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Edmund Spenser (1552-1599)
Edmund Spenser


The Rating of Edmund Spenser's Poems

  1. Amoretti 62. The weary yeare his race now having run
  2. Amoretti 37. What guyle is this, that those her golden tresses
  3. The Shepheardes Calender. Ægloga 1. Ianuarye
  4. Amoretti 19. The merry cuckow, messenger of Spring
  5. Amoretti 30. My Love is lyke to yse, and I to fyre
  6. The Shepheardes Calender. Ægloga 2. Februarie
  7. Amoretti 1. Happy, ye leaves! when as those lilly hands
  8. The Shepheardes Calender. Ægloga 12. December
  9. The Shepheardes Calender. Ægloga 3. March
  10. The Shepheardes Calender. Ægloga 6. Iune
  11. The Shepheardes Calender. Ægloga 8. August
  12. Amoretti 54. Of this worlds theatre in which we stay
  13. The Shepheardes Calender. Ægloga 10. October
  14. The Shepheardes Calender. Ægloga 4. Aprill
  15. The Shepheardes Calender. Ægloga 5. Maye
  16. The Shepheardes Calender. Ægloga 9. September
  17. The Shepheardes Calender. Ægloga 7. Iulye
  18. The Shepheardes Calender. Ægloga 11. Nouember
  19. Amoretti 3. The soverayne beauty which I doo admyre
  20. Amoretti 15. Ye tradefull Merchants, that, with weary toyle
  21. Poem 6. My loue is now awake out of her dreame
  22. Amoretti 40. Mark when she smiles with amiable cheare
  23. Poem 1. YE learned sisters which haue oftentimes
  24. And Is There Care in Heaven, and Is There Love
  25. Amoretti 66. To all those happy blessings which ye have
  26. Amoretti 2. Unquiet thought! whom at the first I bred
  27. Colin Clouts Come Home Againe
  28. Prothalamion
  29. A Hymn in Honour of Beauty
  30. Amoretti 76. Fayre bosome! fraught with vertues richest tresure
  31. So Let Us Love
  32. Amoretti 8. More then most faire, full of the living fire
  33. Mutability
  34. Amoretti 84. The world, that cannot deeme of worthy things
  35. Amoretti 35. My hungry eyes, through greedy covetize
  36. A Ditty
  37. Easter
  38. Epithalamion
  39. Amoretti 6. Be nought dismayd that her unmoved mind
  40. A Hymne of Heavenly Love
  41. Amoretti 72. Oft when my spirit doth spred her bolder winges
  42. Amoretti 7. Fayre eyes! the myrrour of my mazed hart
  43. Astrophel
  44. Amoretti 74. Most happy letters! fram’d by skilfull trade
  45. Amoretti 22. THis holy season, fit to fast and pray
  46. Amoretti 79. Men call you fayre, and you doe credit it
  47. Iambicum Trimetrum
  48. The Visions of Petrarch
  49. Amoretti 58. Weake is th’assurance that weake flesh reposeth
  50. The Tamed Deer
  51. Amoretti 53. The panther, knowing that his spotted hyde
  52. Amoretti 70. Fresh Spring, the herald of loves mighty king
  53. Amoretti 20. In vaine I seeke and sew to her for grace
  54. Virgils Gnat
  55. Ruins of Rome, by Bellay
  56. Amoretti 25. How long shall this lyke-dying lyfe endure
  57. Amoretti 29. See! how the stubborne damzell doth deprave
  58. Amoretti 50. Long languishing in double malady
  59. Amoretti 17. The glorious pourtraict of that angels face
  60. Amoretti 81. Fayre is my Love, when her fayre golden haires
  61. Amoretti 56. Fayre ye be sure, but cruell and unkind
  62. Amoretti 60. They that in course of heavenly spheares are skild
  63. Amoretti 31. Ah! why hath Nature to so hard a hart
  64. Visions of the Worlds Vanitie
  65. Amoretti 48. Innocent paper! whom too cruell hand
  66. Amoretti 38. Arion, when, through tempests cruel wracke
  67. Amoretti 57. Sweet warriour! when shall I have peace with you?
  68. Amoretti 23. Penelope, for her Ulisses sake
  69. Amoretti 27. Faire Proud! now tell me, why should faire be proud
  70. Amoretti 9. Long-while I sought to what I might compare
  71. Amoretti 47. Trust not the treason of those smyling lookes
  72. Amoretti 51. Doe I not see that fayrest ymages
  73. Amoretti 69. The famous warriors of the anticke world
  74. Amoretti 85. Venemous tongue, tipt with vile adders sting
  75. Amoretti 78. Lackyng my Love, I go from place to place
  76. Amoretti 21. Was it the worke of Nature or of Art
  77. Amoretti 42. The love which me so cruelly tormenteth
  78. Amoretti 16. One day as I unwarily did gaze
  79. Amoretti 83. Let not one sparke of filthy lustfull fyre
  80. Amoretti 33. Great wrong I doe, I can it not deny
  81. Amoretti 45. Leave, Lady! in your glasse of cristall clene
  82. Amoretti 64. Comming to kisse her lyps
  83. Amoretti 4. New yeare, forth looking out of Ianus gate
  84. Amoretti 12. One day I sought with her hart-thrilling eies
  85. Amoretti 88. Lyke as the culver on the bared bough
  86. Amoretti 71. I ioy to see how, in your drawen work
  87. Amoretti 36. Tell me, when shall these wearie woes have end
  88. Amoretti 14. Retourne agayne, my forces late dismayd
  89. Amoretti 44. When those renoumed noble peres of Greece
  90. Amoretti 87. Since I have lackt the comfort of that light
  91. Amoretti 52. So oft as homeward I from her depart
  92. Amoretti 67. Lyke as a huntsman, after weary chace
  93. Amoretti 80. After so long a race as I have run
  94. Amoretti 61. The glorious image of the Makers beautie
  95. Amoretti 75. One day I wrote her name upon the strand
  96. Amoretti 24. When I behold that beauties wonderment
  97. Amoretti 10. Unrighteous Lord of love, what law is this

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