This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
A35180 | : 1683?] |
A35180 | s.n.,[ London? |
A45416 | How long shall we thus madly defeat our selves, lose that Christianity which we pretend to strive for? |
A45416 | O Lord, how long shall we thus violate and defame that Gospel of peace that we profess? |
A29819 | Browne, Arthur, d. 1642? |
A29819 | Browne, Arthur, d. 1642? |
A29819 | eng Browne, Arthur, d. 1642? |
A29490 | He was asked if he knew what he had said? |
A29490 | He was asked what he meant by the Olive- Tree? |
A29490 | Which he repeated again and again, and then said, What wait you to hear? |
A29490 | ],[ London? |
A29490 | what do you all stand here to hear? |
A32887 | About two days before we had sent for a Doctor, who came twice to her two several days; the first time she asked, Whether he was a Friend? |
A32887 | John, What hath it profitted thee, that thou hast so grieved thy Dear Mother, that hath so tenderly brought thee up? |
A32887 | would she say, that such a Poor Child had this, or that; how glad would it make them? |
A86192 | For now they say we have no King, because we feared not the Lord; What should a King doe to us? |
A86192 | Returne unto me and I will returne unto you saith the Lord of Hosts; but you said wherein shall wee returne? |
A86192 | they said, What should a King doe to us? |
A86192 | will a man robbe his Gods? |
A86192 | yet have yee robbed mee; but yee say wherein have wee robbed thee? |
A92715 | Quoth the Merchant, You were with me, and told me that you had goods, and would send them in, but I received none: No? |
A92715 | Then the Witnesses were asked, Whether they knew those hands? |
A92715 | Who saw the silver- Tankerd? |
A92715 | who saw my Mistresse best Scarf, or my Masters Gold Hatband? |
A57890 | Being asked some hours before his Execution, If he thought not his Sentence Dreadful? |
A57890 | HE seeing the Halter in the Officers hand, said,''Is this for me? |
A57890 | He was again asked, If he had any Exceptions against the Jury? |
A57890 | What are Worldly Honours and Riches? |
A87169 | The best of Fathers from most sweet and dutiful Children? |
A87169 | The best of Husbands from a most affectionate Wife? |
A87169 | The best of Kings from his most Loyal Subjects? |
A87169 | What Tongue of Men or Angels can sufficiently express the detestation of that bloody fact that separated the best of heads from so lovely a body? |
A63971 | And being askt if he thought not his Sentence dreadful? |
A63971 | At his first coming upon the Scaffold, he looked for the Executioner; and seeing him, said, Is this the Man to do the Business? |
A63971 | Have you not been Guilty of Invasion, and of much Blood, which hath been shed, and it may be, of the Loss of many Souls that followed you? |
A63971 | Sir, was there no Ill in these two Years? |
A63971 | Sir, were you ever Married to her? |
A63971 | What harm have they done? |
A63971 | printed by J. Bradford, at the Bible in Fetter- Lane, London:[ 1688?] |
A67695 | 2, 3. breaking the Lord''s bonds and casting away his cords? |
A67695 | And why his word sooner than Isaiahs, Ieremiahs, Ezekiels,& c.? |
A67695 | For when( I pray you) is it to be expected if not then? |
A67695 | If it had been but a combination of men, could so many souls have been converted while it was on foot? |
A67695 | O how chearfull hath his countenance and lovely smiles been now? |
A67695 | Then he enquired if the Executioner was ready? |
A67695 | Then said he, How will I get it drawn down upon my face? |
A67695 | ],[ Edinburgh? |
A67695 | and how often hath he made the truth of that appear which he addeth, for it is not ye, — but the Spirit of your Father that speaketh in you? |
A67695 | and who can say that ever the Lord suffered his suffering, testifying, sealing, confirming and dying Witnesses to be mistaken in their last discourse? |
A74878 | 9. Who is wise, and he shall understand these things? |
A74878 | And his Lordship said, you have room enough here, have you not? |
A74878 | Executioner, Lie down flat upon your belly: and then having laid himselfe down, he said, Must I lie closer? |
A74878 | Executioner, My Lord, Shall I put up your hair? |
A74878 | Executioner, Will your Lordship please to give me a sign when I shall strike? |
A74878 | IT is to no purpose( I thinke) to speake any thing here, Which way must I speak? |
A74878 | Shoul I, What will that doe me good? |
A74878 | Stay a little, Which side doe you stand upon? |
A74878 | Stay a little, is it well as it is now? |
A74878 | The Executioner pointing to the front of the Scaffold, the Earl replyed, What, my head this way? |
A74878 | Then speaking to the Executioner, he said, Which is the way of lying? |
A74878 | Then the E. of Cambridge said to the Executioner, Must I lye all along? |
A74878 | Then turning about, and looking for the Executioner( who was gone off the Scaffold) said, Which is the Gentleman? |
A74878 | Then turning to the Executioner, he said, Well, you are ready when I am ready, are you not? |
A74878 | prudent, and he shall know them? |
A74878 | which is the man? |
A51986 | & c. If want of Charity be tormented in hell, what will become of Covetousness? |
A51986 | Do you count him prudent, who throws himself over- board, to save his Goods? |
A51986 | Do you think him a wise man who is serious about Trifles, but trifles about the most serious Matters? |
A51986 | Haec peregrinatio mediocris vobis videre potest? |
A51986 | I said of laughter, It is mad; and of mirth, What doth it? |
A51986 | Is he wise who neglects and disobligeth him who is his best Friend, and can be his shrewdest Enemy? |
A51986 | Is that man wise, as to his Body and his Health, who onely clothes his hands, and leaves his whole Body naked? |
A51986 | Must we then appeal to the judgement of Sardanapalus concerning the nature of Felicity, or enquire of Apicius what Temperance is? |
A51986 | O my poor soul, whither wilt thou go? |
A51986 | Ut vero colloqui cum Orphaeo, Musaeo, Homero, Hesiodo, liceat quanti tandem aestimatis? |
A51986 | When gold is profered to thee, wilt thou say, I will come to morrow or next day to take it? |
A51986 | or desire that Sybarite to define Magnanimity, who fainted to see a man at hard labour? |
A51986 | who provides onely against the Tooth- ach, and neglects whole troops of mortal Diseases that are ready to rush in upon him? |
A69886 | & c ▪ Behold( saith Abraham) I am but Du ● and Ashes, and yet dare I to speak un ● my Lord? |
A69886 | ( How is this, Who puts this vile Body into such a Glorio ● i fashion? |
A69886 | 16. saying, O who, who shall deliver this poor Soul from the cruel jaws of all- devouring Death? |
A69886 | 2. Who made thee Lord over thy Brothers Conscience? |
A69886 | 21. began to expostulate, and say unto him, What thing is this that thou dost? |
