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Seventeenth-century verse and prose /

Volume One: Poets included are Lancelot Andrewes, Francis Bacon, John Donne, Ben Jonson, Robert Burton, Phineas Fletcher, Giles Fletcher, George Wither, Thomas Hobbes, Robert Herrick, George Herbert, Izaak Walton, Thomas Carew, Sir Thomas Browne, Sir William Davenant, Edmund Waller, Sir John Sucklin...

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Основен автор: White, Helen Constance, 1896-1967.
Формат: Книга
Език: English
Публикувано: New York : Macmillan, [1951-52].
Предмети:
Подобни документи: Online version:: Seventeenth-century verse and prose.
Съдържание:
  • v. 1.
  • 1600-1660.
  • A sermon preached before the Kings majestie, at White-Hall, on Wednesday the XXV of December, A.D. MDCXXII, being Christmasse Day /
  • Lancelot Andrewes
  • Essays.
  • Of studies (1597) ;
  • Of studies (1625) ;
  • Of discourse (1597) ;
  • Of discourse (1625) ;
  • Of truth ;
  • Of adversity ;
  • Of simulation and dissimulation ;
  • Of envy ;
  • Of atheism ;
  • Of empire ;
  • Of cunning ;
  • Of nature in men /
  • Francis Bacon
  • The proficience and advancement of learning, divine and human /
  • Francis Bacon
  • Poems.
  • At the round earths imagin'd corners, blow ;
  • Death be not proud ;
  • Batter my heart, three person'd God /
  • John Donne
  • To Sir Edward Herbert at Julyers ;
  • The autumnall ;
  • Good Friday, 1613; riding westward ;
  • A nocturnall upon S. Lucies Day ;
  • The apparition ;
  • A valediction : forbidding mourning ;
  • The good-morrow ;
  • Song ;
  • Womans constancy ;
  • The sunne rising ;
  • The indifferent ;
  • The canonization ;
  • Lovers infinitenesse ;
  • Song ;
  • Aire and angells ;
  • The anniversarie ;
  • Loves growth ;
  • The flea ;
  • An anatomie of the world ;
  • Elegie on his mistris ;
  • The extasie ;
  • Loves deitie ;
  • The funerall ;
  • The relique ;
  • The dissolution ;
  • A hymne to Christ ;
  • Satyre III ;
  • A hymne to God the Father ;
  • Hymne to God my God, in my sicknesse ;
  • Devotions upon emergent occasions ;
  • Sermon XXIII preached at S. Pauls, for Easter-day, 1628 /
  • John Donne
  • Epigrammes.
  • To the reader ;
  • To my booke ;
  • On some-thing, that walkes some-where ;
  • To William Camden ;
  • On my first daughter ;
  • To John Donne ;
  • On my first sonne ;
  • To William Roe ;
  • On Lucy Countesse of Bedford ;
  • To Lucy, Countesse of Bedford with Mr. Donnes satyres ;
  • To Sir Henrie Savile ;
  • To John Donne ;
  • Inviting a friend to supper ;
  • Epitaph on S.P. ;
  • Epitaph on Elizabeth, L.H. /
  • Ben Jonson
  • The forest.
  • To Penshurst ;
  • To Sir Robert Wroth ;
  • Song : To Celia ;
  • To the same ;
  • Song : To Celia ;
  • Epode /
  • Ben Jonson
  • Under-woods.
  • A hymne to God the Father ;
  • A hymne on the Nativitie of my Saviour /
  • Ben Jonson
  • Under-woods.
  • A celebration of charis.
  • His excuse for loving ;
  • How he saw her ;
  • Her triumph /
  • Ben Jonson
  • Under-woods.
  • In the person of woman kind ;
  • My picture left in Scotland ;
  • An elegie ;
  • An ode, to himselfe ;
  • A fit of rime against rime ;
  • An epistle answering to one that asked to be sealed of the tribe of Ben ;
  • To the immortall memorie, and friendship of that noble paire, Sir Lucius Cary, and Sir H. Morison /
  • Ben Jonson
  • To the memory of my beloved, the author Mr. William Shakespeare ;
  • Ben. Johnsons sociable rules for the Apollo /
  • Ben Jonson
  • Songs from the masques and plays.
