| "At the round earth's imagined corners, blow" |
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| "d**h, be not proud" (Holy Sonnet X) |
Divine Meditations
|
| "Deign at my hands..." |
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|
| "If faithful souls be alike glorified" |
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|
| "O might those sighs and tears return again" |
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|
| "Oh my black soul! now art thou summoned" |
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|
| "Oh, to vex me, contraries meet in one" |
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|
| "Spit in my face you Jews, and pierce my side" |
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|
| "Thou hast made me, and shall thy work decay?" |
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|
| "What if this present were the world's last night?" |
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|
| "Why are we by all creatures waited on?" |
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|
| A Burnt Ship |
Poems of John Donne
|
| A dialogue between Sir Henry Wootton and Mr. Donne |
Poems of John Donne
|
| A Fever |
Poems of John Donne
|
| A Hymn To Christ At The Author's Last Going Into Germany |
Poems of John Donne
|
| A Hymn To God The Father |
Poems of John Donne
|
| A Jet Ring Sent |
Poems of John Donne
|
| A Lame Beggar |
Poems of John Donne
|
| A Lecture Upon The Shadow |
Poems of John Donne
|
| A Licentious Person |
Poems of John Donne
|
| A Litany |
Poems of John Donne
|
| A Nocturnal Upon St. Lucy's Day, Being The Shortest Day |
Poems of John Donne
|
| A Self Accuser |
Poems of John Donne
|
| A Sheaf Of Snakes Used Heretofore To Be My Seal, The Crest Of Our Poor Family |
Poems of John Donne
|
| A Valediction Of Weeping |
Poems of John Donne
|
| A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning |
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| A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning (Jordan Smith) |
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|
| Air and Angels |
Songs and Sonnets
|
| An Anatomy Of The World... |
Poems of John Donne
|
| An Obscure Writer |
Poems of John Donne
|
| Annunciation |
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|
| Antiquary |
Poems of John Donne
|
| As due by many titles I resigne (Holy Sonnet 2) |
Divine Meditations
|
| Ascension |
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| At the round earth's imagin'd corners |
Poems of John Donne
|
| At the round earth's imagined corners (Holy Sonnet 7) |
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|
| Aucun homme n'est une île |
Devotions upon Emergent Occasions (1624)
|
| Batter my heart, three-person'd God (Holy Sonnet XIV) |
Divine Meditations
|
| Batter my heart, three-personed God (Jordan Smith) |
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| Break of Day |
Poems of John Donne
|
| Community |
Poems of John Donne
|
| Confined Love |
Poems of John Donne
|
| Crucifying |
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| Daybreak |
Poems of John Donne
|
| Disinherited |
Poems of John Donne
|
| Eclogue |
Poems of John Donne
|
| Elegy 17: On His Mistress |
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| Elegy 17: Variety |
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| Elegy I: Jealousy |
Poems of John Donne
|
| Elegy II: The Anagram |
Poems of John Donne
|
| Elegy III: Change |
Poems of John Donne
|
| Elegy IV: The Perfume |
Poems of John Donne
|
| Elegy IX: The Autumnal |
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|
| Elegy V: His Picture |
Poems of John Donne
|
| Elegy VI |
Poems of John Donne
|
| Elegy VII |
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|
| Elegy VIII: The Comparison |
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| Elegy X: The Dream |
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| Elegy XII |
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| Elegy XIII: His Parting From Her |
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| Elegy XIV: Julia |
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| Elegy XIX: To His Mistress Going to Bed |
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| Elegy XVI: The Expostulation |
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| Elegy XVII: On His Mistress |
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|
| Elegy XVIII: Love's Progress |
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|
| Elegy XX (Alternate) Love's War |
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|
| Elegy XX: To His Mistress Going to Bed |
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|
| Elegy:The End of Funeral Elegies |
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|
| ElegyXI: The Bracelet |
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|
| Epithalamion Made At Lincoln's Inn |
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|
| Fall of a Wall |
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|
| Farewell to Love |
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|
| Father, part of his double interest (Holy Sonnet XVI) |
Divine Meditations
|
| For whom the Bell Tolls |
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|
| From ‘The Cross' |
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|
| Good Morrow |
Songs and Sonnets
|
| Good-Friday, 1613, Riding Westward |
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|
| Hero and Leander |
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|
| Holy Sonnet 10 |
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|
| Holy Sonnet 17 |
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|
| Holy Sonnet IX: If Poisonous Minerals, And If That Tree |
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|
| Holy Sonnet VII: At the Round Earth's |
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|
| HOLY SONNETS: Since she whom I lov'd hath paid her last debt |
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|
| Hym To God, My God In My Sickness |
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|
| I am a little world made cunningly (Holy Sonnet V) |
Divine Meditations
|
| Klockius |
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|
| La Corona |
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|
| Love's Alchemy |
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|
| Love's Deity |
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|
| Love's Diet |
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|
| Love's Exchange |
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|
| Love's Growth |
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|
| Love's Infiniteness |
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|
| Love's Usury |
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|
| Meditation II |
