Title: The Oxford Book of English Verse, 1250-1900
Editor: Arthur Quiller-Couch
Release date: October 27, 2021 [eBook #66619]
Language: English
Credits: Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images available at The Internet Archive)
Contents. (etext transcriber's note) |
Impression of 1931
First edition, 1900
Chosen & Edited by
Arthur Quiller-Couch
Oxford
At the Clarendon Press
PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN
TO
THE PRESIDENT
FELLOWS AND SCHOLARS
OF
TRINITY COLLEGE OXFORD
A HOUSE OF LEARNING
ANCIENT LIBERAL HUMANE
AND MY MOST KINDLY NURSE
For this Anthology I have tried to range over the whole field of English Verse from the beginning, or from the Thirteenth Century to this closing year of the Nineteenth, and to choose the best. Nor have I sought in these Islands only, but wheresoever the Muse has followed the tongue which among living tongues she most delights to honour. To bring home and render so great a spoil compendiously has been my capital difficulty. It is for the reader to judge if I have so managed it as to serve those who already love poetry and to implant that love in some young minds not yet initiated.
My scheme is simple. I have arranged the poets as nearly as possible in order of birth, with such groupings of anonymous pieces as seemed convenient. For convenience, too, as well as to avoid a dispute-royal, I have gathered the most of the Ballads into the middle of the Seventeenth Century; where they fill a languid interval between two winds of inspiration—the Italian dying down with Milton and the French following at the heels of the restored Royalists. For convenience, again, I have set myself certain rules of spelling. In the very earliest poems inflection and spelling are structural, and to modernize is to destroy. {viii}But as old inflections fade into modern the old spelling becomes less and less vital, and has been brought (not, I hope, too abruptly) into line with that sanctioned by use and familiar. To do this seemed wiser than to discourage many readers for the sake of diverting others by a scent of antiquity which—to be essential—should breathe of something rarer than an odd arrangement of type. But there are scholars whom I cannot expect to agree with me; and to conciliate them I have excepted Spenser and Milton from the rule.
Glosses of archaic and otherwise difficult words are given at the foot of the page: but the text has not been disfigured with reference-marks. And rather than make the book unwieldy I have eschewed notes—reluctantly when some obscure passage or allusion seemed to ask for a timely word; with more equanimity when the temptation was to criticize or ‘appreciate.’ For the function of the anthologist includes criticizing in silence.
Care has been taken with the texts. But I have sometimes thought it consistent with the aim of the book to prefer the more beautiful to the better attested reading. I have often excised weak or superfluous stanzas when sure that excision would improve; and have not hesitated to extract a few stanzas from a long poem when persuaded that they could stand alone as a lyric. The apology for such experiments can only lie in their success: but the risk is one which, in my judgement, the anthologist ought to take. A few small corrections have been made, but only when they were quite obvious.{ix}
The numbers chosen are either lyrical or epigrammatic. Indeed I am mistaken if a single epigram included fails to preserve at least some faint thrill of the emotion through which it had to pass before the Muse’s lips let it fall, with however exquisite deliberation. But the lyrical spirit is volatile and notoriously hard to bind with definitions; and seems to grow wilder with the years. With the anthologist—as with the fisherman who knows the fish at the end of his sea-line—the gift, if he have it, comes by sense, improved by practice. The definition, if he be clever enough to frame one, comes by after-thought. I don’t know that it helps, and am sure that it may easily mislead.
Having set my heart on choosing the best, I resolved not to be dissuaded by common objections against anthologies—that they repeat one another until the proverb δὶς ἢ τρὶς τὰ καλά loses all application—or perturbed if my judgement should often agree with that of good critics. The best is the best, though a hundred judges have declared it so; nor had it been any feat to search out and insert the second-rate merely because it happened to be recondite. To be sure, a man must come to such a task as mine haunted by his youth and the favourites he loved in days when he had much enthusiasm but little reading.
Few of my contemporaries can erase—or would wish to erase—the dye their minds took from the late Mr. Palgrav{x}e’s Golden Treasury: and he who has returned to it again and again with an affection born of companionship on many journeys must remember not only what the Golden Treasury includes, but the moment when this or that poem appealed to him, and even how it lies on the page. To Mr. Bullen’s Lyrics from the Elizabethan Song Books and his other treasuries I own a more advised debt. Nor am I free of obligation to anthologies even more recent—to Archbishop Trench’s Household Book of Poetry, Mr. Locker-Lampson’s Lyra Elegantiarum, Mr. Miles’ Poets and Poetry of the Century, Mr. Beeching’s Paradise of English Poetry, Mr. Henley’s English Lyrics, Mrs. Sharp’s Lyra Celtica, Mr. Yeats’ Book of Irish Verse, and Mr. Churton Collins’ Treasury of Minor British Poetry: though my rule has been to consult these after making my own choice. Yet I can claim that the help derived from them—though gratefully owned—bears but a trifling proportion to the labour, special and desultory, which has gone to the making of my book.
For the anthologist’s is not quite the dilettante business for which it is too often and ignorantly derided. I say this, and immediately repent; since my wish is that the reader should in his own pleasure quite forget the editor’s labour, which too has been pleasant: that, standing aside, I may believe this book has made the Muses’ access easier when, in the right hour, they come to him to uplift or to console—
My thanks are here tendered to those who have helped me with permission to include recent poems: to Mr. A. C. Benson, Mr. Laurence Binyon, Mr. Wilfrid Blunt, Mr. Robert Bridges, Mr. John Davidson, Mr. Austin Dobson, Mr. Aubrey de Vere, Mr. Edmund Gosse, Mr. Bret Harte, Mr. W. E. Henley, Mrs. Katharine Tynan Hinkson, Mr. W. D. Howells, Dr. Douglas Hyde, Mr. Rudyard Kipling, Mr. Andrew Lang, Mr. Richard Le Gallienne, Mr. George Meredith, Mrs. Meynell, Mr. T. Sturge Moore, Mr. Henry Newbolt, Mr. Gilbert Parker, Mr. T. W. Rolleston, Mr. George Russell (‘A. E.’), Mrs. Clement Shorter (Dora Sigerson), Mr. Swinburne, Mr. Francis Thompson, Dr. Todhunter, Mr. William Watson, Mr. Watts-Dunton, Mrs. Woods, and Mr. W. B. Yeats; to the Earl of Crewe for a poem by the late Lord Houghton; to Lady Ferguson, Mrs. Allingham, Mrs. A. H. Clough, Mrs. Locker-Lampson, Mrs. Coventry Patmore; to the Lady Betty Balfour and the Lady Victoria Buxton for poems by the late Earl of Lytton and the Hon. Roden Noel; to the executors of Messrs. Frederic Tennyson (Captain Tennyson and Mr. W. C. A. Ker), Charles Tennyson Turner (Sir Franklin Lushington), Edward FitzGerald (Mr. Aldis Wright), William Bell Scott (Mrs. Sydney Morse and Miss Boyd of Penkill Castle, who has added to her kindness by allowing me to include an unpublished ‘Sonet’ by her sixteenth-century ancestor, Mark Alexander Boyd), William Philpot (Mr. Hamlet S. Philpot), William Morris (Mr. S. C. Cockerell), William Barnes, and R. L. Stevenson; to the Rev. H. C. Beeching for two poems{xii} from his own works, and leave to use his redaction of Quia Amore Langueo; to Messrs. Macmillan for confirming permission for the extracts from FitzGerald, Christina Rossetti, and T. E. Brown, and particularly for allowing me to insert the latest emendations in Lord Tennyson’s non-copyright poems; to the proprietors of Mr. and Mrs. Browning’s copyrights and to Messrs. Smith, Elder & Co. for a similar favour, also for a copyright poem by Mrs. Browning; to Mr. George Allen for extracts from Ruskin and the author of Ionica; to Messrs. G. Bell & Sons for poems by Thomas Ashe; to Messrs. Chatto & Windus for poems by Arthur O’Shaughnessy and Dr. George MacDonald, and for confirming Mr. Bret Harte’s permission; to Mr. Elkin Mathews for a poem by Mr. Bliss Carman; to Mr. John Lane for two poems by William Brighty Rands; to the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge for two extracts from Christina Rossetti’s Verses; and to Mr. Bertram Dobell, who allows me not only to select from James Thomson but to use a poem of Traherne’s, a seventeenth-century singer rediscovered by him. To mention all who in other ways have furthered me is not possible in this short Preface; which, however, must not conclude without a word of special thanks to Dr. W. Robertson Nicoll for many suggestions and some pains kindly bestowed, and to Professor F. York Powell, whose help and wise counsel have been as generously given as they were eagerly sought, adding me to the number of those many who have found his learning to be his friends’ good fortune.
A.T.Q.C.
October 1900{xiii}
NUMBER | PAGE | |
1.-7. | Anonymous. XIII-XIV Century | 1-10 |
8. | Robert Mannyng of Brunne. b. 1260, d. 1340. | 10 |
9. | John Barbour. d. 1395 | 10-11 |
10.-12. | Geoffrey Chaucer. b. ? 1340, d. 1400 | 11-14 |
13. | Thomas Hoccleve. b. 1368-9, d. ? 1450 | 14-15 |
14. | John Lydgate. b. ? 1370, d. ? 1450 | 15 |
15. | King James I of Scotland. b. 1394, d. 1437 | 15 |
16.-17. | Robert Henryson. b. 1425, d. ? 1500 | 16-25 |
18.-21. | William Dunbar. b. 1465, d. ? 1520 | 25-33 |
22.-29. | Anonymous. XV-XVI Century | 33-57 |
30.-31. | John Skelton. b. ? 1460, d. 1529 | 57-59 |
32.-33. | Stephen Hawes. d. 1523 | 59-60 |
34.-38. | Sir Thomas Wyatt. b. 1503, d. 1542 | 60-65 |
39.-41. | Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey b. 1516, d. 1547 | 65-68 |
42. | Nicholas Grimald. b. 1519, d. 1562 | 68-69 |
43.-44. | Alexander Scott. b. ? 1520, d. 158- | 69-71 |
45. | Robert Wever. c. 1550 | 72 |
46. | Richard Edwardes. b. 1523, d. 1566 | 72-73 |
47. | George Gascoigne. b. 1523, d. 1566 | 74-75 |
48. | Alexander Mongtomerie. b. ? 1540, d. ? 1610 | 75-77 |
49. | William Stevenson. b. 1530, d. 1575 | 77-78 |
50.-72. | Anonymous. XVI-XVII Century | 79-99 |
73.-74. | Nicholas Breton. b. 1542, d. 1626 | 100-102 |
75.-78. | Sir Walter Raleigh. b. 1552, d. 1618 | 102-104 |
79.-84. | Edmund Spenser. b. 1552, d. 1599 | 104-129 |
85.-86. | John Lyly. b. 1533, d. 1606 | 129-130 |
87. | Anthony Munday. b. 1553, d. 1633 | 130 |
88.-95. | Sir Philip Sidney. b. 1554, d. 1586 | 131-136 |
96. | Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke. b. 1554, d. 1628 | 136-137 |
97.-100. | Thomas Lodge. b. ? 1556, d. 1625 | 137-141 |
101.-102. | George Peele. b. ? 1558, d. 1597 | 141-143 |
103.-105. | Robert Greene. b. ? 1560, d. 1592 | 143-145 |
106. | Alexander Hume. b. 1560, d. 1609 | 146-150 |
107. | George Chapman. b. 1560, d. 1634 | 150 |
108.-109. | Robert Southwell. b. 1561, d. 1595 | 151-153 {xiv} |
110. | Henry Constable. b. ? 1562, d. ? 1613 | 153 |
111.-113. | Samuel Daniel. b. 1562, d. 1619 | 153-159 |
114. | Mark Alexander Boyd. b. 1563, d. 1601 | 160 |
115. | Joshua Sylvester, b. 1563, d. 1618. | 160-161 |
116.-120. | Michael Drayton. b. 1563, d. 1631 | 161-173 |
121. | Christopher Marlowe. b. 1564, d. 1593 | 173-174 |
122. | Sir Walter Raleigh. b. 1552, d. 1618 | 174-175 |
123.-164. | William Shakespeare. b. 1564, d. 1616 | 175-200 |
165. | Richard Rowlands. b. 1565, d. ? 1630 | 200-201 |
166.-167. | Thomas Nashe. b. 1567, d. 1601 | 201-203 |
168.-176. | Thomas Campion. b. ? 1567, d. 1619 | 203-209 |
177. | John Reynolds. XVI Century | 209-210 |
178.-180. | Sir Henry Wotton. b. 1568, d. 1639 | 210-212 |
181. | Sir John Davies. b. 1569, d. 1626 | 212-213 |
182.-183. | Sir Robert Ayton. b. 1570, d. 1638 | 213-215 |
184.-194. | Ben Jonson. b. 1573, d. 1637 | 215-225 |
195.-202. | John Donne. b. 1573, d. 1631 | 225-231 |
203. | Richard Barnefield. b. 1574, d. 1627 | 232 |
204. | Thomas Dekker. b. 1575, d. 1641 | 233 |
205.-206. | Thomas Heywood. b. ? 157-, d. 1650 | 233-235 |
207.-217. | John Fletcher. b. 1579, d. 1625 | 235-241 |
218.-220. | John Webster. d. ? 1630 | 242-243 |
221. | William Alexander, Earl of Stirling. b. ? 1580, d. 1640 | 243-244 |
222. | Phineas Fletcher. b. 1580, d. 1650 | 244 |
