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A77664 A rare paterne of iustice and mercy; exemplified in the many notable, and charitable legacies of Sr. Iames Cambel, Knight, and alderman of London, deceased : worthy imitation. Whereunto is annexed A meteor, and A starre : or, Briefe and pleasant meditations of Gods providence to his chosen, of the education of children and of the vertue of love; with other poems. / By Edw: Browne. Browne, Edward. 1642 (1642) Wing B5105; Thomason E1109_1; ESTC R208421 51,495 182

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be possible to prevent them Their death is a plaine prognostication of some evils to come and should bee as a trumpet to awaken others out of the sleepe of sinne Many of the wicked rejoyce when the godly are taken away from them they love their roomes better then their company they hated them and their profession in their life time because as they say they are not for our profit and they are contrary to our doings they checke us for offending against the law it grieves us to looke upon them for their lives are not like other men and therefore at their death they are glad that they are rid of them when indeed they have greater cause to howle and weepe for the miseries that shall come upon them The righteous need not to imitate the ungodly practice of Herod who being ready to die and thinking that his death would be a great joy to many shut up in prison some Noblemen in every town and required his sister Salome and her husband Alexa that so soone as he was dead they should kill those Noblemen and then all Iudea would lament his death The Lord himselfe doth often make the death of the righteous to bee lamented by sending of extraordinary judgements immediately after their death When Noah entred into the Arke the world is drowned with the floud when Lot departs out of Sodome it is burnt with fire 2 In this respect also the righteous have no cause to feare death but rather to desire it for what is it but an ending of some troubles and a preventing of others They may with Paul desire to be loosed to be with Christ which is best of all It is true which Salomon saith That the day of a mans death is better then the day of his birth For the day of a godly mans birth is the beginning of his miserie but the day of his death is the end of his miserie Indeed the day of a wicked mans death is the most wofull day that ever be●ell him for he is not taken away from the evill to come but he is taken unto evill to bee tormented in hell for evermore And therefore hee feares death as much as a malefactor feareth a Serjeant that commeth to carry him to prison where he is like to abide till the day of execution That is true in them which the Divell said Skin for skin and all that ever a man hath will he give for his life And as the Gibeonites were content rather to be bondmen hewers of wood and drawers of water then to bee killed by the Israelites as other nations were So they had rather indure any kinde of miserie then to die as others doe because they feare a worse estate after death and therefore must bee pulled from the earth with as great violence as Ioab was pulled from the hornes of the altar unto which he had fled as to a place of refuge But the godly knowing what an happie exchange they make by death they desire to die so soone as it pleaseth the Lord. Indeed none ought for the ending of present calamities or preventing of future miseries to shorten their owne dayes as Saul did by falling on his owne sword nor yet for the present enjoying of eternall happinesse procure their owne death as Cleombrotus did who reading Plato his booke of the immortalitie of the soule cast himselfe headlong from a wall that he might change this life for a better He onely who gave life must take it away and the Lord may say to such I will receive no soules which against my will have gone out of the body the Philosophers which did so were martyrs of foolish Philosophy Yet seeing that death freeth the righteous from present and future miseries they may be most willing to die so soone as the Lord calleth for them and when death approacheth may say with Simeon Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace 3 Lastly in this respect we must learne not to mourne immoderately for the death of the righteous Though wee received great comfort and enjoyed some benefit by them while they were alive as I did by my late Master Sir Iames Cambel yet seeing that death is an advantage unto them we should ●ee content patiently to bear our owne losse in respect of their great gaine If two friends should lie in prison together or should dwel together in a strange Countrey where both of them were hardly used were many wayes injured endured great want and sustained much miserie though they loved one another dearly and the one were an he●pe and comfort to the other yet if the one should bee taken from the other and brought to his chiefest friends and among them be not onely freed from all such miseries as before he had endured but also bee advanced to great preferment will the other which is left behinde him be discontented at it Will he not rather wish himselfe to bee there with him in the like then desire that either hee had stayed with him or might returne againe This our life is as a prison or strange Country in which wee indure great miserie and may every day looke for more if therefore our dearest friends bee taken from us freed from these miseries and advanced to great glory with Christ and his Saints in the Kingdome of heaven wee have no cause to wish that either they had stayed longer with us or might returne againe unto us but rather desire that wee might quickly goe unto them to bee glorified in like sort Though we may thinke that they died too soone for us yet they died not too soone for themselves for the sooner they come to rest and happinesse the better it is for them Their condition is farre better then ours for they are freed from miserie we are reserved for further miserie they are already arrived at the haven of eternall rest and we are still tossed on the sea of this world with troublesome waves and dangerous tempests they have ended their journey with lesser travell and making a shorter cut and wee are yet travelling with wearisomnes in our journey If any one of them could speake after their death he would say unto them which weepe for him as Christ said to the daughters of Ierusalem Weepe not for me but weepe for your selves and for your children because of the dangerous dayes that shall ensue Or as Christ said unto his Disciples If ye loved me ye would verily rejoyce because I goe unto the Father But if examples doe move any thing at all I may apply all that hath beene spoken to this present occasion A righteous man is perished a mercifull man is taken away for God hath made me seriously to consider and lay close to my heart the losse of my late ●udicious loving Master Sir Iames Cambel Therefore for a memoriall of him I have presumed to set forth his unparallel'd Legacies Which though they be unskilfully performed yet God may work such an effect in
