Poems By Thomas Carevv Esquire. One of the gentlemen of the Privie-Chamber, and Sewer in Ordinary to His Majesty.
- Title
- Poems By Thomas Carevv Esquire. One of the gentlemen of the Privie-Chamber, and Sewer in Ordinary to His Majesty.
- Author
- Carew, Thomas, 1595?-1639?
- Publication
- London :: Printed by I.D. for Thomas Walkley, and are to be sold at the signe of the flying Horse, between Brittains Burse, and York-House,
- 1640.
- Rights/Permissions
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- Link to this Item
-
https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A17961.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"Poems By Thomas Carevv Esquire. One of the gentlemen of the Privie-Chamber, and Sewer in Ordinary to His Majesty." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A17961.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 16, 2025.
Contents
- title page
- ERRATA.
- imprimatur
- POEMS.
-
To A. L. Perswasions to love. - Lips and Eyes.
- A divine Mistris.
- SONG. A beautifull Mistris.
- A cruell Mistris.
- SONG. Murdring beautie.
- My mistris commanding me to returne her letters.
- Secresie protested.
- A prayer to the Wind.
- Mediocritie in love rejected. SONG.
- Good counsel to a young Maid. SONG.
- To my Mistris sitting by a Rivers side. AN EDDY.
-
SONG. Conquest by flight. - SONG. To my inconstant Mistris.
- SONG. Perswasions to enjoy.
- A deposition from Love.
- Ingratefull beauty threatned.
- Disdaine returned.
- A Looking-Glasse.
-
An Elegie on the La:
PEN: sent to my Mistresse out ofFrance. - To my Mistresse in absence.
- To her in absence. A SHIP.
- SONG. Eternitie of love protested.
-
Upon some alterations in my Mistresse, after my depar∣ture into
France. - Good counsell to a young Maid.
-
Celia bleeding, to the Surgeon. -
To
T. H. a Lady resembling my Mistresse. - To Saxham.
- Upon a Ribband.
-
To the King at his entrance into
Saxham, by MasterIo. Crofts. -
Upon the sicknesse of
(E. S.) -
A New-yeares Sacrifice. To
Lucinda. -
SONG. To one who when I prais'd my Mistris beautie, said I was blind. -
SONG. To my Mistris, I burning in love. -
SONG. To her againe, she burning in a Feaver. - Upon the Kings sicknesse.
-
SONG. To a Lady not yet enjoy'd by her Husband. - SONG. The willing Prisoner to his Mistris.
- A flye that flew into my Mistris her eye.
-
SONG. Celia
singing. -
SONG.
Celia singing. -
SONG. To one that desired to know my Mistris. - In the person of a Lady to her inconstant servant.
- Truce in Love entreated.
- To my Rivall.
- Boldnesse in love.
- A Pastorall Dialogue.
- Griefe ingrost.
- A Pastorall Dialogue.
- Red, and white Roses.
-
To my Cousin
(C. R.) marry∣ing my Lady(A.) - A Lover upon an Accident ne∣cessitating his departure, consults with Reason.
-
Parting,
Celia weepes. - A Rapture.
-
Epitaph on the Lady
Mary Villers. - An other.
- An other.
-
Epitaph on the Lady
S. Wife to SirW. S. - Maria Wentworth. Thomae Comitis Cleveland, filia prae∣mortuae prima Virginiam animam exhaluit. An. Dom. Aet. suae.
-
On the Duke of Buckingham. Beatissimis Manibus charis∣simi viri Illma Conjunx sic Parentavit. -
An other. Siste Hospes sive Indigena sive Advena vicissitudinis rerum memor pauca pellege. -
Foure Songs by way of
Cho∣rus to a play, at an entertainment of the King and Queene, by my Lord Chamberlaine; -
Songs in the Play. A Lover in the disguise of an Amazon, is dearly beloved of his Mistresse. -
Another. A Lady rescued from death by a Knight, who in the instant leaves her, complaines thus. -
TO BEN. IOHNSON. Vpon occasion of his Ode of de∣fiance annext to his Play of the new Inne. - An Hymeneall Dialogue
-
Obsequies to the Lady
ANNE HAY. -
To the Countesse of
Anglesie upon the immoderatly-by-her∣lamented death of her Husband. -
An Elegie upon the death of Doctor
Donne, Deaneof Pauls. -
In answer of an Elegiacall Let∣ter upon the death of the King of
Sweden fromAurelian Townsend, inviting me to write on that subject. -
Vpon Master
W. Mounta∣gue his returne from travell. -
To Master W. Moun∣tague. -
On the Mariage of
T. K. andC. C. the morning stormie. - For a Picture where a Queen Laments over the Tombe of a slaine Knight.
- To a Lady that desired I would love her.
-
Upon my Lord Chiefe Iustice his election of my Lady
A. W. for his Mistresse. -
To
A. D. unreasonable distrust∣full of her owne beauty. -
To my friend
G. N. fromWrest. - A New yeares gift. To the King.
- To the Queene.
-
To the New-yeare for the Countesse of
Carlile. -
To my Honoured friend, Ma∣ster
Thomas May, upon his Comedie,The Heire. -
To my worthy friend Master
Geo. Sands, on his transla∣tion of the Psalmes. -
To my much honoured friend,
HENRY: LordCARY ofLeping∣ton, upon his translation ofMALVEZZI. -
To my worthy Friend, M.
D'AVENANT, Vpon his Excellent Play,The Iust Italian. -
To the Reader of Master
William Davenant's Play. -
TO MY FRIEND,
WILL. D'AVENANT. - The Comparison.
- The Enquiry.
- The Sparke.
- The Complement.
- On sight of a Gentlewomans face in the water.
- A Song.
- Song.
- The second Rapture.
- The Hue and Cry.
- To his Mistris confined. Song.
- The Primrose.
- The tinder.
- A Song.
-
The Carver. To his Mistris. - To the Painter.
- Loves Courtship.
- On a Damaske rose sticking vpon a Ladies breast.
- The protestation a Sonnet.
- The tooth-ach cured by a kisse.
- To his jealous Mistris.
- The Dart.
- The mistake.
- title page
- THE DESCRIPTION OF THE SCAENE.
- dramatis personae
- note