Your search query has been changed...Tried: (london and yearly and meeting and society and of and friends and case and of and the and vigilante and a and ship and employed and in and the and slave and trade and with and some and reflections and on and that and traffic)
no results found...Tried: (london or yearly or meeting or society or friends or case or the or vigilante or ship or employed or the or slave or trade or with or some or reflections or that or traffic)
32000 results found. Sorted by relevance .
Eighteenth century forerunners. The tree ; from The petition for an absolute retreat ; To the nightingale ; A nocturnal reverie / A fairy tale ; A night-piece on death ; A hymn to contentment / The highland laddie ; My Peggy ; Sweet William's ghost ; Through the wood laddie ; An thou were my ain thing ; from The gentle shepherd. Patie and Peggy / Preface to the evergreen / The braes of Yarrow / William and Margaret ; The Birks of Endermay / Grongar Hill ; The fleece. from Book I / The seasons. from Winter ; from Summer ; from Autumn ; A hymn on the seasons ; The castle of indolence, from Canto I ; Tell me, thou soul of her I love ; To Amanda ; Preface to winter /
Canzoniere, 132 / Troilus and Criseyde, Canticus Troili / The longe love, that in my thought doeth harbar ; Who so list to hounte I know where is an hynde ; Farewell, Love, and all thy lawes for ever ; My galy chargèd with forgetfulnes ; I find no peace, and all my war is done / The soote season, that bud and blome furth bringes ; Alas, so all thinges nowe doe holde their peace ; I never saw you, madam, lay apart ; Love that liveth and reigneth in my thought / A Meditation of a Penitent Sinner: Written in maner of a Paraphrase upon the 51 Psalme of David ; Loe prostrate, Lorde, before thy face I lye ; But render me my wonted joyes againe / That self-same tongue which first did thee entreat ; Sonet written in prayse of the brown beautie / Licia or poems of love First did I fear, when first my love began / Amoretti: Happy ye leaves when as those lilly hands ; More thenmost faire, full of the living fire ; Rolling wheele that runneth often round ; This holy season fit to fast and pray ; Penelope for her Ulisses' sake ; My love is lyke to yse, and I to fyre ; What guyle is this, that those her golden tresses ; Leave, lady, in your glasse of christal clene ; Lyke as a huntsman after weary chace ; Most glorious Lord of lyfe that on this day ; One day I wrote her name upon the strand ; Lackyng my love I go from place to place ; Men call you fayre, and you doe credit it ; Fayre is my love, when her fayre golden heares / Caelica: Caelica, I overnight was finely used ; Nurse-life wheat, within his green husk growing ; In night when colours all to black are cast / Countess of Pembroke's arcadia: My true love hat my hart, and I have his ; Astrophel and Stella: Loving in truth, and faine in verse my love to show ; Let daintie wits crie on the sisters nine ; It is most true that eyes are form'd to serve ; With how sad steps, O moon, thou climb'st the skies ; My mouth doth water, and my breast doth swell ; Come sleepe, O sleepe, the certaine knot of peace ; Having this day, my horse, my hand, my launce ; What, have I thus betrayed my libertie? ; I on my horse, and love on me doth trie ; Because I breathe not love to everie one ; O grammer rules, O now your vertues show ; Who will in fairest booke of nature know ; Love still a boy, and oft a wanton is ; Stella, thinke not that I by verse seeke fame ; Certaine sonnets: Leave me, O love, which reachest but to dust / Vision upon this conceipt of the faery queene ; Secret murder hath been done of late ; To his son / Phillis: Honoured with pastorall sonnets, elegies