Poems, &c. By James Shirley.
- Title
- Poems, &c. By James Shirley.
- Author
- Shirley, James, 1596-1666.
- Publication
- London :: Printed [by Ruth Raworth and Susan Islip] for Humphrey Moseley, and are to be sold at his shop at the signe of the Princes Armes in St. Pauls Church-yard,
- 1646.
- 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/A93175.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"Poems, &c. By James Shirley." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A93175.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 25, 2024.
Contents
- title page
-
To the truly Noble,
BERNARD HIDE, Esquire. - To my Worthy Friend Mr. JAMES SHIRLEY, Upon His Poems.
-
To my honoured Friend M.
Ja. Shirley, Upon the printing of his Ele∣gant Poems. - To his honoured Friend, the Author, Upon his Poems.
- To his Learned Friend, M. JA. SHIRLEY, On his Elegant Poems.
- To my very Worthy and most Ingeni∣ous Friend, Mr. JA. SHIRLEY, Upon His Poems.
-
Amicissimo
J. Sherleio, & Musae jam Reduci. - encomium
-
text
-
CUPIDS Call. - To his unkind M.
- Good Morrow.
- To his Mistris.
-
To
Odelia. - To his Mistris confined.
- Loves Hue and Cry.
- Goodnight.
- poem
- A Fayring.
-
To
L. for a wreath of Bayes sent. -
To the Painter preparing to draw M.
M. H. - To a L. who had courted a Lady of much perfection, and after offered his Service to another of an inferiour Beauty and Parts; in confidence that the first would re-accept him.
- A Lover that durst not speak to his M.
- To one that said his Mistris was old.
- Ʋpon his M. Dancing.
- Ʋpon his Mistris sad.
- A Gentleman in Love with two Ladies.
- Melancholy converted.
- To a Mistris in whose Letter some Tears were dropt.
- Presenting his Mistris with a Bird.
- Ʋpon Scarlet and blush coloured Ribbands given by two Ladies.
- To his Mistris upon the Bayes withered.
- Strephon, Daphne.
- Taking leave when his Mistris was to ride.
- Love for Enjoying.
- Ʋpon the Princes Birth.
-
To his honoured friend
Tho. Stanley Esquire, upon his elegant Poems. -
To the
E. ofS. upon his recovery. - One that loved none but defor∣med Women.
- The Common-Wealth of Birds.
-
To the Excellent Pattern of Beauty and Ver∣tue,
L. El. Co. ofOr. -
To the H. Lady,
D. C. at his departure. -
A Letter to the Lady
D. S. sent with a New Comedy. -
To the never enough Honoured
E. ofSt. on New-yeares day at night, after other entertainment. -
To
W. M. ofN. -
To M.
Phil. Massenger on his Renegado. - Io.
-
To a
L. upon a Looking-Glasse sent. -
A Song in a Play called
Hide-Parke. - Epithalamium.
- A Mother hearing her child was sick of the Small-Poxe.
-
Epithalamium. To his Noble Friend, Mr.
I. W. - A Catch.
- On a black Ribband.
- To Gent. that broke their promise of a meeting, made when they drank Claret.
- Ʋpon a Gentlewoman that died of a Fever.
-
Ʋpon the death of
G. M. -
Ʋpon the death of
K. James. -
Ʋpon the death of Sr.
Th. Nevill. -
An Elegie upon the honourable, fair, and vertuous M.
Borlase. -
Ʋpon the Death of
C. D. En∣gineere, who died upon ser∣vice to which had no command. -
Epitaph On the Duke of
BƲCKINGHAM. -
An Elegie upon the truly Honou∣rable
Tho. Viscount Savage -
Ʋpon Mr.
Charles Beaumont who died of a Consumption. - The Passing Bell.
-
Et longum Formosa vale.—
FRIENDSHIP, Or Verses sent to a Lover, in Answer of a Copie which he had writ in praise of his Mistris. - The Garden.
-
C
rse - To the proud M.
-
Cupid ungodded. - Fye on Love.
- To a Beautiful Lady.
- Dialogue.
-
- A Postscript to the Reader.