This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
A56845 | The Name of Lords shall be abhor''d, for ev''ry Man''s a Brother, What Reason then in Church or State, one Man should Rule another? |
A10255 | 9 Injurious Sisters, tell me why you made His Twine so small, yet spun so short a twine? |
A10255 | Thou knowest my teares are just Shall, shall they not embalme the precious dust Of my true bosome friend? |
A10255 | what strength is able to withstand The direfull stroke of your imperious hand, Which prayers can not entreat, nor power countermand? |
A10256 | What Member, first, Shall help to binde, when every Member''s burst? |
A10256 | What friend of Goodnesse will not claime a part In our great losse? |
A10256 | Who shares not in our griefe? |
A10256 | what eye forbeares To be a willing Partner in our teares? |
A10256 | what need, what need we presse a teare, When every eye becomes a Volunteire? |
A56987 | ''T was a new Tombe, and was it not most fit For that pure body which was put in it? |
A56987 | But why a Starre? |
A56987 | HArke what is that I heare? |
A56987 | His Yoke is easie; yet on him they lay A heavie crosse to carry; who dares say That this was just? |
A56987 | Nay, when the Sphere of light was puffed out How could the Sunne poore Taper looke about? |
A56987 | VVHat, reckon''d amongst rogues? |
A56987 | When Peace and Learning were so fairely link''t? |
A56987 | mixt with the rabble D ● svail''d like the jewell in the fable Cast in the count mongst theeves? |
A56987 | what coine is he In Jury stamp''d, yet there not currant be? |
A56830 | BUild not your Bliss upon the blaze of Glory, Can perfect Happiness be transitory? |
A56830 | Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani? |
A56830 | Happy is the Just and Holy, for who but he Can judge of things, or what their Natures be? |
A56830 | How is the Sun- bright Honour of his name Eclpis''d? |
A56830 | IN the midst of Life we are in Death, Of whom then may we seek for Succor, but of thee O Lord? |
A56830 | My Soul, to what a strange disguis''d good, Art thou bewitch''d? |
A56830 | O Lord, how great is the Power of thy Hand? |
A56830 | Tell me my Soul, What would''st thou buy? |
A56830 | Was not his name Glorious enough without a Witness? |
A56830 | What means that great Creating Power, to frame This spacious Universe? |
A56830 | What pleasure is in Dainties? |
A56830 | What thing is Man? |
A56830 | What ● ● ast thou for many Years after, but Weakness and ● ● ailty? |
A56830 | When Dust and Ashes mortally offends, Can Dust and Ashes make Eternal mends: ● s Heaven unjust? |
A56830 | Why Did that corrected twilight of his Eye Unmuzle darkness, and with Morning light Redeem the Day, from new baptiz''d Night? |
A56830 | Why do we thus afflict our labouring Souls With dregs of Wormwood, and carouse full Bowls Of boyling Anguish? |
A56830 | Why should thy too much Righteousness betray, Thy danger''d Life, and make thy Life a prey? |
A56830 | how is his Glory Cloath''d with shame? |
A56830 | my deceiv''d Soul, Where wilt thou take thy Peace? |
A56830 | that Gods regard is such: Or why, should Heaven love wretchless Man so much? |
A56847 | A just Advancement is a Providential Act; and who ever envied the Act of Providence? |
A56847 | Art thou banish''d from thy own Country? |
A56847 | Compare it to thy Saviour''s Passion, and it is no Pain? |
A56847 | Desirest thou Knowledge? |
A56847 | Dost thou rage under the Bondage of a raving Conscience? |
A56847 | Dost thou roar under the Torments of a Tyrant? |
A56847 | Dost thou want things necessary? |
A56847 | God hath made us rich in days by allowing six, and himself poor by reserving but one; and shall we spare our own Flock, and sheer his Lamb? |
A56847 | Hast thou lost thy Money, and dost thou Mourn? |
A56847 | Hath any wrong''d thee? |
A56847 | Have the Tortures of Hell taken hold of thy despairing soul? |
A56847 | Honour is a due Debt to the Deserver; and who ever envied the Payment of a Debt? |
A56847 | How cam''st thou by thy Honour? |
A56847 | If thou hide thy Treasure upon Earth, how canst thou expect to find it in Heaven? |
A56847 | If thow owest thy whole self to thy God for thy Creation, what hast thou left to pay for thy Redemption, that was not so cheap as the Creation? |
A56847 | Is any outward Affliction sallen upon thee by a temporary loss? |
A56847 | Is thy Child dead? |
A56847 | Is thy Treasure stoln? |
A56847 | Know the end of thy desire: Is it only to know? |
A56847 | What name of Virtue merits he that goes when he is driven? |
A56847 | Wouldest thou not be thought a Fool in another''s Conceit? |
A56847 | Wouldst thou know the Lawfulness of the action which thou desirest to undertake? |
A56847 | art thou asham''d of his work, and proud of thy own? |
A56847 | by Money; How cam''st thou by thy Money? |
A56847 | canst thou hope to be a sharer where thou hast reposed no stock? |
A56847 | he made thy face to be known by; why desirest thou to be known by another? |
A56847 | then it is Curiosity; is it because thou mayst be known? |
A56847 | with how many Deaths are our Lives patch''d up? |
A56827 | A just Advancement is a Providential Act; and who ever envied the Act of Providence? |
A56827 | Art thou banish''d from thy own Country? |
A56827 | Compare it to thy Saviour''s Passion, and it is no Pain? |
A56827 | Desirest thou Knowledge? |
A56827 | Dost thou rage under the Bondage of a raving Conscience? |
A56827 | Dost thou roar under the Torments of a Tyrant? |
A56827 | God hath made us rich in days by allowing six, and himself poor by reserving but one; and shall we spare our own Flock, and sheer his Lamb? |
A56827 | Hast thou lost thy Money, and dost thou Mourn? |
A56827 | Hath any wrong''d thee? |
A56827 | Have the Tortures of Hell taken hold of thy despairing soul? |
A56827 | Honour is a due Debt to the Deserver; and who ever envied the Payment of a Debt? |
A56827 | How cam''st thou by thy Honour? |
A56827 | If thou hide thy Treasure upon Earth, how canst thou expect to find it in Heaven? |
A56827 | If thou owest thy whole self to thy God for thy Creation, what hast thou left to pay for thy Redemption, that was not so cheap as the Creation? |
A56827 | Is any outward Affliction fallen upon thee by a temporary loss? |
A56827 | Is thy Child dead? |
A56827 | Is thy Treasure stoln? |
A56827 | Know the end of thy desire: Is it only to know? |
A56827 | What name of Virtue merits he that goes when he is driven? |
A56827 | Wouldest thou not be thought a Fool in another''s Conceit? |
A56827 | Wouldst thou know the Lawfulness of the action which thou desirest to undertake? |
A56827 | art thou asham''d of his work, and proud of thy own? |
A56827 | by Money; How cam''st thou by thy Money? |
A56827 | canst thou hope to be a sharer where thou hast reposed no stock? |
A56827 | he made thy face to be known by; why desirest thou to be known by another? |
A56827 | then it is Curiosity; is it because thou mayst be known? |
A56827 | with how many Deaths are our Lives patch''d up? |
A56988 | A just Advancement is a Providential Act; and who ever envied the Act of Providence? |
A56988 | Art thou banish''d from thy own Country? |
A56988 | Compare it to thy Saviour''s Passion, and it is no Pain? |
A56988 | Desirest thou Knowledge? |
A56988 | Dost thou rage under the Bondage of a raving Conscience? |
A56988 | Dost thou roar under the Torments of a Tyrant? |
A56988 | Dost thou want things necessary? |
A56988 | God hath made us rich in days by allowing six, and himself poor by reserving but one; and shall we spare our own Flock, and sheer his Lamb? |
A56988 | Hast thou lost thy Money, and dost thou Mourn? |
A56988 | Hath any wrong''d thee? |
A56988 | Have the Tortures of Hell taken hold of thy despairing soul? |
A56988 | Honour is a due Debt to the Deserver; and who ever envied the Payment of a Debt? |
A56988 | How cam''st thou by thy Honour? |
A56988 | If thou hide thy Treasure upon Earth, how canst thou expect to find it in Heaven? |
A56988 | If thow owest thy whole self to thy God for thy Creation, what hast thou left to pay for thy Redemption, that was not so cheap as the Creation? |
A56988 | Is any outward Affliction fallen upon thee by a temporary loss? |
A56988 | Is thy Child dead? |
A56988 | Is thy Treasure stoln? |
A56988 | Know the end of thy desire: Is it only to know? |
A56988 | What name of Virtue merits he that goes when he is driven? |
A56988 | Wouldest thou not be thought a Fool in another''s Conceit? |
A56988 | Wouldst thou know the Lawfulness of the action which thou desirest to undertake? |
A56988 | art thou asham''d of his work, and proud of thy own? |
A56988 | by Money; How cam''st thou by thy Money? |
A56988 | canst thou hope to be a sharer where thou hast reposed no stock? |
A56988 | he made thy face to be known by; why desirest thou to be known by another? |
A56988 | then it is Curiosity; is it because thou mayst be known? |
A56988 | with how many Deaths are our Lives patch''d up? |
A68936 | 9. WHo euer lou''d, that euer lou''d as I That for his sake renounce my selfe, denie The worlds best Ioyes, and haue the world forgone? |
A68936 | AM I a Garden? |
A68936 | ARt thou my Palme? |
A68936 | But shall, in briefe, my ruder tongue discouer The speaking Image of my absent Louer? |
A68936 | But ô, how fragrant with rich odour, smells That* sacred House, where thou my true Loue dwells? |
A68936 | COme forth( my Ioy;) What bold affront of feare Can fright thy soule, and I, thy Champion, here? |
A68936 | Couldst thou thinke My loue could shake, or such a Vow could shrinke? |
A68936 | FAire Bride, why was thy troubled soule dejected, When I was absent? |
A68936 | For whom giu''st thou so strict a Charge? |
A68936 | HIs Mouth- But stay; What need my lips be lauish, In choice of wordes, when one alone will rauish? |
A68936 | His glorious pompe, whose honour did display The noysed Triumphs of his Marriage day? |
A68936 | How can my flowers, which thy Ewers nourish With showers of liuing waters, choose but flourish? |
A68936 | My busie hand shall nourish Thy fruitfull roots, and make thy branches flourish: Art thou my Vine? |
A68936 | NOr does thy glorie shine to me alone; What place, wherein thy glorie hath not shone? |
A68936 | O Thou the fairest flowre of mortall birth, If such a beautie may be borne of earth, Angell or Virgin, which? |
A68936 | O Thou, whose loue I prize aboue my life, More worthy farre t''enjoy a fairer wife, Tell mee, to what coole shade, dost thou resort? |
A68936 | O tell thy Loue, and let thy Loue come thither: Say( gentle Shephard) fits it thee, to cherish Thy priuate Flocks, and let thy true Loue m perish? |
A68936 | O thou, the Spring, from whence these waters burst, Did euer any taste thy streames, and thurst? |
A68936 | Speake Lady, speake at large, Who is''t? |
A68936 | VVHat curious face is this? |
A68936 | VVHat if the frailtie of my feebler part, Lockt vp the Portalls of my drowsie heart? |
A68936 | VVHo e''re beheld the royall Crowne, set on The nuptiall browes of Princely Solomon? |
A68936 | VVOuld beautie fayne be flatter''d with a grace Shee neuer had? |
A68936 | Where graze thy Sheepe, where doe thy Lambs disport Free from the scortching of this l sowltrie weather? |
A68936 | Who e''re thought heauen a joy, cōpar''d to this? |
A68936 | Who euer lou''d so deare, as I haue done? |
A68936 | Who is''t can stop his eares At these faire lips? |
A68936 | Who, who is this( say they) whose cheekes resemble Aurora''s blush, whose Eye heauens lights dissemble? |
A68936 | how base a thing is Treasure? |
A68936 | or both in one, Angell by beautie, Virgin by the mone, Say, who is Hee that may deserue these teares, These precious drops? |
A68936 | was my Faith suspected Which I so firmelie plighted? |
A26353 | And after that Eckius had asked him: What now was his resolution? |
A26353 | And, All things are the Popes; to whom none dare say: what doe you? |
A26353 | At this the messenger was offended and said: Do you think that Prince Frederick will take up armes in your behalfe? |
A26353 | But why write I thus to you? |
A26353 | But, how more large, than Theirs, was Luthers Fame, Who, with One Pen, both Pope and Rome did tame? |
A26353 | Concerning the fables and lies cast abroad in his life time, what should I say? |
A26353 | Erasmus that viper being rouzed up will write against me again: what eloquence will that most vain hunter after glory exercise to cast down Luther? |
A26353 | For how wicked and impious those hymnes be, which are sung in the Popes Quires, who knoweth not? |
A26353 | For if we be not sustained by his promises, who, I pray you are there in the world, to whom they doe belong? |
A26353 | For these consulted with Luther what they should do? |
A26353 | For what should I doe with so much money? |
A26353 | For why should this unquiet and mischeivous vassall of Satan be offensive to heaven and earth? |
A26353 | He also answered Iohn Hessus to the question: Whether a Christian man may flie in time of Pestilence? |
A26353 | He answered also the Elector of Saxony to this question: How farre it is lawfull to take up armes in our own defence? |
A26353 | He asked the countrey man, what was meant by Almightie? |
A26353 | How often was he reported to fly to the Bohemians? |
A26353 | I pray you, tell me, what can the Divell doe more then kill us? |
A26353 | If I can obtaine for you the Dukes leave, will you dispute? |
A26353 | If my marriage be a work of God, what wonder is there, if the flesh be offended at it? |
A26353 | If the cause be faultie, let us revoke it; and flie back; if it be good: why do we make God a lyer? |
A26353 | If this be true, what feare is there for the truth, if he raigne? |
A26353 | Luther was( and who is not?) |
A26353 | Luther wrote also upon the question, whether souldiers lived in a kinde of life, tending to happinesse? |
A26353 | Namely, whether there be in man any free will to doe good as of himselfe? |
A26353 | Now how knew he that? |
A26353 | O reverend father, do you die in the constant confession of that dectrin of Christ, which you have hither to preached? |
A26353 | Of Hercules his Club, what talk we, then? |
A26353 | Our visitation goeth on, of what miseries are we eye witnesse? |
A26353 | So that when upon a time, one Papist demanded of an other, Why do you not stop the mans mouth with gold and silver? |
A26353 | Speaketh God these things into the wind, or casts he these pearles to bruits? |
A26353 | The Bishop againe said; What if the Articles were collected and submitted to the Councel? |
A26353 | The Italian replyed: Had you the Pope and the Cardinals in your power, what would you do? |
A26353 | Then the Partie; Where then will you abide? |
A26353 | They not knowing the force of this speech, answered, What know we, whether at Rome ye sit on wooden or stone seats? |
A26353 | What befell Adam? |
A26353 | What set Luther on, to say in his book against the King? |
A26353 | What then can Sophisters here performe, whose reason is blinded? |
A26353 | When the Bishop asked him, what remedy he knew or could advise for these stirres? |
A26353 | Why then do you continually and without ceasing macerate your self? |
A26353 | how often was he cal''d a flatterer of Princes, a trumpet of sedition? |
A26353 | how often were scandals raysed from his writings? |
A26353 | that is, as they say: whether in congruitie we deserve grace, when we doe what is in us to doe? |
A26353 | what a spirit, what a confidence was in his very expressions? |
A68937 | Absented from thy fauour, what remaines, But sense, and sad remembrance of my paines? |
A68937 | Ah, what prosp''rous winde, Will lend a Gale, whose bountie ne''re shall cease, Till we be landed on the I le of peace? |
A68937 | Can thy Iustice bee So slowe to them, and yet so sharpe to mee? |
A68937 | Could thy flattring Crimes Secure thee, from the danger of these times? |
A68937 | Could thy razing hand Finde ne''re a subiect, but the Holy Land? |
A68937 | DId not these sacred Cawsies, that are leading To Sion, late, seeme pau''d, with often treading? |
A68937 | Did not those sweet- lipt Oracles begude Thy wanton eares, with newes of Wine, and Oile? |
A68937 | Eagles are not so swift as they: Where shall wee flee? |
A68937 | HOw are my sacred Nazarites( that were The blazing Planets of my glorious Sphaere) Obscur''d, and darkned in Afflictions clowd? |
A68937 | Heauens powers are compacted, To worke my''eternall ruine; To what friend Shall I make moane, when Heauen conspires my end? |
A68937 | If Plants be lopt, because their fruits are small, Thinke you to thriue, that beare no fruit at all? |
A68937 | Is this that Mistris, and that Queene of Nations? |
A68937 | Is this that State? |
A68937 | MY tongue? |
A68937 | O thou( the Spring of mercy) wilt thou send No ease to our Afflictions, no end? |
A68937 | Oh, wherefore hast thou rent Thy Mercy from vs? |
A68937 | Or did thy summer Prophets e''re foresay These euills, or warne thee of a winters day? |
A68937 | Or where shall sorrow finde A place for harbour? |
A68937 | Shall I implore my friends? |
A68937 | TVrne where I list, new cause of woe, presents My poore distracted soule with new laments; Where shall I turne? |
A68937 | Then which, Hell needs no other fire: How nimble are our Foemen, to betray Our soules? |
A68937 | WHere, where art thou, ô sacred Lambe of peace, That promis''d to the heauie laden, ease? |
A68937 | Was not heauens house exempt From thy accursed Rape? |
A68937 | Whereto( Ierusalem) to what shall I Compare this thy vnequall''d miserie? |
A68937 | YEt sleepes thy Vengeance? |
A68937 | YOu noysome Weedes, that lift your Crests so high, When better Plants, for want of moisture, die, Thinke you to flourish euer? |
A68937 | and( vnspide) To shoot the flowers of your fruitlesse pride? |
A68937 | are these, those goodly Stations? |
A68937 | or their lingring death? |
A68937 | what helpe( ah me) what hope is left To him, that of thy presence is bereft? |
A68937 | what marble eye Can see these, these my Ruines, and not crye? |
A68937 | why dost thou thus absent Thy glorious Face? |
A68937 | why were we borne To be deuour''d, and pin''d with famin? |
A56976 | ARt thou banisht from thy owne Country? |
A56976 | ARt thou in plenty? |
A56976 | But it was an evill chance that took thy child, and a wicked hand that stole thy Treasure: What is that to thee? |
A56976 | By Extortion: Compare thy penny worth with the price, and tell me truly, how truly 〈 ◊ 〉 u ● able thou art? |
A56976 | By Mony: How cam''st thou by thy Mony? |
A56976 | Canst thou hope to be a sharer where thou hast reposed no stocke? |
A56976 | DEsir''st thou knowledge? |
A56976 | DOst thou complaine that God hath forsakē thee? |
A56976 | DOst thou roar under the Torments of a Tyrant? |
A56976 | DOst thou want things necessary? |
A56976 | Diminish them wisely: Or wouldst thou make thy Estate entire? |
A56976 | Dost thou rage under the Bondage of a raving Conscience? |
A56976 | God hath made us rich in dayes, by allowing six, and himselfe poore by reserving but one; and shall we spare our owne flocke, and sheare his Lambe? |
A56976 | HAth any wounded thee with Injuries? |
A56976 | HAth any wronged thee? |
A56976 | HAth fortune dealt the ill Cards? |
A56976 | HOw cam''st thou by thy Honou ●? |
A56976 | He is restor''d, not lost: is thy treasure stolne? |
A56976 | IF thou hide thy Treasure upon the Earth, how canst thou expect to finde it in Heaven? |
A56976 | IF thou owest thy whole selfe to thy God for thy Creation, what hast thou left to pay for thy Redemption, that was not so cheap as thy Creation? |
A56976 | IS any outward affliction fallen upon thee, by a temporary losse? |
A56976 | IS thy Child dead? |
A56976 | If it be good, why dost thou mend it? |
A56976 | L. WOuldst thou multiply thy riches? |
A56976 | SEest thou good dayes? |
A56976 | Then it is curiosity: Is it because thou mayst be knowne? |
A56976 | VVOuld''st thou purchase Heaven? |
A56976 | VVOuldest thou know the lawfulnesse of the action which thou desirest to undertak? |
A56976 | VVOuldst thou discover the true worth of a man? |
A56976 | VVOuldst thou not be thought a foole in anothers conceit? |
A56976 | VVOuldst thou traffick with the best advantage, and Crown thy vertues with the best return? |
A56976 | What a ● t thou the worse for the last yeares plaine diet, or what now the better for thy last great Feast? |
A56976 | X. HAst thou lost thy money, and dost thou mourne? |
A56976 | a just advancement is a providentiall act, and who ever envied the act of Providence? |
A56976 | art thou asham''d of his worke, and proud of thy owne? |
A56976 | compare it to thy Saviours passion, and it is no paine Have the tortures of Hell taken hold of thy dispairing soule? |
A56976 | give what thou wilt: Art thou in poverty? |
A56976 | know the end of thy desire: Is it only to know? |
A10262 | Am I a King? |
A10262 | And make his Brothell in our Royall Place? |
A10262 | Art thou that Wonder which the Persian State Stands gazing at so much, and poynting at? |
A10262 | Art thou that man of might, That Impe of Glory? |
A10262 | Art thou that mighty He? |
A10262 | Better Fast: In many sweets, one sowre offends the Pallate; One loth some weed annoyes the choycest Sallat: What are my riches? |
A10262 | Can Ester then be slaine, and not the King? |
A10262 | Filling all wondring eyes with Admiration, And euery loyall heart with Adoration? |
A10262 | God sets the Princely Crowne On heads of Kings; Who then may take it downe? |
A10262 | Ha''s wanton Cupid snatcht it? |
A10262 | Hath his Dart Sent courtly tokens to thy simple heart? |
A10262 | Hath thy deserued worth restor''d againe The blemisht honour of thy Princely straine? |
A10262 | How can I Expect my suit, and haue deseru''d to dye? |
A10262 | How can I rellish them? |
A10262 | How frownes the King, if Haman be not by? |
A10262 | How haps it then That wretched Mordecai, the worst of men, A captiue slaue, a superstitious Iew, Slights thee, and robs thee of thy rightfull due? |
A10262 | How well- succeeding broyles? |
A10262 | In strength, another summes Felicity: What horse is not more happy farre than he? |
A10262 | Is not Queene Ester bosom''d in our heart? |
A10262 | Like to a Lion rouzed from his rest, Rag''d then the King, and thus his rage exprest: Who is the man, that dares attempt this thing? |
A10262 | May my vngarnisht Quill presume so much, To glorifie it selfe, and giue a touch Vpon the Iland of my Sou''raigne Lord? |
A10262 | May not our subiects serue, but must our Queene Be made the subiect of a villaines spleene? |
A10262 | Say, say,( my lifes preseruer) what''s the thing, That lyes in the performance of a King, Shall be deny''d? |
A10262 | Say, say,( thou bounteous haruest of my ioyes)( Said then the King) what dumpish griefe annoyes Thy troubled soule? |
A10262 | Seem''d he not asleepe? |
A10262 | Speake, Lady, what''s the thing Thy heart desires? |
A10262 | Thy Lamb- like countenance, so faire, so meeke? |
A10262 | Times great Fauorite? |
A10262 | What Traitor then dares be so bold, part Our heart, and vs? |
A10262 | What are my children? |
A10262 | What base attempts can happen, vnpreuented? |
A10262 | What braue Command? |
A10262 | What meant that fi''ry Piller, that by night Appear''d to Isr''el, and gaue Isr''el light? |
A10262 | What my honour''d Place? |
A10262 | What pleasure is in dainties, if the Tast Be in it selfe distemper''d? |
A10262 | What sad request Hangs on her lips, dwells in her doubtfull brest? |
A10262 | What stately Triumphs? |
A10262 | What victorious spoyles Their hands achiu''d? |
A10262 | What? |
A10262 | Where are thy maiden smiles? |
A10262 | Where dost thou bide? |
A10262 | Where is that spotlesse flower that while- ere Within thy lilly- bosome thou did''st weare? |
A10262 | Where is the Traitor? |
A10262 | Who dares attempt this thing? |
A10262 | or my Princes Grace, So long as cursed Mordecai furuiues? |
A10262 | or rudely presse( Vncall''d) into his presence? |
A10262 | thy blushing cheeke? |
A10262 | with what delight? |
A10262 | ¶ Seem''d not thy Spouse vnkind, to heare thee weepe, And not redresse thee? |
A10263 | ( that first must seale her Patent) will: Wouldst thou live long? |
A10263 | 3. as it a parcell of celestiall fire, ● nfus''d, by Heav''n, into this fleshly mould? |
A10263 | A thousand Tapours may gaine light from Thee: Is thy Lightless, or worse for lighting mine? |
A10263 | ALwaies pruning? |
A10263 | Affraid of eyes? |
A10263 | Alas And what is that? |
A10263 | Alwaies cureing? |
A10263 | And Man lesse than they? |
A10263 | And is the light of the lesser world more premanent? |
A10263 | And skulk in Corners, and play least in sight? |
A10263 | And what''s a Man? |
A10263 | Art thou affraid to trust thy easie flame To the injurious wast of Fortunes puffe? |
A10263 | Art thou consum''d with soule- afflicting crosses? |
A10263 | Behold; the world is full of troubles; yet, beloved; What if it were a pleasing world? |
A10263 | But if her harmeless light Offend thy sight, What needst thou snatch at noone, what will be thine at night? |
A10263 | But why should Man, the Lord of Creatures, want That priviledge which Plants and Beasts obtaine? |
A10263 | Can thy bright eye not brooke the daily light? |
A10263 | Canst thou appoint my shaft? |
A10263 | Cloystred up in night? |
A10263 | Did heav''nly Providence intend So rare a Fabrick for so poore an end? |
A10263 | Disdaine you not these lumps of dying Clay, That, for your paines, doe oftentimes repay Neglect, if not disdaine, and send you griev''d away? |
A10263 | Disturb''d with griefe? |
A10263 | Ever dressing? |
A10263 | Great Prince of darknesse, hold thy needless hand; Thy Captiv''s fast, and can not flee: What arme can rescue? |
A10263 | Hast thou climbd up to the full age of thy few daies? |
A10263 | He will give his Angels charge over thee? |
A10263 | Hee''s mounting up the Hill; Thou plodding downe? |
A10263 | How wouldst thou delight in her Calmes, that canst so well endure her stormes? |
A10263 | If in the first sixe dayes, where kept till now? |
A10263 | If, wanting Light, I stumble, shall Thy darkness not be guilty of my fall? |
A10263 | In what a streight, in what a streight am I? |
A10263 | Is her brightnesse still obscur''d? |
A10263 | Is her luster fled, Or foyl''d? |
A10263 | Is it for feare Some busie eye should pry into thy flame, And spie a Thiefe, or else some blemish there? |
A10263 | Is not he As equall distant from the Toppe as thee? |
A10263 | Lord, what am I? |
A10263 | May it but light my Ashes to their Grave, And so from thence, to Thee? |
A10263 | Must humane soules be generated then? |
A10263 | My flame, art thou disturb''d, diseas''d, and driv''n To Death with stormes of griefe? |
A10263 | O what reverence, what ● ● ve, what confidence deserves so sweet a saying? |
A10263 | O what shall I desire? |
A10263 | Or being spy''d, shrink''st thou thy head for shame? |
A10263 | Or if they could, what close, what forrein land Can hide that head, that flees from Thee? |
A10263 | Or is''t a propagated Spark, rak''d out From Natures embers? |
A10263 | Or of old? |
A10263 | Or, if it were created, tell me, when? |
A10263 | Seest thou the daily light of the greater world? |
A10263 | Seest thou this good old man? |
A10263 | Shall these get living soules? |
A10263 | Take not thy selfe a Pris''ner, that art free: Why dost thou turne thy Palace to a Iaile? |
A10263 | Tell me, recluse Monastick, can it be A disadvantage to thy beames to shine? |
A10263 | The infant Will had yet none other guide, But twilight Sense; And what is gayn''d from thence But doubtfull Steps, that tread aside? |
A10263 | Then; was it new created? |
A10263 | Those Bacchanalian Tones? |
A10263 | Those buxom tunes? |
A10263 | Those swelling veynes? |
A10263 | Thou art an Eagle; And befits it thee To live immured, like a cloysterd Snaile? |
A10263 | Thus was the first seav''nth part of thy few daies Consum''d in sleep, in food, in Toyish plaies: Knowst thou what teares thine eies imparted then? |
A10263 | To spend his Light In a darke- Lanthorne? |
A10263 | To the declining Man, Why standst thou discontented? |
A10263 | Twixt two extreames how my rackt fortunes lie? |
A10263 | VVAs it for this, the breath of Heav''n was blowne Into the nostrils of this Heav''nly Creature? |
A10263 | VVHat ayles our Tapour? |
A10263 | Was it for this, that sacred Three in One Conspir''d to make this Quintessence of Nature? |
A10263 | What dire disaster bred This Change? |
A10263 | What help can my distracted thoughts require, That thus am wasting twixt a double Fire? |
A10263 | What may this sorrow- shaken life present To the false relish of our Tast, That''s worth the name of sweet? |
A10263 | What shall I doe? |
A10263 | What shall we then conclude? |
A10263 | What still play least in sight? |
A10263 | What sun- shine wil ● Disperse this gloomy cloud? |
A10263 | What then may cause thy discontented frowne? |
A10263 | Where that Maiesty Which sat enthron''d upon thy manly brow? |
A10263 | Where, where that braving Arme? |
A10263 | Who can countermand, What pow''r can set thy Pris''ner free? |
A10263 | Why doest thou wonder, ô man, at the height of the Starres? |
A10263 | Why dost thou lurk so close? |
A10263 | Wilt thou complaine, because thou art bereiv''n Of all thy light? |
A10263 | Wilt thou vie Lights with Heav''n? |
A10263 | Young man, rejoyce; And let thy rising daies Cheare thy glad heart; Thinkst thou these uphill waies Leade to deaths dungeon? |
A10263 | alwaies cropping? |
A10263 | ever topping? |
A10263 | never cur''d? |
A10263 | or what''s the light I have? |
A10263 | or 〈 ◊ 〉 depth of the Sea? |
A10263 | that daring eye? |
A10263 | that thus she vailes her golden head? |
A10263 | those marrow- flowing bones? |
A10263 | where is that glory now, Thy Youth so vaunted? |
A10263 | ● anst thou behold bright Phoebus, and thy sight ● o whit impayr''d? |
A10263 | ● hat art thou now the better by this flame? |
A10263 | 〈 ◊ 〉 was it( thinke you) made a soule entire? |
A77759 | Affright the lesse? |
A77759 | Alas, Sir, said his servants what may be The cause you send us out such wofull grones? |
A77759 | And for a pious mans Astronomie; What if he can not tell the sev''rall motions Those orbs have which do roll about the skie? |
A77759 | And have all my sinnes forgiven? |
A77759 | And hereafter go to heaven? |
A77759 | And what if when Death appears It can not shield me from that fatall blow? |
A77759 | And why are Patrones simoniacall? |
A77759 | Can learning please? |
A77759 | DOth Death come suddenly? |
A77759 | Did he desire a sight Of what might most affect? |
A77759 | Do Our shadows vanish? |
A77759 | Do riches please? |
A77759 | Doth he that prayer- hearing God beseech? |
A77759 | Doth rich apparel please? |
A77759 | Doth toothsome and delicious chear delight? |
A77759 | For Geometrie; what if he can not tell How many miles the vast earth is about? |
A77759 | For to provide? |
A77759 | For to provide? |
A77759 | God made not death: Whence are we mortall then? |
A77759 | Hast thou, Lord, no mercy left? |
A77759 | Have they no reason for this eager thirst After Gods love and friendship? |
A77759 | Have you not seen a mothers wofull tears Embalm the carcase of her onely sonne? |
A77759 | How do ye think That thirstie, drie, and barren land did yawn And gape to heav''n- ward for a draught of drink? |
A77759 | How fell you into such an agonie? |
A77759 | How long be angrie? |
A77759 | How long wilt thou thy gratious visage hide? |
A77759 | How long? |
A77759 | How many hungry mortals have been fed Contentedly at dinner? |
A77759 | How many in the morning walk abroad For to be breath''d on by the keener air? |
A77759 | How much rancour did he show So much harmlesse bloud to spill, And a quarter- part to kill Of all mankind at a blow? |
A77759 | How soon doth Death uncase Our souls? |
A77759 | How to all comfort she stops both her eares, Wrings both her hands, and makes a bitter moan? |
A77759 | I''LL ne''r be proud of beauty if I must Be blemish''d when I die: And if the grave Will mix my beauty with the vilest dust, What profits pride? |
A77759 | IF Death will come, what do men mean to sinne With so much greedinesse? |
A77759 | If God vouchsafe to number out the hairs That do adorn and cloth our sinfull heads; Who doubteth that his providence forbears To count our dayes? |
A77759 | If not, why d''ye presse''t on us? |
A77759 | In these sacred urns What lies but royall dust? |
A77759 | Is it your love that doth produce such grones? |
A77759 | Lord, rather what am I? |
A77759 | Lord, what is man? |
A77759 | May Not God, and Sinne, and Nature claim their due? |
A77759 | No man shall excell me; For who is''t can tell me What pleasures there will be hereafter? |
A77759 | Nor hath wit enough to see The new world that''s in the moon? |
A77759 | Once spilt, what hand can gather''t up again? |
A77759 | Or do you grieve because they di''d so soon? |
A77759 | Or is your onely child deceas''d, that passion Doth domineer so? |
A77759 | Or is''t because that they are dead you weep? |
A77759 | See you not yonder super- stately palace? |
A77759 | Shall my soul ne''r dwell at ease? |
A77759 | Sinne from torment who can sunder? |
A77759 | Starres names, site, bignesse, and such other notions? |
A77759 | Sure I see A providence in all: Who is not vex''d, And plung''d, and lean with too much industry? |
A77759 | VVHat would I do if I were sure to die Within this houre? |
A77759 | What ails your throat, your head, your heart, your bones Or your stomach, or your brains, That you howl so? |
A77759 | What befell Zimri and Cozbi as they lay together? |
A77759 | What begger weeps when''s rags are thrown away To put on better clothes? |
A77759 | What canst thou do that justly may affright me? |
A77759 | What if I die before? |
A77759 | What if he know not how soon The sunne will eclipsed be? |
A77759 | What is a shadow? |
A77759 | What makes Death look rufully? |
A77759 | What makes me fear a serpent? |
A77759 | What shall I lay up for hereafter? |
A77759 | What think you now of such a glorious woman? |
A77759 | What would I leave undone if ghastly Death Stood at my elbow? |
A77759 | What''s become of that complexion Which held all hearts in subjection? |
A77759 | Who is''t will grieve To pull a rotten house down, that it may Be fairer built? |
A77759 | Why are Gods Ministers become men- pleasers? |
A77759 | Why are our Advocates such nippy teasers Of honest causes? |
A77759 | Why doth the Judge with bribes his conscience stain? |
A77759 | Why doth the Land- lord rack? |
A77759 | Why doth the bauling Lawyer take delight In spinning causes to a needlesse length, Untill his clients purse hath lost its strength? |
A77759 | Why should I sinne at all? |
A77759 | Why should your eyes runne o''r For what you have no way to remedie? |
A77759 | Why sinne the foolish sonnes of men for gain? |
A77759 | With greater sloth? |
A77759 | Would I be compassed about With mercie? |
A77759 | Would I by his Spirit be led? |
A77759 | act So many parts at once, and balk no sinne? |
A77759 | and when they once are fled away, Who can return them? |
A77759 | and why do Tradesmen rear Their price, yet sell time dearer then their ware? |
A77759 | find relief in miserie? |
A77759 | for ever, Lord, wilt thou forget me? |
A77759 | for what? |
A77759 | shall I abide Thus for evermore bereft Of all comfort, joy, and peace? |
A77759 | the Us''rer bite? |
A77759 | what? |
A77759 | why the devil and all Do Misers scrape? |
A77759 | wilt thou never let me Enjoy thy face again? |
A56832 | A King? |
A56832 | Admit that: But what necessitie may dispense with the violation of the Law of God? |
A56832 | And are not many more ripe for the same Judgement, whose notorious Crimes have branded them for their respective Punishments? |
A56832 | And did not you at the same instant by relative consequence, proclaime your selves Subjects? |
A56832 | And did the Lord of the Sabbath dispence with a morall Law, for the preservation of an Oxes life, or an Asses? |
A56832 | And is not disorder the mother of Anarchie? |
A56832 | And was he not Proclaimed before he was crowned? |
A56832 | And what is taking up of Armes, but an implyed supposition of at least equalitie? |
A56832 | And when Judgement 〈 ◊ 〉, who is not troubled? |
A56832 | And who is he? |
A56832 | And, can that liberty produce any thing but an establisht disorder? |
A56832 | And, tell me; whose power have his Adherents? |
A56832 | And, who are they? |
A56832 | Are their purses so apt to bleed to no end? |
A56832 | Are you so strict in your Preparations, as to catechize every souldier? |
A56832 | Barbarus has segetes? |
A56832 | But what? |
A56832 | But, admit Statutes may be broken, and you seeke to punish them; Who gave you the power so to doe? |
A56832 | But, in case, your side should prosper, and prevaile, what then? |
A56832 | But, when Kings and their assistance make an offensive, and a destructive warre against their Parliament, may they not then take up defensive Armes? |
A56832 | But, whence proceeds all this? |
A56832 | Can there be a stricter Precept? |
A56832 | Did they encourage their Provinces to take up Arms for the defence of their Liberties or Religion? |
A56832 | Did they endeavour by Scandals and impious Aspersions to render him odious to his people? |
A56832 | Did they seize upon or stop his Revenues? |
A56832 | God gave them, their Power, and who are thou that darest resist it? |
A56832 | God joyned the King and his power, and who dare separate them? |
A56832 | God or man? |
A56832 | Gods Word answers your silly Objection, not I: was not Saul Gods Annoynted? |
A56832 | Had not he as great an Interest in that Crown, as we have in this Common- wealth? |
A56832 | Had the Sword been a necessary stickler in Reformation, how happened it that he mistook his weapon so? |
A56832 | He that shall eat this Bread,& drink this cup of the Lord unworthily, eateth and drinketh, What? |
A56832 | How many does this Army consist of? |
A56832 | How many of these have counterfeited the honour of good Patriots, for largely contributing towards the Ruines of their Country? |
A56832 | How many of these have lately chalenged the name of sanctified Vessels, for containing the poyson of unnaturall Sedition? |
A56832 | How many of these have usurpt the stile of well- affected, for dis- affecting Peace? |
A56832 | How stands he a Marke betwixt two dangers, having nothing left him but guile enough to make him capable of a desperate Fortune? |
A56832 | If Subjects, ought they not to be subject? |
A56832 | If not, who are they? |
A56832 | If our blessed Saviour be not Representative, Tell me where of art thou a Member? |
A56832 | If so, Is it of Doctrine, or of Discipline? |
A56832 | If ye feare the alteration of the Old,( having your Soveraigns Oath, which you dare not beleeve) what other assurance can you have? |
A56832 | Improbus haec tam culta novalia miles habebit? |
A56832 | Nor was it want of strength, that he reformed not in a Martiall way: Could not he command more then twelve legions of Angels? |
A56832 | Or had he pleased to use the Arme of flesh; could not he that raysed the dead, rayse a considerable Army? |
A56832 | Or would they have slighted his gracious Offers? |
A56832 | Or( being Rulers of the Province of Babel) did they invite the Jewes into a Rebellion? |
A56832 | Or, having the proffer of a good Popish, or debaucht Commander, tell me, should he be denyed his Commission? |
A56832 | Or, if such an( almost) unpreventable evill should not ensue, think you, such swarmes of Sectaries sweat for nothing? |
A56832 | Or, is it a Truth ye want? |
A56832 | Or, is it of Discipline? |
A56832 | Or, to examine first every Officers Religion? |
A56832 | Or,( having renounced his Subjects ayde, upon his fayle) could he expect that loyalty, which now he wants upon a meere suspition? |
A56832 | Proclaimed? |
A56832 | Sir John Hotham, then Governour of Hull, who first defyed and dared his Soveraigne to his face, what is become of him? |
A56832 | So, He is tearmed a stumbling block, and does that warrant us to stumble? |
A56832 | So, He sayes, All you shall be offended because of me; and does this patronize our Offences? |
A56832 | The King a knowne Pagan commands grosse Idolatry, did these men conspire? |
A56832 | The Law is good and just: Because then we had not knowne sinne but by the Law, is it therefore lawfull for us to sinne? |
A56832 | The Law: And what Law denyes the King power to pardon Delinquents? |
A56832 | The Lords Annoynted? |
A56832 | The preservation of the old Truth, or the Institution of a New? |
A56832 | Was not Cyrus Gods Annoynted, and many more whom God acknowledges so& yet wicked Kings? |
A56832 | Was not God as able to subdue Him with so few, as to deliver them from so many? |
A56832 | Was not He as tender- eyed towards his own naturall people, as we to one another? |
A56832 | Was not He the great Reformer? |
A56832 | Was not the Truth as deare to Him,( who was the verie Truth) and the way to it as direct to Him( that was the only Way) as to us? |
A56832 | Were Plots, Policies, Propositions, Prophanations, Plunderings, Militatie Proparations, his way to Reformation? |
A56832 | Were they not his owne words, He that taketh up the Sword, shall perish by the Sword? |
A56832 | What Vices of the times have branded his Repute? |
A56832 | What are the hopes of conquest but an Ambition of Superioritie? |
A56832 | What interiour person would not think his Reputation wronged, not to take up considence upon such terrible termes? |