  • Song ;
  • Hymne ;
  • Song ;
  • Song /
  • Ben Jonson
  • The vision of delight presented at court in Christmas, 1617 ;
  • Timber, or, Discoveries /
  • Ben Jonson.
  • v. 1.
  • 1600-1660.
  • Prose characters.
  • Of a base and frivolous affectation of praise /
  • Theophrastus
  • Characters of vertues and vices.
  • The malcontent ;
  • A patient man ;
  • The good magistrate /
  • Joseph Hall
  • The overburian characters.
  • A courtier ;
  • A sailor ;
  • APuritan ;
  • A fair and happy milkmaid ;
  • A roaring boy ;
  • A prison ;
  • What a character is
  • Micro-cosmographie.
  • A grave divine ;
  • A pretender to learning /
  • John Earle.
  • v. 1.
  • 1600-1660.
  • The anatomy of melancholy /
  • Robert Burton
  • The locusts, or, Apollyonists.
  • Canto I /
  • Phineas Fletcher
  • Piscatorie eclogues.
  • Eclog. III /
  • Phineas Fletcher
  • Christ's victorie and triumph.
  • Christ's victorie on earth /
  • Giles Fletcher
  • The shepheards hunting.
  • The fourth eglogue /
  • George Wither
  • Faire virtue, the mistresse of Phil'arete.
  • Sonnet 4 /
  • George Wither
  • Brittan's remembrancer ;
  • A collection of emblemes, ancient and moderne /
  • George Wither
  • Haleluiah, or, Britan's second remembrancer.
  • Hymne I ;
  • Hymn L /
  • George Wither
  • The tired petitioner /
  • George Wither
  • Leviathan, or, The matter, forme and power of a commonwealth ecclesiasticall and civil ;
  • The answer of Mr. Hobbes to Sir Will. D'Avenant's preface before Gondibert /
  • Thomas Hobbes
  • Hesperides.
  • The argument of his book ;
  • When he would have his verses read ;
  • To Perilla ;
  • Upon the losse of his mistresses ;
  • Cherrie-ripe ;
  • Discontents in Devon ;
  • To the reverend shade of his religious father ;
  • Delight in disorder ;
  • Upon love ;
  • Dean-bourn, a rude river in Devon, by which sometimes he lived ;
  • To laurels ;
  • A country life : to his brother, M. Tho : Herrick ;
  • Divination by a daffadill ;
  • En epitaph upon a child ;
  • His fare-well to sack ;
  • Upon a virgin kissing a rose ;
  • To Dianeme ;
  • Corinna's going a Maying ;
  • To his dying brother, Master William Herrick ;
  • To cherry-blossomes ;
  • The welcome to sack ;
  • To live merrily, and to trust to good verses ;
  • To the virgins, to make much of time ;
  • A dirge upon the death of the right valiant Lord, Bernard Stuart ;
  • To musique, to becalme his fever ;
  • The hock-cart, or, Harvest home ;
  • To the western wind ;
  • To primroses fill'd with morningdew ;
  • To Anthea, who may command him any thing ;
  • To meddowes ;
  • A nuptiall song, or, Epithalamie on Sir Clipseby Crew and his lady ;
  • Upon Prudence Baldwin her sickness ;
  • Upon a child that dyed ;
  • Oberons feast ;
  • To daffadills ;
  • To Larr ;
  • The meddow verse, or, Aniversary to Mistris Bridget Lowman ;
  • The parting verse, the feast there ended ;
  • To the most learned, wise, and arch-antiquary, M. John Seldon ;
  • The old wives prayer ;
  • His lachrimæ or mirth, turn'd to mourning ;
  • The mad maids song ;
  • To daisies, not to shut so soone ;
  • An epitaph upon a virgin ;
  • To blossoms ;
  • On himselfe ;
  • To his tomb-maker ;
  • His content in the country ;
  • The apparition of his mistresse calling him to Elizium ;
  • His prayer to Ben. Jonson ;
  • The night-piece, to Julia ;
  • His charge to Julia at his death ;
  • Upon a child ;
  • To Electra ;
  • To fortune ;
  • His grange, or, Private wealth ;
  • The apron of flowers ;
  • Upon Julia's clothes ;
  • Upon Prew his maid ;
  • Upon Ben. Johnson ;
  • An ode for him /
  • Robert Herrick.
