Socrates. Clinias. Axiochus.
AS I went one day to my common
schoole
Lynosargus, and being in
the
waye by
Elizeus, I might
heare the voice of one calling
aloude
to me,
Socrates. And
turning
me about to see whence it came, I saw
Clinias
Axiochus his sonne, together with
Damon
the Musitian
&and
Charmides,
the sonne of
Glauco
running hastely toward
Callirrhoe, whereof the
one was a Maister and professor of the Arte of
Musicke,
&and
the other
by means of great
familiarity
&and
acquaintance, did both
louelove him,
and
also was of him
belouedbeloved; whereupon I thought
good,
leauingleaving my ready
way, to go meet them,
that I might the sooner
vnderunderstand his
meaning.
Then
Clinias bursting out in teares, O
Socrates (quod he) now
is the time when thou
maist shew forth thy long fostered and famous
wisedome, for my father is
eueneven nowe taken
with a
grieuousgrievous disease,
and drawing neere (as
it seemeth) to his end, is therwithall
grieuouslygrievously
troubled, and greatly disquieted. Howbeit,
heeretofore hee was so farre
from the feare of
death, as that he was wont pleasantly to scoffe
and scorne at those which
vsedused to portraict the
Image of death,
painting him with a dreadfull
countenance and a griesly face.
VVhereforeWherefore
I
beseech thee O
Socrates, to go and comfort my
father as you were
wont to doo: for so the
rather
being strengthened with your good
counsaile,
he shall bee able without any grudging or
fainting to passe
through the way of all flesh,
and I with the rest of his friends and
kinsmen
will maintaine the yearely memory of that his
good end.
But that we might the sooner come to him,
we tooke the way, which lieth
beside the town
wall by the Gardeins) for his dwelling was
hard by
the gates which lyeth toward the
Amazons
piller: whither wee
comming, found
Axiochus (which by this time was come to
himself againe)
being indeed somewhat strong
in his body, but very weake and feeble
in his
minde, and resting altogether comfortlesse:
often tossing him,
and tumbling vp and downe
in his bed, fetching deepe and dolefull sighes,
with aboundant streames of trickling teares,
and wailefull wringing
of his handes: whome
beholding, O
Axiochus quoth I, what
meaneth
this?
where bee now those haughtie and
couragious words, wherewith thou wast
wont
to scorne and despise death? where bee those
thy dayly and continuall
prayses of vertue and
goodnesse vanished? where also is now that thy
vnspeakeableunspeakeable stoutnesse, wherewith thou wast
woont to confirme thy
selfe and strengthen
others:
for like as a cowardly champion, which
at the first comming forth as to the skirmish,
with stately steps and
a vaunting visage, dooth
soone after cast away his Target, and taketh
him to flight:
eueneven so seemest thou now, when
there is need most of
al to flinch. Hast thou no
more regarde of thy
diuinedivine and excellent
nature,
that sometime wast a man of so good life
and calling, so obedient
to reasons rule? and if
there were nothing els, yet should it be
sufficient
to mooue thee, that thou art an
Athenian
borne: and lastly should mooue
thee that
common
saying, which is worne in all mens mouths;
That this
our life is a Pilgrimage, which when
we
hauehave ended with perfect measure
and
stedfast
trauelltravell: it behoueth vs with like constancy
of minde,
and ioyfulnes of spirit, and as it were
singing a merry Paean, to enter
into the
purposed
place of rest. But thus to languish in
dispaire
and tenderharted out-cries,
behauingbehaving thy
selfe like a froward Babe,
in thee is neither
regard
of thy wisedome, nor respect of thy age.
