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Down in yon garden sweet and gay (Anon.).
Do you ask what the birds say? (S. T. Coleridge).
Drink to me only with your eyes (Jonson)

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Dry those fair, those crystal eyes (King)

Each in his own strict line we move (Arnold)

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Earl March looked on his dying child (Campbell). 212
Escape me? (R. Browning).

Fair Amoret has gone astray (Congreve)

Fair amorist, what dost thou think (Sidney).
Fair is the night, and fair the day (Morris)
Fair, sweet, and young, receive the prize (Dryden)
Fair was the morn to-day; the blossom's scent
(Morris)

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False though she be to me and love (Congreve)
First shall the heavens want starry light (Lodge)
Follow a shadow, it still flies you (Jonson)
For ever, Fortune, wilt thou prove (Thomson)
Forget not yet the tried intent (Wyatt).

Free love, free field, we love but while we may
(Tennyson).

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From you I have been absent in the spring
(Shakespeare)

Gather ye rosebuds while ye may (Herrick).
Gem of the crimson-coloured even (Campbell)
Give me more love or more disdain (Carew).
Give place, ye lovers, here before (Surrey)
Go, lovely rose (Waller)

Go not, happy day (Tennyson)

Good night? Ah no, the hour is ill (Shelley)
Go, tell Amynta, gentle swain (Dryden)

Hard is the fate of him who loves (Thomson)
Hark! hark! the lark at heaven's gate sings
(Shakespeare)

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Hear, ye ladies that despise (Beaumont and
Fletcher)

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He that loves a rosy cheek (Carew)

Honest lover, whosoever (Suckling)

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How blest the youth whom fate ordains (Cowper). 134
How delicious is the winning (Campbell)

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How do I love thee? Let me count the ways (E.
B. Browning)

How ill doth he deserve a lover's name (Carew)
How like a winter hath my absence been (Shake-
speare)

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How many times do I love thee, dear? (Beddoes).
How should I your true love know (Shakespeare). 219
How sweet the answer Echo makes (Moore).

I arise from dreams of thee (Shelley)

I asked my fair, one happy day (Coleridge)
I cannot change, as others do (Rochester)
I dare not ask a kiss (Herrick)

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I do confess thou'rt smooth and fair (Aytoun)
If all the world and love were young (Raleigh)
If doughty deeds my lady please (Graham)
I fear thy kisses, gentle maiden (Shelley)
If love were what the rose is (Swinburne)
If thou wilt ease thine heart (Beddoes).
If to be absent were to be (Lovelace)

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If women could be fair and yet not fond (Oxford) 153
If you must love me, let it be for nought (E. B.
Browning).

I give thee treasures hour by hour (Terry)

I loved thee once: I'll love no more (Aytoun)
I love thee! I love thee! (Hood).

In a soft-complexioned sky (D. G. Rossetti)
In Celia's face a question did arise (Carew)
In Clementina's artless mien (Landor).
I ne'er could any lustre see (Sheridan).

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In Love, if Love be Love, if Love be ours (Tenny-
son)

In vain you tell your parting lover (Prior)

I prithee send me back my heart (Suckling) .

I prithee leave this peevish fashion (Brome)
It is not beauty I demand (Anon.)

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It is not, Celia, in your power (Etherege)
It is not that I love you less (Waller)
It is the miller's daughter (Tennyson)
It was a lover and his lass (Shakespeare)
It was not in the winter (Hood)

I wish I were where Helen lies (Anon.)

I would be calm-I would be free (Houghton)

Jenny kissed me when we met (Hunt)

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Kneel not, and leave me: mirth is in his grave
(Warren)

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Know, Celia, since thou art too proud (Carew) 160

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Lay a garland on my hearse (Beaumont and
Fletcher)

Let me not to the marriage of true minds (Shake-
speare)

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Let not my love be called idolatry (Shakespeare)
Let's contend no more, love (R. Browning).
Let us go hence, my songs: she will not hear
(Swinburne)
Like some musician that with flying fingers (Roscoe)
Like to the clear in highest sphere (Lodge)
Love, dearest lady, such as I would speak (Hood)
Love in my bosom, like a bee (Lodge)
Love is a sickness full of woe (Daniel).
Love me little, love me long (Anon.)

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Love not me for comely grace (Anon.).

Love of love, and light of light (Warren)

Love, strong as death, is dead (C. Rossetti)

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Love-time and flower-time for this year are dead
(Rhoades)

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Maid of my love, sweet Genevieve (S. T. Coleridge) 113

Mary, I believed thee true (Moore)

Music, when soft voices die (Shelley)

My dear and only love, I pray (Montrose)

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My heart is like a singing bird (C. Rossetti)

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My heart is sick with longing, though I feed (Hood)
My heart is turned to bitter north (Clough)
My little love, do you remember (Lytton)
My love he built me a bonnie bower (Anon.)
My love in her attire doth show her wit (Anɔn.)
My lute, awake, perform the last (Wyatt)
My true love hath my heart, and I have his (Sid-
ney)

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Nay, but you who do not love her (R. Browning). 117
No more shall meads be decked with flowers
(Carew)

No, no, fair heretic, it needs must be (Suckling).
Not, Celia, that I juster am (Sedley)

Not violets I gave my love (Tytler)

Now the lusty Spring is seen (Beaumont and
Fletcher)

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Now we are quits (Bullock)

O' a' the airts the wind can blaw (Burns)

O dove that dost bewail thy love (Horton)

O fairest thou (Warren)

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O faithless world, and thy most faithless part
(Wotton)

Of all the girls that are so smart (Carey)

Of all the torments, all the cares (Walsh)

Oh do not wanton with those eyes (Jonson)
O, how hard it is to find (Campbell)

O lady, thy lover is dead, they cried (MacDonald)
O light of dead and of dying days (MacDonald).
O lips that mine have grown into (Swinburne)
O lovers' eyes are sharp to see (Scott)

O love, turn from the unchanging sea, and gaze

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O Mary, at the window be (Burns)

O mistress mine, where are you roaming? (Shake-

speare)

O morning star that smilest in the blue (Tennyson)
O my luve's like the red, red rose (Burns)
One asked me where the roses grew (Herrick)
One kiss, dear maid, I said and sighed (S. T. Cole-
ridge).

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III

O never say that I was false of heart (Shakespeare)
One word is too often profaned (Shelley)
Only that, dear, neither wise nor fair (Williams). 115
O pensive, tender maid, downcast and shy (Morris)
rose, who dares to name thee (E. B. Browning)
O swallow, swallow, flying, flying South (Tenny-
son)

Out upon it! I have loved (Suckling) ·

Over the mountains (Anon.).

O waly waly up the bank (Anon.).

O were my love yon lilac fair (Burns)

Pack, clouds, away, and welcome day (Heywood).
Phyllis, why should we delay (Waller).
Preserve thy sighs, unthrifty girl (Davenant)

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Remember me when I am gone away (C. Rossetti) 214

Say over again, and yet once over again (E. B.
Browning).

Send home my long strayed eyes to me (Donne)
Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? (Shake-
speare)

Shall I like a hermit dwell (Raleigh)

Shall I tell you whom I love? (Browne).
Shall I, wasting in despair (Wither)

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She dwelt among the untrodden ways (Words-
worth)

She is not fair to outward view (H. Coleridge)

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