  • v. 1.
  • 1600-1660.
  • His noble numbers, or, His pious pieces.
  • His prayer for absolution ;
  • Mercy and love ;
  • His ejaculation to God ;
  • His letanie, to the Holy Spirit ;
  • A thanksgiving to God, for his house ;
  • Another grace for a child ;
  • The new-yeeres gift, or, Circumcisions song /
  • Robert Herrick
  • The temple.
  • The altar ;
  • Redemption ;
  • Easter ;
  • H. Baptisme ;
  • Prayer ;
  • Love ;
  • Employment ;
  • Grace ;
  • Church-musick ;
  • The windows ;
  • Sunday ;
  • To all angels and saints ;
  • Christmas ;
  • The world ;
  • Vanitie ;
  • Vertue ;
  • The pearle : Matth. 13 ;
  • Man ;
  • Life ;
  • Decay ;
  • The quip ;
  • Dialogue ;
  • Artillerie ;
  • Longing ;
  • The collar ;
  • The pulley ;
  • The flower ;
  • The elixer ;
  • Death ;
  • Dooms-day ;
  • Love /
  • George Herbert
  • The compleat angler ;
  • The life of Mr. George Herbert /
  • Izaak Walton
  • The spring ;
  • Mediocritie in love rejected ;
  • To my inconstant mistris ;
  • Perswsions to enjoy ;
  • Ingratefull beauty threatened ;
  • Disdaine returned ;
  • Boldnesse in love ;
  • Epitaph on the Lady Mary Villers ;
  • An other ;
  • An other ;
  • Maria Wentworth. Thomae Comitis Cleveland, Filia Præmortuæ prima virgineam animam exhalauit ;
  • An elegie upon the death of the deane of Pauls, Dr. John Donne ;
  • To a lady that desired I would love her ;
  • To my worthy friend Master Geo. Sands, on his translation of the psalmes ;
  • On sight of a gentlewomans face in the water ;
  • A song /
  • Thomas Carew
  • Religio medici ;
  • Hydrotaphia ;
  • The garden of cyrus /
  • Sir Thomas Browne
  • A discourse upon Gondibert ;
  • Gondibert ;
  • Song /
  • Sir William Davenant
  • Of his majesties receiving the news of the Duke of Buckingham's death ;
  • To amoret ;
  • Song ;
  • The battle of the summer-islands ;
  • On a girdle ;
  • At Penshurst : another ;
  • Upon Ben. Johnson ;
  • Chloris and Hilas. made to a sarabran ;
  • To Mr. Henry Lawes ;
  • Of the last verses in the book ;
  • Panegyrick upon O. Cromwell /
  • Edmund Waller
  • Fragmenta aurea.
  • On new-years day 1640 : To the king ;
  • A sessions of the poets ;
  • Loves world ;
  • Song ;
  • Sonnett II ;
  • Sonnett III ;
  • Barley-break ;
  • Tis now since I sate down ;
  • A ballade : upon a wedding /
  • Sir John Suckling
  • The last remains.
  • Sir J.S. ;
  • Sir Toby Matthews ;
  • A soldier /
  • Sir John Suckling
  • Steps to the temple.
  • Divine epigrams.
  • On the baptized Æthiopian ;
  • To the infant martyrs ;
  • Upon Lazarus his teares ;
  • On our crucified Lord naked, and bloody ;
  • On the bleeding wounds of our crucified Lord ;
  • On Mr. G. Herberts booke, intituled The temple of sacred poems, sent to a gentlewoman /
  • Richard Crashaw.
  • v. 1.
  • 1600-1660.
  • The delights of the muses.
  • Musicks duell ;
  • Sospetto d'Herode ;
  • Out of the Italian : a song ;
  • Wishes : to his (supposed) mistresse /
  • Richard Crashaw
  • Carmen Deo nostro, te decet hymnus sacred poems.
