Or skill of making matches in my life: Though the name of the author is not unveiled, it is likely the law was his profession, as three of his friendly encomiasts sign their verses from the Inner and Middle Temple, and Gray's Inn. There is much quibble also in his composition, and a sententious quaintness in his style that renders his meaning very dark indeed. This will be sufficiently shewn by taking two stanzas in immediate succession. "Fame is our hackney, not the journey's end, Take therefore such a man, that hath bestridde The lacke* of fame, where he is best beknowne: The common rumor, which report is growne T. P. *This should probably be back: but the printer afforded no table of errata. + Stipendious seems to be used in the sense of stipendiary. ART. CLVIII. The Description of a Good Wife: or a rare one amongst Women. London. Printed for Richard Redmer, &c. 1619. Small 8vo. THIS is understood, from Mr. Malone, to be the performance of Richard Brathwaite; a noted wit, poet and justice of peace, says Wood.* It is superior, as a composition, to the preceding poems: has more perspicuity of design, more skill of method, and more harmony of metre. The argument may serve to explain the author's intention. "In pursuit of Love's inquest, Restless, takes himselfe to rest, And displays his fortunes thus:-- Who is good, who is not so. Next, his choice he shews his son, (Lest he should his choice neglect) What by him ought to be done To his Wife, in each respect; Who, though she should ever fear 'Cause he has preeminence : Where the triumph's o'er a woman.” The following passages are extracted from many pages of Direction for the Choice of a Wife. *Athen. Oxon. II. 516. "Chuse one that's wise, yet to herself not so, Inwardly fair, though mean to outward show, To know what huswife means, and such an one T' incur suspicion, that esteems her name Affliction with indifference, and thinks shame Chuse one whom thou canst love, not for constraint Of thy succeeding sorrow;—then, be wise, Chuse one whose pre election can admit None save thy selfe, that she can dearly love; Yet so discreet, as she can silence it Till th' time her parents shall her choice approve : While rash assents, whens'ever they do come, T. P. ART. CLIX. A Happy Husband: or Directions for a Maid to chuse her Mate. Together with a Wive's behaviour after Marriage. By Patrick Hannay, Gent. London: Printed by John Haviland for Nathaniel Butter, &c. 1619. Small 8vo. THIS was reprinted with the poems of Hannay, in 1622, of whom a brief notice is given in Vol. III. of Mr. Ellis's Specimens. His present production is not without moral merit or wholesome advice; and may admit of a short extract from the rules laid down for a Wife's behaviour. "If anger once begin 'twixt man and wife, What might have ceas'd in silence; then, persuasion . Is ominous, presaging life-long warre: And where two join'd do jar, their state decays; It is an adamantine chaine to knit Two souls so fast, nought can them disunite." T. P. ART. CLX. A Wife not ready made, but bespoken : By Dicus the batchelor; and made up for him by his fellow shepheard Tityrus. In four pastorall eglogues. The Second Edition. London: Printed for A. R. 1653. 8vo. THIS is a poetical pleading for and against marriage, in which the opposite advocates display equal ingenuity. The tract has a dedication in verse by R. A. "to his honoured good friend Sir Robert Stapleton," the translator of Juvenal and Musæus. R. A. is Robert Aylet, LLD. who wrote several pieces of a graver cast on spiritual subjects, which were collected into a thick octavo volume, of unfrequent occurrence. The present little work exhibits a few lyric stanzas which invite transcription. They appear under the quaint title of "A Mandee to Grammar-Scholars." "In time of seed, no cost or labour spare ; Shall never reap Things admirable, excellent, and rare. One hour in youth, well-spent, may go for two: Our studie's cold; The things we learn in youth, in age we do. Look but before, you plainly shall descry- On them that spend Their youth in sacred Muses' company: When they that follow worldly vain delights, What heav'ns do send, And sit in mists of sad obscured night. Hence, younger brothers by their studies raise To height of fame, And build brave monuments of lasting praise. |