Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

Re: BATH

16 views
Skip to first unread message
Message has been deleted
Message has been deleted
Message has been deleted
Message has been deleted
Message has been deleted
Message has been deleted

Arthur Neuendorffer

unread,
Jun 18, 2013, 11:30:27 AM6/18/13
to
-------------------------------------------
. Let the bird of loudest lay,
. On the sole Arabian tree,
. Herald sad and trumpet be,
. To whose sound cha(S)te wings obey.
. But tho(U) shrieking harbinge(R),
. Foul precurrer of th(E) fiend,
. Augur of the fe(V)er's end,
. To this troup(E) come thou not near!
......................................
___ <= 18 =>

. L e t t h e b i r d o f l o u d e s
. t l a y,O n t h e s o l e A r a b i
. a n t r e e, H e r a l d s a d a n d
. t r u m p e t b e,T o w h o s e s o
. u n d c h a (S) t e w i n g s o b e y.
. B u t t h o (U) s h r i e k i n g h a
. r b i n g e (R),F o u l p r e c u r r
. e r o f t h (E) f i e n d,A u g u r o
. f t h e f e (V) e r's e n d,T o t h i
. s t r o u p (E) c o m e t h o u n o t
. n e a r!

{E.VERUS} 18 : (Oxford's Latin name)
. Prob. at start ~ 1 in 6,860
......................................
. From this session interdict
. Every fowl of tyrant wing, 10
. Save the eagle, feather'd king:
. Keep the obsequy so strict.

. Let the priest in surplice white,
. That defunctive music can,
. Be the death-divining swan,
. Lest the requ{I}em lack hi{S} right.
. And {T}hou trebl{E}-dated cro{W},
. That thy s{A}ble gende{R} makest
. Wi{T}h the breath thou givest and takest,
. 'Mongst our mourners shalt thou go.
......................................
___ <= 9 =>

. L e s t t h e r e
. q u {I} e m l a c k
. h i {S} r i g h t. A
. n d {T} h o u t r e
. b l {E}-d a t e d c
. r o {W},T h a t t h
. y s {A} b l e g e n
. d e {R} m a k e s t
. W i {T} h (T) h e b r
. e a t h (T) h o u g
. i v e s (T) a n d t
. a k e s (T),

{I.STEWART} 9 Prob. ~ 1 in 137,000
......................................
. Here the anthem doth commence:
. Love and constancy is dead;
. Phoenix and the turtle fled
. In a mutual flame from hence.

. So they loved, as love in twain
. Had the essence but in one;
. Two distincts, division none:
. Number there in love was slain.

. Hearts remote, yet not asunder;
. Distance, and no space was seen
. 'Twixt the turtle and his queen:
. But in them it were a wonder.

. So between them love did shine,
. That the turtle saw his right
. Flaming in the phoenix' sight;
. Either was the other's mine.

. Property was thus appalled,
. That the self was not the same;
. Single nature's double name
. Neither two nor one was called.

. Reason, in itself confounded,
. Saw division grow together,
. To themselves yet either neither,
. Simple were so well compounded,

. That it cried, How true a twain
. Seemeth this concordant one!
. Love hath reason, reason none,
. If what parts can so remain.

. Whereupon it made this threne
. To the phoenix and the dove,
. Co-su(P)remes (A)nd sta(R)s of lo(V)e,
. As ch(O)rus to their tragic scene.
......................................
___ <= 6 =>
.
. C o- s u (P) r
. e m e s (A) n
. d s t a (R) s
. o f l o (V) e,
. A s c h (O) r
. u s t o t h
. e i r t r a
. g i c s c e
. n e.
.
(PARVO) 6 : (Rutland/Manners' motto)
. Prob. at end ~ 1 in 15,000
-----------------------------------------------------------
The 'Hunt for Pan' Folio headpiece:
.
http://www.cuttingedge.org/KJVImages/Most_Noble.jpg
http://www.cuttingedge.org/KJVImages/catalogue.jpg
http://www.cuttingedge.org/KJVImages/tempest.jpg

http://www.cuttingedge.org/news/k1003.cfm
.
1) Child: *I. STEWART* protected by:
.
2) Peacock [ *PAVO* ] : Roger & Francis {MANNERS}.
3) Grapes/CORNucopia: Oxford?
4) Five petaled *Wild ROSE* : Holy Grail (Henry *ROSE-LY* ?)
5) Arrow PHEON: SIDNEY/Pembroke

