The London Book of English VerseEyre & Spottiswoode, 1952 - 891 من الصفحات |
المحتوى
SONGS AND INCANTATIONS | 64 |
Thomas Love Peacock The Wise Men of Gotham Seamen | 132 |
Ambrose Philips To Signora Cuzzoni Little Siren of the three stage | 133 |
THE POETRY OF SENTI | 134 |
James John and Balulalow Robert Wedderburn 137 Aurelian Townshend Though Regionsfar Divided | 137 |
Sir Thomas Wyatt How should I be so pleasant? | 138 |
Sir Thomas Wyatt Farewell unkist | 139 |
Sir Thomas Wyatt With Serving Still | 140 |
John Donne The Sun Rising disclose the shames | 156 |
Henry Howard Earl of Description of Spring The soote season Surrey | 157 |
Edmund Spenser Sonnet Happy ye leaves | 158 |
Edmund Spenser Sonnet Being my selfe captyved | 159 |
Michael Drayton Sonnet Since theres no help | 160 |
Sir Thomas Wyatt They flee from | 161 |
Walter Savage Landor Past ruind Ilion | 162 |
William Shakespeare Sonnet Shall I compare thee | 163 |
Sir Thomas Wyatt Say Nay | 141 |
Sir Thomas Wyatt Rondeau What no perdie | 142 |
Thomas Campion Shall I come sweet Love to thee? | 143 |
Thomas Campion My Sweetest Lesbia | 144 |
Thomas Campion Where She her Sacred Bower Adorns | 145 |
Love Vagabonding | 146 |
Geoffrey Chaucer The Dream of the Romaunt of the Rose | 147 |
William Broome The RoseBud | 148 |
Sir Thomas Wyatt Ye know my heart | 149 |
Christopher Marlowe The Passionate Shepherd to His Love | 150 |
Sir Walter Raleigh The Nymphs Reply to the Shepherd | 151 |
Robert Greene The Shepherds Wifes Song Ah what | 152 |
Phineas Fletcher Chromis Chromis my joy is love? It is a pretty thing | 153 |
Fulke Greville Myra I with whose colours | 154 |
Michael Drayton Cloris and Mertilla Chaste Cloris doth | 155 |
William Shakespeare Sonnet When in disgrace | 164 |
William Shakespeare Sonnet When to the sessions | 165 |
William Shakespeare Sonnet Full many a glorious morn | 166 |
William Shakespeare Sonnet Not marble nor the gilded monu ing ments | 167 |
William Shakespeare Sonnet Like as the waves | 168 |
William Shakespeare Sonnet That time of year | 169 |
William Shakespeare Sonnet Let me not to the marriage | 170 |
of true minds | 171 |
FANTASY AND CURIOUS | 206 |
DESCRIPTIVE VERSE OF AN OBJECTIVE | 309 |
DESCRIPTIVE VERSE OF AN IMPRESSION | 372 |
MORALISTIC VERSE | 471 |
METAPHYSICAL VERSE | 570 |
THE SYMPHONIC POEM | 662 |