LEADER 00000cam 22000001 4500 001 ocm00350536 003 OCoLC 005 20091009010008.0 008 730904s1953 nyu 000 0 eng 010 53010457 035 (OCoLC)00350536 035 (OCoLC)350536 040 DLC|beng|cDLC|dOCLCQ|dTBS|dBTCTA|dLVB|dIBS 043 e-uk---|ae-uk-en 049 MCPL 050 00 PR1125|b.H4 082 00 820.82 100 1 Hebel, J. William|q(John William),|d1891-1934,|eeditor. 245 10 Tudor poetry and prose /|cselected from early editions and manuscripts and edited by J. William Hebel .. [and others].. 264 1 New York :|bAppleton-Century-Crofts|c[1953] 300 1375 pages ;|c22 cm 336 text|btxt|2rdacontent 337 unmediated|bn|2rdamedia 338 volume|bnc|2rdacarrier 500 "[Brings] together ... the material ... included in two books already published: (1) Hebel and Hudson's Poetry of the English Renaissance ... and (2) Hebel, Hudson, Johnson, and Green's Prose of the English Renaissance." 505 00 |gTudor poetry.|tPhilip Sparrow ;|tColin Clout ;|tTo Mistress Isabel Pennell ;|tTo Mistress Margaret Hussey ; |tA prayer to the Father of heaven /|rJohn Skelton -- |tPastime with good company ;|tWhereto should I express ; |tWhoso that will ;|tGreen groweth the holly /|rHenry VIII --|tChildhood ;|tManhood ;|tAge /|rSir Thomas More --|tTwo short ballettes, made for his pastime while he was prisoner in the Tower of London.|tLewis, the lost lover ; |tDavy, the dicer /|rSir Thomas More --|tA praise of his lady ;|tJack and his father ;|tOf loving a dog ;|tOf a sheep's eye ;|tOf enough and a feast ;|tOf late and never ;|tOf a cat's look ;|tOf Heywood /|rJohn Heywood --|tThe lover compareth his state to a ship in perilous storm tossed on the sea ;|tThe lover's life compared to the Alps ;|tDescription of the contrarious passions in a lover ; |tThe lover for shamefastness hideth his desire within his faithful heart ;|tA renouncing of love ;|tWhoso list to hunt ;|tDivers doth use ;|tOf his return from Spain ;|tOf such as had forsaken him ;|tA description of such a one as he would love ;|tThat speaking or proffering brings alway speeding ;|tDescription of a gun ;|tWyatt being in prison, to Bryan ;|tOf his love called Anna ;|tTo a lady, to answer directly with yea or nay ;|tThe lover to his bed, with describing of his unquiet state ;|tThe lover showeth how he is forsaken of such as he sometimes enjoyed ;|tHelp me to seek ;|tForget not yet ;|tAnd wilt thou leave me thus? ;|tBlame not my lute ;|tSince you will needs ; |tTangled I was ;|tHate whom ye list ;|tOf the mean and sure estate ;|tOf the courtier's life ;|tThe lover complaineth the unkindness of his love /|rSir Thomas Wyatt --|tDescription of spring, wherein each thing renews save only the lover ;|tThe frailty and hurtfulness of beauty ; |tDescription and praise of his love Geraldine ;|tA complaint by night of the lover not beloved ;|tComplaint of a lover rebuked ;|tVow to love faithfully, howsoever he be rewarded ;|tThe lover comforteth himself with the worthiness of his love ;|tA praise of his love, wherein he reproveth them that compare their ladies with his ;|tHow no age is content with his own estate, and how the age of children is the happiest, if they had skill to understand it ;|tOf the death of Sir T.W. the elder ;|tPrisoned in Windsor, he recounteth his pleasure there passed ; |tExhortation to learn by others' trouble ;|tThe things that cause a quiet life ;|tLondon, hast thou accusëd me? / |rEarl of Surrey --|tfrom Certain books of Virgil's Æneis, 1557.|tBook II /|rEarl of Surrey --|tThe aged lover renounceth love ;|tA lover, disdained, complaineth ;|tNo pleasure without some pain ;|tOf a contented mind / |rThomas, Lord Vaux. 505 00 |gTudor poetry.|gMinor 'courtly makers' of Henry VIII's reign.|tThat was my woe /|rRobert Fairfax --|tA carol, bringing in the boar's head --|tIn youth, in age /|rRobert Cooper --|tPleasure it is /|rWilliam Cornish --|tAh! the sighs /|rWilliam Cornish --|tWestern wind --|tMy little fool --|tEngland, be glad --|tThese women all /|rHeath -- |tO death, rock me asleep /|rGeorge Boleyn, Viscount Rochford? --|tTo his posterity : written over a chamber door where he was wont to lie at Hallingbury /|rHenry Parker, Lord Morley --|tThe poor estate to be holden for best /|rEdward Seymour, Duke of Somerset? --|tThe lover showeth his woeful state and prayeth pity --|tUpon consideration of the state of this life he wisheth death - -|tOf a new-married student --|tHarpalus' complaint of Phillida's love bestowed on Corin, who loved her not, and denied him that loved her --|tTotus mundus in maligno positus --|tAn old lover to a young gentlewoman. 