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 |
---|---|
A66787 | And by His mighty power doth so keepe His souldiers happy soules that fall asleepe That stinging death shall never hurt them, why? |
A92182 | great shal be thy wo, who shal lament thy case? |
A93559 | y Our great Iehovahs sweetnesses are there, no where to Christians they so much appeare; z The treasures there contein''d, who can relate? |
A96782 | And by His mighty power doth so keepe His souldiers happy soules that fall asleepe That stinging death shall never hurt them, why? |
A67332 | As Ivy thrives, which on the Oak takes hold, So with the Prophets may her lines grow old, If they should dye, who can the World forgive? |
A67332 | But on so vast a subject, who can find Words that may reach th''Ideas of his mind? |
A67332 | He that alone, would wise and mighty be, Commands that others Love, as well as he: Love as he Lov''d, how can we soare so high? |
A67332 | Our Language fails, or if it could supply, What Mortal Thought can raise it self so high? |
A67332 | What Mortal can with Heav''n pretend to share In the Superlatives of Wise and Fair? |
A67332 | What endless War would Jealous Nations tear, If none above, did witness what they swear? |
A67332 | Yet if they still divert us with their Rage, What may be hop''d for in a better Age? |
A35958 | And for a drink of water call, and hear on say me nay? |
A35958 | And presuppon a soul were sure to dwell at last above, In heaven with Christ, yet know ye not, what langour is in love? |
A35958 | I came thou welcom''d me; and life I feel dost give? |
A35958 | Tell me now if you have any love like this? |
A35958 | Then why want I contenting love, since Christs love may be had: In whom is all that I do seek, or can be thought or said? |
A35958 | These did thy Father give to thee, with this expresse command, Son? |
A35958 | What banisht can I more be then for life chasde heer and there: Without a hole to hide my head, which even to beasts is rare? |
A35958 | What can befall me which did not before befall to thee? |
A35958 | What greater drouth then want a drink, in journey at mid- day? |
A35958 | What judgement more unjust then find my party sit as judge, And still the lesse fault he can finde, the more at me to grudge? |
A35958 | What ludging lesse then ly thereout? |
A35958 | What more distrest for righteousnesse, can I expect to be? |
A35958 | What prison worse then fall in hands of persecuting Priests, Thirsting like Wolves for blood of Saints to grace their godlesse feasts? |
A35958 | What sicknesse in deferred- hopes? |
A35958 | What torment more then pricks thurst in on''s head fourscore at once? |
A35958 | Why heard I flattering idols words? |
A35958 | what battell with our so: What trouble when God hides his face, and seems us to forgo? |
A35958 | why did I parly keep: Why suffer''d I affection to sing me so asleep? |
A66766 | A Families necessities, who can Support aright or honour God or Man With due respects? |
A66766 | And Lord if such a failing love as mine, May reach to this; how infinite is thine? |
A66766 | And that we might not ever be forlorn, For our eternal safety he was Born? |
A66766 | And what Commandement will he respect Who neither God nor Neighbour doth affect? |
A66766 | And what havoke then Will Trecherys and Murthers make of Men? |
A66766 | And, who will careful be to foster that Which no man owns, and Brutish Lust begat? |
A66766 | And, yet, how boldly did the Prophet threat Succeeding Vengeance? |
A66766 | Except it be that they might soon undo Those fools which do abuse Gods bounty so? |
A66766 | For, what hath he to bar him from the rest, Who but in one hath wilfully transgrest? |
A66766 | How can he love his Neighbour who doth crave Their Heritage, their wives or good to have? |
A66766 | How safe seem''d Jesobel, by being great? |
A66766 | Or if our daies We spend on Idols, forging Puppet plays, And false Ideas, till all truth be lost? |
A66766 | Or, by what means might they be kept in awe, Whose greantness makes them careless of this Law? |
A66766 | Or, if perpetually he do not act All wickedness, and ev''ry filthy Fact? |
A66766 | Or, secure in falshood be, When great Princes scape not free? |
A66766 | Thou shalt not beare false witnes against,& c. Who can hope for Justice where Magistrates false witness bear? |
A66766 | To thee what is it, whether we adore Thee for our God, or none, or twenty more? |
A66766 | VVEre his Edict omitted, who could say, He should enjoy his life or Goods a day? |
A66766 | What other sin would he have left undone, Which might have hindred his beloved one? |
A66766 | What suff''rest thou, when mad Blasphemers rave Against thy holy Name, that thou need''st have A law to curb them? |
A66766 | and though she were high, How low upon a suddain did she lie? |
A66766 | to reprobate? |
A66766 | ● nd that prime Attribute have overthrown, ● y which, he chiefly to be God is known? |
A60349 | And all the herbs that bear seed in the field, With fruit of all Trees too that seed do yield? |
A60349 | And could we Angels brook it? |
A60349 | And doth not this invite? |
A60349 | And hath he after all excepted one, Bounding thereby your vast Dominion? |
A60349 | And how is''t possible, poor I should be An equal match for such an enemie? |
A60349 | And how shall I appear? |
A60349 | And is''t indeed just matter of complaint, That I on thee laid not a full restraint? |
