item: #1 of 27 id: A35553 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: The tears of the Indians being an historical and true account of the cruel massacres and slaughters of above twenty millions of innocent people, committed by the Spaniards in the islands of Hispaniola, Cuba, Jamaica, &c. : as also in the continent of Mexico, Peru, & other places of the West-Indies, to the total destruction of those countries / written in Spanish by Casaus, an eye-witness of those things ; and made English by J.P. date: 1656 words: 27740 flesch: 51 summary: The tears of the Indians being an historical and true account of the cruel massacres and slaughters of above twenty millions of innocent people, committed by the Spaniards in the islands of Hispaniola, Cuba, Jamaica, &c. : as also in the continent of Mexico, Peru, & other places of the West-Indies, to the total destruction of those countries / written in Spanish by Casaus, an eye-witness of those things ; and made English by J.P. Brevísima relación de la destrucción de las Indias. The tears of the Indians being an historical and true account of the cruel massacres and slaughters of above twenty millions of innocent people, committed by the Spaniards in the islands of Hispaniola, Cuba, Jamaica, &c. : as also in the continent of Mexico, Peru, & other places of the West-Indies, to the total destruction of those countries / written in Spanish by Casaus, an eye-witness of those things ; and made English by J.P. Brevísima relación de la destrucción de las Indias. keywords: able; abominable; abundance; actions; alive; armes; beasts; blood; captain; captive; captivity; castile; cause; certain; chief; childe; children; christians; cities; city; committed; common; company; compassion; continent; countrey; countries; creatures; crimes; cruelties; cruelty; daily; day; death; depopulated; desire; destroy'd; destruction; distant; dogs; earth; end; enemies; english; eye; faith; fear; feet; fell; fertile; fire; foresaid; fury; god; gold; good; governour; great; greater; greatest; ground; hands; hath; heaven; hispaniola; home; houses; idols; indians; indies; infinite; inhabitants; innocent; iohn; island; killing; kinde; king; kingdome; knowledge; labour; large; law; lay; leave; length; lesse; liberty; life; like; little; long; lord; man; manner; martha; massacres; men; mexico; miles; millions; mountains; nation; new; noble; number; order; parts; people; persons; peru; place; poor; potent; power; present; princes; provinces; reason; regions; religious; remaining; rest; revenge; sad; said; sea; self; service; set; slaughters; small; souldiers; souls; space; spain; spaniards; spanish; subjects; swords; taking; tears; text; things; time; torments; treasure; true; tyrant; unjust; war; waste; way; west; whereof; women; world; year cache: A35553.xml plain text: A35553.txt item: #2 of 27 id: A36024 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: The dilucidation of the late commotions of Turkey containing an exact and distinct account of all causes and motives of the deposing of Mahomet, and of the advancing of Soliman to the imperial throne of Constantinople, gather'd from the letters of a person dwelling in, and minutely inform'd of the affairs of that city, and consecrated to the ever august merit of the most serene elector of Bavaria / printed in Italian at Venice, and translated into English by the author of the Monthly Account; to be annex'd to numb. 10 of the Monthly Account. date: 1689 words: 15735 flesch: 31 summary: He would not go directly to hazard his own Person at a time that the Deputies of the Army might have inculcated some distaste in Grand Signier's Mind , whom fear did easily make suceptible of any impression ; but thought expedient to keep private , hoping that by the means of the Kaimecan his Creature to facilitate his ingresse to the Grand Signior , and that he might with the more Security make his vindication , when the Deputies were departed . This must necessarily have been a piece of wantonness in Mahomets Fortune , that must needs make him himself the Author of his own Ruine , and thus push from him the only Prop that contriv'd all manner of means to uphold his sinking Authority . keywords: account; affairs; aga; armies; army; authority; bare; better; blood; body; books; bostangi; brother; capigi; chiaus; chief; city; command; commotions; constantinople; courage; course; crown; day; death; deposed; dignity; dilucidation; dispatcht; divan; eebo; effect; effendi; emperour; empire; employ; english; exact; flight; force; fortune; giving; god; good; government; grand; grand signior; grand vizier; great; greater; hands; having; head; hopes; house; ianizaries; imperial; kaimecam; kizlar; known; late; leader; left; letters; liberty; life; like; little; mahomet; making; manner; matter; means; men; merit; military; militia; mind; ministers; monarchy; money; monthly; mufti; mutinous; necessary; new; occasion; order; osman; ottoman; pachi; parts; pay; people; person; place; port; present; prince; publick; quiet; reason; rebellious; rebells; regeb; resolutions; ruine; said; secure; seraglio; serrail; short; signiors; small; soldiers; soliman; sons; spirit; standard; sufficient; supreme; suspicion; sword; tcp; text; things; throne; time; troups; tumults; turkey; turks; unhappy; vizier; way; worthy; years cache: A36024.xml plain text: A36024.txt item: #3 of 27 id: A37114 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: The Turkish secretary containing the art of expressing ones thoughts, without seeing, speaking, or writing to one another : with the circumstances of a Turkish adventure : as also a most curious relation of translated by the author of the Monthly account. date: 1688 words: 29070 flesch: 75 summary: Boul-Ester who plainly perceiv'd all that pass'd in Gulbeyaz heart , and that she was falling into the snare , judg'd that all Moments were precious , and fancy'd it to be now time to play her part , and to discover to this fair one the subject of her Commission ; by delivering her Youssufs Letter and Prefent . This Selam was more succinct and much less severe than the former , in which Gulbeyaz has told me several times that she pretended so much rigour only on the account that she thought Honour and Decorum engaged her thereunto , that so she might not yield otherwise than in form , and that she might charge to time and the perseverance of her Lover the excuses of a Passion , which she had been but too sensible of from the first Declaration . keywords: account; aga; answer; apartment; bachi; bath; beauty; bed; bit; blew; body; bosom; boul; box; call'd; care; caus'd; certain; chamber; characters; chief; children; cloth; colour; colour'd; common; companions; condition; confident; consent; considerable; constantinople; court; credit; crowns; curious; custom; daughter; day; days; dear; death; design; desire; discourse; door; dye; eebo; emperour; empire; endeavours; english; enterprize; ester; eunuchs; express; extraordinary; eyes; face; fair; fear; feet; flower; fortune; free; friends; gardens; general; glass; gold; good; grand; grand signior; great; green; gulbeyaz; hair; hand; happy; hasseki; head; heart; highness; history; honour; hour; house; husband; intendant; interview; jewells; jewess; joy; kind; known; large; law; leave; letter; life; like; little; long; longer; love; lovers; mahomet; maids; manner; marriage; master; matters; means; mehemmed; mind; mistress; moment; money; mother; nay; new; night; number; occasion; officers; open; pacha; paper; passion; pay; people; person; piece; place; pleasure; plum; possible; power; presents; princess; principal; quality; queen; ready; reason; remedy; rest; rich; run; sea; second; secretary; selam; self; sensible; seraglio; serrail; set; signior; silk; sincerity; sister; slaves; small; sorts; speaking; sugar; sultan; sultaness; sweet; table; tcp; terms; text; things; thought; time; torment; toy; true; turkish; turks; use; usual; valide; wax; way; white; wit; women; wood; words; work; world; worthy; writing; years; young; youssuf cache: A37114.xml plain text: A37114.txt item: #4 of 27 id: A42086 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: A late voyage to Constantinople containing an exact description of the Proportis and Hellespont, with the Dardanels, and what else is remarkable in those seas, as also of the city of Constantinople ... : likewise an account of the ancient and present state of the Greek Church, with the religion and manner of worship of the Turks, their ecclesiastical government, their courts of justice, and civil employments : illustrated ... in fourteen copper-plates ... / published by command of the French King by Monsieur William Joseph Grelot ; made English by J. Philips. date: 1683 words: 76141 flesch: 61 summary: In general, first editions of a works in English were prioritized, although there are a number of works in other languages, notably Latin and Welsh, included and sometimes a second or later edition of a work was chosen if there was a compelling reason to do so. EEBO-TCP aimed to produce large quantities of textual data within the usual project restraints of time and funding, and therefore chose to create diplomatic transcriptions (as opposed to critical editions) with light-touch, mainly structural encoding based on the Text Encoding Initiative (http://www.tei-c.org). keywords: 'em; abdest; adjoyning; adorn'd; advantage; afford; aga; age; alcoran; alla; altar; anchor; ancient; answer; antiquity; arches; architecture; armenians; arms; asia; author; baths; bay; beautiful; beauty; bells; best; bishops; black; body; books; brass; bread; building; business; buttresses; cadi; call'd; caloyers; care; carry'd; castle; caus'd; cause; ceremony; certain; chalcedon; channel; chief; children; christian; church; churches; circle; cistern; cities; city; clock; closet; colour; columns; coming; command; common; company; condition; considerable; constantine; constantinople; constrain'd; content; convents; copper; corners; cost; country; court; cover'd; cross; crowns; cry; cupola; curiosity; custome; cut; danger; dardanels; day; days; dead; dear; death; delightful; describ'd; description; design; desire; devotions; different; difficult; direction; discourse; distance; divine; dome; domo; doors; draught; duty; earth; east; eastern; emperour; empire; employments; enclos'd; end; enemies; english; entrance; europe; europeans; exact; exactness; excellent; explanation; extremity; eyes; fair; faith; fall; famous; farther; favour; fear; feet; festivals; fig; figure; finding; finish'd; fire; foot; forc'd; force; foundation; fountains; fourth; france; french; frequent; friend; fruits; galleries; gallery; gardens; gate; general; glory; god; good; grand; grandeur; great; great city; great number; great pillars; greater; greatest; greek church; greeks; green; grelot; guns; habit; half; hand; happen'd; happy; harbour; hard; haven; hazard; head; hellespont; heraclea; high; higher; hills; hold; holy; honour; hours; houses; ibid; iews; iman; impossible; inhabitants; inside; interest; islands; iustinian; justice; kind; king; kiosc; known; lamps; land; language; large; law; laws; lay; lead; league; leave; left; length; lent; lesser; letter; liberty; life; like; little; long; longer; lower; lye; lyes; magnificent; mahomet; mahometan; majesty; making; man; manner; marble; mark'd; marmara; marry'd; master; means; men; merchant; middle; midst; mind; misfortune; money; monks; monsieur; morning; mosaic; mosquee; muezins; musselmen; nature; near; necessary; necessity; need; new; nicomedia; noble; noise; north; notice; number; oblig'd; occasion; officers; old; open; opinion; order; ordinary; original; ottoman; oyl; pair; papa; parents; particular; parts; pass; passage; patriarch; people; perform'd; person; piece; pillars; plac'd; place; platform; pleasant; pleasing; pleasure; plenty; point; poor; portico; posture; prayers; present; price; priests; principal; private; promontory; proper; propontis; prospect; provision; publick; purpose; quality; quarter; question; quire; rais'd; reach; reader; ready; reason; regard; reign; relation; religion; religious; remains; remarkable; respect; rest; return; rich; right; road; rome; roof; room; round; ruins; sacred; said; sail; sancta; sanctorum; sanctum; satisfaction; sea; seats; second; seeing; self; semi; sepulcher; serraglio; service; set; shew; ships; shoar; short; sides; signor; situation; slave; small; soliman; sophia; sorts; south; space; square; stairs; stand; stay; steeple; steps; stone; stopp'd; story; street; streight; structure; subject; sufficient; sultan; support; tcp; temple; tenedos; text; thing; thought; time; title; tomb; towers; town; trade; travellers; trees; troy; true; truth; turkie; turkish; turks; turn'd; unfortunate; upper; use; usual; vain; vast; venetian; vessels; view; village; voyage; walls; war; watch; water; way; west; whereof; white; wife; windows; wine; wives; women; words; work; world; worship; worthy; years; young; ● ● cache: A42086.xml plain text: A42086.txt item: #5 of 27 id: A54757 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: Augustus Britannicus a poem upon the conclusion of the peace of Europe, at Rijswick in Holland, upon the 20th of September, 1697 / by J. Phillips. date: 1697 words: 4199 flesch: 72 summary: Augustus Britannicus a poem upon the conclusion of the peace of Europe, at Rijswick in Holland, upon the 20th of September, 1697 / by J. Phillips. Augustus Britannicus a poem upon the conclusion of the peace of Europe, at Rijswick in Holland, upon the 20th of September, 1697 / by J. Phillips. keywords: augustus; bloody; books; britain; britannicus; characters; conclusion; crown; danger; death; deem'd; early; eebo; encoding; english; europe; fame; fate; fear; fields; foe; foes; france; fresh; great; greater; grew; heat; heav'n; hero; honour; images; iove; john; joyn'd; league; like; long; man; martial; monarch; monsters; nassav; nature; new; numbers; obey'd; online; oxford; partnership; peace; phase; phillips; poem; prince; renown; rijswick; sacred; strength; sword; tcp; tei; text; toil; vain; victor; war; won; wonder; work; world; xml cache: A54757.xml plain text: A54757.txt item: #6 of 27 id: A54759 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: The character of a popish successour compleat in defence of the first part, against two answers, one