Selected quad for the lemma: death_n
Text snippets containing the quad
ID |
Title |
Author |
Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) |
STC |
Words |
Pages |
A06271
|
London looke backe at that yeare of yeares 1625 and looke forvvard, vpon this yeare 1630 / written not to terrifie, but to comfort.
|
Dekker, Thomas, ca. 1572-1632.
|
1630
(1630)
|
STC 16755; ESTC S2796
|
11,389
|
20
|
sure death bids hee come away by some Tokens which he hath sent thee Be ruâde by me and take this receipt Trust to it for it cui'd a King of Israel Cry out with Dauid O Lord Chastâze me not in thy wrath for thine Arrowes haue lighted vpon mee There is nothing sound in my flesh because of thine anger neither is there rest in my bones because of my sinnes My woundes are putrified my Reynes full of burning I am weakned and sore broken My heart panteth my strength fayleth me And the light of mine eyes euen they are not mine owne my Louers and my friends stand aside from my Plague and my Kinsemen stand afarre off Yet continue thou vvith the holy singer and conclude thus O Lord hast to helpe mee Hovv like you this Medicine Is it of such vertue that albeit thou art sicke to thy Death It vvill by degrees take away all thy Torments This second is a lulep to sweeten the mouth of thy Stomacke after the bitternesse of thy sickenesse âor when by an Armipotent hand thou art lifted out of thy death-bed when the Bell hath ceast rolling for thee and thy Womer-sleâpers leaue gaping for thy Linnen thy goodes and thy money And are madde they are not likely to Rifle thy House vvhen thou hast an appetite to eate and that thy feete are able to walke vpon that Earth which was hungry to dânoure thy whole bdoy Then fall thou vpon that Earth and Magnifie God Then say though thy sinnes in thy sickenesse made thy conscience shev a face to thee as blacke as Hell yet seake thou to it and tell it that this Recouery vvith new repentance continued shâll make it like the vvinges of a Doue couered with Siluer and vvhose Feathers are like the yellovv Gold Say to thy Soule it shal bee as white as the Snow in Zumon and coâsâsse that Gods Mercy is like the mountaine of Bashan Say to thy Health that the Chariots vvhich God sent to guard it vvere tvventy thousand Angels amongst whom the Lord was as in the Sanctuary of Sinay Nay albeit Death should lay his Mouth to thine Eare and bid thee put thy House in order For thou shall Dye Yet an Isaiah some good Mans prayerâ or thine ovvne may bee heard and God may Adâe to thy dayes fifteene yeares more as he did to Hezekiah vpon his Repentance Repentance is a Siluer Bell and soundes sweetly in the Eare of Heauen It is a Dyamond shyning and sparkling in the darke to inlighten all our miseries It is a ãâã for euery vvound It is a golden ladder by whose stâppâs wee climbe to immortality It is a Chayne of Orient Pearle tying vp Gods handes that hee shall not strike vs Repentance smelleth sweeter then the Oyntment vvhich the Woman Annoynted Christs feete when shee wipâd them vvith her Hayre Repentance winnes the King of Heauen to smile vpon vs as if wee were his âauorites and to say thus If thou still art ascending and getting vp this hill of Repentance blessed shalt thou bee in the Citty and blessâd in the field Blessed bee the fruit of thy Body and the fruit of thy Ground and the fruit of thy Caâtle the increase of thy King and the ãâã of thy sheepe Blessed shall be the Basket and thy Dough Blessed shalt thou bee when thou comest in and blessed also when thou goest out Thy Land-soldiers O England Shall not stand in feare âor thy Royall Nauy for thine enemies that rise against thee shall fall before thy face They shall come out against thee one way and fly before thee seauen wayes His word that speakes this may bee taken better then any Kings in the world And therefore hold out both thy hands vnder this Tree of Blessings and catch the golden apples when so freely they are taken downe into thy lappe But if thou trample these gifts vnder thy feete and spurâest at Gods fauour bestowed vpon thee in thy Health in the midst of a hot sicknesse If the Tolling of Bells cannot awaken you nor the opening of graues affright you If Bill-men standing at other mens dores cannot put you in minde that the same guard may locke vp yours and the same red Crosses bee stucke in your Banners If to bee shut vp close for a Moneth seeme but a short Saeue in a Tragedy and not car'd for when t is Acted Then heare O England and thou her eldest Daughter so admired amonst Nations for thy Beauty Heare what New Quiners of Punishments will bee opened For these are the Arrowes which God himselfe sayes hee will draw out at rebellious Kingdomes A Pestilence cleauing fast Consumptions feauers burning Agues The Sword Blasting new-Dewes Heauen shall bee turned to brasle and Earth to Iron Or Houses to haue others dwell in them our Vineyardes to haue others âast them our Oxân to bee slaine yet wee not eate them our Sheepe to bee slaughtered and to feede our enemies These and hideons squâldrons besides are threatened to bee sent out against disobedient people What Physitians Doctors Surgeons or Apothecaries haue wee to defend vs in so dreadfull a Warre None not any If therefore with Naaman thou wouldst bee cleansed from Leprosy thou must obey Elisha