505 00 |gTudor poetry.|tA true love ;|tMan's life, after Posidonius or Crates ;|tMetrodorus' mind to the contrary ; |tDescription of virture ;|tTo his familiar friend ;|tA funeral song, upon the decease of Annes, his mother ; |tMarcus Tullius Cicero's death /|rNicholas Grimald -- |tWhen I was fair and young ;|tThe doubt of future foes / |rElizabeth --|tA sonnet made on Isabella Markham, when I first thought her fair as she stood the princess's window in goodly attire and talked to divers in the court-yard / |rJohn Harington, the elder --|tfrom A mirror for magistrates, 1563.|tThe introduction /|rThomas Sackville, Earl of Dorset --|tfrom Five hundred points of good husbandry, 1580.|tA preface to the buyer of this book / |rThomas Tusser --|tThe praise of husbandry : as true as thy faith, this riddle thus saith ;|tA description of the properties of winds at all times of the year ;|tChristmas husbandly fare ;|tA sonnet upon the author's first seven years service /|rThomas Tusser --|tTo the right worshipful M. William Lovelace, esquire, reader of Gray's inn, Barnabe Googe wisheth health /|rBarnabe Googe --|tComing homeward out of Spain ;|tOut of sight, out of mind ;|tOnce musing as I sat ;|tTo Doctor Bale ;|tAn epitaph of the death of Nicholas Grimald /|rBarnabe Googe --|tTo his love that sent him a ring wherein was graved 'let reason rule' ;|tVerse in praise of Lord Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey ; |tOf drunkenness ;|tThe lover to his lady that gazed much up to the skies ;|tTo a fair gentlewoman, false to her friend ;|tHe declares that albeit he were imprisoned in Russia, yet his mind was at liberty and did daily repair to his friend ;|tUnable by long and hard travel to banish love, returns her friend ;|tThat he finds others as fair, but not so faithful as his friend ;|tTo his friend, promising that though her beauty fade, yet his love shall last /|rGeorge Turberville. 505 00 |gTudor poetry.|tfrom The arbor of amity, 1568.|tWhen he thought himself contemned ;|tOf misery ;|tThe rose / |rThomas Howell --|tTo one who after death would leave his lively picture ;|tJack shows his qualities and great good will to Jone ;|tOf the golden world ;|tTo his lady, of her doubtful answer /|rThomas Howell --|tThe praise of our soldiers ;|tThe lover deceived by his lady's unconstancy writeth unto her as followeth /|rThomas Churchyard -- |tfrom A hundreth sundry flowers.|tGascoigne's good morrow ;|tGascoignes's arraignment ;|tGascoigne's lullaby ; |tGascoigne's de profundis ;|tInscription in his garden / |rGeroge Gascoigne --|tDeep desire sung this song ;|tThe steel glass /|rGeorge Gascoigne --|tfrom The rock of regard.|tDescription of cozeners ;|tEpilogues /|rGeorge Whetstone --|tfrom A posy of gillyflowers.|tFor soldiers ; |tA delectable dream /|rHumphrey Gifford --|tA prayer to the Trinity /|rRichard Stanyhurst --|tOf the mighty power of love ;|tWho taught thee first to sigh? ;|tIf women could be fair ;|tOf the birth and bringing up of desire ; |tWhat cunning can express? /|rEdward de Vere, Earl of Oxford --|tfrom Sir P.S. his Astrophel and Stella.|tTo the worshipful and his very good friend, Ma. Francis Flower, esquire, increase of all content ;|tAstrophel and Stella ; |tFirst song ;|tFourth song ;|tEleventh song /|rSir Philip Sidney --|tCertain sonnets.|tThe nightingale ;|tRing out your bells ;|tThou blind man's mark ;|tLeave me, o love / |rSir Philip Sidney --|tO sweet woods ;|tTwo pastorals : made by Sir Philip Sidney, never yet published, upon his meeting with his two worthy friends and fellow-poets, Sir Edward Dyer and Master Fulke Greville /|rSir Philip Sidney --|tMy mind to me a kingdom is ;|tThe man whose thoughts ; |tPrometheus when first from heaven /|rSir Edward Dyer -- |tAn epitaph upon the Right Honorable Sir Philip Sidney ; |tAnother, of his Cynthia ;|tChorus sacerdotum ;|tCælica ; |tSion lies waste /|rFulke Greville, Lord Brooke -- |tChange thy mind ;|tTo plead my faith ;|tA passion / |rRobert Devereux, Earl of Essex. 