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
Cite this Item
"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 8, 2024.

Pages

Page 126

[ 501] Mortality of the sinners life to be considered and deplored.

IT is reported of Xerxes,* 1.1 that having prepared 300000. men to fight with the Graecians, and having mustered them up into a general Rendezvous, and taken notice of their strength,* 1.2 and the greatness of their number, he fell a weeping, out of the consideration that not one of them should remain alive within the space of an hundreth years: Much more ought we to mourn then, when we consider the abundance of people that are in England, and the abundance of sin perpetrated a∣mongst us; and what shall become not onely of our bodies within these few years, but what shall become of our souls to all Eternity.

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