User:Alien333/Random poem/Kemble

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search

(Kemble)/"'Tis an old Tale and often told" |(Kemble)/A Farewell |(Kemble)/A Lament for the Wissahiccon |(Kemble)/A Promise (By the pure spring, whose haunted waters flow) |(Kemble)/A Promise (In the dark, lonely night) |(Kemble)/A Retrospect |(Kemble)/A Spirit's Voice |(Kemble)/A Wish (Let me not die for ever, when I'm gone) |(Kemble)/A Wish (Oh! that I were a fairy sprite, to wander) |(Kemble)/A Wish (While thus I gaze on thee, and watch thee glide) |(Kemble)/Absence |(Kemble)/An Apology |(Kemble)/An Entreaty |(Kemble)/An Evening Song |(Kemble)/An Invitation |(Kemble)/An Invocation |(Kemble)/Eastern Sunset |(Kemble)/Epistle from the Rhine |(Kemble)/Faith |(Kemble)/Farewell to Italy |(Kemble)/Fragment (It was the harvest time: the broad, bright moon) |(Kemble)/Fragment (Oh! for the temperate airs that blow) |(Kemble)/Fragment (Walking by moonlight on the golden margin) |(Kemble)/Impromptu (Thou who within thyself dost not behold) |(Kemble)/Impromptu (You say you're glad I write—oh, say not so) |(Kemble)/Lament for Israel |(Kemble)/Lines |(Kemble)/Lines Written in London |(Kemble)/Lines addressed to the Young Gentlemen leaving the Academy at Lenox, Massachusetts |(Kemble)/Lines for Music (Good night! from music's softest spell) |(Kemble)/Lines for Music (Loud wind, strong wind, where art thou blowing) |(Kemble)/Lines for Music (Oh, sunny Love) |(Kemble)/Lines on a Sleeping Child |(Kemble)/Lines written at Night |(Kemble)/On a Forget-Me-Not |(Kemble)/On a Musical Box |(Kemble)/Return |(Kemble)/Song (I sing the yellow leaf) |(Kemble)/Song (Never, oh never more! shall I behold) |(Kemble)/Song (Pass thy hand through my hair, love) |(Kemble)/Song (The moment must come, when the hands that unite) |(Kemble)/Song (When you mournfully rivet your tear-laden eyes) |(Kemble)/Song (Where is thy home in thy promised land) |(Kemble)/Sonnet ('Twas but a dream! and oh! what are they all) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (Art thou already weary of the way?) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (Away, away! bear me away, away) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (Blaspheme not thou thy sacred life, nor turn) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (But to be still! oh, but to cease awhile) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (By jasper founts, whose falling waters make) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (Cover me with your everlasting arms) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (I hear a voice low in the sunset woods) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (I would I knew the lady of thy heart) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (Lady, whom my beloved loves so well) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (Like one who walketh in a plenteous land) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (Not in our dreams, not even in our dreams) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (Oft let me wander hand in hand with Thought) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (Oh, modest maiden morn! why dost thou blush) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (Oh weary, weary world! how fall thou art) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (Say thou not sadly, "never," and "no more") |(Kemble)/Sonnet (Spirit of all sweet sounds! who in mid air) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (There 's not a fibre in my trembling frame) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (Thou poisonous laurel leaf, that in the soil) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (Though thou return unto the former things) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (Whence should they come, lady! those happy days) |(Kemble)/Sonnet (Whene'er I recollect the happy time) |(Kemble)/Sonnets |(Kemble)/The Death Song |(Kemble)/The Minstrel's Grave |(Kemble)/The Parting |(Kemble)/The Prayer of a Lonely Heart |(Kemble)/The Red Indian |(Kemble)/The Vision of Life |(Kemble)/The Wind |(Kemble)/To Miss ——— |(Kemble)/To Mrs. Dulaney |(Kemble)/To Mrs. ——— (I never shall forget thee—'tis a word) |(Kemble)/To Mrs. ——— (Oh lady! thou, who in the olden time) |(Kemble)/To My Guardian Angel |(Kemble)/To Thomas Moore, Esq. |(Kemble)/To a Picture |(Kemble)/To a Star |(Kemble)/To the Dead |(Kemble)/To the Nightingale |(Kemble)/To the Picture of a Lady |(Kemble)/To the Spring |(Kemble)/To the Wissahiccon |(Kemble)/To ——— (I would I might be with thee, when the year) |(Kemble)/To ——— (Is it a sin to wish that I may meet thee) |(Kemble)/To ——— (The fountain of my life, which flowed so free) |(Kemble)/To ——— (What recks the sun, how weep the heavy flowers) |(Kemble)/To ——— (When the dawn) |(Kemble)/To ——— (When the glad sun looks smiling from the sky) |(Kemble)/To ——— (When we first met, dark wintry skies were glooming) |(Kemble)/To ——— (Yet once again, but once, before we sever) |(Kemble)/Venice |(Kemble)/Woman's Love |(Kemble)/Written after leaving West Point |(Kemble)/Written after spending a Day at West Point |(Kemble)/Written on Cramond Beach