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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Day of Doom, by Michael Wigglesworth
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Day of Doom
- Or, a Poetical Description of the Great and Last Judgement
-
-Author: Michael Wigglesworth
-
-Release Date: November 26, 2017 [EBook #56053]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DAY OF DOOM ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Michael McDermott, using scans obtained from
-the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Note: Biblical references were originally present as side
-notes rather than footnotes. The references for each stanza were
-collected into a single footnote, as the references are mostly generic
-to the action of the stanza. The summaries, also present as side notes,
-have been moved to precede the stanza to which they were attached.
-
-THE DAY OF DOOM;
-
-Or, a
-Poetical Description
-Of the
-Great and Last
-JUDGMENT:
-With Other Poems.
-
-By
-
-Michael Wigglesworth, A.M.,
-_Teacher of the Church at Malden in New England,_
-
-1662.
-
-Also a memoir of the author, autobiography and sketch of his funeral
-sermon by Rev. Cotton Mather.
-
-Acts 17:31. Because he hath appointed a Day in the which he will judge
-the World in Righteousness by that Man whom he hath ordained.
-
-Mat. 24:30. And then shall appear the sign of the Son of Man in Heaven,
-and then shall all the tribes of the Earth mourn, and they shall see the
-Son of Man coming in the clouds of Heaven with power and great glory.
-
-FROM THE SIXTH EDITION, 1715.
-
-New York;
-American News Company.
-1867.
-
-Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year of our Lord, 1867, by
-
-Wm. Henry Burr,
-
-in the Clerk’s office of the District Court of the United States, for
-the Southern District of New York.
-
-C. S. Westcott & Co., Printers, 79 John street.
-
-
-Memoir of the Author.
-
-The following is the substance of an article published in the “New
-England Historical and Genealogical Register,” for April, 1863, written
-by John Ward Dean, Esq., of Boston:
-
-A century ago no poetry was more popular in New England than
-Wigglesworth’s _Day of Doom_. Francis Jenks, Esq., in an article in the
-_Christian Examiner_ for Nov., 1828, speaks of it as “a work which was
-taught our fathers with their catechisms, and which many an aged person
-with whom we are acquainted can still repeat, though they may not have
-met with a copy since they were in leading strings; a work that was
-hawked about the country, printed on sheets like common ballads; and, in
-fine, a work which fairly represents the prevailing theology of New
-England at the time it was written, and which Mather thought might,
-‘perhaps, find our children till the Day itself arrives.’”
-
-The popularity of Wigglesworth dated from the appearance of his poem,
-and continued for more than a century. Expressing in earnest words the
-theology which they believed, and picturing in lively colors the terrors
-of the judgment day and the awful wrath of an offended God, it commended
-itself to those zealous Puritans, who had little taste for lofty rhyme
-or literary excellence. The imaginative youth devoured its horrors with
-avidity, and shuddered at its fierce denunciation of sin. In the
-darkness of night he saw its frightful forms arise, and was thus driven
-to seek the “ark of safety” from the wrath of Jehovah. For the last
-century, however, the reputation of the _Day of Doom_ has waned, and few
-at the present day know it except by reputation.
-
-The author of this book, whose wand had summoned up such images of
-terror, was neither a cynic nor a misanthrope, though sickness, which
-generally brings out these dispositions where they exist, had long been
-his doom. His attenuated frame and feeble health were joined to genial
-manners; and, though subject to fits of despondency, he seems generally
-to have maintained a cheerful temper, so much so that some of his
-friends believed his ills to be imaginary.
-
-Rev. Michael Wigglesworth was born October 28, 1631, probably in
-Yorkshire, England. He was brought to this country in 1638, being then
-seven years old, but in what ship we are not informed. His father,
-Edward Wigglesworth, was one of those resolute Puritans who, with their
-families, found an asylum where they could enjoy their religion without
-molestation in our then New England wilderness, the distance of which
-from their English homes can hardly be appreciated now. Here they
-suffered the severe hardships of a rigorous climate, the fearful dangers
-from savage tribes around them, while uniting to build up villages which
-are now cities, and which still retain some of the characteristics of
-their Puritan founders. The determined purpose and strength of principle
-that conquered every obstacle was a school of severe training for the
-children of that period. It was natural that a father who had endured so
-much for conscience’ sake should desire to see his only son a clergyman;
-and, although the father’s means were not large, the son was devoted to
-the ministry and given a thorough education. Michael, after nearly three
-years of preparatory studies, entered Harvard College in 1647. Here he
-had the good fortune to have for a tutor the excellent Jonathan
-Mitchell, “the glory of the college,” and famous as a preacher. The
-friendship here begun appears to have continued after both had left the
-college walls. Probably the eight stanzas “on the following work and its
-author,” signed J. Mitchel, were written by that tutor and preacher, who
-was a native of Yorkshire, the county in which Wigglesworth is believed
-to have been born.
-
-In 1651 Mr. Wigglesworth graduated, and was soon after appointed a tutor
-in the College. Some of his pupils were men of note in their day. Among
-them were. Rev. Shubael Dummer, of York, Me.; Rev. John Eliot, of
-Newton; and Rev. Samuel Torry, of Weymouth; but the chief of them, it
-will be admitted, was Rev. Increase Mather, D.D., pastor of the second
-church in Boston, and for sixteen years president of Harvard College.
-That the tutor was faithful to his trust, we have evidence from the
-sketch of the funeral sermon appended to this work, preached by
-Rev. Cotton Mather, D.D., son of Increase, who probably derived his
-information from his father.
-
-While a tutor, he prepared himself for the ministry, and before his
-father’s death he had preached several times. He was invited, probably
-in the autumn of 1654, to settle at Malden, as the successor of
-Rev. Marmaduke Matthews, but owing to long-continued sickness was not
-ordained there till 1656. The precise date of his ordination is not
-known, but it must have been subsequent to August 25, 1656, for his
-letter of dismission from the church at Cambridge bears that date. This
-letter, addressing the “Church of Christ at Maldon,” states that “the
-good hand of Divine Providence hath so disposed that our beloved and
-highly esteemed brother, Mr. Wigglesworth, hath his residence and is
-employed in the good work of ye Lord amongst you, and hath cause to
-desire of us Letters Dismissive to your church, in order to his joining
-as a member with you.”
-
-The ill health which had delayed his ordination at Malden returned soon
-after his settlement there, and interrupted his ministry several years.
-He took a voyage to Bermuda, sailing Sept. 23, 1663, and being absent
-about seven months and a half. But the tedious and stormy voyage seems
-to have impaired his health so much that the change of climate afforded
-him little relief, and he returned much discouraged. He met with a very
-cordial welcome from his friends and parishioners.
-
-While he was thus withheld from his ministry, he employed his time in
-literary labors. His _Day of Doom_ was published about 1662, the year
-before his voyage to Bermuda. The first edition consisting of 1,800
-copies, was sold, with some profit to the author, within a year, which
-considering the population and wealth of New England at that time, shows
-almost as remarkable a popularity as that of _Uncle Tom’s Cabin_.
-
-While absent on his voyage in search of health, Dec. 9, 1663,
-Rev. Benjamin Bunker was ordained pastor of the church at Malden. It
-seems that a distinction was observed at this time in New England
-between pastor and teacher. Wigglesworth calls Bunker “pastor” in some
-verses composed on his death, while on the title-page of this, work he
-calls himself “teacher.” After Wigglesworth became sole minister, he was
-probably considered the pastor. Bunker held this office over six years,
-till his death, Feb. 3, 1669-70; In the elegy on the death of his
-colleague, Wigglesworth highly extols Bunker’s piety and usefulness. The
-next colleague of our author was Bev. Benjamin Blackman, settled about
-1674. He supplied the desk four years and upward. and left in the year
-1679. His next colleague was Rev. Thomas Cheever, son of his early
-teacher, the celebrated New England schoolmaster, Ezekiel Cheever,
-author of _Latin Accidence_. These three ministers were all educated at
-Harvard College, Bunker having graduated in 1658, Blackman in 1663, and
-Cheever in 1677. Mr. Cheever began to preach at Maiden Feb. 14, 1679-80,
-was ordained July 27, 1681, and was dismissed May 20, 1686.
-
-Wigglesworth, though long prevented by sickness from officiating, never
-resigned his ministerial charge, as appears from a letter which he
-addressed to Samuel Sprague, July 22, 1687. He was now left alone as
-minister of the church. He had, however, recovered his health in a
-measure about this time, which had suffered for nearly twenty years, and
-for the remainder of his life he continued in public usefulness.
-
-He died on Sunday morning, June 10, 1705, in the 74th year of his age.
-The epitaph on the last page of this work is believed to have been
-written by Cotton Mather, as it appears in the appendix to his funeral
-sermon as by “one that had been gratified by his _Meat out of the Eater_
-and _Day of Doom_.”
-
-Mr. Wigglesworth had at least three wives: Mary, daughter of Humphrey
-Reyner, of Rowley; Martha, whose maiden name was probably Mudge; and
-Sybil, widow of Dr. Jonathan Avery, of Dedham, and daughter of Nathaniel
-Sparhawk, of Cambridge.
-
-By his first wife he had (1) _Mercy_ b. Feb., 1655-6; m. 1st, [Samuel?]
-Brackenbury, by whom she had at least one son, William; m. 2d,
-[Rev. Samuel.?] Belcher.
-
-By his second wife, Martha, who d. 11th Sept., 1690, a. 28, he had:— (2)
-_Abigail_, b. 20th March, 1681; m. Samuel Tappan, 23d Dec, 1700;— (3)
-_Mary_, b. 21st Sept., 1682 ; unm. in 1708;— (4) _Martha_, b. 21st Dec.,
-1683; m. Wheeler;— (5) _Esther_, b. 16th April, 1685; m. 1st, John
-Sewall, June 8, 1708, who d. 1711; m. 2d, Abraham Tappan, Oct. 21,
-1713;— (6) Dorothy, b. 22d Feb., 1687-88; m. 2d June, 1709, James
-Upham;— (7) Rev. Samuel, b. 4th Feb., 1689-90, d. 3d Sept., 1768. By his
-third wife, Sybil, who d. 6th Aug., 1708, a. 53, he had:— (8) Prof.
-_Edward_, D.D., b. about 1692, d. Jan. 16, 1765.
-
-Rev. Samuel Wigglesworth, the elder son, was settled in Hamilton Parish,
-in Ipswich, Mass., in 1714. He m. 1st, Mary, dau. of John Brintnal, of
-Winnisimmet, 30th June, 1715, who d. June 6, 1723, a. 28, having borne
-him four children, Mary, Michael, Martha, and Phebe. He m. March 12,
-1730, Martha Brown, and had nine children.
-
-Edward Wigglesworth, D.D., the younger son, took his degree of Bachelor
-of Arts in 1710, and applied himself to the study of Divinity. He
-preached for some time in different parishes, and in 1722 was installed
-Hollis Professor of Divinity of Harvard College. Not long afterward he
-was chosen one of the fellows of the corporation. He left an only son,
-who succeeded him as Hollis Professor in the same college, and an only
-surviving daughter, who married Prof. Sewall.
-
-The following are the various editions of the _Day of Doom_, so far as
-we have been able to ascertain:
-
-The first edition was published in 1661 or 1662, and the second four
-years after. These facts are obtained from memoranda by the author,
-which are printed in the Historical Magazine for December, 1863. An
-edition was printed in London, England, without the author’s name, in
-1673. This was, probably, the third impression; the date of the fourth
-is unknown. The fifth edition is said to have been published in 1701.
-Mr. Dean has made diligent search and repeated inquiries, but can only
-find two or three copies of the edition of 1673, and several fragments
-which must have been parts of some of the other editions.
-
-There was an edition published at Newcastle, in England, in 1711. The
-next edition was published in 1715, called “the 6th edition, enlarged,
-with Scripture and marginal notes”—“printed by John Allen, for Benjamin
-Eliot, at his shop in King street.” From this edition, which was
-evidently the seventh, the present one is reprinted, being carefully
-compared with that of 1673. Another edition appeared in 1751, “Printed
-and sold by Thomas Fleet, at the Heart and Crown, in Cornhill,” Boston.
-The next edition appeared in 1811, “Published by E. Little & Company,
-Newburyport,” Mass. The last edition, prior to the present, was
-published in Boston in 1828, by Charles Ewer.
-
-Besides the _Day of Doom_ Mr. Wigglesworth published, in 1669, “Meat out
-of the Eater; or, Meditations concerning the necessity and usefulness of
-Afflictions unto God’s Children.” The “fourth edition” appeared in 1689,
-and subsequent editions in 1717 and 1770. In 1686 he preached an
-Election Sermon, which was printed by the colony. Among his unpublished
-writings is a poem entitled “God’s Controversy with New England, written
-in the time of the great Drought, Anno 1662. By a lover of New England’s
-prosperity.”
-
-Mr. Wigglesworth borrowed little from other poets, and what he borrowed
-was probably from the commentaries and theological treatises with which
-his library abounded, rather than from the poets. Not that his style is
-wholly prosaic, for there are passages in his writings that are truly
-poetical, both in thought and expression, and which show that he was
-capable of attaining a higher position as a poet than can now be claimed
-for him. The roughness of his verses was surely not owing to
-carelessness or indolence, for neither of them was characteristic of the
-man. The true explanation may be, that he sacrificed his poetical taste
-to his theology, and that, for the sake of inculcating sound doctrine,
-he was willing to write in halting numbers.
-
-The author of the _Day of Doom_, belonging to the straitest sect of
-Puritans, was, like many others of that sect, a man of generous feeling
-toward his fellows. Rev. Dr. Peabody calls him “a man of the
-beatitudes.” Obedience to the supreme law gave a heavenly lustre to his
-example and a sweet fragrance to his memory. The clergy of his day
-possessed a deep religious earnestness and a fervent piety. They were
-Bible students and men of prayer. Even many who consider them erroneous
-in doctrine, are willing to allow that they were strict in morals; that,
-if they were wrong in faith, they were right in life; that, if their
-creed was opaque, their hearts were luminous; and that, if their vision
-did not discern the additional light which the saintly Robinson had
-prophesied was yet to break forth from God’s Word, they sincerely
-accepted the light they saw. They were patient, hopeful, humble,
-believing, faithful. They stood on a higher plane than their successors,
-and exercised a proportionally higher power over their hearers. Their
-people revered them, were constant in attendance on their services, and
-submitted gladly to their sway.
-
-
-Autobiography
-
-I was born of Godly Parents, that feared ye Lord greatly, even from
-their youth, but in an ungodly Place, where ye generality of ye people
-rather derided than imitated their piety; in a place where, to my
-knowledge, their children had Learnt wickedness betimes; in a place that
-was consumed with fire in a great part of it, after God had brought them
-out of it. These godly parents of mine meeting with opposition and
-persecution for Religion, because they went from their own Parish church
-to hear ye word and Receiv ye Lords supper &c, took up resolutions to
-pluck up their stakes and remove themselves to New England: and
-accordingly they did so, Leaving dear Relations, friends and
-acquaintance, their native Land, a new built house, a flourishing Trade,
-to expose themselves to ye hazzard of ye seas, and to ye Distressing
-difficulties of a howling wilderness, that they might enjoy Liberty of
-Conscience and Christ in his ordinances. And the Lord brought them
-hither and Landed them at Charlstown, after many difficulties and
-hazzards, and me along with them, being then a child not full seven
-years old. After about 7 weeks stay at Charlstown, my parents removed
-again by sea to New Haven in ye month of October. In our passage thither
-we were in great Danger by a storm which drove us upon a Beach of sand
-where we lay beating til another Tide fetcht us off; but God carried us
-to our port in safety. Winter approaching we dwelt in a cellar partly
-under ground covered with earth the first winter. But I remember that
-one great rain, brake in upon us and drencht me so in my bed, being
-asleep, that I fell sick upon it; but ye Lord in mercy spar’d my life
-and restored my health. When ye next summer was come I was sent to
-school to Mr. Ezekiel Cheever, who at that time taught school in his own
-house, and under him in a year or two I profited so much through ye
-blessing of God, that I began to make Latin and to get forward apace.
-But God who is infinitely wise and absolutely soverain, and gives no
-account concerning any of his proceedings, was pleased about this time
-to visit my father with Lameness which grew upon him more and more to
-his dying Day, though he liv’d under it 13 years. He wanting help was
-fain to take me off from school to follow other employments for ye space
-of 3 or 4 years, until I had lost all that I had gained in the Latin
-Tongue. But when I was now in my fourteenth year, my Father, who I
-suppose was not wel satisfied in keeping me from Learning whereto I had
-been designed from my infancy, and not judging me fit for husbandry,
-sent me to school again, though at that time I had little or no
-disposition to it, but I was willing to submit to his authority therein
-and accordingly I went to school under no small disadvantage and
-discouragement, seing those that were far inferior to me, by my
-discontinuance now gotten far before me. But in a little time it
-appeared to be of God, who was pleased to facilitate my work and bless
-my studies that I soon recovered what I had lost, and gained a great
-deal more, so that in 2 years and 3 quarters I was judged fit for ye
-Colledge and thither I was sent far from my parents and acquaintance
-among strangers. But when father and mother both forsook me then ye Lord
-took care of me. It was an act of great self denial in my father that
-notwithstanding his own lameness and great weakness of Body which
-required ye service and helpfulness of a son, and having but one son to
-be ye staff of his age and supporter of his weakness, he would yet for
-my good, be content to deny himself of that comfort and Assistance I
-might have Lent him. It was also an evident proof of a strong Faith in
-him, in that he durst adventure to send me to ye Colledge, though his
-estate was but small and little enough to maintain himself and small
-family left at home. And God let him Live to see how acceptable to
-himself this service was in giving up his only son to ye Lord and
-bringing him up to Learning; especially ye Lively actings of his faith
-and self denial herein. For first, notwithstanding his great weakness of
-body, yet he Lived til I was so far brought up as that I was called to
-be a fellow of ye Colledge and improved in Publick servdce there, and
-until I had preached several Times; yea and more than so, he Lived to
-see and hear what God had done for my soul in turning me from Darkness
-to light and from ye power of Sathan unto God, which filled his heart
-full of joy and thankfulness beyond what can be expressed. And for his
-outward estate, that was so far from being sunk by what he spent from
-year to year upon my education, that in 6 years time it was plainly
-doubled, which himself took great notice of, and spake of it to myself
-and others, to ye praise of God, with Admiration and thankfulness. And
-after he had lived under great and sore affliction for ye space of 13
-years a pattern of faith, patience, humility, and heavenly mindedness,
-having done his work in my education and receiv’d an answer to his
-prayers, God took him to his Heavenly Rest, where he is now reaping ye
-fruits of his Labors. When I came first to ye Colledge, I had indeed
-enjoyed ye benefit of Religious and strict education, and God in his
-mercy and pitty kept me from scandalous sins before I came thither and
-after I came there, but alas I had a naughty vile heart and was acted by
-corrupt nature, therefore could propound no Right and noble ends, but
-acted from self and for self. I was indeed studious and strove to outdoe
-my compeers, but it was for honour and applause and preferment and such
-poor Beggarly ends. Thus I had my Ends and God had his Ends far
-differing from mine, yet it pleased him to Bless my studies, and to make
-me grow in Knowledge both in ye tongues and inferior Arts and also in
-Divinity. But when I had been there about three years and a half; God in
-his Love and Pitty to my soul wrought a great change in me, both in
-heart and Life, and from that time forward I learnt to study with God
-and for God. And whereas before that, I had thoughts of applying myself
-to ye study and Practice of Physick, I wholy laid aside those thoughts,
-and did chuse to serve Christ in ye work of ye ministry if he would
-please to fit me for it and to accept of my service in that great work.
