Mr. Geo. Withers revived, or, His prophesie of our present calamity, and (except we repent) future misery written by him in the year 1628. Wither, George, 1588-1667. 1683 Approx. 28 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 3 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2006-06 (EEBO-TCP Phase 1). A66763 Wing W3173 ESTC R11628 12930272 ocm 12930272 95639 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal . The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A66763) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 95639) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 993:18) Mr. Geo. Withers revived, or, His prophesie of our present calamity, and (except we repent) future misery written by him in the year 1628. Wither, George, 1588-1667. 4 p. Printed for William Marshall ..., London : 1683. Reproduction of original in Huntington Library. Caption title. An extract from the author's Britains remembrancer, 1628. In verse. Created by converting TCP files to TEI P5 using tcp2tei.xsl, TEI @ Oxford. Re-processed by University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Northwestern, with changes to facilitate morpho-syntactic tagging. Gap elements of known extent have been transformed into placeholder characters or elements to simplify the filling in of gaps by user contributors. EEBO-TCP is a partnership between the Universities of Michigan and Oxford and the publisher ProQuest to create accurately transcribed and encoded texts based on the image sets published by ProQuest via their Early English Books Online (EEBO) database (http://eebo.chadwyck.com). The general aim of EEBO-TCP is to encode one copy (usually the first edition) of every monographic English-language title published between 1473 and 1700 available in EEBO. EEBO-TCP aimed to produce large quantities of textual data within the usual project restraints of time and funding, and therefore chose to create diplomatic transcriptions (as opposed to critical editions) with light-touch, mainly structural encoding based on the Text Encoding Initiative (http://www.tei-c.org). The EEBO-TCP project was divided into two phases. The 25,363 texts created during Phase 1 of the project have been released into the public domain as of 1 January 2015. Anyone can now take and use these texts for their own purposes, but we respectfully request that due credit and attribution is given to their original source. Users should be aware of the process of creating the TCP texts, and therefore of any assumptions that can be made about the data. Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). If an author (or for an anonymous work, the title) appears in NCBEL, then their works are eligible for inclusion. Selection was intended to range over a wide variety of subject areas, to reflect the true nature of the print record of the period. In general, first editions of a works in English were prioritized, although there are a number of works in other languages, notably Latin and Welsh, included and sometimes a second or later edition of a work was chosen if there was a compelling reason to do so. Image sets were sent to external keying companies for transcription and basic encoding. Quality assurance was then carried out by editorial teams in Oxford and Michigan. 5% (or 5 pages, whichever is the greater) of each text was proofread for accuracy and those which did not meet QA standards were returned to the keyers to be redone. After proofreading, the encoding was enhanced and/or corrected and characters marked as illegible were corrected where possible up to a limit of 100 instances per text. Any remaining illegibles were encoded as s. Understanding these processes should make clear that, while the overall quality of TCP data is very good, some errors will remain and some readable characters will be marked as illegible. Users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a TCP editor. The texts were encoded and linked to page images in accordance with level 4 of the TEI in Libraries guidelines. Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Keying and markup guidelines are available at the Text Creation Partnership web site . eng Great Britain -- History -- Puritan Revolution, 1642-1660 -- Poetry. 