THE PUBLISHER Or Translator of NICHOLAS MACHIAVELS Whole WORKS OUT OF ITALIAN, faithfully into ENGLISH; Concerning the following Letter of Nicholas Machiavels, wherein he clears himself of the Aspersions alleged by some on his Writings: Also, his Judgement as to Government, whether Monarchy or Democracie be the best. And Lastly, (tho' a Papist) shows their wicked and base Errors, both of Popes, Jesuits, Priests, etc. and that they shall be brought to ruin. Written by the Author April 1st. 1537. Printed in the Year 1688. THE PUBLISHER Or Translator of Nicholas Machiavels whole works out of Italian, faithfully into English; To the READER, Concerning the following Letter of Nicholas Machiavels in Vindication of Himself, and the Aspersions put by some on his Writings. Courteous Reader, IT hath been usual with most of those who have Translated this Author into any Language, to spend much of their Time and Paper in Taxing his Impieties, and confuting his errors and false principles as they are pleased to call them, if upon perusal of his Writings I had found him guilty of any thing that could deceive the Simple, or prejudice the rest of Mankind, I should not have put thee to the hazard of reading him in thine own Language; but rather have suffered him still to sleep in the obscurity of his own, than endanger the World; but being very well assured of the contrary, and that the Age will rather receive advantage than damage by this publication, I did yet think that it was fit to say something 〈◊〉 Preface, to vindicate our Author from those Slanders which Priests and other biased Pens have laid upon him; but still I thought, that it might prove a bold and presumptuous undertaking, and might excite laughter, for a person of my small Parts and Abilities, to Apologise for one of the greatest Wits and profoundest Judgements that ever lived amongst the Moderns: In this perplexity, I had the good fortune to meet with this Letter of his own writing; which hath delivered not from those scruples, and furnished me with an opportunity of justifying this great Person by his own Pen. Receive then this choice Piece with benignity, it hath never before been published in any Language, but lurked for above 80. years in the private Cabinets of his own Kindred, and the Descendants of his own admirers in Florence, till in the beginning of the Pontificat of Urbane the 8th, it was procured by the Jesuits and other busy bodies, and brought to Rome with an intention to divert that wise Pope from his design of making one of Nicholas Machiavels Name and Family Cardinal, as (notwithstanding all their opposition) he did, not long after. When it was gotten into that City, it wanted not those who had the judgement and curiosity to copy it, and so at length came to enjoy that privilege which all rare pieces (even the sharpest Lybels and Pasquil's) challenge in that Court, which is to be sold to Strangers, one of which being a Gentleman of this Country brought it over with him at his return from thence in the year 1645, and having translated it into English, did communicate it to divers of his Friends, and by means of some of them, it hath been my good fortune to be capable of making thee a present of it, and let it serve as an Apology for our Author and his Writings, if thou thinkest be need any. I must confess I believe his works require little, but rather praise and admiration; yet I wish I could as well justify one undertaking of his not long after the writing of this Letter; for we find in the Story of those times, that in the Month of August following, in the same year 1537. this Nicolo Machiavelli (except there were another of his name) was committed prisoner to the Bargello, amongst those who were taken in Arms against Cosimo at the Castle of Monte●rurli, notwithstanding all his compliments in this Letter to that Prince, and professed obligations to him; if this be so, we must impute it to his too great zeal, to concur with thedesires of the universality at that time, in restoring the Liberty of their Country, which hath so far dazzled the judgements even of great and wise Men, that thou seest many grave Authors amongst the Ancients have even commended and deified the ingratitude and treachery of Brutus and Cassius. But certainly this crime of his would have been much more unpardonable, if he had lived to see his own Prophecy fulfilled in the Persons and Descendants of this great Cosimo, for there was never any succession of Princes since the World began, in which all the Royal Virtues and Qualities necessary to those who rule over Men, were more eminently perspicuous than inevery individual of this line; so that those people have as little cause as ever any had to lament the change of their Government; their great Dukes having been truly Fathers of their Country, and treated their Subjects like Children, though their power be above all limitation, above all sundamental Laws; but they having no Law, are a Law to themselves. I cannot choose but instance in some few of their Benefits to their people, first the making the River Arno Navigable from Pisa to Florence in a year of Dearth, that so the poor might be set on work and have Bread, and the Traffic or both Cities infinitely facilitated, their making at their own charge a Canal from Livorne to Pisa, their erecting at Pisa a famous University; paying the Professors who are eminent for Learning, and discharging all other incidencies out of their own Revenue, besides the raising stately Buildings for Schools and Libraries, their founding a renowned Order of Knighthood, and keeping the Chapter in the same City; and ordering a considerable number of Knights constantly to reside there, both which intended and performed by them, to increase the concourse, and restore the wealth to the once opulent Inhabitants of that place. Their new Building, fortifying and enfranchizing Livorne, that even by the abolishing their own Customs they might enrich their Subjects, and make that Port (as it now is) the Magazine of all the Levant Trade. And lastly, Their not having in 140 years ever levied any new Tax upon their people, excepting in the year 1642. to defend the Liberties of Italy against the Barbarians. These things would merit a Panegyric if either my parts, or this short Advertisement would admit it, I shall conclude then after I have born a just and dutiful testimony to the merits of the Prince who now governs that State, in whom (if all the Princely virtues and endowments should be lost) they might be found and restored again to the world: As some ingenious Artists in the last Age, retrieved the Art of Sculpture by certain has relievos remaining on some Pillars and Walls at Rome; The Prudence, Magnanimity, Charity, Liberality, and above all the humanity, courtesy, and affability of the Prince, though they exceed my expressions, yet they are sufficiently known, not only to his Subjects (the constant objects of his care and goodness) but even to all Strangers, more particularly to our Nation, he having undertaken a troublesome Journey to visit this Kingdom, and to make it witness and partaker of his transcendent generosity and bounty, which he hath continued ever since, as