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A51245 Ho thésauros en ostrakinois skeuesin. A pearl in an oyster-shel: or, pretious treasure put in perishing vessels. The sum or substance of two sermons preached at Withall-Chappel in Worcestershire. Wherein is set forth the mightiness of the Gospel, the meanness of its ministration. Together with a character of Mr. Thomas Hall, his holy life and death. By Richard Moore, a willing, though a most unworthy servant of God in the Gospel of his Son Jesus Christ. Moore, Richard, 1619-1683. 1675 (1675) Wing M2583; ESTC R222046 51,229 137

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tasted the bitterness of death No saith she nor never shall For Christ bath promised that they that keep his sayings shall never see death A Believer may feel the stroke but not the sting of death Ignatius going to suffer Martyrdom triumphed in this that his blood should be found among the mighty Worthies and that the Lord when he maketh inquisition for blood will recount from the blood of righteous Abel not only to the blood of Zacharias but also to the blood of mean Ignatius It was a sweet saying of holy Mr. Hall in time of his health That the sweet rescent of a well-spent life would be matter of singular comfort at a dying day He would have his Hearers learn to know and know to do do to die and die to live In his sickness he said I am now going where I shall have rest from Sin Satan and from all fear weariness watching and from all the evils and errours of a wicked world for I know that my Redeemer liveth and that he shall stand at Job 19. 26. the last day upon the earth c. Oh let my life be nothing but prayer and praises since God had dealt bountifully with me and even whiles he was breathing out his last breath he spake thus All the joys of this life are nothing nothing to the joys that are in Jesus Christ Come Lord Jesus And though he be now dead yet he speaks to you not by his Words but by his Works by Precept and by President Oh labour to lead his life that you may die his death for if you tread in the footsteps of his Faith though death bring your body to Corruption yet shall it never bring your souls to Condemnation I am now closing up the second year of my Ministry among you And Lord what have I been doing here all this while that so few of this Congregation have been brought from death to life to embrace Christ by Faith and to lead a holy life and to live to him Shall I say with the Prophet I have spent my strength in vain and laboured for a thing of nought I hope better things of you and I am perswaded better of some of you and that I may the better prevail with you to live by Faith Remember who it is that speaketh to you viz. one that is esteemed as dead And will you not credit such a Witness It was the request of Dives to Abraham Luk. 16. 30 31. that dead Lazarus might be sent unto his five Brethren he thought that if one came to them from the dead they would believe and repent Such a sight or report indeed might work upon the fancy but it is the Gospel preached that must work upon the affections For my own part I do believe the Truth of the Gospel upon surer Grounds and upon better Authority than if I had received it from one raised from the dead For such a Testimony if it be only Humane can beget but a humane Faith and should it be more than this we might see cause to question whether it were Divine or Diabolical for even Satan can transform himself into an Angel of Light Therefore be building up your selves daily in your holy Faith by Arguments drawn from the Doctrine of your Salvation that more sure Word of Prophesie and so your Faith will stand not on the Wisdom of Men but on the Power of GOD. 1 Cor. 2. 5 The Life and Death of Mr. Thomas Hall who died April 13. Anno Dom. 1665. THomas Hall was born in St. Andrews in the City of Worcester about July 22. An. Dom. 1610. His Father was Mr. Richard Hall a Cloathier in that City of a competent Estate his Mother was Mrs. Elizabeth Bonner descended of an antient Family but that which truly ennobled her was with the Bereans she Acts 17. 11. diligently searched the Scriptures These two lived together many years God giving them a plentiful Progeny of Sons and Daughters three of which Sons were brought up Scholars and afterwards proved godly Preachers The Mother being to them as an Eunice to Timothy or Monica to Augustine 1 Tim. 2.5 a careful Instructer in their Youth and lived to reap the Fruit of her endeavours in her old age Magnum est Dei beneficium pios nancisci Parentes ac praesertim Matrem qua pene tota filiorum A lapide educatio dependet like another Bathsheba she did bathe them with her Tears and Instructions and with her Prov. 31. 