Index of Titles and First Lines
A
- A boat beneath a sunny sky
(Lewis Carroll)
- A Dream
(William Allingham)
- A great king made a feast for Love
(Theodosia Garrison)
- A hundred miles between us
(Theodosia Garrison)
- A late lark twitters from the quiet skies
(William Ernest Henley)
- A Smith makes me
(Rudyard Kipling)
- A wet sheet and a flowing sea
(Allan Cunningham)
- A wild west Coast, a little Town
(William Allingham)
- Abbey Asaroe
(William Allingham)
- Accession Of James II
- Ad Finem
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Adieu to Belashanny!
(William Allingham)
- Ae fond kiss, and then we sever!
(Robert Burns)
- After the Opera
(D. H. Lawrence)
- “Ah! pity all the pangs I feel
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Ah, what can ail thee, wretched wight
(John Keats)
- All that I know of love I see
(Theodosia Garrison)
- All you that do desire to know
- All's over, then: does truth sound bitter
(Robert Browning)
- American Tale, An
(Helen Maria Williams)
- An Epistle to Dr. Moore
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Anarchie, The
- And cannot pleasures, while they last
(Lewis Carroll)
- April Boughs, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- April will come to the quiet town
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Arraignment Of The Devil For Stealing Away President Bradshaw, The
- As close as a goose
(Samuel Butler, 1657)
- As roam'd a pilgrim o'er the mountain drear
(Helen Maria Williams)
- As wand'ring late on Albion's shore
(Helen Maria Williams)
- A-sitting on a Gate
(Lewis Carroll)
- Ask me no more: the moon may draw the sea
(Alfred Tennyson)
- At the midnight in the silence of the sleep-time
(Robert Browning)
- Atalanta in Camden-Town
(Lewis Carroll)
- Awakening, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Ay, 'twas here, on this spot
(Lewis Carroll)
B
- Beauty
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Because of the silent snow, we are all hushed
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Bee Boy's Song, The
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Bees! Bees! Hark to your bees!
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Behold her, single in the field
(William Wordsworth)
- Belle Dame sans Merci, La
(John Keats)
- Below them in the twilight the quiet village lies
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Bid me to live, and I will live
(Robert Herrick)
- Black Sheep
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Blest Reformation Since 1640, The
- Blow, blow your trumpets till they crack
(Lewis Carroll)
- Boat Beneath a Sunny Sky, A
(Lewis Carroll)
- Bombardment
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Book of Thel, The
(William Blake, 1789)
- Bottle Definition Of That Fallen Angel, Called A Whig, A
(Ned Ward, 1717)
- Brave Barbary, The
(Alexander Brome)
- Bread upon the Waters
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Break, break, break
(Alfred Tennyson)
- Break, break, break
(Alfred Tennyson)
- Bride, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Bridge of Sighs, The
(Thomas Hood)
- British-Roman Song, A
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Broken Lute, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Burden, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- But be contented: when that fell arrest
(William Shakespeare)
- But since it was lately enacted high treason
- By the shore, a plot of ground
(William Allingham)
C
- Call, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Cameronian Cat, The
- Canary's Coronation
- Carpette Knyghte, Ye
(Lewis Carroll)
- Catch, A
(Alexander Brome, 1660)
- Cavaleers Litany, The
- Cavalier, The
(Samuel Butler)
- Cavalier, The
(Alexander Brome, 1661–2)
- Cavalier's Complaint, The
- Cavaliers Departing Out Of London, Upon The
(Alexander Brome)
- Cavalier's Farewell To His Mistress, Being Called To The Warrs, The
- Caveat To The Roundheads, A
(Samuel Butler)
- Centurion of the Thirtieth, A
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Cheare up, kind countrymen, be not dismay'd
- Children's Song, The
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Chorus from ‘Hellas’
(Percy Bysshe Shelley)
- Christmas Song When The Rump Was First Dissolved, A
- Cities and Thrones and Powers
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Cities Loyaltie To The King, The
- Claret Drinker's Song, The
- Clean Contrary Way, The
- Cloak's Knavery, The
- Close As A Goose, As
(Samuel Butler, 1657)
- Cloud, The
(Percy Bysshe Shelley)
- Coffin For King Charles, A Crown For Cromwell, And A Pit For The People, A
- Colonel Venne's Encouragement To His Soldiers
- Come, a brimmer (my bullies), drink whole ones or nothing
(Alexander Brome)
- Come, boys, fill us a bumper
- Come buy my new ballad
- Come, come away
- Come, come, let us drink
- Come, dear children, let us away
(Matthew Arnold)
- Come, drawer, some wine
- Come, Jack, let's drink a pot of ale
- Come let's drink, the time invites
- Come, let's purge our brains from ale and grains
- Come pass about the bowl to me
(Alexander Brome, 1646)
- Come your ways
(Alexander Brome, 1645)
- Comin' or goin' still they spread the news
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Commoners, The
(Alexander Brome, 1645)
- Coronation Day, The
(Thomas Jordan, 1664)
- Country Song, A
- Courtier's Health, The
- Cromwell on the throne
- Crossing the Bar
(Alfred Tennyson)
D
- Danger Over, The
- Days, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Death Bed, The
(Thomas Hood)
- Deep in my soul that tender secret dwells
(George Gordon Byron)
- Deep on the convent-roof the snows
(Alfred Tennyson)
- Desponding Whig, The
(Ned Ward, 1709)
- Devil's Progress On Earth, The
- Disbanded Souldier, The
- Disciples, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Distance
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Does the Eagle know what is in the pit?
