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Miscellaneous Poems
By the Rev. J. Keble
Keble, John (1792-1866)
[section]
Ode for the Encænia at Oxford
The Three Absolutions .
Encouragement.
Bereavement.—Resignation.
Burial of the Dead.
Lighting of Lamps.
Lights at Vespers.
Lights in the Upper Chamber.
The Churchman to his Lamp.
The Watch by Night.
Christian Chivalry.
To a Thrush Singing in the Middle of a Village, Jan. 1833.
Dissent.
Let us Depart Hence .
Athanasian Creed.
Burial Service.
Length of the Prayers.
A Remnant.
Jeremiah.
The Ruler of the Nations.
The Avenger.
The Herald of Woe.
The Comforter.
Sacrilege.
United States.
Champions of the Truth.
The Creed.
Spoliation.
Church and King.
Oxford.
Fire.
Commune Pontificum.
Tokens.
Seals.
Gifts.
Arms.
Light.
The Gathering of the Church.
Hymns for Emigrants
Evening Hymn.
The Innocents' Day .
First Sunday after Easter.
Tenth Sunday after Trinity.
Sixteenth Sunday after Trinity.
St. John's Day .
Harvest.
Easter Eve.
Holy Matrimony.
Translations of Ancient Church Hymns.
“Libertas, quæ sera tamen respexit inertem,” 1808.
To —, on her Sister's Death.
To a Girl, who was complaining that she had forgotten her Sister's Birthday.
Lines suggested by the Remembrance of an early but long-lost Friend.
On visiting the Ruins of Farleigh Castle, Somersetshire.
On leaving Corpus Christi College, on his Election to a Fellowship of Oriel.
Song.
A Thought on a Fine Morning.
To the Nightingale.
Sonnet.
Stanzas addressed to a “Gloomy Thinker
“Nec me discedere flevit.”
A Wet Day at Midsummer.
The First Sight of the Sea
Written at Sidmouth.
To a Caue under High Peak, Sidmouth.
To the Memory of John Leyden , M.D.
On being requested to write some Verses in a Friend's Commonplace-book.
Robin Lee.
Stanzas on leaving Sidmouth.
“Nunquam Audituræ.”
Sonnet “concerning the True Poet.”
To J. T. C., with Petrarca.
Song.
Ode on the Uictories in the Pyrenees, 1813.
O, stay Thee yet, &c.
Sonnet.
Lines sent with the Liues of Ridley and Cranmer.
At Hooker's Tomb
Forward
Early Visions.
On a Monument in Lichfield Cathedral
At Penshurst.
Hammond's Graue.
Spring Flowers.
On the North Road.
Newton Cliff, near Fledborough.
By an Old Bachelor very disconsolate at parting with his Four Wives
To the Same.
The Rook.
A Thought upon taking Leaue of some Friends.
A Hint for a Fable.
Moonlight, Ulcombe Parsonage.
Fragment on his Sister Mary Anne's Death.
Huntspill Tower.
The Exe below Tiverton at Sunrise.
A Mile from Totness on the Tor Hoad, looking back.
Fairford again.
Turning out of the London Road, down to Sapperton.
Nay, but these are Breezes.
How shall the Righteous?
There have been mighty Winds.
In Harmony, &c.
Two Lamps apart, &c.
To E. K., jun.
Malvern at a Distance.
Fragment
May-day Song for the Hursley Children.
Mother out of Sight.
When is Communion nearest?
Holy is the Sick Man's Room.
St. Mark xui. 4.
O Lord, if ever, &c.
St. John xiv. 1.
Ye of nice Touch, &c.
The Clarion calls, &c.
In Choirs and Places where they Sing, here followeth the Anthem.
Jeremiah xxiii. 23.
Why seek we, sounding high and low?
Fragment.
When in her Hour of still Decay.
To his Sister Elizabeth.
Written in the Album at Cuddesdon Palace.
Nurse, let me draw, &c.
Hymn for Easter-tide.
For the Opening of the West Window of the Hall of St. Andrew's College, Bradfield. April 5, 1859.
Prayers of Saints.
Epitaph.
Dart and Weber.
Hymn
To a Little Girl.
To Master Bernard Wilson's Dog.
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Miscellaneous Poems
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In Harmony, &c.
In
Harmony, they say, the part
Which rules the strain, and wins the heart,
Is that which children compass best.
Who learns the lesson, he is blest.
Miscellaneous Poems