505 00 |gTudor poetry.|tTo Queen Elizabeth ;|tPraised be Diana's fair and harmless light ;|tLike truthless dreams ;|tLike to a hermit ;|tA description of love ;|tAn epitaph upon the Right Honorable Sir Philip Sidney, knight, lord governor of Flushing ;|tA vision upon this conceit of the Fairy Queen ;|tThe nymph's reply to the shepherd ;|tTo his son ;|tNature, that washed her hands ;|tThe lie ;|tThe ocean to Cynthia : Book XI ;|tThe passionate man's pilgrimage, supposed to be written by one at the point of death /|rSir Walter Ralegh --|tfrom Antonius, 1592. |tChorus /|rMary Herbert, Countess of Pembroke --|tfrom Albion's England, 1592.|tChapter XXXVIII /|rWilliam Warner --|tfrom Hecatompatia,|tor,|tPassionate century of love. |tSome that report ;|tIf Cupid were a child ;|tMy love is past /|rThomas Watson --|tVezzosi augelli ;|tQuesto di verde ;|tfrom The tears of fancy /|rThomas Watson --|tfrom Menaphon.|tDoron's description of Samela ;|tDoron's jig ; |tSephestia's song to her child /|rRobert Greene --|tfrom Greene's Mourning garment.|tThe shepherd's wife's song / |rRobert Greene --|tHexametra Alexis in laudem Rosamundi / |rRobert Greene --|tfrom Greene's Never too late.|tThe palmer's ode /|rRobert Greene --|tfrom Greene's Farewell to folly.|tSweet are the thoughts /|rRobert Greene -- |tfrom Philomela, the Lady Fitzwater's nightingale. |tPhilomela's ode that she sung in her arbor /|rRobert Greene --|tfrom Greene's Orpharion.|tCupid abroad was lated /|rRobert Greene --|tSonnet /|rThomas Lodge --|tfrom Rosalind, 1592.|tRosalind's madrigal /|rThomas Lodge -- |tMontanus' sonnet ;|tRosader's second sonetto /|rThomas Lodge --|tfrom The life and death of William Longbeard. |tMy mistress when she goes /|rThomas Lodge --|tStrive no more ;|tThe fatal star ;|tLike desert woods ;|tfrom Phillis honored with pastoral sonnets, elegies, and amorous delights, 1593 ;|tAn ode /|rThomas Lodge --|tfrom The arbor of amorous devices.|tA pastoral of Phillis and Coridon ;|tA sweet lullaby /|rNicholas Breton --|tSay that I should say ;|tPhillida and Coridon ;|tSong of Phillida and Coridon ;|tAn odd conceit ;|tPastoral : 1 ;|tPastoral : 2 /|rNicholas Breton --|tThe passionate shepherd to his love ;|tTo the Right Worshipful Sir Thomas Walsingham, knight ;|tHero and Leander /|rChristopher Marlowe. 505 00 |gTudor poetry.|gElizabethan miscellanies.|tfrom George Gascoigne's Hundreth sundry flowers.|tA strange passion of a lover --|tThe lover declareth his affection, together with the cause thereof --|tfrom Richard Edward's Paradise of dainty devices.|tAmantium iræ amoris redintegratio est ;|tM. Edwards' May ;|tBeing importunate, at the length he obtaineth /|rRichard Edwards --|tNo pains comparable to his attempt /|rWilliam Hunnis --|tLook or you leap / |rJasper Heywood --|tfrom Thomas Procter's Gorgeous gallery of gallant inventions.|tRespite finem /|rThomas Procter --|tA proper sonnet, how time consumeth all earthly things --|tA true description of love --|tThe lover in the praise of his beloved and comparison of her beauty --|tThe lover exhorteth his lady to be constant -- |tfrom H.C.'s Forrest of fancy.|tA plain description of perfect friendship --|tThe strange pangs of a poor passionate lover --|tEpigram /|rEdward de Vere, Earl of Oxford --|tAnswered thus by Sir P.S. /|rSir Philip Sidney --|tAnother, of another mind /|rF.M. --|tAnother, of another mind --|tTichborne's elegy, written with his own hand in the Tower before his execution /|rChidiock Tichborne --|tfrom R.S.'s Phoenix nest.|tThe time when first --|tO night, o jealous night --|tSet me where Phœbus' heat --|tSought by the world --|tfrom John Bodenham's (?) England's helicon.|tA nymph's disdain of love --|tPhillida's love-call to her Corydon, and his replying --|tThe nymph Selvagia, her song /|rBartholomew Young --|tMelisea, her song in scorn of her shepherd Narcissus /|rBartholomew Young --|tA palinode /|rEdmund Bolton --|tA canzon pastoral in honor of Her Majesty / |rEdmund Bolton --|tTo Colin Clout /|rAnthony Munday -- |tfrom Francis Davison's Poetical rhapsody.