LETTERS OF Mounsieur de BALZAC. 1.2.3. and 4th parts. Translated out of French into English. BY Sr RICHARD BAKER Knight, and others. Now collected into one Volume, with a methodical table of all the letters. LONDON, Printed for John Williams, and Francis Eaglesfield. At the Crown, and Marigold in S. Paul's Churchyard. 1654. portrait of Jean-Louis de Balzac LETTERS OF Mounseur de BALZAC, Translated into English by Sr. RICHARD BAKER, and others. LONDON. Printed for John Williams, and Francis E●glesfeild, at the Crown, and Marigold in St. Paul's Churchyard. 1655. To the Honourable the Lord OF NEWBURGE, ONE OF HIS MAJESTY'S most honourable Privy Council and Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. MY Lord, I may perhaps be thought, besides the boldness, to be guilty of absurdity, in offering a Translation to him who so exactly understandeth the Original; & one who if he had a mind to see how it would look in English, were able to set a much fairer gloss upon it, than I have done: yet my Lord, this absurdity may have a good colour; for it may not be unpleasing to you to see your own perfection in the glass of another's imperfection, seeing even the best Diamonds seem to take a pleasure in having of foils. Besides, I have my choice of another colour, for being to to pass a world of hazard in the censure of the world, I am willing to pass the pikes at first, and account this done, having once passed yours. And towards it, my Lord, I have two comforts; one for the Reader, that the Authors gold is so much over weight, that though much be lost in the melting, yet it holds out weight enough still, to make it currant: the other, for myself, that by this means I may have a testimony remaining in the world, how much I honour you, and in how high a degree I most affectionately am, Your Lordship's humble Servant RICHARD BAKER. TO THE LORD CARDINAL OF RICHELIEV. My LORD, I Here present you Mounsieur Balzac's Letters, which may well be termed new ones, even after the eighth Edition; for though they have long since been in possession of public favour, yet I may justly say, this is the first time their Author hath avouched them. The advantageous Judgement you have delivered of him, and the ardour wherewith all France hath followed your approbation, well deserveth his best endeavours toward the perfectionating so excellent things: I have been solicitous to draw him to this labour, to the end the world might know, that if I be not worthy the share I have in his respects, yet that I have at least been wise enough to make right use of my good fortune, and to cause it to become serviceable to the glory of my Country. But truly, were he master of his body, or did his maladies afford him liberty of spirit, he would not suffer any but himself to speak in this cause; and his pen performing no slight acts, would have consecrated his own labours, and the wonders they have produced. But since evils have no prefixed time of durance, and in that all the good interims which hereafter may befall him, are wholly to be, employed in his Book, The Prince; I esteemed it to small purpose to attend his health in this business, and that it was now no longer any time to defer the purging of these curious Letters from such blemishes as ill impressions had left upon them. They shall therefore non appear in the parity wherein they were conceived, and with all their natural ornaments: Besides, I have added divers letters of his, not as yet come to light, which may serve as a subject of greater satisfaction to all men, and be as a recompense of the honour wherewith he hath collected the former. And truly (my Lord) had it been possible to place in the Frontispiece of this Book, a more illustrious name then yours, or should Mounsieur de Balzac's inclination and mine have been far from any such intention, yet would not the order of things, or the law of decency have permitted any other reflection, than what I now make: I speak not at this present, of that dazzling greatness whereunto you are elevated, nor of that so rare and necessary virtue, which rightly to recognize, the greatest King on earth hath esteemed himself not to be over able. I will only say, I had reason to submit an eloquence produced in the shade, and form in solitariness, to this other eloquence quickened both with voice and action, causing you to reign in sovereignity at all assemblies. Certainly, my Lord, you are more powerful by this incomparable quality, then by the authority wherein the King hath placed you: The only accent of your voice hath a hidden property, to charm all such as hearken unto you; none can be possessed with any so wilful passions, who will not be appeased by the reasons you propound; and after you have spoken, you will at all times remain master of that part of man, no way subject to the world's order, and which hath not any dependency upon lawful power, or tyrannical usurpation. This is a truth, my Lord, as well known as your name, and which you so solidly confirmed at the last assembly of the Notables; as that in the great diversity of humours and judgements, whereof it was composed, there was peradventure this only point well resolved on, That you are the most eloquent man living. This being true, I can no way doubt, but the perusal of this Book I offer unto you, will extraordinarily content you, and that you will be pleased to retire thither, sometimes to recreate your spirits after agitation, and to suspend those great thoughts, who have for their object the good of all Europe. It is a book, my Lord, wherein you shall find no common thing but the Title; (where entertaining some particular person) Mounsieur de Balzac reads Lessons to all men; and where amidst the beauty of Compliments and dexterity of Jeasting, he often teacheth of the most sublime point of Philosophy: I mean not that wrangling part thereof which rejecteth necessary verities, to seek after unprofitable ones, which cannot exercise the understanding without provoking passions, nor speak of moderation without distemper, and putting the soul into disorder: But of that, whereby Pericles heretofore made himself master of Athens, and wherewith Epaminondas raised himself to the prime place of Greece: which tempereth the manners of particulars, regulateth the obligation of Princes, and necessarily bringeth with it the felicity of all States where they command. This book will make it apparent even to your enemies, that your life hath been at all times equally admirable, though not always alike glorious: How you have conserved the opinion of your virtue, even in the time of your hardest fortunes, and how in the greatest fury of the tempest, and in the most extreme violence of your affairs, the integrity of your actions hath never been reduced to the only testimony of your conscience. To conclude, It is in this Book, my Lord, where I suppose you will be pleased to read the presages of your present greatness, and what hath been foretold; not by Astrological Rules, or the aspect of some Constellation, but by a true discourse founded upon the maxims of Reason, and experience of things past; causing him to presume, that God hath not conferred such extraordinary endowments upon you, to be for ever encloistered within yourself: And that he hath loved France better, then to deprive her of the good you ought to procure her. But all these verities shall one day be comprised in that work the King, by your mouth, my Lord, hath commanded Mounsieur de Balzac to undertake, and which one year of leisure will effect. There shall it be, where he will cause all men to confess, that to have the pourtract of a perfect Prince, the reign of so great a Monarch as ours, is to be attended; that the Divine Providence never showed itself more apparently, then in the conduct of his designs, and in the event of his enterprises; and how Heaven hath so far declared itself in his favour, that were his state assaulted on all sides, and all ordinary means of defence should fail him; he hath virtue sufficient to save himself, and perform miracles. Now as you are the prime intelligence of his Council, and your cogitations the first causes of the good resolutions therein taken, you are not to doubt, my Lord, but you likewise possess the principal place therein, after his Majesty; and that you participate more than any other of his triumphs. There shall you be revenged of all those wretched writings you have formerly slighted: There the spirits of all men shall be satisfied in the justice of your deportments, and calumny itself will there be so powerfully convinced, that to cry down so legal a government as yours, ill affected Frenchmen, and those stranger's enemies to this Crown, will find no further pretext in affairs, nor credulity among men. And truly, when I (on the one side) consider how fatal it is to those who govern, to be exposed to the envy of great ones, and complaints of meaner persons, and how Public affairs have this fatality, as how pure soever the administration of the rest be, they still afford sufficient colour to calumny, to disguise them and cause them to appear unjust. And on the otherside: when I consider that to guide this State is no less than to manage a body having no one sound part; and how there is no sick person who doth not sometimes murmur against his Physician; I dare be confident (my Lord) that such a man as Monsieur de Balzac will not prove unuseful unto you, and that the lustre of your actions, and glory of your life shall receive no diminution in his hands. I would say more, did I not fear to disoblige him in commending him, or if I believed him to be so great a self admirer as his enemies figure him unto us. But I who have sufficiently studied him to know him, and who am acquainted with his most secret Inclinations, and the most particular conceptions he hath in his soul, and of a far different opinion to theirs. I will therefore rest there (my Lord) and not to cause you to lose more time, and to the end you may the sooner enjoy the entertainment, this excellent Book prepareth for you: I will satisfy myself in letting you know, that I esteem not myself so unfortunate as formerly I did, since I have happened upon so fair an occasion, to let you know that I am, My Lord, Your thrice humble, and most obedient servant, SILBON. THE PREFACE Upon the Letters of Mounsieur de BALZAC: Bianca Mounsieur de la MOTTE AIGRON. I Doubt not but amongst those who shall see these Works some there are who will esteem them worthy a more advantageous Title then that of Letters, as well in regard of the greatness of those things therein frequently handled, as in respect of the exactness wherewith they seem to have been composed: But as I willingly excuse those, who with unapt compliments imagine they have composed a good Letter; nor do any more blame such as therein never digress from their particular affairs; so must I likewise acknowledge, that such writings as these, having not been made with any intention to be put in Print, the World might well have passed without them: And that it is only allowed to the Germans to give account to the age they live in, and to posterity forsooth, concerning the affairs and fortunes of their particular families, and of the silly acts of their Colleagues Truly it is an error to believe, that grave and solemn subjects are to be banished out of all Letters, or that even eloquence ought but slackly therein to appear; and that the Majesty of both these is only reserved for Pulpits and Panegyric Orations; as though valour never appeared save only in pitched Battles; and that in single Combats it were lawful to run away, or that virtue therein were utterly unuseful, because it hath fewer witnesses, neither is so fully regarded: But besides that, we are no longer in those times wherein the State government was publicly questioned, where the Orators forced the Lieutenant's general of armies to render account of their several charges; and that consequently, there is no more any means remaining to become eloquent in that kind: Yet are there reasons, whereby we may understand the merit of Letters to be of no less regard than that of Orations. Howbeit, if there be any necessity to find some difference between these; this at least can neither be in regard of the dignity of the Subjects the force of Reasons, the gracefulness of Discourses, nor in the sublimity of Conceits. To speak truth, when I consider the Orations yet remaining among the ruins of former ages, some whereof were publicly pronounced, others only penned; I am so far from admiring any advantage they have over those Letters now extant among us both of the same Authors and Ages, as I do not so much as wonder at all, how the first having been armed with discourse and voice, together with the gesture and motion of the body, have produced such prodigious effects as we all know and have so often, as it were by main force, extorted the consents of all hearers; yet the second, though they had not the like arms and allurements have notwithstanding not been any way deficient. Those smooth Exordiums whereby they prepare, and put themselves by easy accesses, as it were into possession of the Readers, those straits and passages whereby they conduct the spirits of men from pleasant to painful, and from grievous, to gracious objects, to the end that having in a manner shaken and cast them out of their former stations, they may afterwards force them to fall on what side they please. Surely all these advantages are so peculiar to Orations, as I ingeniously confess, Letters do not so much as know what they mean. In these, we enter at the first dash upon the matter, nor do we scarce at any time, quit the same; the reasons go altogether alone without assistance, and all the ornament allowed them, is only freedom of conceptions, the fecundity of language, and that they pass not promiscuously. But as concerning the Subjects, they are common to both kinds of writings, and it is an error to imagine, there are some particular to the one, that the other cannot touch upon the same without injury thereunto. Upon the matter, Panegyric discourses, Apologies, Consultations, Judgements upon Moral actions, whether good or bad opinions and censures upon occurrents of those which please, and those we ought to detest, yea even indifferent accidents; briefly whatsoever may fall into discourse, and under reason, are the objects of Letters: So we see, the greatest and most important mysteries of our religion have been left unto us in Letters. All the wisdom of the Pagans is contained in those of Seneca, and we owe to those Cicero wrote to his friends, the knowledge of the secrets, and certain inducements which caused the greatest revolutions the world hath ever known, to wit the shaking and subversion of the Roman Reipublicke, we are therefore to confess Oratorical Treatises to have no other subject than Letters: and that if there be any difference, it is none other than what is observed between our ancient Seas, and those not discovered unto us till in our father's times. The latter are no less deep than the other; they are capable of the like shipping; their ebbs, and floods are neither more just, nor less uncertain; and all the difference discovered between them is only this, that the winds toss not those in like sort as it doth ours, and in that they are seldom or never subject either to storms, or tempests. In like manner it being within the power and capacity of Letters to treat of the same things, how much more eminent and excellent soever one may conceive them to be then any other kind of writings, yet do they not indeed receive those extraordinary motions which appear in Orations, since neither the like height of excess, nor the same Enthusiasms or raptures are herein found; In a word, it is a more middle beauty, and a more calm eloquence. And surely, if the subject we make use of be as illustrious as the person before whom we are to handle it, were it not as much as to abuse both the one and the other, to come short in our expressions: Since the action ought neither to be public, nor general, if you intent to perform it negligently, and not to allow it all the ornaments whereof it is capable. And who can doubt that Cicero being to make an Oration before Cesar, after the change of the Commonwealth, had not a greater apprehension, and prepared not himself with more studious care, then if he had only spoken to that beast with an hundred heads, he had so often led after his own Fantasy, and whereof he was in so full possession so long before, as to cause them to take the part best pleasing unto him. In these last occasions, and in the presence of this man alone, he knew with whom he had to do: Now had he been timorous, or fearful to fail before his Master, yet impute not this apprehension of his to proceed either out of consideration he had of his greatness, nor from the reflections upon those things he came to accomplish: But it was in that he considered him as a man no less versed in the art of well-speaking than himself, and who had heretofore contributed to the study of this science, so many rare gifts of spirit, and so many fair endowments of nature, that had he not afterward esteemed it more noble to conquer men by arms, then to convince them by arguments, and if of the two most excellent exercises this of his life, fortune, and the famousness of his courage, had not caused him to make choice of the former, he might easily have disputed for the glory of the latter with him. Or were it so that this excellent Orator might at this day return into the world, and were personally, or by his Pen to discourse with those two great Cardinals to whom the most part of these Letters are addressed, it is not probable, coming to know them as we do, that he would employ, and contribute a more exact study and solicitude, then when he was only to please a multitude of ignorant Plebeians, and to speak to all that rabble of ancient Rome, we shall yet again be amazed at the perfection of these Letters, some whereof are written to the King, and appointed to be read (as in truth they were) with admiration in full counsel, and a great part of the rest addressed to the most eminent persons of our age. To speak truth we may justly say, this is the first time any thing of perfection hath appeared in our language; so that if of all our ancient eloquence there be aught worthy of esteem in any equality with this, it may be that with much labour you shall produce some one Letter: For of all such who have hitherto written, we may affirm, that the most fortunate among them, when they made choice of subjects able to subsist of themselves, have not been absolutely condemnable, and that amidst their writings, the solidity of learning, and the savageness of language (to wit) the good and evil did equally appear. But when at any time they fell upon subjects where eloquence only swayed the Sceptre, there truly it was where fortune forsook them, and where the feebleness of their proper forces was manifestly perceived, if they were not some way assisted by strange tongues. Some of them (to say the truth) have doubted what way they were to take, and have striven to show it to others, though themselves were not in it. In a word, the greatest glory those gained who have written with most perfection and purity, is only that which nature hath reserved for women, to which sex eminent actions being denied, it seemeth they perform sufficient if they abstain from evil doing. But to say that any hath joined Art to abundance, and mingled mildness with Majesty, or hath raised his stile without either losing himself, or straying from his subject, that is it which in truth we could not see till this present. And questionless these brave and generous forms of discourse, and those great and strange conceptions wherewith these Letters were so curiously limed, and so plentifully graced, have been very slenderly known in proceeding ages: This very order, and this number, whereof every tongue is not capable, and wherein ours owes nothing to the Latin, and which appears in all his words, though diversely, and as their gender requires, do right haply appear in this place, though the most part of writers before him have esteemed these perfections of small importance; yet notwithstanding, without the help of these two great secrets, nether ornaments of Art, nor graces of Nature, can be but in part pleasing; nor can all the reasons the World can allege persuade a Very woman resolving to resist: And to speak seriously, they are no less necessary among excellent discourses, and conceits, than discipline amongst Soldiers, without which, courage is of no effect, and valour most commonly proveth unprofitable. As for me who have known the Author from both our infancies, and who better than all others, can depose in what fashion he effecteth his labours; besides, knowing the great advantage he hath over all those who write at this day: I have ever thought that if any were able to raise our Language to the merit and reputation of such Eloquence, wherewith the Ancients were adorned▪ it should be to him alone to whom our age oweth this glory. Nor do I doubt, but the comparison coming in question at this present, between these his writings, and those of others; the difference will be easily discovered, assuring myself, that all spirits will dispose themselves to be ranged herein to mine opinion and voluntarily to give way thereunto. As for myself, who read the Ancients with all respect due unto them, and the Moderns without any prejudicated opinion, do notwithstanding confess, that all I can conceive in others is so far short of the merit of these Letters, that abstracting from the passion I am possessed with, both for them, and their Author, hardly could I dispose myself to frame this Preface for them. And who is there will make any difficulty to give them their due? Since he whose very faults have been esteemed so fair, that they caused a Sect during his life, which yet continues after his death; having (at Meats) seen certain discourses this Author composed in those miserable times, and which stood in need of another age to be gratefully regarded, was astonished at his beginnings, confessing it was with unwillingness, that the only thing he supposed to possess by the general consent of all, was ravished from him by one who as yet had lived but twenty years. But surely, it was in this strain of writing which in that it is not restrained within so strict limits as that of Letters, is capable of all the motions, and ornaments of Art; and of the same sort as was the other discourse he addresseth to the Pope who now is, upon the like subject, as that of Saint Bernard's to Eugenius: And as God never chose among men any so accomplished with all perfections, as this person to command all others, so can I not conceive any thing either more great, or extraordinary, than what appeareth in this work, nor more suitable to the excellency of the subject, and to the Majesty of him to whom he dedicated his discourse: But if (to return to the particulars of these letters) it were necessary for the delivering an unpartial judgement, to consider those of the Ancients, I should seem more respectful than were requisite, if (putting them all together) I should undertake to make them so much as enter into comparison with these; excepting only those of Seneca, yea even in those (which in truth come not near these) there is so infinite abundance of matter, as can hardly be imagined, and since all things therein appear so confusedly, that it seems they were therein couched without choice, and to say truth, as it were at adventure, some who will yet further tax his stile will happily say, they are rather matters then Works. But for my part, if there be any defects therein, I hold they ought well to be borne with, in regard of so many rarities therein concurring; and when we have said all, what appearance is there to undervalue any thing we receive from a man who was worth seven Millions of Gold? and who once in his life had the heart and ambition to aspire to the Empire of the whole world? Let us therefore esteem all we receive from him, and from those times, yet suffer us to commend our own, wherein this science which meddleth with the commanding of spirits, and which was but formerly in its infancy, is now found to be in his full maturity, and as it were of ripe years. If therefore you acknowledge any obligation due (as in truth there is) to these excellent Letters, you shall in short time see so solid, and just a judgement proceed from this Author, that the Parliament itself produced not any more able; and his solitariness will be so satisfactory unto you, that you will make no more difference than I do, to prefer the same before the magnificence of Princely Courts, and the Pomp of most stateliest Cities. A Table of the letters (as they lie in order) which are contained in the first volume. Lib. I. A Letter from Cardinal of Richelieu, to the Signior of Balzac Page 1. To the Lord Cardinal of Richelieu Page 2 To the same Page 4 To the same Page 5 To the same Page 6 To the same Page 8 To the same Page 9 To the Lord Bishop of Air Page 11 To the same Page 14 To the same Page 16 To the same Page 17 To the same Page 20 To the same Page 21 To the reverend Bishop of Air Page 22 To Mounsieur de la Motts Aigron Page 26 To Mounsieur de bois Robert Page 29 Lib. 2. in the first vol. To my Lord Cardinal de la Valete. Page 32 To the same Page 35 To the same Page 36 To the same Page 37 To the same Page 39 To the same Page 42 To the same Page 43 To the same Page 44 To the same Page 46 To the same Page 47 To the same Page 49 To Mounsieur du Planty Page 50 To Mounsieur de la Magdelen Page 51 To Mounsieur de Montigny Page 52 To the Duke of Espernon Page 53 To the same Page 55 To the same Page 56 The Duke of Espernon his letter to the French King, penned by Balzac Page 59 To the same Page 61 To the same Page 63 Lib. 3. in the first vol. To the Duke de la valete Page 65 To the Signior of Plessis, governor of Tollemount Page 67 To Hidasp Page 68 To Hidasp Page 72 To Signeur de la Roche. Page 74 To Mounsieur de Bois Robert Page 75 To the same Page 76 To the same Page 79 To the same Page 80 To the same Page 82 To Mounsieur Girard Secretary to the Duke of Espernon Page 85 To the same Page 86 To Philander Page 87 To the same Page 87 To Olympia Page 89 To Chrisolita Page 90 To Clorinda Page 91 To the same Page 92 To the same Page 93 To the same Page 94 To the same Page 95 To Lydia Page 96 To the Baron of Amblovile Page 97 To the Count of Schomberg Page 99 A letter from the Count of Schomberg to Mounsieur de Balzac Page 100 Lib. 4. in the fifth vol. To my lord Marshal of Schomberg Page 101 To the Bishop of Angoulesme Page 103 To Father Garasso Page 104 To the Cardinal of Valete Page 106 Another Page 107 To the Lord Bishop of Nantes Page 109 To Mounsieur de la Marque Page 110 To Mounsieur Tissandler Page 111 To Mounsieur de Faret Page 112 To Mounsieur Coeffetean Bishop of Marseillis Page 113 To Mounsieur Pouzet Page 114 An answer to a letter sent to Balzac from a learned old Lady Madamoiselle de Gourney Page 114 To Mounsieur Berniere Page 117 To Mounsieur de Voiture Page 117 To Mounsieur de Vaugelas Page 118 To Mounsieur de Racan Page 120 To the Abbot of S. Cyran Page 121 To Mounsieur Malherb Page 126 To Mounsieur de Vaugelas Page 127 To the same Page 128 To the same Page 129 To the same Page 130 To the same Page 131 To Hydasp Page 132 Another Page 135 Another Page 136 Another Page 137 Another Page 138 Another Page 139 Another Page 141 A Table of the letters contained in the second volume. Lib. I. TO Mounsieur Moreau Page I To Mounsieur R●gault Page 3 To Mounsieur da Moulin Page 5 To Mounsieur the Abbot of Baume Page 8 To Mounsieur Bouthilier Page 10 To Mounsieur the Earl of Exeter Page 11 To Mounsieur de Boyssat Page 12 To Mounsieur Huggens Page 14 To the Baron of S. Surin Page 16 To Cardinal de la Valette Page 17 Another. Page 18 To Mounsieur de Bois Robert Page 19 To Mounsieur de Soubran Page 22 To Mounsieur de la Nawe Page 24 To Mounsieur Chaplain Page 25 To Mounsieur de Nesmond Page 26 To Mounsieur de Pontac. Monpleisir Page 28 To Mounsieur Huggens Page 30 To Mounsieur de la Nawe Page 32 To Mounsieur Conrage Page 33 To— Page 35 To Mounsieur Godeau Page 37 To Mounsieur de Thibaudiere Page 38 To Mounsieur Gyrard Page 39 To my Lord the Bishop of Nantes Page 43 Another Page 44 Another Page 45 To— Page 46 To Mounsieur du Pleix Page 47 To Mounsieur Maynard Page 48 To Mounsieur de Descourades Page 49 To Mounsieur d' Andilly Page 50 To Mounsieur Conrart Page 52 To the same another Page 53 To my Lord the marshal Defiat Page 56 To Mounsieur Grainer Page 57 To Mounsieur Gaillard Page 58 To Mounsieur the Master Advocate in the Parliament. Page 58 Lib. 2. in the second vol. To my Lord the Earl of Exeter Page 61 To my Lord the Arch Bishop of Thoulouse Page 62 To Mounsieur Arnaut Abbot of S. Nicholas. Page 65 To Mounsieur Ogier Page 67 To Mounsieur Sirmond Page 69 To Mounsieur Collombiers Page 70 To— Page 71 To Mounsieur Coeffeteau Page 72 To my Lord, the Earl of Brassac Page 74 To Mounsieur de la Nauve Page 76 To Mounsieur Heinsius Page 77 To Mounsieur de la Pigionniere Page 79 To Mounsieur Chaplain Page 79 To Mounsieur Maynard Page 81 To— Page 81 To Mounsieur Arnaut Page 82 To Mounsieur Nesmond Page 83 To Mounsieur de Borstell Page 85 Another Page 86 Another Page 86 Another Page 87 Another Page 88 Another Page 89 Another Page 89 Another Page 90 Another Page 91 Another Page 92 To Mounsieur de Bois Robert. Page 93 To Mounsieur Descartes Page 94 To Mounsieur de la Motte Aigron Page 95 To Mounsieur de Grainer Page 96 To Mounsieur de la Nauve Page 97 Another Page 98 Another Page 99 Another Page 100 To Mounsieur Bardyn Page 101 To Mounsieur de Aiguebere Page 103 Another Page 105 To Mounsieur de Bois Robert Page 106 Another Page 107 Another Page 108 To Mounsieur the master Advocate in the Parliament Page 110 Another Page 112 Another Page 112 To Mounsieur de Caupeau ville Page 113 To— Page 114 To Mounsieur Trovillier Page 115 To Mounsieur Gerard Page 116 To my Lord the Bishop of Nants Page 118 Another Page 118 A Table of all the letters in the third volume. lib. 1. TO my Lord the Cardinal de la Valet. page I. To the same page 2 To Mounsieur Godea page 2 3 To Mounsieur Conrart page 4 To my Lord the Bishop of Nantes page 5 Another page 6 To Mounsieur de la Nauve page 7 To Mounsieur de la Motte le Voyer page 8 To Madam de Villesavin page 9 To Mounsieur de Gomberville page 10 To Mounsieur de Villiers Hottoman page 12 To Mounsieur de Borstell page 13 To Madam— page 15 To Mounsieur Hobbier page 17 To Mounsieur de Copiauville page 18 To Mounsieur de Forgues page 19 To Madam d'Anguitur page 20 To Mounsieur Balthasar page 22 To Mounsieur de Serizai page 23 Another page 24 Another page 25 To Mounsieur Ogier page 26 Another page 27 To Madam Desloges page 28 Another page 29 To— page 30 To Madam Desloges page 31 Another page 32 Another page 35 Another page 36 Another page 37 Another page 38 To Mounsieur de la Nouve page 39 To Madam Desloges page 40 Another page 41 Another page 42 Another page 43 Another page 44 Another page 45 Another page 46 Another page 47 Another page 48 Another page 49 Another page 50 To— page 51 To— page 52 To— page 53 To Mounsieur de Coignet. page 54 To Mounsieur de Nuluic. page 55 To Madam Desloges page 56 Another page 58 To Madam du Fos page 59 To Madam de Campagnole page 61 Another page 62 Another page 63 Another page 64 The second part of the third volume To my Lord the Cardinal Duke of Richelieu. page 69 Another page 74 Another page 75 To Mounsieur Cytois page 77 To Mounsieur de Chastelet page 78 To Mounsieur de Bois Robert page 81 To Mounsieur Favereau page 83 Another page 86 To Mounsieur Girard page 87 To my Lord the Earl of Port page 88 To my Lord the Bishop of Nantes page 89 To Mounsieur Senne page 90 The opinion of Cicero concerning the stile which Philosophers use in their writings. page 92 To Mounsieur Granier page 92 To Mounsieur de Brye page 93 To Mounsieur de Silhon page 94 To Mounsieur de S. Marte page 99 To Mounsieur D'Argenton page 100 To the most Reverend Father Leon page 101 To Mounsieur Chaplain page 102 To Mounsieur Bonnaud page 105 To Mounsieur Souchote page 106 To Mounsieur Tissander page 106 The letter of Peter Bembo to Hercules Strotius page 108 Another page 108 Another page 109 To the Duke of Falete page 110 To the Bishop of Poitiers page 112 To Mounsieur Guyet page 113 To Mounsieur de L'orme page 114 To my Lord— page 115 To Mounsieur Senne page 115 To Mounsieur de Piles Clerimont page 116 To Mounsieur de Voiture page 117 Another page 118 To Mounsieur Mestivier page 119 To Mounsieur de Mesmes D'Auvur page 120 To Mounsieur de Thure page 121 To Mounsieur de Vougelas page 122 To Mounsieur Girard page 123 Another page 125 Clarissimo Balzacio, Facultas Theologiae Pariensiensis. S. page 126 Another page 127 To Mounsieur Talon page 128 Another page 129 To Mounsieur D'Espernon page 130 To Mounsieur Rous sins page 131 To Mounsieur Breton page 133 Another page 134 Another page 136 To Mounsieur Gerard page 137 To Mounsieur de Gues page 139 To Mouns. de Bois Robert page 143 A Table of the Letters contained in the fourth volume. TO Mouns. Conrart page I To Mounsieur du Moulin page 3 To Mouns. L'Huillier page 4 To Mounsieur the Abbot of Bois Robert. page 6 To my Lord the Earl of Exeter page 7 To my Lord the Duke de la Valett page 8 To Mouns. Drovet page 9 To Mouns. De-Bonair page 10 To Mouns. Huggens page 11 To Mouns. de Racan page 12 To Mouns. De St. Chartres page 13 To Mouns. Baudoin page 14 To Mouns. de Coignet page 15 To Madam Cesloges page 16 To my Lord Keeper of the Seals Seguier. page 17 To Mounsieur de Morins' page 18 To Mouns. de Vaugulas page 19 To Mouns. de la Motte Aigron page 21 To Mouns. de Borstel. page 22 To Mouns. the chief Advocate page 23 To Mounsieur de Maury page 24 To Mouns. de Mondory page 24 To Mounsieur le Guay page 26 To Mouns. de Silhon page 26 To Mouns. de la Fosse page 27 To Mouns. D'espesses' page 29 To the same page 30 To Mouns. de Cowrelles page 32 To— page 32 To my Lord the Bishop of Angoulesme page 33 To Mounsieur de— page 34 To Mounsieur de Serizay page 39 To Mouns. Habert Abbot of Cerizy page 40 To Mouns. de Galliard page 41 To the same page 42 To Madam Desloges page 43 To Mouns. de— page 44 To Mouns. Girard page 46 To the same page 47 To the same page 48 To the same page 49 To Madamoisel de Campagnole page 50 To Mouns. the Abbot of Bois Robert? page 51 To the same page 52 To the same page 53 To Mouns. de Savignac page 54 To Mouns. Chaplain page 56 To the same page 57 To the same page 58 To the same page 59 To the same page 60 To the same page 62 To the same page 63 To the same page 64 To the same page 65 To the same page 66 To Mounsieur de Silhon page 67 To Mouns Gerard Secretary to the Duke of Espernon page 68 To the same page 69 To Mouns. de la Mothe le Vayer page 70 To Mouns. de— page 71 The Letters of MONSIEUR de BALZAC. The first Book. A Letter from the Cardinal Richelieu, to the Signior of BALZAC. LETTER I. SIR, THough I have formerly delivered my opinion to a friend of yours, concerning some of your letters he showed me; yet can I not satisfy myself before these lines afford you a more Authentical approbation thereof. It is not any particular affection I bear to your person, which inviteth me to this allowance, but truth itself, carrying with it such a Prerogative, that it compelleth all (who have their eyes and spirits rightly placed for the delivering an unpartial opinion) to represent them without disguise: My censure shall be seconded by many others, & if there be any of a contrary conceit, I dare assure you, time will make them know, that the defects they find in your Letters, proceed rather from their Spirits, than from your Pen; and how nearly they resemble the Ictericks, who having the Jaundice in their eyes, see nothing which seemeth not unto them to carry the same colour: Heretofore mean Wits admired all things above the pitch of their capacity; but now, their judgements seconding their sufficiencies, they approve nothing but what is within the compass of their Talon, and blame all whatsoever exceedeth their Studies. I dare (without presumption) say in what concerneth you herein, that I see things as they are, and declare them to be such as I see them: The conceptions of your Letters are strong, and as transcendent above ordinary imaginations, as they are conformable to the common sense of such who are of sound judgement. The Language is pure, and the Words perfectly well chosen, without affectation; the Sense is clear and neat, and the Periods accomplished with all their numbers. This censure of mine, is by so much the more ingenuous, as that approving whatsoever is your own in your Letters: I have not concealed to a certain friend of yours, that I found some rectification to be desired, concerning certain things you insert of other men's: fearing lest the liberty of your Pen should cause many to imagine that it is too often dipped in their humours and manners; and draw such as are more acquainted with you by name, than conversation, to be otherwise conceited of you, than you willingly could wish. The manner, wherewith you have received this my Advise, causeth me that continuing my former freedom, I will conclude, in advertising you, that you shall be answerable before God, if you suffer your Pen to sleep, and that you are obliged to employ it upon more grave and important Subjects; being contented that you shall blame me, if in so doing you receive not the satisfaction, to see, that what you perform herein, shall be praised and esteemed, even by those who would willingly pick occasion to control them, which is one of the most sure marks of the perfection of any Work. You shall receive some in this kind out of my Affection, when I may have the opportunity to assure you, that I am, Your well affectionate to serve you, the Cardinal of Richelieu. From Paris the 4. of February 1621. To the Lord Cardinal of Richelieu from BALZAC. LETTER II. MY LORD, I Am as proud of the Letter you did me the Honour to write unto me, as if there were a thousand Statues erected for me, or as if I were assured by infallible authority of my works excellency. Truly, to be commended by that man our Age opposeth to all antiquity, and upon whose wisdom God might well intrust the whole earth's Government, is a favour I could not wish for without presumption, and which I am yet doubtful, whether I have really received, or only dreamt some such matter. But if it be so that my eyes have not deceived me, and that you are he, who hath bestowed that voice upon me, which hath been chosen by all France to present her Petitions to the King, and by the King himself to convey his Commands into Cities and Armies: My Lord, I must humbly then acknowledge you have already paid me before hand for all the services I can ever possibly perform unto you: and I should show myself very ungrateful, if I should hereafter complain of my fortunes: since upon the matter, the goods and honours of this World are most ordinarily none other, than the inheritance of Sots, or rewards of Vice, Estimation, and Commendation, being only reserved for Virtue. Ought I not then to rest highly satisfied, having received from your mouth the same prize, which Conquerors expect for their Victories? yea, all that yourself could hope for, in lieu of your great and immortal actions, if there were another Cardinal of Richelieu to give them their due commendations? But truly (my Lord) that is a thing which will always be wanting to your glory; for when by your only presence you have appeased the spirits of an incensed multitude; when by your powerful reasons you have induced Christian Princes to set the Native Country of Jesus Christ at liberty, & to undertake the Holy War, when you have gained whole Nations to the Church, as well by the force of your Example, as by that of your Doctrine, who is of ability to pay you the reputation which you in all right deserve? and where shall you find so excellent a witness for all the marvellous Acts of your life, as I have of my watchings and studies? I cannot choose but reiterate this, and my joy is overjust to be concealed. Is it possible this great wit and high spirit, which hath been employed even from his first youth in persuading Princes, in giving instructions to Ambassadors, and hath been listened unto by old men, who have seen four Reigns? Is it possible, I say, this man should value me; on whose approbation all enemies agree? nor is there among all men a contrary party, or diversity of belief in this point. If I had a purpose to disquiet the repose of this Kingdom, I would seek for the consent of slack spirits; and I should stand in need in my favour of all sorts of men, were I to study for reputation in a popular State: but truly I never affected confusion, or disorder, and my designs have ever aimed at the pleasing of a few. For since you have declared yourself in favour, as he likewise hath done, for whom France at this day envieth Italy: and since you carry after you the most solid part of the Court, I am content to let the rest run astray with Turks and Infidels, who make the greater number of mankind. Yet (my Lord) I cannot think, that any hereafter will be so far in love with himself, or so obstinate in his own opinion, as not to be a Convertite by the only reading the Letter you honoured me with, and who in conclusion will not subscribe to your great judgement? And, if it be certain that truth itself could not be strong enough against you, there is no question, but that side whereon you two shall agree, aught to be universally followed. For my part (my Lord) let all men say what they will, I fix myself with closed eyes there; and what enemies soever the reputation you have allowed me procure me, yet knowing your abilities, and what you are, I will be no farther solicitous for mine own interest, or future benefit, since it is become your cause. I am My Lord, Your most humble and most obedient servant, BALZAC. The 10. of March, 1624. To the Cardinal of Richelieu from BALZAC. LETTER III. My Lord, I Humbly entreat you to be pleased by these presents, to permit me to confirm unto you the assurance of my most humble service, and that you would allow me to crave some news from you: It is the only thing wherein I am now curious, and which, in the very depth of my retiredness, obligeth me to reflect sometimes upon worldly affairs. But happen what can, I am most assured, you will remain constant even amidst public ruins, and that Fortune cannot bereave you of those advantages she never gave you. Yet could I wish, that your life were somewhat more calm, and less glorious: And I suppose that Artimiza's goodness, having so great Affinity to what is infinite, & which is of power to procure love even amidst the most savage beasts, doth in right deserve to obtain truce, and repose among reasonable Creatures. It is not in us to be Authors of hereafter, nor do our wishes rule the event of humane affairs. But surely, if there be any Justice in Heaven, (whereof there is no doubt) and if God have an eye to worldly matters; we must believe the tears of upright persons shall not be shed in vain, or that your Queen shall wax old in her misfortunes: yet at the least, since our cogitations be still within our own compass, and we being not forbidden to hope well, let us make the best use we may of this small portion of Liberty yet remaining. The virtue she hath hitherto made use of, in resisting her afflictions, will happily one day serve to moderate her felicities. And if God struck a certain * Madam Gabriella. Woman with sudden death, for that she should have been seated in the place, he destinated to this great Princess; he surely will not suffer that man to live long, who hath so highly injured her. However (my Lord) it is great honour unto you, not to have failed her in her afflictions, and to have undervalved all worldly Prerogatives, to be unfortunate with her. I know that herein you satisfy yourself with the testimony of a clear conscience, and that it is not so much for opinion of men, you undertake Worthy actions, as for your own private satisfactian. Nor are you a little to comfort yourself, in that at this present you are praised, even by your very enemies; and to see your resolutions redoubtable to those, who have great Armies on foot, and the chief forces of the State under their Command. I would say more, did I not fear you might suppose I had some private design in my Discourse, or seek hereby to prepare you to receive some kind of importunity from me: But I most humbly beseech your Lordship to be confident, that I being of free condition, am little acquainted with flattery; and that I am not so given over to gain, but that notwithstanding you were still in Avignion, I would ever as really as at this hour remain, My Lord, Your most humble and most affectionate servant, BALZAC. The 15. of May, 1623. To the Cardinal of Richelieu from BALZAC. LETTER IU. My Lord, WEre I not well acquainted with my own insufficiency, I might well be possessed with no small vanity, upon the Letter you did me the Honour to write unto me, and might well imagine myself to be some other thing than I was the day before I received it. But knowing it is no other than a mere favour you pleased to afford me, I will not flatter myself in my good fortune, nor lessen the Obligation due unto you, in presuming to merit the same. If Virtue required any recompense out of herself, she would not receive it from other mouth than yours: and your reputation is at this day so Just and General, as it is become a Verity, wherein the Wise agree with the Vulgar. I do therefore account myself very happy to be reputed of, by a Person who is able to give a value to things of themselves worthless; and I attribute so much to your Judgement, that I will no longer hold any mean opinion of myself, lest therein I should contradict you. Truly, (my Lord) very difficultly will my parts any way answer your expectation. The time, my Favour affordeth me for rest, is so short, I can hardly employ it to other purpose than to complain of its cruelty. I have enough to do to live, and to make that good, I keep myself as carefully as though I were composed of Crystal, or as if I were some necessary matter for the good of all men. Yet (my Lord) you have so great power over me, that I will strain myself to show my obedience, and to give you an account of my leisure, since you please to think I ought not to deprive the World thereof. It is better to utter glorious dreams, than to labour in gross designs, and there are certain Acts of the spirit so excellent, that Princes are too poor, and their power too slender to afford them their full merit. But, my Lord, you have often given so great testimonies of me, that if I should not have some presumption, it were fit I lost my memory; wherefore out of the assurance you give me that my Style doth not stray from that perfection, which men imagine, but never saw, nor have attained unto; I will enter upon a design which shall amaze our vulgar wits, and cause those, who have hitherto supposed they surmount others, to see I have found what they seek for. Whatsoever I do, I will at least have you at all times present to my thoughts, thereby to oblige myself not to come short before so great an example, nor will I forget the place where at this present I am, to the end not to omit any thing worthy the Ancient Rome. It is impossible at once to have so glorious objects, and degenerous thoughts, or not to be transported with all those Triumphs of times past, and with the glory of our age. But this is not the place where I intent to speak, it being of too small extent to receive so illimitable a subject: It shall therefore suffice in conclusion of this my Letter to tell you, that since upon your advice all posterity dependeth, and the whole Court expecteth from you what they are, or are not to believe; I cannot choose (my Lord) but to esteem myself right happy, even amidst my greatest miseries, if you still continue unto me your equal Judgement with the honour of your favours. BALZAC. From Rome this 10. of April 1623. To the Lord Cardinal of Richelieu, from Monsieur Balzac. LETTER V. My Lord, MY purpose was at my arrival in France to have presented my Service unto you, in the place of your Residence, that I might have had the honour to see you; but my health having not been such, as to afford me the free disposition of myself: I am forced to defer my contentment, in that kind, and to entreat to hear some news from you, till I be able to go to understand them from your Self. In the interim, the better to cheer my Spirits, I will believe they are as good as I wish them, and will imagine this Colic of yours, whereof I had so great apprehension, shall be drowned in the fountain of Pougues. This truly is so generally desired, and sought for at God's hands, by so many mouths, that I am confident he will not (in this point) leave the felicity he hath prepared for our times unperfect; and that he loveth the World too well, to deprive it of the good you are to Perform. Armies being defeated, new forces may be set on foot, and a second Fleet may be rigged, after the first perish: But if we should want your Lordship, the World would not last long enough to be able to repair such a loss: And the King might have just cause to bewail the same in the midst of his greatest Triumphs. He hath indeed an inexhaustible Kingdom of men. The Wars do daily afford him Captains. The number of Judges is not much inferior to that of Criminals. It is only of wise men, and such as are capable to guide the Stern of States, whereof the scarcity is great; and without flattery to find out your Equal herein, all Nature had need put itself into Action, and that God long promised the same to mankind before he be pleased to produce him. I say nothing, (my Lord) I am not ready to swear in verification of my belief; or which I confirm not by the Testimony of your very Enemies. The authority of Kings is not so Sovereign, as that is, you exercise over the Souls of such as hearken unto you. Your spirit is right powerful, and daily employed in great affairs, and which refresheth itself in agitation of ordinary occurrents: You are destinated to fill the place of that Cardinal, which at this present, maketh one of the beautiful parties of heaven, and who hath hitherto had no Successor, though he have had Heirs and Brothers. This being thus, who will doubt that public Prayers are to be offered for so precious and necessary a health as yours; or that your life ought to be dear unto you, within you are to conserve the glory of our age. As for me (my Lord) who am assaulted on all sides, and to whom nothing is remaining save hope, being the only benefit of those who are deprived of all others: since my misfortune will needs make me that public sacrifice, which is, to be charged with the pains of all the people, and pay for all the World. I could be well content you should send me your Colic, and that it come to accompany the Fever, the Scyatica, and the Stone. Since of so many diseases, there can but one Death be composed. Nor is it time any longer, to be a good husband of what is already lost. But I will not enter further into this discourse, whereof I shall find no end; and it were to small purpose to tell you, he is the most wretched man in the World, who so much honoureth you, for fear you should reject my affection, as some fatal thing, and lest it avail me not at all to protest that I am, my Lord, Your most humble and most obedient Servant. BALZAC. Septemb. 4. 1622. To the Lord Cardinal of Richelieu. LETTER VI. MY LORD, AFter the sealing of these presents, a messenger passed by this place, by whom I understand that the Pope hath created you a Cardinal; I make no question but you received this news as a matter indifferent unto you: and that your spirit being raised above the things of this World, you behold them with one and the same Aspect. Yet since herein the public good meeteth with your particular interest, and that for your sake the Church rejoiceth, even in all the most irksome Prisons of Europe, it is not reasonable you should deprive yourself of a contentment no less chaste, than those heaven itself affordeth us? and which proceedeth from the same cause. All good men (my Lord) ought in these times to desire great Dignities, as necessary means to undertake great matters. If they do otherwise, besides that God will demand a strict account from them of those his graces, whereof they have made no good use; the World hath likewise just subject of complaint, seeing them abandon it as a prey to the wicked, and that their desire of ease causeth them to forsake the public good. This (my Lord) is to let you know, you are to reserve your humility for those actions, passing between God and yourself: But that in other cases you can neither have too much Wealth, nor over great power; since obedience is due to wisdom; there being certain virtues not practiseable by the poor. I do therefore infinitely rejoice, to see you at this present raised to that eminent dignity, wherein you fill the Universe with Splendour, and where your sole example will (I hope) carry so great weight, as to cause the Church to return to the Purity of its first Infancy. Truly, if there be any hope to expect this happiness, and to see rebellious spirits persuaded, as we behold their Cities forced; you doubtless are the man, from whom we are to expect this felicity; and who is only able to finish the victories of Kings by the subversion of misbelievers: To this effect doth all Christendom exact these achievements at your hands, as a last instruction, and the general peace of consciences: and myself, who have thus long been in search after the Idea of Eloquence, without finding among us any, which is not either counterfeit, or imperfect, am very confident you will bring it to light in the same excellency as it was, when at Rome the Tyrants were condemned, and when it defended the oppressed Provinces. Though Purple be very refulgent, yet will it receive a farther lustre by this your dignity, carrying command wherever it cometh; and which is particularly so proper for the conduct of Souls, as it is only to that power whereto they will submit themselves. My Lord, if I have any hope to be known in after ages, or that my name may pass to posterity; they shall find this consideration to be the first Obligation unto me of seeking the Honour of your acquaintance, and that having heard you speak, you did so absolutely purchase both my thoughts and affections, that since then, I have ever reflected upon you, as on an extraordinary person, and have ever passionately remained, My lord, Your most humble, most obedient, and most faithful servant, BALZAC. The 16. of December, 1622. To the Cardinal of Richelieu from BALZAC. LETTER VII. My Lord, HAd the ways been safe, or if the good order you have taken for public security, had not been subject to the like success as are wholesome Laws, which are seldom well observed, I should not be necessitated to take a longer time than you allotted me when I parted from Fountainebleau, nor had I till now been constrained to spin out the time of my dispatch. But though your Commandments are all powerful in me, yet you know necessity will first be obeyed, nor will you (I hope) be displeased that I have made choice of a Prison, whereto I am accustomed, to avoid another not so commodious for me. This hath not happened but to my extreme grief, since I have not been able to be a witness of the most illustrious life of our age, and have thereby lost half a year of your Actions, which (well nigh) fill up all our History. For though we are not so remote from the World, that no news can come to us, yet they pass so many places, as it is impossible they receive not divers impressions, or that they should arrive here in their purity, since they are often altered from the very Lover; yet I have understood, and Fame hath published, even in deserts, the great conflicts by you undergone, and achieved for the Honour and reputation of France, and how you have subdued the subtleties of strangers, being in truth more to be feared than their Forces. I hear how Italy hath spent all her practices without hurting any, and how those Statesmen, who made account to Seignorize in all Assemblies, and to be Masters in all reasons of State, were unable to defend themselves against you, but with passion and choler: nor to complain of any other thing, but that you persuaded them to whatsoever they were beforehand resolved not to yield. So as (my Lord) those who termed us Barbarians, and by their treaties commonly took revenge of our victories, have in the end found wisdom on this side the Alps, and have well perceived there is a man, who hath abilities to hinder them from deceiving others. They stood amazed▪ to see a Servant, who would not suffer there should be any Master greater than his Sovereign. Who was as sensible of the least evils of his Country, as of his proper sorrows, supposing himself to be wounded upon the least apprehension, when any made show of trenching upon the dignity of this Crown. But when they found you applied present remedies to all such inconveniences as they objected; that you prevented the difficulties they offered to propose, that you dived into their Souls, drawing thence their closest intentions, and how at the first conference you made answer to what they reserved for a second: Then it was indeed, when their Phlegm was turned into Choler, and when you put their humane wisdoms and politic Maxims to a stand. So as we see it is sufficient only to let Good appear, to cause it to be beloved: and truly if Reason had the like power over the Will, as it hath over the Understanding, all those Italians doubtless, who heard you speak, had returned good French men, and the safety of Christendom together with the security of her Princes, had been but one days work. Foreign Wars had been ended in your Chamber; nor should we now have any more than one business upon us, and the King's Forces had at this present been employed only in suppressing the Rebels of his own Kingdom. My Lord, I hope you are persuaded (though I could not probably expect any slight occurrents from the place where you are) yet that I received these with much emotion and transport, it not being in my power to dissemble my joy, when I understood how their Majesties are not weary of your service, and how after having tried divers Counsels, it was in conclusion thought fit to follow yours, & that you precede in the affairs of Europe, by being conductor of the Fortune of France. Truly, of all exterior contentments, there is not any whereof I am so sensible as of that. But on the other side, when I understand that your health is daily assaulted, or threatened by some accident, that the Tranquillity, your conscience affords you, hinders you not from having ill nights: And how amidst the happy successes befalling you, life itself is notwithstanding sometimes tedious unto you; then indeed I must confess they touch me in the tenderest part of my Soul. And whilst the Court makes thousands of feigned Protestations unto you; there is an Hermit some hundred leagues from you, who mourns for your maladies with unfeigned tears. I know not whether or no I may presume to say, I love you: yet is it not probable you will take offence at a word, wherewith you know God himself is well pleased. My Lord; I do in such manner love you, as I am either sick upon the relation of your indisposition; or if the news be current that you are recovered, yet have I still an apprehension of what alteration each hour may bring upon you. Ought it then to be in the fits of your Fever, and in your inquietude for want of sleep, that you understand these public acclamations, and the due praises you have purchased: Shall the Senses suffer, and the Spirits rejoice, or they continue tortured amidst these Triumphs, or that you (at once) perform two contrary actions, and at the same time have need, as well of moderation, as patience: If Virtue could be miserable, or if that Sect, which acknowledgeth no other evil, but pain; nor any greater good than pleasure, had not been generally condemned, the Divine providence had received complaints from all parts of this Kingdom; nor had there been an honest man known, who for your sake had not found something farther to be desired in the conduct of this World. But (my Lord) you understand much better than I do, that it is only touching the felicity of beasts, we are to believe the body, and not concerning ours, residing only in the supreme part of ourselves, and which is as smally sensible of those disorders committed below her, as those in Heaven can be offended by the tempests of the Air, or vapours of the Earth. This being true: God forbid, that by the estate of your present constitution, I should judge of that of your condition; or that I should not esteem him perfectly happy, who is superlatively wise. You may please to consider, that howbeit you have shared with other men the infirmities of humane nature, yet the advantage resteth solely on your side: since (upon the matter) there is only some small pain remaining with you, instead of an infinity of errors, passions, and faults falling to our lots. Besides, I am confident that the term of your sufferings is well nigh expired, & that the times hereafter prepares right solid and pure contentments for you, and a youth after its season, as you are become old before your time. The King, who hath use of your long living, makes no unprofitable wishes: Heaven hears not the prayers that the Enemies of this State offer. We know no successor that is able to effect what you have not yet finished: and it being true, that our Forces are but the Arms of your head, and that your Counsels have been chosen by God to re-establish the affairs of this age: we ought not to be apprehensive of a loss, which should not happen but to our successors. It shall then be in your time (my Lord, I hope) that oppressed Nations will come from the World's end to implore the protection of this Crown: that by your means our Allies will repair their losses, and that the Spaniard shall not be the sole Conqueror, but that we shall prove the Infranchizers of the whole earth. In your time (I trust) the Holy Sea shall have her opinions free, nor shall the inspirations of the Holy Ghost be oppugned by the artifice of our Enemies, resolutions will be raised worthy the ancient Italy for defence of the common cause. To conclude, it will be through your Prudence (my Lord) that there shall no longer be any Rebellion among us, or Tyranny among men: that all the Cities of this Kingdom shall be seats of assurance for honest men; that novelties shall be no farther in request; save only for colours and fashions of Attire: that the people will resign Liberty, Religion, and the Commonwealth, into the hands of superiors, and that out of lawful government, and loyal obedience, there will arise that felicity Politicians search after, as being the end of civil life. My hope is (my Lord) that all this will happen under your sage conduct, and that after you have settled our repose, and procured the same for our Allies, you shall enjoy your good deeds in great tranquillity, and see the estate of those things endure, whereof yourself have been a principal Author. All good men are confident these blessed events will happen in your age, and by your advice. As for me, who am the meanest among those, who justly admire your Virtues, I shall not (I hope) prove the slackest in the expression of your Merits: Since therefore they (of right) exact a general acknowledgement; if I should fail in my particular contribution, I were for ever unworthy the Honour I so ambitiously aspire unto; the height whereof is to be esteemed, Your Lordship's most humble and most obedient servant, BALZAC. To the Lord Bishop of Air. LETTER VIII. My Lord, IF at the first sight, you know not my Letter, and that you desire to be informed who writes unto you: It is one more old-like than his Father, and as overworn as a Ship, having made three voyages to the Indies; and who is no other thing, than the Relics of him, whom you saw at Rome. In those days I sometimes complained without cause, and happily there was then no great difference between the health of others, and my infirmity. Howsoever, be it that my imagination is crazed, or that my present pain doth no longer admit of any comparison, I begin to lament the Fever and Scyatica as lost goods, and as pleasures of my youth now past: See here to what terms I am reduced, and how (as it were) I live, if it may be called living, to be in a continual contestation with death. True it is, there is not sufficient efficacy in all the words whereof this World makes use, to express the miseries I endure; they leave no place, either for the Physicians skill, or the sick man's patience; nor hath Nature ordained any other remedies for the same, save only poison and precipices. But I much fear, lest I suffer myself to be transported with pain, or endure it less Christianly than beseemeth me, being a witness of your Virtue; and having had the means to profit myself by your Example. My Lord, it is now time (or never) I subdue this wicked spirit, which doth forcibly transport my will; and that the old Adam obey the other. Yet doth it not a little grieve me, to be indebted to my misery for my Soul's health, and that I much desire it were some other more noble consideration than nessitie, should cause me to become an honest man. But since the means to save us are bestowed upon us, and that we choose them not, it is fitting that reason convince our sensibilities, causing us to agree to what is otherwise distasteful unto us. At the worst, we must at all times confess, that we cannot be said to perish, when we are safely cast on shore by some Shipwreck; and it may be, if God did not drive me, as he doth out of this life, I should never dream of a better. I will refer the rest to be related unto you at your return from Italy, with purpose to lay open my naked Soul unto you, together with my thoughts in the same simplicity they spring in me: you are the only Person from whom I expect relief; and I hold myself richer in the possession of your good opinion, than if I enjoyed the favours of all earthly Princes, and all the wealth of their Territories and Kingdoms. Truly this is the first time (since I writ unto you from Lions) I have made use of my hands; and I have received a hundred Letters from my Friends without answering one. Hereby (my Lord) you see, there is no other consideration (your self excepted) of force to cause me to break silence, since for all others I have lost the use of speaking. Yet I beseech you to think (notwithstanding all this) my affection to be neither penurious, nor ambitious. The riches I crave at your noble hands, are purely spiritual, and I am at this present in an estate, wherein I have more need to settle some order for the affairs of my Conscience, than to reflect upon the establishment of my worldly Fortunes. But (my Lord) to change discourse, and a little to retire myself from my pains, what do you thus long at Rome? Doth the Pope dally with us? and will he leave to his successor the glory of the best Election can be made? Is he not afraid, lest it be given out he hath some intelligence with his Adversaries, and that he taketh not the advice of the holy Ghost, in what concerneth the Church's Honour, for God's cause bring us with speed this news, provided it be the same the King demands, and all good men desire. I hope it shall not be said, you have spoken Italian all this while to no purpose, or that you can accuse his predictions, as erroneous, who never falsified his word with you, and who is perfectly: My Lord Your most humble servant, BALZAC. The 2. of July 1622. To the Lord Bishop of Air. For the true understanding of this Letter: it is necessary to be acquainted with the Gibbrige the French, residing at Rome, use to speak; who frame a new kind of Language to themselves, composed of Italian words, having only French terminations. LETTER IX. My Lord, I Think you will never be weary of going to Cortege, and that you will for ever have an apprehension of the Crepuscule all the days of your life; for it is, that you have long enough caused the curtains of your Caroche to be drawn in presence of those of Cardinals; and that you may well be (ere now) acquainted with the Court of Rome, even from the Papale subjects, to those who desire to be admitted into the first degrees of sacred Orders. For my part, I should soon be weary in seeing daily one and the same thing, and in beginning the day from the first hour of night? What can there be so pleasing in the place where you are, that should deserve to stay you there? In fair weather the Sun is dangerous: half the year they breathe nothing but smoke, and in the rest, it raineth so frequently, that it seemeth some Sea hangeth over the City of Rome. But it may be you take pleasure in seeing the Pope, a body over shaken, and trembling with age and infirmities, who hath no other thing than Ice in his veins, and Earth in his Visage. I cannot imagine how this object can afford you any great contentment; or that you are much taken with the society and Company of the great multitude of my Lords his assistants, partaking of the one and the other signature: Nor can it be Carriofile whom you so often overrule, who should entreat you to stay there for the furtherance of his affairs. For being (as he is) a Popeline, who, of the Family of the Cardinal Ludovisio, who affords him his full share, it cannot be but well with him. I conclude therefore (my Lord) that I cannot guests the cause of your stay, if you take not the pains to tell me. For to imagine Monsieur de Luzon not to be as yet a Cardinal, were no less than to wrong the King's credit, and to judge amiss of public acknowledgement. I am here at the Antipodes, where there is not any thing but Air, the Earth, and a River; One had here need make above ten days journeys to find a man: wherefore having in this place no other communication but with the dead, I can relate no other news unto you, but of the other World. Is it not true, that he, who would have burnt his shirt, had it known his secrets, would hardly have been drawn to make his general confession? and that Alexander the Great would with much difficulty have been induced to purchase Paradise by humility? What say you of poor Brutus? who killed his Father, thinking to confound a Tyrant, and no less to repent himself at his death, in having loved Virtue, than if he had followed an unfaithful Mistress. Do you not yet remember the first Counsels, whose words smelled of Garlic and green roasted meat? think you not they made use of their hands instead of feet, being rough and dirty as they were, and wore Shoes instead of Gloves? These men were not acquainted either with Sugar, Musk, or Amber-greice. They had not (as then) any gods of Gold, or Goblets of Silver. They were ignorant in all sorts of sciences, save only to make War, and to have domination over men. I lately read how in Venice (in former times) men of greatest quality, usually married with common women, and that either the good Husbandry, or the mutual correspondency was such among the Citizens, that one Wife served three brothers. Think you that Francis the first is called Great, for having vanquished the Swisses? or to distinguish him from his Grandchild? or by reason of his great nose? Give me reason why Selim slew his Father, his Brothers, and Nephews? and after all this died but once? Were it not that I fear to be wearisome unto you, I should never make an end of my news, yea, I should be sufficiently stored to entertain you my whole life-time. But it is high time that unprofitable speeches give place to Pious Cogitations; and that I leave you among your Myrtles and Orange-trees, where you are never better accompanied, than when you are alone. I will here conclude, rather out of discretion, then for want of matter: But this shall not be till after I have said, that of all those who have any share in your favours, there is not any who is therein more proud of his good Fortune, than myself, or more really than I am, My Lord Your most humble and most affectionate servant, BALZAC. The 25. of Sept. 1622. To the Lord Bishop of Air from BALZAC. LETTER X. My Lord, THese times are fatal, for abating those heads appearing above others, and for changing the face of things: and questionless, if this course still continue, the King will either be forced to seek out a new people, or to resolve himself for a solitary Reign: All the Court is black with mournings: there is not a Frenchman who doth not either weep, or is bewailed; and War causeth only slight sorrows; yet even among those, whose loss we lament, there are always some we willingly leave, and whose Catastrophe may serve us as a consolation for the rest. Without further ambiguity, the man is seized on, who grew lean by the welfare of others, and who was one of those pale and sober persons, born for the Ruin of States; there is some appearance he died as well of the Purples of M. L. C. D. R. as of his own, and that you sent him his first surfeit from Rome; where he truly considering how there was no longer any favour to follow, nor Favourite to flatter, he would leave to live any longer, as though he had no further affairs in this World. Howsoever it be, we are herein to acknowledge the finger of God, and to confess, he doth sometimes punish Malefactors, without observing the forms of Justice; at least it cannot be denied, but God loveth the Queen extraordinarily, since he reserveth to himself the revenge of all her injuries, nor will let any thing remain in the World, which may prove distasteful unto her. If she desired the Sea should be calm in the most stormy days of Winter; or two Autumns to happen each year: I am confident of Nature's change, in conformity to her will: nor is there any thing she cannot obtain of Heaven, which granteth the very prayers she hath not as yet begun. I am here some hundred and fifty leagues from these fine things, where I study to solace myself as much as possibly I can; and to this end, I make myself drunk every day: But to free you from any sinister opinion of what I say, I assure you it is only with the water of Pougues, which surely would be Ink, were it black; so that I surfeit without sinning against the rules of Sobriety, and any frolicks are as Austeer as the Minims fastings. I have a great desire to enter covenants with my Physicians, whereby it might be granted, that all agreeable things should be wholesome, and that one might speedily recover his health by the scent of flowers instead of their Medicines, which are ordinarily second miseries succeeding the former: yet without spending much time, or trouble; I have made all impossibilities passable with me, and in the case I am, I would swallow fire, were it prescribed me for the recovery of my health. It is no small advantage not to be reduced to these terms, no more than you are, and not to know what it is to suffer, or complain. So is it for the general good of the whole World, that GOD hath given you this vigorous health to employ it in the service of Kings, and in your Vigilancy over the conduct of people. As for me, who should not happily make so good use thereof as I ought, and who am far more inclinable to Vice, than to Virtue: I hold it convenient I be always crazy, and that GOD take from me the means to offend him, whereof otherwise I should infallibly make but overmuch use: I write not at this present to M. it is all I can do to finish this Letter in haste, and to tell you what you long since knew, that I am my Lord, Your most humble passionate Servant, BALZAC. October the 15. 1622. To the Lord Bishop of Air, from BALZAC. LETTER XI. MY LORD, I Am infinitely glad to understand by your Letters, of your safe return into France, and that you have now no further use of Ciphers, for the expression of your mind to my Lord, the Cardinal of Richelieu. I shall at your pleasure (I hope) understand the particulars of your Voyage, and what you have seen at Naples and Venice, worthy your content. This is not out of any great curiosity I have for these things, or that I admire dumb Marble, or Pictures being no way so beautiful as the Persons: These trifles are to be left for the Vulgar, with whom the same Objects limit their imagination and sight: and who (of all times) reflect, merely upon the present, and (of all things) only upon the appearance: but for my part I am of a contrary opinion. There are not in the whole World any Palaces so sumptuous, or of so high a structure, which are not far under my thoughts, and I conceive in my spirit a poor hermitage, to the foundation whereof many more materials are projected, than were requisite for establishing a Republic. You see here, my Lord, how in some sort I play the Prince amidst my poverty, and with what insolency I scorn, what the World so much admireth; I am as haughty, as though I were a Minister of State, or as if this last change in the Kingdom had been made for me alone: yet you know well, that I call not myself L.M.D.L.U. and how if there had been none but myself to assault, my Lord the Comte of Schambergs Virtue, it still had continued in the same place where it hath been reverenced of all men. Each man hath his several censure concerning this great news, but whatsoever they can say, I assure myself there can nothing befall that Lord, whereto he is not at all times prepared, and that he hath lived too long, not to know that Fortune, taketh special delight in dallying with the affairs of France, and hath from all Ages made choice of our Court, as the Theatre of her follies. If he had not been provided of the government of this City, and what time the King commanded him to come thence, his fall had been more fearful than it was, but it is Gods will that Augolesme should be the fatal retreat of the afflicted, and truly all things well considered, it is no great down-come to light upon a Mountain: Now truly if there be any thing amiss in the administration of the King's moneys, he cannot be taxed for introducing this error; for he found it there: and besides, the necessity of the times have ever resisted his good intentions, and have hindered the appearance of what he had in his heart, for the reformation of disorders; It is now necessary the King undertake so glorious a design, and set his hand to that part of the State, which hath more need of redress than all the rest. But, he is first to begin by the moderation of his Spirit, and he shall after gain their loyalty, who serve him. If those Princes our Elders have seen, had considered, that the Coin coming into their Exchecquers, was no less than the blood, and tears of their poor Subjects, whom they have often forced to fly into Forests, and pass the Seas to save themselves from Taxes and impositions: they would have been more scrupulous and cautelous how they had touched upon so dreadful undertake: at least, they would not have been at once both indigent and unjust, nor have amazed all the Princes of Europe, who could never conceive why they borrowed their own moneys of their Treasurers, who receive their revenues, as they purchase their own strong places from their Governors, who command therein. Truly, it is very strange the Great Turk can intrust his Wives to the vigilancy of others, and assure themselves their Chastity shall thereby be conserved; yet, that Kings know not to whom they may safely encharge their Treasures. But the true reason is, for that an honest man is by so much more difficultly found, than an Eunuch, by how much Miracles are more rare than Monsters. Great Fortitude is requisite for the attaining of honesty, but the will only sufficeth to become covetous, and the most harmless have hands, and may happen to have temptations. Were it my part to play the reformer, and to preach before the Prelates, I would enlarge myself upon this Subject, but in the condition wherein I stand, it is sufficient I approve not the ill, and have a good opinion of the present State: provided, the report be current, that there is now no obstacle between the King and the Queen his Mother, likely to hinder them from meeting; and that things are reduced to those terms, wherein Nature hath placed them: Then will the face of the State shortly resume the same beauty the late King bestowed thereon, and God will with a full hand pour his Graces upon so just a Government. Though my Lord the Cardinal of Richelieu were only near public affairs, without touching them, there is no question but he would bring a blessing to all France, and though he intimated nothing to the King, yet that he would at least inspire whatsoever were necessary for the good of his Subjects, and Dignity of his Crown. I will reserve to speak as I ought of this rare Virtue, till my great Work come to light. Where I will render every man his right, and condemn even those as culpable, whom the Parliaments crouch unto; There shall it be where I will canvas the Court of Rome, (which I always separate from the Church) with as much force, and freedom as he used, from whose mouth we have seen lightning to issue, and Thunder to be thrown out. There is not any thing of so fair assemblance, whose deformities I unmask not. There is nothing of eminency from one end of the World to the other, I over-turn not. I will discover the defects of Princes and States. I will expugn Vice wheresoever it is hidden, and with what Protection soever it is palliated. To conclude, I will pass as severe a Judgement as was that of the Areopagites in times past, or of the Inquisition at this present. Yet, my Lord, in this my common censure, I will take a particular care of the Queen Mother's reputation, and will let all the World see, that what heretofore others have called Virtue, is the natural habitude of this great Princess. In the place for others appointed for Afflictions and Calamities, She shall together with the King, receive only Flowers and Crowns; and as her innocence had saved her from the general deluge, had she then lived; so will it cause her to Triumph in my Story amidst the ruins of others. I have not the faculty of Flattering, but the Art only to speak the Truth in good terms; and the Actions you see, had need be more eminent than those you have read of, if I equal them not by my Words. This being thus (my Lord, as I hope, you doubt not;) imagine in what terms I will Justify the R. D. L. R. and in what sort I will entreat her Enemies: if I have a mind to it, I will make it one day appear that C. C. hath been as cruel a Monster as those who devour whole Cities, and denounce War against all Humane and Divine things. One will imagine by the marks I give him, that R. was a Magician, which daily pricked some Image of Wax with needles, and who disturbed the repose of all Prince's Courts of his time by the force of his Charms. The truth is, I will do great matters, provided my courage quail not on his part, whence I expect it should come▪ and to whom, by a kind of strict Obligation, I am excited to undertake this Judgement, which will be no less famous than that of Michael Angelo. At our next meeting I will more particularly acquaint you with the whole design of my work, with its order, ornaments, and artifice; you shall there see whether or no I make good use of those hours I sometimes obtain from the Tyranny of my Physicians, and lingering Maladies. In the interim do me the honour to love me still; nor think I speak the Court-language, or that I compliment with you, when I assure you I am more than any man living, My Lord, Your most humble servant, BALZAC. The 28. of December, 1622. Another Letter to the Lord Bishop of Air. LETTER XII. My Lord, IT must needs be, your Oath of Fealty doth yet continue, and that the Ceremony you are employed in, be longer than I imagined, since I have no news from you: for I must freely confess unto you, I am not so slightly persuaded of myself, as to have any thought, as that you neglect me. Besides, I am certain that public Faith, and what hath ever been sworn upon Altars and the Gospels, are not more inviolable than your word, and that it will stand good, though Heaven and Earth should start; Besides, I can less conjecture, that you are hindered by want of health, whereof I hope you enjoy so large a treasure, as it is like to continue as long as the World lasteth. It were a wrong to me, should you allege sickness, and no less than to wrangle with me for a thing in such manner appropriated to myself, as I cannot communicate it to any other. I will therefore imagine whatsoever you will have me to think; you may love me if you please, without taking the pains to tell me so: But for my part, how importunate soever I am herein, yet am I resolute to write unto you, till you cut off my hands, and to publish so long as I have a tongue, that I am Sir, Your most humble, and most affectionate servant, BALZAC. The 16. of December, 1622. To the Lord Bishop of Air from BALZAC. LETTER XIII. My Lord, YOu cannot lose me, how little care soever you take to keep me; The Heavens must necessarily infuse new affections in me, and utterly alter my inclinations, if they intent to inhibit me to be your servant. Yet doth it not a little grieve me, you do not testify what I know you believe; and that having the power to make me happy by the least of your Letters, I have more trouble to impetrate this favour, than I should find in the obtaining of three Declarations from the King, and as many Briefs from his Holiness. But all this notwithstanding, I cannot be persuaded you place me among matters of mere indifferency, or that you no longer remember what you have promised with so large protestations, which I hold to be most Authentical. I rather, for the satisfaction of my thoughts, will be confident you have resolved to love me in secret, thereby to avoid all jealousy; and will believe there is more cunning, than coldness in your silence; were it otherwise, had I really lost your Favours, certainly I would not survive so deep a discomfort, since there is not any banishment, shipwreck, or sinister fortune, I could not rather require at God's hands, than such a loss: But these discourses are as much as to suppose impossibilities, or to invent dreams: I will therefore leave them, to let you understand some news from me. I can only say, the Air of this Country is not offensive unto me: for to assure you that I am in health were too great a boldness; I confess, I have now & then some pleasing pauses, & I enjoy certain good hours, which make me remember my former health: But there is great difference between this imperfect estate of mine, and a constitution comparable to that of yours, who have life sufficient to vivify thirty such worn bodies as mine, which needs but one blast to blow it down. Howsoever, my Physicians have promised to make me a new man, and to restore unto me what I have lost. I should be well contented they were men of their words, and that I might at my ease attend all occasions, to testify how passionately I am, Your most humble and most affectionate Servant, BALZAC. The 6. of Jan. 1623. To the Reverend Bishop of Air from BALZAC. LETTER XIIII. My Lord, SInce you have as much care of me as of your Diocese, and in that I perceive you would imagine some defect, even in the felicities you expect in Heaven, should you be saved without me; I will use my utmost endeavours to cause that your desire of my Spiritual good prove not unprofitable, and to make myself capable of the good counsel you gave me by your Letter. True it is, I have been so long habituated in vice, I have almost utterly forgotten my state of Innocence, so as a particular Jubilee for myself only, were no more than necessary: On the other side, the pious motions I have, are so poor and imperfect, that of all the flames the Primative Christians have felt and endured, I should hardly support the mere smoke. Yet (my Lord) even in this bad state wherein I now stand, do I expect a Miracle from my Maker, who is only able to raise Children out of the hardest Quarries; nor will I believe his mercy hath finished what he intendeth to effect for the good of Mortals: For since he hath placed Ports upon the shores of most dangerous Seas, and given some kind of dawning, even to the darkest nights; it may be there is yet something reserved for me in the secrets of his Providence; and that if hitherto I have ranged out of the right way, he will not any longer suffer me to stray, or tyre myself in the tract of vice. And truly, I must here, though much to my shame, acknowledge the truth unto you, with those few drops of corrupt blood (which is all I have left) I am plunged in all those passions, wherewith the soundest bodies are pressed: yea, Tyrants, who burn whole Cities upon the first motion of rage, and choler, and who allow themselves to act what unlawful thing soever, do nothing more than myself, save only to enjoy those things I desire, and to execute those designs remaining only in my will, I wanting their power to perpetrate the like: Nor can the Fever, the Stone, nor the Scytica, as yet tame my rebellious spirit, or cause it to become capable of Discipline; and if time had added years to the rest of my infirmities, I verily think I should desire to behold unclean sights with spectacles, such I mean as you utterly avoid, and cause myself to be carried to those lewd places, whether alone I were unable to go: Insomuch that as there are divers paintings which are necessarily to be clean defaced, to take away the defects; So I much fear, nothing but Death can stay the current of my crimes, unless by your means I enter into a second life, more fruithfull than the former. I therefore speak in good sadness, set your whole Clergy to prayer, and command a public Fast in the same strictness, as though you were to impetrate at the hands of God, the conversion of the great Turk, or of the Persian Emperor. Propound to yourself Monsters in my will to be mastered, and an infinity of Enemies to overcome in my passions, and after all this you will bear me witness, I have not made matters greater than they are, and save only a certain imperfect desire I have to repent, and a kind of small resistance, I sometimes make against the beginnings and buddings of vice, there is not any difference at all between myself and the greatest sinnet living: But take not (I beseech you) this I write, as a mark of my humility, for you never read a truer relation: and what St. Paul spoke in the person of Mankind, accusing himself of other men's offences, is my own simple disposition, which I deliver into the hands of the Divine Justice. I hate myself; yet true it is, I find so great coldness in the performance of pious actions, that my mind seemeth to be imprisoned when at any time my duty draweth me to Church, and when I am there, I rather seek diversions and temptations, than instruction or edification: Even mental prayer being an Oblation for all hours, and which may be performed without either burnt Incense, or bloody Sacrifices, and the finishing whereof is so near the first motion; is to me as laborious, as the Pilgrimage of Mount Serrat, or of our Lady of Loretta, would be to another. I am always sad, but never penitent; I love solitariness, but hate austerity; I side with honest men, but reside with the wicked: if at any time some small rays of Devotion reflect upon my crazy conscience, they are of so short continuance, and so weak, as they neither afford me light nor heat, so as all this being but accident, and mere change, doth not any way merit the name of good, and it were great wrong to Virtue, to rank it in the number of casual occurrents. You are therefore necessarily to labour for my conversion, which I am unable to effect of myself, and that for my part, I only afford matter whereon to make an honest man. If there be certain Saints whom we owe to the tears and intercession of others, and if some Martyrs have made their very Executioners Companions of their Glory, I may well hope you will be a powerful means to save me with yourself; and that one day (happily) I may be mentioned among the rest of your Miracles. Sir, I know your life to be so spotless, as though you were incorporeal, or never loved any other than that Supreme beauty, from whence all others are derived: Wherefore there is no question but so rare a Virtue may easily impetrate at God's hands any supplication you shall exhibit, nor is there any doubt he hath (for you allotted) other limits to his bounty, save his only omnipotency. You shall yet at the least find in me Obedience & Docility, if I have not attained any stronger habitudes. You shall have to do with one who amidst the corruption of this Age, wherein well nigh all Spirits revolt from the Faith, cannot be drawn to believe any truth to be greater, than what he hath understood from his Nurse or Mother. If in what concerneth not Religion, I have sometimes had my private sense and opinion, I do with my very heart leave the same, to the end, to reconcile myself with the Vulgar; and lest I should appear an enemy to my Country for a slight word, or matter of small importance. If φφφφ had held himself to this Maxim, he might securely have lived among men, nor had he been prosecuted with all extremity, as the most savage of all beasts: But he rather chose to make a Tragical end, than to expect a death, wherewith the World was unacquainted, or to execute only ordinary actions. So far as I can learn, or if the report which passeth be current, he had a conceit he might one day prove to be that false Prophet, wherewith the declining age of the Church is threatened: and though he be but of mean extraction, and poor fortunes, he was notwithstanding so presumptuous, as to imagine himself to be the man, who is to come with armed forces to disturb the quiet of consciences, and for whom the infernal Ministers keep all the Treasures yet hidden in the earth's entrails. So long as he contented himself in committing only humane faults, writing as yet with an untainted Pen, I often told him, his Verses were not passable; and that he was in the wrong to esteem himself an understanding man. But he perceiving that the rules I propounded to him, for bettering his abilities, to be oversharp and severe for him, and finding small hope of arriving whether I desired to conduct him, he perhaps thought best to seek out some other way to bring himself into a credit at Court, hoping of a mean Poet to become a mighty Prophet: So that (as it is generally reported) after he had perverted a number of silly Spirits, and long showed himself in the throng of the ignorant multitude; he in conclusion did as one, who should cast himself into a bottomless pit, on purpose to gain the reputation of being an admirable Jumper. My Lord, you remember (I doubt not) what our joint opinion hath been of such like persons, and the weakness you showed there was in the principles of their wicked Doctrine. Now truly how extravagant soever my Spirit hath been, I have yet ever submitted the same to the Authority of GOD'S Church, and to the consent of Nations; and as I have always held, that a single drop of water, would more easily corrupt, than the whole Ocean: So have I ever assured myself, that particular opinions could never be either so sound, or solid, as the general Tenets. A silly man, who hath no further knowledge of himself, than by the relations of others, who is at his wit's end, and wholly confounded in the consideration, or reflection upon the meanest works of Nature; who after the revolution of so many Ages, is not able to assign the cause of a certain Rivers overflow; nor of the intervales, or good days of a Tertian Ague: How dare he presume to speak confidently of that Infinite Majesty, in whose presence the Angels themselves cover their faces with their Wings, and under whom the very Heavens crouch, even to the Earth's lowest concavities. There is no other thing remaining for us, save the only glory of Humility, and Obedience, within the limits whereof, we ought to contain ourselves: And since it is most certain, that Humane reason reacheth not to so high a pitch as to attain the perfection of Knowledge, we ought instead of disputing, or questioning points of Religion, to rest satisfied in the adoration of the Mysteries: for doubtless, if we strive to enter further thereinto, or search for a thing utterly unknown to all Philosophy, and concealed from the Sages of this World, we shall by such profane curiosity gain only the dazzling of our eyes, and confusion of our senses: God by the light of his Gospel hath revealed unto us divers Truths, whereof we were utterly ignorant; but he reserveth for us far greater Mysteries, which we shall never comprehend, but only in that Kingdom, which he hath prepared for his chosen Servants, and by the only vision of his Face. In the mean time: to the end, to augment the merit of our Faith, and the more to perfectionate our Piety, his pleasure is, that Christians should become as blind Lovers, and that they have not any other desires, or hopes, but for those things above the reach of their understandings, and which they can no way comprehend by Natural reason. So soon as the time you have prefixed me, shall be expired, and the Primroses make the Spring appear, I will not fail to wait upon you, and diligently to address myself to the collection of your grave and important Discourses, and to become an honest man by hearing, since that is the Sense appointed for the apprehension of Christian virtues, and whereby the Son of God was conceived, and his Kingdom established among men. But it is needless to use any artifice, or that you paint the place of your abode in so glorious colours, thereby to invite me to come: For though you preached in the Desert, or were you hidden in such a corner of the World, where the Sun did only shine upon the sterile Sands and steep Rocks: you well know, I should esteem myself happy where you are. Your Company being of power to make either a prison, or proscription pleasing unto me; and wherein I find the Loover and the whole Court, will add (to the description you have made of Air) divers beauties which Geographers have not hitherto observed, as being far greater, than others, though more secret. Those Mountains which will not allow France and Spain to be one man's, and under which the Rain and Thunder are framed, will appear to me more huge, than they formerly did, when I first saw them: your waters, which heretofore cured divers diseases, will even raise the dead, if you once bless them; and doubtless this people, always bred up to bear Arms, and who as the Fire and Iron is only destinated for the use of War, hath (ere now) mollified their fierce humour by the moderation of your mild conduct. For my part (Sir,) I make account to become a new man under your hands, and to receive a second Birth from you. Truly, it would be a thing right happy to me, and in itself famous; if the like Spiritual health, proceeding from the garments and shadows of the Apostles, might happen unto me by approaching so holy a person; and if being your workmanship, and the Son of your Spirit, I should instantly resemble a Father so happily endowed with all those rare qualities and perfections, which are wholly deficient in me. BALZAC. To Mounsieur de la Motts Aigron. LETTER XV. YEsterday was one of those Sunless days (as you term them) which resemble that beautiful blind Maid, wherewith Philip the second fell in Love. Truly, I never took more pleasure in so private a solitariness; and though I walked in a large and open plain, whereof man could make no other use, but for two Armies to fight in: yet the shade the Heavens cast on all sides, caused me little to regard the shelter of Caves, or Forests. There was a general and quiet calm from the highest Region of the Air, even to the Superficies of the Earth: the waters of Rivers seemed as even and smooth as those of Lakes; and surely; if at Sea such a calm should for ever surprise ships, they could never be either safe, or sunk. This I say, on purpose to make you repent the loss of so a pleasant a day, for not coming abroad out of the City, as also to draw you sometimes out of your Angoulesme, where you tread levil with our Towers and Steeples, to come and take part of those pleasures wherein the ancient Princes of the World took delight: who usually refreshed themselves in Fountains, and lived on those fruits which Forests afford. Your friends are here in a small circle environed with Mountains, and where is yet remaining some few grains of that fair Gold whereof the first Age was composed. In truth, when the fire of War is flaming in the four corners of France, and that within a hundred paces hence, the whole Earth is covered with adverse Troops and Armies; they with mutual consent do always spare our Village. The Springtime in other places producing the besiegings of Forts and Cities, with other enterprises of War, and which for this dozen years hath been less looked for, in respect of the change of Seasons, then for any alteration of Affairs, suffers us to see no other thing but Violets and Roses. Our people are not contained in their primative innocence, either by fear of Laws, or Study of Sciences: They (to live uprightly) do simply follow their natural Bounty, and draw more advantage from their ignorance of Vice, than most of us do out of the knowledge of Virtue: so as in this Territory of two miles, they know not how to cozen any, save Birds and Beasts, and the pleading Language is as unknown here, as that of America, or of other parts of the World, which have escaped the avarice of Ferdinand, and the ambition of Isabel. Those things which hurt the health of man, or offend their eyes, are generally banished hence; Snakes nor Lizards are never seen here, and of creeping creatures we know no other but Melons and Strawberries. I intent not here to draw you the portrait of a palace, the workmanship whereof hath not been ordered according to the rules of architecture, nor the matter so precious as Marble and Purphire. I will only tell you that at the Gates there is a Grove, wherein at full noon there enters no more day than needs must not to make it night, and to cause all colours not to look black: so that between the Sun and the shade, there is a kind of third temper composed, which may well be endured by the weakest eyes, and hide the deformities of painted faces. The Trees here, are green to the very ground, as well with their own leaves, as with Juy which environs them: and as for the fruits wherein they are deficient, their branches are all beset with Turtle-Doves and Pheasants, and this at all times in the year. From thence I march into a Meadow, where I tread upon Tulipans and Anemons, having caused them to be mingled among other Flowers, to confirm my opinion I brought from my Travails, that French flowers are not so fair, as those of Foreign Countries. I (sometimes walk down into that Valley, being the secret part of my Desert, and which till now) was not known to any man: It is a Country to be wished for and painted. I have made choice thereof for my most precious occupations, there to pass the most pleasing hours of my life: The Trees and water never suffer this place to want couldness and verdure. The Swans which covered the whole River, are retired to this place of security: living in a Channel, which causeth the greatest talkers to take a nap, so soon as they come near; and on whose Banks I am always happy; be I merry, or melancholy: How short a time soever I stay there, I suppose I enter into my first innocency: my desires, my fears and hopes stop in a trice: all the motions of my Soul slacken, nor have I any passions remaining, or if I have any, I govern them as tame beasts. The Sun conveys its light thither, but never its heat. The place is so low, as it can only receive the last points of its beams: being therefore the more beautiful, in that they are less burning, and the light thereof altogether pure. But as it is myself who have discovered this new found Land; so do I possess it without any partner, nor would I share it with my own Brother. But in all other quarters under my command, there is not a man who Courts not his Mistress without control, nor servant of mine who is not Master; each one satisfying himself of what he loves, and spending the time at pleasure. And on the other side, when I see the Grass trodden down; and on the other the Corn full of Layers: I am well assured, it is neither Wind nor Hail, hath made this work, but only a Shepherd and his sweetheart. At which door soever I go out of my house, or on what side soever I turn mine eyes, in this pleasant Pathmos, I find the River of Charanton well meriting as much fame, as that of Tagus, and wherein, when the Beasts go to drink, they see the Heavens as clear as we do, and enjoy the same advantage, which elsewhere men have over them. Besides, this pure water is so in love with this petty Province, that it divides itself into a thousand branches, and makes an infinite of windings and turnings, as loath to leave and deprive itself of so pleasing a lodging; and when at any time it over-floweth, it is only to make the year more fertile, and to afford us means to catch Trout and Pikes, leaving them upon the levil; and which are so great and excellent, as they equal the Sea-Monsters; the Crocodiles of Nile, and all the supposed Gold rolling in those feigned Rivers, so much spoken of by Poets. The great Duke of Espernon comes hither sometimes for change of felicity, and to lay aside that austere virtue and splendour, which dazzleth the eyes of all men, to assume milder qualities, and a more accostable Majesty. This Cardinal likewise, by whom Heaven intends to act so high designs, and of whom you hear me daily speak, after the loss of his brother, who was such a one, as if he might have chosen him among all men, he would not have taken any other: after (as I say) having endured that loss, well deserving to draw tears from the Queen, he made choice of this place, here to exercise his patience, and to receive from God's hands, who loveth silence, and who is found in solitary retirements, what Philosophy affordeth not, nor is to be practised among the throng of people. I would enlarge myself upon other examples, to show you how my Village hath at all times been frequented by Heroical Hermits, and how the steps of Princes and great Siegniours, art (as yet) newly trodden in my ordinary paths. But the more to invite you to come hither; I suppose it sufficient to say, that Virgil and myself do here attend you: if therefore you be accompanied in this Voyage with your Muses; and other Manuscripts, we shall not need to entertain the time with Court news, nor with the german troubles. Let me not live, if ever I saw any thing comparable to your Spiritual Meditations, and if the least part of the work you showed me, be not of more worth than all Frankford Mart, and all those great Books which come to us from the North, bringing cold weather and Frosts along with them. I assure you the Precedent of THOU, who was as worthy a Judge of Latin Eloquence, as of the life and Fortunes of men; and who had left an exact History behind him, had he pleased to retract some things; made no small esteem of these my Countrymen: But I cannot as yet conceive what caused him to affect certain wits so contrary to his own, and who never were acquainted, nor did so much as dream of that Roman purity, you pursue with so great scrupulosity and exact diligence. You will let these men see I assure myself; yea, and those wise Transalpines themselves likewise, who think all such to be Scythians who are not Italians, even in what fashion they spoke in Augustus his age; yea, and in a time more clear from the corruption of good customs. In a word, besides the propriety of terms, and chastity of stile, which dareth a lustre to your elaborate writings, your conceits are so sublime, and so full of courage, that it is very probable the ancient Republic of Rome was adorned with the like, at what time it was victorious over the world, and when the Senate conceived insemblable terms, the Commandments they prescribed to greatest Princes, and the answers it addressed to all Nations on earth: I will speak further, when you appear where I expect you; and where instead of Flowers, Fruits, and Shades, which I prepare for you, I hope to receive from you all the riches of Art and Nature. In the interim (to use my Lord the Cardinal d'Ossats term) I bid you good night, and let you know, that if you seek excuses not to come, I am no longer Your most humble and faithful servant, BALZAC. The 26. September, 1622. To Mounsieur de bois Robert from BALZAC. LETTER XVI. SIR, I Was upon the point not to have written any more unto you, and to have contented myself in sending you single commendations, since I see my Letters procure you Enemies: and for that you are in daily contestation for defending them; if therefore you desire continuance of our conference in this kind, live henceforward reposedly, and reconcile yourself to choice wits, from whom I should be sorry you should separate yourself for my sake; it is far better to conceal a small truth, than to disturb a general peace; and I should hold my Eloquence as pernicious as the perfections of Helena, should it prove any cause of your quarrels. Since there have been found men who have carped at the World's composure, and spied spots in the Sun, it is very likely inferior things cannot be more perfect; and that there is nothing so absolutely approved, against which there hath not been some thing disputed, and certain weak reasons alleged. I confess I write as men build Temples and Palaces, and that I sometimes fetch my Materials a far off, as we are to make a voyage of two thousand Leagues, to transport the Treasures of America into Spain. But if Pearls be not precious because they grow not in the sands of Seine; or if in what I do, some condemn me, it sufficeth that I am not of their mind; if the worst come, I appeal to my Lord the Cardinal of Richelieu, of whose approbation I esteem more, than of popular favour, or applause of theatres. It is long since I understood from him that I exceeded others, not excepting even those who strive to aspire to a kind of Tyranny, and to usurp a more absolute Authority over wits, than is either lawful, or reasonable. This being so, I should much wrong that great person, on whose books God hath placed the Truth we seek after, as well as the Eloquence all of us imagine we have attained should I digress from his opinion, to regard what four or five of those composers of Romand of the Rose say, who have no other Language but Legends: if I would content myself with my Infant conceptions, or determined to write as an honest Woman should speak, they would happily find their own facility in my Works: though truly, if I take any pains therein, I assure myself they will sooner guests at, then gain my conceptions. But truly, he who purposeth to himself the Idea of perfection, and who labours for Eternity, ought not to let any thing escape his Pen, till after long and serious consultation with himself. Yet will I tell you, and all the World may easily understand, that my writings smell more of Musk and Amber, than of Oil, or sweat; whereas out of that great labouriousness they so much frame to themselves, there will infallibly arise obscurity, which none but the Blind can tax me with. But as for those fellows, it is always night with them, and they are rather to accuse their Mothers of their defects, and not colours, or the light: I endeavour (in what I may) to make all my conceptions popular, and to be intelligible among Women and Children, even when I speak of things beyond their Capacity: but if your friends suppose certain of my conceits to be overfar fetched, let them throughly observe, whether they transcend my subject, or their conceptions; or whither I go astray, or they loose sight of me: There are divers things above reason, which yet are not contrary thereto. An Heroical virtue making use of excesses and height of passions, goeth as far beyond vulgar Virtue, as it surmounteth Vice: we are not therefore to shut up all Wits within the same limits, nor presently to censure that as Exorbitant, which is only extraordinary: Otherwise we should resemble that poor Norvegian, who the first time he saw Roses, durst not touch them for fear of burning his fingers, and was much amazed to see (as he supposed,) Trees to bear fire: Surely as Novelty is not of force to make Monsters well featured, so ought it not to hinder our affections to excellent things, though unknown unto us. If for the understanding my language, it were necessary to learn two, or that Anxiety, Decrepitude, and the Irritaments of Despair, were familiar phrases with me; if I made use of Waves instead of Water, and evil Fates for ill fortune, or the Flower-de-luce for France; to the end to play the Poet in Prose; should I immolate myself to public scorn, and sail upon the Ocean in the stormical seasons of the year, if I should say, the Misericordious Justice of God, and his just Misericord; or pluck comparisons from Pliny; and could I not commend a King without the help of Alexander the Great, and Plutarcks' Worthies; if instead of well-speaking, I should translate Tacitus ill, and if in spite of him I should force him to deliver his opinion concerning all the affairs of this age, you then might rightly blame me from bringing follies so far off, and for taking so much pains to make myself ridiculous. But surely I should be the most innocent of all others, had I only offended therein; and I may safely say without vanity, that even the follies of my Infancy, were more serious than those sweet Rhetorical flowers: when all is said, since there is nothing but Religion can force us to believe what she pleaseth, and that Kings themselves have no power over Souls, I am well satisfied with the affection of my friends, and do willingly leave their judgements free to themselves. One Goodnight is more worth than all our Eloquence, and not to know the miseries of this life, is to be more learned than the Scorbonists and Jesuits. For my part, (despising the World as I do) I cannot much esteem myself, who make up one of the sickliest parts thereof; and I have so poor an opinion of my own sufficiency, as I little esteem the Talents of others. Think not then, I adore the workmanship of my hands, though I take as much pains therein, as did the ancient Carvers in counterfeiting their gods. But chose, it is the reason why I dislike them, and had I been a man of ten thousand Crowns rend, I would have given the half of it to a Secretary, only to hire him not to indite those Letters you have so much admired. The 15. February, 1624. The Letters of MONSIEUR de BALZAC. To my Lord Cardinal de la Valete; from Mounsieur D' BALZAC. The second Book. LETTER I. My LORD, WHilst you employ your hours in gaining hearts and Votes, and happily lay the foundation of some eminent enterprise: I here enjoy a reposedness not unlike that of the dead, and which is never roused but by Clorinda's kisses. If the Duke of Ossuna be chosen King of Naples, (as you write the report runneth) I find no strangeness in it. The World is so old, and hath seen so much, it can hardly spy any new matter; nor is there at this day any lawful Authority, whose Origin (for the most part) hath not been unjust. And on the other side the ill success of revolts are far more frequent than are the changes of States: and the same action, which hath no less than a Diadem for the aim, hath often an ignominious death for its end. Howsoever this happens, it shall not much trouble me, since the issue cannot be other than advantageous to this State. For God herein will either make it appear, that he is protector of Kings: or it falling out otherwise, yet at least it will weaken the Enemies to this Crown. But I hope you will not advise me to beat my brains upon those politic considerations; for should I do so, it were no less than to retract the resolution I had taken to look upon things passing among us and our neighbours, as I do on the History Japon, or the affairs of another World. I ought to surrender this humour to vulgar spirits, who interest themselves in all the quarrels of States and Princes, and who will always be parties, on purpose to put themselves into choler, and be miserable in the misfortunes of others. Truly we shall never have done, if we will needs take all the affairs of the World to heart, and be passionate for the public; whereof we make but a small part. It may be at this very instant wherein I write, the great Indian Fleet suffereth shipwreck within two leagues of Land: happily the great Turk hath surprised some Province from the Christians, and taken thence some twenty thousand Souls, to convey them to their City of Constantinople: It may be the Sea hath exceeded its limits, and drowned some City in Zealand. If we send for mischiefs so far off, there will not an hour pass, wherein some disconsolation, or other will not come upon us. If we hold all the men in the World to be of our affinity, let us make account to wear Mournings all our life. As mine experience is not great, so are my years not many: yet since I came into the World, I have seen so many strange accidents, and have understood from my Father such store of incredible occurrents, as I suppose there can nothing now happen, able to cause admiration in me. The Emperor Charles the fifth his Grandchild, born to the hopes of so many Kingdoms, was condemned to death, for having over-soon desired them. The natural subjects of the King of Spain, do at this day dispute with him for the Empire of the Sea; nor will they rest satisfied with their usurped liberty. Surely, we should hardly be drawn to believe these things upon the credit of others, and those in succeeding ages will with much difficulty be persuaded to receive them for truths; yet are these the ordinary recreations of Fortune, taking pleasure in deceiving Mankind, by events far opposite to all appearance; yea, and contrary to their judgements. Hath she not delivered over to the people's fury, the man whom she had formerly raised above the rest, to the end, we should not presume in greatest prosperities? And hath she not at the same time taken out of the Bastile, a Prisoner, to make him General of a Royal Army, thereby to oblige us not at any time to despair? I do here consider all this with a reposed spirit, and as Fables presented on the Stage; or Pictures in a Gallery. Now since the late Comet had like to have been as fatal unto me, as to the Emperor Rodolphus, in that my curiosity to see it, caused me to rise in my shirt, which gave me a cold all the Winter after, I am hereafter resolved not to meddle with any thing above my reach; but to refer all to GOD and Nature. So as Clarinda suffer me to serve her, and that I understand from her own mouth that she loves me, I will hearken to no other news, nor search a second Fortune. I therefore most humbly beseech your Lordship to excuse me, if upon these occasions lately presented, I cannot afford you my personal attendance, or refuse to follow you whither your resolution leads you; my Mistress having commanded me, to render her an account how I shed my blood, and enjoining me never to go the Wars, but when Muskets are charged with Cypress powder; I am rather contented you should accuse me of Cowardice, than she justly to charge me with disobedience. And after all this, tell me whether, or no, you think me to be in my right wits, and that I have not lost my reason, together with the respect I owe you. I herein do as a Delinquent; who fearing he should not be soon enough punished, puts himself into the hands of Justice, not staying either for the rack, or examination of Judges, for the discovery of a crime whereof he was never accused. I am well assured, that of all passions you have only those of Honour and Glory, & that your Spirits are so replenished therewith, as there is no place left either for love, hate, or fear. Yet do I withal consider, that it is a part of a wise man's felicity to reflect upon other men's follies: howsoever, if any word hath escaped me, which may offend your eyes, take it, I beseech you, as a means sent you from GOD for your farther mortification, in causing you to read things so distasteful unto you. You are necessarily to endure far greater crosses amidst the corruption of this Age: if you cannot live among the wicked, you must seek for another kind of World than this, and for more perfect creatures than Mortals. There will ever be poysnings beyond the Alps, Treasons at Court, and revolts in this Realm. Howsoever (my Lord) there will be love even in spite of you, so long as there are eyes and beauties in the World; yea, the Wise themselves will love, if they find Clorindaes', Diana's, and Cassandra's to be beloved. Fire seizeth sometimes on Churches and Palaces. God hath framed Fools and Philosophers of one and the same matter: And that cruel Sect which seeks to bereave us of the one half of ourselves, in seeking to free us from our passions and affections, instead of making a wise man, have only raised a Statue. I must therefore once again tell you that I love, since Nature will have it so; and that I am of the progeny of our first Parents: but I must withal inform you, that all my affections spring not from the distempers and diseases of my Soul; my inclination to serve you, having immortal reason, not momentary pleasure for its foundation, one day happily I shall no more be amorous, but will always remain My Lord, Your most humble and most affectionate servant, BALZAC. To the Lord Cardinal of Valete, Son to the Duke of Espernon. LETTER II. MY LORD, AT length they have done you right, and you now enjoy what you deserved from the first day of your Nativity: if there could be any thing added to man, who reckoneth Kings among his Predecessors, and whose inclinations happily are overgreat to live under the power of another; I should advise you to rejoice at this news; but being extracted as you are, from one of the most illustrious Origins on earth, and begotten by a Father, whose life is loaden with miracles; it sufficeth that you pardon Fortune, since it hath so happened that present necessity hath gained of her what she in right owed to your name. I know well that some will tell you, you are created Prince of such an Estate, as is bounded neither by Seas nor Mountains, and how the extent of your Jurisdiction is so illimitable, as were there many Worlds, they ought all of them to depend thereon as well as this. But I, who suffer not mine eyes to be dazzled by any other lustre than that of Virtue, and who do not so much as bestow the looking on, what most men admire; if I should esteem you either more great, or happy than you were, I should not have sufficiently profited under you, in the true understanding of you. Doubtless in the opinion of the Vulgar, it is an extraordinary Honour to be a prime person in a Ceremony, and to wear a Hat of equal esteem to Crowns and Diadems. Yet I presume you will pardon me, if I make bold to tell you, it is an honour can never oblige a wise man to envy you. For had you this point only above me, I should still be my own Master: Nor had I for your sake renounced that liberty, which was as dear to me as the Commonwealth of Venice. Upon the matter, to have none other Judge on Earth save only your reputation and conscience, and to have a great train of followers, some whereof are employed in the procuring your spiritual pleasures, others in the conduct of your temporal affairs, all this shall be still the same with you, and divers others whom you slight; but to perform good and virtuous actions, when you are assured they shall never come to the World's eye; to fear nothing but dishonest things; to believe death to be neither good nor bad in itself; but that if the occasion to embrace it be honourable, it is always more valuable than a long life: to have the reputation of integrity in your promises, in a time, when the most credulous have enough to do to confide on public Faith: This is it which I admire in you my Lord; and not your red Hat, and your fifty thousand Crowns rend; yet I will say, that for the honour of Rome, you ought to esteem of what she sends you. The time hath been when she would have erected Statues for you, and afforded you sufficient subject to have merited Triumphs: but those days being past, and since that Empire is no longer maintained by such means, yet ought you to rest satisfied with Honours of Peace, and accept (as a high favour) a Dignity the King of Spaine's Son hath made suit for. If there were nothing else in it, but that it causeth you to quit your Mourning-robes, to revest yourself with the colour of Roses, you can do no less than rejoice at such a change. Howsoever the nearest objects to your eyes, will not be so doleful as formerly they were, since there will be nothing upon you, which shall not be resplendent and glorious. I would willingly dilate this discourse, but the speedy departure of the Post will not suffer me; and besides, I being well assured, that if you esteem any thing in my Letters, it is not the multitude of words; I ought to be contented to end this, after my humble suit unto you, to love me always, since I am passionately My Lord, Your most humble, most obedient, and most faithful servant, BALZAC. To the Cardinal de Valette, from BALZAC. I here send you two Letters which were delivered me, to be conveyed unto you, the one from the Duke of Bavaria, the other from the Cardinal of Lerma. My Lord, you shall thereby perceive that your proposition hath afforded joy, both to the Victorious, and to the afflicted; and that the World receiveth a notable interest therein. since it augmenteth the contentment of Triumphs, and sweeteneth the harshness of retirement. LETTER III. My Lord, I Suppose you have understood of the Election of the Pope, some two days journeys from Paris; and that you will make no great haste to add your approbation to a thing already dispatched: I had sent a Post on purpose to advertise you thereof; but my Lord Ambassador thought it not fit, but hath encharged his own Messenger to advertise you of all things in your Voyage this way, and to give you account of all occurrents. This makes me think that the subject of your voyage ceasing, and the time of year being as yet somewhat troublesome, for the undertaking thereof, you will rather reserve it for a fitter season, when you may perform it with less disorder, and more advantageously for the King's service. My meaning is, that I would have you set forward about the end of Autumn, that you may spend here with us, one of these warm and springing Winters, laden with Roses, wholly reserved for our admirable Italic. And my Lord, though herein the consideration of my private interest may seem to make me speak thus, rather than my affection to your service; yet would I willingly tell you, that all kind of contentments attend you here, and if your great Spirit aspire to glorious things for the keeping it in action, it shall infallibly find them at Rome. In the interim, how short a while soever you stay here, you shall have the contentment to see France change some five, or six times. At your return you will hardly find any thing answerable to what you left there; they shall not be the same men you formerly saw, and all things will appear unto you, as the affairs of another Kingdom. But before the matter be grown to that head, it is fitting you reign here in Sovereignty, and become the Supreme Judge of three, or four Conclaves: And truly, it might so happen (my Lord) that I should do you some acceptable service in those great occasions, if I had my health; but to my great grief it is a happiness, for which I envy my Grandmother, and howsoever I have heretofore been little, or much estimable: I confess, that at this present, I am but the half of what I was. It is therefore in vain to expect works of any great value from me, or that you importune me to take pains for the Public; for in Conscience what high designs can a man have, between the affliction of diseases, and the apprehension of Death? The one whereof doth never forsake me, and the other daily affrights me; or how can you imagine I should conceive eminent matters, who am ready to die at every instant. True it is, that the necessity to obey you, which I have always before mine eyes, is an extraordinary strong motive: but (not to dissemble) the impossibility of my performance is yet more forcible; and so long as I continue in the state I now am, I cannot promise you so much as the History of the Kingdom of * A little principality in France. Yuelot; nor that of the Papacy of Campora, though it continued only one half quarter of an hour. From Rome this 27. of February 1622. Another Letter unto Cardinal de la Valette from BALZAC. LETTER IU. My Lord, YOur Cashkeeper hath newly brought me the sum you commanded him to deliver unto me. I would willingly show sufficient thankfulness for this high favour: but besides that your benefits are boundless, and that you are so gracious an obliger, that it doth even augment the value of your bounty, I should seem over-presumptuous to think any words of mine valuable to the least of your actions. It shall therefore suffice me to protest unto you, that the bounty, wherewith the Letter I received from you, is so stored, (being of force to infuse Love and Fidelity in the hearts of very Barbarians,) shall work no less effect in the spirit of a person, who hath learned both by Nature and Philosophy not to be ingrateful. Since I find my interest within my duty, I must necessarily love you (if I hate not myself) and be an honest man by the very Maxim of the wicked. Yet is not this last consideration the cause chiefly obliging me to your service: For though I acknowledge divers defects in myself, yet may I without vanity affirm, I was never besotted with so base an attraction as that of gain. I therefore reflect upon your favours in their naked purity, and the esteem you make of me, is to me by so much a more strong obligation, than all others, in that it regardeth my merit, and not my instant poverty, and proceedeth from your judgement, which is far more excellent, than your fortunes are eminent. Herein (my Lord,) it is manifest, that all your inclinations are magnificent: for you knowing me neither to be fit to make the Father of a Family, nor to solicit causes at the Councel-table, nor well to ride post: you make it appear, you are of the right blood of Kings, who are only rich in superfluous things. Truly, it were a hard matter to guests what in this World is the true use of Pearls and Diamonds; or why a Picture should cost more than a Palace; but only pleasure, which to satisfy the inventions of Art, are daily employed, and nature to that end produceth whatsoever is rare, being indeed a thing more noble than necessiy, she being contented with small matters, ever preferring profit before pleasure. And I will here stop, lest I speak too much to my own advantage: And if I have already incurred that crime, I beseech you to believe it hath not been with purpose to praise myself, but only to extol your liberality: Yet will I make bold to acquaint you, how I employ your money, and yield you a more particular account of the affairs I dispatch for you here at Rome: First, in this hot Month I seek all possible remedies against the violence of the Sun. I have a Fan which wearieth the hands of four Grooms, and raiseth a wind in my Chamber, which would cause shipwreck in the main Sea; I never die but I die Snow in the Wine of Naples, and make it melt under Melons. I spend half my time under water, and the rest on Land: I rise twice a day, and when I step out of my bed, it is only to enter into a Grove of Orange-trees, where I slumber with the pleasant purling of some twelve Fountains: but if occasion be offered to go further once in a week, I cross not the street but in a Caroche, passing still in the shade between Heaven and Earth: I leave the smell of sweetest flowers unto the Vulgar, as having found the invention to eat and drink them. The Spring time never parts with me all the year, either in variety of distilled waters, or in Conserves. I change perfumes according to the diversity of seasons; some I have sweeter, others stronger: And though the Air be a thing Nature bestows for nothing, and whereof the poorest have plenty, yet that, I breath in my Chamber, is as costly unto me as my house-rent. Besides all this, I in quality of my Lord your Agent, am almost daily feasted: and there whilst others fill themselves with substantial and most ponderous cates; I, who have no great appetite, make choice of such Birds as are crammed with Sugar and nourish myself with the spirit of Fruits, and with a meat called jelly. My Lord, these are all the services I yield you in this place, and all the functions of my residence near his holiness; and I hold myself particularly obliged now the second time to thank you for this favour: for by your means I enjoy two things seldom suiting together; a Master and Liberty; and the great rest you allow me, is not the least present you please out of your Nobleness to afford me. Your Grace's most humble, most obedient, and most faithful servant, BALZAC. From Rome 15. of July, 1621. To the Lord Cardinal de Valette from BALZAC. LETTER V. My Lord, WIthin the Deserts of Arabia, nor in the Seas entrails, was there ever so furious a Monster found, as is the Sciatica: And if Tyrants, whose memories are hateful unto us, had been stored with such instruments for effecting their cruelties; surely I think it had been the Sciatica the Martyrs had endured for Religion, and not the fire, and biting of wild beasts. At every sting it carries a poor sick person even to the borders of the other World, and causeth him sensible to touch the extremities of life. And surely, to support it long, a greater remedy than Patience is no less than requisite, and other forces than those of man. In the end GOD hath sent me some ease, after the receipt of an infinite of remedies, some whereof sharpened my grief, and the rest assuaged it not. But the violence of my pain being now past, I begin to enjoy such rest, as weariness and weakness affordeth to overtired bodies. And though I be in a state of health, far less perfect than those who are found, yet measuring it by the proximity of the misery I have endured, and the comparison of those pains I have suffered: I am right glad of my present Fortune, nor am I so hardy, to dare as yet complain of my great weakness remaining. To speak truth, I have no better legs than will serve to make a show; and should I undertake to walk the length of my Chamber, my trouble would be no less, than if I were to pass the Mountains, and cross all Rivers I encounter. But, to the end to change Discourse, and to let you see things in their fair shape; you are to understand, that in this plight wherein I stand, (being sufficient to cause you to pity me four hundred leagues off:) I am on the one side become so valiant, as not to fly, though I were pursued by a whole Army; and on the other, so stately, that if the Pope should come to visit me, I would not conduct him so far as the Gates. This is the advantage I draw from my bad legs, and the remedies arising in my bed, wherewith I endeavour to comfort myself without the help of Physics. You will (I fear) say, I might well have forborn to entertain you with these impertinencies; nor am I ignorant that perfect felicities, such as yours, desire not to be disquieted, either by the complaints of the distressed, or by the consideration of distasteful things: But it is likewise true, that the first loss we endure in pain falls upon our judgement, and the body hath such a proximity with the Soul, that the miseries of the one, do easily slide into the other. But what reason soever I have to defend my evil humour, yet must it necessarily give way to your contentment; and of the two passions wherewith I am assaulted, obey the stronger. I will therefore be no longer sad, but for others, and will hold it fit I make you laugh upon the subject of XXXXX. to whom you lately addressed your Letters. You may please to remember one of their names to be A. the other B; yet it is not sufficient only to know so much, but I must likewise inform you somewhat of their shape and stature. The first I speak of, is so gross, as I verily think he will instantly die of an Apoplexy; and the other so little, as I would swear that since he came into the World he never grew, but at the hairs end: afore any indifferent Judges, an Ape would sooner pass for a man than this Pigmy; nor will I believe he was made after the image of God, left therein I should wrong so excellent a Nature. Besides, it were an easier task to raise the dead, than to make this man's teeth white; he hath a Nose at enmity with all others: and against which there is no possible defence but Spanish Gloves. What can I say more, there is no part of his body that is not shameful, or wherein Nature hath not been defective. Yet notwithstanding one of the fairest Princesses of Italy, is by a solemn contract condemned to lodge night by night with this Monster. When you chance to see this man together with the other great bellied beast, who stuffs a whole Caroche, you will presently suppose God never made them to be Princes; and that it is not only as much as to abuse the obedience of free persons, but even to wrong the meanest Grooms, to give them Masters of this stamp. Now though the party you wot of, do in some sort represent the latter person, yet is there still some small difference between his actions and the others. The great VW. is newly parted from this Court, where he hath not received from his Holiness his expected contentment. His design was to break the Marriage his Brother hath contracted, upon some slight appearance of Sorcery, wherewith he deemed to dazzle the World's eye, and ground the nullity of an action, which was by so much the more free, in that the parties, who performed it, sought not the consent of any to approve it. In conclusion, after the loss of much time, and many words, he is gone without obtaining any thing, save only the Pope's benediction; and as for me, I remain much satisfied to see Justice so exact at Rome, that they will not condemn the Devil himself wrongfully. I have heard how in some places half hour Marriages are made, the conditions whereof are neither digested into writing, nor any memory thereof reserved; but of these secret mysteries, there are no other witnesses, save only the Night and Silence: And though the Court of Rome approveth them not, yet doth she shut her eyes, fearing to see them. I am resolved not to be long in the description of K.K.K. whom you know much better than myself: Yet thus much I will say, that since Nero's death, there never appeared in Italy a Comedian of more honourable extraction: And surely to make the Company at this present in France complete, his personage were sufficient: He makes Verses, he hath read Aristotle, and understands Music, and in a word he hath all the excellent qualities unnecessary in a Prince. I know here a Germane, called S. to whom he giveth an annual pension of a thousand Crowns, assigned unto him upon an Abbey during life; this he hath done, not that he intendeth to use his service in his counsel, or with purpose to employ him in any important negotiation for the good of his affairs: his only ambition is to have him make a book, whereby it might appear how those of M M M. are lineally descended from Julius Caesar. I should be glad he would yet aim at some higher, or more eminent race, and that he would purchase a second fable at the like rate he paid for the first. I would willingly give him his choice of the Medes, Persians, Greeks, or Troyans', which of these he would have of his Kindred, and without the relying upon the Authority of tradition, or testimony of Stories: I would draw his descent from Hector, or Achilles, which he best liked. There are certain Princes who are necessarily to be deceived, if you mean to do them acceptable service, being far better pleased to be entertained with a plausible lie, than to be advertised of an important truth. I hold myself right happy you are not of this humour: for whatsoever I say, I suppose it would be very hard for me to be of a fools mind, though he were a Monarch. I intent not to steal your favours, but to purchase them legally: and having ever believed flattery to be as mischievous a means to gain affection as charms, and sorcery: I cannot speak against my conscience, and were not this true I tell you, I would not assure you, that I am Your most humble, most obedient, and most faithful servant, BALZAC. From Rome this 10. of December 1622. To the Lord Cardinal de Valette, from BALZAC. Letter VI. My Lord, HOw great soever the subject of my sorrows be, yet do I find in your Letters sufficient to make me happy in my hard fortune. The last I received hath so much obliged me, that, but for the displeasing news coming unto me, which tempered my joy, my reason had not been of sufficient force to moderate it. But at this time the death of my poor Brother being incessantly before mine eyes, taketh from me the taste of all good tidings: and the prosperity even of the King's affairs seem displeasing unto me, finding myself to bear upon me the mournings of his Victory. Yet since in this fatal agitation of Europe it is not I alone who bewail some loss, and since yourself have not been able to preserve all that was dear unto you; I should seem very uncivil, if I presumed to prefer my private interest before yours, or reflect upon my particular affliction, having one common with yours. It is long since I have not measured either the felicities, or fatalities of this World, but by your contentments, or discomforts; and that I behold you as the whole workmanship God hath made. Wherefore my Lord, I will lay aside whatsoever concerns myself, to enter into your resentments, and to tell you, since you cannot make unworthy elections, it must needs be that in death of your Friends you can suffer no small losses. Notwithstanding as you transcend sublunary things, and in that all men draw examples out of the meanest actions of your life: I assure myself they have acknowledged upon this occasion, that there is not any accident to surmount, against which you have use of all your virtue. Afflictions are the gifts of God, though they be not of those we desire in our prayers; and supposing you should not approve this proposition, yet have you at all times so little regarded death, as I cannot believe you will bewail any; for being in a condition yourself esteems not miserable. My Lord, it sufficeth you conserve the memory of those you have loved, in consequence of the protestation you pleased to make unto me by your Letter: And truly if the dead be any thing, (as none can doubt) they cannot grieve for aught in this World, wherein they still enjoy your favours. In the mean time I take this to myself, and am most happy in having conferred my dutiful affections upon a man, who setteth so high a value upon those things he hath lost. For any thing (my Lord) I perceive, there is small difference between good works, and the services we offer you; they having their rewards both in this life, and the other; your goodness being illimitable, as is the desire I have to tell you, I am Your most humble, and most faithful servant, BALZAC. From Rome the 29. of Decemb. 