IDENTILIN$$ F07b006| Coryate's Crudities| f. f5v|\E:DRD\fs\08-13-09 07b.006.HE1 %X%1Incipit Ioannes Dones%2. 07b.006.001 L%+Oe her's a Man, worthy indeede to trauell; 07b.006.002 Fat Libian plaines, strangest Chinas grauell. 07b.006.003 For Europe well hath seene him stirre his stumpes: 07b.006.004 Turning his double shoes to simple pumpes. 07b.006.005 And for relation, looke he doth afford 07b.006.006 Almost for euery step he tooke a word; 07b.006.007 What had he done had he ere hug'd th'Ocean 07b.006.008 With swimming %1Drake%2 or famous %1Magelan%2? 07b.006.009 And kis'd that %1vnturn'd%2%5*%6 %1cheeke%2 of our old mother, 07b.006.010 Since so our Europes world he can discouer? 07b.006.011 It's not that %5a%6%1French%2 which made his %5b%6%1Gyant%2see 07b.006.012 Those vncouth Ilands where wordes frozen bee, 07b.006.013 Till by the thaw next yeare they'r voic't againe; 07b.006.014 Whose %1Papagauts%2, %1Andou%Uilets%2, and that traine 07b.006.015 Should be such matter for a Pope to curse 07b.006.016 As he would make; make! makes ten times worse, 07b.006.017 And yet so pleasing as shall laughter moue: 07b.006.018 And be his vaine, his gaine, his praise, his loue. 07b.006.019 Sit not still then, keeping fames trump vnblowne: 07b.006.020 But get thee %1Coryate%2 to some land vnknowne. 07b.006.021 From whe%Mce proclaime thy wisdom with those wo%Mders, 07b.006.022 Rarer then sommers snowes, or winters thunders. 07b.006.023 And take this praise of that th'ast done alreadie: 07b.006.024 T'is pitty ere thy %1flow%2 should haue an %1eddie%2. 07b.006.0SS %X%1Explicit Ioannes Dones%2. 07b.006.0$$ ll. 19-24 ind three sps. Marginal notes: %5*%6 %1Terra incognita%2 %5a%6 %1Rablais%2 %5b%6 %1Pantagruel%2