Union First Line Index of English Verse
13
th
-19
th
Century (bulk 1500-1800)
Information
Search
Administrator Log in
Keyword Search
|
Help
Keyword
--------------------
First Line
Author
Title
Last Line
Shelfmark
Reference Nbr
Names
Translations
Musical Setting
Contains
Begins with
Exactly matches
Does not contain
AND
OR
Keyword
--------------------
First Line
Author
Title
Last Line
Shelfmark
Reference Nbr
Names
Translations
Musical Setting
Contains
Begins with
Exactly matches
Does not contain
AND
OR
Keyword
--------------------
First Line
Author
Title
Last Line
Shelfmark
Reference Nbr
Names
Translations
Musical Setting
Contains
Begins with
Exactly matches
Does not contain
Limit search to specific major repositories?
Beinecke Library (Yale)--Osborn Collection
Bodleian Library (Oxford)
British Library (handwritten 1895 index)
British Library (1894-2009 index)
ESTC (post-1700 only)
Folger Shakespeare Library
Houghton Library (Harvard)
Huntington Library
Leeds University Library--Brotherton Collection
STC (1559-1640 only)
Wing
Women only?
Sort by:
First Line, Author, Library
Author, Title, First Line, Library
Library, Shelfmark, Folio
Gender, Author, First Line
925 Records Found
First Line
Author
Title
Last Line
Library
Shelfmark
Folio
A Calliconian next appears (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 80
A company of guards we found
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 20
A grove I reach'd, where tuneful throstles sung (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 135v
A homely hut, a rural cave
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 7v
A man of bus'ness won't till ev'ning dine (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 122v
A milder horror let the muse explore
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 18
A palace that is more uneasy far (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 74
A poet, starving in a garret (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 97
A politician is the devil's quilted anvil (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 5v
A sickly taper, glimmering feeble rays (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 8
A snake which used in privacy to dwell
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 12v
A vizor and a mask are whispering rooms (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 3
A waving sea of heads was round me spread (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 98
Abhorred the man, whom fate ordains, in spite
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 103
About the time that I shall be (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 26v
Above his neighbors he exalts his horn (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 70v
Above my happy place prepare
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 41
Above the sylphs their gaudy camps unfold (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 90
Absence renews the matrimonial bond
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 15
Accordingly up starts the shade (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 81
Accordingly we walked and prattled (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 78v
Admire those shining lamps that hang above (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 75v
After our loves, to that blest place we'll go (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 26
Ah me! howsoe'er each prospect changed and fled (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 32
Ah, shepherd, gentle shepherd, spare
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 85
Alas, no longer now appear
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 4
All born on earth must die. Destruction reigns
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 36
All dead! and all my trophies! work for groves (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 33
All except trivial points, grew out of date (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 54v
All humble worth she strove to raise (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 94
All the rich treasure, Alexander left (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 26v
All things are hushed, the sun's meridian ray (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 68v
An aged oak, with hoary moss o'erspread (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 112
And all who since, in mild benighted days (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 47
And cramm'd 'em till their eyes did ache (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 63v
And do thou, vacation, deign (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 112v
And drinks, I may with justice say (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 74v
And (for my faith) lay this into your breast (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 4v
And his scorched ribs the hot contagion fry'd (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 101v
And make a viler noise than swine (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 62v
And may our sweet affections (like the spheres) (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 3v
And now around the busy change a show'r
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 21
And now on fancy's easy wing convey'd (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 46v
And now, ten days in tedious travel past (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 39
And now the ruler of the golden day (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 60
And so good morrow to ye, good master lieutenant (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 98v
And therefore thus bespoke the squire (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 61v
And thou, Dalhousy, the great god of war (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 100v
And tho' your glorious beauty should descend (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 28v
And what will not that wicked woman dare (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 21
And when black shade invests the sleepy sky (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 80
Angel of Dullness, sent to scatter round (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 47v
Another praised a universal slop
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 65v
Are these thy palms? Oh queen of love! (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 104v
Arise, eternal God of Hosts
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 42
Around these injured walls is writ
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 15v
As a fierce lioness of Libyan race (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 103v
As all is dullness when the fancy's bad (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 60v
As at the close of an hot summer's day (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 136
As couchful fishers at the benty brook (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 135v
As float the clouds, romantic fancy pours (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 9v
As me in storms, a sinking bark to free (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 20v
As my blood cools, my frighted sense looks home (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 33
As near to peace with easy steps you move (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 64
As new made pilots when they first take sea (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 15
As o'er the checkered landscape fancy strays (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 71
As on the sleepy margin of a brook (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 126v
As one who travels on, and fainting still (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 64
As Reynard was stealing One day to a village
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 134
As simple birds are caught in fowler's net (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 135v
As snow in salmon, at the tepid touch
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 8v
As the gay rose, when winter storms are past
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 103
As torn with inward gripes, and torturing pain (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 98
As vital gales Through the weeds whisp'ring in the heat of day (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 30v
As when a bird that hovers o'er the seas (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 37
As when a flock of linnets, if perchance (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 112
As when a ghost, enlarged from realms below (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 69v
As when a hill, deceptive of the eye (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 32
As when a lion in the toils is cast (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 99v
As when high heaven on some aspiring wood (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 99v
As when proud Caucasus the heav'ns sustains
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 89v
As when the blust'ring wind rolls from the north (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 102v
As when the lark, ambitious of the skies (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 125v
As when the Pleiades arise (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 119
As when the sun bears from our eyes the light (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 114
Astronomy, hail, science heavenly-born (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 22v
At Hackney-School the awkward thing is bred (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 69v
At length the muse her destined task resumes
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 52v
At length the winter's surly blasts are o'er
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 96
At my queen's head shall my next thunder fly (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 29v
At table, if I ask for veal
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 90
At the large foot of a fair hollow tree
Cowley, Abraham
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 127v
Aurora now, not as she wont to rise (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 116v
Aurora's golden rays renewed the light (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 133
Awake, poor soul, and come away
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 46v
Away the fair detractors went (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 93v
Away, you prating woman, you are blind
Harvard
MS Eng 611, I
f. 14
Base mercenary scribblers did employ (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 67
Behold, I ask, and seek, and pray
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 39v
Behold the forst trees, a beauteous scene (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 43
Behold the sun, arrayed with glory, rise
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 41v
Behold the virgin lie Naked and only covered by the sky (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 99v
Behold yon isle, by palmers, pilgrims trod (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 47
