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A57015 The fifth book of The works of Francis Rabelais, M.D., contaning the heroic deeds and sayings of the great Pantagruel to which is added the Pantagruelian prognostication, Rabelais's letters, and several other pieces by that author / done out of French by P.M.; Selections. 1694 Rabelais, François, ca. 1490-1553?; Rabelais, François, ca. 1490-1553? Pantagruel. English.; Rabelais, François, ca. 1490-1553? Pantagruéline prognostication. English.; Rabelais, François, ca. 1490-1553? Correspondence. English.; Motteux, Peter Anthony, 1660-1718. 1694 (1694) Wing R104A; ESTC R2564 128,470 325

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no means help the Sight Ears shall be at least as scarce and short in Gascony and among Knights of the post as ever A most horrid and dreadful virulent malignant catching perverse and odious Malady shall be almost Epidemical insomuch that many shall run mad upon 't not knowing what Nail to drive to keep the Wolf from the Door very often plotting contriving Cud-gelling and puzling their weak shallow Brains and syllogizing and prying up and down for the Philosopher's Stone tho they only get Midas's Lugs by the bargain I quake for very fear when I think on 't for I assure you few will escape this Disease which Averroes calls Lack of Money And by consequence of the last years Comet and Saturn's Retrogradation a huge drivelling He-Scoundrel all be-crinkum'd and colly-flower'd shall dye in the Spittle at his Death will be a horrid clutter between the Cats and the Rats Hounds and Hares Hawks and Ducks and eke between the Monks and Eggs. CHAP. IV. Of the Fruits of the Earth this Year I Find by the Calculations of Albumazar in his Book of the great Conjunction and elsewhere That this will be a plentiful year of all manner of good things to those that have enough but your Hops of Picardy will go near to fare the worse for the Cold. As for Oates they 'll be a great help to Horses I dare say there won't be much more Bacon than Swine Pisces having the Ascendant 't will be a mighty year for Muscles Cockles and Perry-winkles Mercury somewhat threatens our Parsly-beds yet Parsly will be to be had for Money Hemp will grow faster than the Children of this Age and some will find there 's but too much on 't There will be but a very few Bon-Christians but Choak-pears in abundance As for Corn Wine Fruit and Herbs there never was such plenty as will be now if poor Folks may have their wish CHAP. V. Of the Disposition of the People this Year 'T Is the oddest whimsy in the World to fancy there are Stars for Kings Popes and Great Dons any more than for the Poor and Needy As if forsooth some new Stars were made since the Flood or since Romulus or Pharamond at the making some body King A thing that Triboulet or Caillette would have been asham'd to have said and yet they were Men of no Common Learning or Fame and for ought you or I know this same Triboulet may have been of the Kings of Castille's Blood in Noah's Ark and Caillette of that of King Priam. Now mark ye me those odd Notions come from nothing in the World but want of Faith I say the true Catholick Faith Therefore resting fully satisfi'd that the Stars care not a Fart more for Kings than for Beggers nor a jot more for your rich topping Fellows than for the most Sorry Mangy Lousy Rascal I 'll e'en leave other addle-pated Fortunetellers to speak of Great Folks and I will only talk of the Little Ones And in the first place of those who are subject to Saturn as for example such as lack the ready jealous or hornmad self-tormenting Prigs dreaming Fops crabbed Eves-droppers raving doating Churls hatchers and brooders of Mischief suspicious distrustful Slouches Mole-catchers closefisted griping Misers Usurers and Pawn-broakers Christian-Jews Pinch-crusts Hold fasts Michers and Penny-fathers Redeemers of dipt mortgag'd and bleeding Copy-holds and Messuages Fleecers of Sheer'd-Asses