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A08252 Londons doue: or A memoriall of the life and death of Maister Robert Doue, citizen and marchant-taylor of London and of his seuerall almesdeeds and large bountie to the poore, in his life time. He departed this life, on Saterday the 2. day of this instant moneth of May, 1612. Nixon, Anthony. 1612 (1612) STC 18588; ESTC S121754 15,077 34

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being but once past cannot be call'd againe for all thou hast Of his charitie to the citie of Bristow and a relation of some other his seuerall bounties BEsides many other places that can yéeld a plentifull testimonie for him in his behalfe and make a condigne Relation of his good workes we may not here forget the religious care and prouident order which he tooke in his life time for the reliefe and succour of the poore people of Bristowe Who hearing that the same citie was fallen into some decay and pouertie out of a féeling remorse and charitable inclination he had to yeeld helpe to their deiections fréely bestowed vpon the same citie the summe of one hundreth pounds As his bountie was great towards this Citie so were his hands euery where reached out to the necessities of all sortes Yea such was his charitie that if he had seene poore men addicted to labour he would set them on worke and cause them to be imployed to their better furtherance and encouragement If he heard that any of his poore neighbours were decrepit or destitute of meanes to follow their professions he would supply their needes in one condition or other and not faile by his money to make way for their good intentions Wherein he dealt no worse with them then a Reuerend father dealt with a poore kinsman of his who being solicited to aduance him And he thereuppon inquiring what course of life he followed and receiuing answere that he was an Husbandman Why then quoth he if his plough be broken I will repaire it or rather then faile bestow a new one vpon him whereby he may goe on in his course of life But so to aduance him as to make him idle or to forsake his trade or condition in which he was brought vp that I meane not to doe He was milde and gentle to all and his purse euer open to such as were petitioners vnto him for his reliefe so as he might iustly be compared to Titus Qui neminem vnquàm à se tristem dimisit Such as were sutors vnto him for succour did not at any time depart from him without contentment he dismissed no man sorrowfull for lacke of successe nor sent any man from his presence full of griefe or sadnes for want of his helping hand to giue ease and enlargement to their heauines As he was deuoutly carefull to relieue both aged and impotent old men so was he alwaies religiously mindefull as is aforesaid of the wel tuturing and good education of poore and indigent schollers following the example of a godly Patron who estéemed Hospitale adsubleuandam pauper tatem Scholam ad instruendam inuentutem esse optima opera quae aliquis potuit efficere That an Hospitall to sustaine the poore and a Schoole to traine vp youth were the worthiest works that a man could leaue behinde him Insomuch as led by these motiues hée left to the benefite of Posteritie an euerlasting memorie of his Saint-like minde in these behalfes Allowing sixtéene pounds a yeere for euer to Christs-Hospitall in London to be imployed towards the vse and maintenance of a Schoolemaister to traine vp and instruct tenne young Schollers in the knowledge and learning of Musicke and Pricksong Eightéene pounds a yéere to be continued for euer for the Examination Approbation of certaine Schollers yeerely out of the Frée-schoole of the Companie of Marchant taylors in London Twenty pounds a yéere for euer To the Prisons of Ludgate Newgate the two Counters And certaine Fées and Allowances to the Officers of Marchant-tailors-Hall to remaine to perpetuitie to sée these things duely obserued according to the purpose of his charitable and religious intention All which he performed with such Alacritie that it may bee saide of him Merces eius copiosae est in Coelis His reward is very great in the Kingdome of Heauen In the sight of God hee enioyeth the fulnes of all Felicitie which neither eye hath séene nor eare heard nor mans heart atchieued For Resurrectio immortalitatis pullulat foecundius cùm in pauperum auxilio seritur The Resurrection of immortalitie springs more fertillie when it is sowne in helpe of the distressed and needie And he liuing and dying no doubt a chosen and beloued seruant of God and one who as it may be truely said of him had deuoutly consecrated both his whole life to God and his carefull endeuours to the reliefe of the poore After hee had performed his Oblations of Prayer and Thanks-giuing to God as Abraham of whome he was a true Sonne yéelded vp the Spirit and died in a good Age an olde man and of great yéeres Committing his bodie which was but lately the mansion of a most excellent Soule vnto his graue where it rests in assured expectation of a glorious resurrection The manner of his Departure out of this World and his desire to bee with God IN all his sicknes which was not long by reason of the weaknes and disabilitie of his bodie being fourescore and fiftéene yeeres olde hee neuer shewed signe of discontentment or impatience neither was there one word heard come forth of his mouth sounding either