Movements/SectionsMov'ts/Sec's
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5 volumes (presumably):
- Purcell: From rosy bowers from Don Quixote
- Purcell: Where oxen do low from The Bath (1701)
- Corelli: The Moderate Man (English text likely set to a violin tune)
- D'Urfey: The Saint at St. James’s Chapel
- Anonymous: Giovanni amanti voi chi sapete/Ye beaus of pleasure
- D'Urfey: Great Lord Frog to Lady Mouse
- Pepusch: Ocean’s Glory
- English Folk Music: Twangdillo
- Anonymous: Welfare, trumpets, drums, and battling too (dialogue from an unknown opera)
- Anonymous: Britons now let joys increase
- Anonymous: Now, now comes on, the glorious year from The Modern Prophets (1709)
- D'Urfey: The Fart
- D'Urfey: The Second Part of the Fart (The Beef-eaters’ Appeal to Mr. D’Urfey)
- Folk Songs: The Northern Resenter
- D'Urfey: The parson among the peas
- Anonymous: A New Health to the Duke of Marlborough
- Folk Songs: When love fair Psyche made his choice
- Anonymous (possibly Haym): Conjugal Love (based on an aria in Pyrrhus, possibly Pyrrhus and Demetrius (1708)?)
- Akeroyde: What beauty do I see from The Bath (1701)
- Purcell: Let the dreadful engines from Don Quixote
- Weldon: From glorious toils of war (Ode/Dialogue between Mars and Plutus/Mammon)
- Folk Songs: The Scotch Lover at Epsom
- Anonymous (possibly Purcell): Maiden fresh as a rose from The Richmond Heiress (1693)
- Anonymous: Now cannon smoke clouds all the sky
- D'Urfey: As far as the glittering god of day (Lyrical Verses)
- Purcell: Arise my Muse
- Corbett: A Mock Address to the French King
- Anonymous: Love of no party
- Blow: The glorious day is come (Ode for St. Cecelia’s Day 1691)
- Courteville: Vertumnus, Flora, you that bless the fields from Don Quixote
- Purcell: Behold the man from The Richmond Heiress (1693)
- Eccles: I Burn, I Burn
- Anonymous: Remarks for the French King
- Anonymous: What are these idiots doing from Wonders in the Sun (1706)
- Anonymous: The Nightingale from Wonders in the Sun (1706)
- Blow: Church scruples and jars
- Purcell: Since times are so bad from Don Quixote
- Anonymous (possibly Purcell): Come all, great, small (Stool-ball) from Don Quixote
- Purcell: Blow, blow, Boreas, blow (The Storm) from Sir Barnaby Whigg (1681)
- D'Urfey: A Poole at Piquette
- Anonymous: Oh love, if a god thou wilt be from Wonders in the Sun (1706)
- Anonymous: The British Muses
- Anonymous: We prophets of the modern race from The Modern Prophets (1709)
- Anonymous: Draw, draw the curtain, fie, make haste
- Purcell: Clemene, pray tell me from Oroonoko (1695)
- Handel: The Happy Country Gentleman (English version of “Il tricerbero humiliato” from Rinaldo)
- Blow: Behold, how all the stars give way (A Pindarick Ode on New Year’s Day)
- Anonymous: From azure plains blest with eternal day from The Famous History of the Rise and Fall of Massaniello (1700)
- Purcell: Of old when heroes thought it base
- D'Urfey: Vive le Roy
- D'Urfey (possibly): Now some years are gone
- D'Urfey: The Coronation Health
- Folk Songs: Musidora
- D'Urfey: On the Warwickshire Peers
- D'Urfey: Reflecting on the Party Humours
- Anonymous: Love and Gratitude (The Parallel)
- Anonymous: The Yeoman of Kent
- Anonymous: The Courtier and Country Maid
- Anonymous: Would ye have a young virgin of fifteen years from The Modern Prophets (1709)
- Anonymous: On Young Olinda
- Croft: An Ode on Musidora Walking in the Spring-Garden
- Anonymous: A Farewell to the Town
- Lully: Pray now John let jug prevail (English text set to the cibell from Atys) from Wonders in the Sun (1706)
- Anonymous: The Playhouse Saint
