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A66844 The gentlewomans companion; or, A guide to the female sex containing directions of behaviour, in all places, companies, relations, and conditions, from their childhood down to old age: viz. As, children to parents. Scholars to governours. Single to servants. Virgins to suitors. Married to husbands. Huswifes to the house Mistresses to servants. Mothers to children. Widows to the world Prudent to all. With letters and discourses upon all occasions. Whereunto is added, a guide for cook-maids, dairy-maids, chamber-maids, and all others that go to service. The whole being an exact rule for the female sex in general. By Hannah Woolley. Woolley, Hannah, fl. 1670.; Faithorne, William, 1616-1691, engraver. 1673 (1673) Wing W3276A; ESTC R204109 139,140 297

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any former service yet adding withall that knowing her goodness and the delight her Ladiship takes in bestowing courtesies on the undeserver she fears not a denial If it be upon an urgent occasion let her endeavour to move her to compassionate her misery exaggerating the greatness thereof infisting that she hath no other way to retrieve her misfortune that if she cannot hereafter find any way a requital yet she shall notwithstanding retain the remembrance of her love or charity fixed in her heart Conclude with a Prayer to God so to increase her relicity here that she may never stand in need of a kindness from any till the Almighty hath fixed on her head a Crown of Glory Of Recommendation IN the recommending of a person you must shew your motives for so doing as first either as she is a Kinswoman or Friend and a person so worthy as deserving all favour that were it not for her goodness and virtue you would not utter a word in her behalf and conclude that what kindness is done her is shewn to your self How elegantly to complain of injuries done THis may be done several ways if you would mildly complain of a friend and yet not break with him or her let your complaint be mixt with praises saying that you are sorry the persons deportment hath not been such as your friendship required however you are so charitable as to believe the offence was not committed willingly but rather through misprision or ill perswasion But let the offence be ever so great do not rail in opprobrious terms though in smart and significant expressions saying that you have connived too long patiently at the injuries done you but finding instead of amendment the person growing worse you would be more sensless than stones if you should not speak referring your self to his own judgment if passion hath not quite extinguisht the eye of reason whether you are not very much wrong'd however upon a just acknowledgment you are willing to forget all and retain him or her still in the estimation of a friend Forms of Address or Visit. IN the first place insinuate your contentment in discoursing with your friend face to face but since you are deprived thereof you are happy still in having the opportunity and conveniency of writing That you desire to hear of her welfare both as to health and other concerns that your desire is earnest to see her and that those days wherein you see her not are years and those years seem ages especially when you receive no Letters from her that if she will continue that correspondence she shall find occasion of finding fault on your side more of importunity than carelesness or neglect and so conclude with a protestation of the continuance of an inviolable friendship Forms of Congratulation THis is done when we desire to rejoice with our friend for some great good that hath befaln him or her either by escaping from some eminent danger or sickness There are several other subjects of this nature which you may treat on as they happen and therefore I cannot prescribe you exact rules only you must testifie the great satisfaction you receive in your friends welfare and that your joy is not particular but all in general have it when good and virtuous persons are advanced and do prosper Of Consolation LEtters of Consolation seem to mitigate any evil or adversity that hath befaln a friend which being various cannot well have one remedy applied to them If the evil be but small alledg they have no such great cause for their sorrowing the subject not deserving it that they ought to have courage for pusillanimity wrongs the reputation or if it be great insist that it will not last long But if the disaster be very great indeed you must then acknowledg how much you are concerned in his or her sufferings and that having so great a share in her misfortune you are fitter to condole than comfort her therein yet however the interest of alliance or friendship oblige you to apply some lenitive That you cannot perswade her from grieving for that would argue inhumanity having sustain'd so great a loss of a Husband a Wife Father Mother c. but hope she or he will not be so heartless as to be carried away in the torrent of a fruitless grief that Reason must be used for Nature is not obliged to alter its course to please him or her particularly and exempt it self for the sake of one from those Laws to which the whole world is subject In short when a misfortune cannot be withstood immoderate grief doth but exasperate it and that being a Christian there ought to be a submission to Gods Will and subscribe with a prayer to the Almighty to give him or her patience to overcome this great affliction Form of thanks for Courtesies received THanks we must apply as well to the nature of the Courtesie as to the quality of him that hath done it You must begin with a commemoration of the