of dispaire or infideliitie of mistrust or distrust or of any doubting or wauering in the Faith of Christ but alwayes remained faithfull and resolute in his God and so desirous was he to be with the Lord that these golden Sentences were neuer out of his mouth I desire to be dissolued and to bee with Christ And oh miserable wretch that I am who shall deliuer me from this bodie subiect to sinne Come quickly Lord Iesus Come quickly Like as the Hart desireth the Water-springs So doth my Soule thirst after thee Oh God I had rather bee a Doore-keeper in the House of my GOD then to dwell in the Tentes of the wicked With manie other Heauenly spéeches which least I should séeme tedious I will omit Hee would alwayes pray absolutely that God would take him out of this miserable Worlde And whē his Kinred or Friends would séeme to pray for his health if it were the will of God He would answere I beseech you pray not that I should liue For I thinke it long to bee with my God CHRIST is to me Life Death is to me aduantage Yea the day of death is the birth day of euerlasting life and I cannot enter into Life but by Death Therefore Death is the dore or Entrance into Euerlasting life to mee I know and am certainly perswaded by the Spirit of God that the Sentence is giuen alreadie by the great Iudge in the High Court of Parliament of Heauen that I shall now depart out of this life and therefore pray n●t for mee that I may liue here but pray to God to giue me strength and Patience to perseuere to the end and to close mine eyes in a Iustifying Faith in the Blood of my CHRIST With that he saide I thanke my GOD through IESVS CHRIST Hee is come Hee is come my good Iaylour is come to let my soule out of prison Oh sweete Death thou art welcome welcome sweete death Neuer was there any Guest so welcome to mee as thou art Welcome the messenger of euerlasting life Welcome the dore and entrance into euerlasting glorie Welcome I say and thrice welcome My good Iaylour doe thine office quickly and set my soule at libertie Strike sweete Death strike my heart I feare not thy stroke Now it is done Father into thy blessed hands I commend my Spirite Into thy blessed handes I commend my Soule and my bodie At which wordes his breath stayed and so neither moouing hand nor foote he slept swéetly in the Lorde The second day of May. Anno. 1612. Thus haue you heard the vertuous life and Christian death of M. Doue whose many deedes of Charitie are more acceptable to God and more memorable to men in that they were done in his life time God stirre vp the hearts of Rich and Able men to follow his steppes and giue them grace to imitate his good example That they may come to those vnspeakable Ioyes wherein hee now resteth through Christ our Lorde FINIS 〈◊〉 3. 〈…〉 〈…〉 〈◊〉 men Acts. 10. Phil. 4.18 Gen. 48. Reu. 19.16 Psal. 22.6 Iob. 25.6 Chap. 31. 20
LONDONS DOVE OR A Memoriall of the life and death of Maister Robert Doue Citizen and Marchant-Taylor of LONDON and of his seuerall Almesdeeds and large bountie to the poore in his life time He departed this life on Saterday the 2. day of this instant Moneth of Mar 1612. LONDON Printed by Thomas Creede for Ioseph Hunt and are to be solde at his house in Bedlam neere Moore-field Gate 1612. TO THE RIGHT WORSHIPFVLL SIR IOHN SWINNERTON KNIGHT ONE of the Aldermen of the honorable Citie of London HAuing drawne certaine particular remembrances of the bountie and charitable Almes-deedes of Maister Robert Doue lately deceased done all for the most part in his life time And they being digested into a volume although little for quantitie yet not vnworthy to be committed to memorie I thought they could not be better bestowed then vpon such as held commerce with that company or were Heads of that body whereof he continued a long time a worthy member Amongst which I haue selected you from a number of others and am bold to present this little labour vnto you as a brother of that Societie and one that can well iudge both of the Relation and the truth thereof The chiefe and farthest point that my intention seekes to arriue at in this is but to leaue to Posteritie a deserued Testimonie and commemoration of his s●●erall liberalities to the intent that the hand of M●rcy which Heauen in him hath stretcht forth ouer distressed people being duly considered Others to whom God hath plentifully giuen his blessings may be stirred vp to trace him in the like steppes of true Cha●i●ie and be encouraged to looke into their owne Sou●es betimes and to imitate him in the works of pietie It is my Loue that makes tender of this vnto you which I pray receiue with such good acceptation As with my best affection it comes and is bestowed vpon you Thus humbly referring my selfe to your censure I rest Deuoted vnto your worship Anthe Nyxon LONDONS DOVE OR THE MIRROVR OF MARCHANT-TAYLORS CAlling to minde the finall end of mans Creation which is to glorifie GOD and to edifie one an other in the wayes of true Pietie I thought it a dutie as well in respect of the one as in regard of the other to publish this care wonderfull exāple of the vertuous life Christian death of M. Robert Doue Citizen Marchant-Taylor of London who whilst he liued was a Mirrour of Charitie and now being dead is a true patterne of perfect Christianitie But how I may be bolde to lay colours of commendation though neuer so fresh true and liuely on the picture of his Bountie