        item: #1 of 7
          id: A14757
      author: Ward, Samuel, 1577-1640.
       title: VVoe to drunkards A sermon by Samuel Ward preacher of Ipswich.
        date: 1622
       words: 8451
      flesch: 67
     summary: God sometimes practising Marshall law and doing present execution , lest fooles shall say in their heart , there were no God or Iudgement : but conniuing and deferring the most , that men might expect a Iudge comming , and a solemne day of Iudgement to come . But thankes bee to God , who hath reserued many thousands of men , and without all comparison more wittie and valorous , then such Pot-wits , and Spirits of the Buttery , who neuer bared their knees to drinke health , nor euen needed to whet their wits with wine , or arme their courage with Pot - 〈◊〉 .
    keywords: bee; death; drinke; drunkards; euer; god; grace; hath; haue; hee; man; serpent; sinne; tcp; text; thee; thou; thy; time; vpon; wine; woe
       cache: A14757.xml
  plain text: A14757.txt

        item: #2 of 7
          id: A20253
      author: Dent, Daniel.
       title: A sermon against drunkennes preached at Ware by Daniel Dent ...
        date: 1628
       words: 6638
      flesch: 67
     summary: Sicknes , that is a concomitant of this vice ; It is an excellent saying of Chrysostome , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 &c. water doth not so dissolve the earth , as pouring in wine consumeth the body , breeding innumerable diseases in all the regions of mans body in the Animalls , Vitalls , and Naturalls : hence come Lethargies , Apoplexies , Palsies , Catarrhes , Dropsies , Fevers , Consumptions , and many more the Harbingers of death . Now , to drinke wine is not unlawfull ; for every creature is good , if it be received with thankesgiving ; and wine moderately taken , saith Solomon , makes glad the heart , and therefore he would have it given to them that were of heavy hearts ; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , It is not the use of wine , but the abuse that is forbidden , as Chrysostome observes : for there was drunkennesse before the vertue of the grape was knowne to Noah ; and surely , if to drinke wine had been unlawfull , our Saviour would never have turned water into wine at the marriage Feast ; especially , he would never have instituted it as a memoriall of his Blood-shedding :
    keywords: drinke; drinkers; god; men; prophet; reason; sleep; tcp; text; time; vice; wine
       cache: A20253.xml
  plain text: A20253.txt

        item: #3 of 7
          id: A27886
      author: Antiphiloinos, Philander.
       title: Bacchus conculcatus, or, Sober reflections upon drinking an essay / by Philander Antiphiloinos ...
        date: 1691
       words: 1876
      flesch: 75
     summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 106594)
    keywords: eebo; english; philander; tcp; text
       cache: A27886.xml
  plain text: A27886.txt

        item: #4 of 7
          id: A40446
      author: Freeman, George, Sir.
       title: A dehortation from all sinne, but particularly the sinne of drinking. By George Freman sonne to Sr Raphe Freman master of requests
        date: 1663
       words: 3940
      flesch: 35
     summary: These are the entrances of Hell into thy soul , upon the withdrawings of God and spirituall consolations ; without which the soul languisheth , as the body fainteth upon a decay of the animall , or vitall spirits : this must thou look for after the continuance in any known , and presumptuous sin , but if thou find it not , thy condition is dangerous , for the obduration , or hardening of the heart is the threshold of Hell : look quickly then and seriously into thy soul ; labour to get a sight of thy sins in the Book of Conscience , whiles they may be blotted out ; pray earnestly to God for a true sense of them , ( for prayer is the Key of Heaven ; ) consider often of Death , Judgement , Heaven , and Hell ; think how odious the sin of ingratitude is between man and man , and that unthankfulness for the Blood of Christ is the highest of that kinde : think of the shortness of mans life , and the great business is to be done in that little life : that thy short life is posting to an end ; O the folly , and madness of sin ! it is a continuall acting against reason , a treasuring up of wrath with the God of all power , a providing for the society of Devils , and damned souls , who will be cursing their Maker , and one another to all eternity ; 't is that which only is dishonourable to man , a disturbance to Commonwealths ; it is the satisfaction of Devils ( if they could have any , ) the trouble of Angels , and blessed souls , nay the grieving of the holy Ghost , and the continuall murthering of the Son of God. Now although many men that drink not , may , and do often these things , and far worse ; yet drink betrays them more easily to vanities , and idle pastimes : therefore be carefull to avoid this degree of drinking , and thou wilt then be secure from the scandalous sin of visible drunkenness , which is the beastly consummation of the former : I do not speak this to perswade men from society , and chearfulness ; as if Religion , and mirth were things inconsistent ; since I know that true mirth is found no where else : but we do for the most part mistake mirth the most of any thing : accounting that it consists in laughter only ; whereas properly a man may be most truly merry when he laugheth least : for none laugh more than Ideots , and men of weak understanding , and sensualists ; while men advanc'd in knowledge , and quieted in mind , by serious and due reflections on themselves , do it but seldome : but none will deny but the latter sort , have the greater cause for mirth , and consequently must needs be more truly merry ; for true mirth is a complacency of the mind , arising from the apprehension of our personall happiness ; yet while we are in the body , laughter is naturall , and if it be kept within its bounds , and plac't upon right subjects , is both allowable , and conducing to health ; but is not tyed to the Glass , or Bowl : This caution against drinking , concerns those chiefly whose bodies require strong drinks in some small proportion , ( for none do much ) since those who are of another temperament , will abstain without any mans counsell , or any vertue of their own , which is only seen where there are propensities to the contrary ; though some men of this sort may contract habits to themselves , contrary to the first requisites of nature .
    keywords: drinking; god; man; men; sin; soul; tcp; text; time
       cache: A40446.xml
  plain text: A40446.txt