-
-Note.—In the foregoing Autobiography the original spelling is retained.
-In the following poems the spelling is modernized. The use of the acute
-accent (’) to indicate the former pronunciation of the final _ed_ as a
-separate syllable will be obvious; in other exceptional cases the old
-apostrophe is retained. In a few instances the termination _tion_ is
-divided by a hyphen, to indicate its pronunication as two syllables
-(_she_-on). The modern double commas are also used to mark quotations.
-
-W. H. B.
-
-
-To the Christian Reader.
-
-Reader, I am a fool,
-And have adventuréd
-To play the fool this once for Christ,
-The more his fame to spread.
-If this my foolishness
-Help thee to be more wise,
-I have attainéd what I seek.
-And what I only prize.
-
-Thou wonderest, perhaps,
-That I in Print appear,
-Who to the Pulpit dwell so nigh,
-Yet come so seldom there.
-The God of Heaven knows
-What grief to me it is,
-To be withheld from serving Christ;
-No sorrow like to this.
-
-This is the sorest pain
-That T have felt or feel;
-Yet have I stood some shocks that might
-Make stronger men to reel.
-I find more true delight
-In serving of the Lord,
-Than all the good things upon Earth,
-Without it, can afford.
-
-And could my strength endure
-That work I count so dear,
-Not all the Riches of Peru
-Should hire me to forbear.
-But I’m a Prisoner,
-Under a heavy Chain;
-Almighty God’s afflicting hand
-Doth me by force restrain.
-
-Yet some (_I know_) do judge
-Mine inability
-To come abroad and do Christ’s work.
-To be Melancholly;
-And that I’m not so weak
-As I myself conceit:
-But who in other things have found
-Me so conceited yet?
-
-Or who of all my Friends
-That have my trials seen,
-Can tell the time in sevén years
-When I have dumpish been?
-Some think my voice is strong,
-Most times when I do Preach;
-But ten days after, what I feel
-And suffer few can reach.
-
-My prison’d thoughts break forth,
-When open’d is the door.
-With greater force and violence,
-And strain my voice the more.
-But vainly do they tell
-That I am growing stronger,
-Who hear me speak in half an hour,
-Till I can speak no longer.
-
-Some for because they see not
-My clieerfulness to fail,
-Nor that I am disconsolate,
-Do think I nothing ail.
-If they had borne my griefs,
-Their courage might have fail’d them,
-And all the Town (perhaps) have known
-(Once and again) what ail’d them.
-
-But why should I complain
-That have so good a God,
-That doth mine heart with comfort till
-Ev’n whilst I feel his Rod?
-In God I have been strong,
-But wearied and worn out.
-And joy’d in him, when twenty woes
-Assail’d me round about.
-
-Nor speak I this to boast.
-But make Apology
-For mine own self, and answer those
-That fail in Charity.
-I am, alas! as frail.
-Impatiént a creature,
-As most that tread upon the ground,
-And have as bad a nature.
-
-Let God be magnified.
-Whose everlasting strength
-Upholds me under sufferings
-Of more than ten years’ length;
-Through whose Almighty pow’r
-Although I am surrounded
-With sorrows more than can be told,
-Yet am I not confounded.
-
-For his dear sake have I
-This service undertaken,
-For I am bound to honor him
-Who hath not me forsaken.
-I am a Debtor too,
-Unto the sons of Men,
-Whom, wanting other means, I would
-Advantage with my Pen.
-
-I would, but ah! my strength.
-When triéd, proves so small,
-That to the ground without effect
-My wishes often fall.
-Weak heads, and hands, and states,
-Great things cannot produce ;
-And therefore I this little Piece
-Have publish’d for thine use.
-
-Although the thing be small,
-Yet my good will therein.
-Is nothing less than if it had
-A larger Volume been.
-Accept it then in love,
-And read it for thy good;
-There’s nothing in ’t can do thee hurt,
-If rightly understood.
-
-The God of Heaven grant
-These Lines so well to speed,
-That thou the things of thine own peace
-Through them may’st better heed;
-And may’st be stirréd up
-To stand upon thy guard.
-That Death and Judgment may not come
-And find thee unprepar’d.
-
-Oh get a part in Christ,
-And make the Judge thy Friend;
-So shalt thou be assuréd of
-A happy, glorious end.
-Thus prays thy real Friend
-And Servant for Christ’s sake,
-Who, had he strength, would not refuse
-More pains for thee to take.
-
-Michael Wigglesworth.
-
-
-On the Following Work and its Author.
-
-A verse may find him who a sermon flies,
-Saith Herbert well. Great truths to dress in Meter.
-Becomes a Preacher, who men’s Souls doth prize,
-That Truth in Sugar roll’d may taste the sweeter.
-  No cost too great, no care too curious is
-  To set forth Truth and win men’s Souls to bliss.
-
-In costly Verse, and most laborious Rhymes,
-Are dish’d up here Truths worthy most regard:
-No Toys, nor Fables (Poets’ wonted crimes)
-Here be, but things of worth, with wit prepar’d.
-  Reader, fall to, and if thy taste be good,
-  Thou’lt praise the Cook, and say, ’Tis choicest Food.
-
-David’s affliction bred us many a Psalm,
-From Caves, from mouth of Graves that Singer sweet
-Oft tun’d his Soul-felt notes: for not in ’s calm,
-But storms, to write most Psalms God made him meet.
-  Affliction turn’d his Pen to Poetry,
-  Whose serious strains do here before thee lie.
-
-This man with many griefs afflicted sore.
-Shut up from speaking much in sickly Cave,
-Thence painful seizure hath to write the more.
-And send thee Counsels from the mouth o’ th’ Grave.
-  One foot i’ th’ other world long time hath been,
-  Read, and thou’lt say, Illis heart is all therein.
-
-Oh, happy Cave, that’s to mount Nebo turn’d!
-Oh, happy prisoner that’s at liberty
-To walk through th’ other World! the Bonds are burn’d,
-(But nothing else) in Furnace fiéry.
-  Such fires unfetter Saints, and set more free
-  Their unscorch’d Souls for Christ’s sweet company.
-
-Cheer on, sweet Soul, although in briny tears
-Steept is thy seed; though dying every day;
-Thy sheaves shall joyful be when Christ appears.
-To change our death and pain to life for aye.
-  The weepers now shall laugh; the jovial laughter
-  Of vain ones here shall turn to tears hereafter.
-
-Judge right, and his restraint is our Reproof.
-The Sins of Hearers Preachers’ Lips do close,
-And make their Tongue to cleave unto its roof.
-Which else would check and cheer full freely those
-  That need. But from this Eater comes some Meat.
-  And sweetness good from this affliction great.
-
-In those vast Woods a Christian Poet sings
-(Where whilom Heathen wild were only found)
-Of things to come, the last and greatest things
-Which in our Ears aloud should ever sound.
-  Of Judgment dread, Hell, Heaven, Eternity,
-  Reader, think oft, and help thy thoughts thereby.
-
-J. MITCHEL.
-
-
-A Prayer Unto Christ the Judge of the World.
-
-_O Dearest, Dread, most glorious King!_
-_I’ll of thy justest Judgments sing:_
-_Do thou my head and heart inspire,_
-_To Sing aright, as I desire._
-_Thee, thee alone I’ll invocate,_
-_For I do much abominate_
-_To call the Muses to mine aid:_
-_Which is th’ Unchristian use and trade_
-_Of some that Christians would be thought,_
-_And yet they worship worse than naught._
-_Oh! what a deal of Blasphemy_
-_And Heathenish Impiety_
-_In Christian Poets may be found,_
-_Where Heathen gods with praise are crown’d!_
-_They make Jehovah to stand by_
-_Till Juno, Venus, Mercury,_
-_With frowning Mars, and thund’ring Jove,_
-_Rule Earth below, and Heav’n ahove._
-_But I have learn’d to pray to none,_
-_Save unto God in Christ alone._
-_Nor will I laud, no, not in jest,_
-_That which I know God doth detest._
-_I reckon it a damning evil._
-_To give God’s Praises to the Devil._
-_Thou, Christ, art he to whom I pray;_
-_Thy Glory fain I would display._
-_Oh! guide me by thy sacred Sprite,_
-_So to indite, and so to write._
-_That I thine holy Name may praise._
-_And teach the Sons of Men thy ways._
-
-
-The Day of Doom
-
-_The security of the world before Christ’s coming to judgment._
-
-I. [1]
-
-Still was the night, serene and bright,
-  when all Men sleeping lay;
-Calm was the season, and carnal reason
-  thought so ’twould last for aye.
-“Soul, take thine ease, let sorrow cease;
-  much good thou hast in store:“
-This was their Song, their Cups among,
-  the evening before.
-
-II. [2]
-
-Wallowing in all kind of Sin,
-  vile Wretches lay secure;
-The best of men had scarcely then
-  their Lamps kept in good ure.
-Virgins unwise, who through disguise
-  amongst the best were number’d,
-Had clos’d their eyes; yea, and the Wise
-  through sloth and frailty slumber’d.
-
-III. [3]
-
-Like as of old, when men grew bold,
-  God’s threat’nings to contemn.
-Who stopt their Ear, and would not hear
-  when Mercy warnéd them,
-But took their course, without remorse,
-  till God began to pour
-Destructi-on the World upon,
-  in a tempestuous show’r;
-
-IV. [4]
-
-Who put away the evil day,
-  and drown’d their cares and fears,
-Till drown’d were they, and swept away
-  by vengeance unawares;
-So at the last, whilst men sleep fast
-  in their security,
-Surpris’d they are in such a snare
-  As Cometh suddenly.
-
-_The suddenness, Majesty and Terror of Christ’s appearing._
-
-V. [5]
-
-For at midnight breaks forth a light,
-  which turns the night to day,
-And speedily an hideous cry
-  doth all the World dismay.
-Sinners awake, their hearts do ache,
-  trembling their loins surpriseth;
-Amaz’d with fear, by what they hear,
-  each one of them ariseth.
-
-VI. [6]
-
-They rush from beds with giddy heads,
-  and to their windows run.
-Viewing this light, which shines more bright
-  than doth the noon-day Sun.
-Straightway appears (they see’t with tears)
-  the Son of God most dread,
-Who with his Train comes on amain
-  to judge both Quick and Dead.
-
-VII. [7]
-
-Before his face the Heav’ns give place,
-  and Skies are rent asunder.
-With mighty voice and hideous noise,
-  more terrible than Thunder.
-His Brightness damps Heav’n’s glorious Lamps
-  and makes them hide their heads;
-As if afraid and quite dismay’d,
-  they quit their wonted steads.
-
-VIII.
-
-Ye sons of men that durst contemn
-  the Threat’nings of God’s Word,
-How cheer you now? Your hearts, I trow,
-  are thrill’d as with a sword.
-Now Atheist blind, whose brutish mind
-  a God could never see,
-Dost thou perceive, dost now believe
-  that Christ thy Judge shall be?
-
-IX.
-
-Stout Courages, (whose hardiness
-  could Death and Hell outface,)
-Are you as bold, now you behold
-  your Judge draw near apace?
-They cry, “No, no, Alas! and woe!
-  our courage all is gone:
-Our hardiness (fool hardiness)
-  hath us undone, undone!“
-
-X. [8]
-
-No heart so bold, but now grows cold,
-  and almost dead with fear;
-No eye so dry but now can cry,
-  and pour out many a tear.
-Earth’s Potentates and pow’rful States,
-  Captains and Men of Might,
-Are quite abasht, their courage dasht,
-  at this most dreadful sight.
-
-XI. [9]
-Mean men lament, great men do rent
-  their Robes, and tear their hair;
-They do not spare their flesh to tear
-  through horrible despair.
-All kindreds wail; all hearts do fail;
-  Horror the World doth fill
-With weeping eyes and loud out-cries,
-  yet knows not how to kill.
-
-XII. [10]
-
-Some hide themselves in Caves and Delves,
-  in places under ground:
-Some rashly leap into the Deep,
-  to ’scape by being drown’d:
-Some to the Rocks (O senseless blocks!)
-  and woody mountains run.
-That there they might this fearful sight,
-  and dreaded Presence shun.
-
-XIII.
-
-In vain do they to Mountains say,
-  “Fall on us and us hide
-From Judge’s ire, more hot than Fire,
-  for who may it abide?“
-No hiding place can from his Face
-  sinners at all conceal,
-Whose flaming Eye hid things doth spy,
-  and darkest things reveal.
-
-XIV. [11]
-
-The Judge draws nigh, exalted high
-  upon a lofty Throne,
-Amidst the throng of Angels strong,
-  lo, Israel’s Holy One!
-The excellence of whose Presence
-  and awful Majesty,
-Amazeth Nature, and every Creature
-  doth more than terrify.
-
-XV. [12]
-
-The Mountains smoke, the Hills are shook,
-  the Earth is rent and torn,
-As if she should be clear dissolv’d
-  or from her center borne.
-The Sea doth roar, forsakes the shore,
-  and shrinks away for fear;
-The wild beasts flee into the sea,
-  so soon as he draws near,
-
-XVI. [13]
-
-Whose Glory bright, whose wond’rous Might,
-  whose Power Imperial,
-So far surpass whatever was
-  in Realms Terrestrial,
-That tongues of men (nor Angel’s pen)
-  Cannot the same express;
-And therefore I must pass it by,
-  lest speaking should transgress.
-
-_Resurrection of the Dead._
-
-XVII. [14]
-
-Before his Throne a Trump is blown,
-  proclaiming th’ Day of Doom;
-Forthwith he cries, “_Ye Dead arise_
-  _and unto Judgment come._“
-No sooner said, but ’tis obey’d;
-  Sepulchers open’d are;
-Dead bodies all rise at his call,
-  and’s mighty Power declare.
-
-XVIII.
-
-Both Sea and Land at his command,
-  their Dead at once surrender;
-The Fire and Air constrainéd are
-  also their dead to tender.
-The mighty Word of this great Lord
-  links Body and Soul together,
-Both of the Just and the unjust,
-  to part no more for ever.
-
-_The living changed_
-
-XIX. [15]
-
-The same translates from Mortal states
-  to Immortality,
-All that survive and be alive,
-  in th’ twinkling of an eye;
-That so they may abide for aye,
-  to endless weal or woe:
-Both the Renate and Reprobate
-  are made to die no moe.
-
-_All brought to Judgment._
-
-XX. [16]
-
-His wingéd Hosts fly through all coasts,
-  together gathering
-Both good and bad, both Quick and Dead,
-  and all to Judgment bring.
-Out of their holes those creeping Moles,
-  that hid themselves for fear,
-By force they take, and quickly make
-  before the Judge appear.
-
-_The Sheep separated from the Goats._
-
-XXI. [17]
-
-Thus every one before the Throne
-  of Christ the Judge is brought,
-Both righteous and impious,
-  that good or ill hath wrought.
-A separation and diff’ring station
-  by Christ appointed is
-(To sinners sad) ’twixt good and bad,
-  ’twixt Heirs of woe and bliss.
-
-_Who are Christ’s Sheep._
-
-XXII. [18]
-
-At Christ’s right hand the Sheep do stand,
-  his holy Martyrs, who
-For his dear Name suffering shame,
-  calamity and woe.
-Like Champions stood and with their Blood
-  their Testimony sealéd;
-Whose innocence without offence
-  to Christ their Judge appealéd.
-
-XXIII. [19]
-
-Next unto whom there find a room
-  all Christ’s afflicted ones,
-Who being chastis’d, neither despis’d
-  nor sank amidst their groans;
-Who by the Rod were turn’d to God,
-  and lovéd him the more,
-Not murmuring nor quarrelling
-  when they were chast’ned sore.
-
-XXIV. [20]
-
-Moreover, such as lovéd much,
-  that had not such a trial.
-As might constrain to so great pain,
-  and such deep self-denial.
-Yet ready were the Cross to bear,
-  when Christ them called thereto,
-And did rejoice to hear his voice,—
-  they’re counted Sheep also.
-
-XXV. [21]
-
-Christ’s flock of Lambs there also stands,
-  whose Faith was weak, yet true,
-sound Believers (Gospel receivers)
-  those Grace was small, but grew;
-And them among an Infant throng
-  of Babes, for whom Christ died;
-Whom for his own, by ways unknown
-  to Men, he sanctified.
-
-XXVI. [22]
-
-All stand before their Savi-or,
-  in long white Robes yclad,
-Their countenance full of pleasance,
-   appearing wond’rous glad.
-O glorious sight! Behold how bright
-  dust-heaps are made to shine.
-Conforméd so their Lord unto,
-  whose Glory is Divine.
-
-_The Goats described, or the several sorts of Reprobates on the left hand._
-
-XXVII. [23]
-
-At Christ’s left hand the Goats do stand,
-  all whining Hypocrites
-Who for self-ends did seem Christ’s friends,
-  but foster’d guileful sprites;
-Who Sheep resembled, but they dissembled,
-  (their hearts were not sincere,)
-Who once did throng Christ’s Lambs among,
-  but now must not come near.
-
-XXVIII. [24]
-
-Apostates base and run-aways,
-  such as have Christ forsaken,
-Of whom the Devil, with seven more evil,
-  hath fresh possession taken;
-Sinners ingrain, reserv’d to pain,
-  and torments most severe,
-Because ’gainst light they sinn’d with spite,
-  are also placed there.
-
-XXIX. [25]
-
-There also stand a num’rous band,
-  that no profession made
-Of Godliness, nor to redress
-  their ways at all essay’d;
-Who better knew, but (sinful Crew)
-  Gospel and Law despiséd.
-Who all Christ’s knocks withstood like blocks,
-  and would not be adviséd.
-
-XXX. [26]
-
-Moreover, there with them appear
-  a number, numberless,
-Of great and small, vile wretches all,
-  that did God’s Law transgress;
-Idolaters, false worshippers,
-  Profaners of God’s Name,
-Who not at all thereon did call,
-  or took in vain the same.
