to put his children into the way of governing his affairs,
and to have power during his own life to control their
behaviour, supplying them with instruction and advice
from his own experience, and himself to transfer the
ancient honour and order of his house into the hands
of those who are to succeed him, and by that means
to satisfy himself as to the hopes he may conceive
of their future conduct. And in order to this
I would not avoid their company; I would observe them
near at hand, and partake, according to the condition
of my age, of their feasts and jollities. If
I did not live absolutely amongst them, which I could
not do without annoying them and their friends, by
reason of the morosity of my age and the restlessness
of my infirmities, and without violating also the rules
and order of living I should then have set down to
myself, I would, at least, live near them in some
retired part of my house, not the best in show, but
the most commodious. Nor as I saw some years
ago, a dean of St. Hilary of Poitiers given up to
such a solitude, that at the time I came into his
chamber it had been two and twenty years that he had
not stepped one foot out of it, and yet had all his
motions free and easy, and was in good health, saving
a cold that fell upon his lungs; he would, hardly
once in a week, suffer any one to come in to see him;
he always kept himself shut up in his chamber alone,
except that a servant brought him, once a day, something
to eat, and did then but just come in and go out again.
His employment was to walk up and down, and read some
book, for he was a bit of a scholar; but, as to the
rest, obstinately bent to die in this retirement,
as he soon after did. I would endeavour by pleasant
conversation to create in my children a warm and unfeigned
friendship and good-will towards me, which in well-descended
natures is not hard to do; for if they be furious
brutes, of which this age of ours produces thousands,
we are then to hate and avoid them as such.
I am angry at the custom of forbidding children to
call their father by the name of father, and to enjoin
them another, as more full of respect and reverence,
as if nature had not sufficiently provided for our
authority. We call Almighty God Father, and disdain
to have our children call us so; I have reformed this
error in my family.—[As did Henry iv.
of France]—And ’tis also folly and
injustice to deprive children, when grown up, of familiarity
with their father, and to carry a scornful and austere
countenance toward them, thinking by that to keep them
in awe and obedience; for it is a very idle farce
that, instead of producing the effect designed, renders
fathers distasteful, and, which is worse, ridiculous
to their own children. They have youth and vigour
in possession, and consequently the breath and favour
of the world; and therefore receive these fierce and
tyrannical looks—mere scarecrows—
of a man without blood, either in his heart or veins,
with mockery and contempt. Though I could make