can be testified by all who have had the honour to wait upon him in his own Country, or the good fortune but to see him in ours. I myself who have been so happy to be admitted into his presence, and have been honoured since in having his Highness my customer for many choice Books to increase (not his knowledge, for that is beyond receiving any addition by Books) but his curiesity and his Library, do think myself bound in Duty to take this poor opportunity of testifying my gratitude and devotion to this excellent Prince. As to this Letter I have nothing more to say, but that thou mayest see how right this Author was set in Principles of Religion, before he could have the information, which we have had since from the Pens of most Learned and Rational Controversists in those points, and wherefore thou mayst admire the sagacity of his Judgement. Read him then, and serve GOD thy King, and thy Country, with the Knowledge will teach thee. Farewell. NICHOLAS MACHIAVELS Letter to ZANOBIUS BUONDELMONTIUS, In Vindication of himself and his Writings. THE Discourse we had lately (dear Zeno. bio) in the delightful Gardens of our old deceased Friend Cosimo Rucellai, and the pressing importunity of Guileo Silviati, that I would use some means to wipe off the many Aspersions cast upon my Writings, gives you the present trouble of reading this Letter, and me the pleasure of writing it; which last would be infinitely greater, if I were not at this day too old, and too inconsiderable, and by the change of our Government wholly incapable of performing, either with my Brain or my Hand, any further service to my Country; for it hath ever been my opinion, that whosoever goes about to make Men publicly acquainted with his Actions, or Apologise to the World for Imputations laid upon him, cannot be excused from vanity and impertinence, except his Parts and Opportunities be such, as may enable him to be instrumental for the good of others, and that he cannot archieve that excellent end, without justifying himself from having any indirect and base ones, and procureing trust from Men, by clearing the repute of his Justice and Integrity to them. But although this be far from my case; yet I have yielded (you see) to the entreaty of Guilio and the rest of that Company, not only because I am sufficiently (both by the restraint of our Press, and the discretion of the person I writ to) assured that this Letter will never be made public; but for that I esteem it a duty to clear that excellent Society, from the Scandal of having so dangerous and pernicious a Person to be a Member of their Conversation; for by reason of my Age, and since the loss of our Liberty, and my Sufferings under that Monster of Lust and Cruelty Alexander de Medeci, set over us by the Divine vengeance for our sins, I can be capable of no other Design or Enjoyment, than to delight and be delighted in the company of so many Choile and Virtuous Persons, who now assemble themselves with all security, under the Happy and Hopeful Reign of our new Prince, Cosimo; And we may say, that though our Commonwealth be not restored, our Slavery is at an end, and that he coming in by our own choice, may prove (if I have as good skill in prophesying as I have had formerly) Ancestor to many renowned Princes, who will govern this State in great Quietness, and with great Glemency; so that our Posterity is like to enjoy case and Security, though not that Greatness, Wealth, and Glory, by which our City hath for some years past (even in the most factious and tumultuous times of our Democracie) given Law to Italy, and bridled the Ambition of Foreign Princes. But, that I may avoid the Loquacity incident to old Men, I will come to the business. If I remember well, the exceptions that are taken to these poor things I have published, are reducible to three; First, That in all my Writings, I insmuate my great Affection to the Democrical Government, even so much as to undervalue that of Monarchy in respect of it, which last I do, not obscurely in many passages, Teach, and as it were, Persuade the People to throw off. Next, That in some places I Vent very great Impieties, slighting and velifying the Church, as Author of all the misgovernment in the World, and by such contempt make way for Atheism and profaneness. And lastly, That in my book of the Prince, I teach Monarches all the execrable Villainies that can be invented, and instruct them how to break Faith, and to oppress and enslave their Subjects. I shall answer something to every one of these; and that I may observe a right Method, will begin with the first; Having lived in an Age when our poor Country and Government have suffered more than●ges and revolutions, than ever did perhaps be●●● any People in so short a time, and having had till the taking of Flarence, my share in the managing of Affairs, during almost all these Alterations; sometimes in the quality of Secretary of our City, and sometimes employed in Emhass●●●s abroad; I set myself to read the History of Ancient and Modern times, that I might by that means find out whether there had not been in all Ages the like Vicissitudes and Accidens in in State Affairs, and to search out the causes of them, and having in some sort satisfied my 〈◊〉 therein, I could not abstain from scribbling something of the two chief kinds of Government, Monarchy and Democracy, of which all other forms are but mixtures, and since neither my ●●arts nor Learning could arrive to follow 〈◊〉 steps of the Ancients, by writing according to Method and Art, as Plato, Aristotle, and many others have done upon this subject; I did 〈◊〉 myself to make slight observations upon both, by giving a bare character of a Prince as to the Monarchical frame, and as to the Popular choosing the perfectest and most successful of all Goverments of that kind upon Earth, and in my Discourses upon it, following the order of my Author, without ever taking upon me to argin problematicallie, much less to dici●●● which of these two Governments is the best: i● from my way of handling matters in my discourses upon Livy, and from those incomparable Virtues and great Actions we read of in that History; and from the Observations I make, men will conclude (which is, I must confess my opinion) that the excellency of those Counsels and Achievements, and the improvement which Mankind, and as I may so say, Humane Nature itself obtained amongst the Romans, did proceed naturally from their Government; and was but a plain eflect and consequence of the perfection of their Common wealth: I say if Readers will thus judge, how can I in reason be accused for that? it would become those who lay this blame upon me to undeceive them whom my Papers have misled, and to show the World to what other causes we may impute those admirable effects, those Heroic qualities and performances, that integrity and purity of manners, that scorning of riches and life itself, when the public was concerned: If they please to do this, they will oblige my Readers, who will owe to such the rectifying their Judgements, and not at all offend me, who have reasoned this matter impartially and without passion; nor have positively affirmed any thing. But, what if this part