List of Editions
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Aged man that moves these fields (A Dialogue betwixt Time and a Pilgrime)
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Am I dispised because you say (To his Mistress objecting his Age)
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Amarantha sweet & fair (To Amarantha, To dishevell her haire)
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As Cælia rested in the shade (A Pastorall Dialogue betwixt Cleon and Cælia)
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Aske me why I send you here (The Primrose)
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Bacchus, I-acchus, fill our Brains (A Bacchanall)
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Be gone, be gone thou perjured man (No Constancy in Man)
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Canst thou love me and yet doubt (The Heart entire)
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Careless of Love and free from Fears (The Surprise)
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Cloris your selfe you so excell (To the same Lady, singing the former Song)
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Come Chloris hie we to the Bower (Chlrois taking the Ayre)
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Come heavy Souls, oppressed with the weight (Desperato's Banquet)
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Come my Lucasta heer's the Grove (Love and Loyalty)
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Come my Sweet, whilst every strain (Love and Musick)
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Come, come, thou glorious object of my sight (Beauty Paramont)
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Cælia, thy bright Angel's face (The Celestiall Mistress)
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Dearest do not now delay me (To his Mistress upon his going to travell)
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Distressed Pilgrim whose dark clouded eyes (A Dialogue betwixt Cordanus and Amoret, on a Lost Heart)
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Farewell fair Saint, may not the sea and wind (To his Mistress going to Sea)
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Gaze not on Swanns in whose soft brest (Beauties Excellency)
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Give me more Love, or more Disdain (Mediocrity in Love rejected)
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Go thou Emblem of my heart (Upon a Crowned Heart sent to a Cruell Mistress)
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Grieve not, dear Love, although we often part
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He that loves a rosie cheek (Disdaine returned)
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I long to sing the seidge of Troy (Anacreon's Ode, called, The Lute, Englished and to be sung by a Basse alone)
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If my Mistress fix her eye (The Captive Lover)
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If when the Sun at Noon displayes (Night and Day to his Mistress)
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Imbre lachrymarum largo Genas spargo (An Eccho)
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Inquel gelato core (Tavola)
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It is not that I love you lesse (The self Banished)
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Keep on your veile and hide your eye (To a Lady putting off her veile)
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Ladies who gild the glittering Noon (Beauties Eclypsed)
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Ladies, you whose smooth and dainty Skin (A caution to faire Ladies)
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Lately on yonder swelling Bush
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Lovely Chloris through thine eyes (Love above Beauty)
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Musick, thou Queen of souls (The Power of Musick)
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O now the certain cause I know (To a Lady weeping)
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O the fickle state of Lovers (The fickle state of Lovers)
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Sing fair Clorinda whilst you move
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The Day's returned, and so are we, to pay (An Anniversary on the Nuptials of John Earle of Bridgewater, July 12. 1652.)
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Theseus, O Theseus, hark! but yet in vain (Ariadne deserted by Theseus Sittinge uppon a Rock in the Island Naxos thus Complaines)
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Thou Shepheard whose intentive eye (In praise of his Mistress)
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Thou art so fair, and yong withall (Youth and Beauty)
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Though my torment far exceeds (A Smile, or Frown)
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Till I beheld fair Calia's face (Cælia singing)
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Till now I never did believe (The Reformed Lover)
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Tis Wine that inspires (The Excellency of Wine)
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Tis true (Fair Celia) that by thee I live (To Cælia, inviting her to Marriage)
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Two hundred minutes are run down (Staying in London after the Act for Banishment, and going to meet a Friend who sailed the hour
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Venus, redress a wrong that's done (A Complaint Against Cupid)
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When on the Altar of my hand (In the Person of a Lady to her inconstant servant)
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When thou, poor Excommunicate (To his Inconstant Mistress)
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While I listen to thy voyce (To a Lady singing)
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Θέλω λέγειν Ἀτρείδας (Τῶν ἈΝΑΚΡΈΟΝΤΟΣ εἴς Λύραν. α´)