2 warm and melting Supplications This Thomas was first set to the Grammar-School under Mr. Bright and thence sent to the University of Oxford and admitted into Bayliole Colledg whence through the neglect of his Tutor he removed to Pembroke and became Pupil to Dr. Lushington a good Scholar but whose Principles As Plato saith of him were so poysonous that he might have boasted with Protagoras that he had spent many years in corrupting of youth Having taken his Degrees he returned into the Country and for a while preached and taught a private School at the Chappels belonging to Kings-Norton But as yet he was a Foe and no Friend to Gods Truth and People whom he opposed under the notion o● Puritans But as it was with St. Augustine who before was vitious in manners and erronious in judgment going to hear the Eloquence of Ambrose was reduced from his Errours so it fared with him being about that time a diligent frequenter of the learned Lectures of sundry Orthodox Divines at Burmingham he had here a sure and safe foundation laid of the true Religion and from that time he favoured the sincere Milk of the Word of God and intirely loved those that were born and begotten unto God thereby Not long after he was called to supply the Cure at Kings-norton under his Brother Mr. John Hall who had it annexed to the Vicarage of Bromsgrove and a while after gave it franckly to him the Free-School was also added to it for his further encouragement for though it were a large Parish yet the great Tyths being impropriate he had but a small Sallary and could scarcely have subsisted had he not embraced a single life for this cause chiefly as he said Yet after God had set a seal to his Ministry this great people were much upon his heart who ever sought Work rather than Wages that he would never be perswaded to leave them though solicited with a promise of far greater preferment and was in the time of War often accused cursed threatned with death plundred many times and five times imprisoned at the least He was a very hard Student though of a cold rheumatick Constitution he would impallescere Chartis even hazard his life to get Learning and the choice Observations he met with in good Authors he inserted into his Common-place Book and by his great industry he acquired a good measure of knowledg in Arts and Sciences especially in Divinity of God and his Word and Works of
rest 1 Cor. 15. 10. yet makes himself equal with others as an Earthen Vessel nay in some sense inferiour the least of Saints the last of Apostles How doth this reprehend the Eph. 3.8 Pride of the Pope who takes to him the most magnificent Titles such as no meer man without the highest blasphemy may arrogate to himself such as that Pastor of the Catholick Church which he blasphemously calleth his own Ceremon b. ● sect 2. 2 Thes 2.3 Bellarm. de Sum. Pont. l. 2. 23. Spouse nay arrogates to himself the Title of God and sets himself above Princes who are petty gods and so proves himself to be the Antichrist and though he pretends his power from Peter yet follows not his Precepts 1 Pet. 5. 3. and assimilates him in nothing except in denying his Master 3. What an excellent patern of humility have we here who are the Pastors of Christ's Flock not to lord it over 1 Pet. 5. 3. them but to allure them by love shewing Tit. 3. 2. meekness to all men and instructing those that oppose themselves to be very 2 Tim. 2. 25. tender of them and apt to compassionate them in their sorrows and sufferings since we are of the like frailty our selves This should make us say with Moses Who am I If there be any Heavenly Treasure in us it is Christs Gift he gave it and let him have the glory of it Not I but the Grace of God which is 1 Cor. 15. 10. in me The more any man beholds the Suns body the less he sees when he looks to the Earth So we beholding the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ should ascribe the excellency of the power to God and not to our Psal 115. 1. selves Non nobis Domine non nobis sed nomini tuo da gloriam 4. You should not value the Gospel the less vertually but rather have it in the greater veneration because it comes to you in or through Earthen Vessels We are very apt naturally to look at the outward appearance of things or persons and accordingly to prize and prefer them For this St. James taxeth his Hearers who in their Assemblies had respect to him that had on a Gold Ring and gay cloathing So ordinarily Jam. 2. 