LEADER 00000cam a2200973 a 4500 001 ocm14377060 003 OCoLC 005 20200625023422.0 008 860923s1987 enk b 001 p eng 010 86023701 015 GB8701784|2bnb 016 (AMICUS)000006762208 019 14693276|a59162778 020 0192141546 020 9780192141545 035 (OCoLC)14377060|z(OCoLC)14693276|z(OCoLC)59162778 040 DLC|beng|cDLC|dUKM|dMUQ|dUKV3G|dBAKER|dBTCTA|dYDXCP|dO5G |dMCW|dGBVCP|dOCLCF|dOCLCQ|dOCL|dLMR|dNTX|dMWB|dNLC|dDHA |dOCLCQ|dCSA|dOCLCQ|dCCH|dIPL|dTXGRD|dS#L|dOCLCQ|dAU@ |dOCLCQ|dUKUOY|dOCLCQ|dORU|dREU|dZGR 049 STJJ 050 00 PR1223|b.N48 1987 082 00 821/.8/08|219 084 Sammlung|2asb 084 e|2asb 084 17.83|2bcl 084 18.05|2bcl 245 04 The New Oxford book of Victorian verse. 260 Oxford [Oxfordshire] ;|aNew York :|bOxford University Press,|c1987. 300 xxxiv, 654 pages ;|c22 cm 336 text|btxt|2rdacontent 337 unmediated|bn|2rdamedia 338 volume|bnc|2rdacarrier 500 Includes indexes. 504 Includes bibliographical references (pages 621-627). 505 00 |tThomas Lovell Beddoes (1803-1849) --|tA Crocodile -- |tDeath Sweet --|tHymn --|tHumble Beginnings --|tSonnet: To Tartar, a Terrier Beauty --|tA Lake --|tfrom Death's Jest-Book --|tSong ['Squats on a toad-stool under a tree'] --|tSong ['We have bathed, where none have seen us'] -- |tDirge --|tAlfred Tennyson (1809-1892) --|tSt Simeon Stylites --|tUlysses --|tMorte d'Arthur --|tThe Eagle -- |t'Break, break, break' --|tAudley Court --|tfrom The Princess --|t'Now sleeps the crimson petal, now the white' --|t'Come down, O maid, from yonder mountain height' -- |tfrom In Memoriam A.H.H. --|tII 'Old Yew, which graspest at the stones' --|tVII 'Dark house, by which once more I stand' --|tXI 'Calm is the morn without a sound' --|tL 'Be near me when my light is low' --|tLIV 'Oh yet we trust that somehow good' --|tLV 'The wish, that of the living whole' --|tLVI '"So careful of the type?" but no' --|tLXX 'I cannot see the features right' --|tLXXXIII 'Dip down upon the northern shore' --|tXCV 'By night we linger'd on the lawn' --|tCXV 'Now fades the last long streak of snow' --|tCXXIII 'There rolls the deep where grew the tree' -- |tThe Daisy --|tTo the Rev. F.D. Maurice --|tThe Charge of the Light Brigade --|tfrom Maud --|tI. xi 'O let the solid ground' --|tI. xviii 'I have led her home, my love, my only friend' --|tI. xxii 'Come into the garden, Maud' -- |tII. iv 'O that 'twere possible' --|tfrom Idylls of the King: Merlin and Vivien 'In Love, if Love be Love, if Love be ours' --|tTithonus --|tNorthern Farmer. New Style -- |tTo E. FitzGerald --|tCrossing the Bar. 505 80 |tEmily Jane Bronte (1818-1848) --|t'Long neglect has worn away' --|t'The night is darkening round me' --|t'All hushed and still within the house' --|t'It's over now; I've known it all' --|t'It will not shine again' --|t'O come with me, thus ran the song' --|t'O Dream, where art thou now?' --|t'How still, how happy! Those are words' -- |t'What winter floods, what showers of spring' --|t'I know not how it falls on me' --|t'She dried her tears, and they did smile' --|t'Mild the mist upon the hill' --|t'It is too late to call thee now' --|t'Had there been falsehood in my breast' --|t'Come, walk with me' --|tRemembrance -- |tThe Prisoner --|tEmily Jane Bronte, Charlotte Bronte -- |tThe Visionary --|tLeigh Hunt (1784-1859) --|tRondeau -- |tOn the Death of His Son Vincent --|tWalter Savage Landor (1775-1864) --|tHow to Read Me --|t'Twenty years hence my eyes may grow' --|tDying Speech of an Old Philosopher -- |tAge --|tPigmies and Cranes --|tLa Promessa Sposa -- |tMemory --|tWinthrop Mackworth Praed (1802-1839) --|tTo Helen --|tThomas Hood (1799-1845) --|tfrom Miss Kilmansegg and her Precious Leg --|tHer Christening --|tHer Precious Leg --|tHer Death --|tWilliam Barnes (1801-1886) --|tUncle an' Aunt --|tPolly Be-En Upzides Wi' Tom --|tThe Vaices that Be Gone --|tMy Orcha'd in Linden Lea --|tFalse Friends-Like --|tChildhood --|tLight or Sheade --|tSlow to Come, Quick A-Gone --|tThe Turnstile --|tThe Rwose in the Dark --|tThe Zilver-Weed --|tLwonesomeness --|tLeaves A- Vallen --|tJay A-Pass'd --|tThe Vierzide Chairs --|tAll Still --|tThe Vield Path --|tSeasons and Times. 505 80 |tWhen We that Now Ha' Childern Wer Childern --|tWalken Hwome at Night --|tWhich Road? --|tShop O' Meat-Weare -- |tThe Stwonen Steps --|tJames Clarence Mangan (1803-1849) --|tTwenty Golden Years Ago --|tSiberia --|tA New Song on the Birth of the Prince of Wales --|tWilliam Miller (1810- 1872) --|t'Wee Willie Winkie rins through the town' -- |tCharles Dickens (1812-1870) --|tThe Fine Old English Gentleman --|tWilliam Wordsworth (1770-1850) --|t'The most alluring clouds that mount the sky' --|t'The unremitting voice of nightly streams' --|tElizabeth Barrett Browning (1806-1861) --|tGrief --|tfrom Sonnets from the Portuguese XXIV 'Let the world's sharpness, like a closing knife' -- |tfrom Aurora Leigh from First Book --|tThe Best Thing in the World --|t'Died ... ' --|tRobert Browning (1812-1889) --|tMy Last Duchess --|tSoliloquy of the Spanish Cloister --|tThe Bishop Orders His Tomb at Saint Praxed's Church -- |tHome-Thoughts, from Abroad --|tMeeting at Night -- |tMemorabilia --|tAndrea del Sarto --|tTwo in the Campagna --|tLove in a Life --|tA Toccata of Galuppi's --|t'Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came' --|tA Grammarian's Funeral --|tConfessions --|tYouth and Art --|tCaliban upon Setebos --|tRhyme for a Child Viewing a Naked Venus --|tNever the Time and the Place --|tDevelopment --|tInapprehensiveness --|tEbenezer Jones (1820-1860) --|tHigh Summer --|tWhimper of Awakening Passion --|tEyeing the Eyes of One's Mistress --|tJohn Clare (1793-1864) --|tLove's Pains --|tI've Had Many an Aching Pain --|tStanzas ['Black absence hides upon the past'] --|tA Vision. 505 80 |t'The thunder mutters louder and more loud' --|tThe Old Year --|t'I Am' --|tThe Winters Spring --|tHesperus --|tAn Invite to Eternity --|tThe Shepherd Boy --|tEvening -- |tSonnet: 'I Am' --|tStanzas ['The passing of a dream'] -- |tSong ['Soft falls the sweet evening'] --|tTo Miss B -- |tHymn to the Creator --|t'There is a charm in Solitude that cheers' --|tSong ['I went my Sunday mornings rounds'] --|tFirst Love --|tSong ['I hid my love when young while I'] --|tSong ['I wish I was where I would be'] -- |tFragment ['Love's memories haunt my footsteps still'] -- |tThe Yellowhammer --|tSong ['The mist rauk is hanging'] - -|tAn Anecdote of Love --|tJohn Ruskin (1819-1900) --|tLa Madonna dell'Acqua --|tThe Zodiac Song --|tThomas Babington