This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
A13422 | VVert not for him, how would the Muses doe? |
A13446 | [ 8] leaves Printed[ by R. Blower] for W: B[utter?] |
A13473 | And as''t was then an exercise of praise, So what deserues more honour in these daies, Then this? |
A13474 | What yeare, what month, weeke, day or fading houre Wherein some mischiefe did thee not befall? |
A13499 | Why should a Bawd be fur''d with Budge& Miniuer, As if she were a Lady, or Queene Guiniuer? |
A13511 | This Mayd is strange( in shape) to Man''s appearing, Shee''s neither Fish, or Flesh, nor good Red- hearing: What is shee then? |
A13441 | For why? |
A13441 | [ 46] p.: ill.( woodcuts) Printed by I Perse I, for O perse O, and& perse&, and are to be solde at the signe of the Æ dipthong,[ London]:[ 1628?] |
A25840 | M. P.( Martin Parker), d. 1656? |
A13448 | It is a sinne that yeelds vs no excuse( For what excuse can be for Gods abuse?) |
A64158 | s.n.,[ London: 1642?] |
A64165 | eng Jordan, Thomas, 1612?-1685? |
A13457 | To thee what was great Tamberlaine the Tartar, Or matcht with thee what was our Brittaine Arthur? |
A13477 | But hee that drew light out of darknesse, hath often( and can when he wil) draw good out of evill? |
A64183 | ],[ London? |
A64185 | s.n.,[ London? |
A64193 | And what hath England done to worke all this? |
A13424 | But what auailes to spring from royall Race? |
A13424 | What is commaund, might, eminence and place, When treason lurkes where Maiesty doth sit? |
A13424 | What surety is in beauty, strength, or wit? |
A71179 | 8 p. Printed by L. Lichfield][ Oxford? |
A13503 | And how hath Vice our worthy land infected, Since Archery hath beene too much neglected? |
A13503 | Why should the Eagle be the Bird of Ioue, When as the Goose deserueth so much loue? |
A13442 | let that man drinke Sack, the cure followes beyond beliefe: Is any man Ingurgitated, so that he is in the condition of a strong surfeit? |
A13445 | Their deedes did manifest their worthy mindes, Then how can we degenerate from kindes? |
A13445 | We haue that Land and shape our elders had, Their courages were good, can ours be bad? |
A64162 | ],[ Oxford? |
A64179 | Shall I commend their Actions? |
A64179 | What shall I say of this sort of people? |
A13482 | Amongst the Barbarous Indians some live strong And lusty, neere two hundred winters long? |
A13484 | At Dinner with his Grace, I had the happinesse to renew my Acquaintance with the Noble and Worthy Knight Sir Francis Wortley? |
A13484 | His youngest sonne standing by, sayd, Father, have you nothing to give mee? |
A13487 | But what''s a Vagabond and a Runagate? |
A64201 | VVHat Dogs Infernall Snaps and Snarleth thus? |
A64201 | [ 2], 6 p. s.n][ London? |
A64204 | They, what They? |
A13495 | Would''st haue a whore, a Coach, smoke, drink or drie? |
A13495 | Would''st haue an office thy estate to reare, Money will helpe thee to''t man, neuer feare: Do''st want wit how to guide and gouerne it? |
A81604 | Hee''s dead? |
A13462 | None did I say? |
A13463 | None did I say? |
A64172 | Thus ended bold Guy Faulks, and for the Brownists, who d''ye thinke was chose? |
A64172 | [ London? |
A64188 | The first thing I wish them to call their consciences to an account of, is, why they were Rebells at all? |
A64188 | The second is, wherefore they do obstinately and execrably continue in Rebellion? |
A64188 | s.n.,[ Oxford? |
A13497 | Suppose this I ● ● ● e had beene guilty of a fault, must these Women be their owne revengers, their owne witnesses, their owne Judges? |
A64220 | Shall Colchester alone win praise, And shall not London share the baies? |
A64220 | what denotes all this? |
A95543 | Doe you fight against the King to remove some Evill Councellors from him? |
A95543 | What can you doe, or what would you doe more? |
A13519 | For why should not my Boat be as good a monument as Tom Coriats euerlasting ouer- trampling land- conquering Shooes, thought I? |
A13521 | His word is Who goes there? |
A13521 | Where doe you dwell? |
A13444 | Now rap''t with ioy, my Muse must needs record How he was knighted with a royall sword: But into what a puzzell now got I am? |
A13444 | VVHy haue I spent my time thus Coriat? |
A13444 | What though''t was rusty? |
A13444 | Wherefore on thy leud lines thus pore I at? |
A13444 | Why like an Ideot foole adore — I at Thy workes? |
A64160 | Shall Powder Treasons and thanks giving dayes Be still observed in Records of Fame? |
A64160 | So I may say to England, what harme have I ever done unto you? |
A64163 | : 1642?] |
A64163 | Being a just comparison, how the Devil is become a Round- Head? |
A64163 | Being a just comparison, how the Devil is become a round- head? |
A64163 | s.n.,[ London? |
A13468 | But wherefore( Death) doe I on thee Exclaime? |
A13468 | But whither hath my Mournefull Muse digrest? |
