IDENTILIN$$ F117C09|TWHence|Luttrell MS|ff. 69v-70\E:GL\P:EWS\o\7-6-95\C:JSC\Sept'95;5-29-01 117.C09.0HE %XTre[sic] Incerto. 117.C09.001 At once from hence my lines & I depart 117.C09.002 I to my soft still walkes, they to my hart 117.C09.003 I to the Nurse, they to y%5e%6 child of Art. 117.C09.004 Yet as a firme house, though y%5e%6 Carpenter 117.C09.005 Perish, doth stand: As an Embassader 117.C09.006 Is safe, how e're the king be in daunger 117.C09.007 So though I languish p%5r%6st w%5th%6 Melancholy 117.C09.008 My verse the strict Mapp of my misery 117.C09.009 Shall liue to see that for whose want I dye [CW:>>therfore<<] 117.C09.010 Therfore I envy them, & do repent [70] 117.C09.011 That from vnhappy me thinges happy are sent 117.C09.012 Yet, as a Picture or bare Sacrament 117.C09.013 Accept these lines & if in them there bee 117.C09.014 meritt of loue, bestow that loue on me.| 117.C09.0SS [horiz. lines] 117.C09.0$$ formatted as 4 tercets and a concluding couplet, sections separated by horiz. ll., ll. 13,14 ind 6 sp; HE not separated from body with horiz. ll., as with most other poems in this ms.