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A62313 Monsieur Scarron's letters, to persons of the greatest eminency and quality rendred into English by John Davies ...; Correspondence. English. Selections Scarron, Monsieur, 1610-1660.; Davies, John, 1625-1693. 1677 (1677) Wing S832; ESTC R13034 53,437 162

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he is in the World and I must intreat you to be assur'd that your retirement at Roissy is not a greater affliction to your self than it is to me who am apt to hope that sometime or other you would give me a Visit at my little Chamber if your residence were at Paris This is to be understood when you were disappointed of all other meetings and assignations and could not bestow your time elsewhere The actions of our Neighbours should be the Subject of our discourse and many times we should recreate our selves by some little circumventing tricks without which I maintain that all conversation must be lost in process of time Mean time Monsieur d'Elbene and my self often remember you over a glass of Frontiac wishing you were here to do us reason Monsieur de Mata is in Xaintonge I wish that he also were at Paris his company would make your hours slide away somewhat the more merrily whenever you had the kindness to visit Your most humble servant S. FINIS Books Printed for and sold by George Dawes at his Shop over against Lincolns-Inn Gate in Chancery Lane THE History of the World in Five Books The first Intreating of the beginning and first Ages of the same from the Creation unto Abraham The second of the Times from the Birth of Abraham to the Destruction of the Temple of Solomon The third from the Destruction of Jerusalem to the time of Philip of Macedon The fourth from the Reign of Philip of Macedon to the Establishing of that Kingdome in the Race of Antigonas The fifth from the setled Rule of Alexander's Successors in the East until the Romans prevailing over all made Conquest of Macedon Written by Sir Walter Raleigh Knight in Folio The Second Part of the Institutes of the Lawes of England containing the Exposition of Magna Charta and many Ancient and other Statutes Written by the Lord Chief Justice Coke The 3d. Edition with an Alphabetical Table in Folio The Third Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England concerning High Treason and other Pleas of the Crown and Criminal Causes The Fourth Edition Written by the Lord Chief Justice Coke in Folio The Fourth Part of the Lawes of England concerning the Jurisdiction of Courts Written by the Lord Chief Justice Coke The 4th Edition with an Alphabetical Table not heretofore Printed in Folio Brief Animadversions on Amendment of and Additional Explanatory Records to the Fourth Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England concerning the Jurisdiction of Courts by William Prynn Esq in Folio A Second Book of Judgments in Real Personal and mixt Actions and upon the Statute all or most of them Affirmed upon Writs of Error Collected out of the Choice Manuscripts of Mr. Brownloe and Mr. Moyle sometimes Prothonotaries of the Common Pleas. As also of Mr. Smither formerly Secondary of the same Court. Perused Transcribed Corrected and Tabled with Addition of some Notes by George Townesend Esq Second Prothonotary of the Common Pleas. Very use and necessary for all Prothonotaries Secondaries Students Clerks of Judgments and all sorts of Persons any way relating to the Law in Quarto price bound 5 s. De Jure Maritimo et Navali Or a Treatise of Affairs Maritime and of Commerce In three Books Modus Intrandi Placita Generalia The Entring Clerks Introduction Being a Collection of such Presidents of Declarations and other Pleadings with Processe as well Mesne as Judicial as are Generally used in every dayes Practice With Notes and Observations thereupon Composed for the Benefit of the Students of the common Law of England as also of the Attorneys Entring Clerks and Solicitors of the Courts of Common Pleas and Kings Bench ' Acquainting them with the Rudiments of Clerkship and such General-Pleadings and Processe as are used at this day in the Courts of Record at Westminster By William Brown Gent. Author of Formulae Bene Placitandi in Large Octavo Price bound 5 s. Jus Imaginis apud Anglos Or the Law of England Relating to the Nobility and Gentry Faithfully Collected and Methodically Digested for Common Benefit by John Brydall of Lincolns-Inn Esque in Large Octavo Price bound 12 d. Parsons Law or a View of Advowsons Wherein is contained the Rights of Patrons Ordinaries and Incumbents to Advowsons of Churches Collected by William Hughes of Grayes-Inn Esq The third Edition Reviewed and much Enlarged by the Author in his Life-time in Large Octavo An Exact Abridgment in English of the Eleven Books of Reports of the Learned Sir Edward Cook Knight late Lord Chief Justice of England and Composed by Sir Thomas Ireland Knight and Reader of the Honourable Society of Greys-Inn in Octavo Tryals per Pais or the Law concerning ●uries by Nisi Prius By S. E. of the Inner Temple Esq in Octavo Of the Office of the Clerk of the Market of Weights and Measures and of the Laws of Provision for Man and Beast for Bread Wine Beer Meal c. by William Shepheard Esq in Octavo There may be had all sorts of Blank Bonds and Blank Sheriffs Warrants FINIS
