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A88553 The life of Adam. Written in Italian by Giovanno Francesco Loredano, a Venetian noble-man. And renderd into English by J.S.; L'Adamo. English Loredano, Giovanni Francesco, 1607-1661.; J. S. 1659 (1659) Wing L3067; Thomason E1909_1; ESTC R209952 36,489 95

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the Evening was expulsed In a word Humane felicities are no other then moments They for the most part find their Coffin in their Cradle and their death in their birth Whilst he was departing the Sunne retired to shroud himselfe in the Ocean as if externall darknesse should have seconded the spirituall of sinne An Angell increased the griefe and terrour of his sadnesse which armed with fire and sword kept the entrance into Paradice in that he saw himselfe wholly excluded from all hope who flattering his sorrow might be able to promise a returne to his lost delight In placing an Angell with fire and armes in his hands his Divine Majesty intended to impede the entrance of Men and Divells into Paradise And to teach us that to enter into Paradise we must passe through the fire and sword of penitence with the consent of the Angell which is Christ Or else represented to us an Hieroglyphick of Hel the sword signifying the paine of guilt and fire the paine of sense Adam not omitting his sighes and complaints gave the woman the name of Eve which signifies Life because she was to be the mother of all Living Or oppressed with his owne sorrow he would allude to the voice of infants which they make when they cry Shee being the cause of teares and through her all mankind having occasion of weeping Or else would call her Life because seeing nothing but emblemes of death he hoped to comfort himselfe with this name Or it may be haply that he did as men now a dayes who having death before their eyes speak of nothing but life He could not neverthelesse so abstaine through griefe but that the sense mis-led him with its allurements As often as he was incircled in the embraces of Eve who manifested her selfe an interessed companion in his misfortunes he received no small content And it 's probable that she some times served herselfe of such like sentiments as these It 's not necessary Adam because thou must repent that therefore thou must dispaire Let us not undervalue the mercy of that God who with so gentle a hand hath so favourably punished our enormous crimes by shewing more of cowardise then contrition in our tears Let not him sin that hath not courage to undergo chastisement And its true that the soule dissolved into teares though it should evaporate by the eyes would not be able to remove the misery of our losse and it is withall an effect of a great prudence to conforme ones selfe to those things which have no other remedy then sufferance Let 's indeavour to recover what we have lost by the procuring of children Sleight comforts in our infelicity but yet necessary because God hath commanded them Let 's sin no more in disobedience Replicated sinnes as they admit not of excuse so they provoke Mercy it selfe to anger Let us endeavour the procreation of mankind for so we shall conforme to the will of God If Death triumph over this masse of flesh we shal survive in dispight of him in our Children Nephews and the memory of our Progeny I intend not by all this that we should leave off our teares The sorrow for my sinne shall dye with my heart which I believe shall be the last part of me alive I speake it that we may not incense with a new transgression that God in offending whom I know not which is greater the danger or the impiety Adam with a smile begot by the stimulations of sensuallity thus replyed I need no longer now to feare your company my Eve since you become to mee an incentive to good To perswade me that I bemoan not the miseries into which sinne hath brought me is to desire me to assume the quality of flocks and stones I have lost too much ever to feare weeping It s an effect of stupidity and not of prudence not to accompany great losses with great greifes It is yet true that there is a necessity to cheare up the sense to propagate Nature and obey God Thus saying with glances and kisses haveing throwne his armes about his wive's necke they gave themselves wholly up to delight which peradventure for the time begot in them an oblivion of all the accidents past There is not any thing more estrangeth the soule from afflictions than the complacencies of sense In that act a man not only communicates himselfe transformes himselfe but goes out of if not besides himselfe Greifs give way torments vanish discontents are forgotten in those amorous games which admit of no other companions then laughter sport and audacity Till this instant Adam had been kept a Virgin to intimate unto us that Matrimony fills the earth but Virginity Paradise Scarce had Eve satisfied the instinct of nature and appeased in part the allurements of sense when with the signes of pregnancy she was assaulted by repentance the indivisible companion of fleshly delights Here I will not mention the extreams of her passions in loathing and longing for every thing in the burden of her belly in her vigils and in the acerbity of those pangs the more grievious by how much the more strange because the most that I can speak would be the least part of what they were Much lesse will I speak of the sufferance of Adam because it is known that to have a wife and a wife pregnant is a species of martyrdome In the end with all those payns that accompany the gravidnesse of women the time of delivery drew neere Adam playing