of my accusation had been true? Why should I be condemned of Heresy, or indiscretion of preferring a Common wealth before a Monarchy? Was I not Born, Bred, and employed in a City, which being at the time I writ, under that form of Government, did owe all wealth and greatness, and all prosperity to it? If I had not very designedly avoided all dogmaticalness in my observations (being not willing to imitate young Scholars in their Declamations) I might easily have concluded from the premises I lay down, that a Democracy founded upon good Orders is the best and most excellent Government, and this without the least fear of confutation, for I firmly believe, that there are none but Flattorers and Sophisters would oppose me, such as will rest Aristotle, and even Plato himself, to make them write for Monarchy, by misapplying some lose passages in those great Authors. ●● nay, will tell their Readers, that what is most like the Government of the World by GOD is the best, which wholly depends upon his absolute Power; to make this comparison, run with four feet, these Sycophants must give the poor Prince they intent to Deific, a better and superior Nature to Humanity, must Create a necessary dependence of all Creatures upon him, must endue him with infinite wisdom and goodness, and even with Omnipotency itself. It will be hard for any man to be misled in this Argument by proofs wrested from Theology, since whosoever reads attentively the Historical part of the Old Testament, shall find that GOD himself never made but one Government for Men, that this Government was a Common wealth (where in the ●●nchadrim or Senate, and the Congregation or popular Assembly had their share) and that he ●hanifested his high displeasure when the rebellious people would turn it into a Monarchy; but that I may not strick upon the rock I profess to shun, I shall pass to that which is fit indeed to be wiped off, and which if it were true, would not only justly expose me to the hatred and vengeance of GOD, and all good men, but even destroy the design and purpose of all my Writings, which is to treat in some sort (as well as one of my small parts can hope to do) of the Politlcks. And how can any man pretend to wrire concerning Policy, who destroys the most 〈◊〉 sential part of it, which is obedience to all Governments? It will be very easy then for Guilio Salviati, or any other Member of our Society, to believe the Protestation I make, that the animating of private Men either directly or indirectly to disobey, much less to shake off, any government how despotical soever, was never in my Thoughts or Writings; those who are unwilling to give credit to this, may take the pains to assign in any of my Books, the passages they imagine to tend that way, (for I can think of none myself (that so I may give such persons more particular satisfaction; I must confess I have a discourse in one of my Books, to encourage the Italian Nation, to assume their ancient valour, and to expel the Barbarians, meaning (as the ancient Romans used the word) a● Strangers from amongst us; but that was before the Kings of Spain had quiet possession of the Kingdom of Naples, or the Emperor of the Duchy of Milan; so that I could not be interpreted to mean that the people of those two Dominious should be stirred up to shake off their Primces, because they were Foreigners, since at that time Lodovic Sforza was in possession of the one, and K. Frederick restored to the other, both Natives of Italy; but my design was to exhort our Countrymen not to suffer this Province to be the Scene of the Arms and Ambition of Charles the 8th. or K. Lewis his Successor, who when they had a mind to renew the old Title of the House of Anjou to the Kingdom of Naples, came with such force into Italy, that not only our good were plundered, and our Lands wasted, but even the liberty of our Cities and Government endangered, but to unite and oppose them, and to keep this Province in the hands of Princes of our own Nation, this my intention is so visible if the Chapter itself, that I need but refer you to it. Yet that I may not answer this imputation barely by denying, I shall assert in this place what my principles are in that which the World calls Rebellion, which I believe to be not only rising in Arms against any government we live under but to acknowledge that word to extend to al● claindestine Conspiracies too, by which the peace and quiet of any Country may be interrupted, and by consequence the Lives and Estates of innocent Persons endangered. Rebellion then so described, I hold to be the greatest crime that can be committed amongst men, both against Policy, Morality, and in foro Conseientiae; but notwithstanding all this, it is an offence which will be committed whilst the World lasts, as often as Princes tyrannize, and by enslaving and oppressing their Subjects, make Magistracy, which was intended for the benefit of Mankind, prove a Plague and Destruction to it; for let the terror and the guilt be never so great, it is impossible that Humane Nature, which consists of Passion as well as Virtue can support with patience and submission the greatest cruelty and in justice, when ever either the weakness of their Princes, the unamity of the People, or any other favourable accident, shall give them reasonable hopes to mend their condition, and provide better for their own interest by insurrection. ●o that Princes and States ought in the Conduct of their Affairs, not only to consider what their ●cople are bound to submit to; if they were inpired from Heaven, or were all Moral Philoophers; but to weigh likewise what is probable de facto to fall out, in this corrupt age of the World, and to reflect upon those dangerous Tumults, which have happened frequently not only upon oppression, but even by reason of Malversation, and how some Monarchies have been wholly subverted and changed into Democracies by the Tyranny of the Princes; as we see (to say nothing of Rome) the powerful Cantons of Switzerland brought by that means a little before the last age, to a considerable Commonwealth, courted and sought by all the Potents in Christendom. If Princes will seriously consider this, I make no question but they will Rule with Clemency and Moderation, and return to that excellent Maxim of the Ancients (almo●● exploded in this Age) that the interest of Kings and of their People is the same, which truth 〈◊〉 hath been the whole design of my Writings to convince them of. I am charged then, in the second place, with Impiety, and vilifying the Church, and so to make way for Atheism. I do not deny but that I have frequently in my Writings laid the blame upon the Church of Rome, not only for all the misgovernment of Christendom; but even for the Depravation and almost total Destruction of Christian Religion itself in this Province; But that this Discourse of mine doth, or can tend to teach Men impiety, or to make way for Atheism, I peremptorily deny: And although for proof of my innocence herein, I need not but refer you and all others to my Papers themselves, as they are now published (where you will find all my Reasons drawn from Experience, and frequent (Examples cited, which is ever my way