IDENTILIN$$ F017O16/ Eng. poet. e.14 (ff.29v-30)/TJS/mf/1-29-92/cor EWS/o/5-20-92 017.O16.HE1om 017.O16.001 Marry & love thy %1Flavia%2; for she 017.O16.002 Hath all things wherby others beawtious be. 017.O16.003 For thowgh her Eyes be Small, her mowth is great 017.O16.004 Thowgh they be %1Ivory%2, yet her Teeth are Iett. 017.O16.005 Thowgh they be dim%Me, yet she is light enough 017.O16.006 And thowgh her harsh hayre fall, her Skin is towgh; 017.O16.007 W%5t%6 thowgh her Cheekes be yellow, her hayre is red: 017.O16.008 Give her thine, & she hath a Mayden-head. 017.O16.009 These things are beawtyes Elements; where these 017.O16.010 Meete in one, That One must as p%Pfect, please. 017.O16.011 If red & white & each good Quality 017.O16.012 Be in thy Wench; ne're aske where it doth lye; 017.O16.013 In buyeng things p%Pfum'd, we aske if there 017.O16.014 Be Muske or Amber in it, but not where: 017.O16.015 Thowgh all y%5e%6 Parts be not in th'vsuall Place 017.O16.016 Yet she hath th'Anagram of a good Face. 017.O16.017 If we might put y%5e%6 Letters but one way 017.O16.018 In y%5t%6 leane dearth of words, w%5t%6 cowld we say: 017.O16.019 When by y%5e%6 %1Gam-vt%2 some Musitians make 017.O16.020 A p%Pfect songe; others will vndertake 017.O16.021 By y%5e%6 same %1Gam-vt%2 chang'd to ae%Lquall it: 017.O16.022 Things simply good can never be vnfitt. 017.O16.023 She is fayre as any, if all be like her 017.O16.024 And if none be, then is she singular. 017.O16.025 All Love is wonder; if we iustly doe 017.O16.026 Account her wonderfull, why not lovely too? 017.O16.027 Love built on beawty, soone as beawty dyes; 017.O16.028 Chuse this face, chang'd by no deformityes. 017.O16.029 Weomen are like Angells; the fayre be 017.O16.030 Like those, y%5t%6 fell to worse: but such as she 017.O16.031 Like to good Angells, nothing can impayre; 017.O16.032 Tis less greife to be fowle, then t'have beene, fayre. 017.O16.033 For one Nights %1Revells%2, Gold & Silke we chuse [f.30 017.O16.034 But in longe Iowrneys, Cloth & Leather vse. 017.O16.035 Beawty is barren oft; best Husbands say 017.O16.036 There is best Land, where there is fowlest way. 017.O16.037 Oh what a soveraigne Plaister will she be 017.O16.038 If thy past Sinns, have tawght thee Iealousy! 017.O16.039 Heere needs no spyes, nor %1Evnuchs%2; her co%Mmitt 017.O16.040 Safe to thy Foes; yea to a Marmosite 017.O16.041 When %1Belgian%2 seas y%5e%6 low Cowntry drownes 017.O16.042 The durty fowleness guards, & armes, y%5e%6 Townes; 017.O16.043 So doth her Face guard her, & so for thee 017.O16.044 Who forc'd w%5th%6 business, absent oft must be. 017.O16.045 She, whose Face, like Clowds, makes Day, seene Night 017.O16.046 Who mightier then y%5e%6 sea, makes %1Moores%2 seeme white; 017.O16.047 Who thowgh seven yeares she in y%5e%6 %1stewes%2 had layd 017.O16.048 A %1Nun'ry%2 durst receave, & thinke a Mayd: 017.O16.049 And thowgh in Child-birth Labor she did lye 017.O16.050 %1Midwives%2 wold sweare,'twere but a %1Timpany%2, 017.O16.051 Whome, if she accuse her selfe, I creditt lesse 017.O16.052 Then Witches, who Impossibles confesse. 017.O16.053 Whom %1Dildo's%2, %1Bed-staves%2, & her %1Velvett%2 g->>%1Glass%2< 017.O16.054 Wold be as loth to towch, as %1Ioseph%2 was. 017.O16.055 One like none, & lik't of none, fitte'st were 017.O16.056 For things in Fashion every one will were.| 017.O16.0SS D%5r%6: Dun: [above l. 1 in LM] 017.O16.0$$ %1l. 33 hanging indent 2sp; follows non-Donne material & precedes ElBrac; l. 1 hanging indent 1-2sp; poem number%2 70 %1is in LM opp. l. 1 by second scribe; cap /D/ in l. 45 shows that the SS are scribal%2