doth he make inquiry and is sorry That he did so his erring selfe misearry Likewise sometimes God doth his grace restrain From rarest Saints to shew they are but vaine Wiithout his aid also to see and try What bidden Graces in their hearts do lie So fell King David Peter and Saint Paul To humble them us to Repentance call In which respests by Christ some men may say I come in blamles and so goe away Now consider I pray if what David spake in another sense Psal 85. 10 11. verses may not bee truly said of Sir Iames Cambel Mercy and Truth are met together Righteousnesse and Peace have kissed each other Truth shall flourish out of the earth and Righteousnesse hath looked downe from heaven Onely in stead of Truth reade Justice in the 10. verse and Mercy in the 11. verse and then 't is plaine enough that mercy shall spring or bud out of the earth that is as I apply it Sir Iames Cambels name was given him by earthly parents so it sprung out of the earth and that signifies mercy as is before specified in the Anagram Se I came balm and Righteousnes hath looked downe from heaven that is the Sun of Righteousnesse hath infused the Graces of his holy Spirit into his heart to doe righteousnesse as in his life so at his death and that likewise may be applyed to the Anagram on his name I came blamles so that it is evident by these Anagrams and Acrosticke verses that in Sir Iames Cambel Justice and Mercy met together according to this saying of the Prophet David for now I shall not need to change the words in either verse for Truth which is Fides as Tremelius translates it is the root from whence justice and Mercy spring and without justice and mercy faith is dead and truth is falshood But if these two branches of Mercy and Justice spring from the root of a true lively and justifying faith the fruit that they beare will bee peace of conscience and joy in the holy Ghost Thus will I sing with holy David as in a spirituall sense so in remembrance of my late honoured Master Mercy and Truth have met together Righteousnesse and Peace have ki●●ed each other Truth shal flourish out of the earth and Righteousnesse hath looked downe from heaven Therefore I will conclude with these verses following JVstice and Mercy were at great debate Who should in Sir James most predominate True Faith came in and said it was most meet That Mercy she should have the upper seate For she 's the Queene of Grace and for that cause She is to moderate Gods Righteous Lawes So 't was concluded to appease the brall Sweet lovely Mercy should be principall For from true saving Faith Sir James did bring Mercy and Justice like a living spring Of heavenly water to refresh and glad All ●ood mens hearts his losse maks me full sad For Justice ceased with his vitall breath But Mercy will endure long after death And sure his Justice and his Pious waies Shall ever live to his eternall praise For an example though in act it cease But Mercy now in act doth still increase And shewes her beauty in most brave array To poore distressed people whose decay She greatly pittying doth give supply To their necessities and misery Oh had I art I would set forth the praise Of Sir James Cambels pious righteous waies But being my learning 's small conclude will I In mournfull Epitaph and Elegie An Acrostick Elegie IF losse of friends be cause of griefe then I And all good people have some cause to cry Many good men there are I hope but yet Ev'n as Sir James was are full hard to get Such was his Prudence and his Pious care Could order all things well which to declare And show his vertues all in e●ch degree Might mase the Muses nine and much more me But this I doe by my unskilfull Art Eternally to shew my thankfull heart Losses I have how can I chuse but cry Losse hath this City can our eyes be dry Yet though he 's lost to us he 's found in heav'n Because his Mamon to the poore is giv'n Whose Friends are there for to receive and keep His blessed soule although his body sleep Our Friend Lazarus sleepeth John 11. 11. Pretious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints Psal 116. 15. Blessed are the dead that die in the Lord even so saith the Spirit for they rest from their Labours and their works follow them Apoc. 14. 13. An Acrostick Epitaph IN this same Casket lies a Jewell rare And will you know the great worth of the same● Mark well these words his vertu●s passe compare Eternall honour shall raise to his name Soe Just and equall were his vertuous waies Constant in Prastice thereof all his daies A man that alwaies stood for common good Made him belev'd of all men far●e and neere By Prudent Justice he all vice withstood Equall to him where shall we find his peere Lo now hee 's laid up in this earthen mould Like as a Jewell in a case of gold This is the monument upon his name Which I erected by my rustick quill But there 's a thing of cost and curious frame Rarely contrived by industrious skill In Olaves Jewry Church it is to stand A more compleater thing 's not in this land Sir Iames is there to lie in stately port Clad all in armour like a Martiall man Like a grave Senator in gallant sort Hee 's wrapt in robes even as an Alderman Courage and Wisedome in him did remaine And now hee 's dead this Figure shews the same Most Just and equall were his P●ous waies And therefore at his feet doth Justice stand And at his head to his eternall praise Mercy is fixed with her Babe in hand In him sterne Justice did sweet mercy meet And now hee 's dead they stand at 's head and fe●t Close by him kneeles his Lady much lamenting The losse of her deare Pheer this pious man A true Character lively representing The sad Condition of this good woman For shee is truely like the Turtle dove Dayly bewayling the losse of her Love But let her cease to grieve for from above Behold an Angell bright descending downe And for the ●ood deeds done by her true Love With Laurell Garland will his Temples crowne●s To learne by their examples all men may Justice and Mercy drawes the Vaile away Therfore is Fame and Time his Arms supporters To shew to all that in the world doe live That vertuous Actions cannot want reporters For Fame will Time to such man surely give That in good works doe spend the pain and time And now I did intend to cease my Rime But that Fame calls to shew the cost and skill Of this rare structures Fabricke stately brave Contrived and composed but my quill Is blunt and dull for I no learning have Therefore I 'le cease and say 't is rich and faire Marble
