Selected quad for the lemma: world_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
world_n day_n rest_v sabbath_n 2,549 5 9.7550 5 false
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
A49980 The temple of vvisdom for the little world in two parts. The first philosophically divine, treating of the being of all beeings, and whence everything hath its origins as heaven, hell, angels, men and devils, earth, stars and elements. And particularly of all mysteries concerning the soul, and of Adam before and after the fall. Also, a treatise of the four complexions, and the causes of spiritual sadness, &c. To which is added, a postscript to all students in arts and sciences. Second part, morally divine, containing abuses stript and whipt, by Geo. Wither, with his description of fair virtue. Secondly. A collection of divine poems from ... Essayes and religious meditations of Sir Francis Bacon, Knight. Collected, published and intended for a general good. By D.L. Leeds, Daniel, 1652-1720.; Wither, George, 1588-1667. Abuses stript, and whipt.; Bacon, Francis, 1561-1626. 1688 (1688) Wing L915; ESTC R224149 138,032 220

There are 8 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

and Jupiter as also Mars by reason of their great Orb cir●…umference cannot do it because they stand so high above and far distant from the Sun. The other Planets are peculiar Bodies of their own which have a Corporeal Propriety of themselves and are not bound to any fixed place but only to their Circles Orb or Sphere wherein they run their Course but the Sun is not such a Body but is only a place or Locality kindled by the Light of God. Understand the place where the Sun is is such a place as you may chuse or suppose any where above the Earth And if God should kindle the Light by the Heat then the whole World would be such a meer Sun for the same Power where the Sun standeth is every where all over and before the time of Wrath it was every where all over the place of this World as light as the Sun is now bu●… not so intolerable For that Heat was not so great as in the Sun and therefore the Light also was very meek So that man should not dare to say that the Sun is an open Gate of the L●…ght of God but is as the light in a man's Eye whereas also the place of the Eye belongs to the Body but the Light is distinct from the Body The Stars are 〈◊〉 Powers of the seven Spirits of God for when the 〈◊〉 of God was kindled by the Devil in this world then the ●…ole House of this world in Nature or the outermost Birth or Geniture was as it were benumed or chilled in Death from whence the Earth and Stones came to be The Stars are arisen or proceeded out of the kindled House of God's wrath for the whole House is ●…enumed in Death as the Earth is whence the Stars also subsist in Wrath and Love. Before the times of the created Heavens ●…he Stars and Elements and 〈◊〉 the creation of Angels there was no such Wra●…h of God no Death no Devil no Earth nor Stones neither any Stars but the Dei●…y generated it self very meekly and lovingly and formed ●…gured and framed it self in Ideas Shapes and Images which were incorporated 〈◊〉 to the qualifying or fountain Spirits in the generating Of the Earth c. THe Earth is come from the corrupt Saliter of the outermost Birth or Geniture For on the first Day God drove together or compacted the corrupt Saliter which came to be so in the kindling of ●…he Wrath. In this driving 〈◊〉 or compaction of the corrupt wrath S●…liter was King Luc●…r also as an impotent Prin●…e together with ●…is A●…ls driven into the hole of the WrathSaliter into that place where the outward half dead Comprehensibility is generated which is the place or space in upon above the Earth up to the nature Goddess the Moon So far reacheth their extent now ●…ill the last Day and then they will get a House in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 where the Earth now is and 〈◊〉 that is in the 〈◊〉 Birth in the Darkness and this will be called the ●…urning H●…ll For Nature w●… very 〈◊〉 and thin or transparent and all stood meerly in Power and was in a very pleasant ho●… temper But as soon as 〈◊〉 Fight began in Nature with 〈◊〉 proud Devil Nature got a two-fold Source and the outer most Birth or Geniture in Nature was kindled in the wra●… Fire which is called the Wrath of God or the Burning Hel●… But Now when this was done the Deep became clear an●… with the hidd●…n or concealed Heaven th●… Light was seperate from the Darkness and the Globe of the Earth in the grea●… Wheel of Nature was roled or turned once about and th●… p●…ssed the time of one Revolution or of one Day In the duration of the second Day began the sharp 〈◊〉 tion and the incomprehensible 〈◊〉 between the Wra●…h an●… the Love or Light was made And so King Lucifer sirmly strongly or fast bolted up into the House of Darkness and wa●… reserved to the final Judgment And so also the Water of Life was separated from the Water of Death yet in that manner as that they hang to gether in this time of the World as Body and Soul and 〈◊〉 neither of them comprehend the other the Firmament is th●…●…liff or gulf between Time and Eternity But that God calleth it Heaven and maketh a division of the Waters gives us to understand that Heaven is in the world and the world is not in Heaven the VVater above the Firmament is in Heaven and the VVater under the Firmament is the external material Water the palpable water is Death and the impalpable is the Life Moses saith God created Heaven and Earth and all Creatures in six days and rested on the seventh yet God needed no Rest for he hath wrought from Eternit●… and he is a meer working Power and Virtue the understanding li●…th ●…idden in those Words could not 〈◊〉 ●…ve made all his Works in one day Neither can we properly say there was any Day before the Sun was for in the Deep there is but one day in all Therefore the meaning lieth hidden 〈◊〉 understandeth by each days workings the manifestation of the seven Properites for 〈◊〉 saith In the beginning God created H●… and ●…arth This visible World is sprung from the spiritual World and is only an Effluence of the seven Properties for it proceedeth out of the six working Properties but in the seventh that is in Paradise it is in rest and that ●…s the eternal Sabboth of Rest wherein the divine ●…ower and Virtue resteth for the seventh day was the ●…rue Paradise understand it spiritually That is the Tincture of the divine Power and Virtue ●…hich is a temperament this pi●…rced through Properties and wrought in the seventh that is in the substance of all the other Now it may be asked Why did not God bolt up the Devil instantly