A56832 | What is condemning, judging, or deposing, but Supremacie? |
A56832 | What meane ye by having Truth? |
A56832 | What notorious evill hath his Majesty perpetrated to quench the sparkles of a Common Charity? |
A56832 | When the Lyon r ● ● res who trembles not? |
A56832 | When you affronted Basing- house, was that defensive? |
A56832 | When you besieged Redding, which you after slighted, was that defensive? |
A56832 | When you shot five peeces of Ordnance, before one was returned at Edge- hill, was that defensive? |
A56832 | Who limited it? |
A56832 | Who, so bitterly inveighed against Episcopall Government, should be so shot dead out of a Cathedrall Church? |
A56832 | Why was the penaltie, upon the faile, not expressed them? |
A56832 | Will not their costs, and paines expect, at least, a congratulatory connivence in the freedome of their consciences? |
A56832 | and that, of Ruine? |
A56832 | did these to strengthen their own Faction, blast their Soveraignes Name with Tyranny and Faganisme? |
A56832 | did they estrange themselves from his Presence? |
A56832 | or annihilate his Power? |
A56832 | or could there be a more impious Prince? |
A56832 | who labouring to put out the left eye of establisht Government, his left eye, and life were both put out together? |
A56832 | who was so severe an enemy against Peace should perish in the same Warre, ● e so encouraged? |
A56832 | would then our Misertes be at an end? |
A43639 | 5. Who are these that fly as a cloud, and as the Doves to their windowes? |
A43639 | ARt thou delighted with strange novelties, Which often prove but old fresh garnisht lies? |
A43639 | An heart? |
A43639 | And is it not all one, if he have given Thee meanes to get it? |
A43639 | And is it reason what I gave in grosse Should be return''d but by retaile? |
A43639 | And is''t the fruit of having still to crave? |
A43639 | And why? |
A43639 | Art thou incapable of every thing, But what thy senses to thy fancie bring? |
A43639 | But am I not starke wilde, That go about to wash mine heart With hands that are defil''d, As much as any other part? |
A43639 | But how? |
A43639 | But is this all? |
A43639 | But is''t not better hold that which I have, Then unto future expectation trust? |
A43639 | But where may it be found? |
A43639 | But where''s thine heart the while, thou senselesse sot? |
A43639 | But who can tell what is within thine heart? |
A43639 | But, desperatly devoted to destruction, Rebell against the light, abhorre instruction? |
A43639 | Can death, or hell, be worse then this estate? |
A43639 | Can there be to thy sight A more entire delight? |
A43639 | Can there no helpe be had? |
A43639 | Canst thou endure thy pleasant garden should Be thus turn''d up as ordinary mould? |
A43639 | Canst thou not hold them off? |
A43639 | Confesse and pray? |
A43639 | Could there a cord be found, Wherewith omnipotence it self was bound? |
A43639 | DOst thou enquire, thou heartlesse wanderer, Where thine heart is? |
A43639 | Do st thou not in this milky colour see The lively lustre of sincerity, Which no hypocrisie hath painted, Nor self- respecting ends have tainted? |
A43639 | Do''st thou not see how thine heart turnes aside, And leanes toward thy self? |
A43639 | Dost thou draw backe? |
A43639 | Faint- hearted fondling, canst thou feare to dye, Being a Spirit and immortall? |
A43639 | Find''st thou such sweetnesse in those sugar''d lyes? |
A43639 | For me, that was not dead alone, But desp''ratly transcendent grown In enmitie to thee? |
A43639 | Give thee mine heart? |
A43639 | God made it not for food? |
A43639 | HOw pleasant is that now, which heretofore Mine heart hela buter, sacred learnings l ● … e? |
A43639 | Hast thou an eare To listen but to what thou should''st not heare? |
A43639 | Hast thou so soone forgot the former paine, That thy licentious bondage unto sinne, And lust enlarged thraldome, put thee in? |
A43639 | Hath custome charm''d thee so, That thou canst relish nothing but thy woe? |
A43639 | Hath it not within A bottomlesse whirlpoole of sinne? |
A43639 | Have I betroth''d thee to my selfe, and shall The devill, and the world, intrude Upon my right, Ev''n in my fight? |
A43639 | Have I now no more To doe hereafter? |
A43639 | Have forain objects so ingrost thine eyes? |
A43639 | Heale thee? |
A43639 | How doe I hugge mine happinesse that have Present possession of what others crave? |
A43639 | How wide A distance there is here? |
A43639 | IS this my period? |
A43639 | Is it not hollow? |
A43639 | Is mine Almighty arme decai''d in strength? |
A43639 | Is not this Lilly pure? |
A43639 | Is there a joy like this? |
A43639 | Is there a pow''r above My will in me, that can my purposes reprive? |
A43639 | Is this the trimming that the world bestowes Upon such robes of majestie as those? |
A43639 | Is''t not enough to die, unlesse by paine Thou antidate Thy death before hand, Lord? |
A43639 | Is''t therefore thou art loth to see it such, As now it is, because it is so much, Degenerated now from what it was, And should have been? |
A43639 | It may be so: and what of that? |
A43639 | Laid downe already? |
A43639 | Lord, if thou wilt not still encrease my store, Why did''st thou any thing at all bestow? |
A43639 | Lord, wilt thou suffer this? |
A43639 | Must I as well maintaine, And keep, as make thy fences? |
A43639 | Must he, that doth sin- weari''d soules refresh, Himself endure Such tearing tortures? |
A43639 | Must there not be Peace- offerings, and sacrifices of Thanksgiving tendered unto thee? |
A43639 | Must those sides be gash''d? |
A43639 | My meane estate of misery? |
A43639 | My mind''s my kingdome: why should I withstand, Or question that, which I my selfe command? |
A43639 | Or doth thy self- confounding fancy feare thee, When there''s no danger neer thee? |
A43639 | Or hath mine hammer lost its weight? |
A43639 | Or hath thine understanding lost its light? |
A43639 | Or shall I both be clad, And also sad, To think it is a crowne, and yet so bad? |
A43639 | Or wilt thou have beside Violets purple- di''d? |
A43639 | Poore, silly, simple, sense- besotted soule, Why dost thou hugge thy self- procured woes? |
A43639 | Shall I Alwayes lie Grov''ling on earth, Where there is no mirth? |
A43639 | Shall I returne to mine owne heart? |
A43639 | Shall I returne to thee? |
A43639 | Shall I returne, that can not though I would? |
A43639 | Shall both the wine, And worke be all his owne? |
A43639 | Shall he, that is thy Cluster, and thy Vine, Tread the winepresse alone, Whilst thou stand''st looking on? |
A43639 | Shall my mind give o''re It s ● … ● … thus, and idle be, Or buss''d other wise? |
A43639 | Should I not feare before thee, Lord, Who ● … hand ● … heaven, at whose word Devills themselves doe quake? |
A43639 | Should I not love thee, blessed Lord, Who freely of thine owne accord Laid''st downe thy life for me? |
A43639 | Should I not see How to improve my thoughts more ● …, Before ● … these Heart School ● … by? |
A43639 | Should I now lightly let it passe, Take sullen lead for silver, sounding brasse In stead of solid gold, alas, What would become of it? |
A43639 | Speak out thy doubts, and thy desires, and tell me, What enemy or can, or dares to quell thee? |
A43639 | Speak, blessed Lord, Wilt thou afford Me meanes to make it cleane? |
A43639 | That a poore lumpe of earth should sleight My mercies, and not feele my wrath at length, With which I make Ev''n heav''n to shake? |
A43639 | That neither forward, nor on either side I can get loose? |
A43639 | The Pedlar cryes, What doe you lack? |
A43639 | This is the tree of knowledge, and untill Thou eat thereof, how canst thou know what''s good or ill? |
A43639 | Those shoulders lash''d? |
A43639 | WHy dost thou hide thy wounds? |
A43639 | WOuld''st thou, my love, a ladder have, whereby Thou mai''st climbe heaven to sit downe on high? |
A43639 | What Fuller can procure A white so perfect, spotlesse, clear, As in this flower doth appear? |
A43639 | What boundlesse sorrow can suffice a guilt Growne so transcendent? |
A43639 | What can augment my blisse? |
A43639 | What do''st thou meane To aggravate The guilt of sinne? |
A43639 | What doe those scourges on that sacred flesh, Spotlesse and pure? |
A43639 | What expectation hast thou to doe well, That art content to dwell Within the verge of hell? |
A43639 | What have we here? |
A43639 | What is the matter? |
A43639 | What say''st thou to that Rose, That queen of flowers, whose Maidenly blushes, fresh, and faire, Out- brave the dainty morning aire? |
A43639 | What shall I do? |
A43639 | What shall I doe? |
A43639 | What will that fanne, though of the finest feather, Steed thee, the brunt of windes and stormes to beare? |
A43639 | What will thy fight Availe thee, or my light, If there be nothing in thine heart to see Acceptable to me? |
A43639 | What will you buy? |
A43639 | What wilt thou say? |
A43639 | What''s this that checks my course? |
A43639 | What? |
A43639 | What? |
A43639 | What? |
A43639 | What? |
A43639 | What? |
A43639 | What? |
A43639 | What? |
A43639 | What? |
A43639 | Wherefore is there a price in the hand of a foole to get wisdome, seeing he bath no heart to it? |
A43639 | Whilst all thy teares, Thine hopes, and feares, Both ev''ry word, and deed, And thought is foule, Poore filly soule, How canst thou looke to speed? |
A43639 | Who can know it? |
A43639 | Who would be troubled with an heart, As I have been of late, Both to my sorrow, shame, and smart? |
A43639 | Whose eyes out- shine the Sunne, whose beck Can the whole ● … of Nature check, And its foundations shake? |
A43639 | Why doe I trifle then? |
A43639 | Why dost thou spurn And kick the counsells that should bring thee back again? |
A43639 | Why hath Satan filled thine heart? |
A43639 | Why should I not? |
A43639 | Will pleasant fruites, or flowers serve the turne? |
A43639 | Wilt thou not what he sets before thee daine to take? |
A43639 | Would ever any, that had eyes, mistake As thou art wo nt to doe: no difference make Betwixt the way to heaven and to hell? |
A43639 | Yet how should we Divided be, That are not two, but one? |
A43639 | am I riveted, or rooted here? |
A43639 | and so fast asleepe? |
A43639 | are the ruines such thou art affrai''d, Or else asham''d, to see how''t is decai''d? |
A43639 | could those hands, That made the world, be subject unto bands? |
A43639 | do''st thou struggle to get loose againe? |
A43639 | mad men may rave Of mercy miracles, but what will Justice say? |
A43639 | must I still be rooted here below, And riveted unto the ground, Wherein mine haste to grow Will be though sound, But slow? |
A43639 | must he still be driven To new workes of creation for thy sake? |
A43639 | or to enhance the price Thy sacrifice Amounts to? |
A43639 | or whither? |
A43639 | take it at adventure, and not try What metall it is made of? |
A43639 | what I desire Why doe I not? |
A43639 | what danger can it be to eat That which is good being ordain''d for meat? |
A43639 | what strange course shall I try, That, though I loath to live, yet dare not die? |
A43639 | why do''st thou complaine? |
A43639 | why dost thou hide In thy close breast thy wishes, and so side With thine owne soares and so rowes? |
A43639 | wilt thou borrow That griefe to day, which thou must pay to morrow? |
A43639 | wilt thou take No paines for thine own sake? |
A56846 | 138. line 3. Who is the Sheeps- heads now according to your own tearme? |
A56846 | 139. line 23. Who turned his Fiddle to the Base of the times? |
A56846 | 147. line 1. Who is guilty of Parasiticall basenes? |
A56846 | 147. line 18. Who is the Whiteliverd Christian to be turned out among dogs and hell- hounds? |
A56846 | 6. of holy memory, when the Protestant Broome swept cleanest? |
A56846 | A Malignant of the right stamp, and coyned at the Kings own Royall Mint? |
A56846 | And shall the calling of a Minister be undertaken by every unexamined tagrag? |
A56846 | And who are they? |
A56846 | And would they do such an act, and stand guilty of such a Fratricide, so horrible a slaughter, had they not a Warrant for it? |
A56846 | And yet, for the successe of your oft propounded, and( sometimes) accepted Treaties of Peace, what one blessed hower hath been sequestred? |
A56846 | Are not they wise, and truly religious, and holy Merchants for Gods Glory, and blessed Agents for our Kingdomes Reformation? |
A56846 | Are you tormented before your time? |
A56846 | Because he offends his God, wilt thou aggravate the offence, in offending him? |
A56846 | But can you heare your bosome friend injuriously reviled, and lend him no Apology, but run away; and whisper in his eare a tedious Complaint? |
A56846 | But did this Prophets heart smite him, for cutting off his Soveraignes skirt? |
A56846 | But has that holy man no name, Doctor? |
A56846 | But if salt hath lost it''s favour, wherewith shall it be seasoned? |
A56846 | But what? |
A56846 | Can you do the Act with a good Conscience,& not heare of the Action without impatience? |
A56846 | Can you resist, and not rebell? |
A56846 | Come you in your own name? |
A56846 | Dare you resist who have liberty to flee? |
A56846 | Dare you vye piety with those Martyrs, that are so daynty of your passive obedience? |
A56846 | Did not I tell you, in the Preface,( where you shewed your teeth) that you would clap your tayle between your legs anon, and run away? |
A56846 | Did not our Saviour himself condemne the old Pharisees, for their Traditions? |
A56846 | Did our Saviour storme, when the Sadduces reproved his words? |
A56846 | Doctor, you still harp upon the same string: But do these Batts, these Reremice trouble you? |
A56846 | Does your shoe pinch you there? |
A56846 | Doth he execute Gods office, that forbids, what he commands? |
A56846 | God hath commanded all to search the Scriptures; and will ye take Pett if we examine the Doctrine you raise from thence? |
A56846 | Had he speciall Revelations? |
A56846 | How now Doctor, doth your Guilt begin to call for more witnesses? |
A56846 | How now, Doctor? |
A56846 | How often have your solemne Petitions set dayes apart, for the expedition of your Martiall attempts in a Pitcht field, or for the raising of a Seige? |
A56846 | How often was his Authority questioned? |
A56846 | How often were his Doctrines traduced, as false? |
A56846 | How willingly can a dog foule the roome, and how loath to have his nose rubbed in it? |
A56846 | I know thou beleevest; have not you blasphemy enough to traduce the Apostle of a courtly lye? |
A56846 | In whose Reigne was it composed? |
A56846 | Is he not bound to his own Lawes? |
A56846 | Is not Implicite Beliefe one of our greatest Quarrells with the Church of Rome, even unto this day? |
A56846 | Is this your Zeale for Gods glory? |
A56846 | Is your fornace so hot? |
A56846 | None between him and God; Onely accomptable to God for all his Actions? |
A56846 | Or tell me, without blushing, where are they that did it? |
A56846 | Sacred? |
A56846 | Shall every Coblor, Feltmaker, or Taylour intrude into that honorable calling, and be judges of their own sufficiency? |
A56846 | So many millions of soules lye open to the tyranny of his arbitrary will? |
A56846 | Sure, Doctor, You are now besides your text: Shall whole kingdomes, then, depend upon his extravagant pleasure? |
A56846 | Sure,''t was your ill usage made it so: But say, was David a Prophet? |
A56846 | Take heed Doctor, you run not your selfe out of the Assembly into Ely house: What speciall Commission had our Parliament to do the like? |
A56846 | Then, sure, he knew it a heynous sin, to take away the life of Gods Vicegerent( though an Idolater) Had he speciall Revelations? |
A56846 | Thinkest thou, that they, and their Abettors will passe unpunisht? |
A56846 | True, Kings are called Gods: But what followes? |
A56846 | Were not those blessed Martyrs the composers? |
A56846 | What Bells? |
A56846 | What Bonefires? |
A56846 | What Church doore hath been opened? |
A56846 | What Rhethoricall pretermissions of things materiall? |
A56846 | What allegorizing of plaine texts? |
A56846 | What bitternesse? |
A56846 | What faultring? |
A56846 | What invectives? |
A56846 | What obscurity of stile? |
A56846 | What one amongst them threw down his Gauntlet? |
A56846 | What pasquills? |
A56846 | What raylings? |
A56846 | What shuffling? |
A56846 | What tryumphs? |
A56846 | When Ignorance and Folly meet, how malice domineeres? |
A56846 | When Princes offend their God in suffering, or partaking with Idolaters, shall subjects be afraid to offend them? |
A56846 | When a ship hath made a voyage with one winde into New- England, will you blame it for returning back with a quite contrary? |
A56846 | When many people are demanded their Reasons of divers opinions, which they stoutly stand unto, is not their answer thus? |
A56846 | Where the word of a King is, there is power, and who shall say unto him, What dost thou? |
A56846 | Which of them took up the Sling? |
A56846 | Who among so many, struck one blow in the just defence of the true Reformed Religion? |
A56846 | Who was it that was so active for the oath Ex Officio, so eager for the two shillings nine pence so contentious with his parishioners? |
A56846 | Who was the cowardly cur then? |
A56846 | Whose Embassadour are you? |
A56846 | Will your zeale sell Gods honour for the impatience of a Scoffe? |
A56846 | Yet how many thousand more have perisht by the sword, at their Command? |
A56846 | Your Halls say, no: Why? |
A56846 | and leave their lawfull Trades for unwarrantable Professions, according to their own humerous Fansies? |
A56846 | and rebell against God, in rebelling against him? |
A56846 | and to Princes, yee are ungodly? |
A56846 | and what Authority confirmed it? |
A56846 | and when the cruelty of that bloody Religion was but newly out of breath, and fresh in Memory? |
A56846 | and yet, what a busines now, you make of his creeping Ceremonies? |
A56846 | did not your self taxe him of rank Popery? |
A56846 | is every tatling Basket- maker, or Butcher, or mincing Shee a fit Judge of a( Ministers) doctrine, and meet to reprove and confute him for it? |
A56846 | may any, that hath skill to make a shoe, a hat, or a suite, professe the Trade, till he be made free? |
A56846 | nay more, denyed? |
A56846 | not limited by his Coronation oath? |
A56846 | or where''s the Lye? |
A56846 | or, was it your own self? |
A56846 | saith, Is it fit then to say to a King, Thou art wicked? |
A56846 | that endeavour to strike off a Bishops Cap, forsooth? |
A56846 | their unlawfull Commands not violated without Rebellion? |
A56846 | then, doubtlesse, his wayes and actions were the best presidents for us, to follow: But was he a Prophet? |
A56846 | this Book of Common- Prayer is your maine quarrell here; and Bishops, by the Bye: Tell me, who composed that Book? |
A56846 | to cast Pearles before Swine? |
A56846 | to disobey him, whom God hath commanded thee to honour? |
A56846 | to rebell against him, to whom God hath commanded thee to be subject? |
A56846 | what hinders him, he can not practice? |
A56846 | when as the hot mouthed Challenges of Romes Goliahs thundred in our English Host, where, where were all those long- winded Lecturers? |
A56846 | when just now your eyes dazled at the flame I Did not the Doctor, in his Dedication, as good as confesse himself an enemy to Anticeremonians? |
A56846 | where''s the Blasphemic? |
A56846 | would it grieve you, because the Tinker had no Ordination from a Bitesheepe? |
A56846 | your unmaintain''d Opinions are pinned upon the Authority of men: Say, where''s the Papist, now? |
A56841 | ( Falsum nec omen nominis hoc tui;) Moestúmve panget carmen art ●, Melpomenes citharâ canorus? |
A56841 | 12. Who knows, what''s good for man in his dull blaze Of life, his swift, his shadow flying dayes? |
A56841 | 16 The worke of God is unsearchable, 1. WHo''s equall to the Wiseman? |
A56841 | 19. Who knows if my successour is to be A wise man or a fool? |
A56841 | Alas, Alas, my poore deluded soul, Think''st thou to quench thy fire with oyl, or cool Thy flame with Cordials? |
A56841 | All this thou hast: Where, then, Shall thy new wishes ● ix, Rare Man of men? |
A56841 | All this thou hast; Wisdome in things above? |
A56841 | Am I deceiv''d? |
A56841 | And which, imbrace? |
A56841 | Art thou resolved, than, T''abjure delight, and turne Capuccian? |
A56841 | At the fruitfullest but vain? |
A56841 | At ô Camaenarum& dolor& decus; Tu si recedas, quis tua funera Cantabit, ô divine vates? |
A56841 | Aut funditabit, grande, sacro Enthea metra calens furore? |
A56841 | BUt ah, my soul, what boots it to be wise? |
A56841 | Be not deceiv''d, my soul; Let not one Name Confound two Natures, and make two the same: Shall Names give Natures? |
A56841 | Because thy earth hath thus eclips''d the light Of thy contentment, wilt thou make it night? |
A56841 | Beneath the Orbe of heavens surrounding Sun, What worth his labour hath his labour done? |
A56841 | But sad, at merriest; and at sweetest, pain? |
A56841 | Can thy born disease Expect a Cure from such Receipts as these? |
A56841 | Cease to spend This needlesse breath: Shall thy disordered will Confront his Providence? |
A56841 | Coelúmque, versu claudet omni, Atque fidem fidibus sonabit? |
A56841 | Dare thy tongue professe An equall priviledge to Curse and Blesse For one Names sake? |
A56841 | Did not that voice, that voted Wisdome vain But very now, now cry it up againe? |
A56841 | Doe they not both arrive, not both resort To the dull portals of the selfe- same Port? |
A56841 | Doe while thou mayst; To day has eagle wings, And who can tell what change to morrow brings? |
A56841 | Et quis poëtis jam locus aut latex? |
A56841 | Every word How interlin''d? |
A56841 | For fools and me, what vantage to be wise? |
A56841 | For one drops delight Of ayry Froth, how are ye forc''d to borrow Strong Gales of Hope, to sail through seas of sorrow? |
A56841 | For who can eat? |
A56841 | Hast then; O hie thee to that sacred place: Why stay''st thou? |
A56841 | Hath Truth like Janus, got a double face? |
A56841 | How are those sparks of Majesty, that were So bright, now baffled with degen''rous feare? |
A56841 | How happy is that land, how blest the Nation Whose Prince directs by Power, not by Passion? |
A56841 | How is this Image blurr''d? |
A56841 | How is this Manuall blotted? |
A56841 | How is thy will disturb''d with th''inturruptions Of crosse desires? |
A56841 | How short a span Of seeming pleasure serves ye to requite Long Leagues of travell? |
A56841 | How sweetly pleasant is the sleep of such As labour, eat they little, or eat much? |
A56841 | How vainly are ye spent? |
A56841 | I, but my soule, what great, what higher hand Shall stop the mouth of Envy? |
A56841 | IS Quarles dead? |
A56841 | If clouds be full, will they deny to powr Their fruitfull blessings in a lib''rall show''r? |
A56841 | If heavens decree thus bound the works of men, What profit gaines the fruitlesse worker then? |
A56841 | If here be no protection for opprest And lab''ring souls, where shall poor souls have Rest? |
A56841 | If wisdome should entaile Our happinesse on this life, or fill our Saile In this wilde Ocean with perpetuall breath, When should we finde a Hav''n? |
A56841 | In what blest ear will thy complaints finde place? |
A56841 | Is not all this enough? |
A56841 | Is not her royall person gone to view The Mines of Ophir, to the rich Peru? |
A56841 | O but my saul, why dost thou thus contend With thy Creators pleasure? |
A56841 | O what praise Can issue forth from cold decrepit dayes? |
A56841 | O, is it not enough Thy days are ev''ll at best; and but a puffe At longest? |
A56841 | O, is''t not better, not to thirst at all, Then thirst in vain, or quench thy thirst with gall? |
A56841 | Objects far distant, secrets too profound What eye can entertain; what heart can sound? |
A56841 | On whom must all these Royall armies wait? |
A56841 | Or can renown''d Philosophy declare Whither the dying spirits of beasts repair? |
A56841 | Or command Her snake devouring fangs to keep the peace Vpon thy worried Name? |
A56841 | Or did I seem to hear? |
A56841 | Or glorifi''d thy name With honour posted on the wings of Fame? |
A56841 | Or is she gone to oyle the wings of Time With unctious pleasures in some forain Clime? |
A56841 | Or is she mounted on the slippery Throne Of staggering Honour, there disguis''d, unknowne? |
A56841 | Or thy peoples love? |
A56841 | Or what Advantage? |
A56841 | Or who can tell, when his short houre is run, Th''event of all his toyl beneath the Sun? |
A56841 | Phoebus is set; Th''hast pay''d thy tribute light, thy tribute heat, Sigh out the rest: or wouldst thou to him go, Thy Love, thy Life? |
A56841 | Quae lympha Musis? |
A56841 | Quis melle puro jam, calami potens, Condîta promet dia poëmata? |
A56841 | Quis sanctitatem nectáre carminis Tinctam propinans, digna Deo canet? |
A56841 | Quis sertacoelojam dabit? |
A56841 | Quis symbolorum voce pictâ Vnà oculos animúmque, pascet? |
A56841 | Quisquámne fundet jam querulum melos? |
A56841 | Shall what was late condemn''d as a disease, Now prove a Remedy? |
A56841 | Such rare Sonnes thou hast: Thy Princes favour? |
A56841 | Tell me, my puzled soul, what wouldst thou buy? |
A56841 | Tell me, my soul, shall he That gave thee being, be prescrib''d by thee? |
A56841 | That his magnificent, his bounteous hand Made such Provision both by sea and land? |
A56841 | Thou hast it: Knowledge in these Toyes beneath? |
A56841 | Thou hast it: Skill in th''Arts? |
A56841 | Thou hast it: wouldst thou gain the greater pleasure Of a true noble Spouse; whose life may show Vertues rare quintessence? |
A56841 | Thou hast that too: Wouldst thou have hopefull Sonnes to crown thy Last With Peace and Honour? |
A56841 | Thou level''st at? |
A56841 | Thou mayst surcharge as well as sterve The soile; But wise men know what seed will serve: Thy work thus wisely done; what, then, remains? |
A56841 | To what hopefull end Droyl we our crazy bodies, and expend Our sorrow- wasted spirits, to acquire A Good, not worth a breath of our desire? |
A56841 | WHat meant that great creating Pow''r to frame This spatious Universe? |
A56841 | Was not his name Glorious enough without a Witnesse? |
A56841 | Wert thou condemn''d to sorrows? |
A56841 | What Novelty can earth proclaim, and say, It had no Precedent before this day? |
A56841 | What boots our travell, or those works of ours, If all our plots depend on heav''nly pow''rs? |
A56841 | What curious Inquisitor doth know The place whereto ascending souls do goe? |
A56841 | What glorious birth Is to be celebrated? |
A56841 | What hath the owner more then they, but this, What they consume, his eyes behold as his? |
A56841 | What holy Altar shall thy armes embrace? |
A56841 | What is it then the wisemans labour gains More then the painfull fool by all his pains? |
A56841 | What is there then, that lies in earths election To raise thy hap''nesse to more higb perfection? |
A56841 | What is this World, but ev''n a great Exchange Of dear- bought pen worths, all compos''d of Change? |
A56841 | What language does appear? |
A56841 | What meant that sacred Power to command Divorce betwixt united Sea and Land? |
A56841 | What meant the Beames of his refulgent eyes To print their Image in the crystall skyes? |
A56841 | What princely guests with all their num''rous traine Did he expect? |
A56841 | What profit can accrue to man? |
A56841 | What profit hath my wisdome? |
A56841 | What royall State''s at hand? |
A56841 | What then my soul? |
A56841 | What want''st thou then, my soul, that may augment The reall happinesse of a true content? |
A56841 | What wants the poore man that by prudent labour Knowes how to live, more then his wealthy neighbour? |
A56841 | Where is this will- commanding Saint enshrin''d? |
A56841 | Which Tenet shal I baulk? |
A56841 | Whither? |
A56841 | Who shall controule, Who shall suppresse those Passions that contest Within the kingdome of thy troubled brest? |
A56841 | Who worthy of so great a preparation, Is th''object of such royall expectation, What Prince is to be borne? |
A56841 | Why Did that corrected Twi- light of his eye Un- muzle darknesse, and with morning light Redeem the day from new baptized night? |
A56841 | Why do we thus afflict our l ● b''ring soules With dregs of wormwood, and carouse full Bowls Of boyling anguish? |
A56841 | Why should thy folly captivate thy breath, And make thee prisner to untimely death? |
A56841 | Why wrapt he earth( as yet untoucht with showers) In a greene Robe embroid red all with flowers? |
A56841 | Wouldst thou have Honor? |
A56841 | Yea though he live a thousand yeares twice told, What worth his eyes, can his sad eyes behold? |
A56841 | a Good: Whrrein consists The Good Thou level''st at To what strange Lists Is her conceal''d Omnipotence confinde? |
A56841 | aut pium Emblema texet floribus ingenî? |
A56841 | cuncta manant; quod mare civicae Non decoloravêre caedes? |
A56841 | endow''d thy minde with gifts Of sacred Art? |
A56841 | enough to make The miserable childe of man forsake The false protection of thy magick eye, With out th''addition of inconstancy? |
A56841 | his active spirit flown And none to lend a tear, a sigh, a groan, For the worlds losse? |
A56841 | or call that ill, Which he thinks good? |
A56841 | or curious breath Of whispering State? |
A56841 | or to enforce An empty laughter in a vain discourse? |
A56841 | thou enjoy''st it: Treasure? |
A56841 | was he to entertaine? |
A56841 | wert thou born To live in languishment, and die forlorn? |
A56841 | what Potentate? |
A56841 | what can thy heart require, More then thou hast, to fill thy vast desire? |
A56841 | what can thy treasure show, That is not, like thy selfe, unconstant too? |
A56841 | what gains Can crown his actions, or reward his pains? |
A56841 | what great profit lies In a fair Iourny? |
A56841 | what mortall can apply His heart to force a pleasure more then I? |
A56841 | what pleasure is''t, to skrue An Antick face and grimme? |
A56841 | wherein can earth Deserve thy pains, or gratifie thy birth, In framing equall happinesse; nay, in freeing Thy partiall heart from unrepented Beeing? |
A56841 | who shall ease thy pain? |
A56841 | — O then my soule, where shall thy wounds obtain That soveraign balsome? |
A61073 | ''t is a pleasant day; What''s the best news? |
A61073 | AN humane life is but a Play of Passion; What is man''s Mirth but Musick of Division? |
A61073 | ANd now, my Soul, canst thou forget That thy whole life is one long debt Of Love, to him who on the Tree Paid back the flesh he took for thee? |
A61073 | And shall my Brain, and shall my Will Their best to thee resuse? |
A61073 | And shall my voice, and shall my song Praise any but their King? |
A61073 | And such is the condition of that man That dies e''re his Repentance is began; That wants his weapons, can for none implore; For why? |
A61073 | And why thou fledst to us, leaving those whom Dame Nature hath commanded from thy Womb, Thy name in golden Letters to entomb? |
A61073 | And, oh my Soul, how many snares 〈 ◊ 〉 〈 ◊ 〉 before our feet? |
A61073 | Angels are my Companions there: dost think, To pleasure thee, I''ll to Perdition sink? |
A61073 | Are Chains of Iron to be esteemed above the Treasures of Gold? |
A61073 | Are Fetters better than Freedom? |
A61073 | Art thou calumniated? |
A61073 | Both Heav''n and earth on this side of thy Grave? |
A61073 | But how can I a Weed become, If I am shadow''d with the Son? |
A61073 | But how in play first came this cheating Sin? |
A61073 | But how much time more pretious than that sand Have I neglected? |
A61073 | But how shall God make my bed? |
A61073 | But if the Lord were just to use his powers, With how much anger might he look on ours? |
A61073 | But now how shall I study an amends, That, as before, we may continue friends? |
A61073 | But oh, can all our store afford No better gifts for thee? |
A61073 | But tell me farther, what is''t thou wouldst have? |
A61073 | But what''s a Prison when the Soul is free? |
A61073 | By which it follows with divine attest, That there were more, and who knows which was best? |
A61073 | CAn we spell Chris- cross row, and yet not read That Christ for us was dead? |
A61073 | Can he be worth your envy then? |
A61073 | Can man be born to live, and not to die? |
A61073 | Canst thou count thy Bondage to be thy Bliss? |
A61073 | Darkness better far than Light To be preferr''d? |
A61073 | Do we not see, year after year, God''s merciful to them that sear? |
A61073 | Do you not finde it truer there, Now Heaven is all your own? |
A61073 | Dost thou not dayly see his weeping eye Shed Tears to wake thy sleeping Lethargie? |
A61073 | Dost thou not know that God is love? |
A61073 | Dost thou want things necessary? |
A61073 | Doth he not tremble when he once hath got A shaking Ague, or a Feaver hot? |
A61073 | Doth it on Heaven, or things on earth attend? |
A61073 | Envy thinks all men made of equal stuff: Why may not envious men be good enough? |
A61073 | Flesh was made thy slave, But wherein didst thou Satan''s works deprave? |
A61073 | For why? |
A61073 | GReat God, that hast at thy command Both Leaden feet and Iron hand, How shall I stand, How can I look, When thou call''st for thy Dreadful Book? |
A61073 | Great God, can we, Thy Enemies, abide to see Such a glorious Majesty? |
A61073 | HAve you not heard o''th''bloody Siege of Troy? |
A61073 | Had the weak Jews so little wit or grace To trust to that, when he fills ev''ry place? |
A61073 | Hast thou an Estate, and wouldst increase it? |
A61073 | He hath a Soul, but what doth that embrace? |
A61073 | His Justice he Therein displays: May not his Mercy then Turn flames of fire to beds for righteous men? |
A61073 | His Majesty, in such designes as these, Impropriates the Bishops, not the Sees: Impropriate, did I say? |
A61073 | How can Ingratitude sound louder than Yours to your God? |
A61073 | How can he lively paint a man that hath The cold effigies in his face of Death? |
A61073 | How can ye wander, or how can ye stray, When ye are always in, and with your way? |
A61073 | How canst thou go to the Table to eat, if thou dost not first honour him who giveth and furnisheth thee dayly with such great benefits? |
A61073 | How durst thou say to him that dwells on high, The Holy One, Look on the World where all my wealth doth lie? |
A61073 | How he himself did humble unto death, Loosing his life to give us breath? |
A61073 | How long, bless''d Lord, how long? |
A61073 | How many golden Mines at stake must lie, To bear the charge of Prodigality? |
A61073 | How many promises, Lord, do I gather, When I in Prayer petition thee, my Father? |
A61073 | IF wicked men in Gold and Silver shine, Should I at their Prosperity repine? |
A61073 | IS it not pleasant( Christian) to be great? |
A61073 | If I with Brother break my word, The fact may not be great; But if I sin against the Lord, Who shall for me intreat? |
A61073 | If I''m uncapable my self to build, Shall I snatch Tools from him is thorow skill''d? |
A61073 | If Turks to this great fin give a restraint, How piercing must it be unto a Saint? |
A61073 | If good to those that seek thy Grace, What art thou when they see thy face? |
A61073 | If these deserve so much, then what doth he That made these Beauties? |
A61073 | Is any merry? |
A61073 | Is any thing impossible to God, Whose Power can do it with a word, or nod? |
A61073 | Is it not better, prethee Mortal tell, To Heaven we go, than thou bear me to Hell? |
A61073 | Is it not pleasant? |
A61073 | Is it to sweat, and toyl for wealth, Or sport our time away, That thou preserv''st us still in health, And giv''st us this new day? |
A61073 | Is''t thy natures pride? |
A61073 | Jacob slept on the ground; who would not deem Himself most happy, having Jacob''s dream? |
A61073 | Jerusalem, was ever grief like thine? |
A61073 | Knowledge and Love must both accord, for why? |
A61073 | LOrd, what a Shadow is the Life of man? |
A61073 | Lord, this I beg on bended knee, With heart contrite as ashes be, That thou take care both of my end and me? |
A61073 | MY God, had I my breath from thee, This hour to speak and sing? |
A61073 | MY God, my God, turn not to night my day; Shall Mans black Crimes be Darts my heart to slay? |
A61073 | Must I be wretched''cause I''m growing rich? |
A61073 | Must I come from a Diadem to Death, Leaving my joys, in sorrow spend my breath? |
A61073 | Must I, that am coequal with the Father, Be crucifi''d, that man may comfort gather? |
A61073 | Must Kings be made the subjects of their scorns, And wear, instead of Stars, a Crown of Thorns? |
A61073 | Must my dear blood on sinful dust be spilt To pay his debt, and wash away his guilt? |
A61073 | My God, had I my Soul from thee, This pow''r to judge and chuse? |
A61073 | My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? |
A61073 | My God, my God,& c. Must I, that keep the Keys of Death and Hell, Pay visits now where griefs and terrours dwell? |
A61073 | My grief is great,''t is time to rise or fall; Then cleanse me, Lord, from sin, and ease my thrall, That I may say, O, death, where is thy sting? |
A61073 | Now what is mans life but a burning Light? |
A61073 | O Death, the Serpents Son, Where is thy sting? |
A61073 | O Lord, whereby can I know this? |
A61073 | O whither will my giddy fancy stride, When a Distemper''s the unstable Guide? |
A61073 | O whither will my minde with wavering sail, When a Disease shall over me prevail? |
A61073 | O, Death, where is thy sting? |
A61073 | Of Hellens beauty how it did destroy? |
A61073 | Or can you not behold the flames of Hell? |
A61073 | Or have you read of Jacob, how he serv''d Full fourteen years for Rachel, never swerv''d From his affections? |
A61073 | Or is it Pleasure? |
A61073 | Or like a Cherubim that flies on high, Can say, O, Hell, where is thy victory? |
A61073 | Or what although I loose my sight? |
A61073 | Or yet, how durst thou say unto the Christ, If there be none Like thee, or if by thee men do subsist, Make bread of stone? |
A61073 | Pride unto Reason seemeth ever strange; Is Reason absent? |
A61073 | Shall a Bodily Restraint be preferred before a Spirits Liberty? |
A61073 | Shall man be subject to obey, And his Inseriours go astray? |
A61073 | Sin is the Christians greatest sore, and Repentance his surest salve: who then would want the rare Jewel of Repentance? |
A61073 | So when Sleep comes, methinks my Ev''ning- prayer Is like the making of my Will; my care Ought therefore to provide betimes: for why? |
A61073 | Sweet Peace, where dost thou dwell? |
A61073 | TEll me, fond Worldling, why dost thou deride A godly Christian? |
A61073 | TEll me, my Soul, where doth thy passion bend? |
A61073 | TEll me, you bright Stars that shine Round about the Lambs high Throne, How though bodies once like mine, How you are thus glorious grown? |
A61073 | Tell me, O my Soul, how canst thou behold the Sun, if thou dost not honour him that made thine eyes to behold that most beautiful Light? |
A61073 | That done, he rises, to his Neighbour goes, And in sew words doth thus his minde disclose: How do you, Neighbour? |
A61073 | The Church of Heav''n in triumph brings Of their bless''d life above? |
A61073 | The Glutton Philoxenus did ● … inveigh Against Dame Nature, and for what, I pray? |
A61073 | The dead ne''re fear what Death can do: his blast Will come no more; for why? |
A61073 | The poor man''s Comfort, his most trusty Staff; The rich man''s Elegy and Epitaph Wouldst thou be farther in this Science read? |
A61073 | Then in the end bethinks to bid adieu; But first he yawns, and cries, What shall we do? |
A61073 | Then prithee say, What is thy name? |
A61073 | Then saith the Lord, For what cause wast thou hid? |
A61073 | This do I do, what is''t I should do more? |
A61073 | To go with bones? |
A61073 | To what? |
A61073 | True, thou hast dealt thy mercies home, Yet acts of grace mayst deign to some At least, before that day of Reckoning come? |
A61073 | WHat monstrous Devil, or what horrid Hag Bewitch ● … his mind, with Blood to fill his Bag? |
A61073 | WHat though a Prisoner I am now? |
A61073 | WHen a rich Worldling dies, first question is, How Rich he di''d; not, is he gone to Bl ss? |
A61073 | WHen, blessed Lord, shall we Our safe Salvation see? |
A61073 | WOuldst thou be truly perfect? |
A61073 | Was Eden''s Garden barren, was there none That could invite, but this same tree alone? |
A61073 | What Honour can be greater than the Saints? |
A61073 | What envy will at Malefactors flie, Because the day is fair wherein they die? |
A61073 | What excellence may that be said to be, Which the most excellent( as dangers) slee? |
A61073 | What fruit hath man in all these things? |
A61073 | What glorious Creature can a tongue rehearse, May be compar''d to Man? |
A61073 | What heaviness then fits upon his look? |
A61073 | What matter is it? |
A61073 | What mercy conquer''d thee, my God, That thou wouldst bear our sinful load? |
A61073 | What need a whip for stubborn sinners backs, When''t is decreed their heads are for the axe? |
A61073 | What need we care, when Our heavenly Father knoweth we have need of these things? |
A61073 | What sign ● … fie Petitions of a Heart That trembling lies when Death presents his Dart? |
A61073 | What though by nature I am dumb? |
A61073 | What though 〈 ◊ 〉 make me sicken? |
A61073 | What''s your Confinement but a certain Rule That leads to Happiness, Afflictions School? |
A61073 | What, hast thou eat the fruit which I forbid? |
