Husbandry spiritualized, or, The heavenly use of earthly things consisting of many pleasant observations, pertinent applications, and serious reflections and each chapter concluded with a divine and suitable poem : directing husband-men to the most excellent improvements of their common imployments : whereunto is added ... several choice occasional meditations / by John Flavell.

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Title
Husbandry spiritualized, or, The heavenly use of earthly things consisting of many pleasant observations, pertinent applications, and serious reflections and each chapter concluded with a divine and suitable poem : directing husband-men to the most excellent improvements of their common imployments : whereunto is added ... several choice occasional meditations / by John Flavell.
Author
Flavel, John, 1630?-1691.
Publication
London :: Printed and are to be sold by Robert Boulter,
l674.
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Subject terms
Christian life.
Meditations.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A39665.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Husbandry spiritualized, or, The heavenly use of earthly things consisting of many pleasant observations, pertinent applications, and serious reflections and each chapter concluded with a divine and suitable poem : directing husband-men to the most excellent improvements of their common imployments : whereunto is added ... several choice occasional meditations / by John Flavell." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A39665.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 1, 2024.

Pages

MEDIT. I.
Vpon the new modelling of a Garden.

A Gentlewoman who had lately seen a neat and curious Garden, returns to her own with a greater dislike of it thn ever; resolves to new model the whole plot, and re∣duce

Page 259

it to a better form, is now become so curious and neat, that not a weed or stone is suffered in it, but all must lye in exquisite order; and what ever ornament she had observed in her neighbours, she is now restless till she see it in her own.

Happy were it thought I, if in an holy emulation, every one would thus endeavour to rectifie the disorders of their own conversation, by the excellent graces they behold in the more heavenly and regular lives of others. Some Chri∣stians there are (I wish their number were greater) whose actions lye in such a comely and beautiful order, that few of their neighbours con look upon their examples without self-conviction and shame; but few are so happy to be provoked unto self-reformation but such rare patterns. I see, it is much easier to pull up many weeds out of a Garden, than one cor∣ruption out of the heart, and to procure an hundred flowers to adorn a knot, than one grace to beautifie the soul. 'Tis more natural to corrupt man to envy, than to imitate the spiritual excellencies of others.

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