223. | Sir John Beaumont. b. 1583, d. 1627 | 245 |
224.-232. | William Drummond, of Hawthornden. b. 1585, d. 1649 | 245-250 |
233. | Giles Fletcher. b. 158-, d. 1623 | 250-252 |
234. | Francis Beaumont. b. 1586, d. 1616 | 252 |
235. | John Ford. b. 1586, d. 1639 | 253 |
236.-239. | George Wither. b. 1588, d. 1667 | 253-260 |
240.-246. | William Browne, of Tavistock. b. 1588, d. 1643 | 260-264 |
247.-275. | Robert Herrick. b. 1591, d. 1674 | 264-284 |
276.-277. | Francis Quarles. b. 1592, d. 1644 | 285 |
278.-280. | Henry King, Bishop of Chichester. b. 1592, d. 1669 | 286-290 |
281.-286. | George Herbert. b. 1593, d. 1632 | 290-295 |
287.-288. | James Shirley. b. 1596, d. 1666 | 295-296 |
289.-295. | Thomas Carew. b ? 1595, d. ? 1639 | 297-301 |
296. | Jasper Mayne. b. 1604, d. 1672 | 301-302 |
297.-298. | William Habington. b. 1605, d. 1654 | 302-304 |
299.-300. | Thomas Randolph. b. 1605, d. 1635 | 305-308 |
301.-303. | Sir William Davenant. b. 1606, d. 1668 | 308-309 {xv} |
304.-306. | Edmund Waller. b. 1606, d. 1687 | 310-311 |
307.-324. | John Milton. b. 1608, d. 1674 | 311-347 |
325.-328. | Sir John Suckling. b. 1609, d. 1642 | 347-350 |
329. | Sir Richard Fanshawe. b. 1608, d. 1666 | 350 |
330.-333. | William Cartwright. b. 1611, d. 1643 | 351-353 |
334. | James Graham, Marquis of Montrose. b. 1612, d. 1650 | 353-354 |
335. | Thomas Jordan. b. ? 1612, d. 1685 | 354-355 |
336.-342. | Richard Crashaw. b. ? 1613, d. 1649 | 355-370 |
343.-348. | Richard Lovelace. b. 1618, d. 1658 | 370-374 |
349.-353. | Abraham Cowley. b. 1618, d. 1667 | 374-380 |
354. | Alexander Brome. b. 1620, d. 1666 | 381 |
355.-361. | Andrew Marvell. b. 1621, d. 1678 | 382-394 |
362.-365. | Henry Vaughan. b. 1621, d. 1695 | 395-399 |
366. | John Bunyan. b. 1628, d. 1688 | 399 |
367.-392. | Anonymous: Ballads | 400-459 |
393. | William Strode. b. 1602, d. 1645 | 459 |
394. | Thomas Stanley. b. 1625, d. 1678 | 460 |
395. | Thomas D’Urfey. b. 1653, d. 1723 | 460-461 |
396. | Charles Cotton. b. 1630, d. 1687 | 461 |
397. | Katherine Philips (‘Orinda’). b. 1631, d. 1664 | 462 |
398.-402. | John Dryden. b. 1631, d. 1700 | 462-471 |
403. | Charles Webbe. c. 1678 | 472 |
404.-405. | Sir George Etherege. b. 1635, d. 1691 | 472-473 |
406. | Thomas Traherne. b. ? 1637, d. 1674 | 473-475 |
407. | Thomas Flatman. b. 1637, d. 1688 | 475-476 |
408. | Charles Sackville, Earl of Dorset. b. 1638, d. 1706 | 476-478 |
409.-410. | Sir Charles Sedley. b. 1639, d. 1701 | 479-480 |
411.-412. | Aphra Behn. b. 1640, d. 1689 | 480-481 |
413.-416. | John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester. b. 1647, d. 1680 | 481-484 |
417.-418. | John Sheffield, Duke of Buckinghamshire. b. 1649, d. 1720 | 485-486 |
419. | Thomas Otway. b. 1652, d. 1685 | 486 |
420. | John Oldham. b. 1653, d. 1683 | 487 |
421. | John Cutts, Lord Cutts. b. 1661, d. 1707 | 487 |
422.-428. | Matthew Prior. b. 1664, d. 1721 | 488-493 |
429. | William Walsh. b. 1663, d. 1708 | 493 |
430. | Lady Grisel Baillie. b. 1665, d. 1746 | 494-495 |
431.-432. | William Congreve. b. 1670, d. 1729 | 495-496 |
433. | Joseph Addison. b. 1672, d. 1719 | 496-497 |
434.-435. | Isaac Watts. b. 1674, d. 1748 | 497-500 |
436. | Thomas Parnell. b. 1679, d. 1718 | 501 {xvi} |
437. | Allan Ramsay. b. 1686, d. 1758 | 501-502 |
438. | William Oldys. b. 1687, d. 1761 | 503 |
439. | John Gay. b. 1688, d. 1732 | 503 |
440.-442. | Alexander Pope. b. 1688, d. 1744 | 504-507 |
443. | George Bubb Dodington, Lord Melcombe. b. 1691, d. 1762 | 508 |
444.-445. | Henry Carey. b. ? 1693, d. 1743 | 509-511 |
446.-447. | William Broome. d. 1745 | 511-512 |
448. | James Thomson. b. 1700, d. 1748 | 512 |
449. | George Lyttelton, Lord Lyttelton. b. 1709, d. 1773 | 512-513 |
450.-451. | Samuel Johnson. b. 1709, d. 1784 | 513-516 |
452. | Richard Jago. b. 1715, d. 1781 | 516 |
453.-456. | Thomas Gray. b. 1716, d. 1771 | 516-528 |
457.-460. | William Collins. b. 1721, d. 1759 | 528-533 |
461.-463. | Mark Akenside. b. 1721, d. 1770 | 534-537 |
464. | Tobias George Smollett. b. 1721, d. 1771 | 538 |
465. | Christopher Smart. b. 1722, d. 1770 | 538-542 |
466. | Jane Elliot. b. 1727, d. 1805 | 542-543 |
467.-468. | Oliver Goldsmith. b. 1728, d. 1774 | 543-544 |
469. | Robert Cunninghame-Graham of Gartmore. b. 1735, d. 1797 | 544-545 |
470.-471. | William Cowper. b. 1731, d. 1800 | 545-547 |
472. | James Beattie. b. 1735, d. 1803 | 548 |
473. | Isobel Pagan. b. 1740, d. 1821 | 548-549 |
474. | Anna Lætitia Barbauld. b. 1743, d. 1825 | 549-550 |
475. | Fanny Greville. XVIII Century | 550-551 |
476. | John Logan. b. 1748, d. 1788 | 551-552 |
477. | Lady Anne Lindsay. b. 1750, d. 1825 | 552-553 |
478. | Sir William Jones. b. 1746, d. 1794 | 554 |
479. | Thomas Chatterton. b. 1752, d. 1770 | 554-556 |
480.-482. | George Crabbe. b. 1754, d. 1832 | 556-557 |
483.-492. | William Blake. b. 1757, d. 1827 | 558-566 |
493.-506. | Robert Burns. b. 1759, d. 1796 | 566-577 |
507.-508. | Henry Rowe. b. 1750, d. 1819 | 578-579 |
509. | William Lisle Bowles. b. 1762, d. 1850 | 579 |
510. | Joanna Baillie. b. 1762, d. 1851 | 580 |
511. | Mary Lamb. b. 1765, d. 1847 | 581 |
512. | Carolina, Lady Nairne. b. 1766, d. 1845 | 581-582 |
513.-514. | James Hogg. b. 1770, d. 1835 | 582-594 |
515.-541. | William Wordsworth. b. 1770, d. 1850 | 594-618 |
542.-548. | Sir Walter Scott. b. 1771, d. 1832 | 619-628 |
549.-555. | Samuel Taylor Coleridge. b. 1772, d. 1834 | 628-658 |
556. | Robert Southey. b. 1774, d. 1843 | 658-659 {xvii} |
557.-576. | Walter Savage Landor. b. 1775, d. 1864 | 659-667 |
577.-579. | Charles Lamb. b. 1775, d. 1834 | 668-672 |
580.-581. | Thomas Campbell. b. 1777, d. 1844 | 672-675 |
582.-585. | Thomas Moore. b. 1779, d. 1852 | 675-678 |
586. | Edward Thurlow, Lord Thurlow. b. 1781, d. 1829 | 678-679 |
587.-588. | Ebenezer Elliott. b. 1781, d. 1849 | 679-681 |
589.-591. | Allan Cunningham. b. 1784, d. 1842 | 681-683 |
592. | Leigh Hunt. b. 1784, d. 1859 | 683 |
593.-595. | Thomas Love Peacock. b. 1785, d. 1866 | 684-687 |
596. | Caroline Southey. b. 1787, d. 1854 | 687-688 |
597.-601. | George Gordon Byron, Lord Byron. b. 1788, d. 1824 | 688-694 |
602. | Sir Aubrey de Vere. b. 1788, d. 1846 | 694-695 |
603.-604. | Charles Wolfe. b. 1791, d. 1823 | 695-697 |
605.-618. | Percy Bysshe Shelley. b. 1792, d. 1822 | 697-717 |
619. | Hew Ainslie. b. 1792, d. 1878 | 717 |
620. | John Keble. b. 1792, d. 1866 | 718-720 |
621. | John Clare. b. 1793, d. 1864 | 720 |
622. | Felicia Dorothea Hemans. b. 1793, d. 1835 | 721 |
623.-637. | John Keats. b. 1795, d. 1821 | 721-744 |
638. | Jeremiah Joseph Callanan. b. 1795, d. 1839 | 745 |
639. | William Sidney Walker. b. 1795, d. 1846 | 746 |
640.-642. | George Darley. b. 1795, d. 1846 | 746-749 |
643.-646. | Hartley Coleridge. b. 1796, d. 1849 | 749-751 |
647.-654. | Thomas Hood. b. 1798, d. 1845 | 752-762 |
655. | William Thom. b. 1798, d. 1848 | 762-764 |
656. | Sir Henry Taylor. b. 1800, d. 1886 | 764 |
657. | Thomas Babington Macaulay, Lord Macaulay. b. 1800, d. 1859 | 765 |
658.-659. | William Barnes. b. 1801, d. 1886 | 765-767 |
660. | Winthrop Mackworth Praed. b. 1802, d. 1839 | 767-768 |
661.-662. | Sara Coleridge. b. 1802, d. 1850 | 768-770 |
663. | Gerald Griffin. b. 1803, d. 1840 | 770-772 |
664.-665. | James Clarence Mangan. b. 1803. d. 1849 | 772-776 |
666.-668. | Thomas Lovell Beddoes. b. 1803, d. 1849 | 777-778 |
669.-672. | Ralph Waldo Emerson. b. 1803, d. 1882 | 779-785 |
673. | Richard Henry Horne. b. 1803, d. 1884 | 785-786 |
674.-675. | Robert Stephen Hawker. b. 1804, d. 1875 | 786-787 |
676. | Thomas Wade. b. 1805, d. 1875 | 787 |
677. | Francis Mahony. b. 1805, d. 1866 | 788-790 |
678.-687. | Elizabeth Barrett Browning. b. 1806, d. 1861 | 790-800 |
688. | Frederick Tennyson. b. 1807, d. 1898 | 800 |
689. | Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. b. 1807, d. 1882 | 801-803 {xviii} |
690. | John Greenleaf Whittier. b. 1807, d. 1892 | 804 |
691. | Helen Selina, Lady Dufferin. b. 1807, d. 1867 | 805-807 |
692. | Caroline Elizabeth Sarah Norton. b. 1808, d. 1876 | 807-808 |
693. | Charles Tennyson Turner. b. 1808, d. 1879 | 808 |
694.-696. | Edgar Allan Poe. b. 1809, d. 1849 | 809-814 |
697.-698. | Edward Fitzgerald. b. 1809, d. 1883 | 814-818 |
699.-709. | Alfred Tennyson, Lord Tennyson. b. 1809, d. 1892 | 819-847 |
710. | Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton. b. 1809, d. 1885 | 848 |
711. | Henry Alford. b. 1810, d. 1871 | 849 |
712.-714. | Sir Samuel Ferguson. b. 1810, d. 1886 | 849-851 |
715.-730. | Robert Browning. b. 1812, d. 1889 | 852-867 |
731. | William Bell Scott. b. 1812, d. 1890 | 867-872 |
732.-733. | Aubrey De Vere. b. 1814, d. 1902 | 872-873 |
734. | George Fox. b. 1815 | 874 |
735.-738. | Emily Brontë. b. 1818, d. 1848 | 875-879 |
739.-740. | Charles Kingsley. b. 1819, d. 1875 | 879-880 |
741. | Arthur Hugh Clough. b. 1819, d. 1861 | 880-881 |
742.-743. | Walt Whitman. b. 1819, d. 1892 | 881-882 |
744. | John Ruskin. b. 1819, d. 1900 | 882 |
745. | Ebenezer Jones. b. 1820, d. 1860 | 883 |
746. | Frederick Locker-Lampson. b. 1821, d. 1895 | 884 |
747.-754. | Matthew Arnold. b. 1822, d. 1888 | 885-903 |
755.-756. | William Brighty Rands. b. 1823, d. 1880 | 904-905 |
757. | William Philpot. b. 1823, d. 1880 | 906-907 |
758.-759. | William (Johnson) Cory. b. 1823, d. 1892 | 907-908 |
760.-764. | Coventry Patmore. b. 1823, d. 1896 | 908-913 |
765.-768. | Sydney Dobell. b. 1824, d. 1874 | 913-921 |
769. | William Allingham. b. 1824, d. 1889 | 921-923 |
770. | George MacDonald. b. 1824, d. 1905 | 923 |
771. | Dante Gabriel Rossetti. b. 1828, d. 1882 | 923-928 |
772.-776. | George Meredith. b. 1828, d. 1909 | 929-942 |
777.-778. | Alexander Smith. b. 1829, d. 1867 | 942-945 |
779.-789. | Christina Georgina Rossetti. b. 1830, d. 1894 | 946-954 |
790.-793. | Thomas Edward Brown. b. 1830, d. 1897 | 955-956 |
794.-795. | Edward Robert Bulwer Lytton, Earl of Lytton. b. 1831, d. 1892 | 957-962 |
796.-799. | James Thomson. b. 1834, d. 1882 | 963-964 |
800.-802. | William Morris. b. 1834, d. 1896 | 965-967 |
803.-804. | Roden Berkeley Wriothesley Noel. b. 1834, d. 1894 | 967-969 |
805.-806. | Thomas Ashe. b. 1836, d. 1889 | 969-970 {xix} |
807. | Theodore Watts-Dunton. b. 1836, d. 1914 | 970-972 |
808.-811. | Algernon Charles Swinburne. b. 1837, d. 1909 | 972-991 |
812. | William Dean Howells. b. 1837 | 991 |
813. | Bret Harte. b. 1839, d. 1902 | 992 |
814.-815. | John Todhunter. b. 1839, d. 1916 | 993-995 |
816.-823. | Wilfrid Scawen Blunt. b. 1840 | 995-1002 |
824.-826. | Henry Austin Dobson. b. 1840 | 1002-1004 |
827. | Henry Clarence Kendall. b. 1841, d. 1882 | 1004-1006 |
828.-830. | Arthur William Edgar O’Shaughnessy. b. 1844, d. 1881 | 1006-1010 |
831. | John Boyle O’Reilly. b. 1844, d. 1890 | 1010 |
832.-840. | Robert Bridges. b. 1844 | 1011-1018 |
841. | Andrew Lang. b. 1844, d. 1912 | 1018 |
842.-844. | William Ernest Henley. b. 1849, d. 1903 | 1019-1022 |
845. | Edmund Gosse. b. 1849 | 1022-1023 |
846.-848. | Robert Louis Stevenson. b. 1850, d. 1894 | 1023-1025 |
849. | T. W. Rolleston. b. 1857 | 1025-1026 |
850.-851. | John Davidson. b. 1857, d. 1909 | 1026-1028 |
852.-854. | William Watson. b. 1858 | 1028-1031 |
855.-856. | Henry Charles Beeching. b. 1859 | 1031-1033 |
857. | Bliss Carman. b. 1861 | 1033-1034 |
858. | Douglas Hyde. b. 1861 | 1034-1035 |
859. | Arthur Christopher Benson. b. 1862 | 1035-1036 |
860. | Henry Newbolt. b. 1862 | 1036-1037 |
861. | Gilbert Parker. b. 1862 | 1038 |
862.-864. | William Butler Yeats. b. 1865 | 1038-1039 |
865.-867. | Rudyard Kipling. b. 1865 | 1040-1045 |
868.-869. | Richard Le Gallienne. b. 1866 | 1045-1047 |
870.-871. | Laurence Binyon. b. 1869 | 1047 |
872.-873. | ‘A. E.’ (George William Russell) | 1048-1049 |
874. | T. Sturge Moore. b. 1870 | 1049 |
875. | Francis Thompson, b. 1859, d. 1907 | 1050-1052 |
876. | Henry Cust. b. 1861, d. 1917 | 1053 |
877. | Katharine Tynan Hinkson. b. 1861 | 1053-1054 |
878. | Frances Bannerman | 1054-1055 |
879.-880. | Alice Meynell. b. 1850 | 1055-1056 |
881. | Dora Sigerson. d. 1918 | 1056-1057 |
882. | Margaret L. Woods. b. 1856 | 1057 |
883. | Anonymous | 1058 |
c. 1250
lhude] loud. awe] ewe. lhouth] loweth. sterteth] leaps. swike] cease.
c. 1300
on hyre lud] in her language. ich libbe] I live. semlokest] seemliest. he] she. bandoun] thraldom. hendy] gracious. y hent] seized, enjoyed. ichot] I wot. lyht] alighted. hire her] her hair. lossum] lovesome. loh] laughed. bote he] unless she. buen] be. make] mate. feye] like to die. nihtes] at night. wende] turn. for-thi] on that account. wonges waxeth won] cheeks grow wan.
