page
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|
Preface |
v
|
|
Table of Contents |
vii
|
|
Introduction |
xi
|
|
Bibliographical Note |
xxxv
|
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The Printer to the Understanders |
xlv
|
|
To the Right Honourable William Lord Craven |
xlix
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|
Hexastichon Bibliopolae |
li
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|
Hexastichon ad Bibliopolam |
li
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|
To John Donne |
lii
|
Songs and Sonnets —
|
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The Flea |
1
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The Good-Morrow |
3
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|
Song: Go and catch a falling star |
4
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|
Woman’s Constancy |
5
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|
The Undertaking |
6
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|
The Sun Rising |
7
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|
The Indifferent |
9
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|
Love’s Usury |
10
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|
The Canonization |
12
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|
The Triple Fool |
14
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|
Lovers’ Infiniteness |
15
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|
Song: Sweetest love, I do not go |
16
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|
The Legacy |
18
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|
A Fever |
20
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Air and Angels |
21
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|
Break of Day |
22
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|
[Another of the same] |
23
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|
The Anniversary |
24
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|
A Valediction of my Name, in the Window |
25
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|
Twickenham Garden |
29
|
|
Valediction to his Book |
30
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|
Community |
33
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|
Love’s Growth |
34
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|
Love’s Exchange |
35
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|
Confined Love |
37
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|
The Dream |
38
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|
A Valediction of Weeping |
39
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|
Love’s Alchemy |
41
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|
The Curse |
42
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|
The Message |
43
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A Nocturnal upon St. Lucy’s Day, being the Shortest Day |
45
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|
Witchcraft by a Picture |
47
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|
The Bait |
47
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|
The Apparition |
49
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|
The Broken Heart |
50
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|
A Valediction Forbidding Mourning |
51
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|
The Ecstacy |
53
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|
Love’s Deity |
56
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|
Love’s Diet |
57
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|
The Will |
59
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|
The Funeral |
61
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|
The Blossom |
63
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|
The Primrose |
64
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|
The Relic |
66
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|
The Damp |
67
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|
The Dissolution |
69
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|
A Jet Ring Sent |
70
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|
Negative Love |
71
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|
The Prohibition |
72
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|
The Expiration |
73
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|
The Computation |
74
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|
The Paradox |
74
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|
Song: Soul’s joy, now I am gone |
75
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|
Farewell to Love |
76
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|
A Lecture upon the Shadow |
78
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|
A Dialogue between Sir Henry Wotton and Mr. Donne |
79
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|
The Token |
80
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|
Self-love |
81
|
Epithalamions, or Marriage Songs —
|
|
On the Lady Elizabeth and Count Palatine |
83
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|
Eclogue: at the Marriage of the Earl of Somerset |
88
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|
Epithalamion Made at Lincoln’s Inn |
99
|
Elegies —
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|
i : |
Jealousy |
102
|
|
ii : |
The Anagram |
103
|
|
iii : |
Change |
106
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|
iv : |
The Perfume |
107
|
|
v : |
His Picture |
110
|
|
vi : |
|
111
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|
vii : |
|
113
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|
viii : |
The Comparison |
114
|
|
ix : |
The Autumnal |
117
|
|
x : |
The Dream |
119
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|
xi : |
The Bracelet |
120
|
|
xii : |
|
125
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|
xiii : |
His Parting from Her |
128
|
|
xiv : |
Julia |
132
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|
xv : |
A Tale of a Citizen and his Wife |
133
|
|
xvi : |
The Expostulation |
136
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|
xvii : |
Elegy on his Mistress |
139
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|
xviii : |
|
141
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|
xix : |
|
144
|
|
xx : |
To his Mistress Going to Bed |
148
|
Divine Poems —
|
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|
To the E[arl] of D[oncaster], with Six Holy Sonnets |
151
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|
1. |
La Corona |
152
|
|
2. |
Annunciation |
152
|
|
3. |
Nativity |
153
|
|
4. |
Temple |
153
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|
5. |
Crucifying |
154
|
|
6. |
Resurrection |
155
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|
7. |
Ascension |
155
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To the Lady Magdalen Herbert |
156
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|
|
Holy Sonnets: i.–xvi. |
157
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|
|
The Cross |
167
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|
|
Resurrection |
169
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The Annunciation and Passion |
170
|
|
|
Good Friday, 1613, Riding Westward |
172
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|
|
A Litany |
174
|
|
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Upon the Translation of the Psalms by Sir Philip Sidney and the Countess of Pembroke |
188
|
|
|
Ode : Vengeance will Sit above our Faults |
190
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|
|
To Mr. Tilman after he had Taken Orders |
191
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|
|
A Hymn to Christ |
193
|
|
|
The Lamentations of Jeremy |
194
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|
|
Hymn to God, my God, in my Sickness |
211
|
|
|
A Hymn to God the Father |
213
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|
|
To George Herbert |
214
|
|
|
A Sheaf of Snakes Used heretofore to be my Seal |
215
|
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|
Translated out of Gazaeus |
216
|
Notes to Vol. I. |
217
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