import/englishhistory.net/tudor/prihenry.html indexed_doc HTMLPlugin 11478 prihenry.html prihenry.html en utf8 Marilee Mongello Primary Sources: The lyrics of King Henry VIII HTML http://englishhistory.net/tudor/prihenry.html http://englishhistory.net/tudor/prihenry.html <a href="http://englishhistory.net/tudor/prihenry.html"> _iconworld_ </a> Tudor period|Others HASH49ce89d25cca35c039a166 1436940164 20150715 1436940228 20150715 HASH49ce.dir 1500sa.gif:image/gif: <center>&nbsp;<p> <img border="0" src="_httpdocimg_/1500sa.gif" alt="Primary Sources: The lyrics of King Henry VIII" width="399" height="69"> </p> </center> <blockquote> <blockquote> <hr> <p>&nbsp;</p> </blockquote> </blockquote> <blockquote> <blockquote> <blockquote> <blockquote> <blockquote><b><font size=+1>Pastime with good company</font> </b> <blockquote>Pastime with good company <br>I love and shall until I die. <br>Grudge who likes, but none deny, <br>So God be pleased, thus live will I. <br>For my pastance: <br>Hunt, sing, and dance. <br>My heart is set! <br>All goodly sport <br>For my comfort. <br>Who shall me let? <p>Youth must have some dalliance, <br>Of good or ill some pastance. <br>Company I think then best -- <br>All thoughts and fantasies to digest. <br>For idleness <br>Is chief mistress <br>Of vices all. <br>Then who can say <br>But mirth and play <br>Is best of all? <p>Company with honesty <br>Is virtue -- vices to flee. <br>Company is good and ill, <br>But every man has his free will. <br>The best ensue. <br>The worst eschew. <br>My mind shall be. <br>Virtue to use. <br>Vice to refuse. <br>Thus shall I use me!<p>&nbsp;<p>&nbsp;</blockquote> </blockquote> </blockquote> <b> <font size=+1>Alas, what shall I do for love?</font> </b> <p>Alas, what shall I do for love? <br>For love, alas, what shall I do? <br>Since now so kind <br>I do you find <br>To kepe you me unto. <br>Alasse! <p>&nbsp;<blockquote>&nbsp;<blockquote> <blockquote> <blockquote> <b> <font size=+1>Oh my heart</font> </b> <p>Oh my heart, and oh my heart, <br>My hart it is so sore. <br>Since I must from my love depart, <br>And know no cause wherefore. </blockquote> </blockquote> </blockquote> &nbsp; <br>&nbsp; <br>&nbsp; <blockquote><b><font size=+1>The time of youth is to be spent</font> </b> <blockquote>The time of youth is to be spent, <br>But vice in it should be forfent. <br>Pastimes there be I note truly <br>Which one may use and vice deny. <br>And they be pleasant to God and man: <br>Those should we covet when we can. <br>As feats of arms, and such other <br>Wherby activeness one may utter. <br>Comparisons in them may lawfully be set, <br>For, thereby, courage is surely out fet. <br>Vertue it is, then, youth for to spend <br>In good disports which it does fend.<p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> </blockquote> </blockquote> </blockquote> <b> <font size=+1>Alac! Alac! What shall I do?</font> </b> <blockquote>Alac! Alac! What shall I do? <br>For care is cast in to my heart, <br>And true love locked thereto. <br>&nbsp; <p> <br>&nbsp; </p> <blockquote> <blockquote><b><font size=+1>Green grows the holly</font> </b> <p>Green grows the holly. <br>So does the ivy. <br>Though winter's blasts blow never so high, <br>Green grows the holly. <p>As the holly grows green <br>And never changes hue, <br>So I am -- ever have been -- <br>unto my lady true. <p>As the holly grows green <br>With ivy all alone, <br>When flowers can not be seen <br>And greenwood leaves be gone. <p>Now unto my lady <br>Promise to her I make: <br>From all other, only <br>to her, I me betake. <p>Adieu, my own lady. <br>Adieu, my special <br>Who hath my heart truly, <br>Be sure, and ever shall.