Carey, Henry (d. 1743), cxlv. Clough, Arthur Hugh (1819-1861), clxvii. cclii. Coleridge, Samuel Taylor (1772-1834), xx. lxxv. lxxviii. cxxi. cxxxi. clv. clxx. Congreve, William (1670-1729), ccx. ccxvi. Constable, Henry (circa 1854), lii. Cowley, Abraham (1618-1667), ccxxxvii. Cowper, William (1731-1800), clxxxvii. Daniel, Samuel (1562—1619), iii. Davenant, Sir William (1605-1668), xxvii, lvii. Dryden, John (1631—1701), xxii. lx. lxx. cclxxxv. Eliot, George (b. about 1820), ccxi. Essex, Robert, Earl of (1567—1601), lvi. Etherege, Sir George (1636—1689), ccvii. ccıx. Goldsmith, Oliver (1728-1774), ccxxxviii. Haryngton, John (1534-1582), ccxxi. Herrick, Robert (1591-1614), xl. xli. lxxvi. xcix. c. cii. Heywood, Thomas (temp. Eliz., Chas. I.), xxv. Hood, Thomas (1798–1845), xiv. xlv. lxxx. cxix. clvi. Horton, Alice, ccliii. Houghton, Richard, Lord (b. 1809), lxvi. ccxlvi. cclxxiv. Hunnis, William (circa 1585), ccxxxv. Hunt, James Henry Leigh (1784-1859), lxxix. Ingelow, Jean (b. 1830), cclxxv. ccxcvii. Jonson, Ben (1574-1637), xxxix. liv. xcvii. ccxiv. Keats, John (1796–1821), clxviii. King, Henry (1591-1669), cxciii. Landor, Walter Savage (1775-1864), cxiii. cxiv. Lodge, Thomas (1555-1625), xliii. xliv. xcv. cxxxv. Lyly, John (1553—1601), xcvi. Lyttelton, George, Lord (1709–1773), xiii. MacDonald, George (b. 1824), vii. xxiv. clxxxii. ccxxviii. Marlowe, Christopher (1564-1593), xxix. Marston, Philip Bourke, ccxcix. Marvell, Andrew (1620-1678), cvii. Massey, Gerald (b. 1828), cclxi. Montrose, James, Marquis of (1612-1650), cxci. Moore, Thomas (1779—1852), lxxiv. cxv. cclviii. Morris, William (b. 1834), i. xxviii. cxc. cxcvi. cclxviii. Oxford, Edward, Earl of (1545-1604), ccxiii. Palgrave, Francis Turner (b. 1824), clxiii. Payne, John, cclx. Prior, Matthew (1664-1721), lxii. lxxxiii. Procter, Adelaide Anne (1825-1864), ccxlviii. cclxix. Raleigh, Sir Walter (1552—1618), ii. xxx. cci. Rhoades, James, cclxxi. Rochester, John, Earl of (1647-1680), cxliv. cxcv. Roscoe, William Caldwell (1823-1860), xlix, lxxxv. Rossetti, Dante Gabriel (b. 1828), xviii. clxv. clxxxviii. Scott, Sir Walter (1771—1832), xxxiii. xxxiv. cliv. cxcviii. Sedley, Sir Charles (1639—1701), cviii. cix. Shenstone, William (1714—1763), lxiii. lxxxix. Suckling, Sir John (1609-1641), xi. xii. lviii. cxxviii. Surrey, Henry, Earl of (1515—1547), lxxxix. Swinburne, Algernon Charles (b. 1837), lxxxviii. clxxxiv. Tennyson, Alfred (b. 1809), xix. lxix. lxxi. lxxii. lxxiii. Terry, Rose, lxvii. Thomson, James (1700-1748), xlvii. lxiv. ccxviii. Waller, Edmund (1605-1687), xxxii. cx. cxi. clxix. Walsh, William (1663—1687), ccxix. Warren, Hon. John Leicester, cxxii. ccl. cclxvi. cclxvii. Williams, Sarah, clix. Wither, George (1588-1657), cc. ccii. Wordsworth, William (1770-1850), cxviii. clxxix. Wotton, Sir Henry (1568—1636), xcviii. ccxii. R INDEX OF FIRST LINES. PAGE Absence, hear thou my protestation (Anon) All June I bound the rose in sheaves (R. Brown- All my past life is mine no more (Rochester). Browning). does truth sound bitter (R. All thoughts, all passions, all delights (S. 7. Coleridge) Amaryllis I did woo (Wither) Among my fancies tell me this (Herrick) An hour with thee !-when earliest day (Scott) Ask me no more where Jove bestows (Carew) Ask me why I sent you here (Carew) 116 84 181 37 140 179 56 143 59 41 112 51 78 154 Ask what you will, my own and only love (Pal- grave). Ask why I love the roses fair (Locker) A sweet disorder in the dress (Herrick). A trinket made like a heart, my dear (A. A. 32 198 133 171 At the mid hour of night, when stars are weeping, Awake, awake, my lyre (Cowley) Away, delights, and seek some other dwelling A weary lot is thine, fair maid (Scott) Ay, I saw her ;-we have met (Ingelow) Beautiful Evelyn Hope is dead (R. Browning) Being your slave, what should I do but tend Better to sit at the water's birth (MacDonald) Bid me to live, and I will live (Herrick) 210 142 203 Blame me not, love, that I do wear (Roscoe) Came a pretty maid (Eliot) Cherry-ripe, ripe, ripe, I cry (Herrick) Chloe found Amyntas lying (Dryden) Choose me your Valentine (Herrick) Come away, come away, Death (Shakespeare) Come into the garden, Maud (Tennyson) Come, let us leave; have no smooth words, but go Come, let us now resolve at last (Buckingham) Diaphenia like the daffydowndilly (Constable) |