3. men shew esteem to such things that are gorgeous and glorious in the eye of the world and to such Men such Ministers as shew forth in their Sermons much humane Learning and Eloquence and in the mean time neglect and slight the godly simplicity of the Gospel and such as preach it in the power of the Holy-Ghost This is partiality in the Apostles account Not that I speak against Learning which is an excellent Hand-maid to Divinity but the abuse of it when men darken the Truth through the mists of Philosophical speculations and preach Magis ut Col. 2. 8. St. Aug. Multi propter arborem scientiae amittunt arborem vitae placerent quam docerent to please rather than to profit If men set such a price upon Earthly Treasures digged out of the bowels of the Earth and delivered with dirty hands How much more should you value the Gospel though it come from Instruments that are Earthen Vessels Observe the Exhortation of the Apostle We beseech you Brethren know them 2 Thes 5. 13. that labour among you and are over you in the Lord and admonish you and have them in singular love for their works sake Though there be no worthiness in the person yet it is a worthy work it is high and honourable divine and heavenly the preparation to it the execution of it is so if you consider 1 Tim. 3. 1 the worth of a precious soul by the price that was payed to purchase it not Gold nor Silver but the pretious Blood of Jesus Christ and the Reward that 1 Pet. 1. 18 18. will be given to such as are Instrumental in the work the saving a soul from death and the hiding a multitude of sins and how mean soever they appear Jam. 5.20 in the Flesh yet hereafter they shall shine as the Stars in the Kingdom of their Father for evermore Dan. 12.3 5. Admire the depth of Divine Wisdom in this That the Lord should make use of our weakness and unworthiness for the manifestation of his mighty Power in bringing sinners from Satans Kingdom and their sinful courses to accept of Salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ Well may the A●ostle say Who is sufficient for these 2 Cor. 2. 16. things We are not sufficient of our selves to conceive to perceive what is our Duty what is the Dignity of the 2 Cor. 3.5 Ministry much less the depth of the Mysteries of Salvation we are to dispence Our sufficiency and your proficiency is of God we are poor frail Earthen Pitchers appointed by God to bear this precious Treasure if he blow upon us How soon shall we become broken Pot-sheards Who am I saith meek Moses And who am I 1 Sam. 18. 18. and what is my life saith holy David So who am I and what is my life a breath a bubble a vapor How unworthy to bear a Pitcher a Lamp within the Pitcher To blow the Trumpet Judg. 7. 16 Isa 58 1. To say not as they for the Lord and for Gideon but for the Lord and for Jesus Christ Oh the depth Rom. 11. 33. both of the wisdom and knowledg of God! Here is a depth indeed wherein a man might dwell As Chrysostome discoursing about the Love of God in Christ saith Oh I am like a man digging in a deep Spring I stand here and the water riseth upon me and there and still it riseth upon me We are not of Gods Cabinet Counsel we have not David's Key to open this Secret and it is not safe to be prying into this Ark Mirari Rev. 3. 7. Mallem ignorare sine crimine quam scire cum discrimine Euclidis potius quàm rimari sapientia nostra Let us admire what we cannot understand only this What cannot God do that is not sinful if it please him who makes his Power appear in our weakness and gives you this Treasure in Earthen Vessels Vse 6. Endeavour to do all the good you can by and to receive all the good that is tendered you in the dispensation of the Gospel since your Ministers are frail mortal Creatures Earthen Vessels that will soon be broken It will not be long before a period be put to my preaching your hearing to all our prayers repentance and preparations for death and for judgment there will be no longer pardon tendered or graces to be attained no knowledg no wisdom in the grave whither we Eccl. 9.7 10. are going There will be no Accounts cast up no Counsel given or taken no doing of work but a receiving of wages according to our work done Work John 9. 4. therefore while it is day whiles you have
