Epigram: “Out of the conquered Past” by Arthur Upson |
Epigram: The Doubt by Queen Elizabeth |
|
Aubade by Sir William Davenant |
Dawn by John Ford |
Matin-Song by John Heywood |
Song to Apollo by John Lyly |
Hark, Hark! the Lark by William Shakespeare |
The Love Call—Anonymous |
Summons to Love by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
On a Fair Morning—Anonymous |
Stay, O Sweet by John Donne |
The Night Is near Gone by Alexander Montgomerie |
Spring’s Welcome by John Lyly |
Spring by Thomas Nashe |
Whilst It Is Prime by Edmund Spenser |
Description of the Spring by Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey |
Short Sunshine by William Shakespeare |
Beauty, Sweet Love, Is Like the Morning Dew by Samuel Daniel |
When Daffodils Begin to Peer by William Shakespeare |
Fair Is My Love for April’s in Her Face by Robert Greene |
To Aurora by William Alexander, Earl of Stirling |
Aurora by William Alexander, Earl of Stirling |
To Meadows by Robert Herrick |
The Primrose by Thomas Carew or Robert Herrick |
To Violets by Robert Herrick |
Perigot and Willie’s Roundelay by Edmund Spenser |
The Blossom by William Shakespeare |
To Blossoms by Robert Herrick |
The Blossom by John Donne |
Corinna’s Maying by Robert Herrick |
On a Bank as I Sat A-fishing by Sir Henry Wotton |
Phyllida and Corydon by Nicholas Breton |
Song of the May—Anonymous |
My Fair A-field—Anonymous |
The Merry Month of May by Edmund Spenser |
May-song by Thomas Dekker |
Love’s Emblems by John Fletcher |
A Round by William Browne |
Ralph, the May-lord by Francis Beaumont |
An Ode by Samuel Daniel |
Under the Greenwood Tree by William Shakespeare |
Gather Ye Rosebuds While Ye May by Robert Herrick |
Philomela by Richard Barnfield |
A Nosegay by John Reynolds |
The Shepherd’s Holyday by Ben Jonson |
To Phyllis, the Fair Shepherdess by Thomas Lodge |
The Beggars’ Holiday by John Fletcher |
Young Love by William Shakespeare |
God Lyæus, Ever Young by John Fletcher |
What Is Love? by John Fletcher |
Advice to a Girl by Thomas Campion |
Madrigal—Anonymous |
Cherry-ripe by Thomas Campion |
The Passionate Shepherd to His Love by Christopher Marlowe |
The Nymph’s Reply by Sir Walter Raleigh |
The Message by Thomas Heywood |
Corydon’s Song by Thomas Lodge |
A Ditty by Sir Philip Sidney |
Wooing Stuff by Sir Philip Sidney |
The Lover’s Theme by Thomas Lodge |
Olden Love-making by Nicholas Breton |
True Love by Thomas Campion |
The Complete Lover by William Browne |
His Supposed Mistress by Ben Jonson |
A Lover’s Question—Anonymous |
Rosalind’s Madrigal by Thomas Lodge |
What Wight He Loved by William Browne |
It Was a Lover and His Lass by William Shakespeare |
A Roundelay by Michael Drayton |
Hey, Down a Down—Anonymous |
Carpe Diem by William Shakespeare |
Madrigal—Anonymous |
Know, Celia, Since Thou Art So Proud by Thomas Carew |
The Kiss by Ben Jonson |
Gratiana Dancing by Richard Lovelace |
In Praise of Two—Anonymous |
Fair and Fair by George Peele |
A Pastoral of Phyllis and Corydon by Nicholas Breton |
Radagon in Dianam by Robert Greene |
Philomela’s Ode That She Sung in Her Arbour by Robert Greene |
The Nightingale by Sir Philip Sidney |
Love’s Witchery by Thomas Lodge |
Now What Is Love? by Sir Walter Raleigh |
My Lady’s Hand by Sir Thomas Wyatt |
Cherry-ripe by Robert Herrick |
A Double Doubting—Anonymous |
Love Guards the Roses of Thy Lips by Thomas Lodge |
Lips and Eyes by Thomas Middleton |
Passions of Desire—Anonymous |
Song: ‘Who hath his fancy pleasèd’ by Sir Philip Sidney |
Her Eyes by Nicholas Breton |
To Dianeme by Robert Herrick |
Then Love Be Judge—Anonymous |
To Celia by Ben Jonson |
A Miracle—Anonymous |
On the Excellence of His Mistress by Nicholas Breton |
