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A08362 The meroure of an Chrstiane [sic], composed ... by Robert Norvell ... Norvell, Robert.; Marot, Clément, 1495?-1544. 1561 (1561) STC 18688; ESTC S100619 59,722 149

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vs Lord from all maner of ill According to thy pleasure and thy will For strength and might perteneth onelie to th● To whom be gloir and prais eternallie So be it ❧ The 12. articles of our beleū I Trow in God the Father Lord of all That made the earth and heauen celestiall And in Christ Iesu his onelie Sonne most sweit Our Lord consaued by the holie Spreit And of the blissed virgin Marie borne By Pilat falslie iudged rent and torne Crucified dead syne laid in buriall Descended to the helles infernall From death to lyfe he rose on the thrid day Ascended to the heauen where he alway Doeth sit on the right hand of God celest Where bodilie he doeth ●emane and rest ●t the last day from thence shal come with speid Iustlie to iudge the leuing and the deid I beleue in the holie Spre●t Their is an Church of God discreit Of holie sainctes communione And of our sinnes remissione The rising of the fleshe mortall And after lyfe perpetual● In this faith I for euermore Will trust thogh I should die theirfore So be it ❧ The ten Commandementes LIft vp your heartes oppen your eares Hard harted people for till heir The word of God that now appeares And his Commandementes leir I am thy God celestiall From seruitude deliuered the. Thou shall not haue therefore at all No other goddes but onelie me No image to the make thou shall Painted nor carued curious Nor on thy knees before them fall For I thy Lord am ielious His Holie name most venerable Take not in vaine nor it dispryse For God will 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 culp●●●● That him bl●sph●mes in any wyse Sex dayes wirk but on the seuen Rest thou thy seruand and thy beast For that ylk day the God of heauen Reposed ▪ and his workes blest Father and mother honour aye That thou may long the earth posses And so the ground to the alway Her frutes shall yeild with great Incres In couatice desire thou noght Frome thy nighbour by thoght nor stryfe That which is his or he hath boght His beast his seruand nor his wyfe Be no man killer nor homicid Adulterar nor witnes fals Be not an these in thoght nor deid No sclanderare nor lier al 's O Lord thy wordes of efficace Are clearer nor the somers day Intill our heartes Imprint thy grace After this law the to obay So be it ❧ Grace before dynner O Souerane Lord Pastour and heid Loke and behold this compangnie Of thy goodes suffre vs to feid And vse our selues soberlie Without excesse or glouttonie For who that doeth the fear and dreid Thou takes thought on them dailie Their bodies for to cleith and feid So be it ❧ Grace after dynner ▪ O Lord that gaue vs in command To take no thoght for the nixt daye For this that we do vnderstand Thou feidis vs we prayse the aye Since it hath pleased the alwaye With meat and drinke to feid our fleshe So with the bread of lyfe we praye Thou will our sinfull soules refreshe So be it ❧ The Pellicane ●iguring Iesus Christ THe Pellicane of the forest celest Amonges his workes notable and new After the heauen the Angelles and the rest He made his birdes of diuers sindrie hew Allone them left and sine awaye he flewe And gaue them their ●rewill and libertie In to the forest of Parradice to be Where that the tre of lyfe it grew and stude Set by the Pellicane of humilitie To saue his birdes that spared not his blud But as they sang sweit and melodious Into that wood as plesand nightingailles An fouler false vgsume and odious Their with his nettes and girnes soir assailles Syne baneist them the gairdings the vailles Because till ouer high frute they did pretend To wilsome vailles dailles thē were they send Where they remaned long in seruitude Abiding the Pellicane their mis for till amend To saue his birdes that spared not his blude Down from the wood of Angelles bright cleir This Pellicane for loue did swiftlie flie Where he ●and Rawens did his smal birdes deir And shed his blood in streimes ●rwellie Withoutten reuth this Pellicane they gart die Denud of mercie they did him rug and ryue With patience to death he thoild them driue His faltles fleshe because their was no ●ude Nor medicicine could saue his birdes lyue Whill from his tendre heart they re●t his blud The Rauens at the Iewes full of feid Vniustlie put this Pellicane to deid Which doeth betoken Christ both God and man The birdes are the creatures humane The fals fouler the laithlie serpent rude That gart misknow the heauenlie Pellicane To saue his birdes that spared not his blude O Iesu Christ my Lord so sweit That for me vile sinner indigne Thou suffred from the heid to feit Thy bodie for till scorge and ding Thy face ouerspred with foull spitting In to deris●one with great skorne Syne on thy head did thrust and thring An kene and crwell pricking thorne To saue me sinner full of vice Thou was the obligatione Thou made the contract and the price That thou should suffce passione To saue me frome dampnatione That was prepared for Adames seid Frome hell vnto saluatione Thou boght me with thy pretious deid I know Iesus thy patience Hath borne my great fragilitie My sinnes eik and my offence Thou bure them to the death with the. Since thou hes borne suche loue to me and su●fred hast such paines fell To saly ray death and miserie That spared not to die thy sell Lord I the pray with heart and minde Lay not to me my sinfulnes Sith thou hast ben● to me so kinde And