<p>&nbsp;<p>&nbsp;</blockquote> </blockquote> </blockquote> </blockquote> </blockquote> <b> <font size=+1>Who so that will all feats obtain</font> </b> <blockquote>Who so that will all feats obtain <br>In love he must be without disdain. <br>For love enforces all noble kind, <br>And disdain discourages all gentle mind. <br>Wherefore, to love and be not loved <br>Is worse than death? Let it be proved! <br>Love encourages, and makes one bold; <br>Disdain abates and makes him cold. <br>Love is given to God and man; <br>To woman also, I think the same. <br>But disdain is vice, and should be refused, <br>Yet never the less it is too much used. <br>Great pity it were, love for to compel <br>With disdain, both false and subtle. <blockquote> <blockquote>&nbsp; <p> <br>&nbsp; </p> <p><b><font size=+1>If love now reigned</font> </b> <p>If love now reigned as it has been <br>And were rewarded as it has seen, <br>Noble men then would surely ensearch <br>All ways whereby they might it reach. <br>But envy reigns with such disdain <br>And causes lovers outwardly to refrain, <br>Which puts them to more and more, <br>Inwardly, most grievous and sore: <br>The fault in whom I cannot set, <br>But let them tell who love does get. <br>To lovers I put now sure this case: <br>Which of their loves does get them grace? <br>And unto them which doth it know <br>Better than do I, I think it so. <br>&nbsp; <br>&nbsp; <br>&nbsp; <p>&nbsp;<blockquote><b><font size=+1>Whereto should I express</font> </b> <blockquote>Whereto should I express <br>My inward heaviness? <br>No mirth can make me fain, <br>'Till that we meet again. <p>Do way, dear heart, not so. <br>Let no thought you dismay. <br>Though you now part me from, <br>We shall meet when we may. <p>When I remember me <br>Of your most gentle mind, <br>It may in no wise agree <br>That I should be unkind. <p>The daisy delectable, <br>The violet waning and blue, <br>You are not variable -- <br>I love you and no more. <p>I make you fast and sure; <br>It is to me great pain <br>Thus long to endure <br>'Till that we meet again.<p>&nbsp;<p>&nbsp;</blockquote> </blockquote> </blockquote> <b> <font size=+1>Though that men do call it dotage</font> </b> <blockquote>Though that men do call it dotage, <br>Who loves not wants courage. <br>And whosoever may love get <br>From Venus surely he must it fetch, <br>Or else from her which is her heir. <br>And she to him must seem most fair. <br>Where eye and mind do both agree; <br>There is no but -- there must it be! <br>The eye does look and represent, <br>But mind affirms with full consent. <br>Thus am I fixed without grudge: <br>My eye with heart does me so judge. <br>Love maintains all noble courage; <br>Who love disdains is all of the village. <br>Such lovers, though they take pain, <br>It were pity they should obtain. <br>For often times where they do sue <br>They hinder lovers that would be true. <br>For who so loves should love but one. <br>Change who so will, I will be none. <br>&nbsp; <br>&nbsp;<p>&nbsp;</p> </blockquote> <b> <font size=+1>Departure is my chief pain</font> </b> <p>Departure is my chief pain <br>I trust right well of return again. <br>&nbsp; <blockquote>&nbsp; <br>&nbsp; <blockquote><b><font size=+1>Without discord</font> </b> <blockquote>Without discord <br>And both accord, <br>Now let us be. <br>Both harts alone <br>To set in one, <br>Best seems me. <br>For when one sole <br>Is in the dole <br>Of love's pain, <br>Then help must have <br>Himself to save <br>And love to obtain. <p>Where for now we <br>That lovers be, <br>Let us now pray: <br>Once love sure <br>For to procure <br>Without denial. <br>Where love so sues <br>There no heart rues, <br>But condescend. <br>If contrary, <br>What remedy? <br>God it amend. <p> <br>&nbsp;</blockquote> </blockquote> </blockquote> <b> <font size=+1>Though some say that youth rules me</font> <br><font size=+1>(possibly by King Henry VIII)</font> </b> <blockquote>Though some say that youth rules me, <br>I trust in age to tarry. <br>God and my right, and my duty, <br>From them shall I never