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A36555 The forerunner of eternity, or, Messenger of death sent to healthy, sick and dying men / by H. Drexelius. Drexel, Jeremias, 1581-1638.; Croyden, William.; Marshall, William, fl. 1617-1650. 1642 (1642) Wing D2183; ESTC R35549 116,212 389

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why art thou so disquieted within me still trust in God for I will yet give him thanks who is the light of my countenance and my God Psal 42.6 7. We are the children of his Saints and we do expect that life which God will give to those that keep the faith It is not the will of your heavenly Father that one of these little ones should perish Matth. 18.14 So God loved the World that hee gave his onely begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life John 3.16 Now if any man sin wee have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous and hee is the propitiation for our sins and not for ours onely but for the sinnes of the whole world 1 John 2 1. Verily verily I say unto you whosoever heareth my Word and believeth on him that sent mee hath life eternall and shall not come into judgment but shal passe from death to life John 5.24 All that my Father hath given to me shall come unto mee and hee that commeth to me I cast not out of doors Verily verily I say unto you who so believeth in mee hath eternall life John 6 37. 47. I am the resurrection and the life Whosoever believeth in mee yea though he were dead yet shal he live and whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall not die eternally John 11.15 26. In my Fathers house are many Mansions John 14 2. If God be for us who can be against us who also spared not his own Sonne but gave him for us how then shall hee not give us all things with him Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect It is God who justifies Who shall condemne It is Iesus Christ which is dead yea rather which is risen again and sitteth at the right hand of his Father making intercession for us Rom 8 31. usque ad 35. None of us live unto our selves nor none die unto our selves whether wee live wee live unto the Lord or whether we die we die unto the Lord wh●ther therefore wee live or die we are the Lords Rom. 14 7 8. We know that if this earthly house of our dwelling be dissolved wee have a building from God an house not made with hands eternall in the Heavens and for this wee sigh desiring to be put on with our house which is from heaven that if we be clothed we shal not be found naked 2 Co 5.1 2 3 Now shall Christ be magnified in my body whether it be by life or by death for Christ is to me both in life and death advantage But to be with Christ is much better Phil. 1.20 21 23 Our conversation is in heaven from whence we look for a Saviour even our Lord Iesus Christ who shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body Phil. 3.20 21. This is a faithfull saying and worthy of all acceptation that Iesus Christ came into the World to save sinners of whom I am chief 1 Tim. 1.15 Whosoever endureth to the end shall be saved Matth 24 13. Be thou faithfull unto death and I will give thee the crowne of life Apoc. 2.10 These are pure and coole streams and fountains to asswage the heat of sin and fear of death Hee swims safely who baths himself in these waters of comfort § 28. Holy Ejaculations and Prayers of a dying man HOly Eligius a little before his death embracing his friends with teares spoke thus unto them Farewell all yee and suffer me from henceforth to rest Earth must return to earth the Spirit will finde the way to God that gave it So holding up his hands and eyes to heaven prayed so a good while and at last burst forth into these words Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace according to thy word Remember Lord that thou hast made mee as earth Enter not into judgment with thy servant for in thy sight shall no flesh living be justified O remember mee thou Redeemer of the World who onely art without sin and bringing mee from the body of this death place mee in thy Kingdom I know I doe not deserve to see thy face and tast thy favour but thou knowest that all my hopes have bin in thy all-saving mercies and now ô Christ dying in the confession of thy holy Name I doe render my last breath my soule into thy safe keeping Receive me ô Lord according to thy great mercies and let mee not be confounded in my hope open to mee the gate of life and let not the powers of darknes hold me Let thy right hand bring me into thy resting place and let me enjoy one of those Mansions which thou hast prepared for those tha love and feare thee And having thus prayed hee departed Oh could wee follow the example of this holy man let us therefore call upon Christ in these or the like words Enlighten mine eyes ô Iesus that I sleep not in death lest that mine enemy say unto mee I have prevailed against him Psal 13 4. O Lord Jesus Christ the Son of the living God put I pray thee thy Passion Crosse and meritorious death betwixt thy judgment and my poore soule O Remember not Lord our old sins but have mercy upon us and that soon for wee are come to great misery Psal 77.8 Oh m st sweet Jesus Christ our Lord for the honour and vertue of thy most blessed Passion make me to be numbred with thy Saints in glory everlasting Enter not into judgment ô sweet Iesu with thy servant for in thy sigh● shall no flesh living be justified and then let him utter these words I worship thee ô Lord Iesus Christ and blesse thy name for thou by thy holy Crosse and Passion hast redeemed the World O thou Saviour of the World save mee which by thy bitter Crosse and precious bloud hast redeemed me Draw mee unto thee ô Iesus who didst say When I am lifted up from the earth I shall draw all men unto me O most me●cifull Iesus I pray thee by thy precious bloud which thou sheddest for sinners to blot out all my offences O let thy bloud purifie me let thy body ô Christ save mee wash mee in thy bloud and let thy passion confirme my soule ô good Iesu heare me hide me in thy wounds suffer me not to be separated from thee in the houre of death call me bid me to come unto thee that I with all the rest of the glorious Saints may prayse thee O my gracious Redeemer I do wholly give up my self unto thee Cast mee not out from thy presence I come unto thee reject me not Cast me not out of thy sight and take not thy holy Spirit from mee Oh let not my iniquity cast me away whom thy goodnesse did create As death approacheth neerer so let the dying man pray thus O God according to thy will so let thy mercy come unto me bid ô God that my spirit may
the Stage it makes not what part thou performest so thou doest it well Sueton. in Aug. 99. Suetonius reports of Augustus Caesar that at the end of his life he asked his friends that were about him if he had play'd his part well or not They answered him yes why doe ye not then said the Emperour afford me a Plaudite Seneca well spake of the life of man comp●red to a Play Epist 80. in Med. I will often practise my part lest for want of use I grow unskilfull and so get discredit and shame Laertius in Zeno saith that a wise man is l●ke a Player that whether he acts Thersi●es or Agamemnon he should strive to performe both with diligence Wee are therefore to attend not so much what wee are but what wee shall bee when wee shall have layd downe our persons and put of our Vizards nor matters it when wee perform'd our parts onely if we did them with discretion § 32. The Type of Humane life BArlaam an old man Iohannes Damasceu Hist de his c. 13. ad finem declaring to King Iosaphat the deceitfull joyes of Humane life described them to him after this manner A certain man fled from a Unicern which is a fierce cruell beast in his flight he rush'd suddenly into a deepe pit but in his fall his hands being stretch'd forth he caught hold of a tree and by that meanes stopt his fall while hee was in the tree he contemn'd the danger he was escap'd from but he saw two mice the one was blacke the other white these two lay gnawing the roote of the tree and had almost bit it in peeces then he casting his eyes about espyed beneath him a wondrous deepe ditch and in it was a terrible Dragon threatning death to him if he fell and while he was looking about to save himselfe from dangers hee spyed the heads of foure great venemous Serpents lying forth out of the sides of the ditch yet hee neglecting all these dangers hee lift up his eyes and beheld some Honey dropping from a tree wherefore he supposing himselfe secure forgetting the Unicorne that followed him the Dragon that threatned him the Mice that gnawed the roots of the tree the Serpents that waited him and the sudden fall of that tree hee greedily licked in the Honey and these things said Barlaam doe set forth the folly of our lives and thus he explained it The Unicorne resembles Death which doth pursue all mankind eagerly The Ditch is this world which is stored with all sorts of miseries The Tree which he caught hold on is this life terminated within certaine bounds The two Mice are the night and the day which eat up the root of the tree by little and little The foure Serpents are the foure Elements who if they be out of order or molested Death ensues That great and terrible Dragon designes the fiery Serpent the divel who goes about seeking whom he may devoure The drops of Honey which the man so eagerly desired to tast of are the enticing pleasures and the rotten baites of sinnes being once overcome with the alluring pleasures and deceitfull lusts man neither fears the sudden fall into Hell nor ever mindes the joyes of Heaven but desires to perish in the gulph of these sensuall delights this was Barlaams explication to Josaphat Oh how true most true is all this if we be wise let us remember our ends for from every moment of time depends eternity §. 33. The Prologue Narration and Epilogue of mans life THe Prologue of humane life is to be borne the Narration is to grieve the Epilogue is to die The Appendixes of th●se three are grones and teares or joy which is worse than weeping Seneca saith excellently Consel ad Polyb. c. 23. goe too saith he looke circumspectly upon all men and you shall have cause and matter enough to weep Poverty and exigency and extreame necessity calls one forth to his toylsome labour another is vainly sweld and puft up with Ambition another feares in the middest of his wealth a fourth is vexed with care some are weakned with sicknesse and diseases others are turmoyling in great businesses and are troubled with the confluence of Clyents this man grieves that hee hath children a second that he hath lost them a third because he never had them We shall weepe our selves empty of teares before we shall want objects for them Seest thou not what a life Nature promises us whose entrance progresse and egr●sse is but a vicissitude of sorrows and an entercourse of miseries and teares in these we begin our life with these we go on and with abundance of teares and wailings wee goe out A great part of our life is spent in doing evill a great deale spent and consum'd in doing nothing and a great part of it wasted in doing other things not the maine Who is he that so prizeth a day as though he should never have any more Hence is it that we carelesly forget things past neglect things present doe not fore-see things to come Well when it is come to the upshot then then shall we with griefe and sorrow know and understand that what time was spent in sinne and idlenesse to be utterly lost Let us therefore walke circumspectly and lay hold on all times and opportunities for our betterment Let us judge each houre our dying houre By this meanes we shall so order our lives that we shall not be afraid to die for while our life seemes to be prolonged it fleets and passes away §. 34. That the longest life is but short at the best Epist. 77. in fine MOst truly said Seneca no mans life but is short For if we respect the nature of things even Nestors and Statilia's were but short who commanded this t● be inscribed on her tombe tha● shee lived 99. yeares behold the vaine boasting of an old woman what would she have beene ha● she lived an hundred As it is in the Fables th● golden Flour-amour or the Amaranthus was planted next to th● Rose and said to the Rose thus O● what a comely flower the Rose is O how beautifull how amiable I doe take thee for a blessed flower for thy sweetnesse colour an● comelinesse Oh thou Queene o● Flowers To whom the Rose replied I doe indeed oh Amaranthus excell in splendor and sweetnesse but my time of flourishing is but short and though no hand should offer violence to mee yet I doe soon wither of my self but thou art happy for thou alwayes doest flourish never diest I had rather have lesse beauty and longer life Mans life is emblematiz'd in this Rose short and fading and though no violence be offered to him yet he fals of his owne accord into the grave The Prince of Physicians said well Arts are long and durable Hippoc. initio Aphor but life is short Wee have but a little and we spend a great deal of that little in luxury and idlenesse O improvident Mortals the body
this and say take heed of sicknesse it is ill to be under it to whom Epictetus answers judiciously It is all one as if one should say and faigne to make three to be foure It is no ill if I rightly esteem of it it cannot then hurt me but rather profit mee So the like use may be made of poverty sicknesse war May not a man gather benefit by any by all of these the same I may say of Death is it not my appointed Steeresman into rest is it not the Mess●nger that opens the ga●e to Eternity is not Death that which takes off all our burthens and easeth us from labour from misery Let Truth honour thee Epictetus how true are all these and squaring with the Law of Christianity This foundation being laid we shal learn to remember Deaths Agony and not to be affrighted at his comming But oh my Reader I would have thee know that these Documents were not onely written for thy use in the time of thy sicknes but I would have thee read these in the time of thy health that they may stand thee in some stead when thou shalt be visited with sicknesse § 42. The sickman speaks to his friends to the Diseas● to the entrance into Death it selfe to Christ our Lord. DEpart I pray you as unseasonable with your vaine and fruitlesse mourning Here is no place either for Complaints or Petitions You may thinke I goe from you to soon Too soon look that you bee not deceived I was fit for Death's sicle as soone as I was born nay before I was born Why should I complaine I know what I was born Was I not a weak frail body Cast forth to contumelies the food of Diseases Deaths object whosoever thou art take h●pes to thee or undergo thy burthen perhaps thou mayest be dejected to morrow or if no remov'd from hence To the disease ANd is Deaths Harbing●r approach'd must I now lie under sicknesse the time is now come I must put my selfe to the triall Valour is not onely seene in a storme or in a bat●aile Courage may be tried upon a pillow in a bed of affliction I must be sick therefore It cannot be avoided Well I shall either end my Feaver or it me Wee cannot be always together Hitherto I have onely trafficked with health Homil. 13 in Evang. now I must exchange some time with my disease Saint Gregory tels it to me piously and truly The Lord saith he knocks when hee signifies to us that death is neere us by troublous sicknesses to whom we readily open if wee receive with comfort his chastizements Some relations may cause mee to give admittance to this serious Embassadour It is reported of a certaine old man who lay grievous sick and when as Death made an approa●h to take him away the sick old man entreated Death to forbeare his blow a little while untill he could make his Will and set things in readines for so long a journey To whom Death replyed ô crooked old man couldst thou not prepare thy selfe in so many years being so often warn'd by me to whom the old man said again I beseech thee lend me thy faith for I doe not remember that ever thou didst admonish me but Death answer'd briefly then I perceive that old men will lie An hundred six hundred a thousand warnings hast thou had from mee when I daily in thy sight to thy griefe not onely tooke away thy equals of which for years there are few left but also before thy eyes young men and little infants Nay I will appeale to thy own soul forgetfull old man didst thou want admonishments when thy eyes grew dim thy haires wax'd white were f●lne off thy nose lost its smell thy eares grew deafe and all thy other sences and members grew defective in their performances and thy whole body languish'd wasted these all these were Messengers from me and shoul● have been as so many warning pieces to prepare thee to march on These all have knock'd at thy doors though thou wouldst not acknowledge thy selfe to be within Often enough and long enough hast thou bin admonish'd I stay not Come away and enter the Dance of Death now presently He seldome prepares himselfe well which prepares so extraordinary late To his Death-bringing sicknesse WHen I meditate on my life consider the multitude of my sins and the smalnesse of my good duties Alas alas oh my God how am I straitned and how am I beset and encompassed with sorrow but it is better to fall into the Hands of the Lord for great are his mercies and his compassions faile not then that I should adde more days to my years and more sin to my days What an one I would have prov'd thou onely ô Lord knowest Perhaps I might have Apostated and falne from life Since ô death thou art present doe thy message unto me rid mee from misery and the malice of men I am ready and willing to part wi h life onely let me retaine thy Grace ô Lord or rather let it preserve me which I doe earnestly with all my heart beg of thee ô sweet Iesus Christ and through thee Amen To Dea●h it selfe DEath why in so long wastings dost thou like What needs there such great charge I doe yield strike What need'st thou empty all thy quivers when One blast w ll drive one puffe will stroy most men For indeed what is man but a tossed and leaking ship which one lusty wave sends to the bottome There needs no furious charge of tempests wheresoever thou ô Death placest thy murthering Ram it will force passage Mans bodie is wove up of weake and fluid materials glistering in outward lineaments impatient of heat cold or travail of it's own inclination apt to languishments gathering corruption even from his sustentation sometimes hurt by want sometimes by excesse his nutriment wants not discommodity a brittle piece of mortalitie preserv'd and upheld with griefe and anxietie holding his very spirit and breath at anothers disposing which easily departs full of innumerable diseases and though he should want diseases to ruine him yet of his own accord he would fall perish and descend to Death Can wee wonder to see that die in which Death is fed and nourish'd and hath a thousand places to enter possesse and if man doth fall is it any such remarkable losse his very smell and taste his wearinesse and watching his humours and food without which he cannot live are all mortifero●s and deadly To Iesus Christ I Would not Death but life hee seeks it right O Christ who in thy love departs to light I am not afraid with them whom thou speakest o in wrath Goe c. I will follow thee ô loving Saviour with will with delight and what should I doe else when as thou thy self callest me to come and approach neerer to be dissolv'd and to be with Christ is much the better This is the height of my desires 1 Phil 1.23