of Arguing) yet since I am put upon it, I shall in a few lines make that matter possibly a little clearer; and shall first make protestation, That as I do undoubtedly hope, by the Merits of CHRIST, and by Faith in Him, to attain Eternal Salvation; so I do firmly believe the Christian Profession to be the only true Religion now in the World: Next, I am fully persuaded, that all Divine Verities, which GOD then designed to rach the World, are contained in the Books of holy Scripture, as they are now extant and received amongst us. From them I understand that GOD created Man in purity and innocence, and that the first of that Species, by their frailty, lost at once their integrity and their Paradise, and entailed sin and misery upon their Posterity; that Almighty GOD to repair this ●oss, did out of his infinite Mercy, and with unparallelled grace and goodness, send his only begotten Son into the World, to teach us new truths, to be a perfect example of virtue, goodness, and obedience, to restore true Religion, degenerated amongst the Jews into Superstition, ●orinality, and Hypocrisy, to die for the Salvation of Mankind; and in fine, to give to us the holy Spirit, to regenerate our Hearts, support our Faith, and lead us into all truth. Now if it shall appear that as the lusts of our first Parents did at that time disappoint the good intention of GOD, in making a pure World, and brought in by their disobedience the corruptions that ar● now in it. So that since likewise the Bishops of Rome, by their insatiable ambition and avarice have designedly, as much as in them lves, frustrated the Mercitul Purpose He had, in the happy Restauration He intended the World by H● Son, and in the renewing and reforming of Human Nature, and have wholly defaced, and spoiled Christian Religion, and made it a Worldly and a Heathenish thing, and altogether ●●capable, as it is practised amongst them, either of directing the ways of its prosessors to viru● and good life, or of saving their Soul's hereafter● I say, this do appear I know no reason why I 〈◊〉 detesting thus much, and for giving warning to the World to take heed of their ways, should be accused of Impiety or Atheism; or why 〈◊〉 Holiness should be so enraged against the p●● Inhabitants of the Valleys in Savoy, and against the Albigesis for calling him Antichrist: but to fi●● that it is an undoubted truth, I mean that 〈◊〉 Popes have corrupted Christian Religion, 〈◊〉 need but read the New Testament (acknowledg●● by themselves to be of infallible truth and the●e we shall see, that the Faith and Religion pre●●ched by Christ, and settled afterwards by his Apostles, and cultivated by their Sacred Epistle●● is so different a thing from the Christianity th●● 〈◊〉 now professed and taught at Rome, that we should be convinced, that if those. Holy Men should be sent by GOD again into the World, they would take more pains to confute this Gallimaufry, than ever they did to preach down the Tradition of the Pharisees, or the Fables and Idolatry of the Gentiles; and would in probability suffer a new Marryrdom in that City under the Vicar of CHRIST, for the same Doctrine which once animated the Heathen Tyrants against them. Nay, we have something more to say against these Sacrilegious pretenders to GOD'S power; for whereas all other false worships have been set up by some politic Legislators, for the support and preservation of Government, this false, this spurious Religion brought in upon the ruins of Christianity by the Popes, hath deformed the face of Government in Europe; destroying all the good principles, and Morality left us by the Heathen themselves; and introduced in stead thereof, Sordid, Cowardly, and impolitic Notions, whereby they have subjected Mankind, and even great Princes and States, to their own Empire, and never suffered any Orders or Maxims to take place where they have power that might make a Nation Wise, Honest, Great or Wealthy: This I have set down so plainly in those passages of my Book which are complained of, that I shall say nothing at all for the proof of it in this place, but refer you thither, and come to speak a little more particularly of my first assert●● that the Pope and his Clergy have deprvied Christian Religion. Upon this subject I could infinitely wish, now Letters begin to revive agaist that some Learned Pen would employ it sel●● and that some person versed in the Chronolig● of the Church (as they call it) would deduce o●● of the Ecclesiastical Writers, the time and ma●●ner how these abuses crept in; and by what A●● and Steps this Babel that reaches at Heaven, w●● built by these Sons of the Earth; but this mat●● as unsuitable to the brevity of a Letter, and 〈◊〉 deed more to my small Parts and Learning, shall not pretend to, being one who never hither to studied or write of Theology, further than 〈◊〉 did naturally concern the Politics; therefore shall only deal by the New Testament as I hav● done formerly by Titus Livius, that is, mak● observations or reflections upon it, and leav● you and Mr. Guilio, and the rest of our Society to make the judgement, nor citing like Preachers, the Chapter or Verse; because the reading of Holy Scripture is little used, and indeed hardly permitted amongst us. To begin at the top I would have any reasonable man tell me whence this unmeasureable power, long claimed. and now possessed by the Bishop of Rome, is derived, first of being CHRIST'S Vicar, and by that (as I may so say) pretending to a Monopoly of the Holy Spirit (which was promised and given to the whole Church, that is, to the Elect, 〈◊〉 Saints) as is plain by a clause in St. Peter's Ser●●on, made the very same time that the miraculous gifts of the Spirit of GOD were first given ●o the Apostles, who says to the Jews and Gentiles, Repent and be Baptised every one of you in the ●ame of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye ●hall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost, for this promise ●s to you and to your Children, and to all that are afar ●ff, even as many as the LORD our GOD shall call. Next, to judge infallibly of Divine Truth, and to forgive sins as CHRIST did. Then to be the Head of all Ecclesiastical Persons and Causes in the World; to be so far above Kings and Princes, as to Judge, Depose, and Deprive them, and to have an absolute Jurisdiction over all the affairs in Christendom, in Ordine ad Spiritualia; yet all this the Canonists allow him, and he makes no scruple to assume, whilst it is plain that in the whole New jestament there is no description made of such an Officer to be at any time in the Church, except it be in the Prophecy of the Apocalypse, or in one of St. Paul's Episties, where he says, Who it is that shall sit in the Temple of GOD. showing himself that he is GOD. CHRIST tells us, his Kingdom is not of this World; And, if any will be the greatest amongst his Disciples, that be must be serwant to the rest; which shows that his Followers were to be great in Sanctity and Humility, and not in worldly power. The Apostle Paul writing to the Christians 〈◊〉 those times, almost in every Epistle comman●● them to be obedient to the Higher Powers, or Mag●●strates set over them; and St. Peter