and then he had not done so much Mischief Answer This was Gods purpose and that must stand which is he would re-edifie out the corrupted Nature of the Earth or build again to himself an ange●…ical Host or Army viz. a true Body which should subsist eternally in God It was not God's intention at all to let the Devil have the whole ●…arth for an eternal dwelling-House but only the death and fierceness of the Earth which the Devil had brought into it Now if he should have instantly left it to the Devil for an eternal dwelling House then out of that place a new Body could not have been built Now what Sin had that space place or room committed against God that it should stand in eternal shame Sure none and therefore that was unequal to be so Also the purpose of God was to make a curious excellent Host or Army out of the Earth and all manner of Images Ideas and ●…orms for in and upon that all should spring and generate themselves a new as we see in Minerals Oars Stones Trees Herbs and Grass and all manner of Beasts after a heavenly
Contents of the other six in which they work as the Life doth in the Flesh also it is a Food of the Fire where the Fire draweth Essence for its sustenance wherein it burneth and the seventh is the Kingdom of the divine Glory Not that the seventh Property is the Tincture but it is the Body of it the Power and Virtue of the Fire and Light is the Tincture in the substantial Body It is especially to be noted that alwayes the first and seventh Properties are accounted for one and the second and sixth also the third and fifth and the fourth is only the dividing mark or bound And yet all seven are but one the last is the Body of the first They are altogether only the manifestation of God according to Love and Anger Eternity and Time. In the Desire is the original of Darkness and in the Fire the eternal Unity is made manifest with the Light in the fiery Nature Out of the fiery Property and the property of the Light the Angels and Souls have their Original The Darkness becometh substantial in it self and the Light becometh also substantial in the fiery Desires these two make two Principles viz. God's anger in the darkness and God's love in the Light each of them worketh in it self and there is only such a difference between them as between Day and Night and yet both of them have but one only ground and the one is alwayes a cause of the other The visible World is the third Principle that is th●… third ground and beginning this is out-breathed out of the inward ground viz. out of both the first Principles and brought into the Nature and ●…orm of a Creature But according to the manifestation of the Trinity of God there are but three Properties of Nature the first is the Desire which belong●…th to God the ●…ather yet it is only a Spirit but in the seventh Property the Desire is substantial The second is the divine Power and Virtue and belongeth to God the Son in the second Property it is only a Spirit but in the sixth it is the substantial Power and Virtue The third belongeth to the holy Ghost and in the beginning of the third Property it is only a fiery Spirit but in the fifth Property the g eat Love is manifested therein Now these are the seven Properties in one only ground and all seven are equally Eternal without beginning none of them can be accounted the first second third or last but are equally Eternal We must represent this in a Typical way that it may be understood how the one is born of the other The ☿ Seven Forms of Spirits mentioned Revelations Chap. 1. 1. Dark World a Similitude of it is a Candle ♄ ☽ I. Harsh desiring will. ☿ ♃ II. Bitter or stinging ♂ ♀ III Anguish till the flash of Fire 2. Fire World a Similitude of it is the Fire of a Candle ☉ IV. Fire dark Fire light Fire 3. Light World a Similitude of it is the Light of a Candle ♀ ♂ V. Light or Love whence the VVater of Eternal Life floweth ♃ ☿ VI. Noise Sound Mercury ☽ ♄ VII Substance or Nature The first Principle The dark World or Fire of Wrath hence God the Father is called an angry zealous ●…eal us God and a con●…ming Fire The second Princple The Light World or Fire of Love hence God the Son the Word the Heart of God is called a loving and merciful God. The third Principle This World of four Elements which is produced out of the two inward VVorlds above said and is a Glass of them wherein Light and Darkness Good and Evil are mixt it is not Eternal but hath a beginning and an end Of God the Father Son and holy Ghost WHen we consider the whole Nature and its Property then we see the Father When we behold 〈◊〉 and the Stars then we behold his eternal Power and Wisdom So many Stars as stand in the whole Heaven which are incomprehensible to Reason so manisold and various is the Power and ●…Visdom of God the Father If a man would liken the Father to any thing he should liken him to the round Globe of Heaven Thou must not conceive here that the very Power which is in the Father standeth in a peculiar severed part or place in the Father as 〈◊〉 Stars do in Heaven No but the Spirit sheweth that all t●…e Powers in the Father are one in another as one Power VVhen I think with my self what is many hundred thousand Miles above the siary Firmament I find the eternal unchangeable Unity is there the only Eternal God or that only Good which a man cannot express His immensenses●…●…ighth and depth no Creature no not any Angel in Heave●… can search into it But the Angels live in the Power of the Father very meekly and full of Joy and they alwayes sing in the Power of the Father In the Fire God is called an angry God but in the Ligh●… or Love-fire he is called the holy God and in the dark Nature he is not called God. VVe must make distinction each world hath its Principle and Dominion and indeed all is from one eternal Original but it severizeth it self in a twofoid Source a Similitude whereof we have in the Fire and Light where the ●…ire is painful and consuming and the Light meek and giving And yet one were as nothing without the other Of God the Son. YOu must not think that the Son is another God then the Father or that he is without or besides the Father No the Father and Son are not of such a Substance he is eternally in the Father he is the Heart in the Father and the Father generateth him continually from Eternity to Eternity and the Father and Son is one God of an equal Beeing in Power and Omnipotence Now the Heaven and Stars and the whole Deep between the Stars signifie the Father And the seven Planets signifie the seven Spirits of God or the Princes of the Angels among which Lord Lucifer was one before his fali which all were made out of the Father in the beginning of the Creation of Angels before the time of this VVorld Now as the Sun standeth in the midst betwixt the Stars ●…nd the Earth enlightning all Powers and is the Light and Heart of all Powers and is all the Joy in this VVorld Even so the Son of God in the Father is the Heart in the Father and shineth in all the Powers of the Father his Power is the moving springing Joy in all the Powers of the Father and shineth in the whole Father as the Sun doth in the whole VVorld Of God the Holy Ghost THe holy Ghost proceedeth from the Father and the Son and is the third self-subsisting Person in the Deity As ●…he Elements in this World go forth from the Sun and Stars and are the moving Spirit which is in every thing in thi●… world So the Holy Ghost is the moving Spirit in the whole Father and