A13468 | Could nothing thy Insatiate thirst Restraine, But Royall Blood of our Dread Soueraigne? |
A13468 | could nought thy hunger satisfie, But thou must Glut thy selfe with Maiestie? |
A13468 | what a gracious Man of God was this? |
A13456 | What say you to the Leafe or Flecke of a Brawne new kild, to be of weight eight pound, and to be eaten hot out of the Bores belly raw? |
A13456 | much good doe you Gallants, was it not a glorious dish? |
A64171 | And to the Gospell, who can blame this pate? |
A64171 | Since all from Adam come our Great- grand- sire? |
A64192 | Dost thinke all these for many a hundred yeare, Did not professe and know the Truth sincere? |
A64192 | [ London? |
A13423 | And shall we give our selves away to those, That are the sonne of Gods malicious foes? |
A13423 | And shall we, for base feare be so un just To part with Ship and goods within our trust? |
A13423 | Or shall their being darke make others blinde? |
A13423 | [ 6], 20,[ 2] p.: ill.( woodcuts) Printed[ by Nicholas Okes?] |
A95576 | Must Englands Church to that be now subjected? |
A95576 | Must Oxford and her sister Cambridge both Learne of Saint Andrews, and of Aberdene? |
A95576 | What hath the Kirke of Scotland here to doe? |
A13429 | A Man being deeply in play at Dice, having lost much mony, his son( a little lad) being by him, wept; quoth the father, Boy, why dost thou weepe? |
A13429 | But hold, what vessell have I set a Broach, What is muse got jolting in a Coach? |
A13429 | What is it said the Gentleman? |
A19381 | Auaunt dull Morpheus, with thy Leaden spirit, Can matter want of him that wants no merit? |
A19381 | But I pray thee tell me thou Mahometan, dost thou in sadnes call me Giaur? |
A19381 | Signatures:[ par].⁴ A⁴ a⁴ B- E⁴(-[par].1 and E4, blank?). |
A64175 | Hath Lust defil''d her purenesse, never match''d? |
A64175 | The fourteenth day of August, London, London I left, O what hath many a mothers* son don? |
A64175 | What hath the mad and furious sword and gun don? |
A13485 | But what man is so foolish, that desires To get good Fruit, from thistles, thornes and bryers? |
A13485 | He demanded in what Ship I was? |
A13485 | I enquired what the English of it was? |
A13485 | I tolde him in the Rainebowe of the Queenes, why( quoth hee) doe you not know mee? |
A13485 | WHy should I wast Inuention to endite, Ouidian fictions, or Olympian games? |
A64169 | HOw? |
A64169 | What did the babe, what did our Lady do? |
A64169 | What have we not done? |
A13478 | Are Whore- masters decaide, are all Bawdes dead, Are Panders, Pimps, and Apple- squires, all fled? |
A13478 | He ask''d if we were Pyrates? |
A13478 | Is Lechery wax''d scarce, is Bawdery scant, Is there of Whores, or Cuckolds any want? |
A64189 | Before I le live this life, I le take a Knife, And drown my selfe, and then what needs a Wife? |
A64189 | May not a man cal''d Newgate dwell at Highgate, And we d a Widdow at the Pye at Algate? |
A64189 | What can be done more? |
A64189 | What news from Trippolie? |
A64189 | what more can be sed? |
A13419 | And now an arrant Thiefe? |
A13419 | Is any Poet in that lowe Degree, To make his Muse worke Iourney- worke to me? |
A13419 | On whom doe vnder Keepers still rely? |
A13419 | Or are my Lines with Eloquence Imbellish''d, As any Learning in them may be relish''d? |
A13419 | Who but poore Thieues doe Iaylors wants supply? |
A13419 | ● shall he giue vs foode that''s spirituall ● nd not haue meanes to feede him Corporall? |
A64206 | But stay( my Muse) hold, whither wilt thou gad? |
A64206 | Was it a Male SHE, or a Female HE? |
A95527 | The causes of your Rebelling, and of the Kingdomes miseries was the great necessity that you were in, and what( I pray you) was that great necessity? |
A13509 | can any tell? |
A64178 | And what man indeed more fitting to direct your understanding in this point, then I, who am your known, your deare, your persecuted Alexander? |
A64178 | Doe you labour to love one another? |
A64178 | First we must hate all those that be against us, for how can we love our selves, unlesse we hate our enemies? |
A64178 | doe you instantly and earnestly desire it? |
A64178 | how can Peace be setle ● in a Kingdome, unlesse all that seek to destroy it be utterly consumed? |
A13481 | Burre? |
A13481 | Each Tower, each Turret, and each lofty steeple, VVho now( like him) wil tel the vulgar people? |
A13481 | Or who''le describe the signe of euery Alehowse? |
A13481 | VVho now will take the height of euery Gallowes? |
A13481 | Whether his Host were bigg, or short, or tall And whether he did knock ere he did call: The color of ● i ● Host and Hostesse hare? |
A13481 | Who now to doe his natiue country grace, Will for a Trophee execute his case? |
A64203 | A Terme so like a vacation? |
A64203 | Middsomer? |
A64203 | WHat? |
A13454 | Could none of this? |
