IDENTILIN$$ F004Y03|Osborne ms. b 148\pp. 17-22\TWH\cf\3-15-95\P:DF\7-11-97\C:JSC\7-23-97 004.Y03.HE1 %XSatire the fourth 004.Y03.001 Well I may now receiue & die, my sinne 004.Y03.002 indeed is greate: butt I haue binne in 004.Y03.003 A purgatory: such as feard hell is 004.Y03.004 a recreation & scarse mapp of this 004.Y03.005 My mind nott w%5th%6%Yout%Z prides itch, nor yett hath beene 004.Y03.006 poysond w%5th%6 loue, to see or to bee seene 004.Y03.007 I had noe suite att Courte, nor suite to showe 004.Y03.008 yett went to Courte, butt as %1Glare%2 w%5ch%6 did goe 004.Y03.009 To a masq%Q in iest, catcht was, faine to disburse 004.Y03.010 the hundred markes, w%5ch%6 is the statutes curse 004.Y03.011 Before hee scapt; soe ytt pleas'd my destinie 004.Y03.012 (guiltie of my sinne of goeinge) to thinke mee 004.Y03.013 As prone to all yll, & of good as forgett= 004.Y03.014 full, as proude lustfull; & as much in debt 004.Y03.015 As vaine as wittlesse, & as false as they 004.Y03.016 w%5ch%6 dwell att Courte, for once goeinge y%5t%6 way 004.Y03.017 Therefore I suffered this. towards mee did runne 004.Y03.018 a thinge more strange, then one Niles slime the sunne 004.Y03.019 Ere bredd, or w%5ch%6 into Noahs arke came 004.Y03.020 a thinge w%5ch%6 would haue pos'd Adam to name 004.Y03.021 Stranger then seauen Antiquaries studies 004.Y03.022 then Affricke monsters, Guiaunaes rarities 004.Y03.023 Stranger then strangers: One whoe for a Dane 004.Y03.024 in the Danes massacre, had sure binne slaine 004.Y03.025 If hee had liued then, & w%5th%6out help dies 004.Y03.026 when next the prentises 'gainst strangers rise: [CW:One] 004.Y03.027 One whome y%5e%6 watch att noone, letts scarce goe bye [p.18] 004.Y03.028 one to whome y%5e%6 examininge Iustice sure would crye 004.Y03.029 S.%5r%6 by yo%5r%6 preisthood tell mee what yo%5u%6 are 004.Y03.030 his cloathes were strange, though course & blacke & bare 004.Y03.031 Sleeuelesse his Ierkine was: & ytt had binn 004.Y03.032 Veluett; butt was now (soe much ground was sinn) 004.Y03.033 Become tuftafita, & o%5r%6 children shall 004.Y03.034 see ytt plaine rash a whyle, then naught att all 004.Y03.035 This thinge hath traueld & saith speakes all tongues 004.Y03.036 & onely knowes what to all states belongs 004.Y03.037 Made of the accents & best phrase of all these 004.Y03.038 hee speakes one language. If strange meates displease 004.Y03.039 Arte can deceiue or hunger force my taste 004.Y03.040 butt Pedants mottley tongue, Souldiers bombaste 004.Y03.041 Mountebanks drug-tongue, nor y%5e%6 tearmes of lawe 004.Y03.042 are stronge inough p%5r%6paritiues to drawe 004.Y03.043 Mee to beare this: yett I must bee content 004.Y03.044 w%5th%6 his tongue in his tongue cald complement 004.Y03.045 In w%5ch%6 hee can winne widdowes, & pay scores 004.Y03.046 make men speake Treason, Cosen subtlest whores 004.Y03.047 Outt flatter fauouritts & out lye either 004.Y03.048 %1Iouius%2 or Curius, or both together 004.Y03.049 Hee names mee & comes to mee, I whisp%P god 004.Y03.050 how haue I sinn'd y%5t%6 thy wrath furious rod 004.Y03.051 This fellow chaseth mee; hee saith Sir 004.Y03.052 I loue yo%5r%6 iudgment, whome doe yo%5u%6 p%5r%6ferre 004.Y03.053 ffor y%5e%6 best linguist; & I sillyly 004.Y03.054 said that I thought %1Calepines%2 dictionarie 004.Y03.055 Nay butt of men, most sweet S:%5r%6 %1Beza%2 then 004.Y03.056 some Iesuitts, & twoe reuerend men 004.Y03.057 Of o%5r%6 twoe Academies, nam'd there 004.Y03.058 hee stopt mee & sayd nay yo%5r%6 Apostles were 004.Y03.059 And pritie linguists? And soe %1Panurage%2[sic] was 004.Y03.060 yett a poore gentleman, all these may passe 004.Y03.061 