Being surfeited now with this dull recreation (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 85v
Beneath an aged oak's embow'ring shade (incomplete)
Percy, Thomas
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 118
Beneath an hawthorn's bush secreted shade
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 86v
Bid her make haste, and let her understand (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 30
Blessed be the God, whose tender care
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 41v
Blest be thy name, immortal king
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 42v
Blow, blow, thou summer breeze
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 6v
Both skilled to sift the patient's worth, or want (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 65
Both, to our grief, have been too long your tools (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 67
Bought in and sold, received and paid (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 80v
Branches in branches twined composed the grove (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 102
Bright god of day, whose genial power (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 137v
Bright honor all your glorious (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 19
Bright shone the ether, and the radiant sun (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 88
Bright Sol had drove the sable clouds away (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 75
Bullets that wound like Parthians as they fly (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 99v
But Chloe, so lively, so easy, so fair (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 96v
But first I must put off These my sky robes spun out of Iris' woof (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 130v
But from the pail, behold, the milky herd (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 91
But how did she her sentence, sir, receive (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 32
But leave we worlds that less conspicuous shine (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 21v
But lo! yon evening-star just 'gins to rise (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 62v
But love, thy nature, is divine and pure (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 22v
But, madam, do you know what 'tis to die (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 14v
But now, the rising cloud a tempest breeds (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 92v
But now the sun withdraws his fiery ray (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 88v
But oh! th'enchanting blessings who can show (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 99v
But peasants of a rustic mold (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 61
But, see! in mild, resplendent majesty (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 24
But see! where now, thy own best parallel (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 30v
But tell me, critics, if you please (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 80v
But those that write in rhyme, still make (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 62v
But tho' I love, 'tis with so pure a flame (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 27
But what is she that shines above the rest (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 8
But when the sun with fervid ray (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 127
But women now feel no such fire (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 92v
By fulsome flatt'ries they were made as bright (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 66
By lying pamphlets labored to delude
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 68
By the chaste splendors of the moon I swear (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 10v
By this the sun had o'er the welkin spread (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 37v
Careful observers may foretell the hour
Swift, Jonathan
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 94v
Cast on yourselves but an impartial eye (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 5v
Come, for the woodman's jaded arm gives o'er (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 93
Come, smiling angel, Patience, from thy seat (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 8v
Confined to sit in silence, here I waste (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 34
Constables and beadles both (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 80
Contentment, parent of delight (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 120v
Courts have their harlotry and vices (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 74
Cuckolds and misers here are plenty (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 82v
Cullies from Bath and Tunbridge now repair
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 77v
Curb that impetuous tongue, nor rashly vain (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 60
Custom at masquerades agrees
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 13v
Dear Chloe, while the busy crowd (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 137
Dearest, I'm convinced: thou art a gem (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 29v
Death ends both scorn and pride (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 33
Death is the last of ills that he can do (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 27
Death shant have power our souls to disunite (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 25v
Death, thou art welcome; come whene'er thou wilt
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 30
Death, to all troubles, gives a gentle end (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 21v
Deep in a desert-vale, a palace frowns (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 7
Desponding Phillis was endued (incomplete)
Swift, Jonathan
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 97
Destruction's Empire shall no longer last (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 99v
Didst thou the milk of some fierce tigress suck
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 25
Distended with the waters in 'em pent (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 101
Divide and part the severed world in two (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 101v
Dost thou know what reputation is (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 5
Dost thou think I have forgot my valiant leader (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 9
Down, down, thou fair infectious charm of beauty (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 8
Dub, dub, dubba dub, says the drum in the morning (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 84v
Dullness! whose good old cause I yet defend (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 46
Each drew his pen in rhyme or prose (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 74v
Each fancy cit who strolls from town
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 94v
Each girl when pleased with what is taught (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 94v
Each to the other did confus'dly prate (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 64v
Embraces! Love! and kindness! what are these (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 13
Enquire her health; I fear she's in distress (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 31
Ere yellow autumn from our plains retir'd
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 95
Eternal Father, hear
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 36
Ethereal fire! thy bounties last I praise
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 20
Expose no single fop, but lay the load (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 60v
Extravagance, like popery, he hates (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 70v
Fair and good liquor, 'tis by all agreed
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 78
Fair As summer skies, when not a cloud deforms (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 10
Fair ladies, trusty squires, and powder'd beaus (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 90
Fancy's mimic work, ten thousand shapes (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 8v
Far and near The dreadful tempest swells. Lo! from the east (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 40v
Far happier were the meanest peasant's lot (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 124v
Far in, a lonely cell is found (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 71v
Far in the covert of a bushy wood (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 123
Farewell, vain world! and thou its vainest part (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 103v
Farewell, ye forests and delightful hills (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 77
Fat thumping roasted fowls, with each a pound (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 69v
Father, forgive thy froward child
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 40
Flashes of fire they departed from on high (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 64
Flow, Welsted, flow! like thine inspirer beer (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 47v
Fly, prince, from hence into a kinder clime (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 30
For empires, let th' ambitious sue to Jove (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 26v
For golden fees each sold his silver tongue (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 65
For half an hour he feeds, and when he 'as done (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 72v
For know, by lot from Jove, I am the pow'r (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 130
For oft we find that storms and sorrows prove (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 91
For rhyme the rudder is of verses (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 61v
For when tempestuous winds surprise (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 73v
For why such raptures, flights, and fancies (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 94v
Forgetting, that in times of yore (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 79
Fortune assist me, and propitious be (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 19
Friendship! which still enlarged with years and sense (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 87
From whence that decency of mind (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 92v
Furies the steps of incensed lovers guide (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 29
Gen'rous he rises in the crown's defence (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 60
Glory to God, who gave the word (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 42
Greatness, thou gaudy torment of our souls (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 13v
Guards, to confinement the offender bear (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 12v
Hail Albion, native country! but now chang'd (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 124v
Hail! Alpha, and Omega, hail!