A13454 | DId he dye young? |
A13454 | Man murdring death, blind, cruell fierce and fell, How durst thou gripe him in thy meagre armes? |
A13454 | Rowley, William, 1585?-1642? |
A13454 | Shall I say( life) vnkind to leaue vs so? |
A13454 | Shall still thy mortall Iauelings forth be hurld VVith careles flight? |
A13454 | To Death: THou great Monopolist, that all the world Engrosest to thy selfe, wilt thou spare none? |
A13454 | To write Great Britaines woe how am I able? |
A13454 | VVHy didst thou leaue a house, so faire, so sweet? |
A64181 | Are not here a reasonable company of abuses to be in the Preamble of the Pamphlet? |
A64181 | Are not here a treasonable company of abuses, and in the substance of the Pamphlet? |
A64181 | Gentlemen we were not engaged to the service of Ireland otherwise then by the Kings Commission: no, did you fight neither for God, nor your Countrey? |
A64181 | What will these act at home amongst a credulous and seduced people, especially so Religiously Lectured and Trained to Rebellion upon Sundaies? |
A13515 | If any askes what Euidence comes in? |
A13515 | Then said the other, haue I not heere in my custody your hand and Seale to confirme my lawfull possession of your Land? |
A13515 | What therefore can become of mee( miserable Caitiffe?) |
A13515 | and moreouer haue I not a Record of an Oath in open Court, which you tooke concerning the truth of all our bargaine? |
A13515 | or can a man goe vpon hot Coales, and his feete not be burnt? |
A13515 | what perswasiue breath Can call back this iust Sentence of quicke death? |
A13500 | A person that is proud, ne''re pleas''d God yet: For how can they please him whom they forget? |
A13500 | And who can tell how many liues were lost, In fetching home the Bables of such cost? |
A13500 | But yet though Pride be a most deadly sinne, What numbers by it doe their liuings winne? |
A13500 | What though his Cattell with the Murraine dye, Or that the Earth her fruitfulnesse deny? |
A67888 | His weakenesse in judgement NOw I doe pitty thee, that dares to tax Anothers judgemen? |
A67888 | IS it not vaine? |
A67888 | VVHat forward impudence is this? |
A67888 | What are they fit for then, that onely raile? |
A67888 | Will not be due to thee? |
A67888 | to dare Before those noble Senators to appeare Clad in such ragges? |
A13466 | Ah Iudas couldest thou make so base account Of him, whose worth doth heauen and earth surmount? |
A13466 | Didst thou esteeme of ● 0 paltry pence, More then the life of the Eternall Prince? |
A13466 | Is''t possible damn''d auarice could compell Thee sell heauens kingdome for the sincke of hell? |
A13466 | Signatures: A- C(-A1,C8, blank?). |
A13466 | What shall I doe? |
A13466 | Wright?] |
A13466 | where is some secret place, That I might shield me from the wrath of God? |
A13510 | Can Swine yeeld sweet perfumes,( can Swannes breed Crowes? |
A13510 | Can flattering Rogues haue but dissembling showes? |
A13510 | Can health be hidden in the plague or pox? |
A13510 | Can men take pride in fetters, bonds or stocks? |
A13510 | How dares thy ouerweening saucy tongue Presume to doe a Poets name that wrong? |
A13510 | How darst thou( being altogether vile) Attribute to thy selfe that Sacred stile? |
A13510 | How would that alone Shew when the flaming torches all were gone? |
A13510 | NOw honest Reader,( if thou be so) tell Haue I not Ca ● uas''d this same Rascall well? |
A13510 | Shall Heau''n- bred Poesie that so long hath lasted With thy contagious breath be Bussard- blasted? |
A13510 | Shall that Rare Art( which Gods and 〈 ◊ 〉 admire Polluted be by such a scuruie Squire? |
A13505 | And can a Christian thinke how these things are, But that his heart must be possest with Care? |
A13505 | And can a Christian thinke vpon these things, But it his heart with care and pitty wrings? |
A13505 | IS any man offended? |
A13505 | Shall Gods gifts bee common to good& bad, and our boats be priuate onely to the good? |
A13505 | marry gep With a horse nightcap, doth your iadeship skip? |
A13438 | ''T was our sinnes kill''d him( as my faith avowes) And shall we rend and teare his sacred Spouse? |
A13438 | And what a fine Church were we like to have If these companions had what they would crave? |
A13438 | And what? |
A13438 | Bishop?] |
A13438 | For why? |
A13438 | Nothing else Goes to a Church? |
A13438 | Shall Hell- hounds dare aspersions base to fling''Gainst those that thus fewe God, the Church and King? |
A13438 | Shall we be disobedient then to such, Who for our peace disturbed are so much? |
A13438 | What bold audacious spirits then are they That King, Church, State and Lawes thus disobey? |
A64222 | And why( important Pleader) should I stay? |
A64222 | Lov, Why? |
A64222 | One said to Christ, shall I forgive him free, That hath done 7 offences against mee? |
A64222 | Shall I tell thee merrily? |
