Selected quad for the lemma: love_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
love_n affection_n heart_n true_a 3,082 5 4.2829 3 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A04673 The affectionate shepheard Containing the complaint of Daphnis for the loue of Ganymede. Barnfield, Richard, 1574-1627. 1594 (1594) STC 1480; ESTC S114397 18,807 58

There are 3 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the Day his with the Night increase He studies how to get eternall Fame The Souldier fights to win a glorious Name The Knight the Squire the Gentleman the Clowne Are full of crosses and calamities Lest fickle Fortune should begin to frowne And turne their mirth to extreame miseries Nothing more certaine than incertainties Fortune is full of fresh varietie Constant in nothing but inconstancie The wealthie Merchant that doth crosse the Seas To Denmarke Poland Spaine and Barbarie For all his ritches liues not still at ease Sometimes he feares ship-spoyling Pyracie Another while deceipt and treacherie Of his owne Factors in a forren Land Thus doth he still in dread and danger stand Well is he tearmd a Merchant-Venturer Since he doth venter lands and goods and all When he doth trauell for his Traffique far Little he knowes what fortune may befall Or rather what mis-fortune happen shall Sometimes he splits his Ship against a rocke Loosing his men his goods his wealth his stocke And if he so escape with life away He counts himselfe a man most fortunate Because the waues their rigorous rage did stay When being within their cruell powers of late The Seas did seeme to pittie his estate But yet he neuer can recouer health Because his ioy was drowned with his wealth The painfull Plough-swaine and the Husband-man Rise vp each morning by the breake of day Taking what toyle and drudging paines they can And all is for to get a little stay And yet they cannot put their care away When Night is come their cares begin afresh Thinking vpon their Morrowes busines Thus euerie man is troubled with vnrest From rich to poore from high to low degree Therefore I thinke that man is truly blest That neither cares for wealth nor pouertie But laughs at Fortune and her foolerie That giues rich Churles great store of golde and fee And lets poore Schollers liue in miserie O fading Branches of decaying Bayes Who now will water your dry-wither'd Armes Or where is he that sung the louely Layes Of simple Shepheards in their Countrey Farmes Ah he is dead the cause of all our harmes And with him dide my ioy and sweete delight The cleare to Clowdes the Day is turnd to Night SYDNEY The Syren of this latter Age SYDNEY The Blasing-starre of Englands glory SYDNEY The Wonder of the wise and sage SYDNEY The Subiect of true Vertues story This Syren Starre this Wonder and this Subiect Is dumbe dim gone and mard by Fortunes Obiect And thou my sweete Amintas vertuous minde Should I forgetthy Learning or thy Loue Well might I be accounted but vnkinde Whose pure affection I so oft did proue Might my poore Plaints hard stones to pitty moue His losse should be lamented of each Creature So great his Name so gentle was his Nature But sleepe his soule in sweet Elysium The happy Hauen of eternall rest And let me to my former matter come Prouing by Reason Shepheards life is best Because he harbours Vertue in his Brest And is content the chiefest thing of all With any fortune that shall him befall He sits all Day lowd-piping on a Hill The whilst his flocke about him daunce apace His hart with ioy his eares with Musique fill Anon a bleating Weather beares the Bace A Lambe the Treble and to his disgrace Another answers like a middle Meane Thus euery one to beare a Part are faine Like a great King he rules a little Land Still making Statutes and ordayning Lawes Which if they breake he beates them with his Wand He doth defend them from the greedy Iawes Of rau'ning Woolues and Lyons bloudy Pawes His Field his Realme his Subiects are his Sheepe Which he doth still in due obedience keepe First he ordaines by Act of Parlament Holden by custome in each Country Towne That if a sheepe with any bad intent Presume to breake the neighbour Hedges downe Or haunt strange Pastures that be not his owne He shall be pounded for his lustines Vntill his Master finde out some redres Also if any proue a Strageller From his owne fellowes in a forraine field He shall be taken for a wanderer And forc'd himselfe immediatly to yeeld Or with a wyde-mouth'd Mastiue Currre be kild And if not claimd within a twelue-months space He shall remaine with Land-lord of the place Or if one stray to feede far from the rest He shall be pincht by his swift pye-bald Curre If any by his fellowes be opprest The wronger for he doth all wrong abhorre Shall be well bangd so long as he can sturre Because he did anoy his harmeles Brother That meant not harme to him nor any other And last of all if any wanton Weather With briers and brambles teare his fleece in twaine He shall beforc'd t' abide cold frosty weather And powring showres of ratling stormes of raine Till his new fleece begins to grow againe And for his rashnes he is doom'd