<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE TEI.2 PUBLIC "-//TEI P4//DTD Main DTD Driver File//EN" "http://www.tei-c.org/Guidelines/DTD/tei2.dtd" [
   <!ENTITY % TEI.verse 'INCLUDE'>
   <!ENTITY % TEI.linking 'INCLUDE'>
   <!ENTITY % TEI.figures 'INCLUDE'>
   <!ENTITY % TEI.analysis 'INCLUDE'>
   <!ENTITY % TEI.XML 'INCLUDE'>
   <!ENTITY % ISOlat1 SYSTEM 'http://www.tei-c.org/Entity_Sets/Unicode/iso-lat1.ent'>
   %ISOlat1;
   <!ENTITY % ISOlat2 SYSTEM 'http://www.tei-c.org/Entity_Sets/Unicode/iso-lat2.ent'>
   %ISOlat2;
   <!ENTITY % ISOnum SYSTEM 'http://www.tei-c.org/Entity_Sets/Unicode/iso-num.ent'>
   %ISOnum;
   <!ENTITY % ISOpub SYSTEM 'http://www.tei-c.org/Entity_Sets/Unicode/iso-pub.ent'>
   %ISOpub;
   <!-- The following entities have been added by Gerald Egan on 27 September 2004 -->
   <!-- The files 'urls.ent' and 'figures.ent' contain entity declarations -->
   <!-- for all external entities needed by this document -->
   <!NOTATION jpeg PUBLIC
   'ISO DIS 10918//NOTATION JPEG Graphics Format//EN'>
   <!NOTATION gif PUBLIC
   '-//TEI//NOTATION
   Compuserve Graphics Interchange Format//EN'>
   <!NOTATION tiff PUBLIC
   '-//TEI//NOTATION Aldus Tagged Image File Format//EN'>
   <!NOTATION png PUBLIC
   '-//TEI//NOTATION IETF RFC2083 Portable Network Graphics//EN'>
   <!NOTATION HTML SYSTEM "text/html">
   <!-- The following elements were added by Carl Stahmer  on 19 June 2007 -->
   <!-- The TEI P4 Documentation at the below URL's States that these elements -->
   <!-- should be part of the base tei declaration, but OXYGEN's validation engine -->
   <!-- stated that they wer undeclared.  These declarations match the online TEI P4 -->
   <!-- documentation.  See:  -->
   <!-- http://www.tei-c.org/P4X/ref-DAMAGE.html -->
   <!-- http://www.tei-c.org/P4X/ref-CERTAIN.html -->
   <!ELEMENT damage (#PCDATA)>
   <!ATTLIST damage
   id CDATA #IMPLIED>
   <!ELEMENT certainty (#PCDATA)>
   <!ATTLIST certainty
   target CDATA #IMPLIED
   locus CDATA #IMPLIED
   degree CDATA #IMPLIED
   >
]>
<TEI.2>
   <teiHeader>
      <fileDesc>
         <titleStmt>
            <title level="a" type="main" rend="italic">The jealous Lover satisfy'd. / All you that do to love pretend, / Come lend an ear unto my song, / And say no more than you intend, / For therein you your selves do wrong.</title>
            <author/>
            <sponsor>University of California - Santa Barbara</sponsor>
            <sponsor>The Early Modern Center</sponsor>
            <respStmt>
               <resp>Director</resp>
               <name>Patricia Fumerton</name>
            </respStmt>
         </titleStmt>
         <editionStmt>
            <edition>
               <date>?-?</date>
            </edition>
         </editionStmt>
         <publicationStmt>
            <publisher>Early Modern Center, University of California Santa Barbara</publisher>
            <pubPlace>Santa Barbara, CA</pubPlace>
            <date>03/10/2016</date>
            <idno type="EMC">35200</idno>
            <availability>
               <p> The University of California makes a claim of copyright only to original
                   contributions made by Early Modern Center participants and other members of
                   the university community. The University of California makes no claim of
                   copyright to the original text. Permission is granted to download, transmit
                   or otherwise reproduce, distribute or display the contributions to this work
                   claimed by The University of California for non-profit educational purposes,
                   provided that this header is included in its entirety. For inquiries about
                   commercial uses, please contact:
                  <address>
                     <addrLine>Patricia Fumerton</addrLine>
                     <addrLine>Early Modern Center - English Department</addrLine>
                     <addrLine>University of California</addrLine>
                     <addrLine>Santa Barbara, CA 93105</addrLine>
                     <addrLine>United States of America</addrLine>
                     <addrLine>EMail: pfumer@english.ucsb.edu</addrLine>
                  </address>
               </p>
            </availability>
            <idno type="ESTC">R216480</idno>
         </publicationStmt>
         <notesStmt>
            <note type="First_Lines-1">THere was in Bristol City fair / a Maiden of a good degree,</note>
            <note type="Refrain-1">These were the words to her he said, / Sweet if thou dost my sute deny / I am undone, for i'me afraid / my heart will break, and I shall dye. [with variation] | Yet if I thought you would be true, / as now you do pretend to me, / A single life i'd bid adieu, / and be as kind as kind could be. [with variation]</note>
         </notesStmt>
         <sourceDesc>
            <listBibl>
               <biblStruct>
                  <monogr>
                     <title>Houghton Library Huth EBB65H</title>
                     <respStmt>
                        <resp>Editor</resp>
                        <name>none</name>
                     </respStmt>
                     <imprint>
                        <publisher>none</publisher>
