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A28346 The Ladies Charity School-house roll of Highgate, or, A subscription of many noble, well-disposed ladies for the easie carrying of it on W. B. (William Blake), fl. 1650-1670. 1670 (1670) Wing B3152; ESTC R2137 96,148 302

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him as long as I live The sorrows of death caught hold upon me I found trouble then called I on the Name of the Lord and he heard me The Lord hath dealt bountifully with me what shall I render unto the Lord for all his benefits I will take the Cup of Salvation and pay my vows in the midst of his people in the Courts of the Lord 's own House in the midst of thee O Jerusalem praise ye the Lord. And if ever there be a time for us to speak and you to give it is now Whilst your heart is full of his Goodness yet yours can never extend to him to us and our School it may and others need it not we mean your great City-Hospitals but our poor little In fant new-born thing needs really needs and that makes us speak others are Rich we are poor others are full we are empty others have all things we have nothing but what the good Lord Jesus shall encline some great Ladies and a few of you the choicest Citizens of London for to give and choice men it must be that we thus go to for we intend never to beg nor mingle but with the best of Protestants and some of them too have scarce faith enough to believe the success of this great or good design Nay your Brother Cornish himself who in other things is one of a hundred through the greatness of his diffidence would have once perswaded us to lay it down whose Charity yet we doubt not of in the least it being a well approved thing by good men and Ministers one of which constantly Preaches every Lord's day an Evening Lecture for all sorts of comers where Bread and other encouragement is given for any Poor or Needy people that please to be there and hear at that same hour In short the praise and good report of this House and your Charity will live grow and be a great thing and still redound to your Honour and the City's Praise And now the prayers of all our School with the Blessings of the great God of Heaven and Earth rest on the Heads Hearts and Souls of all your near Relations and Family May it please you most Worthy Madam THE Good and Noble Ladies have given liberty to Petition as now we do some few Honourable Citizens and great Merchants Wives of eminent Quality or Degree your Husband being one we well know to be both free bountiful and a Right English Gentlemen in all things We humbly beg and intreat your Ladyship that this our Charity School-house Stick or Roll may be accepted it being for a good work much of praise-worthy And we humbly promise this We will all beg many Blessings or wish Health Peace Wealth and Eternal Happiness to you for ever and ever Yea we will beg for the two young Ladies also that they may be Saints in Heaven good and virtuous Wives on Earth and may have as they really do and will ever well deserve the best of Husbands to enjoy them such as may never grieve nor offend day nor night such as may love them and their Souls both above their great Fortunes and next our Lord Jesus Christ Study what to do for both for to be ensnared with a bad man and unkind or churlish Husband will be a thousand thousand pities grieve us to the heart When sweet Nature's Blossoms Buds and Roses meet with churlish Nabals the yielding gentle Reed is bruised by the ugly Oak and the Honey suckle tangled in a knot which can never be untied till Death But a good man though he be not a Lord though he be not a very great Merchant yet if he be but good natur'd wise cheerful and careful for the world and minds the world to come prayes daily for a Blessing let the Ladies we all say accept of such a one or let one venture first and the other for Honour after or let either chuse as they will but still let both be happy we all pray from the bottom of our hearts Yet happy they can never be unless after all they go to Heaven for Heaven is Heaven when all is done and ever will be We should Buy Sell Trade Marry Live and Dye so as that we may not endanger our Souls in the least Other losses may be gaind Health Wealth and the World but Heaven lost will never be found in another O love God and Jesus Christ now above all love his Praise love his Promise love his Spirit which knocks now and then yea often at your hearts with sweet soft and still Motions in the night saying Open open unto me Hear hear and your Souls shall live I will make a Covenant with you if you will be mine love and live to me now I will own you here and hereafter save you when you come to dye and bless you at the present with Children more or less or that which is better good things Yea no good thing will he with-hold from them that fear him saith the Psalmist And therefore fear him day and night both you yea both you Young and Lovely Ladies that he may indeed bless you in Life Death and Eternity prayes all we at Highgate SILVER DROPS OR SERIOUS THINGS HEre follows the Substance of the fine Young Lady's Answer to that Objection in the Essay Are these Times for Charity and a new Design when we have so many Waies and Objects for it Ay said she And it is the better for us too we have many Joynts and Mercies Fingers Feet and Toes all should do something for him and another world who is alwaies doing of us good and all his Works So saith the Psalmist And all his Works do praise him Psal 145. 10. Now if this little Design of theirs at Highgate be for or look like any thing of serving him why should it dye Let the vanity and things of the world sin folly and emptiness dye but let Virtue Religion and the Love of Charity live in all our bosoms breasts and lives If Angels were to be visible and present with us how much would they be to be embraced and desired for their holiness When Great and Noble Persons Lords Ladies and others embrace true Piety they seem to imitate the holy Angels though cloathed with frailty and mortality immortality is for another world and in that world nothing but Divine Love shall live Joy and Glory cease here but that which is heavenly shall never cease yet Charity shall cease though it be greater than Faith and Love too So sayes Paul 1 Cor. 13. 13. Now abides Faith Hope and Charity but the greatest of all is Charity Will you abound a little in this Work you have enough of this world yea enough to swallow and drown you to Eternity if a good God do not love and save you from the snares cares and flatteries of it For all its pleasures are bewitching things and the sweetest Musick fails tires often times But thou O Son Saint and Servant
nor they that are his much the most things of the world and the best things of the world leave us at the worlds end send us gawl'd and weary out a pack-horse has but beans and oats many care and carry for they know not who A rich man lately going with his son by water towards London Bridg Father said the young man there is a brave play to day at the Dukes Play-house let us go see it O villain said the Father wouldst thou go and have me too when there is a great vessel to look after Damn me chuse you said the Son I will go calling another boat and so stept away but they are both dead now and a vast estate gone and no body knows where almost Oh! how many do the like care and care as the old man did and have nothing many times but sin and the gawled conscience to carry them to the grave a sad reward and curse upon over covetous men but the world at best is but as a spoke in a wheel one is uppermost to day and another to morrow and though corn wine and oyl be the worlds happiness Psal 4. 7. yet this is at an end when he or the world is they ravish in expectation not in fruition but heavenly things are sweet in both and the worlds all is nothing at all at last many desie it and the Devil in their mouths and yet serve both in their hearts it is not the having the world in our hands or our hands in the business of the world but our making an Idol of it serving it more than the Creator God blessed for ever 'T is a great peice of wisdom to hide faults and ignorance sometimes yet learned Rome and Greece the two great schools of the world by all their learning did not define whether there were many Gods or one and were for many years the greatest Idolaters in the world notwithstanding all their wisemen but wisdom is good with an inheritance and true wisdom chooses God and Christ for a portion The Lord is my portion saith my soul and whom have I in heaven but thee saies David Psal 73. 25. Sir Edward Petto saith that if wee do ill the pleasures are but short and the pains remain for ever but if we do well the good does so too and 't is good to wait on God who waits to be gracious to such as call upon him Some men find want of comfort and others find comfort in want because God is with them when thou goest through the fire and through the water I will be with thee saith the Lord Isa 43. 2. And Tertullian sayes of young Ladies if they were cloathed with Silks and Piety Sattins and Sanctity Purple and Modesty God would be with them and love and like them better too A man may love morality civility and not Grace Rome would prove the truth by miracles when she should prove miracles by truth but her whole Golden Legion is a fiction of forged lyes and that he that wrote it had a brazen face and a leaden heart they willingly believe lyes and God in judgment suffers them so to do because they receive not the love of the truth 2 Thes 2. 10 11 12. And Vespasian was tired with a triumph and Ladies have been so with musick and a play-house all is but vanity of vanities at the long run besides Christ and the Knowledge of him Yea all else is but Golden Dreams and 't is better to fear and dream of Hell than to drop into it to think of Jollity and find misery is said or to dream of Heaven upon Earth and to wake by Death in Hell is sad indeed Time passes a pace and all post some where 'T is dangerous putting off that to day which thou must do or else it may be utterly undone to morrow Contemplation and Meditation are good things 'T is as the smell of the Rose and Jessemin sayes one Some men are ashamed to sin before a child but what we are afraid to do before men we should be to think before God And 't is better to spend our time in doing good than bare talking or getting Riches either If we should be thankful for little Mercies Riches and Honour what should we be for God himself and the pardon of sin The Tongue blessing God without the heart is but a tinkling Cymbal and the heart blessing God without the tongue is sweet but still musick but the heart and tongue together makes the sweetest harmony in the world And if the Larks and Birds sing so merrily to the morning Sun we should much more to our Creator and Redeemer Let all the world praise thee O God Let all the world praise thee saith the Psalmist Psal 67. 