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mercy_n grace_n great_a love_n 4,912 5 5.2007 4 true
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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

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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
one only thing be it either Spiritual or Corporeal all created things are that one thing but each thing in its difference of the first beginning according as the property in the Verbum Fiat hath imprinted it self in each thing so is that kind in its Propagation and all things stand in the Seed and Procreation and there is not any thing but it hath a fixity in it be it either hidden or manifest for all shall stand to the glory of God. What soever is arisen from the eternal ●…ixity as Angels and the Souls of men doth remain undestroyable in its fixt Beeing but whatsoever is arisen in the unfixt Beeing viz. with the motion of Time that doth again enter into the first motion whe●…ce it hath taken its original and is a Map of its form which it had here like a Picture or as in an Image in a Glass without life for so it was from Eternity before the times of this world which the Most-high hath introduced into an Image into the comprehensible natural Life in time to behold the great Wonders of his VVisdom in a creatural beeing as we plainly see For we cannot say that this world was made out of something it was only and barely a desire out of the free Lube●… that the Abiss viz. the highest good or beeing viz. the eternal VVill would behold it self in the Lubet as in a Glass therefore the eternal VVill hath conceived the Lubet and brought it into a desire which hath impressed it self and figurized and corporized it self both to a Body and Spirit according to the same impress on 's propery This Impression is the only manifestation of the Mystery and is called Nature and Essence for it manifests what hath been from Eternity in the eternal VVill. A few Words shewing how lovely and graciously the 〈◊〉 Virgin Sophia in the inward ground of man viz. th●… Spirit of Christ in the new Birth out of his Humanity i●… us presen●…h her self to her Bridegroom the Soul 〈◊〉 it entreth into Repentance and how the Soul behav●… it self towards her when Virgin Sophia appeareth to i●… The Gates of the Paradisical Garden of Roses WHen Christ the Corner-stone stirreth himself in the extinguished Image of man in his hearty Conversion Repentance then Virgin Sophia appeareth in the stirring of the Spirit of Christ in the extinguished Image in her Virgins attire before the Soul at which the Soul is so amazed and astonished at its uncleanness that all its Sins immediately awake in it and tremble a●…d shake before her For then the Judgment passeth upon the Sins of the Soul so that it even goeth back in its unworthiness and is ashamed in the presence of its fair Love and entreth into ●…t self denying it self as utterly unworthy to receive such a Jewel This i●… understood by them who are of the Tribe and have casted this Jewel and to none else The Soul saith to its noble Sophia its Love that is born again in the Soul O my noble Pearl and opened Flame of my Light in my anxious fiery Life O how thou changest me into th●… Joy O beautiful Love I have broken my Faith with thee to my Father Adam and with my fiery strength have turned my self to the pleasure and vanity of the ou●…ward World and ●…ave fallen in love wit●… a Stranger and had been constrain●…d to walk in the Valley of Darkness in this strange Love if thou had●… not come to me into the House of my Misery in thy great faithful●…ess by thy pierceing thorough and destroying God's Anger Hell and dark Death and restored thy meekness and love to my siery Life O sweet Love thou hast brought the Water of Eternal Life out of the Fountain of God with thee to me and refreshed me in my great Thirst I behold in thee t●…e Mercy of God which was hidden from m●… be●…ore by the strange Love in thee I can rejoyce thou changest my anguish of Fire to be great joy to me O aimable Love give me t●…y Pearl that I may continue in this Joy forever Upon this the noble Sophia answereth the Soul saith My noble Bridegroom my Strength and Power why hast thou forgotten me so long that I have been constrained in great grief to stand ●…ithout the door knock My dear Love and faithful Treasure thou highly rejoycest me in thy beginning I have indeed broken into thee through the deep ●…ates of God through God's Anger through Hell and Death into the house of thy Misery and have graciously bestowed my Love upon thee and delivered thee from the Chains and Bands wherein thou wast fast boun●… I have kept my ●…aith with thee but thou desir●…st now an exceeding great thing of me which I will not willingly ve●…ture with ●…eeThou wouldst have my Pearl as th●… proper own remember I pray O my belove●… Bridegroom that thou didst carelesly lose it before in Adam and besides thou standest yet in great danger and walkest in two dangerous Kingdoms viz. in the original ●…ire thou walkest in that Country wherein God calleth himself a strong ●…ealous ●…od and a consuming Fire The other Kingdom thou walkest in is in the outward world the Air. wherein thou dwellest in the vain corrupt Flesh and Blood where the pleasure of the world the assaults of the Devil pass over thee every hour thou mayst perhaps ●…n thy great Jo●… bring earthliness again into my Beauty and darken my Pearl thou mayst also perhaps grow proud as Lucifer did when he had the Pearl in his possess on and so mayst turn thy self away from the ha●…mony of God and then I must afterwards be deprivo●… of my Love forever I will keep my Pearl in my self and dwell in the Heaven in thee in thy extinguished but now in me revived Humanity and reserve my Pearl for Paradise until tho●… puttest away this Earthliness from thee and then●… will give it thee to possess But I will readily affo●… and present my Countenance to thee and the swee●… Rayes of the Pearl during the time of this earthly Life I will dwell with the Pearl in the inner Quire and b●… thy faithful loving Bride I will not espouse my se●… with thy earthly Flesh for I am a heavenly Queen m●… Kingdom is not of this world yet I will not cast th●… outward Life away but visit it often with my rayes o●… Love for thy outward Humanity shall return again but I will not have the Beast of Vanity neither did Go●… create it in Adam with a purpose to have it so gro●… and earthly but in Adam thy desire through Lust form ed this beastial groseness from and with all the Essence of the awakened Vanity of the earthly Property wherein Heat and Cold Pain Enmity and Desolution consisteth Now my dear Love and Bridegroom yield but th●… self up into my Will I will not forsake thee in this eart●… ly Life in thy danger though the anger of God shou●… pass upon thee so that