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A26956 The Young lovers guide, or, The unsuccessful amours of Philabius, a country lover ... writ by him to his beautious-unkind mistress ... ; with The answer of Helena to Paris, by a country shepherdess ; as also, The sixth Æneid and fourth eclogue of Virgil, both newly translated by J.B., Gent. Philabius.; Country shepherdess. Answer of Helena to Paris.; Virgil. Bucolica. 4. English.; Virgil. Aeneis. Liber 6. English.; J. B., Gent. 1699 (1699) Wing B131; ESTC R19435 36,870 128

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Bold Poets and rash Painters may aspire With pen and pencill to describe my Faire Alas their arts in the performance fayle And reach not that divine Original Some Shadd'wy glimpse they may present to view And this is all poore humane art Can doe M. Vander ●ucht Seul Philabius THE Young Lovers Guide OR The Unsuccessful Amours of Philabius a Country Lover set forth in several kind Epistles writ by him to his Beautious-unkind Mistress Teaching Lovers how to comport themselves with Resignation in their Love-Disasters WITH The Answer of Helena to Paris by a Country Shepherdess AS ALSO The Sixth Aeneid and Fourth Eclogue of Virgil both newly Translated By J. B. Gent. Si nec blanda satis nec crit tibi comis amica Perfer obdura postmodo mitis crit If your fair Mistress be not mild and kind Bear and persever Time may change her Mind Ovid. de Art Am. l. 1. LONDON Printed and are to be Sold by the Booksellers of London 1699. The PREFACE Writ by Philabius to Venus his Planetary Ascendant Dear Mother Venus I must style you so From you descended tho' unhappy Beau. You are my Astral Mother at my birth Your pow'rful Influence bore the sway on Earth From my Ascendent being sprung from you I hop'd Success where-ever I should woo Your Pow'r in Heav'n and Earth prevails shall I A Son of yours by you forsaken die Twenty long Months now I have lov'd a Fair And all my Courtship 's ending in Despair All Earthly Beauties scatter'd here and there From you their Source derive the Charms they bear The Fair I court partakes in high'st degree Of your transcending Heav'nly Quality Her I admire as most resembling You O take from her what is your Right and Due Or so incline her Favour for your Son That by hard Vsage he be not undone 'T is said those Persons at whose birth you reign Prove gracious to your Sex and Favour gain Must I be th' only Man whom you deny This Privilege O great Severity But ' gainst Heav'ns Actions what can Mortals say It deals with us as Potters do with Clay E'en as it lists for better or for worse Thrice happy those not fated for a Curse Tho' while our Ages Course is running on We little know what Heav'n intends t' have done What seems Affliction oft proves for our Good If with Submission we embrace the Rod. Life we are promis'd but first we are drown'd In Death and then with Life immortal crown'd God's Works are all by Means contrary done And cross to Man's Imagination run 'Till the just time is come that they 're fulfill'd And then tho' late to Providence we yield Perhaps my Fair's unkindness and delay Are more t' endear what once I shall enjoy Those Goods are priz'd for which we dearly pay Or if she 's fated for some other Man Perhaps for me kind Heav'n has order'd one More kind and Fair if Fairer there may be Or if being turn'd my Year of Jubilee Fate has ordain'd me a Quietus here And now my Course for Heav'n I must steer O Venus draw me by your Charms divine From Objects here my dreggy Thoughts refine From Earthly Things that being rais'd to you As I your Heav'nly Kingdom have in view Fixt on Ideal Beauty 'mong the Blest I may enjoy an everlasting Rest Philabius E R The Reader is desir'd to Correct the following Mistakes of the Press PAge 10. line 6. read maturer p. 12. l. 9. seldom does r. often fails p. 26. l. 17. mightily r. nightly p. 34. l. 6. breath r. leave ib. l. 14. r. there 's p. 42. l. 4. r. Ideal p. 44. l. 5. our r. ber p. 48. l. 18. r. learnt p. 53. l. 2. Faith's dele ' s ib. l. 3. with r. wish ib. l. 17. r. suppress p. 56. l. 4. calm r. but p. 64. l. 6. now r. new p. 65. l. 14. but r. cut p. 97. l. 11. r. in Heav'n ib. l. 16. might r. night p. 86. l. 20. ward's dele ' s. New Poems Three Addresses writ by Philabius to his beautious Mistress The First Address My only DEAR WIth Thoughts as kind as Lover ever knew Your Lover writes this Love-Address to you Did you but