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A25458 The Annals of love containing select histories of the amours of divers princes courts, pleasantly related. 1672 (1672) Wing A3215; ESTC R11570 240,092 446

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Discipline of Divorce is confirmed by explanation of Scripture by testimony of ancient Fathers of Civil Laws in the Primitive Church of famousest Reformed Divines And lastly by an intended Act of the Parliament and Church of England in the last year of Edward the sixth By the Author J. Milton price 1 s. 6 d. Octavo 4. A Confutation of the Millenarian Opinion plainly demonstrating that Christ will not reign visibly and personally upon Earth with the Saints for 1000 years either before the day of Judgment in the day of Judgment or after it By Tho. Hall B. D. price bound 1 s. Physick 1. Basilica Chymica Praxis Chimiatricae or Royal and Practical Chymistry augmented and enlarged by John Hartman To which is added his Treatise of Signatures of internal things or a true and lively Anatomy of the greater and lesser World As also the Practice of Chymistry of John Hartman M. D. augmented and enlarged by his Son with considerable Additions all faithfully Englished by a Lover of Chymistry in Folio price bound 10 s. 2. The Art of Chymistry as it is now practised Written in French by P. Thybault Chymist to the French King and Englished by W. A. Doctor in Physick and Fellow of the Royal Society in Octavo price bound 3 s. 3. Medicina Instaurata or a brief Account of the true Grounds and Principles of the Art of Physick with the Insufficiency of the vulgar way of preparing Medicines and the Excellency of such as are made by Chymical Operation By Edward Bolnest Med. Lond. in Octavo price bound 1 s. Law Folio's 1. An Abridgment of divers Cases and Resolutions of the Common Law Aphabetically digested under several Titles By Henry Rolls Serjeant at Law published by the Lord Chief Baron Hales and approved by all the Judges price bound 40 s. 2. The Reports of Sir George Croke Knight in three Volumes in English Allowed of by all the Judges The second Edition carefully corrected by the Original price bound 45 s. 3. The second part of the Institutes of the Laws of England containing the Exposition of Magna Charta and many ancient and other Statutes Written by the Lord Chief Justice Coke The third Edition with an Alphabetical Table added price bound 14 s. 4. 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 price bound 6 s. 5. The fourth part of the Institutes of the Laws of England concerning the Jurisdiction of Courts Written by the Lord Chief Justice Coke The fourth Edition with an Alphabetical Table not heretofore printed price bound 9 s. 6. Brief Animadversions on Amendments of and Additional Explanatory Records to the fourth Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England concerning the Jurisdiction of Courts By Will. Prynne Esq price bound 12 s. Quarto 7. The History of Gavel-kind with the Etymology thereof containing a Vindication of the Laws of England together with a short History of William the Conquerour By Silas Taylor price bound 3 s. Octavo's 8. An Exact Abridgment in English of the Cases reported by Sir Francis Moor Knight with the Resolution of the Points of the Law therein by the Judges By W. Huges price bound 2 s. 6 d. 9. An Exact Abridgment of all the Statutes in Force and Use made in the 16 17 and 18. of King Charles the First and the 12 13 14 15 and 16. of King Charles the Second By William Hughes Esq price bound 2 s. 6 d. 10. The Touchstone of Wills Testaments and Administrations being a Compendium of Cases and Resolutions touching the same carefully collected out of the Ecclesiastical Civil and Canon Laws as also out of the Customs Common Laws and Statutes of this Kingdom By G. Meriton price bound 1 s. 6 d. 11. A Guide for Constables Church-wardens Overseers of the Poor Surveyors of High-ways Treasurers of the County-stock Masters of the House of Correction Bayliffs of Mannors Toll-takers in Fairs c. shewing the extent and power of the several Offices the third Edition enlarged collected by George Meriton price bound 1 s. 6 d. History Folio's 1. The Voyages and Travels of the Duke of Holsteins Ambassadors into Muscovy Tartary and Persia begun in the year 1633. and finished in 1639. containing a compleat History of those Countries whereunto are added the Travels of Mandelslo from Persia into the East-Indies begun in 1638. and finished in 1640. The whole