John Clare Sun Poems
- 51. The Shepherds Calendar - February - A Thaw
- 52. The Shepherds Calendar - April
- 53. Decay
- 54. From
- 55. A Vision
- 56. Graves Of Infants
- 57. The Winter's Come
- 58. The Maid Of Ocram, Or, Lord Gregory
- 59. The Cellar Door
- 60. To John Milton
- 61. The Wood-cutter's Night Song
- 62. The Shepherds Calendar - November
- 63. All Nature Has A Feeling
- 64. Nature's Hymn To The Deity
- 65. June
- 66. The Vanities Of Life
- 67. Dewdrops
- 68. The Shepherds Calendar - July
- 69. Market Day
- 70. The Old Year
- 71. The Shepherds Calendar - March
- 72. The Shepherd's Calendar - June
- 73. The Shepherds Calendar - May
- 74. Wild Bees
- 75. Thou Flower Of Summer
- 76. The Shepherds Calendar - July (2nd Version)
- 77. To Napoleon
- 78. An Invite, To Eternity
- 79. Nobody Cometh To Woo
- 80. December
- 81. Approaching Night
- 82. What Is Life?
- 83. The Skylark
- 84. The Mores
- 85. Summer Images
- 86. Remembrances
- 87. November
- 88. May
- 89. Evening Primrose
- 90. Autumn
Top 10 most used topics by John Clare
Sweet 167 Love 123 I Love You 123 Away 111 Wild 102 Grass 99 Long 95 Summer 95 Green 91 Sun 90Write your comment about John Clare
rodney lipan : john clare you are one of the best writer of any nature of love poem
Ioana Virginia Bolba: John Clare is a wonderful poet. At first sight, one may think he is superficial, but going into details, we discover an intuitive poet, writing only about what he himself felt (not thought), and offering an interesting life lesson, an example of how we should enjoy small things and, most of all, against that rude running after money and not understanding what life actually means.