IDENTILIN$$ File F017HH1 Huntington EL6893\ff.60-61r\GL\P:TLP\o\1-3-92\C:JSC 017.HH1.0HE Elegia 017.HH1.001 Marry & love, thie Flavia for shee 017.HH1.002 hath all things, wherby, others beautious bee 017.HH1.003 For though her eyes be small her mouth is great 017.HH1.004 though they be Ivory, Yet her Teethe are Iett 017.HH1.005 Though they be dymme, Yet shee is light enough 017.HH1.006 And though her harshe haire fall, her skinne is rough 017.HH1.007 What though her cheekes be yellow, her haire is redd 017.HH1.008 Giue her thine, & shee hath a maydenhed 017.HH1.009 Theise things are beawties element; Where theise 017.HH1.010 meet w%5th%6 one, y%5t%6 one must as perfect please 017.HH1.011 If redd & white, & each good quallitie 017.HH1.012 bee in thie wenche ne're aske Where it doth lye 017.HH1.013 In buing things perfumed, We ask if there 017.HH1.014 be musk & Amber in it, but not where 017.HH1.015 Though all her parts be not in th' usuall place 017.HH1.016 shee hath gott th'Anagramme of a good face 017.HH1.017 If wee mought putt the letters but one way 017.HH1.018 in that leane dearth of words what could wee saye 017.HH1.019 When by the Gam=vt some Musitians make 017.HH1.020 a perfect song, others will vndertake 017.HH1.021 by the same Gam-vt, changed to %Yalter%Z[Mvar:>>ae%Lqual<<] it 017.HH1.022 things symplie good, can never be vnfitt 017.HH1.023 shees faire as any, if all be like her 017.HH1.024 But if non bee, then shee is singuler. 017.HH1.025 All love is wonder, if wee iustlie doe [60v] 017.HH1.026 accompt her wonderfull, why not lovely too. 017.HH1.027 Love built on beauty, soone as beawty, dyes; 017.HH1.028 Chuse this face, changed by no deformyties. 017.HH1.029 Women are all like Angells; the%5y%6 faire bee, 017.HH1.030 like those w%5ch%6 fell to worse; but such as shee 017.HH1.031 like to good Angells, nothing can ympaire, 017.HH1.032 Tis' less grief to be fowle the%M t'haue ben faire; 017.HH1.033 For one nights Revills gould & silk wee chuse, 017.HH1.034 but in long iourneys, cloth & leather vse; 017.HH1.035 Beawtie is barren, >%V%5oft%6< best husbands saye, 017.HH1.036 there is best land, where there is fowlest way. 017.HH1.037 Oh what a soverayne plaister will shee bee, 017.HH1.038 If thy past synnes haue taught thee Ielousy. 017.HH1.039 Here needs no spyes, nor Eunuchs; her commytt 017.HH1.040 safe to thie->>thy< foes, Yea to a Marmosite. 017.HH1.041 when Belgian Cities the lowe Conntries drown 017.HH1.042 that durty fowlnes guards & armes y%5e%6 towne: 017.HH1.043 So doth her face guard her, & so fort thee, 017.HH1.044 w%5ch%6 forc'd by busines, absent oft must bee. 017.HH1.045 Shee, whose face like cloudes, turnes y%5e%6 day to night 017.HH1.046 Whoe mightier then the Sea, makes Moones->>Moone< seem whit 017.HH1.047 whom though seaven yeares >%V%5shee%6< in the stewes had layde, 017.HH1.048 a Nunnery durst receaue, & think a mayde. 017.HH1.049 And though in Childbirth labour shee did lye, 017.HH1.050 Midwifes Would swear, twere but a Tympany 017.HH1.051 whom, if shee accuse her selfe, I creditt lesse, [61r] 017.HH1.052 Then Witches w%5ch%6 ympossibles confess; 017.HH1.053 whom Dildoes Bedstaues & her velvett glass, 017.HH1.054 Would %Ywould%Zbee as loth to touch, as Ioseph was 017.HH1.055 One like none, & lik't of none sittest neere; 017.HH1.056 For things in fashion, every one will weare. 017.HH1.0SSom [whirlwind flourish] 017.HH1.0$$ %1L.15 orig. wr. after 12, struck out & correctly placed%2