Courtesie received acknowledging the receiver not worthy thereof having never done any obliging service or if you have yet this hath made double satisfaction then promise that the remembrance of her love shall be deeply engraven in your heart and that you will always retain a resentment of her kindness This you may write if the kindness be so highly qualified that the person looks for no other satisfaction than acknowledgment only I have given you several forms of Letters let me now shew you the parts of a Letter the common ones are Superscription and Subscription The Superscription of Letters is twofold the one external the other internal the outward Superscription is that when the Letter is folded up and containeth the name title and abode of the person we write unto but above all you must have a care that you give proper titles such as befit the quality of the person The Title of a King is To His most Excellent Majesty To the Queen the same altering the article To all Sons or Brethren of the King of England To His Royal Highness To a Duke To His Grace To a Duchess the same To all Earls Marquesses Viscounts and Barons To the right Honourable To Marchionesses and Countesses by Patent To the right Honourable To all Lords To the right Honourable To Knights To the right Worshipful To all Justices of Peace High Sheriffs Counsellors at Law Esquires either by birth or place c. To the Worshipful The Subscription is placed at the lower end of the Letter and in writing to great Persons you must subscribe thus   My Lord or Madam Your most humble and most obedient Servant or Your most faithful and most obliged Servant S. G. To persons of meaner degree subscribe your self thus   Your Servant or Your Friend and Servant If kindred write one to another the greater may express the relation in the beginning of the Letter but she that is of the meaner quality must be content to specifie
the Goods and Chattels of a Parent that they cannot without a kind of theft give themselves away without the allowance of those that have the right in them and therefore we see under the Law the Maid that had made any Vow was not suffer'd to perform it without the consent of the Patent Numb 30. 5. The right of the Parent was thought of force enough to cancel and make void the obligation even of a vow and therefore surely it ought to be so much considered by us to keep us from making any such whereby that right is infringed A fourth duty is To minister to and assist your Parents in what ever necessities or infirmities God Almighty shall think fit to inflict upon them It may be thy Parent is weak or decay'd in understanding supply his or her wants according to thy ability since in thy infancy thou didst receive the same benefits from them When an infant you had neither strength to support nor understanding to guide your self but was supply'd with both by your indulgent Parents wherefore common gratitude when either of these becomes their case obligeth you to return the same offices back again to them And as for the relieving their Poverty there is the same obligation with the former it being but just to sustain those who had maintain'd thee How then shall those answer it who will not part with or circumscribe their own excesses and superfluities for the relief of such to whom they owe their being and well-being and worse it will be with those who out of pride deny their Parents being themselves exalted fearing lest the lowness of their condition should betray the meanness of their birth Lastly that I may conclude this Discourse assure your self That no unkindness fault or poverty of a Parent can excuse or acquit a child from this duty Although the gratitude due to a kind Parent be a forcible motive to make the child pay his duty yet though our Parent were ever so unnatural yet still we are to perform our duty though none of that tye of gratitude lie on us Take this for all Honour and obey thy natural Parents in what condition soever for if they cannot give thee riches yet thy Heavenly Father hath promised thee length of days Of a young Gentlewomans deportment to her Governess and Servants in the Family IF your Parents have committed you to the care and tuition of a Governess in the house with you think with your self that this person whom I must now call my Governess is one whom my Father and Mother have elected and entertain'd for my education to lessen their own trouble but not their tender care of me Therefore if I obey her not in all things requisite I transgress the commands of my loving Parents and displease God in abusing their kindness Next consider within your self that this person who is constituted the guide of my actions is such a one as they are confident either in their own judgments or those who have recommended her to be fit in all points to perform this charge committed to her therefore in obedience to them I must and will obey her and follow those good examples and precepts she shall lay down for my better information If she seem somewhat harsh reserv'd and abridgeth your freedom yet let not your green years be too forward in condemning her nor let not the ill counsel of inferior servants perswade you against her lest by so doing you betray your want of reason and good nature and detract from your Parents worthy care for you If you have just cause of complaint yet speak not maliciously against her but truly and opportunely impart your grief by this means she will be either removed from you or regulated by their commands Be sure therefore that your complaints be just lest you should have one in her stead who may more justly deserve your censure and so make your self unhappy by your Parents fears of having a