Table of Contents:
  • The courtier ; The diuine ; The souldiour ; The lawyer ; The physition ; The marchant ; The countrey gentleman ; The batchelar ; The marryed man ; The wife ; The widow ; The maide ; A pauin ; A galliard to the pauin ; A pauin ; A galliard to the pauin before ; Adew ; A pauin [7] / George Mason and John Earsden
  • A painted tale ; Thirsis and Milla ; She straight her light ; With my loue ; I saw my ladie weeping ; It was a lover ; Who is it that this darke night ; Mistresse mine ; Can I forget ; Loue winged my hopes ; What if my mistresse ; Come sorrow come ; Faire in a morne ; Absence here thou ; Will ye buy a fine dogge / Thomas Morley
  • Now peep, boe peep, thrise happie blest mine eies ; My choice is made, and I desire no change ; Can shee disdaine, can I persist to loue ; Alas faire face, why doth that smoothed brow ; Whether so fast, see how the kindly flowres, perfumes the aire ; Rest sweet nimphes let goulden sleepe, charme your star brighter eies ; Aye mee, shee frownes, my mistresse is offended ; Now let her change and spare not, since she proves false I care not ; Vnderneth a cypris shade, the Queen of Loue sate mourning ; Sound wofull plaints in hills and woods ; You that pine in long desire ; Looke mistresse mine, within this hollow brest ; Clime o hart, clime to thy rest ; Thanks gentle moone for thy obscured light ; I sigh as sure to wear the fruit of the willow tree ; Down a down, thus Phillis sung, by fancie once opressed ; Diaphenia like the dafdowndillie, white as the sunne, faire as the lillie ; Beautie sate bathing by a spring, where fairest shades did hide her ; Musicke dear solace, to my thoughts neglected ; With fragrant flowers we strew the way ; Come, come all you that draw heauens purest breath ; A pauin for the lute and base violl / Francis Pilkington.