A69886 | 33. yet it was but for a common Friend: But what was all that to the death of a Husband? |
A69886 | 4. Who shewed the Beggar kindness in his Life? |
A69886 | 4. did in their very first word say, Come let us make us Bricks; Bewraying their Foolishness: What? |
A69886 | 9. Who will lead me into the strong City? |
A69886 | Abstain from Adultery, for it is rottenness to thy Bones; Dost thou thy Soul? |
A69886 | Alas, How improvident are they, who never take care to provide for thy Journey? |
A69886 | All ▪ What a hard case it is to be at the same time, both poor and sick? |
A69886 | Among so many doubtful, so many various, so many sudden Accidents, what security, or what mind to sin among so many Incertainties? |
A69886 | And are the precious things of Eternity utterly to be forgotten, or disregarded? |
A69886 | And art thou heartily perswaded, that Heaven is only worth the looking after? |
A69886 | And dost thou Father, cry''d they, fear death? |
A69886 | And dost thou soundly believe, that there is a future state of Infinite joy, and eternal Sorrow? |
A69886 | And hast thou no time, capacity, understanding, or will, to work out thy Salvation, with fear and trembling? |
A69886 | And hast thou throughly pondered the certain uncertainty of all temporal Enjoyments? |
A69886 | And he said, What shall I cry? |
A69886 | And how clear is that of Plato, concerning a better Life? |
A69886 | And how many art thou? |
A69886 | And how many art thou? |
A69886 | And is it too soon to remember our Creator, when we have seen many as Young as we are, breathe their last? |
A69886 | And now being refreshed with these Fragrant Leaves, what shall I say? |
A69886 | And shall nothing of all this abate thy Fears, silence thy Complaints, and bring thee to a Chearful Submission? |
A69886 | And then seventhly and lastly, He desires man seriously to consider, what is behind him? |
A69886 | And there will come in the last dayes Scoffers, walking after their own lusts, saying, Where is the Promise of his coming? |
A69886 | And there will come in the last days Scoffers, walking after their own Lusts, saying, Where is the Promise of his Coming? |
A69886 | And we may well demand of the Patient, Wilt thou commit thy self to the Cast of Eternity? |
A69886 | And what became of his soul? |
A69886 | And what more heavenly than the thought of Immortality? |
A69886 | And what other Lecture is read here, or taught, but God''s decree of Man ▪ s Mortality? |
A69886 | And what so sweet a sight once to blessed Abraham, as Sarah? |
A69886 | And when we are Arrested by the cold Hands of Death, how Fale and Wan to all shall we seem? |
A69886 | And where did your Father die? |
A69886 | And who can choose but weep for the shortness of our Lives? |
A69886 | And wouldst thou not die? |
A69886 | Are Stones thus endued with anger? |
A69886 | Are here Titles enough? |
A69886 | Are not Men Leaves, whom Sickness, like dry Leaves and juiceless Flowers, tosles to and fro, and variously sports with? |
A69886 | Art thou better than he? |
A69886 | Art thou not ashamed to reserve the Remains and Dregs of Life to God? |
A69886 | Art thou truly Godly? |
A69886 | At this Hour, What would a man give to secure his Soul? |
A69886 | Attend the first words Christ spake to a Woman after his Resurrection, was it not, Wh ● weepest thou? |
A69886 | Augustus the Emperor, the last day of his Life, asked his Friends that were about him, whether he seemed to them to have acted the play of Life well? |
A69886 | BEhold, I beseech thee, lying at the Pool of Bethesda, a Beggar; a Beggar do I say? |
A69886 | Ba ● ak having asked, Where are the Princes of the Nations? |
A69886 | Behold how a little old Woman glories in her Age; what would she have done had she compleated the Centure? |
A69886 | Behold( said he) while I am yet alive with you this day, ye have been rebellious against the Lord; and how much more after my death? |
A69886 | Being demanded what next? |
A69886 | Beloved, could we not be content to live, yea, to dye with this sentence which hath born, and brought unto us these six places of consolation? |
A69886 | Bereaved New- England, where are thy Tears, at this Ill- boding Funeral? |
A69886 | Blessed Author, art thou yet Alive? |
A69886 | Blessed is the Soul of him that feareth the Lord; in whom putteth he his trust, and who is his strength? |
A69886 | But are we not ashamed that so many Christian Boys and Girls have joyfully endured what we Men could not bear without weeping and complaints? |
A69886 | But art thou at Rest from thy Labours? |
A69886 | But hath God appointed that thou must once dye, and afterwards come to Judgment? |
A69886 | But he believing himself call''d to the Grave, strook the Ground with his Hand, adding these Words, I come, Wherefore dost thou call me? |
A69886 | But he dies well who dies willingly ▪ Who does not readily rise from a hard Bed? |
A69886 | But how did he live? |
A69886 | But how do I know that? |
A69886 | But how shall they know this that never endeavouted to learn? |
A69886 | But into whose hands must this Hippo fall, now the Austin of it is taken away? |
A69886 | But is it a matter of any moment in what place we lay the bodies of our deceased friends? |
A69886 | But is it not all one in what part of the ground I bury my Husband, so I lay his body in a place that is set apart for that purpose? |
A69886 | But is this the adversity for which he was born, according to King Solomon? |
A69886 | But now he is Dead, wherefore should I Fast? |
A69886 | But now he is dead, wherefore should I fast? |
A69886 | But now he is dead, wherefore should I fast? |
A69886 | But our Love was firm, it was strong, yea strong as death; and who then can blame me if my sorrows in some measure keep pace with my love? |
A69886 | But say the Earth will not render when the Lord shall call? |
A69886 | But should not the first depart, what would be left? |
A69886 | But some will say, Shall we meet with our Friends again departed in the Faith? |
A69886 | But weigh the matter well 〈 … 〉 thou be for ever happy, and not be with Christ ● … st thou be where Christ is, and not die? |
A69886 | But what advantage to the dead are the tears of the living? |
A69886 | But what is the meaning of the Phrase to Die? |
A69886 | But what is the meaning of the Phrase to Dye? |
A69886 | But what shall the Dust make answer saith David? |
A69886 | But what then, is there no fan to purge the chaff from the wheat, is there no difference betwixt the good and the bad? |
A69886 | But what was the word I spoke last? |
A69886 | But whether or no is Sickness a Benefit, and Death an Evil? |
A69886 | But why did he put the Lime into those hollow parts? |
A69886 | But why do we deny, and lift up our Noses? |
A69886 | But why dost thou number thy few days? |
