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               <ref target="https://uwaterloo.ca/">University of Waterloo</ref>
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               <p>Peter Cockett is an associate professor in the iArts (Integrated Arts) program at McMaster University. He is the co-editor, with Melinda Gough, of <title level="m">Engendering the Stage in the Age of Shakespeare and Beyond</title> (University of Toronto Press, 2025) which publishes the findings of their 2018 Performance as Research (PaR) workshop at the Stratford Festival Lab. He is the general editor (performance), and technical co-ordinating editor of <title level="m">Queen’s Men Editions</title>. His PaR directing credits include <title level="m">King Leir</title>, <title level="m">The Famous Victories of Henry V</title>, and <title level="m">Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay</title> (2006), <title level="m">Clyomon and Clamydes</title> (2010), and <title level="m">Three Ladies of London</title> (2015) for the Shakespeare and the Queen’s Men project (SQM). The process behind the 2006 productions is documented in depth on the project website <ref target="https://thequeensmen.ca/"><title level="m">Performing the Queen’s Men</title></ref>. For the PLS, the University of Toronto’s Medieval and Renaissance Players, he has directed the Digby <title level="m">Mary Magdalene</title> (2003) and the double bill of George Peele’s <title level="m">The Old Wives Tale</title> and the Chester <title level="m">Antichrist</title> (2004). He also directed <title level="m">An Experiment in Elizabethan Comedy</title> (2005) for the SQM project and <title level="m">Inside Out: The Persistence of Allegory</title> (2008) in collaboration with Alan Dessen. Peter is a professional actor and director with numerous stage and screen credits. He can be contacted at <ref target="mailto:cockett@mcmaster.ca">cockett@mcmaster.ca</ref>.</p>
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               <p>Junior Programmer 2019–2020. Research Associate 2020–2021. Tracey received her PhD from the Department of English at the University of Victoria in the field of Science and Technology Studies. Her research focuses on the <term>algorhythmics</term> of networked communications. She was a 2019–2020 President’s Fellow in Research-Enriched Teaching at UVic, where she taught an advanced course on <title level="a">Artificial Intelligence and Everyday Life.</title> Tracey was also a member of the <title level="m">Map of Early Modern London</title> team, between 2018 and 2021. Between 2020 and 2021, she was a fellow in residence at the Praxis Studio for Comparative Media Studies, where she investigated the relationships between artificial intelligence, creativity, health, and justice. As of July 2021, Tracey has moved into the alt-ac world for a term position, while also teaching in the English Department at the University of Victoria.</p>
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               <p>Project Manager, 2025-present; Assistant Project Manager, 2024-2025; Research Assistant, 2021-present. Mahayla Galliford (she/her) graduated from the University of Victoria with a BA (honours with distinction) in 2024, and an MA English in 2026. Mahayla’s undergraduate research explored early modern stage directions and civic water pageantry. Her SSHRC-funded MA thesis project focuses on transcribing, editing, and encoding early modern girls’ manuscripts, specifically Lady Rachel Fane’s <title level="m">May Masque</title> in collaboration with LEMDO.</p>
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               <p>Andrew Griffin is an associate professor in the department of English and an affiliate professor in the department of Theater and Dance at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He is general editor (text) of Queen’s Men Editions. He studies early modern drama and early modern historiography while serving as the lead editor at the <ref target="http://emcimprint.english.ucsb.edu">EMC Imprint</ref>. He has co-edited with Helen Ostovich and Holger Schott Syme <title level="m">Locating the Queen’s Men</title> (2009) and has co-edited <title level="m">The Making of a Broadside Ballad</title> (2016) with Patricia Fumerton and Carl Stahmer. His monograph, <ref target="https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/renaissance-quarterly/article/untimely-deaths-in-renaissance-drama-biography-history-catastrophe-andrew-griffin-toronto-university-of-toronto-press-2019-x-198-pp-45/D1154E832B251D4BEC76BD5504351063"><title level="m">Untimely Deaths in Renaissance Drama: Biography, History, Catastrophe</title></ref>, was published with the University of Toronto Press in 2019. He is editor of the anonymous <title level="m">The Chronicle History of King Leir</title> (Queen’s Men Editions, 2011). He can be contacted at <ref target="mailto:griffin@english.ucsb.edu">griffin@english.ucsb.edu</ref>.</p>
