WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY
CANON BEECHING

VOL. II.

LONDON:
GEORGE ROUTLEDGE & SONS, LIMITED
NEW YORK: E. P. DUTTON & CO.

page
Table Of Contents[vii]
Biographical Note[xv]
Bibliography Of Henry Vaughan's Works[lvii]
Poems With The Tenth Satire Of Juvenal Englished, 1646[1]
To all Ingenious Lovers of Poesy[3]
To my Ingenuous Friend, R. W.[5]
Les Amours[8]
To Amoret. The Sigh[10]
To his Friend, Being in Love[11]
Song: [Amyntas go, thou art Undone][12]
To Amoret. Walking in a Starry Evening[13]
To Amoret Gone from him[15]
A Song to Amoret[16]
An Elegy[17]
A Rhapsodis[18]
To Amoret, of the Difference 'twixt him and other Lovers, >and what True Love is[21]
To Amoret Weeping[23]
Upon the Priory Grove, his Usual Retirement[26]
Juvenal's Tenth Satire Translated[28]
Olor Iscanus. 1651.
Ad Posteros[51]
To the ... Lord Kildare Digby[53]
The Publisher to the Reader[55]
Upon the Most Ingenious Pair of Twins, Eugenius Philalethes and the Author of those Poems [by T. Powell, Oxoniensis][57]
To my Friend the Author upon these his Poems [by I. Rowlandson, Oxoniensis][58]
Upon the following Poems [by Eugenius Philalethes, Oxoniensis][59]
Olor Iscanus. To the River Isca[61]
The Charnel-House[65]
In Amicum Foeneratorem[68]
To his Friend ——[70]
To his Retired Friend, An Invitation to Brecknock[73]
Monsieur Gombauld[77]
An Elegy on the Death of Mr. R. W., Slain in the late Unfortunate Differences at Routon Heath, near Chester, 1645[79]
Upon a Cloak lent him by Mr. J. Ridsley[83]
Upon Mr. Fletcher's Plays, Published 1647[87]
Upon the Poems and Plays of the Ever-Memorable Mr. William Cartwright[90]
To the Best and Most Accomplished Couple ——[92]
An Elegy on the Death of Mr. R. Hall, Slain at Pontefract, 1648[94]
To my Learned Friend, Mr. T. Powell, upon his Translation of Malvezzi's Christian Politician[97]
To my Worthy Friend, Master T. Lewes[99]
To the Most Excellently Accomplished Mrs. K. Philips[100]
An Epitaph upon the Lady Elizabeth, Second Daughter to his Late Majesty[102]
To Sir William Davenant upon his Gondibert[104]
Translations From Ovid.
To his Fellow Poets at Rome, upon the Birthday of Bacchus[106]
To his Friends—after his Many Solicitations—Refusing to Petition Cæsar for his Releasement[109]
To his Inconstant Friend, Translated for the Use of all the Judases of this Touchstone Age[112]
To his Wife at Rome, when he was Sick[115]
Ausonii. Idyll vi. Cupido [Cruci Affixus][119]
[Translations from Boethius][125]
[Translations from Casimirus][144]
The Praise of a Religious Life of Mathias Casimirus. In Answer to that Ode of Horace, Beatus Ille Qui Procul Negotiis.[152]
Ad Fluvium Iscam[157]
Venerabili Viro, Praeceptori Suo Olim Et Semper Colendissimo Magistro Mathaeo Herbert[158]
Praestantissimo Viro, Thomae Poëllo In Suum De Elementis Opticae Libellum[159]
Ad Echum[160]
Thalia Rediviva. 1678.
To ... Henry Lord Marquis and Earl of Worcester, &c. [by J. W.][163]
To the Reader [by I. W.][167]
To Mr. Henry Vaughan, the Silurist: upon These and his Former Poems. [By Orinda][169]
Upon the Ingenious Poems of his Learned Friend, Mr. Henry Vaughan, the Silurist. [By Tho. Powell, D.D.][171]
To the Ingenious Author of Thalia Rediviva [By N. W., Jes. Coll., Oxon.][172]
To my Worthy Friend Mr. Henry Vaughan, the Silurist. [by I. W., A.M., Oxon.][175]
Choice Poems On Several Occasions.
To his Learned Friend and Loyal Fellow-Prisoner, Thomas Powel of Cant[reff], Doctor of Divinity[178]
The King Disguised[181]
The Eagle[184]
To Mr. M. L. upon his Reduction of the Psalms into Method[187]
To the Pious Memory of C[harles] W[albeoffe] Esquire, Who Finished his Course Here, and Made his Entrance into Immortality upon the 13 of September, in the Year of Redemption, 1653[189]
In Zodiacum Marcelli Palingenii[193]
To Lysimachus, the Author Being with him in London[195]
On Sir Thomas Bodley's Library, the Author Being Then in Oxford[197]
The Importunate Fortune, Written to Dr. Powel, of Cant[reff][200]
To I. Morgan of Whitehall, Esq., upon his Sudden Journey and Succeeding Marriage[204]
Fida; or, The Country Beauty. To Lysimachus[206]
Fida Forsaken[209]
To the Editor of the Matchless Orinda[211]
Upon Sudden News of the Much-Lamented Death of Judge Trevers [213]
To Etesia (for Timander); The First Sight[214]
The Character, to Etesia[217]
To Etesia Looking from her Casement at the Full Moon[219]
To Etesia Parted from Him, and Looking Back[220]
In Etesiam Lachrymantem[221]
To Etesia Going Beyond Sea[222]
Etesia Absent[223]
Translations.
Some Odes of the Excellent and Knowing [Anicius Manlius][224]
Severinus [Boethius], Englished The Old Man of Verona, out of Claudian[236]
The Sphere of Archimedes, out of Claudian[238]
The Ph[oe]nix, out of Claudian[239]
Pious Thoughts And Ejaculations.
To his Books[245]
Looking Back[247]
The Shower[248]
Discipline[249]
The Eclipse[250]
Affliction[251]
Retirement[252]
The Revival[254]
The Day Spring[255]
The Recovery[257]
The Nativity[259]
The True Christmas[261]
The Request[263]
Jordanis[265]
Servilii Fatum, Sive Vindicta Divina[266]
De Salmone[267]
The World[268]
The Bee[272]
To Christian Religion[276]
Daphnis[278]
Fragments And Translations. 1641-1661.[287]
From Eucharistica Oxoniensia (1641)[289]
From Of the Benefit we may get by our Enemies (1651)[291]
From Of the Diseases of the Mind and the Body (1651)[293]
From The Mount of Olives (1652)[294]
From Man in Glory (1652)[298]
From Flores Solitudinis (1654)[299]
From Of Temperance and Patience (1654)[300]
From Of Life and Death (1654)[305]
From Primitive Holiness (1654)[307]
From Hermetical Physic (1655)[322]
From Cerbyd Fechydwiaeth (1657)[323]
From Humane Industry (1661)[324]
Notes To Vol. II[329]
List Of First Lines[355]

BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE.