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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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In this Dittie, is reuealed the morrall iudgment of this notable and excellent History, sette downe by the famous and learned Philosopher Tyabonus: wherein may be seene the very full course and wretched race of man in this transitory life.
 
 
 



In this Dittie, is reuealed the morrall iudgment of this notable and excellent History, sette downe by the famous and learned Philosopher Tyabonus: wherein may be seene the very full course and wretched race of man in this transitory life.

[_]

This Ditty may be sung to Wigmores Galliard.

The Well this man for refuge tooke,
the World dooth represent:
Wherein we seeke by diuers meanes,
to worke our owne content.
And where we struggle and we striue,
eche one for his auaile:
Liuing in hope of many things,
whereof great numbers faile.
The Lyons which did force this man,
vnto his fearefull flight:
Signifie the foure Elements,
which seeke both day and night.
To chase man into contraries,
now well, then sicke againe:
With many alterations,
whereof man feeles the paine.
The Dragon that with gaping mouth,
did watch this yong mans fall:
Dooth represent our earthly Graue,
whereto in ende we shall.
How braue or stoute so euer we be,
how pollitique or wise:
The Graue must shroude our bones at last,
for so is Natures guise.


The Two young twigges wherby he held,
the one is named Loue:
The other may be Temporall goods,
whose strength we often proue.
By Loue we beare vnto this drosse,
so long we hang thereon:
That heauie sinne dooth weigh vs downe,
till faith is well neere gone.
The Little Beastes that gnawed the twigs
of couller blacke and white:
May be compared very well,
vnto the Day and Night:
For they consume the time so fast,
that goods nor wealth can saue vs:
But these two cuts vs off at length,
and then the earth must haue vs.
The Pot with Honnie may be tearmd,
The pleasure in this life:
Wherewith we glutte our selues so full,
we recke no stormes of strife.
Nor manifold calamities,
which threaten mans decay:
The lust of Pleasure gluttes vs so,
we feare them by no way.
So at the length, the Day and Night,
cuttes off our Pleasure too:
And then into our Graue we fall,
as all mankind must doo.
For be we poore, or be we ritch,
this is the end of all:
The Graue must be our shrowding sheete,
when dreadfull Death dooth call.
FINIS.