A comfortable corroborative cordial: or, A sovereign antidote against, and preservative from, the horrours & harms of death : affording a direction how to live and die, so as to be fortified and fenced against the greatest fears and sharpest sense of that king of terrours. Represented in some observations made upon Rev. 14. 13. Upon occasion of the late death and burial of Mrs. Rebeccah Jackler late wife of Mr. John Jackler of Kings-Lynn in Norfolk, woollen-draper; who deceased Octob. 5. and was buried Octob. 7. 1671. By John Horne, sometime preacher of Gods word in Lynn-Alhallows in the same town. Useful to be considered by all men living in this state of mortality: because there is no man living but must certainly die.

  • Horn, John, 1614-1676
Date:
1672
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  • Online

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About this work

Also known as

Comfortable corroborative cordial
Sovereign antidote against, and preservative from, the horrours & harms of death.
Epitaphium in amicam suam Dam. Rebeccam Jackler.
Epitaph upon his deceased friend Mrs. R. J.

Publication/Creation

London : printed by Tho. Radcliffe, and N. Thompson, for B. Southwood at the Star next to Serjeants-Inn in Chancery-lane, 1672.

Physical description

8 unnumbered pages, 117 pages, 3 unnumbered pages

References note

Wing (2nd ed.) H2797.

Notes

"Epitaphium in amicam suam Dam. Rebeccam Jackler" is on final leaf in Latin (H8r) and in English (H8v) as, "An epitaph upon his deceased friend Mrs. R. J.".
Copy stained and tightly bound with slight loss of text.
Reproduction of the original in the British Library.

Reproduction note

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Mich. : UMI, 1999- (Early English books online) Digital version of: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 2091:28) s1999 miun s

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