(William Blake, 1789)
- Dominion Of The Sword, The
- Down the stone stairs
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Downfal Of Charing-Cross, The
- Downfall Of The Good Old Cause, The
- Dreamers, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Drink to me, only with thine eyes
(Ben Jonson)
E
F
- Fair Fidelia, tempt no more
- Fair Phydelia, tempt no more
- Fair, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Fame's Penny-Trumpet
(Lewis Carroll)
- Fear no more the heat o' the sun
(William Shakespeare)
- Fight on, brave soldiers, for the cause
- First, the fish must be caught
(Lewis Carroll)
- Five little girls, of Five, Four, Three, Two, One
(Lewis Carroll)
- Flowery Banks, Ye
(Robert Burns)
- Fond Kiss, Ae
(Robert Burns)
- For mocking on men's faces
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Forsaken Merman, The
(Matthew Arnold)
- Four Ducks on a Pond
(William Allingham)
- Four ducks on a pond
(William Allingham)
- Four Riddles
(Lewis Carroll)
- Free Parliament Litany, A
- Frier Bacon walks again
- From all the mischiefs that I mention here
(Samuel Butler)
- From an extempore prayer and a godly ditty
- From harmony, from heav'nly harmony
(John Dryden)
- From his shoulder Hiawatha
(Lewis Carroll)
- From pardons which extend to woods
- Full fathom five thy father lies
(William Shakespeare)
- Full many a glorious morning have I seen
(William Shakespeare)
G
- Game of Fives, A
(Lewis Carroll)
- Gather ye rosebuds while ye may
(Robert Herrick)
- Geneva Ballad, The
(Samuel Butler)
- Glory of These Nations, The
- Go, fetch to me a pint o' wine
(Robert Burns)
- Go, lovely Rose! Tell her that wastes her time and me
(Edmund Waller)
- God save the best of kings, King Charles!
(Sir Francis Wortley, 1647)
- God send thee peace, Oh, great unhappy heart—
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Going Back
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Good days we see, let us rejoice
- Good Fellow's Design, The
- Good people, hearken to my call
- Good Subject's Wish, The
- Good-bye, my song—I, who found words for sorrow
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Good-bye, Pierrette
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Good-bye, Pierrette. The new moon waits
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Good-morrow, my neighbours all, what news is this I heard tell
- Gray, gray is Abbey Asaroe
(William Allingham)
- Great York has been debar'd of late
- Grief, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Guards!
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Gypsying, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
H
- Hail to thee, blithe spirit!
(Percy Bysshe Shelley)
- Hal o' the Draft
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Happy the man, whose wish and care
(Alexander Pope)
- Hark! the bells and steeples ring!
- Harp Song of the Dane Women
(Rudyard Kipling)
- He made him a love o' dreams—
(Theodosia Garrison)
- He that is a clear Cavalier
(Samuel Butler)
- He that would a new courtier be
(Samuel Butler, 1654)
- He that write these verses certainly
- He trilled a carol fresh and free
(Lewis Carroll)
- Heart of a Hundred Sorrows
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Hee that can impose a thing
- Hence, loathed Melancholy!
