Skip directly to:
Main content
Main navigation
University of Virginia Library
Search this document
Sonnets and Other Poems
By John K. Ingram
Ingram, John K. (1823-1907)
I.
I. LOVE AND SORROW.
II.
II. THE RELIGION OF HUMANITY.
III.
III. MISCELLANEOUS.
A NATION'S WEALTH.
SOCIAL HEREDITY.
SOCIAL ORIGINS.
SAINT PAUL.
THE SOCIAL FUTURE.
PASTOR AB AMPHRYSO.
STREAMS.
NATIONAL PRESAGE.
A PROTEST.
MAJUBA.
ON READING THE SONNET BY R.C.D.,
TO THE PRESIDENT OF THE TRANSVAAL.
1899.
A MONITION.
A FILIAL TRIBUTE.
SIR L. ALMA-TADEMA'S ‘WOMEN OF AMPHISSA.’
NOSTALGIA.
WINGED THOUGHTS.
[How brief our dates! how soon Death apprehends]
[Would'st thou be economical of Time]
A FRAGMENT.
TO A.J.
[The moon was bright that Autumn night]
[‘Vos plaudite!’ th' imperial Roman said]
VERSICLES.
THE MEMORY OF THE DEAD.
Collapse All
|
Expand All
Sonnets and Other Poems
[‘How to be happy?’—smiling, spoke the sage—]
‘How to be happy?’—smiling, spoke the sage—
‘Most miss the way, yet never cease the quest.
Here is the secret—still, from youth to age,
Keep one beloved image in thy breast.’
Sonnets and Other Poems