Page:Groat's worth of wit for a penny, or, The interpretation of dreams, moles, &c. (1).pdf/22

 22 malice but the more folly. The eye large, standing out, foolish, fearful, and iminodest. Eyes disorderly, roving, to rash, and unquiet in mind. The eye-li quavering, fearful. The eye moving swiftly, with a sharpish look, fraudulent unfaithful, and a thief. The eye sted fastly looking troubled in mind, and deceiver. The eye very wide open, ex- tremely imprudent.

The Nose.

The nose round, with a sharpness o the end, wavering of mind. The nose crooked like the eagle's bill, too bold The nose flat, lecherous and full of pas- sion. The nose large at the end, desir- ous of what they see. The end of the nose sharp, fierce, and full of words as a sword, a rolling eye, a smiling coun- tenance, and a scarlet nose, as right a lusty Roger, an artist of the school of Venus, and a lover of the female sex.

How to make a powder to cause a person fall in love with you.

Take neetle seeds and juniper berries,