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The Oxford Book of English Verse
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Take, O take those Lids away to Youth and Age
Contents
-BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Arthur Quiller-Couch, ed. 1919. The Oxford Book of English Verse: 1250–1900.
Index of Titles
Take, O take those Lids away to Youth and Age
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- Take, O take those Lids away
- Tardy Spring
- Tears
- Tell me, my Heart, if this be Love
- That Holy Thing
- That Time and Absence proves
- There is a Lady sweet and kind
- This Lady’s Cruelty
- This World’s Joy
- Thomas the Rhymer
- Thought
- Thoughts in a Garden
- Three Men of Gotham
- Three Ravens
- Thus the Mayne glideth
- Tiger
- Timber
- Time
- Time and Grief
- Time of Roses
- Time, Real and Imaginary
- Times go by Turns
- To ——
- To a Child of Quality, Five Years Old
- To a Lady
- To a Lady asking him how long he would love her
- To Althea, from Prison
- To Amarantha, that she would dishevel her Hair
- To a Mistress Dying
- To an Inconstant One
- To Anthea, who may command him Anything
- To a Skylark
- To Autumn
- To Blossoms
- To Celia
- To Celia
- To Chloe
- To Chloris
- To Coelia
- To Cyriack Skinner
- To Daffodils
- To Daisies, not to shut so soon
- To Death
- To Dianeme
- To Electra
- To Helen
- To Helene
- To Her Sea-faring Lover
- To His Coy Love
- To His Coy Mistress
- To His Forsaken Mistress
- To His Inconstant Mistress
- To His Lute
- To His Mistress
- To Leven Water
- To Lucasta, going beyond the Seas
- To Lucasta, going to the Wars
- To Manon, on his Fortune in loving Her
- To Marguerite
- To Mary
- To Mary Unwin
- To Meadows
- To Mr. Lawrence
- To Mistress Margaret Hussey
- To Mistress Margery Wentworth
- To Music, to becalm his Fever
- To Oenone
- To One persuading a Lady to Marriage
- Too solemn for day, too sweet for night
- To Roses in the Bosom of Castara
- To Sleep
- To Spring
- To the Cuckoo
- To the Muses
- To the Virginian Voyage
- To the Virgins, to make much of Time
- To the Western Wind
- To the Willow-tree
- To Two Bereaved
- To Violets
- Toys
- Triumph
- Trosachs
- True Knight
- Trust Thou Thy Love
- Twa Corbies
- Twenty Years hence
- Twice
- Two Highwaymen
- Two Rivers
- Ubique
- Ulysses and the Siren
- Under the Greenwood Tree
- Unfading Beauty
- Uphill
- Upon Julia’s Clothes
- Upon the Book and Picture of Saint Teresa
- Upon the Death of Sir Albert Morton’s Wife
- Upon Westminster Bridge
- Urceus Exit
- Uriel
- Valedictory Sonnet to the River Duddon
- Vanitas Vanitatum
- Verse
- Verses from the Shepherds’ Hymn
- Vesta
- Vine
- Virtue
- Vixi Puellis Nuper Idoneus
- Vobiscum est Iope
- Voices at the Window
- Vox ultima Crucis
- Wakening
- Waly, Waly
- Wanderers
- Wassail Chorus at the Mermaid Tavern
- Water-Nymph and the Boy
- Weeper
- Weep no more
- We’ll go no more a-roving
- Werena my Heart’s licht I wad dee
- What the Bullet sang
- When, Dearest, I but think of Thee
- When Death to Either shall come
- When Flora had O’erfret the Firth
- When I have Fears that I may cease to be
- When the World is burning
- When we Two parted
- When You are Old
- Where My Books go
- Which’s Ballad
- Whilst it is prime
- Why
- Why so Pale and Wan?
- Wife a-lost
- Wife of Usher’s Well
- Willie and Helen
- Winter Nightfall
- Winter Nights
- Wish
- Wishes to His Supposed Mistress
- With Esther
- Wolfram’s Dirge
- Woman
- Wooing Song
- Work without Hope
- World
- Written at Florence
- Written in Northampton County Asylum
- Years
- Ye Mariners of England
- You’ll love Me yet
- Young May Moon
- Youth and Age
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