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               <p>Martin Holmes has worked as a developer in the UVic’s Humanities Computing and Media Centre for over two decades, and has been involved with dozens of Digital Humanities projects. He has served on the TEI Technical Council and as Managing Editor of the Journal of the TEI. He took over from Joey Takeda as lead developer on LEMDO in 2020. He is a collaborator on the SSHRC Partnership Grant led by Janelle Jenstad.</p>
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               <p>Janelle Jenstad is a Professor of English at the University of Victoria, Director of <ref target="https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca">The Map of Early Modern London</ref>, and Director of <ref target="https://lemdo.uvic.ca">Linked Early Modern Drama Online</ref>. With Jennifer Roberts-Smith and Mark Beatrice Kaethler, she co-edited <title level="m">Shakespeare’s Language in Digital Media: Old Words, New Tools</title> (Routledge). She has edited John Stow’s <title level="m">A Survey of London</title> (1598 text) for MoEML and is currently editing <title level="m">The Merchant of Venice</title> (with Stephen Wittek) and Heywood’s <title level="m">2 If You Know Not Me You Know Nobody</title> for DRE. Her articles have appeared in <title level="j">Digital Humanities Quarterly</title>, <title level="j">Elizabethan Theatre</title>, <title level="j">Early Modern Literary Studies</title>, <title level="j">Shakespeare Bulletin</title>, <title level="j">Renaissance and Reformation</title>, and <title level="j">The Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies</title>. She contributed chapters to <title level="m">Approaches to Teaching Othello</title> (MLA); <title level="m">Teaching Early Modern Literature from the Archives</title> (MLA); <title level="m">Institutional Culture in Early Modern England</title> (Brill); <title level="m">Shakespeare, Language, and the Stage</title> (Arden); <title level="m">Performing Maternity in Early Modern England</title> (Ashgate); <title level="m">New Directions in the Geohumanities</title> (Routledge); <title level="m">Early Modern Studies and the Digital Turn</title> (Iter); <title level="m">Placing Names: Enriching and Integrating Gazetteers</title> (Indiana); <title level="m">Making Things and Drawing Boundaries</title> (Minnesota); <title level="m">Rethinking Shakespeare Source Study: Audiences, Authors, and Digital Technologies</title> (Routledge); and <title level="m">Civic Performance: Pageantry and Entertainments in Early Modern London</title> (Routledge). For more details, see <ref target="https://janellejenstad.com/">janellejenstad.com</ref>.</p>
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               <p>Project Manager, 2020–2021. Assistant Project Manager, 2019–2020. Textual Remediator and Encoder, 2019–2021. Kate LeBere completed her BA (Hons.) in History and English at the University of Victoria in 2020. During her degree she published papers in <title level="j">The Corvette</title> (2018), <title level="j">The Albatross</title> (2019), and <title level="j">PLVS VLTRA</title> (2020) and presented at the English Undergraduate Conference (2019), Qualicum History Conference (2020), and the Digital Humanities Summer Institute’s Project Management in the Humanities Conference (2021). While her primary research focus was sixteenth and seventeenth century England, she completed her honours thesis on Soviet ballet during the Russian Cultural Revolution. She is currently a student at the University of British Columbia’s iSchool, working on her masters in library and information science.</p>
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               <forename>Toby</forename>
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               <p>Toby Malone is an Australian/Canadian academic, dramaturg, and librarian. He is a graduate of the University of Toronto (PhD, 2009) and the University of Western Australia (BA Hons, 2001), and the University of Western Ontario (MLIS, 2023). He has worked as a theatre artist across the world, with companies including the Stratford Festival, Canadian Stage, Soulpepper, Driftwood Theatre Group, the Shaw Festival, Poorboy Theatre Scotland, Pittsburgh Public Theatre, Arizona Theatre Company, CBC, BT/A, and Kill Shakespeare Entertainment. He has published in <title level="j">Shakespeare Survey</title>, <title level="j">Literature/Film Quarterly</title>, <title level="j">Canadian Theatre Review</title>, <title level="j">Borrowers and Lenders</title>, <title level="j">Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Literature</title>, appears in published collections with Routledge, Cambridge, and Oxford. Publications include two monographs: <title level="m">dapting War Horse</title> (Palgrave McMillan) and <title level="m">Cutting Plays for Performance: A Practical and Accessible Guide</title> (Routledge), and is currently co-writing an updated version of <title level="m">Shakespeare in Performance: Romeo and Juliet</title> with Jill L. Levenson for Manchester UP. Toby has previously taught at the University of Waterloo and the State University of New York at Oswego, is currently Research Impact Librarian at Toronto Metropolitan University.
