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Pleasant dialogues and dramma's
selected out of Lucian, Erasmus, Textor, Ovid, &c. ... By Tho. Heywood
Heywood, Thomas
[section]
[dedication]
To his worthie friend the Authour, Master Thomas Heywood.
To the learned Authour Master Thomas Heywood.
To my praise-worthy friend Master Thomas Heywood.
[The Dialogue of Erasmus, called Naufragium]
[The Dialogue of Erasmus, called Procus and Puella]
[The Dialogue of Ravisius Textor, called Earth and Age]
[A Dialogue from Lucianus Samosatensis, called Misanthropos, or the Man-hater]
[A Dialogue of the Same Author, betwixt Iupiter and Ganimede]
Ivpiter and Ivno.
Ivpiter and Cvpid.
Vulcan and Apollo.
Mercvry and Apollo.
Mercvry and Maia.
Vulcan and Iupiter.
Neptvne and Mercvry.
Diogenes and Mausolus.
Crates and Diogenes
Charon, Menippvs, Mercvry.
Menippvs, Æacvs, Pythagoras, Empedocles, and Socrates.
Nerevs, Thersites, Menippvs.
Ivpiter, Mercvry, Ivno, Pallas, Venvs, and Paris.
Ivpiter and Io.
[note]
Apollo and Daphne.
[A Pastorall Drama called Amphrisa, or the Forsaken Shepheardesse.]
An Emblematicall Dialogue,
1. The Argument.
2. The Argument.
[section]
Sundry Fancies writ upon severall occasions.
Funerall Elegies and Epitaphs.
Epithalamions or Nuptiall Songs.
Epigrams.
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Pleasant dialogues and dramma's
1. The Argument.
Two
modest Virgins, of unequall time,
Th'one past, the other growing to her prime,
(
Anna
and
Phillis
) interchange some chat
Of Love, of Mariage, and I know not what.
Pleasant dialogues and dramma's