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Misc. H

E.O.H. .

G.H.H..

W.H.C.H.: See William H.C. Hosmer.

Jin Ha

Farah Habad.

Marilyn Hacker.

Hadewijch of Brabant

Hafiz

Claude Halcro.

Katherine Hale

Hazel Hall

Sharlot M. Hall.

Tom Hall.

Fitz-Greene Halleck.

Clive Hamilton: See C.S. Lewis.

Han-Shan.

Han Yu.

Aaron Tyler Hand.

Nathalie Handal

Ruth Guthrie Harding

Arthur Sherburne Hardy.

Myronn Hardy.

Thomas Hardy.

Vijayalakshmi Harish.

Joy Harjo

Avis Harley

J.D. Harlock.

Abiola Haroun.

Frances Ellen Watkins Harper

Derrick Harriell

francine j. harris

Geo. W.H. Harrison.

Jim Harrison

Jim Harrison and Ted Kooser

Leslie Harrison [Leslie Noyes Harrison]

K.D. Harryman.

Fanny Wheeler Hart.

Robert M. Hart.

Bret Harte.

Penny Harter.

Patrick Joseph Hartigan writing as John O'Brien

L.P. Hartley.

Sadakichi Hartmann

Mary Cornelia Hartshorne.

F.W. Harvey

Matthea Harvey.

Yona Harvey.

H.C. Harwood.

Robert Hass

Frances Ridley Havergal.

Robert Stephen Hawker.

Robert Hayden

Alfred Hayes.

Terrance Hayes

William Hayley.

Ava Leavell Haymon.

Richard Haywarde.

Tom Healy.

Seamus Heaney.

Georgia Heard.

Anne Hebert

Ben Hecht.

Stephanie Heit.

Felicia Hemans

Muyesser Abdul'Ehed Hendan.

David Henderson.

William Ernest Henley.

Liz Henry.

S*an D. Henry-Smith.

Jeannette Fraser Henshall

Sophie Margaretta Hensley.

Lance Henson.

George Herbert

José María Heredia.

Oliver Herford.

Robert Herrick.

Jim Heston.

Mary E. Hewitt.

Rage Hezekiah.

Rosalie Dunlap Hickler.

Mary Hickman.

Faylita Hicks

Bob Hicok

B. Higgins.

Ella Higginson.

Nazim Hikmet.

Conrad Hilberry.

Donna Hilbert.

Sir Geoffrey Hill.

Geo. Canning Hill.

Jennie Earngey Hill.

Leslie Pinckney Hill

John Northern Hilliard.

Brenda Hillman

E. Curtiss Hine.

AE Hines.

Anna Grossnickle Hines

Ellen Hinsey.

Zinaida Hippius. [also listed under Zinaida Gippius]

Edward Hirsch

Jane Hirshfield.

Henry B. Hirst.

Zoe Hitzig

Tony Hoagland.

Florence Hoatson.

Ralph Hodgson.

Jen Hofer

Carlie Hoffman.

Linda Hogan.

James Hogg: See The Ettrick Shepherd.

Robert Hogg.

Cynthia Hogue.

Jackson Holbert.

Martha Everts Holden: See Amber.

I.G. Holland.

J.G. Holland

Marietta Holley.

Erin Coughlin Hollowell

Bob Holman.

Oliver Wendell Holmes.

Nicole Homer

Chloe Honum.

Thomas Hood.

Gerard Manley Hopkins

Henry Clayton Hopkins.

Nora Hopper

Horace [poet].

S.S. Hornor.

E.W. Hornung.

Mary Gardiner Horsford.

George Moses Horton

William H.C. Hosmer.

Walter Edwards Houghton, Jr.

Joan Houlihan.

Margaret Houston.

Richard Hovey and Bliss Carman.

Robert E. Howard.

William Dean Howells.

Mary Howitt.

Helen Hoyt.

Hsieh Hui-Lien.

Yong-Yu Huang.

Andrew Hudgins

August Huerta.

John Ceiriog Hughes: See Ceiriog.

Langston Hughes

Luther Hughes.

Richard Hughes

Victor Hugo.

Leigh Hunt.

Allison Hutchcraft.

Ishion Hutchinson

Aldous Huxley

Jess Hyslop.


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Broken Heart )


Heartbreak )


Heart-broken shapes that stand in field and sky - Edwina Stanton Babcock "Structures"


Break/Broke.

Heart.


