Alfred Noyes September 16, 1880 – June 28, 1958 Poetry Listing Read More About Alfred Noyes below poetry listPoem Title First Lines Period # Lines # Reads A New Madrigal To An Old Melody As along a dark pine-bough, in slender white mystery 32 149 An Open Boat O what is that whimpering there in the darkness? 16 137 Beethoven In Central Park The thousand-windowed towers were all alight. 14 126 Cap'n Storm-Along They are buffeting out in the bitter grey weather, 36 110 Compensations Not with a flash that rends the blue 28 125 Copernicus The neighbours gossiped idly at the door. 242 134 Cotton-Wool Shun the brush and shun the pen, 41 100 Dead Man's Morrice There came a crowder to the Mermaid Inn, 48 115 Dedication. To The Memory Of Sir Cecil Spring-Rice Steadfast as any soldier of the line 28 120 Fashions Fashion on fashion on fashion, 51 107 Fishers Of Men Long, long ago He said, 24 111 Five Criticisms - I Old Pantaloon, lean-witted, dour and rich, 15 104 Five Criticisms - II. I saw the assembled artists of our day 16 114 Five Criticisms - III. With half the force and thought you waste in rage 14 110 Five Criticisms - IV. You with the quick sardonic eye 63 101 Five Criticisms - V If this were true, England indeed were dead. 46 105 Galileo My friend, my dearest friend, my own dear love, 815 124 Ghosts Of The New World There are no ghosts, you say, 48 130 Immortal Sails Now, in a breath, we'll burst those gates of gold, 14 204 Kepler John Kepler, from the chimney corner, watched 446 103 Kilmeny Dark, dark lay the drifters against the red West, 28 121 Lines For A Sun-Dial With shadowy pen I write, 4 120 Memories Of The Pacific Coast I know a land, I, too, 20 131 Michael Oaktree Under an arch of glorious leaves I passed 216 116 Namesakes But where's the brown drifter that went out alone? 24 114 Newton If I saw farther, 'twas because I stood 686 107 Nippon Last night, I dreamed of Nippon 24 117 On A Mountain Top On this high altar, fringed with ferns 24 113 On The Western Front I found a dreadful acre of the dead, 28 99 Peace Give me the pulse of the tide again 20 121 Peace In A Palace You were weeping in the night," said the Emperor, 51 113 Princeton Here Freedom stood, by slaughtered friend and foe, 52 107 Republic And Motherland Up the vast harbor with the morning sun 40 114 Riddles Of Merlin As I was walking 24 136 Sir John Herschel Remembers True type of all, from his own father's hand 504 106 Slave And Emperor The Emperor mocked at Nazareth 20 120 Sunlight And Sea Give me the sunlight and the sea 61 124 The Avenue Of The Allies This is the song of the wind as it came 98 98 The Bell The Temple Bell was out of tune, 60 104 The Big Black Trawler The very best ship that ever I knew, 20 106 The Chimney-Sweeps Of Cheltenham When hawthorn buds are creaming white, 64 101 The Companions How few are they that voyage through the night 20 114 The Humming Birds Green wing and ruby throat, 24 116 The Little Roads The great roads are all grown over 24 100 The Lost Battle It is not over yet-the fight 32 107 The Man Who Discovered The Use Of A Chair The man who discovered the use of a chair, 51 104 The Matin-Song Of Friar Tuck If souls could sing to heaven's high King 42 105 The New Duckling I want to be new," said the duckling. 32 116 The Night Of The Lion Their Day was at twelve of the night, 60 113 The Observatory At noon, upon the mountain's purple height, 291 117
71 Articles (2 Pages, 50 Per Page) [ 1 | 2 ] About: Alfred Noyes was an English poet, best known for his ballads The Highwayman (1906) and The Barrel Organ. This page viewed 2376 times.
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