tholid h●s so great distresse The vinagre and bitterues The scourges skornes and the strife Mot fil me with the great sweitnesse Of peace and euerlasting lyfe Thy holie death surmount and slaye The dolent dead now of my saull Thy pretious blood mot weshe awaye My vncleinnes and vices all The sufflettes suffred in the haull The bandes that band thy handes and feit Mot breck now and perpetuall That bandes of sinne that hurtes my spreit The nailles and the crown of thorne The spitting the strokes and the speir The noddes the shamefull death and skorne The wicked wordes that thou did heir The heauie croce that thou did beir The tormentes of thy death crewell Mot draw my soule to the full neir And saue me frome the paines of hell Lord thy glorificatione Mot clenge my soule and my bodie And in the resurrectione Reforme my great iniquitie Sen I am figurat to the That aye shall regne perpetuum An leuand God in persones thre In world of worldles for to cum ❧ Ane Ballad of the spirituall and carnall vnderstanding of Christes wordes This is my bodie and blood c. Iohn 6. ALlone musing as I forthe went An suddane slepe did me assaye I thoght my spirit was frome me rent Vpon the ground where as I laye I heard an voyce
is heau●nlie the bodie inutill And is but an obscure or law preson Where as in laugour lyeth the soule gentill Of that prison I haue key subtill Which is my dart that for the soule is geuen To louse it out of that soull preson vile Where I it send with mekle ioy to heauen Holde f●irme thy faith on an God vndefild And for thy father take him and him call Ys he be so then art thou sure his child Mat. 6. And aire of his kingdome Celestiall Yf he hath fred the frome death perpetuall Befoir or euer thou had tyll him regaird Rom. 5. Dout not but and thou loue him cordiall With mekell better he shall thy selfe rewaird And as concerning the fleshes actione It can not liue without sinne and delite Nor yet it can not make satisfactione Rom. 6. For sinne to God wherof it had the wyte But right as Iesus vpon an croce perfite Died for our sinnes so most our fleshe expire And die with Christ yf that we wold be quyte Of endles death sinne and of Hellis fire Who striketh this stroke but death thou knowest weill So I am to all christians man and wyfe The end of sinne beginning of their seill The end of cair and thoght most pungetyfe And the beginning of euerlasting lyfe Why wold thou Aig● returne to youth againe To pas the vaill of woo and mortall stryfe Which thou hast scaped with so mekell paine Yf thou will say when I come the arreist That I the do great wrong and violence Saying thou hast no paine but ioy and f●ist With all delite withoutten indigence I say that pleasure turnes to impatience When it at length leadeth to dampnatione My death is pleasure to all hath sapience When ye from death turne to saluation What displeasure haue I here to the named To fear my dart nay nay I say not so But for Christis sake to suffer and be blamed To take in patience truble paine and wo The losse of goodes and dignities also Wanting pleasurs that somtime thou had ryfe So dyeng vnder my dart to pas them fio In place of them shall haue Eternall lyfe For fear of me be not contrist nor wo But haue firme hope and faith for till conforme The will of God and syne let gladlie go Ryches and friendes with all thesaures enorme For an cleir sky betoknes that the storme Will sone throw the Aire make seperatione Suche faith in persones departing doeth performe Sure signes and tokens of their trew saluatiōe To this effect thou shuld not fear at length Iesus for vs would first the death assay His death hath venquest 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 might strength Theirfore thinke not to dye thogh I the slay He me ouercame to s●ue the frome d●●ay So I am but port and passage manifest That thou shuld gladlie ●ine throw night day Frome this fals world to heauenlie gloir celest Somtyme in figure as Scripture declair can An brasin serpent Moyses did raise on hight Which serpent to behold did heall an man That had bene stonged by ●yrie serpents slight Lykewyse all they that by trwe faith hes sight Of Christ is death is heiled of my band As of the secound death I haue no might Christ hath that pouer rest forthe of my hand Great folie is in the custome humane To mourne for men when I them lay on sleip Yf thou beleues he shall with God remane W●y doest thou then lament with sighing depe Orwould thou here alway on lyfe him kepe Will thou him frome his great profit defend Since it is Goddes will thou shuld not wepe In doing so I know thou doest offend Let pagains rore let turkes take terrours That hope to haue none other habitatione The lake of faith is cause of all theare Errours Like Eath●●qu●s ignorant of their saluatione As to the black doo●es frequentation Ipocricie did shaipe that feyned sorow Some for their father maketh dooll ád deploratione That for their mother wold it weire the morrow Messess of Requ●●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 excellis To the great profite of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 With rou●ing roring and 〈◊〉 of bellis Their gredines forth sheweth their wicked wa●● ▪ For yf ye had no vailzeand to your ●●kes Be ye assured that after youre deceirs None of the rabill that wearres the markes Wyll for you ringe or singe or say an veirs For the prepair no suche solemniteis Nor for thy buriall b● thou no wayes trist In Goddes sight they are but vaniteis Sauitie doeth not in earth nor tombe cōsist An Faithfull man shall in the heauen be blist Where euer his fleshe or bodie buried