(John Milton)
- Hence, vain deluding Joys
(John Milton)
- Here's A Health Unto His Majesty
- Here's a health unto his Majesty
- Here's A House To Be Let
- Hey, Then, Up Go We
(Francis Quarles)
- Hiawatha's Photographing
(Lewis Carroll)
- High above his happy head
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Himself
(Theodosia Garrison)
- His Dancing Days
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Hohenlinden
(Thomas Campbell)
- Hold, hold, quaff no more
- Hold out, brave Charles, and thou shaft win the field
- Home-Thoughts, from the Sea
(Robert Browning)
- How happy's that pris'ner that conquers his fate
- How shall I be a poet?
(Lewis Carroll)
- How sleep the brave, who sink to rest
(William Collins, 1746)
- Huggle Duggle
- Humpty Dumpty
(Lewis Carroll)
- Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall
(Lewis Carroll)
- Humpty Dumpty's Song
(Lewis Carroll)
- Hush-a-by lady, in Alice's lap!
(Lewis Carroll)
- Hymn, A
(Helen Maria Williams)
I
- I am as weary as a child
(Theodosia Garrison)
- I arise from dreams of thee
(Percy Bysshe Shelley)
- I bring fresh showers for the thirsting flowers
(Percy Bysshe Shelley)
- I call my years back, I, grown old
(Theodosia Garrison)
- I come to charge ye that fight the clergy
(Samuel Butler)
- I come to you grown weary of much laughter
(Theodosia Garrison)
- I fear thy kisses, gentle maiden
(Percy Bysshe Shelley)
- I followed my Duke ere I was a lover
(Rudyard Kipling)
- I have a horse—a ryghte good horse
(Lewis Carroll)
- I have been a traveller long
- I heard the dogs howl in the moonlight night
(William Allingham)
- I like to think this friendship that we hold
(Theodosia Garrison)
- I lost Young Love so long ago
(Theodosia Garrison)
- I Love My King And Country Well
(Alexander Brome, 1645)
- I love my King and country well
(Alexander Brome, 1645)
- I loved him not; and yet now he is gone
(Walter Savage Landor)
- I loved no King since forty-one
(Samuel Butler, 1661)
- I. M.
(William Ernest Henley)
- I marvel, Dick, that having been
- I mean no giddy heights to climb
(Helen Maria Williams)
- I must be off where the green boughs beckon—
(Theodosia Garrison)
- I never climb a high hill
(Theodosia Garrison)
- I never loved a dear Gazelle
(Lewis Carroll)
- I once was a guest at a Nobleman's wedding
(William Allingham)
- I Remember, I Remember
(Thomas Hood)
- I remember, I remember
(Thomas Hood)
- I said I will go back again where we
(Theodosia Garrison)
- I saw the old sea captain in his city daughter's house
(Theodosia Garrison)
- I Thank You Twice
- I took the love you gave, Ah, carelessly
(Theodosia Garrison)
- I wish we might go gypsying one day the while we're young—
(Theodosia Garrison)
- If you wake at midnight, and hear a horse's feet
(Rudyard Kipling)
- If you'll hear news that's ill
- I'll tell thee everything I can
(Lewis Carroll)
- I'm askin' you'll be easy for a bit, Sir
(Theodosia Garrison)
- I'm just in love with all these three
(Rudyard Kipling)
- I'm wearin' awa', John
(Carolina Oliphant)
- In A Summer's Day
- In a summer's day when all was gay
- In Bedfordshire there dwelt a knight
(Samuel Butler)
- In red-coat raggs attired
- In Sensibility's lov'd praise I tune my trembling reed
(Helen Maria Williams)
- In vain ill men attempt us
- In winter, when the fields are white
(Lewis Carroll)
- Inlander, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood
(William Wordsworth)
- Introduction, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- It is the miller's daughter
(Alfred Tennyson)
- It was not then her heart broke—
(Theodosia Garrison)
J
K
L
- Lady Clara Vere de Vere
(Lewis Carroll)
- L'Allegro
(John Milton)
- Lamentation Of A Bad Market, The
- Land o' the Leal, The
(Carolina Oliphant)
- Land of our Birth, we pledge to thee
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Lang Coortin', The
(Lewis Carroll)
- Last Hours
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Last News From France, The
- Lawyers' Lamentation For The Loss Of Charing-Cross, The
- Lay by your pleading
