Seven centuries of verse, English & American, from the early English lyrics to the present day,

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Smith, A. J. M. (Arthur James Marshall), 1902-1980, editor.
Edition:3d ed., rev. and enl.
Imprint:New York, Scribner [1967]
Description:xxxvii, 818 pages 22 cm
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/2171115
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Other form:Online version: Smith, A.J.M. (Arthur James Marshall), 1902- Seven centuries of verse, English & American, from the early English lyrics to the present day. 3d ed., rev. and enl. New York, Scribner [1967]

MARC

LEADER 00000cam a22000001 4500
001 2171115
003 ICU
005 20190519154441.1
007 ta
008 731212s1967 nyu 000 0 eng
010 |a  66026064  
040 |a DLC  |b eng  |c DLC  |d OCLCQ  |d OCLCG  |d UPM  |d NIALS  |d UAB  |d OCLCA  |d CNMBL  |d OCLCO  |d OCLCF  |d OCLCQ  |d OCLCO  |d NLC  |d OCLCQ  |d OCLCA  |d PAU  |d OCLCQ  |d INT  |d OCLCQ  |d BDP  |d OCLCQ  |d W2U  |d CNMTR 
016 |a (AMICUS)000001190782 
019 |a 968630213  |a 976742890  |a 1033582108  |a 1059824227  |a 1086894361  |a 1100216075 
029 1 |a AU@  |b 000000658375 
029 1 |a NLC  |b 000001190782 
035 |a (OCoLC)1144355  |z (OCoLC)968630213  |z (OCoLC)976742890  |z (OCoLC)1033582108  |z (OCoLC)1059824227  |z (OCoLC)1086894361  |z (OCoLC)1100216075 
050 0 0 |a PR1175  |b .S575 1967 
055 4 |a PN6101 S55a 1967 
082 0 0 |a 821/.008 
049 |a CGUA 
100 1 |a Smith, A. J. M.  |q (Arthur James Marshall),  |d 1902-1980,  |e editor.  |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n50016439  |1 http://viaf.org/viaf/79418083 
245 1 0 |a Seven centuries of verse, English & American, from the early English lyrics to the present day,  |c selected and edited by A.J.M. Smith. 
250 |a 3d ed., rev. and enl. 
260 |a New York,  |b Scribner  |c [1967] 
300 |a xxxvii, 818 pages  |c 22 cm 
336 |a text  |b txt  |2 rdacontent  |0 http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/contentTypes/txt 
337 |a unmediated  |b n  |2 rdamedia  |0 http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/mediaTypes/n 
338 |a volume  |b nc  |2 rdacarrier  |0 http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/carriers/nc 
505 0 |a Sumer is icumen in -- Adam lay I-Bowndyn -- Quid Petis, O fily? -- Ubi sunt que ante nos fuerunt -- I have a yong suster -- I sing of a madien -- O western wind -- The bailey beareth the bell away -- The falcon -- A Lyke-wake dirge -- Jolly good ale and old -- Balade: Hyde, Absolon, thy gilte tresses clere ; Prologue to the Canterbury Tales ; The Nun's Priest's Tale / Geoffrey Chaucer -- Sir Patrick Spens -- The wife of Usher's well -- Thomas the rhymer -- Kemp owyne -- Clerk Suanders -- The cherry-tree carol -- The twa corbies -- The three ravens -- Lord Randal -- Edward, Edward -- Helen of Kirconnell -- To Mistress Margaret Hussey ; To Mistress Isabel Pennell / John Skelton -- Desire / William Cornish -- The epitaph of Graunde Amoure / Stephen Hawes -- The Hind ; They flee from me, that sometime did me seek / Sir Thomas Wyatt -- Description of the spring, wherein each thing renews save only the lover / Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey -- Three sonnets from "amoretti": LXVIII: Most glorious Lord of lyfe ; LXX: Fresh spring, the herald ; LXXV: one day I wrote her name ; Epithalamion / Edmund Spenser -- Walsinghame ; The lie ; Even such is time / Sir Walter Ralegh -- Cupid and campaspe / John Lyly -- Loving in truth ; with how sad steps, o moon ; My true love hath my heart ; Leave me, O love / Sir Philip Sidney -- O wearisome condition of humanity / Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke -- The song at the well ; Bethsabe's song / George Peele -- Are they shadows that we see? / Samuel Daniel -- Sonet: Fra bank to bank, fra wood