2. levedi] lady. y-lent me on] arrived to me. so wyter mon] so wise a man. swyre] neck. may] maid. for-wake] worn out with vigils. so water in wore] as water in a weir. reve] rob. y-yerned yore] long been distressed. tholien] to endure. geynest under gore] comeliest under woman’s apparel. roun] tale, lay.
c. 1300
3. to toune] in its turn.
him threteth oo] is aye chiding them. huere] their. woderove] woodruff. ferly fele] marvellous many. wlyteth] whistle, or look. rayleth hire rode] clothes herself in red. mandeth hire bleo] sends forth her light. lossom to seo] lovesome to see. fille] thyme. wowes] woo. miles] males. murgeth] make merry. makes] mates. striketh] flows, trickles. mody meneth] the moody man makes moan. so doth mo] so do many. on of tho] one of them. breme] lustily. deowes] dews. donketh] make dank. deores] dears, lovers. huere derne rounes] their secret tales. domes forte deme] for to give (decide) their decisions.
3. cloude] clod. wunne weole] wealth of joy. y wole forgon] I will forgo. wyht] wight. fleme] banished.
c. 1300
4. Ichot] I know. burde] maiden. menskful] worshipful. feir] fair. fonde] take, prove. wurhliche] noble. won] multitude. y nuste] I knew not. lussomore in londe] lovelier on earth. suetyng] sweetheart. lefliche] lovely. fonge] take between hands. murthes] mirths, joys. mote heo monge] may she mingle. brid] bird. breme] full of life.
Rode] the Cross. lure] face. lumes] beams. bleo] colour. suetly swyre] darling neck. forte] for to. hue, heo] she. clannesse] cleanness, purity. parvenke] periwinkle. solsecle] sunflower. won] wan.
c. 1300
5. this leves] these leaves. sike] sigh. nys] is not. also hit ner nere] as though it had never been. soth] sooth. bote] but, except. thah] though. faleweth] fadeth. albydene] altogether. y not whider] I know not whither. her duelle] here dwell.
c. 1300
on] one. levedy] lady. thuster] dark. pris] prize.
c. 1350
lestenyt] listen. word] world. xuld] should. schen] beautiful. hevene qwyn] heaven’s queen. bote] salvation.
1260-1340
8. nevene] name. glew] gladden. hurde] flock.
d. 1395
9. liking] liberty. na ellys nocht] nor aught else.
9. yarnyt] yearned for. perquer] thoroughly, by heart.
1340?-1400
10. repeyreth] repair ye. starf] died.
11. disteyne] bedim. y-fere] together.
halt] holdeth.
12. sclat] slate
1368-9?-1450?
13. hier] heir. combre-worlde] encumberer of earth. slow] slew.
1370?-1450?
14. bygged] built. palys] palace.
1394-1437
15. suete] sweet. Lufe] Love.
1425-1500
kepand] keeping. fe] sheep, cattle. him till] to him. dule in dern] sorrow in secret. dill] soothe. but dreid] without dread, i. e. there is no fear or doubt. raik on raw] range in row. lude] loved. leir] learn. lair] lore. heynd] gentle. feir] demeanour. deir] daunt. dre] endure. preiss] endeavour.
wanrufe] unrest. haill] healthy, whole. aboif] above, up yonder. and] if. tak tent] give heed. reid] advise. bute for baill] remedy for hurt. bot gif] but if, unless. daill] deal. mawgre haif I] I am uneasy. reivis] robbest. roiff] quiet.
drest] beset. lemman] mistress. sicht] sigh. in hir intent] in her inward thought. brayd] strode. bent] coarse grass. schent] destroyed. alis] ails. be that] by the time that. till] to. tuke keip] paid attention.
hard] heard. gestis] romances. mot eik] may add to. be] by. janglour] talebearer. wend] weened.
16. howp] hope. but lett] without hindrance. anneuche] enough. holttis hair] grey woodlands. leuche] laughed. wreuch] peevish. huche] heuch, cliff.
17. hinder yeir] last year.
ring] reign. fald] enfold. ying] young. fairheid] beauty. air] heir. laitis] manners. bot and] and also. scho wynnit] she dwelt. bigly] well-built. fold] earth. paramour] lovingly. our allquhair] all the world over. a lyt besyde] a little, (i. e. close) beside. of ane] as any. kest] cast. dungering] dungeon. into hir waine] in her lodging. hellis cruk] hell-claw.
quhill] until. dungin doun] beaten down. his awin persoun] himself. withouten feir] without companion.
the bricht] the fair one. likame] body. lowsit hir of. bandoun] loosed her from thraldom.
quert] prison. coft] bought. straitly led] strictly carried out.
17. hend] gentle.
1465-1520?
18. rois] rose. wenit] weened, esteemed. garth] garden-close. to seyne] to see. that I of mene] that I complain of, mourn for.
gladdith] rejoice. Troynovaunt] Troja nova or Trinovantum. fourmeth] appeareth. geraflour] gillyflower.
are] oar. small] slender. kellis] hoods, head-dresses. guye] guide.
schouris] showers. cumin] come, entered. seir] various. erd] earth. lest] least. synnaris] sinners. benyng] benign.
attour] over, above. perst] pierced. raiss] rose. best] beast.
heill] health. bruckle] brittle, feeble. slee] sly. dansand] dancing. sicker] sure. wicker] willow. wannis] wanes. mellie] mellay.
sowkand] sucking. campion] champion. stour] fight. piscence] puissance. straik] stroke. supplee] save. makaris] poets. the lave] the leave, the rest. padyanis] pageants.
anteris] adventures. schour] shower. endite] inditing. fallowis] fellows.
21. wichtis] wights, persons. man] must. dispone] make disposition.
15th Cent.
22. sheyne] bright.
15th Cent.
23. makeles] matchless. ches] chose.
15th Cent. (?)
24. yede] went.
het] promised.
bait] resting-place. weet] wet. in fere] together.
crippe] scrip. mene] care for.
15th Cent.
25. never a dele] never a bit. than] then.
in fere] in company together.
rede I can] counsel I know.
part with] share with. tho] those.
hele] health.
yede] went.
on the splene] that is, in haste.
16th Cent.
16th Cent.(?)
16th Cent.
16th Cent.(?)
29. flyte] scold.
cloth in grain] scarlet cloth. sigh clout] a rag for straining.
29. threap] argue.
1460?-1529
30. margerain] marjoram.
31. Isaphill] Hypsipyle. coliander] coriander seed, an aromatic. pomander] a ball of perfume. Cassander] Cassandra.
d. 1523
32. defarre] undo.
1503-1542
The Lover Beseecheth his Mistress not to Forget his Steadfast Faith and True Intent
An Earnest Suit to his Unkind Mistress, not to Forsake him
35. grame] sorrow.
1516-47
Wherein each thing renews, save only the Lover
39. make] mate.
39. mings] mingles, mixes.
40. drencheth] i.e. is drenched or drowned.
1519-62
42. fray] affright.
1520?-158-
43. hald] keep. sen] since.
belappit] downtrodden. perigall] made equal to, privileged. garth] garden-close. laif] rest. with mind inwart] with inner mind, i.e. in spirit.
c. 1550
1523-66
1525?-77
1540?-1610?
48. shroudis] dress themselves. shawis] woods. skaillis] clears. gowans] daisies. low] flame. rone] rowan.
pairty] partner, mate. tursis] carry. tyndis] antlers. grone] groan, bell. hurchonis] hedgehogs, ‘urchins.’ maikis] mates. fone] foes. stonèd steed] stallion. crampis] prances. lampis] gallops.
48. freikis] men, warriors. wight wapins] stout weapons. at Titan] over against Titan (the sun), or read ‘as.’ flittis] are cast. blonkis] white palfreys.
1530?-1575
16th Cent.
o’erfret] adorned. shawis] woods. sheen] beautiful. mene] mourn. hyd] skin. blinkis] gets a glimpse. dulce amene] gentle and pleasant one. mae] more.
16th Cent.
51. sheen] bright. til] into. schouris] showers. bewis] boughs. birth] kind. 52. wiss] wish.
16th Cent.
heill] health. invart] inward. venust] delightful. glowffin] blink on awaking. oxter] armpit. a-forrow] aforetime.
Tottel’s Miscellany, 1557
Tottel’s Miscellany, 1557
54. neare] nearer.
William Byrd’s Songs of
Sundry Natures, 1589
The Passionate Pilgrim, 1599
? by William Shakespeare
England’s Helicon, 1600
Phyllida. Corydon, arise, my Corydon! Titan shineth clear. Corydon. Who is it that calleth Corydon? Who is it that I hear? Phyl. Phyllida, thy true love, calleth thee, Arise then, arise then, Arise and keep thy flock with me! Cor. Phyllida, my true love, is it she? I come then, I come then, I come and keep my flock with thee. Phyl. Here are cherries ripe for my Corydon; Eat them for my sake. Cor. Here’s my oaten pipe, my lovely one, Sport for thee to make. Phyl. Here are threads, my true love, fine as silk, To knit thee, to knit thee, A pair of stockings white as milk. Cor. Here are reeds, my true love, fine and neat, To make thee, to make thee, A bonnet to withstand the heat. Phyl. I will gather flowers, my Corydon, To set in thy cap. Cor. I will gather pears, my lovely one, To put in thy lap. Phyl. I will buy my true love garters gay, For Sundays, for Sundays, To wear about his legs so tall. Cor. I will buy my true love yellow say, For Sundays, for Sundays, To wear about her middle small. Phyl. When my Corydon sits on a hill Making melody— Cor. When my lovely one goes to her wheel, Singing cheerily— Phyl. Sure methinks my true love doth excel For sweetness, for sweetness, Our Pan, that old Arcadian knight. Cor. And methinks my true love bears the bell For clearness, for clearness, Beyond the nymphs that be so bright. Phyl. Had my Corydon, my Corydon, Been, alack! her swain— Cor. Had my lovely one, my lovely one, Been in Ida plain—
say] soie, silk.
Phyl. Cynthia Endymion had refused, Preferring, preferring, My Corydon to play withal. Cor. The Queen of Love had been excused Bequeathing, bequeathing, My Phyllida the golden ball. Phyl. Yonder comes my mother, Corydon! Whither shall I fly? Cor. Under yonder beech, my lovely one, While she passeth by. Phyl. Say to her thy true love was not here; Remember, remember, To-morrow is another day. Cor. Doubt me not, my true love, do not fear; Farewell then, farewell then! Heaven keep our loves alway!
John Dowland’s Second Book of
Songs or Airs, 1600
Christ Church MS.
Christ Church MS.
Song of Mary the Mother of
Christ (London: E. Alide), 1601
Robert Jones’s Second Book of
Songs and Airs, 1601
Davison’s Poetical Rhapsody, 1602
Davison’s Poetical Rhapsody, 1602
? F. or W. Davison
{95}
John Dowland’s Third and Last
Book of Songs or Airs, 1603
John Dowland’s Third and Last
Book of Songs or Airs, 1603
Thomas Bateson’s First Set of
English Madrigals, 1604
Captain Tobias Hume’s The First
Part of Airs, &c., 1605
Thomas Ford’s Music of
Sundry Kinds, 1607
Thomas Ford’s Music of
Sundry Kinds, 1607
John Wilbye’s Second Set of Madrigals, 1609
John Attye’s First Book of Airs, 1622
1542-1626
The Arbor of Amorous
Devices, 1593-4
1552-1618
1552-1599
79. make] mate.
In praise of Eliza, Queen of the Shepherds
medled] mixed. yfere] together.
soote] sweet. coronations] carnations. sops-in-wine] striped pinks. pawnce] pansy. chevisaunce] wallflower. flowre delice] iris.
tead] torch.
ruddock] redbreast.
croud] violin.
An Elegy
1553-1606
1553-1633
1554-86
90. leave] cease.
94. prease] press.
1554-1628
96. chimneys] cheminées, chimney-screens of tapestry work.
96. deceive] betray.
1556?-1625
1558?-97
Œnone. Fair and fair, and twice so fair, As fair as any may be; The fairest shepherd on our green, A love for any lady. Paris. Fair and fair, and twice so fair, As fair as any may be; Thy love is fair for thee alone And for no other lady. Œnone. My love is fair, my love is gay, As fresh as bin the flowers in May And of my love my roundelay, My merry, merry, merry roundelay, Concludes with Cupid’s curse,— ‘They that do change old love for new Pray gods they change for worse!’ Ambo Simul. They that do change old love for new, Pray gods they change for worse! Œnone. Fair and fair, etc. Paris. Fair and fair, etc. Thy love is fair, etc. Œnone. My love can pipe, my love can sing, My love can many a pretty thing, And of his lovely praises ring My merry, merry, merry roundelays Amen to Cupid’s curse,— ‘They that do change,’ etc. Paris. They that do change, etc. Ambo. Fair and fair, etc.
(TO QUEEN ELIZABETH)
1560-92
1560-1609
shaid] parted. stripe] rill. offuskit] darkened.
boulden] swollen. sheen] bright. skails] clears. simples] herbs.
cessile] yielding, ceasing. flourishes] blossoms.
1560-1634
1561-95
unmeddled] unmixed.
1562?-1613?