A60349 | And must we die the death, if taste the least? |
A60349 | And what, shall I, sighting with such a soe, Hope to make good my ground,& worst him too? |
A60349 | And will he stick at either? |
A60349 | Are only we restrain''d? |
A60349 | Art thou afraid to die? |
A60349 | At what else could I aim? |
A60349 | Because among the Creatures no help is, Shall there be none? |
A60349 | Being from Eden thrust, where shall I flee To seek relief in this my misery? |
A60349 | But how comes this about? |
A60349 | But is there nothing more? |
A60349 | But say he should, He''s fall''n, Why may not I With ease resist a fallen enemy? |
A60349 | But what of this? |
A60349 | But what of this? |
A60349 | But what''s thy duty now? |
A60349 | But whence these fears? |
A60349 | But where, where is he, if his fatal blow Must cut me off, why do n''t he strike it now? |
A60349 | But why should we more words thus spend in waste? |
A60349 | But, Woman, say, what is''t that thou hast done? |
A60349 | Can only blood pardon procure? |
A60349 | Can the Angelic nature shew such love? |
A60349 | Canst not thou find pleasure enough alone? |
A60349 | Canst part with Delilah? |
A60349 | Canst thou pass one without an holy thought, And thankful mindfulness of him that brought Thee up from th''womb? |
A60349 | Christ dy''d for sinners, why then not for thee? |
A60349 | Come, Soul, put on a smile, chase sorrow hence; Whence flow these tears? |
A60349 | Come, dost thou feel the heavy weight of sin? |
A60349 | Created pow''r Would utmost weakness prove, in that same hour It should engage unto''t; who recompence Can return for an infinite offence? |
A60349 | Death only found Us two to fright, and keep us within bound? |
A60349 | Did God say thus, when ye do eat ye dye? |
A60349 | Did I say, will? |
A60349 | Did he not constitute you Lords of all? |
A60349 | Did he not give Unto you all things that on earth do live? |
A60349 | Did he say, Madam, did he say; indeed, On all these Garden- trees ye shall not feed? |
A60349 | Didst sleep away thy golden morning hours? |
A60349 | Do not thy thoughts with him abide? |
A60349 | Dost think I would have done''t, had I foreseen What would the consequence thereof have been? |
A60349 | Dost thou desire to know it? |
A60349 | Doth he not say, The soul that sins shall die? |
A60349 | FAITH Why troublest thou thy self about the morrow? |
A60349 | Faith, speak out, Hast thou more cause of joy, or I of doubt? |
A60349 | Filthy I was, and so am still; How can An holy Christ dwell in so soul a man? |
A60349 | For if man thus forgiveth, how much rather Will he forgive, of Mercy who''s the Father? |
A60349 | For who will reverence a Deity, If they may sin with full impunity? |
A60349 | God saith, wilt have my Son? |
A60349 | Gods Decrees secret are, and who can read His everlasting purpose? |
A60349 | Hast for thy self nothing to say beside? |
A60349 | Hast thou adventur''d to eat of that tree, Concerning which I gave command to thee, Eat thou should''st not? |
A60349 | Hath he his trophies by him? |
A60349 | Hath he near fill''d his prison? |
A60349 | Hath he not made you owners general Of Fish, and Fowl, and Beasts? |
A60349 | Hath not my voice''Waken''d thine ear? |
A60349 | Hath the swift Sun His morning up- hill- course already run? |
A60349 | Have you at last a confin''d liberty? |
A60349 | He is Immutable, and why should I Doubt of that love which hath Eternity? |
A60349 | He knoweth all things, sure; and what if you, Who bear his Image, be made knowing too? |
A60349 | Heaven view,& Skie, with Sea,& Earth, and Air, And who is there that can with me compare? |
A60349 | Himself he his own happiness doth call; What can he want, who in himself hath all? |
A60349 | How can it be, that I who thus beset Am with such en''mies, should the conquest get? |
A60349 | How dost thou feel thy self, how is''t my dear? |
A60349 | How freely did''st thou stoop, when we did fall? |
A60349 | I am undone by thee, and yet must I Be charged as cause of our misery? |
A60349 | I from thy side was without fault transmitted Into thy bosome, and have I committed Any fault since? |
A60349 | I see indeed that thou art naked; well, Of this thy nakedness who did thee tell? |
A60349 | If God should bid thee ask a boon, wouldst cry, Lord, that my soul might live; my sin might die? |
A60349 | If in a land of peace I fainted have, How shall I live on Jordans swelling wave? |
A60349 | Is any change In thee a cause thereof? |
A60349 | Is disobedience the way to rise? |
A60349 | Is no discov''ry made? |
A60349 | Is not the case plain? |
A60349 | Is one day gone, and yet its work not done? |
A60349 | Is that thy misery, thy plague, thy sore? |
A60349 | It was thy sovereign delight; and how Comes it to be a terror to thee now? |
A60349 | Justice now Requires that sentence pass; and who but thou My Son should pass it? |
A60349 | Likely it is, we are more nice than wise, What mischief can lurk in a Paradise? |
A60349 | Lovely she is: But what is that to me? |
A60349 | Many commands before me present are, But where''s obedience? |
A60349 | Many from thence have tumbled, why not I? |
A60349 | My Dear, where hast thou spent so many hours? |
A60349 | My Glory thou design''st; and if for me All this thou''t do, what w''ont I do for thee? |
A60349 | My guilt is great, my God is just, who can Satisfie justice, and clear guilty man? |
