IDENTILIN$$ F004H06|MS Eng. 966.5|pp. 69-77 (ff. 38-42)|TWH\mf\2-1-95\P:TJS\o\3-96\C:JSC\11-24-98 004.H06.HE1 %XSatyre 4. 004.H06.001 Well I may now receaue and dye, my sinne 004.H06.002 Indeed is greate%Yr%Z, but >%Vyet< I haue bin in 004.H06.003 A Purgatory, such as fear'd Hell is 004.H06.004 A Recreation, and scant Mapp of this. 004.H06.005 My mind, not with prides itch, nor yet hath beene 004.H06.006 Poysond with Loue to see or to bee seene, 004.H06.007 I had no sute%>>>suite<< there, nor yet Sute to showe 004.H06.008 Yet went to Court. But as Glare w.%5ch%6 did goe 004.H06.009 To Masse in iest, catcht, was fayne to disburse 004.H06.010 The hundred Marks, w.%5ch%6 is the statutes curse;%>curse>>,<< 004.H06.011 Before hee scap'd: so it pleasd my destiny, 004.H06.012 Guilty of my sinne in going, to thinke mee 004.H06.013 As prone to all ill, and of good as forget= 004.H06.014 Full, as proude, lustfull, and as much in debt, 004.H06.015 As vayne, as witlesse, and as false as they 004.H06.016 W.%5ch%6 dwell at Court. For, once going that way, 004.H06.017 Therefore I sufferd this. Towards mee did runne 004.H06.018 A thing more strange then on Niles slimes the Sunne 004.H06.019 Er'e bredd, or all w.%5ch%6 into Noes arke came, 004.H06.020 A thing w.%5ch%6 would haue po'sd Adam to name, 004.H06.021 Stranger then seven Antiquaries studyes, 004.H06.022 Then Affricks monsters, Guyanas rarities, 004.H06.023 Stranger then strangers, One who for a Dane 004.H06.024 In the Danes massacre had sure bin slayne, 004.H06.025 If hee had liud then, and without helpe dyes. 004.H06.026 When next the Prentises 'gaynst strangers rise. 004.H06.027 One whome the watch at noone lets scarse goe by, 004.H06.028 One to whome th'examining Iustice sure would crye 004.H06.029 S.%5r%6 by yo%5r%6 Priesthood tell mee what you ar. 004.H06.030 His Clothes were strange, though course, and black though bare [CW:%1trimmed(top_remains)%2] 004.H06.031 Sleeuelesse his Ierkin was, and it had beene [p.70] 004.H06.032 Veluet, but t'was, now, (so much ground was seene) 004.H06.033 Tuftaffata become, and our children shall 004.H06.034 See it playne rash a while, then nought at all. 004.H06.035 The thing hath trauayld, and, sayth, speakes all tongues 004.H06.036 And onely knowes to all states what belongs, 004.H06.037 Made of the accents and best phrase of these 004.H06.038 Hee speakes one Language. If strange meates displease 004.H06.039 Art can deceaue, or hunger force my tast. 004.H06.040 But Pedants motly tongues, souldiers bumbast 004.H06.041 Mountebanks drugg-tongue, nor the termes of Lawe 004.H06.042 Are strong preparatiues enough to drawe 004.H06.043 Mee to beare this: yet I must bee content 004.H06.044 With his tongue, in his tongue calld Complement 004.H06.045 In w.%5ch%6 hee can winne widdows, and pay scores 004.H06.046 Make men speake treason, cozen subtilst whores 004.H06.047 Out-flatter fauourits, and out-lye eyther 004.H06.048 Iouius, or S%Jleydan,%K[%1var%2:>%5Surius%6<,] or both together. 004.H06.049 Hee names mee and comes to mee. I whisper; God|. 004.H06.050 How haue I sinnd that thy wraths furious rodd, 004.H06.051 This fellow, chooseth mee? Hee sayeth, S.%5r%6 004.H06.052 I loue your iudgement. Whome do you preferr 004.H06.053 For the best Linguist, and I sillily 004.H06.054 Sayd that I thought Calepines Dictionary 004.H06.055 Nay but of men, most sweete, S%5r%6,. Beza, then, 004.H06.056 Some Iesuits and two most reverend men 004.H06.057 Of our two Academyes I namd; There 004.H06.058 Hee stoppd mee, and sayd. Nay yo%5r%6 Apostles were 004.H06.059 Pretty good Linguists, so Panurgus was 004.H06.060 But a poore gentleman all these may passe [CW: By-] 004.H06.061 By travell. Then, as if hee would haue sold [p.71] 004.H06.062 His tongue, hee praysd it, and such wonders told 004.H06.063 That I was fayne to say. If yo%5u%6 had liu'd, S%5r%6, 004.H06.064 Time enough to haue bin Interpreter 004.H06.065 To Babels bricklayers, the towre had stood. 004.H06.066 Hee adds, If of Court life yo%5u%6 knewe the good 004.H06.067 Yo%5u%6 would leaue lonnesse. I sayd, not alone 004.H06.068 My lonnesse is. But Spartans fashion 004.H06.069 To teach by paynting drunkards doth not tast 004.H06.070 Now Aretins Pictures haue made few chast, 004.H06.071 No more can Princes Courts,(though there bee few 004.H06.072 Better pictures of Vice.) teach mee vertew. 004.H06.073 Hee like to a high stretch'd Lutestring squeakes, O S.