and wash thy selfe seauen times in Iordan Weeâe seauen times a day Nay seauen times an houre for thy sinnes Whosoeuer with Ahaziah the King of Samaria falleth sicke and sendeth for recouery of Baal-Zebub the god of Ekron and not to the true God indeede hee shall not come from his bed but dye the Death For wee sincke to the Bottome of the watters as the Carpenters Axe did But though neuer so Iron-hearted the voyce of an Elisha the feruency of prayer and praysing God can fetch vs from the bottome of Hell And by contrition make vs swimme on the toppe of the waters of Life Now albeit at the first crying to God nay the Second Third Fourth or twentith time hee will not heare thee But that thy sighes are neglected Thy teares vnpittyed Thy sores nor repented Thy hunger not satisfied Thy pouerty not relieued Yet giue thou not ouer stand at the gate of Gods mercy still Begge still Knock still and knock hard For ãâã was barren yet being an importunate suiter her petition was heard and signed Shee was fruitfull and had three Sonnes and two Daughters So albeit wee bee barren in Repentance in Thanksgiuing in Charity in Patience in Goodnes Yet if vnfeignedly wee pray to Heauen wee shall bee fruitfull And these fiue shall bee our Sonnes and Daughters By this meanes our Maââ shall change her Name agen to Naomi and our bitternes bee turned into sweetnes Art thou sicke Thy best and onely Doctor dwells aboue Hast thou beene sicke Art thou amended Fill Heauen and Earth full of Songes to thy Eternall Physition who takes nothing of thee for any Eloctuâriâs hee giues thee His Pilles are bitter but wholâsome and of wonderous operation And so much the better because what he giues comes gratis Art thou recouered Hast thou pluck't thy foot out of the graue when it was stepping in Then with the Sonne of Syrach acknowledge that a Beggar in health is better then a diseased Monarch Health and Strength are fairer then gold and a sound body is an infinite Treasure So that if thou doest not open thy Lippes to Magnifie him that hath snatched thee out of the lawes of destruction His blessings are to thee as messes of meate set vpon the graue I must yet once more wish thee O Troy nouans to cast thine eyes about thee Looke forward on thy sad Neighbour distressed Cambriage Sickenesse shakes her her glorious Buildings are emptied her Colledges shut vp her Lourned Sonnes forsake her her Tradesmen cry out for succour Want walkes vp and downe her streetes a few Rich a many Poore But the hands of the one cannot feede not fill the mouthes of the other To thee therefore O thou Nourishing mother of all the Citties in England to thee albeit thou art in some Sorrow thy selfe does this afflicted Nource of Schollers come What tree hath Branches broad enough to shelter her from stormes but thine Where is a Sunne to warme her frozen Limbes if it moues not in thy Zodiack Thou O Queene of Citties art Royall in thy gifts Charity sits in thy Gates and compassion waites vpon thee in thy Chamber So that with Dido thou often sayeth Non ignara mali Miseris succurrere disco My miseries to my selfe being knowne Makes me count others wants mine owne FINIS The yeare â625 Fatall to our Kingdome To the Citty â Kings 20 â 1 Kings 20 5. Ioh. 6.20 London generall Misery The spotted Feauer A kin man to the Plague The Moon and her Waâting-maâde The Death of K. I. The Death ãâ¦ã The ãâ¦ã graue The great Change Crosses ãâ¦ã A ãâã âpara ãâ¦ã Enemie The ãâ¦ã the ãâã Men alive in graue A graue Opened The World a fair Inne but il Lodging in it A Chamberline for all Trauelers A man iâ his Graue âees strange sights A sickmans Sessions The best Iudge in England When men is weakest God is strongest A due deât must be payd Iob. 3.3 Old sârâs ill cured breake out agen Many men deaâ few amended The âumâer that dyed in 1625. Luk. 7.30 Math. 25.4 A wicked âcâo le but the best Schollers To trewants Loue thy Physiâian King Dauids Pâysiâke A Iulep Dauids Song set to our tune Read 67. 2 Kings 20.1 Good Men sicke Luke 7 38. Great ãâ¦ã Deut. 25 Bad seruice bad wages 2 Kings 5.14 2 Kings 7. â 2 Kings â 5 God louââ an earned Suiâeâ 1 Sam. 1. ââ Ruth â 2â Syrack 30â 14
all the Reignes of our Kings to any one yeare so full of wonderful mutatiânâ Such Shifting of the Windes from faire to foule and froÌ foule to faire weather Such Eclipses and such affrighting Changes and then my Penne shall be silenc'd But of al the changes happening that yeare the greatest is not yet mention'd When our Sinnes were in a full Sea God call'd in the waters of our punishment and on a sudden our miseries ebb'd WheÌ the Pâstilence struck 5000. and odde in a Weeke into the Graue an Angell came and held the Sword from striking So that the waues or Death fell in a short time as fast as before they swelld vp to our confusion Mercy stood at the Church doores and suffered but a few Coffins to come in And this was the most wonderfull change of all the rest This was a Change worthy to bee set ouer euery doore in Letters of Gold as before Red painted Crosses stood there turning Cittizens to runn-awayes But a white âlagge was held out in signe of Truce A pardon was promis'd and it came to the great Comfort of all our Nation When more than threescore thousand were âowen downe by the âyeth of time Deaths haruest towards the