Of Canting. How long it hath beene a language: how it comes to be a language: how it is deriued: and by whom it is spoken. CHAP. 1.
WHen all the World was but one * 1.1 Kingdome, all the people in that Kingdome spake but one Lan∣guage. A man could trauell in those dayes neyther by Sea nor Land, but he met his Countrey∣men, & none others. Two could not then stand gabling with strange tongues, and conspire to∣gether (to his owne face) how to cut a third mans throate, but he might vnderstand them. There was no Spaniard (in that age) to braue his enemie in the rich and loftie Ca∣stilian: no Romaine Orator to plead in the Rethoricall and Fluent Latine: no Italian to court his Mistressa in the sweet and amorous Tuscane: no French-man to parley in the full and stately phrase of Orleans no Germaine to thunder out the high and ratling Dutch: the vnfruitfull crabbed Irish, and the voluble significant Welch, were not then so much as spoken of: the quicke Scottish Dialect (sister to