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A06202 Ecclesiastes, othervvise called The preacher Containing Salomons sermons or commentaries (as it may probably be collected) vpon the 49. Psalme of Dauid his father. Compendiously abridged, and also paraphrastically dilated in English poesie, according to the analogie of Scripture, and consent of the most approued writer thereof. Composed by H.L. Gentleman. Whereunto are annexed sundrie sonets of Christian passions heretofore printed, and now corrected and augmented, with other affectionate sonets of a feeling conscience of the same authors. Lok, Henry.; Lok, Henry. Sundry Christian passions contained in two hundred sonnets. 1597 (1597) STC 16696; ESTC S104588 172,130 348

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feareth euery cloud that is in sky But little corne shall sow or reape to sell If alwaies he do guide his workes thereby So giue thou when thou maist and thinke thy store Increast thereby no whit impaird the more verse 5 As child in wombe so al things God makes grow vnknown to thee verse 6 Thē morn euen sow thou thy seed God knows which best shal be 5. As thou knowest not which is the way of the Spirit nor how the bones do grow in the wombe of her that is with child so thou knowest not the worke of God that worketh all Thinke this that euen that God which gaue to thee The present blessings that thou dost possesse Thy charitable workes from heauen doth see And will thy labours in due season blesse If thou thy faith by neighbours loue expresse And thinke that as the infants borne that bee Conceiued are do grow do liue do feed And be by birth in time from prison free By meanes vnknowne to mothers them that breed Se be assur'd that God which it hath wrought Can wealth restore by meanes to thee vnthought 6. In the morning sow thy seed and in the euening let not thine hand rest for thou knowest not whether shall prosper this or that or whether both shall be a like good Both rath and late at euery time and tide Then do vnto thy power some almes deed Without some others good let no day slide So oft as thou canst find aman hath need And who this can performe is blest indeed For man can not his worke so wisely guide To know to whom and when to giue is best But who for pittie giues and not for pride Though needlesly some fall among the rest Yet some no doubt is blessedly bestowd And in thy will of good good worke is showd verse 7 Sure life is sweete and all desire long time to see the sunne verse 8 Though long life last yet death maks hast times do vainly run 7. Surely the light is a pleasant thing and it is a good thing to the eyes to see the sunne And since but whilst thou liu'st thy goods are thine And what thou freely giu'st deserueth prayse Giue while thou mayst so mayst thou find in fine Well sau'd what well was spent in liuing dayes For godly worke with God aye present stayes Long mayst thou liue but must in end decline To death the end of euery liuing thing To yeeld to death yet needst thou not repine If liuing thou to man no good canst bring And hauing left some good by life to men More welcome death may be vnto thee then 8. Though a man liue many yeares and in them all he reioyce yet he shal remember the dayes of darknesse because they are many all that commeth is vanitie For death thou knowest vnto life is due And life doth but prepare a man to die Liues cares a daily death in vs renue To worke in vs consent to death thereby Which else no flesh with patience sure would try The many dayes or yeares which do insue Of wariest gouernment to happiest wight Cannot perswade him but that this is true That lightsome day will turne to darksome night That times most long haue end and what doth vade Is little better then a very shade verse 9 Reioyce in youth fulfill desire yet know God iudgeth all verse 10 To clense thy hart wicked flesh graue age vain youth doth cal 9. Reioyce ô young man in thy youth and let thine h●rt chere thee in the dayes of thy youth and wa●ke in the wayes of thine h●rt and in the sight of thine eyes but know that for all these things God will bring thee to iudgement Delight he then in what so ere he please In youth in beauty strength or wealthy store Let him delight himselfe in vse of these And cheare his hart as cause he hath therefore Yet let him thinke death knocketh at his dore And that they all do vanish with their wayes That God alone remayneth euer ●ure That only vertue with vs longest stayes And can eternall blessednesse procure When to the iudgement of a God seuere Our workes must come who all in mind doth beare 10. Therefore take away griefe out of thine heart cause euill to depart from thy flesh for childhood and youth are vanitie Let him and all the wise whilst