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            <title type="uniform">Declaratio de pueris statim ac liberaliter instituendis. English</title>
            <title type="main">That chyldren oughte to be taught and brought up gently in vertue and learnynge, and that euen forthwyth from theyr natiuitie: a declamacion of a briefe theme </title>
            <author>Erasmus, Desiderius, d. 1536</author>
            <respStmt>
               <resp>translator</resp>
               <name>Sherry, Richard, ca. 1506-ca. 1555</name>
               <name/>
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               <name>Nagy, Andrea</name>
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            <idno type="ota">http://ota.ox.ac.uk/id/3183</idno>
            <idno type="isbn10">1106001826</idno>
            <idno type="isbn13">9781106001825</idno>
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            <bibl>Revised version of  <relatedItem type="older" target="http://ota.ox.ac.uk/id/2196"/>
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            <bibl>Not recorded. 
<note>Originally published in 1550 with: "A treatise of schemes &amp; tropes very profytable for the better understanding of good authors, gathered out of the best grammarians &amp; oratours."</note>
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               <titlePart type="main">
                  <title type="main">That chyldren oughte to be taught and brought up gently in vertue and learnynge, and that euen forthwyth from theyr natiuitie:</title>
                  <title type="sub">A declamacion of a briefe theme, by Erasmus of Roterodame.</title>
               </titlePart>
            </docTitle>
            <byline>by 
<docAuthor>Rychard Sherry</docAuthor>
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         <div type="main">
            <head>[A treatise of schemes and tropes]</head>
            <pb n="G1r"/>
            <p>If thou wilt harken unto me, or rather to Chrisippus, the sharpeste witted of 
Philosophers, that shalte prouide that thyne infante and yonge babe be 
forthe-wythe instructed in good learnyng, whylest hys wyt is yet voyde 
from cares and vices, whilest his age is tender and tractable, and his mind 
flexible and ready to folowe euery thyng, and also wyl kepe fast good 
lessons and preceptes.  For we remember nothynge so well when we be olde, 
as those thynges that we learne in yonge yeres.  Care not thou for those 
fooles wordes which chatter that thys age, partly is not hable inough to 
receiue discipline, &amp; partlye unmete to abyde the labours of <pb n="G1v"/>
studies.  For fyrst, the beginninges of learning, stand specially by memorie, 
which as I sayd, in yong ones is very holdfast.  Secondly because nature hath 
made us to knowledge the study of the thynge can not be to hasty, wherof 
the author of al thyng her self hath graffed in us the seedes.  Beside this 
some things be necessary to be knowen when we be sumwhat elder, which by 
a certen peculier readines of nature, the tender age perceiveth both much 
more quickly &amp; also more esily then doth the elder, as the first 
beginnings of letters, the knowledge of tonges, tales &amp; fables of poetes. 
Finallye, why shulde the age be thought unmete to lerning, which is apt to 
lerne maners?  Or what other thinge shuld chyldren do rather when they be 
more able to speake, seyng nedes thei muste do sumwhat?  How much more 
profite is it the age to sporte in letters, then in trifles?  Thou wilt say that 
it is but of litle value that is done in those fyrste yeres.  Why is it disprised 
as a smal thing, which is necessary to a very greate matter?  And why is the 
lucre, be it never <pb n="G2r"/>
so litle, yet a lucre, dispised of purpose?  Now if you often put a lytle to 
a litle, there riseth a greate heape.  Herewith consider this also, if beyng an 
infant he lerne smaller thinges, he shal lerne greter, growynge upwardes in 
those yeres, in which those smaller shuld haue ben lerned.  Finally while he 
doth these things, at the least he shal be kept from those fautes, wherwith 
we se comenly the age to be infected.  For nothynge doth better occupy the 
whole mynd of man, then studies.  Verely this lucre ought not to be set light 
bi.  But if we shuld graunte that by these labours the strength of the body is 
sumwhat diminished, yet thinke I this losse well recompensed by winnynge 
of wyt.  For the minde by moderate labours is made more quycke &amp; 
lustye.  And if ther be any ieopardy in this pointe, it may be auoyded by our 
diligence.  You must haue for this tender age a teacher to enter it by fayre 
meanes, &amp; not discorage it by foule.  And there be also some things both 
pleasaunt to be knowen, &amp; as it wer sibbe to children's wittes, whiche 
to lerne is rather a play then a labour.  Howbeit childehod is not so <pb n="G2v"/>
weake which euen for thys is the more mete to take paynes &amp; labour, 
because they seie not what labour is.  Therfore if thou wylte remember how 
far unworthy he is to be counted a man which is void of lerning, and how 
flitting the life of man is, how slypper youth is to myschiefe, and mans age 
howe it desyreth to be occupied, how baren olde age is, and further how few 
come unto it, thou wylt not suffer thy yong babe in the whych thou shalte 
lyue styll as it were borne agayne, to let go any parte of hys tyme 
unoccupied, in the whych any thynge maye be gotten that eyther maye do 
muche good to all the whole lyfe afterwardes, or kepe it awaye from hurtes, 
and mischiefes. 


</p>
            <p>The selfe same matter enlarged by copye. 


</p>
            <p>After the longe despayred fruitfulnes of thy wyfe, I hearsay thou art made a 
father, and that wyth a man chylde, whyche sheweth in it selfe a meruelous 
towardnes, and euen to be lyke the parentes:  and that if so be we maye by 
such markes <pb n="G3r"/>
and tokens pronosticate anye thyng, maye seeme to promise perfite 
vertue.  And that therfore thou doest entend, to se thys chylde of so grete 
hope, as sone as he shalbe some what of age to be begonne in good letters, 
and to be taught in very honest learnynge, to be instructed and fashioned 
with the very wholsome preceptes of philosophy.  In deede you wyll be the 
whole father, and you wyll haue hym your very son, and to loke lyke you, not 
only in the fashion of hys face, and liniamentes of hys bodye, but also in the 
giftes of hys wytte.  Verely as I am hertelye glad for the good fortune of 
myne especiall friende, so I greatlye alowe your wyse entente.  This one 
thynge I wolde warne you of boldlye in deede, but louinglye, not to suffer 
after the iudgemente and example of the common people, that the fyrst age 
of your infante shulde flytte awaye wythout all fruite of good instruccion, 
and then at the last to set hym to learne hys fyrste letter, when bothe hys 
age wyll not so well be handled, and hys wytte <pb n="G3v"/>
shall be more readye to euyll, and peraduenture possessed alreadye with the 
fast holdyng bryers of vices.  Yea rather euen now loke about for some man, 
as of maners pure &amp; uncorrupt, so also wel learned:  &amp; into his lap 
deliuer your litle chyld, as it wer to a nurse of his tender mind, that euen 
with his milke he may suck in swete lerning:  &amp; deuide the care of thy 
litle sonne to his nurses &amp; teacher that thei shuld suckun the litle body 
with very good iuyce, &amp; so indue hys mynd with very wholsom opinions, 
&amp; very honest lernynge.  For I thinke it not conuenient that the one of al 
the best learned, &amp; also wysest shuldest geue eare to those piuyshe 
women, or unto men very lyke to them the beard excepted, whych by a cruell 
pytie, &amp; hateful loue, iudge that the chyldren euen untyl they ware 
springoldes, shuld be kept at home kyssing theyr mothers, and among the 
sweete wordes of theyr nurses pastymes, and unchaste tryflynges of 
seruauntes and maydens.  And thynke that they ought bitterlye to be kepte 
awaye from learnyng as <pb n="G4r"/>
from venome, saying that the fyrst age is so rude that it can receiue no 
discipline, and so tender that it is not mete for the labours of studies:  and 
finally that the profite of that age is so lytle worth, that neyther anye coste 
shulde be made upon it, neyther that the weakenes of the chyldren shuld be 
rered.  Whyle I proue euery of these thynges false, I pray you a lytle whyle 
take hede, countyng as the truth is, fyrst that these thynges be written of 
him which loueth you as wel as any man doth, &amp; inespecially of the 
thing which so perteineth to you, that none can do more.  For what is more 
derer to you then your son, inespecial hauing but him alone, upon whom we 
wold be glad if we might bestowe yea our life, not only our substaunce. 
Wherfore who mai not se that thei do leudly, &amp; also untowardli which in 
tilling their sand building their houses, keping their horse, use the gretest 
diligence thei can, &amp; take to counsell men that be wyse, &amp; of great 
experience:  in bringing up and teachynge theyr chyldren, for whose sakes al 
other things ar gotten, take so litle regard that nether <pb n="G4v"/>
they once councel with theyr owne mynd, not seke for the iudgements of 
wyse men, but as though there were a trifle in hande, geue care to folyshe 
women, and to euery rascal wretche, whych is no lesse shame to hear, then 
if a man takyng thought for the shooe, wolde set naughte by the foote, or 
wyth great study wold prouide that there shuld be no faut in the garmente, 
naught reckynge for the healthe of the bodye.  Good syr, I wyl not here cause 
you to tarye wyth common places, howe muche the strength of nature, how 
much fatherly loue, the law of god, mens constitucions require the patentes 
to owe unto the children, thorowe whom asmuche as we maye wee escape to 
dye, and be made to lyue euer.  But some thynke they haue gaylye done the 
office of a father, when they haue only begotten chyldren, where as thys is 
the least porcion of loue that the name of a father requyreth.  What greate 
thought take the mothers comenlye leste the infant shulde loke a gogle or a 
squint, lest he shuld be puffe <pb n="G5r"/>
cheked, wrie necked, croke shuldred, croke legged, splaye footed, and left 
that the proporcion of his bodye shuld not be trimme in euery point: 
whereunto besyde other thynges, they be wont to use swadel bondes, and 
keepe in their chekes wyth lytle miters.  They haue regard also to theyr 
mylke, their meate, theyr bathes, &amp; their mouinges, by whyche thynges 
the phisicions in many bookes, and inespecially Galene hath taught that the 
chyldren get good healthe of theyr bodye:  neyther do they differ thys 
diligence unto the seuenth or tenth yere, but euen assone as the chylde 
commeth oute of the mothers wombe, they take great charge of thys.  And 
they do well, for the infancie not regarded, oftentymes causeth men to haue 
a syckely and sore disseased olde age, if they happen to come to it.  Yea 
moreouer or euer the chyld be born, yet dothe the mother take greate heede: 
Thei eate not of euery meat when they be greate wyth chylde, they take 
heede that they moue not theyr bodie to hurte them:  and if <pb n="G5v"/>
there happen any thyng to fall upon their face, by and by they take it away 
wyth theyr hand, and laye it upon the priuie part of theyr body.  It hath ben 
proued by many experimentes, that by this remedie the deformitie whych 
wold haue bene on that part of the body that is sene, hathe lyen hyd in the 
secrete place.  No man calleth this to hasty a care whych is used for the 
worse parte of man.  Why then is that parte of man, wherby we be properly 
called menne, neglected so many yeres?  Shuld he not do all agaynste gods 
forbod which wold trim his cap, lettyng his head be unkempt, and all 
scabbed?  Yet much more unreasonable is it that we shuld bestow iuste 
labours upon the mortall bodye, and to haue no regarde of the immortal 
soule.  Further, if a man haue at home an horse colte, or a whelpe of a good 
kynd, wyl he not straight waye begynne to fashion hym to do sumwhat, and 
wyll do that so muche the more gladlye, the readyer the yonge age is to 
folow the teachers mynde?  Wee wyl teache <pb n="G6r"/>
a popiniaye while time is, to speke as a manne dothe, knowynge well that 
the elder he waxeth, the lesse apte he wyll be to be taughte, yea the common 
prouerbe geuyng warnynge of thys thynge:  That an old popiniaye careth not 
for the rod.  And what a thynge is it to be diligente in a byrde, and slowe in 
teachynge thy sonne?  What do the wytty husbandmen?  Do they not teach 
euen straight way the plantes whyle they be yet tender, to put awaye theyr 
wylde nature by graftynge, and wyll net tarye tyll they be waxen bygge and 
myghtye?  And they do not onlye take heede that the litle tree grow not 
croked or haue any other faute, but if ther be anye, they make haste to 
amend it, whyle it wyll yet bowe, and folowe the hande of the fashioner. 
And what liuyng thynge, or what plante wyll bee as the owener or 
housebande manne wolde haue it to serue for, excepte oure dylygence helpe 
nature?  The sooner it is donne, the better wyll it come to passe. 


</p>
            <p>
               <pb n="G6v"/>Indede to many dumme beastes, nature the mother of all thynges, hath geuen 
more helpe to do theyr natural offices, but because the prouidence of God 
hath of al creatures unto men onlye geuen the strength of reason, she hath 
left the greatest parte to educacion, in so much that one hath written very 
wel the first poynte, the middle, and the thirde, that is the chyefe of all 
mans felicitye, to be good instruccion, &amp; ryght bryngynge up.  Whych 
prayse Demosthenes gaue to ryght pronunciacion, and that in deede not 
falsely, but ryght bryngynge up helpeth muche more to wysedome, then 
pronunciacion to eloquence.  For diligente and holy bringing up, is the 
founteyne of al vertue:  As to folye and myschief, the fyrst, seconde, and 
thyrde poynte is undiligente and corrupte educacion.  Thys is the thynge that 
is chiefelye left unto us.  That is the cause why unto other beastes nature 
hathe geuen swyftnes, flyght, sharpnes of sight, greatnes, and strengthe of 
bodye, scales, flyshes, heares, hornes, nayles, <pb n="G7r"/>
venome, wherby they may both defende their healthe, and prouide for 
theyr liuynge, and brynge up their yonge:  and bryngeth forthe man onlye 
softe, naked, and unfensed:  but in stede of all thys, hath geuen hym a mynde 
hable to receiue all discipline, because in this onlye are all thynges, if a 
man wyll exercise it.  And euerye liuynge thynge, the lesse mete it is to 
learnynge, so muche the more it hathe of natiue prudence.  Bees learne not to 
make their celles, to gather iuce, and to make honye.  The Emets are not 
taughte to gather into their holes in somer, wherby they shulde lyue in 
wynter, but all these thynges be done by instruccion of nature.  But man 
neyther can eate, nor go, nor speake, except he be taught.  Then if the tree 
brynge forthe eyther no fruite or unsauerye, wythout the diligence of 
graffing, if the dogge be unmete to hunte, the horse unapte to iuste, the oxe 
to the plowe, except oure diligence bee putte to, howe wylde and 
unprofitable a creature wolde man become, except diligentlye, <pb n="G7v"/>
and in dew tyme he shulde be fashioned by good bryngynge up.  I wyll not 
here rehearse unto you the example of Lycurgus knowen of euerye man, 
whyche bryngynge oute two whelpes, one of a gentle kynde, but euyll 
taughte, that ran to the meate, that other of sluggyshe syres, but diligently 
brought up, that leafte the meate and leapt upon the beast.  Nature is an 
effectuall thynge, but educacion more effectuall, ouercommeth it.  Menne 
take heede that they maye haue a good dog to hunte, to haue a good horse to 
iournei with, and here thei thynke no diligence to be to hastie, but to haue a 
sonne that shulde be both worship and profite to the parentes, upon whome 
they myghte laye a good part of the charges of their houshold, whose loue 
mighte noryshe and beate up their unweldy age, and that shuld shew hym 
self a trustye and healpynge sonne in a lawe, a good husbande to his wife, a 
valiaunte and profitable citizen to the common wealthe, I saye to haue suche 
ene, eyther they take no <pb n="G8r"/>
care, or else they care to late.  For whom do they plant?  for whom do they 
plowe?  for whom do they buylde?  for whom do thei hunt for riches both by 
land &amp; by sea?  not for theyr chyldren?  But what profite or worshyp is 
in these thinges, if he that shal be heire of them can not use them?  With 
unmesurable studye be possessions gotten, but of the possessor we take no 
kepe.  Who prepareth an harpe for the unskylfull of musycke?  Who 
garnysheth a librarie for hym that can skyl of no bookes?  And are so great 
ryches gotten for hym whyche can not tell howe to use them?  If thou 
gettest these thynges to hym that is well broughte up, thou geueste hym 
instrumentes of vertue:  but if thou get them for a rude and rusticall wytte, 
what other thynge doest thou then minister a matter of wantonnesse and 
mischiefe?  What canne bee thoughte more folyshe then thys kynde of 
fathers?  They prouide that the bodie of the sonne maye be wythout faute, 
and shulde bee made apte to do all manner thynges comelye, but the mynde, <pb n="G8v"/>
by whose moderacion all honeste wyrkes do stand, that they care not for.  It 
nedeth me not here to rehearse that riches, dignitie, authoritie, and also 
healthfulnes of body, whych menne so desirouslye wyshe to theyr chyldren, 
nothynge doth more get them unto man, then vertue and learninge.  They 
wyshe unto them a praye, but they wyll not geue them a nette to take it with 
all.  That thing which is of al most excellent, thou canst not geue thy sonne, 
but thou mayest store hym wyth those good sciences, wherby the best 
thinges be gotten.  Now is this a great inconuenience, but it is yet a greater, 
that they leaue at home their dogge wel taught, their horse well broken and 
taught, and theyr son enstructed wyth no learnyng.  They haue land well 
tylled, and theyr sonne shamefull rude.  They haue their house goodly 
trimmed, and theyr sonne voyde of all garnyshyng.  Further, they whych after 
the peoples estimacion seme to be meruelouse wyse, do prolong the 
diligence to garnyshe the mind <pb n="H1r"/>
eyther into an age unapte to bee taughte, or else take no care at all for it, 
and are meruelouse thoughtfull of externall goodes of fortune, yea or euer he 
be borne, whom they haue appoynted to be lorde of them all.  For what se we 
not them to do?  When their wyfe is greate wyth chylde, then call they for a 
searcher of natiuities, the parentes are whether it shall be a man or a 
woman kynde.  They searche oute the destenye.  If the astrologer by the 
byrth houre haue sayde that the chylde shulde be fortunate in warre:  wee 
wyll, saye they, dedicate this chyld to the kinges courte.  If he shal promyse 
ecclesiasticall dygnitie, wee wyll, saye they, hunte for hym by some 
meanes, a Byshoprycke, or a fatte Abbotshyp.  Thys chylde wyl we make a 
president or a deane.  Thys semeth not to them to hasty a care when they 
preuente euen the very byrth:  and semeth it to hastye that is used in 
fashioning your childrens myndes?  So quyclye you prouide to haue your 
sonne a captaine or an officer, and therewyth wylte <pb n="H1v"/>
thou not prouide that he maie be a profitable captayn or officer of the 
common wealth?  Before the tyme come you go aboute this, to haue your 
sonne a byshop, or an abbot, and wylt thou not fashion hym to this well, to 
beare the office of a byshop, or an abbot?  Thou setteste hym to a chariot, 
and shewest hym not the manner to guyde it.  Thou puttest hym to the 
sterne, and passest not that he shulde learne those thynges that becommeth 
a shypmaster to know.  Finally in all thy possessions thou regardest nothing 
lesse then that, that is moste precious, &amp; for whose sake al other 
thynges be gotten.  Thi corne fieldes be goodly, thy houes be fayre, thy 
vessel is bright, thy garmentes, and al thy housholde stuffe, thy horses bee 
wel kept, thi seruauntes wel taught, only thy sonnes wyt is foule, filthy 
&amp; all sluttishe.  Thou hast perchaunce bought by the drumme a bond 
slaue, vyle, and barbarous, if he be rude and ignoraunt, that makest to what 
use he is good, &amp; trimly thou bryngest hym up to some craft, either of <pb n="H2r"/>
the kytchen, physicke, husbandrye, or stewardshyp:  only thy sonne thou 
settest lyghte by, as an idle thynge.  Thei wyl say:  He shal haue inough to 
lyue on, but he shallnot haue to lyue well on.  Comonly the rycher that men 
be, the lesse they care for the bryngyng up of their chyldren.  What neede is 
it, say they, of anye learnyng, they shall haue inoughe?  Yea the more nede 
haue they of the helpe of phylosophy and learnyng.  The greayter the shyp is, 
&amp; the more marchandyse it carieth aboute, the more neede it hathe of a 
connynge shyppe master.  Howe greatlye do Prynces go about this, to leaue 
unto their sonnes as large a dominion as they can, and yet do none carelesse 
that they shuld be brought up in those good wayes, wythoute the whych, 
principalitie can not wel be ordred.  How muche more dothe he geue, that 
geueth us to lyue well, then to lyue?  Verye lytel do chyldren owe unto 
theyre fathers of whome they be no more but begotten, and not also broughte 
up to lyue verteouslye. 