1621. To the Lord Bishop of Valette from BALZAC. LETTER VII. MY LORD, THough I be not in state, either to perform any great exploit upon the person of any man; nor have any great force to defend myself, yet cannot I touch upon the Count Mansfield without taking it to heart, and joining my good affections to the King's forces. If this were the first time the Germans had exceeded their limits, and sent their Armies to be overthrown in France; the novelty of these Barbarous faces, and of those great lubberly swat-rutters, might easily have affrighted us: But upon the matter, we have to do with known enemies, and who will suffer us to take so sufficient advantages over them, besides those we naturally enjoy, as without being forced to make use of Arms, we may defeat them only by their own evil conduct. I do not wonder there are men, who willingly forsake Frost and Snow, to seek their living under a more pleasing and temperate climate than their own; and who quit bad Countries, as being well assured, the place of their banishment shall be more blissful unto them than that of their birth. Only herein it vexeth me, in the behalf of the King's honour, to see him constrained to finish the remainder of the Emperor's victories, upon a sort of beaten Soldiers, and who rather fly the fury of Marquis Spinola, than follow us. These great Bulwarks, whose neighbour I am, seeming rather the Fabrics of Giants, than the fortifications of a Garrison-Town, will not ever be looked upon with amazement; one day (I hope) there will appear nothing in their places but Cabins for poor Fishermen; or if it be requisite the works of Rebellion should still remain, and the memory of these troublesome people endure yet longer, we shall in the upshot see them remove Mountains, and dive into the Earth's foundations to provide themselves a Prison at their own charge. But withal (my Lord) I beseech you, let there be no further speech made of occasions, or expeditions, and let a Peace be concluded, which may continue till the World's end; let us leave the War to the Turk, and King of Persia, and cause (I beseech you) that we may lose the memory of these miserable times, wherein Fathers succeed their Children, and wherein France is more the Country of Lans ●●ghts and Swisses than ours. Though Peace did not turn the very Desarrs into profitable dwellings, as it doth, or caused not the quarries, or flints to become fruitful, though it came unaccompanied, without being seconded with security and plenty, yet were it necessary, only to refresh our forces; thereby to enable us the longer to endure War. As I was ending this last word, I heard a voice which desired my dispatch, obliging me to end what I supposed I had but begun. It is with much reluctation (my Lord) I am deprived of the only contentment your absence affordeth me. But since you could not receive this Letter, were it any longer, I am resolved to lose one part of my content, to enjoy the other; and to say sooner than I supposed, that I am even absolutely, Your most humble, most obedient, and most faithful servant, BALZAC. The 16. of Sept. 1622. To the Lord Cardinal de Valette from BALZAC. LETTER VIII. My Lord, YOu should oftener receive Letters from me, could I overmaster my pain; but to say truth, it leaveth me not one thought free to reflect upon any thing else; and what desire soever I have to give you content, yet am I not able to do any thing, but at the Physicians good pleasure, and at the Fevers leisure; whilst the Court affordeth you all content, and prepareth whatsoever is pleasant for you, reserving distrusts and jealousies for others: I here endure torments, such as wherewith one would make conscience to punish Parricides, and which I would not wish to my worst enemies. If notwithstanding all this (in obedience to the Counsel you give me in the Letter, you did me the honour to write unto me) I should make myself merry, I were necessarily to take myself for some other body, and become a deeper dissembler than an honest man ought to be. My Melancholy is merely corporeal, yet doth my spirit give place, though not consent thereto; and of the two parts whereof I am composed, the more worthy is overborn by the more weighty. Wherefore if the whole World should act Comedies to make me laugh, and though St. Germane Fair were kept in all the streets where I pass, the object of death ever present before my eyes, bereaving me of sight, would likewise bar me of content, and I should remain disconsolate amidst the public Jubilations, Yea, if the stone I so much dread, were a Diamond, or the Philosophers Elixir, I should therein take small comfort, but would rather beseech God to leave me poor, if he please to bestow no better Riches upon me. But when I have said all, be it unto me as he shall please to appoint, since I am well assured, my maladies will either end, or I shall not for ever hold out: yet should I die with some discontent, if it happen before I testify my dutiful affection towards you, and the sensibility I have of your noble favours. But howsoever it fare with me, I would willingly make a journey to Rome, there to finish the work I promised you, and which you command me to undertake for the honour of this Crown. Certainly if I be not the cause to make you in love with our language, and to prefer it in your estimation before our Neighbour Tongues; I am afraid you will be much troubled to revolt from the Roman Empire, and that it will not be for the History of Matthew, or of Hallian, you will change that of Sallust and Livy. I will not deceive you, nor delude myself; yet may I tell you, that my head is full of inventions and designs, and if the Spring (for which I much long) would afford me the least glimpse of health, I would contest with any who should produce the rarest things. I have an infinite of loose flowers, which only want binding up into Nosegays; and I have suffered others to speak any time these six years, on purpose to be think myself what I have to say. But I well perceive the public shall have only desires and hopes; and truly, if I spring not afresh with the Trees, in stead of so many books you expect from me, you shall not read any thing of mine, save only the end of this Letter, and the protestation I here make unto you, to die Your most humble, most obedient, and most faithful Servant, BALZAC. The 7. of January 1623. To the Lord Cardinal de Vallette from BALZAC. LETTER IX. My Lord, THe hope which any time this three Months, I have had of your determination to come into this Country, hath hitherto hindered me from writing unto you, or to make use of the only means remaining for me to be near your person: But since you have supposed the speedy quitting the Court, to be as fatal as to die a sudden death, and that no less fortitude, or time is requisite to resolve to wean ourselves from pleasing things, than to surmount painful ones, I will by your permission resume the commerce the common rumour caused me to surcease, and will not hereafter believe you can with any less difficulty get out Paris, than can the Arsenac, or Loover. Were it not a place all stored with enchantments and chains, and which is of such power to attract and retain men, as it hath been necessary to hazard divers battles, to drive the Spaniards further off: one might well wonder at the difficulty you find to convey yourself thence. But in truth all the World doth there find both habitations and affairs: and for you my Lord, since in that Country our Kings both enter into their first infancy, and grow old, as being the seat of their Empire; no man can justly blame you for making overlong abode there, without accusing you of overmuch love to your Master, and for desiring to be near his person. At Rome you shall tread upon stones, formerly the gods of Caesar and Pompey, and shall contemplate the ruins of those rare workmanships, the antiquity whereof is yet amiable, and shall daily walk among Histories and Fables: But these are the pastimes of weak spirits, which are pleased with trifles, and not the employments of a Prince, who delighted in sailing on rough Seas, and who is not come into the World to let it rest idle: When you have seen the Tiber, on whose banks the Romans have performed the Apprenticeships of their rare victories, and begun that high design, which they ended not, but at the extreme limits of the Earth. When you shall ascend the Capitol, where they supposed God was as well present as in Heaven; and had there enclosed the fatality of the universal Monarchy: After you have crossed that great Circus, dedicated to show pleasures to the people, and where the blood of Martyrs hath been often mingled with that of Malefactors and bruit beasts. I make no doubt but after you have seen those and divers other things, you will grow weary of the repose and tranquillity of Rome: and will say they are two things more proper for the Night and Churchyards, than for the Court and the World's eye. Yet have I not any purpose to give you the least distaste of a Voyage the King hath commanded you to undertake, and whereof I well hoped to have been the guide, if my crazy body would have seconded the motion of my Will. But truly my Lord, I am deeply engaged in this business, and when I look upon myself single, I sometimes have a desire to make you suspicious of those felicities, I fear, I shall not be able to enjoy with you; yet whatsoever I say, I am not so far in love with myself, as to prefer my private content before the general desires of all men, and the Church's necessities. It is requisite for infinite considerations of importance, you should be present at the first Conclave, and that you appear at a War not therefore less considerable, in being composed of disarmed persons, or for that it makes no Widows nor Orphans. I am certain you have elsewhere seen more dangerous encounters, and have often desired more bloody Victories. But how great soever the object of your ambition be, yet can it not conceive any thing of such Eminency, as at once to give a Successor to Consuls, to Emperors, and Apostles; and to make with your breath the man, who overtoppeth Kings, and who commandeth overall reasonable Souls: Though my health be so uncertain, as I cannot promise myself three days continuance thereof, yet have I not lost all hope to see you (one day) in this Country, the prescriber of Laws to inferiors, and of examples to Commanders. My Lord, it may be, God reserveth me for your sake, that nothing be wanting to your glory, and to the end there might be yet one man in the World, able to afford you the praises proper to your merits, My Lord, Your most humble, and most faithful Servant, BALZAC. The 29. of June 1623. To my Lord Cardinal de Valette. LETTER X. My Lord, IT must necessarily be the greatest affair at this present in agitation on Earth, that could oblige you to leave Paris; nor had you parted thence upon any slighter condition, than to make a head for all Christendom. If you arrive there opportunely to have your part in this great Election, and that the Conclave attend your Presence, on purpose to afford a more full Reputation and Authority, to what shall there be resolved upon: I do no way doubt but you will maintain the same advantage over the Italian wits, as you have obtained over ours; or that their policies will not be as impertinent in your Presence, as the Charms of Magicians are frivolous, being confronted with Divine matters. You have sufficient of their patience to put off affairs when occasion is offered: but you have a courage they come short of, to carry matters by strong hand, if necessity require. Therefore my Lord, to what part soever your opinion shall incline, you will carry that with you which gaineth victories, and causeth the greater party to side with the founder; yea, if matters should pass without contestation, yet should you at least take notice, that you are entreated to that action, wherein God permits you to supply his place, and intrusteth to your care the most important matter of all his works. To speak seriously, his providence is never in so high employment, as when he is to choose the man who hath power to use well, or abuse all the Riches of Heaven, and who is to exercise a power nearest approaching to Divinity. Heretofore God made use of Thunder and Tempests, when he purposed to denounce any thing to men, declaring his Will by other than ordinary means. But since he hath caused Oracles to cease, and suffereth the Thunder to work only natural effects: It is only by the voice of Cardinals he causeth his desires to be manifested, and ordaineth concerning the World's Conduct. When you please (my good Lord) I shall have some notice of these inspirations he hath sent you, and of the election you have made: For to force me (so soon) to inform myself thereof in the place where it was performed, this Kingdom had need be over hot for me, and that I were not so well acquainted as I am with the Sun at Rome. That which blacks the Moors, and burns Lybia, is not so dangerous at this Season; and were you not stored with treasures of Snow, and provided of Halls of Marble, to descend you from the scorching Air, I should as soon choose to be condemned to the fire, as to be forced to reside where you are at this present. But your Grace I know can not be affrighted with all these apprehensions of heat; you are none of those who will find fault with the Air, which all that ancient Republic breathed, or with the Sun, which hath holpen to make so many conquerors, and given light to so many glorious Triumphs. Yet for my part, I who have none of these considerations, and who have wholly put myself into the power of Physic, it is requisite I avoid the very shadow of danger, and live with as great apprehension of fear in this World, as though I were in an Enemy's Country, or in a Forest of wild beasts. It is therefore out of pure necessity I attend your commands in this place, and a more seasonable time, to testify unto you, without running the hazard of my life, that I am with all my Soul My Lord, Your most humble, and most obedient Servant, BALZAC. The 2. of AuAugust 1623. To the Lord Cardinal de Valete, from BALZAC. LETTER XI. My Lord, I Verily believed I could never have been so unfortunate, as to be forced to search in the Gazettes for what you do, and to hear no other news from you, than what common brute bestoweth in all parts of the World, and which the English and Germans may as well know as I. This punishment is by so much the more wounding, in that I have heretofore been enriched with those benefits, whereof you now seem to bereave me; and in that the time was, when you pleased so far to descend from the rank whence you are derived, as to lay aside all those lustres which encompass you, to converse freely with me: But (my Lord) since one word of your mouth hath often cured my decayed spirits, & hath many times made me happy without the help of Fortune: I freely confess unto you, I cannot resolve to change condition, as knowing the loss of the least of your favours cannot be little; Yet being so innocent that I can no way imagine my offence, and not acknowledging among men, other more assured verity then your word, I have a great reluctation to be diffident of a thing, upon the certainty whereof half the Court is engaged for War, and the besieged would make small difficulty to surrender themselves. My Lord, you have pleased to promise you would love me always; therefore I beseech you not to be offended, if I put you in mind, that as the ancient Gods of the Country where now you are, submitted themselves to Destinies, after they had once assigned them: So you, though above all other Laws, are yet subject to your word. I am confident it cannot be revoked so long as the order of sublunary things change not, and the Decrees of God's providence remain immovable: and if you repent any one action in your whole life, you therein do more than your very Enemies, who never as yet called the least of them in question. For my part, I am far from thinking I have totally lost your favours, left I should wrong your judgement, which conferred them upon me, and blame the best eyes in the World, for having heretofore been blind. I will rather suppose, if you send me no news, it is because you think I know what will be done some ten years hence, and that I am brimful of the Roman Court, and of the Italian affairs. Truly I know the present Pope, and I have ever believed, there is not any humane wit more capable to carry so ponderous a felicity, or to let us again behold the primitive beauty of religion, and the golden age of God's Church, I know how at Rome idleness is day and night in action and that the compliments and ceremonies there, put you to more trouble than you should find in governing the whole World, if God had less it to your conduct. Me thinks I yet see this great Tyrant with so many heads, (I mean the Signoury of Venice) together with all those petty Sovereigns, who would hazard more men in hanging one single person, than the King would venture: in two battles, or at the taking in of four Cities. But my Lord all this with the rest doth but slightly touch my spirit, and as you are the sole worldly cause, which affordeth me either joy, or discomfort, so it is from you only I expect good, or ill news: I have made your affection in such sort necessary for my life's contentment, that without it I should find defects even in felicity itself, and should have an imperfect feeling of the most happy successes could befall me. Restore therefore, if so you please, or continue this your ancient favour towards me, which I cannot possibly forbear. And since you are part of that body to which God hath given infallibility, and snce it is forbidden to call the certainty of your wisdom into the least question: condemn not I beseech you, what you have formerly made as though your Italian favours were some other things than your French ones. Your most humble, most obedient, and most faithful servant, BALZAC. The 10. of Decemb. 1623. Balzac his Letter to Mounsieur du Planty. LETTER XII. SIR, SInce you cannot be here till after the Feast, and for that I presume you have no purpose to oppose the Election of the Pope, being cannonically chosen. I will advise you to stay your journey till the Spring be past, and the Snows melted; yet truly you are in such esteem here, as if you come not the sooner, I verily think you will be sent for, and and that the Court of Rome will commence suit with the Loover, to have my Lord the Cardinal's presence. It is therefore fitting (if so he please) that he undertake this voyage, and put of State business, and the War to others, to live here in the midst of Glory and Triumphs. In the mean time, I may (so near as I can) inform myself both of men and affairs, thereby to give you the better instructions at your coming. Now to the end to afford you a taste of what I know, observe what I say, for I will tell you strange things. There is a certain great man here, who entertaineth six Astrologers in Pension, to let him understand from time to time who shall be Pope: Another takes large fees on both sides, finding it the only way to bring his Clients to composition: A third hath the most extravagant virtue you ever heard of, he leads a far more pleasant life then the Duke of Ossuna; and having read in holy Writ, how the wisdom of the World is folly in God's sight, he imagines he should offend his conscience, if he were over wise. Here are Princes in this place, who in full peace pardon neither Age nor Sex. There are others who keep their beds, though they be well able to ride post; and who use all Physic possible to look pale, to be feverish, and full of Cathars, and who make use of all the secrets in Physic to have a meager aspect. In conclusion, the highest place in this World, is that, whether the more easily to arrive, it is necessary to be lame, and take short steps; so as a sound Pope is commonly made out of a sickly Cardinal. At our next meeting I will inform you of the rest, and will in one half hour infuse into you all the experience I have hitherto gotten: But if I have not this contentment so soon as I desire, fail not I pray you, to let me here news of your health, and the rest of our good friends. But especially I beseech you to assure Mounsieur de Mauroy, that I am passionately his servant, and that I find here much subtlety and dissimulation, but not many so pure and true virtues, as his are BALZAC. From Rome 10. of February 1621. A Letter to Mounsieur de la Magdelene from BALZAC. LETTER XIII. SIR, I Am extremely glad you are not of the number of those whom the King hath lost before S. John d' Angely: Conserve yourself therefore so far forth as your Honour and Courage will suffer, or permit, and content yourself to have tasted what War is; which if you please to be advised by me, you should do well never more to behold but with Flanders spectacles. You are bound to execute good Actions, but you are to perform many, and permanently; and to be a better husband of a worthy man's life, than that of an ordinary Soldier of the Guards. At leastwise so long as you continue at the assembly of the Clergy, you shall be serviceable to the Church at your own ease, and there shall commonly be ten days journey between you and danger. Though I were not any more of this World then those who lived before the late King, or who are to come into the World after the decease of this, yet should I not fear to hazard myself in this sort; and to keep all my blood for the Public, as readily as the most valiant Jesuit of France. It is in this sort I have learned to speak in this Court, where honest men are so wedded to their particular interests, and do so little reflect upon the general affairs, as they think there is nothing beyond the tips of their upmost hairs, & suppose the World endeth at their feet. The C. I. dreams of no other thing, but how to fortify himself with men and money against the C. B. whom he taketh for the Turk an Heretic: And say what you will, the fifty Abbeys he hath gotten in one year, is that portion of the Church which pleaseth him better than all the rest. Behold in what terms we stand at this present: instead of procuring the conversion of Nations, and to seek the means to set the Levant at liberty: a P. thinks he hath worthily acquitted himself of his charge, so long as he provides to make his Nephew a greater man than his Predecessors was. But that I fear lest my zeal should overfar transport me, or that you should become as weary of my discourse as of a tedious Preacher, I would dilate myself upon this Subject; but I know the affairs in these parts are very indifferent unto you, I will therefore refer the further relation wherewith I intended to acquaint you, to my Lord, the Marquis of Caevure. In brief, there are none but himself and the Council, who can cause the Pope to incline to our reasonable demands, and I will tell you without flattering him, that so long as he is here, the King may glory that he reigneth at Rome. As for other things, what beautiful objects soever Rome presenteth to my view, and what pleasure soever each man finds there conformable to his humour and inclination, yet cannot I receive any, being so remote from persons so dear unto me, and shall esteem myself unhappy, so long as I am necessitated to write Letters unto you, and only say, what is not as yet in my power to cause to appear, that I am Mounsieur, Your most faithful servant BALZAC. To Mounsieur de Montigny from BALZAC. LETTER. XIV. SIR, THough you use me ill, and that I have reason to be sensible of your neglects, yet I am resolved to suffer from you with an obstinate patience, and to acquire your favours by force, since I cannot obtain them otherwise. But I am assured you are not so uncivil, as not to suffer yourself to be beloved, nor so tied to your own fancies, as that there remaineth no affection in you for whatsoever is separate: Otherwise I should think your humour were as much changed as are the affairs of France, or that you were suddenly become quite another man. I will therefore rest confident in the opinion most pleasing unto me, and imagine you are sufficiently my friend in your thoughts; but that you are over loyal a French man to have any intelligence out of the Kingdom. It may be the example of the Duke of Byron affrights you and that you take all such as are in Italic for Don Pedro's, or Countess of Fuentes: in this case in truth you have reason, and it is far better to write no Letters at all, then to be forced to explain them before the Cour● of Parliament. But if you were of my humour, and that you would refer the whole State, and all the affairs therein to Mounsieur Lumes; me thinks our Amity could not pass for conspiracy, and you might safely let me have news from yourself, and the rest of our friends, without any hazard at all. I desire only to know what you do, and wherein you employ the fairest season of your life. Do you never part from the lips of Opala; whose breath is so sweet as it seems she seedeth only on Pinks and Perfumes? are you in as high esteem in your Mistress' thoughts as your merits and service deserves, and as your loyalty obligeth her unto? Is Clitorhon still in his generous muse? doth he daily take Towns at Table? and doth he yet frame foreign designs between his Bed-curtaines? Is there any good inclination in the Court for our great Cardinal? and are they not persuaded that if he were Pope, the Church would soon be as well Mistress in Germany as at Rome? After you have satisfied me in all these points, I am contented to be at truce with you as long as you please; and if need be, will suffer you to wax old upon the bosom of Opala, without ever ask you what you do there. Yours, BALZAC. BALZAC his Letter to the Duke of Espernon. LETTER XV. My Lord, WEre I not born (as I am) your most humble servant, yet should I show myself a very degenerate Frenchman, if I did not much rejoice in the happiness of your Family, since it is a public Felicity. I have heard the prosperous success of the voyage you made into Beam, and of the great beginnings you have given, to what the King desireth there to undertake. And truly, the Election he hath made of you, to serve him in an occasion of such importance, hath been so generally approved, that, if heretofore there hath been any defects pretended in the conduct of our Affairs, we must necessarily avow, that this last Action hath sufficiently justified all the former; it appearing plainly, that it is not only favour which setteth the difference between men. I no way doubt, but right, and power sideing together, that the event of things will be suitable to our desires: But, howsoever it happen, you have already the glory of having facilitated the victory, and made it appear how the Enemies of the State have no other force, but what they draw out of our weakness. It is now time (my Lord) you take notice of those advantages God hath given you above the rest of men: You ought at least to remember, how being tried with worldly affairs, and retired from Court, public necessity had not sought you out in your private reposedness at home, to put the King's royal Armies into your hands, if you were not the only man from whom all men expect the re-establishment of these affairs. I will not so far rely upon my own opinion, as to answer for the future: Yet when I consider the actions of your life, which are so eminent, that we find difficulty to believe them, even after they have been performed; and those in such, number, that stranger may well imagine you have lived from the very beginning of our Monarchy: I suppose I might boldly affirm, that, if there be yet any great matter remaining to be achieved in the World, there is none but yourself must attempt it. You have possessed the favour of Kings, as Fortunes which might fail you, and have not feared that their passions could outlast your innocence. This virtue we so much admire, hath succeeded the same authority, our Fathers have adored. You have made no use of your power in State, which you have not ever since conserved by the force of your courage. You have at all times preserved the liberty of France amidst the miseries of times, and the usurpation upon lawful power. Who is there can say this of himself? where are they that have stood firm between rebellion and servitude? where was there ever known an old age so necessary for the World, or so much good and bad Fortune equally glorious? My Lord, you know yourself too well, to suspect me of flattery; and my humour is so alien from any servile actions, as the Court hath not sufficient hopes to cause me to do any thing against my conscience. I then speak as I do now; for the only interest of virtue; and if that were not on your side, I would seek for it among our enemies to do it right: None will suspect I have any pretensions at Madrill; or that I intent to make a Furtune in Holland; yet to hear me speak of the Prince of Orange, and the Marquis Spinola, one would say that I did at once expect Abbeys from the Hollanders, and were a pensioner to Spain, In sum, I hold, myself obliged to those, who afford me matter and means to reconcile the two rarest things in this world, to wit; virtue and eloquence. And as their reputation hath need of my Pen, to make it immortal; so are their lives and actions right useful unto me, when I employ my pains on excellent subjects. You have ever done me the honour to wish me well, and I have received innumerable favours from my Lord the Cardinal your Son; but howsoever, I humbly beseech you to be confident that my affections are absolutely pure, and that my particular interests have not any alliance therewith. I am so happy as to have served you in a troublesome time, and to have been of the weaker side; as judging it to be the more honest. I have not since been of another mind; and the reasons drawing me to do what I did, being still the same, I am really, as I ever have been, My Lord, Your most humble and thrice obedient servant, BALZAC. To the Duke of Espernon from BALZAC. LETTER XVI. My Lord, THe Letter I lately received from you, maketh me know I am happier than I supposed, since I have the honour to be sometimes in your memory. It is a place so taken up with high thoughts, and which the public good doth in such measure make use of, as I had not the ambition to imagine, there could be any room left for a man of so small importance as myself. But I see, that as you never had any so potent enemies as to exceed your courage, so have you not any servants of so slight consideration, whom you esteem not worthy your care. Herein my Lord, you make it appear that the meanest matters change their nature into more noble subjects, so soon as they become yours: and how of all men, you have conquered part, and acquired the rest. I am verily persuaded it were no less than to offend God, to deny obedience to a person so high in his favour as you are, and that his meaning is, this commanding spirit he hath conferred upon you, should be master of all others. The honour therefore to you appertaining, being little inferior to what we owe to sacred things; and that besides the ordinary providence which governeth the World, there being a particular one in Heaven, designed merely for the conduct of your life, to make it admired in all after ages: it is neccessary as well in contemplation of this common consideration, as for others particularly concerning myself, I should perpetually remain, My Lord, Your most humble and most faithful servant, BALZAC. The 5. of April 1622. To the Duke of Espernon from BALZAC. LETTER XVII. My LORD, IN this general calm of the State, (wherein the affairs of this Kingdom seem to be asleep, and the World's occurrents to be at a stand) all France expects your presence at Court, to be the Author of the desired news, and to draw from the King's breast the good intentions wherewith it is so richly stored. The reduction of Beam not stained with any drop of blood: the truth wherein you have instructed all men, concerning the possibility of taking Rochel, and the order you have now lately left in Guiene, where you have reduced the Factions to such a point, as their only power consisteth in their perverse humours; putteth us in hope, that if God should defer the safety of our State till another age, it could be no man (your self excepted) for whom he hath reserved so glorious enterprise. My Lord, it is certain he never showed more miracles in those places himself hath consecrated to his glory and public piety, and which he hath chosen on purpose there to manifest his power, than he hath done in your person. And when I consider how often he hath protected you, contrary to all humane appearance; and the opposition you have encountered, in arriving to this height by so many rocks and precipices; I cannot but constantly believe you have over-passed the time of dying; and that for the World's general good, it is fitting you endure as long as the Sun, or Stars. To stop here, were to praise you imperfectly, and only to make it appear you are able to afford long services. I will therefore say more: on which side soever I turn mine eyes, be it that I convey them beyond the Seas, or make them pass those mountains which separate us from our Neighbours, I find not that person in any place, who can justly dispute for glory with you; or whose life is so illustrious as yours. I have seriously considered all whatsoever might give value, or reputation to the Courts of stranger Princes, and there truly I find men who are well seen in Military affairs, and who have gained to themselves no small experience by means of an infinity of rules and maxims: But the difference between those men and yourself, is, that they cannot stir, nor make themselves awful without the Indies, Armies, and Cannons; whereas you are redoubtable all alone, and unarmed; yea, your very stillness terrifieth the greatest enemies of France. This being absolutely true (as no man can doubt) it is high time the King do really make use of a man whom the necessity of his state requireth of him, and that he no longer employ those improsperous persons, under whose hands opportunities wax old, and his good fortune will fail him. It is sufficient that the Rhine and Alps have formerly been French, and that our language is spoken in neighbouring Provinces, without suffering a strange kind of people still to remain in the very bowels of our Kingdom, who will not allow of our ancient Laws. There is now no longer means to cover this scar which dishonoureth the face of State, or to suffer that Rebellion & Loyalty live together. To speak truth, what kind correspondency can be expected between the Mistress of the house, and the Concubine? what a monstrous production would that prove between a Monarchy and a popular government? and what kind of Sovereign should he be, who were dependent on his subjects, and his Council subordinate to the Townhouse? Truly, if Catholics should demand Cities of the King, proportionable to their number, as others do, he should be forced henceforward to remain all his life time at Fountain-bleau and S. Germain's: nor would there remain unto him any more than the bare title of a King, and the common fields of his Country. But it shall not always be so if predictions prove true: And reason as well as nature requireth that things should be reduced to their ancient form. It were no less than to injure him, who hath promised to France a longer continuance then to all her diseases, to think that he having given remedies against the Goths and Moors, he will suffer it to die at this day by the hands of a small pack of Rebels: Provided, that face which I rather call immortal, then ancient, do still assure us of the great source of life you retain in your courageous heart, and that heaven please to preserve for the World's benefit, the blessing it conferred upon us at your Nativity; we require not a more certain presage of the end of our evils; nor is there any so sick, or far strucken in years, who hopeth not to survive these intestine troubles: But we are not to imagine that victory and peace are two opposite things, though they be different; for is the one which assureth the other, and settleth it in state not to be any further either troubled, or threatened by any. When all is done, I find it were much to oblige these malcontents, to give a sure repose to their distrustful spirits, and at once to rid them of all their hopes and fears: when they shall no longer need to trouble themselves with making assemblies, and that their lives shall be free from the fear of punishments. When I say, both they and we shall enjoy common security, it is not to be doubted but their condition will be much bettered, it being a much fairer fortune to be cast on shore by a storm in a craised Vessel, then to be still in the power of winds and Sea-wracks. The word of Kings ought not to contradict the functions of Regality, nor can they oblige themselves to leave their Subjects in miserable estate, or to do contrary to what they ought. And in conscience since the ruin of Rebellion is written in Heaven, in the same sort as is the day of Judgement, and the World's dissolution; were it not as much as to resist God's will, and to oppugn his providence, should we so soon grow weary of well-doing, or refuse to finish a work, the event whereof is infallible? There is nothing so easy for a great Prince, as either to find or conceive faults, nor doth any man doubt that dissimulation is just, when it tends to the advantage and avail of the deceived. If a mad man were capable of remedies, were it not lawful to cure him without ask his consent? were it fit a Father should suffer his Son to be drowned for fear of pulling him out by the hair? Are we to suffer the State to perish, for that we cannot preserve it by ordinary ways? No, (my Lord) we ought not; there is no consideration can cause that thing to change its nature, which of itself it just; and the Laws of necessity do dispense with us for those of formality. Now to return to my first discourse, and to what particularly regardeth your Lordship; seeing your absence from Court hath at all times threatened more miseries unto us, than the apparition of Comets and other irregularities in Nature, and since to be miserable, it is sufficient to be at odds with you. There is not any of your enemies can escape the Divine justice, nor is there any doubt, but you will generally find all those spirits favourable unto you, whom you have formerly convinced; or that your propositions shall not be received as assured Conquests. The best is, there are now no more any usurpers near the King, who seek to engross his favours to their own advantages, and bereave men of those benefits which ought to be as common to them as the fire, or air. His Majesty's heart is open to all his subjects, he receives truth at what hand soever it comes unto him. This being so (my Lord) may we not rest confident you shall not lose one word, and that your virtue whereof the World is uncapable, shall at length be found the only means the King hath to redress and re-establish his affairs. Neither time, travail, nor cost, ought divert him from this design: It is a work will be nothing so costly as to raise a Favourite, and it being a thing all Christendom exacteth of him, as an Hereditary debt the King his Father hath left to be discharged. And truly, it is most certain that the face of States hath been changed, and whole Provinces conquered, with less cost than divers Pagan Princes have employed in erecting of Idols, and causing them to be adored by their people. But to leave this Italian severity you formerly reproved in me, and lest you should accuse me for warring against the dead, I will for your sake pardon their memory; nor will I farther dilate myself upon so odious a Subject. Yet is this but half of what I intended to speak unto you at Coignac; if in that short abode you made there, and the continual press hindering the freedom of my Speech unto you, it had been permitted me to have had a longer audience. But (my Lord) what I could not perform by word of mouth, I will continue by my Letters, if you please to do me the honour as to command them; or if my words which you have heretofore made choice of for the conception of your High thoughts, in bewailing present miseries and public ingratitude, be, as pleasing unto you, as I am perfectly Your most humble, most obedient, and most faithful servant, BALZAC. The 18. of Nou. 1623. The Duke of Espernon his Letter to the French King: penned by BALZAC. LETTER XVIII. SIR, I Understand by the Letter it pleased your Majesty to do me the honour to write unto me, that upon the opinion wherewith some have possessed you concerning the continuance of the Germane Wars, you judge it expedient for the good of your service, I should not (as yet) leave this Frontier. Whereunto Sir, I can give your Majesty no other answer, but that having at all times gathered out of your commands, what my duty obliged me unto, and having never proposed other end to my actions, than the good of your state, I should be careful of straying from that design in an occasion wherein I might imagine your service depended on my obedience. But at this present (Sir) the tranquillity of France groweth to be so general, your affairs so powerfully established, and the honour of your Amity so precious among all your neighbouring Princes; that as there is nothing in this Kingdom which doth not bend under your Authority; so is there not any Prince abroad, who doth not respect your power, or who conserveth not himself by your Justice. And as concerning the troubles of Bohemia; besides, that time hath evaporated the first heat of spirits, and that they begin to retire from those extremities wherein formerly they involved themselves: the imagined danger is so far removed hence, as we cannot conceive the least apprehension, even for those who are not our next neighbours that way. It is certain (Sir) that on this side the Rhine all things seem to be at rest under the shade of your State, and the ancient Allies of this Crown who are nearest any danger, expect the end of War without fearing it should come any further towards them, or that out of all this noise, there will arise any more than one War. These considerations than do no way oblige me to stay in these parts, where things are in so good estate, as they may well nigh subsist of themselves: besides the residence my Son of Valette shall make there in my absence, being sufficient to give order to all occurrents concerning the good of your affairs. I assure myself your Majesty will be so impartial as to be pleased to reflect upon the necessity of my particular occasions, and that suffering me to retire myself to my own house, you will at least permit me to enjoy a favour, usually inflicted on others as a punishment. I doubt not (Sir) but you will condescend to the desire I have to undertake this voyage, and I presume you will be pleased to consider, that I being engaged in two hundred thousand Crowns for your service; after the sight of your royal bounty in all sorts of hands, it were small reason (I receiving nothing) should still in this place stand as a mere cipher for the honour of France; or that I ruin myself with a rich show, only to continue strangers in the opinion they have of the magnificent greatness of your Crown. Yet (Sir) having never believed I could sustain any great detriment by the loss of a thing I so slightly esteem, as I do worldly substance, I intent not in this place to complain of my poverty: But (to speak truth) since all my words and actions are by many misinterpreted; and that having afforded my dutiful attendance to the service of three great Kings, I yet find much difficulty to defend my so long a loyalty against Calumny: I am with much sorrow constrained to say, that if I stood firm in my duty, even when disobedience was crowned with rewards; and have maintained your Authority, when by some it was abused, by others contemned: It is no small injury to me, to imagine I will now begin to fail in my loyalty at this age wherein I am, or suffer myself to be reproached by posterity, whereto I study to annex the last actions of my life. But I see well (Sir) it is long since the hatred of dishonest Frenchmen hath been fatal unto me, and that it hath been born with me inseparably. From the first hour I appeared in the World, there was never either peace or truce unviolated to my prejudice; and as though I were excepted out of all treaties, though War be ended, yet that made against me endureth. At this present (Sir) it sufficeth not I perform my charge without omitting or forgetting any thing due to your service; or that the innocence of my actions be generally acknowledged; but I am driven to those straits, as to be forced to give account of my very thoughts, there being not any (my self excepted) from whom satisfaction is required for the fault he hath not as yet committed. If we lived in a Country where virtue were avoided, as not concurrent with the times, or adverse to the State, and where a great reputation were more dangerous than an inglorious one, I should not need to make much search for the cause of my misfortunes: but I well know the conduct you use, hath more honourable and honest grounds, and that your Majesty hath no pretention to reign with more assurance than the King your Father did before you. It is from him (Sir) you may learn how you are to distinguish wounded innocence from wicked impudency: and to know it is ordinary to draw honest men into suspicion, thereby to make them unserviceable. In following his example, you shall find out the truth, though never so closely hidden, or what shadow soever they cast over the same to disguise it. And truly (Sir) since this great Prince in bestowing your Origin upon you, hath together therewith conferred his most Royal inclinations, I will never believe, that to follow a stranger passion, you will lose those perfections so proper, and natural unto you; or that for me alone your Majesty hath any other spirit then for the rest of men. Truly, if when you were not yet at your own liberty, such hath been the natural goodness of your gracious disposition, as you have at all times resisted violent counsels, nor have ever permitted your Authority should be employed to the ruin of your subjects: there is small appearance, that having now by public and solemn act obliged yourself to reign alone, and your bounty finding not any obstacle to hinder the same, you would disturb the old age of one of your best servants, or deny to his grey hairs that rest nature requires at your hands, I ought to hope (at least) for this recompense for my long and faithful services, since your Majesty may bestow it without incommodateing your affairs, and besides, I having never expected other reward of worthy actions, than the only contentment to have performed them, I shall hold myself sufficiently happy, to receive from my conscience the testimonies, which whilst I live it will afford me, that I have been, really am, and ever will to the end remain, Sir, Your most humble, most obedient, and most faithful subject and servant, Espernon. From Mets 7. of Jan. 1619. Another Letter to the French King from the Duke of Espernon, penned by the same BALZAC. LETTER XIX. SIR, HAving long attended at Mets, the occasions not to be unusefully there, and not finding any thing either in the conduct of my present life, or in the memory of my forepassed time, which might justly cast me into a worse condition than the rest of your subjects: I have presumed that the Laws of this Kingdom, and my Births prerogative might permit me to make use of public liberty, and to partake of that peace you have purchased to the rest of your subjects. Nevertheless, (Sir) your Majesty's will, doth so regulate mine, that I had not removed, had not the cause of my stay there ceased, and the difficulties of the Bohemian War been utterly removed. But having had perfect intelligence by the relations the Duke of Lorain hath received from those parts, that the affairs there begin to be well settled, the overture thereof beginning with the suspension of War on both sides; I could not imagine the good of your service did any way oblige me to remain longer in a place out of all danger in time of peace, and which will make good use of the Empire's weakness if the War continue: considering likewise that if there be any part of your State less sound than the rest, and where your Authority had need with more than ordinary care to be conserved, it is questionless in the Province whither I am going, which bordering upon such neighbours as all honest men may justly suspect; and being a people composed of divers parts, have at all times been either troubled, or threatened with changes: yea, at this present (Sir) the most common opinion is, that the assembly now holden at Rochel, is no way pleasing unto you, and that if you have been drawn to give any assent thereto, it hath rather been a connivency to the necessity of time, then conformable to your will. Whereupon (Sir) if your Majesty please to reflect upon the miseries of your State, where out at least you have drawn this advantage, that even in the very spring of your age, you have attained great experience: You shall plainly see that all the miseries which befell your Majesty in your minority, have been begun upon the like occasions. I therefore using my best endeavours, if the intentions of those of Rochel be good; to hinder that the events be not evil; therein I hope I shall no way disobey you Majesty's commands; but do rather explain them according to the true sense, allowing them the best interpretation, since it is most profitable for your service. Truly (Sir) no man is ignorant, that as the conservation of your Authority is the principle Law of your State: so likewise that the most express and important part of your commands, is the good of your affairs. This being undoubtedly true, what appearance is there, it being in my power to preserve the affections of a divided Province in due obedience to your Majesty, and to pacify by my presence those affections easily drawn to revolt, if none did confirm them in their loyalty: I should (for the interrupting so necessary a voyage,) propound to myself so frivolous considerations, and those so far fetched as the Wars of Bohemia. I live not in an age (Sir) wherein I am permitted to feed myself with vanity; but I do not withal suppose your Majesty doth so slightly esteem of my service, as not to make any farther use of me, save only to see the packets from Germany safely conveyed; nor do I find myself so unuseful, as to be forced instead of better employments; only to let you know what news is stirring, and to give you an account of ordinary rumours. I must humbly beseech your Majesty, to suffer me to die in this opinion I have of myself, and to allow me to make free use of my leisure; if you please not to impose more honourable employments upon me for your service. Howsoever it happen, (Sir) or how badly soever I be entreated, I am determined to continue resolute in well-doing. And your Majesty may be most assured, that neither Time, which affordeth occasions to the most miserable to raise their fortunes, nor Place often favouring their resentments, nor Necessity which causeth their actions to seem just; shall ever transport me from remaining with the same affection I ever have done to be Sir, Your most humble, most obedient, and most faithful subject and servant, Espernon. From Pont de Vichij, the 7. of Feb. 1619. Another Letter from the Duke of Espernon to the French King, penned by the same BALZAC. LETTER XX. SIR, IF your Majesty have misconceived mine intentions before you were clearly informed of them; I am persuaded, I have at this present in such sort justified the same by my proceedings, as there is no further need to defend them by my words. Truly, I may justly say, that the Conduct I have used, hath been such: the Queen your Mother, having done me the honour to make use of my service in a business, she deemed much to import the good of your State; as not making use of the advantages which might arise by causing mischief to continue, or by giving way to such designs, the event whereof would have sufficiently commended the resolution, had they not been disadvantageous unto you: I have contented myself to testify to all France, that I had respect to your Authority even in the hands of mine enemies: whereby (Sir) I trust I have caused my actions to appear so pure and unspotted before your Majesty, that you remain fully satisfied; nor will you I hope judge I have erred, in following a cause I might probably suppose could not be well separated from yours. Now therefore since it hath pleased your Majesty to supply what seemed deficient in the felicity of your Reign, and to settle peace in your State: All your true subjects (Sir) are by so much the more obliged to rely on your Royal word; in that it is the Rock whereon all Christendom rests confident: And the same having been given to the Queen your Mother, besides your obligation thereto by God and Nature, your very reputation confirmeth the same unto her upon this sacred and inviolable assurance, after having dedicated my sensibilities and interests to public peace, and taken your Majesty's memory as witness, that I have at all times served you faithfully, though it hath not always been by ordinary and common ways; I assure myself you will be pleased to permit me hence forward to pass the rest of my days in peace; and now at length to leave me in the Haven whereinto I have been cast by so many violent Tempests. Sir, I have but a short time to stay in this World, and surely I should suppose my life overlong, could I find myself culpable of one single cogitation repugnant to the Allegiance I owe to your Majesty: I therefore most humbly beseech you (Sir) to be pleased to consider, that I desiring no other thing of you, but either some small repose after my great pains, or an honourable death in your service: I can no way herein allot more moderate limits to my ambition, nor wish a more innocent end to my old age: Howsoever, I shall esteem it right happy, may I end it in this sort; and if in losing it, I conserve the quality I have ever hitherto inviolably kept of Your Majesty's most humble, most obedient, and most faithful subject and servant, ESPERNON. From Angoulosme the 10. of June, 1619. The Letters of MOUNSIEUR de BALZAC. The third Book. To my Lord the Duke de la Valete; from Mounsieur De BALZAC. LETTER I. My LORD, IN acquittance of my promise when I parted from Mets, I am to let your Lordship know, we are at this instant beyond ten Rivers, and how all things have been propitious to my Lord your Father's voyage. To be diffident the conclusion will not correspond to these fair beginnings: were either to make doubt of God's providence, or to distrust his grace; but it hath pleased his Divine Majesty at all times to take so particular care for the conservation of your Family, that he will as soon permit his Altars and images to be irreverently entreated, as persons, who are so high in his favour as all of you are. Howsoever it happen (my Lord) if none but the prosperous can lose by alterations; you will, I hope, confess no such change can any way happen, whereout we shall not draw some advantage; and what interpretations soever they give to my Lord your Father's intentions, yet will all honest men judge favourably thereof, nor will any man apprehend failing after so eminent an example. All France attends his resolution to be rightly informed in the truth of the King's affairs, and all men know he is of such consideration in this State, as his least discontentments are to be reckoned among public miseries. I will persuade myself they will not proceed to any extremity, and that there is not impudence enough in our Enemies to transport them to so dangerous counsels. If the worst come, yet must this voyage necessarily produce the one of two things, equally necessary in a troublesome time, War, or Liberty. I am not so clear sighted in future events, as to answer for what shall happen; yet since the order of seasons are framed to facilitate our passage, and that all things have changed more successfully unto us than we presumed to desire; there is small appearance that Heaven will declare itself in favour of the less supportable cause. But that which doth the rather fortify my confidence, is the vigorous estate wherein I find my Lord your Father, he hath no show of old age, save only experience and Authority. The late Ligue, the Rebels, the Sword, nor poison have not been of power to kill him, nor was there ever man so awful in his adverse fortune. As for you (my Lord) who are the object of his hopes and fears; and who are to perform one of the principal parts in his designed action: The City of Mets. remember you have the command of a place which hath been the dishonour of Charles the fifth, and which affoardeth France a revenge for all the affronts he offered thereto. He who defended it against him had no more than two arms as you have, and one single life, nor was he made of any other matter then other men are. It is true, he fought by the King's succours, but it sufficeth you fight for his service, and that all men know you are resolved not to survive your fortunes. Were you born to perform ordinary actions, I should hold it fit to speak unto you in another strain; but since you purpose not to exercise any idle dignity in this World, nor are at this present in case to make use of the hands of a great Army, or expect reputation in your bed; speak as high as you please, provided you act accordingly; and that out of your particular forces (since those of the State fail you) you make good unto the King, the last conquest of his Ancestors. One only worthy man hath heretofore been the whole Republic of Rome, and hath resisted the fury of a victorious Army. So though there were no more true Frenchmen, but my Lord your Father, yourself, and my Lords your brothers, I could no way despair of public affairs, nor of the furtune of this Kingdom. My Lord, I am so weary, that I am forced to defer the continuation of this discourse till another time, and to rest a while to make a more ample relation. I will content myself for the present, to pass my promise unto you of that History, the subject whereof I require at your hands, and to assure you it is impossible to be more than I am Your most humble, most obedient, and most affectionate servant, BALZAC. The 9 of Febr. 1619. To the Signior of Plessis, Governor of Tollemount, from BALZAC. LETTER II. SIR, SInce it appears you have a will to lose every hour what you can in truth spend but once, and that you so slightly esteem your life, as though it were another man's; me thinks the War hath dealt very kindly with you, in being contented to leave you half a face, and that you may well account what is left, as gotten goods. The Duke de maine, and the rest were not quit at so easy a rate: and it hath pleased God to show examples in this kind, to make it appear that he approveth not vanity; nor that he heedeth the advice of men for the defence of his own and his Church's cause. Truly, if these men had practised with the enemy, they could not have been more confident; nor have gone more naked to War, had they fought against women: And in truth I am so far from praising their desperate courses, as I do not so much as pardon them their deaths; and if my opinion had passed, I should have thought it fit to have accused them as culpable of their own deaths, and as such who had committed the greatest Parricides. It becomes me ill in this place to prescribe rules to my Master; for should I attempt to teach your courage how far it should extend itself, I might seem to do no less than prescribe Laws to what is illimitable. Yet be pleased (I pray you) to be informed, that valour is so tender and delicate a virtue, that if it be not sometimes well shielded and concerved by some others, it becometh more hurtful to him who hath it, then healthful for the State, often endamaged by it, or to the Prince who maketh use thereof. And surely without the assistance of reason, which ought to be its Governness, and Prudence as a guide unto it: there is not any passion more blind, nor which doth less differ from the fury of beasts, and the brutish ferocity of Barbarians: The latter of these think it cowardice to quit the place, though the breach of a River roll upon them; or not to stand firm though they see a house falling on their heads. But these wretches, and we, have not the same pretensions; for as they propound to themselves, only to kill, and to die, so should we only aim at victory, and neglect the rest; otherwise to what end is the knowledge of virtue unto us, and of the limits which boundeth it, or to be born under a more happy Climate, then that of Polonia and Muscovia: if we draw no advantage either from the excellency of our institutions, or extractions; I do not at all wonder, why there are men who prefer death before indigence, and who not finding any contentment in their own Countries, are well pleased to pass beyond the Ice of their natural air, as willing to forgo the infelicity of their fortunes. But a man of worth, who at all hours enjoyeth both perfect and pure contents, and who hath a great share of this age's virtue to lose, is a Traitor to the Public, and a Tyrant to himself, if he forsake all this for a mere fancy, and deprive the World thereof, only for a flash of Fame and vain Glory. You know this better than I can tell it you, and if you suppose the Philosophy you have heretofore so highly esteemed, be yet wise enough to instruct you, she will tell you that Life is the groundwork of all other good that can here befall us; since by means thereof one may recover Kingdoms, though utterly lost, and remain Victor, after having been defeated in four battles. There is no question but a dead Lion is less worth than a living Dog, or that the most part of those Princes of whom there hath been so much speech, & those valiant Captains with whose Heroic acts so many Histories are stored, would not willingly change their Laurels for our lives. Rejoice therefore (good Sir) together with Nature: in that you are as yet in the number of men; and comfort yourself with Hannibal, and the Father of Alexander the great, for the loss you have received: whatsoever you can say, you have yet sight enough to cause you to turn lovesick, and to contemplate the beauties of Heaven and Earth. But suppose you were wholly blind, yet is it true, that the Night hath its pleasures as well as the Day; yea, and such as you best love. Yours, BALZAC. The 18. of Decemb. 1622. Another Letter to Hidasp from BALZAC. LETTER III. MY dear Hidasp, thou canst not imagine the content I take in thy Letter, and in the good news it brings me, it is the only way to cause me to contradict myself, when I account my estate miserable, since I hear thou art in health, and lovest me. Were I not confident thereof, I should the next day drink poison; or if not valiant enough to attempt so hardy an enterprise, I should die with sorrow. Thou art (then) as necessary for my living as life itself; so as if thou desirest my estate, thou needest not for that any other means, than to deprive me of thy good opinion: But truly I never had the least apprehension of such a loss, and I assure myself if I were dead, thou shouldest be double as rich as thou desirest to be. I have long since been assured, thy thoughts are not enthralled to the earth, or that thy passions only exceed those of the vulgar. Let me entreat thee to cherish them, my dear Hydasp; and though I be continually sad, and at all times ill affected in my health; yet remember that the very rave of my Fever are sometimes more prizeable than Phylosophycal Meditations; and we see beautiful faces often weep so gracefully, that some have been enamoured of their tears. I have fully acquainted thee with our occurrents here, by my last Letters, nor will I let any opportunity pass without giving myself the content of discoursing with thee in that kind; bind me so much unto thee, as to do the like on thy part: But if thy Letters be so short, as usually they are, I will now betimes tell thee, I will read them so often, as they shall become long enough in spite of thee. I know well how in the place where thou art, thou oughtest not lose any minute of time, since opportunities last no longer; and resolve thyself to take a thousand unprofitable journeys to thy Lord's Chamber, before thou makest one to purpose. Great men use not to keep Registers of the absent, nor remembrancers of them they usually forget: but rather to the contrary; they imagining there is no other thing on earth but themselves, and what concerns them: (provided, they find any who look like men) they never trouble themselves to inquire for others, since with them assiduity often works more than service; yea, and those whom they would not affect for me●i●, they will love by custom: It is therefore necessary you be still in sight, and always at hand for the entertainment of Fortune: It is a tradition the subtle gascoins at their deaths leave to their Children: and truly as choler assumeth Arms out of whatsoever it encounters; so is it true, that occasion taketh hold of all such as present themselves. We ought to contract perfect love with honest men, but yet not to be at odds with others. Poisons themselves are necessary in some cases; and since we are forced to live among savage creatures, we had need have the industry either to familiarise, or force them. I advise thee not to look before thee, behind thee, and on every side when thou sp●ahes●; or to be in so great fear to be taken at thy word, as thou darest not tell what a clock it is if one asks thee. Thou shal● gain much by being silent, the dumb shall at all times therein exceed thee: For my part. I never make question of speaking, when I have any thing in my head better than silence. I do not hereby mean that we ought to discover our intentions by our looks, or that our intetiour conceptions appear outwardly with all their passions, namely, of fear, hatred, or distemper. This were to betray ourselves, and to give ill examples to others. But herein you are to make election of place, and persons, and not wilfully to deprived the self of the most pleasing fruit of man's life, there being not any, in whose breast we may securely deposit either our griefs, or joys. Besides, I would not have thee of that Spaniards humour, who took for his device Que si que no; but consider with thyself that reason is a sacred thing, whereto thou art to yield, where ever it appears. I confess that most things are involved in uncertainties, and that humane sciences have very slender and uncertain foundations; yet are there some truths so perspicuous, and so absolutely received into the World's approbation, as it were no less than to lack common sense, to call them into question; for he who should say, my Lord the Constable d' Esdiguiers were not valiant, or my Lord the Cardinal of Richelieu, were not a man of able parts: doubtless all men would wonder at him, as at one who sought to introduce some new Sect, or endeavour to overthrow the fundamental Laws of the Kingdom. Nay, I tell you yet more; you are pyously to believe divers sots to be sufficient men, since the World will have it so; and that Kings are not the only men who desire complasencie; since if we mean to live among others, we must sometimes necessarily flatter, and frame ourselves to their opinions. Let us then follow the judgement of the wise, and the customs of the vulgar; let us keep our thoughts to ourselves, and allow them our actions and outsides. As I have advised thee not to be over silent, so would I not have thee over talkative, nor to weary any one with thy discourse of Mountauban, or the exploits thou hast there seen performed. I assure thee to avoid the company of these boasting companions; I would take post, go to Sea, or fly to the World's end. They seem to me to have gotten a patent for prating, and that it were no less than to take their purse, if one should offer to speak a word in their presence: But above all, it is very death to me, when these fellows come fresh out of Holland, or when they begin to study the Mathematics. From Milan to Sienna I was haunted with one of these Chapmen; whose company I shall so long as I have life, reckon among my greatest misfortunes. He would needs reform all the fortifications of those strong places we passed by; he trod on no earth at which he carped not, nor travailed over any Mountain, on which he had not some design; he set upon all the Cities in the Dukedom of Florence; he desired only a certain short prefixed time, to take in all the States of Medena, Parma, and Urbino: yea, I had much ado to draw him from casting his designs upon the lands of the Church, and S. Peter's Patrimony. These be diseases the roots whereof are not to be cut up, without taking away the tongue withal: Nay, I fear when all this is done, there will be yet need to pass further into the cure, and to use means to bereave them of voice, for the general good of such as can hear. There is yet another sort of importunate people, whose number doth so multiply in France, it is almost arrived to an infinity: These have not one half hours entertainment for thee, without telling thee the King is raising puissant forces; how such a one is out of credit with his faction; another is a great searcher into, and meddler in State-matters, and how a third diveth into all the intricacies of Court-businesses. If you can have the patience to bear them yet a while longer, you shall straight understand how the Precedent Jannin was the man who had the truest intentions of all the Ministers of Justice: That it is expedient to show a Masterpiece of State, to give reputation to the present current of affairs: That the King's Authority was interessed in this action: and that those who sought to cry down the present government, rather aimed at their particular advantages, than redress of disorders See here the stile wherewith they persecute me even to my poor Village, and which is a cause I loath State, and public affairs. Tyre 〈◊〉 therefore my cars at thine arrival, lest you turn mine adversary with intention to assault me with these huge words. If you know not that the●e follies have not always the same aspect, and that the●e are as well serious follies, as slight ones, I would admonish thee in this place: Now though a men at twenty can have no great experience of the World, yet have you a sufficient clear judgement to keep yourself from being deluded, by the appearance of good, or by the outward lustre of evil. I had need of more time than the bearer allows me, and of more words then a Letter is capable of, sufficiently to instruct thee what thou oughtest to do, and what to avoid; or to learn thee a Science wherein myself do study in teaching thee. I will therefore only say, since I am hastened to make an end, that before all other things thou art to offer thy whole will to God, if thou be'st not able to give the rest; and to have (at least) good designs, if it be not as yet in thy power to do any good deeds. I well know it is no slender task, to undertake to guard ourselves from evil, where enticements are extraordinary, and the danger extreme, and where (thou wilt tell me) that if God will hinder thee from loving beauty, he had need make thee blind. I having no pleasing answer to make thee hereto my dear Hydaspe, I refer thee to thy Confessor: entreating thee to consider, how if the King in the flower of his age wherein we see him, and in the midst of an infinity of objects offering themselves to give him content, is yet notwithstanding so firm in the resolution to virtue, that he as easily surmounteth all voluptuous irregularities, as he doth his most violent rebels, and is not any way acquainted with forbidden pleasures, nor doth glut himself even with lawful ones: If as I say, this truth be generally avowed, I beseech thee tell me why continency may not be placed among things possible? But I much fear, there is no means to gain this for granted at thy hands; since thou believest as others do, that to be chaste, were no less than to usurp upon the possession of married wives. Yet at the least Hydaspe, if this body of thine, being of sufficient ability to send Colonies into each corner of the World, and to people the most desert places, will needs be employed; I entreat thee to stay there, without being transported with the debauches of the mouth, which have no other limits than the loss of reason, and ruin of health. I should be in utter despair were it told me, that my brother drinks as much as though he were in a continual Fever, and were as great a purveyor for his paunch, as if he were to enter into a besieged City. I confess thy inclination doth of itself sufficiently divert thee from these german virtues, and that thou art not much less sober than my self, who have passed over three years without suppers, and who would willingly feed only upon Fennill and pick-teeth, if I thought I could thereby recover health. Yet truly this doth not hinder me from having some apprehension, when I consider how the examples of great ones doth often give Authority to vice: and that to keep ourselves upright in the midst of corruption, is not an effect of the ordinary force of men: Consider then once again (Hydasp) that we are powerfully to resist temptations. Have an eye to the interest thou hast to contain thyself within the limits of an orderly life; and be well advised, whether thou couldst be contented to be of the proportion of those good fellows, whose spirits are choked in their own grease, and who become such comely creatures, that if their bodies were pierced, there would nothing pass forth of their wounds but Wine and Porridge. Besides, ●aking profession as thou dost, to be a man of thy word, be not offended 〈◊〉 I summon thee to observe what thou hast promised me: or that I ●●●ly tell thee, that if thou fallest again to the old game, I shall have 〈◊〉 subject to assure myself of thy fidelity in other thy former pro●●●●s. Were thou the King of the Indies, or thy life endless, I would not ●●rbid thee this exercise; but since we have scarce leisure enough in 〈◊〉 World to attain virtue, nor over great possessions to secure us from ●●●verty; believe me Hydasp, it is very dangerous to suffer shipwreck on 〈◊〉; and besides, the expense of money, (which we esteem as dear 〈◊〉 ●s as life) to lose our senses likewise, and our time, the last where●●●●●●recoverable, is both shameful and sinful. Having here admo●●●● thee well near, though confusedly and scatteredly of those things 〈◊〉 ●●ghtest to fly, it were requisite I should likewise advise thee of 〈…〉 fit for thee to follow, and to cause if I could, good laws to 〈…〉 ●●vil manners. But it is fit to take time to deliberate upon a 〈◊〉 of such importance, and truly to speak herein to purpose, all the wit I have, joined with that of others, were no more than sufficient. Yours, BALZAC. The 1. of Jan. 1624. To Hydasp from BALZAC. LETTER IU. MY dear Hidasp, if God had conferred a Kingdom upon me, with condition not to have me sleep more than I do: I should prove the most vigilant Prince living, nor should I need either Guards, or Sentinels about my person. Surely there is not any (my self excepted) for whom night was not made, since when the winds are calm, and all nature quiet, I alone watch with the Stars. But I much fear lest God will not be satisfied herewith, since I foresee so many miseries ready to roll upon me, as I have no small apprehension to become more wretched to morrow, than I am at this present. The only countenance of Hydasp would refresh me, and cause my pain to be in some sort pleasing. But since there are now at least a dozen great Cities, and a hundred leagues of Snow between us, I have much ado to forbear dying, and to support myself upon my weakest part. Yet my meaning is not to have thee return hither; for (were it possible for me) I had much rather come to thee, and continually to gaze on that face whereof I have drawn so many fair poutraicts. It is true, there are few men living, whose love we should prefer before liberty. But assure thyself thy Master is of those; be not therefore more proud than Henry the third, who first obeyed him. For my part, though I be naturally refractory, yet have I ever had a special inclination to his service; yea, when all things went cross with him, and that his best friends forsook him, I took pleasure in perishing, on purpose to afford him some consolation in his calamities. Many desire a dependency on him out of their particular ends, but me thinks we should have more noble designs, since his only virtue deserveth to be followed, and to cause a press wheresoever it passeth. In truth, the service we yield to so great a person, aught to hold the rank of the chief recompenses we are to expect; yet after this, there followeth another seldom failing any of good parts; yea, or those who have but patience. If thou heest of the one, or other sort of such men, remember this maxim; and do not as those honest persons, who think they do good service to the State, when they betray their Masters. Beasts themselves are capable of acknowledgement; and that Italian had some small show of reason, who called those Devils, who cured Agues, good Angels. Yet truly it is no less than to be over mannerly to go so far, nor would I thank God's enemies for those gracious favours I indeed receive from him only. But as touching the rest of worldly affairs, there is no question, but we are to reflect upon the nearest occasions Fortune affoardeth us; and those who seek after more remote means, shall in conclusion find from one degree to another, that it is to Hugh Capete to whom they are obliged. I was afraid lest I should have left my fingers upon this paper, and have disenabled myself for ever writing more Letters after this, had I any longer continued my discourse. I tell thee no lie Hydasp, this is the third Winter we have had this year, and the greatest irregularity I ever observed in nature, For Gods love inquire the cause of Father Joseph, and entreat him from me, if yourself be not acquainted with him, that he would be pleased to employ the credit he hath in Heaven, to cause the return of warmer weather. BALZAC. The 25. of Jan. 1624. To the Seigneur de la Roche from BALZAC. LETTER V. SIR, I Cannot conceive your meaning, when you speak of my friendship, as of a favour, or predestination, or in being so prodigal of your compliments and commendations. There was sufficient in the Letter you lately sent, to bereave me of speech, and to make me fly to the Indies, were I forced to frame you a punctual answer. But since you are usually victorious, be pleased, I beseech you, to permit your courtesy to work the same effects, as doth your courage; and suffer me to yield unto you in this occasion, as I would do in those of Rochel, or Mountuban. I only entreat you, hence forward to love me with less ostentation and lustre than you have done hitherto; and since it is not in my power to hinder you from having me in estimation, let me at the least entreat you to carry the matter so, as though you had committed some sin; that is, without calling witness, or confirming the fact: otherwise, doubtless the World will suppose your affection to be injurious to your judgement; and I much fear, lest I should be blamed for blinding you, and for being more wicked than the late War, which was contented only to make divers of our friends, blinkards. Truly that so complete a person, whose acquaintance you commend unto me; not finding me suitable to the portrait you showed him, may well say, you are not only satisfied in being singly seduced, but seek to raise Heresies out of your errors, and a contagion out of your crazy constitution. This being so, I see not how I can better make good, either mine own reputation, or your report, then by voluntarily banishing myself from the place where you are, and not by my presence, to overthrow all the Honour you have hitherto acquired for me. If therefore you will not appear a deceiver, nor declare yourself my adversary, leave me I pray you, to my retiredness, where I study only to maintain health, and take no other pains then to procure my own repose, nor have any conference, but with myself. Your most humble servant, BALZAC. The 10. of April 1623. To Mounsieur de Bois Robert from BALZAC. LETTER VI. SInce the dead never return but they affright us: I was persuaded I should do you no small pleasure, nor a little oblige you, in forbearing to appear so much as in Paper before you, suffering you purely to enjoy your accustomed pleasures, without the mixture of any thing that might be distasteful unto you. But since at this present you come to disturb the quiet of Churchyards, and to find out a man, in affecting whose memory you might well be satisfied; I am forced to tell you, that the party you so highly esteem, is wholly remaining beyond the Alps, and how this is only his Ghost lately returned into France. I break all the Looking-glasses I meet with, I blunder the water of all Rivers I cross, I avoid the sight of all Painters in any place where I come, lest they show me the pattern of my pale visage. Yet if in the crazy case wherein I am, I were any way capable of consolation, I beseech you to be assured, I should take it as proceeding from the good success of your affairs, nor would I desire of my disease any long respite, than what were requisite to rejoice with you. But truly, it is an enemy who knows not how to admit of conditions of peace, or truce, and I am so happy as not to be suffered to quit my pains to resume them. The meat I here eat for sustenance, is to me as pleasing as poison, & I endure life out of penance, whereas you (in the place where you live) spend the remainder of the Golden age, refusing nothing to your senses you lawfully may allow them. Though the Queen's Court be so chaste, as it were easier to drink drunk of a fountain, then to take any dishonest pleasures there, and that to gain admittance, it is requisite to be first purified at the Porter's lodge; yet are you allowed even there to have pleasing temptations, and going elsewhere, to seek out more solid contentments. But as for me in the case I am, I make no difference at all between lovely creatures, and well limmed pictures: and the misery I endure, having bereft me of action, my wretched virtue is as much constrained, as the sobriety of the poor is necessary. In all this I add not one word to the bare truth; and if the Count of Pountgibaut had his pardon to let you know how it is with me, he would tell you that I am more withered then the last years Roses, and how all the Engineers in an Army, were no more than sufficient to remove me. But my discourse will be more pleasing, if I speak of that head which deserveth to fill a Diadem, then in continuing this wretched complaint. When at the first I saw concurrent in him so much valour, and so great beauty, I neither took him for man nor woman; but after having recollected myself, I supposed him to be the Amazonian Queen: and doubtless in the World's infancy, it was to such faces only, whereto all people yielded willing obedience, none quitting their service, every man's duty being conformable to his inclination; so as the only means then to be rebellious, was to be blind. When this young Lord came to Rome at his return from te battle of Prague, I can well witness the jealousy he a● once afforded both to men and their wives, and of the great Prognostics all such gave of him, who presumed to have any experience in future occurrents, either by the aspect of Stars, or some more sublime understanding: besides, to consider how at twenty years of age, there is scarce any corner of the known World he hath not traced, to encounter honourable actions; nor any sort of combat wherein for the most part he hath not been Conqueror; that he hath born Arms against Turks, and Infidels, that he hath appeared both in battles and sieges of Cities; that he hath given life to some enemies, and taken it from others. This (to speak truth) is a thing God suffereth as rarely to be seen as deluges, and other great effects of his power, or justice, in a long process of time the merest Cowards may become Masters; were it by no other means, but that by seeing all men die before them, they may inherit the whole World. Divers likewise have performed great exploits, who have begun their actions either with gross errors, of mean adventures. But as there are very few Rivers navigable even from their first fountains, nor Countries where the Sun sendeth forth his full heat from the very dayspring: so are such men (doubtless) very rare and singular, who have not any need either of growth, or years; nor are subject either to the order of times, or rules of nature. But I have no purpose to fold up a book in a Letter: for though my grief do sometimes permit me to spend some small time upon pleasing subjects, yet will it not allow me to make thereon any long stay. I must therefore leave off, during my short good day, lest I fall sick again in your presence, and once more clog you with my complaints, instead of thanking you for your kind remembrance, and assuring you of the great desire I have to remain so long as I live, Your most humble servant, BALZAC. The 4. August 1615. A Letter from Balzac to Mounsieur de Bois Robert. LETTER VII. THough I receive no news from you, and howbeit those from Paris are generally naught: yet am I so confident of your excellent constitution, as I cannot imagine it can be endamaged by that contagious air; Surely if it be not in such sort infected, that birds fall down dead, and that the Springs be not corrupted, you have small cause to fear; and I have heretofore seen you of so perfect a composition, and so strong a substance, that an ordinary infection (I suppose) is unable to seize upon you: And rather than I will have any apprehension of your being carried away with the current of those who die of this great mortality; I shall sooner believe that God reserveth you to make the world's Epitaph, and those last Songs appointed for the Catastrophe of all humane joys. Yet ere it comes to this point, remember your promise, I pray you, and send me something to rid me of the Megreme I have taken in reading the sotteries of these times. I cannot counterfeit the matter, but must confess I taste Verses as I do Melons; so as if these two sorts of Fruits have not a relish near approaching to perfection, I know not how to commend them though on the King's Table, or in Homer's works. Whatsoever you do, yet at the least permit nothing to your spirit which may wound your reputation; and above all, let me entreat you not to be the man who may justly be taxed of having violated the chastity of our language, or for instructing the French in foreign vices, utterly unknown to their Predecessors. Poetry, which God hath sometimes made choice of, for the uttering of Oracles, and to unfold his secrets to mankind, aught at the least to be employed in honest uses: Nor is it a less offence to make use thereof in vicious matters, than to violate a Virgin. This I speak upon the subject of our friend, whose end I fear will hardly be natural, if he die not the sooner of his fourth Pox. This is the second time he hath issued out of Paris by a breach, having escaped as furious a flame as that of Troy. For my part, I cannot conceive what should be his design. For to war against Heaven; besides, that he shall be but slackly accompanied in such an expedition, nor hath a hundred hands as it is said of Giants; he ought to understand, it was an action they could never achieve: and how in Cicilia there are Mountains yet smoking with their Massacre. We come not into this World to prescribe Laws, but to submit ourselves to those we find, and to content ourselves with the wisdom of our forefathers, as with their Land and Sun. And truly, since in matters indifferent, novelties are ever reprehensible, and that our Kings quit not their Lilies to quarter Tulipans in their arms: by how much greater right are we obliged to conserve the ancient, and fundamental points of religion, which are by so much the more pure, in that by their antiquity they approach nearer to the Origine of things, and for that between them, and the beginning of all good, there is the less time subject to corruption. To speak plainly, there is small appearance that truth hath from the beginning of the World attended this man, on purpose to discover itself unto him in a Brothel, or Tavern; and to be sent forth of a mouth which comes short in sobriety to that of a Suisse. I intent not to intermeddle with the Courts of Parliament, nor to prevent their decrees by mine opinion: And to think to make this man more culpable than he is, were as much as to cast Ink on an Ethiopians face; I owe so much to the memory of our forepast acquaintance, as I rather pity him as a diseased person, then pursue him as an enemy. I confess he hath parts in him not absolutely ill, nor do I deny I have much pleased myself with his freedom of speech, so long as he proposed only men for his object, and spared to speak of holy things. But when I heard say, he exceeded the bounds of inferior matters, and banded himself even against what is transcendent to Heaven, I instantly quitted all acquaintance with him, and thought the only pleasure I could do him, was to pray to God to restore him to his right senses, and to take pity on him as he did of the Jews, who crucified our Saviour. Hereafter I will be better advised then to weary you with so long a discourse, or to tyre myself in troubling you: But truly I thought I could do no less after three years' silence, esteeming this not to be over much for a man who is so slow a paymaster, for so many Letters he oweth you. Yet cannot I conclude, before I inform you of some particulars touching the place where I am at this present, and of my employments here. First there is no day passeth wherein I see not the rising and setting of the Sun, and how during that time, I withdraw myself from all other distractions, to enjoy the purity of that fair light. Behold here in this present state wherein I am, all the Courtship I use, and the only subjection I oblige myself unto. When I desire to take the air at other hours of the day, I must indeed confess my eyes have no objects so vast as the Sea, or Apennineses, not do I behold Rome under my feet as formerly I have done: Yet do I on all sides discover so pleasing a prospect, as thouge it fill not the capacity of my spirit so much as did the other, yet doth it far more content me. Painters come forty days journeys hence, to study in my Chamber, and if nature cause her greatness to appear, even from the bottom of the deepest Abysses, and darkest downfalls, she hath no less placed her rarest perfections under my windows. Moreover, I am plunged in abundance up to the eyes, but my riches are tacked to the twigs and branches of Trees; for as Summer hath made me plentiful, so will Winter reduce me to my former poverty. In the mean time, I make Feasts of Figgs & Melons, yea, out of the very Muscadine Grapes I eat, there issueth liquor enough to make half a Kingdom drunk; and the thing whereat happily you will wonder, is, that I put all this into a sick man's stomach, to whom well-nigh all good things are forbidden: yet have I found a means to reconcile my surfeits with my Physical receipts, and in one and the same day I both enjoy pleasure, and endure pain; for I nourish my Fever with excellent fruits, and purge it with Rhubarb: but howsoever I cannot hazard my health in more innocent debauches, since I perform them without troubling the tranquillity either of earth or air, or without bereaving any thing of life. The first men the World produced, attained to extreme age with such pure cates as mine are; for as of all bloody meats they only used Cherries and Mulberries; so was the simplicity of their lives accompanied with a perfect reposedness; Nature as yet being void of all Monsters: There was as then no mention either of Geryon, or Minotaur, nor of φφφφ. The Inquisition and Parliament were only in the Idea of things; and of the two parts of Justice, there was that only known which gave merits their due rewards. BALZAC. From BALZAC, 1623. Another Letter from Balzac to Mounsieur de Bois Robert. LETTER VIII. YOur Letter of the fifteenth of the last Month, came to my hands as I was ready to seal these Presents. You might have just cause to tax me, should I let them go unanswered, or if this dead man appearing in your presence, did not give you thanks for the many excellent words you have used in the adorning his Funeral Oration. I should be but too proud if others were of your opinion, or were infected with the like error you are; but I much fear you will not for the present herein find a party equal to that of the League, and do much doubt if all of a contrary conceit, should be declared Criminals, there would hardly be any acquitted in this Kingdom. Howsoever, I hold myself much obliged unto you, in conferring so liberally that upon me, you so well know I want, and for bestowing all your colours and mercurial mixtures to make me seem beautiful: I will be well advised how I fall out with him who flatters me, and in the love I bear myself, I shall at all times suffer a rival with much satisfaction. Since a certain Gentleman in Germany pleaseth himself in being styled King of Jerusalem, and since those who have no real Patrimonies, tickle themselves with mere Titles and Arms: by the like reason may I imagine myself to be the man you will needs have me, and receive from your courtesy the qualities my Nativity hath not afforded me. But to disblame both of us, I beseech you hereafter to have more care of my modesty, and not to put me in danger either to lose it, or not to believe you. It is no less than to wrong the Angels, to call other spirits than theirs divine; yea, all the Celestial Court is sensible of suffering that name to fall to ground. For my part, I am so far from freeing myself of humane defects, as I do absolutely avow, there is not any more imperfect than I am, no not so much as blinkards and maimed persons. I espy faults enough, on which side soever I see myself, and my wit is so disfurnished of foreign perfections, as I hold no man for learned, if he be not adorned with those abilities whereof I am ignorant; yea, even in that whereof you suppose me to have a perfect understanding: I have in truth no more than mere doubts and conjectures, so as if there were a man of perfect Eloquence to be found at the World's end, I would go in pilgrimage on purpose to see one contrary to N. N. To speak truly, there is great difference between filling the ear with some pleasing sound, and expressing the fancies of Artisans and Clowns according to Grammatical rules; and in reigning over the spirits of men by force of reason; and to share the government of the World with Conquerors and Lawful Kings. I have not the presumption to suppose I am arrived at this point; but I likewise think few have attained thereto, and the Philosophers Stone were with more ease to be extracted, than the Eloquence I propose to myself. It is as yet a kind of Terra incognita, and which hath not been discovered together with the Indies. The Romans themselves could only recover the bare image, as they did of those Territories, over which they Triumphed by a false Title: Yea, Greece herself how vainly soever she boasted thereof, yet seized she only upon the shadow, not seeing the substance: So as upon the matter divers have possessed others with that conceit, being first deceived themselves; and are obliged to the restitution of an ill acquired reputation. Many of our friends have fallen into the like errors; I will not name them, fearing to astonish at the first sight, all such to whom you shall show this Letter; or lest I should publish odious truths. It shall suffice I tell you by the way, that if to attain perfect Eloquence, it sufficed only to weary our hands with Writing, none could therein any way compare with our Practitioners and Pen-clerks. Yet is there not any reason why those, who perform poor things, should draw their weakness to their own advantage, or imagine I flatter them. A man is as well damned for one single deadly sin, as for a thousand without repentance; nor is it the strength of their judgement, which hinders them from committing many faults, but the only barrenness of their wits which enables them not to write many books. I might enlarge myself upon this subject, and discover divers secrets unto you, the world is not yet acquainted with. But I have neither time nor paper left, save only to tell you that I am Sir, Your most humble servant, BALZAC. Another Letter from BALZAC to the same man. LETTER IX. I Understand some have taxed me for saying (in my last Letter unto you) the spirits of Angels; since Angels being all spirits, it seemed unto them to be two inseparable terms: But to let such men see how ill grounded their Objection is, (and I suppose our judgements will herein agree) it may please them to remember, that we call Angels spirits, to distinguish them from bodies, being a far different signification from what the word Spirit importeth, when we take it for that part of the Soul which understandeth, reasoneth, and imagineth, and which causeth so different effects in the Soul of a fool, and that of a discreet person. Questionless (even among Angels themselves) there may be a difference found between the spirits of some, and othersome of them, to wit, in the faculty of Ratiotination and Comprehension: Since those of the last order are not illuminated, but by means of them of the precedent ranks, and so of the rest even to the first; which have a far more sublime intelligence than the inferior Orders, which as no man (how smally soever seen in the Metaphysics will doubt of) come as far short of the understanding the first Order is endued with, as they do of their degree. We are therefore to admit of this difference, and say, that an Angel is doubtless a Spirit, to wit, he is not a body: but withal that an Angel hath moreover a spirit, namely, this faculty of knowing, and conceiving either lesser, or more large, according to the privilege of his Order. So as if a spirit hath no other signification than a simple and incomposed substance, this inequality were not to be found among the Angels, being equally simple, and far from all composition and mixture. When then I say it was a wrong done to Angels to call any other spirits divine save only theirs: I take the word Spirit in its second signification, and thereby separate it from the Angel, and distinguish the simple substance, and nature angelical from that faculty of the Soul termed the understanding. But that one may not say, the spirit of Angels, because they are all spirit, is a reason very reprovable, and whereto there wanteth nothing but verity to make it no untruth; for that besides the spirit, or understanding affoarding to Angels so eminent a knowledge of divine things, they are likewise endued with will, causing them to love what they know, and with memory daily adding something to their natural intellect. But admitting I should yield to whatsoever these my reprehendors would have, and that I limit the word spirit within the bounds of its first signification, I should still have the better of it. For in truth our ordinary manner of conception cannot possibly represent Angels without bodies, yea, and the Church it self affoardeth them so fair, beautiful, and perfect ones, that from thence the best Poets ordinarily pick their Comparisons to pourtraite the rarest beauties. Besides, if in holy writ, mention be often made of the spirit of God, even before he assumed our corporal substance, and in a sense which could not be understood of the third person in Trinity, why may not I as justly speak of the spirits of Angels, being in comparison of God's spirit, no better than earth, and material; and which approacheth not by many degrees unto the simplicity and purity of this majesterial cause, being as the Mother to all the rest. You see here, that (howsoever) it is very dangerous to study by half parts, or to understand some small matter more than those who never were at School; yet is it out of such men as these, that Novelists and superstitious persons are raised; yea, and all the rest, who have reason enough to doubt, but not science sufficiently to determine rightly. BALZAC. To Mounsieur de Bois Robert from BALZAC. LETTER X. SIR, YOu have anticipated what I intended to say, and have not left for me in all Rhetoric, either compliment or commendations to return you. This is to force ingratitude by excess of obligation, and to reduce me to the necessity of being indebted unto you after I be dead. In truth it were necessary I had the power to promise you felicity and Paradise, in requital of the vows and sacrifices you offer unto me, and that I were in case to be your advocate, instead of being thus put to a stand to answer you. It may be you have a mind in such sort to disguise me to myself, as I shall not hereafter know who I am, but be forced to forget my own name, by causing me to imagine I am not the same man I was yesterday. Proceed at your pleasure to deceive me in this sort, for I am resolved not to contest with you in this kind, to the World's end: nor to arm myself against an enemy, who only throws Roses at my head. I should be very glad all my life would pass in such pleasing dreams, and that I might never awake, for fear of knowing the truth to my prejudice. But for the attaining this happiness, it is necessary I do quite contrary to your advice, and never quit my Countryhouse, where none comes to enter into comparisons, or contest with me, for the advantage I have over bruit beasts, or my Lackeys. I agree with you that it is the Court-voice which either approveth or condemneth all, and that out of its light, things though never so perfect, have no appearance: But I know not whether it were my best, to make that my own case; since I fear left my presence there, will rather prejudice my reputation & your judgement, then make good your position. Upon the matter, if there be any tolerable parts in me, they appear so little outwardly, as I had need have my breast opened to discover them: And in conclusion you will find a sufficient obligation for me, to have you think my Soul is more eloquent than my discourse, & that the better part of my virtue is concealed: Yet since my promise is past, I must resolve for Paris, though it prove as strange a place unto me, as if I were out of the World, or as though they should chase raw Courtiers thence, as they do corrupt Statesmen. To tell you plainly how the case stands, I am none of those who study the slightest actions of their lives, and who use Art in all they do, or do not. I cannot light upon that accent, wherewith they authorize their follies, nor make of every mean matter a mystery by whispering it in the ear: And less do I know how to palliate my faults; or make show of an honest man, if really I be not so: Now though I could make myself capable of these Arts, yet would it anger me shrewdly, if after having passed nine Ports, and abidden many back-casts to get thither, to be at last stayed at the Tenth: Nay, should I chance to get admittance; what a Hell were it for me to come into a Country where Hats are not made to cover heads, and where all men grow crooked with extreme cringeing. Consider therefore, whether this humour of mine would sure with the place where you are; or if a man whose points and garters seem ponderous unto him, and who finds it a difficult matter to obey God's Commandments, and the King's Edicts, can be drawn to be obliged to new Laws, or procure to himself a third servitude. In the stare wherein I now am, all the Princes in the World act Comedies to make me sport. I enjoy all the Riches of Nature, from the Heavens to River-waters, and I easily obtain of my moderate spirit, what I cannot attain unto by the liberality of Fortune. This being thus, will you persuade me to change those benefits none envy, with your fears, hopes, and suspicions; or not think it fit I value liberty, for which the Hollanders have made War (now this fifty years) against the King of Spain? But since I have passed my word, I am not resolved to revoke it; yet when I must needs bid adieu to my Woods and solitary places, which have thought me so many good things, and quit this enchanted Palace of mine, where all my thoughts are real inspirations; I shall have a great conflict within me, to keep my word with you. I will believe none but yourself, who best know whether or no I have reason to love this prison my Father builded for me, or this little spot of Land, where there is no defect but a Fountain of Gold and other unnecessary things; there being else sufficient here to satisfy a sober Person; I must confess the last great rains have blemished all the beauty abroad: And Winter which by right should be condemned never to depart from Swedland, is already come to cross the content I formerly enjoyed: But howsoever, there are yet pleasing remedies to avoid these present incommodities. The perfumes I burn, and whereof I am as prodigal, as though I exacted tribute from the Countries from whence they come, maketh me the less to miss the sweetness of the Spring: And a great fire resembling the brightest beauty, which I term the Sun of the night, and dark days, watcheth at all hours in my Chamber, and giveth light to my rest, as well as to my Studies. Before this witness (which I never loose sight of) all Nature is the subject of my meditation; & I conceive works, which happily may merit a place in your Library, & to be chosen Citizens of that Divine Republic. I know not what men do most esteem in books, but I am confident, that in this I compose, Justice and Majesty, shall appear so evenly tempered, as none shall therein find any thing either favouring of cowardice or cruelty. I take and make use of the art of Ancients; as they would have done from me, had I been the first man living. But I have no servile dependency upon their conceptions, nor am I born their vassal, to follow no other laws or examples, save theirs: To the contrary (if I deceive not myself) my invention is far more happy than my imitation; and as there have been in our age divers new Stars discovered, till this present unperceived; so I in matter of Eloquence, seek out singularities, hitherto unknown to any. It is certain, and you know it as well as myself, you who know good things when you see them, and who are the Author of divers; that there are none so severe Muses as the French, nor any tongue more hating affectation, & bare appearances of things than ours. All kind of ornaments therefore are not proper for her: and her purity is at such odds with the exorbitant licence of other languages, that a French vice in this kind, is often made a foreign virtue. But (in this case) we are to take advice of the understanding & care; and for my part, I have for my pattern herein, the Idea of the great Cardinal of Richelieu, as though he were present and privy to my conceptions, or as if he at all times received or rejected them, as they happen to be either good or otherwise: But to tell you the truth, I know not well which way I pass by this tedious and untrodden path, or what use I intent to make of these so many impertinent speeches. But I am as often out of my way, in the allies of my hermitage, & I have many times much use of a man, to let me know whether it be day, or night, and to order my times and actions; yet would I have you know, I do not usually fall into such errors, but only before such as I love and honour, as I do you; at all other times, be it in my visits, or in my Letters, I will be well advised, how I suffer the end to come far short of the Exordium; and from the first word, I make all the haste I may to come to Your most humble servant BALZAC. The 11. of Feb. 1624. To Mounsieur Girard, Secretary to the Duke of Espernon. LETTER XI. LEt me entreat you, that we may deface out of our intended History whatsoever hath passed these last four Months, let us imagine that time to have happened in some fibulous age, and (for our mutual content) let us herein learn the Art of Oblivion. Had I been constrained to quit our ancient acquaintance, being of equal age to either of us, and whereof I make as great account as of my Father's inheritance; surely I had been driven to the like straits, as he who with one hand should be forced to cut off the other. It is then the necessity of my inclination, which forceth me to affect Ph●lander, though he were mine enemy: and this passion doth so please me, that should any man cure me thereof, I would commense suit with him for my former melody. I will not accuse any man for the fault committed: Let us both imagine it to be a Child without a Father, and to clear all men, let us lay it up among the present miseries, and impute it to the power of Fortune. I will rather suppose it to be the last effect of the Comer, then impute it to any act of your spirit, or that you contrived the discontent I have endured. I swear upon whatsoever is August or Sacred amongst men, I have no less loved you then myself, & have equally shared myself between my brother and Philander. Henceforward I desire to do the like. But let us leave all these fair words, and petty niceties to poor spirits, and hereafter confer together with such liberty as Philosophy affoardeth us. But above all things I entreat you not to suffer a supposed wisdom to restrain you within particular respects and petty considerations, which may hinder you from speaking high in what concerns me. Fear not to show yourself my sure friend, for it is neither theft, nor throat-cutting; and of the two extremities of defect and excess, it is better to fall into the fairest and least faculty. Otherwise if friendship should never appear, but remain at all times as a recluse, what better use can we draw thence then of hatred alike hidden? and at the most what use is there to be made thereof, but only for the pleasure of conversation, and necessity of commerce? But I will leave this discourse whereof I hope you have no use, to ask you some news of the little man you sometimes see, and who imagineth the King bereaveth him of all such Offices as he bestoweth upon Mounsieur de Luines. I make no question but he daily tormenteth both Soul and body, for that he is not always at his Master's elbow, nor is so ordinarily seen at the Loover, as the steps of the great stairs, or the Swisses Hall. Threescore and ten years of experience have not sufficed to settle his spirit, and he who should observe his discourse without knowing him, instead of supposing his beard to be silver-haired, would rather think he had cast flower on his face; yet are we to confess he is one of the rarest Court-pieces, and that it is no small sport to see him in a chafe against the State, and the age we live in, which he maliceth more than he doth his creditors. Make quiet use of so pleasing a diversion, and remember the World could not end, nor Nature be perfect, if there were not as well such men as there are Apes and Monkeys. The 13. of Nou. 1623. To the same from BALZAC. LETTER XII. SIR, I Beseech you reserve your counsel for those who are not as yet resolved; and go persuade the Count Maurice to marry, and beget Captains for another age. As for me, I love both solitariness and society, but will not be continually tied to either. If my Father had been of my mind, I had remained where I was before he got me. I imagine the party you desire to bestow on me, is fair; but stay awhile, and she will not be so: She is no fool; but happily more witty than is necessary for an honest woman to be: She is rich, bun my liberty is unprizeable. So as to make me alter my resolution, there is no other means then an express commandment from God, with this proposition, either of death, or a wife. Those creatures at Paris are ordinarily so cunning, and well practised, they find nothing strange the first night they are married: and here, they have not wit enough to give their bodies right motion; but in all places they make men alike miserable, as do Fevers, War, or Poverty. To tell you freely how the matter stands, I will not daily disturb myself in telling my Mistress' hairs, for fear she should bestow them as favours upon her familiars; or to be jealous lest all the women who come to see her, were young men disguised. I cannot endure, that in my absence she and her gallant drink to the health of their Cuckold, and that I be the subject of all their chat. And on the other side, it were far worse, were she chaste, yet a scowl, and to be troubled with an enemy to assault me day and night. I rather affect a tractable vice, than a tyrannical virtue: But if there be any other remedy, I will not be reduced to such straits, as to choose the least of evils; since there is not any of this nature, I esteem not unsufferable. In a word Philander, my Neighbour's example doth not a little terrify me: he hath begotten so many dumb, blind, and deformed creatures, he is able to furnish a reasonable Hospital. I will not be bound to love Monsters, because they are mine, and were I assured not to be defective in this kind, I could well forbear having children; who if they be wicked, will desire my death; if wise, expect it, if the honestest living, yet will they now and then reflect upon it. But it may be (you will say) if my resolution were generally received, the Sea should be no longer charged with ships, and the Land would become desert. To this Philander I answer, that since the world is not always to endure, it were far better to have virtue become its Catastrophe, than any thing else; since it cannot find a more fair and honest conclusion, than a general abstinence in this kind. BALZAC. The 7. of April 1625. To Philander from BALZAC. LETTER XIII. SIR, SInce these be the particular days appointed for Devotion: we being now in the season of public Ecclesiastical mourning, and it importing every man to apply himself in the affairs of his conscience; you must excuse me, if I be short in my conversation with you in this kind, and keep all my discourse for my Confessor. It were strange we should herein do less than the Bells, who are now all dumb, or trouble the commerce contracted between God and man, only to tell idle stories. Let us therefore (I pray you) surcease all sorts of news, and not mingle any profane matter with this holy week, which desireth to be as pure as a Virgin. The high Feast we are falling upon, will set us at liberty, after which, instead of three Letters you have written unto me, I am contented to return you six answers. BALZAC. On Goodfriday. To the same from BALZAC. LETTER XIV. YOur plaints are both right eloquent, and very unjust: I can at least well assure you, my thoughts are not so often here, as where you are, and if my Letters come not so far, it is because they can find none to carry them. But by these presents I purpose rather to rejoice with you for the recovery of your health, then to afflict myself unseasonably. Things past are to be reckoned as nothing, and what happened yesterday, is as far from us as the life of Charlemagne. Wherefore, I who have a perfect experience of worldly affairs, would as soon comfort you for the loss you received by the death of your great Grandfather, (so many years dead before you were born) as for the late danger of your Fever, since it is now gone. The best is, the Physicians have not so far exhausted you, but there yet remains blood sufficient, to bestow part thereof in your Mistress' service, and to fill the World with your offences; so long as the ruins of your head may be repaired, and your beauty bud again with the next Roses, there is nothing lost hitherto; but indeed if instead of your former head, you carried the figure of a rusty Murrain, or rotten Pompion, I should much pity you in such a plight, and would presently add you to the number of decayed buildings. Now when all is done Philander, it is but a little water and earth mingled together, we study to conserve with all the maxims of wisdom, and all the rules of Physic. Let us reflect I pray you, upon our better part, and hereafter labour as well to cure ourselves of Vice, as of the Fever. It is that image of God we defaced by our own hands, we ought to repair; and our first innocency is the thing it behoveth us to ask at his hands, rather than our former health. For my part, I am absolutely resolved to lead a new life, and to take no other care but for my Soul's health, and to procure the same for others. And truly it were far better to consecrate this great Eloquence of ours to his glory, who gave it us, then t●●mploy it in commending fools, and in making ourselves to be p●●●●d among Children. The P. E. whom happily you know, and w●●●ath one of the best, and most polite wits of all his company, 〈…〉 ms me all he can in this my design, and every hour of his com●●●y is as much to me, as eight days of reformation; yet is he not a 〈◊〉 who professeth that pale virtue which affrighteth all men, and is compatible with humane infirmities: but quite contrary, he flatter●●… me in reprehending my errors, and instead of the penance I 〈…〉 he is contented to enjoin me honest recreations. Your bro●●●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 you more about eight days hence, and will give you 〈◊〉 account both of my actions and intentions; believe him as truth it 〈◊〉, and besides, assure yourself further upon my word, he is worth ●ome Doctor and an half, and hath a good wit, without speaking of his zeal and virtue. BALZAC. The 17. of January 1623. To Olympa from BALZAC. LETTER XV. I Am much troubled to find the cause of your tears; to impute them to the death of your Husband, is happily but the bare pretext. It is not to be imagined that death which causeth the most beautiful things to become offensive to the day's brightness, and affrighteth those who formerly admired them; should make that man pleasing unto you, who was never so to any. Yet you seem with him to have lost all, and do so cunningly counterfeit the afflicted, I can hardly believe what I see: Can it be possible, you should be thus pestered to support your good fortune with patience, or be really so sorrowful for the loss of a poor gouty fellow, for whose overlong living I should rather have thought it fit to comfort you? But if this be not thus, what do you with all this great mourning, wherein you plunge yourself, and this midnight never removing from your Chamber? I must confess I was never more astonished, then to find such an Equipage of sadness about you, accompanied with such elaborate actions, and so constrained countenances; and without jesting Olympa, (after this I have seen) there remaineth nothing for the full expression of a feigned passion, but only to wear black smocks, and to be attended by Moors. Yet is it time, or never to return to your right senses, and to conclude your Comedy, let me entreat you to leave off all these sour faces to fools. Cast off this black vail which hinders me from seeing you, and consider that five foot of ground, is worth you two thousand pounds by the year. To raise such a rent, the revenues of half some Kingdom were hardly sufficient; nor can you tax me for not speaking herein the truth, since I have it from your own mouth. Is it not almost incredible, so small a corner of earth, should yield so large a revenue. I doubt not but divers will suppose it bears Pearls or Diamonds. But I had almost forgot the most important business I am to impart unto you, and whereupon I first intended to write. I must therefore say, you are to have a special care, never to repair the loss you have lately received, assuring yourself there is no one man in the World worthy to enjoy you privatively: you shall be answerable for those excellent qualities Nature & Art have conferred upon you for the commanding of men, if you say you cannot live without submitting yourself to one. Herein Olympa, you ought not suffer the vain ambition to be wise to a great Signior to transport you, or the advantage of entering into the Loover in Carroch, to cause you quit the happiness you have to be Queen of yourself. How much Gold soever one bestow in fetters, and how glorious soever the servitude be, yet assure yourself they are but a couple of bad matters. Of late there was not any part of your body, whereof another was not master, he would examine your very dreams and thoughts: It was not in your power to dispose of one single hair, nay he rob you of your very name. See here Olympa, what it is to have a Husband, and what you torment yourself for with such prodigal tears. Me thinks it were all you could, or aught to do were he revived; or if the news of his death were doubtful. Yours, BALZAC. The 22. of July 1622. To Crysolita from BALZAC. LETTER XVI. I Must needs disabuse you Crysolita, and inform you better in the History of that old Haxtris, you supposed to be a very Saint. First, you are to understand, she is extracted out of her Mother's sins, nor was ever any Yirginity so brittle, as that she brought into this World. It is very likely she hath lost all remembrance of any such matter: But people of those days, stick not openly to affirm, that the first time she had liberty to go abroad, (at her coming home) she missed her Gloves and Maidenhead. After this, her beauty augmenting with riper years, she drew the eyes of all Italy upon her; and sold than fifty times at Court, she had formerly lost at School: But since then, she is arrived to an experience, far surpassing that of the Lord Chancellor, or the Pope's Datary: & when I shall tell you, she knoweth whether there be more pleasure in a circumcised Courtesan, then in a Christian; and that she hath experienced the activity of Indians and Muscovites, yet shall I relate but half the story. So it is, that now after she hath filled Limbo with her paricidial lechery, and been threescore years a Lectoress in vice, she would make you confident of her conversion: Yet am I credibly informed, that not having now any thing worth the losing, she is turned Solicitress, to entice others to vice; nor is there any chastity can escape her, if it take not sanctuary in the Carmelites. She cannot endure there should be one honest Woman in the whole City; this angering her as much, as though she robbed her, or had declared herself her enemy. Yet is this the Saint you so much talk of Crysolita, and the very same old Madam, from whom you promised me so many miracles. Now I, who know her very heart, write unto you, what hereafter you ought to believe: for let her make what show she will, yet I know she is as far from her conversion, as from her youth. The Capuchins themselves could not cause her to pass her word to turn honest Woman the next grand Jubilee; for instead of a better answer, she plainly told them, she had not as yet dispatched her business, and could well stay till another, which will happen about eight and twenty years hence. BALZAC. From Rome the 5. of February 1622. To Clorinda from BALZAC. LETTER XVII. Clorinda, FOr that I am not in your conceit sufficiently punished with my Fever, you belike think it fitting, I should yet be further afflicted with Love; so as there is nothing wanting to end my good fortune, but only a lawsuit and a quarrel. In this very place, designed for repose and joy, I continually burn, I tell each hour, and my dreams are full of distractions. Yet after all this, you suppose you much oblige me in wishing me every night good rest, as though it were not in your power to give it me. I had once a Master of your humour: he had means enough to procure my advancement, yet he supposed it sufficient to wish me well, and that I ought to rest satisfied, so long as he said, I deserved a good fortune. I know not whether it be your intention to use me in this manner: but howsoever I cannot take it ill, though you mock me, since you do it so handsomely. Advise me if you think good, to seek for a quiet life in Germany; cast me headlong down some Cliff, and then say God guide me; wish me a good night out of your Chamber, all this concerns not me Clorinda. If I receive injuries from you, I am no longer in state to take notice of them. Yet I should think you might be somewhat more sensible of my sorrows, and at least to show yourself pitiful towards me, though you reserve your affections for some other. It is no generous act to kill a sick person, there is not any so common a Quack-salver but can do as much And in conclusion Clorinda, all the honour you will attain unto herein after my death, is only to have had some small force more than my linger Fever. BALZAC. In my bed the 20 fit of my Fever. Another Letter to Clorinda from BALZAC. LETTER XVIII. WE are not separated either by Seas or Mountains: your lodging and mine touch, yet find I it an impossibility to see you. If you were at Japan, or in the Kingdom of China, I would resolve myself for those places, and I should find some Bark, or other bound for that voyage: think not I dissemble, there is not any shelve in all the Sea, not hazard to undergo in so dangerous a voyage, whereof I have not less apprehension, than the meeting this little brother of yours. But if may be it is yourself, who make these difficulties, I suppose, to arise elsewhere. You are glad you want no pretext, on purpose to vex me when you please. If it be so Clorinda, let me be so much obliged unto you, as to conceal it. I had far rather be deceived, then know the truth to my prejudice: Either my company is troublesome unto you, or you reserve your favours for some other friend. Howsoever, I am contented to believe your Mother is sick, and that you cannot quit her Chamber: there are no excuses so counterfeit, I accept not for currant, so long as they relieve my spirits: Considering the power you have over me, it is a small matter to satisfy yourself in making me conceive the best. Yet must I thank you Clorinda, for violating Justice so formerly, and feigning reasons with purpose to err punctually. By this means you will not suffer me so much as to seem miserable, and you cozen me so cunningly, I can neither bemoan myself, nor beshrew you. Yet is it impossible I can for ever conceal my sensibilities: What violence soever I offer to my humour, it can no longer be contained. To be short Clorinda, if you loved me as you say, you would not live with me in the fashion you do; but I should receive from you real favours, not vain appearances; and say what you will, we shall meet alone once in our lives: I beseech you let not this word affright you, for if any should find us in this manner, none will imagine we conspire against the King, or suspect I read Magic to you. Innocent actions carry their warrant with them, nor is there any necessity that two cannot be together without making a third. Believe me Clorinda, if we shut ourselves for three hours into a private Chamber, the most slanderous will only imagine, I either let you see the errors you are in, or that you administer some Medicine unto me for my Fever. BALZAC. The 15. April 1620. To Clorinda from BALZAC. LETTER XIX. I Know not whether I should term it slackness, or patience, the small resistance I make against the displeasures you do me; it may be, you are resolved to see how far my fidelity will extend, and to extort the utmost proofs thereof: yet is it better Clorinda to endure injustice, then to act it, and to be rather the Martyr, than the Tyrant. Show your wit, I beseech you by inflicting daily new torments upon me, and avoid all occasions of obliging me, with as much care as I seek those to serve you. I have prepared my spirits against all the bad occurrents can happen that way. There is nothing I cannot endure, if it comes from you, your slighting me only excepted: But herein I must tell you, I am so tender, as I am wounded with the least touch. I would not purchase the King's favour, if he afford it me in rough terms; nor would I accept of his Graces, were I forced to gain them in with the foregoing the thing I affect more than his Kingdom. You understand me sufficiently what I mean hereby, and the just occasion I have to complain; but still you will have me in the wrong, nor do I doubt, but you will accuse me of your crime: But speak truly, have you no apprehension, that he whom you have so often injured, shall at length grow weary of his sufferings, and lest he should lose all fear, together with his hopes. You might consider Clorinda, that I am not possessed with slight passions, and how yourself hath told me ere now; that if God should arm me with thunder when I am angry, within four and twenty hours there would be neither Towers nor Pavilions standing in any place: Wherefore to second your conceit; know (if that were) one while the fire should fall upon all jealous persons, and by and by burn all the Mothers and little brothers in a whole Province. And doubtless, if I did you no harm, yet would I put you into such a fright, you should be forced to hide yourself under ground, and come to meet me in some Cave. But I gain much by these glorious brags, or by my seeming severity: I assure myself, you mock me and my threats. It is long since I have showed you the way how to catch me, and you know the means how to reduce me to my former duty: I must confess I am not of sufficient force to contest with Clorinda: her kisses have power to expel all spleen, even out of the spirit of an Italian Prince, for the greatest injury can be offered him. Nay, they would force the Duke de Main to forsake his Arms in the hottest of his Martial conflicts: Wherefore I pray you, let us agree upon a business, which of necessity must be concluded: how disadvantageous soever the peace be I treat of with you, yet shall I at all times gain that which otherwise I should lose in your absence. I have therefore presented my complaints, with purpose to receive satisfactions: I am angry only to the end you may appease me. I will tell you to morrow, that I am come to oblige you, to take the pains to receive me. BALZAC. The 17. of April 1620. To Clorinda from BALZAC. LETTER XX. I See well Clorinda, I do but lose my labour, and that if were an easier matter to return Ice into Coals, then to kindle love in you: All I can say, makes no impression in your thoughts, you will not so much as hear reason, because it resteth on my side. Well Clorinda, I must resolve myself for the worst of events, and stay the time till your wrinkles afford me revenge for all the wrongs you have done me. Think not this tyrannical power of your beauty, will last to the World's end. Time which overturneth Empires, and prescribeth limits to all things, will use you as it doth the rest of fair workmanships. I pray have patience, if I take upon me to tell you this bad news; for I am not to day in the humour to flatter any. Though it would raise choler in you, yet must I say, you will grow stale, and be then no more what you now are. I doubt not of your sighs when you reflect upon this change, or that your very imagination is not sensible of some sorrow; yet shall this happen Clorinda, there is not an hour passeth, which impairs not some part of your face. But the time will come, when your Looking-glass will more scare you, than a Judge doth a Felon: your forehead will fly to the Crown of your head; your cheeks will fall beneath your chin, and your eyes of those days, shall turn of the same colour your lips are at this hour. I could willingly wish out of my love unto you, my relation were not so true as it is. But since I have quitted all complacency, there is no means to make me silent. Clorinda, the Sun is still beautiful, though ready to set; and the Autumn agreeable, though sprinkled with some Snow, but we enjoy no happy years, but the first of youth: And be as careful of yourself as is possible, yet can you not conserve your complexion, and acquire experience. Will you have me say more, and acquaint you with what I understood by a stranger, with whom I have conversed all this day? You are to know there is not any part of the World so remote, which his curiosity hath not carried him, nor rarity in Nature, he hath not carefully observed: He hath seen Mountains which burn perpetually without diminishing; he hath landed in Lands, never resting in one place; he hath seen natural Seamen; but he swore unto me, who among all these miracles, he never yet saw a beautiful old Woman. The Moral hereof is, that you must make use of your youth, and gather Nosegays before the Roses wither. None knows better than yourself, that to be fair, is to reign without having need either of Guards or Forts. You see you are the World's ambition, no man desiring further happiness than Clorinda: But think not to continue this absolute authority, or this general esteem, by other means than you compassed them; and assure yourself, that when you have no further attractions than an eloquent tongue, no man will seek for them among the surrowes of your face. A Woman had need be perfectly provided of virtue, to repair the ruins of her beauty. All the wit and experience in the World is fruitless, when she falls into this state, nor can any thing hinder her from being hated, but only to change Sex. Remember then Clorinda, not to expect to live, when you are as good as dead; nor do not spend that time in deliberating, which should be employed in doing. You are now of years both to give, and receive contentment, and we are in the Month, wherein each Creature turneth amorous; not excepting Lions, Tigers, or Philosophers. I entreat you therefore, not to show yourself the sole insensible creature in the World: suffer yourself to be convinced by reason, since you cannot resist the same but to your own disadvantage: You have no subject to be suspicious of what I say; for I advise you to nothing Clorinda, wherein I would not willingly join with you in the accomplishment. BALZAC. The 3. of May 1620. Another Letter to Clorinda from BALZAC. LETTER XXI. CLorinda, your Religion must needs be amiss, otherwise I should see you now and then at Church: But I think it were an easier matter to convert a whole Nation, then to dispose you to give me content. The cause why you persist in your own opinion, is, because it is opposite to mine. Well then, I must depart without speaking with you, and am barred from affoarding to my affection, what good manners would have exacted of me, though I had not loved you: Truly I know not in what manner to suffer so wounding a displeasure, nor am I so well acquainted with myself, as to pass my word for him I speak of in this occasion. All I can say unto you Clorinda, is, that the only way to rid me out of my pain, is to perform the thing I have so often proposed unto you, and to make yourself capable of a strong resolution. Never did any Prince enterprise a more glorious voyage, then mine shall be, if you will make one: and truly, I see not why you should make any difficulty herein, the longer your journey is, the further shall you be removed from tyranny. It is a Monster you ought to fly from, even to the World's end, and with whom to be in peace, is dangerous: Will you fear to come into the Country of Comedies, Painting, and Music, or into a place where Women are by many as highly esteemed as Saints; without flattering you, I must affirm, you shall seem over much to neglect your own quiet, if you let slip to favourable an occasion to procure it. It is time Clorinda, you make it appear what you are, and that we begin the History of our adventures. If you love, all things will be easy for you; there is no more difficulty to pass the Alps, then to go up into your Chamber: Nor doubt you that the Sea-waters will become sweet, if you be not satisfied in that they be smooth. But I am much afraid I shall not receive from you the satisfaction I expect. You will tell me (as you use) we must let Nature work, and that she will soon revenge us of our enemies. I suppose Clorinda, all this may happen, but it is no reason we should be obliged to the Tyrant's death for our liberty, but to our own resolutions. The 30. of July 1620. BALZAC. To Lydia from BALZAC. LETTER XXII. I Am almost mad to understand thou were seen laugh to day. Is this true love Lydia to be merry in my absence? and to be the same woman thou art, when I am with thee? Yet should I have been satisfied, hadst thou been contented only to have made thyself merry with thy looking-glass, so the man in iron had not been in my place. I never saw him but once, and surely he is either a For, or else all the rules of Physiognomy are false: yet because he calls himself Captain, thou permits him to persecute thee with his compliments, and art at the point to yield. If he touch thee Lydia, all the water in the Sea is little enough to purify thee; and if thou allowest him the rest, have a care, least in his sleep, he take thee for an Enemy, and instead of his embraces, strangle thee. To the Baron of Amblovile from BALZAC. LETTER XXIII. My Lord, I Attend you here in the season of Jasmins and Roses, and do send you a taste of the pleasures of Rome, for fear you be poisoned therewith, upon your first approach. We are here in the Country of curiosities, and to be happy in this place, it sufficeth not to be blind. The Sun hath yet heat enough to ripen us Reasins, and to afford us Flowers: all the Winter falls upon the neighbouring Mountains, to the end we may not want Snow in August. But if you desire I should divert my discourse unto more serious matters, and conceal nothing from you: I must tell you, there is no place under Heaven, where Virtue is so near a Neighbour to Vice, or where good is so mingled with Evil: We here behold miracles on the one side, and monsters on the other; and at the same time when some Discipline themselves, others run to debauches of all kinds. Besides, there is as profound a peace here, as in that part of the Air elevated above the Winds and Storms. Idleness in this place, is an honest man's ordinary vocation; and to save half the World, no man will rise hastily from Table, for fear of troubling digestion. If you chance to see any with scars in their faces, do not thereupon imagine they have purchased them either in Wars, or in defence of their honour, for these are only their Mistress' favours; but in recompense of such refractory humours, you shall see that here, the sanctity whereof doth illustrate the whole Church. It is their fervent prayers which impetrate all advantages over Enemies: It is their fastings which cause fruitfulness to flow upon the Earth: It is their innocency which conserveth the culpable from Eternal ruin. In a word, there are here such excellent examples of Virtue, and so enticing allurements to Vice, that I will not marvel if you turn honest man here, and I will likewise willingly pardon you, if you do not so. Truly, as new Spain is the Province of Gold; and as Africa affords Lions, and France Soldiers; so is Italy the mother of those things you best love. When you shall see these Female Creatures in their own Country, and compare their beauty with the bad fashion of the masculine Italians, I doubt not, but it will seem to you as well as to myself, these Divine Women to have been created by themselves, or to be Queens who have married their Grooms. The most part of those beyond the Mounts have no more beauty than needs must, to excuse them from being esteemed ugly; and if there be some one whose face you could fancy, this shall happily be some desolate Palace, or some well favoured beast. But here (for the most part) they are born Eloquent; and I will tell you before hand, that in one and the same person, you shall find both your Master and Mistress. For my part, I ingeniously confess, I do no longer live under Clorinda's regency, and all that is permitted me in this place, is only sometimes to honour her memory. I expect you should at this passage accuse me of levity and disloyalty, and that you could willingly revile me. But do you not think my sighs must needs be surbated, in going every day four hundred leagues? Besides, being so far from her as I am, what know I, whether I love a dead body, or an Infidel. I have not received any favours from her, which are not rather marks of her virtues, than demonstrations of her love. And had she lost all her liberality in that kind, she could hardly miss it. I am therefore only obliged to my word, not to her affection. And as for that, I should overesteem her, if I made more reckoning thereof, than some Princes do of theirs, and I should show myself over superstitious, if I valued what I only whispered in her ear, to be of greater efficacy than Letters Patents and Edicts. It is a point decided in Ovid's Theology, that an hundred false Oaths from an amorous person, amount not to half a deadly sin, and that it is only the God of Poets whom we offend by our perjury in that point. Now I will be judged by herself, whether I having bestowed my service upon her, she should take it ill if another did reward me; or that I love rather to be happy, then otherwise; or desire rather to possess Lucretia, then to desire Clorinda. Will she have her tyranny extend even to the Church's patrimony, and that the Pope share his temporal Authority with her? I do not believe she hath any such pretensions. For my part, I would she knew I can no longer behold any beauty but naked, nor receive any but warm and moist kisses. I will tell you the rest upon the banks of Tiber, and in these precious ruins whither I go to muse once a day, and to tread in their steps who have led Kings in Triumph. If there were any means there to find a little of Sylla's good fortune, or of Pompey's greatness, instead of the Medals we now and then meet with, I should have a farther subject to invite you hither. Notwithstanding, if you be yet yourself, and that by solemn vow you have forsaken the World, and the vanities thereof, assure yourself, that it is in this Country where felicity doth attend you: and that being once in this place, you will esteem all those as banished persons, whom you have left behind you in France. BALZAC. The 25. of December 1621. To the Count of Schomberg from BALZAC. LETTER XXIV. My LORD, I Send you the papers you have formerly seen, and whereto you have attributed so much, as I should be ashamed to assent thereto, were it not that I hold it less presumption to believe I have merited the same, then to imagine I can have a flatterer of your fashion. I had need be elevated to a more sovereign fortune than the state of Kings, to expect complacency from a man, who could never be procured to approve evil: and of whose disfavour one can hardly find other cause, than the only truth he hath declared. Howsoever it be, since you are now in Lymosin, and take not any journey in those parts, without having a thousand old debates to reconcile, and as many new ones to prevent, it is very propable, that after so painful an employment, and so great disquiet of mind, my book will fall into your hands, just at such time as you cannot find any thing more tedious unto you, than what you come from treating of: For should I presume that in your pleasant walks of Duretal, where all your minutes are pleasing, and all your hours precious, there could be any time spare for me, and my works; it were as much as to be ignorant of the diversions there attending you; or not to be acquainted with the great affluence of noble company, daily repairing thither, to visit you. But were it so, that you had none with you, save only the memory of your forepassed actions, your solitariness hath no need of books to make it more pleasing; nay, if all this were not, yet if you desire to seek contentment out of yourself, you cannot find any more pleasing, then in the presence of your Children, and particularly of that Divine daughter of yours, from whom I daily learn some miracle. It is therefore in her absence, and in solitary walks, where I have the ambition to find entertainment, and to receive gracious acceptance. In all other places (without presuming either to pass for Orator or Poet:) it shall highly suffice me in being honoured with the assurance that I am My Lord, Your most humble servant, BALZAC. The 25. of May 1624. A Letter from the Count of Schomberg, to Mounsieur de BALZAC. LETTER XXV. SIR, THe stile you travail in, causeth the Pens of all such who attempt an answer, to fall out of their hands, and Eloquence may so properly be called yours, that it is no marvel though others have but a small share therein. I would therefore have you know, that if I understand any thing in Letters, yours do obscure whatsoever hath hitherto been esteemed of in our Language: and that (without flattering you) there can be no diversion so pleasing, which ought not to give place to the perusing of those Lines you sent me. This occupation is worthy the Cabinets of Kings, and of the richest Ear curtains of France; and not (as you would have it) of my solitary retirements in Lymosin, from whence I am ready to be gone, with resolution never to retire from the affection I have promised you, whence you shall at all times draw effectual proofs, whensoever you please to employ them for your service. Sir, Your most affectionate servant SCHOMBERG. The 1. of June 1624. The Letters of MOUNSIEUR de BALZAC. The fourth Book. To my Lord Mashall of Schomberg. LETTER I. My Lord, I Should be insensible of public good, and an enemy to France, had I not (as I ought) a true taste of the good news your Footman brought me. I will not mention the Obligations I owe you, being no small ones, if that be not a slight matter to be esteemed by you: But since I make profession to honour virtue even in the person of one departed, or an enemy; and at all times to side with the right, were there only myself and Justice for it, you may please to believe, I complain in your behalf for the miseries of our times, and that I am most joyful to see you at this present, where all the World missed you: Certainly your retirement from Court, hath been one of the fairest pieces of your life, during which, you have made it apparent you are the same in both fortunes: since I can witness, that no one word then passed from you unsuitable to your resolution. Yet this rare virtue being there hidden, in one of the remote corners of the World, having but a very small circuit to dilate itself, must necessarily be contented with the satisfaction of your conscience and slender testimonies: In the mean time the authority of your enemies hath been obnoxious to all honest eyes. There was no means to conceal from strangers the States infirmities, or what reason to afford them for the disgrace of so irreproachable a Minister; nor was there any who grieved not, that by your absence the King lost so many hours and services. For my part, (my Lord) (reflecting upon you in that estate, it seemed to me I saw Phidias, or some other of those ancient Artists, their hands bound, and their costly materials, as Marble, Gold, or Ivory taken from them. But now that better time succeed, each thing being again reduced to its place, it is time to rejoice with all good French men, that you shall no more want matter, and that the King hath at length found how unuseful your absence hath been to his affairs: Truly, be it that he content himself to govern his people wisely, or that the afflictions of his poor Neighbours set near his heart, and that his Justice extend further than his Jurisdiction: No man doubts whatsoever he doth, but you shall be one of the principal instruments of his designs, and that as well Peace as War have equal use of your conduct. All men have well perceived, you have not contributed any thing to the administration of the King's treasure, save only your pure spirit, to wit, that part of the Soul separated from the terrestrial part, being free from passions, which reasoneth without either loving or desiring; and that you have managed the Riches of the State with as great fidelity, as one ought to govern another man's goods, with as much care as you conserve your own, and with as great scruple as we ought to touch sacred things. But in truth it is no great glory for that man to have been faithful to his Master, who knows not how to deceive any: And did I believe you were only able to abstain from ill, I would barely commend in you the Commencements of virtue. I therefore pass further, and am assured, that neither the fear of death, which you have slighted in all shapes, and under the most dreadful aspects it could possibly appear, nor complacency which often overpasseth the best Counsels, to transport itself to the most pleasing ones; nor any private interest which makes us rather regard ourselves, than the Public; shall at all hinder you either from purposing, undertaking, or executing eminent matters, Posterity which will peradventure judge of our age upon the report I shall make, will see more elsewhere than I can here relate, and I shall rest sufficiently satisfied, if you please to do me the honour, as to remember that mine affection is no Child of your prosperity, and how in two contrary seasons I have been equally My Lord, Your most humble and most faithful servant, BALZAC. To the Bishop of Angoulesme. LETTER II. SIR, I Will no longer complain of my poverty, since you have sent me ●easures of Roses, Ambergris, and Sugar; it being of such pleasing commodities, I pretend to be Rich, leaving necessary wealth to the Vulgar. Two Elements have jointly contributed the best they have, to furnish matter for your Liberality: and smally valuing either Gold, or Pearls as I do, I could wish for nothing either from Sea, or Land, I find not among your presents. You have bestowed with a full hand what is offered upon Altars, but sparingly, which men reckon by grains, and whereof none (the King of Tunnis excepted) is so prodigal as yourself▪ In a word, this profusion of foreign odours you have cast into your Comfitures, obligeth me to speak as I do, and to tell you if you feed all your flock as this rate, there will not be any one in all your Diocese, who will not cost you more by the day, than the Elephant doth his Master. I see therefore Sir, I am the dearest Child you have under your conduct, nor should I receive so delicate and precious nourishment from you, did not your affection force you to believe, my life to be more worth than ordinary, and consequently, that it deserveth more carefully to be preserved then any other. But to return you compliments for such excellent things, were as much as to under value their worth, should I strive to acquit myself that way; our Language is too poor and unable to lend me wherewith to pay you: And since in Homer's judgement the words of the most eloquent among the Grecians, were esteemed little better than Honey, (the food of Shepherds) there is small probability mine should be comparable to Ambergris and Sugar, the delicacies of Princes. I therefore fear I shall be forced to be all my life time indebted unto you, for the favours I have received from you, and that it must be only in my heart, where I can be as liberal as yourself. But I well know, you are so generous, as to content yourself with this secret acknowledgement, and that in me you affect my naked good-meaning, which must supply the place of those other more fine, and subtle virtues I cannot learn at Court. Truly, as I expect no commendations, being the second perfumes you present me, in that I hold myself unworthy thereof: so do I suppose you cannot refuse me your affection, since it is a kind of deserving it, to be passionately as I am Sir, Your most humble, and most faithful servant BALZAC. The 25. of Decemb. 