sate up late for he had this happiness above many other men as he said he found himself best when he was most strongly employed his Work was to him instead of Physick and he chose rather to spend himself in Labour than to consume with rust and sickness See more in his following Life ABEL REDIVIVVS OR THE DEAD SPEAKER The Substance of an Anniversary SERMON Preached at Withall April 26. 1674. Whereunto is annexed certain dying Speeches of many Modern DIVINES especially of Mr. THOMAS HALL late Pastor of Kings-Norton HEB. 11. 4. And by it he being Dead yet speaketh LONDON Printed by A. M. for Tho. Parkhurst at the Bible and three Crowns near Mercers-Chappel in Cheapside 1674. To my much esteemed Friend Mr. William Turton of Aulderways in Staffordshire Worthy Sir YOV may wonder at my boldness in presuming to prepose your Name to this popular Sermon and imperfect draught of the Life and Death of Mr. HALL who may seem a stranger to you and indeed I do not remember that I saw your Face since the time that the Lord who sets the bounds of our habitations had cast our Lot together in a pleasant place in a time of Jacob's troubles where we only heard the Voice of Christs Turtle-Dove and had not those dreadful Allarums of War under which other parts of the Kingdom trembled and the very pillars of it tottered That which now encourageth me to this Attempt is that I took notice of your constant attendance upon the Ordinances of Christ and your readiness to sympathize with the sufferings of Sion and the respect you had to the godly Pastors of the Church in particular to the person spoken of in the ensuing Narrative betwixt whom and your self it is said there was a near alliance but doubtless there was an intimate friendship and alose familiarity contracted the remembrance of which I hope still liveth in your heart happily no less than Jonathans did in the breast of Davids or Basils in Nazianzens As therefore Epaminondas defended the body of his fast Friend Plutarch Pelopidas whom he supposed was slain and saw lying upon a heap of dead men so I supposed you would be ready to defend this poor Piece written concerning your deceased Friend of whom though I have said somewhat yet not the one half that I might Tou would not think me to be partial should I say of him what Nazianzen did of Basil aforesaid Antiqua probitate simplicitateque praeditus eruditis pietate piis erudition is laude antecellens Some that were more eminent for Learning he excelled in Piety and some that were more See Mr. Leys Epistle to his Com. upon 2 Tim. as also Mr. Calamy 's Epistle famous for Piety he excelled in Learning And indeed he was held to be by such as well knew him and were able to judg of mens parts and piety both learned and religious I have no more to say concerning him in this place I only beg your pardon and Patronage together with a share in your prayers that what is said in the ensuing Leaves may find acceptance with God and favour in the eyes of his people And my earnest desire and prayer to God for you is that he who holdeth your soul in life and hath lined it out to or beyond David's span would give you much joy and peace in believing That whilst your Body is descending towards the Common Mother the Earth your Soul may ascend as towards the top of Pisgah to descry the Holy Land that the nearer you come to the pit of corruption the more prepared you may be for that place of perfection and like a Tree planted in the Courts of Gods House you may bring forth Fruit even in old Age This I say Sir shall be the prayer of Your Servant in our dearest Saviour and Redeemer Richard Moore SERMON III. HEB. 11. 4. And by it he being dead yet speaketh IN the former Chapter the Apostle presseth the Hebrews to perseverance in the Faith and here in this by a Digression he demonstrates the nature of this Grace from the Effects 1. You have the Mysteries that it contains 2. The Histories that hold it forth 1. The effects that declare the Properties of Faith are three 1. It begets a sure and certain Hope of the accomplishment of Gods Promises v. 1. 