Toggle navigation
Blacklight
Bookmarks (
0
)
History
Login
Search in
All Fields
Related People
Poem Title In Miscellany
search for
Search
Advanced Search
Blacklight
Toggle facets
Limit your search
Content type
Poem
[remove]
459
Related People
Not attributed
277
Horace
36
Abraham Cowley
10
Alexander Pope
7
John Dryden
7
Martial
7
James Thomson
6
John Winstanley
6
William Duncombe
6
Joseph Cockfield
5
more
Related People
»
Poem Theme
Retirement
[remove]
459
The happy man / contentment
110
Rural life
77
Nature
40
Friendship
25
City
24
Love
23
Poetry / literature / writing
22
Sex / relations between the sexes
21
Religion
17
more
Poem Theme
»
Poem Genre / Form
Couplet
211
Imitation / translation / paraphrase
90
Ode
64
Quatrain abab
52
Extract / snippet from longer work
47
Epistle
43
Song
28
Sestet aabccb
24
Epigram
18
Pastoral
16
more
Poem Genre / Form
»
Search Constraints
Start Over
You searched for:
Content type
Poem
Remove constraint Content type: Poem
Poem Theme
Retirement
Remove constraint Poem Theme: Retirement
« Previous
|
401
-
410
of
459
|
Next »
Number of results to display per page
10 per page
10
per page
20
per page
50
per page
100
per page
View results as:
List
Gallery
Search Results
401.
What and how great the virtue and the art
First Line:
What and how great the virtue and the art
Last Line:
Let us be fixed and our own masters still
Author:
Alexander Pope (Absolute)
DMI number:
31545
402.
What is it to us who guides the state
First Line:
What is it to us who guides the state
Last Line:
This moment and this glass is ours
DMI number:
3474
403.
When Aurora gilds the morning
First Line:
When Aurora gilds the morning
Last Line:
Is to live and die retired
DMI number:
20064
404.
What walls can guard me or what shades can hide
First Line:
What walls can guard me or what shades can hide
Last Line:
They stop the chariot and they board the barge
Author:
Alexander Pope (Absolute)
DMI number:
22771
405.
What the fierce Scythians and Cantabrians dare
First Line:
What the fierce Scythians and Cantabrians dare
Last Line:
Her ivory harp with us to sing and play
DMI number:
25533
406.
What though nor glittering turret rise
First Line:
What though nor glittering turret rise
Last Line:
For freedom's voice and truth's are thine
Author:
John Brown (Absolute)
DMI number:
32500
407.
When famed Christina laid her grandeur down
First Line:
When famed Christina laid her grandeur down
Last Line:
So great in public or so great alone
DMI number:
10847
408.
When here Lucinda first we came
First Line:
When here Lucinda first we came
Last Line:
Adieu the sweets of Arno's vale
Author:
Charles Sackville (Absolute)
DMI number:
32631
409.
When Phoebus had exhaled the winter's floods
First Line:
When Phoebus had exhaled the winter's floods
Last Line:
Something that's always good and always new
Author:
Edward Ward (Confident)
DMI number:
5382
410.
When to that dear but inauspicious bower
First Line:
When to that dear but inauspicious bower
Last Line:
And virtue fix her empire in my soul
DMI number:
36631
« Previous
Next »
1
2
…
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46