of his fore-head hard and rough with wrinkles his countenance is wanne and pale with some yellows sometimes like lead blacke blew h●s lips are loosed hanging with weaknesse whitish his teeth are blacke his neck is consumed and growne lean all things are changed so that hee seems as it were to be another person so when God hath changed a mans countenance he sends him to his long home Passe on ô man passe on to thy house of eternity from such a little-little point of time so many Volumes of Ages depend which are not to bee reckoned up by any date of time § 6. We ought to prepare for Death before it comes IT was a wise man saying Moriendum esse antequam mori cogaris i. e that thou shouldst die before thou be compelled to die S. Paul did ●ot onely do so once or often but daily affirming that of himself I die daily 1 Cor. 15 3. Gregory the Great the higher hee gained preferment in the Church the more glorious beams of Sanctity did he send forth this most vigilant Pastor did seem to be dead before death for not long before his Obit hee himselfe described his own condition Such bitternesse of spirit such an assiduous grievance such molestation of the Gout doe afflict mee that my body is as even dryed up already in the grave so that I cannot rise up from my bed Cosmus Med●ces being at the p●int of death whē as he was ask'd of his wife why he shut his eyes before he was dead Answered I do accustome them to that that when they shal be shut up by death they may bear it well This is an excellent kind of death then to shut our eys especially when any deadly pleasure doth intice them be sure thou doest die lest thou shouldst die ô shut them betimes Wisely did Seneca advise Lucilius Doe that before the day of thy death let thy sins be dead before thy selfe § 7. Those that buried themselves PAcuvius being Governour in Syria for Tiberius Caesar did daily so give himselfe to wine and feastings that as hee was carried to his bed from Supper his servants wi●h great applause sung these words to him Vixit vixit i. e. He hath liv'd he hath liv'd What was this but every day to be carried about to his buriall Seneca said well of him That saith he which hee did daily out of an ill conscience let us doe by a good one that when wee are gone to bed and about to sleep with comfort and rejoycing we may say Wee have liv'd if God shal lend us the next morning let us entertaine it with cheerfulnessee His a blessed and secure Possessor of himselfe who expects the next morning without distrust or distraction Labienus the Historian for his inveighing writings termed Rabienus was so hated that all his Books were burnt Labienus not enduring this and not willing to out-live his wit did desire to be carried out and buried in the Sepulchre of his Ancestors where he did end and bury himselfe and what is wonderfull liv'd when he was buried and was buried while he liv'd Storax a Ne●politan not long since a very rich man delicate and a prou● Governour or Overseer for the yeerly p●ovision of Corne having got this office by base and indirect means the common people hated him exceedingly so that being overcome with hunger they fell violently upon the man he seeking to es●ape their fury and rage did hide himself in a Sepulchre in a Church but at last being found and beaten with stones was cut into small Gobbets and his very bloud was lickt up of many so that his bones wanted a Grave Hee had this Epitaph made upon him Storax qui vivus subjit sepulchrum Mirum defunctus caruit sepulchro i.e. Storax who living went into his grave Strange that being dead no sepulchre could have Albertus the Great leaving Rati●bon● came to Collen where though strictly being devoted to Mortification and Contempt of this World so that hee forgat all worldly delights yet would hee continually visit the place of his intended buriall Severus President of Ravenna while hee was healthy went into his Tombe and placing himselfe in the middle betwixt his wife which he had had and his daughter there died Philo●omus of Galata is said to dwel six yeers amongst the graves of the dead Palladius c. 13. that by this meanes hee might overcome the feare of death Polemon of Laodicea Suidas V. Pole as Suidas witnesseth the Scholer of Timocrates the Philosopher the Master of Aristides the Orator being 56 yeers of age cast himselfe into a deepe Sepulchre being urged thereunto by the bitter paines of the Gout and there died of hunger and before his death his friends and neighbours lamenting his case desired him to come forth by their help it is reported of him that hee answered them thus Provide me a more healthy body and I will come up Wee may wonder at these but not imitate them unlesse in this manner Colos 3. as Saint Paul speaks ye are dead and your life is hid with Christ in God That Philosophers counsell is good Vive latens i.e. live hid For as another said Hee lives well that lives retiredly This man may be said to be profitably dead and buried the private life is freest from incumbrances and inconveniences Whose life is to publick often dyes unknowne to himself The private life is fullest of quietnesse § 8. A consideration of our Sepulchre Phthia pro sepulchro TErtia me Phthiae tempestas laeta locabit Englished The third great sicknesse shall Give me a glad funerall Thus said Socrates presaging of his own death this word Phthia is meant for nothing else but the Coffin or the grave to which all must come No house may so truly be said to be ours as our graves This Iacoponus a religious man and pleasant taught by a witty Act of his A Cit●zen of Todi in Vmbria had bought two young Chickens being about to send them home by chance he espyed Iacoponus in the Market to whom he turning said I pray you doe mee that favour and kindnesse as to car y ●hese two Chickens home to my house and be sure you leave them there and doe not deceive me Trust me saith he I will doe as you have bidden me and I w●ll carry them indeed unto the house and so forthwith taking them went directly to his Parish Church and came to his Sepulchre which was reserved for him and in that as well as hee could hee hid the two Chickens Well the Citizen comming home to his house presently asked for his two Chickens his servants all deni d flatly that they saw no such thing brought thither so the Citizen going againe into the Market met Jacoponus again And said to him I thought indeed that thou wouldst not doe as thou shouldst and that thou woul●st deceive me but tell me in earnest where are my Chickens to whom Iacoponus replyed I carried them
a wise man will expound the old mans thus This old man saw many Summers and Winters and ●eath seem'd because it deferd so long as though it would have spared him for he had experienc'd many things he had gone through ma●y miseries and changes of this life but yet at length through all these yeers hee is brought to his Coffin and dust Et mortuus est And is dead Now he that will wisely understand the young mans Epitaph must read it Interrogatorily thus This young man was eminent for wealth for beauty for strength of body beloved of the Muses and Apollo the White Chicken both of the graces and fortune not yet 20 yeers old secure from the Grimface of pale Death hee looked as if hee would have prou'd immortall and as though hee would have deceiv'd all the Fates and is he dead That that old decrepit man should be dead few grieve none doe wonder but that this flourishing young man should bee taken away all men wonder most men sorrow and could such a beautifull gracious active young man dies and is he dead all men seeke and blame the destinies for being so impartiall To his I doe adde another not to be numbred amongst the rest but onely place it to exercise the wi●s of some as well as it hath tired the wits of others it is to be seen in Bononia the words of the Epitaph are these A M. PP D. Alia Laelia Crispis nor man nor woman nor Hermaphrodite not a maid not a young man not an old woman not shamefast nor shamelesse but all things not ●aken away by famine not by sword nor by poyson but by all things nor is buried in the aire nor in the water nor earth but every where Lucius Agatho Priscius nor an husband nor a lover nor a servant nor sorrowing nor rejoycing nor weeping who knows and knows not nor this heap nor this Pyramis nor this Sepulchre but all things that are placed This is a Sepulchre having nobody within it this is a carcasse not having any Sepulchre without it but the carcasse and the Sepulchre are the same to themselves Some have taken this Enigmaticall Epitaph to mean the soul of man some the water of the clouds others Niobe turn'd into a Stone others have imagined otherwise Some have written Commentaries on it as Ioannes Turius of Brudges and Richard White of Basingstoke in England a Lawyer whose booke was printed at Dordrecht by Iohn Leo Berewout Anno 1618 But to let these shadows and clouds passe we wil put our wit to exercise in more plainer paths and the reason why wee interlace our discourse with these is 〈◊〉 because we would not too deeply affright or terrifie our studious Reader and that wee may keepe him from disdain or disliking when he is weary that wee may therefore behold the customes and the wholsom admonitions of the dead look upon another Epitaph which is to be seen at Naples in these words 2 This Marble memory is here placed for mee yea Reader for thee also whosoever thou art watch whilest thou wakest and make seasonable hast to thy work no man knows the set time Farewell 3 The stone of Cajeta exhibits this short Inscription Fui non sum ●estis non eritis Silvius Palladius Vt moriens viveret Vixit at moriturus I was am no● You are shall not be Silvius Palladius Who that He might live dead Did live as alwayes dying I will not omit that most short yet pleasant one of M. Posthumius a Knight M. Posthumius a Knight Whither I goe I know not I die of necessity Farewell all that are behinde 5 To learne us in the first place wisdome and to make us despise vanity this Epitaph following bestowed on a religious and nobly descended Gentleman will serve fitly Ah Traveller stay and read I desire a word with thee In my life I plac'd this stone here against the time of my death who lye here in a narrow space and here in the dust and darknes do expect thee ô my Guest and the last Trumpet of the Angell at the day of judgment but perhaps thou mayst aske my of-spring I am one of the latter sons of Red Earth So thou mayst enquire my Country It was the World My learning it was a shadow my reputation It was smoake my Age Alas a point or if a little more produced a minute Wouldst thou know my wealth 'T was poverty My Honours 't was contempt My liberty it was flattery My desire 't was death and true life after death which I hope I and thou shall enjoy Be gone and remember death 6 I will annex that sad and truly lamentable one an Epitaph of a Brother who was killed by his brother Alas alas Here I am laid a young man before my time Deaths scorne a Brothers Funerall a Fathers grief a Mothers teares the Muses lamentation an example to young men a sigh for old men rottenesse ashes nothing to my self but what to God Ah! Traveller why enquirest thou alas now shall I heare what I feare what I hope for to morrow thou mayest know travell on oh curious Citizen Richardus de Marisco Bishop of Durham writ his own Epitaph an holy one and in those times witty and pleasant It beares this inscription Culmina qui cupitis laudes pompasque sititis Est sedata sitis si me pensare velitis Qui populos regitis memores super omnia si is Quod mor● immitis non parcit honore potitis Vobis praepositis similis fueram bene scitis Quod sum vos eritis ad me currendo ven●tis Englished You who preferments doe desire Who for high prayse are set on fire Your Thirst would quickly quenched be If that you would consider mee You by whom people stout are check'd Be mindfull always ne're neglect That cruell death no whit regards Your Honours or your rich reward For I have been like you in grace Grave Prelats and as chief in place For you shal be even as I am You run and hast unto the same This in those times was of singular wit and learning and savours still of mortification now I adde the Monument of a learned man Iustus Lipsius knowne by his writings speaks thus from his sepulcher to the living Seekest thou who lyes here buried I my selfe will reherse it to thee I was one who of late spoke with style and tongue now it shal be lawfull for another I am Lipsius whom learning and thy favour may cause to live But I dying am gone so shall this also and this world possesseth nothing that is everlasting Wilt thou that I speake in a higher voyce to thee All humane things are but smoke shadows vanity the Image of a Play and to speak in a word nothing this is my last conference with thee I would have thee hope I am in glory Iustus Lipsius liv'd 59 yeers hee dyed in the yeere of Christ 1606 on the passion day of our Saviour So then both learned and
entertained with an undaunted spirit Whither it sets upon us violently or easily A vertuous life never thought ill of death and that man loses nothing who gets all things § 13. How the Saints of God may desire yet feare Death LEt us behold Saint Paul sai●h Saint Gregory how hee loves that which hee avoyds and how hee avoids that which hee loves Behold hee desires to die and feares to put off the tabernacle of flesh Why so Because although the victory makes his heart to rejoyce yet the paine doth trouble him for the present As a valiant man who is to fight a Combate though he be armed yet he pants and trembles and by his palenes discovers feare yet hee is mainly prick'd forward by valour and courage So a godly and holy man being neer to his death and passion is struck with the infirmity of his nature yet is he strengthened with the firmnesse of his hope and doth rejoyce that by dying hee shall live for ever For he cannot enter into that Kingdom but by the interposition of death yet hee doubts and hopes and rejoycing feares and fearing is glad because hee knows hee cannot attain to the prize unlesse he passeth this midway obstacle Hence it is that even the holiest men have in some measure feared deaths encounter King Hezekiah in the increase of his sicknes doth yet in teares lament Esay 38.10 That in the midst of his days he shall go to the gates of Hell What did not the feare of death cause David to utter that speech Psal 102 25. Take mee not away in the midst of mine age What shall we say of Abraham Iacob Elias Who as we are instructed by holy Writt did something feare death Elias flying from death 3. Reg. 19. yet did entreat for it under the Juniper tree Arsenius a man of an hundred twenty yeers old never assaulted with any disease having served God fifty five yeers in a most austere life being now at his d●parting began to feare and we●p Those that were present wondring at it said And doe you ô Father l●kewise fear death to whom he answered ever since I entred into the state of Religion I have always f●ared Seneca spoke excellently often is it seen that even the stoutest man though armed yet at the first entrance into the Combat feares so the resolutest Souldier at the signall of Battle his knees and joynts tremble so it is with the grea●est Commander as also wi●h the famousest Orator at the composing himself to speake This was observed in Charles the fifth Emperour who though hee was couragious in all warlike Expeditions though hee was not overcome with the greatest dangers nor frighted with the furiousnesse of warlike Chariots nor ever shrunke his head out of the maynest hazards yet for all that at the putting on of his Armour hee would something quake and shiver and shew signes of some feare but when once his head piece was on his sword girded to his thigh his Coat of Maile upon him hee was as a Lyon and like a mighty man of valour would set upon the Enemy Even so the best of men do desire and feare death they would be gone out but they tremble at it But it is better to die with Cato then to live with Anthony Hee is Deaths conquerour who quietly gives up his Spirit when he is c●ld from hence §. 14. An ill death follows an ill life EVen as a tree falls that way when it is cut downe as it leaned when it stood so for the most part as we have liv●d and bent our courses so doe we depart As we begun to goe so wee continue a commendable death seldome shuts up a dishonest life What things were pleasurable to us in the course of our lives ee seldome dislike at the time of our deaths A great Courtier of King Cenreds who studied more to please his Sovereigne then his Saviour being at point to die he did not onely seeme to neglect the care of his soule but also to put off the time of his death but hee saw before him a great many wicked Spirits expressing the Catalogue of all his hainous sins before him at which sight in horrour for them in despaire he dyed While wicked Chrysaorius called out for a space even for time but till the next morning he departed Herod Agrippa as his life was full of all impieties so his death was miserable So Herodias a● History reports who by dancing g t off Iohn Baptists head had her owne head cut off by the ice So Iezabel and Athaliah Queenes so ●ing Benhadad Balihazar and Antiochus with 600 more as their lives were naught and wicked so were their ends w etched and odious The death of wise men is to be lamented but much more the lives of the foolish Psal 34.22 the death of sinners is the worst It being an irrevocable ingresse of a most wofull eternity of torments Foolishly doth he feare death who neglects life He who lives to luxury and rio is dead while alive § 15. A good death follows a good life MOst truly said Saint Augustine That cannot be reputed for a bad death when as a good life hath always preceded For nothing but the sequell of death proves it ill A good crop of Corn doth seldome or never faile a plentifull sowing A good life is the Kings high way to a good Death That is the beginning middle and end I may compare life and death to a Syllogisme The conclusion is the end of the Syllogisme so death of life but the conclusion is either true or false according to the nature of the Antecedents So is Death always either good or bad according to the quality of our precedent lives So Saint Paul doth most severely pronounce it Whose end saith he shall be according to their works 2 Cor. 1. ● 15. It is reported of a certain man of a most devout life who was found dead in his study with his body so seated that his finger was upon the holy Bible and upon that place where it is said if the just man shall be taken away by Death hee shall be in his refreshing Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints whither it be slow or sudden The mellifluous Saint Bernard being now neere to his dissolution Thus spoke to his Schollers because quoth he I leave you no great examples of Religion yet three things I doe seriously commend to you which I have specially at all times observed 1 To trust my own sences lesse then others 2 That being hurt or injured by any I never fought after revenge 3 I never did willingly offend any man whatsoever fell out cross and thwart I pacified as I could Now being nere Death He w●it a Let●er to Arnaldus of Good-dale to this effect The spirit is ready but the fl●sh is we k. P●ay you to our Lord Jesus not to defer my exit but keep me when I shall go have