2005-07 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2005-09 SPi Global Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2006-01 Ali Jakobson Sampled and proofread 2006-01 Ali Jakobson Text and markup reviewed and edited 2006-04 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion M r. Geo. Withers Revived : OR , His PROPHESIE of our present Calamity , and ( except we Repent ) future Misery . Written by him in the Year 1628. GOD hath a Controversie with our Land , And In an evil plight Affairs do stand : Already we do smart for doing ill , Yet us the hand of God afflicteth still , And many see it not ; as many be So wilful , that his hand they will not see . Some plainly view the same , but nothing care ; Some at the sight thereof amazed are Like Belthazar , and have a trembling heart , Yet will not from their vanities depart . Some dream that all things do by chance succeed , And that I prate more of them than I need : But Heaven and Earth to witness I invoke , That carelesly I nothing here have spoke . If this , O sickly Island , thou believe , And for thy great infirmity shalt grieve , And grieving of thy follies make confessions , And so confess thine infinite transgressions , That thou amend those Errors , God shall then Thy manifold Distempers cure agen ; Make all thy Scarlet sins as white as Snow , And cast thy threatned Judgments on thy Foe . But if thou ( fondly thinking thou art well ) Shalt slight this Message , which my Muse doth tell , And scorn her Counsel ; if thou shalt not rue Thy former waies , but frowardly pursue Thy wilful course ; then hark what I am bold ( In spight of all thy madness ) to unfold ; For I will tell thy Fortune ; which , when they That are unborn shall read another day ; They will believe God's mercy did infuse Thy Poets breast with a Prophetick Muse . And know , that he this Author did prefer , To be from him , this Isles Remembrancer . If thou , I say , Oh Britain , shalt retain Thy crying sins , thou dost presume in vain Of God's Protection : If thou stop thine ear , Or burn this Rowl , in which recorded are Thy just Indictments , it shall written be With new Additions , deeply stampt on thee With such Characters , that no time shall race Their fatal Image from thy scarred face . Though haughtily thou dost thy self dispose ; Because the Sea thy Borders doth inclose ; Although thou multiply thy In-land Forces , And muster up large Troops of Men and Horses ; Though like an Eagle thou thy wings display'st , And ( high thy self advancing ) proudly say'st , I sit aloft , and am so high , that none Can fetch me from the place I rest upon : Yea , though thou no advantages did'st want , Of which the gloriest Emperies did vaunt ; Yet , sure , thou shalt be humbled and brought low , Ev'n then , perhaps , when less thou fear'st it so . Till thou repent , provisions which are made For thy defence , or others to invade , Shall be in vain ; and still , the greater cost Thou shalt bestow , the honour that is lost Shall be the greater ; and thy wasted strength Be sick of a Consumption at the length . Thy Treaties which for peace and profit be , Shall neither peace nor profit bring to thee . Yea , all thy winnings shall but fewel be , To feed those follies that now spring in thee . On all thy fruits and Cattel in the Fields , On what the Air , or what the Water yields , On Prince or People , on both weak and strong , On Priest and Prophet , on both old and young ; Yea , on each person , place , and every thing , The plague it hath deserved , God shall bring . A leanness shall thy fatness quite devour ; Thy Wheat shall in the place of wholsom Flower , Yield nought but Bran. Instead of Grass and Corn , Thou shalt in time of Harvest reap the Thorn , The Thistle , and the Bryar . Of their shadows Thy Groves shall robbed be . Thy Flower Medows Shall steril wax . There shall be seldom seen Sheep on the Downs , or Shepherds on the Green. Thy Walks , thy Gardens , and each pleasant Plot , Shall be as those where men inhabit not . Thy Villages , where goodly dwellings are , Shall stand as if they unfrequented were . Thy Cities , and thy Palaces , wherein Most neatness and magnificence hath been , Shall heaps of Rubbish be , and ( as in those Demolish'd Abbies , wherein Daws and Crows Now make their nests ) the Bramble and the Nettle , Shall in their Halls and Parlours root and setle : And moreover , they that now are trained , In ease , and with soft pleasures entertained ; Instead of idle Games , and wanton Dances , Shall practice how to handle Guns and Launces , And be compell'd to leave their friends embraces , To end their lives in divers uncouth places , Or else , thy face , with their own blood defile , In hope to keep themselves and thee from spoil . Thy purest Rivers God shall turn to blood ; With every Lake that hath been sweet and good . Ev'n in thy nostrils he shall make it stink , For nothing shall thy people eat or drink , Until their own , or others blood it cost ; Or put their lives in hazard to be lost . Most loathsome Frogs ; that is a race impure , Of base condition , and of birth obscure , This hateful brood shall climb to croke and sing , Within the lodging-Chambers of the King ; Yea , there make practise of those natural notes , Which issue from their evil-sounding throats , To wit , vain brags , revilings , ribaldries , Vile slanders and unchristian blasphemies . The land shall breed a nasty Generation , Unworthy either of the reputation Or name of men ; for they as Lice shall feed , Even on the body whence they did proceed ; There shall moreover swarms of divers Flies Engendred be in thy prosperities , To be a plague : and still are humming so , As if they meant some weighty work to do , When as , upon the common stock they spend ; And nought perform of that which they pretend . Then shall a darkness follow , far more black , Than when the light corporeal thou dost lack . For , grossest ignorance , o'reshadowing all , Shall in so thick a darkness thee inthral , That thou a blockish people shalt be made , Still wandring on in a deceiving shade , Mistrusting those , that safest paths are showing , Most trusting them who counsel thy undoing ; And ay tormented be with doubts and fears , As one that Out cries in dark places hears . Nor shall the hand of God from thee return , Till he hath also smote thy eldest born . That is , till he hath taken from thee quite , Ev'n that whereon thou set'st thy whole delight ; And filled ev'ry house throughout thy Nation , With deaths unlooked for , and lamentation . So great shall be thy ruine , and thy shame , That when thy neighbouring Kingdoms here the same , Their ears shall tingle . And when that day comes , In which thy follies must receive their dooms ; A day of clouds , a day of gloominess , A day of black despair and heaviness , It will appear . And then thy vanities , Thy gold and silver , thy confed'racies , And all those Reeds on which thou hast depended , Will fail thy trust , and leave thee unbefriended . Thy King , thy Priests , and Prophets then shall mourn , And peradventure faignedly return To beg of God to succour them : but they Who will not hearken to his voice to day , Shall cry unheeded ; and he will despise Their Vows , their Prayers , and their Sacrifice . A Sea of troubles , all thy hopes shall swallow ; As waves on waves , so plague on plague shall follow : And every thing that was a blessing to thee , Shall turn to be a curse , and help undo thee . And when thy sin is fully ripe in thee , Thy Prince and People then alike shall be . Thou shalt have Babes to be thy Kings , or worse , Those Tyrants who by cruelty and force , Shall take away thy ancient freedoms quite , From all their Subjects ; yea themselves delight In their vexations : and all those that are Made slaves thereby , shall murmur , yet not dare To stir against them . By degrees they shall Deprive thee of thy Patrimonials all ; Compel thee ( as in other Lands this day ) For thine own meat , and thine own drink to pay . And at the last began to exercise Upon thy Sons , all heathenish tyrannies , As just Prerogatives . To these intents , Thy Nobles shall become their instruments ; For they who had their birth from Noble races , Shall ( some and some ) be brought into disgraces . From Offices they shall excluded stand , And all their vertuous off-spring , from their Land Shall quite be worn : Instead of whom shall rise A brood advanced by impieties . That seek how they more great and strong may grow , By compassing the publick overthrow . They shall abuse thy Kings with Tales and Lies ; With seeming love , and servile flatteries ; They shall perswade them they have power to make , Their Wills their Law , and as they please to take Their Peoples goods , their children and their lives , Ev'n by their just and due Prerogatives . When thus much they have made them to believe , Then they shall teach them practises to grieve Their Subjects by , and instruments become To help the scruing up by some and some , Of Monarchies to Tyrannies . They shall Abuse Religion , Honesty , and all To compass their Designs . They shall devise Strange Projects ; and with impudence and lies , Proceed in setling them . They shall forget Those reverent usages which do befit The Majesty of State ; and rail , and storm , When they pretend disorders to reform . In their high Counsels , and where men should have Kind admonitions , and proving grave , When they offend , they shall be threatned there , Or scoft , or taunted , though no cause appear . Whatever from thy people they can tear Or borrow , they shall keep , as if it were A prize which had been taken from the foe , And they shall make no conscience what they do To prejudice Posterity : For they To gain their lust , but for the present day , Shall with such love unto themselves endeavour , That ( though they know it would undo for ever Their own posterity ) it shall not make The Monsters any better course to take . Nay , God shall give them for their offences , To such uncomely reprobated senses : And blind them so , that ( when the Axe they see Ev'n hewing at the root of thine own tree , By their own handy-strokes ) they shall not grieve For their approaching fall : no , nor believe Their fall approacheth , nor assume that heed , Which might prevent it , till they fall indeed . Mark well , Oh Britain ! what I now shall say , And do not slightly pass these words away ; But be assured , that when God begins , To bring that vengeance on thee for thy sins , Which hazard will thy total overthrow , Thy Prophets and thy Priests shall sliely sow The seeds of that dissention and sedition , Which time will ripen for thy said perdition : But not unless the Priests thereto consent , For in those days shall few men innocent Be grieved ( through any quarter of the Land ) In which thy Clergy shall not have some hand . If ever in thy fields ( as God forbid ) The blood of thine own children shall be shed By civil discord , they shall blow thy flame , That will become thy ruin , and thy shame ; And thus it will be kindled , when the times Are nigh at worst , and thy increasing crimes , Almost compleat ; the Devil shall begin , To bring strange Crotchets and opinions in Among thy Teachers , which will breed disunion , And interrupt the visible Communion Of thy establish't Church . And in the stead Of zealous Pastors ( who Gods Flock did feed ) There shall arise within thee , by degrees , A Clergy , that shall more desire to fleece Than feed the Flock . A Clergy it shall be Divided in it self : and they shall thee Divide among them , into several factions , Which rend thee will , and fill thee with distractions ; They all in outward-seeming shall pretend God's Glory , and to have a pious end ; But under colour of sincere devotion , Their study shall be temporal promotion ; Which will among themselves strong quarrels make , Wherein thy other Children shall partake . As to the Persons , or the cause they stand Affected , ev'n quite throughout the Land. One part of these will for preferment strive , By lifting up the King's Prerogative Above it self ; They will perswade him to Much more than Law , or Conscience bids him do ; And say , God warrants it . His holy Laws They shall alledge , to justifie their Cause ; And impudently wrest , to prove their ends , What God for better purposes intends . They shall not blush to say , that ev'ry King May do like Solomon in every thing , As if they had his Warrant : and shall dare Ascribe to Monarchs , rights that proper are To none but Christ ; and mix their flatteries With no less gross and wicked blasphemies , Than Heathens did ; yea , make their King believe , That whomsoever they oppress or grieve It is no wrong ; nor fit for men oppressed To seek by their own Laws to be redressed . Nay further , to their wicked ends they shall Apply the sacred Story ; or what ever , May seem to further their unjust endeavour , Ev'n what the Son of Hannah told the Jews Should be their scourge ( because they did refuse The Sov'raignty of God , and were so vain , To ask a King , which over them might Raign As Heathen Princes did ) that curse , they shall Affirm to be a Law Monarchical , Which God himself established to stand , Throughout all Ages , and in every Land , Which is as good Divinity , as they Have also taught , who do not blush to say That Kings may have both Wives and Corcubines , And , by that Rule whereby these great Divines Shall prove their Tenet , I dare undertake ( If sound it hold ) that I like proof will make Of any Jewish Custom , and devise , Authority for all absurdities . But , false it is ; for , might all Kings at pleasure ( As by the right of Royalty ) make seisure Of any mans possessions : why , I pray Did Ahab grieve , that Naboth said him nay ? Why made he not this answer thereunto , ( If what the Prophet said some Kings would do , Were justly to be done ) thy Vineyard's mine ; And , at my pleasure , Naboth , all that 's thine Assume I may ; why , like a Turky-Chick Did he so foolishly grow sullen-sick , And get possession by a wicked fast Of what might have been his by Royal