Verse
'A Ruffian Rustick Clambring up a Tree'
PuH 1
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
Alitheas Pearl
('ffair Alithea (when I was A Girle)')
PuH 2
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'All Creatures then the Dolphin are more slow'
PuH 3
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'An old Man through a Town did often pass'
PuH 4
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'And must the sword this controverse deside'
PuH 5
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
Facsimile of f. 87r in Robson, p. 242.
'Aristominus his Strang Ambiguous ffate'
PuH 6
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
Aurora
('Lovely Aurora, o how Heavenly faire')
PuH 7
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
Aurora
('Lovly Aurora, when wilt thou apear')
PuH 8
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Behold how many Cobwebs doth invest'
PuH 9
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Behold this flying ffish with shineing Wings'
PuH 10
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The Center
('Oh that the Splendent & Illustrious Sun')
PuH 11
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The Circle
('In sighs and tears there is noe end')
PuH 12
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The Circle
('The eternall Spirit of Life and Love')
PuH 13
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The Circle
('Those that y
e hidden Chimick Art pfess')
PuH 14
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The Circle
('To bee unwilling or afraid to die')
PuH 15
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Come my Dear Children come and Happy bee'
PuH 16
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
To my Deare J P: M: P:, P:P: They beeing at London, I at Bradfield
('Come my Deare Children to this lonely Place')
PuH 17
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Come my Dear Pledges of our Constant Loves'
PuH 18
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The complaint of Thames 1647 when the best of Kings was imprisoned by the worst of Rebels at Holmbie
('Late in an evening as I walk'd alone')
PuH 19
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Could this ffell Catablepe lift up her head'
PuH 20
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Dear God from thy high Throne look down'
PuH 21
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Dear God turn not away thy fface'
PuH 22
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The desire
('Dear God, vouchsafe from thy High Throne')
PuH 23
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
A Dialogue between two Sisters Virgins bewailing their solitary life, P:P:, f.p.
('Come my deare sister sit with mee a while')
PuH 24
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The Eclips
('Why doe those frowning vapours interpose')
PuH 25
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The Garden, or The Contention of fflowers, To my Dear Daughter Mris Anne [Pulter] at her desire written
('Once in my Garden as a lone I lay')
PuH 26
Copy, the name Pulter
in the title deleted.
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Honor I have I want no heartly pellt'
PuH 27
Copy, untitled, among other inscriptions.
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The Hope January :1665:
('Deare Death desolve theise mortall charms')
PuH 28
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'How fast this creature runs upon the earth'
PuH 29
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'How long shall my dejected soul'
PuH 30
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Immense ffount of Truth, Life, Love, joy, Glory'
PuH 31
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'In Africa about the ffountain's brink'
PuH 32
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'In Ments[?] when Corn was grown excessive dear'
PuH 33
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The invitation into the Countrey to my D.D. MP: PP 1647 when his Sacred Majtie: was at unhappy home
('Deare daughters come make hast away')
PuH 34
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The invocation of the Elements the longest Night in the Year 1655
('Have patience my aflicted soul')
PuH 35
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The Larke
('See how Arachne doth her Howres Pass')
PuH 36
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
Made when I was not well. April 20. 1655
('My Soul why dost thou such a mourning make')
PuH 37
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
Made when I was Sick 1647
('Oh mee! how sore, how sad is my poor heart')
PuH 38
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
Made when my spirits were sunk very low with sickness & sorrow. May 1667 I being seventy one years old
('Droop not my soul, nor hang the Wing')
PuH 39
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Mark but those Hogs wch underneath yond tree'
PuH 40
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Marvall not my names conceald'
PuH 41
Copy, untitled, among other inscriptions.
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Must I thus ever interdicted bee'
PuH 42
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'My God I thee and onely thee Adore'
PuH 43
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'My Heart why dost thou Throb soe in my breast'
PuH 44
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
My Loue is Fair
('And is thy Love soe Wonderous ffair')
PuH 45
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'My Soul why art thou full of trouble'
PuH 46
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
My Souls Sole desire
('Thou that didst on the Chaos move')
PuH 47
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
Of A young Lady at Oxford 1646
('A Noble pair in Love without Compare')
PuH 48
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
Of Night and Morning
('Night's like the Grave wherein wee lie forelorn')
PuH 49
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Oh my aflicted Solitary Soul'
PuH 50
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Old Esculus being told that hee should die'
PuH 51
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
On that Unparraleld Prince Charles the first: his Horrid Muther
('Those glittring Globes of light which grace')
PuH 52
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
On the Fall of that Grand Rebel the Earl of Essex his Effigies in Harry the 7th's Chappel in Westminster Abby
('When that Fierce Monster had usurp'd the Place')
PuH 53
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
Edited from this MS in Robson, pp. 246-7, with a facsimile of f. 85r on p. 241.
