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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A02026 Grammaire angloise pour facilement et promptement apprendre la langue angloise : qui peut aussi aider aux anglois pour apprendre la langue françoise. Mason, George, fl. 1620. 1625 (1625) STC 12173.3; ESTC S3198 77,712 254

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in the shop haue they bought any thinge They be gone they haue bought nothinge Call them againe They are entred into an other shop I see them which come againe They shall be welcome if they bringe money if it be so that they bringe You make vs trauell much I pray you make vs not go and come so much tarie tarie tary we haue hast It is not my fault I desire nothing but to sell I seeke but money Shall we haue the whole pecce for fifteene poundes as much at one word as in an hundreth at the last worde Truly you be importunat you care not whether I lose or gaine you shoulde not bate a halsepenie of tenne poundes when you should buye all that is in the shop and truely if you leaue it no man in the worlde shall haue it for the price if it were my brother I bate you xx s because I will not denye you if I might leaue it for a lesser price you should haue it as soone as any man in the world chiefly for aquaintance sake Well I trust you tell monye haue we not here a porter packbearer laye that vpon thy back and cary it to my lodging at the three kinges in fle etstrete and tell mine hoste that they prepare the supper for we will depart by and by Truely here is a faire payment Paye your selfe in gold or in siluer choose I geue you the choise It is all one vnto me the monye it as good vnto me as gold I would that he which hath coined this shilling had his eares nailed at the pilorie at the post of the dore had his eares cut of to the ende that all false coiners of money might take exāple thereby what say you to it I would and that it had cost me a quarte of wine Farewell haue me commended are you content Yea Sir I thanke you spare nothing that I haue as well without money as with money I will geue you credit for three monethes I will trust you a yeare yea two vpon your word promise obligation bill of your hand in putting suertie I thanke you Sir I will not forsake you for an other truely that marchant is honest I can not tell whether he would do what he sayeth Let vs proue it It shall he for an other time let vs huy some babies for our children shall we It is well said PROVERBES MAister Claudius I pray you teach me how I may rule my selfe to apply certeine Frenche prouerbes with the English and you shall do me a pleasure With all my hart I haue here gathered fome which although they agree not in all pointes touching the wordes notwithstanding in the meaning they agree verie well as if you woulde signifie that one offred you healpe to late or a thing whose vse is alreadie passed for this present we saye in French after death the phisition and the English sayeth after dinner mustard neuertheles the most part of these here gathered in this littell booke do aunswere one an other both in wordes and sense LET VS SEE THEN VVHICH BE those Prouerbes A Carreine kite will neuer be good hawke He is as poore as Iob. It is good to beate the iron while it is hoate He robbeth Peter to paye Paul The burned childe dreadeth the fier Soft pase goeth farre He that commeth last maketh the dore fast If the skie fall we shall haue larkes You are good to be a poore mans sow Like maister like man A scabbed shepe will marre twe whole flocke He that hath a good neighbour hath a good morowe Honger is the best sauce Looke not a giuen horse in the mouth Sweete meate must haue sower sauce Neare is my peticoate but nearer is my smocke The nearer the Church farther from God When the belly is full bones be at rest The Cat loueth fish but she loueth not to wet her foote She is as busie as a hen with two chickens Betwixt two stoles the harse goeth downe It is euill halting before a creepell There is no fier without smoke When the stede in stolne then shut the stable dore Better late thriue then neuer Good wine needeth no bush The pot goeth so often to the water that at the last he commeth broken home He hath put the fier to the toe He setteth the cart before the horses Arowling stone gathereth no mosse All is not golde that glistereth Fewe wordes among wise men suffise He cutteth a large thonge of an other mans leather He beareth fier in the one hand and water in the other He beareth two faces in one hoode Loue me and loue my dog All couit all loose After a storme commeth a caliue Better bowe then breake The King looseth his right where nothing is to be had It is a good horse that neuer stumbleth Saue a theese from the gallowes and he will cut your throte Rome was not built in one daye GOLDEN SAYINGES YOu haue shewed me faire prouerbes whereof I thanke you if you haue some faire sayings let it please you to make vs partakers thereof for I know that the French tongue is not without such I will tell you some very short but full of sense as may be possible the first is In a Prince loyaltie Would God that this were well printed in the hart of all magisttates it is well begone follow In a Clerck humilitie Truely it is as a Philosopher said the more a man is learned the more he ought to humble him self In a Prelat wisedome The same is according vnto the scripture which saith ye are the salt of the yearth In a Knight manhood valiauntnesse Adde thereunto wisedome for the outward strength doth profit littell except it be gouerned by the mother of all vertues which is discretion In a rich man liberalitie But without making anie reckninge of vsurers because they are nor dead neither a liue and do neuer good except they be dead in deed In a learned man eloquence This is not found fulfilled in all men of learning In a marchaunt faith keeping You do except all the bankroutes In a seruaunt obedience It is a great treasure of a good seruaunt and a good wife but I pray you how do you call in Latin a good wife Find her to me first and I will tell it you for according vnto the doctrine of Plato one can not name a thing which can not be found at all Ah you haue stopped my mouth In a woman chastitie In deede Plautus saith that she which is chaste bringeth with her a faire dowrie In wine good smell This pleaseth me very well What do you loue wine so well I should not be a Frenchman if I should not loue wine and in deede I loue the sight thereof very well but the tast pleaseth me better In cloth good colour I bought the other day some flamell which is abready stained In an Herald knowledge Me thinketh that our is not verie skillfull in his art because that he hath not yet specified neither declared mine armes