Comoedia A worke in Ryme contayning an Enter-lude of Myndes, witnessing the Mans Fall from God and Christ. Set forth by HN, and by him newly porused and amended. Translated out of Base-almaynes into English [by Christopher Vitell?] |
I. |
I. |
II. |
III. |
VI. |
VII. |
VIII. |
A. |
IX. |
A. |
B. |
C. |
X. |
XI. |
XII. |
XIII. |
XIIII. |
IIII. |
XVII. |
The XI. Chapter.
Comoedia | ||
C
Cogitacions.Oh! We haue consumed, our tyme farr a mys/
Also, cleane forgotten God, in his Power most conuenient/
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But thir wicked Fame or Credit, wil we now dispise.
Playne-and-iust.
Away thou Unregarding, with thy Counsayle, full of Lyes.
Cogitacions.
And thou likewyse Good-thinking, with thy wiked Fruits and Plants.
Unregarding.
Alact, alact: into what Coasts ; sith heere our Credit wants;
Shall we poore Seruitours, go now for to remayne?
Good thinking.
Wo be to vs, wo be to vs, for we shall suerly be slayne/
Now that the Man doth know, our Wyles & Suttle craftynes.
Lamentacion.
Och/Man! remember yet, thy Folly & wicked Naughtynes:
And reioyce the only in God, and in Him becom renewed.
For the tyme of Ignorance, God hath ouer-viewed.
And now commandeth all Men, with good Aduertisment/
That they ; for their Sinnes; shoulde vnfaynedly repent:
Because that He, a certaye Daye hath sett/
On which He wil urdge now without all Lett
The Circuit of the Earth, with Righteousnes and Equytee.
Playne-and-iust.
O Lorde God, remember now, our ignorant Simplicitee/
And extende towards vs, thy fauorable Grace.
The XI. Chapter.
Comoedia | ||