|tOde /|rJohn Hoskins? --|tMadrigal --|tTo time ;|tUpon visiting his lady by moonlight ;|tA fiction /|rA.W. --|tSonnet / |rJoshua Sylvester? --|tCommendation of her beauty, stature, behavior, and wit ;|tUpon his timorous silence in her presence ;|tTo Cupid /|rFrancis Davison --|tfrom Francis Davison's Poetical rhapsody.|tThe sound of thy sweet name /|rFrancis Davison --|tA sonnet of the moon / |rCharles Best. 505 00 |gTudor poetry.|gSonnet-sequences.|tfrom Giles Fletcher's Licia.|tTo the reader ;|tLicia --|tfrom Barnabe Barnes's Parthenophil and Parthenophe.|tMadrigal ;|tOde --|tfrom Barnabe Barnes's Divine century of spiritual sonnets -- |tfrom William Percy's Cœlia --|tfrom Zepheria.|tAlli veri figlioli delle Muse --|tfrom E. C.'s Emaricdulfe -- |tfrom Richard Lynche's Diella --|tfrom William Smith's Chloris.|tTo the most excellent and learned shepherd, Colin Clout --|tfrom Bartholomew Griffin's Fidessa, more chaste than kind --|tfrom Robert Tofte's Laura --|tFrom Henry Lok's Sonnets of Christian Passions --|tfrom Alexander Craig's Amorous songs, sonnets, and elegies.|tTo Pandora ;|tTo his Pandora, from England. 505 00 |gTudor poetry.|tfrom Diana, 1592 ;|tfrom Diana, 1594 ; |tTo his mistress upon occasion of a Petrarch he gave her, showing her the reason why the Italian commenters dissent so much in the exposition thereof ;|tTo St. Peter and St. Paul ;|tTo St. Mary Magdalen ;|tDamelus' song to his Diaphenia ;|tThe shepherd's song of Venus and Adonis / |rHenry Constable --|tUpon the image of death ;|tLook home ;|tLove's servile lot ;|tNew prince, new pomp ;|tThe burning babe /|rRobert Southwell --|tfrom Cynthia.|tTo his mistress /|rRichard Barnfield --|tfrom Poems in divers humors.|tTo his friend Master R.L., in praise of music and poetry ;|tAgainst the dispraisers of poetry ;|tA remembrance of some English poets ;|tAn ode /|rRichard Barnfield --|tThe unknown shepherd's complaint /|rRichard Barnfield --|tfrom Delia.|tTo the Right Honorable, the Lady Mary, Countess of Pembroke /|rSamuel Daniel --|tTo Delia ;|tAn ode ;|tThe complaint of Rosamond ;|tTo the Lady Margaret, Countess of Cumberland ;|tTo the Lady Lucy, Countess of Bedford ;|tMusophilus ;|tLove is a sickness / |rSamuel Daniel --|tfrom Certain small poems.|tUlysses and the siren /|rSamuel Daniels --|tfrom Tethy's festival. |tAre they shadows? /|rSamuel Daniel --|tfrom Idea, the shepherd's garland.|tThe eighth eclogue /|rMichael Drayton --|tfrom Idea's mirror.|tTo the dear child of the Muses, and his ever kind Mæcenas, Ma. Anthony Cooke, esquire / |rMichael Drayton --|tfrom England's heroical epistles / |rMichael Drayton --|tfrom Poems.|tIdea.|tTo the reader of these sonnets /|rMichael Drayton --|tEngland's heroical epistles.|tHenry Howard, Earl of Surrey, to the Lady Geraldine /|rMichael Drayton --|tOdes.|tTo the Virginian voyage ;|tThe crier ;|tTo the Cambro-Britons and their harp, his ballad of Agincourt /|rMichael Drayton -- |tEclogues.|tThe ninth eclogue /|rMichael Drayton --|tfrom Poly-Olbion.|tThe thirteenth song /|rMichael Drayton -- |tfrom The battle of Agincourt.|tTo my most dearly loved friend, Henry Reynolds, esquire of poets and poesy ; |tNymphidia, the court of fairy ;|tThe shepherd's sirena / |rMichael Drayton --|tfrom The muse's Elysium.|tThe description of Elysium /|rMichael Drayton --|tThe sixth nymphal.|tSilvius, Halcius, Melanthus /|rMichael Drayton - -|tfrom Epigrams and elegies.|tOf a gull ;|tIn Ciprium ; |tIn Haywodum ;|tIn Dacum ;|tIn Titum ;|tIn Flaccum ;|tIn Decium /|rSir John Davies --|tTo his good friend, Sir Anthony Cooke ;|tGulling sonnets /|rSir John Davis -- |tfrom Orchestra.|tOrchestra, or a poem of dancing /|rSir John Davies --|tfrom Hymns of Astræa.|tOf Astræa ;|tTo the spring ;|tTo the rose /|rSir John Davies --|tfrom Nosce teipsum.|tOf human knowledge ;|tThat the soul is immortal, and cannot die ;|tAn acclamation /|rSir John Davies -- |tfrom Virgidemiarum.|tSatire I ;|tSatire VI ;|tSatire VI (book II) /|rJoseph Hall --|tfrom The scourge of villainy. |tTo detraction I present my poesy ;|tSatire X : humors ; |tTo everlasting oblivion /|rJohn Marston --|tfrom The Dutch cortezan.