1626. To Father Garrasso. LETTER III. Father, YOu have found the place whereat I confess I am the most easily surprised, and to oblige me to yield, your Courtesy hath left nothing for your courage to perform: since therefore you employ all your Muses to require my friendship, and have already paid of your own; I can no longer keep it to myself, but as another man's goods. But if this were not so, my resentments are not of such value with me, as not often to bestow them upon more slender considerations than those were which produced them; nor do my passions so transport me, but that I will at all times remain in the power of Religion and Philosophy. Hitherto I can defend a just cause, but in farther resisting what you desire, I should force right itself to be in the wrong, were it on my side: And out of bare enmity which in some Common wealths hath been tolerated, I should even pass to Tyranny, a thing odious to all men. Since our lives are momentary, it is no reason our passions should be immortal, or that men should glut themselves with revenge, whereof God hath as well forbidden the use, as the excess. It is a thing he hath solely reserved to himself; and since none but he truly knoweth how to use this part of Justice, he would no more put it into the hands of men, than he doth Thunder and Tempests. Let us therefore stop in our first motions, for it is already too much to have begun. Let us not term the hardness of our hearts, Courage: and if you have prevented me in the overture of the peace we treat of, repent not yourself, since you have thereby bereft me of all the honour there had been in acquiring it. Heretofore Magnanimity and Humility might have been esteemed two contrary things, but since the Maxims of Morality have been changed by the principles of Divinity, and that Pagan vices are become Christian virtues, there are even weak actions a man of courage ought to practice; nor is true glory any longer due to those who have triumphed over innocents', but to those Martyrs they have made, and to such persons whom they have oppressed. But to pass from general considerations, to what is particular between you and me, it is no way likely, a religious man would disturb the tranquillity of his thoughts, or quit his conversation with God and Angels, to intermeddle with wicked Mortals, and to make himself a party in our disorders. I should likewise have less reason to seek for an enemy out of the World, wherein there are so many adversaries to dislike, and so many Rebels to subdue. Now (Father) whatsoever opinion you have had, and notwithstanding any thing I have said in the beginning of this Letter, I never intended to commence any real War against you: I have not at all felt the emotion I showed; all my choler being but artificial, when at any time certain of my speeches seemed disadvantageous unto you; so as I freely consent, that what was written to Hydasp, shall pass as a flash of my brain, and not as any testimony of my belief, only to let men know, I had a desire to show how able I was to contest with truth, if I had no mind to side with it. This science having been sufficiently daring to undertake to persuade, that a Quartan Ague was better than health: Rhetoric I say, which hath invented praises for Busiris, made Apologies for Nero, and obliged all the people of Rome to doubt whether Justice were a good, or a bad thing, may yet in these day's exercise itself upon subjects wholly separated from common opinions, and by graceful fictions, rather excite admiration in men's spirits, then exact any credence. It raiseth Fantomes with purpose to deface them. It hath paintings and disguisements, to alter the purity of all worldly things: It changeth sides without levity, it accuseth innocence without calumny: And to say truth, Painters and Stage-players are no way culpable of those murders we see represented in Pictures, or presented upon theatres; since therein the most cruel is the most just. None can justly accuse those of falsity, who make certain glasses which show one thing for another: Error in some cases being more graceful than truth. In a word, the life even of the greatest Sages, is not altogether serious, all their sayings are not Sermons, nor is all they write, either their last Testament, or the confession of their Faith. What can I say more? Can you imagine me to be so curious, as to condemn the gust of all that great multitude, who flock to hear you every morning? Are you persuaded that I and the people can never be of one mind? That will oppose myself to the belief of honest men? to the approbation of Doctors? and to their authority who are eminent above others? No Father; I allow no such liberty to my spirit: assure yourself, I esteem you as I ought. I commend your zeal and learning, yea, were it truer than ever it was, that to compose tedious Volumes, is no less than to commit great sins: Yet if you oblige me to judge of yours by that you sent unto me, I say it is very excellent in its kind, and that I will no way hinder you from obtaining a Rank among the Fathers of these modern ages. But my testimony will not (I hope) become the only fruit of your labours; I wish with all my heart the conversion of Turks and Infidels may crown your endeavours. I am persuaded, all the honour this World can afford, aught to be esteemed as nothing by those who only seek for the advancement of God's glory. I will therefore no farther dilate myself upon this Subject, nor wrong holy things by profane praises; my intention is only to let you know, I assume not so poor a part in the Church's interest, as not to be extraordinarily well pleased with those who are serviceable thereto, and that I am right glad besides the propension I have to esteem your amity, so powerful a persuasion as Religion is, doth yet further oblige me. Yours, BALZAC. To the Cardinal of Vallette. LETTER IU. My Lord, THe Letter you pleased to send me from Rome, caused me to forget I was sick, and I presumed to solace myself after three years of saddess, ever since news was brought me of Lucidors' death, and the success of that fatal combat, wherein you could not but be a loser, on which side soever the advantage happened. My Lord, I doubt not but your spirit though altogether stout and courageous, to support your proper misfortunes, is yet mollified by the relation of their miseries who love you, and where there is question rather of showing your good nature, or your constancy, you will quit one virtue to acquire another. I know well, that in the number of your goods, you reckon your friends in the first rank, allowing only the second place to your dignities, and to fifty thousand Crowns rend which accompanies them; and consequently I assure myself, you believe you are, as it were, grown poor by the loss of a man who had relation unto you. But I am likewise most certain, how after the passing certain unpleasant days out of the love you bore him; and having affoardeth him sufficient Testimonies of your affection, he now expecting no further acknowledgement or service, you will at length call to mind, that it is the public to whom you owe your cares and passions, and that you are not permitted farther to afflict a spirit which is no longer yours. Since the misery of this age is so general, as it leaveth no one house without tears, nor any one part of Europe without trouble; and since Fortune is not of power to conserve even her own workmanships, who are many of them fallen to ground: it must needs so happen (my Lord) that being of the World, you are to taste of the fruits it produceth, and that you purchase at some hard rate, the good successes daily attending you. But truly, the place where you are, and the great designs taking you up, may well furnish you with so strong and solid consolations, as they need leave no work for others; and my Eloquence would come too late, should I employ it after your reason, which hath formerly persuaded you, there being now neither precept nor Counsel in all humane wisdom unproposed to your view; and since neither Seneca, nor Epiotetus can say any thing save only your thoughts; I had much rather send you divertisements no way distasteful, then to present you any remedies which doubtless will prove importunate. These writings (my Lord) here enclosed, shall not enter as strangers into your Cabinet, they will not talk unto you of the five predictables of Porphiry, nor of Justinians Novelles, or the numbers of Algebra. But you may there recreate and repose your spirits at your return from Audiences, Congregations, and the Consistory. I could well have bestowed upon them a more eminent title, than what they have. I could out of these composures have framed Apologies, Accusations, and politic discourses; yea, had I pleased never so little to have extended some of my Letters, they might have been called books. But besides, my design, aiming rather to please, then importune, and that I tend to the height of conceptions, and not at the abundance of words: When I treat with you, (my Lord) I suppose myself to be before a full assembly, and do propose to myself never to write any thing unto you, which Posterity ought not to read. Now if sometimes from your person I pass to others, or if I commend those whom I conceive are deserving, I assure myself, I therein performing an act of Justice, and not of subjection: you will be no way displeased with what I do, and well hope, I may conserve your favours without violating humane Laws, or separating myself from civil society. Your most humble servant BALZAC. The 15. of July 1629. To the Cardinal of Vallete. LETTER V. My LORD, THough innocency be the felicity of the afflicted, and that I find in myself the satisfaction, he can expect who hath not offended, yet can I not so easily comfort myself: And the remedies my Philosophy afford me, are for meaner misfortunes than the loss of your favours. All I can contribute to my consolation out of the assurance I have of mine innocency, is the liberty I have taken to tell you so, and to complain of the injustice you have done me, if you have so much as suffered any to accuse me. I need not seek colours to palliate my actions or words: it is sufficiently known, their principal objects have ever been the glory of your name, and the desire to please you: I beseech you likewise to call to remembrance, that hard times have not hindered me from embarking myself where my inclination called me; and that I have served my Lord your Father, when most of his followers were in danger to become his Martyrs. It should seem perchance, I stand in need of the memory of what is past, and that I make my precedent, good Offices appear, to the end to cause them to over-way my present offences. No (my Lord) I intent not to make use of what now is not, for the justification of mine actions, nor am I ignorant that never any woman was so vicious, who hath not heretofore been a Virgin, nor criminal, who cannot prescribe some time preceding his bad life. I speak of to day, as well as of heretofore, and do protest unto you, with all the Oaths able to make truth appear holy, and inviolably, that I never had one single temptation against my duty, and that my fidelity is spotless, as (if you so pleased) it might be without suspicion: I must confess that you having declared yourself no way desirous to trench upon my liberty, and that you left it wholly to myself, I have sometimes made use thereof, imagining that without wronging that first resolution, I vowed to your service, it might be lawful for me to have second affections. I will not expect the rack to force me to confess it; I have loved a man whom the misfortunes of Court, and the divers accidents happening in worldly affairs, have separated from some friends of yours, and have cast him into other interests than theirs. But besides, that he was extracted from a Father, who did not more desire his own good, than your contentment; and since I am most assured how amidst all the forepassed broils, he at all times conserved his inclinations for you. I must needs tell you, I was in such sort obliged unto him, as had he declared War against my King, and against my Country, I could not have chosen any side which had not been unjust: I therefore at this day bewail him with warm tears, and if ever I take comfort in the loss I have sustained, I shall esteem myself the most unworthy, and ingrateful person living. Yourself (my Lord) knowing (as you do) how much I owe unto his amity, would sooner adjudge me to die with him, then blame my resentments. I assure myself all my actions are disguised unto you, on purpose to cause you to dislike them: Howsoever I will not despair, but the time to come will right me for what is past. You will one day see the wrong you offer to my innocency, in admitting false witnesses in prejudice thereof, and what you now term my fault, you will then be pleased to say; it was my unhappy fate, or my hard fortune: in the interim, I am resolved to continue in well doing, and though there were no other but my conscience to acknowledge my fidelity yet inviolably to remain Your most humble and most faithful servant BALZAC. The 30. of Decemb. 1626. To the Lord Bishop of Nantes. LETTER IU. SIR, AS the bearer hereof can testify the obligations I owe you, so may he bear witness of my perpetual resentments, and will tell you, that were I born your Son, or subject, you could have but the same power over me you now possess: nay, I am persuaded, I yet owe somewhat more to your virtue, then to the right of Nations, or nature. If power hath made Princes, and chance Parents, reason well deserves a further kind of obedience: It was that which overcame me upon the first conference I had with you, causing me to prostrate all my presumption at your feet, after having rightly presented to my thoughts, how impossible it is to esteem myself, and know you: I am sure this language is no way pleasing to you, and that you will look awry at my Letter; but do what you please, I am more a friend to truth, then to your humour, and my spirits are so replenished with what I have seen, and heard, as I can no longer conceal my thoughts: I must tell you (Sir) you are the greatest Tyrant this day living; your authority becomes awful to all Souls, and when you speak, there is no further means to retain private opinions, if they be not conformable to yours. I speak this seriously, and with my best sense; you have often reduced me to such extremities, that coming from you, without knowing what to answer you, I have been ready to exclaim and say, (in the rapture wherein I was) Restore me my opinion which you have violently forced from me, and take not from me the liberty of conscience the King hath given me. But truly, it is no small pleasure to be constrained to be happy, and to fall into his hands, who useth no violence; but to their avail who suffer. For my part, I have at all times departed your presence, fully persuaded in what I ought to believe: I never gave you a visit which cured me not of some passion: I never came into your chamber so honest a man, as I went forth: How often with one short speech have you elevated me above myself, and bereft me of whatsoever was fleshly and profane in me: How often hearing you discourse of the World to come, and of true felicity have I longed after it, and would willingly have purchased it at the price of my life? How often could I have followed you, (would you have conducted me) to a higher pitch of perfection, than all ancient Philosophers ever attained? So it is, that you only have bestowed the love of invisible things upon me, causing me to distaste my first and most violent affections: I should still have been buried in flesh, had not you drawn me forth, nor had my spirit been other than a part of my body, had not you taken the pains to unloose it from sensual objects, and to sever the eternal from the perishable part. You caused me at the first encounter to become suspicious to the wicked, and to favour the better side, before I was of it; you have made those remedies pleasing, which all others affrighted me with, and in the midst of vice, you have constrained me to confess virtue to be the most beautiful thing on earth. Think not therefore, that either the pomp of the Roman Court, or the glitter of that of France, can dazzle those eyes of my Soul, whereto you have showed so many excellent things. It is the beams and lightning of those eminent Virtues you have discovered unto me, which cast so forceable reflections upon the eyes of my Soul, and which cause me, (though I formerly resolved to slight all things,) yet at least now to admire something. But yet (Sir) assure yourself, it is not the World I admire, for I rather reflect upon it, as on that which hath deceived me these eight and twenty years I have been in it, and wherein I scarce ever saw any thing, but how to do evil, and counterfeit to be good. In all places on earth, whether my curiosity hath transporteth me, beyond Seas, or on the other side the Alps, in free States, or in Kingdoms of Conquest, I have observed among men only a fare of flatteries, fools, and cheaters; of Old men corrupted by their Ancestors, and who corrupt their children: Of slaves who cannot live out of Servitude: of poverty among virtuous persons, and ambitious covetousness in the Souls of great persons. But now that you have broken the bars, through which I could only receive some light impression of truth, I distinctly see this general corruption, and do humbly acknowledge the injury I offered to my Creator, when I made Gods of his creatures; and what glory I sought to bereave him of, etc. BALZAC. The 12. of January 1626. To Mounsieur de la Marque. Letter VII. I Know not what right use to make of your praises; if I receive them, I lose all my humility, and in rejecting them, I give that as granted which I am taxed for. Upon the edge of these two extremities, it is more laudable to suffer myself to fall on my friend's side, and to join in opinion with honest men, then to lean to that of Lysander, since all men agree, that his censure is ever opposite to the right; and that he is the wisest man in France, who resembles him the least. There would be some error in the reputation I aim at, were I not condemned by him. Think it not therefore strange, that injuries are blown upon me by the same mouth which uttereth blasphemies against the memory of ρρρ, and remember this old Maxim, that fools are more unjust than some sinners: The best is, that for one Enemy my Reputation raiseth against me, it procures me a thousand protectors; so as without stirring hence, I get victories at Paris; nor find I any Harmony so pleasing, as what is composed of one particular murmur, mingled with general acclamations. There are sufficient in your Letter to cause me to retract the Maxims of my ancient Philosophy: At the least they oblige me to confess, that all my felicity is not within myself, things without me entering towards the composition of perfect happiness. I must freely confess unto you mine infirmity: I should grow dumb, were I never so short a time to live among deaf persons, and were there no glory, I should have no eloquence. But it is time I return to the task I have undertaken; and that instead of so many excellent words you have addressed unto me, I only answer you, that I am Your most humble servant BALZAC. To Mounsieur Tissandier. LETTER VIII. AT my return from Poiton, I found your packet attending me at my house; but thinking to peruse your Letters, I perceived I read my panegyrics; I dare not tell you, with what transport and excess of joy I was surprised thereupon, fearing to make it appear, I were more vain then usually women are, and affect praises with the like intemperance as I do perfumes. Without dissembling, those you sent me, were so exquisite, as be it you deceive me, or I you, there never issued fairer effects, either from injustice or error. I beseech you to continue your fault, or to persevere in your dissimulation: For my part, I am resolute to make you full payment of what I owe you, and to yield so public a testimony of the esteem I hold of you, as my reputation hereafter shall be only serviceable to yours, oblige me so far, as to accept this Letter, for assurance of what I will perform; and if you find me not so serviceable as I ought to be, blame those troublesome persons who are always at my Throat, forcing me to tell you sooner than I resolved, that I am Your most humble and faithful servant BALZAC. The 5. of August. 1625. To Mounsieur de Faret. LETTER IX. THere is not any acknowledgement answerable to my Obligations unto you: If I owe you any honour, I am farther indepted unto you then my life comes to. Truly, to be sensible of another man's sufferings sooner than himself, or to assume a greater share in his interests, than he doth; I must confess, is as much as not to love in fashion, or not to live in this age. It is likewise a long time since I have been acquainted, that the corruption environing you, doth not at all infect you; and how among the wicked, you have conserved an integrity suiting the Reign of Lewes the twelfth: Nay, happily we must search further, and pass beyond the Authentic History. It is only under the Poets Charlemagne, where a man of your humour is to be found, and that the combat of Roger hath been the victory of Leon. Without more particularly explaining myself, you understand what I would say; and I had much rather be indebted to your support, then to the merit of my cause, or to the favourable censure I have received from the Public. Certainly, truth itself cannot subsist, or find defence without assistance; yea, even that concerning the Religion; and which more particularly appertaineth to God than the other, seizeth not on our Souls, but by the entermise of words; and hath need to be persuaded to have it believed. You may hereby judge whether the good Offices you afforded me, were not useful unto me, or whether or no my just cause happened successfully into your hands. But I must defer the thanks due unto you upon this occasion, till our meeting at Paris, to the end, to animate them by my personal expression. Be confident in the interim; though pity itself would stay me in my Cell, yet you are of power to cause me to infringe my heremetical vow: besides, you have set such a lustre upon that great City, and have punctuated unto me so many remarkable things, and novelties thereof, in the Letter you pleased to send me, as I should show myself insensible of rarities, and not possessed with an honest curiosity, had I not a desire to return thither. I therefore only attend some small portion of health to strengthen me, to part hence; and to go to enjoy with you our mutual delights, I mean the conversation of Mounsieur de Vaugelas, who is able to make me find the Court in a Cottage, and Paris in the plains of Bourdeaux: Adieu Mounsieur, love me always, since I am with all my Soul Your most humble and affectionate servant BALZAC. The 12. of Decemb. 1625. To Mounsieur Coeffeteau, Bishop of Marseilles. LETTER X. IT is now fifteen days since I received any news from you, yet will I believe the change of air hath cured you; and if you (as yet) walk with a staff, it is rather I hope for some mark of your authority, then for any support of your infirmity: If this be so, I conjure you to make good use of this happy season yet remaining, and not to lose these fair days, hastening away, and which the next Clouds will carry from us. I give yond this advice, as finding it good; and because there is not any thing doth more fortify feeble persons than the Sun of this month, whose heat is as innocent as its light. Adamantus hath had his share of the unwholesome influence reigning in these parts. The Fever hath not born him the respect due to a person of his quality, having so rudely entreated him, as he is scarce to be known: Yet hath he some kind of obligation to his sickness, in having acquainted him with such pleasures, as were not made for those who are over fortunate, and which formerly he knew nor. At this present he can never be weary in praising the benefits of Liberty, nor in admiring the beauty of day, and the diversities of Nature: so as to hear him speak you would suppose all things to be Novelties unto him; and that he is entered into another World, or new born again in this. Besides, they pass their time merrily at N. and of two hundred calling themselves Virgins, I verily think there is not one who speaks truth, if she have not recovered her Maidenhead. It may be their intention is not ill, and that in suffering themselves to be courted, they have no other design, then to raise servants to God. But since Godly intentions do not always produce good effects, if you suffer things to run on in the same course which they do, I greatly apprehend in your regard, that Antichrist will shortly take his beginning in your Diocese; and lest you by consequence should be the first object of his persecution. I suppose you-have a greater interest than any man, to oppose this accident which now threateneth us, and that to divert a mischief which is to be followed by the World's ruin, you ought not to spare the fulminations of Rome; nor make use only of half your power. There are not any will be averse to this good work, save only our young Gallants. But you cannot procure their disaffections upon a better subject than this, nor do greater service to the jealous God, then to conserve the honour of those creatures he loveth, I am Your most humble and most affectionate servant, BALZAC. The 7. of Octob. 1618. To Mounsieur Pouzet. LETTER XI. IF you will not return from Court, we are resolved to send Deputies on purpose to require you of the King, and to beseech him to restore us our good company: I know well, that in the place where you are, there are prisons both for the innocent, and most happy; and that no man can blame you for your overlong abode there, without accusing you for being fortunate. But it were likewise small Justice, your absence should make this City a Village, and that Paris should usurp all the affections you owe me. As I perfectly love you, so do I expect to be reciprocally respected by you; nor would you I should herein have any advantage over you, though I yield unto you in all other things: Neither of us therefore can enjoy solid contentments, so long as we are separated; and I pretend you do me wrong, if you take satisfaction where I am not. Take Post therefore with speed, to be here quickly, grow not old either by the way, or at your Inn, for by this means I shall get the advantage of that time, and you shall gain me four days out of the loss of three Months. I have seen what you willed me concerning λ λ λ, But I would you knew, I have no resentments against forceless enemies, nor have I any mind to put myself into passion, when these petty Doctors please. Should these fellows speak well of me, I would instantly examine my conscience, to know whether I were guilty of any fault; and as Hippolytus suspected his own innocence, because he was esteemed spotless in his stepdame's eye: So should not I have any good opinion of my own sufficiency, were I gracious in their sights, who can have no other than bad affections. Howsoever, they cause me once a day to think myself some greater matter than I am, when I reflect upon their number, and the miracle I work, in interessing in one and the same cause superstitious persons, Atheists, and evil Monks Adieu. Yours, BALZAC. The 14. April 1625. An answer to a Letter sent to BALZAC, from a learned Old Lady, Madamoiselle de Gournay. LETTER XII. Madam, I Do here at the first tell you, I have no other opinion of you, than yourself gives me, and I have at all times had a more strong and sound notion of the inward qualities by the speech, then by the Physiogmony. But if after the Letter you did me the honour to write unto me, it were necessary to seek any foreign proofs; the testimony of those two great personages, who have admired your virtue even in the bud, and left the portrait thereof under their own hands, may well serve as an Antidote, to secure me from the impressions and the painted shadows of calumny. I who know that Asia, afric, and a great part of the World besides, believe Fables as fundamental points of Religion, do not at all wonder (if in what concerneth your particular) there be some who side not with the truth, which is sure to find enemies in all places where there are men. This is an effect of that error, now grown old in popular opinion; that it is fit an honest woman be ignorant of many things, and that, to maintain her reputation, it is not requisite all the World commend her; but that she be unknown to all men. Nay, I say further: The vulgar doth ordinarily cast an injurious eye, and with some tax of extravagancy, upon great and Heroical qualities, if they appear in that sex, to which they conceive it ought not to appertain. Now though to speak generally, and to reflect rightly upon the order of earthly things, and the grounds of policy, I must confess, I should lean to the first of these opinions: Yet will I be well advised, how I think that Nature hath not so much liberty left her, as to pass (upon occasion) the limits she ordinarily alloweth herself; or sometimes to exceed her bounds without blame, to the end, to produce certain things, far surpassing the rest in perfection. It is no good Argument to aver, that because you are adorned with the virtues of our sex, you therefore have not reserved those of your own; or that it is a sin for a woman to understand the Language which heretofore the Vestals made use of. I will therefore leave these calumnious persons, who desire to bereave Lilies of their beauty, and Crystal of its clearness, to return to the Letter I have received from you; where without flattery I will affirm, that * Meaning himself. this man who hath been described unto you, for so vainglorious a person; who despiseth times past, who mocketh the modern, and prejudicateth the future; hath found out divers things in your works well pleasing unto him: so as if my approbation be at this present of any weight with you, you may for your own advantage, add this Encomion to that of Lipsius and Montagnio, and boldly affirm you have this advantage over Kings and Emperors, that the tastes of two different ages have agreed in your favour. Since you were first commended, the face of Christendom hath changed ten times: Neither our manner, attire, or Court, are cognisible to what you have seen them. Men have made new Laws, yea, and the virtues of our forefather's age, are esteemed the vices of ours: yet shall it appear, how amidst so many changes and strange revolutions, you have brought even to our times one and the same reputation; and that your beauty (I speak of what enamoreth the Capucins Friars, and old Philosophers) hath not left you, with your youth. I shall in mine own regard be very glad, the World should take notice how much I honour virtue, by what name soever it passeth, and under what shape soever it is shrouded: and I esteem my party stronger by the half, than it hath been, since you have vouchsafed to enter thereinto. But if without offending against Grammatical rules, and those of Decorum: I durst take you for my second, I assure myself if we were to denounce war against these petty Authors, who are engendered by error, and disclosed out of the corruption of this age, you should not have over many in talking half a dozen of them to task for your part. As the least, you would put those Pedants to silence, who brag they have taught me to speak. Yet will I tell you, before I proceed any further, and to the end they may know as much (if you please) that my Mother is not resolved to give this for granted, and how if there be any glory to be gotten in so poor an exploit, she is determined to dispute the matter against all these bookmakers. I have ever been hitherto of opinion, that in what concerneth the choice of words, I ought to suffer myself to be governed by the common acceptation thereof, without adhering to any one man's single example; and that instead of acknowledging the authority of any particular, I am to follow the public consent. But howsoever, it is not the praise of a great Orator to speak our language well, but rather the mark of a true Frenchman; Nor do I pretend applause from any, for not being born in Holland, or Germany. It is true, I attribute much to Elocution, and know that high things stand in need of the help of words, and that after those have been rightly conceived, they are as happily to be expressed. It only angers me, that out of the poorest part of Rhetoric received among the ancients, they will needs extract all ours. And that to please mean spirits, it is fitting (as they think) our works should resemble those sacrifices, whereout they take the heart, and where, of all the head, nothing is left save only the tongue. I would make answer to the other advertisements you did me the honour to give me, if they had not relation to a matter I reserve myself fully to treat in L. being a work I am in hand with, and which I hope shortly to present unto you at Paris. There it shall be, where I will make it appear unto you, that reason cannot have an easier task, then to persuade a spirit of the like making mine is, and that I equally love the truth, whether I receive it from any other, or that I find it myself. BALZAC. The 3. of August 1624. To Mounsieur Berniere, Precedent in the Parliament of ROUEN. LETTER XIII. THe mean compliment I am to offer you, is the first effect of the fuming drinks I received from you. I have no means to find out my right senses to entertain you; they are lost in your excellent liquors, and I had need be more valiant than I am, to defend myself against Spain and Normandy, with their united forces: I verily think, that what should have been drunk at Barniere betwixt this and Easter, is overflown in my Chamber: If my Friends come not to my aid, I am in danger to suffer shipwreck, or not to become sober again till next year: yet will you needs have me even in this plight wherein I am, to act a sober man's part; and my Soul to execute those functions you have suspended. It is impossible, not being myself, I should speak my ordinary language; I cannot give you two words of thanks without taking one for another; and my head is so full of your Spanish Wine, and Normandy Cider, that my wits give place; I will therefore content myself, to assure you with this small portion of sense yet left me, that supposing your friendship produced nothing, and were as barren, as it is fruitful, I would sue for it out of a more noble consideration, then that of particular interest, and would testify unto you, that it is yourself I love, and and not your fortunes: Believe, I beseech you, the truest of all men: you gained my heart the first time I had the honour to see you; I than gave myself wholly as yours, and said within myself, what I have often since reiterated, that you being rich enough to purchase a Sovereignty beyond the Alps, if that should ever happen, I esteemed you a sufficient worthy person, to deserve to have me live under your Regency, and that I was Your most humble servant and subject BALZAC. At Paris the 5. of March 1627. To Mounsieur de Voiture. LETTER XIV. THough the half of France divide us, yet are you as present to my spirit, as the objects I see, and you have part in all my thoughts and dreams. Rivers, Plains, and Towns may well oppose themselves to my content: they cannot hinder my memory from taking entertainment with you, or from the frequent taste of those excellent discourses wherewith you have graced me, till I be so happy as again to hear you. Though you should grow proud, yet must I confess, I conceive not any thing either great or sublime, save only those Seeds you have scattered in my Soul; and that your company, which at first, was right pleasing, is now become absolutely necessary for me: You may therefore well think it is not willingly I leave you thus long in your Mistress' hands, or that I suffer her to enjoy my goods, without giving me account: Every moment she obligeth you to allow her, are so many usurpations she makes upon me; all you whisper unto her, are secrets you conceal from me; and to have your conversation in mine absence, is to enrich herself by my losses. But there is no reason I should malice so fair a Rival, in that both of you are happy; or that I frame mine afflictions upon your mutual contents; provided (at my coming) I find four Month's absence not to have blotted me out of your remembrance, and that Love hath there reserved some place for friendship, I shall still have for mine advantage the time passing to attend the hour assigned; and you will come to comfort me sometimes, concerning the miseries of this Age, and the injustice of men. In the interim, in the place where now I am, as I have but slender joys, so have I not any great discontents: I am in equal distance removed from disfavour and good fortune, and that unconstant Goddess, who is ever employed in depopulating Cities, and subverting States, hath no leisure to work mischief in mean places. I see Shepherdesses who can only say, yea and nay, and who are too gross witted to be deceived by understanding persons; yet is painting as little known among them as Eloquence; and because I am their Master, they would suffer me to show them, if I so pleased, how small a distance there is between power and Tyranny: instead of the fine words and acquaint discourses wherein your Ladies abound, there issues from their mouths a pure and innocent breath, which incorporates itself with their kisses, and gives them a taste, you ordinarily find not among those of the Court. Supposing therefore you make not any better choice there, than I happen on here by chance, I make over particular profession, to rely on your judgement, and of being Your most humble servant BALZAC. The 7. of October 1625. To Mounsieur de Vaugelas. LETTER XV. THe good opinion you have of me, makes up more then half my merit, and you herein resemble the Poet's Epicts, who out of small truths frame incredible fixions; howsoever, if you loved me not, but according to the rigour or Law and Reason, I should much fear to be but of indifferent esteem with you. It is then much better for me, the affection you bear me, appear rather a passion then a virtue. Extremities in all other things are reprovable, in this laudable; and as certain Rivers are never so useful as when they overflow: so hath Friendship nothing more excellent in it then excess; and doth rather offend in her moderation, then in her violence. Continue therefore in observing neither rule, nor measure, in the favours you afford me, and to the end I may be lawfully ingrateful, being infinitely obliged, leave me not so much as words wherewith to thank you. Truly your last Letters have taken from me all the terms I should employ in this occasion, and instead of the good Offices I incessantly receive from you, it seems you will only have new importunies in payment. Since it is thus, fear not my niceness, or that in matters of great consequence, I make not use of your affection, and in slight ones I abuse it not; henceforward it is requisite, you recover all my Lawsuits, compose all my quarrels, and correct all my errors: For to undertake to cure all my diseases, I suppose you would not, in prejudice of Mounsieur de Lorime. It shall therefore suffice, you will be pleased to let him at this passage read how I require my life at his hands; and if the only obeying him, will preserve me, I will place his precepts immediately after God's Commandments. There is no receipt distasteful, if his Eloquence afford the preparative, nor pain unasswaged by his words, before it be expelled by his Art: Remotest causes are as visible to him, as the most ordinary effects; and if nature should discover herlself naked unto him, he could not thereby receive any further communication of her secrets, than he hath acquired by former experience. Let him therefore bestow better nights on me, than those I have had these six years, wherein I have had no sleep; entreat him to make a peace between my Liver and Stomach, and to compose this civil War, which disturbs the whole inside of my body, if he desire I should no longer live, but for his glory; and to persuade the World, he is nothing indebted to those Arabian Princes, who practised Physic, or to the gods themselves who invented it. Truly if mere Humanists, whom divers of his profession have sometimes scorned, seem of slight consideration with him; or if he be not contented with a civil acknowledgement, I am ready to call him my preserver, and to erect Altars, and offer sacrifice unto him: Yea, to compass this, I will quit the better part of what I implore; It shall suffice he hinder me from dying, and that he cause my diseases and plaints to endure some threescore years. I would likewise know (if you please) what his good Cousin doth, that Citizen of all Commonwealths, that man who is no more a stranger in Persia, then in France, and whose knowledge hath the same extent, as hath all the Turkish Empire, and all the ancient Roman Monarchy. I have at the least three hundred questions to ask him, and a whole Volume of doubts to propose unto him; I expect at our first meeting, to resolve hith him upon the affairs of former ages, and concerning the different opinions of Baromus and Genebrard on the one side, and of Escales and Casaubon on the other. I am in the mean time resolved to pass ten or twelve days with Mounsieur de Racan, to the end to see him in that time work miracles, and write things which God must necessarily reveal unto him. Truly Conquerors have no greater advantage over Masters of Fence, than he hath over Doctors; and he is at this day one of the great workmanships of Nature. If all wits were like his, there would be a great deal of time lost at School: Universities would become the most unprofitable parts of the Commonwealth, and Latin as well as Milan Parchment, with other foreign Merchandizes, would be rather marks of our vanity, than any effects of our necessity. The 10. of October 1625. To Mounsieur de Racan. LETTER XVI. WEre my health better than it is, yet the roughness of the season we are entering into, and which I hoped to prevent, makes me over apprehensive, to stir out of my Chamber, or to hazard myself in a long voyage: A Sunless day, or one night in a bad Host-house, were sufficient to finish the work of my death; and in the state wherein I am, I should much sooner arrive in the next World, then at Chastelleraut. I must therefore entreat you to hold me excused, if I keep not promise with you, or if I take some longer time to make provision of strength, to prepare myself for so hardy an enterprise. At our return from Court, we are to come to your delicate House, and to see the places where the Muses have appeared unto you, and dictated the Verses we have so much admired. Those wherewith you honoured me, do overmuch engage me, to leave my judgement at liberty; I will only content myself, to protest that you were never so very a Poet, as when you spoke of me; and that you have Art enough to invent new Fables, as incredible as ancient fictions: it seems Divinity cost you nothing; and because your Predecessors have furnished Heaven with all sorts of people, and since Astrologers have there placed Monsters, you suppose it may be likewise lawful for you, at least, to get entrance there for some of your friends. You may do Sir what you please; nor have I any cause to blame the height of you affection, since I hold he loves not sufficiently, who loves not excessively. It will only be the good wits of our age who will not pardon you; and will take it impatiently, to see my name in your Verses with as great Splendour and Pomp as that of Artemisa and Ydalia. But as you employ not other men's passions either in matter of hate or love; so I suppose you make less use of their eyes in judging the truth of things. In this case, I am sufficiently confident of my Rhetoric, to assure myself I shall at all times persuade you, that I am more estimable than mine Enemies: and that they have no other advantage over me, who am sick, but only health, if they enjoy it. Besides, you need not make any Apology in excuse of your tediousness: I well perceive by the Excellency of your labours, the time you have therein employed, and know that perfection is not presently to be attained. A Crafts-man may easily in a short time finish divers Statues of Clay, or Plaster; but these are but for a day's use, or to serve as Ornaments at a City's triumph, not to continue many Kings reigns: Those who carve in Brass or Marble, wax old upon their works, and doubtless, matters ever to endure are long to be meditated: if my Megreme would permit me, I could say more unto you, but all I can obatin of it, is to sign this Letter, and to assure you that I am perfectly Your most humble and affectionate servant, BALZAC. The 20. of Novemb. 1625. To the Abbot of St. Cyran. LETTER XVII. SInce you desire to see in what Style I begun to write; and how sufficient a fellow I was at nineteen: I here send you my errors of that age, and the first faults I committed: it were much better to condemn their memory, then to fall into them afresh, by renewing them in this place. But you will be absolutely obeyed, and I have no resistance against your force: See here then the remainder of many things now lost, and what I have saved from ship wrack, being neither valuable to the Diamonds, or lumps of Ambergris, the Sea hath lately cast upon the Coast of Bayone. I advise you for your honour's sake, not to refresh the memory of what is past, nor to seek for examples of your fidelity in our Civil wars, since you have not therein conserved it. You may hereupon say what you please, and try (if you can) to make things seem to us contrary to what they are; yet am I well assured, you were engaged in a faction, wherein you have not been useful to the King, no, not where you could serve him as an honest man ought; so as if you desire I should (to do you a favour) forget things past; or if you will allege that the tranquillity we now enjoy, and the good order used in managing Public affairs, were the effects of your prudent conduct; besides, that this glory is not absolutely due unto you, and there remaining others who suppose they have as large a share therein as yourself. You must not take it ill, if I freely tell you, there is not any thing therein worthy of admiration. You entered upon the State-government in a peaceable time, you therein found all things so well disposed, as they seemed of themselves to work the wished effects; and the most of the French so inclined to subjection, as it was no hard matter to bring them to due obedience. And herein you are necessarily to confess, you owe much to C C C, and that he passed the last years of his life for your instructions, as he since then died for the general good of this Kingdom. If there hath been any obstacle to remove, which at this present may be troublesome unto you, he hath before his death rid his hands thereof, with as much good fortune as resolution. If it may be esteemed a benefit, to understand the nature of the people, thereby to deal with them according to their humours, he hath made it appear unto you, there was not any thing above his patience; since without resentment, he was able to suffer the loss of his liberty; and if so it were, that he was forced to make use of some violent act, which nevertheless was necessary; neither hatred, nor envy have ever been of power to hinder his undertake. In a word, he hath tamed the most stubborn spirits, he hath left the parties who most perplexed this poor Kingdom, either absolutely ruined, or so weakened, as they are utterly unable to rise again. He hath accustomed all men to patience, and hath performed so strange things, as we now find not any thing extraordinary; and (what I most esteem) he hath made the World see how great things the King's Authority was able to do, though sometimes he did this for the establishing his own. I therefore do not at all now wonder, if having found affairs disposed to receive such impressions as you pleased to put upon them, you have hitherto caused them to fall out indifferently well, or if you have not as yet committed any considerable errors in the managing of State-affairs, as not having any matter of difficulty to overcome, you have only herein suffered yourself to be guided by common and ordinary precedents. But what is all this? that your endeavours should deserve to be preferred before all those services the D. and P. with their Predecessors have performed. Had you any imagination, when you spoke in so high terms, you could cause us to believe so great improbabilities; or had you so poor an opinion of all men's judgements, as to suppose we more valued your fears and continual distrusts, than so many generous actions performed by them in the eye of all Christendom, for the glory and reputation of this Crown. I will not touch upon the merits of the living, lest you should impute that to a desire of complacency, or some particular obligation, which the only interest of truth exacteth of me. I only require justice for the dead, whom you have dared to wrong in the King's presence, against all rules of piety, obliging you to respect their memory. Doubt not, but that they are yet sensible of things in this World, and that amidst the glory and contentments they possess, their care to live in the good odour of men, doth yet continue: You may therefore well imagine, they have just cause to think, those lives they have lost in their Prince's service, and for the defence of their Country had been ill employed, and might justly complain of our ingratitude, should we suffer before our eyes their reputations to be questioned, without testifying any distaste. In vain had they triumphed over the most beautiful parts of the earth, and carried their victorious Arms where the name of France was not yet arrived. To small purpose had they recluded the power of strangers, wherein the limits of Nature prescribed unto them. In vain likewise, even in our memory had they conserved State & Religion, when those of your faction did diversely labour the ruin of both; should you now be suffered to enter into comparison with them; or as though the possession of that glory wherein they always remained, were unjustly controverted in their case. But the mischief herein is, that we have only right on our side, and that all things are so averse unto us, as it will be very hard to cause reason to be so much as regarded, because it favours us; so as I get nothing by disputing with a man who is above Laws, and in whose behalf the King hath received so advantageous impressions, as he may securely exercise his passions, under pretext of his Authority, and confound his particular enmities, together with the interests of the Commonwealth. I should be very loath to say you are grown to such extremities, or that out of vanity and presumption, two imperfections purely humane, you should so suddenly be stepped into Cruelty & Tyranny, two Diabolical Errors. Nevertheless, if having great power in the King's breast, (as indeed you may do much) you cause a general diffidence therein of all things, and endeavour to bring his best servants into suspicion with him, thereby to make them unuseful: If you intent by imaginary jealousies to divert his inclination from that goodness, whereto at all times it hath had an extraordinary propension; or if you hinder him from the free use of his natural debonarity toward her, who brought him into this World. Do you not think men will begin to say, it is not vanity alone hath spoiled you? and that it will not be generally wished, that the Maxims you make use of, were somewhat more Christian, and less contrary to God's Commandments. I know we have a Prince of such perfection, as Heaven itself cannot without miracle make farther addition, than Experience. So timely a wise man hath scarce ever been; all his inclinations do wholly aim at good, and Virtue is to him so natural, as I verily believe he would be much troubled to do ill. But you are not ignorant that one cannot give poison to any man so easily, as to him whom in taking it, supposeth he receiveth wholesome Physic, and that ill counsels have never so great power over our spirits, as when we embrace them without distrust. Surely the uttermost of evils is that, whereof we have neither knowledge nor apprehension; nor is there any fault more dangerous, then when we make use of reason itself in our errors. I have no purpose to offend any with my discourse, and do entreat you to believe, I think it very well you make use of all the means, you suppose, may conduce to the causing the King's authority to become more awful to all men, and public peace further confirmed. These are two so delicate matters, as they cannot be touched without danger, not conserved with over much care. Yet must you pardon me, if I say you are to be very circumspect, lest in thinking to strengthen this authority, you abuse it not to the prejudice of your own conscience; and you are withal to consider, that Peace cannot be of any long continuance, if it be pleasing to God, who hath never suffered without resentment, that the Laws of Nature should be violated. These Laws the Barbarians themselves allow of, have not been established either by force or necessity, as others are: The first thing we can do, is to follow them, and the obedience we yield them, can neither be milder, nor more easy: They are not engraven upon Marble, but are born with us; they are not peculiar to one people or Country, but are common to all men: They have not ordained any punishment for those who will not observe them, so was it not probable, that any could be found so much their own enemies, as to be inclined to such extremities. To conclude, they were not made for the mean and vulgar people only, but for all the World: and those are the more strictly thereto obliged, who owe most to their extraction. If this be true (as you cannot but know) should not Heaven be injured? things both Divine and Moral, should they not be openly despised, would not Nature herself cry vengeance against you, should you by your crafts and disguisements animate a young Prince against that person, who of all the World, aught to be most dear unto him, and deface out of his royal Soul by your servile fears (ill founded) his first and most innocent affections? I will not believe for mine own content, and the honour of our age, that this mischief can happen; but I am much perplexed to know who it is, that causeth all honest men to sigh, who hindereth us the perfect feeling of that felity peace affords, and which compassionateth even strangers, who are least interessed in our affairs. Will you have so savage a Soul, as to dread the fairest thing the World affoardeth? or can you be so pusillanimous, as to have any timorous reflection upon an afflicted person? Can you imagine goodness itself should do hurt, or that the Court cannot without danger behold what it hath heretofore seen with so great contentment? For my part, if this be thus, I find no difference between a lost state, and one concerning itself in this sort; and it must needs be, those miseries you apprehend are very violent, if they exceed your remedies. Alas, if we have forgotten we are Christians, shall we not at least remember we are men? if we be almost insensible, even to brutality, shall we not yet afford something to appearance? Be satisfied in being in estimation and favour with the King: Govern alone, (if you can) all his affairs; administer Justice without any assistant; take all his authority into your own hands; yet suffer his Mother to see him, give way that he refuse her not a favour, which he cannot hinder, even his very enemies, sometimes from enjoying. Afford, since it is in your power, this favour to all France; appease in time those public complaints ready to rise against you, and slackening some part of your rigorous counsels, add this only point deficient in the felicity of this King's reign. If you can procure so pious a thing, and so pleasing to God and Man; this great reputation of Honesty you have shrewdly hazarded, will return with more glitter, and lustre then ever it had; we will not believe our own eyes, if they show us any thing opposite thereunto: We will suppose it is some other who had a desire to outstrip the D. and P. and how there is not any appearance, that a man in whom age ought to finish, what the study of Wisdom had happily left unperfect, should still be subject to enter into errors. But if on the other side, you go on in abusing our good King's facility, & unprofitably to perplex his spirits with perpetual distrusts, if you disguise all things unto him, on purpose to cause him to perceive nothing, but what you please, nor to take notice of ill, being hidden under the appearance of its contrary; persuade not yourself, that God will long suffer Truth to be unknown. Do not think, but things will shortly return to the same terms wherein Nature placed them; or that the King having once discovered the bad designs of his Favourites, will not easily be induced once again to amaze the whole World, by a second example of his Justice, and to satisfy his people's complaints, by abandoning them to public vengeance. Then will you over-late reflect upon this World's vanity: you will then consider, that when we esteemed you happy, you were mounted to a place from whence there is not any who have not fallen, and how Fortune envious of your felicity, drew you from that sweet and peaceable life, wherein you were entered; fearing lest thereby you might conserve your Virtue, or therein avoid your ruin. To Mounsieur Malherb. LETTER XVIII. AFter I have told you how dear the testimonies I have received from your remembrance are unto me; I can do no less than thank you for the good Justice you afforded me. If the like Integrity were to be found among those, who have the life and fortunes of men in their hands, I should take pleasure in pleading, and by the same reason Laws punish offenders, I might hope to be rewarded. It may be I flatter myself, but I suppose my interest is the same with all honest men, and that they can no longer live in security, since I am fallen upon, for the virtues I value in them. Surely, if the World suffer ill tongues to touch upon my labours, it is very probable, they will not spare other men's; and that hereafter there will not be any thing so excellent, which shall not be hated, nor so holy, some Lysander will not violate. These ill examples therefore are not to be suffered, nor is it to be tolerated, that one particular person forsake public belief, to rely upon his own peculiar sense: and should this disorder continue, Artificers and Farmers would (at length) prove reformers of State. I pretend not hereby to lessen the favour I received from you: But on the contrary, I am so easy to oblige, as I suppose my friends give me all whatsoever they take not from me; you will yet avouch thus much, that supporting my side, you do in some sort fight in your own defence: For if to day they say, my Style is not good, to morrow they will maintain your Rhymes to be naught. But it is now time, after I have thanked you, that I wrangle with you, and complain for having been injured in the person of Mounsieur de Racan, whom you tax for a disease, whereof I have been dead this ten years. I doubt not, but that part of us whereby we are men, as well as by reason, hath heretofore acquired you Honour; and that our History ought to yield a glorious testimony of your forepassed virtues in that kind: But since you can no longer be happy therein, but by memory; and that your courage will now stand in need of your Son's assistance; me thinks, it is unseemly for you to scoff at our weakness; for howsoever in accusing us, for not having continued young so long as yourself, you can only tax us for arriving at the Haven sooner than you have done. There is none but M. F. who may boldly laugh at the debility of others, and make jests at our charge; but he hath reason so to do, since his merit herein is generally acknowledged; as being little less valiant in those feats, than that ancient Heroes, who subdued Monsters, and in one night was fifty times Son in Law to one of his Hosts. I infinitely esteem the eminent qualities wherewith he is adorned, and find nothing in him which is not perfectly pleasing. But when I consider that he is capable to cause us to be despised by a whole Sex, and to make us ridiculous to the most beautiful part of the World, I have great contestation within myself, to forbear to wish him ill; and what part soever I take, touching the glory all men allow him: Yet doth it not a little anger me, that my Eloquence is not so masculine as his. The 15. of Aug. 1625. To Mounsieur de Vaugelas. LETTER XIX. WEre it not for the Letter you wrote me, I should have stood in need of all my Philosophy to comfort myself for the loss I have received. But since you have sent me the counterfeit of that divine company I left at Paris, having thereby something, representing my forepast good fortune; take it not ill, I begin to have less apprehension then formerly I had, of the discomfort I suffer in being removed from you; or if I say, you have caused your absence to become thereby the less irksome unto me, which otherwise would have proved insupportable. Lucidor doth overmuch oblige me in retaining me in his memory, and in desiring my company in his enchanted Palace. I beseech you to tell him, I shall never forget the happy day we there spent, and that I cannot believe, there is a more excellent Structure even in the Roman Kingdom, though builded by the very hands of Tasso or Ariosto: in sadness my thoughts stayed there, when I parted thence, I still walk in his Allies; I wander in his Woods, and slumber upon the banks of the Fairies Fountain, whereof I need only drink a drop to turn Poet: That infinity of different beauties discovering themselves to our eyes, at the opening of the Gates, caused me instantly to hate Rome, Paris, and all Cities; and I termed the Duke of Venice miserable, in that he is condemned never to remove from the place where he is, and consequently never to see what I there beheld. The Foot-post, who is to carry this Letter, doth much press my dispatch, telling me, he shall hazard, to remain still in this place, if I make it any longer. This is equally my misery, and your good fortune; for as I am constrained to deprive myself of the contentment to entertain time with you, so will this free you from divers impertinent speeches, wherewith happily I should otherwise have importuned you. The 4. of August 1625. LETTER XX. To the same. I Can no longer live without receiving news from you, and understanding from yourself, the good success of your voyage. My brother writ unto me, they have done you some kind of justice, wherewith you were reasonable well pleased; but if this content be not absolute, I am resolved not to rejoice, and I do already condemn the State, and all those who govern it. It is a shame to see the bounties of Princes in the hands of such persons who can neither be useful nor pleasing unto them; and that honest men must still satisfy themselves with the only testimony of a good conscience, and in the content they receive in well-doing: For my part, I will not complain of Fortune, provided, you occasion to commend her. Now if the Ministers of State understood my secret, and that for satisfying of two, it were only necessary to oblige one; by acquitting themselves of what they owe you, they might easily spare what they have promised me. We have newly received tidings of the Defeat given to the Enemies naval Army; but having lost one of my near friends in that Conflict, I cannot forbear to be a bad Frenchman till to morrow, and to grieve for the Victory, whereat all others rejoice: Besides, I being of a profession only exercised in private, and repose, I assure you the report of Cannons begins to trouble me; for of all Wars, those of Germany please me best, in that I am thirty day's journeys off: Our Doctors say no less than I do: the most zealous among them, longingly expect a more quiet season, fearing the ruin of the adverse part, for the interest of their Arguments and Scholarship: and in very truth, I cannot conceive what they should do with their controversies, where there no longer any against whom they could contend. I write you this from the bank of the most beautiful River of the World; but being so far from you, I taste all pleasures imperfectly; and were my Kinsman revived, not seeing you, there would still remain a kind of affliction upon me, which nothing but your presence is able to ease. Without playing the Poet, I can assure you, I have taught your name to all the Rocks in my wilderness: and it is written upon the Barks of all our Trees: but you are no way obliged unto me, in that I love you extraordinarily. It is an action independent on my will or free election, it being at this present as necessary for me, as all other things are, without which I cannot subsist: And it is requisite I suffer myself to be transported by the force of my inclination, which another would call his Destiny. Be therefore when you please mine enemy; you are assured I shall never be but. Your most humble and most faithful servant BALZAC. The 21. of September 1615. To the same. LETTER XXI. A Lame Footman would have made more haste than the Messenger did, who delivered me your two Letters, fifteen days after the latter of them was written: Yet notwithstanding was he very welcome, and had it been Lysander himself, bringing news from you, he had been inviolable to all my Lackeys; and I had received him as my friend. Truly, there is not any discontent which is not lost, in the joy I receive to be beloved by you, and if the small displeasure they have done me, were of power to offend me, I should in your favours find the remedy others seek for revenge. I have as unmovedly read the Satire made against me, as I write this Letter; and have only accused my bad fortune, which hath at all times chosen the most infamous of all men for mine enemies: you cannot imagine how much I am ashamed of this unlucky accident, and of the wrong I suppose I receive, when at any time they give me the advantage in a comparison wherein Lysander cannot enter without having the better of it. Yet Sir, I am resolved to have patience, provided, the War you raise against me, be only feigned, and that you speak not seriously; for surely I would burn all my papers, were they culpable of one single word displeasing unto you; and my thoughts should be far different from my intention, had I done any thing disgustful unto you; howsoever, I crave pardon for the fault whereof you accuse me, though I suppose I have not done you any so ill Offices to fair Ladies, as it seems you would persuade me: On the contrary, if my testimony be seconded by their ascents, there will not be hereafter any among them, who will not look upon you, as at one of their chiefest felicities; and who will not sell all her Pearls, to purchase one of your Nights. Queen's will come from the remotest parts of the World, to taste the pleasure of your conversation; and you shall be the third after Solomon and Alexander, who shall cause them to come at the report of your Virtue. As for devout persons, I do not think they will rank Health and Strength in the number of Vices; for by that reason they should hold all those for Saints, whom the Courts of Parliament have declared as impotent, and so fill Heaven with sick folks. To say truth, I cannot deny, but I have given the Alarm to married men, and I must say, your visits will be suspicious to those who know you not: but when they shall understand what I intent to publish in all places, that you had rather die, then violate with so much as one single thought, the laws of true Friendship, and that your fidelity is irreproveable: In stead of avoiding you, as an object of scandal, they will propound you to their Wives as an example of Continency. I could allege divers other things for my Justification, but if you think I have been faulty, I will not presume to imagine I am innocent; and rather than contradict you, I will sign the decree of my Death with mine own hand. The 10. of Octob. 1625. To the same. LETTER XXII. THere is no other means to exceed the height of what you have written, not to answer the civilities of your Letter, but only by rendering you all your own words: I know not your meaning: but to take the most unprofitable of your friends for your benefactor, and to thank me for the ill I do you, is no less than strangely to abuse the propriety of words, especially for a man so perfectly acquainted with our language, as yourself; or questionless it must needs be, you suffer my persecutions with the like patience, as good men receive those afflictions God lays upon them. For as losses and diseases are presents and favours in terms of devotion; so do you bestow pompous names upon poor matters, & you make yourself believe, you shall draw some advantage out of my Amity, though in truth you extract nothing thence but charge; nor doth it produce any better effects, than Thorns: And upon the matter, what else are the pains and affairs, I perpetually put upon you? or what difference is there between the hatred of an Enemy, and so troublelom an affection as mine? It is I who disturb your rest, who usurp your liberty, who will not suffer you to have any leisure, though that be the true possession of the wise. It is no want of goodwill in me, that I change not all your kindness into choler, and make not a pleader and wrangler of the best tempered spirit Philosophy ever received from Nature; I lay Ambushes for you at Paris, at Fontainbleau, and at S. Germains: Yea, should you think to hide yourself at the World's end to avoid importunities, I would undertake the voyage of Magellan, to seek you out there: yet are you well pleased with all this, and I receive thanks instead of expecting ill words. The care you have to oblige me, exceeds all I can desire: Good Offices come thick upon me, when they proceed from your side; and they are actions it seems you are pleased to convert into habitudes. Without entering into infinities, do I not of recent memory owe to your testimony, all the good opinion your excellent friend can have of me; and if he imagine I am worthy any estimation, is it not you who sets a value upon my defects, and who have assisted me in deceiving him? But in what sort soever you have procured me these favours, be it that therein you have either committed theft, or made an acquisition, I am still right happy to be beloved by a man, who hath the reputation not to affect ill things, and to please whom, it is as much as to be reckoned in the number of honest men. The day before I parted from Court, I had the leisure to observe him at Mounsieur the Marshal of Schambergs house; but I assure you, I could spy nothing of slender consideration, either in his words or aspect; and though I have always used to be diffident of my first opinion; nor ever to judge without long deliberation, I have notwithstanding herein, sinned against my own rules; and was not ashamed to say, that a wit of twenty years had amazed mine: But the Sermon bell rings, which calls and forceably draws me from you: my contentment therefore must give place to my duty, which commands me to make an end, after I have required news from you, concerning a Woman, to whom I am extraordinarily and particularly obliged; of a Woman I say, who is more worth than all our books, and in whose conversation there is sufficient to make one an honest man, without either the help of Greeks or Romans: How old a Courtier soever you are, you understand not French, if you understand not Madam de Deftoges. On Christmas day, 1625. To the same. LETTER XXIII. I Hope very shortly to follow these few lines, and to come to court you with as much assiduity and subjection, as though you were to be the founder of my fortunes. I have no other business at Paris, but this; though I frame many pretexts for that voyage, but I swear seriously you are the only cause. My melancholy is of late become so black, and my spirits are so beclouded, as I must of necessity see you, to dissipate them. It is to small purpose to speak well of me in the place where you are, they do me no good though; this is as much as to cast incense upon a dead body, and to strew flowers upon his grave, but this is no reviving of him. I no longer receive any comfort in the news you send me, and I am well assured my misfortune is constant, what alteration soever happen in the World: it remaineth then, that I seek for my consolation in your presence, and power forth all my complaints into your bosom; this I will do at the first sight of the Sunbeams, beseeching you to believe, that as in the midst of felicity, I should have need of you to make me happy; so also having such a friend as yourself, I shall never esteem myself absolutely miserable. BALZAC. The 20. of November 1625. BALZAC his Letter to Hidasp. LETTER XXIV. I Do far more esteem the Carthusians silence, than the Eloquence of such Writers, and am persuaded, (excepting in Church service, and for the necessity of Commerce) the Pope and the King should do well to forbid them Latin and French; whereof they seek to make two barbarous languages. I know well, that French spirits are sworn Enemies to all sorts of bondage, and that twelve hundred years of Monarchy, hath not been of power to make them lose their liberty, it being as natural to them as life itself. Whatsoever ugly face they frame to the Inquisition, and how full of Tigers and Serpents soever they paint the same, yet do I find it right necessary in this Kingdom: For besides that, it would cause (as in Spain and Italy) even the wicked in some sort, to resemble the upright, and vice not at all to offend the public eye: it would besides hinder Fools from filling the world with their bastardly books, and the faults of School masters from being as frequent as those are of Magistrates, and Generals of Armies. Truly it is a shame there are Laws against those who counterfeit Coins and falsify Mercandizes; yet that such are freely permitted who corrupt Philosophy and Eloquence, and who violate those things, the Vulgar ought no more to meddle with then with State government, or Religious Mysteries. The late great plague was of small consideration in comparison of this, which checks all the World: and surely, if speedy order be not taken, the multiplicity of our Authors will make a Library as big as Paris, wherein there shall scarcely be found one good word, or reasonable conceit. These be the fruits arising out of inordinate idleness, and the third scourge caused by Peace, sent to afflict this poor Realm after Duels, and Lawsuits. There are hardly any to be found, who are contented to keep their faults and follies to themselves, or to sin in secret; but are also doting upon their own follies, as they do desire to engrave them in Marble and Brass, thereby to eternize their memory, and to make them past retracting. Now to return to the party of whom you particularly required my opinion, and who indeed is the first subject of this Letter. I must ingeniously confess unto you, that next to Beer and Physic, I never found any thing so distasteful as his works: he wanteth (almost throughout) even natural Logic, yea, that part thereof which proveth men to be reasonable creatures. In three words he speaks four bad ones, and as he always strayeth from the subject whereof he treateth, so doth he ordinarily talk in an unknown language, though he intent to speak French: Besides, Ice itself is not more cold than his conceits, and when he desires to be facetious (as at every turn he fain would) he had need to be in fee with his Reader to make him laugh, as at Funerals in Paris, weepers are usually hired for money. There is no question but truth were of far more force, and disarmed, than it can be with the assistance this simple fellow would strive to afford her: Now supposing such men were engaged in the right, without any treacherous design, yet is it as much as to abandon God's cause, to suffer it to be supported by so weak and unworthy Pens. The Renegadoes have not so much wronged▪ Christianity, as those who have not valiantly defended themselves against the Turks, & such who through defect of conduct & skill, though they wanted neither zeal, nor affection, suffer themselves to be surprised by the same advantages, they otherwise might have had over their enemies. Truly the Empire of the wicked doth much more maintain itself by our pusillanimity, then by its own power or forces; nor doth any thing cause virtue to be so badly followed, as doth the weak and unskilful teaching and explanation thereof. It were therefore requisite, some wise man, who had been in this Country, where there is continual debate, and where there is never either peace or truce, (called the College of Sarbon,) and who besides had the art to make good things grateful, & could bring matters to atonement by a sweet hand; should come to cleanse the Court from those opinions lately introduced, and cure Souls instead of wounding them with injuries. It was that great Cardinal who triumphed over all humane spirits, and whose memory shall ever be sacred, so long as there remain any Altars, or that oblation is offered on earth. It was I say the Cardinal of Perron, who was able to show Epicurus himself, something more sublime and transcendent than this life, and cause his fleshly Soul to be capable of the greatest secrets of Christian Religion. Though this man had a dignity equal in height to the greatest Conquerors and Monarches: Yet had he (in what concerned Religion) an heart as humble as that of decrepit men and Infants. How often hath he (with those two different qualities) imposed silence upon all Philosophy, and spoken of Divine matters, with as great perspicuity as though he had already been in Heaven; or had seen the same Divine verity wholly discovered, whereof here on earth, we have only a confused understanding, and imperfect knowledge. To tell you in plain terms, but for the works of this Divine person, which I as highly esteem as the victories of the late King his Master, and wherein I desire always to leave mine eyes, when I am necessitated to give over reading: I had been much troubled to retire myself from the tracing the book you sent me, since any mischief doth so easily catch hold of me, when I come near it, as I can hardly look upon a beggar without taking the itch, and my imagination is so tender and delicate, as it is sensible, and afflicted at the sight of any base object; yet thanks be to God, and the Antidote I continually take, I am the better armed against the conspiracy you intended against me: and have yet life in me, after having been under a fools hands longer than I desired. But by what I can gather, he is notwithstanding in good repute in the place where you are, and likely enough to find store of such as will follow him, in that he is head of an evil party. I can hereunto answer you nothing, save only that between this place and the Pyrenean Mountains, good wits do sometimes stray from common opinion, as from a thing too vulgar; and do often take counterfeit virtues, yea, even those who have not any resemblance to the right, for perfect verities: But when I consider, how there is scarce any kind of beast which hath not heretofore been adored among Idolaters, nor any disease incident either to the body, or mind of man, whereunto Antiquity hath not erected Temples. I do not at all marvel, why divers men do sometimes esteem of those, who are no way deserving; or why simple people should hold Sots in high reputation, since they have addressed incense to Apes and Crocodiles. The thing I most vex at herein, is, that both yourself and I, are in some sort obliged to the Author of the book you sent me, and that I have received the beginnings of my studies, and first tincture of Learning from the last, and least estimable of all men. For my part, I protest before all the World, I am not for all that guilty, either of the follies he will fall into, or of any such as he hath formerly committed: and that having had much ado to purify my understanding from the ordures of the College, and to quit myself from perverse studies; I have now no other pretention, but to follow such as can no way be reproachable unto me. Howsoever, I should not reject Chastity, though my Nurse had died of the Pox; and it may sometimes happen, that a bungling Mason may lay some few stones in the building of the Loover, or at the Queen-mothers' Palace. LETTER XXV. THe Letter newly delivered unto me from you, is but three months and an half old: it is an age wherein men are yet young, yet some Popes have not reigned so long, and in the state wherein the Church's affairs have often stood. You might have written unto me at the beginning of one Papacy, and I had received yours at the end of another; howsoever, I can no way better employ my patience, then in attending my good fortune; and as it was the use to be invited a year beforehand to the Sybarites Feasts, so is it fitting you make me long attend the most perfect content I enjoy in this World. I doubt not but T. T. seeketh all occasions to do me ill offices, and that my absence affoardeth him much advantage to wrong me; but on the other side, I cannot think men will more readily believe mine enemy's words, than mine own actions; or that it is sufficient only to slander an honest man, to make him presently wicked. It is true what he saith, that I am not very useful for A●amanta's service, I will at all times readily yield that quality to his Coach-horses, and to the Mules that carry his Coffers: Yet am I too well acquainted with the Generosity of that Signior, to think he doth more esteem the body, than the Soul, or to suppose that a Farmer should be of higher consideration with him, than a man of worth. What confession of Faith soever R. makes, I will not imagine he can ever be really altered: I had rather both for mine own contentment and his honour belive, it is only a voyage he hath made into the Adversaries Country, to the end to bring us some news, and to give us account of what passeth at Charenton: Surely, I suppose, I should not wrong him so much in holding him for a Spy among Enemies, as to call him a forsaker of his side, and a Fugitive from that Church, whereto he hath at least this obligation, (if he will confess no other) that it is she who made him a Christian. You may do me a courtesy, to make me acquainted with the cause moving him to forsake us, and to go from those Maxims he hath so often preached unto me; That a wise man dies in the Religion of his Mother: That he never altars his opinion: That he never reputes himself of his sorepassed life therein: That all Novelties are to him suspicious. It is long since I knew, that no man's cause can be bad in the hands of Mounsieur d' Andilly, and that he betters all the affects: he interessed himself in my protection, the 1. day he saw my works; so as it is not any more myself whom he commends, but his own judgement, which he is bound to defend: Yet will I not desist from being much obliged unto him: For I supposing one affords me a favour, when at any time he doth me Justice, you may well think. I have right particular, and most tender sensibilities for those courtesies I receive, but they are in special regard with me, when they come from a person of so high estimation in my thoughts as he is, and of whom I should still have much to say, after I had related, how amidst the corruption of this age, and in the authority Vice therein hath gained, he hath notwithstanding the fortitude, to continue an upright man, and blusheth not at Christian virtues, nor vaunteth of Moral ones. I hope to see him within few days, and to take possession of some small corner in his House at Pompona, which he hath provided for me, there to breath at mine ease, and to set my spirits sometimes at liberty. In the interim you must needs know, about what I busy myself, and that I tell you, I entertain a fool, in whom I find all the Actors in a Comedy, and all sorts of extravagancies incident to the spirit of man. After my books have busied me all the morning, and that I am weary of their company, I spend some part of the afternoon with him, partly to divert my thoughts from serious things, which do but nourish my Melancholy. Ever since I came into this World, I have been perpetually troublesome to myself, I have found all the hours of my life tedious unto me; I have done nothing all day, but seek for night. Wherefore if I desire to be merry, I must necessarily deceive myself, and my felicity is so dependant upon exterior things, that without Painting, Music, and divers other divertisements, how great a Muser soever I am, I have not sufficient wherewith to entertain myself, or to be pleased. Think not therefore, that either my fool, or my books are sufficient to settle my contentment; nay, rather if you have any care of me, or if you desire I should have no leisure to be sad, make me partaker of all the news happening in the place where you are; let me see the whole Court by your eyes, cause me to assist at all Sermons by your ears, give me account of the good and bad passages happening this Winter, and that there part not a post, uncharged with a Gazetto of your stile, as there shall not any go hence, who shall not bring you some vision of my retiredness. There runs a rumour in these parts, that Mounsieur de Boudeville is slain, but since there are not many more hard achievements to be wrought, then that, it is too great a death to be believed upon the first report. The 1. of November 1625. LETTER XXVI. WEre I not confined to my bed, I should myself have solicited the business I have recommended unto you; nor should I have suffered you thus far to oblige me in my absence. But since I cannot possibly part hence, and am here constrained to take ill rest, being far more grievous unto me then agitation; I humbly beseech you, to suffer these Lines to salute you in my stead, and to put you in remembrance of the request I made unto you. Sir, I am resolved not to be beholding to any but yourself, for the happy success whereof the goodness of our cause assureth us, and in case your integrity should be interessed, I would owe the whole to your favour: For besides, that you are born perfectly generous, I do not at all doubt, but the commerce you have with good books, and particularly with Seneca, hath taught you the Art, To do good to all men. But to the end the obligation I desire to owe you, may be wholly mine own, instead of referring it to the study of Morality, to your bountiful inclination, or to the Justice of my request: I will rather imagine, I shall be the sole cause of this effect, and that you will act without any other assistance, out of the love you bear me, who am passionately Your most humble and most faithful servant, BALZAC. Paris the 2. of May 1627. LETTER XXVII. G X. X. is resolved to leave all worldly affairs in the state he found them, and these great cares which should have extended themselves over the most remote parts of Christendom, have not as yet passed the limits of his house: He preserves his old age, and prolongs his life by all the possible means he can imagine: But it is thought he will not long make his successor attend, and that his death will be the first news in the Gazetto. Physicians and Astrologers have concluded upon this point, that he shall not see the end of Autumn. For my part, I never made any great difference between a dead person, and an unprofitable one; and if things less perfect, aught to be post posed to more excellent ones; it were a mockery to make choice of sick folks, and cause them to be adored by those who are in health, or to put sovereign power into their hands, to the end only to have them leave it to others. But it is not my part to reform all things displeasing me in this World, and I should be very ungrateful, if I blamed that form of government, wherein I find myself very well: In effect (Sir) speak no more to me of the North, nor its neighbours; I declare myself for Rome against Paris, nor can I any longer imagine, how a man can live happily under your Climate, where Winter takes up nine Months of the Year, and after that the Sun appeareth, only to cause the Plague, and (weak as it is) forbears not to kill men: There is not any place▪ (Rome excepted) where life is agreeable, where the body finds its pleasures, and the spirit his, where men are at the source of singular things. Rome is the cause you are neither Barbarian nor Pagan, since she hath taught you the civility of Religion: She hath given you those Laws which Arm you against error, and those examples whereto you owe the good actions you perform. It is from hence inventions and Arts are come to you, and where you have received the Science of of Peace and War. Painting, Music, and Comedies are strangers in France, but natural in Italy: that great Virtue itself you so much admire in your Court, is she nor Roman? That Martchioness, of whom so many marvels are related, is she not Countrywoman to the Mother of the Graches, and the Wife of Brutus? and in truth, to possess all those perfections the World acknowledgeth in her, was it not fitting she should be born in a place whereon Heaven defuseth all its Graces? Truly, I never ascend Mount Palatin, or the Capitole, but I change spirit, and others than my ordinary cogitations seize upon me. This air inspireth me with some great and generous thing I formerly had not; and if I muse but two hours upon the Banks of Tiber, I am as understanding, as if I had studied eight days. It is a thing I wonder at, that being so far off, you make so excellent Verses, and so near the Majesty of Virgil's. I suppose herefore, none will blame me, for having chosen Rome for the place of my abode, or for preferring flowers before Snow and Ice. If men choose Popes of threescore and ten years old, and not of five and twenty, the days are therefore neither sadder nor shorter, nor have we any subject to complain of our Master's debility, since we are thereto obliged for our quiet. From Rome the 25. of March 1621. LETTER XXVIII. IT is not to answer your excellent Letter, I write you this, but only to let you know, you have so absolutely acquired me to your service, as you have left me no liberty to do what I desire, when there is any question of performing your pleasure. Since therefore you and your Printers have conspired against my quiet, and that you determine to make my infirmities as public, as though you meant to lead me to the Hospitals, or Church-porches; I am contented with closed eyes to obey you, and to put my reputation to adventure, rather than seem to refuse a thing you have demanded of me. Mounsieur the Prior of Chives, to whom I communicate my most secret thoughts, and in whose person you shall see that I know how to make good elections, (in delivering you this Letter) may conclude it, and acquaint you with the power I have given you over all my desires; truly, it hath no other bounds than impossibilities. Since as for those which are only unjust, I believe I should make small scruple, to violate the Laws for your sake, and to testify unto you, that virtue itself is not more dear unto me than your friendship; this is Your most humble and most affectionate servant BALZAC. The 4. of January 1624. LETTER XXIX. BEing now ready to alter my course of life, and part hence to come to Court, I held myself obliged to advertise you, that herein I do, what I have no mind unto, and that they have pulled me out from a soil, where I suppose I had taken Root. It much afflicts me, that I must forsake the company of my Trees, and part from that pleasing solitude my good Fortune had chosen for me, before I was born: But since all the World drives me out, and because what I call repose, my friends term Pusillanimity; I must suffer myself to be carried away with the press, and to err with others, since they will not let me do well by myself. Upon my Conscience it is not out of my own ambition that I am highminded, but out of my Fathers; and if people of his time had not measured things by the events, & had not believed those only to be wise, who are fortunate, I should not have busied myself in searching at Paris, for what I ought to have found in myself: But truly I have so great obligation to so good a Father, and the care he hath taken to husband the good grain he hath cast into me, and to finish me after he had framed me; have been so great and passionate, as there is no reason, I should follow my private inclination, by resisting his intention. I go therefore since it is his pleasure, to live among wild beasts, and to expose myself to hatred and calumny, as though the Fever and Sciatica were not sufficient to make me miserable. At my first approach the Grammarians will call me into question, because I put not the French word Mensonge into the feminine gender, and do not believe the Jurisdiction they have over words, is powerful enough, to cause this word to change Sex. Those who have not as yet written, will set pen to paper against me, and the new Bridge will Echo nothing but my name and their injuries. I shall be much distasted to hear I am become an Author, and that I perform indifferent good pieces. The meaner sort of spirits will be much moved, in that I have set so high a rate upon Eloquence, and being unable to follow me, they will throw stones to stay me. The truth I have not dissembled, will at once offend our adversaries and ill Priests; debauched persons will never forgive me the P. P. they have seen in my books; and Hypocrites will wish me ill, because I set upon vice even within the Sanctuary. See here (my dear friend) the persecution prepared for me, and of what sorts of people the Army of mine Enemies is composed. In all appearance there is not any valour able to surmount so great a multitude; and I should do much better to enjoy the peace of my village, and to eat Melons in security, then to cast myself into this incensed troup, and to engage myself in an endless War: yet since all Grammarians are not worth one Philosopher, and in that the better part hath often the advantage over the greater; I am in hope, Authority and Reason siding with me, I shall easily get the upper hand of multitudes and injustice. To tax me in these times wherein we are, is as much as to give the lie to his Master, and to condemn the opinion of the prime men of our age. Those who govern at Rome, and at Paris, make my labours their delights; and when at any time they lay aside the weight of the whole World, they refresh themselves with my Works. But if some bad Monks who in religious houses, as Rats, and other imperfect creatures may happily have been in the Ark, seek to gnaw my reputation; Mounsieur de Nantes, and Mounsieur de Berille will conserve it; and you know them for two men, whom the Church in this age beholdeth, as two Saints dis●interred out of the memory of her Annals, or two of those Primative Fathers, whose Souls were wholly replenished with Jesus Christ, and who have established the Truth as well by their Blood, as Doctrine. I have besides, as an opposite to my Calumniators, one of the most perfect Religious this day living; I mean Father Joseph, whose great Zeal is guided by as eminent an understanding, and who hath the same passions for the general good of Christendom, as Courtiers have for their particular interests. This irreproachable witness knows, I reverence in others the Piety I find not in myself; and if I perform not all the actions of a perfectly virtuous person, yet have I at least all the sensibilities and desires. Mounsieur the Abbot of St. Cyran, who is not ignorant of any thing falling within the compass of humane understanding, besides the more sublime gifts and illuminations wherewith he is adorned, and who in a right profound Litterature, hath yet a more resigned humility, will answer for me in the same case; and though all these strange forces should fail me; have I not sufficient in the protection of the Bishop of Air, and Mounsieur Bouthilier, who do both of them love me, as though I had the honour to be their Brother; and who are so sage, so judicious, and so understanding in all things, as it is not probable, they would begin to err by the good opinion they have of me; I suppose that hereupon I may venture to go to Court, and that with so powerful assistance, there are no enemies I need fear. Yet will I once again tell you, and I beseech you believe me, I would not part hence, were I permitted to stay; and that it doth not a little trouble me, to lose the sight of my paths and allies wherein I walk, without being enforced to wear Boötes, or have any apprehension of Carroaches. From Balzac, the 18. of October 1624. LETTER XXX. I Am doubtful to believe you speak in earnest in your Letter, and that he, of all men, who hath most cause to be satisfied with himself, should need the assistance of any other to comfort him. This is as much as to be distasted amidst the abundance of all things, and to be ungrateful toward your good fortune, since in the height of those favours you receive, and expectation of those prepared for you; you notwithstanding seek for foreign pleasures, and are sensible of petty contentments among great felicities. My writings are no objects but for sick and sad eyes; yea, of such as will be neither cured, nor comforted: They may indeed flatter melancholy, and afford a man (in despair) poison not unpleasing unto him; but to contribute any thing to the satisfaction of a contented spirit, and to mingle themselves with the pleasures of his life, without corrupting all the sweetness, is a thing I can hardly be drawn to believe: And I herein imagine you have rather a design to tell me some good news, then to write a true History unto me. At the age of 0 0 0 0 0. you are seated upon Flowers-de-luce, and can you lie down upon Roses? You are wise, and have not acquired the same with loss of your best years; you are born the same we desire to be at the best: on what side soever you cast your eyes, you find present felicities, and certain hopes; and were there neither Loover nor Palace to promise you preferments or Offices, the house where you are, may alone make you happy. There it is, where virtue hath no cause to complain of the injustice of Fortune, and where she is more commodiously lodged, then among Philosophers; without going thence; you possess whatsoever we desire in our wishes, and what we imagine in our dreams. The days which to me are so long, and whose each moment I reckon, pass over swiftly at Villesavin; nor can riches annoy you in a society capable to make even poverty pleasing. What likelihood is it then, this being so, you should be of your Letters opinion, and that you cannot be without me? It sufficeth me, you sometimes have me in your thoughts as those in Heaven behold what they left on Earth: and that you receive the votes and prayers I shall hereafter address unto you, after the solemn protestation I am about to make, to remain whilst I live Your most humble and most faithful servant BALZAC. From Paris the 15. of September 1617. The end of the first Book. LETTERS OF MOUNSIEUR DE BALZAC. The second Volume, Englished by Sr. RICHRD BAKER. LONDON, Printed by W. B. for F. E. and I. C. 1654. The Letters of MOUNSIEUR de BALZAC. To Mounsieur Moreau, Counsellor to the King, and Lieutenant of PARISH. LETTER I. SIR, I Come to renew my old importunity, and require your Authority, to call the Printers of Paris to account: They have set forth, in my name, certain Letters, which I acknowledge to be mine, and deny not to father; but yet they ought to have been counsel to them, considering I never meant they should gadd about the streets. By this means, when I think I am in my Closer, I find myself upon the Stage; they carry me abroad, when I desire to be private, and what I intended an enclosure to my friends, they lay in common for all the Country. You know Sir, that this kind of writing hath always been privileged; and that many things are entrusted to the bosom of Letters, which neither curiosity, nor hatred ought to pry into: nor ever will, if that be any thing discreet; This, any thing generous. An Enemy in War, that neither spares men's goods nor lives, yet makes a conscience of opening Letters: the Law of secrets prevailing against the desire of revenge: Yet so unfortunate am I, that what an Enemy will not offer in War, I suffer in peace; and that by men, that have no cause to wish me ill. I have nothing so properly mine, which they think not as properly theirs; Nothing kept so close, which they bring not to light. If hold could be laid on intellectual things, they would dive (I think) into the very thoughts of my heart: but since their arms are too short for this, they snatch them from me as soon as ever I have made them sensible, and given them a body upon Paper; in such sort Sir, that I should not dare to write my very Auricular Confession, for fear they should put it in Print, and make it be cried upon the Exchange; and I must be forced at last, either to renounce all commerce in this kind, or at least to invent some strange unknown Characters to speak in secret, and to preserve my conceits from their arresting. They arrogate to themselves a more sovereign power than Princes do, who always leave to private men, the free use of that which is theirs, and never offer to make a highway of my Garden, nor a thoroughfare of my Court-yard. This is a disorder, where of the consequence reflects upon you, and wherein you are more interested than myself; for I do not believe you would be willing to see those excellent discourses, which I have heard you make at the opening of your Courts; and be disfigured by an uncorrected impression; and it would grieve you that profane hands should touch them without choice or discretion, and thereby mar their lustre, and defile their purity. I therefore humbly entreat you in this point to take care of yourself, and to do yourself right: The boldness of these mercenary persons is not restrained by respect, it must have a stronger bridle; and if you give it not a stop by fear of punishment; neither our Closets, nor our Beds will have any thing so secret, which will not be cried upon the Market place, and to speak in the Comedians phrase, That which Jupiter speaks to Juno in her ear, shall be made Table talk for all the people. You being as you are, the censor of manners and Pilot of the state; it belongs to your place to restrain this so Tyrannical an usurpation upon the liberty of men's spirits, and whilst you defend from violence our fortunes and our lives; you must not expose to the same violence other of our goods, no less dear to us than those. And herein I promise to myself some consideration of my own particular, and that for my sake, you will let your courtesy go further than your Justice. And having obliged me to you already upon the like occasion; I doubt not but you will maintain that first favour with a second, and make the Printers know that you have taken my name and writings into your protection, to defend them against all their practices. This shall be to me a singular favour, and which shall bind me all my life to seek out means to testify, that I am Sir, Your most humble and most affectionate servant, BALZAC. To Mounsieur Rigault. LETTER II. SIR, HAving adventured to speak Latin, I feared my boldness might have had but ill success; and I doubted whether in a foreign Country I might pass for an enemy, or for a friend. But your Letter hath given me assurance of my condition. I account it as the Letters Patents of my naturalising; and where I was afraid to be held a Barbarian, I see myself suddenly become a Roman. For since there is now no more use that can serve for the Law; nor people that can serve for the Judge of a dead language; I have therefore recourse to you Sir, in whom I seem to see the very face of the most pure antiquity; and who, after the dissolution of the body of the Commonwealth, doth yet preserve the spirit. The Goths and Vandals have boasted falsely that they left in it nothing remarkable: I find still the full Majesty of the language in your writings; and your stile hath in it, not only the Air and Garb of that good time; but the very courage and the virtue. You draw your opinions from the same Well, and I see no cause that any man can have to contradict them. It is certain, that to gain belief, one must keep himself within the bounds of likelihood; and present to posterity examples, which it may follow; and not Prodigies, with which it may be frighted. Words that are disproportionable to the matter, seem to savour of that Mountibanks strain; who would have it believed, he could make a statue of a Mountain, and would persuade us, that a man were a mile long. There are some men's works, not much less extravagant than this Mountibanks design; and most men seem to write with as little seriousness; and with as little care to be believed. And though men make a conscience in dealing with particular persons; yet when they come to deal with the public, they seem to think themselves dispensed with; and that they owe more respect to one neighbour than to whole Nations, and to all ages to come. You know notwithstanding, that this is no new vice; and not to make a troublesome enumeration of the ancient adorers of favour: Is not that base flattering of Velleim come even to us? and was he not a Bond slave, that desired one should know he was in love with his Chain? I could curse the ill fortune of good Letters, that hath bereft us of the book which Brutus writ of virtue; and in lieu hath left us the infamous possession, which that villain makes of his looseness, and how he had more care of the dregs of a corrupted Court; than of upholding the main structure of the Latin Philosophy. If it had been his fortune to have outlived Sejanus; I doubt not, but he would have taken from him all the praises he had given him to make a present of them to his successor Macron: and if the gaps and breaches of his book were filled up, one should see he had not forgotten so much as a Groom in all Tiberius house of whom he had not written Encomiums. We live in a Government much more just, and therefore much more commendable; the reign of our King is not barren of great examples. It is impossible the carriage of M. the Cardinal should be more dextrous, more sage, more active than it is: yet who knows not that he hath found work enough to do for many ages, and Battles enough to fight for many Worthies: That he hath met with difficulties worthy of the transcendent forces of himself, far exceeding the forces of any other; it is necessary, that time itself should join in labour with excellent Master-workmen to produce the perfection of excellent works. The recovery of a wasted body, is not the work of only one potion; or once opening a vein: the reviving a decayed estate, requires a reiteration of endeavours, and a constancy of labours. The salving of desperate cases goes not so swift a pace, as Poet's descriptions, or Figures of Orators. We must therefore keep the extension of our subject within certain bounds; and not say, that the victory is perfected, as long as it leaves us the evils of War, and that there remains any Monster to be vanquished, seeing even poverty is yet remaining, which is one of the greatest Monsters; and in comparison whereof, those which Hercules subdued, were but tame and gentle. With time, our Redeemer will finish his work; and he that hath given us security, will give us also no doubt abundance. But seeing the order of the world, and the necessity of affairs affords us not yet to taste this happiness; it shall be a joy unto me, to see at least, the Image of it in your History: to return and re-enter by your means into these three, so rich and flourishing years, after which the peace hath showed itself but by fits; and the Sun itself hath been more reserved of his beams, and not ripened our fruits but on one side. You shall bind me infinitely unto you, to grant me a sight of this rare Piece, and to allow me a Key of that Temple, which you keep shut to all the World besides, I assure myself I shall see nothing there but that which is stately and Magnificent; specially I doubt not but the roof itself is admirable, and that your words do Parallel the subject, when you come to speak of the last Designs of our deceased King; and of the undoubted revolution he had brought upon the state of the World, if he had lived. And though in this there be more of divination than of knowledge; and that to speak of such things be to expound Riddles; yet in such cases it is not denied to be Speculative; and I do not believe that Lyvie recounting the death of Caesar, did lightly pass over the Voyage he intended against the Parthians; and that he stayed not a little to consider the new face he would have put upon the Commonwealth, if death had not prevented him. If all my affairs lay here, yet I would make a journey to Paris, expressly for this; and to read a discourse, made after the fashion of this Epitaph, which pleased me exceedingly. He had a design to win Rhodes and overcome Italy. I should have much ado to hold in my Passion till then; but now I stand waiting for your Tertullian, that I may learn of him that patience, which he teacheth, that I saint not in waiting till it be printed; what a crowd there will be to see him, when he shall be in state to be seen; and when he shall come abroad under your corrections; like to those glorious bodies, which being cleansed from all impurity of matter, do glister and shine on every side. This is an Author with whom your Preface would have made me friends, if I had otherwise been fallen out; and that the hardness of his phrase, and the vices of his age had given me any distaste from reading him. But it is long since that I have held him in account; and as sad and thorny as he is, yet he hath not been unpleasing to me. Me thinks I find his writings, that dark light; or lightsome darkness, which an ancient Poet speaks off; and I look upon the obscurity of his writing, as I should look upon a piece of Ebony that were well wrought and polished. This hath been ever my opinion of him. As the beauties of Africa, do not therefore leave to be Amiable, because they are not like to ours; and as Sophonisbe would have carried the prize from many Italian faces; so the wits of the same Country do not leave to please, though their eloquence be a foreigner: and for my part I prefer this man before many that take upon them to be imitators of Cicero. Let it be granted to delicate ears, that his stile is of Iron: but then let it be granted also, that of this Iron, many excellent Armours have been forged; that with it he hath defended the honour and innocency of Christianity; with it he hath put the Valentinians to flight, and hath pierced the very heart of Martion. You see I want not much of declaiming in his praise; but to avoid this inconvenience, I think best to break off abruptly. I am neither good at making Orations, nor at venting of Compliments; I am a bad Advocate, and as bad a Courtier: yet I entreat you to believe that I very truly am Sir, Your, etc. To Mounsieur du Moulin. LETTER III. SIR, no modesty is able to resist the praises that come from you, And I vow unto you, I took a pleasure to suffer myself to be corrupted, with the first lines of your Letter. But it must be one that knows himself less than I do, that dwells long in this error. After a pleasing dream, one is willing to awake; and I see well enough, that when you speak so much in the praise of my work; you make not use of the whole integrity of your judgement. You do me a favour, I cannot say you do me justice; you seem to have a will to oblige me to you, by hazarding to incur the displeasure of truth. Now that you are yourself at the Goal, you encourage with all your forces those that are in the race; and to persuade them to follow you; make them believe they shall go beyond you. An admirable trick of Art, I must confess; and which at first I did not discover. But whatsoever it be, and from what ground soever this wonderful commendation of yours proceeds; I esteem it not less than an ambitious man doth a Crown; and without piercing into your purpose, I take a joy in my good fortune: which is not small Sir, to be loved of you, whom I have always exceedingly esteemed: and whom I have a long time looked upon in the Huguenot party, as an excellent Pilot that affronts a great Fleet, being himself but in Pinnace. The right and authority is on our side; the plots and Stratagems on yours, and you seem not less confident in your courage, than we in our cause. It is certain, that this is the way to give a sedition the show of a just War: and to a multitude of mutineers the face of a well ordered Army. By this you keep many in a good opinion of that which hath now lost the attractive grace of Novelty; and though it be now bending to its declination; yet it cannot be denied, but that it holds still some colour, and some appearance, by the Varnish of your writings; and that never man hath more subtly covered his cause from show of weakness; nor more strongly upheld his side from ruin than yourself: Simo Pergamon Dextra Defendi possent, etiam hac Defensa fuissent. This is my ordinary language, when it comes in my way to speak of you. I am not of the passionate humour of the vulgar; which blancheth the liberty of their judgement; and finds never any fault in their own side, nor virtue in the opposite. For myself, from what cloud soever the day break; I account it fair; and assure myself that at Rome honest men commended Hannibal; and none but Porters and base people spoke basely of him. It is indeed a kind of sacrilege to divest any man, whatsoever he be, of the gifts of God, and if I should not acknowledge that you have received much; I should be injurious to him that hath given you much; and in a different cause wrong an indifferent Benefactor. It is true, I have not always flattered the ill disposed French; and was put in some choler against the Authors of our last broils; but observing in your writings that our Tenets are alike; and that the subjection due to Princes is a part of the Religion you profess; I have thought I might well speak by your consent, as much as I said: and in so doing, be but your Interpreter. Whether the tempest rise from the Northern wind, or from the Southern; it is to me equally unpleasing; and in that which concerns my duty; I neither take Counsel from England, nor yet from Spain. My humour is not to wrestle with the time; and to make myself an Antagonist of the present; it is pain enough for me only to conceive the Idea of Cato, and Cassius; and being to live under the command of another, I find no virtue more fitting than obedience. If I were a Swisser, I would think it honour enough to be the King's Gossip; and would not be his subject, nor change my liberty for the best Master in the World; but since, it hath pleased God to have me born in chains, I bear them willingly; and finding them neither cumbersome nor heavy, I see no cause I should break my teeth, in seeking to break them. It is a great argument, that Heaven approves that government, which hath continued its succession now a dozen ages: an evil that should last so long, might in some sort seem to be made Legitimate, and if the age of men be venerable, certainly that of states ought to be holy. These great spirits which I speak of in my work, and which have been of your party, should have come in the beginning of the World, to have given Laws to new people; and to have settled an establishment in the politic estate; but as it is necessary to invent good Laws, so certainly it is dangerous to change even those that are bad. These are the most cruel thoughts that I entertain against the heads of your party: in this sort I handle the adverse side; and take no pleasure to insult upon your miseries, as you seem civilly to charge me, who have written that the King should be applauded of all the World, if after he hath beaten down the pride of the Rebels, he would not tread upon the calamity of the afflicted. The persecutors of those, who submit themselves, are to me in equal execration with the violatours of Sepulchers; and I have not only pity of their affliction, but in some sort reverence. I know that places strucken with lightning, have sometimes been held Sacred. The finger of God hath been respected in them, whom it hath touched; and great adversities have sometimes rather given a Religious respect, than received a reproach. But thus to speak of the good success of the King's armies were to speak properly: Both sides have gained by his victory. All the penalty that hath been imposed upon you; hath been but this, to make you as happy as ourselves, and you are now in quiet possession of that happiness, for which before your Towns were taken, you were but suppliants. Our Prince will put no yoke upon the consciences of his subjects; he desires not to make that to be received by force; which cannot be received but by persuasion; nor to use such remedies against the French, which are not good, but against the Moors. If the King of Sweden use his prosperity in this manner, and soil not so pure a grace with proscriptions and punishments; I make you a faithful promise to do that which you desire me to do; to employ all my cunning and all my Engines to erect a statue to the memory of his name. You touch the right string of my inclination, when you pray me to praise and to magnify that Prince, If all the Crowns that are wrought upon his Scarf should be changed into so many Kingdoms, they could never in my opinion sufficiently recompense so rare a virtue; not be able to fill so vast a Spirit as his is: As I expect nothing but great from his valour, so from his honesty I hope for nothing but good; and although in Spain it be currant that he is the true Antichrist; yet I am neither so devout to believe such a fable, nor so fearful to be afraid of such a dream. I only answer some scrupulous persons, who question me about this Prince; that our King hath in him a second to stand by him; and such a one as a fitter could never be found, to strike an amusement into the house of Austria; and to divert it from the care it takes of our affairs. But I will stay myself here for this time; and not enter upon a subject, which I reserve for the dearest hours of my leisure, it is better to make a stand at the porch of holy places, than to enter into them without preparation. Besides, my discourse may seem already long, if not too long, for a beginning of acquaintance; pardon I beseech you, the contentment I take to be this way with you, which makes me forget both your employments, and my own custom: which is not to be troublesome to any, much less to make Sermons to my friends; but yourself gave me the Text I have handled, and I cannot doubt, but that having opened unto you the bottom of my heart, without dissimulation; you will give my liberty the credit of your belief, and with this I solemnly assure you that I truly am, Sir, Your, etc. To Mounsieur the Abbot of Baume. LETTER IU. SIR, I Am true, if not liberal; and I send you that I promised, though I cannot send you what I would. This is neither a movable for the use of your house, nor an ornament to beautify your closet; it is matter of discourse only for two or three days at your table; and a Novelty that will quickly grow stale. But if yourself have any better opinion of it, and that you account it of any value, I am contented that you leave my stile to the mercy of any that will arrest it; so you please to justify my intentions to men that are reasonable, and not suffer in the Country where you are, that an honest man should be oppressed with the hatred against his side. If I were a revolted Spaniard, and that the words I write did come from the mouth of a Fugitive, they might with good reason be taken in ill part; and we find that a Grecian at Athens, was once punished for serving the Persians to be their Interpreter: but I desire you to consider, that the cause I maintain is the cause of my Prince and Country, which I could not maintain coldly, without a kind of treason. We punish Prevaricatours and Traitors, but true and lawful enemies we praise, and I cannot think that M. the Cardinal of ●●●va, will think the worse of my passion, for the public liberty, who hath showed himself the like passion, for one particular man's Regency. I am not afraid that a good action should make me lose his favour, or that being himself extremely just, he should not more esteem of my zeal, which is natural and honest; than the choler of Doctor Bou●her, a mercenary man, and a Pensioner to a stranger. It will be no Novelty to say that of Spain, which hath been always said of great Empires, and that rapine and cruelty is a reproach even to Eagles and Lions. To be a Tyrant and an Usurper, is it not in other terms to be a Grandee, and a Conqueror? And are no● violence and severity vices that exceed the reach of virtue, and which makes our morality ridiculous; I blame sometimes the counsels of Kings, but I never lay hands upon their royalty, and if I seek to cut off superfluities and excesses, it cannot therefore be justly said, I tear that off which I seek to prune. Crowns are to me sacred, even upon Idolaters heads; and I adore the mark of God in the person of the great Cham, and of the great Mogoll. Having now made this Declaration, which yet is more expressly delivered in my book: I hope there will be no place left for calumny, and I promise to myself, that for my sake you will whip the Spaniards in point of generousness, and show them that she hath showed herself principally to do a favour to enemies, and to mingle things, which seem hard to be mingled, courtesy and war together, I demand not these good Offices from you, I expect them from your friendship, and I doubt not but you will continue it to me in spite of all the spightfulness and bitterness of the opposites, seeing I know you are free from those petty passions of vulgar spirits, and that you know I am Sir, Your, etc. To Mounsieur Bouthillier, Counsellor of the King in his Counsels, and Secretary of his commands. LETTER V. SIR, I Vow I am one of the worst Courtiers of France, and to justify fortune, for having little favoured me, I will accuse myself for having little courted her; yet for the love of you, I have used an extraordinary endeavour. My affection hath gone beyond my action, and I have put myself to the venture to go as far as Gascogny to seek you out. If you had gone by Cadillac, as I was told you would, you had found me at the water's side at your disinbarking, and I should have put hard with the best of the Country to have had the honour to offer you my service first of any, but God did not think me worthy of my desires. It was his pleasure I should make a journey of fifty leagues not to see you, and I conceive my happiness to be such, that if I should go to Paris with the like intention, God would presently inspire the King's heart to send you away in some Embassage: Be pleased therefore, Sir, to spare me this travail; I dare undertake no second voyage, for fear lest such a thought only should remove you from the station where all the good of life is seated, and out of which a man can have no contentment, but what he can get by the force of reason and Philosophy. It sufficeth me that I have this one way left me, to present you my compliments; and that from time to time I can make you read that your Idea is the dear company of my solitude, and your reputation, the comfortable trouble of my repose. In the estate I now am in, this in effect, is all the part I claim in the affairs of the World; these are the news for which I retain still my whole enquiry; I profess unto you the public prosperities would be less dear unto me, if yours were not bound up in one volume with them. It doth not trouble▪ me I confess that our affairs are prosperous, and that our armies have glorious success, but to think that you are one of the instruments of so flourishing a Kingdom, and that the King makes use of your Pen to communicate himself to his own people, and to strangers, and to distribute both good and evil to all Europe, this is that which ravisheth me with extremity of joy. From your words are framed the Oracles that are at this day given to all Nations, you trouble not your brains any more with the petty interests of Tytius and Maevius; Italy and Germany are now your clients; and the Princes that either fear or suffer oppression, expect their destinies from your answers. I had the pleasure Sir to see all these things before they were visible; I saw the fruit when it was but in the bud, I knew the Gold when it was yet in the Mine, I remember your happy entrance into the World, and that you have not needed a time of probation for being perfectly an honest man, you said things to me in your infancy, which I make use of now in my old age; and I keep for a Monument a Letter you once writ to me from Villesavin as a seed of all the dispatches, and of all the instructions you shall ever make. At that time I was proud of my fortune, and you gave me leave to boast of your friendship, I dare not now use the privacy of such terms; it is fit my ambition should be more modest and more moderate. I crave now only an acknowledging and a protection, and this I hope, Sir, you will not deny me; but take me for one of the charges descended upon you, with the inheritance of Mounsieur d' Aire your deceased Uncle; Bear with my passion as a thing of your own, and which you cannot put away, since in effect I am and never be other. Sir, Than your, etc. To Mounsieur the Earl of Excester. LETTER XVI. SIR, IF I had made a vow of humility, you give me here a fair occasion to be proud for not breaking it, yet this should not be an effect of the love of wisdom; it should be a mark of aversion from goodness, If I did not testify the joy of the news I have received. I could never expect from Fame; a more sweet recompense of my travail than this, which is presented to me by your hands, and when I see the Son of the great Cecile let down his spirits so low as to mine, and make himself less than he is by representing me in his Country; I cannot forbear to vow unto you that it hath touched the most sensible part of my Soul, and that with joy thereof my miseries have given me a comfortable breathing time. For yourself Sir, all the stain you can take herein is but this, that it may be said, you have your sports as well as your businesses, and that all the hours of your life are not equally serious, but seeing the gods in times past have changed their shapes, and disguised themselves in a thousand fashions; I conceive it may be justly allowed to you to give us the moral sense of those fables, you are able without any wrong to yourself to show us, that great persons cloyed with their felicity are glad sometimes to imitate the actions of private men, and to put on Masks to save themselves from the importunity of their greatness. Whatsoever your design were I cannot but turn it to my advantage, for by this means I am certainly an honester man in England than in France: seeing I speak there by your mouth; I therefore most humbly thank you for the favour you have done me, in making me better than I was; and I joy in this, that by your means I am improved in value, which enables me to make you the more worthy present, in presenting you my affection, and the desire I have to be all my life Sir, Your, etc. To Mounsieur de Boyssat. LETTER VII. Sir, WHat occasion soever if be that brings me your Letters, it cannot be but very pleasing, I feel a joy at the only sight of your name, and the honour you do me to remember me is so dear unto me, that though perhaps it be fortune that doth it, yet I cannot but thank you for it. You are one of those whose least favours are obligatory, and you never cast them from you so carelessly, but that they deserve to be carefully gathered. When others bear you affection and hold you dear, it is but to be just, and to pay debts; but when you do the like to others, it is to be liberal, and to bestow favours. You may then imagine what glory I account it, that the meanners of my spirit hath the approbation of your judgement, and I am not a little glad that my inclination hath so good success, not to be hated of one whom I should love, though he hated me. For a train to this first favour I require from you a second; be pleased Sir that I ask you, if it be in truth myself whom you exhort to moderation, whether you think in your conscience that I am fallen into the vice contrary to this virtue? It is now four years that I suffer outrages; they think it not enough to do me wrongs unless they print them too; they do me hurt, and would have me think myself beholding to them for it; an infinite Army of Enemies are come into the Field against me, under the Colours of Philarque; it is not two or three private men, it is whole Companies, whole Troops that set upon me: I am the Martyr of a thousand Tyrants, and if this unhappy influence pass not over, or abate not, I shall come at last to be the object of persecution for all the World. They have painted me out a public sinner amongst honest men; a man that cannot read amongst Scholars; a mad man amongst the sober: These good Offices they have done me hitherto without any revenging; I am as yet a debtor of these charities to them that have lent them to me; I have taken these blows with hardiness in stead of repelling them with force; and my patience hath been such, that many have called it want of courage: If this be so, you will grant me Sir, that you trouble yourself about that which cannot be; that another man's praises should be insupportable to me, when I have not been sensible of my own Calumnies: I am not like to be in haste to hinder by my violence the making of friendship, who have by my remisseness as it were consented to my own hatred. There is no colour to think that I should complain of words feigned, and such as declaimers use in sport, who have not so much as spoken a word of the most cruel action, that ever the most premeditated malice could bring forth. Let our friend, if he please, make an Epitaph or a deifying of— let him employ all his Mortar and all his Art to build him either a Sepulchre or a Temple, and to speak after the manner of— let him erect him a shrine, and place him amongst his household saints: I say nothing against all this, nor condemn his proceeding, whether it be that he honour the memory and merit of the dead, or that he stand in awe of the credit and faction of his heirs. I easily bear with these small spots in my friends, and exact no more of them than they can well spare. I know that Greek and Latin make not men valiant, nor are things that descended to the bottom of the Soul, they scarce reach to the uttermost superficies: they stay commonly in the memory and in the imagination, and polish the tongue without fortifying the heart: I should therefore desire too much, if I should desire at all that these goodly knowledges should get a new virtue for my sake, and should work a greater effect in the spirit of— than they wrought in the Poet Lucan, whom fear constrained to accuse his Mother, and to praise a Tyrant. If it stay but upon me that this dear Child should see the light, after so many sour looks and so many throws, I am ready myself to serve for a Midwife. I am content it shall be published to day, and to morrow be translated into all languages, that the Author may not lose a day in his glory, and that his glory be not bounded within River or Mountain. Never fear that I will impair his ill nights, or add the care of one process to his ordinary watchings; if he have no other unquietness but what he is like to have from me, he may be sure to enjoy a perpetual calm, and a perfect tranquillity; if he be not awaked but by the noise you think I will make him, he may sleep as long as Epimenides, who going to bed a young man was fifty years elder when he rose. Besides, I have too much care of my own quiet, to go about to trouble his; and I love his contentments too well, not to procure it, being to cost me nothing, but the dissembling his weakness, And this I entreat you Sir, to assure him from me. But knowing you to be wise and virtuous in the degree you are, I doubt not, but of your own head, you will tell him, that it becomes not a man of his gravity, to countenance such petty things; and in a point of Scholarship to use as much formality and ceremony, as if it were the Negotiation of an Ambassador; but much more, that it is a base quality to juggle with his friends; and after having said a truth, which was not for all men's taste; to make a Comment upon it, of a Sophister. I have read Tacitus, and the books of— and therefore should know the stile of Tiberius; and the Art of Equivocation; but I should be loath to seem ingenious, to the prejudice of mine honour; and to make use of poison, though I had one so subtle that would kill without leaving any mark to be seen; I have loved man in affliction; and have made use of men in misery: Lightning hath not driven me from places, which it hath made frightful; I have given testimony of my affection, not only where it could not be acknowledged, but where it was in danger to be punished. I am not now so dealt withal myself; and yet if the justice of my cause were not as it is to be regarded, me thinks the violence of my adversaries ought to procure me some favour; doth not even honour oblige those that have any feeling of it, not to join with the multitude which casts itself upon a single man? Oppression hath always been a sufficient ground for protection; and noble minds never seek better Title for defending the weak, than the need there is of them; and to take part with a stranger, it is cause enough that many assault him, and few assist him, and such also I doubt not is your mind: I am not less persuaded of the generousness of your mind; than of the greatness of your spirit, and assure myself you are not the less on my side, because I have many persecutors, as because also, I am firmly, Sir, Your, etc. To Mounsieur Huggens, Secretary to my Lord, the Prince of Orange. LETTER VIII. SIR, I Complain no more of fortune, she hath done me at least some courtesy amongst her many injuries, and since she suffers that you love me, it is a sign she hath some care of amidst her persecutions; this good news I have learned by a Letter of yours to M. the Baron of Saint Surin, who will bear me witness, that after I had read it, I desired nothing more for perfecting my joy, but that I might be such a one as you make me, and be like my picture. If this be the coal of Holland with which you make such draughts, it surpasseth all the colours that we use here to paint withal, and yet the beauty costs you nothing; but you shall hardly make me believe it; I know Gold and Azure, and can easily distinguish it from coal; I see Sir the Ambushes you lay for me; The facility of your stile covers the force of it, but weakens it not, and under a show of carelessness, I find true Art and Ornaments. It serves not your turns to do better in the place where you are than we; and shutting us out to hold possession of the ancient and solid virtue; but you go about to take from us all that is any way passable in corrupt estates, I mean the glory of language; and not suffer us to have this little toy to comfort ourselves withal, for the loss of all our truer treasures. After fifty years' Victories you will now be persuading a parley, and will make yourselves masters of men by a more sweet and humane way than the former, as much in effect as to be that, you have sometimes been termed, the brothers of the people of Rome, and Heirs of the old Cato's, who made profession of severity, and yet were nor enemies of the graces. This is to perfume Iron and Copper, and to the liberty and discipline of Sparta, to add the bravery and dainties of Athens, M. de Saint Surin hath hereof made us excellent relations; and you have sent him back to us with his heart wounded, and his mind tainted with that he hath seen; & he wants not much of being become a bad Frenchman; at least he reteins nothing for his Country but a dutiful and reverend affection; his love your Island hath gotten possession of, and I am much afraid you will find more loadstones to draw him to you, than we shall find chains to hold him with us. He is full of the objects he hath left behind him, and when I talk to him of our Court and of our confusions; he answers with telling me of your government and good order. And here you shall pardon me if I change my compliment into blame, and require to be righted by you for debauching a friend, who with one look of his countenance alleys and sweetens all the bitterness of my life. The number of my persecutors is in a manner infinite, but for how many think you I account so brave a champion? Take him from me and you leave me quite disarmed against ill fortune; I lose my comfort for adversity, and my example for virtue. And finding you the principal Author of this disgrace, I know not how I should but hate you, and persevere in the resolution I have taken, to be most affectionately, Sir, Your, etc. To the Baron of Saint Surin. LETTER IX. Sir, I Learn by the Gazette that you have received a wound at Mastrick; so it be light I forgive it you; but though it be but a scratch I love you too well not to accuse you of too much forwardness. They that are poor in reputation ought to press up to the trenches; and such fervour is as well beseeming fresh Soldiers as young Friars; but for you, you have seen too many wars to be called by the first name, and your valour having been showed in the presence of the Prince, and approved by the testimony of the very enemy; it seems to me that your part is not so much to bring it forth as a new matter, as to keep it up as a known good. I would have you make good actions, as you use to do; but I would have you do it now, if it might be had with a body charmed and with enchanted Arms, that leaving behind you all danger, you might have before you nothing but glory. If God had given us three or four lives, we might at any time venture one, and sometimes in a bravery let one go, being assured we have another in store; but to be prodigal in poverty, and to be careless of one's head when no art can make him a new; this is a point hath no appearance of reason. We must not set so light by the beauties of heaven and the Rays of visible things▪ nor turn our eyes from a spectacle so magnificently erected for us: I offend perhaps the ears of your courage with this discourse, and you are like to send my counsel away as it came; yet take not distastefully an officious injury and think it not strange that I acquaint you with my fears, seeing a goddess was not ashamed to attire her Son in Woman's habit to preserve him; it would grieve me exceedingly to see you come halting home, or with but one eye, and to bring such untoward favours from the Wars; I will not be bound to flatter your grief with that word of a Lacedaemonian mother, Courage my Son; you cannot now take a step that puts you not in mind of your virtue, and less with that example in the Histories of Sallust, he made ostentation of a face remarkable only for scars, and for having but one eye, wherein he took a pleasure, though it made him deformed, and cared not for losing one part of himself, which made all the rest the fuller of honour. Spare me I beseech you this kind of consolation, which I should give you, if you suffer the like losses; and be not so hot in seeking after a fair death, which can gain you nothing but a fair Epitaph. Give me belief only this once, and after this I will leave you to your own belief, and commend you to your good Angel. You shall have leave to dispose of your time some otherwise than thus; but remember that Melons are past, and make not— stand waiting too long for you: Our Rivers never ran more clear, nor our Meadows were ever more green. I make use Sir of all things, both reasonable and insensible to persuade your return. In the name of God come and draw me out of the unquietness you have put me in; I have something, I know not what, lies heavy at my heart, and nothing will lighten it but your company: That which a superstitious man would do for a dream, or for some idle presage, do you I pray you for a friend: who carries you always in his mind, and who is more than any in the World, Sir, Your, etc. To my Lord the Cardinal de la Valette. LETTER X. SIR, the Letter you did me the honour to write unto me, the thirteenth of the last Month came not to my hands till the beginning of this, otherwise I had sooner given testimony how dear these last marks of your remembering me are unto me, and how much I receive of secret glory, seeing all other is denied me, in that I have done any thing which seems not altogether unpleasing to you. It is no small matter to entertain eyes that use not to stay upon vulgar Objects; and to minister pleasure to a mind, which hath nothing in it but lawful passions, and indeed Sir, the height, of my ambition is bounded there. If I had no other payment for all my travail, but only your good opinion of it, I should not complain for being ill paid; and your goodness hath made me full recompense for all the wrongs I have received. The number of my enemies is great, I see it well; the time doth not favour me, I confess it; but having your favour Sir, what can I fear under so powerful a protection? Seeing those to whom God hath given clearer eyes than to other men, and a more sovereign reason, as well as a more sovereign dignity, have no ill opinion of my opinions, what need I care for the censure of the base World? and how can I but hope that the truth assisted by a few sages, will be always able to withstand a multitude of Sophisters? I now send you Sir my answer to such of their Objections, that seem worth the refuting, and which have but any spark of appearance to dazzle the eyes of simple people; the rest are so ridiculous that I dare not oppugn them, for fear you should think I had devised them myself to make matter for discourse; or that I coaped with them about points where I were sure they could do me no hurt. And yet why should I dissemble my ill hap? Those ridiculous Objections find abettors & uphoulders; although I have justice on my side, yet am I sued still, and persecuted by men I never offended; and that when I give over the field and entreat for my life, see the dealings of cruel minds towards those that are good: They have no force, but because I make no resistance; they magnify themselves in the wrong of their advantage; they have not taken it; it is myself have given it. Their first successes, which my sufferance hath encouraged; have been new bonds for the continuance; and because I have used no words against their blows, they think I judge myself worthy to endure them; yet all this shall not make me change my resolution, and I am bend to stay within the bounds into which I have voluntarily put myself. Although I am neighbour to a Marshal's Court, yet I choose rather a disgraceful quietness than to entertain the best quarrel in the World. I have got as it were a habit of carelessness, I dare not say of patience, lest I might be accused to praise myself for a virtue. It may happen that their persecution shall not continue so long as my innocency, and that I may see an end of that, which would be my end. It may be a calmer season will follow after this, and perhaps the tempest, that threatens my head, will fall but at my feet. However the World go, I will always comfort myself with the Letter you did me the honour to write unto me. I will put your good will in balance against all men's malice, and against all the injuries of Fortune; I will account myself not altogether unhappy as long as I shall have place in your remembering me, and that you will believe I am Sir, Your, etc. Another to the same Cardinal. LETTER XI. SIR, I Never durst adventure to be suitor to you in behalf of others, and finding myself unworthy of your favour, I have never offered to counterfeit a Favourite. But though I did stand so far in your grace as to do good offices for any, and that you allowed me the liberty which I dare not take of myself; yet I should do very untowardly to begin with a suit in behalf of Mounsieur Conrades, and to step before you in your own inclinations. I know your love to him, is one of the most ancient you ever had, and he therefore one of the first servants you ever entertained: The choice of so judicious an infancy as yours, hath not, I dare say, been rashly made; and I discover daily by the opening of his heart and thoughts unto me, the reasons you had to love him at first; I come not therefore as his Solicitor, but as his bare witness; and assure you most undoubtedly, that I know not a man living more religious towards the memory of his masters, more firm in performance of his duty, more fervent in his passions, nor more passionately affected to your service than himself. Now that he hath lost M. the Marshal Scomberg, by whose commandment I came expressly from Bourdeaux, to offer him on his part all the contentment he could wish; he thinks he hath right after him to place his hope in you, and that you will do him the honour to uphold with your protection the affairs he hath at Court. I concur with him in this opinion; and knowing that in this so general a corruption of the World, this age of ours owes unto you the last examples we see of goodness, and that without you neither the dead should any more find piety, nor the miserable consolation; I have conceived you will not take it ill that I confirm him in this belief, and that I take this occasion to say that unto you, which in the suddenness of my departure, I had not time to say; that I am perfectly and ever Sir, Your, etc. At Angoulesme 23. Nou. 1632. To Mounsieur de Bois Robert. LETTER XII. Sir, YOu are a better man than you would have me believe you are. Your words of fire and blood agree ill with the sweetness of your spirit, and having received from you a Letter of challenge, I expect from you another of friendship. You may make your profit of the good examples you have seen on that side the Mountains, but follow not the Italian examples of being captious and retaining of spleen, as if it were a Jewel. It is not fit the holy week should pass upon your choler without abating it. It would not be an act of courage, but a hardness of heart, and the best extremities partake so much of vice, that even supreme right is no better than supreme wrong. Play not therefore the Tyrant towards your friend, but stay yourself within the bounds of ordinary justice. The limits that part justice from wrong are not so well marked out, but that one passeth them often before he is aware; and it is neither a lawful greatness to make ourselves terrible to those that love us; nor an honest resistance to stand obdurate to the prayers of men in misery. But perhaps I offer remedies to one in better state than myself; perhaps I am afraid of an artificial choler, & am frighted with that which is but a Vizard. It may be you have a desire to know in what degree I love you, and that your hard dealing with me is but to try me; such experiments would prove dangerous to any other man besides yourself, but you may make them safely; for I make you promise that any patience shall be more insensible than your sense is tender. But yet muse a little upon the honour of our friendship, and upon the opinion of the world. I did make confession to you of my faults, and I am told you publish briefs of your dislike; I have told you confidently that I suffer in it, and because I did not tell it with a good grace, you are offended with the incivility of privacy. Me thinks you should not exact from a plain Country man so punctual a discretion; by living amongst clowns I have forgotten all the good manners I learned with you: the wild man you had civilised is returned back to his natural condition. I do not any longer walk in the Woods, I wander there; and had it not been to see my Lord Mayors show, I had not been seen in the City; although to say the truth, so obstinate a retiring might justly enough have been censured as a kind of rebellion; & as the study of wisdom takes from me all admiration of vain pomp, so yet it leaves me the reverence of lawful authority. And to this purpose (that I may change the tenor of my discourse) I must tell you that I am very well pleased with my Voyage, and do not repent me to have performed a small compliment, which hath discovered unto me an eminent virtue. I have studied M. the Brassac now eight days together, I have observed him in public & in private; I have seen him handle different subjects, with so equal force, that I am even ashamed, that having so perfect knowledge of his own Art, yet he knows mine much better than myself. He is none of these limited wits that count themselves full, if they have but three words of Latin, & have but read one of plutarch's lives: Take them out of certain common places, within which they entrench themselves, and draw all discourse thither, every where else they are utterly disarmed and without defence; but his knowledge is so universal, & comprehends such an infinite number of things, that one cannot touch upon any point where he is not ready for you; and to draw him dry, I do not think there are questions enough in the World to put unto him. In one day I have heard him discourse with Gentlemen about hunting and husbandry; with Jesuits about Divinity, and the Mathematics; with Doctors of less austere profession about Rhetoric & Poetry, without ever borrowing a foreign term, where the natural were the fitter; and without ever flying to authority where the case in question were to be decided by reason. To answer a premeditated oration from point to point upon the sudden, & to send back our orators more persuaded by his eloquence than satisfied with their own, this I have seen him oftentimes do, and no man ever came to visit him, whose heart he did not win with his words, or at least left in it such an impression as is wont to be the first elementing & foundation of love. No liberty can be so sweet as so reasonable a subjection; such a yoke is more to be valued than the Mayor of Rochels' Halberds; and when one is once assured of the sufficiency of his guide, it is afterwards but a pleasure to be led. In less than one week he hath new made all spirits here; hath fortified the weak, hath cleared the scrupulous, and hath given to all the world a good opinion of the present, and a better hope of the time to come. I vow unto you I never saw a man that had a more pleasing way of commanding, nor better knew how to temper force & persuasion together. I have indeed known some not unfit to command, but rather in a Galley than in a City, such might serve for excellent Galley Officers, but are never good to make Governors; they understand not the Art of governing Freemen; there are even some beasts of so generous a disposition, that these men would be too rude to carry a hard hand over them; they would curb them with a Bridle and a Cavasson; whom they might lead in a garter. They think that power cannot subsist but by severity, and that it grows weak and scorned, if it be not frightful and injurious. This method and manner of governing is not like to come from the school and discipline of M. the Cardinal, from whom nothing is ever seen to come that relisheth not of the mildness of his countenance, and receiveth not some impression from the clearness of his eyes. All that have the honour to come near about him are known by this Character, & wear all the same livery, though they be of different deserving. There is not so sullen an humorist that is not mollified by his presence, nor so dull an understanding that he makes not pregnant with a word of his mouth, this you know, & I am not ignorant of; he makes powerful use of weak instruments, and his inspirations lift up spirits to such a height as their own nature could never carry them. He needs in a man but a small seed of reason to draw from him exceeding effects of prudence, and he instructs so effectually the grossest spirits; that what they want in themselves, they get by his instructions. These are works which none can do but he; materials which none but he can put in frame; yet I think I may say without offence, that this is more of his choice than of his making. To spirits that languished for want of room to stir themselves in, he hath given scope and employment, and where he hath found a virtue neglected, to make it as bright as it was solid; he hath not forborn to crown it with his friendship. There is not a mouth in all this Province that blesseth not his Election; and every man believes to have received from him that power, which he hath procured to him, who will not use it but for our good. Amongst the shouts of exultation which wait upon him in all places where he goes; the joy of the people is not so fixed upon present objects, but that it mounts to a higher cause, and gives thanks to the first mover of the good influences, which the lower heavens pour down upon us. And in effect if Cesar thought he took a sufficient revenge of the Africans, for their taking part with the enemy, by placing Sallust to be their Governor; who did them more hurt by his private family, than a Conqueror would have done with all his Army; by the contrary reason we may gather that the true Father of his Country hath had a special care of us in advancing M. de B●assac to the government of this Province, and meant herein to honour the memory of his abode there, and to make happy that land, where perhaps the first conceived those great designs, which he hath since effected. I should not have spoken so much in this point if I did not know that you mislike not in me these kinds of excess; and if it were not the vice of Lovers at the first to speak of the object of their love without all limits. Besides, I have been willing to make you forget the beginning of my Letter by the length of the middle; and by a more pleasing second discourse, to take from you the ill taste I had given you by the first. And so adieu Mounsieur Choler, never fear that I will provoke you again; it was my evil Angel that cast this temptation upon me to make me unhappy; I might have been wise by the example of— whom you handled so hardly in presence of— I shall be better advised hereafter: and will never be Sir, But your, etc. From Balzac 16. of April 1633. To Mounsieur de Soubran. LETTER XIII. SIR, IF you take me for a man hungry of News, you do not know me; and if I have asked you for any, it is because I had none to tell you, and because I must have something to say; I have done it against the stream of my resolution quite, which is to quit the World both in body and mind: but custom is a thing we often fall into by flying it; and we swear sometimes that we will not swear, I desire so little to learn that I know not, that I would be glad to forget that I know; and to be like those good Hermit's, who enquired how Cities were made, and what kind of thing a King, or a Commonwealth was; I am well assured that Paris will not be removed out of its place; that Rochel will not be surprised again by Guiton; that petty Princes will not divest great Kings; that favour will never want Panegyrics and Sonnets; that the Court will never be without Sharks and Cheaters: that virtue will ever be the most beautiful, & the most unprofitable thing in the World. And what can you write in the general of affairs, that hath not relation to one of these points? And for my own particular, what can I hear, but that either some book is written against me, or that my Pension is like to be ill paid, or that I shall not be made an Abbot, unless I be myself the Founder of the