xref: /original-bsd/games/quiz/datfiles/poetry (revision 5f5c18da)
1Come live with me and be my love:\
2And we will all the pleasures prove:\
3{The }Passionate Shepherd{ to his Love}:\
4{Christopher }Marlowe
5Shall I compare thee to a summer's day{?}:\
6Thou art more lovely and more temperate:\
7Sonnet 18:\
8{William }Shakespeare
9Fine knacks for ladies, cheap, choice, brave, and new!:\
10Good pennyworths{! }but money cannot move:\
11Fine Knacks{ for Ladies}:\
12{John }Dowland
13My mind to me a kingdom is:\
14Such perfect joy therein I find:\
15My Mind to Me a Kingdom Is:\
16{Sir }{Edward }Dyer
17Underneath this stone doth lie:\
18As much beauty as could die:\
19Epitaph on Elizabeth{,} {L. H.}:\
20{Ben }Jonson
21Death be not proud, though some have called thee:\
22Mighty and dreadful{,} for thou art not so:\
23{Holy }Sonnet{s}{ 10}:\
24{John }Donne
25Gather ye rose-buds while ye may:\
26Old Time is still a-flying:\
27To the Virgins{,} {To Make Much of Time}:\
28{Robert }Herrick
29Why so pale and wan, fond lover?:\
30Prithee{,} why so pale{?}:\
31Song:\
32{Sir }{John }Suckling
33Stone walls do not a prison make:\
34Nor iron bars a cage:\
35To Althea{,} From Prison:\
36{Richard }Lovelace
37I could not love thee (Dear) so much,:\
38Lov['|e]d I not hono{u}r more:\
39To Lucasta{, Going to the Wars}:\
40{Richard }Lovelace
41I saw Eternity the other night:\
42Like a great ring of pure and endless light:\
43{The }World:\
44{Henry }Vaughan
45Come and trip it as you go,:\
46On the light fantastic toe:\
47L'Allegro:\
48{John }Milton
49When I consider how my light is spent:\
50Ere half my days in this dark world and wide:\
51On His Blindness|When I Consider:\
52{John }Milton
53The grave's a fine and private place{,}:\
54But none{,} I think{,} do there embrace{.}:\
55To His Coy Mistress:\
56{Andrew }Marvel
57Great wits are sure to madness near allied:\
58And thin partitions do their bounds divide:\
59Absalom and Achitophel|Absalom:\
60{John }Dryden
61A little learning is a dangerous thing{;}:\
62Drink deep{,} or taste not the Pierian spring{.}:\
63{An }Essay on Criticism|{On }Criticism:\
64{Alexander }Pope
65The curfew tolls the knell of parting day{,}:\
66The lowing herd wind slowly o'er the lea:\
67Elegy{ Written in a Country Church{-| }Yard:\
68{Thomas }Gray
69The best laid schemes o' mice an' men gang aft a-gley{,}:\
70An{'|d} lea{'|v}e us nought but grief an{'|d} pain for promised joy{.}:\
71To a Mouse:\
72{Robert }Burns
73Tiger! tiger! burning bright!:\
74In the forests of the night:\
75{The }Tiger:\
76{William }Blake
77My heart leaps up when I behold:\
78A rainbow in the sky:\
79My Heart Leaps Up:\
80{William }Wordsworth
81The world is too much with us; late and soon{,}:\
82Getting and spending{,} we lay waste our powers:\
83{The }World is Too Much With Us|Sonnet:\
84{William }Wordsworth
85A sadder and a wiser man{,}:\
86He rose the morrow morn:\
87{The }{Rime of }{The }Ancient Mariner:\
88{Samuel }{Taylor }Coleridge
89In Xanadu did Kubla Khan:\
90A stately pleasure{-| }dome decree:\
91Kubla Khan:\
92{Samuel }{Taylor }Coleridge
93She walks in beauty, like the night:\
94Of cloudless climes and starry skies:\
95She Walks in Beauty:\
96{George Gordon, }{Lord }Byron
97I want a hero- an uncommon want{,}:\