- Let every man with tongue and pen
(Thomas Jordan, 1664)
- Let me not to the marriage of true minds
(William Shakespeare)
- Let me Sing of What I Know
(William Allingham)
- Let Titus and Patience stir up a commotion
- Let's leave off our labour, and now let's go play
(Alexander Brome, 1660)
- Life
(Anna Lætitia Barbauld)
- Life! I know not what thou art
(Anna Lætitia Barbauld)
- Like as the waves make towards the pebbled shore
(William Shakespeare)
- Lion and the Unicorn, The
(Lewis Carroll)
- Little Cowboy, what have you heard
(William Allingham)
- Little Joys, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- London
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Long have we waited for a happy end
(Alexander Brome)
- Long Parliament, The
(John Cleveland)
- Looking-glass For The Whigs, A
- Looking-Glass World, The
(Lewis Carroll)
- Lost Mistress, The
(Robert Browning)
- Love not me for comely grace
- Love Song, A
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Lovelace Grown Old
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Loyal Prisoner, The
- Loyal Soldier, The
- Loyal Subjects' Hearty Wishes To King Charles II, The
- Loyal Tories' Delight, The
- Loyalist's Encouragement, The
- Loyalty Turned Up Trump
- Lycidas
(John Milton)
M
- Mad World, My Masters, A
- Madrigal
- Magdalen
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Maid's Lament, The
(Walter Savage Landor)
- Make room for an honest red-coat
- Man O' The Moon, The
- Mary Morison
(Robert Burns)
- Medley, A
- Meek Twilight! soften the declining day
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Melancholetta
(Lewis Carroll)
- Memento Mori
- Merry Boys Of The Times, The
- Mine be a cot beside the hill
(Samuel Rogers)
- Mithras, God of the Morning, our trumpets waken the Wall!
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Mock Song, The
- Monseigneur Plays
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Monseigneur plays his new gavotte—
(Theodosia Garrison)
- More ballads!—here's a spick and span new supplication
- Most gracious and omnipotent
(John Cleveland)
- Mother, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Mothers of Men
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Mothers of men—the words are good indeed in the saying
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Mournful Subjects, The
- Mrs. Bates, Sonnet, To
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Mrs. Siddons, Sonnet, To
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Much have I travell'd in the realms of gold
(John Keats)
- My days among the Dead are past
(Robert Southey)
- My father took me by the hand
(Theodosia Garrison)
- My father's father saw it not
(Rudyard Kipling)
- My God! all nature owns thy sway
(Helen Maria Williams)
- My heart aches, and a drowsy numbness pains
(John Keats)
- My life has been like a bee that roves
(Theodosia Garrison)
- My little joys went by me
(Theodosia Garrison)
- My love it should be silent, being deep—
(Theodosia Garrison)
- My poplars are like ladies trim
(Theodosia Garrison)
N
- Never did I find me mate for charmin' an' delightin'
(Theodosia Garrison)
- New Ballad To An Old Tune, A
- New Courtier, The
(Alexander Brome, 1648)
- New Droll, A
- New Game At Cards, A
- New Litany, The
- New Spring, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- News! news! here's the occurrences and a new Mercurius
- New-Year's Gift For The Rump, A
- Night before his Death, The
(Walter Raleigh)
- No longer mourn for me when I am dead
(William Shakespeare)
- No, no, go not to Lethe, neither twist
(John Keats)
- No riches from his scanty store
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Nobly, nobly Cape Saint Vincent to the North-west died away
(Robert Browning)
- Nostalgia
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Now, at the hour when ignorant mortals
(William Allingham)
- Now fare thee well, London
(Alexander Brome)
- Now that, thankes to the powers below!
- Now the Bad Old Cause is tapt
- Now the Rump is confounded
O
- O Mary, at thy window be!