and he cometh for he hath the won●…rs of God. For he passed through death and brought 〈◊〉 Body through death when the Turba desired to consume it and the Devil contended for it and would have the Turba which was in Moses because he had ben an angry man and carried the Turba in him But it was told the Devil that the Turba in the 〈◊〉 did not belong to him for it belonged to the Majesty of God and contained the wonders and the Turba in the Darkness in the wrath only belonged to him who is without the City he must not dwell in the City in 〈◊〉 Principle but without it Also Moses his Body is passe●… through Death ●…is un●…able Body which had the VVonders hath swallowed up that which was earthly in the Turba and yet not consumed it to 〈◊〉 but it also is in the 〈◊〉 and his Turba which killed the first-born in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the water slew them that 〈◊〉 the Calf and swallowed up Corah Datha●… and 〈◊〉 into the Earth continued in death For when he dy●… his Spirit and Soul departed from the Turba and he 〈◊〉 mained in the VVonders in the Mistery and now he 〈◊〉 become a Lamb. But though the Body of Moses be d livered from 〈◊〉 Turba it must be tryed in the Fire at the end of Day●… At the last Day we shall not ascend above the pla●… of this world but make our abode here in our 〈◊〉 native Country and go into our home in another worl●… in another Principle of another Property VVhen this outward dominion shall pass away 〈◊〉 the very place where the world now stands there 〈◊〉 be meer Paradise for the Earth will be of an heavenl●… Essentiality so that we shall be able to dwell any where●… and be able to pass through and through it There will be no Cold or Heat any more also 〈◊〉 Night there is no Death any ●…ore also no ●…ear 〈◊〉 Sorrow no Sickness the Earth will be like a Christaline Sea and all the VVonders of the VVorld will be 〈◊〉 wholly perspicously and the Brightness of God shall 〈◊〉 the Light thereof and the holy Jerusalem the great City of God shall be therein The whole world would have been a meer Paradise if Lucifer had not corrupted it who was in the beginning of his Creation an Hierarch in the place of this world But seeing God knew well that A●…am would fall therefore Paradise sprung forth and budded only in one certain place to introduce and confirm Man therein whom albeit ●…od saw that he would again depart thence he would again introduce him thereinto by Christ and establish him a new in Christ to Eternity in Par●… For Lucifer poysoned the first Paradise with his false and wicked Desire therefore God promised to regenerate it anew in Christ For the seventh Day which God appointed for Rest is nothing else but 〈◊〉 regenérate anew in the Spirit of Christ in the human Property wherein the poor Soul shall rest eternally from the source of the six dayes Works viz. of the six Properties of the Life A short summary Appendix of the Soul and of the Turba which is the destroyer of the Image and of Virgin Sophia THe Soul is an Eye in the eternal Abiss a similitude of Eternity a perfect Figure and Image of the first Principle and resembleth God the ●…ather 〈◊〉 his Person as to the eternal Nature The Essence and Substance of it meerly and purely as it is in it self is first the wheel of Nature as to the first four ●…orms viz. 1. Astringent 2. Bitter 3. Fire 4. Anguish ●…ire is a similitude of the Soul. The Soul is an essential ●…ire and the flash of Fire i●… the life of it it resembleth a Globe or an Eye of Fire●… The burning ●…ire in the Source signifieth the first Principle and the Life yet the Fire is not the Life but the Spirit of the Source which ariseth from the ●…ire and goeth forth from the ●…ire like Air. That is the true Spirit of the Source of the life of the Fire which continually bloweth the Fire up again and maketh it burn Now the Fire shineth and giveth light out of the Source where it shineth and the source comprehendeth not the light and this signifieth the second Principle wherein God dwelleth 〈◊〉 we know that the Power is in the Light and not 〈◊〉 the ●…ire the fire only giveth 〈◊〉 to the light and the life or the light produceth meekness and substantiality viz. Water Now we understand that there is a meek life in the light without Source and yet it self is an insensible Source it is nothing but a longing or desire of Love. VVhich Source we account a Tincture in which the ●…dding and blossomings hath its original yet the fire 〈◊〉 the cause of it and the meekness is a cause of the Substantiality for the desire of Love in the Light ●…eth it and keepeth it so that it becometh a Substance but the desire of fire consumeth the Substantiality Indeed the Image dwelleth in the fire of the Soul as Light ●…elleth in the fire but it hath another Principle as the Light is such a Source as is different from the fire And so the true Image of God dwelleth in the Light of the fire of the Soul which Light the fiery Soul must create in the ●…tain of the Love of God in the Majesty by pu●…ting and yielding its Imagination into it But if the Soul do not so but putteth its Imaginatio into it self into its wrathful form of the Source of th●… fire and not into the fountain of Love into the Ligh●… of God then its own Source of forceness astringenc●… and bitterness riseth up and the Image of God becometh a Turba and swalloweth up the similitude of Go●… in the wrath And then the astringent Fiat in the fiery Essence 〈◊〉 the Soul figureth for the Soul an Image of the imagination that is in its Will VVhatsoever the essenti●… fire of the Soul desireth that will be the figure in th●… Soul. viz. earthlv Figures that which the will of th●… Heart casteth it self into that image the Fiat of th●… Soul will make that is as far as the third Principl●… an●… the spirit of the Stars and Elements hath power So that if the w●…ll of the Soul do cast it self into the Kingdom of this world then the outward Kingdom ha●… power to bring its imagination into the inward Principle and if the inward Fiat perceive that in the fire of 〈◊〉 Soul then it becometh pregnant with it and keepeth it And then the Soul hath the image of a Beast in 〈◊〉 third Principle and that cannot be destroyed forever●… except the will of the soul return again out of the 〈◊〉 Lust and pierce into the Love of God agai●… and th●… it getteth the image of God again which may be do●… onl●… in this Life while the Soul is essentially in its 〈◊〉 in the growing of its Tree but after this Life
