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The Anchor anthology of seventeenth-century verse  Cover Image Book Book

The Anchor anthology of seventeenth-century verse / edited with an introd. and notes by Louis L. Martz.

Record details

  • Physical Description: 2 volumes : illustrations ; 21 cm.
  • Edition: [First edition].
  • Publisher: Garden City, N.Y. : Doubleday, 1969.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Vol. 1 is a rev. ed. of The meditative poem, by L. L. Martz, published in 1963.
Vol. 2, edited with an introd. and notes, by R. S. Sylvester.
Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references.
Formatted Contents Note:
Vol. 1 -- The author to his loving cosen / Robert Southwell -- Looke home / Robert Southwell -- At home in heaven / Robert Southwell -- Sinnes heavie loade / Robert Southwell -- Christs sleeping friends / Robert Southwell -- New Prince, new pompe / Robert Southwell -- The burning babe / Robert Southwell -- New heaven, new warre / Robert Southwell -- Marie Magdalens complaint at Christs death / Robert Southwell -- The night, the starlesse night of passion / William Alabaster -- What meaneth this, that Christ an hymne did singe / William Alabaster -- My soule a world is by contraccion / William Alabaster -- Three sortes of teares doe from myne eies distraine / William Alabaster -- Jesu, thie love within mee is soe maine / William Alabaster -- O sweete and bitter monuments of paine / William Alabaster -- Haile gracefull morning of eternall daye / William Alabaster -- Beehould a cluster to itt selfe a vine / William Alabaster -- Now that the midd day heate doth scorch my shame / William Alabaster -- Now I have found thee, I will ever more / William Alabaster -- O starry temple of unvalted space / William Alabaster -- A way feare with thy projectes, noe false fyre / William Alabaster -- The sunne begins uppon my heart to shine / William Alabaster -- When without tears I looke un Christ, I see / William Alabaster -- Elegy 1:Jealosie / John Donne -- Elegy 4:The perfume / John Donne -- Elegy 16:on his mistris / John Donne -- Elegy 19:going to bed / John Donne -- Satire 3 / John Donne -- The good-morrow / John Donne -- Goe, and catche a falling starre / John Donne -- Womans constancy / John Donne -- The sunne rising / John Donne -- The indifferent / John Donne -- The cononization / John Donne -- Lovers infinitenesse / John Donne -- Sweetest love, I do not goe / John Donne -- Aire and angels / John Donne -- The anniversarie / John Donne -- Twicknam garden / John Donne -- Loves growth / John Donne -- The dreame / John Donne -- A valediction: of weeping / John Donne -- Loves alchymie / John Donne -- The flea / John Donne -- The apparition / John Donne -- The extasie / John Donne -- Loves deitie / John Donne -- The funerall / John Donne -- The blossome / John Donne -- The relique / John Donne -- A lecture upon the shadow / John Donne -- To Mr. C.B. / John Donne -- To Mr. R.W. / John Donne -- To Mr. Rowland Woodward / John Donne -- La Corona / John Donne -- Annunciation / John Donne -- Nativitie / John Donne -- Temple / John Donne -- Crucifying / John Donne -- Resurrection / John Donne -- Ascention / John Donne -- Thou hast made me... / John Donne -- As due by many titles I resigne / John Donne -- O might those sighs and teares returne againe / John Donne -- Oh my blacke soule / John Donne -- I am a little world made cunningly / John Donne -- This is my playes last scene / John Donne -- At the round earths imagin'd corners, blow / John Donne -- If faithfull soules be alike ... / John Donne -- If poysonous mineralls ... / John Donne -- Death be not proud ... / John Donne -- Spit in my face you Jewes / John Donne -- Why are wee by all creatures waited on / John Donne -- What if this prresent were the worlds last night / John Donne -- Batter my heart... / John Donne -- Wilt thou love God ... / John Donne -- Father, part of his double interest ... / John Donne -- A valediction: forbidding mourning / John Donne -- The first anniversary / John Donne -- The second anniversarie / John Donne -- Goodfriday, 1613 / John Donne -- A nocturnall upon S. Lucies day / John Donne -- Since she whom I lov'd hath payd her last debt / John Donne -- Show me deare Christ ... / John Donne -- Oh, to vex me ... / John Donne -- A hymne to Christ ... / John Donne -- Hymne to God my God, in my sicknesse / John Donne -- To Christ / John Donne -- The dedication / George Herbert -- The church-porch -selections / George Herbert -- Superliminare / George Herbert -- The altar / George Herbert -- The Thanksgiving / George Herbert -- The reprisall / George Herbert -- The agonie / George Herbert -- Redemption / George Herbert -- Sepulchre / George Herbert -- Easter / George Herbert -- Easter wings / George Herbert -- Affliction (I) / George Herbert -- Prayer / George Herbert -- The H. Communion / George Herbert -- Love I, II / George Herbert -- My God, where is that ancient heat towards thee / George Herbert; Walton's Life of Herbert -- Sure Lord, there is enough in thee to dry / George Herbert; Walton's Life of Herbert -- The temper / George Herbert -- The H. scriptures I / George Herbert -- Mattens / George Herbert -- Even-song / George Herbert -- Church-monuments / George Herbert -- Church-musick / George Herbert -- Church-lock and key / George Herbert -- The church-floore / George Herbert -- The windows / George Herbert -- The starre / George Herbert -- Deniall / George Herbert -- Vertue / George Herbert -- The pearl / George Herbert -- Afflliction (IV) / George Herbert -- Man / George Herbert -- Life / George Herbert -- Mortification / George Herbert -- Decay / George Herbert -- Jordan / George Herbert -- Obedience / George Herbert -- Conscience / George Herbert -- Sion / George Herbert -- The British church / George Herbert -- The dawning / George Herbert -- Dulnesse / George Herbert -- Peace / George Herbert -- Confession / George Herbert -- The bunch of grapes / George Herbert -- The storm / George Herbert -- Grieve not the Holy Spirit &c / George Herbert -- The familie / George Herbert -- The pilgrimage / George Herbert -- Praise / George Herbert -- Longing / George Herbert -- The bag / George Herbert -- The collar / George Herbert -- The priesthood / George Herbert -- The search / George Herbert -- The crosse / George Herbert -- The flower / George Herbert -- The glance / George Herbert -- Marie Magdalene / George Herbert -- The odour, 2. Cor. 2 / George Herbert -- The forerunners / George Herbert -- The invitation / George Herbert -- The banquet / George Herbert -- A parodie / George Herbert -- Song / George Herbert; sttributed to the Earl of Pembroke -- The elixer / George Herbert -- Death / George Herbert -- Judgement / George Herbert -- Heaven / George Herbert -- Love (III) / George Herbert -- L'envoy / George Herbert -- To the reader / Francis Quarles -- Book 2, emblem VII / Francis Quarles -- Book 5, emblem VIII / Francis Quarles -- Book 5, emblem