-
-XXXI. [27]
-
-Blasphemers lewd, and Swearers shrewd,
-  scoffers at Purity,
-That hated God, contemn’d his Rod,
-  and lov’d Security;
-Sabbath-polluters, Saints-persecutors,
-  presumptuous men and proud,
-Who never lov’d those that reprov’d;
-  all stand amongst this crowd.
-
-XXXII. [28]
-
-Adulterers and Whoremongers
-  were there, with all unchast;
-There Covetous and Ravenous,
-  that riches got too fast:
-Who us’d vile ways themselves to raise
-  t’ Estates and worldly wealth,
-Oppression by or knavery,
-  by force, or fraud, or stealth.
-
-XXXIII. [29]
-
-Moreover, there together were
-  children flagiti-ous.
-And Parents who did them, undo
-  by nurture vici-ous.
-False-witness-bearers and self-forswearers,
-  Murd’rers and Men of Blood,
-Witches, Enchanters, and Ale-house haunters,
-  beyond account there stood.
-
-XXXIV. [30]
-
-Their place there find all Heathen blind
-  that Nature’s light abus’d,
-Although they had no tidings glad
-  of Gospel grace refus’d
-There stand all Nations and Generations
-  of Adam’s Progeny,
-Whom Christ redeem’d not, whom he esteem’d not,
-  through Infidelity;
-
-XXXV. [31]
-
-Who no Peace-maker, no undertaker,
-  to shroud them from God’s ire.
-Ever obtain’d; they must be pain’d
-  with everlasting fire.
-These num’rous bands, wringing their hands,
-  and weeping all stand there.
-Filléd with anguish, whose hearts do languish,
-  through self-tormenting fear,
-
-XXXVI. [32]
-
-Fast by them stand at Christ’s left hand,
-  the Lion fierce and fell.
-The Dragon bold, that Serpent old,
-  that hurried Souls to Hell.
-There also stand, under command,
-  legions of Sprites unclean.
-And hellish Fiends, that are no friends
-  to God, nor unto Men.
-
-XXXVII. [33]
-
-With dismal chains, and strongest reins,
-  like Prisoners of Hell,
-They’re held in place before Christ’s face,
-  till He their Doom shall tell.
-These void of tears, but fill’d with fears,
-  and dreadful expectation
-Of endless pains and scalding flames,
-  stand waiting for Damnation.
-
-_The Saints cleared and justified._
-
-XXVIII.
-
-All silence keep both Goats and Sheep
-  before the Judge’s Throne;
-With mild aspect to his Elect
-  then speaks the Holy One:
-“My Sheep draw near, your Sentence hear,
-  which is to you no dread,
-Who clearly now discern and know
-  your sins are pardonéd.
-
-XXXIX. [34]
-
-“’Twas meet that ye should judgéd be,
-  that so the World may spy
-No cause of grudge, when as I judge
-  and deal impartially.
-Know therefore all both great and small,
-  the ground and reason why
-These Men do stand at my right hand
- and look so cheerfully.
-
-XL.[35]
-
-“These Men be those my Father chose
-  before the World’s foundation,
-And to me gave, that I should save
-  from Death and Condemnation;
-For whose dear sake I flesh did take,
-  was of a Woman born.
-And did inure myself t’ endure
-  unjust reproach and scorn.
-
-XLI. [36]
-
-“For then it was that I did pass
-  through sorrows many a one;
-That I drank up that bitter Cup
-  which made me sigh and groan.
-The Cross’s pain I did sustain;
-  yea more, my Father’s ire
-I underwent, my Blood I spent
-  to save them from Hell-fire.
-
-XLII. [37]
-
-“Thus I esteeméd, thus I redeeméd
-  all these from every Nation,
-That they may be (as now you see)
-  a chosen Generation.
-What if ere while they were as vile
-  and bad as any be.
-And yet from all their guilt and thrall
-  at once I set them free?
-
-XLIII.[38]
-
-“My grace to one is wrong to none;
-  none can Election claim;
-Amongst all those their souls that lose,
- none can Rejection blame.
-He that may choose, or else refuse,
-  all men to save or spill,
-May this Man choose, and that refuse,
-  redeeming whom he will.
-
-XLIV. [39]
-
-“But as for those whom I have chose
-  Salvation’s heirs to be,
-I underwent their punishment,
-  and therefore set them free.
-I bore their grief, and their relief
-  by suffering procur’d.
-That they of bliss and happiness
-  might firmly be assur’d.
-
-XLV. [40]
-
-“And this my grace they did embrace,
-  believing on my Name;
-Which Faith was true, the fruits do shew
-  proceeding from the same;—
-Their Penitence, their Pati-ence,
-  their Love and Self-denial,
-In suff’ring losses and bearing Crosses,
-  when put upon the trial;—
-
-XLVI. [41]
-
-“Their sin forsaking, their cheerful taking
-  my Yoke, their Charity
-Unto the Saints in all their wants,
-  and in them unto me;—
-These things do clear, and make appear
-  their Faith to be unfeignéd,
-And that a part in my desert
-  and purchase they have gainéd.
-
-XLVII. [42]
-
-“Their debts are paid, their peace is made,
-  their sins remitted are;
-Therefore at once I do pronounce,
-  and openly declare,
-That Heav’n is theirs, that they be Heirs
-  of Life and of Salvation;
-Nor ever shall they come at all
-  to Death or to Damnation.
-
-XLVIII. [43]
-
-“Come blessed Ones and sit on Thrones,
-  judging the World with me;
-Come and possess your happiness,
-  and bought felicity;
-Henceforth no fears, no care, no tears,
-  no sin shall you annoy,
-Nor any thing that grief doth bring:
-  Eternal Rest enjoy.
-
-_They are placed on Thrones to join with Christ in judging the wicked._
-
-XLIX. [44]
-
-“You bore the Cross, you suffer’d loss
-  of all for my Name’s sake;
-Receive the Crown that’s now your own;
-  come, and a Kingdom take.“
-Thus spake the Judge: the wicked grudge
-  and grind their teeth in vain;
-They see with groans these plac’d on Thrones,
-  which addeth to their pain:
-
-L. [45]
-
-That those whom they did wrong and slay,
-  must now their Judgment see!
-Such whom they slighted and once despited,
-  must now their Judges be!
-Thus ’tis decreed, such is their meed,
-  and guerdon glorious;
-With Christ they sit, judging it fit
-  to plague the Impious.
-
-_The wicked brought to the Bar._
-
-LI. [46]
-
-The wicked are brought to the Bar.
-  like guilty Malefactors,
-That oftentimes of bloody Crimes
-  and Treasons have been Actors.
-Of wicked Men, none are so mean
-  as there to be neglected;
-Nor none so high in dignity
-  as there to be respected.
-
-LII. [47]
-
-The glorious Judge will privilege
-  nor Emperor nor King;
-But every one that hath misdone
-  doth unto judgment bring.
-And every one that hath misdone,
-  the Judge impartially
-Condemneth to eternal woe,
-  and endless misery.
-
-LIII.
-
-Thus one and all, thus great and small,
-  the Rich as well as Poor,
-And those of place, as the most base,
-  do stand the Judge before.
-They are arraign’d, and there detain’d
-  before Christ’s Judgment seat,
-With trembling fear their Doom to hear,
-  and feel his Anger’s heat.
-
-LIV. [48]
-
-There Christ demands at all their hands
-  a strict and straight account
-Of all things done under the Sun,
-  whose number far surmount
-Man’s wit and thought: they all are brought
-  unto this solemn Trial,
-And each offense with evidence,
-  so that there’s no denial.
-
-LV.
-
-There’s no excuse for their abuse,
-  since their own Consciences
-More proof give in of each Man’s sin,
-  than thousand Witnesses.
-Though formerly this faculty
-  had grossly been abuséd,
-(Men could it stifle, or with it trifle,
-  when as it them accuséd,)
-
-LVI.
-
-Now it comes in, and every sin
-  unto Men’s charge doth lay;
-It judgeth them and doth condemn,
-  though all the “World say nay.
-It so stingeth and tortureth,
-  it worketh such distress,
-That each Man’s self against himself,
-  is forcéd to confess.
-
-_Secret sins and works of darkness brought to light._
-
-LVII. [49]
-
-It’s vain, moreover, for Men to cover
-  the least Iniquity;
-The Judge hath seen, and privy been
-  to all their villainy.
-He unto light and open sight
-  the work of darkness brings;
-He doth unfold both new old,
-  both known and hidden things.
-
-LVIII. [50]
-
-All filthy facts and secret acts,
-  however closely done.
-And long conceal’d, are there reveal’d
-  before the mid-day Sun.
-Deeds of the night, shunning the light,
-  which darkest corners sought.
-To fearful blame, and endless shame,
-  are there most justly brought.
-
-LIX. [51]
-
-And as all facts, and grosser acts,
-  so every word and thought,
-Erroneous notion and lustful motion,
-  are unto Judgment brought.
-No Sin so small and trivial,
-  but hither it must come;
-Nor so long past but now at last
-  it must receive a doom.
-
-_An account demanded of all their actions._
-
-LX. [52]
-
-At this sad season, Christ asks a Reason
-  (with just austerity)
-Of Grace refus’d, of light abus’d
-  so oft, so wilfully;
-Of Talents lent, by them misspent
-  and on their Lust bestown,
-Which if improv’d as it behoov’d
-  Heav’n might have been their own;
-
-LXI. [53]
-
-Of times neglected, of means rejected,
-  of God’s long-suffering
-And Pati-ence, to Penitence
-  that sought hard hearts to bring;
-Why chords of love did nothing move,
-  to shame or to remorse?
-Why warnings grave, and counsels, have
-  naught chang’d their sinful course?
-
-LXII. [54]
-
-Why chastenings, and evils things,
-  why judgments so severe.
-Prevailéd not with them a jot,
-  nor wrought an awful fear?
-Why promises of Holiness,
-  and new Obedience,
-They oft did make, but always brake
-  the same, to God’s offense?
-
-LXIII. [55]
-
-Why still Hell-ward, without regard,
-  they bold venturéd,
-And chose Damnation before Salvation,
-  when it was offeréd?
-Why sinful pleasures and earthly treasures,
-  like fools, they prizéd more
-Than Heav’nly wealth. Eternal health,
-  and all Christ’s Royal store?
-
-LXIV. [56]
-
-Why, when he stood off’ring his Blood
-  to wash them from their sin,
-They would embrace no saving Grace,
-  but liv’d and died therein?
-Such aggravations, where no evasions,
-  nor false pretences hold,
-Exaggerate and cumulate
-  guilt more than can be told.
-
-LXV.
-
-They multiply and magnify
-  Men’s gross Iniquities;
-They draw down wrath (as Scripture saith)
-  out of God’s treasuries.
-Thus all their ways Christ open lays
-  to Men and Angels’ view,
-And as they were makes them appear
-  in their own proper hue.
-
-LXVI. [57]
-
-Thus he doth find of all Mankind,
-  that stand at his left hand,
-No mother’s son but hath misdone,
-  and broken God’s command.
-All have transgress’d, even the best,
-  and merited God’s wrath,
-Unto their own perditi-on
-  and everlasting scath.
-
-LXVII. [58]
-
-Earth’s dwellers all, both great and small,
-  have wrought iniquity,
-And suffer must (for it is just)
-  Eternal misery.
-Amongst the many there come not any,
-  before the Judge’s face.
-That able are themselves to clear,
-  of all this cursed Race.
-
-_Hypocrites plead for themselves._
-
-LXVIII.
-
-Nevertheless, they all express.
-  (Christ granting liberty,)
-What for their way they have to say,
-  how they have liv’d, and why.
-They all draw near and seek to clear
-  themselves by making pleas;
-There Hypocrites, false-hearted wights,
-  do make such pleas as these:
-
-LXIX. [59]
-
-“Lord, in thy Name, and by the same,
-  we Devils dispossess’d;
-We rais’d the dead and minist’red
-  Succor to the distressed.
-Our painful teaching and pow’rful preaching
-  by thine own wondrous might,
-Did throughly win to God from sin
-  many a wretched wight.“
-
-_The Judge replyeth._
-
-LXX. [60]
-
-“All this,” quoth he, “may granted be,
-  and your case little better’d,
-Who still remain under a chain
-  and many irons fetter’d.
-You that the dead have quickened,
-  and rescu’d from the grave.
-Yourselves were dead, yet ne’er needéd
-  a Christ your souls to save.
-
-LXXI.[61]
-
-“You that could preach, and others teach
-  what way to life doth lead,
-Why were you slack to find that track
-  and in that way to tread?
-How could you bear to see or hear
-  of others freed at last
-From Satan’s paws, whilst in his jaws
-  yourselves were held more fast?
-
-LXXII. [62]
-
-“Who though you knew Repentance true,
-  and Faith is my great Name,
-The only mean to quit you clean,
-  from punishment and blame,
-Yet took no pain true Faith to gain,
-  such as might not deceive,
-Nor would repent with true intent,
-  your evil deeds to leave.
-
-LXXIII. [63]
-
-“His Master’s will how to fulfil
-  the servant that well knew,
-Yet left undone his duty known,
-  more plagues to him are due.
-You against light perverted right;
-  wherefore it shall be now
-For Sidon and for Sodom’s Land
-  more easy than for you.“
-
-_Another plea of the Hypocrites._
-
-LXXIV. [64]
-
-“But we have in thy presence been,”
-  say some, “and eaten there.
-Did we not eat thy Flesh for meat,
-  and feed on Heav’nly Cheer?
-Whereon who feed shall never need,
-  as thou thyself dost say,
-Nor shall they die eternally,
-  but live with Christ for aye.
-
-LXXV.
-
-“We may allege, thou gav’st a pledge
-  of thy dear Love to us,
-In Wine and Bread, which figuréd
-  thy Grace bestowéd thus.
-Of strength’ning Seals, of sweetest Meals,
-  have we so oft partaken;
-And shall we be cast off by thee,
-  and utterly forsaken?“
-
-_The answer._
-
-LXXVI. [65]
-
-To whom the Lord, thus in a word,
-  returns a short reply:
-“I never knew any of you
-  that wrought Iniquity.
-You say you’ve been my Presence in;
-  but then, how came you there
-With Raiment vile that did defile
-  and quite disgrace my Cheer?
-
-LXXVII.
-
-“Durst you draw near without due fear
-  Unto my holy Table?
-Durst you profane and render vain,
-  so far as you were able,
-Those Mysteries, which whoso prize,
-  and carefully improve,
-Shall savéd be undoubtedly,
-  and nothing shall them move?
-
-LXXVIII. [66]
-
-“How durst you venture bold guests to enter
-  in such a sordid hue,
-Amongst my guests unto those Feasts
-  that were not made for you?
-How durst you eat for spir’tual meat
-  your bane, and drink damnation,
-Whilst by your guile you render’d vile
-  so rare and great Salvation?
-
-LXXIX. [67]
-
-“Your fancies fed on heav’nly Bread,
-  your hearts fed on some Lust;
-You lov’d the Creature more than th’ Creator,
-  your souls clove to the dust.
-And think you by Hypocrisy,
-  and cloakéd Wickedness,
-To enter in laden with sin,
-  to lasting Happiness?
-
-LXXX. [68]
-
-“This your excuse shews your abuse
-  of things ordain’d for good.
-And doth declare you guilty are
-  of my dear Flesh and Blood.
-Wherefore those Seals and precious Meals
-  you put so much upon
-As things Divine, they Seal and Sign
-  you to Perditi-on.“
-
-_Another sort of Hypocrites make their pleas._
-
-LXXXI.
-
-Then forth issue another Crew
-  (those being silencéd),
-Who drawing nigh to the Most High,
-  adventure thus to plead:
-“We sinners were,” say they, “’tis clear,
-  deserving condemnation;
-But did not we rely on thee,
-  O Christ, for whole Salvation?
-
-LXXXII. [69]
-
-“We did believe, and oft receive
-  thy gracious Promises;
-We took great care to get a share
-  in endless Happiness.
-We pray’d and wept, and Fast-days kept,
-  lewd ways we did eschew;
-We joyful were thy Word to hear;
-  we form’d our lives anew.
-
-LXXXIII.[70]
-
-“We thought our sin had pardon’d been,
-  that our Estate was good,
-Our debts all paid, our peace well made,
-  our Souls wash’d with thy Blood.
-Lord, why dost though reject us now,
-  who have not thee rejected,
-Nor utterly true sanctity
-  and holy life neglected?“
-
-_The Judge uneaseth them._
-
-LXXXIV. [71]
-
-The Judge incens’d at their pretens’d
-  self-vaunting Piety,
-With such a look as trembling strook
-  unto them made reply:
-“O impudent, impenitent,
-  and guileful generation!
-Think you that I cannot descry
-  your hearts’ abomination?
-
-LXXXV. [72]
-
-“You nor receiv’d, nor yet believ’d
-  my Promises of Grace,
-Nor were you wise enough to prize
-  my reconciléd Face;
-But did presume that to assume
-  which was not yours to take,
-And challengéd the Children’s Bread,
-  yet would not sin forsake.
-
-LXXXVI. [73]
-
-“Being too bold you laid fast hold
-  where int’rest you had none,
-Yourselves deceiving by your believing,
-  all which you might have known.
-You ran away but ran astray
-  with Gospel Promises,
-And perishéd, being still dead
-  in sins and trespasses.
-
-LXXXVII. [74]
-
-“How oft did I Hypocrisy
-  and Hearts’ deceits unmask
-Before your sight, giving you light
-  know a Christian’s task?
-But you held fast unto the last
-  your own conceits so vain,
-No warning could prevail; you would
-  your own Deceits retain.
-
-LXXXVIII. [75]
-
-“As for your care to get a share
-  in Bliss; the fear of Hell,
-And of a part in endless smart,
-  did thereunto compel.
-Your holiness and ways redress,
-  such as it was, did spring
-From no true love to things above,
-  But from some other thing.
-
-LXXXIX. [76]
-
-“You pray’d and wept, you Fast-days kept,
-  but did you this to me?
-No, but for sin you sought to win
-  the greater liberty.
-For all your vaunts, you had vile haunts,
-  which for your Consciences
-Did you alarm, whose voice to charm
-  you us’d these practices.
-
-XC. [77]
-
-“Your Penitence, your diligence
-  to Read, to Pray, to Hear,
-Were but to drown the clam’rous sound
-  of Conscience in your Ear.
-If light you lov’d, vain glory mov’d
-  yourselves therewith to store,
-That seeming wise men might you prize,
-  and honor you the more.
-
-XCI. [78]
-
-“Thus from yourselves unto yourselves,
-  your duties all do tend;
-And as self-love the wheels doth move,
-  so in self-love they end.“
-Thus Christ detects their vain projects,
-  and close Impiety,
-And plainly shews that all their shows
-  were but Hypocrisy.
