|
Weep no more my wearied eyes |
Nicholas Lanier |
|
Fire! fire! lo hire I burn (Campian) |
Nicholas Lanier |
|
Silly heart for bear |
Nicholas Lanier |
|
No more shall meads be deck'd with flowr's (Carew) |
Nicholas Lanier |
|
Mark how the blushful morn (Carew) |
Nicholas Lanier |
|
Love and I of late did part |
Nicholas Lanier |
|
Like hermit poor in pensive place obscure (Raleigh) |
Nicholas Lanier |
|
Neither sighs, nor tears, nor mourning |
Nicholas Lanier |
|
Stay, silly heart, and do not break |
Nicholas Lanier |
|
Nor com'st thou yet, my slothful love: Recitative |
Nicholas Lanier |
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Tell me, shepherd, dost thou love? Dialogue |
Nicholas Lanier |
|
What tears, dear prince, can serve (Raleigh) |
Robert Ramsey |
|
Go perjur'd man! and if you e'er return (Herrick) |
Robert Ramsey |
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Thou may'st be proud (Herrick) |
Robert Ramsey |
|
Howl not, you ghosts and furies, while I sing: Dialogue (Herrick) |
Robert Ramsey |
|
Chloris sigh'd, and sang, and wept (Pembroke) |
Alfonso (?) Bales |
|
Weep no more, nor sigh, nor groan (Beaumont & Fletcher: The queen of Corinth) |
Stephen Mace |
|
Cease not, thou heav'nly-voiced glorious creature |
John Jenkins |
|
Why sigh'st thou, shepherd? Dialogue (Randolph) |
John Jenkins |
|
Wherefore peep'st thou, envious day? (Donne?) |
John Wilson |
|
Take, o take those lips away (Beaumont & Fletcher: The bloody brothēr) |
John Wilson |
|
In a maiden time profess'd (Middleton: The witch) |
John Wilson |
|
Languish and despair, my heart! |
John Wilson |
|
Turn, turn thy beauteous face away (Beaumont & Fletcher: Love's cure) |
John Wilson |
|
Pity of beauty in distress |
John Wilson |
|
As tuned harp strings sad notes take |
John Wilson |
|
Since love hath in thine and mine eye |
John Wilson |
|
Awake, awake! the morn will never rise (Davenant) |
John Wilson |
|
In the merry month of May (Breton) |
John Wilson |
|
Thou great and good! could I but rate (Montrose) |
John Wilson |
|
From the fair lavinian shore |
John Wilson |
|
In a season all oppressed |
John Wilson |
|
I rise and grieve |
Henry Lawes |
|
Speak, speak, at last reply |
Henry Lawes |
|
Or you, or I, nature did wrong! |
Henry Lawes |
|
Hard-hearted fair, if thou wilt not consent |
Henry Lawes |
|
Sweet stay awhile; why do you rise? (Donne) |
Henry Lawes |
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Break heart in twain! fair ronile may see |
Henry Lawes |
|
Transcendent beauty, thou that art |
Henry Lawes |
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O let me groan one word into thine ear (Pembroke) |
Henry Lawes |
|
Slide soft you silver floods |
Henry Lawes |
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Out upon it, I have lov'd (Suckling) |
Henry Lawes |
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Come from the dungeon to the throne (Cartwright: The royal slave) |
Henry Lawes |
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Come my sweet while ev'ry strain (The royal slave) |
Henry Lawes |
|
Now the sun is fled (The royal slave) |
Henry Lawes |
|
Thou, o bright sun, who see'st all (The royal slave) |
Henry Lawes |
|
Wert thou yet fairer than thou art |
Henry Lawes |
|
Whither are all her false oaths blown? (Herrick) |
Henry Lawes |
|
'Tis but a frown, I prithee let me die |
Henry Lawes |
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No, no, fair heretic, it cannot be (Suckling) |
Henry Lawes |
|
Will you know my mistress' face? |
Henry Lawes |
|
Sleep soft, you cold clay cinders that late clad |
Henry Lawes |
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Bid me but live, and I will live (Herrick) |
Henry Lawes |
|
Go thou gentle whisp'ing wind (Carew) |
Henry Lawes |
|
When thou, poor excommunicate (Carew) |
Henry Lawes |
|
Have you e'er seen the morning sun (Hughes) |
Henry Lawes |
|
O tell me love! o tell me fate! (Hughes) |
Henry Lawes |
|
Beauty and love once fell at odds |
Henry Lawes |
|
O turn away those cruel eyes (Stanley) |
Henry Lawes |
|
As celia rested in the shade: Dialogue (Carew) |
Henry Lawes |
|
Thou may'st be proud (Herrick) |
John Hilton |
