-
history of
Wales and Anglesey,
published with Cynthiades:
Sonnets to his
Mistresse (technically not
precisely of the
sonnet form)
addressed by
Kynaston to...
-
chaste breast and
quiet minde To
warre and
armes I flie. True: a new
Mistresse now I chase, The
first foe in the field; And with a
stronger faith...
- l**** she
smileth Nolo
mortem peccatoris Now is the
month of
maying O
Mistresse mine O thou that art so
cruell A
painted tale Say deere, will you not...
- Pasquil's
Fooles cappe (entered at Stationers' Hall in 1600) Pasquil's
Mistresse (1600) Pasquil's P****e and P****eth Not (1600)
Melancholike Humours (1600)...
-
Alfred Deller's
album Shakespeare Songs. Beck, Sydney. “The Case of O
Mistresse Mine.”
Renaissance News, vol. 6, no. 2, 1953, pp. 19–23. JSTOR, https://doi...
- waymarking.com.
Retrieved 1 May 2020. "[The]
complaint and
lamentation of
Mistresse Arden of [Fev]ersham in Kent, who for the love of one Mosbie,
hired certaine...
- –
Fyfield Books, 1978. ---.
Ouids Banquet of Sence. A
Coronet for his
Mistresse Philosophie, and his
Amorous Zodiacke. With a
Translation of a Latine...
- Epithalamiums. By
Thomas Nabbes (1639). Of the poems, the
verses on a "
Mistresse of
whose Affection hee was doubtfull" have charm; they were
included in...
-
later adapted into a
broadside ballad, "The
complaint and
lamentation of
Mistresse Arden of
Feversham in Kent".
Thomas Arden: A self-made man,
formerly the...
- Faversham, Kent. The ballad's full
title is "The
complaint and
lamentation of
Mistresse Arden of /
Feversham in Kent, who for the loue of one Mosbie,
hired certaine...