A69886 | But why sit I musing in these pensive thoughts when I should rather prepare for the burial of the dead? |
A69886 | But why? |
A69886 | But will these eager Desires open the Gate of Heaven to me? |
A69886 | But you will demand the second time what then, shall not all rise? |
A69886 | But, they will further ask by whose authority shall they rise? |
A69886 | But, what then, shall the Wicked sing ● ● so? |
A69886 | By what Law? |
A69886 | By what authority doest thou impose thy particular light and perswasion upon thy brother;& that so, as almost to un- saint him? |
A69886 | By whom? |
A69886 | Can I bring him back again? |
A69886 | Can I bring him back again? |
A69886 | Can I say more than this? |
A69886 | Can a draught of my tears fetch him back again to life? |
A69886 | Can any thing be counted an advantage, when the Soul loseth God, and it self, ● n the getting of it? |
A69886 | Can my sighs inspire life into his bosom? |
A69886 | Can sweet, and sower fruit come from the same tree? |
A69886 | Canst thou behold the Sufferings of a Sister and wink at them? |
A69886 | Canst thou once suppose, thou shalt ever be an Inhabitant upon the Earth? |
A69886 | Canst thou rejoice, when thou thinkest how many shall put on Crowns of Glory, and yet thy self have no part, or lot in that matter? |
A69886 | Canst thou then dream of any Mansion or Abiding place here? |
A69886 | DEmosthenes being asked, What he thought most Essential to Eloquence? |
A69886 | Death is a Tri ● ● te and a Duty to be paid by all, why then art ● ou troubled? |
A69886 | Did God think me worthy of this time? |
A69886 | Did I ever approach thee with a Countenance chearful? |
A69886 | Did not my Jesus cause Lazarus to arise when he had been four days dead? |
A69886 | Did not thy Saviour Christ foresee his Death, and that a most sharp one, for thirty years and more? |
A69886 | Did the Wise Man intend that a Brother is born to bring Adversity? |
A69886 | Did ● ● thou think Death would have been content with words? |
A69886 | Didst thou ever see me the sadder for this? |
A69886 | Didst thou hope it would suffer thee to talk, while all others suffer? |
A69886 | Do all die alike? |
A69886 | Do thou rather enquire what is done in Heaven among the Saints? |
A69886 | Do we admire at this once dying, wherein thou mayst find private and concealed Dea ● hs? |
A69886 | Do ye not find that by dropping of the Water, and the passage of the Sand the upper Glass empties and the lower Glass fills? |
A69886 | Do''st thou then groan under natural weaknesses and infirmities? |
A69886 | Dost not thou hope in Heaven? |
A69886 | Dost thou accuse Nature? |
A69886 | Dost thou exalt thy self? |
A69886 | Dost thou expect one more potent than Job? |
A69886 | Dost thou grow deaf, or art thou falling asleep? |
A69886 | Dost thou humble thy self? |
A69886 | Dost thou know, Oh Man, that thou must shortly give up the Ghost? |
A69886 | Dost thou live long? |
A69886 | Dost thou refuse the Scourges, the Thornes, the Cross? |
A69886 | Dost thou remember the Folly of the Gluttonous Servant? |
A69886 | Dost thou remember thy Saviour? |
A69886 | Doth Christ weep upon the consideration of Lazarus Death? |
A69886 | FAlling Sick of a Fever, a Friend asking him how he did? |
A69886 | Fifthly, What is against him? |
A69886 | First, What he is by nature, what he is in himself? |
A69886 | For first, thy dead Men shall live: with ● y dead both shall they arise: What''s all this but a manifest proof of the Resurrection? |
A69886 | For shall the Potter do what he will with his clay, and shall not God do what he will? |
A69886 | For what firmness can there be in the matter of Flesh? |
A69886 | For what is Death, but a privation of life; a separation of the Soul, from the Body? |
A69886 | For what is man? |
A69886 | For what is ● our Life? |
A69886 | For why Beloved? |
A69886 | Fourthly, What is above him? |
A69886 | GOOD Lord, what is the Life of Man? |
A69886 | GOod Lord, is it so that there is no returning from the Grave? |
A69886 | God calls thee now, exhorts thee now, expects that thou shouldst now repent, and dost thou delay? |
A69886 | Good People, had you the Reversion of a Rich Living, or Office, would you weep because it is faln into your Possession? |
A69886 | HE said, I bless God, I have all my Senses enti ● … but my Heart is in Heaven; and, Lord Jes ● … Why should''st thou not have it? |
A69886 | HOW old art thou? |
A69886 | Has he not spoke enough, that can perswade with one word or a nod? |
A69886 | Hast tho ● not learnt in so many years calmly, quietly, and undisturbedly to die? |
A69886 | Hast thou considered the good Father of his Family? |
A69886 | Hast thou not hitherto profited more then so childishly to fear Death? |
A69886 | Hath God, with this Serjeant of his, sent his Angels to fetch thee; and art thou loath to go? |
A69886 | Hath the infinitely wise and gracious God, only given thee opportunities and abilities to desire, and hasten thy eternal ruin? |
A69886 | Have I ever accused thee? |
A69886 | Have I ever found fault with thy Government? |
A69886 | Have I misapplied the parts which thou gavest me? |
A69886 | Have I taken a course for the place of his Rest, where his cold body may be laid to sleep? |
A69886 | Have you not signed it? |
A69886 | He fell into some Languishments, attended with a Fever, which in a few days brought him into the Pangs( may I say? |
A69886 | He hath lived, he hath lived; what was this but every day to cause himself to be carried forth and buried? |
A69886 | He that deliver''d the three Children, did he desert the Maccabees? |
A69886 | He that formed the Muscles, the Bones, the Nerves, the Veins ▪ the Marrow, out of the same Clay, Can he not form the same, out of the same again? |
A69886 | He used to say, If want of Charity be tormented in ▪ Hell, what will become of the Covetous? |
A69886 | Here the Lord himself ▪ Is my hand shortened, that it might not help? |
A69886 | Here you may see an acknowledgment of his own imbecillity,& weakness in recovering his dead Child, can I bring him back again? |
A69886 | His Soul is gone; whither? |
A69886 | His weeping Friends,( and how many of them?) |
A69886 | How can these numerical Bodies rise? |
A69886 | How can we be said not to die, when we live among the dead? |
A69886 | How evil? |
A69886 | How great is ▪ the madness of those that commence long hopes? |
A69886 | How great will be his Thought when it is without any hinderance from these material Organs that now obstruct its Operations? |
A69886 | How kindly did an Angel comfort Mary Magdalene, and the other Mary, when they early came to visit the holy Sepulchre of our Lord? |
A69886 | How knowest thou but that it may be as convenient for thee? |
A69886 | How late is it then to begin to live, when thou art iust at the end of it? |
