Union First Line Index of English Verse
13
th
-19
th
Century (bulk 1500-1800)
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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
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11 Records Found
First Line
Author
Title
Last Line
Library
Shelfmark
Folio
Awake O muse; a noble theme
`Ode in praise of friendship'
'Tis all that I desire.
Yale
c.135
p. 22
Come blooming goddess fair Hygeia light,
`Sonnet'
Which, like the morning sun, each vapor clear'd.
Yale
c.135
p. 28
For thee, O friend, my garden's pride I've chose
`To a lady with some of the author's verses'
This wreath, devoted to fair friendship's shrine.
Yale
c.135
p. 37
O heaven, thy awful judgments I adore,
`Meditations and reflections on a storm of thunder and lightning; June the 24th 1756'
One thunder-stroke may lead to joys divine.
Yale
c.135
p. 30
O thou, ambition's only aim and end,
`Sonnet to greatness'
Greatness to goodness join'd can bliss bestow.
Yale
c.135
p. 26
On fair Arcadia's happy plain
`A pastoral tale'
Beware Corinna's hapless end.
Yale
c.135
p. 1
These lines (the product of a leisure hour)
`Verses to a lady with some of the above' [`Where can true happiness...']
In spite of sorrow, sickness, age, or pain.
Yale
c.135
p. 19
Weep not, fond parent, that insatiate death
`Sonnet'
Spotless! may we, be ever so prepar'd!
Yale
c.135
p. 27
Where can true happiness be found?
`On happiness'
He finds true happiness.
Yale
c.135
p. 15
Who guiltless spend each fleeting hour,
`Horace, Book the 1st Ode 22d imitated'
May own and crown my toils!
Yale
c.135
p. 34
Whoe'er, by pride, or worldly pomp misled,
`Sonnet, hung in a tent in a field'
Rais'd, on the sands of guilt, by lawless pow'r.
Yale
c.135
p. 29