at one time the parts of the Mid-wife Nurse and Husband Eve brought forth two births Ca●n was the name of the male and Calamana that of the female Adam full of joy and with eyes big with teares betook himselfe to praise and returne thanks to his Divine Majesty Lord said he thy goodnesse be praised who not altered a jot by the injuries of my sinne hast condescended that I continue a man Mercifull God glorious God immense God since thou ceasest not to do good to those that offend thee I acknowledge that I merited grown odious to the aire earth and all creatures and lost amongst the clouds of oblivion to be made my owne sepulcher as not being able to imagine a viler place Thou on the contrary giving me a power of using all the elements vouchsafest me to be the father of mankind and permittest me to live ever famous to the memory of all Ages Lord I will not go about to commemorate all thy favours for they are infinite I beseech thee only to continue unto me the assistance of thy grace that so I may not fall into those sins which have made me to deserve death Eve afterwards bore Abel and Delbora whereby she increased the joy of Adam Children are doubtlesse the delight of their Parents the fathers seeing their lives renewed in their children whom they look upon as their other selves grown young Poore Adam had neverthelesse little cause of rejoycing whilst he saw borne more subjects of humane misery
earth having been contaminated by the wickednesse of thy hands shall deny thee its fruits and thou shalt become a fugitive and vagabond Cain full of confusion and of feare confessed the whole fact but to little purpose since he did it out of season He departed therefore with his wives children having received from God for a mark that none should kill him the continuall trembling of the head And with reason ought his head to be punished that had slain Abel the head of the Church God permitted that Abel should be slaine by his brother it may be to chastise their parents Fathers not meeting a greater affliction then in the death and depravity of their children Or else it was to instruct us that just men and the true servants of God are allwaies subjected to the persecutions and cruelties of ungodly men Adam having discovered in the flight of Cain the death of Abel for he that flies gives no signes of any thing but ill after an infinite of teares and sighs that well-ny deafned the aire turnes himselfe to God and inspired with passion and griefe expressed these or the like conceptions Lord hath not my sinne yet received punishment equall to its desert Do they still importune thee to pay the debt contracted by my disobedience Is it possible that my teares have not obtained from thy mercy a perfect absolution If this be true my God why enjoy I this light why receive I the respirations of this aire Earth why dost thou not intomb me in thy bowells Heaven why dost thou not slay me with thy thunders Doth divine justice want judgments Is the hand of God disarmed But if my repentance be not able to cancell the debt of my crimes if my sins admit not the excesses of thy pitty if my transgressions contend with the infinity of thy Goodnesse what part O Lord hath the innocence of my poor sonne in the defections of my heart Wherein hath that Abel offended who in his sacrifices hath had the honour of the Divine Complacency Oh miserable wretch reduced to a misfortune beneath the condition of brutish animals which in their kinds produce births that kill not one another by fratricide which with the only instinct of nature spare not only such as are related to them in consanguinity but also in their species Wicked Adam These are all effects of thy sinne Good God permit not the population of the world in my descent for from a bad root nothing can proceed but worse fruit And thou vile Cain that hast rendered thy hands accursed abusing the goodness of thy brother not being worthy thereof what wilt thou do Hated by God by Men and by thy Selfe whither wilt thou go Unfortunate father deprived in one and the same instant of two sons Constrained much more to bewaile him which remains then him which I have lest He would not here have ended his complaints if the shriekes of Eve that introduced pity even into the insensibility of stones had not necessitated him to consolate her in the midst of her teares Love making a separation of our selves from our selves Eve said he there is a necessity of accommodating the affects of our hearts to the wil of of God which in his works alwayes includes secrets impenetrable by our humanity All that which in this vale of the World hath the resemblance of evill is good with God who worketh diversly from our understanding What doth teares profit which are alwayes of small moment but for the dead vaine and unprofitable If by weeping we could retract that fatal point of Gods decree I would say Let 's dissolve our selves into teares But if this be a vaine hope and an impossible supposall Why should we with new sorrows aggravate our old miseries And in regard it is true that discovering by the death of the more just that thou wilt not O my God accept of the propagation of mankind from me I promise and sweare unto thee never to know Eve more Lord I will no longer believe the Divinity of thy essence if I infringing this promise thou dost not fulminate against me the thunder of thy wrath and make me to prove all the effects of thy displeasure Eve presently with an oath confirmed the will of Adam and daily dieting upon teares they ceased not to bewail the hurt of such a losse All greifs admit of some consolation that of the losse of