Abbey: such news would be terrible to a man more interressed than myself, but to me, they are in a manner indifferent, and trouble me no more, than if you should tell me it will be foul weather all this Moon, or that the water is grown shallow in our River, or that a Tree in my Wood hath been overturned with Tempest. I have had heretofore some pretensions to Church preferments, but now they are all reduced to this one preferment of being a good Christian; and so long as they cast not upon Balzac the term of an Apostata for the rest, I am well content with my present condition; and certainly desires so moderate, cannot choose but be successful, and I will never believe that ill fortune any more than good will seek after me so far as this; or that it is possible for him to fall that stands so low; yet if any Devil, enemy of my advancement should envy my retiring; and if any promoter should lay to my charge, that to get out off—. I would corrupt—, I make myself this promise Sir, that you will stand strongly in defence of your innocent friend, and that in so just a protection you will embark also that excellent personage, of whom you speak in your Letter. I am, as you know, unhappy enough not to know her, but seeing the honest men of Greece have used to adore upon adventure, and built Altars to unknown Deities, it may as well be lawful for me to use devotion to this Saint upon the credit of the people of Rome, who have now these three years looked upon her, as upon one of the true Originals, whereof they revere the Statues; they all agree in this, that since the Porciaes' and the Corneliaes' there never was any thing seen comparable to this; and that those divine women, which were the domestical Senate of their husbands, and the rivals of their virtue, have no other advantage over this French Lady, but that they died in an age of funeral Orations. You send me word that you find her in the same estate you left her, and that she is now as fresh and amiable as ever she was, and I easily believe it; this long continued state of youth is no doubt the recompense of her extraordinary virtue: the calm within sweetens and clears the Air without; and from the obedient passions of her mind, there riseth neither wind nor cloud to taint the pureness of her complexion. As there are certain temperate Climates, which bring forth Roses all the year long; and where it is counted for a wonder, that such a day it was cold, or snowed: so are there likewise certain faces privileged, preserved to the end of old age, in the happy estate of their infancy, and never lose the first blossoming of their beauty. But it is not for a man buried in the darkness of a Desert, to talk of the most illustrious matter that is in the World: it befits me rather to read that over again which you have written, than to add any thing to it, and for fear lest any word should scape from me that is not Courtly, and which may mar all I have said already, without further discourse, I assure you that I am Sir, Your, etc. From Balzac, the 8. of August 1633. To Mounsieur de la Nawe, Counsellor to the King in his great Chamber. LETTER XIV. SIR, I Take great joy to hear you hearken after me, and that you need no remembrancer to put you in mind to be mindful of me. This thought of yours is so much the more dear unto me, because it comes from a heart that hath none vain or casual, but makes choice of the Objects it beholds, and of the Images it receives: to be thought of by you, is to be worthy of being thought of. This aught to be the ambition of men that are worth aught; and a virtue that is not approved of you, shows there is something in that is defective. If then I have this mark, I have the seal and confirmation of the true good: I have both the good fortunes, that of virtue, and that of your favour; and herein at least I have some resemblance of an honest man. There are some whom blind chance hath lifted up above you, of whom I cannot speak in this manner: one may set their blame and their praise in equal degree of indifferency, and there is no Obligation to follow them in their opinions, but when they get it by constraint, or else by purchase. All their greatness is in their Titles; there scarce appears upon them one little beam of it in days of Ceremony; and if they will have us to respect them, they must be fain to send a Herald to put us in mind. For you Sir, it is not only upon the Bench that the World reveres you, but your authority follows you wheresoever you are; she accompanies you even in your ordinary conversation: you cannot so disguise yourself, but that I shall always take you for my Judge; and this gravity of your countenance, which changes every word you speak into a Decree, and gives a dignity to your very silence, may serve to verify that Paradox of the Stoikes, That a wise man can never be a private person; and that Nature herself makes him a Magistrate. Mounsieur Coeffeteat and myself, have often had long discourses about this point, and it is not as we would have it, and as we wish, that a man should be left at the bottom of the stairs, whose merit we see ascended to the top; but this is the destiny of the best things; either they are wholly neglected, or at most but half known: and I have seen in the same place a Monkey set upon the top of a Pyramid, and a Master piece of Phydias suffered to stand upon a very mean Base; but the satisfaction of your conscience, and the testimony of your good report ought to be your comfort for all such events. There are illustrious lives of divers fashions; but those like yours, which cast a sweet and pleasing light, please me much better than those that thunder and lighten. It is not the noise and the flashes that make the fair days, it is a calm and clear air; and a life led in tranquillity and judgement, which is the work of reason; is preferable before one half or the great success, the World admires, which are but the extravagancies of fortune. See here the decree of a Country Philosopher, and matter of meditation for one of your walks at Yssy. To tell you true, I have a great longing to come upon you one day on the sudden, and to surprise you in some of your conferences; but it shall be then with a purpose to return as soon as I have seen you, without so much as seeing Paris; to make you thereby see, I can wi●h more ease, go a hundred miles for a man I love, than four paces for the miracle of the World. Such a bravery would be an affront, and subject to interpretation I suppose; yet I am assured that those, who are not diseased with opinion, and infected with custom, would make no ill censure of it, and it little concerns me, that the common people condemn me; if you, and those other good men do justify me, and believe that I am Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 15. January 1622. To Mounsieur Chaplain. LETTER XV. Sir, EXpect not from me a regular answer to your Letters; for besides that I yield an absolute assent to all they contain, and that in treating with you, I desire rather to believe than dispute, and to be found faithful rather than reasonable, I should do wrong to the acknowledgement I owe unto you, to make you see it, in the pensiveness I am now in, and to dislustre so pure a matter with the impression of so black a vapour. I therefore reserve it for fairer days: when my mind shall enjoy its former serenity; and that I shall possess it without distraction. At that time I continue my ill occupation, and after I have made a Prince, it comes in my fancy to make a friend: you I assure you, must be the man I shall set before mine eyes; and shall not seek a more illustrious Original, nor a more remote: yet it grieves me Sir, that should love with so little success: it is not reasonable you should weary yourself in a soil that will bear nothing, and that you should take pleasure to employ your husbandry in tilling of stones and thorns; you can never dive to the bottom of my ill fortune; you are, I deny not, a powerful agent, but it must be upon an apt subject; your industry is great, but Art corrects not destiny; and I am ashamed to see, that all humane wisdom should be unprofitablely employed in governing of me, when whole commonwealths are governed sometimes with less ado. A whole Fleet would not put you to so much labour as doth one poor Bark; and to succour one particular person, you must enter combat against Heaven and Earth. It is better Sir, that this perpetual Object of scandal be removed by my absence; and that I leave peace to my friends by leaving the field to my adversaries. This resolution is not so unmanly as some would point it out unto me, change only the terms; and that which they call cowardly and running away, is but to be better advised and to yield to the time. I have read a word in a Letter, which Cicero writ to Brutus, that confirms me much in this opinion; You withdrew yourself, saith he, out of a corrupted City, you gave place to Varlets; for you Stoics say, That a wise man never runs away. Cato himself, who would rather die, than live to see a Tyranny; was he not resolved to go voluntarily into banishment for avoiding a more supportable evil? And think you, that he had more reason to love his liberty, than I to love my quiet? Or that his grief was more just than mine? As all resistences are not honest, so neither are all flights shameful; and as there are some naughty joys, so there are some reasonable griefs; and you shall see in the Paraphrase of our friend, that for a disgrace which Saint Paul received at Ephesus, his heart failed him, and he grew weary of his life. The authority of so great an example, binds you to pardon in me, the weaknesses you charge me with: For myself, me thinks I hear continually sounding in my ears, the voice that cried to Arsenius, Fuge, sede, Tace; which seems to counsel me, to give myself satisfaction by my quiet, and to give others contentment by absenting myself, and by my silence. Some further reasons I will acquaint you with, when I shall have the honour to see you; having no meaning to do any thing without your liking, and without your leave; whose I am Sir, Most humble, etc. At Balzac 8. of April 1632. To Mounsieur de Nesmond Counsellor to the King, and Controller of the Prince's House. LETTER XVI. SIR, MY dear Cousin, we were put in hope we should have the happiness to see you in this Country, and that here you would make one of the reposes of your voyage, but you have not been pleased to make us so happy; It seems you thought not our walks pleasant enough for you; you scorn now the Fountains of Maillou, and the River of Balzac; these sweet Objects, which heretofore gained your inclinations, and enchanted the innocency of your tender years, are not now able to excite in you the least desire, not so much as to tempt your graver age. I find in this something to be offended at, and whereof to complain. If you had to do with a Poet, he would make a mighty quarrel between you and the Deities of the Woods and Waters; and would send you most reproachful Elegies in behalf of the Nymphs, whom you have scorned. But it makes well for you that I understand not the language of the Gods, and that I can speak no otherwise than the common people do: this will defend you from a number of naughty Verses: and I will say nothing to you more spiteful than this, that you seem to reserve yourself all for Paris, and fear to be profaned with the baseness of a Village. Princes and their affairs leave not in you so much as one poor thought for us; and the pleasures of the Country are too gross and meager for a taste that is used to more delicate and solid pleasures. You see Sir, my dear Cousin, that my complaints are sweet, and that I justify you in accusing you. It is certain, there is a part of the active life, which one may call delightful; and though Virtue have her joy with less tumult than Vice, yet the very secrecy of her joy augmenteth also the sweetness, and vapours not out the purity thereof; and so it happens, that while you sought but after honesty, you have found withal delight also: you dreamt but of being virtuous and profitable to your Country, and into the bargain, you have contentment also and pleasure for yourself. For in effect considering your humour, I doubt not but the pains you take, is your sufficient recompense for the pains you take, and that your very action keeps you in breath; or rather refresheth you; and as one in Aristotle said, That it was a death to him, when he was not in some office; so I verily believe, that to take away employments from you, were as much as to take away your life, and that you would refuse even felicity itself, if it were offered you without having something to do. You do well to love a burden that graceth you more than it weighs, and not to think it a trouble to be in a race, which you have entered with as much applause as they can desire that are going out. You have been men's joy, from the instant you were first seen, and your many employments that have since so happily succeeded, have but ratified the good opinion that was had of you being yet unknown. There are some men that get more reputation by playing upon advantage; but yours is a lawful acquest, and this integrity, which hath nothing in it, either fierce or fearful, this learning, which is neither clownish nor quarrelsome, this course, which can avoid Precipices without turning out of the right way, are none of the qualities with which men use to abuse the World, none of the enchantments, which you make use of to dazzle our eyes. And though our eyes were not capable of illusion, yet having merited the grace and favour of a Prince, the clearest sighted the Heavens ever made, and whose gift I value less than his judgement: It is not for us any longer to examine your sufficiency; seeing he hath chosen you for an instrument of managing his affairs. You would not believe the pleasures that Madam Compagnole and myself take in the consideration of this matter; and what reflection we receive of all those good successes that accrue unto you; I can assure you, she forgets you not in her devotions, and if God but hear her prayers, you need not make any wishes for yourself; We promised ourselves we should see you in our deserts, but since your honour calls you otherwere; it is reason we rest satisfied with so sweet a necessity, and to hear with patience that the public hath need of your service. It is far from me to prefer a short satisfaction of my eyes before the long and durable joys I expect from the progress of your reputation; and if I should desire that for your coming hither you should put yourself the farther off from your ends, my desires should be indiscreet, and I should not be the man I ought to be. Sir, my dear Cousin, Your, etc. From Balzac 1. Oct. 1632. To Mounsieur de Pontac Monplesir. LETTER XVII. SIR, MY dear Cousin, if the counsel I have given you did not give an interest in the resolution you have taken, yet I could not choose but acknowledge it to be good, considering the good success it hath produced. It is true that till now I never liked of long deliberations, nor of stayed lovers; but seeing your wisdom hath concluded in favour of your love, and that it is no longer an idle contemplation of the person you love; I seem to conceive the design you had in drawing out the lines of your love to such a length; in which it cannot be said there hath been time lost; but that you would taste all the sweetness of hope before you would come to that of possession; this is not to be irresolute but subtle, and not to make a stop of contentments but to husband them. This is not to have an apprehension of being happy, but to have a desire to be happy twice, so that in this point you are fully justified. This circumspection, which I accused wrongfully, and which is equally removed from Fury and Effeminateness, puts the passions into a just and durable temper, and makes the mind capable of its felicity by a serious preparation; and I vow unto you that the life you have begun was well worthy you should take some time to study it; It is not fit to enter the state of marriage rashly, and by the conduct of Fortune; all the eyes, that prudence hath are not too many to serve for a guide in this business; many men fall into a snare whilst they think to find a treasure, and errors are their mortal where repentance is unprofitable; but God be thanked you are out of danger, and your happiness is in sanctuary. There is no Nectar nor Roses now but for you; (accept from me I pray this one word of a wedding Compliment) and in the estate you are in, what are you not? Since a Conqueror that is crowned is but the figure of a lover that enjoys; the lover receiving that really which the Conqueror but dreams. You offend not the people's eyes with proud inscriptions, nor astonish them with the clamour of your conquest; you celebrate your triumphs covertly, and draw no man's envy upon you; you reign by yourself alone, and all the pomp, which greatness draws after it, is not comparable to that which you enjoy in secret. I am not acquainted with lawful pleasures, and ought not to be with forbidden; but I have heard it said, that in the first there is a certain peace of spirit, and a confident contentment which is not found in the other: And as the Honey is less gathered from the flowers then from the dew which falls from the Stars; so these chaste pleasures are seasoned from Heaven, and receive their perfection from the heavenly grace, and not from their own nature. I have learned from the ancient Sages, that there is not a more ancient nor a more excellent friendship than this; that in this sweet society griefs are divided, and joys doubled, and that a good wife is a Catholicon, or universal remedy for all the evils that happen in life. I doubt not but she, whom you have chosen, is worthy of this name, and though I should hold your testimony in suspicion, yet I have heard it deposed with so great advantage on her part, and by so tender and judicious spirits, that I am not only glad in your behalf for the good company you have gotten you, but give you thanks also in my own behalf for the good alliance you have brought me. I am exceeding impatient till I see her, that I may between her hands abjure my wrong opinions; and if need be, make honourable amends before her for all the blasphemies I have heretofore written against marriage. I solemnly by this Letter engage myself to do it, and entreat you to dispose her, that she may accept my retractions, which proceed from a heart truly penitent and full of passion, to testify to you both, that I am Sir, My dear Cousin, Your, etc. From Balzac 23. Sept. 1633. To Mounsieur Huggens, Counsellor and Secretary to my Lord the Prince of Orange. LETTER XVIII. SIR, YOur Letter hath run great hazards before it arrived here; It wandered about seven months together, and that now at last it is come to my hands; I ascribe it to the remorse of a man unknown, who being but half wicked, contented himself only with opening it, but would not by any means that I should lose it. Happy were I if I could as well recover other things I grieve for, and that I could say, he were but strayed whom I loved with my heart; but I have lost him for ever, and you are never able to restore me that I lent you; yet I lay it not to your charge, nor to the charge of your innocent Country. I am not of that man's humour, who spoke a thousand villainies against poor Troy, and taxed all her Histories and Fables, because (forsooth) his brother died there, and perhaps of a malady that he hath gotten somewhere else. My grief is wiser than his, I should take my loss unkindly at your hands, if you were yourself the richer for it, but now the loss is common to us both; we both lament a common friend, and yourself have rather the greater share in this sad society, in as much as herein you have advantage over me, for having performed to him the last duties. He saw your tears fall amongst his blood, you filled your eyes and your spirit with all circumstances of his death, and I doubt not but it hindered you from being perfectly sensible of the victory at Mastrich, and from showing a joyful countenance in the most joyful day of all your Prince's life. For myself, I am not as yet capable of consolation, and I have plucked off from my wound all the plasters Philosophy could lay upon it. Me thinks my grief is to me in place of my friend; I possess it with a kind of sweetness, and am so tender of it, that I should think it a second loss, if I had it not to pass my time withal; yet I must entreat it a little forbearance, that I may have time to make you an account of your liberality, and that you may know what is become of the presents you sent me; I received them Sir, after your Letter, and that by another kind of adventure. I have imparted them to the worthiest persons of our Province, I am at this time adorning my Closet with them, and make more reckoning of them than of all the riches your Havens can show, or then all the precious rarities the Sea brings to you from the farthest parts of the Earth. There is as much difference between your friend's stile, and that of other Panegyrists, as between the stoutness of a Soldier and the coyness of a Courtesan. This manly eloquence full of metal and courage, seems rather to fight than to discourse; and rather to aid the King of Sweden then to praise him. The ordering of this Tragedy is according to the rules and intention of Aristotle; precise decency most religiously observed, The verses lofty and worthy of a Theatre of Ivory. Every part pleased me, but that of the Chorus's even ravished me, and because I sigh always after Italy, that Chorus of the Roman Soldiers put me in passion; I find myself touched with it at the very quick, and in all company where I come, I cannot forbear crying out, as if I were in rapture with divine fury: O laeta otia Formiae; Lucrini O tepidi lacus, Baiorum O medii dies; O solae Elysiis aemula vallibus: Lassi temperies Maris: Campani via littoris, lis Baccho ac Cereri vetus, etc. I have only one little scruple to propose unto you; I know not well why Tisiphone is brought in with Mariam, speaking of Styx, Cocytus and Acheron; and I cannot conceive how it is possible a natural body should be form of two as differing pieces as are in my opinion, the Jewish Religion and the Heathenish. My doubt grows from my ignorance, and not from presumption: I ask, as desirous to learn, and not to pick a quarrel, especially with a man, who in such Criticisms is a King, and whom I acknowledge for the true and lawful successor of the great Scaliger; I have read his two Tracts upon the Satire of Horace, which are indeed two Masterpieces; and I do not think, I ever saw together so much antiquity renewed, so much reason displayed, so much subtlety fortified with so much force. He stands not dreaming upon a word of no difficulty, erecting as it were Trophies of like passages, after the fashion of our Note-makers now adays, who heap up places upon places, and bring nothing in their writings, but the crudity and indigestion of their reading. He handles Grammar like a Philosopher, and makes books to be subject to reason; and the authority, which time hath given them to the principles, which truth hath established; he hath discovered that Idea of art, which the best workmen never yet came near, and hath added that last perfection, which shows spots and impurity in the most elaborate writings. I have a great design Sir, to go make myself an Artist under his discipline, and to be at once both your Courtier and his Scholar, I have thought upon this Voyage a year since; but I would fain your Wars would make passage for me the way I would go, and that there were nothing Spanish between Paris and the Hague. The sanctity of Orators and Poets is not reverenced over all the World, they bear no awe amongst Barbarians; these public enemies would not spare Apollo himself, nor the Muses, and my person would find as little respect at their hands at my book did, which in full council they caused to be burnt by the hands of the Marquis of Aytona, Yet I think you may say, you never heard speak of a more illustrious Executioner, nor of one that doth more honour to his trade; and that the Counts of Egmont and Horn were not handled in their punishment with such pomp and state. I dare nor laugh, Sir, at this extravagant cruelty. The Truce I had taken is expired, and I cannot possibly stretch the leave, which my grief gave me any further. I therefore leave you to return to her, and end with swearing, Per illos manes numina dolour is nostri, that there is nothing in the World more dear unto me than your friendship, and that I am with all my Soul, At Balzac 2. of Febr. 1633. Sir, Your, etc. To Mounsieur de la Nawe, Counsellor of the King in his first Court of Inquests. LETTER XIX. Sir, MY dear Cousin, I never doubted of your affection towards me, but I thought it proceeded of pity rather than of merit; and that having nothing considerable in me, but my ill fortune; your good nature was thereby only excited to do me this charity; but now I see, you propose to yourself a more noble Object, and think to find a better reason for your loving me; yet I know not whether it be so just as the former, and whether you may as lawfully respect a vulgar person as you have protected an unfortunate. If I had had any such seeds of goodness in me as you speak of, my ill fortune would have stifled all their virtue. Nothing can bud forth in an air perpetually tempestuous. It is not enough for the labouring man that he take pains in his husbandry, and that his soil be good, but there must be a sweetness of the season also to favour his travel: which I have hither to proved so contrary, that I wonder how I have the heart to be always planting for tempests to spoil. I find more good for me in idleness than in labour, and more gain by doing nothing, than by doing well. When I am idle, I am at least at quiet; and envy rests as well as I; but as soon as once I offer but to stir, there is presently an alarm raised in the Latin Province: and opposition is made before I have conceived any thing to be opposed. Other men's good deeds are rewarded; mine only, if any of mine be worthy the name, should stand in need of a Pardon from the King: a very hard suit it would be, but to get their Pardon: and I follow not virtue only without reward, but I follow her with danger. You think notwithstanding that I take a pleasure in this ungrateful occupation; and that I have a greater forwardness to it, than I find resistance. You think my spirit should never shrink for ill successes, and that of its own fertilty without either one beam of the Sun, or one drop of dew, and at the mercy of all winds, it is able to bud and bring forth something. You judge too favourably of a vigour that is half extinguished, and consider not, that melancholy indeed is ingenious and pregnant, when it comes from the temper, which Aristotle commendeth; but that it is dry and stupid when it proceeds from the continual outrages of adverse fortune. And therefore Sir, my dear Cousin, expect nothing from me to answer your expectation, and to merit the veneration you speak of in your Letter, I cannot endure such a great word in your mouth; are you not afraid to come under my office of a Grammarian? One such improper term is unexcusable, unless it be you had relation to that old Verse, Res est sacra miser; or to that brave fellow in the controversies of Seneca, who in the life time of the Orator Cestius, but upon the wane of his spirit, affirmed that he reverenced his very Cinders, and would use to swear by his shadow, and by his memory. It shall suffice me that you handle me in this manner, that Mounsieur your Precedent and yourself would sometimes say in lamenting me, he had been further off than now he is, if he had met with fewer ambushes in his way. I require your recommendation of my service to that rare personage, whom I dare not call the last of the French; I remember what was laid to Cremutius Cordus his charge; but how ever, I account him worthy of the ancient France, and of the Senate which we have not seen, that had the honour to be arbitrator between the Emperor and the Pope; a mediator between the King and his people. I require from you but only the like favour, and I acquit you of your veneration, provided that you keep for me your good will, which I cannot lose if you be just, since I am Sir, my dear Cousin, Your, etc. From Balzac 16. Febr. 1634. To Mounsieur Conrade. LETTER XX. Sir, THe account I make of you is far from being a mistaking. One should do you wrong to take you for any other than yourself; and it would be a hard matter to find a man for whom you could be changed without loss. I see therefore your drift, you would not think the number of your virtues complete, if you added not humility, and you would make me see that there are Capuchin Huguenots. Indeed a fine novelty, but it belongs not to you, to be so modest; nor to take upon you perfection, who have not yet attained Conversion. To speak uprightly, your respects and your submissions are not sufferable, men used to speak otherwise in the golden age; and to say nothing more hardly of you, you are too unjust a valuer of yourself. Do what you can, you are never any more able to weaken the Testimony, which Madam de Loges, and Mounsieur Chaplain have given of you, than you can deny me your friendship which I crave of you in their name. You see how contagious an ill example is▪ and how I imitate you in condemning you. I can play the reserved as well as you, and seek for mediators and favour to obtain that favour you have granted me already. These are the subtleties of my passion, to the end I may taste a second joy, I will make you tell me twice one thing; Moreover, at our first meeting, I will cause you to expound your Letter, thereby to husband the better, yet for that time the pleasure I take to hear you assure me that you love me. Such assurances should persuade me but little in the mouth of many men; but for you, I know with what Religion you make your promises, and of what holiness your word is. I know you approve of no lies, but those of the Muses, and that fictions in Poetry you can bear withal, but banish them from your conversation; I am glad therefore I have found one face among so many vyzards, and that I can lay hold of something I can feel, and that hath truth in it. It is nothing but true hartedness of my mind that gives me the boldness to approach other virtues, with all which I am at defiance, if I find not this freedom in their company. By this Sir, you have won me, and I must vow unto you, that this sincerity whereof, you make profession, hath been a wonderful allurement to a man, that is no longer taken with the bravery, or gallantness of a fine spirit. These flashes have so often abused me, that I am now grown to be afraid of any thing looks red, lest it should be fire and burn me. I suspect these Barks that are so painted and guilded over, I have often made shipwreck in such: I desire those that are sound and safe, and enter them as Vessels to sail in, and not as Galleries to walk in. When I speak of a friend, I mean not a companion in trade, or in disorder, nor one that can return visits the next day after he hath received them, who never misseth to send Letters by every Post: and is not failing in the least duties of a civil life, but I mean, a witness of the conscience, a Physician of secret griefs, a moderator in prosperity; and a guide in adversity. I have some few left me of this sort, but have had many losses, and very lately one, which but for you would be irreparable; you whom God hath sent to comfort me, and whom I substitute in the place of one of the honestest men that was in France. Our contract, if you please, shall be short and plain. I will propose no matter of lustre to engage you in it; only I assure you my heart, and a sincerity answerable to yours. It is now of proof against the most dangerous air of Christendom, I have brought it from Rome, I have preserved it at Paris; It is not therefore likely that to deceive you, I am come to lose it in a Village; and that I have any design to falsify my faith; seeing I assure you, I will ever be Sir, Your, etc. From Balzac, the 5. of Febr. 1633. To— LETTER XXI. SIR, SInce you will have me to write that in a Letter, which I spoke unto you by word of mouth, this Letter shall be a second Testimony of the account I make of—, and of the feeling I have of the courtesies received from him. During the time we had his company, I considered him with much attention; but in my conscience observed nothing in the motions of his spirit, but great inclinations to great designs, and to see him do wonders in the World, you need wish him no more but matter of employment. He hath all the intendments of an honest man, all the Characters of a great Lord: by these he gains men's eyes in present, and their hearts in expectation, and afterwards brings more goodness forth than ever he promised, and exceeds expectation with performance. And in truth, if this Heroic countenance had no wares to vent but vulgar qualities, this had been a trick put upon us by nature, to deceive us by hanging out a false sign. The charge he exerciseth in the Church, is no burden to him, he hath in such sort accommodated his humour to it, that in the most painful functions of so high a duty, there lies nothing upon his shoulders, but ease and delight. He embraceth generally all that he believes to be of the decency of his profession, and is neither tainted with the heat, which accompanies the age wherein he is, nor with the vanity, which such a birth as his doth commonly bring with it. In a word the way he takes goes directly to Rome. He is in good grace with both the Courts, and the Pope would be as willing to receive the King's commendation of him, as the King would be to give it. He hath brought from thence a singular approbation, and hath left behind him in all the holy Colleges a most sweet odour, and that without making faces; or making way to reputation by singularity. For in effect, what heat soever there be in his zeal, he never suffers it to blaze beyond custom: his piety hath nothing, either weak or simple, it is serious all and manly, and he protesteth, it is much better to imitate S. Charles, than to counterfeit him. Concerning his passion of horses, which he calls his malady; since he is not extreme in it, never counsel him to cure it; it is not so bad as either the Sciatica, or the Gout; and if he have no other disease but that, he hath not much to do for a Physician. One may love horses innocently, as well as Flowers and Pictures: and it is not the love of such things, but the intemperate love that is the vice. Of all beasts that have any commerce with men, there are none more noble nor better conditioned; and of them a great Lord may honestly and without disparagement be curious. He indeed might well be said to be sick of them, who caused mangers of Ivory to be made for them, and gave them full measures of pieces of Gold; this was to be sick of them, to bestow the best office of his state on the goodliest horse of his stable; and to mock indeed reason itself, and the speech of men, to give them a neighing Consul. You shall give me leave to tell you another story to this purpose, not unpleasant. It is of Theophylact, Patriarch of Constantinople, who kept ordinarily two thousand horses, and fed them so daintily, that in stead of Barley and Oats, which to our horses are a feast, he gave them Almonds, Dates, and Pistach nuts; and more than this, as Cedrenus reports, he steeped them long time before in excellent Wine, and prepared them with all sorts of precious odours. One day as he was solemnising his Office in the Church of Saint Sophia, one came and told him in his ear, that his Mare Phorbante had foaled a Colt; with which he was so ravished, that instantly without having the patience to finish his service, or to put off his Pontifical Robes, he left the mysteries in the midst, and ran to his stable to see the good news he had heard, and after much joy expressed for so happy a birth, he at last returned to the Altar, and remembered himself of his duty, which the heat of his passion had made him to forget. See Sir, what it is to dote upon horses; but to take a pleasure in them, and to take a care of them, this no doubt may make a man be said to love them; and nevertheless not the less the wiser man. Even Saints themselves have had their pleasures and their pastimes; all their whole life was not one continued miracle; they were not every day 24. hours in ecstasy: amidst their Gifts, their Illuminations, their Raptures, their Visions; they had always some breathing time of humane delight, during all which time they were but like us: and the Ecclesiastical story tells us, that the great Saint John, who hath delivered Divinity in so high a strain, yet took a pleasure, and made it his pastime to play with a Partridge, which he had made tame and familiar to him. I did not think to have gone so far; it is the subject that hath carried me away, and this happens very often to me when I fall into discourse with you. My compliments are very short, and with men that are indifferent to me, I am in a manner dumb; but with those that are dear unto me, I neither observe Rule nor Measure; and I hope you doubt not, but that I am in the highest degree, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 5. Jan. 1633. To Mounsieur Godeau. LETTER XXII. SIR, THere is no more any merit in being devout; Devotion is a thing so pleasing in your book, that even profane persons find a relish in it, and you have found out a way how to save men's Souls with pleasure. I never found it so much as within this week, that you have fed me with the dainties of the ancient Church, and feasted me with the Agapes of your Saint Paul. This man was not altogether unknown to me before, but I vow unto you, I knew him not before, but only by sight; though I had sometimes been near unto him, yet I could never mark any more of him than his countenance and his outside: your Paraphrase hath made me of his counsel, and given me a part in his secrets; and where I was before but one of the Hall, I am now one of the Closet, and see clearly and distinctly what I saw before but in Clouds, and under shadows. You are to say true, an admirable Decipherer of Letters; in some passages to interpret your subtlety is a kind of Divination; and all throughout, the manner of your expressing is a very charm. I am too proud to flatter you, but I am just enough to be a witness of the truth; and I vow unto you, it never persuades me more than when it borrows your stile. There reflects from it a certain flash, which pleaseth instantly as beauty doth, and makes things to be lovely before one knows they are good. Your words are no way unworthy of your Author; they neither weaken his conceits by stretching them out at length, nor scatter the sense by spreading it out in breadth. But chose the powerful spirit, which was streightened within the bounds of a concise stile, seems to breath at ease in this new liberty, and to increase itself as much as it spreads itself: he seems to pass from his fetters into triumph, and to go forth of the prisons of Rome where Nero shut him up, to enter into a large Kingdom, into which you bring him with royal magnificence. There are some so curious palates, they cannot relish the language of the Son of God, and are so impudent as to accuse the holy Scriptures of clownishness and Barbarism, which made Mounsieur—, who died Archbishop of Benevent, that he durst not say his Breviary, for fear to mar his good Latin by contagion of the bad, and lest he should take some tincture of impurity that might corrupt his eloquence. I will not speak at this time what I conceive of his scruple; only I say that if in the vulgar Translation there be Barbarism, yet you have made it civil; and if our good Malherb should come again into the World, he would find nothing in your Paraphrase that were not according to the strictness of his rules, and the usage of the Court whereof he spoke so often. Some other time we will confer about the Preface, and the Letters I received, which I have in a manner all by heart, but especially I have culled out these dear words to print in my memory, and to comfort my spirits. A little patience will crown you, all their throws seem like those of sick men a little before they die, in which I think there is neither malice nor force, if you can but despise them, Prefer the better side before the greater, and the Closet before the Theatre. Honest persons are for you, and I make account you care not much for pleasing others. The people have often times left Terence for dancers upon the Rope, and banished Philosophers, to gratify Jesters. I have nothing to add to this; and will take heed how I sow Purple with pack-th●ead. I content myself Sir, at this time to assure you that I passionately am Sir, Your, etc. From Balzac 10. of May 1632. To Mounsieur de Thibaudiere. LETTER XXIII. SIR, I Will not raise to you the price of my tears, though I have shed them for you eight days together: I content myself to tell you that I am now comforted; since the news of your death, it changed into tidings of your hurt; and that I am made assured, you may be quitted of it, for a little pain and a little patience. I know well that virtue is more happily employed in well using honest pleasures, than in patient bearing troublesome crosses; and that without an absolute distemper in the taste, one can never find any sweetness in pain; yet you shall confess unto me, that there is a kind of contentment in being lamented; and though the joys of the mind be not so sensible as those of the body, yet they are more delicate and more subtle; at least, you have come to know of what worth you are by the fear, which all honest men were in to lose you, and that in a time when half the World is a burden to the other; and every one reserves his lamentation for his own miseries; yet all in general have mourned for you, in such sort Sir, that you have had the pleasure to hear your own Funeral Oration, and to enjoy the continuance of a happy life, after receiving the honours done to worthy men after death. If the War of Italy continue till Winter, I will come and learn from your own mouth, all the particulars of your adventures, and I shall then know if your Philosophy have not been moved, and waxed pale, at the sight of the Probe, and of the Razor. In the mean time do me honour to be mindful of him who exceedingly honour's you, and to keep for me that part in your affection, which you have promised me, since I truly am Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 29. of July 1630. To Mounsieur Gyrard, Secretary to my Lord the Duke de Espernon. LETTER XXIV. SIR, I Had heard that before, which you sent me word of by your footman; and had rejoiced already, for the new Dignity of Mounsieur the Precedent Signior. It seems you think he is made Lord Keeper of the Scales for none but for you, and that no Feast for the joy of it should be kept any where, but at Cadillac. Within these four days you shall see it kept all the Country over; it is a favour the King hath done the whole Realm. It is not so much for the purity of the air, and for the fruitfulness of the earth, that we ought to call it a happy year, as for the election of worthy Magistrates. I therefore take a joy in this news, as I am a subject of the Kings; and this is the first Right I claim in it: but beyond this, I have a second Right of rejoicing, in that I am interessed in the advancement of a modesty, which I know; and make account to be made happy, by the prosperity of him, of whose honesty I am assured. I put not forth this last word, at adventure: I am ready to make it good against whosoever shall think it rash; and I know he hath preservatives against all the poisons of the Court; and a judgement that cannot be corrupted with all the bribes of Fortune. There is nothing of so high a price, for which he would be willing to leave his virtue: if he had lived in Nero's time, he had been a constant Martyr; but living now under a just Prince he will prove a profitable Officer. To preserve a life, which is to continue but a few days, he would not obscure that life, which ought to last in the memory of many ages: and the least spot upon his honour, would be more insupportable to him, than the effusion of all his blood. He knows that in the administration of Justice, being the interpreter of God; he cannot work of himself; that this Divine Act ought to be a general Suspension from all humane affections, and that in the exercise thereof, he is no longer at his liberty, to show love, or hatred; revenge, or gentleness. He considers that he makes not law, but only declares it; that he is a Minister, and not a Master of his Authority; and that the Sovereignty is in the Law, and not in himself. This is the reason why in every cause he censures, he bethinks himself of his own proper cause, which shall one day be censured; he so judgeth, as if Posterity were to take a review of his judging; and as though the present time, were but subalternate to the future. Thus I have heard him to make his account; and from his principles I have drawn my conclusions; and in a conference I had sometimes with him, he seemed to me a better man than I have set him forth. In such sort Sir, that I am not of a mind to contradict you; In your writing of him to me, you say nothing which is not of my knowledge; and in my writing of him to you, I do nothing but follow your conceits. Never fear that the common errors will deprave his spirit; he hath laid too sure a foundation in the knowledge of truth; he is too strongly confirmed in the good Sect. Having often and seriously meditated on the condition of humane affairs, he values them just as much as they are worth, but he adds nothing by opinion; he hates neither riches nor authority; this were the peevish humour of the Cynics, to hate a thing that in itself is lovely; he makes use of them after the manner of the Academy, and of the Lycaeum, which never thought them impediments to happiness, but rather aids and furtherances to virtue. Or may we not say more probably that he hath drawn his doctrines from a Spring nearer hand; and that he hath not gone out of himself to find out the truest wisdom? He hath examples at home, which may serve him for Ideas of perfection; and Sages in his own race, which are Artists of virtuous life. Whilst he governs himself by their Rules, he may well pass by all foreign doctrines; and having his deceased Uncle before his eyes; he need not care to have Socrates for a mirror: Quip malim unum Catonem quam trecentos Socratas. The memory of this illustrious personage is in such veneration through all France, and his name hath preserved so excellent an Odour in the prime Tribunal of Christendom, that it is not now so much the name of a family, as it is the name even of integrity and constancy itself. Remember the Epigram of that Grecian, whose Manuscript I showed you; which saith, that in a place at Athens when one named Plutarch, there was an Echo answered Philosophy, as taking the one for the other, & making no difference between the two. By the like reason the Muses might use the same figure, and act the like miracle, in favour of this new Pillar of justice. They never need to use reservations, nor fear too deep engaging themselves: whatsoever they lay forth before hand for his glory, shall all be allowed them again in the reckoning. Having been bred up in their bosom, and being entered into their Sanctuary, he will never suffer them to stand waiting and catch cold at his gate; nor that a Swisser shall keep them out from entering his base Court. They shall never have (I assure myself) that unhappy advantage to have given him all, and receive back nothing from him again; to have enriched his mind with a thousand rare knowledges, and then hardly get him to seal them an acquittance. Let us now come to the other part of your Letter; and assay to satisfy your Doctor concerning his Objection. He finds fault with me, because I praise the Pope for his beauty, and says that such praise is for women and youth, and belongs not to old men and Priests. First, Sir I answer, he wrongs me in changing my terms; for I make a great difference between beauty and a good Visage: of this I spoke in the person of the Pope, and should never have thought I had committed a sin, though I had spoken of the other also. As concerning age, you know there are beautiful old men, though there be not beautiful old Women; and you remember that ancient personage, who by report of History was of equal pleasing to all companies through all the ages of his life. As concerning the quality, besides that God rejected in sacrifice all lean and unsound Oblation; he required also to have handsome Priests; and you may show your friend in the books of Moses, that not only the lame and purblind, but even the flat nosed were excluded from being Ministers in sacrificing. But if being, as he is a profane Doctor, the holy Scriptures do not please him; yet he might have remembered that old word of the Tragic Poet, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, upon which I had an eye when I said, This Visage worthy of an Empire. And yet more being a Gascogne Doctor, I wonder he never read the Panegyric, which a Country man of his pronounced at Rome before the Emperor Theodosius; where he should have found these words; Augustissima quaeque species, plurimum creditur trahere de Coelo; sive enim Divinus ille animus venturus in corpus, dignum prius mereatur hospitium, sive cum venerit fingit habitaculum pro habitu suo; sive aliud ex alio crescit; & cum se pariajunxerunt, utraque majora sunt parcam Arcanum Coeleste rimari; Tibi istud soli pateat imperator cum Deo consorte secretum. Illud dicam quod intellexisse hominem & dixisse fas est; talem esse debere qui a gentibus adoratur cui toto orbe terrarum privaeta vel publica vota redduntur; a quo petit Navigaturus serenum, Peregrinaturus reditum, Pugnaturus auspicium. Virtus tua meruit imperium, sed virtuti addidit forma suffragium. Illa praestitit ut oporteret te principem fieri; haec ut deceret. In this discourse, there are some terms which yet may seem fitter for a Pope than for an Emperor: and here is to be noted, that Theodosius was no young man, when Latinus Pacatus praised him thus for his beauty, for it was after his defeat of the Tyrant Maximus; and when after many victories obtained against the Barbarians, he was in full and peaceable possession of his glory. Sometime before this; Gregory Nazianzen had upbraided the Emperor Julian for his ill favoured Visage, for the ill feature of his face, and for other deformities of his body, of which nevertheless he was not guilty. Though one might here question the holy Orator, whether in doing this he did well, or no? Yet from hence we may at least gather, that the qualities, contrary to these he blames, ought justly and may be lawfully made account of; and that such praises, which reflect upon the Creators' glory, are much more Christian than those accusations, which trench upon the scorning of his knowledge. Your friend therefore is certainly more severe than he need to be. He is much to blame to reject in this sort the blessings of Heaven, and the advantages of birth; and to imagine that holiness cannot be examplar and Apostolic, unless it be pale and lean, and look like one were starved. These are the dreams of Tertullian, who will have it, that our Saviour was in no sort beautiful, and therein gives the lie to all Antiquity, and to the tradition of the whole Church. He draws a Picture for him, which is not only injurious to his Divine, but dishonourable also ●o his humane nature. This in my opinion is one of his greatest errors, and which most of all startles me in reading his books. If he would have it, that his watchings and abstinence had dried up his blood, and made him look ghastly; that to the burnt colour of afric, he added also that of burnt Melancholy and of overflowing choler, it may perhaps be granted him; yet I will not accuse, either the Sun of his Country; or the temperature of his body: but leave every one in his natural estate; and so should he have done. But to go about to disfigure the most beautiful amongst the Children of men, and to eclipse all the beams and lustre of a Divine countenance, this is a sullen humour, which no patience can bear with; no charity can ever pardon. You wondered at this strange opinion when I last showed it unto you; and I perceived you suspected I did him wrong; now therefore to justify my credit with you, and to let you see I did it not to abuse you: I send you here the passages I promised you to look out. The first is in his book of Patience; where Christ is called Contumeliosus sibi ipsi. The second in his book against the Jews, where he is said to be, Ne aspectu quidem honestus: but hear the third, which will fright you to hear, in his Tract of the flesh of Christ: Adeo ut●nec humanae honestatis corpus fuit; ●acentibus apud nos quoque Prophetis de ignobili aspectu ejus, ipsae passiones, ipsaeque contumeliae loquuntur; passiones quidem humanam carnem; contumeliae vero inhonestam. An ausus esset aliquis ungue summo perstringere corpus novum? Sputaminibus contaminare faciem nisi merentem, etc. Let us see what Mounsieur Rigaut thinks of this; and whether he be of these sharp and sour ones that would take from Heaven its stars, and from the Earth its flowers. Certainly my censurer is of this number; for I perceive beauty offends him, and he would easily subscribe to Tertullia's opinion. Yet say no more to him of all this, but that which he must needs know; and spare sending out a second Process against a man that hath too much of the first, and deserves you should take some care of his quiet; since he is from the bottom of his heart, Sir, Your, etc. From Balzac 10. of March 1633. To My Lord the Bishop of Nantes. LETTER XXV. SIR, IT is told me from all parts that you speak of me, as one that is dear unto you, and of my ill fortune, as of a thing that concerns you. If this tenderness proceed from a soft effeminate spirit, yet it would not be without merit; and oblige me infinitely unto you; but now that it comes from a feeling of the purest spirit in the World, and the least capable of weakness; how much ought I to esteem it, and of how great price to value it? It wants not much of making me love that grief which procures me so glorious a consolation; and I vow unto you, that to be pitied of you, is a more pleasing thing than to be favoured of the Court. In that Country men go upon snares and ruins; the best places there are so slippery that few can stand upright; and if the miserable pretenders avoid a sudden falling, it is by enduring a tedious tossing: receiving perpetual affronts, and returning perpetual submissions. I therefore like much better to hide myself here with your good favour, and my own good quiet, than to bear a show there with their frights and sour looks; and I bless the winds, and count my Shipwreck happy which hath cast me back upon my old home. Some that were more sensible than myself, would in this case complain of the World; but I content myself to forget it: I will neither have War, nor commerce with the world: I have sounded a retreat to all my passions; as well those that be troublesome, as those that be pleasing; and I protest unto you Sir, I should read with more delight, a relation of one of your walks at Cadillac, than the most delightsom passage of all the Germane History: when I think upon you in company with—, me thinks I see Laelius come to visit Scipio, and confirming him in the resolution he hath taken to stand aloof from the tumults and turbulencies of worldly affairs; and by a quiet retreat to place his virtue, and his glory in a sure hold. I am extremely glad of the honour he will do my Father to pass this way, and bring you along with him; and you may well think that after this I shall not reckon our Village inferior to Tempe, or to Tyvoly. If it were not for the sit of an Ague, which is now leaving me, but very quickly to return; I would go as far as Rochel to meet with this good fortune, that I might be at the first opening of those Largesses of the Church, which a mouth so holy and eloquent as yours must needs distribute. But I am not happy enough to see you, and gain a Jubilee both at once; It must be your pleasure to be so gracious as to accept of such a compliment as I am capable of; and to rest assured with my assuring you by this messenger that I am, and always will be with all the forces of my Soul, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 13. May 1633. Another to the same. LETTER XXVI. SIR, THere are some of your bounties I have cause to complain of; they are such as cannot be acknowledged; and in the least of your actions you are so great, that if I take measure of myself by you, I cannot appear but very little. Your liberality makes me rich, but withal it discovers my necessity, there being no proportion between you and me, how extreme soever my possession be, it can be no competent price for yours; and in the Commerce that is between us, I return you but Flints for Diamonds, yet I present them to you but informa pauper is, not as a Mountibank; & know I give you nothing, though I keep nothing for myself. I am well assured Sir, that I honour you infinitely, but am infinitely unsatisfied to offer you so mean a thing, there is no reasonable man that doth not as much, & since so much is due to you for only your virtue, how much am I to pay you more for your affection? Of this last moyity I am altogether Non-solvent; my services; my blood are not all worth it; and I confess unto you, I shall never be able to deserve but these four words of your Letter, Non discedo abs te Mi Fili, sed avellor; nor those Delicias in Christo meas; nor this, Dulce decus meum, with which you graced me at another time. Mounsieur Gyrard, who knows all my secrets, and offers to be an agent for me with you, will tell you with a better grace how sensible I am of your so great favours, and how proud of so illustrious an adoption as you are pleased to honour me with; of which I make far greater reckoning then to be adopted into the family, of the Fabians, or the Marcelli; you shall also hear by him, that since your departure from hence, you have been (I may say) solemnly invocated, and most honourable commemoration hath been made of you in all our innocent disorderly wakes. Our Curate believes verily that your presence hath brought a blessing to the fruits of our Parish; and we look for better Harvests than our neighbours, who had not the happiness thereof as we had. There is therefore just cause that every week we make a feast upon the day of your coming to Balzac, Et ut tibi tanquam futuro in posterum loci Genio non uno poculo libetur. If this kind of acknowledgement will content you, I shall perfectly acquit myself of performing my duty, having learned in Lorraine, and the Low Countries the means of testifying that I am Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 6. of June 1633. Another to him. LETTER XXVII. SIR, THough I know the good deserts of— are not unknown unto you, and that you need no foreign commendation to increase your respects towards him, yet I cannot hold from doing a thing superfluous; & assure you by these few lines that it will be no blemish to your judgement to let him have your Testimony of his piety. Ever since the time he renounced his error, he hath continued firm and steadfast in the doctrine you taught him: of an erroneous Christian you made him an Orthodox, and your hand is too happy to plant any thing that doth not prosper. He is therefore your workmanship in Christ Jesus, and otherwise so perfect a friend of mine, that I know not, if in the order of my affections, I ought not to set him in equal rank with my own brother. This at least I know, that the least of his businesses is the greatest of mine, and I will not only part your savour between him and me, but will become your debtor for the whole myself alone. I am now polishing those writings which I had condemned, but that you asked their pardon; and since it is your will they should not perish, I revoke my sentence, and I am resolved yourself shall be the other person of my Dialogue; after the example of that Roman you love so well, whose books of Philosophy are commonly his conferences with Brutus, or other Sages, the true and natural judges of such matters; yet Sir it is impossible for me to dissemble any longer a grief I have at my heart, and to end my Letter without letting you see a little cut you have given me there; you made me a promise to come back by Balzac, and now you have taken another way: Thus the wise men of the East dealt with Herod; yet I am neither Tyrant nor enemy to the Son of God. This kind of proceeding is far unlike the Belgic sincerity, and it is not fit for Saints to mock poor sinners. But how unkindly soever you deal with me, I can never turn Apostara, and should you prove more cruel, I should yet never be Sir, But your, etc. From Balzac 15. Octob. 1633. To— LETTER XXVIII. SIR, SInce you have taken pleasure in obliging me, I will not have you have the grief to lose your Obligation, nor that my incompetent acknowledgement should make you have the less stomach for doing good. I know your goodness is clear and free from all foreign respects, and hath no motive but itself; it is not at any man's prayers that the Sun riseth; neither doth he shine the more for any man's thanks; your courtesies are of like condition: Your favours have not been procured by my making suit; and as of my part nothing hath gone before the kindnesses I have received, so on your part I assure myself you expect not that any thing should follow them; yet something must be done for examples sake; and not to give this colour for showing little courtesy to such as complain that men are ungrateful. The place where you are is full or such people; all commerces are but Amusements, and to make men believe the whole World is given to deceive; and it is a great merit in you that you can follow so forlorn and solitary a thing as truth is in a Country where Divines maintain her but weakly, and where she dares scarce be seen in a Pulpit, doth it not show an extraordinary courage to take upon him to distribute her amongst the pretenders, and that in open Theatre? It is no mean hardiness to be good at the Court; to condemn false Maxims where they have made a Sect, and where they have gotten the force of Laws. I have been assured you make profession of this difficult virtue, and that in the greatest heat of calumny, and the coldest assistance that ever a poor innocent had, you have been passionately affected in my behalf, being altogether unknown unto you, but by the only reputation of my ill fortune; and even at this present you are taking care of some affairs of mine, which I in a manner had abandoned; and upon the report you heard of my negligence you make me offer of your pains and industry. The only using your name were enough for all this; I might well spare my own unprofitable endeavours, where my negligence, being favoured by you, shall without all doubt be crowned. You have heard speak of that Grecian, whom the love of Philosophy made to forget the tilling of his ground; and of whom Aristotle said that he was wise, but not prudent. He found a friend that supplied the defect of his own ill husbandry, and repaired the ruins of his house. If my estate were like his, I should expect from you the like favour; but I ask not so much at this time. All that I desire now,— hath promised me a dozen times over; and I see no reason to distrust an Oracle. He is neither inspired by any false Deity, nor hath made me any doubtful answer; to that resisting myself upon this foundation, there seems to have been a kind of Religion in my negligence: and I am not altogether in so much blame, as— would make you think me. He is, I deny not, an Author worthy to be credited; and his testimony ought to be received; but yet he hath not the gift of not erring, and never believe him more, than when he assures you that I am Sir, Your, etc. From Balzac 9 of Febr. 1630. To Mounsieur du Pleix, the King's Historiographer. LETTER XXIX. Sir, Since the time that persecution hath broken out into flames against me, I never received more comfortable assistance than from yourself; and I account your strength so great, that I cannot doubt of the goodness of a cause which you approve. You were bound by no Obligation to declare yourself in my behalf, and you might have continued Neutral with decency enough; but the nobleness of your mind hath passed over these petty rules of vulgar Prudence; and you could not endure to see an honest man oppressed, without taking him into your protection. This is to show me too much favour in a Kingdom where Justice is no better than Mercenary, and where it is bought after long soliciting. I know well that the soundest part is of my side; and that my state is not ill amongst the wise; but on the other side, there are so many opposites on the By, that make War upon me; that I am ready to leave myself to the mercy of the multitude, and to be persuaded by the number of my enemies, that I am in the wrong. It is therefore no small Obligation I am bound to you in, that you have preserved the liberty of your judgement amidst the alterations and factions of passionate men; and have taken the pains to clear a truth, which is to me of great advantage, and was to you of small importance. I do not desire that men should count me learned: this quality hath often troubled the peace of the Church; and they are not the ignorant that make Schisms and Heresies: And less I pretend to the art of well speaking; many bad Citizens have used this as an instrument to ruin their Country; and a dumb wisdom is much more worth than an ill minded eloquence. That which I desire, and which would trouble me much to have taken from me is honesty; of which only I make profession, and without which we are never able to attain salvation; where with all the Greek and Latin of our books we may incur perdition Mounsieur Gyrard, a man you dare trust, and one that hath never born false witness, will answer for me concerning this last point. He hath seen my Soul to the very bottom, and can assure you without deceiving you, that I am no lover of vice; and if you desire assurance that I am an extreme lover of virtue, he will enter into bond for me that I am Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 12. Aug. 1630. To Mounsieur Maynard. LETTER XXV. Sir, THat sorrow is happy which hath you for a comforter. I find more contentment in your passionating me, than I find affiiction in others persecuting me: and I am far from wishing ill to an age, to which I am beholding for so excellent a friend. In this respect I easily pardon it, the wrong you say it hath done me; and should be more unjust than itself is; if being beholding to it for a treasure, I should think much to partake of its iron and rust. It is not now only that opinion governs the World; there hath been disputing against reason in all ages. Contentions and Heresies have ever been, and the truth itself was not believed, when it came into the World in person, and would have spoken. I seek not the favour of the multitude, it is seldom gotten by honest and lawful means; and in that, Enchanters have had some advantage over Prophets. I seek the Testimony of few; I number not voices but weigh● them: and to show what I am, one honest man is Theatre enough. Therefore never trouble yourself that things have befallen me as I made account they would, and never ask for reason of the vulgar who have it not. Ignorance can never be just, nor go right in the dark: Alarms are given, and surprises are made by the favour of night: this is the time of Murders and Robberies, she the mother of dreams and phantasms. Yourself have had your part in this experience as well as others. And at this very time I am talking with you, it may be you are accused by some for being a miscreant, for not believing that Saint Gregory made prayers to God for Trajan's Soul; or that Saint Paul was ever a bosom friend of Seneca. It may be you are called Huguenot for doubting the infallibility of Philarchus, and denying some of his miracles. It may be you are charged with seeking in vain to persuade a Master of Art, that Aristotle had as much learning as Ramus; and that Cicero's stile is as good as that of Lipsius. What shall I say more? It may be your dear and well beloved Marshal puts you to more pains to defend him, than to imitate him; some scholar of Muret maintains boldly against you, that he is a beastly Buffoon; and perhaps the contrary will not be believed upon your bare word. For sitan & stupidas bona carmina perdis ad aures. It is fit to laugh at such disorder, and not to grow in choler; and if you will make a satire of it, that it be of the Character of Horace, and not of Juvenal. I cannot abide victories that are cruel; I ask mercy for my enemies, and love that my revenges should be imperfect and that your Pen should not be bloody, as indeed it could not be, but of a base obscure blood; and to put you into a quarrel unworthy of you, I make too great a reckoning of your valour, and am too much Sir, Your, etc. From Balzac 20. March 1632. To Mounsieur de Descourades. LETTER XXXI. SIR, MY dear Cousin, if I could with any honesty leave the business I have in Angoumois:— should not go into Languedoc without me; and I would make this journey of purpose only to have the happiness to embrace you; you would know me presently by the old yellowness of my face; and thereupon the force of blood would draw along with it a little tenderness, and I do not believe but you would make a difference between your own and strangers. The effects of grace destroy not the affections of nature; they only take away that which is impure and earthly; and I assure myself you do not love me less than you did, but that you love me in a better fashion. I am told that the kind of life you have chosen is not austere, but only to yourself; and that your Thorns prick no body else; in truth, a devotion that pleaseth me exceedingly, and I could never away with this studied sadness, which disguiseth the hatred it bears to men, under pretence of the love of God. I am right glad you have taken the other way, because we may now come safely to you, and never be afraid your virtue should scratch us. Christian Philosophy hath nothing in common with the Cynic. This disguiseth, and that reformeth; one composeth the countenance, the other regulates the spirit; and indeed without an exact managing the superior part; all the pain that is taken about the inferior is to no purpose without that, Mortification is not so good as Carnality; and if you do nothing but change your cloth of Gold for a russet Coat; and your cutwork band for a demi collar, you shall no doubt be a loser by the change. But the case is not so; you have left cares and trouble, for calmness and quiet; and you possess a happiness which Kings can neither keep with themselves, nor suffer amongst their Neighbours; I speak of peace, which in vain is expected from their Alliances and from their Leagues, being not to be obtained but only of God, and who gives it not but to his friends. You are a happy man to be of that number, and you may believe me that I am not troubled about it, seeing there is good hope I may have a benefit by it myself, and that your prayers may draw me after you; I doubt not but they are of great power and efficacy, and doubt as little that I am myself of the number of those you hold dear unto you; but as one that hath more need than any other, I conjure you to double them unto me, who am in heart and Soul Sir, My dear Cousin, Your, etc. From Balzac 4. of May 1633. To Mounsieur d'Andilly. Counsellor of the King in his Counsels. LETTER XXXII. Sir, I Perceive that Mounsieur the great Master is a great extender of expositions, and hath tied you to explain yourself in a matter whereof I never doubted. Herein he hath exceeded his Commission, and done more than he had in charge to do. I seek no new assurance of your friendship; this were to show a distrust in the old, whereas the foundation already laid, is such that makes me forbear even ordinary duties, for fear I should make show to need them, and as if I would hold by any other strength than your own inclination. Care and diligence, and assiduity are not always the true marks of sincere affections, which I speak as well in your behalf as my own: Truth walks now adays with a less train, men use not to make open profession of it, but rather to confess it as a sin: her enemies are strong and open, her adherents weak and secret: yet Sir, if she were in more disgrace, and were driven out of France by Proclamation: I should believe you would be her receiver, and to find her out, I should go directly to Pompone. I therefore never doubted of your love; this were to show a distrust of your word passed to me: I marvelled that— knew nothing of it, and that you let him take possession of his government, without recommending unto him, your friends there. To satisfy myself in this point; I said in my mind, that certainly this proceeded from the great opinion you had of his justice; and that conceiving there would not be with him any place for grace or favour; you would not do me a superfluous office. This is the interpretation I made of an omission, which in appearance seemed to accuse you; and this is the conjecture I made of your silence, before I came to know the cause. Now I see I was in the wrong, to imagine you had such subtle considerations; or that you were restrained by such a cowardly wisdom which dares not assure the good to be good, lest such assuring should corrupt it. For my part I renounce a prudence that is so dastardly and scrupulous, that fears to venture a word for a virtuous friend, because this friend is a man, and may perhaps lose his virtue. You do much better than so, and I am glad to find you not so jealous of the glory of your judgement, but that you can be contented to be slighted and scorned, when it is for the benefit of a friend you love: let us leave phlegm and coldness to old Senators; and never make question whether we ought to call them infirmities of age, or fruits of reason: There are good qualities for enabling men to judge of criminal causes, but are nothing worth for making men fit to live in society: and he, of whom it was said, that all he desired, he desired extremely, seems to me a much honester man than those that desire so coldly; and are so indifferent in their desires. If you were not one of these violent reasonable men, and had not some of this good fire in your temper, I should not have your approbation so good cheap. That which now galls you, would not at all touch you; and things which now descend to the bottom of your Soul, would pass away lightly before your eyes. I hear came yesterday a man to see me, who is not so sensible of the pleasures of the mind; and took great pity of me and my Papers: he told me freely that of all knowledges which require study, he made reckoning of none but such only as are necessary for life; and that he more valued the stile of the Chancery than that of Cicero; he more esteemed the penning of a Chancery Bill, than the best penned Oration that ever Cicero writ. I thought this at first a strange compliment, but thinking well of it, I thought it better to seem to be of his opinion, then undertake to cure a man uncureable. I therefore answered him, that the Patriarch Calarigitone so famous for the peace of Veruins, was in a manner of his mind, who being returned from his Embassage, and asked what rare and admirable things he had seen at Paris; made mention of none but their Cook's shops; saying to every body, as it were with exclamation Verament quelle rostisseries sono Cosa stupenda; as much as to say that there are Barbarians elsewhere, then at Fez and Morocco. One half of the World doth not so much as excuse that which you praise: our merchandise is cried down long since, and to bring it into credit again and put it off, there had need return into the World, some new Augustus and Antoninus,— saith, that whilst he waits for the resurrection of these good Princes; he is resolved to rest himself: and not to publish his Verses, till they shall be worth a Pistol a piece. I fear it will be long ere we shall see this Edition come forth; for myself who make no such reckoning of my Prose; I have no purpose to make merchandise of it; yet desire I not neither to tyre my hands with writing continually to no profit. I mean to make hereafter no other use of my Pen, then to require my friends to let me hear of their healths; and to assure you Sir, that I am no man's more Than your, etc. At Balzac 12. June 1633. To Mounsieur Conrart. LETTER XXXIII. Sir, I Had a great longing to see— and you have done me a special kindness to send it me over. Yet I must tell you, that your sending it gets him a greater respect with me than his own deserving, and if you appoint me not to make some reckoning of him, all that I shall do for his own sake, will be but to bear with him. A man had need be of sanguine complexion, and in a merry vein before, that should be moved to laugh at his poor jests. Melancholic men are too hard to be stirred; that which goes to the Centre of other men's hearts; stays without doors in theirs; at least it toucheth but very weakly the outside; and oftentimes I am so sadly disposed and in so sullen an humour, that if a jester be not excellent, I cannot think him tolerable nor endure to hear him. It is certain the Italians are excellent in the art of jesting, and I could mark you out a passage in Boccace that would have made— and all his predecessors the Stoic Philosophers to forfeit their gravity. But there are not two Boccaces, nor two Ariosto's; there are many that think themselves pleasant when they are indeed ridiculous; I would our good— would leave his wrangling about controversies, and fall to this kind of writing, in which in my opinion he would proven excellent. This would draw his Genius out of Fetters, and give it the extent of all humane things to play in; only he should spare the Church for her eldest Son sake, and forbear the Pope for M. the Cardinal's sake, one of the Princes of his Court. These are respects you ought to have, until your conversion furnish you with other more religious, and change this your honest civility into a true devotion. If we be not bound to speak of men's religion reverently, yet we are bound to speak seriously, and ev●n at this day we call Lucian an Atheist, for scoffing at those Gods who we know were false. For the rest Sir, I pray take heed you show not my Letter to—, he would give me a terrible check in behalf of—, he would not endure I should speak so insolently of an Author approved by the Academy, De gli insensati de peruse, and indeed I had not spoken as I did, but that I dare trust your silence, and know, that to discover a secret to you is to hide it. Make much of this rare virtue and never leave it, and be pleased to believe me that I am Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 13. of June 1633. To the same another. LETTER XXXIV. SIR, I Am going to a place where in speaking good of you I shall find no contradiction, and where your virtue is so well known, that if I say nothing of it but what I know, I am sure I shall tell no news. I bring along with me the last Letter you writ unto me, and mean to be earnestly entreated by Mounsieur— before I yield to grant him a Copy. As for Madam— she should entertain an enemy upon this passport, and though she were resolved to give me no audience, yet she would never deny it to the reader of your writings. I know of what account you are in her heart, and how much I ought to fear, lest all the room there be taken up before hand with your favour. Yet such opinion I have of her justice, that I willingly make her arbitrator of our difference, and require her to tell whether she think I have done wrong to— in desiring him to give over his going to Law, and to pass the rest of his days in more quiet and sweet employments. The art of jesting, whereof I speak is no enemy to the art of morality whereof you speak, rather it is the most subtle and most ancient way of retailing it; And that which would fright men, being used in the natural form, delights and wins them sometimes, being used under a more pleasing mask. Men loathe a wisdom, that is dry and altogether raw; it must have a little seasoning, such a kind of sauce as Socrates was wont to make it; that Socrates, I say, whom all the Families of Philosophers account their Founder, and acknowledge for their Patriarch. The story says he never used to speak in earnest, and the age he lived in called him the scoffer. In Plato's book you shall find little else of him but jesting; with disorderly persons you shall see him counterfeit a Lover, and a Drunkard, thereby to claw them whom he would take. He shuns the stile of the Dogmatists, or to speak definitively of things, as thinking it an instrument of Tyranny, and a yoke that oppresseth our liberty. In short he handles serious matters so little seriously that he seems to think the shortest way to persuade was to please; and that virtue had need of delight, to make way for her into the Soul. Since his time there have come men who contented not themselves with laughing, but make profession of nothing else, and have made it their recreation to play upon all the actions of humane life. Others have disguised themselves into Courtiers and Poets, and left their Dilemmaes and their Syllogisms to turn jeasters, and to get audience in privy Chambers. We see then the World had not always been sad before Ariosto and Bernia came into it; they were not the men that brought it first to be merry; jesting is no new invention, it was the first trade that wise men used; who thereby made themselves sociable amongst the people. Theophrastus who succeeded Aristotle thought it no disparagement to Philosophy, nor that there was in it any uncomeliness unfit for his school Lycaeum; he is excellent at descriptions, and counterfeitings, and his Characters are as so many Comedies, but that they be not divided into Acts and Scenes, and that they represent but only one person. Seneca, as solemn and of as sullen humour as he was otherwise, yet once in his life would needs be merry, and hath left us that admirable Apotheosis of Claudius, which if it were lost, I would with all my heart give one of his books de Beneficiis to recover again; and a much greater ransom if it were possible to get it entire. No doubt but you have heard speak of the Caesars, of the Emperor Julian; that is to say, of the sports of a severe man, and of the mirth of a melancholic man. And from whence think you had the Menippaean Satyrs their names; Things so much esteemed of by antiquity, and under which title the learned Varro comprised all wisdom divine and humane, even from Menippus the Philosopher, who was of a Sect so austere, and so great an enemy to vice, that Justus Lipsius doubts not to set it in comparison with the most strict and reformed order of the Church. I am much deived but Madam— will not be found so scrupulous as you, but will give her voice in favour of an opinion authorised by so great examples. And indeed Sir, why should you not like that our friend should reserve some mirth and some pleasure for his old age? and having declaimed and disputed abroad all day, should come at night to have some merry talk in his own lodging; why should you think it amiss, that after so many wars and cumbats I should counsel him to refresh himself with a more easy and less violent kind of writing; and to afford us such wares as may be received as well at Rome as at Geneva? These thirty years he hath been a Fencer upon Paper, and hath furnished all Europe with such spectacles; why should he not now give over a quarrel that he is never able to compose? He may in my opinion honestly say, it is enough, and content himself to have outlived his old adversaries, without staying to look for new. Having had to do with Mounsieur Coeffeteau, and with Cardinal Perron; it would be a shame for him to meddle now with a dizzy headed father, or with the Antic of Rouen; and a poor ambition it would be in my judgement to erect Trophies of two such broken Babbles; it were better he left individuals and fell to judge of species in general, and that he would consider other men's follies without partaking of them. It were better to discredit vice by scorn, then to give it reputation by invectives, and to laugh with success, then to put himself in Choler without profit. Though there be many sorts of disciplining men, and correcting their manners; yet I for my part am for this sort; and find nothing so excellent as a Medicine that pleases. Many men fear more the bitterness of the potion that is given them, than the annoyance of the infirmity that offends them; we would fain go to health by a way of pleasure, and he should be a much abler man that could purge with Raspices, than he that should do it with Rhubarbe. Our Gentleman by— his leave is none of these; for commonly he neither instructs nor delights, he neither heals nor flatters their passions that read him; he hath neither inward treasure nor outward pomp; and yet I can tell you, as beggarly and wretched as he is, he hath been robbed and ransacked in France. He could not save himself from our Thiefs; and you may see some of his spoils which I present you here. My fiddling Doctor in his visage various, Had twice as many hands as had Briareus; There was not any morsel in the dish Which he with eyes and fingers did not fish; And so forth. You see we live in a Country where even Beggars and Rogues cannot pass in safety; though they have nothing to lose, yet they lose for all that, and men pull the hairs even from them that are bald. There is no condition so ill but is envied of some, no pvoerty so great which leaves not place for injuries. Cottages are pillaged as well as Palaces; and though covetousness look more after great gains, yet it scorns not small. But all this while you must remember that my discourse is allegorical, and that I speak of Poets and not of Treasurers. I am Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 25. of Sept. 1630. To my Lord the marshal Deffiat. LETTER XXXV. SIR, THough I know your life is full of business, and that it hath neither festival, nor day of rest; yet I am so vain as to fancy to myself that I shall be able to suspend this your continual action, and that the recreation I send you shall find some place amidst your affairs: you are not one to be wrought upon, you know the true value of things, and see in Arts those secrets which none but Artists themselves see. There is no thinking therefore to deceive you by a show of good, and by false flashes of reputation; no way to gain estimation with you, but by lawful ways, and rather by seeking commendation from ones self, than testimony from others. This is the cause that I come always directly to yourself, and never seek to get a favour by canvasing and suit, which is not to be gotten but by merit. If my book be good it will be a solicitor with you in my behalf; and if it make you pass some hours with any contentment, you will let me understand it when you have read it. Howsoever I hope you will grant, that the Pension, which the King gives me, is no excess that needs reformation; and that none will accuse you of ill husbandry, if you please to pay me that which is my due. There have been heretofore in the place that you are now in certain wild unlettered persons, who yet made show of valuing humane learnings, and to respect those graces in others which were wanting in themselves; forcing their humour and sweetening their countenances to win the love of learned men; and either out of opinion, or out of vanity have revered that which you ought to love out of knowledge, and for the interest you have in it, I say for the interest, because besides the virtues of peace, having in you the virtues of war; it concerns you not to leave your good achievements to adventure, but to cast your eyes upon such as are able to give your merits a testimony that may be lasting; I dare not say that I myself am one of that number, but thus much I can assure you most truly that I am Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 20. Octob. 1633. To Mounsieur Granier. LETTER XXXVI. SIR, I have received your Letter of the 27. of the last month; but it makes mention of a former which never came to my hands: and it must needs be that fortune hath robbed me of it, for fear I should be too happy, and should have two pleasures in Sequence. This is an accident which I reckon amongst my misfortunes; and I cannot sufficiently complain of this Violatour of the Law of Nations, who hath been so cruel as to break our Commerce the very first day of our entering into it; and to make me poor without making himself rich. I am more troubled for this loss, than for all that shall be said, or written against me: Slander hath a goodly catch of it to be at war with me, it shall never make me yield; it is an evil: is it not a glory for a private man to be handled in such manner, as Princes & their Officers are? And is it not a mark of greatness to be hated of those one doth not know? I never sought after the applause of—, which cannot choose but have corrupt affections in such sort, that did they praise me, I should ask what fault I had done? Though their number were greater than you make it, this would be no great novelty to me, who know that truth goes seldom in the throng; and hath in all times been the Possession but of a few. Even at this day, for one Christian there are six Mahometans; and there was a time when Ingemuit orbis, & see Arrianum esse miratus est. If God suffer men to be mistaken in matters of so great importance, where their salvation is at stake; why should I expect he should take care to illuminate them in my cause which no way concerns them; and to preserve them from an error which can do them no hurt? Whether I be learned, or ignorant; whether my eloquence be true, or false, whether my Pearls be Oriental, or but of Venice: what is all this to the Commonwealth? There is no cause the public should trouble itself about so light a matter; and the fortunes of France depend not upon it. Let the King's subjects believe what they list; let them enjoy the liberty of conscience which the King's Edicts allow them. A man must be very tender that can be wounded with words; and he must be in a very apt disposition to die, that lets himself be killed by Philarchus; or Scioppius his Pen. For myself I take not matters so to heart; nor am sensible in so high a degree. The good opinion of honest minds, is to me a sovereign remedy against all the evils of this nature. I oppose a little choice number, against a tumultuary multitude, and count myself strong enough, having you on my side; and knowing you to be as vigorous a friend of mine, as I am Sir, Your, etc. From Balzac 15. Feb. 1633. To Mounsieur Gaillard. LETTER XXXVII. SIR, I Am unfortunate, but I am not faulty, I was assured you had written to me, but I received not your Letters. You have been my defendor; and I have been a long time without knowing to whom I was bound for defending me: whether it were a man or an Angel that was come to my succour. These are honest subtleties, and generous supererogations. This is to deceive in charity, and to his advantage that is deceived. This is to bring again that good time, wherein Knights unknown came to Freemen, that were oppressed, without telling their names; or so much as lifting up the Beavers of their Helmets. You have done in a manner the like; you have hidden yourself under a borrowed shape; thereby to take away from a good action, all appearance of vain glory; and to let them that are interessed, see, that you are virtuous without looking for reward. For myself, I do not think I am bound to follow the intention of this scrupulous virtue. If you have a will to shun noise, and the voice of the people; yet you cannot refuse the acknowledgement of an honest man: nor let me from paying what I owe you. Because you are modest, I must not therefore be ungrateful, as I am not by my good will, I assure you. You possess my heart, as absolutely, as you have justly purchased it; I am yours by all the sorts of right, not forgetting that of the wars. I will even believe that my enemy hath gotten a full victory, to the end I may more justly call you my Redeemer; and that you may have the Crown that was due to him had saved a Citizen. Mounsieur Borstill, whose wisdom and integrity you know, will answer for the truth of my words: and for myself, I shall need no surety; when I shall be able to testify unto you by my actions; that there is not in the World a man more than myself Sir, Your, etc. From Balzac 22. April 1630. To Mounsieur the Master Advocate in the Parliament. LETTER XXXVIII. SIR, I Have too great a care of your reputation, to seek to have you be found a liar. It shall not lie upon me, that you be not a man of your word; and that your friend is not contented; and seeing it is expected to see this present day what I have written of his company; It is not fit to put off till to morrow the effect of your promise: or that he should languish in the expectation of so small a thing. It is true my book is not here, and my memory is not now so faithful, that I dare trust it to deliver that I gave it to keep: yet I conceive after I have stirred it up in your name, which is so dear unto me, I shall find enough to satisfy your desire, and receive from it this good office. I seem therefore to remember I said, that after so many years, that the Christian Muses have been in France: he is the only man hath entertained them with honour; and hath built a Palace for this sovereign science to which all other are subject and inferior. He hath drawn her our of an obscure and close mansion, where like the poor Socrates she discoursed in prison of the supreme felicity, to place her a seat worthy of her, and to set up a stately and sumptuous race for the exercise of her Children. From hence we may apprehend the dignity and merit of our Sorbon: for which a man the fullest of business in all the World, hath yet had so particular a care amidst the most violent agitation of his thoughts, that the design of the house he erects for her, hath found place in his breast, amidst the Forts and Rampires of Rochel. If our predecessors the Gauls next to their Gods, gave the second place of honour to their Druids, who showed them but a dim and confused light of the state of our Souls after this life; what respect then, what reverence can be too great for those venerable Fathers, who teach us by a knowledge most infallible; what the chief and supreme good is; who discover to us in certainty, the things that are above the Heavens, who make us true relation of that admirable Commonwealth of happy Citizens that live without bodies, and are immaterial; and who deliver to us the wonders of the intellectual World, more pertinently and more directly, than we relate to blind men the ornaments of this visible World. With them are had the springs of pure Doctrine; where with others, but only Brooks and Streams; with them are had resolutions of all doubts, remedies for all poisons: with them time wrongs not antiquity; nor doth old age either need painting, or fear tainting: with them this sixteenth age of the World, beholds Christianity preserved and kept in its first lustre. Seeing the memory of the most part of the Roman Lords is perished together with their Baths, their Aqueducts, their Races, their Amphitheatres; whereof the very ruins are themselves ruined and lost; I find that M. the Cardinal understands more than ever they did, and goes a straighter way to eternity, travelling in a place where his travel can never perish and leaving the care of his name to a company that of necessity shall be immortal, and shall speak of his magnificence as long as there shall be speaking of sin and grace, of good and evil Angels of the pains and rewards of the life to come. I believe I have not spoken any further of it: and I think I could not have spoken less: it is lawful for us to set a price upon our own; and if an ancient Writer said, that more worthy men came forth of Isocrates School; than out of the Trojan Horse: why may not we say as much of Albertus Magnus, and of Saint Thomas? Me thinks I hear out Country men speak of nothing else; but of the Lycaeum and of the Academy: and it is now five and twenty years that I have beaten my brains about the Gymnosophists the Brachmanes and the Rabbins: but when all is done, we should remember that we are Christians; and that we have Philosophers that are nearer to us, and aught to be dearer to us than all they. I am glad occasion hath been offered me to put my opinion hereof in writing; and thereupon to let you know I make no mystery of my writings; and especially with you, to whom I have opened my very heart; and whose I am wholly without reservation. Sir, Most humbly, etc. At Paris 4. July 1633. LETTERS of MOUNSIEUR de BALZAC. LIB. II. To my Lord the Earl of EXETER. LETTER I. SIR, IF you had wholly misliked my book, I had wholly defaced it: but seeing some parts of it, seemed to you not unsound, I have thought it sufficient to cut off the corrupt part, that you might be drawn to endure the rest. I now therefore send you an Edition of it reform, done expressly for you, and which I have taken care to cleanse from the stains, that in the two former were distasteful to you. It is not my purpose to stand disputing in an Argument, where I am willing to be confuted: nor to defend that which is condemned by you, where the question is to give you satisfaction by my rigour; I presently grow insensible of the tenderness of a Father: and shall he uncompassionate to my dearest issues, as often as your pleasure shall be that they should perish. My writings are to me no better than Monsters when they offend your eyes, and to seem vile to you, is to be vile indeed; and therefore in stead of ask their pardon, I have been myself the hastner of their punishment. There cannot a greater testimony be given of a man's integrity, than when the Delinquent concurs in opinion with the judge; and is the Executioner, where he is the condemner. All this have I already done; and although in that unhappy passage which gave you distaste, I had not so much a meaning to bite as to laugh; yet I confess I took my mark amiss for laughing justly. Oftentimes one countenance for another changeth the face of the most innocent action of the world: and though I failed only in ill explaining myself; yet it was fault enough, seeing thereby I gave you cause to doubt of my intention. Truly, my Lord, it was never my meaning so much as to touch the resplendent glory of your Divine Princess. I know well enough, it was fitter to consider her by the magnanimity of her spirit; whereof your whole posterity shall taste the fruits, then by the light flower of bodily beauty; which not only falls away by death; but runs away at the very first approaches of age. I should come out of another World, if I were ignorant of the Encomiums she hath in this kind received by all people's voices. She hath I know been styled the Star of the North: the Goddess of the Sea; the true Thetis. I have read in a Letter, which Henry the great writ unto her in the height of all his troubles; and in the violence of the league: these words, I will Madam be your Captain General. Even he that excommunicated her, spoke of her with honour: and he was, as you know, an understanding Prince, and admirable in the Art of ruling. He took a pleasure to be discoursing of her with Ambassadors resident at his Court; and would sometimes say merrily, that if he had been her husband, certainly greatness and authority would have been the issues of so renowned a marriage. But though she had not ascended to this high degree of reputation, and though he should be devested of all these glorious marks of honour, yet there are two considerations; less specious indeed in the eyes of the World: but more sensible to my spirit, that would bind me strongly to reverence her memory: One Sir, that she hath not scorned our Muses; the other, that she hath loved your house. I was taught by Cambden, the knowledge she had in all kinds of learning; so far, as that she had happily Translated out of Greek into Latin some of Sophocles Tragedies; and some of Isocrates Orations. Of the same Author also, I have learned the great part your Ancestors bare in her confidence and secrets; and your name is so often used in the history of her life, that where soever Elizabeth is mentioned, there Cicile for the most part is never left out. So that she being by good right your domestical Deity, and the reverence you bear her, your most ancient inclination; it is far from me to violate that which you adore, or to hate that which you so dearly love; seeing I am Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 25. June 1634. To my Lord the Archbishop of Thoulouse. LETTER II. SIR, I Have never been sociable since your departure from hence; no man can make me speak; and I do not yet break my sullen silence, but only to tell you, I am the saddest Hermit that ever was. Those whom Saint Hierome reports to have been companions of Serpents and Scorpions, were never of so untoward an humour as I; for I have their vexation, and I have not their consolation. Nothing pleaseth me in the place where I am; you have carried away with you all its worth and goodness; and it is not the hardness of the season, it is your absence that obscures the beauties of my solitude. It was not well done Sir to accustom me to a pleasure which you meant so suddenly to take away from me, or to say better, to show me only my good fortune thereby to make me long after it; and then go presently and make others happy with enjoining it; and yet I know well, that such petty considerations owe obedience to a greater, and that particular interests ought always to give place to public. Mine therefore is not so dear unto me, but that I willingly forget it upon such occasions, and easily for go my own conceits, to enter upon the purpose of Divine providence. The peace we hope for shall perhaps by your voyage be advanced, and you are now perhaps sent from Heaven to go whither you thought to have gone without commanding; If peradventure there be found some particular men that are too much heated, your Eusebius and your Theodoret will help to allay their heat; and if they be too stiffly bend upon severity, you will make them abate their rigour by the examples you bring them, of the moderation of their fathers; I have too good an opinion of so many worthy Prelates as are in your assemblies, to imagine they would ever agree to arm Princes, either against a penitent, or against an honest man, offended; and would not in the interests of their order content themselves with employing the Thunderbolts of the Vatican, without calling forth also those of the Arsenal; Whatsoever may be said in defence of such proceeding, it can never in my opinion have so general approbation, but that some honest spirits will be scandalised by it. This would be to bring excommunication into a poor account, to make it serve only for an Essay, and for a preparative of punishment, and to make it the first plaster of a light wound, which ought to be the last remedy of the extremest evils. Such practice would be far from the custom of the ancient Christianity, and of the age of Martyrs; and I cannot conceive, neither can it be, that Christian Pastors should become Butchers of their Flock; and that the Church, which hitherto hath been in persecution, should now itself begin to persecute. This Church Sir, as yourself and the Gentlemen your brethren teach us, is not a cruel Stepdame, proud and maligning her spouses' Children; but it is a natural Mother, compassioning her own, and desirous to adopt even Proselytes and strangers: You tell us that she runs after the greatest sinners, and goes as a guide before all the World, which is far from saying that it stands not with her dignity to be an instrument of their conversion, nor so much as once to take care what becomes of them; It is you who assure us that she is content to lose her richest Vessels, so as thereby she may gain to her the sacrilegious person who did steal them; it is from you we learn that she is far from animating justice to ruin innocents', who gives sanctuary of pardon to Delinquents. I have heard speak of the sweet nature and sighing of the Dove; but never of her cruelty nor of her roaring; and to give her claws and teach her to love blood, would be no less than to make her a Monster; this would be Sir to make love itself turn wild, and Metamorphose it into hate. This would be to imitate the ancient Pagans, who attributed to their gods all the passions and infirmities of men; no man I hope shall be able to lay such profanation to our charge, we will be no corrupters of the most excellent purity, no handlers of holy things with polluted hands, no stretchers of our defects to the highest point of perfection: They which do so, in what part of the World soever they be, are Anathemaes in your books, accursed in your Sermons, condemned by the rules of your Doctrine, and by the examples of your life. These false Saints do not serve Christ, but serve themselves of Christ; they solicit their own affairs in his name, and recommend it as his cause when it is their own suit. Persuasion that they do well makes them more hardy in doing ill; they call their choler zeal, and when they kill, they think they sacrifice. Thanks be to God no part in the whole body of our Clergy is so unsound; it is returned to its Oil, and to its Balm, in whose place the civil wars had substituted deadly Aconite and bitter Wormwood. The League is dead, and Spain heartsick; our Oracles are no longer inspired by foreign Deities, the spirit of love and charity animates all your Congregations; and no doubt he that ought to be the mouth of the assembly, will consider that Bishops are Ministers of mercy, and not of justice; and that to them our Lord said, I leave peace with you, but said not I leave vengeance with you; howsoever the wisdom of M. the Cardinal will strip off all the Thorny prickles of passions, and sweeten all the bitterness of figures, before they arrive to come near the King. This Divine spirit is far surmounting all Orations, all deliberations, and all humane affairs, and in this he will easily find a temper both to preserve the honour of the Church, and yet not oppress the humility of him that submits; both to give full satisfaction to the first order, and yet not withdraw regard from the merit of the second; both to make us see heads bowed and knees bended before the Altars; and yet no houses demolished, nor governments destroyed, whereof the Altars should receive no benefit. I am in hope you will do me the favour to inform me of the occurrents of the whole history, whereof I doubt not, but you are your self one of the principal parties, and I expect by your Letters a true relation of all the news that runs about. In the mean time Sir, I trust you will not take it ill that I speak unto you of this great affair, as a man that sees it afar off; and whom you appoint sometimes to deliver his advice upon matters, of which he hath but small understanding. At your return we will renew the Commerce we have discontinued, and since you will have it so, I will once again play the Orator, and the Politician before you; yet I fear me much, you will scarce be suffered to keep your promise with me; I see you are more born to action than to rest, and that our rural pleasures are not worthy so much as to amuse so great a spirit as yours is, I therefore wish you such as are worthy of you; that is, the solidest and the perfectest, and such as glorious Achievements and glorious actions leave behind them; and I love not myself so much that I am not much more Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 25. January 1630. To Mounsieur Arnaut, Abbot of S. Nicholas. LETTER III. SIR, THe small service you desired of me is not worth considering, but only for the great thanks I have received for it; I had altogether forgot it when I received your Letter, which makes me yet forget it more in making me to remember it. You have words that change things, and in your language an impuissant willingness is an immortal obligation. If you make so great account of good desires, I marvel what price you set upon good deeds; and if you thus bestow your compliments without necessity, I fear you will want them when you have need; you should go more reserveldy to work, and retain more providence for the future. A man may be a good husband, and yet not be covetous; and seeing limits and bounds are fit in all cases, they cannot be unfit in the case of courtesy: Think not therefore Sir, that herein you have done an act of acknowledgement; you have gone far beyond the bounds of this virtue. If there be a vice opposite to ungratefulness, your too great officiousness hath made you fall into it; and by the excess you have avoided the defect. The interests of M. the Cardinal Bentivoglio have no need of recommending, but amongst people that are not yet Civilised; that which concerns his honour, is no matter of indifferency to them that know his virtue, and they that know it not are no better than Barbarians. If to do him service I had not run whither you prayed me but to go, and if I had not required an absolute suppression of that discourse, whereof you required only but a sweetening; I had performed my duty but very weakly, and had deserved blame in that for which you praise me. Though his name were not resplendent in history, nor his dignity in the Church, yet he should have lustre enough in his very stile and writings, and though he were not a Grandchild of Kings, and a Senator of the whole earth; yet I find something in him more worth than all that: I consider him without his Purple, and devested of all external ornaments; regarding only those that are natural to him; and which would make him most illustrious, though he had but all black cap on his head, and most eminent, though he were but a private man. These are advantages he hath over other men, and which he communicates to this age of the World; goods that he possesseth and I enjoy. For I vow unto you that in this sad place whither my desire to please hath entrapped; and where there is no talk but of Suits and quarrels; I should not know in the World how to pass my time; if I had not brought his book along with me. This hath been the companion of my voyage, and is now the comforter of my Exile; and after I am dulled with a deal of troublesome discourse, and have my ears filled with idle chat, I go and purify myself in his delicate relations; and gather my spirits together, which the noise and clatter had before dispersed. I never saw in so sober and chaste a stile, so much fullness and delight; if nature herself would speak, she could never make choice of more proper terms than those he useth; and where proper terms fail, she could never more discreetly borrow foreign than he doth. The Character of his phrase is so noble, that by this only, without any other signs I should easily know he is come of a good house; and I see that fortune, which hath been so great an enemy of his blood, and hath done so much hurt to his ancestors, hath not yet been able to take from him the mark of their greatness, nor the manners and language of a Prince. Afterwards you give me thanks for loving qualities that are so lovely, and that making profession of Letters, I am put in passion for him, who preserves their honour, and who in his Country is the Crown and glory of our Muses; as often as there is question for his service I shall need no second consideration to put me in heat about it; I tell you plainly, I shall do it no whit the more for any love of you; I entreat you to provide some occasion apart from all interests of his, where you may see the extraordinary account I make of your merits, and the desire I have to manifest unto you that I am Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 3. of Octob. 1631. To Mounsieur Ogier. LETTER IU. SIR, YOu could never have fallen again to your Pen upon better terms than you have done; and I have a conceit your silence hath not been so much a neglect as a meditation. The Letter you pleased to write unto me is so full of infinite excellent things, that it seems you have been making provision three years together to make one feast, and that your sparing for so long a time had no other meaning but to be magnificent for one day. The dispatch of the Constantinopolitan slave you sent me, and the news of Koppenhagen you writ unto me are so enriched with ornaments of your making, that I see plainly whatsoever passeth through your hands receiveth an impression of excellency, and that glorious achievements have need of you to be their Historian. It is not strange unto me that M. your brother hath pleaded my cause, I am an eternal client of your family, and as it is my part to honour my benefactors, so it is yours to preserve your benefits: But verily I could never have thought this last action should have had the Court of Denmark for a Theatre, and the King and his Daughters the Princesses for Judges. You sent me word I had a famous decree passed on my side, and that the assailant was as much hissed at, as the defendant was applauded. God be praised that grants us justice amongst the Goths, for injuries done us by the French; and that raiseth up in an end of the World a sovereign defender of persecuted innocency, such succour sometimes he hath extraordinarily afforded when men abandon her; the Lions do become humane, rather than leave her without protection; and in the most frightful deserts there have been found Nurses for Children, whom the cruelty of their Mothers had exposed. Let us therefore never believe that sweetness and humanity are qualities of the Earth, or of the Air; they are neither proper goods of the easterlings, nor captive virtues of the Grecians. They are wand'ring and passant, all climates receive them in their turn, and it is not the Cimbrick Chersonesus any longer, it is Athens and Achaia that at this day are Barbarians. This Divine Princess of whom your brother writes such wonders, hath no doubt contributed much to this change, and and though there should shine no other Sun upon the Banks of the Baltic Sea, this one were enough to make virtue bud forth in all hearts, and to make Arts and Discipline to flourish in all parts. This is a second Pallas that shall have her Temples, and her suppliants; she shall be precedent of Letters and studies, as well as the former. Even that which you say of the defect of her birth, and of the obscurity of her Mother, might be ground enough for a Poet to make an entire work, and to assure us that she was born and came out of her Father's head: at least, Sir, if your relations be true, she is the lively image of his spirit, the interpreter of his thoughts, the greatest strength of his estate, and who by her eyes and tongue reigneth and ruleth over all objects, that either see, or hear. Why should I dissemble, or hide my contentment? I must confess I am proud in the highest degree for the praises she hath given me. Never Prince passed the Rhine more happily than mine hath done, seeing so good Fortune hath attended him there, and that there he should be crowned by a hand, which was able to give wounds to all others. What shall I say more? I scorn all the ancient Triumphs when I think upon this: I hope for no lustre, but from her splendour, I seek for no glory, but in her recommendation; her only voice is instead of the suffrages of a whole Diet of all the North; and what reason they should not for ever be banished the Empire, who blame that which she praiseth, or that would oppose the sovereignty of her excellent judgement? As for our common enemy condemned by her, to keep company with the Hobgoblins of Norway; since he is no longer in the World, is no longer in state to do her obeisance. If it be not that God will have that to be the place of his purgatory which she would have to be the place of his banishment, and that this proud spirit is confined to live amongst the tempests and other frantic issues of the North, as Varro speaks of Satyrs. You have read I suppose the Dialogues of Saint Gregory; and therefore must needs know that all Souls are not purged after one manner, but some pass through the fire, and others endure the Ice; and the extremity of cold is no less an instrument of Divine justice, than extremity of heat. But I purpose not to set abroach a question of Divinity, for I should then begin a new Letter; and it is now time I should finish this: but telling you first, that he which shall deliver it to you, hath in charge to present you a larger discourse; and to let you see, that there is both Greek and Latin in our Village. If it were not for my study, my solitude would neither have excuse nor comfort, and yet shall not have it perfect neither, unless you bring it to me; and be so honest a man as to come and see me: as I most heartily entreat you to do; and to believe that I passionately am Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 7. Feb. 1635. To Mounsieur Sirmond. LETTER V. Sir, BE not scandalised, nor take exception at my silence. The greatest part of the Letters I write are but the payment of my old debts: and before I answer one, I suffer myself to be summoned three or four times. I seldom stay upon matter of compliment; all I can do, is but to defend myself untowardly; I think myself sufficiently honest, if I be but indifferently uncivil; and because I am apt to do courtesies voluntarily; I expect also voluntarily to receive them; of you, Sir, especially, who judge not friendship by the look, and knows that superstition is more ceremonious, than true piety. The new favours I have received from your Muses are to me as they ought to be, exceeding sensible: yet think not, that this makes me forget your former benefits: and that I carry not in mind, that it is you that gave me the first taste of good, and the principles of virtue; you do but build upon the foundation you laid yourself; and give estimation to your own pains. Having been my guide in a Country which I know not; it is for your honour it should be believed, I have made some progress there, that so it may appear your directions are good. Thus your Poem hath in it a hidden art, which few understand; and I am but the colour of your design. You enjoy yourself all the glory you have done me; all the glory you have imparted to me stays still with yourself; and you have found out a way how to praise yourself, without speaking of yourself: and how to be liberal without parting from any thing. If you come this Summer to Paris, I will give you account of an infinite number of things that will not dislike you; and in revenge thereof, I require to hear from you some news of our malcontent; Cui mos in triviis humili tentare Veneno Ardua & impositos semper Cervice rebelli Far deuces; Coeloque Jovem violare Tonante. I know not whether you have been able to bring the state into his favour; but this I know, it is no small work for persuasion to effect, seeing he is no less obstinate in his errors, than you strong in your reasons. Whatsoever he say of the time; and of the carriage of things; the impunity with which he triumphs, is a visible mark of the moderate government of this Kingdom; and in any Country but this; his head long before this time had paid for his tongue. But I hear he is of so vile an humour, that he is angry for his very liberty; and thinks it is done in scorn, that he hath not all this while been put in the bastile. He values himself to be worthy of an informer; and of Commissioners; and thinks he hath merit enough to be punished in state. Let us bear a little with his malady; he is otherwise not evil, nor of evil qualities: It is only the temperature of his body that is faulty: and if Mounsieur Cytois can purge away his choler, he shall procure to M. the Cardinal a faithful servant. I expect hereupon an Epigram of your making, and am with all my Soul, From Balzac 4. March 1631. Sir, Your, etc. To Mounsieur Colombiers. LETTER VI. SIR, I Find by the Letter which Mounsieur de Mantin writ unto you, that you have done me good Offices with him; and that upon your word, he takes me for more than I am worth. It is your part now to make that sure unto him, which you have warranted, and to disguise me with so much Art, that may make good your first deceit by a second. For to think that I shall be able to answer his expectation, and satisfy your promise: I know he expects too much; and know you have promised too much; that which he speaks of me and of my writings, seems rather to come from the passion of a lover, than from the integrity of a Judge: and I ought to take it, rather as a Present, than as a Recompense. I know besides, that the place from whence he writes hath always been the habitation of courtesy; and that the spark of the Court of Rome, which once rested there, hath since it parted from thence; left a light which gives an influence to the manners and spirits of the Country. So that to this day distinction must be made between the civilities of Avignon, which extend to all sorts of strangers, and the resentments of an able man, which respect nothing but reason; and a difference must be put between the honesty of a compliment, and the Religion of a testimony. Mounsieur Malherbe deceased, who never gave any man's merit, more than its due: and but coldly praised the most praiseworthy things; yet hath heretofore to me, in so high a degree extolled this man, of whom we speak; that I could not but think, it must needs be a very extraordinary virtue that transported him so unwontedly, and a very pressing verity, that forced him to open himself so freely. I have since been confirmed in my judgement of him by divers persons of good quality, and generally by the voice of all our Country: But yet there is in this more cause for me to fear, than hope: Wise men do but only taste an error; with which common people drink themselves drunk: They do not plunge themselves in false opinions, they pass them lightly over; and I am afraid you will ere long receive another Letter in retractation of this, he hath now written so much in my favour: if the worst come to the worst; and that there be no means for me, to keep all the good you have gotten me; I yet may lawfully require to have a part left me; which Mounsieur your brother in Law cannot honestly deny me. I am unfit for the terms he gives me; I willingly return them back to himself: Let him keep his admiring for miracles; or at least for the great stupendious works of nature; I aspire not, nor have any pretence to so high a degree of his account; but I think I have right to his friendship; and that both of you are my debtors of some good will; seeing I honour you both exceedingly, and passionately I am Sir, Your, etc. From Balzac 20. of October 1632. To— LETTER VII. Sir, I Am not altogether profane, yet am but a simple Catechumene neither: I adore your mysteries, though I comprehend them not; and dare not give my spirit that liberty which you give it. Is it fit to be a judge of a Science, of which it is yet but learning the Alphabet? It scarce knows visible Objects, and runs a hazard, when it considers but the exterior face of nature; as for that which is above, it climbs not to it, nor soars so high. My curiosity is not so venturous: and concerning the condition of superior things; I wholly refer myself to the Sorbone. Never think therefore that I will give my censure of your book: I have not yet discovered the bottom; only the bark, I must tell you seems very precious; and I am ravished with the sound and harmony of things, I understand not; this kind of writing would have astonished Philosophers whom it could not have persuaded: and if Saint Gregory Nazianzen had but showed such a piece as this to Themistius, he could not choose but have been moved with it, and must needs have admired the probability of Christianity; though he had not known the secret. These are not words that one reads, and are painted upon Paper: they are felt, and received within the heart. They live and move, and I see in them the sinews of the first Christians; and the stile of that Heroic age, where one and the same virtue, gave life both to discourse and actions; gave influence both to the Soul and to the courage; made both Doctors and also Martyrs. Tell me true, Did you not propose to yourself a Pattern to follow? Have you not been at the Oracle of—: have you not received some inspiration from our excellent friend? Me thinks I meet with his very Character: In certain passages I observe some marks and traces of his spirit; and when I read them, cannot sometimes forbear crying out: Sic oculos, sic ille manus, etc. You need not take offence at my suspicion: so noble a resemblance is an inferiority lifted up extremely high. You are not therein his Ape, but his Son: There is nothing base not mean in the imitation of so high and perfect an Idea: and you know the example of Plato, made Philo go cheek by jowl with him. All I ask of you at Paris, where you so liberally offer me all the good Offices you can do, is but this; that you will do me the favour, to assure that great personage of the great reverence I bear to his merits: and what glory I count it to be counted his friend: but I require with all the continuation of your own love, with which you can honour none, that is more truly than I am Sir, Your, etc. July 25. 1630. To Mounsieur Coeffeteau, Bishop of Dardany. LETTER VIII. SIR, SInce your departure from Mets; there hath nothing happened worthy of the History I promised you, but only that Caesar as I hear, hath presented to the view of brave spirits, certain new and very strange recreations by which he hath gained a great opinion of his knowledge. As to make the images in a piece of Tapestry, to walk, and move; to make all the faces in a room, to seem to be double; to make a River rise in a Hall; and after streaming away without wetting of any, make a company of Fairies appear and dance a round; these are his ordinary sports, and to use the phrase of our friend; but the outside of his secret Philosophy. Signior Mercurio Cardano, swears he hath seen all this, and more; enough to find you discourse for many meetings: and if you appoint him to set hand to his Pen, he will be a Philostratus to this Appolonius. He hath told me, as he hath heard it from him, that for certain, the Heaven's menace France, with a notable revolution; and that the fall of—, hath not been so much the end, as the change of our miseries. For myself who know, that God never makes Mountibanks of his Council; and that the virtue of the King, is able to correct the malignity of the Stars: I laugh at the vanity of such presages; and look for nothing but happiness from the ascendent and fortune of so great a Prince. But to change this discourse, and this Mountibank for another: I have seen the man Sir, that is all armed with Thorns: that pursues a Proposition to the uttermost bounds of Logic; that in most peaceable conversations, will put forth nothing, nor admit of nothing that is not a Dilemma, or a syllogism. To tell you true, what I think of him; he would please me more if he had less reason: this quarrelsome eloquence affrights me more than it persuades me. They which commonly converse with him; run in my opinion the same fortune, which they do, that live near the falls of Nilus; there is no overflowing like that of his words, a man cannot safely give him audience; a Headache for three days after, is the least hurt he can take, that but hears him talk an afternoon. The Gentleman that brings you this Letter, hath charge given him from all in general to entreat you Sir, not to forsake us in so important a matter: but to come and free our companies from one of the greatest crosses, that hath a long time afflicted civil society. You are the only man in whom this Sophister hath some belief: and therefore none but you, likely to reduce him to common right; and to bring his spirit to submit itself to Custom and Usage. You can if you please make it appear unto him; that an honest man proposes always his opinions, no otherwise than as doubts; and never raiseth the sound of his voice, to get advantage of them, that speak not so loud: that nothing is so hateful, as a Chamber Preacher, who delivers but his own word; and determines without Warrant, that it is fit to avoid gestures, which are like to threatenings, and terms which carry the stile of Edicts; I mean, that it is not fit to accompany his discourse with too much action; nor to affirm any thing too peremptorily. Lastly, that conversation reflects more upon a popular estate, than upon a Monarchy; and that every man hath there a right of suffrage: and the benefit of liberty. You know Sir, that for want of due observing these petty rules, many have fallen into great inconveniences; and you remember him who spilt Queen Margaret's own dinner by striking an argument upon her Table with too great violence, disturbed and drove Queen Margaret from her dinner. Such men commonly spoil the best causes; whilst they seek to get the better, not because their cause is good; but because themselves are the Advocates; reason itself seems to be wrong when it is not of their side, at least not in its right place, nor in its ordinary form. They disguise it in so strange a fashion that it cannot be known to any; and they take away her authority and force, by painting her in the colours and marks of folly. These are the particular heads, for which we desire you to take the pains of applying your Exorcisms: particularly upon— I dare say, you will have a thousand Benedictons, if you can drive out of his body this Devil of dispute and wrangling; which hath begun already to torment us. We expect you at the end of the week; and I remain From Mets 15. August 1618. Sir, Your, etc. To my Lord the Earl of Brassac. LETTER IX. SIR, THat which I have written of you; is but a simple relation of that I have seen of you: and if there be any ornament in it: It must needs be, that either yourself have put it there; or else that Fortune hath lent it to me. I had done it very innocently, I assure you, if I had spoken any thing well; who was so ill prepared for it. I should have hit a mark which I aimed not at; and have drawn a Picture, by the casual falling down of my Pencil. My drift was to entertain my friend, who was accustomed to the negligence of my stile: and with whom; if I committed any fault, I was sure of pardon. He cries not out murder, upon seeing one Vowel encounter another, nor stands amazed at meeting with an untoward word, as if it were a Monster: This favour I receive from him; and he, the like from me: we allow all liberty to our thoughts: and if in treating together, we should not sometimes violate Laws of our Art, we should never show confidence enough in our friendship. Rhetoric therefore hath no place in writings where truth takes up all: There is great difference between an Orator, and a Register; and my private testimony ought not to pass for your Encomium. Yet you will have it to be so; you had rather accuse me of being eloquent, than confess yourself to be virtuous; and you avoid presumption, by a contrary extremity. It seems this occasion is dangerous to you; and as in a shipwreck, where all run to save the dearest things: so you abandon your other virtues, to preserve your modesty. She doth herself wrong Sir, to stand in opposition to the public voice; and to reject the testimony of noble fame. She ought not to contradict the two chief Courts of Europe; whereof the one honoureth your memory, the other makes use of your counsels. Aristotle would never approve of this; who speaks of a vice like this, with which if a man be tainted, he resembles him to one, who will not confess he hath won in the Olympic games, though man come and adjudge him the Garland; and calls himself still culpable, though three degrees of the A●eopage, pronounce him innocent. Be not you of so little equity to yourself; and suffer me to tell you what I think: seeing I think nothing, but that which is the common opinion; and I deliver not so much my own particular conceit, as the general belief of the whole World: They who prefer a Captain of Carabins before Alexander the Great; and know not how to praise the integrity of a Statesman, without affronting that of Aristides, fall into that excess, which reason requires should be avoided. Yet we ought not for all this, generally to slight all merit of the present age; and fancy to ourselves, that we are not bound to revere virtue, unless it be consecrated by Antiquity. For myself, I judge more favourably of things present, and do not think I run any hazard in subscribing to the Pope's judgement of you, that in serving the King, you have been his governor. This would be to be too scrupulous, to fear mistaking, after him that they say cannot err; and you are too courteous, to count it a courtesy that I do my duty; and to give me thanks that I am not a Schismatic. Concerning the last Article of your Letter; I say it gives me not so much, as a temptation: neither am I indeed capable to receive it. It sufficeth me Sir, that you protect my repose here; for to enter into defence of my interests in the place where you are, as you do me the honour to promise me; I would advise you not to undertake it. You could never look for better success, than the prime man of this age had, who could not obtain of—; the favour he required of him, in my behalf. It is much easier to break down the Alps; and to bridle the Ocean, than to procure the payment of my Pension: and there is nothing that can make a worker of miracles see, there is something impossible for him to do; but only my ill Fortune. There are the bounds of this power, which is so much envied: The good will he bears me, cannot draw from the King's Officers the eight hundred pounds, which are due unto me: and it is Gods will he should be disobeyed in this, that I may be a witness against them who say that he is absolute. I only entreat you, seeing you desire to oblige me to you, to show him the constancy of my passions, which is obdurate against ill successes, and preserves itself entire amidst the ruins of my hopes. It shall be satisfaction enough for me that he do me the honour to believe I can adore freely and without hope of reward; and that I should do him as great reverence if he were not in so great a height of happiness. I expect this favour from your ordinary goodness, and promise myself that you will alalwayes have a little love for me, seeing I have a will to be all my life most perfectly Sir, Your, etc. From Balzac 30. of May 1633. To Mounsieur de la Nauve, Counsellor of the King in his great Chamber. LETTER X. Sir, SAy what you can, I am not so indulgent to my passion as you are injurious to your own merits. Amongst all your good qualities, you have one that seems an Enemy to all the rest; detraction doth you more injustice than you do yourself, and envy itself gives you that which your own modesty takes away from you. This is not to handle the truth ciullly, to respect her then when she embraceth you? This is to render her civil for good, to call her fabulous, when she calls you virtuous. I find in this Sir more scruple than Religion: The first and most ancient charity is therehy broken, and you are faulty in the first principle of your duty; if owing justice to all the World, you deny to do it to yourself alone. It must be a great preciseness of conscience that shall find in you the evils you accuse yourself of, and a sight more clear than mine that shall see defaults in the course of your life. If you have any; they are surely immaterial, and such as fell not under sense. They come not within the knowledge of any; It must be a secret between your confessor and you. None is known Sir, at least not known to be revealed, and if any were so known, it would rather be sound a proof of humility than a mark of imperfection. I am none therefore, as you say I am, of these charitable liars, who attribute to them they love all that they want; nor of these forgers of Commonwealths, who carry their imagination beyond all possibility of things; I present not unto you an Idea to make you better than you are, but taking you into consideration I propose you as my example to stir me up to goodness; I draw your picture for my own use and not for your glory; I intent more the instructing myself, than the smoothing you with fair words. The object of so elevated a virtue fills my mind with great desires, and if it astonish me sometimes with its height, it makes me at least see by experience, that an inferior virtue is possible to be acquired; so that to say true, I study you more than I praise you, and am in this more swayed with interest than with passion: I mean this passion without eyes, that riseth only from the animal part; for as for that which is reasonable and works with knowledge, I have that for you in the highest degree, and by all kind of obligations and of duties am At Balzac 6. February 1634. Sir, Your, etc. To Mounsieur Heinsius, Professor of the Politics at LEYDEN. LETTER XI. SIR, I Acquit myself of a charge that was laid upon me, and send you from Mounsieur Favereau the Verses he lately made for the King; they have had the approbation of all France, but they have not yet had his own, and if this public judgement be not confirmed by your particular, he takes it but as the passion of a Mother; and that France doth but flatter her Children. He thinks no glory is legitimate whereof you are not the distributour, and that things are not so good by their own goodness, as by the account you make of them; you see by this Sir what rank you hold in the Commonwealth of Letters, and that I am not the only man that look upon you with veneration, being seated in the Throan of the great Scaliger, and giving Laws to all the civil parts of Europe. The highest degree that a man can aspire unto, who is Prince amongst his own, is to become a judge amongst strangers; and there to get reverence where he cannot pretend subjection. To this uppermost Region of merit are you ascended; the light of your doctrine shines upon more than one people, and more than one Country; it spreads and communicates itself in divets places and kinds; it hath as well adorers afar off, as admirers at home: He of whom I speak Sir, is worth a whole multitude, and makes not only a part of a choice company, but is himself alone a company and a number. Do you ask for qualities intellectual and moral? for virtues civil and military, would you have a Philosopher; a Mathematician; a Poet, for Latin, Italian, French? you shall find them all in his one person. He hath the Key of the most sublime sciences, and the superintendance of the noblest Arts. Heretofore he hath been the dispenser of the conceits of Marino, the reformer and pruning knife of the superfluities of his stile, at this time he is overseer of all curious works; the Oracle that Carvers consult, and the spirit that guides the hand before Painters. He meddles in an infinite number of things with equal capacity, and hath as many trades as the Sage of the Stoics had; but makes better works of them than he did. It is not possible either to fill his spirit, or to set it about work enough; so greedy and unsatiable it is of knowledge, so impatient of rest, and growing fresh with action. And to impart to you the expression of a gallant friend of ours; he is in as great a heat for the pleasures of the mind, as the Princes of Asia are for the pleasures of the body; and as they have many Concubines besides the Sultana, which they marry, so hath he one profession as his principal study, but leaves not for all that to follow other exercises, though follow them but with inferior affection; so that it cannot be said of him, that he knows all, but that he ought to know; and that he is nothing less than that he ought to be. He acquits himself most worthily of his charge, and never stands in contemplation, when it is time to be in action. If he be a great Poet, he is no less a great Lawyer; he makes as well the draught of a Process as the description of a Tempest; and having sung Phillis and Amarillis with an admirable grace, he treats of Seia and Sempronia with no less solidity. I give this testimony as religiously of him, as if I give it before a Judge, and as if my writing were upon Oath. Is it not fit you should be ignorant of his merit, whom without any merit you ought to respect, though but only for his respect to you. It is fit you know that he is an elevated person, humbling himself before you, and a Saint offering you sacrifice. It is fit also I should satisfy his desire, which you shall see in the word he hath written to you, as he was going out of his Inn and taking Coach, but that done, Sir, it is not fit I should forget myself; I entreat you therefore you will be pleased that in presenting to you the vows of another, I may offer you also my own, and make you this true protestation, that I am Sir, Your, etc. From Balzac 5. of December 1634. To Mounsieur de la Pigeonniere, Lieutenant General of Bloyes. LETTER XII. SIR, THe Letter you took the pains to write unto me hath calmed my spirit, and given it ease; I could have no comfort of the news of your death, but only by that of your resurrection; and to make an end of weeping for you, it was necessary you should come yourself and stay my tears. I am none of these broachers of Paradoxes, whom too much reason makes unreasonable, and have no feeling either of joy or grief My spirit is more tender, and my Philosophy more humane; and let them, as long as they please, call these passions infirmities, yet for my part I had rather have my malady than their health; If I had lost you, I had lost part of myself, and should never think myself an entire man again, and if I had not hope to enjoy again your learned conversation, I should find nothing but bitterness in my life; nothing in my studies but Thorns, at this time especially, when I am promised a retreat three miles from Bloys, and that I shall come under the jurisdiction of M. the Lieutenant General. I do not much rejoice at this your new Dignity, because I do not rejoice at the servitude of my friends; and because I do not count it any great happiness to be always handling the Sores and Ulcers of the people. I make more reckoning of your idleness than of your employment, and of the Elegy you will make than of all the judgements you will give. If you please to send it, or please to bring it yourself to Paris, you shall make choice yourself in what place of my book you will have it set; and I shall not be a little proud to have so fair a mark remaining of your friendship. I had more to say, but I was pulled away from my Letter, and your own best friends debauch me; I must therefore perforce leave you, yet assuring you once again that I am infinitely glad I shed my tears for you without cause, and that no man is more truly than myself Sir, Your, etc. At Paris 7. Sept. 1631. To Mounsieur Chaplain. LETTER XIII. SIR, IF your ticket had overtaken me at Orleans, I had certainly returned to Paris to receive that honour it promised me; and not have lost so pleasing a visit, which would have comforted me for a troublesome one that afflicted me not a little the day before. But the mischief is, that I was come hither before your ticket, and all I can do now, is to let you know the grief I take, that my inclination and my affairs lie not always in the same place. They have drawn me from the suburb Saint German, to make me ride Post in ●he greatest violence of the late heat; and have exposed my head to all the beams, or to speak like a Poet, to all the Arrows of the Sun. I vow unto you that being in this case, I even repent myself of all the good I had ever said of it, and would fain call back my praises, seeing it made no difference at all between me and my Post-boy, who had never praised it. Thanks be to God I am now in place of safety, where you may well think I seek rather to quench my thirst, than to clear my Sun burned skin; and look more after refreshing than tricking myself up. To this purpose I forget nothing of that I have learned in Italy: My ordinary Diet is upon the fruits of Autumn; being of opinion that no intemperance of these pure Viands can be dishonest, and that it is not fit to be sober as long as the Trees offer us their store, and tempter appetite. Be pleased Sir, that my business may not be to do until the trees shall have nothing upon them but leaves; and that I may not go to the City but when the winter drives me from the Country. In the mean time, I leave mine honour to your care, in the place where you are, and I recommend unto you a little reputation that is left me, having so many wars upon me, and so many combinations made against me. I would be glad my name had less lustre, and my life more quiet, but I know not where to find obscurity; I am so well known, if not by my good qualities, at least by my ill fortune, that though I should banish myself into a strange Country, I do not think I could be hidden. Vbique Notus perdidi exilio locum, I have no remedy therefore but to continue in this famous misery, and to be labouring continually to provoke the envious, and to make work for the idle; wherein notwithstanding, if I shall do any thing that pleaseth you; I shall not think my labour ill bestowed—: I am in truth in great impatience to make known to all the World, the account I make of your virtue: and to leave a public Testimony, and if I durst say it, an eternal; by which posterity may see, that we have loved one another; and that I passionately have been, and am From Balzac 10. September 1631. Sir, Your, etc. To Mounsieur Mainard. LETTER V. Sir, I Have heard this day by a Letter from Mounsieur Chaplain, that you are at Paris, and that in some business of his you have obliged him exceedingly: wherein you have done more than ever you meant; and your action hath in it a double merit. I owe you thanks for it in my own behalf: and besides, being joined as I am with him in communion of all goods and evils; you cannot fasten upon him, and leave me free. He sends me no word of the nature of his business, in which you have done him such good offices: but I doubt me, it is some employment beyond the Alps, and dependence upon some Ambassador to Rome. Whereof I think I may truly say, without giving reins to my Passion at all; that he hath both the substance and the suppleness, which are necessary in dealing with the brains of that Country; and that he, under whom he serves, may lie and sleep all the time of his employment, without any prejudice at all to the King's service. They who see but his outside only, take him for a neat man, and one of excellent and pleasing qualities: but I, to whom he hath discovered that, which he hides from all the World besides: I know him to be a man capable of great designs, and that besides speculative knowledge, he possesseth those also which serve for use, and are reduceable to action. I would say more, if the Post would suffer me. I will only add this in point of his honesty, which I said to you once of an ancient Roman, that I see no example of virtue, in all the first Decade of Titus Livius, that is of too high a strain, or too hard for him. Never therefore withdraw your affection, from so worthy a place; and so long as you thus oblige my friends, It is I that will be Sir, Your most humble and most obliged servant, etc. At Balzac 20. of December 1631. To— LETTER XV. SIR, IN the Letter which— received from you, I saw a line or two for myself; that would even tickle a heart that were harder than mine, and which I could not read without some touch of vainglory. There is a pleasure in yielding to such sweet temptations, and though I know my merit hath no right to so gracious a remembrance, yet by what title soever I come to be happy, I am not a little proud of my fortune. These are Sir the mere effects of your goodness, and your experiments in that art, with which you know how to gain hearts, and to purchase men without buying them. The fairest part of the earth, in which you have left a dear remembrance of your name, gives this testimony of you by the mouth of its Princes, and of their subjects, but seeing in the place where you are, you meet with spirits of love and tenderness; it cannot be that any should escape you, upon whom you have any design to take hold. All things are biting beyond the Garonne; the Sheep of that Country are worse than the Wolves of this; and I have heard a great person of our age say, That if France had a Soul, certainly Gascogny should be the Irascible part. Yet I hear Sir, you have already sweetened all you found sour there; and that your only look hath melted all the steel of the courages of that Province. Mounsieur de— and myself make account to go see the progress of so admirable a beginning, and this next Summer to come and behold you in all your glory. But if we go thirty miles for— we would more willingly go three hundred for— and I begin to think already of a vow to Loretta, that I may thereby have a colour to go to Rome, to be there at the time when you shall do honour to France; and maintain the King's rights. This cannot be too soon for his service, nor soon enough for my desire, who am From Balzac 4. of August 1632. Sir, Your, etc. To Mounsieur Arnaut, Abbot of Saint Nicholas. LETTER XVI. Sir, I Am very slow in answering your Letter, but I could not do it sooner; after three months of continual agitation, this is my first hour of leisure, and the first place I find of commerce, to tender you the compliment I owe you. I see well that your word is not subject to the accidents of the World, and that I have chosen a plot which is out of the reach of Fortune. Your affection to me is not of this brittle matter that friendships at Court be made of; it is of a more excellent stuff, and such as neither time can wear out, nor my negligence weaken. I need not doubt of preserving a good that you keep for me; your faithfulness is more than my negligence, and I am more assured of your honesty than of my own; notwithstanding what certainty soever I have of your love, it is no double to me to have new assurances: Men that are well enough persuaded, yet will go to a Sermon, and take a pleasure to hear that they know already. For myself I can never be weary of reading a thing that gives me satisfaction, and though it were as feigned as it is true, yet you write it with so good a grace, that it would be a pleasure to be so deceived; yet it was fit, you should have stayed there; and not cause me to fall from joy into presumption: How can you look my spirit should contain itself within its bounds, knowing that I am talked of at Rome, and that my name is sometimes pronounced by the most eloquent mouth of Italy? you should have concealed the express charge you had from M. the Cardinal of Bentivoglio, to send me his History; or at least for a temper to my vanity, you should have told me at the same time, that I must not impure a favour to my own sufficiency, for which I am beholding to your good offices; I may believe Sir that he had never had this thought of me, if you had not stirred it up in him by some favourable mention you made of my person; and I know he puts so great a trust in you, that after you have once made a commendation, he would make a conscience to use his own judgement in examining my worth. From what ground soever my happiness comes, I am bound to acknowledge the visible cause, and to that I destinate my first good days journey that God shall send me. I will not fail to give thanks to M. the Cardinal, and to give him an account of my reading, that he may see I know as well how to receive as he to give. In the mean time I offer him a present far unworthy of the magnificence of his, and which will show him, how with his hook of Gold he hath fished but brass, such as it is you shall do me a favour to present it to him, and to let me hold the possession I have in your love, whose I am all my life Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 10. of May 1634. To Mounsieur de Nesmond, Controller of the Prince of Conde's House. LETTER XVII. SIR, MY dear Cousin, your Letter hath told me no news, it hath only confirmed me in my opinion; and testified that you are always good, and always do me the honour to love me. You have qualities of greater lustre than this, but you have none of greater use; and they that could live without your wisdom, yet cannot bear the miss of your goodness. My sister and I continue to implore it in a business which is already set on foot by your commendation, and which attends a full accomplishment by your second endeavour. It is neither without example nor without reason; it needs but such an undertaker as yourself, and you may easily save it from rigorous justice, if you will but lend a little aid to its equity. Of your will I make no doubt, it is the continual agitation of the Court that makes me fear, which drives men one way and their affairs another. But if the Heavens help us not, we are not like in haste to see it in any state of consistence; it will be always floating like the Island of Greece, until a great birth shall make it stay; and that God make sure the King's victories by the Queen's fruitfulness. In the mean time it is not fit you should stay at home, but that you should make one in all voyages; but you must not be of these travellours that get many hosts, and few friends. You are in a state of obliging and making men beholding to you by doing always good; and now for fear you should want matter to work upon, I offer you matter here to set you a work. Be pleased Sir; my dear Cousin, that I entreat you to deliver to— the Letter I writ unto him; and when you deliver it, to testify withal unto him, that having the honour to be to you as I am, the things that touch me must needs concern you; Heretofore I have held good place in his confidence, and to use the terms of a man you hate not: Vetus mihi cum eo confuetudo & cum privatus erat Amici vocabamur. Even lately at Paris he offered me courtesies that might have contented a prouder man's vanity than mine; and I received from him more good words than was possible for me to return him. But these illustrious friendships require continual cares, and an assiduity without cessation. I know they are subject to a thousand inconveniences, and that they grow cold if they be not stirred up and kindled continually. Three words of your mouth spoken with a due accent, may save me the soliciting of three months, and my requests ought not to seem uncivil; seeing I desire nothing but that which— hath done me the honour to promise me; and thinks no otherwise, but that I have received it. To this purpose I send you a short instruction for—: and you may be pleased to be a means, that he cast his eyes upon it; at such time as the business he hath about your person shall permit him. I would not solicit you so boldly: nor press upon you so burdensome a familiarity, if you had not yourself made the overture first. It is a persecution you have drawn upon yourself by the liberal offers you made me in your Letter; and I conceive you did speak as you mean, as I do, in protesting that I honour you with my Soul; and am Sir, My dear Cousin, Your, etc. From Balzac, 20. Octob. 