677 AUTHOR NUMBER AUTHOR NUMBER Unfading Hope I when life's last Campbell 669 We sat by Babel's waters; and our Heroey 809 Unfathonable sea whose waves Shelley 2868 We scatter seed with careless hand Keble 1980 Unhappy ho who does his Persius, tr. 2587 We see but half the causes of our Lowell 319 Unhappy he! who from the first Thomson 811 We shape ourselves the joy or fear Whitller 1438 Unto fair conclusions argueth Tupper 885 We sing the praise of Him who Kelley 689 Unwelcome insight Wordsworth 2571 We speak of the realms of the blest Mills 1724 Up above the thoughts thnt know 1766 We strive with earthly imaginings Curry 1192 Up and down his gardens paced Trench 987 Wo tread one path to glory Spilta, tr 1405 Up from the meadows rich Whillier 1022 Upheaving pillars, on whose tops A. Cary 1450 We wait bencath the furnace-blast Whittier 1394 Up hither líko aërial vapors Milton 2153 We watched her breathing through Hood Upon that burning wall Pollok 2514 Upon the white sea sand Brown 2595 1723 Upl up, my friend I and Wordsworth 2381 What are these in bright array Montgomery 1759 Upward they toiled the mountain Studley 775 What are we set on carth for E. B. Broroning 18 Varia, there's nothing here that's Watts 870 What art Thou, mighty One ? Whito 1511 Vast chain of being / which from Pope 219 What blest examples do I find Walls 995 Verily, there is nothing so true Tupper 2710 What boots the oft-repeated tale Byron 1478 Verily, they are all thine; freely Tupper 129 What different dooms our Hood 1870 Vice is a monster of so frightful Pope 2937 Whate'er I ask, I surely know C. Wesley Vilest of the sinful race C. Wesley 493 Whate'er man's destiny may be Tr. by Alger 820 Violent fires soon burn out Shakespeare 1175 Whate'er my God ordains is right , Rodigasi, tr. 873 Virtue alone can give true joy 2046 | Whate'er our thoughts or purpose Upham 953 Virtne ! how many, as a lowly B. Brooks 2947 | Whate'er the anguish of my Baron von Canitz, tr. 2034 Vishnu asked Bal to take his choice Tr. by Alger 3002 Whate'er the passion, knowledge Pope 514 Vital spark of heavenly flame Pope 734 Whate'er thou purposest to do Tr. by Bowring 294 Virtue distressed to Faith applied 345 What equal torment to the grief Spenser 1031 Virtue, like God, whose excellent Pollok 2943 Whatever hypocrite austerely Millon 2249 Voices familiar as my mother Bickersteth 2627 Whatever lies—In earth, or flits in Ovid, tr. 2891 Voracious learning, often Young 890 2892 Wait, for the day is breaking Toronsend 2952 What has this bugbear death to Lucretius, tr. 699 Wait thou for time: the slow Hooper 1937 “What hast thou for thy scattered Howe 1072 Want sense, and the world will Srain 1538 What hid'st thou in thy Hemans 2726 War, famine, pest, volcano Young 2237 What horror seest thou in that Lucretius, tr. 1778 Warp'd by the world in Byron Hemans 238 Warriors and statesmen have their Norton 8010 | What if the little rain should Cutter 1047 Watch, for the time is short 2969 What is Ambition? 'Tis a glorious Willis 98 Watch! watch! the subtle peril Punshon 434 | What is a trifle ? a thoughtless 2809 Watch, ye saints, with eyelids P. Palmer 2970 What is death? oh I what is death 713 Weak and irresolute is man Cowper 690 716 Weak is the will of man, his Wordsoorth 1919 What is eternity? Can aught Gibbons 1121 We all are children in our strife Nale 1272 1451 We are not worst at once 1648 What is hallow'd ground Campbell 1634 We are standing on the threshold 2389 What is hope! The beauteous sun Srain 1854 Wearied and worn with earthly 606 | What is its earthly victory Willis We clutch our joys as children do Crait 228 What is man-If his chief good Shakespeare 1901 We come not with a costly store 421 What is it that you would Shakespeare 1845 We drive the surrow with the A. Cary 282 2120 Weep not for them ! it is no cause 1964 What is the good man and the wise Oriental, tr. 2285 We find the fiercest things that Cook 1982 What the greatness of a fallen Trench • 1240 We gather up with pious care c. Wesley 655 What I is the jay more precious than Shakespeare 925 We grant although he had Butler 1956 1297 Welcome, dear book, soul's joy Vaughan 2721 What if the sinner's magazincs Blackmore 2338 Welcome, dear feast of Lent