yet they may Prepare themselues to beare with chearefull mind The fierce assaults in death that for vs stay And but by faith can strong resistance find Since all our other workes come short behind Let vs abandon euery wicked way And lay our treasure vp in heauen aboue Youth is a flowre that springeth out in May But euery frost or blast doth soone remoue But heauen and heauenly ioyes will still remaine When youth and earthly works proue meerely vaine Chap. 12. verse 1 Remember thy creator then in these thy youthfull dayes Ere croked age all pleasure to thy lothed life denayes 1. Remember now thy creator in the daies of thy youth whilst the euill dayes come not ANd since thou canst not shun deaths fatall day And as the tree doth fall so shall it rise Whilst yet thou mayst prepare a quiet way Vnto thy soule which in such danger lies If thou in time reliefe do not deuise The earth and earthly things do helpe denay Heauen is the harbor where thy soule doth dwell Let not thy hope on earth then longer stay But it and workes thereof from hart expell Delay no time in hope long life to haue Youth may age must ere long time go to graue Nor the yeares approach wherein thou shalt say I haue no pleasure in them To heauen thy progresse thou dost wish to make Then cloth thy selfe accordingly therefore The clogs of worldly loue and lust forsake And thinke them burdens to thee euermore And in thy life haue lights of vertue store Let thought of thy creator thee awake From sinnes of youth hart burdensome in age Remember God account of thee will take If thy repentance not his wrath asswage Yea leaue thou sinne ere lust leaue tempting thee Thy abstinence else can not vertue bee verse 2 Whilst sunne moone stars seeme light and rayny clouds are farre verse 3 Whilst keepers of thy house are strong whose pillers stedfast are 2. Wh●les the sunne is not darke nor the light nor the moone nor the starres nor the clouds returne after the raine The feeble members which haue lost their might Through which their senses did affection proue No maruell now if they take lesse delight In vaine prospects which they tofore did loue Since they the meanes do want doth liking moue The sunne moone stars heauens ornamēt earths light Can yeeld small comfort to the senslesse corse When all thy ioynts begin by day and night Do tyre thy life and breed the soules remorse No maruell if thou then proue continent But thou shouldst temp'rance euen in youth frequent 3. When the keepers of the house shall trēble
and shall Yet we as they one common end do find One dissolution of this earthly frame Whose matter doth returne vnto the kind From whence at first creation forth it came The memory whereof the mind should tame Of those ambitious braines vnbounded will Which whilst they liue the world with comber fill verse 21 Who knows mans soule ascends or beasts vnto the earth descēds verse 22 Best then say I ioy in thy owne which thee thy knowledge ends 21. Who knoweth whether the Spirit of man ascend vpward and the Spirit of the beast descend downward to the earth And though indeed the soules immortall seed Which had his being from a cause more pure Vpon a higher hope doth iustly feed And shall in all eternitie endure Yet to the eye of man who can assure The same if faith the light vnto the soule Did not distrustfull fleshes thoughts controule For euen the selfe same instruments of life The same necessities of nutriment The same effects of sicknesse with vs rife The same abhorred death hath nature lent To euery creature that on earth she sent And at and after parting of the spright The carkasses of both seeme like to sight 22. Therfore I see that there is nothing better then that a mā should reioyse in his affayres because that is his portion for who shall bring him to see what shall be after him So that I see no vse of earths increase Fit for our bodies but whilst here we liue With them to cheere our sprights and purchase peace And vnto God for them due praise to giue Mans wit no further can his pleasure driue For he and they are subiect as you see To chaunge and to earths fraile mortalitee As for the care the wise and goodly haue Of their successors competent estate It is but due and nature doth it craue But for their loue our selues we ought not hate And toyling vex our soules with worlds debate What they will proue or what in time may grow We know not nor should curious be to know Chap. 4. verse 1 Thē earths vnrights I viewd tears of wrōgd by worthles iudg verse 2 And therwith thought thē blessed dead need not the liuing grudge 1. So I turned con●idere● all the oppressions that are wrought vnder the sunne and behold the teares of the oppressed and none conforteth them and ●o the strength is of the hand of them that oppresse