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Edward Woodley Bowling
1837 - 1907
Poetry Listing
Please Note: This list is not comprehensive, but is an ongoing work of the love of poetry.
Within this area you will be able to read, and give your thoughts on the poetry listed.
Please, if you find an error, let me know.
Read More About Edward Woodley Bowling below poetry list
| | Poem Title | First Lines | Period | # Lines | # Reads | | 1: | A Ballad. | I cannot rest o' the night, Mother, | | 24 | 110 | | 2: | A Curate's Complaint. | Where are they all departed, | | 40 | 87 | | 3: | A May Term Memory. | She wore a sweet pink bonnet, | 1866 | 56 | 90 | | 4: | A Romance In Real (Academic) Life. | By the waters of Cam, as the shades were descending, | 1871 | 56 | 101 | | 5: | A Tragedy Of The 19th Century. | It was a young Examiner, scarce thirty were his years, | 1870 | 56 | 81 | | 6: | A Valentine. | O how shall I write a love-ditty | | 56 | 94 | | 7: | A Vision. | As hard at work I trimmed the midnight lamp, | 1860 | 36 | 80 | | 8: | An April Squall. | Breathless is the deep blue sky; | | 30 | 84 | | 9: | Athletes And Aesthesis. | It was an Undergraduate, his years were scarce nineteen; | 1882 | 68 | 1 | | 10: | Bedfordshire Ballad. - I. | Two Bedfordshire maidens in one village dwelt; | | 72 | 59 | | 11: | Bedfordshire Ballad. - II. | Tom Smith was the son of a Bedfordshire man; | | 92 | 72 | | 12: | Bedfordshire Ballad. - III. | Two twins were once born in a Bedfordshire home; | | 84 | 67 | | 13: | Bedfordshire Ballad. - IV. | I'm a Bedfordshire Chap, and Bill Stumps is my name, | | 108 | 105 | | 14: | Clio Fatidica. | Tell me, Muse, what colour floateth round the River's ancient head: | 1874 | 94 | 60 | | 15: | Father Camus. | Smoking lately in my "Funny," as I'm wont, beneath the bank, | | 77 | 81 | | 16: | Granta Victrix. | Let penny-a-liners columns pour | | 88 | 65 | | 17: | In Camum. (Latin) | Ridicula nuper cymba, sicut meus est mos, | | 77 | 222 | | 18: | In Memoriam G. A. P. | He has gone to his grave in the strength of youth, | | 32 | 76 | | 19: | Julia. An Ode. | When the Cambridge flower-show ended, | | 44 | 64 | | 20: | Lines By A Cambridge Ancient Mariner - Addressed To His University. | Wish ye, sons of Alma Mater, | | 56 | 56 | | 21: | Meditations Of A Classical Man On A Mathematical Paper During A Late Fellowship Examination. | Woe, woe is me! for whither can I fly? | 1865 | 72 | 72 | | 22: | Nunc Te Bacche Canam. | Tis done! Henceforth nor joy nor woe | | 72 | 69 | | 23: | Simplex Munditiis Or, What Should A Maiden Be? | What should a maiden be? Pure as the rill, | | 48 | 61 | | 24: | Solitude In September. | Sweet Solitude where dost thou linger? | | 64 | 70 | | 25: | Tempora Mutantur. | There once was a time when I revelled in rhyme, with Valentines deluged my cousins, | 1875 | 48 | 72 | | 26: | The Alpine Club Man. | We who know not the charms of a glass below Zero, | | 60 | 61 | | 27: | The Battle Of The Pons Trium Trojanorum: A lay sung in the Temple of Minerva Girtanensis. | Aemilia Girtonensis, | 1881 | 168 | 54 | | 28: | The Beaconsfield Alphabet. | A's my new policy called Annexation; | 1879 | 26 | 74 | | 29: | The Climber's Dream. | I made an ascent of the Eiger | | 72 | 66 | | 30: | The Coming Boat Race. | Attend, all ye who wish to see the names | | 66 | 67 | | 31: | The Gladstone Alphabet. | A's Aristides, or Gladstone the Good; | | 26 | 47 | | 32: | The Great Boat-Race. | Come, list to me, who wish to hear the glories of our crew, | 1864 | 72 | 60 | | 33: | The Lady Margaret 5th Boat | Eight B.A.'s stout from town came out M.A. degrees to take, | 1863 | 64 | 62 | | 34: | The May Term. | I wish that the May Term were over, | 1871 | 72 | 62 | | 35: | The Modern Climber. | Year after year, as Summer suns come round, | 1876 | 118 | 65 | | 36: | The Senior Fellow. | When the shades of eve descending | | 48 | 55 | | 37: | The Sorrows Of Father Cam. | One night, as I silently wandered | 1865 | 96 | 66 | | 38: | Turgidus Alpinus. | My miserable countrymen, whose wont is once a-year | | 80 | 55 |
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