1. In the substance of them though the thing promised have no present existence or being yet Faith makes them obvious and evident to the Believer for it is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the ground or confidence by putting that which is hoped for as if we had it in hand and things invisible for such as are conceived by sense 2. The Effect of Faith is drawn from a demonstration of the Elders that by it received an excellent Testimonial that they pleased God and were blessed partakers of the benefits of the v. 2. Messias only by believing 3. A third Fruit of Faith is that by it we understand things incredible to Reason as the Creation of the World which v. 3. was formed and fashioned by the Word of God without appearance of a pre-existing matter yet hereby having respect to Gods Omnipotency we believe it that so it was And this is instanced and exemplified in the following Cloud of Witnesses 1. Of such as lived before 2. In such as were after the Floud The first sort of Witnesses were Enoch Noah and Abel here in my Text v. 5.7 who was the Proto-Martyr of the world as Cain was the first Murtherer Adam indeed slew all his Posterity in a spiritual sense but Cain his Brother bodily and bloodily And as Adam the common Parent of mankind was deceived in the Fruit of Paradise So here he and especially Eve was in the Fruit of Gen. 4. 1. c. 3. 15. the Promise For though the name Cain signifieth a Possession and notwithstanding he built a City yet was he of the wicked One and was no Heir of that City whose Builder and Maker was God And his Mother sensible of the deception in Gen. 4. 2. the First-born when she brought forth the second Son gave him a name suitable hereunto for the Word Abel written with the Letter Aleph imports mourning but with He Vanity one Josephus Antiq. b. 1. c. 2. humbled in mind and holding such Possessions Vanity Here then you have two Men the only Heirs of the World offering Sacrifice to God with different Success For 1. Abel's Offering was more acceptable than Cain's 2. The Cause of this not in respect of Sacrifice it self or the matter of it for the Fruit of the ground might have pleased God as well as the Firstlings of the Flock but it was Faith that made the difference 1. God had respect to Abels person justified by Faith and so to his performance Gen. 4. 4. and to his Sacrifice as a Fruit of his Faith testifying of his Gifts by Levit. 9. 24. some token of his favour
Hall away Our reverend Pastor to a bed of Clay Tell me blest Saint in sooth how couldst So great a Master in Divinity Could not at least our sighs our pray'rs thou die Prevail that thou might'st live old Nestors and tears Injurious Fate because thou couldst not get years The Pearl Would'st therefore spoil the Cabinet What wilt thou put no diff'rence 'twixt faces Not spare th' Saints for their transcendent graces Sure thou art neither blear'd nor brib'd nor blind Thou tak'st the best and leav'st the worst behind T' should seem from Death ther 's no prescription then The Preacher dies as well as other men Had I but tears to spare that are not spent Upon my sins I would give Sorrow vent I 'd drench the earth wherein his body lies And fill the air with Lamentable cries I 'd wet his Coffin and would wash his Tomb Till I another Niobe become But stay my Muse what means this Lamentation Sure his was not a Death but a translation H'walk'd with God and he hath took him hence Not to his loss but to his recompence And yet he lives methinks I see him still In 's doing good eschewing what is ill ' Specially in th' works he hath left behind The pious product of 's Prophetick mind London look to 't he foretold thy burning Thy Plague and poverty for not returning If Gods House be not built within th' Nation Yours and ours will be desolation Seeing those City-Comets that God sent As in fiery Chariot t' Heaven he went Were 't not Ambition I could wish that he Had lay'd the lap of 's Mantle on me Richard Moore An Epitaph upon Mr. Thomas Hall WIthin the period of Davids Span Behold the Sepulture of this Grave man Who whiles he liv'd fear'd not th' face of any Good counsel living dying gave t' many And though he chastly led a single life Held his School's Children and his Church his Wife To which he did impart most liberally His Books in 's life unto her Library The residue almost of what he had He gave the poor to make their faces glade Th' heaven born Jewel's gone the Grave contains Within her womb only those few remains Which though entombed now abide they may Unto the last resurrection day The Soul will then again resume this dust To the habitation of the Just R. M. Vpon the Death of that dear Servant of Jesus Christ Mr. Thomas Hall THou need'st no Trophees to adorn thy Herse Thy virtues serve t' imbalm thy Name in Verse And this I 'll say since death hath stopt thy breath Thy life was Priest-like Prince-like was thy Death In Truths defence thou wast a brazen wall ' Gainst execrable heresies a Mawl Witness thy Guards which still unrouted stand ' Gainst Tom Collier and that