Aze I the silly fish beguile (Robert Jones): Difference between revisions

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'''External websites: '''[http://www.kulturserver.de/home/harald-lillmeyer/Texte/Downloads/Downloads.html Texts of five of Jones' publications, including 'The Muses Gardin for Delights', with some midi files (copyright)]<br>
'''External websites: '''[http://www.kulturserver.de/home/harald-lillmeyer/Texte/Downloads/Downloads.html Texts of five of Jones' publications, including 'The Muses Gardin for Delights', with some midi files (copyright)]<br>


==Original text and translations==
==Original text and translations==

Revision as of 09:46, 4 April 2006

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Editor: robd (added 2006-04-04).   Score information: A4, 2 pages, 71 kbytes   Copyright: CPDL
Edition notes: Original note values and barring. Lute part in modern score notation, one accidental removed, as noted in score; otherwise unchanged. Spelling modernised.

General Information

Title: Aze I the silly fish beguile
Composer: Robert Jones

Number of voices: 1vv Voicing: S
Genre: Secular, Madrigals
Language: English
Instruments: Lute, bass-viol
Published: The Muses Gardin for Delights (1610)
Note: This page of the original is badly smudged in places, making parts of verse 1 and the lute tablature difficult to read.

Description: The lute parts of A Musicall Dreame and The Muses Gardin for Delights are, in places, crude and dissonant. It has been suggested that, in these cases, Jones is only responsible for the melody and bass lines, but there is little external evidence to support this.

External websites: Texts of five of Jones' publications, including 'The Muses Gardin for Delights', with some midi files (copyright)


Original text and translations

English.png English text

Original spelling, modern orthography

1. As I the silly Fish deceive,
so Fortune playes with me, whose baites my heart of joyes bereave,
and Angels taketh mee,
I still doe fish, yet am I caught,
and taken am, their taking taught.

2. The River wherein I doe swimme,
Of streames of hope is made,
Where joyes as flowers dresse the brimme,
And frownes doe make my shade.
Whence smiles as sun-shine gives me heat,
And shadow frownes from showers beat.

3. Thus taken like an envious one,
Who glads for others care,
Since he himselfe must feele such mone,
Delights, all, so should fare,
And strive to make them know like smart,
So I make this to beare apart.