Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n die_v sin_n soul_n 22,606 5 5.7136 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A60290 Sinnes discovery by the emblem of a toad P. F. 1673 (1673) Wing S3866C; ESTC R213214 660 1

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

SINNES DISCOVERY BY THE EMBLEM OF A TOAD More Loathsome What can be unto myne eye Than this most ugly Toade which heere J spie A TOADE Though J be obiect of mans scorne and hate Yett J am better than A Reprobate POor man why with disdain do'st look on Me Thy self more vile by Sinne why do'st not See A Toade I am yet serve God in my kind Accomplishing those Ends to mee Assign'd My place I keep where God appointed mee From Earth that Venome I ●uck-up which Thee And Beasts would hurt and yet my poyson's good For Medicines were it rightly understood And with this poyson though my self I fill It s that which can the body onely kill And makes me loathsome unto mortal Eyes But with me all my shame and sorrow dies But thou rebell'st against Gods majesty And serv'st the Divel his damn'd Enemy With filthy Lusts worst Poyson fil'd thou art Which makes Jehova loath thee with his heart Thy poysons worse ten thousand times than mine Which onely does the body kill but thine The soule likewise and if in sinne thou die Death does not end thy shame and misery It then begins which once but felt and seen A loathsome Toad like me thou 'lt wish thou'dst been Then thou wilt find thy state than mine far worse Since ugly-Sinne made Christ become a Curse And that mans Sinne caus'd all that misery VVhich Christ endur'd from Cratch to Crused-Tree Yea that each wilful unrepented Sinne Does horrour here and hell hereafter win Sin therefore worse than Plagues death hell the divel Cause of all ill hate as the greatest evil And if thou ere wilt enter Heavens straight Gate Let Sinnes not Toades be object of thy hate F. P. FINIS London Printed for John Overton and are to be sold at his Shop at the Sign of the White-Horse without New-Gate 1673.