X / Francis Quarles -- Book 5, emblem XI / Francis Quarles -- The weeper / Richard Crashaw -- On the name of Jesus / Richard Crashaw -- An hymne of the nativity / Richard Crashaw -- A hymne for the Epiphanie / Richard Crashaw -- An ode which was prefixed to a prayer booke ... / Richard Crashaw -- On Mr. George Herberts booke ... / Richard Crashaw -- In memory of the vertuous and learned lady ... / Richard Crashaw -- The flaming heart / Richard Crashaw -- An apologie ... / Richard Crashaw -- On the assumption / Richard Crashaw -- Charitas nimia ... / Richard Crashaw -- A dialogue between the resolved soul ... / Andrew Marvell -- A dialogue between the soul and body / Andrew Marvell -- Clorinda and Damon / Andrew Marvell -- On a drop of dew / Andrew Marvell -- The coronet / Andrew Marvell -- To his coy mistress / Andrew Marvell -- The gallery / Andrew Marvell -- The definition of love / Andrew Marvell -- The nymph complaining ... / Andrew Marvell -- An Horatian ode upon Cromwel's return ... / Andrew Marvell -- The mower against gardens / Andrew Marvell -- Damon the mower / Andrew Marvell -- The mower to the glo-worms / Andrew Marvell -- The mower's song / Andrew Marvell -- The picture of little T.C. ... / Andrew Marvell -- The garden / Andrew Marvell -- Bermudas / Andrew Marvell --
The author's emblem / Henry Vaughan -- The dedication / Henry Vaughan -- Regeneration / Henry Vaughan -- Resurrection and immortality / Henry Vaughan -- Religion / Henry Vaughan -- The search / Henry Vaughan -- The Brittish church / Henry Vaughan -- The lampe / Henry Vaughan -- Mans fall, and recovery / Henry Vaughan -- The showre / Henry Vaughan -- Vanity of spirit / Henry Vaughan -- The retreate / Henry Vaughan -- Come, come, what doe I here / Henry Vaughan -- Midnight / Henry Vaughan -- The storm / Henry Vaughan -- The morning-watch / Henry Vaughan -- The evening-watch / Henry Vaughan -- Silence, and stealth of dayes / Henry Vaughan -- Peace / Henry Vaughan -- The passion / Henry Vaughan -- Rom. Cap. 8 ver. 19, and do they so / Henry Vaughan -- The relapse / Henry Vaughan -- The resolve / Henry Vaughan -- The match / Henry Vaughan -- Rules and lessons / Henry Vaughan -- Corruption / Henry Vaughan -- H. scriptures / Henry Vaughan -- Unprofitablenes / Henry Vaughan -- Christs nativity / Henry Vaughan -- Admission / Henry Vaughan -- Praise / Henry Vaughan -- Dressing / Henry Vaughan -- Easter-day / Henry Vaughan -- Easter hymn / Henry Vaughan -- The Holy Communion / Henry Vaughan -- The tempest / Henry Vaughan -- The pilgrimage / Henry Vaughan -- The world / Henry Vaughan -- The shepheards / Henry Vaughan -- The sap / Henry Vaughan -- Mount of Olives / Henry Vaughan -- Man / Henry Vaughan -- I walkt the other day / Henry Vaughan -- Begging / Henry Vaughan -- Ascension-day / Henry Vaughan -- Ascension-hymn / Henry Vaughan -- They are all gone into the world of light / Henry Vaughan -- Cock-crowing / Henry Vaughan -- The starre / Henry Vaughan -- The palm-tree / Henry Vaughan -- The bird / Henry Vaughan -- The seed growing secretly / Henry Vaughan -- As time one day by me did pass / Henry Vaughan -- The night / Henry Vaughan -- The water-fall / Henry Vaughan -- The salutation / Thomas Traherne -- Wonder / Thomas Traherne -- Eden / Thomas Traherne -- Innocence / Thomas Traherne -- The preparative / Thomas Traherne -- The Third Century / Thomas Traherne --Commentary -- Appendix: Edward Dawson, -- The practical methode of meditation -- Index --
Vol. 2 -- To my dearely-loved friend Henery Reynolds / Michael Drayton -- The epistle of Rosamond to King Henry the Second / Michael Drayton -- excerpts from The muses Elizium / Michael Drayton -- A hymn to my God in a night of my late Sicknesse / Sir Henry Wotton -- A poem written by Sir Henry Wotton, in his youth / Sir Henry Wotton -- On his mistris, the Queen of Bohemia / Sir Henry Wotton -- Upon the sudden restraint of the Earle of Somerset / Sir Henry Wotton -- The character of a happy life / Sir Henry Wotton -- On a banck as I sat a fishing / Sir Henry Wotton -- Tears at the grave of Sr. Albertus Morton / Sir Henry Wotton -- Upon the death of Sir Albert Morton's wife / Sir Henry Wotton -- To my booke / Benjamin Jonson -- To William Camden / Benjamin Jonson -- On my first daughter / Benjamin Jonson -- Donne, the delight of Phoebus / Benjamin Jonson -- On my first sonne / Benjamin Jonson -- On Lucy Countesse of Bedford / Benjamin Jonson -- To Lucy, Countesse of Bedford, with Mr. Donnes satyres / Benjamin Jonson -- Who shall doubt, Donne / Benjamin Jonson -- Inviting a friend to supper / Benjamin Jonson -- On gut / Benjamin Jonson -- Epitaph on S.P. a child of Q. El. Chappel / Benjamin Jonson -- Epitaph on Elizabeth, L.H. / Benjamin Jonson -- To Penshurst / Benjamin Jonson -- Come my Celia / Benjamin Jonson -- Kisse me sweet/ Benjamin Jonson -- Drinke to me, onely / Benjamin Jonson -- To heaven / Benjamin Jonson -- A hymne to God the Father / Benjamin Jonson -- A celebration of Charis in then lyrick peeces / Benjamin Jonson -- Oh doe not wanton with those eyes / Benjamin Jonson -- My picture left in Scotland / Benjamin Jonson -- To himselfe / Benjamin Jonson -- A sonnet, to the noble lady, the Lady Mary Worth / Benjamin Jonson -- A fit of rime against rime / Benjamin Jonson -- Tis true, I'm broke / Benjamin Jonson -- An execration upon Vulcan / Benjamin Jonson -- An epistle answering to one that asked to be sealed of the Tribe of Ben / Benjamin Jonson -- To the immortall memorie, and friendship of that noble paire, Sir Lucius Cary, and Sir H. Morison / Benjamin Jonson -- Slow, slow, fresh fount / Benjamin Jonson -- Queene and huntresse / Benjamin Jonson -- If I freely may discover / Benjamin Jonson -- Fooles, they are the onely nation / Benjamin Jonson -- Still to be neat / Benjamin Jonson -- To the memory of my beloved, the author Mr. William Shakespeare / Benjamin Jonson -- It was a beauty that I saw / Benjamin Jonson -- Ode to himselfe / Benjamin Jonson -- Pans anniversarie; or, the shepherds holy-day / Benjamin Jonson -- Pleasure reconciled to vertue / Benjamin Jonson -- Ovid's Metamorphosis. the sixth booke / George Sandys -- A proper new ballad intituled The Faeryes Farewell / Richard Corbett -- An elegie. upon the death of his owne father / Richard Corbett -- Upon Faireford windowes / Richard Corbett -- To his sonne Vincent Corbett / Richard Corbett -- An epitaph on Doctor Donne, Deane of Pauls / Richard Corbett -- Certain true woords spoken concerning one Benet Corbett / Richard Corbett -- A description / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- Loves end / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- Ditty in imitation of the Spanish / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- Parted souls / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- Madrigal / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- To his friend Ben. Johnson, of his Horace made English / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- Epitaph. Caecil. Boulstr. quae