1562-1619
Siren. Come, worthy Greek! Ulysses, come, Possess these shores with me: The winds and seas are troublesome, And here we may be free. Here may we sit and view their toil That travail in the deep, And joy the day in mirth the while, And spend the night in sleep. Ulysses. Fair Nymph, if fame or honour were To be attain’d with ease, Then would I come and rest me there, And leave such toils as these. But here it dwells, and here must I With danger seek it forth: To spend the time luxuriously Becomes not men of worth. Siren. Ulysses, O be not deceived With that unreal name; This honour is a thing conceived, And rests on others’ fame: Begotten only to molest Our peace, and to beguile The best thing of our life—our rest, And give us up to toil. Ulysses. Delicious Nymph, suppose there were No honour nor report, Yet manliness would scorn to wear The time in idle sport: For toil doth give a better touch To make us feel our joy, And ease finds tediousness as much As labour yields annoy. Siren. Then pleasure likewise seems the shore Whereto tends all your toil, Which you forgo to make it more, And perish oft the while. Who may disport them diversely Find never tedious day, And ease may have variety As well as action may. Ulysses. But natures of the noblest frame These toils and dangers please; And they take comfort in the same As much as you in ease; And with the thought of actions past Are recreated still: When Pleasure leaves a touch at last To show that it was ill. Siren. That doth Opinion only cause That’s out of Custom bred, Which makes us many other laws Than ever Nature did. No widows wail for our delights, Our sports are without blood; The world we see by warlike wights Receives more hurt than good. Ulysses. But yet the state of things require These motions of unrest: And these great Spirits of high desire Seem born to turn them best: To purge the mischiefs that increase And all good order mar: For oft we see a wicked peace To be well changed for war. Siren. Well, well, Ulysses, then I see I shall not have thee here: And therefore I will come to thee, And take my fortune there. I must be won, that cannot win, Yet lost were I not won; For beauty hath created been T’ undo, or be undone.
1563-1601
1563-1618
1563-1631
bilbos] swords, from Bilboa.
1564-93
(WRITTEN BY SIR WALTER RALEIGH)
1564-1616
126. keel] skim.
Fairy Land
134. cypres] crape.
Amiens sings:
Jaques replies:
? or John Fletcher.
{187}
? or John Fletcher.
142. dole] lamentation. convent] summon.
? or John Fletcher.
{188}
can] knows.
THRENOS
Sonnets
149. foison] plenty.
1565-1630?
1567-1601
1593
1567?-1619
Devotion
16th Cent.
177. teint] tint, hue.
1568-1639
1569-1626
1570-1638
1573-1637
189. allay] alloy.
Epitaphs
i
ii
A child of Queen Elizabeth’s Chapel
to the Immortal Memory and Friendship of that noble pair, Sir Lucius Cary and Sir H. Morison
1573-1631
1574-1627
1575-1641
157?-1650
205. stare] starling.
1579-1625
214. mazer] a bowl of maple-wood.
?-1630?
218. dole] lamentation.
1580?-1640
1580-1650
1583-1627
1585-1649
225. paramours] = sing. paramour. band] bound.
158?-1623
1586-1616
1586-1639
1588-1667
239. peer] companion.
1588-1643
Epitaphs
1591-1674
beads] prayers.
247. green-gown] tumble on the grass.
255. trental] services for the dead, of thirty masses.
271. paddocks] frogs.
upon a Child that died
274. Platonick year] the perfect or cyclic year, when the sun, moon, and five planets end their revolutions together and start anew. See Timæus, p. 39.
1592-1644
Respice Finem
1592-1669
1593-1632
Man. Sweetest Saviour, if my soul Were but worth the having, Quickly should I then control Any thought of waving. But when all my care and pains Cannot give the name of gains To Thy wretch so full of stains, What delight or hope remains? Saviour. What, child, is the balance thine, Thine the poise and measure? If I say, ‘Thou shalt be Mine,’ Finger not My treasure. What the gains in having thee Do amount to, only He Who for man was sold can see That transferr’d th’ accounts to Me. Man. But as I can see no merit Leading to this favour, So the way to fit me for it Is beyond my savour. As the reason, then, is Thine, So the way is none of mine; I disclaim the whole design; Sin disclaims and I resign. Saviour. That is all: if that I could Get without repining; And My clay, My creature, would Follow My resigning;
savour] savoir, knowing.
That as I did freely part With My glory and desert, Left all joys to feel all smart—— Man. Ah, no more! Thou break’st my heart!
1596-1666
1595?-1639?
293. imp’d] grafted with new feathers.
On the Lady Mary Villiers
1604-1672
1605-1654
1605-1635
to hasten Him into the Country
1606-1668
Lover. Your beauty, ripe and calm and fresh As eastern summers are, Must now, forsaking time and flesh, Add light to some small star. Philosopher. Whilst she yet lives, were stars decay’d, Their light by hers relief might find; But Death will lead her to a shade Where Love is cold and Beauty blind. Lover. Lovers, whose priests all poets are, Think every mistress, when she dies, Is changed at least into a star: And who dares doubt the poets wise? Philosopher. But ask not bodies doom’d to die To what abode they go; Since Knowledge is but Sorrow’s spy, It is not safe to know.
1606-1687
1608-1674
The Spirit sings:
Sabrina replies:
A Lament for a friend drowned in his passage from Chester on the Irish Seas, 1637
From ‘Samson Agonistes’
1609-1642
1608-1666
1611-1643
Who for his sake wished herself younger
1612-1650
1612?-1685
1613?-1649
Who died and were buried together.
1618-1658
1618-1667
Anacreontics
1620-1666
1621-1678
upon Cromwell’s Return from Ireland
Written after the Civil Wars
slow-chapt] slow-jawed, slowly devouring.
1621-1695
1628-1688
ferlie] marvel. tett] tuft, lock. harp and carp] play and recite (as a minstrel).
leven]? lawn.
dought] could.
368. skeely] skilful.
lift] sky. lap] sprang.
flatter’d] tossed afloat. kames] combs.
jimp] trim. kame] comb. haw bayberry]? a corruption for ‘braw ivory’: or bayberry may = laurel-wood.
cramoisie] crimson. reiver] robber.
dow] can.
369. gore] skirt, waist.
370. lawin’] reckoning. marrow] mate, husband or wife. dowie] doleful. houms] water-meads.
striped] thrust.
twin] part in two.
jimp] trim.
yett] gate.
tyne] lose.
dule ye dree] grief you suffer.
town] stead.
buskit] attired.
wud] mad. grund-wa’] ground-wall.
jimp] slender, trim. row] roll, wrap. Busk and boun] trim up and prepare to go.
freits] ill omens. lowe] flame. wighty] stout, doughty.
wroken] avenged.
row’d] rolled, wrapped. greet] cry.
hooly] gently.
soummin’] swimming.
fashes] troubles. syke] marsh. sheugh] trench.
378. channerin’] fretting.
379. make] mate.
(SCOTTISH VERSION)
380. corbies] ravens.
380. fail] turf. hause] neck. theek] thatch.
381. fleet] house-room.
A CAROL
388. cramasie] crimson.
389. jow] beat, toll.
Charokko] Scirocco.
guedes] goods, property of any kind.
1602-1645
1625-1678
1653-1723
1630-1687
1631-1664
1631-1700
To the Pious Memory of the accomplished young lady, Mrs. Anne Killigrew, excellent in the two sister arts of Poesy and Painting
c. 1678
1635-1691
1637?-1674
1637-1688
1638-1706
Written at Sea, in the First Dutch War (1665), the night before an Engagement.
1639-1701
1640-1689
1647-1680
(After Quarles)
1649-1720
1652-1685
1653-1683
1661-1707
1664-1721
LISETTA’S REPLY
to Lady Margaret Cavendish Holles-Harley, when a Child
1663-1708
1665-1746
may] maid. biggit] built. gait] way, path. hecht] promised. titty] sister. dwam] sudden illness. appose] suppose. pickles] small quantities.
430. hing] hang. dowie] dejectedly. hund the tykes] direct the dogs. steeks] closes. linkin’] tripping.
1670-1729.
1672-1719
1674-1748
1679-1718
1686-1758
wawking] watching. lave] rest. wale] choice, best.
1687-1761
1688-1732
1688-1744
1691?-1762
1693?-1743
?-1745
1700-1748
1709-1773
1709-1784
1715-1781
1716-1771
A PINDARIC ODE
1721-1759
1721-1770
1721-1771
1722-1770
glede] kite. Xiphias] sword-fish.
1727-1805
466. loaning] lane, field-track. wede] weeded. bughts] sheep-folds. daffing] joking. leglin] milk-pail. hairst] harvest. bandsters] binders. lyart] gray-haired. runkled] wrinkled. fleeching] coaxing.
466. swankies] lusty lads. bogle] bogy, hide-and-seek. dool] mourning.
1728-1774
1735-1797
1731-1800
1735-1803
1740-1821
473. yowes] ewes. knowes] knolls, little hills. rows] rolls. row’d] rolled, wrapped.
473. dool] dule, sorrow. lift] sky.
1743-1825
18th Cent.
1748-1788
1750-1825
1746-1794
1752-1770
479. cryne] hair. rode] complexion.
dent] fasten. gre] grow. ouph] elf.
1754-1832
1757-1827
1759-1796
493. stour] dust, turmoil.
494. airts] points of the compass. row] roll.
gowans] daisies. fit] foot. dine] dinner-time. fiere] partner. guid-willie waught] friendly draught.
496. tassie] cup.
497. jo] sweetheart. brent] smooth, unwrinkled. beld] bald. pow] pate.
497. canty] cheerful.
498. or’] ere.
498. staw] stole.
499. wage] stake, plight.
scaith] harm. tent] watch. steer] molest.
drumlie] miry.
lee-lang] livelong.
lift] sky.
1750-1819
1762-1850
1762-1851
1765-1847
1766-1845
1770-1835
514. yorlin] the yellow-hammer. hindberrye] bramble. minny] mother. greet] mourn.
westlin] western. its lane] alone, by itself. low’d] flamed. eiry leme] eery gleam. linn] waterfall. joup] mantle.
swa’d] swelled. waik] a row of deep damp grass. wene]? whin, a furze-bush. maike] a mate, match, equal. his lane] alone, by himself. happ’d] covered. speer] inquire. fere] fellow. eident] unintermittently.
kemed] combed.
kyth] show, appear.
gleid] spark, glow. elyed] vanished.
marlèd] variegated, parti-coloured.
leifu’] lone, wistful. girn’d] snarled. weir] war.
gowl’d] howled. geck’d] mocked. arles] money paid on striking a bargain; fig. a beating. lened] crouched. swink’d] laboured. brainyell’d] stirred, beat. mooted] moulted.
sey] essay. unmeled] unblemished. her lane] alone, by herself.
seymar]=cymar, a slight covering. raike] range, wander. bughts] milking-pens. goved] stared, gazed. corby] raven. houf] haunt.
514. raike] ramble. tod] fox. attour] out over. forhooy’d] neglected.
1770-1850
Lucy
England, 1802
The Sonnet
Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood
There was a time when meadow, grove, and stream, The earth, and every common sight, To me did seem Apparell’d in celestial light, The glory and the freshness of a dream, It is not now as it hath been of yore;— Turn wheresoe’er I may, By night or day, The things which I have seen I now can see no more. The rainbow comes and goes, And lovely is the rose; The moon doth with delight Look round her when the heavens are bare; Waters on a starry night Are beautiful and fair; The sunshine is a glorious birth; But yet I know, where’er I go, That there hath pass’d away a glory from the earth. Now, while the birds thus sing a joyous song, And while the young lambs bound As to the tabor’s sound, To me alone there came a thought of grief: A timely utterance gave that thought relief, And I again am strong: The cataracts blow their trumpets from the steep; No more shall grief of mine the season wrong; I hear the echoes through the mountains throng, The winds come to me from the fields of sleep, And all the earth is gay; Land and sea Give themselves up to jollity, And with the heart of May Doth every beast keep holiday;— Thou Child of Joy, Shout round me, let me hear thy shouts, thou happy Shepherd-boy! Ye blessèd creatures, I have heard the call Ye to each other make; I see The heavens laugh with you in your jubilee; My heart is at your festival, My head hath its coronal, The fullness of your bliss, I feel—I feel it all. O evil day! if I were sullen While Earth herself is adorning, This sweet May-morning, And the children are culling On every side, In a thousand valleys far and wide, Fresh flowers; while the sun shines warm, And the babe leaps up on his mother’s arm:— I hear, I hear, with joy I hear! —But there’s a tree, of many, one, A single field which I have look’d upon, Both of them speak of something that is gone: The pansy at my feet Doth the same tale repeat: Whither is fled the visionary gleam? Where is it now, the glory and the dream? Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting: The Soul that rises with us, our life’s Star, Hath had elsewhere its setting, And cometh from afar: Not in entire forgetfulness, And not in utter nakedness, But trailing clouds of glory do we come From God, who is our home: Heaven lies about us in our infancy! Shades of the prison-house begin to close Upon the growing Boy, But he beholds the light, and whence it flows, He sees it in his joy; The Youth, who daily farther from the east Must travel, still is Nature’s priest, And by the vision splendid Is on his way attended; At length the Man perceives it die away, And fade into the light of common day. Earth fills her lap with pleasures of her own; Yearnings she hath in her own natural kind, And, even with something of a mother’s mind, And no unworthy aim, The homely nurse doth all she can To make her foster-child, her inmate Man, Forget the glories he hath known, And that imperial palace whence he came. Behold the Child among his new-born blisses, A six years’ darling of a pigmy size! See, where ’mid work of his own hand he lies, Fretted by sallies of his mother’s kisses, With light upon him from his father’s eyes! See, at his feet, some little plan or chart, Some fragment from his dream of human life, Shaped by himself with newly-learnèd art; A wedding or a festival, A mourning or a funeral; And this hath now his heart, And unto this he frames his song: Then will he fit his tongue To dialogues of business, love, or strife; But it will not be long Ere this be thrown aside, And with new joy and pride The little actor cons another part; Filling from time to time his ‘humorous stage’ With all the Persons, down to palsied Age, That Life brings with her in her equipage; As if his whole vocation Were endless imitation. Thou, whose exterior semblance doth belie Thy soul’s immensity; Thou best philosopher, who yet dost keep Thy heritage, thou eye among the blind, That, deaf and silent, read’st the eternal deep, Haunted for ever by the eternal mind,— Mighty prophet! Seer blest! On whom those truths do rest, Which we are toiling all our lives to find, In darkness lost, the darkness of the grave; Thou, over whom thy Immortality Broods like the Day, a master o’er a slave, A presence which is not to be put by; To whom the grave Is but a lonely bed without the sense or sight Of day or the warm light, A place of thought where we in waiting lie; Thou little Child, yet glorious in the might Of heaven-born freedom on thy being’s height, Why with such earnest pains dost thou provoke The years to bring the inevitable yoke, Thus blindly with thy blessedness at strife? Full soon thy soul shall have her earthly freight, And custom lie upon thee with a weight, Heavy as frost, and deep almost as life! O joy! that in our embers Is something that doth live, That nature yet remembers What was so fugitive! The thought of our past years in me doth breed Perpetual benediction: not indeed For that which is most worthy to be blest— Delight and liberty, the simple creed Of childhood, whether busy or at rest, With new-fledged hope still fluttering in his breast:— Not for these I raise The song of thanks and praise; But for those obstinate questionings Of sense and outward things, Fallings from us, vanishings; Blank misgivings of a Creature Moving about in worlds not realized, High instincts before which our mortal Nature Did tremble like a guilty thing surprised: But for those first affections, Those shadowy recollections, Which, be they what they may, Are yet the fountain-light of all our day, Are yet a master-light of all our seeing; Uphold us, cherish, and have power to make Our noisy years seem moments in the being Of the eternal Silence: truths that wake, To perish never: Which neither listlessness, nor mad endeavour, Nor Man nor Boy, Nor all that is at enmity with joy, Can utterly abolish or destroy! Hence in a season of calm weather Though inland far we be, Our souls have sight of that immortal sea Which brought us hither, Can in a moment travel thither, And see the children sport upon the shore, And hear the mighty waters rolling evermore. Then sing, ye birds, sing, sing a joyous song! And let the young lambs bound As to the tabor’s sound! We in thought will join your throng, Ye that pipe and ye that play, Ye that through your hearts to-day Feel the gladness of the May! What though the radiance which was once so bright Be now for ever taken from my sight, Though nothing can bring back the hour Of splendour in the grass, of glory in the flower; We will grieve not, rather find Strength in what remains behind; In the primal sympathy Which having been must ever be; In the soothing thoughts that spring Out of human suffering; In the faith that looks through death, In years that bring the philosophic mind. And O ye Fountains, Meadows, Hills, and Groves, Forebode not any severing of our loves! Yet in my heart of hearts I feel your might; I only have relinquished one delight To live beneath your more habitual sway. I love the brooks which down their channels fret, Even more than when I tripp’d lightly as they; The innocent brightness of a new-born Day Is lovely yet; The clouds that gather round the setting sun Do take a sober colouring from an eye That hath kept watch o’er man’s mortality; Another race hath been, and other palms are won. Thanks to the human heart by which we live, Thanks to its tenderness, its joys, and fears, To me the meanest flower that blows can give Thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears.