O
Axiochus thy talke is very foolish, for
reasoning thus without reason,
and seeking to
make some sence of senceles wordes, thou both
dost and
sayest cleane contrary to thy selfe, not
marking, how at one time thou
dost both
complaine
for the lacke of sence which thou shalt
hauehave: and
also art greatly vexed for the rotting
of thy carrion Carcasse, and
despoyling of thy
former delights: as if by this death thou
shouldest
not passe into another life, or shouldest
be so despoyled of all
sence and feeling, as thou
wert before thou wast first brought into
this
world. For
eueneven as in those yeares when
Draco
and
Callisthenes gouernedgoverned the common wealth
of
Athens, thou then wast vexed with no
euilevil,
for in the beginning thou wast no such as to
whome
euillevill might
chance: so likewise when
thou hast ended this state of mortalitye thou
shalt no more be afflicted, for thou shalt not
be in such case as that
any
euillevill can touch thee.
VVhereforeWherefore shake off and cast away all these
trifles and worldly baggage, thus waying in
thy minde, that when the
frame of this earthly
building is
dissolueddissolved, and the soule being
singled,
is restored to his naturall place: this bodye
which is then
left an earthly masse and an
vnreasonableunreasonable
substance, is then no
more a man.
For we are a soule, that is to say, an immortall
creature,
beeing shut vp and inclosed in an
earthly dungeon.
VVherewithallWherewithall nature
hath
clothed vs, and charged vs with many miseries,
so that
eueneven those
things which seeme pleasant
to vs and
ioyfulljoyfull, are indeed but vaine
and
shadowed,
beeing mingled and wrapped in many
thousand sorrowes,
and those also which
vseuse
to breede vs sorrowe and heauines, are both
sodaine, and therefore more hardely
auoydedavoyded,
and also perdurable, and
therefore the more
painefull and wearisome. Such be diseases
and
inflammation of the sences: Such bee inward
griefes and sickenesses,
through which it
cannot
choose but that the soule must bee also
diseased,
since that beeing scattered and spread
through the powres and passages
of the body,
it
couetethcoveteth the
vseuse of that open and kinde
heauenheaven
out
of which it was
deriuedderived, and thirsteth
for the wonted company
&and
surpassing delights
of that aerernall fellowship; whereby it is
euidentevident,
that the passage from life, no is a change from
much
euillevill to great
good.
Marrie I will tell you, as they come to my
minde. For what parcell
(quod he) of our life
is not full of wretchednes? dooth not the
babie
eueneven taken
frõfrom
the mothers wombe, powre
out plenty of teares,
beginning the first step of
life with griefe? neither afterward hath
it once
any breathing or resting time from sorrow,
being
either distressed
with
pouertiepovertie, or pinched
with colde, or scortched with heate, or payned
with stripes: and
whatsoeuerwhatsoever it suffereth,
vtterutter
once it cannot, but
onely with crying dooth
show his minde,
hauinghaving no voice but that
alone
to bewray his griefe: and
hauinghaving through
many
woes waded
to seauen yeares of age, he is
yet afflicted with greater griefes,
being
subiectsubject
to the tyranny of the Schoolemaister and
Tutor.
And as
his yeares encreased, so is the
number
of his guides and gouernours
encreased,
being
afterwards in the handes of Censors,
Philosophers
and Capitaines. Soone after being
waxen a stripling he is hemmed in
with greater
feare, namely of Lyceum, of the Academie, of
the Schoole
of games, of Rulers, of Roddes:
and to shut vp all in one worde, of
infinite
miseries.
And all the time of his youth is spent
vnderunder
ouer-seers which are set
ouerover him by the
Areopagits from which
labours young men
beeing once freed, are yet ouer-layde with
greater
cares and more weightie thoughts,
touching
the ordering of his state
and trade of life:
which also if they be compared with those that
followe, all these former troubles may seeme
but childish and indeed
babish trifles. For
herevponhereupon dooth a troope of
euilsevils accrew, as be
the exploites of warfare, the bitternesse of
wounds, the continuall
labour, skirmishes: and
then closely creepeth on olde Age, in which
are
heaped all the harmes that pertaine to
mankinde,
whether of weakenesse
as naturall, or
of paine as being externall. And but if one
betimes
restore his life as a dew debt to death:
Nature
euerever waiting
as a greedy
vsurerusurer, taketh
paynes aforehand, snatching and pulling
from
this man his sight, from that his hearing, from
som both two senses.