1632. To Mounsieur de Borstell. LETTER XVIII. SIR, I Do not know myself in your Letters: you are like those Painters, that care not for making a face like, so they make it fair. Certainly you thought upon some honester man than myself; when you took the pains to write unto me; and your Idea went beyond your subject: or else you meant to excite me to virtue by a new subtlety; and the praises you give me are but disguised exhortations. They could nor be Sir, either more fine, or more delicate: and I do not think, that your pretended Barbarism comes any thing behind the Grecian eloquence. But tell me true; Is it not as artificial as Brutus his folly? And are not you in plain terms a Cosener, to make us believe you come from that climate, from whence the cold and foul weather comes? Whereas it cannot be you should be born any where but in the heart of Paris, or if any place be more French then Paris, that certainly must needs have been your Cradle. You speak too well, not to speak naturally; this garb, and this purity, in which you express yourself, is not a thing that can be learned by Books: you owe it to a nearer cause; and study goes not so far as it. There have strangers been Marshals of France, but their accent hath always discovered, they were not natural: and they have found it more easy, to merit the leading of our Armies, and to gain the favour of our King; than to learn our language, and attain a true pronouncing. But Sir, seeing in your person, there is seen an Ambassador of eighteen years old; and a wisdom without experience: there is not any thing, be it never so wonderful which being reported of you, may seem incredible after this. It is fit only, that you make more account than you do, of this so rare and admirable a quality: and that you should use it, according to its merits; and not to employ it upon base subjects, that are not worthy of it. Otherwise how good an Artist so ever you be; you will be blamed for making no better choice of your Materials; and myself, who draw so much glory from your fault; had yet much rather see you employ your excellent language, in treating of Prince's interests, and the present estate of Europe; than in advancing the value of a poor sick man: who prays you to keep your valuing, for—: and ask you nothing but pity; or at most but affection: if this be to merit it, that I passionately am Sir, Your, etc. From Balzac 6. November 1629. To him another. LETTER XIX. SIR, I Remember my promise, upon condition you forget not yours; and that in case you come within six miles of Balzac: you will allow me the half day's journey, I require. It is not any hope I have to send you away well satisfied, either with your Host, or with your lodging, that makes me to make this request: but it is Sir, for my own benefit: for you know very well, we never have commerce together, but all the gain remains of my side. I find that in your conversation, which I seek for in vain, in my neighbour's Libraries: and if there fall out any errors in the work I am about, the faults must be attributed to your absence. Leave me not therefore, I entreat you, to my own sense, and suffer me to be so proud, as to expect one of your Visits, if you go to Santoigne, or otherwise to prevent it, if you stay at Lymousin. There are some friendships that serve only to pass away the time, and to remedy the tediousness of solitariness: but yours Sir, besides being pleasant, is withal I vow, no less profitable. I never part from you, that I bring not away pleasures that last, and profit that doth you no hurt. I make myself rich, of that you have too much; and therefore as you ought not to envy me my good fortune, which costs you little: so you ought to believe also, that as long as I shall love myself, I shall be At Balzac 20. of December 1629. Sir, Your, etc. Another to him. LETTER XX. SIR, AT that time when Mistress— parted from hence; I was too much out of order to present myself before a wise man; and I chose rather to be failing in the rules of civility, than to be importunate upon you with my grievances. Now that I am a little at quiet; and can fall to work indifferent well; I must needs tell you, that the confidence I have of your love, sweetens all the bitterness of my spirit, and that in my most sensible distastes; I find a comfort in thinking of this. It is certain Sir, the World is strangely altered, and good men now a days, cannot make a troup. This is the cause, that seeing you are one of this little flock which is preserved from infection; and one of those that keep virtue from quite leaving us; I therefore bless incessantly Madam Desloges, for the excellent purchase I have made by her means: and proclaim in all places, that she discovered me a treasure when she brought me first to be acquainted with you. If I husband's it not, and dress it with all the care and industry, it deserves; it is not, I assure you, for want of desire: but so sweet and pleasing duties, have no place amidst the traverses of a life in perpetual agitation, and your ordinary convensation is reserved for men more happy than I. I wait therefore for this favour from a better fortune than the present, as also occasions by which I may testify, that I passionately am Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 1. of February 1630. To him another. LETTER XXI. SIR, ALthough I am ravished with your eloquence, yet I am not satisfied: but you remain still unjust, and I not well pleased. I see what the matter is; you are so weary of your Penance at Lymousin: that you have no mind to come and continue it in Angoumois. You like better to go in a straight line to the good, than to go to it by the crooked change of evil; and prefer a safe harbour before an incommodious creek. Wherein Sir, I cannot blame your choice; only I complain of your proceeding; and find it strange, you should disguise your joy, for escaping a bad passage, and that you are content to be unhappy at Rochel; because you will not venture to be unhappy here. These high and Theological comparisons, which you draw from the austerity of Anchorets, concerning works of supererogatition, concerning Purgatory and Hell, make me know you are a mocker, and can make use of Ironies, with the skill and dexterity of Socrates. Take heed I be not revenged upon this Figure of yours by another, and return you Hyperboles. For this once, I am resolved to suffer all; hereafter perhaps, I shall help myself with my old Arms. But howsoever the World go, and in what stile soever I write unto you, you may be sure I speak seriously, when I say, that I very firmly am; Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 9 Sept. 1630. To him another. LETTER XXII. SIR, I Am exceedingly beholding to you for remembering me; and for the good news you have so liberally acquainted me withal. If they— loved Sugar, as well as they love Salt; they should have enough of it, never to drink any thing but Hyppocras; nor to eat any thing but Comfits. Without jesting I vow, these are excellent Rebels; and their simplicity is more subtle than all the Art and Maxims of Florence. These Mariners read Lessons now to the inhabitants of Terra firma; and are become the Paedagogues of Princes. There is nothing of theirs that troubles me, but the proposition of their Truce. They should reject it, as a temptation of the Devil: and I dare swear, it was never set a foot, but to gain time and opportunity: The good will, the Spaniard makes show to bear them; is the bait they show upon the hook they hide, he seeks not after them, but to catch them; and he makes show of kindness; because he could do no good with force. Though I have not read the Book you spoke to me of; yet I doubt not of its worth and goodness; I know the Author is a man of great learning and experience, and one that hath been brought up at the feet of Gamaliel; I mean of—: who no doubt hath acquainted him with all the Mysteries of our state. For myself, it must needs be that I speak but at hap hazard of this matter: for it would be a miracle, if by living in the Woods, I should learn the skill to govern the Cities; and that I should be a Politician and a Lawyer, being scarce either a man, or a Citizen: for to speak truly, if the first be a sociable creature, and the other a manager of some part of the Commonwealth: I see not in the estate I am in, how I can justly pretend to either of these two qualities. In favour therefore of Mounsieur— ay yield up my right in all the good I receive from you; and in all the praises you give me, as things that much more belong to him than me. Admire as much as you will, his subtlety; but yet make some reckoning of my true mind; and give him that which I leave him; but yet keep for me, that which you cannot take from me, without doing me wrong: I mean your good will; which ought to be the prize of my passion, and of the fidelity, with which I shall be all my life Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 1. of June 1630. To him another. LETTER XXIII. SIR, I Should be extremely culpable, if you were not extremely good; but I know, you are no rigorous exactor of that which is your due, and that you have much indulgence, for the faults of those you love. My idleness is even become stupidity; and hath taken from me all use both of speaking and writing; yet all things considered, this is no ill quality at this time: no man is bound to give account of his silence; and many become Delinquents for their speaking. I do not think therefore you would ask me news, in a time, when reporting it is dangerous: and when one may be called in question to make explication of it before Magistrates; though the literal sense of our words be innocent, they may search the allegorical, and stand punctual upon an equivocal term to make us culpable of another man's subtlety. But I defy the most pregnant Grammarian, and the most severe inquisitor to find any fault in the protestation I make of most perfectly honouring your virtue, and of being with all my Soul Sir, Your, etc. At Paris 4. of May 1631. To him Another. LETTER XXIV. SIR, IF my Letters had not been lost, you should have known long ere this the joy I have had in being made certain of the most important truth, that ever kept my mind in suspense; and in learning from yourself that you do me always the honour to love me; not that I ever doubted of your goodness, but I have so much knowledge of my own unfortunateness, that I cannot hear any ill news so incredible which I do not believe to be very probable. Yet I perceive Sir, by your holding out so firmly in behalf of a party ruined, that you are not easily altered either in your opinions, or from your errors. That which you have once spoken, and indeed that you have but once conceived, is never changed nor revoked; and therefore as I have nothing more dear nor more precious than your friendship, so have I nothing also more assured, or of more solidity. This your ancient Germane probity is not a whit altered by contagion of our ill examples, & the strength of your constitution hath been able to resist the ill air of our Court. It is not our of ignorance that you follow not the false maxims of this age; but follow your own and those that be lawful; and if it be true, that the King of the Flies hath a sting indeed, but never stings; it is much more true of you, that having the power and ability to do evil, yet for all that you are no evil doer. But this would be too little to praise you but thus; they that understand you well, will say with me, there is nothing in virtue so high, or difficult, which your Soul hath not attained unto: and as nature hath given you all the good qualities that cannot be acquired by study ', so your own study hath procured you all the good qualities that are not in the gift of nature. Though your courtesies had left me my first liberty, and that there were neither Obligation on your part, nor Resentment on mine, yet I should say as much as I do, and give this testimony of you before all the World, and I am not less true of my word than I am Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 7. Octob. 1631. Another to him. LETTER XXV. SIR, THis bearer will tell you how often in a day I am speaking of you, and in what esteem your virtue is in all places where I am heard speak; I speak of nothing else but of the kind of life you have chosen, and this I propose as the peace of passions, which with others are so mutinous, and as the Kingdom of wisdom, which is not free in the great World. Never repent you of so hardy a flight, nor of so noble a banishment; the leisure that you take is far better than the employment that others desire, and you are that close happy man that enjoys true happiness without either pomp, or envy. Aemulus ille Jovis, celsa qui mentis ab arce, Sub pedibus vel summa videt fastigia Regum: Quem non ambigui fasces, non mobile vulgus, Non leges, non castra tenent, qui pectore magno Spemque metumque domat vitio sublimior omni: Exemptus fatis, indignantemque repellit Fortunam, dubio quem non in turbine rerum Dependet suprema dies, sed abire paratum Ac plenum vita, etc. This me thinks is your very description, and might be mine also, if I had cut off a little thread by which I hang still about Paris; out of a fancy of my friends, without any hope at all in myself; for thanks be to God I have purged my spirit from all smokes and fumes of the Court, and my ambition goes no further than the border of my village. I have no longer any thoughts but rustic and provincial; and demand not of— but only abatement— and return of Quart d' Escus; if these be two things, and as it is said, both within his power. One conference with you will fully accomplish the settling me in a good state, and you cannot deny your counsel to a man that hath a longing to put it in practice; and who is with his whole heart Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 1. May 1633. Another to him. LETTER XXVI. SIR, THis day being the six and twentieth of April, I solemnly renounce all Compliments, yet after I have told you first that I never used any with you, but such as were most true; and that whatsoever I have written unto you heretofore until now, is of as great force and vigour as if it had passed before a public Notary. I have with a great deal of pleasure read the Latin, which you did me the favour to send me; the force of the reasoning, and the Oeconomy of the discourse content me exceedingly; only one little word distastes me, and your friend might well have forborn to couple us with Mahometans and Infidels. The liberty which the King gives his Subjects, not to be of his opinion, ought not to reach to the scandalising of that opinion, and seeing he holds it a glory to be the eldest Son of the Church, to call this Church a whore, is in good French to call—. He deserves Sir more respect, and your Doctors should have more discretion: For in truth, if their Religion were the prime Religion of the Kingdom, and that they were at liberty to preach it in the Lovure; they could never speak in higher terms, nor handle Catholics in a ruder manner than they do. I assure myself you will be in this of my opinion: One must always remember the condition of the time, and the state of affairs; wise men will never provoke them that are easily able to undo them; and in the ancient triumphs it was lawful for the Soldiers to scoff at their General; but it was not lawful for the vanquished to speak reproachfully of the Conqueror; you may please to make some reflection hereupon, and I know you will conceive that innocency itself becomes culpable, if it draw on persecution. I bid you goodnight, and am Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 26. of April 1634. Another to him. LETTER XXVII. Sir, WIthout accepting the challenge you sent me, I thank you for the care you had to make me win honour; If it came of itself I would perhaps not stick to receive it, but if it cannot be had without contesting, I will none of it; I love my ease too well, I say not to lose it, but even to hazard it in the best quarrel of the World. I am as patient and as utterly disarmed as an Anabaptist; I am afraid of a Foyt, or a Squib; far from running upon Muskets and Swords points, as they say in our Vicinage. It would be a hard matter to draw a man of this humour to a Combat; but a much harder matter to make me stand in argumentation, being resolved to let the World hold what opinion it pleaseth, and even to forsake my own, if any man will wrangle with me for it. I desire neither to establish my own Maxims, nor to destroy other men's; and if a Master of Arts should come and try me with Omnis Homo Currit, I would answer him Lascialo andar; and if he should go on and say, sed Petrus Currit, I would reply, Lascialo star; and if he would conclude, Ergo Petrus est Homo, I would take my leave of him and say, Che m' Importa? I have very seriously considered of the the Letter of— and absolutely lost all remembrance of my own; I thought I had reason, and perhaps I was wrong, his intentions might be good, but my interpretation of them was naught. The conclusion is; He is a man I make infinite account of, and his friendship shall always be dearer to me than my own opinion. I conjure you to give him assurance hereof, and to get his leave that I may live; seeing I am already beholding to you for so many other courtesies, and am also with all my Soul Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 15. August 1634. To Mounsieur de Bois Robert. LETTER XXVIII. Sir, IF it had not been for a troublesome rheum which hath followed me now these fifteen days, I should have sooner thanked you for the new courtesies you have done me, and for the late pains you have taken for the most unprofitable servant you have. God will reward a nature so free and noble, for myself I can but praise it, and give it the Testimony that is due unto it. But to make it perfect, I entreat you it may be as sweet as it is gracious, and heal me if it may be without thrusting your nails into my sores. I desire not to be left in my ill estate by flattery, but yet I desire to be drawn out of it without roughness; words alone seasoned with sweetness content me more than good deeds that are dry, and come from a proud hand. Be not therefore like the friends of Job, who reproached him in comforting him; but be compassionate a little to humane infirmities, and remember you cannot alter me, unless you new make me. I dare not say, that I prefer the liberty of Deserts before the magnificence of Courts; and that chains, though never so well made and guilded over, do yet not tempt me; I only say, I know myself too well to meddle in a trade whereof I am not capable, and to begin a life which I must needs end, at the very beginning. Thus Sir, I do that out of consideration which you think I do out of laziness, and the faintness of my spirit comes from that of my body. But I know it is impossible to persuade you to this, and no means is left me to justify my sickness but by my death, and when you have lost me, than you will find and say I had reason to complain. In the mean time I understand that the Devils of Paris, of Brussels, etc. are not let loose, and commit outrages upon me in four, or five languages. The contrary faction fortifies itself daily, and there seems to be merit and piety in tearing asunder my reputation. Leave me not therefore to adversaries so incensed, and add not your rigour to their cruelty. I conjure you to take some care of an afflicted Soul, if I have defects, supply them by your virtue; if I be negligent in my affairs, be you my tutor, but exact no more of me than nature hath given me. You are too generous to put back a man that casts himself between your arms; and one that is more than any other in the World, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 5. of January 1632. To Mounsieur Descartes. LETTER XXIX. SIR, YOur Letter found me in the blackest humour I was ever in in all my life. To tell you, that in that estate it brought me joy; were it to speak too boldly for a man in misery: but it is true, it did a little mitigate my sadness, and made me capable of consolation. I do no more now live but in the hope I have to go see you at Amsterdam; and to embrace that dear Head, which is so full of reason and understanding. This is that which hinders me from inviting you to come hither; where—: He is ever in the slavery of Ceremonies and Compliments; and plays the coward with such a contradiction of his spirit, that one could not imagine. He hath the Soul of a Rebel; and the submission of a slave: if you may believe him, he hath no ambition; yet he consents to that of another; and dies of a sickness that is not his own, See what is to be a sycophant; and to be undutiful by obedience. But you Sir, have raised your minds above these vulgar considerations: and when I think upon the Stoics Wiseman, who only was free, was rich, was a King; me thinks, I see you foretold long ago; and that Zeno was but the Figure of Mounsieur Descartes: Foelix qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas, Atque metus omnes, & inexorabile fatum Subjecit pedibus. Either you are this happy man, or he is not to be found in the World: and the conquest of truth, for which you labour with so great force and industry seems to me a more noble business, than all that is done with so great bruit and tumult in Germany and Italy. I am not so vain to pretend, I should be a companion of your travel herein; but I shall at least be a spectator; and shall enrich myself with the relics of the prey; and with the superfluity of your abundance. Think not that I make this proposition by chance; I speak it in great earnest; and if you stay never so little in the place where you are; you shall find me a Hollander as well as yourself; and my Masters, the States, shall not have a better Citizen: nor one more passionate for liberty than I am. Although I love extremely the air of Italy; and the soil that bears Oranges; yet your virtue is able to draw me to the Banks of the frozen Sea; and even to the uttermost Border of the North. It is now three years, that my imagination goes in quest after you; and that I even die with longing to be united to you, and never to part from you again: and to testify unto you, by a continual subjection, that I passionately am Sir, Your, etc. At Paris 25. of April 1631. To Mounsieur de la Motte-Aigron. LETTER XXX. Sir, I Have heard of the happy accomplishment of your marriage; and that it hath been one of the great solemnities of Rochel. I have celebrated it here in my particular; with less pomp indeed and tumult; but with as much joy, and satisfaction of mind, as they that sung the Hymonaeus. Though perhaps you would not have it so; yet your contentments are mine; you have not any passion so proper to yourself, which is not common with me, and play the cruel, as long as you will, I will have a share in that which is yours; even then when you will not afford to give it me. At the worst, I will love you still, as I have ever done, as a creature supremely excellent; though not supremely just: As there are some virtues that are fierce; and scornful; so there are some sciences which have attractives amidst their difficulties, and which draw us on in thrusting us back: You are like these abstract knowledges: Your merit sweetens all your rigours: and how hard soever the persecution hath been, which I have suffered: yet I vow unto you, I could never find in my heart to hate the Tyrant. I have still so great a care of his reputation, that I would not be thought innocent; for fear he should be blamed to have done me wrong; and I had rather be a Prevaricatour, and treacherous to myself, than to seem I had cause of complaint against him. We ought to condemn the memory of this disorder; and to suppress this unfortunate olympiad. We ought to persuade our imagination, that the matter is not so indeed; but that it is only dreamt. When you shall please to remember your words; I shall see your Verses; and your friends Sermons. In the mean time Sir, if you will not have it be a mere liberality; I send you something, to exercise commutative justice, and begin a traffic whereof the Toll is not agreed upon to be taken of right. Never was a man so miserably busied as myself; I am intricated with an infinite number of petty affairs: which, as you know, are no less cumbersome than the great: One thrust of a sword hurts not so much as a hundred pricks of a Pin: and the Arabians have a saying; It is a better bargain to be devoured of a Lion, than to be eaten up of Flies. If I had you, I should have a Redeemer; but your State-business, is preferable before my interests; and it is better I should want you, than come to have you with the curses of the people. I am, and shall ever be At Balzac 29. July 1634. Sir, Your, etc. To Mounsieur de Granier. LETTER XXXI. SIR, THe day I parted from Paris; I dreamt not of taking any journey; but a news which I received, made me take Horse within an hour after I received it. This is that which hindered me from taking my leave; and to use such compliments with you, as in such cases are accustomed. If I did not know you to be an enemy of the Tyranny of Ceremonies; and that you, as well as myself, cut off from friendship all vain pomp and superfluities, I should study for long excuses to justify my journey: but in so doing, I should offer wrong to a wise man; to think he had opinions like the vulgar: and that he would not either give, or take so good a thing as liberty. I enjoy it as I would wish within these three, or four days; and I have received it at the Bank of the River where I left it the last year. I banish from my mind all thoughts of the street Saint Jaques; and dream not either of my Prince, or Commonwealth, either of enemy's books, or of my own: I dream, to say true, continually of you; and find no image in my memory so pleasing, as that which presents me the time of our being together. I would willingly employ Atlante, or Melisse, to procure me a more solid contentment; and to convey you and your Library hither in a night. I cannot forget this dear retreat of your repose; for, I know, that without this, you would find even in Tryvolie, a want in your felicity; and that without your books, our fruits would be but sour; and our good cheer but of ill taste unto you. These are imaginations Sir, with which I flatter myself; whilst I stand waiting to return to Paris; that I may there go find out a happiness which cannot come hither to find out me. If in the mean time you please to send me some news, whereof, you know provincial spirits are extremely greedy; you shall give me means, to make a whole Country beholding to me; and you need but to dictate them to—: who will ease you of the pains of writing them. In these, I require not the strains of your understanding, nor the politic Animadversions which come from this accurate, and Collineant judgement, (to use the barbarous eloquence of our friend) it shall be enough for me that I may know in general some part of that which passeth, and may have some Epitome of the History which you send weekly to Mounsieur d'Andilly. I humbly entreat you, to assure him that I honour him continually with passion; and assure yourself also, that I am Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 10. of Septemb. 1631. To Mounsieur de la Nauve, Commander of a Company in Pyedmont. LETTER XXXII. Sir, MY dear Cousin, I cannot endure you should be come back into France, for nothing but—: and that he should solely and without me, possess a happiness, which more belongs to me than him. His Letters speak nothing but of your conversations, and of your feast; news which he sends me, rather to brave me, and to set me in a longing, than to give any part in his good fortune, and to justify his stay at Paris. I shall one day have means to be revenged of him for this malice: I doubt not to have liberty to walk abroad, when he shall be tied to stay at home; and to have my turn in feasting and making merry, when he shall stand waiting upon enterrements, and go exhorting men that are to be hanged. Yet he is all this while your Favourite in my absence, though he need not think me absent, unless he will; for if he love me enough, to be troubled for losing me, he may easily recover me, by looking upon your face. This resemblance between you and me, is not the least of my vanities; and I vow unto you, I am proud of it in the highest degree: every day I thank my Mother for it in my heart; and do a secret homage for it to Nature. It were enough for me, to be taken for your Copy; but my grey hairs tell me to my shame, that I am rather your Original, and put me in mind of this untoward advantage. I should not do much good, to paint them, unless withal, I could discharge the pensiveness that hath changed them: for the tincture of this blots out all other. It is fit therefore to be merry, and to banish sorrow, seeing this i● the only means to new make us, and to make us able to resist old age, I resolve myself to do so, though it be but to do Fortune a spite; and to take from her by my not grieving, the pleasure she thinks to take in her cruelty. But this goodly resolution stands in need of you; my joy would be perfect, if you would sometimes be a man of the Province; and that there were any appearance of hope, to see you at Condeville. I know no reason you should scorn an Island, in which our Ariosto would have charmed his dearest Herces; and whereof he would have made a thousand other strange devises, if he had been able to discover it. Venture to come thither this next Summer, I conjure you to it by the memory of—: and I will promise you, though not the good fellowship of Paris; yet at least the fair days of Paris; yet at least the fair days of Pignerol. But I fear me much you are not resolute enough to come to civilize a clown; who yet is beyond all I can say, At Balzac 3. of January 1634. Sir, Your, etc. Another to him. SIR, MY dear Cousin, the beginning of your Letter had frighted me, and I was taking Alarm at these words of death and Physicians, but I recovered my spirits when I saw the first had failed of his blow, and that you use not the other but to strengthen you in an estate they have already put you; such days as this will prove more healthful to you than all their Drugs, and the sweetness, which begins to spring from the purity of the Elements, is the only Medicine that heals without corrupting, and cleanseth without wasting. For myself I think not of dying when I have once gotten March over my head, and me thinks I find myself renewed at the only smelling of the Violets. I make use of them to more than one service, they serve me for Broths as well as for Nosegays. I cannot be persuaded that cold purgeth the Air, or drives away sickness; and I am glad at heart to hear the Duke of Feria is dead of the Purples in the month of January, and that in Germany. At least this will justify the Summer and the hot Countries, and will serve us for a proof against— when according to his custom he will plead our adversaries cause. I am more than I thought I was; seeing you assure me that I am sometimes the subject of our conferences; and though in this you run the hazard of being in the number of those Orators, who were blamed for making ill choice of their subjects; yet pardon me if I account the testimony of your remembering me, more dear unto me than the glory of your well speaking; and if I like rather you should talk of my idleness and of my walks, than to discourse of public affairs, or voyages of Princes. I regard not the estimation of the people, I would give a great deal to buy out that with which I have gotten it; but there are certain friendships upon which only I rely, and to be razed out of all accounts in the state would be less grievous to me than to be blotted out of your memory. Continue therefore these conferences which are so pleasing to me, and of which I am in spirit a partaker, or rather deny me not these consolations which are so sweet unto me, and whose effect I feel a hundred miles off. I cannot dissemble the need I have of you, I could not live if you did not love me, but withal you could love a man who is more passionately than I am Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 22. of Febr. 1634. Another to him. LETTER XXXIV. SIR, MY dear Cousin, I am exceeding glad to hear of your news; as for news of the World I set so little by them, and interest myself so little in general affairs, that I may boldly say, I never yet read a whole Gazetta through; you may think this a strange distaste of the present time, and a remarkable impatience, especially in a man who complains that Livies History is too short, and wishes Herodotus would never make an end. Things that wounded me heretofore at the very heart, do not now so much as superficially touch me; that which I accounted as my own is now become a stranger to me, and my heart is hardened against all accidents that happen, if they concern not either myself, or my friends. It is true the death of— wrought in me some compassion; I can never hate men that are extraordinary, and it grieves me that cowardice should triumph over virtue; and the lazy cause the valiant to be murdered. For this man it would not serve to take him at table, it was necessary to come behind him; for else the most resolute of the conspirators would never have had the courage to do the act, would never have abidden the splendour of that terrible countenance, and would have thought he had always heard this voice. Fallit te mensas inter quod credis inermem Tota bellis quaefita viro, tot caedibus armat Majestas aeterna Ducem. Si admoveris ora Cannae & trebiam ante oculos, Thrasymenaque busta Et Pauli stare in gentem miraberis umbram. Change but the Latin names for Dutch, and we may conclude thus; Gustavi stare in gentem miraberis umbram. If I should say more, I should seem to make his Funeral Oration; I am neither fit nor officious enough to go so far, my design was only to write a word, or two, and to pay you all your Compliments with this one little word, I am but most truly Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 7. of April 1634. Another to him. LETTER XXXV. SIR, MY dear Cousin, I mean not to show your Letter to the Doctor that brought it to me, it would make him lose that little humility that is left him, and he would think himself already In statu perfection is acquisitae; you do not well to use him as he were some rare personage, it is the way to spoil him altogether, and to harden a vanity which durst not otherwise show itself. I shall have something to do to make him come to himself, and to take down the swelling of his spirit, which your testimony hath put him into. It is an easier matter to corrupt than to reform the good works more slowly than the evil; and I much fear my remedies will not be so forcible as your poison; Under this name austere Philosophers would comprise the Present you have sent me. They conceive that perfumes are made of sweet and pleasing poisons, and that if they make no impression upon the body, they yet effeminate the vigour of the mind: For myself I speak no such harsh language, but content myself to say with an honester man than they: Cursed be these Effeminate persons that have cried down so innocent and so good a thing. The use of it is lawful, the excess is forbidden; I know the first, and you would cast me upon the other. For to speak truly what good can come of so exorbitant a liberality? and what means this abundance of Orange flower water with which you have loaded our Messenger? you would not have sent me a greater quantity of this water, if where you are, men had reigned a great shower of it: and let this be spoken without Hyperbole; and without putting me upon the high strain. Your good deeds have no spice of the present poverty, one may see in them the abundance of the golden age, and an image of that happy time of which a Poet writes; They poured out by Floods what they give now by drops; yet you have done well to get before hand; hereafter the sumptuary Laws will not suffer you to be so liberal; and you are threatened with the coming forth of a Proclamation that will bring things back to the ancient frugality of our ancestors. Perfumes shall not be used but in Temples, and about the sacrifices at great festivals, nor biskes—; but about the Palace, or at the King's Coronation; so that you shall learn the virtue of moderation by a lesson from the Prince, and you shall be made a good husband if you will not be a bad Citizen. I myself, who profit by disorder, must tell you thus much, that if you reduce not your great Bottles to little Viols, I shall inform against you, and yet will always be Sir, Your, etc. From Balzac 10. of June 1634. To Mounsieur Bardyn. LETTER XXXVI. Sir, NEver was Host better paid than I, for making you poor Cheer; if you should make any long journey at this price, you would make yourself a poor man before you come home, and your first courtesies are such, that they scarce leave any place for second. You are so good that you are unjust; to compare our fruits to those of Italy is not so much to advance our Village, as to vilify Naples and Florence. This is to affront her whom Virgil adored, and to whom he said upon his knees, and holding up his hands; Salve magna Parens frugum Saturnia tellus Magna virum, etc. There is no reason to pardon this excess to a man that makes profession of the truth, and who ought to speak that plainly which it is lawful for Poets to disguise. These fellows make waste of their ornaments and their figures; they call the worst wine they drink Nectar; and though the house of Cacus were no better than an Ox stall, yet in their Verses they make it a King's Palace; such liberty is not allowed to Philosophers; and without derogation to this quality, which you have so good Title to possess, you could never have bestowed your praises upon such base Viands as I was fain to set before you. And for my entertainment with which you seem much better satisfied; even that was yet much poorer, and more meager than my cheer. You know Sir, that in our commerce I contribute nothing but my Docibleness, and my ears; I am the people and you the Theatre; I mean a Theatre reasonable and intelligent, inspired with sentences & instructions, to whose audience I would run from one end of the World to another, and never complain of my pains nor of my journey. I would not only return you your visit in Tourain; but to hear you would do much more, and go much further, willingly untertake as long a voyage as Appollonius did, who travailed many Kingdoms, and passed many Seas, only to see Ia●chas in his Throne of Gold; and hear him discoursing of the nature of things. Your Indian visage and your yellow colour make show of a Gymnosophist; but Gymnosophists had not the virtue that lies hidden under this yellowness; for though they made Trees to speak, and sent tempests on their errands, where they pleased, yet these were effects of their Devilish arts, and no arguments of their wisdom. Yours is not only more humane and more Lawful; but is used also with less pride and less violence. Instead of filling the eyes with unprofitable wonders, it makes to flow and stream in the Soul necessary verities; it doth not astonish me with prodiges, nor affright me with Thunder, but it persuades me to do that I ought to do, and instructs me to know that I ought to know. It is the same I think that appeared under the Empire of Trajan; and communicated itself to men by the mediation of Plutarch. How have you decked her without disarming her? how sweetened her countenance without weakening her force? how covered her Bones and Muscles with a fair flesh, and made her a body of a Carcase? The Syllogism, which by the saying of a Grecian is the Trident and Mace of Philosophy, is in your writings all painted and perfumed: After you have purged it from the rust of Barbarians, and from the poison of Sophisters, you make with it a wholesome and delightful lancing, and no man seeks to ward your blows, because they heal and tickle. With these rare knowledges you should entertain your friends, and not with the fruits of our Orchard, nor with those of my studies, which are as vulgar the one as the other; But yet seeing they please your taste, and that you demand of me particularly the last piece you saw of my making, I have entreated— who carries it to Paris to deliver it unto you in the place where you are; By your example I call it my dissertation, because we live in a Country of liberty, and where faults of this nature are not under the Jurisdiction of the King's Commission. But I durst not be so bold at the Court, where there is no longer any favour for naughty words, nor safety for innovatours of our language. Remember therefore that I speak under Benedicite, and in our most straight confidence; and imitate herein that Queen, who in public called her Son by the name of her Husband, but in private by the name of her favourite; much after this sort do I; having conceived my work from the acquaintance I have with the Latin; I let it in truth carry a French title, but in secret and speaking in the ear I give it the name of his Father. It is now three months that M. de Nants hath been in Brittany, and M. de Tholouze in Languedoc. Upon the first opportunity I will not fail to send them your rare Presents, and let them know in what height of account you hold them both. Do me the like office to Mounsieur Bourdelot, and assure him that I have great pretensions upon his learning, and that I ground myself much upon his honesty. Hereafter one of them shall be my treasure in the necessities of my spirit, the other my sanctuary against the malice of the World. For you Sir, it is impossible for me to express the high opinion I conceive of you; when the question is to speak of your virtue, I cannot find words that give me satisfaction, and therefore at this time you shall have from me but the common conclusion of all my Letters, that I am Sir, Your, etc. From Balzac 15. December 1633. To Mounsieur de Aigue bear, Commander of a Company in Holland. LETTER XXXVII. Sir, YOur Letter hath stayed here a long time for me; if I had been here at its first arrival, I had sooner testified to you the joy with which I received it: and the especial account I make of the meanest of your favours, I seek not after new acquaintance; I had rather I could forgo one half of those I have already but for yours; I vow unto you I have much desired it, and you had attractives for me, even in the Melancholy of my Quartan Ague. I discovered a great worth under the veil of your disvaluing yourself; and saw well, that you sought rather to go safely and solidly, than to go in pomp and state; and had more care to nourish your mind, than to set it out in colours. I do not therefore take you for a simple Captain of Holland, who takes nothing but Stoccadoes; and Circumvallation; and studies such other words in that Country, to come afterwards and fright us with them here in France. I know you possess no less the virtues of peace, than those that make a noise and handle iron: and that you are a man of the Library, as well as of the Arsenal. Mounsieur Huggens, I assure myself, is of the same mind; and I doubt not, but having observed you in both these kinds, he relisheth as well your spirit, as he values your courage. I am very glad of the correspondence that is between you; of which, if you please, I shall make use hereafter, for the safety of our Commerce. But Sir, I have another, more important request to make unto you; and I earnestly entreat you to do for me, with my Lord—: the good offices, which I have right to hope your goodness will afford me. It hath been written to me from Paris, that he had some sinister conceit of me; and indeed the coldness of his countenance, the last time I had the honour to do him reverence, seemed to show as much. This misfortune comes not to me by any fault of mine: for I swear unto you Sir, that I have always carried towards him a most religious respect; and have never spoken of him, but as of a man of very extraordinary parts. It must needs be, that this is some rellick of those impressions, which— hath left in him: and that he judgeth of me by the report of my Enemies. I will not move questions against the memory of a dead man; nor blame the passion of a great worthy. There have been some moved with motives less reasonable, that have wept for their Dogs; and built Tombs for beasts they loved. In that, I acknowledge the good fortune of—: but you know better than any other what his honesty was: and you ought upon this occasion to give your uttermost Testimony in behalf of calumniated innocency. I conjure you to do it effectually: and from what Coast soever the evil come, take into your protection an honest man, who passionately is Sir, Your, etc. From Balzac 3. of February 1633. Another to him. LETTER XXXVIII. SIR, I Have received in one Packet, a Letter from you, of the four and twentieth of March; and another from Mounsieur Huggens of the fifteenth of December. I give you a thousand thanks for each of them; and complain not, that I stayed a while for the latter, seeing if it had come a readier way, it had perhaps not come so safe a way: neither contains it any news, whereof the knowledge might not be forborn without any danger: no matter in it, that either concerns the life of the Prince, or the good of the state. It might have come time enough, ten years hence; for it speaks of nothing but of Kings and Commonwealths, that have been long ago. Our commerce hath no object, but our books; and I have no reason to complain of a slowness, that does a favour to my negligence. But my good neighbour,— suffers me to be idle no longer; she will have me hereafter make use of her messengers; and by consequent, ease you of your conveying them. Yet for my part, I exempt you not altogether, but if you return into Holland, at the time you have appointed; you shall do me the favour to remember the note I send you. I entreat you also to demand of our friends in that Country, what reason they have to bring into our language a new fashion of speaking; and which by the communication you have with them, is gotten into the Letter you sent me. If you say, my Masters the States; you may as well say, Mounsieur the Council; and Madam the Assembly: and more than this; if many Senators that make the body of a Republic, may be called my Masters the States, than every Senator, which makes a part of that body, may be called Mounsieur the State: and if this be suffered, the most strange opinions of— shall be authorised by public use: of the same words will be made another language, and after this it cannot be thought strange, that— should speak of the signory of Venice; as of the Infanta of Portugal; and that she should marry with Mounsieur the King's brother. It is true the league committed the like incongruity when it gave the Duke de Main, the Title of Lieutenant of the State, and Crown of France, but this was not without a check: you know what sport the Catholicon makes at it; and with what force he defends at once, both the rights of the Kingdom, and the Laws of Grammar. And where the same Author in another place, calls the Assembly, which was held at Paris; My Lords the States; he did that but to make it ridiculous; & not with meaning to speak regularly: Our dear friends may make of a little City, a great; but of a bad word they cannot make a good: and though their liberty extend very far, yet it reacheth not to licence Barbarism. Mounsieur Huggens will consider of this point; and if in propounding to the Council so important a matter, he shall speed well; he shall have the honour to purge his Country of a vicious phrase, as much in the judgement of Grammarians, as to free it from a Hydra, or Chimaera, and therein shall show himself a Hercules, or a Bellerophon. This is a way I take with my friends, to make myself laugh; because I am given to pensiveness when I am alone; and I cannot stir up any Joy in me, but by the presence, at least the representation of some person, which is both dear unto me, and chosen for the nonce: of this number Sir, you are, and know well, that I am Sir, Your, etc. From Paris 3. of April 1634. To Mounsieur de Bois Robert. LETTER XXXIX. Sir, IN the mean time, till I see you; be pleased to receive from me a compliment, which shall not be tedious: Only to let me congratulate with you the recovery of your health. God hath now a kind of interest in preserving it; seeing you have consecrated it to him; and your life is vowed to a perpetual Meditation of his Mysteries. I doubt not of his blessing this your holy desire; and look at my return to find a great Preacher under your Cassock. You will show me as many Homilies, as heretofore you have showed me Sonnets: and instead of Parnassus and Permessa; you will speak of Zion, and of Siloe. Yet moderate yourself a little at first: and be reserved in a strange Country. I would not have you dive too deep into the Abysses of Predestination; famous for the shipwrecks of so many Pilots; or to speak more plainly, for the Heresies of so many Doctors. If you will take my counsel, you shall let the Jesuits and the Jacobins fight it out between themselves about the Question De Auxiliis; and never meddle amongst them, nor go about to part them. The often using of Syllogisms is very dangerous for health; there is nothing that heats the blood, or inflames Choler more than Disputation. Besides, though you make yourself hoarse with speaking for the Truth, and make it never so plain: yet you shall never make your adversary to confess it; or ever be able to take hold of him, so long as he can slip from you by a distinction. Above all Sir, let not the love of Divinity make you forget your temporal affairs, and the care of your fortune: for otherwise, It were better I should study with you to halfs; and that you should make the Court both for yourself and me. As I am like to acquit myself extreme badly; so you are likely to grow soon to perfection; and I despair not, one of these days to salute you by the Title, Of Most Reverend Father in God. I know you do not disllike that we should write, to one another in this kind of stile, which Cicero and Trebatius made use of, before such time as untoward Compliments had corrupted friendship; and that this base-jangling was brought into fashion. This Trebatius was a famous Lawyer: of whom Cicero made great account; and yet is always wrangling with him about his Science, and his formal Writs: the like liberty I am bold to take with you; whom I honour infinitely; and should not in this sort contribute to our common joy, if I were not with a perfect freeness of heart Sir, Your, etc. From Balzac 11. of Novemb. 1633. Another to him. LETTER XL. SIR, I Pity your good fortune, the Court that follows you at your Chamber would be to me an unsupportable honour, who would not give my Mornings for all the Compliments of Paris. It is the flower and prime of the day that is taken from you; it is the time of Meditation and Prayer which flattery intrudes upon. There is no Creditor nor Sergeant that you might not deal withal better cheap than with these troublesome friends. You are unfortunate to be so beloved, and a man of whom so many other have use, can be of little, or no use to himself. It is better yet to pass for a Clown, than thus to prostitute one's self by civility, and better never to sacrifice to the graces, than to make one's self the beast for the Sacrifice. You would perhaps intermit this course, but the time is passed for that; a breach would draw upon you a War; and you would run the fortune of that poor Saint, who was murdered with pricks of Pen-knives, and cut in pieces by his Scholars. You would be the object of a Rhetorical, an Historical and a Poetical persecution; and the muses, which now court you, would grow furious, and fall a tearing you, so that you have no remedy now but to hold it out, if you look for safety in the place you are in; you must ever be the mediator between Apollo and Poets; you must always have a thousand businesses both in Prose and Verse, your Chamber must be the passage always from the University to the Court. This backdoor whereof you have sent me a Platform, is in truth an excellent invention, but this will presently be discovered, and you will gain nothing by it, but to be besieged in more places at once. Do better Sir, quit the place that is not tenable, and come save yourself at— I am not so poor, but I can make you a resemblance at least of the good cheer of Paris, and furnish you with innocent pleasures, such as Philosophy and Priesthood will allow of; It shall be for as short a time as you please; and only to make an ill custom take another course. All the family desires this voyage, particularly— who is in good hope his Son cannot prove ill, seeing you have no ill opinion of him, and for his Daughter of whom you write me so much good: I cannot stay myself from vowing to you, that she is not altogether unworthy of it; and perhaps would have deserved an Air with three couplets of your making, if she had appeared in the time when you were the great chanter of France. But now that you have changed your course of life, there is no looking for any thing from you but spiritual discourse and Christian Meditations, which yet will serve as fitly for a Sex to which devotion belongs no less than beauty. Bring therefore to us the Original of your piety and of your Divinity, at least show some sorrow that you cannot do it, that I may see my affection is not scorned, and that I am not without revenge Sir, Your, etc. From Balzac 1. of Decemb. 1634. Another to him. LETTER XLI. SIR, IF you hold your old wont, you will tax me with ignorance, and write me a man of another World; one delivered me but yesternight observations upon the process of the Marshal of— and I set myself to reading all the time my Groom set himself to sleeping. In very truth they gave me an excellent relish; and I vow unto you I never read a stile more subtle, nor that hid its Art more cunningly; I entreat you to send me word who the Author is, and to whom I am beholding for so pleasing a night. It must needs be some man who understands two things equally well, affairs and how to write, one that partakes of the life of a Scholar, and of a Courtier; like to that God of whom the Poets say, he is of the one and other World, Vtroque facit commercia mundo. From the knowledge of Books he draws the vigour and force of his phrase, and from the practice of the Court; the colours and sweetening of his matter. He speaks the language of the Closet, and brings proofs of the Palace; but in such sort, that neatness doth not weaken his reasons; and his force is so tempered; that even Ladies may be judges of the process. Once again, I entreat you to send me the name of this sage Observer, and besides, to give me account what grace I stand in with Mounsieur de—: I was told in no very good grace; neither ay, nor my writings neither. If I made but little reckoning of him; I should easily comfort myself for this disgrace: but in truth, it would grieve me much to be condemned by a judgement, to which I should make a conscience not to subscribe; and I rather believe, there are many defects in my writings; than that in his taste there is any defect of reason. Assure him Sir, if you please, that I am at least capable of Discipline: and am apt enough to follow any method he shall prescribe me, for attaining a proportion of knowledge to content him. Let him but tell me my faults, and see how quickly I will mend them; let him but say, what it is in my stile that offends him; and see how ready I shall be to give him satisfaction. If my Hyperboles displease him; I will blot them out of my Letters the next time they are printed; I will truly confess all I have ever used, and make a solemn vow never to use more. Yet it cannot be truly said; that to use this Figure; is a matter that deserves blame; for, not to speak of humane Authors, we should then blame the Son of God; for saying. It is easier for a Camel to go through a needle's eye, than for a rich man to enter into the Kingdom of heaven. But I will not seek to save myself by so supreme an authority: In this, I will respect our Saviour, but not follow him; I will believe that such examples are far above all humane imitation; and will not attempt it no more than to walk upon the water, and to go forty days without eating. In good earnest, I would do any thing to give contentment to a man that gives contentment to M. the Cardinal; and hath persuaded the King of Sweden. If he will play the Tyrant with those that seek his favour, let him; I refuse not hence forward the hardest conditions he can lay upon me; and to gain his protection; I renounce with all my heart my very liberty: It is now four and twenty hours since I laid my eyes together; It is time therefore that I bid you good morrow, or good night; take which of them you please; and believe me always, Sir, Your, etc. From Balzac 4. December 1634. To Mounsieur the Master Advocate in the Parliament. LETTER XLII. SIR, YOu know I have fed upon the fruits of Pomponne, even beyond the rules of temperance; and I told you there that they are generally excellent; yet I now especially declare myself, in favour of the last you sent me, and find them, far surpassing the Amber Pear, or all other kinds, which I cannot name. It is true, I affect especially the Tree itself that bears them: and I account the meanest of the Leaves, no meaner than Jewels: yet their own goodness is such, that though they grew in the Garden of—: or grew upon a stock that Father—: had planted; yet I should not for all that, but highly esteem them, and take a pleasure in their taste. In a word, to leave speaking in Allegory, and not to flounder myself in a Figure, into which you have most maliciously cast me: I say Sir, that in all your Presents, I see nothing but excellent; and lest you should think, I meant to exempt myself from giving a particular account of my judgement, by speaking in general terms: I let you know, that in the first place, the two lines spoken of at the end of the discourse, please me infinitely; and next to this that place which is written upon occasion of—: that France is too good a Mother to rejoice in the loss of her Children; and that the victories gotten upon ourselves, are fit to wear mourning, and be covered with black vails. All that could have been said upon this Argument, would never have been comparable to this ingenious silence. And as he hath dexterously shunned a passage so tender, so he enters as bravely, and as proudly upon a matter that will bear it; when speaking of—: he saith, that having overcome the waves and the winds, that opposed his passage, and traversed the fires of so many Canons of the Enemies; with a few poor Barks, he made his way through a Forest of great ships, and despising all the English Forces, made a small Island to be the Grave of the glory of that great Queen of the Northern Islands. And a little after; where he saith: that God, who bestows his favours upon Nations, by measure; seeing, that the admirable valour of ours, would easily Conquer the whole World; if it had Prudence equal to its courage, seems therefore to have given us, as a Counterpoise to the greatness of our spirits; a kind of impetuosity and impatience, which to our Armies have oftentimes been fatal, and cause of ruin. But that now the case is altered in this point: that now the French are only French in the Courage and Valour; that these Lions are grown reasonable; and now, to the strength and courage of the North; they join the prudence and stayedness of the South, etc. Also where he saith, that the carriage at Cazal, is a thing incomprehensible; and for which we must be fain to look out some new name; for it cannot be called a Siege, seeing the place was surrendered before ever it was battered: nor it cannot be called a battle, seeing no man struck a stroke: nor it cannot be called a Treaty, seeing Treaties are not made with Weapons in hand, etc. But that which pleaseth me most of all, because it toucheth indeed the string of my own inclination; is that which he speaks of the Marquis of Rambovillet: that there had been Statues erected in honour of her virtue; if she had fortuned to be born in the beginning of her race. For, as you know Sir, this illustrious Woman, is of Roman stock; Et de Gente Sabella; of which Virgil speaks. These are the passages I can call to mind, having not the Originals by me: being taken from me, by a neighbouring Lady; who affects the King of Sweden with the like passion, as Madam Rambovillet, if I durst discover myself therein; they should both know how I do concur with them, so eminent a virtue may chastely enough be loved of both Sexes; and let the slanderous History speak its pleasure; I for my part think no otherwise of it, than as the Queen of Sheba loved Solomon: and as Nicomedes loved Caesar. I had begun something for the Triumph of this great Prince, but his death made my Pen fall out of my hand; and therefore you are like to have nothing from me at this time in revenge of your Sonnet. For your French Prose, I send you another, which I will never believe to be Latin, until— shall assure you, it is; to whom I entreat you to show it from me: Vir plane cum Antiquitate conferendus, & qui mihi est in hoc genere, unus curia, Censor & Quirites. I have read many things of his with infinite satisfaction: but I know, he hath certain miseries in his writing, which he lets not common people know; and— hath told me of a continuation he hath written, of the History of M. de Thou; which is not imparted but to his special friends; and which, I am infinitely desirous to see: but I am not a man that will enter by force upon any man's secrets: and my discretion in such cases, shall be always greater than my curiosity, Optare licebit, si potiri non licet, If I should not presently make an end of my Letter, I should kill you with Latin; for I find myself in an humour that way; and in this desert where I live: I have no commerce, but wi●h such as speak all Latin, I would persuade you to revive them in our language; by an imitation which you are able to do, not much unlike those great examples; I mean of Cicero, of Sallust, and of Livy; not of Cassiodore, or Ennodius Ticinensis, or Sidonius Apollinaris. They that love this impurity of stile, are in a sicker state than they that love to eat Coals and ashes. Fat be it from us, to have such disordered appetites, and let us never be so foolish, to prefer the corruption and decay of things before their prime, and their maturity, I am At Balzac 4. of February 1633. Sir, Your, etc. Another to him. LETTER XLIII. SIR, HE that delivers you this Letter, knows as much of my news as I myself, and will make you ample relation of all that hath passed at—: He hath a business in the Parliament, which is of no great difficulty; and which may be sped without any great eloquence: yet I address it to you, but upon condition, that you shall not employ your whole force about it; but that your labouring for him may be a refreshing to you, from some other labour. I hear with a great deal of pleasure, of the progress of your reputation, and of the effects of my presages. The acclamations you cause in the Palace, are sounding in all places; and we are not so out of the World, but that the Echo of them comes to us. But Sir, I content not myself with clapping of hands, and praising your well-speaking, as others do; I desire to have some particular ground, for which to give your thanks, and am willing to be in your debt, for compliment and reverence; this shall be, when you have sped my friend's suit: and which shall be a cause, if you please, that I will now at the end of my Letter, add a superlative; and say I am; Sir, Your most humble, most faithful, etc. At Balzac 2. of Nou. 1631. Another to him. LETTER XLIV. SIR, I Make no secret of our friendship, it is too honest to be hidden; and I am so proud of it, that I think myself of no worth but by it. Mounsieur Jamyn, acknowledgeth my good Fortune herein, and is himself in passion to get your acquaintance, to which he persuades himself I should not be his worst introductor; and that by my means he might be admitted to your Closet. I will make myself believe that he shall not be deceived in this opinion; and that for my sake you will add to your accustomed courtesies a little extraordinary. They who saw Pericles, how he thundered and lightened in the public Assemblies, were desirous to hear him in a quieter estate; to know whether his calm were as sweet and pleasing as his Tempest. This man hath the like desire; and though my recommendation were as indifferent to you, as it is dear; yet so honest a curiosity would deserve to be respected. He is the Son of one of my best friends, and though perhaps you know it not, you are the example that Fathers propose for imitation to their Children; and by whose name they excite to virtue all their youth. I need not say more to you of this; only be mindful of our resolute and undaunted Maxims; and in this age of malice, do not scorn the praise I give you for your goodness. I kiss the hands of all your eloquent family, and I am Sir, Your, etc. At Paris 16. of Febr. 1634. To Mounsieur de Caupeau ville Abbot of Victory. LETTER XLV. Sir, THe time which my malady permits me, I bestow upon you, and make use of the respite of my fits, to tell you, I have received your last Letters, and the new assurances of your friendship: which is so much the dearer unto me, because I know you use them with discretion; and that there be not many things you greatly affect. This makes for my glory, that I can please so dainty a taste; and that I can get good from one that is so covetous. It is no small matter to draw a wise man out of himself; and to make Philosophy compassionate of others evils. Although the place, to which she hath raised you cannot be more eminent, nor more sure; yet my disgraces may be cause that her prospect is not so fair, or pleasant: and how settled soever the peace of your mind be, yet the Object of a persecuted friend, may perhaps offend your eyes. Our Mounsieur de Berville, I assure myself, dislikes not this kind of wisdom: he likes to have that husbanded and dressed, which Zeno would have to be rooted out; he knows that magnanimity hath its residence between effeminateness and cruelty; and that the sweet and humane virtues, have place between the Fierce and the Heroic. Poet's sometimes make the Demy Gods to weep; and if an old woman's death were cause enough to make Aeneas shed tears; the oppression of one innocent, cannot be unworthy of your sighs. Yet I require from you, none of these sad offices: your only countenance is enough to give me comfort. I do not live, but in the hope I have to see it, and to get you to swear once again in presence of the fair Agnes, and the rest of your Chamber Divinities, that you love me still. After that, if you will have us make a voyage in your Abbey, I shall easily condescend: Provided Sir, that you promise me safety amongst your Monks: and that they be none of those who profess exquisite words: and only talk of Analysis and Caco-zeal. If you have any that be of this humour, you are an unfortunate Abbot; and you may make account to be never without suits. First, they will ask you a double allowance: next they will question your Revenue; and if you chance by ill hap to make a Book, you are sure to be presently cited before the Inquisition; or at least before the Sorbon. God keep you Sir from such Friars, and send you such as I am, who eat but once a day; and who will not open my mouth, unless it be to praise your good words, and to tell you sometimes, out of the abundance of my heart, that I am Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 26. of Decemb. 1631. To— LETTER XLVI. SIR, I Am able to live no longer, if you be resolved to love me no longer; and think not that the good you promise me, can countervail the loss of that you take from me. Keep your estimation and your bounty, for those that have nothing in them but Vanity and Avarice: I am endowed from Heaven with better and more noble passions; I like better to continue in my poverty, than in your disgrace; and will none of this cold speculative estimation, which is but a mere device of reason; and a part of the Law of Nations, if you give it me single, and nothing else with it. I must tell you, I think myself worthy of something more; and that the Letter I write to you, was worthy of a sweeter answer than you sent me. If therein I said any thing that gave you distaste, I call that God to witness, by whom you swear; I than wandered far from my intention. I meant to contain my complaints within so just bounds; that you should not find the least cause to take offence. But I see I have been an ill interpreter of myself, and my rudeness hath done wrong to my innocency: yet any man but yourself, would I doubt not have born with a friend in passion, and not so unkindly have returned choler for sorrow. As for my pettish humour, it is quickly over, and there is not a shorter violence, than that of my spirit: whereas you have taken five whole weeks to digest your indignation, and in the end come to tell me, you would do me any good you can, upon condition to love me no longer. I vow unto you, it is a glorious act to do good to all the World, and to make even ungrateful men beholding. But Sir, if you think me one, to whom you may give that name; you do me exceedingly much more wrong, than it is in your power to do me right: Neque decorum sapienti, unde amico infamiam parat, inde sibi gloriam quaerere. I am wounded at the very heart, with this you have written; but since you will not suffer me to complain; I must be fain to suffer and say nothing; only I will content myself, to make a Declaration contrary to yours; and tell you, I will never make you beholding to me, because I am not happy enough to be able to do it; but yet I will love you always, and will always perfectly be Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 1. of March 1633. To Mounsieur Trovillier, Physician of the Pope's House. LETTER XLVII. SIR, HAving always made especial reckoning of your friendship; it is a great satisfaction to me, that I receive assurance of it, by your Letter. I doubt not of your compassionating my disgraces; and that the persecution raised against me, hath touched you at least with some sense of grief; for even mere strangers to me, did me these good Offices; and though the justice of my cause had not in itself been worthy of respect; yet the violence of my adversaries was enough to procure me favour and protectors. There is no man of any generous spirit, that found not fault with the wits of your Philarchus: nor a man of any wisdom that thought him not a Sophister. Yet I cannot blame you for loving him: seeing I know well, you do it not to prejudice me, and that your affection corrupts not your judgement. You are too intelligent, to be deceived with petty subtleties; and too strong, to be broken with engines of Glass; but in truth, being as you are, a necessary friend, to a number of persons of different qualities; it cannot be, but you must needs have friends of all prices, and of all me it, and that the unjust as well as the innocent are beholding to you. You shall hear by Mounsieur—, when he comes to Rome, the little credit I have with the man you spoke to me of, to whom I present my service, but only once a year; and that I do too, lest I should forget my name, and mistake my person. If in any other matter, which is absolutely in my own power; you will do me the honour to employ me; you shall see my course is not to use excuses and colours, but that I truly am Sir, Your, etc. At Paris 4. of April 1631. To Mounsieur Gerard, Secretary to my Lord the Duke d'Espernon. LETTER XLVIII. SIR, YOu cannot complain, nor be in misery by yourself alone: I partake of all your good and evil, and feel so lively a reflection of them, that there needs but one blow to make two wounds. And thus I am wounded by the news you write, and though your grief he not altogether just, yet it is sufficient to make me partake with you, that it is yours. We weep for one not only whom we knew not, but whom we know to be happy: one that in six months staying in the World hath gained that, which St. Anthony was afraid to lose after three score years penance in the wilderness. I wish I could have had the like favour; and have died at the time, when I was innocent: being myself, neither valiant nor ambitious, I account those wars the best that are the shortest; and that, though in Paradise there be divers degrees; and divers mansions; yet there is not any that is not excellent good. Conserve only your goodly maker of Saints, and you shall find some of all sorts; I mean of the one, and the other Sex: Religious and Seculars, Gascoignes and French. You know well, I have appointed you here a Chamber; and that you are my debtor of a visit, now a whole year, if you be a man of your word; but I fear me you are not, and that as your custom is, you will content yourself with praising my quiet course of life; yet I would have you to flatter at least my spirit, though it be, but with some light hope of so perfect a contentment: promise me you will come, and make me happy; though you break your promise, I shall enjoy at least, so much of good; and in doing so, you shall amuse me, though you do not satisfy me. I send you all I have of that admirable Incognito; of whom there is so much talk, and who hath made himself famous now these three years, under the name of Petrus Aurelius: I cannot for my life find who he is. Mounsieur de Filsac, told me lately at Paris, that of him that brought the leaves to Printing, he could not possibly learn any more than this, that he was a man, who desires to serve God invisibly. And in truth, if you knew in what sort he carries his secrecy; and with what care and cunning he hides himself; you would confess he takes more pains to shun reputation, than ambitious men take in running after it. For from being a Plagiary, to rob others of their glory, who refuseth that which is his own, and suffers a Phantasm, to receive those acclamations and praises which belong to himself. This is no man of the common mould; even in the judgement of his adversaries; and his writings savour not the compositions of this age. They are animated with the spirit and vigour of the former times; and represent us a Church we never saw. Yet it seems in some passages, he hath less of Saint Augustine's sweetness than of Saint Hieroms choler; and that he is willinger to do that, which justice only permits him, than that which charity counsels him. I could wish he had showed a little more respect to the grey hairs, and rare merit of Father Sirmond; or rather that he would have dulled the edge of his Arms, and dealt with him in a gentler war. But there is no means to bridle a provoked valour, nor to guide a great force, though with a great moderation. All Saints are not of one temper; it is enough for Religion to cut off vices; and to purify the passions. Our moral Divinity acknowledgeth some innocent cholers; and it is the beauty of Christ's flock, that there be Lions amongst the sheep, and that as well the sublimest and strongest spirits as the basest and sweetest submit and prostrate themselves to the greatness of Christianity. If I had learned nothing in his book but only to know what respect men owe to a Character reverenced of the Angels, I had not lost my time in reading him. If Bishops be Princes, and if their Dignity be equal or Superior to Kings, shall we make any difficulty, to call a Prelate, My Lord; and esteem him less than a Grand of Spain, or than an Earl of England? You will tell me more of this at your next meeting; and I doubt not, setting aside the interest of— send it me back when you have read it; and forget not the Chapters of honest Bernia. I am more than I am able to express, At Balzac 15. of October 1634. Sir, Your, etc. To my Lord the Bishop of Nants. LETTER XLIX. SIR, I Am now grown shameless, and make no longer any conscience to be troublesome to you. But you may thank your own goodness for it: which hath from the very first been so ready to me, and freely makes me offer of that, for which it ought to make be a suitor. I send you now four leaves for Ruel and if you please to let three of your own lines bear them company, I doubt not but they will have a happy arrival, and that the skiff will procure passage for the great vessel. But because Fortune herself, hath done one half of my discourse, and that I have little commerce with any but Latines born, I humbly entreat you my Lord, to be so good, when I am fallen to help me to rise, and not suffer me to go astray, in a Country, where you are Prince. I know you love your own elections, with more than natural tenderness, and that you respect me; as none of the least of your Creatures. This is a cause, why to keep me in your favour, and to engage you in my interests, I will not tell you to your face, that you are the chrysostom of our Church, that you are privy to the most secret intentions of Saint Paul, That there is neither Jew nor Gentile, that hearing you speak of the greatness and Dignity of Christianity, doth willinlgy submit himself to follow Christ, I will only say, it hath been your will to be my Father, and that I am My Lord, Your, etc. At Balzac 8. of Jan. 1630. Another to him. LETTER L. SIR, YOu have a right to all occasions of doing good. I see not therefore, how I can forbear to offer you one; and to the end, you may always be meriting of thanks, why I should not always be craving new courtesies. The bearer of this Letter is my near Kinsman, yet our friendship is nearer, than our alliance, and the knot which Nature made, virtue hath tied. I humbly entreat your Lordship, to let him see you slight not things, whereof I make such reckoning, and to do that for my sake, which you would much willinger do for his own sake, if he were known unto you. He is a man of metal and spirit; and hath served the King in this Province, having also had the honour to be in person before him in very famous actions. At this time, he is troubled against all right and reason, and they that have drawn him from the exercise of his charge, to make him walk to Paris, have nothing to say, but that they do it of purpose to vex him. And therefore their manner of fight with him, is by flights and retreats, and they cast so many bones of difficulty, between his Judges and him, that it is impossible they should ever come to any issue. They are not able to hinder his justification at last; but they are able to delay, and keep him off a long time. You Sir, may save him this long journey, and may break this Project that Calumny sets on; if you please but to facilitate the overture, he will propose unto you, obtaining for him of— only one quarter of an hours audience, I assure myself, he will not be loath to hear him, being able to inform him of the state of things in these parts; and which he will do faithfully, having thereof a special knowledge. You shall therefore my Lord, infinitely oblige him, to take him into your protection, and you may be pleased to remember, that it is your dear Son, that makes this request unto you, one whom in the ecstasy of your Fatherly affection, you have sometimes called your glory; and the ornament of this age, who yet accounts no quality he hath so glorious, as that which he will never part with, whilst he lives; to be My Lord, Your, etc. From Balzac 3. of April 1631. FINIS. A SUPPLY TO THE SECOND PART; OR, THE THIRD PART of the Letters of Mounsieur De BALZAC. Written by him in French, and Translated into English Bianca Sr. R. B. LONDON, Printed by J. G. for Francis Eglesfield, at the Marigold in St. Paul's Churchyard, 1654. To my LORD, the Cardinal De la Valet. LETTER I. SIR, being not able to bring you this untoward Present myself, I humbly entreat you to execuse me that I send it. Wherein I bind you not to a second perusal, and to read that again, which perhaps you have read already with distaste. It is true Sir, that something is altered in the Copy, and well near one half added to the Original; but the spite is, that base Wares get no value by store, and the water that comes from the same Spring, can never be much differing: but if in any of the passages, I have not altogether come off ill, and that I have had some tolerable conceits, I acknowledge Sir, that I have had it all from the good education I had with you; and that it is the fruit of those Instructions, which you have done me the honour to impart unto me. For, no man ever had conceits more pure, more pregnant, than yourself; no man ever saw things more clearly than you do; you can tell precisely in what degree of good and evil any thing stands; and to find out the truth, there needs no more, but to follow your Opinion. But to speak truly, I fear this quality in you, no less than I esteem it; you have too much knowledge in you for a Discourse that requires simplicity in the Reader. Neither am I so unadvised, to expose it to the severity of your judgement, I submit it rather to the protection of your goodness, and hope you will not lay open those faults, which none but yourself shall see: Humbly entreating you to protect a spirit of your own making; and not so much to consider my manner of expressing, as the affection with which I am Sir, Yours, etc. To the same as before. LETTER II. SIR, I am negligent, for fear of being troublesome, and lest I should be Importunately complemental, I forbear to show myself officiously dutiful. But my fault growing from discretion, I hope you will not take it ill, that I have a care not to trouble you, and that you will pardon the intermission of my Letters, which hath no other end, but the solacing your Eyes. I seek no colours of Art, to paint out the affection I owe to your service; This were to corrupt the natural purity. Truth is simple and shamefast, and when she cannot show herself by real effects, she will scorn to do it by verbal expressions. It is not in my tongue to express her otherwise, than in such terms as are the engagements of a lie; and when I shall have made you most sincere protestations of inviolable fidelity, there will come a cozening companion that will outvie me, and endear himself beyond all my oaths. I could wish there were some mark to distinguish protestations that are true, from those that are feigned; for if there were, I should have great advantage over many Courtiers, more officious and more hot in offering their service, than I am, and you should acknowledge that the eminency of your virtue, not to speak of the eminency of your dignity, is of no man more religiously reverenced, than of myself, who am, and ever will be Sir, Your, etc. To Monsieur Godea. LETTER III. SIR, Disguising will not serve your turn, you are a remarkable man, and whether it be that you call the dissembling of Art, Negligence, or that you cannot put off those ornaments, which are naurall in you; I let you know that the excellency of your stile, extends even to your familiar speech, and that you are able to sweeten it without saucing it. A man may see that come springing and flowing from you, which in others is brought a far off, and that with engines; you gather that which others pull off, and though you write nothing loosely, yet you write nothing with straining: yet I must tell you, they are not the periods of your sentences, nor the pawses that win me so much unto you; I am too gross for such slender and fine threads; if you had nothing but rich conceits and choice words, this were but the virtue of a Sophister, and I should place you in the number of things that may please, but not of things that one ought to love; I make more reckoning of the honesty of a dumb man, than of the eloquence of a varlet: I look after the good of society, and the comfort of life, and not after the delight of theatres, and the amusement of company: Let us make then a serious profession of our duties, and let us give good examples to an evil age; let us make the world see, that the knowledge we have of virtue, is not merely speculative; and let us justify our Books and our Studies, that now are charged with the vices and imperfections of their Teachers. Philosophy is not made to be played withal, but to be made use of, and we must count it an Armour, and not a painted Coat. They are men of the worst making, that now a days make the worst doing; sots take upon them to be subtle, and we have no more any tame Beasts amongst us, they are all savage and wild. For myself, who have seen wickedness in its Triumph, and who have sometime lived in the Country of subtlety and craft; I assure you, I have brought nothing from thence, but loathing and before ever I tasted it, was cloyed: I am exceeding glad to find you of the same diet, and doubt not of the Doctrine I Preach, seeing I read the same in your own Letter; Believe it Sir, there is none more wholesome, none more worthy of our Creation. Which I am resolved to maintain, even to Death, and will no more leave it, than the resolution I have made, to be without ceasing; Sir, Your, etc. To Monsieur Godeau again. LETTER IU. SIR, I have known a good while, that you are no longer a Druyde, and that you lately made your entry into Paris: I doubt not but with magnificence enough, and not without bestowing some public largesse. I never knew you go a foraging, that you returned not home laden with booty; and your Voyages have always enriched your followers. I pretend myself to have a feeling of this, and though far removed from the place where you act them, yet I do not mean, that my absence should cause me to lose my share in the distribution of your good deeds. Cease not Sir, I entreat you, to bind me unto you, and to deserve well of our language. Fill our Closets with the fruits of your brain, and since you can do it, make us to gather more sheaves of Corn, than the best workmen hitherto have left us ears. My devotion stands waiting continually for your Christian works, and I entreat you, they may be done in such a volume, that we may carry them handsomely with us to Church. That which I have seen of them, doth so exceedingly please me, that I would be a Poet for nothing else but with some indifferent grace to praise them, and to say, Verses bless him that makes such blessed Verses. If I did not love you well, I should envy you the conversation of Monsieur Chaplain, of which in a fortnight I received not one small spark by the ordinary Post. Thus I do but taft of that whereof you make full meals; yet remember, I have as good right in him as yourself, and though I trust you with the keeping him, yet I do not quit my part in him; To him and you both, I am most affectionately. Your, etc. To Monsieur Conrat. LETTER. V. SIR, had undertaken to have answered to every point of your eloquent Letter, but when I had spent a whole month about it, I could not satisfy myself with my undertaking. That which I had written, was not worthy, me thought, that I should Father it; and I began to think I should do you a great courtesy, to save you the reading of an ill Oration. But seeing of evils, the least are the best, you shall have cause to be pleased with this compliment, which will cost you no more but one look to look over, and never put you to the labour of turning over the leaf. I have this only to say at this time, that the report, which was spread of my death, hath not killed me, and that in despite of rumour and mortal Presages, I intent to be happy by your means, and not to forgo the good fortune presented to me in your person: so I call your excellent friendship, with which no burden is heavy, no calamity dolorous. For I know I shall find in you that ancient generousness, whereof Monsieur de la Nove, and Monsieur de Ferres, made profession: I account when I discover secrets to you, I hide them; and shall have no jealousy of my honour when I have put it into your hands. In such sort Sir, that my soul should be a very hard temper, if it did not feel a kind of tickling in so present and great adventages, and if I should not most perfectly be, as you oblige me to be, Your, etc. To my Lord the Bishop of Nantes. LETTER VI. SIR, I was upon the point of sending my footman to you, when I saw your footman enter my Lodging, who brought me news exceeding joyful; and now I depend no longer upon Fortune, since another besides herself can make me happy; and am so indeed as much as I would wish, and should never know the value of your friendship, if I made it not the bounds of my ambition. To complain of forturne, and to be your favourite, are things that imply a mortal contradiction: it is an easy matter to comfort a pension ill paid, when a man is in possession of store of treasure, and having neither the gift of impudence, nor of hypocrisy, it is not for me to prosper in an age which esteem them most that are owners of these qualities. It is enough for me, that M. the Cardinal doth me the honour to wish me well, and condemns not your judgement of me; all other disgraces, from whence soever they come, I am prepared to bear, and take for a favour the contempt that is linked to the profession of virtue. But it is too much to say of me, that which Seneca said to Cato: Catonem saeculum suum parùm intellexit. These are transcendencies of Mr. de Nantes, and impostures of love. He stretcheth all objects to infinity, and all his comparisons are beyond proportion. The Sun and the Stars are common things with him, and he can find noting in Nature godly enough to serve for a similitude of that he loves. It is this deceitful passion hath made you believe, that I am of some great worth, and that my barren soil is fruitful in high conceits. But Sir, I count all this nothing, if this love of yours perswade you not to come and stay a while in it, and to be mindful of your word. I have put Monsieur— in hope hereof, and make myself sure since you have made me a solemn promise; knowing that Truth is resident upon the mouth of Bishops. Dixisti, venies, Grave & immutabile sanctis Pondus adest verbis, & vocem fata sequuntur. The Author of these Verses shall be your fourth suppliant: it is one that hath been of your old acquaintance, and was accounted the Virgil of his time. I make use of him upon this occasion, because perhaps you will make more reckoning of him than of me, who yet am more than any man in the World, Sir, Your, etc. Another to my Lord Bishop of Nantes. LETTER VII. SIR, I speak Latin but once a year, and yet as seldom as it is, it comes more upon hazard than out of knowledge, and holds less of learning than of rapture: vouchsafe therefore to take it in good part, that in my settled brains, I answer you in the vulgar Tongue, and tell you, that never Ears were more attentive, nor more prepared to hearing, than those of our family when I read your Letter before them: they were not satisfied to have only a literal interpretation, and to make me their Grammarian, but I must declaim upon it, and make a Paraphrase as large as a Commentary. If you will know the success, I can truly say, that all the company was well satisfied; but I may tell you all, that they were ever ravished with admiration of your bounty, specially my Niece, who in the greatest vanity, that sex is capable of, never durst imagine she should ever have the honour to be praised in Latin, and should serve for an Argument of commendation to the greatest Doctor of our age. She saith, this is a second obligation you bind her in, to make her a Roman after you have made her your daughter; and to give her so noble a Country, after giving her so worthy a Father. And yet to these two favours, I can add a third, which she forgot: methinks Sir, she fattens and grows up with these praises you give her; she is fairer by one half than she was before. And if from virtue there issue certain beams, which enlighten the Objects that are near it; and that beauty flows from goodness, as from the Spring, I need not then go far to seek from whence this varnish of her look, this amiableness of her countenance, is grown upon her: It is certainly your late benediction that hath painted her; and to speak it in the words of the Poet, Formosam Pater esse dedit, Lumenque Juventae Purpureum, & laetos oculis offlîrat honores. I have considered of the Letter whereof you pleased to send me a Copy, and in my judgement, you have all the reason in the World to rest satisfied with it. They could never have been more in favour of you, if you had indicted them yourself, and our friend himself had writ them: if you had been the King, and he the Secretary, if I be not deceived, this stile will bring a cooling upon the joy of— and make them see, they have at least mistaken one word for another, and that the absence of— hath not been a discharge of his authority, but only a breathing from the labours of his charge. I am wrestling still with— and preparing you an after-dinners Recreation, which I will bring myself to Bordeaux, if you stay there till the next month. In the mean time, since you desire new assurances of my fidelity, I swear unto you, with all the Religion of Oaths, and with all the liberty and sincerity of the golden age, that I am Sir, Your, etc. To Monsieur de la Nawe, Counsellor of the King, in his first Chamber of Inquests. LETTER VIII. SIR, my dear Cousin, your nobleness is not of these times, but you are generous after the old fashion. To call the pains I put you to, a favour, and to thank a man for persecuting you, this is a virtue which Orestes and Phylades perhaps knew, but is now no where to be found, but either in old fables, or in your Letter. The offers you make me, do notso much give me a possession, as confirm me in it, and assure me the durableness of a happiness, which wants nothing of being perfect, but being durable. Monsieur de— hath stretched his belief yet further; he hath told me of your coming into this Provience, and hath promised me at least some hours of those Grand days that bring you hither: if they were as long as those of Plato's year, they should not be too long for me, if I might be so happy to spend them in your company. I make account to husband the least minutes of it I can take bold of, and am about in such sort to deck up my Hermitage, that it may not be offensive to your eyes. I can present you but with gross pleasures and Country recreations; yet, you that are perfectly just, will not refuse to take a little contentment where you are perfectld loved, and prefer a lively passion, and a heart sincere, before false semblances and a dead maginificence. My compliments are short, and I am by profession a very bad Courtier, but my words carry truth in them, and I am with all my soul, Sir, my dear Cousin, Your, etc. At Balzac. June 1. 1634. To Monsieur de la Motte le Voyer. LETTER IX. SIR, I am going from Paris in haste, and carry with me the grief, that I cannot stay to tell you in how great account I hold the offer you make me of your friendship. It this be the price of so poor a merchandise, as that I sent you, never was man a greater gainer by traffiking than I: and you seem in this, not unlike those Indians, who thought to overreach the Spaniards, by giving them Gold for Glass. I have long since known your great worth, though you would not be known to have such worth in you; all the care you can take to hide the beauty of your life, cannot keep the lustre of it from dazzling mine eyes, and though you make your virtue a secret, yet I have pierced into it, and discovered it. And yet I must confess unto you my infirmity, I find it too sublime for me, and with my uttermost ability am not able to reach it; all I can do, is to respect it with reverence, and to follow you with my eyes and thoughts. The World cannot raise itself above the pitch of the present age, and be wise in equal rank with Aristides and Socrates; I am contented to be in a lower form of virtue, for I am a man, and they demi Gods, I neither aspire to be their equal, nor their rival, much less Sir, to be their judge or accuser. Anitus and Melitus would be much mistaken in me, if they should think I would join with them in their accusation, as though I thought all opinions to be bad, which are not like mine own, I had rather think, that it is I that lose the sight of Orafius Tubero sometimes, than think that he is strayed, or out of the way; and rather charge myself with weakness, than accuse him of rashness. Let him leave the middle Region of the air below him, and mount up above the highest; let him take upon him to judge of humane things, from Shepherds to Kings, from shrubs to stars, provided, that he be pleased to hold there, and bow his wings, and submit his reason to things divine. I have not time to tell you, how much I value him. Monsieur de— will at more leisure entertain you with discourse about it, I only will assure you, that what mask soever you put upon your face, I find you always exceeding amiable, and that I will ever be Sir, Your, etc. At Paris, 6. Septemb. 1631. To Madam de Villesavin. LETTER X. MAdam, seeing it is my ill fortune, that I cannot find you then I come to see you, I entreat you to let me speak to you by an interpreter, and that I may make this benefit of my being so far from Paris, to have a right of writing to you, when I could not have the power of speaking with you. Indeed, as long as you were taken up with entertaining your dear son, whom long absence had made, as it were new unto you, and as long as you were tasting the first joys which his return had brought with it; It had been a great indiscretion in a stranger, to intrude himself into your private feast, and trouble the liberty of your familiar conversation, but now that your ecstasies of joy are over-passed, and that a more calm estate makes you sociable to others abroad: Now Madam, you may vouchsafe to accept my compliment, and to hear me say, with my Country freedom, that you want much of that I wish you, if you want any thing of absolute felicity. I make no doubt but Monsieur Bourbillier your son, as he parted from hence a right honest man, so he is turned hither an understanding man; and that to the lights, which are given by Nature, he hath added those that are gotten by practice, and by conference. The air of Italy, which is so powerful in ripening of fruits, hath not been less favourable to the seeds of his spirit, and having been at the springhead of humane prudence, I assure myself, he hath drawn deep of it, and hath filled his mind with so many new and sublime knowledges; that even his Father (if it were not for the great love he bears him) might not unjustly grow jealous at it. This, Madam, is that happiness I speak to you of, and which I have always wished to you, and to which, there can nothing be added, but to see shortly so excellent an instrument set a work, and so able a man employed in great affairs. When this shall be, I shall then see the success of my ancient predictions, and of that I have long read in his very face; so that, you may well think, I shall take no distaste at your contentment, as well for the reputation of my skill in Physiognomy and Prognosticating, as for that I perfectly am Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac. 2. Octob. 1631. To Monsieur de Gomberville. LETTER XI. SIR, the mischance at the Tuilliries, hath disquieted me all night, and my unquietness would have continued still, if you had not ●●en the pains to calm it. The news you send me, gives me life; A ●●an cannot be innocent whom Madam de Maisonfort judgeth culpable, she is not one that will complain where there is no fault; and truly, if she had taken the mischance of her page in another fashion than she did, I would rather have abandoned reason than maintain it against her, and would not have trusted my own testimony, if she rejected it. You remember, that but hearing her Name, I fell down in a trance, and that the very sight of her livery, struck into me a religious horror, and a trembling respect, which is not borne, but to things Divine. And in this rank, I place so rare a beauty as hers is; and though I be no man of the World, yet I am not so very a stranger to the occurrents of the World, but that I very well know, she is universally adored; I must not always pass for an Hermit; this I am sure, she carries with her the desires and vows of all the Court, and she leads in triumph those Gallants, who have themselves triumphed over our enemies: yet I know withal, they depend more upon her by their own passion, than by her endeavours, and follow without being drawn. These are Captives, whom she trusts upon their word, for their true imprisonment, and whom she suffers to be their own Keepers. In the course she holds of honesty, her favours are so moral, or so light, that either they content none but the wise, because they desire no more than what is given them; or none but the unwise, because they take that to be given them, which was never meant them; so there are some perhaps well satisfied, but it is by the force of their imagination, and no body hath cause to be proud of a Fortune, which no body possesseth. As her virtue is as clear as the fire that sparkles in her eyes, so her reputation is as much without blemish as her beauty; and of this, honest people give testimony by their words, and Detractors by their silence. She makes thorns that they cannot prick, and makes slander itself to learn good manners. And therefore Sir, I should be very unfortunate, it I had been cause of displeasing her, whom all the World endeavours to please; and it would be a shame to our Nation, that a Frenchman should bear himself unreverently towards her, to whom very Barbarians would bear a reverence. If this misfortune had befallen me, it is not the saving my Page's life, should make me stand in the defence; and I would never desire to augment my train, but to the end I might have the more sacrifices to offer upon the Altar of her choler. But she is too merciful to punish mean Delinquents, and too generous, to give petty Examples: she reserves her justice for the Great ones, and the Proud; for those who having more tender senses, are better able to feel the weight of her anger; or else in truth her purpose is to show me a particular favour, by a public declaration, and to let the World see, she makes a reckoning of that of which the World makes none. And knowing what the gratefulness of good Letters is, she is desirous to have them in her debt▪ she pays our studies beforehand, for the fruit she expects from them, and obligeth the Art which can praise the Obligation: she is made believe, that I have some skill in this Art, and I perceive I am not in so little respect with her as I thought; and of this I am assured, by the pains it cost you, to make her take her Page again that was hurt; and by the civil language she desired you to deliver from her. It exceeded indeed all bounds of moderation, and it seems she would not only for my sake protect an innocent, but would be ready, if need were, to reward a delinquent. For acknowledgement of which generous goodness, all my own spirit, and all my friends put together, can never be too much. It is particularly yourself to whom I must have recourse in this occasion; you Sir, who set the Crown upon Beauty's head, who have the power to make Queens at your pleasure; and to whom Olympia and Yzatide are beholding for their Empire: having bestowed so great glory upon persons that never were; and set all France a running after Phantasms, you may well take upon you to defend the reputation of a sensible and living virtue, and choose a subject that may be thankful to you for your choice; and this is a matter yond cannot deny, of which we will talk more, and conclude it after dinner in presence of the Lady that is interessed in it, into whose presence, I must entreat you, to be my Usher to bring me, that so I may ever more and more be, Sir, Your most humble and most obliged servant, etc. At Paris, 1. June. 1631. To Monsieur de Villiers Hottoman. LETTER XII. SIR, being equally tender of the good will you bear me, and of the account you make of me, I cannot choose but rest well satisfied with your remembering me, and with the judgement you deliver of my writings; you are not a man that will bear● false witness, and you have too much honesty to deceive the World, but withal, you have too much understanding to be deceived yourself, and one may well rely upon a wisdom that is confirmed by time and practice. This is that which makes me to make such reckoning of your approbation, and such account of your counsel, that I shall be loath to be defective in the least tittle of contenting you. It it far from me, to maintain a point, that you oppose: I give it over at the first blow, and yield at the first summons: yet I could never have thought, that of a jest, there should have been made a fault, or that a poor word, spoken without design or aiming at any, should have been the cause of so great complaints. You know, that in a certain modern School, there is a difference made, Fra la virtu faemi●ile; & la Donnesca; and it is held, that to make love, it more the vice of a woman, than of a Princess; and less to be blamed in the person of Semiramis or Cleopatra, than in the person of Lucretia or Virginia: I carry not my opinions so far, and I mean to be no Author of so extravagant a Morality. It may suffice, that without descending from the Thesis to the Hypothesis, I protest unto you, I should be very sorry, I had trenched upon the reputation of that great Queen, or intended to corrupt the memory of so excellent an odour, as she hath left behind her; of whose great worthiness, I have in other places said so much, that I should but shame myself to say any otherwise; and indeed, the terms I used were free, and not injurious, and such, as if they wound a little, they tickle and delight much more: I neither spoke disgracefully of the dignity of her royal birth, nor gave her any odious or uncivil Names, as some others have done, whom I condemn extremely for it; yet Sir, I will yield to confess, that I have said too much, and though my saying too much should have attractives to charm me, and were as dear to me as any part of myself, yet seeing it is distasteful to you, I will for your sake cut it clean off, and never look for further reasons to induce me to it. I can deny nothing to my friends, and therefore make no doubt of the power you have over me, and of my testifying, upon this occasion, without opening my Eyes, that I am Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 4. Jan. 1632. To Monsieur de Borstell. LETTER XIII. SIS, I am so far from seeking to justify my negligence, that I will not go about so much as to excuse it: nothing but my being dead, can be a valuable reason why I waited not upon you, to offer you my service; all other impediments would prove too light, to have kept me here: but such is your graciousness, that it is impossible to fall foul with you; such your indulgence, that you remit a fault before I can confess it: you give me no leisure to ask you, at the very first, you oblige me to thank you, and I have received my pardon here at home, which I never looked to obtain, but at Oradeur, and that with long soliciting. I have not yet seen the AmbassatriΣ, who hath done me the favour to bring it to me, and I cannot imagine, she should be surprised with that despair, as your Letter represents her in. Alciones' affliction, in respect of hers, would be but mean, and those women whose tears Antiquity hath hollowed, did but hate their Husbands, in comparison of her: I know not whether you do her a pleasure, to raise her sorrow to so high, a pitch; for after this you speak of, she shall never be allowed to lift up her Eyes, and you give her a reputation whereof she is not worthy, if she leave but one hair upon her Head. I much distaste your exaggerations, and cannot think she will bear you out in the report you make of her miserable estate: if it were such, as you make it, it would be capable of no remedy: Epictetus and Seneca, would be too mean Physicians, to take her in hand; yet I mean not to contradict you: I think when death her Husband seized, Angelica with her Fates displeased, Looked pale i'th' face as Alabaster: Charging the guiltless Stars with blame In all th'hard Language Rage could frame, When it is grown the Reason's Master. Yet the glory of her spirit mak●s me believe withal, that this sad humour was but a Fit, and continued not long, and that the same day upon the tempest there followed a calm. A man shall meet with some Women of such spirits, that neither time nor Philosophy can work upon them; and some others again, that prevent the work of time and Philosophy, by their own natural constitution. As there is some flesh so hard to heal, that no Balm can cure the prick but of a pin; so again, there are some bodies so well composed, that their wounds are healed with plain Spring-water, and they close and grow together of themselves. I assure myself, our fair Lady is of this perfect temper, and that she would be no example, to make Widows condemned for curling their locks, or for wearing their mourning gowns edged with green. You should allege unto her the Princess Leonina, so highly esteemed of the Court of Spain, and the prime ornament of this last age. Knowing that her Husband's 'querry was come, to relate unto her the particular of his death, and hearing that his Secretary was to come the morrow after, she sent the 'querry word, to forbear coming to see her, till the Secretary were come, that so she might not be obliged to shed tears twice. There is no virtue now adays so common as constancy, nor any thing so superfluous, as the custom of comforting. All the Steel of Biscay, and all the poison of Thessalic, might well enough be trusted in the hands of the mourners of our time, without doing any hurt. I scarce know a man that would not be glad to out live, not only his friends and parents, but even the age he lives in, and his very Country, and rather than die, would willingly stay in the World himself alone. Speak therefore no more of keeping Angelica here by force, who in my opinion is not of herself unwilling; and not having lost the King of Sweden, may therefore the more easily repair her loss. I would to God Sir, I could be no sadder than she is, and that I could forget a person, who is at this present the torment of my spirit; as he hath heretofore been the delight of my eyes▪ but melancholic men do not so easily let go the hold of their passions, and the good remedies you have sent to comfort me for his death, I approve them all, but apply none of them: yet I give you a thousand thanks, though six months after they were due; and though I say not often, yet I say it most truly, that you shall never take care of any man, that is more than myself, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 30. April. 1633. To Madam— LETTER XIIII. MAdam, seeing I could not come to see you at your departure, as I was bound to do, I do not think▪ I shall do you any wrong to send you a better companion than that I promised you; I mean the Book I now send you, whereof you have heard so much talk, and which you meant to have carried with you into Perigord, to be your comforter for the loss of Paris. It is in truth worthy of the good opinion you have of it, and of the impatience with which I am a witness, you have expected it. And if wagers have been laid upon Queen's great bellies, and assurance given they should be brought a-bed of a son, why should I wonder that you have given beforehand, your approbation of a thing that deserves the approbation of all the world? It will certainly bring you out of ta●● with the present I gave you, when you desired me to look you out some of my Compositions. In it you shall find that, that will shorten the longest days of this season; That, that will keep you from tediousness when you are alone; That, that will make you thank me for my absence. For to say true, all visits will be unseasonable to you, when you set yourself to the Recreation of so sweet a reading; and whosoever shall come to trouble you at such a time, must needs have from you some secret maledictions, what civilities soever you make show of, as your custom is. I would be loath to fall into this inconvenience, it is better I give my opinion afar off, and in a Letter, which you may entertain without any solemnity: since than you will have me believe, that my judgement is not altogether bad, nor my opinions wholly unsound; I profess unto you Madam, that setting aside the affection I bear to the Author of this work, I have observed in the work itself, a number of excellent things, which I could not choose but praise, even in an enemy. He is not so choleric I hope, but that he will pardon me if I say that he is one of the most pleasing liars that ever I saw. I complain not of his impostures, but when he ceaseth to deceive me, because I would gladly have them last always. His History hath quite removed my spirit out of its place, and hath touched to the quick all that I have sensible in me. I will not hide my weakness: I knew at first, that the painting I looked on, was all false, yet I could not hold from having as violent passions, as if it had been true, and as if I had seen it with mine eyes: sometimes sorrowful, some times glad; as it pleaseth Monsieur de Bois Robert to tell me tales of good or bad fortune. I find myself interessed in good earnest in all the affairs of his imaginary Kings; I am put in fear for the poor A●axandra, more than I can express, and as much I am humbled for the misfortunes of Lisimantus, and I have seen them both in such extremities, that I made solemn vows for their safety, when at the very height they were miraculously delivered. In conclusion Madam, though I have a heart hard enough, and eyes not very moist, yet I could not forbear to shed tears, in spite of myself; and I have been even ashamed to see, that they were but the dreams and fancies of another man, and not my own proper evils which put into me such true passions. This is a tyrannical power, which the sense usurpeth over the reason, and which makes us see, that the neighbourhood of the imagination is extremely contagious to the intellectual part, and that there is much more body than soul in this proud creature, which thinks itself borne to command all others. The Aethhiopic History hath oftentimes given me these Alarms, and I cannot yet read it without suffering myself to be deceived. As for other writings of this kind, it is true, I make some choice, and run not after all Spanish Romances, with equal passion. They are indeed for the most part, but Heliodorus in other clothes, or as— said, but children borne of Theagenes and Chariclea, and seem to resemble their Father and Mother so near, that there is not a hair's breadth of difference between them. But in this work Madam, I make you promise you shall see novelties, and shall find in it this sweet air of the wide world, and these dainties of the spirit, which are not common in our Provinces. I confess unto you, there is in some passages something that may seem too much painted, and perhaps too garish, and which will not bear examining by the rigour of Precepts; but than you must confess as well that Fables look chiefly after beauty, and care not though it be a little immodest, seeing this kind of writing is rather a loose Poesy, than a regular prose. As soon as I shall be able to ride, I will come and hear your Oracles hereupon, and tell you, as I use to do, that as yourself is one of the perfectest things I ever saw, so I am more than any other, Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac, 10. August, 1629. To Monsieur Hobier, Precedent of the Treasures in the Generality of Bourges: LETTER XV. SIR, though you should say, I present you always with flowers that prick you, and offer you services that may seem unseasonable, yet I cannot forbear the solicitations of my Letters, nor the trading with you by this way of Compliments. The Book which I have desired Monsieur de— to deliver to you, shall pass if you please, but for a petition to obtain an audience; and I am contented that my discourses Moral and Politic, shall contribute nothing to the mending of my own fortune, so they may contribute something to the recommending of my Sister's business: if it become me to speak of a person that is so near unto me, and if you think me worthy to be credited in the testimony I shall give of her, I am able Sir, to say thus much, that she is a woman, either lifted up by her own strength above the passions of her sex, or that Nature hath exempted her from them, by a peculiar privilege: so far, as that amongst us, she stands for an example, and leads a life that is the edification of all our Province. But though she make profession of severe virtues, yet she aspires to no glory by sullen humours; she hath nothing muddy, nor clownish in her, but tempers her austerity with so much exterior sweetness, that without endeavouring to please any, she seems to be pleasing to all the world. I therefore solicit you for her, in behalf of all the world, and crave your favour with violence; for to crave it with discretion, would make but a weak show of the desire I have to obtain it. In matters that concern myself only, I am held back by a certain natural timourousnesse, which makes me oftentimes to be wanting to myself; but in that which concerns her, I observe not so much as honest respects, but am bold, even to temereity; and if therein I should not do too much, I should never think I did enough: and yet this is a fault, which leaves no remorse behind it; the merit of the subject justifies the importunity of the suppliant; and when you shall know her better you will find no great excess in that I write, and will bless my persecution. You have already obliged us exceedingly, and have put the business in an infallible way of prospering; it only remains Sir that you crown your courtesy, and draw a concluding word from the parties, whom I shall call Publicans, and couple them with Heathens, if they be not converted and led with that you shall say unto them: but I cannot doubt of the effect of your persuasions, who know, that both by your tongue, and by your pen, you practise out Art, with assured success. Let us now see the proof of it, in this occasion, and I promise you, that never favour was more commended, nor shall be more recommended, than yours shall be. The consideration of a good deed being joined to that of virtue, you shall possess me by a double title, and I shall not be less of due, than I am by choice, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 25. Decemb. 1631. To Mounsieur de Coupeauville, Abbot of the victory. LETTER XVI. SIR, seeing the Relations that come from Paris tell us no News at all of you, I entreat you to be your own Historian, and not suffer me to be punctually informed of a thousand things, that are indifferent to me, and remain altogether ignorant of the state of your health, which is so infinitely dear unto me. It is very likely, you have all the care that may be of it, as of a thing necessary for exercising the functions of a virtuous life; and I doubt not but you contain yourself always in that excellent means, which is between disorder and mortification. You are no longer hungry after the Glory of Germany, and if the Artillery of the Vastoline carry not so far as the Realie, I azure myself, it can do you no hurt: my mind therefore is at quiet in that point, and I am not afraid to lose you, as I have lost some other valiant friends; and you do well to leave the War to others, and stay yourself upon the Victory. I ask your pardon for this untoward aequivocal word, I have rather written it than thought it, and and it is a misfortune which surpriseth me but very seldom: I only say Sir, that it is better to be Abbot a dozen miles from Paris, than to be General of an Army in Thuringia or Westphaelia; and that a Cross of so many pounds a year, is much more worth than either Hercules club, or Roland's sword, and that he that gave you so honest and so rich an idleness, hath not ill deserved of your Philosophy, to which I recommend me with all my heart, and wish unto it the continuance of this happy repose; but upon condition, that it make you not distaste our friendship, and suffer you to place one of the most noble virtues of the mind in the number of her maladies and infirmities. Be not a Doctor so far as that, and remember, you are my debtor for some affection, if you forget nor, that I am Sir Your, etc. At Balzac, 25. Decemb. 1632. To Monsieur de Forgues, Commander of a Company in Holland LETTER XVII. SIR, my dear Cousin, I think myself a rich man with the goods you have given me: another that should have received the same present, should not owe you for it the same obligation, but the opinion of things, is the measure of their value, and because I have neither mind nor eyes that be covetous, I account the Emeralds of your Peacock, of as great a price as those of Lapidaries: at least, whereas they are without life and motion, these live and move in my base Court; I know my riches, and am known by them, and after I have read myself stark blind, I go and refresh my wearied sight in that admirable verdure, which is to me both a recreation and remedy. Base objects not only offend my imagination, but even provoke my choler; and I should never receive a Monkey from the best of my friends but only to kill it: but I vow unto you, that beauty pleaseth me wheresoever I meet it; yet because it is a dangerous thing in women's faces, I like better to behold it in the feathers of birds, and in the enamelling of flowers. Pleasure's so chaste, are compatible with Lent, and offend not God: and therefore upon these one hour in a day, I take pleasure to stand gazing and amuse myself: I thank you for it with all my heart, and passionately am▪ Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 7. March. 1634. To Madam d'Anguitur. LETTER XVIII. MAdam, It shall never be laid to my charge, that you speak of me with honour, and that I understand it without feeling. A good opinion is obligatory, from whence so ere it come, but infinitely more, when it comes from an exquisite judgement, as yours is; and I doubt not, but Socrates was more touched and tickled with that one word the Oracle spoke of him, than with all the praises the world had given him. The favourable discourses you have held of me, ought not to be held of me in less account than words indeed inspired, & if I should place them in the number of humane testimonies, I should show myself ignorant, that it is Heaven which hath been your Instructor; and that from thence you have received those clear lights, whereof the Stars are but shadows. I do not amplify any thing at adventure, nor suffer myself to be swayed with flattery, but in this point of Illumination, Madam, I always except matters of Faith, lest your Ministers should take advantage of my words. We must needs, I say, hold for certain, that either you have been instructed by an extraordinary way, or confess that you owe it all to yourself, and that coming to know the truth, without study and discipline, your virtue is a mere work of your own making. It is no small matter for one that lives in parts remote from the Court, to be but tolerably reasonable, and able to maintain his common sense against so many opposites and oppositions, as he shall meet with; but in those remote parts, where you have no choice of Examples, there to discover the Idea, from whence Examples are taken, to breath in an infected Air, and full of Errors; and yet retain still sound opinions; to be continually opposed with extravagant questions, and yet always return discreet answers; To take pity of silly Buffoons, when others admire them; to make a difference between jests picked up here and there, and those that come from the Spring itself; between wise discourses, and harmonious fooleries: between a sufficiency that is solid, and that which is only painted; to do these things Madam, aught to be called even half a miracle: and no less a rarity in these days than in former times, it was to see a white Aethiopian, or a Scythian Philosopher. Our Country may justly be proud of so admirable a birth; It is the great work of her famous fecundity, and we may boldly say, there is that found in Saintoigne, which is wanting in the Circle; that which hinders the Court from being complete, and that which is necessary for the perfecting of Paris itself. But as well here as there Madam, if ever you will hear the vows of those who wish your happiness, I would think it fit, you should not make yourself a spectacle for the vulgar, nor suffer your entertainment to be a recreation for idle persons. It deserves not to be approached unto without preparation; and that they should examine themselves well, who present themselves before it. All spirits at all times are not capable of so worthy a communication, and therefore, let men say what they will, I account the reservations you make of yourself, to be very just, and it cannot be thought strange, that being as you are of infinite value, you take some time to possess yourself alone, and not to lose your right of reigning; which admits, as no division, so no Company. To use it otherwise Madam, would not be a civiltie, or a courtesy, but indeed an ill husbanding of your spirit, and a wasteful profusion of those singular graces, of which, though it be not fit you should deprive them that honour you, yet it is fit you should give them out by tale, and distribute them by measure. It is much better, to have less general designs, and to propose to ones self, a more limited reputation, than to abandon one's spirit to every one that will be talking, and to expose it to the curiosity of the people, who leave always a certain taint of impurity upon all things they look upon: by such vicious sufferance, we find dirt and mire carried into Lady's Closets: if there come a busy fellow into the Country, presently honest women are besieged, there is thronging to tell them tales in their ears; and all the world thinks, they have right to torment them: and thus, saving the reverence of their good report, though they be chaste, yet they be public; and though they can spy the least fullying upon their ruffs, yet they willingly suffer a manifest soiling of their noblest part. You have done Madam, a great act, to have kept yourself free from the tyranny of custom, and to have so strongly fortified yourself against uncivil assailants; that, whilst the Louver is surprised, your house remains impregnable. I cannot but magnify the excellent order, with which you dispose the hours of your life; and I take a pleasure to think upon this Sanctuary of yours, by the only reverence of virtue made inviolable: in which, you use to retire yourself, either to enjoy more quietly your repose, or otherwise, to exercise yourself in the most pleasing action of the world, which is the consideration of yourself. If after this your happy solitude, you come sometimes and cast your eyes upon the book I sent you, you shall therein Madam, do me no great favour: the things you shall have thought, will wrong those you shall read; and so it shall not be a grace, but an affront I shall receive, I therefore humbly entreat you, there may be some reasonable intermission between two actions, so much differing: Go not straight from yourself to me, but let the relish of your own meditation be a little passed over, before you go to take recreation in my work. To value it to you, as a piece of great price, or otherwise, to vilify it, as a thing of no value, might justly be thought in me an equal vanity. They who praise themselves, desire consent, and seek after others approbation; they who blame themselves, seek after opposition, and desire they may be contradicted. This latter humility is no better than the others pride. But to the end, I may not seem to go to the same place, by a third way, and desire to be praised, at least with that indifferency I ascribe to you; I entreat you Madam, that you will not speak the least word, either of the merit of my labour, or in default of merit, of the fashion of language I have used in speaking to you: I mean not to put this Letter upon the score; to speak plainly, I entreat you to make me no answer to it, so far I am off, from expecting thanks for it. It is not, Madam, a present I make you, it is an homage I owe you; and I pretend not to oblige you at all, but only to acquit myself of the first act of veneration, which I conceive I owe you, as I am a reasonable creature, and desiring all my life to be, Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac 4. May. 1634. To Monsieur Balthasar, Counsellor of the King, and Treasurer General of Navarre. LETTER XIX. SIR, I never deliberate upon your opinion, nor ever examine any man's merit, when you have once told me what to believe. But yet, if I should allow myself the liberty to do otherwise, I could but still say, that I find Monsieur de— well worthy the account you hold him in, and myself well satisfied of him, upon his first acquaintance. By further conversation, I doubt not, but I should yet discover in him more excellent things, but it is no easy matter, ever to bring us together again: For, he is a Carthusian in his Garrison, and I an Hermit in the Desert; so as that which in our two lives makes us most like, is that which makes us most unlikely ever to meet: yet I sometimes hear news of him; and I can assure you, he is but too vigilant in looking to his Charge; he hath stood so many Rounds and Sentinels, that it is impossible, he should be without rheums, at least, till Midsummer. These are, to speak truly, works of supererogation; for I see no enemy this Province need to fear, unless perhaps, the Persian or Tartarian: the very Name of the King is generally fortification enough, over all his Kingdom; and as things now stand, Vangirod is a place impregnable; that if Demetrius came again into the world, he would lose his reputation before the meanest village of Beausse: but this is one of your politician subtleties, to make Angoulesme pass for a Frontier Town, and to give it estimation, that it may be envied. Doubt not, but I shall give you little thanks for this, seeing by this means you are clean gone from us, and I must be fain to make a journey of purpose into Languedoc, if I ever mean to enjoy the contentment of embracing you, and of assuring you, that I am▪ Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 1. March. 1633. To Monsieur de Serizay. LETTER XX. SIR, if you were but resident at Paris, I should hope sometimes to hear of your News, but now that you are bewitched there, it will be an ungrateful work for you to read mine. They are always such as must be pitied. In my way there are as many stones to dash against, as in yours there are flowers: and life itself is as evil that I suffer, as it is a good that you enjoy: you left me blind, and may now find me lame; my causes of complaining never cease, they do but change place; and the, favours I receive are so husbanded, that I cannot recover an eye, but by the loss of a leg. I was yesterday in a great musing upon this, when suddenly a great light shined in my Chamber, and dazzled mine eyes, even as I lay in my bed. And not to hold you long in suspense, the Name of the Angel I mean, was Madam d' Estissac, who thus appeared unto me, and willing to make the world see, how much she hath profited in Religion, runs after all occasions, to put her Christian virtues in practice. This somewhat abates the vanity I should otherwise have taken in her visit; for, I see it is rather charity than courtesy, and I am so much beholding to my infirmity for it, that she made a doubt whether I were sick enough to merit it; as much as to say, a Paralytic should have had this courtesy from her sooner than I They must be great miseries that attract her great favours; piety which teacheth the fairest hands of the world to bury the dead, may well get of the fairest eyes that ever were, some gracious looks to comfort the afflicted. What ere it be, I have found by experience, that no sadness is so obstinate and cloudy, but pleasing objects may dissolve and pierce, nor any Philosopher so stony and insensible, but may be softened and awaked by their lightest impression. I verily think, another of her visits would have set me on my legs, and made me able to go: but she thought me not worthy of a whole miracle, and therefore I must content myself with this beginning of my cure. I inform you of these things, as being one that reverenceth their cause, and as one loves me too well, to make slight of the goods or evils I impart unto him. This last words of my Letter shall serve, if you please, for a corrective to the former, I revoke it as a blasphemy, and will never believe, that all the Magic in Paris, is able to make you forget a man, whom you have promised to love, and who passionately is, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 3. July. 1633. Another to him. LETTER XXI. SIR, this is the first opportunity I could get to write unto you, and to comfort myself for your absence by this imperfect way, which is the only means left me to enjoy you. These are but shadows and figures of that true contentment, I received by your presence; but since I cannot be wholly happy, I must take it in good part that I am not wholly miserable. I will hasten all I can to finish the business I have begun, thereby to but myself in state to see you; and if my mind could go as fast as my will, I should myself be with you as soon as my Letter. It is true, there cannot be a more delicate and dainty place, than this where I live banished; and a friend of ours said, that they who are in exile here, are far happier than Kings in Muscovia: but being separated from a man so infinitely dear unto me, I do not think, I could live contented in the fortunate Islands; and I should be loath to accept of felicity itself, if it were offered me, without your company. Wherefore assure yourself, that as soon as I can rid myself of some importunate visits, which I must necessarily both receive and give, I will not lose one moment of the time, that I have destinated to the accomplishment of— and will travail much more assiduously than otherwise I should do, seeing it is the end of my travail, that only can give me the happiness of your presence. In the mean time, I am bound, first to tell you, that I have seen here— and then to give you thanks for the good cheer he hath made me. He believes upon your word, that I am one of much worth, and gives me Encomiums, which I could not expect from his judgement, but that you have corrupted it, by favouring me too much. I earnestly entreat you, to let me hear from you, upon all occasions; and to send me by the Post the two books, which I sent for to Monsieur— if you have not received them of him already; but above all, I desire you, that we may lay aside all meditation and art in writing our Letters; and that the negligence of our stile may be one of the marks of the friendship between us: and so Sir, I take my leave and am with all my soul, Your, etc. At Balzac, 2. Decemb. 1628. Another to him. LETTER XXII. SIR, either you mean to mock me, or I understand not the terms of your Letter; I come to you in my night gown, and my night cap upon my head, and you accuse me for being too fine. You take me for a cunning merchant, who am the simplest creature in the world: if another should use me thus, I should not take it so patiently; but what ere your design be, I count myself happy to be the subject of your joy, and that I can make you merry, though it be to my cost: when I write to you, I leave myself to the conduct of my pen, and neither think of the dainties of our Court, nor of the severity of our Grammar; that if there be any thing in my Letters of any worth, it must needs be, that you have falsified them, and so it is you that are the Mountebank, and will utter your counterfeits for true Diamonds. You know well, that Eloquence is not gotten so good cheap, and that to term my untoward, language, by the name of this quality, is a superlative to the highest of my Hyperboles. Yet it seems, you stand in no awe of Father— as though you had a privilege, to speak without control, things altogether unlikely; for this first time, I am content to pardon you, but if you offend so again, I will inform against you, and promise you an honourable place in the third part of Philarchus. The man you wrote of, hath no passions now, but wise and stayed; he hath given over play, and women, and all his delight now is in his books and virtue. Rejoice, I pray you, at his happy conversion, and if you be his friend so much, and so much a Poet, as to show yourself in public, you may do well to make a Hymn in praise of Sickness; as one hath heretofore done in praise of Health: for to speak truly, it is his sickness that hath healed him, and hath put into him the first meditations of his salvation: I expect great News from you by the next Post, and passionately am Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 25. Decemb. 1628. To Monsieur Ogier. LETTER XXIII. SIR, I cannot but confess that men in misery never found a more powerful Protector than yourself; and that you seem borne to be a defender of oppressed innocency. The Fathers of the Minimme Order, are as much beholding to you as myself; whose right, you have so strongly maintained, that if I did not know you well, I should verily think, the Saint you speak of, had inspired you. And as by his prayers he gains a jurisdiction over the fruitfulness of Princesses, so by the same prayers he hath contributed assistance to this excellent work you send me. After this, it is not to be suffered you should make show of niceness; and tell me of your slothfulness. When fire shall cease to be active, I will then believe, you can be slothful; but will never think you hate books, until— shall give over his suits in Law; or if I must needs give credit to your words, I then assure myself, this distaste could never come unto you, but by your too great fare, nor this weariness, but by your too great labour. I am myself a witness of your assiduity in study; and you know how early soever I rise in the morning, I always find you in the Chamber next to the Meteors; which high region, I conceive you have chosen, that you may be the nearer to take in the inspirations of Heaven. I think it long till I come and visit you there, to take counsel of your Muses in a number of difficulties I have to propound unto you. In the mean time, I have this to say, that the News you send me, hath even astonished me, and it seems to me, a kind of Enchantment. Monsieur— will show you certain Letters, which I entreat you to consider of, and by which you shall see, that if I be deceived, yet it is not grossly, nor without much cunning used. Make me beholding to you, by opening your mind more particularly in this matter, and by believing that I am with all my heart, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 4. Feb. 1629. Another to him. LETTER XXIV. SIR, there is no friendship in the world of more use than yours: it is my Buckler in all my battles, it is my Consolation in all my calamities; but specially, it is my Oracle in all my doubts. That which before I have your advice, I propose to myself with trembling, as soon as once I have your approbation, I make it a Maxim, and an Aphorism: and when I have once consulted with you, never did an Ignoramus take upon him to be some great Doctor better than I do: You have knowledge enough to serve your own turn, and your friends; you are the God that inspires the Sibyllae: for myself, I am no longer an Author, but an Interpreter, and speak nothing of myself; but preach only doctrine. I give you a thousand thanks for your great magnificence, in giving me so great a treasure, and for the learned Observations you have been pleased to communicate unto me: Assure yourself I will cry them up in good place, and make your Name alleged solemnly for an Authority. Gratefulness is the poor man's best virtue, and seeing I cannot be liberal, I will endeavour, at least, not to be unmindful: And so Sir, I am most perfectly, and more than any other in the world, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 6. Mar. 1629. To Madam Desloges. LETTER XXV. MAdam, being in a fit of a Fever, I hear you are at Oradour, where I should have the honour to see you, if the joy of so good News had the power to carry me thither, and were able to give me the health, which it is forward to promise me. Being therefore not in case to assure you in person, how sensible I am of your many courtesies, give me eve to testify unto you, that I am not unmindful of the very last you showed me; and that I give you thanks for the beginning of my amendment, whereof you are the cause. It is certain, that when I was burning in a most extreme fire, I received a notable cooling and comfort, to hear you but only named; and this, Madam, is the first miracle you have done in this Country, if you stay but a while here, I hope we shall see many more and greater, and that you will leave some excellent marks, that you have been here. Our deserts shall be no longer rude, or savage, having once been honoured by your presence, the sweet air, that breathes on the banks of the Loire, shall spread itself hither; and I doubt not, but you will change all the choler of Lymousin into Reason, and make our Lions become men. I do not think, there is any will oppose this truth, unless perhaps— who had the heart to part from you with dry eyes, and could not find tears to accompany yours. I have told him of it to his shame, before Monsieur de— and both of us agree, that in this occasion, he might honestly enough, have broken the laws of his Philosophy, and might have lost his gravity, without any lightness. Whilst we were together, they desired to see a part of my Prince, which as yet I dare not call by so illustrious a Name; for in truth Madam, he can be but a private person, until such time as you proclaim him, and that he receive investiture from his Sovereign: so I call your approbation, which is with me in such respect and reverence, that I should prefer it before Reason itself, if they were two things that could be separated, and that I were allowed to choose which I would have▪ I would say more hereof, but that methinks, I have done a great work to say so much; for my head is in such violent agitation, with the heat of my last fit, that all I can do at this time, is but to set my hand to this Protestation, that I honour you exceedingly, am as much as any in the world, Madam Your, etc. At Balzac, 25. August. 1629. Another to her. LETTER XXVI. MAdam, I am jealous of my Lackeys fortune, who makes now a second journey to you, and consequently, shall be twice together more happy than myself: he should never have this advantage of me, if to a journey to see you, there went nothing but courage, and if the relics of my disease, which prey upon weakness, did not tire me more than the extreme violence did, when I had some strength to resist it. By staying in my chamber, I lose all the fair days that shine in the garden; all the riches of the fields are gathered without me; I have no part in the fruits of Autumn, whereof the Spring gave me such sweet hopes; and I am promised health at winter, when I shall see nothing but a pale Sun, a threadbare Earth, and dead sticks, that have brought forth grapes, but not for me to eat. In this miserable estate, I have no comfort, but only the Letter you did me the honour to write unto me, which is so precious to me Madam, that I even honour it, with a kind of superstition, and am ready to make a chain or bracelet of it, to try whether the wearing it about me, may not prove a better Remedy against my Fever, than all the other I have used. There is but one word in it that I cannot endure, being not able to conceive why you should call yourself unfortunate; are you not afraid, lest God should call you to account for this word? and charge you with ungratefulness, for making so slight reckoning of his great benefits and Graces? He hath lifted you up above your own sex, and ours too, and hath spared nothing to make you complete: the better part of Europe admires you; and in this point, both Religions are agreed, and no contesting between Catholic and Protestant; The Pope's Nuntio, hath presented our belief even to your person, all perfumed with the compliments and civilities of Italy, Princes are your Courtiers, and Doctors your Scholars: and is this Madam, that you call to be unfortunate? and that which you take for a just cause to complain; I humbly entreat you, to speak hereafter in more proper terms, and to acknowledge God's favours in a more grateful manner. I know well, that your loyalty hath suffered by your brother's Rebellion; and that in the public miseries you have had some private loss, but so long as you have your noble heart, and your excellent spirit left you, it is not possible, you should be unfortunate; for indeed, in these two parts, the true Madam Desloges is all entire and whole. It is I Madam, that have just cause to say, I am unfortunate, who am never without pain, never without grief, never without enemies; and even at this very time, I write from a house of grief, where my mother and my sister being sick on one hand, and myself on the other, I seem to be sick of three sicknesses at once; yet be not afraid, lest this I send you should be infectious, as though I had a design to poison you with my presents, for I have not yet meddled with any of the Musque fruits, which I hope you shall eat; I have not durst so much as to come near them, lest I should chance to leave some light impression of my Fever upon them: They are originally Natives of Languedoc; and not so degenerated from the goodness of their ancestors, but that you will find them, I hope of no unpleasing taste, and besides Madam, they grow in a soil that is not hated of Heaven, and where I can assure you, your Name is so often rehearsed, and your virtue so highly esteemed, that there is not an Echo in all our woods, but knows you for one of the perfectest things in the world, and that I am, Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac, 20. Septemb. 