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To dash irradiant on the barren shore - Henry Clayton Hopkins "Quatrain"

Man only has no certain destiny - Henry Clayton Hopkins "Quatrain"

In despair to reckon up the bitter cost - Henry Clayton Hopkins "To --"

To win, to weigh, to sort and sift - Henry Clayton Hopkins "To --"

With every word that held a lie - Henry Clayton Hopkins "To --"

Warning struggled in my word - Henry Clayton Hopkins "To --"

Guiltless at my soul's command - Henry Clayton Hopkins "To --"

Bend my life to bridge the tide - Henry Clayton Hopkins "To --"

How soon the heart forgets its wrong - Henry Clayton Hopkins "To --"


Google only yields merchandise (books, art, etc). Nothing on Wikipedia or poets.org 2/8/24


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A loosened sheaf of light - Geo. Canning Hill "Theodora: a Ballad of the Woods"

Crushing crystal dews beneath - Geo. Canning Hill "Theodora: a Ballad of the Woods"

Throughout the wood's dark mazes - Geo. Canning Hill "Theodora: a Ballad of the Woods"

Poured it out in mellow floods - Geo. Canning Hill "Theodora: a Ballad of the Woods"

Walling up its crystal wealth - Geo. Canning Hill "Theodora: a Ballad of the Woods"

The tears that Dryads wept - Geo. Canning Hill "Theodora: a Ballad of the Woods"

That thrilled its mimic tide - Geo. Canning Hill "Theodora: a Ballad of the Woods"


Probably a bio of the poet.


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Poltergeist among the grand spirits - Sir Geoffrey Hill "Genius Loci"

In Pushkin's clock-haunted house - Sir Geoffrey Hill "Genius Loci"

Hazard so much free of compulsion - Sir Geoffrey Hill "Genius Loci"

A wide city under a bronze sky - Sir Geoffrey Hill "Genius Loci"

In the broad way of wonder - Sir Geoffrey Hill "Genius Loci"

Cannot tell presence from memory - Sir Geoffrey Hill "Genius Loci"


Poet's page at poets.org.


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On my high noon journey - Muyesser Abdul'Ehed Hendan "He Was Taken Away" transl. by Joshua L. Freeman

On the darkest dais of his night - Muyesser Abdul'Ehed Hendan "He Was Taken Away" transl. by Joshua L. Freeman

Struck by thunder's omen - Muyesser Abdul'Ehed Hendan "He Was Taken Away" transl. by Joshua L. Freeman

A crime the prisons wrote for him - Muyesser Abdul'Ehed Hendan "He Was Taken Away" transl. by Joshua L. Freeman

A turtle with love pushing from behind - Muyesser Abdul'Ehed Hendan "He Was Taken Away" transl. by Joshua L. Freeman

My stars are seeping away - Muyesser Abdul'Ehed (Hendan) "Returning to the Fire" transl. by author and edited by Darren Byler

Cast the stones from your heart - Muyesser Abdul'Ehed (Hendan) "Returning to the Fire" transl. by author and edited by Darren Byler


Poet's Wikipedia page.


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Shadowy fingers of approaching Dusk - B. Higgins "Eventide"

The moan of centuries breaks - B. Higgins "Gallipoli: An Epitaph"

Whispers of sultry ages - B. Higgins "Gallipoli: An Epitaph"

The stars their monuments - B. Higgins "Gallipoli: An Epitaph"

Chanter of the lonely tombs - B. Higgins "One Soldier"


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The aura of each candle-flame - L.P. Hartley "Candlemas"

Disdained such palpable machinery - L.P. Hartley "Candlemas"

Idle talk's quintessences - L.P. Hartley "Candlemas"

Gathered stores of unproved bliss - L.P. Hartley "Candlemas"

The multiplied inheritance of each succeeding moment - L.P. Hartley "Candlemas"

The issue of their enterprise - L.P. Hartley "Candlemas"

Drown our wills in its excess - L.P. Hartley "Candlemas"

Our universe in chaos thrust - L.P. Hartley "Candlemas"


Poet's Wikipedia page.