child that is refractory Besides think thus with your self that too often complaining makes dull and careless the Auditor and instead of extracting compassion it creates a jealousie of an ill disposition If your Governess be a Woman in years honour her the more if young you may promise your self more freedom with her yet if I may advise I would not have a person too young to have such a charge for they will have sufficient to do to govern themselves therefore the more unfit to govern others besides youth will be the more easily induced to submit rather to their Elders than their Equals What I now declare is the fruit of experience having had too great a charge in this nature when I was very young and do know how defective I was then in my duty since I became a Mother of Children having now more tenderness to youth and can speak it knowingly that a mild moderate way is to be preferred before rigor and harshness and that correction of words is better than that of blows Give me leave Gentlewomen to wish you a good Governess not such a one as I have been but as I could or would be now I can now with a greater sense look back upon my faults than I could discern them when first committed Thus much to your Governess Now to your Maid who is to dress you Be not peevish or froward to her but sweetly accept her endeavours and gently admonish her of her neglects or errors if she be good natur'd and willing to please this carriage will oblige and command a constant diligence from her otherwise you will cause her to serve you only for her own ends and with an eye-service and whilst you are making a wry face in the Glass she will make another behind your back Be courteous to all the Servants belonging to your Parents but not over-familiar with any of them lest they grow rude and sawcy with you and indeed too much familiarity is not good with any for contempt is commonly the product thereof If you can do any Servant good in any thing either in mitigating your Parents anger towards them or presenting their humble petition for them be not slack in so doing for by this means you will purchase to your self both love and honour If any poor body sue to you to beg in their names that which is not unfit for them to ask do not deny them and God will not deny you your requests Do good to all and turn not your face away from the indigent but let your charity extend to their relief and succour Be courteous to all people inferior to your quality but in such a way that they may know you understand your self and this will be a sweet kind of commanding reverence from them and will give you the character of a good and humble spirit assure your self it is better to be good than great Majesty mixt with modesty and humility forcibly commands the service of all but pride and imperiousness though in
take an especial care that the goods in the house be not spoiled by negligence of servants or otherwise Let me counsel you not only to avoid unnecessary or immoderate charges but also with a little cost make a great shew but above all suffer not your expence to exceed the receipt of your Husbands income There is a Proverbial saying That the Masters eye maketh the Horse fat I am sure the active vigilance of a good and careful Wise is the ready way to enrich a bad Husband Of Womens behaviour to their Servants and what is to be required of them in the house or what thereunto appertains IF by a thorough inspection and experience you find you have a faithful Servant give her to understand you are not insensible thereof by your loving carriage and kind acknowledgment of her fidelity and frequently find out some occasions to give her some little encouragements to engage her continuance therein do not dishearten her in her duty by often finding fault where there is little or none committed yet be not remiss in reproving where she doth amiss If you find you have a bad or unfaithful Servant as now adays there are too many more than ever whom you cannot either by fair means or foul reclaim Vex not nor fret at what you see is remediless but first making her thoroughly sensible of her errors give her fair warning to provide for her self and convenient for your own affairs and do not as a great many much to blame give too ill a character of her which will raise you little benefit although it may lay the basis of her utter ruin but rather be silent if you cannot speak good which course I should think was sufficient to work on the greatest stupidity for a future amendment Though a bad Servant detain not the wages nor any part that is justly due for the Labourer is worthy of his hire Be not too passionate with your Servants and look narrowly to them that they wast or lavish nothing lest thereby you impair your estate and so purchase the repute of a carelefs and indiscreet Women If you sind that they affect bravery too much and presume to wear what misbecomes their present condition rebuke them mildly into a moderation for their future advantage and the credit of the Family wherein they are Let not the business of the House take them clearly off the service of God but let them so relieve one the other in their duties that they may be sometimes hearers of a good Sermon and do not forget to make enquiry how they improve by what they hear at Church and in your own house Let every Servant Men and Women have their daily work appointed them which must be duly exacted and taken account of either by your self or some superior servant constituted by you for that purpose and let not your constant and painful care of your worldly affairs exclude your greatest concern the things of Heaven and therefore appoint certain hours Morning and Evening for publick