  • To the name above every name, the name of Jesus a hymn ;
  • In the holy Nativity of Our Lord God a hymn sung as by the shepheards ;
  • Sainte Mary Magdalene or the weeper ;
  • A hymn to the name and honor of the admirable Sainte Teresa ;
  • The flaming heart ;
  • Temperance ;
  • M. Crashaws answer for hope /
  • Richard Crashaw
  • The rule and exercises of holy living /
  • Jeremy Taylor
  • An elegie upon the death of the Lord Hastings ;
  • Coopers Hill ;
  • On Mr. Abraham Cowley ;
  • The destruction fo Troy : Aeneid II /
  • Sir John Denham
  • Lucasta.
  • To Lucasta, going to the warres ;
  • To Lucasta, going beyond the seas ;
  • To Amarantha, that she would dishevell her haire ;
  • To Lucasta : the rose ;
  • Gratiana Dauncing and singing ;
  • The grass-hopper ;
  • The vintage to the dungeon ;
  • To Althea from prison /
  • Richard Lovelace
  • Lucasta postume poems.
  • To Lucasta : he reserved looks /
  • Richard Lovelace
  • Miscellanies.
  • Ode : of wit ;
  • On the death of Mr. William Hervey ;
  • The chronicle ;
  • To Sir William Davenant ;
  • On the death of Mr. Crashaw /
  • Abraham Cowley
  • Anacreontiques.
  • Drinking ;
  • The grasshopper /
  • Abraham Cowley
  • The mistress.
  • The thraldome ;
  • Written in juice of lemmon ;
  • Platonick love ;
  • The change ;
  • Clad all in white ;
  • The wish ;
  • The welcome ;
  • Against hope /
  • Abraham Cowley
  • Pindarique odes.
  • To Mr. Hobs /
  • Abraham Cowley
  • Davideis ;
  • Hymn : to light /
  • Abraham Cowley
  • Essays.
  • Of liberty ;
  • Of my self /
  • Abraham Cowley
  • A dialogue between the resolved soul and created pleasure ;
  • On a drop of dew ;
  • The coronet ;
  • Bermudas ;
  • A dialogue between the soul and body ;
  • The nymph complaining for the death of her faun ;
  • To his coy mistress ;
  • The definition of love ;
  • The picture of little T.C. in a prospect of flowers ;
  • The garden ;
  • Senec. traged. ex Thyeste chor. 2 ;
  • The mower against gardens ;
  • The mower's song ;
  • Upon Appleton house ;
  • An Horation ode upon Cromwel's return from Ireland /
  • Andrew Marvell
  • Silex scintillans.
  • The retreate ;
  • Come, come, what doe I here? ;
  • Joy of my life! while left me here ;
  • Silence and stealth of dayes! ;
  • Buriall ;
  • Peace ;
  • Corruption ;
  • Unprofitablenes ;
  • The world ;
  • The constellation ;
  • Man ;
  • Ascension-hymn ;
  • They are all gone into the world of light ;
  • Cock-crowing ;
  • The bird ;
  • The timber ;
  • The seed growing secretly ;
  • As time one day by me did pass ;
  • The night ;
  • The water-fall ;
  • Quickness ;
  • The book /
  • Henry Vaughan.
  • v. 2.
  • 1660-1700.
  • The history of the rebellion and civil wars in England /
  • Edward Hyde, Earl of Clarendon
  • Hudibras /
  • Samuel Butler
  • Prose characters.
  • A modern politician ;
  • A bumpkin, or country-squire ;
  • A philosopher ;
  • A ranter /
  • Samuel Butler
  • Democritus Platonissans, or, An essay upon the infinity of worlds out of platonick principles ;
  • Divine dialogues /
  • Henry More
  • The saints everlasting rest /
  • Richard Baxter
  • The diary of John Evelyn /
  • John Evelyn
  • The rehearsal transpros'd /
  • Andrew Marvell
  • Grace abounding to the chief of sinners ;
  • The pilgrims progress /
  • John Bunyan
  • Upon the gardens of Epicurus, or, Of gardening in the year 1685 ;
  • Of poetry /
  • Sir William Temple.
  • v. 2.
  • 1660-1700.
  • Anglican sermons.