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Outside among yellowing aspens - Myronn Hardy "Aurora Americana"

When cotton explodes that gaudy hue - Myronn Hardy "Aurora Americana"

Holding time in the dark - Myronn Hardy "Aurora Americana"

Waiting for the dappling of sky - Myronn Hardy "Aurora Americana"

A quality encouraged for navigation - Myronn Hardy "Aurora Americana"

To freeze among the frozen - Myronn Hardy "Aurora Americana"

Tundras with paths lined with wet spikes - Myronn Hardy "Aurora Americana"

A terrible enactment in the dark - Myronn Hardy "Aurora Americana"

There's poison in the bread - Myronn Hardy "Aurora Americana"

Lifting me into cloying light - Myronn Hardy "Aurora Americana"

Where earthquakes are wind - Myronn Hardy "Mosquito"

The gelatinous mass controlling this machine - Myronn Hardy "Mosquito"

Her needle mouth filling with water - Myronn Hardy "Mosquito"

Haunted their whole lives by trees - Myronn Hardy "Mosquito"

In a pool surrounded by azaleas - Myronn Hardy "Solemnity"

Ice that wolves trample silently - Myronn Hardy "Solemnity"

Before the country was ash - Myronn Hardy "Solemnity"

Forgetting the distance - Myronn Hardy "Solemnity"

Have given myself to the linear - Myronn Hardy "To the Linear"

A rocket blasting into the unknowable - Myronn Hardy "To the Linear"

With suicidal guitarists plucking sunrise - Myronn Hardy "To the Linear"


Poet's page at poets.org.


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This revel of quick-cued mumming - Thomas Hardy "According to the Mighty Working"

Outside perception's range - Thomas Hardy "According to the Mighty Working"

Left the shining shrines unsought - Thomas Hardy "After Reading Psalms XXXIX., XL., etc."

To alight upon the wind-warped upland thorn - Thomas Hardy "Afterwards"

Veiled against too strong a stare - Thomas Hardy "An Ancient to Ancients"

No wizard wields the witching pen - Thomas Hardy "An Ancient to Ancients"

Waking to wish existence timeless - Thomas Hardy "And There Was a Great Calm"

From Heaven distilled a clemency - Thomas Hardy "And There Was a Great Calm"

Veering unbid into my view - Thomas Hardy "At Moonrise and Onwards"

That vouched the dark as done - Thomas Hardy "Barthelemon at Vauxhall"

Rang midnight within - Thomas Hardy "Before Marching, and After"

His history would borrow - Thomas Hardy "Before Marching, and After"

Where Death stood to win - Thomas Hardy "Before Marching, and After"

By the pleasant pranks they played us - Thomas Hardy "Budmouth Dears"

Now that war has swept us sunder - Thomas Hardy "Budmouth Dears"

Here in breath and bone - Thomas Hardy "The Casual Acquaintance"

His casual jot of service on that road - Thomas Hardy "The Casual Acquaintance"

Time ticking hard on midnight - Thomas Hardy "The Collector Cleans His Picture"

And the spindrift strikes the glass - Thomas Hardy "The Curtains Now Are Drawn"

The toll that follows from the lagging bell - Thomas Hardy "Drawing Details in an Old Church"

Splashed in its tumbling stir - Thomas Hardy "The Dream Is--Which?"

Found me in haggard rooms - Thomas Hardy "The Dream Is--Which?"

Treading a lonely stair - Thomas Hardy "The Dream Is--Which?"

Till a harsh change comes edging in - Thomas Hardy "The Dream Is--Which?"

Our clock should be the closing flowers - Thomas Hardy "Dream of the City Shopwoman"

Our church the alleyed willow boughs - Thomas Hardy "Dream of the City Shopwoman"

A yearning nature's strong appeal - Thomas Hardy "Dream of the City Shopwoman"

While blusters vex the yew and vane - Thomas Hardy "A Drizzling Easter Morning"

Every sound moves memories - Thomas Hardy "A Duettist to Her Pianoforte: Song of Silence"

Such heavily-haunted harmony - Thomas Hardy "A Duettist to Her Pianoforte: Song of Silence"

Sufficient toll for an unwilling mind - Thomas Hardy "Epitaph"

Ask no ill-advised reward - Thomas Hardy "Epitaph"

When reddest flowers are black - Thomas Hardy "The Garden Seat"

Enter a daisy-and-buttercup land - Thomas Hardy "Growth in May"

Hurdles and stiles scarce visible - Thomas Hardy "Growth in May"

And the hurricane shakes the solid land - Thomas Hardy "I Found Her Out There"

By those haunted heights the Atlantic smites - Thomas Hardy "I Found Her Out There"

Till it catch the sound of that western sea - Thomas Hardy "I Found Her Out There"

Where the gate was past finding - Thomas Hardy "Lonely Days"

In heavy years she would remember - Thomas Hardy "The Marble Tablet"

We shall have marched for nothing - Thomas Hardy "Men Who March Away"

Wayfared at the nadir of the sun - Thomas Hardy "Murmurs in the Gloom (Nocturne)"

