Poems

(0 User reviews)   135
Mary Coleridge 1908
English
  • To Memory
  • Larghetto
  • Slowly
  • Gone
  • A Moment
  • 'There was no place found'
  • Morning Dreams
  • Come Home!
  • The Other Side of a Mirror
  • A Difference
  • I have forged me in sevenfold heats
  • 'Every man for his own hand'
  • In the Brera
  • Regina
  • At First
  • An Anniversary
  • 'Over the hills and far away'
  • Eyes
  • Gifts
  • Master and Guest
  • Two Songs
  • Horror
  • 'He came unto his own, and his own received him not'
  • One and All
  • Mortal Combat
  • St. Andrew's
  • Winged Words
  • True to myself am I, and false to all
  • Go!
  • Not Yet
  • Blue and White
  • Our Lady
  • 'He knoweth not that the dead are thine'
  • The Devil's Funeral
  • Armida's Garden
  • Confidence
  • Burial
  • Mandragora
  • 'The merciful knight'
  • Invocation
  • Doubt
  • On the Hearthrug
  • At Dead of Night
  • Song
  • The Witch
  • A Huguenot
  • Eleanor
  • Self-question
  • A Day-dream
  • I ask of thee, love, nothing but relief
  • Sun and Storm
  • L'oiseau Bleu
  • Jealousy
  • Shadow
  • Prosperity
  • News
  • Awake
  • Song
  • Fair as a Dream!
  • Marriage
  • To a Piano
  • On a Bas-relief of Pelops and Hippodameia
  • In Dispraise of the Moon
  • The Witches' Wood
  • Wilderspin
  • Unwelcome
  • The Lady of Trees
  • February, 1900
  • Dumb
  • When Mary thro' the Garden Went
  • High Wind
  • Whither Away?
  • Beware!
  • The King's Guard
  • Renaissance Gentlemen
  • The White Women
  • Lines to a Tree
  • Other men may never care
  • Night is fallen within, without
  • I saw a stable, low and very bare
  • Death
  • 'Tis not Love that is Dead
  • Bamborough
  • I chanced to see, upon a day
  • Come back to me my swallow
  • Thistledown
  • Pride
  • Sun and Wind
  • Affection
  • Goodness
  • Wanderers
  • Depart from me. I know thee not!
  • At a Friends' Meeting
  • Knowledge
  • Unity
  • Wasted
  • The fire, the lamp, and I, were alone together
  • A Witness
  • Veneta
  • The Train
  • Flowers of the Field
  • Companionship
  • On the Arrival of a Visitor
  • Lo, when the house is empty come the dead
  • Street Lanterns
  • Where a Roman Villa Stood, Above Freiburg
  • 'Deep Calleth unto Deep'
  • Imagination
  • September
  • O Earth, my mother! not upon thy breast
  • Love went a-riding over the earth
  • Friends - with a Difference
  • Thee have I sought, divine Humility
  • Dear builder of the Bridge, with thee I stood
  • Forgive? O yes! How lightly, lightly said!
  • On a day, and on a day
  • Whether I live, or whether I die
  • Thou that canst sit in silence hour by hour
  • One Day in Every Year
  • A Dedication
  • Egypt's might is tumbled down
  • An Insincere Wish Addressed to a Beggar
  • 'Remember Not Our Iniquities'
  • O Mighty Spirit, whither art thou fled?
  • Ah, I have striven, I have striven
  • Weary was I of toil and strife
  • We were not made for refuge of lies
  • Sounds
  • To a Bullying Wind that Rose at Sunset
  • No Newspapers
  • There with two lives before me did I choose
  • O tell me not that years will give
  • 'They served with Nelson, and with Nelson died'
  • O Darkness gather round
  • No longer live!
  • Wind
  • The song of nightingales
  • I shall forget you, O my dead
  • Two Heavens
  • Death and the Lady
  • The Contents of an Ink-Bottle
  • Chillingham
  • Guy's Cliffe at Night
  • New Year's Eve
  • On a Soldier Who Died of Illness
  • Lilies and Doves (May, 1902)
  • On Such a Day
  • Evening
  • Arm thee! Arm thee! Forth upon the road!
  • Her face, for utter stillness, hath no peer
  • Blind
  • Good Friday in my heart! Fear and affright!
  • Lord of the winds, I cry to thee
  • To C. E. G. on Her Birthday
  • The Singing of the Children for Theo
  • Gibberish
  • In London Town
  • The sum of loss I have not reckoned yet
  • Are the dead as calm as those
  • Nicodemus
  • Three Aspects
  • Low-flying swallow, tho' the sky be fair
  • The Haven
  • 'Cut It Down'
  • Change
  • Hail and Farewell
  • Broken Friendship
  • 'In That Sleep of Death What Dreams May Come?'
  • The Maiden
  • January the First
  • Gold
  • O let me be in loving nice
  • Youth's Dying
  • Three Helpers in Battle
  • Praise
  • Joy in Joy
  • Two
  • As I went singing over the earth
  • Ingrato Cor
  • After St. Augustine
  • 'At Evening Time It Shall Be Light'
  • Fighting would I have you die
  • Two differing sorrows made these eyes grow dim
  • The King
  • The Second Time
  • Love, the immortal thing, by Time constrained
  • Hush
  • A Mother to a Baby
  • On a Sudden Departure
  • Say This
  • Tar Ublia Chi Bien Eima
  • Sleep
  • Contradictions
  • Astrology
  • A Child's Day
  • Wind and Sea
  • Mistaken
  • Marah
  • 'My True Love Hath My Heart and I Have His'
  • The Deserted House
  • There
  • Song
  • Useless
  • Christ's Friends
  • All One
  • A Clever Woman
  • Friends and Foes
  • Poet and Sculptor
  • Why is she set so far, so far above me
  • Alcestis to Admetus
  • I know not how it is with me - the light
  • Furness Abbey
  • Helpless
  • I envy not the dead that rest
  • From My Window
  • After Reading Certain Books
  • The Finding of Lord Strathmore (1715)
  • Impromptu
  • In a Volume of Austin Dobson
  • Ghosts
  • At the Madeleine
  • The poet's heart without his gift of song
  • Solo
  • Tired of the daily round
  • He who has lived in sunshine all day long
  • Life and Joy
  • Now
  • That this should be the common grief of all
  • Not as I am thou art - and yet thou art
  • Love, whereof purest light the shadow is
  • Only a little shall we speak of thee
  • Nel Mezzo Del Cammin
  • Sadness
  • Nonsense
  • Therefore I wrote it, not that men should buy
  • Words
  • Some in a child would live, some in a book
Mary Coleridge was a novelist, essayist and biographer. She was also a talented poet, and her posthumously published verses are variously meditative, joyous, gothic, wistful and devotional. (Newgatenovelist)

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