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A58778 The poems of Ben. Johnson, Junior being a miscelanie of seriousness, wit, mirth, and mysterie in [brace] Vulpone, The dream, Iter bevoriale, Songs, &c. / composed by W.S., Gent. W. S.; Johnson, Ben, Junior. 1672 (1672) Wing S203; ESTC R37195 39,315 120

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Pharaoh's kindnesse Kedars Tent From daubing with untempered clay From stoning of the innocent Good Lord deliver me From unbelief fond cares and fears From a long Bill of a Taylor From the Hiena's murthering tears From the deep dungeon of a Jaylor Good Lord c. From close dissemblers with two faces From a false lying double tongue From Catch-poles and their kind imbraces From lingring Law-suits nine lives long Good Lord c. From all stubborn disobedience From Wolves that would devour the flock From Peters foolish confidence But give me Peters watchful Cock Good Lord I pray thee From the inventions of mans brain From the foul curse of being rich From Gog and Magogs cursed train And from the Apple that did Eve bewitch Good Lord deliver me From Sina's thunder Babels Tower From those that fly with borrowed wing From Caterpillers that devour The noble Lilly that doth spring Good Lord c. From Herod and the man of sin From Jonah's Whale and perishing Gourd From the fierce angry Cherubin And from the fiery flaming sword Good Lord c. From north-east winds when they do blow From winter journeys without coyn From travelling to Jericho Where Thieves my jewel did purloin Good Lord c. Let me escape thy raging ire Thy Thunder-bolts O do not dart And from thine angry flaming fire O hide me in thy tender heart In thy dear heart I shall be free Inthron'd in perfect libertie Good Lord hear me Drain up those weeping springs of tears Thy Hurricano's let them cease Thy frowns awaken horrid fears But in thy smiles are joy and peace Good Lord hear me Give me a constant faithful mind To meet thy mercy at the last That I may full forgiveness find Let me forgive all that is past Good Lord hear me A Soveraign Receipt for the Eyes and Hearing c. LOok not asquint or neighbours failing mind The faults thine own which thou in him dost find To all his errors lend thy deaf'ned ear Speak well of him and then thou well shalt hear Probatum est Dysticks BLess me from Guns they kill the lame the blind The Ordinance of love saves all Mankind Seek not to man a meer created thing For what thou want'st go boldly to the King The Soul with life continually is fed When Love and Charity lie in one bed The water of eternal life we gather When we receive the meek love of the Father My dark drie Soul was Aarons withered rod By Jesus springeth ' it 'h Paradise of God God breathed life into this little span Himself the Breather breathed into man Carry my thirsty Soul O holy Dove Into my Fathers flaming heart of love Christ and the Father's one and we in him Crowned with joy in all his glory swim They needs must live a sweet and pleasant life Where Love 's the Husband Charity the Wife FINIS A New-found Medicine for maladies not hazardous desperate or violent but safe and sure pleasant pallatable and comfortable not putting nature to any stress but greatly strenthening relieving and enabling her to encounter with her malignant enemies c. Found out this instant 1671 By the great care and study of ABC H. Item There may be had pleasant cordialities for the prevention of Diseases procuration of cheerfulness improvement of Diet and supply of Spirits From Mr. Waddis his House in Barns September 24. 1671. Enquire at Mr. Horners at the Kings head in Whites Alley in Chancerie lane for Capt. Sambach betimes any morning and from eleven till one and you may have farther Information and directions c. Books sold by Thomas Passenger at the Three Bibles on London-Bridge A Mirror or Looking-glass for Saints and Sinners shewing the justice of God on the one and his mercy towards the other Set forth in some thousand of examples by Sam. Clark late Minister of Bennet-Finck London in 2 Volumns in folio Royal and Practical Chymistry by Oswaldus Crollius and John Hartman faithfully rendred into English folio price 10 s. Gods revenge against murther by John Reynolds containing thirty Tragical stories digested into six Books newly reprinted folio price 10 s. Lord Bacons Natural history folio price 8 s. Sandy's Travels containing a description of the Turkish Empire of Egypt and the Holy Land of the remote parts of Italy and Islands adjoyning folio price 8 s. Markham's Master-piece Roman Antiquitiess by Tho. Godwin quarto price 2 s. 6 d. The famous History of the destruction of Troy in three books quarto price 3 s. Valentine and Orson price 18 d. Etimologicum parvum by Francis Gregory octavo prite 3 s. Chymical essays by John Begumis price 1 s. 8 d. Spiritual Antidotes against sinful contagion by Tho. Doolittle price 18 d. Pools Dialogue betwixt a Papist and a Protestant twelves price bound 1 s. Monasticon Favershamiense or a description of the Abby of Faversham octavo price bound 18 d. The Christians Crown of glory or Holiness the way to happiness octavo price bound 18 d. The path way to health price bound 18 d. The complete Academy or Nursery of complements bound 1 s. The book of knowledge in three parts price 10 d. The book of Palmistry in octavo price bound 18 d. The Wise Virgin being a narrative of Gods dealing with Martha Hatfield price bound 18 d. The Pilgrim's port or the weary man's rest in the grave in twelves price bound 1 s. The famous History of the five wise Philosophers containing the Life of Jehosaphat Son of Avenerio Emperor of Carma and his wonderful conversion to the Christian faith The great Assize by Sam. Smith The delectable History of Amadis de Gaul The pleasant History of Paladine of England The Bear-baiting of Women The History of Frier Bacon and Fryer Bungy New conceited Letters The Jovial Garland containing all the newest songs that are now used The penitent Prodigal or a gratious Reproof for pharisaical Saints by J. H. The Christians best exercise in the worst of times by J. H. Scarborough Spaw being a description of the nature and virtues of the Spaw of Scarborough in Yorkshire by Doctor Wittie The French School-master Farnabies Epigrams Newtons Art of Logick Newtons Art of Rhetorick The famous History of Don Bellianis of Greece in three parts being now complete The famous History of Montelion Knight of the Oracle