A64222 | Well ● … et to Day, Why such grea ● … haste? |
A64222 | What should I doe? |
A64222 | What''s this to me? |
A64222 | Who calls? |
A64222 | Why wood''st thou me? |
A64222 | Why? |
A64222 | Why? |
A64222 | have sinners hope ● … o speed? |
A64168 | B and C. How can the word call''d CHANGED, HANGED B? |
A64168 | DICK is a desperate fellow, but at what? |
A64168 | DICK, and TOM borrowed Gold, and like true debters, Non- payment shakled them in iron fetters: Were the debt iron, fetters gold, what then? |
A64168 | Fast bind, fast find: my Bible was well bound; A Thiefe came fast, and loose my Bible found: Was''t bound and loose at once? |
A64168 | Fortune my foe doth frown on me, but why? |
A64168 | The Boy sayd, Father, whither so hastily? |
A64168 | What execrable creatures are they then, But Hell- hounds, and the Devils Journy- men? |
A64168 | Who sayes the Gospel hath not passage free? |
A64168 | Why in gay Garments do fond fooles take pride? |
A64168 | how can that be? |
A13471 | ( Oh rare show) What though that I observant be to thee, And stand before thee bare, with bended Knee? |
A13471 | And that thy Linnen be more pure and fine? |
A13471 | I blame the man that''s covetous, but why? |
A13471 | Or doth not my poore duty puffe thee higher, And swell thy too much hatefull Pride t''aspire? |
A13471 | Or my Leg make the Gout thy Limbes forsake? |
A13471 | Or that thy Periwig bee sweetly scented, Most neatly Keam''d, slick''d, curled and indented? |
A13471 | They sell their soules an heritage to win, An Heritage in Hell, deare bought with sin: Put case they compasse age; what''s their reward? |
A13471 | Thy out- side may be Rich, thy inside poor,( doore Worse than the wretch that beggs from doore to What though thy Coate be richer Stuffe than mine? |
A13471 | WHat in the World doth true contentment give, That Man should have desire therein to live? |
A13471 | What though I be nine dayes behind the fashio ● … Or that my Breech be of the old Translation? |
A13471 | Will my Hat off, cause thy head cease to ake? |
A64159 | But what is now( my deare brothers, and sweet sisters) become of their vehement Orations, their demonicall disputations? |
A64159 | Three yeares old( replyed the Judge) and no more? |
A64159 | What see I there? |
A64159 | What then shall we say of all his toyes and popish trincats? |
A64159 | and are not the Archbishops and Bishops, the very Buls of Bashan, their superiour and inferiour Officialls, and Officers, the great and little Foxes? |
A64159 | and their iniust Condemnations of us that are the flock of the faithfull, and the onely reserved to eternall Salvation? |
A64159 | his invention and innovations? |
A64159 | how can that possibly be, seeing thou art of that full growth and bignesse? |
A64159 | their Logicall Interpretations? |
A64159 | their erronious Equivocations? |
A64159 | their mentall Reservations? |
A64159 | their syllogisticall examinations? |
A64184 | CAN he be Fair, that withers with a blast? |
A64184 | Is it for Treason that I am Captiv''d? |
A64184 | Or he be Rich, that nothing hath to give? |
A64184 | Or he be Strong, that ayery breath can cast? |
A64184 | Or he be Wise, that knows not how to live? |
A64184 | Or he be Yong, that''s feeble, weak and wan? |
A64184 | Or is it that I was my Fathers Son, That I am of my liberty depriv''d? |
A64184 | WHat is my fault? |
A64184 | Why bragct thou then, thou worm of 5 foot long? |
A64184 | Wouldst thou by conquest win more fame then bee? |
A64184 | Yet, since with sorrowes heer, we live opprest What life is best? |
A64184 | what have I done? |
A53267 | At sixe pence a pint, how comes that to passe? |
A53267 | Come, thou art merry: but how scap''t his Compeere the Archbishop of Canterbury? |
A53267 | I heard that he was for Portugall, and to that purpose had two or three hundred Cap and Feather men in pay, did he mistake France for Portugall? |
A53267 | I marry Sir, the Parliament began well, heaven blesse their proceedings: how went they forward? |
A53267 | It was very likely that it would fall to particulars in time: but what befell those Patents? |
A53267 | Iudge Barkley is not gone, i ● he? |
A53267 | None of the other Iudges? |
A53267 | Sir Iohn Sucklin, what hee that writ admired Aglaura? |
A53267 | Then I may presume that the High Commission is downe; the Papists I know rejoyce at it, they have paid many a fat fine, have they not? |
A53267 | What he that gave the King a hundred horse against the Scotch Pedlers? |
A53267 | What? |
A53267 | all Patents, of what nature soever? |
A53267 | is he fled for Religion too? |
A13524 | For( what call you the Towne) where the great Oysters come from? |
A13524 | The WORLD runs a Wheeles? |
A13524 | WHat a Murraine, what piece of work haue we here? |
A13524 | What excessiue waste doe they make of our best broad- cloath of all colours? |
