Of Delays
Fortune is like the market; where many times if you can stay a little,
the price will fall. Again, it is sometimes like Sibylla's offer; which
at first, offereth the commodity at full, then consumeth part and
part, and still holdeth up the price. For occasion (as it is in the
common verse) turneth a bald noddle, after she hath presented her locks
in front, and no hold taken; or at least turneth the handle of the bottle,
first to be received, and after the belly, which is hard to clasp. There
is surely no greater wisdom, than well to time the beginnings, and onsets,
of things. Dangers are no more light, if they once seem light; and more
dangers have deceived men, than forced them. Nay, it were better,
to meet some dangers half way, though they come nothing near, than to
keep too long a watch upon their approaches; for if a man watch too
long, it is odds he will fall asleep. On the other side, to be deceived
with too long shadows (as some have been, when the moon was low, and
shone on their enemies' back), and so to shoot off before the time;
or to teach dangers to come on, by over early buckling towards them;
is another extreme. The ripeness, or unripeness, of the occasion (as
we said) must ever be well weighed; and generally it is good, to commit
the beginnings of all great actions to Argus, with his hundred eyes,
and the ends to Briareus, with his hundred hands; first to watch, and
then to speed. For the helmet of Pluto, which maketh the politic man
go invisible, is secrecy in the counsel, and celerity in the execution. For when things are once come to the execution, there is no
secrecy, comparable to celerity; like the motion of a bullet in the
air, which flieth so swift, as it outruns the eye.