THE Fore-runner of ETERNITIE OR Messenger of DEATH sent to Healthy Sick and Dying Men by H. DREXELIUS 1643 ●NA 〈◊〉 HIS ●SA ●NIS MORE ●UND●● AEGRIS W. Marshall Sculpsit THE FORERUNNER OF ETERNITY OR MESSENGER OF DEATH Sent to Healthy Sick and Dying Men By H. DREXELIUS LONDON Printed by J. N. and are to be sold by John Sweeting at the Angel in Popes-Head-alley Ann. Dom. 1642. ¶ To the worthy and most virtuous Gentlewoman Mistresse MARGARET DRAPER Widow of Mr. ROBERT DRAPER Esquire MADAME WOnder not that I presume to thrust this Tractate into your hands as not having that Relation to your self usuall in all such Dedications yet finding so great an affinity betwixt your Goodnesse and the Tractate it self so great unitie betwixt your Meditations daily express'd in your Practice and these here imprinted I thought it not onely fit but necessary to prefix your name unto it For it is most just That in whom these Meditations have been continually imprinted she at last should be imprinted in these Meditations Take therefore this Book reade it your self and explain it to others least that Gulf in the Title ETERNITY catch and involve those at unawares that might fore-run it Let the Reader know that it is alwayes to be thought on though never to be understood Let him believe that every moment we travell unto it and shall quickly come to our journeys end that vast place of entertainment the Inne of Eternitie Let him look he bespeaks good Lodging and good Company for the next morning as soon as the Sunne of Righteousnesse appears he shall begin a journey that shall never have end in which he shall still move on yet never proceed for going forward is but as standing still in that motion to which no period is allotted But this you know in a word therefore Take this book now your owne for though your lesse skill in the Latine tongue may deny you to have made the Originall yet the zeal and piety of your Life is the best Translation Shew it therefore to the world that its Meditations whilest you live may be a Pattern for others and when you are dead the Historie of yours So I have brought this Book and you together I know you will quickly be acquainted and talk out the rest therefore now ceasing to trouble you I steal away in silence remaining Yours in all humble service W. CROYDEN ¶ The severall Sections of the three ensuing Books The first Book 1 AN Introduction to the work pag. 1 2 That the remembrance of Death should be daily pag. 3 3 The remembrance of death a medicine against all sinnes pag. 5 4 Of the conclusion of a good life pag. 8 5 That every man is nothing pag. 9 6 Of the short continuance of men pag. 11 7 The same larglier insisted on pag. 13 8 The vanity of the desire of long lise pag. 15 9 That man is dust pag. 1● 10 That every man is truly miserable pag. 21 11 What man is pag. 24 12 Instruction to the haters of funeralls pag. 27 13 That our life is nothing but weeping pag. 29 14 That God comforteth those that weep pag. 30 15 That our death may be as advantagious as our birth pag. 33 16 That death is every where pag. 36 17 Every mans house is deaths home pag. 38 18 The inexorablenesse of death pag. 40 19 The certainty uncertainty of death pag. 42 20 The suddennesse of death pag. 44 21 An antidote against sudden death pag. 54 22 Our dayes are few and e●ill pag. 57 23 How dying young we may be said to be old pag. 59 24 That any one that will may live long pag. 62 25 That we must all die pag. 63 26 The remembrance of death ought to be renewed pag. 66 27 A discourse of Assan Bashaw pag. 73 28 That each day is to be regarded pag. 78 29 The throne of all our pride is our bier pag. 80 30 What our life is pag. 86 31 Our life is a Play pag. 89 32 A type of mans life pag. 91 33 The Prologue Narration Epilogue of mans life pag. 93 34 That the longest life is but short pag. 96 35 Of procrastination pag. 98 36 Deaths haunt pag. 103 37 Of our negligence in meditating of death pag. 105 38 That the present is onely ours pag. 108 39 That we should not rely on to morrow pag. 110 40 The suddennesse comelinesse of death pag. 113 41 That we must watch and pray pag. 116 42 Eight verses out of the Psalms used by S. Bernard for the time of death pag. 119 The second Book 1 THe remembrance of Death recommended to the sick pag. 127 2 The sick mans d●scourse w●th his friends pag. 131 3 Pleasant things not alwayes best pag. 138 4 Christian valour seen in the cont●mpt of death pag. 139 5 Examples of death contemned pag. 141 6 Of a mind ready for death pag. 144 8 Three things grievous in sicknesse pag. 147 9 Sicknesse is the school of vertue pag. 150 10 Sicknesse the monitor to eternity pag. 151 11 Of prayer in sicknesse pag. 152 12 What ought to be our thoughts and actions in sicknesse pag. 155 13 The difference of our thoughts in sicknesse and health pag. 158 14 In all our sicknesse we must send holy sighs to God pag. 160 15 Faults of sick men pag. 161 16 Rules to be observed by the sick pag. 166 17 How the sick man should quench his thirst pag. 168 18 The sick mans napk n pag. 170 19 The sick mans bed pag. 172 20 The hope of a better life asswageth our misery pag. 175 21 True hope of a most blessed life pag. 176 22 Tranquillity flows from true hope pag. 180 23 Patience the whole armour of a Christian pag. 182 24 That we are but guests on earth pag. 186 25 The term of our life is uncertain pag. 187 26 A first objection of the sick man pag. 191 27 A second objection pag. 193 28 The sick mans complaints pag. 195 29 The sick mans discourse with himself pag. 199 30 His discourse with God pag. 201 31 His sure confidence in God pag. 207 32 Of constancy in sicknesse pag. 211 33 Severall prayers to be used by the sick pag. 215 The third Book 1 THe Art of dying pag. 233 2 How to redeem the time pag. 237 3 How to make a short life long pag. 238 4 An end of all things but eternity pag. 239 5 Considerations of a dying man pag. 245 6 We ought to prepare for death pag. 246 7 Examples of such as buried themselves pag. 248 8 A consideration of our grave pag. 252 9 Nine forms of Wills pag. 255 10 Nine Epitaphs pag. 261 11 Nine reasons to perswade us to die with a resolved mind pag. 273 12 Death not to be feared pag. 282 13 How the Saints of God may desire ye● fear death pag. 285 14 An ill death follows an ill life pag. 289 15 A good death follows a good life
pag. 291 16 Like life like death pag. 296 17 The desire of a good death pag. 298 18 Sleep the brother of death pag. 300 19 The forerunners of death pag. 302 20 How we must answer the messenger of death pag. 305 21 A sweet death the worst death pag. 307 22 Deaths blessednesse pag. 312 23 A dying mans farwell to the living pag. 315 24 What should be the words and meditations of a dying man pag. 319 25 Things specially to be observed by a dying man pag. 321 26 What a dying man should do pag. 323 27 Consolation for a sick man pag. 325 28 Holy ejaculations for a dying man pag. 329 29 The dying mans confidence in God pag. 333 30 The last words of a dying man pag. 336 31 Of the conforming our will to Gods will pag. 338 32 The dying mans emulation of the good thief pag. 339 33 Of the Heliotropium pag. 342 34 Prayers for a dying man pag. 345 A YE think DEATH sleeps Take heed he 'll wake ye'll mone B Health makes you skip and dance while sick men grone C Quails shower down to please the gluttons tongue D Sweet Zephyr strows his Flowres Alas how long E Yet Phoebus smiles and walks with goodly grace But clouds ere long will mask his radiant face F When Virtue moves Health gives you stubborn backs Like Rammes when Vice pliant as Virgin-wax G Feast frolick gallants feast drink-swagger rore and kisse But think how on this Point hangs endlesse we or blisse THE FORE-RUNNER of ETERNITIE Or Messenger of DEATH sent to healthy sick and dying men The Remembrance of Death propounded to the Healthy §. 1. Instructions to the Reader and an Introduction to the Work MAny have written comfortable Antidotes against Diseases and Death I determine the same and they are so far from discouraging me that they rather incite my Penne. Some of them with leave be it spoken are too long so that they burthen a sick man with their too too many precepts Others not so much forgetting brevity as a Methodicall Order doe make it too accurate They had not so much offended had they kept their Pens from paper as Apelles desired in Protogenes Plin. l. 35 c. 10. post initium Many have discours'd excellently but as I may say not satisfactory for Practise Theorie is to be commended but here wee must doe and in stead of words set forth action There are others that propose nothing to sick and dying parties but meere terrors and feares and so astonish them yet living I know my Reader that thy desire is to be prepared for Death with small expences I will endeavour to answer thy expectation and Briefly Orderly and Cheerefully I will lead thee to Deaths dore so as thou shalt scarce perceive it 1. Briefly Briefly for I write not a volume but a short Treatise which may be thy dayly companion 2. Orderly I will not observe a strict Order but rather a mixt the way that is plesant seems streight though there be many windings Cheerefully for I will not only treat of Religion 3. Cheerfully but will mix with it verses and fit old Epigrams so that my style shall not only be plaine but relishing of sanctified mirth Thus I thought fitting to admonish thee at the entrance into this subject §. 2. That the Remembrance of Death should be dayly HAppy is that man that spends every day as if it were his last Epictetus doth wisely teach Epictet Enchir. cap. 28. Death saith hee and Banishment and all other evills should be daily before our eyes especially Death So shall our thoughts never be too base nor too ambitious Wretched men why possesse you such large hopes why undergoe you such a great weight of disturbances who to morrow perchance may be dust and ashes Stand sure O man for the sable Goddesse Death daily stands over thy head and when the little remnant of sand in thy houre-glasse shall be runn'd out with a vigilant and undrousie eye expects thy arrivall and canst thou but expect Her as he sung Ortum quicquid habet finem timet i. e. All that a beginning have Doe expect and feare a grave Ibimus omnes i. e. We all must goe To the earth below Nor can any age bribe Death As soone as we are borne we pay tribute and are Deaths hirelings Nay as soone as greedy eyes the first light see Then doe wee even begin to die Death kills the Empresse as well as the Handmaid As the Poet well Horat. lib. 1. ep 4. Because wee dye so fast Think every day thy last Say every Evening This day I stand at the dore of Eternity §. 3. The remembrance of Death is a Medicine against all sinnes THE serious remembrance of Death shakes off all sense of Pleasure and turnes the sweetest hony to Wormwood S. Chrysostome saith Chrysost in his 5. Sermon of wickednesse repulsed pag. 678. The expectation of Death to come will scarcely suffer or give admittance to any carnall delights And truly what doth not the sense of Death work if but entred into the fingers or the pores of the Head much more when it seises upon the whole body it spareth no age no dignity one young man dies another Infant another old man One dies by the sword another by poyson a third by a fall one departs lingringly another suddenly as overtaken with some violent storme or thunder clap Now amongst so many doubtfull changeable and suddain events what security can be expected What courage can there be to sinne amongst such uncertainties And why because we die daily Think of thy houre-glasse though slowly to sense yet certainly by degrees the sands doe runne from the uppermost to the nethermost Cell Apply this to thy fleeting life Every moment some parcell of our life slides away Here 's nothing safe one houre deceives another one moment steales somewhat from another Happy is hee which makes every day his last more happy hee which reckons every houre but most happy that man who accounts every moment He will abstaine from sinne that counts this present moment to be his determined time Oh deceitfull Hopes how many have you deluded While you promise to many the end of their journey old age and yet cut them off in the middest of it in their youth You make men beleeve that may happen to them which many have enjoyed the flourishing of the Almond tree what a number have fallen with innocent hands yet peccant hearts How many have been overtaken by Death whilest they have beene in meditating of wickednesse How many sinners and sinnes hath Death cut off in the middest of their acts How many have smarted for their endeavours to sinne being examples of rashnesse presumption Have not many put a period to their lives and sinnes together What if thou shouldst be one of this number Or why shouldst thou be priviledged beyond others Oh! Scriban in Polit. Christ lib. 1. c. 27. who would think
to find sin in that minde which expects Death with the sinne and punishment by that Death No wise man will play in a storme at sea who in such dangerous precipices will or dare meditate transgressions No man unarm'd can be merry in the middest of an Enemies Armie But much more foolish is hee who knowing every houre every moment to be uncertaine and living in a perpetuated feare of Death yet dares doe those things which for ever will make Death to be most miserable Oh unwise men that we are why doe wee plunge our selves into everlasting punishment and why obey we not good counsels Eccles 7.40 In all thy works saith Solomon remember thy end and so thou shalt no sinne § 4. The conclusion of a good life is of great esteeme TEll me ô Seneca whom doth that great Pliny in his Testimoniall worthy to be envied Plin. l. 14. c. 4. medio call a Prince Say what thinkest thou of Death especially of untimely Death Heare ô young men give eare ô old men so full of complaints Seneca ep st 77. in the end our life is as a tale that is told it matters not how long it is but how well it is performed It is not of any consequence in what place thou doest end end where thou wilt only let thy conclusion be well Epictetus in the same manner saith Euch. c. 23. Remember that thou art but an Actor of a play as thy Master appointeth thee if he sets thee a long part thou must performe it if a short one thy dutie is the same to doe it well Varro speakes not in dissonant termes from these two They live not best who live longest but they who doe live the uprightest Our lives are not valued by the duration of time but by the qualification of our actions Goodnesse in mans life is a quality not a quantity It matters not therefore either where or when or by what means wee die for as God our Master pleaseth so vve must depart Only let us pray that vve die vvell § 5. That every man is nothing Heu heu nos miseros quam totus Homuncio nil est i. e. What wretches ah alas are we All men are nothing verily IN truth it is so But much more wretched are wee in that wee know it not Man is nothing said an ancient Satyrist but I dare say wee begin then to be something when wee acknowledge our selves to be nothing O man know thy selfe know and be wise for Death crops off Lilies as soon as thornes or thistles Oh how vaine and wretched are vve what are vve our learning and Honour is but smoake our selves but dust the one is but a fancie the other but a blast And wee which now speake in the present tense we doe live we are strong and doe flourish in a trice all will be chang'd in the praeter-perfect tense viximus wee have liv'd Here all have the same way Our very life in the encrease decreaseth and we may divide the present day with Death There is a dayly diminution in some part of our lives Our glasse may be turn'd but it 's alwayes running The first sand as well as the last may be said to empty our glasse and the last houre in which we die doth not onely make Death but doth really consummate it §. 6. All men are but of a short time and continuance THe Lily is a flower vvhose life and beauty lasts but a day On the Banks of Hiparis Pliny l. 11. c. 36. a River in Scythia there is a bird called Hemerobios which lives not beyond the compasse of one day but ends her life with the same light she first receiv'd it at sunne-setting In the same shee hath experience of youth and old age shee springs up in the morning flourishes at noone growes old and dies at night but that which is most to be admired in that bird is shee doth in that space provide as much sustenance as if shee should live as long as the Raven Mans life is not unlike to this creature It alwayes is by the flood of flying time and more swift then any bird or arrow And oftentimes hath all his honour and worldly pomp terminated to a day sometimes to an houre and often to a moment Why doe wee then so fondly dreame of yeares and ages when wee are but as the flowers or their shadowes or what can be reckoned to be more vaine or short then either Hee that vvas thirty yeares in making curiously the forme of a man in Glasse had in a twinkling of an eye his vaine labour dash'd to peeces with this vvise answer As I have done to this brittle glasse so may Death doe either to you or my selfe in as short a space how vaine therefore are you in your thoughts But it is most wonderfull that though this life hath by so many learned Divines in all ages been proved to be so swift and short and though all Writers in all times have confirm'd the same yet wretches that we are vve heare not all these loud voyces King Hezekiah cries in the Prophesie of Esay From morning untill night thou will make an end of me Esay 38 1● The Kingly Psalmist cries out Psal 102 17. My dayes are past away as a shadow And that great man in the land of Huz Iob 14.2 Man commeth forth as a flower is wasted and flieth away as a shadow Behold Oh man thou art but a bubble all thy life is but as the passing of a shadow and expectest thou here an abiding place or a quiet habitation Why doest thou heape up thick day oh thou covetous vvretch When as this night they shall fetch thy soule Why thinkest thou on carking and caring as though thou shouldest live Nestors age When as Death is at thy elbow thou shalt be gone from hence before thou thinkest of thy departure hasten the thought of it early Eternity is before thee §. 7. The same point more largely insisted on and confirmed No mans life but is short theirs is shortest vvho forget things past neglect things present feare not things to come Iob saith excellently And they which have seene him shall say where is hee like a dreame that passeth away and flieth hence Iob 2.7.8 so shall he not be found A dreame is vaine a flight is swift Yet man shal passe away as a vision by night Hee speaks of himselfe thus Iob 9 25.26 My dayes are swifter then a post they are gone and have seene no good This uttered that rich man of the East They are passed by as ships of burthen and as an Eagle to the prey For wee be but of yesterday Iob 8.9 and know nothing are not our dayes as a shadow upon earth truly they are so and tarry not We feast banquet dance yet they tarry not Wee are most secure and sleepe till high-noone and yet our dayes tarry not Wee sport away our time prodigally in trifles
