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Ariostos seven Planets gouerning Italie. Or his Satyrs in seven famous discourses, shewing the estate 1. Of the Court, and Courtiers. 2. Of Libertie and the Clergy in general. 3. Of the Romane Clergie. 4. Of Marriage. 5. Of Soldiers, Musitians, and Louers. 6. Of Schoolemasters and Schollers. 7. Of Honour, and the happiest life. Newly Corrected and Augmented, with many excellent and note worthy notes, together with a new Addition of three most excellent Elegies, written by the same Lodovico Ariosto, the effect whereof is contained in the Argument. Qui te sui te sui. London, Printed by William Stansby for Roger Jackson, dwelling in Fleete streete neere the Conduit. 1611.

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This translation is claimed by Robert Tofte in a note upon the Blazon of Jealousie, and wherein he states it to have been, unknown to him, "set forth in another man's name.' There is no difference in the two editions of the Satires, except in the titles. To the last are appended three elegies, with a new pagination. The following is the address

"To the Reader.

"Gentle Reader, the vertuous, with their owne, hauing alwaies regard to another's good, do painfully bestow houres, dayes, and yeares, to make that easie to others, which they with great labour haue obtained; in their places, vsing all meanes, to reclaime all persons from all manner vices, and to furnish them with such gifts of grace, as to make the possessors all ioyntly happy. From the man of experience, which hath learning and wisedome, thou mayst bee sure to receiue good instruction. I know my selfe vnable to give the Author of this booke his due commendation: if I were, and did, yet should I seeme to some to flatter; to others, not to haue said enough wherefore for thy contentment, let this suffice thee: the Author had his education with the learned, his liuing among the greatest concourse of people, and his life vnreproouable. For his gifts, the world hath already had sufficient experience, in that famous worke of Orlando Furioso. Whoeuer thou art, I dare assure thee, thou mayest in this discourse (as in a glasse) see thy present estate, and so not misse to judge rightly of thy end. In reading thou shalt finde pleasure both in the matter and forme, by considering thou shalt

be

be able to instruct thy selfe and others; but by practising as thou ought, thou shalt finde setled happinesse. Let the example of others be thy instruction, to Aye that euil which hath beene their ouerthrow, and to embrace that good which was their aduancement. Be thankfull first to God, then to the Author, and lastly to thy Country-man, who for thy sake without any other recompence, hath taken the paines in most exquisite manner, to bee thy interpreter. Vale."

Then the argument of the whole worke, and the reasons why Lodouico Ariosto writ these Seauen Satyres." Some tales are introduced in the Satires as the well known one of Hans Carvels ring in the fifth Satire. The following is from the third.

"William surnamed Rufus, when in hand,
He swaid the english scepter at command,
It chan't a wealthy Abby voide did fall,
Whose great demeanes being rich in generall,
Many came to the king the same to buy,
(For he did money loue exceedingly.)

Now when Church-chapmen all were com'd vnto him,
And with their vtmost summes did amply woo hias,
He spide a Monke stood halfe behinde the dore,
Whom straight he cald, and bade him come before t
Imagining he came as did the rest,

With all filde bagges, to make his offer best:
And therefore thus the King most graciously
Speakes to the Monke: "Tell me man willingly,
What thou wilt giue; great the revennues are,
And thou free leaue to offer for thy share."

66

My gracious Lord (the old man did reply)
I came not hither this rich place to buy:
For I am poore; or had I wealth at will,
I would not load my conscience with such ill,
As to ingrosse Church-liuings aboue other,
Making me rich by robbing of my brother.
Besides I were an asse to vndertake,
To lay too great a burthen on my backe:
Which to support I know I am vnfit,
Both for my learning, industry and wit.
Onely I hither came in humble wise,

To beg of him which to this place should rise,
That I this petty fauour might but haue,
To be his priest, his Beadsc-man or his slaue."
The King who heard this olde man gratiously,
And finding in him trae humility,

Whence

Whence his rare vertues sprang so curiously,
That they exceld his ranke in dignity:
Freely and franckly without recompence,
Gaue him this Abbey and dispatcht him thence.

J. H.

To Correspondents.

We feel particularly indebted to the Gentleman who furnished several volumes for inspection, through the medium of Mr. Triphook. The not giving excerpts from his interesting Collection of Manuscript Poems, has arisen from not being able to appropriate so large a space as the nature of the Collection was entitled to.

An intelligent friend suggests, that at p. 103, 1. 5, for bowgyt we should read bowgty, i. e. booty; and at p. 115, 1.6 from the bottom, thoil means toil.

