IDENTILIN$$ F15400D|Ham-Letter|1649(CtY,MH)|sigs.Y6-Y7,pp.331-33 154.00D.HE2 %1To Sir%2 Robert Carr. [Y6] 154.00D.HE3 SIR, 154.00D.001 I Presume you rather trie what you can doe in me, than what /I can 154.00D.002 doe in verse; you know my uttermost when it was /best, and even 154.00D.003 then I did best when I had least truth for my /subjects. In this 154.00D.004 present case there is so much truth as it de-/feats all Poetry. 154.00D.005 Call therefore this paper by what name you /will, and if it be 154.00D.006 not worthy of him, nor of you, nor of me, /smother it, and be that the 154.00D.007 sacrifice. If you had commanded me /to have waited on his body 154.00D.008 to Scotland and preached there, /I would have imbraced the 154.00D.009 obligation with more alacrity; /But, I thanke you that you would 154.00D.010 command me that which I /was loath to doe, for even that hath 154.00D.011 given a tincture of merit /to the obedience of 154.00D.012 Your poore friend and 154.00D.013 servant in Christ Iesus 154.00D.014 %1I.D.%2 154.00D.$$ Line 12 indented 25 sp.; line 13, 28 sp.; line 14, 40 sp.; ll. 1-11 in italics.