you see the summe and epitome of al our life Daniel Archbishop of Mentz Elector of the Sacred Roman Empire with his own hands writ these following admonitions 1 Life is short 2 Beauty deceitfull 3 Wealth uncertaine 4 Dominion hated 5 War is pernicious 6 Victory is doubtfull 7 Leagues are fraudulent 8 Old age is miserable 9 Death is felicity 10 The fame of true Wisdome is everlasting To wit of that wisdome which descends from above which establisheth Kingdomes shall never cease but is eternall §. 14. That God doth comfort those that weep HEare the voice of the Comforter and Prom●ser together Ps 50.15 Call upon me in the day of trouble I will deliver thee Ps 33.19 and thou shalt glorifie me And the Lord is nigh to all them that are of a troubled spirit and he will save the humble in heart Aug. in Tom. 8. in Psal 50. Most excellently Saint Augustine Feare not saith hee when thou art troubled as though the Lord was not with thee The Lord is neere to those that are of a troubled spirit Man may prepare a Crown for the Conquerour but hee knows not how to give him strength to conquer But GOD when he beholds the battaile hee strengthens his Champions for that is the voice of the Psalmist that valiant warriour If I said my foot was moved thy mercy O Lord hel●t me up Assoone therefore as thou art troubled stirre up thy faith and thou shalt know Hee will not leave thee comfortlesse But thou mayst perhaps think thy selfe forsaken because thou art not delivered when thou wouldest Hee tooke the three children out of the fire but he which tooke those three left he the Machabees Far be it to think so He delivered the one as well as the other the one corporally that his and their enemies might bee confounded thes● spiritually that the faithfull might in all ages imitate their valour God is high Every good soule is lowly if yee would that the high God should come neere unto you bee humble these are great Mysteries my Brethren God is above all Doest thou lift up thy selfe thou commest not neere him Doest thou debase thy selfe he will come down to thee Call therefore this faithfull Helper to thy succour by prayer Hee will be propitious even at the first sigh if it be from the soule God wil wipe away all tears from their eyes Apoc. 21.4 neither shall there bee any more weeping or mourning or griefe or sorrow because all these are passed away Most truly said the same Father Aug. in Psal 127 circamed How pleasant are the sighs of the soule to God they are more acceptable than the laughter of Fools or Theatres §. 15. That our death may be as advantageous as our Birth EPaminondas the Theban being at point of death said Val Max. l. 3. c. 2. l. 2. c. 6 I● was not so much to bee accounted the period of his life as the beginning For now fellow souldiers may your Epaminondas be said to be born because he so dyes For whether is better to be pampered under griefe in this life or by death to enter into immortality There are a people neer Thrace Herodo● lib. 5. Hist Valer. l. 2. c. 1. Quintil. l. 5. institut called the Trausi which agree with the Thracians in al customs save in this particular That the neighbours when an Infant is born doe with great lamentations rehearse the great calamity the Infant must suffer on the stage of his life And they celebrate the Funerals of their Neighbours with great rejoycing in regard they are by death freed from all the miseries incidēt to this life This Nation of some in this very respect hath bin reputed wise and discreet because they celebrate Birth-dayes with teares and Obits with joy The Getes and Causians are said to doe the same Stobaus in Encomio Mortis and to speak truth let but the seeming pleasures which this life promiseth be but exempt which force and inveigle men to many hazards and inconveniences by their allurements and then our end is to bee judged more happy than our beginning Death is not to be accounted an evill Plin. in praf l. 7. Hist but the conclusion of all evils Plinius Secundus saith There have beene some who have judged it best not to have beene born and next to that an carly Death So Silenus when hee was taken by Midas being asked what was best for man was a good space silent but at last answered thus It is the best not be at all and next to that to be but for a moment I cannot omit that fare and seldome heard of passage pleasant to be related of one Ludovicus Cortusius a Counsellour living in Padua who in his Will at his death forbade all mourning for him at his Buriall and willed that all the Musicians and Minstrels should bee present some to goe before and fifty to follow the Clergymen and the Corps and allowed by Will to each of them for their attendance halfe a Ducat and willed further that his coffin should be carried by twelve beautifull Virgins cloathed in a fresh greene habit and that they should sing melodiously as they passed along and gave to all of them such large Legacies that they served for their Dowry and was attended by an hundred torches and in this manner was sumptuously interr'd in the Church of Saint Sophia in Padua with all the Clergy accompanying his buriall the Black Friers onely excepted whom hee debard by his Testament lest they by their fable weeds might move in some persons mourning or heavinesse so that his Funeral was celebrated with as much mirth as a marriage This merry conceited man dyed in the year of our Saviour 1418 Iuly the seventeenth De modo bene viv Serm 70. Idem de transit mal Saint Bernard spoke worth●ly saying Let those mourne for their dead which believe not the Resurrection those are to bee lamented who after their death are punished in Hell by Devils not those who are placed in Heaven with the blessed spirits Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints Precious indeed as the period of their labours as the consummation of victory as the gate to life and the entrance into perfect rest and securitie Well spoke that wise Hebrew Eccles 7.4 Better is the day of our death then the day of our birth §. 16. That Death is every where THose Wretches who seeke by what means they shall die to whom death is more welcome then life may vex and distract themselves with griefe and anxious sollicitudes and disturbing encumbrances they may sharpen their swords prepare poysons catch at Gibbets looke out for steep Rocks to fall downe from as though the loving yoke and society betwixt the soule and body could not be parted without such exquisite preparation Death is alwayes laying his snares in all places to catch us wheresoever man passeth Death is alwayes
ready where is hee not working whom doth not he meet and strike with his fatall dart How many sorts of deaths are there and all to ruine one poore wretch'd man so that it may be said truly why are so many sorts of deaths assailing Lib. d● honest vitae Idem in medit cap. 3. de dignitat animae When all our lives are bubbles quickly failing Heare but Saint Bernard let the daily meditation of death be thy chiefe wisdome for there are divers kinds of death always pinching thee What ever happens to other men saith he may also happen to thee because thou art a man thou art made and composed of earth and art but dust of dust thou takest thy descent and pedigree from earth thou livest of earth and shalt at one time or other bee reduc'd to earth when that last and terrible day shall come which shall come suddenly and perhaps to morrow or this day It is ●ertain that thou shalt dy but when or how or where is altogether uncertaine Seneca saith It is uncertaine in what place Death looks for thee therefore doe thou expect it in every place §. 17. Every mans House is Death's home WE sport and put Death farre too far away And yet it secretly in us doth lurke Yet from our first breath doe our lives decay And Death begins even then ' gainst us to work Each hour doth strive to cut our threds in twain Each moment Death doth somthing from us gain Wee always dye and in one moment passe Vnto Deaths darkest Cels as lights put out Death cuts off time in which our hopes we place Frustrates our hopes with time which wheels about So short oft times are both our hopes and time That oft Death takes them both even in their prime In the Northern Ocean towards Moscovy there is a certaine fish whose name is Death this great devourer of fishes is mightily arm'd with teeth Hie. Cardan l. 10. de subtilitate pag. 336. and as Cardanus reports it sword-hilts are made usually of his teeth Oh mortals our owne bodies are ponds in which this great Devourer Death is nourished wee need not therefore go farre to find it when it is bred in our own bowels In each 〈◊〉 Home Death keeps a Roome §. 18. That Death is inexorable not to be intreated THough Rocks be deafe and Tigres fell And boystrous Seas doe rage and swell Sometimes these are calme quiet pleas'd And all their furies are appeas'd But death nor threats or friendship doth regard But is than Seas Tygres or Rocks more hard Antiquity feignes the three Ladies of destinies to be all inexorable to whom all the power of life and death is only entrusted to whose distaff spinning thread sheares the Gods have transferd humane actions as it is said When Fates in order come Then every one must run Without delay to his home Those Fates are said not to defer the determined time but keepe it exactly Death by Painters is delineated with a Dart in his hand impartially striking Kings Scepters as they that grinde at mill without eares because hee is not mov'd with mortals cryes hee wants eyes so that hee looks not upon mens miseries hee wants a forehead and cheeks so that hee cannot blush hee wants a tongue lips lest he might afford to men some little comfortable syllable Hee wants flesh all over to shew that hee cannot be touched with any sence of humanity onely you shall see him with nerves limbs muscles bones with his arrows and darts ready to strike downe wretched men suddenly and if at any time above all the rest Death showed his cruelty and inexorablenesse it was then when without all pity or compassion hee struck the Prince and Authour of life Iesus Christ with his deadly dart though at this attempt of his the stones rent the earth shooke the stars hid their beauties the Sun was darkned nay the very Angels seem'd to mourne as not willing to behold Life it selfe brought to death Whosoever thou art thou shalt find death inexorable therefore live always mindful of it the time flies as a Post and what I say may instantly come to passe Pers Sat. 5. Settle every day as it may be thy last or first leading to Eternity § 19. As nothing is more certain so nothing more uncertain than Death De Conviv ad Clericos c. 14. SAint Bernard learnedly crys out What is more certaine in all humane affaires than death and yet what can be found more uncertain than the time of it It shews it self in old men it layes ambushments in yongmen therefore wisely said King Salomon Prov. 27.1 Boast not thy selfe of to morrow for thou knowest not what a day may bring forth so sings that Horace Who knows if Fates will spare us our next breath or aire Hor. l. 4. Od. 7. Saint Iames the Apostle speaks most truly Iam. 4.13.14 Behold you which say to day or to morrow we will goe into such a citie for a yeere and there wee will buy and sell and get gaines when as you know not what may be on the morrow fo● what is your life but a v●●our which now is and sudd●nly passeth away whereas you sh●uld rather say if the Lord will or if wee live we will doe this or that Wee all all of us must passe to the grave for it is said Wee all die 2 Kings 14.14 and are like water spilt on the earth which cannot be gathered up againe Neither can any man plead ignorance of the Law which faith Thou must returne the spirit to him wh●ch gave it and as no man can die which never did live so no man that ever lived but did die onely the time and date is uncertain Therefore Christ hath st●rr'd us up by a wise admonition Watch and pray saith hee for you know not the day and houre and so repeating the words againe Mark 13 33 35 36 37. Watch yee therefore for yee know not when the Lord of the house will come whether at the dawning or at midnight or at the third watch or in the morning lest when he com●s he finde you sl●eping therefore what bee saith Hee saith unto all men VVatch. § 20. Death comes suddenly to many unlooked for almost to all WHo will not watch against the assaults of death who is ready at all houres for execution who never acquaints us with the time hee intends to invade us who sometimes comes creeping sometimes flying sometimes furiously in the twinkling of an eye hastily arrests us unprovided without the least giving us notice without cause without caution in sicknes in health in danger in securitie so that there is nothing free or priviledged from his talons or destroying assaults Was not Tarquinius healthy and merry P●● l. 7. N●● Hist c. 7. and suddenly choaked with the bone of a little fish Fabius likewise wa● well and lusty when presently a small haire which he drunk with his milke
dispatched him Was not the byting of a Weasell the end of Aristides life Did not the Father of Caesar arise well from his bed and dyed putting on his shooes Did not another Caesar breath out his soule going over the threshold into his Palace That Ambassador who intended to have spoken with great admiration the Rhodians affaires in a great Assembly dyed he not in the entrance into the Court If wee will believe Lucian Anacreon the Poet and Sophocles were both killed with the stone of a Grape One little prick of a Needle kild Lucia the daughter of Marcus Aurelius Cneus Bebius Pamphilus the Praetor having desired that Dignity from a youth dyed the first houre hee enjoyed it A sudden and violent laughter hath kild some so wee read of Chilo the Lacedemonian and Rhodias Diagoras who when they heard their sonnes were Conquerours in the Olympick Games in one and the same time both suddenly departed Death hath many passages and entrances by which he comes into us and ruines us sometimes he comes in at the windows sometimes enters into the Sellars not seldome by the supporters and pillars and often by the tiles and covering of the house if hee fails by these betrayers to overthrow the house such I call all the ill Humours Diseases Cathars Plurisies and other Causes which death useth to effect his designes upon us then he will burst open the dores with powder with fire water pestilence poysons beasts and men with all violence and fury that can bee invented Mephihosheth the son of King Saul as he was upon his bed at noone was slaine by hired murtherers Pul●o King of Ierusalem as he hunted a Hare falling from his horse and being trodden upon presently w●s slain Iosias of all the Kings of Iuda David onely excepted the most renowned for piety sanctity and other Princely endowments when he met the Army of Pharaoh Necho King of Egypt being suddenly wounded with an arrow died in the battaile Egillus King of the Goths an excellent Prince was gored and kild by a mad Bull which was let loose by naughty lawlesse people Malcolme the first King of the Scots after many examples of justice on a night as he narrowly viewed his Kingdom was strangled many as they have gone to sleepe have slept their last it is necessary at all occasions to be in battaile aray against this politique enemy Vzzah a great man in Davids Court who laid hands upon the Arke when it shaked as it was bringing to Ierusalem to stay it from falling was smitten and died The Prophet that eat meate contrary to the Lords command was torne in pieces by a Lion Ananias and Saphyra in the Apostles time at the very word of Saint Peter both died suddenly whose act may serve as a faire warning to all men not to transgresse in the like manner but I omit these ancient times and come to our dayes Iacob Gord. in Chron. in hunc annum In the yeare 1559. Henry the second King of France was kild in the midst of his Sports and Triumphs in a great confluence of Spectators for as hee celebrated in great state with justs and tournaments the Marriage of his Daughter in Paris was run into his eye and so through the head with a shiver of a Lance that hee died forthwith In the yeare 1491 Alphonsus the sonne of John the second King of Portugall being 16 yeeres old and a Prince of an excellent wit and great hopes married Isabel the daughter of Ferdinand King