                        <pubPlace>none</pubPlace>
                        <date>none</date>
                     </imprint>
                  </monogr>
               </biblStruct>
               <bibl>
                  <note type="Reference">
                  Information in this section of the Source Description
                  refers to the original ballad manuscript.
                  </note>
                  <biblScope type="vol: p">1: 130</biblScope>
                  <title n="1" type="main" rend="italic">The jealous Lover satisfy'd. / All you that do to love pretend, / Come lend an ear unto my song, / And say no more than you intend, / For therein you your selves do wrong.</title>
                  <title n="1" type="alt" rend="italic">The Jealous Lover satisfy’d.

All you that do to love pretend,
Come lend an ear unto my song,

And say no more than you intend,
For therein you yourselves do wrong.</title>
                  <title n="1" type="descriptive" rend="italic">The jealous Lover satisfied. All you that do to love pretend, Come lend an ear unto my song, And say no more than you intend, For therein you yourselves do wrong.</title>
                  <author/>
                  <imprint>
                     <date value="?-?" certainty="approx">?-?</date>
                     <publisher><orig reg="Blare, Josiah">J. Blare</orig></publisher>
                  </imprint>
               </bibl>
            </listBibl>
         </sourceDesc>
      </fileDesc>
      <encodingDesc>
         <editorialDecl>
            <p>This document follows the guidelines specified for TEI.</p>
            <p>XML Generated Automatically  at 3/10/2016 5:22:58 PM Using EMC</p>
            <p>XBallad Parsing Engine developed by Carl Stahmer.</p>
            <p>TEI Template developed by Gerald Egan and Modified by Carl Stahmer</p>
            <p>All apostrophes are encoded as &amp;apos;.</p>
            <p>Any dashs occurring in line breaks have been removed;</p>
            <p>All dashs are encoded as &amp;dash; and all em dashes as &amp;mdash;.</p>
         </editorialDecl>
         <classDecl>
            <taxonomy id="EMCKEYWORDS">
               <bibl>Early Modern Center Ballad Project Keyword Taxonomy</bibl>
               <category id="emc.7">
                  <catDesc>advice</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.23">
                  <catDesc>affliction/ health</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.15">
                  <catDesc>alcohol</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.52">
                  <catDesc>Americas</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.21">
                  <catDesc>animals/ nature</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.47">
                  <catDesc>Bible/ biblical figures</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.53">
                  <catDesc>buildings/ architecture</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.28">
                  <catDesc>catastrophe</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.50">
                  <catDesc>children</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.11">
                  <catDesc>class</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.46">
                  <catDesc>clothing/ appearance</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.24">
                  <catDesc>country/ nation</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.35">
                  <catDesc>crime</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.41">
                  <catDesc>death</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.8">
                  <catDesc>economics/ commerce</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.38">
                  <catDesc>entertainments</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.43">
                  <catDesc>family</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.66">
                  <catDesc>Featured</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.56">
                  <catDesc>folklore</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.34">
                  <catDesc>gender</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.16">
                  <catDesc>holidays/ seasons</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.18">
                  <catDesc>infidelity</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.64">
                  <catDesc>labor/ craft</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.55">
                  <catDesc>law</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.36">
                  <catDesc>London</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.9">
                  <catDesc>love</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.26">
                  <catDesc>maritime</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.13">
                  <catDesc>marriage</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.25">
                  <catDesc>military/ war</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.39">
                  <catDesc>monstrosity</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.22">