be The wickits soull shall in the hell ●e thrist Thogh he were buried whith all solemnitie At short to end now with my first purpose Fear not me death nor ban me I the pray For who wold in the heauenlie Hous repose Must first beleue goddes promese I saye Vho wold be with his angelles nyght daye Vho wold the face of God behold and se And who wold dwell in paradice for aye Yet before all I death must gar him die Confesse me to be good and gratious For whill I come thou art with sinne repleit Confesse thy lyfe bitter and Eigerous Confesse my dart plesand holsome sweit Also confesse and grant althogh thy spreit Ware mortall as thy filthie 〈◊〉 immound Yet shuld thou hold me as thy freiud discrte That 〈◊〉 the from thir wor●●li● 〈◊〉 pro ●ound FINIS Where followeth The Iudgment of Minos Vpon the preserment of Alexander the great Conquerout Hanniball of Carthage and Scipion the Romain surnamed Affrican 〈◊〉 forth of Fray●ce in sco●tes by the saide Noruell My vailȝeant heart full of honor gloire May not suffre Hāniball to pas before Me intill armes and dedes martiall For suthe I thinke no man that is equall Ought in dedes of armes for to compair There worthynes or actis vnto myne Hanniball I will defende and manteyne the contrair Reporting me vntill God Mynos syne Iudge infernall and Lord of wo and pyite The aufull sworde of iustice to mantyne Where ryght and reason alway shal be seyne For euerie man alike bothe freind and sone Mynos That I may heare fyrst tell to me anone What are ye that disputis heare alone Of high honours to haue the aduantage Alexandre This is the Duke Hanniball of Carthag● And I Alexandre the great Empriour Of all the world Kyng and Conquerour That wan and s●bdwed euery Natione Mynos Your names are of great existunatione Worthie of honour glorie and land supreyme With lawreir crowned is your diadeyme I meruell ye shuld haue debaite togidder ▪ Alexandre Bot Mynos I thinke ye shuld consider My birth for●u●● silicitie and werde And how I wold suffer no man in erde To be my compagnion nor perregall But as the Eigle that suremountis all Other foules most highest in the aire So may no man himselfe to me compaire In high curage and furour bellicall Wherefore I will not that
Nor no sie vaue consautes 〈◊〉 rea● But by his Sonne that ●ath fulfilled the Lawe And satisf●ed the Father ones for all Heb. 9. 1● By off●ing of his bodie na●urall Vpon the ●●oce for vs sinner● to die Whose death and passione made vs captiues fre Ephe. 5 Where we were dead in sinne and did remane Rom. ● And was condempned after Moyses Law Gal. ● ●et hathe his death vs broght on liue agane And shewes to vs the yock that we should drawe Heb. 2 9 The word of God the which doeth planelie shawe 1. Cor. 15 1. Tim. 2 Now we are onelie by Christ all iustified And by his rising are also glorified Wherefore great cause we haue to be content Thogh for thy sake we suffre wo and p●ne Sith we are perteners of thy Testament Of thy promesse and of thy word deyune Esa 4● As Isai saith in the fourtie and nyne May any mother suffre hir eyes beforne Hir sonne to pereshe of hir bodie borne And thogh she do forget hir childe so deir Yet all the slock that will on me depend Idem I shall not them forget I to you sweir And when my people haue done me offend By the contrair I 〈◊〉 them to amend Come saith Christ who will their sinnes cōsidder Ezec. ●● That I may giue them life and health to gidder Come with innocence thogh ye shuld be slaine Come to me for I am ane rightious iudge Gen. 4 7 1● 22. I am iust Abell I am not wicked Came Come to my arke and seke at me refuge For I am Noye and the second deluge Come to me in faith as did Abraham And Isaac that signified the lam Come all sinners for your owne be●oue 〈…〉 Come not as the Scribes with hypocrisie Come vnto me for kindnes and for loue Come as Naaman for I am 〈◊〉 Come on and I shall 〈◊〉 your leprosie I am Moses and I os●e that wan To you the frutefull 〈◊〉 of Canaa● Come till me I am faithfull I osias ●●●g 23. 1 Sam. ●● 〈◊〉 ●5 〈◊〉 ● I present Dauid Scripture makes mentione I ●lewe your olde enemie Golias For your defence I am migthie Samsone Sicke my 〈◊〉 for I am Salomon Come with faith as the Fathers and Propheites Come with repentance as the 〈◊〉 Ionas ● Come all that are liper Lazere and deif Mat. 12. Come all that are with maladie molest Come brigand 〈◊〉 and come theif ●ar ● Come s●ke at me 〈◊〉 and ●●●e in rest ●e that are mad and with the deuill 〈◊〉 Come to me ye that lo●g tyme blinde haue be●●e Lu● ● That I maye oppen your mindes inward 〈◊〉 Come ye that walk in darknes night and daye So that ye will ▪ so my ●●x take regand 〈◊〉 ● Come vnto me for I cast none awaye That will repent with heart and minde inward Knock on your 〈◊〉 and ●● shall be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 ▪ Be not ●educed by 〈◊〉 doctrine nor 〈◊〉 Come 〈◊〉 at me 〈◊〉 and ye shall 〈◊〉 Eternall lyfe that euer shall remane 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not on the paines corporall Ioh. ● 〈◊〉 ye were dead yet shall ●e liue aga●● Come all sinners that will for mercie call Come vnto me and I shall saue you all That bound and settred is in sinnes barge Come vnto me I shall you cleue discharge Ma●● ●● Come to me vs●tairs a●aritious Come all that wrang●slie haue boght and solde Come gredie worines on earth so couettous Luc. 19. Climme vp the treis of your conscience colde Climme as did Zacheus me to beholde That restoird foure folde for ilk 〈◊〉 Syne of his goodes the half gaue to the pure Come with an liuelie faith firme and stable As did the Cananian in the Gospell That required as dog vnder the