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A gorgious Gallery, of gallant Inuentions

Garnished and decked with diuers dayntie deuises, right delicate and delightfull, to recreate eche modest minde withall. First framed and fashioned in sundrie formes, by diuers worthy workemen of late dayes: and now, ioyned together and builded up: By T. P. [i.e. Thomas Procter]

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A briefe dialogue between sicknesse and worldly desire.
 
 
 
 
 
 
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A briefe dialogue between sicknesse and worldly desire.

Sicknesse.
To darkesome caue, where crawling wormes remayn,
Thou worldly wretch, resigne thy boasting breath:
Yeeld vp thy pompe, thy corps must passe agayn,
From whence it came, compeld by dreadfull death.

Worldly desire.
Oh sicknesse sore, thy paines doo pearce my hart,
Thou messenger of death, whose goryng gripes mee greue:
Permit a while, mee loth yet to depart
From freends and goods, which I behinde must leaue.

Sicknesse.
Ah silly soule, entis'de with worldly vayne,
As well as thou, thy freends must yeeld to death:
Though after thee, a while they doo remayne,
They shall not still, continue on the earth.

Worldly desire.
What must I then neede, shrine in gastly graue?
And leaue what long, I got with tedious toyle:
Prolong mee yet, and let mee licence haue,
Till elder yeeres, to put your Brutes to foyle.

Sicknesse.
O foolish man, allurde by lewd delight,
Thy labors lost, these goods they are not thine:
But as (thou hadst) so others haue like right,
(Of them) when thou, shalt vp thy breath resigne.

Worldly desire.
Then farewell world, the Nurse of wicked vice,
Adue vile drosse which mooues mens mindes to ill:
Farewell delights, which did my youth entice,
To serue as slaue, vnto vnsatiate will.

T.P.
FINIS.