http://www.cuttingedge.org/KJVImages/Headpiece_Hunt_Pan_ActsApos.jpg
--------------------------------------------------------
. Venus and Adonis (1593)
.
For there his smell with others being mingled,
The hot sent-snuffing hounds are driuen to doubt,
Ceasing their clamorous crie, till they haue singled
With much ado the cold fault cleanlie out,
Then do they spend their mouth's, *ECCHO replies* ,
As if an o{T}he{R} ch{A}se {W}er{E} in {T}he {S}ki{E}s.
.
[E.STEWART] -3
...............................................
__ <= 3 =>

. A s i
. f a n
. o {T} h
. e {R} c
. (H){A} s
. (E){W} e
. (R){E} i
. (N){T} h
. (E){S} k
. (I){E} s.
..................
{E.STEWART} -3
Prob. {STEWART} in this Stanza ~ 1 in 143,000
(HERNEI) 3 : Prob. ~ 1 in 750
................................................
By {T(H)IS (POO)RE WAT} farre off vpon a hill,
Stands on his hinder-legs with listning eare,
To hearken if his foes pursue him still,
Anon their loud alarums (H)e doth h(E)are,
And (N)ow his g(R)iefe ma(Y) be compared well,
To one sore sicke, that heares the passing bell.
.
(HENRY) 7
...............................................
Prob. (HENRY){STEWART} in adjacent V&A stanzas
~ 1 in 450,000
-----------------------------------------------------
Alternative (modern) spelling:
...............................................
The hot scent-snuffing hounds are driven to doubt,
Ceasing their clamorous cry till they have singled
With much ado the cold fault cleanly out.
Th(E)n do they spend their (M)ouths ; Echo replies,
As if another chase were in the skies.
A(S) if an o{T}he{R} ch{A}se {W}er{E} in {T}he {S}ki{E}s.
.
(ESME) -18
{E.STEWART} -3
.
By this, poor Wat, far off upon a hill,
Stands on his hinder legs with listening ear,
To hearken if his foes pursue him still ;
Anon their loud alarums he doth hear,
And now his grief may be compared well
To one sore sick that hears the passing-bell.
--------------------------------------------------------
The Susan Constant: May 26

Spanish Inquisition starts May 26, 1232
Vesalius' _Fabrica_ published May 26, 1543
Esmé Stewart dies May 26, 1583
SUSANna Shakespeare Hall: (May 26, 1583 - July 11, 1649)
SUSAN Vere Herbert: (May 26, 1587 - Feb. 1, 1629)
HENRY PORTER disappears May 26, 1599
Mary WollSTONECRAFT Godwin: (May 26, 1759 - 1797)
Freemason Alexander Pushkin: (May 26, 1799 - Jan. 29, 1837)
Prince Albert: (May 26, 1819 - Dec. 14, 1861)
Poe enlists in Army as PERRY May 26, 1827
-------------------------------------------------------------------
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esm%C3%A9_Stewart,_1st_Duke_of_Lennox

<<Esmé Stewart, 1st {DUKE} of Lennox, 1st Earl of Lennox
(1542 – 26 May 1583) was the son of John Stewart, 5th Lord
of Aubigny who was the younger brother of Matthew Stewart,
4th Earl of Lennox. Sir James Melville described him as
"of nature, upright, just, and gentle".

At the age of 37 he was introduced to the 13-year-old James VI of
Scotland at the time when the latter made his formal entry into
Edinburgh and began his personal rule. Esmé was immediately popular
with the king and began to gather rewards and preferements. Stewart
went on to join the Privy Council. He was created Earl of Lennox,
on 5 March 1580, and then {DUKE} of Lennox on 5 August 1581.
Lennox was careful to maintain his popularity with the Burgh
administrators of Scotland's towns. In July 1580, the English
diplomat Robert Bowes reported that Lennox had obtained
fishing rights in Aberdeen, which the deposed Regent Morton
had formerly given to his servant George Affleck of Balmanno,
and then he arranged for the King to give
this valuable source of income to the town.

