English songs 1625-1660
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
English songs 1625-1660
(Musica Britannica : a national collection of music, 33)
Published for the Royal Musical Association [by] Stainer and Bell, 1971
Printed Music(Full Score)
Available at 5 libraries
  Aomori
  Iwate
  Miyagi
  Akita
  Yamagata
  Fukushima
  Ibaraki
  Tochigi
  Gunma
  Saitama
  Chiba
  Tokyo
  Kanagawa
  Niigata
  Toyama
  Ishikawa
  Fukui
  Yamanashi
  Nagano
  Gifu
  Shizuoka
  Aichi
  Mie
  Shiga
  Kyoto
  Osaka
  Hyogo
  Nara
  Wakayama
  Tottori
  Shimane
  Okayama
  Hiroshima
  Yamaguchi
  Tokushima
  Kagawa
  Ehime
  Kochi
  Fukuoka
  Saga
  Nagasaki
  Kumamoto
  Oita
  Miyazaki
  Kagoshima
  Okinawa
  Korea
  China
  Thailand
  United Kingdom
  Germany
  Switzerland
  France
  Belgium
  Netherlands
  Sweden
  Norway
  United States of America
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Note
Contains songs of 1-5 parts with unfigured bass realized for keyboard instrument
English words
Contents of Works
- Weep no more my wearied eyes / Nicholas Lanier
- Fire! fire! lo hire I burn (Campian) / Nicholas Lanier
- Silly heart for bear / Nicholas Lanier
- No more shall meads be deck'd with flowr's (Carew) / Nicholas Lanier
- Mark how the blushful morn (Carew) / Nicholas Lanier
- Love and I of late did part / Nicholas Lanier
- Like hermit poor in pensive place obscure (Raleigh) / Nicholas Lanier
- Neither sighs, nor tears, nor mourning / Nicholas Lanier
- Stay, silly heart, and do not break / Nicholas Lanier
- Nor com'st thou yet, my slothful love: Recitative / Nicholas Lanier
- Tell me, shepherd, dost thou love? Dialogue / Nicholas Lanier
- What tears, dear prince, can serve (Raleigh) / Robert Ramsey
- Go perjur'd man! and if you e'er return (Herrick) / Robert Ramsey
- Thou may'st be proud (Herrick) / Robert Ramsey
- Howl not, you ghosts and furies, while I sing: Dialogue (Herrick) / Robert Ramsey
- Chloris sigh'd, and sang, and wept (Pembroke) / Alfonso (?) Bales
- Weep no more, nor sigh, nor groan (Beaumont & Fletcher: The queen of Corinth) / Stephen Mace
- Cease not, thou heav'nly-voiced glorious creature / John Jenkins
- Why sigh'st thou, shepherd? Dialogue (Randolph) / John Jenkins
- Wherefore peep'st thou, envious day? (Donne?) / John Wilson
- Take, o take those lips away (Beaumont & Fletcher: The bloody brothēr) / John Wilson
- In a maiden time profess'd (Middleton: The witch) / John Wilson
- Languish and despair, my heart! / John Wilson
- Turn, turn thy beauteous face away (Beaumont & Fletcher: Love's cure) / John Wilson
- Pity of beauty in distress / John Wilson
- As tuned harp strings sad notes take / John Wilson
- Since love hath in thine and mine eye / John Wilson
- Awake, awake! the morn will never rise (Davenant) / John Wilson
- In the merry month of May (Breton) / John Wilson
- Thou great and good! could I but rate (Montrose) / John Wilson
- From the fair lavinian shore / John Wilson
- In a season all oppressed / John Wilson
- I rise and grieve / Henry Lawes
- Speak, speak, at last reply / Henry Lawes
- Or you, or I, nature did wrong! / Henry Lawes
- Hard-hearted fair, if thou wilt not consent / Henry Lawes
- Sweet stay awhile; why do you rise? (Donne) / Henry Lawes
- Break heart in twain! fair ronile may see / Henry Lawes
- Transcendent beauty, thou that art / Henry Lawes
- O let me groan one word into thine ear (Pembroke) / Henry Lawes
- Slide soft you silver floods / Henry Lawes
- Out upon it, I have lov'd (Suckling) / Henry Lawes
- Come from the dungeon to the throne (Cartwright: The royal slave) / Henry Lawes
- Come my sweet while ev'ry strain (The royal slave) / Henry Lawes
- Now the sun is fled (The royal slave) / Henry Lawes
- Thou, o bright sun, who see'st all (The royal slave) / Henry Lawes
- Wert thou yet fairer than thou art / Henry Lawes
- Whither are all her false oaths blown? (Herrick) / Henry Lawes
- 'Tis but a frown, I prithee let me die / Henry Lawes
- No, no, fair heretic, it cannot be (Suckling) / Henry Lawes
- Will you know my mistress' face? / Henry Lawes
- Sleep soft, you cold clay cinders that late clad / Henry Lawes
- Bid me but live, and I will live (Herrick) / Henry Lawes
- Go thou gentle whisp'ing wind (Carew) / Henry Lawes
