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’Arif
¶ ¶ (poet; Good Words)
À Beckett, Gilbert
A Correspondent
A Damp Tourist
A Dog
A Lady
A Practical Young Lady
A Private Soldier
A Provincial Aspirant
A Septagenarian
A Volunteer
A. (poet; Macmillan's)
A. B. (illustrator)
A. B. (poet; Blackwood's)
A. B. (translator; Blackwood's)
A. C. (illustrator)
A. C. (poet; Chambers's)
A. C. C. (poet; Good Words)
A. C. M. (poet; Good Words)
A. C. W. (poet; Once a Week)
A. D. (poet; Chambers's)
A. D. (poet; Once a Week)
A. D. (translator; Once a Week)
A. E. C. (poet; Once a Week)
A. E. G. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
A. F. (illustrator)
A. F. F. (poet; Macmillan's)
A. F. T. (poet; Good Words)
A. G. (poet; Chambers's)
A. G. (poet; Macmillan's)
A. G. H. (poet; Once a Week)
A. H. (poet; Chambers’s)
A. H. B. (poet; Good Words)
A. H. J. (poet; Good Words)
A. I. (poet; Chambers’s)
A. J. G. D. (poet; Macmillan’s)
A. J. M. (translator; Chambers’s)
A. K. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
A. K. (poet; Macmillan’s)
A. L. (poet; Chambers’s)
A. L. (poet; Cornhill)
A. L. B. (poet; Cornhill)
A. L. L. (poet; Macmillan’s)
A. M. (poet; Cornhill)
A. M. (poet; Once a Week)
A. M’K. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
A. M’L. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
A. N. (poet; Once a Week)
A. P. (poet; Chambers’s)
A. P. H. (illustrator)
A. R. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
A. S. (poet; Chambers's)
A. W. (illustrator)
A. W. (poet; Chambers's)
A. W. (poet; Keepsake)
A. W. S. (translator; Blackwood’s)
Abbey, Henry
Abdülbâkî, Mahmud (pseudonym: “Bāky”)
Abdy, Maria
Acton, Rose
Adams, Charles Warren
Adams, Henry Gardiner
Adams, Lucy
Adcock, Arthur St. John
Addaeus
Addey, Elizabeth
Addey, M. Louisa
Addis, John
Addleshaw, Percy (pseudonym “Percy Hemingway”)
Adye, S.
Aeschylus
Aesop
Agar-Ellis, George James Welbore
Agathias Scholasticus
Aguilar, Grace
Aïdé, Hamilton
Aikin, John (Dr. Aikin)
Ainslie, Douglas
Ainslie, Hew
Ainsworth, Percy Clough (pseudonym “Percy Gallard”)
Ainsworth, William Harrison
Aird, Marion Paul
Aird, Thomas
Airey
Airston, Eubulus
Aitken, Andrew
Aitken, David Russell
Aitken, James Alfred
Aitken, John
Aitken, William
Alamanni, Antonio
Alcmæon (pseudonym)
Alderson, E. Maude
Aldis, James Arthur (pseudonym “Adriel Vere”)
Aldis, Thomas
Alexander, Anton (pseudonym Anastasius Grün)
Alexander, Cecil Frances
Alexander, D.
Alexander, Eleanor
Alexander, M. M. (pseudonym “Myra”)
Alexander, Patrick Proctor
Alexander, Sidney Arthur
Alexander, W.
Alexander, W. L.
Alexander, William
Alford, Charles
Alford, Henry
Algernon Charles Swinburne (allonym)
Alighieri, Dante
Alison, Richard
Allan, Robert
Allen, Robin
Allingham, Helen
Allingham, William
Allom, Thomas
Alma-Tadema, Laurence (1865-1940; daughter of Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema)
Alma-Tadema, Lawrence (1836-1912)
Alpheus of Mitylene
Alsop, Anne
Ames, Minnie
Amos, Isaac Doré
Amy R. (pseudonym)
An Industrious Englishman
An Oxonian
Anacreon
Anderson
Anderson, Alexander
Anderson, David
Anderson, J. E.
Anderson, John
Anderson, John (Chartist)
Anderson, R.
Anderson, William
Andrews
Andrews, E. A.
Andrews, John
Andrews, W. J.
Anna (pseudonym)
Anonymous
Anster, John
Antar
Antipater of Sidon
Antipater of Thessalonica
Antiphanes of Macedon
Antiphilus
Antiphilus of Byzantium
AOI△OƩ (pseudonym)
Apollodorus
Apollonidas of Smyrna
Arbington
Archer, James
Archias
Archilochus
Ardans
Argentarius, Marcus
Argles, Daisy
Argus (pseudonym)
Arion (pseudonym)
Ariosto, Lodovico
Ariston
Aristophanes
Armitage, Evelyn May (née Noble) (pseudonym “Evelyn Pyne”)
Armour, Margaret
Armstead, Henry Hugh
Armstrong, Annie
Armstrong, Florence C.
Armstrong, George Francis
Armstrong, John
Arnold, Edwin
Arnold, Matthew
Arnold, Maud
Arnot, James
Arthur, Reginald
Asclepiadas
Ashby-Sterry, Joseph
Ashe, Thomas
Askham, John
Astronomer Royal of the New Series
Atay
Atkinson, Blanche Isabella
Atkinson, Richard
Atteridge, Helen
Atteridge, M. E.
Aubry, Charles
Auchmuty, Arthur Compton
Ausonius, Decimus Magnus
Austin, Alfred
Austin, E.
Austine
Author of “Poland”
Author of “The Garland,” &c.
Automedon
Aylmer, Isabella Eleanor (pseudonym “I. D. Fenton”)
Aytoun, William Edmonstoune
Aἰων (pseudonym)
Aοίδος (pseudonym)
Ælius Gallus
B. (poet; Blackwood's)
B. (poet; Chambers’s)
B. (poet; Dark Blue)
B. (poet; Good Words)
B. (poet; Once a Week)
B. (translator; Blackwood's)
B. B. B. (poet; Good Words)
B. B. B. (poet; Macmillan's)
B. C. (poet; Chambers's)
B. J. (translator; Once a Week)
B. M. (poet; Macmillan's)
B. R. (poet; Cornhill)
B. W. (poet; Once a Week)
Bacchylides
Baddiley
Badham, Charles
Badham, Henry
Baildon, Henry Bellyse
Bailey, Philip James
Bailie Jarvie (pseudonym)
Baillie, Grisell (Grizel)
Baillie, Joanna
Baillie, Marianne
Baillon, E.
Bain, Charlotte
Bain, Robert
Baker, Ada Bartrick
Baker, Albert J.
Baldwin, Astley H.
Balfour, Alexander
Balfour, Marie Clothilde
Ball, William
Ballantine, James
Ballantyne, Archibald
Ballingall, William
Balmanno, Mary
Bamford, Samuel
Banks, Isabella Varley
Banton, John
Barbauld, Anna Letitia
Barber, J. V.
Barbucallus, Joannes
Barham, Richard Harris
Baring, Maurice
Barker, Bernard
Barker, Mary
Barlow, Jane
Barlow, Nellie
Barmby, Goodwyn
Barnard, Anne (née Lindsay)
Barnard, Edward William
Barnard, Mordaunt
Barnes, George Foster
Barnes, Robert
Barnes, William
Barr, James
Barratt, Emmie J.
Barraud, Allan F.
Barrett, G.
Barrett, Michael (pseudonym “Joseph Carmichael”)
Barrie, James Matthew
Barron, Douglas Gordon
Barron, Oswald
Barstow, Charles H. (1856-)
Bartholomew, Anne Charlotte Turnbull
Barton, Bernard
Bassus, Lollius
Bates, Clara Doty
Bates, David
Batson, Robert
Battersby, Caryl
Baty, Thomas Jack
Baudelaire, Charles
Bauerlé (Bowerley), Amelia
Bayly, Thomas Haynes
Bayne, Peter (pseud. Ellis Brandt)
Beal
Beale, Anne
Beale, James (junior)
Beames, David
Beamish, A. M.
Beattie, James (1735-1803)
Beattie, James (1796-1838)
Beattie, William
Beaufort, M. E.
Beaumont, Francis
Beck, Ellen (pseudonym “Magdalen Rock”)
Becker, Nikolaus
Bécquer, Gustavo Adolfo
Beddoes, Thomas Lovell
Beech, H.
Beers, Ethel Lynn
Beg, Raf'at
Begbie, A. J.
Begbie, Agnes Helen
Begbie, E. H.
Beith, R.
Bell, Charles D.
Bell, Feodora
Bell, John Joy
Bell, Jonathan Anderson
Bell, Robert
Belleau, Rémy
ben Samuel, Judas Hallevy
Bendall, Ernest A.
Bendall, Gerard
Benham, H.
Bennet, William
Bennett, Charles Henry
Bennett, E. L.
Bennett, G. H.
Bennett, L. M.
Bennett, Lucy A.
Bennett, Mary
Bennett, William
Bennett, William Cox
Bennoch, Francis
Benson, Arthur Christopher
Benson, Ralph Augustus
Bentinck, Henry William Cavendish
Bentley, Charles
Bentley, J.
Beranger, Pierre-Jean de
Berger, Florence K.
Berger, Janet S.
Berkeley, Grantley
Bernal Osborne, Ralph (1808-1882)
Bernal, Ralph (1783-1854)
Bernard, Pierre-Joseph
Berry (pseudonym “Carradorne”)
Berry, Lizzie
Besemeres, Jane (pseudonym “Janet Byrne”)
Beth (pseudonym)
Betham-Edwards, Matilda
Bethune, Alexander
Bethune, John
Bethune, John Elliott Drinkwater
Bianor
Bicci, Ersilio
Bickmore, Charles
Biddle, Richard Julian
Bielby, Mena
Bieldfeld
Billi, Marianna Giarrè
Bingham, Clifton
Binns, George
Binyon, Laurence
Bion of Smyrna
Bird, H. M. (pseudonym “Jetta Vogel,” “Jetty Vogel”)
Bird, James
Bird, John
Bird, Mary Page
Birks, Edmund Charles
Bishop of Limerick
Bjørnson, Bjørnstjerne Martinius
Black, William
Blackie, John Stuart
Blackmore, Richard (1654-1729)
Blackmore, Richard D. (1825-1900)
Blackmore, W. P.
Blackwell, Anna
Blackwood, Helen Selina
Blagden, Isa
Blaikie, John Arthur
Blakeney, Edward H.
Blamire, Susanna
Blanchard, Samuel Laman
Blatchley, W. D.
Blatherwick, Charles
Blew, William John
Blind, Mathilde
Blind, Rudolf
Blomfield, Alfred
Blomfield, Dorothy Frances
Blood, L.
Bloomfield, Robert
Blunt, Wilfrid Scawen
Boag, J.
Bob Buller of Brazennose
Boccaccio
Bode, John Ernest
Boden, C. J.
Boger, Edmund
Bogle, William Lockhart
Boiardo, Matteo Maria
Boito, Arrigo
Bolton, A. D.
Bolton, Sarah T.
Bond, Richard Warwick
Bone, Robert Trewick
Boner, Charles
Bonington, Richard Parkes
Bonne, W.
Booker, Luke
Borrow, George
Bosanquet, Fabien
Bosquet, Amelie
Bostock, John
Bostock, W.
Bothams, Walter
Botticelli, Sandro
Boughton, W. H.
Boulger (née Havers), Dora (pseudonym “Theo. Gift”)
Bourges, Léonide
Bourne, Vincent
Bourne, W. St. Hill
Bowen, Charles Inniss
Bowen, Edward Ernest
Bowen, H. Courthope
Bowers, Georgina
Bowker, James
Bowles, William Lisle
Bowley, Ada Leonora
Bowley, May
Bowring, Edgar Alfred
Bowring, John
Bowron, William A.
Bowzy Beelzebub
Boyd, A.
Boyd, Alexander Stuart
Boyd, C. W.
Boyd, H.
Boyd, Percy
Boyesen, Hjalmar Hjorth
Boyle, J.
Boyle, Mary Louisa
Boyson, V. Fenton
Brachmann, Louise
Bradburn
Bradford (pseudonym “Ida Mary Forde”)
Bradford, Edwin Emmanuel
Bradley, Andrew Cecil
Bradley, Basil
Bradley, Edward (pseudonym “Cuthbert Bede”)
Bradley, Francis Ernest
Bradley, Katharine Harris (pseudonym “Michael Field”)
Bradwell, Jack
Brainard, John G. C.
Bramwell, H. F.
Brandreth, Henry
Braun, S. E.
Bray, Anna Eliza
Brazier, Adam
Breakspeare, Ada
Brenan, John Churchill
Brennan, Alfred Laurens
Brent, John
Breton, Jules
Brett, Cecil Winton
Brewtnall, Edward Frederick
Bridell-Fox, Eliza Florance
Bridges, Robert
Bridgman, L. J.
Briggs, S. Constance Isabelle
Brindley, Louis H.
Brine, Emily
Briss, Vida
Brock, E. G. C.
Brock, Lucy
Broderick, Albert
Broderip, Frances Freeling (née Hood)
Brodie-Innes, Francis Annesley
Brodrick, Alan
Bromage, L. Muriel Raikes
Brome, Alexander
Bromley, Beatrice M.
Bromley, Clough W.
Brontë, Charlotte
Brontë, Emily
Brooke, Richard Sinclair
Brookfield, William Henry
Brooks, Shirley
Brooks, Thomas
Broome, Frederick Napier
Brotherton, Alice Williams
Brotherton, Mary
Brough, Robert Barnabas
Brown
Brown, David
Brown, Edward Noyce
Brown, Ellen F.
Brown, Ford Madox
Brown, Henry Rowland (pseudonym “Oliver Grey”)
Brown, J. K.
Brown, J. O.
Brown, James (pseudonym “J. B. S.,” “J. B. Selkirk”)
Brown, James Pennycook
Brown, James Walter
Brown, John
Brown, John (1822-)
Brown, Robert
Brown, Thomas (1778-1820)
Brown, Thomas Edward
Brown, W.
Brown, W.
Brown, William
Browne (Brown), Frances
Browne, A. K.
Browne, E.
Browne, Gordon
Browne, Hablot Knight (pseudonym “Phiz”)
Browne, Marie Hedderwick
Browne, Mary Ann (Mrs. James Grey)
Browne, Washington
Browning, Alma
Browning, Elizabeth Barrett
Browning, Oscar
Browning, Robert
Bruce, Michael
Bruce, Wallace
Bryant, William Cullen
Brydges, Egerton
Buchanan, George
Buchanan, Marion
Buchanan, Robert Williams
Buchanan, Walter
Buck, Ruth
Buckman, Edwin
Buckner, Richard
Buller (pseudonym)
Bulwer-Lytton, Edward
Bulwer-Lytton, Robert (pseudonym “Owen Meredith”)
Burdette, Robert J.
Burdock
Bürger, Gottfried August
Burgess, Arthur
Burgess, James John Haldane
Burgess, W. A. S.
Burke, Christian Caroline Anna
Burlingham, A. S.
Burnand, Francis Cowley
Burne-Jones, Edward
Burney, Edward Francisco
Burney, F. H.
Burnley, James
Burns, David
Burns, Elizabeth Rollit
Burns, Robert
Burnside, Helen Marion
Burton, Henry
Burton, William Paton
Burton, William Shakespeare
Busby, Ellen
Busk, Mary Margaret
Busy-Body
Butcher, Charles Henry
Butler, Alexander Hume
Butler, Henry Montagu
Butler, William Archer
Butt, Beatrice May
Butt, Geraldine
Butters, Robert W.
By a Provisional Committee of Contributors
By One Who Knew Her
By the Author of “Tales and Sketches”
By the Translator of Homer’s Hymns
Byron, George Gordon
Byron, H. J.
C. (poet; Blackwood's)
C. (poet; Chambers's)
C. (poet; Good Words)
C. (poet; Once a Week)
C. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
C. B. (poet; Good Words)
C. B. (translator; Chambers's)
C. C. (poet; Once a Week)
C. C. (translator; Chambers's)
C. C. C. (poet; Once a Week)
C. C. H. (poet; Once a Week)
C. D. C. (poet; Cornhill)
C. E. C. (poet; Once A Week)
C. E. I. (poet; Once a Week)
C. E. P. (poet; Macmillan’s)
C. E. S. (poet; Dark Blue)
C. F. (poet; Chambers's)
C. F. (poet; Macmillan’s)
C. F. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
C. F. B. (poet; Good Words)
C. G. (A Lady in Lerwick) (poet; Chambers's)
C. H. (poet; Once a Week)
C. H. (poet; The Penny Magazine)
C. H. T. (poet; Good Words)
C. H. W. (poet; Once a Week)
C. I. E. (poet; Once a Week)
C. I. M. B. (poet; Atalanta)
C. J. M. B. (poet; Atalanta)
C. K. B. (translator; Once a Week)
C. M. (poet; Good Words)
C. M. A. C. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
C. M. I. (poet; Once a Week)
C. M. L. F. (poet; Good Words)
C. M. O’N. (poet; Blackwood's)
C. M. P. (poet; Chambers's)
C. N. (poet; Blackwood's)
C. N. S. (poet; Blackwood's)
C. O. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
C. P. (poet; Good Words)
C. R. B. (translator; Once a Week)
C. S. (illustrator)
C. S. (poet; Forget Me Not)
C. S. C. (poet; Once a Week)
C. S. F. (poet; Good Words)
C. S. G. (poet; Once a Week)
C. St***g (poet; Forget me Not)
C. T. (poet; Chambers's)
C. U. D. (poet; Cornhill)
C. U. D. (poet; Macmillan's)
C. W. B. (poet; Blackwood's)
C. W. C. (poet; Once a Week)
C+L+N+O (poet; Blackwood's)
Caddell, Cecilia Mary
Caddick, H. C.
Calder, Robert Hogg (pseudonym “Woodburn”)
Caldwell, Robert Charles
Call, Wathen Mark Wilks
Callanan, Jeremiah Joseph
Callimachus
Calverley, Charles Stuart
Calvert, Edwin Sherwood
Calvert, William
Cambridge, Ada
Cameron, Hugh
Cameron, J.
Cameron, Julia Margaret
Cameron, William C.
Campbell, (Robert) Calder
Campbell, E.
Campbell, George
Campbell, Gerald
Campbell, Gordon
Campbell, John
Campbell, Lewis
Campbell, P. M.
Campbell, Robert Lee
Campbell, Thomas
Campbell, W. A.
Campbell, William Wilfred
Canning, George
Canton, William
Cape, George Augustus
Capern, Edward
Capuana, Luigi
Caradoc, A. M.
Carducci, Giosuè
Carew, Thomas
Carey, E. G.
Carey, Elizabeth Sheridan
Carey, Henry
Carlisle, Mabel Beatrice
Carlyle, F.
Carman, Bliss
Carmichael
Carmichael, John Wilson
Carnegie, James
Carpenter, H. Boyd
Carpenter, Mary
Carpenter, William Boyd
Carphylides
Carr, Ernest A.
Carrington, Nicholas Toms
Carter, Alice Staples
Carter, E.
Carter, H. C.
Carter, Kate
Cary, Alice
Cary, Phoebe
Cassiani, Giuliano
Castleman, E.
Catholicus Sudans (pseudonym)
Cattermole, George
Cattermole, Richard
Catty, Charles
Catullus, Gaius Valerius
Caulfield, H. C.
Caunter, John Hobart
Cavalcanti, Guido
Cave, Dora
Cave, Eastwood
Cavell
Cavendish, Margaret
Cay, John
Cayley, George John
Celano, Thomas of
Cerealius
Chalkhill, John
Chalklen, Charles William
Chalon, A.
Chalon, Alfred Edward
Chambers, James
Chambers, Robert
Chambers, William
Chamier, Frederick
Chanter (Longworth Knocker), Gratiana
Chapman, Elizabeth Rachel
Chapman, Matthew James
Charles, Elizabeth Rundle
Charlesworth, Edward Gomersall
Charnock, Mary Anna E. (née Peterson)
Charrin, Pierre-Joseph
Chartier, Alain
Chatterton
Chaucer, Geoffrey
Cheetham, Mary
Chénier, André
Chester, J.
Chester, John
Chettow, John
Chetwynd Griffith-Jones, Elizabeth (pseudonym “George Earnest”)
Child-Villiers, Margaret Elizabeth
Chisholme, Alexander
Cholmondeley Pennell, Henry
Chorley, Henry F.
Chorley, John R.
Christie, James Elder
Christie, M. C.
Christopher North (pseudonym)
Christopoulos, Athanasios
Church, Alfred J.
Churchill, Rosie
Chylde, Christmas E.
Cibber, Colley
Clanvowe, John
Clare, John
Clark, John Haldenby
Clark, Margaret S.
Clark, W. G.
Clarke, Edward Daniel
Clarke, Edward Francis C.
Clarke, H.
Clarke, Henry Savile
Clarke, M.
Clarke, Mary Victoria Cowden
Clarke, S.
Clarke, William Branwhite
Claudian
Cleaver, Mary
Clegg, John Trafford
Clennell, Luke
Clerke, Agnes Mary
Clerke, Ellen M.
Cleugh, J.
Cleugh, James
Clifford, Hugh Charles
Clifton, Arthur (pseudonym “Arthur Marvell”)
Clifton, William John
Clive, Caroline
Close, Charles A.
Close, John (pseudonym “Poet Close”)
Clowes, William Laird
Coates, Elizabeth (née Youatt)
Cobbe, Frances Power
Cobbett, William
Cobbold, Elizabeth
Cochrane-Baillie, Alexander
Cochrane, Alfred
Cochrane, Robert
Cockle, Mary
Colborne Veel, Mary
Coleridge, Hartley
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor
Colin
Colin Clout (pseudonym)
Coller, Edwin
Collier, J. Payne
Colling, Elizabeth (pseudonym "Eta")
Colling, Mary Maria
Collins, John (1742-1808)
Collins, John C. (1848-1908)
Collins, Mortimer
Collinson, Septimus
Colomb, George Hatton
Colomb, Wellington
Compton, Herbert
Conder, Josiah
Congreve, T.
Connell, M. A.
Conway, Charles Denys
Conybeare, John C.
Coode, Helen Hoppner
Cook, Eliza
Cooke, A.
Cooke, Philip Pendleton
Cookson, Christopher
Cooper
Cooper, Abraham
Cooper, Edith Emma (pseudonym “Michael Field”)
Cooper, James Davis
Cooper, Katharine (also Katherine) (née Saunders)
Cooper, M.
Cooper, R.
Cooper, Thomas
Coppée, François
Corbaux, Fanny
Corbet, Richard
Corbould, Edward Henry
Corbould, H. C.
Corbould, Henry
Cordner, Charlotte
Coritanus (pseudonym)
Costello, Louisa Stuart
Cotes, Digby
Cotes, E. [M.?]
Cotterell, George
Courtney, E. J.
Cowan, Alexander
Cowan, William
Cowell, Edward Byles
Cowell, Sydney
Cowen, William
Cowley-Brown, G. J.
Cowley, Abraham
Cowper, William
Cox, F. J.
Cox, L. S.
Cox, Palmer
Coxhead, Ethel
Crabbe, George
Cradock, John Hobart
Craig (Knox), Isa
Craig, John
Craig, Mary A.
Craig, Robert
Craig, Robert Smith
Craik, Dinah
Cramp, William Archibald
Crane, Beatrice
Crane, Walter
Cregan, Beatrice
Cresandia (pseudonym)
Crespi, C. R.
Creswick, Thomas
Crinagoras
Cristall, Joshua
Croker, Thomas Crofton
Croly, George
Crombie, John William
Crompton, R. S.
Crosland, Camilla (née Toulmin)
Crosland, Newton
Cross, Albert Francis
Cross, Edythe H.
Cross, Mary
Crossley, James
Crossman, W.
Crouch, Elizabeth
Crow, Louisa
Crowe, Eyre Evans
Crowe, Mary J.
Crowe, William
Crowley, Nicholas Joseph
Cryan, Robert W.
Cumming
Cumming, C.
Cunningham, Allan
Cunninghame, R. B.
Cunston
Currie, Mary Montgomerie (pseudonym “Violet Fane”)
Cursham, Mary Anne
Curwen, Henry
Custance, Olive
Cutter, William
Cyrus the Poet
D. (poet; Chambers's)
D. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
D. F. A. (poet; Blackwood's)
D. G. B. (poet; Good Words)
D. G. R. (poet; Once a Week)
D. H. (poet; Chambers's)
D. J. M. (poet; Blackwood's)
D. L. P. (poet; Chambers's)
D. M. (poet; Chambers's)
D. T. (poet; Blackwood's)
D'Oyly, Thomas
d'Urfey, Thomas
D’Annunzio, Gabriele
d’Orléans, Charles
Da Costa, Isaac
da Filicaja, Vincenzo
Dadd, Frank
Dafforne, J.
Dagmar (pseudonym)
Daintrey, George
Dale, Thomas
Dalmon, Charles William
Dalton, Cornelius Neale
Dalton, James Forbes
Dalziel
Dalziel, Edward Gurden
Dalziel, L. Beith (pseudonym “Bessie Dill”)
Dalziel, Thomas
Damagetus
Daman, R.
Dana, Richard H.
Danby, B. M
Danby, William
Daniel, Mary
Daniel, Samuel
Daniell, Martin
Daniell, William
Darby, E., Jun.
Darby, Eleanor
Darnell, Martin
Dasent, George Webbe
Daumas, Melchior Joseph Eugène
Davenant, William
Davids, C. J.
Davidson, Alexander
Davidson, Catharine
Davidson, John
Davidson, John William
Davidson, Lucretia Maria
Davidson, T.
Davidson, Thomas
Davies, Charles Maurice
Davies, G. Christopher
Davies, J. H.
Davies, Joseph
Davis, Israel
Davis, J. H.
Davis, John Philip
Davis, Thomas Osborne
Davis, Valentine
Davlin, Charles
Dawes, Rufus
Dawson, James
Day, Julia
Dayka, Gábor
de Argensola, Bartolomé Leonardo
de Argensola, Lupercio Leonardo
de Banville, Théodore
de Beauharnais, Hortense
de Burgh, Hubert
de Bury, Marie Blaze
de Castellana
de Cetina, Gutierre
de Chateaubriand, François-René
de Chatelain, Clara
de Heredia, Jose Maria
de Heussy, M.
de la Fontaine, Jean
de la Vega, Garcilaso
de Lamartine, Alphonse
de Lemene, Francesco
de Mapes, Walter
de Mattos, Katharine
de Mendoza, Diego Hurtado
de Musset, Alfred
de Quental, Anthero
de Quevedo, Francisco
de Rioja, Francisco
de Ronsard, Pierre
de Vega, Lope
De Vere, Aubrey
De Vigny, Alfred
de Villegas, Esteban Manuel
de Wilde, George James
De' Medici, Lorenzo
Deakin, H. C.
Deane, Anthony C.
Deans, George
Dearmer, Mabel
Deazeley, John Howard
Debat-Ponsan, Édouard
Deinhardstein, Johann Ludwig
della Casa, Giovanni
Dempster, Charlotte
Dendy, Alice
Denham, John
Denison, William Joseph
Dennis, John
Dent, Annie
Dent, Jessie C.
Desanges, Louis William
Deuern
Deutsch, Emanuel
Devas, Martha Anne
Devereux, W.
Dewey, Edgar
Dibdin, Thomas John
Dickens, Charles
Dickinson, Emily
Dickinson, R.
Dicksee, Frank
Dicksee, Margaret
Dickson, Antonia
Dickson, Maria Frances
Dietrich, Christian Wilhelm Ernst
Digges, Leonard
Dilks, T. Bruce
Dill (pseudonym “Bee”)
Dilly, J. J.
Dilly, Joseph
Dinton, Elise
Dionysius
Dioscorides
Ditchfield, Peter Hampson
Doane, George Washington
Dobell, Clarence
Dobell, Eva (pseudonym “Eva D.”)
Dobell, Sydney
Dobie, W. Fraser
Dobson, Austin
Dockray, Louisa
Dodge, Mary B.
Dodgson, Charles Lutwidge (pseudonym “Lewis Carroll”)
Dods, Mary Diana (pseudonym “David Lyndsay”)
Doering, Heinrich
Doherty, Francis Malcolm
Domett, Alfred
Donald, George (1800-1851)
Donald, George (1826-)
Donald, J.
Donne, John
Dorat, Claude Joseph
Doubleday, Thomas
Doudney, Sarah
Dougall, William
Doveton, Frederick Bazett
Dow, J.
Dowden, Edward
Dowding, F. Townley
Dowie, Menie Muriel
Downes, George
Downes, Louisa June Campbell (pseudonym “Vere Haldane”)
Downing, Harriet
Dowson, Ernest
Doyle, Arthur Conan
Doyle, Charles Altamont
Doyle, Francis Hastings Charles
Dr. James Scott (allonym)
Drayton, Michael
Dreves, Lebrecht
Driver, F.
Drummond, W.
Drummond, William (Drummond of Hawthornden)
Drury, Anna H.
Dryden, John
Du Bellay, Joachim
Du Fu
Du Maurier, George
Duff-Gordon, Lucie
Dumas, Alexandre
Dunbar, William
Duncan, A. S.
Duncan, D. M.
Duncan, Edward
Duncan, Eric
Dupont, Pierre
Duthie, William
Dutt, Govin Chunder
Dutt, Shoshee Chunder
Dutton
Dutton, Frank R.
Dyer, Edward
Dykes, T.
Dyson, Emily
E. (poet; Blackwood's)
E. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
E. (poet; Good Words)
E. A. D. (poet; Atalanta)
E. A. S. (poet; Good Words)
E. B. (poet; Chambers's)
E. B. (poet; Macmillan’s)
E. B. (translator; Chambers's)
E. B. H. (translator; Blackwood's)
E. B. P. (poet; Cornhill)
E. B. P. (poet; English Woman's Journal)
E. C. (poet; Macmillan’s)
E. C. G. (poet; Good Words)
E. D. (poet; Blackwood's)
E. D. C. (poet; Chambers's)
E. D. C. (translator; Chambers's)
E. D. S. (poet; Macmillan’s)
E. E. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
E. E. W. (poet; Once a Week)
E. F. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
E. F. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
E. F. M. (poet; Chambers's)
E. G. H. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
E. H. (illustrator)
E. H. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
E. H. (poet; Good Words)
E. H. C. D. (poet; Chambers’s)
E. H. E. (poet; Once a Week)
E. H. G. (illustrator)
E. H. K. (poet; Victorian Magazine)
E. H. O. (poet; Cornhill)
E. H. S. (poet; Good Words)
E. H. T. (poet; Blackwood's)
E. H. T. (poet; The Keepsake)
E. J. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
E. J. M. (poet; Once a Week)
E. M. B. (poet; Once a Week)
E. M. M. (poet; Chambers's)
E. M. P. (poet; Once a Week)
E. N. (poet; Atalanta)
E. N. P. R. (poet; Chambers's)
E. N. P. R. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
E. P. (poet; Chambers's)
E. P. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
E. P. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
E. R. (Good Words; illustrator)
E. R. (poet; Chambers’s)
E. S. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
E. S. (poet; The Keepsake)
E. S. C. (poet; Good Words)
E. S. D. (poet; Once a Week)
E. W. H. (illustrator)
Eagles, John
Earle
Earp, Thomas
Eastman, Charles G.
Eastwood, John R.
Ebert, Karl Egon von
Eccles (pseudonym)
Echtler, A.
Eckley, Sophie May
Ede, Charles
Edenborough, A.
Edmonds, Elizabeth Mayhew
Edmondson, William
Edmonstone, Archibald
Edward
Edwards, Amelia B.
Edwards, Annie
Edwards, George Henry
Edwards, Henry Sutherland
Edwards, Kate
Edwards, Mary Ellen (Mrs Freer, Mrs John C. Staples)
Edwards, Thomas
Eeles, E.
Egerton, Francis (Leveson-Gower)
Egremont, Godfrey
Eliot, Marynx
Elliot, Charlotte
Elliot, Mary L.
Elliot, William
Elliott, Ebenezer
Elliott, F. G.
Elliott, J. A.
Elliott, Lucinda
Ellis
Ellis, B. Trapp
Ellis, Henry
Ellis, John
Ellis, Robinson
Elpis (pseudonym)
Elton, Charles Abraham
Elton, Charles Isaac
Eltze, Frederick
Emerson, Ralph Waldo
Emmerson
Emra, Elizabeth
English, Elizabeth
Ennius
Ensor, Robert Charles K.
Epp, R.
Erle
Erskine Norton, Eliza Bland
Erskine, Henry
Erycius Cyzicenus
Etheridge, Annie
Etherington
Ettrick Shepherd
Eubulus
Euripides
Evans, Anne
Evans, Marian (pseudonym “George Eliot”)
Evans, Sebastian
Evelyn
Evered, Robert
Evezard, Alice
Ewen, Marie J.
Eyre, Mary
Eytinge, Margaret
Eωҁ (pseudonym)
F. (poet; Blackwood's)
F. (poet; Macmillan's)
F. A. (poet; Atalanta)
F. B. S. (poet; Chambers's)
F. E. C. (poet; Once a Week)
F. E. T. (poet; Cornhill)
F. F. (poet; Chambers's)
F. G. (poet; Good Words)
F. M. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
F. M. H. (poet; Once a Week)
F. N. B. (poet; Macmillan’s)
F. S. H. (poet; Chambers's)
F. T. (poet; Chambers's)
F. W. (poet; Once a Week)
F. W. B. (illustrator)
Faber, Frederick William
Fairfax-Muckley, Louis
Fairfield, A. R.
Fairlie, Louisa
Falconer, Agnes S.
Falconer, Alexander
Falconer, Mary W. M.
Fallon, Daniel
Fane, Julian Charles Henry
Fargus, Frederick John (pseudonym “Hugh Conway”)
Farmar, Constance
Farmer, Fanny
Farren, E.
Farrer, A.
Farrier, Robert
Farrow, T.
Favart, Charles Simon
Fawkes, Francis
Fāzil
Fearn, Joseph
Feller, Frank
Fellows, Louisa
Fénelon, François
Fenn, George Manville
Fenn, Henry
Ferguson
Ferguson, Samuel
Ferguson, Tom
Fergusson, James R.
Fergusson, Robert
Ferrar, William John
Ferrier, James Frederick
Ferrier, Susan
Fidler, Gideon M.
Fields, Annie Adams
Fields, Florence
Fields, James T.
Fildes, (Samuel) Luke
Finch Hatton, George James
Finlay, John
Finnemore, Joseph
Fisk, William (1796-1872)
Fisk, William Henry (1827-1884)
Fitz-Andrew (pseudonym)
Fitz-Gerald, Desmond G.
Fitzgerald, Clare
Fitzgerald, Edward
Fitzgerald, Geraldine
Fleet, John George
Fleetwood, Peter Hesketh
Fleming
Fleming, James M.
Fletcher, Giles
Fletcher, John
Fletcher, Joseph Smith
Fletcher, Phineas
Flintoff, Albert
Flintoff, C. E.
Fogazzaro, Antonio
Fogg, L. M.
Fonblanque, Albany Jr.
Ford, Jane H. C.
Ford, John
Forrest, James
Forrester, Fanny
Forsayth, Thomas Gifford
Forsyth, J. B.
Forsyth, William
Fort, Frederick
Foscolo, Ugo
Foster, Myles Birket
Foster, Will
Fowler, Ellen Thorneycroft
Fox, Edward
Fox, Joseph
Fox, Sarah Hustler
Fradelle, Henri Jean-Baptiste Victoire
Francillon, Robert Edward
Francis, C.
Franks, Bessy
Franzen, Frans Michael
Fraser-Tytler, Christina Catherine
Fraser-Tytler, Mary Seton
Fraser, B. M.
Fraser, Francis Arthur
Fraser, John W.
Fraser, Robert
Fraser, Robert Winchester
Fraser, W. (pseudonym “Randolph Fitz-Eustace”)
Freeland, William
Freeman, E. D.
Freeman, Mary E. Wilkins
Freiligrath, Ferdinand
French, Harry
Frere, John Hookham
Frere, Mary Eliza Isabella
Friend Richard
Friese, J.
Frith, William Powell
Fritz (illustrator)
Fritz (pseudonym)
Fröhlich, Lorens
From the Papers of a Country Curate
Froude, James Anthony
Fucini, Renato
Fuller, F. L.
Fuller, James Franklin
Fullerton, William Morton
Fulton, Florence M.
Furley, Catherine Grant
Furlong, Alice
Furlong, Mary
Fyfe (pseudonym “Senga”)
Fyvie Mayo, Isabella
G. (poet; Good Words)
G. (poet; Once a Week)
G. (translator; Blackwood's)
G. (translator; Keepsake)
G. B. (poet; Blackwood's)
G. B. (poet; Cornhill)
G. C. (poet; Chambers's)
G. D. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
G. F. (illustrator)
G. F. R. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
G. H. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
G. K. T. (illustrator)
G. L. (illustrator)
G. M. (poet; Chambers's)
G. M. (translator; Macmillan's)
G. M. F. (poet; Once a Week)
G. P. S. (poet; Good Words)
G. T. (poet; Once a Week)
G. W. (poet; Cornhill)
G. W. Y. (poet; Blackwood's)
Gale, Norman
Gallagher, William Joseph
Gallus, Cornelius
Galt, John
Galton, Arthur
Gandar, W. B.
Gardiner, Annie Walker
Gardiner, Linda
Gardiner, Marguerite
Gardiner, William
Gardner, Alan Legge
Gardner, William Biscombe
Garnett, E.
Garnett, Lucy
Garnett, Richard
Garrett, Edmund H.
Garrow, Theodosia
Gaskell, Elizabeth
Gaskell, William
Gaugain, Philip A.
Gautier, Théophile
Gay, Walter
Geddes, E.
Geibel, Emmanuel
Gemmer, C. M.
Geoghegan, Mary
George, Frances (née Southwell)
Geraldine (pseudonym)
Gerard, Emily
Gerhardt, Paul
Germanicus (pseudonym)
Gerok, Karl von
Giacomelli, Hector
Gianni, Lapo
Gibb, E. J. W.
Gibb, W.
Gibbs, William Alfred
Gibney, Edward S.
Gibson, C.
Gibson, C. G.
Gibson, Elizabeth
Gibson, Mary W. A.
Gibson, T. H.
Gibson, Wilfrid Wilson
Gidley, Lewis
Gil, A. O.
Gilbert, Bryan
Gilbert, Nicolas Joseph Laurent
Gilbert, W. S.
Gilchrist, Alexander
Giles, Elizabeth
Gilfillan, Robert
Gill, M. P.
Gillespie, Thomas (1778-1844) (pseudonym “Juvenalis Junior”)
Gillespie, Thomas (Chartist poet)
Gillies, Robert Pearse
Gillington, May Clarissa (Byron)
Giusti, Giuseppe
Gladstone, William Ewart
Glanville, Charlotte
Glase, Agnes E.
Glasse, John
Glatigny, Albert
Glaucus
Gleig, George Robert
Gleim, Johann Wilhelm
Glover, Evelyn H. M.
Goddard, George Bouverie
Goddard, Julia
Godley, Alfred Denis
Godwin, Catherine Grace (née Garnett)
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von
Goldie, G.
Góngora, Luis de
Good, John Mason
Goodale Eastman, Elaine
Goodale, Dora Reade
Goodhart, C. W.
Goodrich, Samuel Griswold
Gordon, Adam Lindsay
Gordon, George Huntly
Gordon, James A.
Gore-Booth, Eva
Gore, Catherine Frances (née Moody)
Gorges, Mary
Gosnell, William
Goss, William Henry
Gosse, Edmund
Gostick, Joseph
Gough, Benjamin
Gould, Hannah Flagg
Gow, Mary L.
Gowen, J. R.
Gracie, A.
Graham
Graham, Eleanor (Grimshaw)
Graham, James
Graham, James (1612-1650)
Graham, John
Graham, M.
Graham, Thomas Alexander Ferguson
Grahame, James
Grahame, Kenneth
Grant, Alexander
Grant, Anne (née MacVicar)
Grant, Francis
Grant, James Gregor
Grant, Ludovic James
Grant, N. D.
Grant, William James
Graves, Alfred Perceval
Graves, Charles L.
Graves, Clotilde
Gray, Alex
Gray, Charles
Gray, J.
Gray, John
Gray, Paul Mary
Gray, Robert
Gray, William
Green, Charles
Green, Eliza Craven
Green, Kathleen Haydn
Green, S. G.
Green, Saretta
Green, T.
Green, T. J.
Green, W.
Green, William Charles
Green, William Henry
Greene, Gerald B.
Greenlaw, M.
Greenwell, Dora
Greenwood, Frederick
Greg, Samuel
Gregor, W. Gow
Grey, G. Duncan
Grey, John
Grieve, John
Griffin, C. J.
Griffin, Edmund D.
Griffin, Gerald
Griffith, W. G.
Griffiths, M. M.
Grindrod, Charles
Grob, Conrad
Groser, Horace George
Grosvenor, Thomas
Grote, Harriet
Groth, Klaus
Gruchy, Gabriel
Grundy, Sydney
Guerrini, Olindo
Guidi, Carlo Alessandro
Gulland, Elizabeth
Gun, Gordon
Gurner, Walter
Gush, William
Guthrie, H.
Gwynn, Stephen
H. (poet; Blackwood's)
H. (poet; Chambers's)
H. (poet; Good Words)
H. (poet; Once a Week)
H. (translator; Once a Week)
H. A. D. (poet; Once a Week)
H. B. (poet; Chambers’s)
H. B. H. (translator; Blackwood’s)
H. B.-D. (poet; Woman's World)
H. C. (poet; Atalanta)
H. C. (poet; Chambers's)
H. C. B. (poet; Chambers's)
H. C. C. (poet; Chambers's)
H. C. G. M. (poet; Macmillan's)
H. D. H. (illustrator)
H. D. W. (poet; Once a Week)
H. E. B. H. (poet; Cornhill)
H. E. M. (translator; Blackwood’s)
H. F. C. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
H. G. (poet; Blackwood's)
H. G. K. (pseudonym; Blackwood’s)
H. G. W. (illustrator)
H. H. (poet; Good Words)
H. H. (poet; Once a Week)
H. H. O. (poet; Chambers's)
H. I. H. O. (poet; Chambers's)
H. J. H. (poet; Atalanta)
H. J. O. (poet; Good Words)
H. K. (poet; Blackwood’s)
H. K. (translator; Blackwood's)
H. L. (poet; Macmillan's)
H. L. (translator; English Woman’s Journal)
H. M. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
H. M. Junr. (poet; Chambers's)
H. M’D. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
H. N. (translator; Forget-Me-Not)
H. P. (poet; Macmillan’s)
H. P. (poet; Once a Week)
H. R. (poet; Chambers's)
H. R. W. (poet; Once a Week)
H. T**y (pseudonym)
H. W. (poet; Chambers's)
H., Alice
Habert, François
Habington, William
Hackett, Wilfred S.
Hafez
Hahn, Johannes Theophilus
Haines, C. R.
Haines, Florence M.
Hale, Philip
Hale, W. P.
Hales, John Wesley
Haley, Alice (pseudonym “Allison Hughes”)
Haliburton, Robert Grant
Halkett, Violet Mary Craigie
Hall, Fanny
Hall, Henry Bryan
Hall, Lydia S. (pseudonym “Adelaide”)
Hall, Samuel Carter
Hall, William C.
Halleck, Fitz-Greene
Haller, Albrecht von
Hallevi, Jehudah
Hallward, Reginald
Halse, George (pseudonym “Rattlebrain”)
Halsey, Grace Virginia
Halswelle, Keeley
Hamilton, C.
Hamilton, Eliza Mary
Hamilton, Richard Winter
Hamilton, Thomas
Hamilton, William
Hamley, Edward Bruce
Hancock, Charles
Hankin, Julian de Kestel
Hankin, Mary Louisa (née Perralt)
Hanley, Kate
Hanmer, John
Hannay, E. H. C.
Harding, Emily Grace
Harding, James Duffield
Harding, Joseph
Hardinge, William Money
Hardy, Heywood
Hardy, J.
Hardy, Paul
Hardy, Thomas
Harford, L.
Häring, Georg Wilhelm Heinrich (pseudonym “Willibald Alexis”)
Harington, Margaret Agneta
Harkness, Thomas
Harlamoff, Alexei
Harland, Aline
Harman, E. King
Harnett, A. W.
Harper
Harper, Henry Arthur
Harriet (pseudonym)
Harrington, Elsie
Harris, A. L.
Harris, John
Harrison, Jane Ellen
Harrison, William Henry
Hart, Elizabeth Anna
Hart, Solomon Alexander
Hartwig, Gustav
Harvey, Florence
Harvey, G.
Harvey, Laura
Harvey, S. W.
Harvey, W. F.
Hasell, Elizabeth Julia
Haslehurst, Ernest William
Haslehurst, F. W.
Hassam, Childe
Hastings, Barbara Rawdon
Hatton, Joshua (pseudonym “Guy Roslyn”)
Haughton, Julia
Havergal, Francis Ridley
Havers, Alice Mary
Havilah (pseudonym)
Hawcroft, Joseph Mowbray
Haweis, Hugh Reginald
Haweis, Mary Eliza (née Joy)
Hawker, Robert Stephen
Hawkey, Charlotte
Hawkins, Annie
Hawkins, John
Hawksley, Julia M. A.
Hawtrey, Phyllis
Hay, Mary Cecil
Hay, Robert W.
Hay, William Mcleager
Hayes, Alfred
Hayman, Henry
Hayne, Paul Hamilton
Hays, Matilda
Hayter, George
Hayter, John
Hayward, Gerald
Hearne, Thomas
Heath, Helena
Heaton, Arthur Frederick
Heaven, Frederick Charles
Hebbel, Christian Friedrich
hebdomadal hand [symbol]
Heber, Reginald
Hedderwick, James
Hedges, John
Heine, Heinrich
Hemans, Felicia
Hemery, Francis H.
Henderson
Henderson, H. L.
Henderson, H. S.
Henderson, J.
Henderson, J. H.
Henderson, James
Henderson, John
Hendry, Hamish
Hendry, James
Henley, William Ernest
Hennessy, William John
Henniker (née Milnes), Florence
Henry, R.
Henryson, Robert
Heraclides
Heraud, John Abraham
Herbert, Auberon
Herbert, George
Herbert, Henry
Herbert, Jane Emily
Herbert, John Rogers
Herbertson, Agnes Grozier
Herder, Johann Gottfried von
Herford, Oliver
Hering, George Edwards
Herkomer, Hubert Von
Hermione (pseudonym)
Hermocreon
Herodotus
Herrick, Robert
Herrick, William Salter
Herschel, John
Hervey, Eleanora Louisa
Hervey, Thomas Kibble
Herz (pseudonym)
Hesper (pseudonym)
Hetherington, William Maxwell
Heward, John
Hewett, Sarah F.
Heywood, Thomas
Hibernian (pseudonym)
Hichens, Robert Smythe
Hickey, Emily
Hickey, Thomas E.
Higginbotham, Elsie
Higgins, H. W.
Higginson, Agnes Shakespeare (pseudonym “Moira O’Neill”)
Hildyard, Ida Jane (pseudonym “Ida J. Lemon”)
Hill, Alsager Hay
Hill, George
Hill, Grace H.
Hill, Isabel
Hill, Louisa
Hill, Will
Hill, William K.
Hills, Robert
Hills, Walter Alfred
Hilse (pseudonym)
Hilton, Arthur Clement
Hine, Maud Egerton
Hingston, Francis
Hislop, James
Hitchcock, George
Hitchings, Charles H.
Hitchman, James Francis
Hoare, Mary Anne
Hobart-Hampden, Lucy Pauline
Hobden, Frank
Hodges, J. H.
Hodges, Sydney
Hodgson, G. G.
Hodson, Magaret
Hogg, Henry
Hogg, James
Hogg, Robert
Hogg, Walter
Hoggan, James
Holden, Mary
Hole, Samuel Reynolds
Holland, Elizabeth (née Gaskell)
Holland, Henry W.
Holland, James
Holland, John
Holland, Laurence Gifford
Holland, M. A.
Holland, Richard George
Hollings, Fanny Sophia
Hollings, James Francis
Hollingshead, John
Hollins, Dorothy
Holman Hunt, William
Holme, James Wilson
Holme, Margaret Torre
Holme, T. M.
Holmes, F. B.
Holmes, James
Holmes, Oliver Wendell
Hölty, Ludwig Christoph Heinrich
Home, F. Wyville
Homer
Homewood, A. S.
Homikoff
Hood, Thomas
Hood, Tom (Jnr)
Hook, Theodore Edward
Hope, Constance
Hopkins, Arthur
Hopkins, Everard
Hopkins, Frances Anne (née Beechey)
Hopkins, Gerard Manley
Hopkins, Jane Ellice
Hopkins, Manley
Hopper, Nora
Horace
Hormazdi, [N. J.?]
Horne, Edward H.
Horne, Herbert P.
Horne, Richard Hengist
Hornklofi, Þórbjǫrn
Hornung, E. W.
Horton, Alice
Horton, Robert Forman
Hough, Lewis
Houghton, Arthur Boyd
Housman, A. E.
Housman, Laurence
Housman, R. F.
Houston, Maud
Houston, Robert
Hovenden, Robert Meyrick
How, William Walsham
Howard, C. W.
Howard, Charles
Howard, Edward
Howard, George William Frederick
Howard, Henry
Howard, Rose
Howden, Jessie C.
Howden, Walter C.
Howie, David
Howitt, Mary
Howitt, Richard
Howlett, Arthur Waltham
Howson, Edmund Whytehead
Howson, J. S.
Hudson, John
Hudson, Mary
Hüffer, Franz
Hughes, Arthur
Hughes, Edward
Hughes, John
Hughes, Mabel L. V.
Hugo, Victor
Huie, Richard
Hulbert, Howard
Hull, Edward
Hull, John Dawson
Hume, Alexander
Hume, Mary Catherine
Humphreys
Hunt, F. E.
Hunt, J. F.
Hunt, John
Hunt, Leigh
Hunt, M. V. G.
Hunt, Violet
Hunter, Anne
Hunter, Harriett Eliza
Hunter, Sissie
Hutchinson, J. P.
Hutton, J.
Huxley, Henrietta Anne
Huxley, Thomas Henry
Hyde, Douglas
I. (poet; Macmillan’s)
I. A. C. (poet; Chambers's)
I. C. (poet; Good Words)
I. D. F. (poet; Once a Week)
I. H. R. (poet; Chambers's)
I. K. (poet; Good Words)
I. P. C. (translator; Forget-Me-Not)
I. R. V. (poet; Chambers's)
Iago, William
Ibbs, J. C.
Ibsen, Henrik
Icarus (pseudonym)
Ilimon
Illegible Illustrator
Image, Selwyn
Imlach, A. F.
Immermann, Karl Leberecht
Ingelow, Jean
Ingelrain
Ingham, Jane Sarson Cooper
Inglis, Henry D. (pseudonym “Derwent Conway”)
Inglis, William F. E.
Innes, Alexander Taylor
Ireland, Ethel
Irving, Edward A.
Irving, Washington
Irwin, Edward
Isaac Tomkins (allonym)
Isaacs
Iselin, Sophia
Iseult (pseudonym)
Isidorus Ægeates
Israëls, Josef
Issel, M.
Italicus, Silius
Izmali, Hamet al
J. (poet; Good Words)
J. (poet; Once a Week)
J. (translator; Once a Week)
J. A. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. A. (poet; Chambers's)
J. A. (poet; Good Words)
J. A. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
J. A. of Wadham College, Oxford
J. A. P. (poet; Good Words)
J. B. (poet; Chambers's)
J. B. (translator; Once a Week)
J. B. L. (poet; Chambers's)
J. B. M. (poet; Chambers's)
J. B. S. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
J. B. S. (poet; Once a Week)
J. B. Y. (illustrator)
J. C. (poet; Chambers's)
J. C. (poet; Chartist Circular)
J. C. (poet; Once a Week)
J. C. A. (poet; Good Words)
J. C. H. J. (poet; Once a Week)
J. D. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. D. (poet; Chambers's)
J. D. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
J. D. H. (poet; Chambers's)
J. E. (poet; Good Words)
J. E. B. (illustrator)
J. E. E. (poet; Chambers's)
J. E. H. (poet; Chambers's)
J. F. (poet; Chambers's)
J. F. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
J. F. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
J. F. (poet; Once a Week)
J. F. (translator; Blackwood's)
J. F. H. (poet; Good Words)
J. F. J. (poet; Once a Week)
J. G. (poet; Chambers's)
J. G. (poet; Good Words)
J. H. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. H. (poet; Chambers's)
J. H. (poet; Good Words)
J. H. B. (poet; Chambers's)
J. H. C. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
J. H. R. (poet; Chambers's)
J. J. (poet; Chambers's)
J. J. C. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. M. (poet; Chambers's)
J. M. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
J. M. (poet; Macmillan's)
J. M. (poet; Once a Week)
J. M. H. (poet; Chambers's)
J. M’C. Junr. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
J. O. B. (poet; Chambers's)
J. P. (poet; Chambers's)
J. P. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
J. P. M. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. P. M. (translator; Blackwood’s)
J. P. S. (poet; Good Words)
J. P. W. (poet; Good Words)
J. R. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. R. C. (poet; Once a Week)
J. R. O. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
J. S. (poet; Chambers's)
J. S. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
J. S. B. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. S. D. (poet; Macmillan’s)
J. T. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. T. C. of Brazen-nose
J. T. P. (poet; Chambers's)
J. T. R. (poet; Good Words)
J. V. (poet; Once a Week)
J. W. (illustrator)
J. W. (poet; Chambers's)
J. W. (poet; Good Words)
Jackson, Blomfield
Jackson, E. W.
Jackson, Henry Kains
James (pseudonym)
James, F.
James, George Payne Rainsford
James, John Kingston
James, M. J.
James, Marian E.
James, Paul Moon
James, R. A. S.
James, Sophie A. M.
Jameson, A. E.
Jamieson, Robert
Japp, Alexander Hay
Japy, Louis Aimé
Jaumi
Jeaffreson, Mary
Jebb, Richard Claverhouse
Jefferson, S.
Jeffrey, Francis
Jelf-Sharp, C.
Jemmett-Browne, Jemmett
Jenkins, Joseph John
Jenner, Alice Hay
Jennings, E.
Jerdan, William
Jermyn, Letitia
Jerrold, Douglas William
Jerrold, William Blanchard
Jervis, Swynfen
Jewsbury, Geraldine
Jewsbury, Maria Jane
Jim's Wife
Jocelyn, Robert
John Bull (pseudonym)
Johns, Benjamin G.
Johns, Bennett George
Johns, Richard
Johnson, Edward Killingworth
Johnson, F.
Johnson, H.
Johnson, James W.
Johnson, Lionel Pigot
Johnson, Samuel
Johnston, Andrew
Johnston, D.
Johnston, Henry
Johnston, M.
Johnston, T. P.
Johnstone, Christian Isobel
Johnstone, Elizabeth M.
Johnstone, William
Jones, Alice
Jones, Ebenezer
Jones, Eustace Hinton
Jones, Harry
Jones, Henry Longueville
Jones, Jacob
Jones, Jessy
Jones, John
Jones, Robert
Jones, Thomas
Jones, W. L.
Jones, William
Jonson, Ben
Jopling, Louise
Joy, Thomas Musgrave
Julian the Egyptian
Junqueiro, Guerra
Jupp, Lawrence B.
Juvenal
Juvenis (pseudonym)
K. C. S. (translator; Macmillan's)
K. G. (poet; Macmillan’s)
K. H. (poet; Blackwood's)
K. M. (poet; Chambers's)
K. S. B. (poet; Once a Week)
K. T. (poet; Chambers's)
Kaye, John William
Keary, Eliza
Keating, Eliza H.
Keats, John
Keble, John
Keeling, William Knight
Keene
Keene, Charles
Keene, Henry George
Keene, William Caxton
Kelly, C. A.
Kelly, Francis
Kelly, Thomas W.
Kemble, Adelaide
Kemble, Fanny
Kemp, Robert
Kempe, Dorothy
Kendall, Elsie
Kendall, Harriet
Kennedy
Kennedy, D. H.
Kennedy, M. E.
Kenney, James
Kent, Armine Thomas
Kent, Charles
Kenward, James (pseudonym "Elvyndd")
Kenyon, Charles Frederick
Kenyon, John
Kerner, Justinus
Kerr, E. H.
Kettle, A.
Khayyam, Omar
Kidd, William
Kidson, Eastwood
Kier, Peter
Kilburne, George Goodwin
King David of Israel
King Henry VIII
King James I of Scotland
King Oscar I of Sweden
King Ptolemy
King Richard I
King, Alice
King, H.
King, Harriet Eleanor Hamilton
King, Henry (1592-1669)
King, Henry (1817-1888)
King, J. A.
King, James
King, John William
King, Violet M.
Kinglake, Christina
Kingsley Tarpey, William
Kingsley, Charles
Kingston, Mary
Kinney, Elizabeth Clementine
Kipling, Rudyard
Kirkman Finlay (allonym)
Kirkpatrick, John
Kirtle (pseudonym)
Kitton, E. E.
Kletke, Hermann
Kleyn, Adelaide
Klopstock, Friedrich Gottlieb
Knight, Charles
Knight, Edward
Knight, J.
Knight, John Prescott
Knight, Joseph
Knowles, Annie L.
Knowles, Davidson
Knowles, Herbert
Knowles, James
Knox
Knox, Lucy
Koo-ri-tsan-koo
Körner, Theodore
Kortright, Frances Aikin
Kosloff, Ivan
Koumanin, Alexander
Krasiński, Zygmunt
Krummacher, Friedrich Adolf
Kurtz
L. (poet; Once a Week)
L. (translator; Once a Week)
L. B. (illustrator)
L. B. (translator; Once a Week)
L. B. H. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
L. F. C. (poet; Chambers's)
L. F. D. C. (poet; Chambers's)
L. G. M. (poet; Good Words)
L. I. C. D. (poet; Once a Week)
L. I. L. (poet; Macmillan’s)
L. J. (translator; Forget-Me-Not)
L. J. G. (poet; Blackwood's)
L. L. (poet; Blackwood's)
L. M. L. (translator; Chambers's)
L. N. (poet; Good Words)
L. R. (poet; Chambers’s)
L. R. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
L. S. (translator; Once a Week)
L. V. (illustrator)
L. W. M. L. (poet; Blackwood's)
La Creevy, C.
La Mont, Elizabeth
la Motte Fouqué, Friedrich de
Labrunie, Gérard (pseudonym “Gérard de Nerval”)
Laing, Alexander
Laird, A. (pseudonym “Hugh Lindsay”)
Lake Price, William
Lamb, Caroline
Lamb, Charles
Lamb, Mary
Lamont, Alexander
Lamont, J. K.
Lamont, Thomas Reynolds
Lampman, Archibald
Lancaster, Charles S.
Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (pseudonym "L. E. L.")
Landor, Walter Savage
Landseer, Edwin
Lane, Clara
Lang, Andrew
Langan, Thomas
Langbridge, Frederick
Langford, John Alfred
Langhorne, John
Langston, Joseph G.
Lapraik, John
Lapworth, W.
Larken, E. P.
Latchmore, W. H.
Latto, Thomas C.
Laundy, George A.
Laurel-Honouring Laureate
Laurence, H.
Laurenson, Arthur
Law, Isabella
Lawless, Matthew James
Lawrence, Robert Harding
Lawrence, Thomas
Lawrence, Walter J.
Lawrie
Lawson, Cecil Gordon
Lawson, E.
Lawson, Francis Wilfred
Lawson, J. K.
Lawson, John
Layard, George Somes
Layton, E.
Layton, Nina
Le Brun, Élisabeth Vigée
Le Fanu, S.
Le Gallienne, Richard
Le Jeune, Henry
Leary, Thomas Humphrys Lindsay
Leask, William Keith
Leatham, Edith Rutter
Leatherdale, V. J.
Lecky, (William) Edward Hartpole
Lee-Hamilton, Eugene
Lee, Henry
Lee, Jessie
Lee, Rona
Lee, William
Leech, John
Lehmann, F.
Lehmann, Rudolph Chambers
Leifchild, Sara A.
Leigh Cliffe (pseudonym)
Leigh, Chandos
Leigh, Cholmeley A.
Leigh, Henry Sambrooke
Leighton, Edmund Blair
Leighton, Frederic
Leighton, John
Leighton, Robert
Leighton, William
Leitch, Richard Principal
Leith, E.
Leland, Charles Godfrey
Lemoine, Gustave
Lemon, J.
Lemon, Mark
Lenox-Conyngham, Elizabeth Emmet
Leonard, George Hare
Leonard[, M. A.?]
Leonidas of Tarentum
Leontine (pseudonym)
Leopardi, Giacomo
Lermontov, Mikhail Yuryevich
Leslie, Charles Robert
Leslie, Eliza
Lester, E. C. (pseudonym “Christie”)
Letham, Alexander
Letherbrow, E.
Leveaux, Florence Malcolm
Levens, J. T.
Levy, Amy
Levy, Edith Grace
Lewin, Thomas Herbert
Lewis
Lewis, John Delaware
Lewis, Matthew
Lewis, T. C.
Lewis, W.
Lewis, W. J.
Lewis, Walter
Lex Rex (pseudonym)
Leyden, John
Lhermitte, Léon Augustin
Li-Tai-Pe
Lida (pseudonym)
Liddell, Henry
Lincolnshire Rector
Lindsay, Alexander
Lindsay, Caroline Blanche Elizabeth
Linney, W.
Linskill, Mary Jane
Linton, James Drogmole
Linton, William James
Linwood, James Smart
Liolett (pseudonym)
Lister, Thomas Henry
Lithgow, William
Little, E. A.
Little, F. D.
Little, J. M.
Littson
Liverseige, H.
Lloyd, Charles
Locker-Lampson, Frederick
Locker, Arthur
Lockhart, John Gibson
Lodge, Adam
Lodge, Reginald B.
Logan, John
Logie, Alexander
Lomond, A.
Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth
Longfield, Claude Robert
Longmore
Longridge, F.
Loots, Cornelis
Lord *** (pseudonym)
Lord Byron (allonym)
Lord, A. R.
Lorinda, C.
Loughlin, T.
Lovejoy, Newell
Lovell, George (1826-1881)
Lovell, George William (1804-1878)
Lover, Samuel
Lowdnes, Dorothy (pseudonym “Dolf Wyllarde”)
Lowe, Helen
Lowe, John
Lowe, Robert
Lowell, James Russell
Lowry, Henry Dawson
Lowther, John Henry
Loye, Charles Auguste (pseudonym “George Montbard”)
Luard, John Dalbiac
Lucas, Horatio Joseph
Lucas, John
Lucianus
Lucillius
Luck, Katie M.
Luckey, Jane
Ludolf, George H.
Lummis, Edward W.
Lumsden, Henry William
Lungren, Fernand
Luscombe, John
Lusted, Charles T.
Luttrell, Henry
Lyall, Alfred Comyn
Lyall, John
Lyle, William
Lyly, John
Lynch, Albert
Lynch, G. D.
Lynd, R.
Lyons, James Gilbourne
M C G. (poet; Century Guild)
M. (poet; Blackwood's)
M. (poet; Chambers's)
M. (poet; Cornhill)
M. (poet; Good Words)
M. (poet; Once a Week)
M. (translator; Once a Week)
M. A. (poet; Chambers's)
M. A. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
M. A. B. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
M. A. D. (poet; Chambers's)
M. A. G. (poet; Chambers's)
M. A. H. (poet; Good Words)
M. and A. (pseudonym)
M. B. (poet; Chambers's)
M. B. (poet; Good Words)
M. B. (poet; Macmillan’s)
M. B. T. (poet; Good Words)
M. C. C. (poet; Macmillan’s)
M. E. B. (poet; Atalanta)
M. H. (poet; Blackwood's)
M. H. (poet; Chambers's)
M. H. (poet; Good Words)
M. H. A. (translator; Good Words)
M. H. W. (poet; Atalanta)
M. J. (poet; Blackwood's)
M. J. L. (poet; Blackwood's)
M. J. L. (poet; Chambers's)
M. L. (poet; Chambers's)
M. L. (poet; The Keepsake)
M. L. S. (poet; Chambers's)
M. M. (translator; Once a Week)
M. M. M. (poet; Good Words)
M. M. M. (poet; Macmillan’s)
M. P. (poet; Chambers's)
M. R. (poet; Blackwood's)
M. R. L. (poet; Good Words)
M. S. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
M. S. (poet; Macmillan's)
M. S. J. (poet; Chambers's)
M. S. J. (translator; Chambers's)
M. T. F. (poet; Once a Week)
M. T. H. (poet; Chambers's)
M. W. S. (poet; Once a Week)
M. Y. G. (poet; Chambers's)
M'Gregor
M’Douall, W.
Maberly, Catherine Charlotte
Macalpine, Mary
MacAndrew, Barbara Miller
Macaulay, Thomas Babington
Macbeth, Robert Walker
MacCarthy, Denis Florence
MacConachie, J.
MacDonald, Alastair
MacDonald, Alexander
MacDonald, Alice
MacDonald, F. R.
MacDonald, George
MacDonald, J. A.
Macdonald, Leila
MacDonald, Maggie
MacDonald, Margaret
MacDonald, Mosse
Macdonell, Annie
Macduff, John Ross
Macedonius
Macfarlan, James
MacFarlane, Harold
Macfie, Ronald Campbell
MacGregor, James
Machar, Agnes Maule
Macindoe, George
Macintosh, Eliza Anne (née Griffiths)
Mackay, Alice
Mackay, Charles
Mackay, George Eric
Mackay, Jessie
MacKay, L. M.
Mackay, W. D.
Mackenzie, A.
Mackenzie, Charles
Mackenzie, David James
Mackenzie, Helen
Mackenzie, John
Mackenzie, Robert Shelton
Mackenzie, William Andrew
Mackie, Gascoigne
Maclachlan, Elsie J. Campbell
Maclagan, Alexander
Maclaren, Mabel
Maclean
Maclehose, Agnes
Macleod, Donald
Macleod, J.
Macleod, John (of Culkein, Stoer)
Macleod, John (of Govan)
Macleod, John (of Morven)
Macleod, Mary
Macleod, Norman
MacLiag, Muircheartach mac Con Ceartaich
Maclise, Daniel
Macmillan, Alexander
Macmillan, Hugh
MacNab, Peter
MacNair, Jean H.
Macnamara, Rachel Swete
Macnish, Robert
Maconachie, Agnes M.
Macpherson, A.
Macpherson, C.
Macpherson, James
Macquoid, Katharine Sarah
Macquoid, Percy Thomas
Macquoid, Thomas Robert
Macray, John
Macready, Catherine Frances Birch
MacWhirter, John
MacWilliam, R. A.
Madden, Richard Robert
Mademoiselle Olga S**
Maginn, William
Magra, Augusta A. L.
Mahoney, J.
Mahony, Francis Sylvester (pseudonym “Father Prout”)
Main, Isa
Maitland, Ella Fuller
Major, Rosa
Malcolm, John
Malden, Henry
Malet, Henry Charles Eden
Malherbe, François de
Mallock, William Hurrell
Malone, Robert L.
Maltby, F. W.
Mangan, James Clarence
Manners, Charles Cecil John
Manners, Janetta
Manners, John
Manrique, Jorge
Mant, Richard
Mantegna, Andrea
Manzoni, Alessandro
Maquet, Auguste
Mara (pseudonym)
Margetts, Constance Berkeley
Marianus
Marion (pseudonym)
Marks, Ed. (Edward?) W.
Marks, Mary A. M. (née Hoppus)
Marlowe, Christopher
Marot, Clément
Marradi, Giovanni
Marriage
Marryat, Frederick
Marshall, M. J.
Marshall, M. T.
Marshall, Thomas Falcon
Marston, Philip Bourke
Martial
Martin, A. C.
Martin, Frances
Martin, John
Martin, P.
Martin, Stanley
Martin, Theodore
Martin, W.
Martyn, M. E.
Marvell, Andrew
Mary (pseudonym)
Mary Queen of Scots
Mary-Anne (pseudonym)
Marzials, Frank Thomas
Marzials, Theo
Mason, William
Massey, Gerald
Massey, Henry Gibbs
Massey, Lucy
Massey, S. R.
Master Ambrose
Mataragkas
Mather, May
Matheson, Annie
Matheson, E.
Matson, William Tidd
Matthews, John
Matthey, Ellen
Maude, Thomas
Maunsell, W. Pryce
Mauve, Anton
Maxwell, Herbert
May, Anna M.
May, Julia H.
Mayhew, Neville
Maykov, Apollon
Maynard, Julia
Mayo, Herbert
McColl, Evan
McCormick, A. D.
McDiarmid, John
McDonnell, Randal William
McDouall, Peter Murray
McEvoy, Cuthbert
McEwan, Tom
McKay, A.
McKay, Archibald
McKendrick, John Gray
McKenzie, Charles
McKeown, Robert L.
McLachlan, Thomas Hope
McLellan, Archibald
McLellan, Isaac
McLennan
McNaghten, Robert Adair
McNay, A. M. (pseudonym “Graham”)
McPhail, N.
McQueen, Thomas
McSheehy
McTaggart, William
McWhirter, John W.
Meadows, K.
Mearns, Lois
Medhurst, Walter Henry
Meikle, S.
Meleager
Mellen, Grenville
Mellersh, Kate
Memor (pseudonym)
Menètrier, Casimir
Mennes, John
Mercer, Edmund
Meredith, Arthur G.
Meredith, G. E.
Meredith, George
Meredith, Louisa Anne
Meredith, William Macdonald
Merivale, Herman Charles
Merry, William Walter
Mesomedes
Metastasio, Pietro
Methuen, W.
Metrodorus
Mew, James
Meynell, Wilfred
Meyrick, Robert
Miall, A. Bernard
Michell, John
Michell, Nicholas
Michie, T.
Miles, Sibella Elizabeth (née Hatfield)
Millais, John Everett
Millar, Harold Robert
Millar, Mary M.
Miller, Charles
Miller, Cincinnatus Heine (pseudonym “Joaquin Miller”)
Miller, Ellen
Miller, Frank
Miller, Hugh
Miller, James William
Miller, Jex
Miller, Thomas
Millevoye, Charles Hubert
Milliken, Edwin James
Millington, James
Mills, Frederick S.
Mills, J. S.
Mills, Rebe
Milman, Constance
Milman, Henry Hart
Milnes, Richard Monckton
Milton, John
Mincius (pseudonym)
Minshall
Minty, Joshua
Miskeen
Mitchell, Elizabeth Harcourt
Mitchell, J. T.
Mitchell, John
Mitford, Mary Russell
Modaffar of Abiward
Moir, David Macbeth (pseudonym “Delta,” ∆)
Moir, George
Molesworth, Olive
Molyson, David
Money-Coutts, Francis Burdett
Monkhouse, William Cosmo
Monreal, George
Monsell, John Samuel Bewley
Montagu, H. Irving
Montalba, Clara
Montgomery the Third (pseudonym)
Montgomery, Bartholomew Sparrow
Montgomery, James
Moodie, Susanna
Moore
Moore, C.
Moore, Dugald
Moore, E.
Moore, Edith S.
Moore, G.
Moore, George Logan
Moore, Louise
Moore, T. Sturge
Moore, Thomas (1779-1852)
More, Hannah
Moresby, Jane
Moresby, Lily M.
Morgan Odoherty (also Mr Odoherty, Ensign Odoherty) (pseudonym)
Morgan, F. Somerville
Morice, Francis David
Morier, James Justinian
Morine, George
Morison, H. N.
Morley, Henry
Morot, Aimé
Morris, Alfred
Morris, Charles
Morris, Lewis
Morris, William
Morrow, Albert George
Morten, Thomas
Mortimer, A.
Morton, George
Morton, Thomas
Moschus
Moseley, Litchfield
Motherwell, William
Moule, Charles Walter
Moule, Horace
Moulton, Louise Chandler
Moultrie, Gerard
Moultrie, John
Moxon, Edward
Mr Ambrose (pseudonym)
Mr. J―nes (pseudonym)
Mr. W. W. (pseudonym)
Mrs M’Whirter (pseudonym)
Müchler, Karl Friedrich
Mudford, William
Mulholland, Rosa
Muller, F.
Müller, Friedrich Max
Müller, Wilhelm
Mullins, Alice
Müllner, Adolphus
Mulvany, Charles Pelham
Munby, Arthur J.
Mundy, Godfrey Charles
Mungo Glen (pseudonym)
Munns, B.
Munro, Georgina C.
Munro, Neil
Munro, Robert
Münster, Mary C. F.
Murchie, Mary J.
Murger, Henri
Murphy, Jeremiah Daniel
Murphy, Joseph John
Murray
Murray, A. H.
Murray, Charles
Murray, Charles Oliver
Murray, E. M.
Murray, George
Murray, John Fisher
Murray, John H.
Musa (pseudonym)
Musaeus
Mutch, Robert S.
Myers, Ernest
Myers, Frederic W. H.
Myrinus
Myron, A.
N—k (pseudonym)
N. H. M. (poet; Chambers's)
N. J. (poet; Once a Week)
N. J. T. (poet; Chambers's)
N. K. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
N. R. (poet; Blackwood's)
N. T. H. B. (poet; Blackwood's)
Naden, Constance
Nairne, A.
Napier, John
Nash, Joseph (1808-1878)
Nauen, Paul
Neaves, Charles
Neele, Henry
Neilson, James M.
Neilson, Robert A.
Nekrasof, Nikolay
Nencioni, Enrico
Nesbit, Edith
Neuman, B. Paul
Neumann, A.
Nevay, J.
Nevinson, Henry W.
Newman, John Henry
Newton-Robinson, Charles
Newton, John Joseph Cradock
Nicarchus
Nichol, H. Ernest
Nichol, John
Nichols, Bowyer
Nicholson, Frances
Nicholson, John Gambril F.
Nicol, R. E. (pseudonym “Edward Roedni”)
Nicoll, Robert
Nicoll, W. Robertson
Nicolson, Alexander
Nicolson, Laurence James
Niel, Mary (Daniel?)
Nisbet, Hume
Nisbet, James
Nixon, Florence
Noble, Irene
Noble, James Ashcroft
Noel, Roden
Norman, A.
Norman, Charlotte
Norris, Alfred
Norris, G. H. F.
Norris, Maria
North, Caroline
North, John William
Northwich, E. T.
Norton, Augusta
Norton, Caroline
Nossis
Nugent Grenville, Anne Lucy
Nugent-Grenville, George
O. (81st Regt.)
O. (poet; Chambers's)
O. (poet; Macmillan’s)
O. H. C. (poet; Good Words)
O. P. (translator; Blackwood's)
O'Doherty, Eva
O'Donnell, John Francis
O'Donoghue, Nannie Power
O'Moore, Dennis
O'Neill, Alicia Jane (née Sparrow)
O'Reilly, John Boyle
O'Ryan, Owen
O'Shaughnessy, Arthur W. E.
O’Hara, Millicent
O’Neil, Henry
Oakley, Henry H.
Octogenarius
Odontist (pseudonym)
Oehlenschläger, Adam
Ofella (pseudonym)
Ofellus (pseudonym)
Ogilby, John
Ogilvy, Eliza
Ogilvy, H.
Ogilvy, William Balfour
Ogle, Nathaniel
Ohlson, E. E.
Old Indian
Oldham, James Bertram (pseudonym “Bertram Romilly”)
Oliphant, Margaret
Oliphant, Margaret Ethel Blair
Oliver, Edwin
Ollier, Edmund
Omai
Omond, T. S.
One of the Authors of “Child World”
One Who Has Known Poets
Onestes
Opie, Amelia
Oppian
Ora (pseudonym)
Oram, Blanche (pseudonym “Roma White”)
Orchardson, William Quiller
Ord, John Walker
Orielensis (pseudonym)
Ormerod, H. J.
Orne, Caroline F.
Orpen, A. M.
Orred, Meta
Osborn, Edward Haydon
Osborne
Osborne, C.
Osgood, Frances Sargent
Osgood, Kate Putnam
Otway-Page, Ellen F. S.
Ouston, Helen
Outram, George S.
Overend, William Heysham
Ovid
Owen, Ellen Culley
Owen, Frances Mary
Owen, Octavius Freire
Owen, Samuel
Oxenford, John
P. (poet; Blackwood's)
P. (poet; Chambers's)
P. A. (poet; Good Words)
P. J. (translator; Good Words)
P. K. (poet; Blackwood's)
P. M. Cantab (pseudonym)
P. S. (poet; Chambers's)
P. W. (poet; Blackwood's)
P*. (poet; The Keepsake)
Pacificus (pseudonym)
Paddy
Page, Ellen
Page, Mary Anne
Paine, C. M.
Palgrave, Francis Turner
Palladas of Alexandria
Palmer, John
Panton, Jane Ellen (née Frith)
Panzacchi, Enrico
Papa, Pasquale
Pardoe, Julia
Pares, Anne (pseudonym “Evelyn Forest”)
Paris, E. T.
Park, Andrew
Park, J. H.
Park, Oscar
Park, William
Parke, Walter (pseudonym “The London Hermit”)
Parker
Parker Douglas, Sarah
Parker, Emma J.
Parker, Gilbert
Parker, Jane
Parker, Martin
Parkes (Belloc), Bessie Rayner
Parkes, W. Theodore
Parkinson, George
Parkinson, Henry W.
Parkinson, Richard
Parkinson, William
Parmenio
Parr, Harriet (pseudonym “Holme Lee”)
Parris, Edmund Thomas
Parry, Charles Hubert Hastings
Parry, Edward
Parsons, Edward
Partridge, Samuel William
Pasha, Hafiz
Pasquier, James Abbott
Passerat, Jean
Passmore, T. H.
Paterson, George (poet)
Paterson, George M. (illustrator and painter)
Paterson, John Curle
Paterson, Walter
Patmore, Coventry
Patmore, Peter James
Paton, A.
Paton, Allan Park
Paton, Frederick Noel
Paton, Joseph Noël
Paton, Waller Hugh
Patrick, Mary
Patterson, James C.
Paul of Thessalonica
Paul the Silentiary
Paul, Charles Kegan
Paul, John Dean (1775-1852)
Paulin, George
Paulus Silentiarius
Paylor, T. W.
Payn, Deline
Payn, Harriet F. (“Tiny”)
Payn, James
Peabody, W. O.
Peach, Louisa Courtenay
Peacock, Florence
Peacock, John
Peacock, Mabel
Pearce, Charles Sprague
Pearce, Maresco
Pearson, Andrew
Pearson, Emma Maria
Peddie, Robert
Pedley, Ethel
Peel, Edmund
Pegolotti, Alessandro
Pember, Edward Henry
Pemberton, Jane Elizabeth
Penn Venn
Penney[, F. G.?]
Pennington, B. J.
Pennington, Marianne
Penny, Anne Judith
Penstone, John Jewel
Pentaur
Peppin, Mary E.
Perceval, Rosamund
Percie
Percival, James Gates
Percy, J.
Percy, Thomas
Peregrine Wilton
Perring
Perrott (Miss)
Perry
Petley, Edmund
Petőfi, Sándor
Petrarch
Pettie, John
Pfizer, Gustav
Philemon
Philip of Thessalonica
Philippus
Phillips, G. C.
Phillips, S.
Phillips, Stephen
Phillips, Susan K.
Phillips, Thomas
Phillips, W. A.
Philo (pseudonym)
Philodemus
Philp, Maud
Phipps, Charles B.
Phipps, Edmund
Piatt, Sarah M. B.
Picken, Andrew L.
Pickersgill, Frederick Richard
Pickersgill, Maria
Pierpoint, Folliott Sandford
Pierrepont, Charles Evelyn
Pike, Albert
Pike, Florence
Pinchard, William Pryce
Pindar
Pinkerton, Susan
Pinwell, George John
Piozzi, Hester Lynch Thrale
Piper, Mary
Pitman, J.
Planché, James Robinson
Plarr (pseudonym “M. I. T.,” “MIT.”)
Plarr, Victor Gustave
Plato
Plimsollides
Pluma (pseudonym)
Plumley, Matilda
Plumptre, Edward Hayes
Plunket, Isabel
Poe, Edgar Allan
Polehampton, Theodore S.
Polin, Edward
Pollock, Walter Herries
Polwhele, Richard
Ponsonby, Eliza Anne (née Skelton)
Poole
Pope, Alexander
Pope, Gustave
Porter, J.
Posidippus
Potter, Frederick Scarlett (also Scarlet)
Poulsson, Emilie
Poultney, Alfred H.
Powell, Frederick York
Powell, Thomas
Power, Ellen
Power, Harriet
Power, Marguerite Agnes
Power, Tyrone
Powers, Susan Rugeley
Poynter, Clara Singer
Poynter, Edward John
Praed, William Mackworth (1802-1839)
Pratt, Charles Stuart
Pray, Isaac Clarke
Prestage, Edgar
Preston, Margaret J.
Prevost, Francis
Price, Fitzjames Tucker
Prichard, C. E.
Prideaux, Sarah Treverbian
Prince Jem
Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia
Prince Rodolph of Liechtenstein
Prince, John Critchley
Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll
Pringle, C. I.
Pringle, Thomas
Prinsep, Henry Thoby
Prior, James
Prior, Matthew
Pritchett, Robert Taylor
Probyn, Laetitia
Probyn, May
Procter, Adelaide Anne
Procter, Bryan Waller (pseudonym “Barry Cornwall”)
Propertius
Prothero, Alice Mary
Prout, S. G.
Prout, Samuel
Prout, Victor
Provis, B. W.
Prower
Prower, Maude
Prowett, Charles Gipps
Prudentius
Prudhomme, Sully
Purves, David Laing
Pushkin, Alexander
Pye, R. H.
Pyle, Howard
Q.
QU.? (pseudonym)
Quarles, Francis
Quarry, A.
Queen Elizabeth I
Quillinan, Edward
Quintana, Manuel José
Quinton, Alfred Robert
Quinton, J. R.
Quintus Mæcius
R. (poet; Blackwood's)
R. (poet; Chambers's)
R. (poet; Macmillan's)
R. (poet; Once a Week)
R. A. B. (poet; Once a Week)
R. F. H. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
R. G. (poet; The Dark Blue)
R. G. O. (poet; Atalanta)
R. H. (poet; Blackwood's)
R. H. (poet; The Keepsake)
R. H. (translator; Blackwood's)
R. H. P. (poet; Blackwood's)
R. H. P. B. (illustrator)
R. H. W. D. (poet; Macmillan's)
R. J. (poet; Blackwood's)
R. J. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
R. K. A. E. (poet; Cornhill)
R. L. A.
R. M. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
R. M. S. (poet; The Keepsake)
R. N.
R. O.
R. P. (translator; Macmillan's)
R. R. (poet; Chambers's)
R. S. (poet; Chambers’s)
R. S. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
R. S. (translator; Chambers's)
R. S. M.
R. S. V. P.
R. T. (translator; Blackwood’s)
R. T. H. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
Rabelais, François
Rachan, Mills
Radcliffe, Ann
Radcliffe, Frederick Peter Delmé
Radford, Dollie
Raeside, David
Ragg, Frederick William
Raikes, Arthur Hamilton
Railton, Herbert
Raine, J.
Raleigh, Walter
Ralston, William (1848-1911)
Ralston, William Ralston Shedden (1828-1889)
Ramsay, Allan
Ramsay, John (1799-1870)
Randolph, Thomas
Rands, William Brighty
Ranken, W. B.
Rankin, Jessica
Rankine, William Macquorn
Ranking, B. Montgomerie
Raphael
Rawnsley, Hardwicke Drummond
Raymond, G.
Reade (pseudonym “Bee”)
Reade, F. E.
Reboul, Jean
Redding, Cyrus
Redi, Francesco
Reece, Robert (Jr.)
Reeve, Alice
Reeve, Henry
Reid, J.
Reid, John
Reid, Maria
Reid, P. T.
Reid, P. Y.
Reid, Robert (pseudonym “Robert Wanlock”)
Reid, Robert Payton
Reid, Samuel
Reinagle, George Philip
Reinick, Robert
Remington, Frederic
Rennie, Eliza
Renton, William
Renwick, James
Repton, Humphry
Retzsch, Moritz
Reynolds, [M. C.?]
Reynolds, Frederic Mansel
Reynolds, John Hamilton
Reynolds, Joshua
Reynolds, Mary[?] Frances
Rhees, J. L.
Rhoades, James
Rhyming Richard
Rhys, Ernest
Rhys, Oliver
Richards, Alfred B.
Richardson, [?R.]
Richardson, Catherine Eliza
Richardson, David Lester
Richardson, George Fleming
Richardson, Paul
Richardson, Robert
Richings, E. A.
Richmond, William Blake
Richter, Albert
Richter, Henry James
Ricketts, Charles
Riddell-Webster, T. W.
Riddell, Henry Scott
Ridley, Matthew White
Rigg, James
Righton, Henry
Rijfkogel, Albertine
Rischgitz, Edward
Ritchie, Leitch
Rivers, Leopold
Riviere, Briton
Robb, Thomas D.
Roberts
Roberts, Charles G. D.
Roberts, Emma
Roberts, Mary
Robertson, A.
Robertson, Alexander B.
Robertson, D.
Robertson, D. J.
Robertson, George
Robertson, James Logie (pseudonym “Hugh Haliburton”)
Robertson, Janet Logie (née Simpson)
Robertson, Maggie
Robertson, Patrick (Lord Robertson)
Robertson, Sarah Moir
Robertson, William
Robertson[, H. L.?]
Robinson
Robinson (Robertson), Stewart
Robinson, Agnes Mary Francis
Robinson, Annie (pseudonym “Marian Douglas”)
Robinson, David
Robinson, George Wade
Robinson, Richard
Robinson, Sybil A. H.
Rochat, F.
Rochlitz, Friedrich
Rock, James
Rockliff, Robert
Rodd, Rennell
Rodger, Alexander
Rogan, Ada Frances
Roger, William (pseudonym "Daphnis")
Rogers, Mary Eliza
Rogers, Samuel
Rogers, William Henry
Rogerson, John Bolton
Rolfe, Frederick William
Rolls, Mary (Mrs. Henry Rolls)
Rookes, Sophia E.
Roose, P. W.
Rosa (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
Rosa, Salvator
Roscoe, James
Roscoe, Thomas
Roscoe, William
Ross, G. Fanny
Ross, Janet
Ross, William Charles
Rossetti, Christina G.
Rossetti, Dante Gabriel
Rossetti, William Michael
Rossi, Giacomo
Rouget de Lisle, Claude Joseph
Routh, Harold Victor
Rowbotham, Elizabeth
Rowe, Cyril
Rowe, John
Rowe, William J. Monkhouse
Rowland, May
Rowley, William
Roxby, Genevieve Mary
Roy, J.
Rozier, Ella H.
Ruckert, Frederick
Rufinus
Rullmann, Ludwig
Runeberg, Johan Ludvig
Runge, Phillip Otto
Rushton, Edward
Ruskin, John
Russell, John
Russell, John (1792-1878)
Russo, Ferdinando
Rutter, Frances
Rutter, Richard Ball
Rutter, Robert
Ryland, Henry
S. (poet; Blackwood's)
S. (poet; Chambers's)
S. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
S. (poet; Good Words)
S. (poet; Once a Week)
S. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
S. A. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
S. A. A. (poet; Macmillan’s)
S. B. (poet; Once a Week)
S. C. (poet; Chambers's)
S. H. (translator; English Woman’s Journal)
S. H. S. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
S. M. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
S. M. C.
S. P. (poet; Blackwood's)
S. R. P. (poet; Good Words)
S. S. (poet; Blackwood's)
S. S. S. (poet; Blackwood’s)
S. W. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
Saadi of Shiraz
Sadler, J. K.
Sadler, M. E.
Saint Columba
Salakostas, George
Salmon, Arthur Leslie
Salmon, M. C.
Salter, William
Sanders, Mary Jane Davidson
Sanders, Samuel Farncombe
Sandford, Daniel Keyte
Sandham, Henry
Sands, J.
Sandys, Frederick
Sara (pseudonym)
Saunders, Donald S.
Saunders, John
Savage, Reginald
Savage, William
Savile, Charles Stuart
Savile, Jeremiah
Sawyer, W.
Sawyer, William
Saxby, Jane Euphemia
Saxby, Jessie Margaret Edmonston
Sayle, Charles
Scaife, Elizabeth
Scarr, G.
Schiller, Friedrich
Schubart, Christian Friedrich Daniel
Schultz, Adolph
Schütz-Wilson, Henry
Schütze-Wilson, F.
Schwab, Gustav
Scotigena Oxoniensis
Scott, Catherine Amy (née Dawson)
Scott, Clement W.
Scott, F. B.
Scott, H. D.
Scott, J.
Scott, J. R.
Scott, James Edward
Scott, John
Scott, John (Scott of Amwell)
Scott, L. M.
Scott, Walter
Scott, William Bell
Scudder, Eliza
Seaman, Owen
Searing, Laura Redden (pseudonym “Howard Glyndon”)
Seccombe, Gladys
Sedgwick, George
Sedwin, Walter
Seeley, E.
Seidl, Johann Gabriel
Selīm I
Sendall, Walter
Seneca
Serapion of Alexandria
Sere, A. L.
Sergeant Murphy
Sergeant, Adeline
Serle, Thomas James
Service, John
Setchel, Sarah
Seward, W.
Sewell, Mary
Seyffarth, Louisa (née Sharpe)
Seymour, Montague
Shadow
Shafto, Holt
Shairp, John Campbell
Shakespeare, William
Shanly, Charles Dawson
Shannon, Charles Haslewood
Sharp, Isaac
Sharp, William
Sharpe, Charles Kirkpatrick
Sharpe, Eliza
Sharpe, M. M.
Sharpe, M. W.
Sharpe, Richard Scrafton
Shaw, Alfred Capel
Shaw, J.
Shaw, John Begg
Shaw, Thomas Budd
Sheil, Edward
Sheil, George
Shelley, Mary
Shelley, Percy Bysshe
Sheridan, Charles Brinsley
Sheridan, Louisa Henrietta
Sheridan, Richard Brinsley
Sheridan, Thomas
Sherman, Frank Dempster
Shields, Frederic J.
Shipton, Anna (née Savage)
Shirley, James
Shoberl, Frederic (1775-1853)
Shoberl, Frederic, Jun. (-1852)
Shore, Arabella
Short, Paul
Shorter, Dora Sigerson
Shute, Anna Clara
Shute, E. L.
Shuttleworth, Philip Francis
Siddons (Miss)
Sidgwick, Henry
Sidney, Philip
Sigourney, Lydia Huntley
Sill, Joseph
Sillery, Charles Doyne
Silver, H.
Simcox, George Augustus
Simcox, William Henry
Simeon, John
Simmons, Bartholomew
Simmons, F. W.
Simonides of Ceos
Simpson, J.
Simpson, Jane Cross
Simpson, Samuel L.
Simson, Florence
Sinclair, Catharine
Sinclair, Ian
Sinclair, J. [K.?]
Sinclair, John Lang (pseudonym “Alfred Egerton”)
Sinclair, William
Singleton, Henry
Singleton, William
Skaldaspiller, Evind
Skelton, Percival
Sketchley, Richard Forster
Skill, Frederick John
Skipsey, Joseph
Skirving, Adam
Skrine, John Huntley
Skurray, Francis
Slader, C.
Slaney, James
Slater, P. F.
Slimon, James MacKintosh
Slinger, F. J.
Smail, James (pseudonym “Matthew Gotterson”)
Smales
Smales, Edwin C.
Small, William
Smart, Alexander
Smedley, Frank E.
Smedley, Menella Bute
Smetham, James
Smets, Wilhelm
Smibert, Thomas
Smirke, Robert
Smith, Agnes
Smith, Albert Richard
Smith, Alexander
Smith, Alexander Munro (1860-1933)
Smith, Edward
Smith, Ellen (pseudonym “Reseda”)
Smith, Enort
Smith, George Barnett
Smith, Goldwin
Smith, Horace
Smith, J.
Smith, J. F.
Smith, J. J.
Smith, James
Smith, James (1775-1839)
Smith, Lucy Caroline (née Cumming)
Smith, Lydia Bosworth
Smith, Nimmo
Smith, R. N.
Smith, Thomas
Smith, W. Alexander
Smith, W. Frank
Smith, Walter Chalmers
Smith, William
Smith, William Henry
Smoil, T.
Smyth, Amelia Gillespie
Smyth, William
Snow, Robert
Solomon, Abraham
Solomon, Simeon
Solomos, Dionysios
Somerset, Henry
Somerville, G. G.
Somerville, William
Sophocles
Sordel de Goit (Sordello)
Sorrel, Susan
Sotheby, William
Soulary, Josephin
Southall, Isabel
Southey, Caroline Bowles
Southey, Robert
Southwell, Robert
Sowden, John
Sparrow, Eliza Julia
Spence, Florence Elizabeth
Spence, Kate E.
Spencer, Aubrey George
Spencer, Peter
Spens, Walter C.
Spenser, Edmund
Spiers, Charlotte H.
Spode, Anna
Spofford, Harriet Prescott
Spratt
St. Barbe, Roger Frampton
St. Clair-Erskine, Robert
St. John, Isabella
St. Maur, Charlotte
St. Vincent, John
Stacey, Walter S.
Stackhouse, Jonathan Lett
Stafford, William Cooke
Staley, A. E.
Stanfield, Clarkson Frederick
Stanhope, Philip Henry
Stanhope, R. H.
Stanley, Arthur Penrhyn
Stanley, C.
Stanley, Edward
Stanton, George Clark
Stanton, Horace Hughes
Staples, John C.
Stapleton, Miles
Starkey, Digby Pilot
Starr, Sarah J.
Statyllius Flaccus
Stebbing, Henry
Stedman, John
Stedman, W.
Steedman, C. M.
Steele, Thomas
Steell, Gourlay
Stembridge, Albert E.
Stephanoff
Stephanoff, Francis Philip
Stephanoff, James
Stephens, L. B.
Stepney, Catherine (also Manners)
Sterling, John
Stevens, William B. B.
Stevenson, David
Stevenson, James J.
Stevenson, M. Lowsley
Stevenson, Robert Louis
Stevenson, Robert Macaulay
Stewart, Albyn
Stewart, Alexander
Stewart, Alexander D.
Stewart, June I.
Stewart, Louisa
Stewart, William John
Stigant, William (also Stigand)
Stirling Graham, Clementina
Stirling, A.
Stock, Elliot
Stock, Henry John
Stockall, Harriett
Stocks, Lumb
Stoddard, Lavinia
Stoddart, J.
Stoddart, Thomas Tod
Stokes, Marianne (née Preindlesberger)
Stolberg, Friedrich Leopold
Stone, Frank
Stone, Louisa F.
Stone, Samuel John
Stonehewer, Agnes
Stonhouse, Charles
Storr, Francis
Story, A. M. Sommerville
Story, Robert
Story, William Wetmore
Stothard, Thomas
Strachey, Jane Maria
Strachey, John St. Loe
Strahan, Alexander Stuart
Strahan, John
Strang, James
Strange, Edward F.
Strettell, Alma
Stricker, Frederick
Strickland, Agnes
Strong, Charles
Stuart (Stewart?), Georgina
Stuart-Wortley, Emmeline
Stuart, Anita
Stuart, G. B.
Stubbs, Charles William
Sturgis, Julian Russell
Suckling, John
Sulman, Thomas
Sultan Murād IV
Sultan Süleyman I
Sutherland, Millicent
Suverkrop, Isabella Ann
Swain, Charles
Swayne, George Carless
Swayne, Margaret Sarah
Sweetman, Elinor M.
Swift, Edmund L.
Swift, Jonathan
Swinburne, Algernon Charles
Sydney, Charles
Sylvester, James Joseph
Syme, James
Symes, J. H.
Symington, A. M.
Symington, Andrew James
Symonds, John Addington
Symonds, P. B.
Symons, Arthur
Symons, Jelinger Cookson
Synge, W. W. Follett
T. (poet; Blackwood's)
T. (poet; Good Words)
T. (poet; Once a Week)
T. A. K. (poet; The Keepsake)
T. C. (poet; Blackwood's)
T. C. R. (poet; Chambers's)
T. D. (poet; Once a Week)
T. D. A. (poet; Chambers's)
T. D. C.
T. G. (poet; Chambers's)
T. M. (illustrator)
T. M. (poet; Blackwood's)
T. M. (translator; Blackwood’s)
T. R. (poet; Chambers's)
T. S. (poet; Once a Week)
T. T. (poet; Blackwood's)
T. W. B. (poet; The Keepsake)
T. W. S. (poet; Chambers's)
Tabb, John B.
Talbot, Frances
Talfourd, Thomas Noon
Tannahill, Robert
Tappan, Henry Philip
Tasso, Torquato
Tate, F. B.
Tate, William J.
Tatham, Emma
Taylor
Taylor, Arthur M. C.
Taylor, Bayard
Taylor, E.
Taylor, E. J.
Taylor, Emily
Taylor, Emily Howson
Taylor, George
Taylor, George R.
Taylor, John
Taylor, M.
Taylor, R.
Taylor, Tom
Taylor, W. L.
Taylor, W. V.
Tayside (poet; Chambers's)
Tchudi, Albert
Teale, William
Teetgen, Alexander Thomas
Tegnér, Esaias
Telbin, W.
Temple, J.
Tennant, Dorothy
Tennant, William
Tenniel, John
Tennyson, Alfred
Tennyson, Hallam
Terrell, Georgina (née Koberwein)
Teufelsdrockh (pseudonym)
Teulon, Harriet Mary
Thackeray, William Makepeace
Thackwell, Walter
Thallus the Milesian
Thaxter, Celia
Theocritus
Theodoridas
Theodosius, J.
Théolier, Philippe
Theta (pseudonym)
Thicknesse, Lily
Thom, William
Thomas, Jane
Thomas, Rose Haig
Thomas, W. Moy
Thompson, A.
Thompson, Annabel Charlotte
Thompson, Anne Harrison
Thompson, D. M.
Thompson, D'Arcy W.
Thompson, Edith M.
Thompson, H.
Thompson, Henry
Thompson, Sidney R.
Thompson, William Gill
Thomson, C.
Thomson, G. W.
Thomson, Gordon
Thomson, J. G.
Thomson, James (1700-1748)
Thomson, James (1825-)
Thomson, James (pseud. B. V.) (1834-1882)
Thomson, John Scoular
Thomson, John Stuart
Thomson, Richard
Thomson, William
Thorburn, Robert
Thorn, Ariell
Thornbury, George Walter
Thorold, Edmund
Thud, M.
Thyillus
Thymocles
Thyne, Philip
Tiddeman, L. E.
Tiffin
Tighe, Mary
Tildesley, James Carpenter
Tilton, Theodore
Timothy Tickler (pseudonym)
Tindal, Henrietta Euphemia
Tipsy Thammuz (pseudonym)
Todhunter, John (pseudonym “Aureolus Paracelsus”)
Tollemache, Beatrix L.
Tollens, Hendrik
Tomkins, Mary Jane (Plarr)
Tonkin, Sarah Eliza
Torceanu, M. Ricard
Townsend, Horatio
Townshend (Townsend), H. J.
Townshend, Chauncy Hare
Toynbee, William
Tranmar, Reid
Trench, Frederick
Trench, Richard Chenevix
Trevanion, Ada
Trevelyan, George Otto
Trevor
Trevor, George
Trollope, Frances
Trueba y Cosio, Joaquin Telesforo de
Truman, Joseph
Tschumakov, Teodor
Tuck, Harry
Tucker, Marwood
Tuckerman, M. P.
Tuckey, Jane
Turgenev, Ivan
Turner, Charles Tennyson
Turner, Florence
Turner, G.
Turner, J. M. W.
Turner, Rosetta
Tusser, Thomas
Tuttiett, Mary Gleed (pseudonym “Maxwell Gray”)
Tweedale, Violet
Tweedie, M. B.
Two "Long Spoons" (pseudonym)
Tylee, Edward Sydney
Tylee, Florence
Tymms, T. Vincent
Tymnas
Tynan (Hinkson), Katharine
Tyndale, Marcia
Tyndall, W. B.
Tyrwhitt, Richard St John
Tytler, Patrick Fraser
U. (poet; Macmillan's)
U. A. T. (poet; Cornhill)
U. L. T. (poet; Good Words)
U. T. (poet; Blackwood's)
Udall, Nicholas
Uhland, Johann Ludwig
Ulph, Margaret Kate
Ululans (pseudonym)
Unsigned
Urquhart, G. S.
Urquhart, Helen
Usher, Nora C.
Uwins, Thomas
V. (poet; Chambers's)
V. (poet; The Keepsake)
V. B. (poet; Good Words)
Valdés, Juan Meléndez
Valentine, F.
Valentine, Laura (née Jewry)
van Streek (née Brinkman)
Vanderlyn, Nathan
Vane, Charles William
Vassall-Fox, Henry Richard
Vaughan, Henry
Vaughan, Wilmot
Vauquelin de la Fresnaye, Jean
Veal, Joseph
Vedder, David
Veitch, John
Veley, Margaret
Verhaeren, Emile
Verney, Frances Parthenope (née Nightingale)
Vernon, Maud V.
Verrall, J.
Vickers, Alfred Gomersal (1810-1837)
Vidal, Peire
Villiers Sankey, William
Villon, François
Vinton, Matthew
Virgil
Vivanti, Annie
Vlachos, Angelos
Vogl, Heinrich
von Baldhoven, Martin
von Chamisso, Adelbert
von Hardenberg, Georg (pseudonym “Novalis”)
Von Malthison
von Münch-Bellinghausen, Eligius Franz Joseph (pseudonym Frederick Halm)
von Salis-Seewis, Johann Gaudenz
Vyse, Maude J.
W. (poet; Blackwood's)
W. (poet; Chambers's)
W. (poet; Once a Week)
W. A. (illustrator)
W. A. F. (poet; Blackwood's)
W. B. (illustrator)
W. B. R. (poet; Good Words)
W. B. S. (poet; Chambers's)
W. C. (poet; Once a Week)
W. E. L. (poet; Chambers's)
W. G. (poet; Blackwood's)
W. G. (poet; Once a Week)
W. G. C. (poet; Macmillan’s)
W. G. M. (poet; Blackwood's)
W. H. (poet; Macmillan’s)
W. H. B. (translator; Macmillan's)
W. H. H.
W. H. K.
W. H. W. (poet; Chambers's)
W. J. C. (poet; Cornhill)
W. J. W.
W. K. S. (poet; Atalanta)
W. M. (translator; Good Words)
W. M. G. (poet; Chambers's)
W. M. G. (poet; Once a Week)
W. M. S. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
W. M. T. (translator; Chambers's)
W. P. (illustrator)
W. P. (poet; Blackwood's)
W. P. L. (poet; Cornhill)
W. P. W. (poet; Chambers's)
W. R. (illustrator)
W. R. (poet; Once a Week)
W. S. (poet; Chambers's)
W. S. (poet; Good Words)
W. S. D. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
W. S. F. (“A Police Constable”) (poet; Good Words)
W. S. M. (poet; Chambers's)
W. S. Y. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
W. T. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
W. T. G. (poet; Once a Week)
W. T. M. (poet; Once a Week)
W. V. (poet; Good Words)
W. W. (poet; Blackwood's)
W. W. (poet; Good Words)
W. W. G. (poet; Macmillan’s)
W. Y. (translator; Macmillan's)
Waddington, Samuel
Waddy, Frederick
Wade, George Woosung
Wagner, E.
Wagner, Richard
Wagstaff, A.
Wain, Louis
Waithman, Helen Maud
Walcott, Mackenzie E. C.
Waldie, Agnes
Walford, Edward (pseudonym “Ralph de Peverel”)
Walford, Lucy Bethia
Walford, Neville
Walford, Olive Montagu
Walker, Elizabeth (Eliza)
Walker, Esther
Walker, Francis S.
Walker, Frederick
Walker, John (pseudonym "Rowland Thirlmere")
Walker, W. Sidney
Wall, J. (pseudonym “Iris”)
Wallace, Robert Bruce
Waller, Edmund
Waller, John Francis
Wallin, Johan Olaf
Walsh, Paul
Walton, Izaak
Ward, J.
Ward, James Warner
Ward, Mary Augusta
Ward, Thomas Humphry
Wardle, Arthur
Wardle, James
Waring, Anna Letitia
Waring, Charles H.
Waring, Eleanor Emma
Waring, H. E.
Waring, S.
Waring, Samuel Miller
Warner, John
Warr, George C.
Warren, Henry
Warren, John Byrne Leicester
Warren, Samuel
Warren, Thomas Herbert
Warrington, George
Warton, Thomas
Waterston, Robert Cassie
Watkins, Frank
Watkins, Morgan George
Watkins, S. Cornish
Watson, Elizabeth Sophia
Watson, J. (photographer)
Watson, James E.
Watson, John Dawson
Watson, L.
Watson, Robert
Watson, Robert Lancaster
Watson, Rosamund Marriott
Watson, Walter
Watson, William
Watt, J. Lauchlan MacLean
Wattier, Émile
Watts-Dunton, Theodore
Watts, Alaric Alexander
Watts, Alaric Alfred (Alfred A.) (1825-1901)
Watts, C. M.
Watts, George Frederick
Watts, Isaac
Watts, John George
Watts, Priscilla (Zillah) Maden
Waugh, Arthur
Waugh, F. G.
Waugh, Francis
Weatherly, Frederic Edward
Webb, Anna
Webb, K. E.
Webb, R. Chapman
Webb, W. Trego
Webber, Byron
Webster, Augusta
Webster, John
Weedon, Francis Charles (1831-1861)
Weid, Pauline Elisabeth Ottilie Luise zu (pseudonym “Carmen Sylva”)
Weir, Harrison
Weissensee, Philipp Heinrich
Welch, W. P.
Wellesley, Richard
Wells (Miss)
Wentworth, Ernest
Werner, Alice
West, Stainley
Westall, Richard
Westall, William
Westmacott, Richard (1799-1872)
Weston, Elizabeth Joanna
Whall, C. H.
Whewell, William
Whishaw, Frederick James
Whistler, James McNeil
Whitcher, John
White Friar
White, E.
White, James
White, Joseph Blanco
White, T.
Whitehead, Charles
Whitelocke, Samuel
Whiting, Sydney
Whitman, Walt
Whitney, Adeline Dutton Train
Whittier, John Greenleaf
Whymper, Charles
Whymper, Frederick Hayes
Wiegand, W. J.
Wiffen, Jeremiah Holmes
Wightwick, George
Wilberforce, Samuel
Wilde, Jane Francesca Agnes (pseudonym “Speranza”)
Wilkie, David
Wilkie, Helen
Wilkie, James
Wilkinson
Wilkinson, Thomas C.
William Morris (allonym)
William, C. P.
Williams, Antonia R.
Williams, Charles H.
Williams, Charles Hanbury
Williams, J.
Williams, J. D.
Williams, R. Stansby
Williams, Robert Folkstone
Williams, S. W.
Williams, Sarah
Williamson, David R.
Williamson, Effie
Williamson, R. R.
Willis, Nathaniel Parker
Wills, James
Wills, Ruth
Wills, William Henry
Wilson-Block, Elisabeth
Wilson, [Janet?]
Wilson, A. C.
Wilson, Alexander
Wilson, Andrew
Wilson, Ernest
Wilson, F. E.
Wilson, F. G.
Wilson, Florence Margaret
Wilson, George (1799-1873)
Wilson, George (1818-1859)
Wilson, George Washington (1823-1893)
Wilson, Helen K.
Wilson, J.
Wilson, James
Wilson, John
Wilson, John (pseudonym “Christopher North”)
Wilson, Margaret (née Harries) (Mrs. Cornwell Baron Wilson)
Wilson, Robert
Wilson, Sarah
Wilson, William
Wilton, Charles
Wilton, Richard
Wimperis, Edmund Morison
Windle, E. G.
Wingate, David
Winkworth, Catherine
Winstanley, Lilian
Winterwood, Geoffrey
Winther, Christian
Witcomb, Charles
Wither, George
Withers, Percy
Wohlbrück, Wilhelm August
Wolcot, John
Wolf, Joseph
Wolfe, Charles
Wolff, Betje
Wolff, Pius Alexander
Wolffsohn, Lily
Wollaston, John Thomas Burton
Wood
Wood, A.
Wood, Alfred
Wood, Elizabeth W.
Wood, Ellen
Wood, Francis Henry
Wood, G. W.
Wood, John
Wood, Lydia M.
Wood, Sam (pseudonym “Mortimer Mansell”)
Woodforde
Woodley, George
Woods, Margaret Louisa
Woods, Virna
Woodward, William
Wooley, Charles (Wolley, Wolley-Dod)
Woolmer, Alfred Joseph
Woolsey, Sarah Chauncey (pseudonym “Susan Coolidge”)
Wordsworth, William (1770-1850)
Wordsworth, William (1835-1917)
Worsley, H.
Worsley, Philip Stanhope
Wotton, Henry
Wotton, Mabel E.
Wrangham, Francis
Wratislaw, Theodore
Wren, Hildegarde
Wren, M. H.
Wright, Arthur
Wright, David
Wright, John Massey
Wyatt, Thomas
Wykehamist (pseudonym)
Wynne, Ellis J.
X. (poet; Blackwood's)
X. (poet; Chambers's)
X. (poet; Once a Week)
X. C. (poet; Chambers's)
X. L. (poet; Blackwood's)
X. Y. (poet; Blackwood's)
Xenocritus
Y. (translator; Blackwood’s)
Yates, Edmund Hodgson
Yeats, William Butler
Young, George
Young, Ruth
Yriarte, Charles
Yule, Henry
Z. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
Z. (translator; Chambers's)
Zappi, Giambattista Felice
Zedlitz, Joseph Christian Freiherr von
Zenodotus of Ephesus
Zeta (pseudonym)
Zimmermann
Zwecker, Johann Baptist
Αμφιων (pseudonym)
Αριαδνη (pseudonym)
Ελιας (pseudonym)
Έσπερος (pseudonym)
Θ
Κρεων (pseudonym)
Νομος (pseudonym)
Φασν (pseudonym)
Ω (poet; Blackwood's)
Ω (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
Фώνη (pseudonym)
Translators
’Arif
¶ ¶ (poet; Good Words)
À Beckett, Gilbert
A Correspondent
A Damp Tourist
A Dog
A Lady
A Practical Young Lady
A Private Soldier
A Provincial Aspirant
A Septagenarian
A Volunteer
A. (poet; Macmillan's)
A. B. (illustrator)
A. B. (poet; Blackwood's)
A. B. (translator; Blackwood's)
A. C. (illustrator)
A. C. (poet; Chambers's)
A. C. C. (poet; Good Words)
A. C. M. (poet; Good Words)
A. C. W. (poet; Once a Week)
A. D. (poet; Chambers's)
A. D. (poet; Once a Week)
A. D. (translator; Once a Week)
A. E. C. (poet; Once a Week)
A. E. G. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
A. F. (illustrator)
A. F. F. (poet; Macmillan's)
A. F. T. (poet; Good Words)
A. G. (poet; Chambers's)
A. G. (poet; Macmillan's)
A. G. H. (poet; Once a Week)
A. H. (poet; Chambers’s)
A. H. B. (poet; Good Words)
A. H. J. (poet; Good Words)
A. I. (poet; Chambers’s)
A. J. G. D. (poet; Macmillan’s)
A. J. M. (translator; Chambers’s)
A. K. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
A. K. (poet; Macmillan’s)
A. L. (poet; Chambers’s)
A. L. (poet; Cornhill)
A. L. B. (poet; Cornhill)
A. L. L. (poet; Macmillan’s)
A. M. (poet; Cornhill)
A. M. (poet; Once a Week)
A. M’K. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
A. M’L. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
A. N. (poet; Once a Week)
A. P. (poet; Chambers’s)
A. P. H. (illustrator)
A. R. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
A. S. (poet; Chambers's)
A. W. (illustrator)
A. W. (poet; Chambers's)
A. W. (poet; Keepsake)
A. W. S. (translator; Blackwood’s)
Abbey, Henry
Abdülbâkî, Mahmud (pseudonym: “Bāky”)
Abdy, Maria
Acton, Rose
Adams, Charles Warren
Adams, Henry Gardiner
Adams, Lucy
Adcock, Arthur St. John
Addaeus
Addey, Elizabeth
Addey, M. Louisa
Addis, John
Addleshaw, Percy (pseudonym “Percy Hemingway”)
Adye, S.
Aeschylus
Aesop
Agar-Ellis, George James Welbore
Agathias Scholasticus
Aguilar, Grace
Aïdé, Hamilton
Aikin, John (Dr. Aikin)
Ainslie, Douglas
Ainslie, Hew
Ainsworth, Percy Clough (pseudonym “Percy Gallard”)
Ainsworth, William Harrison
Aird, Marion Paul
Aird, Thomas
Airey
Airston, Eubulus
Aitken, Andrew
Aitken, David Russell
Aitken, James Alfred
Aitken, John
Aitken, William
Alamanni, Antonio
Alcmæon (pseudonym)
Alderson, E. Maude
Aldis, James Arthur (pseudonym “Adriel Vere”)
Aldis, Thomas
Alexander, Anton (pseudonym Anastasius Grün)
Alexander, Cecil Frances
Alexander, D.
Alexander, Eleanor
Alexander, M. M. (pseudonym “Myra”)
Alexander, Patrick Proctor
Alexander, Sidney Arthur
Alexander, W.
Alexander, W. L.
Alexander, William
Alford, Charles
Alford, Henry
Algernon Charles Swinburne (allonym)
Alighieri, Dante
Alison, Richard
Allan, Robert
Allen, Robin
Allingham, Helen
Allingham, William
Allom, Thomas
Alma-Tadema, Laurence (1865-1940; daughter of Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema)
Alma-Tadema, Lawrence (1836-1912)
Alpheus of Mitylene
Alsop, Anne
Ames, Minnie
Amos, Isaac Doré
Amy R. (pseudonym)
An Industrious Englishman
An Oxonian
Anacreon
Anderson
Anderson, Alexander
Anderson, David
Anderson, J. E.
Anderson, John
Anderson, John (Chartist)
Anderson, R.
Anderson, William
Andrews
Andrews, E. A.
Andrews, John
Andrews, W. J.
Anna (pseudonym)
Anonymous
Anster, John
Antar
Antipater of Sidon
Antipater of Thessalonica
Antiphanes of Macedon
Antiphilus
Antiphilus of Byzantium
AOI△OƩ (pseudonym)
Apollodorus
Apollonidas of Smyrna
Arbington
Archer, James
Archias
Archilochus
Ardans
Argentarius, Marcus
Argles, Daisy
Argus (pseudonym)
Arion (pseudonym)
Ariosto, Lodovico
Ariston
Aristophanes
Armitage, Evelyn May (née Noble) (pseudonym “Evelyn Pyne”)
Armour, Margaret
Armstead, Henry Hugh
Armstrong, Annie
Armstrong, Florence C.
Armstrong, George Francis
Armstrong, John
Arnold, Edwin
Arnold, Matthew
Arnold, Maud
Arnot, James
Arthur, Reginald
Asclepiadas
Ashby-Sterry, Joseph
Ashe, Thomas
Askham, John
Astronomer Royal of the New Series
Atay
Atkinson, Blanche Isabella
Atkinson, Richard
Atteridge, Helen
Atteridge, M. E.
Aubry, Charles
Auchmuty, Arthur Compton
Ausonius, Decimus Magnus
Austin, Alfred
Austin, E.
Austine
Author of “Poland”
Author of “The Garland,” &c.
Automedon
Aylmer, Isabella Eleanor (pseudonym “I. D. Fenton”)
Aytoun, William Edmonstoune
Aἰων (pseudonym)
Aοίδος (pseudonym)
Ælius Gallus
B. (poet; Blackwood's)
B. (poet; Chambers’s)
B. (poet; Dark Blue)
B. (poet; Good Words)
B. (poet; Once a Week)
B. (translator; Blackwood's)
B. B. B. (poet; Good Words)
B. B. B. (poet; Macmillan's)
B. C. (poet; Chambers's)
B. J. (translator; Once a Week)
B. M. (poet; Macmillan's)
B. R. (poet; Cornhill)
B. W. (poet; Once a Week)
Bacchylides
Baddiley
Badham, Charles
Badham, Henry
Baildon, Henry Bellyse
Bailey, Philip James
Bailie Jarvie (pseudonym)
Baillie, Grisell (Grizel)
Baillie, Joanna
Baillie, Marianne
Baillon, E.
Bain, Charlotte
Bain, Robert
Baker, Ada Bartrick
Baker, Albert J.
Baldwin, Astley H.
Balfour, Alexander
Balfour, Marie Clothilde
Ball, William
Ballantine, James
Ballantyne, Archibald
Ballingall, William
Balmanno, Mary
Bamford, Samuel
Banks, Isabella Varley
Banton, John
Barbauld, Anna Letitia
Barber, J. V.
Barbucallus, Joannes
Barham, Richard Harris
Baring, Maurice
Barker, Bernard
Barker, Mary
Barlow, Jane
Barlow, Nellie
Barmby, Goodwyn
Barnard, Anne (née Lindsay)
Barnard, Edward William
Barnard, Mordaunt
Barnes, George Foster
Barnes, Robert
Barnes, William
Barr, James
Barratt, Emmie J.
Barraud, Allan F.
Barrett, G.
Barrett, Michael (pseudonym “Joseph Carmichael”)
Barrie, James Matthew
Barron, Douglas Gordon
Barron, Oswald
Barstow, Charles H. (1856-)
Bartholomew, Anne Charlotte Turnbull
Barton, Bernard
Bassus, Lollius
Bates, Clara Doty
Bates, David
Batson, Robert
Battersby, Caryl
Baty, Thomas Jack
Baudelaire, Charles
Bauerlé (Bowerley), Amelia
Bayly, Thomas Haynes
Bayne, Peter (pseud. Ellis Brandt)
Beal
Beale, Anne
Beale, James (junior)
Beames, David
Beamish, A. M.
Beattie, James (1735-1803)
Beattie, James (1796-1838)
Beattie, William
Beaufort, M. E.
Beaumont, Francis
Beck, Ellen (pseudonym “Magdalen Rock”)
Becker, Nikolaus
Bécquer, Gustavo Adolfo
Beddoes, Thomas Lovell
Beech, H.
Beers, Ethel Lynn
Beg, Raf'at
Begbie, A. J.
Begbie, Agnes Helen
Begbie, E. H.
Beith, R.
Bell, Charles D.
Bell, Feodora
Bell, John Joy
Bell, Jonathan Anderson
Bell, Robert
Belleau, Rémy
ben Samuel, Judas Hallevy
Bendall, Ernest A.
Bendall, Gerard
Benham, H.
Bennet, William
Bennett, Charles Henry
Bennett, E. L.
Bennett, G. H.
Bennett, L. M.
Bennett, Lucy A.
Bennett, Mary
Bennett, William
Bennett, William Cox
Bennoch, Francis
Benson, Arthur Christopher
Benson, Ralph Augustus
Bentinck, Henry William Cavendish
Bentley, Charles
Bentley, J.
Beranger, Pierre-Jean de
Berger, Florence K.
Berger, Janet S.
Berkeley, Grantley
Bernal Osborne, Ralph (1808-1882)
Bernal, Ralph (1783-1854)
Bernard, Pierre-Joseph
Berry (pseudonym “Carradorne”)
Berry, Lizzie
Besemeres, Jane (pseudonym “Janet Byrne”)
Beth (pseudonym)
Betham-Edwards, Matilda
Bethune, Alexander
Bethune, John
Bethune, John Elliott Drinkwater
Bianor
Bicci, Ersilio
Bickmore, Charles
Biddle, Richard Julian
Bielby, Mena
Bieldfeld
Billi, Marianna Giarrè
Bingham, Clifton
Binns, George
Binyon, Laurence
Bion of Smyrna
Bird, H. M. (pseudonym “Jetta Vogel,” “Jetty Vogel”)
Bird, James
Bird, John
Bird, Mary Page
Birks, Edmund Charles
Bishop of Limerick
Bjørnson, Bjørnstjerne Martinius
Black, William
Blackie, John Stuart
Blackmore, Richard (1654-1729)
Blackmore, Richard D. (1825-1900)
Blackmore, W. P.
Blackwell, Anna
Blackwood, Helen Selina
Blagden, Isa
Blaikie, John Arthur
Blakeney, Edward H.
Blamire, Susanna
Blanchard, Samuel Laman
Blatchley, W. D.
Blatherwick, Charles
Blew, William John
Blind, Mathilde
Blind, Rudolf
Blomfield, Alfred
Blomfield, Dorothy Frances
Blood, L.
Bloomfield, Robert
Blunt, Wilfrid Scawen
Boag, J.
Bob Buller of Brazennose
Boccaccio
Bode, John Ernest
Boden, C. J.
Boger, Edmund
Bogle, William Lockhart
Boiardo, Matteo Maria
Boito, Arrigo
Bolton, A. D.
Bolton, Sarah T.
Bond, Richard Warwick
Bone, Robert Trewick
Boner, Charles
Bonington, Richard Parkes
Bonne, W.
Booker, Luke
Borrow, George
Bosanquet, Fabien
Bosquet, Amelie
Bostock, John
Bostock, W.
Bothams, Walter
Botticelli, Sandro
Boughton, W. H.
Boulger (née Havers), Dora (pseudonym “Theo. Gift”)
Bourges, Léonide
Bourne, Vincent
Bourne, W. St. Hill
Bowen, Charles Inniss
Bowen, Edward Ernest
Bowen, H. Courthope
Bowers, Georgina
Bowker, James
Bowles, William Lisle
Bowley, Ada Leonora
Bowley, May
Bowring, Edgar Alfred
Bowring, John
Bowron, William A.
Bowzy Beelzebub
Boyd, A.
Boyd, Alexander Stuart
Boyd, C. W.
Boyd, H.
Boyd, Percy
Boyesen, Hjalmar Hjorth
Boyle, J.
Boyle, Mary Louisa
Boyson, V. Fenton
Brachmann, Louise
Bradburn
Bradford (pseudonym “Ida Mary Forde”)
Bradford, Edwin Emmanuel
Bradley, Andrew Cecil
Bradley, Basil
Bradley, Edward (pseudonym “Cuthbert Bede”)
Bradley, Francis Ernest
Bradley, Katharine Harris (pseudonym “Michael Field”)
Bradwell, Jack
Brainard, John G. C.
Bramwell, H. F.
Brandreth, Henry
Braun, S. E.
Bray, Anna Eliza
Brazier, Adam
Breakspeare, Ada
Brenan, John Churchill
Brennan, Alfred Laurens
Brent, John
Breton, Jules
Brett, Cecil Winton
Brewtnall, Edward Frederick
Bridell-Fox, Eliza Florance
Bridges, Robert
Bridgman, L. J.
Briggs, S. Constance Isabelle
Brindley, Louis H.
Brine, Emily
Briss, Vida
Brock, E. G. C.
Brock, Lucy
Broderick, Albert
Broderip, Frances Freeling (née Hood)
Brodie-Innes, Francis Annesley
Brodrick, Alan
Bromage, L. Muriel Raikes
Brome, Alexander
Bromley, Beatrice M.
Bromley, Clough W.
Brontë, Charlotte
Brontë, Emily
Brooke, Richard Sinclair
Brookfield, William Henry
Brooks, Shirley
Brooks, Thomas
Broome, Frederick Napier
Brotherton, Alice Williams
Brotherton, Mary
Brough, Robert Barnabas
Brown
Brown, David
Brown, Edward Noyce
Brown, Ellen F.
Brown, Ford Madox
Brown, Henry Rowland (pseudonym “Oliver Grey”)
Brown, J. K.
Brown, J. O.
Brown, James (pseudonym “J. B. S.,” “J. B. Selkirk”)
Brown, James Pennycook
Brown, James Walter
Brown, John
Brown, John (1822-)
Brown, Robert
Brown, Thomas (1778-1820)
Brown, Thomas Edward
Brown, W.
Brown, W.
Brown, William
Browne (Brown), Frances
Browne, A. K.
Browne, E.
Browne, Gordon
Browne, Hablot Knight (pseudonym “Phiz”)
Browne, Marie Hedderwick
Browne, Mary Ann (Mrs. James Grey)
Browne, Washington
Browning, Alma
Browning, Elizabeth Barrett
Browning, Oscar
Browning, Robert
Bruce, Michael
Bruce, Wallace
Bryant, William Cullen
Brydges, Egerton
Buchanan, George
Buchanan, Marion
Buchanan, Robert Williams
Buchanan, Walter
Buck, Ruth
Buckman, Edwin
Buckner, Richard
Buller (pseudonym)
Bulwer-Lytton, Edward
Bulwer-Lytton, Robert (pseudonym “Owen Meredith”)
Burdette, Robert J.
Burdock
Bürger, Gottfried August
Burgess, Arthur
Burgess, James John Haldane
Burgess, W. A. S.
Burke, Christian Caroline Anna
Burlingham, A. S.
Burnand, Francis Cowley
Burne-Jones, Edward
Burney, Edward Francisco
Burney, F. H.
Burnley, James
Burns, David
Burns, Elizabeth Rollit
Burns, Robert
Burnside, Helen Marion
Burton, Henry
Burton, William Paton
Burton, William Shakespeare
Busby, Ellen
Busk, Mary Margaret
Busy-Body
Butcher, Charles Henry
Butler, Alexander Hume
Butler, Henry Montagu
Butler, William Archer
Butt, Beatrice May
Butt, Geraldine
Butters, Robert W.
By a Provisional Committee of Contributors
By One Who Knew Her
By the Author of “Tales and Sketches”
By the Translator of Homer’s Hymns
Byron, George Gordon
Byron, H. J.
C. (poet; Blackwood's)
C. (poet; Chambers's)
C. (poet; Good Words)
C. (poet; Once a Week)
C. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
C. B. (poet; Good Words)
C. B. (translator; Chambers's)
C. C. (poet; Once a Week)
C. C. (translator; Chambers's)
C. C. C. (poet; Once a Week)
C. C. H. (poet; Once a Week)
C. D. C. (poet; Cornhill)
C. E. C. (poet; Once A Week)
C. E. I. (poet; Once a Week)
C. E. P. (poet; Macmillan’s)
C. E. S. (poet; Dark Blue)
C. F. (poet; Chambers's)
C. F. (poet; Macmillan’s)
C. F. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
C. F. B. (poet; Good Words)
C. G. (A Lady in Lerwick) (poet; Chambers's)
C. H. (poet; Once a Week)
C. H. (poet; The Penny Magazine)
C. H. T. (poet; Good Words)
C. H. W. (poet; Once a Week)
C. I. E. (poet; Once a Week)
C. I. M. B. (poet; Atalanta)
C. J. M. B. (poet; Atalanta)
C. K. B. (translator; Once a Week)
C. M. (poet; Good Words)
C. M. A. C. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
C. M. I. (poet; Once a Week)
C. M. L. F. (poet; Good Words)
C. M. O’N. (poet; Blackwood's)
C. M. P. (poet; Chambers's)
C. N. (poet; Blackwood's)
C. N. S. (poet; Blackwood's)
C. O. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
C. P. (poet; Good Words)
C. R. B. (translator; Once a Week)
C. S. (illustrator)
C. S. (poet; Forget Me Not)
C. S. C. (poet; Once a Week)
C. S. F. (poet; Good Words)
C. S. G. (poet; Once a Week)
C. St***g (poet; Forget me Not)
C. T. (poet; Chambers's)
C. U. D. (poet; Cornhill)
C. U. D. (poet; Macmillan's)
C. W. B. (poet; Blackwood's)
C. W. C. (poet; Once a Week)
C+L+N+O (poet; Blackwood's)
Caddell, Cecilia Mary
Caddick, H. C.
Calder, Robert Hogg (pseudonym “Woodburn”)
Caldwell, Robert Charles
Call, Wathen Mark Wilks
Callanan, Jeremiah Joseph
Callimachus
Calverley, Charles Stuart
Calvert, Edwin Sherwood
Calvert, William
Cambridge, Ada
Cameron, Hugh
Cameron, J.
Cameron, Julia Margaret
Cameron, William C.
Campbell, (Robert) Calder
Campbell, E.
Campbell, George
Campbell, Gerald
Campbell, Gordon
Campbell, John
Campbell, Lewis
Campbell, P. M.
Campbell, Robert Lee
Campbell, Thomas
Campbell, W. A.
Campbell, William Wilfred
Canning, George
Canton, William
Cape, George Augustus
Capern, Edward
Capuana, Luigi
Caradoc, A. M.
Carducci, Giosuè
Carew, Thomas
Carey, E. G.
Carey, Elizabeth Sheridan
Carey, Henry
Carlisle, Mabel Beatrice
Carlyle, F.
Carman, Bliss
Carmichael
Carmichael, John Wilson
Carnegie, James
Carpenter, H. Boyd
Carpenter, Mary
Carpenter, William Boyd
Carphylides
Carr, Ernest A.
Carrington, Nicholas Toms
Carter, Alice Staples
Carter, E.
Carter, H. C.
Carter, Kate
Cary, Alice
Cary, Phoebe
Cassiani, Giuliano
Castleman, E.
Catholicus Sudans (pseudonym)
Cattermole, George
Cattermole, Richard
Catty, Charles
Catullus, Gaius Valerius
Caulfield, H. C.
Caunter, John Hobart
Cavalcanti, Guido
Cave, Dora
Cave, Eastwood
Cavell
Cavendish, Margaret
Cay, John
Cayley, George John
Celano, Thomas of
Cerealius
Chalkhill, John
Chalklen, Charles William
Chalon, A.
Chalon, Alfred Edward
Chambers, James
Chambers, Robert
Chambers, William
Chamier, Frederick
Chanter (Longworth Knocker), Gratiana
Chapman, Elizabeth Rachel
Chapman, Matthew James
Charles, Elizabeth Rundle
Charlesworth, Edward Gomersall
Charnock, Mary Anna E. (née Peterson)
Charrin, Pierre-Joseph
Chartier, Alain
Chatterton
Chaucer, Geoffrey
Cheetham, Mary
Chénier, André
Chester, J.
Chester, John
Chettow, John
Chetwynd Griffith-Jones, Elizabeth (pseudonym “George Earnest”)
Child-Villiers, Margaret Elizabeth
Chisholme, Alexander
Cholmondeley Pennell, Henry
Chorley, Henry F.
Chorley, John R.
Christie, James Elder
Christie, M. C.
Christopher North (pseudonym)
Christopoulos, Athanasios
Church, Alfred J.
Churchill, Rosie
Chylde, Christmas E.
Cibber, Colley
Clanvowe, John
Clare, John
Clark, John Haldenby
Clark, Margaret S.
Clark, W. G.
Clarke, Edward Daniel
Clarke, Edward Francis C.
Clarke, H.
Clarke, Henry Savile
Clarke, M.
Clarke, Mary Victoria Cowden
Clarke, S.
Clarke, William Branwhite
Claudian
Cleaver, Mary
Clegg, John Trafford
Clennell, Luke
Clerke, Agnes Mary
Clerke, Ellen M.
Cleugh, J.
Cleugh, James
Clifford, Hugh Charles
Clifton, Arthur (pseudonym “Arthur Marvell”)
Clifton, William John
Clive, Caroline
Close, Charles A.
Close, John (pseudonym “Poet Close”)
Clowes, William Laird
Coates, Elizabeth (née Youatt)
Cobbe, Frances Power
Cobbett, William
Cobbold, Elizabeth
Cochrane-Baillie, Alexander
Cochrane, Alfred
Cochrane, Robert
Cockle, Mary
Colborne Veel, Mary
Coleridge, Hartley
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor
Colin
Colin Clout (pseudonym)
Coller, Edwin
Collier, J. Payne
Colling, Elizabeth (pseudonym "Eta")
Colling, Mary Maria
Collins, John (1742-1808)
Collins, John C. (1848-1908)
Collins, Mortimer
Collinson, Septimus
Colomb, George Hatton
Colomb, Wellington
Compton, Herbert
Conder, Josiah
Congreve, T.
Connell, M. A.
Conway, Charles Denys
Conybeare, John C.
Coode, Helen Hoppner
Cook, Eliza
Cooke, A.
Cooke, Philip Pendleton
Cookson, Christopher
Cooper
Cooper, Abraham
Cooper, Edith Emma (pseudonym “Michael Field”)
Cooper, James Davis
Cooper, Katharine (also Katherine) (née Saunders)
Cooper, M.
Cooper, R.
Cooper, Thomas
Coppée, François
Corbaux, Fanny
Corbet, Richard
Corbould, Edward Henry
Corbould, H. C.
Corbould, Henry
Cordner, Charlotte
Coritanus (pseudonym)
Costello, Louisa Stuart
Cotes, Digby
Cotes, E. [M.?]
Cotterell, George
Courtney, E. J.
Cowan, Alexander
Cowan, William
Cowell, Edward Byles
Cowell, Sydney
Cowen, William
Cowley-Brown, G. J.
Cowley, Abraham
Cowper, William
Cox, F. J.
Cox, L. S.
Cox, Palmer
Coxhead, Ethel
Crabbe, George
Cradock, John Hobart
Craig (Knox), Isa
Craig, John
Craig, Mary A.
Craig, Robert
Craig, Robert Smith
Craik, Dinah
Cramp, William Archibald
Crane, Beatrice
Crane, Walter
Cregan, Beatrice
Cresandia (pseudonym)
Crespi, C. R.
Creswick, Thomas
Crinagoras
Cristall, Joshua
Croker, Thomas Crofton
Croly, George
Crombie, John William
Crompton, R. S.
Crosland, Camilla (née Toulmin)
Crosland, Newton
Cross, Albert Francis
Cross, Edythe H.
Cross, Mary
Crossley, James
Crossman, W.
Crouch, Elizabeth
Crow, Louisa
Crowe, Eyre Evans
Crowe, Mary J.
Crowe, William
Crowley, Nicholas Joseph
Cryan, Robert W.
Cumming
Cumming, C.
Cunningham, Allan
Cunninghame, R. B.
Cunston
Currie, Mary Montgomerie (pseudonym “Violet Fane”)
Cursham, Mary Anne
Curwen, Henry
Custance, Olive
Cutter, William
Cyrus the Poet
D. (poet; Chambers's)
D. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
D. F. A. (poet; Blackwood's)
D. G. B. (poet; Good Words)
D. G. R. (poet; Once a Week)
D. H. (poet; Chambers's)
D. J. M. (poet; Blackwood's)
D. L. P. (poet; Chambers's)
D. M. (poet; Chambers's)
D. T. (poet; Blackwood's)
D'Oyly, Thomas
d'Urfey, Thomas
D’Annunzio, Gabriele
d’Orléans, Charles
Da Costa, Isaac
da Filicaja, Vincenzo
Dadd, Frank
Dafforne, J.
Dagmar (pseudonym)
Daintrey, George
Dale, Thomas
Dalmon, Charles William
Dalton, Cornelius Neale
Dalton, James Forbes
Dalziel
Dalziel, Edward Gurden
Dalziel, L. Beith (pseudonym “Bessie Dill”)
Dalziel, Thomas
Damagetus
Daman, R.
Dana, Richard H.
Danby, B. M
Danby, William
Daniel, Mary
Daniel, Samuel
Daniell, Martin
Daniell, William
Darby, E., Jun.
Darby, Eleanor
Darnell, Martin
Dasent, George Webbe
Daumas, Melchior Joseph Eugène
Davenant, William
Davids, C. J.
Davidson, Alexander
Davidson, Catharine
Davidson, John
Davidson, John William
Davidson, Lucretia Maria
Davidson, T.
Davidson, Thomas
Davies, Charles Maurice
Davies, G. Christopher
Davies, J. H.
Davies, Joseph
Davis, Israel
Davis, J. H.
Davis, John Philip
Davis, Thomas Osborne
Davis, Valentine
Davlin, Charles
Dawes, Rufus
Dawson, James
Day, Julia
Dayka, Gábor
de Argensola, Bartolomé Leonardo
de Argensola, Lupercio Leonardo
de Banville, Théodore
de Beauharnais, Hortense
de Burgh, Hubert
de Bury, Marie Blaze
de Castellana
de Cetina, Gutierre
de Chateaubriand, François-René
de Chatelain, Clara
de Heredia, Jose Maria
de Heussy, M.
de la Fontaine, Jean
de la Vega, Garcilaso
de Lamartine, Alphonse
de Lemene, Francesco
de Mapes, Walter
de Mattos, Katharine
de Mendoza, Diego Hurtado
de Musset, Alfred
de Quental, Anthero
de Quevedo, Francisco
de Rioja, Francisco
de Ronsard, Pierre
de Vega, Lope
De Vere, Aubrey
De Vigny, Alfred
de Villegas, Esteban Manuel
de Wilde, George James
De' Medici, Lorenzo
Deakin, H. C.
Deane, Anthony C.
Deans, George
Dearmer, Mabel
Deazeley, John Howard
Debat-Ponsan, Édouard
Deinhardstein, Johann Ludwig
della Casa, Giovanni
Dempster, Charlotte
Dendy, Alice
Denham, John
Denison, William Joseph
Dennis, John
Dent, Annie
Dent, Jessie C.
Desanges, Louis William
Deuern
Deutsch, Emanuel
Devas, Martha Anne
Devereux, W.
Dewey, Edgar
Dibdin, Thomas John
Dickens, Charles
Dickinson, Emily
Dickinson, R.
Dicksee, Frank
Dicksee, Margaret
Dickson, Antonia
Dickson, Maria Frances
Dietrich, Christian Wilhelm Ernst
Digges, Leonard
Dilks, T. Bruce
Dill (pseudonym “Bee”)
Dilly, J. J.
Dilly, Joseph
Dinton, Elise
Dionysius
Dioscorides
Ditchfield, Peter Hampson
Doane, George Washington
Dobell, Clarence
Dobell, Eva (pseudonym “Eva D.”)
Dobell, Sydney
Dobie, W. Fraser
Dobson, Austin
Dockray, Louisa
Dodge, Mary B.
Dodgson, Charles Lutwidge (pseudonym “Lewis Carroll”)
Dods, Mary Diana (pseudonym “David Lyndsay”)
Doering, Heinrich
Doherty, Francis Malcolm
Domett, Alfred
Donald, George (1800-1851)
Donald, George (1826-)
Donald, J.
Donne, John
Dorat, Claude Joseph
Doubleday, Thomas
Doudney, Sarah
Dougall, William
Doveton, Frederick Bazett
Dow, J.
Dowden, Edward
Dowding, F. Townley
Dowie, Menie Muriel
Downes, George
Downes, Louisa June Campbell (pseudonym “Vere Haldane”)
Downing, Harriet
Dowson, Ernest
Doyle, Arthur Conan
Doyle, Charles Altamont
Doyle, Francis Hastings Charles
Dr. James Scott (allonym)
Drayton, Michael
Dreves, Lebrecht
Driver, F.
Drummond, W.
Drummond, William (Drummond of Hawthornden)
Drury, Anna H.
Dryden, John
Du Bellay, Joachim
Du Fu
Du Maurier, George
Duff-Gordon, Lucie
Dumas, Alexandre
Dunbar, William
Duncan, A. S.
Duncan, D. M.
Duncan, Edward
Duncan, Eric
Dupont, Pierre
Duthie, William
Dutt, Govin Chunder
Dutt, Shoshee Chunder
Dutton
Dutton, Frank R.
Dyer, Edward
Dykes, T.
Dyson, Emily
E. (poet; Blackwood's)
E. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
E. (poet; Good Words)
E. A. D. (poet; Atalanta)
E. A. S. (poet; Good Words)
E. B. (poet; Chambers's)
E. B. (poet; Macmillan’s)
E. B. (translator; Chambers's)
E. B. H. (translator; Blackwood's)
E. B. P. (poet; Cornhill)
E. B. P. (poet; English Woman's Journal)
E. C. (poet; Macmillan’s)
E. C. G. (poet; Good Words)
E. D. (poet; Blackwood's)
E. D. C. (poet; Chambers's)
E. D. C. (translator; Chambers's)
E. D. S. (poet; Macmillan’s)
E. E. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
E. E. W. (poet; Once a Week)
E. F. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
E. F. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
E. F. M. (poet; Chambers's)
E. G. H. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
E. H. (illustrator)
E. H. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
E. H. (poet; Good Words)
E. H. C. D. (poet; Chambers’s)
E. H. E. (poet; Once a Week)
E. H. G. (illustrator)
E. H. K. (poet; Victorian Magazine)
E. H. O. (poet; Cornhill)
E. H. S. (poet; Good Words)
E. H. T. (poet; Blackwood's)
E. H. T. (poet; The Keepsake)
E. J. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
E. J. M. (poet; Once a Week)
E. M. B. (poet; Once a Week)
E. M. M. (poet; Chambers's)
E. M. P. (poet; Once a Week)
E. N. (poet; Atalanta)
E. N. P. R. (poet; Chambers's)
E. N. P. R. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
E. P. (poet; Chambers's)
E. P. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
E. P. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
E. R. (Good Words; illustrator)
E. R. (poet; Chambers’s)
E. S. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
E. S. (poet; The Keepsake)
E. S. C. (poet; Good Words)
E. S. D. (poet; Once a Week)
E. W. H. (illustrator)
Eagles, John
Earle
Earp, Thomas
Eastman, Charles G.
Eastwood, John R.
Ebert, Karl Egon von
Eccles (pseudonym)
Echtler, A.
Eckley, Sophie May
Ede, Charles
Edenborough, A.
Edmonds, Elizabeth Mayhew
Edmondson, William
Edmonstone, Archibald
Edward
Edwards, Amelia B.
Edwards, Annie
Edwards, George Henry
Edwards, Henry Sutherland
Edwards, Kate
Edwards, Mary Ellen (Mrs Freer, Mrs John C. Staples)
Edwards, Thomas
Eeles, E.
Egerton, Francis (Leveson-Gower)
Egremont, Godfrey
Eliot, Marynx
Elliot, Charlotte
Elliot, Mary L.
Elliot, William
Elliott, Ebenezer
Elliott, F. G.
Elliott, J. A.
Elliott, Lucinda
Ellis
Ellis, B. Trapp
Ellis, Henry
Ellis, John
Ellis, Robinson
Elpis (pseudonym)
Elton, Charles Abraham
Elton, Charles Isaac
Eltze, Frederick
Emerson, Ralph Waldo
Emmerson
Emra, Elizabeth
English, Elizabeth
Ennius
Ensor, Robert Charles K.
Epp, R.
Erle
Erskine Norton, Eliza Bland
Erskine, Henry
Erycius Cyzicenus
Etheridge, Annie
Etherington
Ettrick Shepherd
Eubulus
Euripides
Evans, Anne
Evans, Marian (pseudonym “George Eliot”)
Evans, Sebastian
Evelyn
Evered, Robert
Evezard, Alice
Ewen, Marie J.
Eyre, Mary
Eytinge, Margaret
Eωҁ (pseudonym)
F. (poet; Blackwood's)
F. (poet; Macmillan's)
F. A. (poet; Atalanta)
F. B. S. (poet; Chambers's)
F. E. C. (poet; Once a Week)
F. E. T. (poet; Cornhill)
F. F. (poet; Chambers's)
F. G. (poet; Good Words)
F. M. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
F. M. H. (poet; Once a Week)
F. N. B. (poet; Macmillan’s)
F. S. H. (poet; Chambers's)
F. T. (poet; Chambers's)
F. W. (poet; Once a Week)
F. W. B. (illustrator)
Faber, Frederick William
Fairfax-Muckley, Louis
Fairfield, A. R.
Fairlie, Louisa
Falconer, Agnes S.
Falconer, Alexander
Falconer, Mary W. M.
Fallon, Daniel
Fane, Julian Charles Henry
Fargus, Frederick John (pseudonym “Hugh Conway”)
Farmar, Constance
Farmer, Fanny
Farren, E.
Farrer, A.
Farrier, Robert
Farrow, T.
Favart, Charles Simon
Fawkes, Francis
Fāzil
Fearn, Joseph
Feller, Frank
Fellows, Louisa
Fénelon, François
Fenn, George Manville
Fenn, Henry
Ferguson
Ferguson, Samuel
Ferguson, Tom
Fergusson, James R.
Fergusson, Robert
Ferrar, William John
Ferrier, James Frederick
Ferrier, Susan
Fidler, Gideon M.
Fields, Annie Adams
Fields, Florence
Fields, James T.
Fildes, (Samuel) Luke
Finch Hatton, George James
Finlay, John
Finnemore, Joseph
Fisk, William (1796-1872)
Fisk, William Henry (1827-1884)
Fitz-Andrew (pseudonym)
Fitz-Gerald, Desmond G.
Fitzgerald, Clare
Fitzgerald, Edward
Fitzgerald, Geraldine
Fleet, John George
Fleetwood, Peter Hesketh
Fleming
Fleming, James M.
Fletcher, Giles
Fletcher, John
Fletcher, Joseph Smith
Fletcher, Phineas
Flintoff, Albert
Flintoff, C. E.
Fogazzaro, Antonio
Fogg, L. M.
Fonblanque, Albany Jr.
Ford, Jane H. C.
Ford, John
Forrest, James
Forrester, Fanny
Forsayth, Thomas Gifford
Forsyth, J. B.
Forsyth, William
Fort, Frederick
Foscolo, Ugo
Foster, Myles Birket
Foster, Will
Fowler, Ellen Thorneycroft
Fox, Edward
Fox, Joseph
Fox, Sarah Hustler
Fradelle, Henri Jean-Baptiste Victoire
Francillon, Robert Edward
Francis, C.
Franks, Bessy
Franzen, Frans Michael
Fraser-Tytler, Christina Catherine
Fraser-Tytler, Mary Seton
Fraser, B. M.
Fraser, Francis Arthur
Fraser, John W.
Fraser, Robert
Fraser, Robert Winchester
Fraser, W. (pseudonym “Randolph Fitz-Eustace”)
Freeland, William
Freeman, E. D.
Freeman, Mary E. Wilkins
Freiligrath, Ferdinand
French, Harry
Frere, John Hookham
Frere, Mary Eliza Isabella
Friend Richard
Friese, J.
Frith, William Powell
Fritz (illustrator)
Fritz (pseudonym)
Fröhlich, Lorens
From the Papers of a Country Curate
Froude, James Anthony
Fucini, Renato
Fuller, F. L.
Fuller, James Franklin
Fullerton, William Morton
Fulton, Florence M.
Furley, Catherine Grant
Furlong, Alice
Furlong, Mary
Fyfe (pseudonym “Senga”)
Fyvie Mayo, Isabella
G. (poet; Good Words)
G. (poet; Once a Week)
G. (translator; Blackwood's)
G. (translator; Keepsake)
G. B. (poet; Blackwood's)
G. B. (poet; Cornhill)
G. C. (poet; Chambers's)
G. D. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
G. F. (illustrator)
G. F. R. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
G. H. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
G. K. T. (illustrator)
G. L. (illustrator)
G. M. (poet; Chambers's)
G. M. (translator; Macmillan's)
G. M. F. (poet; Once a Week)
G. P. S. (poet; Good Words)
G. T. (poet; Once a Week)
G. W. (poet; Cornhill)
G. W. Y. (poet; Blackwood's)
Gale, Norman
Gallagher, William Joseph
Gallus, Cornelius
Galt, John
Galton, Arthur
Gandar, W. B.
Gardiner, Annie Walker
Gardiner, Linda
Gardiner, Marguerite
Gardiner, William
Gardner, Alan Legge
Gardner, William Biscombe
Garnett, E.
Garnett, Lucy
Garnett, Richard
Garrett, Edmund H.
Garrow, Theodosia
Gaskell, Elizabeth
Gaskell, William
Gaugain, Philip A.
Gautier, Théophile
Gay, Walter
Geddes, E.
Geibel, Emmanuel
Gemmer, C. M.
Geoghegan, Mary
George, Frances (née Southwell)
Geraldine (pseudonym)
Gerard, Emily
Gerhardt, Paul
Germanicus (pseudonym)
Gerok, Karl von
Giacomelli, Hector
Gianni, Lapo
Gibb, E. J. W.
Gibb, W.
Gibbs, William Alfred
Gibney, Edward S.
Gibson, C.
Gibson, C. G.
Gibson, Elizabeth
Gibson, Mary W. A.
Gibson, T. H.
Gibson, Wilfrid Wilson
Gidley, Lewis
Gil, A. O.
Gilbert, Bryan
Gilbert, Nicolas Joseph Laurent
Gilbert, W. S.
Gilchrist, Alexander
Giles, Elizabeth
Gilfillan, Robert
Gill, M. P.
Gillespie, Thomas (1778-1844) (pseudonym “Juvenalis Junior”)
Gillespie, Thomas (Chartist poet)
Gillies, Robert Pearse
Gillington, May Clarissa (Byron)
Giusti, Giuseppe
Gladstone, William Ewart
Glanville, Charlotte
Glase, Agnes E.
Glasse, John
Glatigny, Albert
Glaucus
Gleig, George Robert
Gleim, Johann Wilhelm
Glover, Evelyn H. M.
Goddard, George Bouverie
Goddard, Julia
Godley, Alfred Denis
Godwin, Catherine Grace (née Garnett)
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von
Goldie, G.
Góngora, Luis de
Good, John Mason
Goodale Eastman, Elaine
Goodale, Dora Reade
Goodhart, C. W.
Goodrich, Samuel Griswold
Gordon, Adam Lindsay
Gordon, George Huntly
Gordon, James A.
Gore-Booth, Eva
Gore, Catherine Frances (née Moody)
Gorges, Mary
Gosnell, William
Goss, William Henry
Gosse, Edmund
Gostick, Joseph
Gough, Benjamin
Gould, Hannah Flagg
Gow, Mary L.
Gowen, J. R.
Gracie, A.
Graham
Graham, Eleanor (Grimshaw)
Graham, James
Graham, James (1612-1650)
Graham, John
Graham, M.
Graham, Thomas Alexander Ferguson
Grahame, James
Grahame, Kenneth
Grant, Alexander
Grant, Anne (née MacVicar)
Grant, Francis
Grant, James Gregor
Grant, Ludovic James
Grant, N. D.
Grant, William James
Graves, Alfred Perceval
Graves, Charles L.
Graves, Clotilde
Gray, Alex
Gray, Charles
Gray, J.
Gray, John
Gray, Paul Mary
Gray, Robert
Gray, William
Green, Charles
Green, Eliza Craven
Green, Kathleen Haydn
Green, S. G.
Green, Saretta
Green, T.
Green, T. J.
Green, W.
Green, William Charles
Green, William Henry
Greene, Gerald B.
Greenlaw, M.
Greenwell, Dora
Greenwood, Frederick
Greg, Samuel
Gregor, W. Gow
Grey, G. Duncan
Grey, John
Grieve, John
Griffin, C. J.
Griffin, Edmund D.
Griffin, Gerald
Griffith, W. G.
Griffiths, M. M.
Grindrod, Charles
Grob, Conrad
Groser, Horace George
Grosvenor, Thomas
Grote, Harriet
Groth, Klaus
Gruchy, Gabriel
Grundy, Sydney
Guerrini, Olindo
Guidi, Carlo Alessandro
Gulland, Elizabeth
Gun, Gordon
Gurner, Walter
Gush, William
Guthrie, H.
Gwynn, Stephen
H. (poet; Blackwood's)
H. (poet; Chambers's)
H. (poet; Good Words)
H. (poet; Once a Week)
H. (translator; Once a Week)
H. A. D. (poet; Once a Week)
H. B. (poet; Chambers’s)
H. B. H. (translator; Blackwood’s)
H. B.-D. (poet; Woman's World)
H. C. (poet; Atalanta)
H. C. (poet; Chambers's)
H. C. B. (poet; Chambers's)
H. C. C. (poet; Chambers's)
H. C. G. M. (poet; Macmillan's)
H. D. H. (illustrator)
H. D. W. (poet; Once a Week)
H. E. B. H. (poet; Cornhill)
H. E. M. (translator; Blackwood’s)
H. F. C. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
H. G. (poet; Blackwood's)
H. G. K. (pseudonym; Blackwood’s)
H. G. W. (illustrator)
H. H. (poet; Good Words)
H. H. (poet; Once a Week)
H. H. O. (poet; Chambers's)
H. I. H. O. (poet; Chambers's)
H. J. H. (poet; Atalanta)
H. J. O. (poet; Good Words)
H. K. (poet; Blackwood’s)
H. K. (translator; Blackwood's)
H. L. (poet; Macmillan's)
H. L. (translator; English Woman’s Journal)
H. M. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
H. M. Junr. (poet; Chambers's)
H. M’D. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
H. N. (translator; Forget-Me-Not)
H. P. (poet; Macmillan’s)
H. P. (poet; Once a Week)
H. R. (poet; Chambers's)
H. R. W. (poet; Once a Week)
H. T**y (pseudonym)
H. W. (poet; Chambers's)
H., Alice
Habert, François
Habington, William
Hackett, Wilfred S.
Hafez
Hahn, Johannes Theophilus
Haines, C. R.
Haines, Florence M.
Hale, Philip
Hale, W. P.
Hales, John Wesley
Haley, Alice (pseudonym “Allison Hughes”)
Haliburton, Robert Grant
Halkett, Violet Mary Craigie
Hall, Fanny
Hall, Henry Bryan
Hall, Lydia S. (pseudonym “Adelaide”)
Hall, Samuel Carter
Hall, William C.
Halleck, Fitz-Greene
Haller, Albrecht von
Hallevi, Jehudah
Hallward, Reginald
Halse, George (pseudonym “Rattlebrain”)
Halsey, Grace Virginia
Halswelle, Keeley
Hamilton, C.
Hamilton, Eliza Mary
Hamilton, Richard Winter
Hamilton, Thomas
Hamilton, William
Hamley, Edward Bruce
Hancock, Charles
Hankin, Julian de Kestel
Hankin, Mary Louisa (née Perralt)
Hanley, Kate
Hanmer, John
Hannay, E. H. C.
Harding, Emily Grace
Harding, James Duffield
Harding, Joseph
Hardinge, William Money
Hardy, Heywood
Hardy, J.
Hardy, Paul
Hardy, Thomas
Harford, L.
Häring, Georg Wilhelm Heinrich (pseudonym “Willibald Alexis”)
Harington, Margaret Agneta
Harkness, Thomas
Harlamoff, Alexei
Harland, Aline
Harman, E. King
Harnett, A. W.
Harper
Harper, Henry Arthur
Harriet (pseudonym)
Harrington, Elsie
Harris, A. L.
Harris, John
Harrison, Jane Ellen
Harrison, William Henry
Hart, Elizabeth Anna
Hart, Solomon Alexander
Hartwig, Gustav
Harvey, Florence
Harvey, G.
Harvey, Laura
Harvey, S. W.
Harvey, W. F.
Hasell, Elizabeth Julia
Haslehurst, Ernest William
Haslehurst, F. W.
Hassam, Childe
Hastings, Barbara Rawdon
Hatton, Joshua (pseudonym “Guy Roslyn”)
Haughton, Julia
Havergal, Francis Ridley
Havers, Alice Mary
Havilah (pseudonym)
Hawcroft, Joseph Mowbray
Haweis, Hugh Reginald
Haweis, Mary Eliza (née Joy)
Hawker, Robert Stephen
Hawkey, Charlotte
Hawkins, Annie
Hawkins, John
Hawksley, Julia M. A.
Hawtrey, Phyllis
Hay, Mary Cecil
Hay, Robert W.
Hay, William Mcleager
Hayes, Alfred
Hayman, Henry
Hayne, Paul Hamilton
Hays, Matilda
Hayter, George
Hayter, John
Hayward, Gerald
Hearne, Thomas
Heath, Helena
Heaton, Arthur Frederick
Heaven, Frederick Charles
Hebbel, Christian Friedrich
hebdomadal hand [symbol]
Heber, Reginald
Hedderwick, James
Hedges, John
Heine, Heinrich
Hemans, Felicia
Hemery, Francis H.
Henderson
Henderson, H. L.
Henderson, H. S.
Henderson, J.
Henderson, J. H.
Henderson, James
Henderson, John
Hendry, Hamish
Hendry, James
Henley, William Ernest
Hennessy, William John
Henniker (née Milnes), Florence
Henry, R.
Henryson, Robert
Heraclides
Heraud, John Abraham
Herbert, Auberon
Herbert, George
Herbert, Henry
Herbert, Jane Emily
Herbert, John Rogers
Herbertson, Agnes Grozier
Herder, Johann Gottfried von
Herford, Oliver
Hering, George Edwards
Herkomer, Hubert Von
Hermione (pseudonym)
Hermocreon
Herodotus
Herrick, Robert
Herrick, William Salter
Herschel, John
Hervey, Eleanora Louisa
Hervey, Thomas Kibble
Herz (pseudonym)
Hesper (pseudonym)
Hetherington, William Maxwell
Heward, John
Hewett, Sarah F.
Heywood, Thomas
Hibernian (pseudonym)
Hichens, Robert Smythe
Hickey, Emily
Hickey, Thomas E.
Higginbotham, Elsie
Higgins, H. W.
Higginson, Agnes Shakespeare (pseudonym “Moira O’Neill”)
Hildyard, Ida Jane (pseudonym “Ida J. Lemon”)
Hill, Alsager Hay
Hill, George
Hill, Grace H.
Hill, Isabel
Hill, Louisa
Hill, Will
Hill, William K.
Hills, Robert
Hills, Walter Alfred
Hilse (pseudonym)
Hilton, Arthur Clement
Hine, Maud Egerton
Hingston, Francis
Hislop, James
Hitchcock, George
Hitchings, Charles H.
Hitchman, James Francis
Hoare, Mary Anne
Hobart-Hampden, Lucy Pauline
Hobden, Frank
Hodges, J. H.
Hodges, Sydney
Hodgson, G. G.
Hodson, Magaret
Hogg, Henry
Hogg, James
Hogg, Robert
Hogg, Walter
Hoggan, James
Holden, Mary
Hole, Samuel Reynolds
Holland, Elizabeth (née Gaskell)
Holland, Henry W.
Holland, James
Holland, John
Holland, Laurence Gifford
Holland, M. A.
Holland, Richard George
Hollings, Fanny Sophia
Hollings, James Francis
Hollingshead, John
Hollins, Dorothy
Holman Hunt, William
Holme, James Wilson
Holme, Margaret Torre
Holme, T. M.
Holmes, F. B.
Holmes, James
Holmes, Oliver Wendell
Hölty, Ludwig Christoph Heinrich
Home, F. Wyville
Homer
Homewood, A. S.
Homikoff
Hood, Thomas
Hood, Tom (Jnr)
Hook, Theodore Edward
Hope, Constance
Hopkins, Arthur
Hopkins, Everard
Hopkins, Frances Anne (née Beechey)
Hopkins, Gerard Manley
Hopkins, Jane Ellice
Hopkins, Manley
Hopper, Nora
Horace
Hormazdi, [N. J.?]
Horne, Edward H.
Horne, Herbert P.
Horne, Richard Hengist
Hornklofi, Þórbjǫrn
Hornung, E. W.
Horton, Alice
Horton, Robert Forman
Hough, Lewis
Houghton, Arthur Boyd
Housman, A. E.
Housman, Laurence
Housman, R. F.
Houston, Maud
Houston, Robert
Hovenden, Robert Meyrick
How, William Walsham
Howard, C. W.
Howard, Charles
Howard, Edward
Howard, George William Frederick
Howard, Henry
Howard, Rose
Howden, Jessie C.
Howden, Walter C.
Howie, David
Howitt, Mary
Howitt, Richard
Howlett, Arthur Waltham
Howson, Edmund Whytehead
Howson, J. S.
Hudson, John
Hudson, Mary
Hüffer, Franz
Hughes, Arthur
Hughes, Edward
Hughes, John
Hughes, Mabel L. V.
Hugo, Victor
Huie, Richard
Hulbert, Howard
Hull, Edward
Hull, John Dawson
Hume, Alexander
Hume, Mary Catherine
Humphreys
Hunt, F. E.
Hunt, J. F.
Hunt, John
Hunt, Leigh
Hunt, M. V. G.
Hunt, Violet
Hunter, Anne
Hunter, Harriett Eliza
Hunter, Sissie
Hutchinson, J. P.
Hutton, J.
Huxley, Henrietta Anne
Huxley, Thomas Henry
Hyde, Douglas
I. (poet; Macmillan’s)
I. A. C. (poet; Chambers's)
I. C. (poet; Good Words)
I. D. F. (poet; Once a Week)
I. H. R. (poet; Chambers's)
I. K. (poet; Good Words)
I. P. C. (translator; Forget-Me-Not)
I. R. V. (poet; Chambers's)
Iago, William
Ibbs, J. C.
Ibsen, Henrik
Icarus (pseudonym)
Ilimon
Illegible Illustrator
Image, Selwyn
Imlach, A. F.
Immermann, Karl Leberecht
Ingelow, Jean
Ingelrain
Ingham, Jane Sarson Cooper
Inglis, Henry D. (pseudonym “Derwent Conway”)
Inglis, William F. E.
Innes, Alexander Taylor
Ireland, Ethel
Irving, Edward A.
Irving, Washington
Irwin, Edward
Isaac Tomkins (allonym)
Isaacs
Iselin, Sophia
Iseult (pseudonym)
Isidorus Ægeates
Israëls, Josef
Issel, M.
Italicus, Silius
Izmali, Hamet al
J. (poet; Good Words)
J. (poet; Once a Week)
J. (translator; Once a Week)
J. A. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. A. (poet; Chambers's)
J. A. (poet; Good Words)
J. A. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
J. A. of Wadham College, Oxford
J. A. P. (poet; Good Words)
J. B. (poet; Chambers's)
J. B. (translator; Once a Week)
J. B. L. (poet; Chambers's)
J. B. M. (poet; Chambers's)
J. B. S. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
J. B. S. (poet; Once a Week)
J. B. Y. (illustrator)
J. C. (poet; Chambers's)
J. C. (poet; Chartist Circular)
J. C. (poet; Once a Week)
J. C. A. (poet; Good Words)
J. C. H. J. (poet; Once a Week)
J. D. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. D. (poet; Chambers's)
J. D. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
J. D. H. (poet; Chambers's)
J. E. (poet; Good Words)
J. E. B. (illustrator)
J. E. E. (poet; Chambers's)
J. E. H. (poet; Chambers's)
J. F. (poet; Chambers's)
J. F. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
J. F. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
J. F. (poet; Once a Week)
J. F. (translator; Blackwood's)
J. F. H. (poet; Good Words)
J. F. J. (poet; Once a Week)
J. G. (poet; Chambers's)
J. G. (poet; Good Words)
J. H. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. H. (poet; Chambers's)
J. H. (poet; Good Words)
J. H. B. (poet; Chambers's)
J. H. C. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
J. H. R. (poet; Chambers's)
J. J. (poet; Chambers's)
J. J. C. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. M. (poet; Chambers's)
J. M. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
J. M. (poet; Macmillan's)
J. M. (poet; Once a Week)
J. M. H. (poet; Chambers's)
J. M’C. Junr. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
J. O. B. (poet; Chambers's)
J. P. (poet; Chambers's)
J. P. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
J. P. M. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. P. M. (translator; Blackwood’s)
J. P. S. (poet; Good Words)
J. P. W. (poet; Good Words)
J. R. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. R. C. (poet; Once a Week)
J. R. O. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
J. S. (poet; Chambers's)
J. S. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
J. S. B. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. S. D. (poet; Macmillan’s)
J. T. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. T. C. of Brazen-nose
J. T. P. (poet; Chambers's)
J. T. R. (poet; Good Words)
J. V. (poet; Once a Week)
J. W. (illustrator)
J. W. (poet; Chambers's)
J. W. (poet; Good Words)
Jackson, Blomfield
Jackson, E. W.
Jackson, Henry Kains
James (pseudonym)
James, F.
James, George Payne Rainsford
James, John Kingston
James, M. J.
James, Marian E.
James, Paul Moon
James, R. A. S.
James, Sophie A. M.
Jameson, A. E.
Jamieson, Robert
Japp, Alexander Hay
Japy, Louis Aimé
Jaumi
Jeaffreson, Mary
Jebb, Richard Claverhouse
Jefferson, S.
Jeffrey, Francis
Jelf-Sharp, C.
Jemmett-Browne, Jemmett
Jenkins, Joseph John
Jenner, Alice Hay
Jennings, E.
Jerdan, William
Jermyn, Letitia
Jerrold, Douglas William
Jerrold, William Blanchard
Jervis, Swynfen
Jewsbury, Geraldine
Jewsbury, Maria Jane
Jim's Wife
Jocelyn, Robert
John Bull (pseudonym)
Johns, Benjamin G.
Johns, Bennett George
Johns, Richard
Johnson, Edward Killingworth
Johnson, F.
Johnson, H.
Johnson, James W.
Johnson, Lionel Pigot
Johnson, Samuel
Johnston, Andrew
Johnston, D.
Johnston, Henry
Johnston, M.
Johnston, T. P.
Johnstone, Christian Isobel
Johnstone, Elizabeth M.
Johnstone, William
Jones, Alice
Jones, Ebenezer
Jones, Eustace Hinton
Jones, Harry
Jones, Henry Longueville
Jones, Jacob
Jones, Jessy
Jones, John
Jones, Robert
Jones, Thomas
Jones, W. L.
Jones, William
Jonson, Ben
Jopling, Louise
Joy, Thomas Musgrave
Julian the Egyptian
Junqueiro, Guerra
Jupp, Lawrence B.
Juvenal
Juvenis (pseudonym)
K. C. S. (translator; Macmillan's)
K. G. (poet; Macmillan’s)
K. H. (poet; Blackwood's)
K. M. (poet; Chambers's)
K. S. B. (poet; Once a Week)
K. T. (poet; Chambers's)
Kaye, John William
Keary, Eliza
Keating, Eliza H.
Keats, John
Keble, John
Keeling, William Knight
Keene
Keene, Charles
Keene, Henry George
Keene, William Caxton
Kelly, C. A.
Kelly, Francis
Kelly, Thomas W.
Kemble, Adelaide
Kemble, Fanny
Kemp, Robert
Kempe, Dorothy
Kendall, Elsie
Kendall, Harriet
Kennedy
Kennedy, D. H.
Kennedy, M. E.
Kenney, James
Kent, Armine Thomas
Kent, Charles
Kenward, James (pseudonym "Elvyndd")
Kenyon, Charles Frederick
Kenyon, John
Kerner, Justinus
Kerr, E. H.
Kettle, A.
Khayyam, Omar
Kidd, William
Kidson, Eastwood
Kier, Peter
Kilburne, George Goodwin
King David of Israel
King Henry VIII
King James I of Scotland
King Oscar I of Sweden
King Ptolemy
King Richard I
King, Alice
King, H.
King, Harriet Eleanor Hamilton
King, Henry (1592-1669)
King, Henry (1817-1888)
King, J. A.
King, James
King, John William
King, Violet M.
Kinglake, Christina
Kingsley Tarpey, William
Kingsley, Charles
Kingston, Mary
Kinney, Elizabeth Clementine
Kipling, Rudyard
Kirkman Finlay (allonym)
Kirkpatrick, John
Kirtle (pseudonym)
Kitton, E. E.
Kletke, Hermann
Kleyn, Adelaide
Klopstock, Friedrich Gottlieb
Knight, Charles
Knight, Edward
Knight, J.
Knight, John Prescott
Knight, Joseph
Knowles, Annie L.
Knowles, Davidson
Knowles, Herbert
Knowles, James
Knox
Knox, Lucy
Koo-ri-tsan-koo
Körner, Theodore
Kortright, Frances Aikin
Kosloff, Ivan
Koumanin, Alexander
Krasiński, Zygmunt
Krummacher, Friedrich Adolf
Kurtz
L. (poet; Once a Week)
L. (translator; Once a Week)
L. B. (illustrator)
L. B. (translator; Once a Week)
L. B. H. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
L. F. C. (poet; Chambers's)
L. F. D. C. (poet; Chambers's)
L. G. M. (poet; Good Words)
L. I. C. D. (poet; Once a Week)
L. I. L. (poet; Macmillan’s)
L. J. (translator; Forget-Me-Not)
L. J. G. (poet; Blackwood's)
L. L. (poet; Blackwood's)
L. M. L. (translator; Chambers's)
L. N. (poet; Good Words)
L. R. (poet; Chambers’s)
L. R. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
L. S. (translator; Once a Week)
L. V. (illustrator)
L. W. M. L. (poet; Blackwood's)
La Creevy, C.
La Mont, Elizabeth
la Motte Fouqué, Friedrich de
Labrunie, Gérard (pseudonym “Gérard de Nerval”)
Laing, Alexander
Laird, A. (pseudonym “Hugh Lindsay”)
Lake Price, William
Lamb, Caroline
Lamb, Charles
Lamb, Mary
Lamont, Alexander
Lamont, J. K.
Lamont, Thomas Reynolds
Lampman, Archibald
Lancaster, Charles S.
Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (pseudonym "L. E. L.")
Landor, Walter Savage
Landseer, Edwin
Lane, Clara
Lang, Andrew
Langan, Thomas
Langbridge, Frederick
Langford, John Alfred
Langhorne, John
Langston, Joseph G.
Lapraik, John
Lapworth, W.
Larken, E. P.
Latchmore, W. H.
Latto, Thomas C.
Laundy, George A.
Laurel-Honouring Laureate
Laurence, H.
Laurenson, Arthur
Law, Isabella
Lawless, Matthew James
Lawrence, Robert Harding
Lawrence, Thomas
Lawrence, Walter J.
Lawrie
Lawson, Cecil Gordon
Lawson, E.
Lawson, Francis Wilfred
Lawson, J. K.
Lawson, John
Layard, George Somes
Layton, E.
Layton, Nina
Le Brun, Élisabeth Vigée
Le Fanu, S.
Le Gallienne, Richard
Le Jeune, Henry
Leary, Thomas Humphrys Lindsay
Leask, William Keith
Leatham, Edith Rutter
Leatherdale, V. J.
Lecky, (William) Edward Hartpole
Lee-Hamilton, Eugene
Lee, Henry
Lee, Jessie
Lee, Rona
Lee, William
Leech, John
Lehmann, F.
Lehmann, Rudolph Chambers
Leifchild, Sara A.
Leigh Cliffe (pseudonym)
Leigh, Chandos
Leigh, Cholmeley A.
Leigh, Henry Sambrooke
Leighton, Edmund Blair
Leighton, Frederic
Leighton, John
Leighton, Robert
Leighton, William
Leitch, Richard Principal
Leith, E.