For Pity, Pretty Eyes, Surcease by Thomas Lodge |
Bright Star of Beauty by Michael Drayton |
What Poor Astronomers Are They—Anonymous |
Willing Bondage—Anonymous |
What Guile Is This? by Edmund Spenser |
Upon Julia’s Hair Filled with Dew by Robert Herrick |
Daphne by John Lyly |
The Glove by Ben Jonson |
In Tears Her Triumph by William Shakespeare |
Simplex Munditiis by Ben Jonson |
Upon Julia’s Clothes by Robert Herrick |
Delight in Disorder by Robert Herrick |
On a Girdle by Edmund Waller |
To the Western Wind by Robert Herrick |
Phyllis by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
A Dialogue by Christ Church MS. |
Rosalind by William Shakespeare |
Promised Weal by Sir Philip Sidney |
Presents—Anonymous |
Myra by Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke |
Sweet Robbery by William Shakespeare |
Doron’s Description of Samela by Robert Greene |
There Is a Lady Sweet and Kind—Anonymous |
Heart’s Hiding by A. W. |
Sirena by Michael Drayton |
Elizabeth of Bohemia by Sir Henry Wotton |
A Praise of His Lady by John Heywood |
Fair Is My Love by Edmund Spenser |
A Ditty by Edmund Spenser |
Wishes to His Supposed Mistress by Richard Crashaw |
Rosaline by Thomas Lodge |
Damelus’ Song of His Diaphenia by Henry Constable |
Ubique by Joshua Sylvester |
Flos Florum by George Wither |
Fawnia by Robert Greene |
Since First I Saw Your Face—Anonymous |
Beauty and Rhyme by William Shakespeare |
Shall I Compare Thee to a Summer’s Day? by William Shakespeare |
Mark When She Smiles by Edmund Spenser |
Beauty Clear and Fair by John Fletcher |
Beauty’s Triumph—Anonymous |
The Unfading Beauty by Thomas Carew |
Perfect Beauty by Ben Jonson |
Beauty’s Epitome by William Shakespeare |
The Awakening—Anonymous |
Vivamus Mea Lesbia, Atque Amemus by Thomas Campion |
Vivamus by Ben Jonson |
Love by George Herbert |
Mullidor’s Madrigal by Robert Greene |
A Hymn in Praise of Neptune by Thomas Campion |
On Spenser’s “Faerie Queene” by Sir Walter Raleigh |
If All the Pens That Ever Poets Held by Christopher Marlowe |
Lusty May—Anonymous |
When Flora Had O’erfret the Firth—Anonymous |
In Youth Is Pleasure by Robert Wever |
Come Hither, You That Love by John Fletcher |
A Nymph’s Passion by Ben Jonson |
A Madrigal by William Alexander, Earl of Stirling |
A Welcome by William Browne |
Phillis and Corydon by Robert Greene |
The Triumph of Charis by Ben Jonson |
My Heart Is High Above—Anonymous |
Cards and Kisses by John Lyly |
A Conspiracy—Anonymous |
What the Mighty Love Has Done by John Fletcher |
Menaphon’s Song by Robert Greene |
Love’s Keys—Anonymous |
Love’s Harvesters by George Peele |
The Doubt Which Ye Misdeem by Edmund Spenser |
Via Amoris by Sir Philip Sidney |
Orpheus I Am, Come from the Deeps below by John Fletcher |
I’ll Never Love Thee More by James Graham, Marquis of Montrose |
Love’s College by John Lyly |
Wily Cupid by Henry Chettle |
Madrigal by Francis Davison |
“Beware of Love” by Anonymous |
Uncertainty—Anonymous |
Dispraise of Love and Lover’s Follies by Francis Davison |
If Women Could Be Fair and Yet Not Fond by Edward Vere, Earl of Oxford |
Not Mine Own Fears by William Shakespeare |
Whoever Thinks or Hopes of Love for Love—Anonymous |
Why Canst Thou Not by John Danyel |
The Impatient Maid by George Peele |
The Excuse by Sir Walter Raleigh |
To Electra by Robert Herrick |
To Œnone by Robert Herrick |
The Satyr’s Leave-taking by John Fletcher |
The Satyr and Clorin by John Fletcher |
Song: ‘Doubt you to whom my Muse these notes intendeth’ by Sir Philip Sidney |
Basia by Thomas Campion |
A Canzon Pastoral in Honour of Her Majesty by Edmund Bolton |
Phœbe’s Sonnet by Thomas Lodge |
Love’s Deity by John Donne |