- Purcell: As soon as the chaos from The Marriage-hater Match’d (1693)
- Anonymous: The Queen’s Health
- Corbett: Mad Loons of Albany
- D'Urfey: Of all noble sports
- Eccles: Sleep, sleep poor youth (A Dirge) from Don Quixote
- Anonymous: One morn as lately musing (A Satyr, or Ditty)
- Clarke: Lord! what’s come to my mother from The Bath (1701)
- Purcell: Sing, sing all ye Muses from Don Quixote
- Anonymous: The Peroquette
- Anonymous: Monsieur looks pale, and Anjou quakes from The Modern Prophets (1709)
- English Folk Music: The Fond Keeper’s Relapse
- Purcell (possibly): If you will love me, be free in expressing it (text set to a minuet from Don Quixote)
- Purcell (possibly): The Lady’s Answer (text set to a minuet from Don Quixote)
- Anonymous: Love and Satyr
- Folk Songs: The Willoughby Whim
- Anonymous: The Song of Orpheus from Wonders in the Sun (1706)
- Anonymous: We London valets are all creatures from The Modern Prophets (1709)
- D'Urfey: The Bell Assembly
- Croft: I hate a fop that at his glass from The Modern Prophets (1709)
- Anonymous: Celladon, when spring came on from The Old Mode and the New (1703)
- Anonymous: Que chacun remplisse son verre/Fill every glass, and recommend ‘em
- Handel: The Solemn Lover
- Anonymous: The Jolly Miller
- D'Urfey: Now is the sun from the horizon gone
- Anonymous: Le printemps rapelle aux armes/Spring invites, the troops are going
- Italian Folk Music: Blowzabella, my bouncing doxie (set to Pastorella)
- Italian Folk Music: Pastorella, inspire the morning (set to Pastorella)
- Purcell: An Ode on Queen Anne (set to “Sound, Fame, thy brazen trumpet, sound” from Dioclesian)
- Anonymous: The Occasional Ballad
- Anonymous: The Mournful and Passionate Complaint or Petition of Mademoiselle Gallia
- Anonymous: Mac Ballor
- Anonymous: A new health to Prince Eugene from The Old Mode and the New (1703)
- D'Urfey: The New Blackbird
- D'Urfey: A Satyr upon London and in Praise of the Country
- Anonymous: The Dame of Honour from Wonders in the Sun (1706)
- Purcell: Genius of England from Don Quixote
- D'Urfey: Sonnet Royal
- Lully (possibly): Life’s short hours too fast are hasting (English text possibly set to “Scocca pur tutti tuoi strali (LWV 76/3))
- Anonymous: To shew Tunbridge Wells
- D'Urfey: Grand Louis falls head-long down
- D'Urfey: From Dunkirk one night
- English Folk Music: The Court Lunaticks
- Eccles: ‘Twas early one morning, the cock had just crow’d from Don Quixote
- D'Urfey: The Wedding, or the Farmer’s Holiday
- English Folk Music: Windsor Tarrass
- Anonymous: Silvander, royal by his birth
- Anonymous: Fly, fly from my sight
- Eccles: Ye nymphs and sylvan gods (The Bonny Milk-Maid) from Don Quixote
- Anonymous: A Rapture on Albion and Celia
- Anonymous: Fate had design’d this worst of all ages
- Irish Folk Music: Hark Lewis goans, good fador wat ailsh him
- “Signior Opdar:” Advice to the City
- Anonymous: The Mouse Trap from The Country Wake (1696)
- Folk Songs: Farewell my bonny, bonny witty, pretty Moggy
- Folk Songs: Twanty years and mear at Edinborrow
- Morgan: Damon turn your eyes to me from Don Quixote
- English Folk Music: Whilst favour’d bishops new sleeves put on (Greensleeves)
- D'Urfey: Bright was the morning, cool was the air
- D'Urfey: The Disappointment
- Purcell: Young Philander woo’d me long from The Famous History of the Rise and Fall of Massaniello (1700)
- Leveridge: Of all the world’s enjoyments (The Fisherman’s Song) from The Famous History of the Rise and Fall of Massaniello (1700)
- Weldon: Beat the drum
- Purcell: Whilst wretched fools sneak up and down from The Famous History of the Rise and Fall of Massaniello (1700)
