Poetical Miscellanies From a Manuscript Span Classsearchtermspan Classse

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Poetical Miscellanies From a Manuscript Span Classsearchtermspan Classse
Halliwell-Phillipps, J. O. (James Orchard), 1820-1889
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Dried is the hogshead's hed, Wilie Wat wilie.
Make the best of thy plea, Least the rest goe awaie, And thou brought for to sale Wily beguilie.
For thy skaunce and pride, Thy bloudy minde beside, And thy mouth gaping wide.
Mischievous Machiavell.
14 POETICAL MISCELLANIES.
Essex for vengeance cries, His bloud upon the lies, Mountinge above the skies, Damnable fiend of hell, Mischevous Matchivell !
VIII.
ON THE SAME.
Water thy plaints with grace divine, And trust in God for aye. And to thy Saviour
... Christ incline, In Him make stedfast staye.
Rawe is the reason that doth lie Within thy treacherous head, To say the soule of man doth die. When that the corpse is dead.
Nowe may you see the soodaine fall Of him that thought to clime full hie, A man well knowne unto you all.
Whose state you see doth stand Rawlie.
Time did he take when time did serve, Now is his time neare spent; Even for himselfe he craved still, And never would relent.
POETICAL MISCELLANIES. 15 For he hath run a retchless race, Which now hath brought him to disgrace; You that do see his soodaine fall> A warninge he it to you all.


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