A True Love by Nicholas Grimald |
A Rondel of Love by Alexander Scott |
Love’s Immortality—Anonymous |
Comfort by William Shakespeare |
As Ye Came from the Holy Land by Sir Walter Raleigh |
We Saw and Woo’d Each Other’s Eyes by William Habington |
Love Omnipresent by Thomas Lodge |
Lover’s Infiniteness by John Donne |
The Full Love Is Hushed by William Shakespeare |
Love Me or Not by Thomas Campion |
The Love-Letter by William Shakespeare |
The Silent Lover by Sir Walter Raleigh |
Silence in Love by Sir Walter Raleigh |
A Devout Lover by Thomas Randolph |
Devotion—Anonymous |
Being Your Slave by William Shakespeare |
Were My Heart As Some Men’s Are by Thomas Campion |
Love’s Casuistry by William Shakespeare |
A Lover’s Lullaby by George Gascoigne |
The Great Adventure by William Browne |
Silvia by William Shakespeare |
To Chloe by William Cartwright |
To Roses in the Bosom of Castara by William Habington |
To Anthea, Who May Command Him Anything by Robert Herrick |
To Althea, from Prison by Richard Lovelace |
Cupid’s Hiding-place by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
Fancy and Desire by Edward Vere, Earl of Oxford |
Corydon’s Supplication by Nicholas Breton |
My Lady Greensleeves—Anonymous |
Ulysses and the Siren by Samuel Daniel |
On the Queen’s Return from the Low Countries by William Cartwright |
Madrigal: “My love in her attire doth show her wit” by Anonymous |
Art above Nature: To Julia by Robert Herrick |
The Stately Dames of Rome Their Pearls Did Wear by George Gascoigne |
The Bracelet: To Julia by Robert Herrick |
Upon Julia’s Recovery by Robert Herrick |
Upon Combing Her Hair by Lord Herbert of Cherbury |
So Oft As I Her Beauty Do Behold by Edmund Spenser |
Hey Nonny No!—Anonymous |
Passions by Thomas Watson |
A Praise of His Love by Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey |
Song: ‘Ask me no more where Jove bestows’ by Thomas Carew |
Go, Lovely Rose by Edmund Waller |
My Lady’s Presence Makes the Roses Red by Henry Constable |
On Quicksedge, Wrought with Lovely Eglantine by Robert Tofte |
My Spotless Love Hovers with Purest Wings by Samuel Daniel |
Fairest, When by the Rules of Palmistry by William Browne |
Speak, Thou Fairest Fair by John Fletcher |
Restore Thy Tresses by Samuel Daniel |
Do Me Right and Do Me Reason by Thomas Lodge |
Love Winged My Hopes—Anonymous |
The Mad Maid’s Song by Robert Herrick |
Toss Not My Soul, O Love—Anonymous |
If the Quick Spirits in Your Eye by Thomas Carew |
To the Blest Evanthe by John Fletcher |
Brunet and Phyllis by Sir Thomas Wyatt |
The Invitation by Thomas Dekker |
Piping Peace by James Shirley |
The Solitary Shepherd’s Song by Thomas Lodge |
How Can the Heart Forget Her? by Francis Davison |
Chloris in the Snow—Anonymous |
Camella—Anonymous |
What Delight Can They Enjoy by John Danyel |
Doron’s Jig by Robert Greene |
When, Dearest, I but Think of Thee by Sir John Suckling |
Beauty Bathing by Anthony Munday |
Song: ‘Follow a shadow, it still flies you’ by Ben Jonson |
The Shepherd’s Sun by Anthony Munday |
Against Them Who Lay Unchastity to the Sex of Women by William Habington |
My Hope a Counsel—Anonymous |
Faith Everlasting—Anonymous |
A Doubt of Martyrdom by Sir John Suckling |
The Crier by Michael Drayton |
The Constant Lover by Sir John Suckling |
Sigh No More, Ladies by William Shakespeare |
Hymn to Venus by John Fletcher |
Time and Love by William Shakespeare |
Complaint of the Absence of Her Lover Being upon the Sea by Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey |
To Lucasta, Going beyond the Seas by Richard Lovelace |
To Her Sea-faring Lover—Anonymous |
Song of the Siren by William Browne |
Wounded I Am—Anonymous |