And if any fortune
lõgerlonger
then commonly is seene in this life
to linger,
Nature weakening hir powres, dooth loose,
lame, and bow
downe all partes of his body,
but they whose bodies in old age long
flourisheth
in minde, as the saying is, become twise
children. And
therfore the gods, knowing what
is most expedient for men, those whome
they
most deerely
louelove, do soonest take out of this
vale of no wretchednes.
And for this cause
Agamedes
and
Trophonius, when they had
built a
Temple to
Pythius Apollo, desiring of the god
therefore
to grant them the best rewarde that
might be
giuengiven, soone after when
they layde
them downe to rest,
neuernever rose againe.
Likewise
Cleobis
&and
Biton, the sonnes of the
ArgiueArgive Nunne,
whẽwhen
their
mother had made hir
praier to
IunoJuno, that to her sonnes for their great
godlines might be
giuengiven some singuler gift (for
that they when her
yoake of Oxen were not
readily to bee found at the time of sacrifice,
themseluesthemselves being yoaked in the charriot, drew
their mother to the Temple)
vponupon this their
mothers request, the two sonnes the next
morning
were
found dead. It were too long in this
place to reherse the testimonies
of Poets which
in their
diuinedivine poesies do
diuinelydivinely bewaile and
lament the miseries of mans life, I will nowe
onely in place of many,
recite the witnesse of
one, being most worthie of memorie, which
thus
saith,
How wretched a thred of life hauehave the gods spun,
To mortall men that in this race of life do run.
Of all that in the earth are ordained by nature,
Than man, is not to bee found
a more wretched creature.
But of
Amphiaraus what saith the Poet?
Him louedloved highest IupiterJupiter and Apollo deare,
yet could he not reache to his eldest yeare.
What thinkest thou of him
that taught the childe to crie:
When first the Sunne bright day,
he seeth with tender eye.
But I will let them passe, least contrarye to
promise, I seeme to discourse
at large, and that
in the alleadging of forraine witnesses. What
trade
of life I pray you is there, or what
occupation,
of which you
shall not find many that
complaine and greatly mislike of their present
affaires. Let vs
ouerrunneoverrunne the companies of
Artificers
&and
craftsmen,
which continually labour
from night to night, and yet hardly able to
find
them necessaries to
liuelive, by bewayling theyr
bare estate,
&and
filling their nightwatchings with
sorrow and teares. Let vs els
suruewsurvew the life of
Marriners and Seafaring men, which make a
hole through
so many dangers,
&and
which as
Bias
said, are neither in the number
of the
liuingliving nor
yet of the dead, for man being borne to abide
vponupon the earth, dooth as it were a creature of a
double kinde, thrust himselfe
into the maine
sea, and wholy
putpvt his life into the hands of
fortune.
But the life of husbandmen will some say
is pleasant, and
so in deed it is: but
hauehave they
not a continuall ranckling gall,
euerever breeding
new cause of greefe and disquiet, sometime by
reason of drought,
sometime because of raine,
otherwhile for scortching, oft through blasting,
which parcheth the
vntimelyuntimely eare oftentimes,
because of importunate
heate or
vnmeasurableunmeasurable
colde, miserably weeping and complaining. But
aboueabove all, that honourable state of
gouernementgovernement
and principallitie
(for I let passe many
other
things
&and
wrap them vp in silence) through
how many dangers is it tossed and turmoiled,
for if at any time
it
hauehave any cause of
ioyejoye, it is
like
vntounto a blowne blister or a swelling
sore,
soone vp, and sooner downe: oftentime
suffering
a foule repulse,
which seemeth a thousand
times worse then death it selfe. For who at
any
time can be blessed, that hangeth
vponupon the
waueringwavering
will of the witlesse many ? And albeit
the Magistrate
deseruedeserve fauourfavour and praise, yet
is he but a mocking stocke and scoffe of the
comminalty,
being soone after, outcast, hissed
at, condemned, and
deliuereddelivered to
a miserable
death. For where I praye thee O
Axiochus,
(thee I aske
that art in office in the
commonwealth)
dyed that mightie
Miltiades?
where
that victorious
Themistocles? where that
valiant
Ephialtes? where
finally thse noble kings
and glorious Emperours, which not long a goe
flourished in the commonwealth. As for my
selfe, I could
neuernever be brought
to beare office
in the Cittie: for I
neuernever accounted it as a
worthie
and lawdable thing to be in authority
together with the madding multitude.