children is insupportable for it will make patience it selfe out of patience He that loseth a sonne loseth more than a part of himselfe For in himselfe a man dies daily but in the life of a child he goes forward to immortality They many yeares continued their continence and their condoleing sacrificing all their affections to the passion of such a losse when behold at length a Messenger of God admonished Adam in words of this or the like purport Adam It is now time to dry up thy teares Continuall sorrowes are not pleasing to God who desires that in our misadventures we submit to his divine will Comfort thy selfe that Almighty God will in another sonne restore thee all that which thou lamentest in the losse of Abell This sonne shall in his successours revenge thee of him who hath been the cause of all thy miseries From him after some ages shall be borne God-man Feare not againe to touch thy wife for I by the will of his Divine Majesty do free thee from thy vow and absolve thee from thy oath Adam humbly thanked God for his compassion and imparted all to Eve making her gravid a little after begetting a sonne whom he called Soth saying The mercy of God hath furnished me with an Issue which shall repaire the losse of the death of Abell In the Education of this sonne what paines Adam took may be understood by the successe He merited from people the attribute of Divine having given names to the starres and invented the Hebrew-Characters With piety and goodness he ravished the affections of all and was an example to posterity and a glory to his parents In the meane time generations multiplied to that multitude as that men were forced to seperate to cultivate new grounds the first not being sufficient to maintaine them Upon this occasion Adam exercised the talents he received from God He made certaine lawes with which he taught and commanded that which was good Vices being already so increased that they had great need of reformation Adam not being able in regard of the distance of places to prescribe remedies to those evills which multiplied to infinite made use of Laws which make the Prince alwayes present though he be farre distant There is the Law of Nature and the Written Law That of Nature is a sentiment born with the Reason which enableth the Conscience to distinguish good from evill But in wicked minds corrupted by a depraved consuetude this Law is either not known or else dispised The Written Law therefore is necessary which dividing it selfe into Divine Civil constitutes
the good shall be the victime sacrificed to Gods anger You have no way to avoid these evils but by loving serving and obeying God Stupid people why do you not imploy your selves in those works which promise you beatitude Is it happily so great a toyle to exercise the works of temporall and spirituall Mercy Children please God please God for else you are neere to destruction Educate your Children in his feare that happily with their righteousnesse and your penitence you may be able to divert the impending judgements of Divine Justice I know that these my words will not prevail upon those minds who have devoted themselves to ambition jollity dishonesty thievery murther and dissolutenesse But the griefe I conceive for your calamities urgeth me to speak though it may prove ineffectuall I comfort my selfe neverthelesse that if you observe not all these my precepts yet one shall fulfill them for you all I see in the more hidden Arcana of God that She shall spring from the Loins of these who being a Virgin and a Mother shall break the Serpents head beare God into the world and open Heaven to the Just Adam was heard with more admiration then successe for all his sonnes except Seth were maculated with a thousand enormous vices His prophesies were derided because That is with great difficulty believed that is not desired and it is the property of Sinne to bereave men of reason and understanding To Seth who by his virtue merited all his Affections and Benedictions Adam familiarly imparted all the particularities of the past and future eveniences which with the gift of Prophesie had been communicated to him by God He foretold him the Ruine of their posterity the birth of the Virgin Mary the passion and death of God the delivery of the righteous souls from Hell and the Institution of new Lawes He advertised him to instruct his posterity laying up these memorialls in two Towers whereof one to be of a matter that could beare out the impetuosity of water the other resist the violence of fire He commanded him above all that he should never permit any of his children to marry into the family of Cain Vices are ever transmitted to posterity and it would be a great benefit to the world that wicked men were deprived of Issue Wolves-bane and Hemlock grow not on wholesome roots Serpents bring forth only Serpents Thus Adam being arrived to his Nine hundred and thirtieth year oppressed either by infirmity or old age departed this life bequeathing his soul to his Maker and his body to the Earth there to remain till the Resurrection when all the Holy Patriarks shall be freed from the prison of the Grave It is the opinion of many that he dyed on Friday the 3d of March being the day on which he was created to hint that misery comes in the very instant of our felicity He was of very great strength according to the Giant like stature he was of We may believe that he was proportionable of person and very handsome for coming out of Gods hands he could not be otherwise He was buried in Hebron in a Sepulcher of Marble and was afterwards transported to Calvary to the very place where