A61073 | When thou with Rottenness art whelm''d about, Where shall I be? |
A61073 | Where is the Worldling''s glory? |
A61073 | Where lies the cheat, when I receive the gold? |
A61073 | Which Friend or Patron take me to, When Saints themselves are scarce secure from wo? |
A61073 | Who ever swam in such a Sea of Honour and Riches as Solomon? |
A61073 | Who told thee thou art naked? |
A61073 | Why are we dayly by our sins decoy''d? |
A61073 | Why do you stay? |
A61073 | Why doth Iniquity in Glory flourish, In Pastures large? |
A61073 | Would''st thou have Honour, which the World depaints? |
A61073 | You that in Christ no beauty can behold, Nor Heavens glory, dare you be so bold As not to think they all things do excel? |
A61073 | alas, my Lord, how can I bear a Childe, that never knew a man, But am a Virgin pure? |
A61073 | and who sank so egregiously as he? |
A61073 | let him pray: Is any merry? |
A61073 | to Dust? |
A61073 | what can be more exprest? |
A61073 | what price are Mackrel, pray? |
A61073 | what shall I do? |
A61073 | what uncouth place Can shelter from thy face? |
A61073 | wherein lies the odds? |
A61073 | — How shall this be? |
A61073 | — What voice is this that calls me blessed? |
A10246 | A Bride? |
A10246 | Al ● …, to whom should I reueale My dying thoughts, but vnto you, that gaue Being to her, that hath the power to saue My wasted life? |
A10246 | Am I deceiu''d, or doe I heare The voice of Arg''lus sounding in mine eare? |
A10246 | And can the gods themselues( said he) contriue A way for hope? |
A10246 | And can these teares Not intercede betwixt thy deafned ● … ares, And my sad suit? |
A10246 | And is there so much happinesse yet left For a broke heart, a heart that was bereft Of power t''enioy, what heauen had pow ● … r to giue? |
A10246 | And neuer meet againe? |
A10246 | And not be conquer''d yet? |
A10246 | And shall a womans frownes haue power to grieue thee? |
A10246 | And shall our story discontinue here? |
A10246 | And so conclude? |
A10246 | And thinke you that the righteous Gods would fill me With such false ioyes, as( if enioy''d) would kill me? |
A10246 | And why should custome doe our sex that wrong, To take away the priuiledge of our tongue? |
A10246 | And will ye 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A10246 | Are those the noble fauours I expected? |
A10246 | Are your soules conioyn''d so close, That my ent ● … eaty may not enterpose? |
A10246 | Athleia, dare thy priuate thoughts partake With mine? |
A10246 | Be briefe, and take aduantage of your odds; One simple mayde against so many gods? |
A10246 | Be iust; O make not such vnequall ods Of equall sinnes: Be iust, or else no Gods: Why send ye downe such Angels to the earth, To mocke poore mortalls? |
A10246 | Breathes my P ● … rthenia? |
A10246 | But haue we lost Parthenia? |
A10246 | But what can long endure? |
A10246 | But what can rellish pleasing to a taste That is distemper''d? |
A10246 | But who shall comfort poore Parthenia now? |
A10246 | By adding torments, hope I to find ease? |
A10246 | Can Argalus forget His languishing Parthenia? |
A10246 | Can Parthenia change her minde? |
A10246 | Can a sweet repast Please a sicke pallate? |
A10246 | Can earth forget her burthen, and ascend? |
A10246 | Can hills forget their pondrous bulk, and flye, Like wandring Atomes, in the empty sky? |
A10246 | Can my past ioyes reuine, Like this rekinàled fier? |
A10246 | Can nothing be concluded, nothing done, But intermedling Venus must be one? |
A10246 | Can the whining breath Of discontent and passion send reliefe To thy distraction, or asswage thy griefe? |
A10246 | Can you, oh can you be so quickly won, To leaue your poore Parthenia, and be gon? |
A10246 | Canst thou be secret? |
A10246 | Canst thou, O canst thou sleep? |
A10246 | Canst thou, ô canst thou goe, And leaue thy poore distrest Parthenia so? |
A10246 | Could thy prosperous actions think To scape reuenge, because the gods did wink At thy designes? |
A10246 | Doe these wretched eyes attaine The happinesse, to see this face againe? |
A10246 | Does Partheni ● … liue? |
A10246 | Does nothing trouble thee? |
A10246 | Exil''d thy little iudgement, and betray''d thee To thine owne selfe? |
A10246 | Frighting my fancy, with their hourely knells? |
A10246 | From so obdure a rock Can water flow? |
A10246 | From whom, What leane chapt fury did I snatch thee from? |
A10246 | Graues and Bells? |
A10246 | H ● … d my pen deliuered him dead into your hands, what could ye h ● … ue had more? |
A10246 | Has thy heart A locke that none can pick by theevish art, Or brake by force? |
A10246 | Hath Cupids Vniuerse no temp''rate Zone, Either a torrid or a frozen one? |
A10246 | Haue ye beheld a Leaguer? |
A10246 | How art thou chang''d( Parthenia?) |
A10246 | How can thy wishes be A blessing to me, if vnblest in thee? |
A10246 | How hath he spent his daies e''re since? |
A10246 | How is thy weather beaten soule opprest With stormes and tempests blowne from the Northeast Of cold despaire? |
A10246 | How lesse then nothing art thou? |
A10246 | How nothing hath it made thee? |
A10246 | I vow a mariage; why? |
A10246 | I? |
A10246 | If nature giue vs freedome, to affect, Why then should custome barre vs to d ● … tect The gifts of nature? |
A10246 | If so, what helpe? |
A10246 | In what Isle Of endlesse sorrow lurks she all this while? |
A10246 | In what sort The deepe mouth''d Cannon playes vpon the Fort, And how by peecemeales it doth batter downe The yeelding walls of the besieged towne? |
A10246 | Into what a fe ● … Hath one looke strucke thy soule? |
A10246 | Into what estate Hath fortune, and the direfull hand of Fate Driuen thy perplexed soule? |
A10246 | Is Death my Riuall then? |
A10246 | Is all extreame in loue? |
A10246 | Is light so odious to her? |
A10246 | Is my condition So poore, I can not 〈 ◊ 〉, but by petition? |
A10246 | Is not her cruelty enough, alone, But must I bring fresh torments of my owne? |
A10246 | Is thy flame so stout Tendure my breath? |
A10246 | Is''t not enough that Phebus does applaud Her lust, but must nights Goddesse be her baud? |
A10246 | It is my deare Parthenia''s voice; ah me, And can Parthenia, not Parthenia be? |
A10246 | It is my proper taske: what dost thou meane, Without my licence, to intrude my Sceane? |
A10246 | Madam, to whom should my sad words appeale But you? |
A10246 | May Counsell mooue a heart, whose best 〈 ◊ 〉 Consists in desperate yeelding to a griefe? |
A10246 | Must we be parted then? |
A10246 | My deare Parth ● … nia tell me, where, O where Art thou that so 〈 ◊ 〉''st mine ● … ye, mine eare? |
A10246 | My neece Parthenia''s, face: Nor can I be Perswaded( by your leaue) but you are she? |
A10246 | No draughts indifferent? |
A10246 | No meane at all? |
A10246 | Not one dreaming teare? |
A10246 | Nothing but death, and murthers? |
A10246 | O angry heauens; what hath Parthenia done, To be thus plagu''d, or why not plagu''d alone If guilty? |
A10246 | O neuer, neuer To be recur''d: If I had done amisse, Hath heauen no easier plagues in store, but this? |
A10246 | O wherefore should thy heart Vsurpe my stage, and act Parthenia''s part? |
A10246 | O, can your all- descerning eyes behold Such impious actions prosper, vncontroll''d? |
A10246 | O: what aduice can rellish in her eares, That weepes, and takes a pleasure in her teares? |
A10246 | Of whom dost thou complaine? |
A10246 | Or can th''aspiring flames be taught to tend To th''earth? |
A10246 | Or can the heauens,( growne idle) not fulfill Their certaine reuolutions, but stand still, And leaue their constant motion, for the winde T''inherit? |
A10246 | Or haue inchanted mists stept in betweene My abused eyes, and what 〈 ◊ 〉 eyes ● … aue seene? |
A10246 | Or rather, why Do''st not contemne, and scorne their power, and dye? |
A10246 | Or shall Parthenia now be so vnkinde, Te leaue her Argalus, and stay behind? |
A10246 | Or shall a womans wanton smile relieue thee? |
A10246 | Or shall thy ouer- curious steps for beare A garden,''cause there be no Roses there? |
A10246 | Or want a period, till another yeare? |
A10246 | Or what( alas) can humane skill apply To turne the course of loues Phlebotomie? |
A10246 | Or, being borne, O why Did not my fonder nurses Lullaby( Euen whilst my lips were hanging on her brest) Sing her poore Babe to euerlasting rest? |
A10246 | Parthenia, oh Parthenia, who shall weepe Thy world of teares? |
A10246 | Peruerse Partheni ● …, Is thy heart so sworne To A ● … galus his loue, that it must s ● … orne Demagoras? |
A10246 | Say, what hath mortall man To doe with vs? |
A10246 | Send forth thy brighter sun- shine, and the while, O lend me but the twilight of a smile: Giue me one amorous glance: why standst thou mute? |
A10246 | Shall euery day, wherein the earth does lacke The Suns reflex, b''expell''d the Almanacke? |
A10246 | Shall we befriend these louers, with the night, And leaue them buried in their owne delight? |
A10246 | Tell me, Canst thou digest A secret, trusted to thy faithfull brest? |
A10246 | Think''st thou thy mothers blood Cryes in a language, not to be''vnderstood? |
A10246 | Thou impe of Phlegetor; who let thee in, To force a day, before the day begin? |
A10246 | To finde disgrade? |
A10246 | To whom shall she complaine? |
A10246 | To whom( fond man) dost thou complaine? |
A10246 | VVilt thou forsake me then? |
A10246 | What Oratory can preuaile? |
A10246 | What ayle the Gods, thus to disturbe my rest, And make such earthquakes in my troubled brest? |
A10246 | What great request, what suite Does now attend vs, that they thus salute Our nostrills, with such acceptable sauours? |
A10246 | What hope of helpe can ye assure me, When onely she, that made the wound can cure me? |
A10246 | What marble, ah what adamantine care Ere heard the flames of Troy, without a teare? |
A10246 | What meanes thy boldnesse to vsurpe this roome, And force a night, before the night be come? |
A10246 | What shall I doe? |
A10246 | What sudden ill hath taught thee to deny Thy selfe? |
A10246 | When as this cursed hand did goe about To bring thee in, why went not these eies out? |
A10246 | Where is this wanton Harlot now become? |
A10246 | Who brought thee 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A10246 | Who is''t( said he) that calls vntimely night To hide those griefes that thus abiure the light? |
A10246 | Why dost thou frowne? |
A10246 | Why dyest thou not, Demagoras, when as death Lends thee a weapon? |
A10246 | Why moou''st thou not the Gods? |
A10246 | Why was I borne? |
A10246 | Will thy dull Genius giue thee leaue to slumber? |
A10246 | With mingled frownes and smiles, she thus replide, H ● … lfe in a rage, And must I be denide? |
A10246 | With that, as if her heart had rent in two, She past a sigh, and said, O aske not who? |
A10246 | and Argalus so neere His latest houre? |
A10246 | and goe away reiected? |
A10246 | and where? |
A10246 | but the minuts dash Of youthfull passion, to allay the dust Of my desires, and exuberous lust? |
A10246 | did I? |
A10246 | did that answere need To be returned with so great a speed? |
A10246 | did thy flattering thoughts e''re wrong Thy iudgement so; to thinke, D ● … magoras tongue Could so abuse his honour, as to sue For serious loue? |
A10246 | dost thou weepe? |
A10246 | either honey or Gall? |
A10246 | for euer? |
A10246 | how hath passion Put all thy thoughts, and senses out of fashion? |
A10246 | it is not I)? |
A10246 | it is not I: Not I( said he?) |
A10246 | my Argalus was''t this you made Such hast to answere? |
A10246 | nay who can giue reliefe To her, that hopes for succour from her griefe? |
A10246 | neuer? |
A10246 | no dreame incumber Thy frighted thoughts? |
A10246 | or doe false mists but mocke Our cheated eyes? |
A10246 | or how Can counsell chuse but blush to vndergoe So vaine taske, and be contemned too? |
A10246 | or is home So homely in her wandring eyes, that she Must still be rambling, where vnknowne to me? |
A10246 | or who Shall giue reliefe? |
A10246 | to bequeath? |
A10246 | what Fury gaue thee light? |
A10246 | what infernall spright Breath''d in thy face? |
A10246 | what report Can find admittance in th''Arcadian Co ● … rt But faire Partheniaes? |
A10246 | what shall poore Parthenia doe? |
A10246 | what simples can the hand of art Finde out to stanch a louers bleeding heart? |
A10246 | what weapon shall I hold Against thy hand, that will not be controll''d? |
A10246 | what, neuer? |
A10246 | what, not yet? |
A10246 | when, being afflicted, I finde best wishes, yet am interdicted Of those best wishes, and must be remou''d From loues enioyment; why? |
A10246 | why did those pearly teares Slide downe? |
A10246 | why does that heauenly brow Not made for wrinkles, show a wrinkle now? |
A10246 | 〈 ◊ 〉, ah Parthenia; Then must I 〈 ◊ 〉 bought and sold for teares? |
A10260 | The Lot accuses thee, thy words condemne thee,The waues( thy deaths- mē) striue to ouerwhelme thee:"What shal we do? |
A10260 | ''Mong which are sixe- score thousand soules( at least) That hang vpon their tender mothers brest? |
A10260 | ( A third replies)"What is thy Country? |
A10260 | ( and yet not included,) Could Ionah find a resting any where So void, or secret, that God was not there? |
A10260 | ( blessed God) Where is thy Scepter? |
A10260 | 2 ¶ ANd am I here, and my Redeemer gone? |
A10260 | 3 ¶ WHat is the World? |
A10260 | 4 ¶ GOd made the World, and all that therein is, Yet, what a little part of it is his? |
A10260 | A Marble tablet? |
A10260 | A great Exchange of ware, Wherein all sorts, and sexes cheapning are, The Flesh, the Diuell sit, and cry, What lack ye? |
A10260 | Am I a God, and shall I not command? |
A10260 | And a Dauids skill? |
A10260 | And beasts, and cattell, endlesse, without counting? |
A10260 | And did thy fainting browes sweat blood and water? |
A10260 | And doe I liue yet? |
A10260 | And of what allies?" |
A10260 | And shall not I spare such a goodly Citie? |
A10260 | And was all this for mee? |
A10260 | And what are Men but WORMES? |
A10260 | And what contin''all ward? |
A10260 | And what is Life? |
A10260 | And who can tell, if God will change the lot, That we, and ours may liue, and perish not? |
A10260 | And why hast thou done this?" |
A10260 | And yet liue in pleasure? |
A10260 | Are these the tricks to purchase heau''nly grace? |
A10260 | Art thou a Prophet, and dost thou amisse?" |
A10260 | Art thou a man, and dar''st my Lawes withstand? |
A10260 | BVt stay awhile, this thing would first be knowne: Can Ionah giue himselfe, and not his owne? |
A10260 | BVt stay: This was a strange and vncouth word: Did Ionah fly the presence of the Lord? |
A10260 | BVt stay; Is God like one of vs? |
A10260 | But a golden dreame, Which( waking) makes our wants the more extreame? |
A10260 | But quicken''d lumps of earth? |
A10260 | But still delayes His plagues denounc''t, and Iudgement still forbeares, And stead of fortie Dayes giues many yeares? |
A10260 | Can He be dead, and is not my life done? |
A10260 | Can MAN deserue? |
A10260 | Can Word confesse him, when as Deed denies him? |
A10260 | Can anger helpe thee, Ionah? |
A10260 | Can anger helpe thee? |
A10260 | Can ashes clense thy blot? |
A10260 | Can fasting expiate, or slake those fires That Sinne hath blowne to such a mighty flame? |
A10260 | Can he be Wise, that knowes not how to liue? |
A10260 | Can he be Yong, that''s Feeble, Weake, and Wan? |
A10260 | Can he from any place Be spar''d? |
A10260 | Can he that is the God of Truth, dispence With what he vow''d? |
A10260 | Can hee, When he hath said it, alter his Decree? |
A10260 | Can his minde Reuolt at all? |
A10260 | Can sackcloth clothe a fault? |
A10260 | Could he sleepe then, When( with the suddaine sight of Death) the men( So many men) with yelling shreekes, and cries, Made very heau''n report? |
A10260 | Did Ionah sleepe so sound? |
A10260 | Did Ionah sleepe, That should be watchfull, and the Tower keepe? |
A10260 | Did Ionah( the selected mouth of God) In stead of roring Iudgements, does he nod? |
A10260 | Did thy cheekes entertaine a Traytors lips? |
A10260 | Does it become my seruants heart to swell? |
A10260 | Doest thou well? |
A10260 | Doth it become my seruants heart to swell? |
A10260 | GIue leaue a little to adiourne your story, Run backe a step, or twaine, and looke afore ye: Can he be said to feare the Lord, that flies him? |
A10260 | HOw great''s the loue of God vnto his creature? |
A10260 | Hadst thou( O dust and ashes) such a care, And in- bred pittie, a trifling plant to spare? |
A10260 | He that repleats The mighty Vniuerse, whose lofty seat''s Th''imperiall Heauen, whose footstoole is the face Of massy Earth? |
A10260 | How comes it then to passe? |
A10260 | How faining deafe is he? |
A10260 | How fond, corrupt, and sencelesse is mankind? |
A10260 | How fraile and brittle? |
A10260 | How great respect? |
A10260 | How great''s the power of thy hand? |
A10260 | How great''s thy Name in all the Land? |
A10260 | How is thy Glory plac''t aboue the heau''n? |
A10260 | How mighty are the wonders of thy hand? |
A10260 | How mought it bee, That hauing limited his iust Decree Vpon the expiring date of fortie dayes, He then performes it not? |
A10260 | How poore a mite art thou content withall, That man may scape his downe- approching fall? |
A10260 | How seeming great is he? |
A10260 | How seeming sweet''s the quiet sleepe of sin? |
A10260 | How truly little? |
A10260 | How wilfull blind? |
A10260 | How would thine hastie spirit then bin sturr''d, If thou art angry, Ionah, for a Gourd? |
A10260 | I Thurst; And who shall quench this Eager Thurst? |
A10260 | I stand amaz''d and frighted at this word: Did Ionah fly the presence of the Lord? |
A10260 | If they aske thee, Why?" |
A10260 | Ionah, do''st thou well? |
A10260 | Is Heau''n vniust? |
A10260 | Is man a thing, befitting thy Respect? |
A10260 | Is this a fit speech? |
A10260 | Is this a seemly fashion? |
A10260 | Mastre, Is it I? |
A10260 | More then a man? |
A10260 | Must not the Recompence Be full Equiualent to the Offence? |
A10260 | Nath''les, it blooms, and fades within an how re; What thing more pleasing then a morning Sun? |
A10260 | Nay, was not this my Word, The very Word, that these my lips had shaped, When this mis- hap mought well haue bin escaped? |
A10260 | O righteous Isr''el, where, O, where art thou? |
A10260 | Or Ashur whip thee? |
A10260 | Or Sinay blast thee with her sulph''rous smokes?" |
A10260 | Or are my Lawes vniust? |
A10260 | Or art thou ought but Dust? |
A10260 | Or bin bereaued of thine only Sheep, That in thy tender bosome vs''d to sleep? |
A10260 | Or can his Best Doe Iustice equall right, which he transgrest? |
A10260 | Or doe thy hands make God a recompence, By strowing dust vpon thy bryny face? |
A10260 | Or had Boreas blowne His full- mouth''d blast, and cast thy houses downe, And slaine thy sonnes, amid their iollities? |
A10260 | Or hadst thou lost thy Vineyard full of trees? |
A10260 | Or he be Rich, that nothing hath to giue? |
A10260 | Or he be Strong, that Ayery Breath can cast? |
A10260 | Or is his Wisedome, or his Mercy greater? |
A10260 | Or the Lions rent thee?" |
A10260 | Or why should he loue retchlesse Man so much? |
A10260 | S. Aug. Cum Deus iubet se iubere sine vllis ambagibus intimat, quis inobedientiam in crimen vocat? |
A10260 | Shall I destroy the mightie Niniuie, Whose people are like sands about the sea? |
A10260 | Shall I subuert, and bring to desolation A Citie,( nay, more aptly tearm''d a Nation) Whose walls are wide, and wondrous full of might? |
A10260 | So wretched Ionah; But Iehoua thus; What boot''s it so to storme out- ragious? |
A10260 | Speake man, Whence awayes,"From what Confines cam''st thou? |
A10260 | Strange is the charge: Shall I goe to a place Vnknowne and forraine? |
A10260 | Tell vs, What is thine Art( another sayes)"That thou professest? |
A10260 | Thy Sauiours Blood will thaw that frost agen: Thy prayr''s that should be feruent, hot as fier, Proceed but coldly from a dull Desier; What then? |
A10260 | VVonder not at the Title,( A FEAST FOR WORMES:) for it is a Song of Mercy: VVhat greater FEAST than Mercy? |
A10260 | WHo giues me then an Adamantine Quill? |
A10260 | Was he tormented in excesse of measure? |
A10260 | Was there, O was there not a iust suspect, My preaching would procuer this effect? |
A10260 | Was thy deare body scourg''d, and torne with whips, So that the guiltlesse blood came trickling after? |
A10260 | We leaue our liues, and pleasure leaueth vs: Why what are Pleasures? |
A10260 | Wert thou( Lord) hang''d vpon the Cursed Tree? |
A10260 | What faith hadst thou, by leauing thine abode,"To thinke to fly the presence of thy God?" |
A10260 | What hold is there of Earthly Good? |
A10260 | What humour led thee to a place vnknowne,"To seeke a forrein land, and leaue thine owne?" |
A10260 | What is the cause? |
A10260 | What mends by mortall Man can then be giu''n To the offended Maiestie of heau''n? |
A10260 | What mister word is that? |
A10260 | What shall not I,( That am the God of mercie, and haue sworne To pardon sinners, when soe''re they turne? |
A10260 | What shall we doe? |
A10260 | What then, if cruell Pashur heape on strokes?" |
A10260 | What then? |
A10260 | What then? |
A10260 | What thing is Man, that Gods regard is such? |
A10260 | What vncouth Cloyster could there then affoord A screene''twixt faithlesse Ionah, and his Lord? |
A10260 | What was thy sinfull fact, that causes this"( Sayes one) wherein hast thou so done amisse?" |
A10260 | What, Ionah, shall a Gourd so moue thy pitie? |
A10260 | What, art thou angry( Ionah) for a Gourd? |
A10260 | What, art thou borne a Iew? |
A10260 | What, if by strong oppression The Chaldees had vsurpt vniust possession Vpon thy Cammels? |
A10260 | What, if consuming fier( falne from heauen) Had all thy seruants of their liues bereauen, And burnt thy Sheep? |
A10260 | What, if th''Arabians with their ruder traine Had kill''d thine Oxen, and thy Cattell slaine? |
A10260 | What, was this a deed That with the Calling he profest, agreed? |
A10260 | What? |
A10260 | When Dust and Ashes mortally offends, Can Dust and Ashes make Eternall mends? |
A10260 | Where is this Loue become in later age? |
A10260 | Where is thy Lampe? |
A10260 | Where shall I goe, or which way shall I wind? |
A10260 | Whether?" |
A10260 | Which when a wretched man''s once nuzz''ld in, How soundly sleepes he, without feare, or wit? |
A10260 | Who knowes, if God will his intent perseuer? |
A10260 | Whose hearts are sorrowfull, and soules contrite? |
A10260 | Whose infants are in number, so amounting? |
A10260 | Whose prettie smiles did neuer yet descry The deare affection of their mothers eye? |
A10260 | Why hast thou not obey''d( but thus transgrest)"The voice of God, whom thou acknowledgest?" |
A10260 | Why? |
A10260 | Yet fortie Dayes, and Niniueh shall perish? |
A10260 | and doe this? |
A10260 | and howerly regard, Stands man in hand to haue, when such a brood Of furious hell- hounds seeke to suck his blood? |
A10260 | and shooke the skies So vncouth, that the ship it mought haue riu''n? |
A10260 | could Sinners finde out ne''r a one, More fit then Thee, for them to spit vpon? |
A10260 | how great''s thy Name in all the Land? |
A10260 | how poore a thing is wretched man? |
A10260 | how shall we, that are but Bushes, stand? |
A10260 | or Gentile? |
A10260 | or a well- plac''d word? |
A10260 | or hide a shame? |
A10260 | or how could he Teach this,( THOV SHALT NOT KILL) if Ionah be His life''s owne Butcher? |
A10260 | or offer violence Vpon his sacred Iustice? |
A10260 | or purge thy''offence? |
A10260 | or vary like the winde? |
A10260 | or yet by any meanes excluded, That is in all things? |
A10260 | shall I then be silent? |
A10260 | then likewise heare, Who knowes of Ionah, whether, yea, or no, A secret Spirit will''d him to doe so? |
A10260 | thy zealous Shepheard now? |
A10260 | we may not slay thee:"Or shall we saue thee? |
A10260 | were all too little, were they ours: Or shall we burne( vntill our life expires) An endlesse Sacrifice in Holy fires? |
A10260 | what are men? |
A10260 | what earthly thing can long remaine? |
A10260 | what hope haue we to finde reliefe, And want the meanes that may diuulge our griefe? |
A10260 | what is man, but like a worme that crawl''s, Open to danger, euery foot that falls? |
A10260 | what shall become of thee? |
A10260 | wher''s thine yron Rod? |
A10260 | ¶ But stay; Did one of Gods elected number,( Whose eyes should neuer sleepe, nor eye- lids slumber) So much forget himselfe? |
A10260 | ¶ CAn he be Faire, that withers at a Blast? |
A10260 | ¶ How sleight a thing is man? |
A10260 | ¶ IS fasting then the thing that God requires? |
A10260 | ¶ Malfido, rouze thy leaden spirit, Bestirre thee, Hold vp thy drowsie head, Here''s comfort for thee; What if thy Zeale be frozen hard? |
A10260 | ¶ O where, and what''s thy Kingdome? |
A10260 | ¶ What heedfull watch? |
A10260 | ¶ What shall we then returne to God of Heau''n? |
A10264 | , And takes such honour, as base earth can give: Aimes she at Pleasure? |
A10264 | ANd dost thou not admier? |
A10264 | Alas, his Honour can not soare too high, For palefac''d death to follow: He must dye: Lives he a Conqu''rour? |
A10264 | And art thou silent too? |
A10264 | And does the fairest bounty of encrease Crowne him with plenty; and, his dayes with peace? |
A10264 | And doth heaven blesse His heart with spirit; that spirit, with successe; Successe, with Glory; Glory, with a name, To live with the Eternity of Fame? |
A10264 | And gave so strickt a charge? |
A10264 | And is he turn''d a Mill- horse now? |
A10264 | And it seemes to me, The parent''s most delinquent of the three: What; if the better minded Son doe aime At worth? |
A10264 | And must our easie tryall, At first, reade Hieroglyphickes of deniall? |
A10264 | And seeks thou for a new? |
A10264 | And shall Th''indulgent nurse be counted, wisely kinde, If she be mov''d to please his childish minde? |
A10264 | And was this He, that with the help of none, Destroy''d a thousand with a silly Bone? |
A10264 | And was''t a man of God, that brought the word? |
A10264 | And when thou knowst it, let thy servants know: What? |
A10264 | Are Heavens lawes So strict? |
A10264 | Are not our yearly Tributes justly paid? |
A10264 | Art thou faire and yong? |
A10264 | Art thou growne so poore, To leave thy famisht Infants at our doore, And not allow them food? |
A10264 | Breathes he without a crosse? |
A10264 | Came this bone, by chance, To Samsons hand? |
A10264 | Can Heav''n be false? |
A10264 | Can Heaven be false? |
A10264 | Can he be thus Pleas''d with our offerings, unappear''d with us? |
A10264 | Can such things Obtaine lesse priviledge, then a Tale, that brings The audience wonder, entermixt with pleasure? |
A10264 | Can thy miswandring eyes choose none, but her, That is the child of an Idolater? |
A10264 | Can''st recall The words we entertain''d the time withall? |
A10264 | Canst thou supply The empty Ravens, and let thy children dye? |
A10264 | Could not Azza smother Thy flaming lust; but must thou finde another? |
A10264 | Does our Millhorse sweat? |
A10264 | Does thy troubled eare Not tingle? |
A10264 | Does well deserved store Limit his wish, that he can wish no more? |
A10264 | Dost thou not tremble? |
A10264 | Dóes perpetuall mirth Lend him a little Heaven upon his earth? |
A10264 | Great God; O, can thy patient eye behold This height of sinne, and can thy Vengeance hold? |
A10264 | HOw is our story chang''d? |
A10264 | Had they but taken thence That cursed Bone, what colour of defence Had Samson found? |
A10264 | Hast thou not heard a peevish Infant baule To gaine possession of a knife? |
A10264 | Hast thou not promis''d that my strengthned hand Shall scourge thy Foemen, and secure thy Land From slavish bondage? |
A10264 | Hath he not promis''d that the time shall come, Wherein the fruits of my restored wombe Shall make thee Father to a hopefull Sonne? |
A10264 | Hath his faire desart Obtain''d the freedome of his Princes heart? |
A10264 | Hath not the crime Paid a sufficient Intrest for the time? |
A10264 | Hath sinne given ore To cry for plagues? |
A10264 | Have we delaid Our faithfull service, or denied to doe it, When you have pleas''d to call your servants to it? |
A10264 | Have we just cause to joy? |
A10264 | Have we not kept our vowes? |
A10264 | Have we, at any time, upon your triall, Shruncke from our plighted faith, or prov''d disloyall? |
A10264 | He must dye: Lives he in Honour? |
A10264 | He opes thee wombe: why then shouldst thou repine? |
A10264 | His bloodlesse cheekes, and deadnesse of his eyes? |
A10264 | His drooping head? |
A10264 | How can I Thinke but thou hat''st me, when thy lips deny So poore a Suite? |
A10264 | How golden were those dayes? |
A10264 | How hast thou crackt thy credit, that we dare not Trust thee for bread? |
A10264 | How his sterne Browes were bent? |
A10264 | How is''t, we dare not venture To keepe thy Babes, unlesse thou please to enter In bond, for payment? |
A10264 | How often hast thou mockt my slender suite With forged falshoods? |
A10264 | How poorely doe we crowne Their blessed labours? |
A10264 | How small a thing''thad bin( If they had beene so provident) to winne The day with ease? |
A10264 | I feare our lavish tongues have bin too bold: What speeches past betweene us? |
A10264 | I hold it as a wronge: How canst thou say thou lov''st me? |
A10264 | IT was a sharpe revenge: But was it just? |
A10264 | Inexorable Samson: Can the teares From those faire eyes, not move thy deafned eares? |
A10264 | Is God like Man? |
A10264 | Is it not greater wisedome, to denie The sharp- edg''d knife, and to present his eye With a fine harmelesse Puppit? |
A10264 | Is th''old growne stale? |
A10264 | Is there none To please that over- curious eye of thine, But th''issue of a cursed Philistine? |
A10264 | Is this that Conquerer whose Arme did thunder Vpon the men of Askalon, the power Of whose bent fist, slew thirty in an hower? |
A10264 | Is this that blessed Infant, that began To grow in favour so, with God and man? |
A10264 | Is this that daring Conquerour, whose hand Thrasht the proud Philistines, in their wasted land? |
A10264 | Is this that holy Thing, againe whose birth, Angells must quit their thrones, and visit Earth? |
A10264 | Is this the Nazarite? |
A10264 | Is this the man whose hands unhing''d those Gates, And barethem thence, with pillers, barres,& Grates? |
A10264 | Is this the man, whose courage did contest With a fierce Lyon, grappling brest to brest; And in a twinckling, tore him quite in sunder? |
A10264 | It is a right hand blessing; But supplie Of wealth can not secure him; He must die: Lives he in Pleasure? |
A10264 | Lists he to strike? |
A10264 | May a Nazarite, then, Embrue and paddle in the bloods of men? |
A10264 | May not her teares prevaile? |
A10264 | May not that God, that gave thee thy creation, Turne thee to nothing, by his dispensation? |
A10264 | May these Have power to Kill, and murther where they please? |
A10264 | May these revenge their wrongs, by blood? |
A10264 | Meets he no sullen care; no sudden losse To coole his joyes? |
A10264 | Must Angells leave their Thrones of glory thus, To watch our foot- steps, and attend on us? |
A10264 | Must The Childrens teeth be set on edge, because Their Fathers ate the grapes? |
A10264 | Must he end His weary dayes in darkenesse? |
A10264 | Must his hyer, Be knotted cords, and torturing whips of wyer? |
A10264 | Must this Heroe spend His latter times in drudgery? |
A10264 | Must this great Conquerour be forc''d to grinde For bread and water? |
A10264 | Must vengeance yet have more? |
A10264 | Nay, wee''l give ore To tempt thy bridall fondnesse any more: Betray your lovely husbands secrets? |
A10264 | O can those drops, that trickle from those eyes Vpon thy naked bosome, not surprize Thy neighb''ring heart? |
A10264 | O can thy heart not melt, as well as they? |
A10264 | O, canst thou reade Her double story, and thy heart not bleed? |
A10264 | O, sudden change; Is this that holy Nazarite, for whom Heaven shew''d a Miracle, on the barren wombe? |
A10264 | O, then I knew, it was no man: No, no; It was the face of God: Our eyes Have seene his face:( who ever saw''t, but dies?) |
A10264 | O, whither shall poore mortalls flie For comfort? |
A10264 | On what foundation shall his hopes relie? |
A10264 | Or He, whose wrists, being bound together, did Breake Cordes like flax, and double Ropes like thrid? |
A10264 | Or can he border Vpon confusion, that''s the God of order? |
A10264 | Or can th''Almighties tongue, That is all very truth, doe Truth that wrong, Not to performe a vow? |
A10264 | Or can these things be done When we are dead? |
A10264 | Or can thy sinne Plead more t''excuse it? |
A10264 | Or could the Army goe No further? |
A10264 | Or how could he withstood The necessary danger of his blood? |
A10264 | Or may his more familiar hands disburse His liberall favours, from the royall purse? |
A10264 | Or onely to advance His yet unknowne Authoritie? |
A10264 | Or shall an Issue come From the chill closset of a barren wombe? |
A10264 | Or was''t an Angell, sent from heaven, to show What Heaven hath will, as well as pow''re, to doe? |
A10264 | Or was''t some false delusion, that possest The weaknes of a lonely womans brest? |
A10264 | Our eyes can not behold that glorious face, Which is all life, unruin''d in the place: How is our natures chang''d? |
A10264 | Seest thou the fruitfull Wombe? |
A10264 | Shall Manoah''s loynes be fruitfull? |
A10264 | Shall Manoah''s wife give sucke? |
A10264 | Shall a Sonne Blesse his last dayes? |
A10264 | Shall her cold wombe be now, in age, restor''d? |
A10264 | Shall one man suffer for another? |
A10264 | THe jaw- bone of an Asse? |
A10264 | Tell me wherein Art thou more priviledg''d? |
A10264 | Th''extreame affection of my heart does leade My tongue,( that''s quickned with my love) to pleade What, if her parents be not circumcis''d? |
A10264 | The Persian Lawes no time may contradict; And are the Lawes of God lesse firme and strict? |
A10264 | The very Stones shall flie From their unmov''d Foundations, and destroy: Lists he to punish? |
A10264 | The winters heate And summers damp, shall make his will compleate: Lists he to send the Sword? |
A10264 | Their joyfull mouths will blow Their louder Trumpets; Or doe feares affectus? |
A10264 | They''l come and pitch their Tents about our heads; See they a sinner penitent, and mourne For his bewail''d offences, and returne? |
A10264 | They''l come and sing About our beds: Do''s any judgement bring Iust cause of griefe? |
A10264 | They''l fall agreeving too; Doe we tryumph? |
A10264 | They''l fill our hearts with joy, and resolution: Or doe we languish in our sickly beds? |
A10264 | They''l guard our heads from danger, and protectus: Are we in Prison, or in Persecution? |
A10264 | Things that haue no sense, Shall vindicate his Quarrell, on th''Offence: Lists he to send a plague? |
A10264 | Thinke yee that God commits the Sword of power Into the hands of Magistrates, to scower And keepe it bright? |
A10264 | Till then thou must refraine to drinke, or eate, Wines, and strong drinke, and Law- forbidden meate? |
A10264 | Turncbut the key, and thou maist locke it in: Or wouldst thou have a Blessing fall upon thee? |
A10264 | VVAs this that wombe, the Angell did enlarge From barrennesse? |
A10264 | Vnkinde Iudeans, what have you presented Before our eyes? |
A10264 | Wants he no pleasure, that his want on eye Can crave, or hope from fortune? |
A10264 | Was there no fitter place, for them to stay, But even just there? |
A10264 | Was this that wombe, that must not be defil''d With uncleane meates, lest it pollute the child? |
A10264 | What Rites? |
A10264 | What art thou more then she? |
A10264 | What businesse brought you hether? |
A10264 | What can we more clame, Then they, that now, are scortehing in that flame, That hath nor moderation, rest, nor end? |
A10264 | What did our eyes behold? |
A10264 | What disastrous weather Drove you this way? |
A10264 | What holy course of life shall he Be trained in? |
A10264 | What is our desert, But Death, and Horror? |
A10264 | What mad man could presume So dry a tooth should yeeld so great a Rheume? |
A10264 | What more then Devill, What envious Miscreant hath done this evill? |
A10264 | What shall his Office be? |
A10264 | What strange adventures? |
A10264 | What way of breeding shall we chuse T''observe? |
A10264 | What, if rare vertues doe inflame His rapt affection? |
A10264 | What, if the condition Of an admir''d, and dainty disposition Hath won his soule? |
A10264 | What, is this hee, who( strengthned by heavens hand) Was borne a Champion, to redeeme the Land? |
A10264 | Where heaven withdrawes, the creatures power shakes; What miserie''s wanting there, where God for sakes? |
A10264 | Who would not thinke, The thirsty Conquerour, for want of drinke, Should first have dyed? |
A10264 | Why bring you thus an army to us? |
A10264 | Why so was she: Were thy temptations strong? |
A10264 | Why, so were hers: What canst thou plead, but she Had powre to plead the same, as well as thee? |
A10264 | Wills he afamine? |
A10264 | Wouldst thou prevent a judgement, due to sin? |
A10264 | and blinde? |
A10264 | and force it to obey? |
A10264 | and now, at last, Finde pleasure, when her prime of youth is past? |
A10264 | are the daughters of thy brethren growne So poore in Worth, and Beauty? |
A10264 | but must needs expect a foe Iust where his weapon of destruction lay? |
A10264 | dost thou frowne? |
A10264 | his very port and guise? |
A10264 | nor thy spirits faint to heare The voice of those, whose dying shriekes proclame Their tortures, that are broyling in the flame? |
A10264 | will that arme of thine Make me their slave, whom thou hast promist, mine? |
A56828 | ''T is true, God must bee sought; What impious tongue dare be so basely bold to contradict so knowne a Truth? |
A56828 | A relaxation from the toyle of labour: And what is labour but a painefull exercise of the fraile body? |
A56828 | ANd can I choose O God but tremble at thy judgements? |
A56828 | Am I not sunke too deepe into the Jawes of Hell, for thy strong arme to rescue? |
A56828 | And by repentance too; What strange impietie dare deny it? |
A56828 | And ha ● t thou no m ● ● te in thine? |
A56828 | And may I not dispense with a bare lippe deniall of my urg''d Religion for the necessary preservation of the threatned life of a man? |
A56828 | And my demeanour unreprovable before the world? |
A56828 | And shall I then afflict my body and beslave my heaven- borne soule to purchase, Rags to cloathe my nakednesse? |
A56828 | And was not our mixt government unapt to fall into diseases? |
A56828 | And what have they not done to make my soule despair? |
A56828 | And what reward can thy indulgence expect from such a father? |
A56828 | And will these Plague- denouncers never leave to thunder judgements in my trembling eare? |
A56828 | And with blotted fingers made his blurre the greater? |
A56828 | And yet thou pamper''st up thy sides with stollen food, and yet thou deck''st thy wanton body with unearn''d ornaments? |
A56828 | Are we borne to thrum Caps, or pick strawes? |
A56828 | Are we still bound to keepe a legall Sabbath in the strictnesse of the Letter? |
A56828 | Are wee all Angels? |
A56828 | Art thou not condemned to Rags, to Famine, by him whose Law commanded thee to labour? |
A56828 | Art thou worthy of Christ that preferrest thy estate, or thy brothers life before him? |
A56828 | BUt will my God bee now entreated? |
A56828 | Bee circumspect, and provident my soule: Hast thou a faire Summer? |
A56828 | Being sick of the Iaundies, how hast thou censur''d another yellow? |
A56828 | But why dost thou judge thy brother? |
A56828 | CAn flesh and blood bee so unnaturall to forget the Lawes of Nature? |
A56828 | COnscience, why start''st thou? |
A56828 | Can blowing youth immure it selfe within the Icey walls of Vestall Chastitie? |
A56828 | Can drunkennes dry up the Sea that walls her? |
A56828 | Can faire- pretending pictie be so barbarous to condemn us to the flames of our affections, and make us Martyrs to our owne desires? |
A56828 | Can flames of lust dissolve the Ordnance that protect her? |
A56828 | Can full perfection bee expected here? |
A56828 | Can lusty diet, and mollicious rest bring forth no other fruits, but faint desires, rigid thoughts, and Pblegmatick, conceits? |
A56828 | Can the Sunne rise to thy comfort, that hath so often set in thy wrath? |
A56828 | Canst thou appeare in the searching eye of heaven, and not expect to be cast away? |
A56828 | Canst thou command the Sunne to shine? |
A56828 | Canst thou forbid the Mildewes, or controll the breath of the malignant East? |
A56828 | Canst thou hold a full estate, a good pennyworth, which is bought with the deare price of thy Gods displeasure? |
A56828 | Come, if thou freely give thy house, canst thou in conscience bee denied a hiding- roome for thy protection? |
A56828 | Custome in Sinne multiplies it: Pleadest thou societie? |
A56828 | Did not our Prophets give lawfull warning? |
A56828 | Did wee want good Lawes? |
A56828 | Didst thou foresee this danger? |
A56828 | Didst thou not laugh invasion to scorne? |
A56828 | Dost thou glory in thy Friends? |
A56828 | Dost thou glory in thy parts? |
A56828 | Dost thou glory in thy strength? |
A56828 | Dost thou glory in thy wealth? |
A56828 | Endeavour rather to be, then to be thought holy; for what profits it thee to bee thought to be what thou art not? |
