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A90365 Pelagos. Nec inter vivos, nec inter mortuos, neither amongst the living, nor amongst the dead. Or, An improvement of the sea, upon the nine nautical verses in the 107. Psalm; wherein is handled I. The several, great, and many hazzards, that mariners do meet withall, in stormy and tempestuous seas. II. Their many, several, miraculous, and stupendious deliverances out of all their helpless, and shiftless distressess [sic]. III. A very full, and delightful description of all those many various, and multitudinous objects, which they behold in their travels (through the Lords Creation) both on sea, in sea, and on land. viz. all sorts and kinds of fish, foul, and beasts, whether wilde, or tame; all sorts of trees, and fruits; all sorts of people, cities, towns, and countries; with many profitable, and useful rules, and instructions for them that use the seas. / By Daniel Pell, preacher of the Word. Pell, Daniel. 1659 (1659) Wing P1069; Thomason E1732_1; ESTC R203204 470,159 726

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the Egyptian ibid. Spots soon seen in the Ermin page 64 Suspicious ships should not bee neglected to hee spoke withall page 65 Song that the poor bird sung when got out of the Fowlers hands ibid. Suevians estimation of peace page 70 Ships how they should bee governed ibid. Strong drink should bee kept out of ships page 77 Sailors that are naught too like the unsavoury Elder tree ibid. Star the Mariner sails by what page 12 Sailors prophane life like to King Eldreds Reign page 413 Sea-men how they will go forth in windy nights to see if they can espye any star in the heavens page 420 Sea-men how fearful of Rocks and Sands page 430 Sea-men how unkindly they deal with Prayer page 483 Saylors in storms how compared to the Froggs in the Country-mans Pond page 481 Saylors how resemble the Siryphian Froggs page 478 Swearing ships worse habitations than the stinking Jakes and Channels about the City of London page 490 Saylors like to the people in the time that Juvenal lived in page 489 Seas turbulent and dangerous to Passengers because of prophane men in ships page 350 Security taken napping at sea as the old World was page 364 Sea how compared to lovely Paris in Hectors eye page 376 Sea-men exhorted in their employments to imitate the Nobilities of Rome ibid. Storms as well as Calms come from the hand of God page 379 Signs of the coming of storms be fifteen page 373 Ships at sea how resemble the Owl in the Embleme page 535 Saylors imployment how compared to the picture of the naked man in the Almanack page 530 Sea-ports should resemble the Emblem of the Candle page 535 Sea-men how they sit in the Waves and upon the Flouds like him in the Emblem page 536 Sea compared to the English Colledge at Valladolid in Spain for danger page 536 Sea-port Towns if naught how they endanger and threaten the whole Land with ruine page 538 Sunk ships bespeak Sea-men to make seven good applicatory uses page 550 Ships that have fair names upon them oftentimes very foulely miscarry page 547 Sea-mans life and conversation page 548 Sea how compared to Pandora's Box for danger page 542 Ships brought to ruine by reason of sinful men that saile in them page 555 Sea-men if godly need not fear the seas page 544 Saylors life what it is page 458 Sea compared to Proteus page 454 Syracucian when in a storm to save himself threw his wife over-board page 455 Sea how compared to the river Hypanis page 438 Seas why turbulent and Winds boysterous be divers in respect of the prophane wretches that goe in them ibid. Storms how the uttering of Gods voyce in wrath against them that use the seas page 340 Sea-mens large vowes to their God when in storms page 461 Sea-men in want of fear how compared to Sigismund page 475 Sea-men how they call upon God in storms and never in calms page 476 Sea-mans employment as dangerous as the Snails going over the bridge page 533 Story of one risen from the dead page 566 Storms better not bad men page 567 Stork how she expresses her thankfulnesse page 568 Saylors of Zara what they offered to their God for a deliverance in a storm page 570 Sea-men deal with their God as Egypt with the Clouds page 572 Seas upon a time how spoke to a pack of swearing Saylors and asked them why they was not affraid page 560 Shipwrack many suffer and why page 547 Saylors compared to Bees page 452 Sea-men how should prepare for storms page 394 Storms what Gods aimes are in them page 395 Sceva how he told of all his deliverances to his friends page 573 Seamen what they should say of their deliverances page 588 Sea-men how they deal with God page 580 Ship how covered