L'Envoi
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
For works with similar titles, see Envoi.
- "L'Envoi", a poem by Mary Elizabeth Blake
- "L'Envoi", a poem by Mathilde Blind (Thou art the goal for which my spirit longs)
- "L'Envoi", a poem by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (Now, gentle reader, is our journey ended)
- "L'envoi", a poem by Covington Hall (For fame I ask not)
- "L'Envoi", a poem by Elisabeth of Wied, translated by Edwin Arnold (And that which here I have been singing)
- "L'Envoy", a poem by George Herbert (King of Glorie, King of Peace)
- "L'Envoi", a poem by Mary Howitt, written as a tribute to the late Letitia Elizabeth Landon (Farewell, farewell! Thy latest word is spoken)
- "L'Envoi", a poem by Rudyard Kipling (What is the moral? Who rides may read)
- "L'Envoi", a poem by Rudyard Kipling (And they were stronger hands than mine)
- "L'Envoi", a poem by Rudyard Kipling (My new-cut ashlar takes the light)
- "L'Envoi", a poem by Rudyard Kipling (The smoke upon your Altar dies)
- "L'Envoi", a poem by Rudyard Kipling (There's a whisper down the field where the year has shot her yield)
- "L'Envoi", a poem by Rudyard Kipling (When Earth's last picture is painted and the tubes are twisted and dried)
- "L'Envoi", a poem by Andrew Francis Lockhart (When the curtain descends)
- "L'Envoi", a poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (As the birds come in the Spring)
- "L'Envoi", a poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (Ye voices, that arose)
- L’Envoi, a poem by Edwin Arlington Robinson
- L'Envoi, a poem by Robert W. Service (You who have lived in the land)
- L'Envoi, a poem by Robert W. Service (We talked of yesteryears, of trails and treasure)
- L'Envoi, a poem by Robert W. Service (My job is done; my rhymes are ranked and ready)
- "L'Envoi", a poem by Carmen Sylva (And that which here I have been singing)
- L'Envoy, a poem by George Edward Woodberry (My song is not for the old)