Toggle navigation
Blacklight
Bookmarks (
0
)
History
Login
Search in
All Fields
Related People
Poem Title In Miscellany
search for
Search
Advanced Search
Blacklight
Toggle facets
Limit your search
Content type
Poem
1,354
Related People
Not attributed
705
John Dryden
94
David Garrick
92
William Shakespeare
47
John Fletcher
37
Francis Beaumont
35
Colley Cibber
34
Thomas Shadwell
31
Susanna Centlivre
30
George Colman
26
more
Related People
»
Poem Theme
Theatre
[remove]
1,354
Poetry / literature / writing
152
Death
49
Sex / relations between the sexes
45
Critics / criticism
43
Women / the female character
40
Politics
39
Virtue / vice
38
The monarchy (heads of state)
33
Patriotism / glory of the British nation
30
more
Poem Theme
»
Poem Genre / Form
Couplet
1,181
Prologue
555
Epilogue
415
Extract / snippet from longer work
63
Epigram
62
Drama
46
Blank verse
36
Satire
35
Address
30
Quatrain abab
30
more
Poem Genre / Form
»
Search Constraints
Start Over
You searched for:
Poem Theme
Theatre
Remove constraint Poem Theme: Theatre
« Previous
|
1,161
-
1,170
of
1,354
|
Next »
Number of results to display per page
10 per page
10
per page
20
per page
50
per page
100
per page
View results as:
List
Gallery
Search Results
1161.
When Corydon to play-house door
First Line:
When Corydon to play-house door
Last Line:
I know not which to speak of first
DMI number:
7214
1162.
When all that we thought great and good was gone
First Line:
When all that we thought great and good was gone
Last Line:
That such bright hopes we have and such a king
Author:
John Banks (Absolute)
DMI number:
35892
1163.
When Athens all the Grecian state did guide
First Line:
When Athens all the Grecian state did guide
Last Line:
The first play buried since the woollen act
Author:
Nathaniel Lee (Absolute) & John Dryden (Absolute)
DMI number:
35778
1164.
What Timon does old age begin to approach
First Line:
What Timon does old age begin to approach
Last Line:
To drink beer glasses and hear hectors roar
Author:
John Wilmot (Confident)
DMI number:
2216
1165.
What various arts to pleasure you we try
First Line:
What various arts to pleasure you we try
Last Line:
To Steele's immortal Fame your Plaudit pay
DMI number:
17777
1166.
What various revolutions in our art
First Line:
What various revolutions in our art
Last Line:
To own the child a spaniard has begot
Author:
Samuel Foote (Absolute)
DMI number:
39016
1167.
What various thoughts a poet's breast divide
First Line:
What various thoughts a poet's breast divide
Last Line:
From men of courage and from men of sense
Author:
Joseph Trapp (Absolute)
DMI number:
39586
1168.
What various transformations we remark
First Line:
What various transformations we remark
Last Line:
We hope to find in you their stage asylum
DMI number:
38456
1169.
What we must all come to what come to what
First Line:
What we must all come to what come to what
Last Line:
And every day becomes a day of cares
Author:
Arthur Murphy (Absolute)
DMI number:
26995
1170.
What whims what fancies are in these our days
First Line:
What whims what fancies are in these our days
Last Line:
We fly for refuge then to you ye fair
DMI number:
38389
« Previous
Next »
1
2
…
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
…
135
136