over with Celestial curtains page 318 Storms how dreadful sometimes in Egypt page 329 Sea-lights when burn dimme make the Mariners curse and rage page 509 Seas as difficult to Navigate as the Hircinian Forrests bee to travel through page 510 Sigismund Emperour what used to say of his enemy page 514 Seas in storms run as high as the mountains in Mirioneth-shire in Wales page 514 Spaniard how may be dealt withall page 182 Spanish Ambassadors proud Ambassage into England page 185 Sea-men exhorted to bee as valiant for England as the two Scipio's were page 185 Sea-men exhorted to charge the Spaniard stoutly page 187 Sea-men how they see the riches honours and beauties of Countries page 191 T. TRojans how glad after their long Warre when came within the sight of their own Country page 545 Toledo the Arch-Bishop how hee despaired of Solomon page 410 Thankfulnesse how gainful it was to Alexander page 578 Tyger what page 254 Toddy-tree what page 265 Terebinth-tree page 266 Torrid Zone how people live in it page 273 Troy how ruined when secure page 298 Torpedo what page 226 Tumbler page 441 Titus Vespasian how sweetly spoken page 517 Travellers on Land what course they take page 11 Teneriff how difficult to goe up to the top of it page 600 Tree in Pliny how delightful page 2 Theodore how careful of his Childrens education page 35 Turkycock how said to rage page 106 Thistle in the Scottish coyn what it said page 139 Trumpet sounds England stand to thine Arms. page 143 Turks how allow none to be idle page 166 Thescus how guided by Ariadnes thred page 500 Thresher what said of him page 222 Thrush how brings evil upon her self page 205 Turk what said of England when looking for it in a Map page 183 V. ULysses what said of eloquence page 45 Voluptuous Londoner how feasted his five senses page 100 Vines in India how compared page 21 Virgils observation of a storm page 542 Ulysses how sadly hee raged when like to bee drowned in a storm page 556 Venice how lived a thousand years in one form of Government page 529 Use of comfort to those that use the Seas that God is the great Commander of them and of the winds page 360 Voyages are all to bee begun in the fear and by the good leave of God page 387 Vulcan so proud that hee would dwell no longer on earth but c. page 415 Vses of Information Circumspection and Reproof page 361 Unthankfulness reproved page 576 577 W. VVInd what it doth page 36● Wars of old what they did when they went into them page 388 Wonders the greatest in England are her famous and stately Fabricks of warlike ships page 382 White-hall how a curb both to Sea and Land page 489 Winds how overthrow Sambelicus and his Army whilst at dinner page 338 Wind-Armies bee four page 331 Walnot tree how better for beating page 504 Winds are allayed six several wayes page 522 Waves of the Sea what called by some page 524 World if travelled what to be done page 194 Whale what said of him page 212 Wilde-Ass what page 247 Water-spouts at Sea what page 271 Wilde-Cows what page 255 Wilde-Goat what page 254 Wilde-Bore what page 255 Waters of the Sea why called great page 152 Water in Sicily what page 153 War how ought to begin and bee carried on page 145 World how often it hath been fought for page 170 World divided how few Christians in it page 271 Williams valour when went to Sea page 124 West-Indies how tame Fowls are page 241 Weeping-tree page 266 X. XErxes trusting in a multitude of men how betrayed page 520 Xerxes angred at Helespont how threw Irons into it page 521 Y. YEars ago could not sail far at Sea because wanted the use of the Loadstone page 9 Z. Zebra what page 250
when all the skill wit and art that they put forth cannot help them then may they bee said to bee at their wits end That the Sea-man is very frequently Observ 1 and commonly inveigled with such difficult and horrid straights in the Seas that hee neither knows how nor what way to get himself out of them And are at their wits end Now cries the Mariner whom you could never see to cry before Psal 142.7 Bring my soul out of prison that I may praise thy name The Sea-mans condition may well bee resembled unto a prison which notes confinement and inclosure insomuch that there is as little possibility of evasion I may say of Sailors in this case as Job said of himself in another Job 30.31 My Harp is turned to mourning and my Organ into the voyce of them that weep and escape as there is for them that are in Jayls Irons and Fetters Oh the many heart-akes and affrightments that my soul hath had in the unmerciful Seas and not onely I but those that have skill and knowledge in the Seas when wee have been thrown and run upon sands our condition hath been no better than