post languescentem morbum / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- In a glass-window for inconstancy / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- A vision / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- Tears, flow no more / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- Love speaks at last / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- Elegy over a tomb / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- To Mrs. Diana Cecyll / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- Sonnet of Black Beauty / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- The first meeting / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- The thought / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- To a lady who did sing excellently / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- Echo in a church / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- To his mistress for her true picture / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- Epitaph for himself / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- Elegy for Doctor Dunn / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- The brown beauty / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- An ode upon a question moved, whether love should continue for ever? / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- The green-sickness beauty / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- Platonick love / Lord Herbert of Cherbury -- October 14. 1644 / Lord Herbert of Cherbury --
Let not they beauty / Aurelian Townshend -- To the Countesse of Salisbury / Aurelian Townshend -- Youth and beauty / Aurelian Townshend -- A dialogue betwixt time and a pilgrime / Aurelian Townshend -- Come not to me for scarfs / Aurelian Townshend -- Pure simple love / Aurelian Townshend -- A paradox / Aurelian Townshend -- An elegie made by Mr Aurelian Townshend in remembrance of the Ladie Venetia Digby / Aurelian Townshend -- The argument of his book / Robert Herrick -- To his booke / Robert Herrick -- Another / Robert Herrick -- To the soure reader / Robert Herrick -- To Perilla / Robert Herrick -- No loathsomnesse in love / Robert Herrick -- Love what it is / Robert Herrick -- Upon the losse of his mistresses / Robert Herrick -- Discontents in Devon / Robert Herrick -- To the King, upon his comming with his army into the West / Robert Herrick -- To the reverend shade of his religious Father / Robert Herrick -- Delight in disorder / Robert Herrick -- To Dean-bourn, a rude river in Devon / Robert Herrick -- Upon fone a school-master / Robert Herrick -- Upon scobble / Robert Herrick -- His fare-well to Sack / Robert Herrick -- Upon Gryll / Robert Herrick -- The vision / Robert Herrick -- Julia's petticoat / Robert Herrick -- Corinna's going a Maying / Robert Herrick -- Upon Batt / Robert Herrick -- How lillies came white / Robert Herrick -- The lilly in a Christal / Robert Herrick -- Upon some women / Robert Herrick -- The welcome to Sack / Robert Herrick -- To live merrily, and to trust to good verses / Robert Herrick -- The the virgins, to make much of time / Robert Herrick -- His poetrie his pillar / Robert Herrick -- Upon Sudds a laundresse / Robert Herrick -- The hock-cart, or harvest home / Robert Herrick -- To primroses fill'd with morning-dew / Robert Herrick -- To Anthea, who may comand him any thing / Robert Herrick -- To daffadills / Robert Herrick -- To Dianeme / Robert Herrick -- Upon Parson Beanes / Robert Herrick -- To the water nymphs, drinking at the fountain / Robert Herrick -- Upon Jack and Jill / Robert Herrick -- Art above nature, to Julia / Robert Herrick -- The apparition of his mistresse calling him to Elizium / Robert Herrick -- His prayer to Ben Johnson / Robert Herrick -- The bad season makes the poet sad / Robert Herrick -- The night-piece, to Juliea / Robert Herrick -- Upon Jone and Jane / Robert Herrick -- To Master Denham, on his prospective poem / Robert Herrick -- The funerall ristes of the rose / Robert Herrick -- His returne to London / Robert Herrick -- His grange, or private wealth / Robert Herrick -- Love dislikes nothing / Robert Herrick -- Upon Julia's clothes / Robert Herrick -- Ceremonies for Christmasse / Robert Herrick -- An ode for him / Robert Herrick -- To the King upon his welcome to Hampton-Court / Robert Herrick -- The pillar of fame / Robert Herrick -- To his book's end this last line he'd have plac't / Robert Herrick -- His prayer for absolution / Robert Herrick -- His Letanie, to the holy spirit / Robert Herrick -- A Thanksgiving to God, for his house / Robert Herrick -- To his ever-loving God / Robert Herrick -- To his conscience / Robert Herrick -- Another grace for a child / Robert Herrick -- His wish to God / Robert Herrick -- The white island: or place of the blest / Robert Herrick -- To keep a true Lent / Robert Herrick -- To God / Robert Herrick -- The double rock / Henry King -- Tell me no more / Henry King -- The retreat / Henry King -- When I entreat / Henry King -- The surrender / Henry King -- The legacy / Henry King -- To his unconstant friend / Henry King -- The exequy / Henry King -- To my dead friend Ben / Henry King -- An elegy: upon S. W. R. / Henry King -- Upon the death of my ever desired friend Doctor Donne Dean of Pauls / Henry King -- To my honoured friend Mr. George Sandys / Henry King -- Sic Vita / Henry King -- An elegy upon my best friend L. K. C. / Henry King -- The spring / Thomas Carew -- To A. L. Perswasions to love / Thomas Carew -- A divine mistris / Thomas Carew -- A cruell mistris / Thomas Carew -- Murdring beautie / Thomas Carew -- Secresie protested / Thomas Carew -- A prayer to the wind / Thomas Carew -- Mediocritie in love rejected / Thomas Carew -- Good counsel to a young maid / Thomas Carew -- To my mistris sitting by a rivers side / Thomas Carew -- To my inconstant mistris / Thomas Carew -- Perswasions to enjoy / Thomas Carew -- A deposition from love / Thomas Carew -- Ingratefull beauty threatned / Thomas Carew -- To my mistresse in absence / Thomas Carew -- Celia bleeding, to the surgeon / Thomas Carew -- To T. H. a lady resembling my istresse / Thomas Carew -- To Saxham / Thomas Carew -- Upon a ribband / Thomas Carew -- To my mistris, I burning in love / Thomas Carew -- To her againe, she burning in a feaver / Thomas Carew -- A flye that flew into my mistris her eye / Thomas Carew -- To one that desired to know my mistris / Thomas Carew -- Boldnesse in love / Thomas Carew -- Celia Cleon / Thomas Carew -- Shepherd, nymph, chorus / Thomas Carew -- Red, and white roses / Thomas Carew -- To my cousin marrying my lady / Thomas Carew --