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Acheley, T. author of verses, 1
Alcida, Greene's Metamorphosis, 379
Amadis of Greece, 157

Angler, a limb of an upright man, 293
Anglo Saxon poem on the Battle of
Finsborough, 261

Anonymous verses from Bannatyne MS.
186, 190, 191

Answer to Lincolnshire rebels, 281
Apollonius Tyrius, 105

Caveat for common Cursetors, 291
Caxton's edition of Lord Rivers's Dictes
and Sayings, 237; Cato Magnus, 323
Cecill, Sir William, dedication to, 14!
Censure of a loyal Subject, by G. Whet-
stone, 140

Chapman, George, author of funeral song
on P. Henry, 36

Charles, prince, infant of Albion, dedica-
tion to, 30

Archery, Dedication to first edit. of Toxo- Chaunt of R. Sheale, the minstrel, 100;

philus, 206

Aristophanes, a character, 234
Ariosto's Satires, by R. Toft. 393
Arthur of Brytayn, 228; various edition,

of, 229-30; extracts from, 231—3,
Artists temp. of Charles,enumerated, 227
Ascham, Roger, First edition of his
Toxophilus, 206; dedication, ib.
Astrea, Ode by Sylvester, 221
Babylon, a poem from Du Bartus, 382
Bacon, Sir Nich. dedication to, 59
Bannatyne Manuscript, 183
Banquet on baptism of P. Henry, 315
Barrist's, W. triumph of Mars, 359
Barners, Boucher Lord, romance of Ar-
thur of Brytayn,228, Prologueto, 231
Bartholomeus de proprietatibus rerum,

MS. 107

Batman's, Stephen, Golden book of
Leaden Gods, 40; address before Bar-
tholomeus, 110

Bion, description of, 26
Beauties of Great Britain, address to, 159
Belman of London, by Decker, 293
Berkley, the Lords, patrons of 1 revisa,
108-10

Bernardino's tale, by R. Greene, 164
Bibliographia Scotica, by Ritson, 301
Blunt, N. an upright man, 252
Bodleian MS. of Dr. Rawlinson, 73
Book of St. Albans, 112—13
Borde, Andrew, 19; some account of,
20; his portrait of no authority, 21
Breton's N. poen upon the longing of a
blessed heart, 356

Buc, Sir Geo. eclogue by, 365
Bucke's, G. verses before Watson's

nets, I

his farewell, 105

Chess, 149

Chevy Chase, author of ascertained, 97
Christian prayers, printed by John Day,

209

Chronicles of England, a metrical one
described, 76-80; printed by W. de
Wo:d, 1528, described, 110-14
Chronicle of John Harding, 132
Churchyard's, T. Fortunate Farewell, 345
Churchyard's, Thomas, pleasant conceit
penned in verse, 259
Cleges, Sir, MS. poem, 17
Cocks and Cock-fighting, 318
Colbrand's battle with Guy of Warwick,
269

Commendation of Cock-fighting, 318
Contemplation of Sinners, 219
Coppin, family of, possessors of Wootton,
62

Cotton, Charles, verses by, 137
Country life, Ode, 146

Cypress garland, by Hugh Hollaud, 168
Dan Hew, of Lincoln, 179
ΔΑΦΝΙΣ ΠΟΛΥΣΤΕΦΑΝΟΣ, by Sir
Geo. Buc, 365

Davenant's Entertainment at Rutland
House, 234

Declaration against the Scots, 285
Dedication to those that lack money, 321
Deckar's Strange Horse-Race, 340
Denne, W. author of a Mask, 344
Dering's Works, 371; preface thereto,
curious, ib.

Derby, Countess of, an epilogue upon her
death, 98
Son-Dice-play, 149

Buckingham, D. of, dedication to, 168
Caledonian Muse, 302
Capgrave's lives of the Saints, 354
Carey, Lord Henry, dedication to, 40
Carey, Robert, dedication to, 160
Carmichaell, W. verses by, 184
Catalogue of early Scottish poets, 300
Catherine, Q. & Hen. VII., metrical
description of what passed at Oxford
on their divorce, 2015

VOL. IV.