(Robert Burns)
- O, my luve is like a red, red rose
(Robert Burns)
- O wild West Wind, thou breath of Autumn's being
(Percy Bysshe Shelley)
- Obsequial Ode
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Ode on a Grecian Urn
(John Keats)
- Ode on Melancholy
(John Keats)
- Ode on Solitude
(Alexander Pope)
- Ode on the Peace, An
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Ode to a Nightingale
(John Keats)
- Ode to the West Wind
(Percy Bysshe Shelley)
- Of a' the Airts
(Robert Burns)
- Of a' the airts the wind can blaw
(Robert Burns)
- Of all the factions in the town
(Samuel Butler)
- Of all the trees that grow so fair
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Oh, Heart of a Hundred Sorrows
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Oh! Snatched Away in Beauty's Bloom
(George Gordon Byron)
- Oh! snatched away in beauty's bloom
(George Gordon Byron)
- Oh, thou whose melody the heart obeys
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Old Boats
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Old England is now a brave Barbary made
(Alexander Brome)
- Old Familiar Faces, The
(Charles Lamb)
- Old Jemmy
- Old Jemmy is a lad
- Old Protestant's Litany, The
- Old Song On Oliver's Court, An
(Samuel Butler, 1654)
- On a Girdle
(Edmund Waller)
- On a poet's lips I slept
(Percy Bysshe Shelley)
- On first looking into Chapman's Homer
(John Keats)
- On His Blindness
(John Milton)
- On his Mistress, the Queen of Bohemia
(Henry Wotton)
- On Linden, when the sun was low
(Thomas Campbell)
- On the Great Wall
(Rudyard Kipling)
- On The King's Return
(Alexander Brome)
- On the March
(D. H. Lawrence)
- On the Morning of Christ's Nativity
(John Milton)
- On The Most High And Mighty Monarch King James
- One is for the mother who prays for me at night
(Theodosia Garrison)
- One more Unfortunate
(Thomas Hood)
- One winter night, at half-past nine
(Lewis Carroll)
- Orchards
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Orchards in the Spring-time! Oh, I think and think of them,—
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Out of the night that covers me
(William Ernest Henley)
- Oxford and Cambridge shall agree
P
- Pale moon! thy mild benignant light
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Paraphrases from Scripture
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Parasite, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Parliament Routed, The
- Part of an Irregular Fragment, Found in a Dark Passage of the Tower
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Penseroso, Il
(John Milton)
- Peru, a Poem, in Six Cantos
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Phanatick Zeal
- Phantasmagoria
(Lewis Carroll)
- Pict Song, A
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Pill For Fanaticks, A
- Poet, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Poeta Fit, Non Nascitur
(Lewis Carroll)
- Polititian, The
- Poplars, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Prattle Your Pleasure Under The Rose
- Prisoners, The
(Alexander Brome)
- Proper New Ballad On The Old Parliament, A
- Prophets have honour all over the Earth
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Protecting Brewer, The
- Puck's Song
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Puritan, The
(John Cleveland)
Q
R
- Rebellion hath broken up house
- Red Queen's Lullaby, The
(Lewis Carroll)
- Red, Red Rose, A
(Robert Burns)
- Reformation, The
(Samuel Butler, 1652)
- Reiðr vas þá Ving-Þórr es vaknaði
- Rejoice, rejoice, ye Cavaliers
- Relation, A
- Requiem
(Robert Louis Stevenson)
- Restoration, The
- Return, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Return, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Returning, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Rise, winds of night! relentless tempests rise!
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Rome never looks where she treads
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Rondeau of a Conscientious Objector
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Room for a gamester that plays at all he sees
- Rose, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Roundhead, The
(Samuel Butler)
- Royal Admiral, The
- Royal Feast, The
(Sir Francis Wortley, 1647)
- Royalist, The
(Alexander Brome, 1646)
- Royalist, The
- Royalist's Resolve, The
- Ruination
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Runes on Weland's Sword, The
(Rudyard Kipling)
S
- Saint George And The Dragon, Anglice Mercurius Poeticus
- Sale Of Rebellion's House-Hold Stuff, The
- Salem Mother, A
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Saw you the State's money new come from the Mint?
- Say not the Struggle Nought Availeth
(Arthur Hugh Clough)
- Say not, the struggle nought availeth
(Arthur Hugh Clough)
- Sea Dirge, A
(Lewis Carroll)
- Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness
(John Keats)
- Second Part Of Knave Out Of Doors, The
- Second Part Of St George For England, The
- See you the dimpled track that runs
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Seek up and down, both fair and brown
(William Allingham)
- Seer of Hearts, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Sensibility, To
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Shade
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Shades
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?
