I 2 50 'The ·Duty and PleaJure ·bodies of ours are n1ade of fo various parts, and withal fo nice and delicate, that the lcafl: thing in the v,rorld is enough to in– tangle a!Jd diforder them. A drop of hu-– tnour, or a grain of fand,. will fc>1netimes occafion fuch anguifh and pain, as render a man infenfible of all the comforts he en– joyeth in the .\vorld: and they who un– derfbnd any thing of 'the human body, v1ill jufily wonder that all the parts arc · kept in orde'r for an hout. What a n1ercy otight we therefore to account it, -to find ourfelves in health and vigour, no aching in our head, no noifomncfs in our fiomach, no fever ·in the blood, none of the hu-_ n1ours vitiated, none ·of thofe innBn1era,ble conduits brokenwhich convey them, but all the _ organs perforn1ing their proper fuqEti– ons, and a fprightly vigour pofreffing every part! I-Iow n1uch are we indebted to that provide~~e vihich preferveth us fron1 falls· l 1 and brunes, and keepeth all our bones,fo tbqt n ~me ~/them i.r broken; whi eh watcheth over us when we are not able to care for our– fclves! vVhat a bleffing· is it to enioy the re– pofe of the night; tha;. we are not wearied' \vith end lcfs toffings and rollings, norflared ' with dreams, and terr(fied with ,..uijions,. \vhercof holy Job complains; that we -qre" proteCt~d
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