On the Horrid Murther of that incomparable Prince, King Charles the ffirst
('Let none presume to weep, tears are to weak')
PuH 54
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
On the kinges most exelent magisty K Charles ye 1st
('Victorious palm triumphing lawrell boughs')
PuH 55
Copy, the heading in another hand.
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
On the Same [i.e. the death of my deare and lovely daughter J P]
('Tell mee noe more her haire was lovly brown')
PuH 56
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
Edited from this MS in Robson, pp. 250-1, with a facsimile of f. 17v on p. 240.
On the same [i.e. the horrid murther of that incomparable prince King Charles the First]
('Let none sigh more for Lucas or for Lisle')
PuH 57
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
On those two unparraleld friends, Sr: G: Lisle and Sr C: Lucas who were shott to death at Colchester
('Is Lisle and Lucas Slaine? Oh Say not soe')
PuH 58
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The perfection of Patience and Knowledg
('My soul in strugling thou dost Jll')
PuH 59
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The Pismire
('Walking a broad once in a Su
mers day')
PuH 60
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The Revolution
('Oh thou which Circumvolveth all')
PuH 61
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Seest thou this Horizentall Bird whose eyes'
PuH 62
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
A Solitary Complainte
('Must I bee still confind to this Sad Grove')
PuH 63
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
A solitary discoars
('How canst thou heavie bee now shee apears')
PuH 64
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Some Birds their bee sure they noe love doe lack'
PuH 65
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Somnus why art thou still to mee unkinde'
PuH 66
Copy, on a leaf in a separate folder.
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'That many Heliotropians there bee'
PuH 67
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'The Brackman th'angrie Deities to appeas'
PuH 68
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'The Caucasines with Locusts were anoy'd'
PuH 69
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'The Cockatrice as vulgarly receiv'd'
PuH 70
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'The Cruel Tiger Swiftly on doth Pass'
PuH 71
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'The Cuckoes constitution's cold shee knows'
PuH 72
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'The Dubious Raven doth her young forsake'
PuH 73
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'The Eliphant when Radiant Sol doth rise'
PuH 74
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'The Estrich with her gallant gaudy plumes'
PuH 75
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'The hunted hart when shee begins to Tire'
PuH 76
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'The Indian Mooze three Young at once doth bear'
PuH 77
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'The Lion Roars his vassals fear and tremble'
PuH 78
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'The Lyon that of late soe Domineer'd'
PuH 79
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'The Manucodiats as Authors write'
PuH 80
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'The Marmottanes for Unitie's renownd'
PuH 81
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'The Porcupine went Ruffling in his pride'
PuH 82
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'The Stately Mooz being mounted up the hill'
PuH 83
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'The Toad and Spider once would trie the might'
PuH 84
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'There is one black & sullen hour'
PuH 85
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
PuH 86
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'This huge Leviathan for all his Strength'
PuH 87
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'This Stately Ship Courted by Winds & Tide'
PuH 88
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'This Ugly Sow descendent of that Bore'
PuH 89
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'This vast Leviathan Whose Breathing blows'
PuH 90
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
This was written 1648 when I Lay Inn, with my Son John [Pulter] beeing my 15 Child I beeing soe weak that in Ten dayes and Nights I never moued my Head one Jot from my Pillow, out of which great weaknes my gracious God restored me; that I still Live to magnifie his Mercie 1665
('Sad, Sick, and Lame, as in my Bed I lay')
PuH 91
Copy, the name Pulter
deleted in the title, the date 1655
written as a corrective sidenote in a different hand.
