Blacklight

Poems by Pembroke and Ruddier [R209979]

DMI number:
1765
Publication Date:
1660
Volume Number:
1 of 1
ESTC number:
R209979
EEBO/ECCO link:
http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2003&res_id=xri:eebo&rft_id=xri:eebo:citation:99868823
Shelfmark:
EEBO
Place of Publication:
London
Genres:
Collection of 17th century verse and Collection of coterie verse
Format:
Octavo
Content/Publication
First Line:
Can you suspect a change in me
Page No:
pp. 1-3
Poem Title:
EARLE OF PEMBROKE, Lord Steward: SONNET.
Attribution:
EARLE OF PEMBROKE, Lord Steward
Attributed To:
William Herbert
First Line:
If her disdain least change in you can move
Page No:
pp. 3-5
Poem Title:
P.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
As heat's to life so is desire to love
Page No:
p. 5
Poem Title:
II.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Disdain me still that I may ever love
Page No:
p. 5
Poem Title:
P. I.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
William Herbert
First Line:
Shall Love that have Latona's heir the foyle
Page No:
pp. 5-7
Poem Title:
[no title]
Attribution:
Attributed To:
William Herbert
First Line:
No praise it is that him who Python slew
Page No:
pp. 7-11
Poem Title:
R.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
It is enough a Master you grant Love
Page No:
pp. 11-13
Poem Title:
P.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Not like a Skeptick equally distract
Page No:
pp. 13-20
Poem Title:
R.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Men sad and settled love not to contend
Page No:
pp. 20-21
Poem Title:
P.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Nor will I know your wound exulcerate
Page No:
pp. 21-22
Poem Title:
R.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Canst thou love me and yet doubt
Page No:
p. 23
Poem Title:
Sonnet. P.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Soul's joy when I am gone
Page No:
p. 24
Poem Title:
Song. P.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Dear when I think upon my first sad fall
Page No:
p. 25
Poem Title:
P. I left you, and now the gain of you is to me a double Gain.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Do no reject those titles of your due
Page No:
pp. 26-27
Poem Title:
P. That she is onely Fair.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Here though the lustre of her youth be spent
Page No:
p. 26
Poem Title:
R. On the Counteß of Pembroke's Picture.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Muse get thee to a Cell and wont to sing
Page No:
p. 28
Poem Title:
P.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
He that his mirth hath lost
Page No:
pp. 29-33
Poem Title:
P. A Sonnet.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Edward Dye
First Line:
Oh do not tax me with a brutish Love
Page No:
pp. 33-34
Poem Title:
P. That Lust is not his Ayme.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Dudley North Third Baron North
First Line:
Oh faithless world and thy most faithless part
Page No:
pp. 34-35
Poem Title:
Verses made by Sir B.R.
Attribution:
Sir B.R.
Attributed To:
Sir Henry Wotton
First Line:
Wrong not dear Empress of my heart
Page No:
pp. 35-36
Poem Title:
Sonnet. P.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Sir Robert Ayton
First Line:
Nay I must love thee still
Page No:
pp. 36-37
Poem Title:
P. That he will still persevere in his Love.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Dear leave thy home and come with me
Page No:
pp. 38-39
Poem Title:
P. A Sonnet.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
DORON the sad Shepherds swain
Page No:
pp. 40-42
Poem Title:
P. A Sonnet.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
If that you must needs go
Page No:
pp. 43-45
Poem Title:
P. On one heart made of two.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Disdain me still that I may ever love
Page No:
p. 45
Poem Title:
P. That he would not be belov'd.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
William Herbert
First Line:
Who would have thought there could have been
Page No:
pp. 46-47
Poem Title:
Benj. Rudier of Tears.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
O God my God what shall I give
Page No:
p. 47
Poem Title:
R.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Friendship on earth we may as easily find
Page No:
p. 48
Poem Title:
Of Friendship.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Saint did never yet object
Page No:
p. 49
Poem Title:
P. A Sonnet.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
One with admiration told me
Page No:
pp. 50-52
Poem Title:
P. To his Mistreß, of his Friends Opinion of her, and his answer to his Friend's Objections, with his constancy towards her.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Oh let me groan one word into thine ear
Page No:
p. 52
Poem Title:
P. To his Mistris on his Death.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Since every man I come among
Page No:
pp. 53-54
Poem Title:
R.R. his Ballet.
Attribution:
R.R.
