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Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney
1801-1881
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 Eliza Paul Kirkbride Gurney below poetry list
| | Poem Title | First Lines | Period | # Lines | # Reads | | 1: | All Alone. | Alas! they have left me all alone | 1875 | 24 | 512 | | 2: | And The Laughter Of The Young And Gay Was Far Too Glad And Loud. | Hush, hush! my thoughts are resting on a changeless world of bliss; | 1828 | 32 | 498 | | 3: | At A Time Of Deep Proving. | Poor throbbing heart! the battle wave of life | 1850 | 18 | 442 | | 4: | Consolation In Bereavement. | Tis not when we look on the dreamless dead, | 1828 | 28 | 505 | | 5: | Ephesians 4:32. | The accuser of the brethren! | 1845 | 52 | 441 | | 6: | Farewell. | Fare thee well, we've no wish to detain thee, | 1840 | 40 | 463 | | 7: | Heaven And Earth. | Turn from the grave, turn from the grave, | 1828 | 40 | 449 | | 8: | In A Season Of Bereavement. | Bright summer comes, all bloom and flowers, | 1828 | 60 | 441 | | 9: | In This Book | In this book I have scribbled some innocent rhymes, | | 4 | 488 | | 10: | J. H. On The Death Of His Wife. | Oh, when I found that Death had set | 1826 | 30 | 498 | | 11: | Kindness. | Kindness soothes the bitter anguish, | 1811 | 16 | 458 | | 12: | Life's Stages. | To the heart of trusting childhood life is all a gilded way, | 1829 | 76 | 460 | | 13: | Lines Suggested By The Conversation Of A Brother And Sister In The Chamber Of A Deceased And Highly Valued Parent. | My father! Oh! I cannot dwell | 1828 | 40 | 473 | | 14: | Lines Suggested By The Presence Of The English Friends, J. And H. C. Backhouse, In America 1831. | They have left their homes and kindred, they are in the strangers' land, | 1831 | 48 | 464 | | 15: | Oh, For A Home Of Rest! | Oh, for a home of rest! | 1829 | 20 | 451 | | 16: | On A Packet Of Letters. | To-day" Oh! not to-day shall sound | 1828 | 36 | 514 | | 17: | On Hearing It Said "That It Was Unreasonable To Suppose Man Should Believe What He Could Not Comprehend." | Thou great First Cause," Creator, King, and Lord, | 1827 | 30 | 458 | | 18: | On Leaving Pine Cottage. | When our bosoms were lightest, | 1822 | 42 | 396 | | 19: | On Reading "Gibbon's Rome." | And this man was "an infidel!" Ah, no! | 1820 | 34 | 430 | | 20: | On The Death Of Elizabeth Fry And Sir T. F. Buxton. | Ye have met, ye have met, disencumbered of pain, | 1845 | 24 | 423 | | 21: | On The Death Of My Uncle, Joseph Paul. | Fare thee well, fare thee well, for thy journey is o'er, | 1828 | 16 | 412 | | 22: | Recognition In Heaven. | Oh! say, shall those ties, now so sacred and dear, | 1824 | 20 | 458 | | 23: | Reply Of The Messenger Bird. | Thou art come from the spirits' land, thou bird! | | 40 | 411 | | 24: | Shepherd Of Israel. | Shepherd of Israel! o'er Thy fold | 1830 | 28 | 395 | | 25: | Spring. | Oh! the world looks glad, for the spring has smiled, | 1829 | 20 | 468 | | 26: | The Alpine Horn. | When rainbow hues of closing day | 1826 | 40 | 441 | | 27: | The Evening Star. | Hail, pensile gem, that thus can softly gild | 1824 | 24 | 476 | | 28: | The Gathering Round The Oak Tree. | Why should "the little remnant mourn?" | 1826 | 40 | 455 | | 29: | The Last Day. | The God of glory thundereth! who hath not heard His voice, | 1845 | 44 | 417 | | 30: | The Last Look Is Taken | The last look is taken, the last word is said | 1837 | 36 | 444 | | 31: | The Morn And Eve Of Life. | So soft Time's plumage in life's budding spring, | 1824 | 32 | 445 | | 32: | The Plagues Of Egypt; Or, God's Providence Magnified In The Care Of His Chosen. | When darkness over Egypt reigned, | 1836 | 96 | 438 | | 33: | The Reunion Of Sir T. F. Buxton And Elizabeth Fry. | They have met, they have met! now their pinions unfurl | 1845 | 20 | 484 | | 34: | Time. | Oh! Time, as it fleets, dooms a joy to decay, | 1822 | 22 | 414 | | 35: | To A Friend. | Ah! be not sad, though adverse winds may blow, | 1837 | 36 | 455 | | 36: | When The Eagle Finds | When the eagle finds her brood is fledged, | 1850 | 42 | 426 | | 37: | William Forster. | Ah! know ye not in Israel | 1854 | 88 | 417 | | 38: | Woodburn. | Oh, the brow that has never been shaded by care | 1830 | 44 | 451 | | 39: | Written After A Visit To The Institution For The Deaf And Dumb. | I thought those youthful hearts were bleak and bare, | 1822 | 24 | 396 | | 40: | Written At The Delaware Water Gap. | Great and omnipotent that Power must be, | 1818 | 24 | 421 | | 41: | Written In A Friend's Album. | Trust not Hope's illusive ray, | 1821 | 24 | 374 | | 42: | Written In An Album. | Judge we of coming, by the by-past, years, | 1818 | 36 | 404 | | 43: | Written In L. J.'s Album. | Gay visions for thee 'neath hope's pencil have glowed, | 1825 | 34 | 478 |
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