Herbert 1287 What is the world ? tell, worldling Sylvester 3039 We leave now behind us Bonar 581 148 We look at man, and wonder at Cowley 704 What is true knowledgo Nant 2082 We must behold no object Byron 2260 | What laws, my blessed Saviour Heermann, tr. 176 We overstate the ills of life E. B. Browning 1911 | What made the man of envy what Pollok 1038 We're drawing near to Jesus Farmer 8033 What man so wise, what earthly Spenser We're going home, we've had 1710 What may this mean Milton 1137 Were I as base as is the lowly Sylvester 1322 What makes a hero 1-not success II. Taylor 1789 Were we as rich in charity of deed Lytton 839 What men gain fairly—that they Shelley 21 2081 1 AUTHOR NUMBER AUTIIOR NUMBER What might be done if men were Jackay 1423 When the black-lettered list to W. R. Spencer 1260 What multitudes the curse shall C. Wesley 1947 | When the dang rous rocks aro 718 What no human eye hath seen Lange, tr. 1764 When the first larvæ on the Holmes 2297 What place can be for us Millon 1760 When the frantic raptures in your Armstrong 937 What's fame? a fancied life in Pope 056 What shall I do to be forever Schiller, er. 943 When these brief trial-days aro Gellert, tr. 1456 What shall I do with all the days Lemble 10 When the sky is black and Luther, tr. 825 What I since the prætor did my Persius, tr. 1393 When the sun sets, shadows that Lee 1308 What then? Why, then another Crewdson 310 When this passing world is dono McCheyne 741 What though before me it is dark 1190 When those we love on earth Montgomery 2849 What though the ancient dragon C. Wesley 759 When thou a fast would'st keep Barton 1289 What use the preacher's truth and Oriental, tr. 337 When Thou dost favor any action Herbert 22 What 'vaileth them to skip Wyatt 2618 When a deed is done for Freedom Lowell 286 When thou hast drained Tr. by Alger 2609 When adversities now Lilly 194 When adverse winds and waves Sigourney 1566 When through the deep waters 1566 When all the year our fields Wither 1193 When all Thy mercies, O my God Addison 1579 When to the common rest that Bryant 2062 When Amruzail describes Tr. by Alger 2095 When urged by strong temptation Baillie 47 When another life is added 1070 When we are young, this year we Morris 52 When at first from virtue's Scott 1765 When by the bed of languishment Young 679 When wounded sore the Alexander 2708 Whence, but from Heaven, could Dryden 240 When young, and full of sanguine C. Wesley 273 When clouds are seen wise men put Shakespeare 320 Where are the heroes of the ages White 1790 When cruel deeds are done Tr. by Alger 2648 Where art Thou? Thou! Source Townsend 1499 When Death strikes down the Dickens 696 Where'cr a human heart doth wear Lowell 289 When doom'd to poverty's Campbell 1866 Where'er I turn my restless eyo Melendez, tr. 1491 When every scene, this side the 43 Where'er the power of ridicule Akenside 2685 When fain to learn, we lean Ingelou 2369 Wherefore, it is wise and well Tupper 1915 When first my soul enlisted Newton 1798 When first thou camest, gentle Norton 58 Where is comfort! in division Tennyson 2272 When first thy eyes unveil, give Vaughan 2329 Where is the fame-Which the Shelley 1246 When first, to make my heart His Newton 521 Where is the fire which once Herbert 136 When flowing garments I behold Herrick 927 Where is the troubled heart Campbell 60 When Fortuno smiles and looks 1367 Where is your heathen brother Sigourney 2323 When fumes of yino do once the Lucretius, ir 932 Where no shadow shall bewilder Bonar 2679 When gathering clouds around I Grant 866 Where pilgrims seek the Prophet's Lynch 2115 When God came down from Milman 888 When gratitude o'erflows the Lillo 1582 Where that innumerable throng Grinfield 1758 When haughty expectations Wordsworth 1182 Where the fair valley spread her Rolls 7777 When I consider how my life is Milton 268 Where, thy true treasure Young 2000 When I gaze on the light of yon 1756 Which is the weakest thing E. B. Browning 1702 When I survey the wondrous cross Watts 590 While in this sacred rite of thine Smith 204 When I was young! Ah, woful Coleridge 81 While thirst of praise and vain Montague 352 When Jordan hushed his waters Campbell 257 While this immortal spark of Blacklock 2923 When