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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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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