Denounce the sane as vicious - Thomas Hardy "Murmurs in the Gloom (Nocturne)"

That grace can smooth no waters - Thomas Hardy "Murmurs in the Gloom (Nocturne)"

In the gown of fading fashion - Thomas Hardy "The Old Gown"

Doomed long to part - Thomas Hardy "The Old Gown"

Ashlar whereon the gales might drum - Thomas Hardy "The Old Workman"

For brightest brown have donned a gray - Thomas Hardy "On a Discovered Curl of Hair"

To abate the misery of absentness - Thomas Hardy "On a Discovered Curl of Hair"

A caverned ark ever unopened - Thomas Hardy "On a Discovered Curl of Hair"

By bearing down the western road - Thomas Hardy "On a Discovered Curl of Hair"

November blew forth its bleared airs - Thomas Hardy "On One Who Lived and Died Where He Was Born"

Before our sands had run - Thomas Hardy "On the Tune called the Old-Hundred-and-Fourth"

The tide of chance may bring its offer - Thomas Hardy "The Opportunity"

By the embers in hearthside ease - Thomas Hardy "The Oxen"

Should go with him in the gloom - Thomas Hardy "The Oxen"

The ghost of a perished day - Thomas Hardy "A Procession of Dead Days"

A rainbow sight of promise made - Thomas Hardy "A Procession of Dead Days"

In its queue a train of sparks - Thomas Hardy "A Procession of Dead Days"

Whereon to fashion life's citadel - Thomas Hardy "Rake-Hell Muses"

At moth and gnat and cobweb-time - Thomas Hardy "The Rift"

A mad star crossed the sky - Thomas Hardy "The Second Night"

Wasting in sparks as it streamed - Thomas Hardy "The Second Night"

The sparks of the star in her pupils - Thomas Hardy "The Second Night"

With never a fault in its flow - Thomas Hardy "The Selfsame Song"

My head unturned lest my dream should fade - Thomas Hardy "The Shadow on the Stone"

From twain spheres with hearts distuned - Thomas Hardy "Side by Side"

Diverse their ways from the western door - Thomas Hardy "Side by Side"

Meeting those meandering down - Thomas Hardy "Snow in the Suburb"

Imprinted their dreams on its walls - Thomas Hardy "The Strange House"

When friendly summer calls again - Thomas Hardy "Summer Schemes"

Of what another moon will bring - Thomas Hardy "Summer Schemes"

Not designed to waste the noon - Thomas Hardy "To a Lady Playing and Singing in the Morning"

Let your chambers show no sorrow - Thomas Hardy "To a Well-Named Dwelling"

When the wind raved round the land - Thomas Hardy "Trafalgar"

And our doors were blocked with sand - Thomas Hardy "Trafalgar"

And bedtime brought the storm - Thomas Hardy "Trafalgar"

Were beating up and down the dark - Thomas Hardy "Trafalgar"

Dead Nelson and his half-dead crew - Thomas Hardy "Trafalgar"

And beheld the uprising dark weather - Thomas Hardy "The Two Wives"

A preface without any book - Thomas Hardy "A Two-Years' Idyll"

Those two seasons unsought - Thomas Hardy "A Two-Years' Idyll"

Weather the cuckoo likes - Thomas Hardy "Weathers"

When beeches drip in browns and duns - Thomas Hardy "Weathers"

Nine drops of water bead the jessamine - Thomas Hardy "A Wet August"

Gilt over by the light I bore - Thomas Hardy "A Wet August"

Haunt there and drink the wormwood cup - Thomas Hardy "Where Three Roads Joined"

Put on youth in her look and air - Thomas Hardy "A Wife Comes Back"

That throned you from all else human - Thomas Hardy "Without, Not Within Her"

Under the breath of the winnowing-fan - Thomas Hardy "Without, Not Within Her"

Unchilled by damps of doubt - Thomas Hardy "A Woman's Trust"

With cloven logs to keep alight - Thomas Hardy "The Wood Fire"

Call off your eyes from care - Thomas Hardy "A Young Man's Exhortation"

By some determined deftness - Thomas Hardy "A Young Man's Exhortation"

Exalt and crown the hour - Thomas Hardy "A Young Man's Exhortation"

Limitless recruits from Fancy's pack - Thomas Hardy "A Young Man's Exhortation"


Poet's Wikipedia page.