A60349 | My head thou wast; if therefore thou didst know Mischief would follow, why didst let me go? |
A60349 | Nay what need Of climbing Heaven, curiously to look, Whether thy name be written in his Book? |
A60349 | Nay, how shall we upon the Angels look? |
A60349 | Now who can tell, what we may meet before Our journey ended is, and time no more? |
A60349 | Or can sin be the way to become wise? |
A60349 | Or how will they such loathsome Creatures brook? |
A60349 | Our great Creator did by words express, Command us to forbear, and ne''rtheless Would''st thou have me to meddle? |
A60349 | Perhaps thou dost not seast it with delight, But dost not feel a craving appetite? |
A60349 | Shall a Law So strict be given, and I not stand in awe? |
A60349 | Shall mercy be resolv''d, yet want a way, By which its selfe to man it might convey? |
A60349 | Should he be lost for ever, how should flame Rise from thy Altars? |
A60349 | Since I was framed by the hand of Heaven, What have I done? |
A60349 | Such as in corner sit by sire- side, Say, weather''s cold, and who can it abide? |
A60349 | Tell me the truth; where hast bestow''d thy love, Unless upon thy dearest friends above? |
A60349 | That sentence can not be reverst, one shall Dye for lost mankind, or they must dye all, who''l pay the debts that men contracted have? |
A60349 | The Serpent did eat first, afterward I, And we do live, why shouldest thou then die If thou shouldst eat? |
A60349 | The footmen weary me, what shall I do, When I am call''d to run with horsemen too? |
A60349 | There''s no day thou dost all thy work; but pray Dost not do something for God ev''ry day? |
A60349 | Thou dost accept him, dost not? |
A60349 | Thou dost deny thy growth in grace; dost know For certain thine estate some years ago? |
A60349 | Though they this can not do, Shall wisdom infinite be nonplust too? |
A60349 | Thy wound''s incurable, who can it heal? |
A60349 | VVhere is the beauty now of his Creation? |
A60349 | Was she by me given to be thy Guide? |
A60349 | Was this rare fruit designed for a beast? |
A60349 | What Prince would have another in his Throne? |
A60349 | What hast thou found either in look or word, Or in one single carriage, which afford Ground of suspicion may? |
A60349 | What may a worm do? |
A60349 | What means all this, my Lord? |
A60349 | What mine? |
A60349 | What more can Justice ask? |
A60349 | What more is lacking? |
A60349 | What one will dye himself, their lives to save? |
A60349 | What one would thy Name Exalt? |
A60349 | What speak thy bleeding heart,& weeping eyes? |
A60349 | What then remains, but that we study do Love to each other, how to shew it too In all ways possible? |
A60349 | What though this hour I fetch my dying groan? |
A60349 | What time of day is it? |
A60349 | What work could thee detain? |
A60349 | What''s too much for thy Intercession, Which, I know, thou wilt ever live to make With me in Heaven for poor Sinners sake? |
A60349 | When thou art suitor, what shall not be done? |
A60349 | When was that charge giv''n forth? |
A60349 | Where art thou Adam? |
A60349 | Where is thy love? |
A60349 | Which is an argument, I shall not dye, The Serpent eat and dy''d not, why should I? |
A60349 | Who shall repairer be? |
A60349 | Who would not hug a Christ, when hugging him We may in Pleasures river daily swim? |
A60349 | Whom can he owe it to, being God alone? |
A60349 | Whom dost desire? |
A60349 | Why this delay? |
A60349 | Will the Angelic stock sufficient prove? |
A60349 | Wouldst give a world, there were not one within? |
A60349 | Wouldst thou destroy thy self? |
A60349 | Wouldst willingly offend thy God no more? |
A60349 | and made sure Of thousands that did think themselves secure, And out of gun- shot? |
A60349 | and made thy heart rejoice, As it was wo nt to do? |
A60349 | but grant it, hadst not rather, If die we must, that we die both together? |
A60349 | can I go So near thee unperceiv''d? |
A60349 | can it defile? |
A60349 | canst Agag hew, Thy Kingly- darling- lust, canst bid adieu To all the Idols of thine heart? |
A60349 | canst for the world be free Without some intercourse''twixt God& thee? |
A60349 | canst prove it? |
A60349 | come and impart The matter as it is; Adam where art? |
A60349 | dost fear My faithfulness to God or thee? |
A60349 | dost not hear''t? |
A60349 | dost thou not know My being in the Garden? |
A60349 | doth Jealousie( That bane of conjugal Society) Peep up already in thy breast? |
A60349 | doth he recall To mind with triumph, David''s, Peter''s fall? |
A60349 | doth he tell Of captives he hath led in chains to Hell? |
A60349 | or what could supply bow''rs Thy Husbands room so long? |
A60349 | or what occasion given? |
A60349 | or where thy noble heart? |
A60349 | or with what face Can I look upon God? |
A60349 | shall death us part? |
A60349 | shall that be lost Which he prefer''d before his life? |
A60349 | were there Any of them could my great power withstand, Or keep Samaria from Assyria''s hand? |
A60349 | what a pow''r Of sad perplexing thoughts assault my mind? |
A60349 | what hand hath brought Such Cordials in, when of them least I thought? |
A60349 | what pleasant Could keep thee from me? |
A60349 | what resistance can Be made by foolish weak and naked man? |
A60349 | where Ivah''s and Sepharvaim''s gods? |
