Ecclesiastes, othervvise called The preacher Containing Salomons sermons or commentaries (as it may probably be collected) vpon the 49. Psalme of Dauid his father. Compendiously abridged, and also paraphrastically dilated in English poesie, according to the analogie of Scripture, and consent of the most approued writer thereof. Composed by H.L. Gentleman. Whereunto are annexed sundrie sonets of Christian passions heretofore printed, and now corrected and augmented, with other affectionate sonets of a feeling conscience of the same authors.

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Title
Ecclesiastes, othervvise called The preacher Containing Salomons sermons or commentaries (as it may probably be collected) vpon the 49. Psalme of Dauid his father. Compendiously abridged, and also paraphrastically dilated in English poesie, according to the analogie of Scripture, and consent of the most approued writer thereof. Composed by H.L. Gentleman. Whereunto are annexed sundrie sonets of Christian passions heretofore printed, and now corrected and augmented, with other affectionate sonets of a feeling conscience of the same authors.
Author
Lok, Henry.
Publication
London :: Printed by Richard Field, dwelling in the Blacke-friers neare Ludgate,
1597.
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"Ecclesiastes, othervvise called The preacher Containing Salomons sermons or commentaries (as it may probably be collected) vpon the 49. Psalme of Dauid his father. Compendiously abridged, and also paraphrastically dilated in English poesie, according to the analogie of Scripture, and consent of the most approued writer thereof. Composed by H.L. Gentleman. Whereunto are annexed sundrie sonets of Christian passions heretofore printed, and now corrected and augmented, with other affectionate sonets of a feeling conscience of the same authors." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A06202.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 23, 2024.

Pages

Page 31

[verse 17] My hart yet giues both good & bad, in due time God wil find. [verse 18] Who made mā pure, & gaue him wit, though brutish wil be blind.
17.
I thought in mine hart, God will iudge the iust and the wicked: for time is there for euery pur∣pose, and for euery worke.
For God the great law-giuer, wise and iust, Who sees the thoughts, and secrets of the raynes, Though he a while, permit them in their lust To range, in pride of their malicious braynes, Yet when he please, their progresse he restraynes, And makes them stand before his iudgement seat, Whose sway on earth doth seeme most powrful great.
He cals each creature in his time at will, To wreke the wrongs that innocents abyde: Plague, famine, sword, attend vpon him still, And all mishaps the wicked doe betyde, Fro out the snares, the iust he safe doth guyde In his due time, and them with honour crowne, But their oppressors, headlong plucketh downe.
18.
I considered in mine heart, the state of the children of mē that God had purged them: yet to see to, they are in thē∣selues as beasts
Thus mayst thou see (as I do truly say) By deepe consideration of the thing, To humaine state on earth, each houre and day Some chaunge, or alteration new to bring To all estates, to subiects as to King: And that albeit in creation, we Were holy and pure, we now corrupted be.
Through which corruption, death did first creepe in, And death with it, all plagues and wants hath brought, The heauie recompence of parents sin, By them infusd to vs, by vs still wrought: Corrupt throughout, in word, in deed, in thought, With more then brutish sins which in vs raigne, And in our of-spring alwayes will remaine.
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