3. And you Noble Ladies who have best voices and least to do should be most engaged in that good work But Honour is a snare and visits many and needless too sometimes Better stay at home and think Lord what am I What do I Whither go I so fast a little time will put me in a Bason Every man is but a bag full of Dust at the best and Death turns us into Ashes and that Dust may be squeezed into a small place And 't is probable the Grave-man takes up some of that sometimes to sling upon another when he cryes Dust to Dust and Ashes to Ashes But this is certain after a little while every man will be no man A good Gentlewoman being sick was askt whether she were willing to Live or Dye What God pleased Ay but sayes one If God should put it to you but then said she I would refer it to him again And a brave Grace it is to be resigned so patiently to God's will in every thing And there are four Reasons for it The Holiness The Sovereignty Eternity and Goodness of his Will But he that sins and quarrels against this good and holy Sovereign and Eternal Will of God does but do what in him lyes to make him send him Soul and Body into Hell But cut me hack me kill me sayes Austin so thou savest my Soul And oh what an Emphasis does the Scripture frequently put upon the word Soul Hear and your Soul shall live Isa 55. 3. He that sins against me wrongs his own Soul Prov. 8. 36. Fear not them that can kill the Body but him that can throw the Body and Soul into Hell What shall it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his Soul Matth. 16. 26. Thou Fool this night shall thy Soul be taken from thee Luke 12. 18. Matth. 12. 28. Soul mercies Soul-promises and Soul-salvation must needs be great And the Great God by his absolute Sovereignty claims and sayes All Souls are mine Ezek. 18. 4. But most are like the poor Woman Mr. Burroughs mentions who when her house was burning ran about to save some little trisles but forgot her Child in the Cradle But then supposing it to be burnt though indeed it was
would give for the fancy of the Roll and Charity-stick and that she never saw the like and did wonder how any body would speak against the design of it My Lady such a one said She would give to bind some out or send one or two to be Poor Scholars in Cambridge or else to a Sea Captain to learn Navigation and get her Lord if she could to give the Quit-Rent of one or two Houses yearly saying It was no more than the Hawks-man cost him or else she would spare one Point of Venice but the thing should go forward Another Lady Warwick And for the six or seven Citizens Ladies we intend to go to we do verily believe they will give pretty well because they are the chiefest in all London and eminently good My Lady such a one cryed By her Troth she would give nothing at all for she had waies enough for her money But the next said She would give so much for five or six stone of Beef every Week and which of these is most like to Repent when they come to die and go into another World Then my Lady such a one said She would give for Bread and Beer between this and January come Twelve-month and others promise for their Cloathing But we have abundance of waies and objects for our Charity Ay said a fine young Lady it is the better for us we have abundance of Masses many Joints Toes Feet Fingers some Excuses all should do something in order to another World where we must be for ever 't is good to send a little before-hand Faith laies out for Christ and up for self but builds not upon works in the least that is Hay Sand Straw Stubble but Christ a Rock for ever and we should be glad to do any thing for his Honour who Loved Lived and Died for us and still maketh Intercession for us to the Father And now good Ladies and Gentlewomen We humbly pray that all your Charity be ready about Whitsuntide or Midsummer next at the furthest or sent in to the Worshipful Mr. Henry Cornish of Blackwell-Hall Merchant next door to the Gate whom we have one and all Prayed and Petitioned to be our only Interceder Receiver and Chief Treasurer for Life to all you much Honourable Ladies and Gentlewomen of the famous mighty well-beloved City of London or other places round about or else to William Blake of Covent-Garden Woollen Draper at the end of Maiden-Lane in Bedford-Street at the Sign of the Golden-Boy who will likewise take the same care to see it fairly Registred for the Honour of your Families or wait upon your Honours with the Clerk to give you further satisfaction in any particular when you please to command it THE Noble Marquess Galliaces's Sufferings for the Truth was famous through the World your Lord 's embracing of it makes his Marquisdom more great and may that Truth which our true Protestant Religion teacheth be for ever in and among your Noble Family may all the Branches of it flourish as Palms and Cedars be all as green Bays in the Courts of God's own House may the young Lord and his Noble Lady and that great Mass of old Gold be dedicated to the Lord that made Heaven and Earth and all their Blessings be sprinkled with a Blessing from above which may be as the Dew and Rain to the new-mown Grass to make you all fruitful in the waies of God loving him for himself and his Son for ever and all Good works because they are so And this amongst many we humbly beg your most Great and Honourable Family to abound in And that as at the Dedicating of the Tabernacle Exod. 35. 22. every one brought something so at the Rearing of this our Charity School-house one half handful of these Broad-pieces may be slung in as a Free-will Offering to the Lord who will then sanctifie all that great Lump or Heap besides and bless you all as he did the Seed of his Beloved Israel of Old and that he may so do we shall in our station as Poor Hospital ones ever pray Most Honourable and Great Lady THE Bounty of your Noble Deceased Mother the Lady Marchioness and great Hospitality of the Marquess your Father to the Poor of this Town as well as other places which has been and still is and was before we or any of us were born to our Poor Parents now Widows and Widowers many of them of which Bounty we having largly tasted obliges us and all of us humbly to acknowledge your great Goodness and the Charity of your Family the only Noble one near our School wherefore Dear Madam we most humbly beg leave of your Goodness to present one of our Charity School-house Sticks or Letter to your Ladiship and do promise one and all never to forget nor cease to pray for long Life and Eternal Happiness through our Lord Jesus Christ to your most Noble Ladiship and the Marquess also May it please you most Great and Noble Lady YOur Gentleman says That your Honour fears the Yearly Charge of the Ladies Little Charity-School will in time bring Ruine to my Family if not look't into I return a thousand humble thanks for this most kind Caution but I cannot in the least believe those good and Noble Ladies whom I ever intended believed and have Dedicated this unto will ever suffer such an inferiour mean and little person to sink under the Burden of so good and great a Work tending to their own Honour and the Honour of Religion which will be a good Work if half the World should oppose it because 't is not only commended but commanded in holy Writ to do all the good we can whilst opportunity lasts for at Death no man repents of being or doing good nor never will whilst the World stands but thousands for their not doing have complained how they have lost their time and a very great one of this Nation said Man's only Happiness lies in being good and at leizure doing good imitating the glorious Sun and Air yea the best Saints and Angels and God himself who is good to all and all his Works Oh Madam how sweet and cheering are these Beams to every Creature and that Air too through which they spread and send themselves to us below who have yet holy Angels to guard us as well as the blessed Writ and those good examples in it for to guide us in our Charity which does every where commend the poor Widow and Fatherless Children to us as the truest objects of it these being really such and you a very Great Noble and Pious Countess abounding in all manner of Mercies Honour and Plenty enough a large considerable Off-spring as young and tall Plants and Cedars to stand on high ground flourish as Bays and Bay-Trees in the True Church of God as well as in this happy Nation the most happy yet in all the known World and a Lord and Husband of a Thousand to Crown all these many Mercies