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            <note>
               <p>Helen Ostovich, professor emerita of English at McMaster University, is the founder and general editor of <title level="m">Queen’s Men Editions</title>. She is a general editor of The Revels Plays (Manchester University Press); Series Editor of Studies in Performance and Early Modern Drama (Ashgate, now Routledge), and series co-editor of Late Tudor and Stuart Drama (MIP); play-editor of several works by Ben Jonson, in <title level="m">Four Comedies: Ben Jonson</title> (1997); <title level="m">Every Man Out of his Humour</title> (Revels 2001); and <title level="m">The Magnetic Lady</title> (Cambridge 2012). She has also edited the Norton Shakespeare 3 <title level="m">The Merry Wives of Windsor</title> Q1602 and F1623 (2015); <title level="m">The Late Lancashire Witches</title> and <title level="m">A Jovial Crew</title> for <ref target="https://www.dhi.ac.uk/brome/intro.jsp"><title level="m">Richard Brome Online</title></ref>, revised for a 4-volume set from OUP 2021; <title level="m">The Ball</title>, for the Oxford Complete Works of James Shirley (2021); <title level="m">The Merry Wives of Windsor</title> for Internet Shakespeare Editions, and <title level="m">The Dutch Courtesan</title> (with Erin Julian) for the Complete Works of John Marston, OUP 2022. She has published many articles and book chapters on Jonson, Shakespeare, and others, and several book collections, most recently <title level="m">Magical Transformations of the Early Modern English Stage</title> with Lisa Hopkins (2014), and the equivalent to book website, <title level="m">Performance as Research in Early English Theatre Studies:</title> The Three Ladies of London <title level="m">in Context</title> containing scripts, glossary, almost fifty conference papers edited and updated to essays; video; link to <title level="m">Queen’s Mens Ediitons</title> and YouTube: <ref target="http://threeladiesoflondon.mcmaster.ca/contexts/index.htm">http://threeladiesoflondon.mcmaster.ca/contexts/index.htm</ref>, 2015. Recently, she was guest editor of Strangers and Aliens in London ca 1605, Special Issue on Marston, <title level="m">Early Theatre</title> 23.1 (June 2020). She can be contacted at <ref target="mailto:ostovich@mcmaster.ca">ostovich@mcmaster.ca</ref>.</p>
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            <note>
               <p>Jennifer Parr holds a Masters degree in European and Renaissance Drama from the  University of Warwick. She is an independent scholar and professional director and dramaturge based in Toronto. As an undergraduate at the University of Toronto she became  involved as an actor with the P.L.S. Medieval and Renaissance Players’ productions of the Medieval Mystery Cycles returning later to direct an all female company in the York Cycle Fall of the Angels for the international full cycle production in 1998. Her recent productions as director and dramaturge include an all female <title level="m">Julius Caesar</title> and an experimental all female adaptation of <title level="m">Richard III</title>: <title level="m">RIchard 3, Queens 4</title>. Her ongoing research into the historical Richard III and the various theatrical interpretations led to her joining the company of TTR3 as an observer and historical resource for the cast. She also writes a monthly column on music theatre and dance for <title level="m">The WholeNote</title> magazine.</p>
            </note>
         </person>
         <person xml:id="ROBE2" copyOf="PERS1.xml#ROBE2">
            <persName>
               <reg>Jennifer Roberts-Smith</reg>
               <forename>Jennifer</forename>
               <surname>Roberts-Smith</surname>
            </persName>
            <note>
               <p>Jennifer Roberts-Smith is an associate professor of theatre and performance at the University of Waterloo. Her interdisciplinary work in early modern performance editing combines textual scholarship, performance as research, archival theatre history, and design in the development of live and virtual renderings of early modern performance texts, venues, and practices. With Janelle Jenstad and Mark Beatrice Kaethler, she is co-editor of <title level="m">Shakespeare’s Language in Digital Media: Old Words New Tools</title> (2018). Her most recent work has focused on methods for design research that deepen interdisciplinary understanding and take a relational approach. She is currently managing director of the <ref target="http://www.qcollaborative.com/">qCollaborative</ref> (the critical feminist design research lab housed in the <ref target="https://uwaterloo.ca/games-institute/">University of Waterloo’s Games Institute</ref>, and leads the SSHRC-funded Theatre for Relationality and Design for Peace projects. She is also creative director and virtual reality development cluster lead for the Digital Oral Histories for Reconciliation (DOHR) project. She can be contacted at <ref target="mailto:j33rober@uwaterloo.ca">jennifer.roberts-smith@uwaterloo.ca</ref>.</p>