-
-_Civil honest men’s pleas._
-
-XCII. [79]
-
-Then were brought nigh a Company
-  of Civil honest Men, Civil honest
-That lov’d true dealing and hated stealing,
-  ne’er wrong’d their Bretheren;
-Who pleaded thus: “Thou knowest us
-  that we were blameless livers;
-No Whoremongers, no Murderers,
-  no quarrelers nor strivers.
-
-XCIII.
-
-“Idolaters, Adulterers,
-  Church-robbers we were none,
-Nor false dealers, nor cozeners,
-  but paid each man his own.
-Our way was fair, our dealing square,
-  we were no wasteful spenders,
-No lewd toss-pots, no drunken sots,
-  no scandalous offenders.
-
-XCIV. [80]
-
-“We hated vice and set great price,
-  by virtuous conversation;
-And by the same we got a name
-  and no small commendation.
-God’s Laws express that righteousness
-  is that which he doth prize;
-And to obey, as he doth say,
-  is more than sacrifice.
-
-XCV. [81]
-
-“Thus to obey hath been our way;
-  let our good deeds, we pray.
-Find some regard and some reward
-  with thee, Lord, this day.
-And whereas we transgressors be,
-  of Adam’s race were none,
-No, not the best, but have confess’d
-  themselves to have misdone.“
-
-_Are taken off and rendered invalid._
-
-XCVI. [82]
-
-Then answeréd unto their dread,
-  the Judge: “True Piety
-God doth desire and eke require,
-  no less than honesty.
-Justice demands at all your hands
-  perfect Obedience;
-If but in part you have come short,
-  that is a just offense.
-
-XCVII.
-
-“On Earth below, where men did owe
-  a thousand pounds and more.
-Could twenty pence it recompense?
-  Could that have clear’d the score?
-Think you to buy Felicity
-  with part of what’s due debt?
-Or for desert of one small part,
-  the whole should off be set?
-
-XCVIII. [83]
-
-“And yet that part whose great desert
-  you think to reach so far,
-For your excuse doth you accuse,
-  and will your boasting mar.
-However fair, however square
-  your way and work hath been
-Before men’s eyes, yet God espies
-  iniquity therein.
-
-XCIX. [84]
-
-“God looks upon th’ affecti-on
-  and temper of the heart;
-Not only on the acti-on,
-  and the external part.
-Whatever end vain men pretend,
-  God knows the verity,
-And by the end which they intend
-  their words and deeds doth try.
-
-C. [85]
-
-“Without true Faith, the Scripture saith,
-  God cannot take delight
-In any deed that doth proceed [86]
-  from any sinful wight.
-And without love all actions prove
-  but barren empty things;
-Dead works they be and vanity,
-  the which vexation brings.
-
-CI.
-
-“Nor from true Faitli, which quencheth wrath,
-  hath your obedience flown;
-Nor from true Love, which wont to move
-  Believers, hath it grown.
-Your argument shews your intent
-  in all that you have done;
-You thought to scale Heav’n’s lofty Wall
-  by Ladders of your own.
-
-CII. [87]
-
-“Your blinded spirit hoping to merit
-  by your own Righteousness,
-Needed no Savior but your behavior,
-  and blameless carriages.
-You trusted to what you could do,
-  and in no need you stood;
-Your haughty pride laid me aside.
-  And trampled on my Blood.
-
-CIII. [88]
-
-“All men have gone astray, and done
-  that which God’s laws condemn;
-Purchase and offer’d Grace
-  All men did not contemn.
-The Ninevites and Sodomites
-  had no such sin as this;
-Yet as if all your sins were small,
-  you say, ‘All did amiss.’
-
-CIV. [89]
-
-“Again you thought and mainly sought
-  a name with men t’ acquire;
-Pride bare the Bell that made you swell,
-  and your own selves admire.
-Mean fruit it is, and vile, I wiss,
-  that springs from such a root;
-Virtue divine and genuine
-  wonts not from pride to shoot.
-
-CV. [90]
-
-“Such deeds as your are worse than poor;
-  they are but sins gilt over
-With silver dross, whose glist’ring gloss
-  can them no longer cover.
-The best of them would you condemn,
-  and ruin you alone.
-Although you were from faults so clear,
-  that other you had none.
-
-CVI. [91]
-
-“Your gold is brass, your silver dross,
-  your righteousness is sin;
-And think you by such honesty
-  Eternal life to win?
-You much mistake, if for its sake
-  you dream of acceptation;
-Whereas the same deserveth shame
-  and meriteth damnation.“
-
-_Those that pretend want of opportunity to repent._
-
-CVII. [92]
-
-A wondrous crowd then ’gan aloud
-  thus for themselves to say:
-“We did intend, Lord, to amend,
-  and to reform our way.
-Our true intent was to repent
-  and make our peace with thee;
-But sudden death stopping our breath,
-  left us no liberty.
-
-CVIII.
-
-“Short was our time, for in itr, prime
-  our youthful pow’r was cropt;
-“We died in youth before full growth,
-  so was our purpose stopt.
-Let our good will to turn from ill,
-  and sin to have forsaken,
-Accepted be, Lord, by thee,
-  and in good part be taken.“
-
-_Are confuted and convicted._
-
-CIX. [93]
-
-To whom the Judge: “Where you allege
-  the shortness of the space,
-That from your birth you liv’d on earth,
-  to compass saving Grace,
-It was Free Grace that any space
-  was given you at all,
-To turn from evil, defy the Devil,
-  and upon God to call.
-
-CX. [94]
-
-“One day, one week wherein to seek
-  God’s face with all your hearts,
-A favor was that far did pass
-  the best of your deserts.
-You had a season; what was your reason
-  such precious hours to waste?
-What could you find, what could you mind
-  that was of greater haste?
-
-CXI. [95]
-
-“Could you find time for vain pastime,
-  for loose, licentious mirth?
-For fruitless toys and fading joys,
-  that perish in the birth?
-Had you good leisure for carnal Pleasure,
-  in days of health and youth?
-And yet no space to seek God’s face,
-  and turn to him in truth?
-
-CXII. [96]
-
-“In younger years, beyond your fears,
-  what if you were surprized?
-You put away the evil day,
-  and of long life devised.
-You oft were told, and might behold,
-  that Death no Age doth spare;
-“Why then did you your time foreslow,
-  and slight your soul’s welfare?
-
-CXIII. [97]
-
-“Had your intent been to repent,
-  and had you it desir’d,
-There would have been endeavors seen
-  before your time expir’d.
-God makes no treasure, nor hath he pleasure
-  in idle purposes;
-Such fair pretenses are foul offenses,
-  and cloaks for wickedness.“
-
-_Some plead examples of their betters._
-
-CXIV. [98]
-
-Then were brought in and charg’d with sin,
-  another Company,
-Who by Petition obtain’d permission
-  to make Apology.
-They argued, “We were misled,
-  as is well known to thee.
-By their example that had more ample
-  abilities than we;
-
-CXV. [99]
-
-“Such, as profess’d they did detest
-  and hate each wicked way;
-Whose seeming grace whilst we did trace,
-  our Souls were led astray.
-When men of Parts, Learning, and Arts,
-  professing Piety,
-Did thus and thus, it seem’d to us
-  we might take liberty.“
-
-_Who are told that examples are no Rules._
-
-CXVI. [100]
-
-Who are told The Judge replies: “I gave you eyes,
-  And light to see your way,
-Which had you lov’d and well improv’d,
-  you had not gone astray.
-My Word was pure, the Rule was sure;
-  Why did you it forsake,
-Or thereon trample, and men’s example
-  your Directory make?
-
-CXVII. [101]
-
-“This you well knew: that God is true,
-  and that most men are liars,
-In word professing holiness,
-  in deed thereof deniers.
-simple fools! that having Rules,
-  your lives to regulate.
-Would them refuse, and rather choose
-  vile men to imitate.“
-
-_They urge that they were led by godly men’s Examples. But all their shifts turn to their greater shame._
-
-CXVIII.
-
-“But, Lord,” say they, “we went astray,
-  and did more wickedly,
-By means of those whom thou has chose
-  Salvation’s heirs to be.“
-To whom the Judge: “What you allege
-  doth nothing help the case,
-But makes appear how vile you were,
-  and rend’reth you more base.
-
-CXIX. [102]
-
-“You understood that what was good,
-  was to be followed.
-And that you ought that which was naught
-  to have relinquished.
-Contrariwise it was your guise
-  only to imitate
-Good men’s defects, and their neglects
-  who were regenerate.
-
-CXX. [103]
-
-“But to express their holiness,
-  or imitate their grace.
-You little car’d, nor once prepar’d
-  your hearts to seek my Face.
-They did repent and truly rent
-  their hearts for all known sin;
-You did offend, but not amend,
-  to follow them therein.“
-
-_Some plead the Scripture’s darkness, and difference among Interpreters._
-
-CXXI. [104]
-
-“We had thy Word,” say some, “Lord,
-  but wiser men than we
-Could never yet interpret it,
-  but always disagree.
-How could we fools be led by Rules
-  so far beyond our ken.
-Which to explain did so much pain
-  and puzzle wisest men?“
-
-_They are confuted._
-
-CXXII. [105]
-
-“Was all my Word abstruse and hard?”
-  the Judge then answeréd;
-“It did contain much Truth so plain
-  you might have run and read.
-But what was hard you never car’d
-  to know, or studiéd;
-And things that were most plain and clear
-  you never practiséd.
-
-CXXIII. [106]
-
-“The Mystery of Piety
-  God unto Babes reveals,
-When to the Wise he it denies,
-  and from the world conceals.
-If to fulfil God’s holy Will
-  had seemed good to you,
-You would have sought light as you ought,
-  and done the good you knew.“
-
-_Others the fear of persecution._
-
-CXXIV. [107]
-
-Then came in view another crew,
-  and ’gan to make their pleas;
-Amongst the rest, some of the best
-  had such poor shifts as these :
-“Thou know’st right well, who all canst tell,
-  we liv’d amongst thy foes.
-Who the Renate did sorely hate
-  and goodness much oppose.
-
-CXXV. [108]
-
-“We holiness durst not profess,
-  fearing to be forlorn
-Of all our friends, and for amends
-  to be the wicked’s scorn.
-“We knew their anger would much endanger
-  our lives and our estates;
-Therefore, for fear, we durst appear
-  no better than our mates.“
-
-_They are answered._
-
-CXXVI. [109]
-
-To whom the Lord returns this word:
-  “O wonderful deceits!
-To cast off awe of God’s strict law,
-  and fear men’s wrath and threats;
-To fear hell-fire and God’s fierce ire
-  less than the rage of men;
-As if God’s wrath could do less scath
-  than wrath of bretheren!
-
-CXXVII.
-
-“To use such strife, a temp’ral life
-  to rescue and secure,
-And be so blind as not to mind
-  that life that will endure!
-This was your case, who carnal peace
-  more than true joys did savor;
-Who fed on dust, clave to your lust,
-  and spurned at my favor.
-
-CXXVIII. [110]
-
-“To please your kin, men’s love to win,
-  to flow in worldly wealth,
-To save your skin, these things have been
-  more than Eternal health.
-You had your choice, wherein rejoice;
-  it was your porti-on.
-For which you chose your souls to expose
-  unto Perditi-on.
-
-CXXIX. [111]
-
-“Who did not hate friends, life, and state,
-  with all things else for me,
-forsake and’s Cross up-take
-  shall never happy be.
-Well worthy they to die for aye,
-  who death than life had rather;
-Death is their due that so value
-  the friendship of my Father.“
-
-_Others plead for pardon from God’s Mercy and Justice._
-
-CXXX. [112]
-
-Others plead Others argue, and not a few,
-  “Is not God graci-ous?
-His Equity and Clemency,
-  are they not marvellous?
-Thus we believ’d; are we deceiv’d?
-  Cannot his Mercy great,
-(As hath been told to us of old,)
-  assuage his anger’s heat?
-
-CXXXI.
-
-“How can it be that God should see
-  his Creatures’ endless pain.
-Or hear their groans and rueful moans,
-  and still his wrath retain?
-Can it agree with Equity,
-  can Mercy have the heart.
-To recompense few years’ offense
-  with everlasting smart?
-
-CXXXII. [113]
-
-“Can God delight in such a sight
-  as sinners’ misery?
-Or what great good can this our blood
-  bring unto the most High?
-O thou that dost thy Glory most
-  in pard’ning sin display,
-Lord, might it please thee to release
-  and pardon us this day!
-
-CXXXIII.
-
-“Unto thy name more glorious fame
-  would not such Mercy bring?
-Would not it raise thine endless praise,
-  more than our suffering?“
-“With that they cease, holding their peace,
-  but cease not still to weep;
-Grief ministers a flood of tears,
-  in which their words do steep.
-
-_They are answered._
-
-CXXXIV.
-
-But all too late; grief’s out of date,
-  when Life is at an end.
-The glorious King thus answering,
-  all to his voice attend:
-“God gracious is,” quoth he; “like his,
-  no mercy can be found:
-His Equity and Clemency
-  to sinners do abound,
-
-_Mercy now shines forth in the vessels of Mercy._
-
-CXXXV. [114]
-
-“As may appear by those that here
-  are plac’d at my right hand,
-Whose stripes I bore, and clear’d the score,
-  that they might quitted stand.
-For surely none but God alone,
-  whose Grace transcends men’s thought.
-For such as those that were his foes
-  like wonders would have wrought.
-
-_Did also wait upon such as abused it._
-
-CXXXVI. [115]
-
-“And none but lie such lenity
-  and patience would have shown
-To you so long, who did him wrong,
-  and pull’d his Judgment down.
-How long a space, stiff-neck’d race,
-  did patience you afford?
-How oft did love you gently move,
-  to turn unto the Lord ?
-
-_The day of Grace now past_
-
-CXXXVII. [116]
-
-“With chords of love God often strove
-  your stubborn hearts to tame;
-Nevertheless your wickedness
-  did still resist the same.
-If now at last Mercy be past
-  from you for evermore,
-And Justice come in Mercy’s room,
-  yet grudge you not therefore.
-
-CXXXVIII. [117]
-
-“If into wrath God turned hath
-  his long, long-suffering,
-And now for love you vengeance prove,
-  is an equal thing.
-Your waxing worse hath stopt the course
-  of wonted Clemency,
-Mercy refus’d and Grace misus’d
-  call for severity.
-
-CXXXIX. [118]
-
-“It’s now high time that ev’ry Crime
-  be brought to punishment;
-Wrath long contain’d and oft restrain’d,
-  at last must have a vent.
-Justice severe cannot forbear
- to plague sin any longer,
-But must inflict with liand most strict
-  mischief upon the wronger.
-
-CXL. [119]
-
-“In vain do they for Mercy pray,
-  the season being past,
-Who had no care to get a share
-  therein, while time did last.
-The man whose ear refus’d to hear
-  the voice of Wisdom’s cry,
-Earn’d this reward, that none regard
-  him in his misery.
-
-CXLI. [120]
-
-“It doth agree with Equity
-  and with God’s holy Law,
-That those should die eternally
-  that Death upon them draw.
-The soul that sins Damnation wins,
-  for so the Law ordains;
-Which Law is just; and therefore must
-  such suffer endless pains.
-
-CXLII. [121]
-
-“Eternal smart is the desert
-  ev’n of the least offense;
-Then wonder not if I allot
-  to you this Recompense;
-But wonder more that since so sore
-  and lasting plagues are due
-To every sin, you liv’d therein,
-  who well the danger knew.
-
-CXLIII. [122]
-
-“God hath no joy to crush or ’stroy,
-  and ruin wretched wights;
-But to display the glorious Ray
-  of Justice he delights.
-To manifest he doth detest,
-  and throughly hate all sin,
-By plaguing it as is most fit—
-  this shall him Glory win.“
-
-_Some pretend they were shut out of Heaven by God’s Decree._
-
-CXLIV. [123]
-
-Some pretend Then at the Bar arraignéd are
-  an impudenter sort,
-Who to evade the guilt that’s laid
-  Upon them, thus retort:
-“How could we cease thus to transgress?
-  How could we Hell avoid,
-Whom God’s Decree shut out from thee,
-  and sign’d to be destroy’d ?
-
-CXLV. [124]
-
-“Whom God ordains to endless pains
-  by Law unalterable,
-Repentance true, Obedience new,
-  to such are unable.
-Sorrow for sin no good can win,
-  to such as are rejected;
-Nor can they grieve nor yet believe,
-  that never were elected.
-
-CXLVI.
-
-“Of Man’s fall’n race, who can true Grace
-  or Holiness obtain?
-Who can convert or change his heart,
-  if God withhold the same?
-Had we applied ourselves and tried
-  as much as who did most,
-God’s love to gain, our busy pain
-  and labor bad been lost.“
-
-_Their pleas taken off._
-
-CXLVII. [125]
-
-Christ readily makes this Reply:
-  “I damn you not because
-You are rejected, nor yet elected;
-  but you have broke my Laws.
-It is in vain your wits to strain
-  the end and means to sever;
-Men fondly seek to part or break
-  what God hath link’d together.
-
-CXLVIII. [126]
-
-“Whom God will save, such he will have
-  the means of life to use;
-Whom he’ll pass by shall choose to die,
-  and ways of life refuse.
-He that fore-sees and fore-decrees,
-  in wisdom order’ d has.
-That man’s free-will, electing ill,
-  shall bring his Will to pass.
-
-CXLIX. [127]
-
-“High God’s Decree, as it is free,
-  so doth it none compel
-Against their will to good or ill;
-  it forceth none to Hell.
-They have their wish whose Souls perish
-  with Torments in Hell-fire,
-Who rather choose their souls to lose,
-  than leave a loose desire.
-
-CL. [128]
-
-“God did ordain sinners to pain,
-  yet he to Hell sends none
-But such as swerv’d and have deserv’d
-  destruction as their own.
-His pleasure is, that none from Bliss
-  and endless happiness
-Be barr’d, but such as wrong’d him much
-  by willful wickedness.
-
-CLI. [129]
-
-“You, sinful Crew! no other knew
-  but you might be elect;
-Why did you then yourselves condemn?
-  Why did you me reject?
-Where was your strife to gain that life
-  which lasteth evermore?
-You never knock’ d, yet say God lock’d
-  against you Heaven’s door.
-
-CLII. [130]
-
-“’Twas no vain task to knock and ask,
-  whilst life continued.
-Who ever sought Heav’n as he ought,
-  and seeking perished?
-The lowly, meek, who truly seek
-  for Christ and for Salvation,
-There’s no decree whereby such be
-  ordain’d to condemnation.
