- "I Saw My Lady Weep" (the
composer used the
Early Modern spelling "
weepe") is a lute song from The
Second Book of
Songs by
Renaissance lutenist and composer...
- such as "Come,
heavy sleep", "Come again", "Flow my tears", "I saw my Lady
weepe", "Now o now I
needs must part", and "In
darkness let me dwell". His instrumental...
- most
famous airs
include "Come again", "Flow, my tears", "I saw my Lady
weepe", and "In
darkness let me dwell". The
genre was
further developed by Thomas...
- his contemporaries. John
Dowland dedicated the
first song I saw my lady
weepe in his
Second Booke to Holborne. His
patron was the
Countess of Pembroke...
-
xiiii Thou
sents to me Not in ms.
lyric by
Robert Aytoun 15 xv
Shall I
weepe Not in ms. 16 xvi Goe thy
wayes since Not in ms. The text of
stanzas 2-5...
- this
repertoire Deller's
accompanist switched to the lute. I saw my Lady
weepe Flow my
tears Sorrow Stay Die not
before the day Mourn, day is with darkness...
- much
troubled in mind, and
afflicted in conscience, and did
nothing but
weepe and mourne, and long it was
before her
husband could get of her what was...
-
William Webb 167 Thou that lou'dst once now lou'st noe more
Robert Aytoun 168
Weepe noe moreĀ ://: my
wearied eyes
Nicholas Lanier Thomas Campion? From the Masque...
- most
famous ayres include "Come again", "Flow, my tears", "I saw my Lady
weepe" and "In
darkness let me dwell". The
genre was
further developed by Thomas...
-
sainct injoy thy
peacefull sleepe,
While wee that live
employ our foes to
weepe, But when thou wak'st let
glory shew thy grace, Let Heav'n,
which only can...