EBBA 30855
British Library - Roxburghe
THE Triumph at an End, / Or, The Tyranness Defeated. / Behold how rashly Lovers hurry on / Upon the point of sure destruction, / Females are Tyrants, for when they see / They are admir'd & lov'd, theyl cruel be. / When most you shun them, then they most do love. / Then let all mankind in a mean Still move: / Or if your flame burn bright let them not know it, / Your hopes are ruin'd if you once but show it. | |
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Date Published | 1681-1684 |
Author | |
Standard Tune | |
Imprint | Printed for J. Wright J. Clark W. Thackery & T. Passenger |
License | |
Collection | British Library - Roxburghe |
Page | 2.412 |
Location | British Library |
Shelfmark | C.20.f.8.412 |
ESTC ID | |
Keyword Categories | |
MARC Record | |
Additional Information | |
Part 1 | |
Title | THE Triumph at an End, / Or, The Tyranness Defeated. / Behold how rashly Lovers hurry on / Upon the point of sure destruction, / Females are Tyrants, for when they see / They are admir'd & lov'd, theyl cruel be. / When most you shun them, then they most do love. / Then let all mankind in a mean Still move: / Or if your flame burn bright let them not know it, / Your hopes are ruin'd if you once but show it. |
Tune Imprint | To the pleasant new tune of, How bright art thou &c. Or, Young Jamey. |
First Lines | HOw bright are thou whose Starry eyes / two cruel Tyrants prove? |
Refrain | Sweet Phillada be kind. [with variation] |
Condition | |
Ornament | |
Notes | Printed on the recto of EBBA 30854, entitled "The Sorrowful Complaint Of / Conscience and Plain-Dealing. / Against Millers, Userers, Taylors, and Hostises, By which poor Conscience and Plain- / Dealing was sufficiently abused as you shall hear by these following lines." |