Love Poems – Page 3211
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The Wedding-Day
From “Epithalamion” / * * * * *NOW is my love all ready forth to come: / Let all the virgins therefore well awayt: … -
The Weeper
hail, sister springs, / Parents of silver-footed rills! / Ever bubbling things, … -
The Welcome
From the Persian by Edward Fitzgerald / ONE night Shah Mahmúd, who had been of late / Somewhat distempered with Affairs of State, … -
The Well of St. Keyne
“In the parish of St. Neots, Cornwall, is a well arched over with the robes of four kinds of trees,—withy, oak, elm, and ash,—and dedicated to St. Keyne. The reported virtue of the water is this, that, whether husband or wife first drink thereof, they get the mastery thereby.” / —FULLER. / A WELL… -
The Well upon the Brook
The Well upon the Brook / Were foolish to depend — / Let Brooks — renew of Brooks — … -
The Which's Ballad
O, I hae come from far away, / From a warm land far away, / A southern land across the sea, … -
The Whirlwind Road
The muses wrapped in mysteries of light / Came in a rush of music on the night; / And I was lifted wildly on quick wings, … -
The Whistle
“you have heard,” said a youth to his sweetheart, who stood, / While he sat on a corn-sheaf, at daylight’s decline,— / “You have heard of the Danish boy’s whistle of wood? … -
The White Peacock
From “Sospiri di Roma” / HERE where the sunlight / Floodeth the garden, … -
The White Rose
Sent by a Yorkish Lover to His Lancastrian Mistress / IF this fair rose offend thy sight, / Placed in thy bosom bare, …
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