By trauaile. Then as if hee would haue sold 004.Y03.062 his tongue hee prais'd ytt & such wonders told 004.Y03.063 That I was faine to say, If yo%5u%6 had liued %1Sir%2 004.Y03.064 time inough to haue binne interpriter 004.Y03.065 To %1Bables%2 bricklayers, sure y%5e%6 Tower had stood 004.Y03.066 hee adds if of Courte life yo%5u%6 knew the good 004.Y03.067 yo%5u%6 would leaue loanenesse, I said nott alone 004.Y03.068 my lonenesse is butt Spartanes fashion 004.Y03.069 To teach by painteinge Dronkards doe nott last 004.Y03.070 now %1Aretines%2 pictures haue made few chaste [CW:Noe] 004.Y03.071 Noe more can Princes Courtes, though there bee few [p.19] 004.Y03.072 better pictures of vice, teach mee vertue 004.Y03.073 Hee like a high stretcht lute stringe squeakt Oh %1Sir%2 004.Y03.074 'tis sweete to talke of Kings att westminster 004.Y03.075 (Sayd I) the man y%5t%6 keepes y%5e%6 Abby tombes 004.Y03.076 & for his price doth w%5th%6 whoeu%5r%6 comes 004.Y03.077 Of all ou%5r%6 %1Harries%2 & o%5r%6 %1Edwards%2 talke 004.Y03.078 from kinge to kinge ore all there line can walke 004.Y03.079 Yo%5r%6 eares shall heare nought butt kinge yo%5r%6 eyes meete 004.Y03.080 kings onely the way to ytt is kings streete 004.Y03.081 Hee smackt & cride he is base Macanicke course 004.Y03.082 soe are all yo%5r%6 Englishmen in there discourse 004.Y03.083 Are nott yo%5r%6 frenchmen neate; Mine as yo%5u%6 see 004.Y03.084 I haue butt one frenchman looke hee followes mee 004.Y03.085 Certes they are neately cloth'd, I of this mind am 004.Y03.086 yo%5r%6 onely weareinge is the grogaram 004.Y03.087 Nott soe, S:%5r%6, I haue more vnder this pitch 004.Y03.088 hee would nott fly, I chaf'd him butt as itch 004.Y03.089 Scratcht into smarte, & as blunt Iron ground 004.Y03.090 into an edge hurts worse, soe I foole found 004.Y03.091 Crossinge hurte mee. To fitt my sullennesse 004.Y03.092 hee to another key his stile doth dresse 004.Y03.093 And askes what newes? I tell him of new playes 004.Y03.094 hee takes my hand & as a still w%5ch%6 stayes 004.Y03.095 A simbrife twixt y%5e%6 droppe, hee niggardly 004.Y03.096 (as loth t'enrich mee soe) tells many a lye 004.Y03.097 More then tenn Hollinsteads[sic] & Halls & Stowes 004.Y03.098 of triuiall houshold trash, hee knowes. [lc]hee knowes 004.Y03.099 When the Queene smil'd or frown'd, & hee knowes what 004.Y03.100 a subtle states-man may gather of that 004.Y03.101 Hee knowes whoe loues, whome & whoe by poyson 004.Y03.102 hastes to an offices reu%5r%6sion 004.Y03.103 Hee knowes whoe hath sold his land & now doth begg 004.Y03.104 a license, old Iron, shoes bookes or egg= 004.Y03.105 Shells to transport; shortly boyes shall nott play 004.Y03.106 at spancounter or blowepointe butt they pay 004.Y03.107 Toll to some [sic]Courtier:) And wiser then all vs 004.Y03.108 hee knowes w%5ch%6 %1Lady%2 is nott paineted thus 004.Y03.109 Hee w%5th%6 whome meates tires mee, I belch, spew spitt 004.Y03.110 looke pale & sickly like a patient yett 004.Y03.111 Hee thrusts mee, & as if hee had vndertooke 004.Y03.112 to say %1Gallobilgicus%2 w%5th%6out booke 004.Y03.113 Speakes of all states & deeds w%5ch%6 haue binne since 004.Y03.114 the Spaniard came to the losse of Amiens [CW:Like] 004.Y03.115 Like a bigg wiffe att sight of loathed meate [p.20] 004.Y03.116 ready to trauell, soe I sigh & sweate 004.Y03.117 To heare this Macaron talke, in vaine for yett 004.Y03.118 either by humo%5r%6 or his owne to fitt 004.Y03.119 Hee like a priulidge spye, whome nothinge can 004.Y03.120 discreaditt, libells now 'gainst each greate man 004.Y03.121 Hee names a price for euery office payd 004.Y03.122 hee sayes o%5r%6 warres thriue