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Cherry blossoms wedded to the soil's palm - Luther Hughes "[Like the Japanese cherry blossoms wedded to the soil's palm]"

The yellow-black dance of the tiger - Luther Hughes "[Like the Japanese cherry blossoms wedded to the soil's palm]"

Or the echoes that follow after - Luther Hughes "[Like the Japanese cherry blossoms wedded to the soil's palm]"

Fire hitched to the air we breathe - Luther Hughes "[Like the Japanese cherry blossoms wedded to the soil's palm]"

The chuckle of ash sneaking into our lungs - Luther Hughes "[Like the Japanese cherry blossoms wedded to the soil's palm]"

The way your eyes elope - Luther Hughes "[Like the Japanese cherry blossoms wedded to the soil's palm]"

Married to the asylum of pine and bark - Luther Hughes "[Like the Japanese cherry blossoms wedded to the soil's palm]"

The season of fresh lavender - Luther Hughes "[Like the Japanese cherry blossoms wedded to the soil's palm]"

The abysmal cycle of lists - Luther Hughes "[Like the Japanese cherry blossoms wedded to the soil's palm]"

Enlists a fresh haunting - Luther Hughes "My Mother, My Mother"

The classic duty of breath - Luther Hughes "When Struck by Night"


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The leaves are dancing with Death - F.W. Harvey "Autumn in Prison"

Cutting the sky in pattern - F.W. Harvey "Autumn in Prison"

And lifted as with wine - F.W. Harvey "Autumn in Prison"

When fate bereaves life of old joys - F.W. Harvey "The Bond"

Like a precious metal in his fist - F.W. Harvey "The Bugler"

Our various divinity and sin - F.W. Harvey "The Bugler"

Like pipes of battle calling - F.W. Harvey "The Bugler"

Trumpeting men through beauty - F.W. Harvey "The Bugler"

Wines of mirth and friendship - F.W. Harvey "A Christmas Wish"

With the wind your warden - F.W. Harvey "Cloud Messengers"

Your rainy gems in sunlight - F.W. Harvey "Cloud Messengers"

Through tears of memory - F.W. Harvey "Cloud Messengers"

No secret would I plunder - F.W. Harvey "A Common Petition"

However gold the weather - F.W. Harvey "Delights"

So sweet and bitter fancy - F.W. Harvey "English Flowers in a Foreign Garden"

Glowing rose and pensive pansy - F.W. Harvey "English Flowers in a Foreign Garden"

A blade beat from molten memory - F.W. Harvey "English Flowers in a Foreign Garden"

To some strange law surrrendering - F.W. Harvey "Form (A Study)"

All the strange romance of living - F.W. Harvey "Form (A Study)"

Tiny spark of mortal fire - F.W. Harvey "Gloucestershire Men"

Glory is a golden snake around Life's tree - F.W. Harvey "The Golden Snake"

Shall break in the blast of Eternity - F.W. Harvey "The Golden Snake"

Employ no sorrowful thing - F.W. Harvey "Happy Singing"

Laughter of singing thrushes - F.W. Harvey "Happy Singing"

Ripe to be harvested for bitter need - F.W. Harvey "Harvest Home"

The haunted heart that turns - F.W. Harvey "Identity"

April was in your making - F.W. Harvey "June"

When Summer closes her pageantry - F.W. Harvey "June"

Kindled by hands of treachery - F.W. Harvey "Kossovo Day"

And tortured trumpets crying - F.W. Harvey "Kossovo Day"

Robed in moonlight's ancient gold - F.W. Harvey "Lassington"

Their old grey gods of Pain - F.W. Harvey "Lassington"

With passions of skies - F.W. Harvey "'Local Fatalities Are Reported'"

Were made wise beneath the twisted thorn - F.W. Harvey "'Local Fatalities Are Reported'"

Letting Life's cider out - F.W. Harvey "Martha Basin on Marriage"

Saw white Helen on the walls of Troy - F.W. Harvey "The Moon"

The strange seas that bore him - F.W. Harvey "The Moon"

In a brown wild loveliness - F.W. Harvey "On Over Bridge at Evening"

Sweet as the dusty roses - F.W. Harvey "On Over Bridge at Evening"

The speech of my forgotten soul - F.W. Harvey "Out of the City"

Varying as flying hornet's sunshine-smitten wing - F.W. Harvey "A Philosophy"

Its roses turned to holly - F.W. Harvey "The Philosopher Visits the Night Club"

Like a cinder fading black at last - F.W. Harvey "Prisoners"

Clouds standing over hills of dream - F.W. Harvey "Since I Have Loved"

A country by my own heart walled - F.W. Harvey "Since I Have Loved"

A cell of brown and bloody earth - F.W. Harvey "The Sleepers"