the Fire and the fire the ●…ather of the Blood. And as God dwelleth in the world and filleth all things and yet possesseth nothing And as the fi●…e dwelleth in the water and yet poss●…sseth it not Also as the Light dwelleth in Darkness and yet possesseth not the Darkness As the Day is in the Night and the Night in the Day Time in Eternity and ●…ternity in Time so is man created according to the outward Humanity he is the Time and in the Time and the Time is the outward world and it is also the outward man. The inward man is Eternity and the spiri●…ual Time and VVorld which also consisteth of Light and Darkness viz. of the Love of God. as to the eternal Light and of the Anger of God as to the eternal Darkness which soever of these are man●…fest in him his Spirit dwelleth in that be it Light or Darkness for Light and Darkness are both in him Now if the Light be made manifest in the Darkness then the Darkness loseth its darkness and is not known or discern●…d Also on the contrary if the Darkness arise in the Light and get the upper-hand then the Light and the power thereof is extinguished this is to ●…e consi●…ered also in man. The eternal darkness of the Soul is Hell viz. an aking Source of anguish which is called the anger of God But the eternal Light in the Soul is the Kingdom of Heaven where the fiery anguish of Darkness is turned into Joy thus the Soul hath Heaven and Hell in it self Of Tincture BY the word Tincture is meant the power and virtue of Fire and Light and the stirring up or putting forth like a Bud of this virtue is called the holy and pure Element the virtue of the Sun is the Tincture of all things that grow in the visibility of the world so also the Colour is the Tincture of the Ground Christ is the Tincture of the Soul in brief the Tincture is the Life and the perflu●…nt and informing Vi●…tue by which any thing doth sub●…ist for without the Tincture that proceedeth from the Sun Gold were no Gold And so also the Image of God in the S●…l without the true Tincture the eternal Son of Righteousness were not the Image of God. Of the great Turba THe great Turba or Turba Magna is the stirred and awakned wrath of the inward ground when the foundation of Hell is made manifest in the Spirit of this world from whence great Plagues Diseases arise and it is also the awakned wrath of the outward Nature as may be seen in great tempests of Thunder and Lightning when the Fire is manifested or generated in Water In brief it is the effusion of the anger of God by which Nature is disturbed Often times the Children of God have been forced to carry the Sword of the Turba in them a great example whereof we see in Sampson and also in Joshua with his Wars and likewise in Abraham and many other Prophets how the zeal of God did enkindle it self in them that they in the Spirit of Zeal have often-times awakned the Turba Magna in the anger of God and raised great Rebukes Judgments and Plagues upon whole Countries as Moses in Egypt did with his Plagues upon the Egyptians But we must here distinguish if the Zeal of God should awaken it self in an holy man without his purposed Will and give him the Sword of God's Anger such a one desires much from those who in their own thoughts contrive and plot in the wrath and introduce the conceived or purposed Will into the Serpent's Ens and make it to Substance for that is Sin yea though the most holy man Prophet or Apostle should do it Therefore Christ so empathetically and punctually teacheth us in the new-birth Love Humility and Meekness and would that a Christian should not at all Revenge also not be Angry for he saith Whosoever is angry with his Brother is guilty of the Judgment ●…or anger is a conception in the Serpent's Ens which must be cut off by the Judgment of God from the good beeing All War howsoever blanched over and under what pretence soever taketh its original out of God's Anger It doth not belong to any true Christian born of Christ to raise the Sword of the Turba unless the zealous Spirit of God do ●…tir it up in him who often will rebuke Sin whatsoever exalts its self in the wrath about it●… own Honour and Pride and brings it self to Revenge or Blood-shed is from the Devil Earthly Dominion and Government hath its original from the fall in the Serpent's craft All War and Contention doth arise out of the nature and property of the dark world viz. from the four Elements of the Anger of God which produceth in the Creature Pride Cov●…tousness Envy and Anger these are the four Elements of the dark world wherein the Devil and all evil Creatures live and from these four Elements aris●…th ●…ar For although God bad the People of Israel drive out the 〈◊〉 and wage VVar yet the command was wholly from the angry 〈◊〉 od viz. from the ●…ire's Property for the 〈◊〉 had stirred up the VVrath and Indignation which would devour them But God so far as he is called 〈◊〉 wills not any VVar but the kingdom of Nature in Gods Anger willeth it SOund Sion sound the Praises of thy King Let 〈◊〉 well 〈◊〉 Instrument honour bring To him for Sion thou right-well dost know The Gentiles and their I●…ol-Gods must bow And bend unto thy King or br●… must be For none's like Sion's God in Majestie Then Sion's Sons your Instruments prepare With strained Strings most ex●… rare And sweetly 〈◊〉 with Mus●… 〈◊〉 most sharp Our God's renown and praise 〈◊〉 to harp Since from his Hand abundantly your Souls Have drunk Salvation up like Wine in Bowls And made you eat of Mercies numberless And clo●…'d you with Compassions in distress And let his Glory be your Meditations And his high Honour all your Contemplations For such effects will sure produc●… increase Of joy and gladness joyn'd to endless peace For how can Stones but speak With Iron Steel and Brass And Adamants but break At what is come to pass And sound in one set ●…ur Forth shouts of his renown Whose Glory and mighty Power Eternity doth crown For hath not he made Owls With Moles and Bats to sing Like as the chanting Fowls Harmonious tunes in Spring And Eagles he and she Made both to loath their Pey Two Turtle Doves to be In Shiloa's shining day And hath not he the Bear The Panther and the Lyon In substance made appear Like Lambs in holy Sion And by his Mercy rich Transformed the Serpent's ●…ing Into a virtue which From Death to Life doth bring And made of Rocks a Fountain And Stones refreshing Streams And of a Grain a Mountain And darkness Orions Beams And made of puddle-mire A limpid Pond of pleasure Where Fishes joys as Fire Ascend exceeding measure He turn'd
