Of Suspicion
Suspicions amongst thoughts, are like bats amongst birds, they ever
fly by twilight. Certainly they are to be repressed, or at least well
guarded: for they cloud the mind; they leese friends; and they check
with business, whereby business cannot go on currently and constantly.
They dispose kings to tyranny, husbands to jealousy, wise men to irresolution
and melancholy. They are defects, not in the heart, but in the brain;
for they take place in the stoutest natures; as in the example of Henry
the Seventh of England. There was not a more suspicious man, nor a more
stout. And in such a composition they do small hurt. For commonly they
are not admitted, but with examination, whether they be likely or
no. But in fearful natures they gain ground too fast. There is nothing
makes a man suspect much, more than to know little; and therefore men
should remedy suspicion, by procuring to know more, and not to keep
their suspicions in smother. What would men have? Do they think, those
they employ and deal with, are saints? Do they not think, they will
have their own ends, and be truer to themselves, than to them? Therefore
there is no better way, to moderate suspicions, than to account upon
such suspicions as true, and yet to bridle them as false. For so far
a man ought to make use of suspicions, as to provide, as if that should
be true, that he suspects, yet it may do him no hurt. Suspicions that
the mind of itself gathers, are but buzzes; but suspicions that are
artificially nourished, and put into men's heads, by the tales and whisperings
of others, have stings. Certainly, the best mean, to clear the way in
this same wood of suspicions, is frankly to communicate them with
the party, that he suspects; for thereby he shall be sure to know more
of the truth of them, than he did before; and withal shall make that
party more circumspect, not to give further cause of suspicion. But
this would not be done to men of base natures; for they, if they find
themselves once suspected, will never be true. The Italian says, Sospetto
licentia fede; as if suspicion, did give a passport to faith; but it
ought, rather, to kindle it to discharge itself.