Selected quad for the lemma: land_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
land_n israel_n lord_n pharaoh_n 1,941 5 10.2752 5 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
A16792 A solemne passion of the soules loue; Mary Magdalens love. Selections Breton, Nicholas, 1545?-1626? 1598 (1598) STC 3696; ESTC S104706 8,964 18

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

A Solemne Passion of the Soules Loue. At London Printed by Simon Stafford for William Barley and are to be solde at his shop in Gratious street 1598. A solemne Passion of the Soules Loue. A Wake my soule out of the sleepe of sinne And shake off slouth the subiect of thy shame Search out the way how best thou maiest beginne To holy worke thine humble will to frame Then proue not weary of a little paine When fleshes griefe will breede the spirits gaine Confesse thy selfe vnworthy of the sence To learne the least of the supernall will Beseech the heauens in strength of their defence To saue and keepe thee from infernall ill Then fall to worke that all the world may see The ioyfull loue betwixt thy God and thee Tell of his goodnes how he did create thee And in his iustice how he doth correct thee And in his loue how he will neuer hate thee And that his mercy neuer will reiect thee And how he helpt thee when the world distrest thee And with his graces how he sweetly blest thee Say I was sicke and he did send me health I vvas in prison and he set me free And I vvas poore and he did send me wealth And I vvas blinde and he did make me see I vvas perplext and he did heale my paine And being dead he gaue me life againe VVhen I was lame he did my limmes restore VVhen I vvas deafe he made me heare his voice VVhen I vvas vvounded he did heale my sore VVhen I vvas sad he made my soule reioice VVhen I had sind he would not yet forsake me VVhen I vvas lost he did to mercy take me To say yet more what he hath done for me I needes must say his goodnes hath no ende Who when on earth he saw no friend to me Did make me feele I had a heauenly friend A heauenly friend whose helpe doth faile me neuer But is my comfort and my king for euer This is my Lord my life and all my loue My liuing Loue and louing life indeede This is the blessing of my best behoue The sacred fruit whereon I sweetely feede This is the ioy that makes my heart to sing Honour and glory to my heauenly king Oh king more glorious than the world can know thee From whom the day euen from on high doth spring Where glorious works vnto the world doe shew thee Of glorious loue the euerliuing king The king of life in whom the soule doth proue The highest glory of the heauenly Loue. By whose high hands were all things made at first By whose deepe wisedome they are gouernd still By whom alone are blessed or accurst That loue his word or disobay his will By whose sweete breath they liue that do attend him And by whose wrath they die that doe offend him For who can bide the fury of his yre Or halfe conceiue the comfort of his loue Who plagues his foes with an infernall fire And plants his seruants in the heauens aboue Who shakes the heauens makes the mountains bow If he but once begin to knit the brow And where he loues what will he leaue to doe To make the soule acquainted with his kindnes And with what ioy will he the spirit wooe To shun the woes that grow of worldly blindnes What paine or griefe or death did he refuse To saue their liues that he did sweetely chuse Now for the greatnes of his glorious power He is almighty and all glorie his He made the yeare the month day night and hower The heauens earth sea and vvhat in them there is In him alone doth all their being stand And liue or die in his almighty hand He spake the vvord and by his vvord they vvere And all vvas good his secret vvisedome did His vvill did vvorke his fauour vvithout feare And not a thought is from his knowledge hid He knowes the hearts searcheth through the raines And sees the roots euen of the smallest vaines Hee deckt the Skye with sunne moone starres And made the seas to flowe vpon the sand Vpon whose shore his hand did set the barres They shall not passe to ouerflowe the Land Amid the ayre he hath dispearst the Clowdes And onely man within his mercy shrowdes Within the depth the fish their holes doe keepe And in the rocks the Conny makes his house Into the earth the crawling wormes doe creepe And hollowe rocks are harbour for the mouse The Lion keepes his den the bird his nest And man alone doth but in mercy rest Yet these and all are guided by his power And may not passe the passage he hath giuen them The sun his course the Moone must know her houre And clouds must wander but where winds haue driuen thē Beasts know their times fishes know their tides And man alone in onely mercie bides To tell of vvonders by his wisedome vvrought Euen from the greatest to the very least Which time declares by true experience taught In fish and foule in bird in man and beast Marke but the power that doth in each abide And hovve it vveakens in their highest pride The Lyon first is fearefull of the Bee The Elephant doth dread the little mouse Acrovving Cocke the Dragon may not see The stoutest Engle subiect to the louse The greatest Oxe a little taint vvorme killeth And many a man a little Canker spilleth Yet is the Lyon feared for his force The Elephant a huge and mighty beast The fiery Dragon kills without remorse And Eagles carry lambes vnto their nest The Oxe the taint vvorme vnder foote doth tread And man sometimes doth kill the Cankers head But vvhen that power begins to gather pride Then see the strength of the almighty hand By vvhose high helpe the vveakest thinges are tride To spoile the strength vvherein the strongest stand That they may knovv there is a power on hie In vvhom they liue and at his pleasure die To shewe examples of the heauenly might Against the pride of the inferiour power The vvord of truth doth giue a glorious light Where may be seene in minute of an houre How greatest staies that on their strength were groūded With headlong fals vvere vtterly confounded How Pharaoh first the proud Egyptian king That vvould not suffer Israel to passe What plagues and griefes did the almighty bring Vpon the house euen vvhere his lodging vvas Frogges flies and lice did freely make their vvay Euen to the chamber vvhere proud Pharaoh lay A number plagues the Lord did further threaten His Land vvas strooken vvith a darkesome feare His grasse and corne by Grashoppers vvere eaten The plague destroied his people euery vvhere And last himselfe amidst his army crowned Was in a moment in the red sea drowned Yet through these seas his hand did make the way Where all his seruants went and wet no foote Which proues his loue was his elected stay While rebell hearts were torne vp by the roote Which true example to the world may proue The glorious greatnes