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
7
Related People
Horace
[remove]
7
Sir Richard Fanshawe
3
Not attributed
1
Richard Duke
1
Robert Thompson
1
Thomas Flatman
1
Poem Theme
Betrayal / deception
[remove]
7
Sex / relations between the sexes
4
Advice / moral precepts
2
Ambition
1
Beauty
1
City
1
Corruption
1
Courage
1
Landscapes
1
Manners
1
more
Poem Theme
»
Poem Genre / Form
Imitation / translation / paraphrase
7
Couplet
5
Ode
4
Epistle
2
Address
1
Lyric
1
Search Constraints
Start Over
You searched for:
Poem Theme
Betrayal / deception
Remove constraint Poem Theme: Betrayal / deception
Related People
Horace
Remove constraint Related People: Horace
1
-
7
of
7
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
1.
Ask me no more my Quintius whether I
First Line:
Ask me no more my Quintius whether I
Last Line:
First death is the last scene of misery
Author:
Robert Thompson (Confident)
DMI number:
42206
2.
It was a lovely melancholy night
First Line:
It was a lovely melancholy night
Last Line:
And then twill be my turn to laugh
Author:
Thomas Flatman (Absolute)
DMI number:
42164
3.
Jove governs heaven with his nod
First Line:
Jove governs heaven with his nod
Last Line:
And give his mind some relaxation
Author:
Sir Richard Fanshawe (Absolute)
DMI number:
42102
4.
If ever any injured power
First Line:
If ever any injured power
Last Line:
The expected husband from her arms
Author:
Richard Duke (Absolute)
DMI number:
909
5.
If any punishment did follow
First Line:
If any punishment did follow
Last Line:
Their lords away
Author:
Sir Richard Fanshawe (Absolute)
DMI number:
42082
6.
Scaeva thou art wise enough to tell
First Line:
Scaeva thou art wise enough to tell
Last Line:
Get help you rascal where you are not known
DMI number:
42207
7.
What stripling now thee discomposes
First Line:
What stripling now thee discomposes
Last Line:
Of seas great admiral
Author:
Sir Richard Fanshawe (Absolute)
DMI number:
42034