|tO love, how strangely sweet /|rJohn Marston --|tfrom The shadow of night.|tHymnus in noctem / |rGeorge Chapman --|tfrom Ovid's Banquet of sense.|tA coronet for his mistress Philosophy /|rGeorge Chapman -- |tfrom The mask of the middle temple and Lincoln's inn. |tDescend, fair sun.|tOne alone ;|tAnother alone ;|tCho ; |tNow, sleep, bind fast /|rGeorge Chapman --|tfrom The whole works of Homer.|tIliad.|tBook XVIII /|rGeorge Chapman --|tfrom Homer's odysseys.|tOdyssey.|tBook XII / |rGeorge Chapman --|tfrom Godfrey of Bulloigne.|tBook XVI /|rEdward Fairfax. 505 00 |gTudor poetry.|gSongs from plays.|tfrom John Bale's King John --|tfrom R. Wever's Lusty Juventus --|tfrom William Stevenson's Gammer Gurton's needle --|tfrom Tom Tyler and his wife --|tfrom Misogonus.|tA song to the tune of Heart's ease --|tfrom John Phillip's comedy of patient and meek Grissell --|tfrom John Pickering's New interlude of vice, containing the history of Horestes --|tfrom The trial of treasure --|tfrom The marriage of wit and science.|tIdleness singeth --|tfrom Common conditions -- |tfrom Fedele and Fortunio, or,|tThe two Italian gentleman --|tfrom John Lyly's Six court comedies --|tA song in making of the arrows --|tfrom Endymion.|tSong by fairies - -|tfrom George Peele's Arraignment of Paris --|tfrom George Peele's Polyhymnia --|tfrom George Peele's Hunting of Cupid --|tCoridon and Melampus' song --|tfrom George Peele's Old wive's tale --|tfrom George Peele's Love of King David and fair Bethsabe --|tfrom The lamentable tragedy of Locrine.|tStrumbo, Dorothy, Trumpart, cobbling shoes --|tfrom The maid's metamorphosis --|tfrom Wily beguiled --|tfrom The Thracian wonder --|tfrom Thomas Nashe's Summer's last will and testament --|tfrom Thomas Dekker's Shoemaker's holiday, or,|tThe gentle craft -- |tfrom Thomas Dekker's Pleasant comedy of patient Grissill --|tfrom Thomas Dekker's London's tempe --|tfrom Thomas Dekker and John Ford's Sun's darling --|tfrom John Webster's White devil --|tfrom John Webster's Duchess of Malfi --|tfrom Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher's Knight of the burning pestle --|tfrom Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher's The maid's tragedy, 1619 --|tfrom The maid's tragedy, 1622 --|tfrom John Fletcher's Faithful shepherdess --|tfrom John Fletcher's Bloddy brother.|tThe drinking song --|tfrom Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher's Comedies and tragedies.|tfrom John Fletcher's Valentinian ;|tfrom John Fletcher's Beggars' bush ;|tfrom John Fletcher's nice valor ;|tfrom John Fletcher's Spanish curate ;|tfrom John Fletcher's Queen of Corinth --|tfrom Mr. William Shakespeare's comedies, histories, and tragedies.|tfrom Shakespeare and Fletcher's King Henry VIII --|tfrom Thomas Middleton's Chaste maid in Cheapside --|tfrom Thomas Middleton's The widow --|tfrom Thomas Middleton's More dissemblers besides women --|tfrom Philip Massinger's Emperor of the East --|tfrom Nathan Field's Amends for ladies --|tfrom Barten Holiday's Technogamia, or,|tThe marriage of the arts --|tfrom Peter Hausted's Rival friends --|tfrom John Ford's The broken heart -- |tfrom Jasper Fisher's Fuimus troes.|tA morisco --|tfrom Thomas Goffe's Tragedy of Orestes --|tfrom William Sampson's Vow breaker --|tfrom John Jones's Adrasta -- |tfrom Thomas May's Tragedy of Cleopatra --|tfrom Thomas May's Old couple --|tfrom Thomas Nabbes's Hannibal and Scipio --|tfrom James Shirley's Changes, or,|tLove in a maze --|tfrom James Shirley's Triumph of peace --|tfrom James Shirley's Triumph of beauty --|tfrom James Shirley's Cupid and death --|tfrom James Shirley's Contention of Ajax and Ulysses --|tfrom Henry Shirley's Martyred soldier --|tfrom Richard Brome's Northern lass --|tfrom Richard Brome's Jovial crew, or,|tThe merry beggars --|tfrom Sir William Berkeley's Lost lady --|tfrom Robert Chamberlain's Swaggering damsel --|tfrom Robert Davenport's King John and Matilda. 505 00 |gTudor poetry.|gBroadside ballads.