Poems, Volume I
by Lowell, James Russell
Series: The complete works of James Russel Lowess 16 Volumes Poems . Volume I Published by : Fireside Ed. (New York) Physical details: 312 p. ISBN:38635.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Basement | 814 Low (Browse shelf) | Available | 38635 |
V. 1. Fireside travels. --
v. 2. My study windows. --
v. 3-5. Among my books. --
v. 6. Political essays. --
v. 7. Literary and political essays. --
v. 8. Literary essays. The old English dramatists. --
v. 9-13. Poetical works. --
v. 14-16. Letters.
v. 9. The Poetical Works of James Russell Lowell [part 1] --
Threnodia --
The Sirens --
Irene --
Serenade --
With a Pressed Flower --
The Beggar --
My Love --
Summer Storm --
Love --
To Perdita, Singing --
The Moon --
Remembered Music --
Song. To M.L. --
Allegra --
The Fountain --
Ode --
The Fatherland --
The Forlorn --
Midnight --
A Prayer --
The Heritage --
The Rose: A Ballad --
Song --
Rosaline --
A Requiem --
A Parable --
Song --
To A.C.L. --
"What Were I, Love, Of I Were Stripped of Thee? " --
"I Would Not Have This Perfect Love of Ours" --
"For This True Nobleness I Seek In Vain" --
To The Spirit of Keats --
"Great Truths Are Portions of the Soul of Man" --
"I Ask Not For Those Thoughts, That Sudden Leap" --
To M.W., On Her Birthday --
"My Love I Have No Fear That Thou Shouldst Die" --
"I Cannot Think That Thou Shouldst Pass Away" --
"There Never Yet Was Flower Fair In Vain" --
Sub Pondere Crescit --
"Beloved, In the Noisy City Here" --
On Reading Wordsworth's Sonnets In Defence of Capital Punishment --
The Same Continued --
The Same Continued --
The Same Continued --
The Same Continued --
The Same Concluded --
To M.O.S. --
"Our Love is Not a Fading, Earthly Flower" --
In Absence --
Wendell Phillips --
The Street --
"I Grieve Not That Ripe Knowledge Takes Away" --
To J.R. Giddings --
"I Thought Our Love At Full, But I Did Err" --
L'envoi --
A Legend of Brittany --
Prometheus --
The Shepherd of King Admetus --
The Token --
An Incident In A Railroad Car --
Rhoecus --
The Falcon --
Trail --
A Glance Behind The Curtain --
A Chippewa Legend --
Stanzas on Freedom --
Columbus --
An Incident of the Fire at Hamburg --
The Sower --
Hunger and Cold --
The Landlord --
To a Pine-Tree --
Si Descendero in Infernum, Ades --
To The Past --
To The Future --
Hebe --
The Search --
The Present Crisis --
An Indian-Summer Reverie --
The Growth of the Legend --
A Contrast --
Extreme Unction --
The Oak --
Ambrose --
Above and Below --
The Captive --
The Birch-Tree --
An Interview with Miles Standish --
On the Capture of Fugitive Slaves Near Washington --
To The Dandelion --
The Ghost-Seer --
Studies for Two Heads --
On A Portrait of Dante By Giotto --
On The Death of A Friend's Child --
Eurydice --
She Came and Went --
The Changeling --
The Pioneer --
Longing --
Ode To France. February 1848 --
Anti-Apis --
A Parable --
Ode Written For the Celebration of the Introduction of the Cochituate Water Into the City of Boston --
Lines Suggested By the Graves of Two English Soldiers on Concord Battle-Ground --
To_ --
Freedom --
Bibliolatres --
Beaver Brook --
Kossuth --
To Lamartine, 1848 --
To John G. Palfrey --
To W.L. Garrison --
On The Death of C.T. Torrey --
Elegy on the Death of Doctor Channing --
To the Memory of Hood --
The Vision of Sir Launfal --
Letter From Boston. December, 1846.
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