end of that yeare was all most all in Looke backe O LONDON at these and on thy knees sing Hymnes to heauen to thy thân dâliuerance T is strange to obserue that if a Bell be heard to Ring out and that t is voyc'd in such a Parish within the walls of LONDON a many is dead of the ãâã O what talke it breedes If the next ãâ¦ã two then the Report stickes cold to the ãâ¦ã Citââ But if as now it rises to ãâ¦ã the Head and thousands fearefully suspect they ãâã bee vndone And is there not great âeaven for ât is thinke you Yes there is For all other Infirmities and maladies of the Boây goe simply in their owne Habit and liue wheresoeuer they are ãâ¦ã vnder their proper and knowne Names ãâã the ãâã passâth onely by the name of the ãâ¦ã an Ague the Pox Fistula c. ãâ¦ã so ãâã with ãâã that they ãâã and King out sometimes night and dây that sudden destroyer of Mankind that Nimble executioner of the Diuine Iustice The Plague or Pestilence hath for the singularity of the Terrors waiting vpon it ãâã title THE SICKNESSE It hath a Preheminence about all others And none being able to match it for Violence Strength Incertainty Suâtlety Catching Vniuersality and Desolation it is called the Sicknesse As if it were the onely Sicknesse or the Sicknesse of Sicknesses as it is indeede But for all this Tyrants Raging and Rauing vp and downe this Citty after punishment Mercy as you heard bâfore came downe when the deluge was pâst a Raine-bow was seene Martyrdome went before and Glory with a Crowne of Starres immediately followed To Dye is held fearefull and the Graue hath many formidable shapes A Prisoner being drag'd to a Iayle out of vvhich hee can neuer be deliuered may truely call his Chamber his Liuing Graue where his owne sorrowes and the cruelty of creditors bury him They who with fearefull labour maintaine life by digging vnder-ground goe daily to their Graue So doe all Traytors that lay traynes to Blow vp their K. and Countreâ So doe all those whose blacke consciences prâck them on to dige Pitts for others into which they fall then solues But to open a graue as it is indeede the graue is our last Inne and a poore wooden Coffin our fairest Lodging Roome No the Graue is not our Inne where we may lie to Night and be gon to Morrow but it is our standing House it is a perpetuity our Inheritance for euer A peece of ground with a litle garden in it fiue or sixe foot long full of flowres and herbes purchas'd for vâ and our posterity at the deerest Income in the world the losse of Life The World is our common Inne in which wee haue no certaine abyding It stands in the Road-way for all passângers And wither we be vpon speed or goe slowly on foot sure we are that all our Iourneyes are to the land of death and that 's the Graue A sicke-mans bed is the gate or first yard to this Inne where death at our first arriuall stands like the Chamberlaine to bid you welcome and is so bold as to aske if you will alight and he will shew you a Lodging In this great yeare of contagion I meane 1625. wheÌ the Bell man of the Citty Sicknesse beate at euery dore there was one who whilst he lay in his graue his death-bed as he accounted it yet afterwards he Recouered reported to his friends he beheld strange apparitions He saw a purchas'd Sessions The Iudge was terrible In his hand Lightning in his voyce Thunder After thousands were cast and condemn'd to dye sayd this sicke man I saw my selfe a Prisoner and cal'd to the Barre The Iudge looking sternly vpon mee was angry my offences being read to me were heauy my accusers many what could I doe but pleade guilty And falling on my knees with hands held vp cry for mercy Teares sighes and Anguishes of soule speaking hard for me the Iudge melted in compassion signed a repriue sau'd me from death and set me free O in what a pittifull state had I beene else for my conscience araigned me my owne tongue accus'd mee my owne guilt condemn'd mee Yet the mercy of the Iudge sau'd mee In this graue I lay my memory being dead my Sences buried my Spirits couered with Earthly weaknesses and all the faculties of my soule cold as the clay into which I was to be turned Yet loe I was called out of this Graue I quickned and reuiued Seeing then that albeit death was about to thrust mee downe with one hand yet life gentley pluckt me vp by the other what did I but looke backâ at the Horror which had beset me round I did not onely looke backe but I looked forward at the Happinesse comming toward mee which with spred armes I embraced neither did I onely looke forward but I looked vpward to heauen Had I not reason to pay my heauenly Phâsitian with an humble hearty Thankes-giuing I did so Haue I not reason to put al others that either tâ is yeare or in any yeare to come shall be call'd to the same Iudgment-seat in minde of their deliuerance Wee being at least we ought to be Christs followers vse as he did to giue thankes before we breake our Bread and when we are satisfied he is not satisfied vnlesse wee pay him thankes agen thankes that 's all Poore is that good turne which is not worth godaâercy That benefit withers which is not warm'd by the breath of the Receiuer Here leaue we our âicke-man well recouered and singing holy Ditties for his restoring Let vs now agen looke backe and stedfâstly fix our Eyes vpon the âerrible face