feel that Passion moves my Heart While I to you my Fondness here impart 'T would move your Pity Love Compassion all That tender Lovers grateful Kindness call But here alas my great Misfortune lies Words can't present before your gracious Eyes My inward Feeling All that Words can do I 'll say in short my Dear as God is true There 's nought on this side Heav'n I love as You. Yet let not Words alone my Witness be They 're Actions I desire should testify Command me what you please I beg command When once your Pleasure 's known if I withstand Your Will in ought my Life my Fortunes all I have from God afford then let me fall For ever in Disfavour of my Dear The greatest Curse that Man on Earth can bear I 'll not attempt as common Lovers use To write my Mistress Praise the Fair I choose Surpasses me surpasses Praise of Man She 's Praise it self she 's all Perfection Thrice happy 's he whose blessed Stars incline Her gracious Favour Heav'ns grant they are mine Beside those Stars which influence our Birth Three I must beg propitious here on Earth Your Father and your Mother dear and You Of whom I have already courted two And tho' some Men this Practise may disown Who pass by Friends and Daughter court alone Yet since I know your Parents mighty fond Of their dear Child I let them understand My Thoughts for you and hope 't will not displease My Dearest since their study is your ease ' Gainst my Address they one thing did object It was my Age indeed in that respect There 's disproportion yet such have I known When happy Life has follow'd thereupon All kind Indulgence to my Dear I 'd show Your Will should be my Law to come and go And do whate'er you pleas'd you should be free And I 'll presume to say I think with me You may enjoy as happy Scene of Life As where you else may choose to be a Wife I know in Age but two things give offence The Man's Moroseness or his Impotence And Heav'n's my Witness I think I 'm as free From these as one pretends to court should be And by my Years I this advantage gain They 've taught me Knowledge which may entertain My Dear sometimes with what may please her Mind Sometimes in London Pastimes we would find Where all that 's Curious to my Dear I 'd shew Being more perhaps than other Men may do In Summer-heats the Country we would see The small Retirement there belongs to me Is pretty pleasant may be made much more With little Cost Some Things I have in store Are also curious and of Value these And all I have are yours whene'er you please Indeed but poor are such Allurements where So high Desert
begin to know Ten long Months Loathings she did undergo Begin 'Till Children smile on Parents none Genius at board nor Juno ' tBed will own FINIS Books sold at the corner of Popes-head Alley next Cornhill CAmbrige Concordance The History of the Life Reign and Death of Edward II. King of England Lord of Ireland with the Rice and Fall of his great Favourites Gaveston and Spencers Tabulae Faeneratoriae or Tables for the Forbearance and Discompt of Mony whereby the Interest of all Sums from 10000 l. to one Shilling from one Day to 365. is exactly calculated to the thousandth part of a Penny with the Rebate of all Sums to 36 or 3 years c. The Third Edition The New A-la-Mode Secretary Or Practical Pen-man A New Copy-book Wherein the Bastard Italians commonly called the New A-la-Mode Round Hands Mixt Running Hands and Mixt Secretary's are so Model'd and Composed as to dispatch Business with Facility and Neatness Written with much Variety and performed according to the Nature Freedom and Tendency of the PEN by John Ayres Master of the Writing School at the Hand and Pen near St. Paul's School in St. Paul's Church-yard London Youths Introduction to Trade An Exercise-Book Chiefly designed for the Use of the Writing School to employ Youth at Night and other vacant Times while they learn to Write by which the Young Apprentice may be able to Apply his Writing and Arithmetick to Business as a Merchant Shop-keeper or other inferior Trades First Methodized for the Benefit of the Author's Scholars And Published for the Use of such as Teach Writing and Arithmetick By John Ayres The Second Edition Corrected and very much Enlarged Arithmetick A Treatise designed for the Use and Benefit of Trades-Men Wherein the Nature and Use of Fractions both Vulgar and Decimal are Taught by a New and Easie Method As also The Mensuration of Solids and Superficies The Third Edition very