to goe without a new Coate all the Winter throw Thus doth he keepe them still in awfull feare And yet allowes them liberty inough So deare to him their welfare doth appeare That when their fleeces gin to waxen rough He combs and trims them with a Rampicke bough Washing them in the streames of siluer Ladon To cleanse their skinnes from all corruption Another while he wooes his Country Wench With Chaplets crownd and gaudy girlonds dight Whose burning Lust her modest eye doth quench Standing amazed at her heauenly sight Beauty doth rauish Sense with sweet Delight Clearing Arcadia with a smoothed Browe When Sun-bright smiles melts flakes of driuen snowe Thus doth he frollicke it each day by day And when Night comes drawes homeward to his Coate Singing a Ijgge or merry Roundelay For who sings commonly so merry a Noate As he that cannot chop or change a groate And in the winter Nights his chiefe desire He turnes a Crabbe or Cracknell in the fire He leads his Wench a Country Horne-pipe Round About a May-pole on a Holy-day Kissing his louely Lasse with Garlands Crownd With whoopping heigh-ho singing Care away Thus doth he passe the merry month of May And all th'yere after in delight and ioy Scorning a King he cares for no annoy What though with simple cheere he homely sares He liues content a King can doo no more Nay not so much for Kings haue manie cares But he hath none except it be that sore Which yong and old which vexeth ritch and poore The pangs of Loue. O! who can vanquish Loue That conquers Kingdomes and the Gods aboue Deepe-wounding Arrow hart-consuming Fire Ruler of Reason slaue to tyrant Beautie Monarch of harts Fuell of fond desire Prentice to Folly foe to fained Duetie Pledge of true Zeale Affections moitie If thou kilst where thou wilt and whom it list thee Alas how can a silly Soule resist thee By thee great Collin lost his libertie By thee sweet Astrophel forwent his ioy By thee Amyntas wept incessantly By thee good Rowland liu'd in great annoy O cruell peeuish vylde
wealth Striue not with mightie Men whose fortune flies With temp'rate diet nourish wholesome health Place well thy words leaue not thy frend for gold First trie then trust in ventring be not bold In Pan repose thy trust extoll his praise That neuer shall decay but euer liues Honor thy Parents to prolong thy dayes Let not thy left hand know what right hand giues From needie men turne not thy face away Though Charitie be now yclad in clay Heare Shepheards oft thereby great wisdome growes With good aduice a sober answere make Be not remoou'd with euery winde that blowes That course doo onely sinfull sinners take Thy talke will shew thy fame or els thy shame A pratling tongue doth often purchase blame Obtaine a faithfull frend that will not faile thee Thinke on thy Mothers paine in her child-bearing Make no debate least quickly thou bewaile thee Visit the sicke with comfortable chearing Pittie the prisner helpe the fatherlesse Reuenge the Widdowes wrongs in her distresse Thinke on thy graue remember still thy end Let not thy winding-sheete be staind with guilt Trust not a fained reconciled frend More than an open foe that blood hath spilt Who tutcheth pitch with pitch shal be defiled Be not with wanton companie beguiled Take not a flattring woman to thy wife A shameles creature full of wanton words Whose bad thy good whose lust will end thy life Cutting thy hart with sharpe two edged swords Cast not thy minde on her whose lookes allure But she that shines in Truth and Vertue pure Praise not thy selfe let other men commend thee Beare not a flattring tongue to glauer anie Let Parents due correction not offend thee Rob not thy neighbor seeke the loue of manie Hate not to heare good Counsell giuen thee Lay not thy money vnto Vsurie Restraine thy steps from too much libertie Fulfill not th' enuious mans malitious minde Embrace thy Wife liue not in lecherie Content thy selfe with what Fates haue assignde Be rul'd by Reason Warning dangers saue True Age is reuerend worship to thy graue Be patient in extreame Aduersitie Mans chiefest credit growes by dooing well Be not high-minded in Prosperitie Falshood abhorre no lying fable tell Giue not thy selfe to Sloth the sinke of Shame The moath of Time the enemie to Fame This leare I learned of a Bel-dame Trot When I was yong and wylde as now thou art But her good counsell I regarded not I markt it with my eares not with my hart But now I finde it too-too true my Sonne When my Age-withered Spring is almost done Behold my gray head full of siluer haires My wrinckled skin deepefurrowes in my face Cares bring Old-Age Old-Age increaseth cares My Time is come and I haue run my Race Winter hath snow'd vpon my hoarie head And with my Winter all my ioyes are dead And thou loue-hating Boy whom once I loued Farewell a thousand-thousand times farewell My Teares the Marble Stones to ruth haue moued My sad Complaints the babling Ecchoes tell And yet thou wouldst take no compassion on mee Scorning that crosse which Loue hath laid vpon mee The hardest steele with fier doth mend his misse Marble is mollifyde with drops of Raine But thou more hard than Steele