sooty band What Guard the Font the Schools and Pulpit too Which of your Mothers Sons have done like you But yet thy Comments writ on sacred story Most justly may deserve the greater Glory On th' Prophets those thy Lucubrations And those on Paul Doctor of th' Nations Live and thy other works of Charity Now thou art dead with God follow thee Those thou hast begot cry out my Father Which by Sage advice to God did'st gather Some of all sorts of these it doth them ease To trail a tear at thy sad Obsequies With blubred cheeks and countenance wan They sit and sing this Epicedium Let sad April cease her wonted showers And mornful May forbear t'yield its flowers Since this fair Flower 's cropt and with dry eye So many do slight this sad Destiny Richard Moore Vpon the much-lamented Death of Mr. John Ley who was Chair-man of the Assembly of Divines and late Rector of Solyhull His Character THe grace of God which in thy name did shine Was a Divine Spark like generous Wine Which was infus'd in thee without asswage Into thy heart and parts even in old age Which shews to all impartial Judges how That thou hast kept the good wine until now How many Learned within the Nation Like Conduits run wine at th' Coronation Whose parts soon flag grow flat and faint and wast Whil'st thine like wine on th' LEE when old do last Like M●ason an old Disciple's rather Like Moses was this Reverend Father For in old age he had a Sp'rit like him His strength did not abate nor 's eyes wax dim His Pentateuch in th' tipes was partly seal'd Till by this Pen unvail'd the truth reveal'd The Christian Sabbath was by him maintain'd Against all sorts who would have it prophan'd A learned Schoolman much for moderation One able to give Laws for disputation He was skill'd in th' Tongues curious at his Pen A most just Censor both of Books Men He was a Load-stone in 's lovely Carri'ge An Adamant for unconquer'd courage He 'd speak the truth where ere he had bin And lov'd the person but reprov'd the sin More than most are from passion h' was free More mov'd to pity than most are was he He weekly made provision for th' Poor That constantly attended at his Door He 'd sympathize with such as were in bonds And had great skill in setting broken bones A rare Casuist and hath been sent for far Toth'sick to see what their distemperswere And how to heal them by his heav'nly Art H' hath powred balm to many a broken heart And that which crowns the rest is yet behind 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 H' was high in parts and lowly in his mind Like God he had respect to men After the Good he saw in them This was the chief ingredient for which He prized any person poor or rich And such as these if they had need of them Should have his heart his horse his purse his pen. I wish no worse to 's Successor than he Just such another Rector there may be Richard Moore Vpon the much-lamented Death of Mr. Burdal Minister of the Gospel at Walshall in Stafford-shire WHat art thou dead too another Burgess a healing Barnabas and Bo'nerges Who could'st convert thy self to every form Of sp'rit and speech thy flock to reform When Rhet'rick and Metaphysicks would not do 't Thou sought'st by sound words to woo them to it Thy Speech was above Books or humane Art Thou melt'st the stone in many frozen heart More hard than that thou fear'dst would thee torment Till thy last sand was run and breath was spent These pains did not prevent thy powr'ful Preaching Or travel of thy mind in th' constant teaching And as thou trad'st with God in pray'rs and tears He gave thee a return above thy fears Thou dy'd'st in th' fiftieth year with little pain And an eternal Life in Heaven did'st gain Richard Moore Vpon the Death of that humble and holy Servant of Jesus Christ Mr. Henry Field born at Kings-norton bred up under Mr. Thomas Hall and sent to Pembroke-Colledg in Oxford and from thence removed to Christs-Colledg in Cambridg where he was Fellow and so preferred by the