● preservation as in years man growes ●om many perills and great dangers strange ●ich in the universe by course do range ● be preserv'd from the disastrous stormes ● weathers tempest which do bring great harmes ●on mankind and from the wrackfull water ●m fiery flames and from the banefull slaughter ●umane Creatures make freed from Warre ●m hungry famine and Plagues deadly skarre ●e tokens sure of Gods meere Grace and Love ● which sometimes he doth his Children prove ●t Gods great preservation is not all ●s Love to Man in blessings temporall ● he hath on them providentiall care ●t onely to keepe safe but to prepare ●uch earthly comforts in this present life ●d the chiefe of them is a Godly wife Because that she the minde doth helpe and ease But health and wealth the body onely please Yet health and wealth honour and liberty Are the rare gifts of Gods benignity So are good friends a comfortable stay Vnto a poore man in an honest way And all these favours God hath given me For which I never can too thankefull be For first when I was naked weake and poore And by my Parents turned out of doore There did the Lord of me take care and charge And out of misery did me inlarge And brought me in a comfortable place Where I did first begin to long for Grace Yet there three yeares I followed vaine play But at the last I did breake off that way And went about a new worke to upreare But in the same I was scant halfe a yeare And I no sooner came to know the parts Of Latin Language the true grounds of Arts For me the Lord a Master did provide With whom this sixteen yeare I did abide Yet many times I did occasion sind To search and trie what was hid in his mind But when by all the meanes I could devise I could not bring to passe mine enterprise Yet still imploide to rub to scrape and sweepe And so for six yeares space he did me keepe I gave him just offence and fled away But there it was not Gods will I should stay Then after nine yeares with him was spent out I did begin again to looke about For some provision of which I had hope For to obtaine whereto I bent my scope And so by prayer intreaty and perswasion God did even bend and bow Wills inclination By Aexholmes accident and french affaires By bodies grievance and some other cares Yo doe some good for me and my kind mate Whom God hath taken from this mortall state Here did appeare the wondrous worke of God In turning of the Serpent to a Rod Now had I braines or wit I could well shew How God made water from the Rock to flow For humbly I confesse by his kind favour And Gods blessing on my poore endeavour I got provision for my loving mate My selfe and children in contented state And still enjoy the blessings of this life As health and wealth I only want a wife Of whom I hope I should much comfort find To ease and give reliefe my troubled mind But I am like a Mole hid in hard earth If once go● in I hardly can get forth Therefore to God with winged prayer I'lesly That he would raise my minde to things on high Oh Lord do thou infuse into my mind Such sacred wit that I thy Love may find That 's spirituall but this is Infinite Ther 's no man able to descry that light Then how shall I that am an unlearn'd wight Yet what learn'd men from Gods word hath reve● I may as well declare as keepe conceild Especially if 't be to make a story Of Gods eternall Mercy Love and Glory Therefore seeing that my unlearned quill Hath thus begun it shall continue still This Love to shew by the assisting might Of God who out of darknesse can bring light And first of all there 's great manifestation Of Gods great Love in mans predestination That he should Esau hate and Jacob Love It only came of mercy from above But ' gainst Charybdis and Caphorian Rock My shallow vessell I meane not to knock But longst the shore with sailes of faith I 'le coast My Starre the Bible Steer-man the holy Ghost For I too bold will not aske how or why God hath ordained thus mans destiny For me It 's enough to know that my estate Is firme in Christ else I am reprobate But secondly in our sacred vocation Of Gods great love ther 's clearer demonstration For was it not great Love in God to chuse From other Nations the unthankefull Jewes To give them Laws Statutes and Sacraments Of future Blessings and to shew the events Of the Messias by Prophets inspiration But 't is a greater happinesse unto our Nation That we are free from the whores wofull wrack That unto errour we have turn'd our back That God hath brought us into wondrous light That of his Gospell we have the cleare sight That we suck nourishment from sacred Writ That we enjoy such speciall benefit As are the Sacraments and word of God In peace and joy free from th' afflicting Ro● Of Gods just wrath but whither do I goe ●have much more of Gods great Love to s 〈…〉 In the Redemption of sinfull mankind But how or which way shall I bend my mind The wondrous Love of God therein to show How to beginne or end I doe not know Wast not great Love that God became a man That that Infinite should be within a span That Deity should become flesh and bone This cannot by a mortall man be showne ●et it is true God did descend from high And tooke on him sinfull mans misery His Birth was rare his life was mean and poore And in his body all mans sins he bore But oh what greater Love can there be showne Then for a friends life to lay downe his owne 〈…〉 this did Christ sinfull mans debt to pay His Fathers wrath and ●●●ry ●o allay And by his death he did full well expell The power of sinne and the dread pains of hell If I could write of all the wondrous Asts Of Christ our Saviour and his noble facts I then should want both Paper Pen and Inke To utter that which my poore heart doth thinke I am not able fully to relate The rare example of his earthly state Oh! how shall I then into heaven fly There to behold this lorious mysterie How that he rose from death I cannot shew But how he did ascend I faine would know For I was borne upon Ascention day Therefore to follow him I dayly pray But ther 's such Plumets ty'd unto my h●ele That drawes me backward that I cannot feele His Godly motions yet his love I finde Deepely ingraved in my sinfull mind I did intend to write of faith in Christ How thereby justifi'd how that did consist In free forgivenesse of our former crimes To live more Godly in the after times Then did I purpose for to make relation How for to know