98When every year and month sends forth a new one:\
99Don Juan{ Canto I}:\
100{George Gordon, }{Lord }Byron
101A thing of beauty is a joy forever.:\
102Its loveliness increases{;|.} {it will never/Pass into nothingness}:\
103Endymion{ Book I}:\
104{John }Keats
105Matched with an aged wife, I mete and dole:\
106Unequal laws unto a savage race:\
107Ulysses:\
108{Alfred{,} }{Lord }Tennyson
109He will hold thee, when his passion shall have spent its novel force{,}:\
110Something better than his dog{,} a little dearer than his horse:\
111Locksley Hall:\
112{Alfred{,} }{Lord }Tennyson
113'Tis better to have loved and lost:\
114Than never to have loved at all:\
115{In }Memoriam{ A. H. H.}:\
116{Alfred{,} }{Lord }Tennyson
117Kind hearts are more than coronets,:\
118And simple faith than Norman blood{.}:\
119Lady Clara Vere de Vere:\
120{Alfred{,} }{Lord }Tennyson
121Oh, to be in England:\
122Now that April's there:\
123Home{-| }Thoughts{,} From Abroad:\
124{Robert }Browning
125Ah, but a man's reach should exceed his grasp{,}:\
126Or what's a heaven for{?}:\
127Andrea Del Sarto:\
128{Robert }Browning
129How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.:\
130I love thee to the depth and breadth and height:\
131Sonnet{s} {From the Portuguese}{ 43}:\
132{Elizabeth }{Barrett }Browning
133A Book of Verses underneath the Bough{,}:\
134A Jug of Wine, a Loaf of Bread{-|,| }and Thou:\
135{The }Rubaiyat{ of Omar Khayyam}{ 12}:\
136{Edward }Fitzgerald
137The Moving Finger writes; and, having writ,:\
138Moves on{\:|,|.} nor all your Piety nor Wit:\
139{The }Rubaiyat{ of Omar Khayyam}{ 71}:\
140{Edward }Fitzgerald
141Ah Love! could you and I with Him conspire:\
142To grasp this sorry Scheme of Things entire:\
143{The }Rubaiyat{ of Omar Khayyam}{ 99}:\
144{Edward }Fitzgerald
145Remember me when I am gone away,:\
146Gone far away into the silent land:\
147Remember:\
148{Christina }Rossetti
149Home is the sailor, home from the sea,:\
150And the hunter home from the hill:\
151Requiem:\
152{Robert }{Louis }Stevenson
153I fled Him, down the nights and down the days;:\
154I fled Him, down the arches of the years:\
155{The }Hound of Heaven:\
156{Francis }Thompson
157So 'ere's to you, Fuzzy-Wuzzy, at your 'ome in the Soudan;:\
158You're a {pore|poor} benighted {'|h}eathen but a first class fightin{'|g} man:\
159Fuzzy{-| }Wuzzy:\
160{Rudyard }Kipling
161Morns abed and daylight slumber:\
162Were not meant for man alive:\
163Reveille:\
164{A{.}{ }E{.}{ }}Houseman
165I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree,:\
166And a small cabin build there{,} of clay and wattles made:\
167{The }{Lake Isle of }Innisfree:\
168{William }{Butler }Yeats
169I must go down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky,:\
170And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by:\
171Sea{-| }Fever:\
172{John }Masefield
173April is the cruelest month, breeding:\
174Lilacs out of the dead land:\
175{The }Waste{ }Land:\
176{T{.}{ }S{.}{ }}Eliot
177Now as I was young and easy under the apple boughs:\
178About the little house and happy as the grass was green:\
179Fern Hill:\
180{Dylan }Thomas
181Of Man's first disobedience, and the fruit:\
182Of that forbidden tree{,} whose mortal taste:\
183Paradise Lost:\
184{John }Milton
185