IDENTILIN$$ F004SN3|Hawthornden ms. XV|ff. 15-20v|T:EWS\o\6-13-83\FM:JSC\mf\9-25-96\P&C:JSC\3-25&4-20-99 004.SN3.HE1 %XSAT. 4 anno 1594 004.SN3.001 %1Well%2 I may now receaue and die, md**%>>my< Sinne 004.SN3.002 Indeed is great, but I haue been In 004.SN3.003 A purgatorie, such as fear'd Hell is 004.SN3.004 A recreation and scant Mapp of this. 004.SN3.005 My mynd nor with pryds[Mvar:>prids<] ytch, nor yet hath beene 004.SN3.006 Poysond with loue to see and to be seene. 004.SN3.007 I had no Sute there, nor new suite to show 004.SN3.008 Yet went to court; but as Glare which did goe 004.SN3.009 To a Masse in ieast, catcht, was faine to deburse[sic] 004.SN3.010 Three[sic] hundreth[sic] Marks which is the Statuts curse, 004.SN3.011 Before he scap>t%>d<; so it pleasd my Destinie 004.SN3.012 (Guiltie of my Sinne of going) to thinke mee 004.SN3.013 As prone to all ill, and of good as forgett= 004.SN3.014 =full, as proude, lustfull, & as much in dett, 004.SN3.015 As vaine, as witlesse, and as false as they 004.SN3.016 Which dwell at court, for once going that way 004.SN3.017 Therefor I suffred this. Towards me did ru%Mne 004.SN3.018 A thing more strange than on %1Niles%2 Slime the /Sunne 004.SN3.019 Ere bred, or all which into %1Noahs%2 arke came 004.SN3.020 A thing which would haue posd [l.c.]adam to name. [CW:om] 004.SN3.021 Stranger then seuen Antiquaries Studies, [f.15v] 004.SN3.022 Than %1Affricks%2 monsters %1Guyanas%2 rarities, 004.SN3.023 Stranger than Stranger%Ys%Z >is< one wh**%>>who< of%>>for< a Dane 004.SN3.024 On%>>In< the Danes Massacre had sure beene slaine; 004.SN3.025 If he had liu'd then, and withou[sic] help dies 004.SN3.026 When next the prentises gainst strangers rise; 004.SN3.027 One whom the watch at Noone lets scarse goe by 004.SN3.028 One to whom the examining iustice sure would crie 004.SN3.029 S.%5r%6 by b%>>ynot< play 004.SN3.106 at blowpoynt, or spangecounter, but they Pay [CW:om] 004.SN3.107 Toll to some courtier, and wyser than all vs [f.17v] 004.SN3.108 He knowes which lady is not painted, thus 004.SN3.109 He w%5t%6 home meates tries mee, I belch, spue, spit, 004.SN3.110 Looke pale and s>ee%>ic%Vbeene< since 004.SN3.114 The Spaniard[sic] came to the lose[sic] of Amience. 004.SN3.115 Like a Big Wyfe at sight of lothed meate 004.SN3.116 Readdy to traiuell so I sigh and sweate 004.SN3.117 To heare this Makkron talke, In vaine for yet 004.SN3.118 Either my humor or his owne to fit; 004.SN3.119 He like a priuiledgd spye, whom no thing can 004.SN3.120 Discredit, libells now against each great Man, 004.SN3.121 He names a price for eury office payd 004.SN3.122 He sayes o%5r%6 warres thriue ill because delayd, 004.SN3.123 That officers are entayld, and that there are 004.SN3.124 Perpetuities of them lasting as farre 004.SN3.125 As the last Day, and that Great officers 004.SN3.126 Doe w%5t%6 the pyrates share and Dunkerkers, 004.SN3.127 Who wastes in meate, in clothes, in horse, he notes 004.SN3.128 Who loues Whores, who Boyes, and who Goates. [CW:om] 004.SN3.129 I more amaz'd than Circes prisoners, when [f.18] 004.SN3.130 They felt themselues turn'd Beasts, felt my>%Vself< then 004.SN3.131 Becoming Traytor and I thought I saw 004.SN3.132 One of our Giant Statues ope his Iaw 004.SN3.133 To sucke mee in for hearing him I found 004.SN3.134 That as burnd venome, letchers doe grow sound 004.SN3.135 By giuing others their Soares, I might grow 004.SN3.136 Guiltie and he free, therefore I did show 004.SN3.137 All signes of lothing, but since I am in 004.SN3.138 I must paye myne and my forefathers Sinne 004.SN3.139 To the last farthing: therefor to my powre 004.SN3.140 Toughlie & stubornlie I bare this crosse but the howre 004.SN3.141 Of mercie now was come; he cryes[sic] to bring 004.SN3.142 Mee to pay a fine, to scap[sic] this torturing 004.SN3.143 And Said S.%5r%6 can you spare me: I said willinglie 004.SN3.144 Nay S.