Literary and Philosophical Essays: French, German and Italian eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 544 pages of information about Literary and Philosophical Essays.

Literary and Philosophical Essays: French, German and Italian eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 544 pages of information about Literary and Philosophical Essays.
and buried?  The very children are afraid of their friends, when they see them masked; and so are we.  The maske must as well be taken from things as from men, which being removed, we shall find nothing hid under it, but the very same death, that a seely[Footnote:  weak, simple] varlet, or a simple maid-servant, did latterly suffer without amazement or feare.  Happie is that death which takes all leasure from the preparations of such an equipage.

OF THE INSTITUTION AND EDUCATION OF CHILDREN; TO THE LADIE DIANA OF FOIX, COUNTESSE OF GURSON

I never knew father, how crooked and deformed soever his sonne were, that would either altogether cast him off, or not acknowledge him for his owne:  and yet (unlesse he be meerely besotted or blinded in his affection) it may not be said, but he plainly perceiveth his defects, and hath a feeling of his imperfections.  But so it is, he is his owne.  So it is in my selfe.  I see better than any man else, that what I have set downe is nought but the fond imaginations of him who in his youth hath tasted nothing but the paring, and seen but the superficies of true learning:  whereof he hath retained but a generall and shapelesse forme:  a smacke of every thing in generall, but nothing to the purpose in particular:  After the French manner.  To be short, I know there is an art of Phisicke; a course of lawes; foure parts of the Mathematikes; and I am not altogether ignorant what they tend unto.  And perhaps I also know the scope and drift of Sciences in generall to be for the service of our life.  But to wade further, or that ever I tired my selfe with plodding upon Aristotle (the Monarch of our moderne doctrine 1) or obstinately continued in search of any one science:  I confesse I never did it.  Nor is there any one art whereof I am able so much as to draw the first lineaments.  And there is no scholler (be he of the lowest forme) that may not repute himselfe wiser than I, who am not able to oppose him in his first lesson:  and if I be forced to it, I am constrained verie impertinently to draw in matter from some generall discourse, whereby I examine, and give a guesse at his naturall judgement:  a lesson as much unknowne to them as theirs is to me.  I have not dealt or had commerce with any excellent booke, except Plutarke or Seneca, from whom (as the Danaides) I draw my water, uncessantly filling, and as fast emptying:  some thing whereof I fasten to this paper, but to my selfe nothing at all.  And touching bookes:  Historie is my chiefe studie, Poesie my only delight, to which I am particularly affected:  for as Cleanthes said, that as the voice being forciblie pent in the narrow gullet of a trumpet, at last issueth forth more strong and shriller, so me seemes, that a sentence cunningly and closely couched in measure keeping Posie, darts it selfe forth more furiously, and wounds me even to the quicke.  And concerning the naturall faculties that are in me (whereof

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Literary and Philosophical Essays: French, German and Italian from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.