or Marble is Doost scorne my Teares and my true loue disdaine Which for thy sake shall euerlasting bee Wrote in the Annalls of Eternitie By this the Night with darknes ouer-spred Had drawne the curtaines of her cole-blacke bed And Cynthia muffling her face with a clowd Lest all the world of her should be too prowd Had taken Conge of the sable Night That wanting her cannot be halfe so bright When I poore forlorne man and outcast creature Despairing of my Loue despisde of Beautie Grew male-content scorning his louely feature That had disdaind my euer-zealous dutie I hy'd me homeward by the Moone-shine light Forswearing Loue and all his fond delight FINIS The Shepheards Content OR The happines of a harmles life Written vpon Occasion of the former Subiect OF all the kindes of common Countrey life Me thinkes a Shepheards life is most Content His State is quiet Peace deuoyd of strife His thoughts are pure from all impure intent His Pleasures rate sits at an easie rent He beares no mallice in his harmles hart Malicious meaning hath in him no part He is not troubled with th' afflicted minde His cares are onely ouer silly Sheepe He is not vnto Iealozie inclinde Thrice happie Man he knowes not how to weepe Whil'st I the Treble in deepe sorrowes keepe I cannot keepe the Meane for why alas Griefes haue no meane though I for meane doo passe No Briefes nor Semi-Briefes are in my Songs Because alas my griefe is seldome short My Prick-Song's alwayes full of Largues and Longs Because I neuer can obtaine the Port Of my desires Hope is a happie Fort. Prick-song indeed because it pricks my hart And Song because sometimes I ease my smart The mightie Monarch of a royall Realme Swaying his Scepter with a Princely pompe Of his desires cannot so steare the Healme But sometime falls into a deadly dumpe When as he heares the shrilly-sounding Trumpe Of forren Enemies or home-bred Foes His minde of griefe his hart is full of woes Or when bad subiects gainst their Soueraigne Like hollow harts vnnaturally rebell How carefull is he to suppresse againe Their desperate forces and their powers to quell With loyall harts till all againe be well When being subdu'd his care is rather more To keepe them vnder than it was before Thus is he neuer full of sweete Content But either this or that his ioy debars Now Noble-men gainst Noble-men are bent Now Gentlemen and others fall at iarrs Thus is his Countrey full of ciuill warrs He still in danger sits still fearing Death For Traitors seeke to stop their Princes breath The whylst the other hath no enemie Without it be the Wolfe and cruell Fates Which no man spare when as his disagree He with his sheep-hooke knaps them on the pates Schooling his tender Lambs from wanton gates Beasts are more kinde than Men Sheepe seeke not blood But countrey caytiues kill their Countreyes good The Courtier he fawn's for his Princes fauour In hope to get a Princely ritch Reward His tongue is tipt with honey for to glauer Pride deales the Deck whilst Chance doth choose the Card Then comes another and his Game hath mard Sitting betwixt him and the morning Sun Thus Night is come before the Day is done Some Courtiers carefull of their Princes health Attend his Person with all dilligence Whose hand 's their hart whose welfare is their wealth Whose safe Protection is their sure Defence For pure affection not for hope of pence Such is the faithfull hart such is the minde Of him that is to Vertue still inclinde The skilfull Scholler and braue man at Armes First plies his Booke last fights for Countries Peace Th' one feares Obliuion th' other fresh Alarmes His paines nere ende his trauailes neuer cease His with
blind-seeing Boy How canst thou hit their harts and yet not see If thou be blinde as thou art faind to bee A Shepheard loues no ill but onely thee He hath no care but onely by thy causing Why doost thou shoot thy cruell shasts at mee Giue me some respite some short time of pausing Still my sweet Loue with bitter lucke th' art sawcing Oh if thou hast a minde to shew thy might Kill mightie Kings and not a wretched wight Yet O Enthraller of infranchizd harts At my poore hart if thou wilt needs be ayming Doo me this fauour show me both thy Darts That I may chuse the best for my harts mayming A free consent is priuiledgd from blaming Then pierce his hard hart with thy golden Arrow That thou my wrong that he may rue my sorrow But let mee feele the force of thy lead Pyle What should I doo with loue when I am old I know not how to flatter fawne or smyle Then stay thy hand O cruell Bow-man hold For if thou strik'ft me with thy dart of gold I sweare to thee by Ioues immortall curse I haue more in my hart than in my purse The more I weepe the more he bends his Brow For in my hart a golden Shaft I finde Cruell vnkinde and wilt thou leaue me so Can no remorce nor pittie moue thy minde Is Mercie in the Heauens so hard to finde Oh then it is no meruaile that on earth Of kinde Remorce there is so great a dearth How happie were a harmles Shepheards life If he had neuer knowen what Loue did meane But now fond Loue in euery place is rife Staining the purest Soule with spots