</p>
            <p>
               <pb n="H2v"/>The saying of Alexander is muche spoken of:  excepte I were Alexander, I 
wuld wishe to be Diogenes.  But very worthely doth Plutarch rebuke it, 
because that so much the more he shuld haue wyshed to haue had Diogenes 
philosophye, howe muche the greater hys dominion was.  But muche more 
shameful is theyr sluggardy, whyche not onely bryng not up their chyldren 
aright, but also corrupte them to wyckednesse.  When Crates the Thebane 
dyd perceiue thys abhominacion, not without a cause he wolde go in to the 
hyest place of the citye, &amp; there crie out as loud as he could, &amp; 
caste them in the teeth wyth theyr madnesse in this wyse.  You wretches 
what madnesse driueth you?  Take you suche thought to gette money and 
possessions, &amp; take you no care for your children for whom you get 
these thynges?  As they be scante halfe mothers whych onlye bringe forth, 
and not up their chyldren, so be they scante halfe fathers, which when they 
prouide necessaries for theyr chyldrens bodies, euen so much <pb n="H3r"/>
that they maye ryot wythall, prouide not that their myndes maye be 
garnyshed wyth honest disciplines.  Trees peraduenture wyl grow though 
eyther baren, or wyth wild fruite:  horses are soled, though perchaunce they 
be good for nothyng:  but menne (truste me) be not borne, but fashioned. 
Menne in olde tyme which by no lawes, nor good order ledde theyr lyues in 
woodes, in wanderynge lustes of bodye, were rather wylde beastes then men. 
Reason maketh a man:  that hathe no place where all thynges are gouerned 
after affeccion.  If shape and fashion shulde make a man, Images also shulde 
be counted among men.  Elegantly sayde Aristippus when a certen ryche man 
axed him what profite learnyng shuld brynge to a yong man:  &amp; it be no 
more but this quod he, that in the playing place one stone sytte not upon an 
other.  Very properly another Philosopher Diogenes I trowe, bearynge in the 
mydday a candle in his hand, walked aboute the market place that was full 
of men:  beinge axed what <pb n="H3v"/>
thynge he sought:  I seeke quode he, a man.  He knewe that there was a greate 
company, but of beastes, and not men.  The same man on a daye, when 
standing on an hye place he had called a great fort together, and sayde 
nothing else but come hither men, come hyther men.  Some halfe angrye 
cryed agayne:  we are here men, say what thou hast.  Then quod he:  I wold 
haue men come hyther &amp; not you whych are nothyng lesse then men, and 
therwyth draue them away wyth his staffe.  Surely it is very trewe, that a 
man not instructed wyth Phylosophye nor other good sciences, is a creature 
somewhat worse then brute beastes.  For beastes folowe onely the affectes 
of nature, a manne except he be fashioned wyth learning, and preceptes of 
philosophy, is taught into affeccions more then beastlike.  For there is no 
beast more wylde, or more hurtefull then a manne, whom ambicion dryuethe, 
desyre, anger, enuye, ryot, and luste.  Therfore he that prouideth not that his 
sonne may by and by be instructed <pb n="H4r"/>
in the beste learnyng, neyther is he a manne, nor the sonne of a man.  Were it 
not an abhominable fight that the mynde of a man shulde be in a beastes 
body?  As we haue read that Circes when she had enchaunted men wyth her 
wytchcraft, dyd turne them into Lions, beares, and swyne, so that yet ther 
shuld be stil in them the mynde of a man, which thyng Apuleus wrote to haue 
happened to hym selfe, and Austin also hathe beleued that men haue bene 
turned into wolues.  Who could abyde to be called the father of such a 
monster.  But it is a more merueylous monster that a beastes mynde shulde 
be in a mans bodye, and yet do very many please themselues in suche 
chyldren, and bothe the fathers seme, and the common people thynke such to 
be verye wise. 


</p>
            <p>It is sayde that beares caste oute a lumpe of fleshe wythout anye fashion, 
whych wyth longe lyckyng, they forme and brynge into a fashyon, but there 
is not beares yonge one so euyll fauored as a manne is, borne of a rude 
mynde. 


</p>
            <p>
               <pb n="H4v"/>Except wyth much studye the forme and fashion this, thou shalt be a father 
of a monster and not of a man.  If thy sonne be borne wyth a copped head or 
crocked shuldred, or splay footed, or wyth syxe fingers in one hande, howe 
lothe woldest thou be for it, how arte thou ashamed to be called the father 
not of a man, but of a monster:  and art thou not ashamed of so monstruous a 
mynde?  Howe discoraged be the fathers in theyr hertes if their wyfe brynge 
forthe a naturall, &amp; an infante of a brute mynde?  For they thynke they 
haue begotten not a man, but a monster, and excepte state of the lawe dyd 
let them, they wolde kyll that that is borne.  Thou blameste nature whych 
hath denied the minde of a man to thy chylde, &amp; thou causest by thyne 
own negligence, that thy sonne shulde be wythoute the mynde of a man.  But 
thou wylte saye:  Better it is to be of a brutishe rather then of an ungracious 
mind.  Naye better it is to be a swyne, then an unlearned and euyll man. 
Nature, when she geueth the a sonne, <pb n="H5r"/>
she geueth nothyng else, then a rude lumpe of fleshe.  It is thy parte to 
fashion after the best maner, that matter that will obey &amp; folow in 
euery poynt.  If thou wylt slacke to do it, thou hast a beaste:  if thou take 
hede thou hast, as I myght saye, a God.  Stayght waye assone as thy infante 
is borne, it is apte to be taughte those thynges whych properlie belonge to a 
man.  Therfore after the sayinge of Vyrgyll, bestowe diligente labour upon 
hym, euen from hys tender age.  Handle the waxe strayght way whyle it is 
very soft, fashion thys claie while it is moist, season thys earthen vessel 
wyth verye good liquour, while it is newe, dye your wolle whyle it commeth 
whyte frome the fuller, and is not defiled wyth any spottes.  Antisthenes 
dyd verye merilye shewe the same, whyche when he had taken a certen mans 
sonne to be taught, and was axed of hys father what thinges he had neede of: 
a newe booke quod he, a newe pensyle, and a new table.  Verelye the 
philosopher requyred a rude and emptye mynde. 


</p>
            <p>H5v 
Thou canst not haue a rude lumpe, but and if thou fashyon it not lyke a 
manne, of it selfe it wyll waxe naught, into monstruous formes of wylde 
beastes.  Seynge thou doest owe this seruyce to God &amp; nature, although 
there were no hope that thou shuldest haue any profite therby, count in thy 
mynd, how greate comforte, how greate profite, howe much worshyp the 
children that be well brought up brynge to theyr fathers.  Agayne into what 
shames and greate sorowes they cast their parentes that bee euyll broughte 
up.  There is no nede to bryng there unto the examples out of olde chronicles: 
do no more but remember in thy mind the housholdes of thine owne citye, 
howe many examples shalt that haue in eueri place?  I know thou doest often 
hear such wordes.  O happye man that I were, if my chyldren were buryed.  O 
fortunate mother, if I hadde neuer broughte forth chylde.  It is a wayghty 
matter to brynge up chyldren well, I graunt:  but no man is borne to him 
selfe, no man borne to be idle.  Thou woldest nedes be a father, that muste <pb n="H6r"/>
be a good father, that haste gotten them to the common wealth, not to thy 
self only, or to speake more lyke a christen man, that hast begotten them to 
god, not to thy selfe.  Paul wryteth that so in dede women be saued, if they 
bryng forth children, &amp; so brynge them up that they continue in the 
study of vertue.  God wil straitly charge the parents with the childrens 
fautes.  Therfore excepte that euen forthwith thou bryng up honestly that, 
that is borne, fyrst that dost thy selfe wronge, which thorow thy 
negligence, gettest that to thy selfe, then the which no enemye could wyshe 
to an other, either more greuous or paynful.  Dionisius did effeminat with 
delyghtes of the court Dions yong son that was run awaye from him:  he 
knew that this shuld be more carefull to the father, then if he had kylled 
hym with a swerde.  A litel whyle after when the yong manne was forced of 
his father that was come to him, to returne agayne to his old vertue, he 
brake his necke out of a garter.  In dede a certeyne wise hebricion wrot very 
wisely.  A wise child maketh the father glad, &amp; a folish son is sorow to 
the mother. <pb n="H6v"/>
But a wyse chyld not only is pleasure to hys father, but also worship and 
succoure, and finallye hys fathers lyfe.  Contrarye a folyshe and leude 
chylde, not only bringeth heauynesse to hys parentes, but also shame and 
pouertye, and olde before the tyme:  and at laste causeth death to them, of 
whom he had the begynnyng of lyfe.  What nede me to rehearse up?  Daily are 
in our eies the examples of citizens, whome the euyll maners of theyr 
chyldren haue brought to beggarye, whome eyther the sonne beyng hanged, or 
theyr daughter an whoore of the stewes, haue tormented wyth intollerable 
shame and vylany.  I know greate men, whych of manye chyldren haue scante 
one left alyue.  One consumed wyth the abhominable leprie, called by 
diminucion the french pockes, heareth his death aboute wyth hym:  Another 
hathe burste by drynkynge for the beste game, an other goyng a 
whorehuntynge in the nyghte with a visar, was pittifullye kylled.  What was 
the cause?  Bycause theyr parentes <pb n="H7r"/>
thynkynge it inough to haue begotten them, and enryches them, toke no heede 
of theire bryngynge up.  They shall dye by the lawe, whych laye awaye theyr 
children, and cast them into some wood to be deuouted of wylde beastes. 
But there is no kynde of puttynge them awaye more cruell, then to geue up 
that to beastlye affeccions, whych nature hath geuen to be fashioned by very 
good waies.  If ther wer ani witch could wyth euyl craftes, and wold go 
about to turne thy sonne into a swyne or a wolfe, woldest thou not thynke 
that ther were not punyshyement to sore for her myscheuouse deede?  But 
that whych thou abhorrest in her, thou of purpose doest it thy selfe.  How 
huge a beaste is lechery?  how rauenous and insaciable is ryot?  howe wylde 
a beast is dronkenshyp?  how hurtfull a thing is anger?  how horrible is 
ambicion?  To these beastes dothe he set ouer hys sonne, who soeuer from 
his tender youthe doth not accustume hym to loue that, that is honeste:  to 
abhorre synne:  yea rather not onlye <pb n="H7v"/>
he casteth hym to wyld beastes, whych the most cruel casters away are 
wonte to do, but also whych is more greuouse, he norisheth this greate and 
perilous beaste, euen to hys owne destruccion.  It is a kind of men most to 
be abhorred, which hurteth the body of infantes wyth bewitchyng:  and what 
shal we say of those parentes whiche thorowe their negligence and euyll 
educacion bewitch the mynd?  They are called murtherers that kyll their 
children beynge newe borne, and yet kyll but the body:  howe great 
wyckednes is it to kyll the mynde?  For what other thynge is the deathe of 
the soule, then foly and wickednes.  And he doth also no lesse wrong to his 
contrey, to whom asmuch as lyeth in hym, he geueth a pestilente citizen.  He 
is naught to godwards, of whom he hath receyued a chylde for thys purpose, 
to brynge hym up to vertue.  Hereby you may se, how greate and manifolde 
mischiefes they committe whych regarde not the bryngynge up of tender age. 
But as I touched a lytle before, <pb n="H8r"/>
they synne more greuouslie then do these, whych not onely do not fashion 
them to honestye, but also season the tender andsoft vessel of the infante 
to myschiefe and wyckednesse, and teacheth hym vyce before he knowe what 
vice is.  How shuld he be a modeste man and dyspyser of pride, that creepeth 
in purple?  He can not yet sound his fyrste letters, and yet he nowe knoweth 
what crimosine and purple sylke meaneto, he knoweth what a mullet is, and 
other dayntie fyshes, and disdainfullye wyth a proude looke casteth away 
common dyshes.  How can he be shamefast when he is growen up, which 
being a litel infant was begon to be fashioned to lecherye?  How shall he 
waxe liberal when he is old, which being so litel hath lerned to meruell at 
money &amp; gold?  If ther be ani kynd of garment lately found out, as daili 
the tatlers craft, as in time paste dyd Africa, bringeth forth some new 
monster, that we put up on our instant.  He is taught to stand in his own 
conceite:  &amp; if it be taken away, he angerly axeth for it again. <pb n="H8v"/>
Howe shal he beyng olde hate drunkennes, whych when he is an infant is 
taught to loue wine?  They teach them by lytle and lytle suche filthy wordes 
whych are scant to be suffered, as sayth Quintilian, of the delicious 
Alexandrians.  And if the child speake any suche after them, they kysse hym 
for hys laboure.  I warant you they know their yong, growynge nothynge out 
of kynde, when theyr owne lyfe is nothynge else then an example of 
naughtynes.  Beynge an infant, he learneth the unchaste flatterynge wordes 
of nurses, and as we saye, he is fashioned wyth the hand to wanton 
touchynge.  He seeth hys father well whetteled wyth drynke, and heareth 
hym bablynge oute that, that shulde be kepte in.  He sytteth at greate, and 
not very honest feastes, he heareth the house ful of iesters, harpes, 
mynstrels and daunsers.  To these maners the chyld is so accustumed, that 
custume goeth into nature.  Ther be nacions that fashion their chyldren to 
fiersenesse of warre whyle they be yet redde from <pb n="J1r"/>
the mother.  They lerne to loke fierslie, the learne to loue the swearde, and 
to geue a strype.  From such beginninges thei are deliuered to the master: 
and do we merueyle if wee fynde them unapte to lerne vertue, whych haue 
dronke in vyces, euen wyth the mylke?  But I hear some men defendynge 
theyr folye thus, and and saie that by thys pleasure whiche is taken of the 
wantonnes of infantes, the tediousnes of noursyng is recompensed.  What 
is this?  Shuld it be to the verye father more pleasaunt if the chylde folowe 
an euyll deede, or expresse a leude worde, then if wyth his lytle struttyng 
tonge, he spake a good sentence, or folowe any deede that is wel done? 
Nature specially hathe geuen to the fyrste age an easines to folowe and do 
after, but yet thys folowyng is some what more prone to naughtynesse then 
to goodnes.  Is vyce more plesaunte to a good man then vertue, specially in 
hys chyldren?  If anye fylthe fall upon the yonge chyldes skyn, thou puttest 
it away, and dost thou infect the mynd wyth so foule <pb n="J1v"/>
spottes?  Nothynge stycketh faster then that that is learned in yonge 
myndes.  I pray you what motherlye hertes haue those women, whiche dandle 
in their lap their chyldren tyl they be almost seuen yeres old, and in maner 
make them fooles?  If they be so much disposed to play why do they not 
rather get apes, and litle puppets to play wythall?  O saye they:  they be but 
chyldren.  They be in deede:  but it can scant be told how muche those fyrste 
beginninges of our yong age do helpe us to guide all our lyfe after, &amp; 
howe hard &amp; untractable a wanton and dissolute bryngyng up, maketh 
the chylde to the teacher, callynge the same gentlenes, when in deede it is a 
marring.  Might not an accion of euyl handlyng children meruelous iustli be 
laid against such mothers?  for it is plainely a kynde of witchcraft &amp; of 
murther.  They be punyshed by the lawe, that bewitche their children, or hurt 
their weake bodies with poisons:  what do thei deserue which corrupt that 
chiefe parte of the instant with most ungracious venome?  It is a lighter 
matter to kyl the body <pb n="J2r"/>
then the mind?  If a child shulde be brought up among the gogle eied 
stutters, or haltyng, the body woldbe hurt with infeccion:  but in dede fautes 
of the mind crepe upon us more priuely, &amp; also more quickely, &amp; 
settel deper.  The apostle Paul worthely gaue this honor unto the verse of 
Menander, that he wold recite it in his epistels:  Euyl communicacion, 
corrupteth good maners:  but this is neuer truer then in infantes.  Aristotle 
when he was axed of a certen man by what meanes he myghte bringe to pas, 
to haue a goodly horse:  If he be brought up quod he among horses of good 
kynde.  And that if neyther loue nor treason can teach us howe greate care 
we ought to take for the first yeres of our children, at the least waies let 
us take example of brute beastes.  For it oughte not to greue us to learne of 
them a thynge that shall be so profitable, of whome mankinde now long ago 
hath lerned so many fruitful things:  sence a beast called Hippopotamus hath 
shewed the cutting of veines, &amp; a bird of egipt called Ibis hath shewed 
the use of a clister, which the phisicions gretly alow. <pb n="J2v"/>
The hearbe called dictamum whiche is good to drawe out arrowes, we haue 
knowne it bi hartes.  Thei also haue taughte us that the eatinge of crabs is a 
remedy against the poyson of spyders.  And also we haue learned by the 
teachyng of lysardes, that dictamum doth confort us agaynst the byting of 
serpentes.  For thys kynde of beastes fyghte naturally agaynste serpentes, 
of whom when they be hurt, they haue ben espyed to fetche theyr remedye of 
that herbe.  Swallowes haue shewed us salaudine, and haue geuen the name 
unto the hearbe.  The wesyll hathe shewed us that rewe is good in medicines. 
The Storke hathe shewed us the herbe organye:  and the wylde bores haue 
declared the Iuy helpeth sickenesses.  Serpentes haue shewed that fenel is 
good for the eye syght.  That vomite of the stomacke is stopped by lettise, 
the Dragon monysheth us.  And that mans donge helpeth agaynst poyson, the 
Panthers haue taught us, and many mo remedies we haue learned of Brute 
beastes: <pb n="J3r"/>
yea and craftes also that be verye profitable for mannes lyfe.  Swine haue 
shewed us the maner to plow the lande, and the Swalowe to temper mud 
walles.  To be short, there is in maner nothyng profitable for the lyfe of 
man, but that nature hathe shewed us an example in brute beastes, that they 
that haue not learned philosophy and other sciences, maye be warned at the 
least waye by them what they shulde do.  Do we not se howe that euery 
beaste, not only doth beget yonge, but also fashion them to do their natural 
office?  The byrde is borne to flye.  Doest thou not se how he is taught 
therunto &amp; fashioned by his damme?  We see at home how the cattes go 
before their kytlynges, and exercyse them to catche myse &amp; byrdes, 
because they muste lyue by them.  They shewe them the praye whyle it is 
yet alyue, and teache them to catche it by leapyng, and at last to eate them. 
What do hartes?  do they not forth wyth exercise their fawnes to swyftnes, 
and teach them howe to runne?  they brynge them <pb n="J3v"/>
to hye stiepe doune places, &amp; shewe them how to leap, because by these 
meanes they be sure agaynste the traines of the hunters.  Ther is put in 
writing as it were a certen rule of techyng elephantes and dolphins in 
brynginge up their yonge.  In Nyghtingales, we perceiue the offices of the 
techer and learner, how the elder goth before, calleth backe, and correcteth, 
and howe the yonger foloweth and obeyeth.  And as the dogge is borne to 
huntyng, the byrde to flyinge, the horse to runnyng, the oxe to plowynge, so 
man is borne to philosophy and honeste doinges:  and as euery liuing thing 
lerneth very easly that, to the which he is borne, so man wyth verye lytle 
payne perceiueth the lernyng of vertue and honestye, to the whiche nature 
hath graffed certen vehemente seedes and principles:  so that to the 
readinesse of nature, is ioyned the diligence of the teacher.  What is a 
greater inconuenience then beastes that be wythout reason to knowe and 
remember theyr duetye towarde theyr yong:  Man <pb n="J4r"/>
whych is deuided from brute beastes by prerogatiue of reason, not to know 
what he oweth to nature, what to vertue, and what to God?  And yet no kynde 
of brute beastes looketh for anye rewarde of theyre yong for their noursynge 
and teachynge, excepte we luste to beleue that the Storkes noryshe agayne 
theyr dammes forworne wyth age, and bear them upon their backes.  But 
among men, because no continuaunce of time taketh awaye the thanke of 
naturall loue:  what comfort, what worshyp, what succoure doth he prepare 
for hymselfe, that seeth hys childe to be well brought up?  Nature hathe 
geuen into thy handes a newe falowed fielde, nothynge in it in deede, but of 
a fruitfull grounde:  and thou thorow negligence sufferest it to be 
ouergrowen wyth bryers and thornes, whyche afterwardes can not be pulled 
up wyth any diligence.  In a lytell grayue, howe greate a tree is hyd, what 
fruite will it geue if it spring oute. 


