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A65181 A voyage round the world, or, A pocket-library divided into several volumes ... : the whole work intermixt with essays, historical, moral, and divine, and all other kinds of learning / done into English by a lover of travels ... Dunton, John, 1659-1733. 1691 (1691) Wing V742; ESTC R19949 241,762 498

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Character of a Williamit● being the Reverse of a late unlicens'd Treatise entituled The Character of a Iacobite by what Name or Title soever dignified or distinguished Written by a Person of Quality A true and impartial Narrative of the Dissenters New Plot together with an Account of the chief Conspirators Names and principal Consults as well as of several Persons of Quality who have abet●ed and encouraged them By one who was deeply concern'd therein This Book has made a great noise in the World by being mis-understood Price 6. A Discovery of the horrid Association and Conspiracy of the Papists in Lancashire to raise War and Rebellion in the Kingdom of England during the absence of King William in Ireland In a Letter of Instruction from a Roman Catholick of great Quality in London to a Papist Muti●eer in Lancashire Price 6 d. An Antidote against Lust Or a Discourse of Uncleanness shewing its various Kinds great Evil the Temptations to it and most effectual C●re By Robert Carr Minister of the Gospel Casuistical Morning Exercises the Fourth Volume by several Ministers in and about London preached in October 1689. A New Martyrology Or the Bloody Assizes now exactly methodiz'd in one Volume comprehending a compleat History of the Lives Actions Tryals Sufferings Dying Speeches Letters and Prayers of all those eminent Protestants who f●ll in the West of England and elsewhere from the Year 1878. to 1689. The Third Edition with large Additions Mr. Oak's Funeral Sermon Mr. Kent's Funeral Sermon Both preached by Mr. Samuel Slater A compleat History of the Life and Military Actions of the General of all the Irish Rebels now in Arms wherein you have an Account of his Birth and Education his Advancement and Honours his treacherous Disarming the Protestants and Cruelties towards them The Progress of his Arms the Towns he has taken and demolished the Families he has ruin'd together with a Relation of the Skirmishes Battels Sieges and remarkable Transactions which have happened in Ireland with the particulars of the bloody Fight in the North the manner of the late King 's Landing at Kingsail with what remarkable has happened since as also a brief Description of the Kingdom of Ireland in its Provinces Principal Towns Fortresses Situation and present deplorable State Dedicated to the Gentlemen-Soldiers now in Their Majesties Army in Ireland Price 1 s. Early Piety exemplified in the Life and Death of Mr. Nathaniel Mather who having become at the age of Nineteen an Instance of more than common Learning and Vertue changed Earth for Heaven Octob. 17. 1688. The Second Edition with a prefatory Epistle by Mr. Matthew Mead. The Tragedies of Sin together with Remarks upon the Life of the Great Abraham By Stephen Iay Rector of Chinner in Oxfordshire Daniel in the Den by the same Author Poetical Fragments by Richard Baxter Published for the use of the Afflicted The Second Edition Mr. Lee's Joy of Faith Dr. Robert's Key to the whole Bible In Folio Observations on several remarkable Passages throughout the Old and New Testament The Progress of Sin Or The Travels of Vngodliness The Second Edition By B. Keach Price 1 s. A Search after Honesty and plain Dealing Written by Dr. Shirly Price bound 1 s. Poems on several Subjects never handled before Written by an Oxford Scholar The Compleat Tradesman Or The Exact Dealers daily Companion instructing him in the whole Art and Mystery of Trade and Traffick Price Bound 1 s. The Travels of True Godliness from the beginning of the World to this present day in an apt and pleasant Allegory The Seventh Edition By. B. Keach Price 1 s. The Abdicated Prince Or The Adventures of four years The Second Edition Price 1 s. The Bloody Duke Or The Adventures for a Crown Price 1 s. The Late Revolution Or The Happy Change Written by a Person of Quality Price 1 s. The Royal Voyage Or the Irish Expedition Price 1 s. These Four last Books contain a full Account of the Private Intreagues of the two last Reigns and of all the most Remarkable Transactions that have happened since Now in the Press and going to it viz. A Treatise of Fornication occasion'd by the late Birth of several Illegitimates in the Parish of C To which is added a Penitentiary Sermon preached before the Guilty Persons in the publick Congregation upon Iohn 8. 