            </note>
         </person>
         <person xml:id="SEAB1" copyOf="PERS1.xml#SEAB1">
            <persName>
               <reg>Samuel Seaberg</reg>
               <forename>Samuel</forename>
               <surname>Seaberg</surname>
            </persName>
            <note>
               <p>Samuel Seaberg, a University of Victoria English undergrad, enjoys riding his bike. During the summer of 2025, he began working with LEMDO as a recipient of the Valerie Kuehne Undergraduate Research Award (VKURA). Unfortunately, due to his summer being spent primarily in working to establish an edition of Thomas Heywood’s <title level="m">If You Know Not Me, You Know Nobody, Part 2</title> and consequently working out how to represent multi-text works in a digital space, his bike has suffered severely of sheltered seclusion from the sun. Note: Samuel now works for LEMDO as the Assistant Project Manager, much to his bike’s chagrin.</p>
            </note>
         </person>
         <person xml:id="SENY1" copyOf="PERS1.xml#SENY1">
            <persName>
               <reg>Dimitry Senyshyn</reg>
               <forename>Dimitry</forename>
               <surname>Senyshyn</surname>
            </persName>
            <note>
               <p>Dimitry Senyshyn (<title level="m">Clyomon and Clamydes</title>, text) has current research focusing on Shakespeare’s tragicomic romances and their relation to a native tradition of popular romance. He has co-edited an old-spelling edition of <title level="m">The True Tragedie of Richard the Third</title> for <title level="m">QME</title> with Jennifer Robert-Smith. He contributed to the preparation of the REED <title level="m">Inns of Court</title> volume, and he has published in <title level="m">Theatre Research in Canada</title>, <title level="m">Early Theatre</title>, and the <title level="m">Encyclopedia of the Bible and its Reception</title>. He can be contacted at <ref target="mailto:dimitry.senyshyn@gmail.com">dimitry.senyshyn@gmail.com</ref>.</p>
            </note>
         </person>
         <person xml:id="TAKE1" copyOf="PERS1.xml#TAKE1">
            <persName>
               <reg>Joey Takeda</reg>
               <forename>Joey</forename>
               <surname>Takeda</surname>
            </persName>
            <note>
               <p>Joey Takeda is LEMDO’s Consulting Programmer and Designer, a role he assumed in 2020 after three years as the Lead Developer on LEMDO.</p>
            </note>
         </person>
         <person xml:id="VATC1" copyOf="PERS1.xml#VATC1">
            <persName type="cont">
               <reg>Nicole Vatcher</reg>
               <forename>Nicole</forename>
               <surname>Vatcher</surname>
               <abbr>NV</abbr>
            </persName>
            <note>
               <p>Technical Documentation Writer, 2020–2022. Nicole Vatcher completed her BA (Hons.) in English at the University of Victoria in 2021. Her primary research focus was women’s writing in the modernist period.</p>
            </note>
         </person>
         <person xml:id="ANON1" copyOf="PROS1.xml#ANON1">
            <persName>
               <reg>Anonymous</reg>
            </persName>
         </person>
         <person xml:id="CHUR7" copyOf="PROS1.xml#CHUR7">
            <persName>
               <reg>Thomas Churchyard</reg>
               <forename>Thomas</forename>
               <surname>Churchyard</surname>
            </persName>
         </person>
      </listPerson>
      <listBibl>
         <bibl xml:id="CHUR8" copyOf="BIBL1.xml#CHUR8">
            <author>Churchyard, Thomas</author>. <title level="a">How Shore’s Wife, King Edward the Fourth’s Concubine, was by King Richard despoiled of all her goods, and forced to do open penance</title>. <title level="m">Mirror for Magistrates</title>. <pubPlace>London</pubPlace>: for <publisher>Thomas Marshe</publisher>, <date>1563</date>. Z1v-Z8v. STC <idno type="STC">1248</idno>.</bibl>
         <bibl xml:id="OEDT2" copyOf="BIBL1.xml#OEDT2">
            <title level="m">OED: The Oxford English Dictionary</title>. 2nd ed. <publisher>Oxford University Press</publisher>, <date>1989</date>.</bibl>
      </listBibl>
      <listOrg>
         <org xml:id="LEMD1" copyOf="ORGS1.xml#LEMD1">
            <orgName>
               <reg>LEMDO Team</reg>
            </orgName>
            <note>The LEMDO Team is based at the University of Victoria and normally comprises the project director, the lead developer, project manager, junior developers(s), remediators, encoders, and remediating editors.</note>
