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judgement_n heart_n young_a youth_n 1,501 5 9.4198 5 false
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A75822 Avaritia coram tribunali: or, the miser arraign'd at the bar of scripture and reason for his sinful neglect of charity, in this present lamentable and dreadful visitation of the plague. By a gentleman that loves men more than money. Gentleman that loves men more than money. 1666 (1666) Wing A4266; ESTC R223581 11,877 30

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call a coverous Person A narrow Soul and as one tartly expresses it fit to live nowhere but in an Ally Can a serious and deliberate Head give Commission to his Tongue to call Vespasian The Darling of Mankinde and yet forget the usual Sentence that dub'd him so Diem perdidi My unlimited Soveraignty my transcendent Glory has not distill'd upon my Subjects any reviving showers of Grace and Munificence I have lost this day The men of Nineveh sayes our ever-blessed Saviour shall rise in Judgement against this generation and condemn it And do sober Christians imagine that the High and Mighty Monarch of the discover'd World should bewayl the loss of twenty four hours for fear of displeasing burnish'd Brass and carved Wood and he not call'd to a severe account by the Ancient of Days for bringing forth nothing in it may be more then four and twenty years but drouzy Poppy instead of the staff of Bread sowr Grapes and wild Olives But admit that even according to the Psalmists Arithmetick your foot be not yet in the Grave and decripped Age is by most designed for the stall of Repentance yet you cannot convict your security by the Verdict of a wiser than Solomon Eccl. 11.9 Rejoyce O young man in thy youth and let thy Heart chear thee in the days of thy youth and walk in the ways of thy heart and in the sight of thine eyes but know thou that for all these things God will bring thee into Judgement The Angelical Doctor observes That Death is a more treacherous Enemy in surprising youth by stratagem stealing upon them unawares when their Backs are towards it than to the grey-heads whom it charges on the front and the dimmer their eyes be the better they may discern a Coffin the more cause they have to cry out O curva senectus O shrinking shoulders O feeble knees the more is the Grave obvious and consequently might be rendered more familiar May a spring of warm blood full of spirits by three or four fits of an Ague be sadly metamorphos'd into shivering December a pale Cheek a dull Eye a soft pace a restless Bed Can a Feaver even without the help of an universally-destroying putrefaction of humours shake off golden Locks those beautiful leaves of the Arbor Inversa scorch up the radical moysture banish the poor Creature into the land of forgetfulness and make an humble Turf the dishonourable Coverlet of an Airy Gallant of a rare-accomplish'd Monsieur And can Summer Autumn Winter expect fairer usage Can they that have enjoy'd a large Estate many inches of the longest span of Life conceive it not yet high time to make friends of unrighteous Mammon We need not desire a Legat Kekerman to repair to his beloved Dichotomie about division of Estates they may logically enough to our purpose be said to come by divine Providence but nevertheless it will not be amiss to keep the road and take for our fellow-travellers Descent and Purchase He that has digg'd himself thirty or forty years together in the golden Peru of Profit should do very well to consider whether his hands be not dirty whether the Widdow and the Orphan this weak Brain and that credulous Tenant Clyent Customer have no just cause to complain of his gripes though perchance nor well vers'd how to remedy themselves If so how fence you this blow of the Casuists Without Restitution no Salvation Delay not unless thou art content to endure the gnawings of the Worm of Conscience at thy dissolution when Horror and Amazement cry out Hast thou found me O mine Enemy Nor could that suffice the converted Publican Zacheus he restor'd four-fold to heal the wound of Extortion and gave half that he had to the poor to prevent a scarre If the pamper'd flesh turns a deaf ear and the deceitful World searches Hell for distinctions carry them both to Tho. à Kempis Cell Durum est verbum saith he tolle crucem sequere me sed multo durius Ite maledicti in ignem sempiternum 'T is an hard Chapter Take up your cross and follow me but 't is a far more intolerable Go ye cursed into everlasting fire Are you beholden to a rich Ancestor for those Rivolets of Milk and Honey that bedew your condition then God has given you Press-money in hand and a superabundant gratitude engages to manage your Stewardship with fidelity and to imploy your Talents with an industrious Zeal Rising early going to Bed late in conjunction with the Bread of carefulness are strangers to your Birthright Would you stand idle in the Market all day long and that after you have received your penny God gave you not Honour and Wealth to furnish a magazine for rebellious vices blacker in the eyes of Heaven then any Ink can render their names Deceitful disorderly and excessive Gaming put the present Parliament in the sixteenth of our most gracious Sovereign to the trouble of an Act to restrain it from which it is evident that one hundred pound was before look'd upon as nothing to lose and run upon the Tick at a time Discinctis nepotibus with my extravagant young Masters one time might be one minute but should one of those A-la-mode Quakers or Shakers give so much in seven years to the relief of the poor and afflicted he would not to be sure change Soul take thine ease but instead of Thou hast goods laid up for many years for that were a Sarcasm of his own inventing would laugh in his sleeve and hug the phansie that he had done good deeds enough for many years yes even for Methuselah's 969. But all Estates are Dominica Coronae Reg is Coelestis belong to the King of Kings His is directum Dominium an absolute and uncontroulable Regality the Posterity of Adam have onely Utile Dominium so that we may truly say not onely Lord thou hast made us and not we our selves but Lord our Inheritances are thine and not our own The Earth is the Lords and all the fulness thereof this Lump of Clay he has made a Vessel of Honour that of Dishonour some fit objects of Charity and others his Almoners Aska fellow as absuedly prodigal as a certain rich Citizens Heir whom some alive remember a petty Prince in the morning of his Age and a despicable Beggar before noon who for fear of a surfeit of Wealth made Ducks Drakes in the Childrens Babble with Six-pences Shillings and Half-crowns in the Thames or a fellow as ridiculously covetous as he in the Comedy that stop'd the top of his Chimney for fear of losing the smoak few of either Herd will deny that Solomon said true The lot is cast into the lap but the whole disposing thereof is of the Lord or that of Job The Lord gives and the Lord takes away but depraved Nature musters up Quirks to avoid the Statute de Donis conditionalibus in the Bible and will by no means allow that voluntas omnipotentis Donatoris secundum formam in charta