illustrated with divers accurate Maps and Figures Written Originally by Adam Olearius Secretary to the Embassie Englished by J. Davies of Kidwelly The second Edition price bound 18 s. 2. The present State of the Ottoman Empire in three Books containing the Maxims of the Turkish Politie their Religion and Military Discipline illustrated with divers Figures Written by Paul Ricaut Esq late Secretary to the English Ambassador there now Consul of Smyrna The third Edition price bound 10 s. 3. The History of Barbadoes St. Christophers-Mevis St. Vincents Antego Martinico Monsarrat and the rest of the Caribby Islands in all twenty eight in two Books containing the Natural and Moral History of those Islands Illustrated with divers pieces of Sculpture representing the most considerable Rarities therein described Written by an ingenious Hand price bound 10 s. 4. Il. Cardinalismo di Santa Chiesa or the History of the Cardinals of the Roman Church from the time of their first Creation to the Election of the late Pope Clement IX with a full account of his Conclave in three Parts Written in Italian by the Author of the Nipotismo di Roma and faithfully Englished price bound 8 s. 5. The World Surveyed or the famous Voyages and Travels of Vincent le Blanc of Marsscilles into the East and West-Indies Persia Pegu Fez Morocco Guinny and through all Africa and the principal Provinces of Europe price bound 10 s. 6. The History of the Life and Death of William Laud Lord Archbishop of Canterbury containing the Ecclesiastical History of the three Kingdoms of England Scotland and Ireland from his first rising viz. 1621. to his death 1644. By P. Heylin D.D. price bound 10 s. Quarto 7. A brief Account of Mr. Valentine Greatraks the famous Stroker and divers of the strange Cures by him lately performed Written by himself to the Honourable Robert Boyl price stitch'd 1 s. Octavo's 8. A Relation of Three Embassies from his Majesty Charles the Second to the Great Duke of Muscovy the King of Sweden and the King of Denmark performed by the Right Honourable the Earl of Carlisle in the year 1663. and 1664. Written by an Attendant on the Embassies price bound 4 s. 9. A Relation of the Siege of Candia from the first Expedition of the French Forces to its Surrender the 27. of September 1669. Written in French by a Gentleman who was a Voluntier in that Service and faithfully Englished price bound 1 s. 10. The History of Algiers and its Slavery with
the least spark of kindness in your Eyes Tell me I beseech you is it enough for a Lover that they be sparkling without kindness or do you think they have acquitted themselves of their duty when they have dazled a poor Creature I must see Love in them or renounce their Empire and when mine declare I love more than ever I expect yours should make answer And I 'le assure you there 's no Love lost If that be all replied the Ambassadress rather than the Duke shall want his Lesson I 'le look upon you as you please Do I look well now continued she fixing her Eye upon him with as much tenderness as she could Ha! I know you dear Eyes said the Sultan I see now you are disposed to hear me and then he ran out into a thousand amorous expressions but the Duke of Mantua who took no recreation in that kind of divertisement interrupted him by departing hastily out of room Jacaya observed his Physiognomy so changed he was afraid he had been ill and desired the Ambassadress she would permit him to follow him which he did but could not overtake him till he came to his Lodgings The Prince of Turkie desired to know what it was obliged him to retire so abruptly and assured him the Ambassadress was very unquiet till she could be satisfied of his health The Duke being brim full of passion answered not the Sultans Complement but looking fiercely upon him with his Eyes in which grief and rage were both livelily delineated Actum est it is decreed cryed he I love her my Love hath not been thus long constrained but to break out with the greatest violence and I will perish a thousand times before I will endure my Rival shall be beloved Jacaya thought him in a Phrensie and taking him by the Arm to feel his Pulse What do you talk of a Mistress and a Rival you are in a burning Feaver do you remember who it is that speaks to you Yes Prince replied the Duke with somewhat more moderation I know you too well you are the Ambassadresses Darling but you must resolve to take away my life or renounce those addresses Why Sir said the Sultan in a great surprise do you