In Presbyterian Scotland the thought of a Catholic {DUKE} irked many
and Lennox had to make a choice between his Catholic faith or his
loyalty to James. At the end Lennox chose James and the king taught
him the doctrines of Calvinism. The Scottish Kirk remained suspicious
of Lennox after his public conversion, and took alarm when he had
the Earl of Morton tried and beheaded on charges of treason.
Ruthven Raid and exile

In response, the Scottish nobles plotted to oust Lennox. They did so
by luring James to Ruthven Castle as a guest but then kept him as
prisoner for ten months. The Lord Enterprisers forced James to banish
Lennox. A lengthy denunciation of Lennox was issued from Stirling
Castle on 17 September 1582, citing his religion, association with
the murderers of Lord Darnley & Regent Moray and Regent Lennox,
and his control over the royal household and international intrigue.
In December travelling from Berwick on Tweed, on his way south, by
accident the {DUKE} encountered the French ambassador, M. de la
Mothe Fénélon, near Northallerton, who was travelling north to treat
with the Gowrie Regime. In London the Scottish poet William Fowler
pumped him for information which he sent to Francis Walsingham.

The {DUKE} journeyed back to France and kept a secret correspondence
with James. With his return to France, Lennox had met a frosty
reception as an apostate. The Scottish nobles believed that they
would be proven right in their convictions that Lennox's conversion
was artificial when he returned to France. Instead, the former {DUKE}
remained Presbyterian and died shortly after. His final letter to
James Stewart, Lord Doune, requests that the Lord take care of his
son and to recover for him Esmé's possessions in Scotland. After his
death in May 1583, William Schaw took his heart back to James
in Scotland, and his wife and son Ludovic came to Scotland.

James had repeatedly vouched for Lennox's religious sincerity and
memorialized him in a poem called "Ane Tragedie of the Phoenix", which
said he was like an exotic bird of unique beauty killed by envy.>>
.................................................
(ESME) [STEWART], {DVKE}<I> of Lennox
.................................................
http://tinyurl.com/m67zds2

THE ESSAYES OF A PRENTISE, IN THE DIVINE ART OF POESIE.
Imprinted at Edinburgh, by Thomas Vautroullier. (1585)

ANE METAPHORICALL INVENTION OF A TRAGEDIE CALLED PHOENIX.

(E)If Echo help, that both together w(E)
(S)ince cause there be) may now lament with teari(S)
(M)y murnefull yearis. Ye furies als with hi(M)
(E)uen Pluto grim, who dwels in dark, that h(E)
[S]ince cheif we se him to you all that beari[S]
[T]{H}e style men fearis of Dirse : I req{U}es[T]
[E]che greizlie ghesl, that dw{E}lls beneth the S[E]
[W]ith all yon th{R}e, whose hairis ar snaiks full bl{E}[W]
[A]nd all your crew, assist me in thir tw[A]
[R]epeit and ma my Tragedie full nei[R]
[T]he chance fell heir. Then secoundlie is bes[T]
{D}euils void of rest, ye moue all that it rei{D}
{W}ith me, indeid, lyke dolour thame to gri{V}
<I>then will liv', in lesser greif therebi<I>
{K}ythe heir and trie, your force ay bent and quic{K}
{E}xcell in sik lyke ill, and murne with m{E}

From Delphos syne Apollo cum with speid,
Whose mining light my cairs wil dim in deid.
-------------------------------------------------
. Ben Jonson's Epigrams 65

To my {MUSE}.
.
AWay, and leave me, thou thing most abhor'd
That hast betray'd me to a worthless Lord;
Made me commit most fircefierce Idolatry
To a great Image through thy Luxury.
.
Be thy next Masters more unlucky Muse,
And, as thou'hast mine, his Hours, an[D] Youth abuse.
Get him the Times long gr[U]dg, the Courts ill will;
And Reconcil'd, [K]eep him Suspected still.
Make him los[E] all his Friends; and, which is worse,
Almost all ways, to any better course.
With me thou leav'{S}t an happier Muse than thee,
And which {T}hou brought'st me, welcome Poverty.
Sh{E} shall in(S)truct my Aft[E]r-thoughts t(O) {W}rite
Things [M]anly, and no(T) smelling P{A}ra[S]ite.
But I r(E)pent me: Stay. Who [E]'re is {R}ai(S)'d,
For worth he has not, He is (T)ax'd, no{T} prais'd.
................................................................
______________ <= 31 =>

