62 <£0ruj)f)fttt£, 3* that God wyllyng hereafter I wyll both loue it the better, and alfo vfe it the often For as moche as I can gatner of all this communication of ours, the tunge, the nofe, the handes and the feete be no fytter membres, or inflrumentes for the body of a man, then is fhotinge for the hole bodye of the realme. God hath made the partes of men which be befl and moofl necceffarye, to ferue, not for one purpofe onelye, but for manye: as the tunge for fpeaking and tailing, the nofe for fmelling, and alfo for auoyding of all excrementes, which faule oute of the heed, the handes for receyuynge of good thinges, and for puttyng of all harmefull thinges, from the bodye. So fhotinge is an exercyfe of healthe, a paftyme of honefl pleafure, and fuche one alfo that floppeth or auoydeth all noyfome games gathered and encreafed by ill rule, as noughtye humours be, whiche hurte and corrupte fore that parte of the realme, wherin they do remayne. But now if you can fhewe but halfe fo moche pro- fyte in warre of fhotynge, as you haue proued pleafure in peace, then wyll I furelye iudge that there be fewe thinges that haue fo manifold e commodities, and vfes ioyned vnto them as it hath. 2Coi. The vpperhande in warre} nexte the gj goodneffe of God (of whome al vic~fcorie commeth, as fcripture fayth) flandeth Mach r-3-' chefely in thre thinges : in the wyfedome of the Prince, in the fleyghtes and polhcies of the capitaynes, and in the flrength and cherefuil forwardnefle of the fouldyers. A Prince in his herte muil be full of mercy and peace, a vertue moofl pleafaunt to Chrifl, moofl agreable to mans nature, moofl profytable for ryche and poore. For than the riche man enioyeth with great pleafure that which he hath : the poore may obtayne with his labour, that which he lacketh. And although there is nothing worfe then war, wherof it taketh his name, through the which great men be in daunger, meane men without fuccoure, ryche men in feare, bycaufe they haue fomwhat: poore men in care,