Leland, Charles Godfrey
Lemoine, Gustave
Lemon, J.
Lemon, Mark
Lenox-Conyngham, Elizabeth Emmet
Leonard, George Hare
Leonard[, M. A.?]
Leonidas of Tarentum
Leontine (pseudonym)
Leopardi, Giacomo
Lermontov, Mikhail Yuryevich
Leslie, Charles Robert
Leslie, Eliza
Lester, E. C. (pseudonym “Christie”)
Letham, Alexander
Letherbrow, E.
Leveaux, Florence Malcolm
Levens, J. T.
Levy, Amy
Levy, Edith Grace
Lewin, Thomas Herbert
Lewis
Lewis, John Delaware
Lewis, Matthew
Lewis, T. C.
Lewis, W.
Lewis, W. J.
Lewis, Walter
Lex Rex (pseudonym)
Leyden, John
Lhermitte, Léon Augustin
Li-Tai-Pe
Lida (pseudonym)
Liddell, Henry
Lincolnshire Rector
Lindsay, Alexander
Lindsay, Caroline Blanche Elizabeth
Linney, W.
Linskill, Mary Jane
Linton, James Drogmole
Linton, William James
Linwood, James Smart
Liolett (pseudonym)
Lister, Thomas Henry
Lithgow, William
Little, E. A.
Little, F. D.
Little, J. M.
Littson
Liverseige, H.
Lloyd, Charles
Locker-Lampson, Frederick
Locker, Arthur
Lockhart, John Gibson
Lodge, Adam
Lodge, Reginald B.
Logan, John
Logie, Alexander
Lomond, A.
Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth
Longfield, Claude Robert
Longmore
Longridge, F.
Loots, Cornelis
Lord *** (pseudonym)
Lord Byron (allonym)
Lord, A. R.
Lorinda, C.
Loughlin, T.
Lovejoy, Newell
Lovell, George (1826-1881)
Lovell, George William (1804-1878)
Lover, Samuel
Lowdnes, Dorothy (pseudonym “Dolf Wyllarde”)
Lowe, Helen
Lowe, John
Lowe, Robert
Lowell, James Russell
Lowry, Henry Dawson
Lowther, John Henry
Loye, Charles Auguste (pseudonym “George Montbard”)
Luard, John Dalbiac
Lucas, Horatio Joseph
Lucas, John
Lucianus
Lucillius
Luck, Katie M.
Luckey, Jane
Ludolf, George H.
Lummis, Edward W.
Lumsden, Henry William
Lungren, Fernand
Luscombe, John
Lusted, Charles T.
Luttrell, Henry
Lyall, Alfred Comyn
Lyall, John
Lyle, William
Lyly, John
Lynch, Albert
Lynch, G. D.
Lynd, R.
Lyons, James Gilbourne
M C G. (poet; Century Guild)
M. (poet; Blackwood's)
M. (poet; Chambers's)
M. (poet; Cornhill)
M. (poet; Good Words)
M. (poet; Once a Week)
M. (translator; Once a Week)
M. A. (poet; Chambers's)
M. A. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
M. A. B. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
M. A. D. (poet; Chambers's)
M. A. G. (poet; Chambers's)
M. A. H. (poet; Good Words)
M. and A. (pseudonym)
M. B. (poet; Chambers's)
M. B. (poet; Good Words)
M. B. (poet; Macmillan’s)
M. B. T. (poet; Good Words)
M. C. C. (poet; Macmillan’s)
M. E. B. (poet; Atalanta)
M. H. (poet; Blackwood's)
M. H. (poet; Chambers's)
M. H. (poet; Good Words)
M. H. A. (translator; Good Words)
M. H. W. (poet; Atalanta)
M. J. (poet; Blackwood's)
M. J. L. (poet; Blackwood's)
M. J. L. (poet; Chambers's)
M. L. (poet; Chambers's)
M. L. (poet; The Keepsake)
M. L. S. (poet; Chambers's)
M. M. (translator; Once a Week)
M. M. M. (poet; Good Words)
M. M. M. (poet; Macmillan’s)
M. P. (poet; Chambers's)
M. R. (poet; Blackwood's)
M. R. L. (poet; Good Words)
M. S. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
M. S. (poet; Macmillan's)
M. S. J. (poet; Chambers's)
M. S. J. (translator; Chambers's)
M. T. F. (poet; Once a Week)
M. T. H. (poet; Chambers's)
M. W. S. (poet; Once a Week)
M. Y. G. (poet; Chambers's)
M'Gregor
M’Douall, W.
Maberly, Catherine Charlotte
Macalpine, Mary
MacAndrew, Barbara Miller
Macaulay, Thomas Babington
Macbeth, Robert Walker
MacCarthy, Denis Florence
MacConachie, J.
MacDonald, Alastair
MacDonald, Alexander
MacDonald, Alice
MacDonald, F. R.
MacDonald, George
MacDonald, J. A.
Macdonald, Leila
MacDonald, Maggie
MacDonald, Margaret
MacDonald, Mosse
Macdonell, Annie
Macduff, John Ross
Macedonius
Macfarlan, James
MacFarlane, Harold
Macfie, Ronald Campbell
MacGregor, James
Machar, Agnes Maule
Macindoe, George
Macintosh, Eliza Anne (née Griffiths)
Mackay, Alice
Mackay, Charles
Mackay, George Eric
Mackay, Jessie
MacKay, L. M.
Mackay, W. D.
Mackenzie, A.
Mackenzie, Charles
Mackenzie, David James
Mackenzie, Helen
Mackenzie, John
Mackenzie, Robert Shelton
Mackenzie, William Andrew
Mackie, Gascoigne
Maclachlan, Elsie J. Campbell
Maclagan, Alexander
Maclaren, Mabel
Maclean
Maclehose, Agnes
Macleod, Donald
Macleod, J.
Macleod, John (of Culkein, Stoer)
Macleod, John (of Govan)
Macleod, John (of Morven)
Macleod, Mary
Macleod, Norman
MacLiag, Muircheartach mac Con Ceartaich
Maclise, Daniel
Macmillan, Alexander
Macmillan, Hugh
MacNab, Peter
MacNair, Jean H.
Macnamara, Rachel Swete
Macnish, Robert
Maconachie, Agnes M.
Macpherson, A.
Macpherson, C.
Macpherson, James
Macquoid, Katharine Sarah
Macquoid, Percy Thomas
Macquoid, Thomas Robert
Macray, John
Macready, Catherine Frances Birch
MacWhirter, John
MacWilliam, R. A.
Madden, Richard Robert
Mademoiselle Olga S**
Maginn, William
Magra, Augusta A. L.
Mahoney, J.
Mahony, Francis Sylvester (pseudonym “Father Prout”)
Main, Isa
Maitland, Ella Fuller
Major, Rosa
Malcolm, John
Malden, Henry
Malet, Henry Charles Eden
Malherbe, François de
Mallock, William Hurrell
Malone, Robert L.
Maltby, F. W.
Mangan, James Clarence
Manners, Charles Cecil John
Manners, Janetta
Manners, John
Manrique, Jorge
Mant, Richard
Mantegna, Andrea
Manzoni, Alessandro
Maquet, Auguste
Mara (pseudonym)
Margetts, Constance Berkeley
Marianus
Marion (pseudonym)
Marks, Ed. (Edward?) W.
Marks, Mary A. M. (née Hoppus)
Marlowe, Christopher
Marot, Clément
Marradi, Giovanni
Marriage
Marryat, Frederick
Marshall, M. J.
Marshall, M. T.
Marshall, Thomas Falcon
Marston, Philip Bourke
Martial
Martin, A. C.
Martin, Frances
Martin, John
Martin, P.
Martin, Stanley
Martin, Theodore
Martin, W.
Martyn, M. E.
Marvell, Andrew
Mary (pseudonym)
Mary Queen of Scots
Mary-Anne (pseudonym)
Marzials, Frank Thomas
Marzials, Theo
Mason, William
Massey, Gerald
Massey, Henry Gibbs
Massey, Lucy
Massey, S. R.
Master Ambrose
Mataragkas
Mather, May
Matheson, Annie
Matheson, E.
Matson, William Tidd
Matthews, John
Matthey, Ellen
Maude, Thomas
Maunsell, W. Pryce
Mauve, Anton
Maxwell, Herbert
May, Anna M.
May, Julia H.
Mayhew, Neville
Maykov, Apollon
Maynard, Julia
Mayo, Herbert
McColl, Evan
McCormick, A. D.
McDiarmid, John
McDonnell, Randal William
McDouall, Peter Murray
McEvoy, Cuthbert
McEwan, Tom
McKay, A.
McKay, Archibald
McKendrick, John Gray
McKenzie, Charles
McKeown, Robert L.
McLachlan, Thomas Hope
McLellan, Archibald
McLellan, Isaac
McLennan
McNaghten, Robert Adair
McNay, A. M. (pseudonym “Graham”)
McPhail, N.
McQueen, Thomas
McSheehy
McTaggart, William
McWhirter, John W.
Meadows, K.
Mearns, Lois
Medhurst, Walter Henry
Meikle, S.
Meleager
Mellen, Grenville
Mellersh, Kate
Memor (pseudonym)
Menètrier, Casimir
Mennes, John
Mercer, Edmund
Meredith, Arthur G.
Meredith, G. E.
Meredith, George
Meredith, Louisa Anne
Meredith, William Macdonald
Merivale, Herman Charles
Merry, William Walter
Mesomedes
Metastasio, Pietro
Methuen, W.
Metrodorus
Mew, James
Meynell, Wilfred
Meyrick, Robert
Miall, A. Bernard
Michell, John
Michell, Nicholas
Michie, T.
Miles, Sibella Elizabeth (née Hatfield)
Millais, John Everett
Millar, Harold Robert
Millar, Mary M.
Miller, Charles
Miller, Cincinnatus Heine (pseudonym “Joaquin Miller”)
Miller, Ellen
Miller, Frank
Miller, Hugh
Miller, James William
Miller, Jex
Miller, Thomas
Millevoye, Charles Hubert
Milliken, Edwin James
Millington, James
Mills, Frederick S.
Mills, J. S.
Mills, Rebe
Milman, Constance
Milman, Henry Hart
Milnes, Richard Monckton
Milton, John
Mincius (pseudonym)
Minshall
Minty, Joshua
Miskeen
Mitchell, Elizabeth Harcourt
Mitchell, J. T.
Mitchell, John
Mitford, Mary Russell
Modaffar of Abiward
Moir, David Macbeth (pseudonym “Delta,” ∆)
Moir, George
Molesworth, Olive
Molyson, David
Money-Coutts, Francis Burdett
Monkhouse, William Cosmo
Monreal, George
Monsell, John Samuel Bewley
Montagu, H. Irving
Montalba, Clara
Montgomery the Third (pseudonym)
Montgomery, Bartholomew Sparrow
Montgomery, James
Moodie, Susanna
Moore
Moore, C.
Moore, Dugald
Moore, E.
Moore, Edith S.
Moore, G.
Moore, George Logan
Moore, Louise
Moore, T. Sturge
Moore, Thomas (1779-1852)
More, Hannah
Moresby, Jane
Moresby, Lily M.
Morgan Odoherty (also Mr Odoherty, Ensign Odoherty) (pseudonym)
Morgan, F. Somerville
Morice, Francis David
Morier, James Justinian
Morine, George
Morison, H. N.
Morley, Henry
Morot, Aimé
Morris, Alfred
Morris, Charles
Morris, Lewis
Morris, William
Morrow, Albert George
Morten, Thomas
Mortimer, A.
Morton, George
Morton, Thomas
Moschus
Moseley, Litchfield
Motherwell, William
Moule, Charles Walter
Moule, Horace
Moulton, Louise Chandler
Moultrie, Gerard
Moultrie, John
Moxon, Edward
Mr Ambrose (pseudonym)
Mr. J―nes (pseudonym)
Mr. W. W. (pseudonym)
Mrs M’Whirter (pseudonym)
Müchler, Karl Friedrich
Mudford, William
Mulholland, Rosa
Muller, F.
Müller, Friedrich Max
Müller, Wilhelm
Mullins, Alice
Müllner, Adolphus
Mulvany, Charles Pelham
Munby, Arthur J.
Mundy, Godfrey Charles
Mungo Glen (pseudonym)
Munns, B.
Munro, Georgina C.
Munro, Neil
Munro, Robert
Münster, Mary C. F.
Murchie, Mary J.
Murger, Henri
Murphy, Jeremiah Daniel
Murphy, Joseph John
Murray
Murray, A. H.
Murray, Charles
Murray, Charles Oliver
Murray, E. M.
Murray, George
Murray, John Fisher
Murray, John H.
Musa (pseudonym)
Musaeus
Mutch, Robert S.
Myers, Ernest
Myers, Frederic W. H.
Myrinus
Myron, A.
N—k (pseudonym)
N. H. M. (poet; Chambers's)
N. J. (poet; Once a Week)
N. J. T. (poet; Chambers's)
N. K. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
N. R. (poet; Blackwood's)
N. T. H. B. (poet; Blackwood's)
Naden, Constance
Nairne, A.
Napier, John
Nash, Joseph (1808-1878)
Nauen, Paul
Neaves, Charles
Neele, Henry
Neilson, James M.
Neilson, Robert A.
Nekrasof, Nikolay
Nencioni, Enrico
Nesbit, Edith
Neuman, B. Paul
Neumann, A.
Nevay, J.
Nevinson, Henry W.
Newman, John Henry
Newton-Robinson, Charles
Newton, John Joseph Cradock
Nicarchus
Nichol, H. Ernest
Nichol, John
Nichols, Bowyer
Nicholson, Frances
Nicholson, John Gambril F.
Nicol, R. E. (pseudonym “Edward Roedni”)
Nicoll, Robert
Nicoll, W. Robertson
Nicolson, Alexander
Nicolson, Laurence James
Niel, Mary (Daniel?)
Nisbet, Hume
Nisbet, James
Nixon, Florence
Noble, Irene
Noble, James Ashcroft
Noel, Roden
Norman, A.
Norman, Charlotte
Norris, Alfred
Norris, G. H. F.
Norris, Maria
North, Caroline
North, John William
Northwich, E. T.
Norton, Augusta
Norton, Caroline
Nossis
Nugent Grenville, Anne Lucy
Nugent-Grenville, George
O. (81st Regt.)
O. (poet; Chambers's)
O. (poet; Macmillan’s)
O. H. C. (poet; Good Words)
O. P. (translator; Blackwood's)
O'Doherty, Eva
O'Donnell, John Francis
O'Donoghue, Nannie Power
O'Moore, Dennis
O'Neill, Alicia Jane (née Sparrow)
O'Reilly, John Boyle
O'Ryan, Owen
O'Shaughnessy, Arthur W. E.
O’Hara, Millicent
O’Neil, Henry
Oakley, Henry H.
Octogenarius
Odontist (pseudonym)
Oehlenschläger, Adam
Ofella (pseudonym)
Ofellus (pseudonym)
Ogilby, John
Ogilvy, Eliza
Ogilvy, H.
Ogilvy, William Balfour
Ogle, Nathaniel
Ohlson, E. E.
Old Indian
Oldham, James Bertram (pseudonym “Bertram Romilly”)
Oliphant, Margaret
Oliphant, Margaret Ethel Blair
Oliver, Edwin
Ollier, Edmund
Omai
Omond, T. S.
One of the Authors of “Child World”
One Who Has Known Poets
Onestes
Opie, Amelia
Oppian
Ora (pseudonym)
Oram, Blanche (pseudonym “Roma White”)
Orchardson, William Quiller
Ord, John Walker
Orielensis (pseudonym)
Ormerod, H. J.
Orne, Caroline F.
Orpen, A. M.
Orred, Meta
Osborn, Edward Haydon
Osborne
Osborne, C.
Osgood, Frances Sargent
Osgood, Kate Putnam
Otway-Page, Ellen F. S.
Ouston, Helen
Outram, George S.
Overend, William Heysham
Ovid
Owen, Ellen Culley
Owen, Frances Mary
Owen, Octavius Freire
Owen, Samuel
Oxenford, John
P. (poet; Blackwood's)
P. (poet; Chambers's)
P. A. (poet; Good Words)
P. J. (translator; Good Words)
P. K. (poet; Blackwood's)
P. M. Cantab (pseudonym)
P. S. (poet; Chambers's)
P. W. (poet; Blackwood's)
P*. (poet; The Keepsake)
Pacificus (pseudonym)
Paddy
Page, Ellen
Page, Mary Anne
Paine, C. M.
Palgrave, Francis Turner
Palladas of Alexandria
Palmer, John
Panton, Jane Ellen (née Frith)
Panzacchi, Enrico
Papa, Pasquale
Pardoe, Julia
Pares, Anne (pseudonym “Evelyn Forest”)
Paris, E. T.
Park, Andrew
Park, J. H.
Park, Oscar
Park, William
Parke, Walter (pseudonym “The London Hermit”)
Parker
Parker Douglas, Sarah
Parker, Emma J.
Parker, Gilbert
Parker, Jane
Parker, Martin
Parkes (Belloc), Bessie Rayner
Parkes, W. Theodore
Parkinson, George
Parkinson, Henry W.
Parkinson, Richard
Parkinson, William
Parmenio
Parr, Harriet (pseudonym “Holme Lee”)
Parris, Edmund Thomas
Parry, Charles Hubert Hastings
Parry, Edward
Parsons, Edward
Partridge, Samuel William
Pasha, Hafiz
Pasquier, James Abbott
Passerat, Jean
Passmore, T. H.
Paterson, George (poet)
Paterson, George M. (illustrator and painter)
Paterson, John Curle
Paterson, Walter
Patmore, Coventry
Patmore, Peter James
Paton, A.
Paton, Allan Park
Paton, Frederick Noel
Paton, Joseph Noël
Paton, Waller Hugh
Patrick, Mary
Patterson, James C.
Paul of Thessalonica
Paul the Silentiary
Paul, Charles Kegan
Paul, John Dean (1775-1852)
Paulin, George
Paulus Silentiarius
Paylor, T. W.
Payn, Deline
Payn, Harriet F. (“Tiny”)
Payn, James
Peabody, W. O.
Peach, Louisa Courtenay
Peacock, Florence
Peacock, John
Peacock, Mabel
Pearce, Charles Sprague
Pearce, Maresco
Pearson, Andrew
Pearson, Emma Maria
Peddie, Robert
Pedley, Ethel
Peel, Edmund
Pegolotti, Alessandro
Pember, Edward Henry
Pemberton, Jane Elizabeth
Penn Venn
Penney[, F. G.?]
Pennington, B. J.
Pennington, Marianne
Penny, Anne Judith
Penstone, John Jewel
Pentaur
Peppin, Mary E.
Perceval, Rosamund
Percie
Percival, James Gates
Percy, J.
Percy, Thomas
Peregrine Wilton
Perring
Perrott (Miss)
Perry
Petley, Edmund
Petőfi, Sándor
Petrarch
Pettie, John
Pfizer, Gustav
Philemon
Philip of Thessalonica
Philippus
Phillips, G. C.
Phillips, S.
Phillips, Stephen
Phillips, Susan K.
Phillips, Thomas
Phillips, W. A.
Philo (pseudonym)
Philodemus
Philp, Maud
Phipps, Charles B.
Phipps, Edmund
Piatt, Sarah M. B.
Picken, Andrew L.
Pickersgill, Frederick Richard
Pickersgill, Maria
Pierpoint, Folliott Sandford
Pierrepont, Charles Evelyn
Pike, Albert
Pike, Florence
Pinchard, William Pryce
Pindar
Pinkerton, Susan
Pinwell, George John
Piozzi, Hester Lynch Thrale
Piper, Mary
Pitman, J.
Planché, James Robinson
Plarr (pseudonym “M. I. T.,” “MIT.”)
Plarr, Victor Gustave
Plato
Plimsollides
Pluma (pseudonym)
Plumley, Matilda
Plumptre, Edward Hayes
Plunket, Isabel
Poe, Edgar Allan
Polehampton, Theodore S.
Polin, Edward
Pollock, Walter Herries
Polwhele, Richard
Ponsonby, Eliza Anne (née Skelton)
Poole
Pope, Alexander
Pope, Gustave
Porter, J.
Posidippus
Potter, Frederick Scarlett (also Scarlet)
Poulsson, Emilie
Poultney, Alfred H.
Powell, Frederick York
Powell, Thomas
Power, Ellen
Power, Harriet
Power, Marguerite Agnes
Power, Tyrone
Powers, Susan Rugeley
Poynter, Clara Singer
Poynter, Edward John
Praed, William Mackworth (1802-1839)
Pratt, Charles Stuart
Pray, Isaac Clarke
Prestage, Edgar
Preston, Margaret J.
Prevost, Francis
Price, Fitzjames Tucker
Prichard, C. E.
Prideaux, Sarah Treverbian
Prince Jem
Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia
Prince Rodolph of Liechtenstein
Prince, John Critchley
Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll
Pringle, C. I.
Pringle, Thomas
Prinsep, Henry Thoby
Prior, James
Prior, Matthew
Pritchett, Robert Taylor
Probyn, Laetitia
Probyn, May
Procter, Adelaide Anne
Procter, Bryan Waller (pseudonym “Barry Cornwall”)
Propertius
Prothero, Alice Mary
Prout, S. G.
Prout, Samuel
Prout, Victor
Provis, B. W.
Prower
Prower, Maude
Prowett, Charles Gipps
Prudentius
Prudhomme, Sully
Purves, David Laing
Pushkin, Alexander
Pye, R. H.
Pyle, Howard
Q.
QU.? (pseudonym)
Quarles, Francis
Quarry, A.
Queen Elizabeth I
Quillinan, Edward
Quintana, Manuel José
Quinton, Alfred Robert
Quinton, J. R.
Quintus Mæcius
R. (poet; Blackwood's)
R. (poet; Chambers's)
R. (poet; Macmillan's)
R. (poet; Once a Week)
R. A. B. (poet; Once a Week)
R. F. H. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
R. G. (poet; The Dark Blue)
R. G. O. (poet; Atalanta)
R. H. (poet; Blackwood's)
R. H. (poet; The Keepsake)
R. H. (translator; Blackwood's)
R. H. P. (poet; Blackwood's)
R. H. P. B. (illustrator)
R. H. W. D. (poet; Macmillan's)
R. J. (poet; Blackwood's)
R. J. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
R. K. A. E. (poet; Cornhill)
R. L. A.
R. M. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
R. M. S. (poet; The Keepsake)
R. N.
R. O.
R. P. (translator; Macmillan's)
R. R. (poet; Chambers's)
R. S. (poet; Chambers’s)
R. S. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
R. S. (translator; Chambers's)
R. S. M.
R. S. V. P.
R. T. (translator; Blackwood’s)
R. T. H. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
Rabelais, François
Rachan, Mills
Radcliffe, Ann
Radcliffe, Frederick Peter Delmé
Radford, Dollie
Raeside, David
Ragg, Frederick William
Raikes, Arthur Hamilton
Railton, Herbert
Raine, J.
Raleigh, Walter
Ralston, William (1848-1911)
Ralston, William Ralston Shedden (1828-1889)
Ramsay, Allan
Ramsay, John (1799-1870)
Randolph, Thomas
Rands, William Brighty
Ranken, W. B.
Rankin, Jessica
Rankine, William Macquorn
Ranking, B. Montgomerie
Raphael
Rawnsley, Hardwicke Drummond
Raymond, G.
Reade (pseudonym “Bee”)
Reade, F. E.
Reboul, Jean
Redding, Cyrus
Redi, Francesco
Reece, Robert (Jr.)
Reeve, Alice
Reeve, Henry
Reid, J.
Reid, John
Reid, Maria
Reid, P. T.
Reid, P. Y.
Reid, Robert (pseudonym “Robert Wanlock”)
Reid, Robert Payton
Reid, Samuel
Reinagle, George Philip
Reinick, Robert
Remington, Frederic
Rennie, Eliza
Renton, William
Renwick, James
Repton, Humphry
Retzsch, Moritz
Reynolds, [M. C.?]
Reynolds, Frederic Mansel
Reynolds, John Hamilton
Reynolds, Joshua
Reynolds, Mary[?] Frances
Rhees, J. L.
Rhoades, James
Rhyming Richard
Rhys, Ernest
Rhys, Oliver
Richards, Alfred B.
Richardson, [?R.]
Richardson, Catherine Eliza
Richardson, David Lester
Richardson, George Fleming
Richardson, Paul
Richardson, Robert
Richings, E. A.
Richmond, William Blake
Richter, Albert
Richter, Henry James
Ricketts, Charles
Riddell-Webster, T. W.
Riddell, Henry Scott
Ridley, Matthew White
Rigg, James
Righton, Henry
Rijfkogel, Albertine
Rischgitz, Edward
Ritchie, Leitch
Rivers, Leopold
Riviere, Briton
Robb, Thomas D.
Roberts
Roberts, Charles G. D.
Roberts, Emma
Roberts, Mary
Robertson, A.
Robertson, Alexander B.
Robertson, D.
Robertson, D. J.
Robertson, George
Robertson, James Logie (pseudonym “Hugh Haliburton”)
Robertson, Janet Logie (née Simpson)
Robertson, Maggie
Robertson, Patrick (Lord Robertson)
Robertson, Sarah Moir
Robertson, William
Robertson[, H. L.?]
Robinson
Robinson (Robertson), Stewart
Robinson, Agnes Mary Francis
Robinson, Annie (pseudonym “Marian Douglas”)
Robinson, David
Robinson, George Wade
Robinson, Richard
Robinson, Sybil A. H.
Rochat, F.
Rochlitz, Friedrich
Rock, James
Rockliff, Robert
Rodd, Rennell
Rodger, Alexander
Rogan, Ada Frances
Roger, William (pseudonym "Daphnis")
Rogers, Mary Eliza
Rogers, Samuel
Rogers, William Henry
Rogerson, John Bolton
Rolfe, Frederick William
Rolls, Mary (Mrs. Henry Rolls)
Rookes, Sophia E.
Roose, P. W.
Rosa (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
Rosa, Salvator
Roscoe, James
Roscoe, Thomas
Roscoe, William
Ross, G. Fanny
Ross, Janet
Ross, William Charles
Rossetti, Christina G.
Rossetti, Dante Gabriel
Rossetti, William Michael
Rossi, Giacomo
Rouget de Lisle, Claude Joseph
Routh, Harold Victor
Rowbotham, Elizabeth
Rowe, Cyril
Rowe, John
Rowe, William J. Monkhouse
Rowland, May
Rowley, William
Roxby, Genevieve Mary
Roy, J.
Rozier, Ella H.
Ruckert, Frederick
Rufinus
Rullmann, Ludwig
Runeberg, Johan Ludvig
Runge, Phillip Otto
Rushton, Edward
Ruskin, John
Russell, John
Russell, John (1792-1878)
Russo, Ferdinando
Rutter, Frances
Rutter, Richard Ball
Rutter, Robert
Ryland, Henry
S. (poet; Blackwood's)
S. (poet; Chambers's)
S. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
S. (poet; Good Words)
S. (poet; Once a Week)
S. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
S. A. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
S. A. A. (poet; Macmillan’s)
S. B. (poet; Once a Week)
S. C. (poet; Chambers's)
S. H. (translator; English Woman’s Journal)
S. H. S. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
S. M. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
S. M. C.
S. P. (poet; Blackwood's)
S. R. P. (poet; Good Words)
S. S. (poet; Blackwood's)
S. S. S. (poet; Blackwood’s)
S. W. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
Saadi of Shiraz
Sadler, J. K.
Sadler, M. E.
Saint Columba
Salakostas, George
Salmon, Arthur Leslie
Salmon, M. C.
Salter, William
Sanders, Mary Jane Davidson
Sanders, Samuel Farncombe
Sandford, Daniel Keyte
Sandham, Henry
Sands, J.
Sandys, Frederick
Sara (pseudonym)
Saunders, Donald S.
Saunders, John
Savage, Reginald
Savage, William
Savile, Charles Stuart
Savile, Jeremiah
Sawyer, W.
Sawyer, William
Saxby, Jane Euphemia
Saxby, Jessie Margaret Edmonston
Sayle, Charles
Scaife, Elizabeth
Scarr, G.
Schiller, Friedrich
Schubart, Christian Friedrich Daniel
Schultz, Adolph
Schütz-Wilson, Henry
Schütze-Wilson, F.
Schwab, Gustav
Scotigena Oxoniensis
Scott, Catherine Amy (née Dawson)
Scott, Clement W.
Scott, F. B.
Scott, H. D.
Scott, J.
Scott, J. R.
Scott, James Edward
Scott, John
Scott, John (Scott of Amwell)
Scott, L. M.
Scott, Walter
Scott, William Bell
Scudder, Eliza
Seaman, Owen
Searing, Laura Redden (pseudonym “Howard Glyndon”)
Seccombe, Gladys
Sedgwick, George
Sedwin, Walter
Seeley, E.
Seidl, Johann Gabriel
Selīm I
Sendall, Walter
Seneca
Serapion of Alexandria
Sere, A. L.
Sergeant Murphy
Sergeant, Adeline
Serle, Thomas James
Service, John
Setchel, Sarah
Seward, W.
Sewell, Mary
Seyffarth, Louisa (née Sharpe)
Seymour, Montague
Shadow
Shafto, Holt
Shairp, John Campbell
Shakespeare, William
Shanly, Charles Dawson
Shannon, Charles Haslewood
Sharp, Isaac
Sharp, William
Sharpe, Charles Kirkpatrick
Sharpe, Eliza
Sharpe, M. M.
Sharpe, M. W.
Sharpe, Richard Scrafton
Shaw, Alfred Capel
Shaw, J.
Shaw, John Begg
Shaw, Thomas Budd
Sheil, Edward
Sheil, George
Shelley, Mary
Shelley, Percy Bysshe
Sheridan, Charles Brinsley
Sheridan, Louisa Henrietta
Sheridan, Richard Brinsley
Sheridan, Thomas
Sherman, Frank Dempster
Shields, Frederic J.
Shipton, Anna (née Savage)
Shirley, James
Shoberl, Frederic (1775-1853)
Shoberl, Frederic, Jun. (-1852)
Shore, Arabella
Short, Paul
Shorter, Dora Sigerson
Shute, Anna Clara
Shute, E. L.
Shuttleworth, Philip Francis
Siddons (Miss)
Sidgwick, Henry
Sidney, Philip
Sigourney, Lydia Huntley
Sill, Joseph
Sillery, Charles Doyne
Silver, H.
Simcox, George Augustus
Simcox, William Henry
Simeon, John
Simmons, Bartholomew
Simmons, F. W.
Simonides of Ceos
Simpson, J.
Simpson, Jane Cross
Simpson, Samuel L.
Simson, Florence
Sinclair, Catharine
Sinclair, Ian
Sinclair, J. [K.?]
Sinclair, John Lang (pseudonym “Alfred Egerton”)
Sinclair, William
Singleton, Henry
Singleton, William
Skaldaspiller, Evind
Skelton, Percival
Sketchley, Richard Forster
Skill, Frederick John
Skipsey, Joseph
Skirving, Adam
Skrine, John Huntley
Skurray, Francis
Slader, C.
Slaney, James
Slater, P. F.
Slimon, James MacKintosh
Slinger, F. J.
Smail, James (pseudonym “Matthew Gotterson”)
Smales
Smales, Edwin C.
Small, William
Smart, Alexander
Smedley, Frank E.
Smedley, Menella Bute
Smetham, James
Smets, Wilhelm
Smibert, Thomas
Smirke, Robert
Smith, Agnes
Smith, Albert Richard
Smith, Alexander
Smith, Alexander Munro (1860-1933)
Smith, Edward
Smith, Ellen (pseudonym “Reseda”)
Smith, Enort
Smith, George Barnett
Smith, Goldwin
Smith, Horace
Smith, J.
Smith, J. F.
Smith, J. J.
Smith, James
Smith, James (1775-1839)
Smith, Lucy Caroline (née Cumming)
Smith, Lydia Bosworth
Smith, Nimmo
Smith, R. N.
Smith, Thomas
Smith, W. Alexander
Smith, W. Frank
Smith, Walter Chalmers
Smith, William
Smith, William Henry
Smoil, T.
Smyth, Amelia Gillespie
Smyth, William
Snow, Robert
Solomon, Abraham
Solomon, Simeon
Solomos, Dionysios
Somerset, Henry
Somerville, G. G.
Somerville, William
Sophocles
Sordel de Goit (Sordello)
Sorrel, Susan
Sotheby, William
Soulary, Josephin
Southall, Isabel
Southey, Caroline Bowles
Southey, Robert
Southwell, Robert
Sowden, John
Sparrow, Eliza Julia
Spence, Florence Elizabeth
Spence, Kate E.
Spencer, Aubrey George
Spencer, Peter
Spens, Walter C.
Spenser, Edmund
Spiers, Charlotte H.
Spode, Anna
Spofford, Harriet Prescott
Spratt
St. Barbe, Roger Frampton
St. Clair-Erskine, Robert
St. John, Isabella
St. Maur, Charlotte
St. Vincent, John
Stacey, Walter S.
Stackhouse, Jonathan Lett
Stafford, William Cooke
Staley, A. E.
Stanfield, Clarkson Frederick
Stanhope, Philip Henry
Stanhope, R. H.
Stanley, Arthur Penrhyn
Stanley, C.
Stanley, Edward
Stanton, George Clark
Stanton, Horace Hughes
Staples, John C.
Stapleton, Miles
Starkey, Digby Pilot
Starr, Sarah J.
Statyllius Flaccus
Stebbing, Henry
Stedman, John
Stedman, W.
Steedman, C. M.
Steele, Thomas
Steell, Gourlay
Stembridge, Albert E.
Stephanoff
Stephanoff, Francis Philip
Stephanoff, James
Stephens, L. B.
Stepney, Catherine (also Manners)
Sterling, John
Stevens, William B. B.
Stevenson, David
Stevenson, James J.
Stevenson, M. Lowsley
Stevenson, Robert Louis
Stevenson, Robert Macaulay
Stewart, Albyn
Stewart, Alexander
Stewart, Alexander D.
Stewart, June I.
Stewart, Louisa
Stewart, William John
Stigant, William (also Stigand)
Stirling Graham, Clementina
Stirling, A.
Stock, Elliot
Stock, Henry John
Stockall, Harriett
Stocks, Lumb
Stoddard, Lavinia
Stoddart, J.
Stoddart, Thomas Tod
Stokes, Marianne (née Preindlesberger)
Stolberg, Friedrich Leopold
Stone, Frank
Stone, Louisa F.
Stone, Samuel John
Stonehewer, Agnes
Stonhouse, Charles
Storr, Francis
Story, A. M. Sommerville
Story, Robert
Story, William Wetmore
Stothard, Thomas
Strachey, Jane Maria
Strachey, John St. Loe
Strahan, Alexander Stuart
Strahan, John
Strang, James
Strange, Edward F.
Strettell, Alma
Stricker, Frederick
Strickland, Agnes
Strong, Charles
Stuart (Stewart?), Georgina
Stuart-Wortley, Emmeline
Stuart, Anita
Stuart, G. B.
Stubbs, Charles William
Sturgis, Julian Russell
Suckling, John
Sulman, Thomas
Sultan Murād IV
Sultan Süleyman I
Sutherland, Millicent
Suverkrop, Isabella Ann
Swain, Charles
Swayne, George Carless
Swayne, Margaret Sarah
Sweetman, Elinor M.
Swift, Edmund L.
Swift, Jonathan
Swinburne, Algernon Charles
Sydney, Charles
Sylvester, James Joseph
Syme, James
Symes, J. H.
Symington, A. M.
Symington, Andrew James
Symonds, John Addington
Symonds, P. B.
Symons, Arthur
Symons, Jelinger Cookson
Synge, W. W. Follett
T. (poet; Blackwood's)
T. (poet; Good Words)
T. (poet; Once a Week)
T. A. K. (poet; The Keepsake)
T. C. (poet; Blackwood's)
T. C. R. (poet; Chambers's)
T. D. (poet; Once a Week)
T. D. A. (poet; Chambers's)
T. D. C.
T. G. (poet; Chambers's)
T. M. (illustrator)
T. M. (poet; Blackwood's)
T. M. (translator; Blackwood’s)
T. R. (poet; Chambers's)
T. S. (poet; Once a Week)
T. T. (poet; Blackwood's)
T. W. B. (poet; The Keepsake)
T. W. S. (poet; Chambers's)
Tabb, John B.
Talbot, Frances
Talfourd, Thomas Noon
Tannahill, Robert
Tappan, Henry Philip
Tasso, Torquato
Tate, F. B.
Tate, William J.
Tatham, Emma
Taylor
Taylor, Arthur M. C.
Taylor, Bayard
Taylor, E.
Taylor, E. J.
Taylor, Emily
Taylor, Emily Howson
Taylor, George
Taylor, George R.
Taylor, John
Taylor, M.
Taylor, R.
Taylor, Tom
Taylor, W. L.
Taylor, W. V.
Tayside (poet; Chambers's)
Tchudi, Albert
Teale, William
Teetgen, Alexander Thomas
Tegnér, Esaias
Telbin, W.
Temple, J.
Tennant, Dorothy
Tennant, William
Tenniel, John
Tennyson, Alfred
Tennyson, Hallam
Terrell, Georgina (née Koberwein)
Teufelsdrockh (pseudonym)
Teulon, Harriet Mary
Thackeray, William Makepeace
Thackwell, Walter
Thallus the Milesian
Thaxter, Celia
Theocritus
Theodoridas
Theodosius, J.
Théolier, Philippe
Theta (pseudonym)
Thicknesse, Lily
Thom, William
Thomas, Jane
Thomas, Rose Haig
Thomas, W. Moy
Thompson, A.
Thompson, Annabel Charlotte
Thompson, Anne Harrison
Thompson, D. M.
Thompson, D'Arcy W.
Thompson, Edith M.
Thompson, H.
Thompson, Henry
Thompson, Sidney R.
Thompson, William Gill
Thomson, C.
Thomson, G. W.
Thomson, Gordon
Thomson, J. G.
Thomson, James (1700-1748)
Thomson, James (1825-)
Thomson, James (pseud. B. V.) (1834-1882)
Thomson, John Scoular
Thomson, John Stuart
Thomson, Richard
Thomson, William
Thorburn, Robert
Thorn, Ariell
Thornbury, George Walter
Thorold, Edmund
Thud, M.
Thyillus
Thymocles
Thyne, Philip
Tiddeman, L. E.
Tiffin
Tighe, Mary
Tildesley, James Carpenter
Tilton, Theodore
Timothy Tickler (pseudonym)
Tindal, Henrietta Euphemia
Tipsy Thammuz (pseudonym)
Todhunter, John (pseudonym “Aureolus Paracelsus”)
Tollemache, Beatrix L.
Tollens, Hendrik
Tomkins, Mary Jane (Plarr)
Tonkin, Sarah Eliza
Torceanu, M. Ricard
Townsend, Horatio
Townshend (Townsend), H. J.
Townshend, Chauncy Hare
Toynbee, William
Tranmar, Reid
Trench, Frederick
Trench, Richard Chenevix
Trevanion, Ada
Trevelyan, George Otto
Trevor
Trevor, George
Trollope, Frances
Trueba y Cosio, Joaquin Telesforo de
Truman, Joseph
Tschumakov, Teodor
Tuck, Harry
Tucker, Marwood
Tuckerman, M. P.
Tuckey, Jane
Turgenev, Ivan
Turner, Charles Tennyson
Turner, Florence
Turner, G.
Turner, J. M. W.
Turner, Rosetta
Tusser, Thomas
Tuttiett, Mary Gleed (pseudonym “Maxwell Gray”)
Tweedale, Violet
Tweedie, M. B.
Two "Long Spoons" (pseudonym)
Tylee, Edward Sydney
Tylee, Florence
Tymms, T. Vincent
Tymnas
Tynan (Hinkson), Katharine
Tyndale, Marcia
Tyndall, W. B.
Tyrwhitt, Richard St John
Tytler, Patrick Fraser
U. (poet; Macmillan's)
U. A. T. (poet; Cornhill)
U. L. T. (poet; Good Words)
U. T. (poet; Blackwood's)
Udall, Nicholas
Uhland, Johann Ludwig
Ulph, Margaret Kate
Ululans (pseudonym)
Unsigned
Urquhart, G. S.
Urquhart, Helen
Usher, Nora C.
Uwins, Thomas
V. (poet; Chambers's)
V. (poet; The Keepsake)
V. B. (poet; Good Words)
Valdés, Juan Meléndez
Valentine, F.
Valentine, Laura (née Jewry)
van Streek (née Brinkman)
Vanderlyn, Nathan
Vane, Charles William
Vassall-Fox, Henry Richard
Vaughan, Henry
Vaughan, Wilmot
Vauquelin de la Fresnaye, Jean
Veal, Joseph
Vedder, David
Veitch, John
Veley, Margaret
Verhaeren, Emile
Verney, Frances Parthenope (née Nightingale)
Vernon, Maud V.
Verrall, J.
Vickers, Alfred Gomersal (1810-1837)
Vidal, Peire
Villiers Sankey, William
Villon, François
Vinton, Matthew
Virgil
Vivanti, Annie
Vlachos, Angelos
Vogl, Heinrich
von Baldhoven, Martin
von Chamisso, Adelbert
von Hardenberg, Georg (pseudonym “Novalis”)
Von Malthison
von Münch-Bellinghausen, Eligius Franz Joseph (pseudonym Frederick Halm)
von Salis-Seewis, Johann Gaudenz
Vyse, Maude J.
W. (poet; Blackwood's)
W. (poet; Chambers's)
W. (poet; Once a Week)
W. A. (illustrator)
W. A. F. (poet; Blackwood's)
W. B. (illustrator)
W. B. R. (poet; Good Words)
W. B. S. (poet; Chambers's)
W. C. (poet; Once a Week)
W. E. L. (poet; Chambers's)
W. G. (poet; Blackwood's)
W. G. (poet; Once a Week)
W. G. C. (poet; Macmillan’s)
W. G. M. (poet; Blackwood's)
W. H. (poet; Macmillan’s)
W. H. B. (translator; Macmillan's)
W. H. H.
W. H. K.
W. H. W. (poet; Chambers's)
W. J. C. (poet; Cornhill)
W. J. W.
W. K. S. (poet; Atalanta)
W. M. (translator; Good Words)
W. M. G. (poet; Chambers's)
W. M. G. (poet; Once a Week)
W. M. S. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
W. M. T. (translator; Chambers's)
W. P. (illustrator)
W. P. (poet; Blackwood's)
W. P. L. (poet; Cornhill)
W. P. W. (poet; Chambers's)
W. R. (illustrator)
W. R. (poet; Once a Week)
W. S. (poet; Chambers's)
W. S. (poet; Good Words)
W. S. D. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
W. S. F. (“A Police Constable”) (poet; Good Words)
W. S. M. (poet; Chambers's)
W. S. Y. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
W. T. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
W. T. G. (poet; Once a Week)
W. T. M. (poet; Once a Week)
W. V. (poet; Good Words)
W. W. (poet; Blackwood's)
W. W. (poet; Good Words)
W. W. G. (poet; Macmillan’s)
W. Y. (translator; Macmillan's)
Waddington, Samuel
Waddy, Frederick
Wade, George Woosung
Wagner, E.
Wagner, Richard
Wagstaff, A.
Wain, Louis
Waithman, Helen Maud
Walcott, Mackenzie E. C.
Waldie, Agnes
Walford, Edward (pseudonym “Ralph de Peverel”)
Walford, Lucy Bethia
Walford, Neville
Walford, Olive Montagu
Walker, Elizabeth (Eliza)
Walker, Esther
Walker, Francis S.
Walker, Frederick
Walker, John (pseudonym "Rowland Thirlmere")
Walker, W. Sidney
Wall, J. (pseudonym “Iris”)
Wallace, Robert Bruce
Waller, Edmund
Waller, John Francis
Wallin, Johan Olaf
Walsh, Paul
Walton, Izaak
Ward, J.
Ward, James Warner
Ward, Mary Augusta
Ward, Thomas Humphry
Wardle, Arthur
Wardle, James
Waring, Anna Letitia
Waring, Charles H.
Waring, Eleanor Emma
Waring, H. E.
Waring, S.
Waring, Samuel Miller
Warner, John
Warr, George C.
Warren, Henry
Warren, John Byrne Leicester
Warren, Samuel
Warren, Thomas Herbert
Warrington, George
Warton, Thomas
Waterston, Robert Cassie
Watkins, Frank
Watkins, Morgan George
Watkins, S. Cornish
Watson, Elizabeth Sophia
Watson, J. (photographer)
Watson, James E.
Watson, John Dawson
Watson, L.
Watson, Robert
Watson, Robert Lancaster
Watson, Rosamund Marriott
Watson, Walter
Watson, William
Watt, J. Lauchlan MacLean
Wattier, Émile
Watts-Dunton, Theodore
Watts, Alaric Alexander
Watts, Alaric Alfred (Alfred A.) (1825-1901)
Watts, C. M.
Watts, George Frederick
Watts, Isaac
Watts, John George
Watts, Priscilla (Zillah) Maden
Waugh, Arthur
Waugh, F. G.
Waugh, Francis
Weatherly, Frederic Edward
Webb, Anna
Webb, K. E.
Webb, R. Chapman
Webb, W. Trego
Webber, Byron
Webster, Augusta
Webster, John
Weedon, Francis Charles (1831-1861)
Weid, Pauline Elisabeth Ottilie Luise zu (pseudonym “Carmen Sylva”)
Weir, Harrison
Weissensee, Philipp Heinrich
Welch, W. P.
Wellesley, Richard
Wells (Miss)
Wentworth, Ernest
Werner, Alice
West, Stainley
Westall, Richard
Westall, William
Westmacott, Richard (1799-1872)
Weston, Elizabeth Joanna
Whall, C. H.
Whewell, William
Whishaw, Frederick James
Whistler, James McNeil
Whitcher, John
White Friar
White, E.
White, James
White, Joseph Blanco
White, T.
Whitehead, Charles
Whitelocke, Samuel
Whiting, Sydney
Whitman, Walt
Whitney, Adeline Dutton Train
Whittier, John Greenleaf
Whymper, Charles
Whymper, Frederick Hayes
Wiegand, W. J.
Wiffen, Jeremiah Holmes
Wightwick, George
Wilberforce, Samuel
Wilde, Jane Francesca Agnes (pseudonym “Speranza”)
Wilkie, David
Wilkie, Helen
Wilkie, James
Wilkinson
Wilkinson, Thomas C.
William Morris (allonym)
William, C. P.
Williams, Antonia R.
Williams, Charles H.
Williams, Charles Hanbury
Williams, J.
Williams, J. D.
Williams, R. Stansby
Williams, Robert Folkstone
Williams, S. W.
Williams, Sarah
Williamson, David R.
Williamson, Effie
Williamson, R. R.
Willis, Nathaniel Parker
Wills, James
Wills, Ruth
Wills, William Henry
Wilson-Block, Elisabeth
Wilson, [Janet?]
Wilson, A. C.
Wilson, Alexander
Wilson, Andrew
Wilson, Ernest
Wilson, F. E.
Wilson, F. G.
Wilson, Florence Margaret
Wilson, George (1799-1873)
Wilson, George (1818-1859)
Wilson, George Washington (1823-1893)
Wilson, Helen K.
Wilson, J.
Wilson, James
Wilson, John
Wilson, John (pseudonym “Christopher North”)
Wilson, Margaret (née Harries) (Mrs. Cornwell Baron Wilson)
Wilson, Robert
Wilson, Sarah
Wilson, William
Wilton, Charles
Wilton, Richard
Wimperis, Edmund Morison
Windle, E. G.
Wingate, David
Winkworth, Catherine
Winstanley, Lilian
Winterwood, Geoffrey
Winther, Christian
Witcomb, Charles
Wither, George
Withers, Percy
Wohlbrück, Wilhelm August
Wolcot, John
Wolf, Joseph
Wolfe, Charles
Wolff, Betje
Wolff, Pius Alexander
Wolffsohn, Lily
Wollaston, John Thomas Burton
Wood
Wood, A.
Wood, Alfred
Wood, Elizabeth W.
Wood, Ellen
Wood, Francis Henry
Wood, G. W.
Wood, John
Wood, Lydia M.
Wood, Sam (pseudonym “Mortimer Mansell”)
Woodforde
Woodley, George
Woods, Margaret Louisa
Woods, Virna
Woodward, William
Wooley, Charles (Wolley, Wolley-Dod)
Woolmer, Alfred Joseph
Woolsey, Sarah Chauncey (pseudonym “Susan Coolidge”)
Wordsworth, William (1770-1850)
Wordsworth, William (1835-1917)
Worsley, H.
Worsley, Philip Stanhope
Wotton, Henry
Wotton, Mabel E.
Wrangham, Francis
Wratislaw, Theodore
Wren, Hildegarde
Wren, M. H.
Wright, Arthur
Wright, David
Wright, John Massey
Wyatt, Thomas
Wykehamist (pseudonym)
Wynne, Ellis J.
X. (poet; Blackwood's)
X. (poet; Chambers's)
X. (poet; Once a Week)
X. C. (poet; Chambers's)
X. L. (poet; Blackwood's)
X. Y. (poet; Blackwood's)
Xenocritus
Y. (translator; Blackwood’s)
Yates, Edmund Hodgson
Yeats, William Butler
Young, George
Young, Ruth
Yriarte, Charles
Yule, Henry
Z. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
Z. (translator; Chambers's)
Zappi, Giambattista Felice
Zedlitz, Joseph Christian Freiherr von
Zenodotus of Ephesus
Zeta (pseudonym)
Zimmermann
Zwecker, Johann Baptist
Αμφιων (pseudonym)
Αριαδνη (pseudonym)
Ελιας (pseudonym)
Έσπερος (pseudonym)
Θ
Κρεων (pseudonym)
Νομος (pseudonym)
Φασν (pseudonym)
Ω (poet; Blackwood's)
Ω (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
Фώνη (pseudonym)
Date ?
Organ
All the Year Round
Atalanta
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine
Chambers's Edinburgh Journal
Forget-Me-Not
Good Words
Household Words
Macmillan's Magazine
Once a Week
Pageant
The Century Guild Hobby Horse
The Chartist Circular
The Cornhill Magazine
The Dark Blue
The English Woman's Journal
The Keepsake
The Nineteenth Century
The Penny Magazine
The Yellow Book
Victorian Magazine
Woman's World
Series ?
Vol. ?
Num. ?
Pages ?
Christmas issue
True
False
Quoted in article
True
False
Allonymous?
True
False
Allonym ▼ Algernon Charles Swinburne Byron Dr. James Scott Isaac Tomkins James Scott James Scott, Esq. Kirkman Finlay Lord Byron Rev. J. Barrett Richard Dowden Thomas Jennings William Morris
Unsigned?
True
False
Pseudonym ▼ "M. J. J.", "The author of "Phantasmagoria, or Sketches of Life and Literature, etc." ¶ ¶ < △ △, Author of "The Legend of Genevieve" etc. △, By the author of "The Legend of Genevieve," &c A Best Man A Correspondent A Damp Tourist A Dog A Fifth Engineer A Lady A Lady, E. M. H. A Lincolnshire Rector A Modern Pythagorean A Police Constable, W. S. F. A Practical Young Lady A Private Soldier A Provincial Aspirant A Railway Surfaceman A Septagenarian A Septuagenarian A Solitary Student A Volunteer A Young Lady, A. G. A. A. A. A. A. P. A. A. W. A. B. A. B. E. A. C. A. C. C. A. C. L. A. C. M. A. C. S. A. C. W. A. D. A. D. L. A. E. C. A. E. G. A. F. A. F. F. A. F. Scott A. F. T. A. G. A. G. H. A. H. A. H. B. A. H. J. A. I., By a Dweller in Manchester A. J. G. D. A. K. A. L. A. L. B. A. L. L. A. M. A. M. B. A. M. H. A. M. M. A. M'K. A. M'L. A. N. A. O. A. P. A. P. P. A. P. S. A. R. A. S. A. S. B. A. S. D. A. S. F. A. T. K. A. W. A. W. G. A. W. R. Adelaide Adriel Vere Agnostos Aikin, B. Albert B. Alcmæon Alfred Egerton Allison Hughes Alpha Amy R An Industrious Englishman An Irish Gentleman An Oxonian Anastasius Grün Anemone Nemoroso, Primula Vulgaris, Orchis, Daffodil, Cowslip, Strawberry, Violet, &tc. &tc. &c.—Innumerable Signatures Anna Anna Hagdeon Anna Hagedon Anonymous AOI△OƩ Apollodorus Archæus Aretino Argus Arion Arthur Marvell Astronomer Royal of the New Series Aureolus Paracelsus Author of "Gideon's Rock," etc. Author of "Madonna Pia, and Other Poems" Author of "Poland" Author of “The Garland,” &c. Author of the "Weaver's Saturday" Aἰών Aοίδος Æ. P. B. B. B. B. B. B. B. C. B. G. J. B. J. B. K. R. B. M. B. M. F. B. R. B. R. P. B. W. Bailie Jarvie Barry Cornwall Barry Cornwall; ß Beauséant Bee Berni Bessie Dill Beth Blaize Fitztravesty Blue Jay Bob Buller of Brazennose Bob Gregson, P. P. Bowzy Beelzebub Brinhild Brown Robin Buller Busy-Body By a Provisional Committee of Contributors By an Irish Gentleman, lately deceased By one of the Authors of "Child World" By one of the Authors of "Child-World" By one of the Authors of "Poems for a Child" By One Who Knew Her By the Author of "A Tradesman's Lays" By the Author of "An Essay on Woman," &c. By the Author of "Chartley," &c. By the Author of "Chartley" By the Author of "Child-World" By the Author of "Chronicles of the Schönberg-Cotta Family" By the Author of "Chronicles of the Schönberg-Cotta Family"; B. C. By the Author of "Father O'Flynn" By the author of "Fireside Education" By the Author of "Hearths and Watch-Fires" By the author of "John and I" By the Author of "John Halifax, Gentleman" By the Author of "John Halifax, Gentleman"; D.M.C. By the Author of "John Halifax" By the Author of "John Jerningham's Journal" By the Author of "Kelavane" By the Author of "Lady Grace" By the Author of "Lilliput Levee" By the Author of "London in the Olden Time" By the Author of "Miss Molly" By the Author of "Mrs. Jerningham's Journal" By the Author of "Nugæ Sacræ," &c. By the Author of "Polly" By the Author of "Robert Holt's Illusion" By the Author of "Selina's Story" By the Author of "Sir Guy de Guy" By the Author of "Songs of Killarney" By the Author of "Tales and Sketches" By the Author of "The Forging of the Anchor" By the Author of "The Patience of Hope" By the Author of "The Schönberg-Cotta Family'" By the Author of "The Schönberg-Cotta Family", E. C. By the Author of "The White Cross and Dove of Pears" By the Author of “Selwyn” By the Author of “Sir Guy de Guy” By the Author of Frankenstein By the Author of Lorenzo De' Medici By the Author of Nugæ Sacræ By the Author of Nugæ Sacræ, Humanity, &c. By the Author of Queen Isabel By the author of the Life of Burke By the Author of the Life of Burke, Life of Goldsmith, etc. By the Author of The Life of Burke, The Life of Goldsmith, &c. By the Translator of Homer's Hymns C C—. C. C. A. M. W. C. B. C. Brooke C. C. C. C. C. C. C. H. C. D. C. C. E. C. E. C. C. E. I. C. E. N. C. E. P. C. E. S. C. F. C. F. B. C. G. C. G. G. C. H. C. H. H. P. C. H. T. C. H. W. C. I. E. C. I. M. B. C. J. B. C. J. M. B. C. K. C. K. B. C. L. C. M. C. M. A. C. C. M. I. C. M. L. F. C. M. O'N. C. M. P. C. McK. C. N. C. N. S. C. O. C. P. C. R. Crane C. S. C. S. C. C. S. F. C. S. G. C. St***g C. T. C. U. D. C. W. A. C. W. B. C. W. C. C+L+N+O C∫E Campbell Canadensis Carmen Sylva Carradorne Catholicus Sudans Caviare Cecil Cheviot Tichburn Christie Christopher North City Poet of 1788 Clare Clarinda Colin Clout Coritanus Cresandia Currer Bell D D. D. *** D. Dick D. F. D. F. A. D. G. D. G. B. D. G. R. D. H. D. J. M. D. J. R. D. L. P. D. M. D. M. M. D. R. D. R. W. D. T. D** D*** Dagmar Daphnis David Lyndsay Deacon Delta Derwent Conway Dolf Wyllarde Dollie Radford Domesticus Dr. Scott Dunshunner Duthus E. E. A. D. E. A. G. E. A. H. O. E. A. S. E. B. E. B. H. E. B. P. E. C. E. C. B. E. C. G. E. C. M. E. Conder Gray E. D. E. D. C. E. D. F. E. D. S. E. E. E. E. W. E. F. E. F. M. E. G. H. E. G. W. E. H. E. H. C. D. E. H. E. E. H. K. E. H. O. E. H. P. E. H. R. E. H. S. E. H. T. E. I. E. J. E. J. H. E. J. M. E. K. E. K. T. E. L. E. L. H. E. M. B. E. M. C. E. M. D. B. E. M. H. E. M. M. E. M. P. E. N. E. N. P. R. E. O. D. E. P. E. R. E. S. E. S. C. E. S. D. E. S. W. E. W. E. W. H. Edward Roedni Effie Ellen C—. Elpis Emeritus Emma Ensign Odoherty Eremus Erimus Eta Iota Ettrick Shepherd Eva D. Evelyn Forest Evelyn Pyne Eως Eωҁ F. F. A. F. A. K. F. B. S. F. C. A. F. C. H. F. C. W. F. D. F. D. H. F. E. F. E. C. F. E. S. F. E. T. F. F. F. G. F. G. P. F. H. F. H. D. F. L. F. M. F. M. H. F. N. B. F. P. F. R. H. F. R. S. F. S. F. S. H. F. T. F. T. M. F. T. P. F. V. F. W. Father Prout Fitz Fitz-Andrew Fogarty O'Fogarty Francis Annesley Frankfort Sommerville Frederick Halm Friend Richard Fritz G. G. A. G. B. G. C. G. C. J. G. C. P. G. D. G. D. C. G. D. L. G. E. G. F. G. G. F. R. G. G. G. G. H. G. H. F. N. G. H. P. G. L. H. G. M. G. M. F. G. M. H. G. P. D. G. P. S. G. R. T. G. S. G. T. G. W. G. W. L. G. W. T. G. W. Y. G.D.C Gamma Genevra George Earnest George Eliot Geraldine Gérard de Nerval Glis Graham Graham R. Tomson Guy Roslyn H. H. A. H. A. D. H. A. Page H. B. H. B.-D. H. B., Ettrick Shepherd H. C. H. C. B. H. C. C. H. C. G. M. H. C. M. H. D. H. D. W. H. E. B. H. H. E. E. M. H. F. C. H. G. H. G. K. H. H. H. H. H. H. H. O. H. I. H. O. H. J. H. H. J. O. H. K. H. K. W. H. L. H. L. R. H. L. T. H. M 'D. H. M. H. M. B. H. M. Junr. H. M. M. H. M. T. H. Mary T. H. N. H. N. M. H. P. H. R. H. R. W. H. S. H. T. H. T**y H. W. H. W. K. Hannibal Smith Harold Harriet Havilah hebdomadal hand [symbol] Helen Annesly Hermione Herz Hesper Hibernian Hilse Hⁿ HP. Hugh Conway Hugh Haliburton Hugh Haliburton (Shepherd of the Ochils) Hugh Lindsay Hyacinth I. I. A. C. I. A. S. I. B. I. C. I. D. F. I. D. Fenton I. F. I. H. R., By a Lady I. K. I. R. V. Icarus Ida J. Lemon Ida Mary Forde Ilimon Iris Iseult J. J. A. J. A. E. J. A. F. J. A. of Wadham College, Oxford J. A. P. J. A. S. J. B. J. B. F. J. B. L. J. B. M. J. B. S. J. B. Selkirk J. C. J. C. A. J. C. H. J. C. H. J. J. C. P. J. D. J. D. H. J. D. L. J. E. J. E. E. J. E. H. J. E. P. J. E. W. J. F. J. F. F. J. F. H. J. F. J. J. F. O'D. J. G. J. H. J. H. B. J. H. C. J. H. H. J. H. L. J. H. M. J. H. P. J. I. L. J. J. J. J. C. J. J. D. J. J. S. J. K. B. J. K. L. J. M. J. M. D. J. M. H. J. M'C. Junr. J. M'G J. N. J. O. B. J. P. J. P. M. J. P. S. J. P. W. J. R. J. R. C. J. R. G. J. R. O. J. R. S. J. S. J. S. B. J. S. D. J. T. J. T. C. J. T. C. of Brazen-nose J. T. P. J. T. R. J. V. J. V. H. J. W. J. W. K. James James Scott Janet Jean Boncœur Jetta Vogel Jetty Vogel Jim's Wife Joaquin Miller Johannes Boustrophedonides John Bull John Howley Jos. Carmichael Josiah Shufflebotham Judith Juvenalis Junior Juvenis K. K. G. K. H. K. M. K. S. K. S. B. K. S. M. K. T. Kate Kirtle Knapdale Kυων L___x-C. L. L. A. M. L. B. H. L. C. L. C. C. L. C. S. L. D. L. D. G. L. E. L. L. F. L. F. C. L. F. D. C. L. G. L. G. H. L. G. M. L. I. C. D. L. I. L. L. J. G. L. N. L. R. L. V. L. W. M. L. Laurel-Honouring Laureate Leigh Cliffe Leodiensis Leontine Leopold Wray Lewis Carroll Lex Rex Lida Liolett Lord *** Lord Porchester Louis le Cheminant M C G. M. M. A. M. A. B. M. A. C. M. A. D. M. A. G. M. A. H. M. A. L. M. A. M. H. M. A. W. M. and A. M. B. M. B. E. M. B. T. M. C. C. M. C. R. M. E. M. E. B. M. E. S. M. E. W. M. G. W. M. G. W. P. M. H. M. H. W. M. J. M. J. J. M. J. L. M. L. M. L. P. M. L. S. M. M. M. M. H. M. M. M. M. N. M. O. M. O. W. O. M. OD. M. P. M. P. C. M. P. T. M. R. M. R. L. M. Rock M. S. M. S. J. M. T. M. T. F. M. T. H. M. W. O M. W. S. M. Y. G. M'D. Magdalen Rock Maister Hougge Malachi Mullion Mara Marcus Paulus Venetus Marian Marian Douglas Marion Markham Howard Mary Mary S. Mary-Anne Master Ambrose Matthew Gotterson Maxwell Gray May Paul Memor Menzies MacDonald Michael Field Mincius MIT. Moira O'Neill Montgomery the Third Morgan O'Doherty Morgan Odoherty Morgan Odoherty, Esq. Mortimer Mansell Morty Macnamara Mulligan Mr Ambrose Mr Brigs Mr Hougge Mr Odoherty Mr Secretary Mullion Mr Theodore Mr W. W. Mr Wastle Mr. J—nes Mrs M'Whirter Mrs. Walker Mullion Mungo Glen Musa Myra N—k N. N. H. M. N. J. N. J. H. N. J. T. N. K. N. R. N. T. H. B. Nauta None Notice Monger Novalis O. O. (81st Regt.) O. H. C. O. O. Octogenarius Odoherty Odoherty, Tityrus Odonist Old Indian Oliver Grey Omai Omicron One of the Authors of "Child World" One Who Has Known Poets Ora (The Chartist Circular) Orielensis Orwell Ossian Owen Meredith P. P. A. P. C. P. G. P. P. J. P. K. P. K. J. P. M. P. M. J. P. S. P. T. T. P. W. P. W. R. P.* P*. Pacificus Paddy Palæmon Pan Pat Salamander Paul Bell Penn Venn Percie Percy Gallard Percy Hemingway Peregrine Wilton Peter Corcoron Peter Pindar Philo Pictor Pisistratus Caxton Plimsollides Pluma Poet Close Pot-Pourri Proteus Q. R. R. A. B. R. A. S. J. R. B. R. B. R. R. C. R. C. Dublin R. C. K. E. R. C. L. R. D. R. R. E. F. R. F. R. F. H. R. G. R. G. D. R. G. H. R. G. O. R. H. R. H. P. R. H. S. R. H. W. D. R. J. R. K. A. E. R. L. A. R. M. R. M. M. R. M. S. R. N. R. N. S. R. O. R. R. R. R. R. R. S. R. S. C. R. S. H. R. S. M. R. S. S. R. S. V. P. R. S. W. R. ST. J. T. R. T. H. R. W. H. R. W. K. R****y Ralph de Peverel Randolph Fitz-Eustace Renée de Coutans Reseda Rhyming Richard Roma White Rosa Rosetta Rosslyn Rusticus Quondam S. S. A. S. A. A. S. A. D. I. S. B. S. C. S. C. C. S. E. T. S. F. S. G. S. H. F. S. H. S. S. J. S. K. P. S. M. S. M. C. S. M. E. S. P. S. R. C. S. R. H. S. R. P. S. S. S. S. S. S. W. S. W. P. Sadie Samuel Slick, Junr. Sara Scotigena Oxoniensis Senex Senga Sergeant Murphy Shadow Shagird Shiel Dhuv Susan Coolidge Sutherland Ʃ. T. T. A. T. A. K. T. Buller T. C. T. C. L. T. C. R. T. C. W. T. D. T. D. A. T. D. C. T. G. T. H. T. M. T. Meadows, Esq. T. P. T. Pidcock T. R. T. S. T. S. P. T. T. T. W. T. W. B. T. W. P. T. W. S. Tayside Teufelsdrockh The Author of "The Legend of Genevieve," etc., Δ The Author of 'The Legend of Genevieve,' etc., Δ The Author of "A Resident at the Courts of Germany," etc. The Author of "Father O'Flynn" The Author Of "Granby" The Author Of "Hajji Baba" The Author of "John Halifax, Gentleman." The Author of "John Halifax, Gentleman" The Author of "Lady Grace" The Author of "Matthew Dale" The Author of "Miserrimus" The Author of "Morals of May-Fair" The Author of "Mrs. Jerningham's Journal" The Author of "Nugæ Sacræ," &c. The Author of "Nugæ Sacræ," etc. The author of "Richelieu, The Gipsy, &c. &c" The Author of "Songs of Killarney" The Author of "The Castilian" The author of "The Chronicles of London Bridge" The Author of "The Collegians" The Author of Frankenstein The Author of the Siege of Constantinople The Editors The Ettrick Shepherd The Old Bachelor The Once United States The Sketcher The Translator of Homer's Hymns The Veiled Editor of Blackwood's Magazine Theo. Gift Theta Thos. Jennings Tickler Timothy Tickler Tipsy Thammuz Trevor Two "Long Spoons" U. U. A. T. U. L. T. U. T. Ululans V. V. B. V. D. B. V. G. P. V. V. Vere Haldane Victoire Victoire Violet Fane W. W. A. F. W. B. R. W. B. Ripon W. B. S. W. B. T. W. C. W. C. B. W. C. B. O. W. C. H. W. C. I. W. D. W. D. F. W. E. A. W. E. L. W. F. W. F. D. W. F. E. I. W. G. W. G. C. W. G. M. W. H. W. H. H. W. H. K. W. H. W. W. I. W. J. W. J. A. W. J. C. W. J. L. W. J. M. R. W. J. W. W. K. S. W. L. C. W. L. W. W. M. W. M. G. W. M. S. W. P. W. P. L. W. P. W. W. R. W. S. W. S. D. W. S. M. W. S. Y. W. T. W. T. G. W. T. M. W. V. W. V. T. W. W. W. W. F. S. W. W. G. W. W. M. W. W. S. White Friar William Wastle Willibald Alexis Wm Tims Goodenough Woodburn Wykehamist X X. X. C. X. L. X. X. X. Y. Y. K. Yussuf Z. Zeta Αμφιων Αριαδνη Δ Δ, By the author of "The Legend of Genevieve," &c. Ελιας Έσπερος Θ Κρεων Νομος Φ Φ Φασν Ω Фώνη
Related poems
'54. A Tale of the Baltic (We were cruising in the Baltic in glorious Fifty-four): 7484
'Eheu! Fugaces' (An old man sitting in church, and praying with all his breath): 13823
'Neath Radiant Skies (Transformed are the city streets to-day): 12658
'Neath the Scaur (The roseate light dies into purple-black): 3923
'Sic transit gloria' (St Elmo's gleam is fitful grown and pale): 8680
'Twas Night ('Twas night! and yet I could not sleep): 11382
'Twixt Daybreak and Daylight (The glint and glimmer of the daybreak shows): 12835
‘Mali Bheag Og (Oh, look with eyes of weeping): 14982
"'Show me some good stout ladies' gloves,' quoth I" ("Show me some good stout ladies' gloves," quoth I): 14948
"'Tis Christmas Day!" ('Tis Christmas Day!): 14548
"'Tis Hard to Die in Spring" ("'Tis hard to die in spring!" were the touching words he said): 10894
"'Tis one o’clock, the boy from ‘Punch’ is sitting in the passage here” (’Tis one o'clock, the boy from ‘Punch’ is sitting in the passage here): 8632
"'Twas Never Merry World" ('Twas never merry world): 13731
"A 'woman with a past.' What happier omen" (A 'woman with a past.' What happier omen): 8150
"A baby joy is awake in my heart" (A baby joy is awake in my heart): 9754
"A Bruised Reed Shall He Not Break" (I will accept thy will to do and be): 15854
"A counsellor well fitted to advise" (A counsellor well fitted to advise): 8259
"A Day-Dream" (I have sat, silent, dreaming, in the golden sun): 12762
"A friend returned! spring bursting forth again!" (A friend returned! spring bursting forth again!): 10385
"A highway for your God! and lo! the Sea" (A highway for your God! and lo! the Sea): 10963
"A Mother's Gift" ("A Mother's Gift!" in what sweet way): 15435
"A Parting" (Why, no, I should not have told you, dear): 8519
"A Retrospect" (I saw her gathering roses on a lawn): 533
"A Time for All Things" (What will the dawning bring to me): 732
"A Way of Many Moons" (O Spring's a coquette, for she will, and she'll not): 5445
"A wretched thing it were, to have our heart" (A wretched thing it were, to have our heart): 8255
"A-Growing and A-Blowing" (Flowers! pretty flowers! Ah, who will buy?): 2125
"Accept the Verdict of Fools . . . (Puschkin)" ("Accept the verdict of fools"): 14902
"Ach, die Augen sind es wieder" (Ah! those eyes again, that thrill'd me): 9483
"Ach, wenn ich nur der Schemel wär'" (Oh, were I but the footstool, where): 9405
"After Many Days" (I do not ask remembrance in your hours): 14833
"After Many Days" (In autumn's silent twilight, sad and sweet): 12101
"Again in Deepening Beauty Ye Float Near" (Again in deep'ning beauty, ye float near): 1536
"Ah! word that's born amidst our blinding tears" (Ah! word that's born amidst our blinding tears): 12814
"Alas for Her! Why is She Shining?" (Alas for her! why is she shining): 10999
"All Among the Barley" (It seems so short a time): 677
"All Ends In Song" (All ends in song, love, and the old, old story): 1836
"All Right" (While the coach stops a moment, a cup of brown ale): 5272
"All that's sweet and soft attend" (All that's sweet and soft attend): 8078
"All Things in the World Must Change" (Would'st thou have it always Spring): 1115
"Allnächtlich im Traume seh' ich dich" (I see thee nightly in dreams, my sweet): 9412
"Alone—Together" (Alone, I see the sunrise, from the rocks above the sea): 515
"Alone" (I sat thinking, in my study, over hopes that long ago): 13416
"Alone" (Our deepest joy in silence flows): 8518
"Am fernen Horizonte" (On the verge of the far horizon): 9615
"Am leuchtenden Sommermorgen" ('Tis summer, a bright summer morning): 9415
"Am Meer." (Schubert) (The long moan of the monotonous sea): 3588
"Among the lily flowers, to-day" (Among the lily flowers, to-day): 7907
"An Appeal" (Ah! could you see me weep in anguish sore): 8517
"And He Took a Child" (Into the little gray churchyard): 1289
"And stretches outward,—to yon Wondrous Rock" (And stretches outward,—to yon Wondrous Rock): 10964
"And thou, strong soul in a weak body pent" (And thou, strong soul in a weak body pent): 12968
"Anfangs wollt' ich fast verzagen" (In my lonely first despair, it): 9385
"April" (Witching April, if the sun): 576
"Are ye not bulwarks to this lovely Isle" (Are ye not bulwarks to this lovely Isle): 10960
"As by her filial circle first we see" (As by her filial circle first we see): 9538
"As down in the sunless retreats of the ocean" (As down in the sunless retreats of the ocean): 8057
"As the violet loveth the welcome shade" (As the violet loveth the welcome shade): 15871
"As Thy Day, So Shall Thy Strength Be" (When adverse winds and waves arise): 3436
"Ask nothing more of me, sweet" (Ask nothing more of me, sweet): 12840
"At Parting" (When we two meet hereafter): 12699
"At Rest! thou noblest, sweetest-natured Man" (At Rest! thou noblest, sweetest-natured Man): 8585
"At Sempach" (Fields, where the tillage is not wholly man's—): 537
"At That Day Ye Shall Know" (Our joy is full: before Thy feet we bow): 5096
"Auf Flügeln des Gesanges" (Oh, I would bear thee, my love, my bride): 9533
"Aus alten Märchen winkt es" (From the realm of old-world story): 9414
"Aus meinen Thränen spriessen" (Sweet flowers spring up, the fairest): 9529
"Ay—’tis a goodly sight—those verdant bays" (Ay—’tis a goodly sight—those verdant bays): 14631
"Backe and side go bare, go bare" (Backe and side go bare, go bare): 9813
"Battle with Life!" (Bear thee up bravely): 1125
"Be near me, Lord, my light and stay" (Be near me, Lord, my light and stay): 13899
"Be not so kind, for here is Passion's slave" (Be not so kind, for here is Passion's slave): 8678
"Beauty's a Flower" (Youth's for an hour): 8012
"Bees, of Bees of Paradise" (Bees, of Bees of Paradise): 8282
"Behind the Scenes" (Long, long ago I had an aunt): 683
"Behold, I Stand at the Door and Knock" (Who standeth at the gate?—A Woman old): 1670
"Beloved! amidst the Earnest Woes" (Beloved! amidst the earnest woes): 2288
"Beside the Dying Ember" (Beside the dying ember): 1519
"Between March and April" ("Between March and April"): 14798
"Betwixt the Hay-Time and the Corn." An English Idyll (Betwixt the Hay-time and the Corn): 15007
"Blame Not My Lute" (Blame not my lute! for he must sound): 1534
"Blessed are they that mourn" (Ance I had a wife o' my ain): 2674
"Blessed to Give" (The kingly sun gives forth his rays): 1620
"Browning" ("Please your honours," said he, "I'm able"): 13956
"Burn This Letter as Soon as Read" (Burn this letter as soon as read): 536
"But Mercian rivers calm and deep" (But Mercian rivers calm and deep): 8415
"By Bannockburn proud Edward lay" (By Bannockburn proud Edward lay): 14437
"By that dejected city, Arno runs" (By that dejected city, Arno runs): 10015
"Bye-and-Bye" (Was the parting very bitter?): 712
"Carest Thou Not?" (Carest Thou not? oh Thou that givest life): 4522
"Carissimo" (Just beyond the Julian Gate): 1815
"Carpe Diem" (The morning sun is trembling on the stream): 7786
"Changing Toys" (I heard Dick say, as I passed his room): 13546
"Children of Shem! Firstborn of Noah's race" (Children of Shem! Firstborn of Noah's race): 8104
"Chronomoros" (Wearied with hearing folks cry): 5241
"Come all ye jolly shepherds that whistle thro' the glen" (Come all ye jolly shepherds that whistle thro' the glen): 9939
"Come restles swallow fit my restles minde" (Come restles swallow fit my restles minde): 2267
"Come round me, ye lads, that I value the best" (Come round me, ye lads, that I value the best): 9455
"Come, by the nymphs, I pr'ythee play" (Come, by the nymphs, I pr'ythee play): 14130
"Come, here's to the Knights of the true royal oak" (Come, here's to the Knights of the true royal oak): 2243
"Come" (Come to me when the earth is fair): 14430
"Coming Home" (Five primrose springs have flowered and died): 7662
"Con Espressione" (Melodious lady, still be singing!): 14190
"Confidence" (All is silent, lonely, free): 586
"Consule Planco" (Consule Planco; I was young): 12140
"Cuckoo! Cuckoo!" (Song for the First of May) (Cuckoo! cuckoo! it haunts my way): 3890
"Dame Autumn Hath a Mournful Face" (Summer is dead: too soon her radiant shape): 7520
"Das Herz ist mir bedrückt und sehnlich" (My heart is sad, with sore misgiving): 9619
"Das ist ein Brausen une Heulen" (Hark to the roar and the howling): 9413
"Das ist ein Flöten und Geigen" (Hark to yon fiddling and fluting): 9404
"Das ist ein schlechtes Wetter" ('Tis the very roughest of weather): 9381
"Das Meer erglänzte weit hinaus" (The sea loomed wide, a shining flat): 9564
"Dass du mich liebst, das wusst' ich" (Oh yes! I knew you loved me): 9378
"De Mond ist aufgegangen" (The moon is up, and shining): 9563
"De Mortuis" (Oh come let us haste to his grave, let us scatter rich garlands of flowers!): 8916
"De Profundis" (The hot white road winds on and on before): 787
"De'il tak the kilts! For fifty year, nae honest son of Reikie's" (De'il tak the kilts! For fifty year, nae honest son of Reikie's): 9874
"Dear Jemmy when he sees me upon a holiday" (Dear Jemmy when he sees me upon a holiday): 14959
"Dear Thirty-Nine" (Unhonoured by the passing throng): 3728
"Dein Angesicht, so lieb und schön" (Thy face, so sweet and fair to see): 9399
"Deine weissen Lilienfinger" (Oh, if thy white lily fingers): 9568
"Deo. Opt. Max" (Art thou drowsy, dull, indifferent): 3216
"Der Abend kommt gezogen" (The twilight has died in darkness): 9565
"Der bleiche, herbstliche Halbmond" (The waning autumn moon looks): 9566
"Der Schmetterling ist in die Rose verliebt" (The butterfly is with the rose in love): 9394
"Did he, who thus inscribed this wall" (Did he, who thus inscribed this wall): 8424
"Die blaue Frühling's Augen" (The azure eyes of spring-time): 9406
"Die blauen Veilchen der Aeugelein" (The violets blue of those eyes of thine): 9641
"Die Jahre kommen und gehen" (Years come and go; generations): 9613
"Die Jungfrau schläft in der Kammer" (The girl is asleep in her chamber): 9617
"Die Linde blühte, die Nachtigall sang" (The linden blossom'd, the nightingale sung): 9477
"Die Mitternacht was kalt und stumm" (The midnight was cold, and still, and sad): 9410
"Die Nacht ist feucht und stürmisch" (The night, it is damp and stormy): 9616
"Die Rose, die Lilie, die Taube, die Sonne!" (The rose, the lily, the sun, and the dove): 9398
"Die Schönes Fischer-Mädchen" (My bonnie blithe fisher-maiden): 9614
"Die Welt ist so schön, und der Himmel so blau" (The world is so fair, and the sky so blue): 9642
"Died—One Day Old" (Still and cold in the nest): 5104
"Dimidium Facti" ("Oh, fie! The sad thing I have heard!"): 2302
"Do you remember how I laughed at you" (Do you remember how I laughed at you): 7975
"Dost thou ask what life can be?" (Dost thou ask what life can be?): 15594
"Drawing Out the Fear" (A fisher's wife to Duoro's side): 7050
"Dread Temple of the Waters! Ocean-Shrine!" (Dread Temple of the Waters! Ocean-Shrine!): 10965
"Drew the wrong lever!" (This was what the pointsman said): 3636
"Du bist wie eine Blume" (Thou art even as a flower is): 9523
"Du hast Diamanten und Perlen" (Pearls hast thou and diamonds, dearest): 9618
"Du liebst mich nicht, Du liebst mich nicht" (My love you cannot, cannot brook!): 9402
"Ein Fichtenbaum stecht einsam" (A pine-tree stands alone on): 9408
"Ein Jungling liebt ein Mädchen" (A young man loves a maiden): 9401
"Ein Traum, gar seltsam schauerlich" (A dream, that eerie was to see): 9518
"Elia" Lamb (The muses' friend, I whistle down the wind): 9758
"Es fällt ein Stern herunter" (A star is falling, falling): 9487
"Es liegt der heisse Sommer" ('Tis summer, fiery summer): 9479
"Es stehen unbeweglich" (Immovable, unchanging): 9525
"Et Sunt Commercia Coeli" (I did not raise mine eyes to hers): 8854
"Ever Believe Me Affectionately Yours" (Ever believe you true? Dear friend): 6877
"Ever should the damosel" ("Ever should the damosel"): 15766
"Experientia Docet;" Or, the Pleasures of Farming ("So you've taken a farm, Mr. Smithers"): 13479
"Experientia Docet" (I stand again upon the beach): 889
"Faint Heart Never Won Fair Ladye" ("What! stay'st thou now to prate and toy"): 502
"Faith Among the Christian Warrior:" A Picture, by Sir Noel Paton, R.S.A., LL.D. ("Arm! for the foe is near," and as she spake): 3905
"Farewell! for while this life besets me" (Farewell! for while this life besets me): 7951
"Fear neither Time nor Death" (Fear neither Time nor Death): 1948
"Fey" (I'm in no way "superstitious," as the parson called our Mat): 4482
"Fiery Honey" (An April face set in a summer sea): 12888
"Five lofty peaks like so many fingers, rich tints blending" (Five lofty peaks like so many fingers, rich tints blending): 14817
"Followers Not Allowed" (Now lithe and listen, ladies, if you please): 724
"For Better For Worse" ("I have never pressed thee, dear," he said): 4871
"For Love's Sweet Sake" (Because you have no golden hoard): 13294
"Forget-Me-Not" (Forget thee?—then hath Beauty lost her charms): 10774
"Forgotten" ("Forgotten, as a dead man out of mind"): 4193
"Forward we look and we gild it all" (Forward we look and we gild it all): 8662
"Found Dead In The Street" (The labour is over and done): 7615
"Foundered" (Gaily she sailed from the Northern port, in the dawn of the April day): 4745
"Frater Ave atque Vale" (Row us out from Desenzano, to your Sirmione row!): 8064
"Friendly Leaves" (Friendly leaves, so cool and shady, wave above us everywhere): 5049
"From Cannes" (Whence do the lovely strangers come): 4623
"From the fair palace of my lady's eyes" (From the fair palace of my lady's eyes): 8856
"From This Dark Prison of My Pain" (From this dark Prison of my Pain): 5183
"From this deep chasm—where quivering sun-beams play" (From this deep chasm—where quivering sun-beams play): 8458
"Gae owre the muir, gae doun the brae" (Gae owre the muir, gae doun the brae): 8272
"Germania." Suggested by a Picture (On her Rhine-rock stands Germania, stands on guard): 13451
"Get thee gone, Old Year!" (Get thee gone, Old Year!): 15256
"Give It To Him." An Incident of the Franco-Prussian War (Related by the Surgeon). (A German lad and a Frenchman): 1517
"Give Me a Chance." A Fact ("Give me a chance, Jack!" Fierce and fast thundered the flowing tide): 4292
"Go forth, my song! thy goal remember" (Go forth, my song! thy goal remember): 7906
"God Knows" (Where the tear-fed violet blooms): 7080
"Good Tidings of Great Joy" (Oh! sweep the loud harp's tuneful strings): 6151
"Good Words" to the Pitcairn Islanders (O ye friends afar, where the western sea): 1891
"Great Sire! by whatso'er decree" (Great Sire! by whatso'er decree): 8596
"Greek and Latin" (Greek and Latin): 9931
"Green leaf, green leaf of the violet" (Green leaf, green leaf of the violet): 8118
"Had golden Homer and great Maro kept" (Had golden Homer and great Maro kept): 8888
"Hadst thou my death" (Hadst thou my death): 14805
"Hail, happy Dalkey! Queen of isles" (Hail, happy Dalkey! Queen of isles): 6088
"Harp, take my bosom's burthen on thy string" (Harp, take my bosom's burthen on thy string): 8675
"Hat sie sich denn nie geäussert" (Has she never, then, given token): 9485
"Hateful Spring!" [From the "Chansons" of Beranger] (All the winter, from my window): 5858
"Hæc olim meminisse juvabit" (Of pictures hath my soul good store): 11979
"He ceased, and sea-like roar'd the Trojan host" (He ceased, and sea-like roar'd the Trojan host): 12226
"He comes from afar" (He comes from afar): 15142
"He Never Told His Love" (Farewell, farewell! sweet maiden!): 454
"He Told Her That He Loved Her Not" (He told her that he loved her not; but while): 4954
"Hear us, loved Athena, hear!" ("Hear us, loved Athena, hear!"): 15311
"Herz, mein Herz, sei nicht beklommen" (Heart, heart mine, no longer vex thee): 9557
"Hide, O God, the moon in a mist" (Hide, O God, the moon in a mist): 8123
"His Name." From the French of Victor Hugo (The perfume of a lily pure, the lustre of a crown): 6672
"Home they brought her warrior dead" (Home they brought her warrior dead): 14880
"Home, Sweet Home" ("I'm going home, I'm going home!"): 13229
"Hope, child! to-morrow! Hope! and then again to-morrow" (Hope, child! to-morrow! Hope! and then again to-morrow): 7953
"Hope." A Sonnet on the Picture by G. F. Watts, R. A. (Thou sittest blindfold on a world of woe): 12929
"Hope." On G. F. Watts's Picture (Look up, ye weary-hearted, spent with sighs): 1043
"Hör' ich das Liedchen klingen" (When I hear the song, that erst): 9389
"How blest, how firm the stateman stands!" (How blest, how firm the stateman stands!): 15896
"How Swift is a Glance of the Mind!" (That flower, that flower! Oh! pluck that flower for me!): 11716
"How well I love this first keen shivery winter feeling!" (How well I love this first keen shivery winter feeling!): 8040
"Howl! howl! howl!" (Howl! howl! howl!): 8170
"I Am In The World Alone" (Little child! I once was fondled as tenderly as you): 5961
"I Am So Happy!" (I see the faded writing, dated oh! so long ago): 6053
"I Am Weary—Take Me Home" (The pageant was imposing, and the gay assembled throngs): 6128
"I Cannot Smile Again" (My heart is breaking! let me weep): 5684
"I care not a fig for a flagon of flip" (I care not a fig for a flagon of flip): 9811
"I did this for Thee! What hast thou done for me?" (Motto placed under a Picture of our Saviour in the Study of a German Divine) (I gave my life for thee): 1979
"I Have Outlived the Hopes That Charm'd Me" (I have outlived the hopes that charm'd me): 11024
"I Laid Me Down" (I laid me down and slept): 15014
"I may not, I dare not wed with thee" ("I may not, I dare not wed with thee"): 15765
"I mean to wait for Jack." A Lesson for Lovers (Sweet Kate at Wyndham's Dairy, and Jack of Oldham Mill): 4330
"I Mind the Day" (I mind the day I'd wish I was a say-gull flyin' far): 8010
"I must observe moreover that it was" (I must observe moreover that it was): 8108
"I rose this morning about half past nine" (I rose this morning about half past nine): 8180
"I says, says I, to Mrs. Gamp, on Tuesday last I says" ("I says, says I, to Mrs. Gamp, on Tuesday last I says"): 14799
"I see you, Juliet, still, with your straw hat" (I see you, Juliet, still, with your straw hat): 8145
"I Shall Go Softly All My Years" (Since thou art dead "I shall go softly all my years"): 15026
"I shall know why, when time is over" (I shall know why, when time is over): 8414
"I tax not all with this unmanly hate" (I tax not all with this unmanly hate): 8060
"I think there never was a dearer woman" (I think there never was a dearer woman): 8148
"I traced a little brook to its well-head" (I traced a little brook to its well-head): 1611
"I watched thee worship in thy purity" (I watched thee worship in thy purity): 8679
"I will tell you the tale of a troublesome Bear" (I will tell you the tale of a troublesome Bear): 13701
"I Would Not Have Thee Young Again" (I would not have thee young again): 1109
"I'll Hold by Your Hand, Mother" ("Shouldst not thou like, my child, to be"): 7290
"I'm happy as the sunshine" ("I'm happy as the sunshine"): 15850
"I've learnt a new song" (I've learnt a new song): 2188
"Ich grolle nicht, and wenn das Herz auch bricht" (I am not wroth, my own lost love, although): 9548
"Ich lag und schlief, und schlief recht mild" (I slept,—my sleep was soft and sweet): 9376
"Ich stand in dunkeln Träumen" (I stood on her picture gazing): 9649
"Ich trat in jene Hallen" (Into yon halls I stept): 9550
"Ich unglückselet' ger Atlas! Eine Welt" (I a most ill-starr'd Atlas! I am doom'd): 9417
"Ich wandelte unter den Baümen" (Alone with the anguish that tore me): 9384
"Ich will meine Seele tauchen" (I will steep my fainting spirit): 9471
"Ich wollt, meine Schmerzen ergössen" (Oh, would all the anguish I suffer): 9639
"Ich wollte bei dir weilen" (I wanted to linger about you): 9637
"Ich wollte, meine Lieder" (Oh! if these songs of mine were): 9379
"If I Gaze in Woodland Streams" (If I gaze in woodland streams): 12682
"If I Walk in Autumn's Ev'n." Song ("If I walk in Autumn's Ev'n"): 1520
"If I were Jupiter, Sinope, you should be" (If I were Jupiter, Sinope, you should be): 7905
"If it be but a dream or a vision" (If it be but a dream or a vision): 13683
"If this be Love, to draw a weary breath" (If this be Love, to draw a weary breath): 14930
"If Thou Hadst Known" (If thou hadst known that yon wide sheet of blue): 4102
"If thy soul check thee that I come so near" (If thy soul check thee that I come so near): 8182
"If!" (If there were no such thing as pride): 13551
"If!" (If you were sitting talking to me there): 4990
"Im Süssen Traum, bei stiller Nacht" (In sweetest dream, at dead of night): 9545
"Im Traum sah ich die Geliebte" (In a dream I saw my darling): 9552
"Im Walde wandl' ich und weine" (I roam through the wood heavy-hearted): 9383
"Im wonderschönen Monat Mai" ('Twas in the glorious month of May): 9527
"In a Pine-Wood" (The waves are breaking on some far-off strand): 12653
"In Autumn of the Year" (When golden grain hath crowned the ear): 13102
"In den Küssen welche Lüge" (Oh, the sweet lies lurk in kisses!): 9560
"In Disgrace" ('Twas a woman's thought to paint): 5083
"In due observance of an ancient rite" (In due observance of an ancient rite): 8046
"In jerkin short and nut-brown coat I live" (In jerkin short and nut-brown coat I live): 13710
"In mein gar zu dunkles Leben" (Once upon my life's dark pathway): 9396
"In Statu Quo" (Under the ash by the babbling brook): 13430
"In the Clouds" (Sitting underneath a tree): 979
"In the days of our boyhood we listened in glee" (In the days of our boyhood we listened in glee): 15919
"In the glory of youth the young man went" (In the glory of youth the young man went): 8661
"In the Shadow of Thy Wings" (Whene'er a leaf its shadow flings): 5119
"In the West is the golden glory" (In the West is the golden glory): 8663
"In Visions of the Dark Night" (When the dream-wings winnow to slumber): 2355
"Inasmuch" (Dear friends, who will not worship God with me): 4027
"Inconsolabile" (I am waiting on the margin): 3224
"Iron Ships" (I dreamed: In purple seas, on fringèd rocks): 13902
"Is all well with the child?" (Rocked in thine airy nest, in leafy elm): 4002
"Is It Strange?" (When the day is slowly dying): 13373
"It appears that this season's an equine affair" (It appears that this season's an equine affair): 13706
"It Could Not Happen Now" (Ere country ways had turned to street): 5545
"It is a beauteous evening, calm and free" (It is a beauteous evening, calm and free): 9264
"It Might Have Been" (It might have been! Oh, saddest words of all): 12870
"It was her first sweet child, her heart's delight" (It was her first sweet child, her heart's delight): 7866
"It was the day that tuneful Pindar sent" (It was the day that tuneful Pindar sent): 9251
"Ja, du bist elend, und ich grolle nicht" (Yes, thou art wretched, and I am not wroth): 9549
"Jo" (I've played the poor orphan, I've bullied and whined): 4004
"Judge Not, That Ye Be Not Judged" (Perchance the friend who cheered thy early years): 12894
"Kind! es wäre dein Verderben" (Child! it would be your undoing): 9524
"Kitty Palmer" (But "Kitty Palmer"—not a word): 6657
"Know Thyself" ("Know thyself"—wandering, on this text I mused): 11549
"Know'st thou the land which lovers ought to choose?" (Know'st thou the land which lovers ought to choose?): 15331
"Lady Morison rode by hill and dale" (Lady Morison rode by hill and dale): 9073
"Lady, if you love to hear" (Lady, if you love to hear): 9716
"Last Night" (Where were you last night? I watched at the gate): 14177
"Le Toit S’Egaie et Rit." (From Victor Hugo) (The child appears amid the joyous cries): 736
"Left His Home" (He left us all one bright June dawn): 3188
"Les Gants Glacés." (An Anecdote of the Fronde, 1650) (Wrapped in smoke stood the towers of Rethel): 4185
"Lesley for the kirk" (Lesley for the kirk): 8371
"Let Love Abide" (I see the house in dreams, and know the charm that haunts each silent room): 4339
"Let There Be Light" ("Let there be light;" and through the abysmal deep): 12974
"Let us drink and be merry" (Let us drink and be merry): 9897
"Let Us Think of Those That Sleep" (If we could see some warning hand): 3464
"Let wit and waggery, joy and jollity" (Let wit and waggery, joy and jollity): 9899
"Lieb Liebchen, leg's Händchen auf Herze mein" (Lay your dear little hand on my heart, my fair!): 9416
"Liebe, sollst mir heute sagen" (Say, love, art thou not a vision?): 9651
"Life is no sleepless dream, as poets sing" (Life is no sleepless dream, as poets sing): 9271
"Life's at best a hurry-skurry—never ending" (Life's at best a hurry-skurry—never ending"): 14816
"Like Her—but Not the Same!" (I seek her by the stream that laves): 14119
"Like the Days of an Hireling." (I cannot hold the days, they are not mine): 8802
"List ye who love" (List ye who love): 8124
"Little book, surnamed of white" (Little book, surnamed of white): 14860
"Little May" (See, she stands, my little May): 2003
"Little Wife" (Cousins—as boy and girl, we watched): 883
"Lonely this island, the home of the sea-birds" (Lonely this island, the home of the sea-birds): 8224
"Long Ago" (I had a friend, long years ago): 528
"Look, Delia, how we esteem the half-blown rose" (Look, Delia, how we esteem the half-blown rose): 14931
"Lookin' Back" (Wathers o' Moyle, an' the white gulls flyin): 8009
"Loose dishevelled tresses, thrown" (Loose dishevelled tresses, thrown): 14806
"Lost" (Whisht then, oh my jewel! while I say): 8013
"Love is enough; though the World be a-waning" (Love is enough; though the World be a-waning): 14961
"Love, Sweet Love, Is Everywhere!" (The air is filled with a gentle song): 6309
"Mabel" (Say, shall I tell you what my darling's like): 13446
"Mädchen, mit dem rothen Mündchen" (Lassie with the lips sae rosy): 9521
"Mag da draussen Schnee sich thürmen" (Fathoms deep may drift the snow): 9531
"Making Hay While the Sun Shines" (I've whipped the stream from near the weir): 13554
"Man glaubt, dass ich mich gräme" (People think, that for love I am wasting): 9392
"Manch Bild vergessener Zeiten" (Shape after shape uprises): 9633
"Marko, the great Marko" (Marko, the great Marko): 8824
"Mein Herz, mein Herz ist traurig" (My heart, my heart is heavy): 9388
"Mein Kind, wir waren Kinder" (My bairn, we aince were bairnies): 9611
"Mein Liebchen, wir sassen beisammen" (My love, we were sitting together): 9400
"Mein süsses Lieb, wenn du im Grab" (When thou shalt lie, my darling, low): 9409
"Mercedes mia! turn thine eyes away" (Mercedes mia! turn thine eyes away): 9372
"Minnie"—A Hop-Farm Sketch (From the morning prime to the evening dew): 7620
"Mir träumte von einem Königskind" (I dreamt of a monarch's daughter fair): 9480
"Mir träumte wieder der alte Traum" (Again the old dream came back to me): 9474
"Mir traümte, traurig schaute der Mond" (I had a dream; the moon looked drear): 9640
"Missing" ('Twas after Talavera, on an evening dark and gray): 12992
"Moat, where the dragon-flies pose and hover" (Moat, where the dragon-flies poise and hover): 2200
"Morgens steh ich auf und frage" (I at morn get up, and "Will she): 9469
"Mrs. Smith" (Last year I trod these fields with Di): 707
"My daddie is a caukert carle" (My daddie is a caukert carle): 14777
"My Emma and Cupid" ("No earthly love my path shall cross"): 526
"My glass shall not persuade me I am old" (My glass shall not persuade me I am old): 16091
"My Heroine" (I'll introduce you to a girl I know): 7099
"My House Is Left Unto Me Desolate" (A little while, you tell me, but a little while): 13016
"My Lady Wakes" (When my Lady sleeps, the sun): 1644
"My lioness" (My lioness): 8126
"My lost William—thou in whom" (My lost William—thou in whom): 15257
"My Ship" (I sent my beautiful ship to sea—): 4112
"My Soul and I" (Long time ago, my Soul and I): 530
"My soul is prodigal of hope" (My soul is prodigal of hope): 8045
"My Wife's a Winsome Wee Thing" (My wife's a winsome wee thing): 8388
"My Wife" (What is my wife like? Stay and hear): 13617
"Nacht lag auf meinen Augen" (Upon my eyes lay midnight): 9635
"Naked I came into the world of pleasure" (Naked I came into the world of pleasure): 8419
"Never Comes the Beautiful Again!" (Oh! the cruel words that have been spoken): 6107
"Never say that good is waning" (Never say that good is waning): 7770
"No Change!" (I'm standing by the little school): 507
"No More Sea" (Aye, artists come to paint it; and writers, to put in a book): 4505
"No More Sea" (In vision of the land whence pain has fled): 2327
"No record tells of lance opposed to lance" (No record tells of lance opposed to lance): 8461
"No!" (No sun—no moon!): 5404
"No" (They say it is too hard a word): 5384
"Nobody is Missed." Political Apophthegm (The world is gay and fair to us, as now we journey on): 10467
"Non Sum Qualis Eram Bonae Sub Regno Cynarae" (Last night, ah! yesternight, betwixt her lips and mine): 8924
"None Will Miss Thee" (Few will miss thee, Friend, when thou): 12996
"Not Beautiful!" (They say thou art not beautiful): 12805
"Not Known" (A beauteous summer-home had I): 14322
"Not Lost, But Gone Before" (My little child, with clustering hair): 12797
"Not with the anguish of hearts that are breaking" (Not with the anguish of hearts that are breaking): 16083
"Now, men! hats off!" (Now, men! hats off!): 8318
"Nulla Potest Fidos Dissociare Dies" (Though hours divide us, and long miles sever): 13561
"O great was the wonder, and great was the dread" (O great was the wonder, and great was the dread): 10321
"O hone, Odoherty!" (O hone, Odoherty!): 8176
"O Hush Thee, my Babie." (Lullaby) (O hush thee, my babie, thy sire was a knight): 2323
"O Life! O Death! How good ye are and fair" (O Life! O Death! How good ye are and fair): 9270
"O Life! O Death! Ye dread mysterious twain" (O Life! O Death! Ye dread mysterious twain): 9269
"O love, sweet love, must I weep in a lonely room?" (O love, sweet love, must I weep in a lonely room?): 9755
"O Mountain Stream! the Shepherd and his Cot" (O Mountain Stream! the Shepherd and his Cot): 8457
"O my dove! what doth befall her?" (O my dove! what doth befall her?): 7911
"O rock the sweet carnation red" (O rock the sweet carnation red): 8298
"O Rose of Sharon! Fruitful Vine!" (O Rose of Sharon! Fruitful Vine!): 1623
"O sairly may I rue the day I fancied first the women-kind" (O sairly may I rue the day I fancied first the women-kind): 9898
"O Son of my God, what a pride, what a pleasure" [Columcille Cecenit] (O Son of my God, what a pride, what a pleasure): 7946
"O the lark is singing in the sky" (O the lark is singing in the sky): 1602
"O the weary cutters, they've ta'en my laddie frae me" (O the weary cutters, they've ta'en my laddie frae me): 9498
"O, there is a land where the Fairies reside" (O, there is a land where the Fairies reside): 9086
"O, Waly, Waly, up the bank" ("O, Waly, Waly, up the bank"): 14776
"O! gone are the days, when the censure or praise" (O! gone are the days, when the censure or praise): 9812
"Ob all da sarcy Condord's crew" ("Ob all da sarcy Condord's crew"): 15272
"Of Autumn" (A "little love and laughter," many tears): 12777
"Of the earth, earthy" (Have they told you I am going): 3638
"Of the noted giant I am the name" (Of the noted giant I am the name): 13685
"Oh look na, young Lassie, sae softly and sweetly!" (Oh look na, young Lassie, sae softly and sweetly!): 14958
"Oh, Eire, land of tears" (Oh, Eire, land of tears): 8062
"Oh, lest the world should task you to recite" (Oh, lest the world should task you to recite): 8194
"Oh, my lassie, our joy to complete again" (Oh, my lassie, our joy to complete again): 12307
"Oh, schwöre nicht, und küsse nur!" (Oh, swear not, only kiss me now): 9403
"Oh! fill the wine-cup high" (Oh! fill the wine-cup high): 10958
"Oh! I'm the gallant lecturer, as all of you do know" (Oh! I'm the gallant lecturer, as all of you do know): 9439
"Oh! Skylark, for thy wing!" (Oh! Skylark, for thy wing!): 14881
"Oh! white is thy bosom, and blue is thine eye" (Oh! white is thy bosom, and blue is thine eye): 9876
"Oh! who would think, in cheerless solitude" (Oh! who would think, in cheerless solitude): 8788
"Omnia Tempus edax depascitur" (Whate'er we see, do, hear of—all): 8798
"On Great Waters" (The ship has crossed the harbour bar): 5544
"On the Daughter of My Friend, at Whose Funeral I Was Present, in the Cemetery of Passy, 16th June 1832" (The bier descends, strewn with the snow-white rose): 8698
"On the Hardenberg" (Burst, O heart, thy stony cerements): 9555
"On the hill have we brewed beer" (On the hill have we brewed beer): 8284
"On the Move" (Farmer Barr of Dalton More): 6681
"On Yeta's banks the vagrant gypsies place" (On Yeta's banks the vagrant gypsies place): 8053
"Once I was young, and fancy was my all" (Once I was young, and fancy was my all): 14785
"One hour for distant home to weep" (One hour for distant home to weep): 11385
"One in a Thousand" (Roses, roses, oh! brilliant and bright): 506
"One Sunday at St. James’s Prayers" (One Sunday at St. James’s Prayers): 15918
"Only a bit of land-locked bay" (Only a bit of land-locked bay): 8660
"Only a Woman's Hair" ("Only a woman's hair?"): 12197
"Only a Woman's Hair" (Late judge beside an Indian river): 6995
"Only Cousins, Don't You See?" (Charming cousin, tell me where): 12824
"Only Waste-Paper" ("Only waste-paper!"—for the manly hand): 6896
"Only" (Only a woman's face): 924
"Our William" (Who took the Government by storm): 8920
"Out of the mouth of babes" (My little niece and I—I read): 12288
"Over the Hills and Far Away" (A little bird brushed my window by): 6311
"Over the Stones" (On we wander, with smiles or sighs): 722
"Over the Way" (No fresh, young beauty, laughing-eyed): 7483
"Paa Heja:" Life on the Heights (Is there a pleasure can with this compare?): 9082
"Parting Day." (Was it only five minutes ago I stood): 5292
"Parvuli" (Streameth the sunset through the pane): 909
"Pass the flagon, brave boys, let's have one night of glee" (Pass the flagon, brave boys, let's have one night of glee): 15438
"Peace, Freedom, Happiness, have loved to wait" (Peace, Freedom, Happiness, have loved to wait): 8261
"Per Ardua!" (Not on the common road): 6401
"Perchance to Dream" (No shadows these that, through the gates of sleep): 2353
"Philister in Sonntagsröcklein" (Tomfools in their Sunday clothes ramble): 9478
"Poor and Content is Rich" (Am I poor? Does the world to me give): 5047
"Poor Mary-Ann" (How well I can remember when I was a happy child): 5982
"Pour thy tears wild and free" (Pour thy tears wild and free): 7966
"Pray for the soul" (Pray for the soul): 11079
"Pure Element of Waters, wheresoe'er" (Pure Element of Waters, wheresoe'er): 8336
"Queen and Huntress, chaste and fair" (Queen and Huntress, chaste and fair): 15872
"Remember not the sins of my youth" (Could I recall the years that now are flown): 2106
"Reparabit Cornua Phœbe" (Ah, yes! the moonlight comes again): 12882
"Requiescant in Pace" (Mourn not the holy dead): 5105
"Resurrecturis." A poem from the Polish of Sigismund Krasinski (This world is a graveyard of tears, of blood, and of mire): 14287
"Ride on, thy peerless beauty! frank and free" (Ride on, thy peerless beauty! frank and free): 14109
"Riding some days agone in piteous mood" (Riding some days agone in piteous mood): 8684
"Rogues" (Hans Deeven has his garden where the Rhine): 2277
"Sabbath Rest" (It is the day of holy rest): 4046
"Sancta Sanctis" (In love, from love, Thou camest forth, O Lord): 5115
"Saphire sind die Augen dein" (Yes! sapphires are those eyes of thine): 9377
"Says a proverb of Persia (provoking to mirth)" (Says a proverb of Persia (provoking to mirth)): 1682
"Says Plato, why should man be vain" (Says Plato, why should man be vain): 7833
"Sea-Wrack" (The wrack was dark an' shiny where it floated in the sea): 8218
"See their slender shadows pictured on the fence" (See their slender shadows pictured on the fence): 14818
"See, my neighbour's window curtain" (See, my neighbour's window curtain): 7929
"Seek thou not the royal hall" (Seek thou not the royal hall): 15763
"Seit die Liebste war entfernt" (Since my love did me beguile): 9476
"Set in Brilliants" (’Tis usance that, when Princes deign): 1755
"Seven Years—But a Few Days" (The rose of the old Genesis romance): 5037
"Shall I?" (Shall I do this, sir, and shall I do that, sir?): 12861
"She is fair and she is young" (She is fair and she is young): 9756
"She sleepit till the morn at noon and rise airly" (She sleepit till the morn at noon and rise airly): 8214
"Sie haben dir viel erzählet" (They told thee much, much they invented): 9475
"Sie haben heut' Abend Gesellschaft" (They have company coming this evening): 9612
"Sie haben mich gequälet" (People have teased and vexed me): 9636
"Sie liebten sich Beide, doch Keiner" (They both were in love, but neither): 9638
"Silence and Tears" (It may be speech can ease the troubled heart): 9374
"Slave or Free?" ("Free, not a slave." Therein a question lies): 701
"Sleep, my little darling one" (Sleep, my little darling one): 8297
"Sleep, sleep, poor youth, sleep, sleep in peace" (Sleep, sleep, poor youth, sleep, sleep in peace): 14960
"Sleeping in lily bells all the hot day" (Sleeping in lily bells all the hot day): 15255
"So hast du ganz und gar Vergessen" (And hast thou forgotten, so fickle thou art): 9562
"So now I have confess'd that he is thine" (So now I have confess'd that he is thine): 8164
"So Short the Time!" ("So short the time! So much to leave undone!"): 5025
"So wandl' ich wieder den alten Weg" (So again I am pacing the well-known streets): 9397
"So-Called Patriots" (Strange times! Did ever such a plot): 8603
"Solvuntur Tabulæ" (Do you remember how the sun—the setting sun—would sadly fall): 6658
"Some day, but not yet" (Some day, but not yet): 8589
"Soon as, with neighbour hinds, I've led" (Soon as, with neighbour hinds, I've led): 7908
"Stay, Master, stay, upon this heavenly hill" ("Stay, Master, stay, upon this heavenly hill"): 16095
"Still ist die Nacht, es ruh'n die Gassen" (Still is the night, and the streets are lone): 9544
"Such Pity as a Father Hath." A House-Surgeon's Story (There's a verse in the Psalms, or a bit of a verse, it's the one that I've often heard): 4084
"Swallows, swallows, little sisters" (Swallows, swallows, little sisters): 8120
"Sweet Home" ("Sweet Home!" Oh! blissful, holy place): 12078
"Sweet nursling of Aurora's tears" (Sweet nursling of Aurora's tears): 9508
"Sweet spirit! ne'er did I behold" (Sweet spirit! ne'er did I behold): 15554
"Sweet voices! circling all the cloudy tops" ("Sweet voices! circling all the cloudy tops"): 8016
"Sweetheart, there's a beautiful country" ("Sweetheart, there's a beautiful country"): 12842
"Taken from Life" (I know quite well just now it's all the rage): 876
"Talitha Cumi" (Eyes wet and hearts bleeding): 5133
"Tell me not Now" (Tell me not now, if love for love): 780
"Telle est la Vie" (A golden curl): 12949
"Tempora Mutantur" ("First waltz? let me see; with much pleasure!"): 497
"That Can Sing Both High and Low" (Sing high when bold morning springs up from his lair): 1972
"That Day in June" (Ah, love! do you remember?—sweet old phrase): 4737
"That very night the mysterious dame" (That very night the mysterious dame): 10325
"The Battle of the Thirty." A Breton Ballad (March, with his winds, so fierce and frore): 877
"The bird let loose in Eastern skies" (The bird let loose in Eastern skies): 8058
"The Children Laughed and Sang" (It was in the chill December): 7431
"The City of the Crystal Sea" (Father, mother, Elsie, dear): 2569
"The corn is ripe already" (The corn is ripe already): 13450
"The Drift," Lincolnshire (There, in Spring, the violets blue): 4088
"The Dying Villager" (Approach the bed—the doors wide open throw): 8781
"The E'en Brings a' Hame" (I'm dreaming alone on an islet): 527
"The echo of the wailing farther West" (The echo of the wailing farther West): 910
"The ev'ning sheds its balmy sweets" (The ev'ning sheds its balmy sweets): 15913
"The eyes that mourn in pity of the heart" (The eyes that mourn in pity of the heart): 8860
"The Garden That I Love" (Not for me your Ribbon-Garden!): 2348
"The Glove" (Since you have asked, I needs must tell the history): 590
"The God of love & benedicite" (The God of love & benedicite): 2331
"The Greatest of These" (Methought I passed through poppy fields of Sleep): 13672
"The Haven Where They Would Be" (I know a grave): 7495
"The hundred halls of Lord Lafeu" ("The hundred halls of Lord Lafeu"): 15362
"The Land Afar Off" (A Land wherein bleak winter doth not reign): 7551
"The Land O' the Leal" (In the Land o' the Leal, where the heather blooms purple): 12513
"The Last Gift" (Ah! Love, my Love—now that thou liest low): 2238
"The Legend of the Briar-Rose." Sonnet on the Pictures by Burne-Jones (The dreamful loveliness enthralled so long): 1069
"The Little Lovers" ("Little Boy-sailor, with jacket of blue"): 542
"The loveliest blossom of the spring" (The loveliest blossom of the spring): 8061
"The Mist and the Rain" (The mist and the rain, the mist and the rain!): 3155
"The Norway Sheep" (The fierce wind breaking from his bonds comes roaring from the west): 4818
"The Old Order Changeth" (No Knight rides forth upon a summer morn): 12574
"The only way to criticize it is" (The only way to criticize it is): 8111
"The Peal of Bells" (In olden times, beside the Rhine): 13905
"The Rash Vow" (A bed, four walls, and a swart crucifix): 14183
"The Red, Green, and the Yellow" (This is the scene—a red ploughed field): 3978
"The Revenge," A Ballad of the Fleet (At Flores in the Azores Sir Richard Grenville lay): 7853
"The Roses were Lovely, the Roses were Fresh" (Somewhere and some time, long, long ago): 14765
"The sandy ridges of that barren plain" (The sandy ridges of that barren plain): 9373
"The silent grave! nay, leave her not among" (The silent grave! nay, leave her not among): 9375
"The Sirens" (Sweet evil of the sea! fair wingèd girls): 535
"The splendour falls on castle walls" (The splendour falls on castle walls): 6175
"The sun is at rest—for the storms are o'er" (The sun is at rest—for the storms are o'er): 8659
"The sun sets in night, and the stars shun the day" (The sun sets in night, and the stars shun the day): 7832
"The Sweet O' The Year" (The first glad light of morning yet): 2077
"The Thoughts" of Marcus Aurelius (The gentlest soul that ever ruled mankind): 8806
"The time draws near the birth of Christ" (The time draws near the birth of Christ): 1958
"The Time Will Come" (Enjoy the spring, enjoy the spring): 943
"The Travellers." (From the French of Victor Hugo) ("Friend! thou hast wander'd long"): 741
"The Venice of the North" (Bright sunshine over everything): 12431
"The Waukin' o' the Fauld" (Heaven bless thy bonnie face, lassie!): 6139
"The Wheels of God" (The wheels of God, they say, move on): 2630
"The White Heather" (I bribed you with a promise): 12725
"The wild Wazeroo in his fastnesses dwells" (The wild Wazeroo in his fastnesses dwells): 8095
"The World by Wisdom Knew not God" (Thy love of nature's laws, and searchings deep): 2585
"The year has laid his mantle by" (The year has laid his mantle by): 7902
"Their Persian finery I can't abide" (Their Persian finery I can't abide): 16092
"There is a Budding Morrow in Midnight" (Wintry boughs against a wintry sky): 8863
"There is a Garden in her Face" (There is a garden in her face): 2317
"There never was, my heart, a sweeter aching" (There never was, my heart, a sweeter aching): 7948
"There once was a famous physician" (There once was a famous physician): 2231
"There once was a metaphysician" (There once was a metaphysician): 1961
"There once was a youthful Agnostic" (There once was a youthful Agnostic): 1950
"There Shall Be No More Sea" ("There shall be no more sea"): 1792
"There sits by yonder stream" ("There sits by yonder stream"): 15415
"There was anes a may, and she loo'd na men" ("There was anes a may, and she loo'd na men"): 14778
"There's a Spanish grandee on the banks of the Dee" (There's a Spanish grandee on the banks of the Dee): 9896
"Therefore your halls, your ancient colleges" (Therefore your halls, your ancient colleges): 8203
"These lame hexameters, the strong-wing'd music of Homer!" (These lame hexameters, the strong-wing'd music of Homer!): 8473
"These to His Mem'ry since He Held them Dear" (The wise old gardener went through): 612
"They Desire a Better Country" (I would not if I could undo my past): 14390
"They Die Not" (Imperial battles' last avengers stand): 7848
"They're Dear Fish To Me." A True Incident (The farmer's wife sat at the door): 7119
"Thine Eyes still shined for Me" (Thine eyes still shined for me): 2282
"Thine They Are" (On the shore the wavelets laughing): 2789
"This book has all my youth inside it" (This book has all my youth inside it): 7930
"This Do in Remembrance of Me" (Lord Jesu, form that mind in us): 5097
"This Do in Remembrance of Me" (When the Paschal evening fell): 14519
"This Enlightened Age." A Meditation in the British Museum (I say it to myself—in meekest awe): 2451
"This kiss,—take it quickly, my Heart!" (This kiss,—take it quickly, my Heart!): 8833
"This Mortal" (Are then the fleshly bonds so strong and stern?): 4580
"This Ought Ye to Have Done" (We filled the leisure of the days): 12459
"Those people who most work us ill" (Those people who most work us ill): 13749
"Thou cam'st not to thy place by accident" (Thou cam'st not to thy place by accident): 8254
"Thou great strong sea, fast lock'd in dreams" (Thou great strong sea, fast lock'd in dreams): 8658
"Thou, oh Tsui-goa" (Thou, oh Tsui-goa): 8127
"Though the heart be not attending" (Though the heart be not attending): 2057
"Thrice happy fools! What wisdom shall we learn" (Thrice happy fools! What wisdom shall we learn): 8143
"Thy glance, thy lip’s deceit denies" (Thy glance, thy lip’s deceit denies): 14581
"Tiger Bay:" A Windy Night's Dream (I had a dream in my bed last night): 2119
"Till Death Do Us Part" (In every Love-treaty, Death goes to the reckoning): 13026
"Time Brings Roses." (German Proverb) ("Thorns and thistles in my path"): 13730
"Time's Answer" (Time, with his hoary head bent on his hand): 529
"Tired Out" ("Just tired out," the neighbour said): 4743
"To Be Burnt as a Witch." (Pantoum) (That you rode whistling down the lane): 4868
"To feel that we are homeless exiles here" (To feel that we are homeless exiles here): 8256
"To leave unseen so many a glorious sight" (To leave unseen so many a glorious sight): 8257
"To the Front!" (You "thought such aims were out of place"): 2130
"Tod" (Glad you have come; — I was thinking of you): 4024
"Too Late" ("There was nothing in the story!"): 13093
"Town of Starving, Town of Splendour!" (Town of starving, town of splendour): 11001
"Two Lives" (Two travellers toiling, ever parted): 13881
"Und als ich euch meine Schmerzen geklagt" (When I told you my troubles, my tale of despair): 9386
"Und als ich so lange, so lange gesäumt" (And as I linger'd so many a day): 9472
"Und wüssten's die Blumen, die Kleinen" (If the little flowers knew how deep): 9620
"Under the Elm" (Sitting under the old elm-tree): 2206
"Under Trustees" (O have you ne'er heard of a worthy Scotch gentleman): 5353
"Uno de Mille." One of the Thousand of Garibaldi. Lake Como (Another gone of The Thousand brave): 8225
"Venite" (Shall I upon my knees from day to day): 5554
"Vergiftet sind meine Lieder" (My songs, they are poison'd—poison'd!): 9395
"Verrieth mein blasses Angesicht" (What I suffer for love canst thou): 9534
"Verse" (You say the glamour of romance): 12731
"Victoria! Empress Queen! and widowed Wife!" (Victoria! Empress Queen! and widowed Wife!): 8587
"Vixi puellis nuper idoneus" (For maiden's love I once was fit): 11051
"Vox Clamantis in Eremo" (Where are fled the breezy Summers): 9192
"Wages" (It was a merry brook, that ran): 7461
"Wait for Me" (Seaward runs the little stream): 12954
"Warrior fair, to the battle-field going" (Warrior fair, to the battle-field going): 7927
"Warum sind die Rosen so blass?" (Why are the roses so wan of hue): 9650
"Was treibt und tobt mein tolles Blut?" (What sets my blood so mad aspin?): 9535
"Was will die einsame Thräne?" (What's this? A tear, one only?): 9536
"Watch, barrel! watch! mackerel for to ketch" (Watch, barrel! watch! mackerel for to ketch): 8317
"Weep Thou No More!" (Weep thou no more; a common lot is thine!): 549
"Weibertreuer." "Woman's Truth" (Autumn comes without its dances): 980
"Well Done, 'Calliope'!" March 16th, 1889 (Come listen to my story): 2239
"Wenn du vorüberwandelst" (If thou dost but pass before me): 9407
"Wenn ich an deinem Hause" (When past thy house at morning): 9390
"Wenn ich auf dem Lager liege" (When abed I lie enfolded): 9520
"Wenn ich in deine Augen seh'" (Whene'er I look in thine eyes): 9532
"Wenn zwei von einander scheiden" (When it comes to lovers' parting): 9481
"Whare'er There's a Will There is Always a Way" (Langsyne, when I first gaed to schule, I was glaiket): 6155
"What are my darling's eyes? They are blue as wild cornflowers" (What are my darling's eyes? They are blue as wild cornflowers): 12811
"What aspect bore the Man who roved or fled" (What aspect bore the Man who roved or fled): 8456
"What boots it with the plough to trace" (What boots it with the plough to trace): 13449
"What good soever in thy heart or mind" (What good soever in thy heart or mind): 8253
"What Is My Love Like?" (What is my love like? Ah vain, empty words): 704
"What shall I do to please my Queen" (What shall I do to please my Queen): 2173
"What the Hand Findeth to Do" (My true love laid her hand on mine): 6585
"Whatever hath her wish, thou hast thy WILL" (Whatever hath her wish, thou hast thy WILL): 8171
"When Britain first, at Heav'n's command" (When Britain first, at Heav'n's command): 7732
"When darkness hides me, dearest" (When darkness hides me, dearest): 9581
"When Eros Came . . . ." (Epic of Hades) (Long years my Lute was silent, none had heard): 2164
"When Love to fly once took occasion" (When Love to fly once took occasion): 14139
"When My Ship Comes Home From Sea" ("O a golden comb for golden hair"): 747
"When one has lost, by sad annoyance" (When one has lost, by sad annoyance): 7928
"When our heads are bowed with woe" (When our heads are bowed with woe): 8613
"When Panurge and his fellows, as Rab'lais will tell us" (When Panurge and his fellows, as Rab'lais will tell us): 10295
"When Roses Are Blooming" (A maiden sat musing her bower within): 7062
"When the Almond-tree shall Flourish" (Open the window—for the night is hot): 8103
"When the morn beam's clear by bonnie Carlisle" (When the morn beam's clear by bonnie Carlisle): 8993
"When the violet breaks to flower" (When the violet breaks to flower): 7900
"When the world despises me" (When the world despises me): 8121
"When wondering ages shall have rolled away" (When wondering ages shall have rolled away): 8177
"Whence rose ye? on what basement are ye stayed" (Whence rose ye? on what basement are ye stayed): 10961
"Whence that low voice?—A whisper from the heart" (Whence that low voice?—A whisper from the heart): 8459
"Where are the deep-laid chymic cisterns, whence" (Where are the deep-laid chymic cisterns, whence): 10962
"Where is she now? Are her small feet" ("Where is she now? Are her small feet"): 15835
"Where Love is, there is God Also" (O God, in this deep world of ours): 2158
"While every tongue" (While every tongue): 7882
"While worldly men through stupid years" (While worldly men through stupid years): 8175
"Whither is gone the wisdom and the power" (Whither is gone the wisdom and the power): 14789
"Who Rideth Upon the Wings of the Wind" (My God, who makest all Thy winds to blow): 7809
"Whom I Loved the Best" (Brothers five under one roof tree): 13534
"Why art thou cast down, O my soul?" ("He has forsaken me, and I am weary"): 3599
"Why Fail We Ever of the Best?" (What curse hath smit us that we may not know): 2309
"Wie der Mond sich leuchtend dränget" (As the moon through clouds that darkle): 9380
"Wie kannst du ruhig schlafen?" (Sleep, and in peace? How canst thou?): 9547
"Will Sail To-Morrow" (The good ship lies in the crowded dock): 6385
"Will ye go to the Indies, my Mary" (Will ye go to the Indies, my Mary): 14893
"Willing" (The wind wails sadly from the distant seas): 4640
"Wir fuhren allein im dunkeln" (Alone through the dark we travelled): 9486
"Wir sassen am Fischerhause" (We sat by the fisherman's cottage): 9382
"With my breath I drink the air" (With my breath I drink the air): 16090
"Without Hope of Change." Tennyson's Mariana (Days when I lived a happy maid): 13472
"Work from the Soul." Colossians iii. 23 (Work bravely and heartily now): 5872
"Would I were a little Merman" (Would I were a little Merman): 1964
"Would to God!" ("Would that my master could but see"): 2739
"Ye citizens of London towne" (Ye citizens of London towne): 8785
"Ye ladies, and each gentle maiden" (Ye ladies, and each gentle maiden): 7901
"Yea, I Have A Goodly Heritage" (My vineyard that is mine I have to keep): 2047
"Yes" (A little rain): 12843
"You lovers all of manly art and self-defence, attend" (You lovers all of manly art and self-defence, attend): 14804
"Young Hopeful"—The Village Boy (You mark the plan of God, in "mercy" laid): 8779
"Your Joy No Man Taketh From You" (Oh Christ, who layest, a babe, at the bosom of Mary sweet): 5058
"Youth, thou art fled,—but where are all the charms" (Youth, thou art fled,—but where are all the charms): 14786
“‘A thing of beauty is a joy for ever’” (‘A thing of beauty is a joy for ever’): 16100
“‘Iseult’ and ‘Iseult’” (“Iseult” and “Iseult”): 15966
“‘Oh! where,’ says the Spirit of Life to my soul” (“Oh! where,” says the Spirit of Life to my soul): 9326
“‘Our prayers are prophets.’ Father, be it so!” (‘Our prayers are prophets.’ Father, be it so!): 16115
“‘So say the foolish!’ Say the foolish so, Love?” (“So say the foolish!” Say the foolish so, Love?): 8384
“’Mid oaths and blows and pain she grew to girlhood” (’Mid oaths and blows and pain she grew to girlhood): 8357
“’Mid scattered foliage, pale and sere” (’Mid scattered foliage, pale and sere): 10151
“A poppy grows upon the shore” (“A poppy grows upon the shore”): 15981
“A scene such as we picture in our dreams” (A scene such as we picture in our dreams): 10397
“A Time to Dance!” (The Bridegroom has tarried long away): 391
“A Voice from Beverley.” No. II (Oh! Loudon's woods and Cowden knowes): 65
“Ah! if thou wert mine own, love” (Ah! if thou were mine own, love): 9365
“Ah! sorrow in the morn” (Ah! sorrow in the morn): 8216
“All in the early morning grey” (All in the early morning grey): 8612
“All in the early morning grey” (All in the early morning grey): 8991
“Amour Qui Sourit Caché” (I thought my heart was quite burnt out): 188
“And They Sung a New Song” [For Chanting] (Hear what the Saint in solemn dream was shown): 16003
“Angels twain were sitting” (Angels twain were sitting): 1739
“As like miners we explore” (As like miners we explore): 8966
“Autumna” (A bold brunette she is, radiant with mirth): 14258
“Ballad for the Cambridge Election” (B-nk-es is weak, and G-lb-n too): 9203
“Bats now sleep” (Bats now sleep): 8919
“Behave yoursell before folk” (Behave yoursell before folk): 10180
“Cable and shroud! the blast howls loud” (Cable and shroud! the blast howls loud): 9369
“Call the cab, boy! do not dally!” (Call the cab, boy! do not dally!): 16097
“Crafts in Danger” (How pleasing the thought that our wrong-crafts are falling): 9205
“Damp and dreary in the valley” (Damp and dreary in the valley): 8901
“Dear John (the letter ran), it can’t, can’t be” (“Dear John (the letter ran), it can’t, can’t be”): 15980
“Ding dong, ding dong, so rich, so full, so deep” (Ding dong, ding dong, so rich, so full, so deep): 16099
“Discoloured flowerets, violets turned white” (Discoloured flowerets, violets turned white): 8827
“Donec gratus eram tibi” (When I was all in all to you): 11052
“Dweller in heaven high, Ruler below!” (Dweller in heaven high, Ruler below!): 8965
“Elaine” (Bring me Forget-me-nots when I lie dead): 15937
“Faint, Yet Pursuing.” A Song of the Church Militant (All day among the cornfields of the plain): 319
“Far off my dream, and yet unearthly fair” (Far off my dream, and yet unearthly fair): 16116
“Flower of the Bean” (Flower of the Bean): 9258
“For once in sentimental vein” (For once in sentimental vein): 10443
“Forth rushes the water” (Forth rushes the water): 9358
“Frae royal Wull that wears the crown” (Frae royal Wull that wears the crown): 10186
“From Caiaphas to Pilate I was sent” (From Caiaphas to Pilate I was sent): 8536
“From the mountain to the champlaign” (From the mountain to the champlaign): 9307
“Gently the mellow moonlight stream'd” (Gently the mellow moonlight stream'd): 9364
“Give me full-handed roses, lilies, shed” (Give me full-handed roses, lilies, shed): 8828
“Give Us this Day our Daily Bread” (When He, the wise, the great, the good): 49
“Hast thou not noted on the bye-way side” (Hast thou not noted on the bye-way side): 8049
“Haul away, haul away, down helm, I say” (Haul away, haul away, down helm, I say): 11100
“He works but as He can” (“He works but as He can”): 15982
“He’s Risen!” (The sun had set in gloom): 317
“Heigh o, heugh o, what’ll I do wi’ ye?” (Heigh o, heugh o, what’ll I do wi’ ye?): 8301
“Here a foul hulk lies Glasgow’s Gander” (Here a foul hulk lies Glasgow’s Gander): 10982
“Here Judas, with a face where shame” (Here Judas, with a face where shame): 10525
“Here Lies Oliver Goldsmith” (With Youth’s unconquerable eye): 811
“His hand upon the latch.” A Young Wife's Song (My cottage home is fill'd with light): 304
“Ho, ro, Maolruaini of the glens” (Ho, ro, Maolruaini of the glens): 8269
“Hoarse Mævius reads his hobbling verse” (Hoarse Mævius reads his hobbling verse): 2959
“Hollow and vast starred skies are o’er us” (Hollow and vast starred skies are o’er us): 8059
“How lordly smileth” (How lordly smileth): 9362
“How now, captain? shrimps and flounders!” (How now, captain? shrimps and flounders!): 16098
“Hugo.—1845” (A quiet scene! here ’mid the stillness deep): 394
“I came not here to weep, but in thy fall” (I came not here to weep, but in thy fall): 16104
“I come to thee by day-time constantly” (I come to thee by day-time constantly): 8691
“I filled me with the fear of Hell” (I filled me with the fear of Hell): 16006
“I heard (alas, ’twas only in a dream)” (I heard (alas, ’twas only in a dream)): 7777
“I hope Mrs Muse” (I hope Mrs Muse): 10528
“I laud them not; but I must weep for all” (I laud them not; but I must weep for all): 16107
“I lookit east—I lookit west” (I lookit east—I lookit west): 10583
“I once was young and fair” (I once was young and fair): 8505
“I scarcely hoped again to see” (I scarcely hoped again to see): 9368
“I sing of a land that was famous of yore” (I sing of a land that was famous of yore): 10713
“I thought but on the bridal song” (I thought but on the bridal song): 8442
“I’ the Bud” (Ae lovely summer gloamin’): 7591
“I’ve made a little coffer, all of gold” (I’ve made a little coffer, all of gold): 8354
“If e'er you would be a brave fellow, young man” (If e'er you would be a brave fellow, young man): 10198
“If love could be revealed” (If love could be revealed): 15960
“If thou wilt ease thine heart” (If thou wilt ease thine heart): 9306
“In a Gondola.” Venice. Dec 15th, 1889 (O earth and sky make fair this eventide): 12808
“In autumn when the dead leaves fall in showers” (In autumn when the dead leaves fall in showers): 8352
“In blue waving mists and in the deep snow” (In blue waving mists and in the deep snow): 9367
“In Embro town they made a law” (In Embro town they made a law): 10837
“In Memoriam”—Charlotte Bronte (All day across the purple heath): 6519
“In the city of Oxford I was born” (In the city of Oxford I was born): 8391
“John Murray! Dare I call thee John?” (John Murray! Dare I call thee John?): 8304
“King Robert, wounded in old days of war” (King Robert, wounded in old days of war): 8358
“Lament for Lord Byron” (Lament for Lord Byron): 10125
“Last Monday all the papers said” (Last Monday all the papers said): 16043
“Last night I saw you in my sleep” (Last night I saw you in my sleep): 8385
“Last Sunday morn I thought this azure isle” (Last Sunday morn I thought this azure isle): 15956
“Let them cant about Adam and Eve—frae my saul” (Let them cant about Adam and Eve—frae my saul): 10530
“Let us laugh at the asses, while here at our glasses” (Let us laugh at the asses, while here at our glasses): 10712
“Life from each star above is beaming” (Life from each star above is beaming): 9313
“Like prongs, like prongs, your bristles rear” (Like prongs, like prongs, your bristles rear): 10162
“Look here, and ponder well, and know the land” (Look here, and ponder well, and know the land): 16109
“Lovely eyes in loved ones gazing” (Lovely eyes in loved ones gazing): 9359
“Morning.” (Spenserian Sonnet) (Swift down the sky hurries the pale, sham’d moon): 15975
“My baby! my poor little one! thou'st come a winter flower” (My baby! my poor little one! thou'st come a winter flower): 10394
“My left is adorn'd by a poet” (My left is adorn'd by a poet): 10526
“My love shall neither sigh nor sab” (My love shall neither sigh nor sab): 8425
“Mysterious Night! when our first parent knew” (Mysterious night! when our first parent knew): 8510
“Mysterious Night! when our first parent knew” (Mysterious Night! when our first parent knew): 9266
“Nation on Nation, Man upon Man” (Nation on Nation, Man upon Man): 9370
“Now the year twenty-four is vanish'd and no more” (Now the year twenty-four is vanish'd and no more): 10181
“O blest is he, from business free” (O blest is he, from business free): 9762
“O Charlie, brave young Stuart” (O Charlie, brave young Stuart): 14980
“O Pearl of price! my treasured hoard!” (O Pearl of price! my treasured hoard!): 16005
“O weel befa' the maiden gay” (O weel befa' the maiden gay): 10556
“O women of this glen” (O women of this glen): 14977
“O, dove that flying o’er the hill dost stay thee” (O, dove that flying o’er the hill dost stay thee): 15952
“O, I'll cut off my yellow hair” (O, I'll cut off my yellow hair): 9496
“O, Love's a bitter thing to bide” (O, Love's a bitter thing to bide): 10527
“O, mother, tell the laird o't” (O, mother, tell the laird o't, Or sair-ly it will grieve me, O, That): 10759
“O, the snow it melts the soonest when the winds begin to sing” (O, the snow it melts the soonest when the winds begin to sing): 9495
“O, weel befa’ the maiden gay” (O, weel befa' the maiden gay): 10974
“Oh thou whose plebeian brow” (Oh thou whose plebeian brow): 8392
“Oh wad that my time were ower but” (Oh wad that my time were ower but): 10582
“Oh, Biddy Magee” (Oh, Biddy Magee): 8302
“Oh, come to me when through the night” (Oh, come to me when through the night): 9366
“Oh, I'll tell you of a comet” (Oh, I'll tell you of a comet): 8681
“Oh, It's Hard to Die Frae Hame” (The evening sun is shining noo): 373
“Oh, sound the sad bugle” (Oh, sound the sad bugle): 9249
“Oh, why do you weep, my bonny lass” (Oh, why do you weep, my bonny lass): 8896
“Oh! Saint Patrick was a gentleman!” (Oh! Saint Patrick was a gentleman!): 10449
“Old Friends With New Faces” (From nursery years, ’twas a joyous thing): 7336
“On the bright margin of Italia's shore” (On the bright margin of Italia's shore): 11322
“Our mistress is proud” (Our mistress is proud): 8947
“Out of the night that covers me” (Out of the night that covers me): 15927
“Palms of glory, raiment bright” (Palms of glory, raiment bright): 10400
“Peace! peace! swelling trump that repeatest” (Peace! peace! swelling trump that repeatest): 10153
“Poor Miss Tox” (In Dickens ’twas “Princess’s Place”): 2539
“Praties will grow” (Praties will grow): 16114
“Pray do not ask, ’tis forbidden to know” (Pray do not ask, ’tis forbidden to know): 8513
“Prussian, that iron cross upon thy breast” (Prussian, that iron cross upon thy breast): 16113
“Resurgam” (Sweetheart, though ’tis years since we parted): 7398
“Robin Cook’s wife she had an old mare” (Robin Cook’s wife she had an old mare): 8288
“Rout ’Em Out Boys.” Fisherboys’ New-Year’s Song (’Tis New Year’s Day, and here we are): 2471
“Sand, sand, long leagues of heath and barren sand!” (Sand, sand, long leagues of heath and barren sand!): 16108
“Since ’tis clear I only can” (Since ’tis clear I only can): 9371
“Since my lover ceased to woo” (Since my lover ceased to woo): 8405
“Sing not in that strain so dulful” (Sing not in that strain so dulful): 9360
“Six of One and Half-a Dozen of the Other” (“Now, dearest Fred,” she softly said): 233
“So have I seene, when Cæsar would appeare” (So have I seene, when Cæsar would appeare): 8605
“So long has Love enchained me as his thrall” (So long has Love enchained me as his thrall): 8859
“Some ten years ago three men of great fame” (Some ten years ago three men of great fame): 8369
“Sorrowing, yet Rejoicing” (Saddest times are oft the sweetest): 326
“Swans sing before they die—’twere no bad thing” (Swans sing before they die—’twere no bad thing): 16044
“The bark that held a prince went down” (The bark that held a prince went down): 16117
“The Charterhouse is lost, the more's my grief” (The Charterhouse is lost, the more's my grief): 9418
“The gifts of God are many: but from me” (The gifts of God are many: but from me): 16102
“The Great Lone Land” (I wander’d alone and afar): 3964
“The Insurrection of the Papers” (Last night I tossed and turned in bed): 9204
“The moon is come, with lamentation sore” (The moon is come, with lamentation sore): 15983
“The red deer wons i’ the good green wood, browsing ’neath spreading tree” (The red deer wons i’ the good green wood, browsing ’neath spreading tree): 15764
“The Rhine! the Rhine!—May on thy flowing river” (The Rhine! the Rhine!—May on thy flowing river): 10439
“Then come in turn the many cares of day” (Then come in turn the many cares of day): 9751
“There comes from old Avaro's grave” (There comes from old Avaro's grave): 16042
“There rolls He now, majestic, broad, and free” (There rolls He now, majestic, broad, and free): 16101
“There sits a lovely maiden” (There sits a lovely maiden): 9113
“There stand thou now: it is the place for thee” (There stand thou now: it is the place for thee): 16103
“There stands he now, amid the flock the ram” (There stands he now, amid the flock the ram): 16110
“There’s some souls ’ill yammer and cheep” (There’s some souls ’ill yammer and cheep): 10585
“They err who say this long-withdrawing line” (They err who say this long-withdrawing line): 8674
“They may rail at the city, where first I was born” (They may rail at the city, where first I was born): 10840
“Thou, too, art great among Germania's towns” (Thou, too, art great among Germania's towns): 16105
“Though I must go to a foreign land” (Though I must go to a foreign land): 9494
“Though the place that once knew us will know us no more” (Though the place that once knew us will know us no more): 10435
“Through the woods storm-tost” (Through the woods storm-tost): 9356
“Two prophets stand forth in the market-place” (Two prophets stand forth in the market-place): 16106
“Until her Death” ("Until her death!" the words read strange yet real): 405
“Vainly, alas! I dream'd that yet” (Vainly, alas! I dream'd that yet): 9310
“Verse is not all, O poet! unless she fly” (Verse is not all, O poet! unless she fly): 8360
“Was I a Samurai renowned” (Was I a Samurai renowned): 15928
“We saw the swallows gathering in the sky” (“We saw the swallows gathering in the sky”): 15979
“We three archers be” (We three archers be): 9308
“What does it profit us to seek, O friend” (What does it profit us to seek, O friend): 8359
“What girl but, having gathered flowers” (What girl but, having gathered flowers): 8383
“What have I done for you” (What have I done for you): 15929
“Whate’er thy creed may be” (Whate’er thy creed may be): 11078
“When ’Omer smote ’is bloomin’ lyre” (When ’Omer smote ’is bloomin’ lyre): 15923
“When Bawdrons, wi' her mousin paw” (When Bawdrons, wi' her mousin paw): 10179
“When built on laws, the good old cause” (When built on laws, the good old cause): 10178
“When church and crown are tumbled down” (When church and crown are tumbled down): 10163
“When daffodils begin to peer” (When daffodils begin to peer): 9361
“When Dawn Takes Wing” (When Dawn takes wing, she eastward drives and ’lights): 12572
“When Hamlet went before his grave, men bore him” (When Hamlet went before his grave, men bore him): 8669
“When the glen all is still, save the stream from the fountain” (When the glen all is still, save the stream from the fountain): 10199
“When the world is burning” (When the world is burning): 8829
“Where'er Odoherty, with casual foot” (Where'er Odoherty, with casual foot): 9139
“Which nought admits save day” (Which nought admits save day): 9131
“Who dares to say” (Who dares to say): 11077
“Who never eat with tears their bread” (Who never eat with tears their bread): 9357
“Who’s here? a strange, old-fangled German Herr” (Who’s here? a strange, old-fangled German Herr): 16112
“Why art thou silent? Is thy love a plant” (Why art thou silent? Is thy love a plant): 9783
“Why does the sun shine on me” (Why does the sun shine on me): 10761
“Why doth the caged bird sing” (Why doth the caged bird sing): 9582
“Would you know what a Whig is, and always was” (Would you know what a Whig is, and always was): 11073
“Write, write, tourist and traveller” (Write, write, tourist and traveller): 10760
“Ye plumed men of war, ye warriors brave” (Ye plumed men of war, ye warriors brave): 9136
“Ye, gentlemen, and laidies, come here, and I assure ye” (Ye, gentlemen, and laidies, come here, and I assure ye): 9134
“You may reap your harvest of wheat and tares” (You may reap your harvest of wheat and tares): 8217
“Zooks! I must woo the Muse to-day” (Zooks! I must woo the Muse to-day): 10978
(1) Metricum Symposium Ambrosianum, Seu Propinatio Poetica Northi (Come, Morgan, fill up, my boy, handle the ladle): 9810
(From the French) (How is it the sexes have each an odd way—): 13748
1 (“Nelly, if I could prophesy thee never”) (Nelly, if I could prophesy thee never): 15991
1 (“Surely thou wanderest sometimes o’er the waste”) (Surely thou wanderest sometimes o’er the waste): 15987
1 (“You leave me, dear, a craft of fear”) (You leave me, dear, a craft of fear): 15998
1. ("I'll lay me on the wintry lea") (I'll lay me on the wintry lea): 14077
1. The Spring and the Brook (It may be that the Poet is as a Spring): 11449
1.—An Ancient Chess King Dug From Some Ruins (Haply some Rajah first in the ages gone): 2013
1865—1866 (I stood on a tower in the wet): 1896
1893. The New Year (The ferryman is waiting near): 2249
2 (“A bee hangs over every flower”) (A bee hangs over every flower): 15988
2 (“I will love thee as a spirit”) (I will love thee as a spirit): 15992
2 (“When the song raves in thy head”) (When the song raves in thy head): 15999
2. ("Meg of the Glen set aff to the fair") (Meg of the Glen set aff to the fair): 14078
2. Good Intentions (Fair thoughts of good, and fantasies as fair!): 11450
2.—Comfort in the Night (She thought by heaven's high wall that she did stray): 12515
22nd June (The trumpeters in a row): 8051
3 (“Hold—hold my hands and lure my lips awhile”) (Hold—hold my hands and lure my lips awhile): 15989
3 (“O Glory mine, black floods are thick”) (O Glory mine, black floods are thick): 16000
3 (“Only a sense of something, Sweet”) (Only a sense of something, Sweet): 15993
3. ("O laddie, can ye leave me?") (O laddie, can ye leave me?): 14079
3. Grave Temperments (To live for present life, and feel no crime): 11451
3.—Though All Great Deeds— (Though all great deeds were proved but fables fine): 12516
4 (“Death is now a hope of sorrow”) (Death is now a hope of sorrow): 15994
4. Action and Thought (There is a world where struggle and stern toil): 11452
5 (“Love, I cannot hold thee longer”) (Love, I cannot hold thee longer): 15995
5. Prayer (In reverence will we speak of those that woo): 11453
6 (“Are not these too poor to give you”) (Are not these too poor to give you): 15996
6. Lesson to Poets (Try not, or murmur not if tried in vain): 11454
A "Discarded" Suit (To my Long Suit you pay no attention at all): 12411
A "Mercenary" Marriage (She moves as light across the grass): 2913
A "No" (Oh, love me not! my heart is frail and weak): 11991
A "Poor" Rich Man (On a summer morn—long faded): 7576
A "Sad Song" (Weep no more, no sigh, nor groan): 6265
A "Silly" Song ("O heart, my heart!" she said, and heard): 7702
A Bachelor of Forty-Five (At Forty-five! Ah, can it be): 12610
A Bachelor's Apology (Her eyes were bright; her figure slight): 6961
A Bachelor's Consolations (While most companions of my youth): 12614
A Bachelor's Soliloquy (I'm very lonely-hearted when): 723
A Bachelor's Wife (Not every woman my true love shall gain): 3517
A Back-Lying Farm. I (A back-lying farm but lately taken in): 9050
A Back-Lying Farm. II (So sat the maiden: to the outward eye): 9052
A Backward Glance (Were all the ways wherein you went): 13157
A Ballad ("Oh! were you at war in the Eastern land?"): 1980
A Ballad of 1660 (The sun has set, from Brussell's wall): 4894
A Ballad of a Nun (From Eastertide to Eastertide): 790
A Ballad of Cornwall (Sir Tristram lay by a well): 1012
A Ballad of East and West (Kamal is out with twenty men to raise the Border side): 14845
A Ballad of Marion (He lay upon the arras-bed): 13846
A Ballad of Port Blair (Steel for fetters and iron for gyves): 2178
A Ballad of Sir Richard Fanshawe (A goodly ship of English mould rode forth upon the main): 3727
A Ballad of Tennis (The sun is hot: within the shade): 4373
A Ballad of the Armada. 1588-1888 (There shall be so much forgotten of deeds beneath the sun): 14836
A Ballad of the Five Rivers. (Sung by a Funjabee.) (Now is the "devil-horse" come to Sindh): 840
A Ballad of the Heart's Bounty ("What shines at my window out there in the night?"): 1001
A Ballad of the Period (The auld wife sat at her ivied door): 7687
A Ballad of the Were-Wolf (The gudewife sits i' the chimney-neuk): 14850
A Ballad of Victory (With quiet step and gentle face): 1006
A Ballade of My Home (Say, where is home—by sea or land): 12744
A Ballade of the Prince of All (Alway is the soul of man a craver): 4107
A Balloon Ascent at Kilmarnock (Unloose the cords an' let her gang): 3442
A Banquet Scene (The starry lustre lights the banquet-room): 15230
A Bard's Address to his Youngest Daughter (Come to my arms, my dear wee pet!): 10398
A Beaten Army (We have struck our last blow, we have spent our last shot, now): 3169
A Beautiful Woman (Methinks Dame Nature made you in some dream): 7703
A Bird in the Hand is Worth Two in the Bush (In the hand—fluttering fearfully): 1864
A Bird's Song (The sinking sun had streaked the west): 4700
A Bird's-Eye View ("Croak, croak, croak"): 13908
A Birthday (Another year has passed away—so soon!): 6793
A Birthday (My heart is like a singing bird): 14034
A Birthday (O soul of mine, wrapped up in clay): 12017
A Birthday (Up from the under-world they come again): 13072
A Birthday Song (Good morrow to the golden morning): 2290
A Birthday-Gift (I thought of offering thee a flower): 5692
A Black Frost (No gleam of sunlight warms the leaden sky): 4051
A Blackbird's Nest (She sits upon her nest all day): 12830
A Blessing (A little child hath bless'd me): 2154
A Blind Man's Fireside (Talk to me, oh ye eloquent flames): 3686
A Blind Man's Thoughts (I little knew the worth of sight): 6518
A Blush. "The Eloquent Blood" (In a blush doth a tell-tale appear): 3211
A Bombay Sunset (Fanned by the cool sweet evening air): 6587
A Book (What is a book? It is a thought impressed): 14338
A Border Burn (Where Autumn runnels fret and foam): 7915
A Border Foray (The winter winds were blawing cauld): 12412
A Border Song (To horse! For who would idly bide): 253
A Breton Beggar. (Dol Cathedral) (In the brown shadow of the transept door): 14926
A Bridal (A bridal is a joyous thing): 6124
A Bridal Chorus. For Music (Away to the wedding we're speeding): 2367
A Bridal Song (Come ye to seek me? Then bear me home): 10099
A Bridal Song (Ring out, O pealing bells!): 5722
A Bright Autumnal Day (There was not, on that day, a speck to stain): 3252
A Bright Day in November (A Summer hush is on the golden woods): 13008
A Briton’s Thought on the Subjugation of Switzerland (Two Voices are there; one is of the sea): 14811
A Broken Lily (She stood beneath the linden's lengthening shade): 4258
A Buccaneer Ballad (It was only a merry corvette that rode the South Pacific Sea): 4146
A Bunch of Forget-Me-Nots (Forget me not!—It is the cry of clay): 15062
A Bunch of Withered Violets (A bunch of withered violets!): 13287
A Burden of Easter Vigil (Awhile meet Doubt, and Faith): 8853
A Burial at Machærus (Lift up the lifeless trunk): 1990
A Buried Love (Our love was born amid the purple heather): 2560
A Butterfly (Thou incarnation of the light): 6389
A Butterfly in the City (Fair creature of a few short sunny hours): 12825
A Call (There is a cry throughout the land): 10523
A Calm at Sea (Lies a calm along the deep): 10919
A Cameronian Dream (In a dream of the night I was wafted away): 5413
A Canadian to the River St. Lawrence (Could child of thine attune the lyre): 2631
A Candlemas Dialogue ("Love brought Me down: and cannot love make thee"): 1719
A Caravansarai. (Done into verse from Addison) (A dervis travelling in the dreamy East): 2340
A Carol (Deep, deep snow): 8900
A Carol For My Son (Didst thou mount, my son, and ride): 1965
A Carol. (With Apologies to A. T. Q. C.) (Shepherd lass, brown lass): 15932
A Case of Cameos (First, on an Agate-stone, a Centaur strong): 2593
A Castle In Spain (The dragged lilies were beaten down): 1839
A Castle Ruin (Old Ruin, that surmounts yon brow): 6668
A Casual (He came among us one bleak, winter day): 12492
A Cathedral (The Minster's mystic walls uprear): 12428
A Celibate Consoled. "Ex Fumo" (Paint me no joys of wedlock born): 481
A Certain Poem, as it was Presented in Latin by Divines and Others, Before his Majesty in Cambridge, by way of Interlude, Styled Liber Novus de Aventu Regis ad Cantabrigiam, Faithfully done into English, with some Liberal Additions (It is not yet a fortnight since): 9424
A Chance Acquaintence (To have met but once, but once): 13178
A Chance Meeting (Two ships upon life's boundless sea): 7655
A Change (With wooing voice and dazzling smiles she glides): 4544
A Changeling (A little changeling Spirit): 11935
A Chant (How happy is the state that the old man doth possess): 10188
A Chant for Many Voices (Come, strike again the good old strain, and let the welkin ring): 14189
A Chant For Ragged Schools (Come, gentle folks, come, semple folks): 6063
A Chapter of Froissart. (Roman de Grand-Père) (You don't know Froissart now, young folks): 2514
A Chapter of Somes (Some love the sun, and some the moon): 3405
A Character (All beautiful and kind): 3390
A Character (Now that his soul is born in other worlds): 14611
A Character (Thy affection resembles a crystal stream): 11372
A Child Asleep (Vision unto vision calleth): 1724
A Child at Play (A rosy child went forth to play): 7714
A Child Flower (Only a sick child peering down): 1772
A Child in Heaven (A child in heaven! how solemn is the sound!): 5753
A Child's Dream (What know we of the glorious sights which bless an infant's dream?): 13915
A Child's First Impression of a Star (She had been told that God made all the stars): 3535
A Child's Prayer (The day is gone, the night is come): 1225
A Child's Smile (A child's smile—nothing more): 6213
A Child's Story (With rosy cheeks and golden hair): 14607
A Child’s First Letter (To write to papa, ’tis an enterprise bold): 1266
A Christian Paynim. A Legend (Round Malaga's fair city): 1169
A Christian's Creed (I believe in dreams of duty): 1919
A Christmas Carol ("Hail! Lady Mary," said Gabriel): 8803
A Christmas Carol (Christmas, come! And ere you go): 2466
A Christmas Carol (Christmas! Christmas! merry Christmas!): 5669
A Christmas Carol (Deep and hard the snow lay): 8850
A Christmas Carol (Little children, with long waving ringlets): 1443
A Christmas Carol (Lo! newborn Jesus): 1690
A Christmas Carol (Look you, how deep the snow is lying): 10234
A Christmas Carol (Noël, Noël, Noël, Noël!): 14954
A Christmas Carol (The Christmas bells are pealing sweet): 7430
A Christmas Carol (Whoso hears a chiming for Christmas at the nighest): 8801
A Christmas Carol (Wild, wild, wild, and wild): 8756
A Christmas Carol for 1862 (The skies are pale, the trees are stiff): 12067
A Christmas Carol. "Gloria In Exelsis" (Praise ye the Lord this Christmas morn): 13586
A Christmas Carol. 1863 (If ye would hear the Angels sing): 1600
A Christmas Hymn (It was the calm and silent night): 14148
A Christmas Phantasy (In wilds of lone Armenia, where, they say): 1472
A Christmas Song (Come, let us sing!): 2055
A Church Ecologue (The day was gone, the night was come): 11410
A Church-Yard Dream (Methought that in a Burial-ground): 8325
A Church-Yard Scene (How sweet and solemn, all alone): 7887
A Churchyard Eclogue (A brooding silence fills the twilight churchyard): 11124
A City Lyric (My home is the city; to and fro): 7326
A City May-Day Song (Olden hearts had danced to-day): 6761
A City Pastoral (Look down, white summer moon, look down): 3991
A City Weed (I passed a graveyard in a London street): 6880
A City Weed (We may not trample on thee, simple weed): 1396
A Climb at Rouen (The aisles grow dim, and as by winding ways): 5448
A Cloister Legend (A monk, to meditation given): 323
A College Breakfast-Party (Young Hamlet, not the hesitating Dane): 14609
A College Cat (Within those halls where student zeal): 13858
A Comforter (Will she come to me, little Effie): 1657
A Common Grave in South Africa (No ponderous tomb, no fretted vaults are there): 12474
A Comparison (The seaman stands, nor feels the least emotion): 9800
A Comparison Between Good Housewifery and Evil (Ill huswifery lieth): 2833
A Complaint (There is a change—and I am poor): 14812
A Complaint (There is a change, and I am poor): 9784
A Complaint. Rondel (This love it is a weary thing): 679
A Confession (To be deceived, if not to be deceiving): 13436
A Confession (When first I looked upon thy face): 9228
A Confession and Apology ('Tis time that I should loose from life at last): 3703
A Conjugal Dispute (All at the mid of the night, there arose): 6593
A Conquest (I found him openly wearing her token): 608
A Conservative Song (Once more we raise, with glad accord, the old inspiring strain): 11120
A Contented Proprietor (I have plenty of dutiful vassals): 3274
A Conversation (A human foot has never yet ascended): 14897
A Coquette (I said, friend, and I told thee all): 6734
A Cornish May Song (Returning Summer into life): 757
A Cottage Memory (In that foreign country, the dream of old days): 1122
A Country Lane (Between steep banks it winds along): 12636
A Country Maid (Her eyes the sun-kissed violets mate): 13374
A Country Sabbath (Now soars the lark in heaven's eyes): 6992
A Croon on Hennacliff (Thus said the rushing Raven): 3178
A Cry from the Dust! (Not less immortal that, from birth): 1237
A Cry from the Vineyard (Oh, Father, I'm weary—how long must I stay): 13454
A Curfew Song (Peace, weary wind! Thou hast grown tired of roaming): 4126
A Curious Old Song (Hark! how the canting Whigs do roar!): 8027
A Curious Will (The fifth of May): 3451
A Cycle (If he had come in the early dawn): 2465
A Daisy (Just one story is your asking? Well, what story shall it be?): 2236
A Daisy on a Grave (I saw a churchyard, not that holy place): 1445
A Dark Shadow (I never saw my mother's face): 5134
A Dawn Vision (In the dim dawn light, when the air was chill): 4663
A Day Among the Mountains (I wandered late this summer-time by mountain and by stream): 7697
A Day Dream (I basked in the glorious summer heat): 4605
A Day in April (Shifting shine and fleeting shadows): 13344
A Day in Early Summer (A little wood, wherein with silver sound): 12848
A Day in June (That day in June, where the river swept): 4845
A Day of Summer Beauty (Out in the golden summer air): 2551
A Day Too Late (I was thinkin' to-day of something): 4211
A Day-Dream on the Rhine (O for a kingdom rocky throned): 903
A Day-Dreamer (Since coming from the land of dreams is lonely): 5558
A Day's Fishing (Down by the pier when the sweet morn is blowing): 1816
A Daybreak Scene (The mild May-night is gone; the martins greet): 7641
A Dead Baby (Little soul, that for so brief space entered): 6297
A Dead Friendship (There is no more to say): 13218
A Dead Grief (All is over! Come away): 13183
A Dead Jest (Among my books I found to-day): 6798
A Dead Letter (I drew it from its china tomb): 14223
A Dead Man's Message. (Paraphrased from Arabic Verses Quoted By Mogreeth, at Bahrein.—See Palgrave's Arabia) (He who died at Azan sends): 13466
A Dead Past (Spare her at least; look, you have taken from me): 1463
A Dead Rose (O rose! who dares to name thee): 11067
A Dead Sea-Gull: Near Liverpool (Lack-lustre eye and idle wing): 6432
A Dead Worker (Cross her hands upon her breast!): 14377
A Dear Little Maid of Two (I'll sing you a song to a nursery tune): 4038
A Death Scene (As fade the flowers when frowning Winter shrouds): 10616
A Death-Watch (Hush! Still your voice in silent prayer!): 7624
A Deathless Love (Oh sing that plaintive sang, dear May!): 9658
A Debt Unpaid (Oh, my Love, you are still so lowly): 2538
A December Night's Carol (Quick! close the casements—shut the doors): 3876
A Declaration (Again the glimmering night had chased the day): 633
A Democratic Republican's Vision. Addressed to “Argus” (Upon her couch had sunk to rest): 120
A Deserted Garden (Tangled ivy creeps and twines): 12962
A Deserter (I had breathed of the battle, turned to face the foe): 4173
A Determined Aristocrat Denounces the Doctrine of Vox Populi Vox Dei (No! no! my friend. You are all wrong, all wrong!): 8529
A Devil's Lyric. Written during the Indian Famine (Go, sell your opium far and wide): 3937
A Dewdrop (I dream'd that my soul was a dewdrop): 3812
A Dialogue ("And what news have you got to-day, neighbour?" "Why, the Prince is going to be wed"): 420
A Dialogue ("Dainty little lady"): 7287
A Dialogue of Shadows (Englishman. What bustle is there? Can we not groan in peace): 1039
A Dirge ("Earth to earth, and dust to dust!"): 15609
A Dirge (Call for the robin-redbreast and the wren): 6236
A Dirge (My mighty grief hath not a tear): 5723
A Dirge (Now is done thy long day's work): 11149
A Dirge (This morn, thy gallant bark, love): 3147
A Dirge (Weep not for her!—Oh she was far too fair): 10554
A Dirge (Will the dead Hours come again): 3174
A Dirge from a Long Vacation Reading Party (Dear old boy! To that dreary bourne): 13465
A Dirge of Love (Yes! she is dead: the splendour of her eyes): 6188
A Dirge over Sir Daniel Donnelly (As down Exchequer Street I strayed): 8452
A Dorsetshire Legend (Thorkill and Thorston from Jutland came): 743
A Double Event (The merles find Edens in in scented hedges): 13353
A Dozen Years Hence ("Let's drink and be merry"): 11323
A Dream (All yesterday I was spinning): 1394
A Dream (I had a vision! O'er my life): 6365
A Dream (I pondered in a narrow shadowy lane): 13821
A Dream (Is it a dream or truth? If but a dream): 13399
A Dream (Methought I saw thee yesternight): 6096
A Dream (She showed me roses in my morning dream): 2565
A Dream (Sleep had assumed her wonted pow'r): 4873
A Dream (The night was gloomy. Through the skies of June): 7860
A Dream (We stood beside a drowsy-creeping stream): 14795
A Dream Of Death ("Where shall we sail to-day?"): 6181
A Dream of Death (Nothing grieved me, nothing pained me): 1636
A Dream of Egypt (I fell asleep over a ponderous tome): 12121
A Dream of Harvest (I have not seen for many a year): 12668
A Dream of Music (I dreamed a bright angel so near me was singing): 15790
A Dream of our Birth (Each man, before he takes his mortal birth): 8200
A Dream of Rannoch: Rannadhail (Hence, begone, repugnant menial!): 14551
A Dream of Resurrection (So heavenly beautiful it lay): 6185
A Dream of the Hesperides (Once, walking in a land of dreams): 957
A Dream of the Hills (Oh! my heart panteth to be far away): 15275
A Dream of Youth (Still was the air, and all the scene): 15648
A Dream-Garden (This is the thing an Eastern sage hath said): 1784
A Dream-Maiden (The dawn of day is sweet and still): 13018
A Dream. A Fragment (The sun had set, and o'er the eastern sky): 3884
A Drive (Through the thick air the tall majestic trees): 4614
A Duet (Flowers nodding gaily, scent in air): 1095
A Duet (What have I lost? ’tis naught, and yet I know): 2346
A Dumb Poet (Oh, to sing one mighty strain): 4187
A Fable (Silent and sunny was the way): 6487
A Fable Versified (Wherefore pinest thou, my bird?): 1414
A Fable: With a Reserved Dedication (Aphrodite and Pallas were friendly one day): 7120
A Face from the Past (Out of the past there has come a face): 2457
A Fact (It was on an English summer's day): 2115
A Fact that Flowers Double (English John Talbot, Shakspeare's terribly brave): 12361
A Fact. Vide Graphic of 27th December, page 627 ('Twas a dull November day): 3557
A Fair Exchange (I was just sixteen, and the Lady Clare): 13568
A Fair Place and Pleasant (A fair place and pleasant, this same world of ours!): 10212
A False Genius (I see a spirit by thy side): 1376
A False Step (If you should enter where we sisters sit): 4567
A Fancy (Can I catch thee by the wing?): 2230
A Fancy About A Boy (We stood beside the window-sill): 6140
A Fantasia Improvisation (O heart, false heart, why tearest thou me again?): 12216
A Farewell (Fare thee well, Nellie): 8864
A Farewell (Farewell, days, and months, and years): 2664
A Farewell (Go, girl! It matters not to thee): 5750
A Farewell (I leave thee, dear, and fare thee well): 7371
A Farewell (I may not kiss away the tears that still): 4531
A Farewell (Sleep, sleep, my early hopes and fears): 9194
A Farewell Proposal (Farewell? but stay! if words say what they mean): 1886
A Farewell to Naples (A glorious amphitheatre, whose girth): 9028
A Farewell to Summer (See Winter's van, with blazoned banners flying): 7685
A Farewell to Tobacco ("May the Babylonish curse"): 7829
A Farewell. For a Swedish Air (Look in my face, dear): 6218
A Fast Keeper (My friend, Tom Bentley, borrowed from me lately): 15888
A Father to his Children (When my dear mother died, there came to me): 2486
A Father's Curse (A widowed father from the holy fount): 11381
A Father's Grief (To trace the bright rose fading fast): 10595
A Father's Legacy to His Children (When I am dead): 15530
A Father's Soliloquy (What's this? A baby! My first girl!): 13630
A Feather ("Drop me a feather out of the blue"): 9654
A Few Short Years (A few short years—and then): 6018
A Few Words at Parting (Yes, dearest friend; we'll ever keep): 7459
A Few Years (Oh! a few years! how the words come): 11374
A Field-Walk in March (We never had believed, I wis): 6273
A Fight at Sea (A sombre stillness held the seas that night): 713
A Fire (Dazzled with watching how the swift fire fled): 1024
A Fireside Piece (Outside the blast is making riot): 9573
A Fireside Song (Give Hope a place beside our evening-fire): 6369
A First Sorrow (Arise! this day shall shine): 1380
A Fisher-Boy ("Jack, take the helm; and lads, be quick, up with the sail"): 15011
A Fisher-Maid's Song (The poplars tall kissed the cold gray sky): 13188
A Fishing-Town (Quaint clusters of gray houses crowding down): 7679
A Florentine Carnival Song of the Sixteenth Century. Composed by Antonio Alamani, and sung by a company of masquers, habited as skeletons, on a car of death designed by Piero di Cosimo (Sorrow, tears, and penitence): 12262
A Flower of a Day (Old friend, that with a pale and pensile grace): 6392
A Flower of Smokeland (Outside the town there's April shine): 12238
A Flower Song (Down where the garden grows): 2124
A Fly-Fisher's Song (Let others grudge nor sleep nor toil): 7009
A Folded Leaf (A folded page, old, stained, and blurred): 7104
A Forced Recruit at Solferino (In the ranks of the Austrian you found him): 11948
A Fragment (And then it seem'd I was a bird): 990
A Fragment (Go!—when by the world deserted): 10209
A Fragment (She loved as those love who have only one): 4776
A Fragment (The long, the weary agony is past): 14041
A Fragment (Weary amidst a wicked world, when faints): 15376
A Friend (Who borrows all your ready cash): 3883
A Friend (You ask why my face is sad?): 3938
A Friend in a Flower (What joy it is in distant climes to meet): 2705
A Funeral Fantasie (Pale, at its ghastly noon): 10034
A Funeral Feast (In the halls of Derg there is quiet and gloom): 550
A Funeral on Windermere (The sky was blue, the Lake was bright, the time was early Spring): 15818
A Gale, Off Ramsgate (One lady on the tall white cliff!): 15819
A Garden Reverie (I hear the sweeping fitful breeze): 12346
A Gentlewoman of the Old School (She dwelt, I know not where, nor read): 6769
A Gentlewoman of the Old School (She lived in Georgian era too): 2137
A German "Bad" (Deep within a hidden valley, lies a busy little town): 2570
A German Ditty (While life's early friends still surround us): 10533
A Ghost at the Dancing (A wind-waved tulip-bed—a tinted cloud): 6219
A Girl's a Girl for a' That (Is there a lady in the land): 13704
A Girl's Faith (No two leaves among us waving): 2001
A Girl's Love Song (It was an April morning): 1922
A Girl's Self-Sacrifice (The links are golden, yet for ever fret): 7468
A Girl's Story (Yes, truly all my dream is o'er, and I have lived the fairest part): 4061
A Girton Girl (How shall I paint her? Radiant in the dance): 2261
A Glimpse of Caledonia From the Equator (Adieu! ye southern climes, adieu!): 3034
A Glint of Gold (Unmindful of the wintry cold): 12485
A Glorious Victory! (It was a summer evening): 80
A Golfer's Elegy (Beneath the sod poor Tommy's laid): 7226
A Good Conscience (Grant me, O God! that sweet repose): 15810
A Good Old Man (The old man sate beside the fire): 3552
A Gossip (Midnight, and the stars were gleaming): 13177
A Granted Wish.
