PAGE 3 88 86 87 Shepherd, what's love? I prithee tell (Raleigh) Sleep on, and dream of heaven awhile (Rogers) Some ladies love the jewels in love's zone (D. Rossetti) 177 91 78 76 96 G. 15 124 31 Star, that bringest home the bee (Campbell). Sweet looks!—I thought them love (Allingham) 213 Take, O take those lips away (Shakespeare) Tell me not, sweet, I am unkind (Lovelace) The hope I dreamed of was a dream (C. Rossetti) The merchant to secure his treasure (Prior). The splendour falls on castle walls (Tennyson) The words that trembled on your lips (Houghton). PAGE 65 16 35 26 204 85 These many years since we began to be (Swin- 77 43 They seemed to those who saw them meet They that never had the use (Waller) Though, when I loved thee, thou wert fair (Stan- 202 122 160 Thy lips are quiet, and thy eyes are still (Houghton) 223 'Tis not the lily brow I prize (S. T. Coleridge) 'T is not your beauty nor your wit (Anon.) Unless with my Amanda blest (Thomson) Vain is the effort to forget (Arnold) Weep no more, nor sigh nor groan (Beaumont and Well, the links are broken (Procter) Wert thou fairer in thy feature (Anon.). We were apart; yet, day by day (Arnold) When as in silks my Julia goes (Herrick) Whence comes my love? O heart disclose (Haryng-. Whence is this fountain that floweth (Bullock) PAGE 190 32 119 When do I see thee most, belovèd one (D. G. When I tie about thy wrist (Herrick) 175 70 102 99 When Love was stricken with disgust (Houghton). 177 When the lamp is shattered (Shelley) When the sheep are in the fauld, and the kye at When thou, poor excommunicate (Carew) Where found Love his yesterday (Webster) While that the sun with his beams hot (Anon.) 183 132 165 Who is Sylvia? What is she (Shakespeare). Why does azure deck the sky (Moore) Why so pale and wan, fond lover (Suckling) 149 Withdraw not yet those lips and fingers (Campbell) 187 79 Ye banks and braes and streams around (Burns) You'll love me yet, and I can tarry (R. Browning) You meaner beauties of the night (Wotton) PAGE 107 172 149 47 51 49 75 192 You say I love not 'cause I do not play (Herrick). 102 November, 1873. A CATALOGUE OF ENTERTAINING BOOKS For Presents, and for Young People. SELECTED FROM HENRY S. KING & Co.'s CLASSIFIED CATALOGUE. L' FOUR HANDSOME GIFT-BOOKS. YRICS OF LOVE FROM SHAKESPEARE "He has the prettiest love-songs for maids."-Shakespeare. ILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT'S POEMS. W Handsomely bound. E Price 35. 6d. With Portrait of the Author. This is the only complete English Edition sanctioned by the Author. NGLISH SONNETS. H JOHN DENNIS. Price 3s. 6d. Collected and arranged by Small crown 8vo. Elegantly Bound. OME-SONGS FOR QUIET HOURS. By the Rev. Canon R. H. BAYNES, Editor of "English Lyrics" and "Lyra Anglicana." Handsomely printed and bound. Price 3s. 6d. 65, Cornhill, & 12, Paternoster Row, London. |