himself (from whom this extravagant Empire is pretended t●● be derived) in his first Epistle, bids us submit o●● selves to every ordinance of man for the LORDS sake whether it be to the King, or, &c and this is en●● joined although it is plain, that they who go●● verned the World in those days, were bot●● Heathens, Tyrants, and Usurpers, and in th●● submission there is no exception or proviso for Ec●clesiastical immunity. The practice as well as precepts of those Holy Men shows plainly that the● had no intention to leave Successors, who should deprive Hereditary Princes from their right o● Reigning for differing in Religion, who without all doubt are by the appointment of the Apostles and by the principles of Christianity, to be obeyed and submitted to (in things wherein the fundamental Laws of the Government give them power) though they were Jews or Gentiles. If I should tell you by what Texts in Scripture the Pope's claim the powers before mentioned, it would stir you up to laughter, and prove too light for so serious a matter; yet because possibly you have never heard so much of this subject before, I shall instance in a few: They tell you therefore that the Jurisdiction they pretend over the Church, and the power of pardoning sins, comes from CHRIST to St. Peter, and, from ●im to them. Thou art Peter, and upon this Rock 〈◊〉 will build my Church, I will give thee the Keys of ●he Kingdom of Heaven; whatsoever thou shalt bind on Earth shall be bound in Heaven, and whatsoever thou ●halt lose on Earth, etc. From these two Texts ridiculously applied, comes this great Tree which hath with its branches over spread the whole Earth, and killed all the good and wholesome Plants growing upon it; The first Text will never by any man of sense be understood to say more, than that the Preaching, Suffering, and Ministry of Peter, was like to be a great foundation and Pillar of the Doctrine of Christ; the other Text (as also another spoken by our Saviour, to all his Apostles, whose sins ye remit they are remitted, and whose sins ye retain they are retained) are all by the primitive Fathers interpreted in this manner, wheresover you shall effectually preach the Gospel, you shall carry with you Grace, and Remission of sins to them which shall follow your instructions; but the people who shall not have these joyful Tidings communicated by you to them, shall remain in darkness, and in their sins. But if any will contest, that by some of these last Texts, that Evangelical Excommunication, which was afterwards brought into the Church by the Apostles, was here presignified by our great Master, how unlike were those censures to those now thundered out (as he calls it) by the Pope? these we● for edification, and not destruction, to affli●● the flesh for the salvation of the Soul, that th● Apostolical Ordinance was pronounced for som● notorious scandal or Apostasy from the Faith and first decreed by the Church; that is, th● whole Congregation present, and then denounced by the Pastor, and reached only to deba● such persons from partaking of the Communi●on or fellowship of that Church, till Repentance should readmit him, but was followed by no other prosecution or chastisement, as is now practised. But suppose all these Texts had been as they would have them, how does this make for the Successors of St. Peter or the rest? Or how can this prove the Bishops of Rome to have right to such Succession? But I make haste from this subject, and shall urge but one Text more; which is, the spiritual man judgeth all men, but is himself judged of none; from whence is inferred by the Canonists, that first, the Pope is the Spiritual man; and than that he is to be Judge of all the World; and last, that he is never to be liable to any judgement himself; whereas it is obvious to the meanest understanding: St. Paul in t● is text means to distinguish between a person inspired with the Spirit of God, and remaining one in the state of Nature, which latter he says cannot judge of those Heavenly gifts and graces, as he explains himself when he says, The natural man ●●nnot discern the things of the Spirit, because they are foolishness unto him. To take my leave of this matter wholly out of the way of my Studies, I shall beg of you Zen●bio and of Guilio, and the rest of out Society to read over carefully the New Testament, and then to see what ground there is for Purgatory (by which all the wealth and greatness hath accrued to these men) what colour for the Idolatrous worship of Saints, and their Images, and particularly for speaking in their hymen's and prayers to a piece of wood (the Cross I mean (Salve Lignum, etc. and then fae nos dignos beneficiorum Christi, as you may read in that Office, what colour, or rather what excuse for that horrid unchristian, and barbarous Engine called the Inquisition, brought in by the Command and Authority of the Pope, the inventor of which, Peter a Dominican Friar having been slain amongst the Albigesis, as he well deserved, is now Cannonized for a Saint, and styled, San Pietro Martin: In the dreadful Prisons of this Inquisition, many faithful and pious Christians (to say nothing of honest Moral M●ors or Mahometans) are tormented and samished, or, if they out live their sufferings burnt publicly to death, and that only for differing in Religion from the Pope, without having any crime, or the least misdemeanour proved or alleged against them, and this is inflicted upon these poor Creatures, by those who prose to believe the Scripture, which tells us, th● faith is the gift of God, without whose special Illumination no man can obtain it; and the● fore is not in reason or humanity to be punish for wanting it: And Christ himself hath so clea●ly decided that point in bidding unlet the ●a● and the wheat grow together till the Harvest that I shall never make any difficulty ●o call h● Antichrist, who shall use the least persecuti● whatsoever against any differing in m●●ers faith from himself, whether the person ●●d scenting, be Heretic, Jew, Gentile, or Mo●bonnet Next I beseech you to observe in reading th● Holy Book (though Christian fasts are doubtl● of Divine right) what ground there is for enjoying fish to be eaten (at least flesh to be abstain● from) for one third part of the year, by whi● they put the poor to great hardship, whom having purses to buy wholesome fish, are subjects to all the miseries and diseases incident to a b●● and unhealthful diet, whilst the rich, and chief● themselves and their Cardinals, exceed Lucull in their Luxury, of Oysters, Turbats, tinder Cral and Carpioni brought some hundreds of miles feed their gluttony, upon these penitential day of abstinence from Beeff and Perk, It may be will lie in the way of those who observe th● to inquire what St. Paul means when he say That in the latter days some shall departed from the fa● forbidding to marry, and Commanding to abstain from ●●eats which God hath ereated to be received with ●banksgiving; but all these things, and many ●her abuses brought in by these Perverters of christianity, will I hope ●re long be enquired to by some of the Disciples of that bold Friar, ●ho the very same year in which I profesied ●at the scourge of the Church was not far off, ●gan to thunder against their Indulgencies, and ●nce hath questioned many tenets long received ●d imposed upon the world. I shall conclude is discourse after I have said a word of the ●ost Hellish of all the innovations brought in 〈◊〉 the Popes, which is the Clergy; these are a ●t of men under pretence of ministering to the ●ople in holy things, set a part and separated ●m the rest of mankind (from whom they ●ve a very distinct, and a very opposite in●est) by a humane Ceremony called by a ●vine name; viz Ordination, these wherever ●ey are found (with the whole body of the ●onks and Friars, who are called the regula●●ergy) make a Band which may be called th● ●nizaries of the Papaey; these have been the causer all the Soloecisms and immoralities in Go●●ment, and of all the impieties and abomina●●ns in Religion, and by consequence of all th●●order, villainy, and corruption we suffe●●der in this detestable Age; these men by th●●shop of Rome's help have crept into all th● Governments in Christendom, where there is an● mixture of Monarchy, and made themselves a third estate: that is, by their temporalities (which are almost a third part of all the Lands in Europ● given them by the blind zeal, or rather folly o● the Northern people, who over ran this part o● the world) stepped into the throne, and wha● they cannot perform by these secular helps, and by the dependency their vassals have upon them, they fail not to claim and to usurp, and by the power they pretend to have from God and his Vicegerent at Rome. They exempt themselves, their Lands and Goods, from all secular jurisdiction; that is, from all Courts of Justice and Magistracy, and will be Judges in their own Causes, as in matters of tithe, etc. and not content with this, will appoint Courts of their own to decide Sovereignty in testamentary matters, and many other causes; and take upon them to be the sole punishers of many great Crimes, as Witchcraft, Sorcery, Adultery, and all uncleanness; to say nothing of the forementioned judicatory of the inquisition: in these last cases they ●urn the offenders over to be punished (when ●hey have given Sentence) by the secular arm, 〈◊〉 they call the Magistrate, who is blindly to execute their decrees under pain of Hell fire; as if Christian Princes and Governors were appointed only by God to be their Bravoes or Hangmen. They give protection and Sanctuary, to all execrable offenders, even to Murderers themselves, (whom God commanded to be indispensably punished with death) it they come with … their Churches, Cloisters, or any other place, which they will please to call holy ground; and ●f the ordinary justice, nay, the Sovereign power, do proceed against such offenders, they thunder out their Excommunication; that is, cut off from the body of Christ, not the Prince only, but the whole Nation and People, shutting the Church doors, and commanding divine offices to cease, and sometimes even authorising the people to rise up in Arms, and constrain their Governors to a submission, as happened to this poor City in the time of our Ancestors, when for but forbidding the servant of a poor Carmelite Friar who had vowed poverty, and should have kept none) to go armed, and punishing his disobedience, with imprisonment, our whole Senate with their Confalonier were constrained to go to Avignon for absolution, and in case of refusal, had been massacred by the people. It would almost astonish a wise man to imagine how these folks should acquire an Empire so destructive to Christian Religion, and so pernicious to the interests of men, but it will not seem so miraculous to them who shall seriously consider, that the Clergy hath been for more than these thousand years upon the catch, and a formed united Corporation against the parity of Religion, and the interest of Mankind, and has not only wrested the Holy Scripture to their on advantage (which they have kept from the Laty in unknown languages, and by prohibitin the reading thereof) but made use likewise first of the blind devotion and ignorance of the Goths, Vandals, Huns, etc. and since of the am bition and avarice of Christian Princes, stirting them up one against another, and sending them upon foolish errands to the Holy Land, to lost their lives, and to leave their Dominions, it the mean time, exposed to themselves and their Complices, They have besides kept Leatning and Knowledge among themselves, stifling the light of the Gospel, crying down Moral vertue● as splendid sins, defacing humane policy, destroying the purity of the Christian faith and profession, and all that was virtuous, prudent, regular and orderly upon eatth, so that whoever would do good, and good men service, get himself immortal honour in this life, and eternal glory in the next, would restore the good policy (I had almost said with my Author Livy the sanctity too) of the Heathens, with all their valour, and other glorious endowments; I say, whoever would do this, must make himself powerful enough to extirpate this cursed and apostate race out of the world, and that you may see this is lawful as well as necessary, I shall say but one word of their calling and original, 〈…〉 ●nd than leave this subject. The word Clergy, is 〈◊〉 term wholly unknown to the Scriptures, otherwise then in this sense; a particular People or GOD'S lot used often for the whole Jewish Nation, who are likewise called a Kingdom of Priests in some places. In the New Testament the word Cleros is taken for the true Believers, who are also called the Elect, and often the Church, which is the Assembly of the Faithful met together, as is easily seen by reading the beginning of most of St Paul's Epistles, where writing to the Church, or Churches he usually explains himself, To all the Saints in Christ: sometimes, To all who have obtained some faith with us; sometimes, To all who in all places call upon the Name of the Lord Jesus, etc. by which it appears, that neither the word Church nor Clergy was in those days ever appropriated to the Pastors or Elders of the flock; but did signify indifferently all the people assembled to●●● there; which is likewise the literal construction of the word Ecclesia, which is an assembly or ●●eeting; in these Congregations or Churches was performed their Ordination, which properly signifies no more than a decree of such Assembly; but is particularly used for an Election of any into the Ministry. The manner was this, sometimes the Apostles themselves in their Perigrinations, and sometimes any other eminent Member of the Church, did propose to the Society (upon vacancy, or other necessity of a Pastor, Elder, or Deacon) some good Holy man to be Elected, which person if he had parts or gifts, such as the Church could edify by was chosen by the lifting up of hands, that is by suffrage, and oftentimes hands were laid upon him, and Prayer made for him. These men so set apart did not pretend to any consecration, or sacredness more than they had before, much less to become a distinct thing from the rest of mankind as if they had been metamorphosed, but did attend to perform the several Functions of their calling, as prophesying; that is, Preaching the Gospel, visiting the Sick, etc. and