vary, <br>Though some say that youth rules me. <p>I pray you all that aged be <br>How well did you your youth carry? <br>I think some worse of each degree. <br>Therein a wager lay dare I, <br>Though some say that youth rules me. <p>Pastimes of youth some time among <br>None can say but necessary. <br>I hurt no man, I do no wrong, <br>I love true where I did marry, <br>Though some say that youth rules me. <p>Then soon discuss that hence we must <br>Pray we to God and Saint Mary <br>That all amend, and here an end. <br>Thus says the King, the eighth Harry, <br>Though some say that youth rules me. <br>&nbsp; <br>&nbsp; <br>&nbsp; <br>&nbsp; <blockquote><b><font size=+1>Who so that will for grace sue</font> </b> <p>Who so that will for grace sue, <br>His intent must needs be true, <br>And love her in heart and deed, <br>Else it were pity that he should speed. <br>Many one says that love is ill, <br>But those be they which know no skill. <p>Or else, because they may not obtain, <br>They would that others should it disdain. <br>But love is a thing given by God: <br>In that, therefore, can be none odd, <br>But perfect in deed, and between two. <br>Where fore, then, should we it eschew?</blockquote> <br>&nbsp; <br>&nbsp; <p><b><font size=+1>Lusty Youth should us ensue!</font> </b> <p>Lusty Youth should us ensue! <br>His merry heart shall sure all rue. <br>For whatsoever they do him tell <br>It is not for him, we know it well. <p>For they would have him his liberty refrain, <br>And all merry company for to disdain. <br>But I will not do whatsoever they say, <br>But follow his mind in all that we may. <p>How should youth himself best use <br>But all disdainers for to refuse? <br>Youth has as chief assurance <br>Honest mirth with virtue's pastance. <p>For in them consists great honour, <br>Though that disdainers would therein put error. <br>For they do sue to get them grace -- <br>All only riches to purchase. <p>With good order, counsel, and equity, <br>Goode Lord grant us our mansion to be. <br>For without their good guidance <br>Youth should fall in great mischance. <p>For Youth is frail and prompt to do <br>As well vices as virtues to ensue. <br>Where fore by these he must be guided, <br>And virtues pastance must therein be used. <p>Now unto God this prayer we make, <br>That this rude play may well betake <br>And that we may our faults amend <br>And bliss obtain at our last end. Amen. <br>&nbsp; <br>&nbsp; <br>&nbsp;</blockquote> <b> <font size=+1>Let not us that young men be</font> <br><font size=+1>(possibly by King Henry VIII)</font> </b> <blockquote>Let not us that young men be <br>From Venus' ways banished to be, banished to be. <br>Though that Age with great disdain <br>Would have Youth love to refrain, love to refrain, <br>In their minds consider they must <br>How they did in their most lust. <p>For, if they were in like case <br>And would then have gotten grace, <br>They may not now than gainsay <br>That which then was most their joy. <br>Where for indeed, the truth to say, <br>It is for Youth the metest play.<p>&nbsp;</blockquote> </blockquote> </blockquote> </blockquote> <font size=-1><a href="_httpextlink_&amp;rl=1&amp;href=http:%2f%2fenglishhistory.net%2ftudor%2fprimary.html">to Primary Sources</a></font> <br>&nbsp; <!-- text below generated by server. PLEASE REMOVE --><!-- Counter/Statistics data collection code --><script language="JavaScript" src="_httpextlink_&amp;rl=0&amp;href=http:%2f%2fhostingprod.com%2fjs%5fsource%2fgeov2.js"></script><script language="javascript">geovisit();</script><noscript><img src="_httpextlink_&amp;rl=0&amp;el=direct&amp;href=http://visit.webhosting.yahoo.com/visit.gif?us1108082594" alt="setstats" border="0" width="1" height="1"></noscript> <IMG SRC="_httpextlink_&amp;rl=0&amp;el=direct&amp;href=http://geo.yahoo.com/serv?s=76001524&t=1108082594" ALT=1 WIDTH=1 HEIGHT=1>