that which the Apostle was brought into Act. 27.20 And when neither Sun nor Stars in many dayes appeared and no small tempest lay on us all hope that wee should be saved was then taken away Yet in these straights the Lord never left mee nor them that were with mee comfortless but hath at one time or other when that I have thought that the ship would flye in peeces at every billow that hath come upon her when fast upon the sands supported mee bidding mee stand still and see the salvation of the Lord though no possibility of escaping was in view and sight yet hath the Lord seemed to say Fear not for you shall ere long bee delivered and after some little expence of time wee have wonderfully got off again When Ziglag was burnt with fire and the people spoke of stoning David yet found hee much comfort from the Lord in that gravaminous distress 1 Sam. 30.6 But David encouraged himself in the Lord his God That the terrible and heart-daunting Observ 2 dangers that Sea-men very frequently do meet withall in the great deeps Every unreasonable creature when put to it will make use of their horns others of their teeth some of their claws and other some of their feet the Souldier to their Guns Pikes and Swords do put them upon the setting of their wits at work to think and contrive all the wayes and means that ever they can imagine to get themselves out of them And are at their wits end Act. 27.17 They used helps undergirding the ship and fearing left they should fall into the quick sands strake sail and were so driven Vers 18. And being exceedingly tossed with the tempest the next day they lightned the ship Oh the pale faces that bee at these times amongst the Mariners Oh the many trembling joynts amongst our stoutest men Oh the witless heads and the helpless hands that bee amongst them at these times Act. 27.29 Then fearing lest wee should have fallen upon Rocks they cast four anchors out of the stern and wished for the day That the Sea-man is oftener out of his Observ 3 wits than in it And are at their wits end This is the Sailors miserable Motto Nec sine te nec tecism vivere possum I cannot live without I go to Sea and when I am there I cannot abide it The Sea-man hath but a little wit but hee is oftentimes out of it and besides it and that six several wayes 1. In a storm 2. In a fit of anger 3. In a fit of drunkenness 4. In the sin of uncleanness Prov. 6.32 5. In his graceless swearing 6. In the act of murther Mee thinks I hear the Country man saying is it thus That there are such hazzards in the Seas and that the Mariners are put to these heart-affrighting and soul-consternating dangers I would not bee solicited to go to Sea if they would give mee the choysest and cost-liest ship that is in the world for I should conclude that if those men that use the Seas bee so often at their wits end I should bee oftner at the end of mine Are they in such dangers that many times the Masts break by the board upon their heads Are they in such jeopardy that their sails tear in peeces like to white paper by the winds Do the Seas come leaping over their Poop-lanthorns and sometimes over their yard arms Are they ever and anon running upon sands And by and by upon rocks What would become of mee were I in the sight of such storms I confess there is a vast disproportion betwixt the Sea-mans and the Land-mans life because the one is tossed and tumbled in a turbulent Sea and the other is both night and day in quiet at land 1. The Sea is full of dangers whereas the Land is full of peace and safety from those perils that bee at Sea 2. The Sea is restless and unquietly raging but the land is stable and firm and quiet because it stands upon that uncontroulable Decree of the Lords 3. There is small comfort and contentment to bee had or expected in the Sea The Sea is a great Element in which both fish and fowl take great delight to live but there is none of the sons of men but take far more pleasure in being at land Englands Navy is not unlike to Davids Army 1 Sam. 22.2 Every one that was in distress every one that was in debt and every one that was discontented gathered themselves unto him It is poverty makes many go to Sea but the land affords both a multiplicity and variety of it 4. When men are at Sea they are neither amongst the living nor amongst the dead but the land affords sweet converse and good society Vers 28. Then they cry unto the Lord in their trouble and hee bringeth them out of their distresses VVHo will not say but that it is high time for men to betake themselves to prayer when they are involved in such straights as that they are at their very wits end This Scripture I conceive is partim queribundus partim precativus and partim consolatorius 1. It is expostulatory and full of complaints 2. Supplicatory and full of requests 3. Consolatory and full of hopes 1. You have the Sea-men in this Scripture expostulating their case with God and making their dolorous distresses known unto him 2. You have the Sea-man praying unto God to deliver him and all with him out of the storm and dreadful hazzards that they are in Then they cry c. 3. Here is the Sea-man partly comforting of himself with hope that the Lord in his good time will deliver him and those that are with him out of their dangers And this hope springs from the strong confidence that hee hath in God who is the great Commander of the waves and winds