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 33v
Hail, genial goddess, blooming spring
Peckard, Martha (Ferrar)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 105v
Hail, Liberty! a glorious word (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 48v
Hail night! whose shade the sleeping world entombs
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 21
Hail, Phyllis, brighter than a morning sky (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 77
Hail Woodstock! hail ye celebrated glades (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 100
Happier thy fortunes! like a rolling stone (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 47v
Happy for man that the slow circling moons (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 35
Happy, merry as a king (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 101
Happy the man who, with a mind serene
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 115v
Hark! 'tis the nightingale, love's lonely bird (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 31v
Hark! how the jolly huntsman's cries
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 122v
Hark! how the renovating spring (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 123v
Hark how the woods with music ring
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 37v
Hark! I hear the echoes call (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 126v
Hark! in his fields, when now the distant sounds (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 61
Hark, through the sacred silence of the night
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 117
Hate reigns in all the portions of the year (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 8
He and the parson now grow wondrous great (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 70v
He gives the word: the blust'ring winds arise (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 42v
He now so formal grows, the whole machine (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 71v
He roared so loud and looked so wondrous grim (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 100
He steals his resolution from his fear (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 133
He that to 's own fraternity is base (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 67v
He was my friend, the truest friend on earth
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 129
He who would, in this month, be warm within
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 75v
Hear me, thou sinner's friend
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 45
Hear you! in whose grave heads, as equal scales (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 46
Her anger looks with so much innocence (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 29
Her crabbed looks, the parish knows it (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 74v
Her soul is marble, and she can't be moved (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 20
Her voice is low and gives a [sic] Apollo's sound (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 81v
Here in the tuneful groves and flow'ry fields
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 35
Here lay the ruins of an ample bowl (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 64v
Here Niobe, sad mother, makes her moan (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 99v
Here take away the beef and cale
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 15
Here to her chosen all her works she shows (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 46
Here, when the golden autumn's ripened stores
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 70v
High in the midst is bright Loretta seen (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 88v
His eyeballs burn, he wounds the smoking plain (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 97v
His motion works, and beats the oozy mud (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 100v
His useless steed brave Albion wields no more (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 69
His word goes current now the city round (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 71
Hold, sir, enough, I must your victim fall (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 14
Holy Savior, Son of man
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 44v
How blest am I, from all contentions freed (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 75
How cunningly he would seem innocent (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 14v
How fast the dream of greatness slides away (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 21v
How much of paper's spoiled! what floods of ink
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 90v
How oft, exulting from these banks, I've come (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 92v
How pleasing is the pain a lover feels (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 8
How sacred and how innocent
Philips, Katherine
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 83v
How sweet a quietude's in fetters found (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 13
How tall the fir! And yet his root is found
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 18
How vain are women in their youthful days (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 88
Hunting I reckon very good
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 119v
I absolve my lord Yes, I absolve you from your vows and faith (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 10v
I am a prince, and meet you without odds (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 30
I am the man whose eyes have seen
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 35v
I bow'd my neck indeed to mighty love (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 24v
I can conduct you, lady, to a low (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 132v
I can't put out love's great and sacred fire (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 20v
I cannot stifle this gigantic woe (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 101
I do not doubt, Roxana, but you will (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 22
I find, says he, she wants a doctor (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 94
I find your passion for me, is but small (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 22
I have sinned against the Lord
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 35
I hold my weary soul in my teeth (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 7
I knew him in Padua, a fantastical scholar (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 5v
I know and own my sin
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 36v
I know each lane, and every alley green (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 132
I know not what to think. Think no more, let the gods play their game out (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 15v
I know you're mad, that I refuse to go
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 13v
I laughed to see a lady out of date (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 87v
I look no higher than I can reach (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 4
I love thee, O my Lord (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 42v
I ne'er did derogate in all my life (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 32
I never knew foundations laid in blood (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 28
I passed to a very fine room, thro' a porch (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 85
I pity, from my soul, unhappy men (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 61
I saw dark clouds in your fierce lover's eyes (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 24v
I should have told You, sir, I have discovered the Moor to be a rascal (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 16v
I viewed those artful pictures on the wall (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 28
I will to dangers, as to conquest run (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 22
I would not now Wish my wounds balm'd, nor heal'd for any [?] use (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 7
I' th' country he deludes the morn (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 78v
I'll shut this captive from your eyes Prison and absence will be both your cares (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 8v
I'd call them mountains, but can't call them so (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 100
If any curious Christian should desire (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 71
If death be the great punishment you mean (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 26
If in that company, or as you march, you see (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 15v
If my rude passion harbors a design (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 29
If once the justness of each part be lost (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 61
If one short volume could comprise (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 94
If praise they wrote, then ev'ry partial line (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 66
If trifling hope has any room to plead (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 78v
If you attempt the comic ridicule (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 89
Ignatius laughs, to keep in sight
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 15v
Illit'rate all, from painful study freed (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 65v
Immutable and faithful God
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 44
Imposed on customers when drunk or mad (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 67v
Improve litigious suits by ill advice (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 65
In a black shade my wand'ring self I found (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 80
In ancient times (such times are now no more) (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 123v
In arms and wars, we Amazons delight (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 19v
In corners, nooks, and gateways of the town (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 67
In falling out with that or this (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 61v
In melancholy characters we read (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 27
In most, 'tis true, the human sense (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 65v
In rainy days keep double guard (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 120
In slanting rows, With still approaching step, and level'd stroke (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 59v
In storms at sea, when death and danger's nigh (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 29
In sultry weather, when the fleas (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 80v
In sweetest lays Aereal sounds relate Melinda's praise (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 89v
In that soft season when the fruitful show'rs (incomplete)
Cooke, Thomas
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 115v
In the dead of the night, when with labor oppress'd (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 116v
In the fair promise of the youthful year (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 133
In things that no ways remedied can be (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 21
In vain , the hungry mountaineers (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 119
