IDENTILIN$$ F112TM1|HWKiss|Crewe MS|pp. 32, 35-36\JSC\x\7-7-94\P:AY\o\Apr01\C:JSC\4-24-01 112.TM1.HE1 To S%5r%6 H:Wotton: 112.TM1.001 S%5r%6 more y%5en%6 kisses letters mingle soules 112.TM1.002 for thus frends absent speake this ease controlls 112.TM1.003 th' tediousness of my life but for these 112.TM1.004 I could inuent nothing at all to please 112.TM1.005 but I should wither in one day & pass 112.TM1.006 T'a bottle of hay w%5ch%6 am a lock of grass 112.TM1.007 life is a voyage and in o%5r%6 liues wayes 112.TM1.008 Countries, Courts, townes are Rockes or Remorae's 112.TM1.009 they brea* or stopp all shipps, yett our stat's sutch 112.TM1.010 that (though then pitch they staine worse) wee must touch 112.TM1.011 yf in the fornace of y%5e%6 euen line 112.TM1.012 or vnder th'aduers Icy poles thou pine 112.TM1.013 thou knowst temperate regions girded in 112.TM1.014 dwell there, but oh what refuge canst thou winn 112.TM1.015 partch'd in y%5e%6 Court, & in the Countrie frozen? 112.TM1.016 Shall Citties built of both extreames bee chosen? 112.TM1.017 can dung and garlick be a p%Pfume or can 112.TM1.018 a Scorpian and Torpedo cure a man 112.TM1.019 Citties are the worse of all three, of all three? 112.TM1.020 a knottie Riddle each is worse equallie 112.TM1.021 Citties are Sepulchers they w%5ch%6 dwell there 112.TM1.022 are carcases, and yf none sutch ther were 112.TM1.023 & Courts are theaters where some men play 112.TM1.024 Princes some slaues, all to one end, & of one clay 112.TM1.025 The Countrie is a desert where noe good [35] 112.TM1.026 Gaynd (as habitts vnborne) is vnderstood 112.TM1.027 there men become beasts & prone to meere euills 112.TM1.028 In Citties blocks and in leud Courts deuills 112.TM1.029 As in the first Chaos confusedlie 112.TM1.030 Each elem%5ts%6 qualities were in y%5e%6 other three 112.TM1.031 %YS*%Ze Pride, lust, Couetuous, being seuerall 112.TM1.032 To these three places yett are all in all 112.TM1.033 and mingled thus ther yssue incestuous 112.TM1.034 falshood is denied, vertue barbarous 112.TM1.035 Lett noe man say ther, vertues flintie wall 112.TM1.036 shall lock vice %Yfrom%Z\>in>Cstill,< is still at home 112.TM1.051 follow (for hee is easlie trac'd) this snayle 112.TM1.052 bee thine owne pallace or all the world's thie Iayle 112.TM1.053 and in the worlds see doe not like cork sleep 112.TM1.054 vpon the waters face, nor in y%5e%6 deepe 112.TM1.055 sinke like a lead w%5th%6out a line, but as 112.TM1.056 fishes glide, leauinge noe print where y%5ei%6 pass 112.TM1.057 nor making sound soe closelie thy cours goe 112.TM1.058 lett men dispute whether thou breath or noe. 112.TM1.059om 112.TM1.060om 112.TM1.061om 112.TM1.062om 112.TM1.063 But s%5r%6 I aduise yo%5u%6 not I rather doe [36] 112.TM1.064 say ore those lessons, w%5ch%6 I learn't from yo%5u%6 112.TM1.065 whome (free from German scismes & lightness 112.TM1.066 of fraunce, and fayre Italyes faythfullness 112.TM1.067 hauinge from these suck'd all y%5ei%6 had of worth 112.TM1.068 and brought home that fayth w%ch%6 yo%5u%6 carryed forth 112.TM1.069 I throughlie loue, Butt yf my self I haue wo*ne 112.TM1.070 to know my rules I haue and yo%5u%6 haue Donne 112.TM1.0SS [om] 112.TM1.0$$ %1No ind.; HE in LM; l.25 started at bottom of p.32, erased & started again on p.35; checks in LM at ll.28 & 40; marks like a modern "c" in LM at ll. 35-41, 57-58, 63-64; and "ccc" at l.52; wr. vertically along the gutter of p.35, in a 2nd hand(?):%2 **[indecipherable] Poems 1635. p[?] 155.