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Love's Dialect
or; Poeticall Varieties; Digested Into a Miscelanie of various fancies. Composed by Tho. Iordan
Jordan, Thomas (1612?-1685?)
[epigraph]
[section]
[dedication]
To Mr. Thomas Jordan on his Fancies.
To his Friend the Author Mr. Thomas Jordan, on his Varieties.
On my Friend and adopted sonne Mr. Thomas Jordan the Infant-Poet of our Age.
POETICALL VARIETIES.
A Gentleman in love with twenty Mistresses.
A Gentleman's deploration for his Mistresse, falling from Vertue.
To his Mistrisse Philonella, being at her Looking-glasse.
To Clora a farewell, once his coy Mistresse.
To Leda his coy Bride, on the Bridall Night.
A Paradox on his Mistresse, who is cole Blacke, Blinde, Wrinckled, Crooked and Dumbe.
A Dialogue betwixt Castadorus and Arabella in bed.
To his faithlesse Mistresse Vxoria.
To her perjur'd Love Maritus, her dishonorer.
A vow to his inestimable Mistresse.
A Dialogue betweene Icarus and surprized Phillida.
Loves progresse.
To his most excellent Mistresse, Avis Booth.
Achrostick to his Mistresse.
A Gentleman desirous to have his Lady's Picture drawne, describes her thus.
Chaste Love sitting under a Grove of yong Bay-trees, is thus solicited by Lust.
What a Whore is.
An abused Man: Quasi, a Cuccold.
Lust loseth all.
A Dialogue betwixt Adversus and his Mistresse the Lady Contra.
Rara Avis in terr is nigroque Similima Cigno.
To his Mistris Elizabeth Brooke.
A Dialogue betwixt Fidelius and his Silent Mistris Flora.
A Ladies Complaint for the losse of her Love Theodorus.
A Morall Eclogue presented by Vertue, Wealth, and Beauty.
The complaint of an old Lady for the losse of her beauty.
A Gentleman deploring his former follies.
ELEGIACK POEMS.
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Love's Dialect
Love's Dialect
or; Poeticall Varieties; Digested Into a Miscelanie of various fancies. Composed by Tho. Iordan
Thomas Jordan
1612?-1685?
Printed by Authoritie [etc.]
London
1646
Love's Dialect