will certainly wish he had never been in a dying hour who lives not unto him All things fail me now but my God my duty and my prayers Mason So then faith never fails said he who had been five times Embassador for King James But from all chiefly learn this the world to be vanity that God in Christ Faith and holy Duties well performed were never failing things that is to say holy Duties done by Divine assistance and the sense of his Love in Christ But all things else fail us and Cordials cease when breath and life slies away But God is my portion for ever saith the Psalmist 16. 5. Money will not nor money cannot buy one moment from the grave for what would not some give could the Physician help but Faith and Holiness will help practise then the Art of well living for the comfort of well dying Great peace have they that love thy Law saith David Psal 119. 165. Many shall be the sorrows of those that sin much here or hereafter And I suffer these pains for my sins past saith a great Lord. And I shall never sleep more saith a Carding Gentlewoman the word Eternity doth so run in mine Ear. And indeed it is hard when people spend their time in Carding as she had done and come to dying to find comfort Oh! but a good conscience sings sweet Remember O Lord I walk before thee says good King Hezekiah 2 King 20 3. I have finished my work sayes Christ Joh. 17. 4. I have fought a good fight sayes Paul 2 Tim. 4. 7. And I have loved Preached and lived to thee sayes Luther Oh Christ from my Soul And so have I says Beza and I am weary of sin and willing to dye But what have you great Ladies done that you should expect to live with Angels and sing with that Coelestial Quire the praises of the Lamb to all Eternity Rev. 7. 9. Come and begin Heaven here on Earth that ye be never made the tayl at last you are now uppermost in all places rooms and companies would you be lowermost in the next world Lords lead you by the hand up and down stairs where your steps go pit pat with your silver Clappers But oh if ye do not live to Christ what will become of you when the Silken Stockin and the Silver Shoe the Holland Shift and all must off and as ye come into the world so must ye go only your Mother's blood will be washt away Princes Kings and Queens must all lye down to Death and Parliament Lords must pull off their Robes but Death can never strip a Saint nor any true believing penitent of Christ and his Righteousness no no Worms may eat his skin through and through and the Grave consume his flesh and bones to dust as Job speaks Job 19. 26. Yet shall I see my Redeemer But will he own you then if you do not own him now My Sheep hear my voice and I give to them Eternal Life sayes Christ But you would none of me Joh. 10. 27. I have piped sayes Christ but you would not dance I have mourned but ye would not lament Mat. 11. 17. Christ Preached Repentance by John to the Jews but they would not mourn Christ Preached Forgiveness by himself but they would not believe nor have any of his Salvation Oh! take heed and again take heed that ye Great and Noble Gentile Ladies do not the same The Gadarens once preferred their Swine before the Lord of Life and Glory and intreated him to be gone out of their Coasts or Country Luk. 8. 37. And take ye heed that ye refuse not the waters of Shiloah that run softly Isa 8. 6. and slight him that speaks from Heaven Heb. 12. 25. prefer your Lusts Toys Honours and every little thing before your Lord and Master Why should the braying of an Ass be more acceptable to you than the most melodious Musick of the Gospel I mean base and mean things before the high and heavenly ones of God Oh! tast and see that the Lord is gracious and Religion sweet Psal 34. 8. I will assure you 't is said a great Countess to the Lord Bartlet And Cursed be the man said the Noble Marquess Galliaces that thinks all the pleasure in the world worth one hours communion with God And if you would have communion with God sit down and sink down in your spirits and converse with your selves a little before ye go hence and be no more but the Devil visits and twenty needless things will not let you sit down walk alone or be in the dark one hour to mind Death Heaven Hell and Eternity Indeed it is hard for a man of much business or a Lady of much Honour and Courtship to mind the main or to live to him at all who lives much for others Wise men and Great men and States-men too are great strangers to themselves many times Oh! let 's live to our selves We have lived to our Fortune our King and our Country let 's live to our selves before we go hence All the world will not make amends if we neglect it said Sir Francis Walsingham to Lord Burlington who were great States-men in Queen Elizabeth's time and if you neglect it too to breed up two or three young Lords or Ladies to stand in your room and stead meerly to maintain your Honour and the Honour of your Families and not mind the Honour of Christ and his Exemplary Life or Laws which should be copyed out in your Lives and Children's Conversations What do ye more than others as Christ speaks nay do ye not worse than others many times Matth. 5. 47. As if Greatness were necessitated to abandon Piety and Goodness This is a bad conclusion Great men should imitate the great Planets and the great Deity by being good and doing good but you do hurt many times by bad Examples sinning leading others into sin send away your Children for a little breeding to the hazard of their Souls match them to the worst of men for a little Honour many times weep for them when they are sick and laugh when they sin But Cato advises He that will buy a Farm should look well what Neighbours he has but the qualifications of the person had need more be minded of the Young Lady's Servant because 't is for Life For Honour is but a shadow without Piety and will prove a bubble a bubble as one cryed out of all the world upon the thoughts of Eternity indeed that swallows all things as mighty Whales does the little Fishes how quick and soon this comes God knows Man walks sings laughs and talks and Ladies do the same play upon the Lute and Citern one day and to Death's Pipe the next And now if Death and Night puts an end to Life and Day what should remain but to work whilst day and time last because though another day comes and that past yet the same Day and Life nor may that opportunity be which in
your hands if once slipt and gone Oh! how much lost time have I to repent of and how little time to do it in said Sir Henry Wotton in King James's Reign Man's greatest happiness is to be good and at leisure to do good Delays and procrastinations of being good and doing good are dangerous And To morrow to morrow couzens many a one sayes a Father Therefore the Wise man sayes What thou findest in thy heart to do do it with all thy might for there is no device nor work in the Grave whither thou art going Eccles 9. 10. But he that dyes to sin daily makes the best step to this Eternal step of Death as a great Philosopher calls it which puts us not into another room but another place and condition quite away from all we now converse withal Relations never meet together more in the way and manner that they now do but the Father puts away the Son and the Son the Father and this Relation is never more nor the Marriage one neither Matth. 22. 30. Death is a Divorce for ever and though these Relations meet in the Resurrection-state yet is there neither Marriage nor giving in Marriage as Christ speaks to the seventh Brother Let Husbands love their Wives whilest they may and Wives their Husbands this step and journey will part them both for ever as one said to his wife a dying who had been married fifty years or upwards Oh me said a young Lady This is very sad that I must leave thee my dear so soon we have not been married one year what is there no Remedy and must I needs dye Truly yes he that lives must dye whether he be sick or no. We dye because we liv'd said one Death is decreed and we dye naturally our Bed and Sleep resembles Death and the Grave What is sleep but the shadow of it And he that will dye well must live well and if there be any thing after this Life Why do not young men take care to live well I did both saith Socrates though a heathen Live and Dye well go together What God hath joyned let no man put asunder for as the tree leans so it falls Eccles 11. 3. Men do not live sin-ward and dye God ward no no you must live to God and lean to God live and dye to God if ever you mean to go to him The Tree falls as it leans and lies as it falls If you fall God ward you are happy But if sin-ward you are miserable and ever like to be For after death comes judgment that is the stating of the Soul saith Burrace in an unchangeable state Here a mans condition may be mended but after death its never to be altered Faith and Repentance may be wrought here though it be at the last cast This night shalt thou be with me in Paradise Luk. 23. 43. Yet late Repentance seldom true though true Repentance never too late But after death there is no amendment nor Repentance neither Solomon hew'd and squared his Building for the Temple before-hand so that at the rearing of it up there was no noise of the Ax or Hammer heard Whoever God intends as a stone in the heavenly Jerusalem he fits before hand May you all be fitted all you young and lovely Ladies And you more elderly too May you all stand before the Lamb see him have his name and praise in your forehead Palms in your hands Robes upon your backs to cry with that numberless number of all kindreds tongues and people Salvation Glory Honour to the Lamb and to him that sits on the Throne for ever Rev. 7. 10. Yea may you all fall down cry not with the cry of Lamentation but Acclamation Joy and triumph which Triumph to the Godly will certainly be after all actions of Mortality are come to an end In the mean time all affections have two sharp ends the first and the last the first meeting and the last parting of Friends and Lovers is alwayes so And as Christ wept for Jerusalem and the hardness of the Jews whom Paul wished almost to be accursed for that they might be saved so the Jews shal one day be converted and look upon him whom they have peirced and mourn as for their first born Rev. 1. 7. And Paul's Friends wept sore when he told them they should see his face no more Act. 21. 13. But the Mary's wept Mary Magdalen and the Mother of Jesus wept when he said in his sufferings Woman behold thy Son John 19. 26. And the other Loved much because much was forgiven Mark 8. 36. You who have all your sins forgiven let the memorial of his sufferings dwell in your hearts and 't will make you weep to sin against him Oh! the kindness and favours of a good God are obligations to a good Soul May you all remember what he has shewed unto you at any time Were you never sick in dangers nor partakers of some special mercies Oh! keep the Remembrance of his goodness to your Souls But oh how little do rich and poor think upon this God and his goodness to their Souls which must stand before the Lamb as I said but now or be banisht from him for ever and ever or how little do they think of the worth Nature or Immortality of them What 's a fine Silk a fine Skin a fine Shape a sweet Face to such a Spark or Beam of God as the Soul is that came out from him and was breathed into man by him Gen. 2. 7. Shall this immortal thing ever starve dye and be forgotten which one calls the Breath of Life or the Living Breath which gives us Life Some never look their Bibles others never mind their Souls the whole world will not make amends for such a loss much less a vain wretched life of sinful pleasures and a few honours What! Careful for shape and fashion and neglect that which is the Breath of life or the life which gives us Breath as I said before Good Books are good Companions and the Bible makes glorious Christians when they so read mind it as to live up to it Queen Elizabeth lov'd it well and hug'd it in the Prison But vain Books eat up time and spoil many young Ladies and Gentlewomen but 't is not lack of time but love and relish to it that you do not read hear and pray more But what kind of foolish Creatures are many of you young Ladies to think God Christ Heaven Souls may be put off for any slight occasions or a Looking-glass You were not made for Birds or Butterflies to sing in woods Play Court or Dance in Sun But you are made for Saints to sing with Angels and go to God or else to weep in Hell Nay 't is so we will assure you and no otherwise there is but two places Look to the heavens and think well what he deserves that made them and you Psal 8. 3. and you to live in them for ever If