Shoe-makers and Translators Tanners Brick-layers Bellfounders Compounders of Loans Patchers Clowters and Botchers of old trumpery Stuff and all moping melancholly Folks shall not have this Year whatever they 'd have and will think more than once how they may get good store of the King's Pictures into their Clutches in the mean time they 'll hardly throw Shoulders of Mutton out at the Windows and will often scratch their working Noddles where they do not itch As for those who are under Jupiter as Canting-vermin Biggots Pardon-pedlers Voluminous Abbreviators Scriblers of Breves Copists Pope's Bull-makers Dataries Pettifoggers Capuchins Monks Hermits Hypocrites Cushing-thumping Mountebanks Spiritual Comedians Forms of Holiness Pater-Noster-faces Wheadling-gablers Wry-neck'd-scoundrels Spoilers of Paper Stately-gulls Notch'd-cropt-ear'd Meacocks Publick Register's Clarks Clergy-Taylors Wafer-makers Rosary-makers Engrossers of Deeds Notaries Grave-bubbles Protecoles and Prompters to Speakers Deceitful-makers of Promises shall fare according as they have Money So many Clergy-men will dye that there will not be men enough found on whom their Benefices may be conferr'd so that many will hold two three four or more The Tribe of Hypocrites shall lose a good deal of its Ancient Fame since the World is grown a Rake and will not be fool'd much longer as Avenzagel saith Those who are under Mars as Hang-men Cut-throats Dead-doing Fellows Free-booters Hedge-birds Foot-pads and Highway-men Catchpoles Bum-bailiffs Beadles and Watchmen Reformadoes Tooth-drawers and Corn-cutters Pintle-Smiths Shavers and Frig-beards Butchers Coyners Paultry-Quacks and Mountebanks Renegadoes Apostates and Marraniz'd Miscreants Incendiaries or Beutefeus Chimny-sweepers Boorish Cluster-fists Charcoalmen Alchymists Merchants of Eel-skins and Egg-shels Gridiron and Rattle-makers Cooks Paultry-pedlers Trashmongers and Spanglemakers Braceletmakers Lanternmakers and Tinkers this Year will do fine things but some of them will be somewhat subject to be Rib-roasted and have a St. Andrew's Cross scor'd over their Jobbernols at unawares This Year one of those Worthy Persons will go nigh to be made a Field-Bishop and mounted on a Horse that was foal'd of an Acorn give the Passengers a blessing with his Legs Those who belong to Sol as Topers Quaffers Whipcans Tospots Whittled Mellow Cupshotten Swillers Merry Greeks with Crimsin-snouts of their own dying fat pursy Gorbellies Brewers of Wine and of Beer Botlers of Hay Porters Mowers Menders of Til'd Slated and Thatch'd Houses Burthen-bearers Packers Shepherds Ox-keepers and Cow-herds Swine-herds and Hog-drivers Fowlers and Birdcatchers Gardiners Barnkeepers Hedgers Common Mumpers and Vagabonds Day-labourers Scowerers of greasy Thrum-caps Stuffers and Bum-basters of Pack-saddles Rag-merchants idle Lusks sloathful Idlebies and drowsy Loiterers Smell-feasts and Snap gobbets Gentlemen generally wearing Shirts with Neckbands or heartily desiring to wear such all these will be hale and sharp set and not troubled with the Gout at the Grinders or a stoppage at the Gullet when at a Feast on free cost Those whom Venus is said to Rule as Punks Jills Flirts Queans Morts Doxies Strumpets Buttocks Blowings Tits Pure Ones Concubines Convenients Cracks Drabs Trulls Light-skirts Wrigglers Misses Cats Riggs Try'd Virgins Bonarobaes Barbers Chairs Hedge-whores Wagtails Cockatrices Whipsters Twiggers Harlots Kept-wenches Kind-hearted-things Ladies of Pleasures by what Titles or Names soever dignified or distinguish'd Bawds Pimps Panders Procurers and Mutton-broakers Wenchers Leachers Shakers Smockers Cousins Cullies Stallions and Bellibumpers Ganymedes Bardachoes Huflers Ingles Fricatrices He-whores and Sodomites swaggering Huffsnuffs bouncing Bullies Braggadoccios Tory-rory Rakes and Tantivy-boys pepper'd clapt and pox'd Dabblers shanker'd colli-flower'd carbuncled Martyrs and Confessors of Venus Rovers Ruffian-Rogues and Hedge-creepers Female Chamberlains Nomina