</p>
            <p>
               <pb n="J4v"/>All thys profite is lost except thou caste feede into the sorowe, excepte 
thou noryshe wyth thy labour this tender plant as it groweth, and as it were 
make it tame by graffyng.  Thou awakest in tamyng thy plant, and slepeste 
thou in thy sonne?  All the state of mans felicitie standeth specially in thre 
poyntes:  nature, good orderyng, and exercyse.  I cal nature an aptnes to be 
taught, and a readines that is graffed within us to honestye.  Good orderynge 
or teachyng, I call doctryne, whiche stondeth in monicions and preceptes.  I 
call exercyse the use of that perfitenes which nature hath graffed in us, and 
that reason hath furthered.  Nature requyreth good order and fashionynge: 
exercyse, except it be gouerned by reason, is in daunger to manye perylles 
and erroures.  They be greatly therefore deceiued, whych thynke it sufficient 
to be borne, &amp; no lesse do they erre whyche beleue that wysedome is got 
by handelynge matters and greate affayres wythoute the preceptes of 
philosophye.  Tel me I <pb n="J5r"/>
praye you, when shall he be a good runner whych runneth lustelye in deede, 
but eyther runneth in the darke, or knoweth not the waye?  When shall he bee 
a good sworde player, whych shaketh hys sworde up and downe wynkyng? 
Preceptes of philosophye be as it were the eyes of the mynde, and in manner 
geue lyght before us that you may see what is nedefull to be done and what 
not.  Longe experience of diuerse thinges profite much in dede, I confesse, 
but to a wyse man that is diligently instructed in preceptes of well doynge. 
Counte what thei haue done, and what thei haue suffered all theyr lyfe, 
whych haue gotten them by experience of thinges a sely small prudence 
&amp; thinke whether thou woldest wyshe so greate myschiues to thy sonne. 
Moreouer philosophye teacheth more in one yere, then dothe anye experience 
in thyrty, and it teacheth safely, when by experience mo men waxe 
miserable then prudent, in so much that the old fathers not without a cause 
sayde:  a man to make a perill or be <pb n="J5v"/>
in ieopardy, whych assayed a thing by experience.  Go to, if a man wold haue 
hys sonne well seene in physycke, whether wolde he rather he shulde reade 
the bookes of phisicions or learne by experience what thynge wolde hurt by 
poysonyng, or helpe by a remedy.  Howe unhappye prudence is it, when the 
shypman hathe learned the arte of saylynge by often shypwrackes, when the 
prince by continuall batayles and tumultes, and by common myschieues hath 
learned to heare hys office?  Thys is the prudence of fooles, and that is 
bought to dearlye, that men shulde be wyse after they be strycken wyth 
myschief.  He learneth very costely, whych by wanderyng lerneth not to 
wander.  Philippus wyselye learned hys sonne Alexander to shewe hym selfe 
glad to lerne of Aristotle:  and to learne philosophy perfectlye of him to the 
entent he shuld not do that he shuld repent hym of.  And yet was Phylyp 
commended for hys singuler towardnes of wytte.  What thynke ye then is to 
be looked for of the common <pb n="J6r"/>
sorte.  But the manner of teachinge doth briefly shewe what we shulde 
folowe, what wee shulde auoyde:  neyther dothe it after wee haue taken 
hurte monyshe us, thys came euyll to passe, hereafter take heede:  but or 
euer ye take the matter in hande, it cryeth:  If thou do thys, thou shalt get 
unto the euyll name and myschiefe.  Let us knytte therfore this threfolde 
corde, that both good teachyng leade nature, and exercise make perfite good 
teachyng.  Moreouer in other beastes we do perceiue that euery one doth 
sonest learne that that is most properly belonging to hys nature, and whych 
is fyrste to the saue garde of hys healthe:  that standeth in those thynges 
which brynge either payne or destruccion.  Not onlye liuing thyngs but 
plantes also haue this sence.  For we se that trees also in that parte where 
the sea doth sauour, or the northen winde blow, to shrynke in their 
braunches and boughes:  and where the wether is more gentle, there to 
spreade them farther oute. 