you be his servants you shall sing and others shall weep grieve and mourn Isa 65. 14. You shall drink and others shall be thirsty The Heavens declare his wondrous work saith the Psalmist and the Earth is full of his Goodness Psal 8. 1. And will you be full of Sin Enmity and Folly Oh! God forbid that such lovely Creatures as many of you young Lords and Ladies be should be full of sin Sin is an evil an evil Disease in the Soul and to the Soul it kills it worse than Leprosie to Eternity if Christ do not save it Oh! value him fly to him clasp about him that ye never miscarry in Time nor Eternity Compare both how short is one and long the other The pleasures of sin are but for a season Heb. 11. 25. Moses left Pharaoh's Court preferring afflictions before these pleasures which betrays into Gulphs Snares and Rocks Do not you make your selves unhappy in another world when you may do well in both A thousand years should be more valuable than fourscore However let not fourscore be more to you than three or fourscore thousand thousand thousand This is certain Riches Honours Estates and Courtships with all that is Terrene and Sublunary shall fly away Heaven and Earth shall pass away before one Jot or Tittle of God's Word Joh. 2 17. Luk. 21. 33. 'T is a very dangerous thing though you do not mind it to be irreligious Pleasure one day in God's Court is worth a thousand elsewhere Psal 114. 10. Oh! taste and see the sweet and honey of it Less pains will serve for Eternal Life than some take for Temporal yea to dress themselves What! three hours about that and not a quarter at prayers Some get great Fortune by Marriages others a little by Plough Cart and pains others by Play and that 's almost cheating but get the Lord Jesus Christ and you get all 1 Tim. 4 8. This world you see but do not you believe the other and the Resurrection-state if you do not you are Sadduces and irrational Do not you see all things spring again every year Dead Seeds and Corn bring the same Grain and shall not man spring again as well as Worms Flies and Spiders which seem to be dead all the Winter yet live again in the Summer Oh! believe the Resurrection-state and the Promises for Godliness hath one for both worlds But this lies in wickedness 1 Joh. 5. 19. Ephes 2. 2. Shall honours pleasures profits be your portion ever it cannot be Oh look ye after another world then Why choose you not then that that you would have when you come to dye let me dye the death of the Righteous and my latter end be like unto his Num. 23. 10. And every one will say and wish so Let go sin and sorrow take faith and you shall do it how much better is that than fancy heaven and earth than earth and not heaven God can give a thousand pleasures a river of pleasures Psal 36. 8. But vain sinful pleasures are certainly the way to hell 2 Tim. 3. 4 And I could never reconcile them and Religion together said a great one Lovers of pleasures that are sinful are really Lovers of Death yea the whores house goes down to death her feet take hold on hell Prov. 2. 16. 5. 5. He that cannot cease from sin and repent of it must needs be damned for it it is an ill bed-fellow and a worse grave fellow And a cutting saying it was to the Jews that they should dye in it Joh. 8. 21. If ye believe not that I am he you shall die in your sins sayes Christ Sinful lusts make men beasts and sinful wrath makes men Devils What! kill a man in anger Go into the field to seek honour but find Death and Hell live a Murtherer or dye by one If furious sparks did mind the sparkles of an eternal fire and how much the Devil is glad when he finds such fools they would never do as they do sight and damn one another for a thing of nought many times My Life is of more worth said the Philosopher to the rude Mariners who were swearing and careless in a storm than to be cast away And indeed Life is a thing to be valued at a high rate And upon a Life well spent depends Eternal happiness therefore 't is the wise and not fools that redeem time for Eternity The Aegyptians pictured time with three heads a Dog a Lion and a Wolf a Dog signifying Time to come flattering and a Lion to denote Time present strongly working and a Wolf denoting Time lost or past to be biting And Death on a dark Throne with a Rod in one hand and a Key in the other as if by one he drove us together and the other he lockt us up Oh Ladies every moment of time commands Regions of Blessedness when 't is improved but lost it becomes a Worm in conscience and eats to Eternity If men in health and Duellers did but mind this they would not send one another to Hell as they do Certainly such Duellers will be sad repenters as I said before in another world Do they believe a God or do they not If there be a God he is a Rewarder of Virtue and will certainly punish all unpardoned sins which lead us into Gulphs Snares and Rocks Say when temptations are upon you to any great sin Now are the Philistines come and the Cords of Death and Hell are upon me shall I be foolish base vile and unclean do this and wrong my own soul Prov. 8. 36. And all that hate me love death sayes Solomon Some vices have short pleasures long throws and after-pains if vice sin sinful sin and folly have spoiled youth Have a care of old Age one foot is in the grave What! sin all your life and have Heaven at last no it will be Hell And I had rather be in it sayes a Father without sin than in Heaven filled with it Oh! take a fair farewel of it betimes it never did will nor can do any one good no it cannot it brings all the losses crosses in the world on us here or hereafter And how can we think of going to Heaven if we do not live to it but leave a Hell of sin seeds and spawn by bad example behind us or if we should live for Heaven a little and lose it for want of living a little more would it not be sad A good bargain lost for want of a second or third bidding proves a great vexation many times one step more and all had been well and safe but to lose a Heaven for nothing for nothing for want of a little Religion and being serious in it bites to Eternity Oh! if you fall but a step or two short this will be your case and you will never come in Take heed and again take heed O ye great Ones of the times Lords Ladies and others that ye do not miscarry in the daies of Eternity
for we cannot will good much less do it of our selves Yet you must live for Heaven and by Christ get Faith or you can never be saved Short Hints but Sound Truths In great Humility THe Heathen Oracle of mortal man used to say We are born crying live laughing and dye sighing But Job and Solomon seem to hint there is little laughter for man is born to sorrow as the sparks fly up Job 5. 7. and All is vanity saith Solomon Eccles 12. 8. That is all besides Christ and the knowledge of him in a strict sense And sayes Hintius Vpon this account I could even obscure my self to think how much short all knowledge is and how much envy the most curious parts sustain and undergo especially when they are in great and high places where they have too too little time to converse with themselves mind their maker or rectifie their crooked nature Infancy is full of ignorance Youth of sins and Old Age of sorrows and the whole life of dangers so that it is a great misery for poor man who is but a Pile or Bag full of dust to come into the world were it not for the hope of heaven or a better world But this is never lost without great grief when possest with much love A certain rich man that loved riches well and too too well too being sick to death caused all his Plate and Gold to be brought before him and thus said to his soul like the fool in the Gospel Luk. 1● 18. My soul if thou wilt now tarry with me and not leave my body all this will I promise thee and thou shalt enjoy it with Riches fine Buildings Gardens and sumptuous Houses But finding his infirmity increasing and no hopes of life in a great rage and fury he broke out into this most desperate speech Since thou wilt not abide nor be intreated nor tarry longer with me I recommend thee to the Devil and so soon departed Oh! let such men fear to laugh who are in danger to go where it will never avail or profit any thing to weep And he that looks on a picture and sees on it a rich man and a beggar never envies one nor pities th' other all men are but pictures and shadows quickly pass away and the poor have an advantage of the rich many times in dying having but little to leave behind but many are dull in want and wanton in fruition and most mens lives are miserable seeing those that seek for good hardly find it When evil comes of it self and enters our gates unsought Yet the brain will be working whilst the pulse is beating let a man live few years or let a man live many one does not make him happy nor another unhappy but his living well or ill does it Anselmus sayes In heaven joys shall be within and without above and beneath in all parts and round about and everlasting too saith the Prophet Isaiah 65. The lovers of this world eat drink and are merry but for want of the love of God go down to hell Psal 9. 