thou wilt find ground enough to believe in the perusal hereof And the rather because as he hath endeavoured throughout to pass by particular Circumstances the more immediately t●… com●… to the Matter So also hath he every where ●…tted w●…t seems more Airy and less consisting wit●… the present time of Day Of MAN MOunted aloft on Contemplations Wings And noting with my self the state of things I plainly did perceive as on a Stage The consus'd Actions of this present Age. 〈◊〉 the World and viewing sa●… my fill Because that all I saw therein was ill And noting every Creature there I found That only ●…an was the chief spring and ground Of all this uproare yea I soon did see He there was all in all and no●…e but he The Mind is nothing but a Mint o●… Jarrs Or little VVorld of ●…ad domistick VVars Virtue 's depos'd thence and Vice rule obtains Yea Vice from Vice there by Succession ●…s Expelling those whom Virtues presence graceth And in their stead these hurtful Monsters placeth Fond Love and Lust Ambition Enmity Foolish Compassion Joy and Jealousy ●…ear Hope Dispair and Sadness w th the Vice Call'd H●…te Revenge and greedy Avarice Choller and Cruelty which I perceiv'd To be the only Causes man's bereav'd Of quietness and rest yea●… these I found To be the Principal and only ground Of all pernitious ●…ischiefs that now rage Or have disturbed him in any Age. These losing Reason their true Prince began To breed disturbance in the heart of man Each laid a several claim f●…rsooth and he VVould be the Monarch of this Empirie Ruin had got the upper-hand and they VVould be Commanders that were made t' obey And here because I will not order break I will asunder of each Passion speak Of the Passion of LOVE FIrst Love the same I here the first do call Because that Passion is most naturall And of it self could not be discommended VVert not with many a foul Abuse attended God taught it sweetly how to move the mind Both for increasing and preserving K●…nd But now the bound it had contenteth not A Vein of domineering it hath got Makes them set light by Reason's sound direction And bears them head-long by untamed affection Counsel's in vain cause when this fit doth take them Reason and Understand ng doth forsake them It makes them sometimes merry sometimes sad Untam'd men mild and many a m●…ld man mad To ●…ools it VVisdom gives and make●… the witty To shew themselves most Fools the more 's the pitty Such a pishness it now hath entertain'd That all the cre●…it that it had is stain'd Yea 't is as far from what it was as we ●…rom our more honoured antient English be And so unlike unto it self doth prove VVe scarce dare give it now the name of Love. True worth moves few but sure I am not many Have for bare Virtues sake affected any VVealth wins the most yet they by tryal prove Though it breeds liking vet it gains not Love. He that brings VVealth sure if he does not speed The VVomans worth the suing for indeed But now although this Passion I have tide To love of VVomen it concludes ●…eside All whats●…ever kind of Love●… there be Unless they keep the Mind from troubles free And yield to Reason but of such like Lover●… My muse hereafter other I eats discovers Of DESIRE or LUST LUst is presented in the second place Because it shrouds a foul deformed ●…ace Beneath Loves vizard and assumes that name H●…ding its own fault with the others blame Thus this is that which oft caus'd publick Strife And private d●…scord between Man and VVife Th●…s spoil●… the Body this doth make the ●…ace Look wa●…e pale yellow and doth much disgrace The beauty of it this bereaveth quite The Bones of marrow and the Eyes of sight And this way comes that foul Disease to us VVe call the French so vile and odious 'T is ●…ighly made of yea 't is Lust doth weare The richest ●…arments and hath curiest fare The softest Beds it hath to take repose VVith sweet Perfumes but sure there 's need of those Of HATE BVt I have rouz'd another here as bad They call it ●…ate a worse I never had Before in chase I scarce can keep in sooth My self in danger of ●…is venomed Tooth This is the Pas●…on that doth use to move The Mind a clean contrary way to Love. It is an inspiration of the Devil That makes men long for one anothers evil But where it rules they cannot well conceal it But either Words or Deeds or both reveal it The Wick●…d they do hate beyond all m●…asure The righteous man that contradicts their pleasure Yet t●…ey are more coorrupt than all the rest Who hate their Friends they should account of bost But let men strive and study to remove This Passion from their Hearts and graft on Love. Of ENV●… NOw some are in the mind that Hate and this Still go together and one passion is Indeed they fou injurious Humors be So like they seem to have affinitie And yet they di●…fer as oft Kindred do Enough at least I 'm sure to make them two Hate many times from Wrongs receiv'd hath grown Envy is seen where Injuries are n●…ne Yet envious men do least spice such as ●…e Of ill report or of a low degree But rather they do take their aim at such Who either well 〈◊〉 are or rich Some do not care how grosly they dispraise Or how unlikly a report they raise Because they know if it be so false and ill That one believes it not another will And so their Envy very seldom fa●…ls But one way or another still prevails It makes some grieve if any man be friended Or in their hearing praised or commended Contrariwise again such is their spi●…e In other mens mis-fortunes they delight Foul Hag of Envy let thy snakie elves Keep Hell with thee and there torm●…nt themselves O that a man should so from Reason range To entertain a humor that 's so strange And so unprofitable tell me why Should we the honours or the Wealth envy Of other men that we should grudge or fre●… At every good thing that our Neighbours get But sure mischief alwayes doth betide To th' envious than to him that is envied But know Envy is an apparent Foe To Chari●…y and Friends●…ip's overthrow Of REVENGE ROme for Revenge he 's no Comedian That acts for Pleasure but a grim Tragedian A foul stern Monster which if we displease him Death Wounds and Blood or nothing can appease him That cruel Ruffin that in vain doth strive His off-spring from true Valour to derive This most inhuman Passion now and than With Violence and Fury hurries man So far from that sweet mildness wherewith he Being himself should ever tempred be That Man nor Devil can we term him well For part he hath of Earth and part of Hell. Poor World if these thy best Comentments be Seek Blood and Vengeance you that