A rare PATERNE OF Iustice and Mercy Exemplified in The many notable and charitable Legacies of Sr. Iames Cambel Knight and Alderman of London deceased Worthy imitation Whereunto is annexed A Meteor and a Starre OR Briefe and pleasant Meditations of Gods Providence to his Chosen of the Education of Children and of the vertue of Love with other Poems By Edw Browne Psal 19. 1. The heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament sheweth his handiworke Printed at London for William Ley at Pauls Chaine neere Doctors Commons M DC XLII The Effigies of the right wor ss Sr James Cambell Knight sometime Lo Mayor and Senior Aldrn̄ of London etc. To the Right Worshipfull his vertuous and religious Lady Dame Rachel Cambel Relict Executrix of the last Will and Testament of Sir Iames Cambel Knight and Alderman of London deceased And to the Right Worshipfull his honoured friends Sir Thomas Abdy Knight and Baronet and Mr. Iames Cambel Esquire joint Executors with the said Lady Grace and peace be multiplied Right VVorshipfull DEtraction that ugly deformed Hell-borne Monster hath of late cast her poisoning envious breath upon my best actions even upon these harmlesse papers and would faine beget in you an evill opinion of me and of my honest endeavours thereby to worke my utter ruine But I hope the Lord who knoweth the integrity of my heart and the cleannesse of my hands from doing wrong to any especially to my late Iudicious loving-Master will worke in you such an heroicall and magnanimous spirit that you will not be infected with such pestiferous venome your Worships knowing very well that such Detractors like ravenous Vultures eate and gnaw upon the very life and livelihood of others onely for their owne ends viz. that they may grow fat and rich thereby for they care not how they impaire the good name fame or reputation of others so they themselves may get honour and esteeme though there be little worth in them deserving the same Therefore for vindication of my credit in this particular which now lyes a bleeding I am inforced to publish that I intended to keepe private to shew to your Worships and all other my friends that I have beene so far from intending the least disgrace that as I am in duty bound so I have ever sought the honour of my judicious loving Master And I am confident if in these workes of mine he had found any thing to his disparagement hee would in his life time have showne me my errors upon my request which he never did as your Ladiship very well knowes And as it is very well knowne throughout this Citie that my Master in his life did much good to others especially in Iusticiarie affaires so I doe humbly acknowledge that he did alwayes delight to doe me good even to the day of his death And therefore I thinke it part of my dutie now hee is departed this transitorie life to expresse my thankfull heart for the same which I can no better way perform being I have alread●e been● so presumptuous as to cast my unlearned workes into the Presse then to publish without flatterie his many worthie and imparalleled workes to his never-dying memorie That they may bee a meanes to excite and stir up others of his qualitie to doe workes of charitie to the poore and judicious benevolence to the rich Yet I doe ingenuously confesse that they deserve to bee ingraven in Pillars of durable Marble by some learned and eloquent Cicero rather then by my rustick quill on these timeperishing papers For my workes I commit them to your gracious acceptance and judicious censure hoping that what I have done amisse herein you will be pleased favourably to passe by because you know the attractive cause from whence these cloudie and muddie vapours did arise therefore I doubt not but the sun-shine of your favourable aspects will expell such mistie exhalations and ever remain upon the poore and weake yet honest and willing endeavours of Your unworthy yet truly faithfull servant Edward Browne 19. Maii. 1642. A RARE PATERNE of Iustice and Mercy Exemplified in the many judicious noble and charitable Legacies given and bequeathed in the last Will and testament of that grave Iudicous Senator Sir James Cambel Knight sometime Lord Maior and senior Alderman of London who departed this transitory life upon Wednesday the fift day of Ianuary Anno Dom. 1641. and was buried in the Parish Church of Saint Olaves Iewry London the 8. day of February following being Tuesday Obiit sine prole Aetatis suae 72. THe memory of the just is blessed saith the Wiseman but the name of the the wicked shall rot And surely the righteous shall bee had in everlasting remembrance saith holy DAVID Yet the Prophet ESAY complaines That the righteous perish and no man considereth it in heart and mercifull men are taken away and no man understandeth That the righteous are taken away from the evill to come In consideration whereof that I may not be culpable of the like reproofe I will with the Psalmist marke the upright man and behold the just for the end of that man is peace For thereby I shall learn how to dye comfortably It may bee as a paterne or example to direct me and others in the houre of death For eth wicked they dye either sottishly impatiently or desperately First sottishly like blocks and idiots having neither penitent feeling of their sins nor comfortable assurance of salvation Being like to Nabal whose heart ten daies before his death died within him and he was like a stone Such men die like lambes and yet shall bee a prey for the devouring Lion they go quietly like fools to the stocks for correction Secondly others die impatiently who do not willingly bear the Lords correction deserved by their sins but rage fret and murmure as if God dealt too rigorously with them and through impatiency will use unlawfull meanes for their recovery as Ahaziah did who being sicke sent messengers to enquire of Baal zebub the god of Ekren if he should recover of his disease Thirdly others die desperately their consciences accusing them most terribly for their sins without any hope of pardon as Cain who said my sinne is greater then can be forgiven or Iudas who despairing of pardon for his sin in betraying our Saviour went and hanged himselfe The consciences of many wicked men lye quietly and never trouble them all their life time but are stirred up at their death and then rage and torment them like a mad dogge which is lately awaked out of sleepe But the righteous die most comfortably they beleeving in Christ and having repented of their sinnes are assured in their owne soules that all their sinnes are pardoned in Christ they wil make confession of their faith and give testimony of their repentance unto others for their comfort and example They will patiently endure all the paines of their sicknesse as Iob did knowing that all comes from the Lord and that it