         </org>
         <org xml:id="UVIC1" copyOf="ORGS1.xml#UVIC1">
            <orgName>
               <reg>University of Victoria</reg>
            </orgName>
            <idno type="URI">https://www.uvic.ca/</idno>
         </org>
         <org xml:id="QMEB1" n="qmeEditorialBoard" copyOf="ORGS1.xml#QMEB1">
            <orgName>
               <reg>QME Editorial Board</reg>
            </orgName>
            <note>
               <p>The QME Editorial Board consists of <persName ref="#OSTO1">Helen Ostovich</persName>, General Editor; <persName ref="#COCK1">Peter Cockett</persName>, General Editor (Performance); <persName ref="#GRIF1">Andrew Griffin</persName>, General Editor (Text); and <persName ref="#JENS1">Janelle Jenstad</persName>  General Editor (Text).</p>
            </note>
         </org>
      </listOrg>
   </standOff>
   <text>
      <body>
         <div xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_source">
            <head>Source</head>
            <p>Modernized excerpts of <title level="a">How Shore’s Wife, King Edward the Fourth’s Concubine, was by King Richard despoiled of all her goods, and forced to do open penance.</title> prepared from <title level="m">Mirror for Magistrates</title> (<ref type="bibl" target="#CHUR8">Churchyard</ref>).</p></div>
         <div xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_content">
         <lg>
            <l>I joined my talk, my gestures, and my grace</l>
            <l>In witty frames, that long might last and stand,</l>
            <l>So that I brought the king in such a case,</l>
            <l>That <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_1"/>to<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_2"/><note type="editorial">Up until.</note> his death I was his chiefest hand.</l>
            <l><anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_47"/>I governed him that ruled all this land:</l>
            <l>I bare the sword, though he did wear the crown<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_48"/>,</l>
            <l>I <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_3"/>strake<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_4"/><note type="editorial">Struck, swung.</note> the stroke that threw the mighty down.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>If justice said that judgment was but death,</l>
            <l>With my sweet words I could the king persuade,</l>
            <l>And make him pause and take therein a breath,</l>
            <l>Till I with suite the faulter’s peace had made.</l>
            <l>I knew what way to use him in his trade,</l>
            <l>I had the art to make the lion meek,</l>
            <l>There was no point wherein I was to seek.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l><anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_45"/>I took delight in doing each man good,</l>
            <l>Not <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_5"/>scratting<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_6"/><note type="editorial">Aiding, helping.</note> all myself as all were mine,</l>
            <l>But looked whose life in need and danger stood,</l>
            <l>And those I kept from harm with cunning fine<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_46"/></l>
            <l>On prince’s train I always cast mine eyne.</l>
            <l>For lifting up the servants of a king,</l>
            <l>I did through court myself in favor bring.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>I offered aid before they sued to me,</l>
            <l>And promised naught, but would perform it straight.</l>
            <l>I shaked down sweet fruit from top of tree,</l>
            <l>Made spies fall in laps of men by sleight.</l>
            <l>I did good turns whiles that I was a height,</l>
            <l>For fear a flaw of wind would make me reel,</l>
            <l>And blow me down when Fortune turned her wheel.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>I filled no chests with <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_7"/>chinks<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_8"/><note type="editorial">Pieces of money (<ref type="bibl" target="#OEDT2"><title level="m">OED</title>
               <term>chink</term>, n.3 3</ref>).</note> to <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_9"/>cherish age,<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_10"/><note type="editorial">Provide for later in life.</note></l>
            <l>But in the hearts of people laid my gold.</l>
            <l>Sought love of lord, of master, and of page,</l>
            <l>And for no bribe I never favor sold.</l>
