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A banqvet of daintie conceits

Furnished with verie delicate and choyse inuentions, to delight their mindes, who take pleasure in Musique, and there-withall to sing sweete Ditties, either to the Lute, Bandora, Virginalles, or anie other Instrument. Published at the desire of both Honorable and Worshipfull personages, who haue had copies of diuers of the Ditties heerein contained. Written by A. M. [i.e. Anthony Munday]
 
 

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Wyne is strongest.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Wyne is strongest.

[_]

This Ditty may be sung to the Quadrant Galliard.

O what a thing of strength is wine?
of how great power and might?
For it deceiueth euery one,
that takes therein delight.
The minde of King and fatherlesse:
It maketh equall in likenesse.


The bond-man and the free-man bothe,
Wine maketh in equality:
The poore-man and the welthy wretch,
Wine knitteth in affinity.
The Lordly peere and homely hind:
In Wine but slender difference finde.
Wine turneth euerie pensiue thought,
to ioy and gladnesse presentlie:
So that all they which drinke thereof,
doo cleane cast out of memorie.
All sorrow, greefe, debt or distresse:
Wine sets them in such pleasantnes.
Wine maketh euery hart so ritch,
that they forgette immediatly:
Their King, their Gouernour, and all,
and pleade their owne authoritie.
And all their words weigh verie deepe:
Till wine haue brought them fast a sleepe.
When men are entred in their drink,
they haue no minde at all:
Of loue to Brethren, freends or kin,
but some to weapons fall.
But when they are from Wine at last:
They not remember what hath past.
Is not Wine strongest now thinke you,
that carrieth with it such a might:
As forceth men to doo these things,
without regard of wrong or right?
This said, he paused for a space:
And to the second man gaue place.
FINIS.