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| Sir Thomas More. Holbein the Younger (1527). Frick Collection. |
The following posts reproduce the text and notes of an edition by D. O’Connor published in 1903 which is close to the English original of 1557.
The 1903 footnotes are shown as [ ] and my own as [ ].
👈While outwardly he enjoyed a life of comfort, in the privacy of his spiritual life he wore a hair shirt, attended daily Mass, and practised a strict discipline of prayer. He is believed to have become a Third Order Franciscan (and indeed his name is listed in the calendar of Franciscan saints). This may be the significance of the cord shown.
Sancte Thoma
Ora pro nobis.
Of Wrath
Pride the root of wrath
Let us now somewhat see how this part of our medicine, that is to wit the remembrance of death, may cure us of the fierce rageous fever of wrath. For wrath is undoubtedly another daughter of pride. For albeit that wrath sometimes riseth upon a wrong done us, as harm to our person or loss in our goods, which is an occasion given us and often sudden, by reason whereof the sin is somewhat less grievous, the rule of reason being let[1] for the while by the sudden brunt of the injury, not forethought upon, coming upon us unprovided ; yet shall ye find that in them which have so turned an evil custom into nature that they seem now naturally disposed to wrath and waywardness ; the very root of that vice is pride. Although their manner and behaviour be such beside that folk would little ween[2] it. For go they never so simply, look they never so lowly, yet shall ye see them at every light occasion testy. They cannot abide one merry[3] word that toucheth them, they cannot bear in reasoning to be contraried, but they fret and fume if their opinion be not accepted, and their invention be not magnified.
Whereof riseth this waywardness? but of a secret root of setting much by[4] themselves, by which it goeth to their heart when they see any man less esteem them than they seem worthy to themselves.
Wilt thou also well perceive that the setting by ourself is more than half the weight of our wrath ? We shall prove it by them that would haply say nay. Take me one that reckoneth himself for worshipful, and look whether he shall not be much more wroth with one opprobrious and rebukeful word as “knave,” percase[5], or “beggar” (in which is no great slander) spoken to his face by one that he reckoneth but his match or far under him, than with the selfsame word spoken to him by one that he knoweth and knowledgeth[6] for a great deal his better.
Actions of trespass
We see this point confirmed by all the laws made among men, which laws for as much as the actions of trespass be given to revenge men, not of the wrongs only done unto them in their bodies or their goods, but also of their contumelies, griefs and despites[7], whereby they conceive any displeasure at heart, lest, in lack of law to do it for them, they should in following their irous[8] affection, revenge themselves immoderately with their own hands. The law, I say, considereth, pondereth and punisheth the trespasses done to every man, not only after the hurt that is done or loss that is taken, but and if it be such as the party grieved is like to be wroth withal, the punishment is aggrieved or minished, made less or more after the difference in degree of worship and reputation between the parties. And this is the provision of the laws almost in every country, and hath been afore Christ was born. By which it appeareth by a common consent that a man’s own estimation setting by himself, disdaining to take rebuke of one worse than himself, maketh his wrath the sorer.
For the assuaging whereof the law contenteth him with the larger punishment of his offender.
In Spain a dry blow.
And this so far forth that in Spain it is sorer taken and sorer punished if one giveth another a dry blow with his fist, than if he draw blood upon him with a sword. The cause is none other but the appeasing of his mind that is so stricken, forasmuch as commonly they take themselves for so very manly men that three strokes with a sword could not anger one of them so much as that it should appear that, by a blow given him with a bare hand, any man should so reckon him for a boy that he would not vouchsafe to draw any weapon at him.
Good anger
So that, as I said, it well appeareth by the common confession of the world, expressed and declared by their laws, that the point and readiness that men have to wax angry groweth of the secret pride by which we set over much by ourselves. And like as that kind of good anger that we call a good zeal, riseth of that we set, as we should do, so much by our Lord God that we cannot be but wroth with them whom we see set so little by Him that they let[9] not to break His high commandments, so riseth of much setting by ourselves that affection of anger, by which we be moved against them with ire and disdain that displease us, and show by their behaviour that they set less by us than our proud heart looketh for. By which, though we mark it not, yet indeed we reckon ourselves worthy more reverence than we do God Himself only.
I doubt not but men will say nay ; and I verily believe that they think nay; and the cause is for that we perceive not of what root the branches of our sins spring. But will ye see it proved that it is so? Look whether we be not more angry with our servants for a breach of one commandment of our own than for a breach of God’s all ten; and whether we be not more wroth with one contumelious or despiteful word spoken against ourselves than with many blasphemous words irreverently spoken of God. And could we, trow ye, be more moved with the minishing of our own worship than God’s, or look to have our own commandments better obeyed than God’s, if we did not indeed set more by ourselves than Him ?
The harms of wrath
And therefore this deadly sore of wrath, of which so much harm groweth, that maketh men unlike themselves, that maketh us like wood[10] wolves or furies of hell, that driveth us forth headlong upon sword points, that maketh us blindly run forth upon other men’s destruction with our own ruin, is but a cursed branch rising and springing out of the secret root of pride.
