Certaine serious thoughts which at severall times & upon sundry occasions have stollen themselves into verse and now into the publike view from the author [Wyvill coat of arms] Esquire ; together w[i]th a chronologicall table denoeting [sic] the names of such princes as ruled the neighbor states and were con-temporary to our English kings, observeing throughout ye number of yeares w[hi]ch every one of them reigned.

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Title
Certaine serious thoughts which at severall times & upon sundry occasions have stollen themselves into verse and now into the publike view from the author [Wyvill coat of arms] Esquire ; together w[i]th a chronologicall table denoeting [sic] the names of such princes as ruled the neighbor states and were con-temporary to our English kings, observeing throughout ye number of yeares w[hi]ch every one of them reigned.
Author
Wyvill, Christopher, 1651?-1711.
Publication
London :: Printed by F.B. for George Badger and are to be sold at his shop ...,
1647.
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Subject terms
English poetry.
Great Britain -- Kings and rulers -- Chronology.
Cite this Item
"Certaine serious thoughts which at severall times & upon sundry occasions have stollen themselves into verse and now into the publike view from the author [Wyvill coat of arms] Esquire ; together w[i]th a chronologicall table denoeting [sic] the names of such princes as ruled the neighbor states and were con-temporary to our English kings, observeing throughout ye number of yeares w[hi]ch every one of them reigned." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A67233.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 23, 2024.

Pages

CHARITY.

ANd from the fruitfull teeming womb of Faith Each work of Charity beginning hath;

Page 30

From these the happy evidence is had Which prove's them sons of God, whom faith hath made. What e're thy God or Neighbours good requires Must be the serious bent of thy desires. Else know that to those things which heavenly bee A mis-call'd Faith cannot entitle thee. How dare presumptous hast once think to make Christ, Saviour and not Lord: sit down and take A survey of thine heart; though nothing there Can justifie thee, yet unlesse thou beare The Image of thy God, and strive to frame Thy likened conversation to the same, Thou hast no part nor share in him who gave Himselfe to death, repentant man to save. Now blush you Rhemish factors who have lay'd Your envious heads together to upbray'd With liberty a doctrin which hath shown Far better, strickter precepts then your owne; Perhaps you pick halfe sentences, and thence Extract an unmeant Heresie and sence. A cloud of reverend witnesses I might Produce, which neither more nor lesse do write

Page 31

As to this point (though not in rime) then lye Here recollected, for the readers eye.
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