of Spain whose dowrie was the Inheritance of the large Territories of her Fathers Kingdomes The marriage was celebrated with the preparation and furniture of six hundred severall sorts of Triumphs every where were Playes and Tiltings and Justs and Banquets there was such excesse and superfluitie that even Pages and Kitchen-boyes shone in their cloth of Gold and silkes and velvets were accounted of no value but oh the griefe what a strange Catastrophe presently followed scarce were seven moneths passed when as this young Prince sporting himselfe with his horse by the banks of the River Tagus was strucke off from the banks to the earth with his head all bruised fatally and so was carried into a poore fishers Cottage which could scarce hold him and two of his servants and in that poore plight in that dejected state upon a Mattresse of straw he ended his life The King and the Queene his Mother came thither and saw that deplorable spectacle and all their pompe and magnificence was suddenly turn'd into mourning and the wedding ended in a funerall and all their large hopes of the prosperous successefull government of their sons state were extinguished and cut off as greene flowers by the cold blasts of a Northern wind so all this Princes glory was laid in a little quantity of earth Oh the strange and sudden whirle-windes of humane glory Oh the unexpected precipices and downfals of the strongest of mortals Shall I speak of more Basilius the Emperour as he was hunting a Stag was wounded with his horne Hippol. Guar. l. 6. de abominandis gentis hum 1.20 and in short time after of that wound died An ancient Monument in Ambrose neer Oenipont records that a yong unexpert gentleman more rash than wise put his horse with his spurs to take a ditch of twenty feet over Vide Iusta Hen. 4. regis Gall. a Ludovico Rich●omo scripta he forc'd the horse to it but both he and his horse perished alike the Knights clothes and the horses skin kept in that place speake this true to posterity But this sudden death happens alike to good and bad unlesse as in some examples the divine stroke of Justice hath wiped out some out of the Land of the living for some notorious offence in the very act and perpetration so Dathan and Abiram for their rebellion were swallowed up of the earth quick with their consorts Such was the death of Absolon for his rebellion against his Father Such was the death of those fifty that were sent to Elijah whom fire from heaven suddenly devoured Such was the death likewise of Zimri and Cozhi for their transgression being both run through by Phinees Whose action in lust brought them to dust So many Pores as are in the body so many little doores are there for death to enter though death doth not seeme alwayes to be neere yet hee is certainly at hand always ready Why should that seeme strange to be done at this time which may be done at any time The tearm of our life is fixed Senet Epist 101. Med. and alters not but none of us all knows how neere it wee are Let us so order our selves therefore alwayes as if we were come to the mark Let us not defer There was a certain man dream't hee was killed by the mouth of a Lion He rose and neglecting his dreame went to the Church with other company and by the doore as they entred he spied a Lion cut in stone
soule so enlarge thy thoughts why doest thou possesse so much why gapest thou still after more whom so many Provinces and Kingdomes could not hold this little Cabinet must include and why thinke you he desired to have lime and chalke for his nostrils mouth and eares behold the costly Odours and Unguents in which he would be laid downe Oh Maximilian great once thou wert and thy actions and these very things at thy death speake the same Baron Tom. 3. An. 326. ● 96. What shall I speake of the Coffin of Ablavius which was a Praefect and a great Prince amongst other of Constantine the Great his Courtiers an insatiable devourer of gold who meditated more of gold than his grave or heaven Constantine on a time taking him by the hand spake thus unto him How long how long said he shall we heape together wealth of this kind And as hee had spoke the words with a Speare which hee held in his hand he drew the description of a Coffin on the ground Hadst thou said hee a world full of such treasure yet after thy death thou shalt not have a greater place than this perhaps lesse then this forme which I have drawne out Constantine in this prov'd a Prophet for this Ablavius was cut in small peeces so that there was nothing left of him to put into a Sepulchre Charles the fift Emperour of Germany did imitate Maximilian whō I named ere-while long before his death he sequestred himself from administring the affaires of the Empire and having transferr'd the government and management of it to his Sonne who was able for his yeares and of judgement sufficient hee himselfe went into Spaine with 12. followers onely into the Monastery of St. Justus to give himselfe wholly to Gods service and forbade any to call him by any other name or title then Charles onely putting farre off the title of Caesar Augustus with the Imployment and contemned all honours whatsoever And moreover it is registred of him that before he relinquish'd the Empire he commanded his Tombe to be made with all furniture belonging to his buriall and had it carried with him whithersoever he went but privately Hee had this funebrious accoutrements five yeares with him wheresoever he was I even when he went to Millaine against the French and had it diligently every night placed in his bed-chamber Some that were about his Person thought that therein hee kept his treasure others judged that in it he kept some rare books containing some ancient Historys Others thought there was some great matter in it but he himselfe knowing for what purpose he carried it would smiling say He carried it about for the use of something which was deare unto him So did this Charles daily meditate of death that at every night he should say Vixi I have lived and so every morning rise with profit and comfort Many others have piously imitated this Emperour Zach. Lippol tom 3. in vit S. Re. 1. Octob. that for long time together have carried their Coffins the monuments of their death with them for contemplation Genebaldus for seven whole yeares together had his bed made like a Coffine in which for that space he lived austerely and exercised himselfe in Mortification There was one Ida Idem tom 3. in vita S. Idae 4 Sept. Hier. Epist 103. a woman famous for holinesse which had likewise her Coffin made long before her death which she filled twice a day with food and nourishment and so often distributed it to the poore liberally The study of piety is the preparatory for death No death pollutes a vertuous soule he will easily despise all earthly things who hath his thoughts fixed upon his dissolution § 30. What our life is IT is as a flower as smoake as a shadow and as the shadow of a shadow It is a Bubble Dust froth It is as deaw as a drop as brittle ice As the Raine-bow a blazing Taper a bag full of holes A ruinous house deceitfull ashes a spring-day a constant Aprill as a dash in musick a broken vessell As a bucket for a Wel a Spiders web As a drop to the Ocean weake stubble A Summers herbe a short Fable a flying sparkle A darke cloud a bladder full of wind as a little Dove a taking her slight a brittle Glasse a fading Leafe a fine weake thred a Sodemes Apple c. And if a shadow bee nothing tell me what is the dreame of a shadow wee may make sixe hundred thousand of such similitudes of frailty and inconstancy and all like to mans life Me thinkes of all others he spake wittily that calls it a very short dreame of a shadow in briefe let us see what life is it is as one hath described it in this distich Somnus umbra vitrum glacies flos fabula foenum Vmbra cinis punctum vox sonus aura nihil i. e. Life 's like a dreame a bubble ice or glasse Like fading flowers vaine fables with'ring grasse It is a shadow dust a point a voice a sound It 's empty ayre well look'd too Nothing found Ah wretches how seeme we to heape up wealth to get honours to follow and hunt after pleasures when all these are as soone vanished as our selves Any of these all of them are but as a dreame and how short and vaine is that Psal 76.5 true is that saying of the Psalmist the proud are robbed they have slept their sleepe and all the men whose hands are mighty have found nothing they dreamt that they were mighty and rich but what have they retain'd or kept of all they gaped after or hoped for these are but meere dreames and fancies indeed and wakening they shall find their losse and grieve in their punishment What therefore is life I will declare it compendiously the time and length of our life is a point our nature is inconstancy our senses are obscurity Our whole body is but a rotting Concretion our mind vagrant Honours are but smoke Riches are thornes Pleasures are poyson● And that I may summe up all in word All things belonging to the body are but a passing streame all the minds endowments are emptinesse our life is a warre the lo●ging of a traveller in a strange City the shop of all miseries and our fame after death is but oblivion Ausonius delivevers this well unto us Mieremur periisse homines Epigr. 3. momenta fatiscunt Mors etiam saxis nominibusque venit i. e. Men being as moments no wonder though they 're gone Death makes our names to faile and Marble-stone It 's a vertue to consummate our life before death knocks at our doores §. 31. That our life is a play OUr life is a Comedy we the stage-players one acts a King another a Beggar a third a Prince another a Physitian another a Clowne What part is imposed upon us we must performe we get no Plaudite unlesse we act well Well said Epictetus Euch. c. 23 Thou art called upon
wee carry about us is not our dwelling but our June it must be left when once the Master is weary of our company Therefore ô my good Christian hasten to live holily and thinke every day an entrance into a new life Who so fits himselfe this way shall meet death with comfort That man never died ill who lived well § 35. That Procrastination is the greatest damage and blemish to our lives WE put off any thing but wickednesse that not onely takes up the present day but is likewise promised the morrow In sin wee are prompt actors in other things usuall promisers and fair-speakers then wee use to say to morrow it shall be done or next week or next yeere without delay so doe dayes moneths and yeeres slide away while we onely delay and promise but performe not Seneca speaks admirably in this point Lib. de Brev. vit c. 4. Many shall yo● heare saith hee who say at fifty 〈◊〉 will take mine ease the sixtieth yeer● shall discharge me from all encumbran●ces and what surety else desirest tho● of a longer life but who will suffe● things to goe at thy disposing Blushest not thou to reserve the refuse and the dregs of thy rotten yeeres to God and to destinate onely that time for his service which thou art not able to manage in any other manner It is too late then to begin to live when it is time to leave off work What senslesnesse is it to refuse to follow good counsell till a man comes to fifty or sixty yeeres of age and to resolve there to begin to live where most leave off Sigismund the second King of Poland for his delayings and slothfulnesse in matters of weighty consequence was called Rex Crastinus the delaying King such sure are we though wee know not that wee shall be to morrow yet we hazard the mainer work upon such uncertaine probabilities Wee put off all most willingly would wee● if wee could put off death too But death's businesse admits of no delay nor putting off when Death knocks the bars must speedily open Therefore as the Proverbe saith The onely way to be long an old man is to be such an one betimes The King of Macedon obtained such glorious Conquests by being speedy upon his actions Wee lose the best nay all by deferring and delaying Chrysologus said well Most men put off to do well Ser. 125. Med. untill death debar them of time Wee come to death by degrees as men who sleep walking The first day wee put off good duties the second day wee doe them slightly the third day wee forget them on the fourth we are not able to performe them O Mortals to morrows life is too late learn to live to day give earnest to day grieve to day for your sins For who except your owne conceits hath promised you the morrow that which may bee ought to bee done to day why should it be procrastinated to tha● which yet is not may perhaps not be time or if it be perhaps not thine to deferre good actions hath always prov'd dangerous Deferrings are obnoxious to our lives Iumb vet You seldome see the slothfull man that thrives Let us make hast therefore and let us but seriously thinke how speedily wee would foot it if wee were sure there was a destroying Enemy behind us Wee would strive to be formost that we might be furthermost from our pursuers It is so we are followed close to hasten is to escape so shall wee enter into eternall rest It is the greatest comfort against deaths approach to have done all our worke before he comes to call for us To the Sick A Winter 's at hand leaves fall Death 'gins to snatch His Ax and spies thy Glasse spent Sick man watch B What th' Presse to Grapes that Sicknes is to thee If thou be ripe as Grapes in Autumne be C The stouping Hern oft gores her towring Foe So outward grief oft frees from inward woe D Sicknes lays men along as hail doth corn Better fall well then stand with shame an● scorn E Just now 't was cloudy now Sol shew his face Now clouds again This is the Sick man case F To scape the Scorpions sting and th' Archers dart Sicknes and Death I know no meanes 〈◊〉 art G A Sick man 's like an Horse plunging i● sturdy waves Who knows if th' one shall scape the flood● the other the grave § 36. Deaths haunt WIlliam the third Duke of Bavaria a Patron of the poore and Protector of all religious and godly men being dead though all men should have held their peace yet the cryes and teares of the poore lamenting his losse would have been sufficient Trumpets to have blazon'd his Princely worth this prayse-worthy Prince I say when he He returned from the Councell of Basil where he in the place of the Emperour sate chiefe returning to Munchen dreamed such a dreame as this following Hee seem'd to see a lusty great Stag which carried upon one horne little bels and upon the other divers wax Tapers and Torches lighted there was a nimble Huntsman and a pack of hounds who withall swiftnesse and eagernesse had this Stag in chase at the last the Stag having no other way leapt into the Churchyard in which there was a Grave made for a Mans buriall which was open into which the Stag fell and there was taken and killed at the sight of this the Prince wakened and was wondrous desirous to know what this Dreame should mean on the next day he told it to his Lords and this Dreame was variously interpreted which when Duke William had heard presently replyed I am said he this great Stag which Death so eagerly hunts and will shortly and speedily take me and end my days and I will be buried in that Church All things were ordered accordingly and these presages had their events answerable For in short space after this worthy Prince did yield to Death and commended his soule to God piously and was there inter●'d where hee desired A good Death is the introduction to a blessed Eternity § 37. Why though wee daily are Spectators of Burials yet we doe not meditate on Death THe Devill being skilful in the perspective art useth this cunning policy that those things which are furthest off hee makes them seem neer unto us and those which are neer unto us he makes seem a great way distant from us Thus he represents Death to us that though it be so neere us that it is ready to lay hold on us yet it appeares a great way off hence in a vaine security wee promise to our selves many yeares and put the evill day far from us to our great disadvantage Hence is it that wee looke upon other mens Burials as though ours were not to be this long time and though we are decaying daily yet for all that we fancy an eternity to our own souls Sir Thomas Moore our Countriman lest any age should promise him a long life and
