
5 Beautiful Things We Can Learn from Autumn
Emma Danzey
The sun shall not smite thee by day
With its rays, which it shoots forth like darts, and which fly swiftly, and pierce and hurt: hence Apollo, the same with the sun, is represented with a bow and arrows F15; so the rays of the sun seem to be called in ( Habakkuk 2:11 ) ;
nor the moon by night;
this clause should be supplied, as a learned man
``20 When the cold north wind bloweth, and the water is congealed into ice, it abideth upon every gathering together of water, and clotheth the water as with a breastplate. 21 It devoureth the mountains, and burneth the wilderness, and consumeth the grass as fire.'' (Sirach 43)see ( Genesis 31:40 ) ; and our English poet F23 expresses a sentiment to this effect; yet not what affects the bodies of men, but plants, trees, &c. and this not owing to the moon, but to the air. However, these clauses are not to be understood literally; for good men may be smitten and hurt by the heat of the one and the cold of the other, as Jacob and Jonah, ( Genesis 31:40 ) ( Jonah 4:8 ) ; but mystically, of persecuting antichristian tyrants, which are sometimes signified by the sun and moon, as both in Rome Pagan and Papal, ( Revelation 6:12 ) ( 16:8 ) ; and of persecution and tribulation itself, ( Matthew 13:6 Matthew 13:21 ) ( Song of Solomon 1:6 ) ; and is sometimes applied to the perfect state of the saints, either in the New Jerusalem, or ultimate glory, when there will be nothing more of this kind, ( Revelation 7:15 Revelation 7:16 ) . And there are some periods in the present state, when those entirely cease; nor are the saints ever really hurt by them, they being always for their good; or, however, not so as to affect their eternal happiness. The Targum is,
``in the day, when the sun rules, the morning spirits shall not smite thee; nor the nocturnal ones in the night, when the moon rules.''