</p>
            <p>
               <pb n="J6v"/>And what is that that properly belongeth unto man?  Verelye to lyue 
according to reason, and for that is called a reasonable creature, and 
diuided from those that can not speake.  And what is most destruccion to 
man?  Folyshenes.  He wyll therfore be taught nothyng soner then vertue, and 
abhorre from nothynge sooner then folyshnesse, if so be the diligence of the 
parentes wyll incontinent set aworke the nature whyle it is emty.  But we 
here meruelous complantes of the common people, howe readye the nature of 
chyldren is to fal to vyce, &amp; how hard it is to drawe them to the loue of 
honesty.  They accuse nature wrongfullye.  The greatest parte of thys euyll 
is thorowe oure owne faute, whyche mar the wittes with vyces, before we 
teache them vertues.  And it is no maruell if we haue them not verye apte to 
learne honestye, seyng they are nowe already taughte to myschiefe.  And 
who is ignoraunt, that the labour to unteache, is both harder, and also goth 
before teachyng.  Also the common sorte of men to do amysse <pb n="J7r"/>
in thys pointe thre maner of wayes:  eyther because they utterlye 
neglecte the bryngynge up of children, or because they begynne to fashion 
their myndes to knoweledge to late, or because they putte them to those 
men of whome they maye learne that that muste be unlerned agayne.  Wee 
haue shewed those fyrst maner of men unworthi to be called fathers, and 
that they very litle differ from suche as sette theyr infantes out abrode to 
be destroyed, and that they oughte worthely to be punyshed by the lawe, 
which doth prescribe this also diligentlye by what meanes chyldren shuld be 
brought up, &amp; afterwards youth.  The second sorte be very manye, wyth 
whom nowe I specially entend to striue.  The thyrd doth amysse two wayes, 
partly thorowe ignoraunce, partly thorowe retchlesnes.  And syth it is a rare 
thynge and a shame to be ignoraunte to whome thou shuldest put oute thy 
horse, or thy grounde to be kepte, howe muche more shamefull is it not to 
knowe whom thou shuldeste <pb n="J7v"/>
put thy chylde in truste wythal, beynge the dearest part of thy possessions? 
Ther thou beginnest to lerne that, that thou canst not skyll well of thy 
selfe, thou axest counsell of the beste seene:  here thou thynkeste it maketh 
no matter to whom thou committest thy conne.  Thou assignest to thy 
seruantes, eueri man his office that is metest for hym.  Thou tryest whom 
thou mayest make ouersear of thy husbandrie, whome to appoint to the 
kitchen, and who shulde ouersee thy housholde.  And if there be any good for 
nothynge, a slug, a dulhead, a foole, a waster, to hym we commit oure childe 
to be taught:  and that thynge whych requireth the cunningest man of all, is 
put to the worst of our seruauntes.  What is untoward, if here menne haue 
not an untoward mind?  Ther be some whych for theyr couetous mynd be 
afeard to hyre a good master, and geue more to an horskeper then a teacher 
of the chyld.  And yet for al that they spare no costly feastes, nyght &amp; 
day thei playe at dice, and bestowe moch upon houndes &amp; <pb n="J8r"/>
fooles.  In thys thynge onely they be sparers and nigardes, for whose cause 
springe in other thynges myght be excused.  I wold ther wer fewer whych 
bestowe more upon a rotten whore, then upon bringyng up of their chylde. 
Nothyng sayth the Satir writer standeth the father in lesse cost then the 
sonne.  Peraduenture it wyll not be much amisse here to speake of the day 
dyet, which longe ago was muche spoken of in the name of Crates.  Alow to 
thy coke x. pound, to thy phisicion a grote, to thy flatterer .v. talents, to thy 
counseller smoke, to thy harlot a talent, to thy philosopher .iii. halfpens. 
What lacketh to this preposterous count, but to put to it that the teacher 
haue iii. farthings:  Howbeit I thinke that the master is meant under the 
name of philosopher.  When one that was riche in money, but nedy of wit 
axed Aristippus what wage she wold axe for teching his son, &amp; he 
answered .v. L. grotes.  You axe quod he to great a summe:  for with this 
much money a man maye bye a seruaunte. <pb n="J8v"/>
Then the philosopher very properly againe:  but now, quod he, for one thou 
shalt haue two:  a sonne mete to do the seruice, and a philosopher to teache 
thy sonne.  Further if a man shulde bee axed, whether he wold haue hys onlye 
sonne dead to wynne an hundred horses, if he had any crumine of wysedome, 
he wold answer ( I thinke:) in no wise.  Whi geuest thou then more for thi 
horse?  why is he more diligently taken hede to then thy sonne?  why geuest 
thou more for a fole, then for the bringyng up of thy chylde?  Be frugall and 
sparynge in other thynges, in thys poynt to be thryfty, is no sparynge but a 
madnes.  There be other agayn that take good heede in chosyng a master, but 
that is at the desyre of their friendes.  They lette passe a meete and 
cunninge man to teache chyldren, and take one that can no skyll, for none 
other cause, but that he is set forwardes at the desyres of their friendes. 
Thou mad man, what meanest thou?  In saylynge thou regardest not the 
affeccion of them that speake good wordes <pb n="K1r"/>
for a man, but thou setteste hym to the helme, whych can beste skyll to 
gouerne the shyp:  in the sonne, when not only he hymself is in ieopardy, but 
the father and mother and all the housholde, yea and the common wealth it 
selfe, wylte thou not use like iudgement?  Thy horse is sicke, whether wilt 
thou sende for a leche at the good worde of thy friend, or for his cunnyng in 
lechcraft.  What?  Is thy sonne of lesse price unto the then thi horse?  Yea 
settest thou lesse by thy selfe then by thy horse?  This beyng a foule thynge: 
in meane citizens, how much more shamefull is it in great menne?  At one 
supper a dashynge agaynst the mischeuous rocke of dice, and so hauynge 
shyp-wracke, thei lose two hundred pound, and yet they saye they be at 
coste, if upon theyr son they bestowe aboue xx. pounde.  No man can geue 
nature, eyther to himselfe, or to other:  howbeit in this poynte also the 
diligence of the parentes helpeth much.  The fyrst poynt is, that a man chose 
to hym selfe a wyfe that is good, come of a good kynred, and well <pb n="K1v"/>
broughte up, also of an healthfull bodie.  For seyng the kynred of the body 
and mynde is very strayelye knytte, it can not be but that the one thynge 
eyther muste be holpen or hurte of the other.  The nexte is, that when the 
husbande dothe hys duetye to get chyldren, he do it neither beyng moued 
wyth anger, nor yet drunken, for these affeccions go into the chylde by a 
secrete infeccion.  A certen philosopher seemed to haue marked that thyng 
properly, whych seynge a yonge man behauinge hym selfe not verye soberlie, 
it is meruell quod he, but if thy father begat the when he was dronke.  Verily 
I thinke this also maketh greatli to the matter, if the mother at all times, 
but specially at the time of concepcion and byrthe, haue her mynde free from 
all crimes, and be of a good conscience.  For ther can be nothyng eyther more 
quiet or more merye then such a mynd.  The thyrd point is that the mother 
noryshe with her own brestes her infant, or if ther hap any necessitie that 
it maye not so be, let be chosen a nurse of a wholsome <pb n="K2r"/>
body, of pure mylke, good condicions, nether drunke, nor brauler, nor 
lecherous.  For the vices that be taken euen in the very beginninges of lyfe, 
both of the bodye and of the mynd, abyde fast untyl we be olde.  Some men 
also write that it skilleth muche who be his play felowes.  Fourthlye that in 
due season he be set to a chosen scholemaster alowed by all mens witnes, 
and many waies tryed.  You must be diligent in chosyng, and after go thorowe 
with it.  Homer disaloweth wher many beate rule:  and after the olde 
prouerbe of the grekes.  The multitude of captaines dyd lose Caria.  And the 
often chaunginge of phisicions hath destroyed manye.  There is nothynge 
more unprofitable, then often to chaunge the master.  For by that meanes the 
web of Penelopes is wouen &amp; unwouen.  But I haue knowen children, 
whych before they wer .xii. yere old, had more then .xii. masters, and that 
thorowe the rechelesnesse of their parentes.  And yet after this is done 
must the parentes be diligent. <pb n="K2v"/>
They shall take heede bothe to the master &amp; to the sonne, neither shall 
they so caste away al care from them as they are wonte to laye all the 
charge of the doughter upon the spouse, but the father shall oftentyme looke 
upon them, and marke whether he profite, remembrynge those thynges whych 
the olde men spake both sagely and wittely, that the forehead is set before 
the hynder part of the head:  and that nothyng sooner fatteth the horse then 
the masters eye, nor that no dunge maketh the ground more fruitfull then the 
masters footyng.  I speake of yonge ons.  For as for the elders it is meete 
sometyme that they be sente far out of oure syght, whiche thing as it were a 
graffing, is inespecially wont to tame yongemens wyttes.  Emonge the 
excellent vertues of Paulus Emilius, this also is praised, that as often as he 
might for his busines in the common welth he wolde be at the exercises of 
hys sonnes.  And Plinie the nepheu was contente nowe and then to go into the 
schole for his friendes sonnes <pb n="K3r"/>
sake, whom he had taken upon him to brynge up in good learnynge. 
Furthermore, that that wee haue spoken of nature is not to be understand 
one wayes.  For there is a nature of a common kynde, as the nature of a man 
is to use reason.  But ther is a nature peculier, eyther to hym or him, that 
properly belongeth either to thys man or that, as if a man wolde saye some 
menne to be borne to disciplines mathematical some to diuinitie, some to 
rethorike some to poetrie, and some to war.  So myghtely disposed they be 
and pulled to these studies, that by no meanes they canne be discoraged 
from them, or so greatly they abhor them, that they wyl sooner go into the 
fyre, then apply their mynde to a science that they hate.  I knewe one 
familierlye whych was verye well seene both in greke and latin, and well 
learned in all liberall sciences, when an archbishop by whom he was found, 
had sende hither by hys letters, that he shulde begynne to heare the teachers 
of the lawe agaynst hys nature.  After he had complayned <pb n="K3v"/>
of this to me (for we laye both together) I exhorted hym to be ruled 
by his patron, saying that it wold wexe more easy, that at the beginning was 
harde, and that at the least waye he shulde geue some part of hys tume to 
that study.  After he had brought oute certen places wonderfull folyshe, 
which yet those professours halfe goddes dyd teache their hearers wyth 
greate authoritie, I aunswered, he shuld set light by them, &amp; take out 
that whiche they taught well:  and after I had preased upon hym wyth many 
argumentes, I am quod he so minded, that as often as I turne my selfe to 
these studies, me thinketh a swerde runneth thorowe my hert.  Wenne that 
bee thus naturallye borne, I thynke they be not to bee compelled against 
their nature, lest after the common saying we shuld leade an Oxe to 
wreastlynge, or an Asse to the harpe.  Peraduenture of this inclinacion you 
may perceiue certen markes in lytle ons.  There be that can pronosticate 
such thygnes by the houre of hys birthe, to <pb n="K4r"/>
whose iudgemente howe muche ought to be geuen.  I leaue it to euerye mans 
estimacion.  It wolde yet muche profite to haue espyed the same as soone as 
can be, because we learne those thynges most easelie, to the which nature 
hath made us.  I thinke it not a very vayne thing to coniecture by the figure 
of the face and the behaueour of the rest of the bodie, what disposicion a 
man is of.  Certes Aristotle so greate a philosopher vouchsaued to put oute a 
booke of phisiognomye verye cunnynge and well laboured.  As saylyng is 
more pleasaunt when wee haue bothe the wynd and the tyde, so be we soner 
taught those things to the whych we be inclined by redines of wyt.  Virgyll 
hath shewed markes wherby a man may know an oxe good for the plough, or a 
cowe meete for generacion &amp; encrease of cattell.  Beste is the oxe that 
looketh grimly.  He recheth by what tokens you may espie a yong colte mete 
for iusting.  Staight waye the colt of a lusty courage trampleth gaylie in 
the fieldes, &amp;c. for you know the verses. <pb n="K4v"/>
They are deceyued whyche beleue that nature hathe geuen unto man no 
markes, whereby hys disposicion many bee gathered, and they do amisse, 
that do not marke them that be geuen.  Albeit in my iudgemente there is 
scante anye discipline, but that the wyt of man is apt to lerne it, if we 
continue in preceptes and exercise.  For what may not a man learne, when an 
Eliphant maye be taught to walke upon a corde, a bear to daunse, and an asse 
to playe the foole.  As nature therefore is in no mannes owne hande, so wee 
haue taught wherin by some meanes we maye helpe nature.  But good 
orderynge and exercise is altogether of our own witte and diligence.  How 
much the waye to teach doth helpe, thys specially declareth, that we se 
daylye, burdens to be lyft up by engins and arte, whiche otherwyse coulde 
bee moued by no strength.  And how greatly exercise auaileth that notable 
saying of the old wise man, inespeciallye proueth, that he ascribeth all 
thynges to diligence and study.  But labour, say they, is <pb n="K5r"/>
not meete for a tender age, &amp; what readines to lerne can be in children 
whych yet scarse knowe that they are men:  I wyll answere to bothe these 
thinges in few wordes.  How agreeth it that that age shulde bee counted 
unmeete for learnynge, whych is nowe apte to learne good maners?  But as 
there be rudimentes of vertue, so be there also of sciences.  Philosophy hath 
his infancie, hys youthe, and rype age.  An horsecolt, which forthwyth 
sheweth his gentle kynd, is not straight way forced wyth the bytte to cary 
on hys backe an armed manne, but wyth easy exercises he learneth the 
fashion of warre.  The calfe that is appoynted to the plowghe, is not 
strayght wayes laden wyth werye yockes, nor prycked wyth sharpe godes, 
but 
as Virgyl hath elegantlye taught:  First they knyt aboute his necke circles 
made of tender twygges, and after when his free necke hathe bene 
accustumed to do seruice, they make rounde hoopes mete, &amp; when they 
be wrythen, ioyne a payre of meete ons together, and <pb n="K5v"/>
so cause the yonge heyfers to gooe forwardes, and often tymes they make 
them to draw an empty cart, and sleightly go awaye, but afterwards they set 
on a great heauy axeltree of beeche, and make them to draw a great plough 
beame of yron.  Plowmen can skyll howe to handell oxen in youthe, and 
attemper their exercises after their strength muche more diligently ought 
this to be done in bringing up our children.  Furthermore the prouidence of 
nature hath geuen unto litle ons a certen mete habilitie.  An infant is not yet 
meete to whome thou shuldest reade the offices of Cicero, or the Ethickes 
of Aristotle, or the moral bokes of Seneca or Plutarche, or the epistels of 
Paule, I confesse, but yet if he do any thyng uncomly at the table, he is 
monyshed, and when he is monyshed, he fashioneth hym selfe to do as he is 
taught.  He is brought into the temple, he lerneth to bowe his kne, to holde 
hys handes manerly, to put of hys cap, and to fashion all the behaueour of 
hys bodie to worshyp God, he is commaunded <pb n="K6r"/>
to holde hys peace when misteries be in doyng, and to turne hys 
eyes to the alter.  These rudimentes of modestye and vertue the childe 
lerneth before he can speake, which because they sticke fast until he be 
elder, they profit somwhat to true religion.  Ther is no difference to a chyld 
when he is first borne, betwene his parentes &amp; straungers.  Anon after 
he learneth to knowe his mother, &amp; after his father.  He learneth by litle 
&amp; litle to reuerence them, he learneth to obey them, &amp; to loue them. 
He unlerneth to be angrye, to be auenged, &amp; when he is bidden kysse 
them that he is angry withal, he doth it, &amp; unlerneth to bable out of 
measure.  He lerneth to rise up, &amp; geue reuerence to an old man, &amp; 
to put of his cap at the image of the crucifix.  Thei that thinke that these 
lytle rudimentes help nothing to vertue, in my mind be greatly deceiued.  A 
certen yonge man when he was rebuked of Plato because he had plaied at 
dice complained that he was so bitterly chidden for so litle harme.  Then 
quod Plato, although it be but smal hurt to play at dice, yet is it great hurt 
to use it. <pb n="K6v"/>
As it is therefore a greate euyll to accustume thyselfe to euyl, so to use thy 
selfe to small good thynges is a greate good.  And that tender age is so 
muche the more apte to learne these thyngs, because of it selfe it is plyaunt 
unto all fashions, because it is not yet occupyed wyth vyce, and is glad to 
folowe, if you shewe it to do any thinge.  And as commonlye it accustumeth 
it selfe to vyce, or euer it understand what vyce is, so wyth lyke easynes 
maye it be accustumed to vertue..  And it is beste to use best thinges euen 
at the fyrst.  That fashion wyll endure longe, to the which you make the 
empty and tender mynde.  Horace wrote that if you thruste oute nature wyth 
a forke, yet wyll it styll come againe.  He wrot it and that very truly, but he 
wrote it of an olde tre.  Therfore the wise husband man wil straight waye 
fashion the plante after that maner whyche he wyll haue tarye for euer when 
it is a tree.  It wyll soone turne in to nature, that you powre in fyrste of all. 
Claye if it be to moyste wyl not kepe the fashion <pb n="K7r"/>
that is prynted in it:  the waxe may be so softe that nothynge can bee made 
of it.  But scarse is there any age so tender that is not able to receyue 
learnyng.  No age sayth Seneca, is to late to learne:  whether that be true or 
no I wot not, surely elderly age is very harde to learne some thyngs.  This is 
doutles, that no age is so yonge but it is apte to be taught, inespecially 
those thynges unto the whych nature hathe made us, for as I sayd:  for thys 
purpose she hath geuen a certen peculier desyre of folowyng, that what so 
euer they haue herde or seene, they desyre to do the lyke, and reioyse when 
they thynke they can do any thyng:  a man wolde saye they wer apes.  And of 
thys ryseth the fyrste coniecture of their wyt and aptnes to be taughte. 
Therefore assone as the man chyld is borne, anone he is apte to lerne 
maners.  After when he hath begon to speake, he is mete to be taught letters. 
Of what thynge regarde is fyrste to be had, a readines by &amp; by is geuen 
to lerne it.  For learnyng although it haue in infinite <pb n="K7v"/>
commodities, yet excepte it wayte upon vertue, it bryngeth more harme then 
good.  Worthilye was refused of wyse menne theire sentence, which thought 
that children under seuen yere olde shulde not be set to lernyng:  and of thys 
sayinge manye beleued Hesiodus to be the author, albeit Aristophanes to 
gramarian sayd, that those morall preceptes in the whych worke it was 
written, were not made by Hesiodus.  Yet nedes must he be some excellent 
wryter, which put forth such a booke that euen learned menne thought it to 
be of Hesiodus doing.  But in case it were Hesiodus, with out doute yet no 
mans authoritie oughte to be of suche force unto us, that we shulde not 
folowe the better if it bee shewed us.  Howebeit who so euer wer of thys 
mynd, they meant not thys, that all thys time untyll seuen yeres shulde bee 
quite voyde of teachyng, but that before that tyme chyldren shulde not bee 
troubled wyth the laboure of studies, in the whych certeine tediousnes 
muste bee deuoured, as of cannyng <pb n="K8r"/>
without booke, sayinge the lesson agayn, and wyth wrytinge it, for 
scant maye a man fynde anye that hathe so apte a wytte to bee taught, so 
tractable and that so wil folowe, whyche wyll accustume it selfe to these 
thynges wythout prickyng forward.  Chrisippus apoynted thre yeres to the 
nourses, not that in the meane space there shuld be no teachynge of 
manners, and speach, but that the infante shulde be prepared by fayr meanes 
to lern vertue and letters, ether of the nurses, or of the parentes, whose 
maners wythout peraduenture do help very much to the good fashionynge of 
chyldren.  And becaue the fyrste teachyng of chyldren is, to speake playnly 
and wythout faute, in this afore tyme the nourses and the parentes helpe not 
a lytle.  Thys begynnyng, not only very muche profiteth to eloquence, but 
also to iudgement, and to the knowledge of all disciplines:  for the 
ignoraunce of tonges, eyther hath marred all the sciences, or greatly hurt 
them, euen diuinitie it selfe also, phisicke &amp; law. <pb n="K8v"/>
The eloquence of the Gracchians was muche merueyled at in tyme paste, but 
for the most they myghte thanke theyr mother Cornelia for it, as Tullie 
iudgeth.  It apeareth sayth he, that the chyldren wer not so much brought up 
in the mothers lappe, as in the mothers communicacion.  So theyr fyrste 
scholyng was to them the mothers lap.  Lelia also expressed in her goodly 
talke the eloquence of her father Caius.  And what marueile.  While she was 
yet yonge she was dyed wyth her fathers communicacion, euen when she was 
borne in his armes.  The same happened to the two sisters, Mucia and 
Licinia, neeces unto Caius.  Specially is praysed the elegance of Licinia in 
speakyng, whiche was the daughter of Lucius Crassus, one Scipios wyfe as I 
weene.  What nedes many words?  All the house and all the kynred euen to 
the nepheus, and their cosyns dyd often expresse elegance of their fore 
fathers in artificiall and cunnyng speakyng.  The daughter of Quintus 
Hortencius so expressed <pb n="L1r"/>
her fathers eloquence, that ther was longe ago an oracion of hers to se, 
that she made before the officers called Triumuiri, not only (as Fabius 
sayth) to the prayse of womankynd.  To speake without faut no litle helpe 
brynge also the nourses, tutors, and playe felowes.  For as touching the 
tonges, so great is the readines of that age to learne them, that within a 
few monethes a chylde of Germany maye learne Frenche, and that whyle he 
dothe other thinges also:  neyther dothe that thynge come euer better to 
passe then in rude and verye yonge yeres.  And if this come to passe in a 
barbarous and unruled tonge, whych wryteth other wyse then it speaketh, 
and the whych hathe hys schriches and wordes scarse of a man, howe muche 
more easely wyl it be done in the Greeke or Latine tonge?  Kyng Mithridates 
is read to haue perfitly knowen, .xxii. tonges, so that he could plead the lawe 
to euery nacion in their owne tonges wythoute anye interpreter. 
Themistocles within a yeres space <pb n="L1v"/>
lerned perfitly the Persians tong because he wolde the better commen wyth 
the kyng.  If sumwhat old age can do that, what is to be hoped for of a 
chylde?  And all this businesse standeth specially in two thynges, memorye, 
and imitacion.  We haue shewed before alredy that there is a certein naturall 
greate desyre in chyldren to folowe other, and very wyse men wryte that 
memorie in chyldren is verye sure in holdinge faste:  and if we distrust their 
authoritie, experience it selfe wyll proue it unto us.  Those thynges that we 
haue seene beyng chyldren, they so abide in our mindes, as though we had 
sene them yesterdaie.  Thinges that we read to day when we be old, wythin 
two daies after if we read them agayn they seme newe unto us.  Furthermore 
howe fewe haue we seene whych haue had good successe in lernynge the 
tonges when they were olde?  And if some haue wel spedde them in 
knoweledge, yet the right sound and pronunciacion hath chaunsed either to 
none, or to very few.  For rare examples be no <pb n="L2r"/>
common rules.  Neyther for thys muste we call chyldren to lerne the tonges 
after sixtene yere olde, because that the elder Cato lerned latine, and 
Greeke, when he was thre score and ten yeres olde.  But Cato of Utica muche 
better lerned then the other and more eloquent, when he was a chylde was 
continuallye wyth hys master Sarpedo.  And here we ought so much the more 
to take heede, because that yonge age led rather by sense then iudgement, 
wyll assone or peraduenture soner lerne leudnes &amp; things that be 
naught.  Yea we forget soner good thinges then naught.  Gentile philosophers 
espyed that, &amp; merueyled at it, and could not search out the cause, 
whiche the christen philosophers haue shewed unto us:  which telleth that 
this redines to mischiefe is setteled in us of Adam the first father of 
mankind.  Thys thynge as it can not be false, so is it very true, that the 
greateste parte of this euyll commeth of leude and naughty bryngyng up, 
inespeciallye of tender youthe, whyche is plyeable to euerye thynge. 


