A forest of varieties ...
- Title
- A forest of varieties ...
- Author
- North, Dudley North, Baron, 1581-1666.
- Publication
- London :: Printed by Richard Cotes,
- 1645.
- Rights/Permissions
-
To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.
- Link to this Item
-
https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A52444.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"A forest of varieties ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A52444.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 7, 2025.
Contents
- title page
- to the reader
-
A Forest of VARIETIES: Concerning petty Poetry, made more generall in addresse then at first.
- Preludium to the first Verses.
- Postscript upon occasion of the then young Princes pretended desire to have sight of the following Poems.
- Advertisement upon the first Verses.
- AVRORA.
- poem
- To winne her from resolving upon a Cloyster'd life, in whom love is conceived to bee yet predominant.
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- Song.
- Song.
- poem
- To her who shut him in her Closet to breake his hearing of her singing in her upper Chamber, with her Teacher, made upon the instant to perswade her to bee more free.
- Vpon a Brayd of haire.
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- A FANCIE.
- Made in imitation of a Sonnet in Ronsard.
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- Postscript.
-
My farewell to
Catlidge. ByM. G. - Condolement upon occasion of the preceding Verses received from another Author.
- letter
- letter
- letter
- Pathetically, if not too Prophetically Inspired, upon the death of the late Noble and Brave Prince HENRY. An imperfect, but true Inventory and Dissection.
-
Upon the death of
Anne ofDenmarke Queen of great Britaine, and the blazing Starre appearing neere her death, taken for the stellifyed spirit of PrinceHenry dead not long before. - Epitaph.
-
Vpon the death of my faire Cousin
Drury. -
Vpon the death of the supereminent Lady
Haddington, Delineated to the life. - Another.
- An Incentive to our Poets upon the death of the victorious King of Swedeland.
- The reason of a Gentlewomans wearing small blacke patches. Of another Author.
- Occasioned partly by the Verses above, partly by a faire La∣dies keeping on her Mask in the house on a hot day.
- Epigram.
- poem
- True Love and Honour.
-
An Elegie upon the Death of the most faire and vertuous Lady
Rich, which most unhappily happened upon the 24. of August, 1638. - Epitaph.
- On the same.
- A Requiem at the Enterment.
- Grotesque.
- essay
- essay
- Suddaine Touches in the nature of Characters, Written about the yeare, 1625.
- poem
- A Supplement to the Gentleman at such time as hee was out of my hands.
- A Favorite.
- A Divine.
- A Physitian.
- A Lawyer.
- A Souldier.
- An houres Meditation upon goodnesse and improbitie.
- essay
- poem
- Of Death.
- An Essay concerning Musick.
- Aire.
- Song.
- poem
- Aut virtus uomen inane est, Aut decus & pretium recte petit experiens vir.
- Vnhappinesse of Physicke.
- title page
-
EXONERATIONS
OR An Inquisition taken upon my par∣ticular, and humane Frailty, Blindnesse, Presumption, Unquietnesse, and Vanity.- introduction
- poem
- poem
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- For my Sonne.
- essay
- essay
- Once belonging to the Alphabet Sonnet of the Letter E.
- essay
- My Ash-wednesday Ashes.
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- essay
- To my above mentioned Friend. The Conclusion.
- essay
- essay
- poem
- essay
- essay
- poem
- title page
-
This still let me Preface to the faire Philosophicall Inclination.
- Crotesque.
- To my best Clergy friend in relation to the best among us.
- Habituall vertue insuperable.
- Sweetnesse of Goodnesse.
- essay
- The Shepherd, Sheep, and Wolfe.
- essay
- essay
- essay
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- Devotions.
- Corona.
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- poem
- Corollary.
- letter
- A promiscuous peece of three houres work in a morning, to cleare from further writing.
- letter
- essay
- Charitie.
- poem
-
At my return from
York. - letter
- essay
- Postscript.
- afterword
- EXTRAVAGANTS.