change it for hollown●… for wrinkles and stains Now then O now then c. Those Eyes which so many so much did admire And with strange Affections set many on Fire Shut up in that Darkness which Age will constrain Shall never see Mortal no never aga●…n Now then O now then c Those Lips whereon Beauty so fully discloses The colour and sweetness of Rubies and Roses Instea●… of that here will a gashliness weare And none shall believe what Perfection was there Now then O now then c. Thy Teeth that stood firmly like Pearls in a row Shall rotten and scatter'd disorderly grow That gate and those gestures that win thee such grace VVill turn to a feeble and staggering pace Now then O now then c. By these Imperfections old Age will prevail Thy Marrow thy Sinnews and Spirits will fail And nothing is left thee when those are once spent To give or thy self or another content Now then O now then c. That Lust which thy Youth can so hardly fore-go VVill leave thee and leave thee Repe●…tance and Wo And then in thy ●…olly no joy canst thou have Nor hope other rest then a comfortless Grave Now then O now then c. For next shall thy Breath be quite taken away Thy ●…esh turn'd to Dust and that Dust turn'd to Clay And those that thou hast loved and share of thy store Shall leave thee forget thee and mind thee no more Now then O now then c. And yet if in time thou remember not this The slenderest part of thy Sorrow it is Thy Soul to a torture more fearful shall wend Hath ever and ever and never an end Now then O now then if safety thou love Mind thou O mind thou thy Maker above A Passage taken out of Witber's Motto WHat if America's large tract of Ground And all those Isles adjoyning lately found VVhich we more truly may a Desert call Then any of the World 's more civil pale VVhat then if there the VVilderness do lie To which the VVoman and her Son must flie To 'scape the Dragon's fury and there ' bide Till Europe's thankless Nations full of Pride And all A●…ominations scourged are VVith Barbarisin as their Neighbours were The Verses before are these The Eastern Kingdoms had their Times to flourish The Greeci●…n Empire rising saw them perish That fell and then the Roman Pride began Now scourged by the Race of Ottoman VVho live in Sin are all but Thieves to Heaven And Earth they steal from God and take unsiven Good men they rob and such as live upright And being Bastards share the free man's right They 're all as Owners in the Owner's stead And like to Dogs devour the Childrens Bread. Lord what I have let me enjoy in thee And thee in it or else take it from me DIVINE POEMS selected from the Works of Francis Quarls I care not so my Kernel relish well How slender be the Substance of my Shell My heart being virtuous let my Face be wane I am to God I only seem to man. MEDITATION HOw great 's the Love of God unto his Creature Or is his Wisdom or his Mercy greater I know not whether O! th'exceeding love Of highest God that from his Throne above VVill send the brightness of his Grace to those That grope in Darkness and his Grace oppose VVhat thing is Man that God's regard is such Or why should Heaven love rechless man so much VVhy what are men but quickned lumps of Earth A feast for VVorms a buble full of Mirth A Looking glass for grief a ●…ash a Minit A p●…inted Tomb with putrifaction in it A map of Death a burthen of a Song A VVinters dust a VVorm of five Foot long Begot in Sin in darkness nourisht born In sorrow naked shiftless and forlorn His first Voice heard is crying for Relief Alas he comes into a world of Grief His Age is sinful and his Youth is vain His Life 's a punishment his Death 's a pain Death respects Kings and ●…eggars both alike Uncertain when but certain she will strike Death is a minute full of suddain Sorrow Then live to day as thou mayst dye to morrow The VVorld's a body each Man a member is To add some measure to the publick bliss VVisdom is sold for sweet Pleasures for Pain VVho lives but to himself he lives in vain Man in himself 's a little VVorld alone His Soul 's the Court or high imperial Throne VVherein as Empress sits the Understanding Gently directing yet with awe commanding Her hand-maids will affections Maids of Honour All following close and duly waiting on her But Sin that alwayes envied man's condition VVithin this Kingdom raised up Division Vouchsafe Lord in this little VVorld of mine To reign that I may reign with thee in thine Heathen Godds THe Egyptians God did implore Godd Assus the Chal●…eans did adore ●…ibel to the devouring Dragon seeks The Arabians A●…aroth Juno the Greeks The name of B●…llus the Assyrians hallow The Tr●…yjons Vesta Corinth wi●…e Apollo The Arginians Sacrifice unto the Sun ●…o light-foot Mercury bows Macedon To Godd Volumus lovers bend their Knee To Pavor those that faint and fearful be VVho pray for Health and Strength to Murcia those And to Victoria they that fear to lose To Muta they that fear a woman's Tongue To great Lucina Women great with young To Esculapis they that live opprest And such to Quies that desire rest Implore those Godds that list to howl and bark They bow to Dagon Dagon to the Ark But he to whom the Seal of Mercy 's given Adores Jehovah the great God of Heaven Mortality CAn he be Fair that withers at a blast Or he be Strong that airy Breath can cast Can he be VVise that knows not how to live Or he be Rich that nothing hath to give Can he be Young that 's feeble weak and wane So fair strong wise so rich so young is Man. VVhy brag'st thou then thou worm of five Foot long Th' art neither fair strong wise nor rich nor youn●… Like to the Damask Rose you see Or like the blossom on a Tree Or like the dainty Flower in May Or like the morning to the day Or like the Sun or like the shade Or like the Gourd which Jonas had Even such is man whose Thred is spun Drawn out and cut and so is done The Rose withers the blossom blasteth The Flower fades the morning hasteth The Sun sets the Shadow flyes The Gourd consumes and Man he dyes Like to the blaze of fond delight Or like a Morning clear and bright Or like a Frost or like a Shower Or like the pride of Babel's Tower Or like the Hour that guides the Time Or like the Beauty in her prime Even such is man whose glory lends His Life a blaze or two and ends Delights vanish the Morn o'er-casteth The rosts breaks the Shower hasteth The Tower falls the Hour spends The Beauty fades and man's Life ends Of
