144 (T0j:0j|tJ{lti& 36* iii. or iiii. excellent Archers haue befide, were al ioyned in one, I am fure all men woulde wonder at ye excellence of it And this is one waye to learne to fhoote fayre. plji. This is very wel truly, but I praye you teache me fomewhat of ihootyng fayre youre felfe. 2Eax, I can teache you to Ihoote fayre, euen as Socrates taught a man ones to knowe God, for when he axed hym what was God: naye fayeth he I can tell you better what God is not, as God is not yll, God is vnfpeakeable, vnfearcheable and fo forth: Euen lyke- wyfe can I faye of fayre ihootyng, it hath not this dif- commodite with it nor that difcommoditie, and at lafl a man maye fo Ihifte all the difcommodities from fhootynge that there ihall be left no thynge behynde but fayre fhootynge. And to do this the better you muil remember howe that I toulde you when I de- fcrybed generally the hole nature of ihootyng that fayre ihotyng came of thefe thynges, of ilandynge, nockynge, drawynge, howldynge and lowfynge, the whych I wyll go ouer as ihortly as I can, defcribynge the difcommodities that men commonly vfe in all partes of theyr bodies, that you yf you faulte in any fuch maye knowe it and fo go about to amend it. Faultes in Archers do excede the number of Archers, whyche come wyth vfe of ihootynge wythoute teach- ynge. Vfe and cuilome feparated from knowlege and learnynge, doth not onely hurt ihootynge, but the mooil weyghtye thynges in the worlde befide: And therfore I maruayle moche at thofe people whyche be the mayneteners of vfes withoute knowlege hauynge no other worde in theyr mouthe but thys vfe, vfe, cuil- ome, cuilome. Suche men more wylful than wyfe, befide other difcommodities, take all place and occafion from al amendment. And thys I fpeake generally of vfe and cuilome. Whych thynge yf a learned man had it in hande yat woulde applye it to anye one matter, he myght handle it wonderfullye. But as for ihootyng, vfe is the onely caufe of all fautes in it and therfore chylderne