Henry Purcell Musique vocale: Chant, lied
Aaron thus propos'd to Moses
1688
Ah! Cruel nymph, you give despair
Ah! Cruel nymph, you give despair
Ah! how pleasant 'tis to love
1688
Alas, how barbarous we are
Amidst the shades and cool refreshing streams
1687
Amintas, to my grief I see
1679
Amintor, heedless of his flocks
1681
A Poor blind woman
Ask me to love no more
1694
A thousand sev'ral ways I tried
1684
Bacchus is a power divine
Beneath a dark and melancholy grove
Beware, poor Shepherds
1684
Cease, anxious world
1687
Cease, O my sad soul
1678
Celia's fond, too long I've loved her
1694
Come, dear companions of th'Arcadian fields
1686
Come, lay by all care
1685
Corinna is divinely fair
1692
Cupid, the slyest rogue alive
1685
Draw near, you lovers
Dulcibella, when e'er I sue for a kiss
1694
Fair Cloe, my breast so alarms
1692
Farewell, all joys
1685
Farewell, ye rocks
1685
Fill the bowl with rosy wine
1687
Fly swift, ye hours
1692
From silent shades and the Elysian groves
1683
Gently shepherds, you that know
1687
Go tell Amynta, gentle swain
Hark Damon, hark
Hark how the wild musicians sing
Haste, gentle Charon
Has yet your breast no pity learn'd?
1688
Hears not my Phyllis
1695
He himself courts his own ruin
1684
Hence, fond deceiver
1687
Here's to thee, Dick
1688
High on a throne of glitt'ring ore
1690
How delightful's the life of an innocent swain
How great are the blessings 'A Health to King James'
1686
How I sigh when I think of the charms
1681
How pleasant is this flowery plain
1688
How sweet is the air and refreshing
1687
How sweet is the air and refreshing
1687
I came, I saw, and was undone
I envy not a monarch's fate
1693
I fain would be free
If ever I more riches did desire
If grief has any power to kill
1685
If music be the food of love
1695
If prayers and tears
I lov'd fair Celia
1694
I love and I must
In a deep vision's intellectual scene 'The Complaint'
In all our Cynthia's shining sphere
Incassum Lesbia, incassum rogas
1695
In Cloris all soft charms
1684
In vain we dissemble
1685
I resolve against cringing
1679
I saw fair Cloris all alone
1687
I saw that you were grown so high
1678
I spy Celia, Celia eyes me
1687
I take no pleasure in the sun's bright beams
1681
Julia, your unjust disdain
1687
Leave these useless arts in loving
Let each gallant heart
1683
Let formal lovers still pursue
1687
Let Hector, Achilles and each brave commander
1689
Let us, kind Lesbia, give away
1684
Lost is my quiet forever
1691
Love arms himself in Celia's eyes
Love is now become a trade
1685
Lovely Albina's come ashore
Love's power in my heart shall find no compliance
1688
Love, thou canst hear, tho' thou art blind
1695
More love or more disdain I crave
1678
Musing on cares of human fate
1685
My heart, wherever you appear
1685
Nestor, who did to thrice man's age attain
1689
Not all my torments can your pity move
No, to what purpose should I speak
No watch, dear Celia, just is found
1693
O dive custos Auriacae domus
1695
O! fair Cedaria, hide those eyes
Oft am I by the women told
1687
O! how happy's he
1690
Oh! what a scene does entertain my sight
Olinda in the shades unseen
On the brow of Richmond Hill
1692
O solitude, my sweetest choice
1687
Pastora's beauties when unblown
1681
Phillis, talk no more of passion
1685
Phyllis, I can ne'er forgive it
1688
Pious Celinda goes to prayers
1695
Rashly I swore I would disown
1683
Saccharissa's grown old
1686
Sawney is a bonny lad
1694
Scarce had the rising sun appear'd
1679
See how the fading glories of the year
1689
See where she sits
She loves and she confesses too
1683
She that would gain a faithful lover
1695
She who my poor heart possesses
1683
Since one poor view has drawn my heart
1681
Since the pox or the plague
1679
Sit down, my dear Sylvia
1685
Soft notes and gently raised
1685
Spite of the godhead, pow'rful love
1687
Stript of their green our groves appear
1692
Sweet, be no longer sad
1678
Sweet tyranness, I now resign
1667
Sweet tyranness, I now resign
1678
Sylvia, now your scorn give over
1688
Sylvia, thou brighter eye of night
Sylvia, 'tis true you're fair
1686
The fatal hour comes on apace
There never was so wretched lover as I
They say you're angry
1685
This poet sings the Trojan wars
1688
Though my mistress be fair
1685
Through mournful shades and solitary groves
1684
Tis wine was made to rule the day
Trip it, trip it in a ring
Turn then thine eyes
Underneath this myrtle shade
1692
Urge me no more
We now, my Thyrsis, never find
1693
We reap all the pleasures
Were I to choose the greatest bliss
1689
What a sad fate is mine
What can we poor females do?
1694
What can we poor females do?
What hope for us remains now he is gone?
1679
When first Amintas sued for a kiss
1687
When first my shepherdess and I
1687
When gay Philander left the plain
1684
When her languishing eyes said 'love'
1681
When I a lover pale do see
1678
When, lovely Phyllis, thou art kind
1685
When my Aemelia smiles
When Myra sings
1695
When night her purple veil had softly spread
When Strephon found his passion vain
1683
When Teucer from his father fled
1686
When the cock begins to crow
When Thyrsis did the splendid eye
1675
While bolts and bars my days control
While Thyrsis, wrapt in downy sleep
1685
While you for me alone had charms
Whilst Cynthia sung, all angry winds lay still
1686
Who but a slave can well express
Who can behold Florella's charms?
1695
Why, my Daphne, why complaining?
1691
Why so serious, why so grave?
Ye happy swains, whose nymphs are kind
1685
Young Thyrsis' fate, ye hills and groves, deplore
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