The Ways on Earth by Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex |
Cassandra—Anonymous |
Love’s Sacrifice by John Fletcher |
Sonet: ‘Fra bank to bank, fra wood to wood I rin’ by Mark Alexander Boyd |
Waly, Waly, Love Be Bonny—Anonymous |
The Lover’s Appeal by Sir Thomas Wyatt |
In Imagine Pertransit Homo by Thomas Campion |
Thou May’st Repent by Samuel Daniel |
A Supplication by Sir Thomas Wyatt |
Vixi Puellis Nuper Idoneus by Sir Thomas Wyatt |
The Indifferent by Francis Beaumont |
The Faithless Shepherdess—Anonymous |
Madrigal—Anonymous |
Think’st Thou to Seduce Me Then by Thomas Campion |
The Message by John Donne |
My Heart by Oxford Music School MS. |
To His Forsaken Mistress by Sir Robert Ayton |
I Loved a Lass by George Wither |
Then Hate Me When Thou Wilt by William Shakespeare |
Disdain Me Still—Anonymous |
Away, Delights! by John Fletcher |
To His Inconstant Mistress by Thomas Carew |
To an Inconstant One by Sir Robert Ayton |
Falsehood by William Cartwright |
Accurst Be Love by Thomas Lodge |
The Lover Curseth the Time When First He Fell in Love by Sir Thomas Wyatt |
O Crudelis Amor by George Peele |
To His Lute by Sir Thomas Wyatt |
The Scorner Scorned by George Wither |
Hence Away, You Sirens by George Wither |
A Revocation by Sir Thomas Wyatt |
A Renunciation by Thomas Campion |
A Renunciation by Henry King |
O Cruel Love by John Lyly |
False Love—Anonymous |
’Twas I That Paid for All Things—Anonymous |
The Recall of Love by William Shakespeare |
Take, O Take Those Lips Away by William Shakespeare |
A Recantation—Anonymous |
The Parting by Michael Drayton |
Love and Death by Ben Jonson |
A Dirge: Love Is Dead by Sir Philip Sidney |
Resolved to Dust by Thomas Watson |
The Ballad of Dowsabel by Michael Drayton |
Song: ‘Love is a sickness full of woes’ by Samuel Daniel |
Song: ‘Go and catch a falling star’ by John Donne |
Why So Pale and Wan? by Sir John Suckling |
Sweet Love, Renew Thy Force by William Shakespeare |
Doralicia’s Ditty by Robert Greene |
Familia’s Song by Robert Greene |
Muses That Sing by George Chapman |
I Saw the Object by Thomas Watson |
Yea or Nay by Sir Thomas Wyatt |
Upon Her Protesting, That Now Having Tried His Sincere Affection, She Loved Him by Francis Davison |
The Lowest Trees Have Tops by Sir Edward Dyer |
The Chase by William Rowley |
No Minute Good to Love—Anonymous |
Did Not the Heavenly Rhetoric of Thine Eye by William Shakespeare |
Song: ‘Sweetest love, I do not go’ by John Donne |
The Strange Passion of a Lover by George Gascoigne |
A Bequest of His Heart by Alexander Scott |
Shall I Come, Sweet Love to Thee by Thomas Campion |
Discreet—Anonymous |
Song: ‘Only joy! now here you are’ by Sir Philip Sidney |
The Dream by John Donne |
Song: ‘O dear life, when shall it be’ by Sir Philip Sidney |
N’oserez Vous, Mon Bel Ami? by Robert Greene |
Panglory’s Wooing Song by Giles Fletcher |
Ode: ‘My only star’ by Francis Davison |
The One I Would Love by Sir Thomas Wyatt |
There Is None, O None but You by Thomas Campion |
Montana the Shepherd, His Love to Aminta by Anthony Munday |
Canzonet: ‘I pray thee, leave, love me no more’ by Michael Drayton |
To a Gentlewoman by George Turberville |
The Gift—Anonymous |
Loving in Truth, and Fain in Verse My Love to Show by Sir Philip Sidney |
Montanus’ Vow by Thomas Lodge |
Since Brass, nor Stone by William Shakespeare |
Stella, Think Not by Sir Philip Sidney |
Love Unalterable by William Shakespeare |
Syrinx by John Lyly |
The Merry Cuckoo, Messenger of Spring by Edmund Spenser |
To His Book by Edmund Spenser |
Laura by Thomas Campion |
Let Others Sing of Knights and Paladines by Samuel Daniel |
Fair Hebe—Anonymous |
On Lucy, Countess of Bedford by Ben Jonson |