1629. To— LETTER XXVII. MAdam, see here the first thanks I give you, for you know, that having never done me but displeasures, I have never yet returned you but complaints: but now at last you have been pleased to begin to oblige me, and after so many sentences of death, which you have pronounced against me, and after so many cruelties, which I have suffered, you have bethought yourself, ten years after, to send me one good news, which truly is so pleasing to me, that I must confess, you had no other way to reconcile yourself unto me; and I cannot forbear to bless the hand that brought me a Letter from Madam Desloges, though they were died in my blood, and had given me a thousand wounds. The sense of former injuries hath no competition with so perfect a joy, and of two passions equally just, the more violent is easily overcome of the more sweet. You have hastened the approach of my old age, and made grey one half of my hair; you have banished me this Kingdom, and forced me to fly your tyranny, by flying into another Country: finally, it is no thanks to you, that I have not broken my own neck, and made matter for a Tragedy: and yet four lines of Madam Desloges, have the force to blot out all this long story of my misfortunes, and willingly with all my heart, I forget all the displeasures I have received, for this good office you now afford me. I make you this discourse in our first language, that I may not disobey Monsieur de— who will have me write, but will not have me write in any other stile, for in truth, and to speak seriously, now that he leaves me at liberty, I must confess unto you Madam, that I am exceedingly bound unto you, for the continency I have learned by being with you, and good examples you have given me: your medicines are bitter, but they heal; you have banished me, but it is from prison: and if my passions be cooled by the snow of my head, I have then never a white hair, which I may not count for one of your favours: I therefore recant my former complaints, and confess myself your debtor of all my virtue. The time I have employed in your service, hath not been so much the season of my disordered life, as it hath been an initiating me into a regular life which I mean to lead. Your conversation hath been a school of austerity unto me, and you have taught me, never to be either yours, or any others, but only in our Lord, Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac, 10. Octob. 1629. To Madam Desloges. LETTER XXVIII. MAdam, my evil Fortune gives one common beginning to all my Letters: I am impatient even to death, to have the honour to come and see you: but now that I am well, the air is sick, and all the Country drowned: There is no land to be seen between this and Lymousin; and the mischief is, that there is no navigation yet found out, for so dangerous a voyage. This binds me to wait, till the waters be fallen, and that God be pleased to remember his Covenant with Noah. As soon as this shall be, I will not fail to perform my vow, and to come and spend with you the happiest day of all my life. In the mean time Madam, give me leave, to tell you, that I am not yet well recovered of the ecstasy you put me in, by writing unto me such excellent things, that I could not read them with a quiet mind, nor indeed without a ●inde of jealousy. All Frontignon would be sufficiently paid with that you write of a dozen paltry Musk fruits I sent you; and you praise my writings with words, which have no words worthy of them, but your own. This, of one side makes me envious, and of the other side interessed: and if the honour I receive by your flattering Eloquence, did not sweeten the grief of being overcome, it would trouble me much that I had no better defended the advantages of our sex, but should suffer it to lose an honour, which the Greeks and Latins had gotten for it. Yet take heed, you hazard not your judgement too freely, upon the unce taintie of humane things: you esteem well of a Prince, who is not yet borne, you should have seen his Horoscope from the point of his conception, before you should speak of him in so lofty terms. But besides that, nothing is less assured, than the future; and nothing apt to deceive, than hope: Consider, Madam, I beseech you, that you favour an unfortunate man, and that Faction oftentimes carries it away from truth. It will be hard for you, yourself alone, to withstand an infinite multitude of passionate men: and it may be said to you, as was said to those of Sparta, upon occasion of the great Army of the Parsians, that you can never vanquish as long as they can die. Herein there is nothing to be feared, but for yourself; for as for me, I find in your favour, all I seek for; and having you of my side, I care not what fame can do, having once your testimony, I can easily slight hers; and all her tongues put together, can never say any thing for me, that is worth the least line of your delicate Letter. It is at this time, the delight and joy of my spirit; I am more in love with it, than ever I was with— and if she show you that which I write to her, you shall fin●e I make not so much reckoning of my ancient mistress, as I do of you● new messenger; and that I desire all the world should know, that I perfectly am, Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac, 13. Octob. 1629. Another to her. LETTER XXIX. MAdam, I will not take upon me to give you thanks, for the good cheer you made me; for besides that I have none but Country Civilities, and when I have once said, your humble servant and your servant most humble; I am then at the end of my compliments, and can go no further. It were better yet to let you hold your advantage entire, and owe you that still, which I can never pay. I forbear to speak of the dainties and abundance of your Table, enough to make one far, that were in a Consumption; nor I speak not of the delicacy of your perfumes, in which you laid me to sleep all night; to the end, that sending up sweet vapours into my brain, I might have in my imagination, none but pleasing visions. But Madam, what but Heaven can be compatable to the dainties of your Closet, and what can I name to represent sufficiently, those pure and spiritual pleasures, which I tasted in your Conversation? It is not my design to take idly, nor to set my stile upon the high strain; you know, I am bound to avoid Hyperboles, as Mariners to avoid Sands and Rocks; but this is most true, that with all my heart, I renounce the world, and all its pomps, as long as you please to inhabit the Desert, and if you once determine to stay there still, (though I have sent to Paris to hire me a lodging) yet I resolve to break off the bargain, and mean to build me an Hermitage, a hundred paces from your abode: from whence Madam, I shall easily be able to make two journeys a day to the place where you are, and shall yield you a subjection, and an assiduity of service, as if I were in a manner of your household. There shall I let nothing fall from your mouth, which I shall not carefully gather up, and preserve it in my memory. There you shall do me the favour, to resolve me when I shall have doubts; set me in the right way, when I go astray; and when I cannot express myself in fit terms, you shall clear my clouds, and give order to my confusedness. It shall be your ears, upon which I will measure the cadences of my sentences; and upon the different motions of your eyes, I will take notice of the strength or weakness of my writings. In the hear of the travail, and amidst the joys of a mother, that looks to be happily delivered, I will expose the Infant to the light of your judgement to be tried, and not hold him for legitimate, till you approve him. Sometimes Madam, we will read your News, and the divers Relations that are sent you from parts of Christendom: Public miseries shall pass before our eyes, without troubling our spirits; and the most serious actions of men, shall be our most ridiculous Comedies. Out of your Closet, we shall see below us the the tumults and agitation of the world, as from the top of the Alps, we stand and safely see the rain and hail of Saevoy. After this, Monsieur de Borstell shall come and read us Lectures in the Politics, and Comment upon Messer Nicolo unto us: He shall inform us of the affairs of Europe, with as great certainty, as a good husband would do of his family. He He shall tell us the Causes, the Proceedings, and the Events of the war in Germany; and therein shall give the lie, a thousand times, to our Gazettes, our Mercuries, and such other fabulous Histories. We will agree with him, that the Prince he is so much in love withal, is most worthy of his passion; and that Sweden is no longer able to contain so great a virtue: After the fashion of Plutarch, he shall compare together the prime Captains of our age; always excepting— who admits of no comparison. He shall tell us which is the better man, the Italian, or the German; what means may be used to take off the Duke of Saxony from the house of Austria; and what game the Duke of Bavaria plays, when he promiseth to enter into the League; and is always harkening to that which he never means to conclude. From these high and sublime News, we will descend to other meaner, and more popular subjects. It shall be written to you, whether the Kingdom of Amatonte be still in being, and whether there appear not a rising Sun, to which all eyes of the Court are turned: Monsieur de— shall send you word, whether he persist in his pernicious design, to bring Polygamy into France, and to commit nine Incests at once; I mean, whether he have a good word from those nine Sisters, to all whom he hath solemnly made offer of his service. We shall know whether the Baron of— put Divines still to trouble: whether Monsieur de— have his heart still hardened against the ungreatfullnesse of the time; and whether Monsieur de— continue still in his wilfulness to punish mankind by the suppression of his Books. By the way of Lymoges, we shall get the devises of Boissiere; the Epigrams of Maynard, and other dainties of this nature. The Stationer des Espies Meurs will furnish you plentifully with Romances, and with that they call Bells Chooses: and if it come to the worst, from the very Cinders of Philarcus, there will spring up every month a new Phoenix of backbiting Eloquence, that will find us recreation for one hour at least. And these Madam, are a part of those employments, in which I fancy in my mind, we may spend our time all the time of the heat; for when the return of April shall bring again the flowers and fair days, and invite you abroad a walking: we must then look us out some new pleasures, and change our recreations: we will have Swans and other strange Birds, to cover this water at once both quick and still, which washeth the feet of your walls: we will fall a planting of trees, and dressing the allies of your Garden: we will dig for Springs, and discover treasures, which lose themselves under ground, which yet I value no less than veins of silver, because I judge of them without covetousness. And finally, Madam, we will fall a building that famous Bridge, by which to enter your enchanted Palace, and whereof the only design puts all the neighbouring Nobility already into a jealousy. If you like of this course, and of these Propositions, and that my company may not be troublesome to you, there remains nothing to do, but that you command me to come, and I am instantly ready to quit all other affairs in the world, and to come and testify to you, that I am, Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac, 6. Novemb. 1631. Another to her. LETTER XXX. MAdam, we receive the Answers of Oracles without making reply; perfect devotion is dumb, and if you had left me the use of my tongue, I should then have had one part at least, of my spirit free from this universal astonishment that hath surprised it. You are always lifted up above the ordinary condition of humanity, and the divineness of your spirit is no longer an Article in question amongst people that are reasonable; yet I must confess, you never showed it more visibly, then in the last Letter you writ unto me, and if at other times I have been dazzled with some beam, you have now made me stark blind with the fullness of your light. Spare Madam, I entreat you, the weakness of my sight, and if you will have me be able to endure your presence, take some more humane form, and appear not all at once in the fullness of that you are, I were never able to abide such another flash of brightness. My eyes are weary with looking upward, and with considering you, as you are a creature, adorable and divine. Hereafter I will not look upon you, but on that side you are good and gracious, and will not venture to reason with you any more, for fear I should to my own confusion illustrate the advantage of your spirit over mine. You shall have nothing from me hereafter, but prayers and thanks; and I will make you confess, that I solicit better than I praise, I therefore send you now Madam, divers crosses at one time, and persecute you with no less than three afflictions at once, I mean, three Letters of recommendation, which I request from you, in behalf of— humbly entreat you to deliver them to this messenger, & to write them in such a persuasive style, as might be able to corrupt all the Gatoes of Paris, although indeed, the clearness of our right, hath more need of their integretie then of their favour. I expect Madam, this new courtesy from your goodness, and am always more than any in the world, Your, etc. At Balzac, 10. Decemb. 1629. Another to her. LETTER XXXI. MAdam, in the state I am now in, there is none but yourself could make me speak: and I never did a greater work in my life than to dictate these four untoward lines: my spirit is so wholly taken up with the consideration of my misery, and flies all commerce and company, in so violent a manner, that if it concerned me not exceedingly, you should know that— finds himself infinitely obliged to your courtesies, and myself no less than he; I think verily, I should have let— depart, without so much as bidding him Farewell. Pardon Madam, the weakness of a vulgar spirit, which feels no crosses light, and falls flat down at the very first blow of adverse Fortune. Perhaps in prosperity, I should carry myself better, and I do not think, that joy could make me insolent; but to say the truth, in affliction I am no body, and that which would not so much as leave a scratch upon the skin of a Stoic, pierceth me to the very heart, and makes in it most deep wounds. Grief dejects me in such sort, and makes me so lazy in doing my duty, and so unfit for all functions of a civil life, that I wondered no longer at those that were turned into trees and rocks, and lost all sense with only the sense of grief. Yet Madam, as often as I call to mind, that I hold some part in your account and love; I am forced to confess, that my melancholy is unjust, and that I have no good foundation for my sadness. This honour ought to be unto me a general remedy against all sorts of affliction, and the misery that you pity is not so much to be pitied as to be envied. From thence it is, that I draw all the comfort I am capable of, humbly entreating you to believe you shall never pity a man in misery, that will be more grateful than myself, nor that is more passionately, than I am Madam, Your, etc. 31. Decemb. 1629. Another to her. LETTER XXXII. MAdam, I received but just now your Letters of the five and twentieth of the last month, and though I know not, by whom to send an answer, yet I can no longer hold from expressing my joy, nor keepè my words from leaving my heart to fall upon this paper. The last time I writ unto you, I had heard of the unfaithfulness of a friend of mine, which struck me to the very heart; since which time, a better report hath somewhat quieted me; but it is you, Madam, that have restored to me the full use of my reason; and are a cause that I am contented to live. Although corruption be in a manner universal, and that there is no more any goodness to be found amongst men, yet as long as you are in the world, it is not fit to leave it quite, but your virtue may well supply all its defects. Besides Madam, if it be true, as you do me the honour to write unto me, that you account my interests as your own; this very consideration is enough to make them dearer to me than they were before; and I am therefore bound to preserve myself, seeing it seems, you would be loath to lose me. One gracious word, which I observed in your Letter, hath won me to you, in such sort, that I have no longer any power of myself, but what you leave me; and in all your Empire, which is neither mean, nor consists of mean subjects; I can assure you, that you possess nothing with more sovereignty, than my will. If your occasions draw you to Annix this next spring, I hope to have the honour to see you at Balzac, where I am trimming up— with all the care I can, that it may be a little more worthy of your presence, and that the amusement I shall thereby give you, may keep you from marking the ill cheer you are like to find in a Country village: My sister is infinitely bound to you, for the honour you do her, in remembering her; and I am myself, with all my soul, Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac, 1. Febr. 1630. Another to her. LETTER XXXIII. MAdam, my indisposition hath been the cause of my silence, and I thought it better to say nothing, than to entertain you with a troublesome discourse: Besides, I was in a continual expectation of the performance of your promise; and looked to have the honour, to see you here in May. But seeing you have made my hopes recoil, and that you make your abode in Limousin for some longer time, be pleased Madam, that I send— to bring me a true relation of the state of your health; and to tell me, if you use, as you ought, the shade of your woods, and the freshness of your fountains: For myself, who make my harvest at the gathering of Roses and Violets; and who reckon the goodness of the year, by the abundance of these delicate Flowers; Now is the season for my humour, and in one only subject I find cause enough, to scorn and slight both the perfumes of the street St. Honore, and the pictures of the fair St. german. Thus I make myself happy, at a very easy rate, and have not so much as a thought of any want. And indeed, to what purpose should I grieve for pleasures that are absent, and curiously hunt after all the defects of my Estate. If my commerce be only with dumb Creatures, at least I am not troubled with the importunities of Courtiers, nor with the verses of a paltry Poet, nor with the Prose of Messieurs—: These are the inconveniences of Paris, which I count more troublesome, then either the dirt, or the justling of Coaches; and at the worst, if by living in the Desert, I should become a mere savage, yet I am sure to recover the garb of the world, as soon as I shall but see Madam Desloges, and to make myself neat and civil, with but one half hours conversing with her. This is my wish Madam, and passionately I am, Your, etc. At Balzac, 20. June 1730. To Monsieur de la Nouve, Counsellor of the King in his first Chamber of Inquests. LETTER XIX. SIR, My dear Cousin, one cannot say you nay, in any thing: to do you a second pleasure, I am about to commit a second treason, and to send you the Verses, of which I told you who was the Poet. I was bound by a thousand Oaths to keep them secret, but I must confess you are a strange corrupter, and your persuasions would shake a firmer fidelity than mine: yet to the end, we may at least save the appearance, and give some colour to my fault; you may be pleased to say, that it is the translation of an Ode, made by Cornelia, mother of the Gracchis, and that you found it in an ancient Manuscript: you may say, she made it for one of her sons, being in love with a woman, whom afterward he married; and that seeing him one day look extremely palo, she asked him, what it was that made him sick, There is nothing more true than this Story, and there needs nothing, but to change the Names. It is not indeed, the same person, but it is the same merit, and I am sure, you doubt not, but a French Lady is capable of as much, as Qui●tilian spoke of a Roman: Graccorum eloquentiae multum contu●isse Corneliam, matrem, cujus doctissimus sermo, in posteros quoque est Epistolis traeditus.— I never heard speak of such an impatience, or such an irresolution, for I cannot believe, that it is either fear, or effeminateness, or that the spirit of so great a Prince could be subject to such enormous maladies. Whatsoever it be, if he had but read Virgil, a woman would have said unto him with great indignation; and is it then such a miserable thing to die? And if he had been in the Levant, he might have learned of a Turkish Proverb, That it is better to be a Cock for one day, than a Hen all one's life. Et con questo vi b●tio le many, and am, Sir, my dear Cousin, Your, etc. 2. August, 1630. L' Amant qui meurt. OLympa, made me sick thou hast, Thou cause of my Consumption art: There needs but one frown more, to waste The whole remainder of my heart. Alas undone, to Fate I bow my head, Ready to die, now die, and now am dead. You look to have an age of trial, Ere you a Lover will repay; And my state brooks no more denial, I hardly can one minute stay. Alas, undone, to Fate I bow my head, Ready to die, now die, and now am dead, I see already Charon's boat, That comes to ferry me to Hell: I hear the Fatal Sister's note, That cries and calls to ring my knell. Alas, undone, to Fate I bow my head, Ready to die, now die, and now am dead. Look in my wound, and see how cold, How pale, and gasped my soul lies: Which Nature strives in vain to hold, Whilst winged with sighs, away it flies, Alas undone, to Fate I bow my head. Ready to die, now die, and now am dead. To Madam Desloges. LETTER XXXV. MAdam, I have not dared now a good while tosend you any Letters, for fear you should conceive, they carried an ill air about them; nor yet to send you any more Melons, which yet prove excellent good this year, for doubt you should suspect them, as coming from a Country extremely, discredited; but since I understand by your Letter, that you are not so much frighted as I was told, and since also, I can protest unto you most religiously, that I write from a place most clear from any taint of the neighbouring misery, and that hath kept sound in the midst of infection: I am most glad Madam, that I have the liberty to tell you, that I value you more, than all the ancient Romans, and that I have no comfort to think of, in the deepest hours of all my solitude, but only you, and your incomparable merit. What business soever I am about, I take pleasure to let this thought make me a truant at my travail, it is a recreation, for which I abandon all affairs; and there is neither Moral, nor Politic, Plato nor Aristotle, but I presently hive him over as soon as you are once presented to my imagination. I hope I shall need to use no Oaths, to make you believe this verity: you are well enough acquainted with my pride, and know that this Country swain would not turn flatterer for an Empress. There are but three persons, I am resolved to praise; you Madam, are one; and if you have the leisure to read that I send you, you will easily guess, who the other two are; and so I bid you Good morrow, and perfectly am Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac, 9 Septemb. 1630, Another to her. LETTER XXXVI. MAdam, you shall receive from me no premeditated excuses, I had rather confess my fault ingenuously, than take the pains to justify it untowardly. Indeed a fatal sluggishness, cousin german to a Lethargy, hath seized in such sort upon me since my coming hither, that I have not so much as written to my own mother; so as having failed in this first point, I thought not fit to fail by halves; and therefore never troubled myself much in the rest of my duty. I speak Madam, of this exterior duty, and this affection in picture, which is oftentimes but a false representation of the soul, for as for the true respect, and the passion, which hath residence in the heart, I assure you, I have that in me for you, as pure and entire as ever, and that he that calls you his Sovereign, yet honours you not more perfectly, than I do. Monsieur de— will I doubt not, be my witness herein; and will tell you, that what part soever I be forced to play amongst jeasters and merry companions, yet under my players clothes, there will always be found an honest man. I have been sensible, Madam of the loss, which— hath had, and have not been sparing to speak of his unfortunate virtue; yet I never thought, he needed any comforting for it; for, seeing he sees that God spares not his own Images, and that his nearest friends have their disgraces and troubles, he ought not to think any thing strange that happens in this inferior world, and upon inferior persons; what consideration soever may otherwise make them dear unto him. If you have vouchsafed to keep the Letters I have written to you; I humbly entreat you to send them to me, that I may see what volume I can make for the impression that is required of me: but Madam it shall be, if you please upon this condition, that parting with the Letters, you shall never let your memory part with the truths they contain, but hold undoubtedly that I very firmly am, though I do not very often say I am, Madam, Your, etc. 25. Decemb. 1630. Another to her. LETTER XXXVII. MAdam, my labour is happy, since it is never from before you, and since I am told, you make it your ordinary entertainment. The end of all fair Pictures, and good Books, is but only to please your eyes, and to delight your spirit, and the good you have not yet set a price upon, is not yet come to its utter most perfection. I have therefore all that an ambitious man could wish for, I may perhaps have fortune from others, but glory I can have from none but you; and another perhaps may pay me, but none but you can recompense me. The pains I have hitherto taken, have been but ill requited. I have tilled a ground, that brings me forth but thorns; yet Madam, since they blossom for your service, I am contented to be pricked by them, and I love the cause of my disgraces, if they prove a cause of your recreations. The first News you shall hear will tell you what I mean; and that my patience never makes my persecutors weary. You shall see Madam, that there is no conscience made to contradict you, and that the same which you call excellent and admirable, hath yet 〈◊〉 Paris found enemies, and at Brussels hangmen. I will say no more at this time, but that I am, Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac, 6. Jan. 1631. Another to her. LETTER XXXVIII. MAdam, I writ unto you about six weeks since, but my packet not being delivered where I appointed it, I perceive some curious body hath seized on it, and sought for secrets, which he could not find. The loss is not great, to lose nothing, but a few untoward words; and small comforting would serve me, for so small a cross; yet because they were full of the passion I owe to your service, and carried in them the marks of my duty, I cannot but be troubled, they c●me not to your hands, and that my misfortune gives you cause to complain of my negligence. I dare not undertake to clear myself altogether; for though in this I committed no fault, yet I cannot forget some other faults committed before. The truth is Madam, I have been for some time so continually taken up with business, that I have been wanting in the principal obligations of a civil life; and I have drunk besides so many bitter potions, and tasted so many bitter Pills, that I should but offend you with my compliments; which could not choose but carry with them, at least some tincture of my untoward humour. What pleasure could you have taken, to see a medley of choler and Melancholy poured out upon paper, and in stead of pleasing News, to read nothing but pitiful Stories, and mortal Predictions? But enough of this unpleasing matter. I expect here within three or four days, my Lord the Bishop of Nantes; and I would to God Madam, you could be here at that time, and that you were at leisure to come and taste the doctrine of this rare personage. I have heard you say heretofore, you never saw a more holy countenance than his, and that his very look, was a Prologue of persuasion. This conceit, makes me hope, that he is the man, whom God hath ordained to be your Converter, and to bring you into the bosom of our Church, Believe me Madam, and you shall not be deceived; trust that enemy, who wounds nor, but only to draw out the blood that causes a Fever; and never make difficulty to commit yourself to one, that intends your freedom. The triumph which the world makes you fear, is no way injurious to those that be the captives, nor like unto that of which Cleopatra took so sad an apprehension: but in this case, the vanquished are they that are crowned, and all the glory and advantage of the victory rests on their side: I am not out of hope to see so good a day's work; and seeing you are rather laid asleep in the opinion of your mother, than obstinate in a wrong cause: I entreat you, that you will not be frighted with phrases: We will not use this hard term to say, you have abjured your heresy; we will only say, you are awaked out of your slumber, and if our dear friend, Monsieur du Moulin, would do so too, then would be the time of a great festival in Heaven; and the Angels would rejoice at the prosperity of the Church. My zeal Madam, is not out of ostentation: for it is most true, that such a change is one of my most violent wishes; and to see you say your prayers upon your beads, I would with all my heart give you a pair made of Diamonds; though I am not rich, yet I hope you doubt not of the truth of these last words, and that I am with all my soul, Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac, 7. May. 1632. Another to her. LETTER XXXIX. MAdam, it hath been, as much my shame, as my glory, to read your Letter, having so ill deserved it; and the remorse of the fault, I committed, makes me, that I dare not yet rejoice in the honour, I received. You are good and gracious, even to the not hating of evil actions; Your delinquents, not only obtain impunity, but you allow them recompense; and idleness hath more respect with you, than deligent service with ordinary Masters. This is the faelicite of the Golden age, where Plenty had no need of tilling; and where there was reaping without sowing. Yet Madam, I must not so abandon my cause, that I forbear to allege the good it hath in it; it is long since I writ unto you, it is true, but the cause hath been for that these six months, I have every day been upon coming to see you and according to the saying of the Orator, your acquaintance, I have dispensed, with my ordinary worshipping, in hope of a great Holy day; and to perform my devotion with the more solemnity. If Monsieur de— have kept his word with me, he hath told you, how often he hath found me upon the very point of coming; but as many journeys, as I intended to make, so many cross accidents always happened to hinder them, and the misfortune that accompanies me, makes every duty, though never so easy to another, impossible to me▪ Yet Madam, I have never ceased from doing continual acts of the reverence I bear you, and I never swear, but by your merit. My brain is dry in any other Argument, and words are drawn from me one by one; but when there is occasion to speak of you, than I overflow in words; upon this only Text, I take pleasure to be Preaching; and Monsieur de— to whom I was always before a harkener; as soon as I begin discourse of you, becomes my auditor. I can assure you Madam, he honours you exceedingly; and neither his ambassage to Rome, from whence Gentlemen return not commonly without a certain conceit of sovereignty; nor the employments of the State, which make particular men think themselves the Public, have been able to make him take upon him, this ungrateful gravity, which makes Greatness ridiculous, and even virtue itself odious. He hath protested here, before good company, that he will never be found other, and that Fortune should have an ill match in hand, to think to corrupt him. I used my ordinary rudeness, and entreated him, to be mindful of his word, and to be one of our first examples of so rare a moderation. You shall see Madam, in a Letter I send you; that which hereupon I am bound to say of him: and I entreat you, to maintain for me, that I am no common praiser: and that, if I were not persuaded of what I say, it is not all the Canons of his Fort should make me to say it. It is only the worth of things, or at least, the opinion I have of their worth, that draws from me the praises I give them. If Monsieur de— should return to be a private person, I should not respect him a joe less, than now I do: and if you should be made Governess of the Queen's house, I should not be a whit more than I am, Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac, 30. April. 1633. Another to her. LETTER XL. MAdam, never trust me any more, I promise that I cannot perform, but though I be a deceiver, I am an honest one; my promises are always true in my intention, though oftentimes false in the Event. I know not what to say of this unfortunateness, nor to what known cause, to attribute this long ●rayne of mischiefs. It must needs be, there is some Devil employed, to hinder voyages to Lymousin: and that will not suffer me to go thither to see you: sometimes he raiseth up suits in Law against me, sometimes puts me into a quarrel; and when these be composed, and that I am ready to take horse, either he sends me company to divert me, or pricks my horse in shooing, or puts a leg out of joint; for, all these crosses have befallen me, as he that delivers you this Letter can be my witness. But withal Madam, he shall assure you, that though I do steal away by night, and be carried in a chair, it shall not be long ere I will have the honour to come and see you. In the mean time, vouchsafe to accept from me, the amusement of half an hour, and be pleased to read an Inscription, which was lately found, and taken forth of the ruins of an old Building. It is engraven in Letters of Gold, upon a Table of black Marble, and seems Prophetically to speak of you and me. If I were a man could make Verses, you might doubt it were some trick put upon you; but my ignorance justifies me; and seeing, as you know, Poets are not made, it were a strange thing I should be borne at the age of seven and thirty years. I expect from you a Comment upon the whole Mystery; and remain, Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac, 6. Jan. 1628. In Effigiem D. D. praestantissimae & laudatissimae faeminoe. Hac est sequa●ico, veniens à littore Nympha: Hospite quá Lemovix jure superbit ager. Quae desiderium Dominae mibi durius urbis, Mitigat; & per quam non fera turba sumus. Vindicat hanc sibi Thuscae caris, sibi musa latina, Nec minus esse suam, Graius Apollo velit. Hanc sophiae Gens sancta colit, dat jura disertis, Princeps Grammaticas temperat una Tribus Scilicet ut distent speciose sana tumore, una scit, & fractis verba sonora modis. Judicat urbano quid fit sale tingere ludos, Et quid inhumano figere dente notas. Novit ab egresti secernere plectra cicuta, Vosque sacri vates non sociare malis. Ergo quid infidipetitis suffragia vulgi, Quidve Palatinus quaritur arte favor? Quae canitis vivent, si docta provaverit auris, Et dabitur vestris versibus esse bonos. At si quando canat, taccas velmascula Sapph, Te meliùs salva nostra pudore canit. Another to her: LETTER XLI. MAdam, my eyes are yet dazzled, with the brightness of your Cabinet, and I vow unto you, the Night was never so fair, nor so delicately trimmed up, as lately at your House. Not when the Moon accomplishing her way Upon her silver wain, beset with stars, Within the gloomy world, presents the day. I have showed our Ladies the Description of this 〈◊〉 stately Night, and of the rest of your magnificence, which if it were in a severer Commonwealth than ours, would be called a Profusive Wast; they admire you in your house, as well as in your Verses; and agree with me in this, that wisdom hath a hand in every thing; and that, after she hath discoursed of Princes, and matters of State; she descends to take care of her Hosts, and looks what is done in the Kitchin. But from a virtue of their own, they always come to that of yours, ask me continually for News of your entertainment, and for Copies of your Letters: and by this means, the happiness which I have from you, is instantly made common to all the neighbourhood; and yet stays not there neither, but spreads itself both far and near, so that when you think, you write but to one particular man, you write indeed to a whole Province. This is not to write Letters, but rather to set forth Declarations and Edicts; I know Madam, you were able to acquit yourself perfectly, in so noble an Employment; compliments are below the dignity of your style; and if King Elisabett, should come again into the world (you know of whom this is spoken) no question but he would make you his chief Secretary of State. Monsieur de— extols you yet in a higher strain, and is infinitely desirous to see you in this Country. Yesterday, of his own accord he made himself your Tributary, and hath bound himself to send you, every year, a reasonable number of his sweet balls if you shall like them, they will grow into more request than the Gloves of the Frangapani: but because your people of Lymousin may take occasion to Equivocate here: I entreat you to advertise them, that this Perfumer hath three thousand pound rend a year; and holds the supremest dignity of our Province, and that this Glover is a Roman Lord, Martial of the Camp of the King's Armies, cousin to Sr. Gregory the Great, and that which I value more than all this, one of the honestest men that lives: I am bold to use my accustomed liberty, seeing you allow me to do it Madam, having given me your Letters Patents for it, and will bear me out to laugh in graver subjects than this is. It may therefore suffice me to say, but most seriously, that I am, Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac, 2. May. 1634. Another to her. LETTER XLII. MAdam, your place is before all other things whatsoever, and therefore no lawful impediment can be alleged, for failing in the duty, that is due unto you. I have these two months had great affayes; which in the rigour of your Justice, is as much as to say, I have these two months neglected my duty. Having not written to you, in all this time, I am contented to call it, a Disorder, which otherwise I should call a Business, and I do not think, I could with all the reasons of the world have made you patient, to stay so long, for the thanks I am to give you. Your present hath equally wherewith to content both the covetous and the vain; it hath solidity no less than lustre; the only sight of it refutes the modesty you use in speaking of it: you are injurious Madam, to so excellent a thing; it deserves the most stately inscription you could devise to give it, and if I were worth the having of a Cabinet, this should be the prime piece, I would make choice of to adorn it. Because vulgar people have nothing but eyes, therefore they value nothing but Candlesticks of Crystal, and guilded vermilion dishes; but men of understanding, who see less with their eyes than with their spirits, they reflect upon objects, that are more simple and immaterial, and prefer not the people's error, and Artificers fingers, before the truth of things, and before the Masterpieces of the works of reason. He, to whom you did me the honour to send me, is far above all the Encomiums I can give him: I have only this to say Madam, that I have with me here, a famous Author, who as soon as he hath once read him, is resolved instantly to shut up shop, and give over his Trade. He protests he will never more set band to Pen, unless it be to sign his last Will; and therefore meants to make you a sacrifice of all his Papers. I showed him the incomparable Sonnet, De L' Amant qui meurt, at every verse, he called you Divine, and made such loud Exclamations, that he might have been heard to the great high way: which you know, how very far it is from my Chamber. He saith, he will maintain it, even to the street Saint Jaques, that Parnassus is fallen upon the Distaff; and that Racan hath given over the right he pretended in the succession of Malherbe. He speaks in this familiar manner, of these two great Personages, and I never hear him use any meaner style: if I can keep him with me a while; I will tell you more of him, and promise you a Collection of all his Apopthegms. I saw yesterday Monsieur de— who is a most just valuer of virtue, and by consequent, most perfectly reveres yours. He infinitely desires you would come amongst us, and that you would make choice of one of his houses for your abode: if you were pleased to do this, I should have no more journeys to make: I should be the happiest unhappy man that ever was, if I had you here to be my comforter, and that I might be always telling you, that I always am, Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac, 1. Aug. 1634. Another to her. LETTER XLIII. MAdam, you never heard speak of such a diligence; in two months your Letter hath gone twelve miles; so as a business that required haste, had been this way in a good case: and if therein you had given me advise for saving my life, I might have had good leisure to die, before your advice came. I have made grievous complaints hereof, to my good kinswomans'— who lays the fault of her fault upon a thousand that are innocent; upon her Gentlewoman, her Nurse, three maids, four men, etc. so yas Madam there have been great arrignments upon this matter▪ and never was any crime so long and so rigorously in examining; for myself, the joy I take to hear of your health, makes me forget my most just complaints, and sweetens all my choler. I think no more of the late receiving it; I content myself, that I have received it at last; and I find enough in your Letter, to make me amends, for the slowness of your messenger. Besides Madam, I give you to understand, that I have had some few days, with me here, Monsieur Bardyn, as much as to say, The living Philosophy: or Socrates risen from the dead. You make doubt perhaps, what the subject of our conference hath been? Indeed Madam, it hath been yourself, and we have concluded, to erect your statue in the most eminent place of his Lycaeum: and if any Stoic come to new build the Porticus, and any other to restore the Academy, no doubt but they will honour you with the like respect, and you shall always be reverenced of wise men, next to wisdom itself. If you write shortly to— I entreat you Madam, to do me the favour, to put in your packet the dispatch I send you. It imports me much, to have it believed, that— and I doubt not, but you will be content, to use this little fraud for my sake, who am without reservation, Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac, 10. Decemb. 1634. Another to her. LETTER XLIIII. MAdam, I am of your opinion, and can by no means approve the ambition of your fair neighbour: her head is full of state and sovereignty, and aims certainly at a Crown. God loves her too well to second her bad desires, and to give her that she asks: so rare a beauty ought to be the recompense of virtue, and not the prey of Greatness: It is fit, that he who possesseth her, should understand, when things be excellent; should know the value of this, and all his life be thankful to his good fortune for it: it is fitter to make a Gentleman happy, than to give contentment to a tyrant; she might perhaps be some amusment to him, when he were cloyed with killing of men; but withal, she might be sure to be the next object of his cruelty, at the next fit of his wicked humour. You know the Story of Mariam; our theatres at this day sound forth nothing so much, as the cries of this poor Princess: he that puts her to death, loved her above measure; and after her death, kneeled down a thousand times before her image, praying her to forgive him. Poppea was first the Mistress, afterwards the wife, and always the Governess of Nero; she had vanquished this Monster, and made him tame, yet at last he slipped from her, and in an instant of his choler, gave her a kick upon the belly, which was her death. His uncle Caius dealt not so roughly with Caesonia, yet in the greatest heat of his fire, he made love to her in these terms: This fair bead shall be chopped off, as soon as I but speak the word: and told her sometimes, that he had a great mind to put her on the rack, to make her tell him, why he loved her so much. The meaning Madam, of all this is, that the tamest of all Tigers is a cruel Beast; and that it is a most dangerous thing, to be wooed with talons. I have seen the Book you writ to me of, and find it not unpleasing; particularly, where speaking of the makers of Pasquius, and of satirical Poets, he saith, that besides the golden age, the age of silver, of brass, and of iron, so famous and so much talked of in their Fables; there is yet behind to come an age of wood, of which the ancient Poets never dreamt; and in the miseries and calamities whereof, they themselves shall have a greater part than any other. If I go abroad to morrow, I hope to have the honour to see you: In the mean time, that I may observe good manners, and not be wanting in formalities, I will say I am, Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac, 16. Aug. 1626. To— LETTER XLV. MY Lord, besides the thanks I owe you for myself, I have a special charge from Madam de— to thank you from her, and to give you a testimony of your Coachman's skill. He is in truth, a great man in his profession, one might well trust him, and sleep from hence to Paris: He glides by the brink of Praecipices, and passeth broken bridges with an admirable dexterity, say what you can of his manners otherwise; Pardon me, my Lord, if I maintain that they be no vices, and that you do him, great wrong to reproach him with them in your Letter. He doth that by design, which you think he doth by inclination; and because he had heard; that a man once overthrew the Commonwealth, when he was sober, he thinks, that to drink well, is no ill quality to well governing: He takes otherwise no care for going astray, seeing he hath a God for his guide, and a God that was returned from the Indies before Alexander was come into the world. After so long a voyage, one may well trust Father Denys, with a short walk; and he that hath yoked Tigers, may well be allowed to guide horses. Your Coachman, my Lord, hath studied thus far; and if they, who hold in their hands the reins of the State, (to use the phrase of—) had been as intelligent and dextrous as he, they would have run their race with a better fortune, and our age should not have seen the fall of the Duke of— nor of the Earl of—: it is written to me from the Court, that—: These are only News I received by the last Post; but I send you, in their company, the Book you desired, which is (as you know) the Book of the wickedness of the world, and the ancient original of all the modern subtleties. The first Christians endeavoured to suppress it, and called it, Mendaciorum Loquacissimum: but men at this day make it their Oracle, and their Gospel: and seek in it rather for Sejanus and Tigilinus, to corrupt their innocency, than for Corbulo or Thrasea, to instruct them to virtue; at our next meeting we shall talk more hereof: The great Personage I have praised, stands in doubt, that his Encomium is at an end, and presseth me to conclude, that I am, My Lord, Your, etc. At Balzac, 4. June. 1634. To— LETTER XLVI. SIR, I am sorry to hear of the continuance of your malady, though I hope, it be not so great as you make it. These are fruits of this unseasonable time, and I doubt not, but your Fleame, which overflows with the rivers, will also with the fall of the rivers, return again to its natural bounds. I have had my part in this inundation, and it would be no small commodity to me, that things should stay in the state they now are in; for by this means my house being made an Island, I should be less troubled, than now I am by people of the firm Land; But seeing upon the abating of the waters, depends the abating of your Rheum, I am contented with all my heart, they shall abate; as above all things desiring your health: yet withal, I must tell you, there is care to be used: you must abstain from all moist meats, forbear the good cheer of Paris, and follow the advice of an ancient sage, who counselled a man troubled with your disease, to change the rain into drought. You see how bold I am, to send you my prescriptions; I entreat you to follow them, but not to imitate me; for in this matter of Medicines, I confess myself a Pharisee; I commend a Julippe to others, but I drink myself the sweetest Wines. But to speak of something else, I cannot imagine, why Monsieur de— should keep me languishing so long, and having made me stand waiting three months after his time appointed, should now require a further prorogation; and a longer delay. For my part, I verily believe, he spoke not in earnest, when he made you this untoward answer, and that it was rather for a trial of your patience, than for an exercise: He hath the reputation of so honest and just a man, that I can make no doubt of that he hath promised to Monsieur de— and I am persuaded, he accounts himself more straight tied by his word, than by his bond. Monsieur de— believes that I have fingered my money a year since, and you know it is a sum provided to stop three or four of my Persecutors mouths, who will never leave vexing you with their clamours day and night, till they be satisfied. It is therefore your part to use all means possible, to content them, at least if you love your liberty; and take not a pleasure to be every morning saluted with extreme unpleasing good morrows, I expect hereupon to hear from you; and am, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 17. Jan. 1630. To—. LETTER. XLVII. SIR, you ate too just to desire such duties from a sick friend, as you would exact from one that were in health. The reasons I can give of my silence, are much juster than I would they were, and me thinks, three months continuing in a Fever, may well dispense with any obligation whatsoever of a civil life. Yet seeing you will needs have me speak, I cannot but obey you, though I make use of a stranger's hand to quarrel with you. I cannot endure the dissimulation you show, in doubting of my affection, and of the truth of my words. I understand no jesting on that side; these are Games that I am uncapable to learn, and in matter of friendship, I am of that tenderness, that I am even wounded with that, which is perhaps intended but for a tickling. I perceive I have been complained upon to you, but I entreat you to believe, it hath been upon very false grounds; and I require no better justifier, than her own conscience that accuseth me. Within a few days, I will come myself in person, and give you an account of all my actions; and will train myself on to Paris, in hope to enjoy the happiness of your company. In the mean time, be careful not to cure the malady you tell me of, which brings us forth such goodly Sonnets, and makes so well agree the two greatest enemies that are in Nature, I mean, Passion and Judgement: so I bid you Farewill, and am with all my heart, Your, etc. At Balzac, 25. August. 1620. To Monsieur de Coignet. LETTER XLVIII. SIR, I am much bound unto you for your writing to me, and for sending me News that exceedingly pleaseth me. You may well think, I have no mind to cross my own good; and to refuse giving my consent to the Earl of Exeter's request. To have so illustrious an Interpreter in England, is more than a full revenge upon all the petty Scribes that oppose me in France: it is the crowning and triumph of my writings. I am not therefore so a Philosopher, that I place the honour he doth me, amongst things indifferent, but rather to tell you plainly, I have perhaps received too sensible a contentment in it; and upon the point of falling again into my old desire of glory; of which I thought myself to have been fully cured: I send you a word, which I entreat you to deliver to him, which shall witness for me, how dear and glorious the marks he gives me of his love and account, are unto me; Otherwise Sir, I doubt not, but I owe a great part of this good fortune to the good opinion you have of me, which is to be seen in every line of your Letter; and that you have confirmed the English in this Error, which is so much in my favour. Only I entreat you, never to seek to free them of this error, but so to deal with them, that if you convert them from other, it may still be with reservation of this. The truth in question is of so small importance, that it deserves not any curious examination; and in which, to be in a wrong belief, makes not a man to be either less honest, or more unfortunate: Never therefore, make scruple to oblige me, seeing you shall oblige a thankful man, and one who is, Sir, Your &c. At Balzac, 12. June. 1629. To Monsieur de Neusuic. LETTER XLIX. SIR, If I were only blind, I would try to make some answer to the good words of your Letter; but the pain, which my ill eyes put me to, makes me uncapable of this pleasing contention: and I cannot draw from my head, in the state it now is, any thing else but Water and Wax. And besides the unhappy blindness I speak of, I am in such sort overflowed with Rheums, that if it were in the time of the old Metamorphoses, I think verily, I should be turned into a Fountain, and become the subject of some new Fable. I have lost as well my smelling, as my taste, my Nose can make no difference between Spanish Leather, and an old Cows hide: and I sneeze so continually, that all my conversation, is but to say, I thank you, to them that say, God help you. Being in this estate, do you not wonder, I write unto you, and have the boldness to be sending Letters? In truth, never compliment cost me so dear as this, and if I would make use of the privilege of sick men, I might very justly require a Dispensation; but I had not the power, to let your servant go away, without telling you, that you are a very honest Impostor; and that the Periguran you send, is the most refined Frenchman that ever ran afoot to Paris. It must needs be, that the people of your Village is a Colony of the Louver, that hath preserved the first purity of their language amidst the corruption of their Neighbours. There never were such fine things written upon the bank of Dordoune; at least, not since the death of de Montaigue, yet I esteem them not so much, because they are so fine, as because they come from you, whose I passionately am, At Balzac, 25. Jan. 1633. Sir, Your, etc. To Madam Desloges. LETTER L. MAdam, I am always of your mind; and like not Ladies that would be Cavaliers. There are certain bounds that part us, and mark us out our several duties and conditions: which neither you nor we can lawfully pass. And the laws of Decency are so ancient, that they seem to be a part of the ancient religion. Moses hath extended the commandments of God, even to the distinction of your apparel, and ours: and you know he expressly forbids to disguise ourselves in one another's clothes. Women must be altogether women: the virtues of our sex, are not the virtues of theirs; and the more they seek to imitate men, the more they degenerate from their own kind. We have had some women amongst us, that would ride Spanish horses, would discharge Pistols, and would be parties in maintaining quarrels. M. the Marshal Scomberg showed me once a letter, which he writ to a Gentlewoman of— at the end whereof are these words; I kiss the hands of this valiant and pleasing Lady, that is your second in the day, and your wife at night. This Lady might perhaps be valiant, but to my humour, she could not be pleasing. If she had had a beard, she could not have had a greater fault. Women that are valiant, are as much to blame, as men that are cowards. And it is as unseemly for Ladies to wear swords by their sides, as for Gentlemen to have glasses hanging at their girdles. I profess myself an enemy, Madam, to these usurpations of one sex upon another. It strikes me with a kind of horror, when I read in histories of the ancient women Fencers, whom the Romans beheld with such pleasure in their Amphitheatre; and I account not Amazons in the number of women, but of Monsters and Prodigies. Sweetness and tenderness are the qualities that belong to you; and will your she Friend give over her claim to these, that is, to the succession of her mother, and the privileges of her birth? will she not be as well contented as you, with the partition which Nature herself hath made? I cannot conceive with what face she can go a hunting amongst such violence and tumults, and how she can run hallowing all day, till she be out of breath, after a kennel of Hounds, and a troop of Huntsmen. God made her for the Closet, and not for the Field: and in truth, it is a great sin to distend so handsome a mouth, and to disfigure so comely a face, with blowing a borne. To expose such excellent things to all the boughs of the Forest, and to all the injuries of the weather; and to endanger such precious colours with wind and rain, with the Sun and dust. And yet, Madam, to see hunting, without being a party; to go in Coach, and in Parkes enclosed, where a multitude of beasts are kept prisoners, and come to die at Lady's feet; such a recreation as this, I do not condemn, being only entertained with the eyes, and may pass either for a spectacle, or a walk; and is as far from agitation, as from rest. But this serves not her turn, she calls these but lazy and sedentary recreations, and takes no pleasure, but when it is with hazard of her life. But what would be thought Madam, if one would come and tell you, she is slain with a fall, by rank riding, or that she hath met with a wild Boar, that was too hard for her? In such cases, there would not only be no excuse for her death, but it would be a blot upon her memory for ever: and to save her honour, there must be feigned some other accident in her Epitaph. As for that other discoursing Lady you complain of, and whom I know, she commits not in truth such extravagant faults as this doth; yet she hath her faults too: and I can no more allow of women to be Doctors, than of women to be Cavaliers. She should take you for a pattern, and make profit of the good example you give. You know indeed, an infinite number of excellent things; but you make no open confession of your knowledge, as ssee doth, and you show, you have not learned them to keep a School. You speak to her, when she preacheth to you; and making popular answers to her riddles, and giving distinction to her confusion: you do her at least, this good office, to expound her to herself. Neither in the tune of your voice, nor in the manner of your expressing, is any thing seen in you, but that which is natural and French: and although your spirit be of an extreme high elevation, and far above the ordinary reach, yet you so accommodate it to the capacity of all that hear you, that whilst the meaner sort do understand you, the more able spirits do admire you. It is a great matter Madam, to have gotten the knowledge of such excellent things: but it is a greater matter so to hide them, as if they were stolen, and to call them, as you do, by the name of of your secret Truanting. Your Canvas, your Silk, your Needles are seen, but your papers are not seen; and those women that are taken with men that are not their husbands, are not more surprised than you are, when you are found to have an Author in your hand, that is not French. I know therefore, Madam, you cannot approve of one so contrary to yourself, how fair a show soever you make, nor will ever change the plainness of your words, for her learned gybrish. Pedanterie is not sufferable in a Master of Art, how should it be borne withal in a woman? And what patience can endure to hear one talk a whole day together, Metamorphosis and Philosophy; to mingle the Ideas of Plato, and the predictables of Porphirie together: to make no complyment, that hath not in it a dozen Orisons and Hemispheres; and at last, when she hath no more to say, then to rail upon me in Greek, and accuse me of Hyperbole, and Caco-zeale? These be her devises, she will have, in two verses, at least four full points; she hath a design to set on foot, and bring into use again, the Strophes and Antistrophes; she gives Rules both of Epic and Dramatic Poesy, and saith, she cannot endure a Comedy, that is not within the law of four and twenty hours: and this she is going about to publish through all France. If I had a mortal enemy, I would desire no greater revenge of him, than to wish him such a wife. Nothing hath more confirmed me in my desire of solitude, than the example of this Lady: and I see plainly, that a single life is the best thing in the world, seeing it lies in covert, and is free from the cumber of this talking Lady. I expect by this bearer the Essences you promised me, and am, Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac, 20. Septemb: 1628. Another to her. LETTER LI. MAdam, I cannot possibly live any longer without hearing from you: but I cannot hear of any of whom to hear it, and Lymousins are as rare in these parts, as Spaniards since the war was proclaimed. I must therefore make use of a messenger, whom you have raised to an Ambassador, to the end he may inform me of your health and your friends. My love of you, draws on a curiosity for all that are yours: and my mind will not be in quiet, till I hear how the Gentlemen, your children do, and what good news you hear from them. Particularly I desire to know, whether you be yet a Grandmother in Holland: and whether my Lady, your daughte-in law, have brought you Captains or Senators, at least, Madam, they shall be children much bound to their mother; seeing, besides their birth, they shall owe her for their liberty, a thing they should not do to a Fleming of Brussels. I have seen the Cavalier you have so often spoken of, and I think you judge very rightly of him. He consists wholly of a Pickedevant, and two Moustaches▪ and therefore utterly to defeat him, there needs but three clips of a pair of scizers. It is not possible to bring one— to be afraid of him. He saith, that if he wore a Lion's skin, and carried in one hand a Torch, and in the other a Club, yet in such equipage he would be more ridiculous than redoubtable. He believes he hath choler enough, but believes not he hath any heart; he reckons him in the number of beasts that are skittish and resty, but not that are cruel and furious: And when I tell him, he hath been often in the field; he answers, me, it hath been then, rather to feed, than to fight. You can, if you please, return me a hundred fold for this my untoward short relation: and it will be long of you, if my man come not back laden with histories, which must certainly have been written to you by the last Posts. Take pity upon the ignorance of your neighbours, and do me the honour to believe I am, Madam, Your, etc. At Balzac, 15. Aug. 1635. To Madam du Fos. LETTER LII. MAdam, my dear Cousin; There is nothing heard in all quarters, but benedictions and praises, which our poor pleaders give you. They invocate you, as their Redeemer; and if Themis be the goddess of good causes, it seems you are the goddess of good success. For myself, I have known a long time, that you are powerful in persuasion, and never speak without prevailing. This is the cause, why I have promised Monsieur de—, not that you shall solicit for him, but that you shall speed for him; and I am this day warranted of the Event. I could tell you, to make you respect him the more, that he is able to thank you, in five or six languages; that he hath a full Magazine of Astrolabes and Globes; and that, being but of a mean statute, he hath yet, by his knowledge in the Mathematics, found a means to make himself as high as Heaven. But I will content myself to say, that he is my friend, and your Orator: that if my commendation, and your own glory be dear unto you, you cannot but very shortly send him back with full satisfaction. I promised to send you the two Sonnets, you have heard so much spoken of, but my bad memory makes me sail in a part of my promise, and I can send you, but one and a half. The one entire is this: Tu reposois Daphnis, au plus haut de Parnasse, Couronné de louriers si touffus & si verse, Qu' ils sembloit te Cowrir des orages divers Don't la rigueur du sort trouble nostre bonace. Quand l' injust Menaique a been eu cett ' audace D' employer les poisons son's sarabe cowerts, Pour corrumpre ton Nom qui remplit l' univers Et me sprise du temps la fatale menace. Mais si durant la paix, tes Innocents' Escrits, Forcerent d' avouer les plus rares esprits: Que Florence devoit ta Temple a ta memoire, Ce style de combat, Cet Efford plus qu' humain, Fera voir a quel point, tu peux mettre ta gloire, Qu'and l' injure t' a mis les arms a la main, The half one is this: Quelque fois ma raison par des foibles discans, M' incite a la revolte, & me promet secours Mais lors que tout de bon je me veur servir d' elle Apres beaucoup de peine, et d' efforts impuissants Elle dit, qu' vranie est seule aymable & belle, Et m' yrengage plus que ne font tous mes sens. The Author of this last Sonnet hath made one in Spanish, which in the Court of Spain, goes under the Name of Lopez de Vega, and another in Italian, which Marino verily believed, he had read in Petrarke; It is a Spirit, that changeth himself at pleasures and transforms himself into what shape he list: yet he deserves better praises than this, and his Moral qualities are nothing behind his Intellectual, I will tell you his Name, when it shall be lawful to love him openly, and and to make his Encomium without scruple. But first, it is needful, that Fortune which hath cast him upon an Enemy's Country, should bring him back to Paris, where both of us mean to wait upon or, to make our Court, and from thence I desire not ever to return, but only to testify to you more carefully, than heretofore I have done, that I am Madam my dear Cousin, Your, etc. At Balzac, 4. May. 1630. To Madam de Campagnole. LETTER LIII. MY most dear Sister, I send you the Book which you required of me, for my Niece, and I believe, that this and her Prayer-book may very well suffice to make up her whole Library: she shall find in it, a Devotion that is not too mystical, nor too much refined; and which hath nothing but Moral and reasonable. I like this popular Divinity, which meets us half way, and stoops a little, that we may not strain ourselves too much. It follows the example of its Author, who made himself familiar with common people, and put not back so much as Courtesans and Publicans, far from making division in families, and withdrawing women from obedience to their mothers, and their husbands. It commends this obedience, as their principal virtue, and calls it a second worship, and a second religion. I shall be glad to see my Niece make profession of a piety, so conformable to natural reason, and so good a counsellor of all other duties. But let her not, I pray, climb higher, and undertake Meditations of her own head. Irenada whom I sent her, hath taken this pains for her and hath meditated for her, and for all other that shall read his Books. There is nothing more dangerous, than to mount up to Heaven without a helper and a guide; and it is a great confidence, one must have in his Spirit, to let it go so far, and be assured, it will ever come back again. It is not long ago, there was in a Town of Spain, a Society of devoted persons, who continued in meditation so many hours a day, leaving of all base works, to live, as they said, a more heavenly life; but what think you, became of it? even a thousand domestical disorders, and a thousand public extravagancies. The less credulous took the prick of a pin, for a Saints mark, the more humble, accounted their husband's profane; the wiser sort spoke what came in their heads, and made faces perpetually. In so much, that when in the month of May, there did not passed three or four run mad; it was counted a good year. It is fit to stay one's self upon the true virtue, and not to follow the vain Phantasms of holiness. And it is far safer, to ground one's self upon a solid and certain reading, than to go wand'ring in a hollow, and unsteady contemplation. If I had more time, you should have mors words; but he that brings you the letter, calls upon me for it, and I can add no more to it, but that I perfectly am, My dear sister, Your, etc. At Balzac, 15. April. 1635. Another to her. LETTER LIIII. MY dearest Sister, all the world tells me, that my Niece is fair, and you may believe, I will challenge no man, for saying so: Beauty is in Heaven a quality of those glorious bodies, and in Earth the most visible mark that comes from Heaven. It is not fit therefore to slight these gifts of God, nor to make small account of this spark of the life to come: It is not fit to be of so cross an humour, to blame that which is generally praised. Mark when a comely personage comes in place, having but this advantage of her birth, you shall presently see all that were talking, to hold their peace; and what noise soever there was before, you shall have all hushed, and an universal calm upon a sudden: you shall see a whole great multitude, all busy in different matters to make presently but one body, and that only to stand to gaze and wonder; some leave the tales they had begun, some curtal their complaints, and cut them off in the midst; every man puts off his conceits to some other time, only to take a full view, and to contemplate this divine thing that presents itself. If it be at a Sermon, they leave harkening to the Preacher, and they are no longer the auditors of M. de Nantes, but the spectators of Calista. The fair can never be seen without respect, without praises, without acclamations. They triumph, as often as they appear, and their youth hath not more days, than their beauty hath Festivals. But the mischief is, my dear Sister, that the Festivals are short, the youth is not lasting, and the fair at last come to be ill favoured. Queens and Princesses grow old, and there is no old beauty, but that of God, of the Sun, and of the Stars. These heads that now have neither skin, nor flesh, nor hair; These carcases and dry bones have been in their time, the divinities and wonders of the world; and was heretofore called the Duchess of Valentinois, the Duchess of Beaufort, the Marquis of—: Besides there may happen diseases, which will do old ages work before hand, and are oftentimes more ghastly than death itself. We are frighted sometimes to see the spoil and ruins of Faces, upon which the foot of sickness hath trodden, and there is nothing, in which we may more observe, the lamentable marks of the inconstancy of humane things. From hence I conclude, that beauty being a thing so frail and tender, subject to so many accidents, and so hard to keep; it is fit we should seek after another beauty, that is more firm and permanent, that can better withstand corruption, and better defend itself against the force of time. Above all, it is not fit, that women should be proud of a quality, that is infamous for the losses and wracks of many poor Consciences, and which as innocent and chaste as it can be, will yet be a cause to raise in others, a thousand fowl desires, and a thousand unhallowed and wicked thoughts. Say, my Niece hath some thing in her that is pleasing, some thing that is fair and beautiful, as h●● friends conceive, yet she ought always to be afraid of such a good, that is so dangerous for doing hurt to others. I set before her eyes, the sad Picture of that which she shall be hereafter; to the end, she may not grow proud of that which she is now. There is no hurt in meditating a little upon this point. But allow her the liberty we lately took from her; yet withal, put her always in mind, that of the four beauties I have showed her in my Tasso; there is but one of them, that will be a fit example for her to follow. She must leave Armida and Erminia, for the Gallants of the Court, Clorinda is for the valorous men of Gascoigne, and Perigord; but she that I propose for her Pattern, is Sophronia. And if she have not courage enough to say to the Tyrant, as she said, It is I that am the Delinquent you look for, let her at least, have the other conditions, that are necessary to the being her follower, and imitate her in them. This fair Saint made profession of modesty, and neglected her beauty; she was always, either hidden under a veil, or shut up in her Chamber, and all the world might suspect her to be fair; but there was scarce any at all that knew it but her mother. She had no design to entrap any man's liberty, and therefore laid not her snares in their way, nor went to Church to see and to be seen. My dear sister, I cannot choose but take upon me here to be a reformer of corrupt manners, and make my complaint to you, of a Custom, which as well as many other naughty things, the Court hath cast upon us. What reason is there in the world, that women should enter into holy places, of purpose to draw upon them, the view and attention of the Company; as much as to say, to trouble and disturb the whole devotion of a Town, and to do as bad, or worse, as those buyers and sellers did, whom Christ whipped out of the Temple? By this means, good actions become evil, and Piety comes to have no better odour before the Altars, than Perfumes that are musty and corrupted. Women now adays, are bound to be seen to be at Church; and this very desire of being seen there, is the ordinary profanation of the place where they are seen. And in truth, seeing this place is particularly called the House of God, what is it but to vilify God, even in the highest degree, to come and offend at his own doors, and as it were to his face? It is even as great an Impudence, as that of the first Angels, who sinned in Paradise. Yet herein certainly, the Italian women are more pardonable than the French; for they indeed, have no other breathing time of their unfortunate liberty, being at all other times, kept up as slaves and prisoners: but in France, where women are not denied the company and visits of honest men, they can have nothing to say, in justification of this incontinency of their eyes, and of this unsufferable vanity, to seek to part stakes with God, in men's vows, and to share with him in his public Adoration. You little thought this morning to hear a Preacher, and I as little thought to be one; but as you see, the zeal of God's House, hath brought me to it; and finding myself at leisure, I was desirous to bestow part of it upon you The Text was given me yesterday, by the company that was here; where my Niece's beauty was so much extolled, that, sending you News, which are to her so glorious, I thought fit to send her withal a cooling, to keep her glorying in some temper: and so my dear Sister, I take my leave, and am with all my soul, Your, etc. At Balzac, 3. May. 1635. Another to her. LETTER LV. MY dearest sister, having both of us but one passion, it makes us always talking of one thing. My Niece is the subject of all our letters, as she is the object of all ou● cares. For my own part I see not a good or a bad example, which I make not use of for her instruction, and endeavour to employ it to her profit. You remember a woman the other day, who values nothing, likes of nothing, excuses nothing; and let her be in the best and most pleasing company that may be, yet she is sure to put them all into dumps and melancholy. You can come on no side of her, but she pricks and bites: all her coasts are craggy and rocky. And it was not without cause my brother said, that if the man you wot of, had married her, there would certainly have nothing come of that marriage, but Teeth and Nails. It is impossible to live in peace with such a savage chastity. I make no more reckoning of it, than of that of the Furies, whom the ancient Poets call virgins, and wonder not, that women of this humour, love no man, seeing they hate the whole world. This sad and sullen poison taking up all the room in their souls, leaves no place at all for other passions that are sweet and pleasing. They fly pleasures, rather by having their mouth out of taste, than by having their judgement in perfection: and are so continually fretting, that they have no leisure at any time to be merry. As long as they be chaste, they think they may lawfully be discourteous, and scratch men, so they do not kiss them. They have a conceit, that by wanting one vice, they have presently all virtues: and that for a little good fame they gain to their husbands, they may keep them under yoke, and affront all mankind. It is true, the loss of a woman's honour is the greatest disgrace she can possibly incur; and which once lost, she hath nothing left her that is worth the keeping: But yet it follows not, that the preserving it, is any such royal act; and I do not admire any, for not being willing to live in misery and disgrace. I never heard, that a woman should be praised, for not falling in the fire, or for not casting herself down a rock. We condemn the memory of them that kill themselves; but we give no reward to them that preserve themslves. And so indeed it is, a woman that magnifies herself for being chaste, magnifies herself for not being dead, and for having a quality, without which she were as good be out of the world, seeing she stays not in it, but for a plague to her name, and to see her own infamy. I say yet more, that she ought not so much to consider the vice as an evil thing, as to consider it as an inpossible thing, and not to have it so much in detestation, as in ignorance. For indeed, if a woman be truly virtuous, She will sooner believe there are Mermaids and Centaurs, than that there are any dishonest women: but will rather conceive that the world is given to slandering, and that Fame is a liar, than that her neighbour is false and disloyal to her husband: though with her own eyes she should see the fault committed, yet it is her part to suspect her eyes were mistaken, and that it was but an illusion which she saw; at least, she should never give sentence upon this sort of delinquents, seeing Christ himself would not do it to the adulterous woman. When others wrong a woman, it is her part to be sorry: and when others say, she hath been unfaithful, it may be enough for her to say, she hath been unfortunate. And yet more than this too, I could wish, if it were possible, that where she finds most weakness, there she should show most goodness; and I would not, that virtue should beget this bad quality. It is an enemy to society, and deserve not to have so good a mother: and one may well fly and blame the vice, so as the flying it, be without ostentation, and the blaming it be without choler. For otherwise, it would be as much as to require a statue for doing nothing; and in the smart of the punishment, to seek for the pleasure of revenge. An honest woman reforms the world by the example of her life, and not by the violence of her spirit. She ought not to proclaim war against any; not against the most indiscreet and insolent: and if there chance any licentious or uncivil word to be uttered in her hearing, she ought to check it, either by giving no care, or by falling into some other discourse, or by casting upon the speaker a beams of modesty, that may c●ver his confusion, and pi●ce his very soul: and thus she shall use a chastising without offending. There is as well a severity in modesty, as a sweetness, and which keeps insolency itself in awe: and a woman that carries this excellent virtue in her eyes, keeps men within the bounds of their ●uty, without ever falling into outrage, or into words of choler. Other virtues are hidden, and have nothing in them that is visible, or that falls under sense. This virtue hath a body of light, and riseth up into the face, in those pre●ty stains, which bashfulness that is her usher, as Aurora is the Suns, sends up into it. And in truth, the Pu●ple, whereof the Poets speaks, which appears at the break of day, is nothing so rich and glorious, as that w●ich is disclosed in an honesty a little bashful; the effect whereof in noble tempers is not an overflowing of blood, but only one single drop well husbanded. It is not a mass of r●●, which sets the face on fi●e. It is only a first impression, and as it were, a shadow of tincture, that lightly colours it. This honest blush, which is so pleasing a thing in maiden's faces, and which I distinguish from that, which is sottish and untoward, is a bar, and sufficient defence against the audaciousness or the most impudent; and when it is seen to shine in a woman's look, there is no licentiousness that is not dazzled with it, and is not stopped from daring to proceed. And therefore there is no necessity of using any straining of the voice, any churlishness of words, or any agitation of gestures, to do that, which may better be done by silence, and with quietness. And indeed women are bound, if for nothing else, yet for the very in●erest for their beauty, to shun a passion, that makes such villainous faces, and sets so many wrinkles upon their countenance. I have heard some of them complain, that the scent of a Rose was too strong, and that Musk made their heads ache, because it had not mild sweetness enough: and why then will they not take that sweetness into themselves, which they seek for so much in other things? and find fault with the want of it in that Art, which proposeth to itself no other end? if without this sweetness, there grow from the most precious odour, a certain quality which offends them; and if there be some Flowers, and some Perfumes that please them not, what likelihood is there, that Brimstone and Salt-peter can please them, and that their humour can have any thing common with these violent substances? It is true perhaps, that sweetness and mildness have their excesses; but yet, even those excesses are more lawful, than the justest temper of shrewishness and incivility; at least in a woman, they are much more commendable: and it becomes her better to dissemble that she knows, than to discover verities that are odious: and better she should be thought to come out of another world, than to carry to a man the fi●st news of his stinking breath, and teach another to know the infirmity of his race▪ which perhaps he knew not before. These Libe●ties are not sufferable in the f●eest Conversations, they draw on other more dangerous liberties; and though your sex be inviolable, and have the privilege of sanctuary, yet profane persons stick not to lay hands on the Saints themselves, and on their Altars, and nothing is so sac●ed, that can escape the hand of sacrilege. Only those persons that can revenge offences, may venture to give offences; and one that will give the lie, must be of a condition to fight a Duel, and maintain it by Arms. My Niece hath no great need of these precepts, nor indeed of any foreign instruction; she cannot wander from the right, if she go not astray from her own inclination; nor can be troublesome to others, if she borrow not a vice which is none of her own. I have therefore represented to her, the woman of the other day: but after their example, who showed their slaves drunk to their Children, and that is to make her afraid of filthy Objects, and to make that hateful to her, which is not in itself lovely; to confirm her in the principles which you have taught her, and to draw her out some rules from her own action: She is (I know) naturally good; but the best natures have need of some method to guide them, and direction doth never any hurt to virtue: she is able to keep herself in terms extremely obliging, without ever falling into the baseness of flattery: She is able to please without colloguing; and although she call not every thing by the right name; nor be so very curious to speak in proper terms, yet her stile shall not for that, be the less liked, nor her company the less desired. she may call them wise that want the reputation of being valiant; and women that are sad; she may say they are serious. If a man be not of a quick spirit, she may say, he is of a good judgement: and if one be unfortunate in his actions, she may yet say, he hath a good meaning in his counsels But yet in this there is a measure to be held, and a choice must be made, in laying her colours, that she seek not to disguise all sorts of subjects: for there are some indeed that are not capable of disguising. Those that are pale, she may praise for their whiteness: but those that have a dropsy, she must not praise for their fatness: she may say, that scruple is a bud of piety, but she must not say, that profaneness is an effect of Philosophy. She may make a favourable construction of things doubtful, and sweeten the rigour of particular judgements; but she must not contend against common sense, nor be opposite to verities that are public and manifest. She must make a difference between errors and crimes, between a docible simplicity and a presumptuous stupidity, between sots that are honest, and those that are wicked. And if she happen to be in company, where some weak spirit is oppressed, as the world is full of such that will triumph over the weak, and take no pity of any, she must then, by all means, be a protectress of such a one, and make herself a Sanctuary for all those, whom stronger aduersaries would otherwise ruin. This only is to be observed, that she so undertake the maintaining of weak causes, that it may appear by the tune of her voice, that it proceeds from excess of goodness, and not from want of knowledge: and that she compassionates humane infirmities by an act of charity, but makes not herself a party by false persuasion. I am now at the end of my paper; and should have been a good while since at the end of my letter: but I always forget myself when I am with you, and never think hours shorter, than those I bestow upon your memory. And so my dear sister, I bid you farewell, not without great longing to see you: and if you and all your company come not hither the next week, I proclaim it to you, that I am no longer, At Balzac. 10. July. 1634. Your, etc. THE SECOND PART of the third Volume of the Letters of MONSIEUR DE BALZAC. To my Lord the Cardinal, Duke of Richelieu. LETTER I. MY Lord, being stayed here by some occasions, I suffer this hard necessity with a great deal of pain, and account myself banished from my Country, being so long a time deprived of your presence. I deny not, but the victorious and triumphant News, that comes continually from the Army, gives me some resentment of joy, and that the brute of your Name in all quarters, toucheth me very sensibly; but it is no perfect satisfaction to me, to learn that by others relating, which I ought to know as an eyewitness, and I conceive so great a pleasure to consist in the sight of your glory, that there is not a common soldier under your Command, whose happiness and good fortune, I do not envy. But my Lord, though I cannot serve you with my bodily actions, yet I revere you day and night, with the thoughts of my mind, and in this so worthy an employment, I never think the noblest part of myself, can do service enough. Your Lordship, next to the King, is the eternal object of my spirit, I never turn my eyes from the course of your life; and if perhaps, you have Courtiers more officious than myself, and such as do their duties with greater ostentation and show, yet I am most sure, you have no servant that is more faithful, and whose affection comes more truly from his heart, and is fuller of life and vigour. But to the end, my words may not be thought vain, and without ground, I send you now a proof of that I say, by which, you shall perceive, that a man that is himself persuaded, hath a great disposition to persuade others, and that a Discourse, founded upon the things themselves, and animated with the truth, both stirs men's spirits with greater force, and also begets a firmer belief, than that which is but feigned, and comes but in the nature of declaiming. This my Lord, is a part drawn out from the whole body, and a piece, which I have taken most pains to polish; which, I freely vow unto you, that all the hours of a calmer leisure than mine, and all the powers of a more elevated spirit than ordinary, would have found work enough to bring to perfection. In it, there is handled, Of the virtue, and victories of the King; Of the Justice of his Arms; Of Royalty and Tyranny; Of usurpers and lawful Princes; Of Rebellion chastened, and liberty maintained; but because the Prince I speak of, is a stirrer, and makes no stay any where, and that in following him, I should embark myself in a world of several subjects; I have therefore, prescribed to myself certain bounds, which in his actions, I should never have met with: and after the example of Homer, who finished his Ilias with the death of Hector, though that were not the end of the war; I have thought fit, not to go further, than the taking of Size, though this were but the beginning of the wonder, we have seen of his. You know my Lord, that this kind of writing, which I propose to myself, is without comparison, the most painful of all other; and that it is a hard matter, to continue long in an action that must be violent, and to be violent in an action that must continue long. This praise belongs properly to Orators, I mean such as know how to persuade, how to please in profiting; and can make the people capable of the secrets of Governing a Commonwealth. For as for Philosophers, that have written of this argument, their discourse is commonly so dry and meager, that it appears, their intention was rather to instruct, than to please; and besides, their style is so thorny and cumbersome, that it seems they meant to teach none, but the learned. And in this, there is no more difficulty, than there is in healing of men that be in health. And for a man, to make himself obscure, there needs no more, but to stay upon the first notions we have of truth, which are never, either wholly pure nor well unfolded, and which falling from the imagination upon paper, leave upon it such a confusion, that it resembles rather an informed abortion, than a perfect production. Besides, in the composition of a History, especially where the Politics have to do, an Author is carried, and borne out by his matter, and the things being all made to his hand, which ease him of the pains of invention, as the order of the time easeth him of the care of disposing: he hath little to do for his part, but only to contribute words, which is by some made so small a matter, that when Menander was pressed by some friends to publish a work of his, that he had promised: He made answer, it shall presently come forth; for it is in a manner all finished and ready, there wants nothing, but to make the words. But in the persuasive kind of writing (besides, that there must be a better choice made, and a stricter order used, in placing the words, than in simple Narrations, which for all their lustre and riches of expression, require no more but plainness, and fit terms) they which desire to attain perfection, or indeed to do any thing at all of worth, endeavour all they can, to put in use, and reduce to action, the most subtle Idaea's of all Rhetoric; to raise up their understanding to the highest point of things; to search out, in every matter, the verities less exposed to view, and to make them so familiar, that they who perceived them not before, may by their relation come as it were to touch them Their design is, to join pleasure to profit, to mingle daintiness and plenty together; and to fight with Arms, not only firm and strong, but also fair and glittering. They endeavour to civilize Learning; drawing it from the College, and freeing it from the hands of Pedants, who mar and sully it in handling: and to say the truth, adulterate, and corrupt it, abusing this excellent and delicate thing in the sight of all the world. They seek not to avoid Rocks by turning aside from them, but rather by sliding gently over them, and rather to escape places of danger, than to shun them. And to make it appear, that nothing is so sour or bitter, but that it may be sweetened and allayed by Discourse. Finally, they suffer themselves sometimes to be transported with that reasonable sury, which Rhetoricians have well known, though it go beyond their Rules and Precepts: which thrust an Orator into such strange and uncouth motions, that they seem rather inspired, than to be natural; and with which, Demosthenes and Cicero were so possessed, that the one of them swears by those that died at Marathon, and of his own authority makes them Gods: the other, asks questions of the Hills and Forests of Alba, as if they had ears, and were able to hear him. But if I were one that did come any thing near so noble an end, (which I neither will nor dare believe) and that I were able to make strangers see, that all things in France are changed for the better, since the happy Reign of our King, who no less augmenteth our spirits, than he increaseth our courage: yet it is not I that should merit the glory of this, but I must wholly attribute it to the happiness of my time, and to the force of my object. Howsoever, my Lord, if I cannot be taken into the List of learned and able men, at least, I cannot be denied a place amongst honest men, and loyal servants; and if my abilities be worthy of no consideration with you, at least, my zeal and affection, are better worth, than to be rejected. With which meditation, I am sometimes so ravished, that I doubt not, but my resentments must needs content you; and that it is no unpleasing recreation to you, to cast your eye upon a Philosopher in choler. And though true love content itself with the testimony of its own Conscience: and that I give you many proofs of my most humble service, which I assure myself, will never come to your knowledge; yet for your satisfaction, I desire you might hear me sometimes in the place where you are, and might see, with what advantage, I maintain the public cause, in what manner I control false News that runs about, and how I stop their mouths that will be talking in disparagement of our affairs. It is certain, that it is not possible our State should be more flourishing than it is, or that the success of the King's Arms should be more glorious than it is, or that the Peace of the People should be more assured than it is, or that your Government should be more judicious than it is; and yet we meet with certain spirits, that are troubled with their own quietness, are impatient of their own felicity, cannot be held in any good belief, but by prosperities that are supernatural; and longer than they see miracles, give no credit to any thing. If present affairs be in good terms, than they cast out fears of those to come; and when they see the events prove happy, than they fall affrighting us with Presages. They take an Oath, to esteem of no persons, but foreigners; of no things, but far set. They admire Spinola, because he is an Italian, and their enemy; they cannot abide to praise the King, because he is a Frenchman, and their Master. They will hardly be drawn to confess, that the King hath overcome, though they see before their eyes, an infinite number of Towns taken; of Factions ruinated, eternal Monuments of his Victories: and more easily the King hath gotten the applause of all Europe, than these men's approbation. They would persuade us, If they could, that he had raised his Siege before Rochel; That he had made a shameful Peace with the Protestants; and that the Spaniards had made him run away. They do all they can, to exterminate his History, and to extinguish the greatest light that shall ever shine to posterity. I doubt not, but they cast a malicious eye upon my Book; for presenting an image of those things which offend them so much. And they who believe Fables and Romances, and are in passion, for an Hercules or an Achilles, who perhaps never were; They who read with ecstasy of joy, the actions of Rowland and of Reinold, which were never done, but upon Paper: These men will find no relish in a true History, because it gives testimony to the virtue of their natural King. They can like well enough, that against the credit of all Antiquity, Xenophon being a Grecian, and no Persian, should frame Cyrus a life after his own fancy, and make him die in his bed, and amongst his Friends; when yet he died in the wars, and overcome by a woman: and they can like well enough, that Pliny should tell a lie in open Senate, and praise Trajan for temperance and chastity, who yet was given to wine, and to another vice so fowl that it cannot honestly be named, but they can by no means like, that I, who am the King's subject born, should say that of him, which no man can deny to be most true, and that being to make a pattern for Princes, I should rather make choice of his life, than either of that of Cyrus, which is fabulous; or that of Trajan, which is not the purest, that I may not speak of that of Caesar Bogia, which is all black with licentiousness and crimes. Heaven itself is not able to give this kind of people a Governor to their mind. He that was according to Gods own heart, should not be according to theirs: They would not think S●lomon wise enough, nor Alexander valiant enough. They are generally enemies of all sorts of Masters; and accusers of all things the present time affords. They make our heads ache with crying out, that there was no necessity to make a war in Italy; but if you had stayed still at Paris, they would have cried out much louder, that it had not been honest to suffer our allies to perish. Because some of our Kings have made unfortunate voyages beyond the mountains, therefore they will needs have it, that our King, though he follow not their counsels, should yet fall into their misfortunes. They accuse your conduct with old proverbs, because they cannot with sound reasons. They say, Italy is the Church yard of the French: and being not able to observe the least fault in all your carriage in that country, they lay upon you the faults of our ancestors, and charge you with the error of Charles the eighth. Yet I conceive that these men's sin is rather of infirmity than of malice, that they are rather passionate for their opinions, than Pensioners of our enemies; and that they have more need of help by Physic, than of restraint by Law. But it is a grievous thing to see, how the busie-bodyes of our time, speak the same language, which Rebels did in times past; and abuse the happiness of liberty, even against him, who hath procured it unto us. They come continually, and tell me, we are like to receive much prejudice by the discontent of such a Prince, that is gone from our side. And I answer them, it is better to have a weak enemy to fight withal, than a quarrelsome friend to make much of. They will by all means, that the King at any price, should succour Cazall; and I tell them, that he hath succoured it already, by his conquest of Savoy: and that in the state as things now stand, it cannot be taken, but to be delivered back. They are not contented that you perform actions that are extraordinary, they look you should perform some that are impossible: And though there arise sometimes such difficulties in things, that they cannot by any possibility be encountered; I say not, by defect in the undertaker but by reason of repugnancy in the subject; yet they will not take for payment, such reasons as wise men are satisfied withal, but they would have the King do that, which the Turk and Persian joined together, were not able to do. Th●se things, my Lord, would put me extremely into passion, and I could never be patient at such excess of ungratefulness, if I did not remember, that there hath sometimes been a spirit, so sullen, and so saucy, that it dared to find fault with the works of God himself, and was not afraid to say, that if he had been of his counsel, as well in the creation as in the government of the world, he would have given him better advise than he took at first, or than he now follows. After so immense a folly, you must not think it strange, if there be some extravagants; and the vulgar at all times hath been found but an unjust Judge of virtue; and yet for all that, it hath never been without admirers, and now, if those that have but little instinct, and can do nothing but murmur, and do not favour him, it is for us, my Lord, to testify unto you, that reasonable men, and such as know how to spear, are of the better side. At Balzac, 4. Aug. 1630. Your most humble and most obedient servant. BALZAC. Another to him. LETTER II. MY Lord, hearing that Monsieur de— means to question me about the Benefice you did me the honour to give me: and that by virtue of his dispensation, he hath sent to take possession, I have conceived no better shelter, to avoid this storm, than under the greatness of your Name; nor any safer defence against the forces of such an adversary, than the respect of such a Protector as you are. I require not in this any straining of your Lordship's power; I know you are sparing of it in your own proper interests, and reserve it for occasions that are public and important: I only require the continuance of your love, and that you would signify to him that tr●●bles me, you would be glad he would let me be at quiet. F●● besides that to stand in suit with a man of his robe, were as much as to fight with a M●ster of Fence, and to put one's whole right in hazard: It would trouble me, my Lord, though I were assured of success, to think I should owe any part of it to any other besides yourself, seeing I account it more glory to receive from you, than to w●est from another Monsieur de— may do well, to keep his dispensation for a better ma●ket, and draw much more profit with a little patience. And indeed, I verily believe he looks for nothing to make him surcease, but for some demonstration from you, of your desire: and that he rather hath an ambition to be entreated by M. The Cardinal, than any design to take your gift from me. I humbly entreat your Lordship to give him contentment in this point, and not suffer me to fall, at this first step of my Fortune; and that I may not always be unfortunate, being as I am with all my soul, At Balzac. 8. Novem. 1631. Your, etc. Another to him. LETTER III. MY Lord, I am infinitely bound unto you for the honour you have done me, to remember me, and for the pains you have taken, to write in my behalf to Monsieur de— It is true, your pains hath not had so good success, as I verily hoped it would: for though he had given out, that for his satisfaction he required no more but some small sign, that it was your desire: yet having received that sign, he continues still in the same terms, and holds the same rigorous course he did. It makes me think, my Lord, that he knows well enough of what worth your commendation is: certainly, if it had been employed for any other but my self, it had found all the yielding and respect it meriteth: but indeed, I cast unfortunateness upon all matters I deal in: my evil Fortune suffers me not to make benefit of your love▪ you have no sooner a thought to do me good, but presently a thousand impediments arise to hinder it. You give me presents, and do not receive them. You command I should be paid my pension, and your command is not obeyed. Not yours, my Lord, of which one might say, Est fatum quodcunque votes. You have read my Book with pleasure, and spoken of it with commendation; and yet I suffer persecution for making it, as much as to say, for being a true Frenchman, and a lover of public Liberty. For as for the objections they make against me, they certainly are but colours and pretences: If may words be not learned, or eloquent, they are yet sound, and full of truth. There is not one to be found in all my work, which a mean Advocate were not able to defend before the severest Tribunal in the world. The makers of Libels, who condemn them, are the men of all other, that first corrupt them. I begin my Lord, to be weary of this long and obstinate injustice; my Philosophy begins to fail me in this case: and I should be clean and altogether out of heart, if I had no● your goodness to rely upon. For this, at this day, is the common refuge of all oppressed innocents', and no man invocates it in vain. I therefore make myself believe, that it will at last send me also some fair days, after so many storms and tempests raised against me by mine enemies: and that after you have saved Nations, and set Princes in their Thrones, it will be no hard matter to relieve a poor private man, who adores you, and whom calumny seeks to ruin. I know some, my Lord whom, you have made happy, and yet scarce knew their names, when you did me the honour to speak well of me. And some I have known advanced by you, that lay hidden in the throng, when yourself dr●w me out, and placed me amongst the few, yet what get I by it? For in truth I could never make any use of this advantage, because indeed I could never serve you with such care and subjection, as the forwardness of your favours obliged me to do. My indisposition hath always hindered my good designs; I have always combated with weakness of body, and never durst venture to begin a life, which I was not assured I was able to hold out. This hath forced me, my Lord, to court you in a new fashion; and to seek to do you service by my absence and ease, and not trouble you with unseasonable officiousness, and with many low curtsies to no purpose. I am able to say, unworthy as I am, that I was the first man that preached the wonders of your life unto the people, exhorted all Frenchmen to do their duties; have in mine own person given good example in the Provinces, and have healed many spirits that were sick, and ill persuaded of the present government. I am not so well known by my name, as by my forwardness in your service: And when the spiteful rumour ranabroad of late, many persons of quality can tell, how grievously I took it: and how I resolved to follow you to the world's end, if so be the unfortunateness of France should remove you from the Court. Yet I am not troubled that I make you these proofs of my Fidelity, though they would be less difficult to me, than to entertain you, as now I do, with my interests; which to say true is a cruel torture I put myself to. It is not my desire, you should have misfortunes, to the end I might make use of my consolations, nor it is my wish there should be disorders in my Country, and disgrace to my Master, to the end I might the better show myself a good Frenchman, and a loyal servant. But yet my Lord, why may I not be of some use in a calm, and have a place as well in the joy, as in the sorrow? You alone are the Author of your victory; but you alone cannot furnish your triumph, but must have many Artificers to work about it. I have materials enough to make many large Fabrics; but to undertake the work, I must entreat your Lordship I may have a little contentment, or at least, a little quiet. The splendour of your person is so great, that it sends forth beams of light to your remotest servants: and the power which heaven hath given you, is so redoubtable to all sorts of Tyrants, that to give a period to my persecution, there needs no more, but that you give some sign you mean to protect me; which favour I persuade myself you will not deny me: for besides the common cause of being oppressed, you have known a long time, that I make a special profession to be My Lord, Your, etc. At Balzac, 5. Jan. 1632. To Monsieur Cytois, Physician to M. the Cardinal. LETTER V. SIR, my curiosity were undiscreet, if I should ask you news of occurrents in the Army; but you cannot take it ill, that I ask you news of my Lord the Cardinal's health. I learn the progress of his glorious actions by the mouth of Fame: but I must learn from you how he fares in his continual agitation; and whether the temper of his body feel no alteration by the violent motions of his spirit, I conceive that God doubles his force when there is need; and that he hath regard to the necessity of so many people that cannot miss him: but I know also, that he makes use of the second causes, and that your cares and industry concur with this providence. The services you do to one particular man, are obligations to all the world. Never had any Science a more worthy or profitable employment than yours hath: And if the Romans erected a statue to Antonius Musa, for healing of him who oppressed their liberty, why may not you justly expect a public acknowledgement for preserving of him, who makes us all both free and happy? I send him the discourses which— I humbly entreat you to take care they may come to no other hands but his: and therefore that you will keep them in your custody, that they may be safe until I come myself to Paris. I expect this courtesy from that good will you have always promised me: and here I make you this solemn protestation, that you can never honour any man that is more passionately than I am. Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 5. Aug. 1630. To Monsieur de Chastelet, Counsellor of the King, in his Council of State. LETTER V. SIR, it is a great work of memory to be mindful of me at the Court: but it is an effect of a divine goodness to make it rain dainties in the desert: Since Manna, there was never seen there, such a thing as you sent me; and if you were bound to furnish me with such fare, forty years of banishment at this diet, would be to me forty years' felicity. To speak in plain terms, your present is unvaluable: and to help myself in speaking of it, I have been foreed to fetch comparisons from heaven, because inferior things are never able to express it. You do it wrong to give it the name of a Preface: but you will do much wrong to the work itself, before which such a preface is set: If the outside be so rich, and there be so great magnificence in the Gatehouse, what will be in the Galleries, and Cabinets? and what will the Palace be that is worthy of such an entrance? I see indeed that it is a mark of greatness, but I fear withal, that it is a want of proportion, and being not possible the rest should equal the beginning, you will be accused for disturbing the order of things, and for putting perfection out of its place, which should not come in but at the last. See here an accusation that is very nice, and whereof it is a glory to be convinced. In this there is less account to be made of virtue than of vice; and the disorder which makes a magnificence, is more worth than the method which retains a poverty. Fear not Sir, the event of this dispute; Beauty gets the prize in all causes where the Eyes are Judges: and they who blame you for adorning too much your refutation of the Books of Flanders, blame you for having your Armour too much guilded, and that in striking you dazzle their eyes. It seems they know not that the Lacedæmonians never tricked up themselves, but when they went to fight; and that CAESAR made his vaunt, he won Battles with perfumed Soldiers. The pomp of your style arrests not the sight without profit: It is pleasing to the Reader; but withal it is fatal to slander. In it there is to be seen the lustre and bravery of Tournaments; but withal, there is to be seen in it the force and terribleness of War. The only pity is, you had not a competent Enemy to fight withal, and that so much force and valour should be spent upon a feeble fury, and which is now at the last drop of its poison. The wretched man you pursue, and who dies blaspheming, was not worthy of so noble a Resentment as yours, having nothing considerable in him, but that you vouchsafe to speak of him: you make him of some worth by alleging him so often. In undoing him, you make him famous, and his objections will one day not be found, but in your answers. It is five and twenty years since he was a fugitive from his order, and should have had his trial before the General of the Jesuits. And if these good Fathers did not deal too gently with delinquents, and change imprisonment into banishment, he had from that time been suppressed, with all the filthy books he hath made ever since. But it was necessary, that (to crown his inconstancy) after he had abandoned above a dozen sides, he should now for his last prize, become a parasite to the Spaniards, and a Secretary to those bad French that are at their Court. Let it never trouble us Sir, that he calls us Flatterers: Atheists call honest men superstitious. Catiline called them all slaves that would not be parricides; and it hath always been impossible, to be virtuous with approbation of the wicked. They are delinquents themselves, that find fault with our innocency, and they are idle fellows, who prostrate themselves every day before a Don Diego, or a Don Roderigo, and yet think much we should do any reverence to M. the Cardinal Richlieu. But it is fit they should be taught, that here is the true worship, at Brussels but Idolatry; and that to adore a foreign Power, and such a one that doth mischief to the whole earth, is not, at least an action so truly French, as to revere a virtue, that is native of France, and that doth good to all the world. Seeing they abuse our tongue in praising their Tyrants, and justifying our Rebels; It cannot be denied us, to bring it back to its natural and proper use, and in more honest subjects, to purify and make clean those words and phrases, which they have prostituted to the conceits of the Marquis of Aytona, or made to serve the passion of Spain. If tyranny were more to be feared than it is, and that the unfortunateness of Europe should make it reach hither; yet it should never make me to unsay the propositions I hold, and it shall be all my life a most pleasing object to me, to see myself enroled in the Catalogue of Authors, condemned by the enemies of my Country. I think, I may boldly say, I was one of the first maintainers of the truth, and he perhaps that laid open the field, where so many Orators and Poets find themselves exercise: it is time now, that I leave it to younger men, and such as are more able than I am. Yet I entreat you to remember Sir, that I give place without running away; and that it is the coldness of my blood, and the abatement of my strength, that forceth me, and not any want of courage or change of will. Never think I will ever fail in these. I always preserve in my heart the principles of good actions, I mean, good desires; and when I can no longer be a runner in the Race, yet I will be one of the most earnest Spectators, and clap with my hands when I can do nothing else. In the mean time, to the end, that a good part of my ancient travail may not be lost, and that I may not make that an unprofitable secret, between my Muses and me, which may perhaps serve for some edification to the Public. I think, fit, to make you account of certain things I have heretofore conceived; and to show you, that in actions of my duty, I oftentimes content myself with the testimony of my own Conscience. These are Pieces that were wrought before the second voyage into Italy, and before the lamentable Divisions of the Royal Family. In the purity of public joy amidst the applauses of all the King's subjects; and even of those, who have since lost their loyalty, and now lie railing upon us at Brussels. I send you some sheets, as I first light upon them, and I send them Sir, rather to do you Homage by laying my Compositions at your feet, than to make a Challenge, as opposing them to yours, rather to acknowledge the superiority of your Eloquence, and to go in your Lyverie, than to make myself you● Competitor, and seek to brave you, with so rash a Comparison. If you find any relish in Discourses so far short of the force and merit of yours; and if you think they may give my Masters of the University, any the least contentment, I earnestly entreat you, to present them a Copy; and withal, my humble submission to their judgement. I know, this Society is at this day the supreme Tribunal that Censures all works of the Brain, and gives Rules to all other Tribunals of France. I neither doubt of the sufficiency, nor suspect the integrity of the Judges that praeside there: Moreover, I confess Sir, it could never have a more happy Conception, seeing yourself was the first that spoke it, nor a more illustrious birth, seeing M. the Cardinal was a Patron to it; and therefore, borne in Purple, as were those Princes in Constantinople, whom I would call, Porphyrogencies, if the Academy had Naturalised this Foreign word. The honour it hath done me, to make me a member of their body, without binding me to part from hence, and the place it hath given me, without taking away my liberty, are two singular favours I received from it, both at one time. And to say the truth, it is no small benefit to a man of the wilderness, that turnts his face sometimes towards the world, and is not altogether devested of humane affections, that he may enjoy together, both the repose of solitude, and yet flatter his imagination with the glory of so pleasing a Society. This I cannot do without thanking you for so great a favour; and if they understand not of my Resentment by your mouth, they may have just cause to condemn me for one of little Gratefulness. Lend me therefore, I beseech you Sir, some five or six words, I would ask you more, but I know they are of that worth, and so high in their account, that these few will be enough, not only to satisfy for the compliment I owe; but for the Oration also, it is expected I should make them. You will not, I hope, deny me the testimony of your love, and I require it of you by the memory of the other Obligations I owe you. Atque per inceptos promissum munus jambos: you know my meaning, and that I have a long time been, and am My Lord, Your, etc. At Balzac, 15. jul. 1635. To Monsieur de Bois Robert. LETTER VI. SIR, I hear you have been seen at Paris, from whence, I conclude, you are not at the war in Flanders, but are content to go and give it your malediction upon the Frontiers: If you would acquaint us with the passages of that Country, you should infinitely oblige your old friend, who feeds upon no other nourishment but News, and takes no News to heart, but those which concern the King. He is so careful of the Reputation of his Arms, that he cannot abide his victory should be spoken of with doubting: To make him confess, we have lost one man, it is necessary there should be four Regiments defeated; and when he is spoken to, of the Emperors' aid, his answer is that this is a Remedy to be looked for, when the contrary part is dead. To make this man a Present, the Poet you wot of, made lately some Verses upon the estate of affairs in Lorraine, and answers another Poet, who had written, that the King would never be able to hold it, and that the rellicke of affection, which the Country bears to its ancient Duke, would never suffer any familiarity or friendship to reflect upon us. The— that are the Latins of this Country, would make him believe, that he hath found a mean between the Character of Catullus, and that of Marshal, and that he hath avoided the dryness and harshness of the former times, without engaging himself in the luxury and intemperance of the latter times. With these new Verses, I send you the old Prose you desired, and which hath lain so long asleep in my Closet. Though they be writings of an old dare, yet you know, they are always in season; and seeing they entreat of the sovereign virtue, that is of M. the Cardinal, they entreat of a matter that is immortal, and can never lose the grace of being new. Thermopylae and Platea, are to this day the common places of the Grecians that are in the world; and our remotest posterity, which shall more quietly enjoy the labours of this rare man, than we do; shall speak more often, and more honourably of them than we do. I believe, the Letter to Mounsieur Chastelet, will not dislike you, and that you will find something in it worth your reading. I had word sent me from Paris, that his style was too much painted, and too full of Figures for a military style; but you shall see, how in praising him for the rest, I justify him in this; and with what bias I defend the cause of worthy things. I entreat you to ask him for me, the last Libels of—: and to deliver them to— to bring them to me. You have heard by— the cause I have to complain of Mounsieur de—: Delays in such cases are very dangerous, and if you have not already made an end of the matter, I fear me, the Stock that was appointed for paying of me, will go some other way. Do herein what you shall think fittest, and I shall remain, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 15. Jul. 1635. Austrasia infaelix, ne somnia blanda tuorum, Neu m●mores Aquilas, Imperiumque vetus. Quamvis & Titulos & Nomen inutile jactes, Multusque in vano Carolus ore sonet. Carolus ecce iterum, Nostri virtute Capeti Concidit, & lapsas luget Eugenus opes. Vel solo dixisse sat est, capta Oppidae nutu Atque ulrto exutum terga dedisse Ducem. Austrasia huic vilis nimiùm & neglecta fuisti, Nec te ita qui tenuit, credidit esse suam. Credidit hostiles fugitivus linquere terras, Sed te qui propriam jam tueatur adest. Ille Triumphata rediit qui victor ab Alpe, Et p●r quem placidis Mincius errat agris Ille suo natus Juvenis succurrere saeclo, Non tantùm Patri sistere Fata suae. Cur sequeris Fumo? Vacuam cur diligis umbram? Evereque colis diruta saxa domus? Desere Fessa tuos supremasae clade jacentes, Te validam & stantem Deserutre tui. Prima mali patiens atque inter Gallica pridem Fulmina & Arctoas non benè tuta minas: Tandem pone animos, ac Nostra assuesce vocari Ni facias, Cecinit quae mihi Phoebus, habe. Alternis vertet te Celta & Teuto ruinis, Et nisi Pars uni●es, Praeda duobus eris. To Monsieur Favereau, Counsellor of the King in his Court of Aids. LETTER VII. SIR, He whose Verses you commended, believes upon your word, that he is a great Poet: but I told him, that your words are always favourable, and that he should not flatter himself with an approbation which you never denied to any. He hath, since that, showed me other Verses, which he made for M. the Cardinal, and entreated me, to show you some of the places which I thought the most accomplished, but upon this condition Sir, that at least for this once, you shall be a conscionable Judge, and shall tell us upon your Oath, whether you think this good or that bad: Quid referaem Oceanum tibi ne violentior obstet Oblitum solitus segniùs îsse vices,? Et tua concordes siluisse ad Classica ventos, Surgeret ut tacito machina fixa mari. Machina quam vastos Gens sera tulisse Gigantes Credat in Aequorei Caerula regna Jovis. Quid referam Captas primis rumoribus arces, Castraque nec faciem sustinuisse tuam? Nempe al quid coeleste tibi est, quod cuncta verentur, Praesentesque trahis semper ad arma Deos. Non hostem timuere hosts, sed Judice viso, Horruit ad certam pallida turba necem: Si pugnas vicisse parum est, etc. Cernis ut ad subitum conspecti muricis ignem Depressum attollat Parthenopaea Caput, Quae quondam vim passae ferumque exosa cubile, Gestit in antiquos Castra redire thoros. Non animum foedi amplexus, foeda oscula mutent, Sed prior invicto durat amore sides. O quoties superos Mortem Manesque rogavit, Dum fugeret passus, Maure superbe, tuos. O quoties voluit fieri vel in aequore rupes! Frustrarive tuas aequoris unda manus! Fata obstant, dominumque imponunt multa querenti Quo gravior Siculus non fuit antè Cyclops. Qui dapibus àiris, qui sanguine vescitur atro, Qui formosa sacrâ polluit ora lieu. Qui furto, non Marte potens, etc. Hîc placidis Doris Tellurem amplectitur ulnis, Ac leviter summas languida mulcet aquas. Littus Amore calet solo, cui Myrtea silva, Sufficit & virides Citria silva comas. Quô dulces Zephyrorum animas fragrantibus un●bris Miscet, & Ambrosio tingit odour Venus, Exul hyems fugit in scopulos, ubi mollia tantùm Frigora, & aestivas jussa parare nives. Caetera quid memorem? teneri domus aurea veris, Hîc micat, aeternis Ora beata rosis. Nec steriles ostentat opes sed Praeside Baccho, Luxuriant pleno Flora Ceresque sinu. Et dubitat tantae Ludovix accedere doti, Hectoreis Ludovix jam quoque major avis? Et Nymphae ingenuos morientis despicit ignes, Nec memor est alter quam premit esse suam? Rump mor as Armande, haec pars pulcherrimae rerum Te vocat, & segnes increpat usque moras, Parthenope te maesta vo●at etc. I have some conceit, this last Description will not dislike you, and having heard say, as well as I, that the Kingdom of Naples is a paradise inhabited by Devils; you will find some relish in the fiction of the persecuted Nymph, and not be troubled with the Encomiums which our Friend affords the Spaniards. Naturally he doth not much love them; but since the war hath been proclaimed, and that all traffic with them is forbidden, now his nature is turned into Reason, and now he saith, He should not think himself a true Frenchman, or a good Citizen, if he should hold intelligence, so much as with Seneca; much less (as you may perceive by the Character of his phrase) with Lucan; whom Scaliger hath handled so hardly, or with another of that Country, of whom he is continually repeating these words, which I think fit to let you hear: Hispani Poetae & Romani sermonis Elegantiam contaminârunt, & cum inflatum quoddam & tumidum, & Gentis suae moribus congruens invenissent Orationis genus, averterunt Exemplo suo caeteros a recta illa, & in qua praecipuae Poetarum sita laus est, imitatione naturae. Itaque ferè post Augusti tempora, ut quisque maxime vorsum inflaverat, sententiam maximè conterserat, eo denique modo locutus fuerat, quo nemo seriò soleret loqui, ita in pretio haberi caepie. Quinetiam fucatus isle splendour, & adulterina Eloquentiae species, ita nonnullorum qui vera Eloquentiae gustum non habent, occaecavit animos, ut his quoque temporibus extiterint Hispani Duo, quorum alter Lucanum Virgilio, alter Martialem Catullo, aut●po●ere veritus non est. Quorum ab utroque ita dissentio, & siquis Deus potestatem mihi optionemque faciat etc. You see by this, that the Spaniards have marred all in the world, and have always been the corrupters of all good things. It is not the Politics only, that they have spoiled, making it an Art of wickedness, and a science of piracy; but they have done as much hurt to other inferior knowledges, and have dealt no kindlier with the servants, than with the Mistress. It is they that brought in the first heresy, and the fi●st novelties in the Latin Eloquence. It is they that have picked quarrels with Cicero and Virgil; that have made Books with nothing but Antitheses,— as one should make Feasts wi●h nothing but Salt and Vinegar. I make you report of a Poet's opinion, who requires you●s upon the fragments I send you, where his desire is, to come as near as might be to that ancient grace, which was to be seen in the Roman writings, till such time as the plaster and daubings of the Spaniards, had mar●ed their purity. I entreat you to send him your judgement of it; and in the mean time, will assure you, that he is as much as I can be, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 1. Septemb. 1635. Another to him. LETTER JIIU. SIR, I am your vexation in ordinary, and because you have not rejected my first importunities, you have given me encouragement to continue them still. He that brings you this Letter, believes that my commendation would do him no hurt with you; and I believe so too; and seeing his interests are very dear unto me, I earnestly entreat you, to let him find that our common belief is not ill grounded. The favours you do me, are so much the more pure, in that they look for no requital, and that you have no friends that have suits at Balzac. You therefore may work, as your custom is, by the only motions of your virtue; and as it is fit, you should be more ambitious than I, so you must be content, to leave me all the profit of our friendship, and keep for yourself all the glory. I expect an answer out of Holland, where, I doubt not, but your work is in high esteem, as well for the merit of the matter, as for the excellency of the former. I mean, as well for that it is the Production of a great Poet, as for that it is the action of a good Citizen As soon as I hear news from thence, I will acquaint you with it, and entreat this savour from you, that you will believe I passionately am, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 10 June. 1635. To Mounsieur Girard Secretary to M. the Duke D' Espernon. LETTER IX. SIR, your last Letters have exceedingly comforted me, and you have such things for me, that they make me forgetful of all my miseries. With such a friendship, I can mock at ill fortune, and it makes me taste contentments, which good fortune knows not of. It is true, that your absence is a perpetual cooling Card to my joy; and possessing you but in spirit, it requires a very strong imagination, to desire nothing else. Shall we never come to be Citizens of one City? Never to be Hermits in the same Desert? Shall my Counsel be always twenty miles from me? and must I be always forced to pass two Seas to fetch it when I need it? I hope your justice will do me reason, and that Heaven will at last hear the most ardent of all my prayers; but in the mean time, whilst I stay waiting for so perfect a contentment, I would be glad to have of it now and then, some little taste: if it be not in your power to give yourself; at least lend yourself for some few days, and come and sit as supreme Precedent, over both my French, and Latin. I promise you, I will never appeal from you to any other; only for this once, give me leave to tell you, that the word Ludovix, which you blame as too new, seems to me a more Poetical and pleasing word, than either the Aloysius of the Italians, or our Ludovicus; and besides, It favours of the Antiquity of our Nation; and of the first language of the Gauls; witness these words, Ambiorix, Eporedorix, Orgetorite, Vercingetorix, etc. In which you see the Analogy to be plain; yet more than this, I have an Authority, which I am sure, you will make no difficulty to allow: you know Monsieur Guyet, is a great Master in this Art, but perhaps you know not that he hath used this very word Ludovix, before I used it; for I took it from these excellent Verses of his: Non tulit hoc Ludovix, justa puer acer ab ira, Et patriae casum sic videamus, ait. For other matters Sir, you may add to that which was last alleged in the cause of Madam Gourney, this passage out of the divine Jerusalem, where Aladin calls Clorinda the Intercessor of Sophronia, and of her lover, Habbian vita Rispose & libertade, E Nulla a tanto Intercessor se neghi. I kiss the hands of that fair creature you love, and am withal my soul, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 20. Septemb. 1635. To my Lord the Earl of Port. LETTER X. SIR, I have received a letter from you since your being in England, but not being able to read the Gentleman's hand that sent it to me, for want of a decipherer, I have been forced to be uncivil till now, and have therefore not answered you; because indeed I knew not whom to answer: but now, that this Gentleman (whose name is a mystery in his letters) is by good fortune, come again into this country, I can by no means suffer him to part without some testimony of the account I make of your favour, and the desire I have to preserve it, by all the possible means I can. I will make you Sir, no studied Protestations, nor send compliments to a man that is borne in the Country of good words; I will only say, there are many respects that make your person dear unto me: and that besides the consideration of your virtue, which gives me just cause to honour you, that also of the name you bear, and of the rank you hold, are things that exceed the value of indifferency. I love all them that love France, and wish well to our great Prince, of whom in truth, I have heard you speak so worthily, that as often as I remember it, it stirs me up to doing my duty, and to profit by so good an example. If it had been seconded in Italy, we should have seen all we could have hoped. But God himself saves none but such as contribute themselves to their salvation. Saguntum was taken while the Senators were deliberating: and a wisdom that is too scrupulous, commonly doth nothing for fear of doing ill. The most part of Italians are themselves the workmen, to make their own setters: they lend the Spaniard their blood and their hands, to make a slave of their country, and are the parricides of their mother, of whom they might have been the redeemers. But of all this, we shall talk more at Paris, if you come thither this Winter, as I am put in hope you will. In the mean time do me the honour to let me have your love, and to believe me, there is none in the world more truly than I, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 10 Sept. 1630. To my Lord the Bishop of Nantes. LETTER XI. MY Lord, the joy I take in the recovery of your health, is not yet so pure, but that it always represents unto me a terrible Image of your last sickness. The imagination of a danger, though past and gone, yet makes my memory afraid, and I look upon it rather in safety, than with assurance. We miss the losing you but very narrowly: and you were upon the point to leave us Orphans. I speak it seriously, and without any flattery at all, all the victories we have gotten, or shall get, would never be able to make us amends for such a loss: you wouldd have made our conquest turn to mourning: M. the Cardinal would have found something to complain of in his great felicity, and would have watered his triumph with his tears. Let it not be Gods will to lay this cross upon our time: and if it be a cross inevitable, yet let it be deferred to our posterity. It is necessary the Phoenix should live out her age, and that the world should be allowed time for enjoying the possession of so profitable and sweet a life as yours. It is true, the world is not worthy of you; but, my Lord, the world hath need of you: your virtue indeed should long since have been crowned, but that your example is still necessary: and the more happy ones there be in heaven, the fewer honest ones will be left upon earth. Love therefore yourself a little for our sakes; begin now at last to study your health, which hitherto you have neglected, and make a difference hereafter between cold and heat, between good and bad air; between meats that are sweet, and those that are bitter. Though you take no care of your health for your own sake, yet you must take care of it for the common good: For, I beseech you my Lord, tell me, what should become of the cause of the poor? what of the desolation of widows? what of the innocence of men oppressed? I speak not of the hope of such as hope for preferment by you: for though I write you my Father, and call you Monsieur,— yet I am none of that number. I desire nothing from you at this time, but that which you may give me without ask it of another; your love and good will is the only object of my present passion. I renounce with all my heart, all other things in the world, so I may keep but this, and shall never complain of my shipwreck, if it leave me so solid a plank as this to rest upon. Be pleased to do me the honour to believe it, and that I am with all my soul, My Lord, Your, &c At Balzac, 15 June. 1635. To Monsieur Senne, Theologall of the Church of Saints. LETTER XII. SIR, I have been in ecstasy to hear of your health, and that you keep your body in that reasonable fullness of flesh, which contributes something to your gravity, and adds nothing to your weight. I would not wish you to seek to abate it, nor long to be like the dry and tawny skins of the first Christians. For all Tertullia's saying, all Saints have not been lean and melancholic. The last that we have seen, were of your colour and statute; and you do an honour to Divinity, to preach it with a bright visage, representing in some sort the stateof future glory you speak of to the people. Monsieur de— made me so rich a description of your health, that I could not choose but begin my letter with this compliment. I have seen since Monsieur de— who delivered me one from you, and with it our friend's book, for which I thank you with all my heart. I have yet perused only some Tracts, which in truth seem very learned, and are as intelligible as the obscurity of the matter would well bear. It is true, the Title deceived me; and seeing you will have me speak freely what I think, I must tell you, I think they are nothing else than Orations, and that they are fitter to be read upon a Joyn-stoole, than pronounced at a Tribunal. I had thought to have found in them the persuasive motives of Orators, in the highest strain of their stile, and I find nothing but the dry doctrine of Philosophers, and of them neither, nothing but the ordinary language of their precepts; that it makes me think of these new Companies of Soldiers which are levied under the name of Horse, but are put to serve on foot, when they come to the Army. I say not, it is necessary to handle School questions with all the pomp and force of eloquence, I only say, that such discourses ought not to be called Panaegiricks, or Ovations, and that there is either craft or rashness in this proud inscription, which promiseth more than a Philosopher can perform. Cicero condemns it of impropriety, as you shall see at the end of this Letter; and you cannot but confess unto me, that our friend hath mistaken himself two ways: First, to believe he ought to play the Orator in Divinity: And secondly, to imagine, that to make Orations with success, he need but draw forth some Exordiums out of Plutarch's lives, and to allege the so famous Bucephalus, that was broken by Alexander the great. These are Ornaments so vulgar and so stale, that to use them at this day, is rather a mark of clownishness, than of neatness. When fashions are left off in the City, they are then taken up in the Country; and there are none now but poor Gentlemen, that will offer to wear the massiest silver lace, when it is once fitterd, or the richest Plush, when it is once grown threadbare, Both the one and the other have been in fashion, but they are not so now. They were heretofore novelties, but are now but relics: The first comparison that was made of the burning of Diana's Temple, was excellent: all other since have been but idle. And it is not enough, that the spring from whence water is drawn, be itself clear, but to draw that which is clear, it is necessary also that Lawndresses and Passengers have not troubled it, I make no doubt Sir, but that which you will show me, shall be very choice and perfect. You are I know, of too dainty a taste to be contented with every sauce. I am very impatient till I see those rare productions: and I should ere this have seen them, but that your promises are as deceitful as the Titles of your Book; which notwithstanding is otherwise full of excellent discourse, and profound knowledge. It is now four months that I have waited for you, and you have still continued to wrong me, in continuing to break your word: yet as much wronged as I am, I leave not to be, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac. 1. Octob. 1635. The Opinion of Cicero concerning the stile which Philosophers use in their Writings. LOquuntur Philosophi cum doctis, quorum sedare animos malunt, quam incitare. Siquidem de rebus pacatis ac minime turbulentis docendi causa, non capiendi loquuntur, ut in eo ipso, quod delectationem aliquam dicendo aucupentur, plus nonnullis quam necesse sit, facere videantur. Mollis ergo est eorum oratio & umb●atilis, neque nerves & aculeos oratorios habet. Nec sententijs est, nec verbis instructa popularibus, nec juncta numeris, sed soluta liberius. Nihil iratum habet, nihil atrox, nihil mirabile, nihil astutum; Casta, verecunda, incorrupta quodammodo virgo. Itaque sermo potius quam oratio dicitur. Quamquam en m omnis locutio oratio est; tamen unius orationis locutio hoc proprio signata nomine est. To monsieur Granier. LETTER XIII. SIR, my persecution should be sweet unto me, if in suffering it, I might have the happiness to see you; but your absence makes it insupportable; and it were as good for me to go and be killed in the place where you are, as to come hither and die with languishing. Being here against my mind, I find nothing that pleaseth me; and the objects which I beheld before, as the riches of Nature, I cannot now look upon but with horror, and count them but as the moveables of a Prison. I sigh continually after your Cabinet, which hath so often served for a haven to my tossed spirit; and from whence I have so often fetched Arms and courage to defend me against Fortune. I am not out of hope to see it once again, and to sit me down in that green chair, where you know I have used to be inspired, and foretell things to come, as Sibil did from her Tryvet. In the mean time I must let the unhappy constellation pass away; and must give place to the choler of heaven. So long Sir, as you vouchsafe to remember me, and to hold me in the favour of Messieurs du Puy, I shall not want a good portion of consolation. These are persons that without wearing purple, or bearing office, are yet illustrious and in Authority, at least in the reasonable world, and amongst men, that can rightly judge of things. No employment is so honourable as their Leisure: no ambition so worthily at work, as their virtue takes it rest. You shall do me a singular favour, to let them know from me, in how great reverence I hold them both: and that never man entered the Gallery of Mounsieur de Thou, better persuaded than I am, of their incomparable merit. I will sometimes expect to hear from you; and will always be with all my heart, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 3. Septem. 1632. To Monsieur de Brye. LETTER XIV. SIR, My dear Cousin, I have received three of your Letters, within these four months: the other you speak of, are not yet come to my hands, of which loss I am very sensible: for being deprived of your conversation. I cannot but exceedingly esteem of that, which represents it to me. I have oftentimes told you, that you are naturally eloquent; but yet I must confess you have gotten new graces, by being in Cicero's country, and the Air of Rome seems to have purged your spirit, of all vulgar conceits. Monsieur de— is in this of my opinion: and you have written to us such excellent things, that they were able to comfort us for your absence, if we loved you but a little; but in truth, no Copy can be so good, as the Original; and if you come not back very shortly, I could find in my heart, to go as far as Novana to have your company. Your last Letter renews in me my old loves, and makes me with so much pleasure, remember the sweetest part of the earth, that I even die with longing, till I see it again. It is a long time that Italy hath had my heart, and that I sigh after that happy cowardice with which the valiant reproach the wise. If I could have lived, as I would myself, I had been a citizen of Rome ever since the year 1620. And should now enjoy that happiness in possession which you but only make me see in Picture, but my ill fortune would not suffer me: she keeps me in France, to be a continual object of persecution: and though it be now four years since I left the world, and lost the use of my tongue; yet hatred and envy follow me in to the woods to trouble my silence; and pursue me even in Dens and Caves. I must therefore be fain to go beyond the Alps to seek a sanctuary, where I shall be sure to find, at least my old comforter, who will be pleased to believe, that I am more than any other in the world, Sir, Your, most humble, etc. At Balzac, 10. May, 1635, To Mounsieur de Silhon. LETTER XVI. SIR, I have word sent me from Paris, that you make complaints against me: but being well assured, you have no just cause, I imagine, it is not done in earnest, but that you take pleasure to give me a false Alarm. Yet I must confess, this cooling word, I hear spoken, puts me to no little pain: for though it make me not doubt of the firmness of your affection, yet it makes me mistrust the malice of my Fortune. I have been for some time so unfortunate in friendship; that it seems there needs nothing but pretences to rid me of them; the sweetest natures grow sour and bitter against me; and if this fit hold, I shall have much ado to keep my own brother of my side. I would like as well▪ to be a keeper of the Lions, as of such harsh friends; for though I were more faithful than Pylades and Acates put together; yet they would find matter of discontentment; and my fidelity should be called dissimulation. I cannot believe that you are of this number but if you be, it is time for me to go hide myself in the deserts of Thebans, and never seek conversation with men any more. It is my grief and indignation that write these last words; for my patience is moved with the consideration of the wrong is done me: and if you should deal as hardly with me as others have done, it were fit I should resolve to live no longer in a world, where goodness and innocency are so cruelty persecuted. These six months I have received from you but only one Letter, to which I made no answer, because it was delivered me but in April: at which time, you sent me word you should be in France. Since therefore by your own account, you were gone from thence, before the time I could write unto you, would you, I should have written into Italy to Monsieur de Silhon, that was not there? And that I should have directed my Letters to a name, without either hands or eyes to receive and read them? You are too wise to deal so unreasonably with me, and I should call your former justice in question, if you take it ill, that I did not guess, or rather prophesy of the stay of your voyage: and yet after a scrupulous examination of my conscience, I can find no other ground for your complaints, but only this, and I am ashamed to charge so strong a spirit as yours, with so weak a conceit: I must have had a devil at command to send of my errands, and to deliver you my Letters, being so uncertain as I was, of the place of your abode, and in truth, if I had had such a messenger, I had sooner thanked you, than I do, for your excellent discourse: and should not all this while, have kept within the secret of my heart, the just praises it deserves. It hath taught me, Sir, an infinite number of good Maxims; the stile pleaseth me exceedingly, and I see in it both force and beauty, through all the passages, even that passage which did not so fully please me, yet hath as fully satisfied me, as the rest of the work: and though of myself I be blind in the knowledge of holy things, yet the lustre of your expressing, and the facility of your method illuminate my sight. When my health shall give me leave to go from hence, I will then for your Gold bring you Copper, and will receive your corrections and advise, with as much reverence and submission, as any Novice: but in the mean time, I cannot choose but put my hand to my wound, and require you to give a reason of your doing. I know not from whence should come this coldness in you, seeing for myself, I am all on fire: nor how you, with your great wisdom, should be altered and grown another man, seeing I continue still the same, with nothing but my common sense: Great spirits are above these petty suspicions which move the vulgar: and I wonder you could conceive ill of my affection, knowing how well you had preserved your own. If it be the jealousy of eloquence that provokes you, I am willing with all my heart, to leave you all the pretensions I can have to it; and if you please, I will make you a Surrender before witness. Consider me therefore, rather as you● follower, who is willing to increase your troop, than as your rival to strive for precedence. Give me leave to live: a man that cannot be lost, what negligence soever be used in keeping me; and remember that the least respected of all my friends is much dearer to me, than all Sciences, or all Books. Yet such is my unhappiness, that few of them return me the like, but seem rather they would make a benefit of my pains and sorrows. Because they see I am persecuted, they will make every the least courtesy they do me, to be of great value, and set an excessive price upon their friendship, because they imagine I stand in need of it. But I desire them, and you also, to take notice, that my friendship was never grounded upon any interest; but my love is ever without any mercenary design, or hope of benefit. If they be not willing to embroil themselves in my affairs, I would have them know, I am as unwilling as they, they should: and if they are not strong enough to defend the truth in public, and when it is opposed; at least let them not disavow it, when they are in place of safety; let them not deny their friend when the storm is over, and that there is no longer any danger in confessing him▪ You saw my heart, the first time you saw my face; you were at that time my Confessor; and I have not a sin that is hidden from you. I conceive you are too generous to make advantage of this excess of freeness you find in me; and I do not think you so subtle, that you would make a show of discontent, for fear lest I should begin first. These are subtleties indeed of the country from whence you come: but in my opinion very remote from your natural disposition: and you need not make complaints of me, to prevent the complaints I might else make of you. It is certain, that if I had not equity enough to excuse my friends for things they were not able to performe; I might then perhaps have colour to complain they performed not their promise; but I am one, that know there happen a thousand impediments, which hinder a man from keeping his word, and that every thing that is promised and not done, is not presently a violating of faith, or a breaking of promise. Some have laboured to persuade me, that—: but I never believed any such thing, and I could never imagine that you would go about to build your reputation upon the ruins of the reputation of your friend. If any shall make use of such like artifices, to do ill offices between you and me. I earnestly entreat you to make use of the like remedies, to preserve your opinions sound, and not to suffer your judgement to be corrupted. I take God to witness, there is nothing in the world more dear unto me than your friendship; I make public and open profession of honouring you: I highly esteem a number of eminent qualities in you, both Moral and Intellectual; I have oftentimes shed tears, when I read in your Letters of your griefs; all this, me thinks should deserve a little affection, and make the Fathers themselves that are my adversaries, not take it ill that you should love me; especially when they shall know, that I passionately am, Sir, Your, etc. At Parish 8, Feb. 1631. To Mounsieur de saint Marte. LETTER XVII. SIR, I am paid for my pains before hand,, and look for no greater recompense than you have already made me. My ambition should be very excessive, if it were not fully satisfied with your excellent Verses: and if I did not think myself happy to be honoured by a hand, which crownes none but Sovereign heads, and travels not, but about triumphal Arches, and public Monuments. I have long since known, that all excellent things grow in your Garden; and that the Latin eloquence, which is but borrowed by others; and a stranger every where else; aught with you to be accounted as your patrimony: but I knew not till now, that this rare quality, is accompanied with so perfect a courtesy; and that a man so worthy of his name, and that adds new glory to that of the great Scaevola, could admire any other men's works, besides his own. I will do all that possibly I can, to deserve this your favourable judgement, and not to make you sorry for being deceived to my advantage: but howsoevers if I be not able to preserve your good opinion by my merit; I hope at least to merit your favour by my affection; and to make you see that I truly am, Your, etc. At Balzac, 2. Sept. 1630. To Monsieur D' Argenton, Councillor of the King, and Master of Requests in Ordinary. LETTER XVIII. SIR, having taken the pains that I have done, I cannot altogether disvalue my work; yet I am not a little glad to be confirmed in my opinion by a man of your worth: and that my labour is not unpleasing to the soundest judgement. The second censure you make of it, assures me of the integrity of the first; seeing I should be too presumptuous to believe you could be deceived twice together. But let us stay there I beseech you, and think not, I will ever entertain the vanity you put upon me. I neither pretend to instruct the world, nor take upon me to teach you in any thing; it is enough for me, that I can find wise men some recreation; and can lay things before your eyes, which you know already better than myself. I may perhaps be some help to your memory, and refresh your old Ideas; but to add any thing to your knowledge, and impart to you any new Doctrine, this requires qualities that are not to be found in me. I rather hope to be much bettered in knowledge by you; and make account to account you hereafter for one of my Oracles. Prepare yourself therefore to be persecuted with Questions, and look to receive importunities from me in ordinary. Thus I use my friends when they are abler men than myself; and this advantage, which is not great, is accompanied with this inconvenience, which is not small. You shall begin to find it at our next meeting; but in the mean time, I entreat you to believe, that what bad design soever I have against you, yet I mean, perfectly to be, Sir. Your, etc. At Balzac, 17. Septemb. 