A60349 | whose absence dost bemoan, Like that of God, who is thine only one? |
A60349 | why is this great expence Of deep fetcht sighs& groans? |
A60349 | would not thy glory, Father, fade, Should they be lost, who for thy glory made All know? |
A17357 | ( Can all the sectes vvhich haue bene since Christs daies Together joyned, such a number raise? |
A17357 | ( Speake Alberstate and Mansfield as you brag Of Monasteries spoiles, vnder vvhose flag Your vvarfare is? |
A17357 | Am I not shee vvho conceiu''d vvithout sin In Mothers vvombe to bruise him did begin? |
A17357 | Am not I able to performe my vvord, And set my sacred flesh vpon the board? |
A17357 | And can a Lambe for such a price be sold, More vvorth then Iasons sheepe vvith fleece of gold? |
A17357 | And praid before it, should not her blest soule, Haue still remained, as a Blacke- more foule? |
A17357 | And shall I thinke my Church and sheepfold theare VVhere my chiefe Vicar PETER hath no care? |
A17357 | And shall such appertaine vnto my mount, VVho of good vvorkes make none or little count? |
A17357 | And tell me vvhat is sin? |
A17357 | And you Svvash- bucklers of our English stage, Thinke you discretion is your valours page? |
A17357 | Art thou the Man, vvhose Pen againe made right, That stone vvhich from his due place fell dovvne quite Spalatoes Prelate? |
A17357 | As I behold my IESVS on the Rood, VVith armes extended, shed his pretious bloud: Hovv am I moou''d? |
A17357 | As I this vvofull spectacle doe vievv, VVhat actes must follovv, vvhat affects ensue? |
A17357 | As hee the vvarlike Chananites subdues? |
A17357 | Beheaded by sterne Emperours decree, For hiding in his house,''gainst Kesars lavves, Iehouas Priest? |
A17357 | But am I frantique? |
A17357 | But can your malice as yet farther goe, Are you stil vvittie to increase his vvoe? |
A17357 | But let once fire enflame the charged Gun, VVho doth not quake, and from his fury run? |
A17357 | But shall the vvorld be vvarm''d by Austrias son, And to our Britaine shall no good be done? |
A17357 | But that vvhich made my Muse astonisht more, VVas to behold a strange conceited Dore: This vvas forsooth an euer- running floud, A floud saie I? |
A17357 | But vvhat''s the cause for vvhich they shed her bloud? |
A17357 | But vvith vvhat drinke is this great banquet stor''de, VVhat Massique vvine adornes this royall borde? |
A17357 | By mee just honours vveare to Reliques giu''n And doe I novv contemne the same in heaun? |
A17357 | By the sharpe Axes blovv, shee there doth bleed, Heau''ns did yee shine, vvas there a vvicked Sun To lend a daie, vvhil''st such a deed vvas done? |
A17357 | Call they not mee impostor vvith high Priests VVho saie that I so jugle vvith my ghests? |
A17357 | Can such a one finde fauour in thy sight, VVho for Idolatries defence doth vvrite? |
A17357 | Can such more spit their rancourd malice forth, Then in diminishing my graces vvorth? |
A17357 | Could England breed So manie Actours of so so braue a deed? |
A17357 | Could Hannibal more sundrie nations tell, Then sects contrarie in that Babell dvvell? |
A17357 | Did Philistims or SAMSON the field loose, VVhen at his death he kil''d three thousand foes? |
A17357 | Did not Bizantium set the Church on fier? |
A17357 | Did not Iouinian a foule Hogstie make, VVhen from chaste life he did all merit take? |
A17357 | Did not Nouatians build a house of claie, VVhilst Priests authoritie they tooke avvaie? |
A17357 | Doe vvee beleeue amisse? |
A17357 | Doe you feare death? |
A17357 | Doth he not Preach, although he make no noyse? |
A17357 | Doth it by IESVS vvill to their lot fall, To prepare Morter for the Churches vvall? |
A17357 | Doth not our CHAMPNEY the true Prelate Crovvne, VVhilst he casts from their throne vsurpers dovvne? |
A17357 | Doth not this Queene of those foure nayles make much, VVho holied vveare by IESVS bodies touch? |
A17357 | For IESVS faith? |
A17357 | For vvere he not consum''d bysuch a Sun, Hovv should an holocaust be rightly done? |
A17357 | For vvhy hath Pegasus his vvings to flie? |
A17357 | Good God saie I, are ELIZAeVS yeares Againe reuolu''d? |
A17357 | Harke my vviseman, vvhat is the vvorld? |
A17357 | Haue I built vp my Church, IEHOVA saith, On Arrius, Hus, on Magus faithlesse faith? |
A17357 | Hence vgly Monster, vvhy staiest thou behind, To be the Hang- man of the spotted mind? |
A17357 | Hovv augments he our building as for it, Three hundreth thousand stones he maketh fit? |
A17357 | Hovv cruellie doe you meeke IESVS vse? |
A17357 | Hovv dare these Gerasines( feeders of svvine) Affirme their durtie village to be mine? |
A17357 | Hovv doth he make Celestiall Spirits mount, VVhen hee the Eight Beatitudes doth count? |
A17357 | Hovv many doe vvee see, vvho are all ill Haue riches, honours, pleasures at their vvill? |
A17357 | Hovv many of the Tovvnesmen left he dead? |
A17357 | Hovv many such in vpper places goe? |
A17357 | Hovv many such our Basan Pastures shovve? |
A17357 | Hovv many thousands of the selfe- same coate, In Sions Quire chaunt Alleluias note? |
A17357 | Hovv oft didst thou againe vvith the foule Hog VVallovv in myre, hovv often vvith the Dog Returne to vomit? |
A17357 | Hovv oft didst thou returne to PETERS Chaire? |
A17357 | Hovv oft didst thou thy heresies forsvveare? |
A17357 | Hovv then dare these blasphemers of my grace, Saie I haue chosen for my Church a place VVith the earth euen? |