Christ dyed It was so decreed by God that so the innocent blood of a God should wash away the guilty ashes of a Sinner Oh excesse of Love Oh stupendious Mercy And hereupon I am of opinion that a deaths head is alwayes affixed to the feet of the picture of Christs Crucifixion to shew us that it is the head of Adam Of Eves age the Scriptures make no mention perhaps because we ought not to know the death of her that deserved to dye before she was born all the miseries of mankind taking rise from her It s probable that she was oppressed by age and passion for Adams death It pleased his Divine Majesty perhaps that she should survive Adam to double her punishment in beholding the death of the dearest part of herselfe This Reader is the Life of the first Man first Father and first Saint He possessed all those benefits which were vouchsafed by nature or acquired by industry He was endowed with all Sciences was the inventer of all Arts. He preceded all mortalls in Wisdome and the perfect knowledg of all naturall things both because it depended on the cause not on the effects and because he could not lose it with the state of innocence He found in advancement downfall and in downfall glory He was then most infelicitous when he was in the height of all his felicity because he could not keep himselfe so I know not whether be greater the hurt he hath done his posterity in necessitating them to dye or the benefit in occasioning the most wonderfull Love of God to put himselfe upon it to undertake our humane nature And Reader consider in this Relation how vast difference there is between God and man Man brooks no parity nor equality in riches dominion nobility honours nor virtue God on the contrary is so full of benignity and so free from envy that he hath been pleased to forme man almost equall to himselfe And in every way that man resembled God God in every of those wayes hath been like Himselfe Consider that God hath given the dominion over all creatures to man as being indued with the light of reason to teach us that the superiour part of man wherin is the minde and reason the particular attribute of a man ought to precede over the inferiour to wit the senses and affections which we have common with beasts Consider that the greatest felicityes last not long resembling lightening which the more it abounds with light the sooner it vanisheth and leaves behind somuch a greater darknesse as Adam in the Terrestriall Paradise passed in a moment from Paradise into Exile Consider of what small avail are the favors of Nature the gifts of Wisdome the Divine admonitions and the Proximity of God himself whilst a depraved will tyrannizeth over the reason inslaves the understanding and resolves to idolize vice Consider that the greatest errors proceed from the greatest wits in that the wisest man in the world fell and that so much the more inexcusably in asmuch as it was easie not to have sinned Consider that it booteth not to confide in riches honours empire nor the love of great ones when an error of disobedience hath involved us in the extremity of misery and in the hatred of Him that hath given us a beeing according to his own similitude Consider lastly Reader how much Children and Grand children and Posterity lose in the sinne of their Progenitors and Ancestors in that all Ages pay a perpetuall penance for the transgression of Adam FINIS
much as those whom we most love Adam that refused not to be a companion in the sinne shunns to be a companion in the punishment His Divine Majesty though he saw Adams sin arrived to a supreme degree whilst to the exterior and interior consent and consuetude he addes also his excuse and apology and though the temerity of Adam retorted the crime on his Maker so that God seemed the Author of such a fault yet continuing in the exercise of his wonted Mercy he turned to the Woman and said Woman Chosen by me for a Companion and Comfort to Man why hast thou been the instrument of a sinne somuch the hainouser by how much the more unjust why hast thou deceived thy Husband Why hast thou not obeyed thy God The woman suffered not the words of His Divine Majesty to be ended but she replyes My simplicity Lord hath been deluded by the subtility of the Serpent He knew so wel how to dissemble his words that I believed he had neither wit or power to betray my credulity I could not perswade my self that there were treacheries in Paradise nor deceits in the face of a Damsell Thunder therefore O Lord thy punishments upon the Serpent as upon the author of all evill Guilt is a weight that superfluously aggravates every one Happy doth he think himself that to quit himselfe can accuse either the innocence or guilt of others God who had all this while been so full of patience and goodnesse in citing Adam in attending to his defence and in harkening to the excuse of the woman no sooner heares the Serpent to be the Author of so much evill but presently without hearing him he hastned to punish him O the wonderfull mercy of God that makes the punishment of all things precede mans punishment To Serpents that is to Divells he shewes not any mercy Hence we may argue that those who are men namely that prostitute not their reason to sense alwayes find God exceeding in new benefits The Serpents on the contrary namely those obstinate sinners which know not how to leave groveling in the dust of sinne receive their punishment before they be arraigned of their offence It admonisheth men to be men and to keep themselves men Because said God in cursing the Serpent thou hast been the Author of the breach of my precepts because rhou hast deceived