IDENTILIN$$ F116DT1|TWPreg|Dublin ms.I|f. 61v|JSC\mf\10-22-96\P&C(hwt,mf):JMK\6-6&7-10-01;JSC\7-25-01 116.DT1.HE1 %XTo M. T. W. 116.DT1.001 Pregnant againe w%5th%6 th'old twins hope and feare 116.DT1.002 Ofte haue I ask'd for thee both howe & where 116.DT1.003 thou wert, & what my hope of letters were 116.DT1.004 As in our streets sly Beggers narrowly 116.DT1.005 watch motions of the giuers hand, and eye, 116.DT1.006 And euermore conceiue some hope thereby. 116.DT1.007 And nowe thine almes is giuen, thy letters read 116.DT1.008 The Bodie risen againe the w%5ch%6 was dead 116.DT1.009 And thy poore starueling bountifully fedd. 116.DT1.010 After this banquett my soule doth say grace 116.DT1.011 And praise thee for't; & zealously embrace 116.DT1.012 thy Loue, though I thinck thy Loue in this case 116.DT1.013 To bee as Gluttons, w%5ch%6 say middst their meat 116.DT1.014 they loue y%5t%6 best, of w%5ch%6 they most doe eate. 116.DT1.0SS [om; TWHence follows with only a st-break] 116.DT1.0$$ Formatted as four tercets and a concluding couplet. ll. 13,14 ind; TWHence follows as if same poem--no HE & same line-sp betw. poems as betw. sts