In vain you'll strive your destiny to shun (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 23v
In winter's realm, beneath the polar bear (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 92
In winter's time when hardly fed the flocks (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 91v
Indeed, I ne'er did see a god till now (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 8v
Instinctive sound! I'm now convinced by thee
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 38v
Is it that ape in masquerade (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 87v
Is the fish ready? You're a tedious while
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 13v
Is this thy plighted faith, is this thy truth (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 12
It chanc'd, as musing once he stray'd (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 104v
It happened on a summer's lovely morn (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 80
It is a heart as spotless and sincere (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 12
It is my passion, Philon, I forget (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 27v
It seems you are well acquainted with my closet (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 3v
Jesu, give mercy to my soul
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 38v
Jesus, thou son of God most high
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 44
Joy to the groves the vernal seasons bring (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 117
Just as the mariner, 'scaped the wreck of seas (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 41v
Just so good wives their husbands chide (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 74
Kept cider in their vaults with ill design (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 68
Lac'd in her cousins (stays) new appeared the bride (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 98v
Lady, I know not whether You want money, but I have brought you some (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 4v
Laughs not the heart, when giants, big with pride (incomplete)
Churchill, Charles
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 119v
Lay that scarf by. I am a queen, and like myself will die (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 32
Led by unerring Nature's voice (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 65
Less pleased am I with Farinelli's note
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 90v
Let Astrape forbear to blaze
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 32
Let death and fortune threaten, if thy will (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 31v
Let good men, for good deeds, covet good fame (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 2v
Let lofty Pindus some aspire to praise
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 12
Let none presume the hallowed way to tread (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 88v
Let the king raze our fane: our bloods be spilt (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 30
Let us, fair queens, now to the temple go (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 26v
Let worthy minds ne'er suffer in distrust (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 7v
Life and the scenes that round it rise
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 26
Like as in villag'd troop of birdlings trim (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 124
Like baleful comets flaming in the skies (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 122v
Like signs of terror on their brows did sit (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 64v
List again, it may be 'twas the melancholy bird (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 4v
Little siren of the stage (incomplete)
Philips, Ambrose
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 98
Lo! all above the pure, cerulean height
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 21v
Lo, my feet, At unawares, a rural, still churchyard (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 26
Lo, Nelson's airy seat, whose rising sides (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 90v
Lo next two slip-shod muses traipse along (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 47
Lo! on the side of yonder slanting hill (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 60v
Lo, rivers, having through large kingdoms passed (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 26v
Lo. shipwrack'd passengers cast on the shore (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 7v
Lo! to new wonders now thy search remove (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 22v
Lonsdale! thou ever honored name
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 125
Lord, I am poor and weak
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 34v
Love can't permit two rivals in one throne (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 26v
Love, jealousy, and spite conspired thy fall (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 33
Madam, distrust not but that I shall do (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 12
Madam, how like the sea, when calm, you show (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 19
Madam, I approach your royal hand (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 16
Madam, I doubt your spotless innocence (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 31v
Madam I'm grieved that I was not at home (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 92
Madam, our flames a nobler passion rules (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 14v
Madam, said I, but where's the man so just (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 84
Madam! what would your abused fancy get (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 31
Madam, your royal pleasure but relate (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 12
Maids will their smocks turn up above their knees
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 76v
Making them fly like pigs and hogs (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 73v
Mark otherwise the glow-worm's living light
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 20v
Meantime the lyre rejoins the sprightly lay (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 59v
Meanwhile attention loves to mark (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 127
Men are made the victims of your sport (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 57
Mere airy nothings, when with hazard won
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 13
Methinks I hear her sighs: it must be so (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 10
Minutes seem days, and every hour a year (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 32v
Monarchs, thus propt, the shocks of fate defy (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 12v
Money he hugs like any miser (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 80
Money's the life, the spirit of the laws (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 64v
More had I seenbut now the god of day (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 107
Mow the beard (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 98v
Must I, then, only border upon bliss (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 13v
My dearest George! O could I once more view
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 28v
My dearest Lord, farewell, let not a sigh (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 14v
My frame of nature is a ruffled sea
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 33
My guardian, bear me on thy downy wing (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 75
My innocence still wears a robe so white (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 30v
My love, no other bound, than you does know (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 22v
My next disguise too well you know (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 78v
My soul is with too great a load oppressed (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 25v
My thoughts you cannot to revenge incline (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 27v
Nature depraved, abundance does produce (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 73v
Nay, prithee, be clear with us, and tell us (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 15
Next came a jolly troop of stagg'ring sots (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 67v
Next, in a low-browed cave, a little hell (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 8
Next morning, ere the sun with sickly ray (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 103
Next see, Lucretian sages, see the sun (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 72v
Nine tedious days a doubtful course we steer (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 40
No, he had nobler charms my breast to move (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 12
No man stands so secure, but he may fall (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 29v
No more, my friend, for see, the sun grows high (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 81
No parent is oblig'd to starve
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 17 and 18
No sooner does the glitt'ring sign (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 63
Nor are these cormorants of the parish (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 79v
Nor art nor nature has the force (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 100v
Nor meanwhile Is solitude less thy sphere (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 98
Nor wearied yet my roving feet (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 127
Not all the laurels Tyn'dates wears (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 27
Not but each open street abounds (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 79v
Not for ourselves our vagrant steps we bend (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 108
Not new-made mothers to their infants bear (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 13v
Not only in their lives, but looks were knaves (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 64v
Nothing could force his courage to retire (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 19
Now all lay hush'd in solitary night (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 64v
Now Bavius take the poppy from thy brow (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 47v
Now brush and faggot fashionable grow
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 78
Now country lubbers whet their harvest tools
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 77v
Now down the dusky frescade let me walk (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 44
Now eastward turn: lo, thence serenely bright (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 42
Now ev'ning mildly-still and softer suns (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 9
Now had Sol his vigor lost (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 12v
Now had the sun withdrawn his piercing ray (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 79
Now hardly here and there an hackney coach
Swift, Jonathan
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 95v
Now may'rs and shrieves all hush'd and satiate lay (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 46
Now, my brave friend, both love and honor calls (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 17
Now, noblest sister, how shall be repayed (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 12v
Now reigns the night in her sublimest noon (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 32v