.(B)e t h y n e x t M a s t e r s m o r e u n l u c k y{M U S E},
.(A)n d,a s t h o u'h a s t m i n e,h i s H o u r s,a n[D]Y o u
.(T)h a b u s e.G e t h i m t h e T i m e s l o n g g r[U]d g,t
.(H)e C o u r t s i l l w i l l;A n d R e c o n c i l'd[K]e e p
. h i m S u s p e c t e d s t i l l.M a k e h i m l o s[E]a l l
. h i s F r i e n d s;a n d,w h i c h i s w o r s e,A l m o s t
. a l l w a y s,t o a n y b e t t e r c o u r s e.W i t h m e t
. h o u l e a v{S}t a n h a p p i e r M u s e t h a n t h e e,A
. n d w h i c h{T}h o u b r o u g h t's t m e,w e l c o m e P o
. v e r t y.S h{E}s h a l l i n(S)t r u c t m y A f t[E]r-t h o
. u g h t s t(O|W}r i t e T h i n g s[M]a n l y,a n d n o(T)s m
. e l l i n g P{A}r a[S]i t e.B u t I r(E)p e n t m e:S t a y.W
. h o[E]r e i s{R}a i(S)d,F o r w o r t h h e h a s n o t,H e i
. s(T)a x'd,n o{T}p r a i s'd.
.
{STEWART} 31 : Prob. skip < 32 ~ 1 in 10,200
[DUKE] 31 : Prob. same skip ~ 1 in 2,900
(BATH) 31
.................................................
______________ <= 23 =>

. S h{E}s h a l l i n(S)t r u c t m y A f t[E]r-
. t h o u g h t s t(O|W}r i t e T h i n g s[M]a
. n l y,a n d n o(T)s m e l l i n g P{A}r a[S]i
. t e.B u t I r(E)p e n t m e:S t a y.W h o[E]r
. e i s{R}a i(S)d,F o r w o r t h h e h a s n o
. t,H e i s(T)a x'd,n o{T}p r a i s'd.

[ESME] -23
(SO TEST) 22
----------------------------------------------------------
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben_Jonson

<<Ben Jonson married, some time before 1594,
a woman which he described to Drummond as
"a SHREW , yet HONEST." His wife has not been
definitively identified, but she is sometimes identified
as the Ann *LEWIS* who married a Benjamin Jonson at
St Magnus-the-Martyr, near London Bridge. The registers
of St. Martin's Church state that his eldest daughter
Mary died in November 1593, when she was 6 months old.
His eldest son Benjamin died of the plague
ten years later (Jonson's epitaph to him
_On My First Sonne_ was written shortly after), and
a second Benjamin died in 1635. For five years somewhere
in this period, Jonson lived separately from his wife,
enjoying the hospitality of Lord Aubigny.>>
---------------------------------------------------------
The Names of the Principall Actors in all these Playes.
http://ise.uvic.ca/Library/SLT/stage/actorlist.html
.
____ *333* Letters [= (3x3) x *37* {plays}]
______ <= *37* = [4x4x4 - 3x3x3] =>
.
_____ WilliamShakespeareRichardBurbadgeJ *o* hn
____ HemmingsAugustinePhillipsWilliamKe__*m* pt
.
__ ThomasPoopeGeorgeBryanHenryCondell *W* il
__ liamSlyeRichardCowlyJohnLowineSamu__*e* ll
__ CrosseAlexanderCookeSamuelGilburne__*R* ob
_______-ertArminWilliamOstlerNathanFieldJo__*h* nU
_____ nderwoodNicholasTooleyWilliamEccle__*s* to
.
_____ neJosephTaylorRobertBenfieldRobert__*G* ou
__ gheRichardRobinsonJohnShanckeJohnR *i* ce
....................................................
___ (1537) [G]l'(i)ngannati (The Deceived)
.
. probability of "shReW" in 9 x 37 array ~ 1 / 5,000
-------------------------------------------------------------
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esm%C3%A9_Stewart,_3rd_Duke_of_Lennox