        item: #5 of 7
          id: A46993
      author: Jole, William, d. ca. 1702.
       title: A vvarning to drunkards by the sad and suddain death of John Woolman, of Sarret, in the county of Hartford. With a letter of exhortation written to the people on that sorrowful occasion. By William Jole, minister of Sarret.
        date: 1680
       words: 2774
      flesch: 68
     summary: Secondly , Consider what heinous Aggravations this Sin admitts of ; Secondly , Consider how one Drunkard makes many more Partakers of his Sin.
    keywords: drunkard; drunkenness; sarret; sin; tcp; text; time
       cache: A46993.xml
  plain text: A46993.txt

        item: #6 of 7
          id: A70365
      author: James I, King of England, 1566-1625. Counterblaste to tobacco.
       title: Two broad-sides against tobacco the first given by King James of famous memory, his Counterblast to tobacco : the second transcribed out of that learned physician Dr. Everard Maynwaringe, his Treatise of the scurvy : to which is added, serious cautions against excess in drinking, taken out of another work of the same author, his Preservation of health and prolongation of life : with a short collection, out of Dr. George Thompson's treatise of Bloud, against smoking tobacco : also many examples of God's severe judgments upon notorious drunkards, who have died suddenly, in a sermon preached by Mr. Samuel Ward : concluding with two poems against tobacco and coffee / corrected and published, as very proper for this age, by J.H.
        date: 1672
       words: 29706
      flesch: 54
     summary: Gentle Readers , HEre is presented to you a Brief , Learned , and a very seasonable Treatise for the Age we live in : It was many years since Penned by King James of happy and blessed Memory , Entituled , A Counterblast to Tobacco ; It it here verbatim , faithfully transcribed out of the large and learned Volume of His other Works in Folio , which are rare and scarce to be had for money , and of too great a price for the common sort of Tobacco-smokers to purchase : It is granted , the thing may be good , and Physical , and healthful , being moderately and but seldom taken ; but for men to take ten or twenty Pipes in a day in all Companies , Morning , Noon and Night , before and presently after Meals ; this is a strange way of taking Physick . Whereas if men were so wise for their own good , both in Body , Soul , and Estate , as to handle a good Book , either of Divinity , or of Morality , half so often as they do the Pipe of smoke , it would be better for them in all respects , more precious time and money would be saved .
    keywords: body; cold; common; custome; death; disease; doth; drink; drinking; drunkards; drunkenness; evil; fit; god; good; hath; health; house; life; like; man; men; nature; persons; scurvy; self; sin; smoke; smoking; spirits; stomach; taking; thee; thou; time; tobacco; use; wine
       cache: A70365.xml
  plain text: A70365.txt

        item: #7 of 7
          id: B02730
      author: Dod, John, 1549?-1645.
       title: An extempore sermon, preached upon malt, by a way of caution to good fellows; at the request of two schollars, / by a lover of ale, out of a hallow [sic] tree.
        date: 1691
       words: 1343
      flesch: 66
     summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. B02730) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 175838) Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL).
    keywords: ale; tcp; text
       cache: B02730.xml
  plain text: B02730.txt