Act ? If such Divinity as this were true , The Queen should not have needed to pursue Poor Naboth , as she did , or so contrive His Death ; since by the King's Prerogative She might have got his Vineyard . Nor would God Have scourg'd that Murther with so keen a rod On Ahab , had he asked but his due : For , he did neither Plot , nor yet pursue The Murther ; nor ( for ought that we can tell ) Had knowledge of the deed of Jezabel , Till God reveal'd it by the Prophet to him . Nor is it said , that Naboth wrong did do him , Or disrespect , in that he did not yield , To sell , or give , or to exchange his Field . Now if what here mention'd , thou dost heed , ( Oh ' Britain ! ) in those times that shall succeed , It may prevent much loss , and make thee shun Those mischiefs , whereby Kingdoms are undone , But , to thy other sins , if thou shalt add Rebellions ( as false Prophets will perswade ) Which likely are to follow , when thou shalt In thy profession of Religion halt : Then will thy Kings and People scourge each other For their Offences , till both fall together : By weakning of your Powers to make them way , Who seek and look for that unhappy day . Then shall disorder ev'ry where abound , And neither just nor pious man be found , The best shall be a Bryar and a Thorn , By whom their Neighbour shall be scratcht and torn . Thy Princes shall to nothing condescend For any merit , just , or pious end ; But either for encreasing of their Treasure , Or for accomplishing their wilful pleasure : And unto what they fell , or daign for need , There shall be given little trust or ●eed : For , that which by their words confirm they shall ( The Royal seals uniting therewithal ) A Toy shall frustrate , and a gift shall make Their strictest Orders no effect to take . The Parents , and the Children shall despise And hate , and spoil each other : she that lies Within her Husbands bosom , shall betray him ; They who thy People should protect , shall slay them : The aged shall regarded be of none , The poor shall by the rich be trodden on : Such grievous insolencies every where Shall acted be , that good and bad shall fear In thee to dwell ; and men discreet shall hate , To be a Ruler , or a Magistrate ; When they behold ( without impenitence ) So much injustice , and such violence . And when thy wickedness this height shall gain , To which , no doubt , it will e're long attain , If thou proceed : Then from the Bow that 's bent , ( And half way drawn already ) shall be sent A mortal Arrow ; and it pierce thee shall Quite through the Head , the Liver , and the Gall. The Lord shall call , and whistle from afar , For those thine enemies that fiercest are , For those thou fearest most ; and they shall from Their Countries , like a Whirlwind hither come : They shall not sleep , nor stumble , nor untye Their Garments , till within thy Fields they lie . Sharp shall their Arrows be , and strong their Bow , Their faces shall as full of horrour show , As doth a Lyons . Like a bolt of Thunder , Their Troops of Horse shall come and tread thee under Their Iron feet . Thy foes shall eat thy bread , And with thy Flocks both cloathed be and fed . Thy dwellers they shall carry from their own , To Countries which their Fathers have not known : And thither shall such mischiefs them pursue , That they who seek the pit-fall to eschew , Shall in a snare be taken . If they shall Escape the Sword , a Serpent in the wall To death shall sting them : yea ( although they hap To shun a hundred plagues ) they shall not scape ; But , with new danger still be chas'd about , Until that they are wholly rooted out . The Plowman then , shall be afraid to sow ; Artificers , their labour shall forgo ; The Merchant-men shall cross the Seas no more , ( Except to fly and seek some : other shore ) Thy ablest men shall faint , the wise ones then , Shall know themselves to be but foolish men . And they who built and planted by oppression , Shall leave their gettings to the foes possession . Yea , God will scourge thee , England , seven times more , With seven times greater Plagues than heretofore . Then , thy Allies their friendship shall withdraw ; And , they that of thy greatness stood in awe , Shall say ( in scorn ) is this the valiant Nation , That had throughout the world such reputation , By Victories upon the shore ? Are these That people that were Masters of the Seas , And grew so mighty ? Yea , that petty Nation , That is not worthy of thy indignation , Shall mock thee too ; and all thy former fame , Forgot shall be , or mention'd to thy shame . Then wo to them who darkness