<<Esmé Stewart, 3rd {DUKE} of Lennox KG (1579 – 30 July 1624)
was the son of Esmé Stewart, 1st {DUKE} of Lennox. He was a
patron of the playwright Ben Jonson, who lived in his
household for five years. He died in 1624 and was interred,
on 6 August 1624, in Westminster Abbey.>>
.............................................................
On 6 August 1623, Anne Hathaway dies in Stratford
.............................................................
<<On August 6, 1623, longtime friend & protector of Galileo
Maffeo Barberini was elected Pope Urban VIII.>>
---------------------------------------------------------------
On the 14th anniversary of Anne Hathaway's death [August 6, 1637]
Ben Jonson was BURIED UPRIGHT against the wall of his crypt.

'Two feet by two feet will do for all I want'. - Jonson
---------------------------------------------------------------------
<<Nor was it [Sir George] Buck who decided to up and move the Revels
Office from the building of the former priory of the Order of St. John
of Jerusalem (the Knights Hospitallers) in Clerkenwell. Rather the
Revels were removed from there by King James, who gave the properties
to his cousin Esme Stuart, Lord Aubigny, as a wedding gift.
Buck was charged with finding new quarters for the Revels-
which were relocated to Blackfriars at this time but,
instead, to the Priory of the Whitefriars.>> - Matus p.107

<<Gloucester orders the body of Henry VI to be taken to Whitefriars
in Richard III, i, 2. But according to Holinshed from St. Paul's
"he was carried to the Blackfriers.">> - Who's Who in Shak.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
ARCHILOCHUS solar eclipse: April 6, 648 BC Friday
Koran descends to Earth: April 6, 610 AD Monday
Petrarch meets LAURA: April 6, 1327 Monday
LAURA dies of plague: April 6, 1348 Sunday
RAPHAEL born: April 6, 1483 Sunday
RAPHAEL dies: April 6, 1520 Good Friday

{LUCIO: Does BRIDGET PAINT still, Pompey, ha? [MfM Act 3, Sc. 2]}

DURER dies: April 6, 1528 Monday
Kent EARTHQUAKE: April 6, 1580 Wednesday
BRIDGET Vere's birth: April 6, 1584 Monday
Thomas Hobbes' birth: April 5, 1588 Good Friday
Sir Francis Walsingham dies: April 6, 1590 Monday
Historian John Stow dies: April 6, 1605 Sat/Wed.
"native of Crete" EL GRECO dies: April 7, 1614 Monday
Start of _The SOUND & the FURY_: April 6, 1928 Good Friday
---------------------------------------------------------------------
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Stewart,_4th_Duke_of_Lennox

<<James Stewart, 1st {DUKE} of Richmond, 4th {DUKE} of Lennox
(6 April 1612 – 30 March 1655) was a Scottish nobleman.
He was the eldest son of Esmé Stewart, 3rd {DUKE} of Lennox
and his wife Katherine Clifton, 2nd Baroness Clifton.

James Stewart inherited the Dukedom of Lennox on his father's death
(30 June 1624) and was invested as a knight of Order of the Garter
in 1633. He married Mary Villiers, daughter of George Villiers,
1st Duke of Buckingham on 3 August 1637.

A cousin of Charles I of England, Stewart was a Privy Councillor and
key member of Royalist party in the English Civil War. In 1641–42,
he served as Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports. He spent five months
in exile in 1643, returning to England to defend the city of Oxford
for the king. He died on 30 March 1655 at age 42
and was buried in Westminster Abbey.

The Scottish connection to the earldom of Richmond began in 1613 when
Ludovic Stewart, 2nd Duke of Lennox, was created Earl of Richmond.
He was made Duke of Richmond in 1623, when Cobham Hall and the manor
of Cobham, Kent, was granted to him by King James I of England, and
became the main residence of the family. Upon his death in February
1624, the Lennox titles descended to his brother Esmé and the Richmond
titles became extinct. In 1641 James Stewart was created Duke of
Richmond, once again uniting the Scottish and English dukedoms.

