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- Ulysses now left the haven, and took the rough track up through by Homer
- Ulysses slept in the cloister upon an undressed bullock’s hide, on by Homer
- Ulysses was left in the cloister, pondering on the means whereby by Homer
- Un cachot. Une femme à genoux, en prière. by Paul Verlaine
- Un gazetier philanthrope me dit que la solitude est mauvaise pour by Charles Baudelaire
- Un pavillon à claires-voies by Paul Verlaine
- Un pitre caché dans ma forêt by James A. Emanuel
- Un singe en veste de brocart by Paul Verlaine
- Un vieux faune de terre cuite by Paul Verlaine
- Unable are the Loved to die by Emily Dickinson
- Unarmed she goeth; yet her hands by George Parsons Lathrop
- Uncertain lease—develops lustre by Emily Dickinson
- Uncle John, he makes me tired; by Paul Laurence Dunbar
- Unconscious on thy lap I lay, by John Freeman
- Under a burning tropic sun, by James Weldon Johnson
- Under a lawn, than skies more clear, by Robert Herrick
- Under a splintered mast, by Marianne Moore
- Under a spreading chestnut-tree by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
- Under a stagnant sky, by William Ernest Henley
- Under a sultry, yellow sky, by Elizabeth Stoddard
- Under his helmet, up against his pack, by Wilfred Owen
- Under Mirabeau Bridge runs the Seine by Guillaume Apollinaire
- Under my trees of green and gold by John L. Stoddard
- Under my wall by John L. Stoddard
- Under my window-ledge the waters race, by William Butler Yeats
- Under our curtain of fire, by Robert Haven Schauffler
- Under the arch of Life, where love and death, by Dante Gabriel Rossetti
- Under the Great Comedian’s tomb the crowd. by William Butler Yeats
- Under the harvest moon, by Carl Sandburg
- Under the high unclouded sun by John Hay
- Under the Light, yet under, by Emily Dickinson
- Under the linden branches by John Freeman
- Under the orchard trees daffodils danced by Amy Lowell
- Under the rose-tree’s dancing shade by Oscar Wilde
- Under the rose-tree’s dancing shade by Oscar Wilde
- Under the shadow of a hawthorn brake, by E. (Edith) Nesbit
- Under the vine I saw one morning-glory by Hilda Conkling
- Under the wide and starry sky by Robert Louis Stevenson
- Under this loop of honeysuckle, by Robert Graves
- Under what withering leprous light by G. K. Chesterton
- Under yonder beech-tree single on the green-sward, by George Meredith
- Underneath a tree at noontide by Archibald Lampman
- Underneath the autumn sky, by Paul Laurence Dunbar
- Underneath the growing grass, by Christina Rossetti
- Underneath this myrtle shade, by Abraham Cowley
- Underneath this sable herse by William Browne
- Undertakers, hearse drivers, grave diggers, by Carl Sandburg
- Undoubtedly he will relent, and turn by John Milton
- Undue Significance a starving man attaches by Emily Dickinson
- Undulant rustlings, by Lola Ridge
- Undying love to buy by William Butler Yeats
- Une aube affaiblie by Paul Verlaine
- Une dentelle s’abolit by Stéphane Mallarmé
- Une fois, une seule, aimable et douce femme, by Charles Baudelaire
- Une négresse par le démon secouée by Stéphane Mallarmé
- Unfathomable Sea! whose waves are years, by Percy Bysshe Shelley
- Unfelt unheard, unseen, by John Keats
- Unfulfilled to Observation— by Emily Dickinson
- Unhappy White! while life was in its spring, by Henry Kirk White
- Unheard in summer’s flaring ray, by John Keble
- Unit, like Death, for Whom? by Emily Dickinson
- Unless I learn to ask no help by Sara Teasdale
- Unlike are we, unlike, O princely Heart! by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
- Unmindful of the roses, by Christina Rossetti
- Unmoved by all the claims our times avow, by Herman Melville
- Unpenitent, I grieve to state, by Robert Service
- Unseemly are the open eyes by Dorothy Parker
- Unspoken words may thrill the heart, by Madge Morris Wagner
- Unthrifty loveliness, why dost thou spend by William Shakespeare
- Until the Desert knows by Emily Dickinson
- Unto a broken heart by Emily Dickinson
- Unto his housemaid spoke the Laird: by Robert Service
- Unto like Story—Trouble has enticed me— by Emily Dickinson
- Unto my Books—so good to turn— by Emily Dickinson
- Unto seventy years and seven, by Dorothy Parker
- Unto the house of prayer my spirit yearns, by Emma Lazarus
- Unto the Whole—how add? by Emily Dickinson
- unto thee i by E. E. Cummings
- Unto whose use the pregnant suns are poised, by Rudyard Kipling
- Unwatch’d, the garden bough shall sway, by Alfred Lord Tennyson
- Unworthy of her Breast by Emily Dickinson
- Unyielding in the pride of his defiance, by Edwin Arlington Robinson
- Up across windy wastes and up by G. K. Chesterton
- Up and down in my garden fair, by John L. Stoddard
- Up at his attic sill the South wind came by Alan Seeger
- Up cam the tide wi’ a burst and a whush, by George MacDonald
- Up from the evil day by Robert Service
- Up from the South come the birds that were banished, by Ella Wheeler Wilcox
- Up from the street and the crowds that went, by Edwin Arlington Robinson
- Up high black walls, up sombre terraces, by Conrad Aiken
- Up in my garret bleak and bare by Robert Service
- Up in the attic where I slept by Eugene Field
- Up into the sky I stare; by Robert Service
- Up Life’s Hill with my my little Bundle by Emily Dickinson
- Up on the housetop reindeer pause, by Benjamin R. Hamby
- Up the airy mountain, by William Allingham
- Up the old hill to the old house again by Edwin Arlington Robinson
- Up this green woodland-ride let’s softly rove, by John Clare
- Up yonder in Buena Park by Eugene Field
- Up! up! my Friend, and quit your books; by William Wordsworth
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