[The collected works ] ; The collected works of Abraham Cowley. Vol. 2, Poems (1656) : Pt. 1. The mistressUniversity of Delaware Press, 1989 - 649 páginas |
Contenido
9 | |
15 | |
17 | |
Textual Introduction Analysis Collations and Textual Notes | 127 |
Editorial Principles Sigla Abbreviations | 129 |
Textual Introduction | 132 |
Textual Analysis | 160 |
Collations and Textual Notes | 175 |
Commentary | 219 |
Explanatory Notes | 237 |
The Musical Settings | 303 |
Editorial Principles | 305 |
The Composers | 311 |
The Musical Settings of Poems from The Mistress | 317 |
Sigla and Descriptions | 556 |
Collations and Notes to the Musical Settings | 568 |
Critical Commentary and Explanatory Notes | 205 |
References Consulted | 207 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Collected Works of Abraham Cowley: Poetical blossomes, The puritans ... Abraham Cowley Vista de fragmentos - 1989 |
Términos y frases comunes
Abraham Cowley accidental appears bar line Bar Score Notes bass figure British Library cancel the key CCVI collection Comments Composer compositor Cont copy text shows Cowley's poem Crashaw Davideis Donne Donne's dost dotted eighth double bar eighth note emendations errata errors F1 bar F1 Literary source F1 poem figured bass folio half note Heart Heaven Henry Herringman Henry Purcell Humphrey Moseley I-II Inconstant John John Blow key signature King's Literary Collation literary text London Love Love's Lovers M11 fol manuscript Miscellanies Mistress Moseley musical setting ne'r omits Ovid Oxford Pietro Reggio Pietro Reggio Copy Poems68 poet printed editions Purcell's quarter note reading Reggio Copy text Reggio sets shows a sharp Slur song text Songs shows Soul stanza tears Textual variants thee Thomas thou tr tr unascribed variant in bar verse vocal score watermark Weeping William King
Pasajes populares
Página 26 - THE SPRING. Though you be absent here, I needs must say The trees as beauteous are, and flowers as gay, As ever they were wont to be ; Nay the birds' rural music too Is as melodious and free, As if they sung to pleasure you : I saw a rose-bud ope this morn ; I'll swear The blushing morning open'd not more fair.