to wood I rin / Mark Alexander Boyd -- The parting / Michael Drayton -- The passionate shepherd to his love / The nymph's reply (by Sir Walter Ralegh) / Christopher Marlowe -- From the sonnets: XVII: Shall I compare thee; XXIX: When is disgrace with fortune; XXX: When to the sessions; XXXIII: Full many a glorious morning; LV: Not marble, nor the gilded monuments; LX: Like as the waves; LXIV: When I have seen by time's fell hand; LXV: since brass, nor stone ; LXVI: Tired with all these; LXXI: No longer mourn for me; LXXIII: That time of year; CVI: When in the chronicle of wasted time; CVII: Not mine own fears; CXVI: Let me not to the marriage of true minds; CXXIX: Th'expense of spirit; CXXX: My mistress' eyes; CXLVI: Poor soul, the center; Songs from the plays: Who is Silvia?; When daisies pied; When icicles hang by the wall; Now the hungry lion roars; Tell me where is fancy bred; Sigh no more, ladies; Under the greenwood tree; Blow, blow, thouh winter wind ; Come away, death; O mistress mine ; Take, O! Take those lips away; Hark, Hark! the lark; fear no more the heat o' the sun; Where the bee sucks; Full Fathom five; The phoenix and the turtle / William Shakespeare -- Cerry-ripe; Rose-cheeked Laura; Vivamus mea lesbia atque amemus ; When to her lute corinna sings; Kind are her answers; Young and simple though I am; When thou must home / Thomas Campion -- Tom O'Bedlam's song/ Author Unknown -- Song: go and catch a falling star; The canonization; The sun rising; The good-morrow- The Ecstasy ; The Anniversary; Elegy: on his mistress; A valediction forbidding mourning; The relic; HOly sonnets: VII: at the round earth's imagined corners; X: Death, be not proud; Xiii: What if this present; XIV: Batter my heart, three-personed God; A hymn to God the father / John Donne -- To Celia: drink to me only with thine eyes; Song: to Celia; The triumph of Charis; Slow, Slow, fresh fount ; To the memory of my beloved, the author, Master William Shakespeare; An ode to himself; To Heaven / Ben Jonson -- Call for the Robin Redbreast / John Webster -- On the Countess Dowager of Pembroke ; In Obitum M.S., X Mai, 1614 / William Browne of Tavistock -- The argument of his book; Corrinna's going a-maying; To the Virgins, to make much of time; To daffodils; The night-piece, to Julia; Upon Juli'as clothes; Delight in disorder; The cheat of Cupid, or, the ungentle guest; A child's grace; His prayer to Ben Jonson ; The bad season makes the poet sad; A thanksgiving to God, for his house; His creed / Robert Herrick -- The collar; Redemption; Peace; The church-floor; Love; The pulley; Discipline; Life; Virture/ George Herbert -- Death the leveller/ James shirley -- Go, lovely rose/ Edmund Waller -- At a solemn music ; On time ; On the morning of Christ's nativity ; L'allegro ; Il Penseroso; Lycidas; Songs from "comus": The star that bids the shepherds fold; Sweet echo, sweetest nymph; Sabrina fair; To the ocean now I fly ; Sonnets: How soon hath time; When I consider how my light is Oliver Cromwell ; On the late massacre in Piemont ; On the detraction which followed upon my writing certain treatises ; On the same; On his deceased wife; Choruses from "Samson Agonistes": May are the wayings of the wise; Oh how comely it is and how reviving; All is best / John Milton -- Out upon it! I have loved; A ballad upon a wedding; Song / Sir John Suckling -- In the Holy Nativity of our Lord God ; A song / Richard Crashaw -- To Lucasta, going to the wars ; To Althea, from prison / Richard Lovelace -- To his coy mistress; The garden; The picture of little T.C. in a prospect of flowers ; Bermudas; The definition of love / Andrew Marvell -- The world; The retreat; The nigh; Ascension-hymn / Henry Vaughan -- Wonder / Thomas Traherne -- Alexander's feast, or, the power of music ; To the memory of