A rapture / Thomas Carew -- Epitaph on the Lady Mary Villers / Thomas Carew -- The purest soule / Thomas Carew -- This little vault / Thomas Carew -- Maria Wentworth, Thomae Comitis Cleveland, filia praemortua / Thomas Carew -- To Ben Johnson / Thomas Carew -- An Hymeneall dialogue / Thomas Carew -- Obsequies to the Lady Anne Hay / Thomas Carew -- An elegie upon the death of the Deane of Paul / Thomas Carew -- In answer of an elegiacall letter upon the death of the King of Sweden / Thomas Carew -- To a Lady that desired I would love her / Thomas Carew -- To my friend B. N. from Wrest / Thomas Carew -- To my worthy friend Master Geo. Sands / Thomas Carew -- The comparison / Thomas Carew -- Aske me no more / Thomas Carew -- On a Damaske rose sticking upon a Ladies breast / Thomas Carew -- Upon a mole in Celias bosome / Thomas Carew -- To Celia, upon love's ubiquity / Thomas Carew -- A gratulatory to M. Ben Johnson for his adopting of him... / Thomas Randolph -- Upon the losse of his little finger / Thomas Randolph -- An ode to M. Anthony Stafford to hasten him into the country / Thomas Randolph -- On the death of a nightingale / Thomas Randolph -- To one admiring her selfe in a looking-glasse / Thomas Randolph -- A maske for Lydia / Thomas Randolph -- Upon love fondly refus'd for conscience sake / Thomas Randolph -- To roses in the bosome of Castara / William Habington -- To Castara / William Habington -- To a wanton / William Habington -- A dialogue betweene Araphill and Castara / William Habington -- Upon Castara's absence / William Habington -- To Castara, ventring to walke too farre in the neighbouring wood / William Habington -- To the world / William Habington -- The description of Castara / William Habington -- To death, Castara being sicke / William Habington -- To a friend, inviting him to a meeting upon promise / William Habington -- To Castara upon beautie / William Habington -- To the Right Honourable the Countesse of C. / William Habington -- To Castara / William Habington -- To Castara, of true delight / William Habington -- Goee stop the swift-wing'd moments / William Habington -- Nox nocti indicat Scientiam / William Habington -- Go lovely rose / Edmund Waller -- The battel of the summer-islands / Edmund Waller -- To Phillis / Edmund Waller -- Stay Pheobus, stay / Edmund Waller -- On a girdle / Edmund Waller -- Had Sacharissa liv'd / Edmund Waller -- While in the park I sing / Edmund Waller -- To a very young Lady / Edmund Waller -- To the mutable fair / Edmund Waller -- On St. James's Park, as lately improved by His Majesty / Edmund Waller -- To Mr. Henry Lawes / Edmund Waller -- Of the last verses in the book / Edmund Waller -- A sessions of the poets / Sir John Suckling -- Why so pale and wan fond lover / Sir John Suckling -- Do'st see how unregarded now / Sir John Suckling -- Of thee I ask no red and white / Sir John Suckling -- Oh! for some honest lovers ghost / Sir John Suckling -- There never yet was woman made / Sir John Suckling -- No, no, fair Heretick / Sir John Suckling -- Upon my Lady Carliles walking in Hampton-Court garden / Sir John Suckling -- Tis now since I sat down before / Sir John Suckling -- A ballade, upon a wedding / Sir John Suckling -- Sir J. S. / Sir John Suckling -- Love and debt alike troublesom / Sir John Suckling -- Hast thou seen the down in the air / Sir John Suckling -- Fuscara or the bee errant / John Cleveland -- The senses festival / John Cleveland -- The Hecatomb to his mistress / John Cleveland -- The antiplatonick / John Cleveland -- Upon Phillis walking in a morning before sun-rising / John Cleveland -- A fair nymph scorning a black boy courting her / John Cleveland -- A young man to an old woman courting him / John Cleveland -- Upon an Hermaphrodite / John Cleveland -- The general eclipse / John Cleveland -- On the memory of Mr. Edward King drown'd in the Irish Seas / John Cleveland -- Mark Anthony / John Cleveland -- The author's mock-song to Mark Anthony / John Cleveland -- Square-cap / John Cleveland -- Cooper's Hill / Sir John Denham -- On Mr. Abraham Cowley / Sir John Denham -- To Lucasta, going beyond the seas / Richard Lovelace -- To Lucasta, going to the Warres / Richard Lovelace -- To Amarantha, that she would dishevell her haire / Richard Lovelace -- To Lucasta, the rose / Richard Lovelace -- Gratiana dauncing and singing / Richard Lovelace -- The scrutinie / Richard Lovelace -- The grasse-hopper / Richard Lovelace -- Lucasta weeping / Richard Lovelace -- To Lucasta, from prison / Richard Lovelace -- To Lucasta, ode lyrick / Richard Lovelace -- Against the love of great ones / Richard Lovelace -- To Althea, from prison / Richard Lovelace -- A black patch on Lucasta's face / Richard Lovelace -- Love made in the first age: To Chloris / Richard Lovelace -- The motto / Abraham Cowley -- Of wit / Abraham Cowley -- On the death of Mr. William Hervey / Abraham Cowley -- To Sir William Davenant / Abraham Cowley -- Reason, the use of it in divine matters / Abraham Cowley -- On the death of Mr. Crashaw / Abraham Cowley -- The duel / Abraham Cowley -- The request / Abraham Cowley -- Written in juice of lemmon / Abraham Cowley -- The change / Abraham Cowley -- Leaving me, and then loving many / Abraham Cowley -- The soul / Abraham Cowley -- The dissembler / Abraham Cowley -- The extasie / Abraham Cowley -- To the royal society / Abraham Cowley -- Chang'd, yet constant / Thomas Stanley -- Celia singing / Thomas Stanley -- The repulse / Thomas Stanley -- The divorce / Thomas Stanley -- The bracelet / Thomas Stanley -- The exequies / Thomas Stanley -- I prethee let my heart alone / Thomas Stanley -- The relapse / Thomas Stanley -- Expectation / Thomas Stanley -- Religio Laici / John Dryden --
Subject: English literature > Poetry.
English poetry > Early modern, 1500-1700

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  • 2 of 2 copies available at Sage Library System. (Show)
  • 2 of 2 copies available at Treasure Valley Community College. (Show)
  • 2 of 2 copies available at Treasure Valley Community College Library.

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Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Circulation Modifier Status Due Date Courses
Treasure Valley Community College Library 821.408 M3678an v.1 (Text) 32220000689550 Adult Non-Fiction Available -
Treasure Valley Community College Library 821.408 M3678an v.2 (Text) 32220000689519 Adult Non-Fiction Available -

LDR 30885cam a2200853 4500
001308957
003SAGE
00520130830081147.0
008690318s1969 nyua b 001 0 eng
010 . ‡a 68029286
035 . ‡a(OCoLC)1922
035 . ‡a()17230
040 . ‡aDLC ‡cDLC ‡dTVC ‡dUtOrBLW
049 . ‡aTVCA
1001 . ‡aMartz, Louis L. ‡q(Louis Lohr), ‡d1913-2001 ‡0(SAGE)1722745
24514. ‡aThe Anchor anthology of seventeenth-century verse / ‡cedited with an introd. and notes by Louis L. Martz.
250 . ‡a[First edition].
264 1. ‡aGarden City, N.Y. : ‡bDoubleday, ‡c1969.
300 . ‡a2 volumes : ‡billustrations ; ‡c21 cm.
336 . ‡atext ‡2rdacontent
337 . ‡aunmediated ‡2rdamedia
338 . ‡avolume ‡2rdacarrier
4901 . ‡aThe Anchor seventeenth-century series
500 . ‡aVol. 1 is a rev. ed. of The meditative poem, by L. L. Martz, published in 1963.
500 . ‡aVol. 2, edited with an introd. and notes, by R. S. Sylvester.
504 . ‡aIncludes bibliographical references.
