A INDEX OF FIRST LINES. CURSE upon thee for a slave (John Fletcher). All that glisters is not gold (Shakespeare). All the flowers of the spring (Webster). All ye that lovely lovers be (Peele) All ye woods, and trees, and bowers (John Fletcher) Among all sorts of people (Shirley). And will he not come again (Shakespeare) Are they shadows that we see? (Daniel) Arm, arm, arm, arm! the scouts are all come in (John Fletcher) 121 Art thou god to shepherd turned (Shakespeare). Art thou gone in haste (William Rowley). Art thou poor, yet hast thou golden slumbers (Dekker) At Venus' entreaty for Cupid her son (Peele). Autumn hath all the Summer's fruitful treasure (Nashe) Away, delights! seek some other dwelling (John Fletcher). go Beauty, alas! where wast thou born (Lodge and Greene) Black spirits and white, red spirits and gray (Middleton) Brave iron, brave hammer, from your sound (Dekker) Call for the robin-redbreast and the wren (Webster) 142 Care-charming Sleep, thou easer of all woes (John Fletcher) 118 Cast away care! he that loves sorrow (Dekker). 84 127 78 Cold Winter brings to crown your age (Corona Minerva) 203 182 Come away, bring on the bride (John Fletcher). 126 Come away, come away (Middleton). Come away, come away, Death (Shakespeare) Come, lovers, bring your cares (Jones). PAGE 165 · 41 211 139 Come, lovely Boy! unto my court (Rutter) Come, my Celia, let us prove (Ben Jonson). Come, my children, let your feet (Beaumont and Fletcher) Come, my sweet, whiles every strain (Cartwright). 185 Come, shepherds, come, impale your brows (Goffe) Come, thou monarch of the vine (Shakespeare) Come unto these yellow sands (Shakespeare) Come, you whose loves are dead (Beaumont and Fletcher) 91 Comforts lasting, loves increasing (John Ford). Cupid all his arts did prove (Thomas Forde). 230 Cupid and my Campaspe played (Lyly). I Cupid, if a god thou art (Hausted) 197. Cupid, pardon what is past (Beaumont and Fletcher) Dame, dame! the watch is set (Ben Jonson). Did not the heavenly rhetoric of thine eye (Shakespeare) Done to death by slanderous tongues (Shakespeare) Eyes, hide my love and do not show (Daniel). Fair and fair, and twice so fair (Peele) 76 13 Fair Apollo, whose bright beams (William Rowley) 157 Fair summer droops, droop men and beast therefore (Nashe) Fear no more the heat of the sun (Shakespeare). 52 Fine young folly, though you were (Habington). 202 Fly hence, shadows, that do keep (John Ford) Gently dip, but not too deep (Peele) Go, happy heart! for thou shalt lie (John Fletcher) PAGE 144 231 156 61 79 44 105 56 40 20 119 118 81 Hail, beauteous Dian, queen of shades (Heywood). Hark! hark! the lark at heaven's gate sings (Shakespeare) Hast thou seen the down in the air (Suckling) Haymakers, rakers, reapers and mowers (Dekker) 147 158 51 142 193 197 198 83 Heigh-ho, what shall a shepherd do (Shirley). Hence with passion, sighs, and tears (Heywood) His golden locks Time hath to silver turned (Peele) Hold back thy hours, dark Night, till we have done (Beaumont Hot sun, cool fire, tempered with sweet air (Peele) 20 How blest are they that waste their weary hours (Quarles). 195 How round the world goes, and every thing that's in it (Middleton) 167 49 Howsoe'er the minutes go (Heywood) 150 Hymen, god of marriage-bed (Rutter) 206 I care not for these idle toys (William Rowley). 152 I could never have the power (Beaumont and Fletcher) 100 I neither will lend or borrow (Shirley) . 183 I was not wearier where I lay (Ben Jonson) 70 If I freely may discover (Ben Jonson) 59 If Love his arrows shoot so fast (Shirley) 180 If love make me forsworn, how shall I swear to love (Shakespeare) 28 |