Sinetes passions vppon his fortunes offered for an incense at the shrine of the ladies which guided his distempered thoughtes. The patrons patheticall posies, sonets, maddrigals, and rowndelayes. Together with Sinetes dompe. By Robert Parry Gent.

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Title
Sinetes passions vppon his fortunes offered for an incense at the shrine of the ladies which guided his distempered thoughtes. The patrons patheticall posies, sonets, maddrigals, and rowndelayes. Together with Sinetes dompe. By Robert Parry Gent.
Author
Parry, Robert, fl. 1540-1612.
Publication
At London :: Printed by T[homas] P[urfoot] for William Holme, and are to be sould on Ludgate hill at the signe of the holy Lambe,
1597.
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http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A09044.0001.001
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"Sinetes passions vppon his fortunes offered for an incense at the shrine of the ladies which guided his distempered thoughtes. The patrons patheticall posies, sonets, maddrigals, and rowndelayes. Together with Sinetes dompe. By Robert Parry Gent." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A09044.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 14, 2025.

Pages

Page [unnumbered]

PASSION. V. (Book 5)

SOund TRITON forth thy heauy dolefull knill, That, rings a peale of eu'r enduring woe, No vacant place but balefull ECCHOS fill: My heart is made a harbour for the foe: That yeildeth foode vnto my cursed cares, And poyson strong with hony ioyn'd prepares.
Heau'ns shew your power, earth tremble at my crye, And stony rockes be molyfied with moane, The rurall Gods with mournfull melodie, Lament my chaunce, bewaile choice ech one, Your sheapheard swaine in sables clad with care, Doth for the dead some mourning weeds prepare.
The lining doth presage his dying dole, His life is death while others reape his toyle, Who hath not power himselfe for to controle, Is sure the fruite of some aacursed soyle, His tong too long, his wisedome is too short, Who rues in deede the thing he spake iu sport.
But Ladies yet condemne not his desire, Though passed deeds his present griefe pro••••re, And lare mishhapps yeild fuell to his fier, That scant he can the scorching heate endure, Whose ayde he craues to mollyfie his paine, With pleasāt sport of some conceyted vaine,
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