Kaina kai palaia Things new and old, or, A store-house of similies, sentences, allegories, apophthegms, adagies, apologues, divine, morall, politicall, &c. : with their severall applications / collected and observed from the writings and sayings of the learned in all ages to this present by John Spencer ...

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Title
Kaina kai palaia Things new and old, or, A store-house of similies, sentences, allegories, apophthegms, adagies, apologues, divine, morall, politicall, &c. : with their severall applications / collected and observed from the writings and sayings of the learned in all ages to this present by John Spencer ...
Publication
London :: Printed by W. Wilson and J. Streater, for John Spencer ...,
1658.
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Subject terms
Quotations, English.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A61120.0001.001
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"Kaina kai palaia Things new and old, or, A store-house of similies, sentences, allegories, apophthegms, adagies, apologues, divine, morall, politicall, &c. : with their severall applications / collected and observed from the writings and sayings of the learned in all ages to this present by John Spencer ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A61120.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 16, 2024.

Pages

[ 292] The blessing of God is to be eyed more then our own endeavours.

IT is Seneca's observation,* 1.1 that the Husbandmen in Egypt never look up to Hea∣ven for rain in the time of drought,* 1.2 but look after the over-flowing of the banks of Nilus, to be the onely cause of their plenty: And such are they that sacrifice to their own nets and yarn, that look upon their own endeavours, attribute all success to their own projects, and in the mean time never so much as cast up an eye unto God the Author of all, in whom they live, by whom they move, and from whom they have their being.

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