Macaulay (1800-1859) --|tEpitaph on a Jacobite - -|tLewis Carroll (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson) (1832-1898) -- |tRules and Regulations --|t'They told me you had been to her' --|t'How doth the little crocodile' --|t'"You are old, Father William," the young man said' --|tJabberwocky -- |t'The sun was shining on the sea' --|t'In winter, when the fields are white' --|tThe Hunting of the Snark --|t'He thought he saw ... ' (i-viii) --|tCharlotte Bronte (1816- 1855) --|t'The Autumn day its course has run -- the Autumn evening falls' --|t'The house was still -- the room was still' --|t'I now had only to retrace' --|t'The Nurse believed the sick man slept' --|tCharlotte Bronte (perhaps Emily Jane Bronte) --|tStanzas ['Often rebuked, yet always back returning'] --|tEdward Lear (1812-1888) --|t'There was an Old Man who supposed' --|t'There was a Young Lady whose eyes'. 505 80 |t'There was an Old Man on some rocks' --|t'There was an old man who screamed out' --|tThe Dong with a Luminous Nose --|tThe New Vestments --|t'"How pleasant to know Mr Lear!"' --|tCharles Kingsley (1819-1875) --|t'When I was a greenhorn and young' --|tThe Invitation --|tArthur Hugh Clough (1819-1861) --|tNatura Naturans --|t'Say not the struggle nought availeth' --|t'To spend uncounted years of pain' --|tAmours de Voyage --|tThe Latest Decalogue -- |tfrom Dipsychus --|t'As I sat at the cafe, I said to myself' --|t'"There is no God," the wicked saith' --|t'I dreamed a dream: I dreamt that I espied' --|t'That there are powers above us I admit' --|tDante Gabriel Rossetti (1828-1882) --|tThe Blessed Damozel --|tA Half-Way Pause - -|tAutumn Idleness --|tSudden Light --|tA Match with the Moon --|tThe Woodspurge --|tEven So --|tNuptial Sleep -- |tSmithereens --|tChristina G. Rossetti (1830-1894) -- |tSong ['When I am dead, my dearest'] --|tSong ['Oh roses for the flush of youth'] --|tRemember --|tOne Sea-Side Grave --|tEcho --|tThe Bourne --|tfrom the Antique ['It's a weary life, it is, she said'] --|tMay --|tA Birthday -- |tWinter: My Secret --|tA Better Resurrection --|tBy the Sea --|t'They lie at rest, our blessed dead' --|tGoblin Market --|tPromises like Pie-Crust --|tSomewhere or Other --|tThe Lowest Place --|tGrown and Flown --|tA Dirge --|tA Christmas Carol --|t'Summer is Ended' --|t'Endure hardness' --|t'Lord Jesus, who would think that I am Thine?' --|tA Frog's Fate --|tEbenezer Elliott (1781-1849) --|tEpigram ['"Prepare to meet the King of Terrors," cried']. 505 80 |tSong ['Donought would have everything'] --|tEpigram ['What is a communist? One who hath yearnings'] -- |tMatthew Arnold (1822-1888) --|tTo Marguerite -- Continued --|tDestiny --|tDover Beach --|tThe Scholar- Gipsy --|tGrowing Old --|tThe Progress of Poesy --|t'Below the surface-stream, shallow and light' --|tGeist's Grave - -|tWilliam Allingham (1824-1889) --|tA Dream --|tThe Fairies --|tThe Witch-Bride --|t'The Boy from his bedroom- window' --|t'Four ducks on a pond' --|t'Everything passes and vanishes' --|tWriting --|tAn Evening --|tExpress -- |t'No funeral gloom, my dears, when I am gone' -- |tCoventry Patmore (1823-1896) --|tfrom The Angel in the House --|tLove at Large --|tThe Kiss --|tConstancy rewarded --|tThe Rosy Bosom'd Hours --|tThe Toys --|tMagna est Veritas --|tArbor vitce --|tErnest Jones (1819-1869) - -|tThe Song of the Low --|tWilliam Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863) --|tSorrows of Werther --|tJames Henry (1798- 1876) --|tOut of the Frying Pan into the Fire --|tPain -- |tOld Man --|tVery Old Man --|t'Another and another and another' --|tMy Stearine Candles --|t'Once on a time a thousand different men' --|t'Two hundred men and eighteen killed' --|tWilliam Bell Scott (1811-1890) --|tA Rhyme of the Sun-Dial --|tDeath --|tThe Witch's Ballad --|tMusic -- |tMortimer Collins (1827-1876) --|tLotos Eating --|tTo F.C. --|tShirley Brooks (1816-1874) --|tPoem by a Perfectly Furious Academician --|tEdward Fitzgerald (1809- 1883) --|tRubaiyat of Omar Khayyam --|tElizabeth Siddal (later Rossetti) (1829-1862) --|tA Silent Wood --|tDead Love --|tWilliam Morris (1834-1896). 505 80 |tSummer Dawn --|tFor the Briar Rose --|tAnother for the Briar Rose --|tPomona --|tThe End of May --|tThomas Ashe (1836-1889) --|tCorpse-Bearing --|tTo Two Bereaved -- |tT.L. Peacock (1785-1866) --|tLove and Age --|tAdelaide Anne Procter (1825-1864) --|tEnvy --|tRichard Watson Dixon (1833-1900) --|tDream --|tThe Wizard's Funeral --|tDawning --|tGeorge Meredith (1828-1909) --|tfrom Modern Love --|tI 'By this he knew she wept with waking eyes' --|tV 'A message from her set his brain aflame' --|tVI 'It chanced his lips did meet her forehead cool' --|tVII 'She issues radiant from her dressing-room' --|tIX 'He felt the wild beast in him betweenwhiles' --|tXVI 'In our old shipwrecked days there was an hour' --|tXVII 'At dinner, she is hostess, I am host' --|tXXI 'We three are on the cedar-shadowed lawn' --|tXXIII ''Tis Christmas weather, and a country house' --|tXXV 'You like not that French novel? Tell me why' --|tXXXI 'This golden head has wit in it. I live' --|tXXXIV 'Madam would speak with me. So, now it comes' --|tXXXVI 'My Lady unto Madam makes her bow' -- |tXXXVII 'Along the garden terrace, under which' --|tXLII 'I am to follow her. There is much grace' --|tXLVII 'We saw the swallows gathering in the sky' --|tL 'Thus piteously Love closed what he begat' --|tWhen I would Image --|tLucifer in Starlight --|tJ. Stanyan Bigg (1828- 1865) --|tAn Irish Picture --|tAlgernon Charles Swinburne (1837-1909) --|tBefore Parting --|tAfter Death --|tA Leave -Taking --|tIlicet --|tA Match --|tThe Leper --|tThe Garden of Proserpine --|t'Why grudge them lotus-leaf and laurel'. 505 80 |tA Forsaken Garden --|tJohn Leicester Warren, Lord De Tabley (1835-1895) --|tPhiloctetes --|tThe Power of Interval --|tThe Knight in the Wood --|tNuptial Song -- |tThe Churchyard on the Sands --|tCirce --|tThe Study of a Spider --|tRobert Stephen Hawker (1803-1875) --|tA Croon on Hennacliff --|tCharles Turner (formerly Tennyson) (1808 -1879) --|tThe Lion's Skeleton --|tA Brilliant Day --|tOn a Vase of Gold-Fish --|tfrom Harvest to January --|tGout and Wings --|tOn Seeing a Little Child Spin a Coin of Alexander the Great --|tLetty's Globe --|tOn Shooting a Swallow in Early Youth --|tCalvus to a Fly --|tA Country Dance --|tGerard M. Hopkins (1844-1889) --|t'It was a hard thing to undo this knot' --|tThe Habit of