The mysteries of love & eloquence, or, The arts of wooing and complementing as they are manag'd in the Spring Garden, Hide Park, the New Exchange, and other eminent places : a work in which is drawn to the life the deportments of the most accomplisht persons, the mode of their courtly entertainments, treatments of their ladies at balls, their accustom'd sports, drolls and fancies, the witchcrafts of their perswasive language in their approaches, or other more secret dispatches ...

About this Item

Title
The mysteries of love & eloquence, or, The arts of wooing and complementing as they are manag'd in the Spring Garden, Hide Park, the New Exchange, and other eminent places : a work in which is drawn to the life the deportments of the most accomplisht persons, the mode of their courtly entertainments, treatments of their ladies at balls, their accustom'd sports, drolls and fancies, the witchcrafts of their perswasive language in their approaches, or other more secret dispatches ...
Author
Phillips, Edward, 1630-1696?
Publication
London :: Printed by James Rawlins for Obadiah Blagrave,
1685.
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Subject terms
Erotic literature.
English language -- Rhyme.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A54745.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The mysteries of love & eloquence, or, The arts of wooing and complementing as they are manag'd in the Spring Garden, Hide Park, the New Exchange, and other eminent places : a work in which is drawn to the life the deportments of the most accomplisht persons, the mode of their courtly entertainments, treatments of their ladies at balls, their accustom'd sports, drolls and fancies, the witchcrafts of their perswasive language in their approaches, or other more secret dispatches ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A54745.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 17, 2024.

Pages

CAP. 14. The second Connexive Syllogism.

Q. What is the second manner of the connexed syllogism?

A. The second manner of the connexed syllogism taketh a∣way the consequent, that it may take away the antecedent.

Q. Give example?

A. If a wise than assent to any thing, sometimes also he shall be opinionated.

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But he shall never be opinionated.

Therefore shall he assent to nothing.

Qu. Give another example?

A. By the like syllogism Ovid. Trist. 12. judgeth his foo∣lishness.

If I where wise those sisters I should hate; Deities hurtful to whom on them wait. But now so great my foolishness is seen: I build them altars whom my hurt have been.

These two kinds of the Syllogism are most usual of all.

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