Clear Anker, on Whose Silver-sanded Shore by Michael Drayton |
I Must Not Grieve My Love, Whose Eyes Would Read by Samuel Daniel |
Down in a Valley, by a Forest’s Side by William Browne |
Rudely Thou Wrongest My Dear Heart’s Desire by Edmund Spenser |
Small Comfort Might My Banish’d Hopes Recall by William Alexander, Earl of Stirling |
And Yet I Cannot Reprehend the Flight by Samuel Daniel |
Zephyrus Brings the Time That Sweetly Scenteth—Anonymous |
Here Lies the Blithe Spring by Thomas Dekker |
Look, Delia, How We Esteem the Half-blown Rose by Samuel Daniel |
The Rose by William Browne |
A Rose by Sir Richard Fanshawe |
Fair Is the Rose—Anonymous |
Sweet Rose, Whence Is This Hue? by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
The Blushing Rose and Purple Flower by Philip Massinger |
The Funeral Rites of the Rose by Robert Herrick |
A Summer’s Day by Michael Drayton |
The Grasshopper by Richard Lovelace |
A Summer Day by Alexander Hume |
Where the Bee Sucks by William Shakespeare |
The Stream by Christopher Marlowe |
The Dancing of the Sea by Sir John Davies |
As When the Time Hath Been by Richard Corbet |
A Sweet Pastoral by Nicholas Breton |
The Country’s Recreations—Anonymous |
Fortunati Nimium by Thomas Campion |
The Happy Countryman by Nicholas Breton |
Come, Follow Me, Ye Country Lasses by John Fletcher or William Rowley |
Country Glee by Thomas Dekker |
What Pleasure Have Great Princes—Anonymous |
The Shepherd’s Wife’s Song by Robert Greene |
An Ode to Master Anthony Stafford to Hasten Him into the Country by Thomas Randolph |
Epithalamium by Sir Philip Sidney |
Bridal Song by John Fletcher |
The Bridal Song by Francis Beaumont |
A Bridal Song by William Shakespeare or John Fletcher |
Epithalamium by Edmund Spenser |
Epithalamion Teratos by George Chapman |
Epithalamium by Ben Jonson |
Prothalamion by Edmund Spenser |
Helen’s Epithalamium by Sir Edward Dyer |
The Fay’s Marriage by Michael Drayton |
A Ballad upon a Wedding by Sir John Suckling |
Sephestia’s Song to Her Child by Robert Greene |
A Sweet Lullaby by Nicholas Breton |
A Child’s Grace by Robert Herrick |
When That I Was and a Little Tiny Boy by William Shakespeare |
Music by William Strode |
Music to Hear, Why Hear’st Thou Music Sadly? by William Shakespeare |
Orpheus by William Shakespeare or John Fletcher |
To Music, to Becalm His Fever by Robert Herrick |
Let Rhymes No More Disgrace—Anonymous |
If Music and Sweet Poetry Agree by Richard Barnfield |
The Bower of Bliss by Edmund Spenser |
Church Music by George Herbert |
To Live Merrily and to Trust to Good Verses by Robert Herrick |
Master Francis Beaumont’s Letter to Ben Jonson by Francis Beaumont |
His Prayer to Ben Jonson by Robert Herrick |
London Taverns by Thomas Heywood |
Let the Bells Ring, and Let the Boys Sing by John Fletcher |
Jolly Good Ale and Old by John Still |
Pedlar’s Song—Anonymous |
Come Buy, Come Buy by William Shakespeare |
Come to the Pedlar by William Shakespeare |
Phœbus, Farewell! by Sir Philip Sidney |
Constancy by William Shakespeare |
Absence by William Shakespeare |
How Like a Winter Hath My Absence Been by William Shakespeare |
Ode by John Donne |
Be Your Words Made, Good Sir, of Indian Ware by Sir Philip Sidney |
To Lucasta, Going to the Wars by Richard Lovelace |
Love and Debt by Sir John Suckling |
Jealousy—Anonymous |
The Wanton Shepherdess by John Fletcher |
A Woman Will Have Her Will by John Fletcher |
Three Poor Mariners by Thomas Ravenscroft |
To the Virginian Voyage by Michael Drayton |
For Soldiers by Humphrey Gifford |
Agincourt by Michael Drayton |
A Farewell to Arms by George Peele |
The Soldier Going to the Field by Sir William Davenant |