A69886 | How long canst thou awake without refreshment of sleep? |
A69886 | How long canst thou labour without the relief of rest? |
A69886 | How many Thieves do steal away our Lives, while we perceive not what we lose? |
A69886 | How many dost thou deceive? |
A69886 | How many fall with a revengeful Mind, though with an Innocent Hand? |
A69886 | How many has Death prevented in the midst of their wickedness, and cut off half the Crime? |
A69886 | How many snatch''d away in the attempt, have receiv''d the reward of their Impiety? |
A69886 | How many, to whom thou promisest old Age, dost thou cut off in the midst of their Course? |
A69886 | How much do litigious Suits and Diseases snatch from us? |
A69886 | How much time does our Meals, our Recreation, our Play, our Discourse, our Sleep, our Idleness takes up? |
A69886 | How shall we sing the Lord''s Song in a strange Land? |
A69886 | How stupid a thing then is to dispose of Age? |
A69886 | How then shall I make my way to Heaven? |
A69886 | How then ● all the adulterous eye, the coveteous ● ye, the envious eye, the haughty, and ● ornfull eye, be able to look God in ● e face? |
A69886 | How unlike to Christ is this Spirit? |
A69886 | How? |
A69886 | I am Mortal ▪ and do I wonder at Death? |
A69886 | I ask how the first body was Created? |
A69886 | I follow thee, O merciful Father, I follow thee: And wherefore should I refuse, when thou callest me nearer to thee? |
A69886 | I must out of the world, how have I lived when I was in the world? |
A69886 | I there applyed my self[ Ad meum novissimum, to my last thing,] what man liveth, and shall not see death? |
A69886 | IN sickness, O Christian, if thou art asked, how thou do''st? |
A69886 | If God be on our side who can be against us ▪ Who spared not his own Son, but gave him for us all; how shall he not with him, give us all things? |
A69886 | If all my Life makes but one little drop, Why then so many Death''s my Course to stop? |
A69886 | If he, who ● this Bell tells me, is gone now, were some ● xcellent Artificer, who comes to him for a ● ● ak, or for a Garment now? |
A69886 | If never,''t were another thing, but if at any time, why not now? |
A69886 | If then to Morrow, why not to Day? |
A69886 | If thou askest Seneca, What is Man? |
A69886 | If thou shewest that thy Disease may be overcome, at least endur''d? |
A69886 | If you say no, what means your sour carriage to the People of God? |
A69886 | If you shall ask me, how they shall arise? |
A69886 | In his Bed, said the other; where your Father, your Grandfather, and the rest of your Ancestors? |
A69886 | In his Sickness he was visited by a Friend, who finding him fall''n asleep, when he waked, asked how he did? |
A69886 | In the same is our Life to finish, our Works to be examined, and we are then to know how it will go with us for ever and ever? |
A69886 | Is his Soul gone to Heaven or to Hell? |
A69886 | Is it not a small thing, I pray thee, that thou having abundance of Meat, shouldst see him starve for Bread? |
A69886 | Is it not all one, whether in the fields, or whether in our Golgotha''s? |
A69886 | Is it not like unto a Bubble, which quickly swelleth to a considerable bigness, and as quickly sinketh again? |
A69886 | Is it not like unto the Grass which groweth up and flourisheth in the Morning, but is cut down before the Evening come? |
A69886 | Is it so, that it is a Christ- like Frame of Spirit to be deeply affected with, and to weep over the death of such as are truly pious? |
A69886 | Is not God able to enliv''n the Clay, with the same breathing of his Spirit as formerly? |
A69886 | Is there a necessity that what perishes once should always Perish? |
A69886 | Is there ● Lion in the way? |
A69886 | Is this the fruit of thy long and frequent Instruction? |
A69886 | Is this thy Imitation of so many worthy Saints of God, whom thou hast seen entertain the violentest Death with Smiles and Songs? |
A69886 | Is thy Life tak''n from thee? |
A69886 | Is ● t true that our Dear and Pi ● us Relations that are ● ead and gone will never return to us again? |
A69886 | It is he that justifies; who is he that co ● demnesh? |
A69886 | It may be necessary for you to think on Job''s Question, Man giveth up the Ghost, and where is he? |
A69886 | Let the matter be urged home, is everlasting damnation by all means possible, to be prevented? |
A69886 | Life therefore what is it? |
A69886 | Looking upon the Block, and knecling, she said, Will you take it off before I lay it, down? |
A69886 | Lord tell me, tell me when? |
A69886 | Lord who shall dwell in thy Tabernacle? |
A69886 | Lord, for it is very unhonest; Or dost thou love thy Credit? |
A69886 | Man giveth up the Ghost, and where is he? |
A69886 | Man giveth up the Ghost; and where is he? |
A69886 | Mark, the Angel of the Lord encampeth round about his Children, to deliver them: From what? |
A69886 | Miserable diminitive Mortals, wherefore d''ye teach long Hopes? |
A69886 | Moreover, as Death helps us to our Rest, so it is our Rest: Why should we fear it? |
A69886 | Most excellent is the saying of Job, they that saw him shall say, where is he? |
A69886 | Must I then now be sick? |
A69886 | Must I thus die before I am gray? |
A69886 | Must all professors be condemned by thee, because they can not see with thy eyes, and tread in thy steps? |
A69886 | My Soul hath thirsted after God the Fountain of Life, when shall I come and appear before the Face of my God? |
A69886 | NOw where am I? |
A69886 | No, Madam, replied the Executioner; then she tied a Handkerchief before her Eyes, and feeling for the Block, said, What shall I do? |
A69886 | No; Of what then? |
A69886 | No; of thy End? |
A69886 | Now I would fain know of thee, O sick Man, what concerns it thee, what is transacted in Germany, France, Italy, or Spain? |
A69886 | Now the Second Thing regardable, is, If thou art Ashes, why such a deal of Care in Pampering thy Body, which the hungry Worms are to devour to morrow? |
A69886 | Now to comment upon this same place, we may make the like question, and give the very self- same Answer, Nonne omnia Pulvis, nonne Fabula? |
A69886 | Now, Lord, sith things this wise do frame, what help do I desire? |
A69886 | O Men, you dreamt that you were happy and blessed; but of all those things which ye had, which ye hoped for, what do ye retain? |
A69886 | O Mortals, Over- late is to Morrow''s life, live to day; pay your Salary to day; mourn for your Sins to day, for who has assured ye of to morrow? |
A69886 | O death where is thy sting? |
A69886 | O grave, where is thy Victory? |
A69886 | O my dearly beloved Friends, consider what you are all by nature? |
A69886 | O truely Splendid Misery? |
A69886 | O what shall I do for my head, my guide, my heart, my Husband? |
A69886 | O what tie can be so great as that of affection? |