prayers for the Family and let not any Servant be absent unless some extraordinary occasion hinder As near as you can keep one set and certain time with good orders observed for the Table in which be free yet frugal Let there be a competent allowance for the Servants that they may have no just cause to complain nor so much superfluity as that they may entertain a sort of loose Gossips in corners the very bane and spoil of Servants Invert not the course of Nature as too many do of late by converting day into night and night into day but keep good hours for your repose that your Servants may be the better disposed for the next days labour Observe due times for washing and smoothing up the Linnen quickly that it may not be thrown up and down and be mildewed and spoil'd and so be fit for nothing but the wash again and forget not to dearn or mend it every week that it may not run to tatters before it be half worn and do not suffer any Servant to be idle If you have a Dairy see it be kept clean and neat Let not the Corn in the Granary muste and spoil for want of skreening and turning Let your Servant see that your Beasts and Poultry be fatted in their due season and that your Stable keep no more Horses than your own In the Brew-house that the first Wort be not drunk up by idle people and so the smallness of your Beer become a disparagement to your Family In the Bake-house that your Dough which should be for the finest Bread at your Table be not half consumed in making of Cakes That there be always Bread enough for the Servants before hand for it is a point of ill Huswifry to eat hot or very new Bread In the Kitchin that there be no Necessaries wanting nor no wast or spoil made but that the Meat be salted and spent in due time In the Parlour let the Fire be made and the Cloth laid in due time that the Cook may have no excuse for the spoiling of his Meat In the Chambers that every thing be kept cleanly the Beds often turned the Furniture often beaten in the Sun and well brushed Every Saturday take an account of every Servants layings out and once a Month an account of all the expences of the whole House In the Buttery and Cellars that the Butler be careful of not making every idle fellow drunk that comes to the House and so squander away without credit the Wine Ale and Beer Now because you will have frequent occasions for Banquets in the entertaining of persons of Quality I think it not unfit for a Gentle-woman to learn the art of Preserving and Candying of which I shall according to the Profession I make thereof give you an ample account or instruction in some Chapters following Frugality will perswade you to learn these cxcellent Arts for in the constant use of the product thereof you will save much for Sweet-meats you will make much cheaper than you can buy them and more commendable Other things you will meet withall worthy of your observation of which this is no mean one most requisite and in no wise dishonourable that is your understanding how to dress Meat as well as eat it that your Servants may be guided by you and not you by them Gentlewomen I will appeal to you as persons competent to judg whether the right understanding of these things be not altogether requisite and necessary and as to your divertisements none carries in it more profit than Cookery now to the intent I may be instrumental to the making up a compleat and accomplished Gentlewoman give me leave here to set you down such A-la-mode instructions as may perfectly inform you in every thing that belongs to the commendable art of Cookery Terms for Carving all sorts of Meat at Table BEfore we shall treat of the body of Cookery I think it fit by way of Prologue or
and down you will lose your credit It may be a fellow-servant may court you but before you entertain the motion consider how you must live by inconsiderately marrying you may have one joyful meeting and ever after a sorrowful living and have time to repent of your rash matching Instructions for all Nursery-Maids in Noble Families YOu ought to be naturally inclined to love young Children or else you will soon discover your unfitness to manage that charge you must be neat and cleanly about them and careful to keep good hours for them Get their Breakfasts and Suppers in good and convenient time let them not sit too long but walk them often up and down especially those who cannot go well of themselves take heed they get no falls by your carelesness for by such means many the cause at first being unperceivable have afterwards grown irrecoverably lame or crooked wherefore if any such thing should happen conceal it not though you may justly incur a great deal of blame therefore I knew a Gentlewoman absolutely spoil'd by such a concealment her Nurse by negligence let her fall being very young from a Table and by the fall her thigh-bone was dislocated the Nurse fearing the indignation and displeasure of the Childs Parents who were rich and potent conceal'd it a long time under the pretence of some other indisposition endeavouring in the mean time the reducing of the bone to its proper place but by reason of an interposition of a Jelly between the dislocations it could not be done and then when it was too late the Parents were acquainted with the sad condition of their beloved Child and hereupon all means imaginable used for its recovery but all in vain although they had been at some hundreds of pounds charge for the cure She is now as lovely a young Gentlewoman as a ravisht eye can feast upon but it would break the heart of that body the eye belongs unto to see her go her back-side-walking would force a man from her to the Indies and yet her face would attract him to her twice as