Charity IN loving God if I neglect my Neighbour My love hath lost his proof and I my labour My Zeal my Faith my Hope that never fails me If Charity be wanting nought avails me Lord in my Soul a Spirit of Love create me And I will love my Brother if he hate me In Temptation ARt thou oppos'd to thine unequal Foe March bravely on thy General bids thee go Th' art Heaven 's Champion to maintain his right Who calls thee forth will give thee strength to fight God seeks by conquest thy renown for he Will win enough fight thou or faint or flee In Slander IF Winter fortunes nip thy Summer Friends And tip their Tongues with Censure that offends Thy tender Name dispaire not but be wise Know Heaven selecteth whom the World denyes Of Death ME thinks I see that nimble aged Si●…e Pass swiftly by with ●…eet unapt to tire Upon his Head an Hour glass he wears And in his wrinkled hand a Sythe he bears Both instruments to take the Lives from men Th' one shews with what the other sheweth when Me-thinks I see my dearest Friends lament With sighs and tears and woful drysiment My tender VVife and Children standing by Dewing the Bed whereupon I l●…e Me-thinks I hear a Voice in secret say The Glass is run and thou must dye to day Deceitful World. WHat is the World a great exchange of Ware VVherein all sorts and Sexes cheapening are The Flesh the Devil sit and cry What lack ye VVhen most they fawn they most intend to rack ye The VVares are cups of Joys and beds of Pleasure Plenty of choice down weight and flowing measure A Soul 's the price but they give time to pay Upon the death-bed on the dying Day Hard is the Bargain and unjust the Measure VVhen as the Price so much out-lasts the Pleasure The Joys that are on Earth's are Counterfeits If ought be true 't is this they 're true Deceits They daily dip within thy Dish and cry Who hath betray'd thee Master It is I. Hell Torments ALl words come short t' express the pains of those That rage in Hell enwrapt in endless woes VVhere time no end and plagues find no exemption VVhere cryes admit no help nor place redemption VVhere wretched Souls to Tortures bound shall be Serving a world of Years and not be free There 's nothing heard but yells and suddain cryes VVhere Fire never slacks nor worm e●…er dyes But where this Hell is plac't my muse stop there Lord shew me what it is but never where In Hell no Life in Heaven no Death there is In Earth both Life and Death both bal and bliss In Heaven 's all Life no end nor new supplying In Hell 's all Death and yet there is no dying Farth like a partial Ambodexter doth Prepare for Death or Life prepares for both Christ's Death ANd am I here and my Redeemer gone Can he be dead and is not my Life done VVas he tormented in excess of measure And do I live yet and yet live in pleasure Alas could Sinners find out ne'er a one More fit then thee for them to spit upon Did thy Cheeks en●…ertain a Traytors lips VVas thy dear Body scourg'd and torn with VVhips Till that the guiltless Blood came trickling after And did thy fainting Brows shoot Blood and VVater VVert thou Lord hang'd upon the cursed Tree O world of grief and was all this for me Burst forth my T●…ars into a world of Sorrow And let my Nights of gr●…f find ne'er a Morrow Heaven's Glory WHen I behold and well advise upon The wise man's Speech There 's nought beneath the Sun But Vanity my Soul rebels within And loathes the Danghil prison she is in But when I look to New Jerusalem VVherein's reserved my Crown my Diadem O! what a Heaven of bliss my Soul enjoyes On suddain wrapt into that Heaven of Joyes VVhere ravisht in the depth of meditation She well discerns with Eye of Contemplation The glory of God in his imperial Seat Full strong in Might in Majesty compleat VVhere troops of Powers Virtues Cherubims Angels arch-Angels Saints and Sera phims Are chaunting Praises to their heavenly King VVhere Hallelujah they forever Sing Whoever smelt the breath of morning Flowers New sweetned with the dash of twi-light Showers Or pounded Amber or the flowering Thyme Or purple Violets in the proudest prime Or swelling Clusters from the Cypress Tree So sweet's my Love aye far more sweet is he Dismount you Quire of Angels come With men your Joyes divide Heaven ne'er shew'd so sweet a Groom Nor Earth so fair a Bride Hark Hark I hear that thrice Coelestial voice VVherein my Spirits wrapt with Joys rejoyce A Voice that tells me my Beloved's mie I know the Musick by the Majestie ●…ehold he comes 't is not my blemisht Face Can slack the swiftness of his winged pace Behold he comes his Trumpet doth proclaim He comes with speed a truer Love ne'er came The Imperfections of my present state Come forth my Joy what bold affron●… of Fear Can fright thy Soul and I thy Champion here 'T is I that calls 't is I thy Bride-groom calls thee Betide it me whatever it befalls thee The Winter of thy sharp Afdiction's go●… VVhy fear●…st thou Cold and art so near the Son. Heaven only knows the Bliss my Soul enjoyes T'and Earths too dull to apprend such Joyes Then let thy Breath like ●…aggons of strong wine Relieve and comfort this poor Heart of mine For I am sick till time that dotli delay Our Marriage being our joyful marriage day CONCLUSION GAsp not for Honour wish no blasing Glory For these will perish in an Ages story Nor yet for power Power may be 〈◊〉 To Fools as well as thee that hast deserv'd Thirst not for L●…ds nor Money wish for non For Wealth is neither l●…sting nor our own Riches are fair Inti●…ements 〈◊〉 to deceive us They fl●…ter while we live and dying leave us Nor House nor Land nor measur'd heaps of Wealth Can render to a dying man his Heal●…h And what is Life a bubble ●…ull of Care Which prik't by Death straight e●…ters into Air. The Author's Dream Mr Sins are like the Hairs upon my Head And raise their Audit to as high a score In this they disfer these do daily shed But ah my Sins grow daily more and more If by my Hairs thou number out my Sins Heaven make me bold before the Day begins My Sins are like the Sands upon the Shore Which every Ebb lies open to the Eye In this they differ those are cover'd o'er With every Tide my Sins still open lie If thou wilt make my Head a Sea of Tears O! they will hide the Sins of all my Years My Sins are like the Stars within the Skies In view in number even as bright as great In this they differ these do set and rise But ah my Sins do rise and never set Shine Son of Glory and my Sins are gone Like twinkling Stars