Now rosy morn ascends the court of Jove (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 60
Now she's gone, I am at ease: why, how now, Damocles (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 15v
Now shiv'ring winter fledged with feathered rain (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 91v
Now swelled with pride, he does majestic grow (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 71v
Now the shrill corn-pipes, echoing loud to arms (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 69
Now wide the prospect breaks upon my view (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 44v
Nymph! with thee, at early morn (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 137v
O'er yonder eastern hill the twilight throws (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 107v
Oaks which extended arms the winds defy (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 102v
Of many faults rhyme is, perhaps, the cause (incomplete)
Roscommon, Wentworth Dillon, 4th earl
[from Essay on translated verse]
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 61v
Of these, some beaus, and some precise in bands (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 64v
Oft Faunus leaves Arcadia's plain
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 138v
Oft have I seen in the cold thorny brake (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 133v
O Cleophel, my rest has pleasant been (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 31
O come, thou melancholy muse
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 97v
O cruel man! whom some fell tigress bore (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 24
O Delia, when I touch this string
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 101
Oh, do not at this small restraint repine (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 28
O, give me leave to kiss this beauteous hand (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 8v
O happy swains! who innocently free (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 17v
O horror! That not the fear of him, which binds the devils (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 6v
O justice! I suffer now for what hath former been (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 7
Oh! lead me to some solitary gloom (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 86
Oh, let me shroud my blushes in your bosom (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 3v
O Love, how running to thy toils is man
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 61v
O may our bliss continue thus to roll (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 11
O misery! like to a rusty o'ercharged cannon (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 5v
O my dark soul! Is there a mighty God (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 11v
O ne'er may we forget (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 41v
O penitence! let me truly taste thy cup (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 6v
Oh, sacred innocence, that sweetly sleeps (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 6v
O shameful insolence and pride (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 80
O Sir! I see 'tis difficult to keep (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 30v
O sir, the queen such manly courage wore (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 32v
Oh, sir, you are lord of the ascendant (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 4
O Solitude! best state of life below
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 20v
O teach me, friend, to know wise nature's rules (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 122v
O that mine eye might closed be
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 49
O the inconstant And rotten ground of service, you may see
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 5
O what a pretty spinner's here
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 36
O, what a world of doubts and cares
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 42
O, who will pity my distress
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 38v
O! would but heaven to wealthy men reveal (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 74v
Old night had more than half her progress run (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 80v
On fair Asteria's blissful plains
Shenstone, William
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 94
On Pomery. royal hill, where Romans long (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 61
On the god's will, with patience, you must wait (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 21v
Once on a time he turned upholster (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 80
Once, thou fair tempter of my heedless youth
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 36v
One gapes, a second nods, a third he winks (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 83
One hoped by satire, he himself (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 65
Oppressed with his corns, he no faster can crawl (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 84v
Or else a poem, praising to the skies (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 65v
Or is't the worthy country squire (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 88
Our tragic scene, you see, is not yet past (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 22v
Pardon, thou saint, a man in love untaught (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 8v
Past sorrows, let us moderately lament them (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 5v
Peacocks and whores are near allied (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 91
Perfect I was in Adam's loins
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 44
Physician's vassal kept at first to trot (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 65v
Place me, O! place me soon, ye guardian pow'rs
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 116
Plays heightened by gay cloths and gawdy scenes (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 27
Pleas'd with this flatt'ring thought, the love-sick boy (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 124
Poets, you know, were such faint-hearted wretches (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 67v
Praise Him, ye seasons! spring with youthful face (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 23
Pride (of all others the most dangerous fault) (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 61
Printed both pro and con, no matter what (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 67
Proceeding now, in more majestic steps (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 59
Queen Mab and all her company (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 81v
Quick, waft me hence, some gentle dream (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 62
Rash anglers rue late hours; more cautious, I (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 91
Recall your temper, sir, and blame not Cyrus (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 7v
Reflection comes with age: 'Tis our decaying life's autumnal fruit (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 100v
Retirement! thou celestial solacer
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 23
Return, Redeemer, O return
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 34
Rimesters, get wit ere ye pretend to shew it (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 55
Rise, mighty God, maintain thy cause
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii. 41v
Roscius deceased, each high aspiring play'r (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 113v
Run, Artabasus, run, and kneel before her (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 10
Sad sings the Philomel forlorn (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 71v
Sad tales befit my woe: I'll tell you one (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 6
Sadly they charm, and dismally they please (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 99v
Safely the mice through yon dark passage run (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 81
Say, would one be the darling of the town
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 49
Scarce had the night with sable shades appeared
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 19
Scholars should know, all fire in motion lies (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 99v
See how Phoebus welketh in the west (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 135v
See! night has thinned her shades. The watchful bird
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 23
See Phoebus now, as once for Phaeton (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 102v
See, to the sun the butterfly displays (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 43
See, to the west, he downward bends his way (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 42
See, too! responsive, with her holiest strains (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 25v
See where she is! how her affections move (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 27v
See where she lies, Arsanes! she, she's dead (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 32v
See where she lies; her eyes chained up in sleep (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 31
See where the farmer, with a master's eye
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 58
See with what noble pride she steps? That state (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 30v
Seek not for Paradise with curious eye
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 110v
Seek not thou to find The sacred counsels of almighty mind (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 60
Seest thou yonder craggy rock (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 74v
Serene the morn, now Zephyr's gentle breeze
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 57v
Set on to the temple first where we may pay (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 17
She ended: and with lips of rosy hue (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 68v
She noted all she ever read (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 94v
She weeps, and yet looks fair as doth the face of day (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 15v
Shepherd, wouldst thou here obtain
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 93
Silence was first proclaimed in the divan (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 64v
Since you, my dear, a country life admire
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 13
Sing, O my spirit, sing
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 43v
Sir Chaunticleer now ey'd the rising day (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 136
Sir, do you please, I pray, to have your ale (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 83
Sir, for your love you show but weak pretense (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 12v
Sister of Phoebus, gentle queen
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 106
Slaughter and knocking on the head (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 62
Slave, let me die a queen, in all my pride (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 25v
Slow to the court the pensive king returns (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 85v
So a wild Tartar when he spies (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 62
So bakers think it no collusion (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 79v