(William Shakespeare)
- Shall I tell you, then, how it is?—
(D. H. Lawrence)
- She dwelt among the untrodden ways
(William Wordsworth)
- She dwelt among the untrodden ways
(William Wordsworth)
- She put her wedding-gown away
(Theodosia Garrison)
- She Walks in Beauty
(George Gordon Byron)
- She walks in Beauty, like the night
(George Gordon Byron)
- She was a Phantom of delight
(William Wordsworth)
- She was a Phantom of delight
(William Wordsworth)
- Sheila
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Short Litany For The Year 1649, A
(Samuel Butler)
- Siddons! the Muse, for many a joy refin'd
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Sigh no more, ladies, sigh no more
(William Shakespeare)
- Silent One, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Silver Tassie, The
(Robert Burns)
- Since it must be so
(Alexander Brome, 1648)
- Since it must be so, why then so let it go
- Sir Richard's Song
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Size and Tears
(Lewis Carroll)
- Skylark, To a
(Percy Bysshe Shelley)
- Smugglers' Song, A
(Rudyard Kipling)
- So quietly I seem to sit apart
(Theodosia Garrison)
- SO you are lost to me!
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Soldier's Delight, The
- Solitary Reaper, The
(William Wordsworth)
- Some Christian kings began to quake
- Sometimes, slow moving through unlovely days
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Song
(William Davenant)
- Song
(Oliver Goldsmith)
- Song
(Edmund Waller)
- Song, A
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Song, A
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Song for St. Cecilia's Day, 1687, A
(John Dryden)
- Song from ‘Ajax and Ulysses’
(James Shirley)
- Song from ‘Cymbeline’
(William Shakespeare)
- Song from “Don Juan”
(George Gordon Byron)
- Song from ‘Measure for Measure’
(William Shakespeare)
- Song from ‘Much Ado about Nothing’
(William Shakespeare)
- Song from “Pippa Passes”
(Robert Browning)
- Song from “Pippa Passes”
(Robert Browning)
- Song from ‘Prometheus Unbound’
(Percy Bysshe Shelley)
- Song from “The Corsair”
(George Gordon Byron)
- Song from ‘The Miller's Daughter’
(Alfred Tennyson)
- Song from ‘The Princess’
(Alfred Tennyson)
- Song from ‘The Princess’
(Alfred Tennyson)
- Song from ‘The Tempest’
(William Shakespeare)
- Song of Heloise, A
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Song of the Fifth River
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Song of the Young Page, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Song to Mithras, A
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Song To The Figure Two
- Sonnet
(John Keats)
- Sonnet CVI
(William Shakespeare)
- Sonnet CXVI
(William Shakespeare)
- Sonnet LX
(William Shakespeare)
- Sonnet LXVI
(William Shakespeare)
- Sonnet LXXI
(William Shakespeare)
- Sonnet LXXIII
(William Shakespeare)
- Sonnet LXXIV
(William Shakespeare)
- Sonnet XVII
(William Shakespeare)
- Sonnet XVIII
(William Shakespeare)
- Sonnet XXX
(William Shakespeare)
- Sonnet XXXIII
(William Shakespeare)
- Sonnets: Part I. XXXIII
(William Wordsworth)
- Sonnets: Part II. XXXVI
(William Wordsworth, 1802–09–03)
- St. Agnes' Eve
(Alfred Tennyson)
- Stanzas
(Robert Southey)
- Stanzas, Written in Dejection, near Naples
(Percy Bysshe Shelley)
- State's New Coin, The
- Stay, shut the gate!