Sleep, the balm of sorrow - F.W. Harvey "The Sleepers"

Brave thrushes did complete - F.W. Harvey "Song"

The borrowed Coin of Life - F.W. Harvey "Sonnet (to One Killed in Action)"

Your gift upon the highest altar - F.W. Harvey "Sonnet (to One Killed in Action)"

Have reached the end of my desire - F.W. Harvey "Sonnet I (from Farewell)"

Pray devil's thunder may fall - F.W. Harvey "Sonnet II (from Farewell)"

His insolent envy of sweet death - F.W. Harvey "Sonnet II (from Farewell)"

That envious shadowy old king - F.W. Harvey "Sonnet III (from Farewell)"

The blowing buds of lovely mirth - F.W. Harvey "Sonnet III (from Farewell)"

Ringed round with golden weather - F.W. Harvey "The Stranger"

And timbers black with flame - F.W. Harvey "The Stranger"

Flame and the noise of doom - F.W. Harvey "The Stranger"

Every pattern lust can weave - F.W. Harvey "The Stranger"

Let angels carelessly with robins sing - F.W. Harvey "That I May Be Given Fellowship of Angels and a Happy Heart"

The thin blasphemous gravity of wicked men - F.W. Harvey "That I May Be Given Fellowship of Angels and a Happy Heart"

The lonely hollows in the hills - F.W. Harvey "That I May Be Taught the Gesture of Heaven"

Bright silver upon hard morning - F.W. Harvey "That I May Be Taught the Gesture of Heaven"

To glimmer in a rare bright cup - F.W. Harvey "Timmy Taylor and the Rats"

The pain which threshes joy - F.W. Harvey "To the Devil on His Appalling Decadence"

Deeds we wrought in carelessness - F.W. Harvey "What We Think Of"

Dreams we broke in folly - F.W. Harvey "What We Think Of"

The passing breath of flowers bright - F.W. Harvey "The Wind's Grief"


Poet's Wikipedia page.


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Where the cold sea-maids rise to sun - Oliver Wendell Holmes "The Chambered Nautilus"

In webs of living gauze - Oliver Wendell Holmes "The Chambered Nautilus"

Child of the wandering sea - Oliver Wendell Holmes "The Chambered Nautilus"

Than ever Triton blew from wreathed horn - Oliver Wendell Holmes "The Chambered Nautilus"

Through the deep caves of thought - Oliver Wendell Holmes "The Chambered Nautilus"

Full hot and high the sea would boil - Oliver Wendell Holmes "The Comet"

Snuffy old drone from the German hive - Oliver Wendell Holmes "The Deacon's Masterpiece: Or the Wonderful 'One-Hoss-Shay'"

A sea over a pent volcano - Oliver Wendell Holmes "Daily Trials"

Whose arts have caged some devil - Oliver Wendell Holmes "Daily Trials"

Could Memory's hand restore - Oliver Wendell Holmes "Departed Days"

Gaze not upon his shield of jet - Oliver Wendell Holmes "The Dilemma"

By all that thrills the beating heart - Oliver Wendell Holmes "The Dilemma"

Look not beneath his azure veil - Oliver Wendell Holmes "The Dilemma"

Buttoned it with stars - Oliver Wendell Holmes "Evening"

Quivering on their silken threads - Oliver Wendell Holmes "Evening"

The skirt of night's descending robe - Oliver Wendell Holmes "Evening"

And give her to the god of storms - Oliver Wendell Holmes "Old Ironsides"

Knaves are busier fools - Oliver Wendell Holmes "A Rhymed Lesson" (selections)

One constant element in luck - Oliver Wendell Holmes "A Rhymed Lesson" (selections)

Stick on conversation's burrs - Oliver Wendell Holmes "A Rhymed Lesson" (selections)

A knot of spinster Katydids - Oliver Wendell Holmes "To an Insect"

The promise still outruns the deed - Oliver Wendell Holmes "To My Readers"

Their battlefields' thunder and flame - Oliver Wendell Holmes "Union and Liberty"

Who inherit their fame - Oliver Wendell Holmes "Union and Liberty"

Sprinkled with starry light - Oliver Wendell Holmes "Union and Liberty"

The wide beams of thy full constellation - Oliver Wendell Holmes "Union and Liberty"

Cloud that would darken a star - Oliver Wendell Holmes "Union and Liberty"

While through the sounding sky - Oliver Wendell Holmes "Union and Liberty"

By madness and treachery blighted - Oliver Wendell Holmes "Union and Liberty"

We count the broken lyres - Oliver Wendell Holmes "The Voiceless"

What endless melodies were poured - Oliver Wendell Holmes "The Voiceless"


Poet's Wikipedia page.