them and none comforteth him BVt whither doth this passion me transport My thoghts with thinking haue forgot my thought Whilst earthly I with earthly worlds consort And to the bodies cares haue comfort brought My meditations haue the heauens sought And those eternities which passe my skill But now descend to earth againe I will And of more humaine actions will intreat Where we a tragedie of woes shall see Whilst weaker ones oppressed by the great Are destitute of place whereto to flee For succour since their foes their Iudges bee And farre too powrefull wherewith to contend And most men backward poore men to defend 2. Wherefore I prayied the dead which now are dead aboue the liuing which are yet aliue Which makes me thinke though nature it deny That much more happie is the dead mans state Then those that in this life such troubles try And life like death my heart begins to hate Death vnto endlesse life is but the gate But life is vnto death a longsome way Where tyresome troubles vexe vs day by day And death that lothsome state which life doth shun By life itselfe with care and toyle is sought Through perils men to purchase death do run And with lifes scorne holde death but cheaply bought Which honour to them selues or countrey brought For life could not exempted be from wo Whilst dying they all worldly cares forgo verse 3 The vnhorne better then them both who such ill daies not saw verse 4 It vexed me the spight to see that vertuous workes do draw 3. And I count him better thē them both which hath not yet bin for he hath not seene the euill works which are wrought vnder the suune But yet indeed since both by life and death The state of many men is wretched still They may most happie seeme which nere drew breath Or infants dyed neuer knowing ill And reason good for both produce I will The ones not being making them to bee Incapable of vengeance wicked see The other cleane exempt from humane care As being dead now needing nothing more Whose actuall crimes hels doome could not prepare Originall sinnes by grace were cleansd before And mercie guiding them to high heau'ns dore Whose want of reason liuing knew no wo But voyd of feare to death did mildly go 4. Also I beheld all trauell and all perfection of workes that this is the enuy of a mā against his neighbour this also is vanitie and vexation of the Spirit This other plague besides doth follow man A vice alas too common in this age The more of vertue that he glory can The more the baser sort repine and rage And with reprochfull slander malice swage Depriuing or deprauing best desart Or it Eclipsing with some guilefull art No foe to learning like the ignorant Nor to the good like to the bad we say Gods kingdome Beliall seeketh to supplant And vertue fayling his another way Euen viciously they vertue would betray Who herein yet themselues do but disgrace For slander can not iust deserts deface verse 5 The slothfull foole he folds his hands but hunger staru'd he pines verse 6 Whilst to a poore but lasie life his chosen course inclines 5. The foole foldeth his hands and eateth vp his owne flesh Themselues like fooles and feeble helplesse wights Vnable or vnwilling to attaine The trauell which belongs to vertues rights Doe poore disgracefull liue and so remaine And caterpiller like on others paine Doe feed and liue to world improfitable Driuen to depend on scraps of others table Nay well it were with some if so it were Who foodlesse are compeld to begge or starue Because their idle fingers doe forbeare The honest trades which might their liuing serue Whose folded hands no better doth deserue But as they to themselues do proue vnkind So they of others should no better find 6. Better is an handfull with quietnes then two handfuls with I●bor and vexation of the Spirit Yet which is lamentable to be told They senselesse so in idlenesse delight That they their course of life to prayse are bold And all virilitie excluding quight Their base borne humours glose so well in sight As though an humble thought and peace of mind From all industrie did the honest bind As though that peace and plentie neuer met As if wealth were attain'd with bare desire As though they carelesse were that liue in debt As if they grieselesse who not wealth aspire As though God did not trauell'of vs require As though an humble mind appeard not best In modest vse of plentie and of rest verse