(A Fact.) (A granted wish is oft a fatal boon): 4978
A Grave (Bury me not, bury me not): 15187
A Grave Beside a Stream. Rev. VII. 17 (How strange the union of the stream and grave!): 14399
A Grave in The Ozárks (Low on a forest bed): 6199
A Gray Day (Within the woodland's sombre depth): 12432
A Great Man (That man is great, and he alone): 2889
A Great Man Departed (There was a festive hall with mirth resounding): 1110
A Greek Allegory (Deep in the forest lay the shepherd Mysius): 5864
A Greek Girl (Somewhere have I seen her wander): 9750
A Greek Pastoral (Where proud Olympus rears his head): 10068
A Greeting (Yes, dear, it has been long!): 4930
A Grey Day (Cloudy skies and low): 680
A Groan (Uncharitable grinder): 13777
A Group in Tartarus (Hark, as hoarse murmurs of a gathering sea): 10035
A Guernsey Tradition (The Bailiff's home was a lordly hall): 1142
A Guide For Pilgrims (Facing God's light we see now shadow cast): 5625
A Gypsy Rover (Whither away, O wandering wight?): 12539
A Hakka Maiden's Love-Ditty (Long, my love, I followed, to the fifth milestone): 8157
A Halcyon Day in Summer (Though thy song-tribute ne’er has fail’d, O Sea!): 14842
A Happy Life (How happy is he born and taught): 5856
A Happy New-Year to the True Men of the Land (Hark! hark! the sharp voice of Old Christopher North): 10108
A Harvest Song (The toil of day is ended): 6526
A Haunted Room (Well I know a haunted chamber, where the tapestry is hanging): 4628
A Hawthorn Story (Pink and white in snowy shower): 12850
A Health to Old England, and Westminster's Pride (Ye friends of your country, still true to her cause): 14187
A Hebrew Dirge over Sir Daniel Donnelly (Mourn Erin, sons of Erin, mourn): 8450
A Hebrew Melody (O saw ye the rose of the East): 8112
A Highland Dawn (The slumbering sunlight glimmers on the lake): 4279
A Highland Romance (The famous Doctor, weary of Mayfair): 1793
A Hindoo Legend (Under the shadow of a tree): 12124
A Homily (The humblest and frailest grassy blade): 12300
A Hope Carol (A night was near, a day was near): 8818
A House-Surgeon's Story (His ways are past finding, He doeth His will, what are we but as clay in His hand?): 4123
A Household Word to My Cousin Helen (Pleasant are thine eyes, dear Helen): 1255
A Human Skull (A human skull! I bought it passing cheap): 11952
A Human Soul (A wise man walked by the river): 12790
A Husband's Valentine (The days are long and dull, dear): 7385
A Hymn at Sunset Among the Alps (Oh Thou who hast thine altar made): 3337
A Hymn of Nature. An Ode Written for Music (Power eternal, power unknown, uncreate): 15893
A Hymn of the Home-Land (The Home-land! the Home-land!): 1856
A Hymn. [From Lamartine's "Harmonies Poètiques"] (There is an unknown language spoken): 5871
A Japanese Fan (How time flies! Have we been talking): 12336
A Japanese Love-Song (Yes, ’tis Autumn, dearest, see): 4480
A Japanese Song ("You were too long away, my heart"): 2415
A Jersey Lane (The mossy path is echoless for feet): 1521
A Jewish Rabbi in Rome. With a Commentary by Ben Israel (Rabbi Ben Esdra to his dearest friend): 9272
A Journey to the Moon (I've lost so much on this "dull earth"): 12085
A July Twilight (Falls the grey mantle of the twilight soft): 4021
A June Flight From Town (To-day the hot street): 6922
A June Madrigal (O Cuckoo, calling when the dawn is breaking): 13354
A June Morning (The martyr Poppy burned away): 1677
A Kind and Gentle Temper (Since trifles make the sum of human things): 3150
A Kiss ("O what is perfect bliss?"): 13969
A Kiss (Just one kiss: two faces met): 625
A Knight of Rhineland (Crowning the steep his castle stood): 10215
A Lady Loved a Rose (Her heart o'erbrimming with much love unsought): 1009
A Lament (I had a flower, a simple flower): 14480
A Lament (I'm certain, in that hour of bliss): 12301
A Lament (My mother lies at rest beneath): 2592
A Lament (Papers must not contain above): 1967
A Lament (There was an eye whose partial glance): 10591
A Lament for Summer (Weep, Mother-Nature, weep): 7419
A Lament for the Fairies (Beautiful fictions of our trusting youth): 1140
A Lament for the Summer (Moan, oh ye Autumn Winds!): 1311
A Lancashire Doxology ("Praise God from whom all blessings flow"): 1617
A Lancashire Idyl (In the fast-falling dusk of a bleak, cold day): 3895
A Lancashire Superstition (Dead, dead, and so he be, honey. We've all to lie i' turn): 4571
A Landscape (A pastoral plain which one huge mountain shields): 7249
A Lark's Flight (In the quiet city park): 2018
A Lark's Song (L’alouett’, l’alouette monte en haut): 5132
A Last "Good-Night" (Love, I see thee lowly kneeling): 12833
A Last Adieu (Adieu, my loved parent, the trial is o'er): 7962
A Last Look (Good-night, pretty sleepers of mine): 7257
A Last Look (They say the years since last we met): 12312
A Last Ray of Sunshine (Tell thy tale, old year): 1658
A Lay of a Cracked Fiddle (When I was quite a tiny mite): 3992
A Lay of Fairyland, (From a Volume of Poems by John Wilson, now in the Press) (It is upon the Sabbath-day, at rising of the sun): 7826
A Lay of Furness Abbey (Let Layard quarry Ninevah, and Bartlett boat the Nile): 6349
A Lay of London Streets (The Autumn night is far advanced): 1139
A Lay of Lucknow (Asleep!—admid the awful thunder): 6423
A Lay of the League (I'll sing you a song of a worshipful set): 10811
A Lay of the Mews (Up, lazy Tib! claws were not made to sit on): 13657
A Legend (‘No.’—‘What, refuse him admittance?’): 10211
A Legend (Hark! it is midnight's dreary hour): 5672
A Legend of Carlisle: The Scottish Gate (On Carlisle-Gate the moon shines clear): 891
A Legend of Ceuta (The mighty Emir, Alahor, a deadly oath he swore): 4610
A Legend of Eileen Mohr (In the cold Atlantic billows): 5149
A Legend of Kilchurn (Sir Colin's bark is on the wave): 5255
A Legend of Lough Erne (While gazing on that placid wave): 5259
A Legend of Mull (Dark, with shrouds of mist surrounded): 2548
A Legend of Northampton (The noon-tide shone with radiant glow): 574
A Legend of Saint Bees (Hard by the Abbey's hallowed walls): 6439
A Legend of the Red Sea (Half starved the fisher Abib stands): 4257
A Legendary Charade ("Now lithe and listen, little page"): 5782
A Legendary Tale—With Very Little Lore (I'll tell you a story in well sorted rhymes): 11714
A Lesson (I said, my life is a beautiful thing): 4094
A Lesson (Last night I weighed, quite wearied out): 6749
A Lesson for Future Life (Every present holds a future in it): 1141
A Lesson From the Lark (The mists of winter scarcely die away): 6703
A Lesson of Hope (The stars look'd forth in silent eloquence): 1227
A Letter (And so, my child, your heart is almost weary): 13057
A Letter (Bright rose thy marriage day, and met thee brightly): 2312
A Letter (Where were you when I suffered? My heart was very faint): 1923
A Letter From Home (Dainty little missive): 12478
A Letter from Paris (My friend, have you heard of the last new inventions): 14366
A Letter in Black (A floating on the fragrant flood): 2825
A Letter to the Rats (I sit down, a letter your ratships to write): 1779
A Liberal Address (We haven't got a policy): 9250
A Lie (A thistle grew in a sluggard's croft): 7154
A Life Story (In haste I call'd him the light word): 430
A Life's Lesson (I am sitting again by the old oak tree): 13796
A Lincolnshire Village (All cannot from a Yorkshire fell): 6862
A Lingering Leaf (Thou leaflet! fluttering all forlorn): 7424
A Linnet's Song (A wind-blown, sun-kissed, dew-wet flower of sound): 2641
A Little Dead Prince (Buried June 1st, 1873) (Over the happy mother's bed): 2448
A Little Grave (A little grave where daisies grow): 6678
A Little Hymn, For Little Republicans (Hurrah! hurrah! for the blue-winged fly): 114
A Little Link (She sleeps—the welcome wintry sun): 4583
A Living Picture (No, I'll not say your name.–I have said it now): 6224
A Lock of Hair (Only a lock of hair, tied with a silken string): 6705
A London Rose (Diana, take this London rose): 14924
A Long While Ago (Still hangeth down the old accustom'd willow): 5266
A Look (I saw it pass from eye to eye): 3940
A Lost Chord (Seated one day at the Organ): 1649
A Lost Hour (A golden hour on a summer morn): 2556
A Lost Leader. In Memoriam T. H. Green Of Balliol: died March 26, 1882 (Strong, silent soul): 14674
A Lost Love (So fair, and yet so desolate): 242
A Lost Treasure (A pilgrim to the places): 2753
A Love Letter ("And do you think of me"): 4719
A Love Letter (You ask me, friend, to tell you of my wife!): 1916
A Love Match (I am happy: I do not show it): 1909
A Love Secret (I have no thoughts that jingle into rhyme): 12652
A Love Song (My little leaves, why are you glad?): 5077
A Love-Letter to My Wife (Dear heart! all happy thoughts I bring): 5479
A Love-Promise. A Summer Evening Song (At that calm hour thou lov'st the best): 7464
A Love-Song (In the night-time, O beloved): 7438
A Love-Thought (If thou wert only, love, a tiny flower): 12849
A Love's Life ('Twas Spring-time of the day and year): 7450
A Love's Life ('Twas springtime of the day and year): 4527
A Lover's Ballad (She's on my heart, she's in my thoughts): 15474
A Lover's Parting (My deep and faithful passion has sustained): 5189
A Lover's Song (I would not live without thy love): 6978
A Lovers' Quarrel (I could not hear all that they must have said): 4545
A Lullaby (Hush! hush! The night draws on): 7216
A Lullaby (Rest thee! The daylight was gone from the valley): 7542
A Lullaby (Sleep, my child! The shadows fall): 7505
A Lullaby (Wee wearied Lowrie): 4109
A Lump of Carbon (Tell me, lump of Carbon, burning): 7423
A Lyric For Lovers (Love launched a gallant little craft): 5377
A Madrigal (Ah! leave my soul like forest pool): 818
A Maiden's Husband. In Imitation of a "Bachelor's Wife," printed in No. 310 of the Journal (Not every lover shall my heart secure): 3589
A Maiden's Message (O wind, that wanderest o'er hill, and vale, and sea): 3606
A Maiden's Wish (Tell me not what I am! O, speak not so!): 2299
A Man-of-War in the Acorn (An oak-tree, wrestling with the wind): 3282
A Man's a Man For A' That. A New Version ("A Man's a man," says Robert Burns): 9805
A Man's Regret (O my child-love, my love of long ago): 9645
A Man's Requirements (Love me, sweet, with all thou art): 11062
A Man's Thought (Work, there is work to be done): 5056
A Man's Wooing (You said, last night, you did not think): 13889
A Maori Serenade ("When queenly rides the moon above"): 7291
A Mariner's Wife ("Ah me, my dream!" pale Helen cried): 6161
A Marriage Hymn ("From henceforth no more twain, but one"): 3935
A Marriage-Table (There was a marriage table where One sat): 6252
A Marrying Man (Never warn me, my dear, to take care of my heart): 3264
A Martyr's Victory (The streets are thronged in mighty Rome): 6070
A Masquerader (Sorrow once wearied of his sad estate): 7940
A Match of Affection (Well, my daughter is married, the popular prints): 5915
A Matin-Song (Bare the head to the windy morn): 6223
A May Memory (A cottage in a winding lane): 2528
A May Morning (Amid the tender boughs of green): 8879
A May Morning (The sturdy oaks' empurpled heads): 5786
A May Night (Mystical odours creep): 4152
A May Queen (One is there whom we often meet): 15354
A Meditation (Some hidden disappointment clings): 11031
A Meditation of St. Eligius (Eligius said: "It is not good"): 1730
A Memory (A little village far away): 7473
A Memory (A memory of a happy day): 2215
A Memory (An old-world country garden, where the hours): 12865
A Memory (Sometimes in halls of beauty and of love): 1145
A Memory. Rondeau (Twas you, my Rose, my saucy maid): 2361
A Merry Christmas ("A merry Christmas!"–oh! forbear): 4761
A Message (Grey Sea, that ripplest towards yon Kentish cliff!): 12221
A Midnight Conversation (Here lie we, baby, all alone): 8075
A Midsummer Birthday ('Tis midmost June—the roses flush): 4929
A Midsummer Morning in a Country Town (’Tis early dawn; the twittering swallow sings): 6449
A Midsummer Night's Dream (I dreamed a dream upon a summer night): 13833
A Midsummer Night's Dream (We had heard the night-birds calling in the thickets): 12956
A Midsummer Night’s Dream. (Oberon Loquitur) (Alas! they have stolen my Fairy Princess): 1640
A Midway Milestone ("Come down," the simple letter says): 4604
A Miner's Morning Song (Awake, brother miner! The stars have grown dim): 9597
A Minor Poet ('Twas summer time. The warm air throbbed with song): 2371
A Minor Poet (Chiefly in common things he sees): 5051
A Miser's Treasure (The miser lay on his dying bed): 12740
A Missed Spring (Spring flowers? Belovèd, lay them here): 4927
A Missed Summer (White rose-leaves star the grassy way): 4865
A Missionary Cheer (Christ be near thee! Christ up-bear thee): 12354
A Modern Greek War-Song (O supple-tempered, keenly-wounding blade of mine): 14582
A Modern Idyll (No more upon our meads fond shepherds languish): 514
A Modern Madrigal (Come, for the buds are burst in the warren): 12845
A Modern Madrigal (Come, for the buds are burst in the warren): 7544
A Modern Mariana (A well-trained wild vine climbs the cottage-wall): 6745
A Monody (Thou who hast pass'd from darksome street): 5735
A Mood (The sun aslant the carpet, and the rain): 997
A Moorland Reverie (By hedgerows where the wild-rose clings): 12618
A Moral Man. (From the Russian of Nekrasof) (A strictly moral man have I been ever): 12070
A Morning by the Sea ('Twas Hayling Island and a summer day): 2221
A Morning in Spring (O calm sweet morn! Myriads of rosy buds): 1855
A Morning Meeting. Villanelle (The dawn had turned from grey to gold): 669
A Morning Song (I wake this morn, and all my life): 7032
A Morning Song (Oh! the roses were wet as with wine): 2044
A Morning Song for Christmas Day. For Music (Wake! what unusual light doth greet): 8816
A Morning Walk (Though we have said good-bye): 12409
A Moth (What vibrant fans of golden dust): 7364
A Mother (There's music in a mother's voice): 4399
A Mother to Her Forsaken Child (My child—my first-born! Oh, I weep): 11037
A Mother's Anniversary (Not by the seaboard that I love the best): 4542
A Mother's Dirge (I'll pluck, sweet Love, another flow'r for thee): 14005
A Mother's Dirge Over Her Child (Bring me flowers all young and sweet): 9431
A Mother's Garden (I see her in the dear, dead years): 13248
A Mother's Heart (A little dreaming, such as mothers know): 14587
A Mother's Lament for an Infant Daughter (I loved thee, daughter of my heart!): 15071
A Mother's Prayers. From the German (The sweetest sound heard through our earthly home): 7073
A Mother's Reckonings (Our nest is full of little birds): 13967
A Mother's Resignation (No, not forgotten! Though the wound has closed): 5880
A Mother's Song (While you sleep, I—watching—hear): 12500
A Mother's Wail (Oh! Jamie, Jamie, let me greet): 1743
A Mother's Waking (All night the dews in silence wept): 14285
A Mountain Idyl (Aberdeenshire, lift your browie): 6255
A Murmur (I wrote her name on the soft, shifting sand): 12606
A Music Lesson (Fingers on the holes, Johnny): 2517
A Musical Instrument (What was he doing, the great god Pan): 11946
A Musician (It was breathed in the blithesome days of youth): 3986
A Mystery (He sitteth in an ancient hall): 1561
A Mystery (With princely gifts I ply my love): 2389
A Myth About the Nightingales (What spirit moves the quiring nightingales): 14251
A Name (Such a lovable face!): 3184
A National Song (Of flowers that bloom in gardens fair, that blooms in meadows free): 378
A New Alcestis (What time of year it was I cannot tell): 13567
A New Ballad of the New Times, Entitled—"Lord John and the Pedlar;" Showing how Boniface provided a Reform Dinner, and who ate it (Tom Potts, he was a Pedlar bold): 11227
A New Love (Love, not the simple youth that whilome wound): 10943
A New Mother (I was with my lady when she died): 1504
A New Song (He found a place of snug retreat): 2030
A New Song (What is it ails you, ye beauteous people): 8454
A New Song for the Electors of the County of Mid-Lothian (Oh! The gallant Sir John is a Knight of renown): 11215
A New Song, for a Conservative Dinner on the Anniversary of Waterloo (I'll sing you a new song—for all things now are new): 11184
A New Song, to be Sung by All Loyal and True Subjects (Ye good honest Englishmen, loyal and true): 11016
A New Song, To Be Sung by All the True Knaves of Political Unions (Ye rascals and robbers wherever ye be): 11090
A New Story of A Life (The hedge is sprouting out again): 6466
A New Version of an Old Proverb ('Tis hard to forgive—when a base, stealthy hand): 5724
A New Year Fantasy (The New Year hath no word to say): 2061
A New Year's Eve. Christina Rossetti died December 29, 1894 (The stars are strong in the deeps of the lustrous night): 8653
A Night in Cumberland (In silence slept the mossy ground): 14403
A Night in June (Lady! in this night of June): 14570
A Night in the Red Sea (The strong hot breath of the land is lashing): 12091
A Night in Wexford (Of all rivers in Europe (and I have seen many)): 6036
A Night Scene (I see thee not, my gentlest Isabel): 3377
A Night Scene (Now flaming no more on the soft-heaving main): 7968
A Night Song (O Sleep! come down to me): 15812
A Night Thought (How grandly solemn is this arch of night!): 6632
A Night Thought (I do not envy you, ye joyless stars): 10725
A Night Thought (Planets perpetuate the Gods of Greece): 12327
A Night Watch (Upon the threshold of her door she lies): 14734
A Night-Moth. (Vivelai Nouveau) (Frail wings that flutter to the light): 15958
A Night-Thought (The roof of cloud is rent on high): 7623
A Night's Ride in Fairyland (All night the great elms shook for fear): 4261
A Nightingale in Kensington Gardens (They paused,—the cripple in the chair): 2499
A Nightly Remembrance (Do angels haunt the scenes of earth?): 11108
A Nocturnal Sketch (Even is come; and from the dark Park, hark): 3742
A Nocturne of Chopin's (O sound that breaks with tremulous waves): 2742
A Norwegian Lyric (In dalliance with my mountain-harp): 3604
A Novelette. In Four Chapters (A second's touch): 12940
A November Morning's Reverie (Hast thou a chamber in the utter West): 10731
A Nurse (A nurse, a simple nurse; to the unthinking): 13002
A Paneful Catastrophe. A Tale of North Devon (Our Gallic neighbours, modern "shoots of Arês"): 2892
A Paradise of Posies (It’s a paradise of posies! What do you call ’em all—): 4695
A Paraphrase by Edward FitzGerald of the Speech of Paullus Æmilius in Livy, lib. xlv. c. 41 (How prosperously I have served the State): 8525
A Parental Ode to My Son, Aged Three Years and Five Months (Thou happy, happy elf!): 3465
A Parochial Epic. In Easy Verse (My cottage many a year has stood): 9482
A Part: Greater than the Whole ("Oh Mary, sweet angel," I trembled, and said): 2356
A Parting (You go—with a calm smile upon your face): 13623
A Party of Pleasure Up the River Tamar (The clock strikes nine–nor has the sun): 3572
A Passage in a Life (At morn, he was so happy; and at night): 11951
A Pastoral (A simple shepherd, I): 1568
A Pastoral (I sat with Doris, the shepherd-maiden): 578
A Pastoral (Where soft grey hills in summer sheen): 12165
A Pastoral Song (Ye shepherds of this pleasant vale): 7214
A Patriot Queen (Brave words of cheer are these which have been spoken): 9542
A Peep into the Whig Penny Post-Bag (My dear member—I send you a powerful petition): 11049
A Penny for Your Thought (Husband, you are busy thinking): 205
A Perfect Day (We went together up the side): 4651
A Perilous Voyage. (Poem on a Recent Event) (The one was taken, the other left): 13955
A Persian Apologue. (To E. H. P.) (Melek, the Sultán, tired and wan): 12115
A Persian Ghuzl (The life of man is sore beset): 5218
A Petition (Thy latticed window open wide): 3894
A Petition to F. H. in Favour of a Newly Planted Tree (Dear Fanny, ’tis no common tree): 5763
A Phantasy (Nearer, gentle star): 5714
A Phantom Land (There's a land of which we often dream): 12687
A Picardy Pastoral (The waggoner Pierre is tall and straight): 5044
A Picture (A horrid wood of unknown trees, that throw): 11701
A Picture (And there a rolling Ocean did abound): 11966
A Picture (In the Dark Monastic Ages) (Nay, Shepherd! Turn I prythee turn away): 14151
A Picture (One picture fair within my heart I carry): 2666
A Picture (Through heather, moss, and golden rod): 6857
A Picture (With smooth hair parted on her sweet mild brow): 6338
A Piece of Heather (Dear Kate,—In Mr Murray's Guide): 10127
A Piece of Presumption (I always thought the law was sure, although its course was long): 8070
A Place of Burial in the South of Scotland (Part fenced by man, part by a rugged steep): 8668
A Plaster Cast from Pompeii (Once I was young and fresh): 1749
A Plaything (A Baby mistook a bright gem for a plaything): 4122
A Plea for the Dumb Animals (Ye call them dumb; and deem it well): 3555
A Poet Ape (Poor poet ape; that would be thought our chief): 8186
A Poet's Dying Hymn (The blue, deep, glorious heavens!—I lift mine eye): 11020
A Poet's Home (A poet's home! On earth what spot): 1387
A Poet's Love. (From the German of Heinrich Heine) (I hate thee not, though death should be my fate): 13544
A Poet's Loves (A Poet loves full oft, the legends tell): 4492
A Poet's Study (Oh! not in ceiled rooms of state): 15900
A Poor Man on a Tender Subject (I sing a song of a publican): 3684
A Portrait (Behold yon stately vision that advances): 8310
A Portrait (Bright is the lady of my heart, and fair): 15292
A Portrait (Dark eyes, from which a pure, calm soul looks out): 12943
A Portrait, From Memory (A Persian princess, tall and fair): 3313
A Portrait. Addressed to a Lady (I knew a lady once, and she was fair): 15211
A Postscript to "Retaliation" (Here Johnson is laid. Have a care how you walk): 1101
A Posy (“The world hath striven us to part”): 15948
A Pouring Wet Day. June 17th, 1860 (Rain! endless rain! methinks the weeping clouds): 276
A Prayer (Dear, let me dream of love): 8937
A Prayer (I ask not wealth, but power to take): 6670
A Prayer in the City. London, 1869 (Ah, me! the City groaneth at my feet): 3805
A Prayer of the Afflicted (Eternal spirit, God, thou great unknown): 117
A Prima Donna's Charity (Yes! the town is full of people, and men bustle to and fro): 14822
A Prisoner of Hope (To sit and watch in the lonely house): 15017
A Procession (It was a Queen went forth): 686
A Psalm of [Political] Life, 1885–86 (Now and then—not very often): 8682
A Psalm of Life (Through the wild Babel of our fever’d time): 14864
A Psalm of Life. After Psalm CVII (Gather'd out of every region): 2145
A Psalm of Life. What the heart of the young man said to the psalmist (Tell me not, in mournful numbers): 5849
A Punning Address (Ladies and Gentlemen—I can't allow): 13747
A Quartette of Sonnets (O gentle murmuring wind of this June night): 2544
A Queen (She rules with subtle art and skill): 12637
A Queen's Confession (I am failing, wasting, dying): 3281
A Query (Oh, the wonder of our life): 3634
A Query (What is the worth in this age of gold): 1053
A Query (You saucy blackbird, singing to your mate among the cherries): 13207
A Question (Did you know I came to meet you in the night): 4613
A Question (I close my eyes, and once again): 7138
A Question (I will rejoice—my heart is glad): 1764
A Question (My home is in the North; piercing and bitter): 7074
A Question (What cometh out of the night): 12541
A Question (What makes my brow to throb and ache?): 6431
A Question and an Answer (What is Love? Is Love in this): 8874
A Quiet Hour (The sunlight is past, and the dusty air): 6754
A Quiet Night (So still the starry night, I almost fear): 4316
A Quiet Thought, After Sunset (Rest–rest–four little letters, one brief word): 6489
A Quitrent Ode ("Thirty to-day?" Well, be it so): 8141
A Raid (To horse, to horse, my merry men! and never draw the rein): 13445
A Railway Lyric (Four hundred miles, Love, lie between): 6572
A Rainbow (Cloud rolls up from the west): 5435
A Rainy Day in Spring (From leaden clouds there streams incessant rain): 13186
A Rainy Evening (The twilight shadows darkling fall): 7538
A Real Vision ('Tis strange that people now-a-days persist): 10115
A Reassuring Prospect. From "Les Rayons et les Ombres" of Victor Hugo (All is light and all is joy): 5885
A Rebuke (Why are you so sad? sing the birds, the little birds): 4256
A Recollected Song (Years have pass'd since last I heard thee): 15488
A Recollection (I knew that I should be his bride): 5623
A Recollection (Let me for once describe her—once,—for she): 7842
A Recollection of Sir Martin Shee. On the Last Occasion of His Presiding at the Festival of the Royal Academy of Art (If in the fluttering magic of that tongue): 1248
A Reed (I am no trumpet, but a reed!): 11069
A Regular Bad Un. (Yes, Sammy's a sad un): 5446
A Rejected Lover (You "never loved me," Ada!–Those slow words): 6164
A Relic (My Lord and my God, my one hope, and my stay): 714
A Relic (O Lord, O my God, I have hoped but in thee): 749
A Remembrance (I stray ’neath a moon): 8922
A Remembrance (Other thoughts have parted me): 1804
A Remembrance of Autumn (Nothing stirs the sunny silence): 1415
A Reminiscence of Boyhood ('Twas a blithe morning in the aureate month): 11030
A Requiem (Sing soft and low, with tender tone): 7480
A Resurrection (I look around the earth, and see): 4860
A Retrospect (I see it now:—An orchard set): 2118
A Retrospect (I waited long): 13006
A Retrospect (She left me for the infinite, and went): 3903
A Reverie and a Song (When I do sit apart): 2022
A Rhyme About Birds (I said to the little Swallow): 6136
A Rhyme of May (A heavenly evening,—far and near): 14994
A Rhyme of One (You sleep upon your mother's breast): 12401
A Riddle (Child of Nature, formed by art): 13708
A Riddle (Inscribed on many a learned page): 9941
A Riddle (On flutt'ring wings I early rose): 4438
A Riddle by Jehudah Hallevi (It has an eye, and still is blind): 8455
A Riddle, (Written in an Album,) Which every Reader may solve to himself, but none to another (I know not what these lines will be): 13934
A Right Royal Banquet (Never, in all her highest regal state): 2502
A Ring of Gyges (Because that Fate was kind to me): 2049
A Rising Tide (The west wind clears the morning): 4332
A River Song (Soft arms about my throat): 9749
A Roman Drinking Song (Drink ye to the goddess fair): 13732
A Roman Idyl (Oh! blame not, friend, with scoff unfeeling): 10545
A Roman Lawyer in Jerusalem—First Century (Marcus, abiding in Jerusalem): 10437
A Roman Love-Song. (Rhymes Sestina) (If Love would bring me where my lady is): 650
A Roman Tomb (One starlit night upon the Appian way): 2896
A Romantic Existence (In a boyish race to roam): 3195
A Rose (It was the sweetest rose, the loveliest): 14381
A Rose (Why did you wear my rose?): 8928
A Roundel (When first we met, I thought you fair): 13335
A Roundel of Rabelais (Theleme is afar on the waters, adrift and afar): 1084
A Royal Grievance (Once, in a dream, I was a king): 15202
A Ruined Cottage (The roofless walls stand open to the sky): 12676
A Rule of Life ("If you would thoroughly disconcert"): 14904
A Rural Ride (The morning fog on Fleet-street lay): 13884
A Sabbath Morning in the Highlands (What holy calm! the mountains are asleep): 5500
A Sacred Grove (Here Silence is the queen of time; her hand): 1124
A Sacrifice at Ægina (The morn is on the hill; the Eastern red): 8800
A Sad Case by an Old Doll (On a shelf in this cupboard, shut up with my woes): 1969
A Sailor's Sweetheart ("God bless you, lass!" once more they kissed): 2761
A Sailor's Wife's Song (O bonny is my husband's ship, the ship that well I love): 6586
A Scandinavian Legend (A little Water-spirit all day long): 2893
A Scene for a Study (White lay the snow over roof, over wold): 1604
A Scene in Cornwall, on the 10th of May, 1824 (Here, from these russet moors, those granite hills): 15243
A Schoolroom Lament (I find it very hard to feed my thoughts): 4307
A Score of Years Ago (Down by the breaking waves we stood): 294
A Scotch Bank-Note (Tattered and dirty, yet a welcome guest): 7436
A Scotch Health to K. J. (He's o'er the sees and far awa'): 9797
A Scottish Sabbath (A blue mist wraps the peakèd mountain-tops): 6962
A Sea Fight—In the Distance (All nature smiles—the heaven serene): 4435
A Sea Idyll (Last night I saw the mermaids ride): 13038
A Sea Song of the Time of Henry the Sixth (Haul the bowline and vere the sheet!): 13648
A Sea Voyage (Once I sailed in a little steamer): 14766
A Sea-Change (A spacious grave, the boundless sea): 7234
A Sea-Shell (Cool lips of shell, sing, Sea-shell, warm and sweet): 14224
A Sea-Side Reverie (Is there a place where the souls of the just): 8762
A Sea-side Sketch (The sun sinks down a round red disk): 7406
A Sea-Side Wooing (Strephon with Amanda talkèd): 13536
A Sea-Town (A long street straggling up to a church-crowned hill): 7256
A Seascape (Over the waters' face a darkness falls): 12582
A Seaside Memory (It seems so strange. Once more beside): 12564
A Seaside Reverie (A blue dome of heaven seeming): 13245
A Secret (I told my secret to the sweet wild roses): 4648
A Self-Satisfied Man (A young man is walking gaily): 14903
A Sequence of Analogies (Autumn is drear): 14525
A Shadow of George Herbert (If thou, in life's chill thunder-rain): 1407
A Shadow of Truth (I had a wondrous vision—a dream, but not of night): 10498
A Shadowed Life (A quiet, pale-faced orphan girl): 900
A Shepherd's Consolation (It's no' aye rainin' on the misty Achils): 5443
A Shepherd's Life (Oh! often on the mountain's side): 10440
A Shepherd's Song (I pray not now to Cytherea): 2362
A Shetland Summer (Now breaks a wave of golden light): 12767
A Shipwreck (Steadily blows the north-east wind): 6845
A Sigh in the Night (O sweet darkness, still and calm and lonely!): 2500
A Singing Bird (My soul is dull—through all this day): 7137
A Sister of Mercy (See her in her modest beauty): 12875
A Sister's Valentine (Know ye that every flower that blows): 6014
A Sketch (Dost thou thus love me, O thou beautiful?): 6353
A Sketch (Hers was a lowly and a lonely fate): 5987
A Sketch (Our cottage crests the summit of a hill): 4035
A Sketch (There is a land—a lonely place): 7309
A Sketch at Evening (To eastward, where a mountain channel fills): 7002
A Sketch from Nature (How many an hour of hope and dread): 15478
A Sketch in Water-Colours (To a Friend in the South) (Rain, rain, rain! and the wind's in the east!): 1538
A Sleep Song (Willow, where the rushes grow): 4216
A Sleeping Homestead (The meadows slumber fair beneath the moon): 3917
A Sleepless Night (The centre of this universe of stars): 12281
A Sleepless Night (Within the hollow silence of the night): 12246
A Smile and a Sigh (A smile because the nights are short!): 14219
A Snow Parable (Softly falls the snow and slowly, slowly): 5567
A Soldier's Death—1845 (The foe had left the tented ground): 7220
A Soldier's March (A stir of merry music through the street): 3942
A Soliloquy (Not married yet, and twenty-nine!): 12628
A Solitary Lament (This desert dell and unfrequented grove): 13594
A Song (Be not too quick to carve our rhyme): 8758
A Song (In Spring and Summer weather): 2256
A Song (My lady wanders through the glade): 12585
A Song (Oh! for a day of Spring): 8875
A Song (Outside the hedge of roses): 816
A Song (The little white moon goes climbing): 6193
A Song (The sky it is so blue): 7174
A Song (What looks hath she): 2377
A Song for Galatea (A doubtful stir, a sound not yet a sound): 9781
A Song For March (Blow, winds of March! Awake, awake!): 1973
A Song For March (See the tender grass up-springing): 5815
A Song for May (There is a power in England still): 5436
A Song for Music. The Old Story (My love is like the damask rose): 4012
A Song for the Millions (Joy, joy to the injured—the millions awaken): 21
A Song for Women (Within a dreary narrow room): 14676
A Song from "The Loves of the Wrens" (Where is another sweet as my sweet!): 3154
A Song in a Shower (Heyday! 'tis May-day; the merry winds are blowing): 7302
A Song in Exile (Mine no more! . . . For other eyes): 12746
A Song in June (Calm in his chamber the dead man lay): 13036
A Song in June (The brook went rippling, rippling): 12168
A Song in Late Autumn (The blackbirds call from laurel cover): 12783
A Song in the Morning (Awake, poor Soul, the Shadows flee): 16002
A Song in the Night (God's almighty arms are round me): 374
A Song in the Night (The dry leaves dropped upon the way): 4352
A Song in Winter (A robin sings on the leafless spray): 12791
A Song in Winter (Blackbird, whistling cheerily): 12591
A Song in Winter (You turn the gloom to gold!): 8289
A Song of Agincourt ("How many," quoth King Harry): 12192
A Song of Arran (O for the Arran breezes!): 2665
A Song of Birds (Oh, to be a bird, in this glorious summer weather): 5020
A Song of Dartmoor (Rich is the red earth country, and fair beneath the sun): 14962
A Song of Death (Here I come, Love, to strew): 15645
A Song of Earth (Come forth, sweet Mother, be once more): 1850
A Song of Fiji (Freighted with lethargy, the air): 12535
A Song of Glen Dun (Sure this is blessed Erin, an' this the same glen!): 8166
A Song of Good Counsel. German Air.—Geniest de Reitz des Lebens. (To Young Men) (Brave boys, would you live wisely): 4362
A Song of Hedgehogs, in the Nerse Dialect (Once on a time two hedgehogs lived in a cosy-posy hole): 6859
A Song of Hope (Heavy the brooding mist; all prone and still): 12471
A Song of Liberty (He who loveth Truth and Beauty): 4034
A Song of Love and May. (Freely translated from Goethe) (What gleams of glad laughter): 8409
A Song of Nereids (Ding, dong, bell!): 2092
A Song of Old Age (Sing me a song of old age): 3962
A Song of Pitcairn's Island (Come, take our boy, and we will go): 11129
A Song of Proverbs (In ancient days, tradition says): 9675
A Song of Rest (O weary Hands! that, all the day): 12994
A Song of Seasons (Spring with her cowslip-balls): 2418
A Song of Silence (I love you so): 2285
A Song of Summer (My love and I went maying when the bloom was on the thorn): 2201
A Song of Summer (Oh, lovely sunbeams through the meadows dancing): 13040
A Song of Summer (Sing me a song of Summer): 2559
A Song of Sunset (Sweet the rose that the winds have smitten): 673
A Song of the Fates (Cantant. Blood, and fire, and wine, and tears): 13838
A Song of the Olive Tree (Writhen with anguish): 13848
A Song of the Road (Among the hills he woke): 15962
A Song of the Sea (Dark and dismal is the day): 8594
A Song of the Season (While wintry winds howl through the night): 6840
A Song of the Season (Yet once again, before we part): 6510
A Song of the Seasons (Autumn winds sighing): 2156
A Song of the Seasons (When Spring comes laughing): 2637
A Song of the Thames (Forth of the wolds where the west-winds are blowing): 14835
A Song of the Youths (Lo, in the palace, lo, in the street): 13825
A Song of Three Words. Orare, Laborare, et Cantare (Three blissful words I name to thee): 2483
A Song of Wind and Sea (The wind comes down to the gray-walled town): 12501
A Song of Youth and Age (When on the dimpled cheek of Youth): 13086
A Song Which None but the Redeemed can Sing (Through water and through fire): 384
A Song, Sung at a Dinner given to Colonel Lyndsay, by the Conservatives of Fifeshire (Like a plain-speaking soldier has Wellington): 11613
A Sonnet ("To be and not to do!" To idly lie): 12551
A Sonnet (As when some workers, toiling at a loom): 12934
A Sonnet (So soft your words were when you went away): 12580
A Sonnet (Who shall declare the glory of the world): 8865
A Sonnet (With love's uncertain strife my heart is torn): 12631
A Sonnet in the Manner of Petrarch (Come tender thoughts, with twilight’s pensive gloom): 14889
A Sonnet. Suggested by the "True Story of Lady Byron's Life" (And now the veil is lifted from the shrine): 13791
A Soul in All Things (There lives and works): 3526
A Soul in Prison ("Answered a score of times." Oh, looked-for teacher): 14209
A South Sea Island (Island of Rest, Pearl of the Southern Sea): 12503
A Southern Song (Love kissed my eyes, until they grew): 1068
A Spanish Anecdote (It was a holy usage to record): 4775
A Speech (There came, with his speech, "the young glory of Erin"): 8324
A Spell (I have dwelt in a City whose beauty): 2297
A Spirit Present (If from that strange and unknown sphere): 6470
A Spirit-Guardian (I think that through the dismal night): 12908
A Spiritual Song (from the German of Novalis) (Without thee, what were I, worth being?): 2136
A Sprig of Thorn (I smell thee, thorn, brought in my city room): 6925
A Spring Birthday (What blossom shall we choose): 4872
A Spring Bouquet (Rails the rude Wind-king through the surging sea): 6947
A Spring Bridal Song (The Spring has come! The Spring has come!): 1756
A Spring Chanson (The glad Spring-tide is here again): 13233
A Spring Dream (Here rest awhile, the violet's blue): 13424
A Spring Flower (She holds a snow-drop in her hand): 4916
A Spring Madrigal (When lily bells ring out perfume): 6559
A Spring Morning (O! Fair the glorious morning wakes to life): 12498
A Spring Morning (There is calm upon the ocean; with a low and gentle motion): 6315
A Spring Morning (When sparrows in the brightening sun): 6950
A Spring Sketch (A fair spring morn it is, so warm and still): 7254
A Spring Song (Oh, the drifting scent of the violet buds): 4684
A Spring Song (Sweet! let me see thine eyes, and place thine hand): 4711
A Spring Thought (The spring tide flutters to the earth): 2487
A Stage in Life (The days are sleeting by, and melt away): 7654
A Steadfast Tower (Upon the weary waves of the world): 2914
A Stirrup-Cup Song (Fill high the stirrup-cup, my friends): 12540
A Stolen Visit (When you are wrapt in happy sleep): 3816
A Storm (The zigzag silver flashes, and the boom): 7693
A Story of Denmark (In days of old, a Danish king once loved a lady fair): 14244
A Story of Olden Time (So spake the gentle Lady Maude): 348
A Story of the Evil Eye (There came unto an Austrian town): 1947
A Story That Never Grows Old (A youth and a maiden low-talking): 12846
A Stray Sunbeam (A sunbeam gone astray): 13764
A Stream's Singing (O how beautiful is Morning!): 6479
A Street Idyll (Wind-shaken lilies, silver-belled and sweet): 2480
A Stroll by Startlight (We left the Village. On the beaten road): 1107
A Strong-Minded Woman ("Strong-minded woman?" She—so frail a thing): 2295
A Sultan's Warning (In days now past, (why need we name the year?)): 1215
A Summary of the Times in Nursery Rhymes (This is the wall the Whigs built): 11616
A Summer Anthem (A lily floating down the stream, and borne by silver tide away): 4074
A Summer Day (Dear little isle of ours! your very clouds): 11023
A Summer Day (The flowers lay sleeping beneath the dew): 7305
A Summer Dream (Sweet flowers, how many parts ye play): 2458
A Summer Evening's Love Story (Come, Harriet, sit a while; this July eve): 10161
A Summer Gloaming (The dead day's funeral torches glow): 4823
A Summer Memory (Here, where these low lush meadows lie): 6927
A Summer Memory (The church was strange to me): 4863
A Summer Memory (The leaves that danced in the summer glory): 13079
A Summer Night (The shadowy garden fades before my sight): 1936
A Summer Night in Manika (Like one of that all tender Sisterhood): 13311
A Summer Night’s Dreaming (How misty, faint, and far away): 1563
A Summer Noon (A dell knee-deep with flower-sprinkled grass): 4161
A Summer Requiem (Spirit of summer! thou whose honeyed sweets): 7088
A Summer Scene (Laden come the maidens home): 8099
A Summer Solitude (Broad slopes, robed regally in purple ling): 13197
A Summer Song (Welcome, welcome, green leaves, so discreetly hiding): 4342
A Summer Sonnet (It is the Summer-time; sweet odours rife): 13091
A Summer Storm (Ae smileless morn, beneath a thorn): 14057
A Summer Sunset (Green islands in a golden sea): 3699
A Summer Thought (Dazzling the landscape lies): 13198
A Summer Wooing. A Song (Up and away!—up, up, and away!): 13189
A Summer-Day Idyll (Morn on the mountains far and wide): 2792
A Summer-Day Reverie (June's blooming flowers and fragrance sweet): 7066
A Summer's Day (It was a lovely day, a summer's day): 7507
A Summer's Day (Overhead a sapphire sky): 8918
A Sunbeam (The wet winds are sighing, the rain patters down): 4977
A Sunday in Norway (We looked up from our Northern valley to the wall of the craggy height): 5568
A Sunday Pastoral (Colin. Good Morning, Keatie—Fie, for shame): 10243
A Sunflower (Earth hides her secrets deep): 14568
A Sunset (A bright, clear streak of sunset gold): 12918
A Sunset (A soft sweet ripple comes over the sea): 13109
A Sunset on Yarrow (The wind and the day had lived together): 14424
A Swan (Emblem of love unmarr'd): 2199
A Swing (O they made her a swing on a gossamer tree; on the lowest bough of a gossamer tree): 2058
A Symphony of Beethoven (What have I seen and heard? Mourning and laughter): 8340
A Tale of a Comic Song (I went one day to take a quiet walk through Camden Town): 13735
A Tale of St. Michael's Mount (Bright o'er the castle beamed the morn): 13923
A Tale of the Aqueduct (The hour was near: and in her cloistered cell): 15742
A Tale of the Rhine (Sir Rupert the fearless, a gallant young knight): 11905
A Tale of the Tower ("He shall not faint—who in the Lord"): 15168
A Tender Memory (A little footstep pattering on the floor): 6966
A Terror of the Twilight (Far in Norwegian solitudes we strayed): 9080
A Thanksgiving For His House (Lord, Thou hast given me a cell): 3450
A Thought (O could we step into the grave): 8019
A Thought for March, 1860 (Yon blackbird's merry heart the rushing wind): 13949
A Thought from Phantastes (I have a bitter thought: a snake): 2688
A Thought in a Wheat-Field (In His fields the Master walketh): 6686
A Thought in Summer (It was a day in June; my heart, perplexed): 7506
A Thought on Man (In the long past, what time fair Science smiled): 508
A Thrush's Song (A song of exultation, strange and sweet): 12745
A Thrush's Song (The fire burned low, the day was nearly ended): 4566
A Time of Peace (Golden leaves, and a golden day): 3934
A Touch of Pity (Forth they set at early morn): 2741
A Town Garden (Back from the busy noises of the street): 5144
A Transformation ('Twas but a narrow, city way): 13302
A Transformation (How did she change me: who can tell?): 12433
A Traveller's Apostrophe to an English Landscape (I have wandered like an Ishmael to nations east and west): 6263
A Tree in the Street (Though varied their features, yet equally creatures): 1475
A Triad (In the dreary forest arches leaves of gold and bronze are falling): 12683
A Triad (One of the few that loved me): 971
A True and Perfect Account of the Landing of King George the Fourth in Ireland (Muse! take up your joyful fiddle): 9499
A True Ghost Story ("For sale, the old mansion house, Haseley the Great"): 8532
A True Hero. James Braidwood: Died June 22nd, 1861 (Not at the battle front): 14255
A True Knight (Though he lived and died among us): 1341
A Tryst (Her red-gold locks by broad blue ribbons bound): 4048
A Tryste of Old (Red-stemm'd firs whose purple boughs): 13402
A Twilight Picture (’Tis a sweet Sabbath eve in summer-time): 7390
A Twilight Song (The thrush has piped his last clear note): 13193
A Twilight Sonnet (A blush, a smile, a dusk sweet violet): 13152
A Twist-imony, in Favour of Gin-twist, an Humble Imitation of That Admirable Poem, the Ex-ale-tation of Ale, Attributed by Grave Authors to Bishop Andrews, on Which Point Is to Be Consulted, Francis, Lord Verulam, a Celebrated Philosopher, Who Has Been Lately Be-scoped-and Tendencied by Macvey Napier, Esq (At one in the morn, as I went staggering home): 9892
A Unit (One radiant dream makes all the night less gloomy): 2052
A Vagrant's Deathbed (The winds dropp'd their voice to a whisper of love): 1176
A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning (As virtuous men pass mildly away): 8043
A Valentine (A girl, who has so many wilful ways): 6264
A Valentine (By the moss-grown wicket gate): 13125
A Valentine (Comrades, leave me here a while, while as yet ’tis half-past nine): 882
A Valentine (Oh love, lost love, do you as I remember): 4676
A Valley Scene (A wood's dark border with black, blurring line): 6764
A Venetian Bridal (She is dancing in the palace): 3217
A View in the Island of Tanna (Sea wanderers we, our "wave-worn" bark): 14627
A View in the Val d'Arno (A plain all bathed in golden mist, with soft): 1058
A View Near Taranto (A long low coast, fringing a milky sea): 655
A Vigil (Here alone with my dead; the sight of a human face): 14383
A Vigil (Is this the dawn that slowly leaves): 13324
A Village Sketch (Close by the clover field in green arrayed): 14052
A Village Tale (The rooks are cawing in the elms): 1092
A Violet (God does not send us strange flowers every year): 2189
A Violin-Maker in the North (Out from the noisome pit, from black caverns below the ground): 2183
A Vision (An ambient garment encircled her): 1680
A Vision (Gloomy and black are the cypress trees): 1360
A Vision of Combs. Addressed to the "Forget Me Not" (Forget them not! oh, still forget them not!): 15163
A Vision of Great Eastern (Like a huge landslip, lo, the monster glides): 6394
A Vision of Green Leaves (The time was Winter, Winter or the Spring): 359
A Vision of Hours (When the bright stars came out last night): 1384
A Vision of Old Babylon (Outleaping from the Present's narrow cage): 1411
A Vision Of Spring (The day I crossed the pasture lands): 2074
A Vision of the Deep (I thought upon the horrid shapes that inhabited the sea): 10615
A Vision of the World (A blossom on a laurel tree–a cloudlet on the sky): 9965
A Vision. (Allegorical) (Legions of splendours there I saw, as stars): 4793
A Voice From Afar (Weep not for me): 10488
A Voice from Beverley (Hark, the doleful prison bell): 52
A Voice from the Factory (I hear men laud the coming Exhibition): 1177
A Voice from the Woods (I wander through the Autumn woods): 12928
A Voice of Bygone Days (Could I but hear the voice once more): 13342
A Voice of Bygone Days (Could I but hear the voice once more): 13352
A Voice to the People (Why are we chained?—I asked my brother slaves): 152
A Voluntary Testimonial (Under the "daisy quilt"): 12232
A Waif (Sad fate is thine, most desolate of birds): 12939
A Wail for Dædalus (Wail for Dædalus, all that is fairest!): 14640
A Wail from Cottonopolis (O mighty Wilson, Chairman of the League): 9466
A Wall-Flower (My spirit rises to the music's beat): 666
A Warning (Place your hands in mine, dear): 1509
A Wassail for the New Year (Bring in the steaming bowl, my lads): 1229
A Watery Grave (When this frail form returns to dust): 10576
A Wayside Thought (Three nut-brown children of our English lanes): 12260
A Wayside Whisper (Seven years I served for you): 12362
A Wedding Wish. To a Young Couple (The Cynosure of midnight skies): 15330
A Wee Bit Name (A wee bit name! O wae's the heart): 6187
A Weird Scene (Dimly and slowly breaks the dawn): 13150
A Welcome (Give me your hand! Oh, brother! see where rises): 4732
A Welcome (Whose bark from Baltic isles to ours): 14038
A Welcome Sacrifice (Vain is the blood of rare and spotless herds): 6162
A Welcome to his Majesty King George the Fourth, on his Arrival in Ireland, MDCCCXXI (You're welcome over, my royal rover): 9426
A Welcome. April 27, 1882 (The thrushes were singing between the showers): 14675
A Wet Day at Brighton (When London's growing dark and dull, the atmosphere with vapour rife): 6388
A Widow's Wail (Oh thou art lovely yet, my boy): 5229
A Wife (The wife sat thoughtfully turning over): 250
A Wife's Pardon (Now that the first wild pang is past and over): 1434
A Wife's Wonder (If I had never met thee, my beloved): 2002
A Wild-Flower Wreath (If stranger hands might dare): 15289
A Wind out of the West (A wind is come out of the west): 1903
A Wind-Storm At Night (O sudden blast, that through night's silence black): 6173
A Winnower's Song to the Winds (To you, O airy band): 8836
A Winter Ditty (No green may show thro' drifted snow): 13124
A Winter Evening (Lo! as the marshalling shades of eve invest): 7282
A Winter Evening (To-day Eve quits betimes a sullen sea): 7235
A Winter Fantasy. (Imitated from Théophile Gautier) (Your veil is thick, and none would know): 12215
A Winter Love-Song (Dear, if my love could change this earth for thee): 12424
A Winter Morning (It was upon a wint'ry morn): 8420
A Winter Night's Dream (Once more amid the woods!—Loud howls the wind): 10298
A Winter Picture (Linked hands of woman and of man): 4615
A Winter Picture (The winter-rime is on the apple-trees): 12863
A Winter Piece (Day has awaken'd all things: all night long): 13513
A Winter Reverie (Now slowly fades and dies the light of day): 3648
A Winter Sermon (Thou dwellest in a warm and cheerful home): 1159
A Winter Song (Snow-flakes, soft veiling): 16046
A Winter Thought (Oh! oft, in the depth of a dark winter's day): 15395
A Winter Wedding. (At Chiselhurst Church, January 9, 1873) (It fled away in a clang of bells): 2429
A Winter-Night's Bacchantë (The little tumult of the hour is past): 8942
A Wintry Sonnet (A Robin said: The Spring will never come): 14775
A Wish (Dreary are the nights in winter): 6836
A Wish (Fair tender flower sure art thou, Jessamine!): 2713
A Wish (Mine be a cot beside the hill): 2979
A Wish (Mine be a cot beside the hill): 3445
A Wish (Oh, that I were the Spirit of a Plant): 1087
A Wish (To dwell in an eternal): 8342
A Wish (Would I were a tiny flower): 12726
A Wish and a Warning (When thou think'st of days gone by): 3194
A Wish. (From the German of Robert Reinick) (I loved thee, but thou knewest it not): 12052
A Woman (Her shape from air its lightness seemed to take): 7182
A Woman! (A silent tongue and speaking eyes): 13971
A Woman's "No" (He spoke to her with manly word,—): 2649
A Woman's Love (Her voice is unspeakably sweet): 14069
A Woman's Question (Before I trust my fate to thee): 1477
A Woman's Shortcomings (She has laughed as softly as if she sighed): 11061
A Woman's Soliloquy Before Her Mirror (Ah, wherefore do I seek to twine): 12864
A Woman's Soul (I am no painter, yet some fair plain): 1051
A Woman's Wisdom (You blame me that I cannot love): 9256
A Woman's Wish (I sigh not for the poet's wreath): 5685
A Woodland Retreat (This hospitable lodge hath harboured me): 15278
A Word from the Cannon's Mouth (Tremble no more to hear my voice!): 1216
A Word in Season (They have a superstition in the East): 4999
A Word to Young Poets (Why should Sorrow interlace): 1203
A Word with Despondency ("Raise thine eyes, raise thine head"): 6736
A Word with John Bright (Yes, I would, for one hour, that John Bright had his way): 9010
A Word; With a New Moral (In a humble cottage): 5196
A World at Peace (Shaping the shadows of dim times to come): 1172
A Worthy Memory Kept Green. After the Fashion of a Ballad. June 23, A. D. 1314 (Never a braver knight has been): 177
A Year Ago (A year ago we walked the woods): 2624
A Year Ago (Just a little year ago): 12931
A Year of Love (It was a year ago): 15020
A Year's Wooing ('Twas autumn when first they stood on the bridge): 12796
A Young Girl Seen Once, on a Beautiful Evening in May, in Church (Was she an orphan? Can another grief): 11503
A Young Lady's Soliloquy (Uselessly, aimlessly, drifting through life): 6710
A Young Lady's Wish (I'm tired of myself and my nation): 3270
A Young Poet's Musing (Would that I were upon yon lone green hill): 5275
A Youthful Abbot. Written for the christening fete of Charles Stuart Abbott, son of the Hon. Charles Abbott; March 12 (This newly-come, young "Abbot" see): 4460
A Zetland Winter (Now frowns the sun-god on the Northland dark): 13172
A—Further—Meditation for his Mistress (You are the treasury that God): 8772
A'Beckett's Troth (Prison'd in Palestine, A'Beckett saw): 585
Abercrombie Came Down Like a Wolf on the Fold (Abercrombie came down like a wolf on the fold): 11216
Aberglaube (I know of a noble Lady): 12247
Abjuration (There was a time—sweet time of youthful folly!): 10402
Above and Below (Mighty river, oh! mighty river): 5960
Above Rubies (From her rich coronal of shining hair): 2527
Abraham and the Fire-Worshipper. A Dramatic Parable (Fire-Worshipper (aside). What have I said, or done, that by degrees): 1035
Abraham Lincoln (Lincoln! when men would name a man): 14182
Absence (Ah! he is gone—and I alone!): 3141
Absence (Just nine long years since I had from them gone): 758
Absence (The April sunshine, soft and fair): 7238
Absent Friends (The night has flown wi' sangs and glee): 3730
Absit Omen (There never was anything like to-day!): 12900
Abuse of Monastic Power (And what is Penance with her knotted thong): 9843
Account of the Milling-match between Entellus and Dares, translated from the Fifth Book of the Æneid (With daddles high uprais'd, and nob held back): 8378
Achilles (Immortal Thetis, looking through the years): 954
Achilles Over the Trench. Iliad, xviii.202 (So saying, light-foot Iris pass'd away): 7852
Acis and Galatæa (Soft was the evening; sweet the breeze): 4749
Aconites (Broad green leaves, and cup of gold): 4813
Acontius and Cydippe ("Great Goddess Dian! Goddess of young maids!"): 726
Across the Downs (Right across the downs): 2615
Across the Sea (Smooth o'er the yellow sand the waters spread): 13158
Across the Seas (Her foot falls faintly on the sand): 13211
Acrostic (O! There are joys that hoar December brings): 13488
Acrostic on a Patroness of Almack's (Can empty title claim the world's applause): 3799
Acrostique Upon Old Lord Wharton (Whigg's the first letter of his odious name): 9796
AD M. Majum (Not far I went): 15917
Ad Matrem Mortuam (Dear Mother-eyes): 12505
Ad Misericordiam (It would not cost you much, dear): 702
Ad Percevallum e Granta exiturum, A. D. 1783 (O may the Muse sprightliest vein): 8283
Ada's Lament (The moon shines clear o'er land and sea): 4785
Adalieta. (From Boccaccio) (Long years agone—so saith the chronicler): 844
Adam Harkness (Old Adam Harkness stoops beneath the load): 9169
Adams and Jefferson (They have gone to their rest full of honour and years): 93
Address (Another year is gone and past): 15875
Address to a Brandy Bottle (You old brandy bottle, I've loved you too long): 5835
Address to a Lady Who Was Gathering a Convolvulus for an Evening Party (Touch not that flower, ’tis sacred to repose): 15671
Address to a Wife (Oh! hadst thou never shared my fate): 7077
Address to a Wild Deer (Magnificent creature! so stately and bright!): 10446
Address to Spring (The harp so loved awakes no more): 5372
Address to The Bell-Rock Lighthouse (Strange fancies rise at sight of thee): 3130
Address to the Enslaved Millions (Oh! spirit of the injured, why): 63
Address to the Moon (Daughter of beauty, born of heavenly race): 9500
Address to the Mummy in Belzoni's Exhibition (And thou hast walk'd about (how strange a story!)): 2965
Address to the Ocean. On Columbus Setting Sail to Discover America (Be calm, thou Ocean! he who sails on thee): 15351
Address to the Statue of Hymen (Hymen, thou art depicted with a torch): 11702
Address to Tyrants (Ye tyrants, whose deeds cast a withering blight): 140
Address, Written for Miss Smith, (Now Mrs. Bartley) (When the lone pilgrim views afar): 15739
Addressed to a Mother, on her Child's Death (Ask to forget the Past—except): 7475
Adele (Scant of stars is the shadowy sky): 13772
Adeline (Mystery of mysteries): 11152
Adeline. A Ballad (The night was dark, the thunder rolled): 9069
Adieu (Shall you not love me, sweet): 13808
Adieu to Romance (Farewell to wild Romance): 11972
Adieus of Queen Mary (Delightful land of France, farewell): 3748
Admission (Here by Heaven's decree I stand): 8988
Admonition (Yes, there is holy pleasure in thine eye!): 2988
Adolfus, Duke of Guelders. Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries (Adolfus, Duke of Guelders, having died): 2850
Adrift (Ever the waterlily rocked): 14673
Adrift (Why dost thou let thy life drift o'er the sea): 13376
Advertisement. Wants a Place (A faithful creature, trained to serving): 3122
Advice to a Painter (Best of painters, show thy art): 6021
Advice to Dwellers in Towns. By a dweller in Manchester (Dear England! blessings on thy soil): 5475
Afar in the Desert (Afar in the desert I love to ride): 2967
Afar In the Desert (Afar in the Desert I love to ride): 3613
Affection (O lead thy children in Affection's way): 11556
Affinity (In an old-world temple two blocks of stone): 8520
Affliction (When winter's snowy covering wraps): 6858
After (If some day in the after-years): 13138
After a Woe (Let us not be afraid of sorest things): 4218
After Autumn (No more the shocks of Corn): 12319
After Dusk (Pale gleam the stars in the dark sky): 2783
After Evensong (An eventime in spring—): 4834
After Harvest (The harvest now is over, and the sheaves): 13105
After Heine (I've written couplets to my lady's eyes): 14506
After Hurlingham (I'd souped, I'd fished, had my cut off the leg): 14278
After Long Months (After long months we meet again): 12741
After Many Days (How lonely seemed her life now she had lost): 2545
After Many Days (There is a noble river making glad): 12499
After Many Psalms (My heart before the God of innocence I lay me): 7913
After Many Years (Throw wide the window; let us stand): 12644
After Night (Up-springs the lark all boisterous, jubilant): 4237
After Rain (Clear shining after rain; the great grey seas): 4987
After Rain (Dark storms of rain have passed away): 14841
After Spring (Fair as a maiden's dream): 4082
After Summer (Where late the wild bee brushed): 12024
After Sunset (One tremulous star above the deepening west): 12757
After Ten Years (Come out beyond this house and garden pale): 12310
After Ten Years (If I could make a poem that was full of life and wit): 12427
After the Ball. A Buffo Lyric (The very last guest has departed): 5484
After the Battle (My father, hero of the smile so sweet!): 382
After the Battle (On the field where the battle has late been won): 2464
After the Battle (The drums are all muffled; the bugles are still): 6495
After the Battle of Hastings (The morning sun rose on a gorgeous scene): 1720
After the Chinese (Although I am a slave): 14503
After the Concert (My better self! my Stradiuarius! we): 2766
After the Rain (All day above the tired earth had lain): 4685
After the Rain (All day the wild nor'-easter had swept across the plain): 4660
After the Rain (The sunset on the water's breast): 5561
After the Storm (Along the shore, along the shore): 1624
After the Storm (The storm has passed; yet still a troubled moaning): 13049
After the Verdict September 1899 (France, cloven in twain by fire of hell and hate): 8725
After the War (They took him at that pleasant time): 2425
After the Wreck (What of the ocean's roar?): 4677
After Thoughts (“Yet one kiss, dear:—yet another one”): 15997
After Visiting the Field of Waterloo (A winged Goddess, clothed in vesture wrought): 9860
After Winter (Not yet the infant Spring): 12321
After-Glow (There's just enough of the daylight left): 2352
After-Thoughts (And thou art dead! Thou, too, hast passed away): 13224
Afternoon ("Oh sweet," she said, "that afternoon"): 2626
Afternoon Tea (A drive through drooping elms, half drowned): 13636
Afterward (O strange, O sad perplexity): 7577
Against System Builders (All men, both great and small, are fain): 8983
Agassiz (Once in the leafy prime of Spring): 4189
Agatha (From the shade of her simple straw hat): 6792
Agatha (From under the shade of her simple straw hat): 7870
Agathon (Away with me to Athens, Agathon!): 10128
Agnes (I open again the garden-door): 6788
Agnes Brown [Died 14th January 1820, aged eighty-eight; buried in Bolton churchyard, near Haddington] (The spring birds sing, nor care if no one listen): 12896
Ah, Little Maiden! (Ah, little maiden, frank and fair): 4194
Ah, Me! (I measure life by gravestones, not by years): 13608
Ah! Me, ’Tis Winter Yet (I know a time shall be): 12748
Ah! Thyrsis, weep no more: though both thine eyes (Ah! Thyrsis, weep no more: though both thine eyes): 14131
Ah! Years Have Loitered By, Mother (Ah! years have loitered by, mother): 6787
Aileen's Song (The night is dark, the wind is high): 4403
Ailie Mushat's Cairn. A Vision-Like Remembrance of a Vision (The night was dark; not a star was view'd): 9163
Aimless (Aimless to float upon the tide of life): 295
Aitchison's Carbineers (Let others talk of Elcho): 10182
Akin (Great thoughts of mighty minds that crownèd run): 12236
Al Fin de la Jornada (The gathered storm was ripe, the big drops fell): 455
Alas! (Since, if you stood by my side to-day): 6598
Albert Durer (True artists live within the clouds): 695
Albert's Tomb (Some two-and-twenty golden years ago): 411
Alcibiades (He leans upon her breast, his own, his loving one): 167
Alexander Restores to Athens the Spoils Carried off by Xerxes (Raise, Athens, raise thy loftiest tone!): 8755
Alexander the Great ("How big was Alexander, pa"): 105
Alfred of England (King beloved, a thousand years have found thee): 15004
Alfred the Harper (Dark fell the night, the watch was set): 14665
Alfred the Hero King. A Historical Ballad (I will sing of Saxon Alfred): 8626
Algiers (Algiers! wild Algiers!): 11442
Alice (Bright star amid the cloud-forms of the past): 1419
Alice (I saw her sleeping in her shroud): 13998
Alice (In her golden chamber): 13480
Alice (In royal Bessy's days, that doughty maid): 15602
Alice Gray (Sweet Alice Gray is dead): 15674
Alice Lee (Through the dim and lonely forest): 15357
Alice. A Dramatic Scene (This is the spot so loved, so long unseen!): 14213
Alice's Posies (As an old house, very old, so that decay): 1262
Aline (The play-ground's jocund voices mute): 5009
All About a Little Bird (It was not in the blooming May): 2770
All Alone! (When the swallows flee away): 6711
All But ("He hath saved a thousand lives!" they cried): 15021
All Contrary ("Here I stand with blue eyes"): 1646
All Hallow Eve (Through all hearts runs a vein of superstition): 13564
All Loss and Yet All Gain ("If it be God's well, I trust, I shall get well"): 15022
All Saints (Men may not mark them in the crowded ways): 5024
All Saints' Day (At New College Chapel, Oxford) (I shall find them again, I shall find them again): 2473
All Sides of the River (We, with distaste, across the water wan): 13695
All the Year Round (All the year round: its changes but remind us): 1516
All Things Perish Save Virtue (Sweet spring—so full of shine and showers): 5357
All Through the Day (All through the day, my love, watching thine eye): 2802
All' Italia. Translation (Italia! O Italia! unto whom): 14035
All's Well (The long night-watch is over; fresh and chill): 14007
Allgemeines (Jesus, as He walked through the world): 8980
Alma Mater (Edinburgh University) (Gray Mother of three hundred years!): 12685
Almond-Blossom (At last I draw the veil aside): 4710
Alms (An infirm old man passed along a broad highway): 14746
Alone ('Twas midnight, and he sat alone): 5925
Alone (Alone by the ocean at even to wander): 7042
Alone (Alone we tread life's devious pathways, sent): 13201
Alone (Alone! I scarcely breathe the word): 5791
Alone (Alone!): 1695
Alone (I am alone–within the world alone): 386
Alone (I miss you, my darling, my darling): 4637
Alone (I think that I am never quite alone): 4933
Alone (It is the smiling month of May): 6544
Alone (Patient and faithful, and tender and true): 6412
Alone (To whisper, "Look, how beautiful it is!"): 4588
Alone in Chambers—The Old Latin Grammar (My poor old dog's-eared Latin grammar): 3315
Alone in London (By her fault or by ill fate): 12398
Alpin’s Lamentation for Morar (Tearful, oh, Ryno, is my joyless day): 9503
Altabiscar. From the Basque (On the broad Basque mountains arose a cry): 4869
Altar and Grave (The spring-time loveliness decays): 13104
Am Schweitz (We saw the nest of snow and ice): 907
Amabel at Work. Triolet (Last evening when I passed ye farm): 676
Amalia (Fair as an angel from his blessed hall): 10025
Amaranth (Through the dim gate of phantasy): 4244
Amari Aliquid (If ever at the fount of joy): 9245
Amata (Who has not known Amata): 297
Amata Loquitur (Again, O Christ, the bell at Llanagryn!): 8821
Ambitious Dreams (Oh, had I but a plot of earth, on plain, or vale, or hill): 5071
Amen!—In the Cathedral, St. Andrews (Here stood the altar in the ancient days): 9671
American Wild Flowers, for Queen Victoria (Fair Sovereign, whose young maiden brow): 15416
Ammergau: An Idyll ("Where is he gone? O men and maidens, where"): 14405
Amo (When he told me that he loved me): 12185
Amœbæan (The sky has lost the happy lustre): 2647
Among the Corn (The girl sat down, ’mid the rustling corn): 1907
Among the Daisies (Lay her down among the daisies): 12807
Among the Deaths ("Of fever, in Africa, Richard Brand."): 841
Among the Reeds (The streamlet leapt from rock to rock): 687
Among the Ruins (A voice amidst grey ruins clearly singing): 4481
Among the Sand-Hills (Silence among the sand-hills): 4055
Among the Sheaves (Among the sheaves—the golden sheaves): 691
Among the Sheaves (O Lord, the fields are ripe with corn): 5093
Among the Tombs ("I think I never saw this place so fair"): 6262
Amor Mortuus (Long years ago, when all the world was young): 4633
Amor Patiens (Voices whispered in her ear): 13576
Amor Umbratilis (A gift of silence, Sweet!): 8927
Amphibrachs (Now farewell to Lulow): 12552
Amy's Cruelty ("Fair Amy of the terraced house"): 5760
Amy's Swallow (Dead is Amy's friendly swallow): 7001
An "Out-of-Date" Couple (We are "so out of date," they say): 13347
An Abiding Dream (Where the mill-stream blindly rushes): 1219
An Account of the Lord Mayor's Show (One foggy, muggy, shivery day): 13804
An Acorn (Within this little shell doth lie): 3669
An Act for a publique Thanksgiving to Almighty God every yeare, on the fift day of November, Enacted November the fift, 1605 ("Whereas Almightie God hath in all ages shew'd his power"): 14064
An Adieu (May Peace be thine, my Love): 5195
An Allegory (An ancient room,—through high-latticed casements): 13422
An Alpine Idea (Throned emblems of Eternity, that rear): 4995
An Ancient Russian Legend ("Our brawny shoulders are not tired, nor do our"): 500
An Angel Has Passed O'er the Desolate Waste! (These clustering wild flowers not always have grown): 5752
An Angler's Garland. The Angler's April (April dawns.—Sweet month, when doves): 8848
An Anniversary (In a chamber oak and oaken): 7053
An Anniversary (Ten years have passed away): 2804
An Anticipation for a Certain Coquette (She died—and behold, with her lures and her leers): 2955
An Apology ('Tis true that my glances have wandered): 163
An Appeal for the "Cripples' Home" (Another summer, God be praised, has blessed us as of yore): 15851
An Appeal for the Birds to their Natural Friends (O Grace beyond all grace on earth): 2260
An Appeal to Scotchmen. (Occasioned by seeing the procession of the Unemployed Operatives of Glasgow, last Friday week) (Ye descendants of patriots, and martyrs of old): 151
An Apple-Gathering (I plucked pink blossoms from mine apple-tree): 14256
An April Allegro (When the rocks within the elm): 4041
An April Morning (It is a joyous morning): 6641
An April Sermon (Fair Nelly is a butterfly): 4226
An April Song (My heart leaps up on a bright Spring day): 3975
An April Song (Round the world and through the world): 2262
An Artisan's Story (You ask my story? I have led): 376
An Artist's Dream (Under the boughs of an apple tree): 2628
An August Twilight (Now, while the evening mists above the ground): 7265
An Auld Wife's Address to The Moon (You are rising, O Moon, through the thicket of trees): 3033
An Aurora Borealis (O strange soft gleam! O ghostly dawn): 7706
An Autumn Birthday (Not beautiful,—but in thine eyes): 524
An Autumn Dawn (The sun-mist spreads a woof of quivering gold): 4049
An Autumn Dawning (Night-visitants of human homes): 12775
An Autumn Dirge (Autumn has come, and the latter grey half of the year, that will scatter): 5022
An Autumn Elegy (Now it is fitting, and becomes us all): 800
An Autumn Eve (When o'er the cloud bar grim and grey): 4939
An Autumn Evening (How lingers long the sunset light): 12728
An Autumn Evening (In scattered plumes the floating clouds): 7185
An Autumn Evening (The hectic afternoon to evening pale): 7666
An Autumn Hour (More than the glow of June was in the branch): 7564
An Autumn Idyll (A sunny calm upon the moorland lies): 5087
An Autumn Lyric (High o'er the forest the storm clouds are flying): 8546
An Autumn Melody (What notes of what ditty can sound from the city): 13263
An Autumn Moonlight (Beyond the trancéd shadow of new night): 656
An Autumn Morning (White with entangled mists, the cold woods wear): 7276
An Autumn Psalm for 1860 (No shadow o'er the silver sea): 365
An Autumn Shadow (It is golden September, fragrant and bounteous): 1433
An Autumn Song (The glory from the wan year dies): 6934
An Autumn Song (The road was long and dreary and my heart was sore opprest): 2660
An Autumn Sunday (The marbled sky is bright and cold): 7197
An Autumn Walk (Sweet is the smile of the vernal morn): 10248
An Early Passage in Sir John Perrot's Life (The evening tide is on the turn; so calm the waters flow): 3571
An Early Summer Morning (Lo! how the mists, that until now have curled): 7264
An Early Visiter (The dewy Morn, with golden feet): 15832
An Earthly Paradise (Wake, my baby! Wake, my nestling! Wake to all your wond'rous world!): 5060
An East Indian Forest (No silence and no solitude, with night): 15502
An Easter Message (There was of old a child, born of a maiden): 2678
An Easter Text (Waiting so long in the earth-dark low): 1770
An Easter Thought (Sings the thrush from branches budding): 7545
An Eastern Legend (Who, in Bagdad, does not know the great Djaffar): 14916
An Eastern Legend Versified, from Alphonse De Lamartine's Travels ('Twas just when harvest-tide was gone): 14013
An Eastern Night (Here the manguasteens swell, the magnolias bloom): 3560
An Eclogue. Christopher—Duke—the Sub (In the Blue Chamber, far from vulgar eyes): 10116
An Emblem of Translation (Not of one growth the solemn forests are): 1008
An Emigrant (He was young and fragile, and he was poor): 2509
An Emigrant's Glance Homeward (Far, far from those whose tender watchings bred me): 1244
An Ending Day (All cheerless fell the parting of the day): 8943
An English Maiden's Love ('Twas in grand heroic days): 763
An English Swallow-Song (The Rhodians in their sunny isle): 6913
An English Village Sunday Morning (And now, methinks, with cheerful sunny ray): 3268
An English Wife (Whilst the ship goes swiftly rushing): 1402
An English Workman's Address to England (Oh! England, how we doat on thee): 8
An Enigma ('Tis seen early each day, and heard of every hour): 5468
An Enigma. Addressed to the Ladies (We are in kindred many–far and wide): 4773
An Epistle to My Braine (I wonder, braine, thou art so dull, when there): 9062
An Epitaph ("I will be rich!" I said): 6905
An Epitaph (O! stranger, could thy fancy know): 14302
An Evening in Furness Abbey (An Apparition hung amid the hush): 10342
An Evening Musing (The witching scents of thorn and orchard-blooms): 13271
An Evening Sketch (The birds have ceased their song): 9722
An Evening Voice (O'er mellow wood and mournful stream): 261
An Evening Walk (The Patriarch mild, who mused at evening-tide): 9127
An Evening Walk in Bengal (Our task is done!—on Gunga's breast): 5260
An Every-Day Hero ("Tell us," the children to their grandsire said): 1116
An Every-Day Tale (Mine is a tale of every day): 15235
An Excellent New Song (Ye noisy Reformers who rant and who bawl): 7880
An Exile's Address to His Distant Children (O'er the vast realm of tempest-troubled Ocean): 5480
An Honest Valentine. (Returned from the Dead-Letter Office) (Thank you for your kindness): 6320
An Hour (Oh! who can prophesy the coming days?): 11662
An Hour in the Mountains (High amid the mountain ridges): 14725
An Hour on the Cliff ("Who can strive always? easier to lie down"): 14612
An Hour with the Dead (In silence of the starry night): 443
An Humbler Aspect of the Same Truth (Too daring words! I feel the mute dissent!): 11760
An Hymn of Pindar. The Seventh Olympionique. To Diagoras of Rhodes, Conquerer in the Boxing-Match (When the feast's free-hearted lord): 11978
An Ideal (While the grey mists of early dawn): 1494
An Idyl for Christmas In-Doors (The icy streams are black and slow): 1547
An Idyl of Delhi ("Over my grave let the green grass grow"): 14909
An Idyl on the Battle (Fists and the man I sing, who, in the valleys of Hampshire): 10078
An Idyll of the Hayfield (I lingered in the field of hay): 13447
An Idyll of the Woods (It is a summer's day, and I): 5430
An Incident in Paris. Connected with Miss Leigh's Mission Home (It haunted me for a week and more): 3960
An Indian Lament (Day's last of breath and sunlight floats on beach and woody height): 11367
An Indian Lullaby (Rest! rest! rest!): 12549
An Interlude (Between the hills, alone upon the heath): 4557
An Invitation (Listen, what do the breezes say): 2511
An Invitation (Nights are long; the night is late): 6646
An Invitation to the Sledge (Come forth, for dawn is breaking): 12250
An Invocation (Come from the far-off spirit world to-night): 7034
An Invocation (O wind, snell wind of the North!): 12869
An Invocation (Rise, nations! from your trance of woe and wrong): 5287
An Invocation to Spring (Come quickly, O thou Spring!): 6640
An Island Farmer's Fancy (The heat of the sun fell down, fell down): 7366
An Italian Night (The moon was up: the shepherd's pipe no more): 15731
An Occasional Prologue (When Grecian splendour unadorned by art): 3327
An Ocean Grave (My Love lies in the gates of foam): 2123
An Old "Chubb" (Last night I found an old forgotten key): 12965
An Old "Seventy-Four" Frigate (Ah yes, my friend, I am nothing now): 8139
An Old Ballad Re-Written. Annan Water ("Annan water's roaring deep"): 3706
An Old Ballad Renewed (The princess she was a winsome thing): 3697
An Old Conspiracy (They met in haste, they met with guile): 4036
An Old Family Portrait (If you could think, if you could speak): 12698
An Old Garden (Somewhere in the Past so golden): 7526
An Old Haunt (The rippling water, with its drowsy tone): 1112
An Old Idea—Newly Clad (Stream of my life, dim-banked, pale river, flow!): 6083
An Old Legend Done into Rhyme ("I have a secret in my breast"): 5011
An Old Letter (Only a letter): 12872
An Old Love-Song (Ask me no gay refrain of love and leisure): 12607
An Old Maid (Her eyes like quiet pools are clear): 12680
An Old Maid (Sitting with folded hands, that have dropped the needle and thread): 6808
An Old Maid's Retrospections (I look into the dreamy past, and see—what do I see?): 6429
An Old Man's Address to His Ass (Together we have borne the blast): 5306
An Old Man's Dream (Ah, child! I watch you with the firelight's gleam): 4832
An Old Man's Lament (My thread of life is nearly done): 147
An Old Man's Musings (He dwelt in solitude; his brain grew rife): 437
An Old Man's Question (Strange soul of mine that rose, I know not whence): 6377
An Old Miniature ("You showed me, Rob, the other day"): 14670
An Old Offender (A culprit, from the stony prison brought): 1342
An Old Road (A curve of green tree-tops): 2443
An Old Sea-Port. Evening Sketch (Nooked underneath steep sterile hills that rise): 6750
An Old Sermon with a New Text (My wife contrived a fleecy thing): 1615
An Old Song (She sings it, sitting in the glow): 4563
An Old Song (Where sunlight sets its latticed gleams): 5028
An Old Story (Now is seen the kindly power): 7389
An Old Story (The city holds high festival to-day): 1512
An Old Tune (There is an air for which I would disown): 16087
An Old-Fashioned Carol (Long, long, and long ago): 2391
An Old-Fashioned Ditty (I've tried in much bewilderment to find): 6045
An Old-Fashioned Rose (Thro' the rose garden the old Lady wanders): 2373
An Old, Old Story (A casual meeting—one of merest chance): 12806
An Open Secret (Answer my riddle, my darling, my dear): 1645
An Orchard Parable (A gnarled and stunted apple-tree): 2294
An Oriental Comic Song (Once on a time, in Ispahan): 13733
An Orphan Family's Christmas (A blithe old Carle is Christmas): 1596
An Unconventional Sermon (A summer day, "Most calm, most bright"): 5300
An Unequal Game (A moment of loving and laughter): 9644
An Unfinished Song (Yes, he was well-nigh gone, and near his rest): 2127
An Unforgotten Country (My friend, I may not see your face): 13092
An Unforgotten Kiss (The rain is rattling on the pane, the wind is sweeping by): 12792
An Unspoken Question (I thought I must be dreaming): 9780
Anacreon's Grave (Here where the Rose is in bloom, the Vine and the Laurel entwining): 11044
Anacreon's Grave (When the rose is fresh and blooming—where the vine and myrtle spring): 10926
Anacreontic (O if my love offended me): 182
Anacreontics. I (Here sit thee down,—give o'er that peeling wail): 8997
Anacreontics. II (Dry moralists still rail at drinking—let them): 8998
ANAMNHΣIΣ (What is that sacred well): 264
Anastasio (A tale of old Ravenna, on a time): 754
Ancestral Portraits (I am pleased you see the traces): 7437
Ancient Clan Dirge (Murtoch is dead, man! Clan-brothers, come): 13433
Ancilla Domini (Sleep, dearest One): 1133
Ancrum Moor. A Historical Ballad (King Henry was a rampant loon): 8958
Andalla's Bridal (Rise up—rise up, Xarifa, lay the golden cushion down): 7837
Andalusian Canzonet from the French of Theophile Gautier (Down-sliding from my snow-white bosom): 13826
Andrew Hislop, The Martyr (Andrew Hislop! shepherd lad): 3616
Andromache (Ah me, my happy youth, my woful age!): 14374
Ane Pastorale of the Rocke (There wals ane Egil satte on a hille): 10879
Ane Rychte Gude and Preytious Ballande ("O, Dearest Marjorie, staye at home"): 10704
Anemones (It was a happy holiday of ours!): 4738
Angel Eyes (The cold night-wind blew bitterly): 1249
Angel Faces (We see them with us here): 6796
Angel Help (This rare tablet doth include): 10156
Angel Visitors (In the graveyard grave and chill): 12815
Angela (Ay! the proudest owned her peerless): 13800
Angela (Her brow is set in mellow light): 1466
Angels In The Air (Dark, darker grew the leaden sky): 6059
Angler's Tent (Ah me! even now I see before me stand): 11187
Angling (By old gravel shallows): 7164
Angling (My emerald float swims down the stream): 7124
Anima Mundi ("Anima Mundi"—of thyself existing): 5581
Annabel C—. (Oh! might a voice I well remember): 5597
Annan Water ("Annan Water grows black and gurly"): 13405
Annesley ('Tis solemn twilight, and the dusky sky): 15716
Annie. A Story in Two Chapters (A fair and comely child): 629
Another Highland Student (The mighty shadow which Schihallion flings): 2149
Another Way (Come to me in my dreams, and then): 8496
Another Year (The years speed by with meteor flight): 6685
Answer (I would not have a great good man defile): 12390
Answer to A Student's Sketch of a Wife ("Not too witty, nor yet too wise"): 6584
Answer to Charade in No. CXCII (They sit apart, and shun the dance): 486
Answer to Lord Byron's Lines on Love (Oh, say not Love is light from heaven): 10558
Anti-Bacchanalian Songs. No. 1. Pleasure in Sobriety (Man little thinks): 3763
Anticipation (When failing health, or cross event): 6805
Antigone (The words are uttered; now a pitiless fate): 617
Antique Greek Lament (By the blue waters—the restless ocean waters): 11627
Antwerp (It sinks at last, that banner, which to raise): 11345
Anxieties and Comforts (The dreams which early moments deck'd): 5273
Any Poet to his Mistress (Immortal Verse! Is mine the strain): 12400
Apes and Eagles (The crowd to him their fondest deference pay): 14342
Aphrodité (The wind that swept along the shore): 13830
Apology (Not utterly unworthy to endure): 9850
Apology for the Little Naval Temple, on Storrs' Point, Winandermere (Nay! Stranger! smile not at this little dome): 10551
Apotheosis. Westminster, October 1892. (An allegory) (The peasants of Parnassus come to fling): 8439
Apple-Blossoms (The orchard grass is sunshine-barred): 4491
Après (Down, down, Ellen, my little one): 265
Après nous le Déluge (The angels wept at the poor man's pleading): 1190
April (After the snow, before the thunder): 13700
April (April has come!): 5433
April (April, with the pale blue eye): 12441
April (April! thou hast a star upon thy brow): 7000
April (How many pipes have dittied unto thee): 2894
April (I go forth in the fields to meet thee, Spring): 6469
April (Next, April's varying month appears): 15879
April (Stitchwort's out in frock of white): 2014
April (Timid April now appears): 13423
April and I (Blackbird, darling blackbird): 2181
April Days (It is the Spring! prepare the seeds): 14553
April Nonsense. A Fragment (This being the first of April, we intend): 10202
April of England (April of England): 1030
April Showers (Sliding down the south wind's pinions): 4570
April Tears (Wearied with their hours of gladness): 1662
April Voices (The black trees in your London square): 5061
Aprosdokia (Knows she to love?): 14067
Arabic Serenade (My faint spirit was sitting in the light): 1528
Araucaria Imbricata (Thou smilest not, my Araucarian pine!): 733
Arbor Amoris (I have a tree, a graft of love): 16085
Arcadia (The woods are in their glory now): 1204
Archidamia (The chiefs were met in the council-hall): 6730
Archy Tait—the Village Chronicle ('Twere endless task, in numbers to relate): 9004
Arctic Heroes. A Fragment of Naval History (1st Man. We are out of hearing now. Give thy heart words): 1074
Ares (A lovers' parting—vows that burn): 767
Arethusa (From the deep silence of her mountain home): 696
Arethusa and Alphéus (To the nearest stream she hastens): 941
Arguing in a Circle ("When first my true Love crowned me with her smile"): 1997
Aria (There was a la-dy lived at Leith): 9713
Ariadne (Came the maiden Ariadne): 3988
Ariadne (Green are these Naxian groves to all save me): 13459
Ariadne (Sailed the ship from dreaming Naxos ere Aurora tinged the sky): 7221
Ariadne (She stood on the stands of the shelving shore): 8949
Ariadne at Naxos (High upon the Hill of Drios): 11950
Ariadne in Naxos (Like the light of a dawn that was roseate and splendid): 8098
Arise Ye, and Depart (Arise ye, and depart; for never more): 6387
Arise, My Love! (Arise, my Love!—my Ladye bright): 3027
Arlette. A Man's Remembrance (The day is spent, and fields, new-shorn, are bright with fading sheen): 5422
Armgart (Good evening, Fräulein!): 14423
Art (Yes, the work comes excelling): 7924
Art and Conscience (Who Art prefer to Conscience needs must prize): 14707
Art Thou the Maid? (Art thou the maid from whose blue eye): 10723
Arthur's Knighting (I mind me of Toraise in Carmelide): 14414
As Ae Door Steeks, Anither Closes, or The Proverb Reversed (Methinks some auld Scotch proverb says): 3622
As It Hath Been, So It Shall Be (Daisies, starring the grasses): 12609
As the Heart Hears (I know that I can never hear it, never on earth any more): 4241
As They Passed (Within Love's chariot, side by side): 12358
As to His Choice of Her (If I had chosen thee, thou shouldst have been): 7967
Ascending (They who from mountain peaks have gazed upon): 360
Ascension Day (Lift up your heads, ye everlasting Gates!): 11791
Ascent of Snowdon (How merrily they plied the Alpine staff): 2012
Ascent of the Pony, Named Rose, in Mr Green's Balloon. A Peter-Pindaric (Once on a time, some years ago): 5274
Ascent of the Spirit (She lay down in her poverty): 15173
Ask Not if I've Loved Thee! (Ask not if I've love thee!—Now): 4890
Asleep (An hour before, she spoke of things): 1397
Aspiration (The rarest of honeysuckle is on the hedgetop high): 4212
Aspiration and Duty (Oh, what is earth to those who long): 1370
Aspirations (O for the wing of the regal bird): 15728
Aspire! (Aspire! whatever fate befall): 1161
Asrael, the Angel of Death (On a low bed within a narrow room): 14324
Associations (Behold the valley in the moonlight sleeping): 6097
Assuerus (I smote Him!—I! By that wide judgment-door): 13913
Asterie. (Hor. Od. iii. 7) (Why, Lady of the lodestar eye): 14838
Asterope (The green leaves rustle in the breeze, the summer sun is low): 4072
Astronomical Works (All measureless, all infinite in awe): 10003
At a Club Dinner (We tree): 3305
At a Country Dinner-Party ('Mongst flowers from glassy tropics brought): 6918
At a Dominican Priory (In the old Priory garden the friars pace to and fro): 12026
At a Funeral (Beneath our feet and o'er our head): 10876
At a Little Dinner-Party (Dear brother Brown, if we could take): 3314
At a Window (An oriel window looks): 4025
At a Window. (To Cecilia) (Search the round Earth, and Heavens afar): 14825
At Afternoon Tea (At afternoon tea, and alone for a wonder!): 12624
At an Old Country House (Far from the moil of road or rail, a grad old mansion stands): 4144
At Belton, Lincolnshire: June 18, 1857 (Twas night: the crescent moon from out the west): 6413
At Christmas-Tide (Although, outside, the searching tempest roars): 12542
At Dawn (In the night I dreamed of you): 1045
At Daybreak (O do not wake, for so thou look'st most true): 3163
At Even-Tide (What spirit is't that does pervade): 6367
At Evening (A softening haze pervades the dreamy dells): 7283
At Evening Time (The old nest swings on the leafless tree): 6852
At Eventide (Crimson, and gold, and russet): 4708
At Eventide (Stretch out thine hand to me across the waste): 4629
At Her Door (A fool for my doubting and dreaming): 9646
At Her Grave (I come—I come! you do not stir): 13665
At Her Window (Beating heart! we come again): 2424
At Home in Staten Island (My true love clasped me by the hand): 3300
At Last (Face to face): 6868
At Last (Long and weary is the road): 13021
At Last (My life, it has been long): 6607
At Last (The woods are sere, and the winds are grieving): 13336
At Last (When on my day of life the night is falling): 13668
At Last! (Only nineteen to-morrow!—So young, it is hard to die): 13783
At Lord’s (’Mid this great city’s grim embrace): 14941
At Merlincourt (Ah, the benison of dawn): 14955
At Midnight (The pallid moonlight through the casement drifts): 13025
At My Looking-Glass (I loved thee well in "salad days"): 7425
At Night ("Dying? You do but jest!"): 281
At Nightfall (When, in the evening's solitude): 6747
At Peace ('Tis twilight! the murmurous voices): 10434
At Peel (Gather it up from the jagged rocks that fringe the engine keep): 4850
At Rest (Ah, silent wheel, the noisy brook is dry): 3984
At Rest (Here let us linger as the evening closes): 1476
At Rest (Rest here a little while, but not for ever!): 11999
At Richmond (The sun-god's parting shafts of gold): 4371
At Rome (What came we forth to see? a prima donna): 12102
At Rouen (The aisles grow dim, and as by winding ways): 2667
At Scarborough (A grey sky and grey sea): 4160
At Scutari (Far off, beneath an opal sky): 12057
At Sea (Thou, the angry sea that stillest): 2757
At Sea (We sail from the island (he)): 12092
At Sea. 1880 (Old Ocean rolls like time, each billow passing): 14740
At Sorrento (Clear quiet waters, like the pale green sky): 3968
At St. Michael's Mount, Brittany (Warder of Brittany): 8941
At St. Sebastian (Far, and near, and wide they sleep): 4935
At Staithes (Oh, beautiful and treacherous! with bright blue, laughing eyes): 4826
At Stratford Festival. April 23rd (The ripple laps along the churchyard wall): 14934
At the Bar ("Who speaks for this man?" From the great white Throne): 4326
At the Casement (What of her orisons? nymph of the golden hair): 13558
At the Club Window (Sitting alone at the window): 3307
At the Convent Gate (Wistaria blossoms trail and fall): 12248
At the Door. A Dorsetshire Poem (The stream do roll): 14292
At the Eddystone Lighthouse. A Lady Visiting (Oh, dwellers on the deadly reef): 13328
At the Fall of the Curtain (The curtain's falling, and the lights burn low): 8014
At the Ferry (When the north wind grieves round the wailing eaves): 5021
At the Fireside (Around the hearth when raving storms and bitter winds do blow): 12859
At the Gate (Footsore, cold, and weary): 1726
At the Gate (Outside the open gate a spirit stood): 2439
At the Gate (We stand beside the little gate): 12946
At the Gate. (A Sequel to "One Hour") (Soft breezes, blow; green boughs, o'erarch): 13438
At the Grave of Mrs. Carlyle. (Haddington Abbey) (How beautiful it was, and calm, and sweet): 3659
At the June-Tide (The rose-lands gleam, with blooms of creamy-snow): 4155
At The Last ('Tis not what we have done that shall atone): 2048
At the Linn-Side (O living, living water): 7712
At the Mill (Swallows, skimming o'er the shallows): 12979
At the Old Gate (And so, we have met here again, love): 7017
At the River's Edge (O Sweet! when we come to the distant days): 12444
At the Roadside (I, for a time, have left behind): 2882
At the Saeter (Oh happy goats, and sheep, and dogs): 5547
At the Sea-Side (O solitary shining sea): 14021
At the Sea's Edge (The sky is filled with flying cloud): 5113
At the Sepulchre (Eager they watched the dawn): 1622
At the Station on an Autumn Morning. From the Italian of Giosué Carducci (Lamp after lamp how the lights go trooping): 14974
At the Stile (Set deep in the hawthorn hedgerow, stands the old rustic style): 4313
At the Window (Only to listen—listen and wait): 1917
At Thy Grave (Waves the soft grass at my feet): 4086
At Thy Peril ("Am I my brother's keeper?"): 1338
At Twilight (Content thee, Love! Stretch forth no thought to seize): 12761
At Twilight (Since from the castle's belfry, old and grey): 5424
At Twilight (The shadows on my novel fell): 14061
At Twilight (The speedwell folds her leaves of blue): 13117
At Vaucluse (By Avignon's dismantled walls): 14668
At Waking (I bore dead Love unto his grave): 12964
At War (Night yields to day, the day yields to the night): 7268
Atalanta (Greek Atalanta! girdled high): 1641
Atalanta (Race through space): 2259
Atalanta (To the hunt, through the forest, the mountain, the field): 13721
Athanasius Contra Mundum (To the Memory of David Livingstone) (He stood within the wilderness and cried): 2648
Atheistic Scientists (There is a sort of man whose faith is all): 3959
Athens. From the German of Geibel (At the time when the Spring brings the glow to the roses in Athens to-day): 12151
Atlas and Jove (How many giants each in turn have sought): 14346
Atra Cura (Horses! landlord, and six good pair): 7167
Attainment (I think Odysseus, when the strife was o'er): 14510
Au Revoir ("Au revoir"—what tongue can tell): 3770
Au Revoir (If Hate were born of Love or Love of Hate): 8953
Aubade (So late last night I watched with you, and yet): 992
Auf Wiederseh'n (They stood within the minster shade): 173
August ("Praise to the Lord of Harvest!" August rolled): 13460
August (A mellow day, when scarce a breeze): 13537
August (In ev’ry state, in ev’ry age): 15883
August (Lap-laden’d Goddess, lounging on the prow): 15972
Augusta Victrix (Fair is the lily, sweet the blushing rose): 11917
Augustus Broom, A Song (In a parlour gay, one summer day): 3713
Auld Glenae (I am a silly auld man, gaun hirpling over a tree): 9090
Auld Robin Forbes (And auld Robin Forbes hes gien tem a dance): 5342
Auld Robin Gray (When the sheep are in the fauld, and the kye at hame): 14886
Auray (When the full rose unblossom'd to the morn): 762
Auriel (I heard a voice by night, that call'd to me): 3702
Aurora. A Vision. Dedicated to Charles Lamb (Oh! Not the rainbow, flushing through the sky): 12272
Ausonius to Paulinus. Epistle XXV (Four letters now, my friend, thou hast): 9176
Aut Cæsar aut Nullus (Cæsar or nullus! Brother, say not so): 4178
Auto da Fé (The stars were glimmering pale; the mists of morn): 745
Autumn ('Tis the golden gleam of an autumn day): 10273
Autumn (Autumn is dying, alas! Sweet Autumn is near to her death): 7192
Autumn (Autumn is near to her death): 1751
Autumn (Autumn! and the red sun, through mottled clouds): 15298
Autumn (Brown and bare are the Autumn fields): 13108
Autumn (Comes Autumn like a merchant's daughter, rich): 7277
Autumn (Feel sad in autumn? Faith, not I!): 5112
Autumn (Happy Tourist, freed from London): 419
Autumn (I love the season when the first rude breeze): 351
Autumn (I saw the leaved drop trembling): 1464
Autumn (No sound but the beech-nuts falling): 7598
Autumn (Now the last sheaves are gathered in the barns): 5141
Autumn (O Age of death! O season of decay!): 6618
Autumn (Oh! not upon thy fading fields and fells): 6975
Autumn (Our vintage-time is come; the merry bands): 9588
Autumn (Peaceful and silent in the mellow smile): 6867
Autumn (The dying leaves fall fast): 14597
Autumn (The orchard's plenteous store): 5469
Autumn (The rich autumnal shadows fall): 7085
Autumn (The rooks are calling, calling, calling): 14197
Autumn (The wheat is garnered in the red-tiled barn): 5940
Autumn (The year grows still again, the surging wake): 14907
Autumn (The year is dying, dying): 4286
Autumn (There is a fearful spirit busy now): 8096
Autumn (There is no sun at all): 2283
Autumn (When Nature wears her russet gown): 6731
Autumn (Withering leaves on the garden walk): 12732
Autumn and Spring (To-night! to-night! it must be done): 6324
Autumn Bloom (Young Spring had gone by blushing, and kind Summer): 13053
Autumn Days (A wealth of beauty meets my eye): 12998
Autumn Even-Song (The long cloud edged with streaming gray): 240
Autumn Evening (Cross-barred with colouring hedgerows, hill and dale): 7686
Autumn Farewell to Drottningholm (The glorious summer sun already leaneth): 7728
Autumn Flowers (Ye are the sun's last favours, gorgeous flowers!): 355
Autumn Hours (The foxglove bells are tolling autumn hours): 6930
Autumn in the Woods (Every hollow full of ferns): 6885
Autumn Leaves (Before the songs I joy in singing): 7921
Autumn Leaves (Now, leaf by leaf, too feeble to adhere): 7195
Autumn Leaves (Sing dule for the glories of autumn, brilliant and brief!): 5089
Autumn Leaves (Sister, hear ye not the rustling): 6044
Autumn Leaves (What memories come, O Heart): 7516
Autumn Musings. (Dedicated to my dear Mary Campbell, of Hazel Bank, Murray Fields, Edinburgh) ("The day must come when we shall die"): 14331
Autumn Rain (With misty slant the sighing rain): 6494
Autumn Signs (Is there no lesson in the year): 7135
Autumn Song (The great winds blew through the woods at noon): 602
Autumn Storm (The swift cloud scuds along the sky): 5559
Autumn Sunlight (See how yon flood of golden sunlight showers): 12534
Autumn Thoughts (I love not the time when rough Autumn discloses): 4723
Autumn Thoughts. From the German of Geibel (I saw the forests fade): 1594
Autumn Time (I sing the mellowed autumn time): 7275
Autumn Time (Time, like a wrinkled hermit, sits): 692
Autumn Violets (Keep love for youth, and violets for the spring): 14328
Autumn: A Dirge (The warm sun is failing): 2329
Autumn.—A Sonnet (Now mellow Autumn reigns; the garden teems): 7890
Autumn's Alchemy (Pensive Autumn, sadly sweet): 7280
Autumnal Days (It seems but yesterday that merry Spring): 6616
Autumnal Flowers (In vain, oh bright autumnal flowers): 5972
Autumnal Leaves (Leaves that are strewn on the cold lap of earth): 15466
Autumnal Meditations (Amid the stillness of an Autumn eve): 9942
Autumnal Ode (Minstrel and Genius, to whose songs or sighs): 14225
Autumnal Stanzas (The winds are pillow'd, the sun is shining): 10148
Autumnal Thoughts (Oh, not for me the clustering vine): 15752
Autumnal Twilight (I stood at sunset on a litttle hill): 9710
Aux Bien-Amiées (To meet you, and be parted): 431
Avast There! (Oh, Bill, my lad): 13640
Ave Cæsar! (When the Emperor lay a-dying): 917
Ave Imperatrix (To thee, to thee, sombre Persephone): 8869
Ave Maria (Lalotte and Lurlei, beasts of ill): 12106
Ave Maria. (A Breton Legend) (In the ages of Faith, before the day): 12304
Avondale (Oh! fair are thy flow'rets, and balmy the gale): 15712
Awa'. Lines Written on the Death of Jeanie, a Favourite Child, Aged Seven Years (Thou'rt lyin' cauld an' still, my bonnie bonnie): 6949
Axel, a Free Translation from a Popular Swedish Poem (Pultowa's fight was o'er—the royal Swede): 10430
Aytoun, Our Dear Union Laddie (The Whigs think they are grand and great): 11235
Azel (Gentle stranger, prithee say): 4454
Azenor ("Seamen, seaman, tell me true"): 12089
Azrael (With quiet step, and features veiled and hidden): 4920
Ælfred the King (Roll back, ye centuries; and thou, oblivious Time): 7916
Æsop and the Philosopher (One day, Xanthus of Samos, although a philospher): 13766
Æstas Captiva (I had thought when we met (for the year was moved)): 8591
Babbicombe (Oft winter, Babbicombe, thy lonely shore): 15723
Baby (O when did Baby come?): 1752
Baby Beatrice (Who brought baby Beatrice?): 1378
Baby's Catechism (Where did you come from, baby dear?): 8234
Bacchus and the Water-Thieves (Journeying from Naxos swiftly towards Crete): 592
Bacchus to Nicæa (Sleep on in the midst of roses and on flowers): 13572
Bacchus, or the Pirates; Homer, Hymn 5th (I shall now a tale relate): 9242
Back (Back to town to-morrow, back to the struggle and strife): 12191
Back to the Sea Mother (Kindest of mothers, from whom I have strayed): 8657
Back-Water (How live a life so "deaved with din"): 5075
Baden-Baden (If you're sick of your wife): 11307
Baffled (I will plant a tree for myself, she said): 4052
Balder's Flower (Whene'er man looks upon the daffodil): 8811
Ballad ("She is not dead—She has no grave"): 10143
Ballad (A health to Thee!—in this the day): 10896
Ballad (A single horn at the warder's gate): 14459
Ballad (I have left my own home): 15543
Ballad (If dear to thy heart, be the clear flowing burn): 3111
Ballad (In a grand old German city): 2582
Ballad (My love he took me to the fields): 6972
Ballad (Oh! was there ever keener grief): 748
Ballad (Why is it so with me, false Love): 12405
Ballad I. On Mark Wilson, slain in Irongray (I wandered forth when all men lay sleeping): 8735
Ballad II. The voice lifted up against Chapels and Churches ('And will ye forsake the balmy, free air): 8736
Ballad III. The Cameronians rejoice in the Discomfiture of the Godless at Drumclog (Arise, ye slain saints, from the moor and the flood): 8737
Ballad IV. The Doom of Nithsdale (I stood and gazed—from Dalswinton wood): 8738
Ballad of a Mirror Found in an Etruscan Tomb (Once, loving hands wrought me for thee): 2397
Ballad of Foulweather Jack (Admiral Byron has weighed his anchor): 7812
Ballad of the Gibbet (Brothers and men that shall after us be): 16086
Ballad of the Page and the King's Daughter. (Translated from Giebel) (The King rides forth to hunt to-day): 492
Ballad Stanzas (And art thou then away,—away): 10711
Ballad V. Alexander Peden's Harmonious Call to the Cameronians (Ye green glens of Nithsdale, ye brown dales of Dryfe): 8739
Ballad VI. The Cameronian Banner (O Banner! fair Banner! a century of woe): 8740
Ballade of a Quiet Romanticist (Daylong, for a scanty wage): 12587
Ballade of Roses and Thorns (The month that brings the Summer heat): 13255
Ballade of St. Michael (Now past is good St. Swithin's reign): 1787
Ballade of the Olive (The solemn throbbing of the drum): 12234
Ballade: On His Lady Speaking or Singing (There is a music that doth trance the ear): 12475
Ballads of All Countries. England. Robin Hood and the Widow's Sons (There are twelve months in all the year): 1711
Ballads of All Countries. Ireland. Kincora (Oh, where, Kincora! is Brian the Great?): 1776
Ballads of All Countries. Scotland. Katharine Janfarie (There was a may, and a weel-far'd may): 1769
Ballads of the Rhine. Dusseldorf (Out on the waves, far out, my sea-bird! thou and I): 5955
Balliol Scholars. 1840-43. A Remembrance (Within the ancient College-gate I passed): 14446
Ballochmyle (A sweet love-song, whose early touch): 3933
Banks of the Ganges (The skies are fair in southern France): 15546
Bannockburn (I heard beneath my feet the sharp clear ring): 4335
Bannockburn (O for a rush of Castaly): 6072
Banoolah ("Let go the anchor!"—˝rating and harsh the sound): 1368
Barbara (On the Sabbath-day): 14796
Barbara Fleming's Fidelity. A Ballad (Beautiful was Barbara Fleming, as the morning on the hills): 11990
Barley Wood (A voice in vision-haunted Gibeon came): 14147
Baron Fisco at Home (Ha, my old friend! so, you've come back again!): 9014
Baron Jauïoz. (From the Breton) (As I was washing, the stream hard by): 204
Basilides (In vain unto this oath): 2192
Bathilda (There is a dim old tale of beauty): 1502
Batrachomyomachia (Ere I begin my strain, first would I pray): 11919
Battle of Blenheim (It was a summer evening): 3346
Baucis and Philemon. (A Legend of an English Workhouse) (What does it matter whether Giles or Styles): 488
Bavieca (The king looked on him kindly, as on a vassal true): 9727
Be Good (God does not say, "Be beautiful," "Be wise"): 1618
Be Just and Fear Not (Speak thou the truth. Let others fence): 14043
Be Kind To Each Other (Be kind to each other!): 5371
Be Sure, Ye Rich (Be sure, ye rich, who dwell in splendid halls): 6626
Beacoup D'Amour (Despite what wisdom's voice may say): 5237
Beata Solitudo (Deep in the wood the throstle chants): 12663
Beatrice to Dante ("Regard me well; I am thy love—thy love"): 6147
Beautiful for Ever (Somewhere there is radiant land): 13083
Beautiful in Old Age (How to be beautiful when old?): 15200
Beauty (O what is Beauty? Poets say a flower): 11696
Beauty and Grief (There's something beautiful in sadness): 15192
Beauty—Nature—Winter (Beauty and Nature quarrell'd on a day): 11814
Beauty's Devotee (’Tis not the silver in my hair): 7668
Because (I love you not because your eyes): 12673
Bed. A Lullaby (Good night—good night! For now it is high time): 13607
Bedtime ('Tis bedtime; say your hymn, and big "Good-night"): 7565
Before and After (A stillness wraps in calm the summer day): 7409
Before Harvest (The cuckoo and the nightingale have fled): 6602
Before Martyrdom (Out in the wild night she prayed): 2535
Before Sailing (Lean closer, darling, let thy tender heart): 4657
Before Sebastopol (True hearts, true hearts! with courage all undaunted): 1369
Before Sedan (Here, in this leafy place): 14409
Before Sleeping (Now is the dead of night, and I must sleep): 5065
Before the Fight ("Who is there, Fritz, to pray for you?"): 2580
Before the Snow. After Albert Glatigny (Winter is on us, but not yet the snow!): 14599
Before the Spring (The Earth is burying her dead): 7323
Before the Trial by Combat (The doleful wind around around): 2915
Beginning to Walk (He's not got his sea-legs, the darling): 6724
Behind the Roses (Down in a dell in the west countrie): 3827
Behind the Scenes (I like to think of the domestic pleasures): 1500
Behind the Scenes (There's not a day in all the year): 5719
Behind the Veil (Veiled and we cannot see beyond): 2622
Behold, I Stand at the Door! (Daughter, weeping alone): 2554
Bellerophon. A Classical Ballad (The sun shines bright on Ephyré's height): 9295
Below the Heights (I sat at Berne, and watched the chain): 14418
Belshazzar (The midnight hour was drawing on): 9316
Ben and Loch Lomond (Still sleeps Loch Lomond by her mountain side): 6009
Ben Ephraim's Deathbed (Depart! illusions of this world): 14174
Ben Karshook’s Wisdom (“Would a man ’scape the rod?”): 5731
Ben Ma Chree (A boat to see the caves sir? Just step round): 4981
Benedetta Minelli (It is near morning. Ere the next night fall): 6134
Benoni (Sweet earth, that holds my highest prize): 6496
Beranger to His Old Coat (Be faithful still, thou poor dear coat of mine!): 4387
Beranger's Adieu to Song (Of late, to keep my fading garland green): 3481
Bereaved (The gay, glad year was yet in its prime): 7649
Bereft (She heard old ocean's hollow roll): 4163
Bergstimme (A rider through a valley pass'd): 9311
Berlingaccio (On Mad-Thursday night): 3064
Bernardo and Alphonso (With some good ten of his chosen men, Bernardo hath appear'd): 9726
Bertha (Round Elldreth Castle, through the chilly day): 13805
Bertha in the Lane (Put the broidery-frame away): 10750
Beside a Little Grave ("Call no one happy till he dies," the old): 2793
Beside a Tomb (Like a sweet face all soiled with tears): 2618
Beside the Sea (They lingered near the spreading thorn): 7534
Beside the Stile (We walked both slowly o'er the yellow grass): 1868
Bessy and Her Dog (Bessie was always wandering): 5986
Bessy Bell and Mary Gray (O hush'd be our souls as this Burial-ground!): 8028
Best (The Best—it was not given to me!): 1527
Betrayed (Row! row! let us fly! my false love is married): 8704
Betrothed (Dear, as I listen to your voice, Love's light): 13143
Betrothed (She is mine in the day): 778
Betsy Brown. A True Story (All must have heard of Mrs. Brown): 7747
Betsy Lee, a Fo’c’s’le Yarn Part II (Now the grandest ould pazon, I'll be bail): 14492
Betsy Lee, a Fo’c’s’le Yarn. Part I (I said I would? Well, I hardly know): 14491
Better Alone Than in Bad Company (Go! never, never let me see thee more): 8355
Better than Beauty (My love is not a beauty): 5957
Better Than Beauty! (My love is not a beauty): 15487
Between the Lights (The parchèd earth revives; the drooping flowers): 4157
Between the Lines (Sing the song of the singer, merrily ring the rhymes): 4474
Between the Showers (Bee and blossom, blossom and bee!): 5066
Between the Showers (Down it came—the summer shower—): 1805
Between the Sizes (Should I have been so rudely planned): 12634
Between Two Worlds. Parting for Australia (Here, sitting by the fire): 6386
Beyond (Autumn is dying; Winter is come): 12926
Beyond (We must not doubt, or fear, or dread, that love for life is only given): 1497
Beyond Reach (Dear love, thou art so far above my song): 14588
Beyond the Haze. A Winter Ramble Reverie (The road was straight, the afternoon was grey): 12231
Beyond Words (Little maid in homespun gown): 13077
Bhanarach Dhomi A (Brown-Haired Dairymaid) (Oh! sweeter thy music): 8277
Bigamy ('Twixt Sue and Jane I wavered long): 13779
Billy Routing, A Lyrical Ballad (Fit subject for a heroic story): 7781
Bindweed (The verdant garlands creep and twine): 4602
Bion's Lament for Adonis (Wail wail, Ah for Adonis! He is lost to us, lovely Adonis!): 8882
Bion's Third Idyll (I dreamt when lately sleep came o'er me): 14138
Bird Life (Oh! a lovely life is the life of a bird): 6071
Bird Message (O swallow, swallow, flying over sea): 8714
Bird Notes (Six poplar trees, in golden green): 12980
Bird Song (Two birds sat in the forest dark): 8719
Bird-Music (Oh, sweet the thrush's song): 13219
Bird-Nesting, A True Story For Young People (Little Harry went peeping the hedges along): 3467
Birds (Joyous and happy creatures): 5373
Birds (Sure, maybe ye've heard the storm thrush): 7938
Birds at My Window (Standing in my window, I): 7372
Birds of Passage (Fair summer birds, away!): 1727
Birds of Passage (See the birds thronging): 1895
Birds of Passage. ("A lost chance flies owre the sea") ("Turn, turn again!" we call, and all in vain): 657
Birds' Nests (The lark it loves the yellow corn): 6546
Birth Song (Hail, new-waked atom of the Eternal whole): 1083
Birth-Song (Let winds and waters murmur clear): 2422
Birthday Salutation To Alfred, Lord Tennyson. Sent him August 6th, 1889. (Since God, the source of power): 1540
Birthday Verse (The spring-tide air is calm and clear): 6235
Bishop Hubert (’Tis the hour of even now): 15904
Bitter Beer (A song to cheer): 14997
Bitter-Sweet (I am building o'er buried pleasures): 9244
Bitterness (We sat among the ripe wheat sheaves): 6582
Black Mac Torquill. A Highland Tradition (They come through the mists of the morning gray): 15836
Black Monday (Tempus fugit, alas! Our best pleasures are blended): 230
Black-Berries (The trees were flushed with red and gold): 6785
Blackthorn (She sleeps! Ah, welcome spell of rest): 4655
Blanche (Blanche sat by her open casement): 1705
Blank Paper (’Tis but a blank and worthless leaf): 6855
Blessing (Oblivion! but the darkness of the blind!): 11554
Blighted (The Maiden, smiling in a dream of bliss): 7441
Blind (Dark—for ever dark I go): 7573
Blind Mother and Daughter (Daughter, while you turn from your wheel): 3479
Blind Old Milton (Place me, once more, my daughter, where the sun): 11126
Blossom and Blight (For the home mid the orchards where blithe the birds sing): 3304
Blowing Bubbles (Half our sorrows, half our troubles): 15800
Blue and White ("Of your colours, sweet sir, what may your favourite be?"): 7380
Blue Gentian: A Thought (I shall never be a child): 3550
Blue Lightning (O the days when first I knew): 2905
Blue Stockings Over the Border (Read, quickly read, for your honours, ye Oxford men!): 10770
Bluebells (Ah me! how many years have flown): 4590
Boast Not of To-Morrow (The Lark said: "Lo! the winter has gone by"): 12897
Boat Songs (Fair is your face): 2572
Boating (Our eager crew, six merry boys): 2902
Boaz and Ruth. (After Victor Hugo) (At work within his barn since very early): 12150
Bodgy (Only a pet name. Never child was christen'd Bodgy yet): 13773
Bon Jour, Bon Soir (I'll tell, in simple way): 8695
Bonnie Dryfe (Bonnie Dryfe, my native stream): 12963
Bonnie Lady Ann (There’s kames o’ hinney ’tween my luve’s lips): 5360
Bonny Balcairn (There lives an auld man at the back o' yon knowes): 14905
Bonny Bonaly (Bonny Bonaly's wee fairy-led stream): 5798
Bonny Mary (Oh Mary! thou'rt sae mild and sweet): 5228
Book 1. Ode 14 (O bark, fresh waves shall hurry thee): 9006
Book 3. Ode 9 (H. While no more welcome arms could twine): 9423
Book 3. Ode 9 (H. Whilst I was dear and thou wert kind): 9422
Book 4. Ode 10 (Ah cruel, cruel still): 9008
Book First, Ode Ninth (See'st thou, my friend, how white with snow): 8485
Book First, Ode Thirty-Eighth (I hate the Persian banquet's pride): 8486
Book Fourth, Ode Second (He who to Pindar's heights would soar): 8488
Book I of The Iliad, Translated in the Hexameter Metre. Iliad.—Book I (Sing, O celestial Muse! the destroying wrath of Achilles): 12060
Book I.—Ode I. Dedicatory Ode Of Mæcenas (O Mæcenas, from forefathers regal descended): 10254
Book I.—Ode III. On Virgil's Voyage To Athens (So may the goddess who rules over Cyprus): 10261
Book I.—Ode IX. To Thaliarchus (See how white in the deep-fallen snow stands Soracte!): 10255
Book I.—Ode XI. To Leuconoë (Nay, Leuconoë, seek not to fathom what death unto me—unto thee): 10264
Book I.—Ode XII. In Celebration Of The Deities And The Worthies Of Rome (What man, what hero, or what god select'st thou): 10265
Book I.—Ode XV. The Prophecy Of Nereus (When the false Shepherd bore through the waters): 10262
Book I.—Ode XVII. Invitation To Tyndaris (For Lucretilis oft nimble Faunus exchanges): 10256
Book I.—Ode XXII. To Aristius Fuscus (He whose life hath no flaw, pure from guile, need not borrow): 10267
Book I.—Ode XXIII. To Chloe (Like a fawn dost thou fly from me, Chloë): 10263
Book I.—Ode XXXV. To Fortune (Goddess, who o'er thine own loved Antium reignest): 10260
Book II.—Ode III. To L. Dellius (With a mind undisturbed take life's good and life's evil): 10257
Book II.—Ode XIX. In Honour Of Bacchus (Amid sequestered rocky glens,—ye future times believe it!): 10258
Book II.—Ode XVI. To Pompeius Grosphus (For ease prays he who in the wide Ægæan): 10266
Book II.—Ode XX. On His Future Fame (I shall soar through the liquid air buoyed on a pinion): 10259
Book III. Ode 13 (Fount of Bandusia, glassy spring): 8542
Book III. Ode 15 (Wedded to needy Ibycus): 8544
Book III. Ode 23 (If the New Moon thy hands but see): 8545
Book III. Ode 25 (Whither, Bacchus, full of thee): 8547
Book III. Ode 26 (Of late a swain to maidens known): 8548
Book III. Ode 27 (The bitch or fox with young, or jay): 8549
Book III. Ode 29 (O thou of royal ancestry): 8551
Book III. Ode 3 (Firm is the genuine patriot's soul): 8537
Book III. Ode 5 (Jove's power the thunder-peal proclaims): 8538
Book III. Ode 8 (This March-day incense, at the door): 8539
Book III. Ode 9 (While Lydia, I to thee was dear): 8541
Book III.—Ode I. On the Wisdom of Content (I hate the uninitiate crowd—I drive it hence away): 10376
Book IV.—Ode. III. To Melpomene (Whom thou, Melpomene): 10420
Book VI (Where Bragada's slow river scarce contains): 9095
Bookworld (When the dim presence of the awful Night): 2716
Bormus, A Linus Song (Down from the lifted cornfield trips): 14571
Born (Born this morning—and last night): 4811
Born at Jerusalem. (Gladys Mulock Holman Hunt, born Sept. 20, 1876) (English child of Eastern birth): 2743
Born by the Sea (I marvel not thou art so fair): 8703
Borodino.—An Ode (Weep for the living! mourn no more): 10889
Bothwell Castle and Blantyre Priory on the Clyde (The ruined towers that do each other face): 5214
Bought and Sold (Simple souls, who've implicitly ever believed): 243
Bournemouth (If sand-hills swept by ocean-nourished sea): 662
Boyhood (The dreams of early youth): 5307
Boz (The loved of all the world is gone): 7263
Bradmere Pool (Would you see the summer dawn in all its soft and magic beauty): 228
Braid Claith (Ye wha are fain to hae your name): 3414
Bramble (The corn is reaped, the bare brown land): 4574
Bran (Wounded sore was the youthful knight): 1312
Brave in Death ("They sang—the white men sang"): 13356
Bread (Bread, bread! eat and be welcome friends): 5396
Bread of Life (Albeit for lack of bread we die): 1252
Bread Upon the Waters (Say not, "'Twas all in vain"): 5759
Breadth and Depth (Full many a shining wit one sees): 10694
Breaking It Gently. (From the German of Grün) (The Count he was riding home one day): 13707
Brecon Bridge (Low to himself beneath the sun): 12308
Breton Faith (A summer nightfall on a summer sea!): 11407
Bridal Greetings (Ocean and land the globe divide): 15566
Bridal Song (Comforts lasting, loves increasing): 6239
Bridesmaids’ Wishes (Howe’er they fare): 7375
Brief (Infancy! a blushing spring): 912
Bright and Brightest (Bright is the fair maid's eye that looks on thine): 8975
Bright Days in Winter (Bright days in winter are as jewels set): 6726
Bright Olive-Green (Bright olive-green is her outside gear): 10510
Brighton in Storm (So, this is your summer): 11116
Brighton in Sunshine (Though it makes me hysteric): 11115
Britain (My faith is in my native land): 1220
Britain's Prosperity. A new song, which ought to have been sung by the Premier at the opening of Parliament (News for you, gentlemen! Here is prosperity): 9032
Britannia, 1886 (Upon her ocean-beaten throne she sate): 8664
Britons Dare be Free (Whence this amount of misery? Just heaven): 118
Broadcast Thy Seed (Broadcast thy seed!): 7156
Broken (Will it ever come back, the old sweet thought): 13239
Broken Faith (Though the careless turns of fortune): 13367
Broken Off (The sun flares out in the ruddy east): 1905
Broken Toys (I have bow'd beneath the stroke, and the storm is): 539
Broken Toys (Only a boxful of worn-out toys): 12655
Brother Francis and the Pilgrim. From Burser (A pilgrim maiden, young and fair): 3887
Brother Man! (God is One, and we are Two): 5913
Brotherless (Within the west the eve has set): 12069
Brothers! We Are Men! (We are men—made in the image): 5964
Brought to Light (Some miners were sinking a shaft in Wales): 3061
Brown and Gold (It is the time when harvest has begun): 13099
Brown William (Let no one in greatness too confident be): 870
Brown's Peccadillo. An Idyll of the Temple (Pleydell. What! you don't say so! Brown, the pattern-man): 9753
Bruges (Chime, sweet carillon, chime, and drop): 2376
Bubbles (A bubble rises on the stream): 7269
Bude (I stood upon the shore of Bude, and on the deep): 3577
Building Castles (Building castles! April gleams): 4858
Burial of an Emigrant’s Child in the Forests (Surely ’tis all a dream—a fever-dream!): 11355
Buried (We stand upon the churchyard sod and gaze): 4319
Buried Friendship (The weary sun hath sought blue Ocean's breast): 15743
Buried Self (Where side by side we sat I sit alone): 12214
Buried To-day—February 23, 1858 (Buried to-day!): 6414
Buried Treasures ('Tis true my later years are blest): 13090
Burnham-Beeches (A bard, dear Muse, unapt to sing): 3053
Burns (He seized his country's lyre): 13869
Busaco. A Battle-Sketch (The shadows lie broad on yon mountainous heath): 3865
Buttercups (I sit and watch my treasures laid): 4593
Butterflies (Once more I pass along the flowering meadow): 6953
Butterfly (Thou wanton of summer, as wayward as fair): 2396
By A Death-Bed (Death is here: more gently tread): 1655
By A Grave (Father, father, here I linger): 6663
By a Poet's Grave (The Spring has come and gone): 7304
By an Evolutionist (The Lord let the house of a brute to a soul of a man): 8466
By an Open Grave. (November 23, 1874) (Ah, well! this life's a medley—mirth and care): 13637
By Night (Glimmer of moonlight upon the river): 601
By Private Post (From a white-winged ship in a far-off bay): 4104
By Temple Bar. A Reverie (Not now upon the silent Ings): 14271
By that long scan of Waves (By that long scan of waves, myself call'd back, resumed upon myself): 13691
By the Aurelian Wall. (In Memory of John Keats) (By the Aurelian Wall): 8077
By the Camp Fire (Ah, 'twas but now I saw the sun flush pink on yonder placid tide): 2526
By the Christmas Fire (A penny for your thoughts, sweet wife!): 13223
By the Dead (You are gone away, away!): 7602
By the Fire (Charley is knitting his brows o’er a book): 6748
By the Fire (Dead eyes are gazing on her from the pictures on the wall): 4170
By the Fire (She sat and mused by the drift-wood fire): 4643
By the Greenwood (Why should I twine my poor fancies together?): 12145
By the Marl-Pit (Here where across the marl-pit's lone expanse): 8845
By the Mere (Down where trim meadows softly sweep): 13598
By the Mere (Grey, dimly outlined 'neath the sullen skies): 3839
By The Peach-Tree Wall (Where the manor-house garden is tangled the most): 7657
By the Pool (Surely he took the hard first prize): 4680
By the River (Only the low wind wailing): 4675
By The River (The sunshine quivered on the quivering poplars): 6846
By the River (We met at morning by the willowed river): 12982
By the River (We went wandering down through the woodlands): 7131
By the Rosanna. To F. M. (The old grey Alp has caught the cloud): 854
By the Saco River (U. S. A.) (A wind-swept valley of waving wheat): 13155
By the Sea (Fierce on the white cliffs glows the August sun): 7465
By The Sea (I saw the great sea, like a weary child): 2315
By The Sea (I think, as the white sails come and go): 2090
By the Sea (O stranger sails! O drifting isles of foam!): 5053
By the Sea (Stay, ye waves, one moment stay): 688
By the Sea (The mariners sleep by the sea): 1097
By the Sea (When the world is hushed in slumber, and bright planets without number): 14050
By The Sea (When tired of towns, and pining sore): 6159
By the Sea with a Child (It is a beauteous evening, calm and free): 14878
By the Stream (The willows growing by the brook): 2557
By the Ure (Where the purple heights of Hambledon stand clear against the sky): 4080
By the Waters of Babylon. B.C. 570 (Here where I dwell I waste to skin and bone): 14329
By the Yew Hedge (Up and down the terrace pacing, where the winter sunlight glowed): 4626
By Willow Creek (The tent is pitched for sleeping in where cottonwoods are green): 7944
Bye-Past Time (The sky is blue, the sward is green): 9337
Bygones (The palm-trees of the East no more give out): 6267
Byron (Black clouds his forehead bound): 13879
Byron to Murray (Attacks on me were what I look'd for, Murray): 9711
Ça Ira, 1810 (Beaten backward in the press): 4693
Cairola. Stanzas by a Venetian Exile to a Picture of his Birthplace, Sent Him in April, 1866 (I see the Brenta and its level shore): 3221
Caller Ou! A Song of the Dreadful 14th of October (Any fish, ye say, the day, ma'am?): 3954
Callimachus. A Sketch (Soft, fine, and bright, as web hedge-woven at morn): 14425
Calm (There is a time when Nature sadden'd lies): 1508
Calm and Storm (As, azure domed): 5299
Calm and Storm (The stormy blast is strong, but mightier still): 14354
Calomel (Physicians of the highest rank): 5888
Calvary (Pale lamps are twinkling through the town): 1821
Calvus to a Fly (Ah! little fly, alighting fitfully): 7864
Calypso (Sweet morning swims): 558
Cameronian Song (Blood lies on the valley, blood lies on the mountain): 8727
Camoëns; A Dramatic Sketch. In One Act (Three stairs already: must we mount for ever?): 11200
Campaign the First ("Glory of War, my heart beat time to thee"): 9183
Campaign the Second (How fresh the morning meadow of the spring): 9184
Campaign the Third (Lo! yonder sea-mew seeks the inland moss): 9185
Campbell (With all that Nature's fire): 13873
Can I Forgive? (Can I forgive? Nay, sure I do not know): 4681
Can this be Christmas-time? (Can this be Christmas-time?): 6442
Can't be Beat! (From sugar that's beet I advise you abstain): 12858
Canada to the Laureate (We thank thee, Laureate, for thy kindly words): 2442
Canadian Boat-Song—(from the Gaelic) (Listen to me, as when ye heard our father): 10529
Canadian Loyalty. An Ode. [Written at Sunrise on New Year's Morning of 1850, at the head of Lake Ontario, in Western Canada] (As gleams the sunrise on the deep): 9031
Candlemas-Day (This the appointed day on which we throw): 6498
Cant (O! sacred Cant! how canting men declaim): 14341
Cantilena. (Freely translated from Don Estevan Manual de Villegas) ("What whim is this, Don Stephen"): 9021
Canzone VI. (In Morte di M. Laura) (When comes my faithful, gentle comforter): 9765
Canzonet (And must we, must we part?): 15088
Canzonet (I love thee not): 15397
Canzonet (Love that changes is not love!): 15422
Capo Serpente. A Legend of the Campagna (Fast falls the eventide. The last faint flame): 13621
Captain Ortis' Booty: a Ballad (Captain Ortis (the tale I tell)): 12243
Captain Paton's Lament (Touch once more a sober measure, | and let punch and tears be shed): 7821
Captain Walton's Legacy ("Who will dare a noble venture?"): 13522
Captivity (As the cold aspect of a sunless way): 7774
Cardovan (A lowly child was Cardovan): 15210
Cares and Days (To those who prattle of despair): 14313
Carina (Once more, white snowdrops crown thy grave): 2372
Carle, an the King come (Carle, an the King come!): 9420
Carlos. In Memoriam (A theme for Landseer was his head): 13740
Carmen Diabolicum. Sung in Oliver & Boyd's Printing Office, on the Midnight between the 19th and 20th August, 1819. Solo, by Bowzy Beelzebub (When the vessel she is ready, all her rigging right and steady): 7793
Carmen Diabolicum. Sung in Oliver & Boyd's Printing Office, on the Midnight between the 19th and 20th August, 1819. Solo, by Tipsy Thammuz (Thus when our latest sheet, to make Ebony complete): 7794
Carmen Sæculare. An Ode in Honour of the Jubilee of Queen Victoria (Fifty times the rose has flower’d and faded): 14866
Carmen Triumphale. (Stanzas suggested under the flag of the marble arch of the Queen's Palace, the evening of Wednesday, June 10, 1840) (Thou Standard of Kings!—in the blue evening light): 11198
Carnations (Blow, winds of summer, on the grass): 4528
Carnot (Death, winged with fire of hate from deathless hell): 8639
Carol (Old time and I, the other night): 12255
Carol for Christmas (Be comforted, O earth): 3226
Caroline Herschel (Often when I sat there, knitting at my stocking): 2029
Casa Wappy (And hast thou sought thy heavenly home): 5387
Cassandra (Alone, she wanders over Até's hills): 13549
Cassandra (And mirth was in the halls of Troy): 10802
Cassandra (Joy thro’ Troy’s proud mansions rung): 14692
Cassandra (Joy was heard in Ilium's walls): 8211
Castle and Cottage (There stands a castle by the sea): 3280
Castle Belleisle (The enormous hills run smoothly down): 12228
Castle Clare (From holly-bush and leafless larch): 2901
Castle Gloume (High on the breezy fell, in the gap of the mountain waters): 5444
Castle Walls (On the ’leaguered castle wall stand nine stalwart warriors tall): 6520
Castlebar: A Holiday Gossip ("'Castlebar, famed for deer,' the Guide-Book says"): 13797
Castles in Spain (Castles in Spain! oft in my youthful pride): 12456
Castles In The Air (Above in the blue, where the sunbeams are): 2091
Castles in the Air (Muse—genius—fay—that lov'st to dwell): 6298
Castles, Antient and Modern: A Contrast (Moss-grown and grey, behold yon mould'ring walls): 4768
Catching the Moon (I dreamed one night I pushed off in my boat): 8718
Cathair Fhargus. (Fergus's Seat.) A Mountain in the Island of Arran, the Summit of which resembles a gigantic Human Profile (With still face upward to the changeful sky): 14029
Cathedral Bells and New Year's Eve (Only a year ago): 2775
Cathedrals, &c (Open your Gates, ye everlasting Piles!): 9854
Cato. Ambassadors of Cæsar Address Cato ("Noblest of Romans, we come to save"): 10073
Caucasus (Beneath me the peaks of Caucasus lie): 10994
Cæsar (Wake, Rome! destruction's at thy door): 10727
Celia Connellan. Translated From the Irish (Fair Celia, pearly maiden): 5793
Cemented (Aye, wet the shattered edges daintily): 4555
Ceres (Her car, thick bound with scarlet poppy flowers): 4243
Cezembres (Just a measured mile away): 4556
Chacun a Son Gout (When dandies wore fine gilded clothes): 3394
Chairman's Song (Blow aside the smoke, boys): 2696
Chamouni and Rydal (I stood one shining morning where): 14685
Champagne (Faster, faster, friend of mine!): 7393
Chang Ling’s Flute (’Twas night; the tired soldiers were peacefully sleeping): 14820
Change and the Changeless (The eye that sparkles with a flash of mirth): 1208
Change on Change (Three months ago, the stream did flow): 11068
Changed (Dear love, in this rapture of meeting): 7391
Changed (The music of Spring's in the grove, Will): 6854
Changes (In the depth of an ancient casement): 2842
Changing Guides (Along the road the travellers go): 2578
Chanson (One soft glance from your eyes, proud Goddess-love!): 8693
Chanson des Ouvriers (Workmen's Song) (We whose dim lamp, the dawning day): 8293
Chant of Storm Winds (Come, brothers, come; haste o'er the sea): 3808
Charade (For half an evening he had bent): 466
Charade (He wandered with her in the wood): 13754
Charades (What time lethargic Europe woke): 12188
Charity ('Tis better to give than to get): 3553
Charity (A beggar died last night, his soul): 653
Charity (Gentle her step, and calm her mien, as one of heavenly birth): 1681
Charity (Man is dear to man; the poorest poor): 3499
Charity (O Love, how wondrous thou and holy): 6500
Charles Edward at Prestonpans. [Written after walking over the Field with Robert Chambers, on the Centenary of the Battle, 21st September 1845] (Grim and cloud-begirt the morning): 5924
Charles Edward at Versailles. On the Anniversary of Culloden (Take away that star and garter–hide them from my loathing sight): 9950
Charles Lever. Born August 31, 1809: Died June 1, 1872 (Two worlds there are in which we live and move): 14049
Charles the First at Hampton Court. Part of a charade, acted at Castle Ashby, on Lord Northampton's Birth-Day (This is our Court of Hampton, Henriette): 14744
Charles V. at the Convent of Yuste (Shade and sunshine play alternate on the convent's walls): 7367
Charles-Edward After Culloden (Away !—so faithful and so few): 11315
Charlie's Grave (That little grave, that grassy mound): 329
Charlotte and Emily Brontë (Pale Sisters! children of the craggy scree): 12339
Charlotte Corday (Dear, let me hang my little wreath of weeds): 2235
Charon's Ferry (The tide-streams up the inlet sweep): 6212
Chartreuse. (Liqueur) (Who could refuse): 6800
Chartreuse. (Liqueur) (Who could refuse): 7871
Chastened (My soul was stricken on a summer day): 3932
Châtaux en Espagne. A Bachelor's Reverie (How oft in days when childhood's rose): 12163
Chaucer’s Dream of the Crystal Palace (As I slept, I dreamt I was): 9296
Chaunt.—By Mrs M'Whirter (I wonder what the mischief was in me when a bit of my music I proffered ye!): 7814
Chechina. A Recollection of Frascati (From the low wall we leaned, and looking down): 14871
Cheerfulness (Nothing upon the earth for ever grieves): 6521
Cheerfulness (The storm but makes its handmaid, Calm, more sweet): 6682
Cheltenham, 1826 ("Di," says Mary, "do speak"): 10575
Cherry Blossom (Cherry-blossom, wildly growing, ’mid the coppice of the stream): 12155
Chersiphron (When to their utmost we have tasked our powers): 10300
Chevy Chase; a Poem—Iden Latine Redditum (The Percy out of Northumberland): 7760
Chi Mi Gliris-Fhionn (I see the Roan One) (Darling, mine, the spotted heifer): 8267
Chidher. (From Frederick Ruckert) (Spoke Chidher the immortal, the ever young): 3738
Child and Mother (Little Clara stands beside): 1668
Child Daniel (In Fancy-land there is a burst of wo): 8444
Child Memories (Just two little pattering feet): 15024
Child Songs—The Little Prude (Here she comes, her nut-brown eyes): 7524
Child-Philosophy (Sister, the rain-drops as they fall): 6441
Child's Summer Song (A Song for the Summer, a song for me): 2747
Childe Gottfried (Forth to the world Childe Gottfried rides): 939
Childe Roland. (From the German of Uhland) (King Karl sat feasting with his lords): 700
Childhood (Oh! fly to yon flower-mantled meadow with me): 5107
Childhood (Once in a garden bounded by many a lofty wall): 1590
Childhood (Spring-tide of life and May-morn of the mind): 14485
Childhood (When bitter sorrow swells the heart): 2176
Childhood Land (Do you remember long ago): 1780
Childhood's Valley (It was a quiet valley): 3965
Childless (Never for me the crowning marriage sweetness): 5033
Children (Yes, deem her mad! for holy is the sway): 5824
Children of the Mist (The cold airs from the river creep): 1023
Children's Evening Prayer (Gracious Saviour! meekly crave your): 1598
Children's Faces (You bring me peace, O innocent child-faces!): 13103
Chillianwallah (Chillianwallah, Chillianwallah!): 6025
Chimes (Great men and little men): 12295
Chimes (O circle out again, sweet chimes): 7008
Chimes for the Times (Be ye not jealous over-much): 5981
Chiming and Rhyming ("Oranges and Lemons!"): 13803
Chivalry (There came a knight at evening-time): 6659
Chloris Asleep (As Chloris lay asleeping): 11859
Choice. A Dramatic Sketch (So, having crowned you for the second time): 12523
Choose (My tender thoughts go forth, beloved): 5795
Choosing a Field-Flower (Let me choose a wilding blossom): 1293
Choosing the Mistletoe ('Twas Christmas Eve, and all the land): 13171
Chopin (What need have we to speak? Thou hast said all!): 1049
Chorus of Virgins at the Tomb of Julia Alpinula (Hither, ye virgins, come! for here are laid): 3375
Chorus. From the Jephthes of Buchanan (Glassy Jordan, smooth meand'ring): 5482
Christ (I saw myself as a youth, a mere boy): 14760
Christ and Mahommed (Of Christ's betrayal wouldst thou know the reason?): 14720
Christian Kennedy's Song (The lea shall have its lily bells): 8426
Christian, the Dol Hertzog (So Called from his Furious Behaviour.) 1660 (Christian, Duke of Brunswick, and Bishop of Halberstadt): 2852
Christine (I slept): 7530
Christingles (The children stood and watched me): 14375
Christmas (Child of humanity): 6103
Christmas (Hark, hark! Again the echoing Christmas bells): 7481
Christmas (How shall we keep our Christmas, you and I?): 4479
Christmas (Low sighs the wind, the slanting sun beams pale): 1048
Christmas (Old friend, old Christmas! be welcome still!): 1718
Christmas (Rejoice! for Christmas Eve is here once more): 12472
Christmas (When snow lies deep upon the ground): 13587
Christmas (With roseate light the east is all aglow): 12691
Christmas Bells. 1865 (In broken notes of sound): 986
Christmas Carol, 1845 ("The intrigues of this month shall we e'er comprehend?"): 11048
Christmas Carol. In Honour of Maga. Sung by the Contributors (When Kit North is dead): 10924
Christmas Charades (My whole was sad, and cold, and dreary): 13814
Christmas Chimes (Chime on, chime on, ye merry Christmas bells): 7105
Christmas Chit-Chat (Farewell to Autumn, and her yellow bowers): 9504
Christmas Comes But Once a Year (Christmas comes but once a year): 12252
Christmas Day (Another Christmas day is come!): 15406
Christmas Day (Oh, Saviour, whom this holy morn): 10858
Christmas Day on Sunday, 1870 (Rise in joyfulness and splendour): 13726
Christmas Eve (O fiery stars, o frosty skies): 682
Christmas Eve in the Country (A pale-green sky fleck'd with one glitt'ring bar): 13512
Christmas Eve. A Poem. Paraphrase (It was the morn of Christmas Eve. Methought): 12014
Christmas Guests (The quiet day in winter beauty closes): 3912
Christmas Holly (The round bright sun in the west hung low): 13114
Christmas in the Workhouse (The prickly holly, spotted with red): 7316
Christmas Memories: The Days of Long Ago (Beside the Christmas fire): 12736
Christmas Musings. Addressed to Ianthe (Time flies apace—another year hath perished): 15294
Christmas Olive-Branches (Scarlet berries set in gold): 7148
Christmas Roses (The wide white woods are still as death or sleep): 658
Christmas Sonnet. To the Rich (Hast thou not aught to spare, now the rude wind): 6522
Christmas-Day (How will it dawn, the coming Christmas-day?): 1889
Christmas-Tide ("A merry Christmas!" How the old words waken): 13327
Christmas-Tide (Oh, how the aged faces glow): 12960
Christmas-Tide (The Christmas-tide—the Christmas-tide): 6326
Christmas. A Rudder-Head Reverie (In that fames place no longer cruising): 5310
Christmas. An Old-Fashioned Ditty (In days of yore the Baron bold): 14070
Christopher Agonistes (Chr. (Pettishly.) Plague on those herrings, they were nought but salt): 9451
Chrysanthemums (At tea-time in the ruddy light): 5042
Chrysanthemums (He lured me from the firelit room): 13368
Chrysanthemums (Not in the fairy freshness of the Spring): 7488
Chrysanthemums (Pink, crimson, yellow, cream, and white!): 4673
Chryto and Thespis (A spiritual life ’tis given is to inhale): 14140
Church Music (Soft, through the rich illumined panes): 2604
Church-going Tim (Tim Black is bedridden, you say?): 12087
Cinderella and Father Christmas; Or, A Christmas Dialogue in Doggerel Verse, Being Very Much Doggerel and Very Little Verse (Poor Cinderella sits alone): 2064
Cinderella. A Child's Song of the Season (Where Cinderella stitches): 2620
Cintra. A Windy Day in the South (In the brake are creaking): 3310
Cithara. A Dream of Poesy (As the bright Hesper star): 973
City Graves (I walked straight through the gathering fog): 1154
City Violets (Fairest of Spring's fair children): 6811
Civile Bellum (Rifleman, shoot me a fancy shot): 851
Clari in the Well (O little fountain of a maiden): 2122
Classic Ground (I gave the reigns to Fancy, as the day): 2734
Cleobis and Biton. A Story from Herodotus ("Oh! mother, wherefore is thy brow so sorrowful to-day?"): 10898
Cleopatra (Her mouth is fragrant as a vine): 12206
Cleopatra (Here, Charmain, take my bracelets): 9738
Clive's Dream Before the Battle of Plassey (Beneath the thick old mango-trees the trunks are growing black): 9291
Clos Vougeot (Clos Vougeot vintage, listen, make me gay): 13618
Cloud-Dreams (Fresh is the wind in its blowing): 3945
Cloud-Pictures (Here, far from home and all I love, I raise): 12566
Cloudland (O! it is pleasant, with a heart at ease): 3439
Cloudland (The everlasting gates of God's bright heaven): 6501
Clouds (A cloud upon the sky!): 335
Clouds (Nobody looks at the clouds): 15190
Clouds at Sea (Heavy seasons there are when a curtain of gloom): 6149
Cloudy Skies (Silly showers, how fast you fall): 665
Clover (Clover is playing amid the sunbeams): 2365
Clytè (On the sea-shore at Cyprus stood): 505
Clytie (The summer night was waning. Few in number): 640
Cobwebs (Spider, Spider! weave thy thread): 13338
Cœur-de-Lion's Statue. A colossal equestrian bronze figure, by the sculptor Marochetti; now placed outside the Great Exhibition in Hyde Park (Richard the lion-hearted! crown'd serene): 6129
Cold and Quiet (Cold, my dear,—cold and quiet): 2006
Coleridge (Like some full tree that bends with fruit and leaves): 14733
Coleridge (Magician, whose dread spell): 13871
College Chapel (A shady seat by some cool mossy spring): 11954
College Garden (Sacred to early morn and evening hours): 11956
College Hall (Still may the spirit of the ancient days): 11955
College Library (A churchyard with a cloister running round): 11957
Cologne (To the shrine of old St Cunibert, that structure gaunt and lone): 5947
Columbia-Square Market. A Dream, and the Interpretation Thereof ("Must it be always thus?" I woke and wept): 3692
Columbus ("What wouldst thou, Fernando, so troubled and pale?"): 5751
Columbus (I know not rightly whether bard or sage): 13066
Columbus (Now through two weary moons, the restless keels): 9463
Columbus (Steer on, bold Sailor—Wit may mock thy soul that sees the land): 10011
Columbus (Still steer on, brave heart! Though witlings laugh at thy emprise): 11058
Columbus. (A Print after a Picture by Parmeggiano) (Rise, Victor, from the festive board): 10602
Come (Come, Love, come, the bonny boat): 4819
Comfort (Hast thou o'er the clear heaven of thy soul): 1390
Comfort (If there should come a time, as well there may): 4297
Comfort (Speak low to me, my Saviour—low and sweet): 10745
Comfort in Tears (How is it that thou art so sad): 10914
Coming Hame (The lift is high and blue): 389
Coming Home (O brothers and sisters, growing old): 6597
Coming Home (There's a valley in the west world, and a river rippling free): 12463
Coming into Port (I have weathered the turbulent cape of storms): 8917
Coming Pleasures (Shadow-leaves of rugged elms): 7586
Coming Summer (What will the summer bring?): 334
Common (The household bread the children take): 1717
Communings With Nature (As the tempest lifted the northern sea): 13991
Communings with Thought (Return, my thoughts, come home!): 10955
Companions on the Road (Life's milestones, marking year on year): 9584
Companionship (After some thought that leaped life's boundary): 12320
Comparison (Oh! rose of tender pink): 2325
Compensation (Crooked and dwarfed the tree must stay): 6841
Compensation (No, dear—on neither lawn nor hill): 846
Compensation (One woman, in furs and velvets): 4735
Composed After Reading the Abbot (A spirit hath been here—the dry bones live): 8790
Composed in one of the Valleys of Westmoreland, on Easter Sunday (With each recurrence of this glorious morn): 7776
Comrades (There were three): 4118
Concerning Mermaids (There is a maiden of renown): 1789
Concha Veneris (Where erst the sea-waves' gentle swell): 15567
Conclusion (Why sleeps the future, as a snake enroll'd): 9859
Confession (For all these things I ask your pardon, dear): 12739
Confession (My first false love has married a churl): 450
Confessions of a Captive. A Caution by a Confirmed Cynic (Soft, versifying youths that prate): 541
Confessions of St. Valentine (Long ago (as mortals reckon)): 432
Confidences (Oh, you merry, idle fellow, high upon a beech-bough swaying): 13236
Confirmation (Palms are for folded hands): 1773
Conflict and Victory (Oh! Refuge of men worn and weary): 3584
Conradin (The harvest fields shone bright): 15228
Conscience (Where is the king, with all his purple pomp): 15669
Consider (Consider): 14198
Consider the Lilies of the Field (Sweet nurslings of the vernal skies): 5882
Consolation (I was in misery—Reason to me came): 11693
Consolation (Through the village, o'er the river, to the breezes gladness flinging): 7492
Consolation (What shall I grow): 821
Consolation (When the pale wreath is laid upon the tomb): 2772
Consolation (Ye classic bards, whose verses seem): 12781
Consolation For Absence (Our eyes still drink from the same fount of light): 5855
Consolation for Mortality (When thoughts): 3269
Consolation. From the French of Lamartine (Let them fall, these sad tears; let them silently fall): 5374
Consolation. From the German of Baron de la Motte Fouque (Had God no idol taken): 340
Consolatory Verses (The thunder may swell ’long its pathway on high): 104
Constance De V—. An Episode in the Early Life of Charles Maurice, Prince de Talleyrand (Ye maidens of Old England!): 327
Constancy ("It is—it is the trumpet's note!"): 15552
Constancy (Once more, love, we rest where the emerald sea): 13221
Constancy (She dwelt in her dear native vale, where the light): 15551
Constancy (To Constancy, a thousand fanes are reared): 4594
Constancy in Inconstancy: A Young Man's Confession (She hath a large heart still, this lady of mine): 6347
Constant (I give you back your word again): 13226
Constantinople (Say whence the loud clangour that deafens the ear): 3097
Consule Planco. An Autumn Reverie (Bare grow the trees, the yellowing showers come down): 4100
Contemplation (’Twas on a mossy bank beside a brook): 15691
Content (Content! the good, the golden mean): 5268
Content (My heart and I but lately were at strife): 4288
Contented (Deep snows of death have caught my failing feet): 12010
Continued (Methinks that to some vacant Hermitage): 9831
Continued (They dreamt not of a perishable home): 9857
Continued (Yet some, Noviciates of the cloistral shade): 9847
Contradiction, A Tale (In Anster, long since, in the shire o' Fife): 3519
Contrast (’Neath the green limes of sunny climes): 7239
Contrast (Mirth is but the child of sorrow): 2402
Contrasts (A short June night, now brightening fast to dawn): 7525
Contrasts (A sunny brook is gleaming): 2320
Contrasts (Contrasts! They take it as a graceful theme): 4553
Contrasts (Guests, at a nobleman's board): 280
Contrition (As one that, venturing in frail bark, would brave): 11695
Convalescence (Awake, sad world, for Spring has come): 12654
Conversation (In spite of what the cynics teach): 628
Coquette (Because her eyes to me and you): 12959
Corali (Soft-brow'd, majestic Corali!): 11033
Corcyra (I sat beneath an olive's branches grey): 10489
Corinna at the Capitol (There were footsteps on the Corso in the morning twilight gray): 6183
Corn Flowers (Along the swelling of the upland leas—): 5524
Corn-Flowers (From dawn till dusk, we followed up): 7328
Coronach (He is gone from the counter): 9202
Coronation Ode for Queen Victoria I. June 28, 1838 (The Spectre in a maiden-head): 11599
Corporal Pietro Micca. (Time: Seige of Turin by the French, 1706) (Hard by the river Cerva, where Piedmont's Alps look): 471
Corra Linn (Thou speak'st with tongues of tempest, Corra Linn!): 4410
Correctness—(Free Translation) (The calm correctness where no fault we see): 9999
Corruptions of the Higher Clergy ("Woe to you Prelates! rioting in ease"): 9842
Corrymeela (Over here in England I'm helpin' with the hay): 8167
Cortile Salviati (Here dwelt th'aspiring youth who dared to love): 5179
Cossack Cradle-song: "Spi, Mladenets Moi" (Sleep, sleep my pretty son): 8905
Couleur de Rose (When Dawn first opens her sleepy eyes): 6991
Counsels (Though bright thy morn of life may seem): 13995
Count Abel (Through the woods of Normandy, and past the yellow haunted meres): 2857
Count Alarcos and the Infanta Solisa (Alone, as was her wont, she sate,—within her bower alone): 9929
Count Burkhardt (Who rides so fast through the blasted pines): 920
Count Cavour. In Memoriam (Weep, Italy, weep!): 452
Count Eberhard, The Grumbler, of Wurtemberg (Ha, ha! take heed—ha, ha! take heed): 10037
Count Fernan Gonsalez (They have carried afar into Navarre the great Count of Castille): 9729
Count Sarno's Farewell to His Sons (Oh, Naples! thou hast often borne): 3844
Count Vladimir. A Legend of Dalmatia (Halt, thou hurrying traveller!): 15727
Country in Autumn ('Tis past! no more the Summer blooms!): 7222
Country Justice (For him who, lost to every hope of life): 7213
Country Pleasures (In Paradise, amid the hay): 7176
Courage! (Wounded! I know it, my brother): 4119
Court of Darkness (Ill met, Ethereal Powers;—whom Sammael): 10709
Cousin Carrie (This is the stile where Carrie leaned): 6851
Cousin Robert (O cousin Robert, far away): 6415
Cousin Winnie (The glad spring-green grows luminous): 1576
Cowper's Lines on the Receipt of his Mother's Picture (Oh that those lips had language! Life has passed): 2923
Cows in the Meadow (When springing meads are freshly dight): 5088
Cowslip Green (When every vernal hope and joy decays): 14146
Cowslips (Young Spring has daisied all the meads): 4490
Cradle Song (Come, sweet Sleep, O Slumber, draw near!): 8722
Cradle Song (Sleep, my childie, sleep): 14325
Craig-y-Barns. (Near Dunkeld) ('Tis years since thus I rested): 7415
Craving Rest (Oh! for the leisure to lie and to dream): 4169
Creamy Kitty (My heart was sound, and firm, and round): 13628
Creation (Of her heart, and her soul, and her life): 4698
Creation and Redemption ("Let there be Light!"—were the words of creation): 3872
Creatures of the Night (Poised on strong wings, with swift yet stealthy flight): 6649
Credo (Each, in himself, his hour to be and cease): 781
Credo (My heart is sick, my whole head drooping faints): 9188
Cremona. A Ballad of the Irish Brigade (The traitor priest Cassoli has done as was foretold): 15035
Crinoliniana (You ask me, gentle cousin mine): 9669
Critics (Did I, when you went a-warring): 8979
Critique on Lord Byron (So the Public at length is beginning to tire on): 9719
Crœsus and Adrastus. (Herodotus i. 35) (Fortune, that walks above the heads of men): 3206
Cromwell and His Daughter. A Dramatic Sketch (Strange and sad story of temptations!—Satan): 15329
Cromwell's Statue (What needs our Cromwell stone or bronze to say): 8654
Cross Roads (They grew together in the old grey hall): 2856
Crossing the Bar (Sunset and evening star): 8386
Crown and Cross (It seemed a crown of cruel thorn): 1666
Crowned Heads (A little room with a rugless floor): 379
Cruelty to Animals—A Sonnet (Alas! that man, to whom God's grace hath given): 5878
Crustaceans in Custody ("The shelly crawlers each returning year"): 14056
Cuckoo (The moon is but a crescent white): 6444
Cuckoo Song (She heard it first, and it was first of May): 14529
Cuckoo! (Clouds of golden daybreak): 7262
Cuckoo! (There's a dreamy voice in the summer air): 7511
Cucullain and Emer (Come down, sweet Emer, from out thy prison): 3665
Culloden (Culloden, on thy swarthy brow): 3417
Cupid and Campaspe (Cupid and my Campaspe play'd): 2388
Cupid and Campaspe (Cupid and my Campaspe played): 6253
Cupid and the Maiden ("Naughty Cupid! saucy elf!"): 7556
Cupid as a Landscape Painter (Once I sate upon a mountain): 10685
Cupid Caught Tripping (Alas for Love!—the spirit-light): 15737
Cupid Crucified (In those fields of air): 12122
Cupid in the Cabinet. An Attic Legend (Pray you, gentle ladies, hearken): 9182
Cupid Schooled (When she was as gay as a linnet): 9647
Cupid's Quest. Verses for Music (Dan Cupid flew as a butterfly): 2776
Cupid's Revenge (Cupid, naughty little boy): 13550
Curfew-Tide (The thrushes sing in every tree): 13362
Customer-Wark (In Ettrick's old vale, where the heather grows green): 3011
Cuttin' Rushes (Oh, maybe it was yesterday, or fifty years ago!): 7941
Cymbeline (Hard by the garden-seat): 13799
Cymbeline and the Quarrellers (Cymbeline, the king, and his queen): 2516
Cynthia (Why do you love to walk abroad so gay): 13593
D'Abord du Mer. From a French Song (Along the shore, along the shore): 6416
D'Outre tombe (Beside my grave, if chance should ever bring you): 1007
Daffodils (I sang of these bright flowers, you know): 4831
Daffodils (I stand, as once I stood of old): 4295
Daffodils at Sea (Fair daffodils I took across the western sea away): 3972
Daffodils in March (Airily, fairily, floating and fluttering): 4354
Dahlias (It seemed to me when autumn came): 4849
Dahlias (The summer reign of flowers is past): 4503
Daisies (How bare the garden borders lie): 4515
Daisies and Violets (When high in sunshine poise the hawks): 7340
Dame Eleanor's Return (Dame Eleanor waits by the tallest tree): 643
Dame Martha's Well (Dame Martha bode in Sonderland): 3711
Dame Martha's Well. (After Christian Winther) (Dame Martha bode in Sonderland): 2097
Damsel John (Damsel John is fair to see): 480
Dan's First Parliamentary Campaign (Dan, who in Ireland led the way): 10117
Danaë (The hour of noonday sleep was o'er): 13579
Dance of the Peasants, in the Winter's Tale (Sleepest thou, Sufferer?—Sleep denies): 15334
Dance, My Children! ("Dance, my children! lads and lasses!"): 1914
Dandie's Last Journey. Dandie Speaks (Of my travels do you ask me? Do you seriously task me): 3990
Dando, the Oyster-Eater (While yet a child, and on his father's knee): 7787
Danger (How many times have I been near to death!): 11810
Dangerous ("Bless you, my darlings!" Go gliding along): 13641
Dangerous Eyes (The eyes that melt! The eyes that burn!): 3177
Daniel O'Rourke, An Epic Poem, in Six Cantos (I trust, O gentle reader, you'll excuse): 8734
Daniel O'Rourke, An Epic Poem, in Six Cantos, Canto IV (Blessed! thrice blessed was the age of gold): 9226
Daniel O'Rourke, An Epic Poem, in Six Cantos. Canto II (As the sun moves to rest below the wave): 8794
Daniel O'Rourke, An Epic Poem, in Six Cantos. Canto III (Have any of my readers ever seen): 8994
Daniel O'Rourke, An Epic Poem, in Six Cantos. Canto VI ('Tis said a *gander once preserved a Capitol): 9452
Daniel O'Rourke; An Epic Poem, in Six Cantos. Canto V (That there are many wond'rous things, I hold): 9334
Dante (I wait, in patience, and in trembling hope): 11938
Dante (That singer who in Italy of old): 14843
Dante and Beatrice. 1st May 1274 (Beautiful Florence! As in dreams I stray): 8406
Dante to Beatrice (I see thee, gliding towards me with slow pace): 6148
Dante—A Sonnet (Of all Italia's bards the first and last): 6503
Danube and the Euxine ("Danube, Danube! wherefore comest thou"): 10522
Daphne (She stood upon the hill, and sigh’d): 14601
Dark Gordon's Bride (Young Helen has heard the fatal order): 286
Darkness and Dawn (As seamen from a distant land): 12497
Darkness and Light (Oh! the deathly, dreary world): 12942
Darling Dorel (She came with her innocent beauty and grace): 7075
Das Göttliche (Noble be Man): 9790
Dates and Dates (Dates! how we schoolboys loved them! Dates): 10214
Daughters (One stands in robe of white): 4697
David and Jonathan (O heart of fire! misjudged by wilful man): 10492
David Gwynn—Hero or "Boasting Liar"?