|tThe king's hunt is up /|rGray of Reading --|tA song between the Queen's majesty and England /|rWilliam Birche --|tA proper song, entitled : fain would I have a pretty thing to give unto my lady - -|tA new courtly sonnet, of the Lady Greensleeves --|tA proper new song made by a student in Cambridge /|rThomas Richardson --|tAs you came from the holy land of Walsingham --|tThe valorous acts performed at Gaunt by the brave bonny lass, Mary Ambree, who in revenge of her lover's death, did play her part most gallantly --|tLord Willoughby --|tA sonnet upon the pitiful burning of the Globe Playhouse in London --|tThe shepherd's wooing Dulcina --|tTruth's integrity, or,|tA curious northern ditty called, Love will find a way --|tThe milkmaid's life /|rMartin Parker --|tThe four wonders --|tSailors for my money ;|tWhen the King enjoys his own again /|rMartin Parker. 505 00 |gTudor poetry.|gLyrics from song-books.|tfrom William Byrd's Psalms, sonnets, and songs of sadness and piety. |tLulla, my sweet little baby --|tfrom William Byrd's Songs of sundry natures.|tA carol for Christmas Day -- |tfrom Thomas Morley's Canzonets.|tArise, get up, my dear love --|tfrom John Mundy's Songs and psalms.|tIn midst of woods --|tfrom John Dowland's Second book of songs or airs.|tFine knacks for ladies ;|tNow cease, my wandering eyes --|tfrom John Dowland's Third and last book of songs or airs.|tWeep you no more, sad fountains --|tfrom Thomas Bateson's First set of English madrigals.|tBeauty is a lovely sweet ;|tYour shining eyes --|tfrom Tobias Hume's Musical humors.|tThe soldier's song ;|tTobacco, tobacco ; |tFain would I change that note --|tfrom Michael East's Second set of madrigals.|tO metaphysical tobacco --|tfrom John Cooper's Funeral tears, for the death of the Right Honorable the Earl of Devonshire.|tOft thou hast --|tfrom Tobias Hume's Poetical music.|tThe hunting song --|tfrom Robert Jones's Ultimum vale.|tThink'st thou, Kate? -- |tfrom Thomas Weelkes's Airs, or,|tFantastic spirits. |tThough my carriage --|tfrom John Wilbye's Second set of madrigals.|tYe that do live in pleasures ;|tDraw on, sweet night --|tfrom Robert Jones's Muses' garden for delights. |tThe sea hath many thousands sands ;|tOnce did my thoughts --|tfrom Orlando Gibbon's First set of madrigals and motets.|tThe silver swan ;|tDainty fine bird ;|tAh, dear heart --|tfrom John Dowland's Pilgrim's solace.|tIn this trembling shadow --|tfrom Thomas Bateson's Second set of madrigals.|tI heard a noise --|tfrom Martin Peerson's Private music.|tCan a maid that is well bred ;|tOur hasty life --|tfrom John Attey's First book of airs.|tOn a time --|tfrom Christ Church ms. K 3.|tYet if his majesty -- |tfrom John Playford's Select musical airs and dialogues. |tWhen, Celia, I intend --|tfrom Henry Lawes's Airs and dialogues.|tLove above beauty /|rHenry Reynolds --|tfrom Henry Lawes's Airs and dialogues.|tWas it a form? /|rHenry Reynolds --|tfrom John Wilson's Cheerful airs or ballads. |tGreedy lover, pause awhile /|rSir Albertus Morton. 505 00 |gTudor poetry.|tfrom A book of airs ;|tfrom Two books of airs /|rThomas Campion --|tfrom Robert Jones's Second book of songs and airs.|tMy love bound me /|rThomas Campion -- |tfrom Richard Alison's An hour's recreation in music. |tWhat if a day /|rThomas Campion --|tfrom A book of airs. |tMy sweetest Lesbia ;|tWhen to her lute Corinna sings ; |tFollow your saint ;|tThou art not fair ;|tThe man of life upright ;|tHark, all you ladies ;|tWhen thou must home /|rThomas Campion --|tfrom Observations in the art of English poesy.|tRose-cheeked Laura /|rThomas Campion -- |tfrom Two books of airs.|tTo music bent ;|tNever weather- beaten sail ;|tJack and Joan ;|tGive beauty all her right /|rThomas Campion --|tfrom The late royal entertainment-- at Cawsome House.|tNight as well as brightest day / |rThomas Campion --|tfrom The third and fourth book of airs.|tTo the reader ;|tMaids are simple ;|tNow winter nights enlarge ;|tThrice toss these oaken ashes ;|tNever love unless you can ;|tRespect my faith ;|tThere is a garden ;|tYoung and simple though I am ;|tFain would I wed /|rThomas Campion. 505 00 |gTudor poetry.|tfrom Poems.|tSongs and sonnets.