- English Folk Music: The Winchester Wedding
- Anonymous: Ah! Phillis why are you less tender
- William Mountfort (possibly): Great Jove once made love like a bull
- D'Urfey: Dear pinckaninny, if half a guinny
- Purcell: And in each track of glory, since from Of old when heroes thought it base
- Anonymous: Now, now winter is retreating (A Prophetick Sonnet)
- Folk Songs: Jockey was a dawdy lad
- Purcell: Young Colin cleaving of a beam
- Anonymous: Come Jug, my honey, let’s to bed
- Folk Songs: De’il take the war, that hurry’d Willy from me
- Anonymous: How vile are the sordid intrigues of the town from The Marriage-hater Match’d (1693)
- “A Person of Quality”: Hampton Court
- D'Urfey: Hark the thundering cannons roar
- Purcell: On the brow of Richmond Hill
- Folk Songs: Lads and lasses blithe and gay
- Folk Songs: In January last
- Purcell: My dear cockadoodle from The Campaigners (1698)
- Clarke: Hark the cock crow’d, ‘tis day all abroad
- Anonymous: Rise Bonny Kate
- Anonymous: Royal and fair, great Willy’s dear blessing from Love for Money (1691)
- Folk Songs: Sawney was tall and of noble race from The Virtuous Wife (1679)
- Anonymous: ‘Twas when the sheep were shearing
- English Folk Music: The sun had loos’d his weary team
- Anonymous: Joy to the bridegroom! fill the sky
- D'Urfey: The night her blackest sable wore
- English Folk Music: ‘Twas within a furlong of Edinburgh town
- John Gilbert: Chloe found Amyntas lying
- Folk Songs: When Phillida with Jockey play’d at Pam (A Game at Pam)
- D'Urfey: To horse, brave boys of Newmarket, to horse
- Anonymous: When first Amyntas su’d for a kiss
- Anonymous: Aminta one night had occasion to piss
- Various orations, poems, prologues, and epilogues for different occasions (spoken)
- Anonymous: Caponides (set to a tune from Antiochus)
- D'Urfey: When Harrold was invaded
- Leveridge: The Men of Kent
- Purcell: High on a throne of glittering ore
- Anonymous: Advice to the Ladies of London
- Anonymous: Advice to the Beaus
- Anonymous: The Wanton Virgins Frightened
- Anonymous: Royal Flora dry up your tears
- Eccles: The Parallel
- Anonymous: The Ballad of Andrew and Maudlin from The Intrigues at Versailles (1697)
- Purcell: When the world first knew creation from Don Quixote
- D'Urfey: Pretty Kate of Windsor
- Anonymous: Tom and Doll (The Modest Maid’s Delight)
- D'Urfey: The Lovers’ Whims
- Folk Songs: Pretty Kate of Edenbrough
- Anonymous: The Jilts
- Anonymous: State and ambition, alas! Will deceive ye (To Sylvia)
- Blow: The Perfection
- Lenton: The Distrust
- Akeroyde: The Passion
- Anonymous: Joy after Sorrow (text set to the Duke D’Aumond’s minuet)
- Purcell: New Reformation begins thro’ the nation from The Campaigners (1698)
- English Folk Music: Gillian of Croyden
- Anonymous: Ah, tell me no more of your duty or vow (A Song to Celia)
- English Folk Music: The golden age is come (Newmarket)
- Turner: Love Unblinded
- Purcell: Farewell, ye rocks (The Storm)
- Purcell: Sit down, my dear Sylvia
- Draghi: On Augustus and Sophronia
- D'Urfey: The Coquet New Moulded
- Anonymous: The Church Jockey (A Comick Satyr)
- English Folk Music: The Country Sheep-Shearing
- Purcell: Crown your bowls, loyal souls (Text set to Trumpet Tune in C major)
- Anonymous: Lewis Upon the Fret
- D'Urfey: The Franck Lover
- Purcell: The National Quarrel (Parody of A New Irish Tune)
- Anonymous: Alba victorious, Alba fam’d in story
- “A Man of Quality:” Puss in a Corner
- Folk Songs: The Loyal Scot
- Anonymous: Flora, beauteous Queen of May
- Anonymous: Trooping with bold commanders (The Pigg’s March) from an unknown play
- Thomas Farmer: Why! why! oh ye pow’rs that rule the sky!