            <l>I had enough, I might do what I would,</l>
            <l>Save spend or give or fling it on the ground,</l>
            <l>The more I gave the more in purse I found.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>If I did frown, who then did look awry?</l>
            <l>If I did smile, who would not laugh outright?</l>
            <l>If I but spake, who durst my words deny?</l>
            <l>If I pursued, who would forsake the flight?</l>
            <l>I mean, my power was known to every <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_11"/>wight:<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_12"/><note type="editorial">Person, creature (<ref type="bibl" target="#OEDT2"><title level="m">OED</title>
               <term>wight</term>, n. 1.a</ref>).</note></l>
            <l>On such a height good hap had built my bower,</l>
            <l>As though my sweet should ne’er have turned to sour.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>My husband then, as one that knew his good,</l>
            <l>Refused to keep a prince’s concubine.</l>
            <l>Foreseeing th’ end, and mischief as it stood,</l>
            <l>Against the king did never much <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_13"/>repine:<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_14"/><note type="editorial">Grumble, complain (<ref type="bibl" target="#OEDT2"><title level="m">OED</title>
               <term>repine</term>, v. 1.a</ref>).</note></l>
            <l>He saw the grape whereof he drank the wine.</l>
            <l>Though inward thought his heart did still torment,</l>
            <l>Yet outwardly he seemed he was content.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>To purchase praise, and win the people’s scale,</l>
            <l>Yea, rather bent of kind to do some good,</l>
            <l>I ever did uphold the common weal.</l>
            <l>I had delight to save the guiltless blood:</l>
            <l>Each suitor’s cause, when that I understood,</l>
            <l>I did prefer as it had been mine own,</l>
            <l>And help them up, that might have been o’erthrown.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>My power was pressed to right the poor man’s wrong,</l>
            <l>My hands were free to give where need required.</l>
            <l>To watch for grace I never thought it long:</l>
            <l>To do men good I need not be desired,</l>
            <l>Nor yet with gifts my heart was never hired.</l>
            <l>But when the ball was at my foot to guide,</l>
            <l>I played to those that fortune did abide.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>My want was wealth, my woe was ease at will,</l>
            <l>My robbers were rich, and braver than the sun.</l>
            <l>My fortune then was far above my skill,</l>
            <l>My state was great, my <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_15"/>glass<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_16"/><note type="editorial">Hourglass, time.</note> did ever run:</l>
            <l>My <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_17"/>fatal thread<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_18"/><note type="editorial">Length of time allotted on earth by the Fates.</note> so happily was spun,</l>
            <l>That then I sat in earthly pleasures clad,</l>
            <l>And for the time a goddess’ place I had.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <gap reason="sampling"/>
         
         <lg>
            <l>As long as life was remained in Edward’s breast,</l>
            <l>Who was but I? Who had such friends at call?</l>
            <l>His body was no sooner put in <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_19"/>chest,<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_20"/><note type="editorial">A coffin.</note></l>
            <l><anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_49"/>But well was he that could procure my fall.</l>
            <l>His brother was mine enemy most of all,</l>
            <l>Protector then, whose vice did still abound,</l>
            <l>From ill to worse, till death did him confound<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_50"/>.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>He falsely feigned that I of counsel was</l>
            <l>To poison him, which thing I never meant,</l>
            <l>But he could set thereon <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_21"/>a face of brass,<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_22"/><note type="editorial">An impassive, stern look.</note></l>
            <l>To bring to pass his lewd and false intent.</l>
            <l>To such mischief this tyrant’s heart was bent,</l>