so worke security in him exercised the thoughts of Death in himselfe by this fit similitude As man saith he who is led from prison to the place of execution though hee be led about and seems to go slowly yet he feares Death and is as sure of it as he that goes a neerer way and though his legs be strong his eyes quick-sighted his heart lusty though his stomacke be able for digestion yet this one thought turns all into bitternesse that hee is in the way to a certaine execution And what man is not a prisoner in this kind we are all going on towards our long home we are all in the way and parted but by small distances those which are dead have not so much left us onely they are gone before us but perhaps thou mayst say I am healthy and lusty and finde not nor feele any the least sence of sicknesse nor apprehension of Death well flatter thy selfe if thou wilt for certain thou art in the way and wee all are in the way with thee But thou mayst say thou art not yet thirty years old what then thou wast in the way at twenty at ten at five at three nay even at the first yeare and in the first houre goe on perhaps thou mayst a little further but thou wilt shortly come to thy end but yet thou wilt say thy sleepe is sound thy meat and drinke doe excellently well relish and digest Oh fond man Death regards not such things Wee are in the way looke to thy selfe presently thou wilt perceive the place of execution thou art led on there 's but a little time for thee to breath in shortly shall all thy pompe luxury and strength expire as well as thy selfe all our life is but the pathway to death That Death may happy be to live learn I That life may h●ppy be I 'le learne to die § 38. To day for mee to morrow for thee Delrii adag Tom. 2. p. 576. FRancis the first King of Franc● being taken by Charles the fifth comming to Madrid upon a wall he read the Motto of Charles which was Plus ultra Still further and writ under it Hodie mihi cras tibi Mine to day yours to morrow The Conquerour was not off●nded nor angry but gave notice that hee understood the meaning for hee writ this in answer to it I am but a Man and know my selfe subject to mortalitie Elegantly spoke Greg Nazianzen My head saith he begins to be an Almond tree flourishing and therefore my Summer of Age is neer the Sickle is made sharp for work all my feare is lest that terrible Mower should crop me off and cut me downe while I sleepe securely and am not ready for his stroke But thou mayst say Old men indeed may feare but I am yong and green be not thou deceived Death is not limited to any certaine age The same Bier to day may carry an old carcasse to morrow a yong one to day a strong a●●e ●n an to morrow a yong Virgin or 〈◊〉 Child Seneca speaks to the purpose Death saith he stands at the door of a yong man as well as at the threshold of an aged man for all men are registred and inrolled in Deaths Records all must pay their tributes when Death cals forth all must goe out no exemption from his Edict This is the last warning and admonishment that dying men groan forth To day for me too morrow for thee and this is the Graves sentence I fell yesterday thou mayst this day Remember Death Oh remember Eternitie which thou mayst either to day or to morrow begin but never End §. 28. If to morrow why not to day THere is a Chaine and that a we●ghty one that holds us bound fast to wit the Love of this Life which as it is not to be utterly cast off yet it is daily to be weakned and the vigour of it abated that when it shall be required at our hands to surrender nothing may withhold us but that we be ready presently to doe that which at one time or other must be performed Saint Augustine the Bishop of Hippo went on a time to visit another great Prelate and Father of the Church lying very sick and at the point of Death who had been formerly his familiar friend at Saint Augustines comming the sick man lift up his hand and said that he was departing this world and going into Heaven Possidonius in vita Aug. c. 27 Saint Augustine replyed that the Church would stand in great want of him and prayed that God would lend him a longer life The sicke m●n answered again if he never could be well spared but if at any time he should depart why not now The Death of all men is even and alike but the wayes by which it comes are divers one dyes at supper another in his sleepe a third in the commission of some sin One dyes by the sword another is drowned a third is burned some are poysoned and stung to death by Serpents others are kild by some fall and some Consumptions rid away some are cut off in the flower and beauty of their age some are destroyed in their swathling clothes and some in their decrepit years Others onely salute the World and are gone One mans end is commendable anothers dishonorable but let Death come never so gently or favourably yet it never com●s without some horrour and affrightment But that which most of all estrangeth us from liking Death is that wee know the things present and delights in them but whither wee are passing by Death and what things wee shall behold in the bowels of the grave wee know not and wee usually tremble at the report of strange sights therefore are our mindes to bee hardned with the daily exercise and meditation of eternity Eternity I say is to be thought upon night and day as he that will learn to endure hunger must attaine to it by fasting by degrees so the mind must be transferd from transitory things that ever will be expert in the study of Eternity Let him every moment salute and imbrace the threshold of Eternity let this one be the onely square of all his actions I read I write I meditate I watch I speak I worke always to Eternity Hee that ever intends to triumph eternally let his meditation be alwayes fixed and setled upon it § 40. Death is suddain yet comely AS Palladius the Bishop of Helenople testifies Cheremon died sitting as hee was at work Hist c. 92. and well Hee was found sitting with his worke in his hand onely hee was dead Any kind of Death is credited by a vertuous life Philemon an ancient Writer of Comedies as hee rehearsed his Comedies with Menander on the Stage Mad. Philos in Florid p 579 and strove with him for the Bays he was not in any thing reputed inferiour to him He acted a part of a play which he lately had made and being come to the second Scene
of the second Act thinking in it to stirre up more delight and liking in the people On a sudden there fell such a violent storme that the people could not stand to heare him at that time but he promised the people that on the next day they should heare it all finished So on the next day there was a mighty company of people assembled every one strove to place himselfe in the fitted seat either for sight or hearing they that came something late beckned to their friends to make roome for them they that came last were mainly streightned for room The whole Theatre was cram'd with Auditors and there was a wonderfull throng their discourse was divers some talked of what had bin acted the day before others that knew not the former action came to behold the sequell Nothing now was expected but Philemon well the time past on ye● no Philemon appeared some blamed his stay others excused it but when as most did thinke they had stayed longer then was fit and yet so no appearance of the actor they sent some speedy Messengers to call him but they that went found all their expectations frustrated for Philemon was dead in his bed and stiffe and lay in his bed as if hee had bin meditating his part with his hand on his Book but his soule was fled out and so his Auditory failed The Messengers that entred were struck at first with astonishment of this sudden alteration yet wondred much to see how comely hee was laid In his bed Well they returned to the people and told them that Philemon who should have acted a fained part had acted at home a true Play for hee had to all worldly things given his farewell and Plaudite Whereupon divers did grieve amd lament the showre the day before was now seconded with a showre of teares and the Comoedian was now turned Tragoedian If wee looke onely on our present life a then Death will be wished for and that man dyes well who dyes without the feare of Death but yet happier by far is he that is found of Death so doing and who dyes in his worke So that Death it self shal find him busie St. Cyprian the Martyr wisht Hippo. 4. Septemb. p. 920. that hee might be offered to God by Death as he was in preaching he is worthy of prayse whom never the Devill or Death cuts off in their idlenesse § 41. We must watch and pray BEcuse yee know not the time in which the Sonne of man will come The Romans watched in their Armes though sometimes without their shieid because they would have nothing to leane upon because they would prevent sleep Thou must watch oh man and it is profitable to watch with the armour of God upon thy soule the ardent prayers of Christians are their Armour of proof Hope of long life is the leaning stocke that too many sleep upon The usual words of the Romans when they watched were these Vigila vigila Mars vigila Marc. 13.33 35 37. i. e. Watch oh souldier watch By the usuall termes they stirr'd up one another to watch By the same words oh my soule doth God incite thee to wat●hfulnesse The very heaven it self by his incessant motion and constant course night and day adviseth thee to rouze up thy selfe Wilt thou grow deafe to such a Lecturer and give thy selfe to sleep heare Christ himselfe saying Watch and pray as Saint Marke testifies Christ at the end of one Sermon did thrice repeat this clause in these words 1 Goe to watch and pray 2 Therefore watch and pray for you know not when the Lord will come in the Evening or at Midnight or at Cock-crowing or in the Morning Lest if when he should come suddenly be should find you sleeping 3 What therefore I say to you I say unto all watch S. Matthew often speaks the same Mat. 24.42 25.13 c. 26.41 Watch therefore for ye know not what houre the Lord will come And repeats it againe Watch therefore for yee neither know the day nor the houre And our Saviour inculcates the same at the Mount of Olives Watch and pray that yee enter not into tentation Hee publisheth the same by Saint Luke Watch therefore and continue in prayers Luke 21.36 that same very word Watch how often is it doubled by Saint Paul all these is thunder-claps may serve to rowze up our drowzie souls Wee are deafe nay dead if we startle not at all these quickning voyces Who ever thou art if thou hast bin lulled asleep in thy sins awaken Awake thou that sleepest arise and stand up and Christ shall give thee light Knowest thou that fatall blow of Egypt in the middle of the night the destroying Angell smote all Egypt Remember the Lot of the ten Virgins There was at midnight a great cry made and those Virgins which were ready were admitted into the Bride-chamber but those that slept were excluded Canst thou but remember that gluttonous abusive servāt Did not his Lord come in a time that he looked not for and in an houre that he dream't not off Canst thou but consider that good Master of the Family He watched at all houres lest at any houre the Thief should enter and spoyle his goods Canst thou oh canst thou but think on thy Saviour Was not he borne in the middle of the night The same as many think will about the same time come at the time of the general judgment Watch therefore oh watch and thinke every day to be thy Exit from hence § 42. Eight Verses out of the Psalmes of David selected by Saint Bernard which he himself used for the time of Death COnsider and heare me ô Lord my God lighten mine eyes lest I sleep the sleepe of death Lest mine Enemies say I have prevailed against him Psal 13.3 4. Into thine hand I commit my spirit thou hast redeemed mee ô Lord God of truth Psal 31.5 Then spake I with my tongue Lord make mee to know mine End and the measure of my days What it is that I may know what time I have here Psal 39 3 4. Shew me a token for good that they which hate me my see it and be ashamed because thou Lord hast holpen me and comforted mee Psal 86.17 Thou hast loosed my bonds I will offer to thee the sacrifice of thanksgiving and will call upon the Name of the Lord. Psal 116.17 Refuge failed me no man cared for my soul I cryed unto thee ô Lord I said Thou art my refuge and my portion in the land of the living Psal 142.4 5. A Prayer for an happy departure out of this life O Almigh●y and Everlasting God who didst give unto thy servant King Ezechiah length of days when as hee in teares besought thy goodnesse Grant I beseech thee to mee thy unworthy servant before my death such a space and time in which I may heartily deplore and lament all my sins and that for them all I may by thy infinite mercies
find free pardon ●nd forgiveness that when I shall die I may live with thee in life everlasting Amen Almighty mercifull and kind Father I do humbly entreat thee by the death of thy Son my Saviour Jesus Christ to grant mee a quiet and blessed departure out of this miserable life whensoever thou shalt please to call me hence Ano●her for the same purpose M●st mercifull Lord Jesus knowing how great and grievous the paines of dying men are and with what great discomforts the souls of such are in the Agony of de●th Whither should I flee but to thee ô Lord my God Deliver thou my soule that it neither faile nor faint at that dreadful hour Deal with me I intreat thee ô Lord according to the multitude of thy never failing mercies and according to that boundlesse love which made thee lay downe thy life for mee who art life ●t selfe g●ant that I may always have the houre of my dissolution before mee that I may doe that while I am in health which may give me comfort in the pangs of death Let my whole care and study be to learn Mortification and to subdue all my passions and rebellious affections so that I may live wit● thee in glory in thy heavenly Kingdome Amen A Prayer that the Communion of the Body and bloud of J●sus Christ may be effectuall to his soule at the houre of Death taken out of Hugo de S. Victore O Most sweet and loving Jesus grant unto mee miserable sinner that my soul may be refreshed by thy most precious body and bloud that I may always speake of thy most glorious name Amen G●ant that I may always thinke off and apply thy sufferings to my sick soul that so I may be refreshed in the evill day Amen Grant ●hat I may always have a care to imitate thy holinesse and obedience by patience and meeknesse that so all my words thoughts and works may be sanctified Amen Grant mee likewise O sweet Jesus a stedfast hope in thee that though the outward man decay yet the inward man which is created in holinesse m y be strongthened so that when I shall die thou mayst be my hope and my portion for ever Amen The conclusion of the first Book to the Reader THus doe thus ●hink ô Man and while thou are in health prepare for sicknesse and le●●●●e to die either of them is of excellent skill and art ignorance of both these may cast thy soule into utter destruction if thou failest in the performan●e of these thou deprivest thy self of that Eternity which the Faithfull shall enjoy never canst thou amend an errour past this way this shall be punished whh Eternity Wherefo●e always manage thy affaires so as if thou wert at all times depar●ing Dwell most familiarly with thy selfe and search daily all the secret passages of thy conscience those things which thou hast about thee esteeme of them as a Travellers Cloak-bag but let them not be thy clog Thou must carry no more out then thou broughtest in Therefore be satisfied with little and approve thy selfe to God Thou must passe hence Each moment think thou standest at the doore of Eternity Thou must be gone Eternity is alwayes at hand Pleasures are short punishments are without end The labour is but little the reward everlasting These are the instructions wee have prescribed to healthy and able men Wee admonish them not to feare death yet never to lay down the thought of it So now we proceed to instruct the sick and weak To the Sick A Winter 's at hand leaves fall Death 'gins to snatch His Ax and spies thy Glasse spent Sick man watch B What th' Presse to Grapes that Sicknes is to thee If thou be ripe as Grapes in Autumne be C The stouping Hern oft gores her towring Foe So outward grief oft frees from inward woe D Sicknes lays men along as hail doth corn Better fall well then stand with shame and scorn E Just now 't was cloudy now Sol shews his face Now clouds again This is the Sick mans case F To scape the Scorpions sting and th' Archers dart Sicknes and Death I know no meanes no art G A Sick man 's like an Horse plunging in sturdy waves Who knows if th' one shall scape the floods the other the grave The second Book § 1. The remembrance of Death is commended to the Sick Wherein is contained an Introduction to the fo●lowing Discourse and whith●r sickn sse be● evill or not CAunus is a Town in Caria situated in a pestilent ayre and insec●ious to the inhabitāts Wh●ch place when a merry conceited fellow called Stratonicus a Musician beheld hee presently rehearsed that Verse in Homer Iliad 6. Men like to falling leaves are found But green ere-whiles now fall'n to ground He taunted their pale and wanne countenances but when they of that place had afforded him but course entertainment because hee had disparaged their City Hee wittily againe told them Indeed I cannot fitly terme your towne sickly or diseased where I behold so many dead men walking this was more pleasant and smart then the former But why deny we it or why are we lift up with pride when indeed wee are but leaves Iob speaks it plainly Iob 13.25 Wilt thou saith he break a leafe driven to and fro as if hee had said I being but a leafe subject to all inconveniences which feare all storms and winds which tremble and am blowne with one blast farre away Doe not ô doe not ô God speedily make an end of me in thy fury Thou knowest that I shall at once fall of my self Are not men truly to be compared to leaves when as their instability exceeds and out strips them May they not have this title added deservingly seeing that diseases sicknesses of severall sorts doe interchangably drive them to ruine Thus did Clemens Alexandrinus ju●ge Go to saith he ô men of an obscure and fraile life like to the generation of leaves Weake a workmanship as wax like to shadow Vaine fleeting having a life of a dayes continuance Certainly we are leaves and no better when as one little fit of a Feaver distempers alters weakens endangers us What said I a fit of a Feaver nay a little Cough a Crum of bread a Drop of water are able to effect our ruines But what is not health good and sicknesse evill no ô man if you will credit Epictetus What then it is good to use health well it is ill if used ill It is possible by sicknesse to gather fruits meet for thy God nay is it not to be done like wise by death it self wh●t thinkest thou of sicknesses I will shew thee his nature I will grow better by it I will be quiet under it I will think my self well dealt with all I wil not flatter with my Physician nor will I wish for death What wouldest thou more What is given to me I will account it happy prosperous honorable desirerable But some may d●ny