A13524 | how can you make this good Master Poet? |
A13524 | what fields lye vntilled? |
A13524 | what goodly houses are turn''d to the habitations of Howlets, Dawes, and Hobgoblins? |
A13524 | what numbers of poore are encreased? |
A34591 | Are you grown horne mad? |
A34591 | H. Is there not an old proverb, that one paire of legges is worth two paire of hands? |
A34591 | H. Will you take your oath of that? |
A34591 | Or in a Cardinalls cap? |
A34591 | Or in a Popes miter? |
A34591 | This judgement passed upon me for my head; but who saith so of me now? |
A34591 | W. But what is that to men that weare hornes? |
A34591 | W. But why are horned men called more innocent and harmlesse then other men? |
A34591 | W. But why did you attempt such a thing without my consent? |
A34591 | WHat now Husband? |
A34591 | What Round head or Rattle head may then compare with the horned head? |
A34591 | What defence is there in a delinquent Prelates three corner cap? |
A34591 | What doe you meane to assume such a head to make your selfe ridiculous, and a laughing stocke to all the world? |
A34591 | What man or boy scorneth to carry an Inkhorne in his pocket to serve him upon all needfull occasions? |
A34591 | Who can deny it? |
A34591 | Would not one paire of hornes well planted in one innocent head bee worth all these? |
A13421 | And shall the Conscience of a Bawd be Pinfolded so straitly, that her Soule shall be of losse esteeme than a Hackney man makes of his Horse or Asse? |
A13421 | And therfore the law( in this point) favouring their vocation, why should any Consorious Cato plead the Law for banishing of any Bawdes? |
A13421 | Have you a wife at home Or are you a loose Batchelor? |
A13421 | How long will you tarry in Towne? |
A13421 | Now judge, good Reader, have I said amisse, Was ever any Bawdry like to this? |
A13421 | You base rascall, quoth the other, have you no more Whores in your house, must I stand like a Iacke an Apes heere empty handed? |
A13421 | [ 48] p.[ By Augustine Mathewes?] |
A13421 | a Merchant, or Tradesman? |
A13421 | are you a Catholike, or reformed? |
A13421 | are you a Gentleman? |
A13421 | or a swearing and forswearing Rogue doth of his eares? |
A13512 | ( 13) He gaue life vnto herbes, to plants, and trees, For if they wanted life, how could they grow? |
A13512 | ( 18) Who can conceiue the Glory he was in Aboue the heau''n of heau''ns, in throan''d in blisse? |
A13512 | ( 24) Hath he the title of an earthly grace? |
A13512 | ( 44) Dar''st thou profane with thy vngodly breath His Name, that did( before the world) elect thee? |
A13512 | ( 51) But dost thou thinke he is at thy Command, Or that his mercy must attend thy leasure? |
A13512 | ( 75) And tell me then, who shall these Goods possesse That thou hast damn''d thy Selfe to purchase them? |
A13512 | Dar''st thou prouoke his mercy to reiect thee? |
A13512 | Dar''st thou run headlong to perpetuall death, Whereas eternall torments shall correct thee? |
A13512 | Dar''st thou, dare him his Iustice sword t''vnsheath? |
A13512 | Or dost thou thinke that his Almighty hand Is shortned? |
A13512 | Or dost thou thinke thou canst in Iudgment stand And scape the Iustice of his high displeasure? |
A13512 | Or hath he Honor, Lordship, Worship? |
A13512 | Or hath he wealth to be regarded for? |
A13512 | Or that without Repentance hee''le forgiue? |
A13512 | The Fox doth scorne the Grapes, but wot you why? |
A13512 | What Goods in the world can a man achieue, But woe and miserie, o''rewhelms his blisse? |
A13512 | Who can conceiue the Mountaines of our sinne That must be hid with such a sea as this? |
A13512 | Who can conceiue the losse that he did winne To rectifie, and answere our amisse? |
A13512 | Why wilt thou( wilfull) thy perdition plod, And with damnation thy saluation choke? |
A13512 | or Hath he in Court some great commanding place? |
A13512 | or that his supernall pleasure Regards not how the Sonnes of Men do liue? |
A13479 | A Puritan is like, a Poets purse, For both do hate the crosse( what crosse is worse?) |
A13479 | And drunken rascalles are of euery Trade, Should I name all, I or''e the bootes should wade? |
A13479 | And what those rules, but approbation Of that which Nature first, in others wrought? |
A13479 | For what is Arte but imitation Ty''de vnto rules, as such and such haue taught? |
A13479 | For why? |
A13479 | GRace gracelesse, why art thou vngratious Grace, Why dost thou run so lewdely in the race? |
A13479 | In what consists the hangmans greatest hope But hope of great imployment for the rope? |
A13479 | May humane mischiefes be compar''d with mine? |
A13479 | Much Beere, and bottle Ale should stand and stinke: And Mounseir Claret, and sweet Signeor Sacke Would sowre and turne vnto the Merchants wracke? |