English page 435 Prayer how should resemble the stars about the North-pole page 460 Prayer begged at the hands of all the godly and powerful Ministry in England for poor Sea-men page 542 Pliny's expression of Rome given to men that use the Seas page 478 Pliny's judgement what the wind is page 367 Prayer how prevalent with God page 482 Perpetual life-danger of Sea-men page 420 Philostrates's life compared to Sea-men page 392 Prophane Sea-mens Motto ibid. Prayer forced is never ought page 486 Plutarchs report of men dejected what done withall page 401 Paulinus how hee bore his great trial under the savage Goths page 352 Patience an excellent vertue the heathen thought it so when page 353 Praising of God in several directions page 576 Pythagoras scholars what their custome was page 109 Plato how answered Socrates in his rashness page 25 Persons what should not bee taken in into Navy ships page 32 Physiognomer what hee said of an Emperour page 80 Plato's great desire to convert Dionysius page 61 Paul how desirous to have them saved that sailed with him page 52 Pepper-tree how it grows page 263 Pemblico a bird page 242 Q. Question fifteen page 150 R. REasons why Sea-men should bee thankful unto their God for their deliverances are five page 565 Reasons laid down are sixteen why storms arise upon the Seas page 348 Reasons two strong ones why men are so fearful in storms page 455 Righteous man of what worth page 36 Reasons five why young men should bee looked after in the Sea page 73 Roman Ambassadors what said of them page 78 Romans highly esteem of faithfulness page 84 Roman General what a command he bore page 30 Romans cannot indure any without a calling page 166 Rome how once laid down to the ground page 180 Rocks in the Sea what their language is page 322 Richard the first how travelled to the Holy Land page 124 S. SEa compared to Plutarchs Moon page 427 Sea summoned in by the Mariners why it did drown so many of them as it did page 427 Speech objurgatory to the rest less Sea ibid. Speech of Galienus the Emperour when lost all that ever hee had page 402 Sea-men how compared to all high pinacles page 409 Sea-men too confident of going to heaven page 410 Seneca's speech page 401 Sea-men in storms are nearer heaven than any in the world besides page 409 Ships when cast away may bee concluded on that it was when the Mariners were swearing page 487 Several Reasons why Sea-men are the worst people in the world page 488 Sea-mans life and conversation page 393 Sea what it saith to prophane men ibid. Sea-mens lives very uncertain page 388 Ships uncertainty of ever returning whilst at Sea page 383 Sailors Motto what page 417 Sea-mans head what compared to page 416 Ships how rest less in the Sea page 27 Sailors Motto what page 445 Seasons six in which Sea-men are evermore out of their wits page 445 Sea hath four ill things in it page 446 Sea-mans Motto in a storm page 418 Sea-mans night-watching in time of storms page 418 Ship-leak springing how terrible page 426 Sea-mans day labouring in time of storms page 417 Sea-men how seemingly good in time of danger page 484 Shark what said of him page 206 Sea-horses what said of them page 209 Sea-men compared to the Nightingale page 191 Sea-swine what said of them page 222 Sea-calf page 224 Sea-turtle ibid. Stork what said of her page 234 Strange-sheep in Cusko page 249 Sivet-cat what shee is page 251 Scorpion what page 258 Strumbilo how it burns page 273 Sea-men too like the traveller that leaves all things behinde him page 281 Sea like the Sea in Pauten page 301 Ship-masters how reproved and for what page 91 Ship-masters exhorted to imitate Tiberius in his honest minde page 90 Sabbath day how sweetly it is observed at Sea page 95 Swearing complained of and exclaimed against at Sea page 101 Subjects that should bee preached on at Sea laid down page 102 Swearing ships but unhealthful air to breathe in page 103 Sea-men if ever they would bee good and Religious must practise seven things page 111 Socrates how