IDENTILIN$$ F111C09 Luttrell MS, ff. 63v-64\GL\P:EWS\o\7-5-95\C:JSC 111.C09.0HE %XTo S%5r%6 Henry Wotton. 111.C09.001 Heer's no more newes, then virtue; I may as well 111.C09.002 Tell you Callis or S%5t%6 %1Michells%2 tales, as tell 111.C09.003 That vice doth heere habitually dwell. 111.C09.004 Yet, as to get stomacks we walke vp & downe, 111.C09.005 And toyle to sweeten rest (so may God frowne) 111.C09.006 If (but to loath both) I haunt Court or Towne. 111.C09.007 For heere no one is from th'extremitye 111.C09.008 of vice by any other reason free 111.C09.009 But that the next to him's still worse then hee. 111.C09.010 In this worlds warfare, they whom rugged fate, 111.C09.011 Gods Com%Missary, doth so throughly hate 111.C09.012 As i'th Courts Squadron to marshall their estate 111.C09.013 If they stand arm'd with silly honestye, 111.C09.014 with wishes, prayers, & neat integritye, 111.C09.015 Like Indians 'gainst spanish hosts they bee. 111.C09.016 Suspicious boldnes to this place belonges 111.C09.017 And t'haue as many eares as all haue tongues 111.C09.018 Tender to know, tough to acknowledge wronges. [CW:>>beleue#me<<][miscatch] 111.C09.019 Beleeue me, S%5r%6, in my yongst giddiest dayes [64] 111.C09.020 when to be like the Court was a Players praise 111.C09.021 Playes were not so like Courts, as Courts like Playes. 111.C09.022 Then lett vs at the mimick Antiques iest 111.C09.023 whose deepest proiects & egregious Gests 111.C09.024 Are but dull moralls of a game at chesse. 111.C09.025 But now tis incongruity to smile 111.C09.026 Therfore I end & bid farewell a while; 111.C09.027 At Court, though from Court were the better stile.| 111.C09.0SS [horiz. lines] 111.C09.0$$ %1Div into 3-line sts by horiz. ll. at LM; no ind; horiz. ll. also separate HE from body%2