So envious witches, on the least disgust (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 68v
So glides the moon along th'ethereal plains (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 35v
So if, enamoring sense, a verdured path (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 30
So in a prison to the deluded eye (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 135v
So num'rous herds are driven o'er the rock (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 119v
So on he prick'd, and from a rising ground (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 136
So Phoebus or some friendly muse (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 61v
So shine the fields in icy fetters bound (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 123
So sinks the day-star in the ocean-bed (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 129v
So statesmen, out of public trust (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 79v
So the bright fires that light the milky way (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 112
So the stag hears his own feet, and thinks they sound like more (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 97v
So they brandish high in the air their threat'ning staves (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 97v
So vestries that are stiled select (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 79
So when a muse propitiously invites (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 61v
So when a storm's blow o'er And a calm breeze has smoothed the rugged deep (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 14
So when foul night enwraps the low'ring air (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 30
So where the silent streams of Linis glide (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 124
Soft sleep, o'er half the world, his wings doth spread (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 25
Solitude! where shall I find
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 38
Some from the loom, some from the last arose (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 65v
Some graced with scarves at unexperienced years (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 74v
Some little corner in the friendly dome (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 79v
Some, rather, when autumnal winds shall bring (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 90v
Spare me, in mercy spare
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 44v
Spiteful invectives should no patrons find (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 88
Strange pleasure sweeten'd with a soft surprise (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 88v
Such cruel usage, with a murrain (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 74
Such faint essays may fit a common flame (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 13
Such high and lofty pride swells her great heart (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 31v
Such mystic ways Fate does our love confirm (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 13
Sweet day, so cool, so calm, so bright
Herbert, George
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 38v
Sweet Echo, sweetest nymph, that liv'st unseen (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 132
Sweet warbler! to whose artless song
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 106v
Sweetly the morning smil'd, the sky was fair (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 91
Take notice who was fairest, or most fine (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 75
Take pen and ink, and write: are you ready (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 3
Take this advice, swill punch no more (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 80
Teach me to grieve with bleating moan, my sheep (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 101
Teach me to twist a thought a thousand ways (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 57
Tell me, ye souls, who now appear
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 45
Tell thy Cyrus quickly How bore the sad Panthea her departure (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 9v
Th'enliv'ning sun his beams withdrew (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 114v
Th'infernal orator now paused a space (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 65
Th'inhospitable land, left desolate (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 102v
Th'umbrageous shadow, and the verdant green (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 101
Th'unhallowed person ceases to preach peace (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 178
That 'twould have made you laugh to've seen us (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 81v
That happiness does still the longest thrive (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 91
That I went to warm myself in Lady Betty's chamber because I was cold
Swift, Jonathan
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 96v
That monarch who, when danger's near, sits down (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 14
That when the parish gluttons meet (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 80
That which made me call on Solon was, to my remembrance came
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 8
That which of centaur long ago
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 62
That which so oft by sundry writers (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 62
The active bee with pleasure saw (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 100
The bat uncouth thro' instinct fears
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 94v
The bulky form of Overland
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 16
The clock struck twelve, o'er half the globe (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 48 and 107v
The coachman drouthy with the dust (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 86
The cook, who in her humble post
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 36
The danger of battle, they wholly disdain (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 85
The dew-bathed winding plain (now) let me tread (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 43
The different seasons join And to produce the like effects combine (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 67v
The dreadful face of death, I've oft beheld (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 26
The elements their modest winds send out (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 87v
The fair, th'unhappy, innocent Lausaria (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 11
The faults of others we with ease discern (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 60
The female Qual'ty who divide (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 73v
The fleeting birds may soon in ocean swim
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 89
The fluttering bird in viscous snare (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 125v
The formal justice, and the jolly knight (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 88v
The gaping clouds pour lakes of sulphur down (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 99
The gaudy fop, to make a show (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 73v
The gaudy peacock and the glossy dove (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 115
The glories of proud London to survey (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 101
The gods are just, and justly all things sway (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 18
The groves appear all drest with wreaths of flowers (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 102
The growth of meadows, and the pride of woods (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 101v
The heats of summer benefits produce (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 73
The hungry trav'ller in the dreary waste (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 39
The just gods think a crown for such unfit (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 26
The kitchen where we sat in common (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 86v
The land that answers best the farmer's care
Smart, Christopher
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 45v
The life of knowledge is the life of bliss (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 10v
The Lord is gracious, come, my soul
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 39v
The man whose constitution's strong
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 98
The merry Xmas season now draws near
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 78v
The midnight moon serenely smiles
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 117
The mighty Stuffy threw a massy spear (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 101
The moral use of plays does make us know (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 17
The needy traveller, serene and gay (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 136v
The night grows old, 'tis time to go to rest
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 23v
The nymph will have her turn, to be (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 94v
The nymphs, their flower-inwoven tresses torn (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 7
The oak, while you his umbrage deck (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 101v
The pamphleteers their venom daily spit (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 61
The pious jilt to church repairs (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 74
The rageful winter hast'ning on apace
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 91
The sailor so with gladsome eye (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 114v
The silver whiteness that adorns thy neck (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 100
The sparkling flames raise water to a smile (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 102v
The star that bids the shepherd fold (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 130v
The stars are fainting in th'ethereal plain (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 91v
The stone-horse and the bull now rampant grow
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 76
The storm is ceasedthe thunders know their God (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 29v
The summer shone, the fields were gay
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 43
The sun gives motion to the ambient air (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 67
The sun grew low, and left the skies (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 62v
The sun had travelled his diurnal rounds
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 41
The sun now chasing from our sight (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 86
The swain a little or no damage feels (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 134
The swarthy ill-looked jailer soon appeared (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 68
The tawny lion, pawing to get free (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 59v
The thirsty traveller this month will fry
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 77
The traveller beholds with pitying eye (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 67v
The traveller o'er the desert plain (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 114v
The trout, of delicate complexion, creeps (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 91
The tuneful choir in amorous strains
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 97