(From "Historical Problems") ("A galley-lie" ye call my tale; but he): 1094
David Returning From the Conquest of Goliath ("Behold ye the youth from the combat returning"): 13994
Davie Carr (Are you asleep, little Davie? I've slipped away from the gloom): 7637
Dawn ('Tis scarcely four by the village clock): 194
Dawn (In idle grief I sat and sighed): 1418
Dawn (In the cool star-glimmer, night's dream of dawn): 1742
Dawn (Low sobbing waves upon a shadowed shore): 12603
Dawn (The eager light of morning! A clear blush): 13126
Dawn (The robin wakes him from his early nest): 12257
Dawn (There is a solemn stillness in the air): 6999
Dawn at Sea (Through the pale gateways of the east where night and morning meet): 4077
Dawn in an Eastern Jungle. (Suggested by a Night-Journey in Ceylon) (Amid the forest glades we went): 464
Day (Night's shades are waning fast — approaching Dawn): 6364
Day and Night (All day the glorious Sun caressed): 799
Day and Night (The days were once too short for life and me): 9682
Day by Day (Every day has its dawn): 14264
Day Dreams (How they come, and how they go): 4830
Day Dreams (Resting ’neath a peaceful cedar, near an old ancestral hall): 2419
Day-Dawn (The first low fluttering breath of waking day): 5892
Day-Dreams (Call them not vain and false day-dreams we see): 13432
Day-Dreams (I know ’tis but a dream!): 6299
Day-Dreams (I, often lying lonely, over seas): 2860
Day-Dreams (Where o'er the network of the trees): 7476
Day-Dreams (Where the orange bee on the purple flower): 7118
Daybreak (Awake, this morning! wake, O heart and soul): 6665
Daybreak at Sea (Now is there stillness hov'ring in mid-air): 5043
Daybreak in the East (Memnon on the yellow sands): 6721
Daydawn (Blushing and bright, from out the misty East): 7467
Daylight (If I was but born to die): 2532
Daylight and Moonlight ("In broad daylight, and at noon"): 14986
De Courtenaye ("What clouds thy brow, Sir Leoline, at this our marriage feast?"): 15337
De Cresci (The old church clock in Barniston Tower): 10893
De Mortuis. (Two texts and a comment) (I thank ye, o my dead! that in my dreams): 10274
De Profundis (You must be troubled, asthore): 1952
De Quincey's Revenge. A Ballad in Three Fittes (De Quincey, lord of Tavernent): 11310
Dead (A quaint old cottage was on a hill): 13052
Dead (Oh weary eyes! that oft did weep): 13220
Dead (With closèd lips and closèd eyes): 7688
Dead Cities (Where are they? Their life and greatness, where?—gone): 1535
Dead Dreams (A waning moon in the rainfull skies): 2506
Dead Flowers (Those simple daisies which you view): 12976
Dead Hope (Hope new born one pleasant morn): 14220
Dead Joy. (A Song) (Her hues of youthful life divine): 1541
Dead Love (Can the winds of Winter bring): 13112
Dead Love (We are face to face, and between us here): 6576
Dead Violets (Let them lie—ah, let them lie!): 7595
Dean Swift!!! ('Tis not when on turtle and venison dining): 9724
Death (All nature slept. The soft voluptuous air): 12911
Death (How pale! how still! how breathless! Can it be): 15414
Death (There is a shadow standing by the cradle): 4575
Death (This is a world of care): 5381
Death (Time was that Death and I were bitterest foes): 11679
Death (Weep not that Death has bared his blade): 12941
Death (Wherever it may hap, however spring): 9071
Death and Life. In Memoriam July 18, 1881 (O Death! how sweet the thought): 14677
Death and Love (I cried to Life, "All earthly things above"): 11998
Death and Song (Oh, sing to me of my belovèd dead): 12547
Death and the Child (I heard a child breathe forth, in tenderest tone): 4959
Death and the Player (I watched the players playing on their stage): 14927
Death at the End (Would I were dead and lying in my grave): 13169
Death at the Goal. (Suggested by the old Legend that one of the Crusaders died of joy on his first sight of Jerusalem) (He sailed across the glittering seas that swept): 14608
Death Chant for the Sultan (Raise the song to the Mighty!): 11492
Death from the Sting of a Serpant (As when a monstrous snake, with flaming crest): 9969
Death in a Foreign Land (Not long shall this feeble pulse remain): 15350
Death in Life (So fair, so rare, and yet so soon to die!): 12548
Death in the Kitchen (Trim, thou art right!—'Tis sure that I): 14075
Death of Captain Knowles (How many ways there be for men to die): 2433
Death of the Old Year (Thy life is ebbing fast, thou agèd year!): 12594
Death of the Youngest Child ("Why is our infant sister's eye"): 3267
Death Song (There lies a cold corpse upon the sand): 8621
Death's Changed Face (Sweet Saviour, since the time Thy human feet): 2672
December ('Tis dark December now. The early eves): 9561
December (December like a novice stands alone): 15931
December (Hail, first-born of the Winter King): 13485
December (Though now ’tis cold and winter drear): 15887
December (Welcome—Ancient of the year!): 10097
December Droopings (It is a chill, dull morning; o'er the sea): 10794
Declension and Revival (Die to thy root, sweet flower): 1577
Dedicated to all the Churches (A Picture by G. F. Watts, R. A.) (High in mid heaven, motionless and mute): 2633
Dedication to the Physician Who Penned Peptic Precepts, and Prescribed Those Pilular Productions of the Pestle, Prænominated Peristalic Persuaders, This Pretty Poem Is Presented by Its Parent. A Festal Ode (What constitutes a feast?): 9702
Dedicatory (And if we sing—I and that dearer friend): 6287
Dedicatory Poem to the Princess Alice (Dead Princess, living Power, if that, which lived): 7858
Deeds, Not Words (Wherefore bid me say I love you?): 6417
Defiance to Time (Thou shalt not rob me, thievish Time): 6117
Definition of a Long Visit (To define a long visit, is something like saying): 5473
Definition of a Poet (A smiling, weeping, rainbow thing): 3625
Defton Wood (I held my way through Defton Wood): 12514
Degenerate? (Of old sang Horace in his bantering vein): 15009
Delaroche's Picture of Marie Antoinette (Fair and fearless, sad and stately, discrowned Queen): 919
Delay (Stream, that from yon mountain-crown): 12881
Delay (The golden hours are fleeting, Jane): 6504
Delicate Sensibility (O tender heart, that feels too much remorse): 14710
Delight in Disorder (A sweet disorder in the dress): 3448
Deliverance (As some poor captive bird, too weak to fly): 1813
Deliverance (Farewell, O women of my dreams): 12132
Delos (Is Life a sea? O, no, ’tis steadier far): 14699
Delphic Hymn to Apollo (B. C. 280) Done into English by Algernon Charles Swinburne (Thee, the son of God most high): 8641
Deluded (Happy is he who hears, with brow elate): 12282
Demetrio and Zöe (I bade thee tell me, when the rose): 3859
Demos (My song is of Demos, our well-meaning friend): 10957
Denny's Daughter (Denny's daughter stood a minute in the field I was to pass): 8147
Departed Friends ('Tis sweet to muse, as o'er the gladden'd sea): 15710
Departing Emigrant's Song (On the hills of our fathers the sunset is streaming): 4392
Departmental Ditties (I have eaten your bread and salt): 15922
Departure (When I go away from my own dear home): 11362
Depreciating Her Beauty (I love not thy perfections. When I hear): 7963
Der Frühlings-Abend. The Spring-Evening (The heavens glow with rosy hue): 6361
Der Tod als Freund. A Translation of the Picture by Alfred Rethel (Is the sun shining? I thought he set): 13886
Derby Prophecy (There is no sound in Middleham): 6656
Description of Stonehenge (And whereto serves that wondrous trophy now): 4391
Deserted (A briery lane, where wild birds sing): 6963
Deserted (Bright sea, far-flooding all the pebbled sand): 3952
Deserted (Never a ripple upon the lake): 4087
Deserted (Will you remember, when, at close of day): 13320
Desiderium (Dora! I quaff'd enchanted wine): 13394
Désillusionné (From the light-circled hall, through the dazzling throng): 13470
Desolate (I strain my worn-out sight across the sea): 12094
Desolate (Like a funeral pall): 6892
Desolation (Night, like a pall, with stealthy speed): 12590
Desolation (O say not thou art left of God): 10495
Despair (They blame this changeless brow of care): 15510
Despair (When forced to join the thoughtless throng): 11248
Despair. A Dramatic Monologue (Is it you, that preach'd in the chapel there looking over the sand?): 7954
Despondency and Aspiration. A Lyric (My soul was mantled with dark shadows, born): 11710
Destruction of Babylon (And art thou then for ever set! thy ray): 8443
Desultory Stanzas Upon Receiving the Last Sheets of "Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, No. LXV," From the Press (Is then the final sheet before me laid?): 9732
Desultory Stanzas Upon Receiving the Last Sheets of "Memorials of a Tour on the Continent," From the Press (Is then the final page before me spread): 9731
Devotional Musings (I will commit my way, O Lord, to thee): 1731
Dew ("O! dearest mother, tell me, pray"): 1400
Dialogue Between a Mother and Child (Child. "O lady, lay your costly robes aside"): 8245
Dialogue Between Willison Glass, Esq. of Edinburgh, and Jeremy Bentham Esq. of London (Jeremy throw your pen aside): 9712
Dialogues of the Dead. I.—Between Lords Palmerston and Brougham (Welcome, my Henry, to these pleasant plains): 12183
Dialogues of the Dead. II. D'Orsay, Jerrold, and a Stranger (Bonjour, my friend. That stare upon your face): 12186
Dialogues of the Dead. III. Shakespeare, Thackeray, and a Critic (Whilst Homer wags in sleep his dear old noddle): 12187
Dialogues of the Dead. IV. Johnson, Macaulay, Boswell, Goldsmith, Goethe, Thackeray, Richardson, Fielding, Sterne, Addison, Voltaire, Bacon (Of all the Arts that flourish on the earth): 12189
Dialogues of the Dead. V. Artists,—Ancient and Modern (Wae's me, my Stannie, wi' yon ghaistly party): 12190
Dialogues of the Dead. VI. Amongst the Musicians (Whence comes it, Handel, that we hear no news): 12193
Diana and Endymion ('Twas the glowing, golden time): 15203
Diaphenia (Shepherds, since my time is come): 13853
Dick's Apophthegm (I wound along the face of Dover cliffs): 13592
Dido (They left their dear companions on the hills): 755
Dido to Aeneas. (Aeneid, Book IV. vv. 305-330) (Thou breaker of all bonds, was thine the hope): 607
Died Happy (You say, O friends, that I am strangely altered): 2651
Died in India (Weep not, O friends, weep not that she has failed): 1330
Dies Iræ (Day of anger, day of wonder): 7752
Dies Iræ (Day of wrath, O dreadful day): 14332
Dies Iræ (God takes our dearest—ever so): 1754
Different Paths (I lately talked with one who strove): 2694
Different Points of View (Saith the white owl to the martin folk): 7351
Diffidence (My lady sits beside me, and her eyes): 13073
Dig Deep to Find the Gold (Dost thou seek the treasures hidden): 6048
Dinan ("Now by the testament of the good Saint Luke,"): 962
Dion. (See Plutarch) (Fair is the Swan, whose majesty, prevailing): 8463
Dionysius the Schoolmaster (One little year ago and Syracuse): 518
Direction (As by an ancient ruin long I lay): 11968
Dirge (A fallen angel here doth rest): 1286
Dirge (Do not strive to raise her up): 2039
Dirge (Softly!): 9791
Dirge of Summer (All in the arms of Autumn lying): 7608
Discipleship (Thou perfect Brother, perfect Son): 1592
Discipleship (What is God's will?–that I may go): 1894
Discipline (Can it be true that you have read in vain): 13254
Discontent (Light human nature is too lightly tost): 10741
Discords (It had some grains of truth, at least): 6826
Disenchanted (Alas, I thought this forest must be true): 2147
Disenchantment (Although from Adam stained with crime): 10383
Disgrace to the man who would still repress (Disgrace to the man who would still repress): 7
Disguise (Many golden flow’rets lie): 7368
Disillusioned (Love met me late upon the way): 667
Dissolution of the Monasteries (Threats come which no submission may assuage): 9845
Distant Sound of the Sea at Evening (Yes, rolling far up some green mountain-dale): 14877
Dithyramb (Believe me, together): 10805
Divide et Impera (Divide and rule, the politician cries): 9112
Do Kings or Nobles Care For Us? (When you behold a king enthroned): 10
Do Not Weep (I once was young, but now am old; I once was fair, not gray): 6075
Do You Remember It? (Do you remember that purple twilight's falling): 3576
Do You Remember? (Dear, do you remember lingering side by side): 4670
Docendo Discimus (At school my masters many are): 13456
Doctor Cole. An Historical Tale Founded on Facts (In Mary’s days, when Canterbury Pole): 10472
Doctor Cupid (I have doubts that come and go): 8319
Dog-Days (How calm! how still! no ripples stir): 5101
Doggie Squib (My doggie Squib is sad or shy): 7219
Doggrel (Chy-ike, sir—see, sir): 15000
Dolly (We were schoolfellows, Dolly and I): 12969
Dolly's Garden (This is Dolly's garden): 1971
Domestic Asides; or Truth in Parentheses (I really take it very hard): 3234
Domestic Fame (Why is the Grave so silent?): 5608
Domestic Love (Domestic Love! not in proud palace halls): 3261
Domestic Peace (Tell me on what holy ground): 3400
Domine, Quo Vadis? (There stands in the old Appian way): 7782
Domitian and the Turbot. From the Fourth Satire of Juvenal (When the Flavian tiger the nations was rending): 7772
Don Juan and Haidee ("Oh, happy love, where love like this is found!"): 15264
Don Juan Unread (Of Corinth Castle we had read): 7749
Don Raymon of Butrago (Your horse is faint, my king, my lord, your gallant horse is sick): 7835
Donald MacInroy (Sitting by the great hall window): 7446
Donald MacLeod (Donald MacLeod! Woulds't hear his story told?): 3710
Donald—A Pony (Are thy tired feet on this rough earth yet walking): 12803
Donati's Comet (Earth saw amazed a trail of light): 7128
Donna Clara (In the garden, ’neath the twilight): 9578
Dorette (The girls beneath the linden trees): 13502
Dorothy (Dorothy is debonair): 13170
Dorothy (You say that my love is plain): 2132
Dorts. The Mason. A Character Sketch (Jeanie, what was yon the minister was saying?): 3898
Double Acrostic (He wears no gown, nor in his shoes puts peas): 13664
Double Life (Man hath two lives; the one of patient toil): 1405
Doubt (Where is it leading us, this sad procession): 4707
Doubts and Hopes (Golden daylight, calm and noble): 503
Down Stream (Between Holmscote and Hurstcote): 606
Down the Clyde (The morn rose blue and glorious o'er the world): 14797
Down the River (How merry a life the little river leads): 2826
Down the Steep (With a weary, plunging step): 3976
Down-Land (The Down, in a tremble of thin, pale blue): 6713
Down—Down (Creeping close to the workhouse walls): 13652
Dr Robert Chambers's Farewell (Farewell, my loving children dear): 6907
Dr. Johnson's Penance (A country road on market-day): 868
Dr. Scott's Farewell to Braemar (Farewell, then, ye mountains in mystery piled): 7801
Drawn Blank (The passionate grief beside the dying bed): 4641
Dream On (Dream on, fond heart! awaken not): 5758
Dream within Dream; or, Evil Minimised (What evil would be, could it be, the Blest): 1072
Dream-Fancies (Whence are ye who come to us): 12997
Dream-Home (The glad fire danced; my Lady sat and smiled): 5041
Dream-Land (Though the years be fled, and the pain is dead): 13309
Dream-Life (Listen, friend, and I will tell you): 2709
Dream-Roses (A rare rose-garden! Nay, some ground enchanted): 4270
Dreaming (I dreamed as I slept last night): 4718
Dreaming (I wander'd through the summer fields): 1513
Dreaming and Awaking (If I had lain thee low in the mound): 4067
Dreaming and Waking (I dreamt a green and golden earth): 14299
Dreaming in Italy (In the fierce noon of Italy I lay): 12064
Dreamings of the Bereaved (The morning breaks bonnie o'er mountain and stream): 5467
Dreamland—A Sonnet (At night, when all is hushed in still repose): 6958
Dreamland: Sweden (I know a Land, far distant, which): 12538
Dreams (A dream of Youth and Hope!—): 5612
Dreams (Dreams, only foolish dreams may be): 2659
Dreams (I have been dreaming of the happy past): 5688
Dreams (Nay! Let them dream their dream of perfect love): 14857
Dreams (Noon sunshine warms the canopy of leaves): 4485
Dreams (Oh! there is a dream of early youth): 10279
Dreams (Unworthy! yea): 777
Dreams in the Invalides (Long had Napoleon slept afar in his Atlantic grave): 10268
Dreams of Heaven (Dream'st thou of Heaven?—What dreams are thine?): 11075
Dreams that Came True (How sweet the life of my youth with thee): 2228
Dreary Court Sky (Bare life I toil for here all day): 11997
Drift on, My Bark! (Drift on, my bark! The sunbeams sleep): 13489
Drink and Think (Life, my friend! is fairy wine): 14724
Drinking (Here I sit alone, alone): 8985
Drip, Drip, O Rain! (Drip, drip, O Rain!): 1410
Droppings (The leaves that fall on the grassy wall): 2897
Drouthiness (I had a dream, which was not all-my-eye): 9546
Drowned ("'Dead'?—did you say he was 'dead'? or is it only my brain?"): 1674
Drowned (A maiden on a summer eve): 4066
Drowned in Harbour (No more the music of the summer wave): 6684
Druidical Excommunication, &c (Mercy and Love have met thee on thy road): 9824
Du Rys de Madame d'All bret (How fair those locks where now the light wind stirs): 12107
Dual Life (Soft and sound he sleeps, my dear): 4596
Ducie of the Dale (Fair Ducie with her reaping-hook): 478
Duffers Yet (After years of play together): 6889
Duke Phranza the Regicide. A Tale of the Greek Empire ('Twas deep midnight on the Caspian wave!): 10448
Dulce Domum (Ah! racked pine, on the granite steep): 867
Dulce est Desipere. A Latin Student's Song of the Twelfth Century. (Translated from the 'Carmina Burana,' p. 137) (Cast aside dull books and thought!): 12244
Dumb (Our life's profoundest joy and sorrowing): 12293
Dumby (I see the face of the friend I lost): 7339
Dunnottar (In the dim churchyard, cold and grey): 4217
Duntroon (A magical night, my masters!): 2754
Durand (To the ancient house of Balbi): 11778
Dust and Ashes (Betwixt your home and mine): 1487
Dutch Anthem (Who Ne'erland's blood feel nobly flow): 3639
Dutch Pictures (All gaily painted white and green): 2769
Duty (If thou hast Yesterday thy duty done): 4529
Duty (Surely the happiest life for man): 4344
Duty (What recks the soldier on the battle-field): 6579
Duty and Pleasure (Duty and Pleasure, long at strife): 10104
Duty and Pleasure (Duty and Pleasure, long at strife): 5232
Dyspepsiana (Join, oh! ye epicures, in this my strain): 13629
Earl Eirek's Voyage. (A Norse Ballad) (Listen to this antique story): 705
Earl Pembroke's Monument ("Herbert is dead! Heaven rest his soul! I've lost"): 641
Earl Strongbow's Beacon (Fair Eva of Desmond): 715
Earl Walter's Daughter (Earl Walter hath a gay garden): 15793
Early Affection (When all the joys arise to mind): 9340
Early April (It is sweet to look into one another's faces): 1975
Early Dawn—Love and Hope (So ends the glory of the night): 11106
Early Faith (Whom hear we tell of all the joy which loving Faith can bring): 325
Early Honours (It is the year's dull waiting time): 2257
Early Love (Our early love was only dream!): 2581
Early Morning (Crowned with limp dew-pearls, lo! the jewelled Morn): 6507
Early Rising (Through my wide window streams the sun): 6647
Early Roman Inscription on the Base of a Statue in the Museum of the Capitol (Would cruel Fates permit vicarious death): 8300
Early Spring (Now Nature wakes from out her wintry trance): 6996
Early Spring (Oh, sweetly now the seasons change!): 6570
Early Summer. A Hymn (Lord of the Hours! at this fair time): 14210
Early Wooing (Indulging in a retrospect): 3295
Earth and Air (The dweller ’mid material pelf): 14311
Earth and Heaven (There is a World of Death beneath our feet): 14641
Earth to Earth (You bid me count and weigh the stars): 14411
Earth-Roses (A Garden! Gladder than gay June it seemed): 4253
Earth's Complines (Before the feet of the dew): 814
Earth's Harvests (Two hundred years ago, the moon): 1103
Earth's Last Kiss (Earth's last kiss to the dying day): 12927
Earth's Shadow (What spirit darkens the bloom of day?): 13141
Earth's Shadows (O perishable brother, let us pause): 3804
Earthly and Heavenly Trust (I saw in a dream a wailing band): 5003
East and West (Blithely he stepped along the way): 12256
East and West (Sweet is the song, whose radiant tissue glows): 11050
Easter Day (The sun of righteousness appears): 10867
Easter Eve (A night of silence and of gloom): 1736
Easter Greeting. From the German of Karl Von Gerok ("Why weepest thou?" How soft the words come stealing!): 7497
Easter-Day in a Mountain Churchyard (There is a wakening on the mighty hills): 11363
Ebb and Flow (Love is aflame like sunrise on the lea): 1060
Ebb and Flow (Up at your grave, my darling, where the great tides ebb and flow): 4992
Echo (Echo, art thou no spiritual creature, bred): 11718
Echo (Pealing from sun-flushed crag at fall of day): 4484
Echo (To roar of beast in wild-wood still): 11002
Echo and Silence (Sleepest thou, Sister Silence, here): 11379
Echo, A Madrigal (Oh, gentle tenant of the silent grove): 5185
Echo, in two Poetical Dialogues (Can Echo speak the tongue of every country? Echo. Try): 8201
Echoes (Like a twinkling star): 2508
Echoes (Ofttimes when Even's scarlet flag): 12818
Echoes (Still the angel stars and shining): 1305
Echoes (What time we hold the onward track): 6505
Eckart the Trusty. (From Goethe) (How dark it is growing—I wish we were back!): 202
Edelweis (Nay, friend beloved, why thus despair): 13792
Edelweiss (Take, dear Lady, take these flowers): 14992
Eden-Land (You remember where in starlight): 6357
Edgar ("The sun has set, and evening gray"): 15653
Edinburgh after Flodden (News of battle!—news of battle!): 10531
Edith (Weep not, weep not, that in the Spring): 3564
Edith and Nora. A Pastoral Poet's Dream (She hath risen up from her morning prayer): 8291
Edith. Chapter III.—The Stranger (Active, up betimes, the rector, proud of his garden): 13717
Edith. Chapter IV.—Berthold's Letter (As, with sense of guilt, but stronger rage at oppression): 13718
Edith. Chapter V.—The Meeting (Strange and not so happy was the meal in the morning): 13719
Edith. Chapter VI.—Flight (As a foe, well-skill'd, if he beleaguer a city): 13720
Edith. Part I.—Lost. Chapter II.—Home (When the rector saw the troop arrive, from the window): 13716
Edith. Part I.—Lost. Chapter I.—The Rector's Child (Edith Trevor closed the door of the rectory gently): 13715
Edith. Part II.—Chapter I.—Berthold (Seven long years, and a winter:—the planet journeys for ever): 13722
Edith. Part II.—Chapter II.—Over Sea (Who is this who roams on the quiet shore of Newhaven): 13723
Edith. Part II.—Chapter II.—Over Sea. (Continued) (Lingering, 'mid the shells. The lisp of waves that are quiet): 13724
Edith. Part II.—Chapter III.—Little Ethel (It is nigh flood tide: fresh comes the breeze from the river): 13725
Edith. Part II.—Chapter III.—Little Ethel. (Continued) (Thus the noon wore on; and by and bye little Ethel): 13727
Edith. Part III.—Back to the Nest.—Chapter I.—Watching and Waiting (Weeks go by, and May: and June is near: and the singing): 13609
Edith. Part III.—Back to the Nest.—Chapter I.—Watching and Waiting. (Continued) (Fell a time, long since, when, yet unlearn'd to distinguish): 13610
Edith. Part III.—Chapter II.—Up the Brook (Sleep brings dreams. Such dreams, as she would chide, on awakening): 13612
Edith. Part III.—Chapter III.—Village Bells (It is late September, and fresh and clear is the morning): 13613
Edith. Part IV.—All Well (Seven long lingering years, and winter-time, and a summer): 13614
Education (A child is born—now take the germ, and make it): 3135
Education (O lady! if some new-born base should bless): 3440
Effie Campbell (Pretty Effie Campbell): 217
Effie Gordon (Bear me to my lowland castle): 439
Effusion of Friendship (As, at the sun's uprise, the shades of grey): 9695
Egeria (A dream of that dim legendary time): 490
Egeria's Daughter (Woe is me, Egeria's daughter!): 2324
Eglantine (How sweetly, after gentle rain): 4609
Egotism (In prison pent of Personality): 12283
Egypt (On the deep rock of ages have I set): 5963
Ejaculation (Glory to God! and to that Power who came): 9265
Ejaculation (Glory to God! and to the Power who came): 9858
Elder Jonathan (An Elder of the church, a sacred name): 9887
Elderflower (June is the time of the Elder-flower): 2224
Eldorado ("Comrades, talk you of returning"): 13493
Eleanóre. An Autumn Idyll (Fall, fall, ye dim gray mists of autumn-tide!): 12277
Elegiac Stanzas (Calm wakes the beauty of the vernal morn): 10705
Elegiac Verses (What comforts grief? can they that with us weep): 8380
Elegiacs (Light on the western hills!—the crimson glory of sunset): 13834
Elegy (As a vesture shalt thou change them, said the prophet): 8564
Elegy (Fair was thy blossom, tender flower): 8017
Elegy (Oh breathe not—breathe not—sure ’twas something holy!): 8311
Elegy (Strait is the spot and green the sod): 14821
Elegy Composed on the Field of Pinkie (Behold, already from the southern sky): 8730
Elegy I (When first I sought that smile of brightness): 8417
Elegy II (If fate will tear thee from my heart): 8418
Elegy II. Book III (Orpheus, 'tis said, thy ancient lyre): 8754
Elegy III (Should'st thou detect a smother'd sigh): 8481
Elegy III. Book I (She look'd as Ariadne, when she lay): 8751
Elegy in Memory of Percy, Lord Strangford: Died 9 Jan. 1869, aged 43 years (One statesman the less,—one friend the poorer): 14386
Elegy IV. (Imitated from the Modern Latin) (When I that form no longer view): 8482
Elegy on a Country Maiden (From yonder old church-spire, with moss o'ergrown): 9355
Elegy on a Lady (Ah! thou'st laid her low, yet flushed with life, cup-bearer of the sphere!): 14783
Elegy on a Lady (Assemble, all ye maidens, at the door): 15943
Elegy on Captn. Matthew Henderson—A Gentleman Who Held the Patent for His Honours Immediately From Almighty God! (But now his radiant course is run): 14894
Elegy on my Tom Cat (Weep for my Tomcat! all ye Tabbies weep): 9795
Elegy On Our Auld Timmer Clock (Like some auld servant, crazed an' dune): 3251
Elegy on the Death of an Idiot Girl (Who, helpless, hopeless being, who): 8133
Elegy on the Death of an Infant (Ere Margaret was three months old): 8134
Elegy on the Death of J. F. Cavanagh, Bridgeton (Awake, my harp, again to grief): 122
Elegy on the Same (Why tolls the dirge of yonder funeral knell): 15303
Elegy on the Sparrow (Each Love, each Venus, mourn with me): 5340
Elegy to Alisa, Worn with a Lingering Illness (Hath death that cheek of all its bloom bereaved?): 9894
Elegy Written in a Ball-room (The beaux are jogging on the pictured floor): 8178
Elegy XII. Book II (Whate'er the man, who first thy portrait drew): 8752
Elegy XXVII. Book II (O, fools, with foolish hopes elate): 8753
Elegy. Not Written in a Country Churchyard (Nature's robe was autumn-tinted): 9604
Elen of Reigh (Have you never heard of Elen of Reigh): 10316
Eleusinia: Lines Suggested by the Bas-reliefs on the Portland Vase; the figures of which are supposed to be illustrative of the Eleusinian Mysteries (Blue darkness, as of deep midsummer nights): 1294
Eleven Triads (Three Furies are there, Fear, Remorse, and Hate): 14356
Elfie Meadows (A sunny day in leafy June, white clouds are floating high): 289
Elfrida (The summer sun shines warm and bright): 5687
Elisabetta Sirani. 1665 (Just to begin,—and end! so much,—no more!): 11983
Elizabeth (During the weary months, when Paris, all closely surrounded): 9785
Elizabeth of Siberia (Amid Siberian snows the exile's child): 11884
Ella (Not fairer to the breath of morn): 13925
Ellen O'Clair (Say, art thou sleeping now): 760
Ellen Strathallan. A Fairy Legend (The summer's sun with ruddy glow): 15526
Ellen; A Fragment (Is she not beautiful, although so pale?): 15898
Elleonore (The moon hath oped her silver eyes): 5579
Elleray (Oh, lovely is the early Spring, when she clothes the earth with green): 15456
Ellisland (The year was in its prime, for June): 7539
Elm-Blossom (The bloom of the elm is falling): 7177
Elodia (O sudden heaven! superb surprise!): 14501
Elven (O love, than shone on me and sadly went): 765
Elvershöh,—A Fairy Ballad. From the German of Herder (I laid my head on the Fairy-hill): 8006
Elves (We haunt the woods, we haunt the streams): 8265
Elysian Fields at Lowther in Westmoreland (A youth caress'd and nurtured long): 11406
Elysium (Past the despairing wail): 10036
Elysium.—A Sonnet (The sun is burning in the rosy west): 7889
Emblems (The is a freshness in the air): 10407
Emma.—A Tale (Hushed were the tones of mirthful revelry): 7822
Empedocles; A Legend of Mount Ætna ("My voice begins to fail, the cold creeps up"): 744
Empty (Can this be my poem?—this poor fragment): 2456
En Avant! (Heavy and thick the atmosphere): 6366
En Passant (A sidelong glance like April sunlight shining): 12837
Enchanted Embers (When bright flames flicker o'er the burning coal): 620
Enchantment (The perfect hush of summer broods o'er all): 12508
End of the Year (The year is ending; all its good and ill): 13585
Enduring Woe. From the German of Immermann (The leaves come whirling from the trees): 15463
Endymion (Endymion, glistering from the morning stream): 8723
Endymion on Latmos (High on the Latmian hills, with the twilight deepening round him): 457
England (Be glorious, thou Queen of the Ocean! oh ne'er): 15258
England (England, dear England! I have reached thy shore): 15760
England (Sail from the south, and from the east and west): 15363
England: Under the Foreign and Colonial Administration of Mr Gladstone, Lord Granville, and Lord Derby (Down, England, down!): 8846
England. Verses Suggested by the Portrait of Lady Grey (So small! and yet so great a power!): 5765
England's Liberty (Our freedom is no wild exotic scheme): 6737
England's Suttee (Ho, Seeva—deck the chamber!): 465
English Rispetti On Some Flowers (Like dropping rain of heaven by gracious law): 2379
English Sapphics. (Horace to His Cup-Bearer; Odes, i. 38) (Boy, we despise that revel of the Persian): 14868
English Skies (I never gazed upon the Southern skies): 7187
English Songs (O merry sings the nurse by night): 6728
English Worship in Sebastopol. Sunday, 14th September, 1855 (Let the batteries cease shelling, the mortars lie still): 7704
Enigma (I am hard and I'm soft, I am heavy and light): 4464
Enigma (I saw her first when she was my whole): 985
Enquiry (What books enquiry? By the will of Heaven): 14652
Enthusiasm (He who would move the world must stand apart): 13334
Entre Tes Bras. (After Ronsard) (I robbed thee, my love, yester-eve): 14055
Entreaties (If thou at any time shouldst want a friend): 12886
Envy (Envy must be: e'en let her feed her grudge!): 9114
Envy (He was the first always: Fortune): 1510
Epigram (I ask'd my fair, one happy day): 3056
Epigram (Sly Belzebub took all occasions): 3542
Epigram. (From Bartolome de Argensola) (Ella, you had, a month ago): 9020
Epigram. From the German ('Tis better to sit in Freedom's hall): 13781
Epigram. From the Spanish of Lope de Vega (In a mirror, too faithful, alas!): 3462
Epigrams (Bait, hook, and hair, are used by angler fine): 10756
Epilogue (And must I then—the fatal knot once tied): 3791
Epilogue (At midnight, in the silence of the sleep-time): 8387
Epilogue. Spoken by Christopher North, Esquire, and Sir A. Wylie, Baronet ("Something too much of this!" I hear you cry): 9725
Epiphany (Brightest and best of the sons of the morning!): 10861
Epistle to Christopher North, Esq (Dear Kit): 9696
Epitaph (Bacchus! Thy wonders fill the wondering world!): 10917
Epitaph (Blest John, for Jesus' sake, in Patmos bound): 9594
Epitaph (Fulle thirtie yeares, I loved a smuggler bolde): 10906
Epitaph (Oh! passer-by, give heed): 14171
Epitaph of Constantine Kanaris. From the German (I am Constantine Kanaris): 10786
Epitaph on a Gnat, Found Crushed on the Leaf of a Lady's Album, and Written (With a Different Reading in the Last Line) in Lead Pencil Beneath It (Lie there, embalm'd from age to age!): 15532
Epitaph on a Solitary Life (Rest, gentle traveller! on life’s toilsome way): 1654
Epitaph on Agnes Jones. Buried in Fahan Churchyard near Lough Swilly (Alone with Christ in this sequester'd place): 1998
Epitaph on Dyonisia (Here doth Dyonisia lie): 9918
Epitaph on the Beggar’s Dog (Poor Irus’ faithful wolf-dog here I lie): 14937
Epitaph. Sacred to the Memory of Ellen, Daughter of Hector and Ellen Maclean. Died 10th December, 1815, Aged 16 Years (Stranger! if ever Virtue claimed thy tear): 15302
Epitaphium in Septem Annorum Puellulam (My pretty Chloris,—ah, how sweet): 14938
Epitaphs (The child paced through the grey churchyard): 5588
Epithalamia. For A Sister's Wedding (O day half happiness, half mystery!): 6144
Epode 15 ('Twas night!—let me recall to thee that night!): 9007
Epode II. Alfius.—The Charms of Rural Life (Blessed is he—remote, as were the mortals): 10429
Epode X. On Mævius Setting Out On A Voyage (Under ill-boding auspices puts forth the vessel): 10431
Epode XVI. To The Roman People (or Rather to His Own Political Friends) (Another Age worn out in Civil Wars): 10432
Equal Love ("Loves die!" they say. Love, so say we): 1061
Equinictial Gates (Howl on, ye winds, and fill the world with fears): 11558
Ere the Day (We wakened at the dawning, but we never saw the day): 12729
Eric's Dirge (Shon'st thou but to pass away): 10739
Erin Ma Vourneen (When the pure soul of honour shall cease to inspire thee): 13975
Erinnys (Though stark he lieth and cold in clay): 7896
Eriphanis (These are the fairest woods in Argolis): 710
Eros (In the dawn of Life's glory and gladness): 8954
Eros and Fowler (A sportive boy within a shady grove): 14135
Escape From Winter (O, had I the wings of a swallow, I'd fly): 3152
Est Modus in Rebus (We sat and listened in the creeping gloom): 8393
Esther (Morn is come, the purple morn): 15683
Et in Arcadia Ego (The Spring has dress'd the woods in robes of green): 5099
Et tu in Arcadia Viristi (In ancient tales, O friend, thy spirit dwelt): 12114
Eternity. A Fragment. From the German of Haller (Ye forests, wastes of melancholy pines!): 7743
Ettie (Under the boughs of the mighty cedar): 6804
Eudoxia (O sweetest my sister, my sister that sits in the sun): 6240
Eudoxia. Second Picture (O dearest my sister, my sister that sits by the hearth): 6271
Eulione (Ye, who delight in beauty, come and gaze): 15219
Eurykome (O sea! when wilt thou bring again Eurykome to me?): 14573
Euthanasia (They thought he was asleep; but he was dead): 2519
Eva ("Farewell, sweet Eva! o'er yon brow"): 14463
Evander (Silenus! my goblet is brilliant and cool): 866
Evenfall (Wrathfully in the ruddy West away): 7297
Evening (A sweet, calm eve it is; and in the west): 6765
Evening (Beyond the summit of the far-off hill): 12743
Evening (Dim falls the light o'er all the dreaming woods): 13243
Evening (Gold-fringed are the banks of violet cloud): 3928
Evening (I love thee, Evening, for the hues): 14230
Evening (Landward, in haste, the screaming sea-fowl fly): 13153
Evening (Low in the pale cold sky the ashen clouds): 7376
Evening (O'er the blank landscape let the curtains fall): 3607
Evening (One star is trembling into sight): 6635
Evening (Peace breathes along the shade): 10918
Evening (Rest, rest ere yet the night's begun): 4367
Evening (Sweet sounds, so variable in tone at eve): 7272
Evening (Swiftly fall the ev'ning shadows, thickest darkness now is nigh―): 5073
Evening (The long crow-lines push woodward string on string): 7236
Evening (The sky at eve is dim with cloudy gray): 6900
Evening (The sun is set, and up yon western steep): 7025
Evening (The waning light glows in the west): 8343
Evening (Upon the ocean's pallid strand): 636
Evening (When life is young, and sorrow but a name): 5683
Evening at Killarney (Still was the air amid the silver pines): 2336
Evening Guests (If in the silence of this lonely eve): 6082
Evening Hexameters (Darkly the minister-towers, against the glow of the sunset): 1583
Evening in Autumn (Sunk are the winds that swept the rock-girt shore): 15259
Evening in Early Spring (The west is crimsoned, and the evening falls): 6435
Evening Mystery (A lonely landscape; far in distant skies): 12764
Evening on the Lake (Upon the mountain-top the purple tints): 12832
Evening Prayer at a Girls' School (Hush! 'tis holy hour!—the quiet room): 13924
Evening Recollections (It is not when the sun at highest noon): 5626
Evening Solace (The human heart has hidden treasures): 6010
Evening Song (The summer night is calm, and bright): 9200
Evening Song of the Breton Fisherman (A singing breeze in the yellow sail): 12457
Evening Song of the Tyrolese Peasants (Come to the Sun-set Tree!): 14073
Evening Tranquility (How still this hour! the mellow sun): 10141
Evening-Tide (The blossoms of the acacia tree): 13541
Evening: King's College Chapel, Cambridge (Keep silence! From the chanting draw apart): 8611
Evening. (From a Picture) (Sink, shining god—tired Nature halts; and parch'd): 10656
Evening. An Ode (Hark! ’Tis the pig, that, for her supper squeaking): 10700
Evenings at Home (Shutters are barred; the wintry wind without): 14394
Eventide (Do you remember the calm evening-time): 6676
Eventide (Oh sweet, the calm of evening): 2800
Eventide (Tired of its own bright charms, the golden Day): 7512
Ever Alone (Ever alone is a joy to me): 988
Everlasting Flowers (I send thee but a simple gift): 7596
Everlasting Summer (It needs not woods with violets paved): 12604
Every Year (I feel ’tis growing colder): 13204
Evoë (In the presence of Spring, our beautiful Spring): 12360
Examination of the School of Southside (Minister. Now, Mr Strap, I well approve the mode): 10166
Excellent New Song, Composed by James Scott, Esq. M. D. and Sung by Him, with Great Applause, on the Evening of Thursday, 19th July (There are flowers in every window, and garlands round each door): 9427
Excelsior (Put out thy talents to their use): 7636
Exculpation (Wilt thou dare to blame the woman for her seeming sudden changes): 10940
Excuse for Writing Out My Own Praise (When wits with sportive malice aim): 15634
Exercise (Behold the Labourer of the glebe, who toils): 3646
Exile (Steel-dark sea and sunset sky): 12560
Exile (When day's long course of toil is done): 12105
Exiled (My brighter hours, like pleasant dreams, have fled): 1345
Expectancy (The wind went sighing gently through the trees): 14505
Expectation and Fulfilment (O'er ocean with a thousand masts sails on the young man bold): 10020
Experience (Experience, divine instructress of the soul): 7193
Experience (Oh! argue not with me, my friend): 4394
Express (We move in th' elephantine row): 1296
Extempore Effusion, Sung with Great Effect by Morgan Odoherty, Esq. on the Evening of 19th July (My landlady enter'd my parlour, and said): 9428
Extempore—to Mr. Gavin Hamilton (To you, Sir, this summons I’ve sent): 14887
Extempore. To —, To Whose Interference I Chiefly Owe the Very Liberal Price Given for Lalla Rookh (When they shall tell, in future times): 2956
Extract from "Sappho" (And for you): 1692
Extract from Mrs. Rose's Diary (After John Leech) (At Brighton, just a year ago): 179
Extracts from Buchanan's Epithalamium, on the Marriage of Francis of Valois and Mary Stuart (A happier destiny, blest Prince! is thine): 10313
Extracts from my Great Auto-Biographical Poem (It is most veritable,—that sage law): 8446
Exultate Deo (Many a flower hath perfume for its dower): 1828
Eye-Drink (With spirit-thirst I wander forth): 6026
Eye-Memory (When the present all around me): 6068
Eyes and Stars (It never was my lot to see): 14335
Faces in the Fire (I watch the drowsy night expire): 2725
Fact and Intention ("Now what do you think of a man who designs"): 13521
Faded Flowers (Dead withered flowers these, and nothing more!): 12261
Faded Flowers (Farewell, ye withered Flowers): 15314
Faded Laurels (Twas a poor old horse by the road-side): 13408
Fadeless is a Loving Heart (Sunny eyes may lose their brightness): 6359
Fading (I watched in the glad spring-tide): 6982
Fading into Change (A gradual failing in the Summer light): 7486
Failed! (Failed! "Ah, yes, poor fellow!" you say): 4121
Fair and False (There was a tender beauty in her face): 306
Fair as a Rose (Why art thou like this pale pink rose): 13269
Fair Drinking (There's and old Pope-ish legend going): 251
Fair Melissa (Fair Melissa through the grove): 13698
Fair Rosamond. A Fragment. (Lord Clifford's daughter loved a stranger knight): 435
Fair Urience (A knight that wears no lady's sleeve): 2887
Fairies (When breezes sleep): 7281
Fairies and Flowers (Children who gather common flowers at will): 2821
Fairies’ Summer Evening Song (Hark! ’tis the little children’s voices singing at their play): 5994
Fairy Children (From a quaint book of simple fairy lore): 850
Fairy Gambols (Night's silver lamp ascends the skies): 14108
Fairy Gold (There's fairy gold upon the moor—the blossoms of the gorse): 12592
Fairy Jane. (For music) (Teasing, pleasing Fairy Jane): 3632
Fairy Jewels (O white moon, sailing down the sky): 1974
Fairy Lore (Glad were the children when their glowing faces): 2820
Fairy May (Come hither, little Fairy May): 234
Fairy Rings (Round, round the mushroom, brothers): 7171
Fairy-Land (My little one, so grave and wise): 2253
Fairyland in Midsummer (Shall I tell you how one day): 12855
Faith ("Follow me," Jesus said: and they uprose): 14550
Faith (As the worn traveller from day to day): 5170
Faith (God's Truth for steady North-point—nothing fear): 13909
Faith and Friendship (Still let me love thee, though thou art no more): 14642
Faith and Love (When Noah entered in the blessed ark): 11692
Faith and Reason (Reason unstrings the harp to see): 330
Faith in Peril (This outward life, with all its busy forms): 14661
Faith, Hope, and Charity ("Thy mother's spirit, O my child"): 5674
Faith. "Himmelsglaube" (The touch of fate our holiest joys may blight): 3144
Faith's Question (To whom, O Saviour, shall we go): 321
Faith’s Healing (The Scribes and Pharisees they scowl): 2501
Faithful (Only that, dear, neither wise nor fair): 1869
Faithful Carlo (Keep watch, my faithful Carlo): 15767
Faithfulness (Think you, had we two lost fealty, something would not as I sit): 6305
Fallen (What were once her graces): 6738
Fallen in the Night! (It dressed itself in green leaves all the summer long): 1571
Fallen Leaves (Weary, the cloud droopeth down from the sky): 2878
Falling Leaves (It was the noontide, and a solemn peace): 13343
Falling Leaves (Remind me not, O falling leaves, in vain): 6524
Falling Leaves (Tawny, ruby-tinted, golden): 12537
Falling Leaves (Where the welcome snowdrop peeping): 4536
Falling Rain (Ere the Spring cometh): 12129
False Hope (God save me from mine enemy): 3170
Fame (And what is Fame? what to the passing day?): 11807
Fame (And what is Fame? when the closed eye is dead): 11808
Fame (Say what is Fame? Is it perchance to raise): 15233
Fame (What is Fame?): 14472
Familiar Things (There is a truth that travel brings): 1224
Familiar Words (Words that bring back the glad and peaceful hours): 1486
Family Music (Beside the window I sit alone): 1880
Family Worship in a Cottage (Listen!—I heard a voice, a solemn voice): 14103
Fancy and Love (While Love lay asleep in his green myrtle bower): 14104
Fancy in a Stage-Coach. Written Among the Alleghanies, 1834. Addressed to—Whomever the Reader Likes Best (There is a weary listless hour): 14636
Fancy in Nubibus. A Sonnet, Composed on the Sea Coast (Oh! It is pleasant, with a heart at ease): 7753
Fancy in the Nubibus: or the Poet in the Clouds (O! it is pleasant, with a heart at ease): 14861
Fantasie to Laura (What, Laura, say, the vortex that can draw): 10043
Far at Sea (His messmates waiting there, hat in hand): 13750
Far Away (Do they think of me to-day): 13329
Far-Off Visions (I saw a land of pleasantness): 15239
Farewell (Farewell! Oh! black and bitter word): 4450
Farewell (The boat went drifting, drifting, over the sleeping sea): 4559
Farewell (We've parted for the longest time we ever yet did part): 14122
Farewell (When eyes are beaming): 3271
Farewell (Yes, our last farewell is breathed): 5472
Farewell and Welcome. From the German of Goethe (To horse! to horse! how throbs my breast!): 15087
Farewell Ode (O my joy, thou art gone, and my sad weeping heart hast borne indeed): 14787
Farewell Song of the Saxon Bride (I walked beside the old church wall): 8634
Farewell Stanzas. To My Friend (The red hearts of the poppies glow): 2638
Farewell to a Friend On His Departure for America (To souls less form'd than thine to feel): 15590
Farewell to an Adopted Daughter. Written at her request when about to sail for India (Thy sails, above the sea): 10469
Farewell to Ben Vrackie (Fare thee well! thou proud Ben Vrackie): 8146
Farewell to England (Farewell! I go across the main): 11545
Farewell to Greece. For Music (Farewell for ever, classic Land): 10132
Farewell to India (Land of the sun! land of the sun!): 3723
Farewell to Italy (Would that thou wert more strong, at least less fair): 11183
Farewell to Life (My deep wound burns; my pale lips quake in death): 3641
Farewell to my Friends (Oh! wear no mourning weeds for me, when I am laid i'the ground): 9809
Farewell to The Dead (Come near!—ere yet the dust): 3138
Farewell to the Flowers (Dear children of the Garden, Field, and Wood): 6935
Farewell to the Flowers in Autumn (My Flowers, my few and precious Flowers, what evil hath been here!): 15384
Farewell to the Holy Lands. (Twelfth Century) (Ho, trumpets sound!): 3083
Farewell to the Old Year (Old year, going ’mid frost and snow): 2475
Farewell to the Reader (The Muse is silent; with a virgin cheek): 9962
Farewell to the Rhine. Lines Written at Bonn (Fare thee well, thou regal river, proudly-rolling German Rhine): 9187
Farewell to Twenty-Four (Fare thee well, then, Twenty-four): 10169
Farewell, Old Year! (Farewell, Old Year!—when other friends depart): 5245
Farewell: Addressed to a Friend Embarking for Canton (Farewell! and could that word impress): 14097
Farewell! (Dark spots there are in sunny places): 6130
Faristan and Fatima. An Oriental Legend, Done into his mother tongue by E. A. Bowring (Once in a famous Eastern city): 293
Farringford Lawn. (In the days that are no more) (Who hath seen the summer parlour of the King?): 2255
Fashion and Time (Thou seemest, time, on an ill errand bent): 11887
Fashion's Idol (Such wert thou in thy youth:–thy youth!): 4208
Fashionable. The Tale of a Snowdrop (It sprang up so quickly): 346
Fate (Far across the broad leagues heaving, ’twixt old England and her home): 4932
Fate (It comes evermore while we carelessly sing): 12318
Fate and a Heart (It was midnight when I listened): 11947
Father and Child (I left her in the dark to find): 5128
Father and Son (O check not, thoughtless Parent, Childhood's tear): 11671
Father Christmas (What though fair Summer's left us now): 12596
Father Damien (No golden dome shines over Damien's sleep): 14870
Father O'Leary's Sermon (Now know, ye nice flock of myself and friend Rock): 11712
Father Prout's Inaugurative Ode To the Author of "Vanity Fair" (Ours is a faster, quicker age): 11929
Father Sycophant (Old Father Sycophant, stand out to light): 9042
Father.—Child (There are the aspens, with their silvery leaves): 11359
Father's Lament (How can you bid this heart be blythe): 5230
Fatherless (A vacant chair): 3603
Fawdoun (At Black Erne side the fight was fought): 13786
Fay-Flowers (I have won a garland from Elf-land): 6328
February (Oh! how delightful to the soul of man): 9707
February (Out on the World’s waste stands the timid maid): 15939
February (The gray skies weep: not yet the primrose-buds): 7152
February (The robin now, by hungry wants made bold): 9553
February (There was, as has been told, a time): 15877
February. The Hunting Field (Now the fierce west-wind drives the rains): 13403
Fellow Travellers (Eros, and old God Time): 14572
Fellow-Feeling (Poor little soul! We kissed the place): 5138
Fellowship (Well! here we be, woonce mwore at leäst): 14110
Fenella's Escape (Within the stately palace): 4204
Fergusson and Burns; Or the Poet's Reverie ('Tis solemn night—the weary City sleeps): 9873
Fergusson and Burns; Or, The Poet's Reverie. Part II (Again the Poet shuns the bed of sleep): 9889
Fern Leaves: Song of the London Work-Girl (Green as the emerald glancing in sunbeams): 7603
Ferns (In the cool and quiet nooks): 7123
Fescennine Verses on the Nuptials of Honorius (O Prince!—more fair than Venus' star): 9336
Field Flowers (Ye field flowers! the gardens eclipse you, 'tis true): 3127
Field Flowers (Ye who courtly beauty prize): 11311
Fifteenth Sunday After Trinity (Lo, the lilies of the field): 10872
Filiolæ Dulcissimæ (Say, wilt thou think of me when I'm away): 13906
Finette (Finette was young, Finette was fair): 1918
Finger-Posts (This is the way of Heaven: you may kneel): 1010
Finis (Finis—the fittest word to end): 7350
Finis (The book is written. Much is left unsaid): 16034
Finis (The end draws near. By Fates unseen directed): 4938
Finite and Infinite (Backwards and forwards, ceaseless ebb and flow): 13389
Fire Revelations (As now within my winter's fire I look): 6354
Fire-flies (Come forth! the summer insect now recalls): 5191
Fire! (It was the corning-time―the hour): 9598
Firelight (Not summer's noontide glory): 12932
Firmitas in Cœlo (Ring out a requiem for the Imperial dead): 13524
First Fruits (Half covered with last year's leaves): 2584
First Grief (They tell me, first and early love): 3731
First Love (Oh, who will bring me back the days): 10651
First Love (She was the first, the only star): 290
First Love (The dazzle of the sunshine): 4814
First Love (We wander'd on the mountain's brow): 977
First Love, A Dramatic Scene (Nay, dearest mistress, nay—you must not weep): 15613
First of May (Oh, hence with sleep, and leave thy bed): 7910
First Sleep (Fairer than aught in nature): 7155
First Snowdrops (Take them, Dear Heart, they are the first): 2067
First Sunday After Epiphany. No. I (Abash'd be all the boast of age!): 10862
First Sunday After Trinity (Room for the proud! Ye sons of the clay): 10869
First Time at Church (A grave sweet wonder in the baby face): 7444
First. "Old England without me would not be complete" (Old England without me would not be complete): 3500
Fishermen—Not of Galilee. (After Reading a Certain Book) (They have toiled all the night, the long, weary night): 14175
Five O'Clock Tea (What shall we find when the play is done): 12639
Five Things (What makes the time run short?): 8973
Five-and-Thirty (George Lambert, you have woo'd me long): 13897
Fixing the Day (Says Patrick O'Brien to Kathleen Mulreddin): 16119
Flamborough Head (Where the stormy tempests blow, and the cold tides ebb and flow): 12715
Flash Song (As from ken to ken I was going): 10524
Flashes Through the Cloud (Foolish am I, and very sad, sometimes): 7725
Flath Innis. A Legend of Wales (Sad he sits upon the headland): 12077
Flattery (He tells me, that the flowers I wear): 4797
Flattery (Oh, you pretty Robin, keeping watch beside a lowly dwelling): 13240
Flawed Roses (It was here on the terrace they plaited this morn): 12724
Fleur de la Lune (I would not alter thy cold eyes): 8925
Fleurette. (From the French of Gustave Lemoine) (Ah, listen, dear Fleurette, to me): 865
Floatsam! (1492) (All the mill-horses of Europe): 3985
Floral Delights (Back again to wood and dell): 7494
Floreat Britannia. Mafeking, 18th May 1900 (Said he not well, the bard, who wrote with proud): 7815
Florence (Florence! from the mountain's brow): 2945
Florimel (The night is quiet, this New Year's Eve): 3084
Florinda (When of old and young the cheer): 262
Florine (A faultless form was thine, Florine, and scarcely did it seem): 4788
Flotsam and Jetsam (The sea crashed over the grim grey rocks): 4136
Flower and Fruit (Oh foreign flower of love, who set): 7091
Flower Fairies (Flower fairies have you found them): 1643
Flower-Chains (Fair Maiden, while wreathing): 5662
Flowers (Children of Suns restored to youth): 10029
Flowers (Dear friend, love well the flowers! Flowers are the sign): 1106
Flowers (Flowers! lovely flowers): 4952
Flowers (They spring unnoticed and unknown): 6330
Flowers and Life (Loveliest of God’s creations): 5895
Flowers and Music in a Room of Sickness (Hush, lightly tread! still tranquilly she sleeps): 11393
Flowers at Easter (A rosy sunbeam glides the maid): 2075
Flowers for The Bee (Come, honey-bee, with thy busy hum): 5265
Flowers from a Garden (Who shall have the daffodils in my garden growing): 2031
Flowers From Home (Flowers! beautiful flowers!): 7169
Flowers from the South (Flowers quick from the Southern sunshine, swift from the shores of the tideless sea): 651
Flowers of Fire (For ages since the age of Chaos passed): 782
Flowers of the Heart (There are some flowers that bloom): 6908
Flying Hours (From morn's first flush to the twilight gray): 7081
Folded Hands (Sufferer! on thy couch of pain): 2728
Followers with Him (Yet would my numbers frame): 2768
Fontainbleau (As I walk'd in the grass-green alleys): 1608
Fontibel's Serenade (From an Unpublished Drama) (Heigho! life's cares press round me;—what a load): 4902
Fools the Best Lovers (This, too, observe—that men of sense, in love): 3265
Footsteps (In the quiet hour of gloaming): 4070
Footsteps of Angels (When the hours of day are numbered): 5416
Footsteps of Day (I saw the maiden morn go forth, and her steps were soft and still): 236
For a Drinking Fountain (Silent, quickening, giving ever): 2437
For a Young Lady's Album (Such goodness in your face doth shine): 10506
For Daisy (Why are you fair? Is it because we know): 8808
For Daisy: Imitated from Catullus, XLVIIJ (Nay, had but you, most beautiful, most loved): 8812
For Ever (For ever and ever the reddening leaves): 3840
For Greece and Crete (Storm and shame and fraud and darkness fill the nations full with night): 8672
For Life and Death ("Naught to be done, eh?"—It was that he said): 4584
For Love (Curly-haired Carl! Were a blithesomer mate): 4137
For Music (I said to my sorrow, vanish): 4365
For Music (Is she fair as morning's shine?): 10317
For Music (Oh! would that love could die): 2738
For September, 1890 (Summer, summer, tardy guest): 2050
For the Album of Miss —, French Teacher, at Mrs Gisborn's School, Enfield (Implored for verse, I send you what I can): 10512
For the Chartists—A New Song. I Hae a Cot, a Wee Kail-Yard (I hae a cot, a wee kail-yard): 20
For the Fourteenth of February (No popular respect will I omit): 14458
For the Last Page of "Our Album" (At length our pens must find repose!): 10382
For the Last Time (Within this room she passes her still days!): 13017
For The Master (Blow, ye rough winds, o'er pastures brown and sere): 2165
For the New Year (I buried the new year sighing): 1710
For the Panel of an Old Case Clock (Never Returning): 8281
For the Princess May (May 19, 1893) (As sometimes misty clouds that, rolling dun): 2269
For the Wall of a Friend's Study (Stone walls, they say, have ears—'Twere scarcely wrong): 12111
For the XV. Nocturne, by F. Chopin (A month of green and tender May): 7550
Forbearance (Nay! let it pass!): 13274
Forbidden (Oh, weary feet that on Life's stony ways): 4647
Force and His Master (With sleepless toil on land and wave): 1210
Fore-Thoughts (Mad thing she was, for madness fed her nerves): 15986
Foreboding (In the fantastic wonderland of night): 12316
Forest Beauties. Written in Recollection of a Sojourn in the Backwoods of Upper Canada, in the Winter of 1833 and 1834 (Let me their lovely forms recall!): 14635
Forest Scenery (There was a time, when all the pomp of woods): 15237
Forest Voices (I heard a murmuring song): 2840
Forest-Teachings (There was travelling in the wild-wood): 6158
Forever (Two little streamlets leapt and flowed): 13260
Forget Me Not (Forget me not when, far away): 13044
Forget Me Not (Forget me not, forget me now! Great seas between us roll): 4255
Forget Me Not (Forget me not! forget me not!): 15226
Forget Me Not (Forget not, oh! forget not me): 15096
Forget Me Not (The star that shines so pure and bright): 15619
Forget-Me-Not (A blue forget-me-not): 12921
Forgive! (By all the turmoil thou hast felt): 1232
Forgiven (Fast from the land of gold the good ship bore us): 2838
Form (A man walks through a wood): 2909
Former Days. (From the French of Philippe Théolier) (Didst thou linger in the country of our dreams): 14439
Forsaken (She stood within the bayed recess): 13711
Forsaken (Would God that I were dead and no more known): 12096
Forth (Not my own waves that thunder on the shore): 4734
Fortune (A Lady, like to Juno in her state): 8299
Fortune (Why should I court thee, Fortune? Thou art blind): 11752
Fortune and Wisdom (In a quarrel with her lover): 10040
Forum of Women (No single deed of man should woman lead): 10821
Forward! (On, on! Though your star be crossed): 3187
Foscari (Who can thread the azured streets of Venice fair): 4789
Found Twenty Years After (It may be after years have passed away): 915
Foundered (How many a glorious morning I have seen): 15186
Four Dreamers (With a boomsome knock, like an earthquake's shock): 12649
Four Glimpses (I caught one glimpse of a child): 6969
Four Quatrains (Ye cannot cheat the Master of your fate!): 1096
Four Seasons (When Life was Spring our wants were small): 6403
Four Sisters (The First, with rose-tipped fingers—halo soft): 4230
Four Years (At the midsummer, when the hay was down): 6243
Fourth Sunday After Trinity (I praised the Earth, in beauty seen): 10870
Fragment (Lo! there the torrent, dashing against the rocks, doth wildly roll): 14780
Fragment of a Fifth Canto of Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (I stood, Edina, on thy Bridge of Sighs): 8213
Fragment of a Greek Tragedy. Alcmæon. Chorus (O suitably-attired-in-leather-boots): 13859
Fragment of a Poet's Life (We bid thee welcome, little book): 1233
Fragment of an Unpublished Poem (The social world was springing to new light): 4796
Fragment. (For the “Chartists’ Circular”) (Oh God! how is it that the nations lie): 111
Fragmentary Stanzas (Why dawning in sadness approaches the day): 31
France and England (We make no boast of Waterloo): 5875
Francesca Foscari (It was in Venice, ’mid those palaces): 4416
Frau Ilse (I am the Princess Ilse): 9634
Fredericus Rex (Old Fritz). (A Favourite Song in the Prussian Camp) (Fredericus Rex, our King and our Lord): 3920
Free Trade For Ever, And Everything Cheap! An Excellent Election Song (Listen, my lads, to the joyful intelligence): 11102
Free, Among the Dead (Here, thy way was set with snares): 4085
Freedom (Man was not born to say—I will be free): 9144
Freedom (O thou so fair in summers gone): 14971
Freedom and Right (O say not, believe not, the gloom of the grave): 5807
Friar Bacon (I had a vision.—In an antique dome): 9338
Fridolin; or, The Message to the Forge (A harmless lad was Fridolin): 10803
Friend or Foe? (New Year, com'st thou as friend or foe?): 16035
Friend Sorrow (Do not cheat thy Heart and tell her): 1282
Friends (Let us be friends: we may not now be more): 13216
Friends Again (So, we meet again, fair cousin! fourteen years have changed us though!): 1723
Friendship (Celestial Friendship! if yet ne'er pro-fan'd): 8001
Friendship (False friends, like insects in a summer's day): 15553
Friendship (I feel the more, the more I know): 6690
Friendship (Oh, prized and loved through many a year): 15632
Friendship and War (Ye monarchs that delight in war): 153
Friendship's Message (Friend ever faithful, as I sit alone): 12906
Friendship's Valentine (Ere pale Primroses forlorn): 1235
Friendships (Like summer-blooms which fade away): 5654
Frolic in a Palace ('Twas in the reign of one of France's kings): 15562
From a Cantata by Salvator Rosa (If Time should steal away the gold): 13435
From A Dryad. (When asked to come South) (I could not live in verdant groves): 2207
From a Husband (Fonder, tenderer, ever fonder): 7401
From A Sick-Bed (Companions of my mortal pilgrimage): 7656
From Afar (Go thou thy way. I do not seek to share): 4848
From Africa: Southampton, Fifth October 1880 (We pressed to greet him at Southampton Pier): 9273
From an "Absentee" (Let me wander where I will): 15527
From Bordeaux to Paris, 1871. The Dove of Fifteen Thousand Messages (Laden with sorrow–laden with love): 3927
From Far Away (Outside a burning tropic sun): 2375
From Foreign Parts: A Song of Devon (I was wanderin' dro' the thicket, hot and wet, and night a-comin): 7931
From Generation to Generation ("Oh Time, speed faster," cry impatient lips): 2354
From Generation to Generation (With each new spring): 12317
From Gold to Gray (Golden curls, profusely shed): 1245
From Heine (A pine tree standeth lonely): 13828
From Heine (Thou standest like a flower): 2536
From Heine. I.—Aus Meinen Thränen Spriessen (Each tear out of my deep heart welling): 14615
From Home to Home (Come to meet me early, my own): 2023
From India (Oh, sons of women, have ye heard it told): 9473
From Love's Ashes (Lone in a far-off land): 4668
From My Window (An ivy-covered gateway, and beyond): 7541
From my Window. Before Sunset (Framed in the open window): 843
From One to Another (Far overhead): 14445
From Palermo (O'er snowy Alps and tossing seas): 2625
From the Abruzzi (The Rose is sweet, but has the prickly Thorn): 8700
From the Cradle (They tell me I was born a long): 12242
From the French (From love down to friendship): 13744
From the French of Malherbe (O, father! will thy grief cease never?): 475
From the German of H. Heine (She has given a ring to me, knowing): 8516
From the German of Heinrich Heine (When two fond hearts are parting): 181
From the German of Uhland ("Yet once more on the organ play"): 544
From the Heart of the Country (Forty years of London! and never a thing to see!): 1938
From the Italian of Alessandro Pegolotti (Thou art, O tiny violet): 13529
From the Italian of Zappi (A hundred pretty little Loves, in fun): 10371
From the Romaic (Chimari, thy top has seen): 3850
From the Spanish (On dappled steed, with step as fast): 3777
From the Spanish (Turn thine eyes, O King Rodrigo!): 2930
From the Spanish of Gustave Becque (We were together,—her eyes were wet): 8515
From the Tents of Kedar (When rolling wastes of barren sand): 9227
From the Twenty-Third Chapter of St. Luke ('Tis done—and Darkness all around): 4753
From the Wilds (So my old friend recollects me, though the tide of time hath cast): 2903
From Theocritus. Epigram V (By all the nymphs, I charge you, play for one): 5203
From Theocritus. Idyll 17 (One day as roguish Cupid from): 5012
From Theocritus. Idyll the First (Thyrsis. Softly the sway of the pine-branches murmurs a): 13409
From Victor Hugo ("Sweet flower of Love, garden and field adorning"): 13453
From Victor Hugo. (Feuilles d'Automne) (In dark recess, hard by the spot): 13543
Frosty Weather (Now frozen mists the trees with crystals grace): 6625
Frühzeitiger Frühling (Day of delight): 9363
Fulfilment (All things fulfill their purpose, low or high): 13238
Fulfilment (Lo, Spring is here! Her soft, transforming hand): 13136
Funcheon Woods (Dark woods of Funcheon! treading far): 11122
Funeral March. (Chopin) (Measured are the paces): 12406
Funeral of Robert Southey (Crossthwaite Tower sends forth a knell): 15444
Future Prospects of the World (Spirit of Concord! shall it still be thine): 10144
Futurity (And, O beloved voices! upon which): 10743
Gaffer Maurice. How he would neither be young nor wise, and what he had buckled on his back (With his face to the glade, and his back to the bole): 11018
Gallic and English Beauties (When the great Spirit said, Thou dust, arise!): 5725
Garden Rhymes (Amidst the Muse's tuneful throng): 15673
Garden Thoughts, Written on Occasion of a Ladies' Bazaar, in Aid of the Church Missionary Society, Being Held in the Garden-Grounds of a Benevolent Family Resident on the Banks of the Yorkshire Ouse (In a garden—man was placed): 14486
Garden-Fires (What though the snow gleams on the hill!): 5136
Garibaldi (He is the helper whom Italy wanted): 356
Garibaldi (The Lion is down, and how the Dogs will run): 416
Garibaldi's Hymn (The tombs have been rent, and the dead have come forth): 6553
Garibaldi's Retirement (Not that three armies thou didst overthrow): 14028
Garth Castle (Garth Castle, he hath borne the brunt): 16036
Gaster, the First M. A. (There's a comical fellow that all of us know): 9609
Gazel ("From Istambōl's throne a mighty host to Irān guided I") (From Istambōl's throne a mighty host to Irān guided I): 14791
Gazel ("He who poverty electeth, hall and fane desireth not") (He who poverty electeth, hall and fane desireth not): 14779
Gazel ("Lo! ne'er a trace or sign of springtide's beauty doth remain") (Lo! ne'er a trace or sign of springtide's beauty doth remain): 14781
Gazel ("Tulip-cheeked ones over rosy field and plain stray all around") (Tulip-cheeked ones over rosy field and plain stray all around): 14782
Gazel. In Reply to the Preceding (To relieve Baghdad, O Hāfiz, man of tried might is there none?): 14790
Gazel. To Sultan Murād IV (Round us foes throng, host to aid us here in sad plight is there none?): 14788
Ged Tha Mi Gun Chrodh Gun Aighean (Though I have nor sheep nor oxen): 14981
General Mack—A Christmas Carol (At the taking of the Ulm, some forty years back): 10742
Genethliaca Venetiana. Lines on John William Rizzo Hoppner, born at Venice on the Eighteenth of January 1818 (His father's sense, his mother's grace): 8264
Genevieve (All thoughts, all passions, all delights): 5324
Genevra ('Twas the mid hour of night, in that gay clime): 10200
Genius (Genius lay folded long in slumber deep): 11797
Genius (Quoth Fame to Genius, "Who's to blame! thy sons"): 11798
Genius (That which hath been can intellect declare): 9998
Gennesaret. (April, 1862) (Behold, the Waster's peace is here): 12208
Genoa (All cloudless are the heavens above, a calm is o’er the deep): 15453
Genseric (Genseric, King of the Vandals, who, having laid waste seven lands): 3081
Gentle Influences (Violets, in their leafiest shade): 7449
Gentle Words (A young rose in summer-time): 5991
Gentle Words (Use gentle words, for who can tell): 1137
Genus Irritabile Vatum (I know him well; not hard is he to know): 9153
George Levison; or, The Schoolfellows (The noisy sparrows in our clematis): 1471
George Meredith (Deepest and keenest of our time who pace): 788
Geraldine (There thou goest, there thou goest): 1180
Geraldine and I (I have talk'd with her often in noon-day heat): 14217
German Honour and German Earth (There came soldiers across the Elbe): 14851
Gertie's Wee Garden (Gertie's garden is, like herself, small): 5450
Gerty's Necklace (As Gerty skipt from babe to girl): 10370
Gethsemane (I will go into dark Gethsemane): 3585
Ghost-Music (Beneath the pallid castle walls): 1393
Ghosts (Dread you their haunting, oh man of the world-wise brow?): 14385
Ghosts (Ghosts often come to my window): 3675
Ghosts (When the brilliant hues of the sunset fade): 13318
Giannone (Take a cigar—draw up your chair): 9661
Gibraltar (England, we love thee better than we know): 8260
Gibson's Studio (In a Garden filled with sunshine): 1633
Gibson's Studio. On the basso relievo of The Hours Leading the Horses of the Sun, and on other works there (Float on, thou stately pageant, proud and fair): 3209
Gifford’s Grave. (A Story of Sir George Napier) (Many a hero, born and bred): 14947
Gifts (I gave my love a bracelet on her natal day): 495
Gifts (You gave me once a sprig of early may): 5129
Gifts of the Terek: "Dari Tereka" (The Terek rages fierce and fast): 8903
Gildeluec Ha Guilladun, An Armorican Legend (The stately knight, young Elidue): 15668
Gillyflowers (Old-fashioned, yes, I know they are): 4275
Gilt Gingerbread (Kings, I reckon, are half divine): 6751
Ginevra (If ever you should come to Modena): 3237
Ginevra da Siena (So then you've come at last, my own best friend): 9804
Giovanni Duprè. An Eclogue (Look down the river—against the western sky): 12403
Gipsy Children Caught in a Storm (Meek, gentle things—though joyous, meek): 3877
Girlhood (Blue as the harebells): 2204
Girlhood (If one should say: "For ever be as now"): 2278
Girlhood (Thine eyes are filled with dreams): 5086
Give (See the rivers flowing): 1361
Give Place, Ye Ladies (Give place, ye ladyes all): 5990
Given Back (A rich man, waking from a selfish dream): 5440
Giving in Marriage (Come, let us sit together for a space): 4674
Glaucus and Scylla (Over the glassy wave the Nereids): 13566
Gleaners (Gleaner-folk, so meekly going): 2546
Glee for Winter (Hence, rude Winter! crabbed old fellow): 14143
Glen-Almain, or the Narrow Glen (In this still place, remote from men): 10573
Glenalla (I think, when I am weak and low): 1904
Glencoe. A Historical Ballad (The snow is white on the Pap of Glencoe): 1911
Glengarry's Death-Song (Land of the Gael, thy glory has flown!): 8208
Glenton (In this green solitude how sweetly shine): 15297
Gloaming (The green sky!): 13670
Gloaming (There is a beauty in the grey twilight): 10796
Gloaming. From the German of Goethe (Twilight downward softly floateth): 7413
Gloom and Gleam (I have my times all dull and grey): 5437
Glorvina's Warning (Glorvina, Glorvina, beware of the day): 8375
Glose ("Gather ye roses while ye may"): 15933
Glovers and Rovers (All maidens brown or fair): 5182
Go and Come (Though sayest to us, "Go"): 395
God (No! such a God my worship may not win): 9146
God Bless You! ("God bless you!"—kind, familiar words!): 6358
God Careth For the Poor (Oh! speak not of their homely toils, their slow corroding cares): 5181
God Encompasseth Us (How vain the unbelievers cry): 5156
God Hears (Though the heavens be as brass, and the clouds drop lead): 1819
God Help Our Men at Sea (God help our men at sea!): 260
God in Nature (Behold! an earthly Heaven, a realm of air): 9293
God in the Storm ("Did you hear the storm last night, my child"): 5352
God Save the King (Jehovah, King of Kings): 10191
God. Innate Ideas (There is a universe within): 9129
God's Gifts (God gave a gift to Earth: a child): 1379
God's Singer (He bore a harp within his hand): 361
God's-Acre (Quiet and peaceful on this starry eve): 3077
God's-Acre (This is God's-acre! Mark ye well the word): 6554
God’s Horologe (Hark! God’s horologe is striking): 1652
Godiva. Inscribed to John Hunter (John Hunter, friend of Leigh Hunt's verse, and lover of all duty): 14010
Goethe (Alas! on earth his marvels done): 10546
Goethe and Frederika (Wander, O wander, maiden sweet): 13891
Goethe to His Roman Love. Attempted in the Original Metre (Rue it not, dear, that so swiftly thy tenderness yielded thee to me): 11043
Goethe's House. Hirschgraben 23, Frankfort (Quaint Frankfort nestles by the Main): 6820
Goethe's West Oestlichem Diwan (Darkly beautiful East): 9690
Going (Moving about the quiet ways): 4729
Going Away (Do not be angry with me): 2420
Going Out and Coming In (In that home was joy and sorrow): 6295
Going Out With the Tide (Raise me up in my bed, wife): 7071
Going Softly (She makes no moan above her faded flowers): 4534
Going to the "Bad" ("Will you walk into my Kursaal?" said the Sharper to the Flat): 3197
Gold and Gray (I told you once, sweet wife, long years ago): 12532
Gold and Silver (Along her father's field they strayed): 5428
Gold and Silver (Cloth of Silver and Cloth of Gold): 1887
Gold Works Wonders (Richard of spendthrifts was the chief): 3291
Gold, Its Strength and Its Weakness (Strong doors of oak and watch-dogs sour): 9763
Golden Lil (Lily we called her—Lil—Lil!): 14279
Golden Lilies (O Daffodils all aflame): 8866
Golden Silence (Under the beeches we sat at rest): 12568
Golden Words (Some words are played on golden strings): 1570
Gone (Alone, at midnight as he knelt, his spirit was aware): 331
Gone (And thou indeed art gone, I scarce dare speak): 6393
Gone (I went under my dear love's window): 13709
Gone (List to the midnight lone!): 6371
Gone Away (I know a quiet country town): 7067
Gone Away (I see the farm-house red and old): 1480
Gone Away (I will not think of thee as cold and dead): 4565
Gone Away (The winter wears the old pure dress you used to love so well): 4290
Gone Before (Nelly darling, Nelly darling, why this pallor on thy cheek?): 1446
Gone Before (She was most like a rose when it flushes rarest): 1716
Gone Forth (The old, old house behind its silver trees): 1495
Gone Seaward (A merry tiresome child, an hour ago): 14669
Gone! (Gone! gone! the bells toll on): 14272
Gone! (I have the letter yet, Minnie): 1310
Gone! (Oh, lay her gently in the mould): 7629
Good and Bad (Whilst differing critics strive to find): 1984
Good and Ill (Two tasks are ours, to know and understand): 14648
Good Angels (Triumph, for my task is done): 3566
Good Friday (Bound upon th' accursed tree): 10866
Good Intentions (Above the teeming city hangs the moon): 6740
Good Night (How lightly said, how careless spoken): 3911
Good Night (When we have said Good night): 2469
Good Night and Joy Be Wi' You A' (The night is wearing to the wane): 10844
Good Night! (Destroyer! what do you here—here by my poor little nest?): 12068
Good Resolutions. Horace, Odes, Book 4, No. 1. (Our long truce broken, and war again?): 14265
Good Seed (Like seeds deep hid in the thankless earth): 5830
Good Society (What means this rabble of low people here): 9107
Good Verses of a Bad Poet (Exhausted travellers, that have undergone): 1077
Good Wishes (I know but that your face is fair): 7400
Good Words (Good New-Year wishes for my friends!): 367
Good-Bye (And so, thou leav'st me now): 6308
Good-Bye (For it is over, dear. Your careless touch): 14929
Good-Bye (Good-bye, good-bye. The words are said): 12871
Good-Bye (Soft falls the moonlight's silvery rays): 13060
Good-Bye (We two, who met, too late, too late): 4263
Good-Bye (What you might once have been to me): 12669
Good-Bye to the Whigs ! A Song of Rejoicing (Good-bye to the Whigs—their departure's at hand): 11109
Good-bye, Sweetheart (Good-bye, sweetheart! The quaint old phrase): 4665
Good-Morrow (Pack clouds away and welcome day): 2382
Good-Night (Good-night! a word so often said): 6179
Good-Night (The stars we saw arise are high above): 14286
Good-Night. To Mary— (Good-night, good-night, our lamp expiring): 10966
Goodwin Sands (Did you ever read or hear): 4209
Gordale (At early dawn, or when the warmer air): 8338
Grace of Clydeside (Ah, little Grace of the golden locks!): 6123
Gracious Rain (The east wind has whistled for many a day): 9430
Gracy Day. Daffodil (Gracy Day has come to town): 15946
Gradation (Tell me not of insulations, of affinities distinct): 1337
Grains of Gold (Far away there glide along): 1303
Grand Impromptu Poem on Henry King Spark, Esquire, of Skirsgill Park, Penrith (A "spark"—of the Almighty Fire): 13660
Grandad's Burial (They laid him where he could not rise): 14200
Grandeur of Nature (The stars are mansions built by Nature's hand): 2989
Grandfather's Pet (This is the room where she slept): 7617
Grandfather's Story (Give me the helm, child. Why, the steel is dimmed): 4262
Grandmother's Boy (So you've settled to go to sea, dear): 1851
Grandmother's Snuff (A merry sound of clapping hands): 1613
Grandmother's Valentine (St Valentine's Day dawned bright and fair): 13071
Grasmere (From hill-encircled Windermere): 4346
Grasmere Revisited (Wordsworth, when last I trod these mountain-ways): 5106
Grass (Beautiful sight—refreshing green): 6741
Grass (Thou emerald loveliness, that paintest the face): 6758
Grass and Straw (Oh, bonny lass): 8898
Gratitude (O Thou that rul'st the storm and wisely rein'st): 1737
Grave Voices (The mosts were beginning to creep and glide): 1496
Gravy (A widow lady once there was, who lived in Camden): 13644
Gray (Soaring on pinions proud): 13868
Great Odds at Sea. A Leaf of English History (Our ships lay under Florez. You will mind): 2707
Greece. From the French of Ardans (Led by the light of bards of yore): 7974
Greece.—A Sonnet (Land of the muses, and of mighty men): 7847
Greek Mother's Song (O where is peace in all the lovely land?): 14598
Green and Dry (To walk through life and never fling): 552
Green Fields and Shady Lanes (I'm weary of the city's pomps and shows): 13437
Green Leaves (The sweet leaves, the fresh leaves, the young green leaves): 4145
Green Sky (Grey on the linden leaves): 5094
Green Things Growing (Oh! the green things growing! the green things): 12146
Greeting (Many years have sped): 12737
Greeting and Farewell (I hear it in the soft wind on the moorland): 4829
Grief (A vision grew before me from the mist): 2292
Grief (An ancient enemy have I): 1556
Grief and God (Unshunnable is grief; we should not fear): 15037
Grief. A Sonnet (There came to meet me, on Life's toilsome way): 12479
Grimm's Law. A New Song (Etymology once was a wild kind of thing): 9837
Griper Greg. A Capriccio (Griper Greg, of the village of Willoughby Waterless): 1292
Griselda, the Clerke's Tale. Re-made from Chaucer (In fair Saluzzo, lovely to behold): 11888
Groo-loo-kri-tchi (or the Blown-plumed Condor) (Of all the dreadful birds that fly): 8138
Growing Old (Growing old! The pulses' measure): 4688
Growing Old Together (You have promised that through life): 5927
Growing Up (Oh to keep them still around us, baby darings, fresh and pure): 4180
Guardian Angels (When daylight has departed, and earth is hushed to rest): 6037
Guarinos (The day of Roncesvalles was a dismal day for you): 9730
Guenevere (Her amber tresses bound with miniver): 8950
Guesses (I know a maiden; she is dark and fair): 2847
Guests at the Great Inn (Beat the gong, and ring the bell!): 2854
Guido and Marina. A Dramatic Sketch (Clasp me again! My soul is very sad): 15472
Guido's Model (Guido Reni in a Roman palace chamber): 3167
Guilbert Fitz-Richard. A.D. 1070. A Song of a Saxon Gleeman (The Saxon fold were scatter'd like chaff before the wind): 845
Guinevere to Launcelot (The night is here, and thou art with me still): 12016
Gunhilda: or, The Champion Page. A Dramatic Scene (Eight days already have the lists been held): 15098
Gunnar's Death. After the Icelandic of Njals Saga (Up started Gunnar from his sleep, as a weird and woeful sound): 8398
Gur Moch Rinn Mi Dusgadh (’Twas early I rose on a fresh morn of May): 14984
Gusty Weather. Triolet (When Amabel a-milking goes): 664
Gutterslush: Maker of Parliaments (Gutterslush, one of the million): 8543
Guy Fawkes' Day (So runs the burden of the doggerel ditty): 13571
Hacho, the Dane; or the Bishop's Ransom. (A Legend of Llandaff) (Ho! what ship is this on Hafren?): 525
Had I the choice (Had I the choice to tally greatest bards): 13687
Hades (Cowper! thy lines of tenderness so deep): 9512
Hâfiz—Why So Named? (Mohammed Shemseddin, tell me why): 8974
Hail to Thee, Pride of the North, Hail, Christopher, Star of Edina! (Who from thy hill-seated throne, in thine own most romantic of cities): 9219
Hail! Bounteous May! (Spring's delights are all reviving): 1775
Hairst (Though weel I lo'e the buddin' spring): 5461
Half the Year Round (Grateful and lovely, through the leafy glade): 2720
Half the Year Round (Slow-paced and solemn, through the drifting snow): 2699
Half-and-Half at the Admiral (Three thirsty souls in Hertfordshire went tramping through the dust): 13770
Half-Hearted (If I could love thee, Love, a little more): 9248
Half-way to Arcady (He. Here, child! Is this the way to Arcady?): 9319
Halidon Hill. A Border Battle-Field (A sun-clad slope of living green): 7230
Hallowed Ground (Ask yon pale mother what is hallow'd ground): 11546
Hame, Hame, Hame (Hame, hame, hame, Hame fain wad I be): 5361
Hamet to His Conqueror, after Attempting His Life (Repent!—ah, no! my soul shall still be free): 14125
Hammermen of Old (Mimer, the hammerman—strong of arm, brawny of limb, and rugged of brow): 2908
Hampton Court (The windows of the Fountain Court): 3688
Han's Heiling's Rock (See where yon pile of rock is tow'ring high): 9074
Hand and Heart ("Clean heart—clean hands," he said, and looked at mine): 999
Handeck (Emblem of love, two streams united): 532
Hang Him! ("It was in the year 1803," began my old friend): 14764
Hannibal (From out the burning south he came): 4962
Hans Beudix (There once was an Emperor (so says my story)): 9438
Hans Euler. (From the German of J. G. Seidl) ("Hark, child—again that knocking! Go, fling wide"): 742
Hapless Love (Why do you sadly go alone): 1987
Happiness ("Thou shalt be happy!" So I told my heart): 4862
Happiness (As in the sun the dewy violet trembles): 5902
Happy and Whole (Sigh not for me, O never sigh for me): 14545
Happy Frailty (How meanly dwells the immortal mind!): 3755
Happy Old Age (I feel that age has overta'en): 6679
Happy! (His youthful years had withered in the slum): 12735
Hard Times (Hard Times! and so they be, honey; cupboard and hearth are bare): 4562
Hardie's Last Letter to His Sweetheart.
(Inserted by particular request) (O Peggy, dear Peggy! my heart bleeds for you): 90
Harebells (A stretch of common land, abloom): 4664
Harebells (The bells are ringing and ringing): 1683
Hark to the Strain (Hark to the strain!): 3434
Harmonies of Nature (How beautiful, how beautiful, to climb the towering height): 15842
Harmony (O wouldst thou give me Music, let it be): 11631
Harold and Tosti (On England's shores the pirate king): 15506
Harold's Grave (—There, where yon stretch of yellow sand): 9592
Harp of Zion (Harp of Zion, who shall make): 15516
Harry Brougham (Britain's now astir all over): 16
Harvest (Far o'er the slopes, the rider's sickle plays): 2797
Harvest (The "Lord of harvest" on the reddening fields): 1725
Harvest (The corn-land is lying in brief, deep rest): 4311
Harvest (With throbbing heart and tearful eye): 2563
Harvest (Working away at the harvest, reaping the ripening grain): 1811
Harvest Home (The ripen'd grain invites the Reaper's hand): 9329
Harvest Memories (When the noontide sun of autumn floods the cornfields' hazy gold): 685
Harvest Song (Garner in the golden grain): 2209
Hasscoes of Norway. (A Lay of Shetland) (From Norwegian stormy mountains): 1761
Haunted ("Good morning, granny," "What's the time?"): 13793
Haunted (Come, fill my goblet up with wine): 1511
Haunted (Like unto ghosts that come when darkness broods): 7472
Haunted (She cometh to me in the gray, gray dawn): 940
Haunted (There broods no shadow o'er these ancient walls): 4264
Haunting Eyes. (For Music) (In the hour I first beheld thee): 14530
Haunting Spirits (It was an olden fancy, born): 6395
Hawkswell Place (With greyly-pencill'd clouds the twilight creeps): 1429
Hawthorn (I see her where the budding may): 4572
Hawthorn (The hand I love has dropped a spray): 4836
Haymakers (Mary and I are abroad in the glow of a midsummer): 13527
Hazely Heath ('Tis "chill October," yet the linnet sings): 644
Hæmony (A little dust the summer breeze): 14585
He and I (Down in the yellow bay): 1046
He Descended Into Hell; The Harrowing of Hell: (otherwise, the Besieging of Limbo by our Lord.) (All hearken to me now!): 8107
He Giveth His Beloved Sleep (A little child rests on a bed of pain): 7010
He Heeded Not (The song of singing brook to hear): 1575
He is Not a Poet (I would not, if I could, be called a poet): 7960
He Loved (He loved me once—what words are those, "he loved!"): 4488
He Loved Me Once (He loved me once!): 13148
He Would Lead a Better Life (I am tired of folly, tired of my own ways): 7984
Head and Heart ("Heart," quoth Head, "thou'rt ever fretting): 976
Healing for the Sick (O life! with thy large aims and petty strivings): 6333
Heart-Less (One day I gave my heart away): 2412
Heart-Storms (The shadow of night is falling): 13251
Heart's-Ease (A simple flower for such a magic name): 7583
Heart's-Ease and Forget-Me-Nots (Oh, wherefore dost thou mock my grief): 3289
Heartsease (I found a faded Pansy on the page): 13132
Heartsease (The sun hung low, the stream ran slow): 4238
Heartsease (Where should we seek for heartsease? We who fain): 4867
Heartsease: A Song to my Wife (Home in her heart): 7055
Heath and Mountain (Ere yet the golden sheaves were piled): 2904
Heather (How calm it is, and how unchanged!): 4822
Heather (I roamed this morning far away): 4309
Heather (On the top of an Irish mountain): 2211
Heather-Honey (The bee is in the heather and the heather's on the hill): 12529
Heaven and Earth (There are no Shadows where there is no Sun): 11961
Heaven and Hell (Is Heaven a place, or state of mind?): 15189
Heaven on Earth (The heavens may lose their blue and gold): 12782
Hebrew Melody (In Judah's halls the harp is hush'd): 2810
Hector and Andromache (Will Hector leave me for the fatal plain): 10024
Hector in the Garden (Nine years old! First years of any): 11070
Hegel at Jena (On the fourteenth October, at Jena town): 8068
Heidelberg, August, 1867. (In Memoriam) (A day of smiles and tears, half cloud, half sunshine): 13545
Heidelberg. On the Terrace (We stood upon the castle's height): 14443
Heigh-Ho! (A pretty young maiden sat on the grass): 10599
Heights and Depths (He walked in glory on the hills): 13678
Heimkehr (the Return). From the German of Emmanuel Geibel (That was a day of bitter smart): 922
Heinrich Frauenlob (At worms, about our Lady's shrine): 519
Helen and Cassandra (The rush and the roar and the leap and the curl): 13429
Helen Grey (Because one loves you, Helen Grey): 14201
Helen in the Wood (I left the yew tree's shadow, thrown): 12116
Helen's Tower (Helen's tower, here I stand): 3999
Helen's Tower, Erected by Lord Dufferin, in Honour of His Mother, at Clandeboye, Ireland (Fair Tower, that standest dark and cold): 13907
Helena (My friend, our paths are separate on this earth): 6468
Helios and Rhodos. (Suggested by the Picture in the Exhibition of the Royal Academy, 1869) (Lean downward; let thy bright and glistening hues): 13954
Heliotrope (How strong they are, those subtle spells): 4267
Helmorran (Whilst vice parades her front in open day): 9036
Help for Lancashire (They never thought that it would come to this): 937
Helvellyn (Over the heather we rambled): 764
Hemans (To bid the big tear start): 13876
Hendecasyllabics (O you chorus of indolent reviewers): 12225
Henri Quatre (Bold Henri Quatre! gay sovereign! champion strong!): 14619
Henry Brougham (Dead! Passed from our midst to his haven on high!): 7644
Hepatica and Snowdrop (Garden, put on the livery of Spring): 2401
Her Attractions (She has no dazzling charms, no classic grace): 13282
Her Bridal (The clanging steeple dins the air): 272
Her Choice. (Dedicated to the ATALANTA Branch of the Selborne Society) (O gentle maiden, come out awhile): 2071
Her Cuckoo (We heard it calling, sweet and low): 12245
Her Departure (I woke, they said the much-loved maid was gone): 14577
Her Dream (Fold your arms around me, Sweet): 12043
Her Eyes (Her eyes dwell with me as a Psalm): 8771
Her Faults (I know she has a score of faults): 13110
Her First Miracle (The huge weeds bent to let her pass―): 5076
Her Garden (The silent shadow slowly creeps): 12659
Her Grave (Why dost thou sit so still, deep night!): 1453
Her Last Letter ('Tis but a line, a hurried scrawl): 14739
Her Last Posy (In the rarest of English valleys): 3947
Her Laureate (I am, indeed, no theme with you for song): 14602
Her Look (Time may set his fingers there): 12690
Her Picture (This is your picture, just as you were): 8102
Her Rose (A red rose grew in a garden fair): 13355
Her Sister ("Brigid is a caution, sure." What's that ye say?): 7919
Her Spell (What your spell of subtle art): 12528
Here Follow the Notices, Done into Metre by an ingenious Friend (A very singular report, we hear): 8219
Here or There? (May God be near thee, friend): 4350
Here's a Health to Aytoun (Here's a health to Aytoun): 11219
Here's a Health unto His Majesty (Here's a health unto his Majesty): 8326
Here's Health beloved Erin, to thee! [Sung at a Soiree given in honour of Father Matthews, by the Author] (Here's a health to the land of the Thistle and Rose): 128
Here's to the Statesmen, the Pride of our Land (Here's to the statesmen the pride of our land): 14184
Hereafter (In after years a twilight ghost shall fill): 14603
Hermotimus (Wilt not lay thee down in quiet slumber): 11495
Hern Castle (Hern Castle stands by its own broad lands): 220
Hero (A night of winter ages long ago): 569
Hero (Her gold-brown hair in rippling wavelets flowed): 4090
Hero and Leander (See yonder castles old and hoar): 8531
Hero and Leander (Up, gentle Muse, and sing the torch whose gleam): 11689
Hero and Leander.—A Ballad (See you the towers, that, grey and old): 10801
Hero Harold (In his tent, at fall of day): 1897
Hero Harold (Under windless domes of sky): 1899
Hero's Song (The night is dark—my torch is bright): 3779
Hervé Riel (On the sea and at the Hogue, sixteen hundred ninety-two): 12347
Hesperus (There is a silence in the quiet woods): 13972
Hibernal Impatience (O laggard year, that lasts so long): 6988
Hic Jacet Amor (Hard by the spot it lies where all ways meet): 12893
Hidden (O blushes, rise not to my cheek): 7404
Hidden Chords (The present hour repeats upon its strings): 1506
Hidden Comforters (Those idle hands upon her lap lay not, they rather hung): 6527
Hidden Light (I much mistrust the voice): 1353
High Life in the Eighteenth Century (Come, followers of Fashion, both young ones and old): 15308
High, or Low? (Young love, as poets sing, may dwell): 5596
Highland Courting (When was our loving? Oh, ask when the mountains): 8160
Highland Flora (She sat beside her open chest): 409
Hill-Brook Combe (A tiny brook from stone to stone): 1729
Hill-Fort of Condapilly, Madras (Sunset upon the mountains, whence now pour): 15807
Hill-Voices (The curlew wheeling o'er the height): 2765
Hilli-onnee (The Whigs can boast of many a name): 11121
Hint from the Mountains for Certain Political Aspirants (Stranger, 'tis a sight of pleasure): 8468
Hiram Power's Greek Slave (They say Ideal Beauty cannot enter): 1143
His Banner Over Me (Surrounded with unnumber’d Foes): 16004
His Cold (Is it not hard to live one day): 3998
His Daisy (Ain’t I a treat wiv me swell green ’at): 7939
His Dead (He laid the ferns about her feet): 2605
His First Love, and His Last (He lived to dwell contentedly): 12332
His Hour (His hour! Pile the oak logs where the hearthlight leaps and glows): 4305
His Little Shoes (Sunset dies upon the hill): 1966
His Name (O Wonderful! round whose birth-hour): 1797
His Only Friend (He crouched upon the pauper mound): 12880
His Own Epitaph (See, O citizens! here old Ennius's image presented): 11055
Historic Women (Yes, they have lived! these women whose great names): 646
Historical Contrast. May, 1701: December, 1863 (When one, whose nervous English verse): 11994
History of the King-Bird (Far in the south, where vast Maragnon flows): 10561
Ho Ro, Clansmen! (Send the biorlinn on careering): 14983
Hogg (Clothed in the rainbow's beam): 13878
Holidays (A kindly bark of house-dog at a door): 5541
Holidays (Once more, once more again): 9015
Holidays (They come to us but once in life): 1321
Holiness to the Lord (There blooms a beautiful Flower, it blooms in a far-off land): 15889
Holly (Holly, bright and burnished, in the hedgerows shining): 4537
Holly and Mistletoe (Holly and mistletoe): 2103
Holly Berries (Holly berries, holly berries): 6445
Holy Communion (Lord, as Thy temple's portals close): 13676
Holy Family (O child of beauty rare): 10939
Holy Jamie (Come, holy Jamie, come, with all thy store): 9041
Holy Loch (How fair the scene, as from this mound): 7212
Holyday (Half-Greek adown the Highland glen): 9323
Holyhead Breakwater (Between a dark height and a pale storm at sea): 1999
Holyrood (Imperial Holyrood! to thy green court): 10452
Home . . . ("We're going home!" I heard two lovers say): 791
Home (East or West, at home is best!): 15013
Home (from the Gaelic) (Here is the shore, and the far wide world's before me): 5122
Home (Home is not the land of our birth): 15390
Home (I love to visit foreign climes): 5661
Home (O, Home! thou art in every place): 11369
Home (The dearest spot of earth to me): 14466
Home (The little bark upon wide waters lying): 11881
Home (There is a land, of every land the pride): 7202
Home (There was a kindly tone that through the glow): 6038
Home (Two birds within one nest): 12201
Home (When daily tasks are done, and tired hands): 4134
Home and Rest (Child, do not fear): 1484
Home at Last (The ship is sailing, the moon is shining): 1814
Home from the Hill (Let the weary body lie): 8156
Home Sick (Write to me very often): 12700
Home to Thee (Home—but not to thee, sweet): 12025
Home Verses (Sweetest little sister! child): 316
Home Yearnings (I've green'd to see ance mair, John): 6276
Home-Sickness (If I should leave my home, and go away): 12292
Home-Sickness (Where I am, the halls are gilded): 1333
Home's Harmony (The lark may sing her sweetest song): 6556
Homeless (Jessie, as I came home to day, I saw): 14014
Homeless (Sad and weary, lonely, old): 12951
Homer (Homer, thy song we liken to the sea): 12251
Homer's Hymn to Venus (Muse, sing the feats of radiant Aphrodite): 11914
Homesick (Is it not yet morning? When will the long night wane?): 12073
Homeward (From the plane-tree's windless leaves): 7292
Homeward Bound (Our trusty, well-beloved friend): 4546
Homeward-Bound (Are you sleeping—are you dreaming; are you dreaming, love, of me?): 6419
Honeymoon Cottage (The apples ripen where the sun): 6653
Honeysuckle (How fair they were, my darlings twain): 4520
Honor Victis (No need to sing of him who wielded well): 12041
Honour (Honour is tender human love): 1374
Honour to the Plough (Though clouds o'ercast our native sky): 11089
Honour to Woman (Honour to Woman! To her it is given): 9991
Honours (When the column of light on the waters is glass'd): 10679
Honours of War (There is a word my heart is hot to say): 2358
Hop-Gathering (Mary.—Oh the heart I used to have!): 1906
Hope ('Tis dead of night: thick clouds obscure the sky): 14456
Hope (Beautiful dream!): 15788
Hope (From that famed casket to Pandora given): 5010
Hope (Her lips are gravely smiling, and she hath grave dark eyes): 5036
Hope (I lay in grief): 4514
Hope (If thou art absent there is nought that cheers): 12755
Hope (The future is man's immemorial hymn): 5916
Hope (The plant's first shoot was fresh and fair): 4265
Hope (We speak with the lip, and we dream in the soul): 10676
Hope (When Hope's bright form has ta'en a heavenward flight): 15629
Hope and Death (Hope is a legacy the dead bestow): 15342
Hope and Faith (Hope without Faith! a blind man's noonday dream): 14655
Hope and Memory (Earth has each year her resurrection-day): 14392
Hope and Memory (Enjoy the Future free, secure): 14666
Hope and Memory (Gliding along the current of Life's river): 15404
Hope and Memory (Two sisters are there—every year by year): 1802
Hope Deferred (A dreariness came o'er me): 4150
Hope Deferred (His hand at last! By his own fingers writ): 2606
Hope On (The ceaseless rain sweeps on): 7240
Hope On, Hope Ever (Hope on, hope ever. Though dead leaves are lying): 12852
Hope. (Aged Seven) (She wore a gown of russet-brown): 2066
Hope. (Suggested by Mr. Watts’s Picture in the Grosvenor Gallery, 1886) (In lonely vigil till the day be born): 14863
Hope. A Song (Oh, chide not Hope, though she deceives): 13074
Hope. An Epigram (Sweet Hope of life, where shouldst thou dwell?): 1251
Hopelessness (Lone wandering with the woe within me hushed): 7028
Hor. Car. I. 5. A Modern Paraphrase (Pyrrha, the wan, the golden-tressed!): 798
Hor. Od. IV. 8. (Gold would I give my friends, or plate): 10102
Horace in England in the Nineteenth Century to Mæcenas in Elysium. Ode I. of Book I (Mæcenas, my most dear and honoured master): 10283
Horatian Echo. (To an Ambitious Friend) (Omit, omit, my simple friend): 8809
Horatian Version [Epodon VII.] On Meeting the Birmingham Mob, Dec. 1831 (Whither away, ye dirty devils?): 11015
Horatius II. in Cheapside (It was the Mayor and Elders): 13819
Horæ Sinicæ. No. II. Ode on the Death of Yahmasseero, Councillor of State (I have just learned that one of the new): 9164
Horrible Stanzas (Fear haunts me like a sheeted ghost, there comes no rest to me): 10247
Horrida Bella (Wrapped in War's lurid guise, avenging forms): 12438
Hortus Siccus (Gone, with their laughter and their silent sorrow): 7069
Hot Cross Buns.—(After Pope) (Awake, my muse! aside thy buskins fling): 12149
Hours of Rest (Come ye apart, and rest a while): 3969
Hours on Loch Etive (Once more by mighty Cruachan, and once more): 2428
House and Home (Where is the house, the house we love?): 2268
House-Moving (The winter sunshine, bright and cold): 7607
Household Christmas Carols (Bright thoughts and hopes are now awake): 1155
How Galahad Came to Camelot. Being a fragment form a Song, sung by Merlin, at the great feast held by King Arthur, after the achievement of the Grail-Quest. (At the solemn feast of Pentecost, Arthur the king and his chosen knights): 613
How I Read Petrarch (I never could read Petrarch. But one day): 7243
How it Seems (Stars in the Midnight's blue abyss): 12352
How Lady Blanche Arundel Held Wardour for King Charles (The first of May, the garland day, that ushers in the spring): 2880
How Lisa Loved the King (Six hundred years ago, in Dante's time): 10457
How Little It Costs (How little it costs, if we give it a thought): 13390
How Long? (Out of the south is the chill wind blowing): 12429
How Long? (Slowly the long hours come and go): 4125
How Our Vicar Got His Deanery (In a snug country village remote from a town): 6770
How the King Came Home ("Oh, why are you waiting, children"): 12884
How the Wallflower came first, and why so called (Why this flower is now called so): 2413
How They Held the Bass for King James, 1691-1694 (Ye hae heard Whigs crack o' the Saints in the Bass,—my faith! a gruesome tale): 8168
How Thor went to Fish for the Serpent Midgard. A Legend from the Norse Mythology (Without his magic belt of power, or panoply of war): 522
How to Make a Mad Dog (Tie a dog that is little, and one that is large): 3478
How to Make a Pedigree. A New Song (If you'd like a goodly tree): 9735
How Wondrous are Thy Works, O God! A Hymn (How wondrous are thy works, O God): 413
Hubert; Or, The Veteran of India (Where Indian village 'mid the grove of palms): 8793
Hubert; Or, the Veteran of India. Part II (Years roll'd along: the aged Briton's life): 9173
Hullaloo. A Parody (The eves were as grey as grey embers): 13741
Hülseburg (They have pass'd away—and the innocent flower): 15703
Human Brotherhood (The monarch, glitt'ring with the pomp of state): 1151
Human Life (Ah, what is life! a dream within a dream!): 3030
Human Life (Half in day, and half in night): 15734
Human Life (I walk'd the fields at morning's prime): 15646
Human Life (I walk'd the fields at morning's prime): 3136
Human Life (Life to me has ever been): 14228
Human Life (Search all the paths of life, examine ev'ry way): 3463
Humble and Unnoticed Virtue (O my son!): 4382
Hume, Martin, and Canning (Though for more than one hour I've been taking French leave): 9705
Humorous Description of Shipwreck by Drink (This gentleman and I): 8209
Humorous Dialogue Between Brothers of the Charter House ("How find you yourself, brother Balding, to-day?"): 5459
Hungarian Song (Do you not see how our gallant Theresa): 13517
Hunting (Soft is the air, the dewy grass): 12176
Hunting versus Yachting (Some love to ride on the ocean tide): 4432
Hurrah for the Lords! (Must we shout for the Franchise? Well, show what you mean): 8914
Hush! ("I can scarcely hear," she murmured): 1290
Hush! (Hush! for the red leaves are drifting): 4812
Huzza for the Rule of the Whigs! (All ye who are true to the altar and throne): 10517
Hy-Brasail. The Isle of the Blest ('Neath the pale moon's tranquil beam): 12769
Hyacinth (All of spring-time's glow and grace): 4236
Hyacinths (Whilst lingered in the quiet street): 7722
Hyder Ali. From the Indian (Round him rang the jewelled chain): 15736
Hydro-Bacchus (Great Homer sings how once of old): 10666
Hylas ("Lovely river, lovely river"): 2811
Hylas (Hylas, Hylas comes): 3067
Hymn (I cannot always trace the way): 15637
Hymn (O beautiful the streams): 10572
Hymn (O for a heart from self set free): 3624
Hymn Before Sunrise in the Vale of Chamouni (Hast thou a charm to stay the Morning-star): 2974
Hymn by St. Columbia (Sweet is to me in Uchd Alŭinn): 14616
Hymn Concerning Venus. From the Greek of Homer (Sing, O my muse, of golden Aphrodité): 11893
Hymn for Advent (The Lord is come! On Syrian soil): 14442
Hymn for St. John the Baptist’s Day, June 24th (Who shall be the last great Seer): 14687
Hymn for the Czar (God protect brave Alexander!): 3023
Hymn for Whitsunday (June 1) (Come, Holy Spirit, from above): 14495
Hymn I (Sweet Morn! from countless cups of gold): 11408
Hymn II (By scale and method works the Will Supreme): 11412
Hymn II.—Concerning Apollo (How quakes the laurel, great Apollo's shoot!): 11916
Hymn III (O Thou! whom earth and stars proclaim): 11413
Hymn IV (O Thou! sole Sire! pervading Lord of all): 11415
Hymn IX (Oh Thou who strength and wisdom sheddest): 11431
Hymn of a Hermit (Long the day, the task is longer): 10547
Hymn of Nature (God of the earth's extended plains!): 3424
Hymn of the Ascension (He is gone—beyond the skies): 13896
Hymn of the Bread-Taxed (How long shall idlers tax the bread): 77
Hymn of the British Peasant (For the pride of our fields, for our garden-decked land): 2985
Hymn of the City (Not in the solitude): 2871
Hymn of the City (Not in the solitude): 5460
Hymn of the Mountain Christian (For the strength of the hills we bless thee): 10983
Hymn of the Present (Not only in old days He bowed): 2101
Hymn on the Accession (June 20): For National Blessings. An Accommodation of Milton's Version of the 136th Psalm (Let us with a gladsome mind): 14496
Hymn on the Transfiguration ("Master, is it good to be"): 16094
Hymn Over a Dying Virgin (O Thou whom once thy redeeming love): 10324
Hymn to Aphrodite (Of Aphrodite golden-crown'd): 10636
Hymn to Apollo (Thee, Phœbus, hymns the swan with gladden'd wings): 10632
Hymn to Apollo. (From Callimachus) (See how the laurel branches sudden wave): 12143
Hymn to Astarte (What foreland fledged with myrrh): 8453
Hymn to Ceres (Ceres, the bright-hair'd goddess, venerable): 10627
Hymn to Ceres (Shout, women, shout your voices out): 11920
Hymn to December (O'er the bare hill-top moan the gusty breezes): 10880
Hymn to Diana (Dian!—We seek thee in this tranquil hour): 8089
Hymn to Diana (Muse, sing Diana, sister of Apollo): 10624
Hymn to Diana.—Callimachus (O! let us hymn Diana!—she loves her shafts to throw): 11598
Hymn to Hercules the Lion-Hearted (Now will I sing of Hercules, the wondrous son of Jove): 10629
Hymn to Hermes (I sing of Hermes, Hermes th' Argicide): 10630
Hymn to Hesperus (Bright solitary beam, fair speck): 10762
Hymn to Jove (Now will I sing of mighty Jove, Jove greatest, and Jove best): 10634
Hymn to Joy (Spark from the fire that Gods have fed): 9951
Hymn to Juno (I sing of Juno golden-throned, Heaven's great immortal queen): 10626
Hymn to Jupiter. From the Greek of Callimachus (At Jove's high festival, what song of praise): 11860
Hymn to Mars (Mars, of obdurate power, that weighest down): 10623
Hymn to Mars (Mars, the strong one, mighty soul'd): 14142
Hymn to Minerva (To Pallas, town Protectress, the terrible, the strong): 10625
Hymn to Neptune (Of Neptune, shaker of the earth, the awful god I sing): 10633
Hymn to Selene—Luna (Sweet-speaking daughters of Saturnian Jove): 10637
Hymn to the Classic Rhone (No more a hundred temples gleam): 5663
Hymn to the Devil (Speed thee, speed thee!): 10197
Hymn to the Light (First-born of Chaos, who so far didst come): 4375
Hymn to the Moon (How lovely is this silent scene!): 7891
Hymn to the Mother of the Gods (Daughter of heaven's great potentate): 10628
Hymn to the Muses and Apollo (The Muses, and Apollo, and great Jove): 10635
Hymn to the New Year (Hail to the Infant of the Ages! hail): 1790
Hymn to the Night Wind (Unbridled Spirit, throned upon the lap): 9092
Hymn to the Saviour (Christ who art above the sky): 2510
Hymn to the Sea (Grant, O regal in bounty, a subtle and delicate largess): 802
Hymn to the Setting Sun (Slow, slow, mighty wanderer, sink to thy rest): 3493
Hymn to the Setting Sun (Sun of the firmament! planet of wonderment!): 3611
Hymn to the Sons of Jove—Castor and Pollux (Of th' horseman Castor, and his blameless brother): 10638
Hymn to Venus (Ador'd, gold-crown'd, bright-blushing Aphrodite): 14141
Hymn to Vulcan (Thou shrilly-sounding Muse, of the mighty Vulcan sing): 10631
Hymn V (Amid the gay and noisy throng): 11418
Hymn VI (O unseen Spirit! now a calm divine): 11420
Hymn VII (Thou, Lord! who rear'st the mountains' height): 11429
Hymn VIII (I stood upon the heap'd remains): 11430
Hymn X (Time more than earthly o'er this hour prevails): 11432
Hymn XI (Each trembling spray and little flower): 11433
Hymn XII (O'er throngs of men around I cast mine eyes): 11455
Hymn XIII (The stream of life from fountains flows): 11456
Hymn XIV (Eternal Mind! Creation's Light and Lord): 11457
Hymn XV (When up to nightly skies we gaze): 11458
Hymn XVI (The shapes of earth are passing still away): 11461
Hymn XVII (Within its hollow nook of rocks and trees): 11462
Hymn XVIII (Can man, O God! the tale of man repeat): 11463
Hymns for the Unenfranchised (Who is the Patriot, who is he): 27
Hypocrisy and Candour (Tom says he always tells the truth): 3287
I ("Because she listened to the quiring spheres") (Because she listened to the quiring spheres): 996
I ("My love is selfish and unfair") (My love is selfish and unfair): 797
I Am Come But Your Spirits To Raise (How d'ye do—how do d'ye do, my sweet Jane): 4415
I Cannot Get a Publisher (I cannot get a publisher, my case is very hard): 3485
I Ken a Fair Wee Flower (I ken a fair wee flower that blooms): 5979
I Know Not (I know not if thy spirit weaveth ever): 2542
I Know What Beauty Is (I know what beauty is, for Thou): 8294
I Leave Them All (I leave them all,—then blame me not): 5622
I Love the Brooks. Stanzas (I love the brooks, the merry brooks): 5602
I Love Thee, I Love Thee! (I love thee, I love thee! what more wouldst' have me say?—): 5618
I Mused Last Night in Pensive Mood (I mused last night in pensive mood): 13638
I Must Not Love (I must not love!—for envious Time): 3722
I Number None But Sunny Hours (How few can say that of their lives): 5615
I Pity You, Ye Stars So Bright, &c (I Pity You, Ye Stars So Bright): 7817
I Sat in the Shadow (I sat in the shadow all the day): 7237
I Saw Her But Once (I saw her but once—like the lapse of a stream): 11396
I Want You (I want you, in the Springtime sweet and tender): 12647
I Went to Look for Roses ("I went to look for roses"): 15857
I—Alere Flammam. To A. C. B. (In ancient Rome, the secret fire): 772
I—Laura Weeping (Where'er I shift my weary eyes, to know): 1004
I—London (Athwart the sky a lowly sigh): 773
I—Ma Creevin O! (Ma Creevin O, with your breast of snow): 993
I—Ophelia (Oh, tender night!): 829
I—Requiescat (Bury me deep when I am dead): 804
I—The Death of Verlaine (So the poet of grey slips away): 1033
I—The Frontier (At the hushed brink of twilight,—when, as though): 770
I. "After a week of restless care and toil" (After a week of restless care and toil): 10883
I. "By classic Cam a lovely flow'ret grew" (By classic Cam a lovely flow'ret grew): 3356
I. "Here we are shadows—and our lives but dreams" (Here we are shadows—and our lives but dreams): 1362
I. "It is the Crown of Summer–August ride!" (It is the Crown of Summer–August ride!): 6089
I. "Look if for evermore a fair rose grew" (Look if for evermore a fair rose grew): 5295
I. "My gay-garbed friend, much wonder fills the mind" (My gay-garbed friend, much wonder fills the mind): 11257
I. "Not with the fame from silver trumpets blown" (Not with the fame from silver trumpets blown): 5486
I. "Pusicos odi, puer, apparatus."–Ode 1.33 (No, no, John; I will not incur the expense): 7241
I. "Straight from the hand of God comes many a gift" (Straight from the hand of God comes many a gift): 2827
I. "This is the day, which in Time's teeming womb" (This is the day, which in Time's teeming womb): 13840
I. "Tho' born to no ae inch of ground" (Tho' born to no ae inch of ground): 3322
I. "With thistle's azure flower my home I hung" (With thistle's azure flower my home I hung): 1026
I. ("Day after day I watch a level shore") (Day after day I watch a level shore): 14575
I. ("I love thee, but thou guessest not how much!") (I love thee, but thou guessest not how much!): 15797
I. ("If thou drinkest wine, pour a draught on the ground") (If thou drinkest wine, pour a draught on the ground): 14814
I. ("Light barks of Helle's strait, whose flagging sails") (Light barks of Helle's strait, whose flagging sails): 11505
I. ("Mute is the Minstrel's wonder-moving shell!") (Mute is the Minstrel's wonder-moving shell!): 14620
I. ("O Lady fair, whose honoured name doth grace") ("O Lady fair, whose honoured name doth grace"): 1861
I. ("The metal sleeps in its hidden vein") (The metal sleeps in its hidden vein): 13912
I. ("The queen of all the months is with us now") (The queen of all the months is with us now): 7330
I. ("There are some hearts that never do grow old") (There are some hearts that never do grow old): 14728
I. ("There is a runnel creeps across a fell") (There is a runnel creeps across a fell): 10111
I. ("When first, gay Rouen! to thy walls I came") (When first, gay Rouen! to thy walls I came): 15081
I. ("Who that has gazed upon Orion's Belt") (Who that has gazed upon Orion's Belt): 12001
I. (“Minny, reach me out your hand”) (Minny, reach me out your hand): 3922
I. (Fhir a Bhata na-hò-ro ay-li) (From the seaward summits peering): 2490
I. (From Omar Khayyam) (Yon fort once proudly towered into the blue): 14918
I. A Prayer (Father in Heaven! from whom the simplest flower): 11416
I. A Snow Mountain (Can I make white enough my thought for thee): 1985
I. A Surgeon (His brow spreads large and quiet, and his eye): 12378
I. A Vigil (Byron !—Rousseau !—and thou the youngest and): 11201
I. Archangelorum Laudes (Hail to our brother Gabriel!): 8870
I. Charon and his Charge (Why look the distant mountains so gloomy and so dear?): 11470
I. Cupid Set Up for Sale (Sold he must be—there, while he lies asleep): 11823
I. Description of a Picture (Thyrsis who tends the Nymphs' wool-bearing sheep): 14090
I. Dirge of O'Sullivan Bear (The sun on Ivera): 9911
I. Disease (On beauty's cheek the burning flush was seen): 10563
I. Epitaph on Lais (Laïs, who walk'd in gold and purple dyes): 11571
I. First Impressions (The mist of morn still drapes the clattering street): 12313
i. For a Drawing (In a Roses' bower): 8819
I. His Introduction to His Anthology (These primal flowers of Helicon, with cups): 11721
I. Holycross Abbey (From the high sunny headlands of Bere in the west): 11110
I. Hor. Od. ii. 4 (Sir Auburn, if the prudes upbraid): 14873
I. Hymn to Apollo (Keep silence now, with reverential awe): 11764
I. Hymn to Nemesis (Daughter of Justice, winged Nemesis): 11862
I. Life (Each creature holds an insular point in space): 10757
I. Lord B—m to a Great Personage (Dear W—m, to me, on such things much reflecting): 11614
I. Love Grove (This is Love Grove, where all these stately trees): 11636
I. Morning in Spring. Love (How sweet is this grove): 10275
I. Nella Trista Valle (Dark-headed Poet, wanderer of the lute): 8906
I. Niobe (Daughter of Tantalus, lorn Niobe): 11779
I. Oh! Sky-Lark, For Thy Wing! (Oh! Sky-lark, for thy wing!): 11206
I. On a Fountain (Ye Naïds, for whose use Hermocreon found): 11737
I. On the House of Maximinus, in Constantinople (On these bright shores, within this second Rome): 11754
I. Proem (A barren heath, with bitter east-winds piping): 9211
I. Spring (Apple-trees bunched with pink and white): 4023
I. Spring an Idyl (Cold winter now hath left the sky): 11589
I. Summer and Winter (It was a bright and cheerful afternoon): 3036
I. The Battle of Prague. An Old Anonymous Ballad Still Popular Among the Prussian Soldiers (To blockade Prague, that fine old town): 3924
I. The Beautiful Gate of the Temple (Little familiar gate!): 2470
I. The Bird (On the window, lifted an inch): 14431
I. The Brother's Dirge (In the proud old fanes of England): 11386
I. The Chieftain's Lullaby (Hush thee, babe, the stag is belling): 15824
I. The Cross (There fell on Calvary's hill): 1796
I. The Dairy-Maid (My dairy-maiden, trim and tight): 10224
I. The Elephant and the Beasts (An elephant, in ages far-gone): 11478
I. The Grasshopper and Bird-Catcher (High on a lofty thicket): 14152
I. The Mountain Home (On the mountain stands the shieling): 14968
I. The Nine Poetesses of Greece (The Heliconian springs, and rocky steeps): 11521
I. The Poem of Pan (Sing me a song about Pan): 10988
I. The Prayer of the Lonely Student (Night—holy night!—the time): 11246
I. The Recali (Come home!—there is a sorrowing breath): 10479
I. The Studies of the Ladies (a la Francois) (Mamma—this Fénélon's a quiz): 11347
I. To a Family Bible (What household thoughts around thee, as their shrine): 11925
I. To a Lady Reading "The Prisoner of Chillon" in preference to "Childe Harold" (By calm Reflection's cold, undazzled eye): 11316
I. To His Muse by Way of Prologue (Go, bid Love stay): 8830
I. To— (Come, love, and seat you here awhile): 9132
I. Ye Gentlemen of Ireland (Ye gentlemen of Ireland): 11194
I.–A Walk to Acrington on the Fourth of March. (Written for a Friend's Birthday) (A birthday:–and now a day that rose): 2028
I.–Fancy (O fancy, if thou fliest, come back anon): 2098
I.—(Exoteric) (On the fair borders of a mighty stream): 5677
I.—A Dedication (Like spray blown lightly from the crested wave): 9274
I.—A Frosty Day (Grass afield wears silver thatch): 2107
I.—A Winter Song (Came the dread Archer up yonder lawn): 2017
I.—Eily (When the stars sing lullabies): 3610
I.—First Sunday After Christmas (Set thine house in order): 1857
I.—From a Fourth-Pair Window (The sky is dappled blue with clouds that stray): 14534
I.—Hippocrates to the Ambassadors of Artaxerxes (Return, and tell your Sire, The Persian King): 11876
I.—How the Robins Sang (The road was long and dreary, and my heart was sore oppressed): 2497
I.—Hymn for a Little Child (God make my life a little light): 2440
I.—In the Antechamber of Monsignore Del Fiocco (Our master will be Cardinal ere long): 9680
I.—Let the Past be Past ("Bury, oh Dead, thy Dead!" Hearken the call): 14576
I.—Lovers (He gather'd blue forget-me-nots): 2773
I.—Morning Song (The little birds waken): 2549
I.—My Friend: A Portrait (Not of the happy souls who sing): 2758
I.—Outward Bound (Floating, floating, from dawn to dusk): 2645
I.—Sickness (As when a sea-gull, customed long to sweep): 3950
I.—The Anxious Mother (Never did a kinder mother): 2213
I.—The Boat of my Lover (O boat of my lover, go softly, go safely): 2576
I.—The Cattle-Train, Penmaenmawr (All light or summer gloom—no hint of storm): 2135
I.—The Daisy (Pretty it is, as we pass): 3623
I.—The Forth Bridge (When the wild men from Pentland's shaggy side): 8394
I.—The Garden (On the town's edge there is a garden full): 611
I.—The Haunted Spot (I know the spot—'tis on an upland swell): 11585
I.—The King's Messenger (He goes in silence through the crowd): 1882
I.—The Old Man of Hoy (The old man of Hoy): 2025
I.—The Picture (This is her picture—Dolladine—): 1818
I.—The Red-Wheat Field (O rich red-wheat! thou wilt not long defer): 2120
I.—The Violet (A Violet in the fields alone): 2481
I.—The Wind (From the French of Emile Verhaeren) (Crossing the infinite length of the moorland): 1014
I.—The Young Sailor's Song (How merry is the sailor's life upon the bright blue sea!): 2478
I.—To a Promessa Sposa (Look on this flower, which, from its little tree): 2129
I.—To Mrs. J. S. B. (Dear Friend, once, in a dream, I, looking o'er): 14269
I.—Work (Like coral insects multitudinous): 2021
I'll Die at Home (Oh aye, it is very likely, it's mostlins what I have heard): 4268
I'll Love No More (I'll love no more, said I, in sullen mood): 5477
I'll Never Forget That, Ma'am! (They say the men are faithless all): 259
I'm Not A Single Man (Well, I confess, I did not guess): 3137
I'm Very Fond of Water. A New Temperance Song. [Adapted from the Platt Deutsch] (I'm very fond of water): 9513
I'sandûla! (Oh, I'sandûla! ever mournful name!): 7052
I've Lost My Heart (Where is my heart? Alas! not here): 285
Ich hab' im Traum geweinet" (In dreams, oh, I have wept, love!): 9411
Ici-Bas. From the French of Sully-Prudhomme (Here below the lilacs die): 12635
Icolmkill (How beautiful, beneath the morning sky): 8791
Ida and Ermengard (With goodly cheer, and vintage rare): 11177
Idas; or Antichristus Britannicus, Inter Pocula (Hail, Consus, God of Geese! Not without warrant): 9803
Ide (Green vale! I always loved thee; and in youth): 15475
Ideals (Then, dost thou mean, thou faithless one): 11588
Idillie.—Francette (Soon as our flocks from folds are led): 8842
Idillie.—Galatea (O Galatea,—so may every Grace): 8840
Idillie.—Leucothée (The wrinkled Winter has no power): 8843
Idle Words (Say not thy speech was idle; not a word): 328
Idleness (My faithful dog! unwont to hunt for prey): 11885
Idols (Wonder not because the heathen): 6334
Idyl (In the valley of the Wye): 13087
Idyll I. The Lament for Adonis (I wail Adonis! fair Adonis dead!): 10330
Idyll II. Eros and the Fowler (A youthful fowler for his feathered game): 10332
Idyll III. The Tutor and the Pupil (At dawn, while yet I slept, beside my bed): 10335
Idyll IV. Love and the Muses (Of Eros, cruel though he be, the Muses have no dread): 10336
Idyll IX. To Venus (Wherefore, O gentle daughter, Cyprian-born): 10341
Idyll V. The Shortness of Life (Enough! let stubborn fools persist to ply): 10337
Idyll VI. Cleodamus and Myrson (Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter,—which the best): 10338
Idyll VII. Polyphemus and Galatea (O mountain-cliff that beetlest o'er the main): 10339
Idyll VIII. The Evening Star (Hesper! sweet Venus' golden light in Heaven!): 10340
Idyll. (From Don Juan Melandez Valdes) (When we were but mere children): 9018
If (If—it had never shone): 4032
If Hope Be Dead (If Hope be dead—why seek to live?): 10329
If I Might be a Bird (If I might be a bird, I'd be a lark): 6497
If I Were King of Ireland (My love's a match in beauty): 13850
If I Were You (Why did he look so grave? she asked): 12945
If Love Were All (If Love were all, would life be worth the living?): 2307
If This Were So (O Love, if I could see you standing here): 13004
If Thou Wert False (If thou wert false to me, what could I do?): 12625
If You Were Here (If you were here, how pleasant life would be): 13020
If! (If I could pass as swiftly as a thought): 4654
II ("Bear thyself with formal gait") (Bear thyself with formal gait): 10288
II ("Sabinus, let this humble tablet show") (Sabinus, let this humble tablet show): 11506
II ("You were the Queen of evening, and the skies") (You were the Queen of evening, and the skies): 10292
II—A Dream of November (Far, far away, I know not where, I know not how): 9972
II—Before the Dawn (In the weird stillness just before the dawn): 10290
II—Down-a-down (Foxes peeped from out their dens): 9973
II—Her Colours (Rose, grey, and white): 9982
II—Night on Curbar Edge, Derbyshire (No echo of man's life pursues my ears): 9971
II—Phyllis and Damon (Phyllis and Damon met one day): 10291
II—She should have Died Hereafter! (Love had at length a tranquil port displayed): 9975
II—The Isle of Voices (Fair blows the wind to-day, fresh along the valleys): 10289
II. "Beneath an ancient elm-tree's broadest shade" (Beneath an ancient elm-tree's broadest shade): 12389
II. "Bid, at starry midnight's hour" (Bid, at starry midnight's hour): 11258
II. "Fair land, fair love, to new hope born new-blessed" (Fair land, fair love, to new hope born new-blessed): 13841
II. "Formed of unknown immortal elements" (Formed of unknown immortal elements): 12396
II. "If earth hath aught that speaks to us of heaven" (If earth hath aught that speaks to us of heaven): 10884
II. "Let sparks and topers o'er their bottle sit" (Let sparks and topers o'er their bottle sit): 3323
II. "My Love I can compare with nought on earth" (My Love I can compare with naught on earth): 13860
II. "Royal I dream myself, and realm is mine" (Royal I dream myself, and realm is mine): 9976
II. "Such was thy song, when summer walked the land" (Such was thy song, when summer walked the land): 12394
II. "The roses and the mothers cannot choose" (The roses and the mothers cannot choose): 12392
II. "Tyrrhena regum progenies."–Ode iii.29 (Mæcenas, old boy–though descended from kimgs): 11632
II. "Work is a Godsend most divine, direct" (Work is a Godsend most divine, direct): 12487
II. ("Art thou so soon forgotten? thou, the loved") (Art thou so soon forgotten? thou, the loved): 12002
II. ("As on rough hill, the evening all imbrowned") (As on rough hill, the evening all imbrowned): 16024
II. ("Brinkburn—if Time shall spare me—as the weed") (Brinkburn—if Time shall spare me—as the weed): 10112
II. ("Few subjects briefly treated form the lays") (Few subjects briefly treated form the lays): 11522
II. ("For this shall His'try, when she points to those") (For this shall His'try, when she points to those): 15082
II. ("Hush'd is the Shepherd's voice that often woke") (Hush'd is the Shepherd's voice that often woke): 14621
II. ("I love thee, but I see thou hat'st me now") (I love thee, but I see thou hat'st me now): 15798
II. ("Is this the truth, and is it thou dost stand") (Is this the truth, and is it thou dost stand): 16054
II. ("Oh come, that to the wounded heart strength may return") (Oh come, that to the wounded heart strength may return): 16065
II. ("Old Chaucer's daisy ope's its golden eye") (Old Chaucer's daisy ope's its golden eye): 16052
II. ("Poor stricken deer! for whom the world had not") (Poor stricken deer! for whom the world had not): 14729
II. ("Rhegium, whose feet Trinacria's straiten'd sea") (Rhegium, whose feet Trinacria's straiten'd sea): 11572
II. ("This is worth noting: wit's controll'd by dulness") (This is worth noting: wit's controll'd by dulness): 15038
II. (“With careless hearts and full of glee”) (With careless hearts and full of glee): 16076
II. (From Sâdi's Gulistan. Book iii, Story 27) (The wise I liken unto coins of gold): 14921
II. (Gun nbu slan a chi mi) (Health and joy go with thee): 11687
II. (Pour out to Heliodora, and mix that sweetest name): 11637
II. A Student (A little black man, admirably neat): 12379
II. A Voice (Oft in the dumb hour that precedes the dawn): 9212
II. Ballad (Ay—light and careless by thy look): 11317
II. Birthday Hymn (At thy feet we gather!): 16077
II. Che Farò Senz' Eurydice? (Thou bendest o'er the spouse, whom thou hast sped): 8908
II. Confessio Fidei (Outside, the green-fingered fir-tree): 14969
II. Dawn (Dawn with flusht foot upon the mountain-tops): 10225
II. Evening in Summer. Doubt (Oh, love of mine, we sit beneath this tree): 10276
II. Farewell Our Father's Land (Farewell our Father's land): 15825
II. Filial Affection (Serenely o'er her mother's couch she hung): 10564
II. Going Into New Quarters. An Old German Military Ballad, Date (Perhaps the Thirty Years' War), Author Unknown (You people be merry, the soldiers—hurrah!): 15240
II. Home (Homeward wend we—Ah, my dear): 14432
II. Hominum Laudes (Christ, hath Christ's Mother): 8871
II. Hor. Od. iv. 11. (I've a jar of Alban wine): 14874
II. In An Album (When, in the old romantic days): 11111
II. Let Her Depart! (Her home is far, oh! far away!): 11207
II. Lord B—m to Lord A—th—e (Dear Bos, (so old a friend may claim)): 11615
II. Love (We cannot live, except thus mutually): 10781
II. My Vocation (Upon the wide world tost): 11890
II. Of this Land of Love's (This is Love's land, and here we find): 8832
II. On a Bath Called Cupid (Beneath these planes): 11738
II. On a Remembered Picture of Christ, an Ecce Homo by Leonard Da Vinci (I met that image on a mirthful day): 11926
II. On a Statue of Echo (Rock-loving Echo, antitype of sound): 11590
II. On Cupid Sleeping (Thou sleepest—thou): 11765
II. On Justinian's Gardens, Bordering on the Sea (Here ocean laves the land, whose ridges glow): 11843
II. On the Invention of Water-Mills (Stop the quern's handle; maidens, sleep away): 11722
II. On the Picture of a Satyr Holding a Pipe to his Ear and Listening to its Music (Satyr, thy pipe spontaneous tunes awakes): 14092
II. Prayer Continued (Far are the wings of intellect astray): 11417
II. Sleep (A Woman Speaks) (O sleep, we are beholden to thee, sleep): 11898
II. Summer (The brown-faced mower, with sweeping scythe): 16045
II. The Alpine Horn (The Alpine Horn! the Alpine Horn!): 11387
II. The Dead (The phantom of a substance fled): 11824
II. The Girl I Love (The girl I love is comely, straight, and tall): 9912
II. The Indian with His Dead Child (In the silence of the midnight): 10480
II. The Little Brown Man (A little man we've here): 11348
II. The Minster (Stone upon stone!): 12416
II. The Power of Nemesis (My gallant ship now seeks my native shore): 11863
II. The Silkworm and the Spider (One day, as a silkworm slowly spun): 11479
II. The Tower of Famine (Amid the desolation of a city): 13666
II. The Traveller's Evening Song (Father, guide me! Day declines): 11247
II. The Voice from the Tomb (Two days we held our festival—two days we feasted high): 11471
II. To A Beautiful Girl, On her exhibiting a copy she had taken of Raphael's great picture—The Transfiguration—and asking, "Was not that painter inspired?" (Inspired !—could he, the Stoic cold): 11202
ii. To H. K. (Like a willow, like a reed): 8929
II. To Mary (Mary herself too much doth aggrandize): 14153
II. To Zenophile (Thou luscious bud of beauty,—dear to me): 11780
II. Waiting (A square, squat room that stinks of drugs and dust): 12370
II. Where Summer is (Where Summer is, there ’tis fresh and fair): 9140
II. Ye Jackasses of Ireland (Ye jackasses of Ireland): 11195
II.–Compensation (One launched a ship, but she was wrecked at sea): 12365
II.–The Snowdrop Monument (In Lichfield Cathedral) (Marvels of deep, grown cold!): 11901
II.—(Esoteric) (Approach more near, my subtle friend, and see): 12395
II.—A Gleaning Song ("Whither away thou little careless rover?"): 12369
II.—A Hebrew Lament After Defeat (Thou hast thrust us away to a corner): 16031
II.—A Soldier's Farewell (From a Roumanian Folk Song) (Thou wilt recall, tomorrow): 10293
II.—At Nightfall (Coming along by the meadows): 2759
II.—At Queensferry (The blackbird sang, the skies were clear and clean): 14535
II.—Awake (The sun gets up in the morning): 13089
II.—Children's Evening Hymn (The little birds now seek their rest): 16033
II.—Colma, a Song of Selma (Forlorn I linger on the hill): 11877
II.—Continued Human Sorrows (Our happy bathers! pardon my romance!): 13694
II.—Deep in the Valley. (Deep in the valley, afar from every beholder): 16040
II.—Evening (Calm is o'er every hill): 9917
II.—Evening Song (Close, little weary eyes): 16037
II.—Il Curato (There's our good curate coming down the lane): 9681
II.—May (The lilac is out, and the thrush on the spray): 13118
II.—Recovery (There now, thy faithless heart, learn once again): 16041
II.—Reflected Heaven (The mountain-tops above the mist): 9276
II.—Second Sunday After Epiphany (Through Israel's coasts, in times of old): 16009
II.—Song of Midnight (Hark! the cataract is roaring): 11586
II.—Spring is Here (Exultant in the grey, uncertain light): 16038
II.—Stennis (Here on the green marge of the wrinkled lake): 12519
II.—The Eiffel Tower (The men who builded Babel, day by day): 8395
II.—The Love Story (This is the Doll with respect to whom): 16007
II.—The Old Sailor's Song (A hard life is the sailor's, boys, mark well an old man's word): 12391
II.—The Painter on Penmaenmawr (That first September day was warm and blue): 13693
II.—The Three Daisies (One daisy blossomed in the lane): 16078
II.—Thorough (We name thy name, O God): 16029
II.—To a Girl (Thou art so very sweet and fair): 16039
II.—To the Same (Oh Soul! that this fair flower dost so mirrour): 12421
II.—To Tochterchen, on Her Birthday (As one doth touch a flower wherein the dew): 14270
II.—Visions (Here I am, slave of visions. When noon heat): 13932
II.—We Are Not There, Beloved! A voice heard while looking at the graves of our household at Campsie (We are not there, beloved!): 12420
II.—Will the Past be Past? ("Bury, oh Dead, thy Dead!" Can Death's behest): 14578
II.—Wishing (When I reflect how little I have done): 12517
III. Twilight in Winter. Despair (Once more I stand beneath this spreading beech): 10277
III. "All the year round come Godsends evermore" (All the year round come Godsends evermore): 12488
III. "But thou, though prison-bars thy feet confine" (But thou, though prison-bars thy feet confine): 13842
III. "Prayer is not eloquence nor measured tone" (Prayer is not eloquence nor measured tone): 12393
III. "Soother of life, physician of all ail" (Soother of life, physician of all ail): 10885
III. "The cygnet crested on the purple water" (The cygnet crested on the purple water): 13861
III. "When, hand in hand enlinked, we hie to fill" (When, hand in hand enlinked, we hie to fill): 9977
III. “When you were born, a helpless child” (When you were born, a helpless child): 14922
III. ("Earth's night is where she rolls") (Earth's night is where she rolls): 15039
III. ("I, Eteocles, lured by hope of gain") (I, Eteocles, lured by hope of gain): 14093
III. ("Look how from yonder Mountain's rocky urns") (Look how from yonder Mountain's rocky urns): 14622
III. ("My spirit hovers round thy happy home") (My spirit hovers round thy happy home): 16055
III. ("My withered gourd hath budded forth again") (My withered gourd hath budded forth again): 15799
III. ("No gracious boon is life, if vexing cares") (No gracious boon is life, if vexing cares): 11638
III. ("Oh may none like me the wounded be distracted by Absence") (Oh may none like me the wounded be distracted by Absence): 16066
III. ("Praiseworthy are the Thracians, who lament") (Praiseworthy are the Thracians, who lament): 11723
III. ("She is not beautiful, but lovely—grace") (She is not beautiful, but lovely—grace): 12003
III. ("The odorous air, made up of meadow-smells") (The odorous air, made up of meadow-smells): 16053
III. ("Thou who hadst lately birth to music given") (Thou who hadst lately birth to music given): 11523
III. (“Not seld of yore, ’tis said, Calabrian eyes”) (Not seld of yore, ’tis said, Calabrian eyes): 14730
III. A Mountain Transformation (Out of doors the moon is sinking): 14970
III. Autumn in the Woods (The memory of the spring is like a dream): 12367
III. Ballad (If ever my wild spirit burns): 11203
III. Books. (In a Volume of Westall's Milton) (In the dim room, upon the sofa lull'd): 11112
III. Canzonet (The youths and damsels that Love's livery wear): 16025
III. Dissolution (Swift fled the reign of hope; hour after hour): 10565
III. Earth is the realm of death (Earth is the realm of Death, who reigns): 9145
III. Epitaph (The sod so lately stirred, the wreaths that shed): 11825
III. Epitaph on a Child (Proté, thou art not dead, but thou hast pass'd): 11507
III. Epitaph on a young Swiss who Died at Madeira (The exiled son of old Helvetia's race): 11259
III. Epitaph on Cleopatra (Stand, stranger, here by Cleopatra's grave): 11573
III. Eurydice, Respice (Thy lady dies of thy forbidden gaze): 8909
III. Good Wine and Pretty Lasses (Friendship, love, and wine-to-day): 11891
III. Heaven and Earth (God, who with thunders and great voices kept): 10782
iii. Juliet. For a Picture (She leans from out her balcony): 8930
III. Love Grove (Way-faring man, beneath this foliage rest): 14154
III. Love's Witness (When I was in thy chamber): 11472
III. Lovers' Vows (Bright maid, I swore): 11766
III. May (May, like a girl at a garden gate): 10226
III. Memorial of a Conversation (Yes! all things tell us of a birthright lost): 11419
III. Mountain Sanctuaries (I child ’midst ancient mountains I have stood): 11927
III. Mourn for the Brave (Oh, mourn for the brave): 15826
III. My Lisette, She is No More! (What! Lisette, can this be you?): 11349
III. O Ye Voices (O ye voices round my own hearth singing!): 11388
III. On a Lofty House in Byzantium (Mine is a triple prospect, whence I may): 11739
III. On Homer (The fiery sun, upon his axle turned): 11781
III. On Parrhasius' Picture of Philoctetes (Ay—him of Trachis—Philoctetes torn): 11864
III. On the Same Subject (Let Daphne's crest, that towers beyond the sea): 11844
III. Pan (Come tell me, Nymphs, and let the truth appear): 11591
III. Promising. (A Man Speaks) (Once, a new world, the sunswart marinere): 11899
III. Song to be Sung at the Lifting of the Conservative Standard (Come shake forth the Banner, let loyal breath fan her): 11196
III. Staff-Nurse: Old Style (The supreme poets of the common place): 12380
III. The Aziola ("Do you not hear the Aziola cry?"): 13667
III. The Bear, the Ape, and the Pig (A bear, whose dancing help'd to gain): 11480
III. The Church (Ah! this building which we see): 12417
III. The Convict of Clonmell (How hard is my fortune): 9913
III. The Measure (Between the pansies and the rye): 8834
III. The Path (Fast fade the fields, yet not so fast as fade): 9213
III. The Two Homes (Seest thou my home?—'Tis where yon woods are waving): 10482
III. The Ward (Four long brown walls—a waste of plaster, bare): 12371
III. To Charlotte S—. Six years old. (In an Album—St Patrick's Day. 1839.) (Thou fairy child from Innisfail): 11318
III. Where Shall We Make Her Grave? (Where shall we make her grave?): 11208
III. Written at Castleton, in the Peak, July 1823 (Who cometh hither with a heart unwise): 15083
III.–Looking Down (Mountains of sorrow, I have heard your moans): 12366
III.—A Mother's Funeral (Ah, sune ye'll lay yer mither doon): 2222
III.—A Summer Morning (Get up, and see the sun rise!): 13119
III.—Ad Altare (Once man with man, now God with God above us): 16030
III.—Daffodils (I question with the amber daffodils): 16032
III.—Dressing Her (This is the way we dress the Doll): 16008
III.—Forenoon (Soft as the whisper shut within a shell): 14536
III.—Lamentation over Saul and Jonathan (Slain on mountains high): 11878
III.—On the Borders of Cannock Chase (A cottager leaned whispering by her hives): 12518
III.—Sexagesima Sunday (Not in anything we do): 16010
III.—Stennis (These old grey stones, what are they?—pillars reared): 12520
III.—Summer in Winter (Winter is it? Summer splendour): 9277
III.—The Alien Boy (He could not tell them whence he came): 16079
III.—The Bird ("That was the thrush's last good night," I said): 13933
III.—The Waning Year (In spring, in summer, and autumnal wane): 11587
III.—To a Fair Woman, Unsatisfied with Woman's Work (If Beauty is a name for visible Love): 12422
Il "Rè D'Italia" (To a grand old music the ocean rings): 13519
Il Faut Partir (And is it so?—and must we sever?): 15672
Il Paradiso (The sweet old Paradise is not yet lost): 12274
Il Penseroso (Resplendent halls, and Fashion's proud array): 10839
Iliad II. 211—245 (Now all the rest in order formed in subject silence sate): 14254
Iliad Ω. 692, ad fin (But when they reached the ford of that fair stream): 728
Illusion (Methought that it was morn, and that I woke): 8092
Illusion (Where the golden corn is bending): 1347
Illustrissimo Viro (Thou, in whose sweet face we scan): 10849
Images of God (Not, from the noble quarry): 6091
Imagination (Life of the Invisible! Thou Light supreme!): 15426
Imaginative Regrets (Deep is the lamentation! Not alone): 9851
Imagine's Reward: A Legend of the Rhine (Soft be the beams of the summer sun): 4878
Imitated From Horace ('Tis late, and I must haste away): 6204
Imitated from the French (Amid the green brook-fringing grasses): 13827
Imitated from the Troubadour Sordel (Her words, methinks, were cold and few): 12200
Imitated.—To P. M—, M. P. (Believe me, when all those ridiculous airs): 7878
Imitation of a Passage in Tasso's Amynta (When I was just a wee wee callan): 5414
Imitation of Sir John Suckling's Despairing Lover (Why so sad, and pale, fond lover?): 7754
Imma and Eginhart. From de Vigny (How dear it is, how dear, in accents low): 13577
Immortality of Poets (While bravely some attempt to gain): 5321
Immortelles! (I laid ye down on the green hill's breast): 6277
Immutable (Autumn to winter—winter unto spring): 6220
Imogen (Oh, there’s but one sweet word in all the world): 15489
Imperishable (The pure, the bright, the beautiful): 2900
Importunity (He standeth knocking at the door): 2795
Impossible (There lies—I know not in what land): 12181
Impossible Happiness. A Dream (The broad, green summer leaves were fanning pleasantly my brow): 6138
Imprisoned Sunshine (I hear the Sky a-weeping): 8707
Impromptu (To scout mere memories, and bid the thought be holden): 7926
Impromptu on being asked to write something upon leaving England for Norway, June 1836 (Why, as the hour approaches nigh): 4418
Impromptu on Being Desired by a Young Lady to Write Some Lines in Her Album (Sweet Maid! my fairy dreams are past): 15628
Impromptu on Seeing a Sable Vest Thrown Casually Over a Lady's Harp, Which Had for Some Time Been Mute and Untouched, Owing to Her Indisposition (When Judah's sons, in pensive mood): 15657
Impromptu on Waste (Oh! waste thou not the smallest thing): 15536
Impromptu, on a Poet Who Was Compelled by Poverty to Lodge With a Tailor (O, how cruelly fortune the poet misuses): 3046
Impromptu, on the assertion of a Lady, that in her Drawing of Venus, the Hair of the Goddess was arranged so as to conceal a portion of her figure, without disobeying the laws of gravity (Your Venus most surely deserveth applause): 3049
Imprudent Marriages (Let not passion's force so powerful be): 3325
Imps (We pinch the flowers, we pine the grass): 8266
In a Book of Sketches, Made in Italy (Oh! land of beauty—sun-lit Italy!): 4951
In a Californian Cañon (The hills are verdured with the pines and firs): 13128
In a Canoe (As the sunset dies): 4013
In a Cathedral (Up in the roof the carver wrought): 8825
In A Children's Hospital (Scarcely through the curtained casement steals the echo of the street): 2054
In a Corn-Field. (Folkestone) (Where the nodding grasses grow): 2026
In a Country Churchyard ('Mid waving grass the broken headstones lie): 13159
In a Gallery Portrait of a Lady (Unknown) (Veiled eyes, yet quick to meet one glance): 776
In a Garden Fair (When Nature dons her bridal wreath): 4979
In a Gondola. (Suggested by Mendelssohn's Andante in G minor, Book I. Lied 6 of the "Lieder ohne Worten") (In Venice! This night so delicious—its air): 12207
In a London Garret (Outside, I hear the hurry of men's feet): 12443
In a London Square ('Mid the ceaseless throng, as it surged along): 5489
In A Norman Church (As over incense-laden air): 1838
In a War Prison (I see her walking on the shore): 7337
In Affectionate Remembrance of John William Spencer, Earl of Brownlow (Apparelled richly in the presence of the Gods): 1863
In An Abbey (Underneath me is the pavement, where they once stood up and sang): 7625
In An Album (Give me a harp from the gold of sunset): 2360
In an Album—For India (One simple line where thoughtful Memory grieves): 5193
In an Apple-Orchard (Oh, apples, on the apple-tree): 6920
In an Old Church (Through the chancel, quaint and olden): 7378
In an Old Churchyard (In one of England's sweetest spots): 13081
In an Old Palace ("Yes, darling, I will rest awhile"): 4608
In April (Do you ever think, as I think, when the April sunshine falls): 12496
In Arcadia (Dreamy-soft thy lay and tender): 2805
In Arcadie (My Lady dwells in Arcadie): 1827
In Arran (The scent of heather from the purple hills): 12902
In August (Summer declines and roses have grown rare): 193
In Autumn Days (Do you think of the long ago, sweet heart): 13270
In Autumn Days (In Autumn days, when leaves are shed): 13319
In Bed. Early One Summer Morning, to a Fly (Away, thou torment! leave alone): 600
In Bereavement (Lift up thine eyes, afflicted Soul): 15811
In Blossom-Time (In Blossom-time, when all the land was white): 13296
In Bondage (Dumb hearts that have not known Love's bliss or bane): 2533
In Borrowdale. (Lines Written on a White Stone near Wordsworth's Yew-trees) (Upturned stone so smooth and white): 14521
In Bright Days Yet to Come (Lay, lay thy hand in mine, love): 14236
In Burns' Mausoleum, Dumfries (Breathe I above his dust, who now has long): 11540
In Capri. [To Miss Sybil Hays] (Oft to this isle when earth was young): 14832
In Captivity. Skoal! To Henry W. Longfellow (I thank thee, Friend, for this bold song): 12204
In Cheshire (A fine broad plain is this as e'er foot prest): 6791
In China (With wings green and black and a daffodil breast): 5117
In Church on Christmas Day (She groped from out her garret, down): 13510
In Clover. June (There is clover, honey-sweet): 6549
In Coming Hours (In coming hours, when all we say): 4671
In Deep Sorrow (Sad is my song to-night, and brief as sad): 6865
In Dreamland (I cannot go back to the past, dear): 13161
In Drury Lane (One day I walked amid the sweltering heat): 2755
In Dunblane Cathedral (Alone in Leighton's ruined fane): 2524
In Dunblane Cathedral II. (Who worketh out a great intent): 2529
In Dunblane Cathedral III. (We look for God, yet fail to mark): 2567
In Essex (Dry situation; rent thirty pounds): 13736
In Exile (The sea at the crag's base brightens): 6936
In Expectation of Death.—Constantia (When I was young, my lover stole): 6172
In Falmouth Harbour (The large, calm harbour lies below): 8899
In February (To-day I saw a single snowdrop peep): 12554
In February. 1870 (Upon the vigil of Saint Valentine): 10500
In Fruit-Time (Yellow the harvest-fields with golden grain): 7418
In Futuro (The mad world vexes us; the brief years pass): 12279
In God's Acre ('Twas on a Morn of Summer): 3819
In Greek Waters (I saw a beacon lighted on a hill): 13250
In Harvest Time (I sat one morning in a little lane): 4498
In Harvest-Time (From the reddening forest): 2655
In Harvest-Time (With golden sheaves half-laden, stands the wain): 4245
In Her Garden (With a sound like distant music went the May-bees buzzing by): 1926
In Holderness (The wind blew over the barley, the wind blew over the wheat): 4183
In Hospital (In the long night-time, when the ward was chill): 13317
In Late Autumn (Primrose and cowslip have I gathered here): 12103
In Light of Death (When all the wheels of life are running slow): 5123
In Love's Eternity (My body was part of the sun and the dew): 605
In Loving Thee (As shadows fall from linden trees): 6396
In Mary's Bosom (Mary, mother of all mothers): 1865
In May (The house of May is walled with green): 12563
In Memoriam (Hath not a Jew eyes, hands?—When snipt or slit): 9465
In Memoriam (I have no welcome for thee, smiling Spring!): 4333
In Memoriam (Large-fashioned, and large-hearted—Life and Love): 2196
In Memoriam (Loving and loved, here from life's ardent prime): 14493
In Memoriam (O summer sky, so blue and clear): 6994
In Memoriam (On a balcony fronting the river): 174
In Memoriam Major-General Sir George Pomeroy-Colley. February 27, 1881 (Gentle and brave, well skilled in that dread lore): 14564
In Memoriam—Horatius Bonar, D.D. (Singer, at length, "thy travelling days are done"): 5564
In Memoriam; H. L. G. Vigilantibus (When Morning with a hundred wings): 8778
In Memoriam. John Nicol (They never have been men who falsely say): 4114
In Memoriam. (M. A. W.—Poetess. Ætat 25) (O Noble heart! so gentle, kind): 6957
In Memoriam. (Major Steuart Smith) (There sweeps across the ocean foam): 12249
In Memoriam. A. W. E., aged five years, who fell when at play, a distance of fifty-five feet, and was instantly killed (In thy dear grave upon yon flower-decked hill): 7420
In Memoriam. Adelaide Anne Procter (A pure life—purely run): 1757
In Memoriam. D. M. (Ring out, ye spheres! ring out my mournful tale): 7548
In Memoriam. Isambard K. Brunel, Robert Stephenson, died September 15th, October 12th, 1859 (Together dead! while living, separate): 231
In Memoriam. J. A. Froude (Now, when heroic memories pass): 8154
In Memoriam. J. A. M. (With every quiet wife-like grace): 575
In Memoriam. March 28th, 1884 (Lo! in the flush of youth, when hope was high): 4007
In Memoriam. Margaret Oliphant, Died June 25th, 1897 (Seer, who beyond the untrodden bourne): 14946
In Memoriam. November 1859 (Wintry sky and sunless): 357
In Memoriam. November 28, 1860 (When I beheld the weakness and the pain): 11982
In Memory of Dr. Livingstone (Most mournful his dying seems): 2493
In Memory of the Lady Augusta Stanley (O blessed life of service and of love): 2603
In Menlo Woods. Rondeau (In Menlo Woods—rememb'rest, sweet): 2368
In My Garden (Here are green and fragrant alleys): 1941
In My Lady's Garden (Hush!): 4172
In Nomine Domini (Hark! like a clarion rings the voice, "Arise!"): 8817
In October (I saw the sunlight glinting down): 14679
In Pace (Sad morrow dawn! when the presaging heart): 8435
In Pall Mall (What do I see?—that face so fair): 14600
In Philiphaugh Woods (Oh lovely woods of Philiphaugh!): 13276
In Picardy (The sun is down, and twilight dim): 678
In Praise of Youth (With faces bright, as ruddy corn): 8887
In Search of Good Humour (In search of good humour I've rambled all day): 5368
In Secret Places (Ungathered beauties of a bounteous earth): 5556
In September (In the soft September evening, beside the Southern sea): 4524
In September (Where lurk the merry elves of autumn now): 599
In Sight o'Land (Above the restful summer sea): 13050
In Silence (Ah! Lesbia, by that name at last): 8938
In Silence (Speak thou no word, shed thou no tear): 1664
In Snow Time (How should I choose to walk the world with thee): 4558
In Sorrow (When thou art sorrowful, and cares around): 7683
In Spring (Where are you, dear, this sweet spring day, I wonder): 4658
In the Beck ("It is a scene to make a painter mad"): 703
In the Choir (On rolled the mighty melody, as though): 1872
In the Churchyard (O ye dead! O ye dead! you are lying at your rest): 7198
In the Club Smoking Room (The critic's curse): 3309
In the Commonwealth ("Hush, hush. Why did you come to-night, mine own?"): 4821
In the Conservatory (The passion-flowers o'er her bright head drooped): 4507
In the Corner (So often, poor wee rogue, they sent): 13671
In the Dark (He is down! He is struck in the dark!): 1585
In the Dawning (With dimpled hands enfolded on her breast): 13292
In the Distant Years (We met last in the distant years): 13010
In the Evening (All day the wind had howled along the leas): 4059
In the Evening (The night is come with all her silver train): 8412
In the Fall (O Autumn, with thy dying smell): 6866
In the Fall (The old autumnal stillness holds the wood): 3709
In the Fields (Airy budding ash-tree): 1879
In The Fire-Light (I have watched her all the evening): 6723
In the Firelight (Often in this winter firelight): 7610
In the Forest (The wind had gone with the day): 3957
In the Fourth Watch of the Night. St. Matthew xiv. 22-33 (Lo, in the moonless night): 3612
In the Garden (Summer is dying, slowly dying): 9678
In the Glen (The fairy folk had frosted o'er the glen): 4334
In the Glen of Dalziel ("Oh! ken ye wha has left us?"): 2114
In the Gloamin' (Why sinks the sun sae slowly doon): 13280
In the Golden Glow (Lo! broken up and melted is the sky): 4639
In the Harvest Field (Glory to Him who bids the field): 2121
In the Hayfield (What, weary of thy rustic toil): 4815
In the Honeymoon ("Oh world! I've tried thee and I tire"): 15198
In the June Twilight. Suggested by Noel Paton's Picture of "The Silver Cord Loosed" (In the June twilight, in the soft grey twilight): 1589
In the Lane (The daisies star the summer grass): 7096
In the Lane. A September Song (Little Robin, pretty Robin): 5019
In the Mirror (What are they doing up yonder): 4564
In the Month of May (In the month of May, when the chestnuts bloom): 6763
In the Moonlight Long Ago. (Song, For Music) (You love me well, I know, wife): 927
In the Night (As I enter the shadowy portals of Night): 13168
In the Night (Dark, dark the Night, and fearfully I grope): 12353
In the Old Home (The blank, uncurtained windows stare): 4744
In the Orchard (Does Love remember yet the little house): 15008
In the Pamfili-Doria Gardens (Brown, stagnant dawn, forgotten of the sun): 5546
In the Pine-Woods (The summer wind is whisp'ring): 1059
In the Portrait-Gallery at South Kensington (What a strange mystic influence falls): 7377
In the Rhine Woods. Cuckoo! Cuckoo! (I hear it again!): 12826
In the River Pei-ho. June 25, 1859. A Naval Pensioner's Story (A yarn about some victory!—Why, bless you, there's no need): 8172
In the Sad September Gloaming (In the sad September gloaming, when the pallid mists are drawn): 4095
In the Same (Alone in intellect—oft he withdrew): 11541
In the Shadow (Here I am with my head dropped low on your grave; the sky): 14393
In the Shadow (Sitting in the shadow, singing): 3279
In the Shadow of Death (O days of summer and sunshine, of roses white and red): 5070
In the Snow Drift (As I tuned my pipes at the turn o' the wood): 2591
In the Spring (Have all the songs been said?): 12284
In the Spring (It is spring, laughs the blue hepatica, as it gems the garden bed): 4240
In the Sunset. Song (The sunshine lies athwart the fields): 1525
In the Time of Yule (Once more the dear old Yule comes round): 13063
In the Tropics (The blue waves beat upon the coral reef): 3707
In the Twilight (All things on earth are beautiful, and bring): 12276
In the Twilight (Over the dusky verge): 5110
In the Twilight (Sits pale Alice in the twilight, at her laurelled lattice there): 7387
In the Twilight (Well hath one asked if it can even be): 13844
In the Union (Just seventy-four to-day): 13626
In the Valley (To-day, when the sun was lighting my house on the pine-clad hill): 13313
In the Village (It is the last day of July): 14896
In the Violet-Time (The blackthorn buds are breaking where, but now): 1927
In the Winter Twilight (What shall I fashion into rhyme to-night?): 4699
In the Woodlands (In the forest lawns I see): 15015
In the Woods (Feathery larches here and there): 7070
In the Woods (From under the moss, from under the stone): 453
In the Woods (I shelter in the woods this autumn eve): 6915
In the Woods (Oh, the balmy woodland): 2441
In Town (Grinding in town now is "horrid"): 2594
In Vain (We meet, although we know ’tis vain): 13046
In Vanity Fair (Through Vanity Fair, in days of old): 12898
In Ways That We Know Not (I sometimes think God lets our sorrows gather): 13679
In Westminster Abbey ('Tis well! not always nations are ingrate!): 8555
In Westminster Abbey (I saw no crowd: yet did these eyes behold): 8437
In Westminster Abbey, 21st June 1887 (Again within these walls, again alone!): 8624
In Westminster Abbey. July 25th, 1881 (Not this, not this, O Friend, thy funeral day!): 3906
In Winter (There's laughter for the May-time): 1709
In Yarrow (A dream of youth has grown to fruit): 12873
Inch Keith Beacon (Far in the bosom of the Night): 9351
Inch-Cailliach, Loch Lomond. [The island burial-place of Clan-Alpine, resembling, from Rossdhu, a reclining body with folded arms] (No more Clan-Alpine's pibroch wakes): 13162
Incomplete (Is't well when Spring's delicious, sweet dissembling): 7540
Incompleteness (Not he who first behold the aloe grow): 12925
Inconstancy; A Song to Mrs M'Whirter ("Ye fleeces of gold amidst crimson enroll'd"): 7811
Indian at the Burying-Place of His Fathers (It is the spot I came to seek): 11127
Indifference (What cared I that myriad bluebells made a mist adown the dingle): 12626
Indivisible (A moment face to face they stood): 2634
Industry and Idleness (“Tink,” “Tink”—how that blacksmith’s hammered): 7659
Inevitable (Behold that boy in apron blue): 6940
Infancy (If there be perfect joy on earth): 5254
Infancy and Age (Sweet is the light of infancy, and sweet): 1179
Infantine Inquiries ("Tell me, O mother! when I grow old"): 2987
Infinity (How many globules in the deep sea lie): 15409
Infinity of Art (Say what is Art? Th' acquirement of a sense): 11678
Ingé, the Boy-King ("Hail to the king!"): 1844
Inner Life (Thoughts and feelings manifold): 5670
Innocent's Day (Oh, weep not o'er thy children's tomb): 10860
Inscription (Pizarro here was born; a greater name): 2922
Inscription for a Cemetery (The grave, whatever thy degree): 4412
Inscription for a Monument at Arroyo, in Molina (He who may chronicle Spain's arduous strife): 10597
Inscription for a Spring (Whoe'er thou art that stay'st to quaff): 6573
Inscription for Picton's Cenotaph at Waterloo (Weep not, though the hero's sleep): 10098
Inscription for the Apartment in Chepstow Castle Where Henry Martin, the Regicide, Was Imprisoned Thirty Years (For thirty years secluded from mankind): 15895
Inscription in the New Edition of Mrs Heman's Works (High be their meed who here, at last, have heap'd): 11493
Inscription. To the Memory of Lady Caroline Pennant (When on the tomb where glory lies): 3099
Inside of King's College Chapel, Cambridge (Tax not the royal Saint with vain expense): 9855
Insight (There is no commonplace!): 12044
Inspiration (It is not in the solitary place): 12430
Instability (O the dew-drops on the grass): 2484
Instinct (Thou are not of my kind, nor knowest): 6446
Instincts (Heaven gave the bee desire for sweets): 5931
Insulæ Fortunatæ (They cease from labour: care and toil): 13714
Into the Silence. A Death in the West Highlands (Ungather'd lie the peats upon the moss): 5035
Introduction (The morning came. Its footsteps scared away): 10649
Introductory (The throng of Earth's slow struggles seek not here): 9210
Invalided (Ah! to be able to rise): 6825
Invitation (’Tis the ripple of the fountain): 1567
Invitation. To a Beautiful But Very Small Young Lady (You little, light-hearted and gossamer thing): 2953
Invocation (As the tired voyager on stormy seas): 11326
Invocation (Creator of the universal heart): 6184
Invocation (Spirit of love!): 4889
Invocation (Where waitest thou): 1343
Invocation Continued (And come, ye faithful! round Messiah seen): 11327
Invocation to Sleep (On balm of nature to the mind opprest): 6055
Invocation to the Memory of Sir William Wallace (Hail! purest gem, thy country's pride): 46
Invocation to the Unenfranchised (Oh! spirits of the martyr'd brave): 99
Inward Gratitude (As few the gleams that here and there betray): 14695
Io Victis (I sing the Hymn of the Conquered, who fell in the battle of life): 9026
Iole (While a square of sunshine lay): 8969
Iona, 1885 (The quiet clouds within the west): 4358
Iphis and Anaxarete (The olive-groves, clothing the dusky hills): 427
Iphition (How, facing an unconquerable foe): 12337
Ireland—1849. Autumnal Dirge (Then die, thou Year—thy work is done): 9058
Ireland—1849. Winter Dirge (Fall, Snow, and cease not! Flake by flake): 9060
Irené (The monarch Day has flung his crown of gold): 12059
Iris (Through April tears, from Heaven's gate, she came): 4143
Iris. A Memory and a Picture (The small soft rain fell tenderly): 4278
Irish Air ("'Twas a pretty day to be in Ballinderry") ('Twas pretty to be in Ballinderry): 2764
Irish Ballad. Colleen Oge Astore (When I marched away to war): 3556
Irish Captain's Garland (There was a Captain bold): 9497
Irish Feeling.—1885 ('Twas different in Forty-Eight): 8862
Irish Hush Song (I would hush my lovely laddo): 2612
Irish Lullaby (I'd rock my own sweet childie to rest in a cradle of gold on a bough of the willow): 7093
Irish Peasant's Soliloquy (Oh, sweet were the peat stacks and thatch roofs of Bally): 4220
Irish Song (My bonny cuckoo, come whisper true!): 2680
Is it Degenerate? (Is it degenerate, to fall from Wealth): 15010
Isabel (Are thy thoughts upon the sea, Isabel?): 9305
Isabel (Eyes not down-dropt nor over-bright, but fed): 11150
Isabel (Soft waves of warm brown hair): 7252
Isabel (There, with her Father, by the lonely moor): 358
Isaiah XXXIII.17 (Thine eyes shall see! Yes, thine, who, blind erewhile): 333
Isambart and Edith (A girl, whose hair in golden shower fell lightly from her brow): 15398
Isandula (When the cry of death from the far South land): 2784
Ischl (There is a noble beauty in this land): 8619
Ishtar (You have forgotten me, and I forget you): 2398
Isidora (She sang in Spring of Hope): 968
Isles of Light (When the morning first appeareth): 13420
Ismene and Leander. In Three Ballads. (From the German) (Since Adam did the fruits receive): 11161
Israfiddlestrings. The angel Israfel, whose heartstrings are a fiddle.—A Poesque Poem (In heaven a Spirit doth dwell): 13742
It is not to be Thought of (It is not to be thought of that the flood): 14808
It is Well (Yes; it is well! The evening shadows lengthen): 7531
Italia (Italia! how I love thee, both thy brightness and thy beauty): 14610
Italian Patriotic Song (Sons of Italy arouse ye!): 1639
Italy (Earth's loveliest land I behold in my dreams): 7959
Italy (Fair blows the breeze—depart, depart!): 4792
Italy (Strike the loud harp, and let the prelude be): 4897
Its Birthday (In my hid heart my holiday I keep): 4728
Its Revival and Immortality (The powers that quicken earth, air, sea with thought): 11763
IV. "'Tis to the Mob that I Belong" (And so, forsooth, they sneer to see): 11892
IV. "Diodati, wondering at myself I tell" (Diodati, wondering at myself I tell): 16026
IV. "Fall'n hath our lot on days of pleasant calm" (Fall'n hath our lot on days of pleasant calm): 10886
IV. "May rose and lily on thy bosom shower!" (May rose and lily on thy bosom shower!): 9978
IV. "Not more variety in wayside weeds" (Not more variety in wayside weeds): 12489
IV. "Thou that art fire within our souls, O Soul" (Thou that art fire within our souls, O Soul): 13843
IV. "Would Beatrice unto thee, O friend" (Would Beatrice unto thee, O friend): 11260
IV. ("Ah! wretched Thyrsis, what avail thy sighs") (Ah! wretched Thyrsis, what avail thy sighs): 11602
IV. ("As nectar welling from the holy fount") (As nectar welling from the holy fount): 11767
IV. ("I know myself the being of a day") (I know myself the being of a day): 11508
IV. ("I passed a night of anguish and of fear") (I passed a night of anguish and of fear): 16056
IV. ("Lured by the rose's scent at dawn I walked for a whole in the garden") (Lured by the rose's scent at dawn I walked for a whole in the garden): 16067
IV. ("O Heroes, ye comfort my brotherly heart!") (O Heroes, ye comfort my brotherly heart!): 15040
IV. ("Oft in Hesperian climes, when dewy eve") (Oft in Hesperian climes, when dewy eve): 12004
IV. ("When England's Morning Star of song was set") (When England's Morning Star of song was set): 14623
IV. ("Who veileth love should first have vanquished fate") (Who veileth love should first have vanquished fate): 11900
IV. ("With his last breath, Antigenes the son") (With his last breath, Antigenes the son): 11826
IV. (Flower-sipping bee, say hast thou lately prest): 11639
IV. A Dinner to Remember (We dined. A fish from the river beneath): 10227
IV. Agathias the Scholiast to Paul to Silentiary (Here teeming earth her graceful verdure sees): 14096
IV. Ballad (Take away that fair goblet—at least for to-night): 11113
IV. Del Dolor L'Ora e Venuta (The Thracian women could not bear thy wail): 8910
IV. Despondency (Silent was that lone room in which she lay): 10566
IV. Epitaph on His Sister Eugenia (Mark where the flower of love and song is laid): 11524
IV. I Dream of All Things Free (I dream of all things free!): 11389
IV. In Memoriam. J. D. (Sept. 11th, 1877) (Good friends remain; but thou, ah! thou art dead): 12368
IV. Iotis Dying (Two hours before the dawning, while yet the night-stars gleam): 11473
IV. Lady Probationer (This is her picture:—Seven and thirty years): 12381
IV. MacGregor's Wail (On grey Benledi stern): 15827
IV. O Say, My Brown Drimin! (O say, my brown Drimin, thou silk of the kine): 9914
IV. On a Bath Called Cupid (Cythera's Son): 14155
IV. On a Husbandman (The old Amyntichus on thy bosom place): 11574
IV. On a Medal Representing Venus Anadyomene (And who emboss'd the ocean?): 11845
IV. On a Statue of Envy (Moulded with envied skill, black Envy see): 11724
IV. On Cupid Sleeping in a Grove (The shady grove): 11782
IV. On the Rose (I sing the rose of summer): 11865
iv. Refugium (Only a girl just fouled with lust): 8931
IV. Setting-Out (We parted in the sunshine and the crowd): 9214
IV. Sketch in the Old Bailey. (From Life) (Meet epitaph for such as thou): 11319
IV. Song to be Sung at the Lifting of the Revolutionary Standard (Bray, Asses, bray for the pride of the levellers): 11197
IV. Stand by the ocean (Stand by the Ocean): 9150
IV. Summer Song (Come away! the sunny hours): 11209
IV. The Ape and the Juggler (Good father Joltered, who lost his brains): 11481
IV. The Doctor and the Patient (I've lived of late by Doctor's): 11350
IV. The Lilies of the Field (Flowers! When the Saviour's calm benignant eye): 12029
IV. The Power of Gold (The virgin zone of Danaë did Zeus): 11740
IV. The Prospect (Methinks we do as fretful children do): 10783
IV. The Return ("Art thou come with the heart of thy childhood back"): 10494
IV. The Return to Poetry (Once more the eternal melodies from far): 11421
IV. The Visit (A many-footed rush resounds without): 12372
IV. To A Lover of Flowers (Still, gentle Lady, cherish flowers): 11204
IV. To Herrick (In vain, at all to my content): 8835
IV.—A Foundling's Prayer (Lord, what am I that I for love should plead?): 16080
IV.—A Peach (If touch of sense in mortal dust remains): 13935
IV.—Love Test (Lassie wi’ the face sae bonnie): 9275
IV.—Maeshow (Thou fair green mound on the wide brown heath): 12521
IV.—Pretty Rabbit (Pretty rabbit in the fern): 13120
IV.—Quinquagesima Sunday (Thou, who on that wondrous journey): 16011
IV.—Tempora Mutantur (Tick! tick! tick! my heart is sick): 12418
IV.—To— (Strange was the doom of Heracles, whose shade): 14815
IV.—Venus en Herbe (Ten summers old the little maid appears): 14537
Ivor Bach; Or, the Capture of Cardiff Castle (From Love's crown the gems are fallen): 753
Ivy Leaves (I gathered from a grave): 1656
IX. "The region known to men as England" (The region known to men as England): 11265
IX. ("Covered by winter snows, around her young") (Covered by winter snows, around her young): 11529
IX. ("Oh remember that my home was once the top of thy street") (Oh remember that my home was once the top of thy street): 16072
IX. ("That love-creating cestus, from her breast") (That love-creating cestus, from her breast): 11513
IX. ("The flute now sounded in the bridal room") (The flute now sounded in the bridal room): 11745
IX. ("Three laughing maidens by the lots would try") (Three laughing maidens by the lots would try): 11831
IX. ("Yes, love, thou art the one star that I seek") (Yes, love, thou art the one star that I seek): 16061
IX. (“I mourned with tears Theionöe my wife”) (I mourned with tears Theionöe my wife): 11644
IX. Children: Private Ward (Here in this dim, dull, double-bedded room): 12386
IX. Colonisation, two sonnets (Freemen of England, nourish in your mind): 9160
IX. Dreams of the Dead (Oft in still night dreams a departed face): 11426
IX. Epitaph (Who, and who's child art thou, who here dost lie): 11870
IX. Floral (Broad through the open door there stole to me): 12377
IX. Old Church in an English Park (Crowning a flowery slope it stood alone): 12034
IX. On an Old Race-Horse (Eagle—the pride of tempest-footed steeds): 11729
IX. On the Affected Use of Obsolete Words (Sike wights, as sprinkle their quaint virelayes): 11579
IX. Pan (I am the rustic's god; why pour to me): 14160
IX. Resignation (And is it true? can such sweet dreams not lie?): 9223
IX. The Guerilla Leader's Vow (My Battle-Vow!—No Minster-walls): 10299
IX. The Merle and Thrush. (Paraphrase) (Two nooses, formed of woven horse's-hair): 11607
IX. The Penitent Anointing Christ's Feet (There was a mournfulness in Angel eyes): 11337
IX. The Summum Bonum (Much time philosophers have spent in vain): 11787
IX. The Swan and the Linnet (As once a linnet on a tree): 11486
IX. The Ways of Providence (Serapis to a homicide, they say): 11772
IX.—Fifth Sunday After Trinity ("All the night, and nothing taken"): 16016
IX.—Fishwife (A hard north-easter fifty winters long): 14542
IX.—The Fugitives (Dear love, we have left them behind us!): 9282
IX."'Say Shepherd, whose these plants?' 'Athena, thine'" ("Say Shepherd, whose these plants?" "Athena, thine): 11850
Ixion and the Centaurs (Ixion clasp’d a cloudy form): 14310
Jack and Joan (Interr'd beneath this marble stone): 3411
Jack Chiddy. A True Incident of the Rail (Brave Jack Chiddy! Oh, well you may sneer): 3654
Jack Frost (Jack Frost is a wonderful artist indeed): 7618
Jacques’ Threat. A. D. 1787 (There is a pleasaunce walled all round): 7253
James Graham Goodenough: Commodore (The sad ship hastened; but as three bells struck): 14547
Jane Markland. A Tale (It needs not beauty to adorn the face): 1285
Janet. A North Country Idyll (Up in the North, when waving woods were tinged): 13605
Janet's Question (Janet! my little Janet!): 1753
January (Hail, two-fac’d Janus! form’d to cast): 15876
January (Only the soft brown earth to see): 2170
January (What Glad Song Wafts Across the Frozen Land): 15936
January 1866. "Out in the Snow" (A willing mind, a northerly wind): 13396
Janus; The God of New-Year's Day, From the Fasti of Ovid (Behold with omens blithe and bright, on festive New-Year's Day): 10905
Jaques (What time, fair Autumn, musing, walk'd abroad?): 4184
Jaques Balmat, The Pioneer of Mont Blanc (The mountain reared a lofty brow): 6047
Jasmine (They bloom again, the fair white flowers): 4817
Jaÿ Apass'd. A Dorsetshire Poem (When leaves, in evenèn winds, do vlee): 14282
Jealousy (I have thy love—I know no fear): 4900
Jealousy (This cursed jealousy, what is't?): 6251
Jean de Nivelle (Jean de Nivelle is a name): 5453
Jeanie Morrison (I've wander'd east, I've wander'd west): 3018
Jeannie (Where's the way to Jeannie's house?): 296
Jedediah (Peruvian Miner, slave, and beast at once): 9045
Jemmy Blinker. (In Memory of a Great Scholar of the Old School) (Dear Tom, this brown beaker, so clasped and so cracked): 9255
Jenifer (I met her as a cottage-girl): 15973
Jenny's First Love-Letter (Come here, sweet cousin Alice): 5410
Jephthah's Daughter (For all the many years): 12051
Jersey to the Queen (Come, through seas of summer calm): 9490
Jerusalem ('Twas eve on Jerusalem!): 11448
Jerusalem (Thou city of the Lord! whose name): 10532
Jetsam (The warm wave feels cool evening's breath): 13014