Perfection -- |tThe Wreck of the Deutschland --|tMoonrise --|tGod's Grandeur --|tSpring --|tIn the Valley of the Elwy --|tThe Windhover --|tPied Beauty --|t'As kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw flame' --|tThe Leaden Echo and the Golden Echo --|tThe Blessed Virgin compared to the Air we Breathe --|t'The Child is Father to the Man' --|tSpelt from Sibyl's Leaves --|t'No worst, there is none. Pitched past pitch of grief' --|t'To seem the stranger lies my lot, my life' --|t'I wake and feel the fell of dark, not day' -- |t'Patience, hard thing! the hard thing but to pray' -- |t'My own heart let me more have pity on; let' --|t'Thou art indeed just, Lord, if I contend' --|tJohn Henry Newman (1801-1890) --|tfrom The Dream of Gerontius Fifth Choir of Angelicals --|tArthur Munby (1828-1910) --|tThe Serving Maid --|tOne Way of Looking at It --|tPost Mortem. 505 80 |tSebastian Evans (1830-1909) --|tThe Fifteen Days of Judgment --|tJames Thomson ('B.V.') (1834-1882) --|tfrom Art III 'Singing is sweet; but be sure of this' --|t'Once in a saintly passion' --|tMr MacCall at Cleveland Hall -- |tIn the Room --|tIn a Christian Churchyard --|tfrom The City of Dreadful Night --|tIV 'He stood alone within the spacious square' --|tXVIII 'I wandered in a suburb of the north' --|tC.S. Calverley (1831-1884) --|tPeace: A Study - -|tChanged --|tContentment --|t'Forever' --|tThomas Hardy (1840-1928) --|tHer Dilemma --|tNeutral Tones --|tThoughts of Phena --|tFriends Beyond --|tAt an Inn --|t'I Look into My Glass' --|tDrummer Hodge --|tA Wife in London --|tAn August Midnight --|tThe Darkling Thrush --|tWives in the Sere --|tThe Subalterns --|tLong Plighted --|tA Commonplace Day --|tTo Lizbie Browne --|tA Broken Appointment --|tThe Self-Unseeing --|tDora Greenwell (1821 -1882) --|tA Scherzo --|tDigby Mackworth Dolben (1848- 1867) --|tA Song --|tW.H. Mallock (1849-1923) --|tA Marriage Prospect --|tChristmas Thoughts, by a Modern Thinker --|tGeorge Eliot (Mary Ann, later Marian, Evans) (1819-1880) --|tfrom Brother and Sister --|tVI 'Our brown canal was endless to my thought' --|tVII 'Those long days measured by my little feet' --|tVIII 'But sudden came the barge's pitch-black prow' --|tGeorge Augustus Simcox (1841 -1905) --|tLove's Votary --|tT.E. Brown (1830-1897) -- |tThe Well --|t'High overhead' --|tThe Bristol Channel -- |tI Bended unto Me --|tfrom Roman Women XIII 'O Englishwoman on the Pincian' --|tA Sermon at Clevedon -- |tDartmoor: Sunset at Chagford. 505 80 |tGeorge MacDonald (1824-1905) --|tWinter Song -- |tProfessor Noctutus --|tThe Shortest and Sweetest of Songs --|tNo End of No-Story --|tFrederick Locker-Lampson (formerly Locker) (1821-1895) --|tA Terrible Infant -- |tEdward Dowden (1843-1913) --|tBurdens --|tRobert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894) --|t'In Autumn when the woods are red' --|t'I saw red evening through the rain' --|tBrowning --|t'Last night we had a thunderstorm in style' -- |tRequiem --|tPirate Ditty --|tA Mile an' a Bittock -- |tFragment ['Thou strainest through the mountain fern'] -- |t'So live, so love, so use that fragile hour' --|tTo Mrs Will H. Low --|t'My house, I say. But hark to the sunny doves' --|t'It's an owercome sooth