Surprised by joy—impatient as the Wind I turned to share the transport—O! with whom But Thee, deep buried in the silent tomb, That spot which no vicissitude can find? Love, faithful love, recall'd thee to my mind— But how could I forget thee? Through what power, Even for the least division of an hour, Have I been so beguiled as to be blind To my most grievous loss?—That thought's return Was the worst pang that sorrow ever bore, Save one, one only, when I stood forlorn, Knowing my heart's best treasure was no more; That neither present time, nor years unborn Could to my sight that heavenly face restore.
1771-1832
Chorus. Yet Brignall banks are fresh and fair, And Greta woods are green, And you may gather flowers there Would grace a summer queen.
Patriotism
1772-1834
AN ALLEGORY
1774-1843
1775-1864
Leucippe. But I would rather go when they Sit round about and sing and play. Then why so hurry me? for you Like play and song, and shepherds too. Alciphron. I like the shepherds very well, And song and play, as you can tell. But there is play, I sadly fear, And song I would not have you hear. Leucippe. What can it be? What can it be? Alciphron. To you may none of them repeat The play that you have play’d with me, The song that made your bosom beat. Leucippe. Don’t keep your arm about my waist. Alciphron. Might you not stumble? Leucippe. Well then, do. But why are we in all this haste? Alciphron. To sing. Leucippe. Alas! and not play too?
1775-1834
1774-1844
1779-1852
1781-1829
1781-1849
1784-1843
589. tint] lost.
1784-1859
1785-1866
1787-1854
1788-1824
1788-1846
1791-1823
1792-1822
AN IMITATION
1792-1878
619. cleedin’] clothing.
1792-1866
1793-1864
1793-1835
1795-1821
FROM ‘ENDYMION’
623. sea-spry] sea-spray.
(Written on May-Day, 1818)
Written on the Blank Page before Beaumont and Fletcher’s Tragi-Comedy ‘The Fair Maid of the Inn’
1795-1839
FROM THE IRISH
1795-1846
1795-1846
On a Gift-ring carelessly lost
1796-1849
1798-1845
1798-1848
655. kentna] knew not. wi’ fient an arrow] i. q. with deuce an arrow. swithe] hie quickly. laithfu’] regretful.
dowie] dejectedly. weelfaur’d] well-favoured, comely. happit] covered up. lootit] lowered. pawkie] sly. glower’d] stared.
655. e’e-bree] eyebrow. lug] ear.
1800-1886
1800-1859
1801-1886
1802-1839
1802-1850
1803-1840
1803-1840
1803-1849
1803-1882
1803-1884
A LANDSCAPE IN BERKSHIRE
1804-1875
1805-1875
1805-1866
1806-1861
Sonnets from the Portuguese
1807-1898
1807-1882
1807-1892
1807-1867
1808-1876
1808-1879
1809-1849
1809-1883
1809-1892
(ARTHUR HENRY HALLAM, MDCCCXXXIII)
1809-1885
1810-1871
1810-1886
FROM THE IRISH
FROM THE IRISH
1812-1889
1812-1890
731. miminy] prim, demure.
gleg] bright, sharp. wud] mad.
randies] viragoes. flytin’] scolding. skirlin’] shrieking. souter] cobbler. doited] mazed. a-widdershin] the wrong way of the sun: or E. to W. through N.
waled] chose. cantrip] magic.
stour] dust. cramoisie] crimson.
ayont] beyond. glamourie] wizardry.
1814-1902
1815-?
FROM THE IRISH OF THOMAS LAVELLE
1818-1848
1819-1875
1819-1861
1819-1892
1819-1900
1820-1860
1821-1895
1822-1888
1823-1880
1823-1889
1823-1892
1823-1896
1824-1874
1824-1889
1824-1905
1828-1882
1828-1909
1829-1867
1830-1894
FROM ‘THE PRINCE’S PROGRESS’
1830-1897
1831-1892
1834-1882
1834-1896
1834-1894
1836-1889
1836-1914
1837-1909
(IN MEMORY OF CHARLES BAUDELAIRE)
1837
1839-1902
1839-1916
1840
b. 1840
Triolet
Rondeau
1841-1882
1844-1881
1844-1890
1844
1844-1912
1849-1903
b. 1849
1850-1894
b. 1857
FROM THE IRISH OF ANGUS O’GILLAN
1857-1909
b. 1858
1859-1919
A BOY’S SONG
b. 1861
b. 1861
FROM THE IRISH
b. 1862
b. 1862
b. 1862
b. 1865
b. 1865
June 22, 1897
b. 1866
b. 1869
b. 1853
b. 1870
1859-1907
1861-1917
b. 1861
b. 1850
d. 1918
b. 1856
1825-1900
The references are to the numbers of the poems
A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, V, W, Y.
Addison, Joseph, 433.
‘A.E.,’ 872, 873.
Ainslie, Hew, 619.
Akenside, Mark, 461-463.
Alford, Henry, 711.
Allingham, William, 769.
Anonymous, 1-7, 22-29, 50-72, 367-392.
Arnold, Matthew, 747-754.
Ashe, Thomas, 805, 806.
Ayton, Sir Robert, 182, 183.
Baillie, Joanna, 510.
Baillie, Lady Grisel, 430.
Bannerman, Frances, 878.
Barbauld, Anna Lætitia, 474.
Barbour, John, 9.
Barnefield, Richard, 203.
Barnes, William, 658, 659.
Beattie, James, 472.
Beaumont, Francis, 234.
Beaumont, Sir John, 223.
Beddoes, Thomas Lovell, 666-668.
Beeching, Henry Charles, 855, 856.
Behn, Aphra, 411, 412.
Benson, Arthur Christopher, 859.
Binyon, Laurence, 870, 871.
Blackmore, R. D., 883.
Blake, William, 483-492.
Blunt, Wilfrid Scawen, 816-823.
Bowles, William Lisle, 509.
Boyd, Mark Alexander, 114.
Breton, Nicholas, 73, 74 (?).
Bridges, Robert, 832-840.
Brome, Alexander, 354.
Brooke, Lord, 96.
Broome, William, 446, 447
Brontë, Emily, 735-738.
Brown, Thomas Edward, 790-793.
Browne, William, of Tavistock, 240-246.
Browning, Elizabeth Barrett, 678-687.
Browning, Robert, 715-730.
Buckinghamshire, Duke of, 417, 418.
Bunyan, John, 366.
Burns, Robert, 493-506.
Byron, Lord, 597-601.
Callanan, Jeremiah Joseph, 638.
Campbell, Thomas, 580, 581.
Campion, Thomas, 168-176.
Carew, Thomas, 289-295.
Carey, Henry, 444, 445.
Carman, Bliss, 857.
Cartwright, William, 330-333.
Chapman, George, 107.
Chatterton, Thomas, 479.
Chaucer, Geoffrey, 10-12.
Clare, John, 621.
Clough, Arthur Hugh, 741.
{1061}Coleridge, Hartley, 643-646.
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 549-555.
Coleridge, Sara, 661, 662.
Collins, William, 457-460.
Congreve, William, 431, 432.
Constable, Henry, 110.
Cory, William (Johnson), 758-9.
Cotton, Charles, 396.
Cowley, Abraham, 349-353.
Cowper, William, 470, 471.
Crabbe, George, 480-482.
Crashaw, Richard, 336-342.
Cunningham, Allan, 589-591.
Cunninghame-Graham, Robert, of Gartmore, 469.
Cust, Henry, 876.
Cutts, Lord, 421.
Daniel, Samuel, 111-113.
Darley, George, 640-642.
Davenant, Sir William, 301-303.
Davidson, John, 850, 851.
Davies, Sir John, 181.
Davison, F. or W. (?), 64.
Dekker, Thomas, 204.
De Vere, Aubrey, 732, 733.
De Vere, Sir Aubrey, 602.
Dobell, Sydney, 765-768.
Dobson, Henry Austin, 824-826.
Donne, John, 195-202.
Dorset, Earl of, 408.
Drayton, Michael, 116-120.
Drummond, William, of Hawthornden, 224-232.
Dryden, John, 398-402.
Dufferin, Lady, 691.
Dunbar, William, 18-21.
D’Urfey, Thomas, 395.
Edwardes, Richard, 46.
Elliott, Ebenezer, 587, 588.
Elliot, Jane, 466.
Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 669-672.
Etherege, Sir George, 404, 405.
Fanshawe, Sir Richard, 329.
Ferguson, Sir Samuel, 712-714.
FitzGerald, Edward, 697, 698.
Flatman, Thomas, 407.
Fletcher, Giles, 233.
Fletcher, John, 141-143 (?), 207-217.
Fletcher, Phineas, 222.
Ford, John, 235.
Fox, George, 734.
Gascoigne, George, 47.
Gay, John, 439.
Goldsmith, Oliver, 467, 468.
Gosse, Edmund, 845.
Gray, Thomas, 453-456.
Greene, Robert, 103-105.
Greville, Fanny, 475.
Griffin, Gerald, 663.
Grimald, Nicholas, 42.
Habington, William, 297, 298.
Harte, Bret, 813.
Hawes, Stephen, 32, 33.
Hawker, Robert Stephen, 674, 675.
Hemans, Felicia Dorothea, 622.
Henley, William Ernest, 842-844.
Henryson, Robert, 16, 17.
Herbert, George, 281-286.
Herrick, Robert, 247-275.
Heywood, John (?), 53.
Heywood, Thomas, 205, 206.
Hinkson, Katharine Tynan, 877.
Hoccleve, Thomas, 13.
Hood, Thomas, 647-654.
Hogg, James, 513, 514.
Horne, Richard Henry, 673.
Houghton, Lord, 710.
Howells, William Dean, 82.
Hume, Alexander, 106.
Hunt, Leigh, 592.
{1062}Hyde, Douglas, 858.
Jago, Richard, 452.
James I (King of Scotland), 15.
Johnson, Samuel, 450, 451.
Jones, Ebenezer, 745.
Jones, Sir William, 478.
Jonson, Ben, 184-194.
Jordan, Thomas, 335.
Keats, John, 623-637.
Keble, John, 620.
Kendall, Henry Clarence, 827.
King, Henry (Bishop of Chichester), 278-280.
Kingsley, Charles, 739, 740.
Kipling, Rudyard, 865-867.
Lamb, Charles, 577-579.
Lamb, Mary, 511.
Landor, Walter Savage, 557-576.
Lang, Andrew, 841.
Le Gallienne, Richard, 868, 869.
Lindsay, Lady Anne, 477.
Locker-Lampson, Frederick, 746.
Lodge, Thomas, 97-100.
Logan, John, 476.
Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth, 689.
Lovelace, Richard, 343-348.
Lydgate, John, 14.
Lyly, John, 85, 86.
Lyttelton, Lord, 449.
Lytton, Earl of, 794, 795.
Macaulay, Lord, 657.
MacDonald, George, 770.
Mahony, Francis, 677.
Mangan, James Clarence, 664, 665.
Mannyng, Robert, of Brunne, 8.
Marlowe, Christopher, 121.
Marvell, Andrew, 355-361.
Mayne, Jasper, 296.
Melcombe, Lord, 443.
Meredith, George, 772-776.
Meynell, Alice, 879, 880.
Milton, John, 307-324.
Montgomerie, Alexander, 48.
Montrose, Marquis of, 334.
Moore, Thomas, 582-585.
Moore, T. Sturge, 874.
Morris, William, 800-802.
Munday, Anthony, 87.
Nairne, Carolina Lady, 512.
Nashe, Thomas, 166, 167.
Newbolt, Henry, 860.
Noel, Roden Berkeley Wriothesley, 803, 804.
Norton, Caroline Elizabeth Sarah, 692.
Oldham, John, 420.
Oldys, William, 438.
O’Reilly, John Boyle, 831.
O’Shaughnessy, Arthur William Edgar, 828-830.
Otway, Thomas, 419.
Pagan, Isobel, 473.
Parker, Gilbert, 861.
Parnell, Thomas, 436.
Patmore, Coventry, 760-764.
Peacock, Thomas Love, 593-595.
Peele, George, 101, 102.
Philips, Katherine (‘Orinda’), 397.
Philpot, William, 757.
Poe, Edgar Allan, 694-696.
Pope, Alexander, 440-442.
Praed, Winthrop Mackworth, 660.
Prior, Matthew, 422-428.
{1063}
Quarles, Francis, 276, 277.
Raleigh, Sir Walter, 75-78, 122.
Ramsay, Allan, 437.
Randolph, Thomas, 299, 300.
Rands, William Brighty, 755, 756.
Reynolds, John, 177.
Rochester, Earl of, 413-416.
Rolleston, T. W., 849.
Rossetti, Christina Georgina, 779-789.
Rossetti, Dante Gabriel, 771
Rowe, Henry, 507, 508.
Rowlands, Richard, 165.
Ruskin, John, 744.
Russell, George William, 872, 873.
Scott, Alexander, 43, 44.
Scott, Sir Walter, 542-548.
Scott, William Bell, 731.
Sedley, Sir Charles, 409, 410.
Shakespeare, William, 56 (?), 123-164.
Shelley, Percy Bysshe, 605-618.
Shirley, James, 287, 288.