Jewels (Flowers of the inner Earth, that never fade): 6695
Joan D'Arc (Many a lucent star sublime): 14364
Joan of Arc (I read or dreamed, one sultry summer time): 12112
Job's Comforters (The torrent came swirling the drowning man): 7274
Jock Johnstone the Tinkler ("O came ye ower by the Yoke-burn Ford"): 10473
Jocke Taittis Expeditioune Till Hell (Jocke Taitte he satte on yonne hille syde): 10239
Joe Sieg (Who are the heroes we hail to-day): 5294
John and Joan, Canto II (Loud laugh'd the Solidier; when the Reeve, who now): 8733
John of Padua. (A Legend of Longleat) (John of Padua duly came): 551
John Ruskin (He served not lower gods: with pure desire): 12340
John Stuart Mill (My teacher! so indeed thou art): 14498
John Weir, A Ballad (I canna greet for thee, my John Weir): 10296
Johnne Graimis Eckspeditioun Till Hevin. Compilit Be Mr Hougge (There wals ane carle, rychte worldlye wyce): 10977
Johnnie Nip-Nebs, A Winter Fireside Ballad, for Little People (Some ca' him John Nip-Nebs, and some Johnnie Frost): 3525
Johnny Macraw (He came to the gate of the Manse): 12198
Jolly Anglers (Four of us went out fishing): 287
Jolly Father Joe (In olden times, when monks and friars, and priests of all degrees): 9963
Jolly Young Colly (There's jolly young Colly, of Hollywood Hall): 3134
Jove to Hercules ('Twas not my nectar made thy strength divine): 10008
Joy (Joy! Whence art thou? Not of human birth): 1672
Joy (There's joy when the rosy morning floods): 5246
Joy in Evil (A painted lazar-house—a dome-crown’d tomb): 14658
Joy in Sorrow (Joyous clouds were riding): 5504
Jubilee (Fifty years since first a maid): 5438
Jubilee Hymn (For all Thy countless bounties): 16047
Judge Not (Judge not; the workings of his brain): 1389
Juggling Johnny. A New Thimble-Rig Song (Some sing Jim Crow, and jump jis so): 14186
Julia (Julia, thou’rt now a soft, sweet thing): 15753
Julia (Proud the palazzo was—a fit abode): 4875
Julia (Some people say they nothing love): 3421
Julian's Death (An acorn was planted at Julian's birth): 14460
July (Blow loud your trumpets, heralds of July!): 15965
July (Like a fairy enwreathed with the blossoms): 13202
July (Scarcely a whisper stirs the summer leaves): 12831
July (There is a month between the swath and sheaf): 1102
July (Throughout the house a dreamy stillness stole): 13494
July (What do I hear, sunk deep in pleasant drowse): 2864
July (When freedom's standard was unfurl'd): 15882
July Dawning (We left the city, street and square): 7013
June (Fill to my mistress the crystal cup!): 13441
June (From the earliest time ’tis seen): 15881
June (Proud lily—peerless lily—pearly-leaved!): 448
June (Sunniest child of the fruitful year): 6767
June (Sweet Zephyr’s car flies o’er the flow’r-clad trees): 15959
June (There breathes a balmy freshness in the air): 11092
June (Who is this that cometh in the guise of a Woodland Queen?): 2266
June Memories (The leaves drift down in forest ways): 7270
June. Dreaming ('Twas eve, and the hazy twilight): 12161
Junes Long Fled (Oh, do you remember, say): 2051
Jupiter, An Evening Star (Ruler and hero, shining in the west): 6168
Justice (When Deities from earth departure made): 817
Juventus Mundi (List a tale a fairy sent us): 14967
Kaiser Rudolph's Ride to the Grave (At his tow'r of Gersnersheim one day): 5644
Kaiser Sigmund: A Ballad (When Carl the Fourth of Germany the load of life laid down): 13839
Kant and His Interpreters (On one rich man feeds many a starving rogue): 10800
Kate Cunningham's Ride (Years have passed since my girlhood's prime): 2032
Kate. From Lake Wallenstadt, Switzerland (Lonely, as a place enchanted): 11543
Keats (I dreamed a dream of heaven and of Keats): 15935
Keats (O purblind world! Not seldom in the years): 12967
Keene, or Funeral Lament of an Irish Mother Over her Son (There is blood upon the threshold): 11902
Keepsakes (Each lover has a keepsake): 14859
Kemp Owain (Her mother died when she was young): 9488
Kenneth Macrae (Orpheus' lute it warbled well): 8400
Kept Sacred (I cannot find the place again): 960
Keswick (When I am dead and gone, oh! lay me not): 13357
Kíeff. Translated from the Russian of Iván Kozlóff (O Kíeff! where religion ever seemeth): 10536
Kilcolman Castle (The peel-tower stood by the Awbeg Water): 1768
Kilimandjaro (Hail to thee, Monarch of African mountains!): 9208
Killed at the Ford (He is dead, the beautiful youth): 13426
Killed on the Telegraph-Wire (Within the rough four-feet he lay): 12883
Kilspindie (King James in royal Stirling town): 1260
King Alfred's Return from the Danish Camp (The pleasant summer's twilight fell): 15316
King Alfred's Will (Thus, very near a thousand years ago): 4018
King and Queen (Arise, and away with me): 3079
King Autumn (Come not with sudden rage): 13548
King Dirt. A Song Adapted to a slow Sanitary Movement (Drink from the dark and mantling pool): 1242
King Dyring. (Translated and Versified from the Prose of Emile Souvestre) (Over the main to an island home Dyring the prince has sped): 859
King Edward's Dream (On lofty Windsor's terraces and bowers): 11921
King Erick.—(From the German) (Prince Erick, the king's youthful son): 13428
King Harold’s Answer to Harlod Halfagar. (A Norseman’s Saga. Temp. Sept. 1066, A.D.) (From Norway onwards sailing, with breakers on their): 923
King James the Second's Entry into London. November, 1688 (Oh! wherefore shout the people so?): 5174
King Louis the Eleventh's Page. Dialect of Cornouialle (The King's young page in prison pines, for a page's trick at best): 9491
King Olaf (In his high seat on the daïs): 441
King Robert the Bruce in St. Andrew's Cathedral (On old Kilyrmont all the middle age): 3156
King Sigurd, the Crusader. A Norse Saga (The minster bells from morning light): 403
King Solyman and the Hoopoes (King Solyman sat on his carpet of state): 975
King Willie (O, Willie was a wanton wag): 10949
King's Prisoners (Love in his net hath taken us, and bound us): 4022
King's Visit to Scotland. The News (O cam' ye east, or cam' ye west): 9870
Kirkwall. A Sonnet (Far by the margin of the Northern seas): 13100
Kisses ("Are kisses spirits, mother?"): 4234
Kit Carson's Ride (Run? Now you bet you; I rather guess so): 185
Kitty (Wilful Kitty will go out a-playing): 717
Kitty's Prayer ("The misthress is diein', the docthors have said so"): 3963
Knighted (In the thickest of the strife): 6752
Knitting (Knitting gaily in the sunshine): 7064
Knowledge (Yes! ’tis a majestic thing): 11373
Knowledge and Ignorance (Throned in the depths of yonder sunny skies): 1195
Knowledge and Love (I know Thee!—from my infancy Thy light): 2494
Knowledge is Power (Wisdom is of her children justified): 11802
Knowledge of Men (No man fears men, but he who knows them not): 9100
Known and Unknown (O high-aspiring soul of man that reaches): 8155
Kouli Khan (The Persians are coming): 11491
Kunegunda (The crescent moon is sailing through the ether): 13457
L'Amour Fait Passer le Temps. To a Lady. On the Bas-Relief of Her Clock, Which, in Allusion to the Motto Above, Represented a Cupid Rowing Time in a Small Boat (Love, says your artist, makes Time pass): 3093
L'envoi (Foolish crowd! Apollo's son is not one): 8348
L'envoi (Know, O thou vulgar fool): 8347
L'Envoy (The kind Cockney Monarch, he bids us farewell): 9908
L'Envoy to Volume Tenth (Ten volumes are completed! and between): 9595
L'Envoy, To the King (Here close we for the present! This, O King!): 9867
L'Envoy; An Excellent New Song in Honour of Dr. Scott (Draw water of the coldest—draw ye water from the spring): 7800
L'Esprit du Peuple (Two orators a gaping throng addrest): 9509
L'Inferno of Dante, Canto I (Toward the middle of life's onward way): 12011
La Bagatelle; A Valentine (Do you, in Pleasure's roseate bowers): 15074
La Belle Dame Sans Merci (O what can ail thee knight at arms): 14839
La Blonde. Translated from the French of Pierre Dupont (Dream of a landscape pale): 5671
La Californie (An arid place: I would not call it fair): 645
La Carolina (I a girl have seen): 15951
La Chute des Feuilles. (From the French of Millevoye) (Sere autumn had bestrewn the ground): 12109
La Desolazione (Dark is the night enwrapping this vast world): 13455
La Fille Bien Gardée. (An Intercepted Letter) (No, Edith, I have got no briefs—I want no briefs at all): 223
La Mia Dimora (The poem I sigh for is no kindred dwelling): 5485
La Pensée (What is her thought? may we not guess): 15306
La Rose du Bal (This poor flower of the rose): 8936
La Sevillana (Who tells us now of high emprize): 15789
La Sourde-Muette (A pale, solitary girl): 15276
La Violetta (Thou art my loadstar and my queen; to thee): 12210
Labour (Ho! ye who at the anvil toil): 5934
Labour and Rest ("Two hands upon the breast"): 6278
Labour is Prayer (Laborare est orare): 6279
Labour Song (Toil, brothers, toil; sing and toil): 116
Lady Barbara ("My brains within my foolish head"): 880
Lady Blanche (It is scarcely dim twilight, lady): 15775
Lady Fair (Underneath the beech-tree sitting): 10486
Lady Ida's Tryst ("List! I will wait beneath the linden-tree"): 4877
Lady Jane Beaufort (Hail to thee, merry morn of May!): 15713
Lady Julia (Lady Julia sits in a gay boudoir): 13467
Lady Mabel's Lovers (Mount Pleasant's wide-spread terraces were radiant in the sun): 2863
Lady Noel Byron. Lines Written in 1852 (And as she spoke, it seemed as though I stood): 2005
Lady, Awake! (The sun is flooding the eastern sky): 13785
Lahnthal (A dream came o'er me once, one sunny Sabbath afternoon): 5946
Laid at Rest. Westminster Abbey, April 18th, 1874 (Laid among Kings! To be a King is duly): 14512
Lake and Waterfall (The steep and rugged cliffs): 2733
Lalage (I could not keep my secret): 14415
Laleham (Only one voice could sing aright): 8873
Lalla (Reclined upon thy glittering cushions): 4430
Lamartine's Adieu to Poetry (There is an hour of deep repose): 5412
Lamartine's Farewell To France, on Embarking at Marseilles for the Holy Land (If to yon swift bark's canvass I confide): 3739
Lament for Adonis (I and the Loves Adonis dead deplore): 11466
Lament for Bion.—Moschus (Ye mountain valleys, pitifully groan!): 11467
Lament for Eros (Eros is dead! I saw his lovely eyes): 210
Lament for Inez (Oh thou! who in my happier days): 10120
Lament for Macrimmon (Mist wreathes stern Coolin like a cloud): 10785
Lament for Moraig (Cold blow the winds on the heights of Ben Loyal): 12462
Lament of a Big Bristol Butcher (I was as raw as butcher's meat): 10079
Lament of an Egyptian Princess (She lean'd upon a sumptuous couch, which shone): 11237
Lament of Anne Boleyn on the Eve of Execution (To-morrow morn! To-morrow morn!): 698
Lament of Ellen on the Death of her Lover (The tears that from mine eyelids find their way): 7487
Lament of Louise De La Vallière (Once, once again, my weary footsteps come): 3880
Lament of Mary Queen of Scots, On the Eve of a New Year (Smile of the Moon!—for so I name): 3750
Lament of the "Rash Buss" (I'm an auld residenter on mony a farm): 5926
Lament of the Genii, A Fragment, Written upon the occasion of Lady E– leaving the sea coast for the metropolis (As I paced the ocean shore): 3094
Lament of the Last Leprechaun (For the red shoon of the Shee): 1822
Lament of the Old for the Young (This anguish will be wearied down, I know): 5349
Lament of the River (Mourns the river, I came down from the mountain): 3813
Lamente For the Aulde Hostels (Oh Edinbruch, thou heich triumphand town): 3342
Land at Last (Day after day, upon my couch I lie): 7346
Land of Kings and Queens (Adieu, adieu, to England's shore): 40
Langley Lane. A Love Poem (In all the land, range up, range down): 1744
Langsyne (Langsyne!—how doth the word come back): 15523
Language (Oh—words are for opinions, policies): 11698
Lanherne Convent (Though public weal condemns conventual life): 15754
Larthon of Inis-Huna. A Tale of the Green Children (Those isles of Scilly, basking by the shore): 13439
Lass, Gin Ye Wad Lo'e Me ("Lass, gin ye wad lo'e me"): 3353
Last Christmas Eve (Christmas Eve came to us darkly): 1272
Last Fires (When all the passion and the pain): 830
Last Lines (By Affection's torturing power): 15589
Last of Ebb, and Daylight Waning (Last of ebb, and daylight waning): 13689
Last Spring (Now there are snowdrops blossoming, the violets' dewy eyes): 5633
Last Thoughts (Have they told thee I am dying?): 6420
Last Words (Can you not love me?—I hear, not in vain): 7670
Last Words (Darling, 'tis all in vain): 5794
Last Words (Hush, for I am dying): 4913
Last Words (You can write down sweet words in a letter): 13107
Last Words of an Indian Chief ("He cometh! Death is here. Leave me alone!"): 15170
Last Year (Last year he wrote: "The roses blossom red"): 4720
Last Year's Leaves (Over sullen ribs of snow): 13227
Lasting Impressions (You may gaze upon an object): 7723
Late Autumn (Above the dusky pines the full moon hung): 1832
Late Autumn (Steadfast still in his place): 7612
Late in Spring (Throw up the window, lest we miss): 1457
Late Love (Love came to me through the gloaming): 12689
Late Snowdrops (Why droop ye so): 6631
Latimer and Ridley. Burned at the Stake in Oxford, A. D. 1555 ('Tis good to sing of champions old): 9098
Latin Inscription by M. Von Baldhoven, Under the Portrait of E. J. W. (If to the life sweet Weston be not here): 14855
Laudate Dominum (Dare I be mute, when all our Island air): 2378
Laudes Robinsonianæ (Hail, Robinson! by whose indulgent care): 10216
Laughter and Death (There is no laughter in the natural world): 7983
Launched ('Neath a smiling sun and a wooing gale): 4069
Launched in London (With blessed vigil, cross, and sign): 7327
Launching the Life-Boat (Ho! build the Life-boat, heart and hand): 2485
Laurel (A pictured face, in frame of gold): 4678
Laurelled ("One moment listen, guardian fair"): 7945
Laurestinus (How empty seems the firelit room): 4646
Lauretta. A Tale of the Moselle ("Thirst of glory, lust of pleasure, greed of broad"): 947
Lavater's Warning (Trust him little who doth raise): 1408
Lavator (I think of thee! I think of thee!): 15874
Lavender (A perfum'd sprig of lavender): 1830
Lavender (How prone we are to hide and hoard): 4277
Lavender and Pansies (O ne'er a rose your garden grows): 2082
Lavington, Feb. 10, 1849 (I sat within my glad home, and round about me played): 14895
Lawn-Sleeves (No more, alas! I rhyme of fancied pains): 10053
Lay Me Low (Lay me low, my work is done): 4158
Lay of Peace in Sickness (Pleasantly passeth the summer away): 349
Laying a Foundation Stone (After harvest dews and harvest moonshine): 1881
Lazarus (O King and God! when words of power): 2436
Le Deuil Blanc (My Lady did not go): 12813
Le Papillon (Born with the Spring, and with the rose to die): 8696
Learnt by Heart (One beguiling and one beguiled): 566
Leave-Taking (When the wings are feathered): 12357
Leaves (The leaves came forth in the early Spring): 13293
Leaves and Seed (Leaves that strew the wintry chase): 14314
Leaves from a Withered Tree (Here is a vase of withered flowers): 6335
Leaves in Early Autumn (Not yet a rustling carpet for our feet): 1826
Leaving Aldworth. Oct. 11, 1892 (A steamy thresher murmured from afar): 8229
Leaving Port.—A Passenger's Olio (The Fortune sails to-night—a ship): 10089
Lebewohl (Out into the wilderness): 6247
Leddrie Green, An excellent new Song, Written by Bailie Jarvie, a good many Years ago (Ye who on rural pleasures bent): 7810
Left Alone ('Tis just like a belt of the moorland): 5447
Left Behind (I've work to do day after day): 2434
Left Behind (We started equal in the race—nay more): 4726
Left on the Battlefield (What, was it a dream? am I all alone): 482
Legend of "The Hurlstane" (The wintry blast blew loud and shrill): 13583
Legend of the Blush Roses (Little love was running wild): 647
Legend of the Castle of Monctier (Where summer sunshine lends its softest smile): 548
Legend of the Corrievrechan Whirlpool. A Ballad (Prince Breacan of Denmark was lord on the land): 11989
Legend of the Rock-Buoy Bell ("Thou hast done naught but ill on earth," sadly the angel said): 4632
Legendary Fragments ("And meet we thus again?" he said): 3382
Leila (Upon the golden summer air, the evening shadows fall): 5014
Leila and Hassan. (A Persian Legend) (Spake the King unto his daughter): 989
Lenachluten, a Waterfall in Argyleshire ('Mong crags where the purple heather grows): 6875
Lent (Heart that knowest thine own pain): 4355
Lent Lilies (Aye, it is over high for me to climb): 4705
Lent Lilies (Sweet Lenten lilies light the length'ning days): 5078
Leonard Mayburne and Susan Hendrie (They were a gentle pair, whose love began): 10851
Leonardo Da Vinci Poetises to the Duke in His Own Defence (Padre Bandelli, then, complains of me): 9677
Leonora (Leonora, Leonora): 6248
Lesley's March to Scotland (March! march! pinks of election): 8334
Let Bygones be Bygones (Let bygones be bygones; if bygones were clouded): 6893
Let it Be (Let be the river! What does it avail): 4314
Let it Pass! (Be not swift to take offence): 3087
Let Never Cruelty Dishonour Beauty ("Let never Cruelty dishonour Beauty"): 11041
Let These Things Be. Rondeau (Let these things be, O Time! whate'er befall): 12573
Let Us Depart! (Night hung on Salem's towers): 11007
Lethe (Adown the slumberous land one river flows): 4477
Letrilla (Wherefore, child, so brave to-day): 16081
Letrilla. From the Spanish (Fertilize thy plain, blest Tormes!): 15089
Letrilla. From the Spanish (Soft wind, that go'st flying, and murmuring too): 15073
Letter I.—After the Wedding (Bright-browed as Summer's self who claspt the land): 822
Letter II.—After Death's Mockery (When Death from out the dark, by one blind blow): 9974
Letter III. L—d B—m to to Joseph Grimaldi, Esq. On a Coalition (Dear Joe, ’tis clear that this won’t do): 11621
Letters (Such a little thing—a letter): 12923
Letters From Home (Blest wanderers over the wild sea-foam!): 6807
Letters of the Dead. To Livia (How few the moons since last, immersed): 10901
Letty's Globe, or Some Irregularities in a First Lesson in Geography (When Letty had scarce pass’d her third glad year): 14560
Letty's Globe, or Some Irregularities in a First Lesson in Geography (When Letty had scarce pass’d her third glad year): 14584
Liberty (I marked her childhood on the breezy hill): 11794
Liberty (O angel Liberty! where art thou fled?): 11706
Liberty (What thing is liberty? —a most sweet word): 5566
Liberty (Where liveth Freedom? To the busy bee): 15234
Liberty (Ye clouds! that far above me float and pause): 3593
Liberty, Fraternity, and Equality (To Thought's metropolis sublime): 3811
Liberty! Universal Liberty! (O! who would wear a tyrant's chain): 98
Liberty's Tree (When the Goddess of Freedom awoke from her trance): 42
Lies (Would you tell lies to cheat the people? No!): 9101
Lieutenant Luff (All you that are too fond of wine): 3768
Lieutenant Prideaux (No Cross of Valour hath the Muse to give): 1915
Life (Down from the moor, all flushed with purple dyes): 4282
Life (Is it life, to spend unheeding): 1697
Life (It seemeth but the other day): 11368
Life (Life is a tree, and we and all mankind): 2714
Life (Man on an isthmus stands; on either side): 14647
Life (Oh there are passages of Life that lie): 11753
Life (The air was heavy with the fragrant scent): 12910
Life (The Poet sings, "life is a dream," to cheat us of our fears): 4956
Life and Death ("What is Life, Father?" A Battle, my child"): 1307
Life and Death ("What is Life, father?"—"A Battle, my child"): 6481
Life and Death (I called two spirits from before God's throne): 342
Life and Death (Life is a desert drear): 831
Life and the Bird (See Bede's Ecclesiastical History) (Edwin, the Saxon King Northumbrian): 1427
Life and Time (Time sits in silence, patient, at his loom): 12727
Life in Death (All life must fade. The scented damask rose): 13115
Life in Death (Love me in life, darling): 3222
Life in Loving (Ah, let life be very life, my Lesbia,—life in loving): 14683
Life in Paradise (They say thou art not with me—canst not be): 5620
Life in the Stream (Upon a rough old wooden bridge I leant): 6671
Life Lilies. An Allegory (I wandered down Life's garden): 4636
Life or Death? (Doth Life survive the touch of Death?): 14511
Life Returning; After War-Time (O life, dear life, with sunbeam finger touching): 6372
Life Shadows (A shadow haunts us through our constant lives): 14053
Life the School of Manhood (A noble man may to a narrow sphere): 9102
Life-Mosaic (Master, to do great work for Thee, my hand): 2627
Life—A Glose (Golden morning and purple night): 15940
Life—A Sonnet (On eager feet, his heritage to seize): 14124
Life, Death, and Eternity (Arise, my soul! awake! arise!): 5248
Life's Answer (I know not if the dark or bright): 14037
Life's Balances (The Autumn day is dying. So am I): 2881
Life's Chivalry (Where, in the busy city's care and strife): 12947
Life's Cost (I could not at the first be born): 14523
Life's Day (My friends of the morning are gone!): 3541
Life's Errors (What if, in that sublimer state): 15449
Life's Evangels (Silent upon the threshold of life's portal): 6125
Life's Journey (It were a happy thing to dwell): 5985
Life's Little Day (Hopes, like dew-drops, pearl its morning): 6912
Life's Pageants (Come forth, thou pilgrim of the world!): 15750
Life's Pauses (A curious stranger environed in doubt): 8403
Life's Question (Drifting away): 14268
Life's Seasons (Ruby lips that part with baby laughter): 7549
Life's Tools (A man is wanted for the Lord!―): 5063
Life's Vanity (The evening goes and morning comes again): 8711
Life's Voyage (The winds of heaven are loosed on high): 15056
Lift Up Your Hymns, All Men. A Song of Praise for British Workmen. (Tune—Old 148th Psalm) (Lift up your hymns, all men): 2534
Light (Light is the emblem of the star): 15770
Light and Colour (Dwell, Light, beside the changeless God who spoke, and Light began): 10684
Light and Dark (Gently the sunset shades are slanting): 1558
Light and Darkness (Darkness is death to Light, and when it dies): 14643
Light and Darkness (The Sunbeams, fellow revellers): 11232
Light and Shade (A fair child born ’mid purple pall): 1694
Light and Shadow (Life is not all one shadowless day of glory): 7312
Light and Warmth (The good man walks this earthly dwelling): 10692
Light at Evening Time (She is sitting close to the window): 15864
Light at Eventide (On quaint old cupboards and the long-used things): 5030
Light for All (You cannot pay with money): 5827
Light from Emmaus (How oft an absent Lord we mourn): 5029
Light From Within (Light from within shone through her happy face): 2479
Light Love ("Oh! sad thy lot before I came"): 14036
Light of Heart (Light of heart am I): 15511
Light out of Darkness (Plainly to read the written doom): 6691
Lighten the Boat! (Shake hands, pledge hearts, bid fond adieus): 1302
Lights and Shades (The gloomiest day hath gleams of light): 15540
Likeness in Difference (There was a tale of feeling): 1170
Lilac-Blossom (Because your face is such a flower-like thing): 4266
Lilies (She came in the dewy dawning): 1817
Lilies (Upon the bosom of the lake): 6506
Lilies. In Memoriam (The west has lost its golden glow): 4302
Lillie's Lament (The goodliest beech in all the glade): 2472
Lily (What! a child of three-years' growth!): 3893
Lily the Fair, and the Big Brown Bear. A Tale for the Little and Good (Once on a time there lived a prince): 13763
Limerick Bells ("Yet one more peal," the busy Founder said): 938
Limits of Humanity (When the eternal): 9155
Lincoln Quire (On one side springeth many a mimic spire): 5135
Lines (Ask me not with simple grace): 6169
Lines (At eve I wandered by the river's side): 4885
Lines (Be true to the side of the gallant and brave): 5194
Lines (Bless'd is he who ne'er repines): 4429
Lines (Come, bring me a wreath of those fair summer flowers): 5707
Lines (In the long dead days of yore): 2349
Lines (Lady, if thou ever carest): 4457
Lines (Like blossoms that yield not their fragrance till crush'd—): 5513
Lines (May my life in a tavern fleet joyous away): 8275
Lines (Oh bring me pearls and jewels rare): 6030
Lines (One year ago, my path was green): 5176
Lines (Out in the savage mountains): 5015
Lines (The silver moon seems to shine brighter than ever): 4949
Lines (There is no beauty like the halo bright): 5655
Lines (Thou bidst me dry my tearful eyes): 3886
Lines (Though grief may sometimes leave the weary breast): 14231
Lines (Upon a day, no matter, here or there): 14417
Lines (What calm content in this bright scene!): 5005
Lines (What didst thou feel, thou poor unhappy Youth): 8331
Lines (When on my heart the hand of Death doth fall): 14544
Lines (Where Malvern's verdant ridges gleam): 5013
Lines (Worst of all ills that flesh is heir to): 3879
Lines Addressed to a Fair Whig Who Accused Him of Toryism (Yes! I confess myself a Tory): 4423
Lines Addressed to a Friend From the Vicinity of Abbotsford (Here, upon the waveful Tweed): 5234
Lines Addressed to a Lady,with Madame De Sevigne's Letters, Previous to Her Embarkation for the Continent (These letters show, my young and charming maid): 5497
Lines Addressed to a Miniature. By A Lady (Thou knowest not, thou faithful miniature): 6132
Lines Addressed to John Broster, F.A.S.E. Discoverer of the System for the effectual Removing of Impediments of Speech. By a Pupil (When the full moon is seen to rise): 10315
Lines Addressed to the Editor (A Swain?—I am indeed a Shepherd Swain!): 15778
Lines Addressed to the Party Proceeding on the Track of Dr Leichhardt, the Australian Explorer (Ye who prepare with pilgrim feet): 5930
Lines Addresses to The Rev. J. Montesquieu Bellew, Preacher at St. Philip's, Waterloo Place (With stately triumph!—and with loud acclaim—): 5767
Lines by a Lady to her Sons (I could not sleep through all last night): 7207
Lines by B. Simmons, Inscribed to Lady E. S. Wortley and Suggested by a Sketch in "The Keepsake" for 1837 (It was the noon of the Roman day that lit with mellow gloom): 11875
Lines by Galt (Helpless, forgotten, sad, and lame): 3131
Lines by Robert Southey. [From an Unpublished Autograph] (The days of Infancy are all a dream): 1078
Lines by Wallin, The Swedish Poet: Written A Few Hours Before His Death (Repose, O weary soul, in peace repose): 6471
Lines Dedicated to Those Who Mourn Their Dead in the Wrecks of the Bokhara, Roumania, and Scotch Express (Peace! still thy sobbing. Grief has deemed it wise): 8230
Lines for Music ('Twas in the glad season): 6094
Lines for My Ladye's Album (My little ladye owns no sort of dread): 8677
Lines for the Educated. Addressed to Henry Brougham (What is an aristocrat? Is it one): 127
Lines for the Grave. Written at sea, by a young officer, a moth before his death. He left a young widow and infant to mourn his loss (I've wander'd through the busy world): 4944
Lines from Metastasio (Oft as my thoughts in pensive train): 3856
Lines From the German (Thou know'st, perchance, the ancient saying): 5619
Lines from the Past (A few lines, written in a long-lost book): 12667
Lines in Answers to a Poem entitled "Spring," signed "Pauper," in the Athenaeum (Don't tell me of buds and blossoms): 6744
Lines on "Les noirs peignent l'esprit—mais les bleus, peignent l'ame!" (Thus sings—if I conjecture right): 3878
Lines on a Beautiful Girl (All-golden is her virgin head): 14589
Lines on a Cameo Head of Dante (Yes, look on him! The man who into Hell): 1628
Lines on a Dead Soldier (Wreck of a warrior pass'd away): 4390
Lines on a Doo (My bonny bird, wi' wings o' blue): 3431
Lines on a Lady's Speaking in Rapture of the Life of a Cottager (For those who "blest in rural bower"): 15656
Lines on a Thrush Confined in a Cage near the Sea (Poor solitary—melancholy thing!): 11325
Lines on a White Cyclamen Brought from Jerusalem (Young blossom! delicately pure and fair): 3899
Lines on Drunkenness (Fly, drunkenness, whose vile incontinence): 3326
Lines on Glenormiston. [Fragment of a Tweedside Pastoral] (Fronting the bold Cardrona Law): 7094
Lines on Haddon Hall (Thrice venerable, venerated walls): 3795
Lines on Harvey's Picture of the Covenanters Worshipping, Among the Hills of Scotland (It cam from out the silent glen): 4376
Lines on His New Child-Sweetheart (I hold it a religious duty): 5811
Lines on Opening a Casket (Oh! none would covet jewellery): 5327
Lines on Portobello. Written After a Visit of Two Months in 1877 (Though pinkie walls are wondrous fine): 7294
Lines on Revisiting the Country (I stand upon my native hills again): 5325
Lines On Sending Out to his Parents in a Distant Colony, a Little Boy Who Had Been Left an Infant With his Relatives in this Country (The guardians of his infant days): 3262
Lines on Staffa (Darkly the wreathèd mists their curtain spread): 11223
Lines on the Celebrated Picture by Lionardo da Vinci, called the Virgin of the Rocks (While young John runs to greet): 8250
Lines on the Dead Year (The Ivy over-shines the wall): 13812
Lines on the Death of a Brother (Where stray my heedless steps? what lonely scene): 8035
Lines on the Death of a Near Relation. Written on the Sea-Shore (Stretch'd on the beach, I view with listless eyes): 3563
Lines on the Death of a Young Lady (Then thou art gone—the sad death-bell hath toll'd): 8003
Lines on the Death of Gothard a Favourite St Bernard Dog (A calm majestic dog, and fitly named): 7078
Lines on the Grave of a Child (Oh, sweet my Baby! liest thou here): 8002
Lines on the Landing of His Majesty King Louis Philippe, Tuesday, October 8, 1844 (Ho! Wardens of the Coast look forth): 10752
Lines on the Loss of a Ship (Her mighty sails the breezes swell): 3520
Lines on the Lost (Strain, strain the eager eye): 6222
Lines on the Mausoleum of the Princess Charlotte at Claremont (Alas! how many storm-clouds hang): 15899
Lines on the New Fountain Erected by Mr Gurney near St Sepulchre’s Church (Within the giant city): 6525
Lines on the Place de Jeanne d'Arc, at Rouen. Addressed to Samuel Prout, Esq. (O thou brave Art of Painting!—With what skill): 14450
Lines on the Portrait of the Duchesse de Nemours (Fair Princess!—daughter of a kingly race): 4966
Lines on the Portrait of the Princess Royal (Thou first born! sent to joy and bless): 5173
Lines on the Portrait of Viscountess Jocelyn (Fain would my pen attempt to praise): 5148
Lines on the Sale of the Black Arab, The Gift of the Imaum of Muscat (Yes! it is well that he should go): 11469
Lines on Torquay (Whatever England's coasts display): 4795
Lines Picked up at a Rink (Upon the rink the lady sat): 13771
Lines Sent With a "Forget-Me-Not" (Emblem of my Fanny's eye): 3736
Lines Suggested by a Bird Singing, a Wood-Primrose in Flower, a Child Playing, and an Early Butterfly, Jan. 18, 1882 (Sweet Bird, whose carol on the winter thorn): 7490
Lines Suggested by Horace, Bk. I. Ode IX (She now the sullen vapours rest): 6984
Lines Suggested by More than One Recent Domestic History (Full many a sorrowful and tragic tale): 1560
Lines suggested by reading stanzas by Miss Camilla Toulmin, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, entitled "What Dost Thou Whisper, Murmuring Shell?" October 21, 1843 (And dost thou ask me, maiden fair): 5397
Lines Suggested by the Above (They dream, but dreams are of the night): 13829
Lines Suggested by the Greek Massacre (White angels, listening all around): 14402
Lines Suggested by the Omission of the Word "Haereticisque" in the Restored Inscription on Sir Thomas More's Tomb at Chelsea (From Arius to Luther it was truth): 8814
Lines Suggested by the Sight of Some Late Autumn Flowers (Those few pale autumn flowers): 9332
Lines Suggested by the Uncovering of the Memorial of the Prince Consort (Out of a tomb the world’s Hope went of old): 1706
Lines to — (O could I love thee, love as thou art worthy to be loved): 6177
Lines to — With a Berlin Umbrella (Despise not, dear lady, the trifle I send): 5006
Lines to a Dead Linnet (Sweet little friend in hours of lonely thought): 1119
Lines to A Father's Memory (For parents oft ere now there has been weeping): 5282
Lines to a Friend (My friend, dear friend, I would thou were beside me here this eve): 6351
Lines to a Humble-Bee (Whither bound, on shining wing): 7016
Lines to a Lady who was robbed of her Jewels. Written Several Years Ago (When, jewel-girt, the priest to pray): 12093
Lines to a Late-Born Mountain Lamb, On a Blink of Sunshine in Winter (We lammie, on yon Scottish hill): 6824
Lines to a Little Boy (My winsome one, my handsome one, my darling little boy): 4380
Lines to a Little Republican (Bless thy sweet face, my little one): 115
Lines to a Mother (As morning steers on summer flowers): 126
Lines to a Political Friend (Say, Friend—for you have clearer sight than I): 9489
Lines to a Young Lady on Her Birthday (Encircled thus by those you love): 6952
Lines to Crookston Castle (Thou proud memorial of a former age): 8122
Lines to Her Grandaughter. [Sophia Joanna Baillie] (Beautiful baby, where art thou?): 5331
Lines to Ianthe (When by the twilight sea): 5744
Lines to Lady Cochrane. (Now Countess of Dundonald) (I knew thee, Lady! by that glorious eye): 5621
Lines to Miss Agnes Baillie on Her Birthday (Dear Agnes, gleam'd with joy and dash'd with tears): 5281
Lines to Miss Fanny Forman, on Bidding her Farewell (Oh! the grass it springs green on the Street of the gay): 7795
Lines to Miss Grace Maddox, the Fair Pugilist (Sweet Maid of the Fancy!—whose ogles, adorning): 8376
Lines to Murphy (Oh Murphy, Murphy, I am sore afraid): 5239
Lines to Phillip Sampson, the Brummagem Youth (Go back to Brummagem! go back to Brum-magem!): 8508
Lines to the Fountain in the Place de la Concorde (Flow on, ye bright waters! in harmony flow): 5789
Lines to the Hon. Miss Susanna Fox Strangways, Aged one Year, Written in 1744 (Sweeter than the sweetest manna): 3797
Lines to the Memory of a Favourite Dog (Poor dog, and art thou dead? even as a dream): 10852
Lines to the Memory of Robert Johnston, Bridgeton (Is there no other theme for me): 124
Lines to the Memory of Thomas Tyrie, A Young Edinburgh Poet of Great Promise (The fairest flowers that Summer wrings): 6834
Lines Upon a Caged Lark (A cruel deed): 7439
Lines Upon a Library Filled With Pictures (When low'ring skies or angry tempests frown): 5784
Lines Upon Letters (Yes—'mid the unutterable dread): 10622
Lines Written After Perusing a Letter Written by Robert Burns (Only a scrap of paper, old and worn): 6946
Lines Written after Reading the Romance of Arthur's Round Table (Blest be the times, for ever past away): 10067
Lines Written at Kelburne Castle, Ayrshire (A lovely eve—though yet it is but spring): 11162
Lines Written At Keswick in June 1849 (Nature awakes! bleak winter's reign is o'er): 6067
Lines Written at Kinneil, the Residence of the Late Mr. Dugald Stewart (To distant worlds a guide amid the night): 3367
Lines Written at Warwick Castle (I leave thee, Warwick, and thy precincts grey): 10478
Lines Written in a Book of Travellers in Italy, 1829 (Each wave that rolls, fresh imports toss): 3855
Lines Written in a British Burial Ground in India (Here ’midst the glade of loneliest Indian wood): 9174
Lines Written in a Highland Glen (To whom belongs this Valley fair): 7995
Lines Written in a Lady's Album (I cannot stain this snowy leaf): 8018
Lines Written in a Lonely Burial-Ground on the Northern Coast of the Highlands (How mournfully this burial-ground): 8033
Lines Written in a Storm (It was not night, but the heavy sky): 15617
Lines Written in an Album of Elliot Cresson of Philadelphia (From distant climes the stranger came): 3057
Lines Written in an Album. To Eliza (As, midst the bower, some lonelier blossom): 5713
Lines Written in Anticipation of the Duke Wellington's Election (Rich in the wreaths of glory's race, full run): 11903
Lines Written in Memory of a Favourite Bird (I taught my gay and beauteous bird some words of love to prize): 5973
Lines Written in Sickness (Oh, Death! if there be quiet in thine arms): 13973
Lines Written in the Bay of Lerici (She left me at the silent time): 13895
Lines Written in the First Blank Leaf of Shelley's Poems. To the Reader (Pause! and before another page you turn): 11395
Lines Written in the Glen at Penkill ('Tis nature's garden that she made): 8815
Lines Written in the Isle of Bute (Ere yet dim twilight brighten'd into day): 9968
Lines Written on a Picture of a Field of Battle ('Tis sad indeed to view the battle plain): 4748
Lines Written on a Prospect in Buteshire (The spot is rude, yet well may spare): 5291
Lines Written on Hearing the Popular Air of Marlbrouk (Sweet as those airy symphonies can be): 11611
Lines Written on Oak Island, Killarney (Far in the heart of the Island-solitude): 8023
Lines Written on the Back of The Ode, On the Distant Prospect of a Good Dinner (Pleasures of eating! oh! supremely blest): 10843
Lines Written on the Tweedside, September the 18th, 1831 (A day I've seen whose brightness pierced the cloud): 11085
Lines Written on the Walls of Harlech Castle (God! We are but the remnant of those men): 8805
Lines Written Under a Portrait of H. R. H. Prince Albert (No need of sculptured bronze, or poet's art): 4884
Lines, [Composed a few miles above Tintern Abbey, on revisiting the Banks of the Wye during a Tour. July 13, 1798] (Five years have past; five summers, with the length): 2973
Lines, Addressed to a Lady Abroad (What phantasy has charmed my sense?): 4442
Lines, From the German of the late Prince Louis of Prussia (The soul that inwardly is fed): 8132
Lines, On Seeing Again, After an Interval of Some Years, A Likeness of — (Beautiful Painter! once so dear): 11502
Lines, Sacred to the Memory of the Rev. Edward William Barnard (Farewell, blest shade! nor deem, though mute the lyre): 10769
Lines, Suggested by a Poem Called the "Flight of Youth," in the August Number of Blackwood's Magazine (Minstrel! thou has poured a strain): 11681
Lines, Suggested by David's Picture of Napoleon Asleep in His Study, Taken Shortly Before the Battle of Waterloo (Steal softly!—for the very room): 11380
Lines, Written on the Print of the Late Honourable Mrs. Duff, engraved by Agar, from a Painting by Cosway (Thou seem'st prepar'd for flight): 15903
Lines: Written in Spring—1812 (Redeemed from Winter's deadening reign): 7970
Lines. Sent With a Seal in the Shape of Scales (One seal displays the Idalian boy): 3143
Lines. To a Lady Who Had Refused Three Separate Proposals; With a Cameo Figure of Sappho (Oh! mark that cheek, so wan, so pale): 15085
Lines. Written at Granada in the Year 1820 (Yes! nations have their little span): 3460
Lines. Written in the Book of Travellers at Chamouny, August, 1821 (How many number'd, and how few agreed): 3387
Lines. Written on Placing a Lily of the Valley in the Dead Hand of a Lovely Child, While Lying in Her Coffin, May 24, 1829 (Thou sleeping innocent! to thee I bring): 14467
Lines. Written on the Remains of the Temple of Venus at Mount Eryx in Sicily, May, 1824 (When Time, despiser of enchanted ground): 3384
Lines. Written on the Wall of the Alhambra at Granada, May, 1820 (Land of the raven brow and eagle glance): 3392
Linked Lives (A little toddling boy at play): 8159
Linlithgow Palace (Where noble men of proven might): 3013
Listening Angels (Blue against the bluer Heavens): 1301
Lisy's Parting with Her Cat (The dreadful hour with leaden pace approach'd): 15461
Little Alix. A Story of the Children's Crusade ('Twas in the dark and distant time): 1834
Little Bacchus. (To the Statue of a Child by David) (From the great beech, green and old): 4151
Little Bell (Beside her father's cottage door): 1501
Little Brother.―A Song for Little Children (Oh! come, let us lay all our playthings aside): 9602
Little Children (Not in bright abodes alone): 13140
Little Children (Sporting through the forest wide): 3764
Little Chinchilla. A Skating Song (She wears the shortest skirts): 622
Little Elsie (Two small white hands, with fingers meekly folded): 7056
Little Fairy. A Village Story (Lovely Brookland! peaceful village): 1763
Little Feet (Dear little feet that lie in my hand!): 13681
Little Florence (Little Florence, fond and free): 6577
Little John Finality (There lives a lord, whom men may): 11173
Little Leonard's Last "Good-Night" ("Good-night! good-night! I go to sleep"): 11193
Little Matters (There is a little moth, I know): 2910
Little Mattie (Dead! Thirteen a month ago!): 11986
Little May (Oh! empty is her little bed!): 7395
Little Milly (Little Milly hath a look in her dark and serious eyes): 6013
Little Nell (Why does he love me? I cannot tell): 2657
Little Peggy (In a blind little alley, deep sunk in Saint Giles): 7116
Little Rogue! (I was sitting beside): 255
Little Seal-Skin (The Fisherman walked up the hill): 14326
Little Things (Life is set with little things): 15865
Little Things (Often, the little things we hear): 7189
Little Things (Scorn not the slightest word or deed): 308
Little White Shoes (Winifred's new white shoes): 5140
Little Willie (Such a day to leave him, laid in his lonely grave): 4303
Live it Down (Yes, your fault has blurred your name): 7504
Living: (After a Death) (O live!): 6421
Livingstone (It is finished! We shall gaze upon that dauntless form no more): 6998
Llewellyn's Vengeance (By the castle of Llewellyn): 534
Loaded Wains (From the broad fields, their golden glory shorn): 4470
Loch An-Dorb (Far in the wilds of Moray, black and bare): 2671
Loch Carron, Western Highlands (A black and glassy float, opaque and still): 12055
Loch Coruisk (Low at the roots of the Cuhullins): 3640
Lochleven Castle (A light breeze curls the Leven's silver tide): 8789
Lock-and-Bar. A Botany Bay Eclogue (O Gallant Sir James is come out of the North): 9201
Logic ("My dear, be sensible! Upon my word"): 7580
Lohengrin (On distant shores where you will visit me): 2168
London 1802 (Milton! thou should’st be living at this hour): 14810
London Bridge (Adieu, adieu, thou huge, high bridge): 11095
London Cries (What trifles mere are more than treasure): 10426
London in September. (Not in 1831) (Remote, unfriended, melancholy, slow): 3575
London Misnomers (From Park Lane to Wapping, by day and by night): 4421
London Snow (When men were all asleep the snow came flying): 15942
London Violets (Clad in a faded cotton gown): 14552
London. I. The Row and Westminster. Epistle to a Friend ("Write my thoughts about London"!—Good Heavens! I really don't know yet): 8826
Lonely (Sitting lonely, ever lonely): 2727
Long After (Does he remember that fair evening plucked): 2749
Long Ago (As through the poplar's gusty spire): 7661
Long Ago (He gave me his promise of changeless truth): 6945
Long Ago (O the days of long ago!): 7258
Long Ago (O, the glens of long ago!): 1499
Long Ago (The bark sails slowly over sunless seas): 4501
Long Ago (There was a tree, an aged tree): 6095
Long Ago (We wandered in a garden fair): 12856
Long Ago (When opal tints and gray invade): 12620
Long Expected (In expectation, all the year): 631
Longing (The green road, the clean road: it is so broad and): 12460
Longing for Rest (Into the woods, into the woods! this fret): 6019
Longing for Spring (Oh, for the beautiful Spring!): 15869
Longing for Spring-time (Haste, hoary Winter! Loose thy weary chain): 7047
Longings (In Manhood, in the full accomplished glory): 2834
Longings (When shall I be at rest? My trembling heart): 1675
Longo Intervallo (Jane Follett is my love): 737
Look Again! (Say not that thy soul is weary): 7707
Look Forward, Age! (Thy youth hath long been passed): 5967
Look Upward (Thou didst help me across the brooklet): 3215
Looking Back (As a lone pilgrim, travel-worn and weary): 895
Looking Back (I lean on the rectory gates again): 6833
Looking Back (It's oh for the sunny stream): 2455
Looking Back (This is the old farm-house): 3698
Looking Back in Yarrow. A Golden Wedding (Gudewife, we're getting auld): 8523
Looking Down the Road (In the early spring-time): 3275
Looking East: In January 1858 (Little white clouds, where are you flying): 6440
Looking for a Face (She said, "I am resign'd," and tried to strengthen): 12661
Looking for Love (As a fisherman looks out over the bay): 4159
Looking for Spring (A lingering damp within the air): 6467
Looking Forward (With hopeful eyes turned future-wards we stand): 4092
Loose Leaves (It was a goodly Apple): 2152
Lord Aythan (Sing, sing, for my lady fair): 12147
Lord Byron and the Armenian Convent (And lived he here? And could this sweet green isle): 14689
Lord Byron's Combolio (Reading public! whose hunger): 9703
Lord Byron's Room in the Palazzo Moncenigo, at Venice (Long years have pass'd since I this room beheld): 5154
Lord Hatton: A Tale of Castle Cornet in Guernsey ("Kit Hatton! Kit Hatton!"): 10270
Lord Lynedoch: A Historical Ballad (Praise me no poets, dreamers, danglers): 8278
Lord Rodney's Bantam Cock (Yes: thanks to Rodney's zealous aid): 14834
Lord Ronald's Child (Three days ago Lord Ronald's child): 10571
Lord Surrey and the Fair Geraldine ('Twas thus, in the good days of eld): 3867
Lorelei. From the German of Heinrich Heine (I know not what it presages): 13573
Loreley (I cannot imagine what daunts me): 9652
Loreley (I know not what thoughts are thronging): 16084
Lorenzo (A falling star upon an autumn night): 12258
Loss and Gain (I sorrowed that the golden day was dead): 5511
Loss and Gain (Myriad roses, unregretted): 5007
Loss and Gain (Thou hast done well to kneel and say): 1638
Loss in Delays (Shun delays, they breed remorse): 3233
Loss of the Royal George (Toll for the Brave!): 14885
Lost (In other years, when life was gay): 7089
Lost (We are so courteous and kind, we two): 4914
Lost and Found (Solemnly, silently, sullenly slow): 6398
Lost and Found (The storm-clouds drave o'er the lowering sky): 13578
Lost at Sea (Good-night, beloved; the light is slowly dying): 12993
Lost Atlantis (Lost Atlantis sleeping lies): 13206
Lost Eileen (Soft lights may swathe the castle tower): 6971
Lost Eros (I know it fell in spring—in spring): 13589
Lost For A Little (Oh, the fair wind blew fresh, and the surges): 7129
Lost for Gold (She stood by the hedge where the orchard slopes): 13425
Lost Friendship (If I could know you feel just one regret): 13145
Lost Hope (You cast to ground the hope which once was mine): 11139
Lost Hours (It was a mournful watch she kept): 4064
Lost in the Mist (The thin white snow-streaks pencilling): 6422
Lost Innocence (A sleeping babe into my hands was given): 11858
Lost Sunshine (Our House is emptied of Delight): 7622
Lost Syrinx (B.C. 100) (Pan was old, and bleared, and wan): 699
Lost Tiny (Where and what are you, my friend): 15961
Lost With All Hands ("Lost, with all hands, at sea"): 4533
Lost Youth (Sing, till the glad world wake again): 13301
Lost—A Heart (So you're going up to the Highlands?): 8521
Loughrigg-Tarn (Thou guardian naiad of this little lake): 10562
Louis the Eleventh (Welcome! sport that sweetens labour!): 3491
Louis XV. (The King with all the kingly train had left his Pompadour behind): 14362
Love ("Love the gift is love the debt"): 4983
Love (A diamond in the darkness sparkling bright): 7173
Love (A fragile girl, who droops and pales): 4176
Love (A voice of pity strove to bless): 14840
Love (All thoughts, all passions, all delights): 8063
Love (An angel stood at the gate of heav'n): 1954
Love (And is it all a dream—a dream?): 15388
Love (Come, love, I'll weave a wreath for thee): 320
Love (Film after film the distance lies): 2111
Love (Have you got a brook in your little heart): 8413
Love (Let me not to the marriage of true minds): 9878
Love (Love cannot bear rude passion's blast): 14112
Love (Love is not made of kisses, or of sighs): 6993
Love (O love! what art thou, Love? A glorious Star): 12575
Love (O Love! what art thou, Love? the ace of hearts): 10603
Love (Oh! Love!—true Love!—what alters thee?—Not all): 15224
Love (Oh! would I had the wealth of worlds): 6373
Love (Strange are his moods, and strange is he): 13258
Love (Sweet earthly love, two hearts in one uniting): 5120
Love (The love that will soonest decay): 7003
Love (There are who say the lover's heart): 6528
Love and Ambition (Love, laughing, to Ambition said): 15697
Love and Death (All day she lay tossing with troubled brain): 5100
Love and Death (Life may hold sweetness yet: I would not die): 12936
Love And Death (Love stood with pleading eyes and outstretched hands): 2161
Love and Death (Mighty ones, Love and Death!): 10050
Love and Duty, a Rural Sketch ('Twas summer evening's soft and shadowy calm): 15662
Love and Fame (I looked for Fame): 2195
Love and Fame (The poet's soul that had the honey pressed): 7561
Love and Fame (Two maids I wooed upon a day): 12622
Love and Labour (We die not all: for our deeds remain): 7027
Love and Loss (Now the mavis and the merle): 2763
Love and Martyrdom (In yonder window's crimson fold): 6688
Love and Mercy ("Sprinkling with bloom the bank beneath"): 15780
Love and Pain (Love held to me a chalice of red wine): 12135
Love and Pity (Love knocked softly at the gate): 12407
Love and Suicide (At midnight tolls the solemn bell): 8720
Love and the Myrtle ("Sweet Summer flowers, oh live for me!"): 5710
Love and the World (Sweet is the evening breeze): 13080
Love and Thought (Love and Thought, in genial strife): 5449
Love and Time (Because old Time's a rover): 3835
Love and War (He crossed the mountain-paths alone): 6755
Love and Wisdom (Knowledge oft comes to me in fairest guise): 5757
Love Can Never Die (When skies smile first through Winter's gloom): 5738
Love Ever! (She sang—her full voice thrilled the darksome room): 6280
Love for Love (I ne'er could any lustre see): 6250
Love for Love. (A Ballad) (Her soft voice trembled scarce at all): 1537
Love in All (Name the leaves on all the trees): 7417
Love in Death (On the death-darkened air): 401
Love in Sorrow ("What shall I do for thee? Thou hast my prayers"): 15856
Love in the Valley (Under yonder beech-tree single on the greensward): 14614
Love in Winter (Between the berried holly-bush): 2109
Love is a Thief (Love is a thief! when the sky is low): 2385
Love is Forever (Love is forever—think no more): 2343
Love is Love for Evermore (Under the blue of a summer sky): 7557
Love Lights (Pretty dreamer, far away): 12804
Love Maketh Fair (She was the fairest of all things on earth): 1995
Love Memories (Ay, lad, it was here that we lingered): 6837
Love No Longer Thrills My Soul (Love no longer thrills my soul): 11188
Love of Beauty (If one leaf fall from the o'erhanging tree): 1432
Love or Lands ("I bring not houses, lands, or gold"): 12887
Love Song (Ere the lovely dream is broken, ere the glamour fades away): 4603
Love Song (The sweetest flower of latter spring): 934
Love Song, By a Junior Member of the Cockney School (Oh! lovely Polly Savage): 9161
Love Sonnet (There is no date in Love's eternal Year): 9541
Love That Availeth (Easy it were to give my life to thee): 12678
Love that Lasts For Ever (There is a Word): 8635
Love the Betrayer (Lo! in a dream Love came to me and cried): 12240
Love the Pitiful (If you should see a stranger in the street): 2301
Love the Runaway. [From Moschus, Idyll I] (Cypris her Eros thus was loudly crying): 13486
Love Unsung (Glide on, sweet purling stream): 6951
Love v. Beauty. Verdict for the Plaintiff. (Love, perched one day): 896
Love-Craft (O Love, to-day we found a way): 13806
Love-Struck (O! Tell me where is my true love gane): 1873
Love, Love Ever! (Oh love, as long as love you can!): 8534
Love, Pride, and Forgetfulness (Ere yet my heart was sweet Love's tomb): 11140
Love, the Syren (With slender taper fingers fine): 8956
Love; a Song (Oh! say not love is but a name): 14006
Love. A Lyric (Oh Love, that came to me on lightest wing): 4260
Love's Aftermath (Not here, but there): 5085
Love's Arrows (The story that I write of shows how Love): 14592
Love's Bird. A Song (The Bird of Love hath built his nest): 12482
Love's Blindness (Now do I know that Love is blind, for I): 12267
Love's Burial (Thou hast passed from life, and thou knowest it not): 9574
Love's Calendar (The rose in the sunshine, Dearest!): 7667
Love's Call (Shy tender stars sedate and sweet): 7082
Love's Comparisons (Oh! bright is the rose when the sunshine is glinting): 6558
Love's Danger (A sudden glance, a hint no others guess): 4056
Love's Darts (Do not tell me Love is blind): 14237
Love's Enchantment (I thought of thee beside a dropping well): 12525
Love's Exchange (There is a pleasant void within my breast): 7569
Love's Exchanges (You praise my beauty, grace, and art): 12903
Love's Farewell (Since there's no help, come, let us kiss and part): 6621
Love's Gifts (Fain would I wreathe with pearls): 6079
Love's Greetings. (After the German) (How many stars in Heaven do shine): 740
Love's Hour-Glass (Eros! wherefore do I see thee, with the glass in either hand?): 10928
Love's Hue-and-Cry (In Love's name you are charged hereby): 6246
Love's Impotence (She was the fairest, gentlest thing): 6832
Love's Land (Could I set sail on an emerald sea): 626
Love's Last Suit (Love, forget me when I'm gone): 9539
Love's Light (Last year she wandered through the wood): 12205
Love's Motto (Is it that natural impulse of the heart): 15608
Love's Music (Love held a harp between his hands, and lo): 12348
Love's Phantoms of Wo (Day's gone down in the west; yet his last tinge of gold): 7808
Love's Photograph (I've a portrait already of thee, ladie mine): 428
Love's Promise ("I will come back," Love cried, "I will come back"): 14681
Love's Question (Do you weary of hearing me call on thee): 4618
Love's Reasons (Why do I love my darling so?): 4083
Love's Remonstrance (What! for a word—an idle word!): 5308
Love's Riddle ("Why I love thee," is thy question so?): 7700
Love's Roses (In a meadow gay and flowered): 13142
Love's Sacrifice (An old man lived by the Solent Sea): 7578
Love's Season (Nay, never ask, beloved, oh, why so late?): 5296
Love's Seasons (Love came to my heart with the earliest swallow): 13005
Love's Signal Flower (She flung her on his breast): 15442
Love's Sleep (Deep within my lady's eyes): 12937
Love's Song (Love is a precious pain): 2786
Love's Sunrise (The lark leaves the earth): 3814
Love's Transfiguration (O strange sweet loveliness! O tender grace): 12795
Love's Watch (Fair falls the dawn upon thy face, O sea!): 12794
Love's Whisper (Go, heart of mine, and hasten to my Love): 7101
Loved and Lost. "Ich Habe Gelebt und Geliebt" (So you tell me Annie's dying, dying all for love of me!): 2718
Loved at Last (And so he loves me, though they said): 4475
Loved Best ("Loved best!" As one with parched and burning lips): 5742
Lovely Spring. In answer to the poem entitled "Hateful Spring!" (Thou say'st that spring is hateful, because her blossoms bright): 5862
Lovers (The orchard smiles: upon the tufted tops): 15741
Lovers Apart (We meet, and speak, and part, as friends may do): 13371
Lovers Still (His hair as wintry snow is white): 13364
Lovers Still (The moonlight of romance was ours): 7454
Lovers' Vows (I love thee, I swear! but, as man's fleeting breath): 14123
Loving Eyes (Hush, sweet heart—hush; I needs must chide): 6448
Lowly Flower (To the light butterfly said thus the lowly flower): 7922
Lucem Spero: A Hymn for Those in Trouble (The land I travel through is dark): 5125
Lucretius (Lucilia, wedded to Lucretius, found): 14218
Lucy and Her Bird (The Sky-Lark hath perceived his prison-door): 2962
Lucy's Birthday (Seventeen rosebuds in a ring): 5641
Lucy's Garland (Here are roses, little Lucy): 969
Lucy's Wee Cot, or the Expelled (Wi' a cot on the moor, in the lowne o' the glen): 1185
Luke Lather. After Hood (Luke Lather was a barber, sirs): 7645
Lullaby (Baloo, bairnie): 2311
Lullaby (Hush-a-bye, baby!): 12617
Luther's Bridal (They say that if the never winking lamps): 10119
Luther's Gardener. [A.D. 1544] (Our cherry-tree was almost dead): 13458
Lutzen (There is no beauty on that far-spread plain): 15704
Lux in Tenebris (Lost, and within a scattered forest straying): 13019
Lux in Tenebris (The castle window on the height): 13306
Lydford Bridge (Stream of the mountain! never did the ray): 15600
Lying Ill (Love! Kiss me, kiss me on the lips): 6529
Lying in Stone (Sun and shade, a pleasant dapple): 6571
Lyra (Still, still, fair minstrel! pour along): 15172
Lyrical Ballad (My dear and only love, I pray): 6967
Lyrical Lines (As I wandered beside the blue measureless tide): 449
Lysias (It was a sultry summer noon): 1760
Lyttil Pynkie (Lyttil Pynkie caime to Kilbogye yett): 11086
M. Mayor (Mayor is dead. A jolly man): 8913
Mabel (In the sunlight): 11934
Mabel May (I was weary all thro' of the thousand and one): 3191
Mabel's Dove (Each lightly-scattered deed, takes root): 5169
Mabel's Holy Day. In a Garden (Arthur. He came, saw, and was conquered. Lady mine): 9254
Macdhonuil's Coronach (The red sun sleeps in Mora's vale): 731
MacDonald of Sleat (Where wild the winds sweep o'er the lone western deep): 14192
MacTavish and the Queen of Phaerie. A Highland Ballad. Communicated by the Shade of Ossian (I will sing you songs): 9206
Mad Luce (Along the hollow reaches, where the ripples curve on the sand): 4280
Madame Vestris's Answer to "The Alphabet" (Dear friends, although no more a dunce): 5648
Madeira (How strangely on that haunted morn): 14500
Madeira (On the deep and quiet sea): 15204
Madrigal (O Dove, that dost bewail thy love): 14426
Maga (Hark! how the feather'd songster, Chanticleer): 11663
Maga at No. 45 (Forty-five, forty-five): 10187
Maga: An Excellent New Song (A thousand moons have waxed and waned): 7933
Maga's Birthday. Ætatis, Five Hundred (Dear reader of Maga, to whom it is given): 9468
Magenta (Under the willows; in the trampled maize): 196
Maggy O' Buccleuch (O cam' ye through the forests green): 15283
Magus Muir (Gently ye fall, ye summer showers): 10730
Mahammed's Lament for His Mother, Who Died a Pagan (Thy grave's in Yamãma—unhallowed the tomb): 4876
Mahmood the Ghaznavide (Hail to the morn that reigneth): 11029
Maïa (Crowned with a rainbow wreath): 584
Maid Avoraine (Sir Gawain rode in fretful spleen): 908
Maid Barbara (Of all the maids of Dynevor, maid Barbara is most fair): 9458
Maidenhood (Maiden with the meek brown eyes): 6006
Making Poetry (Little one, what are you doing): 1859
Malachi (A sound on the rampart): 11447
Maladetta (Beautiful Sin, with her eyes cast down): 12074
Malham Cove (Was the aim frustrated by force or guile): 8337
Malibran (Crowds in the lighted street): 14368
Mamma's Pet (Women and children!—what a sight): 6424
Man ("Poor creature, man!" — and yet in this): 16049
Man (The human mind—that lofty thing!): 15576
Man Overboard (Not alone in the storm lurk the danger and the sorrow): 3673
Man’s Debt to Woman (When Man, a frail and helpless babe, is ushered into light): 1707
Manheim. An Anecdote of Charles Sandt (A feeble thread of light shot down, a pale imprisoned beam): 5948
Manoli. A Moldo-Wallachian Legend (All day they built, and wall and tower stood crown'd): 12063
Manzoni's Hymn for Whitsunday (Spirit unseen, our spirit's home): 14686
Marathon (From high Pentelicus' pine-clad height): 9284
March (Earth seems to glow with renovated life): 11091
March (Like as that lion through the green woods came): 9554
March (Stay thy fury, Aquilo): 13412
March (The great north wind sprang from the ocean's breast): 4589
March (The March wind whistles through the sombre pines): 3926
March (The merry months are pass’d away): 15878
March (Young March came bounding on with deafening roar): 15944
March Winds (The March winds rave between the hills): 12071
March: An Ode (Ere frost-flower and snow-blossom faded and fell, and the splendour of winter had passed out of sight): 8262
Marcus Antonius ('Tis vain, Fonteus!—As the half-tamed steed): 10416
Marcus Aurelias to Lucius Verus (I have received your letter, read it through): 9739
Marcus Curtius (It is night—a starless night!): 15519
Mare Mediterraneum (A line of light! It is the inland sea): 11992
Margaret Wilson (Murdered for owning Christ supreme): 905
Margaret's Dream. Margaret to William (Willie, come and sit beside me): 13562
Marguerite (A modest maiden, yet a wise): 7061
Marguerite (I pluck the petals one by one): 13968
Marguerite (She lingered ’midst the lilies white and fair): 13272
Marguérite (What dream'st thou, fairest, in thy garden bower?): 4967
Marguerite (Your casement shines in the evening gleam): 1066
Marguerite of France (The Moslem spears were gleaming): 11083
Maria de Torquemada Taking the Veil (There is a spot, a holy spot): 15624
Maria Gray. A Song (Who says that Maria Gray is dead): 10319
Marian May (Marian May was our hamlet's pride): 12209
Mariana (With blackest moss the flower-plots): 11151
Mariana (With blackest moss the flower-pots): 3758
Marianne's Dream (A pale dream came to a Lady fair): 8090
Marie (Across the far blue hills, Marie): 14066
Marie (The roses and the roseleaves gleam): 609
Marie at the Window. A Song Set to Music by Arthur Somervell (Marie, thou sittest thy window near): 8823
Marino Faliero Taking a Last Farewell of Angiolina (His Duchess) (Farewell, my Beautiful! condemn me not): 4772
Marion's Orchard (The softest turf of English green): 1481
Marius at the Ruins of Carthage (He turn'd him from the setting sun): 3772
Marjory May (Marjory May came tripping from town): 4631
Mark Bozzari. From the German of Wilhelm Müller (Open wide, proud Missolonghi, open wide thy portals high): 862
Marriage Unequal (Alas, that even in a heavenly marriage): 10938
Married Lovers (Come away, the clouds are high): 2094
Mars (The wild wild wind wails across a wintry waste): 4190
Mars. A Medley (Not this cold grey world for me): 819
Martin Luther. An Ode (Who sits upon the Pontiff's throne?): 10669
Martin the Monk ("The dim cathedral arches o'er my head"): 4724
Mary (Our child is dead. Death wore no dreadful form): 1350
Mary Anerley (Little Mary Anerley, sitting on the stile): 14202
Mary Ann (She is right weary of her days): 963
Mary Dhu (Song, Adapted to the Music of an Ancient Gaelic Air) (Sweet, sweet is the rose-bud): 14080
Mary,—The Soldier’s Bride (Gaze round thee, Stranger, ’tis a hallow’d spot): 9126
Mary. A Ballad (Her form was bent, her steps were small): 221
Mary's Birthday (She is at rest): 311
Mary's Dream ("The lovely moon had climb'd the hill"): 8055
Mary's Mount (Who, standing on this rural spot): 8729
Mary's Smile (What care I for summer weather): 14002
Mascha (For several years I dwelt in Petersburg): 14914
Master D’Aziliou (It was Master D’Aziliou): 14944
Master Olaf. (From the German) (Master Olaf, the Smith of Heligoland): 279
Masterless (Prancing and shaking his bit with delight): 13802
Matrimony (Then come those full confidings of the past): 2991
Matthew Arnold: April 15; 1888 (What mode, what measure, for so dear an head): 8934
Matthias to Albertus (My best Albertus, when your master's dead): 2431
Maud of the Manse (I sit to-night, and, reading, hear): 7672
Maude Clare (The fields were white with lily-buds): 232
Maude's Spinning (He listened at the porch that day): 11063
Mawgan of Melhuach ('Twas a fierce night when old Mawgan died): 8622
Mawgan of Melluach. The Cornish Wrecker ('Twas a fierce night when old Mawgan died!): 487
Maximus (Many, if God should make them Kings): 1564
May (Dear month of months, the poets' darling May): 1533
May (March hears the building rookery cawing ring): 6914
May (May, mother of Summer, sister of sweet Spring): 9556
May (Now the bright morning star, Day's harbinger): 2265
May (Queen of fresh flowers): 2193
May (Say, need we make the fond request): 15880
May (The daisy and the buttercup): 2186
May (The merry, merry month of May): 13434
May (The wet leaves flap, the sad boughs sway): 6701
May (Whilst troublous blow the southern April winds): 2813
May (Who gaily bound with cries of thrilling might): 15950
May and Death (I wish that when you died last May): 5768
May Blossoms (Hark! how rejoicingly the rivers flow): 7005
May Blossoms (Sweet hawthorn blossoms, with the kiss of May): 7499
May Cameron (May Cameron, my loved one, my best and my fairest): 8728
May Child (She asked me where the roses go): 7558
May Day (Up with the May-pole, little one): 12154
May Day Eve (All the world goes a-Maying!): 2078
May Ditty (Cuckoo! cuckoo! for love and mirth): 3821
May Eve (There’s a crying at my window, and a hand upon my door): 15968
May Flowers (Sweet flowers every one!): 5873
May in Lincolnshire. After the Manner of Southey's Cataract of Lodore (What are the chief delights of May): 13966
May in Surrey (The cuckoo's thrilling voice is in the air): 5298
May It Last (Cross the field a breeze it bore the roses): 5821
May Melodies (Two Robin Readbreasts sat on a tree): 2521
May Month ("Because the month is May," he said): 1928
May Morn at Magdalen College, Oxford (Hail sacred city of the Nine! your halls): 12152
May Morn. A Vision (Shame be to him who sits at home and thinks): 4401
May Morning (Up and away! ’tis jocund May): 6426
May Morning Rain (Oh sweet, oh sweet, oh sweet the Spring): 13674
May Weeds and May Flowers (The clouds that wait around the sun): 7166
May-Blossom (Soft blossom-snow, so white and sweet): 12708
May-Day in New England (Can this be May? Can this be May?): 4377
May-Day Prayer (Give me, gods, a maiden fair): 581
May-Day, 1862. An Ode (It is the morn of May!): 406
May-Song (There's a time for all good lasses): 9672
May: A Sonnet (Come forth, my Silvia; we must haste away): 12878
Mæcenas Atavis (Mæcenas of the royal line): 8667
Me and My Mate. A Whitby Story (Mates? ay, we’ve been mates together): 14594
Meadow-Treasures (All along the meadow ways): 13359
Meditations of a Bereaved Lover on the Sea-Shore ('Tis the sweet hour of Eve, when all): 15052
Meditations of a Hindu, Prince and Sceptic (All the world over, I wonder, in lands that I never have trod): 12054
Medway Song (Heaven, I think, lies somewhere near): 2310
Meeting (So take my hand, and let all lingering cloud): 13358
Meetings and Partings (For ever, like the seaweed tost): 15504
Meg O' Marley (O ken ye Meg O' Marley glen): 10455
Mehalah (Sleep on, Mehalah; let the rude waves beat): 13009
Melancholia (In the cold starlight, on the barren beach): 15003
Melancholia (Saidst thou, The night is ending, day is near?): 12035
Melancholia (Within the solemn sounding of the sea): 2888
Melancholy (Hence, all you vain delights): 6266
Melancholy (It was an hour of deep and chilling gloom): 11668
Melancholy Moments (It is not pain, it is not grief): 5312
Meleager on Spring (When windy winter flies the milder air): 14129
Meleager's Lament for His Wife Heliodora. From the Greek Anthology (Tears, Heliodora, tears alone may be): 9460
Melodies for Middle Age. No. I (I almost thought the days were past): 11397
Memento Mori (The change, the mighty mystic change may come): 4816
Memnon and His Mate (On Tébes' Plain, at labouring dawn): 1447
Memories (A crimson sunset's memory): 6478
Memories (A little window, and a broad expanse): 12616
Memories (Many the thoughts they bring): 7139
Memories (Marjoram, pansies, mignonette): 2446
Memories (Memories on which we dwell): 7087
Memories (O come not back with glare of day): 727
Memories (Once more beneath my yearning eyes): 13101
Memories (Once wand’ring ’mong the autumn woods): 14245
Memories (When the gray twilight softly spreads): 7204
Memories of a Brother (With hair of a deep, deep brown): 352
Memories. A Song (O Love, since we two bade good-bye): 13326
Memory (A wail of child at midnight): 2704
Memory (How oft, in silence, secretly, alone): 6910
Memory (I am an old man–very old): 5937
Memory (My home is now a thousand miles away): 10490
Memory (Past the old gateway of the childhood's home): 4828
Memory (Talk not to me of memory!): 15284
Memory and Hope (Mem’ry with the happy sleeps): 15460
Memory in Solitude (Hail, Memory! fairy bark, that lov'st to glide): 15263
Memory. An Unpublished Fragment Out of Dante’s “Inferno” (Then I was led into another sphere): 13835
Memory. An Unpublished Poem by Charlotte Brontë (When the dead in their cold graves are lying): 12019
Memory. Inscription on an Urn. From the French (Of all the early hours I knew): 15222
Memory’s Song (The earth cast off her snowy shrouds): 14565
Mems. on Members (While Serjeant Spinks): 13661
Men of Genius (Silent, the Lord of the world): 11944
Menam and Spey (Through the white sunlit air): 12662
Mendelssohn's "Duetto" by Moonlight (To-night the sea is sleeping, and the air): 8404
Mephistopheles, General Dealer (Who'll buy tresses, bonnie brown tresses?): 3311
Mercy (God looked, and smiled, upon the wakening earth): 1163
Merlin and Kentigern. A Legend of Tweeddale (Come with me fair maiden, Lilias): 8844
Merlin and the White Death (Darely I sought, in shade and sun): 560
Merry England ("Merry England!" what a picture do these simple words recall!): 11401
Mervaunee. In Two Parts. Part I (When summer days are): 12333
Mervaunee. In Two Parts. Part II (Along the level sands I): 12335
Metamorphosis. (From the German of Robert Reinick) (Laughing spoke to me the maiden): 983
Metaphysics and Theology (At the end of every road there stands a wall): 3312
Metempsychosis (There's nothing so strange, Pythagoras): 885
Method (Nature, that will not be commanded, never): 2911
Miasma (Near a cotter's back door, in a murky lane): 1319
Michael Angelo and the Friar (Would it were always day! These gathering shades): 9099
Michael Angelo: A Dramatic Anecdote (Battista. Well, it is curious, I confess): 14229
Michael Scott (The King sat in his chamber, and wroth of heart was he): 13816
Michael Smith's Letter (In deepest darkness of the deadly mine): 7442
Michael the Archangel: A Statuette (My white archangel, with thy steady eyes): 6180
Michaelmas (The brief September days are waning fast): 12841
Michaelmas Daisies (You wonder, darling, why I love): 4825
Michaelmas Day (Up in the fresh cool morn, Maggie): 13552
Mid-Day in Summer (Lo! lying in the fierce meridian heat): 7394
Mid-May. A Wish (In long, lush grass the deep-hued bluebells blow): 13345
Middle Age (All over; aye, I look at mine own hand): 4506
Midnight (Midnight! So deep the stillness, I can hear): 13366
Midnight (Sail on, O silvern moon, through placid plains): 13962
Midnight (Soft be thy step! Night, the meek mother, lies): 11676
Midnight Confession (From Charles Baudelaire) (At the dreary midnight hour): 616
Midnight Despondings. A Sonnet (Tis midnight,—and there is no moon in heaven): 9445
Midnight Music ("What wakes me from my heavy sleep"): 11776
Midnight—Written at Bermuda (Midnight is on the earth!): 14628
Midnight. Veneziana (Hark! what rich music! seems it not to rise): 15077
Midsummer Eve (A sunset glory lines the west): 4075
Mignon (Know'st thou the land where the pale citron grows): 10658
Mignon's Song (Know you the land where the lemon-tree blows): 11254
Mignonette (That low white wicket! As the sun went down): 4098
Mignonette (There is no rose, among the garden flowers): 1810
Mignonette (Within the sense of touch and sight): 4273
Mill Near Havant, Langston Harbour, Hants (A mill—dull, plodding, energetic, constant): 13682
Milo (Ye Gods! ye Gods! What fate is this ye send?): 14276
Milo's Destiny (How oft must men a fate like Milo's mourn): 14715
Milton (God gave to thee the keys of heaven and hell): 7765
Milton (His spirit was the home): 13866
Milton: 1674 (The sun was set: one thin cloud, high in air): 14321
Milton. Alcaics (O mighty-mouth'd inventor of harmonies): 12224
Milton's Sonnet on His Blindness (When I consider how my light is spent): 2970
Minced-Pie; a Christmas Carol. To Miss S— (I sing Minced-Pie, the pride of Christmas cheer): 10763
Mine (Not much of earth belongs to me): 4577
Mine Enemy (I have a cruel enemy): 1688
Mine Host (Once with a landlord wondrous fine): 1351
Mine! For a German Air (O how my heart is beating as her name I keep repeating): 6254
Minerva Medica. For E. B. (In ancient Rome a temple stands): 1635
Minerva's Boon (They stood by their mother's chariot, the Argives young and fair): 4856
Ministering to Christ (A stranger sat beside the bed): 1240
Minna (Or dream I—or deceives mine eye?): 10823
Minna Troil—A Ballad (Two sisters bloom'd upon thy strand): 9708
Minnie's Musings. In Four Parts (He speaks but little when he's here): 3273
Minuet (Although I smile, my heart within is sighing): 8345
Mirabeau (Not oft before has peopled Earth sent up so deep and wide a groan): 14363
Mirage (Hot lies the sand beneath the weary feet): 4650
Mirage (No happy change my garden knew): 14502
Miranda (She was not beautiful as many are): 15821
Miriam. Obiit 185- (God rest thee!): 6310
Mirkwood Mere (Late, when the autumn evening fell): 3012
Misery ('Twas neither day nor night, but both together): 3205
Misnamed in Vain (I through the city on a summer's day): 2865
Miss Honor's Wedding (Ould Sir Maurice's youngest daughter, do I mind her, Sir, did ye say?): 12414
Miss Lily (Miss Lily lives in a strange old house): 1722
Missed (A silence like the hush of fear): 7673
Missed (I miss you, dear, in the spring-time when the willows blossom whitely): 12660
Missions and Travels (Not sedentary at all: there are who roam): 9840
Mist-Wraiths (When morning stands above the purple hills): 4538
Mistletoe (A cold dark night): 12853
Mizpah (Over the hills, when the daylight dies): 12442
Mizpah (We never used the word while thou and I): 4746
Mogha Neid. A Celtic Fragment (On the plain of Tulaigh, in his last battle-field): 14188
Mohammed (Mohammed, the divine (ere yet his name)): 2853
Mollie Charane ("Oh, Mollie Charane, where got you your gold?"): 11669
Molly and Richard's Dialogue (I tell thee what, Richard,—'tis better for thee): 5354
Molly Astore ("As down on Banna's banks I strayed"): 14800
Moments Fled (Oh, ye moments fled): 15758
Momus—Or an Hour at Bath (Thrice the Abbey clock doth chime): 10170
Monastic Voluptuousness (Yet more,—round many a Convent's blazing fire): 9844
Monmouth (The windows flash in Taunton town): 1437
Monody (They're all, all gone, my loved, my own!): 15396
Mont Blanc (Chief of the giant mountains! awful form!): 15520
Mont Blanc (He who looks upwards from the vale by night): 5177
Mont Blanc. An Imaginary Sonnet, by Sir Walter Scott, While Composing His Swiss Story, Anne of Geierstein (When bold emprise, by thrilling hopes and fears): 10534
Montenegro (They rose to where their sovran eagle sails): 7850
Montero's Flight. (Vide 'Times,' 17th July 1874) (We were fighting for Don Carlos—the cause of God and Spain): 10231
Monument and Turf (Full in the midst of these gray bounds): 6890
Monuments (The marble bears his name, and tells his story): 9116
Moon-Rise (Night, beloved night!): 9013
Moonlight Meditations (The Moon is rising from the ebon tuft): 9590
Moonlight Memories (They say deceit and change divide): 10436
Moonlight on the Lake (In the autumnal gloaming sad and chill): 13196
Moonrise (A man stood on a barren mountain peak): 1308
Moonset (I love the sunset's glowing ray): 7203
Moonstruck (It is a moor): 6483
Moore (Crowned with perennial flowers): 13880
Mopsa’s Tale. "Et in Arcadiâ ego." (In the Arcadia, Sidney’s fair romance): 14563
Mora Campbell (When that dire year had come and gone): 11911
Moral Song (Though from certain crimes exempt): 3386
Moralitas (She that giveth heart away): 10758
Moray and His Thirty. March, 1313 (Long as the fair old city stands, the glory of the North): 4714
Morbegno (There is a long straight road in Lombardy): 14580
Morituri Te Salutamus (Place the Laurel on his brow): 2240
Moriturus! A Spring Lament (The sweet, wild pansies bloom upon the meadows): 13616
Morley Park. In Four Parts ("Friend Edward, from this turn remark"): 14033
Morn on the Mount ('Tis ecstasy on a high hill to stand): 10795
Morning ("Now have the mounting sun's all-ripening wings"): 15781
Morning (Day is dawning. Slim and wide): 12314
Morning (From rounded hills and dimpling vales): 6725
Morning (Glances morning hither): 7952
Morning (Hence on thy shadowy wings, thou Queen of Rest): 5423
Morning (O life-restoring Morn, arise): 7090
Morning (The tide of human life ebbs to and fro): 13256
Morning (There is a parting in Night's murky veil): 10185
Morning and Evening (When first the glorious God of Day): 6773
Morning and Night (I love the joyous Morn!): 15726
Morning Dew (The dewdrops vanish one by one): 1900
Morning Hymn (My Temple is the Morning-sky): 9309
Morning in India (Morning in India, when the mango-showers): 15490
Morning in the East (Morn opes her eye; rock, valley, mount and stream): 15717
Morning on the Mountains (The pale blue mist lies on the mountain crest): 3925
Morning Song (Sweet sounds of morning mingle!): 15280
Morning. (On Seeing a Picture by Bentley.) Inscribed to the Lady Jane Moore (Up glide the vapours of the summer night): 4799
Mortality (The house is old, the house is cold): 5958
Mortality (Ye dainty mosses, lichens gray): 6375
Moscow. Written After the Invasion of Russia by the French (The day-star was retiring in the south): 9444
Moses Saved from the Waters. (From Victor Hugo) (Maidens arise! for the silver stream): 942
Moss (Calm sleeper ’long the mould’ring wall): 6450
Moss-Roses (White with the whiteness of the snow): 4494
Mother and Child (Danae and Perseus) (Closed in the fine-wrought chest): 2669
Mother Country (Oh what is that country): 14215
Mother Dear, Where Art Thou? (Mother, dear, where art thou? Dost thou hear me calling): 6049
Mother-Earth (The miser's grasp upon his gold): 6655
Mothering Sunday (Mid-Lent Sunday) (A mist of leaves, a maze of light, about the gates of Spring): 13341
Motion ("There is," once said the bearded sage, "no motion!"): 11025
Motley (Before a world of tremulous green baize): 1327
Mount Arafa. In Two Parts (Driven away from Eden's gate): 2314
Mount Arafa. In Two Parts (Meanwhile through lowland, holt, and glade): 2319
Mount Tabor ('Tis evening upon Tabor's hill): 15430
Mountain Crosses (On Alpine heights, like Mont Cenis): 13559
Mountain Memories ('Twas but a day—but then that day): 11973
Mountain Phoenix ("She'd draw with her needle the map of old Erin"): 14801
Mountaineer and Poet (The simple goathered who treads places high): 10790
Mountains in Snow (Cold–oh, deathly cold–and silent, lie the white hills ’neath the sky): 6156
Mourir Pour La Patrie (By the voice of the gun that calls us): 8320
Movement. (India, 1853.) (In the dismal polar world): 9229
Mr. Bull's Second Song. The Sly Little Man (There are some of my neighbours who say of my song): 7739
Mr. Bull's Song. The Sly Little Man (There's a sly little man that lives over the way): 7738
Mrs. Jones's Lodger. A Legend of Southend (Come, come, you must have another cup, with just a flavior of gin): 13646
Mrs. Katherine's Lantern. (Written by W. M. Thackeray in a Lady's Album.) ("Coming from a gloomy court"): 12048
MSS. No II. To Marshal— on his Return; or, Congratulatory Address by Mons.— (O welcome home, my marshal, my colleague true and good): 8749
Mumal and Mendra. A Legend of Scinde ("Read it again, and tell me, who was she?"): 610
Mungo Clark, the South Country Packman (A Packman, Mungo, of no vulgar kind): 9167
Municipal Elections the Day After Christmas Day (Ungodly land! and is there such a dearth): 11803
Murmurs (Why wilt thou make bright music): 1406
Murmurs from the Land’s End (Upon the breezes of the west): 8370
Musa (Away with you, baby, away to the garden): 273
Museddes (Ah! that once again my heart with blood is filled like beaker high): 14784
Music (’Tis true no verse of mine can tell): 6427
Music (A spirit came out from the Lord): 1982
Music (Give me sweet music when I'm sad): 15093
Music (I heard a warbling lark): 5192
Music (Music floating from the waters, ebbing through the valley slowly): 6399
Music (Music! how much of gaiety we owe): 15709
Music (Music! what raptures centre in the name!): 13938
Music (Strike the harp, the sylphs descending): 9199
Music (Sweet charmer of the cottage and the throne): 3253
Music (Within her mother's arms my infant lay): 11699
Music. (Translated from the French of Sully Prud'homme) (Oh! from all words refrain): 1063
Music's Mishap (Celestial Music! soul-pervading power!): 2875
Musing (Play on, dear love; I do not care): 14027
Musing (When o'er the soul the twilight of sweet musing): 13065
Musings (I was standing near a river): 14240
Musings (There is a small cloud in the sky): 7844
Musings in September (Out we went, we three): 5351
Musings in the Twilight (In the Twilight alone I am sitting): 7493
Must it be? (Must it be, O love, my darling!): 3642
Mutability (The flower that smiles to-day): 5251
Mutual Assistance (A man very lame): 5391
My Ain Countree (The sun rises bright in France): 10557
My Aunts (My aunts were aged, jealous of their fame): 9886
My Autumn Queen (Come, weary little maiden): 4360
My Baby (They made a little crown in heaven): 6882
My Baby's Lullaby (Oh, hush! little baby! Hush, hush! lullaby!): 7383
My Bath (Come here, good people great and small, that wander far abroad): 8968
My Beech Clump (Soft sunshine floods a peaceful world): 7680
My Belief ("What thy religion—those thou namest?"—"None"): 10686
My Birth-Day ("My birth-day!"—What a different sound): 2963
My Blanket Shawl (Auld friend, ance mair come frae the kist): 6031
My Bonny Mary (Where yarrow rowes amang the rocks): 10553
My Boy (A lock of golden hair): 7660
My Broad Domains (The fair domains of Art are infinite): 2590
My Child Love (How we played among the meadows): 4071
My Childhood's Thought (Three fields beyond our dwelling-place, a limpid streamlet floweth): 6028
My Childhood’s Tune (And has thou found my soul again): 5959
My Choice (You ask me if the face is fair): 7333
My Christian Name (My Christian name—my Christian name): 6073
My Church in Town (My church in town! It fronts our square): 3223
My Cid (My Cid, my lion-tawny pup): 12253
My Confession (Wife! long true to me): 499
My Cottage (My cottage stands upon a gentle hill): 4690
My Country Church (The elms upon the village green): 13569
My Daughter (One Sunday, in Dundee, love—'twas noontide of the day): 7721
My Dog (We two are together in the study): 14899
My Dog's Epitaph. By the Subaltern (Sleep on, sleep on! thou gentle one): 10451
My Double-Blossoming Cherry-Tree (Grows ’neath my windows a cherry-tree): 583
My Dove (I had a dove and the sweet Dove died): 2286
My Dream-Love (Through the sweet early morning doth she come): 4672
My Dream, Love (There is a spirit comes from above): 13758
My Een Are Dim Wi' Tears (My een are dim wi' tears, John): 6024
My Evening (Farewell, bright Sun! mine eyes have watch'd): 9935
My Father (Sacred the hour when thou, my sainted Father): 15459
My Father's Grave (The mound is green, the grass is growing): 15667
My Favourite Tree. A Sketch (My favourite tree! I love his lusty arms): 5743
My Fly (Come hither, fly, that on my window-pane): 13774
My Friend (My Friend has a cheerful smile of his own): 6418
My Friend (Two days ago with dancing glancing hair): 14115
My Friend (Wouldst thou be friend of mine?): 10540
My Friends (I have some friends that I most fondly cherish): 12565
My Garden (I have a garden no man knows): 14051
My Garden (I love my garden, dearly love): 9880
My Garden (My garden all a shimmer of leaves): 12449
My Garden (My garden is a tiny spot): 6715
My Garden Gate (A green lane winds across the down): 12718
My Good Old Aunt—A Sketch (Ah! never, never can my heart forget): 11428
My Grave (Far from the city's ceaseless hum): 11334
My Grave (Shall they bury me in the deep): 5844
My Grave! (Far from the city's ceaseless hum): 3025
My Heritage (In close communion with the mighty dead): 14205
My Holiday (The town is blackening on the sky): 2855
My Home (The evening hours are here—the hours I prize): 511
My Home in Annandale Revisited (I leave with joy the smoky town): 12800
My Household Jewels (My first-born is a gladsome child): 5598
My Island Home (My Island Home! I love thee well): 3355
My Jack (Along the roof-line, sharp and red): 6904
My John (I wish we still were little, John): 14852
My Journal (It is a dreary evening): 1431
My Kate (She was not as pretty as women I know): 5705
My Knight (My little knight and I together read): 2347
My Lady (My Lady's house is sweet and small): 12194
My Lady's Coming (Time stole over the hill one morn): 2233
My Lady's Farewell (Go forth, go forth, my dearest): 892
My Lady's Picture (In a corner of the castle—where long shadows dim and dusty): 4712
My Lady's Song (Sing again, oh, lady mine): 14910
My Ladye Love (See! my longing eyes behold her): 12128
My Letter (I read it, my letter, my letter, as I sate in my rocky nest): 4701
My Letters (Another mizzling, drizzling day!): 10987
My Library (As one who pauses on a rock): 8962
My Life (Little tho' my life may be): 2449
My Life (To me my life seems as a haunted house): 12212
My Little Book (A little book of sundry songs): 12876
My Little Boy that Died (Look at his pretty face for just one minute!): 3594
My Little Picture (I have sent you a little picture): 931
My Little Primrose Flower (There grows a golden primrose): 7205
My Little Sweetheart (Ah! sad are they of whom no poet writes): 6634
My Little Wife (My little wife has two merry black eyes): 9599
My Little Woman (A homely cottage, quaint and old): 3590
My Loss (In the world was one green nook I knew): 12036
My Lost Love (Were we but sure that he who won my Sweet): 12944
My Lost Love (When I awake from heavy-lidded sleep): 7311
My Lost Love (When the silence of the midnight): 4521
My Love (My love is pale, but in her cheeks): 7676
My Love (She steps along the polished mead): 7509
My Love at Church (When thou, my fair one, passed into the church): 8716
My Love of Long Ago (There are faces just as perfect): 13174
My Lover ("I love you, all the world, I do"): 12705
My Lovers Twain (My lovers twain—my lovers twain): 12195
My Maid Marian (Spring comes, with violet eyes unveiled): 2729
My Marsh Farm (Let others boast of granite peaks): 13538
My Mother (I hear the evening winds among): 5802
My Mother (In that sequester'd glen my breath I drew): 9885
My Mother (It is my mother with her raven hair): 965
My Mother's Grave (O rise and sit in soft attire): 3260
My Mother's Grave (There is a spot on this wide earth): 3776
My Mother's Grave. Supposed to be Suggested to a Repentant Prodigal by the Frontispiece to the "Forget Me Not" for 1827 (My mother's grave! my mother's grave! what bitter thought it brings!): 14476
My Mother's Kiss (I love to hear the music): 5379
My Mother's Song (When the thrushes cease their singing, and the wild-bees leave the clover): 13348
My Native Bay (My native bay is calm and bright): 3009
My Native Bay (My native bay is calm and bright): 7201
My Native Place (O what a joy it was to me): 15772
My Native Spot (My native spot, my native spot): 3846
My Native Tongue (I wander'd on mountains of Ind): 9115
My Native Vale (Exotics hence! away, ye alien train): 15060
My Neighbour ("Love thou thy Neighbour," we are told): 3075
My Neighbour Rose (Though slender walls our hearths divide): 11988
My Neighbour's Wife! (Hark! Hark to my neighbour's flute!): 12303
My Nell. (A Soliloquy). Founded on Beranger. (You are nobly born, I know.): 5293
My Niece Fanny Vane! (Well, I own that I shrink in the world's busy way): 4955
My Noonday Dream (Down the Phocian groves of laurel): 729
My Old Dog and I ("Nay, not to-day, my good old fellow"): 10882
My Old Love (I hear in the thicket the brooklet's fall): 6759
My only Love (My only love is always near): 12222
My Own Familiar Hills (Your charm abideth ever): 3951
My Own Fire-Side (Let others seek for empty joys): 3333
My Own Girl (Fifteen shillings—no more, sir—): 3953
My Own Miniature (And was I ever such an elf): 12166
My Palace (High over the lamp-post, high over the street): 12046
My Peggy Is A Young Thing (My Peggy is a young thing): 3350
My Pet Corn (I stood beside an awkward puddle): 14595
My Picture (Stand this way—more near the window): 1358
My Pictures (They gleam upon me from the silent walls): 4014
My Possessions (I am not rich in worldly goods): 6452
My Scottish Boy (My Scottish boy why art thou sad): 45
My Secret (Bend your heads, ye tall trees, above): 7692
My Sister (Up many flights of crazy stairs): 1468
My Snow Image (I raised an image when the snow lay white): 13013
My Songs. Translated from Petöfi (I'm lost in thought, I cannot understand): 3276
My Spirit's Home (Where is the home my spirit seeks): 6196
My Stella's Return (Away care and sorrow, dark visions away): 15067
My Study (Let others strive for wealth or praise): 779
My Study (Yes! Contemplation hath her holy nooks!): 6903
My Swan-Song. To — (Sing?—How should I sing): 9760
My Sweetheart (Brimful of mirth and chatter): 2210
My Sweetheart (Do you know my sweetheart, sir?): 6883
My Timepiece (The hour has struck its advent and farewell): 2007
My Toy (I made the plaything myself you see): 3919
My Treasure (I have a treasure. What is it, say): 412
My Treasure-Box. (Rondeau Redoublé) (My Treasure-box contains nor gems nor gold): 15974
My True Love hath my Heart (My true love hath my heart, and I have his): 2313
My Tyrant (In stockings I stand six feet high): 13631
My Valentine (Oh, lovely Earth! awake to welcome her): 7489
My Valentine (Sit so a little, Amy dear): 2174
My Violin (Art naught but deal, with form and screw and line?): 13096
My Vision (I heard the voice of Ages): 1515
My Walk (Ye gentle folks that live in town): 14617
My Wasted Youth (Let me alone!): 8881
My Wife (I held her, laughing, in my arms): 6980
My Wife (My little wife is out beyond the burn): 12263
My Wife Shall Hae Her Will (If my dear wife should choose to gang): 3626
My Will (Since I have no lands or houses): 2830
My Wish (If but for one brief day my soul might roam): 7731
My Wold Field (I scorn the man who only sees): 7317
Myosotis (Fair Myosotis, where the murmuring river): 13205
Mystery (Curse not the web of circumstance): 8162
Nach Zehn Jahren (After Ten Years). From the German of Emmanuel Geibel (I wandered long abroad, and thence returned): 472
Naebody Kens Ye (Are ye doin' ought weel?—are ye thrivin', my man?): 5408
Naebody's Bairn (She was Naebody's bairn, she was Naebody's Bairn): 6300
Nahum. Chiropodist. A Character Sketch (This was how I first came to know): 3995
Nameless (There is no name, no mark, no sign): 13241
Names (How many Names are spoken, full of mystery): 5207
Naples (Enchantress, fairest, loveliest of the scenes): 4965
Napoleon (The mighty sun had just gone down): 9331
Napoleon's Address to the Statue of His Son (My dearest thought—my darling son): 9902
Napoleon's Telegraph on Montmartre (I see thee standing on thy height): 11497
Narcissus (A silver fountain paved with sandy grail): 967
Narcissus (Like as some solitary woodland flower): 7761
Narcissus (This white-leaved flower with heart of gold): 8408
Narcissus' Flower ("Ah me for youth! Ah me for dolorous eld!"): 8810
National Anthem—New Version (God bless our native land): 3633
National Song (There is no land like England): 11137
Native Scenery (Sweetly wild, sweetly wild): 5257
Natura Regina (Within its banks this little brook includes): 12294
Nature (I dreamt that I stepped into a vast): 14763
Nature (I love thee, Nature—love thee well): 3725
Nature (Nature, if our philosophers be right): 5929
Nature (O Nature, cold of heart): 12142
Nature (O, Nature! holy, meek, and mild): 3124
Nature (The fair smile of morning): 15611
Nature and God (Is not the world a perfect Heaven below): 14660
Nature and Her Child (At dawn she sent him a bird): 5102
Nature and the Dreamer (With proud and lofty brow uplift, and earnest kindling eye): 6488
Nature Consoles (Nature consoles us when Mankind): 7708
Nature Inevitable (O! Nature, I have sought to turn from thee): 14663
Nature Knows No Loss (The flying leaf with golden colours stained): 7630
Nature's Comforting (No, not to the April lilies): 4020
Nature's Farewell (A youth rode forth from his childhood's home): 10846
Nature's Five Lessons (Two years to build a house? The mushroom's roof): 3712
Nature's Haunts (Stranger, if thou hast learnt a truth, which needs): 3487
Nature's Magic (Give her the wreckage of strife―): 5080
Nature's Refrain. A Song of May (What is the merle reciting): 13084
Near the End (O the wild days of youth! the dear dead days!): 4147
Neæra. (Hor. Epod. xv) (The heavens were clear, the moon was bright): 14837
Nebuchadnezzar. A Poem (Behold! Ezekiel to the mountain turns): 11904
Ned Stokes's Carol on Cottages (With my shovel on my shoulder): 211
Neglected (A joyous smile, and a fond caress): 14060
Neighbour Nelly (I'm in love with Neighbour Nelly): 1423
Neighbours (When you live alone, how you hear each sound!): 12480
Neither Sulky Nor Sad (Merry and gay): 5130
Nell Gwyn (It is an olden ditty, full of tenderness and pity): 14389
Nell Latore: A Tale of the Canadian Rebellion of 1885 (. . . Rebel? . . . I grant you,–my comrades then): 5031
Nelly's Locket (The locket's new and dainty too): 2644
Nelson. An Old Man-O'-War's-Man's Yarn (Ay, ay, good neighbours, I have seen): 2816
Nemesis (We were sisters, fortune favour'd): 3210
Nemesis (When he and she were ten and eight): 12957
Nero's Grave (Through riot of rebellious Rome the rumour swiftly spread): 12483
Nestlings (O little bird! sing sweet among the leaves): 7456
Nestor and Tydides. [Pope's Homer's Iliad, Book VIII. Ver. 147] (The reverend charioteer directs the course): 3373
Never Despair (The opal-hued and many perfumed Morn): 1206
Never Forget (Never forget. May the clouds never come): 13078
Never Married (My mother had three daughters, an' the oldest one was me): 7918
Never to Know (One within, in a crimson glow): 1671
Nevermind! (When you see things wrong): 8981
Nevermore (The artless plans of childhood—the rambles through the wild wood): 7384
New Christmas Carol (Then fy let us a' to subscribing): 10167
New Faces (Oh give me new faces, new faces, new faces!): 15232
New Figures (Oh give me new figures!—I can't go on dancing): 15730
New Lights (Time was when haughty bigots ruled): 10220
New Lights and Old (We now-a-days are apt to slight): 6815
New Love, New Life (Heart—my heart! what means this feeling?): 10734
New Rays (Will men still say the light is good): 12753
New Rome. Lines Written for Miss Story's Album (The armless Vatican Cupid): 12218
New Theory of the Heart (When old Galileo first published his system): 3631
New Verses for the Queen's Anthem (God save fair England's Queen): 5270
New Verses on An Old Theme (Old bards have sung of love, yet is the theme): 5290
New Version of John Anderson My Joe (John Anderson, my joe, John): 3507
New Year 1879 (Come, cease your plaint; one year has fled): 6985
New Year in the Colonies (Across the great dividing seas): 5426
New Year's Chaunt (Adieu—adieu to lubberly sorrow): 10168
New Year's Eve (All on road and roof and ledge): 13515
New Year's Eve (Beneath the quiet Heaven's starry sheening): 1505
New Year's Eve (Goodbye, strange year, so fierce and yet so tender): 426
New Year's Eve (Laden with memories of tears and laughter): 1404
New Year's Eve (New Year! New Year! come over the snow): 1156
New Year's Eve (Now the midnight chimes tell the old year is ending): 2393
New Year's Eve (The shut-out wind is humming): 1322
New Year’s Wishes (Christmas is over, and Christmas cheer): 1647
New Years Day (Peal, peal, from the belfry tower): 12076
New-Year (Arise! arise! the wild winds urgent cry): 13393
New-Year's Day (How shall we welcome in the new-born Year?): 6775
New-Year’s Eve (Silent we stand ’neath the wintry sky): 12933
News to Tell (Neighbour, lend me your arm for I am not well): 4009
Nickar the Soulless (Where by the marishes): 14044
Night (Behold the silent empire of the Night!): 2417
Night (Dark shadow ’twixt to-morrow morn and me!): 7571
Night (How shall I name thee, night, Great Secresy?): 11552
Night (I love thee when thou comest, glorious sun): 10189
Night (Mysterious hour, that wrappest me around): 11672
Night (Night is the time for rest): 15905
Night (Night, blessed Night! thou art a faithful friend): 15635
Night (Night! thou'rt the time for rest): 5386
Night (Now to thy silent presence, night!): 7768
Night (O gentle Night! O thought-inspiring Night!): 12798
Night (O the beautiful strange visions seen within the silent night!): 7763
Night (Oh! beauteous is the golden light): 14481
Night (Slowly, the sunset fades): 2774
Night (Soul-soothing season! period of repose): 3243
Night (The earth is veiled in twilight gray): 7508
Night (The lovely ladye Night with stately mien): 2342
Night (The sunset fades into a common glow): 4006
Night (When the glaring day): 3070
Night (Who calls me dark? For I do not display): 7115
Night and Dawn (Bright are the dreams of the sleeping Night): 14336
Night and Love (O night of June, sweet Night, be long!): 1011
Night and Love (The air is blowing wild and sweet): 15231
Night and Morning (So they've sent you a card, my Adonis): 198
Night and Morning (Was it a lie that they told me): 2790
Night and Morning Dreams (I wake from dreams of the night): 4167
Night at Flamborough Head (Fixed in the violet sky, the full-orbed moon): 12688
Night at Sea (Darkness is on the deep!): 4874
Night Bringeth Light (The night doth hold within its shadowy hands): 2801
Night Cry to God (It is not sad): 368
Night Showeth Knowledge (When I survey the bright): 4383
Night-Blowing Flowers (Call back your odours, lonely flowers): 15659
Night-Silence (Under the star-flecked mantle of the night): 12494
Night-Songs of the Sea (A rolling, restless, moaning sea): 5543
Nightfall (Lie still, O heart!): 7458
Nightfall (The sun is set, the clouds are on the hill): 7856
Nightingale and Cuckoo (Oh nightingale and cuckoo! it was meet): 12117
Nightingale: A Rhapsody. (In Ireland) (I have not seen you, I have not heard you): 2197
Nina (How bright, how glad, how gay): 9836
No 1. Despondency.—A Reverie ('Twas on the evening of an August day): 8421
No 1. Elijah (Elijah with his mantle smote the waves): 8475
No Death! (The Lord of Life went down): 5565
No Followers (What's the hardest of all things to follow?): 3198
No Highlands This Year. A Parson's Apology (Untouched by me, on moor and tree): 10236
No II. The Ballad of Bacchus (Of the son of the glorious Semele): 10990
No II. The Casting Forth of Jonah (Dark lowered around the canopy of clouds): 8476
No II. The Woodland Glen (The sun is sinking behind the mountain): 8422
No III. The Isle of Despair. A Vision (Cold blew the noisy winds unceasingly): 8423
No III. The Vision of Zechariah (With smiling cheek, and eyes of cloudless light): 8477
No IV. The Forayer (An old oak forest rose upon my sight): 8438
No IV. The Humours of Hermes (Sing me of Hermes, son of Jove): 11017
No IX. The Elm Trees (Oh! may these trees be ever green): 8743
No King or Peer for me (I'll sing, despite the tyrant laws): 96
No Man's Land (I may not hear the summer rain upon the parched ground fall): 12579
No More (No more—oh! it must be no more): 3787
No More (Oh, the soft wind over the sea): 4974
No More (To meet no more): 4611
No More of Love (Oh speak no more of Love, I pray): 15366
No News from the War (Is she sitting in the meadow): 2102
No Prayer To-Night (No prayer to-night! No golden head): 13088
No Rose Without a Thorn (One fond heart, and only one): 14238
No Tears ("No tears to weep!" And wherefore not?): 12847
No Tidings ("No tidings," she said, "Of my love to-day"): 2461
No V. Ceres (Of venerable Ceres would I sing): 11156
No V. The Cypress Tree (A slender tree upon a bank): 8440
No VI. To the Morning Star (Pale Star! that lookest o'er the waters blue): 8441
No VII. Midnight Wanderings (Blue is the vault of heaven—the gems): 8741
No VIII. The Clouds frown dark (The clouds frown dark upon the sky): 8742
No Work (The workman's idle, and he stalks about): 131
No Work to Do. A New Song to a Very Old Tune (We're a set of knaves and lazy loons): 3693
No X. Solitude (The autumnal sun, with melancholy ray): 8999
No XI. Summer Twilight (The clouds pass away, and are leaving the sky): 9000
No, Love, No! (Dost thou forget the evening walk): 2505
No. I (A mountain child, ’mid Pentland’s solitudes): 10091
No. I. Bloom and Blight (The scene is desolate and bleak): 11731
No. I. Boyhood Thoughts (Season of ripening fruits and rustling grain): 10577
No. I. Go the Whole Hog! Sung With an Accompaniment of Marrow-bones and Cleavers (Ye Tories, who labour by pushing a face): 11623
No. I. Love, Music, and Moonlight ('Twas on a balmy eve of June): 11855
No. I. Return—Once More Return (Return—once more return): 11189
No. I. The Bedouin's Song of Home in a Distant Land (Let me depart—let me depart): 11230
No. I. The Blaze on the Heart (Then good-bye, Joe; you've gone, I'm told): 10272
No. I. The Defeat of Winter (But yester morn the frozen snow): 11839
No. I. The Invitation (Oh come, with thy blue eyes of beaming): 9345
No. I. The Prisoner (Come, leave your work, the daylight flies): 11889
No. I. The Silent Mourner (She leant o'er the dwelling of him): 9921
No. I. To the Skylark (Awake ere the morning dawn—skylark, arise!): 12268
No. I. Vanity (Behold a madman!—on the thirsty sands): 10192
No. I.—Daybreak (Slow clear away the misty shades of morn): 10607
No. I.—Melrose Abbey (Summer was on thee—the meridean light): 10306
No. I.—The Ganges (The waves are dashing proudly down): 9287
No. I.—To Neptune (God of the mighty deep! wherever new): 11562
No. II (Not lovelier to the bard's enamour'd gaze): 10092
No. II. Farewell to a Scene of Youth (Farewell, vernal landscape, whose valleys are bright): 11840
No. II. Hawthornden—A Sketch (Stranger! the spot is wild, the banks are steep): 9922
No. II. Oh! Who Is Like the Mighty One (Oh! Who is like the Mighty One): 11190
No. II. The Blueberry Frolic (Oh, Barbara dear, you'll come with me): 10459
No. II. The Grand Junction (Come reach thy fist in fellowship, good neighbour, unto me): 11653
No. II. The Rainbow (Foreboding gloom o'erspread the summer plain): 11856
No. II. The Separation (In youth our hearts together grew): 9346
No. II. The Snow-Fall (In darkness closed the evening; cloud on cloud): 11732
No. II. The Voice of the Wilderness (Where are they—where are they? the lovely, the brave!): 11231
No. II. The World (There is a tumult in the wilderness): 10193
No. II. Twilight Thoughts (Hoarse chatter'd the crow on the boughs overhead): 12269
No. II. Youthful Memories (Yes! ’tis the gillyflower that blossoms here): 10578
No. II.—Abbotsford (The calm of evening o'er the dark pine wood): 10307
No. II.—Gour (I gazed upon the ruins, wrapt in thought): 9288
No. II.—Snow-Storm (How gloom the clouds! quite stifled is the ray): 10608
No. II.—To Apollo (Bright-hair'd Apollo!—Thou who ever art): 11563
No. III (Down from the gloomy forests of Dalkeith): 10093
No. III. An April Evening (With what serene tranquility pale Eve): 11841
No. III. Apollo (Glorious Apollo, Archer God, whom all): 11082
No. III. Destruction (See how that giant, on his iron car): 10194
No. III. Haddon Hall, Yorkshire (Green weeds o'ertop thy ruined wall): 12270
No. III. How Pleasant Is the Opening Year (How pleasant is the opening year!): 11191
No. III. Light in Darkness. A Sapphic Hymn (Where is the blue calm, that mantled old Ocean): 11733
No. III. Mature Realities (How beautiful the sunset—yet how sad!): 10579
No. III. Stanzas—The Clouds were Dispersed (The clouds were dispersed, and the tempest was o'er): 9923
No. III. Starlight Retrospections (Upon this column—overthrown): 11857
No. III. The Dreary Moor (The blinding rain falls heavily): 9347
No. III. The Shiek's Revenge (To Abdallah's tent a stranger came): 11255
No. III. Waiting for You, Jock (Winter's agoing): 10460
No. III. We've Nothing to Lose (O! what a prospect, how pleasant and cheering now): 11654
No. III.—Clear Frost ('Tis noon, the heaven is clear without a cloud): 10609
No. III.—Dryburgh Abbey (Beneath Tweed murmured ’mid the forests green): 10308
No. III.—Lines Written on the Fly-Leaf of My Bible (I sought for fame; by day and night): 9289
No. III.—To Venus (Oh Thou, most lovely and most beautiful!): 11564
No. IV (Delightful ’tis, and soothing sweet, at eve): 10094
No. IV. Elegiac Stanzas (Farewell! If there can be farewell): 12271
No. IV. Human Life (How change our days! not oftener doth its hue): 10195
No. IV. Regrets and Anticipations (Ripe-dropping fruits, shorn fields, and cloudy skies): 10580
No. IV. Spring Afternoon (It is a lovely afternoon): 9924
No. IV. The Craven Heart (Hark! ’his battle-cry borne on the gale): 11256
No. IV. The Death of Absalom (The battle's voice waned fainter; but the heath): 9232
No. IV. The Evening Lake (How softly o er the silver lake): 9348
No. IV. The Gathering of the Mahonys (Jerry Mahony, arrah, my jewel, come, let us be off to the fair): 9577
No. IV. The Long Voyage (The mackerel boats sailed slowly out): 10461
No. IV.—Moonlight (Behold the mountain peaks how sharply lined): 10610
No. IV.—Nidpath Castle (Stern rugged pile! thou speakest of the days): 10309
No. IV.—To Bacchus (Where art thou, Bacchus? On the vine-spread hills): 11592
No. IV.—To Diana (Most graceful Goddess!—whether new thou art): 11565
No. IX. To Betsy (Though, Betsy, another's thou art): 9434
No. IX. True Valour (Ask ye the warrior's falchion bright): 11366
No. V (A beech tree spreads aloft its emerald boughs): 10095
No. V. Afeared of a Gall (Oh, darn it all!—afeared of her): 10462
No. V. Dying Request of a Hindu Girl (Keep, dear friends, when I am dead): 11332
No. V. The Marble Heart (When Love's first flush came o'er my heart): 9349
No. V. The Olive Bough (The dove flew east—the dove flew west): 9233
No. V.—To Mercury (Oh, winged Messenger! if thy light feet): 11566
No. V.—Vicissitude (Oh! sweetly beautiful it is to mark): 10611
No. V.—Wark Castle (Emblem of strength, which Time hath quite subdued!): 10310
No. VI (How often, resting on this verdant sod): 10096
No. VI. Hagar in the Wilderness (The sun was now declining on the sky): 9234
No. VI. The Evening Star (Oh sweetly shines the summer sun): 9350
No. VI. The Ruined Fountain (Flow on, limpid fountain, though deserts surround thee): 11333
No. VI.—Conclusions (All things around us preach of Death; yet Mirth): 10612
No. VI.—Helius, or the Sun (Daughter of Jove, Calliope, begin, sweet muse, and sing to me): 11180
No. VI.—The Bush Aboon Traquair (As speaks the sea-shell, from the window-sill): 10311
No. VII. Bedouin Lament for a Sheik (Dark Azrael! thy work is done): 11364
No. VII. The Pillow of the Tent ('Twas when the summer skies were blue, and when the leaf was green): 9432
No. VII.—Minerva (Pallas Minerva, goddess bright, with azure eye of heavenly light): 11181
No. VII.—To Somnus (Oh Thou, the leaden-eyed! with drooping lid): 11593
No. VIII. Come, Mary, to Me! (The sun is sinking brightly): 9433
No. VIII. Wisdom in the Wilderness (If the vain hopes from boyhood cherish'd): 11365
No. VIII.—Diana ("Queen and huntress, chaste and fair"): 11182
No. VIII.—To Ceres (Goddess of bounty! at whose spring-time call): 11594
No. X. The Evening Invitation (Oh Ida! fair Ida! the evening is sweet): 9435
No. XI. Absence (Mild the evening sun is shining): 9436
No. XI. The Finale (A Priest, who ne'er had smiled since hands were laid): 9883
No. XII. The Wanderer's Adieu (Receive, O beloved, in kindness receive): 9437
Nobody Cares! (A wearily-wan little face): 12298
Noche Serena (How tranquil is the night! The torrent's roar): 10793
Noctis Dea (Far in the west the glowing colours fade): 12567
Nocturne (In perfect rest the garden lies): 13028
Nocturne (In vain, O Moon, thy pensive rise): 13054
Nocturne (Night broodeth still o'er land and sea): 13300
Nocturne (Tender touches of the twilight are over the evening skies): 4941
Nocturne (The sweet breeze freshened, the moon shone bright): 13820
Nocturne. An Echo of Chopin (Wind, and the sound of a sea): 4249
Noël ("Shepherdess, when come you"): 14942
Noménoë. (Literally rendered from the Breton) (The herb of gold is cut: a cloud): 269
Non Satis ('Tis not enough to see thee, like a star): 300
Nonsense (Nonsense! thou delicious thing): 5375
Nonsense Written in the Album of an Unknown Lady (I know thee not; my wearied eyes): 5906
Noon (It is the height of noon—with coral buds): 15499
Nóra Crióna (You were like a lily on a grave): 15967
Nora's Farewell (You know that my life has been cradled here): 2468
Norfolk Punch. An Incantation (Twenty quarts of real Nantz): 10701
North and South (Glitter'd the ocean around, in light the billows were breaking): 11047
Northern Lights (December hung her glittering roof): 2844
Not Alone! (Companions fair had I, while as a child): 2095
Not Dead (They have said for long long years, she was dead): 7581
Not Glad, nor Sad (You sang a little song to-day): 14988
Not Lost (Being rooted like trees in one place): 14514
Not Lost, But Gone Before (Close on the fringes of a little wood): 5771
Not Love (I have not yet I could have loved thee, sweet): 2462
Not Mourn for Thee? (Not mourn for thee? Though tears be vain): 271
Not Now! (Not now!—not now!—I would not sorrowing hear): 11240
Not Seer, But Singer (Poet thou art, not Prophet! Darkly great): 12328
Not to Be (The rose said, "Let but this long rain be past"): 12315
Not to Myself Alone ("Not to myself alone"): 5884
Not until Next Time ("I dreamed that we were lovers still"): 8876
Not Yet (I met Content upon a flowery way): 5551
Not Yet (Not yet, not yet. Ah! let me gaze once more): 853
Nothing Cares (Ay, nothing cares: the buds peep out): 4096
Nothing Lost (Nothing is lost: the drop of dew): 7593
Nothing More (Place me beneath the apple-trees): 12670
Nothing to Spare (What! Hast thou nought to spare? Alas! thy lot): 7348
Notre Dame (Not up in cloudland, far aloft): 5491
Nought Abides But Love (Gold! gold! shining gold!): 4224
Novantia (Perhaps no common wilderness): 3559
November (For ever shuts the great eye of the World?): 11094
November (Hark! through the wood there rides a mail-clad knight): 15930
November (Is there a blessing above wealth?): 15886
November (Lo, a dim phantom steals across the land): 13505
November (November—and the world of shades is here!): 12021
November (November, month abhorred, is here again): 6937
November (Scarce one brief sun-ray gilds the sombre gloom): 7527
November (She was a lusty maid, to Winter wed): 11677
November (That orbèd maiden with white fire laden): 2234
November (Wrapt in dun fogs, which make the day seem night): 9559
November, In Six Sonnets (Slowly the glittering morning star declines): 9591
November. Sic Transit (The wild north wind is wailing o'er heath, and moor, and brae): 3838
Now (Arise! for the day is passing): 1317
Now (Rise! for the day is passing): 15867
Now, and Then (Birds are singing on bush and tree): 299
Number a Hundred (You will find by the cover, that our magazine): 10210
Number One (It's very hard! and so it is): 3343
Nunquam Novis (I love to know that they are olden): 6620
Nuptials in Jeopardy (Man needs a help-mate—there's no doubt of that): 9900
Nuptials out of Jeopardy (I hope you are not weary yet of Judith, my good Christopher): 9910
Nuptura (Hush! let me hear of love no more): 14618
Nursery Reminiscences (I remember, I remember): 10373
Nursery Reminiscences (I remember, I remember): 11713
Nutting (Amoret and I): 517
O Dolce Selva (O loved and lonely wood—as to a friend): 11704
O gin My Love were yon Red Rose (O gin my love were yon red rose): 1546
O Haru San (Here she lies, her dancing done): 2383
O Lady Mine. From the Greek of Paulus Silentiarius (O Lady mine! there needs no crowning rose): 7478
O Love! O Mine! (O Love! O Mine! this love of ours): 12254
O Mistress Mine (O mistress mine, where are ye roaming?): 2293
O Why Should a Woman Not Get a Degree? On Female Graduation and Ladies' Lectures (Ye fusty old fogies, Professors by name): 10456
O Wistful Eyes! (O wistful eyes! Where did you find your gleam?): 4838
O, mortal, heed thy life, nor quit the port (O, mortal, heed thy life, nor quit the port): 14134
Oasis (Far spreads the desert before and the waste behind us): 1034
Oasis (Thou camest hither with the crescent moon): 6454
Obedience (A noble master all may well obey): 9148
Oberwesel (The chimes of Oberwesel—oh how pleasantly and clear!): 5943
Occult Sympathies (If Nature knew my sorrow): 3683
Ocean (Oh, that this silver stream would bear my soul): 1421
October (A fitful wind about the eaves): 14827
October (Conquest-flushed, like a warrior bold): 13503
October (Few flowers, October, coronal thy head): 9558
October (Grey-tinted glide the clouds across the sky): 4097
October (It is no joy to me to sit): 6256
October (Now to the gladden’d eye appear): 15885
October (Once the year was gay and bright): 2217
October (The fields put on their cloth of gold): 2350
October (The tints you loved on the full foliaged trees): 4988
October (The year grows old; Summer's wild crown of roses): 6795
October (The year grows old; summer's wild crown of roses): 7873
October (Through pearling mists a dark-hair’d maiden peeps): 15924
October (When swallows dream of southern skies): 7574
October (Wood Nymph, October, thou art in thy "sere"): 11657
October 19, 1825 (The woods have doff'd their garb of purply gold): 10992
October in the Scottish Lowlands (The russet's o'er the heather): 2771
October Song (When the fields are ripe and yellow): 8957
October. (After Keats) (October misty bright, the touch is thine): 2513
October.—The Green Hill-Side (A song for dun October): 1750
October's End (Oh, sweet October sunshine, soft and bright): 4923
Octopus Redivivus; Or, the Devil Fish Restored to Favour (Old Horace pities many a king): 13654
Od. I. 11. "Tu Ne Quæsieris" (My sweet Leuconoe, seek no more): 14179
OD. I. 23. To Chloe (As the kid upon the hill): 8600
Od. I. 31. "Quid Dedicatum" (God of the poet, at thy new-built shrine): 14180
OD. III. 10. To Lyce: In Bloom (Hadst thou a savage mate, a home upon): 8606
Od. III. 13. "O Fons Bandusiæ" (Spring of Bandusia, crystal clear): 14181
OD. III. 15. To Chloris, a Crone (Wife of Ibycus the poor): 8610
Od. III. 21. "O Nata Mecum" (My good contemporary cask, whatever thou dost keep): 14178
OD. III. 7. To Asteriè (Why these tears, Asteriè?): 8602
OD. IV. 13. To Lyce: In Decay (Lyce! me the gods have heard): 8608
Ode for Music. On the Death of Lord Byron (O came ye by Dee's winding waters): 10621
Ode for the First Week of January to Messrs Galen and Glauber. Sapphic and Adonian (Galen and Glauber! men of pill and potion): 7741
Ode II. The Discipline of Youth (To bear privation as a friend—to love its wholesome stint): 10378
Ode III. Book I (May that lovable Goddess, the Cyprian Queen): 10251
Ode III. Book II (Keep a stout heart when times are bad, my boy): 10252
Ode IV. In Praise of Drusus and the Race of Neros (Ev'n as the thunder's wingèd minister): 10422
Ode IV. Invocation to Calliope (Descend, O Queen Calliope, from heaven): 10379
Ode on May Morning, M.DCCC.XXIII. By Odoherty (This is the season for the young and gay): 9944
Ode on the Birth-Day of Prince Charles Edward Stuart, The 20th of December, 1746 (Awhile forget the scene of woe): 9447
Ode on the Breaking of a China Quart Mug Belonging to the Buttery of Lincoln College (Whene'er the cruel hand of death): 8036
Ode on the Ceremonial at Windsor, 25th January 1842 (Boldly brilliant from afar): 10895
Ode on the Distant Prospect of a Good Dinner (Ye distant dishes, sideboards blest): 10842
Ode on the First of May (Hail! sacred thou to sacred joy): 4408
Ode on the King's Landing in Ireland, Twelfth August, MDCCCXXI (As I was sitting on the Shannon side): 9425
Ode on the Marriage of the Queen of England (Lift up your heads, ye glorious gates!): 11445
Ode on the Olden Time (The skies are blue; the moon reclines): 9344
Ode to A Nightingale (My heart aches, and a drowsy numbness pains): 3498
Ode to a Steam-Boat (On such an eve, perchance, as this): 10404
Ode to an Eagle (Ætherial bird! that on the mountain's peak): 3114
Ode to an Indian Gold Coin. Written in Chéricál, Malabar (Slave of the dark and dirty mine!): 2928
Ode to Beauty (Spirit of Beauty! thou): 6061
Ode to Blackwall (Let me sing thy praise, Blackwall!): 10911
Ode to Blindness (Ah! think if June’s delicious rays): 5244
Ode to Calcutta (Fair city, India's crown and pride): 15055
Ode to Dellius (An even mind in days of care): 8153
Ode to Enterprise (On lofty mountains roaming): 3316
Ode to Freedom, For the Fourth of July, the Anniversary of American Independence (Freedom, hail!—celestial goddess): 94
Ode to Hope (O gentle Hope! whose lovely form): 5398
Ode to Labour. (From Tait's Magazine) (Hail labour! source, thro' bounteous Nature's aid): 1
Ode to Lydia (Ah, Telephus, those arms of wax!): 8152
Ode to Memory (Come forth, I charge thee, arise): 11147
Ode to Mrs Flanagan (Why do you cry, my sweet Mrs Flanagan): 7885
Ode to Peace (Daughter of God! that sits on high): 3339
Ode to Poverty (Hail! mighty Power! who o'er my lot): 10063
Ode to Poverty (Hail! mighty power! who o'er my lot): 2984
Ode to Summer (Summer's coming! Summer's coming!): 6786
Ode to Tan Hill, Whilom Called Erroneously St Anne's Hill, in Wiltshire (Bless thy smooth crown, old round topp'd hill!): 10719
Ode to the Cuckoo (Hail, beauteous stranger of the grove): 5395
Ode to the Harp of Zion (Harp of the holy heart and hand): 10327
Ode to the Moon (Mother of light! how fairly dost thou go): 10620
Ode to the New Year (Thou hast a gift to offer, fresh New Year): 15978
Ode to the Poppy (Not for the promise of the laboured fields): 6970
Ode to the Swallow (The welcome cuckoo comes with spring): 7563
Ode to Tyrants (Who, and what are ye, scepter'd bullies—speak): 5
Ode To Yimmang River (On Yimmang's banks I love to stray): 3537
Ode VII. To Torquatus (Fled the snows—now the grass has returned to the meadows): 10423
Ode Written in the Cemetery of Pere la Chaise (The evening mild, the sky serene): 9216
Ode XI. Of Book I. Ad Leuconoën (Seek not to know what tale of years): 9764
Ode XIV. To Augustus, After the Victories of Tiberius (But what care can the Senate of Rome, and Rome's people): 10425
Ode XIX. To Telephus.—In Honour of Murena's Installation in the College of Augurs (You tell us how long after Inachus flourished): 10412
Ode XV. To Augustus on the Restoration of Peace (Of wars and vanquished cities when I longed): 10428
Ode XXIX. Invitation of Mæcenas (Long since, Mæcenas sprung from Tuscan kings): 10414
Ode XXV. Hymn to Bacchus (Whither, full of thee, O Bacchus): 10413
Ode XXX. Prediction of His Own Future Time (I have built a monument than bronze more lasting): 10415
Ode, By Coleridge, To Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, on the 24th Stanza in Her "Passage Over Mount Gothard" (Splendour's fondly fostered child!): 3495
Ode, Composed while the Sun was under Eclipse, 7th September, 1820 (Light wanes; dark clouds come hovering o'er): 8782
Ode. The Last Separation (We shall not rest together, love): 4791
Ode. The Pass of Kirkstone (Within the mind strong fancies work): 8465
Odin (Up the wide chimney roared the Christmas fire): 13395
Odoh. Od. I. Night i. Quizzes Frank Jeffrey on His Being Universally Sneered at in His Old Age (Jeffrey, your yellow-backed twaddle, in truth, my dear): 9718
Odoherty's Garland, in Honour of Mrs Cooke, the Great (Let the Emerald Isle make Obrien her boast): 8346
Odonnelly, an Ode (When green Erin laments for her hero removed): 8448
Odysseus (O'er all seas, in his search of home, lay the path of Odysseus): 11059
Oeschenen. (In the Bernese Oberland) (We passed beneath the pine-trees proud): 14933
Of Beauty (All loveliness is as an instrument): 1849
Of Celia's Roses (Would'st thou know why those roses fair): 1951
Of Certain White Doves (When yesterday): 1708
Of Love And Life (Her feet are set on a rugged way): 2157
Of Love and Time ("Dead but a month! Yet his smile is gay"): 13332
Of My Mistress' Presence (Lo! how her eyes, lo! how her hands): 8770
Of One in Russia (Dove that of old fraught with the olive-spray): 796
Of Solitude (Hail, old patrician trees, so great and good!): 2980
Of The Doleful Death, and Dirge, Of Harpalus and Of Phillida's Love Bestowed On Corin, Who Loved Her Not (Phillida was a fair maid): 2062
Off Crozon (The spire of old St. Malo makes a beacon true and brave): 4581
Off to "The House" (We have sold the bits of things, Ben, and there's nothing more to do): 2799
Off Ushant (What of the night, ho! Watcher there): 14693
Ogier the Dane (Often the starlight I have seen): 5966
Oh, Bury Me in the Country! (Oh, bury me in the country): 5586
Oh, Darling, When You Love Me! (Oh, darling, when you love me): 5027
Oh, For Life's Young Dream of Gladness! (Oh, for life's young dream of gladness!): 5679
Oh, give us food! (The suppliant nations of a mighty land): 14998
Oh, It Was in the Moonlight (Oh, it was in the moonlight): 5212
Oh, Peggy, If I Were Young! (Oh, Peggy, if I were young): 13647
Oh, Waly, Waly (Oh, waly, waly, up yon bank): 3344
Oh! Did I Not Foretell (Oh! did I not foretell): 10507
Oh! He Was Great in Cockney Land (Oh! he was great in Cockney Land, the monarch of his kind): 10508
Oh! Love While Love is Left to Thee. From the German (Oh! love while love is left to thee): 6428
Oh! The Flowery Month of June (Oh! the flowery month of June again I hail as summer's queen): 4413
Oh! This Were A Bright World (Oh! this were a bright world): 3486
Olaf The Sea-King A Scandanavian Ballad (Olaf the Viking, the young Sea-King): 1956
Old Adam (A "grand old gardener?"—not at all!): 6909
Old Age ("You are old, father William," the young man cried): 3635
Old Age (Old Age, the evening of our life, the air): 7600
Old Age (The years have robbed thee of so many things): 8977
Old Age (There came sad and gloomy days): 14751
Old Age's Garland (O cauld maun the heart be that's no set a-lowe): 6302
Old Alexandria (A tract of Egyptian desert sand): 3060
Old and New (All in its place as of old!): 2858
Old Büsum (Old Büsen sank into the waves): 14853
Old Dick Purser (Well, it do seem a power of a time ago): 3682
Old Echoes (You wonder that my tears should flow): 1274
Old Friends (My old Friends! my old Friends!): 15514
Old Friends (The old friends!): 3062
Old Friends (We just shake hands at meeting): 3076
Old Friends Together (Oh, time is sweet, when roses meet): 15382
Old King Hake (Born of the Sea on a rocky coast): 2824
Old Letters ("Burn them wholesale! Ancient scars"): 7004
Old Letters (Ay, better burn them. What does it avail?): 4483
Old Letters (In memory of the dear old times): 6608
Old Letters (My letters! written in my earnest boyhood): 4560
Old Letters (Old letters! oh spare them—they are priceless for their age!): 5476
Old London Bridge (On the bridge-crown my master dwelt; our lattice wide o'erhung the stream): 1313
Old Love (The broad sword loses its glitter): 4068
Old Lovers (Steer close beside the river's edge): 2225
Old Master Grunsey and Goodman Dodd. (Stratford-on-Avon, A.D. 1597) (God save you, Goodman Dodd!—a sight to see you!): 14048
Old Memories (As she walked through the lonely street): 2015
Old Moons ("Mother, where do the old moons go?"): 2303
Old Ralph (Alas! alas! How hard to die so young): 13463
Old Roger (Old Roger died: but how old Roger lived): 11537
Old Scotland's Lament (Oh! for the souls of our ancient men of might!): 11165
Old Song (Now Christmas is come): 1837
Old Songs (Old Songs! Old Songs!—how well I sung): 15445
Old Songs (The Songs of old, they come to us, and take possession of our heart): 7643
Old Time. Inscribed to S. A. H. (Young sculptor he, and full of youthful thoughts): 6078
Old Times (“Twas thirty years ago, and now”): 7146
Old Times (Fǒolks alluz säa as they git old): 8285
Old Voices (Across the seas they come to me): 13281
Olden Time (There is a mystery on departed things): 7745
Olden Times and Present (Ancient days of chivalry): 6979
Omàr and the Persian (The victor stood beside the spoil, and by the grinning dead): 1852
Omar Khayyam's Rubaiyyat. A Few of the Quatrains Untranslated by Fitzgerald, Literally Rendered in the Metre and According to the Rhyme of the Originals (When God created man from clay, He well): 12415
Omens (On the red leaves falling): 13557
Omphale (Two women, at the parting of two ways): 12220
On a Baptismal Font. Hymn XIII (On this sad spot—here, where the conscious ground): 9240
On a Bee Inclosed in Amber (Lucid the bee lurks here, bright amber her beauty inclosing!): 11064
On a Breton Cemetery (They sleep well here): 1135
On a Child Asleep (What are thy dreams, unconscious, happy one?): 3870
On a Child Killed by Lightning (As fearless as a cherub's rest): 15578
On a Childe Playing (Sweet bud, that bye and bye shall be a flowre): 10084
On a Country Road (Along these low pleached lanes, on such a day): 8163
On a Dead Woman (Yes: she was fair, if Night is so): 7949
On a Dried Wild-Flower in an Old School-Book (Relic of early days! My casual hand): 7125
On a Dull Spring (And is this Spring! that frenzied Poets feign): 11656
On a Dying Sister (Rose-bud! ne'er did the teeming lap of May): 8125
On a Faded Blue-Bell (And art thou fallen, fair flower, e'en so low): 3396
On A Girdle (That which her slender waist confined): 6622
On a Girl Sleeping (Thou liv'st! yet how profoundly deep): 10471
On a Heavy Fall of Snow on March 29 and 30, 1823 and 1824 (The breath of Spring was lately in the grove): 15584
On a June Morning (The meadow-lands with golden king-cups glow): 7453
On a Lady, Slandered (Her doom is writ;—her name is grown): 4794
On a Lady's Violin (Long, long ago, this priceless thing): 3989
On a Miniature of a Lady. A Rondeau (Her lovely face within a frame): 12733
On a Pet Dove Killed by a Dog. A Gaelic Elegy (Mournful my tale to tell): 6879
On a Picture of Armida and Rinaldo (Dear is that picture for my childhood's sake): 7886
On a Picture of Venice ('Tis she—the fairy city gay, "built on the flowing tide"): 6225
On a Portrait (O! wond’rous art!—It is himself!): 15469
On a Portrait (Oh, mystery of Beauty! who can tell): 14549
On a Portrait (Oh, she is lovely! all too fair): 4806
On a Portrait. Ut pictura poesis (As breaks the sunbeam through the storm): 15549
On a Redbreast Coming Into My Cottage, December, 1810 (Thou'rt welcome, Robin, to my dwallin'): 3020
On a Resurrectionist (Here lies an honest man, my brothers): 10286
On a Ring-Plover Found Dead in Tyree. August, 1884 (In a hollow of the dunes): 4345
On a Roman Camp (Here on this brow the Roman eagle made): 12613
On a Rose: Gathered and Given by Moonlight (Fragrant, full-flushed, my Flora's gift): 6863
On a Ruin, Which Had Been Occupied, at Different Periods, as a Nunnery and a Baronial Castle (Proud pile! no more within thy hoary walls): 15771
On a Sheet of Blank Paper (O virgin page, untouched, unstained): 6964
On A Sleeping Child (Sleep, infant Pilgrim! Over thee one bends): 3029
On a Sleeping Infant. (Written for Music) (Sleep, sleep on, my Baby! may sorrow ne'er light): 4905
On a Spiteful Letter (Here, is it here—the close of the year): 12170
On a Sprig of Heath (I take it up with quickened breath): 13602
On a Sprig of Heather (Flower of the waste! the heath-fowl shuns): 7223
On a Wedding Ring (Declare my race, my birth, my name): 15269
On A Wedding. February 25, 1851 (You are to be married, Mary): 6118
On a Wounded Deer Found in Whittlebury Forest (Art thou left in thy solitude to die): 4417
On Ahead! ("A little bit low?" Well, I is, sir, mebbe): 12410
On an Apple (Mysterious fruit! thy ruddy round): 6762
On an Autumn Day (Farewell, broad downs! whose long unbroken swell): 2621
On an Infant Who Was Born, Was Baptized, and Died on the Same Day (How wast thou made to pass): 13675
On an Infant Who Was Born, Was Baptized, and Died on the Same Say (How wast thou made to pass): 2116
On an Insulated Rock on the Summit of Mowcop, Near Congleton, in Cheshire, Known by the Name of the Man of Mow (Primeval man! and there thou art, the same): 11633
On an Old Harpsichord (Its varnish cracked, its paintings scarred): 6828
On an Old Muff (Time has a magic wand!): 11995
On an Old Song (Little snatch of ancient song): 14972
On Art as an Aim in Life (How was it that he knew it? ay, or where): 14421
On Being Shown the Tomb of a Favourite Dog (On gentle Fanny's grassy tomb): 3561
On Bill Sykes. (After Anacreon) (Paint me, Cruikshank, Doyle, or Leech): 9459
On Broadlaw (A burst of glorious August weather): 5427
On Carmel's Brow. A Hebrew Melody (On Carmel's brow the wreathy vine): 8205
On Certain New Buildings in Covent Garden. To Inigo Jones (O Inigo): 8759
On Chantry's Monument of Two Children in Lichfield Cathedral (Oh who can come to the holy dome): 13996
On Chillon (Eternal spirit of the chainless mind!): 15034
On Christmas Morning (What shall I wish thee, daughter mine): 4852
On Coming of Age (To-day is my natal day): 3408
On Gellia (Gellia, when she's alone, doesn't weep the death of her father): 11056
On Getting Home the Portrait of a Female Child, Six Years Old, Painted by Eugenio Latilla (Type of the cherubim above): 5804
On Granton Pier (Well, this is what I saw on Granton Pier): 9054
On Hampstead Hill (Terrible city brooding at my feet!): 12042
On Hearing a Lark in January (The snow had hardly melted from the field): 2782
On Hearing Week-Day Service at Westminster Abbey, September 1858 (From England's gilded halls of state): 9670
On Her Death-bed. A Lullaby (Hush, baby, hush! the still dews are falling—): 447
On Her Forgiveness of a Wrong (This is not virtue. To forgive were great): 7973
On Her Vanity (What are these things thou lovest? Vanity): 7987
On Her Waywardness (This is rank slavery. It better were): 7969
On His Fortune in Loving Her (I did not choose thee, dearest. It was Love): 7958
On His Nineteenth Birthday (Ninety years—ninety years!): 1854
On Home (That is not home, where day by day): 2994
On Judas. From the Italian of Gianni (Goaded by frenzy, Judas now had sprung): 10366
On Leaving England, 1840 (I sail–we part–yes, England, part from thee): 4800
On Leaving Home (Home of my childhood!–by every spell): 4754
On Leaving My Villa (I gaze with fond regret on you): 5509
On Leaving Naples (Land of the South! victorious clime!): 3800
On Leaving the North Highlands (Once more my northern way I trace): 8030
On looking On The Sea. Written Abroad (Yon sunny wave, that sparkling foam): 3102
On Love and Friendship (Talk not of Love! it gives me pain): 5399
On Madness (To watch the sunlight of the soul go down): 5603
On May Eve (The wind cries under sullen skies, and its wail makes sadder the town): 2407
On Milton's Cottage, at Chalfont, St. Giles, Where he remained during the Great Plague (Beneath this roof, for no such use designed): 5186
On Moonlight. From the Swedish of Ingelrain (Still that same aspect—placid, cold, and bright!): 10114
On One Who Had Never Left His Home (The fields, that were his early joy): 9335
On Poland (How long, O justice, will my spirit bear?): 35
On Reading a Newspaper (Such deeds there be of grief and crime): 14307
On Reading the Appendix to Lord Byron's Tragedy of the Two Foscari (Is Byron surprised that his enemies say): 9814
On Reading the Memoirs of John Bethune, the Fifeshire Forester (Sleep on, son of toil! The tear I shed): 5304
On Receiving a Basket of Violets in Wax (Where, oh where do the violets dwell?): 6408
On Receiving a Bunch of Flowers from the Author of "The Excursion" (Flowers! that a poet's hand hath cull'd): 14451
On Receiving a Bunch of Flowers from the Author of “The Excursion” (Flowers! that a poet's hand hath cull'd): 10390
On Religion (It is not in the lowly-bended knee): 9817
On Revisiting Lichfield Cathedral (The triple spire springs heavenward as of old): 8820
On Seeing a Bust of R. B. Sheridan, from a Cast Taken After Death, at Deville's, Strand (Alas, poor Sheridan! when first we met): 15621
On Seeing a Child Fall Asleep Amid its Sports (Wearied with pleasure! Oh, how deep): 5363
On Seeing A Deceased Infant (And this is death! how cold and still): 3720
On Seeing a Fellow Wound a Hare with a Shot April 1789 (Inhuman man! curse on thy barb’rous art): 14890
On Seeing a Fellow Wound a Hare—Spring—89 (Inhuman man! curse on thy barb’rous art): 14891
On Seeing a Ship, Which Had Been Induced to Alter Her Course by False Lights, Dashed to Pieces on the Rocks of Scilly, at Midnight, in December, 1813 (Fierce the winter tempest blew): 15053
On Seeing a Young Lady Kiss a Rose (May loving friends surround and cheer): 7452
On Seeing Some Work-Horses in a Park on a Sunday ('Tis Sabbath day—the poor man walks): 5278
On Shakespeare's Cliff (If here the mortal foot was ever set): 6533
On Shooting a Swallow in early youth (I hoard a little spring of secret tears): 7863
On Sickness (When from life's busy scenes awhile): 15585
On Taste (When o'er her dying child we hear): 84
On the Asiatic Valley of the Sweet Waters, At Constantinople (Bright Vale of Enchantments!–thy waters and trees): 4784
On the Atlantic (Rages the sea in tempest; and the wind): 8356
On the Bar (All that day on the shore I kept): 13518
On the Beach. Lines by a Private Tutor (When the young Augustus Edward): 1186
On the Birth of the Princess Royal 21st November, 1840 (Hurrah! Hurrah! a child is born): 88
On the Bridge (It was young Robin and his love): 7560
On the Brink (On the brink of the well): 3069
On the Church of Krisuvik in Iceland (Through gilded domes, and splendid fanes): 7827
On the Cliff (Half down the cliff the pathway ends): 7006
On the Cliff-Top (Face upwards to the sky): 6214
On the Cliffs (Silent we sat on the cliffs' bleak side): 13500
On the Cliffs (The tide came in along the bay): 4936
On The Cliffs (While the little ones gather flowers): 7145
On the Coast (A lonely strip of coast where golden sands): 12836
On the Completion of the Thames Tunnel (Joy to thee, brave Brunel!—thy task is done): 5343
On the Dark Threshold (How cold it feels! tho' the sun still shines on your face so close above): 15016
On the Death of a Boy (The autumn leaves are fading fast): 5311
On the Death of a Daughter ('Tis o'er—in that long sigh she past): 10614
On the Death of a Favourite Old Hound (I am glad thou art gone, when the leaves are yellow): 15479
On the Death of a Friend (Friend after friend departs): 2966
On the Death of a Little Girl Two Years' Old (Dear one! I cannot grieve that you art dead): 4787
On the Death of a Miser (He lived alone, and he died alone): 15841
On The Death of A Sister (Dear to my soul! ah, early lost!): 3235
On the Death of an Infant (Sweet floweret! blighted by the winter's blast): 5909
On the Death of Rudolph Ackermann (He is dust!—his course is done!): 15225
On the Death of the Princess Borghese, at Rome; November 1840 (Once, and but once again, I dare to raise): 4907
On the Death of the Princess Charlotte (Marked ye the mingling of the City's throng): 8173
On the Death-Day of Körner (A song for the death-day of the brave): 10881
On the Departure of Sir Walter Scott from Abbotsford, for Naples (A trouble, not of clouds or weeping rain): 14869
On the Duke of Buccleuch's Birth-Day (Rejoice, ye wan and wilder'd glens): 10441
On the Eve of the Wedding (O love, before we part to-night): 7414
On the Eye of a White Horse (As he who sits upon the eye): 7616
On the Fate of "The President" Steam-ship (Is there not one the mournful tale to tell): 5271
On the Garden Terrace. Haddon Hall, Derbyshire (Surely this leaf-screened terrace path): 4219
On the Head of George Buchanan. (From the Chaldee) (Head of the sage! whose mug has shed): 9933
On the Height (Friend who with dauntless soul art climbing still): 12780
On the Heights Near Devoke Water.—August 7, 1838 (Dreary and gray the twilight hour came on): 11960
On the Hill (Welcome, once more, dear mount of solitude!): 6848
On the Hill of the Dead (There is a narrow pathway familiar to my feet): 5118
On the Hills (The sheep were down upon the darkened hills): 14382
On the Kneeling Figure in Malvern Priory (Tenant of stone! here still thou worshippest): 3961
On the Last Day of the Year (Ladies, put sad yew away): 1841
On the Late Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry (Good and holy man, farewell!): 11792
On the Launch of A First-Rate (England hails thee with emotion): 5323
On the Lawn (The heliotropes within the garden-beds): 7076
On the Legend of St. Cecilia and the Angel ('Twas when, oh, meekest Eve! thy shadows dim): 13980
On the Loss of My Child (Does Heaven behold these sadly-falling tears): 5400
On the Loss of Near Relatives (Voice after voice hath died away): 3437
On the Marriage of the Lady Gwendolin Talbot with the Eldest Son of the Prince Borghese (Lady! to decorate thy marriage morn): 4427
On the Might of Right (I saw or I dreamt it—no; ’twas not a dream): 6
On the Mind (The feeble limb may wear the heavy chain): 9818
On the Moors (Red lie the moors, the glorious autumn moors): 5796
On the Old Year (With mournful tone I hear thee say): 11032
On the Path (On the path toiling, I thought not of toil): 6455
On the Picture of a Greek Maiden (How much of the old immortal Poetry): 4455
On the Popular Superstition of First Love Being Lasting (Fist love is a pretty romance): 4196
On the Portrait of a Lady, by Sir Thomas Lawrence (A coronet or crown might wel): 15901
On the Portrait of a Spanish Princess by David Wilkie, Esq. R. A. (How great the limner's triumph! for he writes): 15063
On the Portrait of Her Grace The Duchess of Argyll and The Marquis of Lorn (Daughter of Sutherland, gentle and beautiful): 5727
On the Portrait of Lady Beaumont (Green Erin, long abused and torn): 5639
On the Portrait of Lady Bolton (There's something in a beauteous face): 5704
On the Portrait of Lady Greenock ("Beauties! there are none now, the race is lost!"): 5708
On the Portrait of Lady Molesworth (Sweets to the sweet—renown to the renowned): 5756
On the Portrait of Miss de Horsey (Gentle Lady! with that painted book): 5645
On the Portrait of Miss Lane Fox (O'er the fair earth the glowing day is dying): 5584
On the Portrait of Miss Talbot. A Fantasy (Ere the Sun hath his steeds to his chariot bound): 5717
On the Portrait of Mrs. Horace Marryat (Mother and Child! so long as Earth is ours): 5673
On the Portrait of Mrs. Maher (The olden theme, yet ever new): 5788
On the Portrait of Mrs. Palk. A Thought in the Open Air (Revile not thou the dance—nor speak amiss): 5770
On the Portrait of the Countess of Essex (List the while I sing): 5505
On the Portrait of the Duchess of Manchester (Fair lady, in these troublous times): 5609
On the Portrait of the Hon. Lady Abercrombie (Hang up the harp of gladness on the wall): 5748
On the Portrait of the Hon. Mrs. Ashley (Cold are the hands so many a year that flung): 5651
On the Portrait of the Lady Constance Gower (Star after star hath waned): 5776
On the Portrait of The Lady Dorothy Nevill (How swiftly, here, are loving friends contented!): 5587
On the Portrait of the Lady Elizabeth Lascelles (Hast thou e'er watched in this our northern land): 5790
On the Portrait of the Lady Georgiana Codrington. In the Costume for the Queen's Fancy Ball ('Tis passing beautiful! but wherefore paint): 5781
On the Portrait of The Lady Otway (The ancient theme I sing, yet ever new): 5632
On the Portrait of the Viscountess Sydney (A fair and gentle woman's face is thine): 5740
On the Portrait of Wickliffe (When Superstition overspread the realm): 10047
On the Portraits of The Princess Marie of Baden, Marchioness of Douglas, and The Earl of Angus (Prisoned in towns, I look as in a dream): 5569
On The Prairie (Faster, faster! Flash and wheel!): 2175
On the Quay (O hopes and fears! o months and years): 2459
On the Railway between Zurich and Innsbruck (What prescient mind devised these gradients? laid): 8615
On the Reappearance of the Seventh Pleiad (Long wand'ring sister of a heavenly race!): 15564
On the Recitation of "Palestine," a Prize Poem, by Reginald Heber, in the Theatre at Oxford, on the 15th of June, 1803 (Hush'd was the busy hum; nor voice, nor sound): 15603
On the Removal of Some Old Family Portraits (Silent friends! fare ye well): 11619
On the Rhine (On the little plank-pier of the village): 14194
On the River (Side by side in our tiny skiff): 512
On the Road (The fields are all sweet with hay): 12413
On the Sea-Shore. A Story in Verse ("The light waves kiss the shifting sands"): 3974
On the Shore ("If I were a noble lady"): 7724
On the Shore (My love and I went wandering hand in hand): 4600
On the Sight of a Manse in the South of Scotland (Say, ye far-travelled clouds, far-seeing hills): 8676
On the Sight of Swans in Kensington Garden (Queen-bird that sittest on thy shining nest): 8252
On the South Coast of Cornwall (There lives a land beside the western sea): 1128
On the Star of "The Legion of Honour." (From the French) (Star of the brave!—whose beam hath shed): 9932
On the Tack (The globe of earth on which we dwell): 9461
On the Terrace (The stately lady, the grave calm man): 4247
On the Thames—July (Turned the mill to measured music, fell in soft cascades the spray): 3826
On the Threshold (Ring out, O bells, ring silver-sweet o'er hill and moor): 12961
On the Threshold (Standing on the threshold, with her wakening heart and mind): 4287
On the Tomb of Blucher. From the German (Ay, soldier, weep that grave beside): 15776
On the Waste (Woe-begone and weak, and thinly clad): 2890
On the Water (On the water, on the water): 201
On the Way Home (The sun's rim dips, the West shows gray): 15028
On the Wings of the Wind (Dear idle summer winds that softly blow): 13194
On the Wreck of a Vessel Which the Writer Had Seen Launched (She is launch'd on the bosom of ocean): 15596
On Titian's Studio (There was a time when Art did reverence meet): 5211
On Troy (Where now, O City! be thy walls effaced?): 14633
On Two Sisters (Young Dora's gentle, pure, and kind): 2958
On Using an Etruscan Vase as a Drinking-Cup (Talk not to me of funeral rites, of dismal tombs of earth): 15452
On Visiting Rydal Mount (Long-sought, and late-discovered, rapt is he): 11542
On Yarrow Braes (The wind, the summer wind of June): 5301
Once a Week (Adsumus. With no pregnant words, that tremble): 195
Once a Week (When soft winds whisper, ’mid the leafy trees): 14999
Once More (Once more along the river-side): 13291
Once Upon a Time (Only look at Gaffer Grey): 277
Once Upon a Time (Sunny locks of brightest hue): 10054
Ondine (Where the green cresses glisten in the belt): 961
One by One (One by one the sands are flowing): 1372
One By One (Though from the boughs to which they've long been clinging): 12844
One Day (I will tell you when they met): 14046
One Day (It came not when the roses grew): 13210
One Day (Like some old friend from far who visits us): 12324
One Heart (I sometimes linger o'er the list): 12751
One Hour (A heart as changeful as the skies): 690
One in Every Circle (A girl with something of distress dimming her pensive eye): 354
One in the Crowd. April 10th, 1864 (Over the bridges and through the streets): 14283
One July (If frozen hearts could warm them at the fire): 4130
One June Morning (I'm thinking now of a time, my friend): 2751
One Less (Silent we stood by the window): 6508
One Life in All (A vision of great caves, and blasted pines): 14656
One More Unfortunate (The winds upon the wave are sleeping): 7471
One Note Wrong (Blue bends the sky above): 7141
One of the Sevens (Seven times ten—they came and fled): 2613
One of Three (At the prow of my bark stood Hebe, fair): 14242
One Quarter More. A New Song, To be sung with great applause at an approaching Cabinet Entertainment (Assist me, ye lads, who our festival grace): 11314
One Question, Many Answers ("What wouldst thou be?"): 315
One Spot of Green (When the winter bloweth loud): 1324
One Swallow Maketh Not a Summer (Did she give a tender glance): 190
One Trace Left (They dragged it through the miry street): 2724
One True Heart is Mine (I will not murmur at my lot): 6400
One Way of Looking at It (I thought you always knew it well): 467
One Woman (Her eyes are not "cerulean blue"): 13339
One Word ("Write me an epic," the warrior said): 8526
One word for Louis Philippe, Crown-craft, and Royalty (Infamous wretch! why will not heaven mar): 108
One Year (Softly the lone wind moans the year just dead): 4679
Only (Jewels flashing in the air): 7451
Only a Baby's Grave (Only a baby's grave!): 1612
Only a Little Cross (All cold and lone, on the ground we found him): 12914
Only a Passing Thought ('Twas only a passing thought, my friend): 4065
Only a Song (It was only a simple ballad): 12958
Only a Sweep. A Common Ballad (Low and common poor they were): 393
Only a Week! (Only a week, since you and I): 4731
Only a Word! (A frivolous word, a sharp retort): 3830
Only for Something to Say ("Not engaged? I'm so glad. Will you talk with me, then?"): 266
Only Friends (Summer's freshness fell around us): 12948
Only Seven Years Old When She Died (Only seven years old when she died!): 7397
Only! (In the twilight, in the gloaming): 7426
Only? (Only a withered violet?): 7018
Onward (Sometimes when the growing darkness): 5050
Opposition Medley (Oh! the time is past, when Quarter-day): 7876
Optimus (There is a deep and subtle snare): 1629
Orange Blossom: Sonnet (Far off to sunnier shores he bade us go): 14973
Orange-Blossoms (Sweet quivering blossoms, gold and white): 4324
Orestes (How tranquil is the night! how calm and deep): 10418
Oribates (Up, brethren, up, be journeying and doing): 9198
Originality (You're a disciple of no school): 9151
Orion (O Night! I gaze upon thy starry fire): 6916
Orphanhood (The shadow of the forest trees): 3705
Orpheus (Orpheus. Vanished for evermore): 12049
Orpheus and Eurydice (As sweet Eurydice, with footfall light): 598
Orpheus and Eurydice. (From the Fourth Georgic, 452-528) (Not without wrath of heaven has thee this pest overtaken): 14497
Orpheus in Hades (Ruler and regent, to whose dread domain): 8471
Osborne. Before Midnight, 31st December 1887 (One hour, and ’twill be numbered with the past): 8604
Ossian (Thus sang the bard of Cona as he sat): 3139
Other Influences (Ah, when the Frame, round which in love we clung): 9829
Otho III (Upon a couch of golden woof): 11500
Otterbourne. A Ballad ("To horse! to horse!" Lord Percy cried): 4807
Our Ain Folk (I wish we were hame to our ain folk): 5945
Our April (Oh, but our land is lovable to-day!): 12558
Our Best (To do one's best; the path is hard and long): 4843
Our Bridge (Friends dwell asunder, but hearts are near): 13200
Our Chase (The heath, the heath, the purple heath): 863
Our Children ("Mother, the spring is coming!"): 12703
Our Coachman (Our coachman smokes a mighty pipe): 1335
Our Common Land ("God speed the plough!"—be this a prayer): 149
Our Consecrations (From out each yesterday of life): 951
Our Country Quarters (We live in a cottage, the Ochils behind us): 4369
Our Dead (Nothing is our own; we hold our pleasures): 2715
Our Dream (Perchance to men it may not be given): 2752
Our Father's Business: Holman Hunt's Picture of "Christ in the Temple" (O Christ-child, Everlasting, Holy One): 13946
Our Fathers (Not "better than our Fathers," we): 7932
Our First Lost (Sit close beside me, dearest wife): 1580
Our First Lost (Two little waxen hands): 7621
Our First-Born (She came, an angel in our sight): 14923
Our Future (Did we but see): 10493
Our Future Hope: An Easter Hymn (O frail spirit—vital spark): 14606
Our Good Auld Man (Our good auld man is gane!): 9421
Our Gracious Queen (Bright stars o'er Cambrian mountains softly twinkle): 12664
Our Greater Sun (One soft rich glow, half roseate and half gold): 13290
Our Joys. From Goëthe (There fluttered round the spring): 8313
Our Lane (When the grass springs, and soft winds blow): 7363
Our Lost Pet (She went what time the birds of passage sought): 6938
Our Minister's Last Sermon ("Our minister is na weel," we said, as he climbed the pulpit stair): 4110
Our New Village Clock (Henceforward shall our time be plainly read): 2216
Our Old Dog Jack (Old Jack! we scarce yet count him dead): 7109
Our Outside's Blue, With a Yellow Back (Our outside's blue, with a yellow back): 10509
Our Poet (I wander where the river strays): 8197
Our Poet's Grave (Just where the willow, old beyond remembrance): 4854
Our Prince is Out of Danger (‘Our Prince is out of danger!’): 16118
Our Saviour's Voice (Behold me standing at the door): 12287
Our Secret Drawer (There is a secret drawer in every heart): 837
Our Sexton (Old Jonathan, as wafer thin): 13959
Our Shadow (It falls before, it follows behind): 1679
Our Soldier-Brothers ("Who sneers the giants were of old"): 6284
Our Vicar ('Twas in the glorious summer's prime): 15428
Our Village (Along the old accustomed paths with musing steps we go): 4248
Our Village at Daybreak (’Tis daybreak over the village; I look from the rustic inn): 6590
Our Wedding Day (Our wedding day, dear heart): 13173
Our Widowed Queen (Eyes sorely weeping, hearts strained nigh to breaking): 397
Our Worthy Friend Nap. A New Song (Our once worthy friend Nap, as we all of us feel): 7759
Out Among the Wild-Flowers (Ye flowers, that are our silent monitors): 418
Out at Sea (I know that I am dying, mate; so fetch the Bible here): 12907
Out at Sea (So far am I thou canst not me behold!): 8712
Out at Sea (Three months at sea, and one on shore): 7117
Out of Eden (Again the summer comes, and all is fair): 12311
Out of My Hand (One by one, one by one): 4293
Out of Reach (To love thee, and be dumb. Never by look or word): 6664
Out of Season (To-morrow is the first of May): 13658
Out of Sight (The drifting snow piles white and soft above them): 4323
Out of Work (The winter is round again): 3677
Out of Work (There must be something wrong when the hard Hand): 7589
Out on the Scar (Gold flashes back to the glowing west): 4251
Outcast! (The moon is red and low, and the stars are few): 4177
Outside and In (Quietly browse the meek-eyed cattle): 3679
Outside the Bar (Outside the Bar, amid the breaking surges): 7503
Outside the Garden Gate (Two little forms outside the gate): 12895
Outward Bound (My trusty, well-beloved friend): 4519
Outward-Bound (Good-bye, Old World; shake hands before I go): 12722
Over a Covered Seat in the Flower-Garden at Holland-House, Where the Author of the "Pleasures of Memory" Has Been Accustomed to Sit, Appear the Following Lines (How happily sheltered is he who reposes): 3037
Over Mountains (My heart went roaming and flying): 5084
Over the Hill-Side (Farewell! In dimmer distance): 14291
Over the Hills (The old hound wags his shaggy tail): 209
Over the Mountain (Like dreary prison walls): 2708
Over the River ("Over the river—over the river"): 13410
Over the Sea (I sit in the fading light): 3657
Over the Threshold (White blossoms shine in sunny field and lane): 13349
Over! (A knight came prancing on his way): 13901
Ovid in Pontus (Hard by the banish'd Euxine (a black doom!)): 15598
Owed to a Snaik (Prodiggus reptile! long and skaly kuss!): 13649
Packing up After an English Country Ball (The clock has struck the midnight hour, and the chandeliers burn low): 9808
Paddy O'Rafther (Paddy, in want of a dinner one day): 483
Padre Bandelli Proses to the Duke Ludovico Sforza About Leonardo Da Vinci (Two steps, your Highness—let me go before): 9676
Palestine (Voices on the sandy shore): 7183
Palingenesis (I lay upon the headland-height, and listened): 14288
Palingenesis (I was fashioned long ago): 12241
Pallas and the Centaur. After a Picture by Botticelli ("Centaur, sweet Centaur, let me ride on you!"): 1100
Palmerston (As when men outside stand with silent lips): 7194
Palmyra (Desolate city! who e'er gazed on thee): 15702
Pan (I am the All—the soul created One): 1455
Pan (Played upon the pan-pipe): 14295
Pan Vinctus—Pan Victor (Pan sate blowing his pipe of reeds): 468
Pansies (Do you remember one far day?): 4861
Pansies (I send thee pansies while the year is young): 3663
Pansy (What blossom have you brought to-day): 4272
Pantoum (The wind is silent o'er the sea): 2416
Pantoum. Falling Leaves. (A Lament) (The sweet, long Summer days are past): 15920
Papal Dominion (Unless to Peter's Chair the viewless wind): 9841
Parables (We clutch our joys and children clutch their flowers): 6257
Paradise Music (On the dreary winter nights, ’tis said that whisperings wild and sweet): 6116
Parental Love (I saw three maidens, and a child did sit): 11882
Paris, December, 1870. The Voice of the Night (Arise, hollow-eyed and forsaken): 13728
Parish Sick and Parish Doctor ("Poor Simon's sick." "Then for the Doctor send"): 14371
Park's First Journey In Africa (Ah! lovely flower, what care, what power): 3319
Parody on "To Be or Not To Be" (To have it out or not? that is the question—): 3482
Parody on the Exile of Erin (There stood on the shore of far distant Van Diemen): 10445
Parson Herrick's Muse (The parson dubs us, in our cups): 789
Parson Willy ("What 'Gentleman' retired from city noise"): 9235
Part of Dryden’s Translation of the Twenty-Ninth Ode of the First Book of Horace (Sometimes ’tis grateful to the rich to try): 5280
Parted (A faded flower, a lock of hair): 7160
Parted (Farewell, farewell—a sadder strain): 12827
Parted (In a bosky dell, and shady): 13738
Parted (It is twenty years since my love and I): 7335
Parted (Once more my hand will clasp your hand): 13000
Parted (The silver brooks will miss thee): 12973
Parting (O Brook, be still! O gentle South): 11996
Parting (Overhead, a great aurora): 12571
Parting (Two silent figures in a silent land): 2504
Parting (We have had many partings. In the gloom): 4225
Parting (Weep not that we must part): 4510
Parting and Meeting (And now the time was come when we must part): 5773
Parting and Meeting (As on th' extreme verge of a sunny plain): 11822
Parting at the Junction (’Twas at the Swindon Station I bade my love adieu): 6643
Parting Day (The sunset burns, the hamlet spire): 2867
Parting Precepts (How graceful was that Grecian creed): 10902
Parting Words ("Good-bye!" how oft we use the homely phrase): 6630
Parting Words (Although my early dream is o'er): 12854
Parting Words (Let me go, the day is breaking): 15805
Parting Words (When I am far from hence, and thou alone): 5680
Parting—and After (The moonlight once again is here): 12476
Parva Domus—Magna Quies (A narrow home, but very still it seemeth): 4105
Parvula (A tiny, tiny little bud): 4730
Passage through the Desert. A Fragment (Through barren and deserted wastes, through sands): 8005
Passed Away (Weep no more, strive no more, let the dream go): 4081
Passing (The sun-motes glint across the eaves): 4011
Passing Away (All beauty is fairest when passing away): 6673
Passing By (O rich man, from your happy door): 2540
Passing Clouds (Where are the swallows fled?): 1371
Passing Morven. July 31, 1883 (Down Mull's dark side, from port to port): 4340
Passing Pleasures (These blessed passing pleasures!): 1991
Passing. From the German of Kletke (Thou passest by the bloomy spaces): 6312
Passion (This flame of Passion that so high in air): 825
Passion-Flower (This verdurous rock is fragrant as of old): 4149
Passion-Flowers (She takes them from the warm south side): 4689
Past and Future (Eternal is the Power serene): 2912
Past and Future (God called her home, ye say! Ah, well, she's dead): 4741
Past and Future (I count it profitless to muse and sigh): 3285
Past and Present ("Time flies," and "Time brings many a change"): 156
Past and Present (I saw a little merry maiden): 14083
Past, Present, Future (I mused while I turn'd on a feverish bed): 14475
Pastel (I love you yet in your settings quaint): 16082
Pastorale (All among the flowers and lilies): 8837
Patience (Be patient! Easy words to speak): 4925
Patience (Ever the same calm lesson given): 1492
Patience (Hold thou mine hand, beloved, as we sit): 4653
Patience (Nay, don't lose heart; small men and mighty nations): 9103
Patience (What power can please a patient Fantasy): 8951
Patience on a Monument (I kneel within the church alone): 7710
Patience Taught by Nature ("O dreary life!" we cry, "O dreary life!"): 10746
Patient (I was not patient in that olden time): 4328
Patient and Faithful (You have taken back the promise): 1441
Patrick Laing (The deid sleep soun' in the auld kirkyaird): 5487
Patriotic Effusion to Britain (I love thee, O my native Isle): 3151
Patriotic Ode (To the wind, to the wind, your banners rear!): 9930
Patsey and the Priest (Young Patsey Roney sat one day beside his bit of bog): 13746
Pauline (Ah! happy time! Ah! happy time!): 3186
Paulo-Post-Mortem. (Ghost Loquitur) (June:—so I used to call it, as I think): 9757
Pausanias and Cleonicé; an Old-Hellenic Ballad (By the wine-dark Euxine sea): 14990
Pawned. (Fact) (Ay, times were bitter hard, honey. I'se fourscore years and ten): 4971
Pax Sine Pace (Pause here: sure here is peace): 4223
Peace (Deep in the grass outstretched I lie): 1042
Peace (I could believe that sorrow ne'er sojourned): 8135
Peace (Peace flies before us, quiet Peace): 6835
Peace (The wandering winds are silent on the sea): 13315
Peace After Storm (Peace! it is only a promise): 1801
Peace and War (Said War, "I pray thee my playthings see"): 1164
Peace and War. Two Autumn Landscapes. (Thin yellow leaves are waving in the sun): 3836
Pearls and Bubbles (Pearls ne'er like bubbles o'er the surface drive): 14705
Pearls Before a Hog (We passed the Chablis with the fish): 15197
Pegasus in Harness (At Smithfield once, as I've been told): 10824
Pegasus in Harness (To a horse-fair–Newmarket, say the name): 6430
Pencil Marks in a Book of Devotion (Strong words are these–"Oh Lord! I seek but Thee"): 318
Pencil or Pen (Oh, for the spell of the artist's brush): 4000
Penelope (The herds pass on to meadows dewy-fresh): 2374
Penseés (For evermore the gifts of God are given): 1910
Perchance (Perchance some day, when twilight-tide has crept): 12702
Perdita (I dipped my hand in the sea): 4233
Perennial (She asked her lover, smiling, "If one blend"): 808
Perfect Bliss (All the divine perfections, which, while ere): 10931
Perfect Peace (Like a river glorious): 2588
Perfect Weather ('Perfect weather!' once on a time): 624
Perfection (Fret not for Fame, but in Perfection rest): 13111
Perpetual Adoration (The turf shall be my fragrant shrine): 3509
Persecution (Lament! for Diocletian's fiery sword): 9826
Persephoné. A Lay of Spring (Through the dusky halls of Hadës): 12970
Persistence (Because I begged so hard): 12349
Perugia (Is this the spot where Rome's eternal foe): 14449
Perversity (An ill-starred devil is the man): 9130
Pervigilium Veneris. (Paraphrased) (Love, to-morrow! love, to-morrow): 3667
Pessimism (Bright-faced maiden, bright-souled maiden): 8878
Pessimism (If you let your fancy feed): 5552
Pet (Is there "nothing in a name?"): 6830
Peter Bell. A Tale, in Verse (Away we go—and what care we): 7730
Peter Ledyard,—A Lyrical Ballad (Upon a bleak and barren moor): 9820
Peter McCraw (O! do ye ken Peter, the taxman an ’vriter?): 3338
Peter the Wise (It is some years ago ere our crippled Parishioners): 11176
Peter Weeping (O strong in purpose—frail in power): 10155
Petermann's Land A. D. 1870 (Hunger hath wasted them and they are few): 1738
Petrarch. Canzone 14 (Clear, fresh, limpid waters): 8034
Phaethon (Noble in presence, though a cloud of grief): 9516
Phantasies (The Poet closed his eyes, and lay supinely): 8069
Phantasmagoriana (Figures there were amid the clouds): 9699
Phantasy (Within a Temple of the Toes): 860
Phaon in Sicily (Fair youth, thy careless footsteps stray): 15534
Pharaoh's Serpents (From the little cone of silver foil): 7322
Philhellenic Drinking-Song (Come let us drink their memory): 9948
Philine's Song (Sing not thus in notes of sadness): 10696
Philip, My King! (Look at me with thy large brown eyes): 6109
Phillips of Pelhamville (Short is the story I say, if you will): 5425
Philomela (Surely, surely, Amor nursed thee, songstress of the plaintive note): 10934
Philomela (You sing, you sing): 1064
Philosophers (To learn what gives to every thing): 10817
Philosophy (At once I gazed upon a shining planet): 11886
Phœbus and Hermes (The deep-brow'd lord of Delos once, and Maia's nimble-witted son): 10942
Phoebus with Admetus (When by Zeus relenting the mandate was revoked): 14562
Phormio's Victory In the Corinthian Gulf (Twas when our galleys lay along the winding bay): 10733
Phyle (Hence Thrasybulus' eagle-swoop struck down): 8366
Pia de’ Tolomei (When Life is fading fast): 1661
Picciola (Of all the flowers that deck the verdant knoll): 12995
Pictura Poesis (Two sunny winter-days I sped along): 14517
Pictures (A silver thread among the hills): 642
Pictures in the Fire (Old Winter blows, and whistles hard): 402
Pictures in the Fire (We watch together; but in shade and shine): 12693
Pictures in the Fire (What is it you ask me, darling?): 1306
Pictures on the Panes (How many pictures are there here): 4318
Pierrot (Pierrot . . . . Pierrot . . . . at first they said you slept): 1029
Pietas Rubeculæ (The ancient fane that crowned thy flashing head): 14940
Pindar (Son of the lightning, fair and fiery star): 12217
Pine and Palm (A lonely tree, the rowan grew): 4366
Pious Resolutions, by a Prospective Lecturer (I sober truth and sense will speak): 8105
Pity (There are attractions and affinities): 11880
Pity, the Revealer (I waited long for Love: my spirit drooped): 5131
Plage des Fous. At Biarritz (Not thus dost thou fulfil, oh sea, not thus): 5038
Plants and Men (What is a Leaf? It is a little world): 14653
Platonic Paradoxes. A New Song (In how many strange ways): 10381
Playing Truant (O lilacs—my lilacs are smelling of—heaven!): 2079
Playmates (A tripping footfall on the stair): 7303
Pleading (Give me thy faith, that looking down): 4060
Pleasures of Life (In this ash planting, spread beside the stream): 15467
Plenty of Time (Plenty of Time—Plenty of Time!): 13190
Plighted (Mine to the core of the heart, my beauty!): 6313
Poem by Queen Elizabeth (The doubt of future foes): 2316
Poem. Recited by Odoherty at a Grand Dinner-Party of the Contributors, in their Tent, near Mar-Lodge, on the 12th of August 1819 (Hail to thy waters! softly-flowing Dee!): 7894
Poems on Pictures. I.–The Christian Martyr (By Delaroche) ("Did ye mark when the maiden was hurled?"): 2552
Poems on Pictures. The Huguenot. By J. E. Millais, R. A. (It must not be! There is a loftier light): 3949
Poems to Ida. No. I (Oh! sweetly o'er th' Atlantic sea): 9147
Poems to Ida. No. II (Well—through the clouds of sorrow haste): 9149
Poetical Account of an Oxford Examination (Since the cold-cutting jibes of that Northern Review): 8222
Poetical Antidotes (Oh sing me a song about love, the fond true love of the olden lays): 5928
Poetical Portraits (His was the wizard spell): 10066
Poetry ("Where find ye Poetry?" Go, look abroad): 15785
Poetry (How many voices, sweet and strong): 7315
Poetry (Poetry is a gushing well): 8971
Poetry (The world is full of Poetry—the air): 3747
Poetry and Philosophy (I love them both! And must I make my choice?): 1483
Poetry and Truth (Ah no! My brother singer, thou dost wrong): 5079
Poetry at Sight (Dear Dolly, I'll thank you to send the cocoa): 3745
Poetry in Action (To deem in every heart thy heart reflected): 11758
Poetry Mistrusted (I bid my soul forsake her ceaseless dream): 11757
Poets ("Poeta nascitur, non fit"): 5877
Poets ("The schoolmaster's abroad;" then let him teach): 11816
Poets and Poesy (Few chance-breathed syllables! ye bring to me): 6084
Point Blank (You complain that I am narrow): 3159
Poland (A voice is now around us): 11225
Poland (Is Freedom's latest struggle o'er?): 101
Policeman (How goes the night?): 2685
Polish Martial Hymn (The standard's raised, the sword is drawn): 4424
Political Alphabet; or, the Young Member's A. B. C. (A, was an Althorpe, as dull as a hog): 7883
Political Pastorals. No. I.—Daniel (Daniel, secure from sixty seats to choose): 11915
Polly (Brown eyes): 1609
Polly Loves Me!—Rondeau (Polly loves me! now I know): 13656
Polly Partan, A Ballad (O, pretty Polly Partan! she was a damsel gay): 3123
Polly Partan. A Ballad (O pretty Polly Partan! she was a damsel gay): 7110
Polly's Life (I rise in the morning early, and get the breakfast spread): 7382
Polyxena ("Why should I care to live? I that have known"): 12148
Pomona (She comes, all laden with the teeming wealth): 3831
Pompeii (The burning cone that pours its ashes down): 14352
Pompeii and Herculaneum (What wonder this?—we ask the lymphid well): 10690
Pooh! Never Mind the Rain, Love (Pooh! never mind the rain, love): 10294
Poor and Rich (In a shattered old garret scarce roofed from the sky): 7190
Poor Margaret (Poor Margaret's window is alight): 2831
Poor Matthias (Poor Matthias!—Found him lying): 14773
Poor Men's Gardens (No waxen blossoms stained with rainbow hues): 3201
Poor People. (From Victor Hugo) ('Tis night. The cabin door is shut, the room): 1989
Poppies (All above the sunshine dazzled, all below the poppies played): 4985
Poppies (What! tired—so tired, my little one?): 4864
Popping the Question (I recollect, in former days): 13961
Popular Epithalamium on the Marriage of the Prince of Wales (She comes; across the waters spread the sails): 1572
Portrait of a Lady (Paint me your perfect lady. I have seen): 8868
Portraits À La Mode (To follow with uniformity): 5463
Poste Restante, Venice (“Poste Restante, Venice,” so, ’tis duly noted): 4691
Postscript (This enviable paper! Oh, to think): 994
Pot-Pourri (I plunge my hand among the leaves): 2426
Pot-Pourri (The blue jars in the window): 4715
Pot-Pourri (The little red-rose at the garden gate): 2321
Power and Gentleness, or The Cataract and the Streamlet (Noble the Mountain Stream): 3737
Practising ("Practising, practising." Well, if you're doing it): 263
Praise of Age (Intil a garth, under a red rosere): 8401
Praise the Lord (Praise the Lord, all earth and heaven): 314
Prayer ("Why wilt thou pray? why storm with cries"): 312
Prayer (Man may pray for anything): 14769
Prayer (Pray'r is the soul's sincere desire): 3001
Prayer in Paradise (Morn, noontide, eve, thine orison for me): 5163
Prayers For All Men. From "Les Feuilles D'Automne" of Victor Hugo (My daughter, go and pray! See, night is come): 5857
Prayers for One Gone to Sea (One gone to sea!—it hath a solemn sound): 15448
Preacher Geordy (Poor forty years "a preacher child of want"): 9237
Precepts of Flowers (Oh! lovely flowers, how meet ye seem): 1192
Precious Time (When we have passed beyond life's middle arch): 6628
Predestinated (Not always ’mid the toiling and the striving): 12578
Prefatory Poem (Those that of late had fleeted far and fast): 7849
Preferences and Treasures (I'd rather drink cold water from the brook): 13075