5050 . ‡aVol. 1 -- ‡tThe author to his loving cosen / ‡rRobert Southwell -- ‡tLooke home / ‡rRobert Southwell -- ‡tAt home in heaven / ‡rRobert Southwell -- ‡tSinnes heavie loade / ‡rRobert Southwell -- ‡tChrists sleeping friends / ‡rRobert Southwell -- ‡tNew Prince, new pompe / ‡rRobert Southwell -- ‡tThe burning babe / ‡rRobert Southwell -- ‡tNew heaven, new warre / ‡rRobert Southwell -- ‡tMarie Magdalens complaint at Christs death / ‡rRobert Southwell -- ‡tThe night, the starlesse night of passion / ‡rWilliam Alabaster -- ‡tWhat meaneth this, that Christ an hymne did singe / ‡rWilliam Alabaster -- ‡tMy soule a world is by contraccion / ‡rWilliam Alabaster -- ‡tThree sortes of teares doe from myne eies distraine / ‡rWilliam Alabaster -- ‡tJesu, thie love within mee is soe maine / ‡rWilliam Alabaster -- ‡tO sweete and bitter monuments of paine / ‡rWilliam Alabaster -- ‡tHaile gracefull morning of eternall daye / ‡rWilliam Alabaster -- ‡tBeehould a cluster to itt selfe a vine / ‡rWilliam Alabaster -- ‡tNow that the midd day heate doth scorch my shame / ‡rWilliam Alabaster -- ‡tNow I have found thee, I will ever more / ‡rWilliam Alabaster -- ‡tO starry temple of unvalted space / ‡rWilliam Alabaster -- ‡tA way feare with thy projectes, noe false fyre / ‡rWilliam Alabaster -- ‡tThe sunne begins uppon my heart to shine / ‡rWilliam Alabaster -- ‡tWhen without tears I looke un Christ, I see / ‡rWilliam Alabaster -- ‡tElegy 1:Jealosie / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tElegy 4:The perfume / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tElegy 16:on his mistris / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tElegy 19:going to bed / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tSatire 3 / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tThe good-morrow / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tGoe, and catche a falling starre / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tWomans constancy / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tThe sunne rising / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tThe indifferent / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tThe cononization / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tLovers infinitenesse / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tSweetest love, I do not goe / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tAire and angels / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tThe anniversarie / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tTwicknam garden / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tLoves growth / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tThe dreame / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tA valediction: of weeping / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tLoves alchymie / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tThe flea / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tThe apparition / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tThe extasie / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tLoves deitie / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tThe funerall / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tThe blossome / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tThe relique / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tA lecture upon the shadow / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tTo Mr. C.B. / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tTo Mr. R.W. / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tTo Mr. Rowland Woodward / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tLa Corona / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tAnnunciation / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tNativitie / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tTemple / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tCrucifying / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tResurrection / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tAscention / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tThou hast made me... / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tAs due by many titles I resigne / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tO might those sighs and teares returne againe / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tOh my blacke soule / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tI am a little world made cunningly / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tThis is my playes last scene / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tAt the round earths imagin'd corners, blow / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tIf faithfull soules be alike ... / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tIf poysonous mineralls ... / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tDeath be not proud ... / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tSpit in my face you Jewes / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tWhy are wee by all creatures waited on / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tWhat if this prresent were the worlds last night / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tBatter my heart... / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tWilt thou love God ... / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tFather, part of his double interest ... / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tA valediction: forbidding mourning / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tThe first anniversary / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tThe second anniversarie / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tGoodfriday, 1613 / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tA nocturnall upon S. Lucies day / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tSince she whom I lov'd hath payd her last debt / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tShow me deare Christ ... / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tOh, to vex me ... / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tA hymne to Christ ... / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tHymne to God my God, in my sicknesse / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tTo Christ / ‡rJohn Donne -- ‡tThe dedication / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe church-porch -selections / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tSuperliminare / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe altar / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe Thanksgiving / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe reprisall / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe agonie / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tRedemption / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tSepulchre / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tEaster / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tEaster wings / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tAffliction (I) / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tPrayer / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe H. Communion / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tLove I, II / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tMy God, where is that ancient heat towards thee / ‡rGeorge Herbert; ‡gWalton's Life of Herbert -- ‡tSure Lord, there is enough in thee to dry / ‡rGeorge Herbert; ‡gWalton's Life of Herbert -- ‡tThe temper / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe H. scriptures I / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tMattens / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tEven-song / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tChurch-monuments / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tChurch-musick / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tChurch-lock and key / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe church-floore / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe windows / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe starre / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tDeniall / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tVertue / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe pearl / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tAfflliction (IV) / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tMan / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tLife / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tMortification / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tDecay / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tJordan / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tObedience / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tConscience / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tSion / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe British church / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe dawning / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tDulnesse / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tPeace / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tConfession / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe bunch of grapes / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe storm / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tGrieve not the Holy Spirit &c / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe familie / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe pilgrimage / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tPraise / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tLonging / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe bag / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe collar / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe priesthood / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe search / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe crosse / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe flower / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe glance / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tMarie Magdalene / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe odour, 2. Cor. 2 / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe forerunners / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe invitation / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tThe banquet / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tA parodie / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tSong / ‡rGeorge Herbert; ‡gsttributed to the Earl of Pembroke -- ‡tThe elixer / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tDeath / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tJudgement / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tHeaven / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tLove (III) / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tL'envoy / ‡rGeorge Herbert -- ‡tTo the reader / ‡rFrancis Quarles -- ‡tBook 2, emblem VII / ‡rFrancis Quarles -- ‡tBook 5, emblem VIII / ‡rFrancis Quarles -- ‡tBook 5, emblem X / ‡rFrancis Quarles -- ‡tBook 5, emblem XI / ‡rFrancis Quarles -- ‡tThe weeper / ‡rRichard Crashaw -- ‡tOn the name of Jesus / ‡rRichard Crashaw -- ‡tAn hymne of the nativity / ‡rRichard Crashaw -- ‡tA hymne for the Epiphanie / ‡rRichard Crashaw -- ‡tAn ode which was prefixed to a prayer booke ... / ‡rRichard Crashaw -- ‡tOn Mr. George Herberts booke ... / ‡rRichard Crashaw -- ‡tIn memory of the vertuous and learned lady ... / ‡rRichard Crashaw -- ‡tThe flaming heart / ‡rRichard Crashaw -- ‡tAn apologie ... / ‡rRichard Crashaw -- ‡tOn the assumption / ‡rRichard Crashaw -- ‡tCharitas nimia ... / ‡rRichard Crashaw -- ‡tA dialogue between the resolved soul ... / ‡rAndrew Marvell -- ‡tA dialogue between the soul and body / ‡rAndrew Marvell -- ‡tClorinda and Damon / ‡rAndrew Marvell -- ‡tOn a drop of dew / ‡rAndrew Marvell -- ‡tThe coronet / ‡rAndrew Marvell -- ‡tTo his coy mistress / ‡rAndrew Marvell -- ‡tThe gallery / ‡rAndrew Marvell -- ‡tThe definition of love / ‡rAndrew Marvell -- ‡tThe nymph complaining ... / ‡rAndrew Marvell -- ‡tAn Horatian ode upon Cromwel's return ... / ‡rAndrew Marvell -- ‡tThe mower against gardens / ‡rAndrew Marvell -- ‡tDamon the mower / ‡rAndrew Marvell -- ‡tThe mower to the glo-worms / ‡rAndrew Marvell -- ‡tThe mower's song / ‡rAndrew Marvell -- ‡tThe picture of little T.C. ... / ‡rAndrew Marvell -- ‡tThe garden / ‡rAndrew Marvell -- ‡tBermudas / ‡rAndrew Marvell --
5050 . ‡tThe author's emblem / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe dedication / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tRegeneration / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tResurrection and immortality / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tReligion / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe search / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe Brittish church / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe lampe / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tMans fall, and recovery / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe showre / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tVanity of spirit / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe retreate / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tCome, come, what doe I here / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tMidnight / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe storm / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe morning-watch / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe evening-watch / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tSilence, and stealth of dayes / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tPeace / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe passion / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tRom. Cap. 8 ver. 19, and do they so / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe relapse / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe resolve / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe match / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tRules and lessons / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tCorruption / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tH. scriptures / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tUnprofitablenes / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tChrists nativity / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tAdmission / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tPraise / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tDressing / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tEaster-day / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tEaster hymn / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe Holy Communion / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe tempest / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe pilgrimage / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe world / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe shepheards / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe sap / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tMount of Olives / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tMan / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tI walkt the other day / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tBegging / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tAscension-day / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tAscension-hymn / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThey are all gone into the world of light / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tCock-crowing / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe starre / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe palm-tree / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe bird / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe seed growing secretly / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tAs time one day by me did pass / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe night / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe water-fall / ‡rHenry Vaughan -- ‡tThe salutation / ‡rThomas Traherne -- ‡tWonder / ‡rThomas Traherne -- ‡tEden / ‡rThomas Traherne -- ‡tInnocence / ‡rThomas Traherne -- ‡tThe preparative / ‡rThomas Traherne -- ‡tThe Third Century / ‡rThomas Traherne --Commentary -- Appendix: Edward Dawson, -- ‡tThe practical methode of meditation -- Index --
50500. ‡aVol. 2 -- ‡tTo my dearely-loved friend Henery Reynolds / ‡rMichael Drayton -- ‡tThe epistle of Rosamond to King Henry the Second / ‡rMichael Drayton -- excerpts from The muses Elizium / ‡rMichael Drayton -- ‡tA hymn to my God in a night of my late Sicknesse / ‡rSir Henry Wotton -- ‡tA poem written by Sir Henry Wotton, in his youth / ‡rSir Henry Wotton -- ‡tOn his mistris, the Queen of Bohemia / ‡rSir Henry Wotton -- ‡tUpon the sudden restraint of the Earle of Somerset / ‡rSir Henry Wotton -- ‡tThe character of a happy life / ‡rSir Henry Wotton -- ‡tOn a banck as I sat a fishing / ‡rSir Henry Wotton -- ‡tTears at the grave of Sr. Albertus Morton / ‡rSir Henry Wotton -- ‡tUpon the death of Sir Albert Morton's wife / ‡rSir Henry Wotton -- ‡tTo my booke / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tTo William Camden / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tOn my first daughter / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tDonne, the delight of Phoebus / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tOn my first sonne / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tOn Lucy Countesse of Bedford / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tTo Lucy, Countesse of Bedford, with Mr. Donnes satyres / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tWho shall doubt, Donne / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tInviting a friend to supper / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tOn gut / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tEpitaph on S.P. a child of Q. El. Chappel / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tEpitaph on Elizabeth, L.H. / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tTo Penshurst / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tCome my Celia / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tKisse me sweet/ ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tDrinke to me, onely / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tTo heaven / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tA hymne to God the Father / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tA celebration of Charis in then lyrick peeces / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tOh doe not wanton with those eyes / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tMy picture left in Scotland / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tTo himselfe / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tA sonnet, to the noble lady, the Lady Mary Worth / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tA fit of rime against rime / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tTis true, I'm broke / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tAn execration upon Vulcan / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tAn epistle answering to one that asked to be sealed of the Tribe of Ben / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tTo the immortall memorie, and friendship of that noble paire, Sir Lucius Cary, and Sir H. Morison / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tSlow, slow, fresh fount / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tQueene and huntresse / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tIf I freely may discover / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tFooles, they are the onely nation / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tStill to be neat / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tTo the memory of my beloved, the author