            <l>To God, <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_23"/>ne<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_24"/><note type="editorial">Nor.</note> man, he never stood in awe,</l>
            <l>For in his wrath he made his will a law.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>Lord Hastings’ blood for vengeance on him cries,</l>
            <l>And many more, that were too long to name,</l>
            <l>But most of all, and in most woeful wise,</l>
            <l>I had good cause this wretched man to blame.</l>
            <l>Before the world I suffered open shame,</l>
            <l>Where people were as thick as is the sand,</l>
            <l>I penance took, with <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_25"/>taper<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_26"/><note type="editorial">Wax candle for devotional or penitential purposes (<ref type="bibl" target="#OEDT2"><title level="m">OED</title>
               <term>taper</term>, n.1 a</ref>).</note> in my hand.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>Each eye did stare and look me in the face:</l>
            <l>As I passed by, the rumors on me ran,</l>
            <l>But patience then had lent me such a grace,</l>
            <l>My quiet looks were praised of every man.</l>
            <l>The shamefast blood brought me such color then,</l>
            <l>That thousands said, which saw my sober cheer,</l>
            <l>It is great <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_27"/>ruth<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_28"/><note type="editorial">Compassion, sorrow (<ref type="bibl" target="#OEDT2"><title level="m">OED</title>
               <term>ruth</term>, n. 1</ref>).</note> to see this woman here.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>But what prevailed the people’s pity there?</l>
            <l>This raging wolf would spare so guiltless blood:</l>
            <l>Oh wicked womb, that such ill fruit did bear!</l>
            <l>Oh cursed earth, that yieldeth forth such mud!</l>
            <l>The hell consume all things that did thee good,</l>
            <l>The heavens shut their gates against thy spirit,</l>
            <l>The world tread down thy glory under foot.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>I ask of God a vengeance on thy bones:</l>
            <l>Thy stinking corpse corrupts the air I know.</l>
            <l>Thy shameful death no earthly wight bemoans,</l>
            <l>For in thy life thy works were hated so,</l>
            <l>That every man did wish thy overthrow,</l>
            <l>Wherefore I may, though partial now I am,</l>
            <l>Curse every cause whereof thy body came.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>Woe worth the man that fathered such a child!</l>
            <l>Woe worth the hour wherein thou wast begat!</l>
            <l>Woe worth the breasts that have the world beguiled</l>
            <l>To nourish thee, that all the world did hate!</l>
            <l>Woe worth the gods that gave thee such a fate</l>
            <l>To lie so long, that death deserved so oft:</l>
            <l>Woe worth the chance that set thee up aloft.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>Woe worth the day, the time, the hour, and all,</l>
            <l>When subjects clapped the crown on Richard’s head!</l>
            <l>Woe worth the lords, that sat in sumptuous hall,</l>
            <l>To honor him that <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_29"/>princes’ blood<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_30"/><note type="editorial">The young princes in the Tower, king Edward V and Richard, duke of York, who are supposed to have died at Richard’s command around 1483.</note> so shed!</l>
            <l>Would God he had been boiled in scalding lead,</l>
            <l>When he presumed in brother’s seat to sit,</l>
            <l>Whose wretched rage ruled all with wicked wit.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>Ye princes all, and rulers everyone,</l>
            <l>In punishment beware of hatred’s ire.</l>
            <l>Before ye scourge, take heed, look well thereon:</l>
            <l>In wrath’s ill will, if malice kindle fire,</l>
            <l>Your hearts will burn in such a hot desire,</l>
            <l>That in those flames the smoke shall dim your sight,</l>
            <l>Ye shall forget to join your justice right.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>You should not judge till things he well discerned,</l>
            <l>Your charge is still to maintain upright laws,</l>
            <l>In conscience rules ye should be thoroughly learned,</l>
            <l>Where clemency bids wrath and rashness pause,</l>
