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. |
IIII. |
XV. |
A. |
B. |
C. |
XVI. |
E. |
XVII. |
The XIIII. Chapter.
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B
Unregarding.And to me Unregarding, then high Exaltacion giue:
For I am the Free-spirit, as I by thee do heare.
Eueryone may now deale, like a Foole, and neede not feare/
Re[illeg.]eing with Unregarding, in his Forest that is so wyde:
And fa[illeg.]e: with the free Spirit, then may no Sinne abyde.
For no man, to accuse vs, da[illeg.]e once be so bolde.
Whose likewyse ; after our Mynde; with vs wil not holde/
But shall speake against vs, and saye that we proceede,
In the fal[illeg.]e Freedom/and haue not ; as we reede;
Performed the Obedience, to the Gayning of the Loue/
Yea, though of the Loues Family, or Howsholde then shoulde proue/
Towards them, we wil showe, no Loue nor Freendly-cheere.
Good-thinking.
If any man blaspheame vs, himself he may not cleere/
In the same flourishing tyme, wherin wee thus do rayne.
It shall also now fal out, to nomans ease nor gayne,
That wil openly dispise vs, and seeme on vs to lower:
For we Two [illeg.] now, gotten vs mighty Power/
Through those People that serue vs, in our Affayres that we doo.
Yea, all the Worlde doth showe, loueing Freendship to vs Two
For she doth ernestly her owne, both loue and cate ensue.
29
Thatt is now well seene and knowen, that it is very-true:
For the most Number are mynded, with Us, euery wheare.
Good-thinking.
Are they not almost all now, gotten into our Snare?
Who is-ther now ; I praye you; left without our Bandes?
Are not wee esteemed, for the Cheefest, in all Landes?
They com to great Reproche, that against vs rebell.
The XIIII. Chapter.
Comoedia | ||