- New Poems
- 作者: Robert Louis Stevenson罗伯特·路易斯·史蒂文森
- 日期:2014-08-28 11:13
- 点击:4230
I ASK good things that I detest,
With speeches fair;
Heed not, I pray Thee, Lord, my breast,
But hear my prayer.
...
[详细介绍]
With speeches fair;
Heed not, I pray Thee, Lord, my breast,
But hear my prayer.
...
章节列表
- Prayer
- Lo! In Thine Honest Eyes I Read
- Though Deep Indifference Should Drowse
- My Heart, when First the Black-Bird Sings
- I Dreamed of Forest Alleys Fair
- St. Martin’s Summer
- Dedication
- The Old Chimaeras, Old Receipts
- Prelude
- The Vanquished Knight
- To the Commissioners of Northern Lights
- The Relic Taken, what Avails the Shrine?
- About the Sheltered Garden Ground
- After Reading “Antony and Cleopatra”
- I Know Not How, but as I Count
- Spring Song
- The Summer Sun Shone Round Me
- You Looked So Tempting in the Pew
- Love’s Vicissitudes
- Duddingstone
- Stout Marches Lead to Certain Ends
- Away with Funeral Music
- To Sydney
- Had I the Power that have the Will
- O Dull Cold Northern Sky
- Apologetic Postscript of a Year Later
- To Marcus
- To Ottilie
- This Gloomy Northern Day
- The Wind is Without There and Howls in the Trees
- A Valentine’s Song
- Hail! Childish Slaves of Social Rules
- Swallows Travel to and Fro
- To Mesdames Zassetsky and Garschine
- To Madame Garschine
- Music at the Villa Marina
- Fear Not, Dear Friend, but Freely Live Your Days
- Let Love Go, If Go she Will
- I Do Not Fear to Own Me Kin
- I Am Like One that for Long Days had Sate
- Voluntary
- On Now, Although the Year Be Done
- In the Green and Gallant Spring
- Death, to the Dead for Evermore
- To Charles Baxter
- I who All the Winter Through
- Love, what is Love?
- Soon Our Friends Perish
- As One who Having Wandered All Night Long
- Strange are the Ways of Men
- The Wind Blew Shrill and Smart
- Man Sails the Deep Awhile
- The Cock’s Clear Voice into the Clearer Air
- Now when the Number of My Years
- What Man May Learn, what Man May Do
- Small is the Trust when Love is Green
- Know You the River Near to Grez
- It’s Forth Across the Roaring Foam
- An English Breeze
- As in Their Flight the Birds of Song
- The Piper
- To Mrs. Macmarland
- To Miss Cornish
- Tales of Arabia
- Behold, as Goblins Dark of Mien
- Still I Love to Rhyme
- Long Time I Lay in Little Ease
- Flower God, God of the Spring
- Come, My Beloved, Hear from Me
- Since Years Ago for Evermore
- Envoy for “A Child’s Garden of Verses”
- For Richmond’s Garden Wall
- Hail, Guest, and Enter Freely!
- Lo, Now, My Guest
- So Live, So Love, So Use that Fragile Hour
- Ad Se Ipsum
- Before this Little Gift was Come
- Go, Little Book — The Ancient Phrase
- My Love was Warm
- Dedicatory Poem for “Underwoods”
- Farewell
- The Far-Farers
- Home, My Little Children, Here are Songs for You
- Come from the Daisied Meadows
- Early in the Morning I Hear on Your Piano
- Fair Isle at Sea
- Loud and Low in the Chimney
- I Love to Be Warm by the Red Fireside
- At Last she Comes
- Mine Eyes Were Swift to Know Thee
- Fixed is the Doom
- Men are Heaven’s Piers
- The Angler Rose, he Took His Rod
- Spring Carol
- To what Shall I Compare Her?
- When the Sun Comes After Rain
- Late, O Miller
- To Friends at Home
- I, Whom Apollo Sometime Visited
- Tempest Tossed and Sore Afflicted
- Variant Form of the Preceding Poem
- I Now, O Friend, Whom Noiselessly the Snows
- Since Thou Hast Given Me this Good Hope, O God
- God Gave to Me a Child in Part
- Over the Land is April
- Light as the Linnet on My Way I Start
- Light as the Linnet on My Way I Start
- Come, Here is Adieu to the City
- It Blows a Snowing Gale
- Ne Sit Ancillae Tibi Amor Pudor
- To All that Love the Far and Blue
- Thou Strainest Through the Mountain Fern (A fragment)
- To Rosabelle
- Now Bare to the Beholder’s Eye
- The Bour-Tree Den
- Sonnets
- Air of Diabelli’s
- Epitaphium Erotii
- De M. Antonio
- Ad Magistrum Ludi (Unfinished draft.)
- Ad Nepotem
- In Charidemum
- De Ligurra
- In Lupum
- Ad Quintilianum
- De Hortis Julii Martialis
- Ad Martialem
- In Maximum
- Ad Olum
- De Coenatione Micae
- De Erotio Puella
- Ad Piscatorem