The vale has catched my eye; where through I brake (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 29
The way the noise was, if mine ear be true (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 131
The western sky was purpled o'er (incomplete)
Shenstone, William
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 93v
The woodland nymphs, and gentle fays, at eve (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 118v
The wreck comes near, in that thick, dun-red cloud (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 29v
The young, the old, the witty, and the wise (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 87v
Their way Lies through the perplex'd paths of this drear wood (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 130v
Their words and actions must mysterious be (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 23v
Then love begone, thy thriftless empire yield (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 118v
Then mount the clerks, and in one lazy tone (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 46v
Then must we part! yet I'm to blame Go, whilst my woman's soul can give thee leave (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 9
Then, sir, in your intended flight make haste (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 14
Then to all hopes of happiness adieu (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 13v
Then up comes a noise of untunable pipes (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 84v
There coffee-man, vintner, the victualler and brewer (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 84v
There constant show'rs of hail and rains do flow (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 87v
There likewise mote be seen on every side
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 126
There taught to work, to dance, to sing and play (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 88
There the hoarse screech-owl, that in dead of night
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 103
There's no more credit to be given to th' face (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 2v
There's nothing in this world, like you I prize (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 22v
Thersites only clamored in the throng (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 60
These are the vestry that expends (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 80v
These factions amongst great men, they are like (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 5v
These, my lord, assembled at the bar (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 68v
These suff'rings, madam, I should count but light (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 22
They called for tea and chocolate (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 93
They rally'd next Vanessa's dress (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 93v
Thine, on Cantium's hills, The flow'ry hop, whose tendrils climbing round (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 60v
This doth a wretched dearth of wit betray (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 55
This evening late, by then the chewing flocks (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 132v
This gentle ev'ning let the sun descend (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 112
This in a sea of folly tossed (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 96
This inward sense and feeling of the soul (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 74
This is that noble youth, who, when I stood (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 12v
This lovely, sweet, and beauteous Fairy Queen (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 82v
This month keep near the fire, or you'll find
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 75v
This month reigns beauteous goddess of the spring
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 76v
This woman to my mind distraction brings (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 30v
This zealot Is of a mongrel, divers kind (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 62v
Those gluttons that their own tun-bellies fed (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 68v
Thou art excellently good: Perfection has (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 16
Thou excellent young man! Thy father's soul (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 9v
Thou first salut'st mine eye, Effulgent luminary of the sky (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 67
Thou hill, whose brow the antique structures grace (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 119
Thou moon, whose rays diffused of silver light (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 22v
Though hateful crimes I like a coward fly (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 27v
Tho' in our miseries, Fortune have a part (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 7
Though lust do mask in ne'er so strange disguise (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 4v
Tho' many passions grow within your breast (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 30
Tho try'st by all extremeties to move (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 31v
Through bush, through brake, through groves and gloomy dales (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 68
Thus an I traveled, hey, gee, Dobbin (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 81v
Thus as their pleasing journey they pursued (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 125v
Thus did they feed on authors' seeming brains (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 67v
Thus each old bawdy sot, with ruby face (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 69v
Thus for a while the sun the welkin cheers (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 136
Thus he plods on for twenty years or more (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 70
Thus hourly, sir, fresh glories you receive (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 12v
Thus in my progress whilst I do advance (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 70
Thus in the evening of an April's none
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 37v
Thus let my feet unwearied stray (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 126v
Thus most proud states submit when monarchs claim (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 12
Thus pass my days away. The cheerful sun (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 34v
Thus princes do of ills themselves acquit (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 24
Thus raging beasts we do with gins ensnare (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 21
Thus sang the uncouth to th' oaks and rills (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 130
Thus the benighted traveller that strays (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 122
Thus the poor bird, when frighted from her nest
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 85v
Thus the poor, feathery captive, hard escaped (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 30v
Thus to each vice you give some specious name (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 88
Thus when the storms of love are overpast (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 12
Thus wore out night, and now the herald lark (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 130
Thy brooks, O Burling, claim my just regard
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 20v
Thy head shall rise, tho' buried in the dust (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 99v
Thy mercy fills our serious minds
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 39
Till by ill use they were so cruel grown (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 64v
Time does on all a blest oblivion shed (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 25v
Tis doneI am resolvedI'll love no more (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 29
Tis (let me see) three years and more (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 96
Tis miracle to see a first good play (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 54v
Tis solemn gloom, wild nature's grateful hour (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 31
Tis thou hast cause to blame thy Cyrus's temper (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 10v
Tis we the labors of the learned disperse (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 66v
Tis you alone his fury cans[t] assuage (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 32v
To air the season's grateful change we owe
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 19
To behold thee not painted, inclines somewhat near (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 3v
To dote on weakness, slime, corruption, woman! (incomplete)
Jonson, Ben
[from Volpone]
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 91v
To ease my cares, I stumbled into Ray's (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 83
To fair Fidele's grassy tomb
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 135
To future ages may thy dullness last (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 47v
To see her beauties no man needs to stoop (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 99v
To such a height it seems your love is flown (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 30
To thee, all-glorious, ever blessed Pow'r
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 35v
To these lone shades where peace delights to dwell
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 108
Together both, ere the high lawns appear'd (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 129v
Together now they seek the hermitage (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 136v
Triumphant star! some pity shew
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 96v
Trust women! Ah, Myrtillus, rather trust (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 91v
Twas a foul storm tonightLord Ferdinand's chamber shook like an osier (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 7
Twas an unclouded sky: The day-star sat (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 32v
Twas in the dreary waste of this empire (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 40v
Twas night, when wearied with the toils of day (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 134
Twas now about that season of the year (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 134
Twas now about the Ides of June (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 81
Twas when December, with his spangling snows
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 91v
Twas when the fields had shed their golden grain (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 76v
Twas when the friendly shade of night (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 125v
Twas when the sun had his swift progress made
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 79v
Two and 20 buried alive. How buried alive (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 15v
Two such I saw, what time the labor'd oxe (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 132
Umbretto sees, and touch'd with gen'rous care (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 89v
Under a tow'ring hill, as steep (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 12
Under the tropics is our language spoke (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 100v
Unmoved, though baffled, we renew the trial (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 39v