A69886 | O what would I not do to call him back again? |
A69886 | Of thy Beginning? |
A69886 | Oh Grave, where is thy Victory? |
A69886 | Oh press thy Soul hard with these thoughts, how it is like to go with thee, when thou first steppest into Eternity? |
A69886 | One praying by his Bed- side, asked him if he heard the Prayer? |
A69886 | Or can a poor guilty Worm endure with ease, the burden of infinite Wrath? |
A69886 | Or can any thing be had upon Earth, that will hold ever? |
A69886 | Or can the thoughts of Heaven be any otherwise comfortable, than as thou believest it to be thy Heaven? |
A69886 | Or is endless glory no whit desirable? |
A69886 | Or may Hell be supposed to be a tolerable Habitation? |
A69886 | Or rather to comfort us in the time of Adversity? |
A69886 | Or tell where Death is not, if drops can kill? |
A69886 | Or what becometh of his Soul, when it hath once taken its leave of the body? |
A69886 | Or what good things( of any long continuance) are to be found in so weak a Subject? |
A69886 | Or whoever did he despise that called faithfully upon him? |
A69886 | Or ● oth thy natural timorousness, or unpreparedness, ● ut a check to the vehemency of thy Desires? |
A69886 | Or, ● hat is it, that thou so much stickest at? |
A69886 | Our Elisha is gone, and now who must next year invade the Land? |
A69886 | Q What if thou hadst liv''d longer, wouldst not thou have made the same complaint? |
A69886 | Quaeritur Aegistus quare sit factus Adulter? |
A69886 | Qui potuit i d quod non erat producere, ut aliquid esset, i d quod jam est, cum ceciderit, restituere non potuerit? |
A69886 | Quid dabis pro animâ tuâ tunc, qui nunc pro nihilo das illam? |
A69886 | Rather will it not do me good? |
A69886 | SEest thou, frail Man, the Emblem of thy State? |
A69886 | SEest thou, frail man, the Emblem of thy State? |
A69886 | Secondly, An acknowledgment of his own Imbecillity and weakness, Can I bring him back again? |
A69886 | Secondly, Awake and sing: Who? |
A69886 | Secondly, What is within him? |
A69886 | Shall Hereticks and Pagans give Death a better welcome than thee? |
A69886 | Shall I fear my end, when I know I must have an end? |
A69886 | Shall I fear my last gasp, that puts an end to all my Sighs? |
A69886 | Shall any demand? |
A69886 | Shall he deliver his ▪ Soul from the Hand of the Grave? |
A69886 | Shall his Angels stand waiting to convey thy departed Soul home with Songs of Triumph? |
A69886 | Shall not the wicked rise, as well as the godly? |
A69886 | Shall the body of Paul be scourged, and ● nother for it be glorified? |
A69886 | Shall the vain Heathens shew so much Courage in Death, and Christians, trusting in God, be afraid and tremble? |
A69886 | Shall the weak Earthen Vessel,( as the Prophet speaketh) rise up against the Potter, and say, Now I am made, I will not be broken in pieces? |
A69886 | Shall they live, and not live again; and yet both true? |
A69886 | Shall thy loving kindness be declared in the grave, or thy faithfulness in destruction? |
A69886 | Shall we be troubled upon Earth, because our Friends are at rest under it? |
A69886 | Should it be asked, what is most necessary for a sick Person? |
A69886 | Sick people think a Day a Month, a Month a Year, a Year an Age: How many Ages could this Man but think so many Years? |
A69886 | Sometimes a little Fever; what do I say? |
A69886 | St. Lawrence upon the Gridiron? |
A69886 | Such love as ours did not always possess the hearts of some as nearly allyed? |
A69886 | TELL me, my Dear Seneca, whom Pliny with an Elogy to be envy''d calls the Prince of Learning, tell me what thou thinkst of Death, especially immature? |
A69886 | Tears are both unreasonable and unseasonable, why weepest thou? |
A69886 | Tell me how God Created Heaven and Earth out of nothing? |
A69886 | Tell me how the Bones grow in the Womb of her that is with Child: Can you tell how the Child is framed? |
A69886 | Th''exact Idea of thy hasting Fate? |
A69886 | Th''exact Idea of thy hasting Fate? |
A69886 | That thou flourishing in Purple and Silk, would see Lazarus lye in Rags? |
A69886 | That thou seeing even thy Dogs have pity on him, thou wouldst have no pity upon him thy self? |
A69886 | The First is this, If thou art Dust and Ashes ▪ wherefore art thou proud, thou Dust and Ashes? |
A69886 | The Introduction; and whether Sickness be an Evil? |
A69886 | The Lord gave me my Child, and now hath he taken him away from me again, therefore why should I any longer fast and mourn? |
A69886 | The Lord is my Light and my Health: Whom shalt thou fear? |
A69886 | The Soul of my Neighbour, this Bell tell me, is gone out; Whither? |
A69886 | The first circumstance of the Rich man is, to know what became of his Body? |
A69886 | The lasting of a thousand years, what is it in thy sight? |
A69886 | The most admirable Job, almost by way of complaint interrogates the Diety; And dost thou so soon cast me down? |
A69886 | The same, watch ye, how often doth St. Paul reiterate? |
A69886 | Then I shall with joy look back upon thee, O sad Messenger, and triumph over thee, saying, Oh Death, where is thy Sting? |
A69886 | Then asking his Friends, if he acted his part well, when they answered, Yes; why then, says he, do you not all clap your hands for me? |
A69886 | Then inferred the other, And dost not thou fear to go to Sea? |
A69886 | Then said the Mariner, and do not you fear to go to Bed, so Fatal to all your Predecessors? |
A69886 | Then turning his Face, and seeing some by, he said; Are you so nigh? |
A69886 | Then what art thou, Oh poor Worm, that thou shouldest once Dream that thou canst null or make void this Ordinance and Decree of Heaven? |
A69886 | There is a Courage also in the Bed of Sickness: Shall I leave a Feaver, or that me? |
A69886 | There''s the Question; the Answer followeth in the next, It is even a Vapour,& c. First of the Question, What is your Life? |
A69886 | These( I say) I am sure to see, and to partake with them in Joy; why then should not I be willing to dye, to enjoy their perpetual Society in Glory? |
A69886 | They shall rise indeed, but it shall be to their ruine, and their greater ruine; and their great fall? |
A69886 | Things which are seen ▪ were not made of things which do appear: How were these things done? |
A69886 | Thirdly, The earth shall cast up? |
A69886 | Thirdly, What is before him? |
A69886 | This Night thy Soul shall be taken from thee, and who shall inherit what thou hast scrap''d together? |
A69886 | Thou art going a long and unknown Journey; and whither wouldst thou? |
A69886 | Thou being therefore Earth, why art thou Proud, thou Dust and Ashes? |
A69886 | Thou canst not give an account of thy own Production, nor find out the Work of God in forming the Body? |
A69886 | Thou demandest what is the utmost space of Life? |