of Publicans contracted by mutual Profit and good Offices but to love a man's Enemies is one of the cunningest Points of the Law of Christ and an imitation of the divine Nature But yet again of this Charity there be divers degrees whereof the first is to pardon our Enemies when they repent of which Charity there is a Shadow and Image even in noble Beasts for of Lyons it is a received Opinion that their fury and fiercene●…s ceaseth towards any thing that yieldeth and prostrateth it self The second degree is to pardon our Enemies though they persist without satisfaction ●…d submissions The third degree is not only to 〈◊〉 and forgive and forbear our Enemies but to 〈◊〉 well of them and to do them good But all these 〈◊〉 degrees either have or may have in them a 〈◊〉 Bravery and greatness of the mind rather then 〈◊〉 Charity For when a man perceiveth Virtue to 〈◊〉 from h●…self it is possible that he is puffed up 〈◊〉 takes Contentment rather in the Fruit of his own Virtue then in the good of his Neighbours But if any Evil overtake the Enemy from any other Coast then from thy self and thou in the inwardest Motions of thy Heart art grieved and compassionate and dost no wayes insult as though thy dayes of Right and Re●…enge were at last come This I interpret to be the height and exaltation of Charity XXX Of Goodness and Goodness of Nature GOodness I call the Habit and Goodness of Nature the Inclination This of all Virtues is the ●…reatest being the character of the divine Deity and without it man is busie mischievous wretched thing no better then a kind of Vermine Goodness answers to the Theological Virture Charity and admits no Excess but Error There was never Law or Sect or Opinion did so much magnifie Goodness as the Christian Religion doth Therefore to avoid the scandal and the danger both it is good to take knowledge of the Errors of an Habit so excellent Seek the good of other men but be not in bondage to their Faces of Fancies for that is but facility and softness which taketh an honest mind Prisoner Neither give thou Esop's Cock a Gem who would be better content if he had a Barley Corn. The example of God teacheth the Lesson truly He sendeth his Rain and maketh his Son to s●…ine upon the Just and Unjust but he doth not rain VVealth and shine Honour and Virtues upon men equal Common Benefits are to be communicate with all but peculiar Benefits with choice And beware how in making the portraiture thou breakest the pattern For Divinity maketh the love of our selves the patterns the love of our Neighbour but the portraiture Sell all thou hast and give it to the Poor and follow me But sell not all thou hast except thou come and follow me that is except thou have a Vocation wherein thou mayst do as much good with little Means as with great for otherwise in feeding the Stream thou dryest the Fountain Neither is there only a habit of Goodness directed by right Reason But there is in some men even in Nature a disposition towards it as on the other side there is a natural Malignity For there be that do not affect the good of others XXXI Of Religion THe Quarrels and Divisions for Religion were Evils unknown to the Heathen But yet the bounds of Religious Unity are so to be strengthened as the Bonds of human Socie●…y be not dissolved It is better that Religion should deface men's Understandings then their Piety and Charity retaining Reason only as an Engine or Charriot driver of Cruelty and Malice One of the Doctors of I●…ly had the confidence to put in Writing almost in plain terms That the Christian-Religion had given up good men in Prey to th●…se that are Tyrannical and Unjust It was a great Blasphemy when the Devil said I will ascend and be like the ●…ighest but it is a greater Blasphemy if they make God to say I will descend and be like the Prince of Darkness And it is no better when they make the cause of Religion descend to the execrable actions of murthering of Princes butchering of People and firing of States Neither is there such a Scandal to their Church as out of the Bark of St. Peter to set forth the ●…lagg of a Bark of Pirats and Assassines Therefore since these things are the common Enemies of human Society Princes by their Power Churches by their Decrees and all learning Christian moral of whatsoever Sect or Opinion ought to joyn in the damning to Hell forever these Facts and their Supports and in all Councils concerning Religion the Counsel of the Apostle should be perfixed Ira hominis non Implet justitium Dei. XXXII Of the Moderation of Cares Sufficient for the Day is the Evil thereof THere ought to be a mean sure in worldly Cares otherwise they are but unprofitable as those which oppress the Mind and astonish the Judgment and prophane as those which savour of a mind which promiseth to it self a certain Perp●…ity in things of this World for we ought to be Days men and not to Morrows men considering the shortness of our time and as he saith Laying hold on the present day for the future things shall in their turns become present therefore the care of the present sufficeth and yet moder●… Cares whether they concern our particular or the Common-wealth or our Friends are not blamed But there is a two-fold Excess the one when the Chain or Thred of our Cares is extended and spun out to an over-great length and unto times too far o●… as if we could bind the divine Providence of our Provisions which even with the Heathen was always found to be a thing insolent and unlucky The second Excess is when we dwell longer in our Cares then is requisite for due deliberating or firm resolving for who is there amongst us that careth 〈◊〉 more then sufficeth ei●…er to resolve of a Course or to conclude upon an Implicity and doth not still chew over the same things and tread amaze in the same Thoughts and vanisheth in them without issue or conclusion Which kind of Cares are most contrary to all divine and ●…uman Respects XXXIII Of Earthly Hope Better is the sight of the Eye then the apprehension of the Mind HOpe seemeth a thing altogether unprofitable ●…r to what end serveth this conceit of Good Con●…r and note a little if the Good fall out less then t●…u 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though it be yet less because it is it seeemeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 benefit through thy excess of hope if the good 〈◊〉 e●…al and proportionable in event to t●…y Hope yet the 〈◊〉 whereof by the hope is gathered so as when it comes the 〈◊〉 of it is gone and it seems use and therefore soo●… 〈◊〉 on Society admit thy Success prove better then thy 〈◊〉 it is true gain seems to be made But had it not been 〈◊〉 to have gained the principal by hoping for