A56828 | Fifteene shillings in the pound composition? |
A56828 | Foresee what punishments are prepa''rd to meet thee, and tell mee, what''s thy purchase? |
A56828 | Forgive him: Hath hee srespass''d against the Congregation? |
A56828 | HAs thy brother, O my soule, a beame in his eye? |
A56828 | HOw truely then, O God, this heavy woe belongs to this my boasted sinne? |
A56828 | Has mortalitie no priviledge, to supersede it from the utmost punishment of a little necessary frailtie? |
A56828 | Hath Gilead Balme enough to heale thy superannuated sores? |
A56828 | Hath not my life been blamelesse before men? |
A56828 | Hath not the hardnesse of my heart made mee uncapable of thy compassion? |
A56828 | Have I borne false witnesse like the wanton Elders? |
A56828 | Have I embrued my hands in blood like Barabbas? |
A56828 | Have I like Iacob supplanted my elder brother? |
A56828 | Have I not given Tithes of all I have? |
A56828 | Have I not hated Vice with a perfect hatred? |
A56828 | Have I set up false Gods like the Egyptians? |
A56828 | Have I violated the Sabbath like the Libertines? |
A56828 | Have the Gentiles no priviledge, by the vertue of Messia ● s comming, or has the Evangelicall Sabbath no immunities? |
A56828 | How Pharisaically hast thou judg''d? |
A56828 | How can my ● ippes, that daily breath revenge against my brother, presume to owne thee as my father, or expect from thee thy blessing, as thy child? |
A56828 | How can wee honou ● God if wee revenge our selves? |
A56828 | How fiercely have they preach''d destruction, against my cruelty? |
A56828 | How full of sweetnesse was his death, who dying was reveng''d upon three thous ● nd enemies? |
A56828 | How has the pride of thy owne heart blinded thee toward thy selfe? |
A56828 | How many thirst whilst thou surfeitest? |
A56828 | How many want that blessing thou hast turn''d into a curse? |
A56828 | How often hast thou turn''d the spirituall b ● dy of thy Saviour into thy d ● mnation? |
A56828 | How wert thou wedded to thy owne corruptions, that could''st endure thy unsavory filthinesse? |
A56828 | I, but in some cases truth destroyes thy life; a lie preserves it: My soule, was God thy Creator? |
A56828 | I, but who shall right thy honor then? |
A56828 | Iaco ● could purchase his sick fathers blessing with a downe- right lye, and may I not di ● semble for a life? |
A56828 | If thy impatience can not act a Sabbath twelve houres, what happinesse canst thou expect in a perpetuall Sabbath? |
A56828 | If truth sit Regent, in what faithfull brest shall secrets finde repose? |
A56828 | In all Christian duties who more forward then I? |
A56828 | Is a poore clod of earth wee call Inheritance, prizable with his greatnesse? |
A56828 | Is hee that was so weary of the New- Moones, so taken with the Sunne to tie his Sabbath to that onely day? |
A56828 | Is it equall that God, who gave thee a body, and six dayes to provide for it, should demand one day of thee, and bee denied it? |
A56828 | Is not my crying sinne too loud for Pardon? |
A56828 | Is not the God of heaven and earth worth many kingdomes? |
A56828 | Is not the liberall Cup the Sucking- bottle of the sonnes of Phaebus, to solace and refresh their palats in the nights of sad Invention? |
A56828 | Is not this Gods sole Prerogative? |
A56828 | Is six dayes too little for thy selfe, and two houres too much for thy God? |
A56828 | Is there no allowance to humanitie? |
A56828 | Is thy cause bad? |
A56828 | Is thy honour wrong''d? |
A56828 | Is thy welfare more considerable then his glory? |
A56828 | It is a day of Rest: And what''s a Rest? |
A56828 | May that breach bee set upon the score of m ● rcy, and commended above sacrifice for the savegard of an Asse? |
A56828 | No Graines to flesh and blood? |
A56828 | Nothing but damnation? |
A56828 | Nothing but judgements? |
A56828 | Nothing but plagues? |
A56828 | O like Ahab intruded into Nabott ● Vineyard? |
A56828 | O my deceived foule, how great a darknesse was thy light? |
A56828 | O my ingrant soule, what shall I do to bee saved? |
A56828 | O my soule, how dost thou prize temporalls beyond eternalls? |
A56828 | O my soule, how uncharitable hast thou been? |
A56828 | O my unrighteous soul, canst thou hold thy brother worthy of death for giving thee the lie, and thy selfe guiltlesse that makest a lie? |
A56828 | O thou covetous man, why dost thou treasure up such hidden mischiefe? |
A56828 | O what returne can the tainted breath of my polluted lipps deserve, but to bee bound hand and foot, and cast into the flames of Hell? |
A56828 | O ● can my stony heart not stand amazed at thy Threatnings? |
A56828 | O, wouldst thou offer a pleasing sacrifice to heaven? |
A56828 | Or a puffe of breath wee call life, valuable with his honour, in comparison of whom the very Angels are impure? |
A56828 | Or at a Cockpit leave our doubtfull fortunes to the mercy of unmercifull contention? |
A56828 | Or can our worke be perfect in this vale of imperfection? |
A56828 | Or could''st thou have contrived a way to bee thus miserable? |
A56828 | Or hath my purse beene hidebound to my hungry brother? |
A56828 | Or have I bowed before them like the Israelites? |
A56828 | Or like Absolon defiled my fathers Bed? |
A56828 | Or like David coveted Vriahs wife? |
A56828 | Or like cursed Cham have I discovered my fathers nakednesse? |
A56828 | Or shall my brothers life, or shall my owne be seis''d upon through the cruell truth of my downe- right confession? |
A56828 | Or spend our wanton dayes in sacrificing costly presents to a fleshly Idoll? |
A56828 | Or what mercy canst thou expect from heaven, that hast denied all mercy to thy Neighbour? |
A56828 | Or what presumptuous lips dare disavow it? |
A56828 | Or who but fooles( that can not taste an injury) can moderate their high- bred spirits, and stop their passion in her full carreire? |
A56828 | Reprove him: Hath hee sinned against God? |
A56828 | Search thy selfe to the bottome, and thou shalt find enough to humble thee: Dost thou glory in the ● avour of a Prince? |
A56828 | So long as thy wrath is kindled against thy brother, so long is the wrath of God burning against thee? |
A56828 | Societie in the offence, aggravates the punishment: Pleadest thou help to Invention? |
A56828 | TAke heed my soul, when thou hast lost thy self in thy journey, how wilt thou find thy God at thy journeys end? |
A56828 | Tell mee, what continuance can that Inheritance promise that is raised upon the ruines of thy Brother? |
A56828 | The Law is just and good, and being ruled by that, how can my faire proceedings bee unjust? |
A56828 | The Plague? |
A56828 | The tenth in tithes is any one in tenne, and why the seventh day not any one in seaven? |
A56828 | The young mans great possessions taught his timerous tongue to shrinke from an decline his hearts profession, and who could blame him? |
A56828 | They perish at their owne charge, not mine, and what is that to mee? |
A56828 | VVHat tell''st thou me of Conscience, or a pious life? |
A56828 | VVHat think''st thou now my soule? |
A56828 | VVer''t thou not but now for many yeares even nuzzl''d in the bosome of habituall peace? |
A56828 | VVhat Plagues against my swearing? |
A56828 | VVhat curses to the Covetous? |
A56828 | VVhat judgements to the lascivious? |
A56828 | VVhat vengeance to the prophane, the censorious, the revengefull? |
A56828 | WIll Boanarges never cease? |
A56828 | Was Ioseph mark''d for everlasting death, for swearing by the life of Egypts King? |
A56828 | We sanctifie the day, the day not us: But are we Iewes? |
A56828 | What Commonwealth can be secure? |
A56828 | What Oyle shall bee infused into the Lampe of deare societie, if they deny the priviledge of a civill rejoycing Cup? |
A56828 | What Stra ● ● ● can prosper? |
A56828 | What blessing canst thou hope from heaven, that pleadest for the sonne of the devill, and crucifyest the Sonne of God? |
A56828 | What can my prayers expect but thy just wrath and heavy indignation? |
A56828 | What damnation to Hypocrites? |
A56828 | What have I done to make my case desterate? |
A56828 | What if his beggerly children pine, or his proud wife perish? |
A56828 | What if the custome of a harmelesse oath should captivate thy heedlesse tongue, can nothing under sudden judgement seize upon thee? |
A56828 | What if the luxuriant stile of thy discourse doe chance to strike upon an obvious Oath, art thou straight hurried into the bosome of a Plague? |
A56828 | What kingdome can be safe? |
A56828 | What labour for the youth to number mu ● ick with their sprightly paces? |
A56828 | What labour is it for the impatient lover to measure Hellespont with his widened armes to hasten his delight? |
A56828 | What meane these strict Reformers thus to spend their hou ● e- glasses, and bawle against our harmelesse Cups? |
A56828 | What povertie to the slothfull? |
A56828 | What satisfaction wilt thou give to the Creator, to the creature, to thy selfe, against all whom thou hast transgrest? |
A56828 | What stripes to the ignorant? |
A56828 | What thankfulnesse shall I returne for so infinite a love? |
A56828 | What warre can be succesfull? |
A56828 | What? |
A56828 | When Martiall execution is to bee done, wilt thou feare to kill? |
A56828 | When civill warres divide a kingdome, will Mercuries decline a lie? |
A56828 | When hunger drives thee to the gates of death, wilt thou bee affraid to steale? |
A56828 | Wherefore doe the wicked live, become old, yea are mightie in power? |
A56828 | Who more threatned then the presumptuous? |
A56828 | Why should I spend my pretious minutes in the sullen and dejected shades of sadnesse? |
A56828 | Why should I tire my tender youth, and ● orture out my groaning dayes in ● oyle and travell? |
A56828 | Woe bee to that barrennesse, that wants such showers: Pleadest thou strength to beare much Wine? |
A56828 | and countenanc''d vertue with a due respect? |
A56828 | and discompose the happy peace of my harmonious thoughts with painefull grinding in the common mill of dull mortalitie? |
A56828 | and sell our livelihood for a few teares, and a whining face? |
A56828 | and yet she stands the glory of the world: Can Pride demolish the Towers that defend her? |
A56828 | and yet sound; What danger against procrastination? |
A56828 | dar''st thou deny him for thy owne ends, that denied thee nothing for thy good? |
A56828 | for the saving of the whole livelihood and subsistence of a Christian? |
A56828 | if bloody times should force Religion to sh ● oud it selfe beneath my roofe; upon demand, shall my false truth betr ● y it? |
A56828 | judge thy selfe: Wouldst thou avoyd the sinne? |
A56828 | or Lord, wherein am I more uncapable of thy indignation? |
A56828 | or did our Lawes want execution? |
A56828 | or didst thou not lesse feare a Civill warre ● Was not the Title of the Crowne unquestionable? |
A56828 | or if a wet season meet thy Harvest and with open sluces overwhelme thy hopes; canst thou let downe the floodgates, and stop the watry Flux? |
A56828 | or rather not be secured by a faire officious life? |
A56828 | or ravell out my short liv''d dayes in solemne and heart- breaking Care? |
A56828 | or were wee moved at the sound of Judgments? |
A56828 | or why dost thou set at naught thy brother? |
A56828 | shall I perish for the want of food, and die a Mart ● ● to that foolish conscience which forbids mee to rub the eares of a little standing Corne? |
A56828 | shall the reall breach of a holy Sabbath, dedicated to Gods highest glory bee tolerated for the welfare of an Oxe? |
A56828 | should wee bee stock ● and stones, and( having active soules) turne altogether passives? |
A56828 | thy pleasure, with no crosse? |
A56828 | thy prosperitie, with no adversitie? |
A56828 | thy reputation, with no scandall? |
A56828 | to call our meetings Riots, and brand our civill mirth with stiles of loose Intemperance? |
A56828 | was not Wine given to exhilarate the drooping hearts, and raise the drowzie spirits of dejected soules? |
A56828 | what''s thirty in the hundred to a man of Trade? |
A56828 | which like Hippocrates ● winnes still live and die together? |
A56828 | why dost thou dote on the Image of the King stamped on coyne, and hate ● t the Image of God that shines in men? |
A56828 | yet how often hath God been found upon the deathbed? |
A56828 | yet none live more unscourg''d: VVho deeper branded then the Lyer ● ● yet who more favor''d? |
A56828 | yet not infected: What diseases against my drunkennesse? |
A56828 | yet themselves prosper: VVhat falls to the proud? |
A56828 | yet who lesse punished? |
A56828 | yet who more pleasure? |
A56828 | yet who more safe? |
A56828 | yet who more scotfree? |
A56828 | yet who richer? |
A56943 | ''T is true, God must bee sought; What impious tongue dare be so basely bold to contradict so known a truth? |
A56943 | A relaxation from the toile of labour: And what is labour but a painfull exercise of the fraile body? |
A56943 | ANd can I choose O God but tremble at thy judgements, or can my stony heart not stand amazed at thy threatnings? |
A56943 | And hast thou no moat in thine? |
A56943 | And may I not dispence with a bare lippe deniall of my urg''d Religion for the necessary preservation of the threatned life of a man? |
A56943 | And shall I then afflict my body, and beslave my heaven- born soule to purchase Rags to cloath my nakednesse? |
A56943 | And was not our mixt government unapt to fall into diseases? |
A56943 | And what have they not done to make my soul despaire? |
A56943 | And will these Plague- denouncers never leave to thunder judgements in my trembling eare? |
A56943 | And with blotted fingers made his blurre the greater? |
A56943 | Are we all Angels? |
A56943 | Are we born to thrum Caps, or pick straws? |
A56943 | Are we still bound to keepe a legall Sabbath in the strictnesse of the Letter? |
A56943 | Art thou not condemned to Rags, to Famine, by him whose law commanded thee to labour? |
A56943 | Art thou worthy of Christ that preferrest thy estate, or thy brothers life before him? |
A56943 | Augustine O thou covetous man, why dost thou treasure up such hidden mischiefe? |
A56943 | BUt will my God bee now entreated? |
A56943 | Be circumspect, and provident my soule: Hast thou a faire Summer? |
A56943 | Being sick of the Iaundies, how hast thou censur''d another yellow? |
A56943 | But why dost thou judge thy brother? |
A56943 | CAn flesh and blood bee so unnaturall to forget the Lawes of Nature? |
A56943 | COnscience, why start''st thou? |
A56943 | Can blowing youth immure it selfe within the Icey walls of Vestall Chastity? |
A56943 | Can drunkennesse dry up the Sea that walls her? |
A56943 | Can faire- pretending Piety be so barbarous to condemn us to the flames of our affections, and make us Martyrs to our own desires? |
A56943 | Can flames of lust dissolve the Ordnance that protect her? |
A56943 | Can full perfection be expected here? |
A56943 | Can lusty diet, and mollicious rest bring forth no other fruits, but faint desires, rigid thoughts, and Phlegmatick, conceits? |
A56943 | Can the Sun rise to thy comfort, that hath so often set in thy wrath? |
A56943 | Canst thou appeare in the searching eye of heaven, and not expect to be cast away? |
A56943 | Canst thou command the Sunne to shine? |
A56943 | Canst thou forbid the Mildewes, or controll the breath of the Malignant East? |
A56943 | Canst thou hold a full estate, a good pennyworth, which is bought with the deare price of thy Gods displeasure? |
A56943 | Come, if thou freely give thy house, canst thou in conscience be denied a hiding room for thy protection? |
A56943 | Custome in finne multiplies it: Pleadest thou society? |
A56943 | Did not our Prophets give lawfull warning? |
A56943 | Did we want good Lawes? |
A56943 | Didst thou foresee this danger? |
A56943 | Didst thou not laugh invasion to scorne? |
A56943 | Dost thou glory in thy friends? |
A56943 | Dost thou glory in thy parts? |
A56943 | Dost thou glory in thy strength? |
A56943 | Dost thou glory in thy wealth? |
A56943 | Endeavour rather to be, then to be ● thought holy; for what profits i ● thee to be thought to be what th ● ● art not? |
A56943 | Fifteen shillings in the pound composition? |
A56943 | Foresee what punishments are prepar''d to meet thee, and tell mee, what''s thy purchase? |
A56943 | Forgive him: Hath he trespass ● d against the Congregation? |
A56943 | HAs thy brother, O my soul, a beam in his eye? |
A56943 | HOw truly then, O God, this heavie woe belongs to this my boasted sin? |
A56943 | Has mortality no priviledge to supersede it from the utmost punishment of a little necessary frailty? |
A56943 | Hath Gilead Balme enough to heale thy superannuated sores? |
A56943 | Hath not my life beene blamelesse before men? |
A56943 | Hath not the hardnesse of my heart made me uncapable of thy compassion? |
A56943 | Have I born false witnesse like the wanton Elders? |
A56943 | Have I imbrued my hands in blood like Barabbas? |
A56943 | Have I like Jacob supplanted my elder brother? |
A56943 | Have I not given tithes of all I have? |
A56943 | Have I not hated Vice with a perfect hatred? |
A56943 | Have I set up false Gods like the Egyptians? |
A56943 | Have I violated the Sabbath like the Libertines? |
A56943 | Have the Gentiles no priviledge by vertue of Messiahs comming, or has the Evangelicall Sabbath no immunities? |
A56943 | How Pharisaically hast thou judg''d? |
A56943 | How can my lips, that daily breathe revenge against my brother, presume to own thee as my father, or expect from thee thy blessing, as thy childe? |
A56943 | How can we honour God if we revenge our selves? |
A56943 | How full of sweetnesse was his death, who dying was reveng''d upon three thousand enemies? |
A56943 | How has the pride of thine owne heart blinded thee toward thy selfe? |
A56943 | How many thirst, whilst thou surfeitest? |
A56943 | How many want that blessing thou hast turn''d into a curse? |
A56943 | How often hast thou turn''d the spirituall body of thy Saviour into thy damnation? |
A56943 | How wer''t thou wedded to thy owne corruptions, that couldst endure thy unsavoury filthinesse? |
A56943 | I, but who shall right thy honour then? |
A56943 | Iacob could purchase his sick fathers blessing with a down- right lie, and may I not dissemble for a life? |
A56943 | If thy impatience can not act a Sabbath twelve hours, what happinesse canst thou expect in a perpetuall Sabbath? |
A56943 | If truth sit Regent, in what faithfull breast shall secrets finde repose? |
A56943 | Is a poore clod of earth we call Inheritance, prizable with his greatnesse? |
A56943 | Is he that was so weary of the New- Moones, so taken with the Sun to tie his Sabbath to that only day? |
A56943 | Is it equall that God who gave thee a body, and sixe dayes to provide for it, should demand one day of of thee, and be denied it? |
A56943 | Is not my crying sin too loud for pardon? |
A56943 | Is not the God of heaven and earth worth many kingdomes? |
A56943 | Is not the liberall Cup the Sucking- bottle of the sons of Phebus, to solace and refresh their palats in the nights of sad Invention? |
A56943 | Is not this Gods sole Prerogative? |
A56943 | Is sixe dayes too little for thy selfe, and two hours too much for thy God? |
A56943 | Is there no allowance to humanity? |
A56943 | Is thy cause bad? |
A56943 | Is thy honour wrong''d? |
A56943 | Is thy welfare more considerable then his glory? |
A56943 | It is a day of Rest: And what''s a Rest? |
A56943 | May that breach be set upon the score of mercy, and commended above sacrifice for the savegard of an Asse? |
A56943 | Must we turne Ancherites and spend our dayes in Caves, and Hermitages, and smother up our pretious hours in cloysterd folly, and recluse devotion? |
A56943 | No grains to flesh and blood? |
A56943 | Nothing but damnation? |
A56943 | Nothing but judgements? |
A56943 | Nothing but plagues? |
A56943 | Now tell me O my soul, art thou worthy the name of a Christian, that denyest and opposest the nature of Christ? |
A56943 | O my deceived soule, how great a darknesse was thy light? |
A56943 | O my ingrant soule, what shall I doe to bee saved? |
A56943 | O my soule, how dost thou prize temporalls beyond eternalls? |
A56943 | O my soule, how uncharitable hast thou been? |
A56943 | O my unrighteous soule, canst thou hold thy brother worthy of death for giving thee the lie, and thy selfe guiltlesse that makest a lie? |
A56943 | O what return can the tainted breath of my polluted lips deserve, but to bee bound hand and foot, and cast into the flames of Hell? |
A56943 | O, wouldst thou offer a pleasing sacr ● fice to heaven? |
A56943 | Or Lord, wherein am I more uncapable of thy indignation? |
A56943 | Or a puffe of breath we call life, valuable with his honour, in comparison of whom the very Angels are impure? |
A56943 | Or at a Cockpit leave our doubtfull fortunes to the mercy of unmercifull contention? |
A56943 | Or can our work bee perfect in this vale of imperfection? |
A56943 | Or couldst thou have contrived a way to be thus miserable? |
A56943 | Or hath my purse been hidebound to my hungry brother? |
A56943 | Or like Absolon defiled my fathers bed? |
A56943 | Or like Ahab intruded into Nabals vineyard? |
A56943 | Or like David coveted Vriahs wife? |
A56943 | Or like cursed Cham, have I discovered my Fathers nakednesse? |
A56943 | Or shall my brothers life, or shall my owne be seis''d upon through the cruell truth of my down- right confession? |
A56943 | Or spend our wanton dayes in sacrificing costly presents to a fleshly Idoll? |
A56943 | Or what presumptuous lips dare disavow it? |
A56943 | Or who but fooles( that can not taste anjnjury) can moderate their high- bred spirits; and stop their passion in her full carrier? |
A56943 | Reprove him: Hath he sinned against God? |
A56943 | Search thy self to the bottome, and thou shalt find enough to humble thee: Dost thou glory in the favour of a Prince? |
A56943 | So long as thy wrath is kindled against thy brother, so long is the wrath of God burning against thee? |
A56943 | Society in the offence, aggravates the punishment: Pleadest thou help to invention? |
A56943 | TAke heed my soule, when thou hast lost thy self in thy journey, how wilt thou finde thy God at thy journeys end? |
A56943 | Tell mee, what continuance can that Inheritance promise that is raised upon the ruines of thy Brother? |
A56943 | The Law is just and good, and being ruled by that, how can my faire proceedings bee unjust? |
A56943 | The Plague? |
A56943 | The tenth in tithes is any one in ten, and why the seventh day not any one in seven? |
A56943 | The young mans great possessions taught his timerous tongue to shrink from and decline his hearts profession, and who could blame him? |
A56943 | They perish at their own charge, not mine, and what is that to mee? |
A56943 | VVHat tell''st thou me of Conscience, or a pious life? |
A56943 | VVHat thinkst thou now my soule? |
A56943 | VVIll Boanarges never cease? |
A56943 | WHat a child O my soule, hath thy false bosome harb ● rd ▪ And what reward can thy indulgence expect from such a father? |
A56943 | Was not Wine given to exhilarate the drooping hearts, and raise the drowzie spirits of dejected souls? |
A56943 | Was not the Title of the Crown unquestionable? |
A56943 | We sanctifie the day, the day not us: But are we Jewes? |
A56943 | Wer''t thou not but now for many yeares even nuzzl ● d in the bosome of habituall peace? |
A56943 | What Common wealth can be secure? |
A56943 | What Oyle shall bee infused into the lampe of deare society, if they deny the priviledge of a civill rejoycing Cup? |
A56943 | What Stratagem can prosper? |
A56943 | What blessing canst thou hope for from heaven, that pleadest for the son of the devill, and crucifyest the Son of God? |
A56943 | What can my prayers expect but thy just wrath and heavie indignation? |
A56943 | What damnation to Hypocrites? |
A56943 | What have I done to make my case desperate? |
A56943 | What if his beggerly children pine, or his proud wife perish? |
A56943 | What if the custome of a harmlesse oath should captivate thy heedlesse tongue, can nothing under sudden judgment seiz upon the? |
A56943 | What judgements to the lascivious? |
A56943 | What kingdome can be safe? |
A56943 | What labour for the youth to number musick with their sprightly paces? |
A56943 | What labour is it for the impatient lover to measure Hellespont with his widened armes to hasten his del ● ght? |
A56943 | What mean these strict Reformers thus to spend their hou ● e- glasses, and bawle against our harmless Cups? |
A56943 | What poverty to the slothfull? |
A56943 | What satisfaction wilt thou give to the Creator, to the Creature, to thy selfe; against all whom thou hast transgrest? |
A56943 | What stripes to the ignorant? |
A56943 | What thankfulnesse shall I returne ● or so infinite a love? |
A56943 | What vengeance to the prophane, the censorious, the revengefull? |
A56943 | What warre can be successefull? |
A56943 | What''s thirty in the hundred to a man of Trade? |
A56943 | What? |
A56943 | What? |
A56943 | When civill warres divide a Kingdome, will Mercuries decline a lie? |
A56943 | When hunger drives thee to the gates of death, wilt thou be afraid to steale? |
A56943 | When martial execution is to be done ▪ wilt thou fear to kill? |
A56943 | Wherefore do the wicked live, become old, ye are mighty in power? |
A56943 | Who more threatend then the presumptuous? |
A56943 | Why should I spend my precious minutes in the sullen and dejected shades of sadnesse? |
A56943 | Why should I tire my tender youth, and torture out my groaning dayes in toyle and travell? |
A56943 | am I not sunk too deep into the jaws of Hell, for thy strong arme to rescue? |
A56943 | and by repentance too: What strange impiety dare deny it? |
A56943 | and countenanc''d Vertue with a due respect? |
A56943 | and discompose the happy peace of my harmonious thoughts with painfull grinding in the common mill of dull mortality? |
A56943 | and my demeanor unreprovable before the world? |
A56943 | and sell our livelihood for a few teares, and a whining face? |
A56943 | and yet I live: What plagues against my swearing? |
A56943 | and yet she stands the glory of the world: Can pride demolish the Towers that defend her? |
A56943 | and yet sound; What danger against procrastination? |
A56943 | dar''st thou deny him for thy owne owne ends, that denied thee nothing for thy good? |
A56943 | for the saving of the whole livelyhood and subsistence of a Christian? |
A56943 | in all Christian duties who more forward then I? |
A56943 | judge thy selfe: Wouldst thou avoid the sin? |
A56943 | or did our Lawes want execution? |
A56943 | or didst thou not lesse feare a Civill war? |
A56943 | or have I bowed before them like the Israelites? |
A56943 | or if a wet season meet thy Harvest, and with open sluces overwhelme thy hopes; canst thou let downe the floodgates, and stop the watry Flux? |
A56943 | or rather not be secured by a faire officious lie? |
A56943 | or ravell out my short liv''d dayes in solemn and heart- breaking Care? |
A56943 | or were we moved at the sound of judgements? |
A56943 | or why dost thou set at naught thy brother? |
A56943 | shall I perish for the want of ● ood, and die a Martyr to that foolish conscience which forbids me to rub the eares of a little standing Corne? |
A56943 | shall the reall breach of a holy Sabbath, dedicated to Gods highest glory, be tolerated for the welfare of an Oxe? |
A56943 | should we be stocks and stones and( having active souls) turne altogether passives? |
A56943 | the extract of all diseases? |
A56943 | thy pleasure, with no crosse? |
A56943 | thy prosperity, with no adversity? |
A56943 | thy reputation with no scandall? |
A56943 | to call our meetings Riots, and brand our civil mirth with stiles of loose Intemperance? |
A56943 | was Ioseph mark''d for everlasting death, for swearing by the life of Egypts King? |
A56943 | was Peter when he so denyed his master, straight damn''d for swearing, and forswearing? |
A56943 | what if the luxuriant stile of thy discourse doe chance to strike upon an obvious Oath, art thou straight hurried into the bosome of a Plague? |
A56943 | why dost thou dote on the Image of the King stamped on coine, and hatest the Image of God that shines in men? |
A56943 | yet finde I honour: How fiercely have they preacht destruction against my cruelty? |
A56943 | yet how often hath God been found upon the death- bed? |
A56943 | yet none live more unscourg''d: Who deeper branded then the Lyar? |
A56943 | yet not infected: What diseases against my drunkennesse? |
A56943 | yet themselvs prosper: What fals to the proud? |
A56943 | yet they stand surest: What curses to the covetous? |
A56943 | yet who lesse punisht? |
A56943 | yet who more Scotfree? |
A56943 | yet who more favourd? |
A56943 | yet who more pleasure? |
A56943 | yet who more safe? |
A56943 | yet who richer? |
A56943 | 〈 ◊ 〉, but in some cases truth destroyes thy life; a lie preserves it: My soule, was God thy Creator? |
A56839 | ''T was soundly watcht the whil''st: But have you made Search no where else? |
A56839 | ''gainst whom do''st thou Thus sternely bend thy discontented Brow? |
A56839 | A Virgin beare a Son? |
A56839 | Admit all this Philorthus,( for who can Consider frailty, and not thinke of Man?) |
A56839 | Ah, how often have I cry''d In corners? |
A56839 | All this may be, and yet no Virgin, Swain; Can Virgins bear? |
A56839 | Anarchus? |
A56839 | And Hell: But tell me to what sort of souls does he Expand the Gates of heaven? |
A56839 | And if my faith be conscious of a blot, Why stand''st thou mute so long? |
A56839 | And is not, now, that prophecy made good? |
A56839 | And of a Virgins womb? |
A56839 | Are th''Infernall keys Lesse nimble to unlock Hels gate for these? |
A56839 | Are they severe, Reserv''d, and strict? |
A56839 | Art me no Arts; That which the Sp''rit infuses Shall edge my tongue: What tell''st thou me of Muses, Those Pagan Gods; the Authours of your Schismes? |
A56839 | Art thou his Lad? |
A56839 | Art thou thy self, Anarchus? |
A56839 | At whom does this Artil''ry of thine eye Levell such flames? |
A56839 | Better, quite neglect: But does he totally devote that day To his fair Flock? |
A56839 | Borne without pain? |
A56839 | But Swain, I wonder much they make not bold, Sometimes to straggle to another Fold, To mend so mean a diet? |
A56839 | But have those Pray''rs restor''d the Pearl again? |
A56839 | But is it certain, Nuncius? |
A56839 | But say, what strange mischance was that, did move thee To flee thy native soile? |
A56839 | But say; upon what shoulders grows that Head That can not erre: that can not be misled? |
A56839 | But stay, deare Shepheard, shall my sisters crimes, Or shall th''unjust Rebellions of her times Be plagu''d in me? |
A56839 | But tell me Swaine, does any such foole dwell Within our pale, that thinks you Swaines can sell Such priviledg? |
A56839 | But tell me now, my Saint- imploring brother, One Cypher being added to another, What makes the totall summe? |
A56839 | But tell me, Shepheard, will this dainty feed Make them but seeming fat, or fat indeed? |
A56839 | But tell me, Swain, to what prodigious end May these miraculous discourses tend? |
A56839 | But tell me, Swaine, how come you to engage Such great ones to your faction? |
A56839 | But tell me, Swaine, what busie eyes attend Thy flocks the while? |
A56839 | But tell me, wert thou made A Butcher, or a Tayler by thy trade? |
A56839 | But what betides to riotous Gluttons, then, Hell- tutor''d Sorcerers, and incestuous men? |
A56839 | But wher''s the profit, Shepheard, where''s the gains? |
A56839 | But who comes here? |
A56839 | But, where''s the Nectar, Swaine? |
A56839 | Can Phoebus, in the noon Of his Meridian glory, cease to shine, Before his Solstice leaves him to decline The least degree? |
A56839 | Can a foul weed Delight the smell? |
A56839 | Can any mortall heart Be so befool''d? |
A56839 | Can brave Adolphus fall, And heaven not give us warning? |
A56839 | Can that displease thee, that delights thy God? |
A56839 | Can their wisedomes rome Through all the world, and yet be blinde at home? |
A56839 | Can very Truth take place Of very Truth? |
A56839 | Can your mixtures adde A sweetnesse to it, which it never had? |
A56839 | Canst thou give me At least some hopes of comfort to relieve me? |
A56839 | Champion, speak; why speakst thou not? |
A56839 | Corruption sake? |
A56839 | Could not your Chair dispence With that as safely as with all the rest? |
A56839 | Did Gentilla''s knee Ere bend to any, but her God, and Thee? |
A56839 | Did not I trust, Gentilla, to thy hand My Flocks, my substance, under whose command I left them charg''d? |
A56839 | Doe they stand All sound? |
A56839 | Does thy paines obtain No by- commendaes, no collaterall gain, To raise and heighten up the slender wall Of thy low fortunes? |
A56839 | Evangelus? |
A56839 | Faith, so''s my Nectar, Swaine; my Nectar''s ended; Look, here''s the Shrine, but the sweet Saint''s ascended: See''st thou this empty bottle? |
A56839 | Feeds he for by- respect? |
A56839 | Folds he for fashion? |
A56839 | GRaze on my Lambs, here''s nothing to disquiet Your gentle peace, or interupt your diet: Why croud ye thus so neer your frighted dams? |
A56839 | God morrow, Swain: Not yet? |
A56839 | God- morrow, Swain; God keep thee from the sorrow Of a sad day; What speechlesse? |
A56839 | Graze on, my sheep: Forbeare my Lambs, to feare ye know not what, And feed; your feeding makes your shepheard fat: But who comes yonder?'' |
A56839 | Growes not grasse there, where these proud buildings stood? |
A56839 | HOw fare thy Flocks, Adelphus? |
A56839 | Has Truth a double face? |
A56839 | Has thy hungry zeale Devoured all thy manners at a meale? |
A56839 | Have I prov''d false? |
A56839 | Have not my thoughts observ''d a holy Fast From new desires? |
A56839 | Have not these eyes bin chast As th''eyes of Turtles? |
A56839 | Heavens Statute qualifies all sorts of men; How came yee to repeal that Statute then? |
A56839 | Here''s neither Wolf, nor Fox; Graze on, my Lambs: Graze on, my Sheep; why gaze ye to and fro, As if ye fear''d some evill? |
A56839 | Here''s none but thee and I, Why dost thou turne aside? |
A56839 | How can the wav''ring will of man be guided Betwixt two Sp''rits; at least, one Sp''rit divided? |
A56839 | How could our growing greatnesse choose but blow And quicken up their zealous flames? |
A56839 | How like a Meteor made of zeal and flame The man appears? |
A56839 | How now, Anarchus? |
A56839 | How often have I charm''d by the black Art Of all my sorrowes? |
A56839 | I attended Till I was tyred, and his Tale was ended; What would''st thou more with my obtunded eare? |
A56839 | I prithee, let me sleep, P''sh, what care I for either Wolf or Sheep? |
A56839 | I wonder what the news is? |
A56839 | If I be loyall; say, why doest thou shun me? |
A56839 | If Prisons be so gainfull, what offence Took thy discretion to remove thee thence? |
A56839 | If he be paid for turning of the keyes: What sort of sins unlock the gates of Hell? |
A56839 | In a Browne studie? |
A56839 | In a Muse? |
A56839 | Is Luscus, then, my soule two blessings deep, Or am I joyn''d in Patent with my sheep? |
A56839 | Is prayer become So poor a guest, to be deny''d a roome In thy opinion? |
A56839 | Is the Swain I sought so nigh? |
A56839 | Is thy heart Acquainted with that tongue, that does impart This brain- sick language? |
A56839 | Is thy store hoarded up? |
A56839 | Just so, Papists say: Say, in what place th''Apostles ever did Command Set Forme? |
A56839 | My Lambs, why gaze ye thus? |
A56839 | Nay, how often have these eyes Bin drown''d with briny streames, that did arise From the full fountaine of a flowing heart? |
A56839 | Nay, my Britannus, what concernes us more, Did not that Oracle, in times of yore, Threaten to send his Foxes from their Holds, Into our Vines? |
A56839 | Nay, what man is he That will not temporize, and fan the fire T''encrease the flames of his unblown desire? |
A56839 | Neglect of what is good, is goods abuse: But tell me how it makes for Shepheards use? |
A56839 | No Scraps remain? |
A56839 | Or art thou free? |
A56839 | Or baptise In Basons? |
A56839 | Or bin thy steps misguided? |
A56839 | Or births be freed from pain? |
A56839 | Or can those prayers be pleasing, that proceed From unregen''rate breasts? |
A56839 | Or do''st thou serve for Fee? |
A56839 | Or doe I see Our Boanarges comming? |
A56839 | Or doe his ready sheep Expect his Call, and wholly leave the day To his wise pleasure? |
A56839 | Or gives he free''r raines To mirth and sports, as on our frolique Plaines We Shepheards use? |
A56839 | Or have yee so much boldnesse to compare A Prelats pratling, to a Prophets Pray''r? |
A56839 | Or like an unchew''d Pill, but swallow''t down? |
A56839 | Or shall thy lips demand The debts of Iudabell at Gentilla''s hand? |
A56839 | Or the plagues, that brake Upon the people for hard Pharohs sake? |
A56839 | Or to vex and wrong Your Mother Church? |
A56839 | Or to whimper in the nose? |
A56839 | Or wouldst thou dry the earths full breast, that feeds Thy fragrant Flowers, because it fosters Weeds? |
A56839 | Our doctrines, Brito? |
A56839 | Recollect thy thought, Whose doctrin was it, that Swaine Luther taught? |
A56839 | Say did I not submit My Shepheards to thy service, and commit My Sheep to their protection, to be Foder''d by them, and overseen by thee? |
A56839 | Say, Champion then, for what respects? |
A56839 | Say, did I ever bow To a new choyce, or started from my Vow? |
A56839 | Say; doe you eat, and grind it, Flesh and Bone? |
A56839 | Shall some few staines in the full Lampe of night Cry downe the Moone, and wooe the Stars for light? |
A56839 | So heaven commanded Bishops, and the rest Of that lewd Rank, ranck members of the Beast? |
A56839 | So heaven commanded, that religious praise Be given to Saints, and worship to their dayes? |
A56839 | So heaven commanded, that the high Commission Should plague poor Christians, like the Inquisition? |
A56839 | So heaven commands your Paintings, Pipes,& Copes, Us''d in your Churches, and ordain''d by Popes? |
A56839 | So heaven commands your prayers, that buried dust Of Whores and Theeves should triumph with the Just? |
A56839 | So heaven commands, by conjuring words to bring Vow''d hands together, with a hallow''d Ring? |
A56839 | So heaven( by blest Examples) did enjoin, Your bended knees to worship Bread, and Wine? |
A56839 | Speak, speak; Vigilius eares are mad To know the newes: Say, is it good, or bad? |
A56839 | Speechlesse? |
A56839 | Stands it with justice, that those Vows which she Hath falsely broke, should be reveng''d on me? |
A56839 | Swain, God- morrow: What, Shepheard, not a word to entertain The wishes of a friend? |
A56839 | Thanks, gentle Iudex; for the last, I durst Assure my selfe in thee: but where''s the first? |
A56839 | The Book of Common Prayer? |
A56839 | The Squib, the Ignis fatuus of Religion: But hee''at hànd: Anarchus what''s the newes? |
A56839 | The curse of my God- morrow? |
A56839 | Their Lambs are fair; their Fleeces white as snow; They thrive; are fruitfull, and encrease our store; What need a curious Shepheard question more? |
A56839 | Then Shepheard wake, there is a Wolf broke in Among thy sheep; what fallen asleep agin? |
A56839 | They make rich Shepheards, and encrease their stock; Pan grant, your Shepheard make as rich a flock: But what''s that dainty food? |
A56839 | Thou art befool''d: where heard''st thou this? |
A56839 | Thou childe of wrath, and fierbrand of Hell, Flows wholesome water from a tainted Well? |
A56839 | Thy cheekes so hollow, and thy sides so thin, As if thy girdle had been taken in By famine, for the want of Belly stuffe To fill them up? |
A56839 | Thy flocks so faire And fleeces too, what makes thy fleece so bare? |
A56839 | To be scorn''d, contemn''d, Like school- boyes Theams, whose errors have condemn''d The guilty Truant to the Masters Rod? |
A56839 | To breake our Fences, and to make a way For the wilde Boare to ramble, and to prey Where ere he pleas''d? |
A56839 | To such as we? |
A56839 | Unnat''rall Sodomites, and the brasse- brow''d Lyer? |
A56839 | Vigilius? |
A56839 | WHat ails my dearest Shepheard? |
A56839 | WHat news, Catholicus? |
A56839 | WHat strange affrights are these, that thus arrest My lab''ring soule, and spoile me of my rest? |
A56839 | Well, if the Lord be pleased to allow Set Formes to Prophets, are they set to you? |
A56839 | Were not th''Apostles Fishers, and not fly Their trades, and preach''d the word as well as I? |
A56839 | Were not those Pastures faire enough, to keep My wained Lambs, and to maintaine my Sheep? |
A56839 | Were they not sweet enough, and well sufficing Without that mixture, of your Swaines devising? |
A56839 | Wert ever bound to th''trade? |
A56839 | What Apostle taught your tongue To gibe at Bishops? |
A56839 | What Crown- controlling Nathan dare begin To question Vice? |
A56839 | What Text commanded you to exercise Your Function over Tables? |
A56839 | What aile thine eyes to take Such early slumbers? |
A56839 | What ailes my passion to beleeve so soon The Evill it feares? |
A56839 | What ayles this peevish Shepheard? |
A56839 | What bold? |
A56839 | What busie tongue Has done thine eares, and easie faith that wrong? |
A56839 | What businesse has divided Thy steps this way? |
A56839 | What courses doe they bend? |