A13479 | Oh where are you, stil''d by the happie names Of loues sole heires: sleepes your immortall flames, In their originall dulnesse see a good? |
A13479 | SHall Beggers diue into the Acts of Kings? |
A13479 | Shall Nature speake of supernat''rall things, Shall Egles flights atempted be by Gnatts? |
A13479 | Shall man, I pray, so witlesse be besotted? |
A13479 | Shall men( like beasts) no wisdome be allotted,( Without great studie) with instinct of Nature, Why then were man the worst and basest creature? |
A13479 | The Muses tarry at thy name, why so? |
A13479 | What language wast that Ouid wrote his verse? |
A13479 | Why doth the Parrat call a Boate, a Boate? |
A13493 | A Prouerb old, where had the Deuill the Fryer? |
A13493 | ARustick swaine was cleauing of a block, And hum he Cryes at euery pondrous knock, His wife saies, husband wherfore hum you so? |
A13493 | But yet I muse in what place of this earth, Gods Church did stand before Saint Peters birth? |
A13493 | Can the dambd windefalls of base bawdery, Maintaine the slaue in this imbrodery? |
A13493 | DRusus his portion gallantly hath spent, What though? |
A13493 | Epigram 24. WHo dares for Gluttony the Pope accuse, Or gainst voluptuous dyet make''s complaints? |
A13493 | FOr Gods loue tell what gallant Gull is that, With the great Feather, and the Beauer Hat? |
A13493 | For him that hath deflourd Virginity? |
A13493 | HOw weakely is that weake Religion grounded, That thinks the Church on Peters corps is sounded? |
A13493 | Heauen, Earth, and Sea, being taken in the prime, What rests now for the Popes this latter time? |
A13493 | I doe not like his bargaine: why, wherefore? |
A13493 | IS it not 〈 ◊ 〉 sensuall appetite, The 〈 ◊ 〉 to make a Strumpet of his Childe? |
A13493 | LOrd who would take him for a pippin squire, That''s so bedawb''d with lace and rich attire? |
A13493 | MAy it be calld intollerable pride, For man to sit in the Almighties seate? |
A13493 | Nay then I see he was a subtill Fox, What had he for''t I pray? |
A13493 | Or is not Letchery an Epithite, For him that hath his fathers bed defilde? |
A13493 | Or on mens shoulders pompously to ride, To terrifie the World with thundring threate? |
A13493 | Or who dares say that like a droane or moath, Like an vnpreaching Priest he liues by Sloath? |
A13493 | Or who dares speake such words of trechery, To say the Pope is giuen to Letchery? |
A13493 | Or who is he that dares once veresy, The Pope doth vse excessiue Gluttony? |
A13493 | Or who is he, dares be so impious, To say his holynes is Enuious? |
A13493 | Or 〈 ◊ 〉, for feare of euerlasting scath, Dares once accuse his holynes of Wrath? |
A13493 | Sum primus homo, Vis ire mecum Remis? |
A13493 | THose* Liberall Sciences, in number seauen, Began with Pride, and ends with drowsie Sloath? |
A13493 | That hath defilde the Damsell and the Dam 〈 ◊ 〉 respect of Consanginity? |
A13493 | That like a Wolfe hath spoyld both Ewe and Lamb? |
A13493 | To haue both Kings and Princes at his becke? |
A13493 | To weare a three- pilde Crowne vpon his head? |
A13493 | Where had the Deuill the Frier but where he was? |
A13493 | Whose Horse by mighty Potentates is 〈 ◊ 〉, Who proudly footes vpon the Emperors necke? |
A13493 | Why how the Deuill comes this luckles crosse? |
A13436 | A good house- keeper? |
A13436 | Alas, alas, said I, is Charity as well as Conscience banish''d out of your freedome? |
A13436 | And to haue many of these inuented and made dishes come to a Table, doe you thinke it would not make Nature complaine? |
A13436 | Can I helpe his riot and excesse? |
A13436 | Hath not God giuen you himselfe, what need you haue any more? |
A13436 | Hath the diuel& the world so besotted and bewitched you, that you will wilfully spend your dayes miserably, to end your liues detestedly? |
A13436 | How can you make me truly welcome, except the poore feed with me? |
A13436 | If God can not suffice you, what can satisfie you? |
A13436 | Is it not against Nature to haue Mutton larded with Ambergreece, and breaded with Ciuet? |
A13436 | Is there a Calfe or Sheepe in the Pastures? |
A13436 | Is this charity? |
A13436 | Looke about the Yard, there is not a Ducke, Chicken, Hen or Capon to be seene? |
A13436 | Looke into the Garden, is there a Bee- hiue there? |
A13436 | Looke into the Meddowes, dost thou see an Oxe there? |
A13436 | Looke round about thee, where are now those high woods that did shelter this house from the winds violence? |
A13436 | Oh Christmas, is it not pitty that such an ancient house as this where Hospitality, the Romans houshold God dwel ● ● ▪ should thus decay? |
A13436 | Then to haue another dish brought to the boord couer''d ouer with an inundation of Vinegar, Oyle, and Pepper? |
A13436 | To haue Birds come to the Table lim''d to the dish with viscous and clammy sawces, faster than they were before in the Fowlers lime- twigs? |