fearful of Alcibiades page 115 Spanish Proverb what page 116 Sea-men prophane how compared to Pharaohs seven ill-favoured Kine page 118 Sun how said to shine and would not shine were it not for the godly page 119 Sea-men must practise six things if ever they would have credit ibid. Sea-men exhorted to practise nine very singular good things page 123 Sea-men counselled in three good things page 125 Sea-men should rather dye than stain their credits ibid. Sea-men prophane too like to those in Luthers time page 126 Ships when miscarry may be said that they never sought God in their going out page 132 Ships what order they observe in their going to Sea in nine things page 133 Sea-men how valiant they should bee when they hear of an enemy page 141 Spaniard in what to bee disgusted page 141 Spaniard how massacred many English page 144 Sea or Land a controversie whether bee greater page 153 Sea-men when come out of the West-Indies how glad they are when they can once see the North star page 154 Sea-water how far it excels Land-water in strength page 156 Seas wonderful beneficial to all Countries in five things page 161 Sea-men exhorted to bee of Themistocles temper page 172 Sea separates many Nations a great mercy page 162 Sorrow and pleasure how they fell out page 598 Sea-men how wished a bottle of Nepenthe in storms page 596 States ships how said to resemble Nebuchadnezzars tree page 589 Ships how said to derive their names from the stout fought Battels in England page 290 Ships what several names they have to perpetuate the memory of Englands Battels page 591 Ships that carry the names of Englands Battels upon them are terrible page 592 Sea what manner of place it is page 4 Ship how shee commended the Pilot that steered her well in a storm page 598 Sea hath no lanes foot-paths nor high-wayes to travel by page 12 Sea-men counselled to bee of Fabritius's minde page 16 Sea-men far more on stern in matters of good than any in the world besides page 18 Scipio how of a brave spirit page 21 Sea-Captains some how compared to Thales page 22 Sin the only of Commanders being hurled out ibid. States how little they set by men at Sea whose carriages are naught page 23 Ships carry famous Titles and wherefore page 26 Sea-men too like the Cypress tree page 29 Sea-men that are prophane should bee cast out of ships page 33 Ships have good names but want of government in them page 30 States ships might prosper wonderfully had they but these men in them page 35 States ships should bee little Churches and Chappels page 42 Sea-man how defined page 46 Sea-men how backward to all good in divers particulars page 48 Sabbath day how sweetly it is observed at Sea page 55 Sea Commanders some too like Harpocrates
Butterfly in the Fable what said to the Owl page 499 Barnacle Geese what page 267 Breezes how they cool the hot parts of the world page 273 Buft page 253 Bear page 252 C. CAto's brave Speech to his Souldiers when they were all discouraged page 400 Commanders reproved in four things page 127 Chego a Spanish Mountain page 130 Charls K. of Naples what called page 166 Cyneas what said of that brave Thessalian Oratour Corrupt men how poysonall round about them page 112 Commanders wished to bee of Livius Drusus's mind page 17 Corpuzants what they are page 270 Camelion what page 259 Cocus Tree page 262 Clove page 263 Cypresse ibid. Cynamond page 265 Cedar ibid. Calvin what said of knowledge page 279 Caesars Host how lived on one kind of Herb for a long time page 303 Cranes and Pygmies how fight in the West Indies page 242 Cahou page 243 Cranes what they doe page 237 Crocodile what page 227 Calvin how hee ran into the fire that began in the State of Geneva to put it out page 187 Claudius Marcellus how fought many Battels page 185 Charls 5. what his embleme was page 519 Cable how feigned to speake when it broke in a great storm page 505 Charls the Great how pious he was page 517 Canaan what bredth and length page 269 Chrysostoms comfortable Speech to the people of Antioch page 402 Chaos of Ovid compared to storms page 407 Courtier of King Cyrus's what hee said when to marry his Daughter page 400 Counsel to the States-men of our Land page 381 Complaint of a Ship when run upon the rocks page 419 Complaint of a Ship when ready to sink page 418 Complaint of a Ship when sinking page 426 Cuckoe how faulters in her note when the sweet Summer fails her page 478 Counsel to States-men to look for storms page 380 Counsel to Sea-men good to look for storms whilst at sea page 378 Congratulatory Speech of Sea-men to all good Harbours page 551 Character of a Sea-port Town page 538 Comfort for the States-men of our Common-wealth page 539 Counsel to our Merchants