A69886 | Thou hast begun well, who, what shall hinder thee? |
A69886 | Thou wert ripe for Death long before? |
A69886 | Thou, who are sick, canst thou imitate this poor Man? |
A69886 | Thus Sitenus, being tak''n by Midas, and ask''d, what was the best thing could happen to Man? |
A69886 | Thus far concerning the first particular Circumstance, the Son warning even Almighty God by the mouth of Isaiah the Prophet? |
A69886 | Thy Pains, Do they afflict thee? |
A69886 | Thy Sleeps, Are they short and interrupted? |
A69886 | To die by little and little, is first to mortifie our lesser sins, and not to say with Lot, Is it not a little one? |
A69886 | To me he was a Brother, but now to the Worms: And what loss can be more deplorable than the loss of a Brother? |
A69886 | To me he was a Friend but now to the Grave: and what loss can be greater than the loss of a Friend? |
A69886 | To which the Seaman waving a reply? |
A69886 | To whom Death; F ● nd Banquet for the Grave, said he, couldst thou not prepare in so many Years; that hast had so many warnings from me already? |
A69886 | Truth, Love thee, O Epictetus, How agreeable are all these things to Christian Doctrine? |
A69886 | Tully where, In Learning so profound? |
A69886 | Upon his way, he looking behind him espied Dr. Latimer coming after, and called to him with a chearful Voice, saying, O Brother, are you there? |
A69886 | VVHO will not stand upon his guard against the Efforts of Death that threatens us every Hour, who has appointed no time when he intends to meets us? |
A69886 | VVIth Seneca, I demand of thee, O my sick Friend, why dost thou wonder at thy Miseries? |
A69886 | VVhat hast thou to do with News and false Reports? |
A69886 | VVhat may be done to day, why defer ye to another day perhaps never to come? |
A69886 | VVhat meant that great Personage? |
A69886 | VVhat then is Man? |
A69886 | VVhat then? |
A69886 | VVhat wouldst thou have, O impatient Man? |
A69886 | VVhen shall I come? |
A69886 | VVhere dost thou fly about the VVorld, and beg at the Cottages of Beggars? |
A69886 | VVhere''s Aristole? |
A69886 | VVherefore dost thou bow in vain to every Coach that whirls by thee? |
A69886 | VVhy dost thou make Faces? |
A69886 | VVhy lingrest thou bright Lamp of Heaven? |
A69886 | VVhy should I be offended? |
A69886 | WHat do I do? |
A69886 | WHat more certain in Human things than Death? |
A69886 | WHat shall I do, said the Rich Man in his Heart, because I have not room for the Fruits of my Land? |
A69886 | WHat wouldst thou? |
A69886 | WHerefore art thou troubled? |
A69886 | Was it thus that hitherto thou hast lost all thy time? |
A69886 | Was there ever, saith the Son of Syrach, any one confounded that put his trust in the Lord? |
A69886 | We must one day see the Lord ● ith these very eyes, that now we carry ● bout us: and how shall we be able to ● ook on him with defiled eyes? |
A69886 | Well, sayst thou, but if I know him, it is b ● very little, I never saw him in all my Life? |
A69886 | What Discourse could be more kind, friendly, and fami ● iar than this? |
A69886 | What Ears hadst thou, that wouldest not hear his cry? |
A69886 | What Eyes hadst thou that wouldest not see his Sores? |
A69886 | What Hands hadst thou that would not be stretched out to give, What Heart hadst thou that would not melt in thy Body? |
A69886 | What Hour or Moment is more certain to thee than to another? |
A69886 | What Husband can think so of his Wife, and not melt? |
A69886 | What Joy? |
A69886 | What Man is he that liveth, and shall not see Death? |
A69886 | What Marble Eyes distill not showr''s of Tears? |
A69886 | What Soul hadst thou, that would not pity his silly Soul, this wretched Body, poor Lazarus? |
A69886 | What Stoick Heart is not harrast with Fears To ken this Embleme, to revolve this Book, Where Death''s Memento''s stand where e''re you look? |
A69886 | What are thou afraid o ●? |
A69886 | What are we? |
A69886 | What became of Germany when Luther was dead? |
A69886 | What became of Prague when Jerom was dead? |
A69886 | What became of his Body being dead? |
A69886 | What became of his Body being dead? |
A69886 | What became of his Soul? |
A69886 | What became of his Soul? |
A69886 | What comfort can it bring to his body of earth, to have it cabined in the Grave with his dispersing ashes? |
A69886 | What conception can I have of a separated Soul( says a late Writer) but that''t is all Thought? |
A69886 | What desirest thou? |
A69886 | What did be desire of thee but only Crumbs to save his Life? |
A69886 | What do we do, O Christians? |
A69886 | What does fourscore years avail that man that idly spends them? |
A69886 | What does now my Kingdom, what do all my Guards avail me? |
A69886 | What dost thou fear and shrug, and tremble at, Oh my Soul, thou peevish froward Creature? |
A69886 | What dost thou fear? |
A69886 | What dost thou labour, wh ● dost thou toyl for, O Man? |
A69886 | What dost thou say of Sickness? |
A69886 | What evil can that be which proceeds from the Fountain of Goodnsss? |
A69886 | What harm will it do me? |
A69886 | What has a Pilgrim to do with Flowers and Pibbles, if he return not to his Countrey? |
A69886 | What has he now more than he that liv''d but Eight? |
A69886 | What hath Christianity done to thee, if thy fears be still Heathenish? |
A69886 | What have I now more to do with the World? |
A69886 | What if I prove Sick? |
A69886 | What if thou knowest not one Angel in all the Heavens? |
A69886 | What if thou shouldst be in the number of those? |
A69886 | What is Death? |
A69886 | What is Life? |
A69886 | What is Mortal Life, saith St. Gregory, but a way? |
A69886 | What is a long fear of Death but a long Torment? |
A69886 | What is above you? |
A69886 | What is against you? |
A69886 | What is all this but to look on friends, ● ather as Gods than men, as if all sufficiency ● ere included in them only? |
A69886 | What is become of Caesar now? |
A69886 | What is before you? |
A69886 | What is behind you? |
A69886 | What is below you? |
A69886 | What is here but tumbling and tossing, Cares, Miseries, Griefs of Body and Mind? |
A69886 | What is the end of all men? |
A69886 | What is there that thou canst call a Novelty? |
A69886 | What is within you? |
A69886 | What is your Life? |
A69886 | What keeper of time so sparing, that may not find something worthy to exchange with his time? |
A69886 | What little content do I take in any company on Earth, where I meet with sh ● ● ess? |
A69886 | What love so great as of a Brother and Sister? |
A69886 | What man is he that liveth, and shall not see death? |
A69886 | What meanest thou then vain Fear? |
A69886 | What more dost thou believe, thou dost nothing if thou art temperate in sickness? |
A69886 | What other Answer would God return? |