Innocence because thou art opposite to the execution of my commands and desires and because thou hast been so bold as to be tampering with my image I wil make thee accursed among all the beasts of the earth Thou thy selfe shalt be a burden to thy selfe alwayes going upon thy belly Dust shall be the sustenance of thy life There shall be an antipathy between thee and the woman and enmity between her seed and thy seed The trechery of thy stingings shall be rewarded by her heel which by Crushing thy head shall take away thy Life In short the meanes of sinne become the instruments of punishment The serpent had lift up it self in tempting the woman and now God commanded him for ever after to creepe upon the earth With a thousand promises had he got the favour of the woman and now God condemnes him to a perpetuall enmity with her It s not to be doubted but that His Divine Majesty in the serpent understood also the divell but curst neverthelesse the Serpent only because he would not too much perplex the minds of Adam and the woman who as yet knew not that there was any other incorporeal spirits in the Terrestriall Paradise but only God himselfe and it s a divine Maxime not to offer new occasions to those who are apt to erre The Divell goes upon his brest and on his belly to advert us that he two wayes betrayes the state of innocence With Pride which is emblematically figured by the brest which is the seat of the heart and with Luxury which hath its residence in the belly Or it teacheth us that the irascibles being seated in the breast the concupiscibles in the belly he moveth mans affections with these to precipitate and hurry him into sinne He is condemned to eat the dust which is as much as to say those men onely who having consubstantiated themselves with terrene vices little differ from the earth or dust God to punish the Devill the more in cursing of him threatens him perpetuall enmity with the woman either because he knew her malice was implacable or to hint that he had overcome the woman with treachery and not with open warre After the maledictions of the Serpent God turnes to the Woman and saith And thou Woman for thy credulity for thy concupiscence and for having seduced others into thy sinne thy griefs and thy sorrows shall be multiplyed to thee according to the multiplicity of thy births With the bitternesse of those pangs which shall make thee desire death shalt thou give unto thy children life Thou shalt be always subject to the Man and he shall excercise over thee a perpetuall command It was with reason that three sins should receive three punishments Namely for overmuch credulity multiplicity of births for the pleasure of the palate the pangs of the belly and for the imperious and scandalous seducing the man obedience and servitude It seemes indeed a great felicity the multiplicity of children yet neverthelesse God intended by this multiplicity to curse the woman Because on many births attend many abortions many paines and many perills It is againe to contend with an impossibility that amongst many children there should not be some monstrous either in maners or else in wit or else in life the which is insupportable to the Parents Let us add that the number of children disquiets the affection and the desire of the Fathers either in their education or in their vices or in their misadventures In a word the more fruitfull the Woman is the lesse fortunate is she to be esteemed If haply with a contrary meaning we may not say that God intended by this sentence to curse the Woman obliging her to paines and to blesse her making her fruitfull to denote to us that God in the rigor of chastisments themselves is not forgetfull of the excesse of his Mercy The throws of childbirth are naturall to women but God in the state of innocency with admirable and supernaturall power would have eased her of the paine and anguish All is easy al is possible to the omnipotence of an Almighty God God came at last to pass Sentence upon Adam Perhaps the love he bore him was so ardent that he would make him the last that should prove the effects of his just anger Or he chastised him last because his sinne was greater then others that so he might receive greater terror and greater torment in beholding the punishment of the others The expectation of chastisement is haply a greater paine then the enduring of it He that is punished knowes the worst of his sufferings He that waites for
punishments feares them to be much greater then they are A Hell to a soul that hath proved it shall be no greater nor more horrible To one that dreads it the torments and stripes represent themselves centuplicated Because saith God thou hast bent thy eare to the flatteries of thy wife touching and tasting the fruites of the forbidden Tree I will that thy labours curse the earth instead of cultivating it With the sudors of thy industry shalt thou spend thy days Thornes and thistles shall over-run thy feilds and like a bruit thou shalt be constrained to take herbes for thy sustentation Thou shalt not be able to eat without imploying thy hand or sweating thy brows These thy miseries shall determine with the ultimate period of thy life for I will for thy disobedience that thou returne to thy beginning and that earth become earth and dust dust How unexplicable is the mercy of God! Adam sinnes and transgresseth the precepts of his Divine Majesty and He in pronouncing the sentence of condemnation curseth the Earth What will not love make one doe What share had the earth in the faults of Adam With what demerit had it irritated the indignation of its Lord Unlesse perhaps