Mr. William Shakespeare / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tIt was a beauty that I saw / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tOde to himselfe / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tPans anniversarie; or, the shepherds holy-day / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tPleasure reconciled to vertue / ‡rBenjamin Jonson -- ‡tOvid's Metamorphosis. the sixth booke / ‡rGeorge Sandys -- ‡tA proper new ballad intituled The Faeryes Farewell / ‡rRichard Corbett -- ‡tAn elegie. upon the death of his owne father / ‡rRichard Corbett -- ‡tUpon Faireford windowes / ‡rRichard Corbett -- ‡tTo his sonne Vincent Corbett / ‡rRichard Corbett -- ‡tAn epitaph on Doctor Donne, Deane of Pauls / ‡rRichard Corbett -- ‡tCertain true woords spoken concerning one Benet Corbett / ‡rRichard Corbett -- ‡tA description / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tLoves end / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tDitty in imitation of the Spanish / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tParted souls / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tMadrigal / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tTo his friend Ben. Johnson, of his Horace made English / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tEpitaph. Caecil. Boulstr. quae post languescentem morbum / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tIn a glass-window for inconstancy / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tA vision / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tTears, flow no more / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tLove speaks at last / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tElegy over a tomb / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tTo Mrs. Diana Cecyll / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tSonnet of Black Beauty / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tThe first meeting / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tThe thought / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tTo a lady who did sing excellently / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tEcho in a church / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tTo his mistress for her true picture / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tEpitaph for himself / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tElegy for Doctor Dunn / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tThe brown beauty / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tAn ode upon a question moved, whether love should continue for ever? / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tThe green-sickness beauty / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tPlatonick love / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury -- ‡tOctober 14. 1644 / ‡rLord Herbert of Cherbury --
50500. ‡tLet not they beauty / ‡rAurelian Townshend -- ‡tTo the Countesse of Salisbury / ‡rAurelian Townshend -- ‡tYouth and beauty / ‡rAurelian Townshend -- ‡tA dialogue betwixt time and a pilgrime / ‡rAurelian Townshend -- ‡tCome not to me for scarfs / ‡rAurelian Townshend -- ‡tPure simple love / ‡rAurelian Townshend -- ‡tA paradox / ‡rAurelian Townshend -- ‡tAn elegie made by Mr Aurelian Townshend in remembrance of the Ladie Venetia Digby / ‡rAurelian Townshend -- ‡tThe argument of his book / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo his booke / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tAnother / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo the soure reader / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo Perilla / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tNo loathsomnesse in love / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tLove what it is / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tUpon the losse of his mistresses / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tDiscontents in Devon / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo the King, upon his comming with his army into the West / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo the reverend shade of his religious Father / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tDelight in disorder / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo Dean-bourn, a rude river in Devon / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tUpon fone a school-master / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tUpon scobble / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tHis fare-well to Sack / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tUpon Gryll / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tThe vision / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tJulia's petticoat / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tCorinna's going a Maying / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tUpon Batt / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tHow lillies came white / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tThe lilly in a Christal / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tUpon some women / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tThe welcome to Sack / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo live merrily, and to trust to good verses / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tThe the virgins, to make much of time / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tHis poetrie his pillar / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tUpon Sudds a laundresse / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tThe hock-cart, or harvest home / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo primroses fill'd with morning-dew / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo Anthea, who may comand him any thing / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo daffadills / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo Dianeme / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tUpon Parson Beanes / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo the water nymphs, drinking at the fountain / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tUpon Jack and Jill / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tArt above nature, to Julia / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tThe apparition of his mistresse calling him to Elizium / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tHis prayer to Ben Johnson / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tThe bad season makes the poet sad / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tThe night-piece, to Juliea / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tUpon Jone and Jane / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo Master Denham, on his prospective poem / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tThe funerall ristes of the rose / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tHis returne to London / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tHis grange, or private wealth / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tLove dislikes nothing / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tUpon Julia's clothes / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tCeremonies for Christmasse / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tAn ode for him / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo the King upon his welcome to Hampton-Court / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tThe pillar of fame / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo his book's end this last line he'd have plac't / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tHis prayer for absolution / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tHis Letanie, to the holy spirit / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tA Thanksgiving to God, for his house / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo his ever-loving God / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo his conscience / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tAnother grace for a child / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tHis wish to God / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tThe white island: or place of the blest / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo keep a true Lent / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tTo God / ‡rRobert Herrick -- ‡tThe double rock / ‡rHenry King -- ‡tTell me no more / ‡rHenry King -- ‡tThe retreat / ‡rHenry King -- ‡tWhen I entreat / ‡rHenry King -- ‡tThe surrender / ‡rHenry King -- ‡tThe legacy / ‡rHenry King -- ‡tTo his unconstant friend / ‡rHenry King -- ‡tThe exequy / ‡rHenry King -- ‡tTo my dead friend Ben / ‡rHenry King -- ‡tAn elegy: upon S. W. R. / ‡rHenry King -- ‡tUpon the death of my ever desired friend Doctor Donne Dean of Pauls / ‡rHenry King -- ‡tTo my honoured friend Mr. George Sandys / ‡rHenry King -- ‡tSic Vita / ‡rHenry King -- ‡tAn elegy upon my best friend L. K. C. / ‡rHenry King -- ‡tThe spring / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tTo A. L. Perswasions to love / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tA divine mistris / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tA cruell mistris / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tMurdring beautie / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tSecresie protested / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tA prayer to the wind / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tMediocritie in love rejected / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tGood counsel to a young maid / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tTo my mistris sitting by a rivers side / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tTo my inconstant mistris / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tPerswasions to enjoy / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tA deposition from love / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tIngratefull beauty threatned / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tTo my mistresse in absence / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tCelia bleeding, to the surgeon / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tTo T. H. a lady resembling my istresse / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tTo Saxham / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tUpon a ribband / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tTo my mistris, I burning in love / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tTo her againe, she burning in a feaver / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tA flye that flew into my mistris her eye / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tTo one that desired to know my mistris / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tBoldnesse in love / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tCelia Cleon / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tShepherd, nymph, chorus / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tRed, and white roses / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tTo my cousin marrying my lady / ‡rThomas Carew --