The Fairy Life by William Shakespeare |
Charms by Thomas Campion |
The Charm by William Browne |
Cuckoo by William Shakespeare |
The Ousel-Cock, So Black of Hue by William Shakespeare |
You Spotted Snakes by William Shakespeare |
The Holy Well by John Fletcher |
Nymphidia by Michael Drayton |
Hymn to Pan by John Fletcher |
Hymn to Pan by Ben Jonson |
An Ode to Himself by Ben Jonson |
Who Grace for Zenith Had by Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke |
Song: ‘Virtue’s branches wither, Virtue pines’ by Thomas Dekker |
Pari Jugo Dulcis Tractus—Anonymous |
Man by Sir John Davies |
The Life of Man by Henry King |
The Pulley by George Herbert |
Integer Vitae by Thomas Campion |
A Fancy by Sir Edward Dyer |
Epode by Ben Jonson |
Man’s Medley by George Herbert |
Scorn Not the Least by Robert Southwell |
Self-Trial—Anonymous |
Amantium Irae by Richard Edwardes |
O Sweet Woods by Sir Philip Sidney |
Man’s Civil War by Robert Southwell |
The World by Francis Bacon |
Go, Nightly Cares—Anonymous |
Epistle to the Countess of Cumberland by Samuel Daniel |
Change and Fate by Thomas Campion |
A Farewell to the Vanities of the World by Sir Walter Raleigh |
A Farewell to the World by Ben Jonson |
Care for Thyself—Anonymous |
Madrigal by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
My Mind a Kingdom by Sir Edward Dyer |
The Noble Balm by Ben Jonson |
Wishes for Vin by Richard Corbet |
The Means to Attain Happy Life by Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey |
The Character of a Happy Life by Sir Henry Wotton |
Risposta—Anonymous |
Content by Robert Greene |
Sweet Content by Thomas Dekker |
Thrice Happy He Who by Some Shady Grove by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
Ah, Sweet Content, Where Is Thy Mild Abode? by Barnabe Barnes |
A Passion of My Lord of Essex by Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex |
Truth Doth Truth Deserve by Sir Philip Sidney |
A Song for Priests by Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke |
Coronemus nos Rosis antequam marcescant by Thomas Jordan |
Crabbèd Age and Youth by William Shakespeare |
Times Go by Turns by Robert Southwell |
Even Such Is Time by Sir Walter Raleigh |
Time by Jasper Mayne |
The Merry Heart by William Shakespeare |
Old Age by Edmund Waller |
Questions and Answers by Thomas, Lord Vaux |
No Medicine to Mirth by Francis Beaumont |
To Be Merry by Robert Herrick |
Virtue Triumphant by Ben Jonson |
A Madrigal by Thomas Lodge |
Whilst Youthful Sports Are Lasting by Thomas Lodge |
Content and Resolute by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
They That Have Power to Hurt and Will Do None by William Shakespeare |
The Expense of Spirit in a Waste of Shame by William Shakespeare |
Loss in Delay by Robert Southwell |
Lines Written on a Garden Seat by George Gascoigne |
To Daffodils by Robert Herrick |
Vanitas Vanitatum by John Webster |
Whether Men Do Laugh or Weep by Thomas Campion |
Life, a Bubble by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
O Fly, My Soul by James Shirley |
All Is Naught—Anonymous |
Poor Soul, the Centre of My Sinful Earth by William Shakespeare |
Happy He—Anonymous |
Concerning the Honour of Books by John Florio |
The Book of the World by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
The World, a Hunting by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
Virtue by George Herbert |
A Contrast by Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke |
Eidola by Samuel Daniel |
A Palinode by Edmund Bolton |
Sic Transit by Thomas Campion |
Amiens’ Song by William Shakespeare |
Embers by William Shakespeare |
Fidele by William Shakespeare |
Sad Memorials by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