Honourable Earl of Manchester to be Pastor of Uttington in Lincoln-shire GReat was the Jewel hid within this field A Pearl more precious than the earth doth yield One grace surpasseth Gold and Gems as far As the Sun shining doth the brighter Star This parti-colour'd coat wrought such debate And caus'd thy brethrens envy their hate That from thy place and people thou wast sent To suffer sharp and severe ' prisonment Far worse than that of Joseph in the pit Who afterwards was sold to th' Ishmaelite And by that Merchant-man who came from far To the Kings Provost-Martial Potiphar Where he was prosperous yet by the wile Of her who would by sin his soul defile Was stript of 's coat to keep his conscience His feet were fettr'd for his continence Tell me bless'd Saint what was not this thy fate If thou wast not far more unfortunate For in his bonds good Joseph was more free Who favour found was loos'd honourably But 't was otherwise with thee dear brother Who wast sent from one prison to th' other 'Till death by a Habeas Corpus did remove Thy flesh to th' earth thy soul to heaven above In those thy bonds thou wast so comfortable As made adversity amiable For Divine Truth was girdle to thy loyns And uprightness the brest-plate of thy reins A Faith most firm a shield of thy defence And an incomparable patience Hope was the only helmet of thy head The Gospels peace did light thee to thy bed Thy feet thus shod thou fearest no surprize But could'st defend thy self ' gainst injuries Thou having gotten these to good degree Obtain'st a conquest over Calamity Sore were thy life's troubles sweet thy rest Thy smel 's as of a Field that God hath blest Richard Moore Vpon the Death of many Reverend Ministers since Bartholomew 1662. IF passion be a spur to poetry Sure it should teach me for to verifie Were there but Sympathy who can but weep To see so many Pastors laid to sleep What shall the poor Sheep do now these are dead But dread likewise they shall be scattered The Lord hath smitten many Cedars tall How should poor poplars chuse but fear a fall Are Israels chariots and horsemen gone How should we chuse but weep and make great moan Old Ash foreseeing what a dearth would be Of Sions Seers fell fell down suddenly Although it proved his death yet would he grieve And buried was on Barthol'mew Eve As father Ely bowed his aged head First when the news came thy two sons are dead But when he heard once that the Ark was lost It brake his heart his neck his life it cost Vines Naulton Cawdry Calamy went hence Like Nard and Camphire trees of Frankincense Still sending forth their aromatick scent Till twice extinct from us to Heaven they went Learned Vines went away as in a sleep And Zealous Naulton who was wont to weep Calamy for London he loved so well When in the Fire he heard her passing-Bell Cawdry crowded on Caryl White and Strong Gouge Gataker Hill whitaker and Young Gravely judicious Burges and Hall Who was Tom-tell-troth Baker and Burdall Pale death why do'st thou make such haste And the true Churches Treasure waste Tell me in truth what is there no reprieve That such renowned Worthies might survive See that a Supersedeas thou grant That such the Clergies benefit may'nt want Though thou accostest them with swiftest wing I 'me well assured thou hast lost thy sting They 're now made more than conquerors since dead And are triumphant who were conquered Their Captain Christ hath got the Victory And soon O Death will make an end of thee In the mean time thou canst not surely kill A Child of God but cure him of his ill His Soul 's above thy reach and in a trice When once dismiss'd shall mount to Paradice Nor hurt the Body only lay 't to bed In th' Grave or Coffin where it 's buried RICHARD MOORE De Immortalitate BRight Marble nor the gilded Monunuments Of valiant Heroes nor the rare Contents Of wealthy Monarchs shall out-last thy fame Immortal Scholar of eternal name Neither shall time thy praises e'r divide As learned yet as e'r was on our side Fierce Mars his Sword may Statues overturn And wealthy Cities into Ashes burn Spoil and deface the works of costly plates High Spires and Temples prized at dear rates Yet cannot blur nor these thy Works o'return Immortal Hall who sleepest in thine Urn Art dead do'st speak by Books thou 'st left behind Sight to the faithful eyes unto the blind Bright Orient Pearls to light through misty vales O're gloomy Mountains and obscurest dales When Kingdoms are o'return'd like Troys sad Town The brightest Gem thy lofty front shall crown Posterity Halls learned Name shall boast When this our Isle and Europe quite is lost Aeternitati Comparatum omne tempus breve Popham Gardiner An Epitaph on the never-to-be-forgotten Divine Mr. Thomas Hall STay Passenger in this cold dusty Urn Read carefully in reading see thou learn Life's brevity the shortness of mans days How soon his glory fadeth and decays How soon his honour 's brought unto the Grave How soon the worms their satisfaction have What does his Learning him at all avail When once his vital Spirits