Mark when she smiles with amiable cheer. Spenser. II. 204. Martial the things that do attain. Ld. Surrey. II. 51. Melancholy hence and get. Shirley. III. 103. Mirth and nuptial joys betide. Baron. III. 337Mournful muses, sorrow's minions. Breton. II. 255. My golden locks time hath to silver turn'd. Anon. II. 358. My heedless heart, which love yet never knew. Watson. II. 280. My love I cannot thy rare beauties place. Smith. II. 343. My lute awake, perform the last. Anon. II. 63. My lute be as thou wast when thou didst grow. Drummond. III. 56. My muse by thee restor❜d to life. Davison. III. 13. My Phillis hath the morning sun. Dyer. II. 156. II. 233. My wanton muse that whilom us'd to sing. Raleigh. II. 183. My wife if thou regard mine ease. Kendall. II. 198. N. Naked love did to thine eye. Sherburne. III. 233. 279. Anon. III. 393. No more, no more of this I vow. Brome. III. 274. Now have I learn'd with much ado at last. Raleigh. II. 182. Now I find thy looks were feign'd. Lodge. II. 262. Now the bright morning star, day's harbinger. Mil. ton. III. 196. Now the hungry lion roars. Shakspeare. II. 310. 0. O yes! O yes! if any maid. Lylie. II. 214. Oh that I could write a story. Breton. II. 253. Oh what a pain is love. Anon. III. 313. Oh would to God a way were found. E. of Sterling. III. 29. On a day, alack the day. Shakspeare. II. 308. 202. Our sighs are heard just heaven declares. Waller. III. 165. P. Pack clouds away, and welcome day. Heywood. III.23. Pale sad Aurora leave thy showers to rain. Murray. III. 63. Passions are liken'd best to floods and streams. Raleigh. II. 192. Phillida was a fair maid. Anon. II. 77. Phillis is my only joy. Sedley, III. 377. Phillis let's shun the common fate. Sedley. III. 365, Phillis this early zeal assuage. Sedley. III. 369. Poets may boast, as safely vain. Waller. III. 175. Ponder thy cares, and sum them all in one. Murray. III. 64. Poor Chloris wept, and from her eyes. Anon. III, 317. Prithee die and set me free. Q. Denham. III. 228. Quoth he not long since was a man. Warner. II. 270. R. Reason, thou vain impertinence. Anon. III. 392. Remov'd from fair Urania's eyes. Flatman. III. 363. Return my joys and hither bring. Strode. III, S. 147. Sacred spirit whilst thy lyre. Sheppard. III. 295. See how the feather'd blossoms thro' the air. Veel. See, O see. E. of Bristol. III. 379 See these two little brooks that slowly creep. Cartwright. III. 205. Sees not my love how time resumes. Waller.III.174. Shall I hopeless then pursue. Sherburne. III. 235. 193. Should I sigh out my days in grief. Stevenson. III. 309. Sigh no more, ladies, sigh no more. Shakspeare. II. 311. Silence in truth would speak my sorrow best. Wotton, II. 333. Since love will needs that I shall love. Wyatt. II. 45, Since secret spite hath sworn my woe. Breton. II. 240. Sing lullaby as women do. Gascoigne II. 143. Sleep, old man, let silence charm thee. Beaumont. III. 53. Sleep, silence' child sweet father of soft rest. Drum- So glides along the wanton brook. E. of Pembroke. So light is love in matchless beauty shining. Anon. Somnus the humble god that dwells. Denham. III, Spring of beauty, mine of pleasure. Collop. III. 356. Still to be neat, still to be drest. Jonson. II. 349. Sweet bird that sing'st away the early hours. Drum- Sweet I do not pardon crave. Davison. III. 14. Sweet violets, love's paradise that spread. Raleigh. Sweetly breathing vernal air. Carew. III. 131. T. Take, oh take those lips away. Beaumont and Fletcher. III. 47. Tell me, dearest, what is love. Beaumont and Fletcher, III. 50. Tell me not of joy, there's none. Cartwright. III. 207. Tell me not, sweet, I am unkind. Lovelace. III. 249. Tell me, Utrechia, since my fate. Carew. III. 144. Tell me where is Fancy bred. Shakspeare. II. 312. Tell me ye wandering spirits of the air. Anon.III.396. Thanks, fair Urania, to your scorn. Sedley. III. 373. That which her slender waist confin'd. Waller. III. 170. The dawning day begins to glare. John Hall. II. 93. The doubt of future foes exiles my present joy. Q. Elizabeth. II. 134. The earth late choak'd with showers. Lodge. II. 261. The fountains drink caves subterrene. Fleckno. III. 307. The glories of our blood and state. Shirley. III. 107. The lopped tree in time may grow again. Southwell. II. 167. The maple with a scarry skin. Hannay. III. 11I. The mist is gone that blear'd mine eyes. Anon. II. 354. The monument which thou beholdest here. Ld. Herbert of Cherbury. III. 38. The rushing rivers that do run. Googe. II. 147. The smoky sighs, the bitter tears. Anon. II. 71. The silly swain whose love breeds discontent. Anon. II. 361. The soote season, that bud and bloom forth brings. Ld. Surrey. II. 53 The sturdy rock for all his strength. Yloop. II. 123. The sun, the season in each thing. W. H. II. 359. The ways on earth have paths and turnings known. E. of Essex. II. 327. The woods, the rivers, and the meadows green. Spenser. II. 205. There's no dallying with love. Sherburne. III. 234. There was a man of stature big. Warner. II. 268. There were three ravens sat on a tree. Anon. II. 119. This crystal here. John Hall. III. 298. This garden does not take my eyes. Shirley. III. 104. |