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
413
Related People
Not attributed
188
John Dryden
34
Alexander Pope
15
Nathaniel Lee
14
William Shakespeare
12
Horace
7
Nicholas Rowe
6
Anacreon
5
Edward Young
5
John Milton
5
more
Related People
»
Poem Theme
Joyfulness / happiness
[remove]
413
Love
42
Virtue / vice
25
Nature
24
Sex / relations between the sexes
23
Food and drink
20
Grief / sadness / melancholy
20
The happy man / contentment
20
The monarchy (heads of state)
18
Marriage
17
more
Poem Theme
»
Poem Genre / Form
Extract / snippet from longer work
165
Couplet
133
Song
37
Ode
33
Imitation / translation / paraphrase
24
Quatrain abab
21
Essay
16
Blank verse
13
Occasional poem
13
Quatrain aabb
12
more
Poem Genre / Form
»
Search Constraints
Start Over
You searched for:
Poem Theme
Joyfulness / happiness
Remove constraint Poem Theme: Joyfulness / happiness
« Previous
|
111
-
120
of
413
|
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
111.
Hence loathed melancholy
First Line:
Hence loathed melancholy
Last Line:
Mirth with thee I mean to live
Author:
John Milton (Absolute)
DMI number:
3795
112.
Hence monster war hence to the wasted plains
First Line:
Hence monster war hence to the wasted plains
Last Line:
The best of men and best beloved of kings
DMI number:
27566
113.
Here is the spring where waters flow
First Line:
Here is the spring where waters flow
Last Line:
When God by death thee calls
Author:
John Marbeck (Speculation)
DMI number:
36532
114.
Here lie sequestered from the various calamities of life
First Line:
Here lie sequestered from the various calamities of life
Last Line:
May shrug perhaps and cry poor Ben
DMI number:
30117
115.
Here lies a man a happy man was he
First Line:
Here lies a man a happy man was he
Last Line:
For worldly joy hath always in it death
Author:
Alexander Pennecuik (Confident)
DMI number:
28183
116.
How fine are the pieces of nature's rich loom
First Line:
How fine are the pieces of nature's rich loom
Last Line:
Are diffused in all virtues by me
DMI number:
36330
117.
How all our joys are set in toils of woe
First Line:
How all our joys are set in toils of woe
Last Line:
So from our sorrows all our joys increase
Author:
Sir Robert Howard (Absolute)
DMI number:
19211
118.
How blessed with whom though lowly born
First Line:
How blessed with whom though lowly born
Last Line:
And sweet benevolence and calm content inspires
Author:
John Langhorne (Absolute)
DMI number:
30523
119.
How blindly men their happiness pursue
First Line:
How blindly men their happiness pursue
Last Line:
When love commands tis pleasant to obey
DMI number:
3860
120.
Him Menelaus loved of Mars espies
First Line:
Him Menelaus loved of Mars espies
Last Line:
From his high chariot
Author:
Alexander Pope (Absolute)
DMI number:
12906
« Previous
Next »
1
2
…
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
…
41
42