My heart leaps up when I behold, W 26 My love has talk'd with rocks and trees, T 509 My love, this is the bitterest, that thou, RB 626 My own Beloved, who hast lifted me, EBB 560 My poet, thou canst touch on all the notes, EBB 558 My sister! my sweet sister! if a name, B 210 Nay, but you, who do not love her, RB 605 Nay traveller! rest. This lonely yew tree stands, W 4 Never the time and the place, RB 681 No, great Dome of Agrippa, thou art not Nor happiness, nor majesty, nor fame, Sb 358 No more no more-Oh! never more on me, Push hard across the sand, Sw Quoth a young Sadducee, RB 65" L 446 Ring out, wild bells, to the wild sk Rivulet crossing my ground, T 521 Roll on, thou deep and dark blueroll, B 239 Roman Virgil, thou that singest Ilic temples robed in fire, T 550 Rome disappoints me still; but I sla adapt myself to it, C1 692 Rome is fallen, I hear, the gallan taken, Cl 693 Room after room, RB 630 Round us the wild creatures, RB 68 Rousseau-Voltaire-our Gibbon Staël, B-214 Row us out from Desenzano, to your S row! T 550 Said Abner "At last thou art come! Saint Peter sat by the celestial gate, Saith man to man, We've heard and M 860 Savage, I was sitting in my house, lat RB 671 Say not the struggle nought availeth, Say over again and yet once over again 549 Say what blinds us, that we clain the Ar 714 Scorn not the sonnet; critic, you have fr Sea beyond sea, sand after sweep of See, as the prettiest grave will do i See what a lovely shell, T 522 "So say the foolish!" Say the foolish so, love, RB 683 So then, I feel not deeply! if I did, L 455 So we'll go no more a-roving, B 271 668 Such a starved bank of roses, RB 677 |