| Introduction  |  Contributors  |  Textual Introduction | 
| ←The hart & servys to yow profferd | What menythe thys when I lye alone→ | 
|  The Devonshire Manuscript facsimile 12r | 
 f. [12r] 
1     and  thys At most myscheffe
2    I suffer greffe
3    ffor off releffe
4    syns I have none
5    my lute & I
6    contynually
7    shall vs apply
8    to syghe & mone
9    Nowght may pre{p'}vayle
10    to wepe or wayle 
11    pety dothe fayle
12    in yow Alas
13    mornyng or mone
14    complaynt or none
15    yt ys Alone 
16    as in thys case
17    ffor cruelte
18    most that[[The Devonshire Manuscript/Appendix_I:_Paleographic_Features|{{th}+t+}]] can be
19    hathe suffraynte
20    with{w+t+}in yor hart
21    Whyche makythe bare
22    all my welffare
23    nowght do ye care
24    How sore I smart
25    No tygres hart
26    ys so per{p+}vart 1
27    with{w+t+}out Desart
28    to wreke hys yre
29    & you me kyll
30    ffor my good wyll
31    lo how I spyll
32    ffor my Desyre
33    Ther ys no love
34    that[[The Devonshire Manuscript/Appendix_I:_Paleographic_Features|{{th}+t+}]] can ye move
35    & I can prove
36    none other way
37    Wherfor I must
38    Refrayn me lust
39    banysshe me trust
40    & welthe Awaye
41    thus in myscheffe
42    I suffer greffe
43    ffor off releffe
44    syns I have none
45    my lute & I
46    contynually
47    shall vs apply
48    to syghe & mone
ffynys quod{q+d+} Wyatts
Notes & Glosses
     1.    The expansion can also be to "parvart."[1]  
Commentary
Attributed to Sir Thomas Wyatt[2] in the Devonshire Manuscript, this poem was entered by H2. Similar to other courtly poetry found in the Devonshire Manuscript, this poem describes a suffering lover and his cruel mistress.
This poem is one of seventeen entries where Margaret Douglas marks with “and thys.” Paul Remley has suggested that these annotations relate to another in-text annotation of hers, “lerne but to syng it” (81r), and may indicate a group of texts to be learned for entertaining.[3]
Works Cited
- ↑ See Anthony G. Petti, English Literary Hands from Chaucer to Dryden (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1977), 24.
- ↑ R.A. Rebholz, ed., Sir Thomas Wyatt: The Complete Poems (London: Penguin, 1978), 160.
- ↑ Paul Remley, "Mary Shelton and Her Tudor Literary Milieu," in Rethinking the Henrician Era: Essays on Early Tudor Texts and Contexts, ed. Peter C. Herman (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1994), 40-77.
Textual Notes
Texts Collated
Collation
1      most] moste DBla04 moost LEge03     myscheffe] myschyef DBla04 myschief LEge03 
2      suffer] suffre LEge03     greffe] gryeff DBla04 greif LEge03 
3      ffor] for DBla04 LEge03     off releffe] of relyef DBla04 of relief LEge03 
4      syns] sith DBla04     have] haue DBla04     none] noone DBla04 
5      my] My DBla04 LEge03     &] and DBla04 
6      contynually] continuelly LEge03 
8      syghe] sigh LEge03 wele syth DBla04     &] or and DBla04     mone] mon DBla04 
9      Nowght] Nought LEge03 Naught DBla04     may] doth DBla04     prevayle] prevaill LEge03 
10      wepe] sighe DBla04     wayle] waill LEge03 
11      pety] pitie LEge03 sens pety DBla04     dothe] Doth DBla04 doeth LEge03     fayle] faill LEge03 
12      yow] you LEge03 DBla04     Alas] al DBla04 
13      mornyng] Mornyng DBla04 Morning LEge03 
14      complaynt] complaynte DBla04 complaint LEge03 
15      yt] hit DBla04     yt ys Alone] it is all one LEge03 hit ys alone DBla04 
16      thys] this DBla04 LEge03 
17      cruelte] crueltye DBla04 crueltie LEge03 
18      most] moste DBla04 moost LEge03     can] may DBla04 
19      hathe] hath DBla04 LEge03     suffraynte] sufferaunte DBla04 soveraynte LEge03 
20      yor] youre DBla04 your LEge03     hart] harte DBla04 hert LEge03 
21      Whyche] Which LEge03 and DBla04     makythe] maketh LEge03 makith DBla04 
22      welffare] welfare DBla04 LEge03 
23      nowght] nought LEge03     nowght do ye] naught doo you DBla04 
24      How] how DBla04 LEge03 
25      No] Noo DBla04     No tygres hart]  LEge03     tygres] tygurs DBla04 
26      ys so pervart]  LEge03     so] soo DBla04     pervart] pervarte DBla04 
27      without Desart]  LEge03     Desart] desarte DBla04 
28      to wreke hys yre]  LEge03     hys yre] his Ire DBla04 
29      & you] And ye DBla04     & you me kyll]  LEge03 
30      ffor] for DBla04     ffor my good wyll]  LEge03 
31      lo] Lov DBla04     lo how I spyll]  LEge03 
32      ffor] for DBla04     ffor my Desyre]  LEge03     Desyre] desyre DBla04 
33      Ther] There DBla04     Ther ys no love]  LEge03     no] noo DBla04 
34      that can ye move]  LEge03     ye] you DBla04 
35      &] and DBla04     & I can prove]  LEge03     can] cann DBla04 
36      none] no DBla04     none other way]  LEge03     other] nother DBla04 
37      Wherfor] Wherfore DBla04     Wherfor I must]  LEge03 
38      Refrayn me] refrayne my DBla04     Refrayn me lust]  LEge03     lust] luste DBla04 
39      banysshe] banyshe DBla04 and banyshe DBla04     banysshe me trust]  LEge03     me]  DBla04 
40      & welthe Awaye] frome me alway DBla04  LEge03 
41      thus] Thus DBla04     thus in myscheffe]  LEge03     myscheffe] myschyef & c / DBla04 
42      I suffer greffe]  DBla04 LEge03 
43      ffor off releffe]  DBla04 LEge03 
44      syns I have none]  DBla04 LEge03 
45      my lute & I]  DBla04 LEge03 
46      contynually]  DBla04 LEge03 
47      shall vs apply]  DBla04 LEge03 
48      to syghe & mone]  DBla04 LEge03