IDENTILIN$$ F01600B MH\pp.74-75\EWS\mf\4-18-85\P:JSC[Harvard mf]\9-9-94\pr\cf\MJJ\10-1-95\cor\MJJ\11-20-95\P:js\fc(TxAM)\10-24-05 016.00B.0HE %XE%1leg%2. III. / %X%1Change%2. 016.00B.001 A%+Lthough thy hand and faith, & good workes too, 016.00B.002 Have seal'd thy love which nothing should un- /(doe, 016.00B.003 Yea though thou fall back, that, Apostasie 016.00B.004 Confirme thy love; yet much, much I feare thee. 016.00B.005 Women are like the Arts, forc'd unto none, 016.00B.006 Open to'all searchers, unpriz'd, if unknowne. 016.00B.007 If I have caught a bird, and let him flie, 016.00B.008 Another Fouler using these meanes, as I, 016.00B.009 May catch the same bird; and, as these things be, 016.00B.010 Women are made for men, not him nor mee. 016.00B.011 Foxes & goates; all beasts change when they please, 016.00B.012 Shall women, more hot, wily, wild than these, [CW:Bee][miscatch] 016.00B.013 Be bound to one man, and did Nature then [75] 016.00B.014 Idly make them apter to'endure than men? 016.00B.015 They'are our clogges, not their owne; if a man be 016.00B.016 Chain'd to a galley, yet the galley is free. 016.00B.017 Who hath a plow-land, casts all his seed corn there, 016.00B.018 And yet allows hisground more corne should beare; 016.00B.019 Though Danuby into the sea must flow, 016.00B.020 The sea receives the Rhene, Volga, and Po, 016.00B.021 By nature, which gave it, this libertie. 016.00B.022 Thou lov'st, but Oh! canst thou love it and mee? 016.00B.023 Likenesse glues love: and if that thou so doe, 016.00B.024 To make us like and love, must I change too? 016.00B.025 More then thy hate, I hate'it, rather let me 016.00B.026 Allow her change, then change as oft as shee, 016.00B.027 And so not teach, but force my'opinion, 016.00B.028 To love not any one, nor every one. 016.00B.029 To live in one land, is captivitie, 016.00B.030 To runne all countries, a wilde roguery; 016.00B.031 Waters stinke soone, if in one place they bide, 016.00B.032 And in the vast sea are more putrifi'd: 016.00B.033 But when they kisse one banke, and leaving this 016.00B.034 Never looke backe, but the next banke doe kisse. 016.00B.035 Then are they purest; Change is the nurserie 016.00B.036 Of musick, joy, life, and eternitie. [CW: E%9leg%0.] 016.00B.0SSom 016.00B.0$$ %1Single hyphen in l.2 originally transcribed as%2 --|_ %1or at least that's how the computer file read%2