A56839 | What dire dysaster urg''d thy skilfull hand To find imployment in a forain Land? |
A56839 | What exceptionties That undefil''d, that honourable life From Priestly Orders? |
A56839 | What has poore Gentilla done? |
A56839 | What has that Statute done? |
A56839 | What if thy too neglected Soile abound With noysome Weeds? |
A56839 | What is he? |
A56839 | What is''t? |
A56839 | What makes thee then so sad? |
A56839 | What mean these silent Common- places Of strange aspects? |
A56839 | What mean these sullen frownes? |
A56839 | What midnight- wanderer is grown so bold At such a seas''n, to ramble near my Fold? |
A56839 | What mischief drove thee? |
A56839 | What place may not be secret? |
A56839 | What refuge have yee now? |
A56839 | What serves your Shepheard for, if not to keep Your hearts secure from feares? |
A56839 | What''s that to us, if they appear but so? |
A56839 | What, Nuncius, good or bad? |
A56839 | What, if their skins be puft? |
A56839 | What, not a word? |
A56839 | When your crosse- garted knees fall down before Your Parlour- Table, what doe you adore? |
A56839 | Where Popish hands have rais''d in every Town A Parish Church, shall we pull Churches down? |
A56839 | Where is his abode? |
A56839 | Where was Set Forme forbid? |
A56839 | Where''s our brave Enemy? |
A56839 | Whereupon Ground''st thou thy harsh conceit? |
A56839 | Which of the seav''n may his grave wisdome keep For this Repast? |
A56839 | Who is''t, that will not undertake to be His sins Attorney? |
A56839 | Who taught yee to oppose Your Rulers? |
A56839 | Who taught your wisdomes to forsake your flocks, And let them ramble on the barren Rocks, And wander God knowes where? |
A56839 | Whose hasty feet are they That trace the Plains so quick? |
A56839 | Why doe thy causelesse browes thus frown upon me? |
A56839 | Why dost thou shun Gentilla? |
A56839 | Why gaze ye so? |
A56839 | Why stand yee frighted? |
A56839 | Why was that Statute thought a worse offence Then all the rest? |
A56839 | Wilt thou vent none? |
A56839 | Would not the blessed Virgins blessing doe, Without the blessing of S. Francis too? |
A56839 | Y''are gone by Law and Gospel; They both us''d Set Forme; What Scripture now must be abus''d? |
A56839 | You lately came From the great City: what''s the voice of Fame? |
A56839 | Your double answer wants a single force: And is the Grist of heaven become so course To need your sifting? |
A56839 | am I deceiv''d? |
A56839 | and Wolves into our Folds? |
A56839 | for whom, Are Brothels licenc''d by the lawes of Rome? |
A56839 | hast thou deny''d Thy presence? |
A56839 | no eye can see''t; What, if their flesh be ranck? |
A56839 | none at all? |
A56839 | of whom? |
A56839 | or call his sin, a sin? |
A56839 | or does mine eare Perceive a noise of footsteps, drawing neare? |
A56839 | or hast thou none to vent? |
A56839 | or how Could our untam''d Ambition hope to stand Against the power of so great a hand? |
A56839 | or is it spent? |
A56839 | or ugly shapes, the view? |
A56839 | or what eye Dare( under pain of putting out) once pry Into his Closet? |
A56839 | or what season will Not wait upon his pleasure, to fulfill His royall lust? |
A56839 | or what soule could taint Our Sun- bright names? |
A56839 | rent and torn In every vulgar mouth? |
A56839 | what blest Angels tongue Has broke my slumbers with so sweet a song? |
A56839 | what chast Sophronia would Wound her own heart, for fear her Soverain should? |
A56839 | what evill could cause complaint? |
A56839 | what has our nation Committed, worthy of so foul taxation? |
A56839 | what humor hath possest The Sanctuary of his troubled Brest? |
A56839 | what is''t, he can not doe? |
A56839 | what mean these antick faces? |
A56839 | what new change Has taught his heart- rejoycing eys such strange And dire aspects? |
A56839 | what tell''st thou me Of that? |
A56839 | what ventrous spirit dare enquire Into the lawfulnesse of his desire? |
A56839 | when Lights grow dim and dull, what hand Can keepe out darkenesse? |
A56839 | where could shadowes ground Their ayery errands? |
A56839 | wherein transgrest, That you have made the Tables too too hot To hold it? |
A56839 | who can countermand The melancholy shades of ugly night, When heaven wants Lamps, or when those Lamps want light? |
A56839 | who goes there? |
A56839 | why chid''st thou not? |
A56839 | why damp ye not my dull belief, To lend a little respite to my grief? |
A56839 | why did no Comet blaze Against such hideous things?) |
A56839 | wilt thou disclaime the ground? |
A56843 | ''T is done before one can say What''s this? |
A56843 | 1 When Evaldus shall lay downe, 2 3 Whose head then shall weare the Crowne? |
A56843 | A hundred Marks a year besides, and the Queens Servant? |
A56843 | Ah poor Quack, Art thou come into his clutches? |
A56843 | Am I born to trot after you? |
A56843 | And how his ugly rowling eyes shot fire- brands at Kettreena''s face? |
A56843 | And wert thou not serv''d in thy kind, to be such an asse, to refuse a good thing when''t was offer''d? |
A56843 | And why should not I cheat him with as good a conscience, as he you? |
A56843 | Are my hopes come to this? |
A56843 | Are the plummets of your soule downer? |
A56843 | Are they all dead Artesio? |
A56843 | Are we all safe? |
A56843 | Are we not all consum''d? |
A56843 | Are you not well? |
A56843 | Art in carnest? |
A56843 | Art thou come To give''s a visit? |
A56843 | Artesio, Can you resolve us yet concerning the death of Pertenax? |
A56843 | Artesio, is''t not so? |
A56843 | Artesio, say, what discontents have rais''d These clouds, that over- cast thy chearfull brow, And make sad weather in Kettreena''s face? |
A56843 | Aug. Art acquainted with no Pothecary, that will take an Anuity of a hundred Mark to doe the feat? |
A56843 | Aug. O are ye there? |
A56843 | Beare my years well? |
A56843 | Blisters, Botches, Biles, or Blanes, Coughs, Consumptions, Colds, Catarrs? |
A56843 | Blowes the wind there away? |
A56843 | Bring him in: Now friend, what''s your businesse? |
A56843 | But Trippit is this certain? |
A56843 | But Trippit, In whose name shall we send it to her? |
A56843 | But art not mightily troubled with him in thy dreames? |
A56843 | But did he drink it? |
A56843 | But did that Pilgrim never since appear Discover''d to thine eye? |
A56843 | But has he Knighted Pertenax? |
A56843 | But heav''n protected her: Who brought the Letter and the Potion? |
A56843 | But how can Pertenax devise To wrong such patience? |
A56843 | But how does poor Kettreena take it? |
A56843 | But is my Lady so strict Frank? |
A56843 | But is she stiled Queen? |
A56843 | But methinks your knavery should quickly be discover''d Quack, what doe ye then? |
A56843 | But say, Artesio, what disastrous evill Hath stampt thy looks with these late sad impressions? |
A56843 | But shall''s marry in our old Cloathes? |
A56843 | But tell me, how likest thou Cis? |
A56843 | But what Doctors had she? |
A56843 | But what saies this? |
A56843 | But where''s her Crowne? |
A56843 | But who comes here? |
A56843 | But? |
A56843 | Can not I lengthen out the groaning daies of transitory flesh, or cut them short according to my pleasure and advantage? |
A56843 | Can then belief give help to their disease? |
A56843 | Canst- a make a Composition? |
A56843 | Cause ye look so pale, Your colour''s gone into Kettreenas cheeks; But are you well indeed? |
A56843 | Come, Art thou there? |
A56843 | Come, the plaine truth is, I do n''t like it, so I do n''t, nor should I spare him had he been a King of Gold: What? |
A56843 | Comodus, What eye did ere till now behold Folly and madnesse acted to the life? |
A56843 | Comodus, what account can you give us of this businesse? |
A56843 | Comodus? |
A56843 | Conscience, quoth her? |
A56843 | Could thy heart make a sad Pilgrim Th''object of thy love? |
A56843 | D''ye want Restority? |
A56843 | Dar''st thou be doubtfull? |
A56843 | Deare Sister, what''s the matter? |
A56843 | Did I not mark the lustfull progresse of his lascivious glaunces? |
A56843 | Did her Ladiship send for thee to watch? |
A56843 | Discipline him? |
A56843 | Do''st thou know''t? |
A56843 | Doctor within? |
A56843 | Does there appeare any new light by your Examination? |
A56843 | Does your heart want mirth? |
A56843 | Dost thou consent Kettreena? |
A56843 | Dost thou rejounce? |
A56843 | Dost thou think he has forsaken thee upon''t? |
A56843 | Evaldus? |
A56843 | From whence? |
A56843 | From whom? |
A56843 | From whom? |
A56843 | Glisterpipe? |
A56843 | Has Age or Wedlock lent thee This sickly Night- cap? |
A56843 | Has any Courtier lost his haire? |
A56843 | Has any Lover lost his wits? |
A56843 | Has any Morpheus, Freckles, Staynes, Warts, or Wounds, or Wens, or Scar''s? |
A56843 | Has she taken no Advice formerly? |
A56843 | Has your Lady made no use of any other Doctor formerly? |
A56843 | Have I liv''d these thrice thirty years, to be caught with Chaffe? |
A56843 | Have I nothing else to doe, but to figge from place, from Taverne to Taverne, from corner to corner? |
A56843 | Have not I power to produce the twine of fraile mortality, in spight of death, or nature? |
A56843 | How came it thither? |
A56843 | How can the one be maintain''d? |
A56843 | How habited? |
A56843 | How long Kettreena since thy soft desire Relented first at thy bold Pilgrims fire? |
A56843 | How long has your Lady been sick? |
A56843 | How now my dear Augusta? |
A56843 | How now? |
A56843 | How shall that appeare? |
A56843 | How? |
A56843 | How? |
A56843 | How? |
A56843 | I fear, I fear, some Oeconomick fire Hath late been kindled: Tell us what''s the cause Of these sad looks? |
A56843 | I find by her water, there has been too sudden Alterations in her constitution: Is she not sometimes very hot, and sometimes very cold? |
A56843 | I find likewise, that she is much troubled with the Spleene, which occasions stupidity, melancholy, and at times distractions? |
A56843 | I find obnoxious fumes rising from her stomach, and stupifying her braine: Is she not at times very drowzie? |
A56843 | I like my Father? |
A56843 | I''le grant it him, But will he be secret? |
A56843 | IS any sick? |
A56843 | If any foolish Lord be sick of a Plurisie of Gold, who must be sent for but the Italian Doctor, Seignior Quackquinto? |
A56843 | If any love- sick Lady would take a Pill to purge mellancholly, who must be sought to but the Italian Doctor, Seignior Quackquinto? |
A56843 | In the name of Gold what ayle my bowels thus to gripe? |
A56843 | Is any foule that would be faire? |
A56843 | Is any heart opprest with dolor? |
A56843 | Is any sore Opprest with Qualmes and fainting fits? |
A56843 | Is he? |
A56843 | Is it even so? |
A56843 | Is not the Patent mine? |
A56843 | Is she not apt now and then to speak idly? |
A56843 | Is she not often in a brown study? |
A56843 | Is she not often possest with sudden frights, and feares, and jealousies, and mis- understandings? |
A56843 | Is there never a Statute throughout the Volumes of the Law, that tolerates a man to hang himself? |
A56843 | Is this my Fathers haire? |
A56843 | Is''t possible? |
A56843 | Kettreena, stay, we have a word t''exchange: Sit down Kettreena: Here''s an empty Chaire Invites thy presence; Come, why com''st thou not? |
A56843 | Kettreena, tell me, for thine eye appears An equall sharer in his silent tears? |
A56843 | Liv''d there a Soule subjected to our Crowne, So blest in his deservings, as to find So great a favour at Kettreenas eyes? |
A56843 | Megrims, Skirvies, Cramps, or Cricks, Iaundies, Rickets, Piles, or Rhumes? |
A56843 | Must I be thus slighted, and scorn''d, and contemn''d, and undone by a Runnagate, a Sneap- nose, a thin- gut? |
A56843 | Must I daunce attendance after such a shotten herring as you? |
A56843 | Must her Plummets be wound up? |
A56843 | Must my sweet revenge attend your leisure? |
A56843 | My Fathers lips like these? |
A56843 | Nay, what d''ye mean? |
A56843 | Now Comodus, what means this desperation? |
A56843 | Now friend, what''s your businesse? |
A56843 | O are ye come, give me, give me, quickly, quickly? |
A56843 | O she is dead, Is any hope of life? |
A56843 | Of the what? |
A56843 | Of what condition? |
A56843 | On what just ground Can he pretend to build the least distast? |
A56843 | Or Marina? |
A56843 | Or bound behind? |
A56843 | Or finds a crickling in his hammes? |
A56843 | Or loose before? |
A56843 | Or surcharg''d with Flegme or folly? |
A56843 | Or took the King for more then flesh and bloud? |
A56843 | Or what hard- hearted eare can be so dead, As to be deafe, if faire Panthea plead? |
A56843 | Or what resemblance of my Father? |
A56843 | Or which shall I refuse? |
A56843 | Ore- flowne with blood? |
A56843 | Pray, for what? |
A56843 | Prithee, why Sirrah? |
A56843 | Quack More conscience yet? |
A56843 | Quack So, is all out now? |
A56843 | Quibble, what say''st to this? |
A56843 | Quisquilla, what brought thee thither? |
A56843 | Say on; but what? |
A56843 | Say''st thou me so? |
A56843 | Say, what Confederates had ye? |
A56843 | Shall I not seem too curious to propound A harmlesse question, to thy private eare? |
A56843 | Shall I? |
A56843 | She has her punishment: Who writ the Letter? |
A56843 | Sir, Is Master Doctor within? |
A56843 | Sir, What meane ye? |
A56843 | Sir, did you call? |
A56843 | Speak truth, Are ye guilty of this murther? |
A56843 | Speak, is it so? |
A56843 | Such looks as his are sowre enough to fright Diana from her chastity: And who Ere canoniz''d Kettreena for a Saint? |
A56843 | Sullen, sad, or melancholly? |
A56843 | Tell me Kettreena, do''st thou know this Ring? |
A56843 | Tell me of Conscience? |
A56843 | Tell me of mercy? |
A56843 | Tell me, Kettreena, do''st thou know this Ring? |
A56843 | Tell us what''s the cause Of this dull change? |
A56843 | Thanks sweet Augusta: Tell me dear of what? |
A56843 | These my Fathers eyes? |
A56843 | Trippit, Aug. Where''s Phonilla all this day? |
A56843 | Twenty times? |
A56843 | Twenty times? |
A56843 | V. Chollicks, Fevers, Palseyes, Flux, Cancers, Dropsies, nauseous Fumes? |
A56843 | Was h''ever half so faire? |
A56843 | Was he some foraine Prince in a disguise That came to rob our land of such a prize? |
A56843 | What Fury has possest thee? |
A56843 | What Marble melts not if Pulchrella wooe? |
A56843 | What Rule was that, Madge? |
A56843 | What Symptons can he gather Of Age? |
A56843 | What are ye deafe now? |
A56843 | What ayles my Lord the King? |
A56843 | What ayles thy face? |
A56843 | What haste Augusta? |
A56843 | What if Palladius should advise With his soft Pillow? |
A56843 | What if it should be sent in a Bottle of Greekwine, as a token from one of her Sisters? |
A56843 | What is there in this face To merit such a Complement? |
A56843 | What meanes these teares? |
A56843 | What meanes this change of weather? |
A56843 | What means this strange Militia in thine eyes? |
A56843 | What mov''d him to''t? |
A56843 | What pouder Cis? |
A56843 | What say''st to this? |
A56843 | What secret beauty lurks there in Kettreena That is ecclip''d in Rosia? |
A56843 | What shall I doe? |
A56843 | What shall I doe? |
A56843 | What strange fit Usurps thy patience, and beclouds thy brow? |
A56843 | What tell''st thou me of Conscience? |
A56843 | What tell''st thou me of nature? |
A56843 | What was he for a man? |
A56843 | What was he then? |
A56843 | What were his fortunes? |
A56843 | What were they? |
A56843 | What''s here? |
A56843 | What, fall''n asleep? |
A56843 | What? |
A56843 | What? |
A56843 | What? |
A56843 | What? |
A56843 | When Evaldus shall lay downe, Shall Bellarmo weare the Crowne? |
A56843 | When Evaldus shall lay downe, Shall Museus weare the Crowne? |
A56843 | When Evaldus shall lay downe, Shall Palladius were the Crowne? |
A56843 | Where is he? |
A56843 | Who can help it? |
A56843 | Who can stand Before the power of great Apollo''s hand? |
A56843 | Who rais''d this storm? |
A56843 | Who''s at doore there? |
A56843 | Who''s at doore? |
A56843 | Who''s there? |
A56843 | Whom shall I please? |
A56843 | Why Thursday? |
A56843 | Why didst not drive those troups of Devils From her stormy tongue? |
A56843 | Why didst not pare them then? |
A56843 | Why didst not stop her viperous mouth? |
A56843 | Why do''st not discipline him? |
A56843 | Why do''st thou start Kettreena? |
A56843 | Why doe ye give it then? |
A56843 | Why dost thou sigh? |
A56843 | Why, varlot, then durst you presume to stop the gainfull practises which I intended? |
A56843 | Why? |
A56843 | Why? |
A56843 | Why? |
A56843 | Why? |
A56843 | With all my heart, let''s: But how shall we give it them? |
A56843 | Would Rav''ns appeare as white as Lambs? |
A56843 | You are acquainted with the businesse? |
A56843 | are ye dumb? |
A56843 | be a slave to such a Sot as you? |
A56843 | but what? |
A56843 | does the Jade begin to tyre? |
A56843 | have I three sons, And nere a wife one? |
A56843 | his Allyes? |
A56843 | if he had askt me the Question but once more, verly I had been to morrow two moneths gone: But who can help it? |
A56843 | inflam''d with choler? |
A56843 | more Fees yet? |
A56843 | or else like a fool, sit moaping at home, with neither clothes to my back nor meat for my belly, nor a penny in my purse? |
A56843 | or the other endured? |
A56843 | or your bones marrow? |
A56843 | shall you be first serv''d or I? |
A56843 | such a Bul- pated Milk- sop as you? |
A56843 | to wait upon your taile? |
A56843 | upon what hopefull grounds Could he presume to build his vain desire? |
A56843 | what means your Grace? |
A56843 | what was the matter? |
A56843 | what''s best to doe? |
A56843 | what''s that? |
A56843 | what''s the matter, Quis? |
A56843 | what''s twenty times? |
A10266 | ( Satan) Whence com''st thou? |
A10266 | ( With safe respect, and awfull reuerence To Mystryes) Meditation doth commence An earnest doubt: Was Iobs dispoyled Flock Restored double? |
A10266 | Agrees it with thy Iustice, thus to be Kind to the Wicked, and so harsh to Me? |
A10266 | Ah righteous Iob, what Crosse was left, vnknowne? |
A10266 | Ah righteous Iudge, wherein hath Man to trust? |
A10266 | An si quis atro dente me petiuerit, Inultus, vt flebo, puer? |
A10266 | And gaue thy Spirit, the spirit of Apprehending? |
A10266 | And hast thou( without enuy) yet beheld, How that the World, his second can not yeeld? |
A10266 | And where stand Their loftie Buildings, are they to be seene? |
A10266 | Angels( if God inquier strictly) must Not plead Perfection: then, can man be iust? |
A10266 | Are not the Heauens, and all beneath them, mine? |
A10266 | Are they clos''d with Ignorance? |
A10266 | Are you his Counsell? |
A10266 | Art thou aduanc''d to thy supreme Desier? |
A10266 | Art thou oppos''d to thine vnequall Foe? |
A10266 | Art thou the onely wise? |
A10266 | BOth Goods, and Body too; Lord, who can stand? |
A10266 | Break''st thou a withred Leafe? |
A10266 | But Iob reply''d, How long( as with sharpe swords) Will ye torment me, with your poynted words? |
A10266 | But not so sudden, as you say: But can ye limit forth the space, confine, How long, or when their Lampes shall cease to shine? |
A10266 | But often haue we seene, that such as plow Lowdnesse, and Mischiefe, reape the same they sowe? |
A10266 | But say; In all thy hard Aduentures, hath Thine eye obserued Iob my Seruants Faith? |
A10266 | But thou, Iob,( like a mad man) would''st thou force God, to desist his order, and set course Of Iustice? |
A10266 | CAn mercy come from bloody Cain? |
A10266 | Can God and Belial both ioyne in one Will; The One to aske, the Other to fulfill? |
A10266 | Can Heauens Iust Creator Let passe( vnpunisht) Sinnes of so high nature? |
A10266 | Can Pallates find a rellish in distast? |
A10266 | Can Thy bearded hooke impierce his Gils, or make him Thy landed Pris''ner? |
A10266 | Can guiltie Pris''ners hope for any Good From the seuerer Iudge, whose dismall Breath Doomes them to die, breathes nothing else but Death? |
A10266 | Can he repent, and turne, where- e''re he please? |
A10266 | Can man ad To his Perfection, what He neuer had? |
A10266 | Can then my power, that stands by thy permission, Encounter, where Thou mak''st an Opposition? |
A10266 | Can there in all the earth, say, can there be A Man so Perfect, and so Iust, as Hee? |
A10266 | Can thy Angles take him? |
A10266 | Can thy deepe age vnfold these secret things? |
A10266 | Can thy hard hand Force him to labour on thy fruitfull land? |
A10266 | Can''st thou vnriddle heauens Philosophy? |
A10266 | Canst thou Quaile his proud courage? |
A10266 | Canst thou restraine faire Maia''s course, or stint her, Or sad Orion vshering in the Winter? |
A10266 | Canst thou subiect vnto thy soueraigntie, The vntam''d Vnicorne? |
A10266 | Canst thou, by deepe enquirie, vnderstand The hidden Iustice of th''Almighties hand? |
A10266 | Could Mischiefe been more hard( though more in kind) To nip the Flowers, and leaue the Weeds behind? |
A10266 | Craued I Your Goods, to ransome my Captiuity? |
A10266 | DOth vaine repining( Eliphaz replies) Or words, like wind, beseeme the man that''s( wise? |
A10266 | Did heauen adde To all his fortunes, double what he had? |
A10266 | Did''st ere enquire into the Seas Abysse, Or mark''d the Earth, of what a bulke she is? |
A10266 | Did''st thou diuide the Darknesse from the Light? |
A10266 | Did''st thou inrich the Peacock with his Plume? |
A10266 | Did* he, that now, on his braue Palace stood, Boasting his Babels beautie, chew the cud An hower after? |
A10266 | Didst thou endow The noble Stallion with his Strength? |
A10266 | Digests the Stomake,''ere the Pallat tastes? |
A10266 | Doe Mysteries Vnfold to thee? |
A10266 | Doe loftie Haggards cleaue the flitting Ayre, With Plumes of thy deuising? |
A10266 | Doest thou desire A space of time to search, or to enquire My sinne? |
A10266 | Dost thou command the Cesternes of the Skie, To quench the thirsty soyle; or is it I? |
A10266 | Doth He torment him, Lest that his vntam''d power should preuent Him? |
A10266 | Doth not he possesse All that he hath, or can demand, from Thee? |
A10266 | Doth sad Despaire deny these griefes an end? |
A10266 | Feares He the strength of mā? |
A10266 | Feed''st thou the empty Rauens that cry for meate? |
A10266 | Fond Saint, thine Innocence finds timely speed, A foolish Saint receiues a Saintly meed; Is this the Iust mans Recompence? |
A10266 | For what great Sinne do''st thou afflict me so? |
A10266 | Friends, begge I succour from you? |
A10266 | From mortall eyes, when gloomy darknesse shrouds The Lamps of heauen, know''st thou the reason why? |
A10266 | From muddled Springs, can Christall Waters come? |
A10266 | Gaines he by mans vprightnesse? |
A10266 | Great Maiestie, since Thou art euery where, O, Why should I misdoubt thy Presence here? |
A10266 | Hast thou assign''d The Mountaine Goate her Time? |
A10266 | Hast thou beheld the huge Leuiathan, That swarthy Tyrant of the Ocean? |
A10266 | Hast thou not found, that hee''s of vpright Will, Iust, fearing God, eschewing what is Ill? |
A10266 | Hast thou not heap''d his Garners with excesse? |
A10266 | Hath Heauen dispoyl''d what his full hand hath giuen thee? |
A10266 | Hath enuious Death of all thy Sons bereau''n thee? |
A10266 | Hath heauē withdrawn the Talent he hath giuē thee? |
A10266 | Hath not thy Loue surrounded him about, And hedg''d him in, to fence my practice out? |
A10266 | Hath open Force, or secret Fraud beset His Bulwarks, so impregnable, as yet? |
A10266 | Haue foule Diseases foyl''d thee on the floore? |
A10266 | Haue not Babes been crown''d, And mightie Monarchs beaten to the ground? |
A10266 | He that hath blam''d And scoft at others, shall he dye vnsham''d? |
A10266 | Heauens large Dimensions can not comprehend him; What e''re he doe, what''s He, can reprehend him? |
A10266 | His Coffers fil''d, his Land stockt plentiously? |
A10266 | His Powr''s infinite, mans light is dimme, And knowledge darknesse, not deriu''d from Him: Say then, Who can be iust before Him? |
A10266 | His Wish would not extend To Death, lest his assaults, with death, should end: Then what he did, what could he further doe? |
A10266 | How darst thou then maligne the King of Kings, To whom, great Princes are but poorest things? |
A10266 | How haps the Wicked then, so sound in Health, So ripe in Yeeres, so prosperous in Wealth? |
A10266 | How haue I trespas''t, that thou thus afflict''st me? |
A10266 | How often haue your biting tongues defam''d My simple Innocence, and yet, vnsham''d? |
A10266 | How vaine are then the comforts of your breath, That censure goodnesse, or by Life, or Death? |
A10266 | How wretched was mans case, in those darke dayes, When Law was onely read? |
A10266 | I know your mining thoughts; You will demand, VVhere is the wickeds Power? |
A10266 | I yeeld it for a truth;( sad Iob reply''d) Compar''d with God, can man be iustifi''d? |
A10266 | If Creatures be so dreadfull, how is he More bold then wise, that dares encounter Me? |
A10266 | If God should breathe on man, or take away The breath he gaue him, what were man, but Clay? |
A10266 | In briefe, Would tender eyes endure to see( Summ''d vp) the greatest sorrowes, that can be? |
A10266 | Inricht his Pastures? |
A10266 | Is Heauen Iust? |
A10266 | Is he Bound to reueale his secret VVill to thee? |
A10266 | Is he* afflicted? |
A10266 | Is he* reuil''d and scorn''d? |
A10266 | Is not mans Day prefixt, which, when expyr''d, Sleepes he not quiet, as a seruant hir''d? |
A10266 | Is this a lust mans case? |
A10266 | Is* he, that( yesterday) went forth, to bring His Fathers Asses home,( to day) crown''d King? |
A10266 | It was demanded once, What God did doe Before the World he framed? |
A10266 | Know''st thou th''vnconstant nature of the Wether? |
A10266 | Know''st thou the cause of Snow, or Haile, which are My fierce Artill''ry, in my time of warre? |
A10266 | Know''st thou the place whence Light or Darknesse springs? |
A10266 | Know''st thou the progresse of the rambling Clouds? |
A10266 | Knowst thou Heauens course aboue, or dost thou know Those gentle Influences here below? |
A10266 | Liu''st thou the life of Man? |
A10266 | Liu''st thou to Childhood? |
A10266 | Liues he at quiet now? |
A10266 | Lord, I haue sin''d,( Great Helper of mankind) I am but Dust and Ashes, I haue sin''d: Against thee( as a marke) why hast thou fixt me? |
A10266 | Lord, if thou wilt,( for what is hard to thee?) |
A10266 | Man vndertakes, Heauen breathes successe vpon it; What Good, what* Euill is done, but Heauen hath done it? |
A10266 | May not a Potter, that, from out the Ground, Hath fram''d a vessell, search if it be sound? |
A10266 | Mortall, thou art but Clay: then shall not Hee, That fram''d thee for his seruice, season thee? |
A10266 | My strength,( alas) Is it like Marble, or my flesh like Brasse? |
A10266 | Nay, let thy practice to the Earth descend, Proue there, how farre thy power doth extend; From thy full hand will hungry Lions eate? |
A10266 | Need you helpe to fight His Quarrels? |
A10266 | Nipt thy succeeding Blossoms? |
A10266 | Or Life to such as languish in distresse, And long for death, which, if it come by leisure, They ransack for it, as a hidden Treasure? |
A10266 | Or can his Wrath Be quencht with ought, but righteous Abels Blood? |
A10266 | Or can the whites of Egges well please the tast? |
A10266 | Or did that Steele- digesting Bird assume His downie flags from thee? |
A10266 | Or doe they glance By fauour? |
A10266 | Or else to him, whom God hath wal''d about, That would, but can not finde a Passage out? |
A10266 | Or expect you his applause, Thus( brib''d with selfe- conceit) to pleade his Cause? |
A10266 | Or hath Heauen no requitall for thy painefull Faith, Other then this? |
A10266 | Or hath His angry Brow a smile? |
A10266 | Or if, by furbushing, he take more paine To make it fairer, shall the Pot complaine? |
A10266 | Or is it I? |
A10266 | Or know''st thou whence Aurora takes her flight? |
A10266 | Or lies she any where? |
A10266 | Or lowes the Oxe, when as he wants no meate? |
A10266 | Or may Thy fingers bind him for thy childrens play? |
A10266 | Or shall thy Reason ramble vp so high, To view the Court of wilde Astronomie? |
A10266 | Or those ruder tongues, That school''d the faithlesse* Prophet, for the wrongs He did to sacred Iustice? |
A10266 | Or try a fall with* Angels, and preuaile? |
A10266 | Or whence so many Winds proceed, and whither? |
A10266 | Or who Dare once reprooue them, for the Deeds they doe? |
A10266 | Or who bedewes the Earth with gentle showres, Filling her pregnant soyle with fruits and flowres? |
A10266 | Or why did not my Tombe, Receiue me( weeping) from my Mothers Wombe? |
A10266 | Or why was not my Birth, and Death together? |
A10266 | Or with a Hymne, vnhinge the strongest* Iayle? |
A10266 | Or with what Engins can a man ensnare him? |
A10266 | Or with* slow speech, best Orators conuince? |
A10266 | Rage then, and see who will approue thy rage, What Saint will giue thy railing Patronage? |
A10266 | Rebuke you( then) my words, to haue it thought My speech is frantick, with my griefe distraught? |
A10266 | Receiues he Glory from, or reapes he Good In mortals Ruine, that he leaues man so, To be o''rewhelm''d by his vnequall Foe? |
A10266 | SAid Bildad then, When will ye bring to end, The speeches, whereabout ye so contend? |
A10266 | SAid Bildad then, With whom dost thou contest, But with thy Maker, that liues euer blest? |
A10266 | SAy, is not Satan iustly stiled than, A Tempter, and an Enemy to Man? |
A10266 | Said Eliphaz: What then remaines? |
A10266 | Said, then, th''Eternall; From what quarter now, Hath businesse brought thee? |
A10266 | Say( blear- ey''d mortall) who art thou, that can Thus cleare thy crimes, and dar''st( with vain applause) Make me defendant in thy sinfull cause? |
A10266 | Say, Was Earth not measur''d by this Arme of mine? |
A10266 | Say; Dare thy lips defame an earthly Prince? |
A10266 | Search you the hearts of man( my Friends) or can You iudge the Inward, by the Outward man? |
A10266 | See, his angry breath Puffes nothing forth, but feares, summ''d vp in death? |
A10266 | Seest thou with fleshly Eyes? |
A10266 | Sett''st thou the Season, when the fearefull Hind Brings forth her painefull birth? |
A10266 | Shal thy words stop our mouths? |
A10266 | Shall my Decrees be licenced by thee? |
A10266 | Shall the wicked, for thy sake( That would''st not taste of Euill) in Good partake? |
A10266 | Takes God delight in humane weakenesse, then? |
A10266 | The Musick made of Sighes, the Songs of Cryes, The sad Spectators, with their watry Eyes? |
A10266 | The Spirit gone, can Flesh and Blood endure? |
A10266 | The sable Stage, The liuely Actors, with their Equipage? |
A10266 | Then answered Iob, All this, before I knew, They want no griefe, that find such friends as you? |
A10266 | Then how dare Thy rauenous lips thus, thus, at randome runne, And counter- maund what I the Lord haue done? |
A10266 | Then, behold, what toyes Doe mocke the sense, how shallow are thy ioyes: Com''st thou to Downy yeeres? |
A10266 | Think''st thou to learne( fond Mortall) thus, by diuing Into my secrets, or to gaine by striuing? |
A10266 | Thy glory''s great enough, without him: Why dost thou( thus) disturbe thy mind about him? |
A10266 | Thy lawlesse words implying, that it can Aduantage none, to liue an vpright man? |
A10266 | To whom dost thou extend These, these thy lauish lips, and to what end? |
A10266 | True, Satan beg''d, and beg''d his shame, no lesse;''T was granted; Shall we enuie his successe? |
A10266 | V ● ● nunquam tristis esse? |
A10266 | VVhat bootes our prayer, or vs, to fall before him? |
A10266 | VVhat is th''Almighty, that we should adore him? |
A10266 | VVhat needs there Life to him, that can not haue A Boone, more gracious, then a quiet Graue? |
A10266 | VVho is''t, can claime the Worlds great Soueraignty? |
A10266 | VVho rays''d the Rafters of the Heauens, but He? |
A10266 | Wants Hee thy helpe? |
A10266 | Was I help''t by thine? |
A10266 | Was his former Stock Renew''d with double vantage? |
A10266 | Wer''t thou made priuie, or a stander- by, When God stretch''t forth his spangled Canopy? |
A10266 | What Father got the Raine? |
A10266 | What Glory reapes he from Afflicted men? |
A10266 | What Griefe may be describ''d, but was thine owne? |
A10266 | What Power haue I to mitigate my Paine? |
A10266 | What Title can I challenge more then this, A sinfull man? |
A10266 | What could he more? |
A10266 | What gaines the Hypocrite, although the whole Worlds wealth he purchase, with the price on''s soule? |
A10266 | What hand of man can hinder my designe? |
A10266 | What hath the Lazar left him, but his Griefe, And( what might best been spar''d) his foolish Wife? |
A10266 | What haue I then to boast, What Title can I challenge more then this, A sinfull man? |
A10266 | What haue I then to boast? |
A10266 | What if our torments passe the bounds of measure? |
A10266 | What if the Serpent stung old Adam dead, Young Adam liues, to breake that Serpents Head? |
A10266 | What know you, that we neuer knew? |
A10266 | What need I waste this breath? |
A10266 | What need''st thou stretch Thy direfull hand vpon so poore a Wretch? |
A10266 | What secret fire inflam''d that* fainting breath That blasted Pharo? |
A10266 | What then is man? |
A10266 | What''s Mā? |
A10266 | What''s he can reprehend him? |
A10266 | What, canst thou thunder with a Voyce like Me? |
A10266 | What, therefore, if censorious tongues withstand The Iudgement of my sober Conscience? |
A10266 | Where lies she then? |
A10266 | Where wert thou, when the Planets first did blaze, And in their Spheares sang forth their Makers praise? |
A10266 | Whereat Iob thus: Doth heauens high Iudgement stand, To be supported by the weaker hand? |
A10266 | Wherein hath Wisdome been more good to you Then vs? |
A10266 | Who is''t that rends the gloomy Clouds in sunder, Whose sudden rapture strikes forth Fire,& Thunder? |
A10266 | Who is''t that tames the raging of the Seas, And swathes them vp in mists, when- e''re he please? |
A10266 | Who sees, who heares them, vnamaz''d with wonder? |
A10266 | Who takes the Plaintiffes pleading? |
A10266 | Who was''t inspir''d thy Soule with Vnderstanding? |
A10266 | Who, first, layes downe his Gage, to meet me? |
A10266 | Whose hand did ayde me? |
A10266 | Why did I sucke, to feele such Griefes, as these? |
A10266 | Why did the Midwife take me on her knees? |
A10266 | Why dost thou thus pursue me, like thy Foe? |
A10266 | Why should not I wish Death? |
A10266 | Why should not Times in all things be forbid, When to the Iust, their time of sorrow''s hid? |
A10266 | Why then hop''d man, without a reason Why? |
A10266 | Why was I borne? |
A10266 | Why, rather, didst thou not remoue my sin, And salue the sorrowes that I raued in? |
A10266 | Will God forsake the Innocent, or will His Iustice smite thee, vndeseruing ill? |
A10266 | Will Heauen heare the voyce of his disease? |
A10266 | Will any of you vndertake to teach Your Maker, things so farre aboue your reach? |
A10266 | Will he be handled as a Bird? |
A10266 | Will he make suite for fauour from thy hands, Or be enthralled to thy fierce Commands? |
A10266 | Will scorching Cancer at thy summons come, Or Sun- burnt Autumne with her fruitfull wombe? |
A10266 | Will you doe wrong, to doe Gods Iustice right? |
A10266 | Wilt thou make Comments on my Text, and must I be vnrighteous, to conclude thee, Iust? |
A10266 | Would any from a Pris''ner, prooue a* Prince? |
A10266 | Would''st thou behold a Tragick Sceane of sorrow, Whose wofull Plot, the Author did not borrow From sad Inuention? |
A10266 | being so poore a thing, what need''st thou mind him? |
A10266 | canst thou tell me? |
A10266 | for death''s prepar''d, And flames of wrath, are blowne for such: Doth He Not know my Actions, that so well knowes me? |
A10266 | from what chill wombe Did Frosts, and hard- congealed Waters come? |
A10266 | how Eagle- eyde Are you, to see, what to the world beside Was darke? |
A10266 | how more then men? |
A10266 | or bereauen thee Of thy deare latest hope, thy bosome Friend? |
A10266 | shall God thus striue with flesh and blood? |
A10266 | shall our thoughts inquire Into the depth of secrets, vnconfounded, When in the showre of Nature they are drowned? |
A10266 | what is Man, that thou should''st raise him so High at first, then, sinke him downe so low? |
A10266 | where that future ioy, Which you false- prophecy''d I should enioy? |
A10266 | whēce com''st thou? |
A56836 | & is there none to awake you? |
A56836 | ( Have not our eyes beheld all this?) |
A56836 | 138. line 3. Who is the Sheeps- heads now according to your own tearme? |
A56836 | 139. line 23. Who turned his Fiddle to the Base of the times? |
A56836 | 147. line 1. Who is guilty of Parasiticall basenes? |
A56836 | 147. line 18. Who is the Whiteliverd Christian to be turned out among dogs and hell- hounds? |
A56836 | 6. of holy memory, when the Protestant Broome swept cleanest? |
A56836 | A King: And did not you at the same instant, by relative consequence, proclaim your selves Subjects? |
A56836 | Admit some be so; must, therefore, such, among them, as are humble, diligent, charitable, and enemies to Popery, perish? |
A56836 | Admit that: But what necessity may dispence with the violation of the Law of God? |
A56836 | Admit the piety of the honest hearted People was the first motive to these weekly Lectures, how was that piety abused, by those weekly Lecturers? |
A56836 | Againe, Where the word of a King is, there is power: God joyned the King and his Power, and who dare separate them? |
A56836 | And how can Peace and Plenty bee consistent with perpetuall Garrisons, which must bee maintained with a perpetuall charge? |
A56836 | And is not the Assembly, at this time, divided and in controversie, nay puzzled what Government to set up in the roome of it? |
A56836 | And shall the calling of a Minister be undertaken by every unexamined tagrag? |
A56836 | And tell me; whose power hath his Adherents? |
A56836 | And was hee not Proclaimed before hee was crowned? |
A56836 | And what is taking up of Armes, but an implyed supposition of at least equality? |
A56836 | And when Iudgements thunder, who is not troubled? |
A56836 | And who are they? |
A56836 | And who is he? |
A56836 | And would they do such an act, and stand guilty of such a Fratricide, so horrible a slaughter, had they not a Warrant for it? |
A56836 | And yet, for the successe of your oft propounded, and( sometimes) accepted Treaties of Peace, what one blessed hower hath been sequestred? |
A56836 | And, are not many more ripe for the same Iudgment, whose notorious Crimes have branded them for their respective punishments? |
A56836 | And, can that liberty produce any thing but an establisht disorder? |
A56836 | And, is not Disorder the mother of Anarchie? |
A56836 | And, who are they? |
A56836 | Are not complaints preferd against Brownists and Separatists, unheard? |
A56836 | Are not these rare materialls for a hopefull Presbytery? |
A56836 | Are not they wise, and truly religious, and holy Merchants for Gods Glory, and blessed Agents for our Kingdomes Reformation? |
A56836 | Are their purses so apt to bleed to no end? |
A56836 | Are ye all fallen asleep, while we perish? |
A56836 | Are you so strict in your Preparations, as to catechize every souldier? |
A56836 | Are you tormented before your time? |
A56836 | Barbarus has segetes? |
A56836 | Because he offends his God, wilt thou aggravate the offence, in offending him? |
A56836 | But admit the Civil Government will stand with either? |
A56836 | But can you heare your bosome friend injuriously reviled, and lend him no Apology, but run away; and whisper in his eare a tedious Complaint? |
A56836 | But did this Prophets heart smite him, for cutting off his Soveraignes skirt? |
A56836 | But has that holy man no name, Doctor? |
A56836 | But if salt hath lost it''s savour, wherewith shall it be seasoned? |
A56836 | But what? |
A56836 | But you will first cleare the Kingdome of Papists: And who be they? |
A56836 | But, admit Statutes may be broken, and you seek to punish them; Who gave you the power so to doe? |
A56836 | But, when Kings, and their Assistants make an affensive, and a destructive warre against their Parliaments, may they not then take up defensive Armes? |
A56836 | But, whence proceeds all this? |
A56836 | Can there be a stricter Precept? |
A56836 | Can you do the Act with a good Conscience,& not heare of the Action without impatience? |
A56836 | Can you resist, and not rebell? |
A56836 | Come you in your own name? |
A56836 | Dare you resist who have liberty to flee? |
A56836 | Dare you vye piety with those Martyrs, that are so daynty of your passive obedience? |
A56836 | Did Moses, the man of God, extirpate the Government of Priesthood because Aaron had a hand in the peoples Idolatry? |
A56836 | Did not I tell you, in the Preface,( where you shewed your teeth) that you would clap your tayle between your legs anon, and run away? |
A56836 | Did not our Saviour himself condemne the old Pharisees, for their Traditions? |
A56836 | Did not the Doctor, in his Dedication, as good as confesse himself an enemy to Anticeremonians? |
A56836 | Did our Saviour storme, when the Sadduces reproved his words? |
A56836 | Did these( to strengthen their own Faction) blast their Soveraigns Name with Tyrannie and Paganisme? |
A56836 | Did they encourage their Provinces to take up Armes for the defence of their Liberties or Religion? |
A56836 | Did they endeavour by Scandals, and impious Aspersions, to render him odious to his people? |