A17357 | I built a neate, an ample statelie Kirke, And dare these saie, their hogsties are my vvorke? |
A17357 | I in my Church( vvhat nation can so boast?) |
A17357 | If God vvould not haue holy Pictures stand, To grace his Church; vvhy vvas the cut off hand of Damascene restor''d by MARIES praire? |
A17357 | If it be chiefest loue our liues to spend,( Iesus saith so) in seruice of our friend, VVas not the charitie of Romaines much? |
A17357 | In large descentes of this illustrious line Hovv many rare Pulcherias doe shine? |
A17357 | Is it not strange a Lambe should on his backe Carrie a flocke of Sheep, and their sins pack? |
A17357 | Is not their Amsterdam the drugs, the fex, The sinke of all impuritie and sects? |
A17357 | Is this blest Riuer DAVIDS house of Armes To furnish vs vvith sheilds against all harmes? |
A17357 | Is your soule sicke? |
A17357 | Let none it contrarie to reason thinke, That I haue temper''d some gall vvith my incke? |
A17357 | Let vvartes destroie France, Germanie, and Beme, VVhat doe they care, so vvarres be far from them? |
A17357 | Linguist Philosopher, Statesman to King: Best husband, Father, vvhat not? |
A17357 | Made shee not Barach to stretch out his hand, And put to flight the nevv- sprung errors bands? |
A17357 | Moreouer can rebellions cause be just, VVhen thieues true Lords out of possession thrust? |
A17357 | Must vvee be ouer- past, as if vvee stood Vnder the Arctike Pole, vvhere comes no good? |
A17357 | Neptune appeaseth euery troubled vvaue,( So great a virtue holy Reliques haue:) On euery vvall vvhy should not Ladies see? |
A17357 | No Iohn de Austria their cities vvin, No Parma take reuolting Holland in? |
A17357 | No demi- god( better then other men) Grapple vvith theiuish Cacus in his den? |
A17357 | Of Aibigenses vvhat doth novv remaine? |
A17357 | Of Golden loue vvas not made all the rest? |
A17357 | Of conquer''d Sergius did PAVLE get his name? |
A17357 | Of other Scriptures is not a great part Compos''d according to Poeticke Art? |
A17357 | Or as in first creation great God brings Out of the vvaters feth''red foule vvith vvings? |
A17357 | Or doe the Amazons for ILIONS sake By Argiues ransaked a nevv Troie make? |
A17357 | Or shall I thinke Bauarias Duke so good, Because his vaines doe flovv vvith AVSTRIAN bloud? |
A17357 | Or vvell ey''d prudence doth your courage guide? |
A17357 | Others are poore, vvhat then? |
A17357 | Our Atlas dies, vvho shall supplie his place, Hath he left heires of this supporting grace? |
A17357 | Our bodies hetherto haue bene kept chast, And vnto death shall not this purenesse last? |
A17357 | Que ofreceremos de nuestra parte? |
A17357 | Quoth he( and sighs) at my yeares PHILIPS son, Conq''uerd the vvorld: and( beast) vvhat haue I done? |
A17357 | Romaines ope their eies? |
A17357 | Shall Gentle- men no more, Behold SEBASTIAN shed his manly goare, For IESVS cause? |
A17357 | Shall I an ample Roll of CAeSARS shovv, Or for great Monarkes to HESPERIA goe? |
A17357 | Shall I describe this glorious Nilus head VVhen it began? |
A17357 | Shall I recount hovv Hungarie and Beme Haue gouern''d bene, and kept good by this stem? |
A17357 | Shall not our English Queenes see HELEN make A holy journey for deuotion sake To Salem tovvne? |
A17357 | Shall not such justly feare, their names to finde In the blacke booke of death? |
A17357 | Shall vve discend from heau''n to our earths frame, From earth to hell, and demaund of the same? |
A17357 | Shall vve polluted be vvith Pagans rape? |
A17357 | Shall vvee haue Iulians in our vvretched age, Shevv against IESVS Crucifixe their rage? |
A17357 | Shall vvee of MARGARETS and MARIES tell, In vvhom Pulcherias many virtues dvvell? |
A17357 | Should Herod knovv, that IESVS is Gods Son, VVould hee doe lesse thinke you then he hath done? |
A17357 | Such stories and by them instructed be? |
A17357 | Such vvorthy motiues are for vvhich you braule: Saie you haue suff''red vvrong, right you it vvell? |
A17357 | Take Pictures hence, vvhere is the idiots booke? |
A17357 | Tell me in histories can it be shovvne That sects to IESVS Chutch haue brought a stone? |
A17357 | Tell mee vvhat reasons more can you alledge? |
A17357 | Telling this act shall I a credit finde? |
A17357 | That I might not behold Marathons fight? |
A17357 | That vvee not ouertaken by darke nighte, Discerne may, vvhen, and vvhere, our foes to smite? |
A17357 | The Cath''like title, vvhat a splendor brings, To the stil Conquering Hesperian Kings? |
A17357 | The Gospell saies, let CAeSAR haue his due, Hovv for the Gospell fight you then, thinke you? |
A17357 | The Sisters aske, hovv they durst vse a Knife So soone to cut thy golden thread of life? |
A17357 | The soule of Man cloth''d vvith this fleshly furre, Is this poore Hart, by many cruell Curr, Hunted to death, the houndes names vvill you heare? |
A17357 | Then God would haue thee, why wouldst thou be higher? |
A17357 | These Pictures vvhich in such fayre order stand, Must they be vvith a sacrilegious hand Cast out our Church? |
A17357 | Thy royall Ancestors, vvhat better name, Then Faiths defender haue? |
A17357 | To NAAMANS leprosie art thou a kin, And must still sticke to the defiled skin? |
A17357 | To sou''raingty vvhy doest thou so aspire? |
A17357 | To you my PRINCE I consecrate my booke, Reward my Muse: with what? |
A17357 | VVas not vvhite marble his Parthenian brest? |
