Title | Poet | Year Written | Collection | Body |
---|---|---|---|---|
The Dust | Gertrude Hall | English |
It settles softly on your things, And it ’s a queen’s robe, once so proud, |
|
The Dust behind I strove to join |
The Dust behind I strove to join |
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The Duties of an Aide-de-Camp | English |
Oh, some folk think vice-royalty is festive and hilarious, |
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The duties of the Wind are few, | English |
The duties of the Wind are few, |
||
The Dying Christian to His Soul | Alexander Pope | 1708 | English |
Vital spark of heavenly flame! Hark! they whisper; angels say, |
The Dying Christian to his Soul | English |
VITAL spark of heav'nly flame! |
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The Dying need but little, Dear, | English |
The Dying need but little, Dear, |
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The Dying Swan | Alfred, Lord Tennyson | English |
I. |
|
The dying sycamores |
A beauty like young womanhood's |
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The Eagle | Alfred, Lord Tennyson | English |
A Fragment The wrinkled sea beneath him crawls; |
|
The Eagle of the Blue | Herman Melville | English |
Aloft he guards the starry folds No painted plume—a sober hue, |
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The Eagle's Fall | Charles Goodrich Whiting | English |
the eagle, did ye see him fall?— |
|
The Earl o’ Quarterdeck | George MacDonald | 1844 | English |
A New Old Ballad Then up and spoke the King himsel’: |
The Early Primrose | Henry Kirke White | English |
Mild offspring of a dark and sullen sire, Thee, when young Spring first questioned Winter’s sway, |
|
The Earth | Ralph Waldo Emerson | 1823 | English |
Our eyeless bark sails free, |
The earth has many keys, | ||||
The earth to the sun |
Oh Sun! oh glorious Sun! |
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The Eclipse of Faith | Theodore Dwight Woolsey | English |
The shapes that frowned before the eyes Forgotten is the Titan’s fame, |
|
The Ecstasy | John Donne | 1624 | Love |
Where, like a pillow on a bed, Our hands were firmly cemented |
The Ecstasy | English |
WHERE, like a pillow on a bed, |