Zone burns up the fruitful grass The frigid turns it all to icy glass There love and anger both together dwell A countrey seated between heaven and hell With you love friezes and grows wondrous cold Our constant amities are never old That friendship which some thousand years hath run Is now as fresh as when it first begun Things alwayes present nothing past and gone One heart one mind we number all by one Arithmetick with us allows not two To sing and love is all we have to doe In every soul love throws his flaming darts The flame 's so great no frost can frieze our hearts Incompast with the glories of the Dove Whose gentle breath doth melt us into love Nothing so kind as he who is our brother Nothing so dear as we to one another Love without wrath whose garment hath no spot Tyes all our hearts in one eternal knot No striving to be high or to be best For he 's the greatest Prince that is the least He stands upon the mount and is most tall Who is the humblest and the low'st of all Titles of honour bubbles in the air Why should they soar who noble princes are Ambitious Nimrods who to heaven wo'd climbe The tower of honour long before their time All aim at greatness all men wo'd be Kings They take their flight with raw unplumed wings Those that in sweet humility lye low Are lifted up whether they will or no. To purchase Dukedoms we take no delight The meanest Subject in this land 's a Knight The name of Earl what honour doth it bring To him that is enthron'd a crowned King We wear the crown which you now strive to win Look not on things below but turn thou in With all the strength of faith and thou shalt see The Star that guided us will tutor thee He 'l lay thy soul in such a slumbring trance Thou wilt admire thy former ignorance When he shall freely to thy Soul impart The open cabinet of his rich heart ●n the clear beams of loves eternal light The Prophets and Apostles they did write Their book stood open where was drawn in pages The History of all succeeding ages Things present past to come as they did pass Were represented in a perfect glass And if their book of life were once unsealed All things to all man-kind would be revealed My time is spent appointed by the powers The Angels call me to their cristal bowers Since thou must dwell among the Sons of men In this vain world a forlorn Citizen ●ollow my Councel and all Idols quit The rock Self-love where millions have been split T is self that seeks to mount into the Saddle That he may murder Jesus in the cradle ●t swept like a dire plague where e're it ran And hath infected all this world call'd man ●n an insulting domineering high rant Stalks in the steps of the Sicilian Tyrant This word call'd Love which makes the world run mad Hath now more faces than e're Janus had Many false loves there are for in the tryal The Touchstone proves there is but one that 's loyal The Puritan will sing an amorous Sonnet To sensual love the Zelot vails his Bonnet All light their Torches at Don Cupid's lamp This bastard love hath not the royal stamp For some fair face madmen and fools will dye Because it is delightful to the eye For gold men sail o're Seas of flaming fire Because it gives them all they can desire Flowers whose pleasing odors do excell We love not for themselves but for their smell Whatsoe're pleaseth all men strive to win it And at the bottome self is still within it This coin it will not pass 't is counterfeit Self love is grown to be a general cheat 'T is chaff that 's blown away with every fan All creatures have this love as much as man Unfixed meteors like the wandring light Which doth deceive the Passenger by night Friendship 's dissolv'd and love grows wondrous lean When greater interests do intervene Love from the fountain which is rarely found Loves ' cause it loves and hath none other ground Canst thou love loveliness when clouds do shade it Not for thy interest but his that made it Canst thou with love and pity then bemoan it Because it hath his superscription on it Canst thou draw Fountain-water from a puddle And swim in joy in the height and top of trouble Canst thou make crosses thy delight and pleasure And from the depths of hell drag heaps of treasure A Virgin undefiled in the mire Eat Thunderbolts and swallow flaming fire Canst thou with Jonathan a David take When Scepter Crown and Kingdom lye at stake Canst thou imbrace what all men discommend Call naked poverty thy bosome friend What mortals fear canst thou shake hands with death When he doth come to blow away thy breath Couldst thou a sacrificed Victim be For him that lyes in wait to murder thee Canst thou write self i' th' number of the Martyrs And lay poor Lazarus where thy Strumpet quarters Thy dear and onely Isaac canst thou leave him In his fair hands from whom thou didst receive him Hast thou this love though it be ne're so little Then thou hast something that deserves the title The mysteries this good man did unfold I wish'd they had been written all in gold Transported with high wonder and delight Ending his speech he vanisht out of sight To Pharaoh's plenteous land I next did row Which famous fruitful Nile did overflow The land was good but for a cursed law That I my self must gather all my straw To make my tale of bricks if I grew dull My shoulders paid the reckoning to the full And what was worse my mind doth yet abhor it My work being done I had no wages for it Some that did sing and caroll all the day Carouse and tipple they had all the pay These spent their time in merriment and laughing Rewarded richly with a crown for quaffing We feed and intercommon with the swine They at their great Lords table daily dine To swallow bran and husks we are not nice They banquet on the fruit of Paradice Imprison'd like a blackbird in a Cage Poor puddle-water is our beverage Rich Nectar cannot their quick pallate scape Nor the heart-blood of the most noble grape With golden ornaments and silk arraid On beds of down with diamonds o'relaid They rest and feast in jollity and mirth Our bones in rags on the despised earth What e're they do is paid with smiles and graces Our crimes are all unboweld to our faces For which beside the sorrow and the cost Our backs are feasted at some Whipping-post These have no other leader but the Dove Their meat their drink their rich attire is love They Kings and Princes are no cruel law Conscience to fright or keep their minds in awe They dance they sing they frollick sport and play For all the year is but one holyday The father does the work the children play And