Mr. OIdham; Prologue to "Aureng-Zebe" ' Lines printed under the engraved portrait of Milton, 1688; Song of Venus; The lady's song; The secular masque / John Dryden -- A better answer (Cloe Jealous); To a child of quality; On critics / Matthew Prior -- A description of the morning; Description of a city shower; A satyrical elegy on the death of a late famous general ; Clever Tom Clinch going to be hanged / Jonathan Swift -- Damon and cupid; Song from "The beaggar's opera": were I laid on Greenland's coast; My own epitaph / John Gay -- On the prospect of planting arts and learning in America / Goerge Berkeley -- Ode on solitude; To a young lad on her leaving the town after the coronation ; The rape of the lock; Elegy to the memory of an unfortunate lady ; Engraved on the collar of a dog, which I gave to His Royal Highness; Epitaph intended for Sir Isaac Newton / Alexander Pope -- Prologue spoken by Mr. Garrick at the opening of the theatre in Drury Lane, 1747 / Samuel Johnson -- Ode on a distant prospect of Eton College ; On the death of a favourite cat, drowned in a tub of goldfishes ; Elegy written in a country churchyard; On Lord Holland's seat near Margate, Kent / Thomas Gray -- Ode to evening; Ode written in the beginning of the year / William Collins -- For I will consider my cat Jeoffrey / Christopher Smart -- When lovely woman stoops to folly ; Edmund Burke (from "retaliation") ; David Garrick (from "retaliation") / Oliver Goldsmith -- The poplar field / Epitaph on a hare ; Light shining out of darkness / William Cowper -- to the muses ; song: how sweet I roam'd ; songs of innocence: introduction ; The lamb; The little black boy; The tyger; Ah! sun-flower ; The sick rose; London; The little vagabond ; The garden of love; I asked a thief; From "Milton" ; Scoffers; Auguries of innocence / William Blake -- Scots wha hae ; A red, red rose; Ae fond kiss; To a mouse, on turning up her nest with the plough ; John Barleycorn: a ballad ; To a louse, on seeing one on a lady's bonnet at church ; Address to the unco guid, or the rigidly righteous / Robert Burns -- The daffodils; The solitary reaper; To a butterfly; Stepping westward; Lucy Gray: or, solitude ; Three years she grew; A slumber did my spirit seal; Ode -- intimations of immortality from recollections of early childhood ; Lines composed a few miles above Tintern Abbey ; sonnets: The world is too much with use; Upon Westminster Bridge; London, 1802; thoughts of a Briton on the subjugation of Switzerland ; Mutability; It is a beauteous evening, calm and free; Surprised by Joy -- impatient as the wind / William Wordswoth -- Bonny Dundee; Proud Maisei / Sir Walter Scott -- The fruit plucker; Kubla Khan; The rime of the ancient mariner / Samuel Taylor Coleridge -- [and many more]. 
504 |a Includes bibliographical references and index. 
650 0 |a English poetry.  |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85043932 
650 0 |a American poetry.  |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85004382 
650 6 |a Poésie anglaise. 
650 6 |a Poésie américaine. 
650 7 |a American poetry.  |2 fast  |0 http://id.worldcat.org/fast/00807348 
650 7 |a English poetry.  |2 fast  |0 http://id.worldcat.org/fast/00912278 
776 0 8 |i Online version:  |a Smith, A.J.M. (Arthur James Marshall), 1902-  |t Seven centuries of verse, English & American, from the early English lyrics to the present day.  |b 3d ed., rev. and enl.  |d New York, Scribner [1967]  |w (OCoLC)610553476 
901 |a OREP 
903 |a Hathi 
903 |a HeVa 
929 |a cat 
999 f f |i 51ed2e5d-1781-5f77-8205-1db681072dcb  |s 813c28c3-682c-5d7b-84c0-6f6bfc229964 
928 |t Library of Congress classification  |a PR1175.S602  |l JRL  |c JRL-Gen  |i 6004743 
927 |t Library of Congress classification  |a PR1175.S602  |l JRL  |c JRL-Gen  |b 29605229  |i 3824811