Sidney, Sir Philip, 88-95.
Sigerson, Dora, 881.
Skelton, John, 30, 31.
Smart, Christopher, 465.
Smith, Alexander, 777, 778.
Smollett, Tobias George, 464.
Southey, Caroline, 596.
Southey, Robert, 556.
Southwell, Robert, 108, 109.
Spenser, Edmund, 79-84.
Stanley, Thomas, 394.
Stevenson, Robert Louis, 846-848.
Stevenson, William, 49.
Stirling, Earl of, 221.
Strode, William, 393.
Suckling, Sir John, 325-328.
Surrey, Earl of, 39-41.
Swinburne, Algernon Charles, 808-811.
Sylvester, Joshua, 115.
Taylor, Sir Henry, 656.
Tennyson, Frederick, 688.
Tennyson, Lord, 699-709.
Thom, William, 655.
Thompson, Francis, 875.
Thomson, James, 448.
Thomson, James, 796-799.
Thurlow, Lord, 586.
Todhunter, John, 814, 815.
Traherne, Thomas, 406.
Turner, Charles Tennyson, 693.
Vaughan, Henry, 362-365.
Wade, Thomas, 676.
Walker, William Sidney, 639.
Waller, Edmund, 304-306.
Walsh, William, 429.
Watson, William, 852-854.
Watts, Isaac, 434, 435.
Watts-Dunton, Theodore, 807.
Webbe, Charles, 403.
Webster, John, 218-220.
Wever, Robert, 45.
Whitman, Walt, 742, 743.
Whittier, John Greenleaf, 690.
Wither, George, 236-239.
Wolfe, Charles, 603, 604.
Woods, Margaret L., 882.
Wordsworth, William, 515-541.
Wotton, Sir Henry, 178-180.
Wyatt, Sir Thomas, 34-38.
Yeats, William Butler, 862-864.
No. | |
A Book of Verses underneath the Bough, | 698 |
A child’s a plaything for an hour, | 511 |
A! Fredome is a noble thing!, | 9 |
A garden is a lovesome thing, God wot!, | 793 |
A late lark twitters from the quiet skies, | 843 |
A plenteous place is Ireland for hospitable cheer, | 714 |
A rose, as fair as ever saw the North, | 242 |
A slumber did my spirit seal, | 519 |
A star is gone! a star is gone!, | 642 |
A sunny shaft did I behold, | 555 |
A sweet disorder in the dress, | 258 |
A thousand martyrs I have made, | 412 |
A weary lot is thine, fair maid, | 546 |
Above yon sombre swell of land, | 673 |
Absence, hear thou my protestation, | 197 |
Absent from thee, I languish still, | 413 |
Accept, thou shrine of my dead saint, | 280 |
Adieu, farewell earth’s bliss!, | 167 |
Ae fond kiss, and then we sever, | 499 |
Ah, Chloris! that I now could sit, | 406 |
Ah, how sweet it is to love!, | 400 |
Ah! were she pitiful as she is fair, | 104 |
Ah, what avails the sceptred race, | 558 |
Airly Beacon, Airly Beacon, | 739 |
Alexis, here she stay’d; among these pines, | 228 |
All are not taken; there are left behind, | 680 |
All holy influences dwell within, | 602 |
All in the April morning, | 877 |
All is best, though we oft doubt, | 324 |
All my past life is mine no more, | 414 |
All Nature seems at work. Slugs leave their lair, | 554 |
All’s over, then: does truth sound bitter, | 726 |
All the flowers of the spring, | 220 |
All the words that I utter, | 862 |
All thoughts, all passions, all delights, | 551 |
All under the leaves and the leaves of life, | 382 |
Allas! my worthy maister honorable, | 13 {1065} |
Amarantha sweet and fair, | 346 |
An ancient chestnut’s blossoms threw, | 572 |
And, like a dying lady lean and pale, | 609 |
And wilt thou leave me thus?, | 35 |
Angel, king of streaming morn, | 507 |
Angel spirits of sleep, | 833 |
April, April, | 852 |
Art thou poor, yet hast thou golden slumbers?, | 204 |
As doctors give physic by way of prevention, | 428 |
As I in hoary winter’s night, | 109 |
As I was walking all alane, | 380 |
As it fell upon a day, | 203 |
As one that for a weary space has lain, | 841 |
As those we love decay, we die in part, | 448 |
As we rush, as we rush in the Train, | 796 |
As ye came from the holy land, | 26 |
Ask me no more where Jove bestows, | 289 |
Ask me why I send you here, | 254 |
Ask not the cause why sullen Spring, | 402 |
At her fair hands how have I grace entreated, | 64 |
At the last, tenderly, | 742 |
At the mid hour of night, when stars are weeping, I fly, | 585 |
Awake, Æolian lyre, awake, | 455 |
Away! Away!, | 462 |
Away, delights! go seek some other dwelling, | 211 |
Away! the moor is dark beneath the moon, | 617 |
Bacchus must now his power resign, | 445 |
Balow, my babe, lie still and sleep!, | 28 |
Bards of Passion and of Mirth, | 630 |
Be it right or wrong, these men among, | 25 |
Beating Heart! we come again, | 746 |
Beautiful must be the mountains whence ye come, | 834 |
Beauty clear and fair, | 215 |
Beauty sat bathing by a spring, | 87 |
Behold her, single in the field, | 528 |
Being your slave, what should I do but tend, | 151 |
Best and brightest, come away, | 606 |
Bid me to live, and I will live, | 266 |
Blest pair of Sirens, pledges of Heav’ns joy, | 309 |
Blow, blow, thou winter wind, | 136 |
Blown in the morning, thou shalt fade ere noon, | 329 |
Bonnie Kilmeny gaed up the glen, | 514 |
Brave flowers—that I could gallant it like you, | 278 {1066} |
Breathes there the man with soul so dead, | 547 |
Bright Star, would I were steadfast as thou art, | 637 |
Bring me wine, but wine which never grew, | 671 |
Busy, curious, thirsty fly!, | 438 |
By feathers green, across Casbeen, | 859 |
Bytuene Mershe ant Averil, | 2 |
Ca’ the yowes to the knowes, 473, | 506 |
Call for the robin-redbreast and the wren, | 218 |
Calm on the bosom of thy God!, | 622 |
Calme was the day, and through the trembling ayre, | 81 |
Came, on a Sabbath noon, my sweet, | 805 |
Charm me asleep, and melt me so, | 263 |
Cherry-ripe, ripe, ripe, I cry, | 256 |
Chloe’s a Nymph in flowery groves, | 395 |
Christmas knows a merry, merry place, | 807 |
Clerk Saunders and may Margaret, | 371 |
Cold in the earth—and the deep snow piled above thee, | 736 |
Come away, come away, death, | 134 |
Come, dear children, let us away, | 747 |
Come down, O maid, from yonder mountain height, | 706 |
Come into the garden, Maud, | 708 |
Come, let us now resolve at last, | 417 |
Come little babe, come silly soul, | 74 |
Come live with me and be my Love, | 121 |
Come not in terrors clad, to claim, | 596 |
Come, Sleep, and with thy sweet deceiving, | 207 |
Come, Sleep; O Sleep! the certain knot of peace, | 94 |
Come, spur away, | 300 |
Come then, as ever, like the wind at morning!, | 870 |
Come thou, who art the wine and wit, | 274 |
Come unto these yellow sands, | 129 |
Come, worthy Greek! Ulysses, come, | 112 |
Condemn’d to Hope’s delusive mine, | 451 |
Corydon, arise, my Corydon!, | 57 |
Count each affliction, whether light or grave, | 733 |
Crabbèd Age and Youth, | 56 |
Cupid and my Campaspe play’d, | 85 |
Cynthia, to thy power and thee, | 208 |
Cyriack, whose Grandsire on the Royal Bench, | 320 |
Dark, deep, and cold the current flows, | 588 |
Dark to me is the earth. Dark to me are the heavens, | 817 |
Daughter to that good Earl, once President, | 317* {1067} |
Day, like our souls, is fiercely dark, | 587 |
Dear Lord, receive my son, whose winning love, | 223 |
Dear love, for nothing less than thee, | 199 |
Death, be not proud, though some have callèd thee, | 202 |
Deep on the convent-roof the snows, | 703 |
‘Do you remember me? or are you proud?’, | 569 |
Does the road wind uphill all the way?, | 783 |
Drink to me only with thine eyes, | 185 |
Drop, drop, slow tears, | 222 |
Earth has not anything to show more fair, | 520 |
E’en like two little bank-dividing brooks, | 276 |
Enough; and leave the rest to Fame!, | 361 |
Even such is Time, that takes in trust, | 78 |
Ever let the Fancy roam, | 631 |
Fain would I change that note, | 68 |
Fair Amoret is gone astray, | 432 |
Fair and fair, and twice so fair, | 101 |
Fair daffodils, we weep to see, | 252 |
Fair is my Love and cruel as she’s fair, | 113 |
Fair pledges of a fruitful tree, | 253 |
Fair ship, that from the Italian shore, | 707 |
Fair stood the wind for France, | 119 |
False though she be to me and love, | 431 |
False world, good night! since thou hast brough, | 190 |
Farewell! thou art too dear for my possessing, | 153 |
Fear no more the heat o’ the sun, | 140 |
Fine knacks for ladies! cheap, choice, brave, and new, | 58 |
First came the primrose, | 767 |
Flowers nodding gaily, scent in air, | 874 |
Fly envious Time, till thou run out thy race, | 308 |
Fly hence, shadows, that do keep, | 235 |
Follow a shadow, it still flies you, | 187 |
Follow thy fair sun, unhappy shadow!, | 170 |
Follow your saint, follow with accents sweet!, | 171 |
Foolish prater, what dost thou, | 351 |
For a name unknown, | 857 |
For her gait, if she be walking, | 243 |
For knighthood is not in the feats of warre, | 32 |
Forbear, bold youth; all’s heaven here, | 397 |
Forget not yet the tried intent, | 34 |
Fra bank to bank, fra wood to wood I rin, | 114 |
Fresh Spring, the herald of loves mighty king, | 79 {1068} |
From harmony, from heavenly harmony, | 399 |
From low to high doth dissolution climb, | 539 |
From the forests and highlands, | 605 |
From you have I been absent in the spring, | 157 |
From you, Ianthe, little troubles pass, | 559 |
Full fathom five thy father lies, | 131 |
Gather ye rosebuds while ye may, | 248 |
Get up, get up for shame! The blooming morn, | 247 |
Give a man a horse he can ride, | 798 |
Give all to love, | 669 |
Give me my scallop-shell of quiet, | 77 |
Give pardon, blessèd soul, to my bold cries, | 110 |
Give place, you ladies, and begone!, | 53 |
Go and catch a falling star, | 196 |
Go fetch to me a pint o’ wine, | 496 |
Go, for they call you, Shepherd, from the hill, | 751 |
Go from me. Yet I feel that I shall stand, | 684 |
Go, lovely Rose, | 305 |
God Lyæus, ever young, | 214 |
God of our fathers, known of old, | 867 |
God who created me, | 855 |
Gone were but the winter cold, | 591 |
Good-morrow to the day so fair, | 268 |
Great men have been among us; hands that penn’d, | 525 |
Had we but world enough, and time, | 357 |
Hail, beauteous stranger of the grove!, | 476 |
Hail holy light, ofspring of Heav’n first-born, | 322 |
Hail, sister springs, | 337 |
Hail to thee, blithe spirit!, | 608 |
Hallow the threshold, crown the posts anew!, | 332 |
Hame, hame, hame, O hame fain wad I be, | 590 |
Happy those early days, when I, | 362 |
Hark! ah, the Nightingale, | 752 |
Hark! hark! the lark at heaven’s gate sings, | 139 |
Hark! Now everything is still, | 219 |
Hark! the mavis’ evening sang, | 506 |
He first deceased; she for a little tried, | 180 |
He has conn’d the lesson now, | 660 |
He that is by Mooni now, | 827 |
He that is down needs fear no fall, | 366 |
He that loves a rosy cheek, | 292 {1069} |
He who has once been happy is for aye, | 818 |
Heap cassia, sandal-buds and stripes, | 715 |
Hear the voice of the Bard, | 488 |
Hear, ye ladies that despise, | 213 |
Helen, thy beauty is to me, | 694 |
Hence, all you vain delights, | 216 |
Hence, heart, with her that must depart, | 43 |
Hence loathed Melancholy, | 310 |
Hence vain deluding joyes, | 311 |
Her eyes the glow-worm lend thee, | 262 |
Here a little child I stand, | 271 |
Here a pretty baby lies, | 273 |
Here, ever since you went abroad, | 567 |
Here in this sequester’d close, | 824 |
Here she lies, a pretty bud, | 272 |
Hey nonny no!, | 59 |
Hey! now the day dawis, | 48 |
Hierusalem, my happy home, | 61 |
High-spirited friend, | 191 |
Highway, since you my chief Parnassus be, | 92 |
His golden locks Time hath to silver turn’d, | 102 |
How happy is he born and taught, | 179 |
How like a Winter hath my absence been, | 156 |
How many times do I love thee, dear?, | 668 |
How near me came the hand of Death, | 239 |
How sleep the brave, who sink to rest, | 458 |
How vainly men themselves amaze, | 359 |
Hush! my dear, lie still and slumber, | 435 |
Hyd, Absolon, thy gilte tresses clere, | 11 |
I am that which began, | 809 |
I am! yet what I am who cares, or knows?, | 621 |
I arise from dreams of thee, | 611 |
I ask no kind return of love, | 475 |
I came into the City and none knew me, | 878 |
I cannot change as others do, | 415 |
I cannot eat but little meat, | 49 |
I dare not ask a kiss, | 250 |
I did but look and love awhile, | 419 |
I did not choose thee, dearest. It was Love, | 819 |
I do confess thou’rt smooth and fair, | 182 |
I do not love thee!—no! I do not love thee!, | 692 |
I dream’d that, as I wander’d by the way, | 616 |
I dug, beneath the cypress shade, | 594 {1070} |
I feed a flame within, which so torments me, | 401 |
I flung me round him, | 803 |
I got me flowers to straw Thy way, | 282 |
I have a mistress, for perfections rare, | 299 |
I have had playmates, I have had companions, | 577 |
I intended an Ode, | 825 |
I know a little garden-close, | 802 |
I know a thing that’s most uncommon, | 440 |
I know my soul hath power to know all things, | 181 |
I left thee last, a child at heart, | 678 |
I long have had a quarrel set with Time, | 823 |
I loved a lass, a fair one, | 236 |
I loved him not; and yet now he is gone, | 557 |
I loved thee once; I’ll love no more, | 183 |
I made another garden, yea, | 829 |
I mind me in the days departed, | 679 |
I must not think of thee; and, tired yet strong, | 879 |
I, my dear, was born to-day, | 425 |
I play’d with you ’mid cowslips blowing, | 593 |
I pray thee, leave, love me no more, | 116 |
I said—Then, dearest, since ’tis so, | 727 |
I saw fair Chloris walk alone, | 393 |
I saw my Lady weep, | 66 |
I saw old Autumn in the misty morn, | 647 |
I saw where in the shroud did lurk, | 579 |
I sent a ring—a little band, | 641 |
I sing of a maiden, | 23 |
I strove with none, for none was worth my strife, | 576 |
I tell you, hopeless grief is passionless, | 681 |
I that in heill was and gladnèss, | 21 |
I thought of Thee, my partner and my guide, | 538 |
I thought once how Theocritus had sung, | 682 |