11. Go and sin no more The Third Volume of the Pocket-Library c. Reformed Religion or Right Christianity described in its Excellency and Usefulness in the whole Life of Man By M. Barker Minister of the Gospel The Second Edition with Additions The Pilgrims Guide To which is added the Sick-mans Passing-b●ll The Second Edition Newly Published THE Wonders of Free Grace Or A Compleat History of all the Remarkable Penitents that have been Executed at Tiburn and elsewhere for these last thirty years containing Bishop Atherton's Life and Death who was executed for B r● Bringhurst's Life and Death Bottler's Life and Death Nathaniel Butler's Life and Death Charles Butler's Life and Death Clark her Life and Death Evans her Life and Death Parson Foulk's Life and Death Hobry her Life and Death Holland's Life and Death Kirk's Life and Death Marketman's Life and Death Morgan's Penitent Death Parker's Life and Death Savage's Life and Death Short's Life and Death Stern's Life and Death To which is added a Sermon preach'd in the Hearing of a Condemn'd Malefactor immediately before his Execution THE Pocket-Library VOL. III. Containing a further Account OF THE JUVENILE RAMBLES OF DON KAINOPHILUS With his first Project of Girdling the World c. The whole WORK intermixt with Essays Historical Moral and Divine This Ramble is my Son Randolph LONDON Printed for Richard Newcome 1691. Price Bound 1 s. 6 d. ADVERTISEMENTS 1. THere is just now published The Present State of 〈◊〉 Or The Historical and Political Mercury giving an Account of all the Publick and Private Occurrences that are most considerable in every Court for the Month of November 1690. Sold at the Rav●n in the Pou●tr●y where are to be had every Month to this time beginning from Iuly 1690. 2. A Voyage Round the World or a Pocket Library Vol. II. containing the rare Adventures of Don Kai●●philus during his Seven years ' Prenticeship The whole work intermixt with Instructions for the management of a 〈…〉 As ●lso with particular ●e●arks on the 〈…〉 Book-sellers Authors and Poets in the City of London Price bound 1 s. 6 d. 3. The Wonders of Free-Grace Or A Comple●t History of all the Remarkable Penitents that have been Executed at Tyburn and elsewhere for these last Thirty years containing Bishop Atherton's Life and Death who was Executed ●for B ry Bringhurft's Li●e and Death Bottler's Life and Death 〈…〉 Life and Death 〈…〉 's Life and Death Clark her Life and Death Evans her Life and Death Parson Foulk's Life and Death Hobry her Life and Death Holland's Life and Death Kirk's Life and Death Marketman's Life and Death Morgan's Penitent Death P●rker's Life
earnings alas I 'm a staid Man now turn'd of .... score and he was a little nimble Fellow always Rambling and capering about like Quick-silver in a hot Pudding-Pye But here are the same Looks a meer Chance and Gate and Shuffle because I 'm a Man of business and go for the most part in haste as he did when he was Courting his Mistresses An old Iade she made me sweat I 'm glad I 'm got clear on her But next for Kainophilus the same wise Argument with that before There was once a silly Fellow who pretended a Design a little like this we are about to Ramble round the World he began I think with Kent and so intended to run through all Christendom and the rest of the World but the pitiful abortive Project which could never pretend to that heighth of Thought and profundity of Invention with ours for that cause never liv'd above two or three days and then was justly condemn'd to the stinking darkness of some ignoble Bog-house 'T is not deny'd but that hence we may have taken the Name the only thing worth living in it and have Examples enough for our practice Did not the ingenious Ariosto borrow several of his Names particularly his beautiful Angelica from some dull forgotten Rhimer that went before him Nay did not Virgil rake in Ennius his Dung like a Gold-finder as he was for that very reason that he might deserve the Name And why mayn't we as lawfully pull this single Name out of its nasty Oblivion powder it and dry it and sweeten it and wash it and make use of it for our own proper Cognomen or otherwise as we see occasion Besides I question whether he understood Greek or could construe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which till he does all the World must grant he and the learned Kainophilus here so often named are two quite different Persons and no more the same than I and the Queen of Sheba You may rave and