much Corrected and Enlarged By J. Ayres at the Hand and Pen in St. Paul's Church-yard The Physical Dictionary Wherein the Terms of Anatomy the Names and Causes of Diseases Chyrurgical Instruments and their Use are accurately Describ'd Also The Names and Virtues of Medicinal Plants Minerals Stones Gums Salts Earth c. And the Method of choosing the best Drugs The Terms of Chymistry and of the Apothecaries Art and the various Forms of Medicines and the ways of compounding them By Stephen Blancard M. D. Physick-Professor at Middleburg in Zealand The Third Edition with the Addition of above a Thousand Terms of Art and their Explanation Books sold at the Black Swan and Bible without Temple-Bar A Late Voyage to St. Kilda the remotest of all the Hebrides or Western Islands of Scotland with a History of the Island Natural Moral c. by Mr. Martin Gent. Beauty in Distress a Tragedy as it is Acted by His Majesty's Servants Written by Mr. Motteux With a Discourse of the Lawfulness and Unlawfulness of Plays By the Learned Father Caffara Divinity Professor at Paris sent in a Letter to the Author by a Divine of the Church of England With a Copy of Verses by Mr. Dryden in Defence of the Stage The Canterbury Guest or a Bargain broken A Comedy Acted at the Theatre-Royal Written by Tho. Shadwell The Cornish Comedy as it is Acted at the Theatre-Royal in Dorset-Garden by His Majesty's Servants Dr. Colebatch's four Tracts his Treatise of the Gout and Doctrin of Acids further asserted Cursus Osteologicus Being a compleat Doctrin of the Bones according to the Newest and most refined Notions of Anatomy c. By Robert Baker Chirurgeon Several Tracts about a Standing Army Life of King Lewis XIV The Gentlemans Recreation in Four Parts viz. Hunting Hawking Fowling Fishing wherein these generous Exercises are largely treated of c. The 4th Edition with Aditions Books sold at the Ship in St. Paul's Church-yard PHilip's New World of Words or an Universal English Dictionary containing the proper Significations and Derivations of all Words from other Languages c. the Fifth Edition with large Additions and Improvements from the best English and Foreign Authors Systema Agriculturae The Mystery of Husbandry discovered treating of the several new and most advantagious ways of Tilling Planting Sowing Manuring Ordering and Improving all sorts of Gardens Orchards Meadows Pastures Corn-Lands Woods and Coppices to which is added the Husbandman's Monthly Directions and the Interpretations of Rustick Terms The Fourth Edition with large Additions throughout the whole Archbishop Vsher's Life and Letters Published by Dr. Parr his Graces Chaplain Archbishop Vsher's Sermons Dr. Goad's Aphorisms of the Weather The History of England By Dr. Frankland Love's whole Art of Surveying and Measuring of Land made easie With plain and practical Rules how to survey protract cast up reduce or divide any Piece of Land whatsoever Strode's New and Easie Method to the Art of Dyalling His Arithmetical Treatise of the Permutations Combinations Elections and Compositions of Quantities Boyle's Experimental History of Cold with Cuts Miracles performed by Mony A Poem School of Politicks or Humors of a Coffee-House Bishop Hopkins on the Lords Prayer and Commandments Happy Union betwixt England and Holland Lord Shannon's Letter to an Atheistical Acquaintance Religio Militis A Treatise of Taxes and Contributions Archbishop Cranmer's Judgment on the Holy Scriptures publish'd by Dr. Gee Baxter's Church History and Episcopacy History of Parismus and Parismenos Mr. Boyle's free Enquiry into the vulgarly receiv'd Notion of Nature In English and Latin His Disquisition of the Final Causes of Natural Things His Martyrdom of Theodora and Didymus The Christian Virtuoso Experimenta Observationes Phisicae With a Collection of strange Reports Seraphick Love or Motives to the Love of God Tracts about the saltness of the Sea Medicina Hydrostatica Of Languid and Local Motion Experiments of the Icy Noctiluca Abbadie of the Truth of the Christian Religion Quintilian's Declamations English'd Dr. Newton's compleat Arithmetician Counsellor Manner's Legacy to his Son Ray's Nomenclator Classicus sive Dictionariolum Trilingue A Classical Nomenclator with the Gender and Declension of each Word and the Quantities of the Syllables c. For the use of Schools Robertson's Large and General Phrase-book Dr. Owen's Meditations of the Glory of Christ Yworth's whole Art of Practical Distillation Bishop Hopkins Sermons and Discourses in Four Volumes Plutarch's Morals Englished by several Hands Five Volumes
