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Democritus, or Doctor Merry-man his Medicines
against Melancholy humors. Written by S. R. [i.e. by Samuel Rowlands]
Rowlands, Samuel (1570?-1630?)
[section]
Honest Gentle-men.
Flatteries Favvne.
[Hyppocrisie was kind, and vs'd me well]
[A cittizen for recreation sake]
[A Mony-monger choyse of sureties had]
[A wealthy Misers Sonne, vpon the way]
[Enuy betwixt two friends, a breach did make]
[A country fellow had a dreame]
[An idle fellow that would take no paine]
[A crafty kind of knauish foole]
[A sort of Clownes for losse which they sustayn'd]
[One dying, left three sonnes]
[An old stale Widdower, quite past the best]
[A gentleman, a curious building fram'd]
[A Barber and a Mower did contend]
[An humorons phantasticke Asse]
A Quack-saluers Humour.
[One came to court a Wench which was presize]
[A crew of Foxes all on theeuing set]
[A shepheard that a carefull eye did keepe]
[The Deuill did complaine he was not well]
[A byshop met two Priests vpon the way]
[One clymbing of a tree, by hap]
[An aged Gentleman, sore sicke did lye]
[A simple Clowne in Flanders]
A Courtezans Humour.
[A rich man and a poore did both appeare]
[Two Beggers did encounter on the way]
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Democritus, or Doctor Merry-man his Medicines
Democritus, or Doctor Merry-man his Medicines
against Melancholy humors. Written by S. R. [i.e. by Samuel Rowlands]
Samuel Rowlands
1570?-1630?
Printed for Iohn Deane [etc.]
London
1607
Democritus, or Doctor Merry-man his Medicines