written by Mr. L'Estrange, called The papist in masquerade, &c., and another by an unknown hand. date: 1681 words: 25458 flesch: 45 summary: Now one Remark I would make upon this Sigismond , to continue the parallel to our Case : He was a Prince in his nature as Heroick as we have or can have a Popish Heir , worthy of all those praises that either of these two Answerers have given the last ; and in short , to use one of their own words , A Prince for every thing else , bating his Perswasion , brave to admiration : Which one thing must more particularly witness for him , his being elected King of Poland , a Nation which we all know make their choice for a King out of the gallant , famous , and illustrious Worthies of all the Princes and Nobility through the whole Christian world . If so , and the King is Supreme Governor Ecclesiastick and Civil , and a Popish King notwithstanding shall alienate half his Supremacy to the Pope , then the Pope is co-King with him ; and that it may not be objected that Supream Ecclesiastick Power is not Kingly Power , where the Highest and last Appeal lyes , there lyes Royal Power , and therefore whilst the highest and last appeal in all causes Ecclesiastick , in such a Government is lodged in the Pope his Power is Royal. keywords: absolute; acts; allegiance; answer; answerer; apparent; arbitrary; argument; authority; best; better; betwixt; birth; blood; body; book; breach; brutus; cardinal; case; catholick; certain; change; character; characterizer; christianity; christians; church; common; communion; conscience; contrary; coronation; country; courage; cross; crown; dangers; day; defence; difference; dignity; divine; doubt; duty; early; ecclesiastick; eebo; elizabeth; end; england; english; example; exclusion; eyes; face; faith; fanatick; fatal; fate; father; fear; france; french; friends; glory; god; gods; good; government; great; greater; greatest; hand; head; heart; heaven; heir; hell; help; henry; heretick; holy; honour; hope; ill; illustrious; impossible; infidels; instance; interest; justice; kind; king; kingdom; kingly; l'estrange; late; lawful; laws; left; lestrange; life; like; little; long; lords; majesty; man; mary; masquerade; matter; means; meer; mercy; mistake; monarch; nation; nature; nay; nero; new; oath; obedience; obligation; occasion; old; onely; opinion; page; pamphlet; papist; parliament; particular; party; peace; people; person; perswasion; plain; play; plot; point; poor; popery; popes; popish; popish heir; popish king; popish successour; power; presbyterian; present; preservation; primitive; prince; principles; promis'd; protestant; protestant religion; purpose; queen; reader; realm; reason; religion; republican; right; roman; rome; romish; royal; ruine; sacred; safety; second; self; set; shall; short; sons; soul; state; subject; succession; successour; supremacy; supreme; tcp; text; thing; thought; throne; time; true; truth; turn; unknown; use; viz; want; way; work; world; worth cache: A54759.xml plain text: A54759.txt item: #7 of 27 id: A54760 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: Dr. Oates's narrative of the Popish plot, vindicated in an answer to a scurrilous and treasonable libel, call'd, A vindication of the English Catholicks, from the pretended conspiracy against the life and government of His Sacred Majesty, &c. / by J.P., gent. date: 1680 words: 31468 flesch: 64 summary: Seeing then all the several Orders of the Roman Clergy , and this Vindicator of the Inglish Catholicks , being of the same Gang , are so far from being Persons of Credit , that they are not only the Subject of every Satyrical Pen , but the Religious Scorn and Indignation of so many good and grave Men of their own Profession ; we may presume that those Thunder-bolts of Perjury and concocted Lyes which they toss with so much Rage at others , will not prove so Fatal as vain Malice suggests to men of their own lewd Principles . Users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a TCP editor. keywords: accus'd; accusation; advice; allegiance; answer; appear'd; arch; argument; article; ashby; assassination; attestation; author; authority; bad; bedingfield; believ'd; better; bishop; bloody; blundel; body; books; business; catholicks; cause; certain; chapter; character; chief; christ; church; clergy; common; company; consequence; conspiracy; conspirators; contradictions; contrary; court; credit; crimes; day; days; death; deponent; design; destruction; difference; discourse; discovery; doctor; dominicans; doway; duty; eebo; endeavours; england; english; ergo; europe; evidence; fables; face; fair; false; father; fenwick; fit; fool; friend; gang; general; god; good; government; great; greater; guilty; hand; hang'd; head; hear; heaven; help; henry; high; history; honour; hopes; horse; humane; iesuit; ill; innocent; intended; ireland; jesuitical; jesuits; justice; kastril; keines; king; kingdom; knave; language; law; learning; leave; letters; life; like; little; london; long; lord; lucians; lyes; lying; madrid; majesties; majesty; malice; man; matter; means; meer; men; money; monks; murther; names; narrative; nature; nay; new; non; number; oath; oats; occasion; old; omers; order; ordinary; original; pamphlet; papistical; papists; pardon; paris; parliament; particular; party; people; perjur'd; perjury; person; piece; place; plot; poor; pope; popish; power; presbyterians; pretended; priest; princes; principles; proof; protestants; provincial; publick; purpose; question; rabble; reader; ready; reason; rebellion; rector; regard; religion; reproaches; reputation; rest; ridiculous; right; roman; rome; sacred; saith; salamanca; sayes; scotland; seal; self; set; shame; silly; single; sir; society; sort; soveraign; speak; state; strange; subject; success; sufficient; suiman; support; tcp; testimony; text; thing; time; title; traytors; treasonable; treasons; true; truth; turn; vain; vindicator; want; way; white; william; wiseman; wit; wonder; words; work; world; years cache: A54760.xml plain text: A54760.txt item: #8 of 27 id: A54761 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: Horse-flesh for the Observator being a comment upon Gusman, ch. 4, v. 5 held forth at Sam's Coffee-House / by T.D.B.D. chaplain to the Inferiour clergies guide. date: 1682 words: 5757 flesch: 60 summary: Why this is the Reason ; not a Womans Reason , Because ye shall not believe him ; but , Because he made Brass Screws to an Antipendium . Moreover , my Beloved , there you shall find great Discoveries , monstrous Discoveries , Disclosures , almost past belief , of deep Secrets , profound Mysteries , the hidden Arcana of Screws and Antipendiums . keywords: antipendium; bacchus; beloved; better; books; brass; brass screws; certain; characters; church; coffee; conductor; days; dear; dear conductor; early; eebo; encoding; england; english; fat; general; gentlemen; god; good; great; guide; half; head; house; images; iuno; kind; like; long; loyalty; man; mars; mean; men; observator; onely; online; oxford; partnership; people; person; phase; piece; point; prance; project; proper; read; reason; saith; sam; screws; sight; silver; smock; sort; state; tcp; tei; text; things; tho; time; true; truth; way; words; work; world; xml cache: A54761.xml plain text: A54761.txt item: #9 of 27 id: A54762 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: An humble offering to the sacred memory of the late most serene and potent monarch Charles II by J. Phillips ... date: 1685 words: 2702 flesch: 72 summary: Yet for their Sakes , when once provok'd to Wars , He would not fail To keep Invasion from his guarded Shore ; And rather chose To be th' Aggressor , then expect His Foes . Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 99697) keywords: available; books; brother; characters; charles; creation; data; early; earth; edition; eebo; elements; encoding; english; god; great; heav'n; humble; images; kings; late; like; memory; mercy; monarch; mourn; offering; online; oxford; page; partnership; peace; phase; phillips; plenty; potent; prince; project; reason; royal; sacred; second; serene; tcp; tei; text; work; xml cache: A54762.xml plain text: A54762.txt item: #10 of 27 id: A54763 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: In memory of Our Late Most Gracious Lady, Mary, Queen of Great-Britain, France, and Ireland a poem / by John Phillips. date: 1695 words: 2204 flesch: 71 summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A54763) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 50258) Death searches every Nook and every Hole From the Antarctic to the Artic Pole , And the magnificent Structure , Body and Mind , First rais'd by Gods in Council join'd , In dreary Darkness lays , tho' we are safely bold , And hope , we shall once more a brighter Light behold . keywords: available; books; britain; characters; creation; death; early; edition; eebo; elements; encoding; english; france; gracious; great; grief; heav'n; images; ireland; john; lady; late; long; mary; memory; nature; online; oxford; page; partnership; phase; phillips; poem; project; queen; tcp; tei; text; tho; works; world; xml cache: A54763.xml plain text: A54763.txt item: #11 of 27 id: A54765 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: Maronides, or, Virgil travestie being a new paraphrase upon the fifth book of Virgils Æneids in burlesque verse / by John Phillips, Gent., the author of the Satyr against hypocrites. date: 1672 words: 18076 flesch: 85 summary: AEneas , whiter than his Cravat , Saw 't was nothing for man to laugh at ; 'T was time i'saith for him to work , Young men and maids , Old men and babes , Lady's in Coaches , durty drabs , In wooden-heel shoos , and shoostrings blew , With headlong hast came all to view The fare renowned Trojan blades ; And eke their solemn Masquerades , AEneas brought the prizes forth , Which were to be rewards of worth : keywords: acestes; aeneas; anchises; arms; author; bed; best; better; big; bird; black; blew; blood; blow; bold; bones; books; brains; brave; brother; bull; call'd; cestus; characters; cloantus; close; companions; courage; cow; crack; credit; cries; cry'd; cuff; damn'd; dares; day; dead; dear; devil; dog; doth; early; ears; eebo; english; entellus; eryx; euryalus; eyes; face; fair; fast; fatal; fate; father; fear; fear'd; fine; fire; fit; flames; fleet; fly; foe; force; forgot; fortune; free; friend; fury; galleys; gods; gold; gon; good; grace; great; gyas; half; hand; hard; hast; hat; head; heart; hell; hold; honour; horse; ill; iove; iris; john; joy; kind; large; laugh; lay; lead; leave; length; life; like; little; living; long; lookt; love; mad; maid; main; man; master; mean; men; menestheus; menetus; mighty; mind; near; need; nere; new; night; nimble; nisus; nose; oars; old; palinure; people; phillips; pilot; place; plaguy; play; poor; pox; present; pretty; prize; quo; rage; read; reason; rest; rich; rock; row; run; salias; sea; seas; second; self; sergestus; set; shame; shew; ships; shirt; shoos; shore; sir; slaves; sleep; small; son; soul; speech; sport; streight; strength; sure; swearing; t'other; tarry; tayl; tcp; tei; text; thee; things; thou; thought; time; town; tricks; trojans; true; truth; turn; vain; virgil; want; water; way; weak; weather; wind; wine; wise; women; words; work; worth; young cache: A54765.xml plain text: A54765.txt item: #12 of 27 id: A54771 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: New news from Tory-land and Tantivy-shire date: 1682 words: 3506 flesch: 61 summary: Users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a TCP editor. Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: available; books; characters; company; creation; devil; disloyalty; early; edition; eebo; encoding; enemies; english; faith; great; heraclitus; house; images; item; king; kingdom; land; law; lies; loyalty; man; men; nation; news; observator; online; oxford; partnership; people; persons; phase; phillips; plot; popish; project; protestant; publick; tantivy; tcp; tei; text; thou; tory; whigg; work; xml cache: A54771.xml plain text: A54771.txt item: #13 of 27 id: A54772 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: A poem on the coronation of King James II and his royl [sic] consort Queen Mary date: 1685 words: 1146 flesch: 68 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A54772) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 105076) keywords: books; characters; consort; early; eebo; encoding; english; images; james; king; mary; online; oxford; partnership; phase; queen; royl; tcp; tei; text; xml cache: A54772.xml plain text: A54772.txt item: #14 of 27 id: A54773 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: A reflection on our modern poesy an essay. date: 1695 words: 3383 flesch: 70 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). The great Scandal that Poetry has of late been subject to , together with the respect I always had for it , gave occasion for the following Reflection . keywords: age; author; available; books; cambridge; care; characters; contrary; creation; data; divine; early; edition; eebo; elements; encoding; english; essay; free; good; great; images; john; late; light; london; love; modern; modesty; muses; nature; online; oxford; page; partnership; passions; phase; phillips; poesy; poetry; poets; project; reflection; sacred; stage; tcp; tei; text; thought; true; vice; wanton; wise; wit; works; xml cache: A54773.xml plain text: A54773.txt item: #15 of 27 id: A54774 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: The religion of the hypocritical presbyterians, in meeter date: 1661 words: 7694 flesch: 78 summary: Play with that fear , with that religious awe Which keeps men free , and yet is mans great law : What can they but the worst of Atheists be , Who while they word it 'gainst impiety , Affront the throne of God with their false deeds , Alas , this wonder in the Atheist breeds . But 't was no Fable , or if then it were , Behold a sort of bolder mortals here , Those undermining shifts of knavish folly , Using alike to God and men most holy ; Infidels who now seem to have found out A suttler way to bring their ends about Against the Deity then op'nly to fight By smooth insinuation and by slight : They close with God , seem to obey his Lawes , They cry alowd for him and for his cause . keywords: alas; antichrist; babylon; beloved; books; brethren; brother; cause; characters; church; cloak; cry; cry'd; cryes; daniel; day; dear; devil; devotion; dinner; doth; early; ears; eebo; encoding; english; eyes; face; fall; fear; fine; friends; god; good; grace; great; hand; hard; haste; holy; hot; hum; hunger; hypocritical; images; john; lady; length; little; long; lord; man; meat; men; mistris; nay; night; notes; old; online; oxford; parson; partnership; people; pew; phase; poor; presbyterians; priest; quoth; religion; room; sick; sin; sins; sir; sister; sit; small; straight; sure; sweet; t'other; tcp; tedious; tei; text; thee; time; title; wife; women; words; work; xml; young; zeal cache: A54774.xml plain text: A54774.txt item: #16 of 27 id: A54782 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: Sam. Ld. Bp. of Oxon, his celebrated reasons for abrogating the test and notions of idolatry, answered by Samuel, Arch-Deacon of Canterbury. date: 1688 words: 5369 flesch: 58 summary: But , ( in the same Preface ) should it ever so happen hereafter , that any King of England should be prevail'd with to deliver up the Church , ( That is to say , to dispence with the Penal Laws and TEST ; for the TEST , notwithstanding the Reasons against it , must be included in this long Parenthesis , because the Church fram'd it ) he had as good , at the same Time , resign up his Crown . For my own part , says he● I know none , but the Nonconformist's boisterous an unreasonable Opposition to the Church of England ▪ If he think , that the Abrogation of the T●●● may be a means to unite the Papist , and the Di●senter , which he seems to intimate , by saying That the Faction of the Dissenters may be made use of , ●● instruments ( Iourney-men Tools ) to dissolve and unravel the establish'd Frame of things , and destroy the Church of England ; and so make an unobstructed Passage for the Return of Popery in Glory and Triumph ; then he has left his Cause in the Lurch , and relinquish'd all his Ecclesiastical Polity at once . keywords: arch; authority; better; bishop; books; canterbury; characters; church; conscience; deacon; declaration; dissenters; early; easie; ecclesiastical; edition; eebo; encoding; england; english; force; general; good; government; greater; idolatry; images; laws; liberty; long; majesty; man; matters; meer; nation; notions; online; oxford; oxon; pag; page; partnership; penal; people; phase; polity; preface; princes; principles; project; publick; reasons; religion; samuel; severity; subjects; tcp; tei; test; text; time; vindication; xml cache: A54782.xml plain text: A54782.txt item: #17 of 27 id: A54783 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: A satyr against hypocrites date: 1655 words: 8670 flesch: 78 summary: Play with that fear , with that religious awe Which keeps men free , and yet is mans great law : What can they but the worst of Atheists be , Who while they word it 'gainst impiety , Affront the throne of God with their false deeds , Alas , this wonder in the Atheist breeds . TEdious have been our Fasts , and long our Prayers ; To keep the Sabbath such have been our cares , That Cisly durst not milk the gentle Mulls , To the great damage of my Lord Mayors Fooles , Which made the greazie Catchpoles swear and curse The Holy-day for want o'th'second course ; And men have lost their body's new adorning Because their cloathes could not come home that morning The sins of Parlament have long been bawl'd at , The vices of the City have been yawl'd at , Yet no amendment ; Certainly , thought I , This is a Paradox beyond all cry . keywords: alas; antichrist; babylon; beloved; better; books; brethren; brother; cause; characters; church; cry'd; cryes; daniel; day; dear; devil; devotion; dinner; doth; early; ears; eebo; english; eyes; face; fall; fear; fine; friends; god; good; grace; great; hand; hard; haste; hear; holy; home; hot; house; hunger; hypocrites; images; john; laud; length; little; long; lord; man; meat; men; midwife; nay; new; night; nose; notes; old; online; oxford; parson; partnership; people; pew; phase; phillips; poor; priest; quoth; room; sad; saints; satyr; sick; sin; sir; sister; sit; small; steps; straight; strange; strong; sure; t'other; tcp; tei; text; thee; things; time; true; truly; water; wife; women; word; work; young; zeal cache: A54783.xml plain text: A54783.txt item: #18 of 27 id: A54793 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: Speculum crape-gownorum, the second part, or, A continuation of observations and reflections upon the late sermons of some that would be thought Goliah's for the Church of England by the same author. date: 1682 words: 13825 flesch: 78 summary: I only speak this to shew , that men are not to urge upon the Conscience so severely , that were so nice of it themselves . Priest. Oh Sir , upon extraordinary occasions , and in extraordinary places , men come to shew their Parts and their Learning , not their Divinity . keywords: act; angry; author; body; books; care; case; characters; christian; church; civil; commands; common; company; complement; conscience; crape; david; dissenters; divine; divinity; doctrine; early; eebo; elizabeth; england; english; evil; example; general; gentleman; god; good; government; gown; great; greater; guilty; heart; heaven; heraclitus; house; hum; ill; intended; interest; israel; judges; king; late; law; lawful; laws; like; little; liturgy; long; lord; magistrate; man; maximus; mean; men; merr; mery; mind; minister; modesty; monarchy; nation; nature; nay; obedience; observator; parliaments; people; person; pew; phanaticks; piece; place; plain; play; pound; power; present; priest; priestlove; prince; pulpit; purpose; queen; reason; religion; rest; right; sam; scripture; second; self; sermon; sir; slap; sort; state; statute; subject; sure; talk; tcp; tei; text; thing; time; true; truth; valerius; way; words; world; worship; young cache: A54793.xml plain text: A54793.txt item: #19 of 27 id: A54794 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: Speculum crape-gownorum, or, An old looking-glass for the young academicks, new foyl'd with reflections on some of the late high-flown sermons : to which is added, An essay towards a sermon of the newest fashion / by a guide to the inferiour clergy. date: 1682 words: 11967 flesch: 67 summary: Another sort there are ●hat stuff their Sermons with frightful metaphors ; flie to both the Indies , ransack Heaven and Earth ; down to the bottom of the Sea ; romage all the Shops and Ware●houses , spare neither Camp nor City , but they will have them . Judging , that should the Ministers words be such as comes to the common Ma●ket , plain and practical , he might pass probably for an honest and well meaning man , but by no●means for that thing which he would be thought to be , a Scholar ▪ Whereas if he give a spring now● and then in high Raptures towards the uppermost Heavens , dashing here and there an All● amazing word if he soars aloft in bombasti●●● Huffs , preaches Points de●p and mystical , and delivers the● as dark and Phantastical ; This is the way to be admired , and accounted a most able and profound ●nstructer . keywords: able; bear; behold; beloved; better; books; business; care; castle; certain; characters; charity; christ; church; churches; clergy; coffee; common; covenant; crape; discoveries; discovery; divinity; doctrine; early; edition; eebo; encoding; england; english; eye; faith; fanaticks; fears; feet; fit; foyl'd; general; glass; god; good; gown; grandgousier; great; greek; guide; hard; hat; heart; heaven; heraclitus; high; house; huzzah; images; jealousies; king; late; latin; learning; life; light; like; little; long; looking; lord; loyalty; man; matter; matth; men; mind; multitude; nation; nay; new; number; onely; online; oxford; partnership; people; person; phase; picrochol; piece; place; plain; prayer; preaching; pulpit; question; ready; reason; reflections; revelation; sacks; scarlet; scripture; second; selves; sending; sermon; set; signifies; simnels; small; sort; speculum; state; strange; subjects; taking; tcp; tei; text; thing; thou; thought; time; true; truth; university; use; want; way; words; work; world; xml; young; ● ● cache: A54794.xml plain text: A54794.txt item: #20 of 27 id: A54795 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: Sportive vvit the muses merriment, a new spring of lusty drollery, joviall fancies, and a la mode lamponnes, on some heroic persons of these late times, never before exposed to the publick view / collected for the publick good by a club of sparkling wits, viz. C.J., B.J., L.M., W.T., cum multis alsis---- date: 1656 words: 32524 flesch: 85 summary: Here 's fifteen hundred hands , a goodly number ; Which we could double , but we 're loth to cumber Our selves with all these Tinkers , Tanne●s Cu●●iers , Upholsters Sadlers , Cutlers B●●bers Furriers , Fishmongers , Painters , Fullers ▪ Dyets Soap men , Perfumers Blacksmiths , Turners ▪ Botchers Roap-men And millions more of such good souls , all last week Attended on old Burton , Prynne and Bastwick . Thou canst not play Vulcan before I play Venus : Thy f●ncies are foolish , such follies to gather : There 's many an honest man has worn the Bulls feather . keywords: age; alas; ale; apollo; arse; arthur; baker; bare; bear; beauty; bed; belly; best; better; black; blinde; blood; body; books; bow; boys; brains; brave; break; brother; brown; bulls; burn; cap; caps; care; cat; cause; chance; cheeks; children; church; city; cloak; cloris; close; club; cold; colin; constable; countess; country; court; cries; cry'd; cuckolds; cupid; curious; dance; daphne; day; days; dead; dear; death; deep; delight; desire; devil; doctor; doe; door; doth; doubt; drink; duke; dwell; earl; edward; english; ere; eyes; face; fadding; fain; fair; faith; fall; false; fancies; far; fast; fear; feather; feet; fellow; fine; fire; fit; flesh; fond; foot; fortune; france; free; french; friends; god; gods; good; goodly; goose; gown; grace; great; greater; haire; hand; happy; hard; hath; head; health; heart; hell; help; henry; high; hill; hold; home; honest; hope; horn; hot; house; humour; hunting; husband; ill; iohn; john; joyes; king; kiss; l ●; ladies; lady; land; late; law; leave; lesse; lies; life; like; lips; little; live; london; long; look; lord; lov'd; love; lusty; lye; lyes; mad; maids; man; mans; mark; market; master; mean; measure; men; merry; minde; mode; mother; muses; narcissus; nature; nay; ne'er; near; neck; need; nere; new; night; noble; nose; nought; oft; old; onely; open; ore; people; persons; phoebus; pipe; place; plain; play; pleasure; poets; poor; pot; praise; pray; prethee; pretty; pride; prince; proud; publick; queen; quoth; reader; reason; red; rest; rich; rise; rose; round; sack; scorn; self; set; shew; sing; sir; smell; song; sport; spring; stand; state; stay; stone; strange; strong; sun; sure; sway; sweet; taylor; text; thee; thing; thou; thought; thy; time; tinker; tobacco; tom; tongue; town; treasure; true; truth; turn; us'd; venus; verse; vvith; want; water; way; wear; wench; white; wife; wine; wise; wit; wits; wives; woman; wood; words; work; world; worth; wrong; year; yeares; young; ● d; ● e; ● s; ● ● cache: A54795.xml plain text: A54795.txt item: #21 of 27 id: A54796 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: A vindication of The character of a popish successor, in a reply to two pretended ansvvers to it by the author of the character. date: 1681 words: 8156 flesch: 52 summary: And all this lyes again at the Parliaments door , because they have endeavoured for the good of the Kingdom to disinherit a Popish Successor , and have not supplied the King with moneys , tho' at the same time they have declared , if his Majesty will be graciously pleased to join with them , and bar all the pretence of Papists to this English Diadem , secure their fears by passing that one Bill against that Prince , whose succession is the terror and distraction of this Nation ; an Act in which consists the peace , the safety , and the glory of three Kingdoms ; let him but be removed from all pretensions to this Crown , which justly may be done by King and Parliament , and they will open their purses so wide to Him , give Him that Mass of Wealth , as will make Him both fear'd abroad , and beloved at home . Truly 't is hard indeed ; but the circumstances of this Nation considered , not at all to be wondred at : for I believe all men of sense , as well as Sir Poll , as he calls him , will take it for granted , that if this Popish Heir comes to the Crown , he will by the dictates of that Religion , in spight of Vows and Covenants , promote the Romish Interest with all the severity , injustice , and tyranny , that most religious Cruelty can invent . keywords: answer; author; books; cause; character; characterizer; church; contrary; creation; crown; divine; doctrine; doubt; early; eebo; england; english; faith; fear; god; good; government; great; greater; greatest; hands; honest; images; impossible; king; kingdoms; laws; little; majesty; man; nation; nature; nay; oath; oxford; page; pamphlet; papist; parliament; party; people; plot; popery; popish; popish king; power; pretended; prince; principles; protestant; reason; religion; reply; roman; rome; royal; self; set; successor; tcp; tei; text; thing; tho; time; vindication; virtues; work cache: A54796.xml plain text: A54796.txt item: #22 of 27 id: A55123 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: A pleasant conference upon the Observator and Heraclitus together with a brief relation of the present posture of the French affairs. date: 1682 words: 14993 flesch: 74 summary: None , Sir ; but he said further , I demolished the 〈◊〉 Colemannia in spight of the Court ; I delivered up the Fort of Wak●mannia in spight of the City , and I will be Governou● of the Fortr●s● 〈◊〉 Iusticia still , in spight of the Devil . So that he was at length sent into the Countrey with a thing called a Quietus e●t , to enjoy what he has so bas●ly got , with the Curses of the Islanders . keywords: able; absolute; affairs; arbitrary; belfagor; best; better; books; brother; business; care; cause; certain; characters; chief; church; common; conference; conscience; considerable; country; dam; day; design; devil; early; earth; eebo; encoding; england; english; face; false; fine; fortress; french; friends; general; good; government; governour; grand; great; half; hand; hath; head; health; heart; heraclitus; highness; holland; honour; images; interest; island; iusticia; jesuits; king; landers; late; law; league; life; like; little; long; loose; man; master; match; men; money; monsieur; nation; nay; new; noise; number; observator; occasion; old; online; oxford; partnership; parts; pass; people; person; phase; place; pleasant; plotters; pluto; point; pope; popish; posture; power; pray; present; princes; principal; protection; purpose; reason; relation; religion; right; run; safe; self; senate; set; sir; sootiness; sort; state; subjects; sure; tantivie; tcp; tei; text; thing; thou; time; tinker; tools; tories; tory; true; turk; use; war; way; whigg; work; world; worth; xml; years; young; ● ● cache: A55123.xml plain text: A55123.txt item: #23 of 27 id: A59018 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: The secret history of K. James I and K. Charles I compleating the reigns of the four last monarchs / by the author of The secret history of K. Charles II and K. James II. date: 1690 words: 27293 flesch: 39 summary: That after His return from Denmark to Scotland , seeming mightily satisfied with the Care the Kirk-Party had taken to preserve the Kingdom in Peace , during his Absence ; He was pleased to express himself thus , in a general Assembly , That He blest God , that He was Born at sike a Time of the Gospel , and to be King of sike a Kirk , the purest Kirk in the World : The Kirk of Geneva , says He , keep Yeul and Pasch ; What have they from the Word of God for that ? Besides , Sir Walter Rawleigh did mediate his Favour , by a Discourse he sent him , proving no War could be so necessary or advantageous for England , as one with Spain ; alledging many Reasons and Examples , as well out of the Practice of Queen Elizabeth , as his own Experience ; no Prince else then , being able to pay for , or bear the Expence of a Royal Navy , which once in a Year he would without question accomplish by our intercepting some or most of the Plate-Fleet , all Nations besides ( at that time ) being but Sea-Pedlars : Wherefore , if Philip the Second cut off his own hopeful and only Son Charles , for but pittying the People of Flanders ; it can be no wonder , He should promote the destruction of a Stranger , that did so far applaud the advice of Rawleigh , as to say , No King but his Father , would keep such a Bird in a Cage . keywords: account; act; answer; arch; army; author; bed; better; bill; bishop; bristol; buckingham; business; cause; chamber; charge; charles; chief; children; church; city; command; commission; commissioners; commons; contrary; council; countess; court; danger; daughter; day; days; death; declaration; design; desire; discourse; divers; duke; earl; eebo; elwayes; end; england; english; essex; fair; family; father; favorite; favour; fear; fit; fortune; friends; general; gentleman; george; god; good; great; greater; greatest; grievances; guard; guilty; hall; hands; hath; head; henry; high; history; home; honour; house; ireland; john; judges; justice; keeper; king; king james; kingdom; lady; late; laud; laws; liberties; lieutenant; life; like; little; loan; london; long; lord; love; majesty; man; manner; marriage; master; match; means; members; message; militia; money; moor; nation; nature; near; new; notice; old; opinion; order; overbury; papists; parliament; people; persons; petition; place; power; present; prince; proceedings; publick; puritans; queen; reason; reign; religion; return; ruine; said; salisbury; scotch; scotland; scots; sea; second; secret; secretary; servant; setting; shew; sir; somerset; spain; spanish; speaker; speech; state; strafford; subject; subsidies; suffolk; supply; taking; tcp; text; thing; thought; time; treasurer; treaty; trust; truth; tryal; turner; unto; villers; war; way; westminster; weston; white; wisdom; wise; world; year; young cache: A59018.xml plain text: A59018.txt item: #24 of 27 id: A59027 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: The secret history of the reigns of K. Charles II and K. James II date: 1690 words: 46687 flesch: 36 summary: eng Charles -- II, -- King of England, 1630-1685. James -- II, -- King of England, 1633-1701. keywords: account; act; acts; advice; affairs; affection; aix; alliance; ancient; arbitrary; argyle; arms; army; assistance; authority; barbarous; bed; behalf; best; bill; bishop; blood; body; broken; brother; business; care; case; catholick; certain; charles; chief; church; circumstances; city; close; coleman; command; committed; common; condition; confederate; conscience; consequences; conspiracy; conspirators; contrary; contrivance; corporations; council; country; court; credit; crime; crown; danger; dangerfield; day; days; dear; death; declaration; degree; design; desire; destruction; discovery; dissenters; dominions; duke; durst; dutch; dutchess; earl; eebo; effect; embassador; end; ends; enemy; england; english; estates; europe; evidence; extraordinary; eyes; faith; father; favour; fear; finding; fitzharris; fleet; following; forc'd; force; forth; france; french king; general; gentlemen; giving; god; good; government; gracious; grand; great; greater; greatest; hall; hands; heart; heaven; high; highness; history; holiness; holland; home; honest; honour; hopes; house; husband; iames; iefferies; imaginable; innocent; insomuch; instruments; integrity; interest; ireland; irish; judges; jury; justice; kindness; king; kingdom; known; lady; law; laws; lawyers; league; length; letter; liberties; liberty; life; like; little; lives; london; long; look'd; lord; lordship; majesties; majesty; malice; man; manner; marquiss; master; means; members; mercy; mind; ministers; monarch; money; mother; motives; murder; nation; nature; necessary; necessity; new; noble; number; oath; occasion; old; open; opinion; order; papers; papists; parliament; parts; pass'd; peace; people; persons; piece; pious; plain; plot; popery; popish; posterity; pounds; power; present; preservation; pretence; pretended; priests; prince; principal; private; privy; project; promises; proof; prosecution; protestant; protestant religion; publick; purpose; quality; quarrel; queen; question; ready; real; reason; regard; reign; religion; rest; return; revenge; roman; rome; room; royal; ruin; sacred; said; scotland; sea; second; secret; secretary; security; self; sensible; service; set; sheriffs; shew; short; sir; slavery; solemn; state; subjects; success; sufficient; sums; supply; support; taking; tcp; terms; text; thing; thought; throne; time; title; treachery; treaty; tripple; true; truth; tyranny; vertue; want; war; way; ways; white; wife; witnesses; words; work; world; year; york; zeal cache: A59027.xml plain text: A59027.txt item: #25 of 27 id: A62319 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: Typhon, or, The gyants war with the gods a mock-poem, in five canto's. date: 1665 words: 15746 flesch: 79 summary: Though you are Gods , and we but Men , ( Quoth he ) yet know , for I 'll be plain , If you a quarrel will maintain , And that with neither fear nor wit ; Tell Iove , I hold no answer fit , But this : We will not purchase Glasses For him , nor his