Attributed To:
John Grange
First Line:
When mine eyes first admiring your rare beauty
Page No:
pp. 54-55
Poem Title:
[no title]
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Why do we love these things which we call women
Page No:
pp. 55-56
Poem Title:
R.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Why with unkindest swiftness dost thou turn
Page No:
pp. 56-58
Poem Title:
[no title]
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Be not proud 'cause fair and trim
Page No:
pp. 59-60
Poem Title:
A DIALOGUE.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
If shadows be a Pictures Excellence
Page No:
pp. 61-62
Poem Title:
R. On black Hair and Eyes.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Walton Poole
First Line:
Sir such my fate was that I had no store
Page No:
pp. 63-64
Poem Title:
BENJ. RUDIER TO THE PRINCE At his Return from SPAIN.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
What if rude Nature hath less care exprest
Page No:
pp. 64-65
Poem Title:
R. Of deformity in a Man.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Blind beauty If it be a loss
Page No:
pp. 67-69
Poem Title:
Sonnet P.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
From whence was first this Fury hurl'd
Page No:
pp. 69-70
Poem Title:
Of Jealousie.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Thomas Carew
First Line:
Ladies flee from Loves sweet tale
Page No:
p. 71
Poem Title:
P. Sonnet.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Thomas Carew
First Line:
Fye that men should so complain
Page No:
pp. 72-73
Poem Title:
Sonnet.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Say pretty wanton tell me why
Page No:
pp. 73-74
Poem Title:
P. SONG.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
So glides a long the wanton Brook
Page No:
p. 75
Poem Title:
P. A Sonnet.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Why should Passion lead thee blind
Page No:
p. 76
Poem Title:
P. Of a fair Gentlewoman scarce Marriageable.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Why should thy look requite so ill
Page No:
p. 77
Poem Title:
P. A Paradox, that Beauty lyes not in Womens faces, but in their Lovers Eyes.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
The purest piece of Nature is my choice
Page No:
p. 78
Poem Title:
P. A Lover to his Mistris.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Not that I wish my Mistris
Page No:
pp. 79-81
Poem Title:
Description of a wisht Mistris.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
John Grange
First Line:
Why slights thou her whom I approve
Page No:
pp. 81-82
Poem Title:
R. One that was a Suiter to a Gentlewoman more virtuous then fair, wrote these to a friend of his that disliked her.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Henry King
First Line:
No worldling no 'tis not thy Gold
Page No:
p. 83
Poem Title:
The EPICURES Paradox.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Thomas Carew
First Line:
Yet was her Beauty as the blushing Rose
Page No:
p. 84
Poem Title:
Opportunity neglected.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
What I in Woman have wisht to see
Page No:
p. 85
Poem Title:
A Lover's Dedication of his Service to a vertuous GENTLEWOMAN.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
A restless Lover I espide
Page No:
pp. 86-87
Poem Title:
P. Sonnet.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Shepherd gentle Shepherd hark
Page No:
pp. 88-89
Poem Title:
A Pastoral.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Till now I never did believe
Page No:
pp. 90-91
Poem Title:
P. A stragling Lover reclaim'd.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Thomas Neville
First Line:
Dry those fair those Christal Eyes
Page No:
p. 91
Poem Title:
P. To a LADY weeping.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Henry King
First Line:
Ask me no more whither do stray
Page No:
p. 92
Poem Title:
P. A Complement to his Mistris.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Thomas Carew
First Line:
Not kiss by Love I must and make impression
Page No:
pp. 93-95
Poem Title:
A Paradox in praise of a painted WOMAN.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Now being caught in Cupid'sNet
Page No:
p. 96
Poem Title:
Sonnet. P.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Underneath this sable Herse
Page No:
p. 96 [66]
Poem Title:
An Epitaph on the Counteß of Pembroke.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
William Browne
First Line:
How like a Virgin white and red
Page No:
pp. 97-98
Poem Title:
P. On a Strawberry.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Venus that fair loving Queen
Page No:
pp. 99-100
Poem Title:
P. On VENUS and ADONIS.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Lo on my Neck whilst this I bind
Page No:
p. 100
Poem Title:
R. A POSIE for a Neck-Lace.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
William Strode
First Line:
Tis vain to add a Ring of Gemm
Page No:
p. 101
Poem Title:
P. For an EARRING.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
William Strode
First Line:
Come saddest thoughts possess my heart
Page No:
pp. 102-103
Poem Title:
P. SONG.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Cloris sate and sitting slept
Page No:
p. 104
Poem Title:
Amintas. P.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Go Soul the Bodies Guest
Page No:
pp. 104-107
Poem Title:
Sonnet. P.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Sir Walter Ralegh [Raleigh]
First Line:
The Dolphns trifling each on others side
Page No:
p. 107
Poem Title:
On a Fountain.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Like to a hand which hath been us'd to play
Page No:
p. 108
Poem Title:
To a Friend.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Keep on your mask and hide your eye
Page No:
p. 109
Poem Title:
P. On his Mistreß.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
William Strode
First Line:
My Mistris hath a precious Eye
Page No:
pp. 110-111
Poem Title:
P. In praise of his Mistris IRONICE.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Love the great Workmana new World hath made
Page No:
pp. 111-112
Poem Title:
Translated out of FRENCH.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
When as the cheerful Light was over-spread
Page No:
pp. 113-114
Poem Title:
P. A DREAM.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Each greedy hand doth catch and pluck the flowr
Page No:
pp. 114-115
Poem Title:
P. To a Lady residing at the Court.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Draw not too near
Page No:
pp. 116-117
Poem Title:
A SONG.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Before the sixth day of the next New-year
Page No:
p. 118
Poem Title:
A Prognostication upon Cards and Dice.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Sir Walter Ralegh [Raleigh]