languor and disease Toplady Lowell 205 When lovely woman stoops to Goldsmith 353 Who after wisdom flies must guard Oriental, tr. 2508 When man in error gropes Tr. by Alger 1154 Who are the bless'd Prince 262 When man is born anew Grinfield 2651 Who art thou so wondrous fair 1249 When man is waxing frail Browon E. B. Browning 1684 When, marshalled on the nightly White 402 Who can believe with common Srist 1290 When mortal man resigns his C. Wesley 722 Who can forget, never to be Fletcher 419 When Moses waved his mystio Newton 2341 | Whoever fights, whoever falls Emerson 2068 When Music, heavenly maid Collins 2458 Whoever thinks a faultless piece Pope 587 When nursed with skill what Shenstone 2716 Who feels that God and Heaven's Lowell 290 When o'er earth is breaking 2425 Who has good deeds brought well Tr. by Alger 1550 When on a day, the gates of Tr. by Alger 2188 Who has this Book and reads it not 2723 When once thy foot enters the Herbert 429 Who is as the Christian great C. Wesley 407 When one is past, another care Herrick 316 Who is the Creator love, created Coleridge 412 When one that holds communion Cowper 1979 Who is the honest man Herbert 505 When on my new-fledged wings I 1711 Who learns and learns Oriental, tr. 2100 When on Sinai's top I see Montgomery • 307 Whole houses, of their whole Juvenal, tr. 804 When on the fragrant sandal-treo Edmeston 1360 Whom call we gay? That honor Cowper 1446 When other things are broken Tr. by Alger 1651 Whom do we dub as gentleman Cook 1454 When prayer delights the least Trench 2549 Whom first we love, you know Lytton 2187 When remedics are past the griefs Shakespeare 1624 Whom God hath made the heads 1268 When rising wind and 2635 Who shall guess what I may be Tupper 8057 When shall Thy love constrain C. Wesley 491 "Who shall be greatest in Thy 997 When shall we meet again 2261 | Who that a watcher doth remain Trench 1627 1107 AUTHOR NUMBER AUTTIOR SULIBER Who that has feclings would Clara 2449 Wouldst the honey still tasto Tr. by Alger 2583 Who, that surveys this span Moore 1245 Wouldst thou from sorrow Wilcos 29 Who, think'st thou, in the courts Hant 159 Wouldst thou hear what man Jonson Who, when the pilot warns Nant Dach 2834 Who would be cleansed from every Allis 1805 Wouldst thou learn the depths of Monsell 1402 Who would rely upon these Webster Mant 3066 Who wrapt destruction up in Young 553 Wrapt in a Christless shroud Bonar 300 Why art thou cast down, my Sachs, tr. 2528 Wrapt in impervious mists Bickersteth 1017 Why comes this fragrance on the Davies 1502 Wretched, helpless, and distressed c. Wesley 518 'Why life, a moment ? infinito Young 130 Ye are stars of the night, yo are Moore 3019 Why should I fear the darkest Newton 870 Ye bold to explain, describe C. Wesley 1572 Why should immortal bow to Judson 1133 | Ye golden lamps of heaven Doddridge 665 Why should we count our lifo Hale 255 "Ye have a land of mist and Sigourney 2009 Why this longing, this forever Winsloro 2925 Ye mariners of England Campbell 1038 Why this-Will lug your pricsta Shakespeare 1534 Ye mindful merchants, that with Spenser 216 Why thus longing, thus forever Winslowo 952 Ye nymphs of Solyma! begin the Pope 2287 Will Fortune never come with Shakespeare 1368 Ye paint me old ! and why Withius, tr. 2875 Wisdom divine! who tells tho C. Wesley 3000 Ye powers who rule the tongue Couper 739 Wisdom, whose fruits are purity Moore 2999 Ye quietists in homage to the Young 842 Wise men ne'er sit and wail their Shakespeare 363 Yes, better 'tis to die 915 Wise in his day, the hoathen D. Gray 1275 Wishing, of all employments Young 3004 | Yes-flowers have tones-God Mrs. Esling 1344 With blood—but not his own Conder 175 Yes! I answered you last night E. B. Broroning 556 With caution taste the sweet Cowper 1151 Yes, it was the mountain echo Wordsworth 1031 With crecping, crooked pace forth Spenser 1909 Yes-loving is a painful thrill Tr. by Moore 2195 With eloquence innate his tongue Dryden 2563 | Yes! rather than be poor Horace, tr. 1531 With equal foot, rich friend Horace, tr. 1291 | Yes, Thou didst dic for me, O Son 737 With fatal and disastrous Bickersteth 1620 With God 'tis one Baillie Mant 247 With him went Hope in rank Spenser 1867 Yes, 'tis God's