Arthur Hugh Clough
Arthur Hugh Clough1819–186119th century Arthur Hugh Clough was an English poet, an educationalist, and the devoted assistant to Florence Nightingale. He was the brother of suffragist Anne Clough and father of Blanche Athena Clough, who both became principals of Newnham College, Cambridge. Clough's notable poetic works include The Bothie of Toper-na-fuosich (1848), a long narrative poem, and "Say Not the Struggle Naught Availeth" (1855), a short poem of 16 lines.
Poems
150 poems- 14 PLUTARCH'S LIVES.68 lines
- 16 PLUTARCH'S LIVES.66 lines
- 18 Plutarch’s Lives43 lines
- 1903 Macmillan edition5 lines
- 2 Plutarch’s Lives88 lines
- 20 Plutarch’s Lives43 lines
- 22 Plutarch’s Lives43 lines
- 24 Plutarch’s Lives43 lines
- 26 Plutarch’s Lives43 lines
- 28 Plutarch’s Lives43 lines
- 36 Plutarch’s Lives43 lines
- 4 Plutarch’s Lives43 lines
- 40 Plutarch’s Lives43 lines
- 42 Plutarch’s Lives43 lines
- 44 Plutarch’s Lives43 lines
- 46 Plutarch’s Lives43 lines
- 50 Plutarch’s Lives43 lines
- 52 Plutarch’s Lives43 lines
- 54 Plutarch’s Lives43 lines
- 56 Plutarch’s Lives43 lines
- 6 Plutarch’s Lives88 lines
- 60 Plutarch’s Lives44 lines
- 8 Plutarch’s Lives43 lines
- A FRAGMENT.15 lines
- A London Idyll51 lines
- Across the Sea Along the Shore28 lines
- All Is Well13 lines
- ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH20 lines
- Bethesda38 lines
- Blessed are they that have not seen!32 lines
- CANTO I.11 lines
- Canto II.12 lines
- Canto III.16 lines
- Canto IV.10 lines
- Canto V.8 lines
- CATO THE YOUNGER38 lines
- Cato the Younger : 3787 lines
- Cato the Younger ‘ 5 .44 lines
- Cato the Younger | 4544 lines
- Cato the Younger $7 |89 lines
- Cato the Younger 3 543 lines
- Cato the Younger 3187 lines
- Cato the Younger 3389 lines
- Cato the Younger 3943 lines
- Cato the Younger 4145 lines
- Cato the Younger 4345 lines
- Cato the Younger 4789 lines
- Cato the Younger 4943 lines
- Cato the Younger 5143 lines
- Cato the Younger 5343 lines
- Cato the Younger 5943 lines
- Cato the Younger 6187 lines
- Cato the Younger 6343 lines
- Cold Comfort26 lines
- Dipsychus Continued118 lines
- Duty44 lines
- EPILOGUE TO DIPSYCHUS.87 lines
- ESSAYS IN CLASSICAL METRES.4 lines
- Fragments of the Mystery of the Fall140 lines
- Hid Plutarch’s Lives46 lines
- High and Low24 lines
- Hope evermore and believe!26 lines
- I. Claude to Eustace,--from Florence.8 lines
- I. CLAUDE TO EUSTACE.23 lines
- I. Mary Trevellyn to Miss Roper,--on the way to Florence.24 lines
- I. Mary Trevellyn, at Lucerne, to Miss Roper, at Florence.11 lines
- II14 lines
- II41 lines
- II19 lines
- II. Claude to Eustace,--from Bellaggio.8 lines
- II. Claude to Eustace,--from Rome.20 lines
- II. Claude to Eustace.19 lines
- III14 lines
- III. Claude to Eustace,--from Bellaggio.12 lines
- III. Claude to Eustace.19 lines
- III. GEORGINA TREVELLYN TO LOUISA ——.14 lines
- III. Mary Trevellyn to Miss Roper.--at Lucca Baths.15 lines
- In a London Square16 lines
- In the Great Metropolis20 lines
- Ite Domum Saturæ, venit Hesperus46 lines
- IV32 lines
- IV. Claude to Eustace,--from Bellaggio.6 lines
- IV. CLAUDE TO EUSTACE.33 lines
- IX. CLAUDE TO EUSTACE.25 lines
- MISCELLANEOUS POEMS.21 lines
- NAPLES, 1849.149 lines
- Natura naturans88 lines
- New York:13 lines
- Ny We10 lines
- PHOCION32 lines
- Phocion _ 543 lines
- Phocion | 1543 lines
- Phocion 1342 lines
- Phocion 1743 lines
- Phocion 2143 lines
- Phocion 2343 lines
- Phocion 2544 lines
- Phocion 2713 lines
- Phocion 2931 lines
- Phocion 988 lines
- Phocion Ig43 lines
- Phocion II43 lines
- POEMS ON RELIGIOUS AND BIBLICAL SUBJECTS.28 lines
- PROLOGUE TO DIPSYCHUS.16 lines
- SCENE I.140 lines
- SCENE II.89 lines
- SCENE III.95 lines
- SCENE IV.106 lines
- SCENE IX.53 lines
- SCENE V.9 lines
- SCENE VI.49 lines
- SCENE VII.25 lines
- SCENE VIII.12 lines
- SCENE X.13 lines
- SCENE XI.58 lines
- SCENE XII.29 lines
- SCENE XIII.97 lines
- See ree10 lines
- Sehnsucht73 lines
- SOMETIME FELLOW OF ORIEL COLLEGE6 lines
- Sore eae31 lines
- The Latest Decalogue20 lines
- The Questioning Spirit51 lines
- There Is No God, the Wicked Sayeth32 lines
- Through a Glass Darkly32 lines
- V. Claude to Eustace,--from Bellaggio.9 lines
- V. CLAUDE TO EUSTACE.55 lines
- V. Mary Trevellyn to Miss Roper,--from Florence.9 lines
- Ve er30 lines
- VI9 lines
- VI107 lines
- VI. CLAUDE TO EUSTACE.44 lines
- VI. Mary Trevellyn, from Lucerne, to Miss Roper, at Florence.30 lines
- VII13 lines
- VII. CLAUDE TO EUSTACE.56 lines
- VII. Mary Trevellyn to Miss Roper.12 lines
- VIII15 lines
- VIII. CLAUDE TO EUSTACE.43 lines
- VIII. Georgina Trevellyn to Louisa ----.20 lines
- What? Is the hour already for the Court?29 lines
- X. Claude to Eustace,-from Rome.20 lines
- X. CLAUDE TO EUSTACE.16 lines
- XI. Claude to Eustace.29 lines
- XI. Mary Trevellyn to Miss Roper.20 lines
- XII. Claude to Eustace.26 lines
- XII. Mary Trevellyn to Miss Roper.31 lines
- XIII. Claude to Eustace.37 lines
- XIII. Georgina Trevellyn to Louisa ----.34 lines
- XIV. Claude to Eustace.27 lines
- XV. Georgina Trevellyn to Louisa ----.33 lines
