IDENTILIN$$ F014DT1 Dublin I ms. 877\f.42r-v\pp.61-2\EWS\o\P:JSC\mf\ 014.DT1.0HE %X%1Elegie%2.| 014.DT1.001 Till I haue peace w%5th%6 thee, warr other men 014.DT1.002 and when I haue peace, can I leaue thee then? 014.DT1.003 All other warrs are scrupulous; only thou 014.DT1.004 O faire free Cittie, may'st thy self allowe 014.DT1.005 To any one; In fflanders who can tell 014.DT1.006 whether the Master presse, or men rebell? 014.DT1.007 Only wee know that w%5ch%6 all Ideotts saye, 014.DT1.008 they beare most blowes y%5t%6 come to part the fraye. 014.DT1.009 ffrance in her lunatique Giddiness did hate 014.DT1.010 euer our Men, yea, and our God of late, 014.DT1.011 Yet shee relyes vppon our Angells well 014.DT1.012 w%5ch%6 nere returne, noe more then they w%5ch%6 fell. 014.DT1.013 Sick Ireland is w%5th%6 a strange warre possest 014.DT1.014 Like to an ague, nowe rageing, nowe at rest, 014.DT1.015 W%5ch%6 tyme will cure, yet it must doe her good 014.DT1.016 if shee were purg'd, and her head veine lett blood. 014.DT1.017 And Mida's ioyes our Spanish Iourneyes giue 014.DT1.018 wee touch all gold, but find noe food to liue; 014.DT1.019 And I should bee in the hott parching clyme 014.DT1.020 to dust, and ashes turn'd before my tyme. 014.DT1.021 To mewe mee in a shipp, is to inthrall 014.DT1.022 mee in a prison, that were like to fall, 014.DT1.023 Or in a Cloyster, saue that there men dwell 014.DT1.024 In a Calme Heauen, here in a swaggering Hell. 014.DT1.025 Long Voiages are long Consumptions 014.DT1.026 and ships, are Carts for executions: 014.DT1.027 Yea they are deaths; is't not all one to flye 014.DT1.028 into an other world, as t'is to dye? 014.DT1.029 Here let wee warre, in these armes let mee lye; 014.DT1.030 here let mee Parle, Batter, Bleed, and dye. 014.DT1.031 Thine armes imprison mee, and mine armes thee 014.DT1.032 thy heart thy ransome is, take mine for mee 014.DT1.033 Other men warr, that they their rest may gaine [CW:but][miscatch] 014.DT1.034 But wee will rest, that wee may fight againe. [f.42v/p.62] 014.DT1.035 Those warres the Ignorant, these th'experienc'd loue, 014.DT1.036 there, wee are alwayes vnder, here aboue. 014.DT1.037 There Engins farre off, breed a Iust true feare 014.DT1.038 Neare thrusts, pikes, stabbs, yea bulletts hurt not here. 014.DT1.039 There lyes, are wrongs, here safe vprightly lye 014.DT1.040 there Men kill men, wee'l make one by and by. 014.DT1.041 Thou nothing, I not half soe much shall doe 014.DT1.042 in these warres as they may w%5ch%6 from vs twoe 014.DT1.043 shall springe. Thousands wee see w%5ch%6 trauell not 014.DT1.044 to warre, but stay swords, armes, and shott 014.DT1.045 To make at home; and shall not I doe then 014.DT1.046 More glorious seruice, stayeng to make men? 014.DT1.0SS ffinis| 014.DT1.0$$ %1Even ll. ind; a mark over the [e] in [Parle], l.30, could be intended as a grave accent or a poorly angled acute one--maybe to assure it's pronounced with 2 syllables--it could also be only on the mf., since EWS didn't record it; in l.34 EWS must have misread his tr. on "rest"--he had "iest" (which it resembles in his tr.) but the mf. clearly has "rest"; SS flush with RM%2