Wikisource Page Game (step-by-step pagelist builder)
Open in Book2Scroll
Open file in BookReader
Purge file

Index:Last poems (IA lastpoems00hou).pdf

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Title Last Poems
Author Alfred Edward Housman
Year 1922
Publisher H. Holt and Company
Location New York
Source pdf
Progress Proofread—All pages of the work proper are proofread, but not all are validated
Transclusion Fully transcluded
OCLC 1048235601
Contents
No. Page
We'll to the woods no more (not listed in original) 10
I. Beyond the moor and mountain crest 11
II. As I gird on for fighting 14
III. Her strong enchantments failing 15
IV. Oh hard is the bed they have made him 16
V. The Queen she sent to look for me 17
VI. I 'listed at home for a lancer 19
VII. In valleys green and still 21
VIII. Soldier from the wars returning 23
IX. The chestnut casts his flambeaux, and the flowers 24
X. Could man be drunk for ever 26
XI. Yonder see the morning blink 27
XII. The laws of God, the laws of man 28
XIII. What sound awakened me, I wonder 30
XIV. The night my father got me 33
XV. He stood, and heard the steeple 35
XVI. Star and coronal and bell 36
XVII. The Wain upon the northern steep 38
XVIII. The rain, it streams on stone and hillock 39
XIX. In midnights of November 41
XX. The night is freezing fast 43
XXI. The fairies break their dances 44
XXII. The sloe was lost in flower 45
XXIII. In the morning, in the morning 46
XXIV. He is here, Urania's son 47
XXV. 'Tis mute, the word they went to hear 50
XXVI. The half-moon westers low, my love 52
XXVII. The sigh that heaves the grasses 53
XXVIII. Now dreary dawns the eastern light 54
XXIX. Wake not for the world-heard thunder 55
XXX. I walked alone and thinking 57
XXXI. Onward led the road again 59
XXII. When I would muse in boyhood 65
XXIII. When the eye of day is shut 66
XXIV. The orchards half the way 67
XXXV. When first my way to fair I took 69
XXXVI. West and away the wheels of darkness roll 70
XXXVII. These, in the day when heaven was falling 71
XXXVIII. Oh stay at home, my lad, and plough 72
XXXIX. When summer's end is nighing 73
XL. Tell me not here, it needs not saying 75
XLI. When lads were home from labour 77