Enchiridion miscellaneum spare houres improv'd in meditations divine, contemplative, practical, moral, ethical, oeconomical, political : from the pietie and learning of Fr. Quarles & Ar. Warwick, Gents. : by it they being dead, yet speak (Heb. XI. 4).

About this Item

Title
Enchiridion miscellaneum spare houres improv'd in meditations divine, contemplative, practical, moral, ethical, oeconomical, political : from the pietie and learning of Fr. Quarles & Ar. Warwick, Gents. : by it they being dead, yet speak (Heb. XI. 4).
Author
Quarles, Francis, 1592-1644.
Publication
Amsterdam :: Printed by Stephen Swart ...,
1677.
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Subject terms
Conduct of life.
Maxims.
Cite this Item
"Enchiridion miscellaneum spare houres improv'd in meditations divine, contemplative, practical, moral, ethical, oeconomical, political : from the pietie and learning of Fr. Quarles & Ar. Warwick, Gents. : by it they being dead, yet speak (Heb. XI. 4)." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A56983.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 19, 2024.

Pages

CHAP. XXXIV.

When I see the heavenly Sunn buried under earth in the evening of the day, & in the morning to find a resurrec∣tion to his glory, Why (think I) may not the Sonnes of heaven buried in th' earth, in the evning of their daies, expect the morning of their glorious Resurrection? Each night is but the pastdayes funerall, and the morning his resurrection: Why then should our funerall sleep bee other then our sleep at night? Why should we not as well awake to our Resurrection, as in the morning? I see night is rather an intermission of day, then a deprivation, and death rather borrows our life of us then robbs us of it. Since then the glory of the Sunn findes a Resurrection, why should not the sonnes of glory? Since a

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dead man may live againe, I will not so much look for an end of my life; as wait for the comming of my change.

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