is his fatherly correction and a signe of his love because ●e chasteneth whom he loveth yea they receive their sicknesse as the Lords messenger speaking to their soules as the Prophet Isaiah did to Hezekiah Put thine house in order for thou shalt die and not live and therefore they prepare themselves for another world Ye● further in their sicknesse they can pray most fervently as King Hezekiah did Isaiah 38. and then they will give most fruitfull and comfortable instructions to those which they leave behinde As the Swan sings most sweetly a little before his death so the righteous speake most divinely a little before their end Whosoever searcheth the Scriptures may read the divine prophecy of Iacob unto the twelve Patriarches Genes 49. the holy blessing of Moses upon the twelve tribes Deut 33. the godly exhortation of Iosua to the people of Israel plac●d by h●m in Canaan Ios 23. the wise counsell of David unto Salomon who was to succeed him in the kingdome 1 King 2. Whosoever readeth the Ecclesiasticall histories may not onely see the vertuous lives but also the Christian like ends of the Saints and Martyrs in the Church And whosoever will be present at the death of those which truly feare God may thereby learne how they themselves ought to die for when the outward man doth decay the inward man is renewed more and more They shew that the neerer they doe approach unto their end the neerer they draw toward heaven But in these our dayes many may be found who either do not at all consider the death of the righteous or else doe consider it amisse Though it bee a matter worth consideration yet some doe not consider it at all because they see so many dye they make the lesse reckoning of it till death knocke at their owne doores they never regard it they must needs dye themselves before they can bee brought to consider of death they care not who sinke so they swimme nor how many die so they may live yea this is greatly to be lamented that some doe regard the death of a Christian no more then they regard the death of a dog But seeing wee may learne so many profitable instructions by their death let us now begin to consider it better then ever we did before Others doe consider it but yet amisse either fondly or frowardly Fondly through naturall affection arising from kindred affinitie or familiaritie If a stranger die it nothing moves them but if one of their owne friends dye they sigh and sob they howle and lament If the father lose his son he cries most pittifully as David did for Absalom O my son Absalom my sonne my sonne Absalom would God I had died for thee O Absalom my sonne my sonne If the mother lose her children shee behaveth her selfe like Rachel weeping for her children and would not be comforted because they were not If children lose their parents they cry after them as Elisha did after Elias when he was taken up my father my father If a sister lose her brother she weepeth for him as Mary did for Lazarus If the husband lose his wife he weepeth for her as Abraham wept for Sarah yea he mourneth like a Turtle Dove which hath lost his marrow If the wife lose her husband shee dealeth like Naomi who would not be called Naomi that is beautifull but Mara that is bitter because the Lord had given her much bitternesse If one familiar friend lose another hee lamenteth his death as David did the death of Ionathan Woe is me for thee my brother Ionathan very kinde hast thou beene unto me thy love to mee was wonderfull passing the love of women Indeed I cannot deny but that we ought in a speciall manner to consider the death of those which are neere and deare unto us for it may be they are taken from us because wee were unworthy of them or because we gloried and trusted over much in them and were not so thankfull for them as we ought If we had any help by them we must consider whether God have not deptived us of them for the punishment of our sinnes as the widow of Sarepta did at the death of her sonne saying unto Eliah Art thou come unto me to call my sinne to remembrance and to slay my sonne Yet this consideration must bee ordered by wisedome it must not be joyned with excessive sorrow Neither must wee consider their death alone but also the death of others which dye in the Lord and to learne to make an holy use thereof For as Sampson found sweet honey in the carcasse of a dead Lion so wee may finde some sweet instructions in the dead corps of every righteous man yea the more righteous that they are which doe die the more should their death be considered because it may yeeld greater store of instruction unto us And it may bee that God doth take away those which are neare unto us because wee doe carelesly regard the death of those which be farre off Againe some consider the death of the righteous very frowardly and peevishly yea I may say malitiously and preposterously For if any of them bee taken away by a sudden and extraordinary death they presently censure them as plagued of God and condemne their former profession thinking that God would not have so dealt with them if hee approved either of them or their profession But they must bee instructed in this point by wise Salomon who saith that no man knoweth love or hatred of all that is before him All things come alike to all and the same condition is to the just and the wicked to the good and the pure and to the polluted to him that sacrificeth and to him that sacrificeth not Eli was a Priest and a good man yet brake his necke by falling backward from his seat Ionathan was a sworne brother unto David a godly and faithfull friend yet was he slaine in battell by the hands of the Philistims That Prophet of God which came out of Iudah to Bethel to speak with Ieroboam and the altars which he had built for idolatry was no doubt an holy man yet was hee killed in the way by a Lion Iosiah was a good King like unto him there was no King before him neither after him rose any like him yet was he slaine in the valley of Megiddo by Necho King of Egypt Iobs children were well brought up by their godly father and it is said that before Iob offered sacrifice for them they were sanctified yet within a while after as they were eating and drinking in their eldest brothers house a violent winde overthrew the house and killed them all Wee must not therefore judge of men by their death but rather by their life Though sometime a good death may follow an evill life yet an evill death can never follow a good life Correct thine evill life and feare not an evill death he cannot die ill that lives well saith Augustine And afterward answers