Dictes and sayings, 237
Digges, Leonard, author of Treatise upon
the Science of Numbers, 52
Digges, Sir Dudley, account of, 60

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Dudley, a great scholar, 61;
list of celebrated names in the family, 63
Thomas, enlarged the treatise
upon numbers, 52; author of Panto-
metria, 52; account of, 53; epitaph,
54; dedications to, and extracts from,
his treatises, 57-60

EE

Diogenes,

Diogenes, a character, 234
Dives et pauper, printed by Pynson, 129
Divine poems, by Washbourne, 45
Dorrell, Hadrian, edited Willobre's Avisa,
244; preface to same, 244-7
Downhalus, C. wrote an ode to the
Muses, 1

Drama, Heywood's play of Johan the
husband, &c. 118-22; Hippolitus,
from Seneca by Prestwich, 122; Gen-
tleness and nobility, 270; unlawfulness
of plays, 225; Shepherd Holiday, 341
Drant's, Thomas, sermons, 173
Drummood, Margaret, anonymous verses
probably addressed to, 186
Dudley, Earl of Leicester, dedications to,
55, 338

Dumb Lover, poem, 125
Dunbar, W. verses by, 192

Fusty bandyas, term of merriment, 90
Gain in Loss poem by Prestwich, 123
Gascony described, 26

Genings, N. a counnterfiet crank, 292
Genius, as anciently represented, 44
German Giant described, 276
Gentleness and nobility, by John Hey
wood, 270

Giant, address of one, 276
Glanville Bartholomew, 106; verses by,

108

God's omnipotency, verses upon, 297
Goodly Gallery of pleasant prospects, by
W. Fulce, 384

Golden Book of the Leaden Gods, 40
Gorgas, Sir Arthur, verses by, 136
Gosson's, Stephen, Ephemerides of Phialo,
289

Grafton, W. owner of Our Lady, 50

Durer's, Albert, designs copied for Chris- Graphice, by W. Sanderson, 220

tian prayers, by Day, 209
Dwarf, gift to Hudson the, 278
Echo, verses replving by, 9; upon, 262
Eclogue, by Sir Geo. Buc, 365
Ekatomalia, or passionate Centuric of
Love, by T. Watson, 1

Elyot, Knight, Sir Thomas, sermon on
the Mortality of man, 149
Elizabeth, princess, infant of Albion,
dedication to, 30

Elizabeth, Q383; mercy to the Scotish
Queen, 141

Great Britain's Mourning Garment, 37
Greene's, Robert, pair of Turtle Doves,
210; extracts from, 211-19

Farewel to folly, 1595
address to the Universities, i6t

-, Planetomachia, 338
Alcida, 579; dedication, ib.; the au-
thor's character lately reconsidered, 381
Grisildy, Q Katherine, 203
Guy, E. of Warwick, 268
Harding, J. Chronicle by, 232
Harman's, T. Caveat for Cuisitors, 292

England, Chronicles of, 76-80, 110-Hawks, from Norway, in estimation, zá

14, 132

Heneage, Sir T. dedication to, 173

Ephemerides of Phialo, by S. Gosson, 289 Henry, Prince of Scotland, his baptism,

Epigrams by S. Kendall, 154-7

Epitaph on Sir T. Wyatt, 316
Essex, Earl of, poem to, 345

Evans, W. the great porter, address to, 279
Excellent poem by N. Breton, 356
Farewell to folly, by Greene, 159

to the Muse, 311

Farewell of the Minstrels, 105
Falkland, Lord, fugitive poetry by, 66
verses on Henry Lord

Hastings, 135
Fenner, Dudley, upen recreations, 224
Field pastimes, 313-14
Finsborough, Battle of, an Anglo-Saxon
poem, 261; translated into Latin, 263
Finsburg, fight of, poem from the Anglo-
Saxon, 288

Flecknoe's, R. travels, 143
Flora, description of, 44
Flowers of Epigrams, by T. Kendall, 150
Forrest's, W. poem upon Hen. VIII. and
O. Catherine, 200

Fortunate Farewell, by Churchyard,345
Fragments of a romance upon Guy, Earl
of Warwick, 268

Fulce's, W. Goudly Gallery, 384

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313

- Elegy upon,
30; an Epicede, or Funeral Soug
upon, 36; Madrigal upon, 49

the VIII. Dedication to, 206
dedication to,
22; and Q Catherine, what passed
at Oxford on their divorce, 200
Heywood's, John, play of Johan the hus-
band, &c. 118-24

bility, 270

Gentilness and no-

Higgons, Sir Thomas, lines by, 136
Hippolitus, by Prestwich, 122
Holland, Hugh, 36; notices of himself'
and family, 168; his Cypress Gar
land, ib.

Holbein, Hans, his book of crayons, 228
Honour in perfection, by G. M. 390
Hudson's Jeffery, New Yeare's Gift 278
Huggarde's, Miles, pathway to the tower
of perfection, 67

Hume's, Alex. sacred songs, 294
Huntingdon's, Countess, Epitaph, 66
Hymns, by A. Hume, 294
Hypnerotomachia, translation of, 285

Johna

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