-
-CLIII. [131]
-
- You argue then: ’But abject men,
-  whom God resolves to spill,
-Cannot repent, nor their hearts rent;
-  nor can they change their will.’
-Not for his _Can_ is any man
-  adjudgéd unto Hell,
-But for his _Will_ to do what’s ill,
-  and nilling to do well.
-
-CLIV.
-
-“I often stood tend’ring my Blood
-  to wash away your guilt,
-And eke my Sprite to frame you right,
-  lest your Souls should be spilt.
-But you, vile Race, rejected Grace,
-  when Grace was freely proflfer’d,
-No changed heart, no heav’nly part
-  would you, when it was offer’ d.
-
-CLV. [132]
-
-“Who willfully the remedy,
-  and means of life contemned.
-Cause have the same themselves to blame,
-  if now they be condemnéd.
-You have yourselves, you and none else,
- to blame that you must die
-You chose the way to your decay,
-  and perish’d willfully.“
-
-CLVI.
-
-These words appall and daunt them all,
-  dismay’d and all amort.
-Like stocks that stand at Christ’s left hand
-  and dare no more retort.
-Then were brought near with trembling fear,
-  a number numberless,
-Of Blind Heathen and brutish men,
-  that did God’s Law transgress;
-
-_Heathen men plead want of the Written Word._
-
-CLVII.
-
-Whose wicked ways Christ open lays,
-  and makes their sins appear,
-They making pleas their case to ease,
-  if not themselves to clear.
-“Thy Written Word,” say they, “good
-  we never did enjoy;
-We ne’er refus’d, nor it abus’d;
-  Oh, do not us destroy!“
-
-CLVIII. [133]
-
-“You ne’er abus’d, nor yet refus’d
-  my Written Word, you plead;
-That’s true," quoth he, “therefore shall ye
-  the less be punishéd.
-You shall not smart for any part
-  of other men’s offense,
-But for your own transgressi-on
-  receive due recompense.“
-
-_Insufficiency of the light of Nature._
-
-CLIX.
-
-“But we were blind,” say they, “in mind;
-  too dim was Nature’s Light,
-Our only guide, as hath been tried,
-  to bring us to the sight
-Of our estate degenerate,
-  and curs’d by Adam’s Fa’l;
-How we were born and lay forlorn
-  in bondage and in thrall.
-
-CLX. [134]
-
-“We did not know a Christ till now,
-  nor how fall’n men be saved,
-Else would we not, right well we wot,
-  have so ourselves behaved.
-“We should have mourn’d, we should have turn’d
-  from sin at thy Reproof,
-And been more wise through thy advice,
-  for our own soul’s behoof.
-
-_They are answered._
-
-CLXI.
-
-“But Nature’s light shin’d not so bright
-  to teach us the right way:
-We might have lov’d it and well improv’d it,
-  and yet have gone astray.“
-The Judge most High makes this Reply:
-  “You ignorance pretend.
-Dimness of sight, and want of light,
-  your course Heav’nward to bend.
-
-CLXII. [135]
-
-“How came your mind to be so blind?
-  I once you knowledge gave.
-Clearness of sight and judgment light:
-  who did the same deprave?
-If to your cost you have it lost,
-  and quite defac’d the same,
-Your own desert hath caus’d the smart;
-  you ought not me to blame.
-
-CLXIII. [136]
-
-“Yourselves into a pit of woe,
-  your own transgression led;
-If I to none my Grace had shown
-  who had been injured?
-If to a few, and not to you,
-  I shew’d a way of life,
-My Grace so free, you clearly see,
-  gives you no ground of strife.
-
-CLXIV. [137]
-
-“’Tis vain to tell, you wot fall well,
-  if you in time liad known
-Your misery and remedy,
-  your actions had it shown:
-You, sinful Crew, have not been true
-  unto the Light of Nature,
-Nor done the good you understood,
-  nor owned your Creator.
-
-CLXV. [138]
-
-“He that the Light, because ’tis slight,
-  hath uséd to despise,
-Would not the Light shining more bright,
-  be likely for a prize.
-If you had lov’d, and well improv’d
-  your knowledge and dim sight,
-Herein your pain ’had not been vain,
-  your plagues had been more light.“
-
-_Reprobate Infants plead for themselves._
-
-CLXVI. [139]
-
-Then to the Bar all they drew near
-  Who died in infancy,
-And never had or good or bad
-  effected pers’nally:
-But from the womb unto the tomb
-  were straightway carried,
-(Or at the least ere they transgress’d)
-  who thus began to plead:
-
-CLXVII.
-
-“If for our own transgressi-on,
-  or disobedience.
-We here did stand at thy left hand,
-  just were the Recompense;
-But Adam’s guilt our souls hath spilt,
-  his fault is ckarg’d upon us;
-And that alone hath overthrown
-  and utterly undone us.
-
-CLXVIII.
-
-“Not we, but he ate of the Tree,
-  whose fruit was interdicted;
-Yet on us all of his sad Fall
-  the punishment’s inflicted.
-How could we sin that had not been,
-  or how is his sin our,
-Without consent, which to prevent
-  we never had the pow’r?
-
-CLXIX. [140]
-
-“O great Creator why was our Nature
-  depravéd and forlorn?
-Why so defil’d, and made so vil’d,
-  whilst we were jet unborn?
-If it be just, and needs we must
-  transgressors reckon’d be.
-Thy Mercy, Lord, to us afford,
-  which sinners hath set free.
-
-CLXX.
-
-“Behold we see Adam set free,
-  and sav’d from his trespass,
-Whose sinful Fall hath split us all,
-  and brought us to this pass.
-Canst thou deny us once to try,
-  or Grace to us to tender,
-When he finds grace before thy face,
-  who was the chief offender?“
-
-_Their arguments taken off._
-
-CLXXI. [141]
-
-Then answered the Judge most dread:
-  God doth such doom forbid,
-That men should die eternally
-  for what they never did.
-But what you call old Adam’s Fall,
-  and only his Trespass,
-You call amiss to call it his,
-  both his and yours it was.
-
-CLXXII. [142]
-
-“He was design’d of all Mankind
-  to be a public Head;
-A common Root, whence all should shoot,
-  and stood in all their stead.
-He stood and fell, did ill or well,
-  not for himself alone.
-But for you all, who now his Fall
-  and trespass would disown.
-
-CLXXIII.
-
-“If he had stood, then all his brood
-  had been established
-In God’s true love never to move,
-  nor once awry to tread;
-Then all his Eace my Father’s Grace
-  should have enjoy’d for ever.
-And wicked Sprites by subtile sleights
-  could them have harmed never.
-
-CLXXIV.
-
-Would you have griev’d to have receiv’d
-  through Adam so much good,
-As had been your for evermore,
-  if he at first had stood?
-Would you have said, ’We ne’er obey’d
-  nor did thy laws regard;
-It ill befits with benefits,
-  us, Lord, to so reward?’
-
-CLXXV. [143]
-
-“Since then to share in his welfare,
-  you could have been content,
-You may with reason share in his treason,
-  and in the punishment.
-Hence you were born in state forlorn,
-  with Natures so depravéd;
-Death was your due because that yo
-  had thus yourselves behaved.
-
-CLXXVI. [144]
-
-“You think ’If we had been as he
-  whom God did so betrust,
-We to our cost would ne’er have lost
-  all for a paltry lust.’
-Had you been made in Adam’s stead,
-  you would like things have wrought,
-And so into the self-same woe,
-  yourselves and yours have brought.
-
-_The free gift._
-
-CLXXVII. [145]
-
-“I may deny you once to try,
-  or Grace to you to tender.
-Though he finds Grace before my face
-  who was the chief oifender;
-Else should my Grace cease to be Grace,
-  for it would not be free,
-If to release whom I should please
-  I have no liberty.
-
-CLXXVIII.
-
-“If upon one what’s due to none.
-  I frankly shall bestow,
-And on the rest shall not think best
-  compassion’s skirt to throw,
-Whom injure I? will you envy
-  and grudge at others’ weal?
-Or me accuse, who do refuse
-  yourselves to help and heal ?
-
-CLXXIX. [146]
-
-“Am I alone of what’s my own,
-  no Master or no Lord?
-And if I am, how can you claim
-  what I to sonie afford?
-Will you demand Grace at my hand,
-  and challenge what is mine?
-Will you teach me whom to set free,
-  and thus my Grace confine?
-
-CLXXX. [147]
-
-“You sinners are, and such a share
-  as sinners, may expect;
-Such you shall have, for I do save
-  none but mine own Elect.
-Yet to compare your sin with their
-  who liv’d a longer time,
-I do confess yours is much less,
-  though every sin’s a crime.
-
-_The wicked all convinced and put to silence._
-
-CLXXXI. [148]
-
-“A crime it is, therefore in bliss
-  you may not hope to dwell;
-But unto you I shall allow
-  The easiest room in Hell.“
-The glorious King thus answering,
-  they cease, and plead no longer;
-Their Consciences must needs confess
-  his Reasons are the stronger.
-
-_Behold the formidable estate of all the ungodly as they stand hopeless and helpless before an impartial Judge, expecting their final Sentence._
-
-CLXXXII. [149]
-
-Thus all men’s pleas the Judge with ease
-  doth answer and confute,
-Until that all, both great and small,
-  are silencéd and mute.
-Vain hopes are cropt, all mouths are stopt,
-  sinners have naught to say,
-But that ’tis just and equal most
-  they should be damn’d for aye.
-
-CLXXXIII.
-
-Now what remains, but that to pains
-  and everlasting smart,
-Christ should condemn the sons of men,
-  which is their just desert?
-Oh rueful plights of sinful wights!
-  Oh wretches all forlorn!
-’T had happy been they ne’er had seen
-  the sun, or not been born.
-
-CLXXXIV.
-
-Yea now it would be good they could
-  themselves annihilate.
-And cease to be, themselves to free
-  from such a fearful state.
-happy Dogs, and Swine, and Frogs,
-  yea, Serpent’s generation!
-Who do not fear this doom to hear,
-  and sentence of Damnation!
-
-CLXXXV. [150]
-
-This is their state so desperate;
-  their sins are fully known;
-Their vanities and villanies
-  before the world are shown.
-As they are gross and impious,
-  so are their numbers more
-Than motes in th’ Air, or than their hair,
-  or sands upon the shore.
-
-CLXXXVI. [151]
-
-Divine Justice offended is,
-  and satisfaction claimeth;
-God’s wrathful ire, kindled like fire.
-  against them fiercely flameth.
-Their Judge severe doth quite cashier,
-  and all their pleas off take,
-That ne’er a man, or dare, or can
-  a further answer make.
-
-CLXXXVII. [152]
-
-Their mouths are shut, each man is put
-  to silence and to shame,
-Nor have they aught within their thought,
-  Christ’s Justice for to blame.
-The Judge is just, and plague them must,
-  nor will he Mercy shew,
-For Mercy’s day is past away
-  to any of this Crew.
-
-CLXXXVIII. [153]
-
-The Judge is strong, doers of wrong
-  cannot his pow’r withstand;
-None can by flight run out of sight,
-  nor ’scape out of his hand.
-Sad is their state; for Advocate,
-  to plead thei cause, there’s none;
-None to prevent their punishment,
-  or mis’ry to bemoan.
-
-CLXXXIX. [154]
-
-O dismal day! whither shall they
-  for help and succor flee?
-To God above with hopes to move
-  their greatest Enemy?
-His wrath is great, whose burning heat
-  no floods of tears can slake;
-His Word stands fast that they be cast
-  into the burning Lake.
-
-CXC. [155]
-
-To Christ their Judge? He doth adjudge
-  them to the Pit of Sorrow;
-Nor will he hear, or cry or tear,
-  nor respite them one morrow.
-To Heav’n, alas! they cannot pass,
-  it is against them shut;
-To enter there (O heavy cheer)
-  they out of hopes are put.
-
-CXCI. [156]
-
-Unto their Treasures, or to their Pleasures?
-  All these have them forsaken;
-Had they full cofiers to make large offers,
-  their gold would not be taken.
-Unto the place where whilom was
-  their birth and Education?
-Lo! Christ begins for their great sins,
-  to fire the Earth’s Foundation;
-
-CXCII. [157]
-
-And by and by the flaming Sky
-  shall drop like molten Lead
-About their ears, t’ increase their fears,
-  and aggravate their dread.
-To Angel’s good that ever stood
-  in their integrity,
-Should they betake themselves, and make
-  their suit incessantly?
-
-CXCIII.
-
-They’ve neither skill, nor do they will
-  to work them any ease;
-They will not mourn to see them burn,
-  nor beg for their release.
-To wicked men, their bretheren
-  in sin and wickedness,
-Should they make moan? Their case is one;
-  they’re in the same distress.
-
-CXCIV. [158]
-
-Ah! cold comfort and mean support,
-  from such like Comforters!
-Ah! little joy of Company,
-  and fellow-sufferers!
-Such shall increase their heart’s disease,
-  and add unto their woe,
-Because that they brought to decay
-  themselves and many moe.
-
-CXCV. [159]
-
-Unto the Saints with sad complaints
-  should they themselves apply?
-They’re not dejected nor aught affected
-  with all their misery.
-Friends stand aloof and make no proof
-  what Prayers or Tears can do;
-Your Godly friends are now more friend
-  to Christ than unto you.
-
-CXCVI. [160]
-
-Where tender love men’s hearts did move
-  unto a sympathy,
-And bearing part of others’ smart
-  in their anxiety,
-Now such compassion is out of fashion,
-  and wholly laid aside;
-No friends so near, but Saints to hear
-  their Sentence can abide.
-
-CXCVII. [161]
-
-One natural Brother beholds another
-  in his astonied fit.
-Yet sorrows not thereat a jot,
-  nor pities him a whit.
-The godly Wife conceives no grief
-  nor can she shed a tear
-For the sad state of her dear Mate,
-  when she his doom doth hear.
-
-CXCVIII. [^198]
-
-He that was erst a Husband pierc’d
-  with sense of Wife’s distress.
-Whose tender heart did bear a part
-  of all her grievances,
-Shall mourn no more as heretofore,
-  because of her ill plight.
-Although he see her now to be
-  a damn’d forsaken wight.
-
-CXCIX. [162]
-
-The tender Mother will own no other
-  of all her num’rous brood,
-But such as stand at Christ’s right hand,
-  acquitted through his Blood.
-The pious Father had now much rather
-  his graceless Son should lie
-In Hell with Devils, for all his evils,
-  burning eternally,
-
-CC. [163]
-
-Than God most High should injury
-  by sparing him sustain;
-And doth rejoice to hear Christ’s voice,
-  adjudging him to pain.
-Thus having all, both great and small,
-  convinc’d and silencéd,
-Christ did proceed their Doom to read,
-  and thus it utteréd:
-
-_The Judge pronounceth the sentence of condemnation._
-
-CCI. [164]
-
-*“Ye sinful wights and curséd sprights,*
-  _that work iniquity,_
-_Depart together from me for ever_
-  _to endless Misery;_
-_Your portion take in yonder Lake,_
-  _where Fire and Brimstone flameth;_
-_Suffer the smart which your desert,_
-  *as its due wages claimeth.“*
-
-_The terror of it._
-
-CCII.
-
-Oh piercing words, more sharp than swords!
-  What! to depart from Thee,
-Whose face before for evermore
-  the best of Pleasures be!
-What! to depart (unto our smart),
-  from thee _Eternally_!
-To be for aye banish’d away
-  with Devils’ company!
-
-CCIII.
-
-What! to be sent to Punishment,
-  and flames of burning Fire!
-To be surrounded, and eke confounded
-  with God’s revengeful Ire!
-What! to abide, not for a tide,
-  these Torments, but for Ever!
-To be releas’d, or to be eas’d,
-  not after years, but Never!
-
-CCIV.
-
-Oh fearful Doom! now there’s no room
-  for hope or help at all;
-Sentence is past which aye shall last;
-  Christ will not it recall.
-Then might you hear them rend and tear
-  the Air with their out-cries;
-The hideous noise of their sad voice
-  ascendeth to the Skies.
-
-CCV. [165]
-
-They wring their hands, their caitiff-hands,
-  and gnash their teeth for terror;
-They cry, they roar for anguish sore,
-  and gnaw their tongues for horror.
-But get away without delay,
-  Christ pities not your cry;
-Depart to Hell, there may you yell,
-  and roar Eternally.
-
-_It is put in Execution._
-
-CCVI. [166]
-
-That word “_Depart_” maugre their heart,
-  It is put in drives every wicked one,
-With mighty pow’r, the self-same hour,
-  far from the Judge’s Throne.
-Away they’re chas’d by the strong blast
-  of his Death-threat’ning mouth;
-They flee full fast, as if in haste,
-  although they be full loath.
-
-CCVII. [167]
-
-As chaff that’s dry, as dust doth fly
-  before the Northern wind.
-Right so are they chaséd away,
-  and can no Refuge find.
-They hasten to the Pit of Woe,
-  guarded by Angels stout.
-Who to fulfil Christ’s holy Will,
-  attend this wickéd Rout;
-
-_HELL._
-
-CCVIII. [168]
-
-Whom having brought as they are taught,
-  unto the brink of Hell,
-(That dismal place, far from Christ’s face,
-  where Death and Darkness dwell,
-Where God’s fierce Ire kindleth the fire,
-  and vengeance feeds the flame.
-With piles of Wood and Brimstone Flood,
-  so none can quench the same,)
-
-_Wicked men and Devils cast into it forever._
-
-CCIX. [169]
-
-With Iron bands they bind their hands
-  and curséd feet together,
-And cast them all, both great and small,
-  into that Lake forever,
-Where day and night, without respite,
-  they wail, and cry and howl,
-For tort’ring pain which they sustain,
-  in Body and in Soul.
-
-CCX. [170]
-
-For day and night, in their despite,
-  their torment’s smoke ascendeth.
-Their pain and grief have no relief,
-  their anguish never endeth.
-There must they lie and never die,
-  though dying every day;
-There must they dying ever lie,
-  and not consume away.
-
-CCXI.
-
-Die fain they would if die they could,
-  but Death will not be had;
-God’s direful wrath their bodies hath
-  forev’r immortal made.
-They live to lie in misery,
-  and bear eternal woe;
-And live they must whilst God is just,
-  that he may plague them so.
-
-_The unsufferable torments of the Damned._
-
-CCXII. [171]
-
-But who can tell the plagues of Hell,
-  and torments exquisite?
-Who can relate their dismal state,
-  and terrors infinite?
-Who fare the best and feel the least,
-  yet feel that punishment
-Whereby to nought they would be brought
-  if God did not prevent.
-
-CCXIII. [172]
-
-The least degree of misery
-  there felt is incomparable;
-The lightest pain they there sustain
-  is more than intolerable.
-But God’s great pow’r from hour to hour
-  upholds them in the fire,
-That they shall not consume a jot
-  nor by its force expire.