17. in a little while and nothing remains of them but a short name dust and worms Seneca sayes evil actions are whipt by the conscience of themselves and torments them sore and that wickedness drinketh up the greatest part of its own poison and is a punishment to it self But Christians say there is a hell besides and most of all nations believe future rewards and punishments Oh! let us prevent weeping by weeping sayes One and all of hells sorrows by heavenly repentance Aristotle sayes It were better to dye than to do any thing against the good of virtue And I sayes Seneca was better born than to be a slave to lust what they count virtue Christians do not so well know but this is certain it is better not to be than not to know a good God in Jesus Christ and live to him in some measure who is all and will be all for ever Though Zenon said through his Atheism he feared nothing but Old Age yet Socrates tells ye When Death approaches bad men will be willing to turn Divines And if I have lived well sayes Lucicrema why do not you clap your hands But Divine Love is a never ending Treasure and the Orient Pearl is gathered from the Early Dew And in the 110th Psalm it is said of Christ That from the womb of the morning he had the dew of his youth that is as I humbly conceive from the first peeping out of God's Love to mankind as it was through a promise in Jesus Christ so all these promises and blessings obtained in Time or Eternity are gathered from the head heart Love and Merit of Christ as the morning dew is from Grass Corn or Herbs But to be careless of him or our selves and to live without fear is to Dye Living and is in great danger to fall into the Sea of God's everlasting wrath Awake awake O miserable Soul and lift up thine Eyes lest the night of nights overtake thee Rom. 13. 12. Joh. 9. 4. And assure your selves Death will almost daunt good Livers what wilt thou do But he whom happiness affects cares not how long he lives But Job was safer on the Dunghill than Adam in Paradise And Christ the true Son of the Living God when begging water at the Well of Jacob Joh. 4. 7. from the woman with the Pitcher Yet many think a middle condition is best for this world and for our Souls too but we need every day the blood of Christ to wash us all as well as Water for our faces And the Soul is washed by secret thinking and applying of the Love Life Death and Merit of Christ to it self He gave himself for me sayes Paul Gal. 2. 20. And our Souls are like Camaeleons live upon the Gospel-Air Promises in Christ and God's Love through Christ but the world trusted on is apt to thrust all out of our minds And sayes Tully No man could ever make me believe the Soul should live in this mortal Body and be dead when absent Oh! live then to live for ever Bear well and prepare well for that which can never be avoided namely Death To labour not to dye once is to labour in vain But to live to Christ is a certain way to prevent a second Death And a man whose Soul is truly conversing with God shall find more pleasure in secret walks closets groves and hedges than in the Palace of a Prince And Sir Walter Rawleigh sayes He that is resolved to be a great Favourite and Servant there must abandon strict Piety The love of Fame Name and Pleasure is inconsistent with the Love of God True a weak man may give strict Rules and the holiest Minister in the world hardly lives up to his own Preaching And you cannot look to Heaven with one Eye and look down to the Earth with the other at the same time But however the best counsel is best and most wholsom
for our Souls And though our care be great for the Body yet a man may be as happy in Russet as in Cloth of Tissue A golden Cap and a rending Head a Silken Stockin and a sore Foot or a great Estate and the torment of the Stone or Gout in the great Toe is a grievous misery And I see sayes the Emperor that sovereignty commands no diseases nor the seas having set himself and chair on the shore at the Tides coming in crying back back and I command you proud waves back but the Emperor was fain to move And Bardue Coesar cryed I begot him mortal when word was brought him his only Son was dead which was the reward of Trophimus after he had finished the famous Oracle of Apollo and beg'd that which was the best for him and 't was promised in three dayes he should have it in which time he died But 't is our duty said Seneca to dye often yet one complained against the long life of a Raven and his own short but the old Romans counted it Ominous to see one and not two in the morning as if it had betokened Wife or Husband's death yet though that be the most known 't is the most unknown thing in the world The Sexton Clerk and Coffin-maker are most apt to forget their own though they nail up and bury others and the best Men Citizens and their Neighbours too when they have got their rings and gloves but 't is ill preparing for death when t is a burden to live Sick repentance is seldom true and 't is certain 't is labour and trouble enough to be head and heart sick and then a man can hardly do any thing but mind his ease or pillow Oh! put not off your Will but especially your souls weal and happiness to a dying hour My care was when young to live well and 't is now to dye well said a Heathen Physicians Lawyers and Ministers cannot be heard at once and it may be friends are troublesom too Come to live well is best and that will prevent the worst Oh! then play not the Courtiers part who some say do all things late Rise late Dine late Sup late and Repent late many times never but it is never too late if true but it should be of the whole man but when death has folded up mens dayes opportunities are all gone Moles see and Swans sing a little before they dye but a true Saint and a Simeon sayes let me depart in peace for mine eyes have seen thy salvation Luk. 2. 29. But the fashion of this world is to put men in mind of dying when they see they cannot live above a day or two longer but as I have lived uncertain so I now dye doubting said a wise man and a great Scholar yet after a thousand thousand millions of years eternity will be as long as ever sadly and suddenly will all worldly pleasures be turned into walking dreams and great Alexander is less now than a little whiteish to thistle down which the least wind or air rouls about the world passes away 1 Cor. 7. 31. time is short sayes Burroughs and sayes he the word signifies folded up to the last end or fag of it like a peice of cloth but eternity is still as long as ever Oh! set your house in order 2 King 20. 4. as the Prophet said to the good King if every one has not an house yet every one has a soul as well as a body and there be great affairs that concern both and the greatest wits in the world have been concerned for them said the Right Honourable the Earl of Northampton and have ever found sooner or later the power of God or Religion in their consciences yea the Great and Godly ones Oh my soul my soul said the French Cardinal And Oh mine said the wretched Pope And thou must never be merry more To dye safe is a good thing and the best of men are best at last and have heaven in their Bosoms and Breasts and say Let me go let me go Oh Christ thou are mine said another The Jews said God kissed Moses's soul out of him And the Minister said so he did a great Ladyes in Essex But though some men dye not so comfortably yet they all dye safely who have the habits of true Grace in their souls and many very bad men seem to dye quietly and go to hell like a Lamb in dull diseases consumptions senslesness and hardness of their hearts in sins for Satan can let men alone well enough when he knows he has them sure enough but 't is a sad thing to have a mans eyes never opened till they are sing'd and burnt open in hell break from him and sin now by true and timely repentance and you make sure work for ever Go forth go forth said one to his soul thou hast served God and trusted Christ many years and now Heaven is just at hand and this dying Body of mine shall live again as Job speaks Job 26. 27. and my Soul return with the Joys of Heaven to fetch it to it self Some say There are veins or strings in a man's Tongue which reach to the Heart and when they break he dyes But when heart and tongue shall speak this oh what a comfort is it in a dying hour Plato though a Heathen said All men almost were out of the way because they did not seek after the mind of God and that those did dye most comfortably that lived by reason and adored the first Being Therefore sayes Lucicrema to his friends when he had called for the Glass and combed his head Now clap your hands if I have acted my part well And Seneca sayes Since Nature has stamped a God in the mind of every man and the belief of him arose not from custom nor was enacted by a Law it necessarily follows there must be a Deity the belief is so natural And Cato sayes Epicurus did dread Death more than any thing in the world upon this account Lord Chancellor Edgerton sayes The Atheist and Prophane layes a wager with the Pious but upon mighty odds for one ventures his Life and Soul or the Life of his Soul for ever and the other but his Lust and Sin which is yet his Interest to be without and yet if it were on equal ground the disproportion is vast and infinite and what a sad surprize will he be in when by death he shall be instantly seized by horrid Spirits And this truth of reward and punishments will be tryed in a little time And 't is but a little while and every man shall be no man And though every one should strive to mend one that the world may be better yet may we not think that the world is angry with some because they are no worse When good men are sorry in themselves they are no better but he that is angry with sin and repents of it shall not easily sin in his anger when he