If that thy speech had not bene vttered soft Or not conceald by such as heard the same Which will thee make another lesse to blame For it were meere iniustice to condemne Our vnderlings for lauish speech of vs When we our betters farre do more contemne Yet lothly would therefore be serued thus The rule of Charitie doth will thee do As thou thy selfe wouldst faine be done vnto verse 25 This haue I prou'd wisdom sought to know which fled frōme verse 26 It is too high and deepe my reach cannot her secrets see 25. All this haue I proued by wisedome I thought I will be wise but it went farre from me All this haue I found by experience true And so mayst thou if that thou way it well Apply thy selfe the same then to ensue And let her lawes within thy actions dwell And of thy wisedome do not ouerweene For many times the wise are ouerseene My selfe by nature was inclynd to skill By education was instructed much A heauenly gift did more my knowledge fill And all the world supposd my wisedome such As few attaynd and I supposd no lesse But found my folly great I must confesse 26. It is farre of what may it be and it is a profound deepnesse who can find it For of three things all worthy to be knowne The past the present and the future things Whose first in writs record in part is showne Whose last with deepe obscurenesse blindnesse brings In th' one I had but euen a very tast In seeking th' other out I time did wast That vulgar knowledge which by moderne view I did obserue to make my profit by Did somewhat me instruct and much more trew Then passed things forgotten presently Or dreamd supposals of succeeding time Which for to fetch to heauen my thoughts should clime verse 27 My hart mind hath wisely searcht both good bad to know verse 28 And worse thē death a womans snares I found God sheld thē fro 27. I haue compassed about both I mine heart to know and to enquire and to search wisedome and reason and to know the wickednesse of folly and the foolishnesse of madnesse That knowledge which I had I did bestow With heart and mind in searching round about The true effect of euery thing to know And of effects the causes out of doubt For happie they are held that can define Of causes and effect how they incline And chiefly I obseru'd whence good and ill Haue their originall and nutriment What bounds they haue and how the soule they kill And in the vse of them sought mans intent And so of mirth of folly and delight And what so seemd most pleasant vnto sight 28. And I find more bitter then death the woman whose heart is as nets and snares and her hands as bands he that is good before God shall be deliuered from her but the sinner shall be taken by her And loe I found all sinne to end with shame Yea euen the sinne which doth most men allure The lawlesse loue of women of defame Who bitterer plagues then death to vs procure Insnaring in their bands of beauties gift The wretched soules which yeeld vnto their drift A fatall furie of the flesh alasse In idle braine begot with plentie fed Whose smallest sparckles to a flame do passe If by the eye the fancie will be led But such as God doth loue shall lust refraine Whilst wicked ones intrapped do remaine verse 29 The wicked fall by her faire bayts this I the preacher find verse 30 Of thousand men scarce one proue good of women none by kind 29. Behold ●●●th the Preacher this haue I found seeking one by one to find the count Beleeue me well I know it ouer well By many a one my selfe haue found it true I teach thee this who best the same could tell And for the same with all my hart do rue And wish thee by my harme the like beware And for their new assaults thy selfe prepare For few or none but do assaults abide At first or last and ouer many fall Thou doest not know thy strength what may betide The wisest sort fall herein most of all In any case then trust not to thy strength Some dally with the fire but burne at length 30. And yet my soule seeketh but I find it not I haue found one man of a thousand but a woman among them all haue I not found I must confesse I would not men acquit From equall blame in this so grosse a sinne Beseeming not in truth their stronger wit To yeeld to them whom they from ill should winne And in this point mongst thousands that I know One wise and perfect man I scarce could show But of a world of women that this day Do prostrate their affections to their lust By my experience sure I cannot say Though others can perchance and will I trust That one hath so reclaymd her life to good As that a new assault would be withstood verse 31 This only haue I found that God did man most righteous make But men for their originall grace their owne inuentions take 31. Onely loe this haue I found that God hath made man righteous but they haue sought many inuentions So we and they as wofull president Of parents fall to euill do incline He 'is best at ease that doth his sins repent And not of others sinnes too much define Nor yet his owne excuse bad is the best This sinne is but one sinne among the rest For though God made vs holy pure and iust And gaue vs powre in righteousnesse to dwell Yet did our