                  <catDesc>mythology/ Classical</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.51">
                  <catDesc>news</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.17">
                  <catDesc>nobility/ court</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.29">
                  <catDesc>politics/ government</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.65">
                  <catDesc>procreation</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.42">
                  <catDesc>punishment</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.62">
                  <catDesc>race/ ethnicity</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.54">
                  <catDesc>religious concepts</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.48">
                  <catDesc>religious figures</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.30">
                  <catDesc>religious groups</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.32">
                  <catDesc>royalty</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.14">
                  <catDesc>rural life</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.20">
                  <catDesc>servitude</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.10">
                  <catDesc>sex/ sexuality</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.40">
                  <catDesc>supernatural/ magic</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.49">
                  <catDesc>travel</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.19">
                  <catDesc>trickery/ deceit</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.44">
                  <catDesc>urban life</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.37">
                  <catDesc>vice</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.27">
                  <catDesc>violence</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.12">
                  <catDesc>virtue</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.45">
                  <catDesc>vulgar humor</catDesc>
               </category>
               <category id="emc.63">
                  <catDesc>youth/ age</catDesc>
               </category>
            </taxonomy>
            <taxonomy id="LOCSH">
               <bibl>Library of Congress Subject Heading Taxonomy</bibl>
            </taxonomy>
         </classDecl>
      </encodingDesc>
      <profileDesc>
         <creation>
            <date value="3/10/2016">3/10/2016</date>
            <name type="place">Santa Barbara, California, United States of America</name>
         </creation>
         <textClass>
            <keywords scheme="EMCKEYWORDS">
               <list>
                  <item>advice</item>
                  <item>gender</item>
                  <item>love</item>
                  <item>marriage</item>
               </list>
            </keywords>
            <keywords scheme="LOCSH">
               <list>
                  <item>Ballads, English 17th century</item>
                  <item>Broadsides, England 17th century</item>
               </list>
            </keywords>
         </textClass>
      </profileDesc>
      <revisionDesc>
         <change>
            <date value="3/10/2016 5:22:58 PM">3/10/2016 5:22:58 PM</date>
            <respStmt>
               <resp>XBallad</resp>
               <name>Ward, Jayne</name>
            </respStmt>
            <item>Created XML Version of Ballad</item>
         </change>
         <change>
            <date value="3/10/2016 5:22:58 PM">3/10/2016 5:22:58 PM</date>
            <respStmt>
               <resp>Transcription Supervisor</resp>
               <name>Palmer, Megan</name>
            </respStmt>
            <item>Transcription of ballad manuscript</item>
         </change>
         <change>
            <date value="3/10/2016 5:22:58 PM">3/10/2016 5:22:58 PM</date>
            <respStmt>
               <resp>Double-Key Comparison and Merging</resp>
               <name>Levinson-Emley, Rachel</name>
            </respStmt>
            <item>Transcription of ballad manuscript</item>
         </change>
         <change>
            <date value="3/10/2016 5:22:58 PM">3/10/2016 5:22:58 PM</date>
            <respStmt>
               <resp>Transcriptionist Two</resp>
               <name>Doran, Thomas</name>
            </respStmt>
            <item>Transcription of ballad manuscript</item>
         </change>
         <change>
            <date value="3/10/2016 5:22:58 PM">3/10/2016 5:22:58 PM</date>
            <respStmt>
               <resp>Transcriptionist One</resp>
               <name>Davey, Danielle</name>
            </respStmt>
            <item>Transcription of ballad manuscript</item>
         </change>
         <change>
            <date value="3/7/2016">3/7/2016</date>
            <respStmt>
               <resp>Checker</resp>
               <name>Katie Adkison</name>
            </respStmt>
            <item>Edited Ballad Catalogue Record</item>
         </change>
         <change>
            <date value="3/7/2016">3/7/2016</date>
            <respStmt>
               <resp>Checker</resp>
               <name>Katie Adkison</name>