A56836 | Did they estrange themselves from his Presence? |
A56836 | Did they seize upon, or stop his Revenues? |
A56836 | Doctor, you still harp upon the same string: But do these Batts, these Retemice trouble you? |
A56836 | Does your shoe pinch you there? |
A56836 | Doth he execute Gods office, that forbids, what he commands? |
A56836 | God gave them their Power, and who art thou that darest resist it? |
A56836 | God hath commanded all to search the Scriptures; and will ye take Pett if we examine the Doctrine you raise from thence? |
A56836 | God the holy Spirit allowes it: Who dare question, that the holy Spirit inspired S. Paul in all his Epistles, written to the Churches? |
A56836 | God, or Man? |
A56836 | Gods word answers your silly Objection, not I: Was not Saul Gods Annointed? |
A56836 | Had he speciall Revelations? |
A56836 | Had not he as great an Interst in that Crowne, as wee have in this Common- wealth? |
A56836 | Had the Sword been a necessary stickler in Reformation, how hapned it that he mistook his weapon so? |
A56836 | Have not protest Anabaptists challenged our Ministers to dispute with them in their owne open Churches? |
A56836 | Have not superstitious persons profaned our Churches with their Popish Doctrines, Sacraments and Ceremonies? |
A56836 | Hee that shall eate this Bread, and drink this Cup of the Lord unworthily, eateth and drinketh What? |
A56836 | His pleasure being demanded, whether they should weed them up? |
A56836 | How is Duke Hamilton( scarce warme in his new Honour) taken in his own snare, having entangled his Lord and Master in so many inconveniences? |
A56836 | How long shall the wicked, O Lord, how long shall the wicked triumph? |
A56836 | How many children above a yeare old( because their fathers are suspected to be loyall to their Prince) continue unbaptiz''d? |
A56836 | How many daily make their private meetings, and assemble in the City of London to exercise their Ministery? |
A56836 | How many have been convicted of Blasphemy, and yet unpunisht? |
A56836 | How many of those blood- preaching Ministers, have died expectorating Blood? |
A56836 | How many times have their witnesses been taken against some of our most learned and religious Ministers? |
A56836 | How now Doctor, doth your Guilt begin to call for more witnesses? |
A56836 | How now, Doctor? |
A56836 | How often hath Bow- river( which they lately have baptiz''d New Iordan) been witnesse to their prophanations? |
A56836 | How often have they preached downe Subjection to Princes, and encouraged the Sword to grow warme in the blood of Christians? |
A56836 | How often have your solemne Petitions set dayes apart, for the expedition of your Martiall attempts in a Pitcht field, or for the raising of a Seige? |
A56836 | How often was his Authority questioned? |
A56836 | How often were his Doctrines traduced, as false? |
A56836 | How stands he a Marke betwixt two dangers, having nothing left him, but guilt enough to make him capable of a desperate Fortune? |
A56836 | How willingly can a dog foule the roome, and how loath to have his nose rubbed in it? |
A56836 | How would forraigne Christians have been frighted at the very name of the Church of England? |
A56836 | I know thou beleevest; have not you blasphemy enough to traduce the Apostle of a courtly lye? |
A56836 | If Subjects, ought they not to be subject? |
A56836 | If our blessed Saviour be not Pepresentative, Tell me, whereof art thou a Member? |
A56836 | If so, Is it of Doctrine, or of Discipline? |
A56836 | If ye feare the alteration of the Old( having your Soveraignes Oath, which you dare not beleive) what other Assurance can you have? |
A56836 | Improbus haec tam culta novalia miles habebit? |
A56836 | In whose Reigne was it composed? |
A56836 | Is he not bound to his own Lawes? |
A56836 | Is not Implicite Beliefe one of our greatest Quarrells with the Church of Rome, even unto this day? |
A56836 | Is not this a blessed Priesthood? |
A56836 | Is this your Zeale for Gods glory? |
A56836 | Is your fornace so hot? |
A56836 | Lord, how long wilt then hide thy selfe? |
A56836 | Man could not limit the Power he never gave: If God; shew me where? |
A56836 | Murther his Messengers? |
A56836 | Nay, are not men afraid to complain against them for feare of punishment? |
A56836 | Nineveh cryed mightily to heaven, and they were spared; and shall the miseries of three Kingdomes be hollowed in your eares, and not heard? |
A56836 | None between him and God; Onely accomptable to God for all his Actions? |
A56836 | Nor, was it want of strength, that he reformed not in a Martiall way: Could not hee command more then twelve legions of Angels? |
A56836 | O God, how long shall the Adversary reproach thee? |
A56836 | Or had he pleased to use the Arme of flesh, could not Hee, that raised the dead, raise a considerable Army? |
A56836 | Or tell me, without blushing, where are they that did it? |
A56836 | Or would they have sleighted his gracious Offers? |
A56836 | Or( being Rulers of the Province of Babel) did they invite the Jewes into a Rebellion? |
A56836 | Or, having the proffer of a good Popish, or debaucht Commander, tell me, should he be denied his Commission? |
A56836 | Or, if such an( almost) unpreventable evill should not ensue, think you, such swarmes of Sectaries sweat for nothing? |
A56836 | Or, is it a Truth ye want? |
A56836 | Or, is it of Discipline? |
A56836 | Or, to examine, first, every Officers Religion? |
A56836 | Or, will you undertake that the Elders in a Presbyteriall Government shall be all faultlesse? |
A56836 | Or,( having renounced his Subjects ayde, upon his faile) could he expect that loyalty, which now he wants upon a meen suspition? |
A56836 | Proclaimed? |
A56836 | Sacred? |
A56836 | Shall every Cobler, Feltmaker, or Taylour intrude into that honorable calling, and be judges of their own sufficiency? |
A56836 | Shall the enemy blaspheme thy Name for ever? |
A56836 | Shall therefore the Scriptures be disallowed? |
A56836 | Shall they that are bad, have more power to pull downe a setled Government, then they that be good, to keep it up? |
A56836 | Shall thy wrath burne like fire? |
A56836 | Sir Iohn Hotham, then Governour of Hull, who first defied and dared his Soveraigne to his face, what is become of him? |
A56836 | So many millions of soules lye open to the tyranny of his arbitrary will? |
A56836 | So, He is termed a stumbling Blocke, and does that warrant us to stumble? |
A56836 | So, He sayes, All you shall be offended because of me; and does this patronize our Offences? |
A56836 | Sure, Doctor, You are now besides your text: Shall whole kingdomes, then, depend upon his extravagant pleasure? |
A56836 | Sure,''t was your ill usage made it so: But say, was David a Prophet? |
A56836 | Take heed Doctor, you run not your selfe out of the Assembly into Ely house: What speciall Commission had our Parliament to do the like? |
A56836 | That he will''d the same words to be used, is evident; For his Disciples would be taught, as Iohn taught his: And how were they taught? |
A56836 | The King, a known Pagan, commands a grosse Idolatry; Did these men conspire? |
A56836 | The Law is good and just; Because, then we had not knowne sin but by the Law, is it therefore lawfull for us to sin? |
A56836 | The Law: And what Law denies the King power to pardon Delinquents? |
A56836 | The Lords Annointed? |
A56836 | The preservation of the Old Truth, or the Institution of a New? |
A56836 | Then, sure, he knew it a heynous sin, to take away the life of Gods Vicegerent( though an Idolater) Had he speciall Revelations? |
A56836 | Thinkest thou, that they, and their Abettors will passe unpunisht? |
A56836 | True, Kings are called Gods: But what followes? |
A56836 | Was Plots, Policies, Propositions, Prophanations, Plunderings, Military Preparations, his way to Reformation? |
A56836 | Was not Cyrus Gods Annointed, and many more whom God acknowledges so, and yet wicked Kings? |
A56836 | Was not God as able to subdue Him with so few, as to deliver them from so many? |
A56836 | Was not Hee as tender eyed towards his owne naturall people, as we, to one another? |
A56836 | Was not the Truth as deare to Him( who was the very Truth) and the way to it, as direct to Him,( that was the onely Way) as to us? |
A56836 | Was the Spirit of God too blame, to endite them? |
A56836 | Were not those blessed Martyrs the composers? |
A56836 | Were they not his own words, He that taketh up the sword, shall perish by the sword? |
A56836 | Wh ● you shot 5 peeces of Ordnance, before one was returned at Edge- hill, was that defensive? |
A56836 | What Bells? |
A56836 | What Bonefires? |
A56836 | What Church doore hath been opened? |
A56836 | What Rhethoricall pretermissions of things materiall? |
A56836 | What Vices of the times have branded his Repute? |
A56836 | What allegorizing of plaine texts? |
A56836 | What are the hopes of Conquest, but an ambition of Superiority? |
A56836 | What bitternesse? |
A56836 | What faultring? |
A56836 | What inferiour person would not think his Reputation wronged, not to take up confidence upon such terrible termes? |
A56836 | What invectives? |
A56836 | What is condemning, judging, or deposing, but Supremacie? |
A56836 | What mean ye by having Truth? |
A56836 | What notorious evill hath his Majesty perpetrated to quench the sparkles of a common Charity? |
A56836 | What obscurity of stile? |
A56836 | What one amongst them threw down his Gauntlet? |
A56836 | What pasquills? |
A56836 | What raylings? |
A56836 | What shuffling? |
A56836 | What tryumphs? |
A56836 | When Ignorance and Folly meet, how malice domineeres? |
A56836 | When Princes offend their God in suffering, or partaking with Idolaters, shall subjects be afraid to offend them? |
A56836 | When a ship hath made a voyage with one winde into New- England, will you blame it for returning back with a quite contrary? |
A56836 | When many people are demanded their Reasons of divers opinions, which they stoutly stand unto, is not their answer thus? |
A56836 | When the Lyon roares, who trembles not? |
A56836 | When ye affronted Basing- House, was that defensive? |
A56836 | When you besieged Redding, which you after slighted, was that defensive? |
A56836 | Whence commeth it that there be tares? |
A56836 | Where the word of a King is, there is power, and who shall say unto him, What dost thou? |
A56836 | Where, O where are you, all you that are the wisdom and Governours of this unhappy Island? |
A56836 | Where, O where are you, the great Colledge of Politicall Physitians of this languishing Common- wealth? |
A56836 | Where, O where are you, the great Counsell and grave Senators of this falling Kingdome? |
A56836 | Which of them took up the Sling? |
A56836 | Who among so many, struck one blow in the just defence of the true Reformed Religion? |
A56836 | Who limited it? |
A56836 | Who so bitterly inveyed against Episcopall Government, should be shot dead out of a Cathedrall Church? |
A56836 | Who was it that was so active for the oath Ex Officio, so eager for the two shillings nine pence so contentious with his parishioners? |
A56836 | Who was the cowardly ● ur then? |
A56836 | Whose Embassadour are you? |
A56836 | Why was the penalty, upon the faile, not expressed then? |
A56836 | Will not their costs, and paines expect, at least, a congratulatory connivance in the freedome of their consciences? |
A56836 | Will your zeale sell Gods honour for the impatience of a Scoffe? |
A56836 | Wilt thou be angry with us for ever? |
A56836 | Wilt thou prolong thy wrath from generation to generation? |
A56836 | Yet how many thousand more have perisht by the sword, at their Command? |
A56836 | Your Halls say, no: Why? |
A56836 | and how should Liberty be enlarged, if not peeced with Prerogative? |
A56836 | and leave their lawfull Trades for unwarrantable Professions, according to their own humerous Fansies? |
A56836 | and rebell against God, in rebelling against him? |
A56836 | and shall our Churches therefore be cryed downe, or shut against the Ordinances of God? |
A56836 | and that, of Ruine? |
A56836 | and to Princes, yee are ungodly? |
A56836 | and what Authority confirmed it? |
A56836 | and when the cruelty of that bloody Religion was but newly out of breath, and fresh in Memory? |
A56836 | and yet, what a busines now, you make of his creeping Ceremonies? |
A56836 | because those Poets were Heathenish, was S. Paul afraid to use their sayings? |
A56836 | but what? |
A56836 | did not your self taxe him of rank Popery? |
A56836 | for ever? |
A56836 | if not, what are they? |
A56836 | is every tatling Basket- maker, or Butcher, or mincing Shee a fit Judge of a( Ministers) doctrine, and meet to reprove and confute him for it? |
A56836 | may any, that hath skill to make a shoe, a hat, or a suite, professe the Trade, till he be made free? |
A56836 | nay more, denyed? |
A56836 | not limited by his Coronation oath? |
A56836 | or annihilate his Power? |
A56836 | or could there be a more impious Prince? |
A56836 | or where''s the Lye? |
A56836 | or, was it your own self? |
A56836 | saith, Is it fit then to say to a King, Thou art wicked? |
A56836 | that endeavour to strike off a Bishops Cap forsooth? |
A56836 | that, by the generall Confession both of Prince, and people, had such Monsters to adorne it? |
A56836 | their unlawfull Commands not violated without Rebellion? |
A56836 | then, doubtlesse, his wayes and actions were the best presidents for us, to follow: But was he a Prophet? |
A56836 | this Book of Common- Prayer is your maine quarrell here; and Bishops, by the Bye: Tell me, who composed that Book? |
A56836 | to cast Pearles before Swine? |
A56836 | to disobey him, whom God hath commanded thee to honour? |
A56836 | to rebell against him, to whom God hath commanded thee to be subject? |
A56836 | what hinders him, he can not practice? |
A56836 | when as the hot mouthed Challenges of Romes Goliahs thundred in our English Host, where, where were all those long- winded Lecturers? |
A56836 | where''s the Blasphemie? |
A56836 | who labouring to put out the left eye of establisht Government, his left eye, and life were both put out together? |
A56836 | who was so severe an enemy against Peace should perish in the same Warre, he so encouraged? |
A56836 | would it grieve you, because the Tinker had no Ordination from a Bitesheepe? |
A56836 | would then our Miseries be at an end? |
A56836 | your unmaintain''d Opinions are pinned upon the Authority of men: Say, where''s the Papist, now? |
A56836 | 〈 ◊ 〉 ● overnours for the house of God? |
A10251 | ''T is a common trick: Serve God in Plenty? |
A10251 | ''T is true: But tell me; what was He, that did it? |
A10251 | A God, and can not rise? |
A10251 | A heav''nly Supper and a fleshly Heart? |
A10251 | A messe of Porrage for Inheritance? |
A10251 | A ●, none at all? |
A10251 | ANd da ●''st thou venture still to live in Sin, And crucifie thy dying Lord agin? |
A10251 | ANd were it for thy profit, to obtaine All Sunshine? |
A10251 | ARe all such Offrings, as are crusht, and bruis''d, Forbid thy Altar? |
A10251 | ARe not the Ravens, great God, sustaind by Thee? |
A10251 | ARt thou revil''d, and slandred? |
A10251 | Admit we could; could we appoint the hower? |
A10251 | Ah no; For God and Mammon can not joyne: Doe Beds of Down containe this heavenly stranger? |
A10251 | Alas, Our Bodye''s sensible of neither: Things that are senslesse feele nor paynes nor ease; Tell me; and why not Wormes as well as Fleas? |
A10251 | Alas, what hath this Princely Dreamer done, That he must quit the Glory of his Throne, His Royall Scepter, his Imperiall Crowne? |
A10251 | And Daniel yet remaine Alive? |
A10251 | And apt to raise A rare advantage to the Makers praise? |
A10251 | And but one, of ten Returne the Clenser thanks? |
A10251 | And is the better part Of what thou hear''●, before it warme thy heart, Snatcht from thy false Remembrance? |
A10251 | And must all broken things be set apart? |
A10251 | And not To be recall''d? |
A10251 | And not thy Nuptiall Bed alone defil''d, But to be charged with the base- borne Childe? |
A10251 | And was thy faithfull service payd With oft- repeated strokes? |
A10251 | And wilt thou cloth the Lilyes, and not me? |
A10251 | And yet not Pharoh yeeld T''enlarge poore Israel? |
A10251 | And yet not mov''d? |
A10251 | Are not these, all these Sufficient, to encounter and o''rthrow, Poore sinfull Man; but must that Bandog too, Assault us, Lord? |
A10251 | Art thou not able? |
A10251 | Because it was thy Pleasure, t was no pity; Why should thou pity us, Just God, when we Could never finde a time to pity thee? |
A10251 | But Ten i''th''Hundred?'' |
A10251 | But knowst thou what this dainty Peece encloses? |
A10251 | But what sayes Sathan now? |
A10251 | But when thy more divine Vrania sung, What glorious Angell had so sweet a tongue? |
A10251 | By whom Was their blood shed? |
A10251 | CAnst th ● ● recover thy consumed Flesh, From the well- feasted Wormes? |
A10251 | Can thy just Iealousies, Great God, be grounded On Mans disloyalty, not Man confounded? |
A10251 | Can thy weake thoughts reward Two so unequall, with a like Respect? |
A10251 | Can we as dead, in sin, As Laz''rus, or the Damsell, live agin? |
A10251 | Can we be bold To looke for new, and yet not breake the old? |
A10251 | Canst thou awaken thy earth- closed eyes? |
A10251 | Canst thou beleeve, The suffrings of thy dying Lord can give Thy drooping shoulders rest? |
A10251 | Canst thou conceive Thy Helper strong enough? |
A10251 | Canst thou desier help? |
A10251 | Canst thou intreat Aid from a stronger Arm? |
A10251 | Canst thou redeeme thy Ashes from the dead? |
A10251 | Could neither Mercies oyle, nor Iudgements thunder Dissolve, nor breake thy ● linty heart in sunder? |
A10251 | Could your conscience serve Not to be fooles, and yet to let them sterve? |
A10251 | DId ever Iudge more equally proceed To punish Sin? |
A10251 | DOe this and live? |
A10251 | DOes thy corrected Frailty still complaine Of thy disloyall Mem''ry? |
A10251 | Dare her conscience frame, To act a Sin, but to prevent a Shame? |
A10251 | Dare we trust God for Nights? |
A10251 | David free, To take his choice? |
A10251 | Did not our Iesus doe the like to his? |
A10251 | Did not that sweltring Dives make complaint For water? |
A10251 | Doe worldly pleasures no contentment give? |
A10251 | Does Iob ● erve God for nought? |
A10251 | Dost thou see how Art Does polish nature to adorne each part Of that rare Worke, whose glorious Fabrick may Commend her beauty to an after day? |
A10251 | Evermore alike, Both when heav''n strikes& whē he leaves to strike? |
A10251 | FAmine? |
A10251 | FIerce Lyons roaring for their prey? |
A10251 | FIndst thou no comfort on this fickle Earth? |
A10251 | FIve thousand in a weeke, in one poore City? |
A10251 | God: But tell me, who Gave being to the Loaves of Bread? |
A10251 | HAile blessed Mary: MA, What celestial tongue Cals sinfull Mary blessed? |
A10251 | HAst thou forsaken all thy Sinnes, but One? |
A10251 | HAst thou observed how the curious hand Of the Refiner seekes to understand The inadult''rate purenesse of his Gold? |
A10251 | HAve sland''rous tongues bin busie to defame The pretious Oyntment of my better name? |
A10251 | HOw could thy Soule, fond Woman, be assur''d Thy long disease could be so eas''ly cur''d? |
A10251 | HOw dares thy Bandog, Lord, presume t''approach Into thy sacred pre ● ence? |
A10251 | HOw well our Saviour and the landed Youth Agreed a little while? |
A10251 | Had that the pow''r to call The massy ● ron up? |
A10251 | Has not thy malice had her owne desire? |
A10251 | Hast thou not cause to be a Iealous God? |
A10251 | Have our Syrian streames Lesse pow''r then Isr''els? |
A10251 | Have we not Enemies to counterbuffe, Enow? |
A10251 | How Lord? |
A10251 | How apt is sense, to question, why? |
A10251 | How basely doe our crooked Soules engage Themselves to heav''n? |
A10251 | How might all this come? |
A10251 | I Know not by what vertue Rome deposes A Christian Prince: Did Aaron command Moses? |
A10251 | I doe; Who bids thee Come, will bid thee Welcome too: Rhemus, when call''d in person, you appeare By Proxy, tell me where''s your manners, there? |
A10251 | I feare th''art guilty: Is that heart of thine So faint( if guiltles) that it can not stoope Beneath so poore a Burthen, and not droope? |
A10251 | IF Flouds of Teares should drown my world of Sin, Alas, my floating Arke retaines within, A cursed Cham to store the World agin: What then? |
A10251 | IF a poore timorous Hare but crosse the way, Morus will keepe his chamber all the day; What Evill ● ortends ● ortends it, Morus? |
A10251 | IT is a common use to entertaine The knowledge of a great man, by his Trayne: How great''s the dead- man then? |
A10251 | IVdge not too fast: This Tree that does appeare So barren, may be fruitfull the next yeare: Hast thou not patience to expect the hower? |
A10251 | In Sleepe, we know not whether our clos''d eyes Shall ever wake; from Death w''are sure to rise: I, but''t is long first: O, is that our feares? |
A10251 | Is Dagon growne So weake ith''hamms: Nor stand, nor rise, alone? |
A10251 | Is Sampson singular in this? |
A10251 | Is he gone that rode? |
A10251 | Is not Sophronia left at Sixe and Seaven? |
A10251 | Is not the Flesh, the World enough To foyle us? |
A10251 | Is not the Warrant ample, If back''t with Scripture? |
A10251 | Is she unhappy, or thou cruell rather? |
A10251 | Is the Brick So soone forgotten? |
A10251 | Is the most Of what th''inspired Prophets tell thee, lost In thy unhospitable eares? |
A10251 | Is there a firme di ● ors ● Betwixt all mercy, and the hearts of Men? |
A10251 | Is there no City for a Soule to flye, And save it selfe: Must we resolve to dye? |
A10251 | Is there no pitty? |
A10251 | Is there no remorse In humane brests? |
A10251 | Is there none dead By your defaults? |
A10251 | Is thy Shrine so hot, Thou canst not keepe it? |
A10251 | Is thy Taske too great? |
A10251 | Is''t not a dainty Pe ● ce? |
A10251 | It is a point of Mercy, yet, to give A choise of death to such, as must not live: But was the choise so hard? |
A10251 | Knowst thou not which to slight,& which t''affect? |
A10251 | LAz''rus come forth? |
A10251 | LEt not thy blacknesse moove thee to despaire, Black Women are belov''d of men that''s faire: What if thy hayre, her flaxen brightnes lack? |
A10251 | LOrd, if our dayes be few, why doe we spend And lavish them unto so evill an end? |
A10251 | Let thy heart cheare thee: What delicious Cheare? |
A10251 | Looke to the Law? |
A10251 | Lord, if our dayes be evill, why doe we wrong Our selves, and Thee, to wish our Day so long? |
A10251 | MAmmon''s growne rich: Does Mammon boast of that? |
A10251 | MY Little Pinnace, strike thy Sayles, Let slippe thy Anchor? |
A10251 | May they not be us''d? |
A10251 | Must be expeld his Honour, and come downe Below the meanest Slave, and, for a Season, Be banisht from the use, the Act of Reason? |
A10251 | My Lord, how can Such wonders come to passe; such things be done By a poore Virgin, never knowne by Man? |
A10251 | NEw Garments being brought, who is''t that would Not scorne to live a Pris''ner to the Old? |
A10251 | NO sooner out, but grumble? |
A10251 | NOt pray to Saints? |
A10251 | Nay what shal Esau do? |
A10251 | No Joy at all? |
A10251 | No Obiect for thy Mirth? |
A10251 | No diffrence, but a little Breath:''T is all but Rest;''t is all but a Releasing Our tyred lims; VVhy then not alike pleasing? |
A10251 | No no; Hee''s rather cradled in some Manger: Dwells he in wisedome? |
A10251 | No no; Mans wisedome''s foolishnes with God: Or hath some new Plantation, yet unknown, Made him their King, adorn''d him with their Crowne? |
A10251 | No place that shall Secure our Soules from Death? |
A10251 | No vicissitude of Raine? |
A10251 | Nor this, nor that''s ador''d: Does not th''eternall Law command, that thou Shalt ev''n as well forbeare to make, as bow? |
A10251 | Not stroke thy stomacke downe, when as thy God Is friends with thee, and throwne aside the Rod? |
A10251 | Not to so good an end? |
A10251 | Nothing but Sorrow? |
A10251 | Nothing else, but toyle? |
A10251 | O When our Clergie, at the dreadfull Day, Shal make their Audit; when the Iudge shal say Give your accompts: What, have my Lambs bin fed? |
A10251 | O canst thou not dispence with that, wherein ▪ Thy strict Religion''s a presumptuous Sin? |
A10251 | O where, O where Shall I direct my steps, to finde him there? |
A10251 | O( not to be exprest?) |
A10251 | O, are there not enow, enow beside? |
A10251 | O, by the Law, we dye: Is there no Refuge, Lord? |
A10251 | On the Story of Man? |
A10251 | Or can the ruines of the old find place In th''Arke of Glory, not repayr''d by Grace? |
A10251 | Or canst thou judge that Fier, clos''d about With rak''d up Embers,''cause not scene, is out? |
A10251 | Or has Dagon got The falling sicknes, that his Godship''s found On such a posture, prostrate on the Gro ● nd? |
A10251 | Or hath censorious basenesse gone about With her rude blast to puffe my Taper out? |
A10251 | Or he, in Summer, that complaines of Frost? |
A10251 | Or put on fresh? |
A10251 | Or quit thy Carkas from her sheet of Lead? |
A10251 | Or was''t because our blessed Saviour wore it? |
A10251 | Or why? |
A10251 | PAst time is gone, the Future is to be; Crastinio, say, which most belongs to thee? |
A10251 | PLag ● es after Plagues? |
A10251 | PRomise is d ● tt: And Det implyes a payment: How can the righteous, then dout food,& raymēt? |
A10251 | Parted for ever? |
A10251 | Quite buried? |
A10251 | Quite forgot? |
A10251 | SEest thou that Mon''ment? |
A10251 | SHe must be lov''d; Then courted; and what more? |
A10251 | STands it with State, that Princely David, who Did weare the Crown, should play the Harper too? |
A10251 | Sampson was s ● bject to their scorne and shame: And was not Jesus even the very same? |
A10251 | Say, doe they all stand sound? |
A10251 | Shall I make search in swelling Baggs of Coyne? |
A10251 | Shall wormes, or dust, or men be well advis''d, To goe in person( where we have despis''d) Before a God, a glorious God? |
A10251 | Sinner repent? |
A10251 | So much und ● rfoot? |
A10251 | T Is true; we are but dust; but wormes; nay men, That are more base then either; And what then? |
A10251 | T is true, Great God ▪ then who Can hope for life? |
A10251 | T''advance his passion? |
A10251 | TEn Lepers clensed? |
A10251 | THat drop- requesting Dives did desire His Brothers might have warning of that Fire, Whose flames he felt: Could he, a Fiend, wish well To Man? |
A10251 | THe blessing gon, what do''s there now remaine? |
A10251 | TWo Eares to let in Knowledge; Nature gave; To entertaine true Faith, one heart we have; Why so? |
A10251 | That gives thee kisses? |
A10251 | The Cure perpl ● xes more then the Disease; Prophets prescribe no better meanes then these? |
A10251 | The faithfull Abra''m now erects an Altar: Orders the wood: what tongue can chuse but falter, To tell the rest? |
A10251 | The hedge is broke, That fenc''d my Servant Iob: What further Cloke For his uprightnesse hath he? |
A10251 | Thinkst thou that Formio''s shaking hands with Sin? |
A10251 | Thinkst thou, that thy laborious Plough requires Not Winter frosts, as well as Summer fires? |
A10251 | Thy Lawes are j ● st, And most irrevocable: Shall we trust Or flye to our owne Merits, and ● e freed By our good Workes? |
A10251 | To adorne our Walls? |
A10251 | To counterfeit thy po''wr, And to usurpe thy Kingdome, ev''n as He Were, Lord, at least, a Substitute to Thee? |
A10251 | To deck our windowes? |
A10251 | To garnish Halls? |
A10251 | To turne Gods glorious Image to a Beast, Or turne the Image of a Beast to God? |
A10251 | To what end Mad''st thou such needlesse hast? |
A10251 | True Lord; His Raith is tough: But Snailes as well Can thrive without, as live within their Shell: To save a life who would not lose some skin? |
A10251 | VIctorious Ieptha, could thy Zeale allow No other way, then by a rash- made Vow, T''expresse thy Thanks? |
A10251 | VVHat? |
A10251 | VVHy should we not, as well, desier Death, As Sleep? |
A10251 | VVOuld''st thou be prosp''rous, tho the bēded brow Of Fortune threaten thee? |
A10251 | Vnlock thy Marble Monument, and rise? |
A10251 | WAs it not time to send his sonne to Rages, For mony, whē his wife spun hard for wages? |
A10251 | WHat hast thou done? |
A10251 | WHat newes with Dagon? |
A10251 | WHich is the greater Sin, and which the lesse? |
A10251 | WHo ever sung so high, so rapt an 〈 ◊ 〉 As David prompted by heroick Clio? |
A10251 | WHy did our blessed Saviour please to breake His sacred thoughts in Parables; and speake In darke Enigma''s? |
A10251 | WHy not the Picture of our dying Lord, As of a Friend? |
A10251 | WOldst thou Mundano, prove too great, too strong For peevish Fortunes angry brow to wrong? |
A10251 | WOldst thou, Charissa, wish thy fortunes better, Then, by thy act, to make thy God thy Detter? |
A10251 | Was her Ballance even? |
A10251 | Was thy heart so steel''d, Rebellious Tyrant, that it dare withstand The oft repeated Iudgements of Heav''ns hand? |
A10251 | Was thy knee Bent oft enough? |
A10251 | Was''t not by holy Rome? |
A10251 | Was''t not high time for him to post away, That for an Angell paid a Groat a day? |
A10251 | Were not his Pangs sufficient? |
A10251 | What Wages can we merit, as our owne? |
A10251 | What ayle thy Gods, that they are turn''d so rough, So full of rage? |
A10251 | What hath poore Esau left, but empty teares, And Plaints, that can not reach the old mans eares? |
A10251 | What hinders Life? |
A10251 | What is''t we ayle not, That Wet and Cold can bring? |
A10251 | What must there now be done? |
A10251 | What now''s th''exployt? |
A10251 | What shall poore Mortals do? |
A10251 | What then are they, nay Fooles, in what degree, Whose Actions shall maintain''t? |
A10251 | What''s that to thee? |
A10251 | What, doe thy dayes shew nothing, worth a smile? |
A10251 | What, is there Charity in Hell? |
A10251 | What? |
A10251 | When''s our Zeale in prime? |
A10251 | When''s the time, To doe thee service? |
A10251 | Where shall I trace; or where shall I go winde him? |
A10251 | Which finds the sharper? |
A10251 | Who art thou? |
A10251 | Who made the Fishes? |
A10251 | Why cam''st thou forth, sweet Virgin? |
A10251 | Why could not hungry E ● au strive t''enhaunce His price a little? |
A10251 | Why dost not rate him? |
A10251 | Why should reformed Churches then forbid it? |
A10251 | YOung man Rejoyce: What jolly mirth is here? |
A10251 | and not for Yeares? |
A10251 | and pick the worst of three? |
A10251 | and then Daniel throwne in? |
A10251 | and yet not move thy Rod? |
A10251 | and yet whine? |
A10251 | as if he had, at least, A Common wealth reposed in his brest: A Common- wealth? |
A10251 | but we subscribe to Fate: Perchance, thy Fortune''s to be bought and sold; Was not young Ioseph serv''d the like of old? |
A10251 | couldst thou think the touch of cloth was good To dry the Fountaine of thy flowing Blood? |
A10251 | do''st retaine Nothing that''s Good? |
A10251 | ever whining? |
A10251 | for who hath power to Doe? |
A10251 | must he bleed Yet more? |
A10251 | ne''r to meet agen? |
A10251 | no Princely Sport, To entertaine her? |
A10251 | or incroach Vpon thy choyce possessions, to devoure Thy sporting Lambs? |
A10251 | so right, in kind, and nature? |
A10251 | strengthen''d with example? |
A10251 | the Pest''lence? |
A10251 | the Pestlence? |
A10251 | the Sword? |
A10251 | the Sword? |
A10251 | this abroad, and that at home; But must that Sathan, must that Bandog come T''afflict the weake, and take the stronger side? |
A10251 | was not Abraham a Saint? |
A10251 | was there none to ● e ▪ Betwixt thy Fathers mortall Brow ▪ and Thee? |
A10251 | was thy Sentence iust, To censure Zeale, and not to punish Lust? |
A10251 | what Offring shall Perfume Baals nostrils? |
A10251 | what boots it whether? |
A10251 | what might the reason be? |
A10251 | what pretence For his continued Love and Innocence? |
A10251 | what secret mischiefe can Vn- same thy peace? |
A10251 | what, had they meat enough To fill their golden Stomacks? |
A10251 | when Death had closd her eies, What power had the Damsell to arise? |
A10251 | which is least, When all are great? |
A10251 | which the milder Rod? |
A10251 | which worst, when bad''s the best? |
A10251 | why could not Laz''rus plead, I can not come, great God, for I am dead: Dam''sell arise? |
A10251 | why does he obtaine Such favour to have liberty of his Chaine? |
A10251 | why he punisht, and not she? |
A56969 | 1 ALas fond Child, How are thy thoughts beguil''d, To hope for hony from a nest of wasps? |
A56969 | 1 ANd am I sworn a dunghill slave for ever To earths base drudg''ry? |
A56969 | 1 BE faithfull, Lord, what''s that? |
A56969 | 1 CAn nothing settle my uncertain breast, And fix my rambling love? |
A56969 | 1 HOw shall my tongue expresse that hallow''d fire Which Heav''n hath kindled in my ravisht heart? |
A56969 | 1 O Whither will this mad- brain world at last Be driv''n? |
A56969 | 1 WHat never fill''d? |
A56969 | 1 WHat secret corner? |
A56969 | 1 WHat? |
A56969 | 1 WHy dest thou suffer lustfull sloth to creep, Dull Cyprian lad, into thy wanton browes? |
A56969 | 2 How hath my unregarded language vented The sad tautologies of lavish passion? |
A56969 | 2 I wanted wealth; and at my dear request, Earth lent a quick supply; I wanted mirth to charm my sullen breast; And who more brisk then I? |
A56969 | 2 Uxorious Adam, whom thy maker made Equall to Angels that excell in pow''r, What hast thou done? |
A56969 | 2 What Circean cha ● … m, what Hecatean spight Has thus abus''d the G ● … d of love? |
A56969 | 2 What mean these liv''ries and possessive keyes? |
A56969 | 3 But hath the virtued steel a power to move? |
A56969 | 3 But, O that mean whose good the least abuse Makes bad, is too too hard to be directed: Can thorns bring grapes, or crabs a pleasing juyce? |
A56969 | 3 What well advised eare regards What earth can say? |
A56969 | 3 Where be those rosie cheeks, that lately scorn''d The malice of injurious Fates? |
A56969 | 3 Where have my busie eyes not pry''d? |
A56969 | 3 Why dost thou make These murm''ring troups forsake The safe protection of their waxen homes? |
A56969 | 4 But is the crown of Glory The wages of a lamentable story? |
A56969 | 4 Think''st thou that paunch that 〈 ◊ 〉 out thy coat, Is thriving fat; or flesh, that seems so brawny? |
A56969 | 4 Where shall I 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A56969 | 5 But is there such a dearth That thou must buy what is thy due by birth? |
A56969 | 5 But must the treason of a traitours Hail Abuse the sweetnesse of these ● … uby lips? |
A56969 | 5 Faiths pineons clipt? |
A56969 | 5 What mean dull souls, in this high measure To haberdash In earths base wares, whose greatest treasure Is drosse and trash? |
A56969 | 5 Where shall I seek a Guide? |
A56969 | 6 Deluded mortalls, tell me when Your daring breath has blown Heav''ns Tapour out, and you have spent your own, What sire sh ● … ll warm ye then? |
A56969 | 6 If sweet Corinna smile, A Heav''n of joy breaks down into his heart: Corinna frowns awhile? |
A56969 | 6. Who would not throw his better thoughts about him, And scorn this drosse within him; that, without him? |
A56969 | 7 What''s earth? |
A56969 | 8 In having all things, and not thee, what have I? |
A56969 | A dying breast, that hath but onely breath To beg a wound, and strength to crave a death? |
A56969 | A man was born: Alas, and what''s a man? |
A56969 | Afraid? |
A56969 | Ah fool, th''ast taught him how to stand? |
A56969 | Ah me, what have I enterprised? |
A56969 | Ah, if thou Search too severe, with too severe a brow, What flesh can stand? |
A56969 | Ah, must this blessed Infant tast the pain Of deaths injurious pangs? |
A56969 | Ah, treach''rous soul, would not thy pleasures give That Lord which made thee living leave to live? |
A56969 | Ah, where''s that pearl Percullis, that adorn''d Those dainty two- leav''d Ruby gates? |
A56969 | Alas, what hath he lost? |
A56969 | Alas, what serves our reason, But, like dark lanthorns, to accomplish treason With greater closenesse? |
A56969 | And Justice see? |
A56969 | And fair Astraea gone? |
A56969 | And having thee alone, what have I not? |
A56969 | And him thae closes it? |
A56969 | And how my ravish''d breast — But who can presle those heights, that can not be exprest? |
A56969 | And is this all? |
A56969 | And locks, that did infold Like knots of flaming wire, like curles of burnisht gold? |
A56969 | And must I earn Nothing but stripes? |
A56969 | And must these smiling Roses entertain The blows of scorn, and flurts of base disdain? |
A56969 | And seeking honey, to set up thy trade? |
A56969 | And what hath he found? |
A56969 | And what more smoke then pleasure? |
A56969 | And what then fire? |
A56969 | And what''s a Life? |
A56969 | And what''s a Life? |
A56969 | And what''s a Life? |
A56969 | And where is Life but in thine eye? |
A56969 | And whin''st to be enlarg''d? |
A56969 | And whither are we burried? |
A56969 | And who''s that Light but thee? |
A56969 | And why proportion''d by so large a span? |
A56969 | And why? |
A56969 | And yet thou turn''st away thy face, and fly''st me; And yet I sue for grace, and thou deny''st me; Speak, art thou angry, Lord, or onely try''st me? |
A56969 | And yet thou wilt not come, thou wilt not heare: O is thy wonted love become so cold? |
A56969 | Are all men turn''d Idiots and lunaticks? |
A56969 | Are not my dayes few? |
A56969 | Are not the hunters, and their Stygian hounds Limm''d full to th''life? |
A56969 | Are not they Fed by th''Almighties hand? |
A56969 | Are their senses all adjourn''d? |
A56969 | Are there no streams where a faint soul may wade? |
A56969 | Are these the goods that thou supply''st Us mortalls with? |
A56969 | Are these the high''st? |
A56969 | Are these the symptomes? |
A56969 | Are they too strong, or is thy arm too weak? |
A56969 | Are we sole guiltie, and the first age free? |
A56969 | Art thou a child? |
A56969 | Art thou a gracious God and mild, Or head- strong man rebellious rather? |
A56969 | Art thou all frowns, and ne''r a smile? |
A56969 | Art thou so weak? |
A56969 | Attend they not, and answer to thy call, Like nightly coveys, where thou list and when? |
A56969 | BOth work and strokes? |
A56969 | Be thy lips skrew''d so fast To th''earths sull breast? |
A56969 | Behold these rags; am I a sitting guest To tast the dainties of thy royall feast, With hands and face unwash''d, ungirt, unblest? |
A56969 | Beholder, say, Is''t not well done? |
A56969 | Believe:''t is easie to believe; but what? |
A56969 | Blest he not both the Feeder, and the Food? |
A56969 | But dare the ● … oore affront the hand that laid it? |
A56969 | But form''d, and sight? |
A56969 | But made at morning, and be whipt at noon? |
A56969 | But may thy wrongs be measur''d by the span Of life? |
A56969 | But must I die? |
A56969 | But must I ever grind? |
A56969 | But still and still remove? |
A56969 | But wilt thou leave me then? |
A56969 | Can my affections find out nothing best? |
A56969 | Can not thy lustfull blast, Which gave it luster, make it last? |
A56969 | Can solid rocks restrain The stroke of Justice, and not cleave in twain? |
A56969 | Can stinking Lazarus compound, or strive With deaths entangling fetters, and revive? |
A56969 | Can the burning cole Of thy affection last without the fuel Of counter- love? |
A56969 | Can the flames expire Which he has kindled? |
A56969 | Can these bring cordiall peace? |
A56969 | Can they remove The pangs of grief, or ease the flames of love? |
A56969 | Can thy distemper''d fancy take delight In view of tortures? |
A56969 | Can thy fears command No rocks to shield thee from her thund''ring hand? |
A56969 | Can ye quench his fire? |
A56969 | Canst thou be sick, and such a Doctour by? |
A56969 | Canst thou believe my hand can cure thy grief? |
A56969 | Canst thou conceive such poore delights as these Can fill th''insatiate soul of man, or please The fond aspect of his deluded eye? |
A56969 | Canst thou dig ● … st? |
A56969 | Canst thou forget that drowsie mount, wherein Thy dull Disciples slept? |
A56969 | Canst thou repent of mercy? |
A56969 | Canst thou sow favours, and thus reap disdain? |
A56969 | Cease thy vain hopes; my angry God has vow''d Abused mercy must have bloud for bloud: Shall I yet strike the blow? |
A56969 | Come busse and friends, my lambe; whish, lullaby, What ails my babe? |
A56969 | Come, come, this pettish brat, Thus cry and bawl, and can not tell for what? |
A56969 | Cupid, must the world be lasht so soon? |
A56969 | Death conquer''d Laz''rus was redeem''d by thee; If I am dead, Lord, see deaths prisner free; Am I more spent, or stink I worse then he? |
A56969 | Did I refuse to sing? |
A56969 | Did not the great Creatours voice proclaim What ere he made( from the blue spangled frame To the poore leaf that trembles) very Good? |
A56969 | Die they not fast enough, when thousands fall Before thy dart? |
A56969 | Do they not see God in his Creatures as direct as we? |
A56969 | Do they not tast thee? |
A56969 | Does something please His vain conceit? |
A56969 | Doth gowty Mammous griping hand infold This secret Saint in sacred shrines of sov''reigne gold? |
A56969 | Doth there any such befall Within mans reach? |
A56969 | Dread''st thou thy loads of sinne? |
A56969 | Fear''st thou to go, when such an Arm invites thee? |
A56969 | Fool, thee so bare? |