A17357 | VVas there a land in that age to vs knovvne, VVhether PAVLE vvent not to fetch vvood and stone? |
A17357 | VVast not enough that thou didst dravv so neare To IESVS in thy soule, but thou must beare His likenesse in thy limms? |
A17357 | VVhat Church of Sectaries a Virgin shovves, VVho slit for Chastities defence her nose? |
A17357 | VVhat Cittie vvas there, vvhat defensiue vvall, VVhich vvith his thunder- bolt he made not fall? |
A17357 | VVhat Gospel can they haue, vvhere Turks, vvhere Ievvs Their Synagogues, and prophane Mesquits vse? |
A17357 | VVhat IESVS euer vvas, and did not flie Aboue the common pitche of humane race? |
A17357 | VVhat are these Mountaines vvhere such vvorthies di''de, But eleuated hils of humaine pride? |
A17357 | VVhat are these vvals, these battlements dovvne cast, By sacred povvre of Priests forgiuing blast? |
A17357 | VVhat artes, vvhat stratagems doth IESVS vse? |
A17357 | VVhat doest thou meane my Muse, vvhy gadst thou so? |
A17357 | VVhat dost thou meane? |
A17357 | VVhat dyet hath such virtue as this food: Mortall to make immortall, vvicked good? |
A17357 | VVhat hath Semiramis obtaind the Crovvne, And shevves Magnificence in Babels tovvne? |
A17357 | VVhat hauock amongst Rebels doe they make, Hovv many soules send dovvne to stygian lake? |
A17357 | VVhat industrie, vvhat labours doest thou spend In gaining Iudas? |
A17357 | VVhat is defectiue novv? |
A17357 | VVhat pleasures had he? |
A17357 | VVhat vvonder then, if as Hart through here passe, He seeme to be far other then he vvas? |
A17357 | VVhen any vvith the rot infected vvare, VVith vvhat loue didst thou cure them, vvith vvhat care? |
A17357 | VVhere is Iouinians Hoie; vvhere Arrius Boate? |
A17357 | VVhilest her proud Prelate labour''d to be higher Then God ordaind? |
A17357 | VVho but a IESVS could command the Sun? |
A17357 | VVho but our IESVS, only hath the grace? |
A17357 | VVho can the promis''d land out- deale to his? |
A17357 | VVho doth not REIGNOLDS for his braue vvit loue? |
A17357 | VVho euer had this name, and vvas not high? |
A17357 | VVho hath not hard of angrie ADRIAS vvaues, VVhere millions of ships haue found their graues? |
A17357 | VVho more then I against Iouinian vvritt And must I novv''mongst his Disciples sit? |
A17357 | VVho say my diuine hand Almightie is, VVhy giue they limits to my povvre in this? |
A17357 | VVho shall in Lethes streames his members bath( Is it a benefite?) |
A17357 | VVho should of Sixtus and his Laurence tell If Valerianus had not bene so fell: VVho e''re had heard of braue Sebastians praise? |
A17357 | VVho vvould not judge such silly Cates vnfit, For Potentates, vvhom there vvee see to sit? |
A17357 | VVhom did''st not thou instruct, to vvhom not Preach ● VVhom virtue not by thy example teach? |
A17357 | VVhom doth not BRISTOL vvith his vvritings moue? |
A17357 | VVhose holie anger made Apollo staie, And baite his firie horses in the vvaie; VVho but a IESVS such an act hath done? |
A17357 | VVhy didst thou giue him his hand backe againe, VVho Images Relligion did sustaine? |
A17357 | VVhy doe you voluntarie your selues thrust To patronize a cause as Hell vn- just? |
A17357 | VVhy should not euery vvall and corner Preach And vvhat religion HELEN vvas of teach? |
A17357 | VVhy should you take such tyrants for your freinds, VVho affect none but for their priuare ends? |
A17357 | VVill men beleeue such an heroicke minde Could in so manie dvvell? |
A17357 | VVith my claie Carcase: haue not I a share, As- vvell as he, in a Caelestiall ayre? |
A17357 | Yet i''st not vvonderfull? |
A17357 | You challenge others, for they tooke the vvall? |
A17357 | ],[ Antwerp? |
A17357 | as Priests shall him out tell Poore thirtie pence, he vvill his Maister sell? |
A17357 | as if the vvhole end Of thy conuersing in the vvorld had bin To make this vvretch forsake his haunt of sin: And vvhat revvard? |
A17357 | como se declararà nuestro reconocimiento? |
A17357 | in feete handes side Must IESVS holy characters be spide? |
A17357 | let mee more ponder, and not crie, VVhat vvas this Man so honour''d, more then I? |
A17357 | those vvho neuer soare VVith counsailes vvings to heau''n, vvhat haue they more Then earth? |
A17357 | vvho gaue the same? |
A75925 | ''T is not the number of acquirde commands Makes Monarcks potent? |
A75925 | ( Does not such blisse stand on a ticklish point, The Gout, or head- ach can put out of joynt?) |
A75925 | ( What''s poore mans state, Continually exposed to their hate?) |
A75925 | ; Will you behold the royall majesty, Of Spanish Kings? |
A75925 | A still supplying Subject? |
A75925 | Adventur''d for the Parliamentall rights? |
A75925 | And may we not imagine that God aym''d At the same end? |
A75925 | And such an object how must it distill, Torrents of pleasures on the ravish''d will? |
A75925 | And then what hee hath in Aenigma''s put, Make curious wits enueleat the Nut? |
A75925 | And why all this? |
A75925 | Are not there other beasts, the Fox, the Ape, The Dog, the Elephant so wise as is The Serpent? |
A75925 | Are not your eyes now open? |
A75925 | Are our Rils drunke up? |
A75925 | Are private men more happy? |
A75925 | Be slaves, and as obsequious Vassals stand, To know, then execute what hee le command? |
A75925 | But can not Pyrrhus and his Cineas doe All this in Epire? |