table Mat. ●3 To gadder crōmes from Goddes word that fell To heall hir doghter and to saue hir sell Come also ye women of lyfe prophane Come with repentance as did the Magdalane The death of an sinner I do not desire All thogh he haue bene long tyme deafe and dum Ezec. 19. But rather that he shuld life at me require O Lord these are sweit sayinges all and sum Yet without the I can not to the cum Conuert thou me then shall I be conuerted 〈◊〉 ● 〈◊〉 thou me then shall I be d●uerted From sinne o 〈◊〉 that doeth me soir moles● Since thou to me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so fair an tri●ie without the Lord my co●●●ence hes no rest Strengthen my spirit and to thy selse it tiste Ioh. 1● I pray the in the Name of Iesus Christ Which hathe vs said what thing ye aske ●ra●● My father in my Name ye shall it half In Christes Name we should onelie demand Sith he hathe ●led him self with our natoure And at none other him selfe did so command For that 〈◊〉 Christ is our Mediatoure For our offence to God the plasmatoure ● Ioh. ● Our aduocar our freynd and 〈◊〉 our iudge Our asperance our comfort and refuge Now will I no more stand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To entre in thy holie house and temple Psal ●● My Lord my God to come and drawe the nei● For consolation in heart I shall contemple Thy holie parable and godlie sweit exemple As in sainct Lukes Gospell is written plane Their was an certane man had sonnes twane Luc. 15. The yongest sonne before his father stude And him be●oght of his 〈◊〉 That he might haue his 〈◊〉 parte of gude Idem Whiche his father deuided equallie 〈◊〉 he went forthe in till an strainge cuntrie Where his parte ●●sum din one while In prodigalitie and ●● pleasures vile Sy●●e after hav suche honger and suche ne●● Eriled from his father and his kinne That with the swyne he was compeld to s●●● Idem But when that he bet●oght him of his sinne How many are my Fathers house withine Of ●ryed seruandes that hes bread at will And I his Sonne for falt is like to spill I will vnto my my father and confesse How I am worthie for to be reproued I will him grant my sinne and wickednesse But the father before with pietie moued Idem ● ▪ ●●● Ranne till his sonne and said my dear beloued Thou art welcome and cled him from the colde Syne on his finger put a●●ring of golde And siewe the ●at calf that was holden deir Thogh the eldest sonne their on wold not feid To welcome his yongest sonne make good cheir Idem Then said the father let all blithnes pro●eiti My 〈◊〉 is to●●●● o● luse that before was deid Lord here I se● thy great beatitude And do constdder my owne ●ngratitude It is I wretche from the father exild It is I my conscience hathe me accused Rom. 2. I● is I Lord that is the wandring child The giftes thou me gaue I haue abused And contrare thy command haue them parused And them
for loue and libertie of man Aganes Sinne death and Satan also Apoc. 19. That parsecute mankinde withoutten ho He wold of his goodnes vnder infirmitie Isa ● 6. Phil. 2. Hyd● the greate power of his diuinitie Because that he was hu●ble ouer all whair Mat. 1. His glorious ●o feared him the mair For our sak●● come that captayne expart Psal 45 Ioh. ●● That God di● che●●e after his very hart To gyde his people and be gouernour Ioh. 1. Wish curage came this hardie conquerour Teld with our fleshe infirme ●yne manfu●le Heb. 2. He faught with fo rs againes our fo●s thre These enemies about him round arreyed Satan to tempt him haistelie asseyed 〈◊〉 4. In their assaultes thy war also assailled All thre ouercome their puissance not a vailled Syne death his dart at him threw in that stoūd Apoc ▪ 20 But his dart him selfe wroght ye greittest woūd Death thinking on him to winne an aduantage In to that battaill lost bothe strength ruraige Heb. 1. So our victorious capitayne thus he ch●sed And thogh it best till lat him self be sesed Os●● 13. In dying so he raised his fo rs agane To deathes preiudice and meikle pane Death thou art dead for all thy strength might 1. Cor. 15 Thou art no more now vailleand nor wight Where is thy aufull dart and widdert ●orce Where is become thy power and thy force Where is become thy puissance and thy glorie Death where is thy sting hell thy victorie O Lord of lordes thou by thy might and strēgth Hast done fulfill to vs thy folke at length Deb. ● Thy holie promesse from the altitude Saying by the Sprite of thy Prophete gude Rom. 5. O death with death when thou shall gar me de Os●●●● My death shall be thy death and vinques the O hart of mae● thogh thou war addamant Graue in ●hy self with an 〈…〉 ●●amant 〈◊〉 ● ●ow Chri●●s dead hathe 〈…〉 〈◊〉 And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to ly●e 〈…〉 〈…〉 ●is death 〈…〉 the 〈◊〉 〈…〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ● ● And the soore sentence of the law ha●●he bro●●n The olde tribu●● ▪ 〈◊〉 s●●●e he did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And haithe the dra●●●s kingdome 〈◊〉 ●ul Law Now Sio● sy●g with voice melodi●●● 〈◊〉 1● Syng on bothe 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 glorio●● ●ow Christ brak thy bo●des and made the srie Apoc. 7. Frome Satans s●r●it●de and tyra●●ie Prayse thou the Lord for thy deliuerance And lo●fe the lambe for his newe allia●ce 1. ●or 2. Magnifie him for now and ●uer more To Christ giue onelie honour prayse and glore That hathe so loued the that for thy sa●k Hathe all thy foes subdewed at one straik This conqueroure in s●●le h●roicall Spak as hauing the charge ●●l●stiall ●say 43 S●● I am come I haue power compleit To breke the olde and make an ●●we decr●●● And first