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With branching antlers of the chase - W.H.C.H. "Death of Rob Roy" (The Knickerbocker v.10:1, July 1837)

A word unwelcome to his ears - W.H.C.H. "Death of Rob Roy" (The Knickerbocker v.10:1, July 1837)

Stirred the hoarded hate of years - W.H.C.H. "Death of Rob Roy" (The Knickerbocker v.10:1, July 1837)

Array me in the spoils I took - W.H.C.H. "Death of Rob Roy" (The Knickerbocker v.10:1, July 1837)

Hounds scenting out the retreat of the stag - W.H.C.H. "Death of Rob Roy" (The Knickerbocker v.10:1, July 1837)

While voices of millions are shouting aloud - William H.C. Hosmer "Erin Waking" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]

While Perfidy sharpened the dart - William H.C. Hosmer "Erin Waking" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]

Vultures have crimsoned their beaks in thy heart - William H.C. Hosmer "Erin Waking" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]

Hot winds from the waste of despair - William H.C. Hosmer "Erin Waking" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]

That cannot march on with a faltering stride - William H.C. Hosmer "Erin Waking" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]

In return for a shadowed and comfortless past - William H.C. Hosmer "Erin Waking" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]

Whose tide to a black-crested viper gave birth - William H.C. Hosmer "Erin Waking" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]

Though driven for refuge to cavern and den - William H.C. Hosmer "Erin Waking" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]

Venturing all on the hazardous cast - William H.C. Hosmer "Erin Waking" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]

Will prove an amulet to guard - William H.C. Hosmer "Impromptu: Written on Receiving a Rose-Bud from a Lady"

Golden sunshine's nursing power - William H.C. Hosmer "Impromptu: Written on Receiving a Rose-Bud from a Lady"

Through rose-wreathed halls of fantasy - William H.C. Hosmer "Impromptu: Written on Receiving a Rose-Bud from a Lady"

Who haunts a land without a sun - William H.C. Hosmer "Impromptu: Written on Receiving a Rose-Bud from a Lady"

In vain would morning dawn - W.H.C. Hosmer "The Might of Song"

Launching his thoughts like arrows - W.H.C. Hosmer "The Might of Song"

Worthless weeds upon the shore of Time - W.H.C. Hosmer "The Might of Song"

When tyrants tread the hill-top - W.H.C. Hosmer "The Might of Song"

Hiss like Medusa's vipers in the breast - W.H.C. Hosmer "The Might of Song"

The witchcraft of harmonic sound - W.H.C. Hosmer "The Might of Song"

Ask the fox and raven - W.H.C. Hosmer "The Might of Song"

Consign an empire to the grave - W.H.C. Hosmer "The Might of Song"

Unfold their lettered treasures - William H.C. Hosmer "My Study"

Closed our war with Time - William H.C. Hosmer "My Study"

The hushed belfry of the heart - William H.C. Hosmer "My Study"

Rings with a numbered chime - William H.C. Hosmer "My Study"

When the warring voice of the storm is heard - William H.C. Hosmer "Requiem" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIV no.2, Feb. 1849]

And unchain the silvery feet of waves - William H.C. Hosmer "Requiem" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIV no.2, Feb. 1849]

A wilder wail is uttered by the midnight gale - William H.C. Hosmer "Requiem" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIV no.2, Feb. 1849]

The hallowed wells of Learning - William H.C. Hosmer "Song [The hallowed wells of Learning]" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]

No stain of deep and Stygian dye - William H.C. Hosmer "Song [The hallowed wells of Learning]" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]

Though Error for an hour hold - William H.C. Hosmer "Song [The hallowed wells of Learning]" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]

Reign beneath a darkened sky - William H.C. Hosmer "Song [The hallowed wells of Learning]" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]

With serpent folds entwining round the stem - William H.C. Hosmer "Song [The hallowed wells of Learning]" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]

Feel the frost of cold neglect - William H.C. Hosmer "Song [The hallowed wells of Learning]" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]

And Truth walk down the sounding aisles - William H.C. Hosmer "Song [The hallowed wells of Learning]" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]

Through hearts that are unconquered still - Wm. H.C. Hosmer "A Voice for Poland" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.4, Oct. 1848]

The knightly deeds of other years eclipse - Wm. H.C. Hosmer "A Voice for Poland" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.4, Oct. 1848]

Contrasted with that darker doom - Wm. H.C. Hosmer "A Voice for Poland" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.4, Oct. 1848]

The meed of high and shadowless renown - Wm. H.C. Hosmer "A Voice for Poland" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.4, Oct. 1848]

Make the savage Czar in terror clutch his crown - Wm. H.C. Hosmer "A Voice for Poland" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.4, Oct. 1848]

Pour defiance at his palace-door - Wm. H.C. Hosmer "A Voice for Poland" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.4, Oct. 1848]


Poet's Wikipedia page.