never intermitted the ordinary business of their Trade or Profession, unless their Church or Congregation was very numerous, in which case they were maintained by alms or contribution, which was laid aside by every member, and collected the first day of the week by the Deacons, this was said to be given to the Church, and was employed by suffrage of the whole Collective Body to the poor, and to other incidencies, so far was it from Sacrilege in those days to employ Church goods to Lay uses. From these words, Church, Clergy, Ordination, Pastor, (which last hath been translated of late years Bishop) you see what conclusions these men have deduced, and how immense a structure they have raised, upon so little a foundation, and how easily it will fall to the ground, when God shall inspire Christian Princes and States to redeem his truths, and his poor enslaved Members out of their Churches, and to bring back again into the world, the true original Christian faith, with the Apostolical Churches, Pastors, and Ordination, so consistent with moral virtue and integrity, so helpful and concucing to the best and most prudent policy, so fitted for obedience to Magistraty and Government, all which the world hath for many years been deprived of, by the execrable and innate ill quality, which is insepatable from priest-craft, and the conjuration or spell of their new invented ordination; by which they cry with the Poet, Jam furor humanum nostro de pectore sensum Fxpulit & totum spirant prae cordia Phaebum. which makes them so Sacred, and Holy, that they have nothing of integrity, or indeed of humanity left in them. I hope I shall not be thought impious any longer, upon this point, I mean for vindicating Christian Religion from the assaults of these men, who having the confidence to believe, or at least profess themselves the only instruments which God hath chosen or can choose to teach and reform the world (though they have neither Moral virtues, nor natural parts equal to other men for the most part) have by this pretence prevailed so far upon the common sort of people, and upon some too of a better quality, that they are persuaded their salvation or eternal damnation depends 〈◊〉 believing or not believing of what they say. I would not be understood, to dissuade any from honouring the true Apostolical Teachers, when they shall be re established amongst us. or from allowing them (even of right, and not of alms or courtesy) such emoluments as may enable them cheerfully to perform the duties of their charge, to provide for their Children, and even to use hospitality as they are commanded by St: Paul But this I will prophesy before I conclude; that if Princes shall perform this but siness by halves, and leave any root of this Clergy or Priestcraft, as it now is, in the ground or if that famous Reformer, fled some year since out of Picardy to Geneva, who is of to great renown for learning and parts, and who promises us so perfect a Reformation, shall not it this model wholly extirpate this sort of men than I say I must foretell, that as well the Magistrate as this Workman, will find themselves deceived in their expectation, and that the least fibra of this plant will over run again the whole Vineyard of the Lord, and turn to a diffusive Papacy in every Diocese, perhaps in every Parish: So that God in his mercy inspire them 〈◊〉 cut out the core of the Ulcer, and the bag of th● imposture, that it may never rankle or feste any more, nor break out hereafter, to diffusive new corruption and putrefaction through the body of Christ, which is his Holy Church, 〈◊〉 to vitiate and infect the good order and true 〈◊〉 licy of Government. I come now to the last branch of my charge, which is, That I teach Prince's villainy, and how to ●●●●ive and oppress their Subjects, In which accusation I am dealt with as poor Agnolo Canini was, who as they report, being a very learned practiser of the Laws, and lest the only man of this profession (one Autumn) in our City, the rest of the Advocates being fled into the country for fear of a contagious Disease which then reigned, was commanded by our Judges to assist with his counsel both parties, and to draw Pleas as well for the Defendant as the Plaintiff, else the Courts of Justice must have been shut up. In the same manner my accusers handle me, and make me first exhort and teach Subjects to throw off their Princes, and then to instruct Monarches how to on slave and oppress them; but I did not expect such ingratitude from mine own Citizens, or to be served as Moses was, when he was upbraided for killing the Fgyptian, by one of his own people for whose sake he had done it, whereas he believed they would have understood by that action, that he was the person whom God intended to make use in delivering them from the horrid slavery they were then under. If any man will read over my Book of the Prince with impartiality and ordinary charity, he will easily perceive, that it is not my intention therein to recommend that Government, or those men there described, to the world; much less to teach them to trample upon good men, and a that is Sacred and Venerable upon earth, Law Religion, Honesty, and what not; if I have been a little too punctual in designing these Monsters, and drawn them to the life in all their lineaments and colours, I hope mankind will know them the better to avoid them, m●●● Treatise being both a satire against them, and 〈◊〉 true Character of them: I speak nothing o● great and honourable Princes, as the King's o● England, France, and others; who have th● Sta●es and Orders of their Kingdoms with excellent Laws, and Constitution, to found and maintain their Government; and who reig●● over the hearts as well as the persons of their subjects; I treat only of those vermin bred out of the corruption of our own small Common wealths and Cities, or engendered by the ill blast that come from Rome, Olivaretto da Fermo, Borgi●● the Baglioni, the Bentivoglio, and a hundred others who having had neither right nor honourable means to bring them to their power, use is with more violence, rapine, and cruelty upon the poor people, than those other renowned Princes show to the Boars, the Wolves, the Foxes, and other savage beasts which are the objects of their chase and hunting: whosoever in his Empire over men is tied to no other rules than those of his own will and lust, must either be a Saint to moderate his passions, or else 〈◊〉 very Devil incarnate; or if he be neither of these, both his life and reign are alike to be very short; for whosoever takes upon him so execrable an employment as to rule men against the Laws of nature and of reason, must turn all topsie turvy, and never stick at any thing, for if once he halt, he will falls and never rise again: I hope after this I need say little to justify myself from the calumny of advising these Monsters to break their faith, since to keep it is to lose their Empire, faithfulness and sincerity being their mortal enemies, and Vguccione della Fagivola to one who upbraided him, that he never employed honest men; answered, Honest men will cut my throat, let the King use honest men, meaning the King of Naples, who was established in