of all to death he 〈◊〉 him neir 2. ●or 5. And said these wordes as ye shall after heir Death 〈◊〉 of man and pest capitall That vnder one wolde gouerne all equall 〈◊〉 4. Send downe to the in●er●all pitt pla●de Rom. ● Of hell obs●●re against the I conclude My newe decreit and law that ●euer was 1. ●or ●● Neglect them not for by them must thou pas Take head o death note well and vnderstand 〈◊〉 41. That in my fathers name I the command ●hen thou shall call my cho●in and elect ●et haue to them a● 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 respect I charge the 〈◊〉 thy ●ac● thou shal them 〈◊〉 To ●raye them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Law And when thou 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ● ●ead not with the Sata● nor his co●●●●t N●ther temptation hell nor yet dispair 〈◊〉 nor 〈◊〉 thoght 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a●●air I command the ●at no● to t●●m● app●●● Sad●es nor wo d●●● dr●do●r dread nor ●●ir ●ell nor his 〈◊〉 shall no wayes be prepai●d Nor no da●●at●on shall be one them decla●●d Item To my elect that o● me will beleue ●how shall not haue no p●●ssance them to greue Se● that my chosen w●●h peace and pati●●ce ●o●●●des ●● me I shall be their desence Ioh. ●● With bos●●●g of the Law come thou no more ●al ● ● 4. With Goddes wraith as thou was wo●t before Come not with dolo●●s nor with a●●●ctions Come lo●inglie with bene●●ctions Ps●l ●● Come as my seruand and portar speciall Come as my pos● and s●●●●lie on them call Ioh. ● And sy●e 〈◊〉 oppen thou my porte And say to my 〈◊〉 in this sorte ●●ir is the end of your trauell be ●a●e 〈◊〉 ● ▪ 〈◊〉 ●● ●ere is the end of all your wo and pane So thou shall wi●e the teares from their ey●● And prom●sse the more i●ye then th●y haue 〈◊〉 Thou that sometyme was their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ● Shall ●ow be chainged in be●●dictio●e When thou hast serued of por●e then at last 〈…〉 〈◊〉 throw the ●●●t 〈…〉 th● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall die 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the shall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And sa●d to s●●ne thou 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sy●●e 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 o● Sa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the second death Apo. ●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 most 〈◊〉 O● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fo●●● and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 o● the co●●●●able 〈◊〉 Of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sulp●●r Con●ea●ed and bo●●● of the ol●● ▪ ser●e●t So●kar of his lait●lie 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thou ca●st w●ll 〈◊〉 i● vol●pt●ous place To p●yso●e Adames nature and his ▪ ●ai●● With thy corrupt can●●● thou can atto●es Pollute his harte and g●awe his fleshe bones Psal 14. 〈◊〉 2● Rom. 6. In so far that his fleshe force and puissance With thy ●e●●ome broght till great gre●●●ce Man is the marke at thou doest da●●●e sh●te Of his warke 〈◊〉 day ●hou s●kes tribu●● Thou art in him so 〈◊〉 and so gra●ed ●sa ●● That thou hast him 〈◊〉 and depra●ed ●●t 〈◊〉 note well marke how that my gra●● Shall far surm●●● thy ●●●the in euery place ●om ● ●ll thogh fleshe a●● blood of thy p●st redo●●de ●●t muche more shall my mercie abounde Thogh thou hast with th●●●●so●e ● thy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the heauen 〈◊〉 fathers ire pro●oke 〈◊〉 I hau● done ●●th● ▪ heauen and ●arth fulfill With grace and 〈◊〉 ● w●oght my fathers wil● ▪ ● ●or 15 〈◊〉 ● Ph●l ● 〈◊〉 ● O● n● more valo●● thou shall be rep●ted For I h●●e all thy power 〈◊〉 co●●●●ed To my elect thou shall as drop of gall ●e ●●xt in pyp● of ho●y 〈◊〉 So shall b● melted all thy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And as an 〈◊〉 ●● 〈◊〉 be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So 〈◊〉 art lesse ▪ in 〈◊〉 vnto me 1. 〈◊〉 ●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the fleshe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I do 〈◊〉 And ●●●all to 〈◊〉 all to 〈◊〉 My 〈◊〉 shall work on such ●● 〈◊〉 a●●hair 〈◊〉 ● That olde ●●am shall mas●●r be 〈◊〉 We shall 〈◊〉 make an sa●●oth and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
〈◊〉 that could not satisfie To their desires whill ●yme prefi●t said ho Then for to rule and reigne bigen also 〈…〉 The great ●ictie superbe and glorious That some tyme founded was by Romulus Whiche wan and conquest all the Orient And in short space subdewed all the Occident On suche an wise all landes and langage Become their subiectes and made them homage Carthai●e ancient strong and mightie town They brack the walles and kest the cietie down Their gloir did so increase and multiplie Pryde promest it shuld still remane on hie Pry●● But whē approched their propre houre and tyme Presixt and set by prouidence deuyne From their impire they were ouerthrawn cast They might no longar reigne for tyme was past So toke an end the high Impire Romane That was so long fordged on blood humane The whole world could not by their great puissance Them vēques whill God by his puruiāce Sewe in their sinnat ciuile seditione Which sprang and grew to their confusione Cons●●e in earth no thing is permanent Eccles ● But shall haue end for God omnipotent With dayes houres hathe euery thing prefixt That shall not be ouer past nor yet proli●t Here in this earth nothing is firme nor stable But Christes kingdome remanes 〈◊〉 ●●●● ● 〈◊〉 So biy●g seased ●ur 〈◊〉 Our ● buocat and 〈…〉 Vpon his Fathers right 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for man 1. Tim. 2 Heb. 9. With 〈◊〉 his orisone 〈◊〉 Praying his Father God omnipotent To grante him these requestes consequent Ioh. 17. O supreme Father most worthie in aspect Since in my bodie that thou hast elect Hathe bene accomplished whole obedience Apoc. ● Hebr. 2 9 10 12. 