IDENTILIN$$ F015.B08/ BL Add. 19268 (ff.24r-v)/TJS/mf/4-17-91/cor/GAS/o/7-13-91 015.B08.0HE On his Mistres as she was /Cominge to bed 015.B08.001 Come Madame, come, all rest my powers Defye 015.B08.002 Vntill I labour, I in labour lye 015.B08.003 The foe oftime havinge the foe in sight 015.B08.004 Is tir'd with standinge though he neu%5r%6 fight 015.B08.005 Off with that girdle like the heauens zone glisteringe 015.B08.006 but a far fairer world encompassinge 015.B08.007 Vnpinne that spangled breastplate which you weare 015.B08.008 That the eyes of busy fooles may be stopt there 015.B08.009 Vnlace your selfe for that harmonious chime 015.B08.010 Tells mee from you that now tis your bed time 015.B08.011 Off with that happie Buske which I envie 015.B08.012 That still can be, and still can staud soe nigh 015.B08.013 your gownes going off such beautious state reveales 015.B08.014 As when from flowrie meades the hill shadow steales 015.B08.015 Off with your wiry Coronet and show 015.B08.016 They heyry Diadem which on you doth growe 015.B08.017 Now off with those shooes and then softly treade 015.B08.018 on Loues hollowed temple this soft bed 015.B08.019 In such white robes Heauen Angelles vse to bee 015.B08.020 receiud by men: thou Angell bringst w%5th%6 thee 015.B08.021 A heauen like Mahometts paradise & though 015.B08.022 Ill spirites walke in white by this wee knowe 015.B08.023 These Angells easily from an euill sirit 015.B08.024 They set our hayres, but these our flesh vpright 015.B08.025 License my rovinge hands and let them goe 015.B08.026 Betweene, before, beneath, aboue, belowe 015.B08.027 Oh my America my new found land 015.B08.028 My kingdome safest when with one man mannde 015.B08.029 My mine of pretious stones %Yhow blest am I%Z %^%5my%6 empery 015.B08.030 how blest am I in thus Discovering thee 015.B08.031 too enter in those bands is to be free [24v 015.B08.032 Then where my hand is set, my seale shall bee 015.B08.033 Sweete nakednes all ioyes are due to thee 015.B08.034 As soules vnbodied, bodies vnclothed must bee 015.B08.035 to last these ioyes, gems w%5ch%6 women vse 015.B08.036 Are like Atlantas balls cast men viewes 015.B08.037 that when a fooles eye lighteth on a gem 015.B08.038 his earthly soule may couet theirs not them 015.B08.039 Like pictures, or like bookes gay covering mad 015.B08.040 for Laymen, are all woemen thus arrayde 015.B08.041 themselues are mistick bookes, w%5ch%6 onely wee 015.B08.042 whom their imputed grace will dignifie 015.B08.043 must be reveald: then since that I may know 015.B08.044 As liberally as to a Midwife shewe 015.B08.045 Thy self: Cast all yea this white linen hence 015.B08.046 Heere is noe pennaunce for pure in%Mocence 015.B08.047 to teach thee I am naked first, why than 015.B08.048 what neede you haue more covering than-a- 015.B08.0SS D%5r%6 Donne. 015.B08.0$$ very difficult to read because of bleed-through; deletion in l. 29 is the result of an eye skip to the beginning of the next line-- the scribe had written "how blest am I", noticed the mistake and corrected it to "my empery"; last word of l. 48 left off deliberately