black Mite or Weevil which is born of a white Bean and sallies out at the hole which he makes gnawing it The Mite being turn'd ●nto a kind of a Fly sometimes walks and sometimes flies over Hills and Dales Now Pythagoras the Philosopher and his Sect besides many others wondering at its Birth in such a place which makes some ●rgue for equivocal Generation thought ●hat by a Metempsycosis the Body of that ●nsect was the Lodging of an Human Soul Now were you Men here after your wel●om'd Death according to his Opinion ●our Souls would most certainly enter into ●he Body of Mites or Weevils for in your present state of life you are good for no●hing in the world but to gnaw bite eat ●nd devour all things so in the next you 'll ●'en gnaw and devour your Mothers very ●ides as the Vipers do Now by Gold 〈◊〉 think I have fairly solv'd and resolv'd your Riddle May my Bawble be turn'd into a Nut-cracker quoth Friar Ihon if I could not almost find in my heart to wish that what comes out at my Bunghole were Beans that ●hese evil Weevils might feed as they deserve Panurge then without any more ado ●hrew a large Leathern Purse stuff'd with Gold Crowns Escus au Soleil among them The Furr'd Law-Cats no soone● heard the jingling of the Chink but the● all began to bestir their Claws like a par● of Fiddlers running a Division and the● fell to 't squimble squamble catch that cat● can They all said aloud These are th● Fees these are the Gloves now this 〈◊〉 somewhat like a Tanzy Oh 't was a pretty Trial a sweet Trial a dainty Tria● O' my word they did not starve the Cause these are none of your sniveling Forma P●●●peris's No they are Noble Clients Gen●tlemen every Inch of them By Gold 't is Gold quoth Panurge good old Gold I 'll assure you Saith Gripe-men-all The Court upon ● full Hearing of the Gold quoth Panurge and weighty Reasons given finds the Priso●ners Not Guilty and accordingly order 'em to be discharg'd out of Custody paying their Fees Now Gentlemen proceed go for wards said he to us we have no● so much of the Devil in us as we have 〈◊〉 his Hue tho we are Stout we are Merciful As we came out at the Wicket we we●● conducted to the Port by a Detachment of certain Highland-Griffins scribere ●●●●dashoes who advised us before we came to our Ships not to offer to leave the place till we had made the usual Presents first to the Lady Gripe-men-all then to all the Furr'd Law-Pusses otherwise we must return to the place from whence we came Well well saith Frier Ihon we 'll fumble in our Fobs examine every one of us his Concern and e'en give the Women their due we 'll ne'er boggle or stick out on that account as we tickled the Men in the Palm we 'll tickle the Women in the right place Pray Gentlemen added they don't forget to leave somewhat behind you for us poor Devils to drink your Healths O Lawd never fear answer'd Frier Ihon I don't remember that I ever went any where yet where the poor Devils are not mention'd and encourag'd CHAP. XV. How the Furr'd Law-Cats live on Corruption FRiar Ihon had hardly said those words e're he perceiv'd Seventy Eight Gallies and Frigats just arriving at the Port. So he hied him thither to learn some News and as he ask'd what Goods they had o'board he soon found that their whole Cargo was Venison Hares Capons Turkeys Pigs Swine Bacon Kids Calves Hens Ducks Teals Geese and other Poultry and Wild-fowl He also spy'd among these some pieces of Velvet Satin and Damask This made him ask the New-comers whither and to whom they were going to carry those dainty Goods They answer'd that they were for Gripe-men-all and the Furr'd Law-Cats Pray ask'd he what 's the true name of all these things in your Countrey Language Corruption they repli'd If they live on Corruption said the Friar they 'll perish with their Generation May the Devil be damn'd I have it now Their Fathers devour'd the good Gentlemen who according to their state of life us'd