page 540 Cry of a Ship when cast away within the sight of her Harbour page 547 Cast-away Ships how warnings unto others page 550 Condition of men at Sea like his in the Embleme page 541 Cherub God rides upon over the Seas for the good of those that are in them page 561 Considerations nine serious ones to stirre Sea-men up to thankfulness to their God for their deliverances page 568 Cryes in Sea-port Towns when Ships are lost page 557 Character of many prophane Ships at sea page 465 Considerations five weighty ones to put people that live on land upon prayer for those that goe to sea page 439 Considerations four weighty ones to take off all our Sea-men from the Sin of Drunkenness page 436 Charon in Lucian how served when desired to see heaven page 412 Counsel to those that have a mind to goe to sea page 437 Countries Native sweet to them that have been long out of them page 545 Counsel presented by Xaverius to John the third King of Portugal page 454 Comfortable Epistle of Plutarch to his wife page 398 Calms how devoured at sea page 356 Credit of Sea-men how might be recovered page 16 Commanders should bee men veyd of these five things page 24 Captains Motto what page 26 Cowardliness of a Commander when an Enemy came up with him page 27 Captains should throw out their Trash Stones Thorns Briars and Brambles out of their ships page 33 Characters nineteen worth the observing to man Warlike ships by page 35 Commanders should have an eye and an ear over the gestures c. page 38 Chilo's sentence would doe well upon all ships entring-ladders page 39 Captains should keep up their command in ships page 46 Captains should endeavour the good of Sea-men in five things page 52 Captains should be of Themistocles mind in prize page 53 Captains should stand up many times and reprove their Sea-men page 56 Captains should not be silent when they see and hear evil in their men page 58 Commanders should put out the fire of Swearing every day as well as the Cooks fire page 59 Chrysostoms good Speech to young men page 60 Commanders should practise three things page 63 Captains should live in their Ships as the Sun in the Firmament page 67 Cato a great discourager of evil page 69 Commanders should hold up their dignity ibid. Colossus at Tarentum what page 63 Captains should labour to reclaime their Sea-men page 71 Captains should have a great care of the young that be under them page 73 Captains Cabbins what some of them are page 71 Commanders should have strong desires to have their Sea-men converted page 72 Cowardlinesse to be avoyded when faceing an enemy page 78 Commanders should be as faithful as Pontius Centurio was page 83 Commanders advised how they should deal with their Pursers page 85 Carpenters reproved page 89 Chrysostoms desire to have his Pulpit upon an high Mountain page 101 Commanders should handle Lyars as Artaxerxes did page 105 Cato how he bore his injuries page 108 Calvin how wrongfully slandred page 121 Caesars command commendable page 127 D. DAngers great will make people for to speak page 452 Death comfortable to one sort uncomfortable to another page 458 Drunkennesse what it brought Lot to page 436 Diagoras the Atheist made all the Mariners fare the worse for it in a storm page 344 Devil what sign he dwells at in the world page 468 Dayes travel with Gods decrees page 379 Demosthenes what he said of an Oratour compared to men in storms page 417 Dispute betwixt Doctor Philomusus and Learned Philosophus why Sea-men are the worst sort of people in the world page 487 Doggs that kept Vulcans Temple favoured some and not other some page 377 Death no fit time for Sea-men to make their peace with God in page 389 Demosthenes what he said of a drinking Prince page 99 Directions how to live peaceably on Ship-board be five page 107 Drunken Saylors compared to Tankard-lifting Zeno. page 100 Domitians course the only way to cure all slanderers at sea page 122 Dutches how said to sound the sea page 155 Diogenes how little he set by his money page 168 Diogenes would not bee idle in Athens when besiedged page 181 Deliverances at Sea should be improved for Gods glory page 594 Deliverances should bee eyed in their seasonablenesse page 601 Decree of Theodosius what page 33 Diana's Image in Chios what feigned to doe page 37 Dolphin what said of it page 203 Deer by their out-lying what said of them page 212 Doteril what manner of Bird. page 243 Deliverances of Sea-men fifty one very remarkable page 289 Devices many to kill and fetch off lives page 293 Darius how hard put to it in the Warres page 302 Drunkenness punished to some purpose E. ENglands Navie like to Davids Army page 446 England how it has eleven ill things it that a