            </respStmt>
            <item>Edited Ballad Catalogue Record</item>
         </change>
         <change>
            <date value="11/19/2015">11/19/2015</date>
            <respStmt>
               <resp>Checker</resp>
               <name>Rachel LevinsonEmley</name>
            </respStmt>
            <item>Edited Ballad Catalogue Record</item>
         </change>
         <change>
            <date value="1/20/2015">1/20/2015</date>
            <respStmt>
               <resp>Bibliographer</resp>
               <name>Rachel LevinsonEmley</name>
            </respStmt>
            <item>Initial Ballad Catalogue Record Created</item>
         </change>
      </revisionDesc>
   </teiHeader>
   <text>
      <body>
         <div type="ballad">
            <div type="part" n="1" >
               <head>
                  <title>
                     <seg n="1" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">The Jealous Lover satisfyd.</hi></seg>
                     <lb/>
                     <seg n="2" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">All you that do to love pretend,</hi></seg>
                     <seg n="3" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">Come lend an ear unto my song,</hi></seg>
                     <lb/>
                     <seg n="4" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">And say no more than you intend,</hi></seg>
                     <seg n="5" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">For therein you yourselves do wrong.</hi></seg>
                     <lb/>
                     <seg n="6" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">Tune of, <hi rend="bold">The gallant Youth of</hi> Gravesend.</hi></seg>
                  </title>
               </head>
               <div type="col" n ="1.1" >
                  <lg>
                     <l n="1" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">T</hi>Here was in <hi rend="italic">Bristol</hi> City fair</l>
                     <l n="2" rend="indent">a Maiden of a good degree,</l>
                     <l n="3" rend="left">To whom a young-man did repair</l>
                     <l n="4" rend="indent">and courted her most gallantly:</l>
                     <l n="5" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">These were the words to her he said,</hi></l>
                     <l n="6" rend="indent"><hi rend="italic">Sweet if thou dost my sute deny</hi></l>
                     <l n="7" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">I am undone, for ime afraid</hi></l>
                     <l n="8" rend="indent"><hi rend="italic">my heart will break, and I shall dye.</hi></l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="9" rend="left">Young-men are now so subtile grown</l>
                     <l n="10" rend="indent">and play their parts so cunningly,</l>
                     <l n="11" rend="left">We Maids had better lye alone,</l>
                     <l n="12" rend="indent">than covet for your company.</l>
                     <l n="13" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">Yet if I thought you would be true,</hi></l>
                     <l n="14" rend="indent"><hi rend="italic">as now you do pretend to me,</hi></l>
                     <l n="15" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">A single life id bid adieu,</hi></l>
                     <l n="16" rend="indent"><hi rend="italic">and be as kind as kind could be.</hi></l>
                  </lg>
               </div>
               <div type="col" n ="1.2" >
                  <lg>
                     <l n="17" rend="left">What unto thee I do pretend,</l>
                     <l n="18" rend="indent">is nothing more than what I mean;</l>
                     <l n="19" rend="left">Ile prove thy true and faithful friend,</l>
                     <l n="20" rend="indent">a kinder soul was never seen.</l>
                     <l n="21" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">These were the words, to her he said:</hi></l>
                     <l n="22" rend="indent"><hi rend="italic">Sweet if thou dost my sute deny</hi></l>
                     <l n="23" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">I am undone, for ime afraid</hi></l>
                     <l n="24" rend="indent"><hi rend="italic">my heart will break and I shall dye.</hi></l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="25" rend="left">How many men have vowd and swore,</l>
                     <l n="26" rend="indent">their wanton minds for to fulfill,</l>
                     <l n="27" rend="left">Then think upon their vows no more,</l>
                     <l n="28" rend="indent">which often provd to Maidens ill:</l>
                     <l n="29" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">Yet if I thought you would be true,</hi></l>
                     <l n="30" rend="indent"><hi rend="italic">as now you do pretend to me,</hi></l>
                     <l n="31" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">A single life id bid adieu,</hi></l>
                     <l n="32" rend="indent"><hi rend="italic">and be as kind as kind could be.</hi></l>
                  </lg>
               </div>