to go much a Hunting and Hawking to be the better inur'd to Toil in time of War For Hunting is an Image of a Martial Life and Xenophon was much in the right on 't when he affirm'd that Hunting had yielded a great number of excellent Warriors as well as the Trojan Horse For my part I am no Scholar I have it but by hear-say yet I believe it Now the Souls of those brave Fellows according to Gripe-men-all's Riddle after their decease enter into Wild-boars Stags Roe-bucks Herns and such other Creatures which they lov'd and in quest of which they went while they were men and these Furr'd Law-Cats having first destroy'd and devour'd their Castles Lands Demesnes Possessions Rents and Revenues are still seeking to have their Blood and Soul in another Life What an honest Fellow was that same Mumper who had forewarn'd us of all these things and bid us take notice of the Mangers above the Racks But said Panurge to the New-comer how do you come by all this Venison methinks the Great King has issued out a Proclamation strictly inhibiting the destroying of Stags Does Wild-boars Roe-bucks or other Royal Game on pain of Death All this is true enough answer'd one for the rest But the Great King is so good and gracious you must know and these Furr'd Law-Cats so curst and cruel so mad and thirsting after Christian Blood that we have less cause to fear in trespassing against that Mighty Sovereign's Commands than reason to hope to live if we do not continually stop the mouths of these Furr'd Law-Cats with such Bribes and Corruption Besides added he tomorrow Gripe-men-all marries a Furr'd Law-Puss of his to a high and mighty Doublefurr'd Law-Tibert Formerly we us'd to call them Chop-hay but alas they are not such neat Creatures now as to eat any or Chew the Cud. We call them Chop-Hares Chop-Partridges Chop-Woodcoks Chop-Pheasants Chop-pullets Chop-Venison Chop Connies Chop-Pigs for they scorn to feed o● courser Meat A T d for their Chops cry'd Frier Ihon next year we 'll have 'em call'd Chop-Dung Chop-Stront Chop-Filth Would you take my Advice added h● to the Company What is it answer'd we Let 's do two things return'd he First Let 's secure all this Venison and Wild-fowl I mean paying well for them for my part I am but too much tir'd already with our Salt-meat it heats my Flan● so horribly In the next place let 's go bad to the Wicket and destroy all these devili●● Furr'd Law-Cats For my part quot● Panurge I know better things catch m● there and hang me No I am somewha● more inclin'd to be fearful than bold ● love to sleep in a whole skin CHAP. XVI How Friar Ihon talks of rooting o● the Furr'd Law-Cats VErtue of the Frock quoth Friar Iho● what kind of a Voyage are we m●●
these Wars against the Turk and Barberossa to secure Italy and the Pope and that he must of necessity contribute to it The Pope will answer That he has no Money and will manifestly prove his Poverty to him Then the Emperor without disbursing any thing will demand the Duke of Ferrara 's of him which he knows he may command at a word and this is the Mystery of the Matter Yet 't is not certain whether things will be manag'd thus or no. LETTER XV. My Lord YOu ask whether the Lord Pietro Ludovico is the Pope's Legitimate Son or Bastard be assur'd the Pope was never married which is as much as to say that the aforesaid Gentleman is certainly a Bastard The Pope had a very beautiful Sister There is to be seen to this day at the Palace in that Apartment where the Summists reside built by Pope Alexander an Image of our Lady which 't is said was drawn after that Gentlewoman She was married to a Gentleman Cousin to the Lord Rance who being in the War in the Expedition of Naples the said Pope Alexander *** Now the Lord Rance having certain knowledg of the thing gave notice of it to his Cousin Telling him that be ought not to suffer such a wrong done to their Family by a Spanish Pope and that if he would endure it he himself would not In short her Husband kill'd