INDEX OF FIRST LINES. A choir of bright beauties in spring did appear, A shepeheard's boy, (no better doe him call,)- A woodman, fisher, and a swain, Admire not, Shepherd's Boy, - Ah, what is love? It is a pretty thing, All ye that lovely lovers be, All ye woods, and trees, and bowers, 147 Amidst the fairest mountain tops, 45 And are you there old Pas! in troth, I ever thought, And as within a landscape that doth stand, - 162 And now all nature seem'd in love; Art thou poor, yet hast thou golden slumbers? Beauty sat bathing in a spring, Beneath a meadow bridge, whose arch was dry, - 208 - 117 80 - 86 - 269 Beneath the shade a spreading beech displays, - 236 - 257 - Ceres, most bounteous lady, thy rich leas, Crabbed age and youth cannot live together,- Damon, come drive thy flocks this way, Diaphenia like the daffadowndilly, 89 Fair and fair, and twice so fair, - Far in the country of Arden, - Flora, well met, and for thy taken pain, For a kiss or two, confess, Get up, get up for shame, the blooming morn, Glide soft, ye silver floods, Good-day, Mirtillo, Good Muse, rock me asleep, Gorbo, as thou camest this way, Hark how the mower Damon sung, Haymakers, rakers, reapers, and mowers, Here she was wont to go! and here! and here! How languisheth the primrose of love's garden? I care not for these ladies, I love, and he loves me again, I, with whose colours Myra dress'd her head, In the merry month of May, It was frosty winter season, It was near a thicky shade, It will be rare, rare, rare! Jack and Joan, they think no ill, Like to Diana in her summer-weed, - 187 - III - 56 Live, live with me, and thou shalt see, Lo! Collin, here the place whose pleasaunt syte, Mira, thine eyes are those twin heavenly powers, My banks they are furnish'd with bees, Page - 183 - 266 My sheep are thoughts which I both guide and serve; Near to the silver Trent, Now as an angler melancholy standing, O happy, golden age! O Karol, Karol, call him back again, O shady vales, O fair enriched meads, O Tityrus, thy plaint is over-long, - O'er the smooth enamell'd green, - Shepherds all, and maidens fair, Silly swain, sit down and weep, Sir, welcome: Sit down, Carmela; here are cobs for kings, The daisy scatter'd on each mead and down, - 168 - 66 24 The lad Philisides, This battle fares like to the morning's war, This mossy bank they press'd. This world is made a Hell, Thou divinest, fairest, brightest, Thrice, O, thrice happy shepherd's life and state! Thy younglings, Cuddy, are but just awake, Under an aged oak was Willy laid, What bird so sings, yet so does wail? What, have you let the false enchanter 'scape? What voice is that? my young Lord? speak again, When death shall snatch us from these kids, When Virgil thought no shame the Doric reed, Yea; but no man now is still, Ye little birds that sit and sing, Ye living lamps by whose dear light, Ye nymphs of Solyma! begin the song, Yet once more, O ye laurels, and once more, - - 157 - 119 - 231 - 239 202 - 149 LONDON: Blackie & sON, Limited, 50 OLD BAILEY, E.C. BLACKIE AND SON'S Educational Catalogue. ELEMENTARY CLASSICS. Caesar's Gallie War. BOOK I. Edited, with Introduction, Notes, Exercises, and Vocabularies, by JOHN BROWN, B.A., Worcester College, Oxford; Assistant to the Professor of Humanity in Glasgow University. With coloured map, pictorial illustrations, and plans of battles. F'cap 8vo, cloth, 1s. 6d. "Well printed, with short and, so far as we have tested them, accurate notes. The introduction contains some useful drawings illustrating Roman military life, and there is a map of Gaul so cunningly pasted into the cover that it can be kept open for reference without trailing clumsily about, no matter what part of the book is being read."-Journal of Education. Caesar's Gallic War. BOOK II. Edited on the same plan by JOHN BROWN, B.A. F'cap 8vo, cloth, 1s. 6d. "In noticing Mr. Brown's edition of Book I. we stated that it was one of the most complete text-books we had seen: the same remark applies to this volume. We cannot speak too highly of Mr. Brown's careful and scholarly workmanship." -School Guardian. "The best school edition of Caesar we know."-Academic Review. Caesar's Invasions of Britain. (Parts of Books IV. and V. of the Gallic War.) Edited by JOHN BROWN, B.A. F'cap 8vo, cloth, 1s. 6d. Virgil's Aeneid. BOOK I. Edited, with Introduction, Outline of Prosody, Notes, Exercises on the Hexameter, Vocabulary, &c., by Rev. A. J. CHURCH, M.A., sometime Professor of Latin in University College, London. F'cap 8vo, cloth, 18. "The little manual is admirable, not only in its critical introduction and sensible notes, but in its comprehension of the real and not the imaginary stumblingblocks which confront the beginner."-Speaker. Ovid. Stories from Ovid. Edited, with Introduction, Notes, and Vocabulary, by A. H. ALLCROFT, M.A., Christ Church, Oxford. F'cap 8vo, cloth, 18. 6d. Phaedrus. Selections from Phaedrus, BOOKS I. AND II. Edited for Junior forms, by S. E. WINBOLT, B.A., Assistant Master in Christ's Hospital. F'cap 8vo, cloth, 18. [3] |