drawen foorth by the cunning hand of his worthie déedes or at least the déedes of his hand vpon the seuerall Tables of needie persons I am in doubt since by these colours of mine his glorious Picture may be much obscured that of it selfe is so faire and beautifull as the hearts of all admiring it Their Pennes in priuate and Tongues in publique are busied to write in short and speake at large of the worthines of the same Notwithstanding It being such that extracteth from the Tongues of euery one this Confession Huic similem non vidi I haue not seene anie like to this man And more also Nulla fere●t similem Secla futura tibi The Age to come it's like to bee Will neuer bring the like to thee And such being the condition of euery good worke of bountie as Almes-déedes or such like that it leaues a perpetuall Impression behinde that Posteritie may see in succeeding times the venerable foot-steps of such as haue trode the pathes of precedencie in true Loue and Charitie Let vs now behold what liuely Prints this happy man made euen in his life time by the sundry stamps of his manifold bounties That the times present future Ages may both imitate and admire the same This Phrase of Scripture may be duely attributed vnto him Manie haue done vertuously and bountifully but thou surmountest them all What Trée may more iustly make compare with the T●ee of this mans blessed life then that which like an Heauenly plant growing vp in an earthly soyle beareth twelue manner of Fruites euen t●elue-times monethly in the yéere The very Leaues being for Medicine as the Fruit is for meat For hee in good works was so fruitful● that hee spread-foorth his braunches with their fruits after seuerall manners vnto thirtéene sortes of persons Feeding them twelue times also monthly in the yeere that is All the yéere long with meat medicine As w c such Fruite L●aues as his Tree affoorded Preseruing the sound in health ridding the diseased of infirmities and so continuing both in life By which they cease not with chéerefulnes to lifte vp this voyce to Heauen Oh how happie Creatures are wee that euer hee was borne And thrice blessed hee that euer hee so liued to helpe in number more distressed members of the Mysticall bodie of CHRIST then were the members of his owne naturall bodie To speake of his godly life it was such as gained the rare commendation of all that knew him aswell for his wisedome As for his honestie gentlenes and affabilitie And aboue all for his feruent zeale which he bare vnto Gods word For his whole heart was bent to séeke the Lord His legges were alwaies willing and readie so long as they had abilitie to performe their dutie to carrie his aged bodie to frequent Sermons and heare diuine seruice His whole delight was to be conuersant in the Scriptures and to meditate vpon them day and night Insomuch as while his sight serued he was seldome or neuer found without a bible or some other good booke in his hands And when that failed him he would spend his Time in conferring talking and reasoning of the word of God and of Religion and especially of places and points that did most concerne his latter end and mortalitie Asking what is the Sense of this place what of that How may this place be expounded How that What obserue you of this point and what of that So that he séemed to be as it were rauished with the same Spirit that Dauid was when he said The Zeale of thine house hath eaten me vp Oh happie Doue whose soule is a sacrifice to God and in whose flames so many poore mens prayers are flowne vp to heauen Blessed maist thou be as by beholding thy selfe to be so graced of thy God as by seeing thy sinnes to cleaue vnto the pauement through humilitie and by bestowing thine Almes to reach vnto the firmament through thy liberalitie and bountie hearing the words of that message once brought to Cornelius his eare sounding a fresh in thine heart Thine Almes haue ●scen●ed before the face of God Ascending vp to be rewarded and yet abiding below to be renowned Ascending vp That God may shew his faithfulnes in performing no lesse ●hē he hath promised in rewarding more tenne
the heart of this his déere Seruant to regard them with compassionate affection and to stretch out his merciful hands to succour their bodies beaten with sorrow God blessed them by his earthly giftes whome he had blessed by his heauenly Graces By his handes hath the Lord wip't away their teares and breathed newe life into their hearts laden with griefes The loue of Ionathan neuer more appeared to his deare friend Dauid then his loue hath bene manifested to CHRISTS poore members wherefore it may be saide of him that the candle of his Faith was not hid vnder a Bushell but hath burned most bright to the good example of others Hée like a true Steward hath performed his dutie Hee hath nourished Children Hee hath lodged the Harbourlesse Hee hath giuen comfort to the succourlesse Hee hath ministred to them that were in aduersitie and continually giuen to euery good worke It resteth now that these released persons doe yéelde continuall praise to GOD for so gratious a Benefactor daily pray that the number may be increased that the poore may be respected of those that are honored in the Gates and the crie of the needie may cease in the stréetes And to the ende that this charitable déede may not be thought vnworthilie bestowed vpon them who are now relieued that