</p>
            <p>
               <pb n="L2v"/>We fynd in writyng that great Alexander lerned certeine fautes of hys 
master Leonides, whyche he could not leaue when he was well growen up, 
and a great Emperour.  Therefore as long as amonge the latines floryshed 
that olde vertuousnes of good maners, chyldren were not committed to an 
hyrelynge to be taught, but were taughte of the parentes themselues &amp; 
their kinsfolke, as of their uncles both by father and mother, of the 
graundfathers, as Plutarch sayth:  For they thought it especially perteyned 
to the honour of their kynred, if they had very manye excellentlye well seene 
in liberall knowledge, where as now adayes all nobilitie almost standeth in 
painted &amp; grauen armes, dauncing, huntynge, and dicynge.  Spurius 
Carbilius of a bond man made free, whose patrone Carbilius brought in the 
fyrste example of diuorce, is reported to be the fyrste that taught an open 
grammer schole.  Before thys tyme it was counted a verye vertuous office if 
euery man taught hys kynsefolke in vertue <pb n="L3r"/>
and lernyng.  Nowe is thys theyr onlye care, to seeke for their chyld a wyfe 
wyth a good dowrye.  That done, they thynke they haue done all that 
belongeth to a father.  But as the world is alwayes redy to be worse and 
worse, dayntines hathe perswaded us to commit this office to a tuter that 
is one of our householde, and a gentleman is put to be taught of a seruaunte. 
In whyche thynge in deede, if we wolde take heede whom we chose, the 
ieopardy were so muche the lesse, because the teacher liued not only in the 
fathers syght, but also wer under hys power if he dyd amysse.  They that 
wer very wyse, either bought lerned seruauntes, or prouided they myghte be 
lerned, that they myghte be teachers to their children.  But howe muche 
wyser were it, if the parents wolde get lernyng for thys entent, that they 
them selues myght teach theyr owne chyldren.  Verelye by thys meanes the 
profite wolde be double, as the commoditie is double if the Byshoppe shewe 
hym selfe a good man, to the entente he maye <pb n="L3v"/>
encourage very many to the loue of vertue.  Thou wylt saye:  euerye man hath 
not leasure, and they be lothe to take so greate payne.  But go to good syr, 
Lette us caste wyth oure selfe howe muche tyme wee lose at dice, 
bankettynge, and beholdynge gaye syghtes, and playinge wyth fooles, and I 
weene wee shall bee ashamed to saye wee lacke leasure to that thynge 
whych oughte to be done, all other set asyde.  We haue tyme sufficiente to 
do all we shulde do, if we bestowe it so thriftelye as we shulde do.  But the 
daye is short to us, when we lose the greater part thereof.  Consider thys 
also, howe greate a porcion of tyme is geuen now and then to the foelyshe 
busines of our friendes.  If we can not do as they all wolde haue us, verelye 
wee oughte chiefely to regarde our chyldren.  What payne refuse we to leaue 
unto oure chyldren a ryche patrimonye and well stablished:  and to get that 
for them whiche is better then all this, shulde it yrke us to take laboure? 
namelye <pb n="L4r"/>
when naturall loue and the profite of them whyche be mooste neareste unto 
us, maketh sweete al the grief and payne.  If that were not, when wolde the 
mothers beare so longe tediousenes of chyldbyrth and nursyng.  He loueth his 
sonne lyghtlye whych is greued to teache hym.  But the manner to entruste 
them was the more easy to them in olde tyme, because the learned and 
unlearned people spake all one tong, saue that the learned spake more 
truelye, more elegantly, more wiselye, and more copiousely.  I confesse 
that, and it were a very shorte way to learnynge, if it were so nowe a dayes. 
And there haue bene some that haue gone aboute to renewe and brynge again 
those olde examples, and to doo as those olde fathers haue done afore tyme, 
as in Phrisia, Canterians, in Spayne Queene Elisabeth the wyfe of 
Fardinandus, oute of whose familye there haue come forthe very manye 
womenne bothe merueylouselye well learned and verteouse. <pb n="L4v"/>
Emong the englishe men, it greued not the ryght worshypful Thomas More, 
although beyng much occupyed in the kynges matters, to be a teacher to hys 
wyfe, daughters, and sonne, fyrste in vertue, and after to knowledge of 
Greke and Latine.  Verely this ought to be done in those that we haue 
apoynted to learnynge.  Neyther is there anye ieopardie that they shulde be 
ignoraunt in the peoples tonge, for thei shall learne that whether they wyl 
or not by companye of men.  And if there be none in oure house that is lerned, 
anon we shulde prouide for some cunnyng man, but tryed both in maners and 
lernyng.  It is a folyshe thyng to make a profe in thy sonne, as in a slaue of 
litle value, whether hys teacher be learned or not, and whether he bee a good 
man that thou haste gotten hym or not.  In other thinges pardon may be geuen 
to negligence, but here thou muste haue as manye eyes as Argus had, and 
muste be as vigilant as is possible.  They say:  a man maye not twyse do a 
faute in war: <pb n="L5r"/>
here it is not laweful to do once amisse.  Moreouer the soner the child shall 
be set to a master, so much shal hys brynginge up come the better to passe. 
I knowe some men fynde thys excuse, that it is ieopardy left the labour of 
studies make that good health of the tender bodye weaker.  Here I myght 
ensure, that althoughe the strength of the bodye wer sumwhat taken awaye, 
that thys incommoditie is well recompensed by so goodly gyftes of the 
mynd.  For we fashion not a wrestler, but a philosopher, a gouernour of the 
common wealth, to whom it is sufficient to be healthful, although he haue 
not the strengthe of Milo:  yet do I confesse that somewhat we must tender 
the age, that it maye waxe the more lustye.  But there be manye that 
foolyshely do feare leste their chyldren shulde catche harme by learnynge, 
whych yet feare not the much greater peryll that cometh of to muche meate, 
whereby the wyttes of the litle ons no lesse be hurted then bee theyr bodyes 
by kyndes of meates and drynkes that be not meete for <pb n="L5v"/>
that age.  They brynge theyr lytle children to great and longe feastes, yea 
feastyng sometyme untyl farre forth nyghtes, they fyl them wyth salt and 
hoat meates, somtyme euen tyl thei vomite.  They bynde in and loade the 
tender bodies wyth unhandsome garmentes to set them out, as some trym 
apes, in mans apparel, and otherwayes they weaken their children, and they 
neuer more tenderlye be afrayed of their health, then when communicacion 
is begon to be had of lernynge, that is of that thynge whych of al other is 
moste wholesom and necessarye.  That whych we haue spoken touchyng 
health, that same perteineth to the care of hys bewety, whyche as I 
confesse is not to be lyght set bye, so to carefully to be regarded, is not 
very meete for a man.  Neyther do we more weywardlye fear any other thyng 
then the hurt of it to come by studie, where it is hurt a greate deale more by 
surfet, dronkennes, untymelye watchynge, by fyghtyng and woundes, finally 
by ungracious pockes, which scarse anie <pb n="L6r"/>
man escapeth that liueth intemperatly.  From these thyngs rather let 
them see they keepe their children then from lernyng, whych so carefully 
take thought for the health and dewtie.  Howbeit thys also may be prouided 
for by our care &amp; diligence that ther shuld be very litle labour and 
therfore litle losse.  This shal be if neyther many thyngs, neither euery 
lyght thynge be taught them when they be yong, but the best only &amp; that 
be mete for there age, whiche is delighted rather in pleasaunt thynges then 
in subtile.  Secondly, a fayre manoure of teachynge shall cause that it may 
seme rather a playe then a labour, for here the age must be beguiled with 
sweete flattering wordes, which yet can not tell what fruit, what honour, 
what pleasure lernyng shall brynge unto them in tyme to come.  And this 
partly shal be done by the teachers gentlenes, &amp; curteous behaueour, 
&amp; partlye by his wit &amp; subtile practise, wherbi he shal deuise 
diuerse prety meanes to make lerning pleasaunt to the chyld, &amp; pul hym 
away from feling of labour. <pb n="L6v"/>
For there is nothynge worse then when the waywardnes of the master 
causeth the children to hate lernyng before they knowe wherefore it shulde 
be loued.  The fyrst degree of lerning, is the loue of the master.  In processe 
of tyme it shall come to passe that the chyld whych fyrst began to loue 
lernyng for the masters sake, afterwards shall loue the master because of 
lernyng.  For as many giftes are very dere unto us euen for thys cause, that 
they come from them whome wee loue hertelye:  so lernyng, to whom it can 
not yet be pleasaunt thorowe discrescion, yet to them it is acceptable for 
the loue they beare to the teacher.  It was very well spoken of Isocrates 
that he lerneth very much, whych is desirous of lernyng.  And we gladlye 
lerne of them whome we loue.  But some be of so unpleasaunt maners that 
they can not bee loued, no not of their wyues, theyr countenaunce lowryng, 
their companye currishe, they seme angrye euen when they be beste pleased, 
they can not speke fayre, scarse can they laughe when <pb n="L7r"/>
men laugh upon them, a man wold saye they were borne in an angrye hour. 
These men I iudge scant worthye to whome we shulde put oure wylde horses 
to be broke, muche lesse wuld I thynke that thys tender and almost suckynge 
age shuld be committed to them.  Yet be ther some that thynke that these 
kynde of men, euen inespecyally worthye to be set to teache yonge chyldren, 
whylest they thynke their sturdynes in lookynge is holynes.  But it is not 
good trustyng the lookes, under that frownynge face lurke often tymes most 
unchaste and wanton maners, neyther is to be spoken amonge honeste men, 
to what shamefulnes these bouchers abuse chyldren by fearyng them.  No nor 
the parentes themselues can well bring up theyr chyldren, if they be no more 
but feared.  The fyrste care is to be beloued, by lytle and lytle foloweth 
after, not feare, but a certen liberall and gentle reuerence which is more of 
value then feare.  Howe properly then I praye you be those chyldren prouided 
for, which being <pb n="L7v"/>
yet scante foure yere olde are sente to schole, where sytteth an unknowen 
scholemaster, rude of manners, not verye sober, and sometyme not well in 
hys wytte, often lunatike, or hauynge the fallyng sycknes, or frenche 
pockes?  For there is none so vyle, so naughte, so wretched, whome the 
common people thynketh not sufficiente ynoughe to teache a grammer 
schole.  And thei thynkyng they haue gotten a kingdome, it is marueyle to see 
howe they set up the brystels because thei haue rule, not upon beastes, as 
sayeth Terence, but upon that age whiche ought to be cheryshed wyth all 
gentlenes.  You wolde saye it were not a schole, but a tormentynge place: 
nothynge is hearde there beside the flappynge upon the hande, beside 
yorkynge of toddes, besyde howlynge and sobbinge and cruell threatnynges. 
What other thynge maye chyldren learne hereof, then to hate lernyng?  When 
this hatered hath once setteled in the tender myndes, yea when they be old 
they abhorre studye.  It is also muche <pb n="L8r"/>
more foolyshe, that some men sende their lytle chyldren to a pyuyshe 
dronken woman to learne to reade and wryte.  It is agaynste nature that 
women shulde haue rule upon menne:  besyde that, nothynge is more cruell 
then that kynde, if they bee moued with anger, as it wyll soone be, and wyll 
not cease tyll it be full reuenged.  Monasteries also, and colleges of 
brethern, for so they cal them selues, seeke for their liuynge hereof, and in 
theyr darke corners teache the ignoraunt chyldren commenlye by menne that 
be but a lytle learned, or rather leudlye learned, althoughe we graunte they 
bee bothe wyse and honeste.  Thys kynde of teachynge howe so euer other 
menne alowe it, by my counsell no manne shall use it, who soeuer entendeth 
to haue hys child well brought up.  It behoueth that eyther there were no 
schoole, or else to haue it openlye abrode.  It is a shorte waye in dede that 
commonlye is used:  for manye be compelled of one more easelye by feare, 
that one broughte up of one liberallye. 


</p>
            <p>
               <pb n="L8v"/>But it is no great thynge to beare rule upon Asses or Swyne, but to brynge up 
chyldren liberallye as it is veri hard, so is it a goodly thing.  It is tiranny to 
oppresse citizens by feare, to keepe them in good order, by loue, moderacion 
and prudence, it is princely.  Diogenes beynge taken of the Agenites, and 
brought oute to be solde, the cryer axed hym by what title he wolde be set 
out to the byer.  Axe quod he if any wyl bye a man that can rule chyldren.  At 
this straunge prayse manye laughed.  One that hadde chyldren at home 
communed wyth the philosopher, whether he could do in deede that he 
professed.  He sayde he coulde.  By shorte communicacion he perceyued he 
was not of the common sorte, but under a pore cloke, ther was hydden great 
wisedome:  he bought hym, and brought hym home, &amp; put his chyldren to 
him to be taught.  As the Scots say, ther be no greater bearers then frenche 
scholemasters.  When they be tolde thereof, they be wonte to answere, that 
that nacion euen lyke the Phrigians <pb n="M1r"/>
is not amended but bi stripes.  Whether this be true let other men 
iudge.  Yet I graunt that there is some difference in the nacion, but much 
more in the propertie of euerye seueral wyt.  Some you shal soner kyl, then 
amende wyth stripes:  but the same bi loue and gentle monicions you may 
leade whither ye wyll.  Truth it is that of thys disposicion I my selfe was 
when I was a childe, and when my master whych loued me aboue all other, 
because he sayd he conceiued a certen great hope of me, toke more heede, 
watched me well, and at laste to proue howe I could abyde the rod, and 
laying a faute unto my charge which I neuer thought of, did beat me, that 
thinge so put awaye from me all the loue of studie, and so discouraged my 
chyldyshe mynd, that for sorowe I hadde almost consumed awaye, and in 
deede folowed therof a quartaine ague.  When at laste he had perceiued hys 
faute, among his friendes he bewailed it.  This wyt (quod he) I had almoste 
destroyed before I knewe it.  For he <pb n="M1v"/>
was a man both wyttye and well learned, and as I thynke, a good man.  He 
repented him, but to late for my parte.  Here nowe (good syr)  coniecture me 
howe many frowarde wyttes these unlerned greate hearers do destroye, yet 
proud in their owne conceite of learnyng, wayeward, dronken, cruel, and that 
wyl beate for their pleasure:  themselues of such a cruell nature, that they 
take plesure of other mens tormentes.  These kynde of men shuld haue ben 
bouchers or hangmen, not teachers of youth.  Neyther do any torment 
chyldren more cruelly, then they that canne not teache them.  What shulde 
thei do in scholes but passe the daye in chydyng and beatynge?  I knewe a 
diuine and that familierly, a man of greate name, whych was neuer satisfied 
wyth crudelity against his scholers, when he him selfe had masters that 
were very great beaters.  He thought that dyd much helpe to caste downe the 
fiersnes of their wittes, &amp; tame the wantonnes of their youth.  He neuer 
feasted amonge hys stocke, but as <pb n="M2r"/>
Comedies be wont to haue a mery endyng, so contrary when they had eaten 
theyr meat, one or other was haled oute to be beaten wyth toddes:  and 
sometime he raged against them that had deserued nothynge, euen because 
they shuld be accustumed to stripes.  I my selfe on a time stode nexte hym, 
when after diner he called out a boie as he was wont to do, as I trow ten 
yere olde.  And he was but newe come frome hys mother into that compani. 
He told us before that the chyld had a very good woman to hys mother, and 
was earnestly committed of her unto hym:  anon to haue an occacion to beate 
hym, he beganne to laye to hys charge I wotte not what wantonnesse:  When 
the chylden shewed hym selfe to haue nothyng lesse, and beckened to hym to 
whome he committed the chyefe rule of hys colledge, surnamed of the 
thynge, a tormentoure, to beate, hym ne by and by caste doune the chylde, 
and beate hym as thoughe he had done sacrilege.  The diuine sayde once or 
twyse, it is inoughe, it is inoughe. <pb n="M2v"/>
But that tormentour deaffe with feruentnes, made no ende of his bochery, 
tyl the chylde was almost in a sounde:  Anon the diuine turninge to us, he 
hathe deserued nothynge quod he, but that he muste be made lowe.  Who euer 
after that maner hath taught hys slaue, or hys Asse?  A gentle horse is 
better tamed with puping of the mouth or softe handlyng, then wyth whyp or 
spurres.  And if you handle hym hard, he wil whynche, he wyll kycke, he wyll 
byte, and go bacwardes.  An oxe if you pricke hym to harde wyth godes, wyl 
caste of his yocke, and run upon hym that pricked hym.  So muste a gentle 
nature be handled as is the whelpe of a Lion.  Onlye arte tameth elephantes, 
not violence, neyther is there any beaste to wylde, but that it wyl be tamed 
by gentlenes, neyther any so tame, but immoderate cruelnes wil anger it.  It 
is a seruyle thynge to be chastened by feare, and common custume calleth 
chyldren free men, because liberall and gentle bringyng up he commeth them, 
much unlike to seruile. <pb n="M3r"/>
Yet they that be wyse do thys rather, that seruauntes by gentelnes and 
benefites leaue of their slauyshe condicions:  remembryng that they also be 
men, and not beastes.  There be rehearsed meruelous examples of seruaunts 
toward their masters, whome verely they shulde not haue founde such if 
they hadde kept them under only by strypes.  A seruaunt if he be corrigible is 
better amended by monicions, by honestie, &amp; good turnes, then by 
stripes:  if he be paste amendemente, he is hardened to extreme mischief 
and eyther wyll runne awaye and rob hys master, or by some craft go aboute 
his masters deathe.  Sometime he is reuenged on his masters crueltie, 
thoughe it coste hym his lyfe.  And there is no creature more fereful then 
man, whom cruell iniurie hathe taught to dispyse his owne lyfe.  Therfore 
the common prouerb that sayth a man hath as manye enemies as he hath 
seruauntes, If it be true, I thynke it may be chiefly imputed to the 
unreasonablenes of the master:  for it is a poynte of <pb n="M3v"/>
arte, and not of chaunce to rule wel seruauntes.  And if the wyser masters 
go about thys thynge, so to use their seruauntes, that thei shuld serue them 
well and gently, and in stede of seruauntes had rather haue them fre men, 
how shameful is it bi bryngyng up, to make seruantes of those that be gentle 
and free by nature?  Not wythout cause dothe the olde manne in the comedie 
thynke that there is greate difference betwixte a master and a father.  The 
master only compelleth, the father by honestie and gentelnes accustumeth 
hys sonne, to do well of hys owne mynde, rather then by scare of an other: 
and that he shulde bee all one in hys presence and behind hys backe.  He that 
can not do this sayth he, lette hym confesse that he can not rule chyldren. 
But there oughte to be a litle more difference betwyxte a father and the 
master, then betwixt a kinge and a tirant.  Wee putte awaye a tiraunte from 
the common wealthe, and we chose tirauntes, yea for oure sonnes, eyther we 
oure selfes exercyse tirannye <pb n="M4r"/>
upon them.  Howebeit thys vyle name of seruitude oughte utterlye to bee 
taken awaye oute of the lyfe of chrysten menne.  Sainte Paule desyreth Philo 
to bee good to Onesimus, not nowe as a seruaunte, but as a deere brother in 
steede of a seruaunte.  And wrytyng to the Ephesians, he monysheth the 
masters to remitte theyr bytternesse agaynst theyr seruauntes, and their 
threatnynges, remembrynge that they are rather felow seruauntes then 
masters, because they both haue a common master in heauen, whyche as 
well wyll punyshe the masters if they do amysse, as the seruauntes.  The 
Apostle wolde not haue the masters ful of threatning, muche lesse full of 
beatynge:  for he saythe not, pardonynge your strypes, but pardonynge your 
threatenynges, and yet wee woulde haue oure chyldren:  nothynge but beaten, 
whyche scarse the Galeye masters or Sea robbers do agaynste theyr slaues 
and rowers.  But of chyldren, what do the same Apostle commaunde us? 