to thy selfe And why turnest thou away from those who tell thee of thy approaching danger I beseech thee imitate not those old men whom thou knewest before abroad to whom it was death to heare Death to be spoken off I Pray thee hast thou learn'd no further yet but still to fear death Hast thou got so much knowledge in so many yeares to die freely peaceably and without vexati●n Why tremblest thou Commit thy self wholly to the will of God and so thou hast done the hardest piece of thy work Even our whole life is but a punishment That wise Roman Seneca will counsell thee We being saith he cast into the deep and troublesome sea of this World which is always tossing her waves and billows now lifting us up with sudden advancements now againe leaving us in the lurch to our greater losse Continually tossing us never are we safely setled We are alwayes in suspence and inconstantly floating now and then dash'd one against another sometimes making shipwrack always fearing thus wee saile along this boysterous Ocean exposed to all tempests and there is no Port or Haven till we arrive at Death Many mens credulitie deceives them especially in those things whi●h they love being willing to forget the remembrance of death Daily before our eies we see spectacles and objects of Mortalitie as well of our friends as strangers but we still are otherways imployed and thinke that sudden which might have have hapned every moment of our life This is not the iniquitie of Natu●e but the pravitie of our minds being insatiable in that which it cannot enjoy and altogether disdaining to go out from thence whither he was admitted to enter by request Hee is unjust that leaves not the Donor the disposing of his owne gift He is greedy who doth not account that a benefit which hee hath received but says it is losse to restore it Hee is ingrate who calls the end of pleasure an injury He is foolish which thinks nothing but things present have pr●fit in them He too much pens up and straitens his j●y● who thinks hee enjoys no more then what he hath and seeth Suddenly doth all pleasure leave us it flows and passes and is in a manner ●aken away before it come to us Let us ●ll therefore contentedly enjoy what is b●stowed and su●render it when it shall be demanded Death snatcheth away all some one time some another none escapeth him Let our souls then continually watch never dreading it because necessary lways expecting it because ●ncertain It is hard to say whether it be more folly to be ignorant of or impudent to stand out against the Laws of Mortality All men yea all creatures whatsoever look towards death Whosoever is born to the World is ordained to die and to passe to Eterni●y § 17. Three speciall Rules to be observed by the sick I Concerning God IT is grand impietie to murmur any thing against God our h avenly Fath●r as though the disease hee l yeth upon us were extreame and unreasonable Wee ought rather to say with holy Iob Even as it pleaseth the Lord so come things to passe Blessed be the name of the Lord and to cry out with that devout multitude He hath done all things well For wheth●r God wound or heal us certain it is hee ever beareth towards us the tender care and affection of a most loving Father II Concerning himself In the extremity of sicknesse there is not so much need of long and continuall prayers as of constant and unwearied patience For thereby that which is heavie and intolerable becommeth light and easie Our chiefe cordials and sweetest comforts in our sicknesse are frequent sighes breathed up to Heaven the Remembrance of the patient suffrings of the Saints holy Prayers and Ejaculations sent up to Go● for constant patience and an happy departure out of this life III Concerning others The sicke man must be tractable to his Physicians whether corporall or spirituall If any come to visit him he must shew all patience and calmnesse of spirit and though his disease gripe h●m many things trouble him some displease him others rellish ill wi●h him all things be not done a● his beck yet he must never murmur but allaying the bitternesse of his afflictions with the sweet expectation of a reward expresse Christi●n submissi●n and patience in all his words and actions § 17. Wherewith the sickman should quench his thirst MOst sick folk complain much of th rst those especially who are sick of Feve●s Here therefore wee w●ll shew them a Fountain whence they may drinke as much as they please An. 1590 In lower Austria there was a Thiefe who had kild ma●y men being taken and brought to the Wheele onely had his legs broken which was done the more to torment him with a lingring death and to make him the more terrible spectacle to all such Malefactors bu this tormented person p●oved himself a valiant man and a stout Christian in the height of his torments For all his words argued patience penitence He began seriously to supplicate God to entreat pardon for his sins to be a Preacher of Mortification and to dehort all other men from the like hainous sins And the day being almost spent when as there was a World of people assembled there were likewise present some that knew him and comforted him being glad to see him so patiently to suffer for he being laid flat for his punishment that hee might get another life he asswag'd his present suffering with the hope of future happinesse and not onely so but gave thanks to God who in his anger had remembred mercy and had chastened him that hee might save him In that space of his punishment which lasted for above three days hee requ●sted two things that he might die maturely and Christianly and that it would please God to send a showre of rain seasonably to mitigate his heat and thirst It is recorded that he ob●ained both these requests for about Evening there fell a plentifull showre of raine and afterwards he ended his pains and his life Behold here ô my Christian thou thy selfe here hast also thy wheele but a farre softer one thou rollest in thy bed as on a wheele and without doubt though perhaps thy torment may be lesse yet thy thirst is as great that there may come down into thy soul a comfortable showre look up to Golgotha and behold with the eye of faith thy Saviour upon the Crosse from whose bodie flows Rivers of saving waters here drink here refresh here satisfie thy selfe The more freely thou drinkest of this the more healthy will thy soule be § .18 The sickmans Napkin or Handkerchief CHrotildis Queen of the Franks as Gregorius Turonicus relate it being cruelly used by Amalaricus her husband sent to King Childebert her brother a white linnen cloth all besmeared with her bloud in stead of a Letter and as though she spoke thus to her Brother Canst Thou ô Childebert see this
have not lived as I ought to have done as by grace I might have done I am sorry at my hea●t and it grieves mee that I cannot grieve more I humbly beseech thee ô Lord that thou wouldst not deale with me after my sins but according to thy great mercies thou ô God which hast laid stripes on the outward man give the inward man indeficient Patience So that thy praise may never depart from my mouth Have mercy upon mee ô Lord have mercy upon me and help mee for thou knowest what is good for my soul and body thou knowest all things thou canst doe all things to thee bee prayse for evermore Amen A Prayer after receiving of the holy communion to Jesus Christ. GLory and prayse be given to thee ô Christ who in thy gracious goodnesse wouldst vouchsafe to visit and cherish up my poore soule Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace according to thy word Now I hold thee ô sweet Love I will not let thee go I willingly bid Adiew to the whole World and with joy I come to thee ô my God Nothing at all nothing shall separate mee from thee ô good Iesus for I am joyned to thee in thee I will live in thee I will die and in thee if thou wilt I will remayn for ever I live but not I but Christ liveth in me My soule now is weary of my life I desire to be dissolved and to be with Christ For hee is to mee in life and death advantage Now though I walk in the valley of the shadow of death yet will I feare none evill because thou art with me ô Lord And as the Hart desires the Fountains of waters even so longeth my soule aft●r thee ô God My soule hath thirsted after God the fountaine of living waters When shall I come and appeare before the presence of God Blesse me most loving Iesus and now dismisse me in peace because I am truly thine and I will never for all time part with thee O could this happy union be now made Oh! might I be wholly in thee Oh! that my soul might f●r aye rest in thy imbracings and partake always of thy presence What have I any longer to doe or to be pestered with the World ô most loving Iesus Behold whom have I in heaven but thee an● whom have I desired on earth in comparison of thee Into thy hands ô LORD doe I comm●nd my soule receive mee oh sweet Love that I may ever be with thee and that in thee I may lye downe and take my rest for thou onely makest me dwell in safety Amen The conclusion of the second Book To the Reader WEe have said thus much hitherto to the sound and sick partly to recreate them that they may live to excite them that they may watch to strengthen them to overcome that they might always be ready for Deaths assaults It is better to try any course then to dye ill An ill death is not onely the worst of all errours but it is irrecoverable inexpiable Now we come to dying men and prescribe documents for them not onely that they should read them when they are dying but specially in health to profit them against Death To dying Men. A Death strikes and with his Ax fels burly Okes There 's not a Tree that stands his single strokes B Fly hence Your House begins to crack it falls Get under ground there yee 'll find safer walls C Beast Fish and Fowle wee catch with wiles and snares But Death hurls darts at us and no Man spares D Be not d●smay'd though Sculs from Heaven drop From mortall seed springs an immortall crop E As Waters from Aquarius pitcher drill So runs Mans life Lib. a tryes Wel or Ill F The Sun goes down but 't is to bring now day So man doth dye that he may live for ay G The game 's our own The Deer's pent up No way to flie Dogs Huntsmen Darts Nets Toyls all tell him He must die THE Remembrance of DEATH is presented to dying Men. The third Book § 1. The Art of dying compendiously handled NOt to know how to die is the most wretched folly that therefore wee may learne that whi●h through all our lives we ought to learn fiue things are specially considerable which may make Death good First a free and undaunted mind this is a thing of great value on which do depend the rest An offering of a free heart will I give thee Ps 54.6 Nothing doth more please God no●hing more benefits man then an undaunted willing ready soule and a generous confidence in God Tergiversation and giving back argues a will nothing conformable to Gods Therefore if at some time to be done why not now to get such a prompt mind for death is to love and meditate on seriously the passion of our Lord which every day is to be considered on with Prayers The second a speedy and expedite dispatch and disposing of our debts and goods by will It is an errour not to think of making our wils untill Death be entred over the threshold Discharge thy debts dispose thy goods before Pale grimfac'd death doth come to knock at doore Saint Ambrose hath given us an excellent rule and method for the disposing of our own goods Let there be saith hee sincerity of faith quick sighted providence or let charity be joyned with prudence and prudence linked to charity and let him that giveth an Almes or taketh care that it be given let him doe that God may accept of the gift and the person giving The third is a speciall care of our salvation let that be reckoned of in the first place One thing is necessary Luk. 10.42 Bl ssed Saint Augustine the pattern of well dying men ten days before his Death admitted no Visitants onely at a set houre his Physician and a servant which brought in his dyet and hee himselfe was poured out in prayers teares and sighes hee conversed with GOD concerning his life and l●ft admonishments to us in these words Nullus Christianorum c. Let no Christian depart hence untill hee have fully and worthily repented him of his sins The fourth is the receiving of the Communion and to this the sicke party should bee ready and prepared this great werke stould not bee too long put off nor deferr'd till Death have possessed him it is dangerous to neglect this many die ill because they seeme to d●sire not to die so soone hee that will earnestly repent him of his sinnes let him do it early and contrition of spirit is excellent to a sicke mans salvation The fifth is a pious and entire oblation of himself to Gods good will Every man p●rhaps cannot exhibit a mind undaunted in sicknesse but every man ough● to shew a minde conformable to the will of God Let therefore the sick party often in the time of his visitation repeat these words of our Saviour Mat. 11.26 Even so Father because it seemed good
a care to preserve with prayers your very footsteps that when the betrayer shall come he may find every part so well guarded that he may have no place to fasten in you to wound you Gerardus both by nature Religion the brother of S. Bernard did publickly demōstrate the same which we here affirme that a good death is always joyned to a pious life but let us hear Bernard himself in this point whom si●knesse made wise Would to God I had not lost thee but only had sent thee before Would to God at last though slowly I might follow thee wheresoever thou art gone for no doubt but thou art gone after them whom about the midst of thy last night thou didst invite to prayses as well in words as countenance of gladnesse and didst presently break out into that of the Prophet David to the wonder of those that stood about thee Prayse the Lord from Heaven prayse him in the highest ô my brother thy day sprung forth in the midst of thy night that night was a time of illumination and indeed thy night was turned to day I was called to behold that wonder to see a man rejoycing in death and triumphing over death O Death where is thy victory Death where is thy sting Now thy sting is turned into a Jubilee of mirth Now there was a man who dyed singing and sung dying Thou art now ô daughter of sorrow turn'd into gladnesse Thou enemy of Glory art used for glory and the gate to Hell and the pit to destruction are made the inlet into the Kingdome of Glory and to the finding out of salvation and that of a sinner and justly too for that thou rashly didst use thy power against an innocent and just man ô Death thou art dead and caught with the same hooke thou so greedi●y swallowedst down which voice is to be found in the Prophet O death I will be thy death and will be thy destruction strucke through I say with that hook the faithfull p●ssing through thy loins there is opened through thy sides an happy and joyfull way to life Gerard my bro her fears thee not thou meagre Effigies Gerard my brother passeth through thee to hi● heavenly Countrey not onely securely but joyfully and cheerfully with prayses When as I was come and he had come to the end of that Psalme with a loud voice lifting up his eyes unto Heaven said Father into thy hands I commend my spirit and often repeating the same word Father Father and so turning himselfe with a cheerfull countenance to mee what a dignation is it of God to vouchsafe to be our Father What a glory is it to man to bee the sonnes and heires of God Hee so sung that he turnd my weeping into mirth and beholding his comfortable joy it made me almost forget my own misery He cannot die ill who hath liv'd well § 17. Like life like death WHen as the weary Huntsman's laid to sleep Yet doth hee dream how 's chase and game to keep To wit what things we have been busied about all day those usually we dream on at night in like manner to what we have accustomed our selves to through our lives those like us best in death Hence is it that for the most part as wee have acted our parts here so wee goe off from this stage of mortality There is an History of a Goldsmith who was so excessively covetous that lying upon his death-bed he dreamt still of gold insomuch that hee neglected the advice of Divines and other his Friends concerning his salvation and hourely had his heart fixed upon his money O wretched man hadst thou but one point of an houre to work out thy salvation and yet couldst thou not think upon it as our dayes have beene employed so will even our last of time therefore those who have made Gold their God or pleasures or other vanities their last end are sel●ome pious or comfortable How much better did Socrates who even at last gaspe could not forget himself nor vertue Antiochus King of Syria did most miserably vex the Iews and Maximinus the Emperour with cruell Edicts and most bitter tormen s resolv'd to put out the name of Christianity but both of them by the divine Justice fell into a most lamentable and grievous disease and when as neither of them had any hopes of life left them the one besought the Iews the other the Christians that they would pray for them unto their God Both of them like to Asops Crow which when shee was very ill spoke to her Mother not o lament for her but by her prayers to the Gods she entreated her to pray for her health to whom the other answered which of the Gods is it from whom thou hopest to be recovered when as there is none from whose Altars thou hast not stole some part of a Sacrifice Hence even as wee live so wee die and so we shall be judged at last either to punishment in hell or to everlasting happinesse in Heaven § 17. The wish for a good death Num. 23.10 LEt mee dye the death of the righteous and let my last end be like to his Cals out the Prophet Balaam How much righter had hee spoken had hee said Let mee live the life of the righteous that my death may then be like his It is ridiculous to desire to have a good death and yet to shun a pious life to live well is laborious to die well happinesse but the latter depends on the former Hee which refus●th to passe through the Red Sea shall never eat Manna Hee which loves Egypts slavery shall never enter into the Land of the living Piously and elegantly in this respect doth S. Bernard speak Vtinam inquit hac morte frequenter cadam God grant I may often fall by that death that so I may escape the s●ares of death that I may not be entangled in the mortiferous flatteries of a luxurious life that I may avoid the sense and deceitfull pleasures of lust that I be not overcome with covetousnesse that I be not stirr'd and mov'd to anger to impatience that I be not overwhelm'd with the vexings and distraction of worldly cares and sollicitudes That death is good which takes not life away but changes it onely into a better This for certain is that death that he expects and waits for with all his desires who eagerly pursues that life which shall never know death To be dead to sinnes before death comes is the best death of all § 18. Sleep is the brother of death PAusanias relates that in the City Olympia he saw a Statue called Night in the forme and habite of a woman This held in her right hand a white youth a sleep and in her l●ft hand a black youth as if hee were sleeping the one of these she called sleep the other death both of them were counted the sons of Night hence Virgill makes sleep to be Deaths Kinsman Gorgias Leontinus being very old and