for age an' youth' -- |t'Fair Isle at Sea -- thy lovely name' --|t'As with heaped bees at hiving time' --|t'The morning drum-call on my eager ear' --|t'I have trod the upward and the downward slope' --|tWilliam Ernest Henley (1849-1903) --|tWaiting - -|tTo W.R. ['Madam Life's a piece in bloom'] --|tSydney Dobell (1824-1874) --|tPerhaps --|tE. Keary (fl. 1857- 1882) --|tOld Age --|tPhilip Bourke Marston (1850-1887) -- |tAfter --|tLouisa S. Guggenberger (formerly Bevington) (1845-1895) --|tAfternoon --|tTwilight --|t'Egoisme a Deux' --|tLove and Language --|tAm I to Lose You? -- |tWilliam Renton (fl. 1875-1905) --|tThe Foal --|tThe Shadow of Himself --|tCrescent Moon --|tAfter Nightfall -- |tMoon and Candle-light --|tThe Fork of the Road --|tR.E. Egerton Warburton (1804-1891) --|tPast and Present -- |tAlice Meynell (1847-1922) --|tAfter a Parting --|tCradle -Song at Twilight --|tThe Shepherdess. 505 80 |t'I Am the Way' --|tThe Lady Poverty --|tHenry Bellyse Baildon (1849-1907) --|tA Moth --|tGeorge R. Sims (1847- 1922) --|tA Garden Song --|tUndertones --|tJean Ingelow (1820-1897) --|tThe Long White Seam --|tJohn Addington Symonds (1840-1893) --|tThe Camera Obscura --|tRobert Bridges (1844-1930) --|tLondon Snow --|tOn a Dead Child -- |t'The evening darkens over' --|tJoseph Skipsey (1832- 1903) --|t'Get Up!' --|tNot as Wont --|tWilliam Watson (1858-1935) --|tAn Epitaph --|tWilliam Frederick Stevenson (fl. 1883) --|tLife and Impellance --|tA Planet of Descendance --|tEugene Lee-Hamilton (1845-1907) --|tSunken Gold --|tIdle Charon --|tNoon's Dream-Song --|tAmong the Firs --|tAmy Levy (1861-1889) --|tEpitaph --|tOn the Threshold --|tA. Mary F. Robinson (MME Darmesteter, MME Duclaux) (1857-1944) --|tAubade Triste --|tPallor -- |tNeurasthenia --|tAn Orchard at Avignon --|tE. Nesbit (1858-1924) --|tSong ['Oh, baby, baby, baby dear'] -- |tAmong His Books --|tThe Gray Folk --|tLove's Guerdons -- |tThe Claim --|tVilleggiature --|tRudyard Kipling (1865- 1936) --|tThe Story of Uriah --|tDanny Deever -- |tGentlemen-Rankers --|tIn the Neolithic Age --|tThe Vampire --|tRecessional --|tWilliam Canton (1845-1926) -- |tDay-Dreams --|tOscar Wilde (1854-1900) --|tLes Ballons - -|tSymphony in Yellow --|tfrom The Ballad of Reading Gaol --|tI 'He did not wear his scarlet coat' --|tIII 'In Debtors' Yard the stones are hard' --|tAndrew Lang (1844- 1912) --|tThe Last Chance --|tLionel Johnson (1867-1902) - -|tVictory --|tLambeth Lyric --|tA Stranger --|tThe Roman Stage --|tThe Dark Angel. 505 80 |tGerald Massey (1828-1907) --|t'As proper mode of quenching legal lust' --|tThe Diakka --|tWomankind -- |tCosmo Monkhouse (1840-1901) --|tAny Soul to Any Body -- |tArthur Symons (1865-1945) --|tPastel: Masks and Faces -- |tThe Absinthe-Drinker --|tRain on the Down --|tDuring Music --|tAt the Cavour --|tAt Dieppe --|tParis --|tThe Barrel-Organ --|tW.B. Yeats (1865-1939) --|tA Cradle Song --|tThe Pity of Love --|tThe Sorrow of Love --|tWhen You Are Old --|tWho Goes with Fergus? --|tHe Thinks of Those who have Spoken Evil of His Beloved --|tHe Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven --|tWilliam Cory (formerly Johnson) (1823 -1892) --|tHersilia --|tJames Logie Robertson (1846-1922) --|tThe Discovery