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Maurice Henry Hewlett
1861-1923
Poetry Listing
Read More About Maurice Henry Hewlett below poetry list
| Poem Title | First Lines | Period | # Lines | # Reads | | Absence | When she had left us but a little while | 1896 | 14 | 237 | | Alma Sdegnosa | Not that dull spleen which serves i' the world for scorn, | 1896 | 14 | 212 | | Aspetto Reale | That hour when thou and Grief were first acquainted | 1896 | 14 | 214 | | Blue Iris | Blue is the Adrian sea, and darkly blue | 1910 | 4 | 241 | | Cloister Thoughts | Within these long gray shadows many dead | 1896 | 14 | 187 | | Clytié | Hearken, O passers, what thing | 1894 | 96 | 209 | | Dedication | Love owes tribute unto Death, | 1912 | 30 | 219 | | Dedication Of A Book | To the Fountain of my long Dream, | 1911 | 12 | 210 | | Dream Anguish | My thought of thee is tortured in my sleep | 1896 | 18 | 218 | | Duty | Oh, I am weak to serve thee as I ought; | 1896 | 14 | 204 | | Evening Mood | Late, when the sun was smouldering down the west, | 1910 | 6 | 226 | | Eye-Service | Meseems thine eyes are two still-folded lakes | 1896 | 14 | 196 | | Gnatho | Gnatho, Satyr, homing at dusk, | 1912 | 149 | 197 | | Helen Redeemed | Sing of the end of Troy, and of that flood | 1912 | 2620 | 232 | | Hymnia-Beatrix | Before you pass and leave me gaunt and chill | 1896 | 14 | 208 | | Hypsipyle | Queen of the shadows, Maid and Wife, | 1911 | 721 | 217 | | Kin Confessed | Long loving, all our love was husbanded | 1896 | 15 | 233 | | Lai Of Gobertz[1] | Of courteous Limozin wight, | 1911 | 224 | 230 | | Lux E Tenebris | I thank all Gods that I can let thee go, | 1896 | 14 | 209 | | Oreithyia | Oreithyia, by the North Wind carried | 1897 | 85 | 227 | | Presence | When she had left us but a little while, | 1896 | 14 | 200 | | Quel Giorno Più ... | That day--it was the last of many days, | 1896 | 14 | 212 | | Snowy Night | The snow lies deep, ice-fringes hem the thatch; | 1910 | 4 | 233 | | Spring On The Down | When Spring blows o'er the land, and sunlight flies | 1910 | 6 | 211 | | The Argive Women[2] | Goddess of burning and little rest, | 1912 | 334 | 199 | | The Chamber Idyll | The blue night falleth, the moon | 1894 | 20 | 287 | | The Old House | Mossy gray stands the House, four-square to the wind, | 1910 | 6 | 219 | | The Parting | Breathless was she and would not have us part: | 1910 | 4 | 206 | | The Rosebud | In June I brought her roses, and she cupt | 1910 | 6 | 206 | | The Saints' Maying | Since green earth is awake | 1896 | 100 | 198 | | The Village Wife's Lament | O what is this you've done to me, | 1918 | 1368 | 178 | | The Winds' Possession | When winds blow high and leaves begin to fall, | 1896 | 14 | 209 | | To My Father This Little Book Not As Being Worthy But As All I Have Is Dedicated (From: Earthwork Out Of Tuscany) | I cannot add one tendril to your bays, | | 6 | 214 | | To The Gods Of The Country | Sun and Moon, shine upon me; | | 11 | 205 | | Wages | Sometimes the spirit that never leaves me quite | 1896 | 14 | 219 |
About: Maurice Henry Hewlett was an English historical novelist, poet and essayist.
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