love the Ambassadress To say I love her replied the Duke is too mean I admire I adore her and either you must resign or one of us must dye Jacaya confounded at this Alarm as may well be imagined fell down upon the Chair that was next him and leaning his Elbow upon the Table fell into a contemplation of his Destiny He loved the Ambassadress entirely and though his passion was begun in sport and continued in a Frolick yet at the bottom he was most absolutely serious He was of an amorous Complexion much subject to Love and in that respect it was no easie matter for him to renounce it on the other side he had been infinitely obliged to the friendship of the Duke he had protected him against the Conspiracies of the Strozzi he had given him all necessary supplies and he had never been admitted in France but by his means Love Ha cruel Love cryed he with a sigh will you be always mine Enemy Alas Sir said he addressing himself to the Duke I foresaw the misery is befallen me and had you left me in that liberty I desired I had never pulled it down upon me Had you no other way of breaking with me than by making me your Rival I suppose my friendship hath tryed you and I do not admire it the unfortunate are often tedious to their friends but had it not been enough to let me have known so without adding the consequences of an infructuous passion Do not call me to an account said the Duke for what I have done I knew nothing of it my self and would have sworn I should never have been in Love with the Ambassadress The very moment before I knew she had a kindness for you my Love began to declare by the approaches of my Jealousie the news of your being in Love set me also on fire and that fire having been a long time deprest secretly in my heart that part of it which appears but its beginning is indeed the utmost extremity It is not that I am weary of your friendship and I offer you mine as pure as you have found it But dear Sultan shew me your compassion by your compliance Ladies are unconstant and perhaps you will do that of your self one day either out of weariness or revenge that I conjure you to do now in kindness to me The Turkish Prince could not relish that Proposition all that his obligations and Policy could get from him was only a promise to endeavour to master himself In order to which he absented himself for some time and pretending a Curiosity to see the Kings Houses and other Palaces about Paris he had several Entertainments with several Lords of the Court. Whether in some of those Entertainments the Duke of Mantua laid any design for him or whether the consideration of his misfortune in his Love exstimulated him to retire into some unknown part of the World where that passion was a stranger is not known but certain it is he disappeared in an instant and could never afterwards be heard on The Duke of Mantua was not much happier for the Ambassadour dying in France and his Lady returning into Savoy the Dukes Affairs called him into Italy and gave him no leisure to abandon himself to the desires of his passion A TABLE of all the Histories contained in these Eight Parts THe Countess of Castile page 1 The Pilgrim page 4 Alfreda of England page 14 Don Garcias of Spain page 30 The Duke and Dutchess of Modena page 37 The three Princesses of Castile page 53 Constance the fair Nun. page 81 James King of Arragon page 106 The Fraticelles page 113 Dulcinus King of Lombardy page 156 Nogaret and Mariana page 163 Don Pedro King of Castile page 185 John Paleogolus Emperour of Greece page 205 Amedy Duke of Savoy page 223 Agnes de Castro page 251 The Countess of Pontieuvre page 262 Feliciane page 286 Jane supposed of Castile page 310 The Persian Princes page 325 Don Sebastian King of Portugal page 355 Jacaya a Turkish Prince page 380 FINIS A Catalogue of Books Printed for John Starkey Booker-seller at the Mitre in Fleetstreet near Temple-Bar Divinity Folio's THirty six Sermons preached by the Right Reverend Father in God Robert Sanderson late Lord Bishop of Lincoln the fifth Edition corrected price bound 18 s. 2. The Jesuits Morals collected by a Doctor of the Colledge of Sorbon in Paris who hath faithfully extracted them out of the Jesuits own Books which are Printed by the permission and approbation of the Superiors of their Society Written in French and exactly translated into English price bound 10 s. Quarto 3. Tetrachordon Expositions upon the four chief places in Scripture which treat of Marriage or nullities in Marriage Wherein the Doctrine and