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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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The Louer beeing blinded with the faythlesse loue of his Lady is contented to remit her fault vpon promis of amendment.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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The Louer beeing blinded with the faythlesse loue of his Lady is contented to remit her fault vpon promis of amendment.

Since that thou diddest mee loue
When lust did thee prouoke,
And that thou doost well proue:
That I cannot reuoke.


My freendship fast, my loue nor my good will,
Shew some releefe, least in dispayre I spill.
How well I was content
Alwayes to follow thee?
How well I did assent,
Thy thrall aye for to bee
Thy selfe can iudge to whom I doo appeale,
By sentence lo, to yeeld mee wo or weale.
But if thou mee forsake,
As Cressid that forgot,
True Troylus her make,
And that thy hart is whot
On him whom shame did force thee once his fayth to flie,
I see no hope but yt hee must yeeld forth himself to die.
And though thou thinke that I,
Am loth thee too forgoe,
Yet shall I rather die
Then liue and please my foe:
But hindre him in loue, all others doth refrayne,
Whose treasō once did mee purchace thy due disdain
FINIS