- Stay, stay, prate no more
(Alexander Brome)
- Stay-at-Home, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Sunset and evening star
(Alfred Tennyson)
- Surely you've trodden straight
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Sweet day, so cool, so calm, so bright
(George Herbert)
- Sweet Highland Girl, a very shower
(William Wordsworth)
- Sweet stream that winds through yonder glade
(William Cowper)
- Swiftly walk over the western wave
(Percy Bysshe Shelley)
T
- Take, O, take those lips away
(William Shakespeare)
- Tale Of The Cobbler And The Vicar Of Bray, The
(Samuel Butler)
- Tears, idle tears, I know not what they mean
(Alfred Tennyson)
- Tell me not of Lords and laws
(Samuel Butler, 1652)
- Tell me not, (sweet,) I am unkind
(Richard Lovelace)
- Tema Con Variazioni
(Lewis Carroll)
- That thou wilt be pleased to grant our requests
- That time of year thou mayst in me behold
(William Shakespeare)
- That which her slender waist confined
(Edmund Waller)
- The Abbot of Innisfallen
(William Allingham)
- The Abbot of Innisfallen awoke ere dawn of day
(William Allingham)
- The Angel of the night when night was gone
(Theodosia Garrison)
- The Attack
(D. H. Lawrence)
- The burden that I bear would be no less
(Theodosia Garrison)
- The Child is father of the Man
(William Wordsworth)
- The child like mustard-seed
(D. H. Lawrence)
- The chime of the bells, and the church clock striking eight
(D. H. Lawrence)
- THE cool of an oak's unchequered shade
(D. H. Lawrence)
- The curfew tolls the knell of parting day
(Thomas Gray)
- The Fairies
(William Allingham)
- The Girl's Lamentation
(William Allingham)
- The glories of our blood and state
(James Shirley)
- The gypsies passed her little gate—
(Theodosia Garrison)
- The heart of me's an empty thing, that never stirs at all
(Theodosia Garrison)
- The hierarchy is out of date
- The hours have tumbled their leaden, monotonous sands
(D. H. Lawrence)
- The houseful that we were then, you could count us by the dozens
(Theodosia Garrison)
- The Indian Serenade
(Percy Bysshe Shelley)
- The Isles of Greece, the Isles of Greece!
(George Gordon Byron)
- The kindliest thing God ever made
(Theodosia Garrison)
- THE ladye she stood at her lattice high
(Lewis Carroll)
- The lark now leaves his wat'ry nest
(William Davenant)
- The Lepracaun or Fairy Shoemaker
(William Allingham)
- The Lion and the Unicorn were fighting for the crown
(Lewis Carroll)
- The little dream she had forgot
(Theodosia Garrison)
- The Little Town at Evening
(D. H. Lawrence)
- The long grief left her old—and then
(Theodosia Garrison)
- The Lover and Birds
(William Allingham)
- The Maids of Elfin-Mere
(William Allingham)
- The man o' the moon for ever!
- The Mock Song: The Answer
(Alexander Brome)
- The moon to-night is like the sun
(Theodosia Garrison)
- The night turns slowly round
(D. H. Lawrence)
- The Nobleman's Wedding
(William Allingham)
- The pick o' seven counties, so they're tellin' me, was there
(Theodosia Garrison)
- The Ruined Chapel
(William Allingham)
- The sun is bleeding its fires upon the mist
(D. H. Lawrence)
- The sun is warm, the sky is clear
(Percy Bysshe Shelley)
- The sun shines
(D. H. Lawrence)
- The sun was shining on the sea
(Lewis Carroll)
- THE TOWN has opened to the sun
(D. H. Lawrence)
- The waning moon looks upward; this grey night
(D. H. Lawrence)
- The Whigs are but small, and of no good race
- The Winding Banks of Erne
(William Allingham)
- The world is too much with us; late and soon
(William Wordsworth)
- The world's great age begins anew
(Percy Bysshe Shelley)
- The wretch condemn'd with life to part
(Oliver Goldsmith)
- The year's at the spring
(Robert Browning)
- There are certain things—as, a spider, a ghost
(Lewis Carroll)
- There is an old proverb which all the world knows
- There was a Cameronian cat
- There was an ancient City, stricken down
(Lewis Carroll)
- There's no wind along these seas
(Rudyard Kipling)
- They are ashamed who leave so soon
(Theodosia Garrison)
- They brought to the little Princess, from her earliest hour of birth
(Theodosia Garrison)
- They do not know the awful tears we shed
(Theodosia Garrison)
- They whisper at my very gate
(Theodosia Garrison)
- This Christmas time 'tis fit that we
- This is the month, and this the happy morn
(John Milton)
- Thorkild's Song
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Thou still unravish'd bride of quietness
(John Keats)
- Though other eyes were turned to him
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Three Songs in a Garden
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Three Voices, The
(Lewis Carroll)
- Three-Part Song, A
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Times, The
- Time-Server, The
- Tired with all these, for restful death I cry
(William Shakespeare)
- To ——
(Percy Bysshe Shelley)
- To a Highland Girl, at Inversneyde, upon Loch Lomond
(William Wordsworth)
- To a Young Lady
(William Cowper)
- To Anthea, who may command him anything
(Robert Herrick)
- To Autumn
(John Keats)
- To Celia
(Ben Jonson)
- To Lucasta. Going to the Wars
(Richard Lovelace)
- To Night
(Percy Bysshe Shelley)
- To R. T. H. B.