yll, because delay'd 004.Y03.123 That offices are intayld, & y%5t%6 there are 004.Y03.124 p%Ppetuities of them lastinge as farre 004.Y03.125 As the last day, & y%5t%6 greate officers 004.Y03.126 doe w%5th%6 the Pyratts share & Dunkerkers 004.Y03.127 Whoe wasts in meate in cloath, in horse hee notes 004.Y03.128 whoe loues whores whoe boyes whoe goates 004.Y03.129 I more amaz'd the%T Cerces prisoners when 004.Y03.130 they felt themselues turne beasts, felt my selfe then 004.Y03.131 Becom%Minge Trayto%5r%6, & mee thought I sawe 004.Y03.132 one of o%5r%6 gyant statues ope his iawe 004.Y03.133 To sucke mee in, for heareinge him I found 004.Y03.134 that as burnte venom'd leachers doe growe sound 004.Y03.135 By giueinge others there soares, I might growe 004.Y03.136 guilty & hee free, therefore did I showe 004.Y03.137 All signes of loathinge. Butt since I am in 004.Y03.138 I must pay mine & my forefathers sinn 004.Y03.139 To the last farthinge, therefore to my power 004.Y03.140 toughly & stubbornely, I bore this crosse butt y%5e%6 houre 004.Y03.141 Of my redemption was come, hee tries to bringe 004.Y03.142 mee to a fine to scape his torturinge 004.Y03.143 And sayes, S%5r%6 can yo%5u%6 spare mee, I said willingly 004.Y03.144 nay S:%5r%6 can you spare mee a Crowne thankefully, I 004.Y03.145 Gaue ytt as a ransome, butt as fiddlers still 004.Y03.146 though they bee payd to bee gonne yett needs will 004.Y03.147 Thrust one Iigg more one yo%5u%6 soe did hee 004.Y03.148 w%5th%6 his longe complementall thanks vex mee 004.Y03.149 Butt hee is gonne thanks to his needy wants 004.Y03.150 & y%5e%6 p%5r%6rogatiue of my crowne, scant 004.Y03.151 His thanks were ended, when I w%5ch%6 did see 004.Y03.152 all the Courte filld w%5th%6 more strange things then hee 004.Y03.153 Runne from thence w%5th%6 such or more hast then one 004.Y03.154 whoe feares more actions doth make from pryson 004.Y03.155 Att whome in wholesome solitarinesse 004.Y03.156 my pitteous soule began the wretchednesse 004.Y03.157 Of suito%5r%6s att Courte to mourne & a traunce 004.Y03.158 like his whoe dreamt hee sawe hell did aduance: [CW:Itt:] 004.Y03.159 Itt selfe one mee & such men as hee sawe there [p.21] 004.Y03.160 I sawe att Courte & worse & more, Lowe feare 004.Y03.161 Becomes the guilty, nott y%5e%6 accusor then 004.Y03.162 Shall I (nons slaue) of high borne or rais'd men 004.Y03.163 ffeare frownes? & my M:%5rs%6 truth betray thee 004.Y03.164 to y%5e%6 huffinge braggart puffe Nobilitie 004.Y03.165 Almost about the whole world, hast thou seene 004.Y03.166 (o%C sunne in all thy iournie vanitie 004.Y03.167 noe noe thou w%5ch%6 since yesterday hast beene 004.Y03.168 such as swells the bladder of o%5r%6 Courte? I 004.Y03.169 thinke hee w%5ch%6 made the waxen garden and 004.Y03.170 transported ytt from %1Italy%2 to stand 004.Y03.171 w%5th%6 vs att London, flouts o%5r%6 p%5r%6sence for 004.Y03.172 iust such gay paineted things w%5ch%6 noe sapp nor 004.Y03.173 taste haue in them, o%5r%6s are & naturall 004.Y03.174 some of the stocks are there fruites bastards all 004.Y03.175 'Tis ten a clock & paste all whome y%5e%6 Mewes 004.Y03.176 Ballon or Tennis, Dyett or the stewes 004.Y03.177 Had all the morninge held, now the second 004.Y03.178 time made ready, y%5t%6 day in flocks are found 004.Y03.179 In the p%5r%6sence; & I (god p%Pdon mee.) 004.Y03.180 as fresh & sweete the%5r%6 app%Pells bee as bee 004.Y03.181 The feilds they sould to buye them, for a kinge 004.Y03.182 those hose are (cry his flatterers) & bringe 004.Y03.183 Them next weeke to the Theator to sell 004.Y03.184 wants reach all states, mee thinks they doe as well 004.Y03.185 Att stage