far But to my purpose be not churlish or dogged to them but merry and pleasant and contrive and invent pretty pastimes agreeable to their age keep their linnen and other things always mended and suffer them not to run too fast to decay Do not shew a partiality in your love to any of them for that dejects the rest Be careful to hear them read if it be imposed upon you and be not too hasty with them have a special care how you behave your self before them neither speaking nor acting misbecomingly lest your bad example prove the subject of their imitation Instructions for all Chamber-maids to Gentlewomen in City and Country FRom you it will be required that you wash and starch very well both Tiffanies Lawns Points and Laces and that you can mend what is amiss in them That you work Needle-work well and all sorts of Plain-work or any other work with the Needle which is used in such Houses That you wash black and white Sarsnets that you dress well and diligently perform what you are commanded by your Mistress be neat in your Habit modest in your Carriage silent when she is angry willing to please quick and neat handed about what you have to do You must know how to make all manner of Spoon-meats to raise Paste to dress Meat well though not often required thereunto both of Fish and Flesh to make Sauces garnish Dishes make all sorts of Pickles to see that every thing be served in well and handsomely to the Table in due time and to wait with a graceful decorum at the Table if need should require Keep your Mistresses Chamber clean and lay up every thing in its due place you ought to be skilful in buying any thing in the Market if you be intrusted therewith these things will be expected from you in those Houses where there is no Head-cook If there be no Butler you must see all things decent and fitting in the Parlour and Dining-room In a word you must divest your Mistress from all the care you can giving to her a just and true account of what moneys you lay out shewing your self thrifty in all your disbursements be careful in overlooking inferior servants that they waste nothing which belongs to your Master and Mistress If you are thus qualified and be of an humble and good disposition your merit will deserve a good Sallary and a great deal of love and respect If you have not these accomplishments endeavour their procuration by sparing some money from superfluous expence and over-gaudy clothes for to see a Maid finely trickt up having a fine show without and not one good qualification within is like a jointed Bartholomew-Baby bought for no other use than to be look'd upon Instructions for Nursery-Maids to Gentlewomen both in London or elsewhere LEt me advise you first to consider the charge you take in hand and not to desire it as too many do because it is an easie kind of life void of labour and pains-taking thinking also that Children are easily pleas'd with any thing I can assure you the contrary for it is a troublesome employment and the charge is of greater weight than such vainly imagine You ought in the first place to be of a gentle and good disposition sober in your Carriage neat in your Apparel not sluggish nor heavy-headed but watchful and careful in the night-season for fear any of the Children should be ill and keep due hours for their up-rising and going to bed Take special care that they eat nothing which may over-charge their Stomacks If you observe their Faces at any time paler than ordinary or complain of pain in their Stomack conclude it is the Worms that troubles them and therefore give them remedies suitable to the distemper do this often whether you see those Symtoms or no the neglect of which hath been the destruction of many hopeful Children Keep them whatever you do sweet and clean and moderately warm teach them some good forms of prayer and to read as they are capable restrain them from drinking too much Wine strong Liquors and eating over-much Fruit. Be loving and chearful with them not humping or beating them as many do contrary to the knowledg and pleasure of their Parents That Mother is very un wife that will give liberty to Servants to strike her Children and that Servant is over-sawcy and ill natur'd who dares do it without her Mistresses privity and consent This is your duty and unless you can and will do this never undertake this charge Instructions for such who desire to be absolute Cook-maids in good and great houses IT is a common thing now-adays for Cook-maids to ask great Wages although they are conscious to themselves of their inability of performing almost any thing which as it is unconscionable so to do so in the end it will prove disgraceful to them I shall therefore tell you
the dust and did not leave me till I was within a league of Naples and then I found where I was Constant. What a loss had England sustain'd had you never been found Errat Entring this City I found the people all clad in silk too soft and effeminate for me to converse withal From hence I went to Florence from whence we borrow the art of making Custards which are therefore called Florentines From hence I went to Milan famous for Haberdashers from thence called in London Millaners Thence to Padua hence come our Padding or stroling Doctors vulgarly called Mountebanks Constant. You report wonders go on Sir Errat Of all the Champane Countries in the world Venice for my money What lofty Mountains and pleasant Valleys what spacious Downs for the merry hunt Oh how I have made the Woods ring there with the Dukes dogs And now I talk of him I had never left the place had it not been for the excessive love of his chief Concubine towards me who being discovered stealing the Piazza to carry with her