and amorous delights ; Coronet for his mistress philosophy: Muses that sing love's sensual empery -- Diana: Needs must I leave, and yet needs must I love -- Sonet: Fra banc to banc, fra wod to wod, I rin / To Delia: Looke, Delia, how wee steeme the half-blowne rose ; Care-charmer sleepe, sonne of the sable night ; Let others sing of knights and palladines / Idea in sixtie three sonnets: Nothing but no and I, and I and no ; How many paltry, foolish, painted things ; Love, in a humor, play'd the prodigall ; His remedie for love ; Sitting alone, love bids me goe and write ; Since ther's no helpe, come let us kisse and part / Some blaze the precious beauties of their loves ; Although we do not all the good we love ; Author loving these homely meats speciall, viz. :cream, pancakes, buttered pippin-pies, &c. /
That Reminds Me -- A Bas Ben Adhem -- Seaside Serenade -- Sedative Reflection -- People -- Nevertheless -- When the Devil Was Sick Could He Prove It? -- Oh, Stop Being Thankful All Over the Place -- "My Child is Phlegmatic ..." -- Anxious Parent -- Ha! Original Sin! -- The Party -- Kindly Unhitch That Star, Buddy -- The Passionate Pagan and the Dispassionate Public -- Theatrical Reflection -- Portrait of the Artist as a Prematurely Old Man -- Scram, Lion! -- A Brief Guide to New York -- Birdies, Don't Make Me Laugh -- The Pig -- Lines to a World-Famous Poet Who Failed to Complete a World-Famous Poem, or Come Clean, Mr. Guest! -- Taboo to Boot -- The Cobra -- Very Like a Whale -- Advice Outside a Church -- Platitudinous Reflection -- Fragonard -- Electra Becomes Morbid -- Reflection on a Wicked World -- Our Child Doesn't Know Anything, or, Thank God! -- Listen ... -- The Rabbits -- You Have More Freedom in a House -- Love under the Republicans (or Democrats) -- Don't Look Now -- Reminiscent Reflection -- Lines to Be Mumbled at Ovington's -- Dont' Cry, Darling, It's Blood All Right -- Reflections on Ice-Breaking -- Invocation -- King Leer -- My Daddy -- When You Say That, Smile!, or, All Right Then, Don't Smile -- It Must Be the Milk -- A Lady Thinks She Is Thirty -- Procrastinatin Is All of the Time -- Edouard -- The Individualist -- In Which the Poet Is Ashamed But Pleased -- Funebrial Reflection -- I Know You'll Like Them -- Judgment Day -- The Canary -- The Terrible People -- The Tale of Custard the Dragon -- Political Reflection -- It's Never Fair Weather -- Arthur -- Ma, What's a Banker? or, Hush, My Child -- Golly, How Truth Will Out! -- The Camel -- Will Consider Situation -- The Rooster -- Pretty Halcyon Days -- Mr. Peachey's Predicament, or, Not Mot Parades -- The Sea-Gull -- The Big Tent under the Roof -- Drusilla -- A Good Parent's Garden of Vision -- Literary Reflection -- Two and One Are a Problem -- Song of the Open Road -- Thunder over the Nursery -- The Clean Platter -- The Duck -- Mr. Artesian's Conscientiousness -- The Lama -- Goody for Our Side and Your Side Too -- The Parent -- Family Court -- The Life of the Party -- The Germ -- One Third of a Calendar -- More about People -- The Cow -- Lines to a Three-Name Lady -- Little Feet -- Genealogical Reflection -- The Mind of Professor Primrose -- Reflection on Ingenuity -- The Turtle -- After the Christening -- Aside to Husbands -- The Fish -- Tell It to the Eskimos, or, Tell It to the Esquimaux -- Reflection on Caution -- Turns in a Worm's Lane -- Election Day Is a Holiday -- The Rhinoceros -- September Morn -- From a Manhattan Tomb -- Reflection on Babies -- Epstein, Spare That Yule Log! -- Birth Comes to the Archbishop -- Some of My Best Friends Are Children -- Old Men -- A Drink with Something in It -- Watchman, What of the First First Lady? -- Children's Party -- The Panther -- The Very Unclubbable Man -- Pediatric Reflection -- Good-By, Old Year, You Oaf, or, Why Don't They Pay the Bonus? -- A Carol for Children -- Song for a Temperature of a Hundred and One -- What's the Use? -- I Never Ever Suggested It -- The Kitten -- Don't Guess, Let Me Tell You -- The Caribou -- Please Leave Father Alone -- Legal Reflection -- What's the Matter, Haven't You Got Any Sense of Humor? -- Lucy Lake -- The Oyster -- How Long Has This Been Going On? Oh, Quite Long -- A Watched Example Never Boils -- The Wapiti -- Hearts and Flowers, or, What I Know about Bolivar Black -- Spring Comes to Murray Hill -- Nothing But Nature -- Two Songs for a Boss Named Mr. Longwell -- A Warning to Wives -- Song to Be Sung by the Father of Infant Female Children -- The Phoenix -- Lines Indited with All the Depravity of Poverty -- Malice Domestic -- Machinery Doesn't Answer, Either, but You Aren't Married to It -- A Child's Guide to Parents -- The Turkey -- The Seven Spiritual Ages of Mrs. Marmaduke Moore -- Everybody Tells Me Everything -- The Wombat -- Look for the Silver Lining -- Oh, to Be Odd! -- My Dear, How Ever Did You Think Up This Delicious Salad? -- What Almost Every Woman Knows Sooner or Later -- Pride Goeth before a Raise, or Ah, There, Mrs. Cadwallader-Smith! -- The Squirrel -- Are You a Snodgrass? -- A Parable for Sports Writers, Society Columnists, Bond Salesmen and Poets, or, Go Get a Reputation -- Reflection on the Fallibility of Nemesis -- Raven, Don't Stay Away from My Door -- A Chant for April First -- Dragons Are Too Seldom -- Suppose I Darken Your Door -- Look What You Did, Christopher! -- First Payment Deferred -- Hush, Here They Come -- Biological Reflection -- I Yield to My Learned Brother, or, Is There a Candlestick Maker in the House? -- I Had No Idea It Was So Late -- Reflection on the Passage of Time, Its Inevitability and Its Quirks -- Grasshoppers Are Very Intelligent -- Hearts of Gold, or, A Good Excuse Is Worse Than None -- Introspective Reflection -- Curl Up and Diet -- I Have It On Good Authority -- The Middle of the Month -- First Families, Move Over! -- A Clean Conscience Never Relaxes -- Bankers Are Just Like Anybody Else, Except Richer -- Prayer at the End of a Rope -- Miriam's Lucky Day -- Women Pulls the Wires -- Song Before Breakfast -- The Unselfish Husband -- The Common Cold -- Splash! -- I'll Get One Tomorrow -- The Japanese -- The Friendly Touch -- Don't Grin, or You'll Have to Bear It -- Song for Ditherers -- The Strange Case of Mr. Donnybrook's Boredom -- Experience to Let -- The Man with Two New Suits -- It's Snug to Be Smug -- To a Lady Passing TIme Better Left Unpassed -- The Strange Case of the Blackmailing Dove -- Nine Miles to the Railroad -- Every Day is Monday -- Poor Mr. Strawbridge -- Coffee with the Meal -- The Queen Is in the Parlor -- The Eight O'Clock Peril -- The Strange Case of Mr. Ballentine's Valentine -- Epilogue to Mother's Day, Which Is to Be Published on Any Day but Mother's Day -- England Expects -- This Was Told to Me in Confidence -- Unanswered by Request -- Cat Naps Are Too Good for Cats -- The City -- Nature Knows Best -- Summergreen for President -- The Strange Case of the Dead Divorcee -- Everybody East Too Much Anyhow -- Yes and No -- Columbus -- A Necessary Dirge -- One Man's Meed Is Another Man's Overemphasis -- The Strange Case of the Pleasing Taxi-Driver -- Everybody Makes Poets -- No Wonder Our Fathers Died -- Midsummer's Daymare -- The Strange Case of the Irksome Prude -- A Word on Wind -- A Stitch Too Late Is My Fate -- Spring Song -- Shrinking Song -- The Drop of a Hat -- The Strange Case of Mr. Fortague's Disappointment -- Under the Floor -- The Strange Case of the Ambitious Caddy -- Kind of an Ode to Duty -- Boop-boop-Adieup, Little Group! -- Man Bites Dog-Days -- I'm Terribly Sorry for You, but I Can't Help Laughing -- Where There's a Will, There's Velleity -- The Strange Case of the Girl o' Mr. Sponson's Dreams -- The Calf -- The Purist -- The Ant -- The Hippopotamus -- The Centipede -- Jangle Bells -- Up from the Wheelbarrow -- Away from it All -- The Sage of Darien -- Pipe Dreams -- Absence Makes the Heart Grow Heart Trouble -- Out Is Out -- Isn't That a Dainty Dish? No! -- Oh, Please Don't Get Up! -- How Now, Sirrah? Oh, Anyhow -- Mr. Barcalow's Breakdown -- The Evening Out -- Song for Pier Something or Other -- The Introduction -- Riding on a Railroad Train -- Just Keep Quiet and Nobody Will Notice! -- Parsley for Vice-President! -- Lines to Be Scribbled on Somebody Else's Thirtieth Milestone -- Little Miss Muffet Sat on a Prophet -- and Quite Right, Too -- The Party Next Door -- Locust-Lovers, Attention! -- Traveler's Rest -- The Name Is Too Familiar -- Who Understands Who Anyhow? -- The Banquet -- Do Sphinxes Think? -- Wednesday Matinee -- Barmaids are Diviner Than Mermaids -- So Penseroso -- Complaint to Four Angels -- A Plea for a League of Sleep -- Captain John Smith -- Requiem -- Inter-Office Memorandum -- Time Marches On -- Allow Me, Madam, but It Won't Help -- You and Me and P.B. Shelley -- Glossina Morsitans, or, the Tsetse -- Now Tell Me About Yourself -- Lather As You Go -- Tin Wedding Whistle -- The Skink -- The Strange Case of Mr. Ormantude's Bride -- The Absentees -- April Yule, Daddy! -- I Happen to Know -- I'm Sure She Said Six-Thirty -- Do, Do, Do What You Done, Done, Done Before, Before, Before -- What, No Oysters? -- Ms. Found in a Quagmire -- The Sniffle -- We Don't Need To Leave Yet, Do We? or, Yes We do -- The Smelt -- Slow Down, Mr. Ganderdonk, You're Late -- Creeps and Crawls -- The Screen with the Face with the Voice -- A Visit from Dr. Fell -- Here We Go Quietly Nuts in May -- I Want a Drink of Water, but Not from the Thermos -- The Trouble with Women is Men -- A Beginner's Guide to the Ocean -- The Gander -- Put Back Those Whiskers, I Know You -- Bugs -- No Doctors Today, Thank You -- Dance Unmacabre -- It's a Grand Parade It Will Be, Modern Design -- Down the Mousehole, and What Science Missed There -- Visits Laugh at Locksmiths, or, Hospital Doors Haven't Got Locks Anyhow -- Lament on the Eve of Parting -- Suppose He Threw It in Your Face -- The Grackle -- Now You See It, Now I Don't -- So That's Who I Remind Me of -- There's Always an Ubblebub -- Please Pass the Biscuit -- "Tomorrow, Partly Cloudy" -- Dr. Fell and Points West -- Lines on Facing Forty -- One Night in Oz -- Thought Thought on an Avenue -- Thought Thought While Waiting for a Pronouncement from a Doctor, an Editor, a Big Executive, the Department of Internal Revenue or Any Other Momentous Pronouncer -- Samson Agonistes -- Seeing Eye to Eye Is Believing -- The Strange Case of Mr. Niobob's Transmogrification -- And Three Hundred and Sixty-Six in Leap Year -- Just Wrap It Up, and I'll Throw It Away Later -- Dr. Fell? I Thought So -- The Strange Case of Mr. Pauncefoot's Broad Mind -- Summer Serenade
Introduction / Bury me in a free land: 1770-1899 -- Lift every voice: 1900-1918 -- Dark tower: 1919-1936 -- Ballads of remembrance: 1936-1959 -- Ideas of ancestry: 1959-1975 -- Blue light sutras: 1976-1989 -- Praise songs for the day: 1990-2008 -- After the hurricane: 2009-2020
Corn riggs an' barley rigs ; To a mouse ; Green grown the rashes ; Holy Willie's prayer ; Willie brewed a peck o' maut ; Tam o' shanter ; Afton Water ; Ae fond kiss ; Ye flowery banks ; Scots, what hae ; For a' that and a' that ; A red, red rose ; Auld lang syne /