  • The pleasantness of religion /
  • Isaac Barrow
  • An account of the nature and measures of conscience /
  • Robert South
  • The advantages of religion to societies /
  • John Tillotson.
  • v. 2.
  • 1660-1700.
  • Upon the death of the Lord Hastings ;
  • Heroique stanzas, consecrated to the glorious memory of his most serene and renowned highnesse, Oliver, late lord protector of this commonwealth, &c ;
  • To my friend, Dr. Charleton, on his learned and useful works; and more particularly this of Stone-Heng, by him restored to the true founders ;
  • Of dramatick poesie : an essay ;
  • Prologue to secret-love, or, The maiden-queen ;
  • Epilogue to Tyrannick love ;
  • Song ;
  • Song ;
  • The zambra dance ;
  • Epilogue ;
  • Song ;
  • Prologue ;
  • Epilogue spoken by Mrs. Boutell ;
  • A song from the italian ;
  • Prologue ;
  • Song ;
  • Absalom and Achitophel : a poem ;
  • MacFlecknoe, or, A satyr upon the true-blew Protestant poet, T.S. ;
  • The second part of Absalom and Achitophel ;
  • Religio laici, or, A layman's faith : a poem ;
  • A song ;
  • To the memory of Mr. Oldham ;
  • Horat, ode 29, book 3, paraphrase'd in Pindarique verse ;
  • To the pious memory of the accomplisht young lady Mrs. Anne Killigrew, excellent in the two sister-arts of poesie, and painting : an ode ;
  • The hind and the panther ;
  • A song for St. Cecilia's Day, 1687 ;
  • Lines printed under the engraved portrait of Milton, in Tonson's folio of the Paradise lost, 1688 ;
  • Mercury's song to Phædra ;
  • Song ;
  • Song ;
  • Veni Creator Spiritus, translated in paraphrase ;
  • The sixth book of the Æneis ;
  • To my dear friend Mr. Congreve, on his comedy, call'd, The double-dealer ;
  • Alexander's feast, or, The power of musique : an ode, in honour of St. Cecilia's Day ;
  • Preface to fables ancient and modern ;
  • The secular masque /
  • John Dryden
  • An essay concerning human understanding ;
  • The second treatise of civil government /
  • John Locke.
  • v. 2.
  • 1660-1700.
  • Diary of Samuel Pepys /
  • Samuel Pepys
  • The lady's New-Year's-gift, or, Advice to a daughter ;
  • The character of a trimmer /
  • George Savile, first Marquis of Halifax
  • The poetical works.
  • The salutation ;
  • Wonder ;
  • Eden ;
  • My spirit ;
  • Amendment ;
  • Love ;
  • News ;
  • On leaping over the moon ;
  • To the same purpos ;
  • Consummation ;
  • Hosanna /
  • Thomas Traherne
  • Centuries of meditations /
  • Thomas Traherne
  • Song : written at sea, in the first Dutch war, 1665, the night before an engagement ;
  • Song ;
  • Song ;
  • Song /
  • Charles Sackville, Earl of Dorset
  • Song ;
  • Song ;
  • The indifference ;
  • Song ;
  • Advice to the old beaux ;
  • Song ;
  • Song /
  • Sir Charles Sedley
  • The mulberry-garden, III, ii.
  • Song /
  • Sir Charles Sedley
  • Upon the most useful knowledge, craft or cunning, which is more wisdom, as 'tis less wit ;
  • A drinking-song, against all sorts of disputes in drinking : to one who always bawl'd to have reason done him, and was noicie , and quarrelsom in his cups ;
  • To a witty man of wealth and quality, who, after his dismissal from court, said, he might justly complain of it ;
  • A song : In the name of a lover, to his mistress, who said, she hated him for his grey hairs, which he had at thirty /
  • William Wycherly
  • A dialogue between Strephon and Daphne ;
  • A song ;
  • Love and life : a song ;
  • Upon drinking in a bowl ;
  • A song ;
  • A letter from Artemisa in the town, to Chloe, in the country ;
  • A satyr against mankind /
  • John Wilmot, second Earl of Rochester
  • Satyrs upon the Jesuits.
  • Proluge ;
  • Satyr III /
  • John Oldham
  • The careless good fellow /
  • John Oldham.