in her Journey with me for England was secur'd and I forc'd to fly for 't Constant. Is 't possible Errat I took poste from thence to Genoa from thence to Madrid and so to Leyden Constant. Excellent and how were you entertain'd by the Dutch Errat We were drunk together every day but I 'le say this for them the Devil is but a Dunce to them when they are in their drink The last thing I heard there was a design to charm the Indies and bring it to Amsterdam in Butter-firkins Had I staid longer in Holland I should have dyed on a surfet of Bore but I washt it down with a fox at Flushing here I met with a bucksome Froe with whom I went to Middleburgh and left her as drunk as a bitch at Rotterdam and so taking shipping from thence I landed at Trig-stairs Constant. Well Sir I see the difference between you and truth is so great that there cannot be expected a reconcilement wherefore I shall leave you A Gentleman accidentally hapning into a room where a Company of Ladies were well known to him Gent. YOur pardon Ladies let not my coming interrupt your Discourse but rather give me the freedom that I may participate in the satisfaction Ladies Our discourse is of no great concernment we can take some other time to continue it that we may now give way to yours which we doubt not will prove every whit if not more agreeable Gent. My invention Ladies cannot want a subject for Discourse where the company so overflows with wit and ingenuity but my tongue will want expressions to answer your Critical expectations Ladies Sir we acknowledg no such thing in our selves and therefore let not that we pray be the subject of your eloquence lest we suspect you intend to laugh at us Gent. Ladies you must suffer me not withstanding all this that though modesty interdicts you the acknowledging a truth yet the respect I bear to Ladies commands me not only to acknowledg it but also to divulge and maintain it Ladies We confess Sir the frailty and weakness of our Sex requires some support and for my own part I cannot look upon any person so worthy as your self to be our Champion Gent. What power I have to vindicate your person is derivative from your virtues and were I so feeble that the supporters of my body were no longer able to support that burthen yet one propitious glance of any of your eyes would dart heat and vigor through my whole body and so my feet would be enabled to run in your service Ladies Have a care Sir you do not strain your invention above the reach of an Hyperbole but lore your fancy to the meanness of our capacity if you cannot perform it at present we will give you time Gent. Ladies I am fearful my company may be troublesome or interrupt you from more agreeable conversation wherefore your Servant Ladies FINIS BOOKS sold by Dorman Newman at the King's-Arms and Bible in the Poultry Folio THe History of King John King Henry the Second and the most Illustrious King Edward the First wherein the ancient Soveraign Dominion of the Kings of Great Britain over all persons in all Causes is asserted and vindicated With an exact History of the Popes intolerable Usurpation upon the Liberties of the Kings and Subjects of England and Ireland Collected out of the Ancient Records in the Tower of London By W. Prin Esq of Lincolns-Inn and Keeper of his Majesties Records in the Tower of London A Description of the Four parts of the World taken from the Works of Monsieur Sanson Geographer to the French King and other eminent Travellers and Authors to which is added the Commodities Coynes Weights and Measures of the chief places of Traffick in the World illustrated with variety of useful and delightful Maps and Figures By Richard Blome Gent. Memoires of the Lives Actions Sufferings and Deaths of those Excellent Personages that suffered for Allegiance to their Soveraign in our late intestine Warrs from the year 1637 to 1666 with the Life and Martyrdom of King Charles the First By David Lloyd The Exact Politician or Compleat States-man c. By Leonard Willan Esquire A Relation in form of a Journal of the Voyage and Residence of K. Charles the Second in Holland The History of the Cardinals of the Roman Church from the time of their first Creation to the Election of Pope Clement the Ninth with a full account of his Conclave Mores hominum the Manners of Men described in sixteen Satyrs by Juvenal together with a large Comment clearing the Author in every place wherein he seemed obscure out of the Laws and Customs of the Romans and the Latin and Greek Histories By Sir Robert Stapleton Knight A Treatise of Justification By George Downham Dr. of D. Fifty one Sermons Preached by the Reverend Dr. Mark Frank Master of Pembroke-Hall in Cambridg Arch-Deacon of St. Albans c. To which is added a Sermon Preached at Pauls-Cross Anno 1641 and then commanded to be Printed by King Charles the First Bentivolio and Urania in six Books By Nathaniel Ingelo D. D. The third Edition wherein all the obscure words throughout the Book are interpreted in the Margent which makes this much more delightful to read than the former De Jure Uniformitatis Ecclesiasticae or three Books of the Rights belonging to an Uniformity in Churches in which the chief things of the Laws of Nature and Nations and of the Divine Law concerning the Consistency of the Ecclesiastical Estate with the Civil are unfolded by Hugh Davis Ll. B. late Fellow of New-Colledg in Oxon. Quarto A Letter from Dr. Robert Wild to his Friend Mr. J. J. upon occasion of his Majesties Declaration for Liberty of Conscience Together with his Poetica Licentia and a friendly Debate between a Conformist and a Nonconformist Merry Andrew and poor Robins Dialogue The Dutch Remonstrance concerning the Proceedings