| First Line of Poem |
Poem Title |
Author |
Lines |
Views |
| H a! if yo'd nobbut known that lass, |
An Acrostic. |
John Hartley |
14 |
233 |
| Ha monny young folk are langin for th' fourteenth o' February! |
Valentine Day (Prose) |
John Hartley |
5 |
250 |
| Ha weel aw remember that big Christmas puddin, |
That Christmas Puddin. |
John Hartley |
30 |
208 |
| Ha! My dear! I'm back again |
In Bohemia. |
James Whitcomb Riley |
56 |
84 |
| Ha! snow Upon the crags! How slow |
Statio Sexta |
Thomas Edward Brown |
141 |
380 |
| Ha! whare ye gaun, ye crowlin ferlie! |
To A Louse, On Seeing One In A Lady's Bonnet, At Church |
Robert Burns |
48 |
276 |
| Ha, ha, gods and kings; fill high, one and all; |
Invocation |
Herman Melville |
20 |
143 |
| Ha, I am the lord of earth! The noble, |
Royal Prayer. |
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |
6 |
215 |
| Hack and Hew were the sons of God |
Hack And Hew |
Bliss Carman (William) |
36 |
432 |
| Hackney’d in business, wearied at that oar, |
Retirement. |
William Cowper |
808 |
193 |
| Had a birthday yesterday. |
The Birthday Party |
Madison Julius Cawein |
54 |
290 |
| Had a hare-lip - Joney had: |
Joney |
James Whitcomb Riley |
32 |
81 |
| Had but the light which dazzled them afar |
Sonnet XLII. |
Francesco Petrarca (Petrarch) |
14 |
106 |
| Had he and I but met |
The Man He Killed |
Thomas Hardy |
20 |
151 |
| Had I a cave on some wild, distant shore, |
Had I A Cave. |
Robert Burns |
12 |
300 |
| Had I a great ship coming home, |
Our Ship |
George MacDonald |
8 |
137 |
| Had I a man's fair form, then might my sighs |
Sonnet II: To ---- |
John Keats |
14 |
761 |
| Had I a wish--'twere this, that heaven would make |
The Lay Missioner. |
Denis Florence MacCarthy |
90 |
141 |
| Had I an artist's pencil, I might sketch |
In Memoriam. - Madam Hannah Lathrop, |
Lydia Howard Sigourney |
42 |
72 |
| Had I been young I could have claimed to fold thee |
Song of Jasoda |
Laurence Hope (Adela Florence Cory Nicolson) |
52 |
180 |
| Had I believed that Death could set me free |
Sonnet XXIX. |
Francesco Petrarca (Petrarch) |
28 |
90 |
| Had I but earlier known that from the eyes |
In Love's Own Time. |
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni |
14 |
143 |
| Had I but known yesterday, |
Reproach |
D. H. Lawrence (David Herbert Richards) |
26 |
175 |
| Had I but lived a hundred years ago |
At Lulworth Cove A Century Back |
Thomas Hardy |
20 |
250 |
| Had I but plenty of money, money enough and to spare, |
Up At A Villa – Down In The City |
Robert Browning |
64 |
881 |
| Had I e'er thought that to the world so dear |
To Laura In Death. Sonnet XXV. |
Francesco Petrarca (Petrarch) |
28 |
89 |
| Had I God’s leave, how I would alter things! |
Juris Doctor Johannes-Baptista Bottinius |
Robert Browning |
1577 |
498 |
| Had I the choice to tally greatest bards, |
Had I The Choice |
Walt Whitman |
|
683 |
| Had I the gold that some so vainly spend, |
Ballade Of Love's Cloister |
Richard Le Gallienne |
28 |
175 |
| Had I the grace to win the grace |
The Grace Of Grace |
George MacDonald |
16 |
123 |
| Had I the heavens' embroidered cloths, |
He Wishes For The Cloths Of Heaven |
William Butler Yeats |
|
491 |
| Had I the heavens’ embroidered cloths, |
Aedh Wishes For The Cloths Of Heaven |
William Butler Yeats |
8 |
807 |
| Had I the power To Midas given of old |
The Queen's Song |
James Elroy Flecker |
32 |
281 |
| Had I the wyte, had I the wyte, |
Had I The Wyte. |
Robert Burns |
32 |
295 |
| Had I wist, when life was like a warm wind playing |
Had I Wist |
Algernon Charles Swinburne |
11 |
674 |
| Had Policletus seen her, or the rest |
Sonnet LVII. |
Francesco Petrarca (Petrarch) |
28 |
94 |
| Had she come all the way for this, |
The Haystack In The Floods |
William Morris |
166 |
101 |
| Had the fierce ashes of some fiery peak |
St. Telemachus |
Alfred Lord Tennyson |
|
779 |
| Had the gods loved me I had lain |
Exile |
Walter De La Mare |
8 |
18 |
| Had this effulgence disappeared |
Composed Upon An Evening Of Extraordinary Splendour And Beauty |
William Wordsworth |
|
471 |
| Had tuneful Maro seen, and Homer old, |
Sonnet CLIII. |
Francesco Petrarca (Petrarch) |
14 |
110 |
| Had we but met in other days, |
Too Late. |
John Milton Hay |
40 |
213 |
| Had we not met, the brooding woe |
Had We Not Met. |
Freeman Edwin Miller |
15 |
151 |
| Had you lived when a tyrant king |
Analogy. (To D - - L - - .) |
Francis William Lauderdale Adams |
18 |
18 |
| Had you wept; had you but neared me with a frail uncertain ray, |
Had You Wept |
Thomas Hardy |
16 |
227 |
| Hads't thou stayed, I must have fled! |
The Theologian's Tale - The Wayside Inn - Part Second |
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow |
171 |
125 |
| Hadst thou a genius on thy peak, |
Benlomond |
Thomas Campbell |
16 |
613 |
| Hadst thou a ship, in whose vast hold lay stored |
Thy Ship |
Ella Wheeler Wilcox |
29 |
14 |
| Hadst thou a ship, in whose vast hold lay stored |
Thy Ship |
Ella Wheeler Wilcox |
29 |
8 |
| Hadst thou liv'd in days of old, |
To ---- |
John Keats |
68 |
1097 |
|