(William Ernest Henley)
- To the Looking-Glass world it was Alice that said
(Lewis Carroll)
- To the Virgins, to make much of Time
(Robert Herrick)
- Tom Of Bedlam
- Tommies in the Train
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Town
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Transients
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Tree Song, A
(Rudyard Kipling)
- Trouper, The
- True Relation Of The Lord General Monk's Political Proceedings, A
- True subjects mourn, and well they may
- Tub-Preacher, The
(Samuel Butler)
- Turn-Coat, The
(Samuel Butler, 1661)
- 'Twas brillig, and the slithy toves
(Lewis Carroll)
- Tweedledum and Tweedledee
(Lewis Carroll)
- Tweedledum and Tweedledee agreed to have a battle
(Lewis Carroll)
- Twilight
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Twilight, Sonnet, To
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Twilight Voices
(William Allingham)
U
V
W
- Walrus and the Carpenter, The
(Lewis Carroll)
- War-baby
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Ways and Means
(Lewis Carroll)
- We are out on the open road
(D. H. Lawrence)
- We have a King, and yet no King
- We have ventured our estates
(Alexander Brome, 1661–2)
- We watch'd her breathing through the night
(Thomas Hood)
- Wealth breeds care, love, hope, and fear
- Wedding Gown, The
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Wet Sheet and a Flowing Sea, A
(Allan Cunningham)
- What creature's that, with his short hairs
(Samuel Butler)
- What do they know of youth, who still are young?
(Theodosia Garrison)
- What Booker doth prognosticate
(Martin Parker)
- What is a Whig? A cunning rogue
(Ned Ward, 1717)
- What is a woman that you forsake her
(Rudyard Kipling)
- What is it that is gone, we fancied ours?
(William Allingham)
- What means, honest shepherd, this cloud on thy brow?
- What though the zealots pull down the prelates
- When first by Eden Tree
(Rudyard Kipling)
- When I consider how my light is spent
(John Milton)
- When I have fears that I may cease to be
(John Keats)
- When I left Rome for Lalage's sake
(Rudyard Kipling)
- When in the chronicle of wasted time
(William Shakespeare)
- When in the field of Mars we lie
- When on the sandy shore I sit
(Lewis Carroll)
- When owles are strip'd of their disguise
(Ned Ward, 1709)
- When Pierrot Passes
(Theodosia Garrison)
- When The King Comes Home In Peace Again
- When The King Enjoys His Own Again
(Martin Parker)
- When the spinning-room was here
(William Allingham)
- When the white dawn comes
(Theodosia Garrison)
- When to the sessions of sweet silent thought
(William Shakespeare)
- When we came out of the wood
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Where are they gone, the old familiar faces?
(Charles Lamb)
- Where the pacific deep in silence laves
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Where the pure Derwent's waters glide
(Helen Maria Williams)
- Where the trees rise like cliffs, proud and blue-tinted in the distance
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Where's those that did prognosticate
- Whigs are now such precious things
- Whigs Drowned In An Honest Tory Health, The
- While thee I seek, protecting Power!
(Helen Maria Williams)
- White Queen's Riddle, The
(Lewis Carroll)
- White rose-leaves in my hands, I toss you all away
(Theodosia Garrison)
- Who will believe my verse in time to come
(William Shakespeare)
- Who would not be a Tory
- Whole Nation's Lamentation, The
- Why kept your train-bands such a stirre?
- Win At First And Lose At Last
- Wine the most powerfull'st of all things on earth
- Winter-Lull
(D. H. Lawrence)
- Wish, A
(Samuel Rogers)
- With face and fashion to be known
(Samuel Butler)
- With face and fashion to be known
(John Cleveland)
- With grief and mourning I sit to spin
(William Allingham)
- With saddest music all day long
(Lewis Carroll)
- Within a budding grove, In April's ear sang every bird his best
(William Allingham)
- Written in the Year 1746
(William Collins, 1746)
Y
Æ
Þ