50500. ‡tA rapture / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tEpitaph on the Lady Mary Villers / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tThe purest soule / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tThis little vault / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tMaria Wentworth, Thomae Comitis Cleveland, filia praemortua / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tTo Ben Johnson / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tAn Hymeneall dialogue / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tObsequies to the Lady Anne Hay / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tAn elegie upon the death of the Deane of Paul / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tIn answer of an elegiacall letter upon the death of the King of Sweden / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tTo a Lady that desired I would love her / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tTo my friend B. N. from Wrest / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tTo my worthy friend Master Geo. Sands / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tThe comparison / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tAske me no more / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tOn a Damaske rose sticking upon a Ladies breast / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tUpon a mole in Celias bosome / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tTo Celia, upon love's ubiquity / ‡rThomas Carew -- ‡tA gratulatory to M. Ben Johnson for his adopting of him... / ‡rThomas Randolph -- ‡tUpon the losse of his little finger / ‡rThomas Randolph -- ‡tAn ode to M. Anthony Stafford to hasten him into the country / ‡rThomas Randolph -- ‡tOn the death of a nightingale / ‡rThomas Randolph -- ‡tTo one admiring her selfe in a looking-glasse / ‡rThomas Randolph -- ‡tA maske for Lydia / ‡rThomas Randolph -- ‡tUpon love fondly refus'd for conscience sake / ‡rThomas Randolph -- ‡tTo roses in the bosome of Castara / ‡rWilliam Habington -- ‡tTo Castara / ‡rWilliam Habington -- ‡tTo a wanton / ‡rWilliam Habington -- ‡tA dialogue betweene Araphill and Castara / ‡rWilliam Habington -- ‡tUpon Castara's absence / ‡rWilliam Habington -- ‡tTo Castara, ventring to walke too farre in the neighbouring wood / ‡rWilliam Habington -- ‡tTo the world / ‡rWilliam Habington -- ‡tThe description of Castara / ‡rWilliam Habington -- ‡tTo death, Castara being sicke / ‡rWilliam Habington -- ‡tTo a friend, inviting him to a meeting upon promise / ‡rWilliam Habington -- ‡tTo Castara upon beautie / ‡rWilliam Habington -- ‡tTo the Right Honourable the Countesse of C. / ‡rWilliam Habington -- ‡tTo Castara / ‡rWilliam Habington -- ‡tTo Castara, of true delight / ‡rWilliam Habington -- ‡tGoee stop the swift-wing'd moments / ‡rWilliam Habington -- ‡tNox nocti indicat Scientiam / ‡rWilliam Habington -- ‡tGo lovely rose / ‡rEdmund Waller -- ‡tThe battel of the summer-islands / ‡rEdmund Waller -- ‡tTo Phillis / ‡rEdmund Waller -- ‡tStay Pheobus, stay / ‡rEdmund Waller -- ‡tOn a girdle / ‡rEdmund Waller -- ‡tHad Sacharissa liv'd / ‡rEdmund Waller -- ‡tWhile in the park I sing / ‡rEdmund Waller -- ‡tTo a very young Lady / ‡rEdmund Waller -- ‡tTo the mutable fair / ‡rEdmund Waller -- ‡tOn St. James's Park, as lately improved by His Majesty / ‡rEdmund Waller -- ‡tTo Mr. Henry Lawes / ‡rEdmund Waller -- ‡tOf the last verses in the book / ‡rEdmund Waller -- ‡tA sessions of the poets / ‡rSir John Suckling -- ‡tWhy so pale and wan fond lover / ‡rSir John Suckling -- ‡tDo'st see how unregarded now / ‡rSir John Suckling -- ‡tOf thee I ask no red and white / ‡rSir John Suckling -- ‡tOh! for some honest lovers ghost / ‡rSir John Suckling -- ‡tThere never yet was woman made / ‡rSir John Suckling -- ‡tNo, no, fair Heretick / ‡rSir John Suckling -- ‡tUpon my Lady Carliles walking in Hampton-Court garden / ‡rSir John Suckling -- ‡tTis now since I sat down before / ‡rSir John Suckling -- ‡tA ballade, upon a wedding / ‡rSir John Suckling -- ‡tSir J. S. / ‡rSir John Suckling -- ‡tLove and debt alike troublesom / ‡rSir John Suckling -- ‡tHast thou seen the down in the air / ‡rSir John Suckling -- ‡tFuscara or the bee errant / ‡rJohn Cleveland -- ‡tThe senses festival / ‡rJohn Cleveland -- ‡tThe Hecatomb to his mistress / ‡rJohn Cleveland -- ‡tThe antiplatonick / ‡rJohn Cleveland -- ‡tUpon Phillis walking in a morning before sun-rising / ‡rJohn Cleveland -- ‡tA fair nymph scorning a black boy courting her / ‡rJohn Cleveland -- ‡tA young man to an old woman courting him / ‡rJohn Cleveland -- ‡tUpon an Hermaphrodite / ‡rJohn Cleveland -- ‡tThe general eclipse / ‡rJohn Cleveland -- ‡tOn the memory of Mr. Edward King drown'd in the Irish Seas / ‡rJohn Cleveland -- ‡tMark Anthony / ‡rJohn Cleveland -- ‡tThe author's mock-song to Mark Anthony / ‡rJohn Cleveland -- ‡tSquare-cap / ‡rJohn Cleveland -- ‡tCooper's Hill / ‡rSir John Denham -- ‡tOn Mr. Abraham Cowley / ‡rSir John Denham -- ‡tTo Lucasta, going beyond the seas / ‡rRichard Lovelace -- ‡tTo Lucasta, going to the Warres / ‡rRichard Lovelace -- ‡tTo Amarantha, that she would dishevell her haire / ‡rRichard Lovelace -- ‡tTo Lucasta, the rose / ‡rRichard Lovelace -- ‡tGratiana dauncing and singing / ‡rRichard Lovelace -- ‡tThe scrutinie / ‡rRichard Lovelace -- ‡tThe grasse-hopper / ‡rRichard Lovelace -- ‡tLucasta weeping / ‡rRichard Lovelace -- ‡tTo Lucasta, from prison / ‡rRichard Lovelace -- ‡tTo Lucasta, ode lyrick / ‡rRichard Lovelace -- ‡tAgainst the love of great ones / ‡rRichard Lovelace -- ‡tTo Althea, from prison / ‡rRichard Lovelace -- ‡tA black patch on Lucasta's face / ‡rRichard Lovelace -- ‡tLove made in the first age: To Chloris / ‡rRichard Lovelace -- ‡tThe motto / ‡rAbraham Cowley -- ‡tOf wit / ‡rAbraham Cowley -- ‡tOn the death of Mr. William Hervey / ‡rAbraham Cowley -- ‡tTo Sir William Davenant / ‡rAbraham Cowley -- ‡tReason, the use of it in divine matters / ‡rAbraham Cowley -- ‡tOn the death of Mr. Crashaw / ‡rAbraham Cowley -- ‡tThe duel / ‡rAbraham Cowley -- ‡tThe request / ‡rAbraham Cowley -- ‡tWritten in juice of lemmon / ‡rAbraham Cowley -- ‡tThe change / ‡rAbraham Cowley -- ‡tLeaving me, and then loving many / ‡rAbraham Cowley -- ‡tThe soul / ‡rAbraham Cowley -- ‡tThe dissembler / ‡rAbraham Cowley -- ‡tThe extasie / ‡rAbraham Cowley -- ‡tTo the royal society / ‡rAbraham Cowley -- ‡tChang'd, yet constant / ‡rThomas Stanley -- ‡tCelia singing / ‡rThomas Stanley -- ‡tThe repulse / ‡rThomas Stanley -- ‡tThe divorce / ‡rThomas Stanley -- ‡tThe bracelet / ‡rThomas Stanley -- ‡tThe exequies / ‡rThomas Stanley -- ‡tI prethee let my heart alone / ‡rThomas Stanley -- ‡tThe relapse / ‡rThomas Stanley -- ‡tExpectation / ‡rThomas Stanley -- ‡tReligio Laici / ‡rJohn Dryden --
650 0. ‡aEnglish literature ‡vPoetry.
650 0. ‡aEnglish poetry ‡yEarly modern, 1500-1700 ‡0(SAGE)1445969
7001 . ‡aSylvester, Richard Standish ‡0(SAGE)1638973
70012. ‡aSouthwell, Robert, ‡cSaint, ‡d1561?-1595 ‡0(SAGE)1645348
7001 . ‡aAlabaster, William, ‡d1567-1640 ‡0(SAGE)1754045
7001 . ‡aDonne, John, ‡d1572-1631 ‡0(SAGE)1675354
7001 . ‡aHerbert, George, ‡d1593-1633 ‡0(SAGE)1695833
7001 . ‡aQuarles, Francis, ‡d1592-1644 ‡0(SAGE)1650905
7001 . ‡aCrashaw, Richard, ‡d1613?-1649 ‡0(SAGE)1639809
7001 . ‡aMarvell, Andrew, ‡d1621-1678. ‡0(SAGE)1693309
7001 . ‡aVaughan, Henry, ‡d1621-1695 ‡0(SAGE)1690951
7001 . ‡aTraherne, Thomas, ‡d-1674 ‡0(SAGE)1701016
7001 . ‡aDrayton, Michael, ‡d1563-1631 ‡0(SAGE)1641244
7001 . ‡aWotton, Henry, ‡cSir, ‡d1568-1639 ‡0(SAGE)1651988
7001 . ‡aJonson, Ben, ‡d1573?-1637 ‡0(SAGE)1691458
7001 . ‡aSandys, George, ‡d1578-1644 ‡0(SAGE)1638428
7001 . ‡aCorbet, Richard, ‡d1582-1635 ‡0(SAGE)1771049
70012. ‡aHerbert of Cherbury, Edward Herbert, ‡cBaron, ‡d1583-1648. ‡0(SAGE)1700081
7001 . ‡aTownshend, Aurelian, ‡dactive 1601-1643 ‡0(SAGE)1753365
7001 . ‡aHerrick, Robert, ‡d1591-1674 ‡0(SAGE)1683833
7001 . ‡aKing, Henry, ‡d1592-1669 ‡0(SAGE)1652001
7001 . ‡aCarew, Thomas, ‡d1595?-1639? ‡0(SAGE)1754337
7001 . ‡aRandolph, Thomas, ‡d1605-1635 ‡0(SAGE)1747472
7001 . ‡aHabington, William, ‡d1605-1654 ‡0(SAGE)1753354
7001 . ‡aWaller, Edmund, ‡d1606-1687. ‡0(SAGE)1662358
7001 . ‡aSuckling, John, ‡cSir, ‡d1609-1642 ‡0(SAGE)1651668
7001 . ‡aCleveland, John, ‡d1613-1658 ‡0(SAGE)1740859
7001 . ‡aDenham, John, ‡cSir, ‡d1615-1669 ‡0(SAGE)1644850
7001 . ‡aLovelace, Richard, ‡d1618-1658 ‡0(SAGE)1652027
7001 . ‡aCowley, Abraham, ‡d1618-1667 ‡0(SAGE)1638615
7001 . ‡aStanley, Thomas, ‡d1625-1678 ‡0(SAGE)1694753
7001 . ‡aDryden, John, ‡d1631-1700. ‡0(SAGE)1664513
830 0. ‡aAnchor seventeenth-century series ‡0(SAGE)2042802
902 . ‡a101129
994 . ‡a(2)ma1 ‡a(2)tv1
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945 . ‡ltvn ‡a821.408 M3678an ‡uv.v.1
945 . ‡ltvn ‡a821.408 M3678an ‡uv.v.2
997 . ‡aRDA ENRICHED
905 . ‡uadmin
999 . ‡b4 ‡c011004 ‡dm ‡eBook ‡g4 ‡fa
901 . ‡a1922 ‡bUnknown ‡c308957 ‡tbiblio ‡soclc

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