Book in a forwardness for the Press relating to the Symbolical Theology of the Gentiles and Virgil being known to have been critically learned in that kind and the most learned parts of his Works thereunto relating being his Sixth Aeneid and Fourth Eclogue it entred into my Thoughts lately to peruse them And on the perusal conceiving I should more clearly possess my self of his Sense by a Translation than by a cursary Reading I applied my self to it and such as it is have now permitted it to the Press And conceive as to the main it may appear to an indifferent Reader more easy and more clearly comprehending Virgil's Sense than Mr. Ogylby's whose Notes with others for Illustration the Reader may make use of if he pleases it being beside my present Business to make Comments and Virgil taking him either in the Original or in any Translation being unintelligible in many Places without good Assistance in that kind he presupposing much Learning in a Reader As for Mr. Dryden's Translation of Virgil I must own I heard it was extant before I set upon mine but I could not get sight of it in the Country where I then was As I have look on some parts of it since I cannot pretend to have giv'n Virgil that Lustre in what I have translated of him which Mr. Dryden by his more copious way of Expression has done I having generally endeavonr'd to hold way with Virgil Verse for Verse However in regard I look on Virgil as an Author which may be set in several Lights by Translators for making him more clearly intelligible I have not with-held the small part I have translated from the Publick J. B. The Sixth Book of Virgil's Aeneids THus weeping speaks and sets his Fleet to Sea And came t' Aeuboean Cuma ' n Italy Their Prows they Sea-wards turn with Anchors moor Their Ships whose Bow-built Sterns front all the Shoar The crowding Youth with eager Spirit lands Some striking Fire with Flints the wild Beasts dens Some storm for Wood fresh Rivers some descry Mean while Aeneas fam'd for Piety Apollo's Temple minds his Thoughts are on The Sibyll's Cave and dread recess by none Approacht but with an awful Terror where Apollo future Truths makes known to her Inspiring an excess of Mind And so To Trivia's Groves and Phoebus Tow'r they go Daed'lus t' escape from Minos as they say Daring with Wings in th' Air to make his way By course before unheard of Northward past And gently pitch'd on Chalcis Tow'r at last Assoon's arriv'd Phoebus his Wings to you And Art he sacred made and Temple now In front of which Androgeus Death was carv'd And as to Athens 't was a Pain reserv'd To pay sev'n pairs of Children yearly there Stands Pot and Lot's drawn for them ev'ry year On th' opp'site part Creete stands above the Sea Where 's seen the curst Love of Pasiphae And how by slight the Bull she underlay Here 's the mixt Race and biform Minotaure All Mon'ments of nefarious Lust And here The Lab'rinth whence none ever could get clear Tho Daed'lus finding Ariadne involv'd In desp'rate Love through Pity once resolv'd The Craft-contrived Windings of the Maze By guidance of a Thread through all its ways And Ic'rus you had Grief gi'en way good part In this great Work had had Your chance by Art Your Father twice essay'd t'engrave in Gold Twice his Hand faild him and his Heart grew cold Soon had they view'd all but Achates sent Before return'd with her for whom he went Deiphobe Glaucus's Daughter Priestess both To Trivia and Phoebus Who t' Aeneas saith This is no time such Sights to view But now 'T is fit you slay sev'n Stieres untrayn'd to Plow As many Sheep chosen as our Laws allow This said t' Aenaeas done without delay The Trojans call'd to Temple all obey A mighty Cave but in the Mountains side To which an hundred ways and Gates do guide Whence hundred Voices Sibyll's Answers pass They came to th'entrance when the Virgin says Time calls t' enquire of Fate Lo God appears And saying thus straitway before the Doors Her Count'nance and her Colour chang'd her Hair Dechevell'd flew her Breast as wanting Air And fill'd with Sacred Rage does pant and swell And now she seems self-greater and to tell Things more than human Being more nearly inspir'd She cries Aeneas don 't you as requir'd Your Vows and Prayers offer For till then In this Stupendious House no or'cle's gi'en This said she