- When thou, poor excommunicate (Carew) / Henry Lawes
- Have you e'er seen the morning sun (Hughes) / Henry Lawes
- O tell me love! o tell me fate! (Hughes) / Henry Lawes
- Beauty and love once fell at odds / Henry Lawes
- O turn away those cruel eyes (Stanley) / Henry Lawes
- As celia rested in the shade: Dialogue (Carew) / Henry Lawes
- Thou may'st be proud (Herrick) / John Hilton
- Wilt thou forgive the sin where I begun? (Donne) / John Hilton
- Am I despis'd because you say (Herrick) / John Hilton
- Hang golden sleep upon her eyelids fair / John Hilton
- If that I for thy sweet sake / John Hilton
- You meaner beauties of the night (Wotton) / John Hilton
- Rise, princely shepherd, and be arbiter: Dialogue / John Hilton
- Wake my adonis, do not die (Cartwright) / Charles Coleman
- Bright Aurelia, I do owe / Charles Coleman
- Wilt thou be gone, thou heartless man / Charles Coleman
- Change, platonics, change for shame / Charles Coleman
- How am I chang'd from what I was / Charles Coleman
- When Celia I intend do flatter you / Charles Coleman
- Did not you once, Lucinda, vow: Dialogue / Charles Coleman
- Will Chloris cast her sun-bright eyes / Simon Ives
- Go bid the swan in silence die / Simon Ives
- Shepherd well met, I prithee tell: Dialogue / Simon Ives
- Why should great beauty virtuous fame desire (Davenant) / William Lawes
- Why so pale and wan, fond lover? (Suckling: Aglaura) / William Lawes
- No, no, fair heretic, it needs must be (Aglaura) / William Lawes
- To whom shall I camplain; to men or gods? / William Lawes
- Pleasures, beauty, youth attend ye (Ford: The lady's trial) / William Lawes
- Faith, be no longer coy / William Lawes
- Gather ye rosebuds while ye may (Herrick) / William Lawes
- Come adonis, come away (Tatham) / William Lawes
- Charon, o Charon! hear a wretch oppress'd: Dialogue / William Lawes
- As life what is so sweet / William Webb
- Go and bestride the southern wind / William Webb
- Pow'rful morpheus, let thy charms / William Webb
- Victorious beauty, though your eyes (Townshend) / William Webb
- Since 'tis my fate to be thy slave / William Webb
- Look back Castara from thine eye (Habington) / William Webb
- Blow gently passion in my fair one's breast / William Caesar (alias Smegergill)
- If any live that fain would prove / William Caesar (alias Smegergill)
- Forbear fond swain, I cannot love: Dialogue / William Caesar (alias Smegergill)
- Drowsy phoebus, come away: Dialogue (Haustet: The rival friends) / George Jeffreys
- Have pity, grief; I cannot pay (The rival friends) / George Jeffreys
- Cruel! but once again (The rival friends) / George Jeffreys
- John Atkins (d. 1671) : Wert thou yet fairer than thou art / John Atkins
- This lady ripe and fair and fresh (Davenant: The just Italian) / John Atkins
- When the chill Cherocco blows (Bonham) / John Atkins
- I can love for an hour when I'm at leisure / John Atkins
- Mistake me not, I am as cold as hot / Thomas Brewer
- O that mine eyes could melt into a flood / Thomas Brewer
- What means this strangeness now of late? (Aytoun) / Thomas Blagrave
- Tell me not that I die, or live by thee (Tatham) / John Taylor
- Lay that sullen garland by thee / John Taylor
- Why will you swear I am forsworn (Lovelace) / Thomas Charles
- I will not trust thy tempting graces (Stanley) / Jeremy Savile
- Why, dearest, should you weep (Cotton) / Edward Coleman
- The glories of our birth and state (Shirley: Ajax und ulysses) / Edward Coleman
- Fret on, fond cupid, curse thy feeble bow / John Goodgroome
- Dost see how unregarded now (Suckling) / John Goodgroome
- In vain, fair Chloris, you design (Dering) / Lady Mary Dering
- He that did ever scorn love's might / Robert Smith
- Now Whitehall's in a grave (Lovelace) / John Cave
- The morning doth waste / John Gamble
- Admit, thou darling of mine eyes (Carew) / Roger Hill
- Ah Chloris! would the gods allow / Alfonso Marsh
- Must your fair inflaming eye / anonymous
- If, when I die, to hell's eternal shade (Fowler?) / anonymous
- You meaner beauties of the night (Wotton) / anonymous
- Sing aloud harmonious spheres (Strode?) / anonymous
- Go thy ways since thou wilt go / anonymous
- Appendix. Like hermit poor (Lanier) : synoptic text of variant versions