her for which Fact the present Pope griev'd And to asswage his Sorrow Alexander made him a Cardinal being yet but very young and bestow'd several other Marks of his favour upon him At that time the Pope kept a Roman Lady della Casa Ruffina and by her had a Daughter who was married to the Lord Bauge Count of Sancta Fiore who died in this Town since I came hither By her he has had one of the two little Cardinals who is called the Cardinal of Sancta Fiore The Pope likewise had a Son who is the said Pietro Ludovico concerning whom you inquire who has married the Daughter of the Count de Cervelle on whom he has got a whole Houseful of Children and among others the little Cardinalicule Farnese who was made Vice-chancellour by the death of the late Cardinal de Medicis By what is said you may judge why the Pope did not very well love the Lord Rance and vice versâ on the other side the Lord Rance put no great confidence in him Whence arises a great quarrel between my Lord John-Paul de Cere Son to the said Lord Rance and the abovenamed Petro Ludivico for he is resolved to revenge the death of his Aunt But he is quit of it on the part of the said Lord Rance for he di'd the Eleventh day of this Month going a Hunting in which he extremely delighted old as he was The occasion was this He had got some Turkish Horses from the Fairs of Racana and as he was hunting on one of them that was very tender-mouth'd it fell tumbl'd over him and bruis'd him with the Saddle-bow so severely that he did not live above half an hour after the fall This was a great loss to the French for the King in him has lost a good Servant for his Affairs in Italy 'T is rightly said that the Lord John-Paul his Son will be no less hereafter But it will be a long time e're he gets such Experience in feats of Arms or so great a Reputation among the Commanders and Soldiers as the late brave man had I wish with all my heart that my Lord d'Estissac by his death had the County of Pontoise For 't is said it brings a good Revenue To assist at the Funeral and to comfort the Marchioness his Wife my Lord Cardinal has sent to Ceres near Twenty miles from this Town my Lord de Rambouillet and the Abbot of St. Nicaise who was a near Kinsman to the deceased I believe you have seen him at Court he is a little man all life who was call'd the Archdeacon of the Ursins Besides he has sent some others of his Prothonotaries which likewise my Lord of Mascon has done LETTER XVI My Lord I Defer to my next to give you more at large the News concerning the Emperor for his Design is not yet perfectly discovered He is still at Naples but is expected here by the end of this Month. Great preparations are made for his coming and abundance of Triumphal Arches His four Harbingers have been a good while here in Town two of them Spaniards one Burgundian and the fourth a Flemming 'T is great pity to see the Ruins of the Churches Palaces and Houses which the Pope has caused to be demolished and pulled down to make and level him a way For the Charges of his Reception he has laid a Tax on the College of Cardinals on those who have Places at Court and the Artificers of the Town as much as the very Aquarols The Town is already full of Foreigners On the Fifth of this Month the Cardinal of Trent Tridentinus arrived being sent here by the Emperor His Train is very numerous and more sumptuous than the Pope's He had with him above a hundred Germans all drest alike their Gowns were Red with a Yellow Galloon and on their right Sleeve was embroydered a Wheat-sheave ti'd close and round it was written VNITAS I hear he is much for Peace and reconciling all the Christian Princes He eagerly desires a General Council whatever is done in other matters I was present when he said to my Lord Cardinal du Bellay His Holiness the Cardinals Bishops and Prelates of the Church are against a Council and will by no means hear any thing of it though they are pressed by Secular Princes on that Subject