|
Wilt thou forgive the sin where I begun? (Donne) |
John Hilton |
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Am I despis'd because you say (Herrick) |
John Hilton |
|
Hang golden sleep upon her eyelids fair |
John Hilton |
|
If that I for thy sweet sake |
John Hilton |
|
You meaner beauties of the night (Wotton) |
John Hilton |
|
Rise, princely shepherd, and be arbiter: Dialogue |
John Hilton |
|
Wake my adonis, do not die (Cartwright) |
Charles Coleman |
|
Bright Aurelia, I do owe |
Charles Coleman |
|
Wilt thou be gone, thou heartless man |
Charles Coleman |
|
Change, platonics, change for shame |
Charles Coleman |
|
How am I chang'd from what I was |
Charles Coleman |
|
When Celia I intend do flatter you |
Charles Coleman |
|
Did not you once, Lucinda, vow: Dialogue |
Charles Coleman |
|
Will Chloris cast her sun-bright eyes |
Simon Ives |
|
Go bid the swan in silence die |
Simon Ives |
|
Shepherd well met, I prithee tell: Dialogue |
Simon Ives |
|
Why should great beauty virtuous fame desire (Davenant) |
William Lawes |
|
Why so pale and wan, fond lover? (Suckling: Aglaura) |
William Lawes |
|
No, no, fair heretic, it needs must be (Aglaura) |
William Lawes |
|
To whom shall I camplain; to men or gods? |
William Lawes |
|
Pleasures, beauty, youth attend ye (Ford: The lady's trial) |
William Lawes |
|
Faith, be no longer coy |
William Lawes |
|
Gather ye rosebuds while ye may (Herrick) |
William Lawes |
|
Come adonis, come away (Tatham) |
William Lawes |
|
Charon, o Charon! hear a wretch oppress'd: Dialogue |
William Lawes |
|
As life what is so sweet |
William Webb |
|
Go and bestride the southern wind |
William Webb |
|
Pow'rful morpheus, let thy charms |
William Webb |
|
Victorious beauty, though your eyes (Townshend) |
William Webb |
|
Since 'tis my fate to be thy slave |
William Webb |
|
Look back Castara from thine eye (Habington) |
William Webb |
|
Blow gently passion in my fair one's breast |
William Caesar (alias Smegergill) |
|
If any live that fain would prove |
William Caesar (alias Smegergill) |
|
Forbear fond swain, I cannot love: Dialogue |
William Caesar (alias Smegergill) |
|
Drowsy phoebus, come away: Dialogue (Haustet: The rival friends) |
George Jeffreys |
|
Have pity, grief; I cannot pay (The rival friends) |
George Jeffreys |
|
Cruel! but once again (The rival friends) |
George Jeffreys |
|
John Atkins (d. 1671) : Wert thou yet fairer than thou art |
John Atkins |
|
This lady ripe and fair and fresh (Davenant: The just Italian) |
John Atkins |
|
When the chill Cherocco blows (Bonham) |
John Atkins |
|
I can love for an hour when I'm at leisure |
John Atkins |
|
Mistake me not, I am as cold as hot |
Thomas Brewer |
|
O that mine eyes could melt into a flood |
Thomas Brewer |
|
What means this strangeness now of late? (Aytoun) |
Thomas Blagrave |
|
Tell me not that I die, or live by thee (Tatham) |
John Taylor |
|
Lay that sullen garland by thee |
John Taylor |
|
Why will you swear I am forsworn (Lovelace) |
Thomas Charles |
|
I will not trust thy tempting graces (Stanley) |
Jeremy Savile |
|
Why, dearest, should you weep (Cotton) |
Edward Coleman |
|
The glories of our birth and state (Shirley: Ajax und ulysses) |
Edward Coleman |
|
Fret on, fond cupid, curse thy feeble bow |
John Goodgroome |
|
Dost see how unregarded now (Suckling) |
John Goodgroome |
|
In vain, fair Chloris, you design (Dering) |
Lady Mary Dering |
|
He that did ever scorn love's might |
Robert Smith |
|
Now Whitehall's in a grave (Lovelace) |
John Cave |
|
The morning doth waste |
John Gamble |
|
Admit, thou darling of mine eyes (Carew) |
Roger Hill |
|
Ah Chloris! would the gods allow |
Alfonso Marsh |
|
Must your fair inflaming eye |
anonymous |
|
If, when I die, to hell's eternal shade (Fowler?) |
anonymous |
|
You meaner beauties of the night (Wotton) |
anonymous |
|
Sing aloud harmonious spheres (Strode?) |
anonymous |
|
Go thy ways since thou wilt go |
anonymous |
|
Appendix. Like hermit poor (Lanier) : synoptic text of variant versions |
|
|
Weep no more my wearied eyes |
Nicholas Lanier |
|
Fire! fire! lo hire I burn (Campian) |
Nicholas Lanier |
|
Silly heart for bear |
Nicholas Lanier |