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King SOLOMON's Portraiture

of OLD AGE.

Ecclef. xii. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6.

Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth, while the evil days come not, nor the years draw nigh, when thou shalt fay, I have no pleasure in them. While the fun, or the light, or the moon, or the ftars be not darkened, nor the clouds return after the rain. In the day when the keepers of the house shall tremble, and the frong men shall bow themselves, and the grinders ceafe because they are few, and those that look out of the windows be darkened.

And the doors fhall be shut in the streets, when the found

of the grinding is low, and he shall rise up at the voice of the bird, and all the daughters of mufick shall be brought low.

Alfo when they shall be afraid of that which is high,

and fears fhall be in the way, and the almond-tree fball flourish and the grafhopper shall be a burthen, and defire fhall fail, because man goeth to his long home, and the mourners go about the streets.

Or ever the filver cord be loofed, or the golden bowl be broken, or the pitcher be broken at the fountain, or the wheel broken at the cistern.

HE Oracles of God are given forth. that the men of God may be made wife unto salvation, (2 Tim. iii. 15.)

and all those that through faith have themselves exercised therein; fhall, thro' grace, (the Spirit of God moving upon the waters,) obtain that most desired end; but this main happiness, is

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not the only, that may be acquired by searching the scripture; for there are many natural things, the knowledge whereof may be better gained in one line of them, than in whole volumes of confused naturalifts: Wherefore he that in the true fear of God shall apply himself to them, may think not only to have eternal life, but by the way also to obtain the true knowledge of most things that appertain to this. Seek first the Kingdom of God, and all other things fhall be added unto thee, Mat. vi. 33. Solomon fought after nothing but wisdom, but see what a gracious answer he received, I have given thee a wife and an understanding heart, I have also given that which thou haft not asked, both riches and honour, and I will lengthen thy days, 1 Kings iii. 5-15. Thus it pleaseth God to deal with those who are fincere, not only to give them their hearts defire, but to fuperadd somewhat they were not aware of, that may be beneficial to

in their courfe of life. Looking after the

of man, which is compleatly fet down in ver. 13. of this chapter, I find before I come there, an anatomical enumeration of the fad symptoms of extreme old age, and such an one as I dare be bold to say, is not elsewhere to be found. When the wisdom of the omniscient God, through his fervant Solomon fhall defcribe it, why should I fearch any further? Ænigmatical I confess it, and exceeding difficult; wherefore I have the more diligently applied myself

to the interpretation of it. And so much the rather, because I find various fenfes put upon the words, and scarce any one hath, without interruption, carried the allegory clean through the whole fix verses, as I judge it ought to be. And because a mistake in the parts of man, may cause a mistake in the literal interpretation, I (whose study it hath been to be more versed in those than ufual interpreters) do take the liberty to endeavour explication, wherein, if befide my own fatisfaction and content, I shall add any thing to others knowledge, I fhall therein have a second reward.

I am not ignorant of all, nor do I defpife any of those several interpretations both literal and myftical, that several learned and good men have been exercifing themselves in. There are that expound all this allegory, or at least some part of it, to a state of wickedness, to a state of poverty, to a state of spiritual desertion, to a famine of bread, or of the Word of God, to the feveral difperfions and captivities of the Jews, to the destruction of both the temples, and of Jerufalem, to the obftinacy of the Jews, to the unprofitableness of the Gentiles under their ministry, to the apoftafy of the latter times, to the end of the world, and to the day of judgment. I know God doth at sundry times, and in divers manners speak unto the world by his fervants, Heb. i. 1. And knowing this firft, that no prophecy of the fcripture is of

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any private interpretation; I know this from thence, that no private interpreter whatsoever is to bind up others to the measure of his own understanding. Now as I am against no other, fo there is no other against me in this that I am about. All that can be faid concerning it, is, that it is low, and mean, and ordinary, however (confest by all) it is true, genuine, and proper. And this may be faid of it beyond all other whatsoever; that it is the basis and foundation of all the reft. And every one of them receive their clarity of truth, from the analogy they bear to this primary interpretation; that is, that these fix verses are a true and proper description, of the natural, infirm, and decrepit age of mankind. That which the Latins call ætas capularis; the age of him who is fhortly to be taken unto death, or into the coffin, or upon the bier, or into the grave; plainly the age of him, who is by courfe of nature just at his last, and must ere long neceffarily yield to inevitable diffolution. There is in that language also another word (which way foever we take its etymology) that will excellently fignify unto us the condition here delineated. And that is filicernium; for whether we take it, quafi filiceâ herniâ laborans; he that. is troubled with hard ruptures, as very old men for the most part are, or fili herbâ usurus, he that will foon call into use fuch an herb as was then accustomed to funeral entertainments, or

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filentibus brevi cernendus, he that will quickly be free among the dead; or laftly, filices cernens ; he that by his age and infirmity is continually put in mind of his tomb; or rather (that which seems to be most proper) he that is bowed down with age, so that he cannot but behold the ground whereon he now stands, and under which he muft ere long be laid. And this answereth exactly to the Greek word, yépwv, παρὰ τὸ ἐις γῆν ὁρᾷν.

I fhall not take upon me precisely to limit the bounds of this decrepit state, forafmuch as they are various, in refpect of the difpofitions of mens bodies, of their course of lives, and also of the places and ages in which they live. The lives of the Patriarchs before the flood were extended to almost a thousand years, Gen. v. 27. and yet we read not of those sad symptoms attending them, as attend us now at fourscore. About the time of the flood, God abbreviates the course of man's life, and feems precisely to fet it at one hundred and twenty years, Gen. lxiii. I know very well moft men would have this text to be understood as a threatening only to the prefent inhabitants of the old world, that it should be fo many years before the flood swept them all away: But it seems to me (and not to me only *) rather to intend the cutting short of the life of man for the future. For it is clear by the context, that

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Jofephus, lib. 1. c. 7.

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