1)4 The time to come. Per~.vD[. I. pa. 37') .Co[.r, The Saints anddeath ;ifthou get on horfe-backe,one fiumble may take away thy life : if rho~walke through the fire.ets ofaCide, fo many tiles upon the houfes, ·m, aybe fo many infl:rume!lts ofthy death : befides,· impoifonings, infidiations, rage of creatures, the 1 hands of bloody men and infinite waies befides : if thou·comeev~~ to afweet and wel.fenced garden, · where thou thmkefi: of nothing but plea!l1re and fafetie, even there (faithcalvin)may lurke anAd– der, whichmay bee thy baHe. What privilege, or · ' protection hail: thou, bee rhou' never fo llrong or young, to fee the funne rife the next morning, fith . many hav~gone wen to bed, and before morning it is become their grave? If then there bee fo many l waics to let thee 6ut ofthis life, and thou maiell be ct1tofffo fuddainlyand fo ·.f9one, and ifthou die as thou art, art certainly damned, what a miterable man art thou? and in howwofull acafe ? ~ Looke forward and upon the time to·come. And therein confider., 1 Death, through which thou mull: fhortly patre. Som~dreadfull and fringing circumfrances where– of, fee Pin. Dequatzeornovijfimu. pag. r. t The dreadfull tribunallofrhe everlivingGod, before which thou mull: fhortly appeare, where, what miferie will meet thee, it is unconceivable. ~ That fiery lake wherein thou mull: liefor ever, which is the miferieofall miferies,becaufe endletfe, eaileffe and remedildfe ;--where there are torments without end and pafHma~ination, and fuch as thou £halt never.be able t6avoid or abide. But no tongue can tell them, noheart conceive them. , , To '.
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