Ambarvalia
Appearance
AMBARVALIA.
AMBARVALIA.
POEMS
AND
LONDON:
CHAPMAN AND HALL, 186, STRAND;
FRANCIS MACPHERSON, OXFORD.
MDCCCXLIX.
LONDON:
BRADBURY AND EVANS, PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.
Poems (not listed in original)
- "The human spirits saw I on a day"
- "Ah, what is love, our love, she said"
- "I give thee joy! O worthy word!"
- "When panting sighs the bosom fill"
- "As, at a railway junction, men"
COMMEMORATION SONNETS, Oxford, 1844
- "Come back again, my olden heart!"
- "When soft September brings again"
- "Oh, ask not what is love, she said"
- "Light words they were, and lightly, falsely said"
- Qui laborat, orat
- "With graceful seat and skilful hand"
- When Israel came out of Egypt
- "The Silver Wedding! on some pensive ear"
- "Why should I say I see the things I see not"
- "Sweet streamlet bason! at thy side"
- "Away, haunt not thou me"
- "My wind is turned to bitter north"
- "Look you, my simple friend, 'tis one of those"
- "Thought may well be ever ranging"
- "Duty—that 's to say complying"
- "Blank Misgivings of a Creature moving about in Worlds not realised"
- Qua cursum ventus
- ALCAICS
- Natura naturans
- ὁ θεὸς μετὰ σοῦ
- ἐπὶ Λάτμῳ
- Χρυσέα κλῂς ἐπὶ γλώσσᾳ
- "Is it true, ye gods, who treat us"
Poems (not listed in original)
- To the Pines of the Cascine at Florence, January 1840
- To the Same, June, 1848
- The Lucerne Lion
- Portraiture
- Lapse
- To an Idiot Child
- Aspiration
- Lilie. A Myth
- Parting
- Il Geloso
- New-Old Philosophy
- Apostrophe
- I Would
- Goodman Tobacco-farmer
- Verses Written in the Boboli Gardens at Florence
- An Anniversary
- On a Child Asleep
- Si Modo
- To ——
- The Father and the Child
- To a Friend
- So Help Me, Love
- The Daisy in the South
- To Aganippe
- Evening Stanzas
- To the Cuckoo in Spring
- Stanzas Suggested in the Boboli Gardens at Florence
- To a Cuckoo in Autumn
- The Riddle
- She Bewitched Me
- The Question
- "Nay, friend, the truth is high above!"
- I. The Burning of the Tower
- II. London
- III. The French Revolution (1830)
- IV. To the Revered Memory of Thomas Arnold, D.D.
- V. To Speak, to Make, to Do, to Be
- VI. The Church of St. Maria in Via Lata, Rome
- VII. The Cactus (Ficus Opuntia)
- VIII. The Naming of the Stars
- IX. To the Statue Entitled "L'Esperance" (in the Louvre)
- X. To ———: "Like an unused Spectator, who in fear"
- XI. "He builds on Nature who to genuine Art"
- XII. To ———: "As soldiers from the ramparts of a town"
- XIII. "Speak it no more—no more with words profane"
- XIV. "Searching the skiey depths all night in vain"
- XV. Monte Cuccio
DEVOTIONAL POEMS
- I. Hymn to the Holy Spirit
- II. "O Time, dull Time, go faster"
- III. "Yet let me keep the old observances!"
- IV. "The evil birds which I have fed so long"
- V. "Oh, what am I, if in this kindliness"
- VI. "A Christian poet am I, or would be"
- VII. "Lord, I will take no comfort but of Thee"
- VIII. "O leave thyself to God, and if indeed"
LONDON:
BRADBURY AND EVANS, PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.
This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.
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