but I see the Time at hand when the Prelates of the Church shall be reduced to demand a Council and the Laity will not hearken to it This will be when the Latter have taken from the Church all the Wealth and Patrimony which they had given while Ecclesiastics by the means of frequent Councils maintained Peace and Vnity among the Laity Andrew Doria came to this Town on the Third of this Month in no very good Equipage No manner of particular respect was shewn him at his Arrival save only that the Lord Pietro Ludovico conducted him as far as the Palace of the Cardinal Camerlingo who is a Genoese of the House of Spinola The next day he saluted the Pope and the day after went away for Genoa on the Emperor's behalf to inform himself underhand concerning the Dispositions of the French about the War We have had here a positive Account of the Old Queen of England's Death and they add That the Princess her Daughter lies very ill However The Bull that was to be issued out against the King of England to excommunicate him and to interdict and proscribe his Kindom did not pass at the Consistory because of the Articles De commeatibus externorian commerciis mutuis Of the Passages of Foreigners and Mutual Intercourses
which my Lord Cardinal Du Bellay and the Bishop of Mascon opposed in the King's name on account of the Interests which he pretends to have in it It has been put off till the Emperor's Arrival My Lord I most humbly recommend my self to your kind Favour praying God that it may please him to keep you long in health and prosperity Rome Feb. 13. MDXXXVI Your Lordship 's most humble Servant Francis Rabelais The End of the Letters THE CONTENTS The Fourth Book of Pantagruel CHap. 1. How Pantagruel went to Sea to visit the Oracle of Bacbuc alias the Holy Bottle pag 1 Chap. 2. How Pantagruel bought many Rarities in the Island of Medamothy 7 Chap. 3. How Pantagruel receiv'd a Letter from his Father Gargantua and of the strange way to have speedy News from far distant places 11 Chap. 4. How Pantagruel writ to his Father Gargantua and sent him several Curiosities 15 Chap. 5. How Pantagruel met a Ship with Passengers returning from Lantern-Land 19 Chap. 6. How the Fray being over Panurge cheapned one of Dingdong's Sheep 23 Chap. 7. Which if you read you 'll find how Panurge bargain'd with Dingdong 27 Chap. 8. How Panurge caus'd Dingdong and his Sheep to be drowned in the Sea 32 Chap. 9. How Pantagruel arrived at the Island of Enasin and of the strange ways of being akin in that Country pag. 35 Chap. 10. How Pantagruel went ashore at the Island of Cheli where he saw King St. Panigon 41 Chap. 11. Why Monks love to be in Kitchins 44 Chap. 12. How Pantagruel pass'd by the Land of Petifogging and of the strange way of living among the Catchpoles 48 Chap. 13. How like Master Francis Villon the Lord of Basché commended his Servants 54 Chap. 14. A further Account of Catchpoles who were drub'd at Baschés House 59 Chap. 15. How the Ancient Custom at Nuptials is renewed by the Catchpole 63 Chap. 16. How Fryar Ihon made tryal of the Nature of the Catchpoles 68 Chap. 17. How Pantagruel came to the Island of Tohu and Bohu and of the strange death of Widenostrils the Swallower of Windmills 72 Chap. 18. How Pantagruel met with a great Storm at Sea 77 Chap. 19. What Countenances Panurge and Fryar Ihon kept during the Storm 81 Chap. 20. How the Pilots were forsaking their Ships in the greatest stress of weather 85 Chap. 21. A Continuation of the Storm with a short Discourse on the Subject of making Testaments at Sea pag. 89 Chap. 22. An End of the Storm 93 Chap. 23. How Panurge play'd the Good-Fellow when the Storm was over 97 Chap. 24. How Panurge was said to have been afraid without reason during the Storm 100 Chap. 25. How after the Storm Pantagruel went on shore in the Islands of the Macreons 103 Chap. 26. How the good Macrobius gave us an Account of the Mansion and decease of the Heroes 106 Chap. 27. Pantagruel's Discourse