“…65 "It is," as Helen Wilcox pertinently discerns, "from this perspective of looking back on the city, in actual or imaginary exile from it, that Whitney constructs a remarkable early modern cityscape" in the collection's concluding "Wyll and Testament." 66 This final portrait that Whitney (whose persona has only her "bookes and Pen" to sustain herself) offers of her alienation and forced banishment from London is intrinsically related-and, indeed, replies upon-what has been called the "carefully calibrate[d] … marginalized and disenfranchised poetic voice" that she cultivates throughout earlier sections of the work. 67 Socially, this "louyng … Sister," "poore Kinsewoman," and "vnfortunate Friend" is "all sole alone," spatially disconnected from her own family members and lacking "a Husband, or a house."…”