Lines

Augusta Baldwyn

 * Lines (Why do I love the evening star)
 * Lines (The dreams of earth obscure our joy)
 * Lines (From some cruel scorn protect me, Lord)

Anne Lynch Botta

 * Lines ("Sing me that song again")

Emily Brontë

 * Lines ("I die, but when the grave shall press")
 * Lines ("Far away is the land of rest")
 * Lines ("The soft unclouded blue of air")

George Gordon Byron

 * Lines written in "Letters of an Italian Nun and an English Gentleman, by J. J. Rousseau: Founded on Facts" ("Away, away,—your flattering arts")
 * Lines addressed to the Rev. J. T. Becher, on his advising the Author to mix more with Society ("Dear Becher, you tell me to mix with mankind")
 * Lines addressed by Lord Byron to Mr. Hobhouse on his Election for Westminster ("Would you go to the house by the true gate")
 * Lines Addressed to a Young Lady ("Doubtless, sweet girl! the hissing lead")
 * Lines Inscribed upon a Cup Formed from a Skull ("Start not—nor deem my spirit fled")
 * Lines to Mr. Hodgson, written on board the Lisbon Packet ("Huzza! Hodgson, we are going")
 * Lines Written beneath an Elm in the Churchyard of Harrow ("Spot of my youth! whose hoary branches sigh")

Lewis Carroll

 * Lines ("Little maidens, when you look")

Mary Caroline Denver and Jane Campbell Denver

 * Lines

Mary Baker Eddy

 * Lines

Ralph Waldo Emerson

 * Lines ("Love scatters oil")

Thomas Hardy

 * Lines ("Before we part to alien thoughts and aims")

Jane Elizabeth Roscoe Hornblower

 * Lines (When I forget the Sacred Power)
 * Lines (Weep not, though lonely and wild be thy path)
 * Lines (Sweet warbling Bird! I cannot sing like thee)
 * Lines (On this delicious morning air)
 * Lines (In grief's dark hour I ask for Thee)
 * Lines (In chains and darkness Peter slept)
 * Lines (In ancient times, one spot)
 * Lines (I saw the waters, as bright they lay)
 * Lines (I saw that eye when it was bright)
 * Lines (Forth from the Saracen's far land)
 * Lines (Deem them not blest whom prosperous fortune guides)
 * Lines (Books! sweet associates of the silent hour)
 * Lines (An apparition passed me by)
 * Lines (A child is born—now ring the bells)

Frances Anne Kemble

 * Lines

Letitia Elizabeth Landon

 * Lines Addressed to Alaric A. Watts, Esq. ("There is a dear and a lovely power")
 * Lines ("She kneels by the grave where her lover sleeps")
 * Lines ("There is no smile to answer thine")
 * Lines, Supposed to be the Prayer of the Supplicating Nymph in Mr. Lawrence Macdonald’s Exhibition of Sculptures ("She kneels as if in prayer, one graceful arm")
 * Lines, Suggested by a Drawing of W. Daniel’s, Esq. A. R. A., representing the Hindoo Girls floating their Tributary offerings down the Ganges ("They bend above the moonlit stream")

John Gibson Lockhart

 * Lines ("When youthful faith hath fled")

James Russell Lowell

 * Lines ("The same good blood that now refills")

Edith May

 * Lines

Frances Sargent Osgood

 * Lines

Epes Sargent

 * Lines ("Ignoble hate, defeating its own ends!")

Percy Bysshe Shelley

 * Lines ("That time is dead for ever, child")
 * Lines ("Far, far away, O ye")
 * Lines ("The cold earth slept below")

Elizabeth Sherwin

 * Lines

Lydia Huntley Sigourney

 * Lines, On the death of the Rev. Mr. Washburn, of Farmington, Connecticut, during a storm at midnight, while on his passage to South-Carolina, for the benefit of his health, accompanied by his wife.
 * Lines, On hearing a venerable friend sing at midnight, a short time previous to her death, in consequence of the derangement of a mind, once of the strongest and most amiable character.

Christopher Smart

 * Lines ("He sung of God, the mighty source")

Harriet Beecher Stowe

 * Lines to the Memory of "Annie" ("In the fair garden of celestial Peace")
 * Lines on the Death of Mrs. Stuart ("How quiet, through the hazy autumn air")

Henry David Thoreau

 * Lines ("All things are current found")
 * Lines ("Though all the fates should prove unkind")

William Wordsworth

 * Lines left upon a seat in a YEW-TREE ("Nay, Traveller! rest. This lonely yew-tree stands")
 * Lines written at a small distance from my House ("It is the first mild day of March")
 * Lines written in early Spring ("I heard a thousand blended notes")
 * Lines written in a boat ("How rich the wave, in front, imprest" / "How richly glows the water's breast")
 * Lines written near Richmond upon the Thames ("Glide gently, thus for ever glide")
 * Lines written a few miles above TINTERN ABBEY ("Five years have passed; five summers, with the length")
 * Lines written with a Slate-pencil upon a Stone ("Stranger! this hillock of mishapen stones")
 * Lines In the School of——is a tablet ("If Nature, for a favorite Child")
 * Lines composed at Grasmere ("Loud is the Vale! the Voice is up") (unindexed)