A69886 | What sayest thou to these things, Oh my Soul? |
A69886 | What sayest thou, Oh my Soul, are the things of time only or chiefly to be minded? |
A69886 | What sayst thou, my sick Friend? |
A69886 | What shall I mention the Child kill''d by an ● sicle dropping upon his Head from the Penthouse? |
A69886 | What shall I remember any more? |
A69886 | What shall I say of the hardness of this screwing Rich Mans Heart? |
A69886 | What shall be the issue of the Disease? |
A69886 | What shall such intimate familiar friends do, as the Soul and Body are, which have lived together from the Womb with so much delight? |
A69886 | What shall we now say? |
A69886 | What shame possesses us if we blush not at these things? |
A69886 | What so necessary as the thought of Death? |
A69886 | What so sweet a spectacle to the World, as Sarah? |
A69886 | What then, my sick Friend, do the things of the Earth trouble thee? |
A69886 | What then? |
A69886 | What use shouldest thou that live ● ● make of this now? |
A69886 | What was the meaning of this, but only to intimate these words? |
A69886 | What were the Nine Hundred Ninety Nine Years of Methuselah? |
A69886 | What will become of thee to Morrow, when thy whole Body shall be but one Pool, one continued Wound? |
A69886 | What wilt thou give then for thy Soul to save it, who dost so prodigally throw it away now for nothing? |
A69886 | What would I not give to have him restored to life again? |
A69886 | What wouldst thou more? |
A69886 | What wouldst thou more? |
A69886 | What''s the reason? |
A69886 | What, can earthen Walls raise up such Pride in Men? |
A69886 | What, doth Mary''s weeping set Jesus Christ a weeping? |
A69886 | What, lying at a Gate ▪ and full of Sores too? |
A69886 | What? |
A69886 | What? |
A69886 | When are his Teeth prepar''d for Food? |
A69886 | When is Man able to go? |
A69886 | When shall I come to appear before the presence of God? |
A69886 | When thou accompaniest another to the grave, dost thou conclude thus with thy self the very next time that any death is spoken of, it may be mine? |
A69886 | When to speak? |
A69886 | When? |
A69886 | Whence it appears, that if she sleep, she shall do well; and shall we take it ill, that our Friends are well? |
A69886 | Where are now those complaining sick people? |
A69886 | Where are these harps of their tongues? |
A69886 | Where are those cristal glasses which were so long since broken? |
A69886 | Where are those thousands fed by this Crucified Lord? |
A69886 | Where are thy Parents? |
A69886 | Where are thy Sixty? |
A69886 | Where hast thou left thy Seventy? |
A69886 | Where is it? |
A69886 | Where is it? |
A69886 | Where is now the power and strength of my Empire? |
A69886 | Where is thy Fath? |
A69886 | Where is thy Sting, O Grave? |
A69886 | Where then is not Death, if Lions of Stone can kill? |
A69886 | Where wilt thou find thy Fourscore? |
A69886 | Wherefore art thou afraid, O Man, of short hope? |
A69886 | Wherefore d''ye undertake such a vast heap of Business? |
A69886 | Wherefore do we desire and pray that the Heavenly Kingdom may come, when our Earthly Captivity so much delighteth us? |
A69886 | Wherefore do we expostulate with Death? |
A69886 | Wherefore do we not follow the Council of the Son of S ● ras? |
A69886 | Wherefore do we so earnestly wish for the fulfilling of Christs Kingdom, when we had rather serve the Devil here, then raign with Christ there? |
A69886 | Wherefore do we trust to Death? |
A69886 | Wherefore do ye delay? |
A69886 | Wherefore do ye expect a Truce? |
A69886 | Wherefore do ye pretend immature Age? |
A69886 | Wherefore do ye think upon delay? |
A69886 | Wherefore dost thou not follow him that goes crying so loudly before thee? |
A69886 | Wherefore then do we set our Minds upon vain things? |
A69886 | Wherefore then dost thou add a Disease of mind to sickness of Body? |
A69886 | Wherefore then dost thou complain in vain, and fester thy Wounds with the Nails of Impatience? |
A69886 | Wherefore then dost thou repine? |
A69886 | Which words contain two general parts, a Question and an Answer; What is your Life? |
A69886 | Whither do we run to be punish''d for ever? |
A69886 | Whitherto have tended all thy serious Meditations? |
A69886 | Who can forbear a Tear at the Funeral of a Friend? |
A69886 | Who can withhold from mingling Tears with Grief, To see this Tyrant reign as Monarch chief? |
A69886 | Who is he that sets a value upon Time, that prizes a Day, or understands that he dies daily? |
A69886 | Who is he whom you call Father every time you pray? |
A69886 | Who knows whether the Gods to this days sum Will add to Morrow, though but just to come? |
A69886 | Who of all that multitude speaks ▪ one word for so great a Benefactor? |
A69886 | Who saw it come ● n, or who saw it go out? |
A69886 | Who shall Cure thee? |
A69886 | Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods chosen? |
A69886 | Who shall praise thee in the pit? |
A69886 | Who shall separate us from the love of God in Christ? |
A69886 | Who so hard- hearted, as to deny so small a Duty to the Sick? |
A69886 | Who will warrant things to pass, as thou disposest them? |
A69886 | Who would not hear them? |
A69886 | Who? |
A69886 | Whoever continued in his fear and was forsaken? |
A69886 | Whose Joys are transitory? |
A69886 | Why Lord, dost thou now break off my Life? |
A69886 | Why art thou angry with those that mind thee of the approaching danger? |
A69886 | Why art thou insatiable? |
A69886 | Why art thou so full of heaviness, O my Soul? |
A69886 | Why can he not be called back again? |
A69886 | Why did I shew Lazarus no mercy o ● ● arth? |
A69886 | Why did not give Lazarus a crumb of Bread? |
A69886 | Why didst not thou permit me to make up the full hundred? |
A69886 | Why do we fear to die? |
A69886 | Why do you look on them as if you would eat them up? |
A69886 | Why dost thou change thy former good Resolutions? |
A69886 | Why dost thou complain against thy self? |
A69886 | Why shall I weep, and cry thus mournfully both day and night, seeing he is dead and gone? |
A69886 | Why should I alive refuse it? |
A69886 | Why should I fear to restore that which I received upon that condition? |
A69886 | Why should he either fear one or t''other, who is conscious to himself, that a Man ought not to fear any thing but death? |
A69886 | Why should not I tell thee the Portion that is prepared for thee? |
A69886 | Why shouldst thou spend thy Quiver on my head? |
A69886 | Why so? |
A69886 | Why then do I take on, as if I either suspected his happiness, or doubted of following him? |
A69886 | Why then should I not sorrow for the loss of such a Brother? |
A69886 | Why then, O Man, canst thou not imitate Christ upon the Cross? |
A69886 | Why therefore do we fear at last? |
A69886 | Why therefore, O my Soul, shouldst thou be loth to part upon fair terms? |