1631. To the most reverend Father, Leon, Preacher of the Carmelites. LETTER XIX. MY most reverend Father, you do me too much good at once, your friendship is of great worth, being alone, and you send it to me accompanied; it brings with it an infinite number of excellent things, and resembles that happy River which leaves plenty in all places where it passeth. The Present I have received comes from such a fruitful Vine; it is not a vain show of magnificence, which gives only a light satisfaction to the eyes, but I find it essential and solid, and any spirit that is capable of speculation, may well find nourishment enough for a long time in ●he juice only of your Preface I will not take upon me any more, though you solicit me to do it, and instead of giving my advice, would have me, I should pronounce a Decree. Take heed, my good Father, what you say, and consider what a goodly thing it would be to raise my Village into a Parliament, and make appeals from Paris to Balzac. Though you had humility enough to submit to an unlawful Magistrate▪ yet I have not presumption enough to intrude upon an unlawful charge: Remember yourself besides, that your book is dated from Mount Carmell, which is to say, out of our jurisdiction, and that Decrees are of no force, where time out of mind, there have been Oracle's. You know what S●●etonius saith of it, in the life of Vespasian, he makes no bones to make a God of a Mountain. I like not the boldness of such Metamorphoses yet I am not ignorant, how far the force of piety may reach; and knowing it hath right to remove Mountains, I doubt not but Carmell at this day may be in France, and that upon a place so holy and so high, there may descend more grace and light from heaven, than there ascends ignorance and vapours from the earth. Accept from me this true confession I make unto you, and dispense with me for that sovereign judgement you require of me: Though I am not willing to be your Precedent, yet I am not the less, My most reverend Father, Your, etc. At Balzac, 25. April. 1635. To Mounsieur Chaplain. LETTER XX. SIR, I have now these three weeks taken mine ease, in spite of myself; and one of my feet, which I have not very free, keeps me in my bed, with more inconvenience than pain. Heretofore it hath put me to torture; and therefore I count it now a favour, that it only keeps me in prison, which I sweeten as well as I can, with my Books and my friends. You think you contribute nothing to the comfort I receive; but I assure you, the best part of it comes from you; and nothing comforts me so much for the fair days I lose, as that excellent Ode you sent me: I am even ravished with every part of it; the choice and marshalling of the words; the structure and harmony of the composition; the modest greatness of the conceits; the force which savours not of any violence: all these are worthy to be ranked with the best Antiquity. In some places you do not only touch me; but touch me to the quick: the agitation of the Poet, is transferred upon the reader; and no Trumpet makes so loud and silver a sound, as your Harp doth: Quand la Revolte dans son fort, Par une affrense & longue mort Paya si cherement l' usure de ses crimes: Et que ses boulevars en fin assujettis Country les appareils des arms legitimes Implorerent en vain le secours de Thetis. Ils décriuent l' horrible pas, Où per cent visibles t●épas On crût de nostre Camp retarder la vaillance: Et figurent encore au mil●eu de nos rangs Themis qui te préta son fer & sa balance, Affin de décider ces fameux differens. Ils chantent l' effroyable foudre Qui d' un umouement si soudain, Partit de ta puissant main; Pour mettre Pegneol en poudre Ils disent que tes bataillons Comme autant depais tourbillons Ebranlerent ce Roc jusques dans ses racines, Que mesme le vaincut' eut pour liberateur, Et que tu luy bâtis sur ses propres ruins Vn rampart èternel contre l'usurpateur. Either I have no skill in Verses, or certainly these Verses will live to the remotest posterity; they will be alleged for proof and testimony in the counsels of the last Kings that shall reign upon earth; and perhaps too, they shall serve for a Law, and for a Decree, as well as Homer's Verses did; by the authority whereof a great war that was kindled between the signory of Megara and Athens was reconciled. I know for myself, I shall never stay till your death, for putting you in the number of my Authors; and as often as in my presence, there shall be speaking of the siege of Rochel, of the forcing of Suza, of the taking and keeping of pignerol, so often shall I allege the divine Verses you have written of them: and these also, which I lay not less carefully up in my memory. Ils disent que les Immortels De leur culte & de leurs Autels Ne doivent qu'à, tes soins la pomp rendissante, Et que ta préuoyance & ton Authorité Sont les de ux for'rs Appuis dont l'Europe tremblante Soûtient & raffermit sa foible liverté. Dans un paisible mowement Tu t' éleves au Firmament Et laisses contre toy murmuurer sur la terre: Ainsi le haut Olympe à son pied sablonneux Laisse fumer la foudre, & gronder le Tonnerre, Et garde son sommet tranquille & lumineux. And these other, which to him, to whom you address them, are as much worth as a triumphant Arch: Tun courage aux monsters fatal, Est tousiours plus fort que le mal. Sur le solide honneur sa base est estabile: Le droit & la raison laccompaguent tousiours, Et sans que sa vigueur soit jamais affoiblie, Qu'ou cede ou qu'ou resist, il vadiun mesme course. And these other that are so sage and moral. L'or pour luy cesse d'estre un metal pretieux. La beauté perissable est un bien qu'il mospuso: Pour l'un il est sans mains, & pour l'autre sans yeux And these other that are so noble and so poetical; Cepandant que la Lune accomptissant son course Dessus un char d'argent enuironné d' estoiles Dans le sombre univers represente le course. And now, after all this, tell me, if I have not profited by the reading, and have not made good use of your presents. I should quickly grow rich, if you would send me such presents often; but this is too inordinate a desire, I must be convent with one crop in a year; and I may very well entertain myself a long time, with that you have already sent me, for which I thank you with all my heart, and am, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 12 July 1633. To Monsieur Bonnaud, Councillor in Ordinary to my Lord the Prince. LETTER XXI. SIR, I acknowledge in your Verses due to me but only my name, all the rest belongs to somebody else, and is unfitter for me than a Crown for a private Man. I cannot therefore value myself the more, for having a thing I cannot use; nor is it fit I should put on Ornaments, which being as unfit for me, as in themselves they are rich, would disguise me, rather than adorn me. A Courtier would complain that you mock him, Et que vous en faites une piece, A Doctor would say, you undertake a Paradox, and try the strength of your wit, upon the novelty of an irregular subject. I think, I must myself be of this opinion; and charge you Sir, with abusing Poetry, and for choosing an incredible thing to make it believed. Nevertheless, seeing the Philosopher, Favonrinus, took upon him to praise a fever, and the Romans adored it, I wonder not at your design; for I perceive, there is nothing so bad of which may not be spoken some good, and whereof some or other have not ma●e a holy day. After this extravagant Encomium, and this ridiculous Temple, you might do well to take my miseries too, and consecrate them in your stanzes, and take me too, and make me a thing adoreable and divine, for they are but the sports of wit, which delight, though they do not persuade, and accuse with pleasure, because they are witty; but do not deceive me because I know their craft. For the assurance you give me by your Letter of your friendship, I am infinitely beholding to you, and make account to reap no small benefit by it; for having a soul as you have, full of virtue, you make me a Present that is invaluable, to bring me into so worthy a possession; and whilst you offer me freeness and fidelity, you offer me the two greatest rarities this age affords. I believe you speak more seriously in Prose than you do in Verse, and that you are content to be a Poet, but have no meaning to be a Sophister. I likewise entreat you to believe, that the least word I speak is accompanied with Religion, which I never violate; and that there is nothing more true, than the promise I here seal you, most perfectly to be, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 6 Octob. 1635. To Monsieur Souchote. LETTER XXII. SIR, By your reckoning you have written to me thrice for nothing, when indeed I knew not of your first Letters, but by your last: if I had received them, you may be sure I should have answered them, for though I be not very regular in observing compliments, yet I am not so negligent of necessary duties, that I should commit so many faults togethe, How profound soever my slumber be, yet I awake presently, assoon as I am once stirred; and especially when it is by so dear a name, and by so pleasing a voice as yours is, Never therefore require me to give it in charge to some other, to let you hear from me; such a request would be an offence to our friendship, an action fitter for a Tyrant than a Citizen: it were to take me for that great Mogul, who speaks to none but by an Interpreter. I like not this savage stateliness, it is far from me to use so little civility towards men of your worth: when it is I, that am beholding to you, I pray let it not be my Groom that shall thank you for it. I will take the pains myself to assure you I am wholly yours; and whereas I did not bid you farewell at my going from Park, you must not take it for an argument of slighting your person, but for an effect of the liberty I presume of, and of the renouncing I have vowed to all vain ceremonies. They that are my friends give me this leave; and you are too well acquainted with the solidity of things, to ground your judgement upon appearances; neither do I think you will require them of me, who am as bad a courtier, as truly I am, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 20. jul. 1630. To Monsieur Tissandier. LETTER XXIII. SIR, you shall receive by this bearer the rest of the works of—: or to speak more properly, the continuation of his follies. They are now as public, as those of the great divine Marshal, whom you have heretofore visited in the famous little house. He useth me still with the same pride and insolency he was wont: and you would think that he were at the top of the empyreal Heaven, and at the bottom of Hell; so far he takes himself to be above me: but I doubt not, ere long, his pride shall be abated, and his insolency mortified. He shall shortly be made to see, that he is not so great a man as he thinks himself; and if he have in him but one spark of natural justice, he shall confess he hath triumphed without cause, and must be fain to give up all the glory he hath gotten unlawfully: Turno tempus erit magno cum optaverit emptum Intactum Pallanta: Monsieur de— is still your perfect friend, and he never writes to me, but he speaks of you. He is at this present at Venice, where he meditates quietly the agitation of all the world besides; and where he enjoys the honest pleasures which Italy affords to speculative Philosophers. But Sir, what mean you by speaking of your tears, and of the request you make unto me? Do you not mock me, when you pray me to comfort you for the death of your Grandfather, who had lived to see so many Families, so many Sects, so many Nations, both to be born and die: a man as old as Heresy itself: the League was younger than he; which when the Cardinal of Lorraine first conceived, he caused a Book to be printed, wherein he advertised France of the conception of this Monster. You weep therefore for the losses of another age; it is anchises or Laertes you weep for; at least it is for a man who did but suffer life, and was in a continual combat with death. He should long ago have been one of the Church Triumphant, and therefore you ought to have been prepared for either the loss, or the gain that you have made. Monsieur Rembo was not of your humour; I send you one of his Letters, where you shall see, he was as much troubled to comfort himself for the life of two Grandmothers that would not die, as he was for the death of a Brother that died too soon. I commend your good Nature, But I like not your Lamentations; which should indeed do him you sorrow for, great wrong, if they should raise him again to be in the state in which you lost him. It may suffice to tell you, that he is much happier than I; for he sleeps, and I wake; and he hath no more commerce with men unreasonable and inhuman, and that are but Wolves to one another. You know I have cause enough to speak thus, but out of this number, I except certain choice persons, and particularly yourself, whom I know to be virtuous, and whose I am, Sir, Most humble, etc. At Paris, 3. Dec. 1628. The Letter of Peter Bembo, to Hercules Strotius. A Vias ambas meas, effoetas, deploratasque foeminas, & jam prope centum aunorum mulieres, mibi fata reliquerunt; unicum fratrem meum, juvenem ac florentem abstulerunt, spem & solatia mea●▪ Quamborem, quo in maerore fim, facile potes existimare. Heu me miserum: Vale; Id. Jan. 1504 Venetijs, Another to him. LETTER XXIV. SIR, if it had not been for the indisposition of my body, I had not stayed so many days from thanking you for your many courtesies; but for these two months I have not stirred from my bed; so cruelly handled with the Sciatica, that it hath taken from me all the functions of my spirit, and made me utterly uncapable of any conversation, otherwise you may be sure I should not voluntarily have deprived myself of the greatest contentment I can have, when I have not your company; and that I should not have received three Letters from you, without making you three Answers. Now that I have gotten some quiet moments from the violence of my torture, and that my pain is turned into lameness, I cannot choose but take you by the hand, and tell you, in the first place, that you are an ungrateful man, to leave our Muses, and follow some of their sisters, that are neither so fair, nor so worthy of your affection. I entreat you to believe, it is a temptation your evil Angel hath cast upon you; and that you ought to reject it, as the counsel of an enemy. Things are not now to begin; it is no time now to deliberate; you are gone too far in the good way to look back, and to be unwilling to finish that little which remains. To leave eloquence for the Mathematics, is to refuse a Mistress of eighteen years old, and to fall in love with an old woman. God keep you from this unhappiness, and inspire you with better thoughts than those that have carried you to this desire of change. It would be a disloyalty, I should never pardon you, but should blame you for it as long as I live. For making that reckoning of you as I do, and expecting great matters from you: it were an infinite wrong you should do, to make me lose the most pleasing of all my hopes. I therefore, by all means, entreat you to persevere in your first design, and to resolve upon a voyage of three months, to come and be reconciled to her whom you have offended, and to make her a public satisfaction by the edition of your writings, by which it will plainly enough be seen, the great favours she hath done you. And for my part, I promise you a chamber, where you shall have the prospect of a Garden twelve miles long; and so you shall be at once, both in the City and in the Country. Besides, ● bind myself to set before your Book, an Advertisement to the Reader, to the end that no man may be ignorant of the part I bear, in that which concerns you. Consider whether you like of these conditions, and whether you have courage enough to come and lodge Au Pre aux Glerks, where I will wait for you without any design of challenge or process. You shall be sure Sir, to have there admirable visions, and shall meditate nothing but with success: And in truth, seeing the least motion of your spirit puts me to ecstasy; what will it be, when you shall employ your whole forces? And if your conceits be so just, and so well governed, in the midst of confusion, and unseasonable disturbances, what a man will you be, when you shall be at leisure, and have the liberty which now you want? Take my word for it, you need not fear the censure of the world; I'll undertake, you shall have the approbation of all honest people, provided, that you make a truce with your Mathematics, and never intricate your brains with that melancholic and doting Science, which cost Archimedes his life; at least, before you cast yourself upon such high and sublime specuculations, it is fit you should get you credit by exercises that are more sweet and popular. And now Sir, this is all you are like to have at this time, from my Sciatica, that I am, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 23. March. 1628. Another to him. LETTER XXV. SIR, I do but now receive your Letter of the twelfth of this Month, which confirms me in the opinion I have always had; that my interests are as dear unto you as your own, to compliment with you for this, would be to thank you for being good, as much as to say for being yourself; It is much better to return you friendship for friendship, than to pay you with unprofitable words. In a word Sir, I make profession to be an honest man, and therefore all the thankfulness that can be desired from a person obliged, you may expect from me. As concerning— I assure you I wish him no ill, because I conceive he hath done me none; it is sufficient for me, that my friends have no good opinion of his opinions, and that his own friends begin to take notice of his false dealing. In all this there is nothing either new or strange; I am not the first innocent that have been persecuted in the world, and if I could not bear detraction and slander, I should be more dainty than Princes, and their principal officers are, who forbear not to do well, though for their well doing they be evil spoken of; the best and foundest part is of my side, I want no protector, either Males or Females, and if I would make use of all my advantages, I could oppose Doctor to Doctor, and Gown to Gown; Fratribus & fratres, & claustra minantia claustris. But it is fit sometimes to make spare of ones forces, and to restrain resentment within less bounds than justice allows. The Prince you desire to hear of, is yet in the Idea of the King his Father, far from coming as yet to Paris or Thouleuze; for myself I am always blocked up by my Sciatica, and I think all the storms of the middle region of the air fall down upon my unhappy legs; but it is you that will bring me health and fair weather, and your presence will work that miracle which I expected from Monsieur de L'orme: come therefore, I inireat you, speedily, and suffer not a man to die for want of succour, who passionately is, Sir, Yours &c. At Park, 30. March, 1628. To my Lord the Duke Valette. LETTER XXVI. SIR, it grieves me much, that the first Letter you see of mine, should not be pure and free from all my interests, and that instead of entertaining you with matters of weight, and proportionable to your spirit, I should bring it down to the petty affairs of a private man; yet I cannot believe, that you being all gracious, and all generous as you are, will think any occasion of doing good unworthy of you, but that your virtue in this doth imitate the supreme, which is never to busy in governing of Heaven and the other nobler parts of the world, but that he takes care as well for governing the meanest of all his creatures. I humbly beseech your Lordship to consider me in this last quality, and if it be no incivility to make such a request, that you will undertake the business I present unto you, but as a disburdening you of some more weighty, if it be not that my unfortnatenesse makes the easiest that are to become impossible, I see no reason you need to employ your whole forces about this matter; there needs no more but only the motion of your will, and a light impression of your credit, with— to give it all the solidity and lustre I desire. I should not seem to understand the terms of the last Letter he did me the honour to write unto me; if I had not yet some little hope left, and a kind of satisfaction in my own Conscience. Yet I allege to him no merit of my part, but much generousness of his, nor speak of any services of mine to recompense him, but of his goodness that prevents them, and subjects not itself to the rigours of ordinary justice: This, my Lord, is all the right I allege for myself, and all the title upon which I ground my pretensions: but now I leave following it myself, and put it wholly into your hands, a place perhaps to which my ill fortune herself will bear a respect; but if she shall be opposite to your desire, and prevail above your favour, yet at least I shall thereby know the force of destiny, to which all other forces give place, and which cannot be mastered by any force, nor corrected by any industry; but yet it shall not hinder me from resting well satisfied, seeing I shall in this receive much more from you than I am denied by him, it I hold any part in your grace & favour, which is already my comfort against whatsoever ill success shall happen. It sufficeth me to be happy with this kind of happiness, which is more dear to me than all the happiness the Court can give me, being a man no more ambitious than I am, My Lord, Your, etc. At Balzac 25. Decemb. 1634. To my Lord, the Bishop of Poitiers. LETTER XXVII. MY Lord, although Monsieur de— hath promised me to give you assurance of the continuation of my service, yet I cannot forbear to add these few lines to his testimony, and to tell you that which I tell to all the world; that your virtue is a transcendent far above the abilities and carriage of our age. It is a match for Antiquity in its greatest pureness and severity. When the Camilli and the Scipio's were not in employment, they reposed themselves and took their ease as you do; and when I consider sometimes the sweet life you lead at Dissay, I conclude that all the employments of the Palace, and all the intricacies of the Court are not worth one moment of a wise man's idleness. It is well known that from your childhood you have despised Vanity, even in her kingdom, and that in an air where she had attractives able to draw the oldest and most reluctant spirits. All the pomp of Rome hath not so much as given you one temptation; and you are so confirmed in a generous contempt, that if good Fortune herself should come to look you out, you would scarce go out of your Closet to meet her in your Chamber. This is that I make such reckoning of in your Lordship, and which I prefer before all your other qualities; for those, how great soever they be, are yet but such as are common with many base and mercenary Doctors, whereas this force and courage are things that cannot be acquired in the noise and dust of Schools. You found not these excellent qualities in the Vatican Library, nor yet got them by reading of old Manuscripts; you owe them indeed to Monsieur your deceased Farther, that true Knight, without spot or wrinkle▪ equally skilful in the art of war, and in affairs of peace, and that was the Heros of Muret, of Scaliger, and of Saint Mart. I propose not a less object for my worship than they did, neither indeed is it less, or less aeligious than theirs was; and though you did not love me as you do, and though you should denounce war against me, and become head of a faction to seek my ruin, yet I should not for all that forbear to revere so rare a virtue as yours is, but should still remain, My Lord, Your, &c At Balzac, 4 May. 1630. To Monsieur Guyet. LETTER XXVIII. SIR, I fear not much to lose a thing I esteem but little, but holding your friendship in that account I do, if I should have lost it, I should never see day of comfort more; you must not therefore think it strange that I was moved with the Alarm that was given me, for though I know myself to be innocent, yet I conceived my unfortunateness to be such, that I may give credit to any bad news. Now that Monsieur de— hath quieted the agitation of my mind, and hath assured me of your love, I cannot forbear to signify unto you the joy I take, telling you withal, that so I may preserve a friend of your merit and worth, I do not greatly care for loving him ●hat will leave me. There is little to be seen amongst men but malice and weakness, and even of good men the greatest part is scarce sound; this is a cause why a firm & constant spirit, as yours is, is of wonderful use in society, & it is no small benefit to them that are wearied and overtoyled as I am, to have a person to rest upon, that cannot fall. There is need of courage to maintain a friendship & indeed of prudence to perform the meanest duty of life; 'tis nothing worth to have a sound will, if the understanding be defective, it is to no purpose that one makes vows and sacrifices: Nil vota furent●m, Nil delubra juvant, he complains without cause of his spleen and his other inferior parts; this is to accuse innocents'; the evil no doubt comes from a higher place, & it is the brain that is cause of all the disorder The knowledge I have hereof makes me have compassion of him, and excuse in a Dr. of threescore years old, those base shifting tricks that are not pardonable in a Scholar of eighteen. Any man but myself would call his action a cowardice, & a treason; but I love to sweeten my grief as much as I can▪ cannot become an enemy at an instant, & pass from one extremity to another, without making a little stay by the way. I honour still the memory of our former friendship, and cannot wish ill to a man to whom I have once wished well; but this is too much of complaining & quarrelling. Do me this favour, I beseech you, to make choice of something in your study for a consolation of my solitude. I have already the Encomium of Monsieur the Admiral de la V●let, but I would fain have the Epitaph of my Lady the Duchess of Esp●●non, and those admirable Elegies you showed me once; In quibus tam●e▪ Tibullo similis quam Tibullus sibi; I entreat you to deliver them to Monsieur— who will see them safely delivered to me; if you please we will use him hereafter as our common correspondent, who knowing me to the very bottom of my heart, will, I doubt not, most willingly add his testimony to my protestations, that I truly am, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 25. Sept. 1630. To Monsieur de L'orme, Physician in ordinary to the King, and Treasurer of France at Bordeaux. LETTER XXIX. SIR, it is not now only that I make a benefit of your friendship, I have had profit by it a long time, and you have often been my advocate with so great force, and so good success, that they, who had before condemned me, were glad to revoke their sentence as soon as they heard you speak, yet all this while you did but only speak well of me, now you begin to do well for me; it is you whom this year I may thank for my pension▪ Without you Sir, my warrant would never have persuaded my partner, it would presently have been rejected, and he still have continued inexorable. But it must be confessed, there is no wi●de beast but you can tame, no matter so bad but you can make good; as you heal maladies that are incurable, so you prevail in causes that are desperate, and if you find never so little life and common sense in a man, you are able to restore him to perfect health, and make him become a reasonable man. I desire not to have the matter in any better terms than you have set it, I am glad I shall not need to invocate M. the Cardinal for my dispatch, and that Monsieur— hath promised not to fail to pay me in September. If he should pay it sooner, I should be fain to desire you this favour, to keep it for me till that time. Now I only entreat you, to draw from him a valuable at assurance of it, and for so many favours and courtesies done me, I shall present you with something not altogether so bad, as those I have already showed you; and seeing one cannot be called valiant for having the better of a coward, neither can I be accused of vanity, for saying I have exceeded myself. I am therefore bold to let my Letter tell you thus much, that if my false Pearls, and counterfeit Diamonds have heretofore deceived you, I do not think that the show I shall make you of my new wares will use you any better. Yet my meaning is not to praeoccupate your judgement, who neither of myself nor of my writings, will have any other opinion than what you shall please to allow me. Since the time I have wanted the honour of seeing you, I have made a great progress in the virtue of humility, for I am now proud of nothing but of my friends affections; Let me therefore never want yours, I entreat you, as you may believed, I will all my life, most passionately be, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 8. Decemb. 1629. To my Lord— LETTER XXX. MY Lord, I hope you will not take it ill, that I put you in mind of a man, to whom you have heretofore made demonstration of your love, and that after a long intermission of these petty duties, which are then troublesome when they are frequent, you will give me leave to tell you, that I have indeed omitted them, but more by discretion than by negligence. I know Sir, you have no time to lose, and to put you to the reading of unprofitable words, what were it but to show an ignorance, how much the King employs you, and how the present affairs go. It is therefore the respect I bear to your continual employments, that hath caused my silence; and I should be very absurd, if in the assiduity of your cares, I should present you with little pleasing amusements, and should look for an answer to some poor compliment, when you have so many commandments of importance, and so many orders of necessity to deliver forth. It is enough for me, that you do me the honour to cast your eyes upon the protestation I make you, that in all the extent of your command, there is not a soul more submiss, nor more desirous to bear your yoke, than mine is; and that as much as any in the world, I am, My Lord, Your, etc. At Balzac, 10 Aug. 1630. To Monsieur Senne, Theologall of the Church of Saints. LETTER XXXI. SIR, you need not wonder to see your name in the Book I send you: Lovers, you know, leave marks of their passion every where, and if they were able, would fill the whole earth with their cyphers and devices. It is a custom as ancient as the world, for with that began writing also: and at first, for want of paper, men graved the names of those they loved, upon the barks of trees. If any man wonder I should be in love with a Preacher, why wonders he not at that Roman, of whom a Graecian, said, that he was not only in love with Cato, but was enchanted with him? You have done as much to many others in this country, and I have here as many Rivals as you have Auditors. Yet there is not the same object of all our affections: they run after your words, and hang at your mouth: but I go farther, and discover in your heart, that which is better than your eloquence. I could easily resist your Figures and your Arguments, but your goodness and your freeness take me captive presently: I therefore give you the title of a perfect friend in your Encomium: because I account this a more worthy quality, than to be a perfect Orator, and because I make most reckoning of that virtue in a man, which humane society hath most need of. For other matters, remember yourself, in what terms I did speak to you of the business you write of; and that only to obey you, I have been contented to alter my opinion. I was well assured the enterprise would never take effect; but I thought it better to fail by consenting than by obstinacy, and rather to take a repulse, than not to take your counsel. I have known a long time that fortune means me no good, and the experience I have of her hath cured me of the malady of hope and ambition. Make me not fall into a relapse of these troublesome diseases, I beseech you, but come and confirm my health: you Sir, that are a sovereign Physician of souls, and who are able to see in mine, that I perfectly am, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 10. Feb. 1635. To Monsieur de Piles Clerimont. LETTER XXXII SIR, having heard of the favourable words you used of me at the Court, I cannot any longer forbear to give you thanks, nor stay till our next meeting from telling you how highly I esteem this favour. I cannot but confess, I did not look to find so great a graciousness in the country of maliciousness; and seeing, that the greatest part, even of honest men, have so much love for themselves, that they have but little, or none left for strangers: I thought with myself, that the infection of the world might have lightly touched you, and that either you had no passions in you at all, on at least, but very cool and moderate: but I see now, that you have more generousness in you than is sit to have amongst men that are interessed, and that you put in practise the Maxims of our Ancestors, and the Rules of your Epictetus. It is I that am for this, exceedingly bound unto you, seeing it is I that receive the benefit of it, & that am the Object of your virtue. You may then believe, I have not so unworthy a heart, as not to feel a resentment answerable to so great an Obligation; at least Sir, I hope to show you, that the Picture mine enemies have made of me, is not drawn after the life, and that their colours disfigure me rather than represent me. I have nothing in me heroical & great, I confess, but I have something that is humane and indifferent. If I be not of the number of the virtuous; I am at least of their side. I applaud them whom I cannot follow, and admire that I cannot imitate. I am glad if I can be praised, not only of the judicious and wise, such as you, and our Monsieur de Boissat are, but even of the simpler sort, that are honestly minded, such as— I know Sir, how to love in perfection, and when you shall know me better, you shall confess there is none that can be more than I, At Paris, 2 April 1635. Your, etc. To Monsieur de Voyture. LETTER XXXIII. SIR, if I did not rely upon your goodness, I should take more care than I do in preserving your favour: and I should not let a messenger go from hence, by whom I should not persecute you with my Letters. But knowing you are no rigorous exactor of that which is your due, much less expect I should give you more; I have conceived, I might be negligent without offence, and that having an absolute power over me as you have, you would use it upon me, with the moderation of good Sovereigns. And I should still continue to follow mine own inclination, which finds a sweetness in idleness; if I did not think it necessary to advertise you that I am in the world, lest you should think all your courtesies lost that you have done me. I would have been glad I could have loved you all my life long without any kind of interest, or temporal consideration; yet it troubles me not to give honour to my friend, by giving him matter of his virtue to work upon. I am content you shall hold the higher part in our friendship, which is to do good, but then I look to hold the lower & less noble part, which is to acknowledge; and this is so settled in my heart, that a greater cannot be desired from a man exceeding sensible, and exceedingly obliged. But though it were so, that you had no tie upon me, and that without ungratefulness, I might forbear to love you; yet I entreat you to believe, that the knowledge I have of your worth & merit, would never give me leave to do it, but that the natural respect we owe to things that are perfect, would always bind me infinitely to honour you, and to be with all my soul, as I am, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 15. July 1630. Another to him. LETTER XXXIV. SIR, you are welcome from Flanders, from England, and from Spain. I am not only glad for your return, but I refresh myself after your voyages: For if you know it not, I must tell you, that my spirit hath gone these voyages with you; and you never passed the Sea, that I was not near a shipwreck. They that know what it is to love, will not mislike the novity of this compliment: I have born my part in all the fits of your Favour, I have drunk part of all your potions, I have accompanied you in all your strange adventures. It is therefore great reason I should give you thanks for giving my friendship rest, and that by finishing your travel, you have finished my unquietness. It is better Sir to be a private man at home, where there is courtesy and freeness, than to be a Lord Ambassador among public enemies; and if the Jews said well, that the Graves of Judea were more beautiful than the Palaces of Babylon; why may not we be bold to say, that the Dirt of Paris is better than the Marble of Madrid? It is a juster thing to adore M. the Cardinal, than to put off ones hat to the Precedent Rose, or to the Marquis of Ait●na; and it would have been a news no less shameful than lamentable, if we had come to read in the Gazettes these pitiful words; spain's rising up; Atque ibi magnu● Mirandusque Gl●ens sed●t id Praetoria regis, Donec H●sperio libeat vigilare Tyranno. Thanks be to God, the face of things is hanged, and a great Prince liberty hath cost but the life of good a Horse. At our next meeting, you shall tell me all the fortunes you have passed; and in requital thereof, I will tell you news out of the wilderness, and it shall be at Monsieur de Chaudebous Chamber, that our conference shall be, at least, if you care any thing for it, and that I be in his favour still. Howsoever, this I am sure, he can never love any man that honours him more perfectly than I do, or that hath a greater opinion of the beauty and nobleness of his mind He is always one of the dear objects of my thoughts, and I still take him for one of those true Knights, which are no where to be found now, but in the History of France. I want such an example before my eyes, to stir up the faintness I feel in my duty, and to thrust me forward in the love of Virtue. The least of his words make my spirit both higher & greater, the only sound of his voice give me both life & strength, & I doubt not but I should be twice as good as I am, if I could but see him once a month, and make a third in your excellent conferences. But this is a happiness which is at home with you, but far off from me, though I have a design to come nearer to it; you enjoy it to the full, and leave to others only a desire of it and a jealousy, and jealous indeed I should be if I did not love you more than I love myself, and if being bound to you for a thousand favours, I did not acknowledge myself more bound to take a contentment in your good fortune. Enjoy then your happiness, Si●, and never fear I will oppose it, seeing I shall always prefer your contentments before my own, and shall be all my life, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 5 Novemb. 1634. To Monsieur, Mestivier Physician to my Lord the Duke D'Espernon. LETTER. XXXV. SIR, I am a thirst for the waters of Vic, ever since I heard you think them to be wholesome; the reputation you give them hath made me to send for them, to try whether this Drug will do me any more good than others; I am apt to believe for the satisfaction of my taste, that there are no better medicines than those that are least compounded, and which come ready made from the bosom of our common mother; but specially I have a confidence in nature when she comes authorized by your judgement, and hath the warrant of so esteemed a name as yours, and by this means Sir, you have saved me a voyage into Italy; For, but for you I was taking a journey of two hundred and fifty leagues upon the word of an ancient Poet, to the end I might be of those happy ones, of whom he writes these versts, Non venas resecant, nec vulnere vulnera a sanant, Pocula nec trifti gramine mista bibunt. Amissum lymphis reparant impune vigorem, Pacaturque agro luxuriante dolour. I have since received your learned Letter, wherein you prescribe me the order I must hold in using this wholesome disorder, and teach me to drink with art; in truth you have more care of me than I am worthy of, my health is no matter of any such importance, that it should be managed with such curiosity. It is not worth the pains you have taken in treating of it so learnedly, and writing these two leaves of paper you have sent me. The public, which you will have to be interessed in it, will acknowledge no such matter, it hath no use in these turbulent times of contemplative Doctors. The active life is that defends the frontiers, and repels the enemy, and the least musketier in the army of M. the Cardinal of Valette, is at this time of more use than all the peripatetics and Stoics of this Kingdom; we may therefore think that the public we talk of dreams not of me, nor is engaged to preserve my idleness, but it you that love me, and would therefore make me of more worth than I am, thereby to have the more colour for your loving me. I am much bound unto you for this favour, yet I doubt whilst you set me at so high a price, there is none would take me for such as you would vene me; but I regard it not, I bound my reputation by your account, and desire no other Theatre, nor other World but you: it sufficeth me that in your spirit I enjoy the glory you give me, and sweetly possess my good fortune, which I know I merit nor, if you weigh it in the Skales of Scrupulous justice, but which you will yet preserve to me, if you have regard to the passion with which I testify unto you, that I am, Sir. Your, etc. At Paris, 3. Septemb. 1635. To Monsieur de Mesmes D' Avaur, Ambassador to the King at Venice. LETTER XXXVI. SIR, if the persecution continue, I shall be forced to give place to envy, and to go wait in the place where you are for a change of time, which in this Kingdom is so adverse unto me. It is indeed my adversaries design to make all sorts of governments my enemies, and not suffer me to breath at liberty, either in Monarchy Aristocracy, or Democracy. You have seen his Manifests printed, which have flown beyond the Alps; you know the cunning he useth to draw the public hate upon me, and to make me ill thought of, as well by the King's Allies as by his Subject. He goes about to banish me out of all states, to shut all places against me that are open, even to fugi●ves, and not to leave my innocency one corner of the earth to be in safety: yet Sir, let him do his worst, and practise what he can, I hope you will bear me cut to say, that he shall never hind me from having a place in your heart, nor be able to take from me this pleasing refuge. And besides that Ambassador's houses enjoy the privileges of ancient Sanctuaries, and that there is neither justice not violence but hath respect unto th●m; I assure myself your only affection will interest itself for my safety, without any other public consideration, and that you will defend me as a thing dear unto you; thought the defence of a man afflicted were not otherwise in itself, a thing worthy the dignity of an Ambassador; wheresoever you shall have power to speak, I shall be sure of a strong protection, being as I am assured of your well speaking, and this eloquent mouth, which persuades the wise, and by which the just expounds himself, is just, shall gain no doubt a good opinion of my cause by undertaking it, and a favourable censure of those judges at least that I acknowledge. I expect this issue from your almighty Rhetoric, and hope Sir, that in these troublesome encounters you will double your love and your good offices unto me. Though I should be worse entreated of the world, and of fortune than I am, and should have nothing before my eyes but lamentable successes, and deadly presages, yet you would remember how that Cato stood firm upon ruins, and held himself constant to a side which the Gods themselves had abandoned. I do not think my case is yet in this extremity, it hath subsistence & foundation; and as it is not so bad but that an honest man may maintain it with a good conscience, so neither is it so weak but that a mean courage may undertake it without fear. The Gentleman that brings you this Letter, hath promised to make you a more ample relation hereof, and to inform you of my whole story. I humbly entreat you to give him audience, until I come and crave it myself, and that I assure you in your Palace amongst your other Courtiers, that I truly am, Sir, Your, etc. At Paris, 20. Decemb. 1627. To Monsieur de Thure, Doctor of the Sorbone, and Cannon of the Church of Paris. LETTER XXXVII. SIR, my dear Cousin, the news you sent me surprised me not, I am so accustomed to receive disgrace, that I find in this nothing extraordinary; it is true, I am a little more sensible of it than of the former, and the place from whence it comes, makes me itake it a little more to heart; yet seeing you seem to compassionate my misery, I find myself comforted of one half of it; and having you for my Champion, I fear not what my persecuters can do against me. Suffer me to call them so, that solicit your College against me, and make it less favourable to me, than I add good right to hope for. It is not their zeal of your Religion, nor interest of the public that sets them on work; it is an old spite they bear me, which I could never master with all my long patience. It is the hate of a dead man which lives still in his Tomb, it is his relics that war upon me, and whereof some ill disposed French do serve themselves to disgrace a work, which hath no other end but the honour and service of the King. I never doubted of your good nature, and I know, if need were, your charity would cover the multitude of my faults; but in this case, I think I have reason rather to ask justice at your hands, and tell you, that if you take the pains to consider my words as I meant them, and not have my enemies correct them; you will easily grant they contain nothing contrary to the orthodox Doctrine, or that is not maintainable in all the Schools of Christendom. This being so, my dear Cousin, I doubt not but you will strongly defend my cause, at least my person, and will be pleased to assure the Gentlemen of your fraternity, that having always accounted their College as the Oracle of true Doctrine, and as the interpreter of the Church in this Kingdom; I could not wish a more sweet or glorious fruit of my travails, than to see them entertained by so learned & holy Personages, that my greatest ambition is but to merit their good acceptance, & to deserve their favourable censure; and if for obtaining this I have not either happiness enough, or not enough sufficiency, I have at least docibleness enough to learn of them that which I know not, and to confess that in their learned conferences they possess the secret and certainty of all holy points, whereof we in our private meditatoins have but suspicions and conjectures, that if I were assaulted by strangers, I could perhaps make a shift to resist, and that with success, but that I prefer obedience, which I owe before a victory, which I might get; that I desire not to contest with my fathers, nor pretend to have reason against their authority, to which I submit myself in such sort, that I am resolved to assure myself of nothing, but upon their word and credit, and from henceforth to acknowledge no truth, but that which they shall please to teach me: I leave it to you to augment, to reform, or embellish this compliment, as you shall think fit; I make you Master of the whole business, and never mean to disavow any thing you shall do, being absolutely, Sir, my dear Cousin; Your, etc. At Balzac, 18 Jan. 1632. To Monsieur de Vougelas, Gentleman in Ordinary to my Lord, the King's only Brother. LETTER XXXVIII. SIR, I humbly entreat you to take for yourself, all the excuses you make to me, and to believe that I have always a love answerable to your virtue; though I say it not so often, as by the laws of civility I am bound to do. Since the coming hither to Monsieur de— you have been the most ordinary and most pleasing subject of all our conference▪ and I am much more curious to hear of your studies, than to hear all the news of the great World. Yet I intent not hereby to ask it of you with importunity, and to engage you again in a commerce of unprofitable words, which would but wrong your necessary employments: I am well enough satisfied with the assurance I have of your love, and am well contented you should keep your compliments for those you love not so well, when I shall find myself to stand in need of you; I am not grown so bashful, but that I can use the liberty I have long used, and trouble you again by my freeness. Hitherto it hath afforded you nothing but trouble, and it was your evil Angel that inspired you with a desire at first to be acquainted with me. But one day, perhaps, I shall be more happy; and for so many and great favours you have done me, it may be you may draw from me some small argument of acknowledgement. In the mean time Sir, I desire you not to cast upon me, a reputation which I am not able to maintain; make no more mocks at my prattling, and hide the shame of your friend, which your other friend hath published. He only is guilty of the fault that was done; and you may well think, I was not so impudent to send false Latin to the University of Paris, as much as to deliver false Money to the Mint, and think to make Mint-men take it for currant. It shall suffice me, that you approve of the French, I mean to bring you; or at least, that you make it worthy of your approving, by making it new with your corrections. If Monsieur Faret be returned from Brescia, you shall make me beholding to you, to assure him from me of the continuation of my service, I make infinite account of him, and am with all my soul, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 15. May. 1629. To Monsieur Gerard Official of the Church of Angaulesmr. LETTER XXXIX. SIR, my last Letters are great Books, and I have nothing to add, but only that I entreat you to take the pains to read them over again, and to draw them into heads for the help of your memory, which though I know to be very excellent, yet I know also, it is extremely full of business, and that I am but the five and twentieth of your Clients, I set down nothing so precisely, but that I leave you liberty to change my orders, if you find them not fit, and to sail with the wind. Nothing but good success can be expected from your sterning; you will so manage, I assure myself, my resentments with Monsieur de— and make him see so much respect and modesty in my grief, that he will perhaps be sorry be ever disobliged me▪ I assure myself also, that when you fall upon my Chapter, where I treat with Monsieur de— that you will not carry yourself, as only my instrument, and as one that hath charge of me, but that you will do as an honest man should, that is persuaded to it by the truth, and interessed in the cause of oppressed innocency. Concerning the perfumes I desired of you, I could wish you would bring me a shop-full; but you must use some body else to choose them for you, for you know them not yourself, but only by name, and you may perhaps have the oil of Nuts given you for the oil of Jasmin, and Gingerbread for Sweet-balls. So it is that pretty things are unknown of great personages: you would think you should do yourself wrong to descend to such peddling wares, and of an Ambassador, and a Philosopher, become a Merchant and an Apothecary; yet Aristippus would be dealing in things that you think scorn of, and said, that he and the King of Persia were the two unfortunate Ones, whom Diogenes pitied. You send me word that Monsieur de— hath great Designs in the Commonwealth of Letters, and that he is resolved be an Author and a Preacher both at once. If you remove him not from so dangerous a resolution, your shall see Books that will be the Funerals of common sense, and let but the name be changed, and it will be said of his Sermons, as an excellent man of our time, said of the Sermons of Friar Lazarus. Fe● de zeal, moins de Science Faisoit que Lazare bossu; Preschant des Cas de conscience N'stoit quasi pas apperceu. As much as to say, that though the Clock did ring out a great while, and that he hath been talking a song hour, yet so little heed is taken of him, that none will believe there is any man in the Pulpit. Before he comes to the Ave Ma●ia, all his Auditors are out of the Church, and he may call them Apostates from the Word of God, and Fugitives from the Church; yet with all he can say, he shall never make one of them to come back. I have not these two years written thus much with my own hand; it is to me, as one of Hercules labours: and can you then doubt, how much I would be willing to do, to do you service? I kiss the hands of all the Family, which you see, and which I honour exceedingly, and am, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 10 Feb. 1633. Another to him. LETTER XL. SIR, I love you better than I thought, since you parted from hence, I have had a number of Alarms for you: and though I stand in covert, yet that keeps me not from the foul weather of your voyage. But I hope, by this time, you are upon returning, and that shortly, we shall ●it by the fires side, and hear you tell your adventures of Bcausse, and of Mantelan. Whatsoever Monsieur de— have said unto you, when you took leave of him; I do not think, that in all the whole Discourse, there can one passage be found that is subject to any bad interpretation: if it be considered as a member depending upon the body, and not as a piece that is broken off. There may, perhaps, be found some proposition, a little bold, but never to go so far as rashness; the Antecedents and the Consequents so temper it, that if a man will not be too witty in another man's intentions, he can never make any doubt of mine. It was never intended, you know, but only to prove a Monarchy to be the best form of Government, and the Catholic Church to be the only Spouse of Christ; Neither yet do I write so negligently, but that I am ready to give a reason of that I write, and am able to defend my opinions against those particular persons that oppugn them; for as for the sovereign authority, you can witness for me with what humility I submit myself unto it. The day after your departure Monsieur de— came to Balzac, whom I kept with me three whole days; I never saw man less interessed, less ambitious, less dazzled with the splendour of the Court; and to speak generally, better cured of all popular diseases. By this I come to know the nobleness, and even the sovereignty of reason, when it is well schooled and instructed, we need not mount up to heaven to find cause of scorn in the littleness of the earth, the study of wisdom will teach it as well: A wise man counts all things to be below him; Palaces to him appear but Cottages, and Sceptres but Baubles; it pities him to see that which is called the greatness and fortune of Princes, and from the height of his spirit, Il void comme fourmis marcher nos legions, Daus ce petit amas de poussiere & de 'bove Dons nostie vanito fait tant de regions. I have at last found the Letter you required of me, which I now send you by this Post, our good father hath taken a copy of it, and saith it is fit to be kept for an eternal monument in our house; and adds moreover, that Erasmus never had so much honour done him by the Sorbon, which instead of condemning my divinity, hath given a fair testimony in praise of my eloquence; for so he pleaseth to call the little ability I have in writing; for it is his custom to make choice of very noble terms for expressing of very vulgar qualities. For yourself Sir, you know it very well, and I entreat you to advertise our other friends that know it not, that all this testimony, and all this honour that is done me, is happened to me by a mere mistaking I had satisfied the desire of the Sorbon long before it, if I had understood they desired any satisfaction from me, but two Editions of my Book coming forth at one time, my charitable neighbours, in my absence, delivered the Sorbone the less corrected Copy, in which indeed, my proposition was not so fully cleared and unfolded as was fit, but never told them that in the other Copy I had clean taken away all colour of wrangling, and justified beforehand, that wherein I imagined they could find any thing to say against me, I expect to hear by the next messenger of your coming to Paris, and am with all my heart, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 25 Jan. 1632. Clarissimo Balzacio, Facultas Theologiae Pariensiensis, S. REdditae sunt nobis ad Calendas Aprilis abs te Literae, vir clarissime, omnibus quidem gratis; simae, non eo solum nomine, quod multam in ordinom nostrum observantiam prae se ferrent; sed etiam vel maxime, quod prope●ssissimam tuam voluntatem immutandi ca quae in Principe tuo offendere mentes Christianas possent. Hunc in librum inquirendi fama, quae nec te latere potuit, non tam occasionem nobis, quam necessitatem attulit. In quo sane uti nulla nis● disertissimo, sic incogitanti quaedam excidisse deprehensa sunt, ex corum relatione quibus recensendi ejusdem delegata provincia fuerat. Praetipas, eaque maxime instituti nostri huic Epistolae subnectemus; quae & si judicabantur, minus ad orthodoxa doctrinae amussim quadrare, aequum tamen pro Christiana charitate ac dignitate tua duximus, ut omnem judicii aequitatem amicae monitionis humanitas praecederet, quo tu ipse operi tuo emendando quaqua operam dares. I stud vero quam pre voto nostro successerie, ' vel ex ●o intelleximus, quod tua ipse sponte in idem cosilium conspēraver●s docilitatem facultati nostrae, ad id tua Epistola pollicitus. Quad & maxime tibi gratulamur, neque velimus tamen in illud incumbas, ordmis nostri duntaxat authoritate viotus, uti bencvole recipis, sed ipsius veritatis; cui nunquam faelicius triumphant ingenia, quam dum cedunt, summissis praesertim per religionis obsequium armis, quorum usus quantum subsidit, ad decertandum conferret, tantum non posset afferre impedimento ad victoriam; siquidem, hoc in genere Vincere, nisi victi non possumus. Ne tu etiam talem deinceps debebis Modestiae tuae gloriam, Cujus laude, non minor inter Christianos audies, quam inter mortales, Facundia audiisti hactenus, ejusdem merito lubentissimos laudatores habebis, quos aliàs multa urgente querimonia, officii ratio coegisset vel invitos esse Censores. De Mandato D.D. Decani & Magistrorum Sacrae Facultatis Theologiae Parisiensis, Ptt. Bowot. Apud Sorbonam: Anno Christi, 1632. Another to him. LETTER XLI. SIR, my Philosophy is not of so little humanity, but that I grieved exceedingly at the reading of your Letter, and was touched to the very quick, for the death of— yet seeing he is happier than they that mourn for him, and that he hath left the world in an age when he yet knew it not; I think it no wisdom to be obstinate in an ill grounded sorrow, or to account that an evil to another, which is the greatest good could have happened to myself. Christianity will not let me say, Optimum non nasci, Bonum vero quam citissime interire: but it hinders me not to believe, that one day of my life, with Baptism, is better than a whole age of iniquity. I write this Letter to you from— whither I am come to lodge, after I had entertained my Lord— until night. I conceived there was some necessity to deliver him your Letter with all speed, and therefore I exposed my person to all the injuries of an incensed sky, and ventured to make a voyage that would have frighted a stouter man than myself. By this you may know, that I count nothing difficult, which reflects upon any interest of yours, or which cencernes your contentment; and I love you so much, that I should not say so much, if I had more craft in me than I have But my good Nature exceeds all other considerations of vulgar Prudence; and I would not keep you from knowing what great power you have over me, though I knew beforehand you would abuse this power. For other things, I am very glad to hear you begin to grow sensible of the charms of music, and that you go to the Consorts, which are in reputation. Yet I have seen the time, when your ears were no learneder than mine, and when you made no great difference between the sound of Lutes, and the noise of Bells. See what it is to frequent good company; and to live in a Country of neatness. I that stir not from the Village, know no other music, but that of Birds; and if sometimes I hear a more silver sound, it comes from those noble Animals which monsieur Heinsius praiseth so much: and which by Lucian's saying, serve for Trumpets in the Kingdom of the Moon. I give you a thousand thanks for your news, but especially for the last; it is certain, that the choice of Monsieur de Belieure to the Ambassador of Italy, is a thing will be generally well liked; men talk wonders already of his beginnings, of the readiness and Vivacity of his Spirit, of the force and staidness of his Judgement, besides some other excellent qualities of his Age, from which we may hope for much. And for myself, who am one, that love my Country exceedingly; I cannot but exceedingly rejoice in this new fruitfulness, which comes upon him at the latter end of his old age. It doth me good to see famous deceased men, to live again in their excellent posterity; and I doubt not of the good success of a Negotiation, where a Belieure, a Thou, or a Sillery, is employed These were our Heroes of the long Robe; and the Princes of our Senate: and now their children (that I may continue to speak Latin, in French) are the Princes of our youth, at least they are names more happy, and that portend more good to France, than the name of— and no doubt she will have cause to thank M. the Cardinal, for respecting races, that are so dear unto her; and for stirring up in the King's mind, the old inclinations of the deceased King his Father. I fall asleep at this very time I am talking with you, and am rather in case to make ill Dreams, than good Discourses: and so I take my leave of you, my dear and perfect friend, as I also am to you, as much as possibly can be, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 4 Octob. 1634. To Monsieur Talon, Secretary to my Lord the Cardinal De la Valette. LETTER XLII. SIR, I took infinite pleasure to see myself in one of your Letters, and Monsieur— who imparted it to me, can witness for me, with what greediness I read that passage, which concerned me. I cannot say, that he is here, though it be true, that he is not in Gascoigne, for we enjoy nothing of him here but his Image; he is so married, that he would think it a disloyalty to his wife, if he should dare to laugh when she is not by. All his sociable humour he hath left with her, and hath brought nothing to us, but his Melancholy. When I would make him merry, he tells me, I go about to corrupt him. All visits he makes in her absence, though it be to Covents, and Hospitals, yet he calls them deboystnesse. So as Sir, you never saw man better satisfied with his present estate; not a greater enemy to single life. He is not contented to pity you and me, and to lament our solitude; but he reproacheth us outrageously, and calls us unprofitable members of the Commonwealth, and such as are fit to be cut off. As for me, I make no defence for myself, but your example; I tell him, let him persuade you to it first, and he shall soon find me ready to follow his counsel. I hope we shall meet together ere long; and then we shall not need to fear his being too strong for us in our conferences, when we two shall be against him alone. Provide therefore Solutions for his Arguments; but withal deny me not your assistance in other encounters, where it may stand me instead. You can never do courtesies to a man more capable of acknowledgement; nor that is more truly, than I, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 12 Febr. 1633. Another to him. LETTER XLIII. SIR, I am exceedingly well satisfied with the news you send me; and with the assurance you give me by your Letter of the continuation of your friendship. Not that I was afraid, I should lose it, but because it is a pleasure, to hear one's self called happy; and that one cannot have too many titles for a possession, which can never be too much valued. I take not upon me to contend with you in Compliments, or to dispute of civility with you, who live in the light of the world, and have whole Magasins of good words. For besides, that I never had any skill of the Court; it is now so long I have been a countryman, that it were a miracle, if I had not clean forgot it all. Pardon therefore a rudeness which I cannot avoid, and seeing I am not able to answer you, give me leave to assail you, and require you to give a reason of the present state of things: What can you say Sir, of these wretched Flemmins, who shut their gates against good Fortune when she would come into them? and are in love with their Fetters and their Keepers? I do not think there be truer slaves in all Asia: and I do not wonder our arms can do no good in their Country, seeing it is a hard matter to take a yoke from men's heads, who prefer it before a Crown, & Sovereignty▪ when it is offered. Sick men are then to be despaired of, when they throw their Medicines on the ground, and account of Potions as of Poisonings. It is not therefore our fault if they be not cured: we have active power enough to work, but it must be upon a matter that is apt & disposed. I expect hereupon a Decree from your politics, and remain, Your, etc. At Balzac, 1 July 1635. To Monsieur D'Espernon, Martial of the King's Armies. LETTER XLVI. SIR, my compliments are very rare, and I take no great care for preserving your friendship. I account you so true of your word, that I cannot doubt of having your love, seeing you have done me the honour to let me have your promise. It is to no purpose to solicit Judges that cannot be corrupted; it is enough for procuring their favour, that the cause be good. You see therefore, I do not much trouble myself to commend mine unto you, and I present myself so seldom before you, that if you had not an excellent memory, you had certainly forgot me long ago. I pray you not to do me good offices, for knowing that you let slip no occasion of doing good: I may be sure to have my part of your good deeds, though you have none of my prayers. Your new Acquests at the Court, make you not leave that you have on this side the Loire: your friends that are always with you, take not up all your heart, there is some place left for your friends farther off, of which number I am one, and more in love, Sir, with the contemplative life, than ever. I am always under ground, and buried with my trees, and they must be very strong cords, and very violent commandments, that should remove me: yet I am contented to give my thoughts a liberty: and my spirit is often in the place where you are, and my absence is not so idly bestowed, but that I can make you a reckoning of it. I speak to you in this manner, because I know you are no hater of delightful knowledges, and have an excellent taste to judge of things. Though by profession you be a Soldier, yet I refuse you not for a Judge in our peaceable difference, being well assured, there are not many Doctors more accomplished, or of a sounder judgement than yourself. This quality is no opposite to true valour; the Romans, whose discipline you seek to re-establish, used to lead with them the Muses to War, and in the tumult of their Armies, left always place for these quiet exercises. Brutus read Polybius, the night before the battle at Phlilippi, and his Uncle was at his book he very hour before he meant to die. Never therefore fear doing ill, when you follow the example of such excellent Authors: none will ever blame you for imitating the Romans, unless perhaps the Crabates, or other Enemies, as well of Humanity as of France: But to be thus blamed by Barbarians, is an infallible mark of merit; for they know no points of virtue, but such as are wild & savage, and imagine, that roaring and being furious, are far more noble things than speaking and reasoning: I leave them to their goodly imaginations, and come to tell you, that though you Letter to my Sister be dated from the Army in Germany, yet it is eloquent enough to come from the Academy of M. the Cardinal; it neither smells of Gunpowder, nor of Le pais de adieu pas; I know, by certain marks I have observed in it, that your Books are part of your Baggage, and I find nothing in it, that is worthy of blame, but only the excessive praises you bestow upon me; and if you were not a stout champion and able to maintain it with your sword, you would certainly, ere this, have had the lie given you a thousand times for praising me so. I should be very sorry to be a cause of so many petty quarrels, and so unworthy of your courage; a Foreign war hath need of your spirit; make not therefore any Civil for my sake; I desire no such violent proofs of your affection: it serves my turn, that you love me quietly; and, if you so please, secretly too, to the end, that our friendship being hidden, may lie in covert from injuries, and that possessing it without pomp, I may enjoy it without envy: I reckon it always amongst my solidest goods, and will be sure never to lose it, if perfect faithfulness will serve to keep it; and if it will suffice to be, as I most passionately am, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac 4 Jan. 1635. To Monsieur de Reussines. LETTER XLV. MY dear Brother, I have upon this last occasion received nothing from you, but the offices I expected; I know you to be jus● and generous, and one that will always religiously pay whatsoéver you owe, either to blood or friendship, yet this hinders me not from being obliged to you, and to your good Birth for it. This hath bestowed a friend upon me, which I never took pains, either to look out, or to make: it is a present of Nature, which I should have taken, if she had given me my choice. I desire you to believe, that I never stood less in need of comfort, than now; I oppose nothing against the rage of a thousand adversaries, but my scorn: I am Armour of proof against all the tales from the Suburbs St. Honoré, and from all the Libels of the street St. jaques. They increase daily in sight, and if the heat of their spirits do not abate, there will shortly be a little Library of follies written against me. But you never yet heard of such a gravity as I have, nor of a mind that could take such rest in the midst of storms and tempests as I do; and this I owe to Philosophy, under whose covert I shelter myself: it is not only higher than mountains, where we see it rain and hail below us: but it is stronger also than a Fortress, where we may stand out of danger, & make mouths at our enemies. All that hurts me in the war of—, is that which concerns the interest of others: it grieves me extremely, that his cruelty should leave me, and fall upon my friends. I wish I could have bought out the three lives, that touch the honour of— with a third Volumn of injuries done to myself, and where no body else should have any part: and I may truly say, that this is the only blow, which that perfidious enemy hath given me, that goes to my heart; and the only of all his offences that I have felt. I entreat you to let my friend know of my grief, and to make sure unto me this rare personage by all the cares and good offices your courtesy can devise. His virtue ought to be inviolable to detraction, but detraction will not spare virtue itself, but takes a delight in violating the best things. I have reason to place him in this rank, and considering him as one of the most accomplished works of Nature, I must needs consider withal, that Nature itself is sometimes calumniated. Madam de— inquires often after you, and hath a great opinion of your heart and spirit. You may be sure I say nothing in opposition to the account she holds you in, but am rather glad to see my judgement confirmed by so infallible an authority: see, you be always good, and always lay hold upon our ancient Maxims, and be assured I am, and always will be, My dear Brother, Your, etc. At Parish 15, Jan. 1621. To Monsieur Breton. LETTER XLVI. SIR, you are a man of your word, and something more. You promise less than you perform, having undertaken to furnish me but with Gazettes; you extend your largesse to large volumes of Books. This Jonnius, whose Verses you sent me, is no ordinary man. The boldness, and beauty of his phrase, comes very near the greatness and magnificence of Horace. He chooseth and placeth his words with the same preciseness, and care; he speaks always loftily, and if in all things there be bounds and limits, he sometimes seems to go beyond them. For example, upon the Canonization of Ignatius, made by Pope Gregory the fifteenth, Nam te ille primus Vaticanis ritibus Admovit aris Coel●tem, Mixtumque superis aureo curru dedit Perambulare sydera. A Pagan Poet could have said no more of the deifying of Julius Caesar, yet in saying so much▪ he should have said too much: there being great difference between consecrating the memory of a mortal man, or the giving him a Divinity, between the declaring or the making a God, between being Augustus or being Jupiter. I know not also, why speaking of Protestant Ministers, he stands so punctually to descant upon the word, which of all conceits is the poorest; Maltque ominata Verba & & inter Obscaena, Exinde lege publica reponendum Solve Ministri Garnifex gerit nomen. I should think, that this descanting makes not much for the honour of Princes chief Counsellors; and it seems, the Poet in this place, forgot M. the Cardinal, who guides the public fortune, and governs the world under this name of Minister. There is no greater reckoning to be made, no great matter to be built upon three or four little syllables, which signify nothing, but what custom, without any reason pleaseth, and are of no more value than use gives them. This word Vates, is taken sometimes for a Fool, sometimes for a Sorcerer, sometimes for a Prophet; and the word Prophet itself, is sometimes taken for a Juggler, witness the Greek Proverb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: Will you upon this go rail up●n Prophets, & send them with their name to the place of correction, or shut them up in Bedlam. And yet further to endear this subtlety of jonicus: you may say, that Ministers at all times have been enemies of Christ, and prove it by this, because a Minister was one of those that struck him on the face in the presence of the High Priest; as it is said, Unus ex Ministris Caiphae, etc. The ground upon which such Figures are built, is so weak and ruinous, that there is no means to make i● stand firm; our adversaries may make use of it as well as we, and to be even with you for your Text of the Minister of Caiphas, they will I doubt not bring you another Text, where our Saviour himself is said to be a Minister, come to execute in the world the decrees of him that sent him, and to do the eternal will of his Further. This is called triumphing for syllables an● words, and running after Phantasms If the ancient Rome had used to play in this fashion, Bishops called by them Pontisices, would have been but makers of Bridges, no● Dictator's any more than Schoolmasters. Poor Brutus would have b●ene the Bu● for all the arrows of his time. The Assinii, the Porcii, the Bessie, would not have had one day of rest, they would have been forced to get themselves adopted into some other Families, and to change their names thereby to s●ve themselves from the opprobrious Figures of Orator's and Poet's. I meant to have written but two or three lines, and I am come to the bottom ●f my paper; this is the pleasure to be talking with you that deceives me thus, and makes me think that we are walking together, and conferring about our Books and Studies. After all that hath been said, I conclude that your Poet is a great Lyric Poet, and would have had a Pension of Augustus, and sat at Table with Me●oenas. I Bid you goodnight, and am, Sir, Your▪ etc. At Balzac, 10. Feb. 1631. Another to him. LETTER XLVII. SIR, I am at leisure for no body but you, and though I am pestered with a multitude of small affairs, yet I quit them all to come and tell you, that I have received your last dispatch, and find myself infinitely obliged to Monsieur de— seeing you put me in hope that he will spend this winter at Paris, ● purpose at that time to be a daily waiter upon him, and try what I can do to merit my fortune. I am told, that you are grown friends with the graces, and will no longer be an enemy to honest pleasures Hold you firm, I beseech you, in this resolution, and never give it over, if you mean well to your life. The●e is no danger in refreshing yourself sometimes with pleasing company, that so you may return more fresh and vigorous to your learned exercises. It is better to be innocently merry at the Inn in Venice, than to go kill ones self in the Vault of the Church, as the poor— I lament him, in truth, as a man dead and miserable, and it grieves me he had not time to bethink him of his soul's health, and to ask pardon of God; but to conceive, that by his death a great light is extinguished, and that the world hath lost a great man; I knew him too well to have any such opinion He was, to say true, a man of metal, and had certain slashes of wit that were not unpleasant, so long as they were not printed; but who would endure him to be enroled among modern Authors, or give his verse a place among the Poets of this time? Yet he himself counted his courage and his military virtues as nothing in comparison of his eloquence, and excellent gift of speaking and writing, wherein he was so highly conceited of himself, that only for telling him one day of it, he never loved me after, and is dead; I assure myself, with a heartburning against me for it. They that reprove me for writing Neuvelles Victorienses in my first Letter to M. the Cardinal, make it appear they are far travellers in the Latin Country, and never come to discover Victrices literas, Laureatas literas, Nuntiam laurum, etc. Malice is a very unjust thing, but ignorance much more; Homine imperito, you know the rest. And never take offence that there be some will not so much as allow me for a Grammer-Scholler, and perhaps have reason. We oftentimes think ourselves to be the true owners of things, of which indeed we are but usurpers; there is nothing secure against wrangling, every thing is matter of suit in this wretched world, yet I mean not so easily to yield and give up my right; for if I were nor able to write according to the rules of Art, I must certainly be one of the most dull capacity, and altogether uncapable of all discipline. For, did I learn nothing by seeing the Cardinal Perron? Nothing by being a Scholar in the French tongue, under Mr. Nicholas Geoffe●ean? Nothing by a thousand conferences with the good man Malherbe? And lastly, Nothing by lodging with Father Baudoin? Vel in bicipiti somniâsse Parnassus? For one is as much as the other, as you know well. This man, in truth, is no ordinary Father, his conceptions and productions are without intermission; he fills our studies with his books, he amends, reforms, embellishes the books of others, he smells a Barbarism, or an incongruity seven miles off; he hath counted by tale all the improprieties that are in—: he is admirable in knowledge and use of all particles, and I am sure he loves me not so little, to hide any secret or mystery of all his knowledge from me; I entreat you to kiss his hands for me, and to believe that I am most truly, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 20. Aug. 1630. Another to him. LETTER XLVIII. SIR, three days since I imparted my melancholy and my unquietness unto you, and how much I was moved at the cruelty of— I have since received your Letter of the ninth of this present, which doth not indeed take all my pain from me, because it declares not what is done against me, but yet assuageth it a little, because it declares that nothing is done against me that is deadly. However I must put on a resolution for all events, and comfort myself with Philosophy, and with you; you that are my true and faithful friend, and that stand between me and all the stones my enemies throw at me. Your affection is no small help to me in these troublesome encounters, and the tenderness you show to have of me, binds me in a very sensible obligation to you. Concerning the ill will of— it can do me no great hurt, and pardon me if I do not think my honour is engaged to make so bloody a war upon him as you would have me. The less show is made of resenting petty injuries, the better and the more readily they are repelled; if I should think upon answering him, I should but make a comment upon his gibfish, for them that understand him not, and thereby bring his folly into the more credit and request. When time and place serv●s we will handle him as he deserves, and doubt not but his lightness shall light heavily upon him, only do you collect some common places upon this matter, and remember yourself of all that hath passed between— to the end the History may not be lost. I have had speech with the man whose whole life is nothing but a continual meditation of death; I never found him so austere, nor so great an enemy of bravery as now; his devotion respects neither right of nations, nor laws of civility. I have not been able to get him to write to that person that loves him so dearly, and complains to you so often about it. All the Answer he returns to his long Letters, are but these three words of the Gospel, Noli amplius peccare, which in sweeter and more courtly terms▪ is as much as to say, Lites heures au lieu de lire ses poulets Desile taes colliers, faits-en des chapelets, etc. I received the other day a most elegant and gentle Letter from one Mounsieur Ytterius, a Lawyer of Antwerp; but I know not by what means it came to my hands, nor by what direction to return an answer. Pray inquire after him, and let our friends know, that in spite of the Marquess of Aytona, I have adherents in Flanders, and therefore he need not make his brags for having burnt my book at Brux ●s. Scilicet illo igne, vocem omnium Gentium, & libertatem Europae, & conscientiam generis humani abolere arbitrabatur. By the next Post I will write to Monsieur Hottoman, and will give Monsieur de la Pigeonnerio thanks for the verses you had of him to send me. We have read them here in good company, both of Males and Females, and they all agree, that the Fathers, my adversaries, are none of those Christian Ulysses', he speaks of, that have nailed their Passions to the Cross of Christ. I forgot to ask you of Monsieur Seton, and to desire you to call to him for the papers he promised me. I regard him as one of the great Doctors of our age, and make use of the riches of his spirit with so great privacy, that he seems to be but as it were my Treasurer. I know not how to make an end; nor yet am willing to say more, because I must reserve something for Monday next. I therefore take my leave, assuring you there is none more truly than I, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 7. Jan. 1631. To Monsieur Girrard, Official of the Church of Angoulesme. LETTER XLIX. SIR, I make use of you with the like liberty as I desire you would make use of me; if therefore you have any spare time, you may allow it to the affairs of— but so as you allow it to mine first, and that you make a difference between friendship and courtesy. I doubt not but you will give your best advice to the Gentleman that is recommended to you, and will set forward the best you can the design we have to make him one day an honest man. I find the Book more neatly, and more correctly printed than I could have imagined; and I would tell you that you are an able Grammarian, but that I fear your Divinity would be angry for giving you so small a praise, and so much vilified by the Messieurs or Masters. The two Latin Tracts you sent me are as different of stile as they are of matter. Any man that can but relish the ancient purity will take the first of them for the work of some Roman that lived in the times of the republic, but the other can be but the writing of some Gaul or Spaniard that came to declaim at Rome, in the reign of the sixth or seventh Emperor. One meets at the beginning with something that dazzles, and makes a fair show of some great good to follow, but at the bottom there is no such matter to be seen, nothing but swelling and obscurity, oftentimes false trains, and every where brags and bravadoes that are not tolerable. It is a pleasure, as I am told, to hear this famous Author talk of himself; he thinks his Pen as much worth as the King of Sweden's Sword, and no less fatal to States and Princes. He saith it is he that bestows glory or dishonour, makes men famous or infamous as he pleaseth, and that he hath means enough to be revenged of the Emperor or Pope, if the Emperor or the Pope should offer him any wrong. Scaliger, Lipsius and Casaubon were by his own saying, but his Forerunners, and all the light of the former age, but the Aurora of his, and yet for all this, he hath but a very little head, and but very staring eyes, and but a very fumbling speech, and but a very silly discourse, that you may know his judgement is not the predominant part of his soul. But the world talks otherwise of him, that he is a lost man, and one that hath forfeited his brains, not only swallowed up of a strong and vast imagination, not only bending under the burden of an overcharged memory, but apt to lose himself in the walks of Plato's Philosophy, for which yet he is become an Apostate from Aristotle's Doctrine. I confess unto you now, that the time hath been I have made much reckoning of this man, & am still of those ill husbands that give presents, but pay no debts It is certain, I discharge my duty extremely ill; & Mons. Videll hath just cause to think me the most uncivil man that lives. But you know the secret of this matter, and that in my incivility there is a kind of Religion, which I have not dared as yet to violate. Unless I should sin against my faith given, I can neither enjoy the good he hath done me, nor give him the thanks I owe him; and this is the extremity of my misery, that I have received a most precious gift, and yet can neither be rich by it, nor thankful for it. Take some course for God's sake, that I may dispense with an each that is so contrary to honesty, and so directly crosseth the right of nations and all good manners. Entreat our friend to give me my liberty again, which I have solemnly promised to employ wholly in doing him service, and in accommodating that confusion which makes me commit this disorder. Monsieur de Plassae hath so powerfully confuted that which I writ the other day to Madam D' Anguitour, that I am become persuaded myself, and am no longer of my own opinion, but willingly confess, that if I should be obstinate in defending my false maxims, I should do as ill as make a schism amongst Ladies, & be the Author of a most pernicious doctrine. I have put this Letter in my packet, that you may see I yielded not for nothing, and that you may show it also to Monsieur— who hath desired me he might see it. The Encomium of Monsieur de la Valette, which your brother desired of me, is in the 103 Book of the Histories of Monsieur de Thou. Change but the date only, and you will agree with me, that it was certainly made for our Monsieur de Valette, that is now. I send it you by this Post, and remain, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 4. Decemb. 1632. RUpem brunam profectus, pulsatis muris, cum ab oppugnatione tentatae cum damno suerum repulsus ●ssit, rurs●s redinteg●ata verberatione, ubi vidit ab ea parte con●●um frustra esse; jam ruinis ab obsessis sarta; alio tormenta transfers; dumque in iis Collocandis laborat, ictis majoris sclopeti, in capite sauciatus est; ex eoque vuln●re, p●st duas horas decessit, m●redibili sui Regis Deside●●o relicto; cui strenuam admodum, ac fidam operam semper navave●at. E●at vi summa fortitudine praeditus; in periculis imperterritus; in adversis Constans in prosperis mode●atus, liberalis, comis, magnae in explicandis negotiis solertiae, in imper●o ac magistratu, qua●● privatus, melior. Espernonius, quem ●lie hae●ede●● rel●quit, eum casum acerhissime tulit: quip fratre charissimo, & firmissimo Fortunae suae invidiosae munimento O●batus. To Monsieur de Gues. LETTER L. SIR, my most dear Father, you have obliged me exceedingly unto you, for imparting unto me the good news that is come, and for communicating with me, the joy you take in the happy success of the King's Army. I do not think he hath a better subject in all his Kingdom, than yourself; never servant was more zealous for his Master's greatness; never Persian more religiously adored Monarchy. You love your children, I know, infinitely, yet this is but your second love; that of the State, and of the Public, goes far before it, and I fear me, you would give us all for the poorest Frontier Town of Flanders, or for any paltry Fort of Milan That which I read in the Post script of your Letter, did s● very well please me; the good opinion which Monsieur de— ha●h of me, is more a burden to me, than an honour: and I could wish, he would make less reckoning of me, so he would let me be more at quiet. You have a strange friend of him, to take me for his common place book, and to think that I am an Index for finding out conceits and figures. In the matter you propounded to me on his behalf, I can say no more than what I have said already; but if he please to take the pains to Translate my French into Latin, he may easily do in such sort, that he shall be taken for the Author, and I but for the Translator▪ I have told you of the dignity of the Language, in which he means to write, and what great advantage it hath over ours; it is certain, that it elevates and raiseth up the low thoughts of the Authors, and gives much more to them, than it receives from them. Whereas ours contrariwise, hath no beauty, but as the Authors embellish it and set it out. It hath no subsistence, but by the matter, no force, but from the subjects that are handled. I have made choice, of some, which I thought fittest for his purpose, if he find them for his turn, he may make use of them, and better them much by putting them into Cicero's stile and phrase: and these are they. Good men ought to desire great Dignities, as a necessary means to perform great achievements, which if they perform them not, both God will call them to account for his graces, no better employed, and the World will justly complain; it is left a prey to the wicked, and that the desire of their own private quiet, makes them abandon all care of the public. This is to tell you, my Lord, that you ought to reserve your humility, for actions that pass between God and you; but that for other matters you cannot have too much credit, nor too much greatness, seeing it is fit that wisdom should be obeyed, and that there are some virtues, which cannot be acted by those that are poor, etc. Though we be not so out of the world, but that we hear news of it; yet it passeth through so many places, that it cannot choose but receive divers impressions, and can never come to us in purity, seeing it gathers mud in coming but from the Lowre. Yet I have come to know, and fame hath sounded in our desert, the great battles that have been fought for the honour of France, and how you have vanquished the spirits of strangers, which is a greater victory than to vanquish their forces. I have come to know, that Italy hath vented out all her subtleties, and employed them to deceive us, and yet could not; and that these spirits, which thought to reign in all assemblies, and to be masters of reason, have not been able to defend themselves against you, but with spite and choler, nor to complain of any thing, but that you persuaded them to that, which they came resolved never to do, so as they which called us Barbarians, and got always as much by their Treaties, as they lost by our Victories, have found at last, that there is wisdom on this side the Alps, as well as beyond, and are driven to acknowledge, that we had a man amongst us now, able to hinder them from deceiving us as they had done. They wondered to see a Servant that could not endure there should be a greater Master than his own, that felt the least evils of his Country, as if they were his proper wounds, and thought it a hurt to himself, if there were but an offer made to touch the Dignity of his Crown; but when they saw that you applied remedies upon the sudden to all inconveniencies, which they thought you could never have avoided, that you not only answered all objections they made, but prevented all they intended to make, that you dived into their souls, and took hold of their intentions there, and at the first conference, made answer to that which they reserved for the second; then in truth their fleam turned into choler, and then you quite routed all their humane Prudence, and all their politic Maxims, etc. I am not able to dissemble the joy I take, to hear that your good services are acknowledged, that when divers counsels had been tried, yet yours, at last, was still fain to be followed, and that in guiding the fortune of France, you are no less Precedent of all affairs of Europe. It is true, that of all external contentments, I have none so sensible to me as this; but on the other side, when I hear that your health is continually assaulted, or at least threatened by some accident or other, that the rest, which the quietness of your Conscience ought to afford you, keeps you not from having unquiet Nights, and that in the midst of all your glory and good successes, yet you oftentimes are as it were, weary of your life, than indeed, etc. And can it not be, that you should come to hear the public acclamations, but in the unquietness of your watchings? Nor of your praises, but in your pains? Must the Sense suffer, and the Spirit rejoice? Must you be upon the rack, when you are in your triumphs? Must you do two contrary works at once, and at the same time have need both of moderation and of patience? If virtue could be miserable, and that the sect, which accounts nothing evil but pain, nothing good but pleasure, were not universally condemned. Certainly the divine Providence, would at this day be complained upon by places of all this Kingdom, and all honest men, would in your behalf find something amiss in the world's government. B●t my Lord, you know better than I, that it is the happiness of Beasts only, of which we must believe the body; for, as for ours, which resides in our highest part, it is as little sensible of disorders that are below her, as they which are in Heaven are uncapable of offences by storms of the air, or by vapours of the earth. And this being so, God forbid that I should judge of your condition by the state of your health, and not think him perfectly happy whom I esteem. Do but imagine with yourself, that you have made a division of the infirmities of humane nature, with other men, and then you shall find the advantage is on your side, seeing there is in you but a small portion of pain for infinite defects that are in others. Yet I cannot but think, that the term of your patience is near expired, and that the time to come is preparing contentments for you that are wholly pure, and will make you young again after the time, as before the time you have made yourself old. The King that hath need of your long life, makes no wishes in vain, and heaven hears not the prayers of the enemies of our state. We know of no successor fit to undertake what you leave unfinished; and if it be true that our Armies are but the arms of your head, and that God hath chosen your counsel for establishing the affairs of this age; why should we fear a loss which hath no right to come but to our posterity? he will not in this only point leave imperfect the happiness he hath promised us; be loves men too well to deprive them of that good which you are borne to do them. When Armies are defeated, there may new be levied, and a second Fleet may be set forth when the first is lost; but if you, my Lord, should false u●, etc. It shall be in your time, that people oppressed shall come f●om the worles' end to seek the protection of this Crown▪ 〈◊〉 by your means our Allies shall be well paid for their losses, that the Spaniards shall be no conquerors, but the French shall be the fleers of all the earth It shall be in your time, that the holy seat shall have her opinions free, the inspirations of the holy Ghost shall be no more oppugned by the cunning of our adversaries, and that there shall be raised up courageous hearts, worthy of ancient Italy, and able to defend the common cause Finally my Lord, I shall be by your wisdom, that there shall be no more tyranny in Christendom, nor rebellion in this Kingdom: That the people shall leave in their superiors hands both Liberty and Religion, and that ●●om this legal government, and from this perfect obedience, there shall arise that happiness, which Politicians seek fo●; and which is the end of all civil societies. My hope is that all these things shall c●me to pass through your wise government, and that after you have made sure our peace and our neighbours, you shall yourself enjoy the benefit of your good deeds with pleasure, and at your ease, and shall see the state of things continu● flourishing, whereof none but yourself have been the Author. I earnestly entreat you so to deal with Monsieu● de— that he may rest contented with this, and dispense with me for any new meditation which would require more leisure than I am like to have. This bearer will deliver you the History of Queen Elizabeth, which may serve you for a recreation to the end of the week, and then I shall come and ask your opinion, and desire you to give me some light of that time, out of the great experience you have in many things I desire of God with all my heart, that he will be pleased to afford you yet some great matter to exercise yourself in, and that this wise old age of yours, which we so much admire, may long continue to be a strength and ornament to your family. These are my earnest wishes, and withal, to make you by a perfect acknowledgement of your favours a perfect proof that I am, Sir, my dear Father, Your, etc. At Balzac, 7 June 1634. To Monsieur de Boisrobert. LETTER LI. SIR, the Muses never favoured man as they do you; you are the only man that need neither retreat nor leisure for your meditations; In the troubles of the world you possess your spirit in peace, and seeing the bruit of the Court diverts not your attention, neither can the Sea and all its waves hinder your compositions. It is no small advantage to find that solitude in ones self, which others seek for in the Desert, and not to be bound to go out of the world for fetching in of sound opinions and persuasive words. If the merit of yours take place, we shall shortly see at Stageplays, as many long Cassocks, as short Robes, and the most austere Philosophers will have their hands and eyes in the recreations of the people, and so Sir, of a mischief you shall make a remedy; you shall set timorous spirits at liberty, and shall free us from two terrible Monsters, scrupulousness, and vicious bashfulness. You make me long to bear a part in this action, and in this sort to defend the Theatre; to take the field after you is not so much to fight as to pursue the victory, and I think it no wrong to virtue to justify an innocent pleasure, and that which is only worthy of her; this we owe to Jason, to Masinissa, to Brutus, and other worthy men, who live at this day in the person of the man you so much commend, and whom I admire as often as I hear. It is certain, that the grace with which he pronounceth virtue, gives them a degree of goodness, which the Poets could not. They are more beholding to him that pronounceth them, than to him that made them; and this second Father (if I may so speak) purgeth by his adoption all the vices of their birth; the tune of his voice accompanied with the dignity of his gestures, gives a kind of nobleness to the vulgar and base conceits. No soul is so strongly fortified against the objects of sense, which he forceth not; No judgement so wary and so well prepared, which is not caught with the imposture of his words, in such sort, that if in this world there be any happiness for verses, it is certainly in his mouth, and in his pronouncing; by which, as evil things get the colour of good, so good things get the uttermost of their perfection. Let me know Sir, weather I hit right upon your inclinations; and in the mean time I give you many thanks for your many favours, particularly for the Letter of my Lord you took the pains to send me. He writes indeed in the style of a Conqueror, and these words Accepi, legi, probavi, savour much of these, Veni, vidi, vici of I: Caesar, and of these, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, of another Ceasar that was afterwards. Though I should never receive other mark of his love but this, yet were this a full recompense of all the passion I owe to his service; yet I must tell you, I cannot forget the honour he hath done me, in procuring me a promise that I shall be paid of— I have done all possible I could to blot this thought out of my mind, but I confess unto you, that my imaginative part is a little strong. I could never hitherto satisfy myself herein, and what bad answer soever I receive from men, yet still I rely upon this word of God, who commands me to hope well, and therefore I wait still for the accomplishment of the Oracle. All our people are extremely bound unto you for remembering it, and I am myself more than all the world together, Sir, Your, etc. At Balzac, 3 April, 1635. FINIS. LETTERS OF MONSIEUR DE BALZAC. THE FOURTH VOLUME, Newly corrected. Printed in the year 1654. To the READER. THe name of Balzack is not confined within the Orb of one Kingdom: his pen hath made him known unto all that pretend to Eloquence and Politer Learning: And had his language been more general, his worth had been more known. It is then a duty we owe to virtue to unfold it, when it is contracted within too narrow limits, and to unlock the Cabinet, and make it communicable, when it is restrained from that freedom which is part of its essence and nature. Wherefore some of our own, finding that our Author's Language was too narrow for the merits of his works, have rendered some pieces of his in English. Nor did their Travails fall short of their hopes, but success hath crowned their endeavours. By the encouragement of their auspicious flight abroad, I made Augury touching the fortunes of this fresh piece, whtch I now expose to the common light, without the countenance and patronage of any great name, but guarded only with its own fate: It hath a Genius, and carries the name of Balzac in every page, that is enough. Pierre Math. Hist. de Hen. 4. Liv. 3. For know (Reader) that he is Master of the pen in France, L' Aigle de l' Eloquence Francoise, as one styles the great Chancellor Du Vair, a towering Eagle, whose strength of wings bears him aloft above the tracts of common flights. I may say of him, with some variation, what Pliny said of Cicero, that of latter times, and for his own language, L. 7. nat. Hist. c 30. solus in toga triumphum meruit, linguaeque lauream, and if the Muses speak French, they would use no other Dialect, than that of Mons: de Balzac. If thou dost not find the same thread run through all his Letters, think it a piece of his Art, to vary the Idea and character of his speech, according to the quality of his subject. Wherefore we find him sometimes lofty and magnificent, and sometimes grave and moderate: now he is calm and smooth, and anon he thunders and lightens: here his words fall like hail, Hom. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. and there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, like still and gentle snow, or the silent feet of time. And though they be but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, strictures, and excursions of his pen, yet upon due examination, thou shalt find they be decoctions of purest Rhetoric; and take away Monsieur, & vostre tres humble, they be so many acquaint orations, and discourses politic and moral. But never did any beauty gain all suffrages, nor any wit a general applause. Mart l. 4. Epig. 32. Our Author in his Hermitage, like that Bee, entombed in Amber, Dum latuit luxit: he shined through the vail of obscurity, where in he involved himself: but some Owleys could not brook the splendour of his light, though at such a distance and declination; and he had more enemies in this solitude to molest him, than the Gout and Stone. It was ever the fate of eminent persons to have Antagonists, and envy, like the Athenian Ostracism, and persecutes the best. A testy Friar, under the name of Philarchus, comes out of his Cloister, and raiseth the Hue and Cry after him, as an errand Thief, and avoucheth that our Monsieur here, is but a Mountebank, and a Plagiary, that struts in borrowed plumes, and makes a great show of the frippery and brokage of other Authors: pudet haec opprobria, etc. But Balzac found a learned Apologist, to refute these imputations; so that this single encounter grew up into a faction, and the Penmen came so fast into the field, that the Philarkes, and Antiphilarks divided all France. There happened some disgusts between him and Father Garesse a Jesuit and a man of able parts: But the French King himself did so far tender the studious Repose of Mons. de Balzac, (that by these altercations he might not be discouraged or diverted from greater designs.) He interposed his Authority to make a Reconciliation, and because it makes for the honour of the party's litigant, I have prefixed here the King's Act, and their mutual letters, as I find them at the beginning of Garasse his Some Theologique. And now (judicious Reader) Balzac stands at thy Tribunal, expecting thy doom: He hopes to find more Candour, and better dealings in England, the Region of peace, as he calls it, than among his own: presuming upon the goodness of his cause, and thy justice, I have adventured something upon thy censure. If thou contractest thy brow, it is no single fate, thou condemnest at once a multitude of Dependants, and Admirers of his virtues, and among them, in an humble distance F. B. AN ADVERTISEMENT OF Monsieur the KING. Understanding of the bad intelligence, which by the unhappiness of the times hath gtown between Monsieur de Balzac, and the Author of this Book, we could not but partake of the discontents of sundry honourable personages; and judging it very reasonable, that to men that continually do good services to the Commonwealth, and from whom it should expect better, yet hereafte should be divided in wills and affections. We have endeavoured to dispel those Clouds by the evidence of truth; the business was not very difficult for us, being we were to deal on the one side with a religious man, who by the rule of his Profession, takes a glory in despoiling himself of all interests, and to desire the love of all the world; on the other side, with a man of a fr●nk and noble courage, whose discretion guided him to put a difference between the faults of men, and the unhappiness of the age. So that we thought fit, to tie again the knot of friendship, which (by accident) had been untied. It is commonly an easier task to reconcile old Friends, than to make new ones. Having then happily effected that business, we thought that good men, who are ever well affected to the sweetness of peace, would gladly receive some authentic testimonies of their good intelligence, and for this purpose, we have got interchangeable letters under their own hands, that confirm the sincerity of their hearts, for to present them to the public, which cannot be distasteful to any, but to those that are pleased with nothing but disorders and contentions. Johanni Ludovico Balzaco. V. C. S. P. QVod ad te jam scribo, (V. C.) mirari desines, si me, ut Religiosum, & tui amantem esse memineris: & animam, puto, & manum hanc facile agnoveris, sin minus, saltem ignoveris, quod utrunque gestum est. Non nihil inter nos longi frigoris fuit, seculi potius vitio, quam vestro. Septennium est, fateor ex quo mutua inter nos Epistolarum missio interrupta cessavit; ex hoc silentio torpor, ex torpore glacies exorta: vel patere suis, ut ad te verbis scribat sapientissimus Hebraeorum Doctor, dicatque Christallus gelavit ab aqua: sed nosti quid rei est Christallus, cui precium facit ipsa fragilitas? vel frangatur, vel indomita glacies benigno tepore solvatur: favent omnia, & tempus, & amicorum vota communium, & imprimis desiderium meum. Nolo retegere quod odiosum est, rixarum inter nos argumenta & fomites; fatalia ista sunt, & dissolvendis amicitiis nata: In litibus nullus (ut nosti) finis est: dum — Liticulas lis seminat unica plures. Versiculos ad te extemperaneos & rudes mitto, sed scienti loquor & occupationes meas, & Epistolarem in versu formam; nihil enim ab Heroico retinet preter pedes, quos habet formica etiam cum homine communes, sed quo plures eo pejores. Tibi uni prope datum est Heroicas gravesque literas condere; scripsit Ovid Heroidas, sed Balzacus Heroicas. Pluribus abstineo, ne quod judicio dico, adulationi imputet, qui non norit me hujns criminis immunem, imo & hostem. Caetera coram amantius & fusius, scis enim a Sapiente dictum: mitte sapientem & nihil ei dicas. Regium Proxenetam nacti sumus, hoc nomine totum dixi. Vale & me ama. 50 Martii. M.DCXXV. ex domo Probat. S. Ge●mani. DIc mihi, quid temerè priscum turbavit a●●orem, Qui me corde tuo scriptum (Balzace) ferebat Atq, unum ad nomen veteris gandebat amici, Invenisse ratus quo se jactaret, Orestem? Cet●è ego qui cupipè rerum cognoscere causas Scrutarique vices librato examine novi, Hoc demum pelagus non vestigabile contis Experior, Sophiaeque meo se curta supellex Objicit ingenio misera, & deludit amantem; Nam neque scintillam video fulgere, neque umbram Quae meri●ò nostri radios fuscarit amoris, E levet affl●ctam sapitus sententia mentem Quam fluxisse reor magni de fonte Platonis. Ille inter Superos solum accensebat Amorem Jnfantem vetulum, causas qui rideat omnes Vt pote qui causas etiam praecesserat aevo, Jllarumque putet rigide se jure solutum; Et puto, si quisqu●m recte describat Amorem Rem male non capiet, si dicat Anaition esse. Non quod ego gravibus causis Balzace carerem Cum Genio cogente meo te primus amavi, Nam primum ut tenerae gemmas aetatis biantes Et clausum ingenij calicem primoribus annis Caep●sti referare, mihi nec cornea vena Marmoreo sub corde fuit, nec amare negavi Scis etenim, haud alium testem volo temporis acti, Vt tecum creuêre anni, spes crevit & ipsa, Et cum maturos licuit mihi carpire fructus Arboris optatae ramis, quaem rore sciebam Este saginatam bibulo, coelique saliva, Jure meo accessi propius, dectraque voraci Pendulus attraxiramum: sed inania veta Delusi agricolae durus soedavit Hydaspes, Qui molles aditus speranti & mustea pema Excussit rigidasque nuces lapidosaque corna. Hic ego me fateor justum sentire dolerem. Et nemit ab verum memini incusaere Platonem, Primus amicitiam qui dixit Anaition esse. Namque edii immeritum quod tu cessaris amare Te causas habuisse nego, nisi pestis amorum Fama, tibi vanat formaverie invida causas Inconsulta parens edii, quod si vice versa Forte reclamavi trepidans, contraque ligonem Feruidus opposui volsellem, & me quique culpae Propterea vis esse reum, Balzace, fatentem Accipe, nec tantillum obstet, ne simus amici. Saepius & magnae nascuntur amantibus irae, Quas voco perpetuum sinceri gluten a moris, Quin & roribibae nativo foedere conchae Post validum se fulmen amant ardentius, & quo Tempestas animosa magis turbaverit aequor, Purior in testas coelo delabitur imber. Fac igitur solido generosum pectus amori Vt pateat, nomenque haud dedigenerit amici, Quod devota meo tibi mittit Epistola jussu, Hanc certe calamo scripsi, queus vulsit ab ala Ipse sibi sincerus Amor, nigrumque liquorem Esse licet videas tamen est & sanguen Amoris, Quod tua suspicio nigrum facit, & liber ipse Non liber est, sed prima ●ti membranula cordis, Quam volui ipse mihi propria deglubere dextra. Haud alias habuisse v●lim, Balzace, tabellas Scriptorem-ve alium, non si vel Toxaris ipse, Primus apud veteres, formam qui scripsit amandi Pingat Amicitiam, legemque reponat in axes: Toxaris occubuit, rigidae periere columnae, Scruptus ipse jacet, quem sculpfit Barbarus axe●● Et legem et sculptas absorbuit unda tabellas: At nos Toxaridae veri, nativaque proles Vraniae, quamvis morienti posthuma matri, Cordibus innexis verum sculpemus amorem Qui nullis mergatur aquis, licet ipse frementem Invidiam vom●t Oceanus, vel totus Hydaspes Influat in medios latices, aut Doris amaram Suspicione tumens, nos inter misceat undam. Quin etiam si nostra foret naturae rebellis Vnica prae reliquis ratio te coget amari Antiquumque gelu dulci l●ntore resolvet. Nempe quod impietas tibi displicet, Aulica pestij Et juvinum famosa lues: nam si omina desint Argumenta mihi, queis demum heroica monstrem Ingenia agnovisse Deum, tum tu mihi solus Testis eris Balzace, interque examplae fereris, Tu tibi sis exemplo ipse, & mortalia saeclae Despice securus; nemque ad divina vocaris Quo Genius te cunque vocat: Tibi subditur omnis Invidia, & resupina facis mortalibus era Nostrumque imprimis video gaudere Malherbam. Et quod surgenti Cicero tribuisse Maroni Dicitur inclamans, Magnae spes altera Romae: Hoc juste Maro jam noster maturior aevi Surgenti reddit Ciceroni: hoc ipsae videbit Aemula posteritas, & cernes te quoque faemae Participem: est etiam tibi Corta & Laelius ipse. Ingenii eos blanda tui, sunt altera coelo Lumina, nec cunctos sol obtegit invidus ignes. Nos igitur tecum spatiis communibus ire Aut ignes inter minimos stellasque cadentes Ad famam patiare, licet non passibus aequis. A Letter of Monsieur de Balzac to the Reverend Father Garassius of the Society of Jesus. Father, YOu have lighted on that side, upon which I confess my weakest strength doth lie, and your courtesies have left nothing for your valour to perform that might force me to yield. Since you employ all your Muses to beg my friendship, and that you have already requited it with your own, I can no longer detain it then as another man's goods. But if this were not so, my injuries are not so dear unto me, but that I do usually forgive them upon less reason than they were given, and my passions do never grow so headstrong but they remain still in the power of Religion and Philosophy. Hitherto I was able to maintain a good cause, but should I be obstinate and oppose that also that you desire, I should do wrong to right itself if it were on my side, and from simple enmity which hath been tolerated in some Republics, I should proceed to tyranny which is odious to all the world. Since we ourselves are mortal, there is no reason our passions should be immortal, and that men should glut themselves with revenge, whereof God hath prohibited as well the use as the excess. This is a thing that he reserves wholly for himself, and because he alone knows how to use this part of justice, he would not commit it to the hands of mortals, no more than he would thunder and tempests. Let us therefore stop at our first quarrelling, for it is already too much to have begun. Let us not give the name of courage to hardness of heart, and if you have prevented me in the overture of peace, which we negotiate, let it not repent you that you have robbed me thereby of all the honour that was here to be acquired. At other time's magnanimity and humility might be two contrary things; but since moral principles have been changed into Evangelical Maxims, and that the vices of Pagans are become the virtues of Christians, there is a sort of cowardice that a man of valour ought to show: and true glory doth not belong to them that have triumphed over Innocents', but to the Martyrs that they have made, and to those men that they have oppressed. But if we must descend from general considerations to that which is between you and me in particular; as there could be no colour that a religious man would disturb the tranquillity of his thoughts, and quit his conversation with God and Angels, for to intermeddle with sinful Creatures, and partake in our disorders: so there were less reason yet, that I should go and seek for an enemy out of the world, whereas they are within it so many Huguenots to exercise my hate upon, and so many Rebels to combat with. Moreover Father, what opinion soever you had of it, notwithstanding any thing that I have spoken in the beginning of my letter, yet it was never my purpose to wage war with you in good earnest, I was not so far moved as I made show of, and all my anger was but artificial, when my words did at any time seem injurious; so that I do willingly consent that what was written to Hydaspes, shall pass for an exercise of wit, not for an argument of my belief, and that men should believe that I intended only to show that my strength could vanish truth, when I did not fight for her. That Science that durst undertake to persuade sick men that a quartane Ague is better than health; Rhetoric, I say, that could frame a Panegyric for B●siris, an Apology for Nero, and put all Rome into a doubt, whether justice were better omitted then executed, might well yet at this day be practised upon subjects that swerve from common Tenants, and by pleasing fictions raise men's wonder, though not win belief: This makes phantasms, only to unmake them again, it hath varnishes & disguises to alter the purity of any thing in the world, it can shift sides without imputation of fickleness, and accuse innocence without guilt of calumny. And certainly Painters and Stage-players are not guilty of those murders that we behold in their Tables and on their theatres, but here, he that is most cruel is reputed most just. Those that make Glasses which present one object for another are not accused of Imposture, and Error is sometimes comelier than the truth. In a word, the life of the greatest Sages is not evermore serious; all their talk is not preaching, and whatsoever they write is not their last Testament, or a confession of their faith. What shall I say more? Think you that I am so delicate as to condemn all the tastes of the numerous multitude which throng to hear you every morning? Do you imagine that the people and I can never concur in the same opinion, and that I mean to oppose the general verdict of good men, the approbation of Doctors, and the authority of Superiors? No good Father, I do not allow that swinge and liberty to my understanding: assure yourself, that I esteem you in that degree as I ought, I applaud your zeal and learning, and were it truer now than ever that to compose great Volumes is to commit great sins, yet notwithstanding, if you oblige me to judge of yours, according to the portion which you did send me, I speak boldly, that it is most excellent in its kind, and Mons: Malherbe and I will not deny you a place in the Class of Fathers of the latter age. But our testimonies and Encomiums will not be the only fruit of your labours. I desire with all my heart, that the conversion of Pagans and Infidels may be the approbation of it, and I think that all the glory of this world should be accounted but air and emptiness, by them that aim at nothing but the advancement of God's glory. Wherefore I need not enlarge myself any farther upon this subject, nor wrong sacred things by profane commendations, my intention is only to testify to you, that I claim not so small a part in the interests of the Church, as not to be most heartily thankful to those that do her service, and that I am right glad, that besides the reasons that prompt me to esteem your friendship, one so powerful as that of Religion doth yet farther oblige me thereunto. TO MY LORD THE CHANCELLOR. MY LORD, THat Scorn and contempt that you were pleased lately to throw upon a Libel, framed against Mons. de Balzac, and your denial then to licence it for the Press, are a sufficient testimony how much you do value the person of that man. You did conceive, that being, as you are, the supreme Dispenser of Justice, you had (in a sort) violated that Justice, in permitting such hard censures to pass upon that man, whom you with so much reason approved, and whom others cannot with any reason reprehend. So that if there be any yet to be found, that cannot fully persuade themselves to approve of this man by your example, their obstinacy is sufficiently confuted by your Authority. And if this cannot repress their sinister intents, yet notwithstanding, it prevents the effects of them, and hinders that he be not persecuted in print. This high favour which flows from that esteem, which you did always bear to his writings, did invite me to collect with all diligence, these rare productions of his spirit, for the contentation of yours. And as it was not without his consent, that one of his friends hath deposited this treasure in my hands: so I do verily believe, that this office of presenting them to you, is also very comformable to his inclinations. Your worth is so evidently known, that none should imagine I could choose a Sanctuary more noble or more propitieus; and the general current of men's affections to do you service, is so strong and high, that I could not shun this Duty. As for me, I confess I am exceedingly pleased with this occasion that presents itself to me, for to make it appear to your Honour, how apprehensive I am of the late favours which your Bounty hath conferred upon me. Certainly, my Lord, my obligations unto you must be infinitely great, since when I have presented you with all that the Eloquence of this age hath most precious, yet notwithstanding I must remain your debtor, while I draw breath. You shall meet here with Doctrines, which the austerest Philosophy would not disdain to own and profess; Among these severe speculations, you shall see some flashes of wit break forth, which will serve to entertain you with much delight; I speak of the French Epistles, for as for his Latin, I refer them to the judgement of those that do better understand the beauty and delicacy of that language. I am content to believe that Cicero never entertained his friends with better grace and contentment; nay, that the very close and compacted style, and the strong and vigorous expressions which B●utus sound wanting in the writings of that great Orator, are here to be found; But I fear I should detain you too long, from the pleasure of these novel lectures, if in commending ●a●e Epistles, I should arrest you any longer, in reading this poor one of mine. Indeed (my Lord) for to speak nothing that were unworthy of you; it were requisite that Mons. de Balzac would lend me some of the graces of his style: or, as he will be ravished with joy, that I have made choice of you to be the Patron of his writings, he would come himself to make the Dedication; It sufficeth me, if my design and undertaking for to perform something that might be acceptable to your Greatness, do not give you any distaste, and that you believe, that I am sincerely My Lord, Your most humble and most obliged servant, JOHN CAMUSAT. TO MY LORD THE CHANCELLOR. MY LORD, I Have understood of your denial, for the publishing of a Libel, lately framed against me. And though (perhaps) the harm that I should have received thereby, would have been but small, yet my obligation unto you, never ceaseth to be great; and this argueth a special care in you of my tranquillity, not to suffer that any, the least noise should disquiet it. I know not (my Lord) if this be not to handle with too much niceness and tenderness, a man that makes profession of Philosophy; it were enough that public Authority should shelter me from the tempest, without exempting me from the wind, and dust, and that it would guard my retreat from savage beasts, without frighting away the flies also, and such importunate Infects. But (my Lord) the goodness which you reserve for me, extends farther than to ordinary justice. You take not only care for my repose amidst the hurry and tumult of Europe, but you would have the world also show a respect unto my retiredness, and that being sequestered from men, I should be also placed beyond the level and teach of Detraction, yet this fiend did pursue Saint Hierome even unto the gates of Bethlehem, and to the foot of our Saviourss cradle; there she found him (as he relates himself) although he had thought to hide himself. If this insolent thing had no regard of an admirable sanctity, and a place guarded with Angels, me thinks a vulgar innocence, retired within an ill fortified village, must not expect any favourable treaty. But to pass from common conditions to the learned Tribe; If in all ages, there arose seditious spirits, that rebelled against the Chieftains of Arts, and discipline, and if in the memory of our Fathers, it was spoken openly at Paris, that Aristotle was a simple Sophister, I think they deal courteously with me in this Country, if they be contented to call me a simple write That great blasphemer of the name of Aristotle (my Lord) was D. Ramus, who afterward, though he was a Catholic, was taken for a Huguenot, at the massacre: And indeed, some did believe that God permitted this to come to pass by a just judgement; and that the Tutelar Angel of good Letters, took the pretext of Religion, for to revenge the injuries that were done to Reason. There is one this day alive in Germany, a petty Tyrant in Grammar, an enemy of common and general verities, and an accuser of Cicero; who (not long since) hath put forth some observations, where he prefers a bill against his own Judge, and questions the precedency ever allowed unto that Prince of Latin Antiquity. So that (my Lord) the universal consent of all the world, strengthened by a prescription of 18. centuries of years, is not a sufficient title for to warrant the reputation of that Roman, against the prevaricating quirks of this Barbarian. Indeed, this is a business of no good example, but yet since it is so, and that it doth little avail Virtue, to be consecrated by time, and to be crowned by the people, for to make it inviolable against the practices of some private Humours. There is no reason that I should complain before so many Worthies, that have been so ill entreated themselves, and that I should be had in any consideration, where Aristotle and Cicero are not in safety; an ordinary man should not make moan, for suffering the same destiny, which extraordinary Personages have undergone; and I cannot with modesty, desire or expect from you that you should reform the world for the love of me; nay, I know (my Lord) that this little disorder, is of some good use in a Commonwealth; and it were to be wished, that malice would busy itself thus, about things of small importance, that it might not think of business of higher consequence. Those that have hitherto bestowed their pains, in depraving the sense of my words, and in falsifying my works, had (perhaps) ere this time, forged men's Testaments, and minted false coins; And he that now desires from you a privilege, would have stood in need of a pardon, it may be, if it had not been for me. It is better by far, that injustice should exercise itself upon my books, then that it should vex and implead against all that is good and sacred in a civil society; that unjust men should rather toss and transpose words, invert and pervert periods of speeches, then remove the bounds of lands, or demolish their Neighbours houses; To say the truth, this is the most innocent way that vice can employ itself in, and I believe I have not a little deserved from the Commonwealth, for keeping at work these ten years, such an infinite number of idle companions, who (certainly) would have been dangerous Commonwealth's men, if they had not chosen rather to have been ridiculous Censors. It is well, that the heat of their brains, is exhaled out this way, and that their intemperance takes this course, and that to prevent their fury, men give some scope and liberty to their folly. Permit them therefore this exercise (my Lord) they cannot choose but make use of their time, which they will employ far worse, if you do not permit them to employ it thus-Permit giddy Youth to spend their heat and fury upon a senseless subject, and a dead Letter, which is not capable either of joy or sorrow. As long as these Pen-fincers only beg the Seal of your Authority, be no niggard of the Prince his grace and favour, and abate something of your wont severity and rigour. If it were a new and unusual thing, it may be, I should be contented to have the first Libel, which branded me with injuries be suppressed, but since there is now a pretty Library of them, I am in a manner well pleased it should swell and increase; and I take a delight to build me a monument with those stones, which envy hath hurled at me, without doing me harm. I account it no disgrace to be censured by some men, because I account it no credit to be favoured by them: I intent not to canvasse for voices, nor labour a mysterious secret, whereby I may gain the general applause of the world. I have obtained what I desired, (my Lord) if I have obtained your approbation, as being derived from an unerring principle, and from an Intelligence most perfectly illuminated. God hath bestowed on you, a sovereign judgement, before the King had committed to your hands, his sovereign Justice. And you were most powerful in Reason, before you were so in Authority. I need not have recourse to this, knowing that the other is no way against me, and I esteem it more glory to me, to have pleased you, than I would think it satisfaction to have my enemies proscribed by you. Your speeches of me upon every occasion so full of respect, your own portraiture that you bestowed upon me a year ago, for a pledge of your Affection, your imparting to me the riches of your writings, I mean those writings, that were animated with the spirit of the State, and were full of the greatness of your Mastery, which seemed to me so far to transcend the strength and vigour of this age, and so nearly resembling the Roman Majesty. In a word (my Lord) each moment of that happy afternoon, which I had the honour to pass away with in your closet, are privileges, which I do value above that which you denied a Fantasme or the successor of Philarchus. I dare not rehearse my other obligations, by which I stand bound unto you, you have herein enjoined me silence, and believe that your favours would lose something of their purity, if my thanks should still attend them. Nevertheless you must not stifle in me the intentions of an honest man, or smother the conceptions of grateful thoughts, you have debarred me from divulging my acknowledgements, but you shall not debar me from acquitting that secret part of duty, and from being, (at least in my soul) and that while I live My Lord, Your most humble, most obliged, and most thankful servant, BALZAC. From Balzac the 1 of July 1637. A COLLECTION OF SOME MODERN EPISTLES OF MONSIEUR DE BALZAC. To Monsieur CONRART. LETTER I. SIR, BEing arrived home but this morning, I could not before the evening frame an answer to your Letter which you honoured me with, and was delivered me at my arrival; it is so full of baits to feed both the eyes and the understanding, that it were impossible I could refrain f●om reading it more than once. It is so judicious, and withal so passionate, that I cannot think of it without congratulating with my Country that we have seen Philosophers, even in our own language, and those Philosophers such Profess goodness as well as wisdom; the time, you see is now past for to satisfy your desire; but though the King by the activity of his courage could not render those remedies unuseful, which you expect from my idle meditations; yet I mean not to act the bold Empiric or Mountebank in your presence. It would argue too much impudence to send any drugs and receipts from a country village to Paris, and to undertake the cure of afflicted minds in a country of good Books and great Doctors. Nay, I have seen, Sir, in your own house, a Megazin of rare instructions and examples, both printed and in hand-writing. And Justus Lipsius, (had he been your Neighbour) might have made a purchase of a Constantia of a stronger and better temper, than her that he hath bestowed among us. Since then the whole mass and mine is in your own power, I cannot persuade myself that you could have desired those few Grains that I could furnish you with, and that being so rich yourself, you were resolved to exhaust my poor stock too. Taking view from hence at so far distance of the estate and affairs of our Frontiers, I cannot distinctly and clearly bestow my judgement on them. I am content to carry about me the thoughts of an honest man, and to remove from my mind the disgusts of ill success with good hopes. I know Sir, that the fairest kingdoms have suffered the vicissitudes of good and evil; and that the brightest fortune hath some spots and shadows; and knowing this, I cannot think strange of any disasters that may happen, or be surprised with the news of a revolt, or be any thing amazed with losses more than with gains. Flanders I confess is advanced pretty far into Piccardy, and would have given the like alarm to France, as France had given it the year before. But it may be they that plunder it freely to day in the field, will be to morrow blocked up in a siege: your good Brothers I know will revenge the quarrel, and they that pillage the Cities of others, will be glad to get them home to save their own habitations against their Ancient subject. We must then confess that Antiquity hath wisely termed God of War Communem Martem, that Homer never gave it a fitter Epithet than that. It it certain that it never favours the same cause long. This is a Fugitive in all Armies, and a starter from all parties, sometimes a Guelpht, and sometimes a Gibellin, sometimes wearing the white scarf, and sometimes the red. This is too much Sir, concerning Public Affairs. Do me the favour as to send to M. du Moulin the answer that I have made him, the latter words thereof will call to your mind those three verses of our Jerusalem. Torq. Tasso lafoy Gierusal. Liberata. Amando in te ciò, & c By loving that in thee, which others fear doth move, And envious hate, be seems thy virtues to approve: And willingly with thee could make a league of love. I beg of you the good favours of that grand adversary of the Romanists, but yours above all, fine I am with all my soul Sir, Your, etc. Balzac. 30. Octob. 1636. To Monsieur du MOULIN. LET. II. SIR, Courtesy never denies respect to any man, and thinks no man's Presents mean but her own. This was it (no doubt) that made You speak of me in such an high strain, and set so great a price upon my Book, which (indeed) is but the worst part of your Library. I see you will not alter your course, or forget your ancient civility, for the which I am infinitely obliged unto you. And if some men would needs persuade me that at other times you handle me something rudely, yet I cannot believe you do it with an hostile hand; on the contrary, I suppose that in your familiar Letters you give a a true copy and character of yourself, but in actions of ceremony, men require another countenance, and more studied gravity; otherwise, Sir, my nature can bear with my friends, and I am not of so delicate a sense as to complain of petty wrongs which I suffer-Besides, that I do not at all meddle with that Science of division which ●eaches to rend our Saviour's Coat into a thousand pieces, and to implead and cavil against every word of his Testament. This commonly doth rather exasperate men's spirits, then compose affairs, and multiply doubts, in stead of increasing charity. If I were put to my choice, I would take a little less of that which puffeth up, and a little more of that which edifieth. Truth is not the purchase of hot blood, or of incensed choler, or a disturbed imagination. The Labyrinths of Logic are not the easiest way to heaven, and oft times God hides himself from them that search him with over much curiosity. You will avouch (I am sure) all that I say, and this too, Sir, that the best quarrels prove nought, and of bad consequence, and that the contentions of Doctors prove the murders of their brethren's souls, if they tend not to the peace of the Church; for my part, I can with other vulgar Christians, but wish for it; but you can with the Worthies of Christian Religion, contribute much towards it, and whensoever you shall preach and teach this, I shall ascribe unto you one of the principal parts of that holy work. But while we expect that this peace be advanced through the grace of God, and that we draw nearer every day one to another, nothing hinders but that we may maintain innocent commerce, and traffic in things lawful. There is no law rightly interpreted that is repugnant to that of Humanity, doth not accord with the law of Nations. If our opinions differ, it is not necessary that our affections should disagree; the head and the heart have their several motions, and actions distinct; and moral virtue can reconcile and unite what the intellectual might separate. Love me therefore still if you please, since you may do it lawfully, and I believe also, that I may be without scruple, while I live Sir Your, etc. Balzac. March 30. 1636. To Monsieur L' Huillier Councillor to the King, and Ordinary Mr. of his Accounts. LET. III. SIR, YOu can make men happy, and procure them Sun shine days, where, and when you please. Let us speak no more of misfortunes: there is nothing here within but prosperity, since the Ordinary hath arrived: and I must recall a language which I have forgotten, since you do restore a passion to me which I had lost. I thought there was no disposition to any joy left in me, yet notwithstanding from a little spark raked up in my bosom, you have kindled such an excess, that I never felt the like; such inebriations of the spirit, and sober transportments Philosophy hath observed in extraordinary successes. There is no way Sir to suppress or keep this joy concealed, and if it be lawful for me to speak it, my heart is so full and high that it mounts up to my face. I am like to lose by it all the gravity and demureness, which I have these many years contracted by my melancholy life. And since there is no apparent cause that might stir such a passion in such a languishing spirit as mine, men may imagine that I paid some remainders, and that I have received an acquittance patent, but that I call it your letter. They still deceive themselves, and take me for another man than I am; for my interests touch me not so sensibly as my passions do, and Fortune is not so rich as to present me with any thing that might countervail the least pledges of your Amity. The world and I do not agree in the rate of things that are bestowed and received. It doth estimate them by an Arithmetical, and I by a Moral proportion, according to which, Sir, all your words to me are weighty and precious, because all true; and because Truth cannot be sufficiently estimated in a time where Oracles do fain, and when we have reason to mistrust, even Faith itself, when the great Cato should not be taken without caution and security. I do infinitely cherish those speeches of yours, so full of verity, and preserve them as the titles of a possession, which I passionately desired before I went to Paris, and which I account for the greatest business that I did during my abode there. In lieu of these, I will forgive Paris for all the unquiet nights, and other mischiefs I suffered there, I complain no more of its impure air, or the jangling of Bells, or of the justling and dirt of the streets. And though I could not carry away thence but the bare Idea of your entertainment, yet besides that you defrayed the charges of my journey in it, I can live here, (yet a while) upon your charges, and feed my thoughts a long time with what I have received from your mouth. Yet I know not whether a provident managing of remnants, may make them last always, or whether old Ideas, do not at the last fade and vanish out of the memory, or whether an expired felicity may denominate a man still happy. What ever joy your letter sprang in me, yet (being a mark of your absence) it doth but advertise me, that I am sixscore leagues distant from the Author of my welfare, and that therefore I can receive but imaginary painted satisfaction, and enjoy but foreign pleasures. You cannot represent unto me the happy hours that I have spent in the closet of Messieus de Puy, and the fine things that I have heard there, without tacitelie upbraiding me with the pensive hours of my solitude, and the gibberish of my Neighbourhood. In truth Sir, if you know it not, I must tell you, that Balzac is the frontier of Barbary. But one day's journey from hence, (Monsieur des Cordes can tell you) the honest Swains do not eat bread, or speak French but upon Sundays; The most understanding men there, believe that Prestor-John saith Mass; and that the snow in the Country of the Moors is black, the most gentle and affable find in an innocent word, the tenth part of a lie; and are offended with the very aspect and silence of a man that passeth by. Are not these the right Antipodes to the lodgings of Monsieur de Thou, and especially of the Gallery, which is not only full of the noblest spoils of Antiquity, and of Greek and Roman Treasures, but which is (otherwise) inhabited by all the Graces of the present Age, and all the sociable and civil virtues. Yet notwithstanding these, it might deserve the curiosity of the remotest Nations of the Earth, and invite the inhabitants of Cadiz and those beyond them, for to see there the great Precedent of Counsels and humane actions, and the grand Doctor of Kings and Commonwealths. But although this famous and learned Head appears not there, but by the benefit of paints, yet his memory still keeps its place, and presides in all the Assemblies that happen there. Me thinks, that of Master of the house, He is become the Genius of the place, and inspires all those that speak there, that so they might not speak any thing unworthy of his presence. Indeed this is the cause of my happiness here, that my poor conceptions give you some content, as you would make me believe; and that my adventures in print, have the allowance and approbation of those excellent Brothers, my dear and loving Friends. Now, Sir, that I begin to grow sober again, and to recover myself from that ecstasy, which you have cast me into; take good heed, that you make no doubt of the seriousness of my speeches: assure them, therefore, if you please, that the favours that I have receiv●d from them, are not let fall into a barren and ungrateful souls; and that it is impossible to honour them more perfectly than I do. You shall do me the favour also as to believe, that you never loved a man that could set an higher rate upon your amity, or would be more than I am Sir, Your, etc. Balzac. Nou. 23. 1636. To Monsieur the Abbot of Rois-Robert. LET. IU. SIR, since my departure from Paris, I have received two Letters of yours, that is to say, two singular Emblems, or tokens of your goodness: for it is certain, if you be not exposed to the danger of war, you are (at least wise) obnoxious to the cumbrances and molestations of it: and in this plight to have found the leisure to remember me, and to send from the farthest skirts of Piccardy, but a thought as far as Guy●n, is a thing that could not be expected, but from a friend that is extremely solicitous of those things that he loves. According to your order, I communicated the news unto my Father, who doth profess himself much obliged unto you for it. We do daily groan for that of peace, and if you send us intelligence of this before Easter, I will answer you with a public thanksgiving, and with the benedictions of all our Arrierban. That Virgin which your Authors call Astrea, was at other times, courted and adored by them (only) of the long gown: now even Gladiators and Pirates think her handsome and comely. I do not see any man of the sword, but doth at some time of the day mislike and beshrew his own trade. I do not know whether this be either the cowardice of the age, or the impatience of the Naetion, or the fear of poverty and famine presented to their imagination; or (to speak more favourably of the present occasions) a Christian tenderness and common sense of humanity; so vehemently doth all the world desire peace, that I think Heaven cannot send a better Present to the Earth. I think that— should be employed upon such a pious occasion, and chosen one of the Agents for Coloigne. If he would bring us that excellent Donative of Heaven, he deserved to enter the Academy in triumph, and that Monsieur the Precedent should make the speech himself: For my part, I should receive him after such a Negotiation with more respect, then if he came from commanding an Army; And to tell you the truth, the pacific Angels do please me far better than the destroying Angels. Think it not strange, Sir, that the desire of glory is not the passion of Villagers, and that dreaming (sometimes) of the Crabbats, I pitch upon the same though with the Poet: Impius haec tam culta novalia Miles habebit? — Barbarus has segetes? These are thoughts which are bred in my rural walk, and which spring from lowness of spirit; into which I am apt to fall, as soon as I have lost the sight of you. Therefore be pleased to take the pains to fortify me from time to time, and to send me some preservatives against the bad news which fly about. These would help to entertain good thoughts, while we expect the conclusion of the Treaty, and make my Neighbours know, that a man cannot be ill informed that maintains intelligence with you, and make them believe, that I am indeed what I profess myself to be, which is Sir, Your, etc. Balzac 17. Octob. 