and sin out we might well say The worst is gone and the best is come praise be to him that maketh the change and is unchangeable in himself Mal. 3. 6. and in all his Attributes And he is a Fool that saith There is no God or That the Love of God hath not wonderfully appeared to Mankind by Jesus Christ Titus 3. 4. Oh! be rich in Faith and you shall never be poor in the world to come And they that are most full of that have most comfort and experience too of his Faithfulness Faith is the Life of the Soul and Christ is the Life of our Faith Oh! live upon him and you shall live with him and never dye Joh. 17. 24. Do not be offended with him nor they that are his Great and many waves have beat upon the Rock but the Church remains still and the Gates of Hell Sin Death and Despair nor Enemies neither shall ever prevail against it Matth. 16. 18. Some set their hearts upon God others against the Church but those that maliciously persecute good men will find ill Rewards Saul Saul why persecutest thou me Act. 9. 4. 'T is a mad thing to be furiously mad against good people If ever we expect to be happy we must be holy and hate no man for it for without it no man shall see God Heb. 12. 14. But the Devil tempts men to sin and then to despair and good men are full of doubts after sinning Oh! begin to live to God before you dye and a man may live sin dye and be utterly lost in a little time some thieves rob a long time others are quickly taken and executed but Gods patience is great towards most men yet some have but little sport for their souls airy Sparks ride post and quickly sin away their time but fair and soft is too fast to hell and the Devils and death would not be half so troublesom were it not for sin but he that leads a good life takes a great deal of comfort with him to his end and that death of his frees his soul for ever nothing can trouble in heaven unless it be want of living or more living unto God on earth and nothing can be more terrible in hell than to think there was a time they might but 't is past 't is past Simeon and Paul desired to dye Luk. 2. 29. David and Hezekiah desired to live 2 Kin. 20. 3. and it was well enough for them and his servants any way For whether we live or whether we dye we are the Lords Rom. 14. 8. for if indeed we be so we can never dye amiss A wise man never looses his wisdom though he be a sleep nor a good man his grace though he be catcht away before he is aware yet it is best to do as Job sayes Wait for our Change Job 14. 14. Death is never the nearer nor farther off for minding or not minding and young men have it at their backs as well as old men in their faces yet the familiar rising of it in our thoughts will make it less strange and more welcom when it comes if it be from trouble to comfort and not from light to darkness and the dungeon of darkness where light shall never be Oh that sinners would prevent weeping by weeping and their own misery by becoming God's Servants as a good Lady said If he be not a better Master than any do not serve him but if he be a better Master than all as certainly he is oh serve him serve him day and night O ye Lords Ladies Gentlewomen and others and ye would quickly be content so to do if ye did but taste how gracious he is and how much better to you than you deserve Sin and Sinners desert is Hell Oh! 'T is mercy to us all to have any thing on this side that and all misery to be there Though we came into the world alike and must go out yet let 's not live alike but say you as Joshua did I and my house will serve the Lord Joshuah 24. 15. Oh! hazard your credit if it be counted discredit to fear him for 't is not unlovely or not commendable to love what is most lovely Christ and his wayes Great peace have they that keep his laws Psal 119. but ill company will commit evil for company and two or three men were lately stabbed by their companions who haunted ill houses but good company never hurts and the house of mourning is better than the house of feasting many times And Bishop Cranmer was troubled for but drinking at Queen Mary's court because she would not hearken to the Gospel nor his Counsel in King Edward s dayes and good men should every where savour of the fear of God be much in self-tryal and in self-denial too and to take up his cross when Christ layes it before him as that good man did at the stake for his counsel or sticking to the word of God but the worst of Christ or suffering for him is better than the best of all the world Paul and Silas sung in the Stocks Act. 16. 25. so did Hampshire Philpot in Bonner's Cole-house He learns Christ well that learns to follow him through thick and thin He left his life to save us we find ours in following him Christ dyed to give Life and Repentance Act. 3. 26. And no man ever repented for serving him in a just Call A wise man provides for his Family and saves his Soul by his Skin or Sufferings many times Some have bewailed the day of their Birth as Job did through the greatness of his grief chap. 6. 2. None the day of Conversion or Marrying unto Christ or Tryals for him when he stood by them And this is a sweet Promise I will never leave thee nor forsake thee Isa 49. 14 16. Isa 43. 1 2 3. But the Forsakers of God shall be forsaken Short Sayings of the Wise or Q. Mary 's Martyrs WIll you now most Noble Ladies take a few short and serious Sayings from the Wise pore and ponder on them but a little which are as Goads and Nails fastened by the Master of the Assemblies that is Christ saith Solomon Eccles 12. 11. for it is meant of him And this was a good one of Sir Francis Compton Oh! keep close to Religion for that brings Peace at the last Hold out Faith and Patience saith Boulton It 's but one Stile more and we shall be at our Father's House said a brave Martyr When shall I be dissolved and be with Christ saith another Lo here I am let them do with me what they please but don't you meet me at the last Day in an unconverted state Said a good Man to his Children in a dying Hour and they weeping for him he cried What a deal of do is here to let a Man die and go Home And so with Heavenly Counsel fell a sleep Perkins converted Northampton Boulton And Brave Learned Famous Bishop Vsher desired to Die as
greatest of all Sinners said St. Paul And if I were equal says Deering in holiness to Abraham Isaac and Jacob and had the purity of Angels yet I would confess my self a Sinner and expect no Salvation but in Christ and from his Righteousness And if I had the excellency of all Creatures in Heaven and Earth I would still rely upon that for as there is but one Sun for all the World so there is but one Communion and Saviour for all Saints Oh! that I might live more to him or die to go to Heaven says a Father He is my Life he is my All said another And whenever thou art tempted to Uncleanness Lust or Pride consider what thou art already by Sin in respect of its desert and punishment and what thou shalt be in the Grave when thou hast lain a Month or two there and thy thoughtful Lusts and Plumes will quickly fall as the Soul is the Life of the Body so God is the Light and Life of the Soul When the Soul departs the Body dies and so the Soul dies too when God leaves it for when he forsakes us he utterly overthrows us and gives us a deadly Wound But Anselmus says That Christ died for Elect Men and Angels For Men that they might rise out of Sin and for Angels that they might not fall into it And if they should go to Hell that do not feed the Hungry and cloath the Naked Mat. 25. 42. what will become of them that oppress the Poor and take from them Prov. 14. 31. Ezek. 12. If want of Charity shall be Tormented what will become of Covetous Oppressors One said of Gregory the Great That he was the worst and the best Bishop worse than all that went before him and better than all those that have succeeded who used to be troubled when he read these words Son remember in thy Life-time thou receivedst thy good Things Luke 16. 25. A great Preacher said in his Life-time he was often tempted to despair but God gave him strength to overcome it But the same subtile Serpent in my Sickness would have persuaded me That my Labours and Fidelity in the Ministery had even merited Heaven but blessed be God that gave me strength to overcome him by bringing these two Scriptures especially What hast thou that thou hast not receiv'd 1 Cor. 4. 7. yet not I but the grace of God which was with me 1 Cor. 15. 10. These Texts made the Enemy get away ashamed Fools go laughing to Destruction as well as to the Correction But do any thing with me says another so thou save my Soul I had rather be in Hell without Sin than in Heaven with it Sayes Anselmus Ambition is a gilded Misery a secret Poyson and an hidden Plague the Parent of Envy the Original of Vice and Moth of Holiness Oh the unhappiness of great Men said a great Earl in the Tower that know no other end of their Greatness than to abuse Inferiours Young men middle-aged and old are oft surprized by Death and Ladies too while the Gown is making But this is life eternal to know thee the eternal true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent John 17. 3. And said a great Scholar and English Gentleman now in being I have studied almost all the Learning in the World and find more mystery in that short saying of Paul to Timothy This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Christ Jesus came into the World to save Sinners 1 Tim. 1. 15. But when we consider what was done to John Huss of Bohemia and Thomas Cranmer Bishop of Canterbury in Queen Maries days we have just reason in this Land to fear the worst Dr. Cranmer was discourst about the lawfulness of King Henry's Divorce from Queen Catharine his Brothers Wife and his judgment was The King would do well to consult the Word of God and take able Divines counsel This advice was hearkned to and he sent for by the King and so dispatch'd away to Rome to dispute it with the Pope and the Earl of Wiltshire Ambassador along with him And it is said when they both came before the Pope the Pope put his Foot out for them to kiss the Earl's Spaniel being young fond and foolish and it may be train'd up catcht him by the Toe but however Cranmer and the Earl both scorn'd to kiss after him and presently after his return he was made Archbishop of Canterbury and soon after the Proverb grew Do him but a shrewd turn and he will be your Friend as long as you live And some say by Nature he Was a very Charitable Man I wish you Ladies for your own sakes were so too But we have no reason to complain nor I hope never shall against your most Noble Sex He was the freest from Passion of any man in the World But when they had set him upon a high Scaffold in Queen Maries dayes to make his Recantation for owning the Protestant Principles Dr. Cole having made a sad Popish Sermon to him to take his Death patiently and to rejoice in his Conversion as he called it After Sermon Cranmer said Pray you good People pray for me who have contrary to Truth and my Conscience for fear of Death Signed a Writing of