dying fail If literature could free learn'd Men from death This Golgotha and dormentorious earth Halls Skeleton should never yet have found Who did with copious works so well abound Genius of art thy loss we do lament Mellifluous Orator who still time spent In reading seeking hearing sapience But now alas from us he is snatcht hence That makes us weep weeping we do deplore Tears blur our writings we can write no more 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Life's Shortness Life 's a bubble Full of trouble And a vapour Or a tapour Life 's a flower Lasts an hour Soon it blasteth Sooner wasteth Then think how soon Mans pleasures fly away Since all his life-times but a winters day Like to the flower that with the Suns uprise His bud unfolds and in the ev'ning dies His swift concurrent motions like th' Sun With winged paces suddenly are gone Then think on God on grisly death's strong hand How thy poor soul at Gods just bar must stand Therefore prepare his aid see thou implore When that thou com'st his bar to stand before 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Solon Have God in mind him serve with filial fear And think how soon thy dying time is near Lord shall my soul when body it doth die Lord-liking climb the heavens Canopie Then farewel Earth Place of my Birth Adieu vain Pleasures Heaven yieldeth Treasures Far better than this tottring Stage doth yield Where we can't act but presently are kill'd O grisly pale-fac't death why so unkind To take him hence and leave me here behind Because I am not ripe too green of years To full this Corn-field of destroying tares If t' were not so thou wouldest take me hence To Heaven above thy dear's ones recompence Where Saints do triumph when the prize they 've won When this my body may out-shine the Sun When Moses-like I view the three in one FINIS Books to be Sold by Tho. Parkhurst at the Bible and three Crowns in Cheapside In Folio SErmons upon the whole Epistle o● St. Paul to the Colossians By Mr. John Daille translated into English by F. S. 2. An Exposition of Temptation on Mat. 4 v. 1 to the end of the 11 v. A practical Exposition on the third Chapter of the first Epistle of St Paul to the Corinthians with the Godly Mans Choice on Psal 4. v. 6 7 8. By Anthony Burgess Forty six Sermons upon the whole Eight Chapter of the Epistle of the Apostle Paul to the Romans 8 Sermons upon the whole fourth Psalm 10 Sermons upon the whole forty second Psalm 19 Sermons upon the whole 51 Psalm 9 Sermons upon the whole 83 Psalm All Five by Tho. Horton D. D. Left perfected for the Press under his own Hand a little before his Death XXVI Sermons upon several Texts of Scriptures By the Learned and Reverend John Donne D. D. Quarto's The Morning-Exercise against Popery or the principal Errours of the Church of Rome Detected and Confuted in a Morning-Lecture preached lately in Southwark By several Ministers of the Gospel in or near London Mediocria or the most natural and plain understanding according to the Scripture of the great Doctrines of Election Redemption Justification the Covenants the Law and Gospel and of Perfection Large Octavo Captives bound in Chains made free by Christ their Surety or the Misery of graceless Sinners and their Recovery by Christ their Saviour By Tho. Doolittel The Faithfulness of God considered and cleared in the great Events of his Word or a second Part of the fulfilling of Scripture By the same Author Speculum Sherlockianum or a Looking Glass in which the Admirers of Mr. Sherlock may behold the Man as to his Accuracy Judgment Orthodoxy The Childs Delight together with an English Grammar The true way of reading and spelling English Both by Tho. Lye Small Octavo A Religious Family or a Treatise in which is 1. The Beauty and Excellency of a pious and well-ordered Family described 2. The single Mans Family-Book faithfully prescribed By Phil. Lamb. Index Biblicus Multijugus or a Table to the Holy Scripture wherein each of its Books Chapters and divers Matters are distinguished and epitomized The almost-Christian Discovered or the False-Professor tried and cast By Matth. Mead. The Godly Mans Ark or the City of Refuge in the Day of his Distress with Mrs. Moores Evidences for Heaven By Edm. Calamy The true Bounds of Christian-Freedom By S. Bolton The sinfulness of Sin and the Fulness of Christ By Will. Bridge A Discourse against Transubstantiation or an Answer to the ordinary Question whether a Man may be saved in the Roman Catholick Religion By I. C. D. D.