reliefe of poor helplesse children in Christ hospitall he hath given 500. pound To enlarge the hospitall of Saint Thomas in Southwark with more lodging for poore sicke diseased persons he hath given 1500. li. And for a further reliefe of the poore blinde lame diseased and lunatique persons in Bridewell St. Bartholomewes and Bethlehem Hospitalls he hath given 300. li. viz. 100. li. to each Fiftly for redemption of poor Captives under Turkish slavery where they are inforced by cruell torments to forsake their Religion he hath given one thousand pounds And for the release and reliefe of poore distressed prisoners that lye in miserable bondage by meanes of mercilesse creditors in nine prisons in and about London he hath given one thousand pounds What shall I say more I am amazed at so many charitable bequests of one man for he hath not onely remembred the Laity but the Clergie also not onely the valiant Souldiers the Gentlemen of the Artillery Garden with one hundred pounds towards their stock and one hundred markes for a dinner or supper because he was once chosen a Colonell of this City but poore honest preaching Ministers also with 500. li. towards the supply of their necessities not to exceed 5. li. nor lesse then 40. shillings a man because he would nourish learning and religion for he knew learning to bee a maine prop to uphold religion in its purity and therefore not to bee despised as now it is for the infirmities of some few men And not onely mankinde in generall but such things as conduce to his honour and livelihood this judicious charitable Gentleman hath thought on in the composure of his Testament first to comfort and refresh the poore destitute in cold weather he hath followed his fathers steps and left 500. pounds for a further supply of a stocke of Coales which his said father Sir Thomas Cambel Knight and sometime Lord Maior of London began with three hundred pounds secondly to make wayes passable to abridge long journeyes and to ease labour he hath left 250. pounds for the erection of a new bridge over the Foord neere Wansted in Essex and last of al that we as he should delight to bee in the Church of God which is the congregation of the faithfull the house of prayer where with one heart wee should heare God speake unto us by his word and wee unto him by humble confession earnest supplication and hearty thanksgiving hee hath given one thousand pounds towards the repaire of the mother Church the Cathedral Church of Saint Paul which evidently showes he was a man that did approve all things in the worship of God should bee decent and in good order And lest he himselfe should forget any that were capable of charity hee hath left the overplus of his estate which by his computation will be ten thousand pounds if not impaired by bad debts or otherwise in his Executors discretion to dispose of in some such piou and charitable worke or workes thing or things as they shall think fit which I hope will bee to the glory of God the reliefe of the poor the honour of the deceased and to the comfort and joy of the Executors themselves Yet I have not mentioned all his charitable Legacies for I have not made relation of 120. l. to 120. poor men in money or gownes and 12. d. a piece for their dinner upon the day of his Funerall 200. l. to poore beggars to avoid trouble on the same day 200. l. to the poore of the Parishes of Saint Peters Poore and Saint Olaves Jewry London and of Barking in Essex Besides 100. l. to the parishioners of the Parish of Saint Olaves Jewry for their good will to erect his monument by his fathers and his brothers Master Robert Cambel late Alderman of London And being he was so carefull for his honour while hee lived I thought it part of my duty to take some labour for the augmentation therof now he is dead which I could no better way performe then by publishing those his unparalleled Legacies for though that may bee more solid and durable yet this my labour may be as profitable and usefull for the stirring up of some charitable mens heart to doe workes of this nature For if they be truly just while they live they will shew the fruits thereof at their death because such men doe seldome any great worke of charity till their death if they doe any then as I have beene told by some for every rich man is not as Sir Iames because hee brought Justice and Mercy with him from his cradle charactered on his name Therefore I cease to wonder that he hath left such a paterne at his death when his name which was given him presently after his birth demonstrated the same as appeares in the Acrosticke verses and Anagrams following made by mee neare three yeares since and presented To his ever honoured Master Sir IUst is the Lord in all his waies And mercifull unto the poore Man likewise should in all Assaies Ever be Just but loving more Such are rare birds in these our daies Can ballance these in all their waies And yet I doubt not but some are Mercifull and righteous both But I feare they 're very rare Ev'n such to find in ripefull growth Let 's then with Justice mercy joyne Lest we be paid in the same coyne Iames Cambel Anagrammatized Se I came Balm AS Balm is of a fragrant sent So are those Graces God hath lent Vnto mankind sit to set forth Gods glory and his servants worth As Balm apply'd well to a sore Doth heale and cure so are the poure Reliev'd recur'd by Mercies oyle Which now I find springs in my soile Se I came Balm for this same cause Ev'n to fullfill my Makers Lawes That both my life and death set forth Justice and Mercies royall worth Another ANNAGRAM James Cambell I came Blamles NO man but Christ in this world e're could I came in blamles and so goe away My thoughts are pure words holy and workes say From sin originall and actuall stailesse For sins forbidden fruit Adam did eate blamles Hath caus'd his children crave sin as their meat So that young babes no sooner borne but cry As feeling sins thrall and lifes misery But yet I read in Gods most sacred word Many were tearmed Righteous by the Lord Such were good Noah Daniel Job the Just Not that they were so for they had a lust To do ill some of their workes did shew it But God in Mercy let not's Justice know it So now as then some righteous men there be Not innocent from sin to God yet free From foule notorious nefarious crimes Such as are now the Custome of the times To do their Neighbour wrong the poore oppresse And make a Trade of all ungodlynesse But the true Innocent is like a child Who in all Actions is both meeke and mild And though sometimes by hap they goe astray And wander little in an unknowne Way Then
