A Preface. 
5; 
4 A Preface to the buier of 
this booke. 
Chap. 5: 
Hat lookest thou herein to haue ? 
Fine verses thy fansie to please ? 
Of many my betters that craue, 
Looke nothing but rudenes in thease. 
2 What other thing lookest thou then ? 
Graue sentences many to finde ? 
Such, Poets haue twentie and ten, 
Yea thousands contenting the minde. 
3 What looke ye, I praie you shew what ? 
Termes painted with Rhetorike fine ? 
Good husbandrie seeketh not that, 
Nor ist any meaning of mine. 
4 What lookest thou, speake at the last ? 
Good lessons for thee and thy wife ? 
Then keepe them in memorie fast, 
To helpe as a comfort to life. 
What looke ye for more in my booke ? 
Points needfull and meete to be knowne 
Then dailie be suer to looke, 
Ur 
To saue to be suer thine owne. 
*,* Mason remarks that this metre was peculiar to Shenstone. 