And like as it is in physic[11] a special thing necessary to know where and in what place of the body lieth the beginning and as it were the fountain of the sore from which the matter is always ministered unto the place where it appeareth (for, the fountain once stopped, the sore shall soon heal of itself, the matter failing that fed it, which continually resorting from the fountain to the place, men may well daily purge and cleanse the sore, but they shall hardly heal it) ; likewise, I say, fareth it by the sore of the soul : if we perceive once the root and dig up that, we be very sure the branches be surely gone. But while the root remaineth, while we cut off the branches, we let well the growing and keep it somewhat under ; but fail they may not always to spring again.
And therefore, sith this ungracious branch of wrath springeth out of the cursed root of pride, and setting much by ourself, so secretly lurking in our heart that unneth[12] we can perceive it ourselves, let us pull up well the root, and surely the branch of wrath shall soon wither away. For taken once away the setting by ourselves, we shall not greatly dote upon that we set little by.
So shall there of such humility, contempt and abjection of ourselves shortly follow in us, high estimation, honour and love of God and every other creature in order for His sake, as they shall appear more or less lief[13] unto Him.
And sith that by the destruction of pride followeth, as I have said, the destruction of wrath, we shall apply to the repression of wrath the self-same considerations in the remembrance of death that we before have shewed to serve to the repression of pride.
For who could be angry for the loss of goods if he well remembered how little while he should keep them, how soon death might take them from him ? Who could set so much by himself to take to heart a lewd rebukeful word spoken to his face, if he remembered himself to be, as he is, a poor prisoner damned to death, or so very wroth as we be now with some bodily hurt done us upon some one part of the body, if we deeply remembered that we be, as we be indeed, already laid in the cart carrying towards execution.
And if the wretchedness of our own estate nothing moved us – which, being such as it is, should if it were well pondered make us little regard the causes of our wrath, considering that all the while we live we be but in dying – yet might the state of him that we be wroth withal make us ashamed to be wroth. For who would not disdain to be wroth with a wretched prisoner, with him that is in the cart and in[14] the way to hanging, with him that were adying ? And of this would a man be the more ashamed if he considered in how much peril and jeopardy of himself his own life and his own soul is, while he striveth, chideth and fighteth with another, and that ofttimes for how very trifles ! First, shame were it for men to be wroth like women for fantasies and things of nought, [even] if there were no worse therein. And now shall ye see men fall at variance for kissing of the pax[15], or going before in procession or setting of their wives’ pews in the church. Doubt ye whether this wrath be pride ? I doubt not but wise men will agree that it is either foolish pride or proud folly.
How much is it now the more folly if we consider that we be but going in pilgrimage and have here no dwelling-place than to chide and fight for such follies by the way. How much more shame and folly is it yet when we be going together to our death, as we be indeed.
If we should see two men fighting together for very great things, yet would we reckon them both mad if they left not off when they should see a ramping lion coming on them both, ready to devour them both. Now when we see surely that the death is coming on us all, and shall undoubtedly within short space devour us all, and how soon we know not [at] all, is it not now more than madness to be wroth and bear malice one to another, and for the more part for as very trifles, as children should fall at variance for cherry stones, death coming, as I say, upon us, to devour us all ?
If these things, and such other as they, be very true, so they were well and deeply remembered, I little doubt that they would both abate the crooked branch of wrath and pull up from the bottom of the heart the cankered root of pride.
Footnotes
[1] Hindered.
[2] Think.
[3] Jocular, humorous, witty, teasing.
[4] Greatly esteeming.
[5] Perhaps.
[6] Acknowledges..
[7] Malice. [Ed. Action that shows contemptuous disregard; contemptuous treatment or behaviour; insulting action; OED].
[8] Angry.
[9] Withhold themselves.
[10] Wild.
[11] The practice of medicine.
[12] Scarcely..
[13] Dear.
[14] i.e., on.
[15] The pax or kiss of peace is given during Solemn High Mass after the recitation of the Agnus Dei. In ancient times it was given to every one present, but this was discontinued in the thirteenth century, under Pope Innocent III. A small instrument made of silver or of gold and bearing a representation of our Lord on the cross, was introduced and denominated the osculatorium, which all, even the celebrant, kissed at this part of Mass. Though once very common, this practice is now only kept up in a few religious houses.
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SUB tuum præsidium confugimus, Sancta Dei Genitrix. Nostras deprecationes ne despicias in necessitatibus, sed a periculis cunctis libera nos semper, Virgo gloriosa et benedicta. Amen.
The Virgin of Tenderness. >12th century.
Totus tuus ego sum
Et omnia mea tua sunt;
Tecum semper tutus sum:
Ad Jesum per Mariam.
He that hearkeneth to me, shall not be confounded: and they that work by me, shall not sin. They that explain me shall have life everlasting. Ecclesiasticus (Sirach) xxiv. 30-31.30-31.