his Throne, and had right to it. But that I may have occasion to justify myself against a little more than I am accused of, I will confess, that in a work where I desired to be a little more serious, than I was in this Book of the Prince, I did affirm, that in what way soever men defended their Country, whether by breaking or keeping their faith, it was ever well defended, not meaning in a strike moral sense, or point of honour, but explaing myself that defacta the infamy of the breach of word, would quickly be forgotten and pardoned by the world; which is very true. Nay, what if I had said that good success in any interprizes (a far less consideration than piety to our Country) would have cancelled the bleam of such perfidy as Caesar (whom I compare to Catiline) used towards his fellow Citizens', not only not detested by posterity, but even crowned with renown and immortal fame; insomuch as Princes to this day) as I have observed elsewhere) think it an honour to be compared to him, and the highest pitch of veneration their flatters can arrive at is to call them by the name of one who violated his faith, and enslaved his Country. I hope that in showing as well these Tyrants as the poor people who are forced to live under them, their danger, that is by laying before the former, the helish and precipitous courses they must use to maintain their power, by representing to the latter, what they must suffer, I may be instrumental, first, to deter private Citizens from attempting upon the liberties of their Country, or if they have done it, to make them lay down their ill gotten Authority; and then to warn the rest of the Nobility and people, from these factions and malignancies in their several commonwealths and Governments, which might give hope and opportunity to those who are ambitious amongst them, to aspire to an Empire over them. However it prove, I hope I am no more to be blamed for my attempt, than that excellent Physician of our Nation is, who hath lately taken so much pains to compose an excellent Treatise, of that foul Disease which was, not long since, brought from the new world into these parts; wherein though he be forced to use such expressions as are almost able to nauseate his Readers, and talk of such Ulcers, Boyles, Nodes, Botches, Cankers, etc. that are scarce fit to be repeated, especially when he handles the causes of those effects, yet he did not intent to teach or exhort men to get this Disease; much less did he bring this lamentable infirmity into the world, but discribes it faithfully as it is, to the end men may be detered, and avoid the being infected with it, and may discern and cure, whenever their incontinence and folly shall procure it them. I shall say no more in this matter; but to conclude all make a protestation, that as well in this Book, as in all my other Writing, my only scope and design is to promote the interest and welfare of mankind, and the peace and quiet of the world, both which I am so vain as to believe, would be better obtained and provided for, if the principles I lay down were followed and observed by Princes and People, than they are like to be by those Maxims which are in this Age most in vogue. For myself I shall only say (and call you all to witness for the truth of it) that as by my Birth I am a Gentleman, Chief Magistrate. and of a Family which hath had many Consaloniers of Justice in it; so I have been used in many employments of great trust, both in our City and abroad; and at this hour am not in my Estate one penny the better for them all, not should I have been, although I had never surfered any losses by the seizure of my Estate in the year 1531, for my carriage it hath ever been void of faction and contention, I never had any prejudice against the house of Midici, but honoured the person of all those of that Family whom I knew, and the memory of such of them as lived before me, whom I acknowledge to have been excellent Patriots and Pillars of our City and Commonwealth. During the turbulent times of Piero, and after his expulsion out of Florence, though my employments were bu● Ministerial, my advice was asked in many grave matters, which I ever delivered with impartiality and indifference, not espousing the heady opinions of any, much less their passions and animosities; I never sided with any Party further than that the Duty of my charge obliged me to serve the prevailing Party, when possessed of the Government of our City; this I speak for those changes that happened between the flight of the laid Pien● de Medici, and the horrid Parricide committed by Clement the 7th. upon his indulgent Mother, joining with his greatest enemies, and uniting himself with those who had used the most transcendent insolence to his own person, and the highest violence and fury the Sun ever saw to his poor Courtiers and Subjects, and so accompanied he might sheathe his Sword in the bowels of his own desolate Country. At that time, and during that whole Siege, I must confess I did break the confines of my Neutrality, and not only acted as I was commanded barely, but roused myself, and stirred up others haranguing (in the Streets and places of the City) the People to defend with the last drop of their Blood, the Walls of their Country, and the Liberty of their Government; taking very hazardous Journeys to Ferrucio, and then into the Mugello and other parts, to bring in Succours and Provisions to our languishing City, and acting as a Soldier (which was a new profession to me) at the age of above sixty, when others are dispensed from it. For all which, I had so entire a satisfaction in my mind and conscience, that I am persuaded this cordial made me able to support the sufferings which befell me after our Catastrophe, and to rejoice in them so far, that all the malice and cruelties of our enemies, could never draw one word from me unsuitable to the honour I thought I merited, and in some sort enjoy, for being instrumental to defend (as long as it was possible) our Altars and our Hearths. But all that I have undergone, hath been abundantly recompensed to me by the favour and courtesy) of the most excellent Signior Cosimo, who hath been pleased to offer me all the preferments the greatest ambition could aspire to which I did not refuse out of any scruple to serve so incomparable a Prince, who see early years manifest so much courage, humanity, and prudence, and so fatherly a care of the public good, but because I was very desireous not to accept of a charge which I was not able to perform, my years and infirmities having not brought me to a condition in which I am fitte● to live in a Cloister then a Palace, and made me good for nothing but to talk of past times the common vice of old Age: So that I did n●● think it just or grateful to reward this excellent person so ill for his kindness, as to give him 〈◊〉 useless Servant, and to fill up the place of a fat better. This is all I think fit to say of this matter I choose to address it to you Zenobio, for the constant friendship I have ever entertained with you & formerly with your deceased Father, the companion of my Studies, and ornament of our City. And so I bid you farewell, The first of April, 1537.