A69886 | Why tremblest thou? |
A69886 | Why weepest thou? |
A69886 | Why with a slow Consumption, cruel Death, Dost thou d ● prive me slowly of my Breath? |
A69886 | Why, O Clay, dost thou murmur against the Potter? |
A69886 | Why, O dying Friend, dost thou set apart to Morrow, or the next Day for thy Salvation? |
A69886 | Why, how can this be? |
A69886 | Why? |
A69886 | Will it not be so in Heaven? |
A69886 | Will the enjoying of sinful pleasures, or empty lying vanities, for ● few minutes, recompence the loss of Heaven ● t self? |
A69886 | Wilt thou inlarge thy Barn? |
A69886 | Wilt thou shew a mira ● ● to the Dead; or shall the Dead rise up a ● ● praise thee? |
A69886 | Worm of a Man, what wouldst thou have? |
A69886 | Would Chance have us adore her lawless will? |
A69886 | Would not he be the Laughing- stock of others, who being Condemned among many, should beg to be the last Executed? |
A69886 | Would not this Rich Man afford thee some out- house to lie in, to shroud thee from Storms and Tempests? |
A69886 | Would you know the reason hereof in a word? |
A69886 | Wouldest thou have me abandon the Gaiety of Masks? |
A69886 | Wouldst thou have an Abstract, an Epitome of all Humane Life? |
A69886 | Wouldst thou have it in Man? |
A69886 | Wouldst thou have more signal Arguments? |
A69886 | Wouldst thou live? |
A69886 | Yea, Man giveth up the Ghost and where is he? |
A69886 | Yea, he reproved them, and said unto them, Why trouble ye the Woman? |
A69886 | Yes, he did: But what then? |
A69886 | You ask how the same Body can be restored? |
A69886 | You warn us of approaching Death, and why May we not know from you what''t is to dye? |
A69886 | and bemoan himself as if his life were broken off in the third Act? |
A69886 | and hold communion with him, and yet not know him? |
A69886 | and to appoint that time for Devotion, which thou canst no otherwise employ? |
A69886 | and was troubled, and said, where have ye laid him? |
A69886 | and why perswade you me, now I am at the point of death, to abate of that rigor, which I all my life have used? |
A69886 | be taken out of this World? |
A69886 | but a Vapour that appeareth but a little? |
A69886 | can I bring him back again? |
A69886 | can I put life into him? |
A69886 | can I revive him? |
A69886 | cursed, cursed, most accursed Soul, ● Where am I now? |
A69886 | for which no mercy is shewed to me in Hell ▪ ● hat shall I do? |
A69886 | had GOD any glory by me? |
A69886 | had men any good by me? |
A69886 | he that hath made man of nothing, shall he not be able to raise him again out of the dust at the last day? |
A69886 | how shall these windows be opened, which have so long since been dampned up with clay? |
A69886 | how shall they awake? |
A69886 | how shall they sing the song of the Lord in a strange language? |
A69886 | how shall they sing? |
A69886 | into everlasting Happiness, or into Everlasting Misery and Torments? |
A69886 | is it not enough that many of them may know thee? |
A69886 | is it not like unto a Vapour, which appeareth for a little time, and then vanisheth away? |
A69886 | makes answer himself, and saith, The earth hath swallowed them up all? |
A69886 | must I Be forc''d to live when I desire to die? |
A69886 | my good friends, where are your years? |
A69886 | no ▪ Many Dishes? |
A69886 | no, no: What is it then that thou dost desire? |
A69886 | no: Or thou wouldest have some delicate Meat? |
A69886 | no: Or thou wouldest sit at the Table with his Sons and Servants? |
A69886 | no: Would not his Wife intreat her Husband for thee? |
A69886 | no: would not his Children speak for thee? |
A69886 | no: would not his servants pity thee? |
A69886 | nonne in paucis ossibus memoria eorum conservatur? |
A69886 | or dost thou know how to bribe Death, that it may alwayes stand at a distance? |
A69886 | or for Counsel, ● he were a Lawyer? |
A69886 | or have I not power to deliver? |
A69886 | or how is it with thee? |
A69886 | or whither goes his Soul when it is once gone out of his Body? |
A69886 | said the pious Wadsworth, in his Answer to the Fear of Death; and dost thou say thou knowest none in Heaven? |
A69886 | say she plead Antiquity of possession so many thousand years? |
A69886 | shall I make answer, when I am turned and resolved into Dust? |
A69886 | shall Paul ● ear in his Body the marks of the Lord Jesus, and not bear in the same body the crown of his glory? |
A69886 | shall he cause to travail, and shall be not bring forth? |
A69886 | these well tuned Cymbals? |
A69886 | unless we accompt Cares, Troubles, Pains, Vexations, and Sins for Advantages: Or what would he have had more, had he liv''d Eight Hundred? |
A69886 | what Child can reflect upon the impossibility of ever seeing his Father or Mother more, and not be overwhelmed with grief? |
A69886 | what Friends are those that howl? |
A69886 | what Parent can consider this, with respect to his Child, and not mourn? |
A69886 | what Riches do we seem to heap, what Honours do we invest our selves withal, what Pleasures do we seem to enjoy? |
A69886 | what Wife can have such a thought of her Husband, and not faint? |
A69886 | what are you born of God ▪ united to God by faith and love? |
A69886 | what doth the holy Ghost say, yea, and nay; can sweet and bitter water come from the same fountain? |
A69886 | what is it thou wouldst have? |
A69886 | what would then these wretches do? |
A69886 | when I know that all things have their end? |
A69886 | when I shall make a journey to Heaven? |
A69886 | when the elect, and chosen people of God have a dissolution of Soul and Body: Whether their hope of rising any more dyeth with them? |
A69886 | where is Solomon the Wise, Or Sampson strong in Fight; Where is the lovely Absalom; Or David''s dear Delight? |
A69886 | wherefore art thou perplexed? |
A69886 | wherefore should I take on thus sadly, being all is in vain? |
A69886 | which of them darest thou touch or raste of? |
A69886 | who hath pure eyes, and can not behold iniquity and sin? |
A69886 | who shall be the Author of that Resurrection? |
A69886 | who shall rest in thy holy place? |
A69886 | who would not be in the Rich man''s state? |
A69886 | who would not comfort them? |
A69886 | who would not pity them? |
A69886 | why Do thy Steeds tread so slowly on? |
A69886 | why art thou not satisfied? |
A69886 | why dost thou refuse the Cup? |
A69886 | wouldst thou not that I should drink the Cup which the Father provided for me, which Christ mingled for me? |
A69886 | yet all these are but a Dream, how short, and how vain? |
A69886 | yet hast thou not believed in him whom thou hast not seen, and rejoiced with joy unspeakable, and full of glory? |
A69886 | — What art thou then afraid of? |
A69886 | 〈 … 〉 what if thou hast not seen him with thy 〈 … 〉 eyes? |