The fort-royal of the Scriptures, or, The vade-mecum concordance presenting unto the world an hundred heads of Scripture, most of them common-placed for publique use : wherein all (especially the weaker sort of Christians) may suddenly command most of all the rarities in the book of God / by an admirer of the word.

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Title
The fort-royal of the Scriptures, or, The vade-mecum concordance presenting unto the world an hundred heads of Scripture, most of them common-placed for publique use : wherein all (especially the weaker sort of Christians) may suddenly command most of all the rarities in the book of God / by an admirer of the word.
Author
Hart, John, D.D.
Publication
Edinburgh :: Printed by the Heires of George Anderson for Andrew Wilson,
1649.
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Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A45722.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The fort-royal of the Scriptures, or, The vade-mecum concordance presenting unto the world an hundred heads of Scripture, most of them common-placed for publique use : wherein all (especially the weaker sort of Christians) may suddenly command most of all the rarities in the book of God / by an admirer of the word." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A45722.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 16, 2024.

Pages

In our Friends.

To put our brethren far from us,

And utterly to

Page 147

estrange our brethren far from us, Job 19.13.

To have our kinsmen to fail us, our familiar friends to forget us, Job 19.14. & 15.16.

To be abhorred of inward friends, and those that loved turned against us, Job 19.19

To have our lovers friends and kinsmen to stand afar off from our grief, Ps. 38.11.

To have lovers friends and acquaintance bee put far from us,

And our acquaintance into darknesse, Ps. 88.18

All friends dealing treacherously being be∣come enemies, Lam. 1.2

To call for our lo∣vers, but to be deceived by them, Lam. 1.18.

To be scorned of friends,

Yet our eyes to poure out teares unto God, Iob 16.20.

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