of the decease of Heroic Souls and of the dreadful Prodigies that happen'd before the death of the late Lord de Langey 110 Chap. 28. How Pantagruel related a very sad Story of the death of the Heroes 114 Chap. 29. How Pantagruel sail'd by the Sneaking Island where Shrovetide reign'd 117 Chap. 30. How Shrovetide is anatomiz'd and describ'd by Xenomanes 120 Chap. 31. Shrovetide's outward parts anatomiz'd 123 Chap. 32. A Continuation of Shrovetide's Countenance 126 Chap. 33. How Pantagruel discover'd a monstrous Physetere or Whirlpool near the Wild Island pag. 131 Chap. 34. How the monstrous Physetere was slain by Pantagruel 134 Chap. 35. How Pantagruel went on shore in the wild Island the ancient Abode of the Chitterlings 138 Chap. 36. How the wild Chitterlings laid an Ambuscado for Pantagruel 141 Chap. 37. How Pantagruel sent for Colonel Mawl-Chitterling and Colonel Cut-Pudding with a Discourse well worth your hearing about the Names of Places and Persons 144 Chap. 38. How Chitterlings are not to be slighted by Men. 150 Chap. 39. How Fryar Ihon join'd with the Cooks to fight the Chitterlings 152 Chap. 40. How Fryar Ihon fitted up the Sow and of the valiant Cooks thht went into it 155 Chap. 41. How Pantagruel broke the Chitterlings at the Knees 159 Chap. 42. How Pantagruel held a Treaty with Niphleseth Queen of the Chitterlings 163 Chap. 43. How Pantagruel went into the Island of Ruach 165 Chap. 44. How a small Rain lays a high Wind. 169 Chap. 45. How Pantagruel went ashore in the Island of Pope Figland 172 Chap. 46. How a Junior Devil was fool'd by a Husbandman of Pope Figland pag. 177 Chap. 47. How the Devil was deceiv'd by an Old Woman of Pope-Figland 182 Chap. 48. How Pantagruel went ashore at the Island of Papimany 185 Chap. 49. How Homenas Bishop of Papimany shew'd us the Uranopet Decretals 189 Chap. 50. How Homenas shew'd us the Arch-Type or Representation of a Pope 393 Chap. 51. Table-Talk in Praise of the Decretals 196 Chap. 52. A Continuation of the Miracles caus'd by the Decretals 200 Chap. 53. How by the Vertue of the Decretals Gold is subtilly drawn out of France to Rome 207 Chap. 54. How Homenas gave Pantagruel some Bon-Christian Pears 212 Chap. 55. How Pantagruel being at Sea heard various unfrozen Words 215 Chap. 56. How among the Frozen Words Pantagruel found some odd ones 219 Chap. 57. How Pantagruel went ashore at the Dwelling of Gaster the first Master of Arts in the World 223 Chap. 58. How at the Court of the Master of Ingenuity Pantagruel detested the Engastrimithes and the Gastrolaters 227 Chap. 59. Of the ridiculous Statue Manduce and how and what the Gastrolaters sacrifice to their Ventripotent God pag. 230 Chap. 60. What the Gastrolaters sacrific'd to their God on interlarded Fish-Days 235 Chap. 61. How Gaster invented Means to get and preserve Corn. 239 Chap. 62. How Gaster invented an Art to avoid being hurt or touch'd by Cannon Balls 243 Chap. 63. How Pantagruel fell asleep near the Island of Chaneph and of the Problems propos'd to be solv'd when he wak'd 248 Chap. 64. How Pantagruel gave no Answer to the Problems 253 Chap. 65. How Pantagruel past the Time with his Servants 258 Chap. 66. How by Pantagruel's Order the Muses were saluted near the Isle of Ganabim 263 Chap. 67. How Panurge bewray'd himself for fear and of the huge Cat Rodilardus which he took for a puny Devil 266 The Fifth Book of Rabelais treating of the Heroic Deeds and Sayings of the Good Pantagruel CHap. 1. How Pantagruel arriv'd at the Ringing Island and of the Noise that we heard pag. 1 Chap. 2. How the Ringing Island had been inhabited by the Siticines who were become Birds 5 Chap. 3. How there is but one Popehawk in the Ringing Island 8 Chap. 4. How the Birds of the Ringing Island were all Passengers 11 Chap. 5. Of the dumb Knighthawks of the Ringing Island 15 Chap. 6. How the Birds are cramm'd in the Ringing Island 18 Chap. 7. How Pantagruel came to the Island of the Apedefers or Ignoramus's