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Gosse, Edmund W., xxi. cxxii. cliv. ccvi. ccxvi. ccxxi.

Greenwell, Dora, cl.

Hedderwick, James, lvii. clxvii. clxxiv.

Houghton, Lord, xli. lxi. xcii. xcvi. cxii.

Inchbold, J. W., clv.

Ingelow, Jean, cx.

Locker, Frederick, xlvii. lxvii. lxix. lxxxix, cviii. clxxi.
Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth, cxvii, clxxxiv.

Lowell, James Russell, xvi. xxix. clxviii. clxix. clxxv.
clxxxv. clxxxvi.

Lytton, Lord, x. cxix.

MacDonald, George, lxxxvi. cxxviii.

Marston, Philip Bourke, cxli. clvi. clvii.

Marzials, Theophile, lxxxiii. lxxxiv. lxxxv. ccix.

Massey, Gerald, lvi. lxxix.

Meredith, George, lix. cxlviii.

Miller, Joaquin, cxvi.

Monkhouse, W. Cosmo, ccxi.

Morris, Lewis, xix. xl. xciii. cvii. cxv.

Morris, William, xcvii. xcviii. xcix.

Myers, Ernest, xxv. cxlvi.

Myers, Frederick, lv. lxxxviii.

Newman, Dr., xci. cxliv.

Noel, Hon. Roden, xv.

O'Shaughnessy, Arthur, xviii. xxxvii, lxiii.

Palgrave, Francis Turner, liv. lxxxvii, xc. cii.

Patmore, Coventry, xiv. xcv. cxxxii.

Paton, Sir Noel, xxxii.

Payne, John, clxxix. cciii. ccvii, ccx. ccxii, ccxiii. ccxvii.

ccxix. ccxxii.

Pennell, H. Cholmondeley, lii.
Pfeiffer, Emily, cxcviii. ccxv.

Rhoades, James, cxliii. clxxvii.

Rossetti, Christina, xxxvi. xxxviii, xxxix, cxx. cxxxvi. clxx.
Rossetti, Dante Gabriel, xvii. xlviii, cxlvii. clviii. clix.
clxi, clxii. clxxii.

Sawyer, William, lxviii.

Saxe, John Godfrey, clxv. clxvi.

Scott, William Bell, clxiv. clxxviii. cxcv. cxcvi. cxcvii.

cxcix.

Simcox, George Augustus, vi.

Southesk, Earl of, liii. lxx. lxxvi.

Stedman, Edmund Clarence, ix. lxxii. cxxxviii.

Story, W. W., lxxxi.

Swinburne, Algernon Charles, xii. 1.

Taylor, Sir Henry, li. (see Vere, Aubrey de).
Tennyson, Alfred, iii. xi. xxiii. xliii. lxxvii, lxxviii. clxiii.
Tollemache, Beatrix, cxxxix,

Townley, Mary, cxxiv.

Trench, Archbishop, xciv. cxxix. clxxvi.

Turner, Rev. Charles Tennyson, cliii. clx.

Vere, Aubrey de, xxvi, lxii. cxxi. (with Sir Henry Taylor),
clxxx. clxxxi,

Waddington, Samuel, ccviii.

Warren, Hon. J. Leicester, iv. lxxx.

Webster, Augusta, xxx, xxxv. cxiii. cxiv. cxxvii. cxl.
Wilton, Rev. Richard, clxxxii. clxxxiii.

Woolner, Thomas, lxv. lxxi.

A genial moment oft has given

A lark in the mesh of the tangled vine

A little time for laughter

A momentary wish passed through my brain
A month or twain to live on honeycomb .
A rose, but one, none other rose had I

NO.

94
212

A sigh in the morning gray!

A smile because. the nights are short!

Across the glory of the evening skies

Ah me, dread friends of mine,—Love, Time, and Death .

Ah, memory! ah, ruthless memory!

All down the linden-alley's morning shade

All that I know

Along the shore, along the shore

And what is Love by Nature?

Are sorrows hard to bear,—the ruin

As a twig trembles which a bird

As I sat sorrowing.

Ask nothing more of me, sweet

Away! away! The dream was vain

Ay, thou art welcome, heaven's delicious breath!

Beating heart! we come again

Behold, above the mountains there is light

Beneath those buttressed walls with lichen grey
Between the hands, between the brows

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Came, on a Sabbath noon, my sweet

Close as the stars along the sky

Come to green under-glooms,-and in your hair

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Come to the woods, Medora .

Consider the sea's listless chime

Could we but know

Count each affliction, whether light or grave

Dear love, I have not ask'd you yet

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Each hour until we meet is as a bird

Even in a palace, life may be led well!
Every day a Pilgrim, blindfold

Fair garden, where the man and woman dwelt
Fair is my Love, so fair

Foil'd by our fellow-men, depress'd, outworn
"Follow Me," Jesus said; and they uprose
For me no roseate garlands twine
From morn to evening, this day, yesterday
From the outskirts of the town

Girls, when I am gone away

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Give her but a least excuse to love me!

Gray cloud, gray veil 'twixt me and youth

Hapless doom of woman happy in betrothing!
He saves the sheep, the goats he cannot save!
Hence, rude Winter! crabbed old fellow
Here, in this leafy place.

His poisoned shafts, that fresh he dips

How gently, beautiful, and calm

I ask not for those thoughts, that sudden leap

I bring a garland for your head

I cannot kiss thee as I used to kiss

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I grieve not that ripe Knowledge takes away

I have been here before.

I have not, yet I would have loved thee, sweet

I hold within my hand a lute

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I saw, I saw the lovely child,

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I saw in dream where met proud rivers twain

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I know not if a keener smart
I learnt a lesson from the flowers to-day

I made another garden, yea

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Nay, pluck not,-let the first fruit be
I said to Love, "Lo one thing troubles me!

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I thank thee, dear, for words that fleet

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I would not have this perfect love of ours

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I would thou might'st not vex me with thine eyes,

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If but thy heart were stone

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If by any device or knowledge

If ever, dear.

If he would come to-day, to-day, to-day

If I could choose my paradise

If Love should faint, and half decline

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It may be that our homeward longings made
It was in the prime

It was not like your great and gracious ways!
Kiss me, sweetheart; the Spring is here
Let not our lips pronounce the word Farewell

Let them go by-the heats, the doubts, the strife

Life knows no dead so beautiful

Life lapses by for you and me

Light, so low upon earth

Light's Love, the timorous bird, to dwell

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Like an island in a river

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Like to the moan of buried rivers

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Little dimples so sweet and soft

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Long fed on boundless hopes, O race of man
Love is come with a song and a smile

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3

Love is the Minstrel; for in God's own sight
"Love thou thy Neighbour," we are told
Love walks with weary feet the upward way
Love within the lover's breast.

Man dwells apart, though not alone

My day and night are in my lady's hand .

My heart is freighted full of love

My little Son, who look'd from thoughtful eyes

My only love is always near

My soul is sick of nightingale and rose

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