Recantation for which this Hand of mine shall be first burnt holding it up with many tears running down his cheeks and at the fire he held it out that all might see it first burnt never stirring of it but once to wipe his Face to the grief of many Beholders in the Year 1556. But for John Huss he was burnt in the Year 1415. There being a Council about three Popes the Cardinals being divided after Alexander the fifths Death to which Council the Emperor commanded John Huss to go giving him his safe conduct to pass and return in which journey he preacht and set up letters of his judgment in every City At Constantine he was sent for by the Cardinals imprisoned and tyed up to a Rack against a Wall many Nobles and Lords of Bohemia petitioned for him but that would do no good But a good thing it is for great Lords to appear on the behalf of poor Ministers when imprisoned and persecuted for the Truth yea there were fifty of them in Bohemia that stood up and petitioned for him and Jerom of Prague A brave pattern for all Ages when the Truth is suffering but yet all signifi'd nothing For when the Council had degraded and condemned him he kneeled down saying Lord Jesus forgive them they know not what they do In degrading of him they pared off the hair so close that they even cut the skin off his Crown the Council having made an Order That Faith was not to be kept with Hereticks Going to be burnt they put upon him a Triple Crown of Paper all painted over with ugly Devils which when he saw he said My Lord Jesus did wear a Crown of Thorns for me and I will this for
Papists The last and general Closing Letter that is thus presumed to be offered ANd now most Noble Great and Right Honourable Ladies Gentlewomen and others 'T is not many Weeks nay Days since your poor Orator Supplicant or Petitioner was in his own and others apprehension at the brink of Death and the Grave and so many Days together But God was pleased by Doctor Cox my alone Physician to raise me up again And though in my Sickness my Life seemed to be flying away like an Eagle in the Air and the World and the Things thereof to be passing away as if they had never been yet yet I did secretly resolve if God should raise me up to perform or finish this poor little scribled and yet serious short brief and harmless Pocket-Book with the Ladies Letters which yet I humbly entreat your Noble Ladyships to peruse and view over and over in some serious leisure Hour persuading my self that though your Breasts are full of Piety Virtue Wisdom and Virtuous Thoughts yet you may find some if not many brief hints of Truth Religion and Virtue well worth your pious Thoughts or Memory for as Eternity is a very serious thing so every Sickness that brings one near the Borders of it or from the Borders of it should make us very serious and to Speak and Act as those that have been near another World though not in it And truly if I were no more nor longer to be in this than just to finish these few Lines and humbly on the bended Knee to present them to your Lilly Hands and so to lie down and die at your Feet yet would I seriously do it in the way of Prayer to your Honours First That the short Hints might be weighed and weighed again and again in your most strict serious and retired Thoughts whether they be really so as they seem to be hinted to you and if you find them indeed so to be by the standard Golden Rule Reed or Touchstone of God's holy Word then not to slight and say Pish Fool or cry This simple Man will never a done for 't is of more concern than so Truth is Truth and serious Things must and will be serious whether we mind or count them so or no. And this I assure you if ever you come as come you must to a Fit and Bed of Sickness I mean a thorow Sickness that your life seems in your own others thoughts to be flying away you will be then thinking of your immortal ever-living and never-dying Souls And it may be in a dowsed manner not knowing well where you are or what Day it is whether Day or Night The Watch Candle being in the Room the Curtains drawn little or no Company to speak to you because of the high Feaver or other Distemper but yet in that hour it may be Fears Doubts Conscience will be working and secret Questions will be working in you whether you must and shall Die now or no go to the Grave leave your golden Hangings Rooms Honours and Relations going to the silent and be seen no more whilst it may be are just in the middle of some great Design or other as your Supplicant was in these Papers or setting up of your little Charity-School at High-Gate But be it what it will every Design must break off if Death really come with and at the end of your Sickness and then no remembrance of you or yours will be after a very little while Oh Madams for our Lord Jesus Christ's sake and your own Souls I beseech you mind a little the house of mourning Eccles 7. 2. which he says 't is so good to go to and the Bed of sickness before it comes and especially what to do before it comes that its coming may not be as a damp and death to your spirits when it comes It 's said the Cockatrice never kills but when it sees us before we see it Oh be before-hand with your Sickness and prepare in Life for Death and Health for Sickness and assure your selves you may as well persuade your selves that Michaelmas will never come because April is and May is at hand as that Sickness and Death will not come because Health Wealth Honour and all about you is now as you would have it and more comforts seem to promise to you also from a Son or Daughter 's great Match or Purchase which you are just a making But yet Michaelmas comes in course and Winter too when one Flower will not be left But now against the height and heart of that and all that is cold and killing unto Creature-comforts set a never-failing good God aside make him your portion and with the Prophet Habakkuk say Though the labour of the Olive should fail Flocks Herds and the Fruits of the Field yield no increase yet I will rejoyce greatly I will joy in the God of my salvation Habbak 3. 17 18. But this must nor can ever otherwise be but by true Faith in the Love Life Blood Death and Merit of our Lord Jesus Christ with holy walking in the sanctifying graces of his Spirit six or seven of which you may eminently find I shall hint at in the first Sermon our Lord Jesus Christ ever preach'd Mat. 5. 3 4 5 6 7 8. First blessed are the poor in Spirit for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven by purchase purpose promise and eternal preparation Mat. 25 34. Come ye blessed of my Father and receive a Kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the World Oh blessed Poverty that enriches men with the Kingdom of Heaven This poverty of Spirit is nothing else but a sensible want of Grace and Christ and every good thing in our selves through the discovery of original sin to us by the Fall of Adam whereby we go out of our selves as knowing our selves to be lost by the purity and spirituality of God's most holy inward piercing Law the ten Commandments by which we go out of our selves as knowing our selves to be most miserable wretched creatures and lost in our selves seeing no hope nor help any ways but in Gods mercy thorough Christ and this brings us to be like the poor Prodigal or Publican Luke 18. 11. to cry Lord be merciful to me poor lost sinner and grant that I may find Christ and pardon for my Soul and by Prayer Reading Hearing Preaching Meditating make out after him in an humble persevering way And this is the Poverty to which the Kingdom of Heaven belongs that is the Gospel with all its Promises and everlasting Kingdom of Glory too which God grant you and yours may all find But secondly ver 4. Blessed are all they that mourn for they shall be comforted that is for sin in-dwelling of original and actual sin and upon that account cry out like great St. Paul O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of sin Rom. 7. 24. Mark Ladies Sin has a Body yea in Paul it had though he was
Gentlewomen and others as the Italian Beggars proudly beg saying frequently Do it for your own good Let us humbly beg as on our knee in the bowels of our Lord Jesus Christ do yea and do without your lame Objections That you have so many ways when it is nothing else but a will and heart that you want for you have Purse enough and 20 ways to save a little and therefore do something worthy of this good Design And you may be sure 't is a good one because it is to feed cloath and teach poor ignorant Children to know themselves fear God and live in a hard world what can be better ask your Lords I am sure the Lord Christ all the Prophets and Apostles commend it I have cloathed the hungry saith Job And Dorcas or Lydia made cloaths saith Paul Acts 9. 39. And Cornelius was a man full of good Works Alms-deeds and Charity Acts 10. 4. And Primitive Christians sold their Lands to give to necessitated Brethren Acts 4. 32 3 4. so that 't was all along and is still a good work because it suits so well with our Religion and the Church of England which saith with St. James Faith without Works is dead Jam. 2. 26. But this and such as the nature of this is amongst many others will declare it living Thirdly it is a good work because it will in some measure stop the mouths of Papists who are prone to say Where are your Works and how few are your Hospitals and how small is your Charity notwithstanding great Preaching Yet we have more than they know but do not boast as they do Our Catholick Doctrine teaches us to do good private and publick too And this is a Catholick grace because it is more or less in every Member of Christ and ought so to be for he bids us be merciful as our heavenly Father is merciful who maketh the Sun to shine and the Rain to rain upon the just and the unjust Mat. 5. 45. I shall give you one blessed Scripture more and I hope I may without any boasting truly say I have even this present February or March experienced something of it and God Almighty grant that you many or all of you might do so too for it will be your case or cases as sure as God lives to lie upon the Bed of Sickness as I have done many days together Now says the Holy Writ Blessed is the man that considereth the poor and needy Psal 41. 