%5r%6 can you spare mee a crowne, thankfully, I 004.SN3.145 Gaue it as Ransonne;[sic] but as fidlers, still 004.SN3.146 Though they be payd to be gone, yet needs will 004.SN3.147 Thrust on more Iegg vpon you, so did he 004.SN3.148 W%5t%6 his long complementall thankes vex mee. 004.SN3.149 But he is gone thankes to his needye want 004.SN3.150 And the prerogatiue of my crowne, Scant [CW:om] 004.SN3.151 His thankes were ended, when I which did see [f.18v] 004.SN3.152 All the court filld with more strange things than hee, 004.SN3.153 Ran from thence with such, or more haste, than one 004.SN3.154 Who feares more actiones, doth make from prisone 004.SN3.155 At home in wholesome solitarinesse 004.SN3.156 My pitieous soule began the wretchednesse 004.SN3.157 Of suit[sic] at court >to< mourne, and a traunce 004.SN3.158 like his who dream'd he saw%Y,%Z hell, did aduance 004.SN3.159 It selfe or[%1var%2:o>%5uer%6<] mee, and such men as he saw there 004.SN3.160 I saw at court, and Worse, & more, low feare 004.SN3.161 Becomes the guiltie, not the accuser then 004.SN3.162 Shall I (None's Slaue) of high borne or raisd men 004.SN3.163 Feare frownes, and my mistresse truth betray thee 004.SN3.164 To the huffing, braggard, puft nobilitie: 004.SN3.165 No. No, thou which since yeasterday hast beene 004.SN3.166 [l.c.]almost about the World, hast thou seene 004.SN3.167 O Sunne, in all thy Iourney vanitye 004.SN3.168 Such as swelles the bladder of o%5r%6 court? I 004.SN3.169 Thinke he which made you[sic] [om] Garden; and 004.SN3.170 Transported it from Italie, to stand 004.SN3.171 With vs at London, floutes o%5r%6 courts here, for 004.SN3.172 Iust such gay painted things which no Sapp, nor [CW:om] 004.SN3.173 Taste haue in them, ours are, and naturall [f.19] 004.SN3.174 Some of the %1Stockes%2 are there, fruits bastard all.| 004.SN3.175 'Tis ten a clocke and past, all whom the mewes, 004.SN3.176 Baloune, Tennice, dyet, or the Stewes 004.SN3.177 Had all the morning held, now the Strond[sic] 004.SN3.178 Tyme made ready that Day, in flockes are found 004.SN3.179 In the presence and I (God pardon mee) 004.SN3.180 As frech[sic] & sweet the apparreles be, as bee 004.SN3.181 The feilds they sold to buy them, for a king 004.SN3.182 Those Hose are (cries his flatters[sic]) and bring 004.SN3.183 [l.c.]them next weeke to the theater to sell. 004.SN3.184 Wantes reach all States. mee seemes they do as well 004.SN3.185 At Stage as court, all are players, who ere looks 004.SN3.186 (for themselues dare not goe) o're cheapside Bookes, 004.SN3.187 Shall find their ward-robs inuentarie;[sp:sic] now 004.SN3.188 The ladyes come, as Pyrattes which did know 004.SN3.189 That there came weake ships fraught w%5t%6 Cuthanell[sp:sic] 004.SN3.190 The Men boorde them, & praise as they thinke well 004.SN3.191 Their Beauties, they the Mens wits, both are bought, 004.SN3.192 Why good wits n'ere weare skarlet Gownes, I thought 004.SN3.193 This cause, these mens witts for speeches buy 004.SN3.194 And Woemen buy all Reds; w%5t%6 skarled[sic] Dye [CW:om] 004.SN3.195 Hee calls her Beautye lyme twiggs, her haire neet,[sic] [f.19v] 004.SN3.196 Shee feares her Drugs ill layd, her haire il set. 004.SN3.197 Would not Heraclitus laugh, to see Macrine 004.SN3.198 From Hatt to shoe himselfe at Doore refine. 004.SN3.199 As the presence wer a Meshite, and liste[sic] 004.SN3.200 His Skirts and Hose, & call his cloths to shriste[sic] 004.SN3.201 Making them con[%1brevigraph%2]fesse not onlie mortall 004.SN3.202 Great staines and holes in them, but veniall, 004.SN3.203 Feathers and Dust with which they fornicate, 004.SN3.204 And then by Durers rule[sing.] surveys the state 004.SN3.205 [l.c.]of his each lyme, and with strings he odds tries 004.SN3.206 Of his necke to his leg, and wast the[sic] thighes. 004.SN3.207 So in immaculate clothes and sumetrie[sic] 004.SN3.208 [l.c.]perfect as circles, with such imet>y>G*< in RM between ll.174 & 175; scribal "/" in l.201 separates 2nd & 3rd words; this scribal note precedes poem, on f.14v:%2 This Satyre (though it heere haue the first place /because no more was intended to this booke) was /indeed the authors forth in nomber & order; /he hauing wreten fiue in all to which /this caution will sufficientlie direct in /the rest.