James's son Esmé Stewart inherited the Richmond and Lennox titles
on James's death, but Esmé died at age 10 in 1660, whereupon
both titles descended to Charles Stewart, son of James Stewart's
younger brother George Stewart, 9th Seigneur d'Aubigny.>>
---------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.tudorplace.com.ar/NORREYS.htm
.
Francis NORREYS (1° E. Berkshire)
Born: 1578 / *July 6* 1582
Acceded: 28 Jan 1620
Died: 29 Jan 1621
.
Succeeded to his grandfather's barony as 2° B. Norreys of
Rycote and also to the estates of his uncle Sir Edward Norreys.
.
In 1621 Francis was created Earl of Berkshire.
.
_ He left no sons and the earldom became extinct,
.
but the BARONY descended to his daughter Elizabeth (d. 1645),
- the wife of Edward Wray (d. 1658).
.
Their daughter Bridget (b. 1627 -- d. 1657) married as his 2nd wife
Montagu Bertie, 2nd Earl of Lindsey, and their son James Bertie
(1654--1699) became Baron Norris (or Norreys) in 1657, and
was created *EARL of ABINGDON* ifl 1682. His descendants
the Berties, *EARLs of ABINGDON*, still hold this barony,
and are the present representatives of the family of Norris.
.
Married: Bridget De VERE 1598
.
Children: Elizabeth NORREYS (Baroness)
.
Buried: 28 Nov 1645, Westminster Abbey, London, England
---------------------------------------------------------
BRIDGET was born on April 6:
................................................
. BRIDGET Vere born April 6, 1584
. Raphael (April 6, 1483 - April 6, 1520)
-------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.seniorcitizens.com/k/raphael.html

<<On Raphael's tomb in the Pantheon composed by *Bembo* whose
intimacy with the painter was such as to establish the truth
of the statement, says that he died on the sixth of April,
1520, being exactly thirty-seven years old on that day.>>

D. O. M RAPHAELI SANCTO IOAN.
AEMVLO CVIVS SPIRANTEIS PROPE IMAGINEIS ST CONTEMPLERE NATVRAE
ATQVE ARTIS FOEDVS EACIELE INSPEXERIS.

INTEGER INTEGROS QVO DIE NATVS EST EO ESSE DESIIT VII.
ID APRIL MDXX. ILLE HIC EST RAPHAEL TIMUIT QU0 S0SPITE
VINCI RERUM MAGNA PARENS QU0 M0RIENTE M0RI."

'This is Raphael's tomb, where he lived he made Mother NATURE
. Fear to be vanquished by him and, as he died, to die too.'
-----------------------------------------------------------------
By 1367 *Petrarch* had settled in Padua.

Sidney's son-in-law, Roger Manners, was
a classmate of Rosencrantz & Guildenstern at
Girolamo Cardano's alma mater: Padua University!

<<Petrarch's poems collectively called 'Rime' (Rhymes),
tell of the great love of his life: a woman named Laura,
whom he first saw in church on April 6, 1327.>>

. Laura died on April 6, 1348.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Stuart

<<The House of *STEWART*, or Stuart, is a European royal house.
Founded by Robert II of Scotland, the Stewarts first became monarchs
of the Kingdom of Scotland during the late 14th century, and
subsequently held the position of the Kings of England, Ireland, and
Great Britain. Their patrilineal ancestors (from Brittany) had held
the office of High Steward of Scotland since the 12th century, after
arriving by way of Norman England. The dynasty inherited further
territory by the 17th century which covered the entire British Isles.

The name Stewart derives from the political position of office similar
to a governor, known as a steward. It was originally adopted as the
family surname by Walter Stewart, 3rd High Steward of Scotland, who
was the third member of the family to hold the position. Prior to
this, family names were not used, but instead they had patronyms
defined through the father; for example the first two High Stewards
were known as FitzAlan and FitzWalter respectively. During the 16th
century the French spelling Stuart was adopted by Mary, Queen of Scots
when she was living in France. She sanctioned the change to ensure
the correct pronunciation of the Scots version of the name Stewart,
because retaining the letter 'w' would have made it difficult for
French speakers, who usually render "w" as "v". The spelling Stuart
was also used by her second husband, Henry Stuart, Lord *D(arnley)*;
he was the father of James VI and I, so the spelling Stuart
for the British royal family officially derives from him.>>
-------------------------------------------------------------
EPIGRAMS. BOOK I. The Author B. J.