A Religious Use of Taking Tobacco by Robert Wisdome |
If Thou Survive by William Shakespeare |
On Sardanapalus’ Dishonourable Life and Miserable Death by Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey |
I Fear Not Henceforth Death by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
Good Night by Thomas Armstrong |
Chidiock Tichborne’s Lament by Chidiock Tichborne |
His Winding-Sheet by Robert Herrick |
Miserrimus by Robert Greene |
To a Mistress Dying by Sir William Davenant |
Thy Bosom Is Endearèd with All Hearts by William Shakespeare |
When to the Sessions of Sweet Silent Thought by William Shakespeare |
To His Lute by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
Alexis, Here She Stayed, among These Pines by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
Sweet Soul, Which in the April of Thy Years by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
Forget by William Shakespeare |
One Day I Wrote Her Name upon the Strand by Edmund Spenser |
I Know That All beneath the Moon Decays by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
Thou Window, Once Which Servèd for a Sphere by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
Æglamour’s Lament by Ben Jonson |
O Crudelis Amor by Thomas Campion |
Her Autumn by William Shakespeare |
Like As the Culver, on the Barèd Bough by Edmund Spenser |
To Me, Fair Friend, You Never Can Be Old by William Shakespeare |
Bright Soul of the Sad Year by Thomas Nashe |
Praise of Ceres by Thomas Heywood |
Winter by William Shakespeare |
Now Winter Nights Enlarge by Thomas Campion |
A Round by Francis Beaumont |
Come, Sorrow, Come—Anonymous |
Come, Ye Heavy States of Night—Anonymous |
O, Sorrow, Sorrow by Thomas Dekker |
Urns and Odours Bring Away by William Shakespeare or John Fletcher |
Melancholy by John Fletcher |
Disconsolate—Anonymous |
Of Misery by Thomas Howell |
The Weeper by Richard Crashaw |
Idle Tears by John Fletcher |
I Saw My Lady Weep—Anonymous |
Weep You No More, Sad Fountains—Anonymous |
To Daisies, Not to Shut So Soon by Robert Herrick |
The Evening Knell by John Fletcher |
Pan’s Sentinel by John Fletcher |
Song of Woe by William Shakespeare |
Country Nights by Richard Corbet |
Sweet Suffolk Owl by Thomas Vautor |
Love Hath Eyes by Night—Anonymous |
The Night-Piece: To Julia by Robert Herrick |
Nox Nocti Indicat Scientiam by William Habington |
Song: ‘Who is it that, this dark night’ by Sir Philip Sidney |
Now the Hungry Lion Roars by William Shakespeare |
To a Nightingale by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
To the Nightingale by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
Hymn to Diana by Ben Jonson |
To Cynthia by Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke |
The Moon by Sir Philip Sidney |
To Cynthia by Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke |
The Moon by Charles Best |
Lullaby by Thomas Dekker |
Come, Sleep by John Fletcher |
Invocation to Sleep by John Fletcher |
Care-Charmer Sleep, Son of the Sable Night by Samuel Daniel |
Hark, All You Ladies by Thomas Campion |
Sleep, Angry Beauty, Sleep by Thomas Campion |
To Sleep by Sir Philip Sidney |
Sleep by Thomas Sackville, Earl of Dorset |
Two Carols. I. Bringing in the Boar’s Head—Anonymous |
Two Carols. II. In Die Nativitatis—Anonymous |
A Christmas Carol by Robert Herrick |
Ceremonies for Christmas by Robert Herrick |
Our Blessed Lady’s Lullaby by Richard Rowlands |
To His Saviour, a Child: A Present by a Child by Robert Herrick |
The Burning Babe by Robert Southwell |
Verses from the Shepherds’ Hymn by Richard Crashaw |
The New Year’s Gift by Robert Herrick |
Saint John Baptist by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
