Contents
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Contents
- Close section Front Matter
- Close sectionThe Poems of Thomas Carew
- Close sectionPoems, 1640
- The Spring
- To A. L. Persuasion to love
- Lips and Eyes
- A divine Mistress
- SONG. A beautiful Mistress
- A cruel Mistress
- SONG. Murdering beauty
- My mistress commanding me to return her letters
- Secrecy protested
- A prayer to the Wind
- Mediocrity in love rejected. SONG
- Good counsel to a young Maid. SONG
- To my Mistris sitting by a Rivers side.
- SONG. Conquest by flight
- SONG. To my inconstant Mistress
- SONG. Persuasions to enjoy
- A deposition from Love
- Ungrateful beauty threatened
- Disdain returned
- A Looking-Glasse.
- An Elegy on the La: PEN: sent to my Mistress out of France
- To my Mistress in absence
- To her in absence. A SHIP
- SONG. Eternity of love protested
- Upon some alterations in my Mistress, after my departure into France
- Good counsel to a young Maid.
- Celia, bleeding, to the Surgeon
- To T.H. a Lady resembling my Mistress
- To Saxham.
- Upon a Ribband
- To the King at his entrance into Saxham, by Master Jo. Crofts
- Upon the sickness of (E. S.)
- A New-years Sacrifice. to Lucinda
- SONG. To one who when I prais'd my Mistress beauty, said I was blind
- SONG. To my Mistress, I burning in love
- SONG. To her again, she burning in a Fever
- Upon the King's sickness
- SONG. To a Lady not yet enjoyed by her Husband
- SONG. The willing Prisoner to his Mistress
- A fly that flew into my Mistress her eye
- SONG. Celia singing. ('Hark how my Celia')
- SONG. Celia singing
- SONG. To one that desired to know my Mistress ('You that think Love can convey')
- In the person of a Lady to her inconstant servant
- Truce in Love entreated
- To my Rival
- Boldnesse in love.
- A Pastoral Dialogue. ('As Celia rested in the shade')
- Grief engrossed
- A Pastoral Dialogue. ('This mossy bank')
- Red, and white Roses
- To my Cousin (C. R.) marrying my Lady (A.)
- A Lover upon an Accident necessitating his departure, consults with Reason
- Parting, Celia, weeps
- A Rapture
- Epitaph on the Lady Mary Villers
- An other. ('The purest Soul that e're was sent')
- An other. ('This little Vault, this narrow room')
- Epitaph on the Lady S. Wife to Sir W. S.
- Maria Wentworth, Thomæ Comitis Cleveland, filia
- On the Duke of Buckingham
- An other. ('Reader, when these dumb stones')
- Close sectionFour Song by way of Chorus to a play
- Close sectionSongs in the Play
- To Ben. Iohnson. Upon occasion of his Ode of defiance annexed to his Play of the new Inne
- An Hymeneall Dialogue
- Obsequies to the Lady Anne Hay
- To the Countess of Anglesea
- An Elegy upon the death of the Dean of Pauls, Dr. John Donne
- In answer of an Elegiacall Letter upon the death of the King of Sweden from Aurelian Townsend, inviting me to write on that subject.
- Upon Master W. Mountague his return from travel
- To Master W. Mountague
- On the Marriage of T. K. and C. C. the morning stormy
- For a Picture where a Queen Laments over the Tomb of a slain Knight
- To a Lady that desired I would love her.
- Upon my Lord Chief Justice
- To A. D. unreasonable distrustful of her own beauty
- To my friend G. N. from Wrest
- A New-years gift. to the King
- To the Queen
- To the New-year, for the Countess of Carlisle
- To my Honoured friend, Master Thomas May, upon his Comedy, the Heire
- To my worthy friend Master Geo. Sands, on his translation of the Psalmes.
- To my much honoured friend, Henry Lord Cary of Lepington, upon his translation of Malvezzi
- To my worthy Friend, M. D'Avenant, Upon his Excellent Play, the just Italian
- To the Reader of Master William Davenant's Play
- To Will. Davenant my Friend
- The Comparison
- The Complement
- On sight of a Gentlewoman's face in the water
- A Song. ('Aske me no more')
- The second Rapture
- The tinder
- A Song. ('In her fair cheeks')
- To the Painter
- Loves Courtship
- On a Damask rose sticking upon a Lady's breast
- The protestation, a Sonnet
- The tooth-ache cured by a kiss
- To his jealous Mistress
- Close sectionAdditional Poems from the 1642 Edition
- Close sectionAdditional Poems from the 1651 Edition
- Close sectionPoems from a Manuscript
- The prologue to a Play presented before the King and Queen
- The Epilogue to the same Play
- To Mris Katherine Nevill on her green sickness
- To his mistress retiring in affection
- To a Friend
- A Ladies prayer to Cupid
- An Excuse of absence
- On his Mistress looking in a glass
- Close sectionA Translation of Certain Psalms
- Coelum Britannicum: A Masque.
- Close sectionPoems of Uncertain Authorship
- Close sectionPoems Incorrectly Ascribed to Carew
- Close sectionThree Letters to Sir Dudley Carleton
- Close sectionPoems and Letters Addressed to Carew
- COMMENTARY
- Close sectionPoems, 1640