64. To [Robert (Cecil) Earl of Salisbury. (May 4, 1608)]
. Upon the Accession of the Treasurership to him.
......................................................
NOt glad, like those that have new Hopes, or Suits,
With thy *NEW PLACE* , bring I [T]hese ear[L]y Fruits
[O]f Love, an[D] what the [G]olden Ag[E] did hold
A Treasure, Art: Condemn'd in th' Age of Gold.
..................................................
_ <= 8 =>

. *N E W P L A C E* (May 4, 1597)
. b r i n g I[T]h
. e s e e a r[L]y
. F r u i t s[O]f
. L o v e,a n[D]w
. h a t t h e[G]o
. l d e n A g[E]d
. i d h o l d A T
. r e a s u r e,
.
[T LODGE] 8
------------------------------------------
Shakespeare's Sonnets:

27 WTB-T-FIALSPWML{F}
28 HTW(B)ADTHIASWB{A}
29 WIA-A-WFDWYHLFF{T}
30 WII(A)TFAATATWB{A}
31 TWAAHHABTHWTTA
32 IWA(T|CARE]OHATBT
33 FFKGAWASEWBT{Y}S
34 WAT(H)TTFTNTTTAA
..............................
43 WF[BATH]TWHBWTAA
..............................
. [B]ut when I sleepe, in dreames they looke on thee,
. [A]nd darkely bright, are bright in darke directed.
. [T]hen thou whose shaddow shaddowes doth make bright,
. [H]ow would thy shadowes forme, forme happy show,
..............................
86 WBTM{WANG|H]WAIBT
87 FATM{FATA|T]OSCTI
88 WAUA-WUOT[A]FTDST
89 SASA-TTAI[B]TLAFF
-----------------------------------------------------
The Choice of Valentines by Thomas Nashe

Druggs and Electuaries of new deuise
Doe shunne my purse ; that trembles a[T] the price.
Suffi[C]eth, all I haue, I y[E]ald hir hole,
Whi[C]h for a poore man [I]s a princelie do[L]e.
I paie our hostess scott and lott at moste,
And looke as leane and lank as anie ghoste.
What can be added more to my renowne?
She lyeth breathlesse, I am taken doune,
The waues doe swell, the tydes climbe or'e the banks,
Iudge gentlemen if I deserue not thanks,
And so good night unto yow eue'rie one,
For loe, our threed is spunne, our plaie is donne.

Claudito iam riuos Priape, sat prata biberunt.

Thus hath my penne presum'd to please my friend ;
Oh mightst thow lykewise please Apollo's eye.
No: Honor brooke's no such impietie ;
Yett Ouids wanton Muse did no(T) offend.
He is the fountain whence my (S)treames doe flow[E].
Forgiue me if I sp(E)ake as I was taught,
A ly[K]e to women, ut(T)er all I knowe,
As longing to [U]nlade s(O) bad a fraught.
My mynde once purg'[D] of (S)uch lasciuious witt,
With purifide word's, and hallowed vers{E}
Thy praises in large volume{S} shall rehearce,
That better {M}aie thy grauer view befitt.
M{E}anewhile yett rests, yow smile at what I write,
Or for attempting, banish me your sight.

___________ <= 29 =>

O u i d s w a n t o n M u s e d i d n o(T)o f f e n d.H e
i s t h e f o u n t a i n w h e n c e m y(S)t r e a m e s
d o e f l o w[E]F o r g i u e m e i f I s p(E)a k e a s I
w a s t a u g h t,A l y[K]e t o w o m e n,u t(T)e r a l l
I k n o w e,A s l o n g i n g t o[U]n l a d e s(O)b a d a
f r a u g h t.M y m y n d e o n c e p u r g[D]o f(S)u c h
l a s c i u i o u s w i t t,W i t h p u r i f i d e w o r
d's,a n d h a l l o w e d v e r s{E}T h y p r a i s e s i
n l a r g e v o l u m e{S}s h a l l r e h e a r c e,T h a
t b e t t e r{M}a i e t h y g r a u e r v i e w b e f i t
t.M{E}a n e w h i l e y e t t r e s t s,y o w s m i l e a
t w h a t I w r i t e,O r f o r a t t e m p t i n g,b a n
i s h m e y o u r s i g h t.

(SOTEST) -30
[DUKE] -34
{ESME} 24
---------------------------------------------------------
Art Neuendorffer
0 new messages