- Folk Songs: King George was crown’d with much Glory (A Satyrical Ditty)
- Paisible: The King’s Health
- Croft: Ye pretty birds that chirp and sing
- Anonymous: Dear Jemmy when he sees me upon a holiday (The Country Lass)
- Anonymous: Memorials of London and Westminster
- D'Urfey: The New Windsor Ballad
- Anonymous: Mirtillo, darling of kind fate from an unknown play
- Anonymous: High renown and martial glory
- Purcell: A Welcome to the Happy Peace (parody of “Come unto these yellow sands” from The Tempest)
- English Folk Music: The Female Quarrel
- Anonymous: Mundunga was as feat a jade from an unknown play
- Courteville: Here is Hymen, here am I from Don Quixote
- Anonymous: Bright honour provokes me, farewell jolly Kate
- Anonymous: Ye Britains, how long shall I tire my brains from an unknown play
- Bononcini: The Consolatory Muse (English version of “Pastorella spera spera” from Il trionfo di Camilla
- Barrett: The Duke of Ormond’s Health
- Anonymous: When vile Stella kind and tendre
- Anonymous: Pretty Pegg of Wandsor
- Anonymous: In vain, in vain fantastic age
- English Folk Music: London’s Loyalty
- Akeroyde: The Law of Nature
- Anonymous: The Curtain Lecture
- D'Urfey: Steer, steer the yacht to reach the strand (A Royal Song)
- Anonymous: Me send you, sir, one letter (The Authentick Letter)
- Akeroyde: Ah! my dearest, my dearest Celide
- Courteville: Cease Hymen, cease thy brow from Don Quixote
- Anonymous: Apelles told the painters fam’d in Greece
- Clarke: Whilst the French their arms discover (text set to King's March)
- Purcell: A Lad of the Town
- Anonymous: If my addresses are grateful (To Chloris)
- Anonymous: Abroad as I was walking (A Scotch Song) from Trick for Trick (1678)
- Anonymous: If beauty by enjoyment can (To Cynthia)
- Farinel: The King’s Health (text set to Faronells Division on a Ground)
- Farinel: Mars now is Arming (A Royal Ode) (text set to Faronells Division on a Ground)
- Anonymous: Wae is me, what ails our northern loons (The Scotch Lasses Song)
- Dowland: The Crafty Mistress’s Resolution (parody of “Can she excuse my wrongs” from The Firste Booke of Songes)
- Anonymous: Prattles and tattles o’er bottles (The Toper)
- Folk Songs: The Politick Club
- English Folk Music: The Farmer’s Daughter
- English Folk Music: A little of one with t’other
- D'Urfey: Make your honour, miss, tholl loll loll from Love for Money (1691)
- English Folk Music: Of noble race was Shinking
- Anonymous: Forc’d by a cruel lawless fate
- Anonymous: When Sylvia in bathing, her charms does expose
- Anonymous: Upon a sunshine summer’s day
- Blow: Stubborn church-division (text set to a ground)
- English Folk Music: The Moderator’s Dream
- Anonymous: Boast no more fond love, thy power
- Anonymous: Brother Solon’s Hunting Song from The Marriage-Hater Matched (1692)
- Anonymous: When for air I take my mare
- English Folk Music: Did you not promise me when you lay by me (The Blacksmith)
- Anonymous: ‘Twas when summer was rosie (Willey’s Intreague)
- Colonel Simon Pack: The larks awake the drowzy morn (The Serenade) from The Injured Princess (1682)
- Anonymous: Why are my eyes still flowing
- Folk Songs: Walking down the highland town (Catherine Logy)
- Anonymous: The Scotch Parson’s Daughter
- Anonymous: Room, room, room for a rover (The Blackbird)
- Anonymous: Whilst content is wanting (The New Blackbird) from Wonders in the Sun (1706)
- Anonymous: Brute who descended from Trojan stem (The Cambrian Glory)
- Anonymous: I follow’d fame and got renown
- Anonymous: Go silly mortall, and ask thy creator
