Union First Line Index of English Verse
13
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Century (bulk 1500-1800)
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Beinecke Library (Yale)--Osborn Collection
Bodleian Library (Oxford)
British Library (handwritten 1895 index)
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Houghton Library (Harvard)
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23 Records Found
First Line
Author
Title
Last Line
Library
Shelfmark
Folio
As aw'd th' approach, and fix'd respectful love,
There fix, there shine and heighten social life.
Yale
c.153
p. 2
For this, my God, my humblest praises wait;
`[Soliloquies] (6)'
Seems to demand a tribute from the skies.
Yale
c.153
p. 161
Forgive me friends if I conceal
`An enigma'
To use me well, or let me quite alone.
Yale
c.153
p. 89
Friendship! Thou powerful sovereign of the mind,
`Sent in the beginning of a letter to Aurelia'
Who leads us thro' the maze of life, and kindly fix'd us there.
Yale
c.153
p. 83
Hath this late year effac'd one single crime?
`The New Year'
Short is the journey, and the end is bliss.
Yale
c.153
p. 77
How frail is life! How soon 'twill end
And wishes are no more.
Yale
c.153
p. 73
How my soul struggles pants for liberty,
`[Soliloquies] (5)'
O, could I soar above them.
Yale
c.153
p. 157
I laid me down and sweetly slept,
`A morning hymn...by Aurelia'
Nor think ye call too soon.
Yale
c.153
p. 57
Let all in heav'n and earth combine,
`Hymn'
To praise the great eternal King.
Yale
c.153
p. 95
O'er distant lands and seas I swiftly roam
`An enigma'
Sense and Fidelia I shall ne'er forsake.
Yale
c.153
p. 81
Oft I retire in hope to find
`Hymn'
An honor to myself, and thee.
Yale
c.153
p. 93
O! bear me to some lonely cell
Nor wish for heaven below the skies.
Yale
c.153
p. 75
Oh! how does ev'ry trifle seize my heart
`Soliloquies [1]'
Be straight transported to the full possession.
Yale
c.153
p. 147
O Lord, since sinful dust may dare,
`Hymn'
Unknown to mortals here below.
Yale
c.153
p. 49
O! when shall I behold thee as thou art?
To mount and spend eternity in praise.
Yale
c.153
p. 55
The Lord is great, and greatly to be praised;
`Soliloquies [3]'
Will give us an eternity to sing.
Yale
c.153
p. 153
Too low my strains, too flat my artless song
Rowe, Elizabeth (Singer), 1674_1737
`[Soliloquies] (2)'
When your eternal King inspires the song.
Yale
c.153
p. 149
Welcome, thou presage of my certain doom.
Wakeford, Mrs. [ ]
`The mourning ring'
And gain the plaudit of a smiling God.
Yale
c.153
p. 167
What has this world to fill my vast desires?
`[Soliloquies] (4)'
That ceaseless pants for God, its only rest.
Yale
c.153
p. 155
What tho' my sins are of a crimson stain?
Will pardon all the ills that I have done.
Yale
c.153
p. 109
While you secure from noise and strife,
`To Camilla'
And wish you back to town again.
Yale
c.153
p. 87
Why gracious God, am I so highly blest?
`[Soliloquies] (7)'
By doing all thy will__
Yale
c.153
p. 163
Why is my soul o'ercast with anxious fear?
`[Soliloquies] (8)'
He always hears them for he always loves.
Yale
c.153
p. 165