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The Forrest of Fancy

Wherein is conteined very prety Apothegmes, and pleasaunt histories, both in meeter and prose, Songes, Sonets, Epigrams and Epistles, of diuerse matter and in diuerse manner. With sundry other deuices, no lesse pithye then pleasaunt and profytable [by H. C.]
 

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An Exhortation to Pacience.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

An Exhortation to Pacience.

VVhen griping greefes do greeue the minde,
The nicetest meanes that men may finde,
which God and nature hath assignde,
Is pacience well applyde:
For pacience puts all paine to flight,
Yea pacience makes the hart delight,
And doth reuiue eche dulled spright,
by reasons rule and guyde.
For euery sore, a salue it is.
It turnes all bitter bale to blisse,
And he that hath it, shall not misse.


To tast of heauenly ioyes.
Through it the miser likes his lyfe,
Through it he bydes his brawling wife,
Through it he flies all hate and stryfe,
And nothing him anoyes.
Through it he suffers false reports,
And loathes to liue in lawlesse Courtes,
Yea patience dayly him exhortes,
To hold himselfe content?
And though his happe be good or ill,
Yet being armde with patience still.
No euill once he shall fulfill,
But be to vertue bent.
Therefore for pacience let vs pray,
To driue all drowsy dumpes away,
That euery hower doth vs annoy,
Through froward frowning fate,
For vext we are on euery syde,
Not knowing safely where to byde,
And therefore lacke so good a guyde,
To better our estate.
God graunt vs euer of his grace,
That perfect pacience to imbrace,
We may be moude in euery case,
And flye all furious yre.
Let pacience put vs still in mynde,
And make vs hope good hap to fynde,
When moste with cares we are combynde,
To kindle good desyre.
Finis.