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Nathaniel Parker Willis
January 20, 1806 - January 20, 1867
Poetry Listing
See Nathaniel Parker Willis's Story and Essay Listing Here.
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 Nathaniel Parker Willis below poetry list
| | Poem Title | First Lines | Period | # Lines | # Reads | | 1: | A Child's First Impression Of A Star. | She had been told that God made all the stars | | 25 | 296 | | 2: | A Portrait. | She was not very beautiful, if it be beauty's test | | 24 | 273 | | 3: | A Portrait. | She's beautiful! Her raven curls | | 42 | 257 | | 4: | Andre's Request. | It is not the fear of death | | 24 | 272 | | 5: | April. | I have found violets. April hath come on, | | 36 | 359 | | 6: | City Lyrics | Come out, love, the night is enchanting! | | 32 | 1064 | | 7: | Contemplation. | They are all up - the innumerable stars - | | 64 | 265 | | 8: | Dedication Hymn. | The perfect world by Adam trod, | | 16 | 226 | | 9: | Discrimination. | I used to love a radiant girl - | | 24 | 252 | | 10: | Hero. | Gentle and modest Hero! I can see | | 32 | 258 | | 11: | Idleness. | The rain is playing its soft pleasant tune | | 82 | 288 | | 12: | Isabel. | They said that I was strange. I could not bear | | 40 | 240 | | 13: | January 1, 1828 | Fleetly hath passed the year. The seasons came | | 27 | 1019 | | 14: | January 1, 1828. | Fleetly hath past the year. The seasons came | | 27 | 252 | | 15: | January 1, 1829. | Winter is come again. The sweet south west | | 39 | 265 | | 16: | Lassitude. | I will throw by my book. The weariness | | 29 | 251 | | 17: | Little Florence Gray | I was in Greece. It was the hour of noon, | | 64 | 867 | | 18: | Love In A Cottage | They may talk of love in a cottage | | 32 | 934 | | 19: | May. | Oh the merry May has pleasant hours, | | 32 | 362 | | 20: | Mere Accident. | It was a shady nook that I had found | | 36 | 321 | | 21: | On A Picture Of Children Playing. By Fisher. | I love to look on a scene like this, | | 32 | 263 | | 22: | On Seeing A Beautiful Boy At Play. | Down the green slope he bounded. Raven curls | | 51 | 301 | | 23: | On Seeing Through A Distant Window A Belle Completing Her Toilet For A Ball. | Tis well - 'tis well - that clustering shade | | 42 | 249 | | 24: | On The Death Of Edward Payson, D.D. | A servant of the living God is dead! | | 40 | 267 | | 25: | On The Death Of Miss Fanny V. Apthorp. | Tis difficult to feel that she is dead. | | 26 | 245 | | 26: | Parrhasius | There stood an unsold captive in the mart, | | 172 | 900 | | 27: | Psyche, Before The Tribunal Of Venus. | Lift up thine eyes, sweet Psyche! What is she | | 43 | 279 | | 28: | Roaring Brook: - Cheshire, Con. | It was a mountain stream that with the leap | | 33 | 293 | | 29: | Scene In Gethsemane. | The moon was shining yet. The Orient's brow, | | 50 | 249 | | 30: | Sketch Of A Schoolfellow. | He sat by me in school. His face is now | | 93 | 242 | | 31: | Song. | Sleep, like a lover, woo thee, | | 32 | 289 | | 32: | Sonnet. | Storm had been on the hills. The day had worn | | 14 | 274 | | 33: | Sonnet. | Elegance floats about thee like a dress, | | 14 | 279 | | 34: | Sonnet. | Beautiful robin! with thy feathers red | | 14 | 250 | | 35: | Sonnet. | Exquisite Laura! with thy pouting lip, | | 14 | 232 | | 36: | Sonnet. | There was a beautiful spirit in her air, | | 14 | 259 | | 37: | Sonnet. Winter. | The frozen ground looks gray. 'Twill shut the snow | | 14 | 269 | | 38: | Starlight. | The evening star will twinkle presently. | | 26 | 321 | | 39: | The Annoyer | Love knoweth every form of air, | | 40 | 940 | | 40: | The Annoyer. | Love knoweth every form of air, | | 40 | 372 | | 41: | The Baptism. | She stood up in the meekness of a heart | | 21 | 238 | | 42: | The Belfry Pigeon | On the cross-beam under the Old South bell | | 50 | 899 | | 43: | The Declaration | Twas late, and the gay company was gone, | | 24 | 953 | | 44: | The Declaration. | Twas late, and the gay company was gone, | | 24 | 302 | | 45: | The Earl's Minstrel. | I had a passion when I was a child | | 93 | 259 | | 46: | The Serenade. | Innocent dreams be thine! The silver night | | 23 | 262 | | 47: | The Shunamite.[A] | It was a sultry day of summer time. | | 112 | 285 | | 48: | The Solitary. | Alone! alone! How drear it is | | 40 | 272 | | 49: | The Table Of Emerald. | That 'Emerald Green of the Pyramid' - | | 64 | 267 | | 50: | The Torn Hat | There’s something in a noble boy, | | 50 | 919 | | 51: | The Tri-Portrait. | Twas a rich night in June. The air was all | | 84 | 361 | | 52: | To A Belle. | All that thou art, I thrillingly | | 48 | 236 | | 53: | To A Bride. | Pass thou on! for the vow is said | | 36 | 242 | | 54: | To A Sleeping Boy. | Sleep on! Sleep on! beguiling | | 44 | 305 | | 55: | To Giulia Grisi | When the rose is brightest, | | 9 | 934 | | 56: | To Helen In A Huff | Nay, lady, one frown is enough | | 18 | 924 | | 57: | Twenty-Two. | I'm twenty-two - I'm twenty-two - | | 56 | 256 | | 58: | Unseen Spirits | The shadows lay along Broadway, | | 30 | 911 |
About: Nathaniel Parker Willis (January 20, 1806 - January 20, 1867) was an American author and editor who had worked with notable American writers including Harriet Jacobs and Edgar Allan Poe.
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