|tLove's deity ;|tSong ;|tWoman's constancy ;|tThe indifferent ; |tThe flea ;|tThe message ;|tThe bait ;|tThe will ;|tThe sun rising ;|tBreak of day ;|tThe computation ;|tConfined love ;|tThe broken heart ;|tA lecture upon the shadow ; |tLove's alchemy ;|tThe ecstasy ;|tThe good-morrow ;|tAir and angels ;|tThe prohibition ;|tThe undertaking ; |tLovers' infiniteness ;|tLove's growth ;|tThe anniversary ;|tThe canonization ;|tA valediction of weeping ;|tSong ; |tA valediction forbidding mourning ;|tThe funeral ;|tThe relic ;|tTwicknam garden ;|tA nocturnal upon Saint Lucy's Day, being the shortest day /|rJohn Donne --|tElegies.|tOn his mistress ;|tThe autumnal /|rJohn Donne --|tSatires. |tSatire III /|rJohn Donne --|tEpigrams.|tA lame beggar ; |tAntiquary ;|tPhryne /|rJohn Donne --|tLetters.|tThe calm : To Mr. Christopher Brooke ;|tTo Sir Henry Wotton /|rJohn Donne --|tThe anniversaries.|tAn anatomy of the world : the first anniversary ;|tOf the progress of the soul : the second anniversary /|rJohn Donne --|tDivine poems ;|tGood Friday, 1613, riding westward ;|tA hymn to Christ, at the author's last going into Germany ;|tA hymn to God the Father ;|tHymn to God, my God, in my sickness /|rJohn Donne. 505 00 |gTudor poetry.|tEpigrams.|tTo the reader ;|tTo my book ; |tTo my bookseller ;|tTo my mere English censurer ;|tOn something that walks somewhere ;|tTo Doctor Empiric ;|tTo William Camden ;|tTo Francis Beaumont ;|tTo John Donne ; |tOn Lucy, Countess of Bedford ;|tTo Lucy, Countess of Bedford, with Mr. Donne's satires ;|tInviting a friend to supper ;|tOn my first son ;|tAn epitaph on S[alomon] P[avy], a child of Q[ueen] El[izabeth's] chapel ;|tEpitaph on Elizabeth, L.H. /|rBen Jonson --|tThe forest.|tWhy I write not of love ;|tTo Penshurst ;|tSong, to Celia (1) ; |tSong, to Celia (2) /|rBen Jonson --|tA celebration of Charis in ten lyric pieces.|tHis excuse for loving ;|tHer triumph ;|tBegging another (kiss), on color of mending the former /|rBen Jonson --|tAn ode to himself ;|tA fit of rhyme against rhyme ;|tTo the immortal memory and friendship of that noble pair, Sir Lucius Cary and Sir H. Morison ;|tAn epistle answering to one that asked to be sealed of the Tribe of Ben /|rBen Jonson --|tTo the memory of my beloved the author, Mr. William Shakespeare, and what he hath left us /|rBen Jonson --|tBen Jonson's sociable rules for the Apollo /|rBen Jonson --|tfrom Cynthia's revels.|tSlow, slow, fresh fount ;|tOh, that joy so soon should waste ;|tQueen and huntress /|rBen Jonson - -|tfrom The poetaster.|tIf I freely may discover ;|tSwell me a bowl /|rBen Jonson --|tfrom Volpone, or,|tThe fox. |tFools /|rBen Jonson --|tfrom Epicœne, or,|tThe silent woman.|tStill to be neat /|rBen Jonson --|tfrom The second mask, which was of beauty.|tHad those that dwell in error foul /|rBen Jonson --|tfrom The description of the mask-- at the Lord Viscount Hadington's marriage.|tBeauties, have ye seen /|rBen Jonson --|tfrom Oberon, the fairy prince. |tBuz, quoth the blue fly /|rBen Jonson --|tfrom The gypsies metamorphosed.|tThe fairy beam upon you /|rBen Jonson --|tfrom Pan's anniversary.|tThus, thus begin / |rBen Jonson --|tfrom The sad shepherd.|tHere she was wont to go ;|tThough I am young /|rBen Johnson. 505 00 |gTudor poetry.|gEpigrams.|tfrom Timothe Kendall's Flowers of epigrams.|tTo Sabidius ;|tTo Fidentinus ;|tTo a married couple that could not agree ;|tOf Fuscus, a drunkard ;|tOf Alphus ;|tTo the reader --|tfrom Sir John Harington's Elegant and witty epigrams.|tComparison of the sonnet and the epigram ;|tAgainst writers that carp at other men's books ;|tOf Faustus, a stealer of verses ;|tOf treason ; |tTo Sextus, an ill reader --|tOf clergymen and their livings ;|tTo Mr. John Davies /|rSir John Harington -- |tfrom Everard Guilpin's Skialetheia.|tOf Titus ;|tOf Cornelius ;|tSatyra quinta --|tfrom Thomas Bastard's Chrestoleros.|tAd lectorem ;|tDe piscatione --|tfrom John Weever's Epigrams in the oldest cut and newest fashion. |tIn nigellum ;|tDe se ;|tTranslat. ex martial ;|tIn rudionem ;|tIn tumulum Abrahami simple ;|tAd Io. Marston & Ben. Ionson ;|tAd Guielmum Shakespeare --|tfrom Samuel Rowland's Letting of humor's blood --|tfrom Samuel Rowlands's Humor's looking-glass --|tfrom Chetham Ms. 8012.|tAn epitaph on a bellows-maker ;|tOf a cozener ;|tAn epitaph on a man for doing nothing /|rJohn Hoskins -- |tfrom Reliquiœ Wottonianœ.