               <div type="col" n ="1.3" >
                  <lg>
                     <l n="33" rend="left">While life doth in my heart remain,</l>
                     <l n="34" rend="indent">most loyal I to thee will prove,</l>
                     <l n="35" rend="left">For here I vow and swear again</l>
                     <l n="36" rend="indent">that nothing shall my mind remove.</l>
                     <l n="37" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">These were the words, to her he said:</hi></l>
                     <l n="38" rend="indent"><hi rend="italic">Sweet if thou dost my sute deny</hi></l>
                     <l n="39" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">I am undone, for im afraid</hi></l>
                     <l n="40" rend="indent"><hi rend="italic">my heart will break and I shall dye.</hi></l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="41" rend="left">With that she took him by the hand</l>
                     <l n="42" rend="indent">and blushing seemed to comply,</l>
                     <l n="43" rend="left">Quoth she thou now shalt understand</l>
                     <l n="44" rend="indent">that for thy sake ile live and dye:</l>
                     <l n="45" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">And now I think thou wilt be true,</hi></l>
                     <l n="46" rend="indent"><hi rend="italic">as thou pretendest unto me,</hi></l>
                     <l n="47" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">A single life ile bid adieu,</hi></l>
                     <l n="48" rend="indent"><hi rend="italic">and be as kind as kind can be.</hi></l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="49" rend="left">When he did hear her charming voice</l>
                     <l n="50" rend="indent">part with such pretty words as these,</l>
                     <l n="51" rend="left">Oh how in heart he did rejoice,</l>
                     <l n="52" rend="indent">then Babies in her eyes he sees:</l>
                     <l n="53" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">Then lovingly to her he said,</hi></l>
                     <l n="54" rend="indent"><hi rend="italic">since thou dost not my love deny,</hi></l>
                     <l n="55" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">I will no longer be afraid</hi></l>
                     <l n="56" rend="indent"><hi rend="italic">that I for love of thee shall dye.</hi></l>
                  </lg>
               </div>
               <div type="col" n ="1.4" >
                  <lg>
                     <l n="57" rend="left">No, no, we will so well agree,</l>
                     <l n="58" rend="indent">that thou no more shalt doubtful be,</l>
                     <l n="59" rend="left">Ile banish all thy care and fear,</l>
                     <l n="60" rend="indent">and prove a faithful wife to thee:</l>
                     <l n="61" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">For now I think thou wilt be true,</hi></l>
                     <l n="62" rend="indent"><hi rend="italic">as thou pretendest unto me;</hi></l>
                     <l n="63" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">A single life ile bid adieu,</hi></l>
                     <l n="64" rend="indent"><hi rend="italic">and be as kind as kind can be.</hi></l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="65" rend="left">The wedding-day they pitchd upon</l>
                     <l n="66" rend="indent">and bravely it did solemnize,</l>
                     <l n="67" rend="left">Where all things decently were done,</l>
                     <l n="68" rend="indent">their hearts were both a sacrifice:</l>
                     <l n="69" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">And lovingly to her he said,</hi></l>
                     <l n="70" rend="indent"><hi rend="italic">since thou dost not my love deny,</hi></l>
                     <l n="71" rend="left"><hi rend="italic">I will no longer be afraid,</hi></l>
                     <l n="72" rend="indent"><hi rend="italic">that I for love of thee shall dye.</hi></l>
                  </lg>
                  <lg>
                     <l n="73" rend="left">Young-men &amp; Maids where ere you be</l>
                     <l n="74" rend="indent">take pattern by this loving pair,</l>
                     <l n="75" rend="left">And prove what you do seem to be,</l>
                     <l n="76" rend="indent">seek not each other to insnare;</l>
                     <l n="77" rend="left">But lovingly your hearts unite,</l>
                     <l n="78" rend="indent">so may you ever happy be;</l>
                     <l n="79" rend="left">Those that in falseness take delight</l>
                     <l n="80" rend="indent">will tumble into misery.</l>
                  </lg>
               </div>
               <closer>
               </closer>
            </div>
            <closer>
                  <seg n="1" rend="left"><hi rend="bold"><hi rend="italic">Printed for</hi></hi> <hi rend="italic">J. <hi rend="bold">B</hi>lare <hi rend="bold">on London-Bridge.</hi></hi></seg>
            </closer>
         </div>

      </body>
   </text>
</TEI.2>