Prelude to Hymn on Providence (When Homer fills his fierce war-trump of glory): 3429
Present in Absence (Absence, hear thou my protestation): 6623
Presentiment (Clouds anew have gather'd o'er me): 11027
Press On. A Rivulet's Song ("Just under an island, 'midst rushes and moss"): 1104
Preston Tower (By the fertile Lothian Links): 4846
Presumption Reproved (When nation meets nation): 15580
Preterita (There was a glory in those quiet lanes): 13958
Priam and Hecuba. Iliad. Book XXII (Thus, flying wild like deer, to their city hurried the Trojans): 14020
Pride of Birth (Blown from a high and spreading oak): 5392
Prière. From the French of Sully Prudhomme (If you knew the heart is sore): 12747
Primavera (The Spring has passed this way. Look! where she trod): 9748
Primitive Saxon Clergy (How beautiful your presence, how benign): 9828
Primrose and Violet (Primrose and Violet linger late): 4840
Primrose and Violet (Primrose and violet, down in the lane): 6816
Primroses (Come, put away that dreary book): 4294
Primroses (Yes, darling, sweet and very gay—): 4740
Prince Ahmed and the Fairy. A Sketch from the Arabian Nights (On he past): 13940
Prince Alexander of Bulgaria. Sofia, 26th November 1893. (A Bulgarian to his Son) (He is coming, my boy, he is coming! Hark, how the trumpets wail!): 8165
Prince Charlie—A Charade (He sailed for bonnie Scotland's shore): 2089
Prince Philibert (Oh, who loves Prince Philibert?): 1614
Prince's Street Sketches. No I: "The apparel oft bespeaks the man" (Through Bards there be, to whom th' old-fashioned Nine): 8037
Princess Elizabeth at Woodstock (In ancient Woodstock's regal bower): 15670
Prithee Madam (Prithee madam, what are you): 7521
Prize of Song (Challenged by the haughty daughters): 8251
Pro Patria (Land of the white cliff and the circling ocean): 810
Proæmium (Each one that lives has an appropriate "want"): 9166
Probation (It shall be mine, although I wait for it): 13322
Procrastination (Alas! how neglectful): 15481
Proem to "The Wonderful Mission of Earl Lavender" (Though our eyes turn ever waveward): 801
Prognastication (A farmer once with many a comfort blest): 3466
Progress (All victory is struggle, using chance): 1346
Progress (The broad advances of material power): 7784
Progress of Our New Church (As yet no organ rolls, no church-bell rings): 2421
Progress of Unbelief (Now is the autumn of the Tree of Life): 10487
Prologue Spoken Before a Private Theatrical Performance in Manchester (High o'er the drama's visionary scene): 9034
Prologue to 'The Duchess of Malfy' (When Shakespeare soared from life to death, above): 8724
Promenade de Tivoli (O, France is the region of caricature): 10203
Prometheus (Curtain thy heavens, thou Jove, with clouds and mist): 10726
Prometheus Bound. Translated from Æschylus (We have reached Earth's boundary, this Scythia tract): 11874
Prophets (Who spouts his message to the wilderness): 9118
Prose and Song (I looked upon a plain of green): 14297
Proserpina in the Shades (Through the dull hours (that see not any change)): 1331
Proserpine (A champaign covered with eternal flowers): 559
Prospects of Britain (But where was that high place? Where the gate): 4
Prosperity (I doubt if the maxims the Stoic adduces): 6771
Prosperity (I doubt if the maxims the Stoic adduces): 7874
Protection (Dreary the moor, low blasts set up their dirge): 11967
Proteus, the Politician (Come you who'd learn the states): 11308
Prothalamion (Slant, happy dawn, across the silent fields): 13847
Proud Maisie (Proud Maisie is in the wood): 8959
Proudly the Flood comes in (Proudly the flood comes in, shouting, foaming, advancing): 13690
Proven! (Methought I would subject all maids I know): 1786
Proverb ("A watched pot never boils," the old wives say): 4847
Providence (The wise observe their brethren, and withhold): 7362
Providence. From the Italian of Filicaja (As when a mother turns her loving eye): 10368
Prudence (Bide your time—bide your time!): 10543
Psalm CXXXIX ("The flood may bear me far" from mortal shore): 5045
Punch Song (Four Elements, join'd in): 10818
Punch Song. To Be Sung in the North (On the mountains' chainless summit): 10819
Punch's Paean to the Princelet (Huzza! we've a little prince at last): 133
Punishment and Mercy (I wander'd by a river, on whose sides): 11694
Purple Pansies (Mine is no lordly garden ground): 12909
Pygmalion (The feast was ended with the dying day): 12125
Pyramis (Aspiring monument of human toil): 14939
Qu'il Mourût (The patriarch of the Gallic stage): 9835
Quarrels (When two men quarrel, who owns the coolest head): 9108
Quartett on King Arthur, Dan, and George (In England rules King Arthur): 10520
Quatrain Addressed to a Lady, and Written on the Envelope in Which Was Returned Her Own Letter (Fair maid, we are now quite): 3041
Quebec (O fortress City, bathed by streams): 3941
Queen Argenis (How pleasant here to dream the hour away): 11499
Queen Elizabeth's Verses, While prisoner at Woodstock, Writ with charcoal on a chutter (Oh, Fortune: how thy restless, wavering state): 2279
Queen Elizabeth's Verses, While Prisoner At Woodstock. Writ with Charcoal on a Shutter (Oh, fortune! how thy restlesse wavering state): 2387
Queen Guennivar's Round (Naiad, for Grecian waters!): 3179
Queen Polly (One morn in every summertide): 5498
Queen Sophia ("I know there is much meaning in thine eyes"): 14191
Queen Zuleima (Not less a Queen, because I wear): 1217
Questa Vita Mortale (This mortal life, that in a little hour): 11705
Question and Answer (Are there no lilies on Havering Pond): 955
Question and Answer (You rhyme in praise of my golden hair): 13123
Questions (The children say, at close of day): 12425
Questions and Answers (Q. Flowers, wherefore do ye bloom?): 10410
Questions from the Loom (Oh, tell me, ye tyrants of earth!): 47
Questions to the Cuckoo (Was it not some lover): 3214
Quid Sit Orandum (God is all-wise, all-powerful, and all-good): 10126
Quiet Working (Ask not by what gate thou entered): 8978
Quince (Near a small village in the West): 6592
Quis Pro Domina? (Whenso I view the reverend halls): 12344
Quits (Love looked at me with pleading eyes): 12651
Quits! (Indeed, they have not grieved me sore): 12822
Rabbi Ben Ephraim's Treasure (The days of Rabbi Ben Ephraim): 2879
Rachel's Dove (By an old stone fountain): 5216
Rachel’s Dream (Why didst thou wake me, Deborah? for I have dreamed a dream): 6509
Railway Reverie (The dry tense cords against the signal-post): 3162
Rain at Midnight (O midnight Rain): 7496
Rain in the City (Though all the pavements stream with wet): 5142
Rain. From the French of Emile Verhaeren (Long as unending threads, the long-drawn rain): 995
Raindrops (When thunderclouds hang black in May): 597
Random Chords (Alone! What a world of anguish lies): 2656
Rational Fear; or "Friendly Advice to the Lords" (Ye nobles and prelates, the pride of our land): 11071
Re-volution. With Apologies to Mr Rudyard Kipling and Professor Garner (This is the wonderful story): 8198
Real Presence (In the heart of the city that's proud and gay): 13076
Reality and Fancy (To reach a seeming gem, one tax'd his speed): 11551
Reason's Victory (O'er Youth's ardent season): 15579
Reasons For Absence (Since you, fair lady, deign to ask): 3040
Rebecca (Alone, a captive, and a stranger): 2941
Rebecca Parting with Jacob (My youngest born, my pride of heart, thou must, thou must away): 15574
Recall Me Not (Recall me not, as in the idle crowd): 4912
Receiving Charity (My wife is sick in bed; my children's eyes): 132
Recollection (Fair stars of Ursa, I ne'er thought to turn): 9741
Recollections (As strangers, you and I are here): 1348
Recollections of the Arabian Nights (When the breeze of a joyful dawn blew free): 11155
Recompense (In Spring, two robins from the warmer lands): 6753
Recompenses (Though friends are false, and fate unkind): 12657
Reconciled (Two angry men–in heat they sever): 1595
Reconciled (We parted where the shadows crept): 12629
Reconciliation (O let not thoughts of sullen hue): 7669
Reconciliation (Oh! sadder than all turmoil after rest): 2670
Reconciliation (The West glows softer and the breeze blows mild): 12588
Reconciliation (Word over all, beautiful as the sky): 16111
Recovered (Forth issuing from my long-kept cottage door): 7021
Recovery (As, when a storm hath ceased, the birds regain): 9827
Recovery (For many a day, like one whose limbs are stiff): 14203
Red Hugh (O pleasant whisper on the heath): 3297
Red Rose (Why do your leaves uncurl invisibly?): 795
Red Roses (Dear, let me linger here awhile): 4844
Redbreast (How simply unassuming is that strain!): 3438
Redondilla, From Quevedo. (Quintana: Poesias, iii. 238) (Down into Hell travelled Orpheus the Thracian): 9061
Reflections (Grant, that by this unsparing Hurricane): 9852
Reflections in a Ruined Abbey (The beautiful, the powerful, and the proud): 8745
Reflections in a Village Church Near Lake Windermere (Seldom by aught but rustic feet): 15491
Reflections on a Brumal Scene (I have an old remembrance—there are hours): 7824
Reflections Written on the Marriage Day of a Young Lady, Whose Mother Died During Her Childhood (And not one filial thought of her!): 15336
Refrains (I know not if the air is sweet, nor if the roses flower): 807
Refuge (In all time of agony): 1673
Regained (Like the notes that stir and die): 2652
Regalia of Scotland (Memorials of my country's doom!): 8140
Regret (The swifts fly low): 4937
Regrets (If we had but known, if we had but known): 3930
Reine d'Amour: Romance à La Bien-Aimée (Close as the stars along the sky): 12015
Reiselust (Nay, Love, but stay thy blame): 786
Rejoice! (In the warm grandeur of the summer-glows): 2837
Release (Away!—No more, the sport of scorn): 9285
Release (When we have closed the sad, world-tirèd eyes): 12426
Relics (A spray of oak-leaves and some withered flowers): 5441
Relics of the Dead (She was not fair nor young: at eventide): 6034
Religion (The East belongs to God; the West): 8972
Reliques (A wild, wet night: the driving sleet): 2898
Reliques of the Lost (Our stout hearts brave the ice-winds bleak): 225
Remedy (I was drooping, I was grieving): 1355
Remember Me (Remember not thine idle dream): 15358
Remember Me Not (Fare thee well, oh, my friend! in the hours of thy glee): 15749
Remember! From the French of Alfred de Musset (Remember, when the timorous Dawn): 2330
Remembered (Only a great green meadow, with an old oak-tree in the hedge): 4153
Remembered Beauty (Long years have pass'd; but yet, in silent mood): 9180
Remembered Best of All (When I'm looking back across the time-worn pages): 12569
Remembered Days (I remember a morn behind the mill): 7227
Remembrance (Love taketh many colours, and weareth many shapes): 4414
Remembrance (Man hath a weary pilgrimage): 2975
Remembrance (Mine, Mary, thou canst never be): 10954
Remembrance (My childhood!—those were joyous days!): 15605
Remembrance (The grass is on thy grave, Mother): 6564
Remembrance (When for those sons of men is stilled the day's turmoil): 11004
Reminiscence (The south wind wars against the cold): 14257
Reminiscences (In life's meridian stage,—what time are past): 15048
Reminiscences of My Last Morning in Rome, May 26th, 1834 (It was in Rome, a glorious morn in May): 4419
Remonstrance Against Cruelty (Why should man's high aspiring mind): 5286
Remonstrance of the Lowly ('Tis not for us—the poor and lowly born): 3227
Remonstrance with the Snails (Ye little snails): 5267
Remonstrance; Addressed to the Writer of the preceding Stanzas (Christian minstrel, sing'st thou so?): 13945
Remorse (Shade of the past!): 14664
Remorse (Threading the dance along the merry green): 15606
Renewal (As the young phœnix, duteous to his sire): 1132
Renunciation (Like the voice of the storm, like the sound of the sea): 3980
Repentence (Blackbird, blackbird, your notes are true―): 5108
Reply to An Invitation to Dine with Old Schoolfellows (When I look back through threescore years): 3628
Reproach (Fierce the sea is, and fickle if fair): 3803
Reproof (But what if One, through grove or flowery mead): 9838
Requiem (Gone art thou, in youthful sweetness): 10728
Requiem (Let her rest; the weary night): 13278
Requiem (O the hour—the hour supernal): 1809
Requiescat (And what if no trumpet ever be sounded): 16093
Requiescat (More was buried with you, love): 4073
Requiescat in Pace (We have watched him to the last): 13892
Requiescit (O noble heart! full heavy on thee lay): 14516
Requital (Loud roared the Tempest): 1651
Resignation (And I, too, was amidst Arcadia born): 9954
Resignation (To me here sitting by the fire alone): 6760
Resigned (When my weary spinning's done): 7172
Resigning (Children, that lay their pretty garlands by): 6126
Resolution (She comes to walk in this sweet wild): 9667
Respect the Burthen. An Incident (Great Garibaldi, through the streets one day): 2566
Rest (Beneath the western heaven's span): 7092
Rest (Love came floating o'er the waters of life's calm untroubled sea): 4337
Rest (Love, give me one of thy dear hands to hold): 4301
Rest (Not in the torpor of a stagnant pool): 7412
Rest (On the soft grass, among the daffodils): 648
Rest (They are at rest): 10496
Rest (To-day I'll give to peace: I will not look): 991
Rest (Toll out, ye bells! sound midnight through the air): 13407
Rest (When thou art weary of the world, and leaning): 7097
Rest in the Lord (God draws a cloud over each gleaming morn): 1699
Rest Only in the Grave (I rode till I reached the House of Wealth): 15890
Rest: An Ode (Beneath the hill): 1593
Restitution (Upon her face were lines of pain and doubt): 14406
Resurgam (The bones of winter whiten on the hills): 7051
Resurgam (The Winter morn of cheerless gray): 13064
Resurgent (Green the little leaflets shew): 7639
Resurrection (I wrapped around me tight a cloak of scorn): 12752
Resurrection (Though Death met Love upon thy dying smile): 13951
Retirement (A shady and sequestered spot): 6600
Retirement (This grove—among its crowded trees): 15265
Retribution (He that with tears did never eat his bread): 10923
Retrospection (There are moments in life that are never forgot): 5249
Retrospection. For a Swedish Air (Winds in the trees): 6226
Retrospective (I never shall forget the school): 206
Return ("How is grown my little lady?"): 1458
Return of the Swallow (Home again beneath my eaves): 12892
Returned (Give me the place in your home, brother): 6718
Returning Spring (The flowers arise!): 2083
Reunion (Where shall we meet who parted long ago?): 4310
Revenant (You ask me why at our first meeting): 14509
Reverence in Love (No song of mine can e'er express): 6790
Reverses (When mirth is full and free): 10491
Rhine-Land (We lean'd beneath the purple vine): 1425
Rhoda; Or, the Whistle. Inscribed to the Hon. Lord Ardmillan (A fair young girl sat working by the fire): 1586
Rhyme (Playing with words—the pretty toys—): 4870
Rhyming Salutation (Hail, Christopher, old buck, I hope the weather): 9700
Rich and Poor ("We stand on the brink of the spirit world"): 13705
Rich and Poor Children (I met the rich man's children): 5303
Richelieu (All she-creatures that exist): 3085
Richer than Ever. A Wife's Story. (A sneer upon another's lip—): 855
Riches (It is the mind that maketh good or ill): 2983
Riches and Friendship (A certain man of vast estate): 7515
Riding to the Boyne (The sun flashed on his breastplate steel): 13645
Ringan and May. Ane Richte Mournfulle Dityee (I hearit ane laveroke synging with gle): 10217
Rinkomania ("There is rank on the rink," said young Brown with a wink): 13753
Rizpah, Daughter of Aiah. (Written for Music) (Under the changing sky): 538
Robert Blake, General-at-Sea (Our Happy Warrior! of a race): 2736
Robert Browning (Gone from our eyes, a loss for evermore): 8381
Robert Browning (Gone from us! that strong singer of late days): 14847
Robert Bruce Crowned by the Countess of Buchan (The Bruce is on his bended knee–a king, without a throne): 5904
Robert Bruce's Heart; or, The Last of the Crusaders ("This tediousness in death is irksome, lords"): 8204
Robert Burns (A fire of fierce and laughing light): 8656
Robert Burns (All hearts are his—with high and low): 7742
Robin (Robin on the yellow bough): 6683
Robin and I (Once, upon a winter day): 3970
Robin and Maggie: An Idyl (Rob looks on while Maggie works): 14211
Robin Hood and the Potter (It fell out one day, that as Robin Hood lay): 14320
Robin Redivivus (Wha says that Robbie Burns is deid?): 8073
Rocks of Offence (Life's ways are rough. Lord, help our will): 13669
Roddy Mor the Rover (Of all the roamin' jacks that yet to Farranfore kem over): 7803
Roger Goodfellow. A Song. To be sung to all sorry rascals (Small sirs, so melancholy): 11012
Roll On! (The ancient sage, in philosophic dreams): 1234
Romance (Where brooding rain-clouds, grim and hoar): 13222
Romance Jocoso. (Quintana: Poesias Castellanas, ii. 153) (Love and Death one day together): 9059
Romance. (Quintana: Poesias Castellanas, ii. 116) (Fie upon the nut-brown maiden!): 9057
Romance. From the Spanish of Gongora (At Orán, a noble Spaniard): 13919
Romans: Upon Reading the Philippic Orations of Cicero (How shall I praise thee, Caesar? Thou art he): 8940
Rome. 1870. Written on the Eve of the Entrance of the Italian Troops into Rome (There is a picture I remember well): 4015
Rome. November 4th, 1867 (Purple shadows on the mountains): 13574
Romsdal Fiord. July 11, 1881 (So this, then, was the Rover's nest): 8963
Rondeau Redoublé (It is the Spring, she comes, soft, sweet, and shy): 4837
Rondeau Redouble (My weariness has vanished with the day): 2403
Rondeau Redouble. On the Portrait of an Unknown Child (A laughing child with deep blue eyes): 2411
Rondeau: At Set of Day (At set of day the long, lithe shadows creep): 12458
Rondeaux d'Amour (Before the night come, and the day expire): 793
Rondel ("Love heeds not Time!" the foolish Rose breathed low): 13209
Rondel (In the shadow of your eyes): 675
Rondel (She came to me when Spring was in the land): 13113
Rondel (The sweet old words, whose ring caressed): 4713
Rondel of Spring (Cuckoo! Cuckoo! How wistfully): 13085
Ronsard: On the Choice of his Tomb (Ye caverns, and ye founts): 8921
Room in the World (There is room in the world for the wealthy and great): 1222
Rosa (He slept when fever had wracked his brain): 5659
Rosa Mundi (O Rose of May-time): 6772
Rosamond, Queen of the Lombards (Her long black hair came curling down): 861
Rose and Roses (I should like to dress me in roses): 8709
Rose Leaves (We stood beside the sleeping bay): 14246
Rose Marie (The snows have melted from the hills!): 2334
Rose or Thorn? (O Love the rose, O love the thorn): 2781
Rose-Elf Riddles (The Rose-Elf laughed with glee): 12772
Rosemary from the Camaldoli Monastery, Naples (Not on the breast of the unconscious dead): 2884
Roses ("I have roses to sell! I have roses to sell!"): 12919
Roses (A crimson rosebud into beauty breaking): 7289
Roses and Memories. Sonnet (Gloam and a grayness as of breaking night): 13184
Roses and Rosemary (I walked through my garden to cull me fresh posies): 14185
Roses in the Garden (By chance I passed a garden gay): 8713
Rosette. (From Béranger) (What! can you so respectless be): 716
Rotten Row (I hope I'm fond of much that's good): 14208
Rough Wind that Moanest Loud (Rough wind that moanest loud): 2308
Round the Hop-Bin (Round the hop-bin six fair maidens): 222
Roundel (This time last year you could not guess): 663
Rousseau (Oh, Monument of Shame to this our time): 10039
Rousseau (Oh, thou, Geneva's honour, yet her shame): 15266
Rowing (Rowing on the rippling waters): 13801
Royal Heart (Luke Claus Stanislaus, the King's son, had a sorrow): 2250
Rubens in the Cloister (From pallid morn until the drowsy noon): 706
Rudolph of Hapsburg (At Aachen, throned in imperial state): 8553
Rudolph of Hapsburg.—A Ballad (At Aachen, in imperial state): 9987
Rue (Dear, it is twilight time, the time of rest): 4721
Rule of Life (Wouldst thou be a happy liver): 9105
Rung into Heaven (One moonlit Yuletide, long ago): 400
Rupert, the Rope-Maker (Between my cot and the eastern sea): 4356
Rural Scenery (Receded hills afar of soften'd blue): 10771
Rural Seclusion. A sketch (How splendidly! with what a glorious light): 9325
Russian Martial Song. (In honour of General Count Wittgenstein) (Hail to the chief whose prowess sav'd): 8321
Russian Soldiers' Melody (The powerful army of the White Tsar): 8322
Rustic Courtship (Flower of the broom): 5052
Ruth (She stood breast-high amidst the corn): 15638
Ruth (The Plume-like swaying of the auburn corn): 11329
Ruth (When Ruth was left half desolate): 8305
S.S. 'Lustania' (I read in Dante how that horned light): 7857
Sabbath Bells (From the grey belfy of the minster tower): 2571
Sabbath Bells (The cheerful Sabbath bells, wherever heard): 8249
Sabbath Noon (The bell's sonorous chime hath died away): 7845
Sabbath Peace (How sweet are thy returns! how dear): 353
Sabbath Songs (Up! this sweet Sabbath morning! Creation's matin hymn): 2520
Sabbath Sonnet. Composed by Mrs Hemans a Few Days Before Her Death, and Dedicated to Her Brother (How many blessed groups this hour are bending): 11504
Sacontala. A Tale (It was a day of joy and revelry): 15078
Sacred Ground (A place to mark the Graces, when they come): 10935
Sacred Sudorifics (Fatigued with wand'ring over): 14667
Sacrifice ("Nay, for his sake is anything too hard?"): 4591
Sad Words (The little threads break one by one): 244
Sadak the Wanderer. A Fragment (He through storm and cloud has gone): 2933
Safe (Safe? the battle-field of life): 14526
Safi (Safi knelt by the spring with her wonted pitcher at even): 14121
Sail, Little Boat (Sail, little boat—sail out of the bay): 12611
Sailing Away (Sailing away with the wind abeam): 12601
Saint and Sinner (Ah, reverend sir, she has departed): 12110
Saint Dorothea (The sun blazed fiercely out of the cloudless blue): 759
Saint Elizabeth of Bohemia (I never lay me down to sleep at night): 6166
Saint Joseph and Mary. From a French Folk-Song (Saint Joseph and Mary): 1021
Saint Mary's Lake (Yarrow) (Peace on the Lake, and peace within my heart): 8106
Saint Swithin (The green ears droop, brown are the leaves): 4019
Saint Valentine (I think if old Saint Valentine but knew): 1168
Saint Valentine's Day (Saint Valentine's Day! And midst old recollections): 12862
Saints (I see them with their heavenward eyes): 2607
Saints (Ye, too, must fly before a chasing hand): 9848
Sala di Gran Senata, at Venice (How many mem'ries does this stately hall): 5187
Salvage (What have I brought from the spring-time, vanished so long ago?): 2037
Sanctandrews (St Andrews! name unmeet for tuneful lay): 7797
Sand-Castles (I watch in meditative hour): 7314
Sandown Bay (Oh, the summer sunshine): 3618
Sandro Gallotti (Sandro Gallotti,—sir, your slave!): 14867
Sanitary Inspectors. A Tale for County Councillors (Insanitary spectors, void of common-sense and brains): 8161
Sant' Ambrogio. From the Italian of Giusti (Your Excellency looks with sapient frown): 14249
Sapphic Ode to the Evening Star (When from the blue sky traces of the daylight): 9088
Sappho (Blest as the gods I hold the youth who fondly sits by thee): 14107
Satan Reformer (Satan laugh'd loud, when he heard that peace): 11245
Satis (When with the warmth of one last clinging kiss): 184
Satisfied (After the toil and turmoil): 4300
Saturn (’Tis noon’s bright stillness: on the cliff he lies): 7358
Saturn and Proteus, or Humble Desires (Saturn took refuge in old Proteus' cave): 11703
Saw Ye Geordie Cumin'. An Excellent New Song (Saw ye Geordie cumin', quo' she): 9868
Saxon Monasteries, and Lights and Shades of the Religion (By such examples mov'd to unbought pains): 9839
Scamander (Calm stream! that flow'st in Troas' classic land!): 15301
Scan.-Mag (Well, such a one as Mrs. P): 3583
Scandal (On that sad day when our first parents fell): 5616
Scarborough at Sunrise (Morning breaks on tower and steep): 5590
Scarborough—1859 (I have been here a little child, with a nankeen frock and spade): 215
Scene from the Odyssey. From the MS. Translation (We reach'd a beauteous port, whose sheltered bound): 15241
Scene in a Vermont Winter ('Tis a fearful night in the winter time): 9792
Scene Near Hydrabad (The butterflies are all abroad, the flowers): 15304
Scene Near Loch Ness (A skiff upon the waters! lo! it glides): 15792
Scene on the Grampians (Amid this vast, tremendous solitude): 8792
Scene—The Church of St Jerome, Granada. A Traveller—A Spaniard (Whose grave is this?—a stranger-eye, like mine): 11444
Scenes From a Play, Joanna of Naples (If there were language in each bud): 5204
Scenes of Boyhood (They are the sounds of former joy): 15745
Sceptics and Spectres (Lean Sceptic, hating spectres, white, or sable): 14337
Schedule A! Schedule A! (Schedule A!—Schedule A!): 11214
Schiller's Last Words ("Calmer and calmer still"): 5779
Schola Crucis, Schola Lucis (Beneath Thy cross I stand): 1280
School and Summer (Study to-day! those children twain): 1297
School Friendship (We were friends when our childish natures): 1265
School Friendships (This world is cold and selfish! I would fain): 15288
Schwerting of Saxony. (Translated from the German of Ebert) (Schwerting, Duke of Saxony, sate at the festive board): 871
Scorn and Repentance (Scorn not Repentance, for be sure that thou): 14703
Scorn Not the Least (Where wards are weak, and foes encount'ring strong): 3468
Scorn Not the Vilest (Scorn no one, even the vilest. Who art thou): 5876
Scotch Sincerity (I said, to one who picked me up): 3680
Scotland: A Song (The hills of my country are mantled with snow): 5344
Scotland's Laurels—a Song (All hail, Caledonia! thou nurse of my childhood!): 29
Scotland's Song of Liberty, to William Lovett, John Collins, and Dr P. M. M'Douall, On their liberation from the Prisons of England, July and August, 1840 (With spirit still unbroken): 1184
Scott (He sings, and lo! Romance): 13874
Scraps of Italy (O thou eternal Rome!): 3109
Scraps of Italy (Perchance as here, beside the crystal flood): 2951
Scraps of Verse from a Tourist's Journal (Into the wood! into the wood!): 9801
Scraps of Verse from a Tourist's Journal (You sail on Lucerne's lake): 9833
Sea Dreams. An Idyll (A city clerk, but gently born and bred): 13888
Sea Music (The grey unresting sea): 12156
Sea Sapphics (Sinking, slowly sinking, a weary Titan): 2399
Sea Scene (Cables entangling her): 10604
Sea Song (Call not the old life back, oh sea): 4010
Sea Ventures (I stood and watched my ships go out): 13553
Sea-Flowers (Earth has no vision more pure and sweet): 5143
Sea-Lore (Up stole, creeping on the shore): 6629
Sea-Shore Reflections at Sun-Set (Thou, mighty ocean, whom I now behold): 9505
Sea-Spoil (See the children with quick eyes): 7416
Sea-View (The ships seem hanging in the air): 7324
Sea-Voices (Up from the Deeps the mystic voices come): 13288
Sea-Voices (Where the broad sands lay smooth for fairy feet): 13314
Sea-Weeds (The depths of the ocean): 414
Seared (Only a little wiser, perhaps): 12175
Season Song ("Sweet love," said I, "'tis the birth of the year"): 4228
Seasonable Wooing (When the merry Spring flung her odorous gifts): 470
Seasons (Oh the cheerful Budding-time!): 14380
Seathewaite Castle (Sacred Religion, 'mother of form and fear'): 11159
Seaward (The long surf whitens up the bay): 7462
Seaware (A bit of driftweed tossed upon the shore): 13175
Seclusion (Lance, shield, and sword relinquish'd—at his side): 9830
Seclusion (The heart in sacred peace may dwell): 11040
Second Life (After life's departing sigh): 10653
Second Sight. (A Fact.) ("Nay, do not sail to-day, my lads," he said): 4824
Second Sight. A Dramatic Scene (Oh! I will chide thee, truant! Look how fair): 15097
Second Song.—To the Same (Thy tuwhits are lulled, I wot): 11145
Second Sunday After Epiphany (Incarnate word, who, wont to dwell): 10864
Second Sunday After Epiphany. No. II (By cool Siloam's shady rill): 10863
Second Sunday in Advent (The Lord will come! the earth shall quake): 10857
Second. "My humble first in yonder vale" (My humble first in yonder vale): 13862
Secrecy (Your purpose told to others, is your own): 9135
Secret Affinities: A Pantheistic Fantasy, From the French of Théophile Gautier (Deep in the vanished time, two statues white): 12037
Secret Sorrow (My soul is troubled with an ancient sorrow): 6227
Secrets (I've a secret in my heart, and I can tell it unto none): 6105
Secrets (July roses wet with rain): 13147
Seed-Words (Twas nothing—a mere idle word): 6778
Seedtime and Harvest (Beneath a dark November sky): 6555
Seeing and Doing (We stood upon the mountain's open side): 14347
Seeking ("And where, and among what pleasant places"): 337
Seeking for Rest (Only a muddy waif): 13734
Seeking Rest (Oh ye that fare amid these breathless places): 3891
Seeking Rest (Thus saith my soul, "The path is long to tread"): 3558
Self and Selfishness (Free thou thyself from self's narcotic leaven): 14716
Self-Knowledge ('Tis no doubt pleasant): 9109
Selkirk After Flodden. (A Widow's Dirge, October 1513) (It's but a month the morn): 8831
Semper Munditias, Semper, Bassilessa, Decores (Dress, at all hours arranged with studious care): 3806
Sensation (In days of yore, when men were slow): 13596
Sent Back by the Angels. A Ballad ("A little bit queer"–my Mary!): 3979
Sent to Heaven (I had a message to send her): 11949
Sent With Flowers (Take the last flowers your natal day): 5150
Sentences of Confucius (Threefold the stride of Time, from first to last!): 10810
Separation (I think of thee whene'er the sun is glowing): 10735
September (A dusky-browed spirit stood by the throne): 13498
September (Gildeth apace the warm September sun): 4246
September (How bright and beautiful the sun goes down): 11093
September (Innumerous chills of Winter smite the air): 7022
September (Life has been call’d a sporting day): 15884
September (Lo! the languid Summer lies): 6931
September (September in the arms of August lies): 15976
September (The harvest moon stands on the sea): 291
September (The wasp feeds in the hollow peach): 7604
September (There, in soft September sun): 12581
September the Third. (The Anniversary of Cromwell's Death, of Dunbar, and Worcester.) (Whereas the storm had died away, and thou): 848
Septuagesima Sunday (The God of Glory walks his round): 10865
Seranade. [For Music] ('Tis now the hour when blushing Day): 5917
Serenade (Art thou waking): 4040
Serenade (Awake, sweet love, for Heaven is awake!): 12356
Serenade (Come and fear not, gentle one): 5236
Serenade (Done is the summer's day): 7500
Serenade (Hail, western star of ray benign): 13931
Serenade (Oh, sweet the lily's silver sleep): 15248
Serenade (Sleep! sleep! if the visions around thee that hover): 15346
Serenade (Sweet maiden, awake): 12820
Serenade (The moon unclouded walks above): 15464
Sestina (I saw my soul at rest upon a day): 13952
Sestina of Hope (I stood alone within the silent wood): 2395
Sestina of Sleep (I saw the waterlily's petals close): 2386
Severed (Weary is the life I lead): 9511
Shade and Shine (Away to the Westward the ship is sailing): 13259
Shades (There is a shade on a brow once bright): 388
Shadow Thoughts (The better part of life is Sleep): 6779
Shadow-Music (I hear a voice thro' the autumn woods): 2326
Shadows (A burst of golden sunshine): 7510
Shadows (Break shadows from this dawn-light—break): 14059
Shadows (O! Mournful sequence of self-drunken days): 11974
Shadows (Say, dost thou love me, dear? Those eyes of thine): 12924
Shadows (Shadows come and shadows go): 13283
Shadows (The sweetest melody): 5018
Shadows of the Past (Blessed shadows of the past): 6986
Shadows on the Wall (Beside the hearth there is an hour of dreaming): 2726
Shadows: The Shadows of Ellen and Mary (The street-door is ajar, and Ellen enters): 1209
Shady Valley (The time was toward the heats of June): 836
Shâh Noshirân, King of Persia (In Persia, in olden time, lived a great king): 12397
Shakespeare (His was the wizard spell): 3595
Shakespeare Club of Alloa (Brethren, know you the import of this meeting?): 8052
Shakespeare's Women (Beyond me and above me, far away): 2819
Shakspeare (How little fades from earth when sink to rest): 14732
Shakspeare (What fiery tribulation purged thy soul): 7338
Shakspeare. A Celebration Ode (Ring out, glad bells, your blithest lays): 6864
Shall I, Wasting in Despair? (Shall I, wasting in despair): 2304
Shall we ever meet again? (Shall we ever meet again): 2134
Shanklin (No, this is not the land of Love): 445
Sharqi (Our hopes, our thoughts, are for the weal of our dear native land): 14792
She and I (Love me, love, with a love like mine): 14239
She and I (Now married half a score of years): 278
She and I (Why do I love my love so well?): 4042
She Comes (I sit beside the stream; and all the air): 13316
She Forgot Her Wrongs (Yes, she forgot them!—Angry words): 13024
She is Not Dead, But Sleepeth (Spell-bound upon her couch of glittering sea): 5175
She Never Told Her Love (Oh, no! she never told her love, nor dreamt that mortal knew): 3125
She Never Told Her Love (Was it that Moonington could find): 429
She Sang (She sang, dim night about us fell): 619
She Was a Phantom (She was a Phantom of delight): 3317
Sheaves of Gold (Among the golden sheaves, my love): 12812
Sheep On the Cheviot Hills (Graze on, graze on—there comes no sound): 5256
Shelley (A solitary rock): 13877
Shelley's Heart. To Edward John Trelawny (Trelawny's hand, which held'st the sacred heart): 161
Shelter (I thank thee, Ruysdael, for this simple scene): 11818
Shemaheit, or the Cockney's Irish Feast. A True Story (A wealthy Cockney, as is oft the case): 5869
Shemuel (Shemuel, the Bethlehemite): 1962
Shepherd's Song (Follow, follow, little sheep): 2575
Shepherdess's Cradle-Song. From the German (Sleep, baby, sleep): 6027
Shepherds' Song ("All alas and welladay"): 809
Shetland (Adieu! the cliffs that front the wave): 7242
Shining Stars (Shine, ye stars of heaven): 1349
Shipwreck (On the smiling sea was never a curl): 4028
Shipwreck Wood (See! how the firelight flashes on the pane): 4687
Shooting for the Silver Cup (Red in the sun, the danger-flag): 7142
Shooting Stars (Last night we watched the falling stars): 2162
Shoreward (Oh, my spirit is on the wing): 227
Shyness (Strong bars that sunder sympathies): 7180
Sibyl (Ebon hair in mazy tresses): 13837
Sibylline Books (When first, a boy, at your fair knees I kneeled): 7981
Sibylline Leaves (The story of our love is incomplete): 8588
Sic tu recoli merearis! (O soul, my soul, before thou com'st to die): 827
Sic Vos Non Vobis (At the hour of dawn on the Northern Sea): 2172
Sicilian Octave. Love (Like fire of sun, within the heart of vine): 15925
Sicilian Octave. Sorrow (Thou comest in our childhood’s happy days): 15934
Sicilian Octaves (Narcissus beautiful passed from her fain): 2369
Sicilian Octaves. [To Dr. Richard Garnett, C. B., with grateful thanks for his Sicilian Octaves] (Oh, fair is friendship with its equal part): 2363
Sick in the City (Pained is my head with weary care): 7150
Sick in the City (Three feet by two of hazy blue): 5557
Sickness (Treading the track which winds austere and slow): 5114
Side by Side (May we, then, never know each other?): 2899
Sie Sollen Ihn Nicht Haben (They shall not have it, cravens!): 8323
Silence (Weigh'd with the eloquence of Silence, Sound): 15059
Silent Gift (Thou half-way up the long steep hill of Fame): 13127
Silent Teachings (Sunlight! tell the hidden meaning): 6339
Silent Teachings (While overhead the rain-drops softly fell): 6512
Silent Worship (Though glorious, O God! must thy temple have been): 9905
Silvio Pellico and the Piombi (O God! how oft from those hot leads arose): 14690
Silvio Pellico, Imprisoned in the Venetian Piombi (The captive stood in his dungeon drear; no friendly aid was nigh): 6314
Similitudes (A Hailstone, from the cloud set free): 15417
Simmenthal (Far off the old snows evernew): 14395
Simon the Cyrenian. A Christian Ballad (Come out of the country): 2096
Sin and Reason (All sins must needs in man's own choice begin): 14701
Since Yesterday (The mavis sang but yesterday): 13381
Sincerity (In old Billboa's ancient town): 13755
Sing Not of the Past (Sing not in these glittering halls): 3873
Sing On! (Sing on, sweet lark!): 2760
Sing Round About Hawick, &c (We'll round about Hawick, Hawick): 10777
Sing, Little Bird. A Christmas Carol (Sing, little bird, on the shivering bough): 7674
Singing (Let me count up the songs of life that we): 4283
Singing (Singing from the mountain spring): 3892
Singing to a Star. (His Mother's Song) (Little Star, so wistful and so lonely): 2072
Sir Alain's Dove (Sir Alain has a castle fair): 3219
Sir Allan's Wooing (Nor shroud can hap, nor the marble hide): 8783
Sir Arthur Young. An Historical Ballad (He bends from his horse, the pledge is tied): 950
Sir Baldred's Farewell (I will thee bless—I will thee bless): 15568
Sir Cresswell Cresswell (Of all the Courts throughout the land): 9522
Sir Dagonet's Quest (King Mark came riding, in great despite): 1028
Sir Daniel Donnelly.—A Ballad (I came down to breakfast—And why all this sobbing): 8447
Sir Eliduc. A Lay of Marie (Touch ye the harp with tender): 11474
Sir Eustace (Child of the dust! whose number'd hours): 11358
Sir Graelent. A Breton Legend (The lady of Sir Graelent): 1304
Sir Harold (A day of strife hath fled): 9066
Sir Hugh. Founded on a Galloway tradition (Sir Hugh rose forth one summer eve): 3352
Sir John Suckling's Campaigne (Sir John he got him an ambling nag): 7225
Sir Julian and His Page (It was deep midnight, and the stars shone bright): 4201
Sir Lancelot at the Forest Chapel (Overthwart and endalong): 2281
Sir Launcelot's Boast (Sir Launcelot boasted he would never wed): 13581
Sir Olaf. (From the German of Heinrich Heine) (Nigh the church two men are standing): 693
Sir Penny (In earth there is a little thing): 3630
Sir Perceval's Return (Sir Perceval returned from fight): 15293
Sir Plume To Sacharissa: Who is Cross (Thy voice it is so sweet, and let): 1968
Sir Ralph de Blanc-Minster (Hush! tis a tale of the elder time): 12084
Sir Roger de Coverley in Love (The breeze was dead, the sun was high): 15658
Sir Self and Womankind (Sir Self-Sufficient on his mule): 11943
Sir Suno and the Mermaid (Sir Suno he built a ship so grand): 11690
Sir Toggenburg. A Ballad of Schiller ("Love, Sir Knight, of truest sister"): 10468
Sir Tray: An Arthurian Idyl (The widowed Dame of Hubbard's ancient line): 10269
Sir Tristem (Sir Tristem built a golden bark): 888
Sir Walter Scott (Mourn, sons of Scotia, mourn the day): 15696
Sir Walter Scott at the Tomb of the Stuarts in St Peter's (Eve's tinted shadows slowly fill the fane): 11405
Sir Walter's Honor (O mother! cast thy fears away): 2059
Sir William Douglas ("Sir William Douglas;" nothing more, carved on the old grey stone): 4652
Siste Viator (What is it that is dead?): 12039
Sister Grace (Sister Grace in wimple white): 7345
Sister Rose Gertrude (Sister Rose with the clear blue eye): 12045
Sisterly Sympathy (What shall I say to soothe thee, sister mine): 12935
Sisters (The day had gone as fades a dream): 6874
Sit Down in the Lowest Room (Like flowers sequestered from the sun): 14071
Sitting in the Sun (When Hope deceives, and friends betray): 6660
Sitting on the Shore (The tide has ebbed away): 6160
Six Little Words (Six little words arrest me every day): 12801
Six Nouns (Hark! across our neighbour's staircase): 13756
Sixteenth Sunday After Trinity (Wake not, oh, mother! sounds of lamentation): 10873
Sixteenth Sunday After Trinity (When our heads are bow's with woe): 10874
Sixty New Years' Days Ago (Is my darling tired already): 1474
Sketch from the Antique (Why bleeds poor Myra's ivory side?): 1523
Sketches (In the far village by the shining sea): 12983
Sketches Among the Poor. No. 1 (In childhood's days, I do remember me): 11688
Sketching the Castle (Sketching the castle, there they sit): 200
Sky Pictures in Sicily (Pale phantom, on the blue October night): 2866
Skye (My heart is yearning to thee, O Skye!): 2650
Slander (Go north and south on German ground): 9120
Slander (Put the scarlet pillory up): 6617
Slaved Britannia (Slaved Britannia! who shall ward thee): 158
Slavery (Earth! Earth! and canst thou longer bear): 5499
Sledding Stanzas ("Snow before to-morrow!"): 13815
Sleep (Beautiful up from the deeps of the solemn sea): 9610
Sleep (I came to waken thee, but Sleep): 1588
Sleep (When friends were cruel, and threaten'd to forsake): 1478
Sleep (While children sleep): 4031
Sleep and Death (Beyond the dying sun's last rim of light): 12507
Sleep and Death (Say, when the infant sleeps its wakeless sleep): 568
Sleep—A Sonnet (We sleep and dream. Who has not seen and met): 12885
Slumber. (From the Spanish) (Flow, softly flow, thou murmuring stream!): 3026
Small Talk (Aid me, ye Nine! I own that's nothing new): 7806
Small Things (I shaped a marble statue, the image of a thought―): 5074
Small Trials (Not great things are our life-trials;—the huge wave): 1702
Small-Talk (Small-talk is like small change; it flows): 5407
Smiles (Smiles melt the hate of foemen into love): 1201
Smiles (The childish smile is fair, but lovelier far): 14355
Smoke and Cloud (More dear the smoke that marks the shepherd's roof): 14700
Smokedrift (Bring me nor frankincense nor myrrh): 12621
Snow (I wander forth this chill December dawn): 2839
Snow (Last night the snow was falling): 2735
Snow (Wrapped in a dead, deep silence lie the moors): 7479
Snow on the Moors. February (O'er the wide waste of barren, bloomless moors): 12866
Snow-Drift (Winter's white banner waves on every bough): 6434
Snow-Flake (We parted in the winter): 4579
Snow-Flakes (Float on, float on): 12081
Snow-flakes (Through the chilly winter morning): 7533
Snowdrop (The time of Candlemas is here): 4704
Snowdrop (Welcome to earth, white snowdrop, once again): 7319
Snowdrops (Blossoms blown from the breath of Spring): 15018
Snowdrops (I had fair hopes all summer long): 4291
Snowdrops (Not from green meadows prodigal of flowers): 12555
Snowdrops (O Snowdrops, do not rise): 14533
Snowdrops (She stands before her looking-glass): 4855
Snowdrops (Shivering, pale and pure they stand): 1767
Snowdrops. (Consolation) (A small bird twitters on a leafless spray): 3661
Snuffers (Reforming Friend! believe ’tis true, though trite): 14712
So Is the Story Told (A fair head meekly bowed): 9655
So Long Ago (Roundel) (So long ago the hours of joy took flight): 8507
Social Questions. Ireland and Her Famines (There is woe, there is clamour in our desolated land): 13759
Society and Solitude (Methinks I see upon some desert coast): 10110
Society Satires. The Local Magnate (He climbs the ladder towards the highest place): 7421
Society Satires. The Managing Mamma (She walketh up and down the marriage mart): 7102
Socrates (I will sing a Greek, the wisest): 8623
Soft Fell the Shade of Even-Time (Soft fell the shade of even-time): 6241
Soft Shineth the Moon (Two wild hearts in one measure beating): 730
Sold (Come out with me into the moonlight: I know ’twas the maddest of folly): 11985
Soliloquy of a Modern Fine Lady (How dull it is to sit all day): 5167
Solitude (Grant, O ye healing Nymphs, that have your haunts): 10930
Solitude (Hail, old patrician trees, so great and good!): 3735
Solitude (Nay, leave me not alone to-night—alone): 15373
Solitude (Not in the deepest tangles of the wood): 12999
Solitude (There is a time when tears will flow): 14453
Solitude (Yes, let me wander by the murm'ring brook): 4903
Solitude and Society (In still retreat a thoughtful talent thrives): 9137
Some Answer (Not for himself—he lives to God alone): 14605
Something and Nothing (Dust are we, by one Almighty hand): 14651
Something Cheap (There's not a cheaper thing on earth): 5376
Something Great (The trial was ended—the vigil past): 13047
Something Left ("Gone, gone, the freshness of my youthful prime"): 3303
Something Worth Having (To have the sure esteem): 459
Sometimes (Sometimes, when life seems wonderfully dear): 13264
Somewhere (Somewhere the wind is blowing): 5432
Son of Man (Let me not scorn my fellow-men): 5542
Song ('Tis sweet on the hill top, when morning is shining): 9241
Song ("To't with a will, and hang Despair!"): 15273
Song (A bouquet for my love who loves me not!): 4638
Song (A presence terrible and sweet): 15455
Song (A soul was in each hour, that sped): 344
Song (A stream that passed a garden side): 5004
Song (Against the fretful ills of fate): 15964
Song (And wouldst thou music? listen to the watchdog's honest bay): 15675
Song (Awake to the sound of my sighing): 4786
Song (Believe me, if all those endearing young charms): 7877
Song (Cram-bam-bu-lee! all the world o-ver): 10322
Song (Drenched by the wintry seas): 6534
Song (Fly not, summer—fly not yet): 12734
Song (Friend, whose smile had ever power): 15205
Song (Give me the flowers that breathe): 15777
Song (Go hang my lyre upon the wall): 15693
Song (Grief sat beside the fount of tears): 4803
Song (Hail to the train that in triumph advances!): 9087
Song (Hope still will mount—no timorous fears): 15061
Song (Hurra for the Highlands! the stern Scottish Highlands!): 5315
Song (I askèd of the pallid moon): 176
Song (I could not through the burning day): 775
Song (I gave thee, love, a snow white wreath): 14087
Song (I hate those wild spirits that either are crowing): 5393
Song (I looked on the waters—all calmly they lay): 13918
Song (I love my love—but not because he beauty has and youth): 14074
Song (I love thy gay laugh as it merrily rings): 15476
Song (I loved her with the purest love): 15176
Song (I've heard of a gladness—nae sorrow and sadness): 109
Song (If I had my heart's delight): 12196
Song (In the summer, when flowers in the woodlands were springing): 11072
Song (In the time of blossoms and of birds): 11357
Song (Lilies to the dead are due): 13034
Song (Little bird, little bird, with thy beautiful eye): 15429
Song (Long summers have smil'd, and long winters have frown'd): 8995
Song (Look through the gloaming, the fire-flies are roaming): 8952
Song (Maid of my heart—a long farewell!): 7980
Song (Maiden of the sunny brow): 15804
Song (Mirth is but the child of Sorrow): 15977
Song (Moon! thou hast gently won): 11708
Song (My mind to me a kingdom is): 2919
Song (Nae heartless parasite I sing): 157
Song (Night, with her starry eyes): 15419
Song (Now winter is banish'd—his dark clouds are vanish'd): 28
Song (O fresh is the breeze of my mountains): 7991
Song (O have you blessed, behind the stars): 1090
Song (O Lady, leave thy silken thread): 15069
Song (O the voice of woman's love!): 15533
Song (Oh do not sing me such a lay): 15212
Song (Oh, for the days that have passed away): 15367
Song (Oh, mark yon little bounding bark): 3126
Song (Oh, three little birds on a bramble spray!): 12955
Song (Oh! but there is a pain too supremely surpassing): 4439
Song (Oh! the gowan's in the glen, and the winter is awa'): 3637
Song (Over thy cheek): 15607
Song (Ring'd with blue mountains): 3982
Song (She died in beauty!–like a rose): 3007
Song (She was not fair, she was not fair): 15402
Song (She's somewhere in the sunlight strong): 803
Song (Shine, lovely Star!): 15322
Song (Sing!—sing me to sleep): 5610
Song (Stay, sweet day, for thou art fair): 4518
Song (Stay, sweet Day, for thou art fair): 4582
Song (Summer is flying): 5840
Song (Sunset and stars and sea): 12473
Song (Swallow, foretelling a rainy day): 5067
Song (Swan-like form and snowy arms): 13939
Song (Sweet day, so cool, so calm, so bright): 2918
Song (The girl sat under the beetling cliff): 4607
Song (The gloomy night is gathering fast): 2921
Song (The nightingale is warbling): 15305
Song (The ship that proudly leaves the shore): 14483
Song (The silent bird is hid in the boughs): 4140
Song (The songs we used to sing together): 15281
Song (The winds are blowing winterly!): 15185
Song (There sits a bird on every tree): 6285
Song (There was a time when o'er the land): 38
Song (There's beauty in the dawning light): 13331
Song (There's not a word thy lip hath breathed): 15561
Song (They tell me she's no longer fair): 15236
Song (Those days were bright and pleasant days): 5601
Song (Thou sayest it is beautiful): 3602
Song (To the wood, to the wood!—where the wild birds sing!): 4957
Song (Upon the Ganges' regal stream): 14471
Song (Vive l’Amour!—In Life’s bright morning): 15858
Song (Vow no more: I did not think): 11107
Song (What can it mean?—that glance so tender): 485
Song (What projects men make–what queer turns they take): 5242
Song (What's a fair or noble face): 15371
Song (When I'm no more, this harp that rings): 3381
Song (When the pale moon is shining): 15274
Song (When Zephyr comes fresh'ning the broad summer glare): 15625
Song (Where eagle calls to waterfalls): 175
Song (Why so pale and wan, fond lover?): 11544
Song (Within these eyes, a brighter hue): 7434
Song (Young Love, a little pedlar boy): 15361
Song for a Family Party, to be sung by "All who've known each other long" (Ye! whose veins are like your glasses): 14144
Song For April (Primroses shine with pale gold light): 2076
Song for Music (Lover singeth of Faith): 2276
Song for November (The brown fogs are rising): 1316
Song for the Million (Song, admit me of thy crew!): 11096
Song for the Morning of the Day of St John the Baptist (Come forth, come forth, my maidens, 'tis the day of good St John): 8469
Song for the Opening of the Goldsmith's Hall. St Dunstan is their Patron (St Dunstan our patron and saint): 11568
Song from an Unfinished Drama (Where is Pan, Pan and the crowd): 8776
Song from the Beacon (Wish'd-for gales the light vane veering): 10142
Song From The Dutch, as Translated in the Student's Almanack of Leyden (Long for thy coming I've waited and sighed): 3649
Song I ("Where—where are the chiefs, and the hosts, whom the Lord"): 10831
Song I (Confusion to routs and at homes): 8306
Song I. Comparisons are Odious. A Chaunt (With an old song that is quite gone out of date): 9540
Song I. Saint Patrick (A fig for St Dennis of France): 9570
Song II ("Jehovah is holy, Jehovah is just"): 10832
Song II (That nothing is perfect has frequently been): 8307
Song II. Cobbett's Complaint. A Dirge (Now let no eyes be dry): 9543
Song II. Lament of a Connaught Ranger (I wish to St Patrick we had a new war): 9572
Song III ("Hark! hear ye the sounding"): 10833
Song III. Rafferty's Advice (When you go courting a neat or a dainty lass): 9575
Song III. When This Old Book Was New (When this Old Book was new): 9691
Song IV ("Howl! Babylon, howl! for the halls of thy mirth"): 10834
Song Occasioned by Seeing, in the Quarterly Review, and Blackwood's Magazine, some Gloomy Anticipations of the Effects of the Change in the Navigation Code (If e're that dreadful hour should come—But God avert the day!): 10086
Song of a Fallen Angel over a Bowl of Rum-punch (Heap on more coal there): 10081
Song of a Good Eclectic (My creed and my master you wish to learn?): 8960
Song of a Patriot (Oh, Britain! once my happy home): 145
Song of a Returned Exile (Sweet Corrin! how softly the evening light goes): 11434
Song of an Exile (In mine own land, across yon weary waters): 1451
Song of an Old Maid (What can I offer you, oh my love): 13295
Song of Death (Shrink not, O Human Spirit): 12388
Song of Demodocus the Bard Before Ulysses, in the Court of King Alcinous. Odyssey. Lib. VIII (The Bard, preluding, struck his tuneful lyre): 11912
Song of Emigration (There was heard a song on the chiming sea): 10792
Song of March (The morning streams on sparkling floods): 6813
Song of Marion's Men (Our band is few, but true and tried): 11131
Song of Peace (Awake the song of peace): 3714
Song of Silenus (The merry stars are glancing): 14630
Song of Sorrow (I can sing not of youth or of morning): 1003
Song of the Bees (We watch for the light of the morning to break): 5887
Song of the Bells (Soft upon the summer air): 15801
Song of the Bird, in Armida's Enchanted Garden: From Tasso (And all amid that fair enchanted ground): 8989
Song of the Burman Lover (Oh! come with me, in my little canoe): 15347
Song of the Captive (A flower, that's wondrous fair I know): 3504
Song of the Carilloneur (Ring out, my bells, in accents clear): 6823
Song of the Ceylonese Women (The sun is dancing on the streams): 14106
Song of the Chartist Emigrant (O! why from the land of my sires am I driven): 3228
Song of the Cress-Girl (’Tis fresh! And I sought it long miles from home): 721
Song of the Dew to a Dying Girl (Under the starlight, under the moon): 14259
Song of the Flower-Girl (The flowers of spring, the flowers of spring): 13419
Song of the Forsaken Maid (Oh weel I mind! The sun flung bricht): 6007
Song of the Happy Mother (Look at me, my pretty boy): 4402
Song of the Harvest Home (Open, O Master, the new gates): 8287
Song of the Highland Drover (Now fare thee well, England, no farther I'll roam): 3751
Song of the Imprisoned Cœur de Lion (When, fettered in some lonely cell, a captive would disclose): 3619
Song of the Irwell (I flow by tainted, noisome spots): 6895
Song of the Little Heart (Laugh, little heart, in simple glee): 4222
Song of the Luagh (Five Hieland maidens here are met): 3426
Song of the Nautilus (A fairy I am of the boundless sea): 6108
Song of the Night. From the Italian of Giacomo Leopardi (Thou silent orb of Night): 9320
Song of the Rain in Skye (Come tourists and forget a while): 4127
Song of the Roses (We come at the birth of joy on earth): 14062
Song of the Sea Waves (I stood beside the sunny sea): 5592
Song of the Seasons (Gaunt Winter flinging flakes of snow): 6902
Song of the Shirt (With fingers weary and worn): 5403
Song of the Volunteers (England, as of old, girdled round by ocean-foam): 14176
Song of the Water Gueuse (The beggar's band that walks the land): 11346
Song of the Wheaten Bread (“Come, wheaten bread, and tell me true”): 8897
Song of the Wild Flower (On this desolate heath, all unnoted, unknown): 6032
Song of the Wind (I sport at morn amid flowry beds): 7609
Song of the Winds (Hurra—hurra—hurra!): 6054
Song of the Workmen (We light our lamps before the dawn of day): 6234
Song on April (April, sweet month, the daintiest of all): 5320
Song on Curling (When snell o'er our snaw tappet mountains): 5806
Song on Mr Peel (O Tories, dear Tories, who still are as true): 10516
Song Sung at the Symposium in the Saloon, 3d of January 1840 (Attend to my song, ye contributors all): 11437
Song Sung at the Symposium in the Saloon, 8th January 1841 (Come, all good friends who stretch so free): 11170
Song to a Salmon (Thou bonny fish from the far sea): 7895
Song to My Wife. [Written on Lord Mayor's Day, 1837] (We'll not go nigh the "sight" to-day): 3529
Song to the Men of England (Men of England, wherefore plough): 2
Song to the Sea (Let the wave-song of Beauty be sung to the sea): 8955
Song V ("As Gomorrah and Sodom, of old, in his ire"): 10835
Song V. A Real Irish "Fly Not Yet" (Hark! hark! from below): 9579
Song VI. The Impassioned Wave (’Tis sweet upon th’ impassion’d wave): 9580
Song—"That I love thee, charming Maid," to its own Tune (That I love thee, charming maid, I a thousand times have said): 7820
Song—“John Nicholson's Daughter” (The daisy is fair, the day lily rare): 10717
Song—A Memory (When thy burdened spirit fails): 13094
Song—My Border Home (Some praise the charms of foreign climes): 6121
Song—Sung by General Sophist Seward of Christ-Church (Hail to the maiden that graceful advances!): 7819
Song—The Spring (I know where by Life's wayside): 5941
Song—The Winds (The South Wind sings of happy springs): 6924
Song, by Mr Wastle, On Proposing the Health of H. R. H. Prince Leopold (Look, oh! look from the Bower—'tis the beautiful hour): 7816
Song, For the Dinner Given to the Earl of Dalhousie, at Edinburgh, 14th September 1847, Before his Proceeding to India as Governor-General (Long, long ere the thistle was twined with the rose): 10729
Song, Hurrah for the Charter (Hurrah for the Charter, stern freedom's own Charter): 33
Song, On Being Asked Who Wrote "The Groves of Blarney" ('Who'—ask ye! No matter.—This tongue shall not tell): 9448
Song, on the Wedding-Day of Timothy Tickler, Esq. and Miss Amarantha Aloesbud (Fill, fill to the brim, fill a bumper to him): 9723
Song, The Scottish Emigrant's Farewell (Farewell, a lang, a last fareweel): 32
Song: From 'The Compleat Angler' ("Oh, the gallant fisher's life"): 8851
Song: Minnie to Her Spinnin'-Wheel (Birr on, birr on, my spinnin'-wheel!): 3015
Song. "Here's a health to one I love dear." (Here's a health to thee, Mary): 7769
Song. (From an Unpublished Opera) (Up among the mountains): 13993
Song. (From the Circassian) (What means this misery-happiness?): 4446
Song. (Lending the Ears) (The ear has come to the corn field): 8290
Song. A Phantasy (I saw, in sleep, a sullen Sphinx that stood): 4325
Song. Aftermath (Heart of my youth! when spring): 15969
Song. Der winter hat mit kalter hand, &c. From the German. Anonymous ('Tis done:—by Winter's icy hand): 7993
Song. Ex Improviso, on Hearing a Song in Praise of a Lady's Beauty ('Tis not the lily brow I prize): 3110
Song. From "Titan," an Unpublished Romance (As the stream glideth on to the depths of the ocean): 15761
Song. From "Titan," an Unpublished Romance (The last sunburst of glory): 15782
Song. In Answer to "Is There a Heart That Never Loved?" on Hearing It Sung by a Lady (Oh, no! there’s not a heart but owns): 15492
Song. Wallace, Knight of Elderslie (Brothers of my native shore): 24
Song. Written at Sea, on Board the William Jolliffe, November 18, 1829 (Down the Elbe and o'er the sea): 15335
Song.—"There is not a Breath" (There is not a breath on the breast of the ocean): 10149
Song.—The Blackbeetle. After Tennyson (When cats sneak out and night is come): 13651
Song.—The Owl (When the cats run home and light is come): 11144
Song.—The Taking of the Salmon (A birr! a whirr! a salmon's on): 3330
Songless (Sweet little maid, whose golden-rippled head): 7522
Songs for the People No. II ("Envy of surrounding nations"): 9
Songs for the People. No. III (I love to sing of liberty—I love the true and free): 12
Songs for the People. No. IV (Cold, cold was the night, and the place wild and dreary): 13
Songs for the People. No. V (What is a Chartist—is he one): 15
Songs for the People.—No. VI (O had I an eagle's wings): 23
Songs in the Night (Darkness broods upon the temple): 6111
Songs of Birds ("The Skylark's song: "Arise, arise!"): 3900
Songs of the Olden Time. Sally in Our Alley (Of all the girls that are so smart): 7218
Songs of the Olden Time. The Country Lass (Although I am a country lass): 7217
Songs of the Sea (Gently, gently, through the water): 8701
Songs of the Seasons. I. The Spring Song (Winter, Winter, is hurrying away): 2981
Songs Sent South (My Love, beside the Southern sea): 4001
Sonnet ('Twas in those hours of Youth's delicious spring): 10101
Sonnet ("Vain are his labours who is never idle!"): 5997
Sonnet (A pearl, that ’bideth in a lowly shell): 15431
Sonnet (A thought of joy, that rises in the mind): 6112
Sonnet (Across the hedges, thick with Autumn's flowers): 4727
Sonnet (All is the same as when I was a child): 6610
Sonnet (And must I perish thus?—a nameless tomb): 8522
Sonnet (Another Noon—and still the sun rides high): 5155
Sonnet (Another rolling year has swept away): 249
Sonnet (Are ye not weary, brother, of the clouds): 6286
Sonnet (Around us still extends a paradise): 6228
Sonnet (As rich am I as though some fairy dower): 2404
Sonnet (As some vast rock just parted from the shore): 4601
Sonnet (Be patient, heart of mine! be patient still): 5780
Sonnet (Black is the Lake, and blacker still the Sky): 8327
Sonnet (Calm is thy silver bosom, lovely Clyde!): 9171
Sonnet (Dear heart, they say Love is for youth alone): 15957
Sonnet (Deep fears long since I've had for England's weal): 8430
Sonnet (Each joy we cherished slowly fades away): 4508
Sonnet (England has felt of old a tyrant's sway): 11547
Sonnet (Ere baffled Winter, at fair Spring's first nod): 12742
Sonnet (Fogarty! friend and partner of my heart): 9453
Sonnet (Friend of my heart, here in my close green bower): 4434
Sonnet (Go seek for infant beauty in the field): 6127
Sonnet (Hast thou, in feverish and unquiet sleep): 9685
Sonnet (High on a gnarled and mossy forest bough): 4516
Sonnet (How sweet to watch from some vine-covered hill): 7086
Sonnet (I could have lengthen'd out one fleeting hour): 15660
Sonnet (I dreamed—I saw a little rosy child): 5901
Sonnet (I dreamt last night that I was once again): 12600
Sonnet (I grieve beside thee; yet I would not weep): 13321
Sonnet (I grieved for Buonaparté, with a vain): 2868
Sonnet (I have "no right" to weep for thee—"no right"): 7332
Sonnet (I love the country as I do my dreams): 6491
Sonnet (I love to see you each upon his steed): 8432
Sonnet (I once had thought to have embalm'd my name): 8497
Sonnet (I saw her once, once only, long ago): 13042
Sonnet (If I might choose, where my tired limbs shall lie): 8524
Sonnet (If this poor name of mine, now writ in sand): 14858
Sonnet (Impassion'd grief is dumb—no earthly sound): 13979
Sonnet (In my life's Pilgrimage, as I count o'er): 13151
Sonnet (In the cold change, which Time hath wrought on Love): 4205
Sonnet (It doth surpass belief how some–accounted): 5956
Sonnet (It is late summer-time; and, in a dream): 12526
Sonnet (It is not fanciful that one excels): 3858
Sonnet (It is not to be thought of that the flood): 3008
Sonnet (It was a fair spot by that Fountain's side): 4777
Sonnet (Keep thou thy native white Simplicity): 8732
Sonnet (Loud midnight-soothing melancholy bird): 3098
Sonnet (Methought my love was dead.—O ’twas a night): 3393
Sonnet (More free than Alpine eagle's wing is mind!): 6535
Sonnet (My love she is a lowly but sweet flower): 3376
Sonnet (Not in the sunshine, not by noisy day): 6039
Sonnet (Not that Disease his cruel hand has raised): 14408
Sonnet (O lofty souls, that in the olden days): 7727
Sonnet (O noble maid! When daylight sinks to sleep): 7046
Sonnet (O noble maid! When daylight sinks to sleep): 7422
Sonnet (O pleasant Wind, whose breathings softly pant): 8839
Sonnet (Oft let me wander hand-in-hand with thought): 6871
Sonnet (Oh lay me not beneath the poisonous yew): 14114
Sonnet (Old thoughts, old memories of days gone by): 12642
Sonnet (Our yesterdays enthral our morrows still): 12656
Sonnet (Poor drifted flower, which this unthinking sea): 2019
Sonnet (Rememb'rest thou, sweet love, and aged Oak): 5514
Sonnet (Shall the hag Evil die with child of Good): 11141
Sonnet (Sleep, Silence' child, sweet father of soft rest): 2929
Sonnet (Sometimes amid the garish hours of day): 12679
Sonnet (Spot of wild beauty—a long year hath past): 15545
Sonnet (The bitter wind was blowing from the west): 14420
Sonnet (The dying leaves are drifting to and fro): 12467
Sonnet (The fleeting hours of time flow swiftly on): 12556
Sonnet (The flower, full blown, now bends the stalk, now breaks): 3171
Sonnet (The Lake lay hid in mist, and to the sand): 8136
Sonnet (The loud day yields unto the silent night): 6768
Sonnet (The loved are never lonely: round them still): 6380
Sonnet (The mirthful spring hath come to us at last): 5865
Sonnet (The mutual passion that unites the hearts): 5283
Sonnet (The rain falls softly on the window eaves): 4540
Sonnet (The summer sun had set!—The blue mist sail'd): 10139
Sonnet (The thrush is hid within the emerald bough): 13351
Sonnet (There are some sorrows that on life impress): 15921
Sonnet (There be some songs that, whosoever singeth): 12448
Sonnet (There is a hallowed sweetness in the name): 12904
Sonnet (There is a spirit in this world of ours): 5474
Sonnet (There's that more precious than the diamond's flame): 12738
Sonnet (Though I have cause for tears, I will not weep): 13921
Sonnet (Tis sweet to wander in the early year): 6581
Sonnet (To be a lonely wanderer among hills): 15571
Sonnet (Too much–too much we make Earth's shadows fall): 6046
Sonnet (Urging with queenly grave her upward way): 5816
Sonnet (We meet at morning, while the laughing light): 4426
Sonnet (We must not be too tender of ourselves): 5580
Sonnet (We toiled unduly: labour's ponderous wheels): 5850
Sonnet (Were this a feather from an eagle's wing): 8494
Sonnet (What felt the world's survivor when the bough): 5971
Sonnet (What is this worldly craft, so boasted oft): 3863
Sonnet (When thou wert here, Life stood at gaze with Joy): 5732
Sonnet (Whene'er I feel this rare excess of health): 6001
Sonnet (Where the red wine-cup floweth, there art thou!): 6207
Sonnet (Who can the Throne of the Eternal find?): 7771
Sonnet (Who hath no treasured something of the past): 6012
Sonnet (Why should we pine and perish, sickness-struck): 5642
Sonnet (Wild is the Lake, dark in autumnal gloom): 8329
Sonnet (With grief in heart, and tears in swooning eyes): 14561
Sonnet (With high-souled Monti, cowardly I deem): 7716
Sonnet (Ye who the lack of gold would plead as lack): 5976
Sonnet (Years pass away; the worthy die, and leave): 3793
Sonnet 10 (In her life's fairest and best flowering prime): 9767
Sonnet 103 (Alack, what poverty my Muse brings forth): 8686
Sonnet 11 (When birds' lament, when green leaves whispering): 9775
Sonnet 116 (Let me not to the marriage of true minds): 8683
Sonnet 12 (Ne'er did I see a spot so fit for gaze): 9774
Sonnet 121 ('Tis better to be vile than vile esteem'd): 8894
Sonnet 122 (Thy gift, thy tables, are within my brain): 8687
Sonnet 123 (No, Time, thou shalt not boast that I do change): 8688
Sonnet 125 (Were't aught to me I bore the canopy): 8895
Sonnet 128 (How oft, when thou, my music, music play'st): 8861
Sonnet 137 (Thou blind fool, Love, what dost thou to mine eyes): 8689
Sonnet 14 (When Faith and Love, which parted from thee never): 9263
Sonnet 140 (Be wise as thou art cruel, do not press): 8196
Sonnet 20 (A woman's face with Nature's own hand painted): 8855
Sonnet 24 (Mine eye hath play'd the painter and hath steel'd): 8857
Sonnet 31 (Where is that brow, which by its lightest sign): 9771
Sonnet 32 (How much I envy thee, earth, miser grown): 9768
Sonnet 37 (As a decrepit father takes delight): 8185
Sonnet 43 (That nightingale which doth so sweetly plain): 9772
Sonnet 45 (Passed is that time, alas! when joyfully): 9777
Sonnet 49 (Against that time, if ever that time come): 8189
Sonnet 57 (Being your slave, what should I do but tend): 8190
Sonnet 58 (That God forbid, that made me first your slave): 8191
Sonnet 59 (Go, mournful verse, to that hard stone which hides): 9769
Sonnet 6 (Alas! of all my happy days the last): 9766
Sonnet 60 (Like as the waves make towards the pebbled shore): 9260
Sonnet 62 (Sin of self-love possesseth all mine eye): 8192
Sonnet 63 (Against my love shall be, as I am now): 8193
Sonnet 66 (Death, thou hast left the world without its Sun): 9770
Sonnet 67 (Ah! wherefore with infection should he live): 8690
Sonnet 71 (No longer mourn for me, when I am dead): 8195
Sonnet 73 (That time of year thou may'st in me behold): 8187
Sonnet 73 (That time of year thou may'st in me behold): 9261
Sonnet 74 (But be contented: when that fell arrest): 8188
Sonnet 74 (But be contented: when that fell arrest): 8685
Sonnet 78 (So oft have I invoked thee for my Muse): 8893
Sonnet 79 (Whilst I alone did call upon your aid): 8883
Sonnet 8 (Captain, or colonel, or knight in arms): 9262
Sonnet 80 (O how I faint when I of you do write): 8884
Sonnet 80 (Oh how I faint when I of you do write): 8183
Sonnet 81 (Or I shall live your epitaph to make): 8891
Sonnet 82 (I grant thou wert not married to my Muse): 8892
Sonnet 83 (Death has extinguished my once dazzling sun): 9778
Sonnet 83 (I never saw that you did painting need): 8889
Sonnet 84 (Who is it that says most? which can say more): 8890
Sonnet 85 (I walk and weep my days that are no more): 9779
Sonnet 85 (My tongue-tied Muse in manners holds her still): 8885
Sonnet 86 (Was it the proud full sail of his great verse): 8184
Sonnet 86 (Was it the proud full sail of his great verse): 8886
Sonnet 87 (Blest spirit, that so sweetly didst of old): 9776
Sonnet 89 (Dear little bird, that flying still dost sing): 9773
Sonnet Dedicatory (Although a hundred leagues of weary soil): 10090
Sonnet Dedicatory (As we had been in heart, now linked in hand): 10305
Sonnet from Petrarch. “Se lamentar angelli o verdi fronde” (The birds' sad song, the young leaves' rustling play): 305
Sonnet I (A grim Power in the north rose up, and spread): 9621
Sonnet I. On seeing the Grave of an unfortunate Girl whom the Author had known in the days of her innocence (A passing sigh is due to every bier): 7989
Sonnet II (He, prophet-like, beheld the coming years): 9622
Sonnet II. To the Same (Peace to thy dust!—The dove of peace that fled): 7990
Sonnet III (So that wild Thrace—the Turkestan of old): 9623
Sonnet in a Spring Grove (Here the white-ray'd anemone is born): 1336
Sonnet IV (But yet that pass by the Thessalian sea): 9624
Sonnet IX (From Great Poseidon's altar looking back): 9629
Sonnet IX (When from my dreary home I first mov'd on): 8081
Sonnet LV (Not marble, nor the gilded monuments): 8487
Sonnet LXXXVII (Farewell! thou art too dear for my possessing): 8489
Sonnet on "Glory." Translated from the Italian of Redi (Glory, what art thou?—thou for whom the bold): 3477
Sonnet on a foreign warship's salute to the Queen's standard at Osborne, 1875 (With their deep tones, monotonous and slow): 2614
Sonnet on Christmas (How have they dawned on us, those Christmas days): 13275
Sonnet on June (Month of the sunny skies, and woodlands bright): 13247
Sonnet on Myself (I love to walk towards Hampstead saunteringly): 7875
Sonnet On the Battle between Mendoza and Tom Owen, at Banstead Downs, July 4th, 1820 ("Superfluous lags the veteran on the stage"): 8799
Sonnet on the Death of his Late Majesty (Ward of the Law!—dread Shadow of a King!): 8467
Sonnet on the Duke of Wellington (Honour to those who toweringly aspire): 11620
Sonnet on the Nonpareil (With marble-coloured shoulders—and keen eyes): 8511
Sonnet on the Visit of the Duchess D'Angouleme to the Village Church of — (Before the altar of the village fane): 3845
Sonnet to ___, In Her Seventieth Year (Such age how beautiful! O Lady bright): 3457
Sonnet to — (The world bursts in between us—we must part!): 9721
Sonnet to a Child (Thou darling child! When I behold the smile): 10137
Sonnet to a Pair of Old Boots. Written, seventy years ago, by a gentleman now deceased, and found among his papers (Ye two companions of my wintry way): 7229
Sonnet To A Poetical Young Friend (Poetical and poor! Ah, hapless friend): 5456
Sonnet to a Revered Female Relative (Lady, when I behold thy thoughtful eye): 7999
Sonnet To a young Lady caressing her Infant Brother (O take not, dearest Mary! from my view): 7998
Sonnet to Ailsa Rock (Hearken, thou craggy ocean pyramid!): 8088
Sonnet To an Infidel (All is in change—yet there is nothing lost): 8000
Sonnet to Ben Lomond. Copied From the Scrap-Book at Rowerdinnan Inn (Proud and repulsive, as some conquering knight): 5998
Sonnet to Charlotte M— (Thou art but in life's morning, and as yet): 9907
Sonnet to Clarkson (Patriot for England's conscience! Champion keen): 10738
Sonnet to Forgetfulness (Come! sweet Oblivion—gentle, loving, mild): 7447
Sonnet to Haydon (Genius immortal, industry untired): 9121
Sonnet to John Carnegie, Esq. (Sweet Bard of Largo's Vale! yet once again): 8202
Sonnet To L—. Christmas, 1848 (How shall I crown thy uncomplaining brow): 6004
Sonnet To L—. Christmas. (The earth is silent, and the winter air): 5974
Sonnet to Lord Denman. Retiring from the Chief Justiceship of England (There is a solemn rapture in the Hail): 1041
Sonnet to the Buttercup (Will no one sing of thee, thou pleasing flower): 5977
Sonnet to the Moon (Oh! thou sweet mother of the "veiled hours"): 4465
Sonnet to the New Year (For ever doth our Mother Earth repeat): 13225
Sonnet to the River Waveney (Still flows meandering stream, thy silver tide): 4461
Sonnet to the South Wind (Ay, thou art welcome—heaven's delicious breath): 3454
Sonnet to the Yew-Tree (When Fortune smiled, and Nature's charms were new): 7978
Sonnet to Walter Scott, Esq. (Sweetest of Minstrels, strike the harp again!): 8110
Sonnet to Wordsworth (Wordsworth, I envy thee, that from the strife): 9143
Sonnet V ("True, Philip may have erred; but now at least"): 9625
Sonnet VI (And so at length, of help and hope bereft): 9626
Sonnet VI (When Thou that agonized Saint dost see): 8083
Sonnet VII (Then, whilst the Sun of Ammon from the west): 9627
Sonnet VIII (Alas! the dry-rot of the heart spreads wide): 9628
Sonnet VIII (My Bible! scarcely dare I open thee!): 8080
Sonnet X (Yet this man, the mean Roman satirist): 9630
Sonnet XI (As o'er the dying embers oft I cower): 8082
Sonnet XI (But he preferred to go: then Demades): 9631
Sonnet XII (Perchance a death sought nobly, and sustained): 9632
Sonnet XIX (Thou cottage gleaming near the tuft of trees): 8084
Sonnet XXIII (There is I know not what within my breast): 8085
Sonnet XXVI (Lord of my love to whom in vassalage): 15892
Sonnet—A Frosty Night (Out in the keenness of the pinching air!): 7041
Sonnet—Evening (I love to watch the bright stars, one by one): 5420
Sonnet—For a Picture (Well pleased am I, fair damsel, to have seen): 12638
Sonnet—Human Love (No lessening in loving, neither change): 14520
Sonnet—Love for the Young (Not only for yourselves, but for the years): 2438
Sonnet—Rash Opinions (We judge too rashly both of men and things): 6008
Sonnet—The Sky-Lark’s Nest (Not in secluded incense-breathing grove): 6456
Sonnet, by the Ettrick Shepherd; (Addressed to Christopher North, Esq. on receiving the last Number of this Magazine, by the hands of John Dow, Esq. W. S. ) (How sweet when winter, o'er the yarrow rocks): 7834
Sonnet, On Hearing the Clock Strike at Midnight on the 31st December (Hark! In that dirge-like peal what magic lies): 5898
Sonnet, On the Pic du Midi d'Ossau, in the Pyrenees (Peak of the South! who from thy mountain-bed): 3461
Sonnet, On the Spirit of Domestic Happiness (Albion! a tutelary Power is thine): 7997
Sonnet, On Viewing My Mother's Picture (How warms the heart when dwelling on that face): 10032
Sonnet, to a Child (In thought thou art immortal, joyous child!): 14009
Sonnet: On My Little Boy's First Trying to Say "Pa-Pa" (Marked day! on which the earliest dawn of speech): 6176
Sonnet: On Overhearing A Little Child (A Visitor) Saying "Mamma" in the Next Room (Hark! through the wall it comes! and to my ear): 6167
Sonnet. To the Unknown Sculptor of the Apollo (Wert thou a mortal in whose mortal mind): 4091
Sonnet. — May (Once more fair Nature smiles, and from the hand): 5002
Sonnet. (From Lupercio de Argensola) (I grant, Don John, the lily and rose that, rarely): 9022
Sonnet. (From Quevedo) (Pilgrim, in Rome who seekest Rome, resign): 9024
Sonnet. (Written at Sanquhar) (O Scotland, thou art full of holy ground!): 313
Sonnet. A Gravestone Upon the Floor in the Cloisters of Worcester Cathedral ("Miserrimus!" and neither name nor date): 2961
Sonnet. A Tradition of Darley-Dale, Derbyshire ('Tis said that to the brow of yon fair hill): 3540
Sonnet. Composed Off Ætolia, in 1820 (I hear gay tones from every joyous Greek): 15601
Sonnet. Evening on the Pier at Burlington (A little gladsome world was gathered there): 13898
Sonnet. From the Italian (Adieu my youth! Without one sigh adieu!): 5893
Sonnet. In Memoriam W. C. P. Drowned at Oxon, summer term 1882 (As at some revel, when the cups are crowned): 7555
Sonnet. On a Brother and Sister who Died at the Same Time, Abergele, August 20, 1868. (Men said, who saw the tender love they bare): 14262
Sonnet. On Mr. Lough's Statue of "Lady Macbeth" (If this dread image were by ocean thrown): 1223
Sonnet. On Reading "Paradise Regained." 1830 (Homer and Dryden, not unfrequently): 3568
Sonnet. On seeing a Spark fall from Mr Hogg's Pipe (Hush'd were the scenes around;—a slumbrous dream): 7748
Sonnet. On the Death of A Lady (Within a dell, one Spring, my boyhood knew): 11595
Sonnet. Petrarch to Laura (In the first hour of the first April day): 4996
Sonnet. Suggested by Mr Wall's Painting of the Falls of Niagara (Oft have I stood in fancy on the shore): 11924
Sonnet. The Camellia (As Venus wander'd 'midst the Idalian bower): 3112
Sonnet. The Cemetery of the Heart (Oft, in the twilight of my spirit, to): 6341
Sonnet. The Misty Landscape (The blue mist sleeps on Henham's fairest bowers): 3782
Sonnet. The Rhine Visited ('Twas yet a dream!—The golden light of day): 9943
Sonnet. To — (Oh! I have loved thee with a boundless love): 8774
Sonnet. To — 1817 (Upon what pleasant slope, or sunny field): 7862
Sonnet. To * * * (Nay, Sweet, ’tis nothing new! What though the light): 1052
Sonnet. To My Sister, With a Volume of Tennyson's Songs (I said, "What gift for one from foreign climes"): 1055
Sonnet. To Robert Browning; Suggested by a Sunset of Unusual Beauty (A mighty sorrow gathers, while the eye): 1221
Sonnet. To Robinson Crusoe (Friend of my childhood! many a weary day): 9172
Sonnet. To the beautiful Miss Lucy Forman. On seeing her shaking Canaster from one Bag into another (Albeit no narrowness lie in my creed): 7751
Sonnet. Written at Benares, in the East Indies (The shades of evening veil the lofty spires): 15639
Sonnet. Written by the Sea-Side (Ocean! thy foam-crowned bulwarks round our land): 11634
Sonnet. Written in a Church-Yard (A sweet and soothing influence breathes around): 9704
Sonnet. Written in July, 1824 (How oft, amid the heap'd and bedded hay): 15647
Sonnet. Written in the steamer, on leaving Constantinople (Proud Stamboul's gay and gilded domes recede): 4782
Sonnet. Written off the Dutch Coast, August 1st, 1820 (Let him not say 'I love my country'—he): 9170
Sonnet. Written on the Terrace of Richmond Castle, Yorkshire (Richmond! their rage a thousand years have spent): 3096
Sonnet.—In Illness ("The broken threads of life's all-tangled skein"): 13298
Sonnet.—To Denmark (Again the trumpet-blast of war is blown): 10519
Sonnets ('Tis night! and the long radiance of the west): 3527
Sonnets (A Mother watched with many a silent vow): 7572
Sonnets of Praise (The nestling vales lie sheltered from rough winds): 12816
Sonnets to Mr Wordsworth. No I (Behold yon Moon! with what a sober joy): 8117
Sonnets to Mr Wordsworth. No II (Wordsworth, thy name is precious to mine ear!): 8119
Sonnets Written Among the Mountain Scenery of Cumberland (Ye mountain surges! mimic mountain main!): 14626
Sonnets Written in the Vicinity of Flamborough Head (Whate'er man images of profound and great): 11970
Sonnets—The Early Thrush (Methinks that voice exults most joyously): 6928
Sophocles—Trachinæ (Venus swayeth all below): 11680
Sorrow and Joy (With heavy foot, and heel to th' ground): 12174
Sorrow and My Heart (To the field where I was lying): 1409
Sorrow and Song (Weep not over poet's wrong): 5478
Sorrow is Dry (When to Peggy Bauldie's daughter, first I told Sir Daniel's death): 8445
Sorrow Without Consolation (O, wherefore shouldst thou try): 10913
Sorrows and Joys (Bury thy sorrows, and they shall rise): 1126
Sorrows of Werther (Werther had a love for Charlotte): 7936
Soul-Gardening (So spake the hoary thyme): 1578
Sound Without Sense (There was a young lady of Cork): 14280
Sounds at Sea (The weary sea is tranquil): 5455
Southernwood (Ah me! how seldom now are seen): 4471
Southey (Where necromancy flings): 13870
Southey's "Famous Victory." Corrected to the Present Time (It was a summer evening): 6342
Southey's Epitaph (Ye torrents foaming down the rocky steeps): 5406
Souvenirs (I loved a lady fair of face): 838
Sowing (Sow thou thy seed of corn and wait a while): 12561
Sowing and Reaping (Sow with a generous hand): 1420
Sowing and Reaping (We live by thought, and by the men who spake): 4239
Sowing the Dragon's Teeth (Cadmus, Agenor's son, the dragon slew): 3183
Spae Craft (My bairn, while thy mither rests tir'd wi' her toil): 9601
Sparrows (Now in the country-side from hawthorn snows): 12233
Special Report on the Channel Tunnel Scheme (When I dare to tempt the sea): 8948
Speech (Be choice and frugal in thy speech alway): 7170
Speed the Plough (John Wilde of Rodenkirchen was standing on a hill): 1264
Spike Island. A Legend (From the alder bushes): 15169
Spinners and Weavers (In lonely room, half lit by the midnight oil): 2691
Spirits (On the soft gales Morn is bringing): 5766
Spirits of the Mighty Dead (Spirits of the mighty dead!): 89
Spiritual Songs (from the German of Novalis) (Eastward far, lo dawns the mountain): 2148
Spiritual Songs (from the German of Novalis) (Who in his chamber sitteth lonely): 2150
Spite (If I go by her window singing): 8353
Spoken in Anger ('Twas but a little word in anger spoken): 12978
Spring (A quicker motion stirs the wakening world): 5121
Spring (A rich root-scent now rises from the ground): 6757
Spring (As sometime after deathlike swound): 4975
Spring (Cheerless the day and wintry, gray and chill): 13135
Spring (Come back, O Spring of Earth!): 7245
Spring (He who, from some dreary mountain, watches o'er the dusky deep): 13622
Spring (Here, where the tall plantation firs): 11936
Spring (I know a wood to which the darling Spring): 3063
Spring (In goodly colours, gloriously arrayed, (Spenser)): 2405
Spring (Is Spring a time to mourn?): 15477
Spring (It is not that sweet herbs and flowers alone): 8093
Spring (Late in the month a rude East Wind came down): 13948
Spring (Now comes the Spring from southern lands): 7373
Spring (O Mother Earth! dost thou at last awake): 2740
Spring (O what charm shall be wrought for the desolate heart): 15633
Spring (Oft let me wander hand in hand with Thought): 6948
Spring (She comes, she comes, o'er hill and meadow-land): 6594
Spring (Spring, who laves her feet in showers): 6699
Spring (Spring! harbinger of joys renewed): 7209
Spring (Sunshine streaming gaily): 7293
Spring (The Spring is here—the delicate-footed May): 3412
Spring (The violet beds are flushed again): 477
Spring (This balmy air, and yonder brimming cloud): 9586
Spring (Thrice-welcome Spring! whose dewy locks are bright): 6514
Spring (Up from the glowing South—with azure eyes): 13601
Spring (Upon the threshold of the earth she stands): 4931
Spring (Welcome, Spring, too long delayed): 8807
Spring (What's lovelier than Spring): 15705
Spring (With an aching heart and a brain outweary): 172
Spring and the Lover (Oh, woe is me that my love is dead!): 2406
Spring at Oxford (In Spring God shakes hands, and we know Him!): 8550
Spring Chanson (Sing your rich warblings from the topmost tree): 13960
Spring Fancies (A baby April in her moods, she plays): 15910
Spring Fancies (Gone were but the winter): 14128
Spring Flowers (Last year's flowers have fled): 1983
Spring has Come Again (The paths are pleasant through the land): 2541
Spring Heralds (A softer murmur in the leafless woods): 6860
Spring in August (Where the gray rock shadow throws): 14557
Spring in Autumn (Shall we remember in some time far off): 7559
Spring in Exile (The Spring is here! and far-off England wears): 12706
Spring in Field and Wood (The earth awakes as from a dreamless sleep): 2778
Spring in the Alley (She stooped and told him that the Spring was born): 12823
Spring in the South (Not as she comes to us): 4926
Spring in the Student's Quarter (Winter is passing, and the bells): 16089
Spring is Coming ('Spring is coming! Oh, Spring is coming!'): 13022
Spring is Coming! (Spring is coming! joyous spring!): 5322
Spring Lights and Shadows (The breeze and showers of coming Spring): 1373
Spring Lyric (Buds! that in blustering March): 2298
Spring Rain (The Eastern wind came sweeping through): 3165
Spring Showers (Sweet is the swart earth): 6873
Spring Song (Blow, Spring, upon the lap of earth): 6812
Spring Song (My Lady April is passing fair): 2335
Spring Song (When all the world goes sweethearting): 2184
Spring Song in the City (Who remains in London): 2112
Spring Song. (From the German) (The gentle zephyrs wakening blow): 169
Spring Song. Proserpine (When Boreas blows): 12153
Spring Thoughts (Swift speeds my spirit to the west): 750
Spring Time (No time for play): 2639
Spring Winds (I heard the winds with unseen feet): 5495
Spring-Time in the Court (They say the Spring has come again!): 1081
Spring-Water (When men from all the region brought): 5124
Spring-Worship (As some fond mother loves to run): 6921
Spring—A New Version ("Come, gentle Spring! ethereal mildness come!"): 5405
Spring. A Ditty for St Valentine's Day (All Hail! For the sun, like a giant, is rending): 13234
Spring's Advent (I looked forth on the world to-day): 12972
Spring's Changes (Again the floweret on the bank): 7588
Spring's Gifts (Come, when the Spring the leaf unfolds): 7210
Spring's Herald (A violet! sweet-scented, dainty-hued): 13235
Spring's Messengers (Happy the ear which first perceives): 6822
Spring's Return (Rise up, rise up, my Morgan, lay the foaming tankard down): 10105
Spring's Secret (Girdled with gold, my little lady's bower): 2646
Springs in the Desert (I pace the long deserted rooms): 1438
Springtide (When First Spring-buds are starring the Spring-blue): 12351
Springtime (Lo! already a fern new-born): 12090
Squire Coe and His Daughters (Flat is the shire of the southern folk): 3931
St Alban (Proto-Martyr) (Ah, could ye see it, there are angel eyes): 6680
St Cecilia (I marvel not thou art adored a Saint): 11796
St Helena (Ye cliffs dark and dreary that frown o'er the main): 8332
St Monans, Fife (There it rests, with its back to the brae): 12646
St Stephan's Day (The Son of God goes forth to war): 10859
St Stephen's Day (Ho! follow me! follow me!): 11399
St Valentine's Day (Saint Valentine, with snowdrop wreath encrowned): 12086
St. Agnes (Deep on the convent roofs the snows): 4441
St. Andrew's (Far, far from home, on this lone rocky shore): 15563
St. Andrew's Links (As I came over St. Andrew’s Links): 14528
St. Antony of Coma (Yes, I am Anthony the Eremite): 1518
St. Bartholomew ('Tis the dead of the night, and the city): 245
St. Elmo (The fresh and fragrant morning was abroad): 1569
St. Feinah's Tree. A Legend of Loch Neagh (They say, my sons are sleeping): 15120
St. George and the Dragon. An Ancient Myth Modernized (What, weeping, weeping, my little son): 13506
St. George of England: A National Legend (What do you say? Our gracious lady dead!): 1714
St. George. (At Venice and at Windsor) (Oh, sweetly shrined in island-home, in star-lit sanctuary): 2081
St. Jean Pied du Port (Where the quaint Basque city stands"): 4994
St. John the Baptist ("Art Thou the Healer that should come"): 14376
St. John the Baptist (O Jesus, if one minute, if one hour): 14379
St. Leonard's by Moonlight (The Traveller may boast of the clime of the East): 15744
St. Magnus', Kirkwall (See yonder on Pomona's isle): 11098
St. Mary of the Lows (O lone St. Mary of the waves): 15524
St. Michael's Eve (I will to tell ye a story, for in winter time we bore ye): 5640
St. Patrick's Day (The first time I went to a fair): 12127
St. Peter and the Baskets (St. Peter, from the door of heaven, one day): 4368
St. Peter Walking on the Sea (Swift-rolling clouds the face of heaven pervade): 15542
St. Roche's Well ("Who goes a short path goes the longer way"): 952
St. Stephen's (When frank-eyed War with Love stood hand in hand): 7733
St. Stephen's. Part Second (Ere France the last dread century closed in blood): 7736
St. Stephen's. Part Third (While States yet flourish, from the soil unseen): 7734
St. Swithin. The Legend (Chant a mass for the saintly dead): 13526
St. Valentine's Day (Every night I dream of you): 661
St. Vincent; Or, Fire versus Water (The beautiful blue water): 2430
Stabat Mater (Stood the maiden Mother weeping): 7757
Stabat Mater Dolorosa (Stood the mournful mother weeping): 2445
Staffa (God hath his temples by no human hand): 2658
Stalzenfells (It is morning on the mountain, the green morn of bursting spring): 5942
Stanzas ('Tis a beautiful spot—a delicious retreat): 4752
Stanzas ('Tis vain to grieve for what is past): 8514
Stanzas (A hallow'd fane): 3095
Stanzas (Ah, no! alas–it cannot be!): 4769
Stanzas (And thou too hast awakened from the brilliant dream of youth): 4760
Stanzas (At times in summer hours are seen): 3374
Stanzas (Bare is the land and brown, so brown and bare): 6818
Stanzas (Blest is he who ne'er repines): 4755
Stanzas (Come not, when I am dead): 5575
Stanzas (Days are gone, by many a token): 4443
Stanzas (Hark! Italy's music): 8493
Stanzas (He gazed upon an infant's tomb): 4764
Stanzas (Home of my childhood! I leave thee in sorrow): 5787
Stanzas (How like a star you rose upon my life): 4758
Stanzas (I do not idly cast): 5686
Stanzas (I love thee! I have sought to quell): 3475
Stanzas (I must forget thy dark eyes' love-fraught gaze): 3771
Stanzas (I never cast a flower away): 10123
Stanzas (I was a violet in a lonely shade): 6316
Stanzas (Is it because amid the crowd): 3789
Stanzas (It is not the purple of eastern twilight): 4969
Stanzas (Judge not from smiles that all beneath): 4763
Stanzas (Most beautiful, I love thee!): 4750
Stanzas (My deep unutterable distress): 4445
Stanzas (My heart is like a wither'd rose): 3778
Stanzas (No—no—they shall not see me weep): 3145
Stanzas (O my Sweet, my Sweet, my Sweet!): 6694
Stanzas (O, come to me in dreams, my love!): 4762
Stanzas (Oh Life! in thy confused, mysterious dream): 3039
Stanzas (Oh, bitter—bitter is the unrest): 11370
Stanzas (Oh! ceaseless my grief!): 4911
Stanzas (Oh! let the balmy morning gale this sight bear on its wing): 4774
Stanzas (Oh! thou that with a meek despair): 1637
Stanzas (She died, she died—yet still to me): 7792
Stanzas (Stars! by the light of whose ardent eyes): 5660
Stanzas (Still the same, ever the same, this outward face of things!): 6381
Stanzas (Suns will set, and moons will wane): 13944
Stanzas (The fountaines smoake, and yet no flames they shewe): 3321
Stanzas (The friendships of my youth were strong): 6229
Stanzas (The harp I woke for thee): 5585
Stanzas (The song of birds, the breath of flowers): 4896
Stanzas (The word has been spoken; my doom has been said): 5483
Stanzas (The young, the young! that must be old!): 7717
Stanzas (There are silence and gloom, where was glad freedom once): 4771
Stanzas (There is a language none can speak): 13920
Stanzas (There is beauty on the mountain): 15902
Stanzas (There is pity for the mariner): 4756
Stanzas (There is time–a dreary time): 3570
Stanzas (There's not a bird that charms the air): 5905
Stanzas (Thou standest in the world of soul): 6203
Stanzas (Thou sweet and lovely prospect, so well known): 3580
Stanzas (Thou'rt fair, how passing fair! but on that brow): 4422
Stanzas (To love in solitude and mystery): 3769
Stanzas (Truth! truth! where is the sound): 53
Stanzas (Twelve mournful months have well nigh past): 15084
Stanzas (What time I wasted youthful hours): 5571
Stanzas (When roses deck the cheek of youth): 5370
Stanzas (When Sol illuminates the eastern sky): 3849
Stanzas (When the sweet bubul thrills the perfumed breeze): 3567
Stanzas (When the trees were green in summer): 6405
Stanzas (When the twilight of summer is passing away): 5162
Stanzas (Who has not felt, ’mid azure skies): 3574
Stanzas (With every joy we haste to meet): 10946
Stanzas (Yes, I have bask'd in sunny lands): 3888
Stanzas Addressed to a Lady, Whom the Author Advised to Postpone Her Intended Visit to Germany (Cold, lady, comes the autumn shower): 3380
Stanzas by a Lady (No, no, the gayest Festival can charm, can please no more): 11233
Stanzas By A Lady in Lerwick, in Shetland (As the tender flower opens its leaves to the sun): 3255
Stanzas by Lord F. L. Gower, On the Execution Militaire, a Print from a Picture by Vigneron (His doom has been decreed): 2948
Stanzas by Shakspeare, and Somebody Else (Oh, how much more doth beauty beauteous seem): 6062
Stanzas Dedicatory to Francis Jeffrey (Your days, Mr Jeffrey, how gaily they sped): 9419
Stanzas for Music (Nay—smile not, girl!): 13941
Stanzas for Music (Thou gentle and kind one): 3257
Stanzas for Music (When the morning awakes in the valley): 10411
Stanzas for the Burns' Festival (Stir the beal-fire, wave the banner): 10680
Stanzas For the King's Landing (The eagle screams upon Benmore): 9871
Stanzas On Seeing a Sun-Dial In a Churchyard (Grey dial-stone, I fain would know): 3232
Stanzas on — (Rare to find a friend true and faithful): 6041
Stanzas on a Sprig of Mignonette, Gathered in Winter (The lingering perfume of thy flower): 15907
Stanzas on an Infant (The rose-bud, blushing through the morning's tears): 9715
Stanzas on Parting (Though we, beloved, now must part): 9089
Stanzas on Seeing a Recently Erected Monument in the Chapel of Greenwich Hospital (Stop! shipmate, stop! he can't be dead!): 10388
Stanzas on Shelley (Oh, not like ours that life was born): 14735
Stanzas on the Death of John Kemble (The star that o'er departed years): 9936
Stanzas on the Ruins of Holyrood Chapel, at Blitheburgh, in Suffolk ('Tis sweet, in Blitheburgh's desolated pile): 4458
Stanzas On Trying In Vain To Read (Hence, thoughts! I vainly strive to steep): 3104
Stanzas on Viewing the Stars at Midnight (My Mother! if from yon blessed sphere): 5202
Stanzas Sent to a Lady, With a Ballad on the Death of Montrose (Lady! perchance thoul't not disdain): 5573
Stanzas to ***** (Oh! pale is that cheek): 15915
Stanzas To A Lady (I would not dare to offer thee the hackneyed words of love): 6198
Stanzas to an Infant (Thou'rt welcome, Thomas Henry): 9895
Stanzas to an Old Friend (Come here's a health to thee and thine): 9709
Stanzas to Kate, on Appearing Before her After a Casual Turn up (All punish'd and penitent down on the knee): 8503
Stanzas to Mary (Do you remember, Mary): 4765
Stanzas to Music (Where are thy fountains, music, where the deep mysterious tide): 11011
Stanzas to Sorrow (Yes, yes, tears are sweet; and the dark lonely hour): 15666
Stanzas to Stella (The woodland stile!—'tis well—but yet): 15631
Stanzas to The Lady Emmeline Manners, upon reading a poem of hers in 1830, ending, "And still I ever love in vain!" ('Tis said she loves each earthly thing): 4431
Stanzas to the Memory of Thomas Hood (Take back into thy bosom, Earth): 10948
Stanzas to Wordsworth (Like solitary branch of oak or elm): 9608
Stanzas Written After Hearing Arkwright’s Song, “Leaves Have Their Time to Fall, and Flowers to Wither” (Yes! yes! ’tis true!—The glowing cheek): 3372
Stanzas Written After the Funeral of Admiral Sir David Milne, G. C. B. (Another, yet another! year by year): 10947
Stanzas Written for an Italian Air (Where the consecrated willow): 3785
Stanzas Written in a Park in Surrey, October, 1820 (The earlier frosts had long begun): 9033
Stanzas Written in Dejection. From the Chinese of Li-Tai-Pè (The sun of yesterday which leaves me): 520
Stanzas Written in the Churchyard of Richmond, Yorkshire (Methinks it is good to be here): 3016
Stanzas Written on Returning from Iona, the Seat of St Columba (See, I then Thy wave-beaten shore, lone isle): 11922
Stanzas, Addressed to R. M. W. Turner, Esq. R. A. On His View of the Lago Maggiore from the Town of Arona (Turner, thy pencil brings to mind a day): 3045
Stanzas, Addressed to the French Nation (What do ye with this skeleton?): 86
Stanzas, Addressed While the Author was on the Continent, To – (Think of me, dear one! when you tend): 4447
Stanzas, On Reading an Account of the Re-Interment of King Robert Bruce (Alike the mean and mighty fall): 8764
Stanzas, On the Death of Napoleon Buonaparte (The knell hath toll'd, and the mighty hath gone): 9342
Stanzas, on this Green Bank, &c (On this green bank I saw thee lie): 9093
Stanzas, Suggested by a Conversation with a Friend, On the Battle of Bannockburn (Thou glorious field where Bruce once fought): 37
Stanzas, Suggested by the Departure of a Friend from Scotland (The trav'ller who hath wander'd where): 9119
Stanzas, Written During a Voyage in Search of a North-West Passage, and Addressed to a Northern Princess (Oh! pretty Polar lady!): 8512
Stanzas, Written upon Robert, the Son of Captain S. Shaw, of the Royal Artillery, Now a Resident in the East Indies—A Child Five Years of Age (A witching child, to whom 'tis given): 8429
Stanzas: On the Custom in Switzerland, &c, of planting Flowers on the Graves of departed Friends (To ’scape from chill Misfortune’s gloom): 8004
Stanzas. "A Cloud came over my Soul" (O welcome is the Cloud of Night): 7992
Stanzas. Accompanying a "Keepsake" (Hast marked how oft a simple song): 5785
Stanzas. Afar, Oh Ladye Fair, Afar (Afar, of Ladye fair, afar): 8474
Stanzas. Composed in Sherewood Plantation (There is a moaning sound abroad): 7744
Stanzas. Containing an exact and literal account of the behaviour and fate of ABRAHAM ISAACS, of Ivy-lane, who died of excessive brandy (In IV-lane, of CT fame): 106
Stanzas. Oh Mine be the Shade, &c (Oh! mine be the shade where no eye may discover): 9165
Stanzas. On Visiting a Scene of Childhood (Long years had elapsed since I gazed on the scene): 9181
Starlight (Now when the day has quenched its lingering light): 13284
Starlight in the Garden (The Garden (by its ivied walls inclosed)): 1309
Starralore (Love has left his mournful traces on that fairest of all): 929
Stars (All stars that fill Time’s mystic diadem): 14704
Statues (Fair Statues! blind ye look, but full within): 14694
Steadfast (As one entranced will sometimes gaze afar): 7638
Steam Land (There is an engine, huge and dark): 14345
Steam-Vessel (I saw her when her smoky volumes curl'd): 11800
Steam-Vessel (Old Homer says that the Phæacian bark): 11801
Stella Maris (Why is it I remember yet): 771
Stephanotis ("Nay, darling, nay, my bonny girl"): 4621
Still Proudly Trills Thy Witching Voice (Still proudly trills thy witching voice): 10384
Still the Skylark Sang (All was bleak, all was bare): 1050
Stock in Trade of Modern Poetesses (Lonely shades, and murm'ring founts): 3780
Stonebyres (Words! ye are powerless–at this scene of power): 4409
Storm-Gold (After the rainy day): 5550
Story of a Grave (Here, while yon sunset's golden overflow): 1460
Stranded ("There is a tide in the affairs of men"): 4235
Strangers Now (Years of chequered life together): 13703
Strangers Yet! (Strangers yet!): 11937
Strayed from the Flock (The wind goes sobbing): 1877
Street Arabs (Two little children at play in the street): 2798
Street Music (An Orpheus! an Orpheus! Yes, Faith may grow bold): 3272
Strength (In strength there ever dwells of right): 7785
Strength and Love (Hope not that many here): 13179
Strewn Flowers (I met a maiden by a rill): 12259
Strive, Wait, and Pray (Strive; yet I do not promise): 1382
Stuart Mill on Mind and Matter. A New Song (Stuart Mill, on Mind and Matter): 9799
Student's Song (Though we're deep in Titus Livius): 833
Study of A Pool (I lay as in a waking dream): 2258
Stupid Piety (If the Ass whose back did carry): 8986
Substance and Shadow (That man's a shadow, old Experience cries): 14650
Success (A figure terrible and bright): 12345
Such a Fool! (He was always a fool—Tom Lake—and we always were telling him so): 12408
Sudden Changes (This morning in the meadows there were drifts of daisies bobbing): 13215
Sufficient unto the Day is the Evil Thereof (Oh! by that gracious rule): 9717
Summer (And then a silence drops upon the land): 13677
Summer (Beautiful plant, sample of natural grace!): 9587
Summer (Dancing along the lands): 1871
Summer (Now have young April and the blue eyed May): 8094
Summer (Now have young April and the blue-eyed May): 3244
Summer (Now Summer comes laughing along the lands): 2788
Summer (Now Summer comes, on golden wing): 12714
Summer (Summer's the time for dreams): 4842
Summer (Sun-gold within her hair young Summer sings): 6137
Summer (The blooming grace of Nature's youth has fled): 949
Summer (The shepherd-boy is singing): 2609
Summer (The sun is careering in glory and might): 2214
Summer and Absence (In the sunshine there's a humming): 3192
Summer and Autumn Fancies (Her happy wondering eyes had n’er): 15912
Summer and Love (When to my heart the air seems full of song): 4154
Summer and Winter (Ah! those were very pleasant days): 6318
Summer and Winter (Midsummer morn: the year's young queen): 4374
Summer Calm (A summer silence sits upon the lake): 4017
Summer Day Break (A flash of day along the sky): 5046
Summer Departed (Whither gone, sweet summer): 4451
Summer Eve (How sweet at summer eve): 11403
Summer Evening (With what calm grandeur comes the summer eve): 408
Summer Evening in Herts. (Composed Many Seasons Ago) (How calm the valley's slumbering breast): 14149
Summer Gone (Small wren, mute pecking at the last red plum): 6459
Summer Idleness (Under "a roof of pine"): 7585
Summer in France, 1871 (The summer has come back again, I feel): 4045
Summer in Spring (A still descent of summer gloom): 7334
Summer in the City (A strange wan lustre dwells upon that brow): 3173
Summer in the City (What have you brought me, dear?): 4841
Summer in the City (Who is it comes in robes of fiery amber): 1800
Summer in the Heart (Spring-time may lose its freshest tints): 13154
Summer is Coming (Meadow flowers, fair and sweet): 1867
Summer Moon ('Tis a bright Summer moon; along the shore): 10775
Summer Morning Landscape (The eyelids of the morning are awake): 10702
Summer Morning's Song (Up, sleeper! dreamer! up; for now): 3427
Summer Night (The hay is down, ye moon is high): 672
Summer Night (The long bright sunny day is at an end): 12630
Summer Noon ('Tis mid-day, burning mid-day in mid June): 7015
Summer Noontide (Unruffled the pure ether shines): 11038
Summer on the Wane (Brief grow the waning days; the poplars shed): 7084
Summer Rain (O'er yonder brook, the stepping-stones gleam white): 4242
Summer Roses (The roses never seemed so sweet): 4918
Summer Snow (Once in a garden fair): 1581
Summer Sunset (The sun was sinking to ocean's rim): 12275
Summer Term. 1882 (Few months have waned, few days gone by, since we): 7568
Summer Twilight (Ah! what an hour of ecstasy is this!): 7411
Summer Wind (The long wind through my casement strays): 6436
Summer Woods (Sing on, sweet birds!): 13051
Summer. From the German (Summer is unveiling): 9196
Summer's Later Flowers (Ere yet the glowing Summer says "Farewell"): 13266
Summer's Melody (Oh! picture to yourself a scene like this): 12721
Summer's Sleep (What though cold Winter's here): 13369
Sun and Rain (A young wife stood at the lattice-pain): 13807
Sun-light on the Sea (The August glamour falls upon the sea): 7072
Sun-Rays (The rising sun with radiant finger raised): 3301
Sunbeams on the Sea (There is no cloud in all the sky): 14296
Sunday Evening (I sat last Sunday evening): 10087
Sunday in the Highlands ('Tis meet the house of God should stand): 5057
Sundown (Gone is the day of pure delight): 12666
Sunflower. A Memory (Herself! Least fit of all flower-names to write): 4250
Sunflowers (The blossom brightly, straight and tall): 4473
Sunlight at Evening (Weary and worn, and old and grey): 521
Sunrise (As on my bed at morn I mus'd and pray'd): 13950
Sunrise (Sunrise! Sunrise! See!): 9012
Sunrise (The world is speaking to me this fair morn): 5488
Sunrise (When the violet arch grows pearly gray): 12696
Sunrise Sapphics (When the darkness fades and the morning wakens): 2409
Sunset (All alone I pass to-day): 12553
Sunset (Behind the bastions of the darkened hills): 12445
Sunset (How beautiful the evening beams are falling on the sea): 10848
Sunset (I looked upon the sunset): 6704
Sunset (Melody to ancient air): 6884
Sunset (My window's open to the evening sky): 15560
Sunset (Now to his place in the west): 5345
Sunset (Slow sinks the sun-god in his ocean-grave): 13836
Sunset (When stream and lake of golden light): 7246
Sunset and Moonrise: A Reminiscence (Fair as a woman with her ornaments): 2617
Sunset from Boar's Hill, Near Oxford (Marvellous vision! How the spangled sky): 12451
Sunset in the Western Highlands. Oban, Argyleshire (The bay is smooth as glass; no breeze awakes): 4166
Sunset Meditations (The sun goes ploughing down the seas): 10477
Sunset off the Azores (Now under heaven all winds abated): 14413
Sunset on the Lomonds (See where into the sunset far): 9016
Sunset on the Nile (I saw not such a placid stream as makes): 12545
Sunset Thoughts (How beautiful the setting sun): 9937
Sunset, after Rain (The shower hath drifted o'er; the blue): 10140
Sunshine (Broad and bright the sunshine): 4592
Sunshine (Oh, Sunshine Spirit, I have seen): 1005
Sunshine (We called her Sunshine, for her golden hair): 4586
Sunwards (Dazzling track of woven beams): 13067
Super Flumina (I read that old and wondrous song): 2226
Sursum Corda ("Lift up your hearts": I hear the summons pealing): 5090
Sursum Corda (Memory, forget thy melancholy smile): 2359
Susie ("A little girl has died," they say): 4079
Suspense (Heart sickness, that of old the wise man knew): 12280
Suspiria (There is a love in my young breast): 6537
Sutor John (Old Sutor Fergusson, thou'rt welcome here): 9168
Swallow Song (Welcome, wanderer, to the valley!): 13431
Swallows (Now, o'er the harvest meadows green): 1485
Swallows (The swallows fly high, the swallows fly low): 13082
Swanhilda's Song (A maiden fair, in sooth, was she): 15500
Swedish Folk-Songs. Fair Carin (The fair Carin—a maiden): 1080
Swedish Folk-Songs. The Dove on the Lily (There sits a pure dove on a lily so white): 1082
Sweet Day of Days (On the moss-grown bridge I stand): 13012
Sweet Day So Cool (Sweet day so coo, so calm, so bright): 3432
Sweet Home (A song of all songs sang he, singing of home): 1939
Sweet Lavender ('Tis the sound of distant music, and it comes from o'er the hills): 6002
Sweet Lavender (Sweet lavender! I love thy flower): 3471
Sweet Love and I (Sweet Love and I have strangers been): 6888
Sweet Love is Dead (Sweet Love is dead): 12291
Sweet Rose (Sweet rose, awaking to the light): 12713
Sweet Seventeen (I knew a maid; her form and face): 14433
Sweet Violets. Sent by a Lady in the Country to a Friend in Town (April 29) (Birchen boughs are leafless still): 7059
Sweetbriar (How fragrant is the summer dusk): 4551
Sweetbrier Lane (Dearest of all are the sweet spring flowers): 13137
Sweetheart, Farewell (Beneath the whispering trees we lingered late): 12991
Sweets of Woman's Life (A babe at rest on mother's breast): 13496
Swift and the Mohawks (A black sedan through Temple Bar): 436
Swing Song (As my little Johnny sat): 852
Swing-Song (Swing! swing!): 4003
Swing-Song (Up and down, high and low): 2482
Symbolic Wild-Flowers (This, love, is the blue star-bosom'd flower): 10158
Symbols (Still hearts, whose passions never stir): 9679
Sympathy (Fellow-worker, toiling brother): 6677
Sympathy (I had a grief—and learned from it to see): 11879
Sympathy (I wandered to a ruined fane): 15392
Sympathy (There was a soft enchantment in her eye): 11691
Sympathy (Thou askest me wherein the golden chain): 4171
Syringa (Her form soft-gowned in purest white): 4820
T'Runawaa Lass. (In the Dialect of the North Riding) ("Wah, Mary! sittin' lawnsum on a bench"): 588
Tak Your Auld Cloak About Ye (In winter, when the rain rain'd cauld): 3345
Take Warning (Once lived a comely maid who, proud): 433
Taken Away (Death came and touched with icy hand my babe): 6965
Tales O' the Daft Days. No. II (The Hairst was ower, the barnyard fill'd): 9903
Tales O' the Daft-Days. No. I (Again the cluds o' winter scowl): 9891
Tam Nelson (Tam Nelson was a queer, queer man): 10584
Tamise Ripe (Of "Tamise ripe" old Leland tells): 239
Tammy Little (Wee Tammy Little, honest man!): 3004
Tanfield Gateway Tower (They raised me here to mark their power): 15495
Tannhäuser (Good folks, now listen to my song): 842
Tantalus (I at the banquet of the Gods have sate): 9585
Tasso to Eleonora: A Canzonet and Sonnet (As vapour risen from the sea): 183
Tasso's Coronation (A trumpet's note is in the sky, in the glorious Roman sky): 10715
Taste (Dost thou love the Winter fire): 7039
Tattooing Song (He who pays well let him be beautifully ornamented): 8295
Tædium Vitæ ("Creation's over—man, you know"): 1678
Te Deum! ('Tis noonday. On Italian plains): 2706
Tearless Grief (At last it is the peaceful night, and I): 13199
Tears (My heart is lone, my Love is gone): 6538
Tears (O tears! When we are sunk in sorrow): 6437
Tears of Joy (From the dark chamber where the sick one lay): 11965
Tears, Idle Tears ("Tears, idle tears, I know not what they mean"): 14794
Tears. [After Victor Hugo] (Why seek to hide thy solitary woe?): 13555
Tega. (Translated from the Russian) (By the river's bank at ev'ning): 982
Tel-el-Kebir. September 13, 1882 (Our forces were massed in the dead of the night): 7529
Temagami (Far in the grim North-west, beyond the lines): 8008
Temujin (The Imperial mandate to Pekin): 302
Ten Years Ago (Ten years ago, ten years ago): 10122
Tenantless (A level waste, where sheep are starving drear): 9053
Tenderness (Not unto every heart is God's good gift): 4329
Teneriffe (Atlantid islands, phantom-fair): 14508
Tennyson (Ye winds that sweep round Britain's shore): 13273
Tennyson and "Cymbeline" ("Bring me my Shakespeare! There! So let it rest!"): 8228
Tenth Sunday After Trinity (Jerusalem, Jerusalem! enthroned once on high): 10871
Terry Wigan. From the Norwegian of Henrik Ibsen (A strange and grizzled man once dwelt): 8961
Tested (I used to wonder in those summer days): 12754
Tethered (An open lake with room for all the sky): 4349
Thalassa (I look across the land and sea): 12278
Thalassa! Thalassa! (Here is no common sea): 9761
Thalatta! Thalatta! (Brave North Sea, bright North Sea!): 4162
Thanatopsis (To him who, in the love of Nature, holds): 5326
Thankfulness (Sweet bird, although thy music pleasant be): 6619
Thanks (Kind friends! if aught that I could say): 12953
Thanksgiving (Thanks be to God! to whom earth owes): 332
That Gloamin' Langsyne (The westlin' sky's glowing): 9606
That Merlin Cried to Humanity (I know that I, thy preconceivèd soul): 15984
That Time is Dead for Ever, Child (That time is dead forever, child): 1531
That Tragic Jest (Athwart the whistling ice we wheeled): 5032
That's What We Are ("Careful and troubled about many things"): 10753
The Norse Princess (Upon a ruin by the desert shore): 1574
The "Blood and Thunder" Drama (The drama is declining fast): 13634
The "Cinque Maggio." From the Italian of Manzoni (He was. As still as lay): 12213
The "Crochet-Worker." Suggested by Etty's Picture in the Exhibition of the Royal Academy, 1849 (See with what nimble ease her fingers ply): 6057
The "Farewell Summer" Flower (Was it even the dreaming fever?): 5650
The "Friedhof," Or Court of Peace ("Sweet sister, come, and let us roam away o'er the fine-arched bridge"): 5999
The "How" and the "Why" ? (I am any man's suitor): 11143
The "Hulks" in the Medway (In that wild river "Medway" called): 7635
The "Living Dog" and the "Dead Lion." From the Times of Thursday Jan. 10 (Next week will be published (as "Lives" are the rage)): 10766
The "New Woman" (She does not "languish in her bower"): 13378
The "Old Player." Imitated from Anastasius Grün (Aloft the rustling curtain flew): 11053
The "Pitch-In" (How did I get this mark on my cheek): 14277
The “Poste Restante.”—A Reverie (Heart-wearied with the jarring, ceaseless wheels): 275
The “Silent Land” (Lonely in her palace weeping): 970
The Abacus Politicus; or, Universal Suffrage Made Safe and Easy. A New Song (Reformers sage some novel schemes): 9802
The Abbess of Marlow (Marlow's Abbess is fair to see): 13591
The Abbey (It is the hour of vespers! solemn, slow): 8433
The Abbey (Within the Minster's venerable pile): 11682
The Abbot of Innisfallen: A Killarney Legend (The Abbot of Innisfallen): 14289
The Absent Ship (Fair ship, I saw thee bounding o'er the deep): 14488
The Acapulco Indian's Song. The Indian to His Love (Off with the bow! The lake's blue waters heave): 15735
The Adieu (We'll miss her at the morning hour): 3774
The Adieu. Written in 1808, by Lord Byron, under the impression that he would soon die (Adieu, thou Hill! where early joy): 3000
The Adopted Child ("Why wouldst thou leave me, oh, gentle child?"): 3497
The Advent of Truth (A time there is, though far its dawn may be): 5845
The Adversary (I had a comrade, he was my rival): 14900
The Ae Lamb o' the Fauld (In yon rude lanely sheilin'): 6294
The Affection of Mice (Assist me, my Muse, while in verse I would tell): 6944
The African Chief (Chained in the market-place he stood): 11132
The Afterglow (The August afterglow over the sea): 4667
The Aftermath (The glamour of the after-light): 3605
The Aftertime (A wee cot house abune the knowe): 2787
The Age of Harmony (O sweet is the clear warbling song of the wild wood): 14
The Age of Wonders; Or, the New Whig War. A New Song (I wonder if wonders are ever to cease): 11244
The Aged Disciple Comforting (Fear not, my son; these terrors are from God): 9209
The Aged Man ("What wouldst thou, thou fair young child"): 15377
The Ages (A thousand years—a thousand years!): 14639
The Alcestis of Euripides (Ah, hospitable roof! where, tho' a god): 11686
The Alloy ("A kiss ere we part"): 3794
The Almond Tree (Look on yon light and blooming sprays): 15840
The Almond-Tree (Spendthrift of Spring, why in the keen bright air): 3220
The Alp Hunter ("Wilt thou not, thy lamblings heeding"): 10670
The Alphabet (Though not with lace bedizened o’er): 5647
The Alps, Seen From Marengo (The glory of a cloud—without its wane): 5171
The Altered River (Thou lovely river, thou art now): 3055
The Alternative (If what thou writ'st, or what thou seek'st to do): 10799
The American Indians (I heard the forests as they cried): 15795
The Ancestral Song (There were faint sounds of weeping;—fear and gloom): 10474
The Anchor of the Soul (O Galilean! art thou, too, forlorn): 3946
The Ancient Kirk (How like an image of repose it looks): 10772
The Ancient Maiden (Oh dear, I am now thirty-six): 3336
The Ancient Monument (There's a lion under thy feet, Sir Knight): 15439
The Ancient Portrait (It hung alone, in massive time-tinged frame): 7244
The Ancient Spinster Beauty (When I was young and passing fair): 3609
The Anemone (Spring smiles, and sudden silver songs arise): 12758
The Angel (God sendeth His angel, Sleep): 8944
The Angel (Why should'st thou fear the beautiful angel, Death): 1385
The Angel and The Child (An angel form, with brow of light): 5332
The Angel and The Infant. (From the French of Jean Reboullé, of Nismes) (An angel over a cradle stood): 847
The Angel and the Spirit (A spirit once lay sighing): 5682
The Angel in the House (There is an angel with us in the house): 5668
The Angel Israfil. An Old Jewish Legend (God rested from my work: and all): 12180
The Angel of Eventide (When sunset's lustre fills the land): 1544
The Angel of Love (On noiseless wing, one starry night): 1430
The Angel of the Rain (Over the thirsty land): 5072
The Angel's Lesson (When all was void, and all was night): 4879
The Angel's Song (Come with a poet's eye, and parent's heart): 10177
The Angel's Story (Through the blue and frosty heavens): 1552
The Angel’s Visit (Cloud bars, all purpling-drifting west): 1703
The Angels (Childish illusions too utterly vanished): 2179
The Angels. Paraphrased from the German (Now list while I tell thee, my darling child): 6362
The Angler (On pool and pinewood, clearly grey): 13680
The Angler's Song (Where the bulrush bows and bobs): 6651
The Angler's Wish ("I in these flowery meads would be"): 8849
The Anniversary (Nay, chide me not! I cannot chase): 10392
The Anniversary of Burns' Birthday. January 25th, 1866 (Swiftly the stealthy sands have run): 13400
The Anniversary of Death (We keep an Anniversary to-day): 15496
The Annual Pill (Vill nobodies try my nice Annual Pill): 8377
The Annuitant's Answer (My certy, but it sets him weel): 6899
The Answer (A little note, sweet-scented, delicate): 978
The Answer. (Kyvielle) (I have no song for thee; I have no heart): 15949
The Ant or Emmet (These Emmets—how little they are in our eyes!): 3756
The Anticipation (A fount there is of wondrous pow'r): 3784
The Antidote (An only boy, a common fate): 14065
The Antique at Paris (What the Grecian arts created): 10012
The Antique to the Northern Wanderer (And o'er the river hast thou past, and o'er the mighty sea): 10013
The Apparition (I was leaning on the bulwarks): 13653
The Appeasement of Demeter (Demeter devastated our good land): 14826
The Apple-Trees (An orchard fair, to please): 15911
The Appointed Hour (No cloud is in the tranquil sky): 4200
The April Hours (When the trees shake off their tears): 6645
The Aqueduct (Relic! that wouldst still bestride): 5636
The Arbour (O 'tis delightful, on a vernal eve): 8996
The Arbutus (Here Love, with straying feet, shall go): 12711
The Arcadian Lovers (How fares the lovely maid, Arcadia’s pride): 8341
The Archer in the Garden (Wandering at twilight through my garden fair): 12533
The Arctic Expedition. (From the Women's Side.) May 29th, 1875 (O let me smile a little, I pray): 2550
The Art of Book-Keeping (How hard, when those who do not wish): 5907
The Artist's Dream of Death (How did it come to his mind? the fleshless and horrible dream): 13556
The Artist's Morning Song (My dwelling is the Muses' home): 10688
The Artists (Give us mountains, rocks, and streams): 9304
The Arve at Cluse (Hast thou no rest, oh, stream perplexed and pale!): 5197
The Ash Pool (The wet wind sobs o'er the sodden leas): 4164
The Aspen (I went out into the wistful night): 1582
The Aspen Tree (Why tremblest thou, Aspen? no storm threatens nigh): 15791
The Astronomer (Astronomer! thy mind I covet not): 14350
The Atlantic Wedding Ring (The way is far across the sea): 9484
The Auld Ash Tree (There grows an ash by my bour door): 9947
The Auld House o' Gask: A Sketch from Strathearn ("The auld House, the House o' Gask"): 8276
The Auld Man's Farewell to his Wee House (I like ye weel, my wee auld house): 3419
The Auld Man's Prayer (Loud grief was in my father's hame): 97
The Auld Meal Mill (The auld meal mill—oh, the auld meal mill): 6023
The Auld State Kirk. New Song (The Auld State Kirk is deaf an’ blin’): 50
The Aurora Borealis.—A Sonnet ('Tis midnight; and the world is hushed in sleep): 7846
The Aurora On the Clyde. September 1850 (Ah me! how heavily the night comes down!): 6099
The Australian Dying Year (Not in the winter of life he dies): 1067
The Author's Journey to Woodbridge after the Storm (The worthless author of these simple rhymes): 8236
The Auto da Fe (I bend o'er the flame as it burns): 178
The Autumn Crocus (In the high woods that clothe our hills): 8902
The Autumn Message (She gathered the dark blue violets): 4642
The Autumn of Life (The old man sits at his cottage door): 7477
The Autumnal Eve (We met and parted on an autumn eve): 8769
The Avenging Childe (Hurrah! hurrah! avoid the way of the Avenging Childe): 9928
The Awakener in the Desert (In the still desert, near the streaming Nile): 5490
The Babes in the Wood. A Lover's Dream (So dreaming sad and true): 372
The Baboushka. A Ballad of Christmas (Once, beneath the guidance of a star): 1957
The Baby (Where did you come from, Baby dear?): 8292
The Baby's Name (Baby, what shall mother name you?): 2182
The Bairns A' At Rest (There was din, as ye ne'er heard the like): 3955
The Balance Sheet (Another year has passed away): 7432
The Ballad of Bitter Fruit. (After Théodore de Banville) (In the wood with its wide arms overspread): 8852
The Ballad of Earl Harold (From the green face of the earth): 15494
The Ballad of Lord Langshaw ("And will ye hae my house, lady"): 2223
The Ballad of Oriana (My heart is wasted with my woe, Oriana): 11154
The Ballad of Pandava (The King, the great Pandava): 1930
The Ballad of Richard Burnell (From his bed rose Richard Burnell): 1108
The Ballad of the 'Cleopatra' (Hear how the stars and stripes, above stripes and stars): 12325
The Ballad of the Brides of Quair (A stillness crept about the house): 1630
The Ballad of the Gold-Digger (Our future bright, our spirits light): 1283
The Ballad of the King's Jest (When springtime flushes the desert grass): 14848
The Ballad of the King's Mercy (Before the old Peshawur Gate, where Kurd and Kaffir meet): 14844
The Ballad of the Last Suttee (Udai Chand lay sick to death): 14846
The Bands of Love (Oh, let my soul go free, mother!): 417
The Bandsman's Ballad (Come wind the the horn of the harvest—hark!): 8992
The Banquet of the Deity (Once it occurred to the Most High): 14756
The Bard (Who are the teachers of the Bard?—All things): 6476
The Bard's Speculation (I'm now turn's of eighty): 4396
The Bard's Spell (The Prince lay dead in the old grey hall): 4928
The Barmaid (A little past the village): 1625
The Barrin' o' the Door ("It fell about the the Martinmas time"): 14772
The Bass Rock ('Twas Summer, and a more enlivening sun): 10052
The Battle (Heavy and solemn): 10030
The Battle (The dawning sunlight beams): 12305
The Battle (What see I on this barren strand?): 11460
The Battle Field (I dream'd I stood on the battle field): 51
The Battle of Algiers (Come, join me, British landsmen, dragoons and grenadiers): 8484
The Battle of Corrymuckloch (December, on the twenty-first): 5471
The Battle of Cressy. A Reading (On Cressy's fair and verdant plain two hostile armies): 13600
The Battle of Gilboa (The armies of Achish are pouring from Gath): 398
The Battle of Roslin (Hark!—'twas the trumpet rung!): 9441
The Battle of Sempach ('Twas when among our linden trees): 8130
The Battle of the Birds. An Apologue (A discussion among British Birds once arose): 5431
The Battle of the Blockheads (Of Wastle, Hogg, and North): 10555
The Battle of the Boyne (My father, thou art dying. Turn thy thoughts): 15300
The Battle of the Frogs and Mice (Ye muses Nine, that dwell upon the sacred Hill of Helicon): 11923
The Battle Painter (Wild horsemen billowing round a planted flag): 570
The Battle-Flag of Sigurd (I have no folded flock to show): 2219
The Bay of the Dead. An Armorican Legend (Wedded to-day is one who dwells): 484
The Beacon-Light (Night now descends with gloomy shadow): 11166
The Beaten Commander (Let him turn his face to the wall): 13468
The Beautiful Gate (It is a fair tradition, one of old): 3176
The Beautiful, a Prototype of Paradise (Why seeks the soul the beautiful to know): 5188
The Beauty Spring at Crewkerne, in Somersetshire (At early dawn, on the First of March): 6717
The Bedrid Cottager’s Prayer (Hush! ’tis the voice of prayer I hear): 5288
The Bee (I love to watch thy labours, busy bee): 15708
The Bee Orchis (See, Delia, see this image bright): 15699
The Beechen Wood.—A Song (How dark and dismal, my Jessy dear): 9706
The Beggar (Beggar, he by whose commands): 14317
The Beggar (I passed along the street): 14901
The Beggar's Dog (Rambling one day in London city): 7298
The Beggar's Soliloquy (Now, this, to my notion, is a pleasant cheer): 545
The Beggarman's Song (Were I a king, a crowned king): 9091
The Beginning and the End (Over the meadows we two went forth): 2194
The Beleaguered Widow (Oh! who is it stands in widow'd guise): 5365
The Belfry (From an old Belfry Tower I looked down): 11809
The Bell (When legends of Judæan hills): 13809
The Bell of St. Paul's, London (In London town wags many a tongue): 3349
The Belle of the Season (Yes, she is very beautiful, with sunlight in her glancing): 208
The Bells (As one, who would yon city reach): 1323
The Bells of Avignon (Avignon was a joyous city): 7168
The Bells of Lorloches (Spake the Lady of Lorloches): 371
The Beloved (Blow gently over my garden): 8877
The Benediction. From the French of François Coppée (It was in eighteen hundred—yes—and nine): 14680
The Benefactress (Who asks if I remember thee? or speak thy treasured name?): 15175
The Benison (I laid me down in melancholy mind): 9694
The Bereaved Slave-Mother. Suggested by "Uncle Tom's Cabin." (Moonlight wraps the dark-red river): 5658
The Best Infant-School (Nature, best Schoolmistress, I love the book): 11628
The Best Thing in the World (What’s the best thing in the world?): 15852
The Best Wine Last (So Cana said: but still the first was good): 4363
The Betrayed (Farewell! a long and last farewell): 15783
The Betrayed (She sat alone, on a cold grey stone): 284
The Betrothed (Had I met thee in thy beauty): 15432
The Betrothed (They were lovers): 15050
The Better (Weary head and aching eye): 1442
The Better Land. (From Mrs Hemans' Songs of the Affections) ("I hear thee speak of the better land"): 3019
The Better Thought (The Better Thought! How oft in days): 6194
The Bewitched Toys; Or, Queen Mab in the Children's World (Here comes Queen Mab in her coach-and-six!): 1601
The Bible (Lamp of our feet! whereby we trace): 123
The Bier-Path (I'll lead thee to my favourite ground within the valley nigh): 6056
The Birch-Tree at Loeschwitz (At Loeschwitz above the city): 671
The Bird (It was a sunny eve—and in a bower): 11553
The Bird (See'st thou yon birdie bright): 752
The Bird and the Bower (I had a little bower when I was young): 2712
The Bird in the Storm (The rain was falling, the winds were calling): 6363
The Bird of Akbar (Bird of the highest heavens, no spot of earth): 15747
The Bird of Dawning (These morns of March): 14830
The Bird of Paradise (Oh, wondrous bird of regions bright): 3212
The Bird-Boy (The corn's spiked gold round the sheep in the fold): 6545
The Birds (Doubling its force, the winter pours): 3716
The Birds (Is there a man so dull of soul and sense): 5346
The Birds' Nest (When clouds hang low on moors and seas): 6789
The Birth of a Prayer (About the church soft music flowed): 4117
The Birth of Morning (Pure, calm, diffused, the twilight of the morn): 1111
The Birth of Rhodes (When at Creation's radiant dawn uncurl'd): 3578
The Birth of the Rose: A Phantasy (The flush of Summer warms the cheek of night): 13508
The Birth-Day Crown (If aught of simple song have power to touch): 1870
The Bishop and the Knight (Low at the Bishop's feet he knelt): 12062
The Bitter Cry of Brer Rabbit (Pity a helpless prisoner's woe): 12239
The Black and the White Slave (I had a dream of slavery): 36
The Black Broom. A Scotch Sang English'd (The Broom cam capouring doon to the Hoose): 7879
The Black Dog of Ardenne (It was the gay Lord Gaveston, and loud and light laugh'd he): 13477
The Black Forest (Of old, the mountain-rooted pines): 7664
The Black Shawl (Like a madman I gaze on a raven-black shawl): 10996
The Black Watch (This is our own, our native shore): 10618
The Black Yager's Song. From the German of Körner (To field! to field!—in arms arise): 8241
The Black-Bird (The glossy Merle, who wildly sings to me): 6596
The Blackbird (Golden Bill! golden Bill!): 15756
The Blackbird (Upon the cherry-bough the blackbird sings): 9267
The Blackbird (When creeps the dawn across the dewy lea): 5111
The Blackbird in November (What though the chestnut leaves are brown): 13864
The Blackbird's Song (Aye, when the weary sun comes round): 3996
The Blackbird's Song (The bee is asleep in the heart of the rose): 6732
The Blacksmith (Old England, she has great warriors): 2683
The Blacksmith and the Daisy (Among the daisies she nestled down): 13059
The Blacksmith's Song. Strike, while the Iron's hot. Translated from an Old French Song (Through the casement, roseate dawn): 7445
The Blast of War (Brooding for ages o'er the darken'd earth): 1181
The Blessed (Cumhal the king, being angry and sad): 1025
The Blest In Heaven (No sorrow now hangs clouding on their brow): 3347
The Blind Bairn (The wee blind beggar bairnie sits): 6296
The Blind Boy (O say! what is that thing call'd light?): 2924
The Blind Boy to His Sister (My Sister, pray, what is Light?): 7546
The Blind Mother (Gently, dear mother, here): 3360
The Blind Piper (I love to hear the bagpipe sound): 15595
The Blind Poet (Give me thy hand, and when the songsters wake): 13165
The Blind Reader (Just at the corner of the street): 5439
The Blind School (And is it ours in even this our day): 387
The Blockhead (Once upon a time there was a blockhead): 14915
The Blooming of Violets (Ay! cast those gloomy thoughts aside): 6086
The Blooming Rose ('Twas holiday in Fairy Land): 1507
The Blossoming Time (The violets, in bunches of purple): 3168
The Blue Alcove (Yes, you are right. We both were young. ’Twas ’neath the Christmas holly): 13702
The Blue Bell. A Story for Children ("Oh auntie, a story! A story, please"): 2777
The Blue Mountain Exile (From his hut he strays forth, to gaze on the night): 3181
The Blue Mountains; or the Far (A man, he was, of humble birth and mind): 10207
The Bluff Muttoneer (You may talk of your dandies, your bloods, and fine fellows): 2992
The Boa Ghaut, East Indies (The cataract, the mountains, and the sweep): 15721
The Boat (The boat is swiftly going): 9664
The Boat and the Beacon (The rivers rush into the sea): 5617
The Boat of Grass (For years the slave endured his yoke): 3189
The Boatman (Half sleeping still, I stand among): 9673
The Boats (A boat upon the margin of the waves): 4269
The Bode (The sun rode high at noontide, the wind blew from the north): 4973
The Bonny Brideland Flower (In the Brideland sleeping): 12364
The Bookworm (Men call him "Bookworm"—and he lives alone): 12719
The Bookworm (With spectacles upon his nose): 4039
The Boot. From the Italian of Giuseppe Giusti (I am not made of ordinary stuff): 14015
The Border Land (In fleshly weakness as abed I lie): 3592
The Boulden Brothers (Ivan Liubovitscha, born in Trava): 7718
The Bourbons. 1830 (Let their blood flow like water!): 3869
The Bourne (Underneath the growing grass): 14039
The Bourse (It is a noble structure, softly falls): 5503
The Bower of Peace (When Hope's illusions all have waned): 11477
The Bowl of Punch (Upstanding, and brim every glass!): 3818
The Boy and the Butterfly (Fair lady, see—yon butterfly): 3043
The Boy and the Captive Bird (Oh! give it liberty!): 324
The Boy and the Ring (Fair chance held fast is merit. A certain king): 3161
The Boy Disciple (It is told in The Lives of the Fathers): 1884
The Boy from Ballytearim (He was born in Ballytearim, where there's little work to do): 8011
The Boy Mahomet (They feign that Mahomet, the three years' child): 1300
The Boy Martyr. (Nero Imperator) (Now that the bull with gilded horns was stricken by the priest): 930
The Boy Pygmalion (Thus she stood amid the flowers, fairest of the blushing things): 5172
The Boy's Dream (Through a narrow casement window): 6092
The Bracelet (Fair were the heavens when I kissed): 1924
The Brakens Wi' Me (I'll sing of yon glen o' red heather): 10320
The Bramin Angel. An Oriental Tale (Rest thee, rest thee, weary stranger): 11475
The Branchers (I sat to bask, one sunny morn): 8990
The Brave Women of Tann (Sate the heavy burghers): 1444
The Breeze (The mists they are scatter'd): 10921
The Breton Mother (Through the door soft airs are breathing): 13404
The Bribe ("Not to be had for love or gold"): 4202
The Bridal (I heard the merry peal of bells, the solemn rite was o'er): 5165
The Bridal Eve. A Dramatic Scene (This is the bridal eve, and yet thy lady): 15676
The Bridal Morning (Thy bridal morning! They are now): 13997
The Bridal of Andalla (Rise up, rise up, Xarifa, lay the golden cushion down): 10106
The Bridal of Dandelot (She smiled, and said, "What good to hear"): 1610
The Bridal of Galtrim (The priest's at the altar; the bride–and the groom): 254
The Bridal Toilet (The Bridal Toilet! not an hour of mirth): 15786
The Bridal-Day (Bride! upon thy marriage-day): 10827
The Bride (We miss her from these halls of mirth): 4425
The Bride of an Hour (From Gunnerfleet to Ivinscar): 634
The Bride of Corinth (A stranger youth from Athens came): 8374
The Bride of Corinth (A youth to Corinth, whilst the city slumber'd): 10650
The Bride of Lochleven (The winds were wintry, and the night was dark): 11414
The Bride of Rozelle. A Jersey Legend (Lapped in the Bay of Roses, flowered Rozelle): 12162
The Bride of the Danube (The orb of night had flung on high): 13928
The Bride of the Nile (Pride of the Pharaohs! with thy walls and towers): 15505
The Bridegroom (The moon yet strives with dawn): 9195
The Bridemaid (The bridal's glittering pageantry is o'er): 3773
The Bridesmaid (The maiden moon was shining out with a strange awakening gleam): 15410
The Bridge of Life (Across the rapid stream of seventy years): 2547
The Bridge of Planks (Spanning the streamlet's grassy banks): 6843
The Bridge of Sighs (One more unfortunate): 5454
The Bridge of the Hundred Spans (What will Van Horne say? Well, he'll fret): 4116
The Brigand Leader and his Wife. (From a picture by Eastlake) (Dark chieftain of the heath and height): 10598
The Bright Little Girl. Song to an Irish Tune (Her blue eyes they beam and they twinkle): 1318
The Brighton Beauty. (Vide Frontispiece) (I am bewitched by gentle eyes; my restless heart is haunted): 6210
The Brill. A Lay of Brighton (All ye who know the town of Brighton): 5774
The Brimham Crags (Away, away unto heaven's own bound): 4103
The Briton's Fireside ('Twere vain to seek on foreign shores the comforts of a "home"): 5318
The Broadswords of Old Scotland (Now there's peace on the shore, now there's calm on the sea): 10183
The Broken Bridge (It was a lovely autumn morn): 9909
The Broken Chain (Captivities, bound in iron bands): 1167
The Broken Chain (I am free! I have burst through my heavy chain): 3048
The Broken Heart (Ah! little I thought, when, with thrilling delight): 9339
The Broken Heart (When the knell, rung for the dying): 4198
The Broken Lute (She dwelt in proud Venetian halls): 10764
The Broken Toy (A broken toy! what memories cling): 7536
The Broken Toy (He led us to the summer-house): 6977
The Broken Tryst (Where on the mighty Grampians the shadows flit and fly): 4989
The Broken Violin (Come, my poor dog, and eat thy fill): 5226
The Broken Vow (Dying lies young Effie Logan): 918
The Brook (Ever impetuous, ever on rushing, the brook amongst boulders): 13611
The Brook Rhine (Small current of the wilds afar from men): 2491
The Brook—The Waters of Consolation (Ah! well do I remember thee, sweet Brook): 11673
The Brook. (From the German of Goethe) (With waters clear and silver bright): 2087
The Brothers (Slumber, Sleep—they were two brothers, servants to the Gods above): 10927
The Brothers. A Tale of "Araby the Blest" (In Araby the Blest two brothers lived): 1196
The Brothers' Feud ("Brother, brother, gird thy sword"): 14095
The Brothers' Revenge (Upon her couch of death–as pale): 4948
The Bucanier (Who sails, with masts so trim and raking): 3775
The Bucket (O’er a green mound the bucket swings): 6722
The Bugle Notes of Spring (Now, Winter, on his ice-bound car): 3943
The Building of the Palace of the Lamp (1st Genius. Deep in the earth the foundation is planted): 8786
The Bullfight of Ganzul (King Almanzor of Granada, he hath bid the trumpet sound): 7839
The Burden of Pity (Walk straitly in your ways, O sweet): 1022
The Burden of Sion (Captive and sorrow-pale, the mournful lot): 11054
The Burden of the Willows (O willows, willows, watchers by the stream): 615
The Burial in the Desert (In the shadow of the Pyramid): 10973
The Burial March of Dundee (Sound the fife, and raise the slogan—let the pibroch shake the air): 10033
The Burial of Alaric. [Thoroldsen speaks] (For no man knows where our great leader lies): 2351
The Burial of Douglas (They bore him barefaced on his bier): 10470
The Burial of Sir John Moore, Who fell at the Battle of Corunna, in 1808 (Not a drum was heard, nor a funeral note): 7982
The Burial of the Mighty (A glorious voice hath ceased!): 11243
The Burial of the Old Year (I dug a grave at midnight, there to bury): 13516
The Burial of the Old Year (We were a mighty multitude): 1158
The Buried Chime (Under the cliffs at Whitby, when the great tides landward flow): 4476
The Buried Flower (In the silence of my chamber): 10515
The Burn (I sat on a grey crag of Scotland's shore): 8382
The Burn Among the Heather. Oban, Argyllshire, 1871 (Nursed on the bosom of the Ben): 4058
The Burning of Njal. A Canto After the Icelandic of Njals Saga (Steadily gallop on Skeidará sand): 8399
The Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons (Ruined and gone! How like a feverish dream): 6209
The Burthen Lightened (God lays his burthen on each back): 1435
The Bush with the Bleeding Breast (Now, of all the trees by the King's highway): 1269
The Bussex Rhine. (Sedgemoor) (The night before, at Bridgewater): 8279
The Busy Workmen ("Each drop you drink's a workman true"): 15195
The Buttercup (There is a golden-chaliced flower): 6606
The Butterflies (The butterflies, like pansies, freed): 12452
The Butterflies' Pedigree (Butterflies here, butterflies there): 1932
The Butterfly (A Butterfly bask'd on a baby's grave): 15468
The Butterfly (Is this the type, as poets paint, of man's immortal doom): 6060
The Butterfly (Lovely, light as cloud in sky): 5697
The Butterfly on Mont Blanc (Who would have thought it, upon this icy cliff): 3153
The Butterfly—An Allegory (Born with the spring, to die when fades the rose): 12681
The Butterfly—An Allegory. From the French of Alphonse de Lamartine (Born with the spring, to die when droops the rose): 7049
The Cabbage Soup (The only son of a peasant widow woman): 14748
The Cabin-Boy (Upon the bridge, at silvery break of day): 1866
The Caged Lark ("In vain! Thy sunny fields are far away"): 2730
The Cairn (Caradoc with the golden torque): 7161
The Caliph's Draught (Upon a day in Ramadan): 14515
The Call (A white-robed angel stood at Heaven's door): 474
The Call (I walked with one whose child had lately died): 15023
The Call (Tho' the mist is on the mountain, yet the sun is on the sea): 813
The Call in Vain (Call back the dew): 3175
The Calm Sea (The gentle breeze that curl'd the sea had slowly died away): 10767
The Cambridge University Boat of 1860 (Some twenty years back, o'er his nectar one day): 13910
The Camera-Obscura. A Sunday Morning Lecture (Oh, Nature! ever wondrous, ever new): 1241
The Camp of Wallenstein (Sulter's tent, with booths. A moving crowd of soldiers of all colours and): 8339
The Campagna of Rome (Who calls the broad Campagna drear): 1808
The Campeador's Spectre Host (On the towers of Leon deep midnight lay): 10278
The Canadian Crofter's Boat-Song (Listen to me, as when ye heard our father): 8552
The Canary (A charming little household bird): 7606
The Candidate's Garland. An Excellent New Song (Ye candidates claiming to serve the good cause): 11309
The Canny Courtship (Young Redrigs walks where the sunbeams fa'): 11099
The Captain's Wife (The wind was blowing up from the west): 1981
The Captive Lark (The Spring's abroad, the morn is high): 7988
The Captive Princess (It was a sweet and soothing strain): 15179
The Captive Sea-Bird (Thou solitary bird, with drooping wing): 6482
The Captive—A Charade (Oh, strong the walls of Wentworth Hold): 2080
The Captive. A Dramatic Scene (Alb. Enter and fear not, trembler. Thou shalt live): 10581
The Captive's Dream (I dream of all things free!): 3455
The Captive's Dream (I dream'd in my desolate prison room): 3385
The Captive's Dream (When night o'er earth her mantle threw): 102
The Cardinal's Voyage (I have seen some queer things): 10971
The Carmelite Nuns of the Perpetual Adoration (Calm, sad, secure, behind high convent walls): 8926
The Carnival at Venice. (A. D. 1720) (Tapestry's rich-coloured fables): 594
The Carpenter (O Lord, at Joseph's humble bench): 2142
The Carrier Dove of Athens (I sat by the side of my own dear May): 3480
The Carrier Pigeon (Speed, speed upon thy way!): 399
The Carver and the Caliph ((We lay our story in the East)): 12136
The Carver's Lesson (Trust me, no mere skill of subtle tracery): 11939
The Casket (Within a casket of corporeal clay): 1315
The Castle by the Sea (Say, hast thou seen the castle): 11735
The Castle by the Sea. (Freely Translated from the German of Uhland) (Hast thou seen that castle olden): 874
The Castle in the Sea (I would like to clothe me in roses): 8702
The Castle Moat (There be seas, and there be streams): 6719
The Castle of the Mendicant (A dun and barren mount there is, upon whose sloping base): 5333
The Castle of Time. A Vision (Up rose the full moon in a heaven of blue): 10708
The Castle on the Mountain (There stands an ancient castle): 10695
The Cat's-Paw (I have a deep respect for that dear sex): 15689
The Cataract of Lodore (How does the water come down at Lodore?): 3510
The Caterpillar (Draw thy tender rings behind thee, overtop that spear): 904
The Cathedral ('Twas a glorious sight): 11971
The Cathedral (Deep within the massive portal stands the old cathedral door): 7267
The Cathedral Quarry (A lonely spot, where brambles cling): 7162
The Cavalier's Choice (It was a gallant cavalier): 10922
The Cavalier's Escape (Trample! trample! went the roan): 451
The Cavaliers' March to London (To horse, to horse, brave cavaliers): 6733
The Cave of Lemorna; A Legendary Tale (Amidst Lemorna's sullen cave): 15688
The Cedar Tree (Lay her beneath the Cedar Tree): 7428
The Cemetery (How still the cemetery lies): 7030
The Centenary of the Bells. St. Mary's, Wareham, in Dorsetshire (For a hundred sweet, sad years): 4682
The Chaffinch (The winter wind howls back to northern seas): 6547
The Chain (The bond that links our souls together): 1422
The Chain Broken (I woo thee not—I dare not seek): 14484
The Chamois (High o'er the crag the poiséd eagle flies): 8618
The Chance Blessing ('Twas the first of cold Spring mornings): 13894
The Change (But yesterday, and we were one): 9440
The Change (Unclouded shone Hope's brilliant beam): 4459
The Change-Seeker (Who to unknown lands would wander): 6011
The Changed (I loved—the earth, and all things on it, grew): 11700
The Changed Cross (It was a time of sadness, and my heart): 1559
The Changeling (I had a little daughter): 8207
The Changeling (I had a little daughter): 9123
The Changing Skies. A Sonnet (Form follows cloudy form across the sky): 12436
The Chant of Altabiscar (A cry has arisen): 9025
The Character Of A Happy Life (How happy is he born and taught): 5382
The Charge of the Heavy Brigade at Balaclava. October 25th, 1854 (The charge of the gallant three hundred, the Heavy Brigade!): 14672
The Chariot (Because I could not stop for Death): 8410
The Charity of the Countess Kathleen (O Countess Kathleen): 2065
The Charms of the Fatherland (I go to see my own dear land once more): 5238
The Chase of the Siren. A Doric Legend (Ages past a Doric village): 898
The Chaunt of Friendship (Oh tell me not of prudence, oh deave me not, I say): 9701
The Chemist (You have heard, have you not? of "Philosopher's scales"): 6390
The Cherry-Time (On the whitest plumes of the Mayflower-tree): 6580
The Cherwell Waterlily (Bright came the last departing gleam): 11872
The Chess-Board (My little love, do you remember): 7788
The Chestnut Walk: Trinity College, Cambridge (Linger, my spirit, in the chestnut walk): 7379
The Chew Tragedy; Being a Faithful Account of the Doings of John Meek's Magpie (At a pleasant village in Somersetshire): 11164
The Chief and His Tail. An Excellent New Song, (by a Person of Quality,) Recommended to be Sung by All Leal Scotsmen (Come fill up your glasses,—Here's "God bless the King!"): 9872
The Chief End of Man (What the chief end of Man?—Behold yon tree): 10006
The Child and the Bishop (The town that Roman power and force): 1898
The Child and the Dew-Drops ("Oh, dearest mother, tell me, pray"): 6636
The Child and the Fairy ("O say, little Thumbikin, where do you dwell?"): 7435
The Child in the Cradle (Within that narrow bed, glad babe, to thee): 10681
The Child in the Midst. (Founded on an old Legend) (There stood a tiny convent): 1774
The Child of Care. (From the German of Herder) (Once, by a gently murmuring stream): 881
The Child of Genius (I saw him musing on the mountain's side): 15216
The Child Reading the Bible (I saw him at his sport erewhile): 11252
The Child-Angel (Little tongues that chatter, chatter): 7646
The Child-Face (At morn or eve, where'er I go): 7523
The Child-Queen (Blow, brazen trumpets, blow your best!): 13530
The Child-Season (O sunny life of childhood! blossoming): 13277
The Child-Violinist (He had played for his lordship's levee): 12334
The Child's Burial in Spring (Where Ocean's waves to the hollow caves murmur a low wild hymn): 11709
The Child's First Lesson; Or, A' Alaney, Jessie (Noo, noo, a' alaney, Jessie): 2522
The Child's Flower Lesson (How mild it is this morning, dear): 1798
The Child's Garden (Beneath the budding lilacs): 6352
The Child's Treasure (Around a throne of cloud and storm): 6146
The Child's Warning (There's bloom upon the lady's cheek): 10549
The Child's Way to Heaven ("O! I am weary of earth," said the child): 15848
The Childless (When I think upon the Childless, how I sorrow for the gloom): 4783
The Children (Jenny's sick and ailing): 5082
The Children (Only to keep them so): 4976
The Children (To grown-up beauty men are fond): 6842
The Children of Lebanon. An American Idyll (There is a valley near New England, fair): 14444
The Children of Lir (Out upon the sand-dunes thrive the coarse, long grasses): 1829
The Children's Bed-Time (The clock strikes seven in the hall): 14532
The Children's Music (We asked where the magic came from): 3620
The Children's Time-Piece (Now Summer dons her golden robe): 6601
The Children's Triumph (The sunbeams came to my window): 2474
The Chimes of Antwerp (High o'er the sunlit market-place): 13380
The China Mender (Good morning, Mr. What'-d ye-call! Well! here's another pretty job!): 15254
The Choice (A Fairy there lived in the long, long ago): 7514
The Choice (In yonder mansion in the park): 4037
The Choice (Now take thy choice, thou maiden fair): 13916
The Choice. (Rispetto) (The red, red rose is Love): 15971
The Cholera Mount. Lines on the Burying-Place for Patients who have Died of Cholera; a pleasant eminence in Sheffield Park (In death divided from their dearest kin): 11236
The Chords of Love (The heart's best treasures lie in secret mines): 1157
The Chosen Rock (Here, in the hush and stillness of mid-noon): 10932
The Christening (Array'd—a half-angelic sight): 10484
The Christian (Shine on, thou bright sun, in yon summer-tinged sky): 15525
The Christian Bride; a Poem in Three Cantos (Young Torthil sits below the woody steeps): 11617
The Christian Victim. (A Scene in the Coliseum) (Roll back the wheel of Time!—at Fancy's call): 15831
The Christmas Bells (The midnight stars shine overhead): 13379
The Christmas Child (The rain is cold, the sky is pitch): 396
The Christmas Fleet (I saw three ships a-sailing): 1840
The Christmas Rose (Child of the ancient year): 6803
The Christmas Rose (Unto the cradle of the Wondrous Child): 14774
The Christmas Tree (The Christmas Tree! the Christmas Tree!): 366
The Christmas-Tree. (From the German of Gustav Hartwig) (Another Spring with faint, sweet airs): 2242
The Chrysanthemum (Enlivening guest! Fairly thine image dwells): 7191
The Chrysanthemum (Welcome in our leafless bower): 5897
The Church by the Sea (That spirit of wit, whose quenchless ray): 12099
The Church in The Wilderness (Beneath a forest's shadows dim): 6141
The Church Poor-Box (I am a Poor-Box!—here I stick): 1162
The Churchyard By the Sea. A Memory (Across the waste of years I see): 12802
The Churchyard Lily (Slowly out of a summer grave): 6709
The Churchyard Yew (Under the black yew-tree): 7321
The Cilician Pirates. (Temp. Pompeii Magni) (The Autumn night was warm and still, the deep Cilician bay): 12072
The Circassian War-Song (A shout from the mountains !): 11320
The Cities of Time (In a deep and death-like forest): 1257
The City Lies in Hushed Repose (The city lies in hushed repose): 12920
The City of Earthly Eden (Sheddád the Mighty, the great of limb): 2681
The City of Extremity (There is a place, a dreadful place): 6548
The City Pigeons (How yonder flock of silver wings): 7628
The City Waif (Weary and pale, a little child): 12857
The Claims of Labour (Laying in dust the giant arm of strife): 1199
The Clansmen: In Imitation of a Highland Boat Song, and in Illustration of Gaelic Rhythm (Send the biorlinn on careering): 2530
The Clapham Sect (Bright be thy greenery, and sweet thy grass): 3904
The Clearing of the Glens (They'll speak of him for many a year): 9037
The Cleft in America (The skies have voices soft): 381
The Clerk of the Pipe (The Clerk of the Pipe is a man of some weight): 11217
The Cliff Swallow (O'er eddying pool, and swift wide reach): 7354
The Cliffs of Dover (Rocks of my country! let the cloud): 10594
The Cliffs of Dover (Rocks of my country! let the cloud): 15618
The Climb from Vallë (Steep was the climb from Vallë: far below): 9081
The Cloud (A cloud came over a land of leaves): 4156
The Cloud (The cloud lay low in the heavens): 4497
The Cloud Embracer and the Cloud Compeller (Thou brain-sick dreamer in a world of dream): 15916
The Cloud-Mountains (When the day was slowly fading): 7403
The Cloudberry (Nay, touch it not; ’tis the cloudberry bloom): 2796
The Clouds (Dark and heavy-bosomed Clouds): 7370
The Clouds (Oh clouds! ye ancient messengers): 5221
The Clown's Song ("Here I am!"—and the House rejoices): 2702
The Clyde in November (Hark! from the hills, where blustering herald-winds): 7711
The Clydesdale's Yeoman's Return. An Excellent New Ballad to the Tune of Grammachree. Written and Sung by Dr. Scott (Twas on a Wednesday evening, John Craig came darkling hame): 7766
The Coachman of the "Skylark" (Ye passengers so bothered): 9660
The Coble (The eye was filled by the heave and the flash): 4308
The Cock and the Fox—A Fable (Reynard, moving through the wood): 5277
The Cock of the Hustings (Early in the morning wending): 9464
The Coffee and the Wicked Word (I spun a copper up in the air): 14995
The Coliseum (Ye circling walls, whose melancholy bound): 7898
The Coliseum at Rome (Here let me muse on this moss-woven stone): 15359
The College.—A Sketch in Verse (Oft has some fair inquirer bid me say): 10433
The Combat à l'Outrance (He slandered Mabel, then I smote): 964
The Comet (A comet wing'd by heav'n is hurled to meet): 3524
The Coming of Cupid (She spoke no word at first; but, through her tresses): 12701
The Coming of May (I had dined, not too well nor too sparely): 5726
The Coming of Spring (Spring came out of the woodland chase): 8158
The Coming of Spring (The winter-time is past and gone): 6756
The Coming of the Dark (Full-flushed, the sun dropt down): 12464
The Coming of the May (The chestnut boughs are all aglow): 12615
The Coming of the Spring (The coming of the Spring): 377
The Commencement of the New Century (Where can Peace find a refuge?–whither, say): 9960
The Common (There the star-blossomed chickweed grows): 6702
The Common Fate of All Things Fair (So strange it seems to me): 4120
The Common Foe (Ye toiling me of England): 137
The Common Joys (The bleak and black November): 1831
The Commonplace (Shall we but value what is rare): 12771
The Communion of the Doomed (A youthful priest sat in his tent): 5762
The Complaint (I heard thee say that thou wert slow of speech): 11959
The Complaint (Thou, not content to see my bitter doom): 8796
The Complaint of Ceres (Now the kindly Spring appears): 8296
The Complaint of Harald the Valiant (The pride and splendour of the sea): 14172
The Complaints of the Poor (And wherefore do the poor complain?): 56
The Concert (Last eve, a Concert gave me such high pleasure): 11601
The Condemned (Child of guilt! thou art destined to die): 3103
The Confession (I pray thee, father, do not turn): 15326
The Confession (There's somewhat on my breast): 11501
The Conflict (No! I this conflict longer will not wage): 9953
The Congress of Nations (A mighty dome is rear'd in solemn state): 1173
The Conquerors. A Glance at History (They flash'd like meteors through the rack): 125
The Consolations of Art (The play is done, and shadow lies): 14911
The Constancy of Nature Contrasted With The Changes in Human Life (How like eternity doth nature seem): 3422
The Constant Friends (O, sweet-soul’d Flowers! with robes so bright): 15833
The Contadina (Most cheerful Contadina!—thy lapsing years glide o'er): 10590
The Contadina. Dictating her Love-Letter (Come, thou old, unloving scribe): 10596
The Contrabandist (I'm a bold smuggler): 11321
The Contrast (In fortune, fickle, proud, and strange): 15178
The Contrast (Ungentle Love wakes Love of gentler mood): 11675
The Contributor's Lament for Yellow and Blue (Where famed Auld Reekie): 9821
The Convent Garden (A convent garden at the evening hour): 1532
The Convent Girl (Far up the wall, amid the eglantine): 7457
The Convent of Chaillot, or La Valliere and Louis XIV. (Suggested by an engraving with that title in one of the Annuals) (The convent-bell has heavily toll'd): 11384
The Convent-Bell (Oh! listen, listen to the toll of yonder deep-toned bell!): 15641
The Convict Ship (Morn on the waters!—and, purple and bright): 10176
The Convict Ship (Morn on the waters!—and, purple and bright): 5799
The Convoy of David ("You cannot pass!" was the stern reply of the frontier sentinelle): 3522
The Cook and the Doctor (Blest be the man who first invented eating): 2944
The Cooling Wheen (Tibbie had consented Tam to tak): 3656
The Corn-Keeper (A blight came into the corn by night): 2232
The Cornfield (The lark had flown with lessening wings): 7132
The Cornish Alewife. A Sketch from Life (Far from the town, where Tamar's waters flow): 5950
The Cornish Coast (Far in the west, a windy music rings): 2610
The Cot in the Glen (Oh! ’tis not the star of the evening o’ertopping): 9327
The Cotswold Hills (Now the sunset lies a-dying, and the purple fades to gray): 12576
The Cottage Door ('Tis sweet companionship to hold): 13929
The Cottage in the Hebrides (Beneath a rock o'er which green aspens bent): 15221
The Cottager's Song (No elegant palace God raised o'er my head): 6216
The Couch by Friendship Spread (How sweet the couch by friendship spread): 5269
The Count of Greiers (The gallant Count of Greiers—he looked at break of day): 11736
The Count of Vendel's Daughter. From the Ancient Danish (Within a bower the womb I left): 456
The Country Church (The blue of the forget-me-not): 6735
The Country Dance (Who comes here, with patch on cheek): 13048
The Country Dog in Town (A farmer, of the name of Brown): 3472
The Country Girl (That happy gleam of vernal eyes): 2950
The Country Kitchen (Is there not comfort by the country fire?): 15592
The Country Milestone (Trusty and true, by the road it stands): 6687
The Country Postman (A day of sullen, smothering heat): 6697
The Country Seat (Oh Summer Hill! if thou wert mine): 11383
The Country Sermon (It was a shining Sunday morn): 1862
The County Mayo (On the deck of Patrick Lynch's boat I sit in woful plight): 8665
The Course of Life (O! let the soul its slumber break): 3402
The Cousins (But he is old—my father is so old!): 15846
The Covenanter (The Lord beheld a cotter by the shore): 4033
The Covenanter's Heather-Bed (A stormy night, and dark, had closed a gloomy day): 7737
The Covenanters' Night-Hymn (Ho! plaided watcher of the hill): 10417
The Covert (The eagle beats his way): 1791
The Cowslip (Unfolding to the breeze of May): 10147
The Crabstick (Through Britain's isle as Hymen stray'd): 10164
The Cradle Song of the Poor (Hush! I cannot bear to see thee): 1366
The Cramming System (Your defence, my Lord Pam, of the system of Cram): 9526
The Cranes of Ibycus (On to the strife of Car and Song): 8630
The Cranes of Ibycus. A Ballad (From Rhegium to the Isthmus, long): 10815
The Cranes of Ibycus. A Ballad from Schiller (To Corinth, where the sons of Greece): 11570
The Creation of Woman (Man walked in Eden; gorgeous, fair, and gay): 5599
The Creed of Poetry (Obscurely bright the glories of our being): 11761
The Crest of King Pallinor (The star of Chivalry is set): 734
The Cricket Fiddler. A Recitation for Young Violinists. The music to be played, as arranged, after each verse (The lawn was shorn like velvet): 1845
The Cricket on the Hearth (Spirit of the wintry hour): 5213
The Crocus (Out of the frozen earth below): 1848
The Cropped Flower (Go, lovely flower!): 5859
The Crow and The Fox. Versified from Æsop's Fables (A crow sat on the limb of a tree): 1771
The Crown of a Year ("Is all the glory for the infant year?"): 2291
The Crown of Failure (When you have lived your life): 13330
The Crown of Love (O, might I load my arms with thee): 248
The Crown of Roses (Familiar, yet from other lands, the pleasant echo comes): 6566
The Crown of the Year (Give me the Autumn–gracious is the Spring): 2212
The Crown of Thorns (Go, daughters of Sion; your King survey): 11376
The Crowning (How dazzling flash the streams of coloured): 11684
The Crowning of Charlemagne (Midnight sits upon the sky): 11498
The Crusader's Flower (Fast by the empty mansion of the Lord): 2187
The Crusader's Return (Who'll keep for me my ladye dear?): 9492
The Crusader's Wife. (Literally Translated from the Breton) (Unto our Lord his war I'm bound, the call brooks no delay—): 897
The Cry of the Children (Do ye hear the children weeping, O my brothers!): 9964
The Cry of the Earth ("Weep on–weep on, ye April skies!"): 5921
The Cry of the Human ("There is no God," the foolish saith): 10748
The Cry of the Innocents (From out the depths of misery): 3196
The Cry of the Lonely (Let this suffice us, Lord!): 364
The Cuckoo (When a warm and scented steam): 6692
The Cuckoo-Toll (Hark! in the windings of the vale): 15244
The Cumæan Sibyl (King Tarquin sat beside the open door): 708
The Cup of Crime (On Israel's head a crown was bound): 15245
The Cup of Life: "Chasha Jhizni" (We quaff life's cup with dim): 8904
The Curate (What did he know about it? — the boy who stood up there): 4692
The Curate's Fireside (I have only one daughter): 6502
The Curé's Progress (Monsieur the Curé down the street): 12264
The Curse of Glencoe (The fair calm eve on wood and wold): 9984
The Curse of Omicron (I doom thy foot): 9450
The Curse of Rome (In France throned Despotism's foe and fear): 14273
The Curse of the Gudmunds. A Legend of Iceland (A white elf sits by the churchyard gate): 13462
The Cyclop of Euripides (I've borne a pretty tolerable share): 11228
The Cymric Town (The town of the Cymric men): 2780
The Cypress (Upon the summit of the rounded hill): 1665
The Daffodil (Foremost among the flowers of Spring): 7251
The Dairy Maids of Dort (In the famous Netherlands-country): 1642
The Daisy (The Daisy blossoms on the rocks): 9064
The Daisy and the Star (The modest daisy on the hill): 5903
The Dance (See how like lightest waves at play, the airy dancers fleet): 10659
The Dance (See with floating tread the bright pair whirl in a wave-like): 11060
The Dance of Death (The warder look'd down at the depth of night): 10910
The Dance of Death (Where the shores of Brienz stand up rugged and steep): 739
The Dancing Girl Reposing. On One of Three Statutes of Dancing Girls, by Canova (There is a shadow in her eye): 15321
The Danish Warrior's Death Song (Away, away! your care is vain): 2942
The Dappled Doe. A Convent Legend (There are fifty thanes in King Egbert's hall): 15182
The Dark Hour Ere the Dawning (She rocks her baby to and fro): 6391
The Dark Side (Thou hast done well perhaps): 1398
The Dark Waggon (The Water-Wraith shrieked over Clyde): 9027
The Darkened Room (Outside the blind, the world lives on): 1017
The Dart (Flow onward, onward, onward flow): 7347
The Daughter (My little daughter grows apace): 13033
The Dauntless Bird (The waters roar among the woods): 7611
The Dawn (All the wild waves rocked in shadow): 2477
The Dawn of Peace (Sweet dawn of peace, how lovely is thy breaking!): 12839
The Day Beyond (When youth is with us, all things seem): 12672
The Day in the East is Breaking (The day in the East is breaking): 4299
The Day is Done (The day is done! the shades are gathering deeper): 5069
The Day of Rest (Rest, rest! it is the Day of Rest—there needs no book to tell): 6192
The Day of the Dead (Le Jour des Morts) (Wifeless and childless now for thirty years): 6217
The Day of the Lord (The Day of the Lord is at hand, at hand): 6269
The Day of Wailing (Though the low winds blow from the soft south-west): 4866
The Day That is Dead (My day, my golden day that is dead): 4181
The Day's Best Hour (Sweet is the Morn that deepens to a blush): 12450
The Day's Work (Do thy day's work, my dear): 4882
The Days Gone By (The burthen of the world's old song): 9191
The Days of Creation. From the German of Krummacher (All dead and silent was the earth): 3401
The Dæmon (Spake my Dæmon unto me): 7491
The Dead (Forget not the dead who have loved, who have left us): 6040
The Dead (Lay her softly on the bier): 7188
The Dead (Only to touch once more the "vanished hand"): 4808
The Dead (Underneath the nodding plumes): 6270
The Dead Bride (The banners curl and flutter): 894
The Dead Bride's Doll (Not unto Venus might she offer up): 2046
The Dead Child (Our little friend is in his grave): 6853
The Dead Child (Sleep on, dear, now): 2254
The Dead Cid (As carrion crows come flocking when the royal beast is sick): 12184
The Dead Czar (Lay him beneath his snows): 6268
The Dead Flower (In an old and musty volume, of strange and curious lore): 7355
The Dead Friend (My sun is darkened, and my broken life): 12912
The Dead in The Sea. [From the German of Ferdinand Freiligrath] (Under the sea-waves bright and clear): 5826
The Dead Invalid (White in a whiter shroud she lies): 7399
The Dead Lover (Dead! And only a week to-day): 12674
The Dead Mermaid (St. Brandan, coming out of his cell): 5555
The Dead Poet (The poet's little span is done): 4539
The Dead Pope (The whole day long had been wild and warm): 2891
The Dead Rose ('Twas morning; through the eastern pane): 6929
The Dead Soul (I dreamed such a horrible dream last night): 4359
The Dead Trumpeter (Wake, solider!—wake!—thy war-horse waits): 10458
The Dead-Tryst (As I went by the harbour when folk were abed): 2241
The Deaf Man's Soliloquy (To me, while neither voice nor sound): 15399
The Deaf Musician (I see a lark in the far summer sky): 2568
The Dearest (Oh! that from far-away mountains): 14638
The Death and Burial of Malbrough (Malbrough is gone to the wars): 5402
The Death Chant of Regnar Lod-Brok (In their coverts, the brood of false Loki, abhorred): 2635
The Death of Œnone (Now many a rolling month was gone): 422
The Death of Anthony (Can it be? Are you living, my queen?): 8595
The Death of Charles the First. An Historical Scene (Cromwell!—Good morrow, Ireton!—Whither goes): 15711
The Death of Cleopatra (Horace, Odes, I. 37.) (Now fill the bowl, now join the dance, and see): 14831
The Death of Columba (Saxon stranger, thou didst wisely): 2205
The Death of Don Alonzo of Aguilar (Fernando, King of Arragon, before Grenada lies): 8470
The Death of Huss (In the streets of Constance was heard a shout): 3939
The Death of Isaiah—A Fragment (—At that call): 9865
The Death of King John ('Tis evening, and the ancient towers of Swinstead Abbey lie): 13606
The Death of King Warwolf. A Norse Legend (The great King Warwolf waxing old): 916
The Death of Love (And is he dead at last? He lingered long): 4722
The Death of Mary (If I had thought thou could'st have died): 3425
The Death of Pan (Behold the vision of the death of Pan): 5842
The Death of Poetry (From the mute wilderness that hath no name): 11762
The Death of Queen Blanche (Maria de Pedilla be not thus of dismal mood): 7836
The Death of Rachel (Bring me Benoni, bring the son of sorrow): 933
The Death of Rachel (She felt—in many a patient tear): 15208
The Death of Summer (By the length’ning twilight hours): 7599
The Death of Summer (Wild Autumn winds blow chill and drear): 13262
The Death of Tennyson (The last of all our mighty bards is low): 8434
The Death of th' Owd Squire ('Twas a wild, mad kind of night, as black as the bottomless pit): 3704
The Death of the Deer (He sleeps on the sward where he gamboll'd but now): 5316
The Death of the Dove (Aloft on buoyant wing the ring-dove flew): 15047
The Death of the Duke of Clarence and Avondale (To the Mourners) (The bridal garland falls upon the bier): 8407
The Death of the First-Born (My sweet one, my sweet one, the tears were in my eyes): 10174
The Death of the Old Year. Written in Neville's Court, Trinity College, Cambridge, at Midnight, December 31, 1838 (Old Year! thy race is well nigh run): 4770
The Death of the Righteous. In Memory of E. B. (Her's was a soul of fire that burn'd): 15313
The Death of the Year (A cloud came out of the golden west): 4561
The Death of Winkelreid (Battle of Sempach, 9th July, 1386) (In July, when the bees swarmed thick upon the linden tops): 463
The Death Song (Are the roses all faded, that thus you should wear): 3378
The Death Struggle (My back is to the wall): 4016
The Death Trance (Weep, maiden, here by Cupid's grave! He fell): 10933
The Death-Bell (Come, list and hark, the bell doth toll): 6238
The Death-Song of Ariadne (How cold and dark it is! the earth and sky): 4573
The Death-Song of I’Krimah (Methinks from Paradise I see): 14173
The Death-Song of Regner Lodbrog (We have fought with our swords, hurrah!): 11351
The Death-Watch ("The death-watch ticked beside the hearth last night"): 4991
The Death-Wind (A whitewash'd attic, a truckle bed): 12123
The Debt;—A Pathetic Ballad (Oh yes, I often mention it): 3
The Debutante (She stood in all that bashful tenderness): 13917
The Deceitful Vicar (Saint Barnabas's Church upon): 12230
The Decoy (One sat among the old sepulchral stones): 11819
The Dedication (Had I but wealth, had I but fame): 8911
The Deeds of Wellington (Ay, many a year I followed him): 1267
The Deein' Fisher (Gang, Jenny, bring my fishing-book): 9600
The Deep Sea Fishing (Up with the flags, white, purple, and red): 4129
The Defence of Lucknow (Banner of England, not for a season, O banner of Britain, hast thou): 7859
The Deformed Child (When Summer days are long and warm, they set my little chair): 339
The Deity (All Nature owns with one accord): 15299
The Dejeuné. A Pindaric Ode (And was the sorrow so profound): 8109
The Delaying Spring (Spring-time! why with the swallow dost thou linger?): 7250
The Deluge (Around the globe one wave from pole to pole): 5434
The Demoniac: A Poem in Seven Chapters (In the green month of Zif, afar, beneath a palm-tree sate): 10245
The Dental Hospital (The other night the moon shone bright): 2159
The Departed (A faded flower, a bud of beauty blasted): 15813
The Departed (Tell me, O my father, mother): 15823