A13436 | What is gold, but yellow rubbish? |
A13436 | What is siluer, but white drosse? |
A13436 | What need you be couetous? |
A13436 | Why art thou making such haste now? |
A13436 | Will you know when she was in her perfect health? |
A13436 | Will you possesse him, let the poore possesse some of your wealth? |
A13436 | Wilt thou lose nothing, then put it to a spirituall interest, let the poore borrow some of thee? |
A13436 | and will you pinch your bellies to starue yoursoules? |
A13436 | not a Goose to be had? |
A13436 | whither art thou going? |
A13436 | will you empty your consciences, to fill your bagges? |
A13436 | will you liue poore to dye rich? |
A13461 | ''t is monstrous; fie, fie,''t is Lust in doating age: what makes within your thoughts such wanton fire? |
A13461 | AGed man, with what face dare you aske a young Gentlewoman the question? |
A13461 | An old man asked a yong Maid this Question: If I should take thee to be my Wife, I pray thee tell me, wilt thou bee honest? |
A13461 | Arise you Rogue, you sleepy rogue; can you sleepe so soundly, for all the Sunne shines in your face? |
A13461 | DVcke? |
A13461 | GOod morrow wife, how doe you this morning? |
A13461 | HEy ho, what the Sunne so high already, and not the Boy up, nor the Shop open? |
A13461 | I thought you had not beene so loosely given, was this the reason that you did forsake my bed, to breath your self for your whoors abroad? |
A13461 | SWeete- heart, me thinkes I finde a great alteration in you, that you are not the woman that you have been towards me, can you shew any reason for it? |
A13461 | VVHat, are you awake good man Foxe- catcher? |
A13461 | VVHat, doe you meane to take me downe in my wedding shooes? |
A13461 | VVHy you whoreson raskally fellow, didst thou marry me to disgrace me, and make mee a shame to my selfe, and all my Kin? |
A13461 | You marry an old rich widow for a comfort? |
A13461 | are you in any better humour than you were last night tro? |
A13461 | is this your madding month? |
A13461 | me thinkes you are burdened with such yeares, that you should now be past dreaming on a Wife: Old age to match with Youth? |
A13461 | no care at all left to forbeare spending thy money, but thus idly to waste thy goods? |
A13461 | or doe you suppose that I wil wedde a Statue, or lye in a Bed of Snow? |
A13461 | or play with old Antiquity? |
A13461 | or what other disaster is the cause of your heavinesse? |
A13461 | you can not bee so jocund as you should: And when you doe goe abroad with me, doe not I perceive how you march before after foure Mile an houre? |
A13520 | ( 8) ONce the said 〈 ◊ 〉 saw a 〈 ◊ 〉 that had a Iack Daw to sell: Sirra quoth he what wilt thou take for thy daw? |
A13520 | Because your worship lookes so like a Lyon, sayd the man: a Lyon quoth the Iustice? |
A13520 | He demaunded of me what I 〈 ◊ 〉 by my answer? |
A13520 | His wife the bride, who also went for a maid, did muse and aske what was the meaning of so many Cakes? |
A13520 | I beseech your worship, said the man, to pardon me, for 〈 ◊ 〉 was afraid: afraid of what, said the Iustice? |
A13520 | I remember thée better now( said my Lord) there were 2 brothers of you, but one is dead, I pray which of you doth remaine aliue? |
A13520 | My Lord, sayd the Suruayor, I pray you what shall we 〈 ◊ 〉 with the earth which we digge out of the said pit? |
A13520 | Of mée, said the 〈 ◊ 〉? |
A13520 | Said the Doctor, I doe not say costly but costiue: and I pray thee tell me, is she loose or bound? |
A13520 | Sirrah( 〈 ◊ 〉 the Iustice) must I bid you bee gone 〈 ◊ 〉 many times, and will you not goe? |
A13520 | Well now what is to bée done in this matter? |
A13520 | Wherefore( said the other) dost thou aske so much for him? |
A13520 | Why, 〈 ◊ 〉 Will, who is there? |
A13520 | the other: then said he, you may sweare you haue séene the best hors in England: how do you know that said the other? |
A13520 | when didst thou sée a Lyon? |
A13520 | why wast thou afraid of ma? |
A13502 | ( quoth the mother,) I know he is very rich: rich, said the maide? |
A13502 | Away went the Butcher, the Porter, and the Gentleman, who asked the Butcher his name, and of what Country he was? |
A13502 | He must, and shall have Money, and so will I: Are you as mad as your man said the Serving- man? |
A13502 | I pray thee canst thou say thy prayers, or Creed? |
A13502 | Marry I say Sir, I charge thee bring hither our Sturgeon; What doe you meane, my Colt said hee? |
A13502 | Now, God blesse me, said the maide, for I can not love him: why canst thou not love him? |
A13502 | The Gentlemen perceiving that no deniall would satisfie their intruding importunacy, said, do''st thou heare fellow, how many are you? |
A13502 | The place being told, and the Taverne appointed, the witty Soldier went to the Tapster, and call''d for two Gunnes of Beere; Guns quoth the Tapster? |