-
-CCXIV. [173]
-
-But, ah, the woe they undergo
-  (_they_ more than all beside)
-Who had the light, and knew the right,
-  yet would not it abide!
-The sev’n fold smart which to their part
-  and porti-on doth fall.
-Who Christ’s free Grace would not embrace,
-  nor hearken to his call.
-
-CCXV. [174]
-
-The Amorites and Sodomites,
-  although their plagues be sore,
-Yet find some ease compar’d to these,
-  who feel a great deal more.
-Almighty God, whose Iron Rod,
-  to smite them never lins.
-Doth most declare his Justice rare
-  in plaguing these men’s sins.
-
-CCXVI. [175]
-
-The pain of loss their souls doth toss,
-  and wond’rously distress,
-To think what they have cast away
-  by willful wickedness.
-“We might have been redeem’d from sin,”
-  think they, “and liv’d above.
-Being possesst of Heav’nly rest,
-  and joying in God’s love
-
-CCXVII. [176]
-
-“But woe, woe, woe, our Souls unto!
-  we would not happy be;
-And therefore bear God’s vengeance here
-  to all Eternity.
-Experience and woful sense
-  must be our painful teachers,
-Who’d not believe, nor credit give
-  unto our faithful Preachers.“
-
-CCXVIII. [177]
-
-Thus shall they lie and wail and cry,
-  tormented and tormenting;
-Their galled hearts with poison’d darts,
-  but now too late repenting.
-There let them dwell in th’ Flames of Hell:
-  there leave we them to burn,
-And back again unto the men
-  whom Christ acquits, return.
-
-_The Saints rejoice to see the Judgment executed upon the Wicked World._
-
-CCXIX. [178]
-
-The Saints behold with courage bold
-  and thankful wonderment,
-To see all those that were their foes
-  thus sent to punishment.
-Then do they sing unto their King
-  a Song of endless Praise;
-They praise his Name and do proclaim
-  that just are all his ways.
-
-_They ascend with Christ into Heaven triumphing._
-
-CCXX.
-
-Thus with great joy and melody
-  to Heav’n they all ascend,
-Him there to praise with sweetest lays,
-  and Hymns that never end;
-Where with long rest they shall be blest,
-  and naught shall them annoy,
-“Where they shall see as seen they be,
-  and whom they love enjoy.
-
-_Their eternal happiness and incomparable glory there._
-
-CCXXI. [179]
-
-Oh glorious Place! where face to face
-  Jehovah may be seen,
-By such as were sinners while here,
-  and no dark veil between!
-Where the Sunshine and light Divine
-  of God’s bright countenance,
-Doth rest upon them every one,
-  with sweetest influence!
-
-CCXXII. [180]
-
-Oh blessed state of the Renate!
-  Oh wond’rous happiness.
-To which they’re brought beyond what thought
-  can reach or words express!
-Grief’s watercourse and sorrow’s source
-  are turn’d to joyful streams;
-Their old distress and heaviness
-  are vanished like dreams.
-
-CCXXIII. [181]
-
-For God above in arms of love
-  doth dearly them embrace.
-And fills their sprights with such delights,
-  and pleasures in his Grace,
-As shall not fail, nor yet grow stale,
-  through frequency of use;
-Nor do they fear God’s favor there
-  to forfeit by abuse.
-
-CCXXIV. [182]
-
-For there the Saints are perfect Saints,
-  and holy ones indeed;
-From all the sin that dwelt within
-  their mortal bodies freed;
-Made Kings and Priests to God through Christ’s
-  dear Love’s transcendency,
-There to remain and there to reign
-  with him Eternally.
-
-
-A Short Discourse On Eternity.
-
-What mortal man can with a Span
-  mete out Eternity?
-Or fathom it by depth of Wit,
-  or strength of Memory?
-The lofty Sky is not so high,
-  Hell’s depth to this is small;
-The World so wide is but a stride,
-  comparéd therewithal.
-
-It is a main great Oce-an
-  withouten bank or bound,
-A deep Abyss, wherein there is
-  no bottom to be found.
-This World hath stood now since the Flood,
-  four thousand years well near,
-And had before enduréd more
-  than sixteen hundred year.
-
-But what’s the time from the World’s prime,
-  unto this present day,
-If we thereby Eternity
-  to measure should essay?
-The whole duration since the Creation,
-  though long, yet is more little.
-If placed by Eternity,
-  than is the smallest tittle.
-
-Tell every Star both near and far,
-  in Heav’n’s bright Canopy
-That doth appear throughout the year
-  of high or low degree:
-Tell every Tree that thou canst see
-  in this vast Wilderness,
-Up in the “Woods, down by the Floods,
-  in thousand miles Progress:
-
-The sum is vast, yet not so vast
-  but that thou may’st go on
-To multiply the leaves thereby,
-  that hang those Trees upon:
-Add thereunto the Drops that thou
-  imaginest to be
-In April Show’rs, that bring forth Flow’rs
-  and blossoms plenteously:
-
-Number the Fowls and living Souls
-  that through the Air do fly,
-The wingéd Hosts in all their Coasts
-  beneath the starry Sky:
-Count all the Grass as thou dost pass
-  through many a pasture-land,
-And dewy Drops that on the tops
-  of Herbs and Plants do stand:
-
-Number the Sand upon the Strand,
-  and atoms of the Air;
-And do thy best on Man and Beast,
-  to reckon every Hair:
-Take all the Dust, if so thou lust,
-  and add to thine Account:
-Yet shall the Years of Sinners’ tears,
-  the Number far surmount.
-
-Naught join’d to nauglit can ne’er make aught,
-  nor Cyphers make a Sum;
-Nor things finite, to infinite
-  by multiplying come:
-A Cockle-shell may serve as well
-  to lade the Ocean dry
-As finite things and reckonings
-  to bound Eternity.
-
-Oh happy they that live for aye,
-  with Christ in Heav’n above!
-Who know withal that nothing shall
-  deprive them of his love.
-_Eternity, Eternity!_
-  Oh! were it not for thee,
-The Saints in bliss and happiness
-  could never happy be.
-
-For if they were in any fear
-  that this their joy might cease,
-It would annoy (if not destroy)
-  and interrupt their peace.
-But being sure it shall endure
-  so long as God shall live;
-The thoughts of this, unto their bliss,
-  do full perfection give.
-
-Cheer up ye Saints amidst your wants
-  and sorrows many a one;
-Lift up the head, shake off all dread,
-  and moderate your moan.
-Your sufferings and evil things
-  will suddenly be past;
-Your sweet Fruitions and blessed Visions,
-  for evermore shall last.
-
-Lament and mourn you that must burn
-  amidst those flaming Seas:
-If once you come to such a doom,
-  for ever farewell ease.
-sad estate and desperate,
-  that never can be mended,
-Until God’s Will shall change, or till
-  Eternity be ended!
-
-If any one this Questi-on
-  shall unto me propound:
-What! have the years of Sinners’ tears
-  no limits or no bound?
-It kills our heart to think of smart,
-  and pains that last for ever;
-And hear of fire that shall expire,
-  or be extinguish’d never,
-
-I’ll answer make (and let them take
-  my words as I intend them;
-For this is all the Cordi-al
-  that here I have to lend them:)
-When Heav’n shall cease to flow with peace
-  and all felicity.
-Then Hell may cease to be the place
-  of Woe and Misery.
-
-When Heav’n is Hell, when Ill is Well,
-  when Virtue turns to Vice;
-When Wrong is Right, when Dark is Light,
-  when Naught is of great price;
-Then may the years of Sinners’ tears
-  and sufferings expire.
-And all the Hosts of damnéd Ghosts
-  escape out of Hell-fire.
-
-When Christ above shall cease to lovo,
-  when God shall cease to reign
-And be no more as heretofore
-  the World’s great Sovéreign;
-Or not be just, or favor lust,
-  or in IMen’s sins delight;
-Then wicked men (and not till then)
-  to Heav’n may take their flight.
-
-When God’s great Power shall be brought lower,
-  by foreign Puissance,
-Or be decay’d and weaker made
-  through Time’s continuance;
-When drowsiness shall him oppress,
-  and lay him fast asleep,
-Then sinful men may break their pen,
-  and out of Prison creep.
-
-When those in Glory shall be right sorry
-  they may not change their place,
-And wish to dwell with those in Hell,
-  never to see Christ’s face;
-Then those in pain may freedom gain
-  and be with Glory dight:
-Then Hellish fiends may be Christ’s Friends,
-  and Heirs of Heaven hight.
-
-Then, ah! poor men! What! not till then?
-  No, not an hour before;
-For God is just, and therefore must
-  torment them evermore.
-ETERNITY! ETERNITY!
-thou mak’st hard hearts to bleed:
-  The thoughts of thee in misery,
-  do make men wail indeed.
-
-When they remind what’s still behind
-  and ponder this word NEVER,
-That they must there be made to bear
-  God’s Vengeance for EVER :
-The thought of this more bitter is
-  than all they feel beside;
-Yet what they feel, nor heart of steel,
-  nor flesh of brass can bide.
-
-To lie in woe and undergo
-  the direful pains of Hell,
-And know withal, that there they shall
-  for aye and ever dwell;
-And that they are from rest as far
-  when fifty thousand year,
-Twice told, are spent in punishment,
-  as when they first came there;
-
-This, oh! this makes Hell’s fiery flakes
-  much more intolerable;
-This makes frail wights and damned sprites
-  to bear their plagues unable.
-This makes men bite, for fell despite,
-  their very tongues in twain;
-This makes them roar for great horrcr,
-  and trebleth all their pain.
-
-
-A Postscript Unto The Reader.
-
-And now, good Reader, I return again
-To talk with thee who hast been at the pain
-To read throughout and heed what went before;
-And unto thee I’ll speak a little more.
-Give ear I pray thee unto what I say,
-That God may hear thy voice another day.
-Thou hast a Soul, my Friend, and so have I,
-To save or lose; a Soul that cannot die;
-A Soul of greater price than Gold or Gems;
-A Soul more worth than Crowns and Diadems;
-A Soul at first created like its Maker,
-And of God’s Image made to be partaker:
-Upon the wings of noblest Faculties,
-Taught for to soar above the Starry Skies,
-And not to rest, until it understood
-Itself possessed of the chiefest Good.
-And since the Fall thy Soul retaineth still
-Those faculties of Reason and of Will,
-But oh! how much deprav’d and out of frame,
-As if they were some other’s, not the same!
-Thine Understanding dismally benighted,
-And Reason’s eye in Spir’tual things dim-sighted,
-Or else stark blind; thy Will inclin’d to evil.
-And nothing else; a slave unto the Devil;
-That loves to live, and liveth to transgress.
-But shuns the way of God and Holiness.
-All thine Affections are disorderéd,
-And thus by headstrong Passions are misled.
-What need I tell thee of thy crooked war,
-And many wicked wand’rings every day?
-Or that thine own transgressi-ons are more
-In number than the sands upon the Shore?
-Thou art a lump of wickedness become,
-And may’st with horror think upon thy Doom,
-Until thy Soul be washéd in the flood
-Of Christ’s most dear, soul-cleansing, precious Blood.
-That, that alone can do away thy sin,
-Which thou wert born and hast long lived in;
-That, only that can pacify God’s wrath,
-If apprehended by a lively Faith,
-Now whilst the day and means of Grace do last,
-Before the opportunity be past.
-
-But if, man, thou liv’st a Christless creature,
-And Death surprise thee in a state of nature,
-(As who can tell but that may be thy case?)
-How wilt thou stand before the Judge’s face,
-When he shall be reveal’d in flaming fire.
-And come to pay ungodly men their hire.
-To execute due vengeance upon those
-That knew him not, or that had been his foes?
-What wilt thou answer unto his demands.
-When he requires a reason at thy hands.
-Of all the things that thou hast said or done.
-Or left undone, or set thine heart upon?
-When he shall thus with thee expostulate:
-“What cause hadst thou thy Maker for to hate;
-To take up arms against thy Sovereign,
-And enmity against him to maintain?
-What injury hath God Almighty done thee?
-What good hath he withheld that might have won thee?
-What evil, or injustice hast thou found
-In him that might unto thine hurt redound?
-If neither felt nor feared injury
-Hath movéd thee to such hostility,
-What made thee then the Fountain to forsake,
-And unto broken Pits thyself betake?
-What reason hadst thou to dishonor God,
-Who thee with Mercies never ceas’d to load?
-Because the Lord was good hast thou been evil,
-And taken part against him with the Devil?
-For all his cost to pay him with despite.
-And all his love with hatred to requite?
-Is this the fruit of God’s great patience,
-To wax more bold in disobedience?
-To kick against the bowels of his Love?
-Is this aright his Bounty to improve?
-Stand still, ye Heav’ns, and be astonished,
-That God by man should thus be injured!
-Give ear, Earth, and tremble at the sin
-Of those that thine Inhabitants have been!
-But thou, vile wretch, hast added unto all
-Thine other faults and facts so criminal.
-The damning sin of willful unbelief;
-Of all Transgressors hast thou been the chief.
-Yet when time was thou might’st have been set free
-From Sin and Wrath and punishment by me;
-But thou would’st not accept of Gospel Grace,
-Nor on my terms Eternal Life embrace.
-As if that all thy breaches of God’s Law
-Were not enough upon thy head to draw
-Eternal Wrath, thou hast despis’d a Savior,
-Rejected me, and trampled on my favor.
-How oft have I stood knocking at thy door,
-And been denied entrance evermore?
-How often hath my Spirit been withstood,
-When as I sent him to have done thee good?
-Thou hast no need of any one to plead
-Thy cause or for thy Soul to intercede:
-Plead for thyself, if thou hast aught to say,
-And pay thy forfeiture without delay.
-Behold thou dost ten thousand Talents owe;
-Pay thou the debt or else to Prison go.“
-
-Think, think, man, when Christ shall thus unfold
-Thy secret guilt, and make thee to behold
-The ugly face of all thy sinful errors.
-And fill thy soul with his amazing terrors,
-And let thee see the flaming Pit of Hell,
-Where all that have no part in him shall dwell;
-When he shall thus expostulate the case,
-How canst thou bear to look him in the face?
-What wilt thou do without an Advocate,
-Or plead, when thus thy state is desperate?
-Dost think to put him oif with fair pretenses?
-Or wilt thou hide and cover thine offenses?
-Can anything from him concealed be,
-Who doth the hidden things of darkness see?
-Art thou of force his Power to withstand?
-Canst thou by might escape out of his hand?
-Dost thou intend to run out of his sight,
-And save thyself from punishment by flight?
-Or wilt thou be eternally accurst,
-And ’bide his Vengeance, let him do his worst?
-Oh! who can bear his indignation’s heat?
-Or ’bide the pains of Hell which are so great?
-
-If, then, thou neither canst his Wrath endure.
-Nor any ransom after death procure;
-If neither Cries nor Tears can move his heart
-To pardon thee or mitigate thy smart,
-But unto Hell thou must perforce be sent,
-With dismal horror and astonishment,
-Consider, my Friend, what cause thou hast,
-With fear and trembling (while as yet thou may’st),
-To lay to heart thy sin and misery,
-And to make out after the Remedy.
-Consider well the greatness of thy danger,
-O Child of wrath, and object of God’s anger.
-Thou hangest over the Infernal Pit,
-By one small thread, and car’st not thou a whit?
-There’s but a step between thy Soul and Death;
-Nothing remains but stopping of thy breath,
-(Which may be done to-morrow, or before)
-And then thou art undone forevermore.
-Let this awaken thy security,
-And make thee look about thee speedily.
-
-How canst thou rest an hour or sleep a night,
-Or in thy creature-comforts take delight?
-Or with vain Toys thyself forgetful make
-How near thou art unto the burning Lake?
-How canst thou live without tormenting fears?
-How canst thou hold from weeping floods of tears?
-Yea, tears of blood, I might almost have said,
-If such-like tears could from thine eyes be shed.
-To gain the world what will it profit thee.
-And lose thy soul and self eternally?
-Eternity on one small point dependeth;
-The man is lost that this short life misspendeth.
-For as the Tree doth fall, right so it lies,
-And man continues in what state he dies.
-Who happy die shall happy rise again;
-Who curséd die shall curséd still remain.
-If under Sin and Wrath Death leaves thee bound,
-At Judgment under Wrath thou shalt be found;
-And then woe woe that ever thou wert born,
-O wretched man, of Heav’n and Earth forlorn!
-Consider this, all ye that God forget,
-Who all his threatenings at naught do set.
-Lest into pieces he begin to tear
-Your souls, and there be no deliverer.
-
-O you that now sing care and fear away,
-Think often of the formidable Day,
-Wherein the Heavens with a mighty noise.
-And with a hideous, heart-confounding voice
-Shall pass away, together being roll’d,
-As men are wont their garments up to fold;
-When th’ Elements with fervent heat shall melt,
-And living Creatures in the same shall swelt.
-And altogether in those flames expire,
-Which set the Earth’s Foundati-ons on fire.
-Oh! what amazements will your hearts be in,
-And how will you to curse yourselves begin.
-For all your damned sloth and negligence.
-And unbelief and gross Impenitence,
-When you shall hear that dreadful Sentence pass’d.
-That all the wicked into Hell be cast!
-What horrors will your Consciences surprise.
-When you shall hear the fruitless, doleful cries
-Of such as are compelled to depart
-Unto the place of everlasting smart!
-What! when you see the sparks fly out of Hell,
-And view the Dungeon where you are to dwell.
-Wherein you must eternally remain
-In anguish and intolerable pain!
-What! when your hands and feet are bound together,
-And you are cast into the Lake forever!
-Then shall you feel the truth of what you hear,
-That Hellish pains are more than you can bear,
-And that those Torments are an hundred fold
-More terrible than ever you were told.
-
-Nor speak I this, good Reader, to torment thee
-Before the time, but rather to prevent thee
-From running headlong to thine own decay,
-In such a perilous and deadly way.
-We who have known and felt Jehovah’s terrors,
-Persuade men to repent them of their errors.
-And turn to God in time ere his Decree
-Bring forth, and then there be no Remedy.
-If in the night, when thou art fast asleep,
-Some friend of thine that better watch doth keep,
-Should see thy house all on a burning flame.
-And thee almost inclosed with the same:
-If such a friend should break thy door and wake thee,
-Or else by force out of the peril take thee,
-What! wouldst thou take his kindness in ill part,
-Or frown upon him for his good desert?
-
-Such, my friend, such is thy present state
-And danger, being unregenerate.
-Awake, awake, and then thou shalt perceive
-Thy peril greater than thou wilt believe.
-Lift up thine eyes, and see God’s wrathful ire
-Preparing unextinguishable fire
-For all that live and die impenitent.