The Departed Friend (When life was young, when all the hopes we wove): 4437
The Departed Friend (Ye visions of romantic youth): 15319
The Departing Vessel (A bark was gliding through our bay, with banners on the breeze): 6321
The Departure of the Innocents (Take them away! Take them away!): 4142
The Descent of Love (Ah youthful Love! thy votarist): 14088
The Descent of Man. A Continuation of an Old Song ("Man comes from a Mammal that lived up a tree"): 10377
The Desert's Use (Why wakes not Life the desert bare and lone?): 14351
The Deserted (And does he quite forget): 6612
The Deserted Cemetery (A melancholy spot!—the wasted stone): 15830
The Deserted Churchyard (There lay an ancient churchyard): 14468
The Deserted Garden (Beyond the woods, yet half by woods inclosed): 6886
The Deserted House (Life and Thought have gone away): 11148
The Deserted Inn (I came to a deserted inn): 8044
The Deserted Paradise (Silence, that was not peace, so held the place): 4320
The Deserted Room (The fire flames leapt about the logs): 4489
The Desolate Village. A Reverie (Sweet Village! on thy pastoral hill): 7957
The Desolation of Jerusalem (They have crushed my pride! They have trampled me down in the dust!): 10297
The Despairing One. From Murger ("Say, who art thou that knock'st so late?"): 761
The Despot's Heir (Through years of solitude and chill disdain): 14032
The Destinies (Last of an ancient house! sole relic left): 14448
The Destiny of the Gifted (Daughter of Song! how truly hast thou spoken): 4805
The Destiny of the Poet (And can it be true that the minstrel must go): 5506
The Destroyer (He came not with the glittering sword): 15575
The Destroyers (Those foes of truth, they joke, and dig, and mine): 14343
The Destruction of Sennacherib (The Assyrian came down like the wolf on the fold): 2964
The Devil and I (The devil? Yes! I have often seen him): 15191
The Devil's Dream on Mount Aksbeck (Beyond the north where Ural hills from polar tempests run): 10853
The Devil's Last Walk (It wasn't his dinner, or supper, or tea): 11312
The Devil's Rafter. A Legend of Appleby (Father Ambrose): 13789
The Devil's Walk (From his brimstone bed, at break of day): 10427
The Devonshire Lane (In a Devonshire lane, as I trotted along): 9940
The Dew-Drop and the Stream (The brakes with golden flowers were crowned): 5868
The Dew-Drops (One morn I mark'd two dew-drops bright): 3598
The Dey's Song (Pbroo, pbroo! my bonnie crew): 3753
The Dial (I heed not complications of late times): 7342
The Dial (This is the place, as husht and dead): 2110
The Dial at Night (I said unto my soul: "The whole long night"): 12605
The Dial's Shadow (Go, Cupid; say to her I love): 13098
The Digger. From the Portuguese of Guerra Junquerio (The cock crows this December night): 820
The Dirge of Adonis. (From the Greek of Bion) (Ai! ai! wail for Adonis!—the young Loves wail for him, ai! ai!): 446
The Dirge of De Clare (Dark are thy woods, Coed Grono): 632
The Dirge of the Leaves (Dead or dying): 7528
The Dirge of Wallace (They lighted a taper at dead of night): 100
The Dirty Old Man. A Lay of Leadenhall (In a dirty old house lived a Dirty Old Man): 1271
The Discarded Jester (Once more to sit beside the king): 12536
The Disconsolate (Down from her hand it fell, the scroll): 15706
The Discovery of Tobacco (There were three jolly sailors bold): 13627
The Disinherited (Sunbeams are shining on thy native hills): 5168
The Disinterment (Lost Lord of Song! who grandly gave): 11169
The Disinterred Warrior (Gather him to his grave again): 11101
The Dismal Pool (It lies in deepest forest gloom): 1461
The Dissipated Husband (He comes not; I have watch'd the moon go down): 2986
The Diver ("Ho! where is the knight or the squire so bold"): 8625
The Diver (Under the Sea they lie): 6523
The Diver, A Ballad ("Oh, where is the knight or the squire so bold"): 10643
The Diver. From the German of Schiller ("Where is the knight or the vassal so brave"): 10514
The Divine Life (Where shall we find the Lord?): 14736
The Divine Procedure (How?—when?—and where?—the gods give no reply): 9152
The Division of Ranks (Yes, there's a patent of nobility): 10004
The Divorce (Would'st learn, that I've been doom'd to know): 4958
The Dog Guard. An Australian Story (There are lonesome places upon the earth): 13822
The Doleful Death and Dirge of Harpalus. (Continued) (His eyes were red, & all for watch'd): 2069
The Doleful Lay of the Noble Wife of Asan Aga (What is yon so white beside the greenwood?): 10665
The Dominie's Oe (The Dominie's sel'): 9605
The Doom of Cheynholme (Cheynholme Hall is a ruin lone): 4888
The Doom of the Mirror (Fair Judith Lee—a harass'd pair): 10662
The Doomed (Onward she sailed;—with her most precious freight): 4759
The Double Bankruptcy ("You owe me a full thousand pounds"): 15193
The Double Lesson (Maiden of Padua, on thy lap): 15440
The Doves (I stood upon the summit of a gently-swelling hill): 14762
The Downfall of Garibaldi (You Roman Catholics, now attend): 14803
The Downward Path. A Landscape of Rembrandt's in the Uffizi, Florence (The climbing and the toil are past, and now): 13540
The Drachenfels (Farewell, proud cliff! From Cologne's gothic door): 2931
The Dread To-Morrow (How often doth the march of coming ill): 12299
The Dream (In fairest garden wandered): 11777
The Dream (In the dream I dreamt to-night): 4617
The Dream (When night's sable wing shades the hour of repose): 6074
The Dream of Lord Nithsdale (Farewell to thee, Winifred, dearest and best!): 9983
The Dream of Mohammed the Second (Sultaun, Sultaun!): 11443
The Dream of the Deserted. A Ballad (All through the weary, wakeful night): 15512
The Dream-Ship (I built a little ship): 8708
The Dream-Testimony of Ora May (The moaning wind among the woods): 5667
The Dream. A Sonnet (It was no foolish dream of fairy land): 15654
The Dream. From the Italian of Francesco de Lemene (What a strange dream was that of mine! Methought): 10369
The Dreamer (He loves to watch the waves at play): 12627
The Dreams of Ocean (Ocean, with no wind to stir it): 14334
The Dredging Song (Hurrah! for the oyster-dredging song): 5939
The Drop of Dew (See how the orient dew): 3003
The Drowned at Sea (Never bronze or slab of stone): 11981
The Drowning of Kaer-Is. (Literally Translated from the Breton) (Heard ye the word the man of God): 901
The Drum (I hate that drum's discordant sound): 2916
The Drummer Boy of Kent (A Story from the French Wars, 1431) (And so you ask a tale of arms): 1689
The Drunkard's Dream (The drinking had ceased, for the midnight was come): 83
The Drunken Sea (The sea, the sea, the Drunken Sea): 5240
The Duke of Brunswick's Diamonds (The famous Duke of Brunswick, he surely must be blessed): 1599
The Duke Of Milan's Warning. A Scene in Milan Cathedral (The mass was said in Milan's holy fane): 3389
The Dull November Day (Fog, and mist, and rain): 1833
The Dumb Child (She is my only girl): 1150
The Dumb Speaks (Look on us two, I pray you—her and me—): 4835
The Dungeon Key ("I give this key to the kelpie's keeping"): 14022
The Dusty Miller. Told to a Pet Lamb ("Up, up the long stair to the nursery flat"): 2056
The Dwarf and the Oak Tree. A Vision of 1850 (Within the greenwood as I walked): 9035
The Dwellings of the Poor (Are they not lowly cottages): 5409
The Dying Child ("I cannot leave thee, Mother"): 1691
The Dying Christian (What sounds are these? Why tolls that solemn bell?): 8697
The Dying Cottager (My reap-hook lies beside the wall): 1853
The Dying Flower (Have hope; why shouldst thou): 11774
The Dying Flower; Being a Dialogue Between A Passenger and a Fading Violet (Droop not, poor flower!–there's hope for thee): 5846
The Dying Girl (And thou art dying, beautiful and young): 5464
The Dying Heroes, From Uhland (The Scandinavian swords rose midst the host): 425
The Dying Infant (Day lit the woody mountains; in the dell): 15251
The Dying Jew to His Daughter (Life's ebbing sands are almost run): 14102
The Dying Knight ("The sun upriseth gladsomely—good omen this I trow"): 15433
The Dying Seaman (Small was the cot, and trees shut out the sky): 15381
The Dying Sister (What matters it, though Spring-time): 15320
The Dying Spaniel (Old Oscar, how feebly thou crawl'st to the door): 11103
The Dying Spaniel (Old Oscar, how feebly thou crawl'st to the door): 5452
The Dying Student (A sickening weight is on my heart—I feel): 3729
The Dying Traveller. Written on a Sick Bed in Egypt (It is not the sickness that preys on my frame): 15738
The Dying Viking ("Bring me my armour, Sigurd"): 13411
The Dying Year (Ripples the sun-gold o'er the western sky): 4174
The Dying Year (Scant leaves upon the aspen): 7199
The Dying Year (The dying year's departing breath): 6983
The Dying Year's Requiem (Once more the silent Autumn days): 13491
The E’en Brings a’ Hame (Upon the hills the wind is sharp and cold): 8206
The Eaglet and the Child (The Baron cam' to his castle yett): 3944
The Earl and the Doctor; or, the Chair and the Siege. A Fytte of University Reform ("My lord, I think we safely may predict"): 9011
The Earl's Daughter. (Historical Portrait-Gallery, August 1866) (Large twilight eyes, and calm pure face): 7357
The Earl's Love (Lovely Mabel Bagnall, whither is she flown?): 1885
The Early Blue-Bird (Blue-bird, on yon leafless tree): 5258
The Early Called (Oh, weep not when thou lay'st the sod upon the young child's breast): 5570
The Early Dead (Why should we mourn for those who died): 5190
The Early Dead (Why weep for thee? Thou heedest not): 11242
The Early Lark (The harsh March winds were blowing): 380
The Early Lost (Fare-thee-well, fair flower, that opening): 10967
The Early Settlers (How strange a dream is seems to me): 5330
The Early Taken (A Mother mourned her children dead): 10747
The Early Tide (All night I had lain debating): 12512
The Earth to the Sea (From his rock pillow and his bed of sand): 596
The Earthen Lamp (Who loves not the darkness still must dare proclaim): 14708
The Earthquake at Lisbon (Old Lisbon's earthquake formed a mighty hollow): 13663
The East Neuk ('Tis a soft west wind, and no mist is in the air): 1944
The East Wind (He pierces us with shafts of steel): 13582
The Easter Decorations (O take away your dried and painted garlands): 2489
The Echo (Deep in a wood where yellow floods): 13414
The Echo of a Song (For all we sing, there still remains): 1526
The Eclipse of the Sun, 1821 (High on her speculative Tower): 9864
The Edel-Weiss. To the Memory of William Howitt (I was born in my little shroud): 3621
The Eden of Youth ("On to the land where we shall be at rest"): 14384
The Eggs and the Horses (John Dobbins was so captivated): 4405
The Eglantine (The sun was setting in the summer west): 10991
The Egoist (He possessed every quality calculated): 14755
The Eighteenth of June, 1832 (The Genius of France stood on Waterloo's plain): 3786
The Ejectment (The dusty road is filled with green): 7677
The Elder (Of old, in Scottish land, a Sire there lived): 8750
The Elder's Daughter (Cast her forth in her shame): 14003
The Elements. From Bürger (I teach a lofty lore—attend!): 8315
The Elf-king's Youngest Daughter (Down the merry streamlet dancing): 9782
The Elfin Charm ('Twas in the days of elves and fays): 1473
The Elle-Maid Gay (Ridest by the woodland, Ludwig, Ludwig): 6360
The Elves (With the noiseless beat of fairy feet): 7299
The Elves and the Children (Three little ones sit in a flowery mead): 3829
The Embroideress at Midnight (She plies her needle till the lamp): 5367
The Embroidery Frame (In a lofty room a lady fair): 5206
The Emigrant Lassie (As I came wandering down Glen Spean): 2518
The Emigrant's Bird (To distant lands across the sea): 1138
The Emigrant's Daughter (We were but children when our parents came): 385
The Emigrant's Farewell (Farewell, thou poor land of the coward and slave): 26
The Emigrants (When the elms turn yellow): 6850
The Emigrants (Where the remote Bermudas ride): 2976
The Emperor and the Pope (Through haughty Rome's imperial street): 1860
The Emperor and the Rabbi (Old Rabbi, what tales): 11476
The Empty Hall (Through the casement the wind is moaning): 9247
The Enchanted Bridle. A Legendary Ballad ("Get up, get up, my merrie young men"): 9268
The Enchanted Castle. From a celebrated picture by Claude Lorraine (The sun is on his western throne): 10593
The Enchanted Castle. From a Celebrated Picture by Claude Lorraine (The sun is on his western throne): 15664
The Enchanted Domain (Two lions sat on their pedestals): 11909
The Enchanted Ground ("Lady, danger hovers round"): 15252
The Enchanted Stream; or, The Rider's Vision (The Rider stay'd by the rivulet's bank): 2946
The Enclosed Common (Well done? Oh, I suppose so. ’Mid the gorse): 4525
The End (Hush! They are ended): 1062
The End of a Month (The night last night was strange and shaken): 166
The End of Autumn (Autumn departs—but still his mantle's fold): 3256
The End of David. (A Legend of the Talmud) ("Lord, let me know mine end, and of my days"): 8692
The End of it All (The night is over—open wide the shutter): 6550
The End of the Banquet (Farewell, my friends!—I hear the call): 10287
The End of the Play (She had been so shy and winning): 12527
The End of the story (You were standing alone in the silence): 12899
The End of the World. A Dream (I dreamt that I was in a peasant's hut): 14913
The End of the Year (Hark! the winter wind is singing): 2934
The Enemies. A Picture and a Parable for Children (There was a starling in a happy nest): 4213
The Enemy and the Friend (A prisoner who had been condemned): 14759
The Engine-Driver to His Engine (Put forth your force, my iron horse, with limbs that never tire!): 9659
The English Boy (Look from the ancient mountains down): 11409
The English Martyrs. A Scene of the Days of Queen Mary (Morn once again! Morn in the lone dim cell): 11224
The English Sailor and the King of Achen's Daughter. A Tale of Terror (Come, listen Gentles all): 8308
The English Ship, "Three Bells" (Beneath the low-hung night cloud): 13743
The Enthusiast on the Waters (Far off and near the billow roll'd): 15537
The Envious Roses (A pretty blue-eyed laughing flower): 14479
The Epic of the Lion. Faithfully Rendered from the French of M. Victor Hugo's 'L'Art d'Être Grandpère' (A Lion in his jaws caught up a child): 9583
The Epiphany (Star of glory! brightly streaming): 11400
The Epitaph of Adonis. An Idyl (I weep for fair Adonis, he is dead): 981
The Erl King (Who rides so late through the grisly night?): 10655
The Erl King's Dying (Bury me, love, when the year is old): 711
The Erl-King (Wha's ridin' sae fast i' the gloamin's licht?): 7208
The Erle Queen. On London, Westminster, or any other Bridge. (Oh! haste thee, my daughter! the river is deep): 3399
The Eternal Pendulum (Swing on, old pendulum of the world): 3670
The Eumenides (Earth, the first prophetess, I worship first): 11883
The Eumenidies of Æschylus (Earth, the first prophetess, I honour first): 11560
The Evangel of Venus (When at morning I behold): 1937
The Eve of Her Wedding (Hush! Let me hide my happiness): 12697
The Eve of St Jerry (Dick Gossip the barber arose with the cock): 8372
The Eve of St John (Hushed as the grave is the village, and now from the belfry tower): 8609
The Eve of the Bridal (The gorgeous light wanes fast away): 15171
The Eve on the Bridge (O the round yellow moon on the bridge!): 2555
The Even-Song of the Streams (Lo! couch'd within an odorous vale, where May): 11711
The Evening Before the Battle (Why are those watchfires gleaming bright): 5224
The Evening Breeze. Job, v. 6, 7 (Blow on, blow on, thou soft and evening breeze!): 11465
The Evening Hour (Oh! calm, sweet evening hour): 3897
The Evening of Life (How do we measure a life? How "shape our ends"): 8614
The Evening Sea (Dim sheet of lucid splendour, seen afar): 7682
The Evening Star (Bright as young joy it seems to stir): 7284
The Evening Time (Together we walked in the evening time): 2643
The Evening Valley (Bathed in soft twilight's harmonizing hue): 15295
The Evening Walk (My lonely ramble yester-eve I took): 10900
The Evening-Star (The evening star watched by the moon): 6368
The Everlasting Rose (Hail to thy hues, thou lovely flower!): 3483
The Everlasting Rose (Hail to thy hues! thou lovely flower): 3765
The Evil E'e (An evil e'e hath look'd on thee): 5978
The Excommunication of the Cid (It was when from Spain across the main the Cid had come to Rome): 9728
The Excuse (Wish thee joy on thy birth-day!): 3107
The Execution of Montrose (Come hither, Evan Cameron): 10678
The Exhibited Dwarf (I lay without my father's door): 10057
The Exile (My heart-sick cares and lonely hours o'ercome): 3882
The Exile (Not for the fervid youth, who quits his home): 5198
The Exile's Adieu (Fare thee well! my father-land): 3860
The Exile's Song (O where is now my father's land): 148
The Exile's Wife to Her Sleeping Child (My child, arise! Alas, how calm the sleep): 5678
The Expectation (Hear I the creaking gate unclose?): 10647
The Expiation of Charles V ("Go bid the great bell of the chapel to toll"): 553
The Eyes of Mahmūd (Sultan Mahmūd, son of Sabaktagin): 3166
The Faces in the Fire (In langsome nichts o' winter, when frost is unco keen): 9603
The Factory Child (Now spring is come, wi' gentle showers): 146
The Fading Photograph (It was glossy and brown, and clear and bright): 6708
The Faeries, A Dream-like Remembrance of a Dream (It chanced three merry Faeries met): 8174
The Fair One Whom I Mean. From the German of Burger (O, in what pomp of love serene): 2996
The Fair Ophelia (No more upon her cheek shall roses glow): 14266
The Fairest Flower. The Lay of the Captive Earl (I know a floweret passing fair): 10912
The Fairies (Where are the wonderful elves, and the fairy creatures bright?): 6876
The Fairies. (Translated from the German of Heinrich Heine) (The wavelets plash on the lonely strand): 890
The Fairies' Flitting (The Fairies are floating, flying away): 13144
The Fairies' Knowe (When the dew is on the moorland, and the moon is on the hill): 4622
The Fairy (Fairy, where dost dwell?): 11377
The Fairy Gold ("It lies at the foot of the rainbow there"): 5583
The Fairy Ladder (The snow was in the valley): 12182
The Fairy Prince (I saw her face shine through the pane): 12118
The Fairy Prince (Some roses tangled in the grass): 2034
The Fairy Prince Who Arrived Too Late (Too late for love, too late for joy): 13904
The Fairy Ring (Merry hearted Norah, sleeping): 5152
The Fairy Shell (One day, when wandering on the shore): 7079
The Fairy's Reply (I come, I come): 11378
The Faith of Love (I blame thee not, my peerless bride): 5166
The Faither's Knee (Oh! happy is the mither o' ilk little pet): 6303
The Faithful City (Month after month of fighting—till Hope in the dust lay low): 7813
The Faithful Comrade (Once I had a comrade true): 3802
The Faithful Guardian (Sweet innocence! how calm thou sleepest): 15531
The Faithful Mirror (I am but thy faithful mirror): 1436
The Faithless Lyre (I woke my lyre in youth's bright hours): 14100
The Fall of Castle Gardoval (Slowly on the changeless mountain crumbles Castle): 944
The Fall of Roderick and Spain (O turn your eyes, Don Roderick—O turn your eyes and see): 9083
The Fall of the Aar—Handec (From the fierce aspect of this River throwing): 9861
The Fall of the Leaves (The woods now wear their autumn hue): 5646
The Fall of the Year (Coldly and brightly draws the day): 6887
The Fall of the Year (Now flowers of deeper hue and scarlet glow): 7271
The Fall of the Year (Rustling leaves, which everywhere): 7231
The Fallen Star (A star is gone! a star is gone!): 10173
The Fallow Field (The days were bright, and the year was young): 4338
The False Love (The white moon rose o'er the castle grey): 13560
The False One (And it could please a vacant hour): 15844
The False One (I knew him not,—I sought him not): 15686
The Family Altar. A Cottage Scene (I saw a cradle at a cottage door): 15344
The Fane of Memory (The fane of memory is in the heart): 3854
The Far Far East (It was a dream of early years, the longest and the last): 5970
The Farewell (Now begone, my little Book!): 14126
The Farewell (Stanzas for Music) (Where are the hopes that we cherished): 10280
The Farewell of Day (Farewell, farewell! I must away): 14118
The Farewell of the Seal (Husband, farewell! for many a year): 9514
The Farewell to Earth (Must, must I die? leave all I've loved or known): 11239
The Farewell. In Imitation of Metastastio (Are we then doom'd at length to part?): 3781
The Farm-House Near the Sea (Near the beetling cliffs of Scotland): 12083
The Farmer's Corn (At early dawn, when o'er the leaves): 3902
The Farmer's Daughter (She seems to stand beside me now): 13620
The Farmer's Daughter (Spring ruled in earth and air): 2677
The Fatal Shot (There is a war ’tween Ostroviz and Serral): 7719
The Fatal Tryst (Far o'er the waters the sweet moon shone): 13398
The Fate of Polycrates.–Herod. iii. 124-126 (Oh! go not forth, my father dear–oh! go not forth to-day): 9966
The Father and the Mother (The father spake,—"Oh might I be"): 1715
The Father of the Regiment. (An Old Grenadier's Story of an Episode in the Retreat of Napoleon's "Grande Armée" from Moscow) (Thick snow-wreaths weighed upon the firs): 835
The Fatherless (Seek not the smiling vale, sweet boy): 15177
The Favour of the Moment (And so we find ourselves once more): 10019
The Favourite Flower (Twine not the rose, the thorny rose): 4197
The Fear and The Hope (My thoughts within me grow at times so high): 6200
The Fearless De Courcy (The fame of fearless De Courcy): 5817
The Feast of Almhuin. A Legend of Erin and Lochlin (Glancing and keen the bright sun struck the sea): 13461
The Feast of Ingathering (Not for the proud and mighty is the festive table spread): 6306
The Feast of Life (A banquet is spread for small and great): 1284
The Feast of Peter the First (O'er the Neva gaily dancing): 11000
The Felon (The felon sat chained in his prison-cell): 5378
The Female Convict to Her Infant (Oh, sleep not, my babe, for the morn to-morrow): 4393
The Ferry (Many years have passed for ever): 9665
The Fever Phantasy (Mystic maiden! who art thou): 5184
The Fieldfare (When wildly wave the poplar tops): 13055
The Fields in May (What can better please): 14410
The Fiery Trial. A Legend ("Go, carry to thy convent back"): 1250
The Fifth of November ('Twas the fifth of old November): 6329
The Fight at the Ford Between Ferdiah and Cuchullin. An Episode from the Ancient Irish Epic Romance, The Tain Bó Cuailgné, or the Cattle Prey of Cuailgné (Cuchullin the great chief had pitched his tent): 13831
The Fight at the Ford Between Ferdiah and Cuchullin. An Episode from the Ancient Irish Epic Romance, The Tain Bó Cuailgné, or the Cattle Prey of Cuailgné. [Continued] (That night they rested there: Next morn they rose): 13832
The Fight for the Belt. A Lay Sung at a Feast in Pall-Mall (The Fancy of America): 7775
The Fight in the Dark. A New Song (Of all crotchety notions that e'er have occurred): 10326
The Fight of Nidwalden (The hearts were bold, but the hands were few): 15679
The Fight on Rhu-Carn (Arthur, one sunny morn, our legends say): 13452
The Fight with the Dragon (Who comes?—why rushes so fast and loud): 9992
The Fight With the Dragon. A Romance (Why stirs the town, why rolls along): 11612
The Fine Old Man (I met a hearty fine old man): 78
The Finishing Touch (He did not see me, baby, or know that I was there—): 444
The Fire Escape Man (Says he, "Fire!"): 15001
The Fire of Drift-Wood (We sat within the farm-house old): 6064
The Fire’s Breath (“Away, come away, she was waiting early for you”): 15990
The Fireman's Song ("Ho, comrade, up! awake, arise! look forth into the night"): 10538
The Firmament (When I survey the bright): 2823
The First (A lovely and a languid hour): 4452
The First (The first, the first!—oh! nought like it): 4946
The First and Last Kiss (Thy lips are quiet and thine eyes are still): 12097
The First Born Prince of Wales (Weep, noble lady! weep no more!): 479
The First Christmas-Day (In heaven above there was joy the day): 2523
The First Daisy (Thou Note of Praise!—The first I've seen): 6919
The First Day of June (Sweet June, I greet thee on thy birthday morn): 6447
The First Days of Spring (All, all is poetry around): 4895
The First Death (Kabeel. What art thou, that thus standest in my path): 1383
The First English Poet (Dwelt a certain poor man in his day): 14569
The First Flowers (Now pipes the thrush, dear messenger of spring): 887
The First Gray Hair (The matron at her mirror, with her hand upon her brow): 10048
The First Grey Hair (The wifie wha sits on her ain man's knee): 5335
The First Guid Day (It is the showery April): 9607
The First Hot Word (The first hot word; ah! shun it, dear): 4881
The First Look (A stranger's look! Then whence arose): 15238
The First Look-Out on the World (He comes down from Youth's mountain-top): 383
The First Mild Day of March (It is the first mild day of March): 2968
The First Morning of 1860 (One evening mid the summer flown): 11930
The First Night of the Year (The snow lies cold on field and fold): 660
The First of June (Last night I lay upon my bed): 1778
The First of May (All hail to thee, thou First of May): 3239
The First of May (Hail! sacred thou to sacred joy): 8221
The First of May (The first of May!—The first of May!): 10453
The First Primrose (A primrose awoke from its long winter sleep): 6943
The First Primrose (Little yellow darling): 1701
The First Sermon (Once, on a lovely day—it was in spring): 10071
The First Shoes (Wife, keep those shoes with the shape of his feet in them): 6666
The First Snow (There is sorrow and there is mirth): 4054
The First Snow on the Fell (Our days had begun to darken): 1470
The First Snowdrop ("Dear little flower! dost thou not fear"): 7045
The First Snowdrop (Still far in the South is the sunshine of Spring): 6847
The First Sorrow (Beautiful boy! so still to-night): 7029
The First Swallow (White-throated herald of the coming May): 4398
The First Swallows (Thy calm eyes smiling to my own): 6230
The First Violets (Who that has loved knows not the tender tale): 5777
The First Waits. A Meditation for All (So, Christmas is here again!): 14226
The First-Born (Hope and Fear, philosophers say): 15375
The First-Born (The First-born is a Fairy child): 1254
The Fisher (The water rush'd and bubbled by): 10660
The Fisherman (Fisherman, speak to me, why so lonely?): 1912
The Fisherman in His Boat (Early at morning-tide seek I the strand): 6355
The Fisherman's Funeral (Up on the breezy headland the fisherman's grave they made): 4274
The Fisherman's Home ('Tis Summer–and the forest scene): 5578
The Fisherman's Summons (The sea is calling, calling): 4175
The Fisherman's Wife (It was summer-time, and the dawning day): 7360
The Fisherman's Wife (Will the storm never blow over? How the blast sweeps by the door!): 7111
The Fishermen. From the French of Emile Verhaeren (The spot is flaked with mist, that fills): 1002
The Five Children. A Ballad (Oh, gently sways the rocking boat): 15501
The Five Hundredth Number of the "Cornhill Magazine" (For two-score years the tumbling spray): 15006
The Five Oaks of Dallwitz. From the German of Körner ('Tis evening—in the silent west): 7740
The Five Toasts (As by five senses we are directed): 5457
The Flag of England (When whirling flames round Moscow rose): 15368
The Flag. (A Fact.) (A wild street fray in the Cuban town, where each fought for his own right hand): 4986
The Fleet Street Eclogue (What thought may burst the bond): 7698
The Flight (With flying gleams, the moon of March): 2845
The Flight from Granada (There was crying in Granada when the sun was going down): 7841
The Flight into Egypt (Night fell in peace on Bethlehem's hill): 15470
The Flight to Cyprus (De Vere has loos'd from Ascalon—Judea's holy gate): 11174
The Flock for the Market; or, Hope and Despondency (Two hundred strong they pour'd into the field): 7865
The Flower and Star (The Flower beheld a Star above): 14657
The Flower and the Sun (The sun one summer's day had softly wooed): 14233
The Flower Girl of Savoy (Fair ladies all, who love to hear): 14454
The Flower Girls (Girls of Florence, come we in): 2463
The Flower of Gnido (Had I the sweet resounding lyre): 10075
The Flower of the Desert (Why art thou thus in thy beauty cast): 11008
The Flower Queen (A dewy rose, blood-red): 13031
The Flower Spirit (When Earth was in its golden prime): 15755
The Flower-Girl (The cold wind nipping at her feet): 13265
The Flower-Show (They blush and smile before us in this gay and varied scene): 4893
The Flower-War of the Fairies (Fairies of the Sun and Moon): 2306
The Flower's Revenge. (Translated from the German) (On the soft cushions of a couch of down): 9104
The Flowers (When God to man a being gave): 15817
The Flowers and Fiordispina (The lily and rose they strove one day): 1921
The Flowers of God (The welcome flowers are blossoming): 6122
The Flowers' Choice (I heard the flowers on a day): 7100
The Flowers' Petition (We flowers and shrubs in cities pent): 1377
The Flowing of the Waters (As I lay in peace profound): 1276
The Fly (While the glass goes gaily round): 3534
The Flying Cloud (Cloud! following sunwards o'er the evening sky): 6090
The Flying Dutchman (Like an arrow flies the ship, without aim, without goal, without rest): 2088
The Flying Years (As a dream when night is done): 2245
The Fool's Song (It will go better yet—it will go better yet!): 5962
The Fords of Jordan, 1859 ('Tis scarce a hundred steps and one): 12009
The Foreigner (Among the ballast hills he creeps): 13673
The Forest of Arden (There is no forest of Arden now): 4210
The Forest Temple (Why hath man raised to thee his crumbling temples?): 1277
The Forestalling of Sorrow ("Ere the sorrow comes with years"): 5026
The Forge by the Forest (It stands half-hidden in the greenwood's edge): 13182
The Forget-Me-Not. [From the German of Müchler] (Silent o'er the fountain gleaming): 5819
The Forging of the Anchor (“Come, see the Dolphin’s Anchor forg’d; ’tis at a white heat now”): 3148
The Forging of the Anchor (Come, see the Dolphin’s Anchor forg’d; ’tis at a white heat now): 11014
The Forgotten Grave (Out from the City's giant roar): 2574
The Forgotten One (I have no early flowers to fling): 3383
The Forsaken (Athwart the valley, thro' the glen): 945
The Forsaken (Oh mine be the shade, which no eye might discover): 15218
The Forsaken (What is it that came o'er her fainting heart): 11795
The Forsaken to the False One (I dare thee to forget me! go wander where thou wilt): 10061
The Fortune-Favoured (Ah! happy He, upon whose birth each god): 10023
The Fortune-Teller. A Seaport Ditty ("Hark, my maiden, and I'll tell you"): 214
The Founding of the Bell. Written for Music (Hark! how the furnace pants and roars!): 10031
The Fountain (Under arched underlacings of green boughs): 4168
The Fountain (We talked with open heart, and tongue): 3433
The Fountain of Trevi (The din of day was hush'd and o'er): 4469
The Fountain of Youth ((Colin, a youth who seems most woe-begone, meets the elderly Theanor)): 9076
The Fountain, A Conversation (We talk with open heart, and tongue): 3341
The Fountain. From the French of Théophile Gautier (A fountain bubbles forth, hard by the lake): 12038
The Fountain's Depths (The fountain's depths were dim and chill): 15425
The Four Ages of the World (Bright-purpling the glass, glows the blush of the wine): 10808
The Four Gates (I know that He cometh by fire): 5521
The Four Gospels (Jesus came down from heaven, and brought): 8987
The Four Mourners (The bravest of them all lay slain): 7388
The Four Seasons (When Life was spring our wants were small): 5775
The Four Sisters. (Translated from the German of Theodor Körner) (There was once a mother whose daughters three): 2745
The Fourfold Aspect (The lovers stood on the deep recess): 4026
The Fourth of June (The fourth of June! the fourth of June!): 14473
The Fourth of June at Eton. An Eclogue (Beneath the wattled bank the eddies swarm): 12404
The Fowler (I have an old remembrance—'tis as old): 11105
The Fox and the Hare: A Lyric. From the Norwegian of Björnson (The fox he lay at the birch-tree root): 13790
The Franciscan and the Brotherhood ("Whence that unwonted sternness? Why that face"): 10333
The Fratricide. (Finnish) (O, where have ye been the morn sae late): 879
The Fraülein's Hair. An Episode of the Liberation War (From Moscow the baffled eagle came): 513
The Free'd Bird (Return, return, my Bird!): 11013
The Freed Bird (Return, return, my Bird!): 11084
The Freeman and the Slave ("From distant lands, far o'er the wave"): 54
The Friar of Orders Gray (It was a friar of orders grey): 2036
The Friar's Farewell to Oxford (T'other night I as I passed by old Anthony-wood): 7818
The Friend of Greece (The friend of Greece! Fair fall the mould): 13890
The Friends of My Youth (Friends of my youth! Where are ye? On the stream): 5366
The Friendship of Home (Oh, no!—not through the glitt'ring crowd): 13983
The Fuchsia (Within the mountain lodge we sat): 7023
The Fugitive Slaves (Our wrongs were countless as the sands): 6379
The Funeral (Whoever comes to shroud me, do not harm): 8042
The Funeral Boat. A Legend (The damsel's heart was fond and true): 15559
The Funeral Hymn (Where the long reeds quiver): 11356
The Funeral of the Forsaken. Suggested by a French Engraving (The gorgeous sun is fading fast): 15803
The Funeral Pile (The rain was blowing in quick white gusts): 7325
The Funeral Torch (Nature supplies the corpse, and man the tomb): 14698
The Fusiliers' Dog. (Lately Run Over, After Having Gone Through the Crimean Campaign) (Go lift him gently from the wheels): 13947
The Future (’Tis well the Future is not ours, but His): 14649
The Future (The drop that falls unnoted in the stream): 2710
The Future (What saith the future? Will the few take heed): 9816
The Future Life (How shall I know thee in the sphere which keeps): 3740
The Gael to His Country and His Countrymen. A Song (“My heart's in the Highlands, I love every glen”): 14976
The Gallery of Diana at Fontainebleau (A warrior king deemed this hall should rise): 5501
The Game at Chess (Love with a Lady—would you know): 15389
The Game of Life (With eager hand Hope deftly weaves): 282
The Gamekeeper (Firs that are the squirrels' ladders): 7144
The Gamester (See where the Victim stands!—not crown'd with flowers): 15616
The Gander of Glasgow (I sing of the Gander we've got from the West): 10975
The Garden (How vainly men themselves amaze): 3324
The Garden Chair. A Photograph (A pleasant picture, full of meanings deep): 6275
The Garden in the Churchyard (Would you know where is my garden?–Where the church-tower gray and lone): 5839
The Garden of Boccacio (Of late, in one of those most weary hours): 3054
The Garden of Sleep (Fairer than aught on earth it lies): 2070
The Garden. A Ballad in the Old Style (The face of My Ladye's a garden, I trow): 7103
The Gardener of the Hall (When She was born I had been long the Gardener of the Hall): 4960
The Garland of Wild-Flowers (These be simple flowers, lady): 6370
The Garrulous Lover (I am as love-sick as a nightingale): 12531
The Gascon (There are Gascons, I'm told, not a few): 5415
The Gascon O'Driscol (In old O'Driscol's pedigree): 9571
The Gay Serenade (When the shades of the gloaming are over the lea): 15802
The Gentianella (Green thou art, obscurely green): 15044
The Gentleness of Death (Who that can feel the gentleness of Death): 1213
The Geologist's Wife to her Husband Setting off upon an Excursion (Adieu then, my dear, to the Highlands you go): 5889
The German Lovers (Bertha, what think'st thou?—is yon star a world?): 3881
The German Night Watchman's Song. From "Souvenirs of a Summer in Germany" (Hark, while I sing! our village clock): 4388
The German Watchman's Song (Hear, my masters, hear me singing): 12179
The Ghost Bereft (The poor ghost came through the wind and rain): 1019
The Ghost in the Picture Room (The lights extinguished; by the hearth I leant): 2732
The Ghost of Edmontine. A Tale of Mystery (The wind was howling fiercely): 14063
The Ghost of the Gander (Oh! what is that figure, and what can it mean): 10981
The Ghost of the Oratory (Rob. Brother, I wish thee joy): 10304
The Ghost. A Canterbury Tale (There stands a city, neither large nor small): 10560
The Ghosts' Banquet (The fields are blank, the trees are bare): 1268
The Gift (Oh, blessed, blessed flowers! the hand): 5900
The Gift of Clunnog Vawr. A Tale of Caer Arvon (When he who raised the pile of Clunnog Vawr): 13475
The Gifts (Oh, gaily sailed the gallant craft): 2218
The Gifts of Térek (Térek bellows, wildly sweeping): 9970
The Gipsies' Song. From the "Preciosa" of C. M. Weber (In the wood—in the wood!): 5969
The Gipsy's Malison (Suck, baby, suck, mother's love grows by giving): 10465
The Girl and the Blossoms. (From the Italian of Rossi) (When apple-trees in spring were gay): 3473
The Girl in a Florentine Costume. From a picture by H. Howard, Esq. R. A. (Art thou some vision of the olden time): 10589
The Gladiator (Sweep on, sweep on! your savage sport is o'er): 15279
The Gladness of Nature (Is this a time to be cloudy and sad): 3666
The Glastonbury Thorn (My son, thou sayest that thy life): 1842
The Glastonbury Thorn (There grew, within a favour'd vale): 1226
The Gleaner's Guide ("Poor heart! that twinest with the twisted band"): 516
The Glee-Maiden's Spell ("Lean your head against my breast"): 5739
The Glen of Dreams ('Tis sweet enough, O heart of me, when day is on the street): 15025
The Glen of Roslin (Hark! ’twas the trumpet rung!): 15446
The Glen's Retreat (Far down the glen, where shadow reigns): 3913
The Gloaming (A wish at close of day): 8220
The Glory of God in Creation (Thou art, O God, the life and light): 5314
The Glove (From morning time to night time): 4029
The Glove (Intent on bloody sport): 8628
The Glove (Rais'd on a throne, in a feudal state): 9330
The Glove, a Tale (Before his lion-court): 10644
The Glove. (From Schiller) (Before his Lion-garden gate): 3792
The Gloves (It was a sunny summer's day): 267
The Glow-Worm (Hail, little joyful, glimmering spark): 5836
The Glow-Worm (O Gem, more precious than the thrice-tried ore): 11625
The Glow-Worm (Some Apes found a Glow-worm): 3078
The Glowworm ('Tis only when the sun hath left his throne): 15612
The Glowworm (A star with loving eyes gazed on a flower): 6307
The Goat and the Vine (A kid's rock-leaping and thick-bearded spouse): 14632
The Goblins of the Marsh. A Masque (What a sweet night to be gadding about!): 1325
The God and the Bayaderé. An Indian Legend (Mahadeh, earth's lord, descending): 10691
The God of Nature (Thou, dear enthusiast, sayest): 10150
The Gods of Greece (Ye Gods of Greece! bright Fictions! when): 4942
The Gods of Greece (Ye in the age gone by): 9955
The Gods of Greece. From the German of Friedrich Schiller (Bright beings of the land of fable, when): 8199
The Gods of the Hearth (Only a picture, dimmed and smirched): 4135
The Gold Bridge. A Legend of the Ninth Century (Saxon Edmund ’gainst the Dane): 1901
The Gold-Finder (To travellers by the seas, or on long plains): 9186
The Golden Age (My friend, your golden age is gone): 9110
The Golden Age (The father sits, and marks his child): 1147
The Golden Age. A Poem ("Money abundant, at an easy rate!"): 9197
The Golden Bee (Laden with precious merchandise, the growth of Chinese toil): 2737
The Golden Bee (With precious merchandise well stored, the growth of Indian soil): 2492
The Golden Gate (A lady stood at the golden gate): 6473
The Golden Island: Arran from Ayr (Deep set in distant seas it lies): 14024
The Golden Ladder (When torn with Passion's insecure delights): 14546
The Golden Mean (My friend, you will do wisely not to steer): 10232
The Golden Rose (“Sister, wake! ’tis surely morning; listen, I can hear the bees”): 5923
The Golden Thread (A maiden stood in an old-world room): 13246
The Golden Thread. An incident so narrated in a very early French Fabliau.—(See Sir Walter Scott's "Essay on Romantic Literature.") (In pleasant lands far away): 2423
The Golden Touch (The amber dust of sunset fills): 815
The Golden Year (Come, sunny looks, that in my memory throng): 2723
The Goldsmith's Daughter (A goldsmith stood within his stall): 9663
The Gondola (Swiftly o'er the Brenta bounding): 3140
The Gone-Before (Alas! we are prone to say): 6739
The Good and the Beautiful (Foster the Good, and thou shalt tend the Flower): 9996
The Good Great Man (How seldom, friend, a good great man inherits): 1193
The Good Great Man (How seldom, friend, a good great man inherits): 14604
The Good Hope (O be not sad, as though in dreams): 7632
The Good of It: A Cynic’s Song (Some men strut proudly ’midst honours and gold): 6113
The Good Omen. A Lyrical Ballad (I was compell'd to leave the land): 10109
The Good People (Where the fern grew high and branching): 13511
The Good People (You've seen a cloud in summer, sir, a dust-cloud rise and whirl): 7113
The Good Ship Marshal (’Twas the red sundown of Christmas Day): 6425
The Goode Manne of Allowa. Ane most strainge and treuthfulle Ballande (Did you ever heire of ane queere ould manne): 10714
The Goodwives of Weinsberg. From the German of Bürger (Who can tell me where Weinsberg lies?): 15247
The Goose-Girl. A Tale of the Year 2099 (The little goose-girl came singing): 14416
The Gorse (As I lingered at the window): 12989
The Gourd and the Palm. A Persian Fable ("Hour old art thou?" said the garrulous gourd): 15199
The Grace of Simplicity (Still to be neat, still to be drest): 6259
The Graces (Did you ever hear tell of Wind-whistle Lodge): 11324
The Grand General Junction and Indefinite Extension Railway Rhapsody (Though the farmer's hope may perish): 11035
The Grand Match (Dennis was hearty when Dennis was young): 7937
The Grand Staircase of the Chamber of Peers, Palace of the Luxembourg (With mind intent on mighty cares of state): 5494
The Grandfather's Pet (This is the room where she slept): 1747
The Grandmother's Apology (And Willy, my eldest born, is gone, you say, little Anne?): 199
The Grass (The grass so little has to do): 8411
The Grave in the Moorland (Low lieth it, long grass upon it waving): 1424
The Grave in the West (Western wind, balmy and sweet!): 6332
The Grave of Faction (’Twas mirror'd on a bright poetic dream): 1178
The Grave of Osceola, a Young Indian Chief, Who Died in Captivity of a Broken Heart (Red Eagle of the Western sky): 15822
The Grave of the Gifted (A grave for the gifted—where—where shall it be): 11250
The Grave of the Heart (There is in every heart a grave): 1740
The Grave on the Hill (Deep in a silent wilderness): 6614
The Grave. From the German of Salis (Deep is the grave, and silent): 336
The Grave's Voices (Sunk as in dreams, and lost in anxious thought): 7063
The Graves of a Household (They grew in beauty, side by side): 3329
The Graves of Household (They grew in beauty side by side): 14879
The Graves of the Dead. A Dirge (Oh, when should we visit the graves of the dead): 10847
The Gravy (To a gravy of beef (good and strong), I opine): 8598
The Gray Hill Plaid (Tho' cauld and drear our muirland hame): 6304
The Great Cathedral Window. An Old Legend (The great west window was framed and done): 7163
The Great Chesnut Tree at Keir to its Owner, in the Storm of October 4th, 1860 (Oh! master, master, such a weary night!): 14327
The Great Enchanter (Sleep is the poor man's warmest cloak): 7369
The Great Muckle Village of Balmaquhapple (D'ye ken the the big village of Balmaquhapple): 10454
The Great North Sea (Years nave passed since the great North Sea): 12913
The Great Peace-Maker. A Sub-Marine Dialogue ("Slumbrous immensity that knows no bounds"): 1194
The Great Warrior (I am a warrior, stout and strong): 15188
The Greatness of Creation (Upon the winged winds, among the rolling worlds I flew): 10813
The Greek and the Turkman. A Night Attack by Constantine Paleologus, on a Detached Camp of the Troops of Mahomet the Second, at the Siege of Constantinople (The Turkman lay beside the river): 15655
The Greek to His Sword (Now forth I draw thee, glittering blade): 9901
The Green Hills of Holy Old Ireland ("Oh give me a rifle and away I will go"): 14802
The Green Linnet (Upon yon tuft of hazel trees): 3335
The Green Moss (A delicate thing is the green, green Moss): 15400
The Greenwood (This nook the tiny theatre has been): 11666
The Greenwood Shrift (Outstretched beneath the leafy shade): 11913
The Grenadiers (For France two grenadiers held their way): 9317
The Grey Monk's Miserere (The grey monk patters a midnight prayer): 3708
The Groom’s Story (Ten mile in twenty minutes! ’E done it, sir. That’s true): 12338
The Grousome Caryl; Ane Most Treuthful Ballant (There wals ane man came out of the weste): 10172
The Groves of Daphne (To the Lord God of Saboath): 5718
The Growth of Good (Far where the smooth Pacific swells): 1243
The Growth of Song (The Poet caught the notes of praise which angel voices sang): 13900
The Grub-Street Poet's Vision (Bards of ancient time were bless'd with visions): 3828
The Guardian Angel (As in hospital once a poor fellow lay pent up): 3533
The Guelph and the Ghibelline: A Scene from an Unpublished Tragedy (Bravo! bravo! thanks, good Arlecchino): 15644
The Guests of the Heart (Soft falls through the gathering twilight): 7613
The Guid, Guid Wife (O, he that gets a guid, guid wife): 3456
The Guiding Star (What is yon gem, so chaste and fair): 15528
The Gypsey's Song (O, haste ye, and come to our gate en'): 8427
The Gypsies' Song. (Translated from the Russian) (We are two maidens): 13401
The Haconarmal. After the Icelandic by Evind Skaldaspiller, A.D. 963 (Saddled are the steeds of Fate): 966
The Hail-Storm; Or, the Death of Bui. (Translated from the Ancient Norse) (Sigvald Earl of Jomsborg, in Vindland, chief): 540
The Hall Porter at the Club ("How long, good friend, have you sat here?"): 3668
The Hamlet, An Ode (The hinds how blest, who ne'er beguiled): 2972
The Hand (What is it, fashioned wondrously, that, twin-born with the brain): 5833
The Hand-Maiden's Lament (O would that I were fair, Mirror!—O would that I were fair!): 15323
The Hanmer Oak (Honour to the Hanmer Oak!): 4904
The Happiness of a Rural Life (The shepherds, guarded from the sparkling heat): 5284
The Happy Dream (I wandered in a happy dream): 5983
The Happy Halt. (From the French) (Kind housewife, prithee do not feed): 2339
The Happy Hour (The life of man has wondrous hours): 14305
The Happy Land (Oh land of happiness,): 14749
The Happy Lovers (They had no "partings in the wood"): 13257
The Happy Man (By day, no biting cares assail): 7429
The Harbingers (Deep in the sunny copses, thick in the sheltered lanes): 4296
The Harbour At Night: Picton, New Zealand (Warm is the night and still; the misty clouds): 12439
The Hard Strait of the Feinne (Now of the hard strait of the Feinne this Legend's verse shall tell): 3994
The Harebell (Simplest of blossoms! to mine eye): 15271
The Harebell and the Foxglove (In a valley obscure, on a bank of green shade): 13978
The Harp (The harp so loved awakes no more): 5805
The Harp of Fionbell (Full many triumphs hath music won in cottage and bower and hall): 2616
The Harp of Invermorn (By Ivermorn the deep sea laves): 689
The Harp Unstrung (Once to the touch of a gentle hand): 3929
The Harper's Song (Here is thy home to be): 4404
The Harvest Home (When Moray's bonny mountains blue a darker dress assume): 1908
The Harvest Moon (Faded the last faint blush of evening's rose): 4880
The Harvest Moon (The moon has turned to a silvery gold): 7179
The Harvest of the Sea (The sea lies dreaming by the shore): 4214
The Haunted Castle (Once upon a time I pondered): 7575
The Haunted Glen ('Twas on a summer's evening): 3587
The Haunted House (The rusty gate hangs on its broken hasp): 12546
The Haunted House. A Christmas Story (Dear Julia): 13639
The Haunted Man (He does not look wan or haggard): 2748
The Haunted Schooner. (A Tale of the Eastern Seas) (The Ghosts of the West are laid, are laid): 14945
The Haunting Face (When daily cares and thoughts give place): 9470
The Hawthorn (Aye, it is well-nigh overed): 4659
The Hawthorn Tree (A bird sat in the hawthorn tree): 6968
The Haymakers (A narrow cliff, above a narrow stream): 8620
The Haymakers (The sun laughs through, piercing the blue): 7126
The Head of Bran (When the Head of Bran): 256
The Healing of Malchus' Ear (When in the garden, past the brook): 2476
The Heart (The heart—the gifted heart): 15286
The Heart of Bruce, in Melrose Abbey (Heart! that didst press forward still): 10353
The Heart of England. (Suggested by seeing a venerable Oak in Warwickshire, which is supposed to occupy the exact centre of England) (A joy stirs through thy branches, Ancient Tree!): 1218
The Heart of the Bruce. A Ballad (It was upon an April morn): 10648
The Heart Shall Find Its Eden Yet (Full many a day which darkly dawns): 12930
The Heart's Dirge (I wake not thus at midnight's hour): 10570
The Heart's Home (Where is thy home? Thus to my heart appealing): 7729
The Heart's Melodies (Listen! listen! full is ever): 6202
The Heart's Motto, "Forget me not" (Appealing language! unto me): 15897
The Heart's Own ("Mine own for ever!" thus we cry and think): 5792
The Heart's Prison ("Here, take this heart," an angel said): 11896
The Heart's Summer (Oh! Stay not, Swallow, in the dusky South): 12211
The Heartless One (Upon my darling's beaming eyes): 7054
The Hearty Old Man (Joyous spirits, whom Bacchus has here brought together): 3490
The Heather (If I were King of France, that noble fine land): 8076
The Heather. A Reverie (O sweet is the breath of the heather): 2746
The Heavenly Lover (It was the joyful sunrise hour): 1015
The Hebrew Mother (The rose was rich in bloom on Sharon's plain): 10405
The Hedge (Fair neighbour of the thatchèd cot): 15012
The Hedgehog (Some carping, cross-grain'd souls there be): 10464
The Height and the Deep (When from that world ere death and birth): 8431
The Helen ("So you're back again among us"): 4254
The Herald (I do remember a strange man—a Herald): 8215
The Herald of Summer (I hear a gush of melody, and see a flush of green): 4062
The Herald Star: A Christmas Poem (Lo! the recurring Season, and the time): 14030
The Herdsman's Repose (The herdsman rested awhile at noon): 13483
The Hermit (At the close of the day, when the hamlet is still): 7215
The Hermit at Home (A hermit from his desert home): 2883
The Hermit of the Coliseum (In ancient cell, with tangled weeds o'ergrown): 3395
The Hermit's Crown (The noontide sun is blazing upon a tourney-field): 735
The Hermit's Lamp (When wanes thy lamp amid the morning light): 14697
The Hero (My hero is na' decked wi' goud): 30
The Heroine Martyr of Monterey (The strife was stern at Monterey): 6142
The Herons' Pool (In the April morn of shine and shade): 4736
The Hidden Gem (Like purest tints of summer sky): 13476
The Hidden Roses (E'en now, within the frozen stems): 7634
The High Prize (O hero, marked for some supreme award): 2038
The High Tide on the Coast of Lincolnshire, 1571 ("The old mayor climbed the belfry tower"): 15863
The Highest (A magic boat, I saw afloat): 7720
The Highland Gillie ("Why stays my lord?" the Highland Gillie cried): 15353
The Highland Shearer (Fu' yellow lie the corn-rigs): 5595
The Highland Student (Beyond the bay, beyond thew glimmering sands): 1874
The Highland Tartan (Dear to each Highland soldier's heart): 9055
The Highlander's Return (Young Donald Bane, the gallant Celt, unto the wars had gone): 10984
The Hills! (The hills! the hills! When we hear those words, we feel the joyous breeze): 6472
The Holiday (He gave his eyes to the skies of blue): 12466
The Holiday (Is it a holiday, that thus in rule): 6029
The Hollow (The hollow in the old oak tree): 4810
The Holly Tree (O Reader! hast thou ever stood to see): 2920
The Holy Well (Hidden in a deep wood-hollow): 1412
The Homage (Before an earthly throne, as erst in prayer): 11685
The Home and Language of Love (Oh, never rudely will I blame his faith): 5347
The Home of Affection (Oh! how shall I woo thee, beloved, for my bride?): 5534
The Home of Love (Thou mov'st in visions, Love!—Around thy way): 3441
The Home-Wood (And here's the wood again where I): 2906
The Homes of England (The stately Homes of England): 10617
The Homes of England (The stately Homes of England): 3320
The Homes. (To My Constant Reader.) (Since first the Universe began): 9189
The Honest Petition of certain Members of the Independent Kirk of Scotland (Great, michtie, gracious, lovely Queen): 134
The Honest Working Man. A Character (You ask me, "Where does freedom dwell?"): 112
The Honey Stealer (As Love, that wicked thief, one day): 14137
The Honey Stealer (As Love, the rogue, once chose to roam): 14136
The Hop Girl (Blithe March, with thee the infant Spring): 14111
The Hope of Love (There is not time enough to love you here): 12712
The Hornet (Phœbe demure, lay sleeping in her bower): 11799
The Horrors of Housekeeping. Especially in the Festive Season. Reviewed by a Young Married Lady (O!! The bother of giving men dinners): 13514
The Horse (Proud creature! thou dost boast the favour'd station): 11005
The Horse and the Laden Ass (Dear brother horse, so heavy is my load): 15873
The Horse of the Desert. (From an Arabic Poem, Given in General Daumas's "Chevaux du Sahara") (My steed is black—my steed is black): 523
The Host's Story (Once on a time (as children's stories say)): 1550
The Hostage (Close up to the tyrant Damon went): 8540
The Hostage. A Ballad (The tyrant Dionys to seek): 10816
The Hostelry. 1700 (Bay-windowed, pendant-gabled, broad): 857
The Hotel Garden (Oh, the golden prime of that summer weather!): 869
The Hour for Me (I'll sail upon the mighty main—but this is not the hour): 1746
The Hour of Thought (The orb of day is sinking): 10240
The Hour of Victory (Dawn broke o'er Gaul's phalanxes, proudly array'd): 13992
The Hour we Parted. An Irish Song. (Air, "The Fair Girl.") (The hour we parted): 2642
The Hour-Glass (Sparkling, dancing downwards): 4271
The House Beautiful (A naked house, a naked moor): 8633
The House Beautiful (I am sitting beside my nursery fire): 14556
The House by the Sea (Just on the other side of the road): 4526
The House Desolate (So still the old house lies, so dull, so grey): 823
The House of Clay (There was a house–a house of clay): 6245
The House on the Hills. A Tale (Still white, as with the constant fear): 11559
The Household Jewels (A traveller, from journeying): 1120
The Household Spaniel (Poor Oscar! how feebly thou crawl'st to the door): 15610
The Huguenot's Farewell (I stand upon the threshold stone): 11618
The Human Couplet (This Life's the Couplet's opening verse, and Time): 14709
The Human Cry (Hallowèd be Thy name—Hallelujiah!): 7893
The Human Frame Likened to a House (Man's body's like a house; his greater bones): 3513
The Human Seasons (Four Seasons fill the measure of the year): 8087
The Humblest (Who comes the humblest of Thy children, Lord?): 4106
The Humours of a Village Fair (The dawning day has scarcely scared the night): 9094
The Humours of Donnybrook Fair (Oh! ’twas Dermot O’Rowland M‘Figg): 10586
The Hungarian Joseph (No, no! 'tis false! it cannot be!): 9046
The Hunt at Portskewitt (Earl Harold's at Portskewitt): 638
The Hunt of Glen-Fyne; a Tradition of the Western Highlands (On heath-clad hills the orb of day): 14082
The Hunter (Merrily winds the hunter's horn): 14358
The Hunter (That was the flashing of Orion's spear): 14951
The Hunter's Serenade (Thy bower is finished, fairest!): 11130
The Hunting of Lady Maude (The wild horn cleaves the quivering air): 15508
The Huntress of Armorica. A Tale of St. Michael's Mount. Carey Luz in Leuz (Tower lordly as thou wilt, rise bold to heaven): 13492
The Husband to the Wife (We two who were so long as one): 13857
The Husband's Request (Love me with a heart of love): 7594
The Husbandman (Earth, of man and bounteous mother): 14357
The Husbandman (Lightly doth the furrow fold the golden grain within its breast): 10925
The Husbandman (Thou, who long hast dug the soil!): 14316
The Hut. From Théophile Gautier (Under thick trees, about it swaying): 12040
The Hym of King Olaf the Saint. Altered from the Icelandic (Swend, king of all): 10787
The Hymn (Hail! thou whose crown): 9252
The Hymn to Aphrodite (Of the fair Queen of Cyprus, tell me, muse): 10899
The Hypocrite (Oh! the wind, the tyrant wind! listen how he roars): 1684
The Ice-Palace (The Empress Anna by the Neva's shore): 15380
The Ideal (A tall majestic lady): 3290
The Ideal and the Actual Life (For ever fair, for ever calm and bright): 10018
The Ideal Wife (Somewhere in the world must be): 7547
The Ignis Fatuus (Come, trav'ler, come! the lady moon): 15507
The Ignis Fatuus and the Fire (When foolish first in early days): 3822
The Imitator (Good out of good—that art is known to all): 10000
The Imitator, A Fable From the German of Muchler (An arrow from a bow just shot): 3660
The Immutable (Time flies on restless pinions—constant never): 10682
The Implicit Promise of Immortality. A Poem (Friend, and it little matters if with thee): 14419
The Improvisatrice (Beside her cottage door she sate and sang): 14489
The Impulse of Poetry (What then still binds the Poet to his page?): 11759
The Incantation. (From the Greek of Theocritus.—Id. II.) (Thestylis! where are the laurel-leaves? quick, girl! bring me the love-spells!): 14248
The Income Tax—A Song (O the weary income tax): 155
The Income Tax. An Excellent New Song (All you who rents or profits draw): 10641
The Indian Girl's Lament (An Indian girl was sitting where): 11128
The Indian Girl's Lament (An Indian girl was sitting where): 2997
The Indian Girl's Lament. [After Victor Hugo] (Forget? Can I forget the scented breath): 13542
The Indian Summer (Look forth on the forest ere autumn wind scatters): 6742
The Indian's Address to the Stars (Stars, that ripple o'er the skies): 5217
The Indian's Death-Song (See on his mat—as if of yore): 10825
The Indian's Prayer (Falls the evening o'er the forest): 12952
The Indian's Reasons for Worshipping the Sun (With reverential awe): 15364
The Indian's Revenge. Scene in the Life of a Moravian Missionary (Was that the light from some lone swift canoe): 11907
The Inevitable (The royal sage, Lord of the Magic Ring): 14012
The Infant Christ, with Flowers (Blest age of innocence and truth): 10399
The Infanticide (Hark where the bells toll, chiming, dull and steady): 10041
The Infinite (Wouldst thou with thy bounded sight): 9138
The Inhabited Well. From the Hindoostanee (When mid-day's fierce and cloudless sun): 10080
The Initials (Yet stands the tree! There seems no change): 13794
The Inn (The queer, old-fashioned Inn stood on the heath): 6932
The Innermost Room (I have a little chamber, dressed and swept): 9834
The Insect (I dreamt that some twenty of us sat together): 14747
The Intercepted Letter (Never! while life and power are mine): 4440
The Interview. From Schiller (I see her yet amidst her lovely train): 8314
The Invalid. A Hampshire Study (How be I this mornin'? Why terrible bad I be): 12286
The Invalid's Mother. To the Sun, at Lisbon (O sun! whose universal smile): 1391
The Invincible Armada (She comes, she comes–the Burthen of the Deeps!): 9952
The Invincible Armada (She comes, Spain's proud fleet comes! The ocean broad): 8402
The Invincible Lover (My heart sings like a May-day bird): 7228
The Invitation (If I called thee, wouldst thou come): 4128
The Invitation, from the German of Gleim (My wealth is in a little cot): 3658
The Invocation (Come to me from the Spirit-land!): 4428
The Invocation (The blackbird sings upon the bough): 9352
The Iris on the Cataract (How oft have I viewed thee, all glorious and bright): 15209
The Irish Exile's Lament (Erin, the wild harp is hushed on thy mountains): 5208
The Irish Mule-Driver (I went away once to the wars for a frisk): 12080
The Iron Gate—A Legend of Alderley (I love those tales of ancientry): 11538
The Iron Safe (Our burgomaster needs a safe to keep): 12167
The Ironing Day (One day of dread is o'er—but ills are double): 3496
The Irwell (I flow by tainted, noisome spots): 7903
The Island Church (Poor was the peasant, poor and heavy-hearted): 1803
The Island of Atlantis (Oh thou Atlantic, dark and deep): 10408
The Island of Atlantis (Oh thou Atlantic, dark and deep): 13922
The Island of Dream (Sailing under the sunrise, mariners watch'd for the gleam): 5146
The Island Queen (Oh! Island Queen, thy destiny): 95
The Isle of Avalon (The breeze that crisps the shining sea): 13590
The Isle of Beauty (Where glitters the isle, where the sunny tract glows): 11251
The Isle of Dogs (Ten thousand years the Isle of Dogs): 10903
The Italian Boy (Child of the South, I love thy smiling face): 5810
The Italian Itinerant, and the Swiss Goatherd (Now that the farewell tear is dried): 9862
The Italian Organ-Boy: A Poem Dedicated to Mr B*BB*GE (Child of the magic land of lake and hill): 7114
The Ivory Gate (Dorothy lies in her snow-white bed): 1777
The Ivy (A graceful ivy, fair and young): 6085
The Ivy (I've seen the rose-bud blushing): 15045
The Ivy (Pushing the clods of earth aside): 3987
The Ivy Leaf (Fling garlands of flow'rs to the young and fair): 956
The Ivy of Kenilworth (Heard'st thou what the Ivy sigh'd): 14094
The Jackdaw (There is a bird, who by his coat): 14936
The Jacobin Bill (Now the reign of the tyrant for ever is past): 10980
The Jester's Passing Bell. A legend of the reign of Francis the First: during whose reign the "Black Death"—an infectious species of plague—ravaged both England and France (The Jester with his crazy eye): 442
The Jewess of the Cave. A Poem in Four Parts (Manasseh wakes; a lamp's soft light is shed): 11158
The Jews' Cemetery. (Lido of Venice) (A tract of sand swept by the salt sea-foam): 12108
The Jews' Wailing-Place, Jerusalem. (November, 1859) (Sharp clash the hoofs on marbles worn): 12202
The Joke (You ask me why I wear this grin): 2171
The Joys of Earth (A Spirit rests upon our Earth, abiding, though unseen): 370
The Jubilee. 1887 (Eight hundred years and twenty-one): 8235
The Judge and the Bishop. An Authentic Romagnole Chronicle (Imola city is old and staid): 3068
The Jungfrau of the Lurlei. (A Legend of the Rhine) (Who sails with pennant waving gay): 11630
The Kalif of Baldacca (Into the city of Kambalu): 14284
The Kentucky Girl (The modest corps was honoured in a roaring parting toast): 7942
The Key (If thou wouldst know thyself—thyself as others see): 10689
The Khunjunee (Welcome to thee, sweet khunjunee!): 6174
The Killarney Hunt (The stag is up! and hound and pup): 15002
The Kilt, The Claymore, and the Cotton Umbrella! (Cam' ye by Badenoch, lad wi' the paletôt?): 5935
The King and the Bishop (Before Roskilde's sacred fane): 13406
The King and the Minstrel of Ely. From the Norman-French (Lordings list a little space): 3059
The King and The People (When in the fortress-rock ’bode Israel's king): 6712
The King at the Gate (A king sat high on his ivory seat): 886
The King in Thule (There was a king in Thule): 10909
The King Oak (The forest sward was his palace floor): 7158
The King of the Radical Islands. Written a little after the death of George IV (You've heard of sovereigns stern and wild): 44
The King of Thule. From Goethe (In Thule dwelt a king, and he): 218
The King of Yvetôt (There once was a king, as I've heard my granny sing): 12172
The King Shall Enjoy His Own Again (What Booker can prognosticate): 8330
The King's Crutches ("Uneasy, alas! lies the head which is crown'd!"): 8333
The King's Daughter. (A Legend of Normandy) (The King has a daughter he fain would wed): 639
The King's Death (First Slave: He sleeps!): 12343
The King's Device (Where mail-clad ranks are marching): 5657
The King's Muster (Little wat ye wha's coming): 9869
The King's Quair. Cantus (Worschippe, ye that loueris bene, this May): 2280
The Kinge's Hunt is Upp (The hunt is up, the hunt is up): 5988
The Kingfisher (Of all the little hearts in feather): 5126
The Kiss (We sat within a bosky glade): 14579
The Kitten (Wanton drole, whose harmless play): 3236
The Knave of Bergen. (From the German of Wilhelm Smets) (Merry it is at Frankfort): 13478
The Knell of the Parting Year. Written at Midnight (Hark!—’tis the midnight chime): 15458
The Knight and the Lady (I was a brawny knight): 7605
The Knight of the Faded Plume (The lady left her splendid bower): 13984
The Knight of Toggenburg (Sir Knight! the love that sisters feel): 10645
The Knight's Counsels (Their Iris hues, amid the gloom): 14243
The Knight's Grave (Under painted cross and chalice): 298
The Knight's Lament (Upon the dreary battle-field): 13597
The Knights of St John (Oh, nobly shone the fearful Cross upon your mail afar): 10807
The Kraken (Below the thunders of the upper deep): 11146
The Labourer's Wife (She took her trouble in her heart, and went): 7517
The Labours of Thor. Being a Norse Legend from the Prose Edda (The path to the giants' country): 3157
The Ladies in Parliament. A fragment After the Manner of an Old Athenian Comedy ('Tis hard upon ten. Since a quarter to eight): 14333
The Ladies of St. James’s (The Ladies of St. James’s): 15938
The Lady Alice (What doth the lady Alice, so late on the turret stair): 1073
The Lady and the Child (There lived a lady, beautiful and dear): 1253
The Lady and the Novel (What is the book, abstracted damsel, say): 3874
The Lady and the Rooks. A True Story (Trust the grand and gentle Trees): 1812
The Lady and the Sea-Captain ('Twas in a palace-garden): 15317
The Lady Hertha (The ancient Germans thought all blessings came): 1326
The Lady Jane Grey (There is an old and costly room of state): 14731
The Lady John Manners (All gracious thoughts and feelings kind): 5627
The Lady of Ashlynn (In a quiet English vale): 4947
The Lady of Provence (The war-note of the Saracen): 10055
The Lady of Sevilla (In the city of Sevilla): 2332
The Lady of the Castle (The Leaguer round the castle wall): 14361
The Lady of the Fen (Glorious and grand is this our time): 1320
The Lady of the Grange (In spring-time, with its opening flowers): 557
The Lady of the Greenwood Tree. A Legend of Transylvania (Sir Rudolf is riding since break of day): 11238
The Lady Sorrow (The Lady Sorrow came to me): 13203
The Lady Witch (The lady witch foreknew her doom): 2885
The Lady's Dream (I stood one eve within a forest's shade): 1490
The Lady's Rock (Day by day in sun or shade): 4493
The Lady's Vision (Alone she dwelt, in heart and mind alone): 1925
The Lady’s Dilemma ("My son is going suddenly to countries far away"): 1648
The Ladye Anne (The Ladye Anne hath fixed her gaze upon the leaden sky): 6100
The Ladye That I Love (Were I a doughty cavalier): 3017
The Ladye's Brydalle ("Come hither! come hither, my little foot-page"): 10100
The Laggard Knight (Too late! The mighty dragon's crest of gold): 1134
The Laird (Of ancient family, God knows how old): 9888
The Laird o' Lamington (Can I bear to part wi' thee): 10213
The Lairde of Lonne. Ane Rychte Breiffe and Wyttie Ballande, compilit by Maister Hougge (There wals ane manne of muckil mychte): 10060
The Lake (My life ofttimes seems like a stagnant lake): 6221
The Lake. (After Lamartine) (On, on, for evermore we seem to glide): 12126
The Lame Boy (Behind the ridge of Primrose Hill): 13043
The Lament for Bion. (After the Greek of Moschus) (Come, weep with me ye Dorian glades and springs): 14862
The Lament for Thurtell (A loud Lament is heard in town—a voice of sad complaining): 10107
The Lament of Ella (Oh! would my love would list my voice): 9687
The Lament of Kephalos (Haste, Father Helios, haste!): 3193
The Lament of Norman Leslie (It's oh! for Norman Leslie and fair St. Andrew's town): 4694
The Lament of the Exile (The world of care is sunk in sleep): 15338
The Lament of the Irish Emigrant (I'm sittin' on the stile, Mary): 4778
The Lament of the Irish Imigrant (I'm sitting on the stile, Mary): 5832
The Lamentation of Granada for the Death of Celin (At the gate of old Granada, when all its bolts are barred): 7840
The Land of Cocaigne (His home-knitted suit—blue chain armour complete): 2272
The Land of Dreams (O Spirit-Land! thou land of dreams!): 10722
The Land of Freedom (Beneath Afric's hot sun, Mohab toil'd thro' the day): 39
The Land of Promise: A Fable (A pilgrim folk, o'er leagues of pathless sand): 8072
The Land of Slaves ('Twas a sunny holiday): 10541
The Land of the Brave and the Free! (Hail Britain! Ocean's noblest born): 113
The Land We Live In (For this delightful land of ours): 6714
The Land's End (This world of wonders, where our lot is cast): 13911
The Land's Vigil (How many a face throughout the Imperial Isle): 8436
The Landlady's Daughter (Three students they hied them over the Rhine): 9662
The Landscape (I stood and gazed where the free hills arise): 15720
The Landscape (Soft roams the balmy wind, among): 9353
The Language of Eyes (Trust not word or tone): 15473
The Language of Flowers. From the German (Fragrant daughters of the earth): 6878
The Language of the Eyes (Silence is golden—speech is silvery!): 623
The Laplander's Song. (From the Swedish of Franzen) (Spring, my swift reindeer): 1875
The Lapse of Time (Lament who will, in fruitless tears): 9736
The Lapse of Time (Lament who will, in fruitless years): 3254
The Lark (I hear the lark to-day; he sings): 5512
The Lark (Prithee, from thy topmost height): 5953
The Lark's Flight (Under the gallows tree): 12765
The Lascar Crew (The ship Britannia sailed away): 9259
The Lass O' Logie Lea (O first I loved my bonny Jessie): 187
The Lass of Aben-Hall (God save the lass of Aben-Hall!): 496
The Lass's Wardrobe (A lass lived down by yon burn-braes): 3332
The Last (Never the patter of baby feet upon the shining floors): 4304
The Last (What! is the ladye sleeping?–no, too pale): 4453
The Last Bathe (Into the arms of a little bay): 3967
The Last Buccaneer (The winds were yelling, the waves were swelling): 14932
The Last Conflict (When the last agony draws nigh): 310
The Last Devil's Walk (From his brimstone bed at break of day): 1491
The Last Evening Primrose (Of all my loved Primroses): 15325
The Last Fairies (All in the gloaming of a golden day): 3820
The Last Flight ("Strike up with fiddle and fife and guitar!"): 12329
The Last Footfall (There is often sadness in the tone): 6331
The Last Journey (Slowly, with measured tread): 11626
The Last Lament (And this is then the last sigh): 9688
The Last Lay of the Minstrel (The treasured ones of earth are flown): 5008
The Last Look (When doom'd by distress through the world's friendless track): 3101
The Last Man ('Twas in the year one thousand and one): 10606
The Last Man (All Triposes shall end in gloom): 13615
The Last Night of the Girondins (A hall for solemn banquet decked, but not for festal glee): 7701
The Last Night of the Year (’Tis desolate out on field and mere): 7285
The Last of England (The white cliffs fade into the twilight gray): 13232
The Last of the Macarthies. A Ballad (It was an ancient castle): 15482
The Last Ray of the Setting Sun (Dark was the vision of the good old King): 15838
The Last Redoubt (Kacelyevo's slope still felt): 12056
The Last Request (Lay me beside him! lay me beside my sire): 5721
The Last Song of Sappho (Sound on, thou dark unslumbering sea!): 10952
The Last Stork (I've heard a tale of olden time): 10051
The Last String ("Off with it, old fellow, before you start!"): 8601
The Last Swallow (Swallow, borne on pinions fleet): 2318
The Last Thaw (Farewell to winter's faint blue skies): 12141
The Last Toast at Cabool (“Drink to the hearts that beat for us!” ’Twas thus the soldier cried): 5891
The Last Tryst (Over brown moors and wither'd leas): 4188
The Last Walk (Oh lost Madonna, young and fair!): 10600
The Last Walk (With feeble, failing. faltering feet she trod): 4859
The Last Wish (In some wild forest shade): 5419
The Last Wish (Old friend, you know I trust you. You have heard): 14040
The Last Wish (This is all, is it much, my darling? You must follow your path in life): 4285
The Last Wolf in Gwentland (There's thunder on the Blorenge): 13499
The Last Words of Juggling Jerry (Pitch here the tent, while the old horse grazes): 212
The Last Words of Socrates (No scorn or doubt was thine, O martyred one): 1734
The Last Words of Summer (It breathes a parting whisper through the meads): 1211
The Last Work (The twilight deepens, and the quiet room): 2263
The Last Year (Tender lights on sky and sea): 12977
The Late Queen of Prussia (Oh, thou! pale Daughter of the eagle!): 3579
The Later Flowers (The elder's blossoms are flat and fair): 12730
The Lattice (I sat at my lattice window): 1456
The Law of Mercy ('Tis written with the pen of heavenly Love): 1214
The Lay of Sir Arthur (What time the beetle blows his horn): 756
The Lay of Sir Eglamour and Lady Claribel (Around the portal hollyhocks are flaunting): 4950
The Lay of Sir Lionel (It was the merry time of spring): 11908
The Lay of Starkàther (It was an aged man went forth with slow and tottering tread): 11034
The Lay of the Bell (Fast, in its prison-walls of earth): 9994
The Lay of the German Lint-Makers (Tear the smooth linen, pull out the pale threads): 14407
The Lay of the Lady and the Hound (Listen, fair knights, to a minstrel's word): 258
The Lay of the Mountain (To the solemn Abyss leads the terrible path): 10826
The Lay of the Phantom Ship (All in a gay and goodlie ship): 3208
The Lay of the Seven Oars (Listen! Lords of the sounding oar): 168
The Lay of the Three Mighty Men (On the hill by Bethlehem David stood): 375
The Lay of the Wise Olég (Wise Olég to the war he hath bound him again): 11003
The Leaf (I saw one leaf upon a tree remaining): 1273
The Leaf (Thou art curl'd and tender and smooth, young leaf!): 1465
The Leaf Prophetic (This year—Next year—Some time—Never): 6821
The Leafless Tree (The silver moon careers a sky): 9238
The Leafy Time of June (The leaves are green upon the bough): 7306
The League of Crime (When musing on the ills of life): 43
The Learned Wife (Only a man like you, my Willy): 13497
The Leather Bottèl. A Darwinian Ditty (How ma-ny wondrous things there be Of which we can't the reason see! And): 10380
The Leaves (No leaf as yet! though like a wraith of snow): 13176
The Left-Handed Fiddler (Of all the things in this offensive world): 10159
The Legend of Barney O'Carroll (Out there where the big waves is breakin'): 9493
The Legend of Covenham Bridge (In Rippelea Chantrie kneels good Queen Maude): 593
The Legend of Herod Agrippa (White of lip, and darkly wondering what the future for the dead): 12075
The Legend of Hotspur and Lady Kate; Or, A New Reading of the "Percy Reliques" (The lady sat in her warm boudoir): 5631
The Legend of Ishtar. (Assyrian) (Ishtar the Beautiful, whom some call Love): 8169
The Legend of Jubal (When Cain was driven from Jehovah's land): 14400
The Legend of La Brea (Down beside the loathly Pitch Lake): 14401
The Legend of Little Pearl ("Poor little Pearl, good little Pearl!"): 2822
The Legend of Loch Uisk in the Island of Mull (Yon vale among the mountains): 2640
The Legend of Pertinax Creech and Philbert Flip (Dr. Pertinax Creech): 13811
The Legend of Roses (The space is cleared: around the murmuring crowd): 3182
The Legend of Saint Vitus (To Cairo city one hot afternoon): 697
The Legend of Santarem (Come, listen to a monkish tale of old): 11720
The Legend of Seamer Water. (Wensleydale) (At the base of mighty Addlebro' fair glimmers Seamer water): 4138
The Legend of St Rosalie (Fair art thou, Sicily! in all his round): 10892
The Legend of St. Christopher (A giant man was old Christopher): 2432
The Legend of St. Gabriel's (The waves beat high above the ship): 630
The Legend of St. Katherine. (According to the "Golden Legend") (They who have seen the sunlight): 12082
The Legend of the Almond Tree ("Demophoön! Demophoön!"): 1663
The Legend of the Christmas Rose (Dark fell the night on which our Lord was born): 2251
The Legend of the Holly (The crown of thorns Lord Jesu wore): 2229
The Legend of the Ladye's Cross (It was a lovely evening—the glare of day was past): 1183
The Legend of the Lido (He stood before the Signori): 11561
The Legend of the Lily (Once a Tiger, for a freak): 2163
The Legend of the Lockharts (King Robert on his death-bed lay, wasted in every limb): 984
The Legend of the Miraculous Rose-Trees (Old travellers say, that, in an Eastern land): 1246
The Legend of the Prince's Plume. A Story of the Battle of Crecy, from Froissart's Chronicles (White clung the sparkling frost to the long dry weeks in the hedges): 3687
The Legend of the Redbreast (There is a little bird, mamma): 307
The Legends of "St. Leonard's Foreste" (No fairer trees in Sussex wolds): 948
The Lemur, A Halloween Divertimento (A Lemur, by the gate of horn): 9893
The Lemur.—A Halloween Divertimento (While nimble thus in transformation): 9904
The Lesson of the Bindweed (Upon our Britain's western coast): 4132
The Lesson of the Lilies (By the clear margin of the pleasant streams): 1858
The Lesson of the War (The feast is spread through England): 1367
The Lesson. Ex Oriente Lux (The things of Earth and Sea, and Sky): 9292
The Lesson. From the German of Klopstock (The Spring, Aëdi, returns in light): 7994
The Lethe-Draught (Fill thy heart with moonlight): 5209
The Letter From Home (A youthful stranger walk'd alone): 6145
The Liar (Come forth, wild moralist, and show thy creed): 11804
The Life of the Sea (These grassy vales are warm and deep): 10424
The Life-Assurance Agent's Appeal (Come now, my friend, and do not stare): 6557
The Life-Lamp (There was a wife in a Holland port): 2264
The Life-Ledger (Our sufferings we reckon o'er): 6794
The Life-Ledger (Our sufferings we reckon o'er): 7872
The Life-Shore (Alone by my fire-side dreaming): 1439
The Lifeboat (The sea, as by some inner demon stung): 3993
The Light of Evening (Why, when the evening comes and the winds are quiet and still): 469
The Light of the Hearth (Father and children with red wet eyes): 4057
The Light of the Stars (The night is come, but not too soon): 6261
The Light-House (Rising from the dark wild sea): 15557
The Lighthouse (High o'er the black-backed Skerries, and far): 3971
The Lighthouse of the Minot's Edge (Three leagues from the shore in Boston Bay): 12562
The Lightsome Ladye (From Arlec's towers a knight went forth): 936
The Lilac (The lilac bush is in blossom): 1913
The Lilies of the Field (Each at the dawn uprears its silver chalice): 5989
The Lilies of the Field (The Saviour's flowers! How pure and fair): 7552
The Lily (How withered, perished seems the form): 7033
The Lily of the Vale (Tender Lily of the Vale): 15845
The Lily of the Valley (With unseen movement grows the lily's stem): 7652
The Lincolnshire Beck (Through no steep rocks and nodding fern): 7365
The Linden Tree (Here's a song for thee, - of the linden tree!): 5493
The Linden Tree (Suggested by Schiller's "Walk Under the Linden Trees") (Nature hath endless aspects—to the young): 491
The Lindsay's Bridal (In blithe London Town): 12985
The Lingering Rose (Sick Autumn, in her funeral pomp): 7143
The Linnea Borealis ('Tis a child of the old green woodlands): 6152
The Linnet-Hawker (I met, in a close City square): 1230
The Lion And The Mouse. Versified from Aesop's Fables (A Lion on a sultry day): 2390
The Little Abbey of Carennac (On the Dordogne) (Here–in God's house of the open dome): 6325
The Little Bauble. A Story of a Street-Arab (A poor little, street-going Arab): 2561
The Little Blind Boy (Oh, tell me the form of the soft summer air): 15356
The Little Bridge (They parted on the Little Bridge): 7513
The Little Collier-Boy (Father he works in the coal-pits deep): 6356
The Little Dipper (Little Dipper, piping sweet): 5054
The Little Fair Soul (A little fair soul that knew not sin): 1902
The Little Feet. A Mother's Villanelle (Across the lonely chamber floor): 13303
The Little Foot-Page (No jewel in his cap he wore, no plume in his pagelike pride): 7715
The Little Girl's Lament (Is Heaven a long way off, Mother?): 347
The Little Gray Bridge (I stand upon the little bridge): 6861
The Little Hwomestead (Where the zun did glow warm vrom his height): 14294
The Little Knight. (A Lay of Domestic Chivalry) (I know fair maids of old): 13442
The Little Maid that Slept (Sombre folds the windows shroud): 2673
The Little Old Clerk (The little old clerk is thin and gray): 12789
The Little Princess (The little princess sat quite alone): 1781
The Little Sleeper (She sleeps; but the soft breath): 6404
The Little Son (When my little son is born on a sunny summer morn): 7917
The Little Teacher (With dark foreboding thoughts opprest): 5465
The Little Woodland Gleaner ("Art thou weary, Dove Annette—say, hast thou been roaming far?"): 6043
The Living Dead (We are surrounded by the living dead): 6599
The Living Men (I see the true men of the day): 15194
The Living, and the Dying, and the Dead (The living, and the dying, and the dead): 3983
The Locked Gate (Nature the Gate to God, and Faith the Key): 14706
The Locket (Yes, ’tis a trifle. No, not “hers,” nor mine): 725
The Locomotive Engine (Along the Tyne's long vale approaches): 3516
The Logicians (See here two cavillers): 14116
The London Necropolis Woking (The swallows and white butterflies): 2043
The Lone House (I have a lone house on the side of the moor): 4348
The Lone One (I may not share the winter hearth): 345
The Lone Sea Beach (You say the flowers are springing): 5199
The Lonely Heart (If I had thought thou couldst have died): 7058
The Long Ago (Alone I dream in the twilight hour): 2410
The Long Last Sleep (Awake, and speak to me once more! Awake!): 5614
The Long Putt. A Golfing Song (You may drive from the tee both straight and far): 8631
The Longing (From out this dim and gloomy hollow): 10657
The Look (Beside the fire he sits between my feet): 15027
The Lord of Balloch (The eagle has left his eiry stern): 15341
The Lord of Castle Crazy (I dwell in Castle Crazy): 3825
The Lord of Nann and the Fairy. (From the Breton) (The Lord of Nann and his fair bride): 238
The Lord of Riccia's Heir (Near sunny Fiesole, whose heights o'erlook): 4970
The Loreley, After Heine (I canna tell what has come ower me): 14434
The Loss of H. M. S. Victoria. An Anniversary Lament, June 22, 1894 (Deep, buried deep): 8144
The Loss of the Saldanha ("Britannia rules the waves!"): 3521
The Lost Child (The bairnie by the cottage door): 7562
The Lost Clue (I watch the fire burning low): 14023
The Lost Eden (Proferring fortunes): 1018
The Lost Embassy (The lilies lean to the white, white rose): 2328
The Lost Expedition (Lift—lift, ye mists, from off the silent coast): 14026
The Lost Heart (I remember, I one evening): 5664
The Lost Lamb (A shepherd laid upon his bed): 10016
The Lost One (I mourn, albeit I mourn in vain): 6707
The Lost One (The sun was sinking, and the waves): 13849
The Lost One (We meet around the board—thou art not there): 3484
The Lost One Found (The mother's hearth is lone, her child hath roamed away): 15401
The Lost Piece of Silver (Holy Lord Jesus, Thou wilt seek till Thou find): 1794
The Lost Poetry of Sappho (Time, I know, is ruler, and Change almighty): 14253
The Lost Rune (Now I sought in the hoarder of words, where the dark wood closes them round): 7854
The Lost Ship (Oh! weep for those who weep themselves no more): 15484
The Lost Ship (The storm was gathering all the day; and in the bay, and in the bay): 7658
The Lost Stars (With sandal-wood and ivory): 5754
The Lothian Ball, or the Widow's Cow. In a Series of Prosing Epistles. Epistle First (Dear Christopher! I'm given to understand): 9341
The Lounger (Le Flaneur) (Me? I lounge!): 5411
The Loup-Garou. A Legend of Auvergne ("Good friend, if thou art going"): 684
The Love of Country (Though plenty from her horn, with liberal hand): 10121
The Love of Nature (Where the green banners of the forest float): 1113
The Love Test (With a graceful step, and stately): 1417
The Love-Bird (A love-bird came to the window pane): 4635
The Love-Cheat (She loved me, she said, and she swore it): 591
The Love-Suit (Beloved and lovely Brenda!—earth's most treasured one by me!): 15213
The Lovelorn Kleplit (The livelong night sleep fled from me; to-day I’m all aweary): 15954
The Lover (Mother, I've a thousand loves!): 15515
The Lover and Birds (Within a budding grove): 1295
The Lover and The Bachelor. A Dialogue (Scorner of wedlock, thou dost seem): 5319
The Lover to His Faithless Mistress (When Life's enchanting dream was new): 15649
The Lover's Doom. (From Don Diego de Mendoza) (This is the sentence): 9023
The Lover's Grave (Maiden, rise, and weep no more—thy betrothed hath found a rest): 6197
The Lover's Moonlight (I saw a Lover—on his upraised bow): 11674
The Lover's Tomb ("I'll gather my dark raven locks o'er my brow"): 15064
The Lover's Wreath (With tender vine-leaves wreathe thy brow): 3501
The Lovers (The world lies hushed around them now): 4433
The Luckless Lover ("If aught on earth assault may bide"): 10548
The Lunatic's Complaint (Again I see thee—yet again): 11080
The Lute (Wake not again, thou sweet-voiced lute!): 15068
The Lyke-Wake Song (The corn may shake owre ripe on the rigs): 8784
The Lyre and Sword (Thou sword upon my belted vest): 3644
The Mad Banker of Amsterdam; or, the Fate of the Brauns (Beneath your quickening feet light springs the green): 8379
The Mad Banker of Amsterdam; or, The Fate of the Brauns (Blue-stocking misses rail against your bard): 8344
The Mad Banker of Amsterdam; Or, the Fate of the Brauns (Let finer poets celebrate Paris): 8223
The Mad Banker of Amsterdam; Or, The Fate of the Brauns (The traveller, if he has no portmanteau): 8244
The Madman of Corinth (There was a man in Corinth, as mad as mad could be): 13464
The Madonna (With mighty pictures by the Great of Old): 11028
The Madonna Della Seggiola (Our own dear Raphael, with the angel's face): 580
The Madonna Di San Sisto (Once and once only and no more): 8945
The Madonna of the Mandarini (When in heaven a little angel): 8362
The Madras Monsoon (Gilding the waters with his golden hair): 15794
The Magic Lantern (Our Thoughts like figures on the magic glass): 14714
The Magic Lay of the One-Horse Chay (Mr Bubb was a whig orator, also a soap laborator): 10152
The Magic Mirror (Once on a time, as I heard tell): 11081
The Magician's Apprentice (Huzzah, huzzah! His back is fairly): 10736
The Magician's Servant (Abou-Ben-Ali was a great magician): 3160
The Magnetic Telegraph (Along the smooth and slender wires): 6098
The Magnolia (The great magnolia glimmered in the dusk): 4982
The Maid and the Angel ("White bird, and white bird!" sighed a pensive maid): 2488
The Maid and the Fisher. From the German of Chamisso (The purple shades of night came down and darkened): 13563
The Maid and the Leaf. A Japanese Idea (A dead leaf drifted along the snow): 4513
The Maid of Huddersfield (There's a rose-tree in my garden; but it hath not budded yet): 9467
The Maid of Neidpath (O! lovers' eyes are sharp to see): 14876
The Maid of Ulva (The hyacinth bathed in the beauty of spring): 10784
The Maiden and the Leper (Down the green valley, on her ass): 3815
The Maiden and the Looking-Glass. From the German of Heinrich Doering (Hateful Mirror! Prithee say): 5812
The Maiden and The Rose. [From the French of Chateaubriand] (The coffin descends, with the white blossoms strewn over): 5861
The Maiden at the Spring (Pleasantly the morning sun): 5600
The Maiden from Afar (Once in a vale, each infant year): 10804
The Maiden from Afar (With peasants poor in lowly glade): 14247
The Maiden Masque ('Twas a thief audacious): 434
The Maiden of the Sea (A pretty little mermaiden there lives beneath the sea—): 13745
The Maiden Queen (Who is is that comes with a glorious train): 6484
The Maiden Sleeps. Translated from the German (The maiden sleeps–why mourn ye in this wise): 7060
The Maiden's Bloody Garland (A mournful ditty I will tell): 8032
The Maiden's Complaint ("Though we were parted, or though he had died"): 6727
The Maiden's Heart (Knotting and twisting her golden hair): 13421
The Maiden's Heart and the Ocean (They sparkled and danced in the morning light): 1056
The Maiden's Lament (The wind rocks the forest): 10671
The Maiden's Lover ("Woo me not with sighs and tears"): 11942
The Maiden's Prayer (Holy Catherine, I beseech thee): 8705
The Mail-Cart (Jolly little mail-cart): 4115
The Malwood Eclogues (Ye Muses of Monmouth, permit me, I pray): 12296
The Man in the Forest, or The Emigrant. [From the German of Ferdinand Freiligrath] (The forest, cool and green): 5831
The Man of Culture in Love (This witch of modern days): 12677
The Man With the Hoe: Canada (Lo! here I stand, the independent man): 12511
The Man with Three Friends. A Story told in the "Gesta Romanorum" (To one full round and quietly): 2151
The Mandolinata (The night is still, the windows are open): 9246
The Mango-Tree (He wiled me through the furzy croft): 14422
The Maniac (Beneath a blasted pine, alone, reclin'd): 15599
The Maniac's Plaint (My heart throbs on from day to day): 9324
The Maniac's Smile (Saw you that smile upon the maniac's cheeks): 15690
The Manse (The Manse, with thirteen red-brick gables): 2832
The Many and the Few. An Appeal for the Right (Proud dwellers in gay palace halls—ye honoured of the earth): 11
The March (The clouds that in their grim array): 15714
The March of Arthur. (From the Breton) (Tramp, tramp, tramp, tramp to battle dim!): 476
The March of Intellect (It came—and its step was as light as the breath): 57
The March of Intellect. A New Song (Oh! Learning's a very fine thing): 10323
The March of Time. On hearing the village clock of Achen strike noon in the Achenthal, amidst the Tyrolese Alpas (The march of Time, the march of Time): 4195
The Margate Voyage ('Twas just ten o'clock in the morning): 11171
The Mariner (Soft glides the sea): 15718
The Mariner's Cave (Once on a time there walked a mariner): 2104
The Mariner's Last Visit (How beautiful upon this verdant bank): 9218
The Mariner's Return. A Description (Julian. Blest be each grain of sand beneath my feet): 10074
The Mariners (Raise we the yard and ply the oar): 14359
The Marriage-Guest. From the Spanish (I saw him wed thee—saw him clasp): 3843
The Marseillaise Hymn (On, countryman, on, for the day): 58
The Martyr-Student (Alas! ’tis vain:—this wasting lamp): 14629
The Martyrdom of Faithful in Vanity Fair (The great human whirlpool!–'tis seething and seething): 6153
The Martyrdom of St Eulalia. Hymn IX (Firmly she spoke, unshrinking still): 9239
The Martyrs' Monument. A Monologue (Now glory to our Councillors, that true and trusty band): 9985
The Masque of Life (The poor are growing poorer): 1388
The Masque of the Months (Firstly thou, churl son of Janus): 2661
The Masque of the New Year (Out from tower and from steeple rang the sudden New Year bells): 1270
The Masquerade of Freedom (When Freedom first appeared beneath): 9070
The Master (The herd of Scribes by what they tell us): 10001
The Master-Art. (Suggested by the Poem "Crossing the Bar") (The old-world builder reared his mount of stone): 14912
The Matrimonial Rule. Inscribed in the Album of a Young Lady on the Eve of Marriage ('Tis morning!—o'er the new-waked earth): 15587
The Matterhorn Sacrifice (To do what none): 14195
The May Fly (The sun of the eve was warm and bright): 2851
The May Queen (Borne upon the strongest shoulders): 2785
The May Queen (The boughs were white with the bloom of May): 13244
The Mænad's Grave (The girl who once on Phrygian heights): 12265
The Meadow-Grass (The grass is bending, quivering in the light): 13299
The Meaning of the Look (I think that look of Christ might seem to say): 10744
The Meditation of the Old Fisherman (You waves though you dance by my feet like children at play): 8071
The Meeting ('Twas Night! and sleep had spread her influence round): 4961
The Meeting (After years): 14378
The Meeting (Bitter was the tale I dreaded): 7783
The Meeting (I see her still, with many a fair one nigh): 9956
The Meeting (The old coach-road thro' a common of furze): 288
The Meeting (With Time I turn—years backward flow): 13599
The Meeting of M. Verrier and Adams, Independently Discoverers of the New Planet, Neptune, at Oxford, June, 1847 (“To mortals many tongues,—to angels one): 1704
The Meeting of Wallace and Bruce on the Banks of the Carron (The morn rose bright on scenes renown'd): 7807
The Memory of Monboddo. An Excellent New Song ('Tis strange how men and things revive): 9515
The Memory of Sandy Ferguson (If e'er at Peggy Jardine's it was your luck to dwell): 7899
The Memory of the Dead (The memory of the precious dead! how oft its sudden gush): 15420
The Mer-Baby. (Suggested by a Picture by Miss Dorothy Tennant) (They wandered forth, linked hand in hand): 652
The Merchant (Where sails the ship?—It leads the Tyrian forth): 10010
The Merchant and his Daughter (The old man closed his iron box): 3864
The Mermaid. (An Old Galloway Ballad Re-Written) (In the warm night of a summer month): 564
The Mermaid. From the German of Goethe (The sea-wave falls—the sea-wave flows): 7972
The Message ("Sing me a low, sweet song," the Lady said): 13580
The Message of Seth. An Oriental Tradition (Prostrate upon his couch of yellow leaves): 9096
The Message of the Snow (All around me, through the forest): 7675
The Message of the Snowdrop (Courage and hope, true heart!): 3973
The Message to the Dead (Thou'rt passing hence, my brother!): 10707
The Messenger Dove ("Fly, fly, my dove, to my own true love"): 14000
The Messenger Dove (Go, silvery dove, my message bear): 13565
The Metropolitan Editor's Song (My priestly right's a mystery still): 12229
The Midges (I sat me down, nor thought of harm): 9303
The Midnight Boat (A boat comes down a deep broad stream): 1452
The Midnight Review (At midnight hour is heard): 3511
The Midnight Train (Across the dull and brooding night): 2719
The Midnight Watch (I am watching, watching lonely): 720
The Midnight Wind (The spirit of the air is busy now): 15324
The Might of Song (A rain-flood from the mountain-riven): 9990
The Mighty Magician (He stood upon the summit of a mount): 1238
The Milestones (Seventy milestones on the road): 3674
The Mill in the Valley (The wheel went round): 1806
The Mill on the River Mole (Where are the waters wandering?): 834
The Mill-Fiend (Come, let us go down from this weather-stain'd hill—): 839
The Mill-Stream (Half-way the running stream is ever hid): 3080
The Mill-Stream (Oh! dark the night, with storm and mist): 12119
The Miller's Meadow (The swan loves the brook in the Ten-acre Meadow): 6693
The Million of Potatoes (Last Martinmas thro' rain and sleet): 3258
The Mind (The human mind is like a working-shop): 11555
The Mind and the Body (Once among other tenants at will upon earth): 9674
The Mine Spirit (The lists were set, the tents were pitched): 2886
The Miniature (Afar from native plain and grove): 8744
The Minister's Mare (The minister's mare was as gude a grey mare): 10601
The Minster-Bell (On a bleak hill the Minster stands): 6746
The Minstrel (“What sounds are those without, along”): 10663
The Minstrel's Curse (A castle of the olden time, o'er subject regions wide): 11022
The Minstrel's Curse (In days of old a castle stood high and proud to view): 292
The Minstrel's Curse (So loftily in olden times a royal castle stood): 11734
The Minstrel's Curse (There stood a castle long ago, that lordly was to view): 8590
The Minstrel's Song ("Praise me my dame's bright eyes"): 12169
The Minstrel's Song (You bid me strike the sounding lyre): 3866
The Minstrels (The minstrels in the gallery): 12986
The Minstrels of Old (Where now the minstrel of the large renown): 9961
The Mirk (When snaw lay deep upon the brae): 7501
The Mirror of the Danube (On forests bright with fading leaves): 5818
The Miser's Grave (Go, bring the pullies, Teddy. We must dip): 10985
The Misogynist's Fate (Strong is the spell that Learning leaves): 12164
The Missel-Thrush In February (There is a bird, a handsome speckled bird): 6578
The Missing Ship (Right gallantly, that morning hour): 7098
The Mission of the Flowers (Hail! lovely visitants, that yearly bring): 7498
The Mist on the Moor (There's a cottage on Conistoun Moor to the west): 14072
The Mistake of the Loves (To-day, as idly in my chair): 921
The Mistake. (An Old Gem Reset) (Miss Marion Gray was an old maid confest): 257
The Mistakes of Life (Oh, the mistakes of life!): 2169
The Mistletoe (The wind blows cold, and the sun is low): 13061
The Mistletoe Bough; or, the Romance of the Rose (With "sweets for the sweet" is the Christmas tree laden): 247
The Mite of a Minstrel (The Fairies, we're told, before modern intrusions): 5730
The Mitherless Bairn (When a' ither bairnies are hush'd to their hame): 5334
The Moaning Sea (With her white face full of agony): 6675
The Mob (A Poet o'er his glowing lyre): 10995
The Modern Argonauts (You have heard the ancient story): 9040
The Modern Danäe (In vain! in vain! it will not be): 6015
The Modern Joshua. A Tyneside Tale (To drag the wheels of Time, and stay their rolling): 3286
The Modern Judas (For what wilt thou sell thy Lord?): 1929
The Modern Rule of Drinking (A man of sense may take three glasses): 11118
The Modern Tityrus (With a carelessly calm composure): 12773
The Modern Wooer. (Written to be Sung in Private Theatricals). (Since woman is blind): 5716
The Mohammedan Lady to her Hand-Maiden (Bring out the mats beneath the trees): 6374
The Mole (You've seen along a breezy down): 7642
The Moment (Do you ever think, my darling): 4108
The Money-Spinner Spider (In my chair, supinely seated): 6583
The Monitors (The lift looks cauldrife i' the west): 11088
The Monk (I knew a monk, a hermit, a saint): 14767
The Monkey and the Cat (Bertrand the wily ape, and Master Puss the cat): 7912
The Monkey-Martyr: A Fable ('Tis strange what awkward figures and odd capers): 10779
The Monster Diamond A Tale of the Penal Colony of West Australia (“I’ll have it, I tell you! Curse you—there!”): 13824
The Month of Mary (All the fields are gay with "bluettes," all the river banks with broom): 4980
The Month of September (Once—in the elder time—men did adore): 7790
The Monument (The place was thick with many a stately tree): 15680
The Moon and I (A golden moon that leans her gentle face): 3948
The Moon in the Morning (Back, spectral wanderer! What dost thou here?): 6104
The Moon's Wanderings. (From the German) ("The keeper is gone to the feast to-night"): 562
The Moonbeam (Thou com'st in brightness, when the day): 15421
The Moonlight (How like the moonlight o'er the sea): 12481
The Moonlight Churchyard (There is no cloud to mar the depth of blue): 11010
The Moonlight of the Heart (Oh! gaily, in Life's morning bright): 15227
The Moor Loch (Among the lonely hills it lies): 12437
The Moorish Girl at Her Father's Grave (Oh! sweet my father, proudest of the chiefs): 13487
The Moorish Maid of Granada (The setting moon hangs over the hill): 11353
The Moors (The moors! the moors! the bonny brown moors!): 6182
The Moral of This Year (O'er hill and dale, in surging sea, the waving cornfields smile): 1359
The Morisons (From Burnswark top to deep Glenae): 8480
The Morn's Meaning (Here in the height I sit awhile): 12589
The Morning Before the Massacre of St. Bartholomew. August, 1572 (The fickle sunshine (in and out)): 913
The Morning Mist (The earth is covered with a hoary breath): 7374
The Mosque of St. Sophia (Sophia's day-bright domes have proudly gleamed): 4779
The Mosquito's Song (In the dreamy hour of night I'll hie): 3662
The Moss (When black despair beats down my wings): 5092
The Moss Rose. From the German of Krummacher (Erewhile, in Orient's sunny clime): 7985
The Moss-Rose (Mossy rose on mossy stone): 14637
The Mossy Seat (The landscape hath not lost its look): 7965
The Moth to the Star (How I adore thee, bright, beautiful Star!): 15374
The Mother (Oh! who can tell the Mother's thrilling bliss): 15296
The Mother and Her Dead Child (With ceaseless sorrow, uncontroll'd): 11042
The Mother and the Angel ("I want my child," the mother said, as through): 2128
The Mother's Call (Come, sweet ones, come to the field with me): 5922
The Mother's Choice (A Mother was watching on Christmas night): 1687
The Mother's Choice (One evening sat around the fire): 7582
The Mother's Grave (Look, sister sweet, upon that hallow'd stone!): 15642
The Mother's Heart (When first thou camest, gentle shy, and fond): 5252
The Mother's Lament for Her Son. For Music (My child was beautiful and brave!): 10133
The Mother's Lament on the Evening of the Battle (The valley was red, for the death-fray was ended): 14089
The Mother's Last Song (Sleep! — The ghostly winds are blowing): 5574
The Mother's Offering (Our dear ones are torn from us! One by one): 15349
The Mother's Picture (From many days of wandering, and many days of care): 15729
The Mother's Sacrifice ("What shall I render Thee, Father Supreme"): 15796
The Mother's Story (The traveller, of reverend mien): 1551
The Mother's Story (They took my daughter to gaol): 1524
The Mother's Test (Our nurse, our dear, old, faithful Joan, what pleasant tales she told): 1175
The Mother's Vigil (A wakeful night with stealthy tread): 12966
The Mother’s Lament (When I was young, when I was fair): 1650
The Motherless Children. Addressed to the Infants Left by Madame Leontine Genoud. [From the French of De Lamartine] (Poor sable-clad children, who ceaseless, forlorn): 5843
The Mount of Olives (Now is the Father Glorified): 9593
The Mountain Brook. In Three Sonnets (Heaven help me! Whither would my dark thoughts run!): 3696
The Mountain Child (Is there a lot in life exempt from pleasure): 4899
The Mountain Laureate (Morning is flashing from a glorious sun): 9084
The Mountain Maid. A Song Translated From the Persian (One day, upon the mountain side): 6451
The Mountain of Gold (In the region of chartless land that lies): 13767
The Mountain of the Holy Cross, Colorado, U. S. (Engraven on the mountain side): 5048
The Mountain Spring. An Idyll (Oh, for the spring, the mountain spring): 972
The Mountain Torrent (Dazzlingly beautiful, majestic, strong): 15307
The Mountain Walk (From beaten paths and common tasks reprieved): 2577
The Mountain Well (Here, on the sultry mountain's face): 2155
The Mountain Wind (Blast of the mountain! the strongest, the fleetest): 6035
The Mountains (All through the frozen land we sped): 13187
The Mourner (Oh! do not strive by lute and lay): 15509
The Mourner (When on the bed of sickness laid): 15379
The Movement (Whence springs this agitation): 107
The Mower's Song (Move together, scythes and mowers): 6774
The Mulberry Tree (When the long hot days are nearly gone): 13501
The Mulberry-Tree (The Mulberry-tree, the Mulberry tree!): 5421
The Murder Glen (This is a dreary spot as eye shall see): 11861
The Murderess. From the German of Schiller (Hark! is not that the clock's dull sound): 8242
The Muse's Mirror (To deck herself, the Muse, at early morn): 10941
The Music and the Listeners (She played in the lighted chamber): 2503
The Music of the Mill (Loudly brawling down the valley, smoothly gliding o'er): 7147
The Music of the Spheres (Hast thou not heard it, the universal music?): 3308
The Music of the Spheres (Soft are your voices, O! ye spheres): 10706
The Music of the Winds (Oh! many voicèd is that giant lyre): 1448
The Musical Frogs (Brekekekex! coax! coax! O happy happy frogs!): 170
The Musician (He sweeps the strings: the children dance): 13713
The Myrtle (Evergreen! Evergreen!): 15485
The Mystery (O the haunted house on the moorland, how lone and desolate): 14016
The Mystery of Night (Alas! the weakness of our human praise): 11964
The Mystic Muse of the Shell (Bright crimson bars flecked all the west): 12917
The Mystical Body of Christ (Lo! in wondrous beauty rising): 1758
The Nabob (When silent time, wi' lightly foot): 5341
The Name of England (What deepest stirs an English heart): 1530
The Nameless Monument (A level stone that Time hath fretted): 6838
The Nameless Rivulet (We met within a Highland glen): 5329
The Narrow Lot (A little Flower so lowly grew): 1587
The National Anthem: Adapted for the Year of the Jubilee (God save our gracious Queen): 5429
The National Gallery (Loud roared the tide of life, rapid and vast): 7405
The National School Festival, on the Occasion of the Prince of Wales's Baptism (Feast of St. Pau's Conversion, 1842) ('Tis a regal festival!): 4963
The Native Melody. Stanzas, Supposed to be Repeated by an Exile (Once more, oh! turn, and touch the lyre): 9443
The Necromancer (An old man on his deathbed lay, an old yet stately man): 10956
The Necromancy of the Past (Fruits seem sweeter when the season): 6080
The Needle (Bright and busy little thing): 7121
The Needle, Pen, and Sword ("What hast thou seen, with thy shining eye"): 5933
The Neglected Child (I never was a favourite): 10393
The Neglected Needle's Address to Its Mistress (Spurn me not, lady, I have served you now): 5289
The Negro's Lament for Mungo Park (Where the wild Joliba): 7755
The Negro's Lament for Mungo Park (Where the wild Joliba): 9822
The Neighbour ("Selina, my daughter Selina"): 2131
The Nettle-King (There was a nettle both great and strong): 3340
The New and the Old (Oh maiden of ancient romances): 12763
The New Auld Lang Syne (Time passes on, the year returns): 15815
The New Dædalus (I had a vision of a man who made): 14367
The New Jelly (From old boots, sir, from old boots): 13778
The New Moon (When, as the garish day is done): 11133
The New Nostrum For Ireland. A Song (O! Many a nostrum's paraded and puffed): 10253
The New Prometheus (Stroking sleek her pampered palfrey, led for pastime from his stable): 5594
The New Sirens. A Palinode (In the cedar shadow sleeping): 14559
The New Year ("A good New Year, with many blessings in it!"): 12595
The New Year (Farewell, Old Year; a length of pictured days): 7149
The New Year (Thank God that towards eternity): 309
The New Year—Friend Or Foe? (We lean out in the darkness of the frosty night): 2063
The New-Forest Pauper. A Lyrical Ballad (The Justice, in his elbow-chair): 9429
The New-Year Cry of the Fallen (The gate is shut. Another year is gone): 1721
The Newspaper Correspondent (Two friends are seated together at a table): 14752
The Night After the Battle (There is a mourning o'er Morgarten's waters): 12306
The Night Before the Morrow (Maiden, said I, and I looked): 12199
The Night Before the Mowing (All shimmering in the morning shine): 6453
The Night Beggar (In a damp and dreary cellar): 2698
The Night My Love Comes Home ("O get ye up to the Tower, mother"): 2042
The Night of the Neckar. A German Legend (Neckar, night is on thy stream): 2937
The Night Walk (Awakes for me and leaps from shroud): 12297
The Night Watch At Sea ('Tis night! he walks the silent deck with slow and measured tread): 4420
The Night-Bird (O ugly bird, who spread'st thy wing): 8721
The Night-Blowing Stock (Come! look at this plant, with its narrow pale leaves): 9686
The Night-Hawk (The winds are pillowed on the waveless deep): 10171
The Night-Song. From the Turkish of Hamet al Izmali (Arise, young daughter of the dove): 15434
The Nightingale (Like the wooing dove): 6336
The Nightingale (Sole singer in the world of dreams): 13361
The Nightingale (Soul of living music!): 3428
The Nightingale (The nightingale rests on a waving bough): 4891
The Nightingale (The silence is no more: ’tis shattered by): 12524
The Nightingale (What sudden burst of melody): 1619
The Nightingale and Glow-Worm (A Nightingale, that all day long): 2870
The Nightingale and the Unsatisfied Heart (When in a May-day hush): 1741
The Nightingale Flower (Fair flower of silent night!): 5462
The Nightingale to the White Rose (Rose, my delight are thy petals white): 4462
The Nightingale’s Song (I wander musing ’neath the trees): 12704
The Nightingales (Do you forget the starry light): 4619
The Nightmare (I come in the gleams from the land of dreams): 3505
The Ninth Anniversary; An Incantation for "The Forget Me Not" (Thrice the month it's course hath run): 15682
The Noble Coward (Am I afraid of man?): 2100
The Noble Mariner (Shout the noble seaman's name): 6154
The Noble Mercer (Winstanley's deed, you kindly folk): 1603
The Non-Descript—To a very charming Monster (Thou nameless loveliness, whose mind): 8056
The Noon of Love (Eastward each morning): 1032
The Noonday Rest (At rest amid the flush of golden corn): 4343
The Noontide Dream (Who had such a wildering glance): 15443
The Noontide Retreat (Tall forest trees their stately branches bending): 15715
The Norman Conscript (The good, the wise, ever their country love): 10642
The Norseman (A swarthy strength, with face of light): 2812
The Norseman (Before he died his homesick heart was thrilled): 2167
The North-West—Canada (Oh would ye hear, and would ye hear): 7935
The North, The Land of Love and Song (Leaves were flying): 10233
The Northern Lights. A Norse Superstition ("Nay, mother, nay; the pictured coal is glowing"): 4478
The Notes of the Birds (Well do I love those various harmonies): 3403
The Novel—A Satire (One night the Poet—(for in these dull times)): 10241
The Novelist (The man with a head for a tale): 12641
The Novice (’Tis a gay and gorgeous chamber): 15450
The Nun of San Ildefonso (Around my cell the shadows fall): 15282
The Nun's Burial (Sister, lie there! While we): 959
The Nuptials of Peleus and Thetis. Catullus lxiv. 1-75 (Born on Pelion height, so legend hoary relateth): 14435
The Nuptials of the Doge of Venice with the Adriatic Sea (Thou blue and buoyant wave): 3106
The Nymph's Reply (If that the world and love were young): 2275
The Nymphs (I stood before a glorious and extensive chain of hills): 14758
The Oak of Judah (How slowly ripen Powers ordain’d to last!): 14339
The Oases of Lybia (Nought wholly waste or wretched will appear): 6165
The Obstinate Titan (The heavens were raining, the Deluge was gaining): 9745
The Occupation of the Convent at Aspeizia by the Rebel Troops in 1839 (Hark, hark, o'er hill and dell): 5164
The Ocean (O mighty mausoleum, vast, sublime!): 6642
The Officer. (From Béranger) ("See! down the street the soldiers come"): 567
The Old Abbey Bell ('Tis evening, sweet evening—how calm and sublime): 15352
The Old and New Year (I saw an old man, that his budget threw): 11815
The Old and New-Year (Crossing last night a dreary moor): 5954
The Old and Young Courtier (I sing an old song made by an aged old pate): 3331
The Old Astronomer (Reach me down my Tycho Brahé, I would know him when we meet): 1820
The Old Bachelor's Bride (Little Bessy—pretty Bessy— vainly I have tried): 5952
The Old Banner (The poor old banner! Give it here, I say!): 4252
The Old Beau (The days we used to laugh, Tom): 3857
The Old Birdsnest (Take not—take not that lone, old nest): 15457
The Old Book ('Twas shattered by that fall. Ah, well!): 12510
The Old Book (Quaint poems of a far-off age): 7691
The Old Casket (The key is lost? Well, we must force the lock): 4742
The Old Cathedral Bell (The old cathedral bell): 6499
The Old Cathedral Organist (’Tis forty years ago since first): 7151
The Old Chartist (Whate'er I be, old England is my dam!): 878
The Old Chateau (Through these close-cut alleys): 1631
The Old Church (I stood within those ancient walls: times's ruthless sway I felt): 5919
The Old Coin (A massy lump of brass and bronze): 7601
The Old Coin's Teaching (I had a coin, so old and so defaced): 12477
The Old Corporal. (From Béranger) (With shoulder'd arms, and cheerful face): 577
The Old Cottage Clock (Oh! the old, old clock, of the household stock): 6215
The Old Couple's New Year (A glad New Year to thee, my love, I am alive to say): 6120
The Old English Manor-House (It dawns in the manor-garden): 6560
The Old Familiar Faces (I have had playmates, I have had companions): 8246
The Old Familiar Faces (I loved a love once, fairest among women): 2993
The Old Farm Gate (Where, where is the gate that once served to divide): 3743
The Old Fish-Pond (Green growths of mosses drip and bead): 2654
The Old Garden (I stood in an ancient garden): 2141
The Old Home ("Return, return," the voices cried): 4361
The Old Home (Ever and ever when spring-tide comes): 2045
The Old Home (In the quiet shadows of twilight): 13062
The Old Home (It is not a castle olden): 6955
The Old Home (The roof tree stands as ever it stood, the jasmine stars the wall): 4078
The Old Home (Yes, still the same, the same old spot): 13963
The Old Homestead (Let us never go back—though we long): 4215
The Old House in the Dell (The dell was woody, the dell was deep): 7705
The Old Ivy (From the ancient turret's window, where encroached the ivy sprays): 6743
The Old Jackdaw ('Tis an old Jackdaw, and he sits all alone): 11977
The Old King Dying (The blinding shades of evening fall): 751
The Old Knife-Grinder ("Still at thy glass, thou dawdling lass!"): 5515
The Old Letter (I burned the others, one by one, but my courage failed at last): 7157
The Old Love (You love me, only me. Do I not know?): 12219
The Old Love and the New (How oft I've watched her footstep glide): 8554
The Old Maid's Prayer to Diana (Since thou and the stars, my dear goddess, decree): 10592
The Old Maid's Scarf (You say my scarf is fading fast): 119
The Old Man and the Ship. An Armenian Legend ('Tis sunset and the wind is blowing fair): 2515
The Old Man's Comforts, and How He Gained Them (You are old, Father William, the young man cried): 2869
The Old Man's Sigh. A Sonnet (Dewdrops are the gems of Morning): 11163
The Old Man's Tale; Or, Kilspindy Castle (Hard by, where Luffness waves its wood): 9920
The Old Manor-House ('T is sweet as the dawn flashes over the lawn): 15418
The Old Manor-House (An old house, crumbling half away, all barnacles and lichen-grown): 2000
The Old Minstrel (An humble, aged man am I): 3718
The Old Monk in the Belfry (Hark! the mournful numbers rolling): 10481
The Old Nursery Story. From the Low-German (She was like a dolly, so bonny and wee): 7410
The Old Oak-Tree (I love the woods arrayed in Summer's green): 7068
The Old Oss. A New Song to an Old Tune (I'm a broken-kneed old knacker, and I'm sadly afraid): 13632
The Old Piano (Nay, Maidie, have sweet patience yet awhile): 12557
The Old Rule of Drinking. From the Greek of Eubulus (A man of sense three cups may take): 11117
The Old Sailor's Story (I have seen a fiercer tempest): 12423
The Old Scottish Cavalier (I'll sing you a new song, that should make your heart beat high): 10672
The Old Sea-Port (When winds were wailing round me): 10476
The Old Seaman (You ask me why mine eyes are bent): 5153
The Old Servitor (Who travels on the road to-night?): 2701
The Old Shepherd on His Pipe (When I smoke I sees in my pipe): 13539
The Old Soldier. An Anecdote (There be footsteps angels follow, e'en through fashions false and hollow): 5628
The Old Song (Sing me the song that was often sung): 13208
The Old Statue (In the market-place of Ypres, three hundred years ago): 2859
The Old Stonemason (A showery day in early spring): 12399
The Old Sword (Leave the old sword its niche upon the wall): 4312
The Old Tree in Norbury Park (The Poet. Come forth from thine encircling bole): 3810
The Old Tree's Fall (And so man's ruthless hand at last): 6093
The Old Trysting-Place (Within my heart dreams of far-distant days): 7031
The Old Vagrant (Well, in this ditch I reach at last): 5918
The Old Vagrant. (From the French of Béranger) (Weary and old, here let me die): 14260
The Old Viking. An Adaptation for Music (Why ’midst these shadowy woods should I): 12971
The Old Washerwoman (Thou see'st her busy with the linen): 6461
The Old Woman (I wandered alone in a distant meadow): 14898
The Old World and the New (There's a checkmate universal): 3690
The Old Year (All it's waning days are counted): 4940
The Old Year (Down in the frozen earth): 872
The Old Year (I dreamt last night I was standing): 2289
The Old Year and the New (The Old Year goes away: her eyes are sad): 12593
The Old Year and the New (The reign of the Year is drawing to a close!): 6561
The Old Year's Vindication (The Year was ready to die): 6627
The Old Year’s Blessing (I am fading from you): 1659
The Old, Old, Story (Have you forgotten the old, old story): 13095
The Olympeium (Of star-lit stormy years the ceaseless flow): 8367
The Olympic Jupiter (Calm the Olympian God sat in his marble fane): 10544
The Omens (Oh, when I went a-wooing): 746
The One Ewe Lamb (What bitter words were said to-night): 4576
The One Forgotten (A spirit speeding down on All Souls' Eve): 8020
The One in the Middle (Five very plump birds met one pleasant Spring day): 1970
The Only Beauty (He who will splendour, must to India go): 8717
The Only Way (Like him, of whom the poet sings): 14950
The Opening of the Ganges Canal (From distant-lying lands): 9297
The Orchard and the Heath (I chanced upon an early walk to spy): 14214
The Ordeal ("Thou hast claimed to be our chief"): 5741
The Ordeal of the Heart (Fair beam'd the morn—the glowing wave): 15626
The Organ Blower (That shadowed corner in the loft): 14068
The Origin of Language. An Excellent New Song ('Tis not very easy to tell): 9596
The Origin of Species. A New Song (Have you heard of this question the Doctors among): 9510
The Origin of the Autumn Tints. An Indian Story ('Tis not the Pale-face sweeps our tribe away): 5711
The Origin of the Fairies (I have heard a wondrous old relation): 10134
The Origin of the Snowdrop (Adown the leaden sky): 3207
The Original Ballad of the Dowie Dens (At Dryhope lived a lady fair): 8396
The Orphan (Thou sayest, thou hast no dower): 13525
The Orphan Maid's Lament (Ah, think ye that this troubled soul): 10312
The Orphan's Dream of Christmas (It was Christmas Eve—and lonely): 1548
The Orphan's Song (I'm a sma' Orphan Lass, for my Parents are dead): 11411
The Orphan's Voyage Home (The men could hardly keep the deck): 1088
The Other Room (This pleasant room, you say, holds all I need): 12602
The Others (When I can bear no more): 12495
The Ould Lad (I mind myself a wee boy wi' no plain talk): 7943
The Outcast Lady (The Lady sate at the castle gate): 1152
The Outcast Mother (I've seen this dell in July's shine): 11941
The Outlaw (He laugh'd at Nature's changes; with the deer): 15661
The Owl (I dwell apart in the ivy-green): 12484
The Owl (In the hollow sat I, of a wild ash tree): 11087
The Owl (There sat an owl in an old oak tree): 10552
The Owl (What means the whooping owl, that nightly sits): 11665
The Owl-d Homestead (Mr. Peregrine Popples Plushington Pea): 2247
The Ox (The holy night that Christ was born): 1099
The p and the q; or, the Adventures of Jock M'Pherson (There was an auld man, and he had an auld wife): 10365
The Pageant of Seamen (The song of the sea-adventurers, that never were known to fame): 7735
The Pains of Knowledge (As up the Tower of knowledge slow we rise): 14654
The Painter (He that built up this world for man and beast): 11821
The Painter and Pourtalès (True, it was a humble garret): 3190
The Painter Puzzled (Well, something must be done for May): 15692
The Painter's Last Work.—A Scene (The fever's hue hath left thy cheek, beloved!): 11009
The Painter's Love (The summer day had reached its calm decline): 5814
The Palace and the Colliery (When within that silken-curtained room): 15849
The Palace and The Workhouse (In a costly palace Youth meets respect): 3591
The Palace Fountain (The fountain with its silvery dance): 6562
The Palace of Pan (Inscribed to my Mother) (September, all glorious with gold, as a king): 8462
The Palimpsest (Love turn'd quite studious, grave, one day): 241
The Palmer (Art thou come from the far-off land at last?): 10250
The Palmer's Tale (Far in the purple time, e'er pain): 946
The Paradox of Time (A Variation on Ronsard) (Time goes, you say? Ah no!): 2525
The Parent Oak (The oak of old England for ages had stood): 11352
The Parent's Prayer for the Children (Christ on Earth, in Heaven the King): 12289
The Parents to Their Children. On the 1st of January, 1824 (In the oblivion of afflictions past): 15215
The Park (How beautiful! A garden fair as heaven): 10936
The Parliament of Salisbury Plain. A New Song (A bold Bright idea has flashed on my mind): 9798
The Parricide. Abridged from Victor Hugo (At that still hour when sleep folds up the sight): 13885
The Parrot and the Mirror. Addressed to a Portrait of Mrs. Kingston James (A lady, young and fair): 5611
The Parson's Comforter. A Photograph from Life. (The parson goes about his daily ways): 4341
The Parson's Visitor, A Lyrical Ballad (An almost cloudless autumn sky): 10082
The Part and the Whole (If Death seem hanging o'er thy separate soul): 14348
The Parted ('Tis night—the moon, with regal pride): 15378
The Parthenon (A ruin! But no Gothic pile divine): 8365
The Parting (It was a meeting, such as on this earth): 5783
The Parting and the Meeting (And we must part? And can it be): 5712
The Parting Charge (I see the white sails of thy ship): 15065
The Parting of Ulysses (The goddess with a radiant tunic dress'd): 935
The Parting of Ulysses; An Homeric Reminiscence (I dare not live, thy loving thrall): 914
The Parting Wreath (It was a form to dream of, slight and frail): 15360
The Partition of the Earth ("Here! take this world," cried Jove, from his high throne"): 3453
The Partition of the Earth ("There! Take the world!" Jove from him skyey throne): 8492
The Pass of Death. Written Shortly After the Decease of the Right Honourable George Canning, and With Reference to That Event. (Another's gone, and who comes next): 5383
The Passage (As one whose homeward path through darkness lies): 11793
The Passage of the Red Sea (When Moses' rod): 6532
The Passing Bell (The mist creeps upward from the shadowy vale): 4063
The Passing Bell (Thou wilt come when thou hearest the passing bell): 5001
The Passing Bell (When our little day is ended): 5147
The Passing Cloud (O cloud, so beautiful and fleet): 6604
The Passing Fear ("Mother, I shall not die," she said): 6272
The Passing Guest ('Tis pleasant in the summer time a passing guest to be): 5359
The Passing of Summer (Woods russet red): 7804
The Passing of the Poet (On Western skies he gazed, and, lo!): 12716
The Passing of the Queen (Renowned and reverenced of the wondering world): 14956
The Passing Railway Train (Poesy is creation; whoso planned): 5466
The Passion-Flowers of Life (The setting sun was sinking fast): 1573
The Passion. From the Old Spanish (Earth and Heaven bewailing): 8131
The Passionate Shepherd to His Love (Come, live with me, and be my love): 2274
The Past (How wild and dim this Life appears!): 7964
The Past (I loved you many years ago): 1065
The Past (Let those who have in Fortune's lap): 3476
The Past (The past! the past! It is a word of many thoughts to me): 15700
The Past—The Present—The Future. A Prophecy (When Gaul her standard raised on high): 91
The Past, the Present, and the Future (I can see that I grow older): 7713
The Pastor's Pool (I stood in the summer evening): 5560
The Path (Backwards I look along my path): 6990
The Path of Faith (Perchance thou deemest it is hard): 1259
The Path Through the Corn (Wavy and bright in the summer air): 6443
The Path Through the Snow (Bare and sunshiny, bright and bleak): 6378
The Patriot Engineer ("Sirs! may I shake your hands?"): 864
The Patriot Soldier (A wail was heard on the battle plain): 138
The Patriot's Grave. Suggested on Visiting the Tomb Where Andrew Hardie is Interred (Look, look ye here, ye heavenly-minded few): 79
The Patriot's Widow (The enemy was nearing): 6281
The Pauper's Dead Child (Hush! speak softly; fasten the door): 7681
The Paysanne in the City (I pine to hear the breeze of spring): 14474
The Peace-Maker's Panacea: Or, Open Questions. A New Song (Come all ye wrangling Liberals, give ear unto my song): 11167
The Peace-Makers: An Idyl (Pleased as a curate out on holiday): 14222
The Peaches (When summer flowers begin to jade): 7353
The Peak of Darra (Gaunt Peak of Darra! lifting to the sky): 11123
The Pearl-Lily. Addressed to Miss Louisa H. Sheridan, on her receiving from her female friends, a beautiful representation of a lily in pearls, "as a tribute to her talents and virtues" (When the crown'd Lily, o'er the waters leaning): 4804
The Pearls (Accept, Lezel, this simple gift): 6530
The Peasant Girl (Aye beautiful, thou dark blue sky!): 2932
The Peasant's Song (Now the sun is watering down): 3259
The Peasant's Song (O say not man's faith is a flower, love): 14465
The Peasantry of England (The Peasantry of England): 15167
The Pedlar (A pedlar hawked his wares for sale): 6069
The Peiho, 1859 (There comes a wailing on the breeze—): 219
The Pen and the Album ("I am Miss Catherine's book" (the Album speaks)): 5613
The Penitent (Within a dark monastic cell): 14304
The Penitent Free-Trader (Tufnell! For the love of mercy): 9043
The Penitent's Return (My father's house once more): 10953
The People's Petition (O Lords and Rulers of the Nation): 121
The Peoples. Italian Legend (When the fair world from chaos rose complete): 4504
The Perfect Death (Where shall we learn to die?): 14737
The Perilis of Wemyng. Ane moste woeful Tragedye (I will tell you of ane wonderous taille): 10850
The Permissive Bill. A New Song (Pray, what is this Permissive Bill): 9806
The Perran Sands (Hast thou ever, in a travel): 3180
The Persian Lovers (The Sun was in his western chamber): 2935
The Pervious Heel (I know a scent which to me brings restoring freshness, yet): 6337
The Pewter Quart. A New Song to an Old Tune (Here, boy, take this handful of brass): 10088
The Phantom Ox ("What frightens you in from your play, my child?"): 12104
The Phantom Ships (The phantom ships, the little ships): 7343
The Philanthropists (Come all ye philanthropists, tender of souls): 11168
The Philosopher and The Fungus. A Fable (One autumn noon, a youthful sage): 5380
The Philosopher and the Monkey (O little philosopher monkey-faced): 3809
The Philosopher of the Garden (I sit beneath a fluttering beech): 7344
The Philosophical Egoist (Hast thou the infant seen that yet, unknowing of the love): 10797
The Pick of the Whelps: A Picture and an Allegory (A red-roofed barn, with open door): 12890
The Picture (A horrid wood of unknown trees, that throw): 11253
The Picture of Danäe (Receive my thanks, my hearty thanks, Bernardo): 11125
The Pied-À-Terre (Sentimental young students may be in the right): 11104
The Piercing of the Appenine (The sky darkens over the waves of the Rhine): 8361
The Pilgrim (Youth's gay spring-time scarcely knowing): 10673
The Pilgrim of the Desert (Wearily flaggeth my Soul in the Desert): 9683
The Pilgrimage to Kerlaar. (From the German of Heinrich Heine) (She stood beside the lattice: her boy lay on his): 987
The Pilgrimage to Kevlaar (The mother stood at the window): 9387
The Pilgrims and The Peas (A brace of sinners for no good): 3653
The Pilot Fish and the Shark (Lord John, if thou hast been "at"): 11715
The Pilot in the Mist (Steaming the northern rapids—(an old St. Lawrence reminiscence)): 8210
The Pioneers ('Fools only wander from the broad highway'): 12023
The Pisky Gleaner (From candle-doubting to candle-teening): 13852
The Pixey. A Tale (In Devon's vales and lawns so gay): 15677
The Plagiarist (If I've a taper that I light): 15196
The Plague of Darkness, A Dramatic Scene from the Exodus (Caleb. Is it thy will, that longer we remain): 9393
The Plague of Elliant. (From the Breton) ('Twixt Faoüet and Llangolan): 226
The Plaint of Absence (I think of thee at morning, when the shades): 10986
The Planting of the Vine. A Thought from the German (Old Father Noah sat alone): 3678
The Planting. A Parable ("Plant it safe, thou little child"): 6465
The Play (Catherine of Cleves was a lady of rank): 11019
The Player and the Listeners (One sat at an instrument, and played): 1605
The Playing Infant (Play on thy mother's bosom, Babe, for in that holy isle): 10820
The Plea ("It was so sweet and lovely in its youth"): 4747
The Plea for Mercy (Be merciful! Poor, feeble, human ken): 5572
The Pleiades (Hail, ye celestial Seven): 7648
The Plighted Troth (On the sands, the yellow sands): 13795
The Poacher's Wife (At Anna's breast an infant sleeps): 3721
The Poem of Pentaur (King Rameses marched to the Northward, to the borders of Kadesh he came): 14743
The Poet ("Who is this?" said the moon): 3671
The Poet (Amid life's busy hum and clamour hoarse): 5867
The Poet (Bard, the film so thin and bright): 14300
The Poet (Behold the poet, where, enchain'd by thought): 15054
The Poet (Give honour to the poet. Who shall tell): 6814
The Poet (None sang of love more nobly; few as well): 8556
The Poet (The poet hath the child's sight in his breast): 10791
The Poet (The Poet is a poem, which but few): 15387
The Poet (Who is the Poet? Who?—How dare define): 12710
The Poet (World-teacher, yet World-scorned! Thy harp, men say): 5676
The Poet and the Magician (Thou of the wild and wandering eye): 15365
The Poet and the Passions (The winds come forth from South and North): 9230
The Poet and the Voice (A poet wandered by a woodland stream): 6282
The Poet and the World (The thrush whistles over the meadow): 6706
The Poet to His Friends (Friends, fairer times have been): 10654
The Poet-Lark (The purple hills are tinged with gold): 6480
The Poet's Answer, To a Lady's Question Respecting the Accomplishments Most Desirable in an Instructress Of Children (O'er wayward childhood would'st thou hold firm rule): 3113
The Poet's Answer, To a Lady's question, respecting the accomplishments most desirable in an Instructress of Children (O'er wayward children wouldest thou hold firm rule): 10395
The Poet's Auction (As I stroll'd down St. James's, I heard a voice cry): 10920
The Poet's Bouquet. From the French of M. de Heussy (By day I steal from her with secret guile): 13570
The Poet's Bower (A bower there is, a lowly bower): 11906
The Poet's Bridal-Day Song (O! my love's like the steadfast sun): 3518
The Poet's Bridal-Day Song (Oh! my love's like the steadfast sun): 10175
The Poet's Den. A Sketch on the Spot ('Tis the "leafy month of June"): 10403
The Poet's Grave. Written for a Gaelic Air (We fain would know the hallowed spot): 6258
The Poet's Harp (O for the poet's harp of golden strings!): 12671
The Poet's Home (In the cavern's lonely hall): 14303
The Poet's Home (Mark yonder cot, among the trees): 926
The Poet's Homily (Ye doubters of a power divine): 2583
The Poet's Mind (Vex not thou the poet's mind): 11142
The Poet's Mission (Weaving light fancies, lay a youthful poet): 5853
The Poet's Mission (What is the Poet's noblest work? To sing): 6474
The Poet's Picture (The pent-up passion of her soul): 828
The Poet's Power (Ay, scorn the Poet's Power): 6195
The Poet's Song to His Wife (How many summers, love): 3010
The Poet's Treasures (The laughing streams all crystal bright): 12984
The Poet's Wife (Oh! little ye know how the poet's wife): 6475
The Poet's World (He lives within a world which he has made): 13030
The Poet's World (If all be true that poets sing): 2337
The Poetess (I saw her in her youth's bright dawn; her eye): 15746
The Poetry of a Root Crop (Underneath their eider-robe): 14738
The Poetry of Life (Who would himself with shadows entertain): 10014
The Poetry of Railways (No poetry in Railways! —foolish thought): 5883
The Polish Chef (With lion heart and arm of might): 85
The Political Cobbler (Man is an animal of strong propensities): 15698
The Pond on the Hill (O solitary Tarn upon the Moor): 5589
The Pool and The Brook (How silently it slumbereth): 6637
The Poor Man's Burial (Ho! contract coffins for the Parish Poor): 14373
The Poor Man's Darling. A Tale of Hard Times (Why did you leave me, Asthore Machree?): 6799
The Poor Man's Grave (No sable pall, no waving plume): 5881
The Poor Man's Grave (The poor man's grave! this is the spot): 3423
The Poor Man's Lot (My soul with indignation burns): 135
The Poor Man's Song (I'll sing a song, and such a song): 103
The Poor Man's Song (Oh, wherefore bid me cross the seas): 154
The Poor Man's Song. [From Uhland] (A poor man, poorer none, am I): 3726
The Poor Man's Wedding (I wed thee, girl, as poor men wed): 41
The Poor of the City (What evil hath the poor man done): 64
The Poor Poetaster (I, the poor Poetaster, bewail my hard fate): 8237
The Poor Woman. (From Béranger) (It snows, it snows, and yonder, at God's porch): 637
The Poplar (The life of the slow, scented gale): 14952
The Poplar (The plume-like poplar rises tall): 7597
The Poplars (Shivering and wretchedly three poplars tall): 14987
The Portrait ("Why dost thou fix so earnestly"): 14145
The Portrait (As Beauty for her picture sat one day): 11820
The Portrait (Gift of the absent! whose illusive power): 3581
The Portrait (Her hair was a golden brown): 473
The Portrait (Oh she was fair! This is enough—and much): 5920
The Portrait of Mrs. Alfred Montgomery (There are lips that call forth laughter): 5161
The Portrait of Mrs. Fairlie (Away with Fancy's song of pleasant chime!): 4943
The Posie (Oh, love . . . will venture in, where it daur-na weel be seen!): 1542
The Posy. A Ballad (As I went down my garden): 3909
The Power of Love (No damp that mortal reason throws): 4395
The Power of Words (O! mighty Words, in wise men's mouths ye raise): 14344
The Practice of Poetry (Oh witching error! Am I but deceived): 11755
The Praise (Deceived, unloved; yet far too loved by me): 15985
The Praise of Light (Who praiseth thee in fittest mood, O Light?): 12130
The Praise of Love. From Ariosto's Capitoli Amorosi, XV (Let others praise it, if they please): 15681
The Prayer (A pair of dimpled knees bent on the floor): 13635
The Prayer of a Dying Sufferer (I come to Thee, blest Jesus): 2113
The Prayer of Hercules (Hear me, O Zeus my father, for I am thine): 14396
The Prayer of Prudentius (Father in heaven adored): 1748
The Prayer of Siddârtha. (Suggested by "The Light of Asia") (Give me all morrow): 1783
The Prayer of Socrates (Grant, O Olympian gods supreme): 4005
The Prayer of St. Chrysostom (Almighty God, who gives us grace): 2744
The Prayer of the Poor for the Poor (I asked for wealth to aid the poor): 6531
The Prayer of the Swine to Circe
(An Homeric Interpolation, Inscribed to Mr. Briton Riviere) (Huddling, they came, with shag sides caked with mire): 2564
The Prayer of the Women (God of Eternity! shadows are stealing): 12440
The Prayers (Still as glass was the ocean): 4030
The Present (Do not crouch to-day, and worship): 1395
The Present and the Past (With the solitude of ages): 15383
The Present Time (Full many a bard of Memory sings): 6033
The Press (God said, "Let there be light!"): 25
The Press (The Press! what is the Press? I cried): 15405
The Press-Gang. From the Chinese of Thou-Fou, a Popular Poet of the Eighth Century (The summer sun was sinking low): 504
The Pretty Girl I Knew (Time flies so fast: indeed, I'm puzzled quite): 13780
The Pretty Page (Cupid I did once engage): 15046
The Price (A man lived fifty years—joy dashed with tears): 5116
The Price of Time (When we have passed beyond life's middle arch): 1202
The Priceless Pearl (A child of Italy, in convent reared): 7474
The Pride of the Country-Side (Oh! Phyllis is surpassing fair): 12766
The Priest at Gastein (If pleasure were the aim and end of all): 8617
The Priest's Burial (He is dead!—he died of a broken heart): 10542
The Priest's Heart (It was Sir John, the fair young Priest): 14499
The Primrose (I saw it in my evening walk): 9506
The Primrose (Welcome, pale primrose! starting up between): 7206
The Primrose of the Rock (A rock there is whose lonely front): 3458
The Prince of Peace (Death sent his messengers before): 4595
The Prince of the Storm (I was born in a cloud of sulphureous hue): 15768
The Prisoner (My soul forgets the fetters that she wears): 5715
The Prisoner (Row gently this way down the stream): 1329
The Prisoner of Ghent (Stand from my path, you solemn pair): 10891
The Prisoner of Holland (Within my father’s garden): 14943
The Prisoner of Spedlins (To Edinburgh, to Edinburgh): 6348
The Prisoner of Spezzia (Thank God for Spezzia's prison gloom!): 12066
The Prisoner of War ("See, the shepherd's star is shining!"): 4385
The Prisoner to the Sunbeam (Faint beam of light, that glancest through my cell!): 15687
The Prisoner: "Uznik" (Away from the prison-shade!): 8907
The Prisoner's Evening Service. A Scene of the French Revolution (What was our doom, my father?— In thine arms): 11897
The Prisoner's Fire (Right sweet society the captain owes): 3717
The Prisoner's Prayer to Sleep (O gentle Sleep! wilt Thou lay thy head): 8263
The Private Burying-Place (The chestnut opens out its fans): 7127
The Private of the Buffs (Last night, among his fellow roughs): 14221
The Private View (Dearest Jane): 270
The Problem (Her life is all one neutral tint): 7386
The Problem Solved (Hoorah! we have found out the secret at last): 10505
The Process of Composition (Oft in our fancy an uncertain thought): 7884
The Procession (There were trampling sounds of many feet): 10972
The Proclamation (Bold warriors of Erin, I hereby proclaim): 10537
The Professor of Signs. A Scotch Legend Versified (Now, in these days, when every one is itching): 5863
The Professor's Dream ("Millions of years the world has been a-making"): 11873
The Progress of Learning (The fatal Morn arrives, and, oh!): 8022
The Progress of Painting. A Fragment of a Dream (Fill'd with the wonders I had seen): 6206
The Progress of Passion for His Lady (Once more from the dark ivies, my proud harp!): 10076
The Promise of Sleep (All day I could not work for woe): 1044
The Promise of Spring (Slow dies the wintry day, the winds of March): 13134
The Prophecy of the Last Druid ('T was eve—the vapours thick and dun): 15165
The Prophecy of the Twelve Tribes (The Patriarch sat upon his bed): 10539
The Prophet in the Wilderness. Lines on an Engraving by Martin (When from before the threat'ning queen): 15547
The Proposal (Ay, they are Love's own words! his breath of flame): 15572
The Proposal (While in her fairy bow'r, alone): 3842
The Proscribed (O weel do I mind when wi' weel thacket straw): 130
The Protestation (Dear Eyes, set deep within the shade): 8912
The Puppet-Show of Life (Ho–ho–my puppet-show!): 9959
The Purple Cloak; Or, The Return of Syloson to Samas. Herod. III. 139 (The king sat on his lofty throne in Susa's palace fair): 9967
The Pursuit of Love (Art thou gone in haste?): 6237
The Pursuits of Politics. A Poem ("Privy conspiracy," the Rubrick says): 11221
The Quaker Poet. Verses on seeing myself so designated ('The Quaker Poet'—is such name): 9906
The Quaker's Lament (All the mills were closed in Rochdale): 9051
The Queen (How strange to see that creature young): 11683
The Queen of Hearts (How comes it, Flora, that, whenever we): 13914
The Queen's Wreath on the President's Bier (Still westward through the night in silence sweeping): 3910
The Queer Stick. A Rustic Legend (It was very far off, and a long time ago): 11496
The Quern-Lilt (The cronach stills the dowie heart): 3752
The Question (Dear, do you quite forget? The sweet soft light): 4934
The Question (Father, beneath the moonless night): 1027
The Questioner—A Chant (I ask not for his lineage): 5838
The Quick March of the Fourteenth Regiment (When first the might of France was set): 12402
The Quid Pro Quo (I heard you ask in a whisper light): 3685
The Quiet After the Storm (The storm is past and gone): 9744
The Quiet One (Without the darkness thickens): 5062
The Rabbi's Present (A Rabbi once, by all admired): 12058
The Rabbit and the Teal. (From the French) (In Friendship close and fair): 3551
The Radical (I've been for more than twenty years what snarling people call): 11402
The Raid of the Kers (Tam Ker rode o'er by the Maiden Crags): 10246
The Railway Station (Not well nor wisely some have said "among us"): 341
The Railway Station (They judge not well, who deem that once among us): 1075
The Railway. A Song ('Twas on a Monday morning soon): 5417
The Rain (The Rain with little diamond feet): 6591
The Rain-Cloud. (After the Tamil) (Ye who are rich, and share): 12290
The Rain-Drop. [From the Bostán of Sa'di] (A drop of rain was falling from forth a summer-cloud): 1782
The Rainbow (Bright Bow, in thy glory’s o’erarching yon sky): 15483
The Rainbow (Father of all! Thou dost not hide thy bond): 14252
The Rainbow (He hath lit up the sky with His thousand rays): 15569
The Rainbow (How high a gate of gorgeous light): 7627
The Rainbow (Still young and fine; but what is still in view): 10284
The Rainbow of Love (There's a rainbow of beauty that spans the sad earth): 6492
The Rainy Day (Fleet-street is wet, and splashed, and mushy): 14996
The Rape of Proserpine (Proser. Now come and sit around me): 8416
The Rape of Proserpine. From the Italian of Cassiani (The virgin of Sicilia shriek'd with fright): 10367
The Rat-Catcher of Hameln (The Piper, he laughed with a scorn that stung): 8227
The Ravens (Through the dark sky, and angry sea beneath him): 1892
The Razors (A fellow in a market town): 3651
The Real and Ideal (I saw her as she once did seem): 5894
The Realms of Air (The realms on high—the boundless halls, where sports the wing of light): 1745
The Reapers (The reapers bend their lusty backs): 7083
The Reason (Lady, I see your eyes that glance my way): 13444
The Reason Why Florence was Called "The Duchess." Dedicated to F. C. B. and K. L. B. ("Not her name, but Florence," such is): 3652
The Recantation. Hor. Od. i. 16 (Lovely mother's lovelier daughter): 9528
The Recollections of the People (They will speak of all his glory): 4384
The Rector. A Parody on Goldsmith's Country Clergyman, in the "Deserted Village" (Near where yon brook flows babb'ling thro' the dell): 7756
The Red Beads ("Keep them till we meet again," low the sailor said): 4921
The Red Breast of the Robin. An Irish Legend (Of all the little merry birds that live up in the tree): 7402
The Regatta (Ho! hearty Steeple-chasers): 10165
The Reign of Law (The dawn went up the sky): 14206
The Reigning Vice. Book V (As the shell, parted from its parent shore): 10065
The Reigning Vice. Book VI (Trace the dark passions;—view their strength uncurb'd): 10072
The Reigning Vice. Book VII (As, lured by wealth, the trembling miner braves): 10129
The Reigning Vice. Book VIII (Life's duties known, with firmer step proceed): 10130
The Reinterment of John Hunter (Within the walls beneath whose shade): 6827
The Reiver (A Modern Greek Song) (Dark on the hills the night-shades fell): 2619
The Relic on the Rocks (The lustrous moon through the winterly night): 4554
The Remonstrance (Thou wilt not hearken, though I weep): 2203
The Repentance of Ninevah (Vast was that city–fam'd that place): 3569
The Reply of the Fairies (Where do we hide when the year is old): 6242
The Reply of the Shunamite Woman ("I dwell among mine own,"—Oh! Happy thou!): 11331
The Reprieve (A moment since, he stood unmoved—alone): 4206
The Reproach at Parting (I leave thee! I leave thee! beloved of my soul): 15262
The Requiem (The evening her curtain of darkness had spread): 87
The Requiem of Genius (No tears for thee!—though light be from us gone): 10056
The Resignation (She bowed her head—she took the crown): 5576
The Resolve. In imitation of an old English Poem (My wayward fate I needs must ’plain): 2995
The Rest of the Heart (O for the quiet of the heart profound): 15315
The Resurrection (Morning of the Sabbath-day!): 15773
The Retreat (A stranger sat down in the lonely Retreat): 15521
The Retrospect (Oh! days, that once I used to prize): 15437
The Return ("Drop down your oars, the waters trace"): 3391
The Return (All day the land in golden sunlight lay): 12975
The Return (Art thou come with the heart of thy childhood back): 5222
The Return (Julietta! Julietta!): 4050
The Return From Exile (As memory pictured happier hours, home-sickness seized my heart): 5458
The Return of Napoleon from St. Helena (Ho! city of the gay!): 15394
The Return of Tanē (At the set of the sun from the pa of Maroa): 13310
The Return of the Firefly (We're into port at last, Fred, we've pass'd the harbour bar): 252
The Return of the Flowers (Ye flowers of the woodland so wild): 3823
The Return to Lezayre (I came to the place where my childhood had dwelt): 6190
The Return. Dulce Domum (From the far West, where Dee—the princely halls): 10559
The Reveille (He who, from some rocky summit, watches o'er the dusky deep): 13604
The Revelation (He was wont to creep and stumble, with a slow, uncertain pace): 14019
The Revenge of Aesop. Imitated from Phaedrus (A blockhead once a stone at Æsop threw): 1093
The Reverie (Thy dreams are such as every maiden’s be): 15493
The Rewards of Song (I have a little, soft and plaintive): 4089
The Rhine Song (No! France shall ne'er obtain thee): 5364
The Rhyme of the Caliph (The Caliph Alderàma, in the pleasant South of Spain): 1258
The Rich and the Poor (Go, child, and take them meat and drink): 15806
The Richest Prince. (From the German of Justinus Kerner) (In a stately hall at Worms): 958
The Richest Prince. (From the German of Kerner) (Once in Worms' old Kaiser palace): 13782
The Rime of Sir Lionne (In days of old, as rimesters tell): 12834
The Rime of the Auncient Waggonere (It is an auncient waggonere): 8373
The Ring (Ay, gaze on it, touch it, it is the ring): 4141
The Ring and the Fish (A lady and her lover once): 10754
The Ring and the Stream. A Drama (Andronicus. What hath inspired this happy change, my thought): 9689
The Ring in the Sea (High up among the mountains): 8706
The Ring of Life (We trod the bleak ridge, to and fro): 806
The Ring of Polycrates (He stood upon his turret's height): 14691
The Ring of Polycrates (Upon his palace roof he stood): 8629
The Ring of Polycrates. A Ballad (Upon his battlements he stands): 10675
The Ripples' Request (Throw us a sunbeam to play with!): 13788
The Rising in the North (Listen, lively lordings all): 9866
The Rival Bard. A Protest (Yes, it was a lovely air, and his voice was—very fair): 2068
The Rival Bubbles (Two bubbles on a mountain stream): 5317
The Rival Flowers. From the French (A sorrowing Amaranth, ’neath a new-born Rose): 15906
The Rivals. A Ballad of the Year 1857 (I was young, I was fair, I was only seventeen): 6650
The River (Beneath this fair unclouded sky): 6777
The River (For centuries oceanward it has flowed on): 13180
The River (From the bosom of the mountain): 11980
The River (On thy margin let me die): 5470
The River (River, fair river, brightly wandering): 4757
The River (River! River! little River!): 10364
The River (Smooth flows the glassy tide, scarce a ripple disturbeth): 719
The River (The River rushes—the River falls,—): 5733
The River (Thou art the Poet of the Woods, fair River): 15214
The River Floweth On (A spot where all things earthly seem): 14241
The River Runs for All (Although the cloud may rise, the shower may fall): 15839
The River Saco (From Agiocochook's granite steeps): 6114
The River Thames (Streams there may be proudly rushing): 1632
The River: A Reverie (The wild bird sings to charm me, while the summer breeze is blowing): 5525
The River. (By Tegner, a Swedish Poet) (In silence, where the new-born river dwells): 5388
The River's Voice (Summer's sunbeams brightly dart): 6020
The Road Round by Kennedy's Mill (The steam-carriage now rushes angrily o'er): 6110
The Road that Jesus Trod. (Written between Jerusalem and Jericho) (Among the rocky hills there winds): 5502
The Robber Saint. A Cornish Legend (In the far West, where the Lizard): 849
The Robin (Ere Dawn descends enrobed in silvery light): 7232
The Robin (Her long white fingers o'er the keys): 4656
The Robin (Thou comest, blythe one, when the summer sky): 5358
The Robin Redbreasts' Chorus (The summer sweets has passed away, with many a heart-throb sore): 5965
The Robins (They chose their nook, the bonnie birds): 4569
The Robins (We're leaving the old home, robins): 1334
The Rock in The Atlantic (In the sleepless Atlantic, remote and alone): 6150
The Rocky Boulders of Cornwall (Piled on the lofty peaks of rugged Tors): 6831
The Roll-Call of Home. "For Valour" (A soldier came from distant lands, to seek his childhood's home): 6894
The Roman Wall (Where yonder reaching hill slopes boldly down): 9879
The Roman Wall, Northumberland (Sunshine and the old gray wall): 12717
The Romance of the Swan's Nest (Little Ellie sits alone): 10749
The Romaunt of the Rose. (A Cornish Legend) (Two thousand years ago, one spring): 587
The Rook (Let the Skylark make her boast): 6565
The Root of Love (Unto a goodly tree): 1698
The Rosary (I have strung them on a golden string): 4725
The Rose (Fair Queen of Flowers!): 12447
The Rose (How art thou slandered here, fair blushing rose!): 6974
The Rose (How fair is the rose! what a beautiful flower): 3757
The Rose (Stephen, clerk of Oxford town): 1031
The Rose (The last day of August—the beginning of autumn): 14745
The Rose (Very close to death he lay): 4620
The Rose (Where is our rose, friends?): 10997
The Rose and Bird (A birdling sang upon the spray): 7300
The Rose and Laurel Leaf (On thy path of music whither): 15058
The Rose and The Bee (D’ you see, my love, that joyous bee): 6654
The Rose and the Gauntlet (Low spake the Knight to the peasant maid): 14360
The Rose and the Lily. (From the German of Deuern) (A lovely Rose and Lily growing): 5801
The Rose of Eden. Arabic Legend (Fair Eve knelt close by the guarded gate, in the glow of the Eastern spring): 4495
The Rose of Jericho (There is a flower that pilgrims bring): 6720
The Rose of Kenmare (I've been soft in a small way): 180
The Rose of Sharon (Too fond for me the melting heart): 15759
The Rose of Warning. A Legend from the German (Where towering o'er the vale on high): 11066
The Rose-Tree (O, little rose-tree mine, so red): 15953
The Rose. A Sonnet (I gave a rosebud to my dearest dear): 13765
The Rose. Rondel (Were I a rose upon thy breast!): 13757
The Rose's Promise (I kiss the violet, darling): 13650
The Rosemary (Through the dim copse-wood sighs the gale): 5605
The Roses (Do they lie fading out upon the height): 4696
The Roses of St. Elizabeth (Elizabeth, lady of Hungary): 1953
The Roses. Inscribed to Miss T. (Two Roses, just culled, and yet glistening with dew): 8137
The Rough Old Squire's Young Bride (Through the whole of a run, and a capital one): 13473
The Round Game of the Christmas Bowl (The Rhyme) (Here is a Pool, all made of ice): 1549
The Round of Life (Two children down by the shining strand): 7470
The Round of the Wheel (The miller feeds the mill, the mill the miller): 14353
The Round Tower at Jhansi.—June 8, 1857 (A hundred, a thousand to one; even so): 207
The Round Tower. A Sonnet (In London, queen of cities, you may see): 5911
The Route ("Send for a chair—it blows so hard—I can't bear windy weather"): 9881
The Rover's Farewell to His Mistress (Away!—away!—o'er the sparkling tide): 15597
The Royal Arsenal (Woolwich—Woolwich): 10969
The Royal Guest. On the Visit of Queen Victoria to King Louis Philippe (Why doth yon glorious Isle): 15471
The Royal Vision (On the well-cushion'd throne, where the curious still see): 8335
The Royalist (1646) (Come pass about the bowl to me): 8328
The Ruby and the Rose (He was the lord of Merlintower): 4191
The Rueful Ride (A traitor's sword unsheathed in the dark): 595
The Ruined Abbey (Thou dumb interpreter of vanished time!): 7466
The Ruined Castle By Sunlight (Not by the glimmer of the moon's pale ray): 5656
The Ruined Chapel (No abbots now in ghostly white nor sable): 7341
The Ruined Chapel (Unroofed, below the mountain stands): 7012
The Ruined City (The shadows of a thousand springs): 2722
The Ruined Cottage (None will dwell in that cottage, for they say): 15072
The Ruined Hamlet (Silence now reigns where once was heard): 7043
The Ruined Mother (O cursed is the law that lends its aid): 14370
The Ruined Nunnery ('Twas a tempestuous eve; the rains): 10331
The Ruins of the Castle of St Cervantes (Ye hoary towers, sacred to Cervantes' holy name): 9077
The Rule of Action (In silence mend what ills deform thy mind): 14340
The Rulers of the Land (I'm very sorry for the Poor—would ne'er their lot upbraid): 7758
The Rural Life (Ye who would serve the rural life): 6402
The Russian Black Eagle (The trumpet of the storm is blown): 15620
The Russian Language (In days of doubt, in days of agonising reflections): 14770
The Sabbath Bell (Pilgrim, that hast meekly borne): 13989
The Sabbath Day (The merry Birds are singing): 410
The Sabbath Evening (The breeze was light, the air was balm): 11398
The Sabbath Morn (Light of the Sabbath—soul-awakening Morn): 3744
The Sacred City (The northern winter was over and gone): 2846
The Sad Ryme of Queen Valentine (Queen Valentine had a castle fine): 2177
The Saga of King Hjörward's Death (The Norns decreed in their high home): 14741
The Sailor (Oh, the lark sang loud an' sweet, as he rose abune the wheat): 5562
The Sailor Boy (O sailor boy! this is the day): 1992
The Sailor-Man (Sure a terrible time I was out o' the way): 7947
The Sailor. A Romaic Ballad (Thou that hast a daughter): 1344
The Sailor's Bride (Open the casement, mother dear!): 440
The Sailor's Evening Song (In the wave the sun is sinking): 14464
The Sailor's Fate (He perish'd on the moor! The pitying swain): 14086
The Sailor's Song (With steady ray the cold moonshine): 7888
The Saint and the Demon (How sweet is the state of the blessed in heaven): 10447
The Salt-Mines of Hallein (Oh, I had dreamt of this, as of a scene): 5000
The Same (What awful perspective! while from our sight): 9856
The Same Subject (The lovely Nun (submissive but more meek)): 9846
The Sanctuary (Not in the proud cathedral): 7392
The Sands of Time (When the leaves are whispering damp and dead): 12643
The Sangreal. A Part of the Story Omitted in the Old Romances (Through the wood, the sunny day): 1584
The Satrap (Through all the streets of Sardes went a voice): 12050
The Saturnalia (Through our great gate at Pompeii, at the third hour of the day): 460
The Savoyard (A lone and friendless Savoyard, far from my native home): 3573
The Sayings of Saadi (Rose-leaves the paper on which Saadi wrote): 3200
The Scarecrow (This is the Goodman of the corn!): 4124
The Scenery—Go and See It! (And speak ye may of grandeur and of gloom): 9079
The Scholar's Story (Sole child of her house, a lovely maid): 1553
The School Mistress (When Shenstone's charming picture we behold): 2287
The Schoolmaster (Here dwells the Schoolmaster): 2693
The Schoolmaster (Our Academe, whose massive towers): 7396
The Schoolmistress (She was little more than twenty): 2767
The Schoolroom at Christmas Time (Grey plaster walls, with many a stain of damp): 1503
The Scornful Nose ('Tis very true, oh maiden fair): 4532
The Scottish Widow's Lament (Afore the Lammas tide): 3715
The Sculptor's Story (Ay, look at it! Graceful, and true, and grand): 4739
The Sculptured Children. On Chantrey's Monument at Lichfield (Fair images of sleep!): 15522
The Scytheman (A man who bore a scythe, by chance or aim): 14711
The Sea (A rich red radiance fills the western sky): 13181
The Sea (In ages before Time was young): 2138
The Sea (Over the sunlit ocean, danced our brave): 11667
The Sea at Noon (A gentle air the realm of waters sweeps): 15847
The Sea Calls. (Thoughts of Venice in the High Alps) (Broad shadowy mountains and the boundless plain): 12088
The Sea-Fog (Upon the cliff's steep edge I stand): 7014
The Sea-Gull (The pale, pathetic sunshine on park and pleasaunce lay): 4993
The Sea-Gull (What tempts thee to this inland lea): 7650
The Sea-King's Bride (There's music and mirth in the lordly tow'r): 15332
The Sea-Shell (Upon a rock's extremest verge): 13985
The Sea-Shell's Murmur (A murmur low): 15427
The Sea-Shore (Mourn on, mourn on, O solitary sea!): 6260
The Sea, in Storm (Rage, stormy Sea!): 1566
The Sea's Answer (The pale moon rushed along the stormy sky): 4511
The Search (Tracking each inlet): 9530
The Search after God. From the German (Thee seeks my spirit): 15250
The Search For Quotations (The Roman epicure, ’tis said): 1949
The Seashore (Hark! ’tis a knell!): 15914
The Season (And must I wear a silken life): 2191
The Seasons (A blue-eyed child that sits amid the noon): 1071
The Seasons (Spring brought me flow'rs: small tiny buds and frail): 13507
The Seasons (Spring—and her heart is singing): 489
The Seasons (The Seasons are my friends, companions dear!): 2927
The Seasons (The Seasons are my friends, companions dear): 3746
The Seasons in Italy (Oh! my pale December roses): 579
The Second Pandora (Methought Prometheus, from his rock unbound): 11036
The Secret (And not a word by her was spoken): 10646
The Secret (Still, still river, flowing on): 6511
The Secret in the Air (Not a leaf is on the beech, not a blossom on the elm): 7381
The Secret Lover. From the Persian of Jaumi (Lives there the soulless youth, whose eye): 11212
The Secret Mourner (They bore him on his grave in the heart of the busy town): 13156
The Secret of the Brook (The silver brook is dancing light): 4683
The Secret of the Mere (I built a hut beside the Mere): 2608
The Secret of the Nightingale (The ground I walked on felt like air): 2035
The Secret of the Stream (When the silver stars looked down from Heaven): 1287
The Secret That Can't Be Kept (Its dreariness had grown into a proverb): 268
The Secrets of the Heart (Guess, what counted pebbles lie): 3841
The Self-Devoted (She hath forsaken courtly halls and bowers): 3565
The Selfish, Tyrannical Whig (Know ye the man who is fawning and sly): 22
The Senators of Treves (Because the Goths are nigh): 12133
The Sensitive Plant (Fair plant, thou art no nursling of the winds): 11697
The Sentis (Left were the busy quays, the street): 14985
The September Forest (Within a wood I lay reclined): 9222
The Serenade (Awake, and leave the baby Sleep): 7331
The Setting Star (Oft have I watched the stars upon their course): 5604
The Setting Sun (I sate myself, a pilgrim at my rest): 13965
The Settler (In a far-distant land, the eve): 6839
The Settlers (Two stranger youths in the Far East): 1291
The Seven Heads ("Who bears such heart of baseness, a king I'll never call"): 9927
The Seven Hearts of Condé (Each in its silver urn enshrined): 3885
The Seven-Nights' Watch. North-Country Superstition (Nay, don't turn the key, not yet, not yet, five nights haven't past and gone): 4306
The Seventh Plague of Egypt. The Tempest ('Twas morn—the rising splendour roll'd): 14084
The Seventh Poor Traveller (Girt round with rugged mountains): 1555
The Sexes (See, the tender infant, see two loveliest flowers united): 10677
The Sexton (Sexton I am of Armouth town): 2687
The Sexton's Daughter. A Poem (Beside the Church upon the hill): 11597
The Shade of Burns to its Tormentors (Oh! friends and foes alike forbear): 8031
The Shadow (False friend! in sunshine like my shadow nigh): 14722
The Shadow Kiss (Two deep bay windows lit the room): 246
The Shadow of Death (Turn, turn away those mild pathetic eyes): 7359
The Shadow of Death. (Suggested by Holman Hunt's Picture) (Weary, half weary of the work of life): 14504
The Shadow of the Hand ("How varied are life's flowery paths"): 1426
The Shadow on the Way (Lighted by daylight mild and fair): 9207
The Shadow Under the Yew (There sits a shadow under the yew): 6661
The Shadowed Cross (In wedded love our loves had twined): 7485
The Shadows (My little boy, with pale, round cheeks): 14274
The Shafts of Song (Thou who deem'st the poet's lay): 14298
The Sharing of the Earth ("Take the world," cried the God from his heaven): 10661
The Shearing at the Stepping-Stones (O you brooklet brown and clear): 668
The Sheep and the Goat (Not all the streets that London builds): 1591
The Shepherd (Beside her cot, with shaking hand): 5127
The Shepherd (The calm, heroic time I picture oft): 659
The Shepherd (Upon the lofty ledges of an alp): 14397
The Shepherd and His Flock (Up the steep and rocky mountain): 1762
The Shepherd Boy (The rain was pattering o'er the low thatch'd shed): 2917
The Shepherd Poet of the Alps (Singing of the free blue sky): 10238
The Shepherd's Cot (You ask me, do you, for the shepherd's cot): 10146
The Shepherd's Widow (It's now the bonny month o' June): 2507
The Shepherdess (God set thee on this Norman plain): 5023
The Shepherdess (Misty and grey o'er the slumbering lake): 15318
The Shepherdess and the Sailor (When lightning parts the thunder-cloud): 9877
The Sheriff's Ball! ("Here's glorious news!" cried Cousin Jack): 11719
The Ship (Where art thou going, mighty ship?): 11464
The Ship of Mail. (From the German of Baron Littson) (The wind roars loud, the sea in wildest surges): 461
The Ship's First Voyage (A stranger in a foreign land): 6186
The Shipwreck (Hope, thou who guidest man's unruly ways): 4467
The Shop (Now, my boy, you're eighteen and you must learn): 8363
The Short Gentleman's Apology (Sublimest, fairest of thy sex, how can I match with thee): 3002
The Shot (Along the sloping upland paths I trod): 4702
The Sick Dream (A wintry night:—my casement with the blast): 11629
The Sick Man's Dream (And there before me flashed a morning gleam): 12633
The Siege of Ravenna (In woful plight, a piteous sight): 3082
The Siege of Rhodes (Protogenes the Painter): 5691
The Siege of Woman's Heart (Woman's Heart long had stood): 15328
The Sighing Shade (Lady Maud sitteth alone): 1450
The Silent Eve (The shades of night are hastening down): 8472
The Silent Grave. A Sonnet ('Twas when mid forests dark the night winds raged): 9442
The Silent Lyre (The Lyre is silent now—we listen, but in vain): 15166
The Silent Pool (Beneath the surface of the crystal water): 14558
The Silent Toast (Health to one whose cherished name): 5178
The Silkless Worm (The silk-worm weaves itself a silken tomb): 14349
The Silver Wedding (Receive my offering, Mother mine): 7200
The Singer (Unto the loud acclaim that rose): 1121
The Singer of the Sea. A Legend of the Orkneys (There lives a strange wild legend of the isles): 12158
The Singer's Curse (In days of old a castle stood, it stood so haught and high): 9668
The Singer's Prize (The tall house lowers grimly): 9648
The Singing Bird (Why dost thou fly, sweet bird? oh stay, prolong): 11664
The Siren Isle (Evening's purple glory slept): 7048
The Siren's Music Heard Again (The weary sails a moment slept): 12171
The Sirens (From no grim ancient headland blossom-crowned): 12342
The Sister's Dream (She sleeps!—but not the free and sunny sleep): 13970
The Sister's Farewell (Dear Sister, sit beside my bed): 1118
The Sister's Grave (I had a little sister once): 11569
The Sisters (In Logan Brace, by shores of Dee): 493
The Sisters (Two sisters sit by the embers): 6568
The Sisters of Bethany (Picture, thou troublest me. I cannot gaze): 10401
The Skeleton (This hollow brain parts like a pod): 7175
The Skies (Ay! gloriously thou standest there): 11134
The Skulls (A magnificent, dazzlingly-illuminated hall): 14920
The Sky-Lark (Bird of the wilderness): 13981
The Sky-Lark (O bird, from the shade of the forest): 6340
The Sky-Lark (Sweet Bird, I have listened in vain for thy song): 5630
The Sky-Lark (Whither away, proud bird, is not thy home): 5390
The Sky-Lark's Song (It comes down from the clouds to me): 6163
The Skylark (Bird of the wilderness): 2040
The Skylark (Bird of the wilderness): 3245
The Skylark (Far from trim pleasaunce, far from bustling town): 7011
The Skylark (Hark to the dropping melody): 7308
The Skylark. Addressed to a Lady: On Hearing That Bird's Song Early in the Morning of February 27, 1832, When the Ground Was Covered with Hoar-Frost, and the Small Pools Were Plated with Ice (O warn away the gloomy night!): 15253
The Skylark's Song (Winged voice to tell the skies of earth): 3645
The Slave-Ship (A ship bounds o'er the open sea): 6569
The Slave-Ship (The supercargo, Mynheer van Koek): 9567
The Slave-Ship (There was no sound upon the deep): 2926
The Sledge (Just fancy, Sweet Cousin! a ride): 3875
The Sleep of the Hyacinth. An Egyptian Poem (Three thousand years! three thousand years!): 13893
The Sleep of the Hyacinth. An Egyptian Poem. (Concluded from No. 6) (Woe was in the land of Egypt): 13999
The Sleeper (The fire is in a steadfast glow): 12095
The Sleepers (Lo! night upon the mighty city, night): 14047
The Sleepers. A Contrast (Behold them slumbering side by side): 13015
The Sleeping Albatross (As lone the bold Albatross sits on the billow): 15407
The Sleeping Beauty (Sleep with honey-dews hath bound her): 15779
The Sleeping Beauty (Year after year unto her feet): 11153
The Sleeping Slave (Ay, sleep!—alas, the day's at hand): 15486
The Sliding Scale. (A melancholy song, to an auld tune) (Oh, the weary "sliding scale"): 144
The Slow Stream (Ah me! I said, the stream is slow): 3617
The Small Chrysanthemum (There stands, with stem and foliage broken): 7196
The Smile and the Sigh (A lonely Smile, which smiled in sadness): 14593
The Smith's Wife (By copious draughts, and jarring disputes fired): 9048
The Smithfield Bull to His Cousin of Nineveh (Cousin, the distance of the seas): 1174
The Snawy Kirkyard (A' nature lay dead, save the cauld whistlin blast): 5313
The Snow (The silvery snow!—the silvery snow!): 15206
The Snow (The snow! the snow!—'tis a pleasant thing): 13974
The Snow (The snow! the snow! ’tis a pleasant thing): 10550
The Snow Queen (I was a maiden cold as ice): 12079
The Snow Ship (Far within the Northern main): 15513
The Snow-Child (She grew in sadness, not in mirth): 6457
The Snow-Storm (How quietly the snow comes down): 5847
The Snow-Storm (What angel is passing from heaven): 9946
The Snowdrop (Through days of rain and nights of snow): 13129
The Snowdrop Bulb (Of its crown of glittering whiteness, of its clustering leaves bereft): 4486
The Snowdrop's Call (Who else is coming?—There's sunshine here!): 14470
The Snowdrops (Without the dry trees groan and shiver): 7762
The Snowstorm (Slow falls the snow from the grey heaven, no cry): 8349
The Snowy Eve. A Sonnet ('Tis night, and Darkness o'er the land and sea): 8773
The Soldier in Egypt (From my slumber I woke at the dead hour of night): 8115
The Soldier's Dream (Beside the red camp-fire he slept): 6513
The Soldier's Funeral (Calmly he died, the gallant youth): 9175
The Soldier's Grave ('Twas long ago, in the summer time): 2496
The Soldier's Return (Oh, day thrice lovely! when at length the soldier): 5348
The Soldier's Return (Soft o'er the vale day sheds his parting beam): 14008