            <l>And further sayeth, strike not without a cause:</l>
            <l>And when ye smite do it for justice sake,</l>
            <l>Then in good part each man your scourge will take.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>If that such scale had moved this tyrant’s mind,</l>
            <l>To make my plague a warning for the rest,</l>
            <l>I had small cause such fault in him to find,</l>
            <l>Such punishment is used for the best,</l>
            <l>But by ill will and power I was oppressed:</l>
            <l>He <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_31"/>spoiled<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_32"/><note type="editorial">Confiscated.</note> my goods, and left me bare and poor,</l>
            <l>And caused me to beg from door to door.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>What fall was this, to come from prince’s fare,</l>
            <l>To <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_33"/>watch<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_34"/><note type="editorial">Scrounge, scavenge.</note> for crumbs among the blind and lame?</l>
            <l>When alms were dealt I had an hungry share,</l>
            <l>Because I knew not how to ask for shame,</l>
            <l>Till force and need had brought me in such frame,</l>
            <l>That starve I must, or learn to beg an alms,</l>
            <l>With book in hand, to say <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_35"/>St. David’s psalms.<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_36"/><note type="editorial">David, king of Israel, wrote the majority of the Bible’s psalms.</note></l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>Where I was wont the golden chains to wear,</l>
            <l>A pair of beads about my neck was wound,</l>
            <l>A linen cloth was lapped about my hair,</l>
            <l>A ragged gown that trailed on the ground,</l>
            <l>A dish that clapped and gave a heavy sound,</l>
            <l>A <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_37"/>staying<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_38"/><note type="editorial">Steadying.</note> staff and wallet therewithal,</l>
            <l>I bare about as witness of my fall.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>The fall of leaf is nothing like the spring,</l>
            <l>Each eye beholds the rising of the sun,</l>
            <l>All men admire the favor of a king:</l>
            <l>And from great states grown in disgrace they run,</l>
            <l>Such sudden claps <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_39"/>ne<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_40"/><note type="editorial">Not.</note> wit nor will can shun:</l>
            <l>For when the stool is taken from our feet,</l>
            <l>Full flat on floor the body falls in street.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>I had no house wherein to hide my head,</l>
            <l>The open street my lodging was perforce.</l>
            <l>Full oft I went all hungry to my bed,</l>
            <l>My flesh consumed, I looked like a corpse.</l>
            <l>Yet in that plight who had on me remorse:</l>
            <l>O God, thou knowest my friends forsook me then,</l>
            <l>Not one <anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_41"/>holp<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_42"/><note type="editorial">Helped, aided.</note> me, that succored many a man.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>They frowned on me that fawned on me before,</l>
            <l>And fled from me, that followed me full fast:</l>
            <l>They hated me, by whom I set much store,</l>
            <l>They knew full well my fortune did not last.</l>
            <l>In every place, I was condemned and cast,</l>
            <l>To plead my cause at bar it was no boot,</l>
            <l>For every man did tread me underfoot.</l>
         </lg>
         
         <lg>
            <l>Thus long I lived, all weary of my life,</l>
            <l>Till death approached, and rid me from that woe.</l>
            <l>Example take by me, both maid and wife,</l>
            <l><anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_43"/>Beware, take heed, fall not to folly so:</l>
            <l><anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_51"/>A mirror make by my great overthrow.<anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_52"/></l>
            <l>Defy the world and all his wanton ways,</l>
            <l><anchor xml:id="emdTTR3_Shoreswife_anc_44"/>Beware by me, that spent so ill her days.</l>
         </lg>
      </div></body>
   </text>
</TEI>