-Awake, awake, Sinner, and repent.
-And quarrel not because I thus alarm
-Thy Soul, to save it from eternal harm.
-
-Perhaps thou harborest such thoughts as these:
-“I hope I may enjoy my carnal ease
-A little longer, and myself refresh
-With those delights that gratify the flesh,
-And yet repent before it be too late,
-And get into a comfortable state.
-I hope I have yet many years to spend,
-And time enough those matters to attend,“
-Presumptuous heart! Is God engag’d to give
-A longer time to such as love to live
-Like Rebels still, who think to strain his Glory
-By wickedness, and after to be sorry?
-Unto thy lust shall he be made a drudge,
-Who thee and all ungodly men shall judge?
-Canst thou account sin sweet, and yet confess
-That first or last it ends in bitterness?
-Is sin a thing that must procure thee sorrow,
-And wouldst thou dally with’t another morrow?
-
-O foolish man who lovest to enjoy
-That which will thee distress, or else destroy!
-What gainéd Samson by his Delilah?
-What gainéd David by his Bathshebah?
-The one became a slave, lost both his eyes,
-And made them sport that were his enemies;
-The other penneth, as a certain token
-Of God’s displeasure, that his bones were broken,
-Besides the woes he after met withal.
-To chasten him for that his grievous Fall:
-His own Son Ammon, using crafty wiles,
-His Daughter Thamar wickedly defiles:
-His second Son, more beautiful than good.
-His hands embreweth in his Brother’s blood:
-And by and by, aspiring to the Crown,
-He strives to pull his gentle Father down;
-With hellish rage, him fiercely persecuting,
-And brutishly his Concubines polluting.
-Read whoso list, and ponder what he reads,
-And he shall find smaU joy in evil deeds.
-
-Moreover this consider, that the longer
-Thou liv’st in sin, thy sins will grow the stronger;
-And then it will an harder matter prove
-To leave those wicked haunts that thou dost love.
-The Black’moor may as eas’ly change his skin.
-As old Transgressors leave their wonted sin.
-And who can tell what will become of thee,
-Or where thy Soul in one day’s time may be?
-We see that Death ne’er old nor young men spares,
-But one and other takes at unawares;
-for in a moment, whilst men Peace do cry,
-Destruction seizeth on them suddenly.
-Thou who this morning art a lively wight,
-May’st be a corpse and damnéd Ghost ere night.
-
-Oh! dream not then that it will serve thy turn
-Upon thy Death-bed for thy sins to mourn;
-But think how many have been snatch’d away,
-And had no time for mercy once to pray.
-It’s just with God Repentance to deny
-To such as put it off until they die.
-And late Repentance seldom proveth true,
-Which, if it fail, thou know’st what must ensue;
-For after this short life is at an end,
-What is amiss thou never canst amend.
-Believe, man, that to procrastinate.
-And put it off until it be too late,
-As ’tis thy sin, so it is Satan’s wile,
-Whereby he doth great multitudes beguile.
-How many thousands hath this strong delusion
-Already brought to ruin and confusion,
-Whose souls are now reserv’d in iron chains,
-Under thick darkness to Eternal Pains!
-They thought of many years, as thou dost now,
-But were deceived quite, and so may’st thou.
-
-Oh! then, my friend, waste not away thy time.
-Nor by rebellion aggravate thy crime.
-Oh! put not off Repentance till to-morrow,
-Adventure not, without God’s leave, to borrow
-Another day to spend upon thy lust,
-Lest God (that is most Holy, Wise, and Just)
-Denounce in wrath, and to thy terror say,
-“This night shall Devils fetch thy Soul away.”
-
-Now seek the face of God with all thy heart.
-Acknowledge unto him how vile thou art.
-Tell him thy Sins deserve eternal wrath,
-And that it is a wonder that he hat
-Permitted thee so long to draw thy breath.
-Who might have cut thee off by sudden death,
-And sent thy Soul into the lowest Pit,
-From whence no price should ever ransom it;
-And that he may most justly do it still,
-(Because thou hast deserv’d it) if he will.
-Yet also tell him that, if he shall please,
-He can forgive thy sins and thee release.
-And that in Christ his Son he may be just
-And justify all those that on him trust;
-That though thy sins are of a crimson dye.
-Yet Christ his Blood can cleanse thee thoroughly.
-Tell him that he may make his Glorious Name
-More wonderful by covering thy shame;
-That Mercy may be greatly magnified.
-And justice also fully satisfied.
-If he shall please to own thee in his Son,
-“Who hath paid dear for Man’s Redempti-on.
-Tell him thouh hast an unbelieving heart.
-Which hind’reth thee from coming for a part
-In Christ; and that although his terrors awe thee,
-Thou canst not come till he be pleas’d to draw thee.
-Tell him thou know’st thine heart to be so bad,
-And thy condition so exceeding sad,
-That though Salvation may be had for naught
-Thou canst not come and take it till thou’rt brought.
-
-Oh! beg of him to bow thy stubborn will
-To come to Christ, that he thy lusts may kill.
-Look up to Christ for his attractive pow’r.
-Which he exerteth in a needful hour;
-Who saith, “When as I lifted up shall be,
-Then will I draw all sorts of men to me.“
-Oh! wait upon him with true diligence
-And trembling fear in every Ordinance;
-Unto his Call earnest attention give.
-Whose voice makes deaf men hear and dead men live.
-Thus weep and mourn, thus hearken, pray, and wait,
-Till he behold and pity thine estate,
-Who is more ready to bestow his Grace
-Than thou the same art willing to embrace;
-Yea, he hath Might enough to bring thee home,
-Though thou hast neither strength nor will to come.
-
-If he delay to answer thy request.
-Know that ofttimes he doth it for the best;
-Not with intent to drive us from his door,
-But for to make us importune him more;
-Or else to bring us daily to confess.
-And be convinc’d of our unworthiness.
-Oh! be not weary, then, but persevere
-To beg his Grace till he thy suit shall hear;
-And leave him not, nor from his footstool go.
-Till over thee Compassion’s skirt he throw.
-Eternal Life shall recompense thy pains,
-If found at last, with everlasting gains.
-For if the Lord be pleas’d to hear thy cries,
-And to forgive thy great iniquities,
-Thou “wilt have cause forever to admire
-And laud his Grace, that granted thy desire.
-Then shalt thou find thy labor is not lost,
-But that the good obtain’d surmounts the cost.
-Nor shalt thou grieve for loss of sinful pleasures,
-Exchang’d for Heav’nly joys and lasting treasures.
-The yoke of Christ which once thou didst esteem
-A tedious yoke, shall then most easy seem.
-For why? The love of Christ shall thee constrain
-To take delight in that which was thy pain.
-The ways of Wisdom shall be pleasant ways,
-And thou shalt choose therein to spend thy days.
-
-If once thy Soul be brought to such a pass,
-O bless the Lord and magnify his Grace.
-Thou that of late hadst reason to be sad,
-May’st now rejoice and be exceeding glad;
-For thy condition is as happy now
-As erst it was disconsolate and low.
-Thou art become as rich, as whilom poor;
-As blessed now as cursed heretofore.
-For being cleansed with Christ’s precious Blood,
-Thou hast an int’rest in the chiefest Good;
-God’s anger is towards thy Soul appeas’d.
-And in his Christ he is with thee well pleas’d.
-Yea, he doth look upon thee with a mild
-And gracious aspect, as upon his child.
-He is become thy Father and thy Friend,
-And will defend thee from the cursed Fiend.
-Thou need’st not fear the roaring Lion’s rage,
-Since God Almighty doth himself engage
-To bear thy Soul in everlasting Arms,
-Above the reach of all destructive harms.
-Whatever here thy sufferings may be,
-Yet from them all the Lord shall rescue thee.
-He will preserve thee by his wond’rous Might
-Unto that rich Inheritance in Light.
-
-O sing for joy, all ye Regenerate,
-Whom Christ hath brought unto this blessed state!
-O love the Lord all ye his saints, who hath
-Redeeméd you from everlasting wrath!
-Who hath by dying made your Souls to live.
-And what he dearly bought doth freely give.
-Give up yourselves to walk in all his ways,
-And study how to live unto his praise.
-The time is short you have to serve him here;
-The day of your deliv’rance draweth near.
-Lift up your heads, ye upright ones in heart,
-Who in Christ’s purchase have obtain’d a part.
-Behold he rides upon a shining cloud.
-With angel’s voice and Trumpet sounding loud.
-He comes to save his folk from all their foes.
-And plague the men that Holiness oppose.
-So come, Lord Jesus, quickly come, we pray;
-Yea, come and hasten our Redemption-day.
-
-
-Vanity of Vanities.
-
-A SONG OF EMPTINESS.
-
-Vain, frail, sliort-liv’d, and miserable Man,
-Learn what tliou art wlien thy estate is best;
-A restless Wave o’ th’ troubled Oce-an,
-A Dream, a lifeless Picture finely drest.
-
-A Wind, a Flower, a Vapor, and a Bubble,
-A Wheel that stands not still, a trembling Reed,
-A trolling Stone, dry Dust, light Chaff, and Stubble,
-A shadow of something but truly naught indeed.
-
-Learn what deceitful Toys and empty things
-This World and all its best Enjoyments be;
-Out of the Earth no true Contentment springs,
-But all things here are vexing Vanity.
-
-For what is Beauty but a fading Flower?
-Or what is Pleasure but the Devil’s bait.
-Whereby he catcheth whom he would devour,
-And multitudes of Souls doth ruinate?
-
-And what are Friends but mortal men as we.
-Whom Death from us may quickly separate?
-Or else their hearts may quite estrangéd be,
-And all their love be turned into hate.
-
-And what are Riches to be doted on?
-Uncertain, fickle, and ensnaring things;
-They draw men’s Souls into Perditi-on,
-And when most needed take them to their wings.
-
-Ah! foolish man! that sets his heart upon
-Such empty shadows, such wild Fowl as these,
-That being gotten will be quickly gone,
-And whilst they stay increase but his disease.
-
-As in a Dropsy, drinking drought begets.
-The more he drinks the more he still requires,
-So on this “World whoso afifection sets,
-As Wealth’s increase, increaseth his desires.
-
-O happy Man, whose portion is above,
-Where Floods, where Flames, where Foes cannot bereave him!
-Most wretched Man that fixéd hath his love
-Upon this World, that surely will deceive him!
-
-For what is Honor? what is Sovereignty,
-Whereto men’s hearts so restlessly aspire?
-Whom have they crowned with Felicity?
-When did they ever satisfy desire?
-
-The Ear of Man with hearing is not fill’d;
-To see new sights still coveteth the Eye;
-The craving stomach, though it may be still’d.
-Yet craves again without a new supply.
-
-All Earthly things man’s cravings answer not,
-Whose little heart would all the World contain,
-(If all the World should fall to one man’s lot)
-And notwithstanding empty still remain.
-
-The Eastern Conqueror was said to weep
-When he the Indian Oce-an did view,
-To see his Conquest bounded by the Deep,
-And no more Worlds remaining to subdue.
-
-Who would that man in his Enjoyment bless,
-Or envy him, or covet his Estate,
-Whose gettings do augment his greediness.
-And make his wishes more intemperate?
-
-Such is the wonted and the common guise
-Of those on Earth that bear the greatest sway;
-If with a few the case be otherwise.
-They seek a Kingdom that abides for aye.
-
-Moreover they of all the Sons of Men
-That rule, and are in highest Places set,
-Are most inclin’d to scorn their Bretheren,
-And God himself (without great Grace) forget.
-
-For as the Sun doth blind the gazers’ eyes,
-That for a time they naught discern aright,
-So Honor doth befool and blind the Wise,
-And their own lustre ’reaves them of their sight.
-
-Great are their Dangers, manifold their Cares,
-Through which, whilst others sleep, they scarcely Nap,
-And yet are oft surprised unawares.
-And fall unwilling into Envy’s Trap.
-
-The mean Mechanic finds his kindly rest;
-All void of fear sleepeth the Country Clown;
-When greatest Princes often are distrest,
-And cannot sleep upon their Beds of Down.
-
-Could Strength or Valor men Immortalize,
-Could Wealth or Honor keep them from decay
-There were some cause the same to Idolize,
-And give the lie to that which I do say.
-
-But neither can such things themselves end are,
-Without the hazard of a change, one hour.
-Nor such as trust in them can they secure
-From dismal days, or Death’s prevailing pow’r.
-
-If Beauty could the Beautiful defend
-From Death’s dominion, then fair Absalom
-Had not been brought to such a shameful end:
-But fair and foul unto the Grave must come.
-
-If Wealth or Scepters could Immortal make,
-Then, vrealthy Croesus, wherefore art thou dead?
-If Warlike force which makes the World to quake,
-Then why is Julius Caesar perished?
-
-Where are the Scipio’s Thunderbolts of War?
-Renownéd Pompey, Caesar’s Enemy?
-Stout Hannibal, Rome’s Terror known so far?
-Great Alexander, what’s become of thee?
-
-If Gifts and Bribes Death’s favor might but win,
-If Pow’r, if Force, or Threat’nings might it fray.
-All these, and more had still surviving been;
-But all are gone, for Death will have no Nay.
-
-Such is this World, with all her Pomp and Glory;
-Such are the men whom worldly eyes admire,
-Cut down by time, and now become a Story,
-That we might after better things aspire.
-
-Go boast thyself of what thy heart enjoys,
-Vain Man! triumph in all thy worldly Bliss:
-Thy best Enjoyments are but Trash and Toys;
-Delight thyself in that which worthless is.
-
-_Omnia prœtereunt prœter amare Deum._
-
-
-Death Expected and Welcomed.
-
-“Welcome sweet Rest, by me so long Desir’d,
-Who have with Sins and Griefs so long been tir’d;
-And welcome Death, my Father’s Messenger;
-Of my Felicity the Hastener.
-
-Welcome good Angels, who, for me distrest,
-Are come to guard me to Eternal Rest.
-Welcome, Christ, who hast my Soul Redeem’d,
-Whose Favor I have more than Life esteem’d.
-
-Oh! do not now my sinful soul forsake.
-But to thyself thy Servant gath’ring take.
-Into thy Hands I recommend my Spirit,
-Trusting through Thee Eternal Life t’ inherit.
-
-
-A Farewell to the World.
-
-Now Farewell, World, in which is not my Treasure;
-I have in thee enjoy’d but little Pleasure.
-And now I leave thee for a Better Place,
-Where lasting Pleasures are, before Christ’s face.
-
-Farewell, ye Sons of Men, who do not savor
-The things of God; who little prize his Favor.
-Farewell, I say, with your Fool’s Paradise,
-Until the King of Terrors you surprise,
-And bring you trembling to Christ’s Judgment Seat,
-To give Account of your Transgressions great.
-
-Farewell, New England, which hast long enjoy’d
-The Day of Grace, but hast most vainly toy’d
-And trifled with the Gospel’s glorious Light;
-Thou may’st expect a dark Egyptian Night.
-
-Farewell, young Brood and rising Generation,
-Wanton and proud, ripe for God’s Indignation,
-Which neither you nor others can prevent,
-Except in Truth you speedily repent.
-
-Farewell, sweet Saints of God, Christ’s little Number,
-Beware lest ye through sloth securely slumber;
-Stand to your Spir’tual Arms and keep your Watch,
-Let not your Enemy you napping catch;
-Take up your Cross, prepare for Tribulation,
-Through which doth lie the way unto salvation.
-
-Love Jesus Christ with all sincerity;
-Eschew Will-worship and Idolatry.
-Farewell, again, until we all appear
-Before our Lord, a _Well-done_ there to hear.
-
-Farewell, ye faithful Servants of the Lord,
-Painful dispensers of his Holy Word,
-From whose Communion and Societ
-I once was kept through long infirmity
-This of my Sorrows was an aggravation;
-But Christ be thankéd, through whose Mediation
-I have at length obtainéd Liberty
-To dwell with Soul-delighting Company,
-Where many of our Friends are gone before,
-And you shall follow with a many more.
-Meanwhile stand fast, the Truth of God maintain,
-Suffer for Christ, and great shall be your Gain.
-
-Farewell, my natural Friends and dear Relations,
-Who have my Trials seen and great Temptations;
-You have no cause to make for me great Moan;
-My Death to you is little Loss or none.
-But unto me it is no little Gain,
-For Death at once frees me from all my Pain.
-Make Christ your greatest Friend, who never dies;
-All other Friends are fading Vanities.
-Make him your Light, your Life, your End, your All;
-Prepare for Death, be ready for his Call.
-
-Farewell, vile Body, subject to decay.
-Which art with lingering sickness worn away;
-I have by thee much Pain and Smart endur’d;
-Great Grief of Mind hast thou to me procur’d;
-Great Grief of Mind by being Impotent,
-And to Christ’s Work an awkward Instrument.
-Thou shalt not hencefortli be a clog to me.
-Nor shall my Soul a Burthen be to thee.
-
-Rest in thy Grave until the Resurrection,
-Then shalt thou be revivéd in Perfection,
-Endow’d with wonderful Agility,
-Clothed with Strength and Immortality;
-With shining Brightness gloriously array’d.
-Like to Christ’s glorious Body, glorious made.
-Thus Christ shall thee again to me restore,
-Ever to live with him and part no more.
-Meanwhile my Soul shall enter into Peace,
-Where Fears and Tears^ where Sin and Smart shall cease.
-
-
-A Character of the Reverend Author, Mr. Michael Wigglesworth, in a Funeral Sermon Preached at Malden, June 24, 1705. By the Reverend Dr. Cotton Mather.
-
-He was Descended of Eminently Religious Parents, who were Sufferers for
-that which was then _The Cause of God_ and of _New-England_. While he
-was yet a youth, he was marvellously concerned that he might have an
-Heart filled with the Spirit of God. This Concernment upon his mind
-appeared especially in his watchful Endeavors to have _Spiritual Sins_
-chased out of his cleansed Heart. Pride, the Sin of _Young Men_, yea, of
-_all_ Men; Pride, the Sin which few Men try or trouble themselves about;
-this Devout Youth was full of Holy and Watchful Trouble about it: And he
-then wrote a very Savoury Discourse, Entituled, _Considerations against
-Pride_, and another, Entituled, _Considerations against Delighting more
-in the Creature than in God_. This was to Mortify in himself the Sins
-rarely minded by the most of men.
-
-Having had a Pious and a Learned Education, the first Publick Station
-wherein I find him, was that of a _Fellow_ and a _Tutor_ in _Harvard
-Colledge_. With a rare Faithfulness did he adorn that Station! He used
-all means imaginable to make his _Pupils_ not only good Scholars, but
-also good _Christians_, and instil into them those things which might
-render them rich Blessings unto the _Churches_ of God. Unto his Watchful
-and Painful Essays to keep them close under their _Academical Exercises_
-he added Serious Admonitions unto them about their Interior State; and
-he Employed his _Prayers_ and _Tears_ to God for them, and had such a
-flaming zeal to make them worthy Men, that upon Reflection he was afraid
-_Lest his cares for their Good, and his affection to them, should so
-drink up his very Spirit, as to steal away his Heart from God._
-
-From _Cambridge_ he made his remove to _Malden_, and was their Faithful
-Pastor for about a Jubilee of years together.