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Kissing all the bees - Florence Hoatson "Blossoms"

Holding cups of honey - Florence Hoatson "Blossoms"

A ring of fairies upon the biggest plate - Florence Hoatson "Fairies in the Cupboard"

Steals across a thousand floors - Florence Hoatson "The Friend of Santa Claus"

One part water and three parts smoke - Florence Hoatson "Jerry"

For the fairies to slip through - Florence Hoatson "The Little White Gate"

And lure the foals away - Florence Hoatson "The Pixies on the Moor"

Red earth and a hawthorne hedge - Florence Hoatson "Summer Picture"


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Every year hath its winter - Ella Higginson "When the Birds Go North Again"

When the birds go north again - Ella Higginson "When the Birds Go North Again"

When new leaves swell in the forest - Ella Higginson "When the Birds Go North Again"

Grass springs green on the plain - Ella Higginson "When the Birds Go North Again"

The alder's veins turn crimson - Ella Higginson "When the Birds Go North Again"


Poet's Wikipedia page.


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Make a paper wolf for me - Joan Houlihan "H. Antecessor"

A study of cut mark and fracture - Joan Houlihan "H. Antecessor"

Shadow built the walls - Joan Houllihan "RAG SMELL. FIRE"

Holed and cribbed with light - Joan Houllihan "RAG SMELL. FIRE"

Where newborn pieties spark and strike - Joan Houlihan "Turn of a Year"

We had married ourselves to a trance - Joan Houlihan "What Does Your Seeing Want?"


Poet's page at poets.org.


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Yet sings, knowing he hath wings - Victor Hugo "Be Like the Bird"

Pilloried to their thrones of shame - Victor Hugo "Feuilles d'Automne" transl. by Roger Casement

Filled with intoxication of delight - Victor Hugo "The Genesis of Butterflies" transl. by Andrew Lang

Set my lips to your full cup - Victor Hugo "More Strong Than Time" transl. by Andrew Lang

Plucked from the roses of your days - Victor Hugo "More Strong Than Time" transl. by Andrew Lang


Poet's Wikipedia page.


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Fall winds strip the ash tree - Hsieh Hui-Lien "Fulling Cloth for Clothes" transl. by Burton Watson

Dusk enfolds the empty curtains - Hsieh Hui-Lien "Fulling Cloth for Clothes" transl. by Burton Watson

To make a robe you'll wear ten thousand miles - Hsieh Hui-Lien "Fulling Cloth for Clothes" transl. by Burton Watson

Offers fair omen for a rich year - Hsieh Hui-Lien "Prose Poem on the Snow" transl. by Burton Watson

Highways like ribbons of alabaster - Hsieh Hui-Lien "Prose Poem on the Snow" transl. by Burton Watson

The silver pheasant bereft of hue - Hsieh Hui-Lien "Prose Poem on the Snow" transl. by Burton Watson

This show of tangled profusion - Hsieh Hui-Lien "Prose Poem on the Snow" transl. by Burton Watson

The wonder of dazzle and charge - Hsieh Hui-Lien "Prose Poem on the Snow" transl. by Burton Watson


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And in the stream's rough current - Robert Hogg "I Love the Merry Moonlight"

Twist a rope of beams of the sun - Robert Hogg "Oh, What Are the Chains of Love Made Of?"

Wind up the wandering breeze - Robert Hogg "Oh, What Are the Chains of Love Made Of?"

Sunbeam, breeze, and drop of dew - Robert Hogg "Oh, What Are the Chains of Love Made Of?"

The winds and waves for guides - Robert Hogg "A Wish Burst"

Mark the gulfs of the yawning deep - Robert Hogg "A Wish Burst"

Calm and peaceful sleeps the tide - Robert Hogg "A Wish Burst"

Rest on the parching land - Robert Hogg "A Wish Burst"


There are several poets of this name. Their dates are mutually exclusive. I'm reasonably certain these poems all belong to the same Robert Hogg. At least, allpoetry.com credits them all to the same poet.


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