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Subjects
Songs with lute, Early works to 1800, Music, Ayres, GalliardsPlaces
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Table of Contents
Unquiet thoughts
Who ever thinkes or hopes of love for love
My thoughts are wingd with hopes
If my complaints could passions move
Can she excuse my wrongs with vertues cloake
Now, O now I needs must part
Deare if you change Ile never chuse againe
Burst forth my teares
Goe crystall teares
Thinkst thou then by thy fayning
Come away, come sweet love
Rest a while you cruell cares
Sleep wayward thoughts
All ye whom love or fortune hath betrayd
Wilt thou unkinde thus reave me of my heart?
Would my conceit that first enforst my woe
Come againe, sweet love doth now invite
His golden locks time hath to silver turnd
Awake sweet love thou art returnd
Come heavy sleepe
Away with these self-loving lads
A galliard for two to play upon one lute at the end of the booke.
Edition Notes
For voice (cantus) and lute (in tablature), with altus, tenor, and bassus parts on confronting pages.
Facsim. of the edition originally published: London : Humfrey Lownes, 1613.
Originally published in 1597. "The 1613 edition has been reproduced here because it incorporates authorial revisions"--Publisher's note.
Reproduced from the copy in the British Library, London.
The final selection ("My Lord Chamberlaine his galliard") is instrumental.
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- Created May 19, 2019
- 1 revision
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May 19, 2019 | Created by MARC Bot | Imported from marc_openlibraries_sanfranciscopubliclibrary MARC record |