- English Folk Music: In the fields in frost and snows from Wonders in the Sun (1706)
- Anonymous (possibly Purcell): I love thee well (To Chloris) (text set to a rigadoon, possibly Rigadoon in C major)
- English Folk Music: Strike up drowsie gut-scrapers
- Barrett: The Three Goddesses (The Glory of Tunbridge Wells)
- Clarke: A Health to the Imperialists (text set to March and Air in C major)
- Barrett: Prince Eugene’s Health
- Folk Songs: Valiant Jockey’s march’d away (The Scotch Virago)
- Anonymous: On the Queen’s Progress to the Bath
- Anonymous: Now the summer solstice does scorching come
- Anonymous: The Comical Dreamer
- Anonymous: Elevate your joys, ye inspired of the town from The Modern Prophets (1709)
- Anonymous: Salley’s Answer to Sawney
- Anonymous: Chloris, for fear you should think to deceive me (To Chloris)
- Anonymous: These, these are fit members my brethren, don’t lose ‘em
- Anonymous: The instrument with which to sing
- Anonymous: Phillis when your ogling eye (To Phillis)
- Anonymous: Yet we love ye most
- Anonymous: In a desart in Greenland (A Dialogue Between Philander and Sylvia)
- Anonymous: Stella, with heart controlling grace (The Disappointed Beau)
- Anonymous: Was it some cherubin
- Anonymous: Now second Hannibal is come (The King’s Health)
- Anonymous: The thundering Jove in his radiance above
- D'Urfey: Dear Miss Bromely (A billet doux in return of her verses)
- D'Urfey: A Virgin’s Meditation from The Two Queens of Brentford (masque)
- D'Urfey: When I visit proud Celia just come from my glass from an unknown masque
- Anonymous: Oh yes! Oh yes! Oh yes! I cry
- Anonymous: Run lovers, run before her
- Anonymous: A Comical Dialogue Between Blunt English Johnny and his Wife Scotch Gibby
- Anonymous: My dear, I’ve sent the letter (A Politick Dialogue)
- Folk Songs: The Honest Highlander’s New Health to the Queen
- Anonymous: The Fox-Hunter from The Bath (1701)
- Anonymous: Chloe’s a nymph in flowry groves (The Mistress)
- Anonymous: ‘Tis not a kiss, or gentle squeeze
- Anonymous: Damon’s Retirement
- Clarke: Young Gustavus, or the King of Sweden’s Health (text set to March and Air in C major)
- Purcell: A grasshopper, and a fly (An Allegory)
- Anonymous: ‘Tis gone, the black and gloomy year
- Blow: Behold, how all the stars give way (A Pindarick Ode on New Year’s Day)
- D'Urfey: Whilst abroad renown and glory (The Happy Man)
- Anonymous: Let Oliver now be forgotten (Old Tony)
- English Folk Music: Now, now the Tories all shall stoop (The Whigs Exaltation)
- Anonymous: Clowdy Saturnia drives her steeds apace (An Ode on the King’s Birthday)
- Anonymous: The joys of court, or city (The Banditti) presumably from The Banditti (1686)
- Anonymous: Monsieur now disgorges fast (Sir Rob. Bedingfield, The Lord Mayor’s Health)
- Blow: Bartholomew Fair
- Blow: In a seller at Sodom
- Anonymous: There’s such religion in my love
- Anonymous: Corrinna when you left the town
- Courteville: Have you seen Battledore play (The Shuttlecock)
- Finger: While I with wounding grief did look from
- Anonymous: The world was hush’d, and nature lay (Love’s Revenge)
- Anonymous: What’s the worth of health or living (The Moralist)
- Anonymous: Born with the vices of my kind (To Cynthia)
- Barrett: Liberty’s the soul of living from A Commonwealth of Women (1685)
- Akeroyde: Cinthia with an awful power from A Commonwealth of Women (1685)
- Anonymous: If gold could lengthen life, I swear
- Purcell: The Old Fumbler
- Various orations, poems, prologues, and epilogues for different occasions (spoken)
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