A56969 | For ever ranging? |
A56969 | For ever? |
A56969 | From whence are we expelled? |
A56969 | Great Jove was vanquisht by his greater might;( And who is stronger- arm''d then Jove?) |
A56969 | Grieve not( my soul) nor let thy love wax faint, Weep''st thou to lose the cause of thy complaint? |
A56969 | Hang''d round with silks and gold? |
A56969 | Has Justice now found wings? |
A56969 | Has earth no mercy? |
A56969 | Has none regain''d His senses? |
A56969 | Hast thou perus''d the curse Thou laid''st on Adams fall, and made it worse? |
A56969 | Hath vengeance found thee? |
A56969 | Have you seen him whom my soul loveth? |
A56969 | Haw stands thy tast? |
A56969 | He hath lost happinesse for which he was made, and found misery for which he was not made: What is gone? |
A56969 | He whom thy hands did form of dust, And gave him breath upon condition, To love his great Creatour, must He now be thine by composition? |
A56969 | Heav''n finds an eare, when sinners find a tongue? |
A56969 | Heav''n thought good Lost man should feed in sweat; not work in bloud: Why dost thou wound th''already wounded breast? |
A56969 | Hold forth thy arm, and let my fingers try Thy pulse; where chiefly doth thy torment lie? |
A56969 | Hold, Justice, stay: Sinner, speak on; what hast thou more to say? |
A56969 | Hold, Justice, stay: Speak, sinner; hast thou nothing more to say? |
A56969 | How art thou shaded in this veil of night, Behind thy curtain slesh? |
A56969 | How can my musick relish in your cars, That can not speak for sobs, nor sing for tears? |
A56969 | How has thy lightnesse given A just occasion to thy foes illusion? |
A56969 | How is thy empty universe bereaven Of all true joyes, by one false Joyes delusion? |
A56969 | How know''st thou this? |
A56969 | How long shall darknesse soyl The face of earth, and thus beguile Our souls of sprightfull action? |
A56969 | How often hath my patience built, dear Lord, Vain tow''rs of Hope upon thy gracious Word? |
A56969 | How often have I sought thee? |
A56969 | How often have my nightly torments praid For lingring twilight, glutted with the shade? |
A56969 | How often, tir''d with the fastidious light, Have my saint lips implor''d the shades of night? |
A56969 | How old''s thy grief? |
A56969 | How shall we sing a song of the Lord in a strange land? |
A56969 | How small a blast will make a bubble swell? |
A56969 | How sweetly has the Lord of life deceiv''d thee? |
A56969 | I have sinned; what shall I do unto thee, O thou preserver of men? |
A56969 | I know thy Justice is thy self; I know, Just God, thy very self is Mercy too; If not to thee, where? |
A56969 | IS Natures course dissolv''d? |
A56969 | IS not this Type well cut? |
A56969 | If I have lost my Path, great Shepherd, say, Shall I still wander in a doubtfull way? |
A56969 | If Man can love man with so entire affection, that the one can scarce brook the others absence? |
A56969 | If every where, why do I not see thee present? |
A56969 | If it might be seen, Why is this envious curtain drawn between My darkned eye and it? |
A56969 | If my pufft light be out, give leave to tine My slamelesse- snuss at that bright Lamp of thine; O what''s thy Light the lesse for lighting mine? |
A56969 | If not why dost thou spare A willing breast; a breast that stands so fair? |
A56969 | If so, Lord, who''s so mad to die? |
A56969 | If that object be too bright For mans aspect, why did thy lips invite Mine eye t''expect it? |
A56969 | If thou begin to fear, thy fear begins; Fool, can he bear thee hence, and not thy sins? |
A56969 | In ev''ry part Full of rich cunning? |
A56969 | In full heaps untold? |
A56969 | In pleasure? |
A56969 | In what measure He seems transported with the antick pleasure Of childish baubles? |
A56969 | Is crazy Time grown lazy, faint or sick With very Age? |
A56969 | Is hell broke loose, and all her Fiends untied? |
A56969 | Is none return''d To his forgotten self? |
A56969 | Is not that breath Immortall? |
A56969 | Is not thy bloud as cold ● … s hot, by turns? |
A56969 | Is the road fair? |
A56969 | Is there no Good, then which there''s nothing higher, To blesse my full desire With joyes that never change; with joyes that nev''r expire? |
A56969 | Is there no charitable hand will sever My well- spun thred, that my imprison''d soul May be deliver''d from this dull dark hole Of dungeon flesh? |
A56969 | Is there no comfort? |
A56969 | Is there no cover that will give protection T''a fainting soul, the subject of thy wraths 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A56969 | Is there no resection? |
A56969 | Is this a time to pay thine idle vowes At Morpheus shrine? |
A56969 | Is this a time to sleep Thy brains in wastfull slumbers? |
A56969 | Is this that sprightly fire, Whose more then sacred beams inspire The ravisht hearts of men, and so in ● … lame desire? |
A56969 | Is this the sad condition Of those that trust thee? |
A56969 | Is this the state? |
A56969 | Is thy compeer so cruel, And thou so kind, to love unlov''d again? |
A56969 | Is''t insufficiency? |
A56969 | Is''t not enough, enough that I ● … ulfill The toylsome task of thy laborious mill? |
A56969 | It is the lot of man but once to die, But ere that death how many deaths have I? |
A56969 | It was my errour: are not grones and tears Harmonious raptures in th''Almighties ears? |
A56969 | Know''st thou not where to scape? |
A56969 | LOrd, has the feeble voyce of flesh and bloud The pow''r to work thine ears into a floud Of melted mercy? |
A56969 | Let me enjoy but thee, what farther crave I? |
A56969 | Lies it in Treasure? |
A56969 | Lives she in honour? |
A56969 | Lord, I bled before In thy deep wounds; can Justice challenge more? |
A56969 | Lord, canst thou see and hold? |
A56969 | Lord, has thy scourge no mercy, and my woes No end? |
A56969 | Lord, if thou art not present, where shall I seek thee absent? |
A56969 | Lord, is thy Scepter lost, or laid aside? |
A56969 | Lord, s ● … ll I strike the blow? |
A56969 | Lord, shall I strike the blow? |
A56969 | Lord, shall a Iamb of Isr''els sheepfold st ● … ay? |
A56969 | Lord, shall we grumble when thy flames do seourge us? |
A56969 | May not this labour expiate and pu ● … ge My sinne, without th''addition of thy scourge? |
A56969 | Mine eyes are blind and dark, I can not see; To whom, or whether should my darknesse flee, But to the Light? |
A56969 | My earth''s a living Temple t''entertein The King of Glory, and his glorious train: How can I mend my title then? |
A56969 | My path is lost; my wand''ring steps do stray; I can not safely go, nor safely stay; Whom should I seek but thee, my Path, my Way? |
A56969 | My soul, chear up; what if the night be long? |
A56969 | My soul, pry not too nearly; the complexion Of Sols bright face is seen but by reslexion: But wouldst thou know what''s heav''n? |
A56969 | My soul, sinnes monster, whom, with greater ease Ten thousand fold, thy God could make then please; What wouldst thou have? |
A56969 | My soul, what''s lighter then a feather? |
A56969 | NOt eat? |
A56969 | No day of freedome? |
A56969 | No, they were smok''d and slav''d as well as we: What''s sweet- lipt Honours blast, but smoke? |
A56969 | Not by tears to be implor''d? |
A56969 | Not cast an eye Upon the fruit of this fai ● … Tree? |
A56969 | Not first belov''d have I the power to love? |
A56969 | Not having thee, what have my labours got? |
A56969 | Not tast? |
A56969 | Not touch? |
A56969 | O Whither shall I fly? |
A56969 | O can my frozen gutters choose but run, That feel the warmth of such a glorious Sun? |
A56969 | O canst thou not digest An houre of travel for a night of rest? |
A56969 | O hath my leaden soul the art t''improve Her wasted talent, and unrais''d, aspire In this sad moulting time of her desire? |
A56969 | O shall I, shall I never Be ransom''d, but remain a slave for ever? |
A56969 | O tell me, why Thou dost command the thing thou dost deny? |
A56969 | O that my wayes were directed to keep thy Statutes? |
A56969 | O thou most sweet, most gracious, most amiable, most fair, when shall I see thee? |
A56969 | O where, Of whom hath not my thred- bare tongue demanded? |
A56969 | O whither means her 〈 ◊ 〉 groom to drive? |
A56969 | O who can leave so sweet a face as this? |
A56969 | O who would droyl, Or delve in such a soyl, Where gain''s uncertain and the pain is sure? |
A56969 | O why Doth that eclipsing hand so long deny The Sun- shine of thy soul- enliv''ning eye? |
A56969 | O why hast thou obey''d Thy own destruction? |
A56969 | O wilt thou disaltern The rest thou gav''st? |
A56969 | O you that dote upon this world, for what victory do ye sight? |
A56969 | O, I am dead: to whom shall I, poore I, Repair? |
A56969 | O, can my voyce be pleasant, or my hand, Thus made a Prisner to a forrein land? |
A56969 | O, canst thou choose but see, That mad''st the eye? |
A56969 | O, how art thou betray''d, thus fairly driven In seeming triumph to thy own confusion? |
A56969 | O, to part so long? |
A56969 | O, will thy slumb''ring vengeance never wake, Till full- ag''d law- resisting Custome shake The pillours of thy right by false command? |
A56969 | Oh, where next Shall I go seek the Authour of my rest? |
A56969 | Or be thy moulting wings Unapt to fly? |
A56969 | Or can my wandring thoughts forbear to rove, Unguided by the virtue of thy spirit? |
A56969 | Or can so great a purchase rise From a salt humour? |
A56969 | Or can the untouch''d needle point aright? |
A56969 | Or can the water buried Axe implore A hand to raise it; or it self restore, And from her sandy deeps approch the dry- foot shore? |
A56969 | Or can thy flocks be thriving, when the fold Is govern''d by a Fox? |
A56969 | Or canst thou hope to come, and view, Like prosperous Caesar, and subdue? |
A56969 | Or canst thou think that bad which heav''n call''d Good? |
A56969 | Or do mine eyes not seek thee where they should? |
A56969 | Or dost thou vainly labour to hedge in Thy losses from my sides? |
A56969 | Or find thee not, if thou art ev''ry where? |
A56969 | Or has our lust ● … ull god persorm''d a rape, And( fearing Argus eyes) would scape The view of jealous earth, in this prodigious shape? |
A56969 | Or hath some frolick heart set back the hand Of Fates perpetuall Clock? |
A56969 | Or is there such a Good at all? |
A56969 | Or is''t a mere disease? |
A56969 | Or is''t a tart Idea, to procure An edge, and keep the practick soul in ure, Like that dear Chymick dust, or puzzling Quadrature? |
A56969 | Or shall the silent suits of drooping flow''rs Woo thee for drops, and be refresh''d with show''rs? |
A56969 | Or shall the wants of famisht ravens cry, And move thy mercy to a quick supply? |
A56969 | Or what are men, but puffs of dying breath, Reviv''d with living death? |
A56969 | Or what has made thee Oreslip thy lost degree? |
A56969 | Or what need stratageme or strength, where hearts obey? |
A56969 | Or what need strength compell, where none gainsay? |
A56969 | Or what''s my Mother, or my Nurse to me? |
A56969 | Or when shall I find him? |
A56969 | Or why suspended by the common lot, And being born to dy, why dy I not? |
A56969 | Or 〈 ◊ 〉 shall I have accesse to light inaccessible? |
A56969 | Peace, childish Cupid, peace: thy singer''d eye But crios for what, in time, will make thee cry: But are thy peevish wranglings thus appeas''d? |
A56969 | Peace, my joy: Will nothing do? |
A56969 | Pish; death''s a fable: Did not heav''n inspire, Your equall Elements with living Fire, Blown from the spring of life? |
A56969 | Poore Soul, what ail''st thou? |
A56969 | Q ● … ck- seeing Faith now blind? |
A56969 | Rebellious fool, what has thy folly done: Controul''d thy God, and crucisi''d his Sonne? |
A56969 | Remember, I beseech thee, that thou hast made me as the clay, and wilt thou bring me to dust again? |
A56969 | SEest thou this fulsome Ideot? |
A56969 | Say then, proud inch of living ● … arth, what can Thy greatnesse claim the more in being man? |
A56969 | Say, what''s the cause Of his commitment? |
A56969 | See him in want; enjoy him in con ● … nt: Conceiv''st him lodg''d in Crosse, or lost in pain? |
A56969 | Shall Eve transgresse? |
A56969 | Shall I ask, who made me? |
A56969 | Shall earths black Monarch take A full possession of thy wasted land? |
A56969 | Shall marble- hearted cruelty ass ● … il These Alabaster sides with knotted whips? |
A56969 | Shall our perpetuall toil Ne''r find a Sabbath, to refresh awhile Our drooping souls? |
A56969 | Shall we still creep like Snails, That gild their wayes with their own native slimes? |
A56969 | Sing, Hymen, to my soul: What? |
A56969 | Still batchelour of Sense? |
A56969 | Stripes after stripes? |
A56969 | Tell me where be those now that so lately loved and hugg''d the world? |
A56969 | Tell me, my wishing soul, didst ever trie How fast the wings of red- crost faith can slie? |
A56969 | Tell me; what secret virtue doth invite Thy wrinkled eye to such unknown delight? |
A56969 | Tell, tell me then, what danger can accrue From such blest Food, to such half- gods as you? |
A56969 | The gain''s not great I purchase by this stay; What losse sustain''st thou by so small delay, To whom ten thousand years are but a day? |
A56969 | The height of whose inchaunting pleasure Is but a flash? |
A56969 | The hidden engines? |
A56969 | The lawlesse Purliews? |
A56969 | The new- drawn net? |
A56969 | The one''s a Line, the tother is a Lure; This, to entice thy soul; that, to enforce: Way- laid by both, how canst thou stand secu ● … e? |
A56969 | Then thought? |
A56969 | Then wind? |
A56969 | Think''st thou, the Crown of Glory''s had With idle ease, fond Cyprian lad? |
A56969 | Thou art my Sun, great God: O when shall I View the full beams of thy Meridian eye? |
A56969 | Thou dwellest it light inaccessible; and where is that inaccessible light? |
A56969 | Thy tears are trifles; thou must do: Alas, I can not; then endeavour: I will; but will a tug or two Suffice the turn? |
A56969 | To what are we impelled? |
A56969 | To what den? |
A56969 | To what mountain? |
A56969 | To what place can I safely flie? |
A56969 | To what strong house? |
A56969 | To whom shall I apply 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A56969 | Triumph not Cupid, his mischance doth show Thy trade; doth once, what thou dost alwayes do: Brag not too soon: has thy prevailing hand Foil''d him? |
A56969 | Turn back, my dear; O let my ravisht eye Once more behold thy face before thou fly; What, shall we part without a mutuall kisse? |
A56969 | WHat is my soul the better to be tin''d With holy fire? |
A56969 | WHat means my sisters eye so oft to passe Through the long entry of that Optick glasse? |
A56969 | WHat means this pe ● … vish brat? |
A56969 | WHere is that Good, which wisemen please to call The Chiefest? |
A56969 | WHy dost thou shade thy lovely face? |
A56969 | WIll''t ne''r be morning? |
A56969 | Was there not bloud enough, when one small drop Had pow''r to ransome thousand worlds, and stop The mouth of Justice? |
A56969 | Were they but painted colours, it might stand With painted reason, that they might devote thee; But things that have no being to besot thee? |
A56969 | What Paul- like pow''r had your admir''d devotion? |
A56969 | What ails my bird? |
A56969 | What art thou more in being man? |
A56969 | What ayls the fool to laugh? |
A56969 | What castle shall I hold? |
A56969 | What dextrous Art had your Elegiak songs? |
A56969 | What do we here? |
A56969 | What doth that Glasse present before thine eye? |
A56969 | What gen''rous mind Would be so base to bind Her Heav''n- bred soul a slave to serve a blast of wind? |
A56969 | What hath the prisner done? |
A56969 | What heart can long be pleas''d, where pleasure spends so fast? |
A56969 | What hopes have I to passe without a Guide? |
A56969 | What humane madnesse makes the world affraid To entertein Heav''ns joy, because convey''d By th''hand of death? |
A56969 | What if some solid rock should entertain My frighted soul? |
A56969 | What lost thy love? |
A56969 | What makes thee fool, so fat? |
A56969 | What may this Excellence be? |
A56969 | What mean these bargains, and these needlesse sales? |
A56969 | What meanst thou thus, my poore deluded soul, To love so fondly? |
A56969 | What more could Edom, or proud Ashur do? |
A56969 | What more do we? |
A56969 | What need To send more darts? |
A56969 | What need that house be dawb''d with slesh and bloud? |
A56969 | What need these jealous, these suspitious wayes Of law- divis''d, and law- dissolv''d entails? |
A56969 | What needs a stratageme where strength can sway? |
A56969 | What none dismist thy Cou ● … t? |
A56969 | What palat would refuse full bowls of spight, To gain a minutes tast of such delight? |
A56969 | What place is left unransack''d? |
A56969 | What say''st thou, sinner? |
A56969 | What seest thou there? |
A56969 | What sense- delighting objects dost thou spie? |
A56969 | What shackle- breaking faith infus''d such motion To your strong prayers, that could obtain the boon To be inlarg''d, to be uncag''d so soon? |
A56969 | What shall I do? |
A56969 | What shall I do? |
A56969 | What shall I say? |
A56969 | What sinfull 〈 ◊ 〉 Implores the Son of David? |
A56969 | What then this bubble? |
A56969 | What trusty Lantern will direct my feet To scape the danger of these dang''rous places? |
A56969 | What vantage is it to be born a man? |
A56969 | What walls shall hold me? |
A56969 | What will ye do in the day of your visitation? |
A56969 | What''s here to be enjoyed, But grief and sicknesse, and large bills of sorrow, Drawn now, and crost to morrow? |
A56969 | What''s lighter then the mind? |
A56969 | What''s treasure But very smoke? |
A56969 | What, Cupid, are thy shafes already made? |
A56969 | What, Soul, no further yet? |
A56969 | What, if my feet should take their hasty flight, And seek protection in the shades of night? |
A56969 | What? |
A56969 | What? |
A56969 | What? |
A56969 | What? |
A56969 | What? |
A56969 | What? |
A56969 | When shall I come and appear before God? |
A56969 | When wilt thou lead me from this dark dungeon, that I may consesse thy name? |
A56969 | Where be those killing eyes, that so controul''d The world? |
A56969 | Where canst thou safely stay? |
A56969 | Where is their laughter? |
A56969 | Where is their mir ● … h? |
A56969 | Where shall I seek him? |
A56969 | Where shall I seek this Good? |
A56969 | Where shall I sojourn? |
A56969 | Where shouldst thou seek for rest, but in thy bed? |
A56969 | Where their insolence? |
A56969 | Wherefore hidest thou thy face, and holdest me for thine enemy? |
A56969 | Which weigh''d in equall scales is found so light, So poorly over- balanc''d with a bubble? |
A56969 | Whish, lullaby, What a ● … ls my babe? |
A56969 | Whither flie I? |
A56969 | Whither shall I go? |
A56969 | Who art thou? |
A56969 | Who breathes that boules not? |
A56969 | Who can indure the 〈 ◊ 〉 rayes of the Sunne of Justice? |
A56969 | Who hath stored the air with sowl, the waters with fish, the earth with plants and flowers? |
A56969 | Who shall deliver me from the reproch 〈 ◊ 〉 this shamefull bondage? |
A56969 | Who shall not be consumed by his beams? |
A56969 | Who will tell my beloved that I am sick of love? |
A56969 | Who would not bear The worlds derision with a thankfull eare? |
A56969 | Whom have I in Heaven but thee? |
A56969 | Whom shall I ask? |
A56969 | Why apples, O my soul? |
A56969 | Why begg''st thou then the pineons of a Dove? |
A56969 | Why do I seek thee, if thou art not here? |
A56969 | Why dost thou give me so unp ● … iz''d a treasure, And then deny''st my greedy soul the pleasure To view thy gift? |
A56969 | Why dost thou hide thy face? |
A56969 | Why eat''st thou not what Heav''n ordain''d for food? |
A56969 | Why hurries on her ill- match''d payre so fast? |
A56969 | Why swell''st thou, man, pust up with fame and purse? |
A56969 | Why was I born a man? |
A56969 | Why was it made, if not to be enjoy''d? |
A56969 | Will earths perpetuall progresse ne''r expire? |
A56969 | Will not the thet''rick of my torments move? |
A56969 | Will nothing still it? |
A56969 | Will that promis''d light Ne''r break, and clear these clouds of night? |
A56969 | Wilt thou set thine eyes upon that which is not? |
A56969 | Without that Light what light remains in me? |
A56969 | Wouldest thou that thy flesh obey thy spirit? |
A56969 | Ye suck the self- same milk, the self- same aire: No mean betwixt all paunch, and skin and bone? |
A56969 | and blows succeding blows? |
A56969 | and ev''ry day, Fill''d with his blessing too? |
A56969 | and has Faith none? |
A56969 | and he so bold? |
A56969 | and her entangled prey? |
A56969 | and must these brows resigne Their Crown of Glory for a crown of thorn? |
A56969 | and the game they follow? |
A56969 | and the snares that lie So undiscover''d, so obscure to th''eye? |
A56969 | and what desire I on earth in respect of thee? |
A56969 | and what is lest? |
A56969 | and where will ye leave your glory? |
A56969 | another year, and then for ever: Too quick resolves do resolution wrong; What part so soon, to be divorc''d so long? |
A56969 | are all retein''d Beneath thy servile bands? |
A56969 | both lash and labour too? |
A56969 | but bo ● … n, and then rebell? |
A56969 | but wherefore do I call thee so? |
A56969 | can mine eye Run fast enought''obtain this prize? |
A56969 | can ought behid from thee? |
A56969 | canst relish wholesome food? |
A56969 | canst thou but admire The empty fulnesse of his vain desire? |
A56969 | canst thou see and suffer? |
A56969 | did injurious Nature bind My soul earths prentice, with no clause to leave her? |
A56969 | did not this brow Then sweat in thine? |
A56969 | didst ever heare the sounds, The musick, and the lip- divided breaths Of the strong- winded horn, recheats, and deaths Done more exact? |
A56969 | does not the Ideot shake it In his left hand? |
A56969 | doth Times glasse stand? |
A56969 | doth it subsist A reall Essence, clouded in the midst Of cu ● … ious Art, or clear to ev''ry eye that list? |
A56969 | doth thy Prospective please Th''abused fancy with no shapes but these? |
A56969 | dy before my sinnes are dead? |
A56969 | fond man, step forth and take it: Or would''st thou wealth? |
A56969 | found him out? |
A56969 | from how great a good, to how great an evil? |
A56969 | has the voyce of danger lost the art To raise the spirit of neglected care? |
A56969 | hast thou ought to plead, That sentence should not passe? |
A56969 | hear thee? |
A56969 | how 〈 ◊ 〉 thou hurried to and fro? |
A56969 | is thy hand Still bound to th''peace? |
A56969 | lost and found? |
A56969 | must I ever grind? |
A56969 | must these dainty li ● … tle sprigs that twine So fast about my neck, be pie ● … c''d and torn With ragged nails? |
A56969 | my life is but a pain at b ● … st: I am but dying dust: my dayes, a span; What pleasure tak''st thou in the bloud of man? |
A56969 | my pains no ease? |
A56969 | n ● … s and quiver too? |
A56969 | nay worse, be slain? |
A56969 | nay, what sense Is not partaker of thine Excellence? |
A56969 | never Meet more? |
A56969 | never once 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A56969 | no intermission? |
A56969 | none but these? |
A56969 | nor musick for these climes? |
A56969 | nor pleas''d with sun, nor shade? |
A56969 | or balanc''d with the bloud of man? |
A56969 | or hath that great Pairroyall Of Adamantine sisters late made triall Of some new trade? |
A56969 | or in it, That longer then a minit Can lend a free delight that can endure? |
A56969 | or the strength t''unlock The gates of Heav''n, and to dissolve a rock Of marble clouds into a morning show''r? |
A56969 | or what affrights thee? |
A56969 | or will povertie send back Full bags of gold, because the bringer''s black? |
A56969 | repair''d with food? |
A56969 | said I these times Were not for songs? |
A56969 | see how the fool presents thee With a full basket; if such wealth contents thee: Wouldst thou take pleasure? |
A56969 | seems not an em''lous strife Betwixt the rare cut picture and the life? |
A56969 | shall I never find A night of rest? |
A56969 | shall his hollow arms Hugg thy soft sides? |
A56969 | shall mortall hearts grow old In sorrow? |
A56969 | shall my indentures never Be cancell''d? |
A56969 | shall these course hands untie The sacred Zone of thy virginitie? |
A56969 | sill''d with Zeuxian Art? |
A56969 | snail my weary arms infold And underprop my panting sides for ever? |
A56969 | so apt to heare The frantick language of my foolish fear? |
A56969 | sweet- fac''d Cupid, has thy bastard- treasure, Thy boasted honours, and thy bold- fac''d pleasure Perplext thee now? |
A56969 | th''infernall Nimrods hollow? |
A56969 | their arrogance? |
A56969 | these the signes of love? |
A56969 | thou must persever: I''ll strive till death; and shall my feeble strife Be crown''d? |
A56969 | to whom shall my sad ashes fly But Life? |
A56969 | to whom will ye ● … lie for help? |
A56969 | was not my sinne There punish''d in thy soul? |
A56969 | we loyter: cloggd with mire? |
A56969 | were not those drops enow? |
A56969 | what ails my babe to cry? |
A56969 | what ails my babe to cry? |
A56969 | what art thou more in being man? |
A56969 | what bold tongue can say Without a blush, he hath not boul''d to day? |
A56969 | what boots it to be coyn''d With Heav''ns own stamp? |
A56969 | what comfort''s here? |
A56969 | what ha ● … e I done? |
A56969 | what kind sea will hide My head from Thunder? |
A56969 | what moves my froward boy To make such whimp''ring faces? |
A56969 | what need there all These slie devices to betray poore men? |
A56969 | what need these engines then? |
A56969 | what nev''r commence Master in Faith? |
A56969 | what path untrod Shall I seek out to scape the flaming rod Of my ostended, of my angry God? |
A56969 | what satisfaction can Poore dust and ashes make? |
A56969 | what soul would not be proud Of wry- mouth''d scorns, the worst that flesh and bloud Had rancour to devise? |
A56969 | what unwonted way Has scap''d the ransack of my rambling thought? |
A56969 | what vantage can there be To souls of Heav''n- descended pedegree, More then to beasts that grovel? |
A56969 | what was there in my birth That could deserve the easiest smile of mirth? |
A56969 | what? |
A56969 | when shall I be satisfied with thy beautie? |
A56969 | when will day Begin to dawn, whose new- born ray May gild the wether- cocks of our devotion, And give our unsoul''d souls new motion? |
A56969 | whence are we thrown? |
A56969 | where can Ambition sind a higher style then man? |
A56969 | where is he not, that''s every where? |
A56969 | where safely go? |
A56969 | where shall I abide, Untill his flames be quench''d or laid aside? |
A56969 | where shall I find This Cath''lick pleasure, whose extremes may bind My thoughts, and fill the gulf of my insatiate mind? |
A56969 | where shall I meet Some lucky hand to lead my trembling paces? |
A56969 | where will her restlesse wheels arive? |
A56969 | wherein can earth delight thee? |
A56969 | whither am I come? |
A56969 | whither did I go? |
A56969 | whither should I go? |
A56969 | who shall deliver me from the body of this death? |
A56969 | who shall deliver me 〈 ◊ 〉 the reproch of this shamefull bondage? |
A56969 | who would not wish to be Dissolv''d from earth, and with Astraea flee From this blind dungeon to that Sunne- bright Thro ● …? |
A56969 | why draw''st thou back thy tim''rous arm? |
A56969 | why hast thou set me as a mark against thee? |
A56969 | why is my sorrow- wasted breath Den ● …''d the easie priviledge of death? |
A56969 | why tax I thus our modern times, For new- born follies, and for new- born crimes? |
A56969 | will her ● … ambling sits be never past? |
A56969 | will it neither be Pleas''d with the nurses breast nor mothers knee? |
A56969 | will nakednesse refuse Rich change of robes, because the man''s not spruse That brought them? |
A56969 | will neither bed nor board Receive him? |
A56969 | will no Ark of rest Receive my restlesse Dove? |
A56969 | will no plump fee Bribe thy false fists to make a glad decree, ● … unfool whom thou hast fool''d, and set thy pris''ners free? |
A56969 | will thy good ● … esse please T''allow no other favours? |
A56969 | will thy shackles neither loose nor break? |
A56969 | will''t never strike? |
A10252 | ( A third replyes)"What is thy Country? |
A10252 | ( O Lord) Before I fled? |
A10252 | ( Satan) whence com''st thou? |
A10252 | ( and yet not included) Could Ionah finde a resting any where So void, or secret, that God was not there? |
A10252 | ( 〈 ◊ 〉 he could lend an answer unto either)"A fourth d ● ● ands; Where hath thy breeding beene? |
A10252 | 1625 Or hast thou fed so neere that there is none Now left but delicates to feed upon? |
A10252 | 5. WHo e''re beheld the royall Crowne, set on The nuptiall browes of Princely Salomon? |
A10252 | 8 FAire Bride, why was thy troubled soule dejected When I was absent? |
A10252 | 9. WHo ever lov''d, that ever lov''d as I, That for his sake renounce my selfe, deny The worlds best joyes, and have the world forgone? |
A10252 | A marble tablet? |
A10252 | A ● d gave thy spirit the spirit of apprehending? |
A10252 | AM I a Garden? |
A10252 | ANd are the Lawes of God defective then? |
A10252 | ANd dost thou not admier? |
A10252 | AR ● thou my Palme? |
A10252 | Absented from thy favour, what remaines, But sense, and sad remembrance of my paines? |
A10252 | Ah righteous Iob, what crosse was left unknowne? |
A10252 | Ah what continuall ward? |
A10252 | Ah, what prosp''rous winde Will lend a gale, whose bounty ne''re shall cease, Till we be landed on the I le of peace? |
A10252 | Am I a God, and shall I not command? |
A10252 | And a Davids skill? |
A10252 | And are thou silent too? |
A10252 | And beasts, and cottell endlesse, without counting? |
A10252 | And did thy fainting browes sweat blood and water? |
A10252 | And gave so strict a charge? |
A10252 | And hast thou( without envy) yet beheld, How that the World his second can not yeeld? |
A10252 | And is he turn''d a Mill- horse now? |
A10252 | And is she come to this? |
A10252 | And it seemes to me, The Parent''s most delinquent of the three: What; if the better minded Son doe aime At worth? |
A10252 | And make his Brothell in our Royall Place? |
A10252 | And may none Revenge his private wrongs, but he alone? |
A10252 | And must our easie triall ▪ At first, reade Hierogly ● hickes of deniall? |
A10252 | And of what allies?" |
A10252 | And seekst thou for a new? |
A10252 | And shall Th''indulgent nurse bee counted wisely kinde, If she be mov''d to please his childish minde? |
A10252 | And shall not I spare such a goodly Citie? |
A10252 | And shall the tender Babes of Sion cry, And pine for food, and yet their mothers by? |
A10252 | And shall we repine, Great God, to foster any Babe of thine? |
A10252 | And was all this for me? |
A10252 | And was this He, that with the helpe of none, Destroy''d a thousand with a silly Bone? |
A10252 | And was''t a man of God, that brought the word? |
A10252 | And what are Men but WORMES? |
A10252 | And what is Life? |
A10252 | And when thou knowst it, let thy servants know: What? |
A10252 | And where stand Their lof ● y buildings? |
A10252 | And who can tell, if heaven will change the lot, That we, and ours may live, and perish not? |
A10252 | And yet it bloomes, and fades within an houre; What greater pleasure then a rising Sun? |
A10252 | Angels( if God in quier) strictly must Not pleade Perfection: then can man be just? |
A10252 | Are heavens lawes So strict? |
A10252 | Are not the Heavens, and all beneath them mine? |
A10252 | Are these the buildings? |
A10252 | Are these the trickes to purchase heavenly grace? |
A10252 | Are they clos''d with Ignorance? |
A10252 | Are they to be seene? |
A10252 | Are you his Counsell? |
A10252 | Art thou a Prophet, and dost thou amisse?" |
A10252 | Art thou a man, and d ● r''st my Lawes withstand? |
A10252 | Art thou advanc''d to thy supreme desier? |
A10252 | Art thou attain''d at length to full perfection Of ripened yeares? |
A10252 | Art thou de ● repit? |
A10252 | Art thou faire and young? |
A10252 | Art thou growne so poore, To leave thy famisht Infants at our doore, And not allow them food? |
A10252 | Art thou oppos''d to thine unequall Foe? |
A10252 | Art thou that Wonder, which the Persian State Stands gazing at so much, and poynting at? |
A10252 | Art thou that man of might, That Impe of Glory? |
A10252 | Art thou that mighty He? |
A10252 | Art thou the onely wise? |
A10252 | B ● t say; In all thy hard Adventures, hath Thine eye observed Iob my Servants faith? |
A10252 | BOth Goods, and body too; Lord, who can stand? |
A10252 | BVt stay a while; this thing would first be known: Can Ionah give himselfe, and not his owne? |
A10252 | BVt stay: this was a strange and uncouth word: Did Ionah flye the presence of the Lord? |
A10252 | BVt stay:( sad Genius) How doe griefes transport Thy exil''d senses? |
A10252 | BVt stay; Is God like one of us? |
A10252 | Became her suitor, that was humbly his, And fairely thus intreating, this bespake: What is''t Queene Ester would? |
A10252 | Breathes hee without a crosse? |
A10252 | But Iob reply''d, how long,( as with sharp swords) Will ye torment me, with your pointed words? |
A10252 | But a golden dreame, Which( waking) makes our wāts the more extreme? |
A10252 | But still delaies His plagues denounc''t,& Iudgement stil forbeares, And stead of forty dayes gives many yeares? |
A10252 | But thou, Iob,( like a madman) would''st thou force God, to desist his order, and set course Of Iustice? |
A10252 | CAn furious Dragons heare their helplesse broode Cry out, and fill their hungry lips with food? |
A10252 | CAn mercy come from bloody C ● in? |
A10252 | Can Ester then be slaine, and not the King? |
A10252 | Can God and Belial both joyne in one will; The one to aske, the other to fulfill? |
A10252 | Can He be dead, and is not my life done? |
A10252 | Can Heav''n be false? |
A10252 | Can Heaven be false? |
A10252 | Can Man deserve? |
A10252 | Can Thy bearded hooke impierce his Gils, or make him Thy landed Prisner? |
A10252 | Can anger helpe thee? |
A10252 | Can ashes, clense thy blot? |
A10252 | Can fasting expiate, or slake those fires That sinne hath blowne to such a mighty flame? |
A10252 | Can he When he hath said it, alter his Decree? |
A10252 | Can he be said to feare the Lord, that flyes him? |
A10252 | Can he be thus Pleas''d with our offerings, unappeas''d with us? |
A10252 | Can he be young, that''s feeble, weake, and wan? |
A10252 | Can he from any place Be barr''d? |
A10252 | Can he repent, and turne, when e''re he please? |
A10252 | Can he that is the God of Truth, dispence With what he vow''d? |
A10252 | Can heavens just Creator Let passe( unpunisht) Sinnes of so high nature? |
A10252 | Can his minde Revolt at all? |
A10252 | Can man adde To his perfection, what he never had? |
A10252 | Can palates finde a relish in distast? |
A10252 | Can sackcloth cloth a fault? |
A10252 | Can such things Obtain lesse priviledge, thā a Tale, that brings The audience wonder, enter mixt with pleasure? |
A10252 | Can there in all the earth, say, can there be A man so Perfect, and so Iust, as He? |
A10252 | Can thy angles take him? |
A10252 | Can thy hard hand Force him to labour on thy fruitfull land? |
A10252 | Can thy lustice be So slow to them, and yet so sharpe to me? |
A10252 | Can thy miswandring eyes choose none, but her, That is the child of an Idolater? |
A10252 | Can word confesse him, when as deed denies him? |
A10252 | Can ● t thou, by deepe inquiry, understand The hidden Iustice of th''Almighties hand? |
A10252 | Can''st recall The words we entertain''d the time withall? |
A10252 | Can''st thou unriddle heavens Philosophy? |
A10252 | Canst thou Quaile his proud courage? |
A10252 | Canst thou restraine faire Maja''s course, or stint her ▪ Or sad Orion ushering in the Winter? |
A10252 | Canst thou subject unto thy soveraigntie The untam''d Vnicorne? |
A10252 | Canst thou supply The empty Ravens, and let thy children die? |
A10252 | Com''st thou to downy yeares? |
A10252 | Could he sleepe then, When( with the sudden sight of Death) the men( So many men) with yelling shrikes, and cryes, Made very heaven report? |
A10252 | Could her small And ill- appointed handfull then prevaile, When Pharo''s men of warre, and Charr''ots faile? |
A10252 | Could not Azza smother Thy flaming Lust; but must thou finde another? |
A10252 | Could thy flattring crimes Secure thee from the dangers of the times? |
A10252 | Could words affright thee? |
A10252 | Couldst thou thinke My love could shake, or such a vow could shrinke? |
A10252 | Craved I Your Goods, to ransome my Captivity? |
A10252 | DEath, art thou growne so nice? |
A10252 | DId not these sacred Cawsies, that are leading To Sion, late seeme pav''d, with often treading? |
A10252 | DOst thou not tremble? |
A10252 | DOth vaine repining( Eliphaz replies) Or words, like wind, beseeme the man that''s wise? |
A10252 | Did Ionah fleepe, That should be watchfull, and the Tower keepe? |
A10252 | Did Ionah sleepe so sound? |
A10252 | Did Ionah( the selected mouth of God) In stead of roaring judgements, does he nod? |
A10252 | Did ever any taste thy streames, and thurst? |
A10252 | Did heaven adde To all his fortunes double what he had? |
A10252 | Did hee, that now on his brave Palace stood, Boasting his Babels beauty, chew the cud An hower after? |
A10252 | Did not those sweet- lipt Oracles beguile Thy wanton eares, with newes of Wine, and Oile? |
A10252 | Did thy cheekes entertaine a Traylors lips? |
A10252 | Did''st thou divide the darknesse from the Light? |
A10252 | Did''st thou inrich the Peacock with his Plume? |
A10252 | Didst ere enquire into the Seas Abysse, Or mark''d the Earth of what a bulk she is? |
A10252 | Didst thou endow The noble Stallion with his strength? |
A10252 | Digests the Stomack, e''re the Pallat tastes? |
A10252 | Doe Mysteries Vnfold to thee? |
A10252 | Doe thy grizly haires Begin to cast account of many cares Vpon thy head? |
A10252 | Does our Mill- horse sweat? |
A10252 | Does perpetuall mirth 〈 ◊ 〉 him a little Heaven upon his earth? |
A10252 | Does well deserved store Limit his wish, that he can wish no more? |
A10252 | Dost thou command the Cisternes of the Skie To quench the thirsty soyle; or is it I? |
A10252 | Dost thou desire A space of time to search, or to enquire My sinne? |
A10252 | Doth it become my servants heart to swell? |
A10252 | Doth not he possesse All that he hath, or can demand from Thee? |
A10252 | Doth sad Despaire deny these griefes an end? |
A10252 | Each one shall reape the harvest he hath sowne, His meed shall measure what his hands hath done ▪ Who is''t can claim the Worlds great Soveraignty? |
A10252 | Eagles are not so swift as they: Where shall we flee? |
A10252 | Even so( great God) thou sendst thy blessings in, And we returne thee, Dunghils of our Sinne: How are thy Angels hacknei''d up and downe To visit man? |
A10252 | FIghts God for cursed Amalek? |
A10252 | FOrthwith to satisfie the Queenes request, The King and Haman came unto her Feast, Whereat the King( what then can hap amisse?) |
A10252 | Feare not to goe; Were not the grounds of Sampsons Combate so? |
A10252 | Fears he the strength of Man? |
A10252 | Feed''st thou the empty Ravens that cry for mea ● e ● Sett''st thou the season, when the fearfull Hind Brings forth her painfull birth? |
A10252 | Filling all wo ● dring eyes with Admiration, And every loyall heart with Adoration? |
A10252 | Fond Saint, thine Innocence findes timely speed, A foolish Saint receives a Saintly meed; Is this the just mans recompence? |
A10252 | For what great sinne dost thou afflict me so? |
A10252 | For whom giv''st thou so strict a charge? |
A10252 | Friends; beg I succour from you? |
A10252 | From Hamans mouth, shall Haman honour''d be? |
A10252 | From mortal eyes, when gloomy darkness shrouds The lamps of heaven? |
A10252 | GOd is the God of peace: And if my brother Strike me on one cheeke, must I turn the other? |
A10252 | Gaines he by mans uprightnesse? |
A10252 | God se ● s the Princely Crowne On heads of Kings, Who then may take it downe? |
A10252 | Great God; O, can thy patient eye behold This height of sinne, and can thy vengeance hold? |
A10252 | Great Royall Dreamer, where is now that thing Thou so much vaunted''st of? |
A10252 | HOw are my sacred Nazarites( that were The blazing Planets of my glorious Sphaere) Obscur''d and darkned in Afflictions cloud? |
A10252 | HOw great''s the love of God unto his creature? |
A10252 | HOw is our story chang''d? |
A10252 | Had they but taken thence That cursed bone, what colour of defence Had Samson found? |
A10252 | Hadst thou beene ravisht of thine onely Sheepe, That in thy tender bosome us''d to sleepe? |
A10252 | Hadst thou( O dust and ashes) such a care, Such in- bred pitty,''a trifling plant to spare? |
A10252 | Has wanton Cupid snatcht it? |
A10252 | Hast thou assign''d The Mountaine- Goate her Time? |
A10252 | Hast thou beheld the huge Leviathan, That swarthy Tyrant of the Ocean? |
A10252 | Hast thou not found, that he''s of upright will, Iust, fearing God, ● schewing what is ill? |
A10252 | Hast thou not heap''d his Garners with excesse? |
A10252 | Hast thou not promis''d that my strengthned hand Shall scourge thy Foe- men, and sccure thy Land From slavish bondage? |
A10252 | Hath God decreed No other Curse upon that cursed seed? |
A10252 | Hath Heaven dispoil''d what his full hand had givē thee? |
A10252 | Hath Nature taught fierce Tygers to apply The brest unto their younglings empty cry? |
