IDENTILIN$$ F003DT1| DUBLIN MS I|ff. 14v-16|E:mth\mf\06-10-94\P & C:JSC\EWS o-hwt\9-10-98 c:DRD 3/11/08\c DT1 tiff GAS 6-24-11 003.DT1.HE1 %X%JSatyre%K. 2 003.DT1.001 Kind pittie choakes my splene, braue scorne forbidds 003.DT1.002 Those teares to issue, w%5ch%6 swell my eye-lidds 003.DT1.003 I must not laugh, nor weepe sinns, and bee wise 003.DT1.004 Can railing then cure these worne maladies? 003.DT1.005 Is not our Mistress faire Religion, 003.DT1.006 As worthy of all our Soules deuotion 003.DT1.007 As Virtue was in the first blinded age, 003.DT1.008 Are not Heaue'ns ioyes as valiant to aswage 003.DT1.009 Lusts, as Earths honour was to them? alass 003.DT1.010 As wee doe them in meanes, shall they surpass 003.DT1.011 vs in the end? and shall thy fathers spirit 003.DT1.012 Meet blind Philosophers in heauen, whose meritt 003.DT1.013 Of strict life may bee imputed faith, and heare 003.DT1.014 Thee whom hee taught soe easie wayes, and neare, 003.DT1.015 To follow damn'd? o if thou dar'st feare this, 003.DT1.016 This feare, great courage, and high valour is; 003.DT1.017 Dar'st thou aide Mut'inous Dutch, & dar'st thou laye 003.DT1.018 Thee in shipps, wooden sepulchers, a praye 003.DT1.019 To leaders rage, to stormes, to shott, to dearth, 003.DT1.020 Dar'st thou diue seas, and dungeons of the earth 003.DT1.021 Hast thou couragious fire to thawe the Ice 003.DT1.022 Of frozen North-discoueries, and thrice [CW:Coulder] 003.DT1.023 Colder then Salamanders, like divine [f.15] 003.DT1.024 children in th'oven, fires of Spaine, and the line, 003.DT1.025 whose countreyes Limbecks to our bodies bee; 003.DT1.026 Canst thou for gaine beare; & must euerie hee 003.DT1.027 w%5ch%6 cries not Goddesse to thy mistress, drawe, 003.DT1.028 or eat thy poysonous words, courage of strawe; 003.DT1.029 O desperate Coward, wilt thou seeme bold, and 003.DT1.030 to thy foes, & his (who made thee to stand 003.DT1.031 sentinell in his worlds garrison) thus yeild, 003.DT1.032 and for forbidden warrs, leaue th'appointed field? 003.DT1.033 Knowe thy foe, the foule Deuill, his, whom thou 003.DT1.034 striu'st to please, for hate, not loue, would allowe 003.DT1.035 thee faine his whole realme to bee quitt; and as 003.DT1.036 the worlds all parts wither away and passe, 003.DT1.037 soe the worlds selfe, thy other lou'd foe, is 003.DT1.038 in her decrepit waine, and thou louing this, 003.DT1.039 dost loue a withered, & worne strumpett; last 003.DT1.040 fleash%>fle>>%Ya%Z<fle>>%Ya%Z<