Upon the Book and Picture of the Seraphical Saint Teresa by Richard Crashaw |
To Saint Katherine by Henry Constable |
For the Magdalene by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
A Hymn to the Name and Honour of the Admirable Saint Teresa by Richard Crashaw |
The Talent by Barnabe Barnes |
To His Ever-loving God by Robert Herrick |
A Hymn to God the Father by John Donne |
The Soul’s Haven by Nicholas Breton |
A Litany by Phineas Fletcher |
His Pilgrimage by Sir Walter Raleigh |
Litany to the Holy Spirit by Robert Herrick |
Forsake Thyself, to Heaven Turn Thee by Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke |
To Music Bent Is My Retired Mind by Thomas Campion |
A Dialogue by George Herbert |
Discipline by George Herbert |
An Ecstasy by Francis Quarles |
O Come Quickly by Thomas Campion |
The White Island by Robert Herrick |
If I Could Shut the Gate against My Thoughts by John Danyel |
Praise and Prayer by Sir William Davenant |
The Collar by George Herbert |
The Flower by George Herbert |
Guests by Christ Church MS. |
In Time of Plague by Thomas Nashe |
Most Glorious Lord of Life, That on This Day by Edmund Spenser |
Christ Crucified by Richard Crashaw |
Easter Song by George Herbert |
Beyond by Lord Herbert of Cherbury |
The New Jerusalem—Anonymous |
Epigram by Francis Quarles |
What Doth It Serve to See Sun’s Burning Face by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
Aspatia’s Song by John Fletcher |
Ophelia’s Song by William Shakespeare |
Valediction, Forbidding Mourning by John Donne |
Death’s Emissaries by James Shirley |
Death the Leveller by James Shirley |
Death, Be Not Proud by John Donne |
Echo’s Dirge for Narcissus by Ben Jonson |
A Lover’s Dirge by William Shakespeare |
Robin Hood’s Dirge by Anthony Munday and Henry Chettle |
A Land Dirge by John Webster |
A Sea Dirge by William Shakespeare |
The Shrouding of the Duchess of Malfi by John Webster |
The Funeral by John Donne |
On the Tombs in Westminster Abbey by Francis Beaumont |
The Phœnix and the Turtle by William Shakespeare |
On the Death of Sir Philip Sidney by Henry Constable |
From ‘Daphnaïda’ by Edmund Spenser |
To His Paternal Country by Robert Herrick |
Three Epitaphs upon the Death of a Rare Child of Six Years Old by Francis Davison |
Upon a Child That Died by Robert Herrick |
Another Elegy upon a Child That Died by Robert Herrick |
Exequy on His Wife by Henry King |
On a Virtuous Young Gentlewoman That Died Suddenly by William Cartwright |
Of His Dear Son, Gervase by Sir John Beaumont |
A Part of an Ode by Ben Jonson |
On the Lady Mary Villiers by Thomas Carew |
Hero’s Epitaph by William Shakespeare |
Epitaph on the Countess Dowager of Pembroke by William Browne 1590–c. 1645) or Ben Jonson |
Epitaph on Elizabeth L. H. by Ben Jonson |
An Epitaph on Salathiel Pavy by Ben Jonson |
Upon the Death of Sir Albertus Morton’s Wife by Sir Henry Wotton |
In Obitum M S, X. Maij, 1614 by William Browne |
The Widow by George Wither |
An Epitaph upon Husband and Wife by Richard Crashaw |
Troll the Bowl by Thomas Dekker |
The Bonny Earl of Murray—Anonymous |
An Elegy of a Woman’s Heart by Sir Henry Wotton |
Comfort to a Youth That Had Lost His Love by Robert Herrick |
Let No Bird Sing by William Browne |
Calantha’s Dirge by John Ford |
Luce’s Dirge by Francis Beaumont |
Penthea’s Dying Song by John Ford |
An Elegy upon the Death of Doctor Donne by Thomas Carew |
The Soul’s Errand by Sir Walter Raleigh |
No Trust in Time by William Drummond of Hawthornden |
To Time by A. W. |
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Postscript: Sonnet Prefixed to His Majesty’s Instructions to His Dearest Son, Henry the Prince by King James I. |