according to his own agreement performed seven yeares for Rachel he out of a base covetous desire because hee would not lose the benefit of Iacobs service cheated him with blear-ey'd Lea and made him serve 7. yeares more for Rachel for he thought if Iacob had obtained his love he would have served him no longer Therefore finding that God blessed him for Iacobs sake and as Iacob told him saying for the little that thou hadst before I came is increased to a multitude was very unwilling to part with Iacob and therefore agreed with him upon a certaine bargaine of wages But when hee saw that Iacob got too much that way he abridged him of that and changed his wages ten times like many covetous masters in these dayes that for feare their servants should thrive under them grow proud or fit for better services doe what they can as wel in abridging them of that which is their just due as sometimes in those things they may get without them I meane without any damage or great trouble to them as a word of their mouth a note of their hand or in performing the will of the dead But I have no cause to complain in this particular for I doe humbly acknowledge my Master hath and doth more good for me then I deserve Yet I presume to touch those Masters that care not for their owne credit or their servants good Therefore leaving the politique head of Laban I come to his skinne The skin of a Serpent is beautifull and glistering and seemeth more amiable then hurtfull and Laban as his name signifies White the most beautifull colour so he seemed to bee a very faire dealing honest man as by his oration to Iacob appeareth in these words What hast thou done thou hast even stoln away my heart and carried away my daughters as though they had beene taken captives with the sword wherefore didst thou flie so secretly and steale away from me and didst not tell me that I might have sent thee forth with mirth and with songs with Timbrell and with Harpe But thou hast not suffered mee to kisse my sonnes and my daughters Now thou hast done foolishly in a●ng so yet though thou w●ntest away because thou greatly longest after thy fathers house wherefore hast thou stolne away my gods By which words any man of a reasonable capacity would not otherwise apprehend but that Iacob had done him a great deale of wrong and he no way faulty But when he could not prove what he said then he was faine to condiscend to the accusation which Iacob laid to his charge Yet because he would seeme faultlesse he claims propriety in his estate of all that hee had in these words These daughters are my daughters these sonne● are my sonnes and these sheepe are my sheepe and all that thou hast is mine and what can I not doe this day unto these my daughters or to their sonnes which they have borne Like many Masters in these our dayes that at their servants departure in stead of preferring or doing any good for them charge them with such things they cannot prove then if they quit themselves in that they claim propriety in their estate even as Laban in these or the like words All these goods are ours you have got them by us and now you have got a little you grow proud but consider that if it had not beene by our meanes you could never have come to this state as if they could divine how God would otherwise provide for them and so seeme to be very just righteous and conscionable themselves The last part of Laban is his sting and that hath a poisonous and venemous quality and wounds deadly Which was the envious heart of Laban his intents to hurt Iacob But how shall I finde them first in his face by his lookes Iacob perceived it well for speaking to his wives he said I perceive your fathers countenance is not towards me as it was wont Secondly by his words his envie appeared in this saying I am able to doe thee hurt As much as if hee should have said I could finde in my heart to take to my selfe all these sheep and droves of cattell that are mine and what can I not doe yea I am able to doe thee evill viz. to kill thee my intention is good But. This But spoiled all But God forewarned me Thirdly his malice appeared by his actions besides his comming to him and pursuing him with his brethren the altering of his wages and other hard services which he put him unto it was very conspicuous in requiring of Iacob those things which were lost by casuality and mischance as himselfe testifieth Whether it were torne by beasts or stolne by theeves by night or by day he was forced to make it good Like many masters in these our dayes that force their poore servants to pay for things that are broke or lost by casuality and their pretence is to make them more carefull when it is plaine it is to secure their owne goods and keepe their servants the poorer that they may detaine them the longer in subjection But yet wilful negligence in servants ought to bee punished else they will not care what spoil they make of their masters goods so that by this hard dealing of Laban Iacob told him to his face that except God had beene with him hee should have beene sent away empty as many servants are by such masters And thus much I thought good to write to prove Laban a Serpent And now I should show how this Serpent came to be a staffe of support to Iacob But before I write any further I will note the reasons why Isaac should send his sonne that he had made Lord of his brethren so poorely to seeke him a wife did he forget how his father sent Eleazar of Damasus the Steward and eldest servant of his house in great state with 10. Camels richly laden and servants to attend them to his brother Nahor to provide him a wife or was Isaac now at this time poorer then his father Abraham for answer to the first question it could not be that Isaac being a godly man and so brought up from his youth could forget a matter of such consequence To the second it 's plaine that hee was not poorer then his father but rather richer For Abimeleck King of the Philistins said unto him Get thee from us for thou are mightier then we a great deale But the reasons as I conceive why Isaac should send his sonne Iacob away without any attendance or other riches but his staffe onely as himselfe testifies was first for secrefie that he might not be prevented of his journey by his brother Esau who had before vowed his death for if Iacob should have taken any servants or treasure it would have beene declared to his brother who as I surmise was Lord of the house and servants while his father lived But secondly his father sent him away thus poorely to teach