</p>
            <p>
               <pb n="M4v"/>In somuch he wyll not haue them beaten slauyshely, he commaundeth all 
crueltye and bytternes to be awaye from our monicions and chydyng.  You 
fathers saythe he, prouoke not your chyldren to anger, but bring them up in 
discipline and chastisyng of the Lorde.  And what the discipline of the lorde 
is, he shal soone se that wyll consider, wyth what gentlenes, what 
meekenes, what charitie the Lord Jesus hathe taught, suffered, and noryshed 
and brought up by litle and lytel his disciples.  The lawes of man do temper 
the fathers power:  the same also permit unto the seruauntes an accion of 
euyll handlyng, and from whence then commeth thys crueltye amonge 
christen men?  In time paste one Auxon a knight of Rome, whylest he wente 
about to amende hys sonne by beatynge hym unmesurably, he kylled him. 
That crueltye so moued the people, that the fathers and chyldren haled hym 
in to the market place, &amp; al to be pricked hym, thrust him in wyth theyr 
wrytyng pinnes, nothynge regarding <pb n="M5r"/>
the dignitie of his knighthod, and Octauuos Augustus had much a do to 
saue hym.  But now a daies howe many Auxons do we see whiche the thorowe 
cruell beatynge, burie the chyldrens healthe, make them one eyed, weaken 
them, and sometyme kyll them.  Roddes serue not to some mens crueltie, 
they turne them and beate them wyth the greate ende, they geue them 
buffettes, and stryke the yonge ons wyth their firstes, or whatsoeuer is 
next at hand they snatche it, and dashe it upon them.  It is told in the lawe, 
that a certen sowter, when he layd one of his sowters upon the hynder parte 
of the heade wyth a laste, he stroke oute one of hys eyes, and that for that 
deede he was punyshed by the lawe.  What shall we saye of them whyche 
beside their beatinges, do them shamefull despite also?  I wolde neuer haue 
beleued it, excepte both I had knowen the chylde, and the doer of this 
crueltie perfitelye.  A chylde yet scante .xii. yere olde, whose honeste 
parentes had done good to his master, they handled so <pb n="M5v"/>
cruellye, that scarse anye suche tiraunt as was Mezencius or Phalaris coulde 
do more cruelly.  They caste so much mans dunge in to the childes mouth 
that scarsely he coulde spit, but was compelled to swallowe doune a great 
parte of it.  What tiraunt dyd euer suche kynde of despyght?  After suche 
daynties, they exercysed suche lordelynes.  The chylde naked was hanged up 
wyth cordes by the armeholes, as though he hadde bene a stronge thyefe, and 
there is amonge the Germanes no kynde of punishement more abhorred then 
thys.  Anone as he honge, they all to beat hym wyth roddes, almoste euen tyll 
deathe.  For the more the chylde denyed the thynge that he dyd not, so muche 
the more dyd they beate hym.  Put also to thys, the tormentour hym selfe 
almoste more to be feared then the verie punyshemente, hys eres lyke a 
servente, hys narowe and wrythen mouth, hys sharpe voyce lyke a spirite, 
hys face wanne and pale, hys head roulyng about, threatninges and rebukes 
suche as they lusted in <pb n="M6r"/>
theyr anger:  a manne wolde haue thought it a furie out of hel.  What 
folowen?  anone after this punishement the chyld fel sicke with 
great ieopardye both of mynde and lyfe.  Then this tormentour began fyrst to 
complayne, he wrote to hys father to take awaye hys sonne as sone as could 
be, and that he had bestowed as much phisicke upon him as he coulde, but in 
vayne upon the chylde that was paste remedye.  When the sickens of the body 
was somewhat put away by medicines, yet was the minde so astonied, that 
we feared leste he wold neuer come agayne to the olde strength of hys mynd. 
Neither was thys the cruelty of one daye, as longe as the childe dwelte wyth 
hym there passed no daye but he was cruely beaten once or twise.  I knowe 
thou suspectest o reader, that it was an haynouse faute, wherunto so cruell 
remedie was used.  I wyl shew you in few words.  Ther was found both of hys 
that was beaten and of two others, theire bookes blotted wyth ynke, their 
garmentes cutten, and their hose arayed wyth mannes donge. 


</p>
            <p>
               <pb n="M6v"/>He that played thys playe was a chylde borne to all myschiefe, whiche by 
other ungracious deedes afterwardes, made men beleue the other to be true 
that were done before.  And he was nephewe by the systers syde to this mad 
docter:  euen then playing a part before to these thyngs whych souldiers are 
wont to do in bataile or robbynge.  At an hostes house of his, he pulled oute 
the faucet, and let the wyne runne upon the ground, and as one to shew a 
pleasure, he sayde that he felt the fauour of the wyne:  wyth an other of hys 
felowes he daylye played at the sworde, not on sporte, but in earnest, that 
euen then you myght wel perceyue he wolde be a thyefe or a murtherer, or 
whych is very lyke to them, that he wolde be an hyred souldier.  Although the 
teacher fauored hym, yet fearynge leste they shulde one kyll an other, he 
sente awaye his cofen.  For he had for that other a good rewarde:  and he was 
of this sorte of gospellers, to whom nothing is more swete then monei.  His 
godfather was made surely to <pb n="M7r"/>
beleue that the child was with a good and diligent master, when in deede he 
dwelte wyth a boucher, &amp; was continually in company, and made drudge 
with a man that was halfe mad, and continually sicke.  Thus fauoringe more 
his kynseman then hym by whom he had so much profite, the suspicion was 
layde upon the harmeles, to whom they ascribed so muche malice that he 
wolde teare and defile his owne garmentes to auoide suspicion if any suche 
thyng had bene done.  But the child commyng both of good father and mother, 
dyd neuer shewe any token of such a naughtie disposicion:  and at thys daye 
there is nothyng farther from all malice then are hys maners, whyche nowe 
free frome all feare telleth all the matter in order as it was donne. 


</p>
            <p>To suche tutors do honeste citizens committe their chyldren whome they 
moste loue, and suche do complayne that they be not wel rewarded for their 
paynes.  And this tormentour wolde not once knoweledge he had done amisse, 
but had <pb n="M7v"/>
rather playe the starke mad man, then confesse his faute:  and yet agaynst 
such is not taken an accion of euyll handlyng, neither hath the rigoure of the 
lawe anye power agaynste suche huge crueltie.  There is no anger worse to 
be pleased then theirs that be lyke to haue the fallynge sycknes.  Howe many 
things be crepte in, into the lyfe of christen men, not meete neither for the 
Phrigians nor the Scithians, of the which I wyl shew one much like this 
matter.  The yong gentleman is send in to the uniuersitie to lerne the 
liberall sciences.  But with how ungentle despightes is he begun in them? 
Fyrst they rub his chyn, as though they wolde shaue his bearde:  hereunto 
thei use pisse, or if ther be any fouler thyng.  This liquour is dashed into his 
mouth, &amp; he may not spit it out.  Wyth paynfull bobbes they make as 
though thei drewe hornes from him:  somtime he is compelled to drinke a 
great deale of vinegre or salte, or whatsoeuer it listeth the wyld company 
of yong men to geue him:  for when they begin the play, thei make him swere 
that he shal obey al that they commaund <pb n="M8r"/>
him.  At last they hoyse him up, &amp; dashe his backe against a post 
as often as they list.  After these so rustical despightes sumtime foloweth 
an ague or a paine of the backe that neuer can be remedied.  Certes this 
foolishe play endeth in a dronken banket:  with such beginninges enter they 
into the studies of liberal sciences.  But it were mete that after this sorte 
thei shuld begin a boucher, a tormentour a baud or a bonde slaue or a 
boteman, not a chidl appointed to the holy studies of lerning.  It is a meruel 
that yong men geuen to liberal studies be mad after this fashion, but it is 
more meruel that these things be alowed of suche is haue the role of youth. 
To so foule &amp; cruel solyshenes is pretensed the name of custume, as 
though the custume of an euil thing wer any thing else then an old errour, 
whiche ought so much the more diligently to be pulled up bicause it is crept 
among many.  So continueth among the diuines that maner of a vesper, for 
they note an euyl thynge with a like name, more mere for scoffers then 
diuines.  But thei that professe liberal sciences, shuld haue also liberal 
sports. <pb n="M8v"/>
But I come againe to chyldren, to whome nothyng is more unprofitable, then 
to be used to stripes, whiche enormitie causeth that the gentle nature is 
intractable, and the viler driuen to desperacion:  and continuaunce of them 
maketh that both the bodye is hardened to stripes, &amp; the mynd to 
wordes.  Nay we may not oftentymes chyde them to sharplye.  A medicine 
naughtelye used, maketh the sickenes worse, helpeth it not, and if it be 
layde to continuallye, by litle and litle, it ceaseth to be a medicine, and 
dothe nothinge else then dothe stinkynge and unwholesome meate.  But here 
some man wyll laye unto us the godlye sayinges of the Hebrues.  He that 
spareth the rod hateth hys chylde and he that loueth hys sonne, beateth hym 
muche.  Agayne:  Bowe downe the necke of thy chylde in youth, and beate hys 
sydes whyle he is an infante very yonge.  Suche chastisemente peraduenture 
was meete in tyme paste for the Iewes.  Nowe must the sayinge be 
expounded more ciuilely.  And if a man wil <pb n="N1r"/>
be hard to us wyth letters and sillables, what is more cruell then to bend 
the necke of a chyld, &amp; to beat the sides of an infant?  woldest thou not 
beleue that a bull were taught to the plowgh, or an asse to bear paniars, and 
not a man to vertue?  And what rewarde doth he promise us?  That he grope 
not after other mennes dores.  He is afeard left his son shulde be poore, as 
the greateste of all mischiefe.  What is more coldly spoken then thys 
sentence?  Let gentle admonision be oure rodde, and sometyme chydyng also, 
but sauced wyth mekenes, not bitternes.  Let us use thys whyp continuallye 
in our chyldren, that beyng wel brought up, they maye haue at home a meanes 
to lyue well, and not be compelled to begge counsell at their neighbours how 
to do their busines.  Licon the philosopher hath shewed .ii sharpte spurres to 
quicken up chyldrens wyttes, shame, and prayse:  shame is the feare of a 
iust reproch, prayse is the norysher of all verteous actes:  wyth these 
prickes lette us quicken our chyldrens wyttes. <pb n="N1v"/>
Also if you wyl, I wyl shewe you a club to beate their sides wythall. 
Continuall labour vanquysheth all thynges sayth the best of al poetes.  Let us 
wake, let us prycke them forwardes, &amp; styl call upon them, by 
requitinge, repetynge, and often teachyng:  Wyth this club let us beate the 
sydes of our infantes.  Fyrst let them lerne to loue, and maruell at vertue 
and lernyng, to abhor sinne and ignorance.  Let them heare some praysed for 
theyr well doinges, and some rebuked for their euyl.  Let examples be 
brought in of those men to whom lernyng hath gotten hygh glorye, ryches, 
dignitie, and authoritie.  And againe of them to whom their euyll condicions 
&amp; wyt wythout all lernyng hath brought infamie, contempt, pouertye 
and myschiefe.  These verely be the clubbes meete for christians, that make 
disciples of Jesu.  And if we can not profite by monicions, nor prayers, 
neyther by emulacion, nor shame, nor prayse, nor by other meanes, euen the 
chastenyng with the rod, if it so require, ought to be gentle &amp; honeste. <pb n="N2r"/>
For euen thys that the bodies of gentle children shulde be made bare, is a 
kind of despite.  Howbeit Fabius utterly condemneth al the custume to beate 
gentle chyldren.  Some man wil saye, what shall be done to them if they can 
not be driuen to study out by stripes?  I answer roundly, what wold ye do to 
asses or to oxen if thei went to schole?  Woldest thou not driue them in to 
the contrey, &amp; put the one to the backhouse, the other to the plowe.  For 
there be men as well borne to the plowe and to the backehouse, as oxen and 
asses be.  But they wyll saye:  then decreseth my flocke.  What then?  Yea 
and myne aduauntage to.  Thys is an harde matter:  thys maketh them to 
weepe.  They fet more by money then by the profite of the chyldren.  But 
suche are all the common sorte of folyshe teachers.  I graunte.  As the 
philosophers describe a wyse man, the rethoricians an oratour, such one as 
scarse maye be found in anye place:  So muche more easye it is to prescribe 
what manner of man a scholmaster shuld be, then to find many that wil be 
as you wold haue them. <pb n="N2v"/>
But thys oughte to be a publyque care and charge, and belongeth to the ciuyle 
officer, and chyef prelats of the church:  that as ther be men appointed to 
serue in war, to singe in churches, so muche more there shulde be ordeined 
that shuld teach citizens chyldren well and gently.  Vespasianus oute of hys 
owne coffers gaue yerely sixe hundred pounde to Latine and Greke 
rethoricians.  Plinie the nephew of his owne liberalitie bestowed a great 
summe of money to the same purpose.  And if the comenty in thys poynt be 
slacke, certenly euerye man ought to take hede at home for his owne house. 
Thou wylt saye:  what shall poore men do which can scarse fynd their 
chyldren, muche lesse hyre a master to teache them?  Here I haue nothynge 
to saye, but thys oute of the comedie:  We muste do as we maye do, when we 
can not as we wolde.  We do shewe the beste waye of teachynge, we be not 
able to geue fortune:  Saue that here also the liberalitie of ryche men ought 
to helpe good wyttes, whych can not shewe <pb n="N3r"/>
forthe the strength of naturall inclinacion because of pouertye.  I wyll that 
the gentlenes of the master shulde be so tempered, that familiaritie, the 
companion of contempte, put not away honeste reuerence, suche one as men 
say Sarpedo was, tutour to Cato of Utica, which thorowe hys gentle maners 
gat greate loue, and by hys vertue as lyke authoritie, causynge the chylde to 
haue a greate reuerence, and to set much by him wythout anye feare of 
toddes.  But these that can do nothynge elles but beate, what wolde they do 
if they had taken up on them to teache Emperoures or kynges chyldren, 
whome it were not lefull to beate?  They wyll saye that greate mens sonnes 
muste be excepted from thys fashion.  What is that?  Be not the chyldren of 
citizens, men as well as kynges chyldren be?  Shulde not euerye manne as 
wel loue hys chylde as if he wer a kynges sonne?  If his estate be sumwhat 
base, so muche the more neede hath he to be taught, and holpen by lernynge, 
that he maye come up, <pb n="N3v"/>
from hys pore case.  But he be of hye degre, philosophy &amp; lernyng is 
necessarye to gouerne hys matters well.  Further not a fewe be called frome 
lowe degre to hye estate, yea sometyme to be great byshops.  All men come 
not to thys, yet oughte al men to be brought up to come to it.  I wil braule no 
more with these greate beaters, after I haue tolde you this one thing:  Now 
that those lawes &amp; officers be condemned of wyse men, whych can no 
more but feare men wyth punyshement, &amp; do not also entyse men by 
rewardes:  and the whych punyshe fautes, and prouide not also that nothyng 
be done worthy punishment.  The same must be thought of the common sort 
of teachers, whych only beate for fautes, and do not also teache that mynd 
that it do not amysse.  They straitlie require their lesson of them:  if the 
chylde fayle, he is beaten:  and when this is done daily because the child 
shuld be more accustumed to it, thei thinke they haue plaied the part of a 
gaye scholemaster.  But the chyld shulde fyrste haue ben encoraged to <pb n="N4r"/>
loue lernyng, and to be afearde to displease hys teacher.  But of these 
thynges peraduenture some man wyl thynke I haue spoken to much &amp; so 
myght I worthely be thought, except that almoste all men dyd in this poynte 
so greatly offende, that hereof a man can neuer speke inough.  Furthermore 
it wyll helpe verye muche, if he that hathe taken upon hym to teache a 
chylde, so sette hys mynd upon hym, that he hear a fatherlye loue unto hym. 
By thys it shall come to passe, that both the child wil lerne more gladly, 
&amp; he shal fele lesse tediousnes of his laboure.  For in euery busines loue 
taketh away the greatest part of hardnes.  And because after the olde 
prouerbe:  Lyke reioyseth in lyke, the master muste in maner play the childe 
againe, that he may be loued of the chylde.  Yet this lyketh me not, that men 
set theyr children to be taught their fyrst beginnings of letters unto those 
that be of extreme and dotyng olde age, for they be chyldren in verye deede, 
they fayne not, they counterfait not, stutringe, but stutte in deede. 


