POETICAL RHAPSODY: TO WHICH ARE ADDED, SEVERAL OTHER PIECES, BY FRANCIS DAVISON. = WITH MEMOIRS AND NOTES, BY NICHOLAS HARRIS NICOLAS, Esq. FELLOW OF THE SOCIETY OF ANTIQUARIES. VOLUME THE SECOND. Page II. Love, in justice, punishable only with like love 152 III. He calls his Ears, Eyes, and Heart, as wit- nesses of her sweet Voice, Beauty, and Praise of her Eyes, excelling all comparison Contention of Love and Reason for his Heart That she hath greater power over his Happi- VIII. Her Beauty makes him live even in despair IX. Why her Lips yield him no words of comfort XII. He desires leave to write of his Love Quid pluma levius? Pulvis. Quid Pulvere? Ventus. &c. SONNETS, &c. BY THOMAS WATSON. A Dialogue between the Lover and his Heart A Dialogue between a Lover, Death, and Love 131378 |