But
Theramenes and
Calixenus of late
memorie
appointing
vnderunder them
certaine
Magistrates,
condemned certaine guiltlesse men, not
hearing
their causes to
vndeseruedundeserved death.
Onelye
withstood them you, and
Triptolemus,
of
thirty thousand men which were gathered in
the assemblie.
Thou art farre wide
Axiochus, and reasonest
vnskilfullyunskilfully,
ioyningjoyning the
feeling of
euillevill, with
the wante of good things, forgetting thy selfe
that then thou shalt bee in the number of the
sencelesse dead. For
him indeed which is
bereft
of all good things, dooth the contrary force
of
euillevill things greatly vexe. But he which hath
no being, can take
nor feele nothing, in place of
those things whereof he is despoiled.
Then by
what reason can any griefe bee
conceyuedconceyved of
that thing, which
breedeth no sence nor
perseueranceperseverance
of any thing which hurteth. For
if in
the beginning O
Axiochus, thou didst not,
though indeed in vayne,
ioynejoyne sence and
feeling
to death, most
vnwiselyunwisely, thou shouldest
neuernever had cause to feare death. But now thou
doest confound thy selfe, and
speakest
contrarie
to thy selfe, oft fearing that thou shalt bee
depriueddeprived of soule and sence together, and oft
thinking, that with thy sence
thou shalt feele
that thing, whereof there is no sence nor
feeling.
And to this purpose do all those excellent
and notable reasons
of the soules immortalitie
tend.
For it is not the weake nature of mortall
man, to raise himselfe to
the fulfilling of such
high and haughtye matters, as to despise the
ramping rage of wilde beasts, to
ieopardjeopard
himselfe
in the wastefull
sea, to builde Citties, and
them with lawes and pollicie to establish:
to
looke vp into
heauenheaven, and marke the course of
the Starres; and the
wayes of the Sunne and
Moone, with their risings and setting, to
consider
their eclipses, their spaces, their making
of the nights and dayes
alike, their double
conuersionsconversions,
to behold the
order of the windes,
the seauen watrie starres, of winter, of summer,
of stormes, with the violent rage of
whirlewindes,
and as it were these
labours of the
world, to
deliuerdeliver to posteritie,
vnlesseunlesse in our
mindes
there were a certaine
diuinedivine spirit and
vnderstandingunderstanding, which could
comprehend and
reach
vntounto the supernaturall knowledge of so
great matters.
VVhereforeWherefore nowe O
Axiochus, thou art
not in the way to death,
but to immortality,
neither shalt thou (as thou didst seeme right
now to feare) bee bereft of all good, but shall
hereby
enioyenjoy true and
perfect good: Neither
shalt thou
perceiueperceive such durty pleasures
as are
these, beeing mingled with the puddle of this
sinfull body,
but most pure and perfect delight
being
deuoiddevoid of all contagious
trouble. For
beeing loosed and
deliuereddelivered out of the
darkesome
dungeons
of this body, thou shalt passe
to that place where is no lacke nor
complaint,
but all things full of rest, and
deuoiddevoid of
euillevill.
MoreouerMoreover there is calme and quiet
liuingliving
without
all knowledge of
vnrestunrest, peaceable
and
still occupied in beholding the course
&and
frame
of Nature, and
studying Philosophy, not to
please the idle ignorant and common sort,
but
with
vprightupright and
vndeceiuableundeceivable truth.
