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
174
Related People
Not attributed
77
John Dryden
9
James Thomson
7
Horace
6
John Dyer
5
William Shakespeare
5
Alexander Pope
4
Aphra Behn
3
Edward Young
3
George Lyttelton
3
more
Related People
»
Poem Theme
Landscapes
[remove]
174
Nature
30
Places
17
God
11
Architecture / buildings
10
Poetry / literature / writing
8
Art / painting
7
Gardens
7
Love
7
The monarchy (heads of state)
7
more
Poem Theme
»
Poem Genre / Form
Couplet
94
Prospect poem / topographical poem
44
Extract / snippet from longer work
39
Ode
13
Blank verse
12
Imitation / translation / paraphrase
12
Address
11
Quatrain abab
9
Pastoral
8
Epistle
7
more
Poem Genre / Form
»
Search Constraints
Start Over
You searched for:
Poem Theme
Landscapes
Remove constraint Poem Theme: Landscapes
« Previous
|
101
-
110
of
174
|
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
101.
Should nature's self invade the world again
First Line:
Should nature's self invade the world again
Last Line:
And visit mountains where they once did grow
Author:
Edmund Waller (Absolute)
DMI number:
16351
102.
See Winter comes to rule the varied year
First Line:
See Winter comes to rule the varied year
Last Line:
And one unbounded Spring encircle all
Author:
James Thomson (Absolute)
DMI number:
25259
103.
Septimius ready bent with me
First Line:
Septimius ready bent with me
Last Line:
Over the warm ashes of thy friend
Author:
Sir Thomas Hawkins (Absolute)
DMI number:
42079
104.
Shall Cooper's Hill majestic rise in rhyme
First Line:
Shall Cooper's Hill majestic rise in rhyme
Last Line:
And greater blessings from his lips receive
Author:
James Ward (Absolute)
DMI number:
7432
105.
Shall no sublimer muse thy mountain grace
First Line:
Shall no sublimer muse thy mountain grace
Last Line:
Both pleased to yield to Winchester and thee
DMI number:
36813
106.
So the pure limpid stream when foul with stains
First Line:
So the pure limpid stream when foul with stains
Last Line:
And a new heaven on its fair bosom shows
Author:
Joseph Addison (Absolute)
DMI number:
20950
107.
Since I have wandered through the pleasing scenes
First Line:
Since I have wandered through the pleasing scenes
Last Line:
Yet sure no virtuous man would wish him less
DMI number:
17794
108.
St James's groves are famed in Waller's lays
First Line:
St James's groves are famed in Waller's lays
Last Line:
Remote from envy and unknown to praise
Author:
Peter Aram (Speculation)
DMI number:
12121
109.
Some Rhodes some Mytilene Ephesus doth please
First Line:
Some Rhodes some Mytilene Ephesus doth please
Last Line:
Drink cares away we'll set up sails tomorrow
Author:
Sir Thomas Hawkins (Absolute)
DMI number:
42037
110.
The ancient bards in strains both bold and sweet
First Line:
The ancient bards in strains both bold and sweet
Last Line:
Content to gaze to wonder and admire
DMI number:
12813
« Previous
Next »
1
2
…
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
…
17
18