The theater of music, or, A choice collection of the newest and best songs sung at the court and public theaters the words composed by the most ingenious wits of the age, and set to music by the greatest masters in that science : with a theorbo-bass to each song for the theorbo or bass-viol : also symphonies and retornels in 3 parts to several of them for the violins and flutes.

About this Item

Title
The theater of music, or, A choice collection of the newest and best songs sung at the court and public theaters the words composed by the most ingenious wits of the age, and set to music by the greatest masters in that science : with a theorbo-bass to each song for the theorbo or bass-viol : also symphonies and retornels in 3 parts to several of them for the violins and flutes.
Publication
London :: Printed by J. Playford for Henry Playford and R.C. ...,
1685-1687.
Rights/Permissions

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Subject terms
Songs, English -- England.
Songs with continuo.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A54969.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The theater of music, or, A choice collection of the newest and best songs sung at the court and public theaters the words composed by the most ingenious wits of the age, and set to music by the greatest masters in that science : with a theorbo-bass to each song for the theorbo or bass-viol : also symphonies and retornels in 3 parts to several of them for the violins and flutes." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A54969.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 15, 2024.

Pages

Page 6

〈♫〉〈♫〉 HArd Fate! that we have Eyes to see, yet not a—void our Mi—se- ry! I knew, to love her were my Bain, much more to tell her of my Pain: Nay, after this hard Combat try'd, and when with Com—ple—ments de—ny'd, not then t'have pow'r to give it o're, was e—ver Wretch so curs'd be—fore.

II.
Yet who would grudge to bear this weight, Would she, alas! commiserate; Who would refuse whole days of Care, To dream all night of Love and her? I would a Purgatory bear, That might be overcome by Pray'r; But this Eternal Round of Woe, None but the Damn'd should undergo.
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