stopt The Trojans quake with fear Aeneas then pour'd forth this hearty Pray'r O Phoebus always pittying Hardships sent On Trojans who did guide the Dart was bent By Paris at Aechilles By your Hand Being guided Seas surrounding Tracts of Land Of vast extent I 've entred past the Moors Remotest bounds and all their sandy Shoars And now tho' baulked long we 're hither come So far pursu'd still by our Trojan doom And now the Trojans you of right shou'd spare All Gods and Goddesses who ever were Displeas'd with Troy and Trojan Glory ' nd you Most holy Priestess knowing things t' ensue Since I ask nothing to my Fates undue Tell us the Trojans and tost Gods of Troy And wand'ring Deities Latium shall enjoy To Trivia ' nd Phoebus Temples then I 'll raise Of Marble and in 's Name set Holy Days And in my Kingdoms Sacred Structures I Will build to keep your Books of destiny And secret Fates foretold my Nation and Choice Men appoint as Sacred for that end Only I wou'd you write them not lest they To rapid Winds become a sport and prey But speak them Ending thus what he shou'd say Now she impatient Phoebus yet to bear Within the Cave does rage and strives to clear Her loaded Breast of him still he the more Her raging Heart and Mouth does over pow'r And toyls her and so works to tempet meet And now the Temples hundred Gates which yet Were clos'd flie ope of their accord and thro' Them flie the Sibyll's Answers thus O you Who now have past all dangers on the main Were fated for you know there still remain On Land far greater Trojans shall possess Lavinia's Kingdom doubt you not of this But they 'll wish not t' have come Wars horrid Wars I see and Tyber foaming with much Blood Simois and Xanthus here you 'll find made good And Dorique Tents And an Achilles now In Latium's born and of a Goddess too Nor will the Trojans go they where they please Be without Juno When in your distress You were suppliant to what Countries here And Towns did you not sue for aid Be sure A forreign Wife and extern Match will be The cause again of so much Misery But boldly stem Misfortunes yield to none What scarce you 'd think your entrance to this Crown Will first be shewn you from a Grecian Town The Sibyll utters with such Words as these From th'or'cle dread ambiguous Prophesies Resounding in the Cave Apollo so The raging Virgin stimulates to do
't Nor Theseus and Pirithous tho' sprung All from the Gods and Men would yield to none He sought with 's Strength Hell's keeper to subdue And from K. Pluto's Throne him trembling drew And these his Queen from 's Chamber would have too The Sibyll briefly thus to him reply'd Here 's no such Treason Anger lay aside Our Arms are meer Defence Hell's keeper's free Barking to awe the Ghosts eternally Let chast Proserpine keep her Uncle's Room Aeneas who for Zeal and Arms is known Sprung of Troy's Royal Blood is hither come To see his Father in the Shades below If no respect such Piety you shew You know this Bow ' so ope's her Garment where 'T was hid and seen his Passion strait was o'er No more being said The fatal Gift h'admires Not seen before for many many Years And sets his tawny Boat close to the Shoar Thence driving all the Ghosts stood there before And clearing's Seats in 's wicker Vessel took The stout Aeneas whereupon it shook And crackt and let much Water in Tho' still On th' other Shoar he landed them at Will On Mudd and Marshy Weeds the Coast do fill The monstrous three-mouth'd Cerb'rus in a Den There opp'site barking makes the Country ring To whom being frightful to Spectators view With Snakes about his Neck the Sibyll threw A Bolus made of Drugs to her well known With Hony mixt which strait he swallow'd down And on the Ground with this he reeling fell Extending's mighty Body o'er the Cell Hell's Ward 's asleep Aeneas th'Entrance seiz'd Leaving the Lake which no Man e'er repast Just entring Voices and great Cries they hear Of Children Infants Souls stand wailing there Who sweet Life scarce enjoy'd but from the Breast Were forc'd by Fate and sent to their long Rest Next these are Men unjustly judg'd to die Tho' not without their lotted Destiny Th'Inquis'tor Minos bears the Lot-pot he Ghost-Juries calls Mens Lives and Crimes to try The next are such who tho' no Crimes they had Life hating thro' Despair themselves destroy'd And threw their Souls away what would they do Life to regain what Hardships undergo But Fate withstands it and the Lake them