Title | Poet | Year Written | Collection | Body |
---|---|---|---|---|
“Fear no more the heat o’ the sun” | William Shakespeare | 1584 | English |
From “Cymbeline,” Act IV. Sc. 2. FEAR no more the heat o’ the sun, |
“Fly to the desert, fly with me” | Thomas Moore | 1799 | English |
Song of Nourmahal in “The Light of the Harem” “FLY to the desert, fly with me, “Our rocks are rough, but smiling there |
“Forever with the Lord” | James Montgomery | 1791 | English |
FOREVER with the Lord! Here in the body pent, My Father’s... |
“Forever” | Charles Stuart Calverley | 1851 | English |
Forever! ’t is a single word! Forever! What abysms of woe ... |
“Forget thee?” | John Moultrie | English |
“forget thee?”—If to dream by night, and muse on thee by day, |
|
“From the recesses of a lowly spirit” | Sir John Bowring | 1812 | English |
From the recesses of a lowly spirit, We see thy hand,—it leads us, it supports us; |
“Full many a glorious morning” | William Shakespeare | 1584 | English |
Sonnet Xxxiii. |
“Give me more love or more disdain” | Thomas Carew | 1615 | English |
Give me more love or more disdain; Give me a storm; If it be love, |
“Give me thy heart” | Adelaide Anne Procter | English |
With echoing steps the worshippers |
|
“Give place, ye lovers” | Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey | 1536 | English |
Give place, ye lovers, here before And thereto hath a troth... |
“Go, lovely rose” | Edmund Waller | 1626 | English |
GO, lovely rose! Tell her that ’s young, |
“God is everywhere” | Robert Nicoll | English |
A Trodden daisy, from the sward, |
|
“God save the king” | Henry Carey | 1713 | English |
God save our gracious king! O Lord our God, arise! |
“Great Nature is an army gay” | Richard Watson Gilder | English |
Great Nature is an army gay, |
|
“Greene grow the rashes O” | Robert Burns | 1779 | English |
Green grow the rashes O, There ’s naught but care on ev’ry han’, |
“Happy are the dead” | Henry Vaughan | 1641 | English |
I Walked the other day, to spend my hour, Yet I, whose... |
“Hark, hark! the lark” | William Shakespeare | 1584 | English |
From “Cymbeline,” Act II. Sc. 3. |
“Has summer come without the rose?” | Arthur William Edgar O’Shaughnessy | English |
Has summer come without the rose, |
|
“Hence, all ye vain delights” | John Fletcher | 1599 | English |
From “The Nice Valour,” Act III. Sc. 3. |
“Home they brought her warrior dead” | Alfred, Lord Tennyson | English |
From “The Princess” Then they praised him, soft and low, |