A13502 | Wee are foure said the Musitian; Can you dance said the Gentlemen? |
A13502 | Well overtaken Katch- man sayes one, Gramercy Water- man said the other; wilt thou buy 100. of Faggots, said Bawdy Boy? |
A13502 | What, is my man mad said the Butcher? |
A13502 | Why sayst thou so? |
A13502 | Yes that it is said the other; then sayd Baxted, will not your Master bee angry if I doe goe away and not drinke? |
A13502 | and what is the reason that I have knock''t, and bounc''d so long for you? |
A13502 | the Host answered, that it was good sawce for their meate; Sawce said the other? |
A13502 | who lets them Eate, Drinke, weare, say, or doe what they please, but Fooles? |
A13502 | yea quot the other, hee would have Money, I told you: Money, why should hee not have Money said the Butcher? |
A13439 | ( equivocating, and meaning your five fingers) and what was this better than cheating? |
A13439 | A Posset with a poxe to you, said I; you would have a Cawdle made of Calves Egges, would you not? |
A13439 | A Sergeant? |
A13439 | Ah, hah, have I got the master now? |
A13439 | Alas, why should not Ivory teeth bridle intemperate tongues? |
A13439 | And I pray you how old are you? |
A13439 | And are you growne so kinde just now? |
A13439 | And now good- man Baker what canst thou bolt out of me for all this? |
A13439 | And what think you of a Clarke? |
A13439 | But how shall we save this, and get more? |
A13439 | But sister, pray tell me, what thinke you of a Grocer? |
A13439 | But( said the other) had shee the patience to endure it? |
A13439 | Doe you beginne to kicke like your gald horse already? |
A13439 | Doe you weare no Corkes, nor no Polonie- heeles? |
A13439 | HVsband, what money hast thou in thy Purse? |
A13439 | Hast thou took the Glasier, thy Husbands trade out of his hand, and art come hither to picke Quarrels? |
A13439 | Honester, Madam Malipert( said the other) and whence Mistris Odious came you by these comparisons? |
A13439 | How now, doe you come with your Ballad Rime to tell mee what I have to doe, and how to behave my selfe to my husband, and in my owne house? |
A13439 | How, of a Church? |
A13439 | I like the beginning well( saith his neighbour) but the end tries all things: But I pray you tell mee; did you not learne this at a play? |
A13439 | I pray you what hath your pen purchast? |
A13439 | MOrt, what lower hast thou in thy Bung? |
A13439 | Marry Syrreverence, goodly Gossip: I pray you Mistris Gill Flurts how came you by that goodly word? |
A13439 | Of Eele- skinnes doe you meane? |
A13439 | Said his neighbour, said shee nothing all this while? |
A13439 | She reply''d, and truely Sister I am of your minde; but I pray you, had you never any Suiters yet? |
A13439 | THou as honest a man as lives by bread? |
A13439 | The simple Novice desirous of novelty, beganne more calmly to listen to her, and asked her what it was? |
A13439 | Then said his neighbour: but how could you have the heart to use her so hardly? |
A13439 | Thou an Artist? |
A13439 | Thou an Horseleich? |
A13439 | Thou canst vaumpe old Bootes, but when wilt thou vaumpe mee, and make me new and fresh againe? |
A13439 | Thou keepe thy market without the railes? |
A13439 | To which he answered, what should any thing be spoke, where nothing would be heard? |
A13439 | What I pray you should a young man, and a young woman doe, when they are together in an Hey- loft? |
A13439 | What doth this gravell you? |
A13439 | What of a Goldsmith? |
A13439 | What of a Merchant? |
A13439 | What of a Silke- man? |
A13439 | What of an Upholster? |
A13439 | What then of a Jeweller? |
A13439 | What thinke you of a Draper? |
A13439 | What thinke you of a Fishmonger? |
A13439 | Where wert thou, you Rogue, when the Queane your Nurse was to bee shaven? |
A13439 | Who replyed, a play? |
A13439 | Who taught you, I wonder, to meddle betwixt the barke and the tree? |
A13439 | You had twenty five boord Cove, what a Ruffin is budged with it? |
A13439 | You had twenty five shillings Husband, what a Divell is become of it? |
A13439 | and soft lippes conceale fullen hearts? |
A13439 | can your Muse feede you with Mutton? |
A13439 | can your Rime make you feede on Rabbets? |
A13439 | have I in the stead of an handkerchiefe, given you a drench for your glanders? |
A13439 | have I rub''d you on the gald backe? |
A13439 | have I wrung you in the withers? |
A13439 | or can you buy your selfe Beefe with the leaves of a Bay- Tree? |
A13439 | or to what preferment hath it raised you? |
A13439 | or why should a faire face bee the betrayer of hidden faults? |
A13439 | or your Goose- quill got you? |
A13439 | or your Poetry on Partridge? |
A13439 | the skinne and the flesh, the man and the wife? |
A13439 | thou ride thy horses in Cuckolds pound? |
A13439 | your Canzonets on Capons? |