wils so to our senses trust That it the vse of reason did expell Since which a swarme of hatefull sinnes increase On thought word deed and all our actions prease Chap. 8. verse 1 Who is like the wise who al things knows his face with fauor shines verse 2 The wise his Princes hests obserues and to Gods word inclines 1. Who is as the wise man and who knoweth the interpretation of a thing the wisedome of a man doth make his face to shine the strength of his face shall be changed IT stands him then vpon who would withstand This great calamitie of humane kind Another course of life to take in hand Then in the practise of the most we find And arm'd with wisedome gainst the flesh to fight Not yeelding cowardlike to lewd delight That is true wisedome worthy lasting fame That doth adorne with honor and with prayse Such as sincerely do imbrace the same That will transforme their life to better wayes And giue them grace with Prince and people still And in the end aduance their state it will 2. I aduertise thee to take heede 〈◊〉 the mouth of the king and to the word of the oth of God It teacheth man his dutie vnto God And how with ciuill men he should conuerse With neighbours how to haue a kind abode Or with a people that are most peruerse To know what doth
is euill among all that is done vnder the sunne that there is one cōdition to all also the heart of the sonnes of men is full of euill and madnesse is in their hearts whilest they liue and after that they go to the dead And sure of all the things that I do know It is the thing that seemes most strange to me That maketh wise men most amazed grow And best men most discouraged to bee When they their states as hard as others see And that like others is their death in show As subiect vnto paine as wicked men Forgotten be they once in graue below Their vertues as not done vnthought of then So that their cares and fooles vnquiet dayes Both madnesse seeme both die deuoide of prayse 4. Surely who so euer is ioyned to al the liuing there is hope for it is better to a liuing dog then to a dead Lyon Hence doth proceede no doubt the prouerbe old That liuing dogge dead Lyon doth excell With princely beast of noble courage bold Then euery barking curre dare ●ausly mell That liuing durst not come within his smell The reason is right easie to be told Because he liuing could himselfe relieue Life doth in time new hopes and haps vnfold But death no hope or earthly hap doth giue Time worketh wonders if our time we take Occasion at our death doth vs forsake verse 5 The liuing know that they must die but dead things are forgot verse 6 Their loue hate is quēcht the earth more fruit affords thē not 5. For the liuing know that they shall die but the dead know nothing at all neither haue they any more reward for their remembrance is forgotten And so accordingly do wise men vse Whilst yet they liue and liuing haue the powre To worke their wils they proper times do chuse To perfect their intent least death deflowre Their sweetest hopes who all things doth deuowre For well they see and may it is no newes The man that now triumphes to morne to die That dead the foole the wisest will abuse And that the wisest then do senslesse lie And what vnperfected they left behind Neglected and themselues soone out of mind 6. Also their loue and their hatred and their enuy is now perished and they haue no more portion for euer in all that is done vnder the sunne Their loue their solace and their chiefe delights Euen with their liues expired and at end Their hate their plots of high reuenge and spights And euery action that they did pretend Dead into graue with them each one descend Into that cabbin of eternall nights Where they no more the gladsome beames shall see Of shining sunne the comfort of the wights That in this mortall life yet lingring bee Those perturbations ryfe with humane kind Their now exchanged state no more shall find verse 7 With bread wine cheere then thy hart the pledges of gods loue verse 8 With comely'aray cloth thou thy corps thou pleasant balmes maist proue 7. Go eate thy bread with ioy and drinke thy wine with a cheereful hart for God now accepte●h thy workes Thy part of earthly things that lawfully Thou mayst inioy I therefore thee aduise Vse whilst thou mayest for death comes speedily And crosses vnsuspected oft arise As euery mans experience daily tries Vse thou thy owne with plentie'and cheerefully Hurt not but helpe thou others to thy powre And if God gaue thee meanes aboundantly Do not thy selfe the same alone deuoure But as God gaue so freely do thou giue Those almes best please we vse whilst yet we liue 8. At all times let thy garments be white and let not oyle be lacking vpon thine head Thou needst not in thy dyet be precise As some