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present time are, the reader

They will not compare with

What the lyrics of the may be supposed to know. those of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, but they are genuine, as far as they go. The best of them, to my thinking, are BARRY CORNWALL's—a venerable name, which must soon pass from amongst us.

that which should

Where

The arrangement adopted here is always obtain in works of this nature, viz., the chronological one. The lyrics of each poet are placed in the order in which they were written, so far as I could ascertain it, and the whole in strict succession of time. several are taken from one poet, as in the case of SHAKESPEARE and FLETCHER, the date of the earliest determines his place in the century. SHAKESPEARE, for instance, is placed in the year 1592, the date assigned by DYCE to "Love's Labour's Lost;" and FLETCHER in 1610, the date of the publication of his "Faithful Shepherdess." Where an author's works were not published until after his death, the lyric, or lyrics, selected therefrom, are, of course, placed before his death. In such cases one can only approximate to correct chronology: certainty is impossible. The student of English Poetry will detect, in most cases, the reasons which have influenced me in assigning the conjectural dates. Had I made the collection for him alone, I would have added annotations of all sorts, which, by-the-way, I could hardly restrain myself from

doing. But, working for the general reader, who seldom cares for the laborious trifles of the scholar, however curious they may be, I have let the poets speak for themselves, without note or comment from me. The text is as pure as I could make it. I dare not flatter myself, however, that it is absolutely pure, so much have the old poets been tampered with by those who have edited them, and those who have quoted from them. In the matter of spelling, punctuation, etc., I have conformed to the usage of to-day, not being able to see the sacredness of the old style of typography, the phonographic spelling of the author, the whims of his printers, and the blunders of the press generally..

NEW YORK, November 1, 1865.

R. H. S.

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WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE 30
WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE 30
JOHN DONNE 31

WILBYE'S MADRIGALS 33
W.LBYE'S MADRIGALS 33
WILBYE'S MADRIGALS 34
WILBYE'S MADRIGALS 34
WILBYE'S MADRIGALS 35
WEELKES'S BALLADS 35
.RICHARD BARNEF:ELD 36

THOMAS DEKKER 38
SIR JOHN DAVIES 39

.FARMER'S ENGLISH MADRIGALS 40
.FARMER'S ENGLISH MADRIGALS 40

.HENRY CONSTABLE 41

THOMAS WATSON 42 MORLEY'S MADRIGALS 43

DOWLAND'S BOOK OF SONGS 43

DOWLAND'S BOOK OF SONGS 44

DOWLAND'S BOOK OF SONGS 45

Madrigal.

Madrigal

Of Corinna's Singing.

Madrigal

A Song

.WEELKES'S MADRIGALS 46

WEELKES'S MADRIGALS 47

.THOMAS CAMPION 47

THOMAS CAMPION 48

DAVISON'S POETICAL RHAPSODY 49

PAGE

Ode

Madrigal.....
Madrigal...

There is a Garden..

Song...
Madrigal

✓ Song

Madrigal....
Song...
To Celia...

To Celia.....

The Triumph of Charis.

DAVISON'S POETICAL RHAPSODY 50
DAVISON'S POETICAL RHAPSODY 51
WEELKES'S MADRIGALS 51

ALLISON'S HOUR'S RECREATION IN MUSIC 52
..SIR ROBERT AYTON 53
..BATESON'S MADRIGALS 54
.THOMAS HEYWOOD 54
WEELKES'S AIRS 55
BEN JONSON 56
BEN JONSON 56
....BEN JONSON 57
BEN JONSON 58
GILES FLETCHER 59

The Wooing Song of Panglory.

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"Shall I, wafting in despair ?".

...............

"Call for the robin redbreaft and the wren

"Hark, now every thing is ftill".

"All the flowers of the Spring". Madrigal...

The Character of a Happy Life

On his Mistress, the Queen of Bohemia.

The Indifferent......

Madrigal

A Kiss

Defired Death

To Sleep........

JOHN FLETCHER 63

JOHN FLETCHER 63

..JOHN FLETCHER 64

PILKINGTON'S MADRIGALS 65

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GEORGE WITHER 65

JOHN WEBSTER 67 ..JOHN WEBSTER 67

JOHN WEBSTER 68 WARD'S MADRIGALS 69 .SIR HENRY WOTTON 69 ...SIR HENRY WOTTON 70

..FRANCIS BEAUMONT 71 WILLIAM DRUMMOND 72

WILLIAM DRUMMOND 73

....WILLIAM DRUMMOND 73

WILLIAM DRUMMOND 74

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