I thought to meet no more, so dreary seem’d, | 620 |
I took my heart in my hand, | 782 |
I travell’d among unknown men, | 517 |
I wander’d lonely as a cloud, | 530 |
I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree, | 864 |
I will make you brooches and toys for your delight, | 846 |
I wish I were where Helen lies, | 387 |
I, with whose colours Myra dress’d her head, | 96 |
Ichot a burde in boure bryht, | 4 |
I’d a dream to-night, | 658 |
I’d wed you without herds, without money or rich array, | 713 |
I’m sittin’ on the stile, Mary, | 691 {1071} |
I’m wearin’ awa’, John, | 512 |
I’ve heard them lilting at our ewe-milking, | 466 |
If all the world and love were young, | 122 |
If aught of oaten stop, or pastoral song, | 459 |
If doughty deeds my lady please, | 469 |
If I had thought thou couldst have died, | 604 |
‘If I were dead, you’d sometimes say, Poor Child!’, | 761 |
If rightly tuneful bards decide, | 461 |
If the quick spirits in your eye, | 290 |
If the red slayer think he slays, | 672 |
If there were dreams to sell, | 667 |
If thou must love me, let it be for naught, | 685 |
If thou wilt ease thine heart, | 666 |
If to be absent were to be, | 344 |
If you go over desert and mountain, | 830 |
In a drear-nighted December, | 632 |
In a harbour grene aslepe whereas I lay, | 45 |
In a quiet water’d land, a land of roses, | 849 |
In a valley of this restles mind, | 24 |
In after days when grasses high, | 826 |
In Clementina’s artless mien, | 568 |
In going to my naked bed as one that would have slept, | 46 |
In Scarlet town, where I was born, | 389 |
In somer when the shawes be sheyne, | 22 |
In the hall the coffin waits, and the idle armourer stands, | 768 |
In the highlands, in the country places, | 847 |
In the hour of death, after this life’s whim, | 883 |
In the hour of my distress, | 275 |
In the merry month of May, | 73 |
In Xanadu did Kubla Khan, | 550 |
Into the silver night, | 845 |
Into the skies, one summer’s day, | 756 |
Is it so small a thing, | 754 |
It fell about the Martinmas, | 374 |
It fell in the ancient periods, | 670 |
It fell on a day, and a bonnie simmer day, | 377 |
It is a beauteous evening, calm and free, | 521 |
It is an ancient Mariner, | 549 |
It is not, Celia, in our power, | 405 |
It is not death, that sometime in a sigh, | 649 |
It is not growing like a tree, | 194 |
It is not to be thought of that the flood, | 526 |
It is the miller’s daughter, | 701 |
It was a dismal and a fearful night, | 352 {1072} |
It was a lover and his lass, | 137 |
It was a’ for our rightfu’ King, | 505 |
It was many and many a year ago, | 695 |
It was not in the Winter, | 651 |
It was not like your great and gracious ways!, | 762 |
It was the Winter wilde, | 307 |
Its edges foam’d with amethyst and rose, | 873 |
Jenny kiss’d me when we met, | 592 |
John Anderson, my jo, John, | 497 |
Know, Celia, since thou art so proud, | 293 |
Ladies, though to your conquering eyes, | 404 |
Late at een, drinkin’ the wine, | 370 |
Lawrence of vertuous Father vertuous Son, | 319 |
Lay a garland on my herse, | 209 |
Leave me, O Love, which reachest but to dust, | 95 |
Lenten ys come with love to toune, | 3 |
Lestenyt, lordynges, both elde and yinge, | 7 |
Let me go forth, and share, | 853 |
Let me not to the marriage of true minds, | 162 |
Let the bird of loudest lay, | 144 |
Let us drink and be merry, dance, joke, and rejoice, | 335 |
Life! I know not what thou art, | 474 |
Like the Idalian queen, | 225 |
Like thee I once have stemm’d the sea of life, | 472 |
Like to Diana in her summer weed, | 103 |
Like to the clear in highest sphere, | 100 |
Lo, quhat it is to love, | 44 |
London, thou art of townes A per se, | 19 |
Long-expected One-and-twenty, | 450 |
Look not thou on beauty’s charming, | 544 |
Lords, knights, and squires, the numerous band, | 423 |
Loud mockers in the roaring street, | 869 |
Love bade me welcome; yet my soul drew back, | 286 |
Love guards the roses of thy lips, | 99 |
Love in fantastic triumph sate, | 411 |
Love in my bosom like a bee, | 97 |
Love is a sickness full of woes, | 111 |
Love is enough: though the World be a-waning, | 801 |
Love is the blossom where there blows, | 233 |
Love not me for comely grace, | 71 {1073} |
Love, thou art absolute, sole Lord, | 338 |
Love thy country, wish it well, | 443 |
Love wing’d my Hopes and taught me how to fly, | 62 |
Marie Hamilton’s to the kirk gane, | 375 |
Mark where the pressing wind shoots javelin-like, | 775 |
Martial, the things that do attain, | 41 |
Marvel of marvels, if I myself shall behold, | 785 |
Mary! I want a lyre with other strings, | 470 |
May! Be thou never graced with birds that sing, | 245 |
May! queen of blossoms, | 586 |
Me so oft my fancy drew, | 238 |
Men grew sae cauld, maids sae unkind, | 655 |
Merry Margaret, | 31 |
Methought I saw my late espousèd Saint, | 321 |
Mild is the parting year, and sweet, | 565 |
Milton! thou shouldst be living at this hour, | 524 |
More love or more disdain I crave, | 403 |
Mortality, behold and fear!, | 234 |
Most glorious Lord of Lyfe! that, on this day, | 84 |
Mother, I cannot mind my wheel, | 564 |
Mother of Hermes! and still youthful Maia!, | 629 |
Much have I travell’d in the realms of gold, | 634 |
Music, when soft voices die, | 618 |
My blood so red, | 385 |
My Damon was the first to wake, | 480 |
My days among the Dead are past, | 556 |
My dear and only Love, I pray, | 334 |
My delight and thy delight, | 832 |
My faint spirit was sitting in the light, | 613 |
My grief on the sea, | 858 |
My heart aches, and a drowsy numbness pains, | 624 |
My heart is high above, my body is full of bliss, | 52 |
My heart is like a singing bird, | 780 |
My heart leaps up when I behold, | 532 |
My little Son, who look’d from thoughtful eyes, | 763 |
My Love in her attire doth show her wit, | 63 |
My love is strengthen’d, though more weak in seeming, | 158 |
My love o’er the water bends dreaming, | 797 |
My lute, awake! perform the last, | 38 |
My mother bore me in the southern wild, | 487 |
My new-cut ashlar takes the light, | 865 |
My noble, lovely, little Peggy, | 427 |
My Peggy is a young thing, | 437 {1074} |
My Phillis hath the morning sun, | 98 |
My silks and fine array, | 485 |
My soul, sit thou a patient looker-on, | 277 |
My soul, there is a country, | 363 |
My thoughts hold mortal strife, | 230 |
My true love hath my heart, and I have his, | 88 |
Nay but you, who do not love her, | 721 |
Near to the silver Trent, | 118 |
Never seek to tell thy love, | 492 |
Never weather-beaten sail more willing bent to shore, | 176 |
New doth the sun appear, | 231 |
News from a foreign country came, | 406 |
No coward soul is mine, | 738 |
No, no! go not to Lethe, neither twist, | 628 |
No thyng ys to man so dere, | 8 |
Nobly, nobly Cape Saint Vincent to the North-west died away, | 730 |
Not a drum was heard, not a funeral note, | 603 |
Not, Celia, that I juster am, | 410 |
‘Not ours,’ say some, ‘the thought of death to dread, | 854 |
Not unto us, O Lord, | 876 |
Now sleeps the crimson petal, now the white, | 705 |
Now the lusty spring is seen, | 212 |
Now the North wind ceases, | 774 |
Now winter nights enlarge, | 174 |
Nuns fret not at their convent’s narrow room, | 533 |
O, Brignall banks are wild and fair, | 543 |
O Captain! my Captain! our fearful trip is done, | 743 |
O Christ of God! whose life and death, | 690 |
O come, soft rest of cares! come, Night!, | 107 |
O Earth, lie heavily upon her eyes, | 789 |
O fly, my Soul! What hangs upon, | 287 |
O fly not, Pleasure, pleasant-hearted Pleasure, | 816 |
O for some honest lover’s ghost, | 325 |
O for the mighty wakening that aroused, | 676 |
O friend! I know not which way I must look, | 523 |
O goddess! hear these tuneless numbers, wrung, | 626 |
O happy dames! that may embrace, | 40 |
O happy Tithon! if thou know’st thy hap, | 221 |
O how much more doth beauty beauteous seem, | 150 |
O, I hae come from far away, | 731 |
O joy of creation, | 813 {1075} |
O lusty May, with Flora queen!, | 51 |
O many a day have I made good ale in the glen, | 638 |
O Mary, at thy window be, | 493 |
O Mary, go and call the cattle home, | 740 |
O Memory, thou fond deceiver, | 468 |
O mistress mine, where are you roaming?, | 133 |
O mortal folk, you may behold and see, | 33 |
O my Dark Rosaleen, | 664 |
O my deir hert, young Jesus sweit, | 384 |
O my Luve’s like a red, red rose, | 503 |
O never say that I was false of heart, | 161 |
O perfect Light, which shaid away, | 106 |
O ruddier than the cherry!, | 439 |
O saw ye bonnie Lesley, | 500 |
O saw ye not fair Ines?, | 650 |
O sing unto my roundelay, | 479 |
O sleep, my babe, hear not the rippling wave, | 661 |
O soft embalmer of the still midnight!, | 636 |
O Sorrow!, | 623 |
O that ’twere possible, | 709 |
O the sad day!, | 407 |
O thou, by Nature taught, | 457 |
O thou that swing’st upon the waving hair, | 347 |
O thou undaunted daughter of desires!, | 339 |
O thou with dewy locks, who lookest down, | 484 |
O Time! who know’st a lenient hand to lay, | 509 |
O, to be in England, | 729 |
O turn away those cruel eyes, | 394 |
O waly, waly, up the bank, | 388 |
O were my Love yon lilac fair, | 502 |
O western wind, when wilt thou blow, | 27 |
O wha will shoe my bonny foot?, | 369 |
O what a plague is love!, | 392 |
O what can ail thee, knight-at-arms, | 633 |
‘O which is the last rose?’, | 851 |
O wild West Wind, thou breath of Autumn’s being, | 610 |
O world, be nobler, for her sake!, | 871 |
O world, in very truth thou art too young, | 822 |
O yonge fresshe folkes, he or she, | 10 |
O, you plant the pain in my heart with your wistful eyes, | 814 |
Of a’ the airts the wind can blaw, | 494 |
Of all the flowers rising now, | 757 |
Of all the girls that are so smart, | 444 |
Of all the torments, all the cares, | 429 {1076} |
Of Nelson and the North, | 581 |
Of Neptune’s empire let us sing, | 173 |
Of on that is so fayr and bright, | 6 |
Oft, in the stilly night, | 584 |
Often I think of the beautiful town, | 689 |
Oh how comely it is and how reviving, | 323 |
On a day—alack the day!, | 124 |
On a starr’d night Prince Lucifer uprose, | 776 |
On a time the amorous Silvy, | 72 |
On either side the river lie, | 700 |
On parent knees, a naked new-born child, | 478 |
On the deck of Patrick Lynch’s boat I sat in woful plight, | 734 |
On the Sabbath-day, | 778 |
On the wide level of a mountain’s head, | 553 |
Once did she hold the gorgeous East in fee, | 522 |
One more Unfortunate, | 654 |
One word is too often profaned, | 615 |
Only tell her that I love, | 421 |
O’re the smooth enameld green, | 312 |
Orpheus with his lute made trees, | 143 |
Others abide our question. Thou art free, | 753 |
Out of the night that covers me, | 842 |
Out upon it, I have loved, | 326 |
Over hill, over dale, | 127 |
Over the mountains, | 391 |
Over the sea our galleys went, | 716 |
Pack, clouds, away! and welcome, day!, | 205 |
Passing away, saith the World, passing away, | 784 |
Passions are liken’d best to floods and streams, | 75 |
Past ruin’d Ilion Helen lives, | 561 |
Peace, Shepherd, peace! What boots it singing on?, | 882 |
Perfect little body, without fault or stain on thee, | 837 |
Phœbus, arise!, | 224 |
Piping down the valleys wild, | 486 |
Poor soul, the centre of my sinful earth, | 164 |
Praise is devotion fit for mighty minds, | 303 |
Pray but one prayer for me ’twixt thy closed lips, | 800 |
Proud Maisie is in the wood, | 542 |
Proud word you never spoke, but you will speak, | 562 |
Pure stream, in whose transparent wave, | 464 |
Put your head, darling, darling, darling, | 712 |
Queen and huntress, chaste and fair, | 184 {1077} |
Queen of fragrance, lovely Rose, | 449 |
Quhen Flora had o’erfret the firth, | 50 |
Quoth tongue of neither maid nor wife, | 656 |
Remain, ah not in youth alone!, | 566 |
Remember me when I am gone away, | 787 |
Return, return! all night my lamp is burning, | 766 |
‘Rise,’ said the Master, ‘come unto the feast’, | 711 |
Robin sat on gude green hill, | 16 |
Roll forth, my song, like the rushing river, | 665 |
Rorate coeli desuper!, | 20 |
Rose-cheek’d Laura, come, | 169 |
Roses, their sharp spines being gone, | 141 |
Round the cape of a sudden came the sea, | 725 |
Sabrina fair, | 315 |
Safe where I cannot die yet, | 786 |
Say, crimson Rose and dainty Daffodil, | 177 |
Say not the struggle naught availeth, | 741 |
Says Tweed to Till, | 383 |
Scorn not the Sonnet; Critic, you have frown’d, | 534 |
Seamen three! What men be ye?, | 595 |
Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness!, | 627 |
See how the flowers, as at parade, | 356 |
See the Chariot at hand here of Love, | 188 |
See where she sits upon the grassie greene, | 80 |
See with what simplicity, | 358 |
See yon blithe child that dances in our sight!, | 662 |
Sense with keenest edge unusèd, | 838 |
Seven weeks of sea, and twice seven days of storm, | 821 |
Shall I compare thee to a Summer’s day?, | 145 |
Shall I strew on thee rose or rue or laurel, | 810 |
Shall I thus ever long, and be no whit the neare?, | 54 |
Shall I, wasting in despair, | 237 |
She beat the happy pavèment, | 345 |
She dwelt among the untrodden ways, | 516 |
She fell away in her first ages spring, | 83 |
She is not fair to outward view, | 644 |
She knelt upon her brother’s grave, | 790 |
She pass’d away like morning dew, | 645 |
She stood breast-high amid the corn, | 652 |
She walks in beauty, like the night, | 600 |
She walks—the lady of my delight, | 880 {1078} |
