IDENTILIN$$ F117CT1|TWHence|Puckering MS; R.3.12.|p. 73\GL\P:EWS\o\'93;7-3-95\C:JSC\'95;6-5-01 117.CT1.0HEom 117.CT1.001 Att once from hence my Lines & I depart 117.CT1.002 I to my soft still walkes, they to my hart 117.CT1.003 I to the nurse, they to the child of Art 117.CT1.004 Yet as a firme house though the Carpenter 117.CT1.005 Perish, doth stand, As an Ambassadour 117.CT1.006 Lyes safe howe ere his king bee in danger 117.CT1.007 So though I languish, prest w%5th%6 melancholy 117.CT1.008 My verse, the strict mapp of my miserie 117.CT1.009 Shall liue to see that, for whose want I die 117.CT1.010 Therefore I enuy them, and doe repent 117.CT1.011 That from vnhappie mee, things happie are sent 117.CT1.012 Yet as a Picture, or bare Sacrament 117.CT1.013 Accept these lines, & if in them there bee 117.CT1.014 Meritt of loue, bestowe that loue on mee. 117.CT1.0SS [om] 117.CT1.0$$ formatted as 4 tercets and a concluding couplet; ll.13-14 ind 5 sps. poem may have been taken as extension of poem 116 see notes for poem 124--these screwups could suggest a copy ms [TWPreg concludes p.72 and TWHence begins p.73 and HE is om, so there is no clear separation of the two poems--DAS 4/3/2007]