-
-It was not long after his coming to Maiden that a sickly Constitution so
-prevailed upon him, as to confine him from his Publick Work for some
-whole seven of Years. His _Faithfulness_ continued when his _Ministry_
-was thus interrupted. The Kindness of his Tender Flock unto him was
-answered in his Kind Concern to have them served by other Hands. He took
-a short voyage unto another Country for the Recovery of his Health;
-which, though he recovered not, yet at his Return I find him comforting
-himself with inserting of this Passage in his Reserved Papers:
-
- “Peradventure the Lord Removed me for a season that he might set a
- better Watchman over his Flock, and a more painful Laborer in his
- Vineyard. This was one thing that I aimed at in Removing (to help the
- People’s Modesty in the case), and I believe the Lord aimed at it, in
- Removing me for a season.”
-
-His Faithfulness now appeared in his _Edifying Discourses_ to those that
-came near him; much bewailing the want of a Profitable and Religious
-conversation in so many that profess Religion. And that yet he might
-more _Faithfully_ set himself to do Good, when he could not Preach he
-_Wrote_ several Composures, wherein he proposed the edification of such
-Readers as are for plain Truths, dressed up in _a Plain Meeter_. These
-Composures have had their Acceptance and Advantage among that sort of
-Readers; and one of them, the _Day of Doom_, which has been often
-Reprinted in both Englands, may find our Children till the Day itself
-arrive.
-
-It pleased God, when the distress of the Church in _Malden_ did
-extremely call for it, wondrously to restore his _Faithful Servant_. He
-that had been for near Twenty Years almost _Buried Alive_, comes abroad
-again, and for as many years more, must, in _Publick Usefulness_,
-receive the Answer and Harvest of the Thousands of Supplications with
-which the God of his Health had favoured him.
-
-How _Faithfully_ did he now Deliver the _Whole Counsel of God!_
-
-How _Faithfully_ did he Rebuke _Sin_, both in his _Ministry_ and
-_Discipline!_
-
-How Faithful was he to the _Work of God_ in the Churches of
-_New-England_, and grieved at every thing that he thought had any
-Tendency to incommode that Glorious Work! But how _Patient_, how
-_Loving_, how _Charitable_ to such as in lesser Matters differed from
-him!
-
-How Faithful was he in the Education of his _Family_! A very Abraham for
-his Commands unto them, to _Keep the Way of the Lord!_ A very David for
-his charge unto them to _Know the God of their Father and Serve Him!_
-
-His long Weakness and Illness made him an _able Physician_ for the
-_Body_ as well the _Soul_.
-
-As he was _Faithful to the Death_, so he was _Lively to the Death._
-
-It was a surprise to us to see a little, feeble _Shadow of a Man_,
-beyond _Seventy_, Preaching usually twice or tlirice in a week,
-Visiting, Comforting the _Afflicted_, Encouraging the _Private
-Meetings_, _Catechising_ the Children of the Flock, and managing the
-_Government_ of the Church, and attending the _Sick_, not only as a
-_Pastor_, but as a _Physician_ too; and this not only in his own Town,
-but also in all those of the Vicinity. Thus he did _unto the Last_; and
-he was but one _Lord’s-Day_ taken off before his Last. But in the _Last
-Week_ of his Life, how full of _Resignation!_ How full of
-_Satisfaction!_
-
-From his Exemplary Life I will single out one thing, his EARLY RELIGION.
-Our _Wigglesioorth_ was a Godly child, and he held on living to God and
-Christ until the Seventy-Fourth Year of his Age.
-
-When he lay a Dying, some one spoke to him about his having secured his
-_Interest_ in the Favor of Heaven, and his _Assurance_ of that Interest.
-He Replyed, [Methoughts like my _Polycarp,_]
-
- “I bless God I began that Work betimes, and ere I was Twenty Years Old
- I had made thorow work of it. Ever since then I have been pressing
- after the Power of Godliness, the Power of Godliness! For more than
- Fifty Years together I have been Laboring to uphold a Life of
- Communion with God; and I thank the Lord I now find the Comfort of it!
-
-Words that contain in them _A History of a Life_ more Valuable than I
-have seen a Volume in Folio.
-
-
-Epitaph. (Believed to Have Been Written by Rev. Cotton Mather.) The Excellent Wigglesworth; Remembered by Some Good Tokens.
-
-His Pen did once _Meat from the Eater_ fetch; And now he’s gone beyond
-the _Eater’s_ reach. His _Body_ once so _Thin_, was next to _None_; From
-hence he’s to _Unbodied Spirits_ flown. Once his rare skill did all
-_Diseases_ heal; And he does nothing now _uneasy_ feel. He to his
-_Paradise_ is joyful come, And waits with joy to see his _Day of Doom._
-
-
-Contents.
-
-Memoir of the Author
-Autobiography
-To the Christian Reader
-On the following Work
-Prayer unto Christ
-The Day of Doom
-    Security of the World before Christ’s coming
-    Suddenness and Terror of his appearing
-    Resurrection — All brought to judgment
-    The Sheep separated from the goats
-    The several sorts of reprobates described
-    The Saints justified — Election — Atonement
-    They are placed on thrones
-    The wicked brought to the Bar
-    Secret sins brought to light
-    Hypocrites plead for themselves
-    Another sort of hypocrites
-    Civil honest men’s pleas
-    Pretended want of opportunity to repent
-    Plea of examples of betters
-    Godly men’s examples misleading
-    Scripture, darkness, and difference of interpretation
-    Fear of persecution
-    Plea of God’s mercy and justice
-    Vessels of mercy
-    Mercy abused — Day of grace past
-    Shutting out by God’s decree
-    The Heathen’s plea
-    Reprobate infants’ plea
-    The wicked all convinced and silenced
-    Hopeless and helpless estate of the ungodly
-    Sentence of condemnation
-    Sentence executed — The wicked cast into Hell
-    Their unsufferable torments
-    The saints rejoice thereat
-    They ascend in triumph to Heaven
-A Short discourse on Eternity
-A Postscript unto the Reader
-Vanity of Vanities
-Death expected Ill
-A Farewell to the World
-Funeral Sermon
-Epitaph
-
-[1] Luke 12:19.
-
-[2] Matt. 25:5.
-
-[3] Mat. 24:37, 38.
-
-[4] 1 Thes. 5:3.
-
-[5] Mat. 25:6.
-2 Pet. 3:10.
-
-[6] Mat. 24:29, 30.
-
-[7] 2 Pet. 3:10.
-
-[8] Rev. 6:15
-
-[9] Mat. 24:30.
-
-[10] Rev. 6:15, 16.
-
-[11] Mat. 25:21.
-
-[12] Rev. 6:14.
-
-[13] Thes. 4:16.
-
-[14] John 5:28, 29
-
-[15] Luke 20:36.
- 1 Cor. 15:52.
-
-[16] Mat. 24:31
-
-[17] 2 Cor. 5:10.
- Matt. 25:32.
-
-[18] Mat. 5:10, 11.
-
-[19] Heb. 12:5, 6, 7.
-
-[20] Luke 7:41, 47.
-
-[21] John 21:15.
- Mat. 19:14.
- John 3:3.
-
-[22] Rev. 6:11.
- Phil. 3:21.
-
-[23] Mat. 24:51.
-
-[24] Luke 11:24, 26.
- Heb. 6:4, 5, 6.
- Heb. 10:29.
-
-[25] Luke 12:47.
- Prov. 1:24, 26.
- Job 3:19
-
-[26] Gal. 3:10.
- 1 Cor. 6:9.
- Rev. 21:8
-
-[27] Exod. 20:7, 8.
- 2 Thes. 1:6, 8, 9.
-
-[28] Heb. 13:4.
- 1 Cor. 6:10.
-
-[29] Zach. 5:3, 4.
- Gal. 5:19, 20, 21.
-
-[30] Rom. 2:13
-
-[31] Acts 4:12.
-
-[32] 1 Cor. 6:3.
-
-[33] Jude 6.
-
-[34] 2 Cor. 5:10.
- Eccl. 3:17.
- John 3:18
-
-[35] Job 17:6.
- Eph. 1:4.
-
-[36] Rev. 1:5.
-
-[37] Eph. 2:1, 3.
-
-[38] Mat. 23:13, 15.
- Rom. 9:20, 21.
-
-[39] Isa. 53:4, 5, 11.
-
-[40] Acts 1:3, 48.
- Jam. 2:18.
- Heb. 12:7.
- Mat. 19:29.
-
-[41] 1 John 3:3.
- Mat. 25:39, 40.
-
-[42] Isa. 53:11, 12.
- Rom. 8:16, 17, 33, 34.
- John 3:18.
-
-[43] Luke 22:29, 30.
- Mat. 19:28.
-
-[44] Mat. 25:34.
-
-[45] Cor. 6:2.
-
-[46] Rom. 2:3, 6, 11.
-
-[47] Rev. 6:15, 16.
-Isa. 30:33.
-
-[48] Eccl. 11:9, 12, 14.
-
-[49] Ps. 139:2, 4, 12.
-Rom. 2:16
-
-[50] Eccl. 12:14.
-
-[51] Mat. 12:36.
-Rom. 7:7
-
-[52] John 5:40, and 3:19.
-Mat. 25:19, 27.
-
-[53] Rom. 2:4, 5.
-
-[54] Isa. 1:5.
-Jer. 2:20
-
-[55] John 3:19, etc.
-Prov. 8:36.
-Luke 12:20, 21.
-
-[56] Luke 13:34.
-John 5:40, and 15:22.
-
-[57] Rom. 3:10, 12.
-
-[58] Rom. 6:23.
-
-[59] Mat. 7:21, 22, 23.
-
-[60] John 6:70.
-1 Cor. 9:27.
-
-[61] Rom. 2:19, 21, 22, 23.
-
-[62] John 9:41.
-Rev. 2:21, 22.
-
-[63] Luke 12:47.
-Matt. 11:21, 22, 24.
-
-[64] Luke 13:20.
-
-[65] Luke 13:27.
-Matt. 22:12.
-
-[66] 1 Cor. 11:27, 29.
-
-[67] Mat. 6:21, 24.
-Rom. 1:25.
-
-[68] 1 Cor. 11:27, 29.
-
-[69] Acts 8:13.
-Isa. 58:2, 3.
-Heb. 6:4, 5.
-
-[70] 2 Pet. 2:20.
-
-[71] John 2:24, 25.
-
-[72] John 6:64.
-Psal. 50:16.
-Mat. 15:26.
-
-[73] Rev. 3:17.
-Mat. 13:20.
-
-[74] Mat. 6:2, 4, 24.
-Jer. 8:5, 6, 7, 8.
-
-[75] Psal. 78:34, 35, 36, 37.
-
-[76] Zach. 7:5, 6.
-Isa. 58:3, 4.
-1 Sam.15:13, 21.
-Isa. 1:11, 15.
-
-[77] Mat. 6:2, 5.
-John 5:44.
-
-[78] Zech. 7:5, 16.
-Hos. 10:1.
-
-[79] Luke 18:11.
-
-[80] 1 Sam. 15:22.
-
-[81] Eccl. 7:20.
-
-[82] Deut. 10:12.
-Tit. 2:12.
-Jam. 2:10.
-
-[83] Luke 18:11, 14.
-
-[84] 1 Sam.16:7. 2 Chron. 25:2.
-
-[85] Heb. 11:6.
-1 Cor. 13:1, 2, 3.
-
-[86] Heb. 11:6.; 1 Cor. 13:1, 2, 3.
-
-[87] Rom. 10:3.
-
-[88] Rom. 9:30, 32.
-Matt 11:23, 24 and 21:41.
-
-[89] Mat. 6:5.
-
-[90] Prov. 26:23.
-Mat. 23:27.
-
-[91] Prov 15:8.
-Rom. 2:3.
-
-[92] Prov. 27:1.
- Jam. 4:13.
-
-[93] Eccl. 12:1.
-Rev. 2:21.
-
-[94] Luke 13:24.
-2 Cor. 6:2.
-Heb. 3:7, 8, 9.
-
-[95] Eccl. 11:9.
-Luke 14:18, 19, 20.
-
-[96] Amos 6:3, 4, 5, 6.
-Eph. 5:16.
-Luke 19:42.
-
-[97] Luke 13:21, 25, etc.
-Phil. 2:12.
-
-[98] Mat. 18:7.
-
-[99] John 7:48.
-
-[100] Psal. 19:8, 11.
- Exod. 23:2.
- Psal. 50:17, 18.
-
-[101] 2 Tim. 3:5.
-
-[102] 1 Cor. 11:1.
-Phil. 4:8.
-
-[103] Psal. 32:5.
-2 Chron. 32:26.
-Mat. 26:75.
-Prov. 1:24, 25.
-
-[104] 2 Pet. 3:16.
-
-[105] Prov. 14:6.
-Isa. 35:8.
-Hos. 8:12.
-
-[106] Matt. 11:25.
-Prov. 2:3, 4, 5.
-
-[107] Acts 28:22.
-
-[108] John 12:42, 43.
-
-[109] Luke 12:4, 5.
-Isa. 51:12, 13.
-
-[110] Luke 9:23, 24, 25 and 16:2.
-
-[111] Luke 9:26.
-Prov 8:36
-John 3:19, 20.
-
-[112] Psal. 78:38.
-2 Kin. 11:26.
-
-[113] Psal. 30:9.
-Mic. 7:18.
-
-[114] Mic. 7:18.
-Rom. 9:23.
-
-[115] Rom. 2:4.
-Hos. 11:4.
-
-[116] Luke 13:34.
-
-[117] Luke 19:42, 43.
-Jude 4.
-
-[118] Rom. 2:5, 6.
-Isa. 1:24.
-Amos 2:13.
-Gen. 18:25.
-
-[119] Mat. 25:3, 1, 2.
-Prov. 12:8, 29, 30.
-
-[120] Isa. 5:18, 19.
- Gen. 2 : 17.
-Rom. 2:8, 9.
-
-[121] Rom. 6:23.
-2 Thes. 1:8, 9.
-
-[122] Ezek. 83:11.
-Exod. 34:7, and 14:17.
-Rom. 9:22.
-
-[123] Rom. 9:18, 19.
-
-[124] Heb. 22:17.
-Rom. 11:7, 8.
-
-[125] Luke 13:27.
-2 Pet. 1:9, 10, compared with Mat. 19:16.
-
-[126] Acts 3:19, and 16:31.
-1 Sam. 2:15.
-John 3:19.
-Job 5:40.
-2 Thes. 2:11, 12.
-
-[127] Ezek. 33:11, 12.
-Luke 13: 34.
-Prov. 8 : 33, 36.
-
-[128] Gen. 2:17.
-Mat. 25:41, 42.
-Ezek. 18:20.
-
-[129] 2 Pet. 1:10.
- Acts 13:46.
- Luke 13:24.
-
-[130] Mat. 7:7, 8
- Gal. 5:22, 23.
-
-[131] John 3:19.
-
-[132] John 15:22, 24.
- Heb. 2:3.
- Isa. 66:34.
-
-[133] Mat. 11 : 22.
-Luke 12 : 48.
-
-[134] Mat. 11:22.
-
-[135] Gen. 1:27.
-Eccl. 7 : 29.
-Hos. 13 : 9.
-
-[136] Mat. 11 : 25, compared with 20:15.
-
-[137] Rom. 1:20, 21, 22.
-
-[138] Rom. 2:12, 15 and 1:32.
- Mat. 12:41.
-
-[139] Rev. 20:12, 15, compared with Rom. 5:12, 14 and 9:11, 13.
- Ezek. 18:2.
-
-[140] Psal. 51:5.
-
-[141] Ezek. 18:20.
- Rom. 5:12, 19.
-
-[142] 1 Cor. 15:48, 49.
-
-[143] Rom. 5:12.
- Psal. 51:5.
- Gen. 5:3.
-
-[144] Mat. 23:30, 31.
-
-[145] Rom. 9:15, 18.
- Rom. 5:15.
-
-[146] Mat. 20:15.
-
-[147] Psal. 58:8.
- Rom 6:23.
- Gal. 3:10.
- Rom. 8:2, 30, and 11:7.
- Rev. 21:27.
- Luke 12:14, 8.
- Mat. 11:22.
-
-[148] Rom. 3:19.
- Mat. 22:12.
-
-[149] Rev. 6:16, 17.
-
-[150] Psal. 139:2, 3, 4.
- Eccl. 12:14.
-
-[151] Mat. 25:45.
-
-[152] Mat. 22:12.
- Rom. 2:5, 6.
- Luke 19:42.
-
-[153] Mat. 28:18.
- Psal. 137:7.
-
-[154] Isa. 33:14.
- Psal. 11:6. Num. 25:19.
-
-[155] Mat. 25:41, and 25:10, 11, 12.
-
-[156] Luke 12:20.
- Psal. 49:7, 17.
- Deut. 32:2.
-
-[157] 2 Pet. 3:10.
-
-[158] Luke 16:28.
-
-[159] Rev. 21:4.
- Psal. 68:10.
-
-[160] 1 Cor. 6:2.
-
-[161] Compare Prov. 1:26. with 1 John 3:2, and 2 Cor. 5:16.
-
-[162] Luke 16:25.
-
-[163] Psal. 58:10.
-
-[164] Mat 25:41.
-
-[165] Luke 13:38.
- Prov. 1:26.
-
-[166] Mat. 25:46.
-
-[167] Mat. 13:41, 42.
-
-[168] Mat. 25:30,
- Mark 9:42.
- Isa. 30:33.
- Rev. 21:8.
-
-[169] Mat. 22:13, and 25:46.
-
-[170] Rev. 14:10, 11.
-
-[171] Luke 16:24.
- Jude 7.
-
-[172] Isa. 33:14.
- Mark 9:43, 44.
-
-[173] Luke 12:47.
-
-[174] Mat. 11:24.
-
-[175] Luke 16:23, 25, and 13:28.
-
-[176] Luke 13:24.
-
-[177] Mat. 9:44.
- Rom. 2:15.
-
-[178] Psal. 68:10.
- Rev. 10:1, 2, 3.
-
-[179] 1 John 3:2.
- 1 Cor. 13 12.
-
-[180] Rev. 21:4.
-
-[181] Psal. 16:11.
-
-[182] Heb. 12:23.
- Rev. 1:6, and 22:5.
-
-
-
-
-
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