it was cursed by God for that it did nor suddenly open a gulph to swallow him who had not known how to obey his Creator Or unlesse that God would have it cursed because it was always to serve the serpent for food It argues also the goodnesse of the Lord to remember Adam of the end of his miseryes whilst in minding him of his death he sets before him the period of his infelicity And although Death is the wages of sinne it proves notwithstanding profitable and necessary that so mans miserys and misfortunes become not immortall Mercifull God that blessest even when thou chastisest us Indeed death was a necessary act in the world that so the feare of losing the life should spur man on to all good actions and refraine him from all bad What would not man dare what would not man atempt to do if death should not cut the thread of his sensuality of his ambition How would he despise the death of the soul and his last damnation in the fall of the world that dying every moment should neverthelesse pride himselfe in a hope of immortallity It would not doubtlesse be the least of his rash attempts with the union of the mountaines to attempt a scalado upon Heaven Let the goodnesse of God therefore be for ever praised that to preserve the soul from perpetual damnation and to interrupt a lethargy of vices which would determine only with the termination of time hath decreed the dissolution of this masse of humane flesh and permitted that a momentary paine that is circumscribed by the brevity of a grone should deliver us from an eternall torment accompanyed with such dolours as the just anger of God is able to produce Scarce had the Soveraign Monarch pronounced the punishment for the sinne of Adam but making either by virtue of his Divine power or by meanes of the Angels certaine garments of beasts skins he therewith covered the nakednesse of Adam and Eve who stupifyed with Gods displeasure knew not so much as how with pardon to beg the mercy of his Divine Majesty This also is an argument of the wonderfull beneficence of God in that he would not permit that sinners thrust out of Paradise should for all that be wholly deprived of his providence as to the necessity of covering their bodies Because divine favours are of the nature of the Sunne which participates its heat and its light even to those that despise it God rendered the bodies of these wretches so miserable that without clothes they could not suffer the violences of the seasons nor cover that part of the body which is unworthy of the eye He would have these clothes of skins that so they might daily weare about them the emblematicall tokens of their mortality which being of slaughtered beasts should daily remember them of death and advert them that they dwelt under the intemperancy of a Heaven that would have dealt with them as with beasts And who knows but that God in vesting our first Parents with skins intended to describe what ought to be the habit of wise and just men condemning silkes and purples which denote onely effeminacy and pride Unlesse perhaps he would give us to understand how full of blindnesse are the counsells of men that have not recourse to God in their miseries since the vesture composed by Adam covered not all his nudity nor defended him from externall incommodityes and was inconvenient pricking the flesh and bringing paine and trouble Adam being clothed God began to upbraid him saying Behold Adam thy hopes obtained behold thy pretensions determined Thou art made just like Us omnipotent wise and all composed of goodnesse and holinesse Behold thou art become of a nature immortall not obliged to any needing of none and blessed in thy selfe Behold thy enjoyment of the knowledg of good and evill so much coveted by thy incredulity Get thee packing therefore out of the Paradise of delights and fixe thine aboad where thou wast formed cultivating that earth from whence thou hast derived thy beeing It was one of the wonted effects of Gods benignity to drive Adam out of Paradise because if he had continued amongst those delights without enioying them he would have received too much torment there being no greater punishment to be found then to be in the midst of felicityes and to be denyed the fruition Or he was dismissed from Paradice because What could God hope from him that had not power to shew himselfe continent no not with the very Trees More out of an effect of feare then disobedience it was that Adam stood immoveable when God by force took him from thence appointing him a station wherein he might command with the eye all the delights of Paradise that so daily beholding the losse of his happinesse his pennance should become more severe and his repentance more sincere It was goodnesse in God to thrust Adam out of Paradise for that he thereby removed the occasion of sinning anew there not being a greater incentive to a relapse into sinne then the being in the place where the sinne was before committed Those remembrances are no other then stimulations which enkindle the desire and hurry the will to new faults What Adams condition was expulsed Paradise many be easier imagined then described His eyes pregnant with teares his mouth full of sighs were the least expressions of his griefe His Wife insted of comforting him augmented his torments not so much for her haveing been the originall of his sinne as for the griefs which he received from her afflictions Poore Adam that didst not scarce one whole day enjoy the gifts of Gods favour His felicity being shorter then that of an Ephemeris About three of clock he was brought into the Garden at six a clock he sinned and in