If you demaunde of mee another reason,
and signe of the soules immortality,
I will tell
you what the wise man
Gobrias shewed me: He
saide that
at what time
Xerxes conuayedconvayed his
huge Army into
Greece, his Grandfather
which
was of the same name, was sent into
Delos to
defende that Iland
in which were two Gods
borne. In the same Iland that his Grandfather
learned out of certaine brasen Tables which
Opis and
Hecuergus had
brought out of the
Northerne Countries, That the soule after time
it is
dissolueddissolved from the body passeth into a
certaine
darkesome place,
a Coast that lyeth
vnderunder
the earth wherein is
Plutoes Pallace no
lesse than
IupitersJupiters
IupiterJupiter
kingdome: For the earth
being
equally
ballanced in the middest of the
world, and the compasse thereof beeing
round
as a ball, that the one halfe Sphere thereof is
allotted
to the
higher Gods, and the other halfe
to the infernall powres; betwixt whom
there is
such kindred and allyance, that some bee
brothers,
and other
some brothers children. But
the entry of the way which leadeth to
Plutoes
kingdome is fenced with iron gates, and
fastened
with brasen bolts:
which when a man
hath opened, he is entertained of the
RiuerRiver A-
cheron;
next which is
Cocytus: which flouds
being
ouerpassedoverpassed, hee must come
before
Mi-
nos and
Rhadamanthus, the merciles
IudgesJudges:
which
place is called the plain of Truth where
the
IudgesJudges sit examining
eueryevery one that
commeth
thither how he hath
liuedlived, and with what
trade or
manner of life hee hath inhabited his
mortall body, with whom there
is no place for
lies; nor refuge for excuses. Then they which
in their
life time were inspired and led with a
good Angell, are
receiuedreceived into
the houshold of
the blessed, where all seasons flowe with
abundance
of all fruits, where from the
siluersilver springs
doo calmely run the Christall
streames, where
the flourishing medowes are cloathed with
chaungeable
Mantles of glorious colours,
where are famous Schooles of renowmed
Philosophers,
goodly companies of
diuinedivine Poets,
trim sorts of
Dauncers,
heauenheavenly Musicke,
great banquets furnished with costly cates,
Tables
abounding with all bounty, delights
without
all care, and pleasures
without all paine: For
the Inhabitants thereof are neither touched
with force of cold, nor payned with excesse of
heate, but the moderate
Aire breatheth on
them mildly and calmely, being, lightned with
the
gentle Sunnebeames.
In this place, and in the Elysian fields, they
which
hauehave taken holy
orders are highly
aduancedadvanced
and
reuerencedreverenced, dayly ministring the
vnsearcheable
rytes of Religion.
VVhereforeWherefore
then shouldest thou doubt but to
be made
partaker of the same honor, being one of the
seede of that
heauenheavenly race: It is an old saying
and rightly reported, that
Hercules and
Bac-
chus going downe to hell, they were instituted
in holly orders,
and that they were emboldned
to goe thither of the Goddesse
Eleusina.
But
they which being wrapped in wickednes
hauehave
led an
vngodlyungodly life,
are snatched vp by the
Furies,
and by them carried through the lowest
hell into deepe darkenes and
vtterutter confusion,
where the place and abode
of the wicked is,
and where the three score daughters of
Danaus
dwell,
whose punishment is continually to fill a
sort of bottomlesse vessels,
where also is to bee
seene the vnquencheable thirst of
Tantalus,
the
gnawen Entrailes of
Titius, and the endles
stone of
Sisiphus, whose
end beginneth a newe
labour. There bee they rent of wilde beasts,
continually scorched with burning Lamps,
pained
with all kind of torments,
and afflicted with
endlesse pennance. These thinges I remember
that
I
hauehave heard
Gobrias tell; but you
Axio-
chus may
iudgejudge of them as
you list. Only this
I know and assuredly hold fast, that
eueryevery mans
minde is immortall and passing out of this life
feeleth no griefe
nor sorrowe.
VVhereforeWherefore O
Axiochus whether thou be carryed into those
highest Pallaces or lower Vawts, needes must
it bee that thou
shalt bee blessed because thou
hast
liuedlived well and godly.
FINIS.