Unmuffle, ye faint stars; and thou, fair moon (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 132v
Unworthy to be called thy child
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 44v
Upon the shore, as frequent as the sand (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 99v
Virtue adorns her soul within
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 36
Vow friendship, secrecy, and all that's kind (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 69v
W-de, thy beechen slopes with waving grain
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 136v
Watchful behind the compter he appears (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 70
We ask not how discreet, how young, how fair (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 75
We cheat the finny fools, ourselves as blind (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 91v
We must be free from scandal as the fault (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 29v
We must remember this mock prince is still (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 16
We need not doubt all power to us must yield (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 22
We should, as learned poets use (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 61v
We stand exposed to every sin
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 36
We used no arts to adult'rate our wine (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 67v
Weary of thoughts, I set me down
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 37
Welcome, bright influence! kindest gift of Him
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 24v
Welcome, thrice welcome, day of rest
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 43
Well, let me make my will. since love must die (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 11
Well then, my purse, thy sabbaths keep
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 90
Were Nelly's figure mounted there (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 96v
Were you a god, and had the power of Jove (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 24
What are all the joys of life
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 23
What cloudy blacks my heart and visage wear (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 28
What is this sound, this phantom, fairy name (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 133v
What mortal can such beauty view (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 18v
What pictures now shall wanton fancy bring (incomplete)
Leapor, Mary
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 79
What shall I do? 'tis pain and death to live (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 25
What shall we do, Colonel? They say (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 15
What sudden warnings give the must'ring clouds (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 29
What thick dark fog is this before my eyes (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 26
What thing so good, which not some harm may bring (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 91
What tho' my sins are of a crimson stain
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 48v
What time the jocund rosy-bosomed hours (incomplete)
Cooper, John Gilbert
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 107
What to the office of a king is due (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 29v
What tumult's this within my breast appears (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 27v
What various shapes does mighty love put on (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 17v
What various thoughts now wrestle in my breast (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 27v
What will become of me now? There's nothing but (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 16v
Whee, whee, whee, What a wheeing dost thou keep (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 133v
When again the lambkins play (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 101
When Albion rul'd the land, whose lineage came (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 68
When Boreas sounds his fierce alarms (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 123v
When cloudy mists obscure the visual ray (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 97v
When Cupid first instructs his darts to fly (incomplete)
Churchill, Charles
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 124
When first the tender blades of grass appear
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 9v
When (Heaven) appoints, the horned moon renews (incomplete)
Baker, Henry
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 42v
When horrid night arises from the deep (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 22v
When I have gained the highest victory o'er (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 11
When late the bees were stript by winter pale
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 137
When lightnings flash, the most obdurate mind (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 90v
When lim'd the poor bird thus with eagerness strains (incomplete)
Piozzi, Hester Thrale
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 125v
When lonely night composed the drowsy mind (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 79
When Mars and Venus in conjunction were (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 69v
When Phoebus from his mounted team (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 71
When Phoebus's beams are withdrawn from our sight (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 116v
When shall my midnight-sighs and morning groans (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 33v
When skillful traders first set up
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 89v
When the gay fairies jovial us'd to rove (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 89
When the seas's calm, the air serene and clear (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 24
When the still village took its usual rest (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 80v
When these, who think all wisdom lies (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 63
When western clouds involved the god of light (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 64
When wintry clouds obscure the sky (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 85v
When young-ey'd spring profusely throws (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 123
Where am I brought in inobservant range
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 28
Where justice is too oft so dearly bought (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 64
Where'er we turn, by Fancy charm'd, we find
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 135
Whether we fall by ambition, blood, or lust (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 7
While rich Burgundian wine and bright champagne (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 102v
While soft through water, earth, and air
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 105
Whilst satire thus, disdaining mean control (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 127
Whilst thus the knight a tedious moon beguiled (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 37
Who are in love, at all times can't be wise (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 20v
Who were at first but hawkers, and no more (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 66v
Whoo abuse justice, scoff at reason (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 74v
Whose best religion is but formal shew (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 64
Whose thirsty product all looked parched and dry (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 64
Why bear I yet the Father's rod
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 40v
Why did Change-Ally waste thy precious hours (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 97
Why did the gods such heavenly forms create (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 25v
Why do you make yourself so wild a tempest (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 4v
Why doth your lordship use this solitariness (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 6v
Why, here's a man now, would bright (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 6v
Why, madam, do you fly a lover's prayer (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 13
Why sits Content upon a cottage-sill (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 112
Why, why, ye gods, has Cyrus so deserved (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 11
Winds! who in troubled air your voices raise (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 22v
Wisdom doth not more moderate wasting sorrow (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 7
Wise providence, his useful parts
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 12
With eager search to dart the soul (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 128
With gallant pomp and beauteous pride
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 101v
With hurtful whims they kept the world in play (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 67v
With rebel-will I ne'er oppose (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 66v
With wanton songs t'inflame a virgin's blood (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 65v
With you conversing, time on feet of down (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 11
Within his breast Dwells no ingredient of love or honor (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 16
Won by the summer's importuning ray (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 102v
Ye gods! annihilate but space and time (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 100
Ye seasons! that in sweet vicissitude
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 25v
Yet boundless are his hopes, as is his gain (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 69v
Yet lovely in her sorrow still appears (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 97
Yet more! Have I not said enough, dear uncle (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 10
Yet not incurious, was inclined (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 93
Yet once more, glorious god of day
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 137v
You are our judge, and on your gentle breath (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 26v
You are still abusing women. Who, I? no, only (by the way now and then) mention (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 4
You are studying to become a great wise fellow (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 4
You could not else with such a feeling sense (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 88
You know not Aribert. He's haughty, stern, unbounded in his power (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 9v
You look on me, Orontes, as your foe (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 18
You smoking cot, beat by the mountain wind (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 92v
You to a senseless rock your love make known (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 21
You who by nature had such gifts allowed (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 66v
Your gentle aid Hygeia well can witness; she who saves (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, i
f. 107v
Your innuendoes when you tell us (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, ii
f. 96v
Your kiss is colder Than that I have seen in holy anchorite (incomplete)
Harvard
MS Eng 611, iii
f. 5v