presence gives Mant 1730 Within the gates of hell sat Sin Milton 1770 Yes, 'tis the hand-Of death I feel White 686 Within the heart of ev'ry man Tr. by Alger 1697 Yes, we do differ when we most Coleridge 2730 Within the old cathedral dim 2722 Yet cease I not to struggle Wordsworth 154 Within this amplo volume lies Scott 244 Yet be not surety if thou be a Herbert 1296 Within this lowly grave a Bryant 863 With joy-with grief, that healing Young 611 | Yet do thy work; it shall Whittier 351 With notions fraught, the C. Wesley 2452 Yet grieve thou not, nor think Bryant 3061 Without haste 1 without rost Goethe, tr. 946 Yet heaven hath angels watching Whiltier 1703 With scanty line shall reason Bally 2625 | Yet in thy thriving still misdoubt Herbert 193 With scrupulous care exact, he Pollok 283 | Yet is there one more cursed than Spenser 2018 With silence only as their Whillier 1018 With the year-Seasons return Milton 270 Yet not with man His Holiness Weld 616 With trembling hand Sigourney 2451 With what an awful world Thomson 1840 With what clcar guile of gracious Wilkinson 459 Yet well thy soul hath brook'd the Byron 1366 With what unknown delight Jane Taylor 1960 Yet within thy human bosom 1975 Woe came to man in Eden 202 | Ye writers of what none with Cowper 2398 Woe to thee, wild Ambition ! I N. 4. Brooks 101 You have already gone too far Prior 1113 Woe to the worldly man, who King 559 You may as well go stand upon Shakespeare 2405 Women are angels wooing Shakespeare 555 Your hoards are great, your Whittier 1442 Woman's heart and gentle hand Hale 3013 Your voiceless lips, O fowers Longfellow 567 Wonder of wonders! On the R. Palmer 614 You satisfy your anger Massinger 2650 Words are mighty, words are 3025 You say to me-wards your affection Herrick 2193 Words are things of little cost 3024 Youth is not rich in time; it may Young 2582 Work for time is flying Bonar Bickersteth 1722 Would I describe a preacher Cooper 2558 PARTIAL LIST OF WORKS QUOTED. 66 66 66 BRITISH POETs, published by J. R. Osgood | Aldrich's (T. B.) Poems, J. R. Osgood & Co., & Co., Boston, 130 volumes, including Boston. Akenside, Poetical Works. 1 vol. Allingham's (William) Poems. J. R. Osgood Beattie, 1 vol. & Co., Boston. Butler, 2 vols. Arnold's (Matthew) Complete Works, 2 vols. J. Burns, 3 vols. R. Osgood & Co., Boston. Macmillan & Byron, 10 vols. Co., London, Campbell, 1 vol. Browning's (E. B.) Complete Poems. J. R. OsChatterton, 2 vols. good & Co., Boston. Macmillan & Co., Churchill, 3 vols. London. Coleridge, 3 vols. Browning's (Robert) Complete Works. J. R. OsCollins, 1 vol. good & Co., Boston Macmillan & Co., Cowper, 3 vols. London. Donne, 1 vol. Emerson's (R. W.) Poems. J. R. Osgood & Co., Dryden, 5 vols. Boston. Falconer, 1 vol. Craik's (Dinah Maria Muloch) Poems. J. R. an Gay, 2 vols. Osgood & Co., Boston. Goldsmith, 1 vol. Hervey's (Tho. K.) Poems. J. R. Osgood & Gray, 1 vol. Co., Boston. Herbert, 1 vol. Holmes' (O. W.) Poems. J. R. Osgood & Co., Herrick 2 vols. Boston. Hood, 5 vols. Hymns of the Ages, 1st, 2d, & 3d Series. Keats, 1 vol. J. R. Osgood & Co., Boston. Marvell, 1 vol. Horace's Odes. Translated by Theodore Martin. Milton, 3 vols. J. R. Osgood & Co., Boston. Montgomery, 5 vols. Longfellow's (H. W.) Complete Poetical Works. Moore, 6 vols. J. R. 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Longmans & Co., London, 66 & Co., & Co., lan & Co., Morris' (William) Earthly Paradise, 3 vols. Schaff's (P.) Christ in Song. A. D. F. Ran Roberts Bros., Boston. F. S. Ellis, London. dolph & Co., New York. Rossetti's (C. G.) Poems. Roberts Bros., Bos, Winkworth's (C.) Lyra Germanica, Longmans ton. F. S. Ellis, London. London. Rossetti's (D. G.) Poems. Roberts Bros., Bos- Neale's (J. M.) Medieval IIymns and Sequenton. F. S. Ellis, London. ces. Joseph Masters, London, London. Robert Carter & Bro., New York. Riving- Punshon's (W. M.) Sabbath Chimes. James Nisbet & Co., London. Brother, New York. Rivingtons, London. J. T. Hayes, London. & 3d Series. Robert Carter & Bro., New Monsell's (Jno. S. B.) Poetical Works. Bell & Daldy, London, Mant's (Bp.) Happiness of the Blessed. Riving- Mackay's (Charles) Poems and Songs. Straban tons, London. & Co., London. London, New York. Burns, Toronto. |