Disce vivere: = learne to live. Disce mori: learne to dye. Two briefe treatises joyned together: the one, of learning to live; the other, of learning to dye. Wherein is shewed, in what manner every well disposed Christian may learne, first how to live the life of the righteous, and then how to dye the death of the righteous.
- Sutton, Christopher, 1565?-1629
- Date:
- 1626
- Books
- Online
Online resources
About this work
Also known as
Disce vivere: learne to live. The first treatise of learning to live.
Disce viuere: learne to liue. The first treatise of learning to liue.
Disce Mori: learne to dye. A religious discourse, mouing euery Christian man to enter into a serious remembrance of his end.
Disce Mori: learne to dye. A religious discourse, moving every Christian man to enter into a serious remembrance of his end.
Publication/Creation
Printed at London : I. D[awson] for Nicholas Bourne, at the Royall Exchange, 1626.
Physical description
48 unnumbered pages, 477 pages, 15 unnumbered pages; 40 unnumbered pages, 400, that is, 390 pages : illustrations
Contributors
Notes
Dedication signed: Christopher Sutton.
Parts 1 and 2 each have separate dated title pages. Part 1 reads: "Disce viuere: learne to liue. The first treatise of learning to liue" and imprint has "I. D[awson]. for Nicholas Bourne." Part 2 reads: "Disce mori: learne to dye. A religious discourse, mouing euery Christian man to enter into a serious remembrance of his end" and imprint has "Richard Badger and George Miller, for Nicholas Bourne.".
Page 390 misnumbered 400.
Imperfect; lacks general title page and leaf I11.
UMI microfilm reel 1587 has part 1 only.
Marginal notes.
References note
STC (2nd ed.) 23488.
Reproduction note
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Mich. : UMI, 1999- (Early English books online) Digital version of: (Early English books, 1475-1640 ; 1587:1, 1643:3) s1999 miun s