more have lov'd Than light ; and good advice have disapprov'd : For they shall wander in a crooked path , Which neither light , nor end , nor comfort hath . And when for Guides and Counsel , they do cry , Not one shall pity them who passeth by . Then wo to them that have corrupted been , To justifie the wicked in his sin ; Or , for a bribe the righteous to condemn : For flames ( as on the chaff ) shall seize on them : Their bodies to the Dunghil shall be cast ; Their flower shall turn to dust their flock shall waste , And all the glorious titles they have worn , Shall but increase their infamy and scorn . Then wo to them that have been rais'd aloft By good mens ruins ; and by laying soft And easie pillows under great mens Arms. To make them pleas'd in their alluring charms . We gather Armies , and we Fleets prepare ; And then ; both strong and safe we think we are . But when we look for Victories and glory , What follows , but events that make us sorry ? And 't is Gods mercy that we turn our faces With so few losses , and no more disgraces . For what are most of those whom we commend Such actions to ; and whom we forth do send To fight those Battles which the Lords we call , But such as neither fight for him at all ? Whom dost thou make thy Captains , and dispose Such offices unto , but unto those ( Some few excepted ) who procure by friends Command , and pay to serve their private ends , These by their unrepented sins , betray Thy Cause ; by these , the honour , and the day Is lost : and when thou hopest that thy trouble Shall have an end , thy danger waxeth double . We fain would be at peace , but few men go That way , as yet , whereby it may be so . We have not that humility which must Effect it : we are false and cannot trust Each other , no nor God with true confessions ; Which shews that we abhor not our transgressions . It proves , that of our errors we in heart Repent not , neither purpose to depart From any folly . For all they that are Sincerely penitent , do nothing fear So much as their own guilt , nor seek to gain Ought , more than to be reconcil'd again . And they that are thus minded , never can Be long unreconcil'd to God or man. Believe me England , howsoever some Who should foresee thy plagues before they come , Endeavour to perswade thee that thou hast A hopeful time , and that the worst is past Yet I dare boldly tell thee , thou hast nigh Worn out Gods patience by impiety . And that unless the same we do renew By patience , our folly we shall rue . And , if we do not more Gods will regard , That mischief is but for a time defer'd . Be mindful therefore while it is to day ; And let no good occasion slip away . Now rend your hearts , ye Britains , wash and rinse them From all corruption , from all evil cleanse them , Go offer up the pleasing Sacrifice Of Righteousness : from folly turn your eyes . Seek peace , and follow it with strict pursute : Relieve the needy ; Judgment execute ; Refresh the weary , right the fatherless : The strangers and the widows wants redress : Give praise to God , depend with lowly faith On him , and what his holy Spirit saith : Remember what a price thy ransom cost , And now redeem the time that thou hast lost . Return , return thou ( oh back-sliding Nation ) And , let thy tears prevent thy desolation : As yet thou maist return : For Gods embrace Is open for thee , if thou hast the grace To give it meeting . Yet , Repentance may Prevent the mischiefs of that evil day Which here is mention'd : yet , thou maist have peace , And by discreet endeavouring , encrease Each outward grace , and ev'ry inward thing , Which will additions to thy comfort bring . Now grant us peace , O Lord ! for perilous The times are grown , and no man fights for us But thou , O God! Nor do we seek or crave , That any other Champion we have . Thy Church in these Dominions , Lord preserve In purity , and teach us thee to serve In holiness and righteousness , until We shall the number of our days fulfil . Defend this Kingdom from all overthrows , By forraign Enemies , or home-bred foes . Our King with ev'ry grace and vertue bless , With thine honour , and his own encrease . Inflame our Nobles with more love and zeal , To thy true Spouse , and to this Common-weal . Inspire our Clergy in their several places , With knowledge , and all sanctifying Graces ; That by their Lives and Doctrines they may rear Those parts of Zion which decayed are . Awake these People , give them souls that may Believe thy Words , and thy Commands obey . FINIS . London , Printed for William Marshall at the Bible in Newgate-street , 1683.