</p>
            <p>
               <pb n="N4v"/>I wolde wyshe to haue one of a lustye yonge age, whome the chylde myght 
delyght in, and which wold not be lothe to playe euerye parte.  Thys man 
shulde do in fashionyng hys wytte, that parentes and nurses be wont to do in 
formynge the bodye.  Howe do they fyrste teache the infante to speake lyke a 
man?  They applye their wordes by lyspyng accordyng to the chyldes 
tatlynge.  Howe do they teache them to eat?  They chaw fyrst their milke 
soppes, and when they haue done, by lytle &amp; litle put it in to the chyldes 
mouthe.  Howe do they teache them to go?  They bowe downe their owne 
bodies, and drawe in theyre owne strides after the measure of the infantes. 
Neyther do they fede them wyth euerye meate, nor putte more in then they 
bee able to take:  and as they increase in age, they leade them to bigger 
thinges.  First they seeke for noryshemente that is meete for them, not 
differyng much from mylke, whych yet if it be thrust into the mouthe to 
muche, either it choketh the chylde, or beynge caste <pb n="N5r"/>
oute defileth hys garmente.  When it is softelye and pretelye put in, it doth 
good.  Whych selfe thynge we se commeth to passe in vesselles that haue 
narowe mouthes:  if you pour in muche, it bubbleth out agayne, but if you 
powre in a litle, and as it were by dropes, in deede it is a whyle, and fayre 
and softely erste, but yet then fylled.  So then as by small morsels, and 
geuen now and then, the lytle tender bodies are noryshed:  in lyke manner 
chyldrens wyttes by instruccions meete for them taught easely, and as it 
were by playe by lytle &amp; litle accustume them selues to greater thyngs: 
&amp; the wearynesse in the meane season, is not felte, because that small 
encreasynges so deceyue the felynge of labour, that neuerthelesse they 
helpe much to great profite.  As it is told of a certen wrestler, whych, 
accustumed to beare a calfe by certein furlonges, bare hym when he was 
waxen a bull, wythoute anye payne:  for the encrease was not felt, whych 
euerye daye was put to the burden.  But there be some that looke that <pb n="N5v"/>
chyldren shulde strayghtwaye become olde men, hauyng no regarde of their 
age, but measure the tender wittes, by theyr owne strengthe.  Straightway 
they call upon them bytterly, straightway they straightly require perfect 
diligence, by and by they frowne wyth the forhead if the childe do not as wel 
as he wold haue hym, and they bee so moued as thoughe they had to do wyth 
an elder body, forgettyng you maye be sure that they themselues wer once 
children.  How much more curteouse is it that Pliny warneth a certen master 
that was to fore.  Remember saythe he, that bothe he is a yonge man, and 
that thou hast ben one thi selfe.  But many be so cruel against the tender 
chyldren, as though thei remembred not neyther them selues, neyther their 
scolers to be menne.  Thou woldest that I shulde shewe them those thynges 
that be meete for the inclinacion of that age, and whiche shuld by and by be 
taughte the lytle yongons.  Fyrst the use of tonges whych commeth to them 
with oute any great studye, ther as olde <pb n="N6r"/>
folkes can scarse be hable to learne them wyth great labour.  And here to as 
we sayde, moueth the chyldren a certen desyre to folowe and do as they se 
other doe of the which thing we see a certen lyke fashion in pies and 
popiniayes.  What is more delectable then the fabels of poetes, which wyth 
their swete entisynge plesures so delight childrens eares that thei profite 
us very much when we be olde also, not only to the knowledge of the tong, 
but also to iudgement and copye of elegant speche?  What wyll a chyld hear 
more gladlye then Esops fabels, whyche in sporte and playe teach earnest 
preceptes of philosophy?  and the same fruite is also in the fabels of other 
poetes.  The chylde heareth that Ulisses felowes were turned into swyne, 
and other fashions of beastes.  The tale is laughed at, and yet for al that he 
lerneth that thing that is the chiefest poynte in al mortall philosophye: 
Those whyche be not gouerned by ryght reason, but are caried after the wyll 
of affeccions, not to be men, but beastes. <pb n="N6v"/>
What coulde a stoycke saye more sagely?  and yet dothe a merye tale teache 
the same.  In a thynge that is manifest I wyll not make the tarye with many 
examples.  Also what is more mery conceited then the verses called 
Bucolicall?  what is sweter then a comedie, whych standing by morall 
maners, deliteth bothe the unlearned and chyldren?  And heare how great a 
parte of philosophye is lerned by playe?  Adde unto thys the names of all 
thynges, in the whych it is meruell to see howe now a dayes, yea euen they 
be blind which are taken for wel lerned men.  Finally, shorte and mery 
conceited sentences, as commonly be prouerbes, and quicke shorte sayinges 
of noble men, in the whiche onlye in tyme paste philosophie was wonte to be 
taught to the people.  Ther appeareth also in the very chyldren a certen 
peculier redines to some sciences, as unto musicke, arithmetique, or 
cosmographie.  For I haue proued that they whych were very dull to lerne the 
preceptes of grammer and rethorique, were found verye <pb n="N7r"/>
apte to lerne the subtile artes.  Nature therfore must be holpen to that 
parte wherunto of it selfe it is inclined.  And down the hyll is very litle 
labour, as contrary is great.  Thou shalt nether do nor saye anye thynge 
agaynst thy naturall inclinacion.  I knewe a child that could not yet speake 
whych had no greater pleasure, than to open a booke, and make as thoughe he 
read.  And when he dyd that sometyme many houres, yet was he not weery. 
And he neuer wept so bitterli, but if you had offered hym a booke, he wolde 
be pleased.  That thynge made hys friendes hope that in time to come he 
wolde be a well lerned manne.  His name also brought some good lucke:  for 
he was called Hierome.  And what he is now I can not tel, for I sawe hym not 
beynge growen up.  To the knowledge of the tonge it wyll helpe verye muche 
if he be broughte up amonge them that be talkatiue.  Fabels and tales wyll 
the chylde lerne so muche the more gladly, and remember the better, if he 
maye see before his eyes the argumentes <pb n="N7v"/>
properlye paynted, and what soeuer is tolde in the oracion be 
shewed him in a table.  The same shall helpe as much to lerne without boke 
the names of trees, herbs, and beastes, and also their properties, 
inespecially of these whych be not common to be seene in euerye place, as is 
Rhinoceros, whyche is a beaste that hathe a horne in hys nose, naturall 
enemye to the Elephant:  Tragelaphus, a goate hart, Onocrotalus, a byrd lyke 
to a swan, whyche puttyng hys head into the water brayeth lyke an asse, an 
asse of Inde and an Elephant.  The table maye haue an Elephant whom a 
Dragon claspeth harde aboute, wrapping in his former feete with his tayle. 
The litel chyld laugheth at the syght of thys straunge paintynge, what shall 
the master do then?  He shall shewe him that ther is a greate beaste called 
in Greeke an Elephante, and in Latine lykewyse, saue that sometyme it is 
declined after the latine fashion.  He shall shewe, that that whyche the 
grekes cal proboscida, or his snout, <pb n="N8r"/>
the latines call his hande, because wyth that he reacheth hys meate.  He 
shall tell hym that that beaste doth not take breath at the mouthe as we do, 
but at the snoute:  &amp; that he hath teth standyng out on bothe sides, and 
they be iuory, which rich men set much price by, and therwith shal shew 
hym an iuory combe.  Afterwardes he shall declare that in Inde ther be 
dragons as greate as they.  And that dragon is bothe a greke worde and a 
latine also, saue that the grekes saye dracontes in the genitiue case.  He 
shall shewe that naturallie betwyxte the dragons and the Elephantes is 
great syghte.  And if the chylde be somewhat gredy of learnynge, he maye 
rehearse manye other thynges of the nature of Elephantes and dragons. 
Manye reioyse to see huntinges paynted.  Here howe manye kyndes of trees, 
hearbes, byrdes, foure footed beastes maye he lerne and playe?  I wyll not 
holde you longe wyth examples, seynge it is easye by one to coniecture all. <pb n="N8v"/>
The master shall be diligent in chosynge them oute, and what he shall iudge 
moste pleasaunt to chyldren, most mete for them, what they loue best, and 
is most floryshyng, that in especially let hym set before them.  The fyrste 
age lyke unto the spring tyme, standeth in pleasaunt sweete flowres, and 
goodly grene herbes, untyl the heruest time of ripe mans age fyll the barne 
full of corne. 


</p>
            <p>Then as it were agaynst reason in ver or springe tyme to seeke for a rype 
grape, and a rose in autumne, so muste the master marke what is mete for 
euerye age.  Mery and pleasaunte thynges be conueniente for chyldehod, 
howbeit all sourenesse and sadnes muste be cleane awaye from all studies. 
And I am deceyued except the olde men ment that also, whyche ascribed to 
the muses beynge virgins, excellent bewtye, harpe, songes, daunses, and 
playes in the pleasaunt fieldes, and ioyned to them as felowes the Ladies of 
loue:  and that increase of studies dyd stande specially in mutual loue of 
myndes, and therefore the olde <pb n="O1r"/>
men called it the lernyng that perteined to man.  And ther is no cause why 
profite maye not folowe pleasure, and honestie ioyned to delectacion.  For 
what letteth that they shulde not lerne eyther a proper fable, arte of poets, 
or a sentence, or a notable prety hystorie, or a learned tale, as well as they 
lerne and can wythout boke a piuyshe songe, and oftentimes a baudy one to, 
&amp; folishe old wiues tatlynges, &amp; very trifles of triflyng women? 
What a summe of dreames, vaine tyddels, and unprofitable trifles of 
spirites, hobgoblines, fayries, witches, nightmares wood men and gyauntes, 
how manye naughty lies, how many euyll sayinges remember wee, yea euen 
when we be men, whych beyng lytle chyldren we lerned of our dadies, 
grandmothers, nurses, &amp; maydens whyle they were spynnynge, and heard 
them when they kissed &amp; plaied wyth us?  And what a profite shuld it 
haue bene to lernynge, if in stede of these moste vaine gattinges, not only 
folyshe, but also hurtfull, wee had lerned those thynges that we <pb n="O1v"/>
rehearsed a litle before.  Thou wylt sa ye, what lerned man wyll lowly hys 
wyt to these so small thynges?  Yet Aristotle hym selfe beynge so greate a 
philosopher was not greued to take upon hym the office of a teacher, to 
instruct Alexander.  Chiron fashioned the infancy of Achilles, and Phenix 
succeded hym.  Hely the priest brought up the childe Samuell.  And ther be 
now a daies whych eyther for a lytle money, or for theyr plesure take almost 
more payne in teachyng a pye or a popiniay.  There be some that for 
deuocions sake take upon them iourneys that both be farre and ieoperdeous, 
and other laboures besyde almost intollerable.  Why dothe not holynes cuase 
us to do thys office seynge nothyng can please god better?  Howbeit in 
teachinge those thynges that we haue rehearsed, the master must neyther be 
to much callyng upon, neither to sharpe:  but use a continuaunce rather then 
be wythout measure.  Continuaunce hurteth not so it be mesurable, &amp; 
spiced also wyth varietie and pleasauntnes.  Finally if these thynges be so <pb n="O2r"/>
taught, that imaginacion of labour be awaye, and that the chylde do thynk al 
thinges be done in playe.  Here the course of our talkyng putteth us in 
remembraunce briefely to shewe by what meanes it maye be brought to 
passe that lernyng shuld waxe swete unto the chylde, which before we 
somwhat touched.  To be able to speake redely, as I told you is easely gotten 
by use.  After thys commeth the care to reade and write whych of it selfe is 
somwhat tedious, but the griefe is taken awaye a great parte by the cunnyng 
handling of the master, if it be sauced with some pleasaunt allurementes. 
For you shall fynde some whych tarye long and take great paine in knowyng 
&amp; ioynynge their letters &amp; in those fyrst rudimentes of grammer, 
when they wyl quyckely lerne greater thyngs.  The yrkesomnes of these 
thinges must be holpen by some pretie craft, of the which the old fathers 
haue shewed certen fashions.  Some haue made the letters in sweete crustes 
and cakes that chyldren loue well, that so in manner they myghte eate up 
their letters. 


</p>
            <p>
               <pb n="O2v"/>When they tell the letters name, they geue the letter it selfe for a rewarde. 
Other haue made the fashion of iuorie, that the chylde shulde playe wyth 
them, or if there were any other thyng wherin that age is specially delited. 
The englyshe men delyte principally in shotynge, and teache it their chyldren 
fyrst of all:  wherfore a certen father that had a good quicke wyt 
perceiuinge his sonne to haue a greate pleasure in shotyng, bought hym a 
prety bowe &amp; very fayr arrowes, &amp; in al partes both of hys bowe 
&amp; arrowes were letters painted.  Afterwards insted of markes, he set 
up the fashion of letters, fyrste of Greke, and after of laten:  when he hyt, 
&amp; tolde the name of the letter, besyde a greate reioysinge, he had for a 
reward a cherye, or some other thynge that chyldren delyte in.  Of that playe 
commeth more fruite, if two or thre matches playe together.  For then the 
hope of victorie and feare of rebuke maketh them to take more heede, and to 
be more chereful.  By thys deuise it was broughte aboute that the <pb n="O3r"/>
chylde wythin a fewe dayes playynge, had perfitely lerned to know &amp; 
sound all hys letters whych the common sort of teachers be scarse able to 
brynge to passe in thre whole yeres wyth their beatynges threatyngs, and 
brawlynges.  Yet do not I alowe the diligence of some to painful, whych 
drawe out these thyngs by playinge at chesses or dyce.  For when the playes 
themselues passe the capacitie of chyldren, how shal they lerne the letters 
by them? 