1. All these Children of Hampstead Hornsey or Highgate are really so the Lord preserveth and keepeth him delivereth him not into the hands of his Enemy and keepeth him alive the Lord shall comfort him when he is sick upon his Bed and shall make his Bed in his sickness that is comforts for his Soul yea and Body too if this great full plain eminent well-known Scripture be not considered none will Now 't will be of the latest may be another day and you will certainly come to be sick and it may be in your Sickness be dozed scarce know where it be day or night as I said before and it may be in your Sickness have many fears and doubts concerning your eternal weal. The Enemy will tempt you by reason of sin and guilt secretly to despair or throw away your Soul and Souls nay he will do it because you have liv'd no more to God and his Honour but have minded your own Honour Ease Pleasure and Interest in the World done no Good been a Christian in Name only having a form of Godliness but no Power 2 Tim. 3. 5. And a thousand things of this Nature he will bring it may be he will bring some particular Sins committed so and so to your Minds whilst the Room is close or two or three in it with a watch Light the Curtains drawn but the Evil One is very busie in the Bed or Conscience with you Now now if you wish as God Almighty grant you may never be delivered over into your Enemies or the Enemy of Mankinds salvations Hands Mind this Promise I do not bid you build upon it that is dangerous But build upon Christ and mind this for the Promises must be minded and the Conditions performed too in some measure And therefore be Merciful that the Lord may be Pitiful and not by Death deliver you to your Enemies Hands 'T is a dreadful terrible thing for a poor Partridge to lie trembling in the Talons of the Faulcon says the Practice of Piety but a thousand thousand times more dreadful to be delivered into the hands of Satan in a dying Hour but the Promise is God will not deliver the merciful Man into the Enemies hands Psal 41. 2. but keep him alive Nay he will certainly do it that is He will keep him alive in Christ unto Eternal Life or else alive in this World for more Work and Comfort which latter Promise is rather meant here So that a long Life seems to be promised to a merciful Man or Woman And now Ladies would you also live long on the Earth as I believe you would and enjoy all your Comforts Riches Honors and Relations be merciful to the Poor not idle vagabons sturdy Rogues and Beggars that make a Trade but poor industrious House-keepers old people and children that are past their Labour or too young poor Outed Ministers Widows and others All these you must consider And as the Apostle sayes Do good unto all men as ye have opportunity especially the houshold of Faith and in so doing you might expect the promise or promises But some may object it may be you would have us give all away no nor above the tenth part neither scarce that Yet many many good men and Ministers think we are bound to that especially Dr. Gouge And in his Book called The Best Way of Thriving gives you forty Arguments of Scripture for it And tells you an excellent story of a Bishop that lost a hundred pound for not giving five c. But Divine discretion must be used for this and the other world too We all commend good Husbandry and good Houswifery But what think you of the Lady Warwick she would say Save the money of one Rich Lac'd Gown a year and that would serve to cloath a great many poor Children especially if it should be a May-Gown Here was good Houswifery and great Charity I had rather starve a Lust said she than not feed a good Christian And she found the comfort of it in her sickness for she had scarce any God toll'd her Soul away as it were without groans But you it may be let a thousand pound Necklace it may be more lie dead in a little penny Bran Box and many thousands more in Jewels Plate Gold or Silver by you and yet yet think it a great matter to do a little any thing that is for a Noble Good and Brave Charitable Design which may flourish to the world's end for ought you know If you would do
some little thing at present take no care for hereafter as our Saviour sayes of to morrow Mat. 6. 25. Luk. 12. 22. There are Ladies enough in England yea and good Citizens too for to carry it on when you have once set it up But I have heard that a poor Coach-maker's Wife gave almost as much as a great Countess at a Collection Will this pass Nay do you your selves think this will in the day of Account And our Lord Jesus Christ will take an Account of every Lady of the Land Wife or Widow as well as others And though he approved of the poor Widow's Mite cast into the Treasure yet he will never accept of your Charity except it be in some measure proportionable to the Talent he has put in your hands For do you think that God or Christ will accept of the improvement of one Talent from a Lady Lord or others that he has given ten to no he will ask you Where are the other nine and you will then be speechless For he does not allow you nor no man living to lay up up out and out for Self Covetousness Honour Pride Vain-Glory Children Grand-children Nephews Nieces and all manner of Relations this and that great purchase every year but still little or nothing for Religion and another World God or your Souls but for Silk Sattin Coaches Lace Tire-women and other French Toys and yet may be you good Ladies too all which we grudge you not in the least but in the mean time to see you all almost slight Charity the love and eminent practice of it this is uncomfortable and not Lady Vere like Or will she and you stand alike together in the day of Accounts Nay will not the Lady Drummond though a Papist condemn some of you She was not of the true Church and yet gave almost a thousand pound to the Poor but nothing for a Funeral Come come be convinced and do more good while you live for you have not done a quarter of that good you might have done and not have hurt your Lords Estates or run backwards in the least nor do we in the least desire that you should For Charity brings a great blessing as a good Divine said But you want a heart or a hand for Christ or a Death-watch at your Bed's head to put you in mind of another world But a sound sickness will do it and nothing else to purpose But then it may be you will talk talk talk in a high Feaver of a hundred things when the plaisters are on your feet blisters on the arms legs and neck instead of Christ and his Righteousness As a Merchant did about Wooll and would hear nothing but what price Wooll bore Bring my Manteau and my green Petticoat I will rise but the Watchers cry Pray good Madam be still and keep your Arms in the Bed Don't tell me I will rise and go see my Lady such a one call the Coach quickly And a hundred things run in the head when we are running to another world and its Eternity may be altogether unprepared Now if you would find mercy in that day which was the last Text that worthy Dr. Manton ever Preacht on will it not be very sweet welcom and seasonable when all things creature comforts and relations are just a going from you or you from them for ever to find a God embracing of you Oh! be good then do good and remember the Poor and this good Work too because it may live when you are gone flourish and be a mighty Tree as I said before but the promise is You shall rather live too and not dye For the Lord will keep him alive when he lies sick Mark that word and it may be when you are dangerously sick and in your senses you would not for half nay all your Estates but that you should recover because you have doubts and fears about your Soul 's Eternal state as the poor Apothecary had that cryed despairingly He should go to Hell and lye millions of years there But now to be kept alive and recover will be the sweetest and greatest mercy to you in the world Oh try trust and take God s promise before all the world's They often fail though the blood of Christ never as one said when his head was going off Yea this promise 't is but venture a little mony it may be 't is no more not so much as a French Page or one or two Liveries cost you or some lesser thing if you look well about May not this or that be saved and go to this good design which stands high upon a high Hill and has a great name The Ladies not what Ladies but the Ladies taking in all by that general universal endless name as it were though it be intended to pious good and great Religious Protestant Ladies and other virtuous Gentlewomen yet it has an universal name because no body knows what God may incline some or how many of that Noble Sex to do for it Some are apt to think it may be in time as big as most things why not and as worthy it bears so many Noble names as there be Ladies in the Land or shall be successively and who knows but some body may dye want an Heir and remember this when you have set it once a little up For it is still The Ladies Charity School-house and must be whilst one stone or stick remains upon another for no body can new christen it And therefore pray don't let this young God-Son of yours it is your first and will be your last Starve dye look poor or be spoiled for want of a little good keeping one two or three years The Boys are fine handsom and well cloathed now not too fine because they are the Ladies You cannot but like them and their place exceeding well and be taken with it if you would but send or see them these Holy-days or after But now if a year or two hence they should be grown which God sordid poor ragged half-starv'd and no cloaths Country folks would say who rule or go that way 〈◊〉 Were there not good Ladies enough in and about London to maintain a little School a Duce on their Pride Charity Close hand and Covetousness if it is be all And a hundred things of this nature will be said and some scoffing at Religion too which will be as bad as death And therefore pray good Ladies and Gentlewomen out of tenderness and conscience do not let the thing dye for want of a little countenance but set the wheel a going by giving something this Easter one Whitsuntide or two till you see the thing it self and the likely wheel of its prosperity which there is no doubt of if you come a little off However above all a hundred times that we can say do something for this great and serious promise and promises in case of Death or Sickness it may be in a week or months time and you shall