Ben. Johnson's poems, elegies, paradoxes, and sonnets
- Title
- Ben. Johnson's poems, elegies, paradoxes, and sonnets
- Author
- King, Henry, 1592-1669.
- Publication
- London :: Printed and sold by the booksellers,
- 1700.
- Rights/Permissions
-
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- Link to this Item
-
https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A47404.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"Ben. Johnson's poems, elegies, paradoxes, and sonnets." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A47404.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 22, 2024.
Contents
- title page
- THE PUBLISHERS TO THE AUTHOR.
-
POEMS.
-
SONNET. The Double Rock. - The Vow-Breaker.
- Ʋpon a Table-Book presented to a Lady.
-
To the same Lady upon Mr▪
Burtons Melancholy. -
The Farewell. Splendidis longùm valedico nugis. -
A Black-moor Maid wooing a fair Boy: sent to the Author by Mr.
Hen. Rainolds. - The Boyes answer to the Blackmoor.
-
To a Friend upon
Overbury's wife given to her. - Ʋpon the same.
-
To
A. R. upon the same. - An Epitaph on Niobe turned to Stone.
-
Ʋpon a Braid of Hair in a Heart sent by Mrs.
E. H. - SONNET.
- SONNET.
- SONNET.
- SONNET. To Patience.
- Silence. A SONNET.
- Loves Harvest.
- The Forlorn Hope.
- The Retreat.
- SONNET.
- SONNET.
- SONNET.
- SONNET.
- To a Lady who sent we a copy of verses at my going to bed.
- The Pink.
- To his Friends of Christ-Church upon the mis∣like of the Marriage of the Arts acted at Woodstock.
- The Surrender.
- The Legacy.
- The short Wooing.
-
St. Valentines day. - To his unconstant Friend.
-
Madam Gabrina, Or the Ill-favourd Choice. Con mala Muger el rem
dio Mucha Tierra por el medio. - The Defence.
- To One demarding why Wine sparkles.
- By occasion of the Young Prince his happy birth
- Ʋpon the Kings happy return from Scotland.
- To the Queen at Oxford.
- A salutation of his Majesties Ship the Soveraign.
- AN EPITAPH On his most honoured Friend Richard Earl of Dorset.
- The Extquy.
- The Anniverse. AN ELEGY.
- On two Children dying of one Disease, and buried in one Grave.
- A Letter.
- An Acknowledgment.
- The Acquittance.
- The Forfeiture.
- The Departure. AN ELEGY.
- PARADOX. That it is best for a Young Maid to marry an Old Man.
- PARADOX. That Fruition destroyes Love.
- The Change Il sabio mude conseio: Il loco persevera.
- To my Sister Anne King, who chid me in verse for being angry.
- AN ELEGY Ʋpon the immature loss of the most vertuous Lady Anne Rich.
- AN ELEGY Ʋpon Mrs. Kirk unfortunately drowned in Thames.
-
AN ELEGY Ʋpon the death of Mr.
Edward Holt. - To my dead friend Ben: Johnson:
- AN ELEGY Ʋpon Prince Henry's death.
- AN ELEGY Ʋpon S. W. R.
- AN ELEGY Ʋpon the L. Bishop of London John King.
- Ʋpon the death of my ever desired friend Doctor Donne Dean of Pauls.
- AN ELEGY Ʋpon the most victorious King of Sweden Gustavus Adolphus.
- To my Noble and Judicious Friend Sir Henry Blount upon his Voyage.
-
To my honoured Friend Mr.
George Sandys. - The Woes of Esay.
- An Essay on Death and a Prison.
- The Labyrinth.
-
Being waked out of my sleep by a su
ff of Candle which offended me, I thus thought. - Sic Vita.
- My Midnight Meditation.
-
A Penitential Hy
ne. - AN ELEGY Occasioned by sickness.
- The Dirge.
- AN ELEGY Occasioned by the lesse of the most incompara∣ble Lady Stanhope, daught or to the Earl of Northumberland.
-
- ERRATA.