circumstances which make it unsupportable, but death assumes fearfull shapes to affrighten us, he is not content to part our soules from our bodies, to break in two the chains which did unite them, and to destroy Gods chiefest workmanship, but to satisfie his cruel∣ty, & tire our patience, he assumes a thousand frightfull shapes, and leaves marks of his fury in the persons of the dead which terrifie the living. He appears hideous even in the beautifullest visage that ever was; he shrinks up the nerves, hollows the eyes, defaceth the complexion, alters the lineaments, and turns a miraculous beauty into a dreadfull Monster. Somtimes he burnes the bowels by the scorching heat of a fever, somtimes swels up the body by a long continued dropsie, somtimes he makes an anatomy, or skeleton thereof, by an irksome consumption, somtimes forms strange characters in the lungs or brain, somtimes he covers the face over with an ulcer, and changes the Throne of beauty into the Seat of deformity.
Violent deaths are yet more uncoucht than such as are naturall; they are not to be beheld without terrour, and those who have cou∣rage enough to tolerate the gout or stone, have not constancy enough to endure the torture of fire▪ or rack; 'tis therefore that it is said, that our father Adam knew not the heinousnesse of his sin, till he saw the picture of death in Abels face; the losse of grace, Gods anger, the Angels indignation, his banishment from Paradise, the creatures revolt, the alteration of seasons, warring of Elements, nor yet the insurrection of the body against the soule, were not suf∣ficient to make known unto him the exorbitancy of his sin, nor the injustice of his disobedience: but when he saw his son want moti∣on, his eyes want light, when he heard no words proceed from his mouth, saw no colour in his face, nor felt no motion of his heart, he thought his sin was very great since it deserved so sore a punishment.
To say truth, death is the image of sin, this father makes himselfe seen in his daughter, his uglinesse is seen in his pro∣duction, and there needs no more to acknowledge the misery of a sinner, than to consider the aspect of a dead man. Those pale lips, those sunk eyes, those hollowed cheeks, and that corruption which always accompanies stench, is the shadow of a soule which mortall sin hath bereaved of innocency and grace. All teacheth us that we are criminall, and that the evills which we endure, are as