|tJohn Hoskins to his little child Benjamin, from the tower /|rJohn Hoskins --|tIn Chus --|tIn Norgum --|tfrom Henry Parrot's Mouse-trap --|tfrom Henry Parrot's Epigrams.|tOrtus novus urbe Britannus ; |tImpar impares odit --|tfrom Henry Parrot's Laquei ridiculosi.|tSuum cuique pulchrum --|tfrom Henry Parrot's Mastive.|tNuptiæ post nummos ;|tEbrius dissimulons -- |tfrom John Heath's Two centuries of epigrams.|tAd modernos epigrammatistas ;|tAd zolium ;|tIn porcum ;|tAd Tho. Bastardum epigrammatistam ;|tIn Beatricem præpropere defunctam ;|tAd collegium Wintoniensem --|tfrom Thomas Freeman's Rub and a great cast.|tMe quoque vatem ;|tTo the stationer ;|tIn epitaphium pingui minerva compositum ; |tAliud ;|tIn Phædran ;|tOf Spenser's Fairy Queen. 505 00 |gTudor prose.|tUtopia.|tBook I : slightly abridged ; |tBook II : selections /|rSir Thomas More --|tThe chronicles of Froissart.|tBerners' preface ;|tvol. 1, chap. 146 /|rJohn Bourchier, Lord Berners --|tA supplication for the beggars : complete /|rSimon Fish -- |tThe governour, Book i : abridged /|rSir Thomas Elyot -- |tThe union of the--families of Lancaster and York : selections from reign of Henry VIII /|rEdward Halle -- |tThe fyrste sermon before Edward VI : abridged /|rHugh Latimer --|tToxophilus : dedication and preface /|rRoger Ascham --|tThe schoolmaster.|tBook I : complete ;|tBook II : the section on Imitatio /|rRoger Ascham --|tThe castle of knowledge : selections /|rRobert Recorde --|tThe life of Cardinal Wolsey : selections /|rGeorge Cavendish -- |tLetter to Thomas Hoby : complete /|rSir John Cheke -- |tThe courtier.|tBook I : abridged ;|tBook IV : last part, complete /|rSir Thomas Hoby --|tActs and monuments : selections /|rJohn Foxe --|tThe dial of princes. |tChap[ter] 22 : from Guevara /|rSir Thomas North -- |tPlutarch's Lives.|tThe life of Caesar : abridged /|rSir Thomas North --|tEuphues : the anatomy of wit : complete to 'A cooling card for Philautus' /|rJohn Lyly --|tThe school of abuse : abridged /|rStephen Gosson --|tThe defence of poesy : complete /|rSir Philip Sidney -- |tArcadia.|tBook I, Chaps. 1-3 ;|t[Book] II, [Chapters] 7- 8 ;|t[Book] III, [Chapter] 6 /|rSir Philip Sidney -- |tRosalynde : Euphues' golden legacy : slightly abridged / |rThomas Lodge --|tGeorge Best's True discourse : selection ;|tHakluyt's Principal navigations : dedication and selections /|rRichard Hakluyt and the voyagers --|tA notable discovery of Cozenage : abridged ;|tThe third part of conny-catching : selection ;|tGroats-worth of wit : selection /|rRobert Greene --|tPreface to Menaphon : complete ;|tThe unfortunate traveler : abridged ;|tThe praise of red herring : selection /|rThomas Nashe -- |tThomas of Reading : slightly abridged /|rThomas Deloney --|tOf the interchangeable course, or|tVariety of things. |tBook XII /|rRobert Ashley --|tOf honour.|tchap. 7 / |rRobert Ashley --|tOf the laws of ecclesiastical polity. |tBook I, chaps. 1-9 /|rRichard Hooker --|tThe Bible.|tThe translators' preface to the King James Version : abridged ;|tThe sermon on the mount : Matthew, 5 : the King James Version compared with five sixteenth-century versions -- |tThe wonderful year : abridged /|rThomas Dekker --|tA survey of London : selections /|rJohn Stow --|tThe essays of Montaigne : Vol. I, Chaps. 19 and 25 : abridged /|rJohn Florio --|tOf human passions : preface to trans. of Nicholas Coeffeteau /|rEdward Grimeston --|tThe history of the world : selections, abridged, from the preface, and i. 9. 2, iii. 12. 7, v. 1. 9, v. 3. 15, and v. 6. 12 ; |tLetter to his wife /|rSir Walter Ralegh --|tEssays : selections from early and later eds. ;|tThe proficience and advancement of learning.|tBook I : slightly abridged / |rSir Francis Bacon --|tParadoxes.|tI : complete /|rJohn Donne --|tA sermon--to the company of the Virginian plantation : abridged ;|tDevotions : selections /|rJohn Donne. 650 0 English literature|yEarly modern, 1500-1700. 651 0 Great Britain|xHistory|yTudors, 1485-1603|vSources. 651 0 England|xCivilization|y16th century|vSources. 914 FARM18562 938 Baker and Taylor|bBTCP|n53010457 /L/r982 994 02|bMCP
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