bounds And Styx's Waters nine times them surrounds Not far from hence as far as th' Eye can reach The mourning Fields lay round they name them such In secret Av'nues and a Myrtle Grove Here Persons stand brought to their ends by Love Whose restless Cares e'en Death it self survive Here he sees Phaedra ' nd Procris and the sad Esiphyle who shews the Wounds she had From her own Son Evadne here he saw Pasiphae and Laodamia And Caeneus who at first a Girl had been And then a Man a Woman then agen ' Mongst whom Phoenician Dido in the Wood Walkt as the rest her Wounds all fresh with Blood Whom when Aeneas as he near her came Got sight of thro' the dark Shades as a Man Sees or imagines that he sees the Moon Just turn'd the new thro' cloudy Skies he weeps And thus with tender Love his Mistress greets Unhappy Dido a true Message then Was brought me you are dead with Dagger slain Alas I caus'd your Death by Heav'n I swear And Gods above and if ought Faith be here T was ' gainst my Will O Queen I left your Shoar By Gods commands I did it which compell Me now to pass these darksome Shades of Hell Thro' loathsome rotten Ways Nor could believe My parting from you would cause so much Grief Pray stay and go not from me whom d' you fly This is the last Thing I to you can say With such like Words he strove her angry Meen And fretted Soul t' appease and wept agen She turn'd her Head and on the Ground her Eyes She fixt no more concern'd at all he says Than might a Flint or th'hardest Stone that is At length she starts and to the shady Wood She swiftly passt where her Sichaeus stood Who Love for Love return'd in high degree And ne'ertheless Aeneas mov'd to see Her ill chance follows weeping all the way Thence he proceeds with Zeal the Fields to view For famous Warriors ' lotted There he knew Tydeus the fam'd Parthenopeus and Adrastus pale Ghost there he saw to stand The noble Trojans who in Battle sell He viewing all in order did bewail Glaucus Medon Thersilocus with these Antenor's three Sons and Polybetes The Priest of Ceres and Idaeus who His Arms and Chariot holds in 's Hand e'en now The crowding Souls on Right and Left surround With one sight of him not content they stand And fain would know why he came to their Land The Trojan Nobles and great Army there Of Agamemnon seeing him appear With Arms bright shining in the Shades began To quake with Fear and part of them to run As living they ran to their Ships some try'd To raise their low-still Voice and loud t' have cry'd And stood their Mouths all vainly gaping wide And here he saw Deiph'bus mangled sore His Face disfigur'd and his Body tore His Nose cut off his Ears his Hands that he Striving withal that none his Maims should see Thro' Shame could scarce be known But strait Aeneas calling him by 's Name thus said Valiant Deiphobus sprung of Troy's great Blood What cruel Man would use you in this sort Or whom would God permit to do 't I heard That you being wear'ed with the Slaughter great You made of Grecians in Troy's fatal night Dy'd on the Heap among the Crowd confus'd Then I my self a Mon'ment for you rais'd On Rhaetia's Coast and loudly thrice did call Your Ghost The Place your Name and Arms has still But Friend I could not see you and Interr In your own Country as 't was my desire Deiph'bus then on your part nothing's left Dear Friend you 've done my Ghost all Fun'ral right 'T was my Fate and Lacaena's Cruelty Brought on me this she left these Marks on me For as we pass't that last night in false Joys You know 't and can't but too well mind how 't was When th' Horse by Fate pass't o'er th' high Walls of Troy And armed Men in 's Bowels did convey She feigning Bacchus Feast to celebrate Led Trojan Women with her thro' the Street And bore her self a mighty Torch as chief And from a Tower the Greeks a Signal gave Then I with Labours tir'd requiring Rest Lay in my Bed with sound Sleep being opprest My exc'llent Wife this while my Arms convey'd From th' House and e'en the Sword lay at my Head Brings Menelaus in and ope's my Door Hoping 't is like his Kindness thus t'ensure And purge those Crimes she had incurr'd before In short in rusht the Greeks and with them came Vlysses much encouraging their Crime Which Heav'ns revenge if I may wish the same Now in return pray tell me what has brought You here alive Have stormy Seas it wrought Or God's Commands or what Chance might it be Which mov'd you these dark mournful Shades to While