vncleane Making thicke purses thin fat bodies leane Loue is a fiend a fire a heauen a hell Where pleasure paine and sad repentance dwell There are so manie Danaes now a dayes That loue for lucre paine for gaine is sold No true affection can their fancie please Except it be a Ioue to raine downe gold Into their laps which they wyde open hold If legempone comes he is receau'd When Uix haud habeo is of hope bereau'd Thus haue I showed in my Countrey vaine The sweet Content that Shepheards still inioy The mickle pleasure and the little paine That euer doth awayte the Shepheards Boy His hart is neuer troubled with annoy He is a King for he commaunds his Sheepe He knowes no woe for he doth seldome weepe He is a Courtier for he courts his Loue He is a Scholler for he sings sweet Ditties He is a Souldier for he wounds doth proue He is the same of Townes the shame of Citties He scornes false Fortune but true Vertue pitties He is a Gentleman because his nature Is kinde and affable to euerie Creature Who would not then a simple Shepheard bee Rather than be a mightie Monarch made Since he inioyes such perfect libertie As neuer can decay nor neuer fade He seldome sits in dolefull Cypresse shade But liues in hope in ioy in peace in blisse Ioying all ioy with this content of his But now good-fortune lands my little Boate Vpon the shoare of his desired rest Now must I leaue awhile my rurall noate To thinke on him whom my soule loueth best He that can make the most vnhappie blest In whose sweete lap I le lay me downe to sleepe And neuer wake till Marble-stones shall weepe FINIS SONNET Loe here behold these tributarie Teares Paid to thy faire but cruell tyrant Eyes Loe here the blossome of my youthfull yeares Nipt with the fresh of thy Wraths winter dyes Here on Loues Altar I doo offer vp This burning hart for my Soules sacrifice Here I receaue this deadly-poysned Cu Of Circe charm'd wherein deepe Magickelyes Then Teares if you be happie Teares indeed And Hart if thou be lodged in his brest And Cup if thou canst helpe despaire with speed Teares Hart and Cup conioyne to make me blest Teares moue Hart win Cup cause ruth loue desire In word in deed by moane by zeale by fire FINIS THE COMPLAINT OF CHASTITIE Briefely touching the cause of the death of Matilda Fitzwalters an English Ladie sometime loued of King Iohn after poysoned The Storie is at large written by Michael Dreyton YOV modest Dames inricht with Chastitie Maske your bright eyes with Vestaes sable Vaile Since few are left so faire or chast as shee Matter for me to weepe you to bewaile For manie seeming so of Vertue faile Whose louely Cheeks with rare vermilion tainted Can neuer blush because their faire is painted O faire-foule Tincture staine of Woman-kinde Mother of Mischiefe Daughter of Deceate False traitor to the Soule blot to the Minde Vsurping Tyrant of true Beauties seate Right Cousner of the eye lewd Follies baite The flag of filthines the sinke of shame The Diuells dye dishonour of thy name Monster of Art Bastard of bad Desier Il-worshipt Idoll false Imagerie Ensigne of Vice to thine owne selfe a lier Silent Inchaunter mindes Anatomie Sly Bawd to Lust Pandor to Infamie Slaunder of Truth Truth of Difsimulation Staining our Clymate more than anie Nation What shall I say to thee thou scorne of Nature Blacke spot of sinne vylde lure of lecherie Iniurious Blame to euerie faemale creature Wronger of time Broker of trecherie Trap of greene youth false Womens witcherie Hand-maid of pride high-way to wickednesse Yet path-way to Repentance nerethelesse Thou dost entice the minde to dooing euill Thou setst dissention twixt the man and wife A Saint in show and yet indeed a deuill Thou art the cause of euerie common strife Thou art the life of Death the death of Life Thou doost betray thy selfe to Infamie When thou art once discerned by the eye Ah little knew Matilda of thy being Those Times were pure from all impure complection Then Loue came of Desert Desire of seeing Then Vertue was the mother of Affection But Beautie now is vnder no subiection Then women were the same that men did deeme But now they are the same they doo not seeme What faemale now intreated of a King With gold and iewels pearles and precious stones Would willingly refuse so sweete a thing Onely for a little show of Vertue ones Women haue kindnes grafted in their bones Gold is a deepe-perswading Orator Especially where few the fault abhor But yet shee rather deadly poyson chose Oh cruell Bane of most accursed Clime Than staine that milke-white Mayden-virgin Rose Which shee had kept vnspotted till that time And not corrupted with this earthly slime Her soule shall liue inclosd eternally In that pure shrine of Immortality This is my Doome and this shall come to passe For what are Pleasures but still-vading ioyes Fading as flowers brittle as a glasse Or Potters Clay crost with the least annoyes All things in this life are but trifling Toyes But Fame and Vertue neuer shall decay For Fame is Toomblesse Vertue liues for aye FINIS Hellens Rape OR A light Lanthorne for light Ladies Written in English Hexameters LOuely a Lasse so loue da Lasse