of America --|tA Schule Laddie's Lament on the Lateness o' the Season --|tDollie Radford (1858-?) --|tSoliloquy of a Maiden Aunt --|tJ.K. Stephen (1859- 1892) --|tEngland and America --|tOn a Rhine Steamer -- |tOn a Parisian Boulevard --|tIn the Backs --|tA Remonstrance --|tAfter the Golden Wedding --|tKatharine Tynan (1861-1931) --|tThe Witch --|tErnest Dowson (1867- 1900) --|t'You would have understood me, had you waited' - -|tTerre Promise --|tSpleen --|t'They are not long, the weeping and the laughter' --|tJohn Gray (1866-1934) -- |tLes Demoiselles de Sauve --|tWings in the Dark --|tThe Barber --|tMishka --|tThe Vines --|tPoem --|tSpleen -- |tBattledore --|t'They say, in other days' --|tTobias and the Angel --|tThe Flying Fish --|tOn the South Coast of Cornwall --|tMichael Field, Katharine Bradley (1846-1914), Edith Cooper (1862-1913) --|tCyclamens --|tNoon --|tJohn Davidson (1857-1909). 505 80 |tThirty Bob a Week --|tA Northern Suburb --|tMary E. Coleridge (1861-1907) --|tAn Insincere Wish Addressed to a Beggar --|tThe Nurse's Lament --|tAubrey Beardsley (1872- 1898) --|tThe Three Musicians --|tThe Ballad of a Barber - -|tA.E. Housman (1859-1936) --|tfrom A Shropshire Lad -- |tI 1887 --|tXII 'When I watch the living meet' --|tXVI 'It nods and curtseys and recovers' --|tXXX 'Others, I am not the first' --|tXL 'Into my heart an air that kills' -- |tXLVIII 'Be still, my soul, be still; the arms you bear are brittle' --|tLX 'Now hollow fires burn out to black' - -|t'Because I liked you better' --|t'Her strong enchantments failing' --|t'Yonder see the morning blink' - -|t'Oh who is that young sinner with the handcuffs on his wrists?' --|t'Here dead lie we because we did not choose' --|t'When the bells justle in the tower' --|t'The laws of God, the laws of man' --|t'When the eye of day is shut' -- |t'Some can gaze and not be sick' --|t'The sigh that heaves the grasses' --|tVictor Plarr (1863-1929) -- |tShadows --|tOf Change of Opinions --|tHilaire Belloc (1870-1953) --|tThe Justice of the Peace --|tFrancis Thompson (1859-1907) --|tThe End of It --|tFrederick Tennyson (1807-1898) --|tOld Age --|tDora Sigerson Shorter (1866-1918) --|tThe Wind on the Hills. 520 An anthology of 560 poems from the Victorian era. 530 Also issued online. 648 7 1800-1899|2fast 650 0 English poetry|y19th century. 650 7 English poetry.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst00912278 650 7 English poetry|y1800-1899 (19th century)|2sears 653 Poetry in English, 1837-1900 - Anthologies 655 7 Poetry.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01423828 655 7 Poetry.|2lcgft 700 1 Ricks, Christopher,|d1933-|eeditor. 776 08 |iOnline version:|tNew Oxford book of Victorian verse. |dOxford [Oxfordshire] ; New York : Oxford University Press, 1987|w(OCoLC)571320454 856 41 |3Table of contents|uhttp://www.gbv.de/dms/bowker/toc/ 9780192141545.pdf 856 42 |3Contributor biographical information|uhttp:// catdir.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0725/86023701-b.html 856 42 |3Publisher description|uhttp://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/ enhancements/fy0639/86023701-d.html 914 FARM11797 994 C0|bSTJ
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