2. Cor. 6 Rom. 7. Therefore I pray the with de●full reuerence The inobedience of the worlde remitte That they against the daylie do committe Thogh poysone entred in by Adames race Thou may remead it with thy might and grace For my goodnes and loue mende that misdead Rom. 5. Since that by Adam entred sinne and dead Grant throw my death which was superlatyne May entre peace and euerlasting lyue I make the most humble supplicatione Since thou hast pleised the oblatione That pietie hathe caused me to present Ioh. 15. Of my owne naturall bodie innocent That sinne nor death pretend no actione Heb. 10. But take my fleshe and blood for satisfactione Ephes 1. Of them that will with heart intrincicall Pray in my Name to the continuall Holding the as the Father eterne tutorne Ioh. 14. And me as brother iudge and gouernoure Matt. 6. That hopes in me and in none other wight For them o Father I pray the day and night The ardent loue and pietie paternall Ioh. 17. That thou hast borne to me contenuall Must cause the lykewise them to loue so weill That in their heartes they may pers●ne and feill Ioh. 1● How for my sake thou hast them all resaued As thy owne children Gotten and consaued When they by waiknes in temptatione fall 1. Cor. 10 O Father then haue mercy on them all Considder of themselues they haue no goode But imperfite and borne of fleshe and bloode Ioh. 14 16. Without our helpe they fall and may not stand To thy goodnes them all I recommand I know full well what may to them betyde So Sata● me assailled with his pryde Thus may I not alway in their vexatione Mat. 4. Contemple them without I haue compassione Heb. 2. Their cau●e and maters touches me so neir They are my blood elect and brethren deir Thy are my membres and my holie Kirke I must be their defence for them to wirke Ephes 1 2. I may not suffre that one of them be shent To ansuer for them all I me present By thy bontie eternall they are thyne 1. Cor. 3. Mat. 21. Ioh. 16 17. Yet by reasone I boght them they are myne Thou hast them put vnder my gouernance And promesed me to be their assurance Their aide their helpar and protectour propice Father I pray the for my Sacrifice Idem That thou wilt in their mindes and hartes pour Our odoriferrant balme and sweit licour With the feruent flambe and zeale of Charitie The liuelie Spirit condigne of our deitie And the sweit vnctiō that doeth from bothe proceid Mus● be 〈◊〉 their solace and remeid Again 〈…〉 As well 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●iabolicall Ioh. 14. For their most 〈◊〉 and stro●● 〈◊〉 Their most persite and principall instructour The holie Gost for witnes and for gaige Ephes 1. 2. For 〈◊〉 and arles of our heritage Lat them with vs reignes o Father 〈◊〉 When they offend impute to me their crime Ioh. 17. And ended so this supplicatione He said to me for thy oblatione Heb. 9. Rom. 4 5. My dear beloued Sonne celestiall For the offence of men terrestriall Then payed for all au ransome most condigne Heb. 10. And I at thy request to them benigne My Sonne delice and substance of my sell Esa 9. Heb. 5. Pro●or 8. 2. Cor. 4 Ma● 28. Resaue all powere in heauen earth and hell Till damne till bind till Lousse and till releue Till saue them all that shall on the beleue Take all the treasures of the heauen celest Dispone and parte them where thou pleses best Sith I haue all this power to the geuen Psal ●● Act. 2. Heb. 1 The earth the hell the Angelles of the heauen A geue the likewise in thy holy hand An rod of yron to strike who doeth ganestand If thou shall plese that rod without regaird Shall brecke breisse them as an pottars shaird Apo. 19. Our holie lambe ressaning all this charge To shewe him selfe bothe liberall and large The heauens oppened in haist with reuerence Mat. 18. Where he departed with magnificence 〈◊〉 ●●●asure and the holie gifte 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●he worlde plane and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And 〈◊〉 of all his promesse to fullfill Act. 2. The great conforteur come his 〈◊〉 With diuerse tongues and leides solatious And with zeraphricall windes gratious Ilke on of them in science newe did sleit With diuerse giftes of the sammyn Spreit 1. Cor. 2● Where their was men of Mede and Parthians Of Pontus Pamphill and Cerene●us Of Capado●e and Mesopotamia Of Asia Egypt Libia and Phrigia Act. 21. Their was Arab Iewe Greik and Proseleit Strangers of Rome of Candy and of Creit These nations all maruelled and was on sloght To here se what was by the Apostles wroght By verie vertue of their high doctrine Idem When all these nationes were before theme syne In their maternall tongues and propre leid Ilk one of them heard Christ preached in deid Fontaines of grace from them did slowe spring Throw Chrisis prom●sse where his Spirit benig To Idiot men vnlearned hece on ground ●●n 10. Their simplenes did prudent men consound Christ promised to leawe when he did ascend