celestial Asses : Let him send Ganimed , that elf , Or take the pains to go himself . For if of Iove they gain the odds By conquest , they shall all be Gods. keywords: alcides; angry; argument; arms; ass; bacchus; befel; best; better; big; blow; broke; canto; cause; courage; crane; cries; cry'd; day; dead; devil; doth; dreadful; drink; early; earth; eebo; encelades; english; ere; ev'ry; eyes; fall; fate; fear; fight; fire; fit; foe; follow; force; gods; good; great; great iove; ground; gun; gyants; half; hand; haste; head; heart; heaven; hercules; high; hold; honour; iove; iuno; iupiter; knave; knife; land; leave; length; lie; life; like; little; long; love; mad; madam; man; mars; matter; mean; men; mercury; mighty; mimas; momus; neptune; news; noise; o'er; odds; pallas; parson; pins; place; powder; priest; quoth; quoth iove; rest; rout; said; set; shape; silenus; sir; son; speed; stand; stout; straight; strength; sure; sword; tcp; tell; text; thunder; time; toe; town; true; typhon; us'd; vulcan; war; way; wife; wine; wood; words; work; worse cache: A62319.xml plain text: A62319.txt item: #26 of 27 id: A66741 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: Wit and drollery joviall poems / corrected and much amended, with new additions, by Sir J.M. ... Sir W.D. ... and the most refined wits of the age. date: 1661 words: 50966 flesch: 82 summary: SHall I woe thee lovely Molly , She is fair , fat , fine and Jolly , ●t she hath a trick of folly ; ●herefore I le have none of Molly , ●o no no , no no no , I 'le have none of Molly , ●o no no no no. The Gallants and Taylors are half years togeth●● To fit a new suite to a new Cap and feather , And whether to make it of Cloath , Silke , or Le● the And is not &c. New tricking , new triming new measures , ne● pac● New heads for our men , for women new faces And twenty new tricks to mend thir bad cases . keywords: additions; adieu; admirable; age; alas; ale; answer; apace; arms; arow; arts; author; bad; bag; bare; barnaby; bear; beat; beauty; bed; beer; belly; best; better; bid; bin; bit; black; blind; bloud; blow; bodies; body; bold; books; boyes; brave; break; breast; breath; brewer; bridge; bright; call'd; canst; cap; care; catch; cause; change; characters; charles; cheeks; cheese; cho; christmas; church; city; claret; clear; cock; cold; come; comedy; common; constant; content; cony; country; court; crown; cry; cuckolds; cupid; cure; cut; dare; day; dead; dear; death; delight; dem; desire; devil; discourse; diseases; disgrace; divine; divinity; doctor; doe; dog; dolly; door; dost; doth; dream; drink; drinking; drollery; drunken; dull; dwell; dye; e're; early; earth; easie; edition; eebo; elements; end; england; english; exact; excellent; eyes; face; fair; faith; fall; false; fancies; farewel; fashion; fast; fat; fate; fear; feeding; feet; fellow; fields; fill; find; fine; fire; fish; fit; flames; flesh; fly; fond; food; foot; forbear; force; forth; fortune; france; free; freind; french; friends; general; god; gods; goe; gold; good; gown; grace; grant; gray; great; green; grief; half; halloe; hand; hard; hare; harm; hast; hath; hay; head; health; heart; heaven; help; hide; high; hill; history; hold; hole; holy; home; honour; hope; horse; hot; hounds; hour; husband; iohn; iove; iron; itch; iuno; jade; judges; kill; kind; king; kiss; knife; known; ladies; lady; land; language; lanke; large; late; latin; laugh; law; lawyer; learned; leave; left; liberty; lies; life; like; lilly; lips; liquor; little; london; long; look; lord; lov'd; love; lovely; lovers; lusty; lye; lyes; mad; maid; majesty; major; man; manner; mans; march; masters; matter; meat; meet; melancholly; men; merry; method; mind; mistress; monarchy; money; mortal; mother; muse; natural; nature; nay; near; need; neer; nere; new; night; noble; nose; nought; oft; old; onely; open; original; pair; parliament; past; pedler; penelope; people; perfect; persons; phoenix; physick; piece; pig; pipes; pity; place; plain; play; pleasure; plot; plump; poems; poet; poor; pope; porter; pot; power; pox; practise; praise; pray; present; prethee; pretty; prince; print; prize; protest; prove; proverb; publick; purse; queen; quoth; rare; read; reason; red; rest; rich; rise; room; rose; round; royal; runs; sack; sad; saint; sake; sal; scarce; schollers; school; scorn; sea; second; secrets; self; sent; sermon; set; shall; shee; shine; ships; shot; silent; sing; sir; skin; sleep; smith; smock; smooth; soft; song; sore; soul; souldiers; speak; speech; spirits; sport; stand; state; stay; stone; straight; strange; street; strength; strike; strong; sun; sure; sweet; sword; tcp; teeth; tell; text; thee; thing; thither; thou; thought; thunder; thy; times; tom; tongue; tooth; touch; town; trade; treatise; trouble; true; tub; turn; turn'd; ulysses; undone; university; useful; valour; variety; venus; verse; vertue; vulcan; vve; vvhen; vvhich; vvith; want; wanton; water; way; wear; weather; white; whore; wide; wife; wind; wine; wise; wish; wit; wits; witty; wives; woman; words; work; world; wrong; year; young; youth; ● nd; ● o; ● ● cache: A66741.xml plain text: A66741.txt item: #27 of 27 id: A70611 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: Montelions predictions, or, The hogen mogen fortuneteller discovering as plain as a pike-staff, the dark intrigues, and grand catastrophes, carried on, or designed in most parts of the world. date: 1672 words: 3399 flesch: 60 summary: Yet that the Blind World may see our Skill , either in Astrology , or Coskinomancy ( that more Mysterious Art of the Sieve and Shears ) is not a whit inferiour to the busiest of our fellow-Students , we have resolved on the Question to oblige the Publique ( we mean Hawkers , and Coffee - Houses ) by delivering our Sentiments on the present Conjuncture of Affairs , induced hereunto ; for that not only our Brother , the Apollo of Clerkenwel Green , hath for some time disappeared to Mortals , being ( as we are credibly informed ) gone to Visit his Nurse at the Antipodes , but also because the heretofore active G●osequil of our beloved Pupil , the renowned Poor R●bin , is of late grown Dry and Stubbed , yielding little more than the Dregs of Red-Lettice Wit , or nauseous Repetitions . Not that we find by the abstrusest Rules of Geomancy , that the Hogen States are any more likely this year to Establish the Fifth Monarchy in an Universal Common-Wealth , than Sa●othy Levy , to Revive and Recollect the Ten scattered Tribes , for taking Possession of the Holy Land : Yet are we more than Confident , that Sage Aphorism of the late Deceased Plagiary Tresmeg●●us in his Temple of Wisdom , will shortly be ●●●uied to a hairs breadth , viz. keywords: available; books; catastrophes; characters; creation; dark; data; dutch; early; edition; eebo; elements; encoding; english; fortuneteller; general; grand; great; hand; heads; hogen; houses; images; intrigues; john; keying; land; little; m2492b; markup; montelions; new; online; oxford; page; partnership; parts; phase; phillips; pike; plain; predictions; project; proquest; sea; sets; staff; states; strange; tcp; tei; text; time; victory; wing; work; world; xml cache: A70611.xml plain text: A70611.txt