Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n woeful_a world_n yield_v 25 3 6.3724 4 false
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
A12819 Meditations, and resolutions, moral, divine, politicall century I : written for the instruction and bettering of youth, but, especially, of the better and more noble / by Antony Stafford ... ; there is also annexed an oration of Iustus Lipsius, against calumnie, translated out of Latine, into English. Stafford, Anthony.; Lipsius, Justus, 1547-1606. 1612 (1612) STC 23127; ESTC S1001 32,969 235

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

in my beginning thinke of my end that in my end I may reioyce in my better and neuer-ending beginning 5 Iob made a couenant with his eyes least at any time they should looke vpon a Mayde but since I cannot make a couenant with mine eyes least at any time they look vppon a Maide I will trie if I can make a couenant with my heart least at any time it desire a Maide 6 GOD made Heauen for the good Hell for the badde but he made earth for both This shewes vs that while wee liue heere wee must of necessity conuerse with both I will therefore lay mine eares open to all but my heart to few 7 Our Master hath left vs two Sacraments One of which tell 's vs that wee are Christians the other biddes vs liue like Christians This later is that Tree of Life the passage whereto is guarded by no Cherubin nor by any brandished Sword but whosoeuer will may come thither and eating worthily may liue for euer VVhen therefore I eate of this Tree I will remember out of whose bloud it sprang The memory whereof will suggest vnto mee that if I eate not this fruit worthily I am vnworthy to be a branch of the Tree that is if I eate not his body worthily I am then vnworthy to be a member of that body whereof he is the head 8 The first murtherer of all mankinde was also the first Lyer two horrible vices and alike bloudy For a man had better bee murthered then belyed haue his person slaine then his fame I will therefore flie from a Lyer as from an Aspe the poyson of whose tongue is mortall 9 Besides our internall originall and actuall sinnes wee haue externall accidentall crimes layed vpon vs by our families but in my conceit very vniustly for wee haue enough to answere for the first man and are no way liable to the debts of his successors VVhy should man lay more vpon man than GOD himselfe doth As with him the vertues of my House cannot saue me no more can the vices of it damne mee The Law of God shall be with me aboue the Law of Armes or the Law of Nations 10 Those that serue God only vpon Sundayes are like seruants extraordinarie who come to waite vpon their great Lords onely vpon great dayes But I will make euery day my Sabbath and will follow my Lord in ordinary making Charitie my Cognizance 11 VVhile the Papists and wee contend which of vs erre most in matters of faith wee striue who shall erre most in matters of life so that wee studie at once who shall beleeue best and who shall liue worst not who shall bee most vertuous but who most enuious My chiefest care therefore shall bee to liue well so shall I euer bee sure to fare better than hee who beleeues well and liues ill 12 Two sortes of men I loathe and detest a Foole and a Carper Yet of the two I would make choyce to holde discourse with the Carper for I had rather be misunderstood in all then not to bee vnderstood at all I will therefore onely beware of the one but I will scorne the other 13 Laughing is onely proper to man amongst all liuing creatures whereas indeede he ought euer to be weeping in that he euer sinnes the beasts euer laughing to see man so much abuse his so much reason O! if a man knew before hee came into the world what hee should endure in the world hee would feare his first day more than his last I will therfore weepe at mine owne misery and neuer laugh but at mine owne folly and since my Master was Vir dolorum a man of griefes it shall not be said that I am Vir voluptatum a man of mirth 14 Valour hath many servants going vnder her name but few of them are her true fauorites Some snatch courage from her and wanting wisedome to rule it are disclaimed by her Others are Giants in their wordes and Dwarfes in their deedes She hates him who speakes more than he dares doe and makes him her Champion who dares do more than he dare speake I I hee is the man with her who wounds his enemy with his sword not with his word Yet Christianity vnhorses euen Valour her selfe and deposing her makes new lawes and proclaimes him the brauest combatant who can conquer himselfe that is who can ascend so high aboue Nature as to descend belowe himselfe and to offer seruice where hee owes reuenge I will inuoke GOD to endue mee with this supernaturall gift and withall to deliuer mee from a valiant drunkard and a valiant foole 15 VVhen my memory lookes back as far as she can see me thinks it is but yesterday yet I know by course of Nature my life cannot bee trebbl'd Now I haue indured so much misery in my one Yesterday that I am affraide to thinke of the two To-morrowes 16 It is a woonder to see the childish whining we now-adayes vse at the funeralls of our friends If we could houl them back againe our lamentations were to some purpose but as they are they are vaine and in vain If therfore my friend be good I will be glad that he is rid of the world if hee bee bad I will not bee sorry that the world is rid of him but that so wofull a world is like to receiue him If I haue a friend whose soule ioyn'd with mine makes but one minde and that at his death I see my teares must burst out or my heart within I may then perhaps yeeld to the infirmity of the flesh yet not so much that he hath left the world as that he hath left mee in it 17 He is the most miserable of men who fashions his body and minde according to the opinion of the vulgar and he the happiest who conforms his life to the lawes of a true iudgement This mā knows that we must heare with many but decree with few ioyning forces with two or three braue retired spirits hee bandies with a legion of the Vulgar Hee lookes downe with pitie on the poore Plebeians like Xerxes bewailes their hard hap in that none of their names shal liue after a few yeares Knowing that the eternall substance of his soule was breath'd into him by the Eternall he cares for nothing which is not able to hold-out with Eternity I will therefore despise things momentary and since I haue ful assurance that I shall liue in the other world my deedes shal do their best to make me liue in this 18 Now-a-dayes the clothes are spoken to and not the men and few haue regard to the riches of the breast but of the backe He who in his fashions differs and degenerates most from his ancestours is held the most generous Gentlemā The world is grown so sensuall that the parts of the body are preferr'd before those of the mind so that to say He is a man of good parts is as much to say as He is a