Title | Poet | Year Written | Collection | Body |
---|---|---|---|---|
“Love not” | Caroline Elizabeth Sarah | English |
Love not, love not, ye hapless sons of clay! Love not! the thing ye love may... |
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“Love scorns degrees” | Paul Hamilton Hayne | English |
From “The Mountain of the Lovers” |
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“Maid of Athens, ere we part” | Lord Byron | English |
Maid of Athens, ere we part, By those tresses unconfined, |
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“Make way for Liberty” | James Montgomery | 1791 | English |
[Battle of Sempach, fourteenth century] “MAKE way for Liberty!”—he cried; |
“Max and Maurice”: Last Trick | Wilhelm Busch | 1852 | English |
Translated by Charles Timothy Brooks MAX and Maurice! I grow sick, |
“Max and Maurice”: Preface | Wilhelm Busch | 1852 | English |
Translated by Charles Timothy Brooks AH, how oft we read or hear of |
“Max and Maurice”: Trick First | Wilhelm Busch | 1852 | English |
Translated by Charles Timothy Brooks TO most people who have leisure |
“Max and Maurice”: Trick Second | Wilhelm Busch | 1852 | English |
Translated by Charles Timothy Brooks WHEN the worthy Widow Tibbets |
“Max and Maurice”: Trick Third | Wilhelm Busch | 1852 | English |
Translated by Charles Timothy Brooks THROUGH the town and country round |
“Moan, moan, ye dying gales” | Henry Neele | English |
Moan, moan, ye dying gales! Fall, fall, thou withered leaf! |
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“Mont Blanc yet gleams on high” | Percy Bysshe Shelley | 1812 | English |
From “Mont Blanc” |
“My days among the dead” | Robert Southey | 1794 | English |
My days among the dead are passed; With them I take delight in weal, |
“My dear and only love” | James Graham, Marquis of Montrose | 1632 | English |
Part First |
“My eyes! how I love you” | John Godfrey Saxe | English |
My eyes! how I love you, So glossy your hair is, Quite Grecian... |
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“My God, I love Thee” | Saint Francis Xavier | English |
From the Latin by Edward Caswall MY God, I love thee! not because Thou, O my Jesus, thou didst me |
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“My heart leaps up” | William Wordsworth | 1790 | English |
My heart leaps up when I behold |
“My heart ’s in the Highlands” | Robert Burns | 1779 | English |
My heart ’s in the Highlands, my heart is not here; |
“My heid is like to rend, Willie” | William Motherwell | English |
My heid is like to rend, Willie, |
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“My little Girl” | Samuel Minturn Peck | English |
My little girl is nested A weary little... |
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“My minde to me a kingdom is” | Sir Edward Dyer | 1563 | English |
My minde to me a kingdom is; Content I live; this is my stay... |