She was a phantom of delight, | 529 |
She was a queen of noble Nature’s crowning, | 643 |
She who to Heaven more Heaven doth annex, | 333 |
She’s somewhere in the sunlight strong, | 868 |
Should auld acquaintance be forgot, | 495 |
Shut not so soon; the dull-eyed night, | 261 |
Since all that I can ever do for thee, | 795 |
Since first I saw your face I resolved to honour and renown ye, | 69 |
Since I noo mwore do zee your feäce, | 659 |
Since there’s no help, come let us kiss and part, | 117 |
Sing his praises that doth keep, | 210 |
Sing lullaby, as women do, | 47 |
Sister, awake! close not your eyes!, | 67 |
Sleep, sleep, beauty bright, | 490 |
So shuts the marigold her leaves, | 244 |
So, we’ll go no more a-roving, | 599 |
Softly, O midnight Hours!, | 732 |
Some vex their souls with jealous pain, | 418 |
Sound, sound the clarion, fill the fife, | 545 |
Spring, the sweet Spring, is the year’s pleasant king, | 166 |
Stand close around, ye Stygian set, | 571 |
Stay, O sweet, and do not rise!, | 195 |
Steer, hither steer your wingèd pines, | 241 |
Stern Daughter of the voice of God!, | 531 |
Still do the stars impart their light, | 331 |
Still let my tyrants know, I am not doom’d to wear, | 737 |
Still to be neat, still to be drest, | 186 |
Strange fits of passion have I known, | 515 |
Strew on her roses, roses, | 750 |
Sublime—invention ever young, | 465 |
Sumer is icumen in, | 1 |
Summer set lip to earth’s bosom bare, | 875 |
Sure thou didst flourish once! and many springs, | 364 |
Surprised by joy—impatient as the Wind, | 537 |
Swallow, my sister, O sister swallow, | 811 |
Sweet are the rosy memories of the lips, | 794 |
Sweet, be not proud of those two eyes, | 264 |
Sweet day, so cool, so calm, so bright, | 281 |
Sweet Echo, sweetest Nymph that liv’st unseen, | 314 |
Sweet in her green dell the flower of beauty slumbers, | 640 |
Sweet rois of vertew and of gentilness, | 18 |
Sweet Spring, thou turn’st with all thy goodly train, | 227 |
Sweet western wind, whose luck it is, | 249 |
Sweetest Saviour, if my soul, | 284 {1079} |
Swiftly walk over the western wave, | 612 |
Take, O take those lips away, | 138 |
Tary no longer; toward thyn heritage, | 14 |
Tell me not of a face that’s fair, | 354 |
Tell me not, Sweet, I am unkind, | 343 |
Tell me not what too well I know, | 570 |
Tell me where is Fancy bred, | 132 |
Th’ expense of Spirit in a waste of shame, | 163 |
Thank Heaven! the crisis, | 696 |
That time of year thou may’st in me behold, | 152 |
That which her slender waist confined, | 304 |
That zephyr every year, | 226 |
The beauty and the life, | 229 |
The blessèd Damozel lean’d out, | 771 |
The boat is chafing at our long delay, | 850 |
The chough and crow to roost are gone, | 510 |
The curfew tolls the knell of parting day, | 453 |
The day begins to droop, | 839 |
The days are sad, it is the Holy tide, | 688 |
The fierce exulting worlds, the motes in rays, | 777 |
The forward youth that would appear, | 355 |
The glories of our blood and state, | 288 |
The gray sea and the long black land, | 724 |
The Indian weed witherèd quite, | 390 |
The irresponsive silence of the land, | 788 |
The isles of Greece! the isles of Greece!, | 601 |
The king sits in Dunfermline town, | 368 |
The Lady Mary Villiers lies, | 294 |
The lark now leaves his wat’ry nest, | 301 |
The last and greatest Herald of Heaven’s King, | 232 |
The leaves are falling; so am I, | 575 |
The linnet in the rocky dells, | 735 |
The loppèd tree in time may grow again, | 108 |
The lovely lass o’ Inverness, | 504 |
The man of life upright, | 175 |
The merchant, to secure his treasure, | 424 |
The moth’s kiss, first!, | 723 |
The murmur of the mourning ghost, | 765 |
The Nightingale, as soon as April bringeth, | 91 |
The rain set early in to-night, | 720 |
The red rose whispers of passion, | 831 |
The reivers they stole Fair Annie, | 372 |
The ring, so worn as you behold, | 482 |
The Rose was sick and smiling died, | 255 {1080} |
The seas are quiet when the winds give o’er, | 306 |
The soote season, that bud and bloom forth brings, | 39 |
The spacious firmament on high, | 433 |
The splendour falls on castle walls, | 704 |
The Star that bids the Shepherd fold, | 313 |
The sun descending in the west, | 491 |
The sun rises bright in France, | 589 |
The thirsty earth soaks up the rain, | 349 |
The twentieth year is wellnigh past, | 471 |
The wine of Love is music, | 799 |
The world is too much with us; late and soon, | 535 |
The world’s great age begins anew, | 607 |
The year’s at the spring, | 718 |
The young May moon is beaming, love, | 582 |
Thee too, modest tressèd maid, | 508 |
Then hate me when thou wilt; if ever, now, | 154 |
There ance was a may, and she lo’ed na men, | 430 |
There are two births; the one when light, | 330 |
There be none of Beauty’s daughters, | 598 |
There is a garden in her face, | 168 |
There is a Lady sweet and kind, | 70 |
There is a mountain and a wood between us, | 574 |
There is a silence where hath been no sound, | 648 |
There is sweet music here that softer falls, | 702 |
There lived a wife at Usher’s well, | 378 |
There was a time when meadow, grove, and stream, | 536 |
There were three ravens sat on a tree, | 379 |
There were twa sisters sat in a bour, | 376 |
There’s a glade in Aghadoe, Aghadoe, Aghadoe, | 815 |
There’s a whisper down the field where the year has shot her yield, | 866 |
There’s a woman like a dew-drop, she’s so purer than the purest, | 722 |
There’s not a nook within this silent Pass, | 540 |
They are all gone into the world of light!, | 365 |
They are waiting on the shore, | 804 |
They flee from me that sometime did me seek, | 37 |
They seem’d, to those who saw them meet, | 710 |
They that have power to hurt and will do none, | 155 |
They told me, Heraclitus, they told me you were dead, | 759 |
They all were looking for a king, | 770 |
This ae nighte, this ae nighte, | 381 |
This hinder yeir I hard be tald, | 17 |
This is a spray the Bird clung to, | 728 |
This little vault, this narrow room, | 295 {1081} |
This winter’s weather it waxeth cold, | 29 |
Thou art to all lost love the best, | 267 |
Thou still unravish’d bride of quietness, | 625 |
Thou youngest virgin-daughter of the skies, | 398 |
Though beauty be the mark of praise, | 189 |
Three years she grew in sun and shower, | 518 |
Through grief and through danger thy smile hath cheer’d my way, | 583 |
Through the black, rushing smoke-bursts, | 748 |
Throw away Thy rod, | 283 |
Thus the Mayne glideth, | 717 |
Thus when the silent grave becomes, | 447 |
Thy bosom is endearèd with all hearts, | 148 |
Thy restless feet now cannot go, | 341 |
Thy soul within such silent pomp did keep, | 420 |
Tiger, tiger, burning bright, | 489 |
Time is the feather’d thing, | 296 |
’Tis a dull sight, | 697 |
To all you ladies now at land, | 408 |
To fair Fidele’s grassy tomb, | 460 |
To live within a cave—it is most good, | 792 |
To me, fair friend, you never can be old, | 159 |
To mute and to material things, | 548 |
To my true king I offer’d free from stain, | 657 |
To the Ocean now I fly, | 316 |
To these whom death again did wed, | 342 |
To-day, all day, I rode upon the down, | 820 |
To-night retired, the queen of heaven, | 463 |
Too late for love, too late for joy, | 779 |
Too solemn for day, too sweet for night, | 639 |
Tossing his mane of snows in wildest eddies and tangles, | 812 |
True Thomas lay on Huntlie bank, | 367 |
Trust thou thy Love: if she be proud, is she not sweet?, | 744 |
’Twas on a lofty vase’s side, | 456 |
’Twas the dream of a God, | 881 |
Twenty years hence my eyes may grow, | 560 |
Under the greenwood tree, | 135 |
Under the wide and starry sky, | 848 |
Under yonder beech-tree single on the green-sward, | 772 |
Underneath this myrtle shade, | 350 |
Underneath this sable herse, | 246 |
Unlike are we, unlike, O princely Heart!, | 683 |
Up the airy mountain, | 769 |
Upon my lap my sovereign sits, | 165 {1082} |
Urns and odours bring away!, | 142 |
Venus, take my votive glass, | 426 |
Verse, a breeze ’mid blossoms straying, | 552 |
Vital spark of heav’nly flame!, | 442 |
Waes-hael for knight and dame!, | 674 |
We are the music-makers, | 828 |
We saw Thee in Thy balmy nest, | 340 |
We see them not—we cannot hear, | 675 |
We, that did nothing study but the way, | 279 |
We watch’d her breathing thro’ the night, | 653 |
We’ve trod the maze of error round, | 481 |
Weave the warp, and weave the woof, | 454 |
Weep no more, nor sigh, nor groan, | 217 |
Weep not, my wanton, smile upon my knee, | 105 |
Weep with me, all you that read, | 193 |
Weep you no more, sad fountains, | 65 |
Welcome, maids of honour!, | 251 |
Welcome, welcome! do I sing, | 240 |
Well then! I now do plainly see, | 353 |
Were I as base as is the lowly plain, | 115 |
Wharefore sou’d ye talk o’ love, | 619 |
What beck’ning ghost, along the moonlight shade, | 441 |
What bird so sings, yet so does wail?, | 86 |
What conscience, say, is it in thee, | 265 |
What have I done for you, | 844 |
What is your substance, whereof are you made, | 149 |
What needs complaints, | 269 |
What nymph should I admire or trust, | 422 |
What should I say?, | 36 |
What sweet relief the showers to thirsty plants we see, | 42 |
What was he doing, the great god Pan, | 687 |
When by Zeus relenting the mandate was revoked, | 773 |
When, Cœlia, must my old day set, | 396 |
When daisies pied and violets blue, | 125 |
When, dearest, I but think of thee, | 328 |
When Death to either shall come, | 840 |
When Delia on the plain appears, | 449 |
When God at first made Man, | 285 |
When I am dead, my dearest, | 781 |
When I consider how my light is spent, | 318 |
When I have borne in memory what has tamed, | 527 |
When I have fears that I may cease to be, | 635 |
When I survey the bright, | 298 {1083} |
When icicles hang by the wall, | 126 |
When, in disgrace with Fortune and men’s eyes, | 146 |
When in the chronicle of wasted time, | 160 |
When Jessie comes with her soft breast, | 791 |
When Letty had scarce pass’d her third glad year, | 693 |
When like the early rose, | 663 |
When Love arose in heart and deed, | 755 |
When Love with unconfinèd wings, | 348 |
When lovely woman stoops to folly, | 467 |
When maidens such as Hester die, | 578 |
When my love was away, | 836 |
When our two souls stand up erect and strong, | 686 |
When the breath of twilight blows to flame the misty skies, | 872 |
When the fierce North-wind with his airy forces, | 434 |
When the hounds of spring are on winter’s traces, | 808 |
When the lamp is shatter’d, | 614 |
When the sheep are in the fauld, and the kye at hame, | 477 |
When the world is burning, | 745 |
When thou must home to shades of underground, | 172 |
When thou, poor Excommunicate, | 291 |
When thy beauty appears, | 436 |
When to the Sessions of sweet silent thought, | 147 |
When we two parted, | 597 |
When we were idlers with the loitering rills, | 646 |
When you and I have play’d the little hour, | 861 |
When you are old and gray and full of sleep, | 863 |
Whenas in silks my Julia goes, | 259 |
Where, like a pillow on a bed, | 198 |
Where the bee sucks, there suck I, | 130 |
Where the pools are bright and deep, | 513 |
Where the remote Bermudas ride, | 360 |
Whether on Ida’s shady brow, | 483 |
While that the sun with his beams hot, | 55 |
Whither, O splendid ship, thy white sails crowding, | 835 |
Who hath his fancy pleased, | 89 |
Who is it that, this dark night, | 90 |
Who is Silvia? What is she?, | 123 |
Whoe’er she be, | 336 |
Whoever comes to shroud me, do not harm, | 200 |
Why art thou silent! Is thy love a plant, | 541 |
Why does your brand sae drop wi’ blude, | 373 |
Why dost thou shade thy lovely face? O why, | 416 |
Why, having won her, do I woo?, | 760 |
Why I tie about thy wrist, | 260 {1084} |
Why so pale and wan, fond lover?, | 327 |
Why, why repine, my pensive friend, | 563 |
Wilt Thou forgive that sin where I begun, | 201 |
With all my will, but much against my heart, | 764 |
With blackest moss the flower-plots, | 699 |
With deep affection, | 677 |
With how sad steps, O moon, thou climb’st the skies!, | 93 |
With leaden foot Time creeps along, | 452 |
With lifted feet, hands still, | 856 |
With margerain gentle, | 30 |
Worschippe ye that loveris bene this May, | 15 |
Wouldst thou hear what Man can say, | 192 |
Wrong not, sweet empress of my heart, | 76 |
Wynter wakeneth al my care, | 5 |
Years, many parti-colour’d years, | 573 |
Ye banks and braes and streams around, | 501 |
Ye blushing virgins happy are, | 297 |
Ye flowery banks o’ bonnie Doon, | 498 |
Ye have been fresh and green, | 270 |
‘Ye have robb’d,’ said he, ‘ye have slaughter’d and made an end, | 860 |
Ye Highlands and ye Lawlands, | 386 |
Ye learnèd sisters, which have oftentimes, | 82 |
Ye little birds that sit and sing, | 206 |
Ye Mariners of England, | 580 |
Yes: in the sea of life enisled, | 749 |
Yet if His Majesty, our sovereign lord, | 60 |
Yet once more, O ye Laurels, and once more, | 317 |
You are a tulip seen to-day, | 257 |
You brave heroic minds, | 120 |
You meaner beauties of the night, | 178 |
You must be sad; for though it is to Heaven, | 806 |
You promise heavens free from strife, | 758 |
You spotted snakes with double tongue, | 128 |
You’ll love me yet!—and I can tarry, | 719 |
Your beauty, ripe and calm and fresh, | 302 |
Your eyen two wol slee me sodenly, | 12 |
PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS, OXFORD
BY JOHN JOHNSON, PRINTER TO THE UNIVERSITY