has not been in my power to conceal it from you be pleas'd to imagine by this ingenuous confession the sincerity of my Soul and assure your self that I am above all others My Lord Your most humble c. S. LETTER XXXI To the same My Lord I Am uncertain whether you will be in a condition to read my Letter The last time I sent to enquire of your health the account I receiv'd was That you were no fully recover'd of an indisposition which had for some time confin'd you to your Chamber It will be no hard matter for you to imagine what alarms that ill news must bring to a man who at the present is oblig'd to you for all he has in the World and who without you would be more wretched than he is though his misfortunes be in a manner beyond all example Those who have honour'd me with their love as you have done may have been themselves fully satisfy'd that my affection for them has been very great and it is not to be thought that I should now begin to be ungrateful towards the most generous Person of all those who ever had pity on me I think every hour a thousand till I get to Paris to take my Oath of fidelity to you which I have not yet done Mean time I humbly beseech you to compleat the Favour whereof you have made a beginning in the business of the Waggons and to procure that Justice be done to those to whom that Affair has been confirm'd Monsieur Poncet will make a Report of it on Saturday next if the Councel sits They who are prosecuted are fully convinc'd that there are above four thousand Livers due to the King and it is a concern that may extend much further as you will find by the account which the Bearer of this Letter is able to give you of it I am My Lord Your most humble c. S. LETTER XXXII To the same My Lord IF there be not some great self-satisfaction in obliging people I know not upon what grounds you should do me any kindness I am not a person any way useful to you and I dare not wish that I were lest I should make a wish that might be disadvantageous to you Nor am I so fondly conceited of my self as to hope that I can contribute much to your divertisement since I cannot have the honour of coming near you or making my self otherwise known to you then as all others know me to be even in this life not much inferiour in torments to a damned Soul and sometimes by the making of Books that is by the permission of God Almighty by being one of the greatest inconveniences that can happen to Mankind But though I should be Master of some Qualities that were more considerable and though a particular acquaintance of many years standing should have brought me into some favour with you and that I should cultivate that favour by a constant Commerce of Letters yet would all this amount to little if the Affairs of the publick Ministery be so pressing upon you as that you cannot afford them the reading Well my Lord these Reflections give me a great deal of trouble as often as the remembrances of your Liberality raise them in me and I am extreamly out of countenance to think that I cannot preserve my self in your memory otherwise then by the miserable Productions of a Mind which by reason of a Body much more miserable and a Destiny yet more miserable than that ruin'd Body must not ever expect much tranquility But now I speak of those Productions of the Mind am I to believe that you lik'd my Fable of Hero and Leander Monsieur de Chaulne would perswade me to believe it but possibly it was only his kindness to flatter an indispos'd person I humbly beg your Lordships condescention so far as to give me under your own hand an approbation of it which I shall prefer before that of all the Academists in the World or that by your Censure thereof I may so much the better know my self Howere it happen I am My Lord Your most humble c. S. LETTER XXXIII To the same My Lord THe favour you were pleas'd to do me in not slighting the Comedy which I dedicated to you was enough to induce me to be absolutely at your disposal without any necessity of your having engag'd me further by a new obligation I think it one way to give you my thankfulness for it when I acknowledg that I cannot sufficiently do it and that I more fully express my resentment by that confession than by all the Complements in the World I am My Lord Your c. S. LETTER XXXIV To the same My Lord I Am so far from deserving the kindness you have lately done me that I should have been much surpriz'd thereat if I had not already receiv'd other assurances of your Liberality or if I were the only person in the Nation who knew not that you are continually obliging all the World All I desire at present is to conjure you into a perswasion that the resentments I have thereof are the greatest I am capable of But my Lord if on the one side I am overjoy'd to see that all the Affairs of State the management whereof lies upon your shoulders divert you not from thinking of mine so on the other it is no small affliction to me that I can neither forbear speaking of your munificence without ingratitude nor publish it without raising a certain jealousie that it is not so much out of inclination as interest that I have ever been and ever shall be My Lord Your c. S. LETTER XXXV To the same My Lord WE never saw any Surintendant in France belov'd and esteem'd as you are and the reason is that we have not seen any so generous and obliging as you are but I doubt you pay dearly for it and that cannot acquire so noble a reputation without the enduring of great importunities For my part it would be a continual remorse to me that I have been importunate through the whole course of my life and that I am not in a way to reform if I did not at the same time see the wealthiest persons and those of the highest quality beg favours of you with less reservedness and caution than I do though they have not so much right to pretend to your kindnesses as such an unfortunate man as I am whom you have promis'd to give his Mind some tranquility That my Lord is an enterprize worthy your great Self and that you may the sooner be satisfy'd that you have compleated it I recommend to you my Concerns in the Affair of the Debets Your Lorship may be pleas'd to remember that it was upon my entreaty you granted the confirmation of it The persons for whom I sollicited your furtherance of it proffer'd me a small part in the Affair but when I consider that I am but slowly happy in all my undertakings and that I