fret all this while and cry all this is Banter which I confess is the readiest way of answering it but I appeal to all sober Judges whether it been't almost as bad as Kidnapping a Man away to go about to perswade him he is what he is not to make Trincalo a Duke or as a good modest Gentleman was some time since served by the Barbarian Africans beat him into Nobility and make him stand in bodily fear of being at last thrasht into the Royal Family To avoid which unsufferable Inconveniencies and others of the like pernicious nature I take all these pains with those who don 't know what to make of me to shew both what I am and what I am not The third and last Name from which this peeping peering Eves-dropping World pretends to know me is I confess the least Heroical of all the three namely Iohn which they most subtilly deduce from that line in the Explanation Hold up phy Head John Ay and so I can for all I have heard yet or am like to hear 'T is true the Author of those Verses has been a little bold now and then speaking something too diminitively not to add familiarly of the Subject and Person he handles This fault I could wish he had here especially avoided Had he used but the mighty Hebrew word Iehochanam instead of that pitiful sneaking Iohn-English I should e'ne have glory'd in the Name and defy'd the World to say its worst upon 't of that or me See but how they reason The Author's Name was IOHN They know one whose Name is Iohn nay that they are sure of they 'll prove it by the Register by his Bills and Bonds and own Hand-writing scrawl'd at the bottom of at least in a modest computation One million and five hundred thousand Epistles and familiar Letters Well pray go on and don 't waste him thus why therefore he must be the Author In answer we don't deny there 's a certain Person in the World known by the Name of Iohn nay two or theee hundred but if the Argument be good enough all the rest must be the Authors on 't as well as Iohn-a-nokes or Iohn-a-styles But this Iohn is a Bookseller Come prove that if ye can I do it from the foresaid Verses Who e're heard of a King or a Bookseller drowned Worshipful reasoning Well how all this World is over-run with Fallacies How few can discourse clearly and handsomly And how few are Evanders Granting he must be one of these two does it follow he 's the other or both together He 's to ●huse which he 'll be a King or a Bookseller and assures ye he has Wit enough to chuse the best To be short Does not every body know there have been King Iohns as well as Bookseller Iohns Iohn King of Naples King of Ierusalem King of England besides a hundred and fifty little johnny-Iohnny-Kings not worth taking notice of This the World knows but I know something more and could name 'em a King Iohn of my own acquaintance nay and perhaps a Bookseller too as well as the Party suspected and then where 's all their arguing But this Iohn Bookseller went to New-England Ay there 's the home-stroke now they think they have me as fast as the sage Gentlemen Aldermen had their worshipful Brother the Cuckoe when the Hedge was finished to keep in the noble Bird for their own use or the poor Bumkin when he pricks in a Leather But trust Vander for wrigling out agen in spite of all their craftiness Grant the Frontispiece has New-England Boston the Wigwams and all that nay and a Bookseller too for once ay and a Iohn Bookseller yet all this won't nor shan't do to prove the Author of these Works is known to the World For if there were more Iohns and more Booksellers that went to New-England then the case is clear that from all has been said they can never prove who 't is since it may be one as well as t'other But the Premisses I assert upon my Honour and am sure that my honest Fellow-Traveller Iohn how d' ye like it Sir will never deny it Therefore the Conclusion stands as firm as a Rock of Adamant that ye don't know me nor shan't know me or as I have it in my Memorial-Book word for word it is not at all prov'd that the Author of this Work should be the Person whom the World believes it to be Once more whispering Speak all at once for I 'll hear no more Why quo ' Mr. Critick though these Evidences taken singly by themselves mayn't be able to conclude against the Person accused yet all together they may for we often see as in the Fable one Stick Broken when twenty such together though of equal force separately would require a Hercules to snap 'em asunder Come never talk is't not impossible that all these Characters should meet in one Man agreeing to the Author of these Works and yet that Person not be the Author