</p>
            <p>This is not to helpe the chyldrens wyttes, but to put one labour to an other. 
As there be certen engins so full of worke and so curious, that they hynder 
the doynge of the busines.  Of thys sorte commonly be all those thynges 
whych some haue deuised of the arte of memorye for to gette money, or for 
a vayne boastynge, rather then for profite:  for they do rather hurte the 
memorye.  The best crafte for memorie, is thorowlye to understande, and 
then to brynge into an order, last of al often to repete that thou woldest 
remember.  And in litle ons there is a natural <pb n="O3v"/>
great desyre to haue the mastry inespecially of suche as be of lustye 
courage, and lyuely towardnes.  The teacher shall abuse these inclinacions 
to the profite of hys study.  If he shall profite nothing by prayers, and fayre 
meanes, neyther by gyftes mete for chyldren, nor prayses, he shal make a 
contencion with hys equales.  Hys felowe shall be praysed in the presence of 
the duller.  Desyre to be as good shall quicken forwards, whom only 
adhortacion coulde not do.  Yet it is not meete so to geue the mastrie to the 
victor, as thoughe he shulde haue it for euer; but somtime he shall shewe 
hope to hym that is ouercome, that by takyng hede he may recouer the shame: 
whych thynge capteynes be wonte to dooe in batayle.  And sometyme we 
shall suffer that the chyld shuld thynke he hadde gotten the better, when he 
worse in deede.  Finally by enterchaungyng, prayse and disprayse, he shall 
noryshe in them, as Hesiodus sayth, a stryfe who shall do best.  Perchaunce 
one of a sadde wyt wyl be loth so to play the child <pb n="O4r"/>
among chyldren.  And yet the same is not greued, neyther yet ashamed to 
spende a greate parte of the day in playing wyth litle puppies and 
marmesettes, or to babble wyth a pie or popiniay, or to play the foole wyth a 
foole.  By these tryfles, a verye sadde matter is broughte to passe, and it is 
meruell that good men haue litle pleasure herein, seeyng the natural loue of 
our children, and hope of great profit is wunt to make those thynges also 
pleasaunte, whyche of them selues be sharpe, fowre and bytter.  I confesse 
that the preceptes of grammer be at the beginnynge somewhat fowre, and 
more necessary then pleasant.  But the handsomnes of the teacher shal take 
from them also a greate parte of the payne.  The beste thynge and playnest 
muste be taughte fyrste.  But nowe wyth what compasses, and hardenesse be 
chyldren troubeled whyle they learne wythout the booke the names of the 
letters before they knowe what manner letters they bee? <pb n="O4v"/>
Whyle they be compelled in the declinynge of nownes and verbes to can by 
roote in howe manye cases, moodes and tenses one worde is put:  as muse in 
te genetiue and datiue singuler, the nominatiue and vocatiue plurel?  Legeris 
of legor, and of legerim, and legero?  What a beatyng is then in the schole, 
when chyldren be axed these thynges?  Some light teachers to boast their 
lernynge are wonte of purpose to make these thynges somewhat harder. 
Whyche faute maketh the beginnynges almost of all sciences in doute, and 
paynfull, specially in logicke.  And if you shewe them a better waye, they 
answere they were brought up after thys fashion, and wyll not suffer that 
anye chyldren shulde be in better case, then they them selues were when 
they were chyldren.  All difficultye eyther therfore muste be auoided, 
whyche is not necesarye, or that is used oute of tyme.  It is made softe and 
easy, that is done when it shuld be.  But when tyme is, that of necessitie an 
harde doute muste be learned, <pb n="O5r"/>
than a cunnynge teacher of a childe shall studye as muche as he may to 
folowe the good and frendlye Phisicians, whych whan they shall gyue a 
bytter medicyne do anoynt, as Lucrecius saith, the brimmes of their cuppes 
with honye, that the chylde entised by pleasure of the swetenes shuld not 
feare the wholesome bytternes, or else put suger into the medicine it selfe, 
or some other swete fauoryng thynge.  Yea they wyl not be knowen that it is 
a medicine, for the only imaginacion sometyme maketh us quake for feare. 
Finally thys tediousenes is sone ouercome, if things be taught them not to 
much at once, but by lytle and litle, and at sundrie times.  Howebeit we 
ought not to distrust to much chyldrens strength, if perhaps they muste take 
some paines.  A chyld is not myghty in strength of bodye, but he is stronge 
to continue, and in abilitie strong inough.  He is not myghty as a bull, but he 
is strong as an emer.  In some thinges a flye passeth an elephant.  Euerye 
thyng is mighty in that, to the <pb n="O5v"/>
whyche nature hathe made hym.  Do we not se tender chyldren runne 
merueylouse swyftlye all the daye long, and feele no werinesse.  What is the 
cause?  Because playe is sette for that age, and they imagine it a playe and 
no labour.  And in euerye thynge the gretest part of payne is imaginacion, 
whych somtyme maketh us feele harme, when there is no harme at all. 
Therefore seynge that the prouidence of nature hath taken awaye 
imaginacion of laboure frome chyldren.  And howe muche they lacke in 
strengthe, so muche they be holpen in thys part, that is, that they feele not 
labour.  It shal be the masters parte, as we sayde before, to put away the 
same by as many wayes as he can, and of purpose to make a playe of it. 
There be also certen kindes of sportes meete for chyldren, wherwyth theyr 
earnest studye must somwhat be eased after they be come to that, they 
muste lerne those higher thynges whyche can not be perceiued wythoute 
diligence and laboure:  as are the handling of Themes, to <pb n="O6r"/>
turne latine into Greeke, or greeke into latine, or to learne cosmographie 
wythout booke.  But moste of all shall profite, if the chylde accustume to 
loue and reuerence hys master, to loue and make muche of learnyng, to feare 
rebuke, and delyght in prayse.  There remayneth one doute, wonte to be 
obiected by those whych saye:  The profite that the chylde getteth in those 
thre or foure yeres to be so lytle, that it is not worthe the laboure, eyther 
to take so muche payne in teachynge, or bestowe so much coste.  And these 
in dede seme unto me, not so muche to care for to profite the chyldren, as 
for the sparyng of theyr money, or the teachers labour.  But I wyl saye he is 
no father, whyche when the matter is of teaching his child, taketh so greate 
care for expenses.  Also it is a folyshe pitie, to thintent the master shuld 
saue his labour, to make his sonne lose certen yeres.  I graunt it to be true 
in dede that Fabius sayth, that more good is done in .i. yere after, then in 
those .iii. or .iiii. why shuld we set light by this litle that is won in a thyng 
far more precious. 
O6v 
Let us graunt that it is but a very lytle, yet were it better the chylde to do 
it, then eyther nothyng at al, or lerne somewhat that after muste be 
unlerned.  Wyth what businesse shall that age be better occupied as sone as 
he beginneth to speake, whiche in no wyse can be unoccupied?  Also how 
lytle soeuer it be that the former age doth bringe, yet shal the chylde lerne 
greater thynges, euen in the same yeres, when smaller shuld haue ben 
lerned, if he had not lerned them before.  Thys sayth Fabius, euery yere 
furthered and increased profiteth to a great summe and as muche tyme as is 
taken before in the infancie, is gotten to the elder age.  It nedeth not to 
rehearse that in those first yeres certen thinges be easely lerned, which be 
more hard to be lerned when we be elder.  For it is very easely lerned, that 
is lerned in time conveniente.  Let us graunt that they be small and litle 
thynges, so we confesse them to be necessarye.  Yet to me in deede it 
semeth not so litle a furtheraunce to lerning to haue gotten though not <pb n="O7r"/>
a perfit knowledge, yet at the least waye a taste of bothe the tongues, 
besydes so many vocables and names of thinges, and finally to haue begun to 
be able to reade and write promptly.  It greueth us not in thinges much more 
vile, to gette all the vauntage we can, be it neuer so lytle.  A diligente 
marchaunt setteth not light bi winning of a farthing, thinkyng thus in hys 
mynde:  it is in dede of it selfe but a litle, but it groweth to a summe, and a 
litle often put to a lytle, wyll quyckelye make a great heape.  The Smithes 
ryse before daye, to wyn as it were parte of the day.  Husband men upon the 
holy daye do some thynges at home, to make an ende of more worke the other 
dayes.  And do we regarde as nothyng the losse of .iiii yeres in oure 
chyldren, when there is nothyng more costly then tyme, nor no possession 
better then lerning?  It is neuer lerned tymely inoughe that neuer is ended. 
For we muste euer learne as longe as we lyue.  And in other thyngs the lucre 
that is loste by slackenes, maye be recouered <pb n="O7v"/>
by diligence.  Time when it is once flowen awaye (and it flyeth awaye 
very quickely) may be called againe by no inchauntmentes.  For the poets do 
trifle whyche tell of a fountayne, wherby olde men do as it were waxe yong 
agayne:  and the phisicions deceiue you, whych promise a gay floryshyng 
youth to old men thorowe a certeyn folishe fytt essence I wote not what. 
Here therfore we ought to be verye sparyng, because the losse of tyme may 
by no meanes be recouered.  Beside this the fyrst part of our lyfe is counted 
to be best, and therfore shuld be bestowed more warelye.  Hesiodus aloweth 
not sparynge, neyther at the hyest, nor at the lowest, because when the tune 
is full it semeth to hasty, and to late when it is spente:  and therefore 
byddeth us spare in the myddes.  But of tyme we muste nowher cast away 
the sparing, and if we shuld spare when the tunne is ful for thys cause that 
wyne is best in the myddest, then shulde we most of all saue our yonge 
yeres, because it is the best parte of the life, if you <pb n="O8r"/>
exercise it, but yet that goeth swyftest awaye.  The husbande manne if he be 
anye thynge diligente, wyll not suffer anye parte of hys lande to lye vacante, 
and that that is not meete to brynge forthe corne, he setteth it eyther wyth 
yonge graffes, or leaueth it for pasture, or storeth it wyth potte hearbes. 
and shall we suffer the beste parte of our lyfe to passe awaye wyth oute all 
fruite of lerning?  Newe falowed ground must be preuented wyth some 
fruitefull thynge, leste beynge untylled, it brynge forthe of it selfe naughty 
cockle.  For needes muste it brynge forthe somewhat.  Lykewyse the tender 
mynde of the infante, except it bee strayghte wayes occupyed wyth 
fruitefull teachynges, it wyl be ouercoued wyth vyce.  An earthen potte wyll 
keepe longe the fauoure of the liquore that it is fyrste seasoned wyth, and it 
wyll be long or it go out.  But as for an earthen vessel beynge newe and 
emptye, you maye keepe it for what liquore ye wyll. <pb n="O8v"/>
The mynde eyther bryngeth forth good fruite, if you caste into it good seede, 
or if ye regard it not, it is fylled wyth naughtines, whych afterwardes must 
be pulled up.  And not a litle hath he wonne whych hathe escaped the losse, 
neyther hathe he brought small helpe to vertue, whiche hath excluded vyce. 
But what nede many wordes?  Wylt thou see howe muche it auayleth, 
whether one be brought up in learnynge or not?  Beholde how excellently 
lerned in the olde tyme men were in their youth, and how in oure daies they 
that be aged be hable to do no thyng in studie?  Ouide beyng a verye yonge 
man wrot hys verses of loue.  What olde man is hable to do lyke?  What 
maner of man Lucane was in hys youthe hys workes declare.  Howe came 
thys?  Because that beynge but .vi. moneths old he was brought to Rome, 
&amp; strayght waie deliuered to be taught of two the best gramarians, 
Palemon, and Cornutus.  Hys companions in studye were Salcius Bassus, and 
Aulus Persius:  that one excellente in <pb n="P1r"/>
historye, that other in a Satyre.  Doubtles hereof came that most perfite 
knoweledge that he had in all the seuen sciences, &amp; his so marueylous 
eloquence, that in verse he was both an excellente oratoure, &amp; also a 
Poet.  In thys our time ther wanteth not exemples of good bringing up 
(although thei be veri few) &amp; that as wel in women as men.  Politian 
praised the wit of the maiden Cassandra.  And what is more marueylous than 
Ursinus a childe of .xii. yeres olde?  for the remembraunce of him, he also in 
a very eligante epistle put in eternall memorye.  Howe fewe men shal you 
nowe fynd, whiche at one time be able to endite two epistles to so manye 
notaries, that the sentence in euerye one do agree, and that there shoulde 
happen no inconueniente speache.  That chylde did it in fyue epistles &amp; 
gaue the argumentes without any study, &amp; was not prepared afore hand 
to do it.  Some men when they se these things, thinking that thei passe al 
mens strength, ascribe it to witchcraft.  It is done in dede by witchcrafte, 
but it is an effectual <pb n="P1v"/>
enchaunting, to be set in time to a learned, good, and vigilant master.  It 
is a stronge medicine to learne the best things of learned men, and emonge 
the learned. 


</p>
            <p>By such wytchcrafte Alexander the greate, whan he was a yonge man, 
besides eloquence, was perfit in al the parts of Philosophie, and except the 
loue of warres, &amp; swetenes to raygne had quite caught away his 
inclination, he might haue bene counted the chiefe among the beste 
Philosophers.  By the same meanes Caius Cesar beinge but a yonge man, was 
so eloquent &amp; wel sene in the mathematical sciences.  So well sene also 
were many Emperors:  Marcus Tullius, also Virgil, and Horace in their lusty 
youth were so excellent in learninge and Eloquence, all bycause they were 
strayght waye in their tender age learned of their parentes &amp; nourses 
the elogancy of the tonges, and of the beste maisters the liberal sciences: 
as Poetry, Rhetorique, Histories, the knowledge of antiquities, 
Arithmetique, Geographye, <pb n="P2r"/>
Philosophye, moral and political.  And what do we I praye you?  wee kepe our 
children at home till they be past fourtene or fiftene yere old, and whan 
they be corrupted wyth idlenes, ryot, &amp; delicatenes, with muche worke 
at the laste we sende them to the commen scholes.  There to further the 
matter wel, they taste a little grammer:  after, whan they can declyne 
words, &amp; ioyne the adiectiue and the substantiue togither, they haue 
learned al the grammer, and than be set to that troubled Logike, wher they 
must forget againe if they haue learned to speake anie thynge well.  But 
more unhappye was the tyme whan I was a child whiche al to vexed the 
youth with modes of signifiinge, and other folyshe questions, &amp; teching 
nothinge els then to speake folishelye.  Verely those masters bicause they 
wold not be thought to teach folish thinges, darckened grammer wyth 
difficulties of Logike and Metaphisike:  euen for this verelye, that 
aftewardes they shold returne backwardelye to learne grammer, whan <pb n="P2v"/>
they were olde, whiche we set happeneth nowe to some diuines that be 
wyser, that after so manye hye degrees and all their titles, wherby they 
maye be ignoraunte in nothing, they be faine to come againe to those bookes, 
whiche are wonte to be reade unto children.  I blame them not, for it is 
better to lerne late then neuer, that thing which is necessary to be knowen. 


</p>
            <p>Good Lorde what a world was that, when wyth greate boastynge John 
Garlandes verses wer read to yonge men, and that with longe and painefull 
commentaries?  whan a greate parte of tyme was consumed in folyshe 
verses in saying them to other, repetynge them, and hearynge theim agayne? 
whan Florista and Florius were learned with out booke?  for as for 
Alexander, I thynke him worthye to be receiued amonge the meaner sorte. 
Moreouer howe muche tyme was loste in Sophistrye, and in the superfluous 
mases of Logyke?  And bicause I will not be to longe, howe troublesomelye 
were all sciences taughte? <pb n="P3r"/>
howe paynefullye?  whiles euerye reader to auaunce him selfe, wolde euen 
straighte waye in the beginninge stuffe in the hardest thynges of all, and 
sometyme verye folyshe thyngs to.  For a thyng is not therfore goodly 
bycause it is harde, as to stand a far of, and to caste a mustarde seede 
thorowe a nedles eye &amp; misse not, it is hard in dede, but yet it is a 
verye trifle:  and to undo a payre of tariers, it is much worke, but yet a 
vayne and idle subtiltye. 


</p>
            <p>Adde hereunto, that oftentymes these thynges be taught of unlearned men, 
and that is worse, of lewd learned men, somtyme also of sluggardes and 
unthriftes, which more regarde takynge of money than the profite of there 
scholers.  Whan the commune bryngynge up is suche, yet do wee maruayle 
that fewe be perfitly learned before they be old.  The beste parte of oure 
lyfe is loste wyth idlenes, with vices, wherewith whan we be infected, we 
giue a litle parte of our tyme to studies, and a greate parte to feastes and 
plaies.  And to an yll matter is taken <pb n="P3v"/>
as euil a craftes manne, either teachynge that is folyshe, or that whiche 
must be unlearned againe.  And after this we make our excuse that the age is 
weake, the wyt not yet apte to learne, the profite to be verye small, and 
manye other thinges, whan in dede the fault is to be ascribed to euill 
brynginge up.  I wil not trouble you any lenger, onelie wil I speake to your 
wisdome whyche is in other thynges verye sharpe and quycke of syght. 
Consider howe deare a possession youre sonne is, how diuerse a thynge it is 
and a matter of muche worke to come by learnynge, and how noble also the 
same is, what a redines is in all childrens wyttes to learne, what agilitie is 
in the mynd of man howe easily those thynges be learned whyche be beste 
and agreable to nature, inespeciallye if they be taught of learned and gentle 
maisters by the waye of playe:  further how fast those thynges abide with 
us, wherewith we season fyrste of all the emptye and rude myndes, whiche 
selfe thynges an elder age perceyueth <pb n="P4r"/>
doeth more hardelye, and soner forgetteth:  Beside thys how dear 
and the losse neuer recouered, tyme is, howe much it auayleth to begin in 
season, and to learne euery thyng whan it shold be, how much continuaunce 
is able to do, &amp; howe greately the heape that Hesiodus speaketh to, 
doeth increase by puttinge to little and litle, how swiftly the time flieth 
away, how youth wyll alwayes be occupied, &amp; howe unapte olde age is to 
be taught:  If thou consyder these thynges thou wilt neuer suffer that thi 
litle child shoulde passe away (I wil not say) seuen yere, but not so much as 
thre dayes, in the whiche he maye be eyther prepared or instructed to 
learnynge though the profit be neuer so litle. 

</p>
         </div>
         <trailer>FINIS.</trailer>
      </body>
  </text>
</TEI>