as Courte, all are players, whoe ere lookes 004.Y03.186 (where them selues dare nott goe) o're cheapeside bookes 004.Y03.187 Shall find there wardropps inuentory: nowe 004.Y03.188 the Ladies come as Pyratts, w%5ch%6 did knowe 004.Y03.189 That there came weake shipps fraught w%5th%6 Cuchanell 004.Y03.190 the men board them, & prise[sic] (as they thinke well) 004.Y03.191 There beauties, they the mens witts, both are bought 004.Y03.192 why good witts nere weare scarlett gownes I thought 004.Y03.193 This cause. These men mens witts for speeches 004.Y03.194 & woemen buy all redds w%5th%6 scarlett dies 004.Y03.195 Hee calls her beautie lime twiggs her haire a nett 004.Y03.196 shee feares her druggs yll layd, her haire loose sett 004.Y03.197 would nott. %1Heraclitus%2 laugh to see Macrine 004.Y03.198 from hatt to shoe himselfe att dore refine 004.Y03.199 As the Presence were a Meschity? & lift 004.Y03.200 his skirtts & hose & call his Cloaths to shrift 004.Y03.201 Makeinge them confesse nott any mortall 004.Y03.202 greate staines & holes in them butt veniall [CW:ffeathers] 004.Y03.203 ffeathers & dust w%5th%6 w%5ch%6 they fornicate [p.22] 004.Y03.204 & then by darers[sic] rules survay the state 004.Y03.205 Of his each limbe & each stringe the odds tries 004.Y03.206 of his necke to his leggs, & waste to thighes 004.Y03.207 Soe in immaculate cloathes & simmeritie[sic] 004.Y03.208 p%Pfect as Circles w%5th%6 such nicitie 004.Y03.209 As a younge P%5r%6cher att his first time goes 004.Y03.210 to preach hee eates, & a lady w%5ch%6 owes 004.Y03.211 Him nott soe much as good will streight arrests 004.Y03.212 & vnto her protests protests protests 004.Y03.213 Soe much as att Rome would serue to haue throwne 004.Y03.214 ten Cardinalls into the inquisition 004.Y03.215 And whisp%Pd by Iesu soe often y%5t%6 a 004.Y03.216 purseuant would haue rauisht him away 004.Y03.217 ffor sayinge o%5r%6 Ladies psalter, butt tis fitt 004.Y03.218 that they each other plague, they merritt ytt 004.Y03.219 Butt heere comes %1Glorius%2 y%5t%6 will plague them both 004.Y03.220 whoe (in the other extreame) onely doth 004.Y03.221 Call a rough carelessnes a good fashion 004.Y03.222 whose cloake his spurres tare, whome hee spitts on 004.Y03.223 Hee cares nott, his yll words can doe noe harme 004.Y03.224 to him he rusheth in as if arme arme 004.Y03.225 Hee came to crye, & though his face bee as yll 004.Y03.226 as theres w%5ch%6 in old hangeings whipp Christ still 004.Y03.227 Hee striues to looke worse; hee keepes all in awe 004.Y03.228 Ieasts like a licenc'd foole, com%Maunds like lawe 004.Y03.229 Tir'd now I leaue this place, butt pleased soe 004.Y03.230 as men w%5ch%6 from goailes to execution goe 004.Y03.231 Goe through the greate Chamber w%5ch%6 is hunge 004.Y03.232 w%5th%6 the seauen deadly sinnes. Beinge amonge 004.Y03.233 Those AE%Lscaparts men bigg inough to throwe 004.Y03.234 chareinge crosse for a barre, men w%5ch%6 doe knowe 004.Y03.235 Noe token of worth butt queenes man, & fine 004.Y03.236 liueinge barrells of beefe & flaggons of wine 004.Y03.237 I shooke like a spyed spye. Preachers w%5ch%6 are 004.Y03.238 seas of witt & arts, yo%5u%6 can then dare 004.Y03.239 Drowne the sinns of this place, for mee 004.Y03.240 whoe ame a scant brooke, ytt inough shall bee 004.Y03.241 To wash the staines away although I yett 004.Y03.242 w%5th%6 Machabae%Lus modesty, y%5e%6 merritt 004.Y03.243 Of my worke lessen, yett some wise men shall 004.Y03.244 (I hope) esteeme my writts Chanonicall: 004.Y03.0SS ffinis 004.Y03.0$$ %1no ind; ll.165-68 transcribed in this order: 166, 167, 165, 168 and no'd in l. marg as 2,3,1,4 to straighten this out. %2