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Those that imployed are the Apes to catch'
PuH 92
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
To Astrea
('Thou blessed Birth of the Celestiall Morn')
PuH 93
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
To Aurora
('Faire Rosie Virgin when wilt thou Arise')
PuH 94
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
To Aurora
('Look up sad eyes behould the smileing Morn')
PuH 95
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
To Aurora
('Why doth Pale Phoebe thus her bevty shrowd')
PuH 96
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
Sr: Wm: D: Upon the unspeakable Loss of the most conspicuous and chief Ornament of his ffrontispiece
('Sir / Extreamly I deplore your loss')
PuH 97
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Two Mountebancks contended for A Stage'
PuH 98
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
Universal dissolusion, made when I was with Child of my 15th: child I being my sonne John very one thought in a Consumption 1648
('My Soule why art thou sad at the decay')
PuH 99
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
Upon the Crown Imperiall
('Why doth the Tears stand in the Orient eyes')
PuH 100
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
Vpon the Death of my deare and lovely daughter J P
('All you that haue indulgent Parents been')
PuH 101
Copy, with an inserted note identifying J P
as Jane Pulter, baptized May 1. 1625, buried oct 8 1645, aet. 20
.
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
Facsimile of f. 17v in Robson, p. 240.
Upon the imprisonment of his Sacred Majestie that unparalel'd Prince King Charles the ffirst
('Why I sit sighing here ask mee noe more')
PuH 102
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Vain Erostratus was soe fond of ffame'
PuH 103
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Vertue once in the Olympicks fought a duell'
PuH 104
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'View but this Tulip, Rose, or July fflower'
PuH 105
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The weepeinge wishe January .1665
('O that the tears that tricle from mine eyes')
PuH 106
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The Welcom
('Dear Death thou'rt welcom to my troubled soul')
PuH 107
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The Welcome
('Death come and welcome thou'rt my Ancient friend')
PuH 108
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'When as that Geniall Universall ffire'
PuH 109
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'When Brittish Brennus Sack'd that Noble Citty'
PuH 110
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'When fair Aurora drest with raidient Light'
PuH 111
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'When God (who is to Mercie most inclin'd)'
PuH 112
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'When Mighty Nimrade Hunting after fame'
PuH 113
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'When Phalaris for Tiranny soe ffam'd'
PuH 114
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'When royal ffergus Line did rule this Realm'
PuH 115
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'When scornd Medea saw Cruesa led'
PuH 116
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Who can but pitty this poor Turtle Dove'
PuH 117
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
Facsimile and transcription of f. 104r in Reading Early Modern Women, ed. Helen Ostovich and Elizabeth Sauer (New York & London, 2004), pp. 390-1.
'Why art thou sad at the aproach of Night'
PuH 118
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'Why must I thus for ever bee confin'd'
PuH 119
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
The Wish
('Oh that I were a Sun that I might Send')
PuH 120
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
'You that love Poppit Playes, Masks, Court Buffoons'
PuH 121
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
Prose
An unfinished prose romance, in two parts, beginning When that voluptuous Prince Roderigo had driven his Infant Nephew and King...
.
PuH 122
Copy, headed (f. 1r rev.) The unfortunate Florinda Written by the Noble Hadrassas The first Part, The Second Part beginning on f. 32r rev., incomplete.
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.
PuH 123
Copy of The Second Part of the Unfortunate fflorinda, a sheaf of twelve folio leaves in a separate folder.
In:
A folio volume of writings, chiefly poems, by Lady Hester Pulter, composed
c.1646-65, written from both ends, 167 leaves (including several loose leaves), in contemporary calf.
Entitled (f. 1r) Poems Breathed forth By The Nobel Hadassas and the poems described as Hadassas Chast ffances Beeinge the ffruett of solitary and many of them sad howers, one section headed The sighes of a Sad soule emblematically breath'd forth by the noble Hadassah: Emblemes, the text predominantly in two neat hands, with additions, insertions, sidenotes, and revisions in two other hands, one probably Pulter's own hand; a note (f. 1r) stating that Lady Hesther Pulter dyd the latter End of March or beginning of April .1678. aged 82
.
c.1655-61.
Later owned by Sir Gilbert Inglefield, Bt. Christie's, 8 October 1975, lot 353.
Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Mark Robson, Swansongs: Reading Voice in the Poetry of Lady Hester Pulter, EMS, 9 (2000), Writings by Early Modern Women, ed. Peter Beal and Margaret J.M. Ezell, pp. 238-56.