A10252 | Hath he not promis''d that the time shall come, Wherein the fruits of my restored wombe Shall make thee father to a hopefull Sonne? |
A10252 | Hath heav''n withdrawn the talent he hath giv''n thee Hath envious Death of all thy Sons bereaven thee? |
A10252 | Hath his Dart Sent courtly tokens to thy simple heart? |
A10252 | Hath his faire desart ● ● tain''d the freedome of his Princes heart? |
A10252 | Hath not the crime Paid a sufficient Intrest for the time? |
A10252 | Hath not thy love surrounded him about, ● And ● edg''d him in, to fence my practice out? |
A10252 | Hath open force, or secret fraud beset His Bulwarkes, so impregnable, as yet? |
A10252 | Hath sinne given ore To cry for plagues? |
A10252 | Hath thy deserved worth restor''d againe The blemisht honour of thy Princely straine? |
A10252 | Have not Babes beene crown''d, And mighty Monarchs beaten to the ground? |
A10252 | Have savage beasts time, place, and natures helps, To feed and foster up their idle whelpes? |
A10252 | Have soule Diseases foil''d thee on the floore? |
A10252 | Have we not kept our vowes? |
A10252 | Have we, at any time, upon your triall, Shrunke from our plighted faith, or prov''d disloyall? |
A10252 | Have wee just cause to joy? |
A10252 | He must dye: 〈 ◊ 〉 he in Honour? |
A10252 | He opes the womb: why then should''st thou repine? |
A10252 | He that repleats The mighty Vniverse, whose lofty seat''s Th''imperiall Heaven, whose footstoole is the face Of massie Earth? |
A10252 | Heavens large dimensions can not cōprehend him; What e''re hee doe, what''s he can reprehend him? |
A10252 | Heavens powers are compacted To worke my''eternall ruine; To what friend Shal I make mone, when heaven conspires my end? |
A10252 | Hence spring thy sorrowes( Iob)''T is Iustice, then Thou shouldst- bee plagu''d, that thus plagu''d other men; Is heaven just? |
A10252 | Her Buildings raz''d, Her Towers burnt? |
A10252 | Her Glory thus defac''d? |
A10252 | His Coffers fill''d, his Land stock''d plenteou ● ● y? |
A10252 | His bloodlesse cheekes, and deadnesse of his eyes? |
A10252 | His drooping head? |
A10252 | His glorious pompe, whose honour did display The noysed triumphs of his Marriage day? |
A10252 | His pow''r is infinite, mans light is dimme; And knowledge darknesse not deriv''d from him? |
A10252 | His wish would not extend To death, lest his assaults, with death should end: Then what he did, what could he further doe? |
A10252 | How are the objects of his musing Worthlesse, and vaine, that perish in the using? |
A10252 | How can I Expect my suit, and have deser ●''d to dye? |
A10252 | How can I Thinke but thou hat''st me, when thy lips deny So poore a Suite? |
A10252 | How can I see such mischiefe? |
A10252 | How can my flowers, which thy Ewers nourish With showers of living waters, choose but flourish? |
A10252 | How comes this alteration then that He Thus limiting the''effect of his Decree Vpon the expiring date of forty daies, He then performes it not? |
A10252 | How darst thou then maligne the King of Kings, To whom great Princes are but poorest things? |
A10252 | How faining deafe is he? |
A10252 | How fortunate Hath favour crown''d his times? |
A10252 | How frownes the King, if Haman be not by? |
A10252 | How golden were those dayes? |
A10252 | How great respect, and howerly regard, Stands man in hand to have; when such a brood Of furious hel- hounds seeke to suck his blood? |
A10252 | How haps it then That wretched Mordecai, the worst of men, A captive slave, a superstitious Iew, Slights thee, and robs thee of thy righfull due? |
A10252 | How haps the wicked then, so sound in health, So ripe in yeeres, so prosperous in wealth? |
A10252 | How hast thou crackt thy credit, that we dare Trust thee for bread? |
A10252 | How have I trespast, that thou thus afflict''st mo? |
A10252 | How his sterne browes were bent? |
A10252 | How is thy glory plac''t above the heaven? |
A10252 | How is''t, we dare not venture To keepe thy Babes, unlesse thou please to enter In bond, for paiment? |
A10252 | How often hast thou mockt my slender suite With forged falshood? |
A10252 | How often have your biting tongues defam''d My simple Innocence, and yet unsham ● d? |
A10252 | How poore a mite art thou content withall, That ● an may ● cape his downe ● approching fall? |
A10252 | How poorely doe we crowne Their blessed labours? |
A10252 | How seeming great is he? |
A10252 | How seeming sweet''s the quiet sleepe of sin? |
A10252 | How small a thing''t had bin( If they had beene so provident) to winne The day with ease? |
A10252 | How truly little? |
A10252 | How vaine are then the comforts of your breath, That censure goodnesse, or by Life or Death? |
A10252 | How wilfull blinde? |
A10252 | How would thine ● asty spirit then bin stirr''d, If thou art angry, Ionah, for a Gourd? |
A10252 | How wretched was mans case, in those dark dayes When Law was only read? |
A10252 | I Lately mus''d; and musing stood amaz''d, My heart was bound, my sight was overdaz''d To view a miracle: could Pharo fall Before the face of Isr''el? |
A10252 | I Thurst; and who shall quench this eager Thurst? |
A10252 | I feare our lavish tongues have bin too bold: What speeches past betweene us? |
A10252 | I hold it as a wrong: How canst thou say thou lov''st me? |
A10252 | I stand amaz''d, and frighted at this word: Did Ionah flye the presence of the Lord? |
A10252 | I yeeld it for a truth,( sad Iob reply''d) Compar''d with God, can man be justifi''d? |
A10252 | IT was a sharpe revenge: But was it just? |
A10252 | If Creatures be so dreadfull, how is he More bold then wise, that dares encounter Me? |
A10252 | If ought, what harme at all? |
A10252 | If plants be cropt, because their fruits are small, Thinke you to thrive, that beare no fruit at all? |
A10252 | If they aske thee why?" |
A10252 | In briefe, Would tender eyes, endure to see( Summ''d up) the greatest sorrowes, that can be? |
A10252 | In exorable Samson: Can the teares From those faire ● yes, not move thy deafned eares? |
A10252 | In strength, another summes Felicity: What horse is not more happy farre than he? |
A10252 | Inricht his Pastures? |
A10252 | Ionah, dost thou well? |
A10252 | Is God like Man? |
A10252 | Is God the God of vengeance? |
A10252 | Is Heaven unjust? |
A10252 | Is Iustice fled from heaven; Or are the righteous Ballances uneven? |
A10252 | Is Man a thing befitti ● g thy ● espect? |
A10252 | Is he Bound to reveale his secret Will to thee? |
A10252 | Is he afflicted? |
A10252 | Is he revil''d and scorn''d? |
A10252 | Is he, that( yesterday) went forth, to bring His Fathers Asses home,( to day) crown''d King? |
A10252 | Is it not greater wisdome, to deny The sharp- edg''d knife, and to present his eye With a fine harmlesse Puppit? |
A10252 | Is not Queene Ester bosom''d in our heart? |
A10252 | Is not mans day prefixt, which, when expir''d, Sleepes ● e not quiet as a servant hir''d? |
A10252 | Is th''old growne stale? |
A10252 | Is there no resort To forkt Parnassus sacred Mount? |
A10252 | Is there none To please that over- curious eye of thine, But th''issue of a cursed Philistine? |
A10252 | Is this a ● it speech? |
A10252 | Is this that Citie, whose eternall Glory, Could find no period, for her endlesse storie? |
A10252 | Is this that Conquerour, whose Arme did thunder Vpon the men of Askalon, the power Of whose bent fist, slew thirty in an hower? |
A10252 | Is this that Mistris, and that Queene of Nations? |
A10252 | Is this that State? |
A10252 | Is this that blessed Infant, that began To grow in favour so with God and man? |
A10252 | Is this that daring Conquerour, whose hand Thrasht the proud Philistines in their wasted land? |
A10252 | Is this that holy Thing, against whose Birth Angels must quit their thrones, and visit Earth? |
A10252 | Is this the Nazarite? |
A10252 | Is this the man whose hands unhing''d those Gates, And bare them thence, with pillars, barrs& Grates? |
A10252 | Is this the man, whose courage did contest With a fierce Lyon, grapling brest to brest; And in a twinkling, tore him quite in sunder? |
A10252 | Is ● ot heavens deepest curse with death to boot, Denounc''d to him that takes from, or ads too''t? |
A10252 | It was a wise mans speech, Could never they Know to command, that knew not first t''obey: Where''s then that high command? |
A10252 | It was demanded once, What God did doe Before the World he framed? |
A10252 | Know ● st thou the cause of Snow or haile, which are My fierce Artill''ry in my time of warre? |
A10252 | Know''st thou Heavens course above, or dost thou know Those gentle influences here below? |
A10252 | Know''st thou th''unconstant nature of the weather? |
A10252 | Know''st thou the place whence Light or Darknesse spring ● Can thy deepe age unfold these secret things? |
A10252 | Know''st thou the progresse of the rambling clouds? |
A10252 | Like to a Lyon rouzed from his rest, Rag''d then the King, and thus his rage exprest ● Who is the man that dares attempt this thing? |
A10252 | Lists he to strike? |
A10252 | Liv''st thou the life of man? |
A10252 | Lives he in weale, and full Prosperity? |
A10252 | Lord, I have sinn''d( Great Helper of Mankind) I am but Dust and Ashes, I have sinn''d: Against the ●( as a marke) why hast thou fixt me? |
A10252 | Lord, if thou wilt,( for what is hard to thee?) |
A10252 | MY tongue? |
A10252 | Man undertakes, heaven breathes successe upon it; What good, what evill is done, but heavē hath done it? |
A10252 | Master, Is it I? |
A10252 | May a Nazarite, then, E ● brue and paddle in the bloods of men? |
A10252 | May my desiers hope to find successe, When to ● ffect them, I the Law transgresse? |
A10252 | May my ungarnisht quill presume so much, To glorifie it selfe, and give a touch Vpon the Iland of my Soveraigne Lord? |
A10252 | May not a Potter, that from out the ground, Hath fram''d a Vessell, search if it be sound? |
A10252 | May not our subjects serve, but must our Queene Be made the subject of a vis ● aines spleene? |
A10252 | May not that God, that gave thee thy creation, Turne thee to nothing, by his dispensation? |
A10252 | May these revēge their wrongs, by blood? |
A10252 | More than a man? |
A10252 | Mortall, thou art but Clay: Then shall not he, That fram''d thee for his service, season thee? |
A10252 | Must Angels leave their Thrones of glory thus, To watch our foot- steps, and attend on us? |
A10252 | Must The childrens teeth be set on edge, because Their fathers ate the grapes? |
A10252 | Must he end His weary dayes in darknesse? |
A10252 | Must his hyer, Be knotted cords, and torturing whips of wyer? |
A10252 | Must not the recompence Be full equivalent to the offence? |
A10252 | Must this Heroe spend His latter times in drudgery? |
A10252 | Must this great Conquerour be forc''d to grinde For bread and water? |
A10252 | Must vengeance yet have more? |
A10252 | My busie hand shal nourish Thy fruitfull roots,& make thy brāches flourish: 〈 ◊ 〉 thou my vine? |
A10252 | My strength( alas) Is it like Marble, or my flesh like Brasse? |
A10252 | Nay was not this my word, The very word, my jealous language vented, When this mis- hap might well have beene prevented? |
A10252 | Nay, let thy practice to the earth descend, Prove there, how farre thy power doth extend; From thy full hand will hungry Lions eate? |
A10252 | Need you helpe to fight His quarrels? |
A10252 | Nipt thy succeeding Blossomes? |
A10252 | No Muse implor''d? |
A10252 | No word, No thought of Helicon? |
A10252 | Noy, we''l give ore T ● 〈 ◊ 〉 thy Bridall fondnesse any more: Betray your lovely husbands secrets? |
A10252 | O Thou the fairest flowre of mortall birth, If such a beautie may be borne of earth, ● ● gell or Virgin, which? |
A10252 | O Thou, whose love I prize above my life, More worthy farre t''enjoy a fairer wife, Tell me, to what cool shade dost thou resort? |
A10252 | O can those drops, that trickle from those eyes Vpon thy naked bosome, not surprize Thy neighb''ring heart? |
A10252 | O can thy hear ● not melt as well as they? |
A10252 | O righteous Isr''el, where, O, where art thou? |
A10252 | O thou( the Spring of mercy) wilt thou send No ease to our Afflictions, no end? |
A10252 | O, sudden change; Is this that holy Nazarite, for whom Heaven shew''d a Miracle on the barren wombe? |
A10252 | O, then I kn ● w, it was no man: No, no; It was the face of God: Our eyes Have seene his face:( who ever saw''t, but dies?) |
A10252 | O, whither shall poore mortalls flie For comfort? |
A10252 | O; canst thou reade Her double storie, and thy heart not bleed? |
A10252 | Occasion brings New Iealousies betwixt the hearts of Kings: Wills he a famine? |
A10252 | Oh, wherefore hast thou rent Thy Mercy from us? |
A10252 | On what foundation shall his hopes relie? |
A10252 | Or Ashur whip thee? |
A10252 | Or He, whose wrists, being bound together, did Break Cords like flax, and double Ropes like thrid? |
A10252 | Or Sinay blast thee with her sulph''rous smokes?" |
A10252 | Or Sun- burnt Autumne with he fruitfull wombe? |
A10252 | Or are my Lawes unjust? |
A10252 | Or art thou ought but Dust? |
A10252 | Or can he border Vpon confusion, that''s the God of order? |
A10252 | Or can his best Doe Iustice equall right, which he transgrest? |
A10252 | Or can the whites of Egges well please the tast? |
A10252 | Or can these things be done When we are dead? |
A10252 | Or could the Army goe No further? |
A10252 | Or did thy summer Prophets ere foresay These evills, or warn''d thee of a winters day? |
A10252 | Or did ● hat Steele- digesting Bird assume His downy Flags from thee? |
A10252 | Or didst thou feed by chance, and not observ''d What food it was, but tooke as Fortune carv''d? |
A10252 | Or doe thy hands make heaven a recompence, By strowing dust upon thy bryny face? |
A10252 | Or else to him, whom God hath wall''d about, That would, but can not finde a passage out? |
A10252 | Or expect you his applause, Thus( brib''d with selfe- conceit) to plead his cause? |
A10252 | Or had Boreas blowne His full- mouth''d blast, and cast thy houses downe, And sl ● ine thy sonnes amid their jollities? |
A10252 | Or hadst thou lost thy Vineyard full of trees? |
A10252 | Or hath Heaven no requitall for thy painfull Faith, 〈 ◊ 〉 then this? |
A10252 | Or hath His angry Brow a smile? |
A10252 | Or hath thy ravenous stomach beene o''represt With common diet at thy last great feast? |
A10252 | Or have the rurall woods engrost thee there, And thus fore- stall''d our empty markets here? |
A10252 | Or he be strong, that ayery Breath can cast ▪ Can he be wise, that knowes not how to live? |
A10252 | Or hee be rich, that nothing hath to give? |
A10252 | Or how could he withstood The necessary danger of his bloud? |
A10252 | Or if by for bushing, he take more paine To make it fairer, shall the Pot complaine? |
A10252 | Or is his Wisedome, or his Mercy greater? |
A10252 | Or is it I? |
A10252 | Or know''st thou whence Aurora takes her flight? |
A10252 | Or life to such as languish in distresse, 〈 ◊ 〉 long for death, which, if it come by leysure, They ransack for it, as a hidden treasure? |
A10252 | Or lowes the Oxe, when as hee wants no meat? |
A10252 | Or lyes she any where? |
A10252 | Or onely to advance 〈 ◊ 〉 yet unknowne Authority? |
A10252 | Or shall an Issue come From the chill closet of a barren wombe? |
A10252 | Or the Lions rent thee?" |
A10252 | Or those ruder tongues, That schoold the faithlesse Prophet for the wrongs He did to sacred Iustice? |
A10252 | Or was the Paper scant, or dull the Pen That wrote those sacred lines? |
A10252 | Or was this dish so tempting, that no power Was left in thee, to stay another hower? |
A10252 | Or was''t some false delusion, that possest The weaknesse of a lonely womans brest? |
A10252 | Or what request of thine, are found denyall? |
A10252 | Or whence so many Winds proceed ▪ and whither Wer''t thou made privy, or a stander ● by, When God stretcht forth his spangled Canopy? |
A10252 | Or where shall sorrow finde A place for harbour? |
A10252 | Or who Dare once reprove them, for the deeds thy doe? |
A10252 | Or who bedewes the earth with gentle showres, Filling her pregnant soyle with fruits and flowres, What father got the raine? |
A10252 | Or why should heaven love rechlesse Man so much? |
A10252 | Or why was not my Birth, and death together? |
A10252 | Or with a Hymne unhinge the strongest Iayle? |
A10252 | Or with slow speech best Orators convince? |
A10252 | Or with what engines can a man ensnare him? |
A10252 | Our eyes can not behold that glorious face, Which is all life, unruin''d in the place: How is our nature chang''d? |
A10252 | Rage then, and see who will approve thy rage, What Saint will give thy railing Patronage? |
A10252 | Rebuke you( then) my words to have it thought My speech is franticke, with my griefe distraught? |
A10252 | SAid Bildad then, When will yee bring to end The speeches whereabout ye so contend? |
A10252 | SAid Bildad then, With whom dost thou contest, But with thy Maker, that lives ever blest? |
A10252 | SAy, is not Satan justly stiled than, A Tempter, and an enemy to Man? |
A10252 | Said Eliph ● z; What then remaines? |
A10252 | Said, then, th''Eternall; From what quarter now Hath businesse brough thee? |
A10252 | Say then, who can be just before him? |
A10252 | Say( poreblinde mortall) Who art thou that can Thus cleare thy crimes, and dar''st( with vaine applause) Make me defendant in thy sinfull cause? |
A10252 | Say, Was earth not measur''d by this Arme of mine? |
A10252 | Say, say,( my lifes preserver) what''s the thing, That lyes in the performance of a King, Shall be deny''d? |
A10252 | Say, say,( thou bount ● ous harvest of my joyes)( Said then the King) what dumpish griefe annoyes Thy troubled soule? |
A10252 | Say; Dare thy lips defame an earthly Prince? |
A10252 | Search you the hearts of men( my Friends) or can You judge the Inward, by the Outward Man? |
A10252 | Seem''d he not asleepe? |
A10252 | Seest thou the fruitfull Wombe? |
A10252 | Seest thou with fleshly eyes? |
A10252 | Shal thy words stop our mouths, he that hath blamd And scoft at others, shall he die unsham''d? |
A10252 | Shall I destroy the mighty Ninevie, Whose people are like sands about the Sea? |
A10252 | Shall I subvert, and bring to desolation A City,( nay, more aptly term''d a Nation) Whose walls boast lesse their beauty than their might? |
A10252 | Shall Manoah''s loynes be fruitfull? |
A10252 | Shall Manoah''s wife give suck? |
A10252 | Shall a Sonne Blesse his last dayes? |
A10252 | Shall her cold wombe be now, in age, restor''d? |
A10252 | Shall my Decrees be licenced by thee? |
A10252 | Shall one man suffer for another? |
A10252 | So Haman thus be thought, Whom more than I Deserves the Sun- shine of my Princes eye? |
A10252 | So said, The Lord did interrupt his passion, And said, How now, is this a seemely fashion? |
A10252 | So that the guiltlesse blood came trickling after? |
A10252 | So wretched Ionah: But Iehovah thus; What boot''s it so to storme outragious: Becomes it thus my servants heart to swell: Can anger helpe thee, Ionah? |
A10252 | Speake Lady, speake at large, ● ho is''t? |
A10252 | Speake man, Whences awayes,"From what Confines ca ● ●''st thou? |
A10252 | Speake, Lady, what''s the thing Thy heart desires? |
A10252 | Strange is the charge: Shall I goe to a place Vnknowne and forraigne? |
A10252 | THe jaw bone of an Asse? |
A10252 | TVrne where I list, new cause of woe presents My poore distracted soule with new laments; Where shall I turne? |
A10252 | Takes God delight in humane weaknesse, then? |
A10252 | Tell me wherein Art thou more priviledg''d ▪ Or can thy sinne Plead more t''excuse it? |
A10252 | Tell us, What is thine Art( another sayes)"That thou professest? |
A10252 | Th ● se thirty dayes uncall''d for have I bin 〈 ◊ 〉 my Lord; How dare I now goe in? |
A10252 | That done, h''enjoyes the crowne of all his labour, Could he but once out- nose his right- hand- neighbour ● Lives he at quiet now? |
A10252 | That hand That once did curse, doth now the curse withstand: Is God unjust? |
A10252 | The Lot accuses thee, thy words condemne thee,"The ● ● ves( thy deaths men) strive to overwhelme thee:"What she we doe? |
A10252 | The Musicke made of Sighs, the Songs of Cries, The sad Spectators with their watry Eyes? |
A10252 | The Persian Lawes no time may contradict; And are the Lawes of God lesse firme and strict? |
A10252 | The Spirit gone, can Flesh and Blood indure? |
A10252 | The learned Counsell ple ● d the case; The Queene degr ● ded from her place? |
A10252 | The sable Stage, The lively Actors with their equipage? |
A10252 | The winters heate And summers damp, shall make his will compleate: Lists he to send the Sword? |
A10252 | Then answered Iob, All this, before I knew, They want no griefe, that finde such friends as you? |
A10252 | Then how dare Thy ravenous lips thus, thus at randome runne And countermaund what I the Lord have done? |
A10252 | These the tower and state, That all th''amazed Earth stood wondring at? |
A10252 | They''l come& pitch their Tents about our heads; See they a sinner penitent, and mourne For his bewail''d offences, and returne? |
A10252 | They''l fill our hearts with joy, and resolution: Or doe we languish in our sickly beds? |
A10252 | They''l guard our heads from danger,& protect us: Are we in prison, or in Persecution? |
A10252 | They''ll come and sing About our beds: Does any judgement bring Iust cause of griefe? |
A10252 | Things that have no sense, Shall vindicate his Quarrell, on th''Offence: Lists he to send a plague? |
A10252 | Thinke you to flourish ever? |
A10252 | Thus, thus that Spring of Mercy oftentimes Doth speak to man, that man may speak his crimes? |
A10252 | Thy Lamb- like countenance, so faire, so meeke? |
A10252 | Thy Saviours blood will thaw that frost agen: Thy pray''rs that should be servent, hot as fier, Proceed but coldly from a dull desier; What then? |
A10252 | Thy face hath smiles, as well as frownes, by turnes; Thy fier giveth light as well as burnes? |
A10252 | Thy lawlesse words implying, that it can Advantage none to live an upright man? |
A10252 | Till then thou must refraine to drinke, or eate, Wines, and strong drink, and Law- forbidden meate? |
A10252 | Times great Favorite? |
A10252 | To what advantage canst thou more expose Thy life than this? |
A10252 | To whom dost thou extend These these thy lavish lips, and to what end? |
A10252 | Turne but the key, and thou maist locke it in: Or wouldst thou have a Blessing fall upon thee? |
A10252 | Vnkinde Iudeans, what have you presented Before your eyes? |
A10252 | WAs this that wombe, the Angel did enlarge From barrennesse? |
A10252 | WHat curious face is this? |
A10252 | WHat if the frailty of my feebler part, Lockt up the Portalls of my drowsie heart? |
A10252 | WHere, where art thou, O sacred Lambe of peace, That promis''d to the heavie laden, ease? |
A10252 | WHo gives me then an Adamantine quill? |
A10252 | WOuld beauty faine be flatter''d with a grace She never had? |
A10252 | WOuldst thou, when death had done deserve a story Should staine the memory of great Pompeyes glory? |
A10252 | Wants he thy helpe? |
A10252 | Was he tormented in excesse of measure, And doe I live yet? |
A10252 | Was there no fitter place, for them to stay, But even just there? |
A10252 | Was there, O was there not a just suspect, My preaching would procure this effect? |
A10252 | Was thy deare body scourg''d, and torne with whips? |
A10252 | Were Ionah''s eyes Still clos''d, and he, not of his life bereaven? |
A10252 | Wert thou( Lord) hang''d upon the Cursed Tree? |
A10252 | What Rites? |
A10252 | What Traitor then dares be so bold, to part Our heart and us? |
A10252 | What are my Children? |
A10252 | What art thou more than she? |
A10252 | What base attempts can happen, unprevented? |
A10252 | What brave exploits, what well deserving glory; The subject of an everlasting story, Their hands atchiev''d? |
A10252 | What businesse brought you hether? |
A10252 | What can we more clame, Then they, that now are scorching in that flame, That hath nor moderation, rest, nor end? |
A10252 | What could he more? |
A10252 | What did our eyes behold? |
A10252 | What disastrous weather 〈 ◊ 〉 you this way? |
A10252 | What faith hadst thou, by leaving thine abode,"To thinke to flye the presence of thy God?" |
A10252 | What gaines the Hypocrite, although the whole Worlds wealth he purchase, with the prize on''s soule? |
A10252 | What glory reapes he from afflicted men? |
A10252 | What griefe may be describ''d, but was thine owne ▪ Is this a just mans case? |
A10252 | What hand of Man can hinder my designe? |
A10252 | What hath the Lazar left him, but his griefe, And( what might best been spar''d) his foolish wife? |
A10252 | What have I then to boast, What Title can I challenge more than this, A sinfull man? |
A10252 | What hold is there of earthly good? |
A10252 | What holy course of life shall be Be trained in? |
A10252 | What hoots our prayer, or us to fall before him? |
A10252 | What humour led thee to a place unknowne,"To seeke forraigne Land, and leave thine owne?" |
A10252 | What if consuming fier( falne from heaven) Had all thy servants of their lives bereaven, And burnt thy sheepe? |
A10252 | What if our torments passe the bounds of measure? |
A10252 | What if the Serpent stung old Adam dead: Young Adam lives, to breake that Serpents head? |
A10252 | What is in us poore Dust and Ashes, Lord, That thou should''st looke upon us, and afford Thy precious favours to us, and impart Thy gracious Counsels? |
A10252 | What is th''Almighty, that we should adore him? |
A10252 | What is the cause? |
A10252 | What know you, that we never knew? |
A10252 | What meanes this franticke Nazarite to take Gods office from his hand, and thus to make His wrongs amends? |
A10252 | What meant that fi''ry Pillar, that by night Appear''d to Isr''el, and gave Isr''el light? |
A10252 | What mends by mortall Man can then be given To the offended Majesty of Heaven? |
A10252 | What mister word is that? |
A10252 | What more than Devill, What envious Miscreant hath done this evill? |
A10252 | What name can raise And crowne his drooping thoughts, but Delila''s? |
A10252 | What need I wast this breath? |
A10252 | What needs there Life to him, that can not have A B ● ● ne, more gracious, then a quiet Grave? |
A10252 | What pleasure it in dainties, if the taste Be in it selfe distemper''d? |
A10252 | What power have I to mitigate my paine? |
A10252 | What prosp''rous fate Exalts his Pagan head? |
A10252 | What punishment? |
A10252 | What sad request Hangs on her lips, dwells in her doubtfull brest? |
A10252 | What secret Cloister could there then afford A screene''twixt faithlesse Ionah, and his Lord? |
A10252 | What secret fire inflam''d that fainting breath That blasted Pharo? |
A10252 | What shall his Office be? |
A10252 | What shall we do? |
A10252 | What then is man? |
A10252 | What then, if cruell Pashur heape on stroakes?" |
A10252 | What then? |
A10252 | What then? |
A10252 | What thing is Man, that Gods regard is such? |
A10252 | What was thy sinfull act, that causes this,"( Sayes one) wherein hast thou so done amisse?" |
A10252 | What way of bleeding shall we chuse T''observe? |
A10252 | What''s man? |
A10252 | What''s that to thee? |
A10252 | What, Ionah, shall a Gourd so move thy pity? |
A10252 | What, art thou angry( Ionah) for a Gourd? |
A10252 | What, art thou borne a Iew? |
A10252 | What, canst thou thunder with a voyce like Me? |
A10252 | What, if by strong oppression The Chaldees had usurp''d unjust possession Vpon thy Camels? |
A10252 | What, if rare vertues doe inflame His rapt affection? |
A10252 | What, if th''Arabians with their ruder traine, Had kild thine Oxen, and thy Cattell sl ● ine? |
A10252 | What, if the condition Of an admir''d, and dainty disposition Hath wen his soule? |
A10252 | What, is this he, who( strengthn''d by heav''ns hand) Was borne a Champion, to redeeme the Land? |
A10252 | What, shall his curse to Amalek be void? |
A10252 | What, therefore, if censorious tongues withstand The judgement of my sober Conscience? |
A10252 | What, was this a deed That with the Calling he profest, agreed? |
A10252 | What? |
A10252 | What? |
A10252 | When Dust and Ashes mortally offends, Can Dust and Ashes make eternall mends? |
A10252 | Where are thy maiden- smiles, thy blushing cheeke? |
A10252 | Where dost thou bide? |
A10252 | Where is that spotlesse Flower, that while- ere Within thy lilly bosome thou didst weare? |
A10252 | Where is the Traitor? |
A10252 | Where is this love become in later age? |
A10252 | Where is thy Lampe? |
A10252 | Where is thy Royall off- spring to succeed Thy Throne, and to preserve thy Princely seed Till this time? |
A10252 | Where lyes she then? |
A10252 | Where shall I goe, or which way shall I wind? |
A10252 | Where wert thou, when the Planets fi ● st did blaze, And in their sphears sang forth their Makers praise? |
A10252 | Whereat Iob thus: Doth heav''ns high judgement stand To be supported by thy weaker hand? |
A10252 | Wherein hath Wisdome beene more good to you Then us? |
A10252 | Wherein, have I beene faithlesse of disloyall? |
A10252 | Whereto( Ierusalem) to what shall I Compare this thy unequall''d misery? |
A10252 | Which when a wretched man''s once nuzzled in, How soundly sleepes he, without feare, or wit? |
A10252 | Who dares attempt this thing? |
A10252 | Who e''re thought heavē a joy cōpar''d to this? |
A10252 | Who ever lov''d so deare, As I have done? |
A10252 | Who first, layes downe his Gage, to meet me? |
A10252 | Who is''t can stop his eares 〈 ◊ 〉 these faire lips? |
A10252 | Who is''t that rends the gloomy Clouds in sunder, Whose sudden rapture strikes forth fire& thunder? |
A10252 | Who is''t that tames the raging of the Seas, And swathes them up in mists, when e''re he please? |
A10252 | Who knowes, if God will his intent persever?" |
A10252 | Who rais''d the Rafters of the Heavens, but He? |
A10252 | Who sees, who heares thē, unamaz''d with wonder? |
A10252 | Who takes the Plaintifes pleading? |
A10252 | Who warranted his breath To threaten ruine, and to thunder death? |
A10252 | Who was''t inspir''d thy soule with understanding? |
A10252 | Whom seekes the King to honour more than me? |
A10252 | Whose Infants are in number, so amounting? |
A10252 | Whose hand did ayde me? |
A10252 | Whose hearts are sorrowfull, and soules contrite? |
A10252 | Why bring you thus an Army to us? |
A10252 | Why did I sucke, to feele such griefes as these? |
A10252 | Why did the Midwife take me on her knees? |
A10252 | Why did the sword escape''s? |
A10252 | Why dost thou thus pursue me, like thy Foe? |
A10252 | Why hast thou not obey''d( but thus transgrest)"The voyce of God, whom thou acknowledgest?" |
A10252 | Why should not I wish Death? |
A10252 | Why should not times in all things be forbid, When to the just, their time of sorrow''s hid? |
A10252 | Why so was she: Were thy temptations strong? |
A10252 | Why so were hers: What canst thou plead, but she Had power to plead the same, as well as thee? |
A10252 | Why then hop''d man, without a reason Why? |
A10252 | Why was I borne? |
A10252 | Why were we borne To be devour''d and pin''d with famine? |
A10252 | Why, rather, didst thou not remoue my sin, And salve the sorrowes that I raved in? |
A10252 | Why? |
A10252 | Will any of you undertake to teach Your Maker, things so farre above your reach? |
A10252 | Will he be handled as a bird? |
A10252 | Will he make suit for favour from thy hands, Or be enthralled to thy fierce commands? |
A10252 | Will heaven heare the voice of his disease? |
A10252 | Will scorching Cancer at thy summons come? |
A10252 | Will you doe wrong, to doe Gods Iustice right? |
A10252 | Wilt thou make Comments on my Text,& must I be unrighteous, to conclude thee, just? |
A10252 | Wonder not at the Title( A FEAST FOR VVORMES:) for it is a Song of Mercy: What greater FEAST than Mercy? |
A10252 | Would any from a pr ● ● ner prove a Prince? |
A10252 | Would any strive with Samson for renowne, Whose brawny arme can strike most pillers downe ▪ Or try a fall with Angels, and prevaile? |
A10252 | Wouldst thou behold a Tragick Sceane of sorrow, Whose wofull Plot the Author did not borrow From sad invention? |
A10252 | Wouldst thou prevent a judgement, due to sinne? |
A10252 | YEt sleeps thy vengeance? |
A10252 | YOu noy some weeds, that lift your crests so high, When better plants, for want of moysture die? |
A10252 | Yes, doe: T will make you Gods, and know as much As he that made it: Thinke you, you can fall Into deaths hands? |
A10252 | Yet forty dayes, and Niniveh shall perish? |
A10252 | a great exchange of war ●, Wherein all sorts,& sexes cheapning art, The Flesh, the Devill sit, and cry, What lacke ye? |
A10252 | am I a King? |
A10252 | and blinde? |
A10252 | and doe this? |
A10252 | and for her sake, What is''t the King would not? |
A10252 | and force it to obey? |
A10252 | and now, at last Finde pleasure, when her prime of youth is past? |
A10252 | and why hast thou done this?" |
A10252 | and yet live in pleasure? |
A10252 | and( unspide) To shoot the flowers of your fruitlesse pride? |
A10252 | are the Daughters of thy brethren growne So poore in Worth, and Beauty? |
A10252 | are these those goodly Stations? |
A10252 | b''ing so poore a thing; what needst thou minde him? |
A10252 | but must needs expect a foe Iust where his weapon of destruction lay? |
A10252 | but quickned lumps of earth? |
A10252 | but stay, what need my lips be lavish In choice of words, when one alone wil ravish? |
A10252 | came this bone, by chance, To Samsons hand? |
A10252 | can nothing please Thy curious palate, but such Cates as these? |
A10252 | canst thou tell me? |
A10252 | could Sinners finde out ne''re a one, More fit than Thee, for them to spit upon? |
A10252 | could thy razing hand Finde ne''re a subject, but the Holy Land? |
A10252 | does thy troubled care Not tingle? |
A10252 | dost thou frowne? |
A10252 | dost thou well? |
A10252 | doth he torment him Lest that his untam''d power should prevent him? |
A10252 | for death''s prepar''d, And flames of wrath are blowne for such: Doth H ● No ● know my actions, that so well knowes mee? |
A10252 | from what chill wombe Did frosts, and hard- congealed Waters come? |
A10252 | have we delaid Our faithfull service, or denied to doe it, When you have pleas''d to call your servants to it? |
A10252 | his very port and guise? |
A10252 | how Eagle- eyd Are you, to see, what to the world beside Was da ● ke? |
A10252 | how can I Survive, to see my kin, and people dye? |
A10252 | how fraile and brittle? |
A10252 | how great''s the power of thine hand? |
A10252 | how great''s thy Name in all the Land: How mighty are the wonders of thy hand? |
A10252 | how more than men? |
A10252 | how poore a thing is wretched man? |
A10252 | how shall we, that are but bushes, stand: How fond, corrupt, how senselesse is mankinde? |
A10252 | know''st thou the reason why? |
A10252 | may these Have power to kill,& murther where they please? |
A10252 | nor thy spirits faint to heare The voice of those, whose dying shriekes proclaime Their tortures, that are broyling in the flame? |
A10252 | or Gentile? |
A10252 | or a well- plac''d word? |
A10252 | or bereaven thee Of thy deare latest hope, thy bosome Friend? |
A10252 | or both in one, ● ● gell by beauty, Virgin by thy moane, ● ● y, who is He that may deserve these teares, ● hese precious drops? |
A10252 | or can his wrath Be quencht with ought, but righteous Abels blood? |
A10252 | or can th''Almighties tongue, That is all very truth, doe truth that wrong, Not to performe a vow? |
A10252 | or doe they glance By favour? |
A10252 | or hide a shame? |
A10252 | or how could hee Teach this,( Thou shalt not kill) if Ionah be His life''s owne Butcher? |
A10252 | or may Thy fingers bind him for thy childrens play? |
A10252 | or my Princes Grace, So long as cursed Mordecai survives? |
A10252 | or offer violence Vpon his sacred Iustice? |
A10252 | or purge thy''offence? |
A10252 | or rudely presse( V ● call''d) into his presence? |
A10252 | or their lingring death? |
A10252 | or these, but yeeld? |
A10252 | or vary like the winde? |
A10252 | or what deserved Fine? |
A10252 | or why Lament we, whom we rather should envie? |
A10252 | or yet by any meanes, excluded, That is in all things? |
A10252 | sha ● ● I then be silent? |
A10252 | shall I implore my friends? |
A10252 | shall our thoughts inquir ● Into the depth of secrets, unconfounded, When in the shoare of Nature they were drowned? |
A10252 | shall the wicked, for thy sake( That would''st not taste of evill) in good partake? |
A10252 | than which, hell needs no other fire: How nimble are our Foemen to betray Our soules? |
A10252 | that ample fam ● Your sexe, to glorifie for their honour''d name, Your noble sexe in former dayes atchiev''d? |
A10252 | the very Stones shall flie From their unmov''d Foundations, and destroy: Lists he to punish? |
A10252 | their joyfull mouthes will blow Their louder Trumpets, Or doe feares affect us? |
A10252 | they''ll fall a grieving too; Doe we triumph? |
A10252 | thy glory''s great enough without him: Why dost thou( thus) disturb thy mind about him? |
A10252 | thy zealous Shepheard now? |
A10252 | was I help''t by thine? |
A10252 | was my faith suspected, Which I so firmely plighted? |
A10252 | was not heavens house exempt From thy accursed Rape? |
A10252 | was this that wōbe, that must not be defil''d With uncleane meates, lest it pollute the child? |
A10252 | we may not stay thee:"Or shall we save thee? |
A10252 | were all too little, were they ours: Or shall wee burne( untill our life expires) An endlesse Sacrifice in Holy fires? |
A10252 | what are men? |
A10252 | what foole would not admire To see their greater folly? |
A10252 | what helpe( ah me) what hope is left To him, that of thy prescence is bereft? |
A10252 | what hope have wee to finde reliefe, And want the meanes that may divulge our griefe? |
A10252 | what is Man, tha ● thou should''st raise him so High at the first, then sinke him downe so low? |
A10252 | what is man, but like a worme that crawles Open to danger every foote that fals? |
A10252 | what is our desert, But Death, and Horror? |
A10252 | what mad man could presume So dry a tooth should yeeld so great a Rheume? |
A10252 | what made thee( fainting) gaspe for ayre ▪ A simple Word upon a painted Wall? |
A10252 | what marble eye Can see these, these my ruines, and not cry? |
A10252 | what needst thou stretch Thy direfull hand upon so poore a wretch? |
A10252 | what shall become of thee? |
A10252 | what''s he can reprehen ● h ● m? |
A10252 | whence com''st thou? |
A10252 | where that future joy, Which you fals- prophecy''d I should enjoy? |
A10252 | where''s thine iron Rod? |
A10252 | where, O soveraig ● ● King, Is that great Babel, that was rais''d so high, To shew the highnesse of thy Majesty? |
A10252 | wherein hath Man to trust? |
A10252 | whether?" |
A10252 | who would not thinke The thirstie Conquerour, for want of drinke, Should first have died? |
A10252 | who would raise A Tower, to perpetuate the praise And lasting Glory of their renowned Name, What have they l ● ft but Monuments of shame? |
A10252 | why doe not mortalls cease To build their hopes upon so short a lease? |
A10252 | why dost thou thus absent Thy glorious face? |
A10252 | will that arme of thine Make me their slave, whom thou hast promist mine? |
A10252 | with what delight? |
A10252 | wouldst thou faine be rich? |
A10252 | ¶ ANd am I here, and my Redeemer gone? |
A10252 | ¶ But stay; Did one of Gods elected number,( Whose eies should never sleep, nor eie lids ● lūber) So much forget himselfe? |
A10252 | ¶ CAn he be faire, that withers at a blast? |
A10252 | ¶ GOd built the World, and all that therein is He framed, yet how poore a part is his? |
A10252 | ¶ How slight a thing is man? |
A10252 | ¶ IS fasting then the thing that God requires? |
A10252 | ¶ Malfido, rouze thy leaden spirit, bestirre thee; Hold up thy drouzy head, here''s comfort for thee What if thy zeale be frozen hard? |
A10252 | ¶ O where, and what''s thy Kingdome( blessed God) Where is thy Scepter? |
A10252 | ¶ Seem''d not thy Spouse unkind, to hear thee weep And not redresse thee? |
A10252 | ¶ WHat is the World? |
A10252 | ¶ What shall we then returne the God of heaven? |
A10252 | ● Yet what availes my wealth, my place, my might ▪ How can I relish them? |
A10252 | ● ants he no pleasure, that his wanton eye 〈 ◊ 〉 crave, or hope from fortune? |
A10252 | ● eets he no sullen care, no sudden losse 〈 ◊ 〉 coole his joyes? |
A10252 | ● here graze thy Sheepe, where doe thy lambs disport 〈 ◊ 〉 from the scorching of this* sowltry weather? |
A10252 | ● ● ere heaven withdraws, the creaturs power shakes ▪ 〈 ◊ 〉 miserie''s wanting there, where God forsakes? |
A10252 | 〈 … 〉 our yearly tributes justly paid? |
A10252 | 〈 ◊ 〉 may his more familiar hands disburse 〈 ◊ 〉 liberall favors, from the royall purse? |
A10252 | 〈 ◊ 〉 shall, in briefe, my ruder tongue discover The speaking Image of my absent Lover? |
A10252 | 〈 ◊ 〉 strange adventures? |
A10252 | 〈 ◊ 〉 then can linger, unattemted? |
A10252 | 〈 ◊ 〉 then shouldst thou deceive me, and impart S ● ● oule a falshood, to so true a heart? |
A10252 | 〈 ◊ 〉 yee that God commits the Sword of power 〈 ◊ 〉 the hands of Magistrates, to scower 〈 ◊ 〉 keep it bright? |
A10252 | 〈 ◊ 〉, his Honour can not soare too high, 〈 ◊ 〉 palefac''d death to follow: He must dye: Lives he a Conqu''rour? |