perswade and onely eat to liue Where choyse is set to chuse in thee it lies All things were made for man God all doth giue By bounty vs to thankfulnesse to driue Yea all the rich attyres thou canst deuise For different states of men ordayned were For Princes purples for to please the eyes And all the precious gems that earth doth beare Yea sweet perfumes for delicace ordaynd If thou mayst haue them need not be refraynd verse 9 Reioyce in thy chast spouses bed since God her to thee gaue verse 10 What so thou woldst atchiue dispatch no works are don in graue 9. Reioyce with thy wise whom thou hast loued all the dayes of the life of thy vanitie which God hath giuē thee vnder the sunne all the dayes of thy vanitie for this is thy portion in the life and in thy trauell wherein thou labourest vnder the sunne If that thy eyes behold a beautie rare Which doth delight thy hart and loue inflame If that in lawfull band she proue thy share And that vnto thy loue her loue she frame Thou mayst with comfort ioy thee in the same A comfort sure to mitigate the care Which worldly troubles may on thee inflict The sweetest God or nature could prepare Or out of all earths beauties could be pickt So great as none can iudge that are vnkind And on a single life do set their mind 10. All that thine hand shall find to do do it with all thy power for ther is neither work nor intention nor knowledg nor wisedom in the graue whither thou goest And at a word for all what else beside In all the world thou hast a mind vnto So that in vse thereof a measure guide Thou art no whit restraind the same to do But do it quickly least death all vndo For death diuerteth all who can abide The fury of his force if once he smight To do what thou woulst do then take thy tide For in the darkesome graue of deadly night No knowledge wisedom powre there doth remaine All is forgot all purposes are vaine verse 11 The worthy want the wise the strōg haue oft times guerdon smal verse 12 None knows his houre as birds in snare are caught so mē do fall 11. I returned and saw vnder the sunne that the race is not to the swift nor the battell to the strong nor yet bread to the wise nor also riches to men of vnderstanding neither yet fauor to mē of knowledge but time chance commeth to them all By these obseruances I sought to win The happinesse which I did in part attaine But all gaine not the goale the running bin Nor haue the spoyle that fight the field to gaine Nor to the wise doth alwayes wealth remaine Nay many needy sterne and new begin The world whose wits and industries were good Their best indeuours stand on tickle pin And consterd are as they are vnderstood By such on whom the common wealth doth stay And time and chance in each thing beares a sway 12. For neither doth mā know his time but as the fishes which are taken in an euill net and as the birds that are caught in the snare so are the children of mē snared in the euill time when it falleth vpon them suddenly
groueling is his resting place Then shall my soule with Debora imbrace In thankfull wise thy mercies I receiue And so pursue the fleshly Canaans race Till I the furie of the same bereaue And with my song thy seruants shall accord To yeeld due praise to thee the liuing Lord. SON LXXVI MY soule like silly Ioseph Lord was sold By fleshly brethren his vnkind alas To vanities the merchants which behold From far they saw to Egipt which do passe A seruant vnto Ismaels seed it was And sold from sin to death and so to hell Of humane frailtie Lord a looking glasse In which all foule affections long did dwell Yet lo alas when sin seekes most t' excell And haue my mind consent to traitrous lust With grace ô Lord that enemy repell And heare my praiers who in thee do trust Who though a space in bodies prison staies Yet Lord at length vouchsafe to heauen to raise SON XXVII SO blinde ô Lord haue my affections bin And so deceitfull hath bin Satans slight That to giue credit I did first begin To pride and lust as heauenly powers of might I offred all my sences with delight A sacrifice to feed those Idols vaine Of all the presents proffred day and night Nought vnconsumde I saw there did remaine Till that thy Prophets by thy word made plaine The falshood by the which I was deceiued How Satans kingdome made here of a gaine And wickednesse my hope and faith bereaued But now the sifted ashes of thy word Bewraies Bels Prists slaies dragon without sword SON LXXVIII A Wicked theefe that oft haue robd and slaine Thy graces of their frute my selfe of blisse Now on the crosse of conscience I remaine To die the death the which eternall is I see no way to quit my selfe of this Vnlesse thou Lord whose kingdome is aboue Remember me and cansell life amisse Out of thy memorie through Christ thy loue Who in my flesh with me like death did proue That guiltlesse he might guilties ransome bee Loue to my soule it was that did him moue The bands of death to bide to make vs free Blesse thou my tong increase thou faith in mee This night to be in paradise with thee SON LXXIX IN bondage long to Satan haue I bin A maker of the bricke of Babell towre By birth a thrall to grosse and filthie sin Whom lusts taskmasters doth attend ech houre Affection to the flesh doth cleane defloure The memorie and loue of promist lands The fiend euen Pharo seeketh to deuoure My soule and chaine me to his dreadfulll bands But Lord receiue me safe into thy hands Protect me from the rigor of his might Quench thou the force of lusts inflamed brands In my defence giue me true faith to fight Send Moyses Lord with powre of heauenly sword And Aaron to direct me by thy word SON LXXX A Moabit I was of cursed kinde Vnkinde vnto thy Church Lord and to thee Who sought by ayde of foolish Balaam blinde To captiuate the soule that should be free Incestuous frutes of that high climing tree Which doth subdue all reason and all grace A carnall kinsman by a neare degree Vnto the soule the which I haue in chase Whom I with lothsome sin sought to deface And bastardise with carnall fond affect Whose ofspring thou vnto the tenth mans race Didst once out of thy sanctuary reiect Yet now by faith made free of Iury land A suter here before thy throne do stand SON LXXXI LO how I groueling vnder burden lie Of sin of shame of feare Lord of thy sight My guilt so manifold dare not come nie Thy throne of mercy mirror of thy might With hidden and with ignorant sinnes I fight Dispairing and presumptuous faults also All fleshly frailtie on my backe doth light Originall and actuall with me go Against a streame of lusts my will would roe To gaine the shoare of grace the port of peace But flouds of foule affections ouerfloe And sinke I must I see now no release Vnlesse my Sauior deare this burden take And faith a ship of safetie for me make SON LXXXII FRom Iuda wandring Lord to Iericho From holie law of thine to carnall lust Whilst midst the prease of lewd affects I go I robbed am of rayment pure and iust And wounded lye Lord groueling in the dust Not any passer by can giue me aide In fleshly strength or friendship is no trust By highway seene to helpe me few haue staide But since my Sauior Christ on crosse hath paide A ransome rich to cure my bleeding sore By faith to craue the frutes I 'am not affraide In hope my health thereby for to restore Bind vp my wounds with balme leade me to rest Giue me such gifts of grace as like thee best SON LXXXIII THis slender Citie Lord of strength behold Wherein I dwell Bethulia my bower Of flesh whereto sin laies a battry bold And seeks with sword dearth my soules deuower Suppresse thou hellish Holofernes power Who prides himselfe in praie of children thine I haue no trust in mountaines wals nor tower For want of faithes true fountaine we shall pine Raise vp this female couragde heart of mine Strengthen my hand to reue this monsters hed Let me not tast deceiptfull follies wine Nor be polluted with worlds sinfull bed But constantly by faith fight in defence Of feeble flesh and driue thy enemies thence SON LXXXIIII NOt that my faith doth faint a whit is cause That I so instant am on thee to call O God of life but yeelding to thy lawes Before thy sight my soule these teares lets fall Which in thy bottle kept I know are all And quench the fury of thy burning ire Which sin enflamde and qualifie it shall The quarrell which hath set thy wrath on fire If feruently the childe due food desire Of father he will not giue him a stone If of the wicked iustice man require Importunely some iustice will be showne More righteous iudge and father thou to mee Art Lord indeed and far more kind wilt bee SON LXXXV THe many trials Lord that I haue found Since out of Egipt darknesse I am brought Might witnesse well how in thee still abound Powre mercy truth wherby thy workes are wrought But foule dispaire against my faith hath fought Amidst the wildernesse wherein I stay And daintier food my fond affections sought Then Manna which thou sentst me euerie day The desert Zyn doth fountaine pure denay Of grace wherewith to quench my fainting ghost Eternall death expects my soule as pray And lust assaults me with a hideous host Stretch forth hād Lord smite thou my hart of stone With rod of true repentance griefe and mone SON LXIII THou hast ô Lord of mercy me enricht With flocks of fauour and of graces great Since I in Bethell first the pillar pitcht Of praises to thy name and mercies seat Yet fleshly Esawes foule affections threat A ruine to the frute faith forth should bring With pleasing humors him for to intreat