%5r%6 004.H06.074 Tis sweete to talke of kings. In westminster 004.H06.075 (Sayd I) the man that keepes the Abby Tombes 004.H06.076 And for his price doth with who ever comes 004.H06.077 Of all our Harrys and our Edwards talke 004.H06.078 ffrom king to king, and all theyr kinne can walke 004.H06.079 Yo%5r%6 eares shall heare nought but king, yo%5r%6 eyes meete 004.H06.080 Kings onely, the way to it is kings streete. 004.H06.081 Hee smackd and cryd, Hee's base, mechanick, course 004.H06.082 So ar yo%5r%6 Englishmen in theyr discourse. 004.H06.083 Are not yo%5r%6 Frenchmen neate? Mine? As yo%5u%6 see 004.H06.084 I haue but one, S%5r%6, looke hee followes mee. 004.H06.085 Certes th' are neatly cloth'd. I of this mind am 004.H06.086 Your onely wearing is this Grogeram%>Grog>>a<more>>;<< lowe%>>>L<>>Playes.<< who er'e lookes 004.H06.186 (for they themselues dare not) in Cheapside bookes 004.H06.187 Shall find theyr wardrobes Inventory. Now 004.H06.188 The Ladyes come. As Pirats, w%5ch%6 did knowe 004.H06.189 That there came weake shipps fraught w%5th%6. Cotchenele, 004.H06.190 The men board them, and prayse (as they thinke, well) 004.H06.191 Theyr beauties, they the mens witts. Both ar bought. 004.H06.192 Why good witts ne're weare scarlet gownes, I thought 004.H06.193 This cause. Those men mens witts, for speeches, buy, 004.H06.194 And woemen buy all redds w.%5ch%6 scarlet dye. 004.H06.195 Hee calls her beautys Limetwiggs, her hayre, Nett. 004.H06.196 Shee feares her druggs ill layd, hir hayre loose sett. 004.H06.197 Would not Heraclitus laugh to see Macrine 004.H06.198 From hatt to shoe himselfe at dore refine, 004.H06.199 (As the Presence were a Meschite) and lift 004.H06.200 His skirts and hose, and call his clothes to shrift 004.H06.201 Making them confesse, not onely mortall 004.H06.202 Greate staynes and holes in them, but veniall 004.H06.203 Fethers and dust with w.%5ch%6 they fornicate 004.H06.204 And, then, by Durers rules, survaye%Ys%Z the State [CW:of-][miscatch] 004.H06.205 Of his each Limb, and with strings the odds tryes [p.76] 004.H06.206 Of his neck to his legg, and wast to thighs 004.H06.207 So in im%Maculate clothes and sym%Metry, 004.H06.208 Perfect as Circles, with such nicety 004.H06.209 As a young preacher at the first time goes 004.H06.210 To preach, hee enters, and a Lady, w.%5ch%6 owes 004.H06.211 Him not so much as goodwill, strayt arrests, 004.H06.212 And vnto her protests, protests, protests, 004.H06.213 >%Y<(>%Z%Vas< at Rome would >%Y%Z< seru>d%>e< to haue throwne 004.H06.214 Ten Cardinalls into the Inquisition)%>Inquisition%Y)%Z>,< 004.H06.215 And whispers by Iesu so often that a 004.H06.216 %JTopcliff%K[%1var%2:>%5Purseuant%6<] would haue rauishd him quite away 004.H06.217 ffor saying Iesus Psalter. But 'tis fitt 004.H06.218 That they each other plague, they merit it. 004.H06.219 But heere comes Glorious that will plague them both 004.H06.220 Who, in the other extreme, onely doth 004.H06.221 Call a rough carlesnesse good fashion 004.H06.222 Whose Cloke his spurrs teare, or whome hee spits on 004.H06.223 Hee cares not hee. His ill words doe no harme 004.H06.224 To him, Hee rusheth in, as if Arme Arme 004.H06.225 Hee came to crye, And though his face bee as ill 004.H06.226 As those w.%5ch%6 in old hangings whipp Christ, still 004.H06.227 Hee striues to looke worse, hee keepes all in awe, 004.H06.228 Iests like a licenc'd foole, com%Mands like Lawe. 004.H06.229 Tyr'd, now I leaue this place, and (but pleasd so 004.H06.230 As men w%5ch%6 from Iayle to execution goe) 004.H06.231 Goe through the greate chamber. Why is it hung 004.H06.232 With the 7 deadly sinns? Beeing among 004.H06.233 Those Ascaparts (men bigg enough to throw 004.H06.234 Charing crosse for a barre, men w.%5ch%6 do knowe 004.H06.235 No token of worth but Queenes Man, and fine 004.H06.236 Liuing barrells of beefe, flaggons of wine) [CW:I shooke-] 004.H06.237 I shooke like a spyd spye. Preachers w.%5ch%6 are [p.77] 004.H06.238 Greate seas of witt and Art, you can, then dare 004.H06.239 To drowne the Sinns of this place, for, for mee, 004.H06.240 Who am a scant brooke, it enough shall bee 004.H06.241 To wash theyr staynes away. although I, yet, 004.H06.242 (With Machabes modesty) the Knowne merit 004.H06.243 Of my worke lessen, yet some wiseman shall 004.H06.244 (I hope) esteeme my writt Canonicall. 004.H06.0SS [three short, horiz. lines across page] 004.H06.0$$ %1no ind; >>P.<< to left of HE; 3 short, horiz. lines under HE%2