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James Williams
1851 - 1911
Poetry Listing
See James Williams'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 James Williams below poetry list
| Poem Title | First Lines | Period | # Lines | # Reads | | 1: A Ballade of Lost Law | This England is gone staring mad, | | 28 | 14 | | 2: A Garden Party in the Temple | On hospitable thoughts intent | | 56 | 16 | | 3: A Greek Libel | Neobule, yesternight | | 46 | 12 | | 4: A Vision of Legal Shadows | A case at chambers left for my opinion | | 76 | 19 | | 5: Bologna | I go from colonnade to colonnade | | 14 | 9 | | 6: Cases - Ex Parte Jones | Oh for the wily infant who married the widow and made | | 8 | 12 | | 7: Cases - Commonwealth V. Marzynski | Against the statutes of the Old Bay State | | 14 | 10 | | 8: Cases - Dashwood V. Jermyn | Captain Dashwood, who had been | | 70 | 20 | | 9: Cases - Finlay V. Chirney | When love-sick man descends to folly | | 8 | 18 | | 10: Cases - Hampden V. Walsh | Five hundred pounds as stake I'll lay," | | 15 | 13 | | 11: Cases - Mylward V. Weldon | Gainst Weldon Mylward files a bill, | | 25 | 16 | | 12: Cases - Pollard V. Photographic Company | Shall I take your photograph, my pretty maid? | | 14 | 13 | | 13: Cases - Willis V. The Bishop Of Oxford | Aid me, Muses! my endeavour is to sing a woful song, | | 34 | 17 | | 14: Com[oe]dia Juris | Est omne jus forense quasi com[oe]dia; | | 7 | 11 | | 15: Her Letter in Chambers | I sat by the fire and watched it blaze, | | 32 | 15 | | 16: How We Found Our Verdict | We sat in the jury-box, twelve were we all, | | 40 | 16 | | 17: Justice | Ah! justice is a virtue bepraised and full of worth, | | 8 | 18 | | 18: Justinian at Windermere | We took a hundredweight of books | | 84 | 11 | | 19: Law and Poetry | In days of old did law and rime | | 48 | 21 | | 20: Lawn Tennis in the Temple Gardens | Not in contempt but to our sport inclined | | 12 | 17 | | 21: Le Temps Passé | Those brave old days when King Abuse did reign | | 15 | 14 | | 22: Roman Law | I am a "coach" in Roman law by fate, | | 32 | 14 | | 23: Somewhere | Somewhere in a distant star, | | 48 | 16 | | 24: The Court Of Reason | A thousand doubts and pleadings in a day | | 14 | 20 | | 25: The Minneapolis Case | Kind reader, tarry here, nor miss | | 60 | 17 | | 26: The Poet And The Advocate | Glory and gain thus mixed distract the thought, | | 28 | 24 | | 27: The Spinning-House of the Future | Without my dinner here I lie, | | 44 | 14 | | 28: The Squire's Daughter | We crawled about the nursery | | 56 | 12 | | 29: To Rome | Tell me, proud Rome, why dost these edicts read, | | 14 | 15 | | 30: Translations - Greek Anthology | Woe to the house whose mistress was a slave! | | 126 | 13 |
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