thus there described and after all these things he fell downe on his bed and knew that hee should die Oh what force and energie is there in the words post haec After all these things and in this decidt he fell specially in those morre●tur that he should die Alexander had in hopes conquered a World already nay worlds He thought he had done things worthy of everlasting Annals and yet after all these so many so great Trophies hee fell downe not onely into his bed but to his grave he must be content with a small Coffin Petius Alphonsus relates i● that Alexander being dead Many Philosophers met to speake some thing to be engraven on his Monument One hee utterd this En modo quatuor ulnarum spacium ei satis est cui spatiosissimus terrarum orbis non suffecerat i.e. behold now foure cubits is room enough for h m who● while ere the whole World would not suffice ano her added yesterday Alexander could have freed any from death now no● himself One beholding his golden Ch●st spoke thus Yesterday sai● he Alexander of Gold made treasure now change turns and gold makes treasure of Alexander Se● the wise men exprest themselves but they all concluded with that of the Machabees Afterward he fell down into his bed and dyed Juvenal sings thus of him Vnus pellaeo Iuveni non sufficit orbis ... i.e. The whole World though 't be was Will not content Philips great son But marke the largnesse of our thoughts while wee prove forgetfull of our own condition oh did we meditate on heavenly immortall things while wee vainly dispose these transitory ones to our Nephews and Kinred Alas all this this while we are extending our thoughts death oppresseth us and this thing which is called old age is but a short circuit of a few y●ers Why should wee therefore trust death Consider but for what small matters wee lose our lives It is not our meat nor drink nor watching nor sleep used intemperately but prove deadly our foot hurt a little the griefe of the eares a rotten tooth meat offending the stomach a drop of an ill Humour any of these may open the gate to death Is it a matter of any great consequence or profit whither we live or die Ill sents savours tastings wearinesse nay nourishment it selfe without which we cannot live may bring in and usher in death The body of man is weak fluid rotten diseased wheresoever it moves it is conscious of it's own infirmity It endures not every Climate the Sea alters it the change of ayre infects it the least cause hurts it Let us believe him therefore who said Therefore ô men death is better then a bitter life and eternall rest then continued travell Therefore I say It is better to dwell in heaven then to travell on earth § 22. Death's Blessednesse WRite Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord even so saith the Spirit that they rest from their labours and their works follow them to die in the Lord is to die the servant of the Lord as the holy Scriptures speake of Moses Moses my servant is dead as if the Lord should say although hee sinned sometime and by sin made himself not my servant yet hee died my servant He died in my service Whatsoever hee was whatsoever he did it was mine for all the servants work is the Lords and such a joyfull Verse in that Song wa● that of old Symeon Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace according to thy Word In peace altogether at whose entrance all the wars of the righteous men are ended never for all eternity to be begun again Such servants of God do all die in the Lord which dying do as it were rest in his bosome and so resting sweetly are said to sleep in death So blessed Stephen in the midst of that storm and showre of stones in such a great tumult and fury of those that stoned him slept in the Lord. Acts 7.60 Ioh 11.11 So our Lord spoke of Lazarus that h e did but sleep So Moses the servant of the Lord died when God bade him or as some expound it at the Lords speech as if the Lord had kissed him in this sence as a Mother takes her Infant in her Arms and kisseth him being a sleep and so lays him into bed smilingly no otherwise did God with Moses but by sweet embraces and smiles did lay him being falne asleepe into Abrahams bosome Where h●e shall give his children peace saith the Psalmist Blessed yea for ever blessed are all they that so die because they shall never be miserable as Saint Bernard saith The death of the righteous is good for the rest Secondly for the newnesse of it Thirdly for the security of it Blessed yea thrice blessed are all such for their works follow them they shal follow them as servants their Lord as sonnes their father as Schollers their Master as Souldiers their Generall as Nobles do their Sovereigne They shall follow us to Gods Tribunall They shall be brought into the highest Courts of the Great King and there shall be admitted for noble Courtiers And as every one which is able for wealth and Nobility is known by the number and adornment of his followers so who desires to appeare before the King of Glory let him be wel and richly furnished with such servants And let him set them before him and look that they be many and richly apparelled and though our good works go before us in some kinde yet they follow us in reward The labour which we spend on them and in them goes before The reward which we have from them follows He never can want comfort that is well stored with such followers § 23. A Dying mans farewell to the living who must follow him the same way MAny are the things for which I am sorry Especially the neglect of grace and the time that I have ill spent Oh how should I how ought I to have beene more patient more submisse more mindfull of my death ô how few and small sparkles of divine love have had irradiations in my soul Have mercy upon me ô God have mercy upon me according to the multitude of thy great mercies ô infinite goodnesse by the precious bloud of thy deare Son be mercifull to mee a sinner and ô you whomsoever I have offended in words or deeds Forgive and pardon mee You have mee now heartily confessing my selfe guilty and sorrowfull and deny not to mee before I goe hence this viaticum even the free forgivenesse of all my offences towards you Doe not I pray you let your courage fall in the time of sicknesse by my example because I am weak Set your eyes upon the actions of holier men and conform your selves to them Emulate with ardency their patience humility obedience And I cannot but give you hearty thanks for all the good offices you have performed towards ●ee either by your hand and work care
ever dwell with thee Oh let that voice sound in my eares To day shalt thou be with me in Paradise Lord Now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace according to thy word For mine eye● have seen thy salvation Oh loving Iesus what is thine own I beseech thee to take O Lord Iesu Make mee to be numbred with thyne Elect. O Iesus thou Son of Dauid have mercy upon mee Lord be thou my helper Make haste ô Lord Iesus to come and help me O Lord Iesus receive my spirit Amen § 29. The dying mans confidence in GOD. HEre I doe confidently with S. Bernard confesse and say let others pretend their Merits and others that they can and have borne the heat of the day yet I hold it good to keepe close to the mercy of God and to put my confidence in the Lord. And though I am conscious to my selfe that my former life hath been full of sin so that I deserve to be cast off by Gods justice yet will I never leave off to trust in his infinite goodnesse and ●hat as hitherto his al-sufficient Grace hath administred strength ●o my weaknesse so the same will ●et give me strength and power to ●eare all things patiently and wil●ingly And this my patience ●hough small and little helped by ●he assistance of his Grace whi●h doth infinitely exceed my thoughts will mitigate my pains and will bestow that eternall reward upon me in Heaven This one thing ô God will I desire of thee that thou wouldst never suffer me to fall from relying upon thy goodnesse although I know my self to be weak and undeserving Yea though I should come to that casting down and terrours that I did seem even to be utterly lost and left yet I would call to mind that Apostle of thine Saint Peter that was ready to sink at the first blast of winde and to fall from his faith and I would then even doe as hee did call upon thee and say Lord save mee and even then would I hope that thou wouldst stretch forth thy hand and helpe mee but yet if thou shouldst permit mee to be harder beset then Peter which I pray thee not to suffer ô Lord yet I neverthelesse do hope that thou wouldst looke upon mee with the eyes of thy mercy and that thou wouldst turne and behold mee as thou didst Peter when he had denied thee and that thou wouldst not suffer thy whole displeasure to arise but that thou wouldst help me and deliver my soul This I know assuredly that God will not forsake me without my fault I know that of Saint Augustine to be most true God can free and hath done for many great things without any desert of theirs because he is Good but yet he never condemn'd one without great demerits because he is just Therefore in great trust and confidence I do wholly rely upon him if for my sins he suffers me to perish yet his justice shall be glorified but I hope and certainly doe hope that his mercifull goodnesse will keep my soul that so rather his mercy may be praysed then his justice nothing can fal upō me but what God will Now whatsoever hee wils though it may seeme harsh and evill yet is truly good Whatever ô God thou wilt I will the same altogether I will ô God I will § 30. The last words of a Dying man AVgustus the Emperour when hee dyed dedicated his last wordes to his Empresse Livia Livia said hee be all thy life long mindfull of our Marriage farewell How much trulier may Christians dedicate their last speeches to their Lord and Master Iesus Christ saying O Lord Remember the time since my soul was espoused to thee in holy wedlock Dionysius the Areopagite an holy man of life being condemned to lose his head ●earing the sentence of death with a generous resolution contemning the scoff● of the multitude repeated the last words of our Saviour Father into thy hands I commend my spirit Saint Basil the Great at the close of his life when as he had furnishd all them about him with excellent admonitions spoke the same words unto Christ as the former Martyr had done Saint Bernard as if he should shew to the sick man Christ Iesus Oh thou Christian saith hee despair not of thy sicknes Christ hath told thee what thou art to say in all the hazards of death to whom to flie to to whom to call on In whom to hope even in God the Father which cannot despise the prayers of them that trust in him doe thou therefore such works in the time of thy sicknesse that thou mayest truly say In thee ô Lord have I put my trust let me not be confounded Therefore let the last words of the dying man be directed to God to him our prayers to him let goe all our desires Let all our hopes terminate in him let him receive our last sighes let the dying man say thus from his heart To thee ô Lord doe I looke up to thee I lift up my eyes to thee I direct my prayers § 32. The conforming of our wils to Gods will is of great value especially at the end of our lives LVdovicus Blosius gives this advice for the conforming our wils to the will of God There is no exercise at our death can be more profitable th●n that every one should fully resigne himself into ●he hands of his C eatou● humbly lovingly wholly trusting and relying in his infinite mercy and goodnesse For it cannot but hee that whosoever doth thus place his confidence in God before his departure hence but that he shall partake of joy in the Caelestiall Kingdome For those that shall be for ever with the Lord shall be freed from punishm●nt In this mind died that good ●●ief on the Crosse which did no desire our Saviour to save his body but wholly desired Christ to forgive his sins and to give him the Kingdom of Heaven so fully did he resigne himself into Gods hands so wholly did he offer himself to Christ that hee should do with him as he pleased And if it so fall out that when death is at hand thy sicknesse is grievous and painfull cast that also upon God For the death of Christ wil yield us consolation in death He is gone before innumerable others are gone before why should it irk thee to follow § 33. The dying man emulates the good Thief in Golgotha LOrd Remember mee when thou commest into thy kingdome Oh happy Thiefe which didst profit more in the school of Christ in 3 houres space then the Iscariot did in three yeers thou goest before me in words and for a forme of prayer who wast to Christ in his greatest extremity a Patron and an Advocate Good God! how deep are thy judgements his friends and kinred are silent his Disciples forsake him The Angels appear not neither is his mother suffered to defend his inno●en●e and where are those eleven thousand and more fed by this crucified Lord What one out of
so great a multitude does open his mouth in his cause The mayntenance of Christs Cause is therefore devolv'd to the defence of this Thiefe One Thief pl●ads against another for Christs innocence he mayntains it takes of the others scandals reproves the infinite multitude of pa●ricide Did not the Son of God blush to have his Cause defended by a Thief No! hee was so farre from being ashamed at his Oratory that hee praysed him in publick nor was his Rhetorick defective in Gods Cause And wee ind●e justly therefore wee receive the due reward of our deeds but this man hath done nothing amisse Lu. 23.4 O how justly may I say the same of my self And I do justly die for my offences for I doe but receive the wages of my works but my Saviour What had hee done nothing at all worthy of death nor of such torments Let mee therefore ô God be heard when I use this forme of prayer Lord remember me for now thou art come into thy Kingdome and because thou art in thy Kingdome looke upon m●e now languishing and decaying and adm●t mee to thy self when I depart I beg this of thee ô Jesus by thy scourging Thorns and Crosse by all thy ●orments and by thy precious ●eath What therefore remaynes but ●hat I should for ever cast my soul ●nto his bosome whose dolour and ●ains hee onely weighs and consi●ers He knows what conduceth ●o the health of our souls and ●ee from all eternity ha h deter●ined by what way wee shall return to him O Lord I have waited for thy salvation § 34. The Heliotropium or Turn sole against all diseases and death the onely Medicine THis Herbe as experience shews it turns with the Sun both at his rising and setting nay even in cloudy weather hee shews his love to the Sun by night as it were for grief he shuts up himself for want of her beautifull Lover Oh could mans will alwayes so follow and attend upon Gods will that at all times it should be conformable to it and and follow it through all afflictions and adversities and not to turn aside in that great cloudy day of death Upon this set day let the dying man imitate this flower and let him f●x the eyes of his faith upon that glorious Sun of righteousnesse especially then This doe our Saviours owne words teach us Even so Father Math. 11.26 for so it seemed good in thy sight so even so my ●ying friend speak you In all things that ever you doe in all evils to be endured or suffered by the example of our Lord say always So Father even so good Father so be i● ô my Father with often ingeminations and specially when the pangs of death doe rage most violently then even then subject thy will in all things to his pronounce these watching in health in sicknesse but at the pinch of death never forget them Lord thou knowest my heart command it Lord I have hoped in thee I have said thou art my God thou shalt mayntaine my lot my he●lth my disease prosperity and adversity my life and my death are in thy hands as thou wilt so let all things be It shall be pleasant to me ei●her to live or die according to thy good will because thou art my Father Therefore ô Father as thou wilt order dispose permit all things to be done in mee and of mee as may be pleasing to thee let not any thing in mee crosse or thwart thy heavenly disposing So even so good Father let thy will be done from hence-forth and for ever This herb is of wonderfull vertue to all sicknesse evils and death Hee is far●e from feare of destruction that is in will so united to his God FINIS Prayers to be said of or to be read to a man dying OH holy Jesus my strength my ●efreshing my defender and my deliverer in whom I have hoped on whom I have believed whom always I have loved who art my chiefe pleasure the fortresse of my strength my hope even from my youth up Lead me forth ô ●hou that art the leader of my life and I will follow thee stretch forth thy right hand of mercy to the worke of thine own hands which thou the Creatour of all things didst make of the dust of the e●rth and strengthenedst with bones and sinews to whom thou by death gavest life The time is at hand that dust must return to dust and my spirit to thee my Saviour and blessed Redeemer who gavest it me Open good Lord to mee the gate of life for for mee wretch didst thou the Lord of life hang on the tree and wast reckon●d amongst transgressors receive me ô mercifull God according to the multitude of hy tender mercies thou didst kindly and speedily entertain the penitent thiefe upon the Crosse begging of thee I am sick and sore smitten to whom should I run for cure but t● thee ô gracious Physician heal thou m●e ô Lord and I shall be whole and those that put their trust in thee shall not be confounded in thee ô Saviour have I trusted let me no therefore be put to confusion But who or what am I most glorious God that I should with such bold●esse speak to thee I am a sinner borne nay and conceived in transgression a rotten carcasse an uncleane vessell food for wormes Spare mee forgive mee good God what conquest wouldest thou have to contend or s●t thy selfe against me who ●m weaker and lighter then the stubble before the winde then the dust or the chaff driven too and fro with every blast Passe by ô Lord all my transgressions and rayse up thy poore dejected servant from the Dunghill Stand up ô Lord and for my defence rayse up thy self and reject not the supplication of thy poore weak servant Let my prayers enter into thy presence and stretch forth thy hand and com● and help I am the man that travelling from Hierusalem am taken and wounded of thieves and left half dead be thou thou ô my Saviour the good Samaritan and c mfort me I have grievously sinned in the whole course of my life and my sins are ever before thee From the crown of my head to the sole of my foot there is not one sound or clean member O if thou by thy precious death on the Crosse hadst not helped my soule I should have for my sins deserved eternall perdition I even I am partaker ô sweet Iesu of that inestimable Redemption thou didst shed that most precious bloud for my sake ô thou preserver of men and therefore put me not away from thee I am that sheepe which wandred and lost it self seek mee ô thou great Shepheard and take mee and conduct me into thy fold that thou mayest be true in all thy sayings Thou that hast promised that whensoever a sinner shall repent and return thou wilt have mercy upon him Truly Lord I am not worthy to be called thy son because I have sinned against heaven and before thee