Page:Rudyard Kipling's verse - Inclusive Edition 1885-1918.djvu/791

 INDEX TO FIRST LINES

PACI

A farmer of the Augustan Age 609

A fool there was and he made his prayer 251

A great and glorious thing it is 50

A Nation spoke to a Nation, 208

A Rose, in tatters on the garden path, 425

A stone's throw out on either hand 575

A tinker out of Bedford, 333

Abdhur Rahman, the Durani Chief, of him is the story told. .... 279

About the time that taverns shut 725

Across a world where all men grieve 446

After the burial-parties leave 365

After the sack of the City when Rome was sunk to a name. . .712

Ah! What avails the classic bent 391

Ahasuerus Jenkins of the "Operatic Own," 5

All day long to the judgment-seat 608

All the world over, nursing their scars, 638

Alone upon the housetops to the North 700

"And some are sulky, while some will plunge 574

And they were stronger hands than mine 700

As Adam lay a-dreaming beneath the Apple Tree 738

" 'As anybody seen Bill 'Awkins?" 504

As I left the Halls at Lumley, rose the vision of a comely .... 59

As I was spittin' into the Ditch aboard the Crocodile, 492

As our mother the Frigate, bepainted and fine, 161

As the dawn was breaking the Sambhur belled 734

At Runnymede, at Runnymede, 750

At the close of a winter day, 381

At the hole where he went in 708

At times when under cover I 'ave said, 537

At two o'clock in the morning, if you open your window and listen,. 752

'Ave you 'card o" the Widow at Windsor 470

Away by the lands of the "Japanec 129

Ay, lay him 'neath the Simla pine 49

Be well assured that on our side 169

Beat off in our last fight were we? 604

Because I sought it far from men, 604

Bees ! Bees ! Hark to your bees ! 659

Before a midnight breaks in storm, 337

Before my Spring I garnered Autumn's gain, 636

773