Devotions upon Emergent Occasions (1624)
|
| Meditation IV |
Devotions upon Emergent Occasions (1624)
|
| Meditation XI |
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|
| Meditation XVII |
Devotions upon Emergent Occasions (1624)
|
| Meditation XVII ("No man is an island") |
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|
| MEET THE INTERNATIONAL POWERFUL SPELL CASTER FROM AFRICA,MARRIAGE,RELATIONSHIP ,BELGIUM,USA,CAMEROON+!! |
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| Mercurius Gallo-Belgicus |
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|
| Nativity |
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|
| Negative Love |
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|
| Niobe |
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|
| O might those sighes and teares returne againe (Holy Sonnet III) |
Divine Meditations
|
| Ode |
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|
| Oh my blacke Soule! now thou art summoned (Holy Sonnet IV) |
Divine Meditations
|
| Oh, to vex me, contraryes meet in one (Holy Sonnet XIX) |
Divine Meditations
|
| On the Lady Elizabeth, and Count Palatine Being Married on St. Valentine's Day |
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|
| On The Progress Of The Soul... |
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|
| Phryne |
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|
| Pyramus and Thisbe |
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|
| Raderus |
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|
| Ralphius |
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|
| Ressurection |
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| Resurrection |
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|
| Resurrection, imperfect |
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|
| Sappho to Philaenis |
The Complete Poetry of John Donne
|
| Satire I |
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|
| Satire II |
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|
| Satire III |
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|
| Satire IV |
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|
| Satire V |
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|
| Self-Love |
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|
| Show me deare Christ, thy Spouse, so bright and clear. (Holy Sonnet XVIII) |
Divine Meditations
|
| Since she whom I lov'd hath payd her last debt (Holy Sonnet XVII) |
Divine Meditations
|
| Song |
The Complete Poetry of John Donne
|
| Song// sweetest love... |
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|
| Sonnet Cycle For Lady Magdalen |
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|
| Spit in my face you Jewes, and pierce my side (Holy Sonnet XI) |
Divine Meditations
|
| Sweetest Love, I do not go |
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|
| Temple |
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|
| That Time and Absence proves Rather helps than hurts to loves |
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|
| The Anniversary |
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|
| The Annunciation And Pa**ion |
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|
| The Apparition |
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|
| The Bait (British Lit Assigment) |
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|
| The Baite |
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|
| The Blossom |
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|
| The Broken Heart |
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|
| The Calm |
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|
| The Canonization |
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|
| The Computation |
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|
| The Curse |
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|
| The Damp |
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|
| The Dissolution |
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|
| The Ecstasy |
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|
| The Expiration |
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|
| The Flea |
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|
| The Flea (british lit) datner-garza |
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|
| The Funerall |
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|
| The Harbinger |
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|
| The Indifferent |
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|
| The Legacy |
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|
| The Message |
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|
| The Paradox |
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|
| The Primrose |
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|
| The Prohibition |
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|
| The Relic |
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|
| The Sun Rising |
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|
| The Token |
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|
| The Triple Fool |
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|
| The Undertaking |
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|
| The Will |
-
|
| This is my playes last scene, here heavens appoint (Holy Sonnet VI) |
Divine Meditations
|
| Thou hast made me, and shall thy worke decay? (Holy Sonnet I) |
Divine Meditations
|
| To George Herbert, |
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|
| To His Mistress Going to Bed |
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|
| TO MR. I. P. |
-
|
| To Mr. Rowland Woodward |
-
|
| TO Mr. Samuel Brooke |
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|
| To Mr. Tilman After He Had Taken Orders |
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|
| TO Mr.I.L. |
-
|
| TO Mr.T.W. |
-
|
| To Sir Henry Goodyere |
-
|
| To Sir Henry Wotton At His Going Amba**ador To Venice |
-
|
| To Sir Henry Wotton II |
-
|
| To The Countess Of Bedford I |
-
|
| To The Countess Of Bedford II |
-
|
| To The Earl Of Doncaster |
-
|
| To The Lady Magdalen Herbert, Of St. Mary Magdalen |
-
|
| To The Praise Of The Dead And The Anatomy |
-
|
| Translated Out Of Gazaeus, |
-
|
| Twickenham Garden |
-
|
| Upon The Translation Of The Psalms By Sir Philip Sidney And The Countess Of Pembroke, His Sister |
-
|
| Valediction to his Book |
-
|
| What if this present were the worlds last night? (Holy Sonnet VIII) |
Divine Meditations
|
| Why are wee by all creatures waited on? (Holy Sonnet XII) |
Divine Meditations
|
| Wilt thou love God, as he thee? then digest (Holy Sonnet XV) |
Divine Meditations
|
| Witchcraft By A Picture |
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|
| Woman's Constancy |
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|