IDENTILIN$$ F050O36 MS Rawl. poet. 160 (ff. 103v-04)/ TJS/mf/11-8-91/cor EWS/o/6-3-92 050.O36.0HE AN OTH%LER 050.O36.001 Noe spring nor somer beawty hath such grace 050.O36.002 as I haue seene in an autumnall face 050.O36.003 young beawties force o%5r%6 loues, & y%5t%6 a rape 050.O36.004 this doth but councell yet yo.%5w%6 cannot scape [CW:if] 050.O36.005 If't were a shame to loue, here here noe shame [f.104r 050.O36.006 Affection here takes reverences name 050.O36.007 were her first yeares y%5e%6 golden age? 'tis true 050.O36.008 But now shees gold oft try'de & ever newe 050.O36.009 that was her torrid & inflaming time 050.O36.010 this is her tollerable tropick Clime 050.O36.011 ffor faire eyes whoe askes more heat then comes from \hence 050.O36.012 her in a feaver wishes pestilence 050.O36.013 Call not theis wrinckles graues, if graves y%5ey%6. were 050.O36.014om 050.O36.015 Yet lies not loue dead here but here doth sit 050.O36.016 Vowed to this like a sworne anchorite 050.O36.017 And here till hers w.%5ch%6 must be his death come 050.O36.018 he doth not dig a grave but build a tombe 050.O36.019 Here dwells he though he soiourne eu%5r%6y where 050.O36.020 In progresse, yet his standing howse is here 050.O36.021 Here still noe evening is nor name nor night 050.O36.022 Wheres noe voluptuosnes yet all delight 050.O36.023 In all her words vnto her hearers fit 050.O36.024 yow may at revells as at councells sitt 050.O36.025 this is loues timber, youth his vnderwood 050.O36.026 there he as wine in Iune inrages blood 050.O36.027 w.%5ch%6 then comes seasonablest when yo%5r%6 taste 050.O36.028 and appetite to other things are past 050.O36.029om 050.O36.030om 050.O36.031om 050.O36.032om 050.O36.033 If we loue things long sought, age is a thing 050.O36.034 w.%5ch%6 we are fforty yeares a compassing 050.O36.035 In transitory things w.%5ch%6 soone decaye 050.O36.036 age must be loveliest at the latest daye. 050.O36.037 But name not winter faces whose skins slack 050.O36.038 Lanke like an vnthrifts purse, but a soules sack 050.O36.039 whose eyes seeke light within fore all heres shade 050.O36.040 whose mouthes are holes worne out rather then made 050.O36.041 whose every tooth is to a severall place ygone 050.O36.042 to vexe their soules at th'resurrection 050.O36.043 Name not the living deaths head vnto me 050.O36.044 for theis not auntient but antiques be 050.O36.045 I hate extreames yet I had rather staye 050.O36.046 with tombes then cradles to weare out a daye 050.O36.047 Since such is loues naturall motion, may still 050.O36.048 my loue descend and Iourny downe the Hill 050.O36.049 Not pointing after growing beawties soe 050.O36.050 I shall ebbe, or w%5th%6 them who homeward goe. 050.O36.0SSom 050.O36.0$$ %1line 19 ind 2sp; there is a blank line between lines 13 & 15; there is an%2 x %1in left margin opposite line 1; EWS--follows one headed%2 A SONNET %1; HE of this is a miswriting of "ANOTHER" the TH in the HE is a digraph with the legs on the T and E forming the legs for the H, the T also has a mid-leg right shoulder crossbar; Scribe saw a break after l. 13 in the poem and thought he had another sonnet. He then failed to note any break between this poem and ElAnag, and ran them together. Perhaps the first 13 ll of ElAut ended the page in the exemplar; HE above a geometrical design in pink ink%2