A75925 | But sole GODS hand, And PROVIDENCE( that can events command) So soone, so easily with no losse of blood Redeeme a Kingdome from long servitude? |
A75925 | But that grand Traytor, Lucifer, what''s done With him? |
A75925 | But who can crosse Gods efficacious will? |
A75925 | But why did he assume the Serpents shape? |
A75925 | Can any Law Limit his Arme? |
A75925 | Can any object be like God? |
A75925 | Can any poyson lurke within? |
A75925 | Can he be specifide by words of Art? |
A75925 | Can he who no waies will be circumscrib''de, By any termes of Learning be describ''de? |
A75925 | Can such a God be barren? |
A75925 | Contented with a scrip, a dish, a staffe, More mad themselves at others madnesse laugh? |
A75925 | Could humane wit or strength? |
A75925 | Dare we presume we have a Deitie, In us to cast on faults infinitie ▪ Are we not mortall men? |
A75925 | Did God idely take Such paines in the composure? |
A75925 | Did too much plenty cause a surquedrie? |
A75925 | Do''s Anubis barke? |
A75925 | Doe not I lyneally claim ● my descent, From great Achilles, who to ● lium went? |
A75925 | False Impe, who wouldst have Empire over all, To the lowest pit thou shalt dejected fall: Can nothing please thee but thy Makers Crowne? |
A75925 | HOw often write I Verses? |
A75925 | Had we not peace? |
A75925 | Have I degenerated? |
A75925 | How art thou spotted, with what tincture di''de, Of sins proud London? |
A75925 | How bountifully did they give their store, Of gold at Guildhall? |
A75925 | How did the searcher of all intrailes finde, Iniquity in so sublime a minde? |
A75925 | How did we handle Strafford? |
A75925 | How fitly doe the quiet thrones expresse, Gods never to be altered quietnesse? |
A75925 | How many Princes, mounted even to th''top Of Fortunes wheele, have falne? |
A75925 | How many starv''d in prisons thither sent, Even for no crimes, at your commandement? |
A75925 | How many wealthy men, even in our times, Either for reall or supposed Crimes, Have been dispoil''d of all? |
A75925 | I st not Gods chiefest atribute to show Much mercie to transgressours? |
A75925 | I st not a folly( Sir) to vaunt of blood? |
A75925 | I st''not strange one single crime, Should last, and blast all progresses of time? |
A75925 | If they are ill, why are they lef''t to roame Abroad, why are they not confin''d to home In Hell? |
A75925 | In Heaven? |
A75925 | Ingratefull wretches why have you misus''d, Those treasures I have given you, why abusde? |
A75925 | Is it Times fault? |
A75925 | Is there delight in War? |
A75925 | Le ts aske where are their followers now? |
A75925 | Must Angels so accomplished with grace, In Entity so perfect give him place? |
A75925 | Nothing at all, And must the masse of man for nothing fall? |
A75925 | Now, what a pleasant Vision wert? |
A75925 | Only a Whin, a Bramble will be great, Takes complacence enthron''d in Royall Seate; But what''s the sequell? |
A75925 | Or did not envy raigne? |
A75925 | Or didst thou surfeit with much plenitude? |
A75925 | Or envy? |
A75925 | Or in Augustus, or Vespasians time, Proud with the Trophees of the Easter clime? |
A75925 | Our fountains dry? |
A75925 | QUale tuum pectus, quae Musa humana superna, Dum pariter lustrans, Tartareasque domus? |
A75925 | Ruine on him? |
A75925 | Semei may barke, Achitophel counsel give, But how long after did these traytors live? |
A75925 | Shall I who have so many Verses writ, In every Theme impl ● yd my active wit; And having promis''d Verses, not performe What I have promis''d? |
A75925 | Shall not there be DVRATION? |
A75925 | Shall sins against our selves be thought almost, As great as sins against the Holy Ghost, Ne''re to be pardon''d? |
A75925 | Shall we conceive Adam was so unwise, To think an apple could make cleare his eyes? |
A75925 | So Solomon his Queenes so much affects, That for''em to false Gods he Phanes erects: But did the mischiefe end in Adams sin? |
A75925 | Study foure yeeres the ten Predicaments, Meane while forget the ten Commandements; What profits Stoicisme? |
A75925 | Such Victories obtain''d enter new sights? |
A75925 | Suffer the heat of dayes, the cold of nights? |
A75925 | Suppose we conquer Rome, Africk, Spaine, France, In Asia our victorious ● lags advance, What have we got? |
A75925 | Surely such men have been; and made a shew Of Learning, had Disciples, and did know Something indeed, although not much; but what? |
A75925 | The union''s lost, where is, and what is that? |
A75925 | Their maimed Dagon falls before the Arke, Do''s Hamon bleate now? |
A75925 | Then how pellucid bodyes made divine By glory are? |
A75925 | Then in the turnes and windings that he makes, How does he represent the circling snakes? |
A75925 | Then what a glorious sight wil''t be to see, Great Rome in all her former Majesty? |
A75925 | This noble Prince, and all his court''sie foyld? |
A75925 | Thus Monarcks may decline, and may not such, Who to a state turne Kingdomes doe as much? |
A75925 | VVAs thy Quill made o th''towring Eagles wing, Who soaring in the bosome of his King, Saw what was done in Heaven? |
A75925 | VVHo''s this? |
A75925 | WHy did God labour when he made the Court Of Heaven so glorious? |
A75925 | Was Lucifer a Peacock? |
A75925 | Was ever Rome, Spar ● ●, or Athens blest, With such a happinesse? |
A75925 | Was he accomplish''d? |
A75925 | Was not a Wave, Nestorius venturde on Nestorius grave? |
