Flovvers of epigrammes, out of sundrie the moste singular authours selected, as well auncient as late writers. Pleasant and profitable to the expert readers of quicke capacitie: by Timothe Kendall, late of the Vniuersitie of Oxford: now student of Staple Inne in London

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Title
Flovvers of epigrammes, out of sundrie the moste singular authours selected, as well auncient as late writers. Pleasant and profitable to the expert readers of quicke capacitie: by Timothe Kendall, late of the Vniuersitie of Oxford: now student of Staple Inne in London
Author
Kendall, Timothy, fl. 1577.
Publication
Imprinted at London :: [By John Kingston] in Poules Churche-yarde, at the signe of the Brasen Serpent, by Ihon Shepperd,
1577.
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Subject terms
Epigrams.
Cite this Item
"Flovvers of epigrammes, out of sundrie the moste singular authours selected, as well auncient as late writers. Pleasant and profitable to the expert readers of quicke capacitie: by Timothe Kendall, late of the Vniuersitie of Oxford: now student of Staple Inne in London." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A04794.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 7, 2024.

Pages

E. G. TO THE READER.

LIke as the spring by natures course doth breed The sundry sortes of flowers of pleasant hew: And clothes the earth with hearbes that thēce proceed, Sweete for their sent, and pleasant to the vew: Wheron the mynde of man is fixed fast, Reuiued now, duld by the winter past: So in this spring, that earthly thinges doth chere, Kendall sends forth the flowers that he hath got,

Page [unnumbered]

Of Epigrammes, by pluckyng here and there Of learned men, from many a Garden plot. Smell of his flowers, resort vnto this felde, The Gardens be of price that these do yelde.
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