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A96185 The VVelch embassadour, or the happy newes his vvorship hath brought to London. Together with her thirteene articles of acreements, which her propounds to all her cousens in her countiies [sic] and her cities to consider of. 1643 (1643) Wing W1314; Thomason E96_16; ESTC R5249 5,346 8

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THE VVelch Embassadour or the happy Newes his VVorship hath brought to London Together with her thirteene Articles of acreements which her propounds to all her Cousens in her Countries and her Cities to consider of Printed for I. ●●●●rwood 1643. THE VVelch Embassadour IT is not uncaknowne to her oworlds that in her time of her Springs or her summer seasons her Kings and Princes goe out with her troops and her company to Wars and to pattailes as in her Low Countries does her cousen her Prince of Orange and in her Kingdomes of England her cousen Prince Ruperts with her white Tog which as her Moderns hold is a Prince disguis'd and also her owne Countriman prince Griffith who is gone out the Lord caknowes whither with her troop in her beaten silver and her cold laces for her thought it requisite and fitting it being her time of yeare when her mens and her ' omens are hot in her Reines and her p●cks and her motions and her agitations in her members her ploods which makes her men goe to wars with her ' omens and fight with her in her beds till her sweat agen to send her Embassadors to all her peoples and her natives to make her offers and her treaties of peace and attonements before her proceed to her open wars in which her men shall be sure to get holes in her pates out of which her wounds shall spring up her hornes in such number that her shall never be cur'd of while her has preath in her podies And her would have her to take notice and good regards that her Embassadour is a Shentleman of Wales of fery ancient families of a fery pig and a high house and her ancestors were with her cousen Noahs in her Arkes and came into Prittaine with her progenitor Prutes and was had in creat estimation ever since in her welch Mountains In Winter her has her uncaknown pallaces and in Summer time her has her habutations in her oods and her Mountains if her has desire to understand her names her is cald plaine Cuckows for her affects no other titles nor denominations then what hath been given to her ancestors Her cares 〈◊〉 Ri●ing in states or in her pontificalibus in her Coaches or on her horses out her is carried like her cousen Perseus through the avres and twixt her Heavens and Earths and takes her journies on her wings her needs no interpreters for her understand all her Languages all her Nations understand her when her cryes Cuckows and so much shall suffice for her descriptions of her persons and her qualities now her shall proceed to her Articles and her effects of her Embassage Her is sent to all Christian peoples to her Tuckes and her Infidels her Pagans and her Shews to let her understand her pleasures which her has set downe as followeth Her first Article of acreements which her propounds is to her men and her wives that live in her huge creat Cities which is that her men shall in the time of her Springs provide her backs of Armour of proofs and have her long pikes which her beares about her in her preeches well st●●ld and stiffe on all her occasions when her coes to incounter her wives bodies to bodies naked or in her Co●slet of her shirts and her smocks in her fields of her peds or her Coaches or her shall be sure her wives will denounce open wars against her and never acree to peace till her Embassadour of Wales have come to her houses and at her doores proclaim'd her Cuckolds H●r second Article which her offer in the behalfe of her create Princesses her wives to her subjects her husbands is That whereas her used in her winter seasons not to firke her Tobies nip her Nardivies smooke her phob●sses tickle her Cuquoques or which is in her plaine welch English whip her jetros or ●ounce her podies Her must be sure to give her her due benevolence at least twice every night and once after her dinners called nooning for her trinkings betwixt her meales or her does menace her accustomed p●oclamation of wars which is to cry Cuckow to her faces and her wives doe threaten also to goe to peds to her Iournimen and her eld●st or well-grown prentices experience her with one of her forem●ns Her third Article which her tenders her of peace is that her husbands call her wives sweet Chucks Honies and Pigs-nies though her call her Roagues and Rascalls nay beasts and Cuckolds that her beware how her use her hands or often to bestow on her armes or her shoulders her plows or her pastinadoes though her wives breake her pates with her Ladles or her Skimmers or if her will not acree to this her Article of peace without her exceptions her is in all her names to denounce her Husbands open wars and defiances which shall last till her houses be too hot to hold her and till her boyes as her walks her streetes use her Embassadours Language and cry out Cuckows Her fourth Article is that as her Spring is fresh creen as her Leekes or her Onions her first bee sure to take her wives into her fields and her medowes and give her creen cowns her must also provid her new Cloaths as her cousens in Wales doe her wives once in seaven yeares and let her be in her fashions or her will set eff her wares and her commodities by retayls to purchase her fine habits new Garments which may breed much wars and divisions in her families Her fifth proposition which her maketh to avoyd civill wars and dissentions betwixt her omens and her husbands is that her husbands l●t her wives have her wills or her will have it inspight of her teets that her husbands have no feares nor her jealousies nor her misu●derstandings of her wives honesty though her chance to see her in pe●s with her friends for her jealousies as her all caknows are her author of her civill wars and if her husbands crowe yellow in her hearts and her livers her Embassador tells her as her friend that her shall carry her ensignes on h●r foreheads and be stander-bearer to her Cuckows or Cuckolds Her sixt proposition is that her husbands must satisfie her wives appetites and her longings which her are very subject to in her Springs when her plood flows in her veins and her arteries as if her had a mind to have two able mens one to take her up before and her other behind and carry her in her chaires which her call Sedans to her creat ped at Wares her must suddainly and with all celerities fulfill her pleasures or it will beget j●rrs and prible prables which her shall hardly appease without creat perill of being transformed as her cousen Ast●on Her seventh Article is that her must in no wise hinder her wives from going at midnight to her cousens labors though her imagine her goe to her houses of Hospitality which her in welch call Bawdy-houses nor