A75925 | Was thy eye evill because God was good? |
A75925 | We have surveigh''d the world and nothing finde, Which can beatifie m ● ns restlesse mind: Created to be happy: must this end, Be frustrate? |
A75925 | Wee meane to treate of GOD, what shall wee take For Essence, and a Definition make? |
A75925 | What Aromatick smell? |
A75925 | What Plato''s wit To your salvation? |
A75925 | What a magnifique spectacle shal''t be? |
A75925 | What are your Empires? |
A75925 | What are your stately masques? |
A75925 | What can content this brainsick young mans minde? |
A75925 | What harme did we the Devill? |
A75925 | What horrid act hath his eversion wrought? |
A75925 | What is, is his; and must he come so low Beneath himselfe, that when he will bestow His favours, he must aske his creatures what He shall bestow? |
A75925 | What quoth th''aspiring Angell, shall this slime o th earth, this worme in plenitude of tyme, Grac''d with the union Hypostaticall, Be Deified? |
A75925 | What round Angels? |
A75925 | What the Stagyrit? |
A75925 | What their Historie? |
A75925 | What title have you to invade these lands? |
A75925 | What undiscovered pathes the Serpent treades, With what slye Engines, and darke wayes he leades Mankinde to errour? |
A75925 | What was his fury? |
A75925 | What''s Provideence? |
A75925 | What''s Solomon on his Imperiall Throne, His Grandees all attending, every one Praising his wisedome? |
A75925 | What''s all this To what we are made for, everlasting blisse? |
A75925 | What''s the worlds treasure to Beatitude? |
A75925 | What''s thirty miles to Sions amplitude? |
A75925 | What''s to be done? |
A75925 | What? |
A75925 | When I was young, whose valour but mine owne Worth could restore me to my Fathers throne? |
A75925 | When gave you lodging to the harbourlesse? |
A75925 | When help''d you widowes, and the fatherlesse? |
A75925 | Where are Diogenes scholers that can scrub, Sleepe, wake, eate, drinke, live, die; All in one Tub? |
A75925 | Wherefore are wee joyn''d So fiercely in dispute? |
A75925 | Who but the Mother of us all Gods minde Could in few words such stronge allusions finde? |
A75925 | Who can describe what''s sin? |
A75925 | Who can tell, How many Monarks by their Vassals fell? |
A75925 | Who for smooth Epicure will Champions be? |
A75925 | Who now adore strict Zeno''s Apathie? |
A75925 | Who to defend their marcid Axioms vow? |
A75925 | Why all this stir? |
A75925 | Why did th''ambitious Horse endure the bit, To chase the hart, then would be free from it? |
A75925 | Why doe wee study? |
A75925 | Will nothing satisfie? |
A75925 | Will we not feare, Like retributions at Gods hands? |
A75925 | With soaring wings why would he northward flye, And independant be as the most high? |
A75925 | Would all thus Poetize, who would refuse, To celebrate the straines of such a Muse? |
A75925 | Yet has he perpetrated all these crimes, By proxie, above a hundred thousand times) How fell the Devill then? |
A75925 | You cruell men, what pleasure did you take? |
A75925 | Your stewardship, not knowing, or not caring, How I to thousand others have been sparing, To you most bountifull? |
A75925 | a transcendent pride? |
A75925 | and shall we beare Immortall enmities? |
A75925 | and without hope Ever to rise; who but the other day, Ore many Nations had Monarchicke sway? |
A75925 | begin againe: And search in every corner of my braine? |
A75925 | but deaths, but bands, But sequestrations of mens goods and lands, Will we not feare? |
A75925 | did he glorying in his state, Aspire to be with God coequall Mate? |
A75925 | did not these hands Defeat Demetrius, and his bay- crownd bands? |
A75925 | doe not the conquerors sit upon The manner of his chastisement? |
A75925 | furnish it with light, Of all the scattered Tapers of the night, And that eternall Torch the Sun? |
A75925 | he can best dispence, Who knowes what''s given is but benevolence Great were thy eminencies: did we repine At dignities conferd on thee, and thine? |
A75925 | how grave Laud? |
A75925 | how smooth the skin, And gay? |
A75925 | ingenious playes? |
A75925 | le ts cast up our account, To how much- does the totall summe amount? |
A75925 | must all the Kates be spoyld? |
A75925 | must we toyle, and labour spend In vaine? |
A75925 | often teare My Verses? |
A75925 | or Talions Law? |
A75925 | shall our children rue, And childrens children( what they never knew) Their Grandsires errors? |
A75925 | stil imagining they were, Vnworthy thy brave Muse? |
A75925 | that he shou''d, Envy our happinesse, prevent our good? |
A75925 | the Seige of Troy, And sacking oft''? |
A75925 | through what labours run, To finde how, where, by whom, such deeds were done? |
A75925 | what have we got by wars? |
A75925 | what his drunkennesse? |
A75925 | what sights? |
A75925 | wherefore in such sort Did he adorne it? |
A75925 | wherefore take a mold, Better then this terrestriall we behold, For the Materiall? |
A75925 | whether on this or that Person, or nature? |
A75925 | who from the abysse of nought, First made thee, then to this perfection brought? |
A75925 | why did they not when they lost grace, Forfeite as well their Energye as place? |
A75925 | why must we goe so far, Expose our selves to th''hazard of a war? |
A75925 | why should we run through So many dangers; wherefore fight and rome? |
A75925 | will we not stand in awe, Of the like recompence? |