consumed in prodigalitie Luc. 19. Following my lust and sensualitie So now great hongare reignes in this l●●b That all kinne people in parrell is to tyne For falt of Goddes worde and his command And I compeld till ear with mekill pyne Amos 8. That whiche is meiter for dogs and for swine Haue I not cause for to be sad and wo When I think on the house that I came sro Where their is an aboūdāce of the heauēlie bread But I allas haue done my self misgyde That my sinnes theiron will not let me feid What shall I do or where shall I me hyde Rom. 7. Or shall I still into my sinne abyde With repentance is better that I murne And yet agane to my father returne Perchance he mercie will vpon me haue I trust he will me souccour in my n●id When with repentance I it aske and craue Then shall I pray him that he take no heid Ezec. 18. To my folie nor to my wicked deid And to my sinnes past haue no regaird Nor after my deseruinges me rewaird Ioh. 17. That his iustice to me haue no respect Where I haue walked long tyme vndiscre●e Rom. ●● But that his mercie make me his elect And as I thoght these wordes in my spre●e Their did appeir to me an father sweit That notwithstanding my sinne did me imbrace And from my fa●ltes he did remoue his fate Esa 44. Syne did command 〈…〉 That in the booke of life I 〈◊〉 rol● And cled me with an robe of innocence And on my finger put an ring of gold Whiche is the liuelie faith that I should hold Luc. 15. And with that hand where the ring did repose He gaue me bread to eat more sweit nor rose Syne for my loue the best fed calf was keild That worldlie wisdome on an croice gart bleid Act. 3. Which calf was Christ our onelie stay and beild Heb. 9. Who said to me my owne brother take heid Who trustes in me shall neuer see the deid And thoght they were in●i●me dead man wyse Ioh. 11. Yet shall they liue and haue eternall lyfe My liuelie dead I tholed for thy behoue Hathe Adās ofspring frō Satans bādes driued Col. 2. Thou mon bel●ue with hope to reigne aboue O death in lyfe by Christes death arriued Heb. 2. We that were dead are by his death reuiued Gal. 2. We are all dead as concerning the Law Rom. 7. And yet we liue throw Christes death we knaw O Lord my God Christ my Mediatour 1. Ioh. 2. That tholed death for my saluatione W●she clenge and purge my poysoned natoure Ephe. 5. With liuelie water of regeneratione Tit. 3. That I se no more the separatione Of the and me my Lord my God and King Ioh. 14. But in the heauen with the that I may ring But giue me knowledge of the holie Worde And cause it shrow my inward p●●●●s rinne Heb. 4. Perce thou my heart with that two edged smorde And that it still remaine my harte withinne Whil thou this spirit take from this corps of sinne Then thy right waye shall I parsaue and finde Rom. 7. And walk no more stumbling as I were blinde To vnderstand that word shall giue me plane Deut. 4. If I with mekenes do it humblie reid What is the trwe meate of an Christiane Allanerlie since no man leues on breid But by the worde which doeth of God proceid Mat. 4. Lord thou art high brade lenth and latitude Stloth serene the pure and plesand slude I come to the to weshe me in that place Thou knowes well I am the blinde man borne Refuse me not but grant me of thy grace Since for my sake thou beatten was and torne Ioh. 9. Suffre me not o Lord to be forlorne Nor led with blinde thogh I blindnes desire To go and trampe in euerie dub and myre Oppen my inward eyne and giue me sight O Lord and make me one of thy appointed ● Ioh ▪ 2 4. Ephe. 2. Heb. 2 9 10. That I may iudge the darknes by the light And say that it is Iesus Godes oynted That with his precious ▪ blood hath me anointed And me redemed hathe from captiuitie And hathe me geuen the Spirit of libertie The 〈…〉 for the of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 chace With 〈…〉 ● and 〈◊〉 That I 〈…〉 and it 〈◊〉 Esa 15. Luc. 1. Louse thou 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that I may 〈◊〉 expre● That holie worde and dailie it confes Sen th●● hast said let not my yocke the greue 〈◊〉 ● ▪ For if thou will ●●my promesse beleue Thou shall dwell in me and I in the remane If thou byde constant withoutten balt or hink To comfort the in thy trauell and pane In thy drouthe thou shall haue my blood to drink Ioh. 6. And in thy heart if that trwe faith can sink My bodie thou shall haue and fleshe to ●it To fede the inward man the lyfe and spreit Remembring thereby my death and passione Vntill I come kepe the same in memorie 1. Cor. 11 For they receaue their ownr damnatione That eattes this Sacrament vnworthelie Making no difference of the Lordes bodie Therefore let one man iudge him selfe and s●ne Let him come ●at the bread and drink the wyne 2. Cor. ●● Right many are with maladi●s confused And do perish● at length without remeid B●cause they haue ▪ 〈◊〉 Sa●●a●●●t abused 1. 〈◊〉 11. And many slepes to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Because they haue not thereof taken he●d Lord ●locken me with drink celestiall That no dregges nor poysone papisticall Haue puissance to entre my heart withinne Whose dregges hath done the whole world delude Which is but draffe and satlinges full of sinne Ioh. 6. The Lordes word and promesse is my fude He hath me fed in faith with fleshe and blude He is the bread of life the which shall geue Pardon of sinne to all that will beleue He is the Sacrament and lambe Paschall That oues for all hath made ane offring Leuit. 18 Deu● 21. Psal 4● Heb. 1. Gal. 3. His precious bloode hath ransoued vs all He was for vs curst and on an ecoce did hing That curse till vs he chainged in blessing And to saue his elect for verye loue He gaue him selfe to death for their behoue And from the dead ▪ to life he roise againe In to his naturall bodie sensible Ioh. 21. Syne to his Apostles appeared plaine Mar. 16. That they might all see his bodie visible Syne to his Father that is inuisible He ascended from them thogh they did murne Act. 1. And promest at the last daye for to returne In that same bodie that he rose from deid Which bodie doeth remane in heauen alwaye And sitteth on Godds right hand as saith the creid Heb. 1● ▪ And shall not steir nor moue as Paull doeth saye Whill the last trompet sound at domesdaye If it
