[The Poems to which no mark is prefixed are arranged above (pp. xliv. As at noon Dulcina rested (No. xxv. See pp. xxviii-ix.) Page 122 xlvi • Come live with me and be my dear (No. xiii. Ignoto in E. H. See pp. Conceit, begotten by the eyes (No. xl.) 118 Coridon, arise my Coridon (No. v. Ignoto in E. H. See p. xxxi.). Court's commender, State's maintainer (No. xxxvii. See p. 96.) + Court's scorn, State's disgracing (No. xxxvi. See p. 95.). 74 75 Fain would I, but I dare not (No. xxxiv. See p. 121, n.).... 106 Go, Soul, the Body's guest (No. xxviii. See also pp. xxix, n. lxx-lxxii.) 99 xxxviii Here lies Hobinoll, our pastor while ere (No. xxxviii. See p. 122, n.) This Index is confined to the forty-four poems enumerated in the list • Hey, down a down, did Dian sing (No. ix. Ignoto in E. H. See p. If all the World and Love were young (No. xii. Page See also p. 136).. 128 + If Love be life, I long to die (No. ii. By A. W. See p. xxx.).... + Like desert woods, with darksome shades obscured (No. xvii. Probably Like truthless dreams, so are my joys expired (No. xxx. See also p. xlviii Man's Life's a Tragedy: his Mother's womb (No. viii. Ignoto in 82 Many desire, but few or none deserve (No. xxxi. See also p. xxxv, n.) xlviii 116 + My wanton Muse, that whilome wont to sing (No. xiv. By A. W. lii Now have I learnt, with much ado, at last (No. xxiv. By A. W. See Passions are likened best to floods and streams (No. xx.). 132 Prais'd be Diana's fair and harmless light (No. xix. See also pp. xxviii • Quivering Fears, heart-tearing Cares (No. i. Ignoto in R. W.).... 57 • Shall I like a hermit dwell (No. xxvi. See p. xxix.). 72 • Shepherd, what's Love, I pray thee tell (No. x. See pp. xxvii, 1, n. Sweet violets, Love's Paradise, that spread (No. xv. Ignoto in E. Sweet were the sance would please each kind of taste (No. xvi. See + The frozen snake, oppress'd with heaped snow (No. xxiii. By A. W. + The fairest pearls that Northern seas do breed (No. xviii. By A. W. The praise of meaner wits this work like profit brings (No. xxii. See xlv The word of denial, and the letter of fifty (No. xxxix. See also p. Three things there be, that prosper all apace (No. xliv.) ...... ...... To praise thy life, or wail thy worthy death (No. xli. See extracts on xlix xlix + Water thy plants with Grace divine,&c. (No. xxxiii. See also p. lxxiii.) 114 81 Whilst my Soul's eye beheld no Light (N°. iv. Ignoto in R. W.). 61 Other copies (in Phœnix Nest, 1593, and Davison) begin, "Now what Dum puer es, vanæ nescisque incommoda vocis (Hoskins) 84 Eternal Mover, whose diffused glory (Wotton) 46 Eternal Time, that wastest without waste (A. W.).... xlii Farewell, ye gilded follies, pleasing troubles (Uncertain. See also p. 135.) 111 Go! bid the world, with all its trash, farewell (Breton). 98 Go! Echo of the mind (Unknown).. 93 He first deceas'd: she for a little tried (Wotton. See also p. 136.). 44 Here lies the man was born and cried (Hoskins) 9 1 How happy is he born and taught (Wotton).... 29 If breath were made for every man to buy (Unknown) 83 If life be time that here is lent (Hoskins).. In vain I live, such sorrow lives in me (A. W.)... 9 xlii It is not I that die, &c. (Ascribed to Sidney) My prime of Youth is but a frost of cares (Tychbourne). Ixix 69 37 10 4 xxxix 51 24 41 85 78 S Thy flower of youth is with a north wind blasted (Unknown) 68 16 Who would have thought there could have been (Dr. Brooke). + Another copy begins, "This day dame Nature seem'd in love"-. 65 xi 14 19 |