1616. To my Lord, the Earl of Excester. LET. V. MY Lord, having not enjoyed my health, or as least having had no leisure at all, since the time that your Letter was delivered me; I could not any sooner render you thanks for the testimonies of your esteem and affection, which you vouchsafed me therein. I will not any way seem to suspect or doubt of a news that makes for me; and I do readily believe, that my works that were sent you from the Queen your Mistress, have been your welcome▪ home among your friends. But herein, I do acknowledge their good fortune, far beyond my deserts, and the Influences that descend from the Court, beyond all the favours they can receive from a Country Village. Those hands so great and powerful, that gave you this small Present, do ennoble whatsoever they touch, and are able to effect rarer transmutations, than those which Alchemy boasts of; with their mark, a trivial Fable may pass for Authentic History, and the Nether-Britton should surpass the native Frenchman. I have therefore my Lord, no thought of deserving that Elegy, which I owe to so illustrious a circumstance; nor do I mean to glory in the travails, which my Book (as you inform me) hath made beyond the Rhine. Your name (being one of its principal Ornaments) is that to which I must owe my frame in those Climates, and it was upon your recommendation and credit, that all the Courts in the North, and some of their Schools too, have entertained my Books. I do here solemnly promise you never to abuse this favour, at leastwise, never to write any thing of your Island, that might give any distaste in the reading, and that will not testify particularly of you, that I am most entirely My Lord, Your &c. Balzac. Sept. 20. 1636. To my Lord the Duke de la Valette, Governor and Lieutenant General for the King in Guienne. LET. VI My Lord, I Do not mean to tempt your valour, it were precipitate rashness to dare it; yet I shall make bold to tell you, that you have no less Art and dexterity in conquering, than in winning men; and that in you, that which entreats and persuades, hath no less efficacy than that which commands and enforceth. It doth nothing avail me to shun the world, the better to enjoy myself in the desert. Three words from your mouth, make me lose all the freedom I enjoy there; and I see myself surprised in that Sanctuary, in which I thought to save myself. I must confess my Lord, that there is no such absolute independence, over which you cannot claim some power; that there is none so discontented and averse that you cannot allure▪ or so wild and disorderly that you cannot tame. Since you have done me the honour as to write, that you have sent me your heart, I should betray very tittle skill or judgement in rare and excellent things, if I were not ravished with such a present, and if I did not esteem it above all that ambition can desire, or Fortune bestow. It may be, the hearts of Giants were more vast, and less limited by reason; but the hearts of the Heroes were not more noble, or of any other elevation than yours is of; and be that speaks of this, speaks of a place hallowed, and purged from all the vices of this age, and where all the ancient Virtues have taken Sanctuary. Lo here, my Lord, what gift you have sent; after which, I have nothing to wish for in this world, which I have abandoned, since this is the most pure and refined part of it; in which, goodness cohabits with power, and greatness combines with love. To which I must of necessity, stoop and yield; and my heart were more vile, than yours is generous, if I were not My Lord, Your, etc. Balzac Jan. 10. 1637. To Monsieur Drovet, Doctor of Physic. LET. VII. SIR, YOur sorrow is too accurate, and studied to be true; and an afflicted person that writes such brave things, hath no great need of any thing of mine to solace him. I will therefore forbear a task, which I conceive to be so needless, and will be contented to tell you, that I know how to discover counterfeit sorrows. No man could act a Desperato better than you. Panigarola made not such exclamations when he preached, that there will be signs in the Sun and in the Moon. And it is a pleasure to see you write of the end of the world, of the falling of the Stars, and the final ruin of Nature, and all this, upon occasion of my Ni●c●, labouring of a fever. This is to give Virgil the lie, that calls your profession a dumb Science. For indeed, to find so many Ornaments and Tropes upon such a vulgar Theme, could not be without having a Treasury of words, & without teaching this Mute, Rhetoric. Yet me thinks, you should husband & manage this treasure more thriftilie, & have more care than you had, of the modesty of a poor Maid. Are you not afraid to make her fall into vainglory, and mar all the pains of that good Father that guides her conscience? if I did not furnish her with counter-poison, you would infect her mind, and cast her into a worse malady than that you cured her of, But I have taught her, that there are a sort of Enchanters that bewitch by commending, and that the wanton Courtship of Sirens hath alured many to their ruins, and filled the Seas with frequent shipwrecks. She believes her Glass, and me too, who are more true to her than you, and who (without much difficulty) can rectify her opinion of herself, which you would have strained too high. For my own particular, I cease not to be your debtor for the acquaint extravagances and hyperboles, wherein you express your affection towards me; and for her part, separating your commendations from her name, and considering them asunder, by themselves, she esteems them as the wealth of a Jeweller's shop, which indeed may delight her eyes, but she finds nothing there that belongs to her. Receive this compliment as from her, if you please, I am merely but her Secretary in this point, and I shall remain Sir, Your, etc. Balzac 12. Octob. 1636. To Monsieur de Bonair. LET. VIII. SIR, the honourable mention that you were pleased to make of me in your Book, is a most singular favour, and I cannot behold myself in so fair a seat without some temptation of vain glory. I know not as yet, whether my testimony be to be admitted or rejected; and whether I be an Apocryphal or Canonical Author; but since you have cited me, it is not lawful for me to doubt any more of the good success of my writings, and after this, I dare claim a place in the noblest Libraries. It is true, I dare not own that Title you bestow on me, of the Genius of Eloquence. Besides, that this would be a wrong to Mercury and Pythe, who have for many ages possessed the Chair, and swayed the Art of Elocution; it were necessary also that I had the suffrages of all the Preachers and Advocates of the Realm; and you know, Sir, that there is none of them so mean, that doth not persuade himself that he is the God of Persuasion, and would very hardly confess a superior. I must not therefore entertain an Elegy, which would be challenged from me by two so great Nations, equally terrible and potent, and I am content to be less prized by you, since I am sure of the same affection; you shall preserve that for me, if you please, since I am willing to give it its true estimation, and to be really Sir, Your, etc. Balzac. 20. Dec. 1635. To Monsieur Huggens Councillor and Secretary of the Commands of my Lord the Prince of Orange. LET. XIX. SIR, I have received with your Letter the Dissertation of Monsieur— in Print; but to write my opinion thereof, would be too dangerous an enterprise. I never mean to doubt of the certainty of his Doctrine; and too bad construction was made of me at the beginning of our commerce for to adventure farther in that way. It sufficeth me to confess that I was lost in all probability, had it not been for your protection, since even under that, I could hardly be secure. This is a Buckler that hath been pierced in a thousand places, and (to speak freely) hath served me rather for a show, than defence. My great Adversary (as you call him) would rain have made an example of your poor Suppliant, and showed that he did not either believe that you did love me so dearly, or that he did not much reward the persons whom you so loved. Nevertheless Sir, if I had been of a quarrelsome humour, that matter (perhaps) would not have been so appeased; and men would persuade me, that my person only was injured, my Assertions being as firm and as found as they were before the battery. But let the field be his, seeing he cannot endure an encounter, that I say not a resistance; and I do willingly yield him all the advantages of this action. He chose rather to take me, then receive my submission, and preferred a trophy before an homage. Nevertheless, I am resolved not to alter my condition or forget my wont civility. Yet I do make a stand at the very same bounds that he hath leapt over, and give respect to that Character, which he hath violated; I speak of your love and good opinion, which are more precious to me then my writings or my reputation, and which I cannot disesteem wheresoever I met them. Sir, there will be always in the world Oppressors, and man oppressed, and I must be one of the Innocents' that must suffer the persecutions of a Herod. But there is nothing so hard that love cannot digest. I pardon (for your sake) all my injuries and sufferings, with all my heart, and am contented to be ill entreated, as long as I give evidence that I am Sir, Your, etc. Balzac. 10. Septemb. 1636. To Monsieur de Racan. LET. X. SIR, I render you thanks for your Shephtardesse; with whom I enjoyed such ravishing pleasures, that the voluptuous never enjoy the like, and yet so chaste and honest, that I think not myself bound to make confession, she hath revived my spirits that were rebated with eager study, and retired with distinctions and Syllogisms. I cannot dissemble, I have not this long time Sir, spent a day more happily then when I entertained Her. And if I have thought Her so beautiful in her own simple weeds, and natural habiliments, without the addition of those helps which serve to embellish and adorn; what will it be, when she will appear in the pomp and lustre of the Theatre? and when those things that are of themselves so powerful, will be mended with the help of the voice and the graces of pronunciation? if I thought She were to come forth suddenly in that Equipage, I would strait begin my journey for to be present at that joyful spectacle, and to give you the applause which you do justly deserve. But since you have sent Her me, being yet warm from the birth, and that She must grow up a while and gather strength in your hands, I hope I shall be time enough at Roche to behold her in her glory. I understand Sir, in the mean while, that there is a great contention between the Ladies about the names of Orante and Ortana, and that they are more ambitious of the scrip and shepherd's hook then any thing. It lieth in you to do them justice, & satisfy their ambition: yet notwithstanding, if you'll believe be, you must cashier this rural Equipage, & adapt yourself to Crowns & Sceptres. That active and strong spirit which doth sway you, hath too much vigour for to dwell on weaker Themes; it would break all the furniture of Horn-pipes and Haubois that you should fill it with; moreover, the Country and cabin is not the proper sphere of magnificence, and Shepherdesses must not dance to the sound of a Trumpet. I have therefore chosen for you an heroic subject indeed, and worthy the courage and majesty of your style; which style carrieth all the exactness of rules, and hath been already used with good approbation by the Masters of Antiquity. But the sport is, to see you dispute and contend with them for their own victory and to challenge them at the same carreeres and courses that they have gained their glory by. This kind of imitation is more noble and hardy than invention itself, and which you are very capable to undertake. However, if you shall stand in need of some aid, I am ready to do the Office of a Grammarian, and to give you the literal interpretation of the Texts of such Authors, which you mean to follow, with a resolution to outgo them. I knew that herein I shall not betray any great care of their reputation, nor do any good office to any of them. But Sir, there is nothing that I would not do for you, to whom I confess infinite obligations, and will be everlastingly Sir, A most humble, etc. Balzac. 3. Sept. 1633. To Monsieur de St. Chartres. LET. XI. SIR, The disorders of a crazy, and ruinous body, and the pains I suffer by it, are the eternal hindrances of my devoir: These also shall be (if you please) the ordinary Apologies for my silence. You may believe, that I do not use to make great preparations for to treat with you, in respect of the familiarity we profess each to other; and if I could have rendered you thanks sooner for your courtesies, I would not have saved the expense of a few ragged lines, so long a time. I have received the Translation of your friend who doth me more honour than I can deserve. I cannot sufficiently acknowledge the pains that he was pleased to take for me, being not ignorant how unpleasing a thing is Dependence. I confess that it is more than a probable argument of a man's love, to submit himself to the fancy of a man that holds no superiority over him. This servitude is irksome, and so heavy a yoke to good wits, that they have seldom born it as they should; and Victorius observes a number of passages of Aristotle, which Ciceria did not understand in his translation. And yet to understand an Author aright is not all: things rendered in another language, must retain the same degree of goodness, (if it be possible) as was in the Original: the strong must not be enfeebled, not the well attired be devested or clad in rags, nor those that are well mounted be unhorsed, and made to serve on foot. Most Interpreters (indeed) deal with books in that manner, and do violate the Laws of sacred hospitality, towards the persons of the noblest strangers that they meet with. Commonly they write French after the Latin mode, and Latin after the French; and I have seen more Authors stripped and excoriated, than Authors translated. It is by your good favour, that I am not of the number of those Martyrs; but on the contrary, your friend hath done me many courtesies which I needed, and furnished me with a thousand Ornaments which I had not of mine own. I am very much obliged unto him in this behalf, and I owe you also much thanks, for the regard you showed to my Counsels, preferring them before your first inclinations. Accomplish Sir, that which you have begun, and let us see a Senator worthy the ancient Republic, and the age of genuine and legitimate Romans. In our time, men do bear a great opinion of their eloquence▪ and a certain Author (whose name I have forgot) talks of the purple of their language, as well as of that of their gowns. I doubt not but you will adorn them: both with the one and the other livery; And that you will make the driest thorns of their perifogging Dialect, look fresh and flourishing again, if you will take the pains to dress and manure them. Monsieur Chaplain follows my counsel, and thanks me in all his Letters for the friendship contracted between you. Preserve Sir for me that good which I do for others, and think me not unworthy of it, since that I am with all my soul Sir Your, etc. Balzac. 4. Nou. 1636. To Monsieur Baudoin. LET. XII. SIR, I received the alarm of your sickness: but your letter did soon settle and compose my mind; if it be as you write, but an attachment without grief, I believe that I am not bound to keep much ado in bemoaning you; this necessary rest and residence is good for something: it doth (at least) privilege a Philosopher from performing a thousand petty Offices, which do distract a Contemplative life, and which a civil life doth seem to exact from him, that hath the free use of his legs. So that in the state that you are in, you do oblige the Public in despite of you; and doubt not, but divers N●tions do bless your Gout, that is the cause of your leisure, since that indeed it doth not handle you rudely, and that I do (as others) reap much profit thereby; I know not whether I ought to call it good or bad, except my own interest should be more considerable, than the liberty of my friend. Hereupon, I shall consult with my Moral Philosophy, upon that part which treareth of Duties, which you (I am sure) will not have called Offices. You shall understand Sir, in the mean while, that I have received the second impression of my Letters, and that my eyes are not so bad, but that I could espy at the first glance, that which they owe unto your care. I should be uncivil (not to say unknowing) if I did not render you thanks for this favour, and if that my Book (having received better order and Oeconomy by your hands) I did not confess that it is you that did bestow upon't it's last graces. We must confess that you are an admirable Chemic to refine that with is gross and drossy in my writings; and that you are a great exterminator of our superfluous Characters. But I should have been yet more deeply engaged unto you, if that you had throughly played the Aristarchus, and with that Hatchet which is so formidable to SS●, which you deem unuseful, you had hewn off my other faults, as well as that of Orthography. This shall be reserved for another time, and for a work of greater consequence, whereof you shall be the Judge, upon condition Sir, that you show no pity or favour in your censures, and that my stile undergo all the rigour of your laws, as long as my person be had in consideration, and that I be still Balzac. 25. Octob. 1636. Your, etc. To Monsieur de Coignet Gentleman in Ordinary to the most Illustrious Queen of great Britain. LET. XIII. SIR, I was much discontented that I parted from Paris, without having the honour to bid you Adieu. But it is very difficult to live regularly amidst such confusions, and to be punctual in a time when all things are out of order. I thought I had done much, that I had not forgot myself, being in the place where I was; and that I did put six score leagues of Land between Me and John de Werth. Being able to make but a sorry Soldier, I thought that no body had any thing to say to me in Picardy, and that the King's Army, would not be the less complete for my absence. Lo now Sir, I am arrived here, this side of the Loire, busy in fortifying, as well as I may, my village with Philosophy; and entrenching myself against the Enemies with good books. If the tempests which threaten the Frontiers of Bayon arrive at us, we must think of another way of safety, and resolve (in any case) to pass the Sea, and go and dwell in that Region of Peace, and that happy Climate where your divine Princess reigns. But the good conduct and leading of the King her Brother, and the good Fate of France Forbid us to harbour any thoughts of despair; and the opinions of Sages, that expect a calm and serenity after a storm, are far different from the Dialect of the vulgar, that think that all storms are everlasting. It shall be then a visit of compliment (in despite of john de Werth) that I shall perform, and not a voyage of necessity which I must make; and I hope my words shall find no evasion, and that I shall tell you in London that which I say here, that I am entirely Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 10. Sept. 1636. To Madam Desloges. LET. XIV. MAdam, Take it not amiss, that I do much rejoice at your removal from Paris, since that thereby I do regain the glorious beatitude of your Neighbourhood; and that I am now but fifteen Leagues distant from Virtue retired: Monsieur d'Auvita did confirm this news, whereof I had otherwise an intimation formerly; and he hath farther assured me (Madam) of the good success of your journey, and of your victory in the Chamber of the Edict. Since the guerdon of this Conquest lieth in Aunix, I believe it will repent you to have offended the Angoulmois some five years agone. I say it is some pleasure to me to think that you will not digress any more out of the Road in contempt of us; and now shortly will be the time when you will dignify those men with your presence, which do so passionately desire to see you. I am not so presumptuous as to allege here my own wishes. But me thinks (Madam) that the Duke of Rochefeucaut deserves one of your stages; and if it be so, I have reason to hope to be happy in some hours of the two or three days, which you cannot deny to afford Him. I was about to send to you— to learn some news of you: But this excellent Bearer, hath promised me to relate some at his return; and you need not be troubled, in that he did forbear that crude Oration that was provided for you. This is a man (Madam) in whose month are Temples and Altars erected for you, and who adores you in every word he speaks; He hath no vulgar conceit of your virtues, and he being ab●o● man of parts, is worthy of that regard you bear to him. I hope he will love me a little for love of you, and that you will do so likewise; and add this favour to the infinite number that I owe you, and which oblige me to be more than any man in the world, Madam Your. etc. Balzac. 7. Octob. 1636. I send you (Madam) the compliment which you desire to see; it was sent ere this, but was not received, because my packet was lost. Since that time, I have never thought of it; but your curiosity finds out things that are lost, and I am so good a Courtier, that none should have seen it besides yourself. To my Lord Keeper of the Seals Seguier, since Chancellor of France. LET. XV. MY Lord, If I had not been advertised that it was my bounden duty to write unto you, I should not have thought it needful so to do. And though I have ruminated as much as any other, upon the choice that the King hath made of your person, I considered it, as one of the felicities of his reign, and as a general influence of favour upon all the world. Calling to mind the definition of Aristotle, that calls justice the good of another, I thought it not so congruous to congratulate with him that must be the Guardian of the Laws, touching a preferment that will put him to a perpetual care and vigilance. But rather to partake in silence of the common felicity of those people that shall wholly rely upon his watchfulness. But my Lord, since custom commands it, & that congratulationss from the remotest parts of the Kingdom do post towards you, I should be thought unworthy of that rank which I hold among your humble Servants, if I did not sequester myself from the Crowd to deliver you (a part) some testimony of my joy, and to make you see, that in places of silence and solitude there be not wanting acclamations for you, and affections for the Country. I shall therefore make bold to tell you, that the joy which seizeth me at this time, is mingled with a kind of vanity; and having accompanied you with my thoughts and eyes even unto the place of your advancement, I do imagine I have (in some sort) conducted you, whither the judgement of the Prince hath advanced you Wherefore my Lord in your promotion, I do rejoice for the good success of my Imagination, and take no small pleasure to see my own Divinations verified. Certainly it is a matter of delight to see a Virtue so laborious and active as yours, brought into the most wide and spacious Career that Fortune could make choice of; and this is aspectacle worthy the sight of Heaven, and of the blessed soul of the late Cato of your race. The importance is, my Lord, that you begin in a very good season, for to continue long; and that you are in the verdure and vigour of your age for to uphold the crazy and decrepit weakness of our State. In this Elevation both of Merit and Dignity, each man will be your Adorer and Votary: But you will give me leave to assure you that none will approach unto you with a purer and more disinteressed Devotion than mine, and that I am without much pomp and flourish, yet in much sincerity My Lord, Your, etc. Balzac. 1. April 1636. To Monsieur de Morins, Counsellor of the King in the Court of the Edict, at Agen. LET. XVI. MY Lord, You are noble enough to love a man without any merits, but I were too loose and forlorn if I were so loved, and yet you have some cause to call me by that bad title; and if Monsieur Girard hath not had a care of his friend's reputation, all circumstances condemn me. It is true that my fault was but the omission of a Compliment, which had slipped out of my memory; and yet I avow to you, that this omission is such a sin that hath (a long time) burdened my conscience, and causeth such gripes and remorse Sir, that except the same goodness that hath showed me favour do grant me a pardon, I cannot make attonemeat with myself. But I am apt to believe that for the appeasing of my thoughts, you will not run the hazard of your former benefits, and that you will by your perseverance add to my obligations. Knowing this moreover, that you are a right honest man; I must necessarily conclude that you are no Formalist or a man of Ceremony, and that you do not tie yourself to those petty observances and Rites which make the friendship of this age more perplexed and difficult then sincere. If Yours may be gained or merited by a true and perfect valuation of your worth, I will not be an unfaithful Depositary, beseeching you to believe that I am already as much as any man in the world Sir, Your &c. Balzac Feb. 20. 1636. To Monsieur de-Vaugelas Gentleman in Ordinary to Monsieur the King's only Brother. LET. XVII. SIR, I did read my own thoughts in your Letter; I subscribe unto all that you have writ unto me, and confess that in the Elegy of Monsieur Arnold the Abbot, you do (indeed) but give your friend his due, and lend him never a grain. This is (in truth) a most accomplished man, and who at the age of 22 years, was reputed wise even by the Italians, that lately thought wisdom was their own freehold. He hath with his great knowledge mingled much goodness: the sharpness of his understanding is tempered and allayed by the sweetness of his behaviour, and his modesty doth repress and conceal much of his abilities. He never pardons himself, though he doth bear with all humane infirmities in others; and that Piety which he doth practise, gives respect unto all, but strikes a terror in none. Lo Sir, the testimony which I add unto yours: which I would bestow upon an enemy that deserved it, but would not upon a friend that wanted merit. His knowledge is attended on by other virtues, and it hath furnished him with excellent morality: for without this, it should be solitary and of little use. I tell you nothing of the late experiment I have found of it in your Letter which he wrote unto you: besides that my best language would be far below my apprehension of it; I know withal too well the power of his Rhetoric to contest with it; since he hath got so many advantages over me, he must needs have that of civility and compliments too; and my silence must not be accounted any more the effect of modesty but of the Eloquence of his Letter. I send it you back because you would have it so, and because you may make some use of it in your Cabinet; but I shall reserve a Copy of it under your favour, that it may afford some comfort and relief to my discontents. I have seen the siege of Tyre, the death of Darius, the voyage of the Indians, and I have read them with wonder. All these seem to me so good French, and so natural. that it is impossible to pick out any line there, that doth savour of, or show any affinity with Latin, or wherein the original Author hath any advantage above the second. What would you have more Sir, or what sentence can you crave of me? I have but one word to add in commendation of your Travels. The Alexander of Philip was invincible, and that of Vaugelas is inimitable. It is that (to say no more) that will deserve the affection of your incomparable marchioness, and the fair Beavy or Troop that do often assemble at her house. Monsieur— calls Her a choice and resplendent Court, and the great World refined and reform: and saith, that there is no Tribunal so sovereign that we may not appeal from, unto the Mansion of Rambovillet. Since I cannot know what kind of work it is that my Stationer shall give you, until this divine Roman Dame shall pass her censure upon it; I dare not as yet, declare myself for a Book which I must not acknowledge, although I have composed it. It sufficeth to tell you, that I had an aim to speak French, and to write some Letters which should not put Her to trouble of deciphering. I did not heartily desire that my Design might take effect; and I should believe I had not gained a little, by the commerce of many years, if what you shall present her with, in my name, may entertain her thoughts for a few hours; the noblest labours of the understanding cannot aspire to a higher bliss than that; Philosophy herself should betray too much presumption to think to take them up wholly and employ them; she cannot claim to be any more than her diversion and by-thought. I shall be very well contented Sir, if I might serve for that purpose handsomely; and I should boast after this, that I were (though in my absence) very good company. That timorousness that did ever possess me that I could not be so, any other way, and the fear of troubling the serenity of another man's visage by the sullen clowdiness of mine, have made me to refrain from all Feasts and Assemblies, and hindered me from bringing heavy looks to those places which I esteem sacred, and before those eyes which I do reverence. So that it is a pure reverence in me, that I abstain from acceptable and delightful conversation, and from the pleasures of those Cabinets that appertain to them only that be happier than I And I do choose rather to adore a far off with awful regard, then be importunately, and saucily familiar. I leave it to you to excuse and justify this timoriousnesse which proceeds from respect, not from a Stoical ferocity. Add you will do me a favour, if that while yond represent the best part of your friend, you will take the pains to excuse the worst. Whereunto, I do earnestly conjure you, and to believe firmly, that I am Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 26. Feb. 1636. To Monsieur dela Motte-Aigron. LET. XVIII. SIR, The Indian Canes which you sent me were pretty, but you have so embellished them at Rothel, that I doubt me they are not for my turn. They are not made for a private man's use: They are Emblems of sovereign command; and a bolder Orator than I, would render you thanks rather for your Sceptres then your Canes. By what name soever we call them, they are the more precious to me, because they came from You, more than for any other consideration; and though you have not made me rich, yet you have made me very glorious. It is a Maxim in Aristotle, that Ambition is no more satisfied with benefits received, than covetousness. But me thinks, he should have added, when it receives from him, from whom it desired to receive. For all sorts of Benefactors do not far oblige those that are ambitious of the better sort only. For my part, I should believe that the Presents of Monsieur— would pollute me, and I would be as much ashamed of his favours as I glory in yours. In truth Sir, I have quitted the Country, and am come purposely to the Town to show them. With them, I do sustain my old age with credit, and look as trim as upon solemn days of Ceremony. They serve me both for to support and to adorn; for moveables of necessietie, and ostentation too. But the worst is, that I have nothing here for to requite so rare a Present, but the shape and lineaments of a vulgar man, and the sad representation of my own visage. As it were very unjust that I should pretend to beauty: so it is a very solecism that Philarchus calls me a Narcissus. But there are always foolish passions, and idle curiosities in the world. My friends at Paris would needs urge me to have my Picture drawn, and I, to give them contentment, did yield myself for one half hour to be transcribed, and granted them this meager delight. Some Copies were sent me: one whereof I bestow upon you, supposing that it, will not scare you; and knowing that affection is a better flatterer yet, than the Painter. This is it that will bear a false witness for me to prove me fair, and which will allow me a place in the Class of your illustrious men. Such a place in your Cabinet, is indeed a high advancement, and which I cannot obtain but by mere favour; but that which you have given me in your heart is no less precious to me, and I think I have good right to the possession, since I am really Sir, Your &c. Angoulesme 15. Jan. 1637. To Monsieur de Borstell. LET. XIX. SIR, I durst not undertake the great and hazardous voyage, which I did impose upon myself some four years past, without taking leave from our noble Lady. I have therefore sent unto her to beg it, by the man that shall deliver you this letter; and that shall bring me back (if you please) some directions for my journey, which I beg of you. Being provided of such ammunition, I shall not fear the rigour of February, nor the unconstancy of March, nor the inundations of the Loire, nor the ways of Beausse. I am sure to arrive happily at Paris: where Sir, if you have any business, I can furnish you with a Solicitor, who (though but a forty one) is very ambitious to do you service. Alte non temo, & humili non s degno: I neither fear the high nor disdain the low. You cannot think of any employment that shall not be very welcome to me; and though I love sloth, and make a profession of Idleness, yet I will change my inclination, and of a sedentary man become a Currier; except this, I am commonly desirous of privacy, and never bring into the Assemblies of men but my eyes, and my testimony. There must be spectators at such times, as well as Poets and Actors; and some that must do nothing, for the interest and honour of those that act. But to the purpose Sir; what are become of your Actors of the Low Countries? I do verily think that there is no more Holland in the world, and that the Sea hath drowned the famousest part of the earth. There was never such a dearth of news; And the Caribusian Monks do not meditate with more silence, than they do wager war in that Country. If you are more learned than the Gazettes, I pray impart your knowledge by this Bearer, who hath a charge to give you an account of many things, and will acquaint you particularly how far I am Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 18. Feb. 1636. To Monsieur— the chief Advocate. LET. XX. Sir, I am impatient until I can hear of the estate of your health, and learn by the return of my Lecquay, whether your legs be better than they were wont. It is no wonder if they bend under the burden of so many brave things which they sustain; and being to carry the counsels of a whole Province, if they be somewhat incommodated with such a weight. Yet I do hope well of the wholesomeness of that Air which you breathe; and that being out of the reach of that malignant Jupiter, (that noisome mildew, I would have said) which overruns the Hills of Angoulesme, you will have the leisure to travel to your breaches, and fortify yourself against winter. This is a Neighbour that doth threaten us upon the Frontiers, and if I can, I will fly from him, as far as afric. But this remedy is something too far. Without undertaking so great a voyage, we will endeavour to make resistance as well as we may; and I am already resolved to use all humane industry, to barricado my Chamber, and to block up all approaches towards it. If I can maintain it bravely against so terrible an Enemy; I shall account myself no mean Engineer, and shall think my Sconces and Fortifications as regular as those of the Hollanders. After this, this shall be, if you please, the Camp of our riotous discourses and extravagances; of our peaceful disputations, and all other exercises that an honest man may perform in a Chair, I do therefore design you for it about mid-November, and remain Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 18. Oct. 1636 To Monsieur de Maury. LET. XXI. SIR, You have sent me a Present which was extremely dear and welcome to me, and which I must highly prise, both for the manner of sending, and the matter sent; the affliction which you paint out and emblazon, is so Christian, that all the joy in the world is not able to countervail it; and you complain in such a learned form, that we must forbid men to comfort you, lest you should cease complaining. I am you know, but a simple French Doctor; yet I do now and then, make excursion into the Latin Country, and take a view of the Frontiers. But this is too little for to know the just value of your Muse, and to give you the commendation that you deserve. You have an ancient Roman near you, that can distinguish between the Native and the Foreigner; and makes it Religion to confound the modesty of the age of Augustus; with the intemperaence of succeeding times. He hath a smack of the primitive Poetry, which the Spaniards had not yet vitiated, and made immodest; and of that pure Latin, which the Declamators had not yet corrupted with nice subtleties. He it is, that can give you ample and just commendation, and can make a just estimate of the riches of your stile: For my part, I can but testify unto you my deep apprehension of your courtesies in this behalf, and assure you that I will be while I live Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 23. Octob. 1636. To Monsieur de Mondory. LET. XXII. SIR, Your Letter was to me an old novelty, and I received it but in the beginning of December, thought it had been at my house since August: To unfold this Riddle, I must tell you, I am newly returned from a long voyage, & that I found your Letter here at my arrival. You may believe, that the name of a man that is dear unto me, did at first encounter of my eye affect me with joy; and that it is no small satisfaction and contentment to me, to see that I hold a place in a memory, that is so occupied and fully fraught as yours. This is to lie down among a bed of Roses, when I lie among so many brave Poems, and rare discourses which you contain, as a walking Library. And if it be lawful to tell out the rest, to be the friend of Monsieur de Mondory, is to be a Favourite of a thousand Kings; for indeed you do so lively represent unto us the majesty and magnificence of former ages, that we must confess that your representations, are the glorious Resurrections of those Princes which you do personate. And things being thus, take it not amiss that in my answer I must contradict you. You cannot compare the bonnet of Herod with that of Monsieur the Advocate— without doing some injury to Royal dignity, and avileling their Purple and Diamonds; without doing yourself a bad office, in lessening, and obscuring in me thereby (if you could) the great Idea which I conceived of you, the day that I saw you with that Bonnet. But you may be pleased to humble yourself; you cannot deface or blot out of my memory that first impression and Image of majesty which you there left; and I cannot figure you in my thoughts, but with a commanding accent, and the eloquence of a Master, far transcending that inferior Rhetoric, which works but my entreaties and remonstrances. Yet I speak not this, as though I would always consider you under the name and shape of another; or that I believe, if that you should quit the Theatre, you would be out of all employment in the world. The Letter which you were pleased to write unto me doth sufficiently witness, that Eloquence is your natural endowment, and that without borrowing from any, you can traffic in very good things of your own. Suspect not then that I should recant to your prejudice, after this new occasion of extolling you▪ On the contrary, I am ready (if need be) to add something to my former testimony. I have many reasons to respect you, and I think I may do it with the licence of our severest Schools. Since that having reformed the stage, and purged it from all obscenity, you may glory in this, that you have reconciled Comedy with— Pleasure, with Virtue. And though for my part I stand in need of recreations, yet since I desire not to enjoy but those that are cleanly, and which do not violate honesty, I do (with the common voice) give you thanks for the care you have taken, to provide fit remedies, and Antidotes against melancholy, and other untoward passions. But farther, calling to mind that you proposed my contentation sometimes, for the end of your action, and that you aimed oftentimes at me alone, I were ungrateful if I did not confess that I am Sir Your, etc. Balzac. 15. Decem. 1636. To Monsieur Le. Guay. LET. XXIII. Sir, You had an intention to perform an act of humility; when you did dedicate your Poem to me; for to expect protection from a man that is not reckoned of the world, and light from a name so obscure as mine, you could not (sure) forget yourself in this sort. The same virtue which obligeth the Saints to acknowledge Superiors wherever there are men, hath carried you to this depth of lowliness; and you have chosen an unhappy man, for to bestow honour upon, that you might lose that, which you would fain bestow, I must confess, that no man ever commended his Neighbour more Christian like, and doth more decline the Trade of those Mercenaries, who sell their testimonies and credit to any, that have wherewith to requite them. These are Hucksters of Poetry and Rhetoric; that prostitute to the first comers, even those whom you style the kindred of the Gods and Daughters of jupiter; and make Pegasus a very hackney of commendation, (as I may so say) for all the world. You have a heart of a far better mould than theirs; and though men consider not as they ought, the graces and elegancies of your Muse, we must notwithstanding infinitely commend their nobleness and generosity. I confess for my part, that I am a debtor to them as far as any, and that I know not how to requite in any measure, the favours that I have received from them. Yet notwithstanding, I forbear not to load my Porter with a pretty gross bundle; not pretending thus to acquit myself, or thinking that I am hereby less than before. Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 1. April. 1636. To Monsieur de Silhon, Musqueteer of the King's Company. LET. XXIV. Sir, Having your person in great admiration, I cannot misprise or undervalue your friendship. The fair tokens whereof, which I have received in the Letter, that you were pleased to write unto me, have obliged me so far, that I confess that I owe you already that which you are pleased now to promise me. I will tell you but this, that if Princes could bestow health and virtue, I should tell more sedulous Courtier than I am, and should stand in more need of your testimony, and the recommendation of your friend. But truly, in the case that I am, my desires are so feeble, and my passions so cold and languid, that I could hardly be persuaded to take up a Crosier, if I found it on the earth. Though Philosophy doth not teach, that we must seek for happiness out of the wheeling Orb of the Court; my own laziness would cause me to apprehend it as a fortune, under whose weight I should perpetually groan, and not a place of any ease; and I do less esteem of a place of Government that might cumber me, than a field of liberty that may solace me. If you go any time into Gascony, and do me the honour to take my house in the way, you will verify what I say to you; and avouch, that if I were as well cured of all maladies as that of Ambition I had not many wishes to commence. It is true that some company (like that of Monsieur your Brother) is wanting unto me; and if this were added to my Hermitage, I durst contend with Jupiter for happiness. This is a speech of Epicurus which Seneca doth allege, but which I do mean to apply better than it was by the Author; since bread and bear (which this Philosopher made the two Elements of sovereign good) are not so rare or so good, as those excellent instructions and perfect honesty, which I should find and enjoy in the person of my friend. I do charge you to assure him, that I do ever honour and esteem him infinitely, and for your particular, you may believe, that you cannot affect a man that could be more sincerely than I am, Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 19 Decem. 1635. To Monsieur De la Fosse. LET. XXV. SIR, You judge too seriously of my Recreations, and bear too high an opinion of my Essays. It is no Roman Citizen that you thus respect, it is a Barbarian disguised. I have drawn some rude lineaments and misshapen figures, and you would allow them for just works and exact Pieces. Your eloquence herein doth favour me, but altars me not a whit. You are powerful in Language, but I am hard of persuasion; and I have learned from a mous Author, that to give things honourable appellations doth cost us nothing: And I see well that Illustrious and Excellent which you grace me with, do signify (except by way of Civility) but things vulgar and mean. It is true Sir, that I do adventure sometimes to copy out good Originals. I have an eye as much as possibly I may, to ancient examples, and I do scarce seek them beyond Terente or this side Livy. But these are but idle Speculations (perhaps) and impotent desires which leave an infinite space between my abilities and my Idea; if it be so, as I fear it is, Monsieur de Prieset doth heedfully observe this distance, and pitieth in his soul the vain attempts and rashness of my pen. Yet he is so good and loving, that he will not, I should learn this distasteful truth from him; and loves rather to commend a fault, then discover it, in a man that is dear to him. He hath written such polite things to me, and in such abundance, that I dare not send forth any reply after his answer, lest I should be undone by so unequal a comparison. I must not attempt this great design, for the success thereof must needs be unlucky, though I should make use of Auxiliaries, and demands succours of all the L●t●xists of our Province. You shall tell him then, if you please, that I do acknowledge the advantage his stile hath over mine, and I think it no disparagement that I must still owe him what I shall never be able to pay him. You are kind enough yet Sir, to assure Monsieur Habert the Abbot, and Monsieur de la Chamber, of the constancy of my service; and how impatient I am, that the world doth not yet know, in what regard I hold their virtues. It sufficeth me that they accept and allow of my affection, and that they testify it unto you with a nod. For to desire Letters, and not tickets from them, were to be ignorant of the present condition of their life, and the homage that they perform to our Monarch, who best deserves it. I have received some Verses from Monsieur de Espesses, and you send me some more of other men's, together with a letter, which my servant left to grow stale upon the Table in my Chamber. You will do me the favour as to deliver him my Packet, and readily take so much pains for my sake: who will account myself happy to be made your Agent in these parts, and be able to express that none is more entirely Sir, Your, etc. Balzac. 3. Jan. 1637. To Monsieur de Espesses Councillor of the King in his Council of States. LET. XXVI. SIR, You make me (truly) to languish, and it is more than four months, since I have expected our Translation: I call it ours, because you made it in my Chamber, and on my paper; and I might call it mine too, by a rule in the Law, which doth adjudge the surface to go along with the profundity; but that I remembered the exception of the Emperor, which he adds in favour of excellent Artisans. Nobis contrà videtur, meliùs esse Tabulam cedere Picturae: Ridiculum enim est picturam Apellis vil Parrbasii in accessi●nem vilissimae picturae cedere. We must not urge a man that is intent upon more important affairs. Yet when your leisure serves, be pleased to perfect that same Translation, and try if our language can express Ter●nce in that nobleness of stile, and the Character of Se●pio and Laelius, which the Roman Nation observe to be in it. In the mean time Sir, to have the more colour to demand of you, I send you here a small gift; some Verses which I received lately from one of my friends in Englend, who doth charge the Muses of the Low-Countries with the making. You are in some sort interessed in it, seeing they question the credit and truth of an Author who among you, is cried for Indubitable; and seem to thwart your judgement of him, as concerning the certainty of his Testimony. But (in good sooth) the Flemings have reason to require such a scrupulous and punctual truth in our news: They who are the most fabulous Historians of this age, and for the most part, truck away nothing but Apocryphal Relations. By changing the proper names only in their Verses, we might retort all their Sarcasmes upon themselves; we could speak truly of their Gazet, what they have falsely written of ours; and tell them farther, that that which they deride so, is well esteemed all over by the most ingenious Nation of the world; It is certain that the fine wits of Rome do admire the acuteness and apposite expressions therein; and Monsieur the Abbot of— upon his return from Italy did assure me, that it was pronounced in the Academy of the Humorists, that each section of the Parisian Gazet was worth a Chapter in Florus, or Valerius Maximus. They are Sir, as you know, Epigrams in prose: and the determination of so famous a Tribunal, is a sufficient Countermure against the assaults of this new Poem. I would, desire you to impart it to Monsieur Gaulmim, and some other grave Judges of Latin learning. That we may know the gust of your great world, and what we are to believe in the Provinces. The description of the Bureand ' Address, seems to me to have been drawn upon the plain, or model of that Palace which Ovid hath erected to Fame. But you will make us upon this, and all the rest most large and learned Observations; and I do promise myself to receive from you at once, both a Translation and a Commentary. I am perfectly Sir Your &c. Balzac 25 Nou. 1636. To the same. LET. XXVII. SIR, Since I wrote my Letter, it comes to my head that for a Counter cuff to the Gazeta Parisiensi●, we might send to the Low Countrymen, Historia Hispana, and fill it with Comical sport enough. First we must make it to be the ineestuous Offspring of the Giants, begotten upon their own sister Fame, for the high and mighty lies wherewith it doth abuse the credulity of the simple; and (in truth) the natural pride of that Nation which appears, even in the wand'ring Beggar in extremest misery; and those Rhodomont●des which to them are so proper and usual, that their very compliments retain a smack of them▪ are worthy of so illustrious an Extraction, and to descend in a direct line from Enceladus and Mimas, and Briareus. This premised Sir, and enriched with your art, I would have this monstrous Issue gain upon the belief of the Indians and the Cockneys of Europe, that the beginning of the universal Monarchy promised to Spain, will betid just the next year, which is the Climasterical year of all other States; that Gods will is, that there should be but one Monarch upon earth; and that the Pope himself for his better accommodation, doth mean to resign Rome to him, and exchange it for the Archbishopric of Toledo. That the Battle where the King of Sueden was slain, was the last sigh of dying liberty; that this Prince was no such thing as we took him to be, and for those achievements of his, which we entertained with such wonder, nothing was performed without the help of Magic, by virtue only of some charms and characters, and the assistance of the Powers of Hell, which at last was found too weak against the House of Austria. That to the end, that the second causes and humane means might concur with the design of providence, foreign affairs do seem to comply of themselves to this great change. That the King of England is not so brave, but that he would be contented to be a Feudatary of the King of Spain; and if it goes to the worst, that there will not be wanting some Gunpowder-men to make him caper in the air with his whole Realm. That the cinders of the Holy League, and the remainder of the Huguenot Party begin to flame a new in Frence by the bellows and Libels of St. German; that they have bargained with some secret Engineers, who have undertaken to fortify Ro●b●l in one night. That Duke Charles must be revenged upon Nancy, and that he doth hold Paris already in extremity; that if there be not a Spanish Garrison already in Turin and C●sall, there will be one, when it shall seem good to his Catholic Majesty, and when the Dukes of Savoy and Mantua, shall be received into his favour. That he will have none of Venice or Amsterdam, because that an Illuminatee of Madrid, and a Sybille of Naples have assured him, that the Sea will one day swallow up these two great Cities; and the loss of his Spaniards that should be their Commanders, would be a cause of great grief unto him. That he had long since chastised the Rebels of Holland, if some considerations of state had not hindered him from it. But let him preserve that Land of contradiction, for a Fencing-school for his own Subjects, to keep them from idleness, and to breathe them by continual exercise. That for the rest, if the world will not be so easily conquered, he hath in his coffers wherewith to buy it. And hereabouts, this Daughter of Fame and Enceladus her Brother, must raise her tone higher, and outbid her first figure or number; she must with one dash of the pen make more gold, than the Sun can make in a thousand years; she must make the winds labour, and force the Ocean to groan under the new Fleet, which according to her computation, must arrive every month punctually at Lisbon and Sivil; she must make a discovery (if needs be) of the third Indies, and find out all the hidden mines there; not those within the Demaines of Antichrist excepted, and cause them to be guarded by those evil Spirits, which S Augustine calls (for this reason) Incubones Thesauroru●●, etc. Behold Sir, a rude draught of a work which expects from you its consummation and perfection, which you might soon finish, if your poetical fancy should once seize you. Here is matter (you see) for an excellent Irony, and wherewith to continue it to a hundred verses and more, though the Comedy did affect you near so little, especially when you shall add from and fashion to the stuff which I present you with, who am Sir, Your, etc. Balzac. 27. Nou. 1637. To Monsieur de Cowrelles. LET. XXVIII. SIR, I cannot write unto you but tumultuarilie: my hands and head are so full of business, that being to take a journey to Paris, I am bound to bid farewell to the Clergy, the Nobility and the Commons. It is now four years that I have deliberated upon this voyage, and being at last resolved, I am like by your favour to be accompanied then I did expect, Comes facundus in via, etc. I think I may give this attribute to your Book, after the Elegy which you vouchsafe me therein: and if I had not already taken part and declared myself, for the Author of the Flandrian History, (who is one of my good Lords and friends) I should have entered blindly into a new faction, which (as it seems) you do abet and patronise; but Sir, you will not take it amiss that I profess constancy, and that this second Author, hath not won my first affection. This evening I shall begin to entertain him, and to taste of those delicacies whereof you were pleased to make an Essay. These will not be painted Cares I am sure, not Pageants of good; no nimble juggle and impostures practised upon the eye and imagination, as most part of those things are that come from that Country. There is no imposture so finely contrived, as to be able to cheat so cautious a judgement as yours. And I will folllow you, wheresoever you will please to lead me, (I mean still to except matters of faith) and I believe you will not be offended with such an exception, since the Laws of friendship will allow it me, and since I never cease to be most affectionately Sir, Your, etc. Angoulesme March 8. 1636. To— LET. XXIX. SIR, My willingness to relieve afflicted men, deserves not the thanks which I have reaped thereby. This is a passion which on my part doth but produce fruitless desires, and which cannot by you be ●●d in any estimation, but out of a superlative nobleness in you. In that I have given harbour to a man that was persecuted, I did but that which the Law of Nations required of me, and what I would not have denied to the misfortunes of an— or a Spaniard. If you take this to mind, and become my debtor, you do assume the interest of all mankind, and acquit the honour of the whole world; for my part, I am twice rewarded for an act, which I thought was sufficiently rewarded in the doing, and for which I expected neither honour nor acknowledgement. You see Sir, that I am not privy to your secrets, and if you were obliged hereby, it was by an innocent and blindly ignorant man. For the Cavalier, touching whom you ask some news; I believe that he hath prevented me, as being unwilling that any other than himself should be the Historian of his adventures. He will (no question) write unto you, what hath happened unto him in the Resectory of the— Fathers, and the notable advantages he hath gotten over a Gladiator of the long Gown. I am not troubled a whit that he hath got him some credit in so good a place, and gained the reputation of a man of valour. Yet, I must tell you, that his credit is dearer unto me than my own interest; and that if he have not the mind to dispute, it is not my desire he should turn for my sake. He may be my friend at a cheaper rate; and I can content myself with the calmness and tranquillity of his passion, not needing that it should break forth and appear through noise and jangling. Many men (you know) never do a good turn, but that they may have occasion of upbraiding. Poverty is more tolerable than such Creditors; and there are some Patrons of such harsh dispositions, that I would choose persecution before their succours. Upon our first meeting, I will declare myself more particularly to you, and in the mean while, rest Sir, Your &c. Paris May 3. 1631. To my Lord the Bishop of Angoulesme, chief Almener to the Illustrious Queen of great Britain. LET. XXX. MY LORD, I have seen in a Letter that you have written to Monsieur— that my name is not unknown unto you, and that I have some share in your good Graces; this is a favour which I owe to your courtesy only, and I dare not believe, that my more than small deserts, could have acquired me such an inestimable good as that. I cannot justly enjoy it, if you would not admit of that perfect devotion and reverence which I offer you, and which I were bound to pay to your virtue, though I should never reflect upon your Dignity You have at first boarding, engaged my observance. It will be (my Lord) an incredible contentment unto me, to enjoy that happy entertainment and discourse which you have done me the honour to promise me. And I am confident, that I shall still depart thence a better man, and more learned, though my inclination be never so untoward, and unapt for good purposes, and my memory never so slippery to retain the impression of fair Ideas. But I begin to fear that your Flock should in the mean while languish for you, and that the interests of France, will cross and oppose themselves against the wishes of our Province. The fear of that was it, that caused me to send England a Book, which I did heartily desire, I could have presented to you there, together with the Author. He is one of the great Votaries of that great Cardinal Perron your Uncle: He doth celebrate his memory without intermission, and adores his learned Relics. He doth glory in being his ghostly Son; and you will not (I am sure) make any difficulty, to avow this spiritual alliance that is between you and him, being joined with the condition, that he desires to live in all his life-time; which is to be My Lord, Your &c. Balzac 20. Dec. 1636. To Monsieur De— LET. XXXI. Sir, I write unto you with a heart wounded with sorrow, and make my moan to you, for the sinister opinion, that you have conceived of me, upon the first evil report that was suggested to you concerning me. I thought I had given you a sufficient assurance of the smoothness and plamnesse of my soul, that you should not have so easily doubted of it, and entertain a belief so injurious to amity, before you had communicated your jealousies to your friends, and made them clear enough. You know Sir, more than any other, that my passions are not close and reserved, but I carry my soul still in my prehead. When I was not as yet, so far your Servant as now I am, I did not use much Artifice, and dissimulation to persuade the contrary; and thence you might have deduced an infallible conclusion, that if I had changed my inclination, I would not have deceived you with new protestations of fidelity. I do therefore religiously protest unto you, that honouring you with that zeal as I do, you could not inflict a greater punishment upon me, than the forfeiture of your favours. But moreover, I do swear to you by all that is sacred in the world, that I have committed nothing that might deserve such a cruel punishment. After this me thinks you might be confirmed in the truth, but pardon me if I tell you, you should have been so before; and that I do extremely wonder, that a weak and gross calumny, should quite ruin and deface in your thoughts, the good impressions, which I thought I had left there. I cannot hinder men's misconstructions of me, or bind Interpreters from doing violence, and putting my words upon the rack, to make them depose things which were far from my intentions. Sophisters make use of a true proposition to infer an erroneous conclusion; and Pettisoggers still cite the Law, to authorize their injustice, and yet none will tax truth to be the cause of error, or Law the mother of injustice. I cannot warrant, but my own thoughts (which are sound and innocent) not those of my adversaries, which are full of malice and rancour. I am responsible for the things that I have written, and ready withal to maintain them. But all the visions and fancies of men are not in my power. Every man can make a nimble and subtle decipherer of another man's intentions. The same picture, according to several lights and postures, may have several representations; and often times there is a great difference between a Text and the Commentaries, the meaning of the Author and the Criticisms of Grammarians. I said that I knew some strange insufferable humours, and no way fit to possess and sway freeborn men. Therefore I said, that a man, whom I do infinitely esteem and honour was of that humour. Lo here Sir, (not to say half of what I think of it) a conclusion very unworthy a Logician, and which is as far from common, as from my particular sense. Indeed it was not you, that deduced it, yet you should not have entertained it at second hand, and if it did not seem to you to be palpably false, yet you might have demurred a while, and suspected it; you have done yourself wrong and me too, in conceiving so bad a thought of your own merit and my fidelity; in expressing that you have some distrust of yourself, who are of no mean value, and but very little confidence in me, whose freeness is something worth. I have but little skill in fallacies, and a mean Juggler may sometimes gain credit with me: nevertheless, I should never have been thus surprised and deluded, and when you have wrote to me in a dozen Letters at least, that you knew some men that wrote pernicious Books, and maintained Heretical Propositions: I did not yield to such an imagination that this did reflect upon me; and when you sent a Lackey into this Province, I did not forbear to send you commendations by him. You see that I am stung, and therefore am sensible. If your love were not dear unto me, I could well enough bear your neglect of me; and if my zeal to you were not strong, I should endeavour to solace myself, after your ill entreating of me. But because I love, I would be requited with love; and I cannot brook to be taxed with a fault, which I thought did not deserve so much as suspicion. Sir, I am upon the point to publish a new Volume of Letters, where there be some which I have written unto you and others, where I make mention of you, as your virtues did oblige me; and where will be one also, wherein (as some would persuade you) I am injurious to you. How I pray, can all these agree? can I be both your friend and your foe at once? can I blow with the same mouth, both hot and cold? can the literal sense favour you, and the allegorical injure you? can I do you wrong, when I must needs wrong myself? shall I give an occasion of distaste by ambiguous terms, where I must make myself ridiculous by apparent contradictions? This was it Sir, that was suggested to your credulity, and which you did not reject at first acquaintance, as I had reason to expect from your good discretion. These were the false surmises which were brought before you, wherein you found more semblance of truth, then in the sincere protestations which I made to you. I cannot conceive (knowing that you have continued your friendship towards me, and that I too have not lost my reason) how you could imagine, that I intended in a bravery to disengage you, and by those awkward spirits which I had known, I aimed directly at you, and might not design some other as well. I know a great many of the Gascons, and as there be some of them very moderate, so also there be others that are not so. I know some of Provence and Corsica, and I am not ignorant of their natural gentleness; I know some Spaniards, and I know how agreeable is their yoke with that which they call Castiga vellacoes. Lastly, you may believe that I have not traveled blindfold, & I had in vain conversed with men, if I had not endeavoured to know them; and yet in this particular, men would fain make all my acquaintance to be terminated in you, and that I have pardoned a thousand Humorists in the world (to whom my proposition might be applied) for to violate you. They surmise, that having an aim to wound some body, I made choice of one of my chiefest friends for my mark; and that I have murmured closely and in dark language, that He is rough and violent, whom I proclaim every where, and with loud accent, for completely wise and noble. I will not cite unto you mean testimonies, for the confirmation of this truth. I can allege My Lord, the Duke of— and My Lord the Count of— of whom is here question made. They know both of them, how far I am your Servant, and with what servency I did maintain your honour and interests, on a time when occasion was presented. I am willing to believe that your other friends might serve you in some stead in some other encounters; but in this here, all the whole Company (I except no man) was mute. There was not any there, but myself that spoke strenuouslie in your behalf, concerning those things that did reflect upon you; and the boldness of my affection carried me so far, that the Lords, whom I now named unto you, did give me a public testimony, and professed, (though with a little disgust) that I was too good a friend to make a Countier of. I am therefore something aggrieved at this time, to be requited thus with oblequie, where I thought I had deserved thanks; to have preserved my fidelity inviolable towards you, and now to be accused of treachery; to be the only man in your defence on that occasion, whereof you have cause to boast, and now to be the only man of whom you complain. I do not use to value my services which I perform to my friends, and I am content to stand up for them manfully, without making unto them an account of my prowess. Moreover Sir, this betrays grief, more than presumption, and may be termed defending, rather than upbraiding; These are resentments which accompany innocence that is offended; and which your facility (abused by the malice of another) doth force from my heart against my will I will not conceal it from you, you have made a deep wound in it, it makes me think in all my dreams of the injustice which I suffer at your hand, and you had utterly lost any friend, that had been less firm than myself; by putting him to such a hazard. Wherefore Sir, for all the revenge that I desire for the injury which I have received, take it not amiss, that I give you this advice, that you give less credit hereafter to another, and more to yourself; that you would be more jealous of those opinions that you have conceived upon your first acquaintance of a business, and less affected to the rumours of the City, which are not grounded upon any solid foundation. You should consider the place from whence these acquaint News have traveled; weigh the circumstances of the thing, examine by what spirit the accuser was led thereunto: and not examine his person only, and passion, and interests; but also the deservings of the party accused, his manner and behaviour of life, and his former actions: suspend your judgement at leastwise, until time shall give you a more exact & particular information of businesses; otherwise you shall never want disquiet and vexation, and you should thus but feed upon suspicion and distrust, which are very unwholesome viands. Men must not send you relations of whatsoever an undiscreet friend or some rude sturdy servant, or such and such a Neighbour shall report unto— they must have more care of the tranquillity of your mind; and likewise for your part, you must not swear unto the testimonies of all the Informers, that have a plot upon your credulity, and take pleasure in the pain and exercise which they put you unto. If you allow an open gate for all tales and suggestions to enter in, they will throng into your house apace, and first come, first heard. To day, they will inform you (and perhaps with specious colours too) that your Privadoes do divulge your secrets; and to morrow that your Domestics do rob and rifle you; and at last that all the world is your enemy, and all private conferences, are but conspiracies against you. I conjure you Sir, for your own peace, not to give so much credit to those things which do no way concern Religion, nor to abandon yourself to those Relators, who pretend to dispel melancholy, when they are fit for nothing but to whisper follies into your ears, and to calumniate with a good grace: make a distinction betwixt the fraudulent Arts of Parasites and the freedom of ingenious men; between those that adore Fortune, and those that regard nothing but Virtue. For my part, I declare freely unto you, that if Monsieur the— were raised again, and would commit his omnipotency to your hands, I should not do that to regain your favour, what I do now perform in regard of our friendship. At leastwise I should be more stern and stubborn (than I am) in my displeasure, and more obstinate in seeking to you, and less solicitous of the event of my seeking. But I have not yet the skill to comply with the times, and to be still on Fortune's side; I profess such an austere honesty and goodness that is not of the present times. I would take a pleasure to be a Companion of my friend in exile, and be his fellow prisoner, I would run under his Ruin to bear it off, when I could not help him to stand fast and subsist. Your Fortune being so well established as it is, doth not require any such proof and trial of fidelity. But it is certain that you cannot desire of me any experiments of love so hazardous, but I would willingly undergo them with pleasure for your sake, and testify unto you that I am (beyond comparison) more than all my Informers. Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 7. June 1633. To Monsieur de Serizay. LET. XXXII. SIR, There is no way to bear any longer with the contumacy of your silence, I have sent this Messenger of purpose to make you speak, and to tell you (though with some distaste to you) that you have lost your memory; and that is no less than the third part of your soul. So that there remain but the understanding and the will, wherein I have (perhaps) some nook and seat. You have promised me wonders, and performed just nothing; you did owe me a visit immediately after your voyage to Saints, and since that, you might have gone to Rome and come back again. You see here great cause of discontent; nevertheless I am so facile, that if you would but bereave yourself of the pleasures of the Court for three or four days, I would seal you a general Pardon for all that is past, and account you as honest a man as ever I did before. While I expect this reasonable satisfaction which you cannot deny me, be pleased to acquaint my Lord the Duke of Rochefoucaut that Monsieur de Nantes is extremely troubled that he cannot receive the honour which he would willingly pay him by coming to visit him in these parts. He expects this morning some tidings from my Lord, the Duke of Espernon for to render himself where he shall appoint him to find him; and I look upon him as upon a blessing which I expect to lose every moment. If he were not preparing to Mass he would gnifie unto him his discontents himself, and the earnest desire he hath to make his Son one of the Luminaries of our Church. He finds the business so for advanced, that there will be no great difficulty to effect the rest, and that his Extraction is so happy, that a little cultivation will produce rare and excellent fruits. Do me the favour as to deliver to Monsieur his eldest Son the Panegyricke framed for the King of Sueden, together with the Letter which I wrote the last Summer to poor—. This is not to recommend unto him the memory of her: I know that she is infinitely dear unto him: nor to put him into any affright; for men of his sort do apprehend nothing but dishonour. I desire only that he should see that my poor judgement doth sometimes jump with good understandings, and that I had the honour to be his Rival in one passion that he hath harboured. If you do not send me by my Man the Discourse of— garnished with Notes and Commentaries, I shall have a new cause of quarrel; and do not you think that I betake myself to Monsieur— for them, this is an Oracle (indeed) that is always ready to answer, but I fear me, that you have not always devotion enough to consult with him. Adieu Sir, I am absolutely Balzac 30. May 1633. Your, etc. To Monsieur Habert, Abbot of Cerizy. LET. XXXIII. SIR, I believe that you will not be offended with a Petition that this Bearer shall commence unto you in my behalf. Your goodness carrieth you so far at to love your Persecutors; and you have entertained so favourably my first importunities, that I stand not now in fear, of making motions. If you had given me, the repulse at first, you had taught me the virtue of discretion, and provided better for your own quietness. But the force of example is dangerous: the evil doth suddenly insinuate and grow familiar, and treads oft that way, which it was wont to measure. So that I think that I have now some colour of justice to torment you; and it is habitual unto me to abuse a thing, when I have not found difficulty enough to make me use it with moderation. I shall continue Sir, an importunate Beggar till you forget to be generous: and do no doubt; but I know how to make use of a good so diffusive and beneficial, as in your Amity. You shall travel to day for the good of my estate, because there is a Council; and to morrow for the good of my soul, because there is a Sermon; that I may acknowledge you my friend, for my spiritual as well as temporal good, and that you may receive my thanks, both in this and the other world. That which you are to pronounce with gracefulness of action, and cannot well be communicated in writing, hath notwithstanding already given me infinite delight upon paper. I have never seen our Mysteries illustrated with so much light of eloquence, nor Reason so successfully employed in the service of Faith, nor Christian Morality better seasoned, to make it relish well in profane palates. But in this particular, I would fain be less beholding to you, that I might have the more freedom, and be able to assure you (without any supposition of engagement, or sign of acknowledgement) that I admire all your Muses universally, both the politer and the severer ones; both those that can compose Hymns and Anthems, and sing the praises of our Saviour Christ: and those that can resolve Problems, and deal in Christian learning. I bid you good day, and remain with all my soul Sir, Your &c. Paris 29 April 1636. To Monsieur De Gaillard. LET. XXXIV. SIR, Be of good courage, and start not at the opening of my packet; I do assure you beforehand, that it is not my Ghost that talks to you, and that the Letter that I write unto you, doth not come from the other world. The rumour which was scattered concerning my death, hath not killed me; and I am yet, (since it is the pleasure of God) a witness of his works, and an Adorer of his power. I have ere this, received the alarm of the like news; but I am no longer credulous to dreams and presages; my soul doth not labour with those popular infirmities: And I do consent with that Grecian, that all the wishes of enemies, all the imprecations of Poets, and all the false bruits of Fame, are not able to bring on our destiny one hour the sooner. There is a Gentleman in Gascoigne, who is chronicled to have been slain in the battle of Yury; and he is yet very well notwithstanding, and means to live long. I am Sir, of the same humour too, and confess to you that I do not much hate my life, though I have little cause to love it. Your Stationers indeed did not believe this: they have handled me as though I had been dead indeed, and have magined withal, that they be my rightful Heirs ex ass, having eized upon the first papers of mine that they could meet with. I am omething apprehensive of this injury, and it should grieve me if Monsieur— should be the Author of it; because I should then endure it with more impatience yet. To say truth, if this be not to wound and violate (downright) the Law of Nations, it is (at least) to deflower and taint it: and you will confess with me, that it could not be pleasing unto me, that the— should be published without ask my consent thereunto. Had it been so, I should not have been perhaps very averse, and I should have desired him only to alter something for my sake, and something for his own. For though his understanding be passing good, yet you know well, that our Grammatians do not allow his stile for regular; and though their scruples be ill grounded, yet they must be considered. That which I would fain have changed, and where I thought I had some small interest, was one word, which nay ancient Enemy had already miserable mangled; and which, (not wanting spirit and life in its natural place) doth resemble those delicate plants, which die as soon as they be transplanted from their own banks. But remedy comes now too tardy. I must comfort myself against this, as well as other injuries. This is but dallying to former wrongs; and such pinches should well be born with, by a man that never useth to complain of Treasons and Assassinates. For your satisfaction Sir, let it suffice that I have a perfect knowledge of your wisdom and honesty, and that I would trust you with my life, my honour, and my fortunes. If I had had so base a thought as to suspect you in this dealing, I should believe that I were bound to do penance for my suspicion. I know that you are every way virtuous, and my firm friend, as I am very really Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 10. Jan. 1634. To the same— LET. XXXV. SIR, I have received your incomparable Book: in the which (after a long and tedious perusal) my Grammar could find no construction, nor my Logic common sense. This is not the first time that that poor Wit hath strayed so. He hath been this long time ridiculous without being facetious, and hath been a laughingstock to the vulgar, and an object of pity to the wise. The late Monsieur— did use to call him the greatest enemy that ever Reason had, between Cales and Bayonne; and said, he was a fool in two Sciences, and in four Languages. Nevertheless, if our friend shall think him worthy of some traces of his pen, let us indulge him that exercise, with this proviso, that he be not violent, and that he put not himself to a heat; that (if it please him) he do not deal seriously with him, or arm himself at all points, against an Adversary that deserves not any encounter but with pins. As for the— you wrong yourself, for to mistrust the moderation of my spirit. In the estate that I have ordered and settled it in, I have less passion than the King of the Stoics, and I must be excited for eight days together, to the cruelty of hearing any man whatsoever, for one half an hour▪ It is not my intention to write against Monsieur— but to discourse with him; and I have not so little wit, but that I can distinguish his person from his cause. He hath obliged me with so good grace, and spoken of me in such high language and sumptuous terms, that I cannot doubt of his respect, or his affection towards me. And he shall likewise see my resentment of it, through the whole file of my discourse; wherein I am resolved to temper myself so discreetly, that if I persuade him not to my opinion, I shall not make my proceedings odious; and if I do not rest satisfied with what he faith, I shall contradict him but obliquely, and with a kind of Bias, which shall not be distasteful unto him. This will be (perhaps) the first example of modesty, that hath been heard of among the disputants of this age; and we will demonstrate to those of that side, who talk outrageously in Problems of small importance; that the altercations of honest men are without choler, and that generous enemies live better together then malicious Burghers. For the rest Sir, I desire you to continue the pains that you have begun, and to send me wherewith, I may fortify all the Approaches that are liable to assault and battery. I shall fear nothing, being strengthened with so powerful succours; and you will justify my cause if it be good, or give it a colour of justice, if it be not so. See what an enterprise it was in you to love me: You could never have conceived a more pernicious design for yourself. It will repent you more than once, and you will renounce at anytime (I am sure) the sorry purchase which you have made in the acquaintance of a troublesome man. Nevertheless, he is one that is most affectionately Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 20, March. 1634. To Madam Desloges. LET. XXXVI. MAdam, It is now three months that I have expected Monsieur de Auvila, that I might be informed of the state of your health: But having lately understood that it is not so currant as I could wish it, and mine being not so firm, that I could adventure upon a journey, I have dispatched one towards you to learn the truth thereof. It will be an incredible ease to my mind, if I find that it was be a false alarm, or that your sickness by this time be over past. I do hope for one of the two (Madam,) because I do passionately desire it, but I beseech you to believe that it is long of my crazy body that I am no sooner cleared of my fear, and rid of the pain you put me to; and that you do not see me in person instead of the Messenger that I have sent. He hath in charge to present you with my fine Cuts or small Ingravery, which I have newly received from Paris; I thought meet to send you this dumb visit, that it might not oblige you to any compliment that might put you to trouble; you do receive (indeed) more troublesome ones, sometimes; And if the fullenness of my countenance be an object of bad presage, you will confess that the perpetual silence that doth accompany it, is a great Commodity: at leastwise it can never be offensive to you, since it leaves you still at quiet, and demanding no ceremony from you, it must perplex you less than the Antiquities and Originals of La March, and Limousin. Finally Madam, it lieth in you to preserve your bounties for me, and maintain me in my possession. I know that Monsieur de Awl is of infinite value, and I believe I cannot lose him, since it was you that gave him me; you have too good a hand to do any thing that should not last, and there is no accident that can menace and shake that friendship, whereof virtue is the cause, and you the Mediatrix. I esteem that of this rare Personage as a treasure, and I would be well pleased, that he should know by your means, that I admire the eloquence of his Degmatical and peaceable Divinity, though I do not subscribe unto the Doctrine of his polemical writings. I most humbly kiss your hand, and remain Sir, Your, etc. Balzac. 16. Jan. 1637. To Monsieur De— LET. XXXVII. SIR, Take pity on a man that hath not the leisure to live, that is always busy and always sickly, whom a thousand griefs seize upon in his Chamber, and a thousand persecutions throng upon from without. Monsieur de— knows it well that I am no dissembler, and will testify unto you (I assure myself) that in the state that I am in, I can but admire those letters, to the which I should frame an answer. I avow unto you Sir, that it cost me some pains to decipher them. But yet I do not complain of my travel, which found most happy success. I have discovered infinite rarities under the riddles of your Scribe, and I did not mistake the graces, though He had begrimmed them all over. I send them back to you, since it is your request, and yet notwithstanding I cease not to detain them; my memory is not so unfaithful, but it preserves the better part of your fair compositions, as well as of your excellent conversation. It is certain that this gave me some gusts and appetites which I never had, before you came hither. I am not good Sir, but by your goodness, and if I have any degree of holy heat in me, it is neither proper nor natural unto me, I have it from your communication. You are at this day one of those Authors whom I cite still with a grace and an Emphasis: I do arm myself with your reasons against the enemies of truth, and you are all my French Divinity. What a harvest might be reaped (think you) of devour meditations, and spiritual Treatises from less seed than are your Discourses and Letters? A man might extract from them more sap and juice then from many Quaáragesimall. Sermons of Spanish Postillers, and were they but a little amplified, they might serve for complete Apologies of Christian Doctrine, and solid refutations of unsound Philosophy. Your acquaintance then is no small purchase, and I owe you more th●n vulgar thanks for it. But since you desire none other but my edification: instead of minting fastidious compliments for you, I will labour to put your wholesome counsels to practise. I will become a good man if I can, that you may be celebrated in my works, being not contented with words. The curing of a disease doth sufficiently proclaim the sovereignty of the remedy; and it is a far better way to magnify your stile by performing actions of virtue, which it doth propose as its end, then to cry out Euge at every period. There is no hopes to go beyond this. Remember me if you please in your Sacrifices, that is, love me effectually, after your way, since I am after mine, and that very sincerely Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 30. Decemb. 1636. To Monsieur Girard, Official of the Church of Angoulesme. LET. XXXVIII. SIR, Your favour: have exhausted my thanks, I cannot choose but acquaint you, that I do repossess my old pieces again, and that your love is still ingenious in obliging those whom you affect. I doubt not but that the courtesies that I have received from Monsieur de— are the effects of your testimonies of me; and I must ascribe all the contentment that I have received thereby to your preparation and induction. There is no subject so vile and mean but gains price by your estimation. You have found the trick or secret to make objects swell beyond their proportion ad infinitum; and to stamp a man Illustrious, though of a very abject condition. I came to know him by the civilities of—, which are far different from the brevadoes of—. Are not these the most tyrannical spirits in the world? that should say that I could hinder, that any Books should be written or published, at a hundred leagues distance? that is, that I should maintain an Agent in all the Printing-houses of France, that should prevent the publication of Antiphilarkes. These Messieurs that have handled me in such a sort, that fire and poison would seem to an Italian too gentle tortures to revenge their cruelty, are at this time, offended (for sooth) that I should be furnished with so much as a Buckler, and that I should be offered a Sanctuary. They demand a reason of me why a man, whom I never knew, should take compassion on Innocence oppressed, and could not endure the noise and insolence of their false triumphs, which I should not do neither, dear Friend, if I would give vent and liberty to my grief, and that nature suffered not in the suppression of so just complaint. And yet I must continue to do her violence, and deserve the approbation of Monsieur our Prelate. I beg from you his good favours, and desire you both to believe that I am affectionately Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 20. March. 1633. To the same— LET. XXXIX. Sir, It is not your will that I solicit, but your Memory. For amidst the presie of business of the whole Province, which you do willingly take the charge of, mine happily may slip out of your memory without your fault. The importance is, to commence it with an opinion that it is feasible, and with a resolution to carry; for if reason be urged timorouslie, and if a man do not descend straight from generalities to particulars, a thousand journeys unto the— will not be worth one; and we should but take much pains to little purpose. Monsieur de— shall pardon me, if I do not find myself either hardly, or strong enough to undertake the work which he hath done me the honour to design me for; and for such a task, a more peaceable and happy retreat, and a more practised and expert quill than mine, are requisite. I have used my hand and mind to write but toys, and things unnecessary. For the future, I purpose not to write any works of supererogation, but what the Church prescribes, and God doth reckon as meritorious. I am extremely troubled at my Cousin's mischance, and the burning of his Study. He cannot choose but be very sensible of this loss, since it was the chiefest part of his wealth, and thereby sa● the Issues of his brain perish before his face, without being able to redress it. This must be his comfort, that he is young and laborious, and that Fortune cannot ravish from him those true Gods which he is Master of. The loss of a vessel is not valued, if the Pilot be saved; and Captains have been seen to triumph after the loss of many Armies. Miser & nudus Imperator invenit exercitum Our Advocate is more cruel than the war, and more severe than justice: He hath slain in his Letters my Lord the Marshal of— and my Lord the Duke of—, who are yet alive to pardon him. Tell him (if you please) that he do not traffic any more in such news, for he will be reckoned among the fabulous Authors else, and men will take me for bad intelligence. I know well that he is not surety for the news that flies abroad, but he is answerable for the asseveration wherewith he doth recommend them unto me; and he must talk of something that is not know, or at leastwise with the cautious form of the Poets, when they say, ni faema est, ut perhibent, si eredere dignum est, I bid you good even, and remain perfectly Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 4. Feb. 163●. To the same— LET. XL. YOur friend doth not well to take the Alarm, since it is not I that gave it him. I was never used to promise but with an intention to perform; and those that have sovereign power over me, have not power enough to make me falsify my word. As for those idle contemplators that talk according to their fancy, concerning the occasion of my Voyage; I do not think it any part of their office to render an account of my actions; I ever thought that the liberty of going and coming was tolerated, as lawful in this Kingdom; and when a man departed out of Paris, he was not bound to publish a Manifesto, to make it known to all the world. It is not without reason that Monsieur de St●ben doth much esteem the eloquence of M●ffeus. The late Monsieur Scaliger, who was none of the best friends the Jesuits had, did so before him; and see here one trace of his pen concerning it, in one of his Letters. M●ffaeùt ille quisquis est, vir elequentissimus est, ambitiosae taemen magis quam cast gatae facundiae. He commends him (you see) though not without exception, yet in my judgement without envy; since in this particular the most Intelligent of the Society concur with him in the same opinion, and namely the Historiographer of the Low-countrieses wars, who in his Dialogues, speaks of him thus; though it be in the person of another: Miratus sum florem & numeros O●ationis. Dixi Scriptorem mihi videri non hujus aevi, sed è veteri illo Ordine & q●t tem Patricio Historicorum. Nihil uspiam incultum neglectumque cone●nnae perfectáque omniae; nisi forie eo peccat, quòd nihil peccat, nam & ingenium Scriptoris auxium apparet interdum, & dictio videtur exquisita ad sonum, eumque famili moduletione crebrò fusum. Quare monui ut orationis culturam saepius ●●b●ntiusque dissimularet, nec verbae itae trajiceret quasi complementa numerorum. I am yet in the same state, that you left me in at parting, but that I have still the same malady, though not the same consolation. My Ague visits me every night, though (indeed) not in the same pomp and ceremony as it used, when its accesses were regular. But yet, it doth still handle me rudely, and I do much fear the consequence of this custom. Come Sir, and exorcise this evil spirit out of my body, by the infusion of some mirth into my mind, and think not that I can receive any true joy, being so far distant from you. I am Sir, Your, etc. Balzac. 7. April 1635. To the same— LET. XLI. SIR, Since it is impossible to withstand it, I have sent you the Letter, that you desired to see. But you shall read it (if you please) to your own ears only, that it may not awake Envy And that some Philarchus do not overhear you. Lo here withal, the three lines of Cardinal Bentivolio's Letter, which you did so often demand of me, and which I can no longer deny you without incivility. Di nuovo prego V. S tia a ringratiar, etc. I do again entreat you to thank Monsieur Balzac in my name, and by the same opportunity to make him an ample testimony of my great affection towards his deserts; and tell him this withal, that no pen doth more discourage me then his, for I see too well how far it doth surpass mine. I must confess that in this particular, to do me grace he hath been unjust to himself, and that the same motion of humility that prompts Princes of his rank and parentage to wash poor men's feet, hath moved him to use me so respectively. Neither do I pretend to take a pride in it; but yet I think, it will not be denied, but that I may derive some comfort from it. And (indeed) it seems that the goodness of this brave Worthy, would needs make me amends for the malice of my Adversaries. These few lines do weigh down the swelling Volumes of my Opponents, and I shall use no other refutation of all that hath, or shall be written against me. For the present Sir, I am not of that man's opinion who censures that passage, La noire mere des estoiles; the Poet that so styles the night, is not so bold and rash as the Grammarian supposeth, that reprehends him. And if this be as he saith, a Gasconisme, Tibollus was a Gascon when he said, Ludite, jam Nox jungit equos: currumque sequuntur Matris lascivo sydera fulva choro. The Night there is mother of the stars; as in another Poet the Nurse of them. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Nox, aurcorum furva nutrix syderum. Our Man writes to me oft enough, but he puts me to hereafter in all his Letters; and doth ever promise what he never performs. Nevertheless I do believe, that He will certify me by the first Post touching the event of that business which makes you so anxious, and I will not sail to impart unto you the news, as soon as ever the Carrier bringeth them, I am Sir Your &c. Balzac 20. July 1632. To Madamoisell de Campagnole. LET. XLII. MY dear Niece, You did not well, that you did not keep that Houry Chaplet, which I had the favour to receive from your Lackey; the winter would not have budded but for you, and by consequence you should have better valued this favour, and managed your Roses more sparingly. They should have been bestowed about your temples, for an honour to its pregnancy, and not have been bestowed on an Hermit: for this were to hide a miracle. I see well your drift herein, you would needs be liberal in a time of scarcity; and lose your own right, that you might please my passion with something; which is so much affected with true and lively flowers: which I do term so, because the other, which men do so much esteem, having not any odour which animates, are in my judgemrnt but fair Pictures, or specious Carcases. But I beseech you to resolve me one scruple that doth trouble me; and ease me of my perplexity. Tell me, was this because there be some already, or because there be some yet left? are these remainders, or forerunners? was it the last spring that was tardy, or the new that is hasty and forward? lo here a Problem worthy to be discussed by the Philosophers of your Sex, and it would not be amiss to propose it to Her whom you speak of, for to have her resolution. I profess, that if she be very expert, she is a very dissembler, for I could never discover her to this hour. She hath such a heavy dull apprehension, that a man had need interpret twice or thrice over what ever he speaks to her. It were easier to converse with a deaf woman, and I would choose rather to make myself understood by a Cornet, then to be my own Interpreter. Yet if this stupidity be without malice, it is more tolerable than malicious cunning. God permits himself to be entreated, (sometimes) by a simple thumping of the breast, and often rejects eloquent and loud prayers. It is a miserable light, that whose glory and lustre flows from vice only, and yet is not offensive to great men. A good Beast is of more worth than a bad Angel. This is the upshot of all (my dear Niece) that you must lay a foundation of bounty, upon which it is allowed you to raise a Structure of other virtues, that are more high, and more glorious. You did not stand in need of this lesson, but I would needs fill up my paper, before I would put a period, and tell you that I am Your, etc. Balzac. 15. Dec. 1637. To Monsieur the Abbot of Rois-Robert. LET. XLIII. SIR, The world is full of darstardlie friends, but you are none of this world. You can love daringly and resolutely; and I see that my injuries are (commonly) more apprehended by you, then by myself; nevertheless I am much vexed with the language which you received from Messieurs the— These are men that do understand too well the points of honour, for to give me any satisfaction; and for my part, I carry so much goodness about me, as to demand nothing from them but my life. I never believed that their Superior had promised me nothing. If he hath left them no other debts to pay but this, they have great cause to commend him for his good providence and thrift. In the mean while, I cannot dissemble my sorrow to you for his death, nor forget to tell you, that in all his ill carriages towards me, he hath never done me a greater affront than this, to die. If I had some particular Revelation concerning it, or if he had advertised me thereof by the Spirit of Prophecy, which is spoken of in his Elegy, he should have seen his prating long since condemned, and should not have carried away into the other world, that great opinion of sufficiency, which his fraternity did soothe him with. For the other extravagant Doctor, which you mention, it would not be acceptable to God Almighty, that I should undertake his reformation; it were needful to create him anew, for to amend him. It were no mean enterprise but to examine his book, and to make a breviaty of all the absurd things therein contained. I would choose as soon to be condemned to be a Scavenger for the streets of Paris, and to carry away all the dirt out of that little world. His impertinencies are infinite, and would puzzle a better Arithmetician than I am to calculate them, and he that would go about to count them, Conterà ancorae in sùl'ombraso desso etc. Will count the Trees on top of shady Apennine Assoon: or waves, when winds do chafe the curling Brine. If this Bearer shall stand in need of recommendation to the Council, I doubt not, but knowing his name, and what a share I bear in his interests, you will effectually assist him for love of me, who am more than any man in the world; Sir, Your, etc. Balzac. 30. Jan. 1629. To the same— LET. XLIV. SIR, I am (ever this month) confined to my bed, where I received your Letter directed from Rouen. To read there the continuation of your sickness, could not (you must think) be any assuagement of mine. I bestow a thousand curses upon the waters of Forges, for impairing your health. Propertius hath not been more liberal, or bestowed more upon the Baia that killed Angustus his Nephew. But a main difference is, that this man was a Poet, and did but act grief: but I am truly afflicted; and true friendship doth really suffer more than flattery can personate. I am very sorry that— hath not demeaned himself towards you so well as he should have done; and if you have resolved upon his ruin, I do not mean to step in between him and it, and undertake his protection. I do ever side with all your passions without premeditation; and that man that doth not please you, hath no allurements so powerful, as can render him pleasing to me: nevertheless, if this man's offence were venial, and your justice could be satisfied; I would adventure to beg his pardon, and would become his surety, that he should willingly undergo all the punishments that you would inflict upon him, to regain your favour. There are some businesses between us, that force me to dissemble a little, and do not permit an apparent runture, if there come not from you an express order to the contrary But being once freed out of this turmoil, if he be so unlucky as to offend you again, I declare unto you that I do even now renounce him; and I had rather forget my obligations to him, then to carry affections repugnant to yours. Your Cousin is too generous to oblige (so nobly) a man whom he never knew; and I had rather believe, that his esteem of me, is but the consequence of your love, then to imagine it to be an apprehension of any merit in me. I do purpose a voyage beyond the Seas the next year; If I take ship at deep, as I hope to do, I shall not fail to go and kiss His hands at Rouen; and to make him see that the Monster, that Father Goulie speaks of, is a tame Beast, (at least) and capable of knowledge. If I did exceedingly rejoice at the news, when a Canonship was bestowed upon you, I forgot how far this Dignity was below your deserts. It sufficeth me, that I give you some testimony that I am not sorry for it; and that I consider it (as in the crowd) among other Benefices that shall fall upon you; knowing that some few men's lives (that be not yet dead) are the only obstacles to your Virtues. I expect by the first Post, some better news concerning your health, and ever remain with all my soul Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 10 May 1634. To the same. LET. XLV. SIR, Your last Message did give me exceeding content, and though I am well assured of your affection towards me, yet I take a singular delight to read in your Letters that you love me. These be words, whose fragrancy time cannot wear away; and which will be as pleasant to me many years hence, as when they were first spoken. I am (indeed) ravished with your last Protestaetions: But I rejoice with you the rather, for the felicity of this new age, since you are in part the cause of it, and that by your suggestions, Monsieur— doth purpose to allot a considerable Tenement of lands for the relief of poor and disconsolate Muses. We shall see this year Sonnets and Odes, and Elegies enough. The Almanac doth promise wonderful plenty, and Parnassus must not yield less than it did under the Pontificate of Leo the Tenth. For you Sir, if you believe me, you shall never take pen in hand again, but in case of necessity, and only that commerce may not decay. Hitherto you have been a Horace, now you a●e Mycenae's; and if we do not celebrate you (every Scribbler of us) and address our Works, both in prose and verse to you, you have just cause to indict us of ingratitude. For my part, I would willingly both live and die under your patronage; and I do provide an oration for you in genere demonstrative; wherein (at the first salute) I shall astonish the world with this great prodigy. That you are both a complete Courtier, and a perfect friend. Since you would absolutely have it so, that I come to Paris, it is to you, that I shall make my most frequent resorts to do my respects; and it is in your Cabinet that I shall (by your good leave) redeem the time which I have lost in the Country, but we must give place (a while) to the anger of storming Jove; or to speak the language of men, we must permit it to rain and freeze in Beausse; and not go to outbrave the month of February. I have no great need to die out of too much daring. My health is still very infirm and unconstant; and if I did not take incredible care, (I say not to preserve my person, but only to continue my sleeps) you had lost me a great while since. Since I am wholly yours, you will allow me the use of this word, and take it not ill, that I reckon myself in the number of those things, that are not to you indifferent. You have infinitely obliged me in assuring Monsieur the Count of— of the continuance of my zeal and fidelity. I have made him so eminent and public a ma●ke, that as I can never recant it, so can he never suspect it. I omit a thousand things that I should tell you of: but this will be employment for the next week: and I am forced to conclude that I am Sir, Your, etc. Balzac. 10 Feb. 1632. To Monsieur de Savignac. LET. XLVI. SIR, Either I have not well interpreted myself, or Monsieur de— hath not well understood me. I do ever value the merits of Madam de Anguitar, and if it must be, that I must (by a second act) confirm that testimony which I have given of her, I am ready to declare myself anew, and to commend once more a Lady that is so praiseworthy. It is true, that for the interest of her honour, it will be something material, to understand the cause that made my intentions to be misconstrued, and that I lead you to the very source of this jealousy; whereas, it seemed to certain Cavaliers, my friends, that I did too much approve of her singular humour, and frequent retire, one of the most eloquent of them took a fancy to publish his dislike in this point; and to write a reproachful Letter unto me in the name (as he saith) of the whole Corporation of honest men. Wherein he proclaims open war against me in their name, as though I had conspired against fair Society; and calls me the Common enemy; the universally jealous man, the Tyrant to both sexes. He doth imagine that it is my intent to shut up in prison all fair and delectable things, for to punish curious eyes. He cries out, that I would fain abrogate the sweetest laws of this Realm, and bring in the cruelty of that custom in Spain, where honest women are mewed up in Cages, and honest men adore but doors and windows. From Madrid, he passeth to Constantinople, and tells me in a great rage, that I am good for nothing but to be a Counsellor of the great Turk, for to advise him to raise the walls of the Seraglio higher, and to double the Guard of the Sultana; Then he doth accuse me for a thousand mischiefs, and takes me for Him that invented the iron grates, the locks the vails and masks: and for the author of all those things that oppose his intrusion and saucy curiosity. Insomuch that he imagines that I must render him a reason of the secrets and difficulties of all riddles; of the darkness of all ancient Oracles; of the Allegories of Poets, and of the Mysteries of all Religions. To make answer to far less than this, it behoved me to study a long Apology; and (as ill luck was) when I received his Letter, I was not in the humour of making Books. Wherefore Sir, I profess to you truly, I chose rather to yield then defend myself, and abandon my Maxims to the verbosity of my good friend, rather than maintain them with the expense of so many words as he did ply them with: But if I be not deceived, there is a good deal of difference between my Maxims and the praises of Madam d' Anguitar; and he must take heed of confounding in the design that I have, that which I have distinguished in the Letter which I wrote unto Her. To say that She is one of the Perfections of the world, is an immovable truth, for which I would sighed all my life time: But to say that such Perfections must be sequestered from the eyes of men, is (I suppose) a probematical opinion, which I may revoke without prejudice to my own constancy, or to the worth of these Perfections. But on the contrary, most will be apt to believe, that this will be sufficient amends, and just satisfaction for the injury I did them, in condemning them to solitude and retiredness; and will call it their revoking from exile and releasing out of bondage. Thus Sir, I preserve still my first Design; and my commendations remain whole and entire among the ruins of my Maxims. Nay out of their demolitions, Trophies might be erected to the honour of Madam d' Anguitar, and a Theatre built, where she might be gazed upon, by those that can but divine & guess at Her; and that the Desert might no longer have such advantage over the City. This is not then to rebel against her Virtues, but to wish Her a more spacious Empire, and a greater number of Subjects than She hath had, nor to go about to eclipse her light, but to adjudge, that She should issue forth out of the Clouds, for the benefit and comfort of the Universe. I pity those Critics that take it otherwise; and am sorry that Monsieur— is fallen upon a thought so far distant from mine He might have understood me well enough, without putting me to the pains of interpreting myself; and might have seen (moreover) that though in this occasion I would not at all consider the interests of another, yet I should have considered my own at least. Doth he imagine that I could have been persuaded to spoil at one dash, one of the dearest issues of my brain? and to bereave myself of the acknowledgements of one of the greatest Personages of the world, who thinks herself in some measure beholding unto me? I am no such enemy to myself, or so prodigal of the good that I have acquired. I do not mean to throw dirt upon that piece, where I have bestowed so many and so rich colours; and believe not you, that I would have razed out (being thereunto entreated by none) those words that did no way mislike me; you that know how Heliodorus denied to do the like, though earnestly solicited thereunto, by a whole Council. If you do me the honour as to make a journey to morrow to Balzac, I will tell you more; though negociating with an understanding so serene as yours, I think I have spoken enough already concerning it. This is Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 26. March 1637. To Monsieur Chapelain. LET. XLVII. SIR, I am newly out of a fit of an Ague; and though the shaking and tossing be past, yet it is not yet calm. My head is so numbed, and deafened with yesterday tempest, that I am for no reasonable use; and in the estate that I am, I am not fit for any society. Nevertheless, there is no way to put off so just an office as this to another time, and (though with hazard of incongruities, and offending against Grammar Rules) you must receive from me these three or four ragged lines. You have obligations upon me, both new and old, which cannot by me be sufficiently acknowledged. I am ashamed to be beloved so much, and deserve it so little; and if you be not contented with an honest heart, I can offer you nothing worthy so noble and pure affection as yours. The last Letter which you did me the honour to write unto me, hath given proof thereof beyond all question; and I have kissed each line thereof as so many traces or footsteps of the golden Age, and so many Pictures of the sincerity of the old World. Your counsels are most wise and loyal, and I would most punctually render them obedience, if I were in case to do it. But besides that it is impossible to appease and conjure down Envy, and that I am too weak to grapple with it: Physicians do prohibit all study and labour of the spirits; and tell me, that I cannot meditate one half hour, without running the hazard of never meditating more. So that Sir, it is more expedient that my cause should perish then I; and that I should be beaten at Paris in my absence, then that I should die here in person You will (no doubt) be of my opinion, and since the occasion (which is presented) of dying, is none of the most glorious: you will not take it amiss if I make some more use yet of my life, to be Sir, Your &c. Balzac 30. Jan. 1632. To the same— LET. XLVIII. SIR, You do wrong to that Passion or regard which I bear towards you, to call it Civility: it deserves a better name than that; and we are not acquainted in the Country with those virtues, countenance and show. I deal very seriously with my friends, and I speak nothing but what I mean to make good; and by the principles of ancient Philosophy, I do think that a Compliment doth as much oblige me as a Contract. Think not then that I deal with you out of common places: they are the true motions of my soul, which I show you, and if I could exhibit my very soul, you would confess, that the expressions of my tongue are far inferior to the Jdea by the which they were framed. It is you alone Sir, that can content those that demand satisfaction, and make my interests even what please you. I have neither liberty nor election when I see the bent of your desire. Tear, burn, scatter the ashes of my books in the wind; I do submit them to all the rigour of your justice; Tibi in me, meaque aeternae authoritas esto. You are no more my Councillor but my Sovereign, and by consequence, deal not with me by Argumeurs and Remonstrances, but impose Laws upon me, and prescribe Commands. You shall never find a more docile and supple nature than mine, no not if you were to seek in Asia, that Country of perfect Slaves. Nevertheless, I think that my humility will not take off the edge of persecution, but on the contrary, it will make my adversaries to swell and grow insolent: But I have comforts ready at hand against all the ill fortunes which I expect. In this, I desire only the glory of obeying you. It is enough for me that I have showed that friendship can do more with me, than Tyranny, and I would acknowledge your jurisdiction, when I might decline all other. I am Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 20. July. 1632. To the same— LET. XLIX. SIR, Hitherto I have beheld (without disturbance) all the assaults of my enemies; and they have but scratched some lines of my books, and at most have called to question some things of small consequence. But now that they wound me in the tenderest part of my heart, I profess to you, I begin to have some resentment. I cannot forgive them the injury they have done me, to raise jealousies, and make a breach between us two. And I have conceived such indignation against this imposture, that it is impossible I should write unto you soberly and moderately. If I do not exercise vindicative justice, there is no reason I should desire it. That which doth most of all trouble me is, that I do run after a Fantas●se, and that I know not whom to lay hold upon. And truly, if there were any means to discover this honest Secretary that was bestowed on me without my knowledge, I think it were very just to pay him his wages. However, here is a man that would gain a name by such an occasion; and do●h pronounce against him that terrible Arrest. Ligno pereat qui sumum vendidit. These men should be made an example; and whereof a civil Society ought to be quickly purged. They are the most dangerous Thiefs of all, that rob us of our friends: which be ●oods, that should remain ours, after the loss of all other. I confess, that I have many infirmities, and am subject to err a thousand ways, but I am not capable of an offence of that high nature that I am charged with; and the goodly Letter which you sent me a Copy of, carries neither my stile nor my Genius; nevertheless, your faith hath betrayed a weakness, and you have staggered a little upon the opening of this false Packet. Assure yourself Sir, if I have forfeited your good opinion and favour, that I would not outlive so smart an affliction; and you may believe, that I do not rashly hazard a thing so precious as that. I make not only sincerity and zeal the companions of my friendship: but discretion also and respect. The persons whom I love, are to me almost most in the same degree of veneration, as those things which I adore▪ I approach them not but with awe, which accompanies Religion; and it is certain, that I am so fearful to attend them, that (lest I should distaste them with my sullenness) I do force and fain smiles when I am most sad. You shall know more of this in the progress of my life; and avouch that I know how to practise those maxims, which I hold, and approve myself, with courage and constancy. Sir Your, etc. Balzac. 1. March 1632. To the same— LET. L. SIR, Since I have arrived here, I have received the Letter, which you did me the honour to write unto me; which is, a continuation of your courtesies and bounty, and an entrance upon a commerce▪ where I must take all, and you give all. While I expect to make benefit of your Prose, I feast upon your verses, which have disrelisht all that I took for excellent before. I never saw boldness more discreet, courage better maintained, or sweetness less effeminate. Th●se are Sir, worthy Harbingers of your Damsel. But you do her wrong to seem to doubt of her good Fate, and do not believe the auspicious omens tha● appeared at her Nativity, which promise long life. If you have patience enough to consummate this work, all the rest is sufficient: your natural wit is strong and pregnant; you have the perfection of Arts; your Cabinet is a Magazine of Ornaments and riches, to adorn the Subject. What more is wanting to you? Be not nice any longer: you are condemned to go forward with it, except you mean to quit one passion for another, and abandon Poeter for the Politics: wherein to tell you the truth, I believe you will prove admirable. I am of your opinion, that 1500 verses at one brea●h go far; and that it would not be amiss, to set more reasonable bounds to every Book. But touching all this, you may consult with Vida & Francestorius; and if they be not of the same opinion, Scaliger may be the supernumerary▪ Our Doctor saith, that he hath not so much need of counsel as of aid, and since things past, fall not under deliberation, it is no time now, to know whether he hath erred; he desires you only to teach him how to deny it with some fair probability, to persuade the people that Pericles is not fallen, though the people saw it. For my part, I am confident of the good success of all your enterprises. Having found the bell m●●ivo in favour of the Poet Marini, there is no such Monster which you cannot shape and make handsome; and without doubt, you have such precious Oil, that one drop thereof is sufficient to blanche a Moor. It is Sir, Your, etc. Balzac. 1. Aug. 1632. To the same— LET. LI. SIR, My silence is not the effect of sloth; and you may believe that it is against my will that I deprive myself of the contentment that I took in entertaining you. The reasons that obliged me to silence, were more just than I wished they had been; and a troublesome Defluxion which fell upon my eyes, hath failed to charge you with a blind friend: For in that case, I think you could not have chosen but to have been my Guide; and I did already make account to learn to sing, that I might chant your Poem. But (by the great mercy of God) I recovered my eye sight yesterday; and you are freed from the sad office, which my distressed Fortune might have required from your good nature, Now that I do speak, and do not rattle in the throat; I must give you an account of the voyage that I made; and I must tell you with as much ceremony and eloquence as heretofore, that I have been to meet the Court as far as Cadilliac. I had the honour there, to do my respects to my Lord—. But his sickness that took him the very day that he arrived thither, and mine, which would wait no longer to attach me, did force me to take my way back to my Village, where I found your Messages, and my Coffers. I render you once more, most humble thanks for the care you took to keep them for me; and since you are pleased that I make use of you, with such familiarity, you must permit my thankful acknowledgement thereof. The news you wrote unto me, concerning the sickness of— was told me at Bourdeaux, when I was there; and I swear unto you, I have not slept a good sleep since. This is as good a man as ever I was acquainted with, and I do mainly esteem him; because I know him to the very heart, where (without feigning) I have found nothing but what was noble, and (I dare speak it) magnanimous. I know that his out side hath been displeasing to many; But men must not always be judged by the lineaments of the face; and that aversation is unjust, which springs only out of deformity. I do much wonder that two words which I have written to my Stationer, being half a sheep, are flown out of his shop already. I assure you I am no— nor do not use to put on severity in reading these kinds of Relatiosn. But (in truth) this here did give me much content; and though I meet with some passages that might be altered without any harm, and where a decorum was not so exactly observed as it might have been; nevertheless, (to speak in the general) the invention, to my thinking, was handsome, the narration neat and smooth, and the stile all favouring of the Court and Cabinet. When you have read it, I will think of it, as you shall pronounce the sentence; in the mean while, I use the liberty allowed in points not yet decided; and the interim, that you are too good to agree with me, until you have made the truth manifest unto me. For the Dutch Orator, remembered (as leastwise) that I spoke nothing but touching his phrase, for I do infinitely esteem his learning and judgement. Be pleased therefore to manage this petty secret according to your ordinary prudence: since I am so unfortunate, that I cannot utter one word, but it will strait find strange Glosses and Commentaries, and that there be people so charitable, as to stir up war against me, and create me enemies in all parts of the world. I have never received the Letter of Monsieur de— neither, did I need them to assure me of his love. I know that he is good and noble; wherefore relying hereupon, it sufficeth me to understand that he is well; and it is not material to me, whether I learn this from him or from you. I forgot to tell you that I received from Monsieur the Duke of— many caresses and favours; he hath used me like some great Personage, or mighty Signior; and I have been his Favourite the space of four days. I desire no more, nor do I labour to promote my good fortune any farther, I am content to bond it Sir, with the fruition of your good savour, and I am most affectionately Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 1. Decemb. 1632. To the same— LET. LII. SIR, I have returned no answer to your Letter, in regard I have been cumbered (●a●ely) with some domestic affairs, which would allow me no leisure to write; it is your Prerogative, to be able to intend several things at once: you enjoy a spirit so calm, that you can read a Dialogue in Plato, and dispatch a dozen businesses too at once, with a resolve to die an hour after. For my part, one object is enough to employ me, and it is impossible for me to reconcile recreation and business. That which you tell me of Monsieur— is true. The Letter which he wrote unto me is an abridgement of all his Books; and I cannot return answer to it, though I would, but by the Messenger that goes the next year from Angoulesme. But though it hath been told you, yet be pleased not to believe it, that this Letter offend me, or that mine hath given any offence. Only upon occasion of one little word, he took a hint to sport it after his ordinary manner, and to make a new show of his old manner of boarding We must be indulgent to our friend's mirth, and give way a little to their jolly humour. Nay, a man ought not to do his enemy all the discountesies he can; and to be very sensible of a wrong, is to add weight and measure to it. Satisfy yourself▪ I pray, touching my spirit by these maxims of peace; and fear not that any man can raise my passions to an humour of contention. A thousand Chartels cannot tempt me to one D●el, and I can be more coward than the Hot-spu●rs of the times are quarrelsome. I fear not their strength nor subtlety, but I fear my own trouble, and I do infinitely love my R●st: Honour itself would seem unmannerly to me, if it came to disquiet it. And I would fain pass for an Incognito even in my own Province, and my own Village. You cannot believe how much I am fallen out with the world, and how distasteful I am to myself. What was wont to tickle and please me, hurts me. An Almanac and an History I esteem alike. Those simple terms of stile, phrase, and period, are so harsh to my ears, that they make my head ache. If it were Gods will, that I should be sentenced to lose my good or bad Reputation, I mould resign it (with all my heart) to any that would desire it; and I have a desire to change my name, that I might not any more share in any thing that is spoken of Balzac, nor interest myself either in the praises or dispraises that are bestowed on him. Is not this Sir, a pretty resolution? and which I should long since have undertaken. This is almost the panoply of that Philosopher, that patiently took a box on the ear in a public place at Corinth He professed he had a Helmet toward future blows, that if any should chance to give him another box, it might fall on an Iron f●ce, and not his. Apply this how you please; as for my part, I do but laugh at Rhetoric, and all its Tropes; and have nothing to do with that Art, which hath created me so many vexations. I am with all my soul Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 10. jan. 1632. To the same. LET. LIII. SIR, God doth beset me on all sides, and sends me afflictions by Troops: To comfort me for the disease of Monsieur de— news is brought me of that Monsieur de— so that I begin to make a conscience to love you, since my friendship is (in a manner) fatal to whomsoever I give it; and that I possess nothing but I lose it in a moment. But there is no need of doing bad offices about you, or to affright you with any Planet, whose malignity (I hope) you are able to correct. I pass it over therefore to tell you, that as long as Monsieur de— was here, I performed my part with wonderful assiduity, so that I was astonished at it myself. We have had long and particular discourses upon all good subjects, and by consequence, you may believe that you have not been forgotten. I never preach well, but when you are my Text. As I prise nothing more justly than your love, so I praise nothing more willingly than your virtue; and this subject pleaseth me so well that I never want words, if I do not want Auditors. Yet I do not pretend to engage you hereby. To reckon you in the number of Illustrious men, is only to leave you in your own seat; and to say that the Damsel will be your work, is to say, that Pallas will issue out of the head of Jove. She is at this time the sweetest hope and expectation of honest leisure; She is the desire of the Cabinet, and will be the great labour of the French Muses. I have threatened (this long while) a voyage to Paris; which I intended of purpose to see it; and I hope to surprise you both together one day when you expect me not. But remember Sir, that even your purpose is a vow; and that you can have no such dispensation, that can take away all scruple, if you have a render conscience, and will believe some Divines (that I can name) concerning it. I cannot conclude my letter before I acquaint you, that I am ravished with the good opinion you bear towards my N●phew. I ascribe more to your predictions, then to them that make Horoscopes and calculate nativities; and the conjectures which your good judgement doth suggest, are more certain than those which they derive out of their Art. My Sister is so proud of the testimony you gave her, that she would have returned you a Compliment; if she durst adventure to speak to you. But her respect did check her desire, and I have promised to excuse her silence; which (I know) you will pardon, because it will save you the pains to reply, we desire Sir, the continuation of your good admonitions to this gallant man; and doubt not, but a glance or cast of your eye now and then, will edify him much. I think you should consider him as something that concerns you. For my part, I make no difference between your affection and mine; and I am without all reservation. Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 25 May. 1633. To the same— LET. LIV. SIR, I know not how to present myself before you: though my conscience doth acquit me, some appearances condemn me; and you see my fault, but know not my affairs; I have had variety of them ever these three months, which have strangely exercised me; and whereof I am yet so weary, that I must have a great while to recover myself. All that I can, is to use my idleness well, and to make something of my leisure. Now that I have got it in possession again, I mean not to be disseised of it: If it be possible, I bid eternal farewell to all Contracts, Transactions and Acquittances. These are Ornaments of our language which must not (in my opinion) enter into your Poems. You have more care of the chastity of your Damsel, then to violate her with these villainous terms; and this were of a Virgin to make a strumpet of her. But I can never obtain that small favour of you, or prevail so much as to see here (at least) the first hundred verses that do concern her. I do preserve carefully all those things that you have sent, and never produce them out of my Treasury, but to impart them to choice wits. The invention of your first Metamorphosis is ingenious, Ovid had swelled up and dilated that subject which you have contracted and pressed together. But the importance is, that in this little, you appear great; and I behold you entire in every parcel. The second part doth please me no less yet then the first, and I hold that Lionness happy that hath heaven for an Amphitheatre, and hath been placed there by such a hand as yours. You make her jar so well and tunably; and her roaring is so sweet and melodious in your Verses, that there is no music comparable. Those of— do not flow in such numbers. Longeque pulch●ius spectaculum est, & dignius oculis cruditi, videre nobilem illam feram, quam miserum & febriculesum Annaei Lucaeni Simium. With the last letter I received Bembus which you sent me. In truth he is not so well polished and digested as those Authors in the Library of Monsieur— But all tattered and confused as it is, I can assure you, it likes me infinitely. I never love luxury, and am nothing curious for gay clothes. The beauty of Chariclea did shine through her rags; and your Marini hath made a Sonnet, wherein he tells us, how he fell in love with a canting D●xie. I thank you therefore for Vinus and the Graces (though ill attired) which I met with, in your Books, and remain Sir, Your &c. Balzac 3. July, 1633. To the same— LET. LV. SIR, I entertain your commendations like ill gotten goods; the fruition whereof is sweet, although unjust. It is some honour to me to have so excellent a Flatterer as you are; and I suffer myself willingly, and take a pleasure to be deceived by a man that can do it so neatly. I think (indeed) that the verses which you have seen, are not bad in their kind; but I think withal, that this is the shortest of all kinds. I durst not engage myself in a wider career; my strength serves but for a short tug; and I walk at the foot of your Parnassu●; but I should want breath, if I should attempt to mount the top. You do (indeed) Sir, bear the name of a great Poet, and succeed equally in all sorts of Verses; and though you speak with extreme modesty of the last work which you sent me: I do not find that it oweth any thing to the fairest pieces that you have showed us. There is no stanze that hath not its particular value; nor no piece but is remarkable for some beauty. But that which did chiefly relish with me was the Prayer which you direct to Apollo; and that admirable Music, (which proceeding out of the Clouds) heals your malady in a trice. This is not the effect of ordinary Poetry; it is a fit of that divine rapture and fury, which Plato hath acknowledged; and which the first Poets were sometimes possessed with. Send me such Presents often, if you would have me rich in my poverty; and have good company in my solitude. But above all, love me well, if you would have me happy; and assure yourself, that no man in the world is more than I am Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 9 Aug. 1634. To the same— LET. LVI. SIR, I know that you love me, and I know that you are in health, but this is not enough; I must learn something more concerning it; and you must tell me some news of your brave meditations. Doth the Girl wage war, or doth she keep at home in the Country with her Father? Doth Charles grow soft in the embraces of the fair Agnes, or doth he quit love for honour? In what state are the affairs of England? How doth Hire and Pothe? What do your Achill●s and Aj●x? are you for a battle or for a siege? J●m nunc minaci murmure cornuum Perstringis aures, jam litui strepunt: Audire magnos jam videor Deuces Non indecoro pulvere sordidos, etc. See questions enough at once; but you are not bound to answer to them punctually; and provided, that you satisfy me in one Article, you have to deal with a man of a facile disposition, who will not be rigorous for the rest. I am now more a Hermit then ever; and for having here a little Court but two days only, I had the Megrim by it for three weeks. Tranquillity and silence Sir, are precious things; and it Epicurus had some reason to complain of his very friends, that they did break his head with their applause and acclamations: what must be said of the bawl and exclamations of a man's enemies? of the first and second part of the Philarkes of their times? Those that write are subject both to the one and the other persecution. But for my part, I avow to you, that hitherto Compliments have done me more harm than injuries. I use none towards you Sir, for fear you should complain of me in the same manner; and I am content to tell you, that I am without compliment, that is, entirely Angoulesme 1. Sept. 1632. Your &c. To Monsieur de Silhon. LET. LVII. SIR, You show a sort of humility that is not sufferable; and though it be the proper stile of Saints to talk of their vileness, and their nothingness, yet to reject all testimonies indifferently, that come from another, is in my opinion rather a contempt of our Neighbour then a modest conceit of ourselves. I am no flatterer, but I praise or dispraise, according as I am persuaded of the merit of things, or their default; and if I talk often of the great lights that you have, whether in a sacred or profane Learning, it is because I have been dazzled therewith. Your three Discourses do please me infinitely; and I am very well pleased that mine did not displease you: But I am the more glad that you are of my opinion touching the putting down quite of all Answers, Replies, Defences, Apologies, and the like. Since I have but laughed at the attempts of a Legion, I do not mean to complain of the insolence of one Garbine; A man were better to pick out an enemies, and this here may fight all alone, if it please him: It is not fit to show anger against a man that deserves pity, nor to lose patience upon an occasion so obscure, that it were hard to make it appear. You send me no news concerning the affairs of Italy, and I am very desirous to hear some. It hath been told me that Monsieur Maynard hath not appeared in Paris, though Monsieur de No●illes be arrived thither. He will (perhaps) be stayed a longer time. If it be so, my affection is so far ingenious, as to torment my mind▪ I stand in fear (for his sake) of all the dangers both of Sea and Land. I do apprehend at once that he is led captive into Barbary; and that the Spaniards have surprised him. That which must comfort me in this distraction is, that a good spirit doth pass undauntedly through all; and that they were the Poets (his Predecessors) that made wings for Daed●lus. However you will confess, that if Epigrams be current among the Milanese, and that he wants but 2000, of them for his ransom, he hath wherewth to satisfy them without damage to himself. In truth, I am solicitous touching this my dear friend; and you will oblige me, if you will be pleased to send me a relation of his Adventures, when you shall come to know them. I am Sir, Your, etc. Balzac. 30 Decem. 1636. To Monsieur Gerard Secretary to my Lord the Duke of Espernon. LET. LVIII. SIR, Happy are those actions that fall under your Pen and History. Since you do extol a man's idleness, even to the envy of the world, and so far, as to propose it for an example, what will you talk of the life of the Swedish King, and other Miracles of our age, if you will take them in hand? The mischief is, that those that have heard you shall see me; and you have set me at so high a rate, that I cannot hold after it, but upon your credit, and by my own absence. If Monsieur the Duke of— passeth by Balzac, the Legend that you have framed of me, will at first dash lose that probability that it carried, and I shall be no more that famous Hermit that hath been related and described unto him by an officious Impostor. In vain will he seek among my papers the fine things that you have promised him; and it will repent him (perhaps) that he turned out of the Road, for such a sad spectacle that I shall exhibit him. In any case Sir, I will present myself, and if hitherto you have deceived him, yet you shall acquit yourself of the name of Cozener, when you shall assure him on my behalf of an inviolable fidelity, and hearty acknowledgement. These are qualities which I possess in a sovereign degree; and which I preserve for him in the bottom of my soul. But the passion which I bear to his Honour, must not be still kept as a secret, and I will at length profess, what I have this long while adored in particular manner. Do me the favour as to tell him thus much, and believe withal, if you please, that I am Sir, Your &c. Balzac. 30. March 1635. To the same— LET. LIX. SIR, I love no kind of quarrelling, much less with my friends. But it is a thing worthy pity, that a man should receive continual wrongs, and yet must not open his mouth to complain, but he shall be censured for a troublesome and untoward fellow. I know the eager spirit of that man that speaks so loud, when my interests are in agitation. I know he is carried with the hot vapours that exhale from that sulphury vein, which (you say) lieth about his heart. But you will confess notwithstanding, that the bottom of that heart is not bad. His lavishness proceeds from a fair spring; and in acts of friendship an inundation is better than drought. I forgive the irritated zeal, inconsiderate goodness, and impetuousness of a man that cannot love with moderation. We must do him some right; and not hate his passion, though we approve it not; for my part, I do permit it, but not employ it; and though he tells me, that he hath a fierce Satire to come forth to kill our Messer, if he do not save himself in the little Cottage; I give him thanks for his good will, but I desire him to deliver the Satire into my hands, & for this purpose only, that none might see it. You shall find in my packet some latin compositions that were sent me, & particularly, the latter tears of S. Peter, which have been commended unto you. In my judgement, (and I think you will subscribe to it) he is too subtle, and shows too much punctuality in delineating a true Penitent. Nature doth not speak thus, nor its passions either, which are the Daughters of nature, as subtleties are the wantoness of Art. S. Peter's sorrow is admirably well expressed by Grotius; and these four verses of his, which I remember, do weigh down the 400 that I have sent you. Quae me recondet Regi●? quâ maestum diem Fallam latebrâ? quaero nigrantem specum Quâ me sepeliam vivus; ubi nullum vid●ns, Nulli videndus, lachrymas soveam meas. Are not these worthy of the Heroic times and purest Antiquity? the rest of the discourse is animated with the same Genius; and is a lesson for Orators, that sorrow must not be elaborate, or at leastwise must not betray any studied care. I leave your Brother to relate news; he hath in charge to inform you of all occurrences, and therefore I have nothing to say, but that I am Sir, Your, etc. Balzac. 15. June 1636. To Monsieur De la Mothe Le Vayer. LET. LX. SIR, My spirits have been so dull and heavy these three days, ●hat it is beyond imagination. Never did any man lose the relish of all Books and Arts as I did; and hence you may gather that that which you sent me, was very delicate, when it procured an appetite to a languishing man. You have strangely altered me in a moment: my soul is touched to the quick; and you have made it so hungry after knowledge, that I have no mind to any thing but to your Philosophy. If you will set up a Sect, I am ready to unroll myself, at least wise, I will subscribe willingly to that frank Doctrine, which maintains its liberty against the usurpations of Aristotle; and is contented to acknowledge lawful power, but not to be slave to the Tyranny of one particular man. I speak Sir, as I believe Doubtless your work will last, and to give you your full due, I must give it in your own language: so noble an act of the soul, is not the weakest argument we have of its immortality; and if any shall hereafter take in hand this subject, he will be beholding to you for this new argument, which your modesty would not permit you to make use of. Certainly there were no reason nor colour, that the Offspring should be of a better condition than the Mother; and that those productions which must encounter time, and conquer Fate, should flow from a corruptible Principle. But since I have sped so well in my first solicitations, I desire not to stop there▪ This good success doth encourage me to redouble them, and in the name of all the Learned, to beg yet more works of the same vigour. Though I should perform no other Office in the Commonwealth of Learning then this, I were not an unuseful member; and this will be (one day) honour enough for me, when it will be said, that I gave the counsel for those labours which you have undertaken. Acquire for me Sir, this reputation, that I may add it to that which I would gladly deserve all my life time, which is to be Balzac. 29. March 1637. Your &c. To Monsieur de— LET. LXI. SIR, The Discourse which you did me the honour to send me, is full of an infinite number of good things; and none can deny but your friend is both learned and judicious. Nevertheless I do not think that he will find in that place whither he goeth, that approbation which he promiseth to himself: I think that (for his speaking Latin after the French manner) his meaning is better than his expression. He is not always so regular as I would desire; and his words do sometimes do wrong to his thoughts. True it is, that in these times we are very nice and delicate in the purity of expressions. We can brook no stile that is licentious, be it never so little; and whatsoever is no after the garb of the Court is accounted barbarous. This is not that I am of the opinion of Monsieur do— that said that the good man's judgement could never pass beyond the Gar●nd; and that he was put into such a fright at Blaye, that he durst not adventure any farther. When he spoke this, he forgot (sure) that Mons. de Pibrac, Monside Montegne, and the Cardinal de Ossat were Gascons; & their solid judgements which are admired to this day over all Europe, do sufficiently refute that poor jest which passeth among some for excellent. It is certain that Reason is common to all Countries, and consequently is of that, where they say Adieu-sias, as well as when they say Dieu vous condu ssi. It is confined to no place, and we may find subtlety among the Swissers, and stupidity among the Florentines; but indeed, for the Language, it is not all alike: without question in some places, they speak better than elsewhere, and whereas a Courtier of Rome did taste something of Milan in the Histories of Titus Liviu●, it is not impossible to observe in the writings and conversations of your men some tincture of their Province. Ever and anon, you shall observe them to let slip vousist for voulust, fausist for falust, cousin mi●n, & ie suis esté a Thoulouze, which mar all good speech: and their allarent, donuarent armarent, have run over their banks, and come as far as our Country. The late Monsieur de Malherbe hath told me often that he did what possible he could for to correct the dialect of Monsieur de— and purge it of Gasconisme, but could never bring it about: so difficult is it to wipe off our natural stains, and utterly to wear out the badge of our Country. Nevertheless for all this, neither the Patavinity of Titus Livius, nor the Gasconisme of some of our times, do hinder them from being reputed Eloquent. And for one petty fault, either of use or of Grammar, I condemn not those works which in all other respects, are excellent. To satisfy your desire, I have sent by Monsieur de— the Letters of Monsieur Heinsius, one whereof preceded my Dissertation, the other followed his answer. Now that I have furnished you with these two Letters, to entertain you a while; be pleased not to take it amiss that I take leave of you, and all the world for two years. I am forbid to write any thing for so long a time, and this is an oath that I have taken by the order of my Confessor; and upon good and weighty considerations. I hope God will give me the grace to observe it. Nec mihi scribendi veniet tam dira cupido: And you will not (I am sure) tempt me to sin, and provoke me to break that silence which I have sworn to. But though you should solicit me a tho●●and times, and assault me every day in two or three Languages, I am resolved to be inexorable, and not to be moved with that happy abundance of your words. If you term me uncivil, and expostulate with me in the words of your Poet. Vnde istam meruit non faelix charta repulsam? Hosts ab Hoste tamen per barbara verba salutem Accipit, & Salve mediis intervenit armis; Respondent & saxa homini. I will make answer with an audible voice both to your Poet and you, that Religion must sway Civility, and that a lesser duty must yield to a greater. Finally if there be an absolute necessity, that we have some commerce with each other; in this case, I will choose rather to make a journey then write a letter, and expose myself to the hazard of shipwreck by going to see you, then violate my faith by writing to you. Adieu then until the year of 1639. which we will begin (by God's grace) by the renewing of our ancient Traffic. Is is Sir, Your &c. Balzac.— FINIS. A Table of the Letters (as they lie in order) which are contained in this Volume. TO Monsieur Conrart Let. 1. p. 1. To Monsieur du Moulin. let. 2. p. 3 To Mons. L'Huillier. let. 3. p. 4 To Mons. the Abbot of Rois-Robert. let. 4. p. 6 To my Lord the Earl of Excester. let. 5. p. 7 To my Lord the Duke De la Valette. let. 6. p. 8 To Mins. Drovet. let. 7. p. 9 To Mons. De-Bonair. let. 8. p. 10 To Mons. Huggens let. 9 p. 11 To Mons. de Racan. let. 10. p. 12 To Mons. De St. Chartres. let. 11. p. 13 To Mons. Baudoin. let. 12. p. 14 To Mons. De Coignet. let. 13. p. 15 To Madam Desloges. let. 14. p. 16 To my Lord Keeper of the Seals Seguier, etc. let. 15. p. 17 To Mons. De Morins. let. 16. p. 18 To Mons. De Vaugelas. let. 17. p. 19 To Mons. De la Motte Aigron. let. 18. p. 21 To Mons. De Borstel. let. 19 p. 22 To Mons. the chief Advocate, let. 20. p. 23 To Mons. De Maury, let. 21. p. 24 To Mons De Mondory. let. 22. p. 24 To Mons. Le Guay. let. 23. p. 26 To Mons. De Silhon. let. 24. p. 26 To Mons. De la Fosse. let. 25. p. 27 To Mons. D' Espesses. let. 26. p 29 To the same. let. 27. p. 30 To Mons. De Cowrelles. let. 28. p. 32 To— let. 29. p. 32 To my Lord the Bishop of Angoulesme. let. 30. p. 33 To Mons. de— let. 31. p. 34 To Mons. De Serizary. let 32. p. 39 To Mons. Habert Abbot of Cerizy. l. 33. p. 40 To Mons. De Gaillard. let. 34. p. 41 To the same. let. 35. p. 42 To Madam Desloges. let. 36. p. 43 To Mons. de— let. 37. p. 44 To Mons. Girard. let. 38. p. 46 To the same. let. 39 p. 47 To the same. let. 40. p. 48 To the same, let. 41. p. 49 To Madamoisel de Campagnole. let. 42. p. 50 To Mons. the Abbot of Bois-Robert. let. 43. p. 51 To the same. let. 44. p. 52 To the same. let. 45. p. 53 To Mons. de Savignac. let. 46. p. 54 To Mons. Chapelain. let. 47. p. 56 To the same. let. 48. p. 57 To the same. let. 49. p. 58 To the same. let. 50. p. 59 To the same. let. 51. p. 60 To the same. let. 52. p. 62 To the same. let. 53. p. 63 To the same. let. 54. p. 64 To the same. let. 55. p. 65 To the same. let. 56. p. 66 To Mons. de Silhon. let. 57 p. 67 To Mons. Gerard Secretary to the D. of Espernon. l. 58. p. 68 To the same. let. 59 p. 69 To Mons. de la Mothe le Vayer. let. 60. p. 70 To Mons. de— let. 61. p. 71