supernaturall In my weirs I hated vice and creweltie I set vp iustice and ciuilitie The furse of Bacchus I did refuse With all the dulce pleasures of soo●it Venuse ▪ Who are ennimyes at all tymes and hours To all vailzeand and noble Conquerours I say not this my self for to promote And wold be laith their honour for till blote But will defend vnto the day of dome The honour and the worthynes of Rome Mynos ye knowe the Romains do excell All nations better then my tongue can tell The sentence of Mynos Your martiall dedes with paines night daye Are broght to ende with many hard assay I say that all conquestes vnder the sonne Oght with reasone and vertue to be wonne So Scipion is worthie that did eschewe All kynd of vice and followed vertue The high tytle of honour pretious Before you two that were so vitious Wherefore we iudge Scipion to proceid And Alexandre Hanniball to exceid And yf ye thinke our sentence importune It is to you two to aske of fortune That fand her at all tymes so fauourable To fulfill your lustes insaciable That still without repose ye thoght it good To shed and spill the innocentes blood Without propose the world to molest Where vertue failes reason may not rest FINIS BY ME ROBERT NORVEL Non est mortale quod opto Psalm 5 ❧ werba mea auribus percipe Psalmus 5 Vnto the wordes that I shall say If it may pleis the len thy care To know the sore sighes and fear Of my poore hart boith nyght and day Lord I the pray To hear the voce and zeill ardent Of my distres my God and King My supplicatione I resing Onlie to the and my intent I do present Befoir the day in euerie place To hear me yf thy plesure be Ilk morning pray and ryght airlie To heauen heuand vp my face A bydand grace Thou art the ryghteous God bening Thou louest not an double man For euill doers neuer can Haue residence into thy ring Nor abiding Who folehardie and wicked bene That pleasure takes for till offend Ar odius that will not amend For such befoir the Lordis eine Dar not be seine Thy fearfull yre shall make agast Liears trumpours and homicides All suche wirkers of wicked dedes The Lord that reules all at last Shall them out cast But all shy lawes I shall leir Both heart and mynd I shall prepair Till honour the for euer mair Into thy house with heart inteir Vnder thy feaer Lord my God guyde me and conuoye For thy goodnes I the demand Forth of my ennimies hand And me conduct boith night and day In thy right way No trueth is in their mouth nor halse Their heart is couerd vnder cure Their throt an oppen sepulchure Full of falshead and flattrie false Their tonge is alse Lord let them be put vnto sack That whatsoeuer they take on hand Be them aganis and them gainstand For contrair the they vndertak Put them abak Thy chosen with magnificence Shall aye reioyse and hope in the For they shall euer blissed be That takes thy shield for their defence With patience The giftes of the Lord are large Vnto the iust O Sauiour Thou couers them with thy fauour For who will them assaill or charge Thou art their targe Finis ❧ The excusation of the maker to the maker to Iidder with the makero direction to his goo● Lord and maister my Lord Earle of Argyle ❧ Nou est mortale quod opto NOw art thou lytle volume broght to end Thogh thou be voyd of eloquence and bare Thy suithfast sētence on Goddis word doisdepēd As thy cotations right clearlie dois declaire Go searche the scriptures ād ye shall fid all their That I haue written it may be trid and kend For welfair of the commoun populair If I had treated of facttes bellicall Of heauenlie motions or of Astronimie Or how that men in loue bene bound thrall And subiect to his soueraine fair laidie I could haue showne many trim storeis That wolde haue pleased persons mundiall Hauing delite into suche vanities But thou small work cōcernes not the fleshe For I the wroght for till instruct mannes spreit With diligence theirfore se thou dispeshe To spirituall men of conceince discreit For carnall men thou art not for them meit To gostlie men thou shal be found right freshe And in their mouthes right delicat and sweit Hast the theirfore with detfull deligence To euerie person thou findes spirituall And homage make to them and reuerence But I command the thou pas first of all ●o the Erle of ●●●ple in speciall For whose c●●●e I wrote this sure sen●ence Throw hearing of his Godlie gouernall Submit my humble seruice day and night Vntill his Lordshipe whill my lyfe may dure With all my force my power strength might At foote and hand with heart and besy cure By sea or land where euer he list to sure As it becommes my symplenes of right Shew him that I shall die his seruiture And now farewell ye gentill readeris all Farewell all ye that be professours trwe Of God the Fatheres word celestiall And of his Sonne our soueraine Christ Ieswe In whome all grace till vs poore seruādes grwe And saued vs from death perpetuall Farewell all faithfull I say no moir adew ¶ Noruelles Newyeres gyft to the Archeris of the gard when he was presoner at Paris ●● the bastillie 1555. TO all the Archeris of the scottis gard I wyshe health honour and prosperitie If that I shuld seke them trewlie to reward Throw Scotland Englande France Ytalie Spayne Portugaill Yrelande Almanie Turkie Trace Medois and the Moirs of Ynde Syne rake hell and the bodum of theste I could not find so many so vnkynde Finis quod Noruell