IDENTILIN$$ C11700C|TWHence|1639|p. 178\E:ME\mf\7-25-87\P:EWS\o(C[KeynesB.4.8])\5-31-00\C:JMK\2-26-01;JSC\8-23-01\P:DAS\cd(MH)\8-15-00\C:JSC\4-7-03\p:BMV\fs(TxAM)\11-16-05 117.00C.HE1 %X%1Incerto%2. 117.00C.001 A%+T once from hence my lines and I depart, 117.00C.002 I to my soft still walkes, they to my Heart; 117.00C.003 I to the Nurse, they to the child of Art; 117.00C.004 Yet as a firme house, though the Carpenter 117.00C.005 Perish, doth stand: as an Embassadour 117.00C.006 Lyes safe, how e'r his King be in danger: 117.00C.007 So, though I languish, prest with Melancholy; 117.00C.008 My verse, the strict Map of my misery, 117.00C.009 Shall live to see that, for whose want I die. 117.00C.010 Therefore I envy them, and doe repent, 117.00C.011 That from unhappy me, things happy'are sent; 117.00C.012 Yet as a Picture, or bare Sacrament, 117.00C.013 Accept these lines, and if in them there be 117.00C.014 Merit of love, bestow that love on me. [CW:%1To%2] 117.00C.0SSom 117.00C.0$$ formatted as four tercets and a concluding couplet; ll. 13, 14 ind; no ms. emendations in Oldisworth vol. (C10: Keynes B.4.8), but a gloss ("Satan") wr. in LM at ll. 10-11