and rest Secondly if wee consider this liquor running in the second current then wee shall finde it to bee muddy foule loathsome and the onely poysonous and soul-killing water in whose heart soever this carnall earthly and sinfull liquor springs shall ever thirst and never be satisfied he is in every thing contrary to the former lover hee is never contented with his estate In prosperity he is proud presumptuous and cruell and in adversity hee is desperate fretfull and envious His minde is onely upon earth and fading transitory riches hee careth for no heavenly grace so he may have carnall pleasure he takes no care for his soule but all his care is to pamper his body he accounteth the godly simple fooles and esteemes them as the off-scowring among the people he boasteth himselfe in the multitude of his riches and solaceth himselfe in his pleasures he thinkes hee shall live for ever upon e●●th and puts the day of death a farr● off hee ca●eth not by what meanes he getteth ●is riches so hee may goe bravely and fare deliciously every day Thus the lover of carnall and fl●shly delights will not feare to commit adultery gluttony drunkennesse c. fulfill the d●sire or lust of the flesh And thus the l●ver of the world will venture to comm●t cove●ousnesse oppression cruelty c. to fulfill and satisfie the lust of the eyes and pride of li●e The man th●t is inflamed with this love liveth upo●●he earth as a Citizen in his owne C 〈…〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the world dandleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 child● 〈…〉 ding his desire with rich●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fl●sh p●mpere●h him as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●●eding his desire with pl●●sure and d●l 〈…〉 and the Devill fostereth him as his father by perswading him that he is in a happy condition yet he is in subjection to the world a servant to the flesh and a slave to the divell Thus he lives in seeming happinesse and dyes in reall misery and or one drop of the shadow of comfort loseth an Ocean of true consolation Thirdly and lastly if wee looke upon this liquor running in the third pipe wee shall finde it to be clean good and wholesome wa●er I● whose heart soever this humane ●vi●l and naturall liquor springs may rest satisfied for a time but this cannot give the heart any true content except it proceed from the first love which in a good Christian are never separate for he that truly loveth God will love his brother also but he that hath not this charitable love for so we may terme it cannot have the first love as the Apostle testifieth saying If any man saith hee loveth God and hateth his brother he is a lyar for how can he that loveth not his brother whom he hath seene love God whom hee hath not seene Yet this love may be without the first as appeares in divers of the Heathen Philosophers who have exceeded many Christians in morall vertues yet were without the divine spirituall and heavenly love for they did not know God nor the mystery of godlinesse and therefore had no faith and consequently could not have the first love which proceedeth from faith The man that is inflamed with this love doth really fulfill the commandments of the second Table in the morall Law he loves his neighbour as himselfe this is a true charitable man he hath dispersed abroad and given to the poore hee doth much good in the world he relieves the needy helpes the oppressed feeds the hungry instructs the ignorant comforts the comfortlesse c. he layes for himselfe here a good foundation by good workes and shall at the last receive the reward of his labour if he faint not This love doth in large it selfe into three severall species or pipes In the first runnes that humane love wherewith we love all mankinde as they are men of one common nature with us In the second runnes that civill love wherewith wee love our owne Countrey and Nation as they are men brought up under one civill government in Lawes and Religion with us and in the third pipe runnes that naturall love wherewith we love our kindred or friends as they are of the bloud or to whom wee are bound by some speciall obligation of amity To let the humane and civill love runne out as men are pleased to convey it forth from the fountaine of their heart I will onely fix my meditations upon this naturall love and of that I will not write any thing of the love of parents to their children or brother to brother c. although I know their love may bee very great But I will onely insist to write what that natural love is wherewith a man is affected to a woman And herein I would not bee understood to meane that lustfull love which is commonly covered under this title although experience shewes that it is very powerfull in whose heart soever it is kindled and is a raging passion as all love is if it bee not kept in as fire within the chimny the sea within his bounds It is a foolish madnesse a labyrinth of errour and a miserable thraldome before it can be obtained But if the lover doth fulfill his desire what hath he got but a racke to his minde a torture to his soule a gibbet to his conscience a staine to his reputation and a pleasing yet fatall poyson This breeds a consumption in his purse rottennesse in his bones and a blot in his good name But if this love bee in the lawfull way of marriage as this kinde is seldome to that effect then if the lover doth make his choice onely for the beauty of the body without any respect to the qualities of the minde hee may finde one that may please his eye but commonly she proves a wanton Hellen or a trayterous Dallila one that will consume his wealth and worke his destruction or else such a one that will make him a scoffing stocke to the world by cunning planting upon his head Acteons livery Thus for pleasure he gets misery and for a beautifull outside embraceth a snake in his bosome poyson in his meat and gall in his drinke Againe I would not bee understood to meane that covetous desire which is also commonly clothed with this title and in these dayes chiefly embraced when a man doth onely chuse a wife for riches although hee cannot like her person much lesse love her Such may meet with one that may fulfill his desire with wealth but commonly she proves a scolding Xantippe one that will be alwayes scolding railing and taunting him and with whom hee shall never live one quiet houre Thus for a little wealth he is alwayes pinched with a strait shooe lives in continuall vexation and at the last is forced to leave her because he cannot live quietly with her But this is not the love which I purpose to describe for this is carnall earthly and sinfull but the other is naturall honest and commendable which is an honest desire of the