before were distressed It is expedient they should so behaue thēselues in their actiōs as God thereby may be glorified others by their exāple brought frō vice to vertue Their mindes that before were clogged w t care wanting y e which was necessary by which they were made vnapt either in outward action or inward thought to serue their God is now freed from that heauy burden by the works of this reuerend citizen So as they haue now no let but as the P●almist saith To set their delight in the Law of the Lord to exercise themselues therein all the dayes of their life Besides his yéerely Pension allowed to these thréescore Widowes which is vi s. viii d. per annum foreuer besides other allowances He hath also left order towards the cōtinuall maintenāce which was begun in his life time of poore widowes in Merchātailors Almeshouses on Tower hill And to sixe poore men euery third yeere cloaks a piece to each of them xxvi s. viii d. a yeere to be continued for euer And as anie of these Almes-men shall die their places g●ow voyde then these Cloake-men by Election to stand and possesse the former p●ace and beneuolence in reuertion In regarde whereof they may with the Prophet crie out and say Oh what shall wee giue vnto GOD for all his ben●fites and the Blessings hee hath bestowed on the Sonnes of men If wee would knowe howe to please him and bee readie to followe his will and Commaundement though wee be not able to performe what we would yet doing what we can our vnperfectnes shal be mad perfect through CHRIST and estéemed as righteous in the merites of his Passion Neither doth the Lord ●●quire more then a thankfull heart as the Scripture test●fieth Hee that offereth praise shall glorifie mee and to him that disposeth his wayes aright will I shew the Saluation of GOD. Of his Charitie to Bedlam and Bride-well The Hospitall of S. Bartholmews and Saint Thomas Hospitall in Southwarke NOw turne your eyes vpon wounded and vlcerous Laz●rs that lye vnder the handes of Chyrurgicall Physitians made miserable by their owne grieuous and Eye-wounding sores and made happie againe through present hope and after happe to be perfectly Cured by the prouidēt meanes of this godly Benefactor and you shall sée their woundes and Ulcers to stand wide open before you Oh looke in at them you shal beho●de Miserie her selfe to haue taken possession of their earthly bodies being Houses of Clay as Iob calleth them for to dwell therein And when you are gone come againe within a while beholde their woundes closed and sores skinned and séeing nothing but bare scarres Prints in their places pronounce that Mercie hath beene there and displacing Miserie nothing to be seene but her foote-steps hath set ioy health and comfort as ioynt Tenants in possession assigning them to pay for their Rent Laude and praises vnto the HIGHEST It being his goodnes that sent his seruants Charitie to doe all the good is done vnto them And séeing it is God which hath striken them as Iob felles them bringing on them vulnera per alium wounds by something from without or making to rise vp in them vulnera perse Sores frō something within It is for them to know and acknowledge that Ipse medetur qui vulnerauit c. He which woundeth them by one meanes healeth them by an other And he which hath striken them by his instruments of equitie salueth them by his hands of Mercie Striking them that their hearts may see into their sinne and acknowledge his iustice heartily crying Iustus es Domine iustum iudicium iuum Righteous art thou Oh Lord and iust is thy Iudgement And healing them againe that they may behold his mercifull goodnes sweetly singing Gratia dei est misericordia Domini est This is the fauour of God This is the mercy of the Lord that is euen that they perish not Vpon swéet experience of which great Mercy Dutie laies vpon them that are thus relieued if shamefully they shake it not off this humble confession of Iacob I am not worthy of the least of all thy mercies And this great mercy which they finde comming vnto them from God they may cōceiue that through this godly Benefactor as through a Conduit pipe It is deriued vnto them from their good God the fountaine of mercy yea rather brought vnto them in him as in a vessell of mercy That so God shewing them mercy by him and they returning him honour and praise from him He may aswell from them to God-ward be vas honoris A vessell of honour as he from God to them vas misericordiae A vessell of mercy Who as he was alwaies a charitable relieuer of diseased or maimed persons So did he but at Easter last not thrée wéekes before his happie departure out of this miserable world sent to each of the places a●oresaid Thirtie and odde pounds a peece to be imployed to the ease and comfort of such as were there detained That Prysoners haue beene relieued and released out of the prisons of Newgate The Counters and Ludgate by the riches of his gift HEre may you behold the further care of this vertuous man in his continued déedes of charitie in his life time and a little before his death extended to the comfort of distressed prisoners who if euer men had cause to magnifie the Maiestie of God for his gifts bestowed by the hands of his seruants Then may not they be bashfull to speake or bury in silence the bountifull fauour of so good a Benefactor who through his charitie hath not onely relieued them being in prison but hath also loosed