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LONDON:
PRINTED BY S. AND R. BENTLEY, DORSET-STREET.
LENOX LIBRARY
NEW YORK
OF
VOLUME THE SECOND.
Sonnet I.
He demands pardon for looking, loving, and
writing
Page
151
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
inward virtuous Perfections
Praise of her Eyes, excelling all comparison
His Lady to be condemned of Ignorance or
Cruelty
IV.
Ode I.
Sonnet V.
VI.
VII.
Contention of Love and Reason for his Heart
That she hath greater power over his Happi-
ness and Life, than either Fortune, Fate,
or Stars
On his Lady's weeping
VIII. He points out his torment
Ode II. A Dialogue between him and his Heart
Sonnet VII. His Sighs and Tears are bootless.
VIII. Her Beauty makes him ve even in despair
IX. Why her Lips yield him no words of comfort
X. Comparison of his Hear to a ten pest-beaten
Ship
Elegy. To his Lady, who had vowed Virginity.
Sonnet XI. That he cannot leave to love, though com-
manded
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
That Time hath no power to end or diminish his Love
Love's hyperboles
An Invective against Love
ibid.
153
154
155
156
Three Sonnets for a Proem to the Poems following:
Petrarch's Sonnet, "Pace non trovo," &c. translated
He proves himself to endure the hellish torments of Tan-
talus, Ixion, Titius, Sisyphus, and the Belides
Love's Discommodities
Allegory of his Love to a Ship
Execration of his passed Love
A Sonnet of the Sun, by Charles Best
A Sonnet of the Moon
II.
178
179
180
181
Ode II. The more favour he obtains, the more he desires
Love the only price of Love
188
Madrigal II. Verbal Love
192
193
194
Ladies' Eyes serve Cupid both for Darts and Fire
Elegy III. Her Praise is in her Want
Her outward Gesture deceiving his inward Hope
L'Envoy, in rhyming Phaleucia
Sonnet. IV. Desire hath conquered Revenge
That he is unchangeable
Ode V. Petition thaye het leave to die
The Lover's Absence kills me, he Presence cures me
but folly for his faithfulness
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
203
Upou visiting his Lady by Moonlight
Ode VI. The kind Lover's Complaint in finding nothing
Ode VII. Unhappy Eyes
211
Upon an heroical Poem which he had begun, in Imitation
of Virgil, of the first inhabiting of this famous Isle
by Brute and the Trojans
Upon his Lady's buying Strings for her Lute
Care will not let him live, nor Hope let him die
Ode IX. Cupid's marriage with Dissimulation
Ode X. Dispraise of Love, and Lovers' Follies
In Praise of the Sun
220
221
223
224
226
227
229
Being scorned and disdained, he inveighs against his Lady
Ode XIV. The Tomb of dead Desire
An Altar and Sacrifice to Disdain, for freeing him from
Love
239
240
242
CERTAIN POEMS UPON DIVERS SUBJECTS, BY THE
SAME AUTHOR.
Three Odes translated out of Anacreon. Ode I.
Ode II.
A Comparison betwixt the Strength of Beasts,
the Wisdom of Man, and the Beauty of a Woman's
Face
Ode III.
Anacreon's Second Ode, otherwise; by Thomas Spelman
Anacreon's Third Ode, otherwise
An Answer to the First Staff: that Love is unlike in
Beggars and in Kings
249
A Song in Praise of a Beggar's Life
250
Upon beginning without making an end
251
An Epigram to Sir Philip Sydney; translated from Jodelle 252
To Time
A Meditation upon the Frailty of this Life
A Dialogue between the Soul and the Body
Sapphics, upon the Passion of Christ
DIVERS POEMS OF SUNDRY AUTHORS.
A Hymn in Praise of Music
Ten Sonnets to Philomel.
Sonnet I. Upon Love's entering by his Ears
Sonnet II.
Sonnet III. Of his own, and of his Mistress' Sickness at
one Time
Sonnet IV. Another, of her Sickness and Recovery
Sonnet V. Allusion to Theseus' Voyage to Crete, against
the Minotaur
Sonnet VI. Upon her looking secretly out of a Window
as he passed by
Sonnet VII.
Sonnet VIII. To the Sun of his Mistress' Beauty
eclipsed with Frowns
Sonnet IX. Upon sending her a Gold Ring with this
Poesy, Pure and endless.
Sonnet X. The Heart's Captivity
A Hymn in Praise of Neptune
Of his Mistress's Face
An Elegy of a Woman's Heart
A Poesy to prove Affection is not Love
Madrigal. In Praise of Two
To his Lady's Garden; being absent far from her
Upon his Lady's Sickness of the Small Pox
A Sonnet in the Grace of Wit, of Tongue, of Face
Sonnet. For her Heart only
Ode-That Time and Absence proves
Rather help than hurts to loves.
The True Love's Knot
Sonnet-"Best pleas'd she is, when love is most exprest"
Sonnet "When a weak child is sick and out of quiet"
Sonnet "Were I as base as is the lowly plain"
Madrigal " "My love in her attire doth shew her wit"
A Poem "When I to you of all my woes complain"
256
257
259