The Soldier's Tear (Upon the hill he turn'd): 12331
The Solitary (Lonely pilgrim, through a sphere): 14318
The Solitary Singer (Sweet singer!—sweet to hear when only one): 12821
The Somnambulatory Butcher.—An Episode (Men's legs, if man may trust the common talk): 9162
The Son of a Soldier (Oh mother! dear mother! I cannot remain): 3105
The son of Pæon to Miletus came (The son of Pæon to Miletus came): 14132
The Son of Sorrow. A Fable from the Swedish (All lonely, excluded from Heaven): 1086
The Song of an Aged Bard. From the Gaelic (Oh! set me down beside the brook): 11436
The Song of An Owl (Bright the moon shone): 2041
The Song of Autumn (I have painted the woods, I have kindled the sky): 7133
The Song of Cassandra (Faithful lover, dost thou think): 2166
The Song of Courtesy (When Sir Gawain was led to his bridal bed): 197
The Song of Death (Ye call me a cruel reaper): 6644
The Song of Demodocus (Sweet prelude then the cunning harper made): 11842
The Song of Dreams (In the rosy glow of the evening cloud): 15808
The Song of Eve to Cain (Oh! rest, my baby, rest!): 14726
The Song of Liberty (How should we drink to him): 6208
The Song of Maldon, or the Death of Brihtnoth (He bade each youth turn loose his horse and drive it far away): 14865
The Song of Metrodorus (Metrodorus was a rare old blade): 9283
The Song of Miriam (A song for Israel's God!—Spear, crest, and helm): 11328
The Song of Night (I come to thee, O Earth!): 4389
The Song of Songs (The dawn-wind sighs through the trees, and a blackbird, waking): 1127
The Song of the Bell (Firmly walled up in the earth): 8638
The Song of the Cossack (Come, friend of the Cossack! bright courser, come forth): 5225
The Song of the Gifted (I heard a song upon the wandering wind): 11157
The Song of the Heart (Blithely sings the young heart, and cheerily shines the sun): 7532
The Song of the Janissary (Have they trod down the mighty?—By sea and by shore): 10587
The Song of the Mail-Coachman (Oh, the days were bright): 10904
The Song of the Mountain Stream (List to the song of the mountain stream): 6376
The Song of the Sabre (I have leapt from the sheath in the hand of the brave): 1198
The Song of the Sirens (Come where the woods are wooing): 165
The Song of the Spade (All honour be paid to the homely spade): 5829
The Song of the Spatula (The spatula): 8364
The Song of the Strength of Our Selves (Within us, in the Holy of Holies, the quickened Soul dwells. There we greet it): 2190
The Song of the Survivor (Where is the form of girlish mould): 229
The Song of the Sword. A Parody on the "Song of the Shirt" (Weary, and wounded, and worn): 5899
The Song of the Tramp (Cold, cold is the wind): 13964
The Song of the Willi. A Ballad (The wild wind is whistling o'er moorland and heather): 192
The Song of Theodolinda (Queen Theodolind has built): 12131
The Song of Youth (I cannot stay): 14949
The Song of Zuleika (Oh Love, what joy thy rosy moments give): 15386
The Song She Sang (She sang it, sitting on a stile): 6819
The Song's Errand (O Song! go greet her whom I may not greet): 7554
The Songs of Erin (I've heard the lark's cry thrill the sky o’er the meadows of Lusk): 14953
The Sonnet (A Sonnet is a moment's monument—): 14671
The Sonnet. From the Spanish of Lope de Vega (Violante says, a Sonnet I must write): 10372
The Sonneteer (He loves to lean against some aged tree): 15586
The Sons of Mooslim (When fierce Rebellion raised her head): 9391
The Soother (Thou little silvan brooklet): 6458
The Sorrow of the Sea (A day of fading light upon the sea): 3966
The Sortie from Naumburg. Translated from Uhland's Ballad, "The Hussites Before Naumburg" (The Hussites came down on Naumburg): 3916
The Soul of Books (Sit here and muse!—it is an antique room): 5337
The Soul to the Ideal (I will not hear thy music sweet!): 674
The Soul's Awakening. To-Day (What has happened since yesterday?): 12387
The Soul's Awakening. Yesterday (Undine speaks: I stand in the hush of the hastening river): 12018
The Soul's Defiance (I said to Sorrow's awful storm): 3247
The Soul's Oratorio ("And all that is within me"—greater far): 3614
The Soul's Parting (She sat within Life's Banquet Hall at noon): 343
The Soul's Surrender (If Thou wilt take my heart, O God): 15019
The Souls of the Slain (The thick lid of night closed upon me): 12341
The Sound of Skye (Here then I rest me. On this shelving sand): 11371
The Source of Joy (Joy springs in the heart that is tender and kind): 1231
The South Downs (Downs—where the sunbeams fleeting skim): 7165
The South Sea Islands. A Fragment (Careering o'er the stormy deep): 15733
The South Wind (The south wind rose at dusk of the winter day): 1098
The Sower (See, full of hope, thou trustest to the earth): 10009
The Sower (Though his heart may dare to glory): 1146
The Spark (As when, amidst the embers cold): 6615
The Sparrow (I returned home from the chase): 14919
The Sparrow and the Caged Bird. Founded on an Anecdote Related in the Naturalist's Magazine (I dote on every little bird): 4397
The Sparrows of the Temple. (An Idyl of Paper Buildings) (I wonder what they talk about, those birds): 10237
The Speaking Bells (Once upon a Sabbath day): 1795
The Spectator at Bury St Edmunds (I met seven ladies at the Bury Ball): 7651
The Spectre of the Rose. (From the French of Théophile Gautier) (Those slumbering lids unclose): 14518
The Spectre's Cradle-Song (Hush, my bonnie babe, . . . hush, and be . . . still!): 1545
The Spell (There's such a glory on thy cheek): 15556
The Spell Broken (Oh yes, thou art, though changed, the same): 10778
The Spell Unravelled. Written the 6th May 1820 (My God! with what words can I dare): 8483
The Sphinx (Dread warder of an ancient land): 7665
The Sphinx (Yellowish grey sand, loose above): 14757
The Spice Tree (The Spice Tree lives in the garden green): 14309
The Spider Swinging in the Wind (I saw a spider swinging in the air): 15615
The Spider's Song. [From the Danish of Oehlenschlager] (Look upon my web so fine): 3249
The Spinner (With my babe beside me sleeping): 14315
The Spinning-Wheel (I winna sing o' bluidy deeds an' waefu' war's alarms): 3358
The Spirit of Beauty (The Spirit of Beauty unfurls her light): 5247
The Spirit of Peace (Where hath the spirit of peace his home?): 6005
The Spirit of Ruin (When man was banish'd Eden's bowers): 15480
The Spirit of the Spring (Sweet Spirit of the Spring): 1988
The Spirit of the Times (There is amidst the earth gone forth, to set the nations free): 59
The Spirit of the Vanished Island (The Island of the Spirit hung): 928
The Spirit of Youth ('Twas night; perchance the shadows deep my wondering sense beguiled): 3288
The Spirit's Enigma (Hark to the Spirit!): 6551
The Spirit's Mysteries (The power that dwelleth in sweet sounds to waken): 2874
The Spirit's Visit (There is a spirit come to me to-night): 2861
The Spirits of the Wind (Where is your home, ye wanderers free?): 7065
The Spoiler Despoiled (Musing in the autumn twilight, lulled by the low droning wind): 13495
The Spray of Seaweed (Nestled below the hollow bank): 4499
The Sprig of Lavender (Tis a faded sprig of Lavender, in nowise worth the keeping): 235
The Sprightly Ballad of Minikeena; or, The Fairy and the Rabbit (A Tailor, howsoever loth): 14522
The Spring-Tide Comes (The Spring-tide comes along the way): 13350
The Squall (The nighest shave of death I've had?): 4232
The Squeegee (Oh, ’tis I am the gentle squeegee): 13642
The Squirrel ('Twas not a bright and sunny day): 11969
The Squirrel and the Bluebottle Fly (The bluebottle fly asked the squirrel to dine): 1825
The St John's-Wort (The young maid stole thro' the cottage door): 9085
The Stag (It is morning, and the sky): 15636
The Stag-Hound (The lean hound lay by the castle wall): 13415
The Stage-Struck Hero (It's very hard! oh, Dick, my boy): 15285
The Stagnant Pool (Behold yon stagnant pool, from whence): 6698
The Stalking-Horse. In Three Fyttes ("You will come, then; you heard what a stress mama"): 582
The Star (Afar in yon blue ether): 14583
The Star in the East (A lurid star is burning in the east): 6406
The Star in the East (The burning East hath caught a sign): 15348
The Starling (Spring's pilot! and her nimblest-wingèd darling): 2862
The Stars (Make friendship with the Stars): 15343
The Stars (What are their years? The night's unfathomed deep): 13146
The Statues (It was far norland; the great abbey rose): 2848
The Stay-At-Home. (After Claudian) (Happy the man whose perfect life his father's fields have seen): 1933
The Steam-Ship (Amid the thousand wonders of the vast unquiet sea): 15748
The Steam-Thresher with the Straw Carrier (Flush with the pond the lurid furnace burned): 7881
The Still, Small Voice (Not in the rushing Wind): 15837
The Stock-Rider's Grave (Where the myrtles grow thick): 5518
The Stolen Dance ("Listen!—hush!" said a whispering voice): 6058
The Stolen Kiss (She slept—I have seen loveliness): 14461
The Stolen Leaves ("Who stole my beautiful leaves?"): 1835
The Stolen Love (Oh, sweetest is the stolen love): 13662
The Stone (Have you ever remarked an old grey stone): 14761
The Stone Face. A Christmas Legend (Lo! here the first sun strikes the cold grey peak): 3997
The Stone-Throwers (What can we say to those who deem it right): 4099
The Storm (Day fades away, and low'ring clouds now fly): 3861
The Storm (See, on yon rock, a maiden's form): 10998
The Storm-Painter in His Dungeon (Midnight! and silence deep!): 10475
The Stormkarl (A low-breathed song sweeps o'er the listening stream): 13509
The Storms and Stars of March (Harsh is the voice and loud the war): 6065
The Stormy Petrel (A thousand miles from land are we): 2873
The Stormy Sea! (Ere the twilight bat was flitting): 10740
The Story of a Year (A little Child in raiment white): 13116
The Story of Alice Ayres (We see how wretched are the parts): 14828
The Story of an Afternoon (The clouds were up in the sky): 14412
The Story of An Ambuscade. A Frontier Ballad (Yes, children, I can see it still—that rude old fortress there): 1766
The Story of Damon and Pythias. (From the German of Schiller) (He crept near Dionys the king): 738
The Story of Europa. Hor. Old. III. xxvii. 25 ('Mid teeming ocean's monster brood): 186
The Story of Fair Florimel (There sat a gentle Lady): 5593
The Story of Life (O fair are the waters that mirthfully glide): 5451
The Story of Sir Arnulph (An earnest man, in long-forgotten years): 556
The Story of the "Birkenhead." Told to Two Children (And so you want a fairy tale): 14113
The Story of the Lightning ('Tis summer eve beneath the shivering lindens): 3086
The Story of Three Hearts (From A. Petöfi) (There was a knight bereft of native land): 12138
The Strange Country (I have come from a mystical Land of Light): 2146
The Stranger (The wedding-bells are ringing as if it could not be): 6407
The Stranger Rose (A young Moss-rose in a hedgerow grew): 6464
The Stranger's Grave (He sleeps within a nameless grave): 7107
The Stranger's Lair (Steeped in sunshine the village lay): 1562
The Strangers (Nay, part not so with distant air, thou cold and stately one): 6000
The Stray Blossom (Under a ruined abbey wall): 12838
The Stray Sunbeam (A sunbeam stole from behind a cloud): 6536
The Stream that Hurries By. An Unpublished Poem by the Author of "The Collegians" (The stream that hurries by yon fixed shore): 12100
The Streamlet ('Twas a streamlet that burst from its source in the hills): 15385
The Streamlet (Beautiful stream): 2589
The Streamlet (Lately in the songless gloaming): 1621
The Street Gossips. A Song for Dancing (Since you beg with such a grace): 12266
The Strength of a Little Flower. This Incident is Related in the "Experiences of a Prison Matron" (From the wicked woful streets): 3199
The Strength of Home (The settler leaves his native home): 7040
The Strollers (The little village, all astir): 13575
The Stromcarl (Far and wide): 15843
The Struggle For Fame (If thou wouldst win a lasting fame): 5834
The Student (As by Salamanca's city): 11775
The Sublime (To stand upon a windy pinnacle): 7956
The Suicide (She wander'd on the lonely shore): 15651
The Suit of the Mistrel (What a dream of delight! while young Victor was wooing): 11178
The Summer Has Past (The Summer has past, yet I mourn not her flowers): 4751
The Summer Night's Reverie (Mine eyes did never see a moonlight night): 9328
The Summer of 1818 (The months we used to read of): 8086
The Summer of 1838 (Ye Summer Winds, ye come upon mine ear): 11670
The Summer Pool (There is a singing in the summer air): 3701
The Summer Sabbath (The woods my Church, to-day—my preacher boughs): 1091
The Summer Shower (Some sing of sunny climes, and cloudless blue): 12530
The Summer Wind (Speak for me, wind of summer): 3284
The Summer Wind (The breezes come, the breezes pass): 12455
The Summer Woods (Go gather sunbeams where they lie): 407
The Summer-Land (Two leaflets, long since wither'd, that give birth): 1454
The Summer's Eve (The clover look'd so rich, and rare): 3420
The Summers Long Ago (O for those merry, merry times): 2202
The Sun at Home (If we be blithe and warm at heart): 6343
The Sun of My Songs (The birds are all a-singing): 162
The Sunbeam (I come forth from God's mouth): 7663
The Sunbeam (Thou art no lingerer in monarch's hall): 3410
The Sundial. Song. (I number only sunny hours): 1522
The Sunken City (By day it lies hidden and lurks beneath): 3065
The Sunken Crown (There, over on the hill-top): 9666
The Sunset's Gate (In they came, racing and tumbling): 3896
The Sunshine (I love the sunshine every where): 3512
The Swallow (The swallow is a bonnie bird, comes twittering o'er the sea): 5276
The Swallow's Departure ("Yes, friend Blackbird, you say truly, all the summer flowers are dying"): 13268
The Swallow's Return (Ah, you're welcome from your travels, from across the ocean, Swallow!): 13249
The Swallow's Return. (Ritorno della Rondinella) (Gentle wanderer, Rondinella): 6552
The Swallows (Ah! swallows, is it so?): 12027
The Swallows (Captive on the Moorish shore): 5227
The Swallows (Fly, Swallows, now September): 7356
The Swallows (With rapid shoot of purple wings): 7248
The Swan and the Skylark (Midst the long reeds that o'er a Grecian stream): 11006
The Swans of Wilton (O how the swans of Wilton): 6780
The Sweet Briar (Our sweet autumnal western-scented wind): 3406
The Sweet Briar (The Sweet Briar flowering): 9067
The Sweet Pea (Oh, what has been born in the night): 5091
The Sweet-Sedge (Oh, river-side): 6382
The Sweetest Songs (Soft, Cupid steals the crowd among): 2537
The Sweetest Thing in the World (Oh tell me what are the sweetest things): 12788
The Sweets of Friendship (For a short month condemn'd to rove): 3848
The Sweets of Love (Enchanting sex, whose tyrant reign): 3847
The Swells.—A Poem in the Style of Edgar Allan Poe ("Hear that noisy lot of swells"): 13633
The Swine-herd of Gadara. (A Fancy) (No morsel in the wallet, and no drop): 9759
The Swing (It stands, no beauty on the lawn): 3918
The Swing (Upward she swings her flight afar): 5910
The Swiss Alp (Yesterday thy head was brown, as are the flowing locks of love): 10945
The Swiss Alp (Yesterday's eve were thy peaks still dark as the locks of my loved one): 11046
The Sword ('Twas the battle-field, and the cold pale moon): 13982
The Sword of Caesar Borgia (Well hath the graver traced thee, sword of mine!): 812
The Sword Song (Thou sword upon my belted vest): 3643
The Sword Song of Körner (Thou sword upon my belted vest): 9890
The Sybil (Upon her head no diadem): 15345
The Sycamine (The frail yellow leaves they are falling): 10419
The Syracusan Orthon warns you this (The Syracusan Orthon warns you this): 14133
The Syrian Flute (It was a Syrian afternoon): 12007
The Syrian Princess: A Fragment of an unpublished Tragedy (Say whence then all this reverence for the gods): 14227
The Tailor's Wife (The Tailor's wife! avaunt, ye peaceful few): 9047
The Tale of a Mother. From Hans Christian Anderson (There the little one lay white and dying): 5769
The Tale of the Baptistry of St. Mark's (And there he sate, that stern and haughty man): 5200
The Tale Unfinished (In some green quiet grave, brother): 1247
The Talisman (Away with gems and ornaments, and braidings of the hair): 6087
The Task (Life's school has many tasks we all must learn): 4509
The Tax-Gatherer ("Ah, husband, I must break thy rest!"): 3523
The Tea-Table (Though unknown to Greek and Roman song): 10058
The Teachers (What time Diogenes, unmoved and still): 10937
The Tear (Chrystal gem of mortal birth): 15287
The Tear (Crystal gem of mortal birth): 10136
The Tears of the Dead (Those dew-drops that glitter so thick on the leaves): 15577
The Teetoller's Rhapsody at the Pump (Oh spring of pure delight, and fount of bliss): 5851
The Telescope Fish (Ha, ha!): 13737
The Tell-Tale Face (I hate those frigid notions): 3655
The Temple at Ægina (Here would the beauty-loving Greek beguile): 8368
The Temple of Folly (Ay! hew them down on every side): 9063
The Temple of the Wood (Along the highway as we pace): 2273
The Temptation of Arthur (Where to the sea the woodlands fair dropped down): 13588
The Tenth Muse (A discovery of interest has recently been made): 12756
The Test of Love (Would you, lady fair, discover): 3042
The Test of Time (Once, in the twilight realm of thought): 1288
The Test of True Love. From the Italian (I sought for true and faithful love): 15707
The Testimonium, A Prize Poem (Our celebrated Jurist, long ago): 8533
The Thames and Windsor Forest (My eye, descending from the hill, surveys): 7224
The Themes of Song (Where shall the minstrel find a theme?): 3241
The Thief Detected (As lovely Nature once explored): 3038
The Thinker and the Doer (One sits at home, with pale impassive brow): 1256
The Third Generation (Over the field and across the stile): 4924
The Third Poor Traveller (You wait my story, next? Ah, well!): 1554
The Thirty-First of December (Hark to the deep-toned chime of that bell): 15094
The Thistle (The green grass-blades aquiver): 10208
The Three Ages of Woman (Love, in thy youth, a stranger knelt to thee): 7977
The Three Captains (All beneath the white-rose tree): 16088
The Three Cords (God made several chords to bind): 1735
The Three Cottage Girls (How blest the maid whose heart, yet free): 9863
The Three Deaths (Lay the dead Hope amid the flowers to rest): 4523
The Three Electors. (A Favourite Anecdote of Luther's) (Three princes on at the Diet met): 932
The Three Estates (When Richelieu to the Clergy cried): 3172
The Three Fishermen (Three fishers went sailing out into the west): 6274
The Three Friends (There were three friends—that is to say): 5870
The Three Goblets ("Here is a rest for the weary"): 884
The Three Guests (The world was dark, and comfortless, and chill): 3790
The Three Hunters. (From the German of Uhland) (Three hunters a hunting merrily start): 589
The Three Maidens (There were three maidens met on the highway): 203
The Three Maidens. (From the German of Uhland) (Three maidens sate in their bower): 12144
The Three Monks (Deep in a Tyrol valley the grey old Priory stood): 4827
The Three Rooks. Scene from the “Birds” of Aristophanes the Younger (Caw, caw): 11229
The Three Sons (I have a son, a little son, a boy just five years old): 3732
The Three Stages (It was a happy group. The honest pair): 5912
The Three Statues of Ægina (Chiron, the sculptor, night and day): 856
The Three Voices (There are three voices born of Heaven's blue): 12586
The Three Voices. A Vision (As I pondered, chafing sadly): 12273
The Threefold Tragedy (That lady is a fair one, whom we met): 10205
The Thresher's Song (Flail and flail, we cheer'ly work): 7178
The Thrush in February (I know him, February's thrush): 14975
The Thunder Storm. From the German of Schwab (Grandfather, grandmother, mother and child): 12159
The Thunderstorm (It comes!—the rushing wind has burst): 15277
The Tick of the Clock (Every tick of the clock): 3277
The Tick of the Clock at Midnight ('Tis the tick of the clock at Midnight): 2668
The Tie Severed. A Sketch (When news came to the mother, that her son): 10222
The Time for Me (What time the Shepherd Summer leads): 7233
The Time to Marry (The would-be wise this counsel give, —): 5755
The Time Was—and Is (Years, many years have pass'd): 3108
The Toad (We see the surface, but the life below): 369
The Toast (The feast is o'er! Now brimming wine): 6485
The Toilers (Speed on, slave of Mammon, in quest of the dross): 14054
The Toilers' Homes of England (The toilers' homes of England!): 60
The Tollman's Ditty (I ha'e plough'd, I ha'e delved, cuttit hat, shorn, and thrash'd): 3515
The Tomb and the Rose (The tomb asked of the rose): 6872
The Tomb in Ghent (A smiling look she had, a figure slight): 1403
The Tomb of Cecilia Metella (They laid her in her bed of pride): 4909
The Tomb of de Bruce (And liest thou, great Monarch, this pavement below?): 10854
The Tomb of King John in Worcester Cathedral (Before the great High Altar of his God): 8149
The Tomb of Napoleon (And who shall write thine epitaph?—thou man): 15369
The Tomb of Simonides (O! stranger, turn thou not away): 14301
The Tombless Man. A Dream (I woke from sleep at midnight, all was dark): 10737
The Tombstone (I sat down to rest on an old tombstone): 5401
The Tongue of Fire (I hear December's biting blast): 6171
The Torch (True friend! that with me like a torch I bear): 14723
The Tories—A National Melody ('Tis with joy and exultation I look round about this nation): 10083
The Torrent (How I delight to watch a rushing river): 13761
The Torrent (Yea, like to some torrent which, severed in twain): 3597
The Torrent of Arabia (All foaming down its native hills): 6346
The Touch of Pain (Spring laughs for gladness of her buds upcurled): 13261
The Tour of Dulness (From her throne of clouds, as Dulness look'd): 10698
The Tourists (Once Satan and Moloch): 11306
The Tower Garden (A heritage from some far time): 12684
The Tower of Erceldoune (There is a stillness on the night): 10242
The Tower of London.—A Poem (Proud Julian towers! ye whose grey turrets rise): 10907
The Tower of the Seine ('Twas in the old times, and the fierce Normans lay): 1263
The Towing Path (Beside the Lock—my love and I): 718
The Town Child and the Country Child (Child of the country! free as air): 5362
The Track of the Telegraph (Oh! wondrous wire, threading thy silent way): 1565
The Tragedy of the Lac de Gaube in the Pyrenees (The marriage blessing on their brows): 11975
The Train. (After Tennyson) (I come from haunts of Smith and Son): 7614
The Transformation (I thought my love an angel once): 15201
The Translation of Faith. St. Peter's, January 6th, 1870 (High in the midst the pictured Pentecost): 14398
The Traveller's Hymn for All Saint's Day, Being an Adaptation of Arndt's Poem: "Was ist des Deutschen Vaterland?" (Where is the Christian's Fatherland?): 14441
The Traveller's Vision. From the German of Freiligrath (It was midway in the desert; night her dusky wing had spread): 6460
The Treadmill Song (They've built us up a noble wall): 9737
The Treasure-Seeker (Many weary days I suffer'd): 10693
The Treasures of the Deep (What hid'st thou in thy treasure-caves and cells): 3128
The Tree of the Valley (The tree of the valley): 15180
The Tri-Color (Again o'er the vine-cover'd regions of France): 10950
The Triad (Show me the noblest Youth of present time): 2952
The Trial of Charles the First. An Historical Scene (Hath every name been call'd? and every judge): 14455
The Tribute (On the twelfth of May, on the Isle of Man): 4915
The Triumph of Bacchus and Ariadne. Lorenzo De' Medici's Carnival Song (Fair is youth and void of sorrow): 12302
The Triumph of Envy (Exult, dim shadow of the good, and cry): 13427
The Triumph of Love. A Hymn (Blessed through love are the Gods above): 10042
The Triumph of Mordecai (Jerusalem, thou'rt fall'n, yet still): 15260
The Triumph of Poetry (The times are gone when woman's heart): 14105
The Triumph of St. Dorothea ("Nay! yield, beloved, this fold delusion"): 1696
The Triumphs of our Language (Now gather all our Saxon bards): 6022
The Trothplight (Crimson red behind the hill): 3801
The Troubadour and His Swallow. [From the French] (The warm breath of summer): 5866
The True Amazon (Thou art gone—but not to battle): 6493
The True Golden Age (Childhood's the only golden age): 3202
The True Irish Grievance (Down, down with the Church that in Ireland is planted!): 10438
The True Joy-Giver (Oh Œvoë, Liber Pater): 9684
The True Lover (To him whose love flows on—beyond the shore): 8390
The True Mistress (Wild friend, a mistress ought to be): 9177
The True Voice (Voices so many haunt me on my road): 1354
The Trumpet (The Trumpet's voice hath roused the land): 10406
The Trumpets of Doolkarnein (With awful walls, far glooming, that possess'd): 1261
The Tryst (Farewell, beloved! we will not weep; ’tis but a little while): 12227
The Tryst (There was not a cloud in the deep blue sky): 4597
The Trystin' Tree (Prithee, bonnie bird, tell to me): 2467
The Trysting Hour ('Tis past the well known trysting hour): 15223
The Tuft-Hunter (They say I'm a Tuft-hunter; but I say the Tuft hunts me): 9733
The Tun Unvisited. (Vide Wordsworth's "Yarrow Unvisited") (Of Heidelberg we oft had read): 13474
The Tunnel (Genii of the diving bell!): 11097
The Turn of the Year (A gentle wind of western birth): 1890
The Turned Lesson ("I thought I knew it!" she said): 2632
The Twa Magicians (The lady stands in her bower door): 10718
The Tweed at Pebbles (I lay in my bed-room at Peebles): 1606
The Twelfth of August ('Tis morning! and the 12th of August): 9747
The Twentieth of September, Eighteen-Hundred Fifty-Four (Come all you gallant British hearts, that love the red and blue): 9299
The Twenty-Fourth Book of Homer's Iliad, Attempted in English Hexameters (Now the assembly dissolv'd; and the multitude rose and disperst them): 11344
The Twenty-ninth of February. A Tragic Sketch (See, now the evening red has died away): 7828
The Twenty-Second Book of the Illiad. Translated into English Trochaics (Thus, like deer, all terror-stricken, through the city streets they spread): 11548
The Twin Brothers (Both suckled on one mother's breast): 6102
The Twin Genii (There are twin Genii, who, strong and mighty): 6081
The Twin Plants (Two ivy plants grow kindly on my wall): 7469
The Twin Sisters (Fair as two lilies from one stem which spring): 10206
The Twin Sisters (Stand both before me; for, when one is gone): 5233
The Two Birthdays. Or, Hope and Resignation (A year ago, a little year): 3958
The Two Blackbirds (A Blackbird in a wicker cage): 1148
The Two Champions (I saw a goodly champion ride): 875
The Two Deaths (Two maidens walking beside a river): 13699
The Two Faces (Beauty and I struck hands and swore): 4298
The Two Graves. From the German of Klopstock (Whose is this lonely grave?): 7986
The Two Guides of Life—The Sublime and the Beautiful (Two genii are there, from thy birth through weary life, to guide thee): 10806
The Two Hands (A large brown hand by labour stained): 303
The Two Heavens (There are two Heavens for natures clear): 12350
The Two Interpreters ("The clouds are fleeting by, father"): 1401
The Two Laments. (From the German) (Over a new-filled grave a maiden tender): 1653
The Two Lights ("When I'm a man," the stripling cries): 9243
The Two Locks of Hair (A youth, light-hearted and content): 6249
The Two Magicians. A German Tradition (The Master of the magic spell): 10466
The Two Margarets. I.—Margaret by the Mere Side (Lying imbedded in the green champaigne): 2009
The Two Margarets. II.—Margaret in the Xebec (Resting within his tent at turn of day): 2016
The Two Mirrors (Sitting in the summer twilight): 2806
The Two Mirrors (There is a silent pool, whose glass): 14308
The Two Monuments (Banners hung drooping from on high): 11241
The Two Muses (My fire burnt low—at intervals): 9318
The Two Norse Kings. A Yorkshire Legend (Two galleys, each with crimson sail): 546
The Two Oceans (Two seas amid the night): 14312
The Two Porches (Under the porch, entwined with jasmines and roses): 13624
The Two Portraits (Black-mantled Night o'er-rides the hills): 5689
The Two Prayers (It was the hour for evening prayer—there came a goodly throng): 6191
The Two Quatrains (There was once a town whose inhabitants worshipped poetry): 14917
The Two Roses (Two roses once in my garden grew): 6959
The Two Sacks. Imitated from Phædrus (At our birth, the satirical elves): 1105
The Two Scythes (I had two scythes, with faces full of light): 6652
The Two Seas (Each night we are launched on a sea of sleep): 13011
The Two Songs (When love was young, at brightening morn): 4276
The Two Sowers (Death came to the earth, by his side was Spring): 3977
The Two Spirits (Last night, when weary silence fell on all): 1365
The Two Statues (In an old city's market-place of yore): 1275
The Two Streams (Yes, they are bright and sparkling in their flow): 1279
The Two Temples (Time was when Shinar's eastern plain): 6135
The Two Threads (A babe, who crept from the downy nest): 4053
The Two Trees (I saw two trees. The one was fair and high): 1144
The Two Voices (Two solemn voices, in a funeral strain): 10710
The Two Years (The summerless Old Year is dead): 6575
The Type of Prometheus (Stretched upon his couch of pain): 11635
The Tyrant's Death (The mighty Tyrant dead! and one poor hearse): 11707
The Unbeliever (Within my arms thou'lt lie, love mine!): 9576
The Unburied Babe ("You look pale and thin, my Alice!"): 13417
The Unearthly Visitant (The Grave hath opened now, and hath restored): 4466
The Unequal Conference and the Vex'd Debate (The unequal conference and the vex'd debate): 11220
The Unexpected ('Twas said by one who now has gone): 12709
The Unfinished Poem (Take it, reader—idly passing): 2817
The Unforgotten (Forgotten thee! oh! if to dream about thee): 15503
The Unhappy Lover. (After Theocritus, Id. XXIII) (A man, love-drunken, loved an unkind maid): 13533
The Union (Three in one, but one in three): 8449
The Union Workhouse (Nature was strong, and Simon did not die): 14372
The Universal (Is there an eye that looks around): 6231
The University Extension (An unclassified jelly, who lived in a swamp): 8527
The Unknown Grave (No name to bid us know): 1375
The Unknown Grave (Who sleeps below? who sleeps below?): 10077
The Unknown Seas (What do they bring to us, through time and tide): 4229
The Unreturning Brave (Oh! speak the word of Victory in measured tones and low): 5201
The Unseen (When eyes are bright with hope, the skies are): 12597
The Unseen Model (Forth to his study the sculptor goes): 14117
The Untravelled Traveller. Lines written on the Recovery of Prince Leopold ("When brothers part for manhood's race"): 14524
The Uphill and the Downhill (Strode a lordling from his palace): 12623
The Upland Path (Wise men—or such as to the world seem wise): 6563
The Urchin of the Sea (The storm died out, and the day was dying): 3283
The Use of Flowers (God might have bade the earth bring forth): 15762
The Use of Flowers (Sweet human flowers of passing loveliness): 1239
The Use of Tears (Be not thy tears too harshly chid): 3146
The Use of Wealth ('Tis waste in glittering piles to hoard): 1200
The Uses of Beauty (Heart-throbs of Poesy): 9298
The Uses of Sorrow (Oh, grieve not for the early dead): 1076
The Vain Regret (Oh! had I nursed, when I was young): 2977
The Vale of Ide (Green vale, I always loved thee! and in youth): 15565
The Vale of Pines (How soft is the sound of the river): 10138
The Valentine (A boy sat in the branching oak): 1713
The Valentine (Said the moth to the star): 1847
The Valley of Dreams (A lilied stretch of shadowed water-way): 12645
The Valley of the Flowers (It lies at the gates of the morning): 4165
The Valley of the Sweet Waters (What is the young Sultana's grief?—why weeps she thus alone?): 4997
The Vase of Tears (The morning through the lattice fell): 6477
The Vase of the Tears of Eros (Thine are all tides, beneath the moon): 13845
The Vaudois Wife (Thy voice is in mine ear, Belov'd!): 10721
The Vault of The Princes (And here they lie–these ashes of proud princes): 5854
The Veil (What ails, what ails you so, my brothers): 7920
The Veil (Why do my brothers from me turn): 5215
The Veiled Bride (Veil'd the future comes, refusing): 415
The Veiled Image at Sais (A youth, whom wisdom's warm desire had lured): 10674
The Veiled Statue at Sais (A youth, who had to Sais in the land): 8627
The Venal Sanctuary (I trod the hallowed ground that bore): 6133
The Venetians (Gold on the girls' gold heads): 5055
The Very Latest Edition of Robinson Crusoe. Published, with splendid illustrations, by A. Harris, Convent Garden Theatre (Henry Byron one day to A. Harris did say): 13684
The Vesper-Hour, On the Coast of Normandy (Calmly fades the light of day): 6783
The Veteran Tar (A mariner, whom fate compell'd): 10059
The Veterans of the Grand Army meeting Napoleon's Ashes from St. Helena. (From Théophile Gautier) (Bored, and thus forced out of my room): 12053
The Veto. A New Song Dedicated to the Whig-Intrusion Section of the Non-Intrusion Committee (The Church and her laws often claim my applause): 11459
The Victim (A plague upon the people fell): 1888
The Victim Bride (I saw her in her summer bow'r): 3058
The Victim of Hymen (I remarked to Dalrymple in Kensington Gardens): 13696
The Victor. Written After the Fire in Which James Braidwood Lost His Life (In life’s daily path of duty God hath heroes true and tried): 1667
The Victories of Love (Dear children, God is love, and love): 14267
The Victories of Love (Dear Mother, I can surely tell): 14261
The Victories of Love (Father, you bid me once more weigh): 14263
The Victory Feast (The stately walls of Troy had sunken): 9986
The Vigil (The moon has risen solemnly): 3225
The Vigil of All-Souls. To my Friend on His Wedding-Night (To-day for thee, and to-morrow for me): 14045
The Vigil of Rizpah (A lonely watcher on the mountain-height): 392
The Vigil of Rizpath (Who watches on the mountain with the dead): 11330
The Vigil of St Mark. A Dramatic Tale (This is the bank on which my childhood slept): 9446
The Vigil of Venus (He that never loved before): 10045
The Vigil of Venus. A May-Song (Spring is come with all its music; in the spring Jove saw the day): 14991
The Viking Babes (This little bay is the great blue sea): 5109
The Viking's Death (Down to the shore slow marched the mournful throng): 7310
The Viking's Serf ("Sing me a song that will make me young"): 498
The Vikings' Graves (Very quietly they sleep): 4851
The Villa (The sovereign moon, new-risen in Fiesole): 9290
The Village Beauty (There she stands just within the trellised porch): 7019
The Village Church (It stands, gray-towered and ivy-clad): 12469
The Village Church (Lo! ’mid yon vale’s secluded green): 15441
The Village Cobbler (Behind that door, by every filth defiled): 9038
The Village Funeral (Long had the cheek, by seeming health o'erspread): 8780
The Village Magdalene (Urged by that word, which hell might not gainsay): 9039
The Village Maid (Blest is the humble village maid): 15643
The Village Matron's Evening Song (Morn—noon—are past; the lights of even): 13926
The Village of Scheveling. A Dutch Legend of 1530 (A startling sound by night was heard): 15539
The Village Pestilence (The ev'ning sun o'er Arran's lofty brow): 3409
The Village Politician (Thrice happy land, where order keeps the rein): 8777
The Village Sabbath (The Sabbath sun has mounted in the east): 9049
The Village Saturday (From the Campagna, when the sun is low): 9743
The Village Schoolmaster (A stripling tyrant of unyielding look): 9002
The Village Spice-Shop (Bagnall's, the spice-shop, at the village end): 14058
The Village Wedding (From house to house, with nicely papered hair): 9003
The Village Wit (Rob Shankland was a light and limber blade): 9044
The Vines (Winter was dead, and the torpid earth): 3218
The Violet (A violet blossom'd on the lea): 10664
The Violet (Sweet flower, who scarcely peep'st between): 6588
The Violet Bank (Ere the spring with full completeness): 7553
The Violet Bank (Once more, dear friend, the violet bank we seek): 12874
The Violet Girl's Song (Violets in the sunshine): 6648
The Violet. From the German of Goethe (A violet blossom'd on the green): 3508
The Violin Player (You who love music and comprehend): 2237
The Virgin (Mother! whose virgin bosom was uncrost): 9849
The Virgin Martyr. Suggested by the well-known picture by Paul Delaroche, in the international exhibition of 1862 (Yes, the sad day of life was past): 13584
The Virgin's Lullaby (Hush Thee, hush Thee, little Son): 13854
The Virgin's Rock (The tide was flowing fierce and fast in beautiful Biarritz Bay): 4917
The Vision ("I have never pressed thee, dear," he said): 4984
The Vision (I call upon thee in the night): 7823
The Vision (It rained misfortunes: he but smiled): 15030
The Vision (Thunder pealed and lightening quivered): 10968
The Vision by Moon-Light (It was a calm serene evening): 9343
The Vision of Caedmon (The hour was that most glorious eve of christ): 13490
The Vision of a Picture (In a House, where grace abideth): 5151
The Vision of Caligula. A Fragment (The night is over Rome—deep night intense): 11596
The Vision of David (My waking soul flew to my God and my King): 6540
The Vision of Famine. Part I (Within a gorgeous palace a young and blooming Queen): 1976
The Vision of Famine. Part Second (In bright effulgence rose the summer sun, upon the): 1977
The Vision of Polyphemus (In the noontide of the summer): 9128
The Vision of the Isles of Immortality and Death (Yonder it heaves at even and sunrise): 189
The Visit to the Lions (So, the curtain has dropt): 11305
The Vizier's Parrot (The Caliph Haroun gave his Vizier Ali): 573
The Vocation of Man (Noble be man): 9156
The Voice (Thou art not now so fair and gay as thou wert wont to be): 6289
The Voice of Birds (The voice of birds! the glorious voice which tells): 15229
The Voice of Cheer (From Heaven there comes a voice of cheer): 1228
The Voice of Childhood (I heard a voice, a childish voice): 5369
The Voice Of God (God spake a word): 2073
The Voice of Home to the Prodigal (Oh! when wilt thou return): 5231
The Voice of Nature ('Twas in a lone sequestered dell): 9097
The Voice of Nature (I heard a bird on the linden tree): 10878
The Voice of Nature (There are many things that speak of thee): 6201
The Voice of Spring (I come, I come! ye have call'd me long): 2969
The Voice of Spring (I come, I come! ye have call'd me long): 2990
The Voice of the Stream (Thou comest with a pleasant voice, O little stream, to me): 7134
The Voice of the Waterfall (Voice of the Waterfall! thy booming sound): 15290
The Voice of the Wind (Oh! many a voice is thine, thou Wind! full many a voice is thine): 10716
The Voice of the Wind (Throw more logs upon the fire!): 1332
The Voices in the Fir Wood (There's ever a soft, low breathing through the fir-trees' long dark ranks): 3824
The Voices of Nature (Wearied with the golden glare): 14330
The Voices of the Flowers (If you lie with your ear to the soft green earth): 3601
The Voices of the Sea (Along the shell-wreathed, shining strand): 4634
The Voices That Call Me (There's a voice from the woodland that calls me away): 6101
The Volunteers' Song (Up and arm you, one and all!): 7746
The Voyage (I have bid farewell to English ground, to English faces dear): 1807
The Voyage of Columba ("Son of Brendan, I have willed it"): 2185
The Voyage of Earth (This grey round world so full of life): 14696
The Voyage of the Golden Hope (Behind us the dull shore fell): 4227
The Voyage of the John Duncan from Gravesend to Dunedin (The good ship in the river lay): 15855
The Wae Heart (Blythe steps amang the copse the rae): 3470
The Waefu' Want O' Siller (Come, ragged brethren o' the Nine): 3334
The Wager (Said the Turk, 'With our swift horses): 8715
The Waggoner, A Poem (Blithe souls and lightsome hearts have we): 7773
The Wail of Lady Anne (A ship came bounding with the gale): 9224
The Waits (Hark! where peals yon swelling anthem?—Hark! it winds its solemn way): 6516
The Waits (In a dull night of December, when the last decaying ember): 13729
The Wake of the Absent (The dismal yew and cypress tall): 5932
The Wake of the King of Spain (Arrayed in robes of regal state): 3741
The Wake of Tim O'Hara (To the Wake of O'Hara): 3695
The Wakeful Sleeper (When things are holding wonted pace): 12061
The Wakening (My dreams were full of beauty; all bright things): 4207
The Waking of Spring (Spirit of Spring, thy coverlet of snow): 794
The Walk (Hail, mine own Hill—ye bright'ning hill-tops, hail!): 10809
The Walking Doll. By Her Late Owner (Oh, we liked her, of course–in a way. We were proud): 2198
The Wall-Flower (The Wall-flower—the Wall-flower): 9068
The Wall-Flower (When the eve-star uplifts her silver torch): 6926
The Walled Garden (An ancient garden with a crumbling wall―): 5040
The Walmer Life-Boat (Hark! A distant gun is sounding): 6881
The Wand of Light (One summer-noon, a sad-eyed man—to whom): 1469
The Wanderer (Dim sank the pale sun thro' November's wan haze): 15408
The Wanderer (I met a waif i' the hills at close of day): 5095
The Wanderer (Yon primrose valley spreads among): 4372
The Wanderer of Connaught (Oh! Norah, when wandering afar from the shade): 9354
The Wanderer to Her Child (The sun is sunk, and daylight gone): 10281
The Wanderer's Return ("How cold upon my passion blows the wind"): 14989
The Wanderer's Return (You have come back to us, my brother): 6290
The Waning Light (The flowers fade out on moor and woodland): 12470
The Waning Moon (O sickle of the waning moon): 8351
The War of the League (Now glory to the Lord of Hosts, from whom all glories are!): 3734
The War-Caldron (Double, double, toils and troubles!): 9653
The Warning (The storm-cloud came, o'er heaven's large pathway strode): 11557
The Warning (Waken not Love from his sleep! The boy lies buried in slumber): 11045
The Warnings of the Past (Faint dream-like voices of the spectral Past): 1197
The Warrior (A gallant form is passing by): 3733
The Warrior's Death (On mettlesome charger, with arrow's swift flight): 15573
The Warrior's Farewell ("Maid of my love! I must away"): 15652
The Warrior's Grave (Where shall the warrior rest, but on the battle plain): 11811
The Waste of War (Give me the gold that war has cost): 1171
The Watcher (The streets are smothered in the snow): 2841
The Watchman (Watchman! thou whose salutations): 6433
The Watchman's Lament (As homeward I hurried, within "The Wen"): 10314
The Water Nymph (Alas, that e'er the moon should beam): 13930
The Water Ousel (Beneath the brook, with folded wings): 15031
The Water-Carrier (Whenever I crossed at morn or eve): 5508
The Water-Elf (A water-fairy sat and play'd): 1207
The Water-Lilies (I muse alone, as the twilight falls): 3936
The Water-lily (Burthened with a cureless sorrow): 5879
The Water-Lily (Oh! beautiful thou art): 11361
The Water-Man ("Oh, Mother! rede me well, I pray"): 10908
The Water-Ousel’s Song (Whitter! whitter! where the water): 12819
The Waterfall of Gastein by Moonlight (The shimmer of the Moon has lit the Vale): 8616
The Waters of Oblivion (The waters of oblivion's stream): 14477
The Waterside (To the waterside—to the waterside): 4468
The Way (I said, "O Guide, go forth"): 2093
The Way in the Wood (A wood lies on the shore): 1616
The Wayside Rest (Hush! let no wandering wind): 5510
The Wayside Well (O! The pretty wayside well): 1038
The Weaning of the Lambs (Here, on the trunk of this uprooted pine): 7519
The Weaver's Dream (He leaves his chilly couch, his home of gloom): 139
The Weaver's Song (Oh! can I forget as I bend o'er my loom): 3647
The Weaver's Song (Weave, brothers, weave!—Swiftly throw): 2872
The Weaver's Song (Weave, brothers, weave!—Swiftly throw): 3754
The Wedding (All Women love a Wedding! old): 12355
The Wedding Ring (I climbed the hill, and looked around): 14388
The Wedding Ring (Nay, Annie, start not thus aside): 13988
The Wedding-Cake and the Will (Will tester's father made a will): 7448
The Wedding-Day (O that my death-day were as nigh): 6384
The Wee Flower (A bonnie wee flower grew green in the wuds): 3494
The Wee Raggit Laddie (Wee stuffy, stumpy, dumpie laddie): 3021
The Wee Raggit Lassie (Wee, genty, timid, bashfu' wain): 5355
The Weeping Ash, With Names, Dates, &c. Carved on Its Bark (One ’mid the lofty hundreds round): 11375
The Weeping Lady (When liate o' nights, above the green): 9794
The Welcome Guest (Hail, messenger of peace and love!): 7095
The Welcome Guest. (From the French of Henry Mürger) (Who knocks without there at so late an hour?): 13484
The Welcome Home (Warm is the Welcome! ’tis our way to grasp): 12363
The Well of Beauty. Addressed to the Viscountess N— (Where the Crescent has vanquish'd the Cross): 3871
The Well of Truth (How few would pump if they believed the tale): 14713
The Well-Known Spot (Again with joy I view the waking shore): 6942
The Wells of Elim (Elim, Elim! Through the sand and heat): 15033
The Wet Shroud (They gave her back again): 6170
The Whaler Fleet (Full merrily sail'd our whaler fleet): 709
The Wheat in Blossom. A Summer Idyl (No grateful zephyr breathes at eventide): 3901
The Wheels (There are strange, solemn times, when serious men): 11958
The Whippiad, A Satirical Poem (Where whiten'd Cain the curse of heaven defies): 9949
The Whitby Smack ("She ought to be in, she ought to be in"): 4182
The White Crusade—Italy 1860 (Long, long the foot of pride): 362
The White Flower's Story (A sweet pure flower, white as the snow without): 4543
The White Rose (Rose of the desert! thou art to me): 9065
The White Slave's Murmurs (Birds, happy birds, that haunt the deep green bowers): 62
The White Squall (The sea was bright, and the bark rode well): 15057
The White Statue (I love you, silent statue: for your sake): 1013
The White Winter (Man, but it's vexin'! There's the law): 14824
The White Witch (The White Witch stood on the harbour side, the wind sighed soft from the west): 4883
The Widow and Her Child ("Oh! mother, dear mother, what dreams of delight"): 15784
The Widow and the Priest (Outside our village, up within a croft): 1994
The Widow of Glencoe (Do not lift him from the bracken): 10732
The Widow'd Mother (Beside her Babe, who sweetly slept): 7996
The Widow's Cloak (There's a widow Lady worthy of a word of kindly tone): 9643
The Widow's Lullaby (Oh saftly sleep, my bonnie bairn): 5890
The Widow's Reply (Strive not a wounded heart thine own to make): 5737
The Widow's Song (Oh! this world is a wide one—for sorrow or joy): 15809
The Widow's Wake (Deep in the midnight lane): 2721
The Widowed Mother (Here, in the temple, where with him I've knelt): 3868
The Widowed Queen of the Sandwich Islands ("She has had many sorrows; spare her this!"): 563
The Widower (I saw the widower mournful stand): 3006
The Widower's Dream (I saw thee in the dreams of night): 14487
The Wife of Auchtermuchtie (In Auchtermuchtie thair wond ane man): 3028
The Wife of Sir Walter Raleigh (Day, like a warrior, stood): 15372
The Wife to Her Dying Husband (I have loved thee in thy beauty—thy glory, and thy power): 5017
The Wife to her Husband (You took me, William, when a girl, unto your home and heart): 3650
The Wife to the Husband (O Death in Life, so many months of hours): 13856
The Wife's Dream (Side by side we hear at twilight voices clear and laughter sweet): 13547
The Wife's First Grief (The day had closed around me): 15411
The Wife's Remonstrance (Good Master Parson Justice: man and wife): 14369
The Wife's Reply (Thou askest me what offerings bright): 6291
The Wife's Song of Home (The Home of my choice is nor humble nor great): 5681
The Wife's Trial; or, The Intruding Widow. A Dramatic Poem, Founded on Mr Crabbe's Tale of the "Confidant" (Selby. Do not too far mistake me, gentlest wife): 10720
The Wife's Vigil (Watching, watching for ever): 3921
The Wife’s Lover (I have a lover, I. ’Tis long indeed): 5553
The Wild Bee (I come at morn, when dewdrops bright): 7007
The Wild Curlew (On this first day, ’mong the couching hills): 7543
The Wild Flower (A wild flower fair, as fair might be): 15518
The Wild Flower (Sweet wilding tufts that, ’mid the waste): 3724
The Wild Flowers of Spring (Spring taps at your casement, cousin): 893
The Wild Pink of Malmesbury Abbey (The Hand that gives the angels wings): 15184
The Wild Rose (A boy espied, in morning light): 10724
The Wild Rose (Awhile I left my glorious books): 8101
The Wild Rose (From cloudless skies, the sun o'erhung): 8766
The Wild-Fires (Oh summer eve, and village peace): 4386
The Wild-Swan (An arrow sent from the hunter's string): 6589
The Wilderness (The homeless wilderness!): 4381
The Wilderness (Up the long corrie, through the screetan rents): 2562
The Wile of Juno. (Iliad 14; line 153-353) (The golden-throned queen of heaven beheld): 8535
The Willow Brook (Cold flowing over the cresses): 6716
The Wind (The wind went forth o'er land and sea): 1381
The Wind Amid the Trees (The skies were dark and bright): 1669
The Wind and the Tree (Sang the wind to the tree): 1016
The Wind in the Street (A country wind is in the street): 6817
The Wind that Kissed the Roses (The wind that lifts the ivy-sprays): 2086
The Wind Through the Keyhole (Hark! to the low wind sighing, so sad, so bleak, so cold): 7122
The Wind's Music (Ever about Life's pathway floats): 12768
The Wind's Tidings ("Oh voice of summer winds among the trees"): 2099
The Winding Lane. A Cockney Pastoral (Come, Lilian, to the winding lane): 13625
The Window Tax (Since Statesman have taxed the blue heavens above us): 4203
The Winds (Harp on, ye winds! in glad content): 3024
The Wine Cup. A Vision (I saw the secrets of the sky): 11895
The Wine-Bibber's Glory—A New Song (If Horatius Flaccus made jolly old Bacchus): 9693
The Winter Brook (Tassels of ice hang over the foam): 7037
The Winter Dressmaker (Good dressmaker Snow sits a-stitching): 2244
The Winter it is Past (The winter it is past, . . . and the summer comes at last): 1539
The Winter Robin (Sweet bird! stol'st thou the hue): 6633
The Winter Tree (I saw it late in July—then it towered): 6870
The Winter Wild (How sudden hath the snow come down!): 10959
The Wintery May—1837 (When summer faded last away): 11918
The Wisdom of Life (Use well the moment; what the hour): 9106
The Wise Men of Gotham (May be in Essex, may be in Kent): 1685
The Wish ('Tis sweet along the pebbled shore): 15593
The Wish (O tell me not when thou hast ceased to love): 15945
The Wish (So you would kiss the poet's lip): 8100
The Wish Enjoyed (So damp my cot beside the hill): 3446
The Wish-Burst (O, to bound o'er the bonnie blue sea): 3035
The Wishes of A Dumb-Waiter (To circle round the "social board"): 10485
The Wishing-Gate (Hope rules a land for ever green): 2954
The Wishing-Tree (Mary M'Gragh sat under a tree): 11074
The Witch (I think I'd like a be a witch): 3672
The Witch of Ae (A pawkie auld kimmer wons in yon glen): 8478
The Witch of Ae's Song ('Turn round, thou bit o' the rarest timmer): 8479
The Witch of the Gray Thorn (Thou old wrinkled beldam, thou crone of the night): 10219
The Witches' Race ('Twas sabbath eve, and I lingered late): 15291
The Witches' Ride (Come, come, gossips, now mount, now mount): 531
The Witchwife's Son (A gude ship came across the main): 12177
The Withered King (So have I read a story of a king): 1352
The Withered Leaf (The Spring-time saw thy birth, poor faded thing): 5157
The Witnesses (Day by day in the open meadows): 13035
The Wives of Weinsberg (The little town of Weinsberg): 5951
The Wizard's Castle. A Leaf from Ariosto (Orlando Furioso), Canto IV (They struggle through forest of fir and pine): 3807
The Woeful Ballad of Hapless Maria and the Pretty Page Who Looked Up Too Far (It was a hapless maiden, and her age was seventeen): 13817
The Woeful Ballad of Queen Elgiva. After the Old Fashion (King Edwy kept his marriage feste): 5582
The Woman's Kingdom (I sought to build me a throne): 2344
The Wonder-Worker (Have *you* a wondrous little son?): 5139
The Wondrous Well (Came North, and South, and East, and West): 1298
The Wood Echo. A Greek Legend (Old Pan still lives amid the woods): 873
The Wooden Walls of England (Ye sacred arks of liberty! that float): 13986
The Woodland Grave (No sacred monumental urn): 12950
The Woodland Seat (Deep in a wood–I love the spot!): 3907
The Woodland Walk (Let us in the forest stroll): 5896
The Woodlands (O spread agen your leaves an' flow'rs): 9793
The Woodroof (Thou art the flower of grief to me): 1634
The Wooer (O, Partridge, I intreat of thee, thee I salute, O maiden): 15955
The Wooer to the Widow (Command me not to leave thee! Thou hast wrought): 5736
The Wooing and the Wedding of Queen Dagmar. Translated from the Old Danish Ballads (King Waldemar and good Sir Strange): 1579
The Wooing of Sendai. An Old Japanese Legend (For ever in the pine-clad shore): 4669
The Words of Belief (Three Words will I name thee—around and about): 9989
The Words of Error (Three errors there are, that for ever are found): 9988
The Words of Maharava (Saith the Hermit Maharava, in the Shaskru deeply learnèd): 3204
The Words of Schamyl, the Prophet (Schamyl, the prophet, hath spent the night): 9294
The Work-Girl's Song (Pipe, merry Annot): 6244
The Working Bee (Yonder I see the working bee): 110
The Workman and the Man with the White Hands (Why do you come here?): 14742
The World (A Playground—oft with clouded skies): 13029
The World (Oh World, thou art no resting-place!): 15309
The World and How to Use It (Live with the world whoso has nerve): 9122
The World and the Dewdrop (The Law that rounds the world, the same): 14718
The World and the Pebble (The sea for ever rolls the stone): 14717
The World and the Poet (A bird sang out in the meadows): 13231
The World as I Find It (They say the world's a weary place): 3596
The World Grows Old (The world grows old, her beauty fadeth fast): 9190
The World Is Too Much With Us (The world is too much with us: late and soon): 14807
The World of Change (Oh! trust not, cling not, to the hope): 15270
The World of Love (Where low the sun's last beams were shed): 2836
The World's Age (Low in the west burned day's red line): 14849
The Worldly Voice (Ye early dews of Morn): 15462
The Worm (Thou grovelling horror!—thou most abject form!): 5778
The Worm and the Flower (You're spinning for my lady, worm!): 14457
The Worn Wedding-Ring (Your wedding-ring wears thin, dear wife; ah, summers not a few): 6542
The Worst of It (That is the worst of it. Passion has passed): 3837
The Worth of Life (A happy lot must sure be his): 14319
The Wound (Fling the gay stuffs above it): 4972
The Wounded Conscript (In Scythian wilds, by Gallic phrenzy led): 5159
The Wounded Soldier's Return (The sun was just retired, the dews of Eve): 8238
The Wounds of Life (God only smites that through the wounds of wo): 14719
The Wreath (I sought the garden's gay parterre): 7979
The Wreath of Fame (He told me of a laurel wreath): 15774
The Wreaths (Our German Klopstock, if he had his will): 10944
The Wreck (On the shore of the far blue Atlantic, is a wailing of wild despair): 5729
The Wreck (Onward the vessel bears, like some huge chief): 6205
The Wreck of "The Arctic" (Oh! bark baptised with a name of doom!): 1363
The Wreck of the "Ocean-Queen." To the Heroes of Colwyn Bay. November 7th, 1890 (Men of Cornwall! men of Devon!): 14908
The Wreck of the Orpheus (All day, amid the masts and shrouds): 6700
The Wreck of the Pocahontas (I lit the lamps in the lighthouse tower): 3299
The Wreck Off Calais. Saturday, October 4, 1866 (The waves broke over the harbour light): 3689
The Wrecked Mariner (Stay, proud bird of the shore!): 11136
The Wrecks of Arginusæ (Hiram, my friend, I'm glad to see you here): 13752
The Wrecks of Arginusæ (What say you, sir? My trick is known in Tyre): 13751
The Wren (There is a bay, all still and lone): 5253
The Wren's Nest (Among the dwellings framed by birds): 3452
The Wye. (Near Monmouth) (A land of hills and woods and yew-crowned rocks): 7455
The Wyfe of Auchtermuchtie (In Auchtermuchtie thair wond ane man): 7955
The Year of our Redemption (Up! toilers of Britain, mind's sunlight is gleaming): 81
The Year of Sorrow.—Ireland—1849. Spring Song (Once more, through God's high will and grace): 9056
The Year's Crown (Fain would I stay thee, from thy fragrant tresses): 13471
The Year's Twelve Children (January, worn and gray): 7153
The Years Have Past! Lines for music (Years have past! since first I loved thee): 4798
The Yellow Leaf (The year is on the wane—the blue): 11226
The Yellow Leaf (The yellow leaf has fall'n): 9456
The Yellow Violet (When beechen buds begin to swell): 3359
The Yellowhammer (Out on the waste, a little lonely bird I flit and sing): 5442
The Yew Tree (There is a Yew Tree stands on yonder mound): 4463
The Young Artist's Dream (Mediæval) (I fain would grow to be a man): 2453
The Young Bride's Farewell (Forget me not—forget me not—): 14482
The Young Captive. From the French of A. Chenier (The early gentle flowers of spring): 15090
The Young Cottagers (When yellow leaves were falling): 15769
The Young Grey Head (Grief hath been known to turn the young head grey): 9993
The Young Maid and the Flower (The coffin descends! and a garland of roses): 3492
The Young Mother (And thou hast now a babe! sweet gift from God!): 390
The Young Mother to Her First-Born Child (My sweet wee nursling! thou art sweet to me): 3266
The Young Soldier ("Young soldier, whither goest thou?"): 13603
The Youth and the Sage (Oh, Sage, the parentage of Wisdom tell!): 1153
The Youth By the Brook (Beside the brook the Boy reclin'd): 10814
The Youth of England to Garibaldi's Legion (O ye who by the gaping earth): 14018
The Yule Log (The evening was cloudless: but there hung): 3293
The Zitana ("Go not into the wild Basque land"): 4922
Their Childhood's Home (The house stands tall): 1942
Then (Heart, comfort thee. One day we two shall stand): 2447
Then and Now (Beneath the shade of this ancient yew): 766
Then and Now (Dost thou remember, love, how pale and wan): 13037
Then and Now (In fables of the Golden Age): 13195
Then and Now (In that sweet olden time of May): 4502
Then and Now (The sky was blue): 12877
Then and Now (Then the merle and thrush were singing round the homesteads in the hedges): 12776
Then last of all (Then last of all, caught from these shores, this hill): 13692
Theocritus.—Idyll I. Thyrsis and a Goatherd (Sweet are the whispers of yon pine, that makes): 14323
Theology in Extremis: Or, a Soliloquy That May Have Been Delivered in India, June, 1857. Moriturus Loquitur (Oft in the pleasant summer years): 12013
Theophany (When draw the Prosperous near me, I forget): 10005
Theory and Practice. (Answer to Above) ('Tis true that it costs not much): 13391
There are twa sides to every question (What makes ye sae merry, my bonny woman, and why are your een sa bricht?): 2133
There Is a Hill (There is a hill beside the silver Thames): 15941
There is a Tongue in Every Leaf (There is a tongue in every leaf!): 9919
There Were Times, My Lord Jeffrey, Between You and Me (There were times, my Lord Jeffrey, between you and me): 11234
There's a Hum Through the Land (There's a hum throughout the land, there's a voice in the air): 82
There's Light Behind the Cloud! (In the lone and weary nights, my child): 6051
There's Not a Joy That Life Can Give, &c (There's not a joy that wine can give like that it takes away): 9815
There's Nothing Like a Smoke. A Sailor's Song (There's nothing like a smoke): 13643
They are not Dead (They are not dead, the dear ones we held dearest): 4221
Things Hoped For (Her silver lamp half-filled with oil): 6613
Things New and Old (The Old, so Wisdom saith, is better than the New): 13032
Things Requisite (Have a tear for the wretched—a smile for the glad): 6844
Thinking of Michael (In the chamber of death underground): 3956
Third Part of Christabel (Listen! ye know that I am mad): 7764
Third. "Tempestuous seas produce my first" (Tempestuous seas produce my first): 13863
Thirty Bob a Week (I couldn't touch a stop and turn a screw): 774
Thirty-One. To a Lady Who Told Her Age (Well, if it's true, this "thirty-one"): 14429
This Is All (Just a saunter in the twilight): 13007
This is Life (Like to the falling of a star): 2978
This Morning's 'Times' in Chambers (H'm—Smith a boy,—Brown, ditto,—Jones, a girl): 10374
This World (This worls is all a symbol; Man alone): 14644
Thisbe (She lives in the smoky city): 9656
Thistle-Down (The thistle-seeds blow down the wind): 6689
Thomas Davis (I walked through Ballinderry in the spring-time): 8666
Thomas Harlowe (All amid the summer roses): 1160
Thomas Muir's Farewell To His Native Land (In tears, Caledonia, I bid thee farewell): 159
Thomson (The Seasons as they roll): 13867
Thomson's Birth-Place ("Is Ednam, then, so near to me? I must gaze"): 10951
Thor at the Bridge (In old Norse legend have I heard): 1732
Thorer. A Norse Saga (The paths upon the high Dunfeld are muffled with the snow): 13532
Thorns in the Pillow (Tiny thorns): 350
Thorr's Hunt for his Hammer (Wrath was Wing-Thorr): 543
Thory's Toft and Lound (Far in the Fen lies Thory's Toft and Lound): 3908
Thou and I (Thou art the light, and I the shade): 6344
Thou Art Gone to the Shores of the Seraph's Land (Thou art gone to the shores of the seraph's land): 6283
Thought (Though patrons shun my house and name): 3528
Thought (Though patrons shun my house and name): 5848
Thought and Deed (How swift and bright the Thought! but slow behind): 14645
Thought and Expression (They flit, they come, they go): 6017
Thought and Love (The more by Thought thou leav’st the crowd behind): 14662
Thoughts ("The sun set in a sea of brilliant hues"): 4192
Thoughts (Come, living Thoughts—envelope me around): 11600
Thoughts (I saw a glowworm on a grave): 15663
Thoughts (Why do you grow so silent): 2450
Thoughts by Moonlight, A Simile (When evening's gentle breath hush'd): 92
Thoughts of a Deaf and Dumb Boy on Observing His Sister Playing Upon the Piano-Forte (Sister, I would have thee tell): 5285
Thoughts of A Mother (Lo! a fir tree towers o’er Sarajevo): 5823
Thoughts of Heaven (High thoughts!): 5328
Thoughts of Youth and Manhood (In youth’s first dreamy prime): 14634
Thoughts on a Winter's Night (Where have ye been, ye mighty rushing winds?): 3435
Thoughts on Death (We know there is a better world): 4945
Three Badgers (There be three Badgers on a mossy stone): 12809
Three Burdens (The burden of Life.—Hours of pain): 3914
Three Cups of Cold Water (The princely David, with his outlaw-band): 1728
Three Evenings and One Afternoon, Etc. (Three evenings and one afternoon): 2653
Three Evenings in the House (Yes, it look'd dark and dreary): 1627
Three Flowers (Three bonny flowerets once had I): 2531
Three Houses (Three houses all alike, all piteous): 9657
Three Meetings (Oh the happy meeting from over the sea): 14216
Three O'Clock in the Morning (There is a time of morning): 12435
Three on the Prairie (Three on the prairie: Lilian Wynne): 4101
Three Phases (Far o'er the azure depths, in which the earth): 2717
Three Pictures of a Life (Playmate of dreams and flowers and all things bright): 12784
Three Roses (Just when the red June roses blow): 1493
Three Roses (Together on a slender spray they hung): 13139
Three Scenes for the Study (Caillette! by those lowered eyes I often thought): 1489
Three Score and Ten (Round, round my life she wove a spell): 899
Three Sonnets (Had you been wise, you never had been poor): 4357
Three Sonnets (I will not paint them. God them sees, and I): 6131
Three Sonnets (Oh doubly sweet, when life looks frowningly): 5886
Three Streets (I sought the new, unknown to meet): 4113
Three Thoughts (Come in, Sweet Thought, come in): 8673
Threnody (Alfred, Lord Tennyson, October 6, 1892) (Life, sublime and serene when time had power upon it and ruled its breath): 8593
Through a Church Window (Without the sweet sun shone; within): 4047
Through Life (We slight the gifts that every season bears): 6766
Through the Ivory Gate (I had a dream last night): 9322
Through the Night. A Nocturn (Beneath thy window, gleaming white): 4284
Through the Valley of the Shadow (A child lay dying; but still her brow was clear): 12938
Throwing Stones in the Sea (We sat on the shore at Shanklin): 3681
Thule (Beloved Thule, I am thine!): 13164
Thunnor's Slip. A Legend of Thanet (In Rome's Rutupium, fruited Thanatos): 13418
Thy Home is Not Here ("Thy home is not here!" Whence cometh that sound?): 5720
Thy Kingdom Come (Thy kingdom come. Great need I have, Thou knowest): 2144
Thy Voice (I saw thy face once more—and knew thee not): 4717
Thy Work Is Done (The sunlight sheds its glory): 14232
Thyrsis. A Monody, to commemorate the Author's Friend, Arthur Hugh Clough, who died at Florence, 1861 (How changed is here each spot man makes or fills!): 14204
Tibbie Inglis, or The Scholar's Wooing (Bonny Tibbie Inglis!): 15732
Tibbie Shiel's in Yarrow ("And is this Yarrow?" Wordsworth sang): 8528
Tickler's Song to a Brother Sportsman at a Distance (Though I rove through the wilds of majestic Braemar): 7897
Tidings. (From the German of Grün) (From jousting homeward rides the Earl): 494
Till an Crodle A’Dhonnachaidle (Turn the Kine, Duncan) (Turn the kine, Duncan): 8274
Till Death (Two hands held in one clasp): 906
Timasitheos (O for the gift to rise in full degree): 12134
Time (Ancient, young, immortal, dead!): 13942
Time (Demon! why hurry me on so fast?): 1759
Time (The heart may live a lifetime in an hour): 1191
Time (Time painted an old man—silly conceit!): 11817
Time (Time the Revealer! Lo! he passeth by): 12793
Time (Time was, Time is, and Time will be no more): 11659
Time and Beauty (One ray from thine orient beauty): 13520
Time and Change ('Tis not that she is grown less fair): 12235
Time and Eternity (Time is that desert-mist in which we see): 14646
Time and Love ("Oh! make the most," said Time, "of hours"): 15694
Time and Oblivion (Old Time sat in a glacier's frozen cave): 11660
Time and the Reveller (A Reveller mock'd Time, as he did pass): 11661
Time Defied (Thou wert not here, but still I did defy): 12012
Time Employed, Time Enjoyed. Addressed to a Young Lady from Whom the Author Had Received an Elegantly Wrought Watch-Pocket (Within this curious case): 13977
Time. Written at the Conclusion of a Year (God's sand-glass has been shaken—Lo! there falls): 6345
Time's Changes (Flow, streamlet, to the shining sea): 7184
Time's Changes (I saw her once—so freshly fair): 10569
Time's Cure (Mourn, O rejoicing heart!): 1386
Time's Healing (Time worketh wonders in his onward course): 4530
Time's Takings and Leavings (What does Age take away?): 15558
Times and Manners (O men of old, whose classic deeds): 13851
Timoleon. (See Plutarch's Lives) (The night before he sailed for Sicily): 14566
Tintagal (Mail-clad warder, in the far-time): 13760
Tintagel (Perched on this living granite, rest): 6849
Tintagel Castle (Visit the city—there the eye admires): 15535
Tintoret. (Scene, Venice: Time, The Plague Year) (Slow, underneath the Casa D'Oro's wall): 635
Tiny Rill (Over green fields and meadows a tiny rill ran): 14819
Tiny Tokens (The murmur of a waterfall): 2512
Tired (We are so tired, my heart and I): 4549
Tired. To— (The Holy Grail thou hast not vainly sought): 14440
Tit for Tat. From the Persian (I met a maid on yon hillside): 14234
Tithonus (Ay me! ay me! the woods decay and fall): 11932
Tivoli (So, Pilgrim-friend, at length I see thee stand): 5507
To — (Give me that which thou know'st—I'll receive and attend): 9997
To — (How tenderly my bosom heaves): 7211
To — (Music! the voice of angels—given): 7791
To — (Oh! Lady, now the time is past): 10190
To — (That e'er my visits will become): 2949
To — (The Dark hath promise of the Light): 7726
To — (The day from me pass'd): 3050
To — (They told me, with their feelings bitter): 3539
To — (Truths thou canst not, though thou woo me): 10822
To — (What is the aim with which the poet glows): 2808
To — (Why did my eyes to me reveal): 3600
To —. (In vain! in vain! thine arts and wiles): 5634
To "Atalanta." "Quite Full For Two Years" ("Quite full for two years," was the answer that came): 1955
To "Beauty" (The morn is up! wake, Beauty, wake!): 10699
To "Fairy-Fingers." Lines Written in an Album (Fairy-fingers, made to bless): 12468
To "Maimey" (M'aymez), a Damsel of Fifteen Who Wishes to Abbreviate Herself into "May" (Writ in old French, your childhood's name): 9752
To "The Unreturning Brave." Ashantee War, March, 1874 (Yours not the laurel from a grateful land): 14513
To *** (Yes! I remember well our meeting): 10993
To **** (The world is bright before thee): 5984
To a Baby Kinswoman (Love, whose light thrills heaven and earth): 8642
To a Beloved Sister on Her Birthday (Not to the stars will I devotion pay): 15454
To a Bird Singing in the Woods (O Thrush! upon the beechen bough): 6638
To a Blackbird (Bird on the bough): 7296
To a Blackbird (Sable-coated, golden-throated): 12559
To a Blackbird in May (Oh, first and foremost of the waking birds): 14993
To A Blighted Blossom (Ah, blossom blighted, luckless, alone): 3416
To A Blind Girl (I do not sigh as some may sigh): 10890
To a Brother Poet (Once more the treasured lyre I raise): 12867
To a Bunch of Lilac (Is it the April springing): 783
To a Buttercup (Hold thy tiny goblet up): 5145
To a Butterfly (Thou gorgeous insect! flow'r of air!): 15588
To a Butterfly in the City (Feeble flutterer, timid thing): 5825
To a Butterfly Near a Tomb (I stood where the lip of Song lay low): 11076
To a Caged Skylark, Regent's Circus, Piccadilly (The city's stony roar around!): 10518
To a Cherry Blossom (O cherry blossom! have you loved?): 12990
To a Child (And would my dear-heart now be told): 2220
To a Child (Dear Child! whom sleep can hardly tame): 14306
To a Child (Fairest of Earth's creatures!): 7861
To a Child (Gazing on thee fair innocent): 5160
To a Child (I gaze upon thine eyes of blue): 4953
To a Child (Kathleen of the glad blue eyes): 12799
To a Child (Thou knowest not how lovely childhood is): 4767
To a Child (Thy memory, as a spell): 10768
To a Child of Quality 5 Years Old (Lords, Knights, and Squires, the numerous band): 681
To A Child Who Asked Me For A Poem (You asked me for a poem, dear): 1945
To A Child. (From the Greek) (Protë, thou has not died, thou art gone to a better land): 1712
To a China Cup. Shelved. (Vivelai Nouveau) (Thy days of usefulness have fled): 15947
To a Cloud (Cloud, that rests on the hill, till the bright beams of day): 4908
To a Conqueror's Wife, On His Return (Divine lady, who hast been): 9551
To a Coquette (I would not blame thy changeful spirit): 13712
To A Cowslip (No tiny alien plant are thou): 5297
To a Critic who Quoted an Isolated Passage, and then Declared it Unintelligible (Most candid critic, what if I): 3047
To a Dear and Absent Sister (Yes! when thou art happy in thy husband's home): 15517
To a Deer in a Park (Graceful, winsome creature): 3627
To A Departed Child (Thou art not in yon lovely star): 3242
To a Departed Friend (They tell me thou art dead): 6411
To a Departed Poetess (Thy graceful numbers bear me oft in dreams): 5666
To a Devonshire Maiden Sojourning in London (O, bright Lent Lily with the golden hair): 12810
To a Dying Infant (Sleep, little baby! sleep!): 9333
To a Fair Young Lady (When love away had flash'd, and fled): 10221
To a Felled Tree (Fine giant! there you fallen lie): 6856
To a First-Born Child (My child!—How strange that name appears): 2939
To A Flower (Dawn, gentle flower): 3246
To a Friend Leaving England in September (Dear friend, you leave our chary northern clime): 12028
To a Friend Recently Lost. T. T. (When I remember, Friend, whom lost I call): 12137
To a Friend Returning Overland from India (Would I were with thee! where thou art): 15722
To a Girton Girl. (A Rondeau) (I loved you once, two years ago): 12694
To a Golden Heart (Pledge of departed bliss): 10915
To A Highland Girl (Sweet Highland girl, a very shower): 3503
To a Jilt (When first we corresponded, you): 13375
To a Lady (Again I welcome the familiar pen): 13001
To a Lady (Dear lady! all of loveliness and good): 14721
To a Lady Bird ("Lady Bird! Lady Bird! fly away home"): 10845
To a Lady in Reverie (Oh! let me gaze on that still brow, fair dame!): 4436
To a Lady Reading Romeo and Juliet. From the German (Of love and sorrow ’tis a peerless tale): 8114
To a Lady Singing (The music springs from thy calm breast): 3379
To a Lady Who Desired the Writer to Send Her Some Verses (You bid me rhyme! ah, how can I refuse): 3582
To a Lady who had longed to see him (She read my books until she felt indeed): 7904
To a Lady Who Said I Had No Conscience (Many there are, and clever people too): 4906
To A Lady, On Hearing Her Disparaged (Thou art not fair, men say: thy worth): 7592
To a Lady, on Her Saying She Did Not Believe Me (Believe me, or believe me not): 15665
To a Lady, Who Wished for a Specimen of Original Poetry (Condemn'd in distant wilds to stray): 15630
To a Lady, with a Leaf Gathered from the Mulberry-tree Planted by Milton in the gardens of Christ College, Cambridge (The Mulberry mourns in its changed hue the doom): 15092
To a Lady: On her Planting Ivy Round a Ruined Church (A lady from a distant land): 6066
To a Land-Bird off Cape Horn, April 2, 1836 (Pretty bird! the sight of thee): 7440
To a Lark. On Hearing One Sing Early in February (Up in the sky! sweet Lark! up! up!): 9734
To a Little Boy (My winsome one, my handsome one, my darling little boy): 11468
To a Little Child (Couched within thy little nest): 6954
To a Little Girl, Whom the Author Saw Playing With a Snake (Beware! beware, young thoughtless Fanny!): 13987
To a Little Huswife (O little Huswife clean and spruce): 3700
To a Long Vacation Party (Dear friends, whom kindly Summer bore): 6639
To a Lover of Autumn. (1830) (You blame me, sister, when I say): 11394
To a Modern Portia (To-day among a crowd I passed): 12707
To a Moralist (Are the sports of our youth so displeasing?): 10038
To a Nameless One (I have wander'd where the woodbine): 13990
To a Painter (All praise the likeness by thy skill portrayed): 14813
To a Pearl (I have not seen thee shine in crowded hall): 3051
To a Picture of the Madonna (Fair vision! thou'rt from sunny skies): 10249
To a Portrait, Taken in 1837 ("A by-gone mode!" some would-be critic cries): 5016
To a Rain-Drop (Hail! jewel, pendent on the grassy blade): 6906
To a Robin (Sweet little bird! along the path): 6809
To a Rose. The Thought from the Italian (Queen of Flora's emerald bowers): 11222
To a Scene in Caithness (Romantic wilderness of vales and mountains): 10877
To a Sign-Painter (O worthy artist, in my chair): 12020
To A Skylark (Sing, for the morn is near, is near!): 6603
To A Sleeping Child (Art thou a thing of mortal birth): 3362
To a Sleeping Infant (Sleep on, my child, sleep on): 141
To a Snow-Drop, Appearing Very Early in the Season ("Lone Flower, hemmed in with snows and white as they"): 7778
To a Snowdrop (Lovely little Snowdrop): 13237
To a Spinster. Love's Calendar (That courtship gay is lady day): 2960
To a Star (With what a melancholy lustre thou): 14091
To a Street Sycamore (Here in the narrow street you stand): 12640
To a Thrush (How I do envy thee, thou small brown bird): 4686
To a Thrush. A Woodland Reverie (Ah, brother singer, piping there): 4231
To a Travelling Monkey (In soldier's coat of British red): 15207
To A Very Young Friend, With A Present of His First Printed Visiting Card (Dear Edmund, take the gift I send): 3318
To a Waterfowl (Whither, midst falling due): 11135
To a Wellingtonia Gigantea Pine (Ten years ago, my baby fir): 7020
To A Wild Bird (Sweet is thy gurgling song): 5418
To A Wild Flower (In what delightful land): 3032
To a Winter Wind (Loud wind, strong wind, blowing from the mountains): 6106
To A Winter-Blooming Wild Flower (Lone dweller in this bleak and barren spot): 5860
To A Withered Tree in June (Desolate tree, why are thy branches bare?): 5338
To a Wood Dove, Which Fled, at the Approach of the Writer, from a Ruined Tower of the Abbey, in the Vicarage Garden, at Tavistock (Oh! fly not away, silly dove, from thy nest): 15544
To a Wood-Pigeon (Have I scared thee from thy bough): 10450
To a Wounded Ptarmigan (Haunter of the herbless peak): 11199
To a Young Friend Devoting Himself to Philosophy (Severe the proof the Grecian youth was doom'd to undergo): 9958
To a Young Friend. With a Copy of Ackermann's Forget Me Not (Forget me not!—forget me not!): 15816
To a Young Girl (Oh! gentle grace of early years): 7036
To a Young Italian Lady (Young beauty of the South! and must thou go?): 4898
To a Young Lady (Sweet stream, that winds through yonder glade): 14884
To A Young Lady (When first I met thee, Isabelle): 3514
To a Young Lady on the Approach of the Season (At ten o’clock your maid awakes you): 14555
To a Young Lady Playing at Chess (Take heed, my fair-one, how you play): 15751
To a Young Man of the Period (You need not ask to press my cheek): 13686
To a Young Singer (Not waiting till a slow-discerning world at last has found you): 5137
To A. A. P. (Long ago I heard thee singing): 15866
To A. H. T. (Thy child is gone from thee—not yet thy mate—): 5629
To A. Petöfi (The splendid sun awakening from the East): 13448
To Agatha (Lady! when summer's fondest smiles are shed): 15181
To Alfred, Lord Tennyson (Lord in this land and lord in many lands): 14928
To Amelia. (After Mr. Fielding) (I heard the ladies, with their candour strange): 14507
To an Absent Friend (If I and mine were all below the grass): 14193
To an Angling Friend (At last, old Friend! thy limber rod): 8880
To an Early Friend (The dream, the dream of life is fled!): 3388
To an Early Spring Day (O Day, thou found'st me sleeping; let me sleep!): 1131
To An Emigrant Lady, 1828 (Adieu! adieu! In secret now): 11175
To an English Girl (You smile, and half in jest you ask): 12860
To an Evening Cloud Raining in the Distance (Fair cloud that floatest over yonder hill): 14150
To An Infant (Thou camest in sunshine. May sunshine attend): 7640
To an Infant Daughter (I gaze upon thy cherub face): 11976
To an Infant, Sleeping on Its Mother's Breast During a Storm (While round a guard attendant angels kept): 15622
To An Italian Beggar-Boy (Thou miniature of woe!): 9300
To an Itinerant Musician. A Sonnet (Ah! minstrel, hush that soul-subduing strain!): 15678
To an Old Coat. (From Béranger) (Poor coat, well loved for many reasons): 12113
To an Old Playmate (Dost thou still remember me?—): 5764
To an Old Pleasure Boat, Converted into a Seat in Shirley Park (Old boat! I wish a lot were mine): 4448
To An Old Volume of Robinson Crusoe (My ancient favourite! while I bend): 5996
To an Unknown Lady (The accomplished Raphael, he, whom prevalent Grace): 8872
To Arcady (Give me the pleasure of a book): 8074
To Arms! To Arms! (The cry be, "War;" who talks of peace!): 5607
To B. R. Haydon (High is our calling, Friend!—Creative Art): 8699
To Baby Kathleen Mary (Little baby prattle): 2117
To Be a Child. A Villanelle (I sometimes fondly used to pray): 13312
To Beauty (Beauty! when intellectual charm is thine): 15591
To Betsey Jane. An Ode (Oh, Betsey Jane! Oh, Betsey Jane!): 13659
To Blackwood's Magazine, No. LIV (Drab-coated book, in quakerly disguise!): 9449
To Burns's Highland Mary (O loved by him whom Scotland loves): 9030
To Callirhoe, at Lausanne (I twine, far distant from my Tuscan grove): 9938
To Caroline (When thy bounding step I hear): 14883
To Cecilianus (Nobody, Cecilianus, e'er thought of your wife (she's so ugly!)): 11057
To Charles Sumner. In Memoriam (For years, dear friend, but rarely had we met): 10223
To Cheviot (Conspicuous Cheviot, thou dost proudly tower): 7026
To Christina Rossetti (Thou has filled me a golden cup): 2623
To Christopher North, Esq. From an Occasional Contributor, Living at Cape Clear, Who Was Applied to for an Article about the King (Chief of scribblers! Wondrous Editor!): 9875
To Clara (I would not we should meet again): 11039
To Clarissa (A butterfly of rose-lit June): 8015
To Come (What is to come when we have lived to-morrow?): 2689
To Contemplation. Illustrative of a Subject After Westall (Pensive Nymph! if such may be): 13943
To Coralie (Who may the favoured youngster be): 8637
To Corduba (My Corduba—with wild, dishevell'd hair): 8797
To Corinna, To go a-Maying (Get up, get up, for shame! the blushing morn): 3449
To Corsica (Rude Corsica, thou worse than desert land): 8795
To Cupid (What without thee is life?—who without thee would live): 4998
To Daffodil: In Springtime (O Princess with the Golden Hair): 15970
To Daffodils (Fairie Daffodills, we weepe to see): 3404
To Dicky Gossip. While he thinks of tittle-tattle, not to forget his wiggery (Do you see that stately caxon): 9029
To E. M. S. (The years will pass, and hearts will range): 8504
To Ebert. From the German of Klopstock (Ebert, a dark and melancholy thought): 8240
To Elizabeth in Sickness (Oh thou! whose love hath sanctified and blest): 3562
To Emma (Amidst the cloud-grey deeps afar): 9957
To Emma, Learning Latin, and Desponding (Droop not, dear Emma, dry those falling tears): 10513
To Ethel, (Who wishes she had lived—"In teacup-times of hood and hoop, Or while the patch was worn") ("In teacup times!" The style of dress): 9569
To Exiles (Are you not weary in your distant places): 7934
To Fidelia (Horace, Odes, iii. 23.) (Sweet Child of Nature, simple Fidelia!): 14823
To Fogarty O'Fogarty, Esq. of Blarney (Bard of the West! thy lay shall still be read): 9454
To Galla (Galla—midst other moving things): 9179
To Genista (’Tis your birthday; you ask for a rhyme): 14438
To Gloriana in the South. April (The Year is in its green bud): 3066
To Goldenhair. (From Horace) (Ah, Pyrrha—tell me, whose the happy lot): 11931
To HB (Genius of playful humour! free to flit): 10897
To Henrietta Susan Fielding (I bare thee to the Font—I spake thy vow): 5492
To Henry Lee (Old Trotty Veck informed us, in the "Chimes"): 13655
To Her Majesty Queen Victoria, on Her Coronation in Westminster Abbey, June 28, 1838 (The orb and sceptre in thy hands they placed): 15164
To Her Royal Highness the Princess Victoria (Fair wert thou when thy mother's eye): 11894
To Hermione (What shall I liken unto thee?): 14591
To Him (Return, return; my being yearns for thee): 6288
To Himself: In Intercession for His Mistress (Do thou relent): 8867
To his Book (I read the meaning of that wistful look): 9009
To His Love: Who Had Unjustly Rebuked Him (Gentle as Truth, and zealous even as Love): 4517
To His Mistress. (From the German of Heine) (What do the violets ail): 2595
To Ianthe (Again, sweet syren! breathe again): 7855
To Ianthe, in Absence (The Star of Evening glitters in the West): 10703
To Italy (Hail! all hail, thou fair Italia! thou that erst didst lead the van): 7584
To Italy (O Italy, my country! thou endowed): 12720
To James Russell Lowell (Friend of my childhood, boyhood, manhood, age): 8273
To Jenny Lind (Goddess of Song! Enchantress! who that ere): 5496
To John of Bologna's Mercury. (In the Bargello, at Florence.) (Hermes,—who lighter than the breeze dost rise): 8767
To Juana (O Heavens! I see thee again, my lady!): 7950
To L. M. O. (Ah! pure and lovely flower of maidenhood): 603
To Lady Holland on the Snuff-Box Bequeathed to Her by Buonaparte (Lady, reject the gift! ’tis tinged with gore!): 10103
To Laura Playing (When o'er the chords thy fingers steal): 10028
To Laura, Two Years of Age (Bright be the skies that cover thee): 3351
To Laura. (Rapture) (Laura—above this world methinks I fly): 10027
To Laura. The Mystery of Reminiscence (Who, and what gave to me the wish to woo thee): 10026
To Leisure (Leisure! there are to whom thy wealth): 15049
To Lesbia's Sparrow (Lesbia's darling! Pleased she): 5339
To Lina O—. With a Birthday Locket (Your Sun is in brightest apparel): 10271
To Lina Oswald (Aged Five Years) (I tumble out of bed betimes): 2010
To Literary Fame (Thou idle, airy shadow, Fame! how few): 10639
To Little Mary (I'm bidden, little Mary!): 10131
To Lord Tennyson. On his Eightieth Birthday, August 6th, 1889 (The fourscore years that blanch the heads of men): 14872
To Louie (They say, if I'd a poet be): 12749
To Louie. A Sonnet (The fainting Arab, doomed in desert lands): 12774
To Love (A few quick years, methought, would cause youth's fancies): 12504
To Lucy (The silver tones of woman's tongue): 10588
To Lynette, Born on Innocents' Day (It has taken twenty year): 1959
To M. W. (There's something in thy lightest mirth): 10046
To Marg. Baldhoven, Etc. Lately Married (Would'st love thy husband and thyself be loved?): 14856
To Margaret (Let Fortune frown; let Sorrow reign): 8731
To Marguerite (Should a poet stop to trifle): 8047
To Mdlle. Luigina de Sodre (Not Composed, But Imagined, in the Bath Rooms) (A generation's faded skirts have swept): 5624
To Me Your Heart Is Mute (To me your heart is mute; all pleading words): 12434
To Meet Again (To meet again! Oh, that a cruel fate): 10829
To Melancholy (Belated Melancholy! deep, oh deep): 3862
To Mildred (You shun me like a fawn, my dearest Milly): 10235
To Miss Cockburn (There's joy upon thy guileless brow): 4449
To Miss Elizabeth Vicars in her Tenth Year (You ask, my dear, a verse or two): 2444
To Miss Kelly (You are not, Kelly, of the common strain): 8247
To Mont Blanc (The desert is around thee): 11717
To Mr James Home, Writer to the Signet (These two volumes come to prove): 8039
To Mr Lucas. Written while sitting to him for my Portrait. December, 1825 (Oh! young and richly gifted! Born to claim): 10396
To Mr. Graham, of Fintry, on Being Appointed to My Excise Division (I call no goddess to inspire my strains): 14892
To Mrs Hemans (Thou hast ennobled Woman, and thy name): 10979
To Mrs Hemans, On her intended Publication, entitled, "Records of Woman" ("Records of Woman!"—shall they not be fair): 10828
To Music (Nymph, we woo thee from the steeps): 15075
To Music, To Becalm His Fever (Charm me to sleep, and melt me so): 3263
To My Babe (There is no sound upon the night): 10070
To My Bird (Adelaide) (Pretty bird! O pretty bird!): 2809
To My Birdie ('Tis many a long year now, Birdie!): 11179
To My Birdie (Here's onlie you an' me, Birdie—here's onlie you an' me!): 10421
To My Bullfinch (Dear and happy little bullfinch): 2160
To My Canary (Half Nature and Half Art art thou): 7301
To My Canary (O Lady Betty, pert and bold): 12047
To My Canary in His Cage (Sing away, ay, sing away): 6143
To My Child (I love to gaze upon thy cheek): 10976
To My Child (Little maiden, sweet and good): 3889
To My Child That Liveth Still (My Baby, they say that thou art gone): 3536
To My Country: Appealing Against a Prolonged Usurpation of a Faction (Awake awake, my country! thou that art): 3231
To My Daughter (Sweet Rose, thy bloom, when I am gone): 9193
To My Daughter Lily (Six changeful years are gone, Lily): 5938
To My Daughter. Composed Whilst Traversing on Foot the Pass of the Simplon (The Rhone's wild floods around me rave): 15091
To My Dear Mary Anne (Adieu to sweet Mary for ever!): 14447
To My Dog (Cossack, my mute companion, as thou sleep'st): 8038
To My Dream-Child (Little one! I lie i' the dark): 6076
To My Flute ('Tis nae to harp, to lyre, not flute): 5302
To My Friend (You think me "good and true," and it is well): 7647
To my Friend Will. Davenant, Upon his Poem of Madagascar (What mighty princes poets are! Those things): 14935
To My Friends (Mourn not, my friends, that we are growing old): 14586
To My Godchild, Alice (Alice, Alice, little Alice): 6119
To my Grandchildren (My blessing on you, little babes): 1733
To My Infant Son (Why, why, my little son, dost thou): 3250
To My Lady (The light of stainless dawn is in your eyes): 12570
To My Lady's Eyes. Madrigal. (From Gutierre de Cetina) (O Eyes, serene and clear): 9019
To My Mistress (All that's lovely speaks of thee!): 10697
To My Mother (O thou whose care sustained my infant years): 3407
To My Mother. Composed during Illness (Mother mine, thy soft voice ringeth): 5772
To My Native Valley (Vale of my childhood! haunt of raptures o'er!): 15242
To My Old Dog's Portrait. (While expecting my new dog) (Almost all of your little hour was mine, almost every grain of its sand): 2345
To My Robin Redbreast (Now keenly blows the northern blast): 6891
To My Shadow (Constant companion of my way): 3415
To my Sister (From the city in a plain): 8021
To My Sister on Her Twenty-Third Birthday (Thine eye is radiant still; thy silken hair): 15355
To My Sweetheart (That one and one make really two): 7057
To My Two-Wheeled Steed (You are not a "Bissikle," rhyming with "physical"): 7255
To My Valentine (The summer wind may sing a song): 13333
To My Wife (Take, dear, my little sheaf of songs): 15926
To My Wife (Thy cheek is pale with many cares): 5800
To My Wife, Ill (Ah me! how sweet a thing it were): 6605
To My Wife. A Valentine (Beautiful day, oh, beautiful day!): 4548
To Myself (Now stand thou still for ever): 9740
To Nature (Thou art a friend that ever bides with me): 12493
To Neæra (My wreck of mind, and all my woes): 4406
To Nelly (The rose, alas! shall bloom to fall): 12879
To Nicæa, the Birthplace of Garibaldi (Nicæa! thou wast rear'd of those): 2818
To Octavia (Full many a gloomy month hath past): 9934
To Odoherty, In Answer to “Farewell,” &c (Go, get thee gone, thou dastardly loon): 10184
To One Far Off (Do you think of me in the twilight grey): 2208
To One I Love (I love—what do I not love? Earth and air): 12686
To One Who Rejoices (Dear heart, our souls in holiday with thee): 1846
To One Who Spoke Ill of Him (What is your quarrel with me, in love's name): 7976
To One Whose Love Lies Dying (Fear Time, but fear not Death): 1940
To Our Etty (Our life of sad colours): 7278
To Pallas Athene (No sculpture now is left, which can express): 8763
To Patty. (For an Album) (What can I write within a book): 974
To Pity (Oh, Pity! all my sighs are thine!): 5250
To Poesy (This is a solitude where I may hold): 15582
To Portia at Belmont (Quick from fog and frost away): 9253
To Primroses, Filled with Morning Dew (Why do ye weep, sweet babes? can tears): 3447
To Prince Charlie (Thou gallant young prince with thy foot on the heather): 14979
To Priscilla L.— D.— Written in May (My Friend, Priscilla, as in days of old): 8091
To Psyche (Through what soft veil of purple mist): 4179
To Pyrrha (Bedewed with odorous balms, what pretty boy): 8636
To Pyrrha (What scented stripling, Pyrrha, woos thee now?): 8151
To Richard Harrison, Green Bank (Dear little one! and can thy mother find): 8397
To Roast a Swan? (Take three pounds of beef, beat fine in a mortar): 8597
To Rollo
Untimely Taken (Puppy, yours a pleasant grave): 1020
To Romance (Spirit, that throw'st thy fairy fingers o'er): 15333
To Salome at St. James's (Flower of the ballet's nightly mirth): 784
To Scotland (Scotland! the land of all I love): 3005
To Selina (I've worshipp'd woman—saints, forgive my folly!): 2876
To Silvia (Silvia, rememb'rest thou the hour): 9742
To Silvio Pellico. (On reading the story of his imprisonment.) (Songs of deliverance compassed thee about): 8258
To Sleep (Spirit of many mysteries! thou who makest): 15268
To Solitude (O solitude! in thy lone bowers): 15684
To Spring (Once more dost thou return, O joyous Spring!): 15370
To Spring (Season of youth and song and sunny mirth): 12008
To Spring (Sweet Spring! with shy, soft eyes of heavenly blue!): 13286
To Spring. A Sick Girl's Invocation (Come forth, most beauteous Maid): 13023
To St. Andrew. Ode III. of Book IV (That man upon whose natal hour): 10285
To Swallows (Thrice welcome, swallows swift upon the wing): 12750
To Swallows on the Eve of Departure (Joyous Birds! Preparing): 10605
To T. G. with a Copy of the Imitation of Christ (What the message Angels bring?): 8822
To Taglioni (As a bright flower, that, gracefully depending): 14567
To the Absent One (Far, far away from me, down by the sea): 7619
To the Absent Swallow (Where dost thou linger all this pleasant time): 5336
To the Alps (Eternal Alps, in your sublime abode): 501
To the Altar of St. George's Church, Hanover-Square (Hail to thee, altar! thou hast long): 15541
To the Apollo Belvedere (Apollo, "Lord of the unerring bow,"): 8761
To the Astronomer (Prithee babble not so loud): 10687
To the Blackbird (Bird with the saffron bill): 12759
To the Blackbird (What strains mellifluous, O sweet-voiced thief): 12692
To the Brother of Sleep (Thee folly waits with fear: but Wisdom smiling meets thee): 6438
To the Bust of My Son Charles (Fair image of our sainted boy): 15183
To the Bust of the Pompeian Cœlia (Alas, my Cœlia, that your grace): 824
To The Butterfly (Fly, gaudy moth, with fickle flight): 3100
To the Century Guild (The Faery Queene of Spenser's mystic page): 8775
To the Child of Corinna! (Oh, boy! may the wit of thy mother awaking): 8309
To the Church of England (Church of our God! whose heaven-lit beam): 11984
To the Clouds. A Sonnet Written by Moonlight (Whither scud ye so fast, ye ships of Heaven): 15614
To the Coming Flowers (Awake, dear sleepers, from your wintry tombs): 6829
To the Corn Lords (O, deaf to hear! and dim of sight to see): 9819
To the Countess of Chesterfield, and her Sister, the Hon. Mrs. Col. Anson, on being reminded of a promise of a marriage present (I've not forgotten the sisters fair): 4444
To the Cuckoo (Hail to thee, Cuckoo! from whatever land): 15340
To The Cuckoo (Hail, beauteous stranger of the wood!): 3506
To the Cuckoo (O blithe new-comer! I have heard): 2843
To the Departed (Thy rest is with the fallen great): 15724
To the Editor of the John Bull Magazine, On an Article in His First Number (Who you are, I don't know, Mister T'other John Bull): 10135
To the Empress Frederic. On her arriving in England, 19th November 1888 (When England sent thee forth, a joyous bride): 8599
To the Empress Frederick (Ah! Sorrowing Lady! In thy native land): 8509
To the Empress of India (Say that in thee again the Prophet doth arise): 14590
To the Evening or Tree Primrose (While proudly flaunt, to lure the gaze): 15740
To the Evening Star (Fair in the west thy lovely light appears): 9502
To the Evening Star (Mine own loved star!—thou art come again): 15604
To The Evening Star (Soft star of Eve! whose trembling light): 3248
To the Evening Star. [From Bion, Idyl XVI] (Glad Hesper, golden glimmer, come!): 13469
To the Faire "White Rose" ("Alas! my ladye bright. Thy dawn is clouded"): 13535
To the First Lily of the Season (First of the year, pale fragile flower): 5158
To the Five Oaks at Dullwitz (Silence now the close of day presages): 2943
To the Flower "Forget Me Not" (Blossoms more rich and rare than Thou): 15095
To the Ideal (Then wilt thou, with thy fancies holy): 10017
To The Ideal (Thou shalt live, when lost and dying): 2296
To the King (Lowly to thee, his liege, with love and reverence bending): 9807
To the Lace-Winged Fly (Bright fly! thou recallest the sweet days of my childhood): 5914
To the Ladies (When bills are long, and Credit low): 7286
To the Lady Harriet Chichester, Daughter of the Earl and Countess of Belfast (Sweet is the blush of the morning's light): 4892
To the Lapwing (Wild bird, whose airy wheel and querulous cry): 12779
To the Lark (O lark, thou dost my weary heart so move): 3981
To the Last Star of Morning (Meek lamp of heaven! thy splendors fade away): 15623
To The Lily of The Valley (Fair flow'r, that lapt in lowly glade): 3129
To the Lord of the Manor of Merdon (That by custom of this clime): 1693
To the Magdalen (Yes, weep, O woman frail and fair): 10154
To the Mavis, or Missletoe Thrush (Hail, shrill musician! harbinger of spring!): 15412
To the Memory of J. P. W—Skaja (She laid there, dying of typhus): 14754
To the Memory of John Tait, Late Editor of the Liberator. Written at his Grave in the Necropolis, Glasgow (Mourn o'er this mound—this consecrated grave): 61
To the Memory of Lord Charles Murray. Who died in the Cause, and lamented by the People of Greece (Thou shouldst have slept beneath the stately pines): 10856
To the Memory of the Deeply-Lamented Ensign George Holford Walker, Who was Shot through the Heart in an Affair with the Malays, on the 3d of May 1832, and Died Instantaneously, in his 19th Year (Oh, fare-thee-well! our beautiful and brave!): 11192
To the Men of Kent (Vanguard of liberty, ye men of Kent!): 14809
To the Mocking Bird (Thou glorious mocker of the world! I hear): 11446
To The Moon (All pale and lovely Wanderer!): 3767
To the Moon (Moon! I have loved the hour of thy aspiring): 15627
To the Moon (O were my heart as bright as thou art now): 15725
To the Moon (Pure silvery orb, that, through the deep blue sky): 10773
To The Moon (To thee, an orison of love): 3532
To the Moon After a Storm (Sweet Moon! thy radiance clear and cold): 3796
To the Moss-Rose (Oh, mossy rose! whom, in thy fragrant bower): 15555
To the Mountain Winds (Mountain winds! oh! whither do ye call me?): 10244
To the Muse of Milton (Far from this visible diurnal sphere): 10776
To the Music of One Who Had Ceased to Deserve the Love of a Poet (Oh, God! that ever pangs so sharp): 4801
To the Mystic (That is the real mystery which around): 10002
To the New Year. Commenced in Savoy, Between Frangy and Geneva, on the 1st of January, 1826 (Beautiful art thou in thy coming forth): 15538
To the Night Wind (Art thou a lover, wandering the green lanes): 15174
To the Nightingale (Joy to thee, Nightingale!—Now the sweet bud): 15339
To The Nightingale (What time thy heavenly voice preludes): 5235
To the Nightingale On her Leaving E—C—1784—By Mrs. Dr. Hunter—London (Why from these shades, sweet bird of eve): 14888
To The Ocean (O Thou vast Ocean! ever sounding Sea!): 3474
To the Olive (Olives! ye sacred trees, ye that intent): 8350
To the Passion-Flower (If Superstition's baneful art): 13927
To the Picture of a Dead Girl, on First Seeing it (The same—and oh, how beautiful!—the same): 10409
To the Poet Thomas Gray. (Died 30th July 1771) (Serene and lovely Voice, too seldom heard!): 12577
To the Poets—A Sonnet (Sweet souls, how should we live without your dower): 2553
To the Princess Victoria, on Seeing Her in York Cathedral, During the Performance of the Messiah (Sweet Princess! as I gaze upon thee now): 11584
To the Proselyte-Maker (A little Earth from out the Earth, and I): 10021
To the Publisher (Were I a king, my Blackwood, I would raise): 8142
To the Queen: A Christmas Greeting (The parting year was by such triumph crowned): 7971
To the Queen: A New Year Greeting (What shall we wish thee for the coming year?): 8048
To the Queen. Written on the Day of Her Majesty’s Departure from Belvoir Castle (Not in the scope and range of Thought is found): 15834
To the Rainbow (Triumphal arch, that fill'st the sky): 10282
To the Rev. Dr Wordsworth (The minstrels played their Christmas tune): 3531
To the Rhine (Majestic stream! whose hundred fountains): 10830
To the Rhine (When last I saw thy gushing flood): 3783
To the River Derwent (Among the mountains were we nurs'd, lov'd Stream!): 7779
To the River Tweed (Roll on, bright Tweed, roll on): 11567
To the Robin (Sing, Robin, sing; your song is always sweet): 12543
To the Robin (Sweet singer of the sweet sad days): 13377
To the Rose. From the German (Rose, how art thou charming and mild): 3538
To the Rose. From the Spanish of Don Francisco de Rioja (Warm rival of the flame that dies): 15908
To the Round-Leaved Sundew (By the lone fountain's secret bed): 10145
To the Same Lady, in Her Eighty-First Year, April, 1825 (At twelve months old, dear cousin, you): 3798
To the Sand Grouse (Why come ye from the tawny waste): 5548
To the Sea (Thou glorious sea! more pleasing far): 15548
To the Sea (Why art thou grieving evermore, O Sea?): 13307
To the Setting Sun (And must thou leave thy azure course on high): 9501
To the Singer (Sister, the soul that wakes in thee): 13045
To the Sky-lark (Bird of the free and fearless wing!): 15070
To the Skylark (Ethereal minstrel! pilgrim of the sky!): 14882
To The Skylark (Now weel befa' the cloud that bears): 5481
To the Slanderers of Russia (Why rave ye, babblers, so—ye lords of popular wonder?): 11026
To the Small Celandine (Pansies, lilies, kingcups, daisies): 3149
To the Snowdrop (Full oft the poet has essayed to sing): 5980
To the South Wind (Balmy breeze from the blossomy south): 4400
To The South Wind (O southern wind!): 3328
To the Spring (Once more, beloved season of delight!): 15695
To the Spring (Welcome, gentle Stripling): 10044
To the Stars (O, Stars! bright Stars, mysterious lights): 15465
To the Stethoscope (Stethoscope! Thou simple tube): 10755
To the Sun-Dial; A Midnight Reverie (My ear is pain'd, my heart is sick): 15066
To the Swallow (Swallow, cruel swallow! wherefore dost thou come): 510
To the Swallow, Preparing to Emigrate. A Sonnet (And canst thou leave my hospitable dome): 15640
To the Sweet-Scented Cyclamen (I love thee well, my dainty flower!): 10836
To the Swiss (Ho! Swiss arise): 8116
To the Tempest (Ye Winds! mysterious potentates of air): 15261
To The Thrush (Rapt Orpheus of the green and glimmering ways): 2370
To The Unsatisfied (Why thus longing, why for ever sighing): 5841
To the Veiled Magician (North! many a time upon thy glory musing): 9697
To the Venus de'Medici (Venus, thou cam'st to men of other days): 8760
To the Wild Bee (One of my boyhood's dearest loves wert thou): 5220
To the Wind (O thou invisible agent, that dost sweep): 14469
To the Wind (With fearful voice, he rushes down our street): 6517
To the Winter Violet (One note of music will bring home): 4910
To The Worldling (In hours of mirth and heartless glee): 3240
To the Year 1832 (Thou art gone to the past, wicked Year): 11249
To the Yeomanry Cavalry of Manchester (Yeoman! your grateful country's pride): 9720
To Theocritus, in Winter (Ah, leave the smoke, the wealth, the roar): 14684
To Thomas Campbell, Esq. An Expostulatory Epistle occasioned by the following passage in his Specimens of English Poetry (Sir, in your last work you the logic display): 7843
To Those Who Fail (Courage, brave heart; nor in thy purpose falter): 13166
To Time (Off! abhorred Iconoclast!): 12584
To Time (Time! I rejoice, amid the ruin wide): 14120
To Time.—A Remonstrance (Time! once to me a laggard—now I see): 10640
To Timid Workers (The smallest things may work for good): 7631
To Victor Hugo (Victor in Poesy, Victor in Romance): 7851
To Violets (Welcome, maids of honour): 2366
To Virgil (Roman Virgil, thou that singest): 8670
To Virgil (Thou sleepest, Virgil, where the shores and seas): 13903
To Virgil. Written at the Request of the Mantuans for the Nineteenth Centenary of Virgil's Death (Roman Virgil, thou that singest): 8067
To Winter (Winter, Winter, did I murmur): 13957
To Woman. From the Above (Power is your own–and still it is your own): 4781
To Wordsworth (The voice of Nature in her changeful moods): 6157
To-Day (Let dotards grieve for childhood's days): 6052
To-day (To-day, to-day, only show valiant face): 9141
To-Day and To-Morrow (The future joy he only will not miss): 14702
To-Day and To-Morrow (When thou art by): 2679
To-Day and Yesterday (Life is not lived by days nor yet by years): 13163
To-Morrow ("We will gather flowers to-morrow"): 12891
To-morrow ("You'll come to-morrow, then?" the light words lightly said): 4833
To-morrow ("You'll come tomorrow then;" light words lightly said): 4662
To-morrow (In the downhill of life, when I find I'm declining): 6624
To-morrow (Say, where shalt thou be found on earth?): 14462
To-morrow (We can't recall the vanished past): 7352
To-Night (I set myself as a task to rhyme): 4612
To— (Meekness, sincerity, and candour, seem): 10535
To—, on Returning a Silk Kerchief of Hers (Winged with my kisses go, go thou to her): 8813
Tobogganing (I watched a gay and fascinating throng): 12544
Together (Babes that on a morn of May): 4322
Together (The winter wind is wailing, sad and low): 4666
Token Flowers (My heart had never known Love's magic power): 12120
Tokens of Natural Affection (—As from the lowly meadow ground): 9698
Told in the Firelight (Old friend, at last, at last after years of restless, strong desire): 12203
Told. Rondel (When Belle I met one starry night): 13768
Toleration (Look not for wings in worms, or eyes in moles): 16051
Toleration (The Pater noster is a goodly prayer): 9142
Tolle Lege! (Prostrate in his deep dejection, underneath a fig-tree’s shade): 1700
Tom and I (The meadow with its clover sweet): 13305
Tom and Kitty (Where two white cots o'erarched with shade): 2033
Tomkin's Letter to Jenkins. On the Manchester Conference and the Corn Laws (Dear Jenkins,—'Tis long since I wrote you a letter): 11119
Tony's Address to Mary (Oh, Mary, heave a sigh for me): 5223
Too Late (“Too late! too late!” ’tis the faint low cry): 5180
Too Late (And we have met, O love, at last!): 9286
Too Late (Could ye come back to me, Douglas, Douglas): 6319
Too Late (Hush! speak low—tread softly): 2814
Too Late! ("O! mother, the wind blows chill o'er the moor"): 1416
Too Late! (And so she has passed away from this world of sighs and tears): 7653
Too Late! (Too Late! the curse of life! Could we but read): 11172
Too Late. An Everyday Romance (Which shall it be, Love, which shall it be): 8607
Too Soon (She came, how sweet and fair she came): 7288
Too Timid (You look into my face as if): 12157
Tooth of the Olden Time (Tooth of the olden time! I'd wish to learn): 3133
Topsy-Turvy (Oh! the valiant knight in armour): 1843
Torquil and Oona (The bright brief summer of the western isles): 14025
Totty's Consolations. An Art Story (Our little Tots, just six years old): 2703
Touch not that Sword (Touch not that sword, if thy heart's not o'erflowing): 55
Toujour La Même (Toujour la même was on the seal): 6350
Towards the North Pole (A wondrous glamour veils the frozen sea): 13304
Town Cats In The Country ("Dear old Mother Tabbykins"): 2060
Town Eclogue (The Schoolmaster's abroad, abroad—oh! when will he come home): 11624
Towton Roses. Local Legend (Where Lancaster's last stake was set): 4616
Trade Songs. Street Sweeper (At a crossing of the Strand): 2684
Trade Songs. The Carpenter (You know our friend the Carpenter): 2695
Trade Songs. The Cobbler (Once there was a cobbler bold): 2692
Trade Songs. The Fiddler (My fiddle and I we are ancient friends): 2690
Trade Songs. The Law Writer (Thro' the morn, and thro' the noon): 2686
Trade Songs. The Sailor's Wife (Hush, my boy! hush, my blessing!): 2700
Trade Songs. The Showman (Come, look into my puppet-show; a penny is the money): 2697
Trade Songs. The Workhouse Nurse (Take your child upon your knee!): 2682
Tradition (A love-lorn Maid, at some far-distant time): 8460
Traditrice (Once, and only once, did light illumine): 14387
Trafalgar Day (Sea, that art ours as we are thine, whose name): 8655
Trafalgar Oct. 21, 1805 (Heard ye the thunder of the battle): 14682
Tragedy (O fly with me and be my wife): 164
Tragedy. A Sketch (Ah me! the loneliness): 13323
Tranquility. A Study (He stood—a sober City clerk): 13482
Transformation (Folded hands on a shrouded breast): 4353
Transition-Time (Leaf-laden slide the yellow streams): 2907
Translation (Strong are the measures we employ): 3852
Translation (To rende a cherishede loue aparte): 3853
Translation of a Greek Fragment of Simonides (Around the helpless wandering bark): 8129
Translation of an Arabic Poem (We have mingled our blood with streaming tears): 7831
Translation of Goethe's "Haiden-Roslein" (Grew a baby rosebud rare): 7044
Translation of the Bible (But, to outweigh all harm, the sacred Book): 9853
Translation of the German Students' Song. "Gaudeamus Igitur." Sung at the Students' Funerals (Let us be merry, boys, while our youth protects us): 5968
Translations of Homer. Hexameters and Pentameters (These lame hexameters the strong-wing'd music of Homer!): 12223
Transplanted (When last I saw her, all cold and white): 2835
Traveller's Joy (Twining, wreathing, softly drooping): 12454
Treasure (The flowers I planted in the flush of spring): 4716
Treasure (Two youthful schoolmates, blithe and free): 3294
Treasure-Trove (I stood beneath a dappled sky): 554
Treasure-Trove (Something I've found on my way): 6960
Treasures (Let me count my treasures): 1340
Tree-Worship (Vast and mysterious brother, ere was yet of me): 768
Trees of Old London (Old City Trees, dear City Trees!): 13191
Tremynfa, Aber (A sloping old-world garden, whose high wall): 12446
Trepidation of the Druids (Screams round the Arch-druid's brow the Seamew—white): 9823
Tribute (Shall woman's worth be held disgraced): 7408
Trifles (An August day): 12829
Trifles (Nothing so small that God has made): 6781
Trifles (The griefs that fall to every share): 7279
Trifles (The massive gates of Circumstance): 6669
Trinklied (The song of Wine is light and fine): 9315
Triolet (Here's a little new year pitched out of the sky): 1963
Triolets (Gladly we greet thee): 2394
Triolets (Golden daffodils I bring): 4839
Triolets (He. Eyes that are watching the fire): 649
Triolets (Seed and blossom and flower): 1788
Triolets (Thus was I dreaming): 2400
Triolets (We used to watch the white moon's car): 13027
Trips of the Lily of Bonchurch (The moon looks wild, but heed it not, my boat is in the bay): 11438
Triumphant Music (Wherefore and whither bear'st thou up my spirit): 10062
Trodden Out (The fount is not frozen nor dry): 6539
Trotty (Who would be a mother?): 1876
Troubadour Song (The warrior cross'd the ocean's foam): 14875
Trouble. A Sonnet (“For man is born to trouble as the sparks”): 13769
True (True to the promise of thy far-off youth): 4500
True Chivalry (Listen, where o’er startled Europe): 7349
True Chivalry (No more in likely tournament): 6077
True Culture. Love and Knowledge (The bazaar on splendid trash): 8976
True Gifts (He gives no gift who gives to me): 13131
True Loneliness (’Tis lonely in the Desert): 6611
True Love (Exquisite Miss Millionaire!): 10970
True Love (I would that every angry shaft): 6941
True Loveliness (Who hath not felt the harmony of grace): 15249
True Magic. To W. W. S. (There dwelt of late by Tiber's flow): 9075
True or False? (So, you think you love me, do you?): 421
True to One (There is a dream of olden time): 6801
Truisms (The meanest face you look upon, the clay of coarsest mould): 6782
Trust (By that strange fellow on your brow): 6802
Trust (I have no rule, O Saviour, but Thy will): 2153
Trust in God and Do the Right (Courage, brother! do not stumble): 2139
Truth (O how much more doth beauty beauteous seem): 2829
Truth and Beauty (Beauty and Truth, in Heaven's congenial clime): 11065
Truth and Beauty (I had a friend who lived for Truth): 5034
Truth and Error ('Tis bad but haps once and again): 8982
Truth, Youth, and Age. An Apologue (What is Immortality?): 15570
Trying the Yacht. A Poem in Sonnets (Now, while the breath of summer up the street): 8946
Tuberoses (The master's story holds the stage): 4599
Turberville, and the Heiress of Coity ("Carve Glamorgan," cried FitzHamon): 571
Turn Mother's Face to the Wall (Turn Mother's face to the wall, Alice): 13776
Turned Off! (There, ’ang up the bill-’ook, missus, and gave us my pipe and a light): 12323
Turning the Flowers (Out in the country, where two roads met): 13279
Twelve Months. (A Strophe and Antistrophe) (In the midnight of the snow-storm): 572
Twenty Years (There, beyond the grassy lowlands): 7112
Twenty-four Quatrains from Omar (Khayyám that used to stitch the tents of Thought): 1130
Twenty-Second Sunday After Trinity (Oh, God! my sins are manifold, against my life they cry): 10875
Twice Wounded (Twice has your name been shouted through the dark): 12486
Twilight (A clear pale sky—serene and autumn-cold): 12022
Twilight (A long, low room, with oaken-panelled walls): 4321
Twilight (At morn or eve, in the darkling gray): 6515
Twilight (Dewfall—and I sat and read): 858
Twilight (Drift little snowflakes ’mid the shells): 3817
Twilight (In mantle of crimson, the Father of day): 10157
Twilight (Now twilight draws her shadowy curtain round): 3788
Twilight (Now, as the amber west mists into gray): 7273
Twilight (Spirit of Twilight, through your folded wings): 785
Twilight (The last bright wave of day hath ebbed): 7318
Twilight (The night-flowers open; days are short): 7186
Twilight (This calm, sweet eve, suggestive of such rest): 6806
Twilight (Through the black arch of interlacing trees): 1070
Twilight (Through the black arch of interlacing trees): 13097
Twilight (Twilight, the gray-eyed child of Day and Night): 13252
Twilight Dozing (You sang the olden songs, and, sadly dreaming): 3073
Twilight Dreams ("Sing to me, dear!" The voice came through the gloom): 12915
Twilight Dreams (Mistress Edith, in the twilight): 458
Twilight Dreams (They come in the quiet twilight hour): 6997
Twilight in My Garden (O purple twilight! from thy dim recesses): 12723
Twilight in the North (O the long northern twilight between the day and the night): 14290
Twilight Musings (How beauteous is this summer eve!): 9231
Twilight on Loch Katrine (Blue is the bosom of the sunless lake): 8787
Twilight Voices (What are the whispering voices): 2586
Twilight: Oban Bay (Softly fall the mystic moments): 5081
Twilight. To L. L. D. (Dream-hallowed hour! when drifting dusk and shade): 13039
Twilight's Hour (The sunlight on a waveless sea): 7307
Twin Souls (Some kindly look, some undefined expression): 4630
Twixt May and June (Here let us rest and sing): 4008
Two (In the bitter gloom of a winter's morn): 4624
Two (Two buds plucked from the tree): 7140
Two Autumn Pictures (The grass is dank with twilight dew): 6667
Two Babes. A Midwinter Bucolic (I have gathered all my sheaves): 8847
Two Brothers (I had a vision): 14753
Two Castles (I know a castle, great and high): 3832
Two Christians (Two Christians travelled down a road): 2558
Two Dark Days (If the dread day that calls thee hence): 1482
Two Days (Somewhere in that strange land we call the Past): 12889
Two Dreams (I saw, in dream, an aged reverend Man): 2027
Two Friends (Frank, I had left you, lost you): 1893
Two Graves (Two graves within one year I saw): 1557
Two Graves. (January 20, 1892) (One Brotherhood, we stand to-day): 2180
Two Greetings (Out of the deep, my child, out of the deep): 7892
Two Hearts. (Suggested by the picture "In Memoriam") (In the sunlight, darting, dancing): 6956
Two Homes. To a Young English Lady in a Military Hospital at Carlsruhe. Sept. 1870 (What do the dark eyes of the dying find): 14428
Two Little Birds. A Song for the Young (Two little birds on an evergreen tree): 5874
Two Little Books (Two little books are mine to read): 12461
Two Little Feet (Oh life, so prodigal of life!): 13217
Two Little Words (Two little words that trembled on my tongue): 13370
Two Lots ("Poor Nellie," then a sigh, a careless kiss, and she flutters away): 2495
Two Love Stories (Laura Leslie has a lover): 14017
Two Partings (We parted once before. You wept): 216
Two Pictures (A frail angel presence—she is kneeling): 627
Two Poets (He sat upon a pinnacle alone): 12285
Two Points of View (The woodmen were toiling with axe and wedge): 3915
Two Portraits (I bar the door on friends to-night): 4587
Two Portraits (They smile from no silv'ry, fretted frame): 12465
Two Scenes in the Life of Xenophon (The day is o'er—the foe has ceased to beat): 10667
Two Seas (A mariner by tempest crost): 3074
Two Seasons (Can this be Spring? These tearful lights that break): 2611
Two Sisters (When dusk descends and dews begin): 14391
Two Sketches. I. (The shadow of her face upon the wall): 10788
Two Sketches. II (Her azure eyes, dark lashes hold in fee): 10789
Two Songs (Deem not these tears that freely fall): 2791
Two Sonnets (Ambitious, young, a Poet tuned his lyre): 7570
Two Sonnets (Before my soul the memory of a face): 6490
Two Sonnets (My life is dreary as a bridge of sighs): 3694
Two Sonnets by Mr Chapman (A little heap of dust! yet might that clay): 11963
Two Sonnets on a Church (This is the fortune of a certain Church): 3071
Two Spirits of Song (Two spirits sat beside me): 3278
Two Springs (The wood-birds tell me that the Spring is here): 12608
Two Streams (Two streams out-welling on the upland height): 12650
Two Summer Days (In hope I climbed the grassy stair): 2543
Two to One ("Do not speak of the mischievous urchin"): 3691
Two Toilers (Behold him fare thro' tranquil fields): 5059
Two Worlds (God's world is bathed in beauty): 1498
Two Years After (The winter morning as I write): 14678
Twofold (Of twofold essence are our natures all!): 6486
Tyranny (They who bear the weight of tyranny): 3296
Ubique (Everywhere round England): 4327
Ulpha Kirk (The Kirk of Ulpha to the Pilgram's eye): 11160
Ulysses (To gain his home all oceans he explored): 10007
Ulysses in Ogygia (Was it in very deed, or but in dream): 11993
Una, the Moon-Fay; Or, the Vision of Chastity (I, Tristem, doughty knight and good): 694
Unattained (Ah! the great heights we fain, but could not climb!): 1057
Uncertainties (Pink linen bonnet): 14829
Uncertainty (Darkness surrounds us; seeking, we are lost): 9825
Unchanging (The poet singeth like the bird that sitteth by the rose): 1799
Uncle Toby and the Widow ('Tis noon, delicious summer noon): 15267
Uncultured Gifts (Life's but a mask upon the face of Death): 1212
Under a Railway Arch (Poor, worn-out, mortals! here you lie): 8939
Under a Thorn-Tree (Wife, you see I kept them snugly): 4351
Under an Elm (Oh, under the boughs let's glide): 509
Under Especial Blessings. A Sonnet (Lord Christ, Lord Christ, oh! for a little space): 2020
Under Grey Skies (Under grey skies we stood that night): 826
Under Sail (No lotos-land of fairy-tale): 5064
Under the Apple Tree (A dome of blossom rises overhead): 2579
Under the Chestnuts (We stood beneath the chestnuts beside the riverbank): 4709
Under the Cliffs (The sails, now white as a swan's breath): 7136
Under the Cypresses (Here I am in the cypress lane!): 3072
Under the Dream-Tree (In a trackless garden a tree is growing): 4472
Under the Fir-Trees. A Harvest Romance ("Ha, Marian! well met, fair maid! Where roaming this bright morn?"): 424
Under the Laburnum (Beneath the slim laburnum-tree): 12502
Under the Lighthouse (We sat and we watched the sun going down): 2454
Under the Limes (As there I stood beneath the flowering limes): 6397
Under the Mango (Under the solemn mango shade): 4550
Under the Oak (Soft the wind-blow and sunshine): 8389
Under the Palms (Led on—not driven by mere outward force): 1986
Under the Palms (Under the palm-trees on India's shore): 6189
Under the Pansies (Across the kirkyard path I go): 6917
Under the Snow (Thickly lie the falling flakes): 1660
Under the Stars (O youth, rose-crowned, yet full of strife): 2629
Under the Surface (On the surface, foam and roar): 2452
Under the Tree (Autumn's last relic of the summer's gold): 2675
Under the Trees (Under the trees in summer time): 13531
Undine. Versification of Part of de la Motte Fouqué's Romance, in Illustration of a Painting by M. Retzsch, in the Collection of His Serene Highness Prince Esterhazy (In the bright dawning of a summer morn): 14478
Undreamt Dreams (Midst shadows I have entered through thy door): 12901
Unending (I see that all these things come to an end): 4131
Unenfranchised (They will use every art to disunite you): 7914
Unfading Beauty (He that loves a rosy cheek): 2925
Unforgetfulness (Ah! chide not these fond tears that flow): 2341
Unforgotten (Sweet Lady mine, the faded rose): 7329
Unforgotten (You stepped awhile outside with me): 13106
Unfortunate Genius (Years pass'd away, and where he lived, and how): 3238
Unfulfilled (I am dying, O Lord! I am dying): 14427
Ungathered Love (When the autumn winds go wailing): 14527
Unica (I heard three maidens singing): 2427
Unimore. A Dream of the Highlands (Morven and Morn and Spring and Solitude!): 10989
Unknown Graves. (In Cyprus) (O, unknown grave of passion! grave of blood): 14613
Unofficial (One morning my heart can remember): 2762
Unopened Buds (A shape of beauty beyond man's device): 1462
Unreflecting Childhood and Age (It is, indeed, a little while): 10343
Unrest (Sleep visits not these eyes, or draws anear): 2877
Unrest (The rose that is perfect to-day is blown overfull to-morrow): 13130
Unrest (What hast thou now, O woman wan and pale?): 5635
Unsatisfactory ("Have other lovers,—say, my love,—"): 14494
Unspoken (Ah, never doubt my love is true): 12770
Unspoken (I may not keep thee, dear. I long have known): 4512
Unspoken Dialogue (Above the trailing mignonette): 11933
Unsung Heroes (So long as the world and the heart are young): 13041
Unter Den Linden (In the early morning, when the gauzy mist): 12173
Until the Day dawn (Silence and Night were alone in the forest; afar was the sound of the sea): 7798
Until the Evening (Tired with the daily toil for daily bread): 13285
Unto Death (Ah! it is thou, the angel of my life): 6869
Unwritten Poetry (Say, can'st thou paint a picture in thy soul): 11756
Up the Gerschni Alp (This is the way that you must go): 14925
Up the Skager Rack (It was the point of dawn; and in the bow): 9078
Up-Hill (Does the road wind up-hill all the way?): 14031
Up-Hill (Does the road wind up-hill all the way?): 15853
Up, Bonnie Bird! (The mist on the lea's but an awning): 1765
Upon Seeing Miss Fanny Kemble in Juliet (Italian passion, sudden, deep, intense): 10049
Upon the Threshold (Once more we stand with half-reluctant feet): 7106
Upper Austria (We loved that Upper-Austrian land!): 4886
Upward (Far off the mountain-tops glimmer, the gloom of the storm-cloud gathers): 15029
Urbanus Loquitur (Let others sing the country's charm): 8935
Urbs in Rure. Rondeau (For you and me, who come oppressed): 1054
Urbs Roma Vale! (While yet a boy, nor then of dew): 8964
Urbs Roma Vale! Conclusion (Bright Fount of Trevi, sweet and pure): 8970
Urbs Roma Vale! Part II (When Beatrice averred that she): 8967
Ure (Glinting in her sunny shallows): 4487
Utopia (Where is the land of Utopia): 5563
Utopia (Your lazy loon, if dainty pigeons): 9124
V. "A certain fisher labouring at his trade" (A certain fisher labouring at his trade): 11741
V. "A stormy sky, with glimpse of promise fair" (A stormy sky, with glimpse of promise fair): 12490
V. "How fair the summer day of joy and light" (How fair the summer day of joy and light): 11261
V. "If She be Made of White and Red" (If she be made of white and red): 8838
V. "In all the ripeness of they beauty's prime" (In all the ripeness of they beauty's prime): 11846
V. "O let her go, the bird of brood and nest" (O let her go, the bird of brood and nest): 9979
V. "On shores far foreign, or remoter seas" (On shores far foreign, or remoter seas): 10887
V. ("Certes, my lady sweet, your eyes of bliss") (Certes, my lady sweet, your eyes of bliss): 16028
V. ("Demœneta had sent against the foe") (Demœneta had sent against the foe): 11575
V. ("I think when I look back from some high sphere") (I think when I look back from some high sphere): 16057
V. ("It is a glorious thing to feel secure") (It is a glorious thing to feel secure): 14624
V. ("Oh friends of my bosom, remember last night's wine") (Oh friends of my bosom, remember last night's wine): 16068
V. ("See a meet spot for longing lovers' vows") (See a meet spot for longing lovers' vows): 11783
V. ("Sisters, unmothered in your tender years") (Sisters, unmothered in your tender years): 12005
V. ("The rebel Eros owns no code of laws") (The rebel Eros owns no code of laws): 14098
V. ("This is Aratus’ work, whose subtle mind") (This is Aratus' work, whose subtle mind): 11509
V. ("Tyrinna, nobly-born, the theme of fame") (Tyrinna, nobly-born, the theme of fame): 11525
V. Ancient Norwegian War-Song (Arise! old Norway sends the word): 11210
V. Before Operation (Behold me gruesome, waiting for the knife!): 12373
V. Cæsar's Kid (Me, whose o'erflowing udder yielded more): 11603
V. Departure (The breeze already fills the sail, on yonder distant strand): 11114
V. Deprivation (The husband hath returned to find her dead): 10567
V. Epitaph on Casander (Mortal, as if immortal dream not thou): 11768
V. Eros Crowned (Where thine elastic bow? Where now thew darts?): 14156
V. Far O'er the Sea (Where are the vintage-songs): 11390
V. Impromptu, On Being Reproached with Indifference to Rossini's Music (Sing me thy simple ballad songs): 11205
V. Life (Ours and ourselves are death's: no mortal knows): 11725
V. Love (What's the use of loving, in): 10228
V. Oh! Were I a Swan (Oh! were I a swan, on the blue-bosom'd lake): 15828
V. On a Muddy Fountain (Do not, wayfaring man, this fount draw near): 11866
V. On a Statue of Pan (Let thy lips, curved upon thy golden reed): 11827
V. Sigh thou not for a happier lot (Sigh thou not for a happier lot): 9154
V. Staff-Nurse: New Style (Blue-eyed and bright of face, but waning fast): 12382
V. The Birds of the Air (Te, too, the glad and fearless birds of air): 12030
V. The Goat and the Horse (A goat, with feet that danced and head that sway'd): 11482
V. The Same (I muse upon your lingering words of love): 9215
V. The Warrior's Dirge (The cuirass hangs on the wall): 9925
V. The White Cockade (King Charles he is King James's son): 9916
V. The Wish (Come to me, when my soul): 10497
V. To a Blackbird (No more, sweet Merle, pour out thy plaintive lay): 11640
V. To Silvio Pellico, on reading his "Prigόine" (There are, who climb the mountain's heathery side): 11422
v. Vanity of Vanities (Ah! I know it, my Darling, but who can say nay to you?): 8932
V. Writing (A man who keeps a diary pays): 15041
V.—Darling Dolly (Darling Dolly's house shall be): 13121
V.—Early Autumn (If as I sit here now in the warm sun): 13936
V.—Music Ambulant (The beach was crowded. Pausing now and then): 14538
V.—Quinquagesima Sunday (Take, O Lord, my faithless heart): 16012
V.—Sunday in the Highlands (What holy calm is this! The mountains sleep): 12419
V.—The Death of Haco (The summer is gone, Haco, Haco): 12522
V.—The Violet’s Grave (The woodland! And a golden wedge): 9280
Vacuna (When some shall say, Fair once Vacuna was): 1883
Vain Comparisons (If I shall say thy brows are fair): 8915
Valentine (My love was born on British ground): 10204
Valentine's Day (Some young urchin, shamming lonely): 561
Valentine's Day, 1873. (An Unpublished Poem) (Oh! I wish I were a tiny browny bird from out the south): 14596
Valkyrie and Raven (Ye men wearing bracelets): 911
Valley Streams (Walking through the verdant plain): 2636
Value and Worth (If thou hast something, bring thy goods, a fair return be thine!): 10022
Vanished Dreams (Beautiful stories, in shielings wild): 13230
Vanished Hours (Where are they gone, those dear dead days): 4598
Vanitas (Through all the hours of all the days): 8757
Vanitas Vanitatum (How spake of old the Royal Seer?): 11945
Vanitas Vanitatum! (O weary, weary woes of life): 16048
Vanitas Vanitatum? (And is it true what this man writes): 13504
Vanitas! Vanitatum Vanitas! (I've cast my care on nothing now): 9312
Vanity Fair (Here's a babble): 2143
Vanity of Riches (Why dost thou heap up wealth, which thou must quit): 4379
Vanity of the World (What well-advised ear regards): 3357
Vanquished (I and Cupid met one day): 2322
Variations on Nursery Rhymes. Hush-a-bye Baby (The cradle is rocking): 1686
Vates (He hears dim voices in the void): 8506
Veiled (At old Egyptian festals, we are told): 4139
Venezia (The day was sultry, not a summer breeze): 5205
Venice (Ah, Venice! thou art lovely still): 15436
Venice (City of palaces, Venice, once enthroned): 14688
Venice (Yes! thou art glorious still): 14004
Venice Unvisited (The lovely City married to the Ocean): 2815
Venus Anadyomene (This is Apelles' work. See Venus rise): 9178
Venus Pandemia (No more, O maiden, make thy care of robes): 13523
Verb "To Be." (Present Tense) (I am—a lonely, bitter-hearted woman): 12868
Verdict—"Found Dead." The Surgeon's Tale ('Twas on a dark December's evening): 5675
Vernal Feelings (’Tis soothing, ’tis delightful to the mind): 10838
Vernal Invocation (Come hither, come hither, and view the face): 10483
Vernal Stanzas (Bright shone the sun, blue was the day): 10619
Vernier (If ever thou shalt follow silver Seine): 9301
Verses (Down to the river's side): 8280
Verses (I saw her in her infant day): 4411
Verses (Lady, thy face is very beautiful): 2957
Verses (Weep no more, willow! weep no more!): 4790
Verses Addressed to One of the Human Teeth Dug Out of the Cairn on Airswood-Moss, May 1828 (Tooth of the olden time! I'd wish to learn): 10064
Verses By Motherwell, Written a Few Days Before His Death (When I beneath the cold red earth am sleeping): 3488
Verses Inscribed in an Album (Why write my name 'midst songs and flowers): 10389
Verses Inscribed in an Album (Why write my name 'midst songs and flowers): 14452
Verses on All-Fool's-Day (Hail, glorious dawning! hail, auspicious morn!): 10118
Verses on the New Promotions (O Anna! thy new friends and prick-eared court): 9462
Verses on Thomas Clarkson, by L. E. L. (Not to the many doth the earth): 3766
Verses Recited by the Author, in a Party of his Countrymen, on the Day that the News arrived of our final Victory over the French (Now, Britain, let thy cliffs o' snaw): 7961
Verses Suggested by Ovid's Lines (Had you but eyes, but eyes that move): 8804
Verses to Cologne (Cologne, not all the treasures of thy shrine): 5591
Verses to the Comet of 1811 (How lovely is this wildered scene): 3354
Verses to the Eagle (O to be free, like the eagle of heaven): 10444
Verses to the Memory of a Very Promising Child. Written after witnessing her last Moments (I cannot weep, yet I can feel): 8007
Verses to the Memory of Mr George Miller. Am early disseminator of cheap literature (While some aspire to glory and to fame): 3348
Verses to the Memory of Robert Bloomfield (Sweet, simple Poet, thou art gone!): 10085
Verses Written After a Visit to the Grave of Sir Walter Scott in 1842 ('Twas gloaming, and the autumn sun): 10812
Verses Written in 1793, on Seeing the Place Where the Maid of Orleans Suffered. From the German (Here naked they exposed thee): 8128
Verses Written in November (This is cauld and cheerless weather): 5305
Verses Written on the Sixth of November 1817 (Oh weep, unhappy Realm!—weep on!): 8113
Verses, Addressed to the Right Hon. Lady Anne Scott of Buccleuch (To Her, whose bounty oft hath shed): 8286
Verses. To a Lady who Presented the Author with the Flower of a Field Plant, which, if Placed Under the Pillow at Night, is Said to Have the Fairy Property of Causing the Gifted Person to Dream of the Giver (I little deem'd that the fair flower): 15076
Versicles (There was a young lady of Bocking): 14281
Versification of a Passage in Purchas (How shall I admire): 8312
Very Far Away (One touch there is of magic white): 2008
Vespertilia (In the late autumn's dusky-golden prime): 792
VI. "A simple youth, to pure love servant bound" (A simple youth, to pure love servant bound): 16027
VI. "An old expressive simple word is this" (An old expressive simple word is this): 12491
VI. "The livelong night I spend in wo" (The livelong night I spend in wo): 11828
VI. "The twilight shades are darkening o'er the dell" (The twilight shades are darkening o'er the dell): 10888
VI. "Think thou no more of Words, exclaim'd my friend" (Think thou no more of Words, exclaim'd my friend): 11262
VI. "Where at the precipice's foot the wave" (Where at the precipice's foot the wave): 9980
VI. ("A Spartan mother slew her Spartan child") (A Spartan mother slew her Spartan child): 11576
VI. ("Bethink thee, oh my heart, if it be well") (Bethink thee, oh my heart, if it be well): 16058
VI. ("Here Sao, Dicos' son, in sleep doth lie") (Here Sao, Dicos' son, in sleep doth lie): 11510
VI. ("I long for the strong wine and its man-o'ermastering strength") (I long for the strong wine and its man-o'ermastering strength): 16069
VI. ("In a deeper sense than the common") (In a deeper sense than the common): 15042
VI. ("Lamented Youth! so frank and brave! so young") (Lamented Youth! so frank and brave! so young): 14625
VI. ("Thano's words, Phocæa, when the night") (Thano's words, Phocæa, when the night): 11526
VI. ("While from the strand his line a fisher threw") (While from the strand his line a fisher threw): 11641
VI. A Scrubber (Behold her! Gaunt, and in her hard sad face): 12383
VI. After Operation (Like a weak light involved in heavy smoke): 12374
VI. By the Well (Just in her teens): 10229
VI. Fortune Capricious (Whene'er my reason would essay to scan): 14157
VI. Life (Me,—nor the surges of the winter seas): 11726
VI. Luyalla, Adieu! (The last red tinge of purple light): 15829
vi. Of Her Heart-Shaped Locket, Worn Secretly in Her Bosom (Ah! little Heart, how the Gods have been kind to you, Heart of Gold): 8933
VI. On a Bad Poet (Eutychides, the mongrel bard, to Hades now is wending): 11742
VI. On a Fountain Sacred to Pan (These elms and willows, with long pointed leaves): 11784
VI. On a Portrait (Thymarete, thy very self is there): 11847
VI. On Spring (Now the mead-painting grace of soothing spring): 14099
VI. On the Same (Is there a stone that did not shed a tear): 11769
VI. Reminiscence (The funeral day arrives: in mourning weeds): 10568
VI. The Avenger (O! Heavens, if that long-wish'd-for morning I spied): 9915
VI. The Hyphen (I am weary of the ocean, emblem of Eternity): 9217
VI. The Invocation (Oh! art thou still on earth, my Love?): 11391
VI. The Midnight Glade (The moon is rising; silence reigns): 9926
VI. The Olive-Tree (The palm—the vine—the cedar—each hath power): 12031
VI. The Parrots and the Monkey (Two parrots straight from St Domingo): 11483
VI. The Soldier's Death-Bed (Like thee to die, thou Sun!—My boyhood's dream): 10499
VI. The Stream Set Free (Flow on, rejoice, make music): 11211
VI. The Suicide (Oh, man! before thy morn of life): 11867
VI. To Corinna in Intercession for Love (Now all be hushed, all, all be wholly still): 8841
VI. To the Rev. Dr Wordsworth, Master of Trinity (Worthy! That in the fulness of thy years): 12006
VI. To the Same, Released (How flows thy being now?—like some glad hymn): 11423
VI. To Zenophile Playing on the Lyre ('Tis a sweet strain,—by Pan of Arcady!): 11604
VI. To— (Led by swift thought, I scale the height): 9157
VI.—A Morning of Later Autumn (This is the year's despair: some wind, last night): 13937
VI.—Back View (I watched you saunter down the sand): 14539
VI.—Felix, Felix Ter Quaterque! (Shout and sing, ye merry voices): 9278
VI.—First Sunday After Trinity (Since we kept the Saviour's birth): 16013
Via Umbræ (With sunset glory glowing): 13167
Victoria Opening the Parliament of 1841 (There was a scene of pomp): 15393
Victoria. February 2nd, 1901 (Dear name, above all glory great): 14957
Victus Victor. Father Joseph Damien. Went to Molokai Leper Island, 1873. Died 1889 ("No way but this? What matter. Let it be."): 1934
View From the Wood (This is a woodland scene—a smooth-trunked beech): 7261
View on the Hudson (Once more, Grand River, on thy pictured breast): 4964
View on the Hudson (Sound to the sun thy solemn joy for ever!): 4887
Vigil (Ah Love, if to-night, in the long dark hours): 13212
Vigil (Sleep, little flow'ret! with fragrant flowers sleeping): 3554
Vigil of the New Year (In this the death-watch of the year): 13953
Vigils (A young and yet unbelted knight he seems): 6383
Vignette (The long waves wash the strand, the fog lies low): 4606
VII. "This sable steed, whose hoofs with clangour smite" (This sable steed, whose hoofs with clangour smite): 9981
VII. "When reason serves at passion's will" (When reason serves at passion's will): 11263
VII. ("A lonely bird that's prisoned in its cage") (A lonely bird that's prisoned in its cage): 16059
VII. ("I have the edict of the old man of the tavern, and 'tis an ancient saying") (I have the edict of the old man of the tavern, and 'tis an ancient saying): 16070
VII. ("Is thy hair bound") (Is thy hair bound): 11868
VII. ("Me a dry plane-tree now,—this creeping vine") (Me a dry plane-tree now,—this creeping vine): 11511
VII. ("My love for Heliodora oft my soul") (My love for Heliodora oft my soul): 14101
VII. ("Tell, by the Nymphs! wilt thou for me essay") (Tell, by the Nymphs! wilt thou for me essay): 11785
VII. ("The poor man never lives, nor therefore dies") (The poor man never lives, nor therefore dies): 11642
VII. ("Thee, Aristodice, erst all admired") (Thee, Aristodice, erst all admired): 11527
VII. ("To Pitana they Thrasybulus bore") (To Pitana they Thrasybulus bore): 11577
VII. ("Virtue's Toleration") (Virtue's Toleration): 15043
VII. A Patient (John Gallagher—'mad Jack'—from Donegal): 12384
VII. A Song of Hope (Droop not, my Brother! I hear a glad strain): 11392
VII. Eunicidas (This monumental Parian marble, graced): 11848
VII. Life (Oh! this is life and nought but this—to live in every pleasure): 11727
VII. Life Short ("Oh! how brief this world's pleasure"): 14158
VII. Night Picture (Implacable, the speck of gas compels): 12375
VII. Oft in a night of April (Oft, in a night of April, when the ways): 9158
VII. On a Small Vessel (A tiny thing they call me—all unmeet): 11770
VII. On a Tiresome Poet (No more, no more, my Marcus, thy child lament—but me): 11743
VII. On an Old Race-Horse (Me at Alphæus wreathed, and twice the theme): 11829
VII. On Reading Coleridge's Epitaph, Written by Himself (Spirit! so oft in radiant freedom soaring): 11424
VII. Places of Worship (Spirit! Who's life-sustaining presence fills): 12032
VII. Prayer to Venus (Placid Cythera, friend of marriage vows): 11605
VII. School-Girl Rebels (A class of girls, in short school robes): 10230
VII. The Annunciation (Lowliest of women, and most glorified!): 11335
VII. The Cathedral Bell and the Hermitage Bell (Within an old cathedral hung): 11484
VII. The Charmed Picture (Thine eyes are charm'd—thine earnest eyes): 10501
VII. Άуνωστῳ ϴεῳ (Oh, sought of old on misty mountain tops): 9220
VII.—Dogs on the Beach (This to the dog must be a paradise!): 14540
VII.—Summer Eve (It is the hour when all things rest): 9279
VII.—Third Sunday After Trinity (Speak, for Thy servant heareth): 16014
VIII. "Sweet notes, to all but him unspoken" (Sweet notes, to all but him unspoken): 11264
VIII. ("A Spartan Venus! yes—for there she stands") (A Spartan Venus! yes—for there she stands): 11578
VIII. ("I follow thee as does the patient earth") (I follow thee as does the patient earth): 16060
VIII. ("Just as if death were near, enjoy thy wealth") (Just as if death were near, enjoy thy wealth): 11830
VIII. ("We have tried our lot in this city of our fortune") (We have tried our lot in this city of our fortune): 16071
VIII. ("Would that my sire had taught his son to keep") (Would that my sire had taught his son to keep): 11512
VIII. (Tears, tears, Artemidorus, tears were shed): 11643
VIII. A Church in North Wales (Blessings be round it still!—that gleaming fane): 12033
VIII. A Visitor (Her little face is like a walnut shell): 12385
VIII. Ad Sodales (The stars are clear in heaven, and all the slopes): 9221
VIII. Another (Round one poor bed is stretched the painted screen): 12376
VIII. Beauty, a Fading Flower (Remember thou): 11786
VIII. Dream on (Dream on, ye souls who slumber here): 9159
VIII. Epitaph (John the illustrious): 14159
VIII. Hope of Future Communion with Nature (If e'er again my spirit be allowed): 11425
VIII. Life (Enough for me this cloak, though homely spun): 11728
VIII. On a Beautiful Girl (These lovely lips): 11744
VIII. On a Cenotaph (Maiden Lysidice, though hapless fair): 11869
VIII. On a Statue of Niobe (See how these tears, wrung from the broken heart): 11606
VIII. On Ariadne a Harpist (When Ariadne's fingers sweep the strings): 11771
VIII. The Dreaming Child (And is there sadness in thy dream, my Boy?): 10503
VIII. The Musical Ass (The fable which I now present): 11485
VIII. The Song of the Virgin (Yes, as a sun-burst flushing mountain-snow): 11336
VIII. To Cæsar (Not—if the ocean waves in strife combine): 11849
VIII. Winter Roses Sent to a Lady on her Birth-Day (We roses, Lady, with flower-loving May): 11528
VIII.—Rain (The sky saggs low with convoluted cloud): 14541
VIII.—Serenade (Awake, beloved! it is the hour): 9281
VIII.—St. John Baptist's Day (Herald, in the wilderness): 16015
Vilanelle (These half-blown roses, yesternight): 13149
Village Wedding Bells (Ring on, ring on, ye wedding bells!): 4336
Villanelle (Down the dear old lane where we always meet): 13365
Villanelle (If Love be dead): 2384
Villanelle (Oh dream again): 2392
Villanelle (The past is o'er): 12675
Villanelle (When, youth renewed, earth's heart is waking): 1529
Villanelle.—Rozette (Rozette, though my absence was brief): 8694
Villenelle (In the wood walks alone): 4809
Vineta (From the sea's deep hollow faintly pealing): 14854
Vintage Song. From "Otto of Wittelsbach," an Unpublished Tragedy (Thanks, pretty maids!): 15447
Violet (She stood where I had used to wait): 283
Violet (Swift-falling feet beneath the budding beech): 4133
Violet-Time (Violet-time is come again): 7633
Violets (Among what Time has left me petals pale): 13337
Violets (Sweet is the legend of a happy soul): 2895
Violets (When first I pluck'd the violet): 1514
Violets: Sent In a Tiny Box (Let them lie–ah, let them lie!): 6178
Violets! Sweet Violets! ("Violets! Sweet Violets!" they are calling through the street): 2300
Violets. (A Patch-Work Sonnet) (Violets "that come before the swallow dares"): 13413
Virginia (If I were like thee, lovely child): 2947
Visions in the South (Her human heart was given): 9321
Visitants (They come to me at dawn of day): 13325
Vita in Vulnere. Written in a Copy of Renan's "Vie de Jésus" (In the Indian dawn): 5549
Vita Post Mortem (The Poet dies: his songs are left): 13619
Vive Bessemer (It was a leetle Frenchmans, and he had been sea-sea seek): 13739
Vive la Guerre (Loud they cried in her streets): 6729
Vivelai (Love's Roses) (A crimson rose it was, with breath so sweet): 2414
Vivelai (Rhythme d'Alain Chartier) (Above the storming of the winter sea): 2408
Vogel-Lied (Sing, birdie; mount and sing): 13440
Voice of the River. A Madrigal (Flow for ever, gentle river): 2284
Voices (December's wind was keen and shrill): 13192
Voices at the Ferry (The path to the Ferry goes winding down): 2305
Voices in the Air (Oft in the pleasant talk of waking dreams): 4093
Voices of the Human Heart (I felt the breath of the expiring year): 13372
Volunteer Drilling (Sweet Amy said, with pleading eyes): 13528
Votive Tablets (What the God taught me—what, through life, my friend): 9995
Vous et Moi (Your eyes, serene and pure, have deigned to look upon me): 7925
Vows (The world of Feeling!—Oh, how lie): 15217
Vox Naturæ (Low heard the river-reeds among): 4259
Vox Populi (I'll hear no more. Think you the people's brawl): 11805
Vox Populi: The Cynic's Version (A stately white lily, fragile and fair): 14771
Voyage of Life (The golden sails of Thought): 15413
Vrom Hinton. Two Speakers (Ah! then at the feäst, at the cool evenentide): 14293
Vulcan and Momus; Or, The Glass Shutter. A Sketch from Life (Said Momus to Vulcan, "She's not to my mind"): 5746
Wages (Glory of warrior, glory of orator, glory of song): 14212
Wagram; Or, Victory in Death (I saw a sunrise on a battle-field): 9302
Wait (You blame the world, for yet they turn): 16050
Wait No Longer! (Oh for such an education): 5992
Wait On ("They tell me that he loves me—but as yet"): 13443
Wait! (Deep is the crimson in the west): 998
Waiting ('Tis time you drew the curtain, child, and latched the open door): 7313
Waiting ("Better calm death than dying life," I thought): 13122
Waiting ("Wherefore dwell so sad and lonely"): 1357
Waiting (A young girl fair among her flowers): 2435
Waiting (Beloved, in some dewy summer night): 13297
Waiting (Golden Summer and glowing wood): 12760
Waiting (I am waiting alone while shadows grow): 13242
Waiting (I have waited till Spring's first breath came over the rippling streams): 7407
Waiting (I have waited while primroses faded): 7587
Waiting (Now since we two have counted up the cost): 4043
Waiting (Once, in the twilight of an autumn day): 12905
Waiting (Sitting under the birch-trees, in the beautiful April day): 4627
Waiting (They lie, with uplift hands, and feet): 14275
Waiting (Thou of the sunny head): 6933
Waiting (Under the silent trees): 14127
Waiting (Waiting many a lonesome hour): 953
Waiting (Waiting while the shadows gather): 7502
Waiting (Waiting! For what? Shall I ever know?): 7038
Waiting (Will it be over to-day or to-morrow?): 2011
Waiting For Lovers (Now that all our younger guests are gone): 5210
Waiting for May ('Tis weary waiting for May, my dear): 13133
Waiting for the Spring (As breezes stir the morning): 565
Waiting in the Dusk (Sitting alone in the twilight time): 1878
Wake, England, Wake! (And thought we that His reign could cease?): 10375
Waking Dreams. A Fragment (O that my soul might breathe one touching strain): 8029
Walking Out (O'er Plewley's green and pleasant height): 6987
Wallace's Sword. Written on Seeing It Preserved in Dumbarton Castle (Is this the sword of Wallace wight): 3418
Walled Out (In last Septimber it was, whin the weather is mostly grand): 12326
Wallis's Picture of Chatterton (On his truckle-bed outstretchèd, heedless now of smile or frown): 7684
Walter and William ('Twill be a wild rough night upon the Moor): 11427
Walter Hurst (Walter Hurst): 1364
Wanderers (As o'er the hill we roam'd at will): 12139
Wang-Ti. One Piecee Pidgin English Sing-Song (Last year my look-see plum tlees all flower whitey snow): 14554
Waning (The autumn days are waning, and the gold is on the leaf): 3833
Wanted, A Governness (A Governess wanted—well fitted to fill): 3489
Wanting (The new year has brought back the same old blooms): 12612
Wanting (Under the mighty headland the wavelets laugh and leap): 4578
War ("Thank heaven!" men say, "we live in peaceful days"): 129
War (A cancer ’neath the heart of history): 6923
War (I slept!—Upon the sealed lid): 15701
War (Two Mothers lifting prayers unto one God): 1236
War Song. From the Modern Greek (Shall we gaze upon the height): 15220
Wardie—Spring-time (In the exuberance of hope and life): 404
Warfare (My hand has lost its cunning and its power): 13068
Warlock Woods (The oaks are doom'd in pleasant Warlock Woods): 3213
Warlock Woods (The oaks are doomed in pleasant Warlock Woods): 7320
Warning (Do not touch him—do not wake him! Fast asleep is Amor lying): 10929
Warnings (Ye mystic sighs, which are the winds that fling): 6232
Was it I? (In the morning the light breezes shiver): 4281
Washed Ashore (Strangers, and silent, with no voice to tell): 2460
Washed Ashore. Lines Suggested by Some Foreign Letters Picked Up on the East Coast of Scotland, After a Storm (To-night there is a storm at sea): 7535
Washing Day (The Muses are turned gossips; they have lost): 3443
Waste (The troubled sea around this Isle of life): 6541
Wasted Loves (What does God do with all the wasted loves): 4044
Wastwater (Deep is the lake and dark): 5098
Wastwater in a Calm (Is this the Lake, the cradle of the storms): 11186
Wastwater in a Storm (There is a Lake hid far among the hills): 11185
Wat O' Buccleuch (Some sing with devotion): 10442
Watch Chant at Chur (Hear, ye Christians, let me tell you): 6042
Watch Cry. From a German Patois Song (Listen, listen to the hour!): 1413
Watching (Watching when the morning breaketh): 1597
Watching (Yes, it will soon be the dawn, dear): 7699
Watching and Wishing (Oh, would I were the golden light): 11953
Water Music ('Twas in summer—glorious summer): 1488
Water-Lilies (How like yon water-lily fair): 12665
Wayconnell Tower (The tangled wealth by June amassed): 1149
Wayfarers (Wayfarers, we!—from dawn to distant dawn): 15032
Wayside Flowers (I love the flowers whose softly-tinted faces): 13214
We Are Brethren A' (A happy but hame this auld world would be): 5394
We are Changed! (We feel our love has long grown cold): 8671
We are Free (The winds, as at their hour of birth): 11138
We Are Growing Old (We are growing old—how the thought will rise): 5803
We Rear No War-Defying Flag (We rear no war-defying flag): 6409
We Return No More! ("We return—we return—we return no more!"): 10113
We Two (But then, you see, I love him. Just that—love): 4733
We were Children Once (We were children when we thought): 2587
We Will Struggle (What an insignificant trifle may often give): 14768
We will Take the Good Old Way (Let MacIntyres say what they may): 14978
Wealth Untold (Seek your treasure, and you'll find): 12922
Wealthy and Wise (Little he loseth, who, for greater gain): 1165
Weapons (Both swords and guns are strong, no doubt): 3676
Weariness (To-day we are tired of pleasure): 1459
Weary (Oh, but to rest awhile! to rest from strife): 614
Wedded Love (Say not, that pure and wedded love expires): 3132
Wedded Love (This little sprig of life, that feeds the root): 1996
Wedding Words (A jewel for my lady's ears): 6674
Wee Willie (Fare-thee-well, our last and fairest): 14727
Weeds (Scorn not those rude, unlovely things): 3719
Weep not for the Dead (Weep not for the dead): 10201
Wein-Lied (A Wine-Song). From the German of Emmanuel Geibel (God bless thee! heaven descended dew): 925
Welcome and Departure (To horse!—away o'er hill and steep!): 10916
Welcome to the Roses (Roses, roses, beautiful flowers!): 7590
Wellington (Ancient heroes, chiefs victorious): 11435
Were I A Star (Were I a bright and glittering star): 7181
West End Fair September 1806 (Dame charity, one day, was tired): 2085
Westminster Abbey (Down the aisles of the Abbey, in gathering night): 8726
Westminster Abbey (October 12, 1892) (Bring me my dead!): 8428
Westminster Abbey. July 25, 1881. (What! for a term so scant): 8065
Westminster Abbey. May, 1871 (Not by the home he loved so well beneath the church's shade): 2126
Westminster-Hall and the Works of Art, (On a Free-Admission Day) (By slow degrees, like rain-fraught breeze rising in time of dearth): 10751
Westward (Westward the sunset is dying): 13267
Westward, Ho! (We should not sit us down and sigh): 6322
Whalley's Entertainment (How did Mr. Whalley): 13697
Whar Ha'e Ye Been a' Day (Whar ha'e ye been a' day): 11218
What are the Stars? (The little cheek is pressed to mine): 7460
What Dost Thou Whisper, Murmuring Shell? (What dost thou whisper, murmuring Shell?): 5389
What Is Beauty? To — (What is beauty? Form and feature): 6050
What Is Genius? (What is Genius?—’Tis a gem): 7626
What Is Love? (Love is the passion which endureth): 3044
What May Be Ours (Thou that dost pine, indeed): 1356
What Might Have Been (She was never married, our dear old Aunt): 13308
What Might Have Been! (I think the pain my heart has felt): 2357
What One Year Brought (If they told me a year ago): 274
What Seems to be Happening Just Now with the Pope (When a man's to be ruined, he first is demented): 9519
What Shall I Ask? (What shall I ask to fill my cup of life): 13392
What Shall We Do For Coal? (With furnace fierce in forge and mill): 9832
What the Years Bring (Two sunny-haired and clear-voiced children stood): 7482
What Was It? (It was not a scold, nor a cuff, nor a kick): 3158
What? (She was working a slipper; but she didn't like that): 423
When Autumn Has Laid Her Sickle By (When Autumn has laid her sickle by): 5309
When Green Leaves Come Again. Song (When green leaves come again, my love): 13887
When I Am Dead (Bring no flowers rare): 3164
When I am Dead (When I am dead): 1047
When I Upon thy Bosom Lean (When I upon thy bosom lean): 4378
When I Was Seventeen! (Ah! well do I remember still): 6981
When Jack is Tall and Twenty (When Jack is tall and twenty): 4364
When March Winds Blow (Give me veiled eyes, divinely blue): 2333
When Night and Morning Meet (In the dark and narrow street): 322
When Roses Blow (When Roses blow, you will return to me): 13253
When Summer Wanes (When summer wanes, and green is turned to gray): 12787
When the Boats Come Home (There's light upon the sea today): 4347
When the Night and Morning Meet (In the dark and narrow street): 15870
When the Sea Gives Up Her Dead (They tell us with the quiet voice): 4625
When the Ship Comes Home (A little child, bright-eyed and fair): 7579
When This Old Cap Was New (When this old cap was new): 9692
When Thou Art Happy (When thou art happy, and hast half forgotten): 5652
When thou Sleepest (When thou sleepest, lulled in night): 11987
When We Are All Asleep (When we are all asleep who dance, and sing): 1935
When We Awake (Sometimes this life around us is so keen): 2338
When You Are Sad (When you are sad, I ask no more): 4706
When You Were Seventeen (When the hay was mown, Maggie): 7689
When? (Something in either heart unspoken): 13481
Where and When (Where the unsheathing needles of the larch): 12916
Where Are They? (Where are they—the companions of our games): 5797
Where Dwell the Dead? (Where do they dwell? 'Neath grassy mounts, by daisies): 1123
Where Hast Thou Been, My Beautiful Spring? (Where hast thou been, my beautiful Spring?): 6317
Where I Would Sleep (Not in a crowded City of the Dead): 12453
Where is God? (Where is He?—Ask his emblem): 15051
Where is Yesterday? ("Mother! some things I want to know"): 7427
Where Love Doth Dwell (For thirty years I dwelt within the sound): 8066
Where Shall I Seek? (Where shall I seek the meek-eyed Peace?): 5706
Where Shall We Roam? (Where shall we roam, O maiden mine?): 7295
Where the Rainbows Rest (It was in the Spring of the year, I know): 2271
Where to Look (Bend not thy light-desiring eyes below): 14659
Where Would I Be? [From the German of B. Wolff] (Where would I be?): 5828
Where? (A minute gone. She lingered here, and then): 6989
Wherefore Weep? (Weep not for Death!): 6462
Which of Us Twain? (I heard one sing beside the stream): 12506
Which? (If thou art false as thou art fair): 12981
Whichever Way I Turn My Eyes (Whichever way I turn my eyes): 12509
Whig and Tory. A Metrical Meditation (The Tories once ruled with resistless command): 11313
Whig Malignity. A Simile (Once in my pilgrimage forlorn): 34
Whig or Tory (Be thou or Whig or Tory): 11622
Whigs of Chester (A. Where have you been, my jolly, jolly boy?): 10160
While I Wait (Dear, while I wait for you, I would not steep): 13289
While the Grass Grows (In a country, where I know not; maybe very far away): 1931
Whilst it is Prime (Fresh Spring, the herald of love's mighty king): 2364
Whisky (Sing, jovial Muse, how, from the furrow'd field): 10841
Whitby Abbey (Is this the ancient "Beacon Bay"): 5103
White Camellias (Whiter than any whitest rose): 4919
White Jasmine (White jasmine stretches far and wide): 4496
White or Grey (There was once a Rabbit with silver fur): 2084
White Violets (The children of her Sabbath school): 4568
Whither Goest Thou? (Dim Child of Earth!): 14404
Whither? (All spangled are the beech trees, with motes of autumn gold): 3834
Whithersoever (Whatever haps shall come to you and me): 14531
Whitsunday (Spirit of truth! on this thy day): 10868
Whittington's Advancement (Here must I tell the praise): 1960
Who are the Great of Earth? (Who are the mighty? sing): 6327
Who Cares? (Who cares for the last year's rose?): 7130
Who is the Richer? (When the wealthy Rothschild is praised in my hearing): 14750
Who Knows? (I grant her fair, ay, passing fair): 13003
Who Rolled the Powder In? A Lay of the Gunpowder Plot (They've done their task, and every cask): 9072
Who Shall Have the Roses? (Who shall have the roses in my garden growing?): 1943
Who'll Buy a Cupid? (Of all the wares so pretty): 10652
Who's in the Right (The gunner pointed the gun to the mark): 10196
Why Do They Die? (In the fresh glow of beauty, the first flush of light): 5813
Why Don't I Marry Mary Anne? (Why don't I marry Mary Anne?): 13813
Why They Kept Holyday (Hark, how the bells are clashing overhead!): 4644
Why? (I wonder why, six months ago): 13228
Wiesbaden (She came amongst us with the spring, those moist delicious days): 5944
Wife and I (We quarell'd this morning, my wife and I): 902
Wife, Come Hame (Wife, come hame): 6301
Wild Flowers ('Tis fair to see our cultured buds their shining tints unfold): 5837
Wild Flowers (Beautiful children of the woods and field): 3444
Wild Flowers (Beautiful children of the woods and fields!): 5385
Wild Flowers (Oh, beautiful blossoms, pure and sweet): 12619
Wild Flowers (Pale apple blossoms and red flowers): 4076
Wild-Flowers From Alloway and Doon (No book to-night; but let me sit): 12828
Will and Sandy. A Scots Pastoral (It happen'd once upon a day): 10511
Will O' The Wisp ("Ho! Ho! Two friends are we!"): 2053
Will O'the Wisp. (A ballad written for Clari, on a Stormy Night) (Just an inch high): 2140
Will Webster ("Man is ambition's tool in every state"): 9884
William Makepeace Thackeray (The Merry Bells ring in the Christmas Day): 1607
William Tell (He stood! the arrow in his hand): 15685
Willie Baird: a Winter Idyll (’Tis two-and-thirty summers since I came): 12000
Willliam Gurney (The hundred acres, golden with the hopes): 2828
Willy Herdman. The Old Soldier (Poor Willy Herdman, o'er thy Chilly Bier): 9236
Wilson (His strain, like holy hymn): 13875
Wilt Thou Be Long? (Wilt thou be long? The workful day is o'er): 13363
Wind Voices (Wind, that art wailing through the night): 12632
Wind-Voices (Pile high the logs, and draw the curtains round): 4645
Windermere (Queen of the lakes, how fair art thou, with all thy wild array): 15403
Windlass Song (Heave at the windlass!—Heave O, cheerly, men): 1299
Wine (Was the Koran uncreated?): 8984
Wine and Sleep (Amid Cithaeron's solitudes, what time): 14196
Winged Seeds. With an Illustration by the Author (Lightly floats the feathered seed): 13787
Wings and Hands (God's angels, dear, have six great wings): 5068
Winifred ("Blue-bells and Robin's eyes"): 2024
Winifred (Sweet Winifred sits at the cottage door): 3306
Winter (Blue-green firs waver in a water wan): 2573
Winter (Cold—piercing cold!): 547
Winter (Cold, cold! it is very cold): 363
Winter (Dreary and white the heavy pall of snow): 4703
Winter (Dreary old Winter! weary old Winter!): 6233
Winter (Hail! monarch of the leafless crown): 7024
Winter (How hushed the world is: how the sea-like sound): 618
Winter (I wander'd to the forest, to discern): 11812
Winter (Now evenings come full early, mornings late): 6810
Winter (The grounds are cleared; the uprooted poles are piled): 9589
Winter (The heath was brown upon a thousand hills): 1449
Winter (The rain and cold are now begun): 6797
Winter (This is the eldest of seasons: he): 8097
Winter (Thou dark-robed man with solemn pace): 6939
Winter (When gusts of wind, with rain and sleet): 6784
Winter (Winter, a surly fashion, thankless, rude): 11658
Winter (Winter! no dread of thine approach shall fill): 6543
Winter at Pau. 32 Weymouth Street, Portland Place, W.: Nov. 7, 1866 (Will you have me in verse? Will you have me in prose?): 12237
Winter by the Sea-Shore (The curving shore is fringed with ice and snow): 2803
Winter Calling up His Legions (What ho!—awake, all my stormy powers!): 15719
Winter Days (The birds have flown): 621
Winter Evening at Stewart Island, New Zealand (The winter sun drops low, the winter light): 12550
Winter Fancies (Red-bosomed Robin, in the hard white weather): 15909
Winter Memories (The crackling fire is fading fast): 555
Winter Moonlight (Loud-voiced Night, with the wild winds blowing): 6292
Winter Morning (Throughout the watches of the night): 8768
Winter Nights (Cold blows the wind around the hill): 6323
Winter Rain (Motionless, leaden cloud): 15963
Winter Reverie (I cannot wake a gladsome note to-day): 14235
Winter Scene (The silvery frost hath spangled every spray): 11813
Winter Scenes in Scotland (Though vanished now the brilliant dyes): 13810
Winter Signs (Lines upon the forehead come): 7159
Winter Song. (From the Japanese) (Keen the wind from Fuji's height): 4289
Winter Sunset (Roses in the sky): 2252
Winter Tokens (When the stormcock blows his whistle): 2663
Winter Violets (You ask me why my eyes are filled with tears): 1205
Winter Welcomed ('Tis Winter—Winter wild and drear): 14001
Winter with the Gulf Stream (The boughs, the boughs are bare enough): 462
Winter Woodland (The trees dream in the stillness): 2248
Winter-Time (Though Winter reigns, Beauty still holds her throne): 6574
Winter: An Elegy (I look from my lonely window): 9005
Winter. A Picture. (From the Magyar Poet Petöfi) (Where hath the bright-hued rainbow from out the heavens vanish'd?): 13397
Winter. From the Japanese (Eternal summer cannot be!): 4317
Winter's Gone (Come with my, my Phyllis dear): 13346
Winter's Harvest (Pure and blue is the broad, broad sky): 7361
Winter's Hope (The Autumn days are gone—all flown): 7108
Winter's Wreath (The winter's wreath has charms for me): 7690
Wintry Landscape (How sweet was this landscape, by summer array'd): 10765
Wisdom (To some she is the goddess great): 10798
Wisdom and Folly. From "Titan," an Unpublished Romance (Which is the better, tell me, pray): 15787
Wisdom and Prudence (Would'st thou the loftiest height of Wisdom gain?): 10683
Wise Words (The polished knight ne'er leaves a dame): 13775
Wishes (All the fluttering wishes): 1392
Wishes (I would I could draw off those sweet little shoes): 8710
Wishes (On Bramshill's terrace walks Lady Clare): 1428
Wishes (Three sisters stood beside the Wishing Tree): 12160
Wishes (Whenever I read in old Romancers’ pages): 13762
Wishing. A Nursery Song (Ring—ting! I wish I were a Primrose): 1328
Wisteria (How tenderly the twilight falls): 4552
Wistful (Dear, it is hard to stand): 4857
Witchery (I looked upon you, and my soul was stirred): 12648
With a Present (The Index to a book is small): 6973
With a Rose (In Persia, ’tis said): 2270
With a Wedding Present (Sweetest maid in all the earth): 191
With the Dead Leaves. From the Japanese (Watching the dead leaves drift along): 4535
With the Duke ('Stole away—stole away!' from the gorse in the hollow): 12322
With the Huntress (Through the water-eye of night): 13855
With the Mind's Eye (The rasping sound of steel on steel): 13340
With the Past (Think you ever of one gloaming): 12598
With Thee (With thee, Sweetheart, I would delight to stroll): 12599
Withered (I lift my heart to my drooping face): 7463
Withered (Oh, there was one I used to know): 213
Withered Flowers (Strange are the memories, oh, withered flowers): 2711
Withered Roses (Withered rose-leaves in an urn): 7443
Within and Without (The Christmas-bells were ringing from the church upon the hill): 4315
Within the Veil (I cannot hear thy beating heart): 13070
Without and Within (Is it that some spirit fills all space): 15868
Without and Within (Loved one, within the veil! be one word spoken): 4111
Without and Within (Once spake a gray-hair'd poet: A noble thing and good): 338
Without Words (We met and we felt there was something between us): 12695
Without—Yet With (I stand beneath the tree where once we stood): 13185
Wizzerde Wynkin's Dethe. Ane Auncient Ballad (The Wizzerde's een grewe derke and dimme): 10613
Wolf-Edith (Wolf-Edith dwells on the wild grey down): 1000
Woman (’Tis said Woman's nature): 15451
Woman (Hail, Woman! whose transcendent charms unfold): 3502
Woman (In infancy, from woman's breast): 3530
Woman (Of manly wisdom if there lacketh aught): 11550
Woman (The prototype of every female mind): 11910
Woman and Music (Cynics may say this world's a world of misery and pain): 15583
Woman on the Field of Battle (Gentle and lovely form!): 10855
Woman. From the French (When Man is striken by the shaft of sorrow): 4968
Woman. Suggested by a Portrait of the Honourable Mrs. Leicester Stanhope, in the Foreground of a Beautiful Landscape (O what a scene is this! so beautiful): 15246
Woman's Constancy (Now thou hast loved me one whole day): 8041
Woman's Destination (The stream, which once a slender rill): 15820
Woman's Eye (The light that beams from woman's eye): 15550
Woman's Grief (When he died): 15327
Woman's Heart (If I were asked what most my soul doth prize): 3031
Woman's Love (Did ever man a woman love): 3115
Woman's Love (He came, a meteor from the sky): 15581
Woman's Love (I mark the shadows dense of even): 3142
Woman's Love (To gaze on him, the loved one, and to trace): 7537
Woman's Love: a Dialogue (It hath been told, in heat and cold): 12098
Woman's Love. From a Picture of Agostina Tassoni, a Celebrated Beauty of Pisa, with a Dove on Her Hand (Oh for thy wing, my dove): 15650
Woman's Wit (They are hushed—the hoarse voices of battle): 13058
Won (She was so young and fair): 7518
Won! (A start—a pause—a flutter and a sigh): 301
Wood Anemones (A mist of violets white and blue): 4547
Wood Hymn (Broods there some spirit here?): 11360
Wood Notes (Amid a world of wealth I dwelt): 13784
Wood-Nymphs (Know'st thou the magic of haunting woods): 2380
Woodland Memories (I dearly love the lonely grove): 7247
Woodland Music (What saith the hum of the woodlands): 3298
Woodland Voices (Roaming ’mid the green savannas, autumn leaves so thickly falling): 6003
Woodruffe (Home's sacred nook, love's hallowed ground): 4661
Woods of Warwick (Pleasant, pleasant woods of Warwick, when the shaws are thick with summer): 1946
Wooed (In leafy girths, the garden-walls): 6609
Word Analogies (One the gracious line of beauty): 1440
Words (Words are lighter than the cloud-form): 1479
Words of Love. From the German of Körner (Words, words of love! ye murmur sweetly as): 5690
Words upon the Waters (Far away fond hearts are beating): 1339
Words: For the German Students' Funeral-Tune. (In Memoriam: November 1857) (With steady march, along the daisy meadow): 6463
Wordsworth (He hung his harp upon): 13872
Wordsworth and Hartley Coleridge: in Grasmere Churchyard, Westmoreland (Two graves, and in them poets twain): 14199
Work (Curtained in sunny light): 1676
Work (If some great angel spake to me to-night): 4541
Work (The tree of Life, Earth-rooted, blooms in heaven): 2246
Work (Work! What is life but work? and work is life): 6595
Work and Play (Runs the round of labour): 2750
Work and Pray (My heart is aching sorely): 2498
Work Away! (Work away!): 1182
Work for Heaven (If thou have thrown a glorious thought): 1399
Worship (Were there no temples reared by mortal hands): 6662
Would We Return Again? (If the dark Gate which closes on the Past): 1543
Wounder and Healer. (The Idea Taken from Agoub's Translation of an Arabic Song) (Thy witching look is like a two-edged sword): 12851
Wreck of the "Drummond Castle" (Where the ocean's ceaseless roar): 2381
Wreck of the Comet (Dull rolls the drum; its wild and plaintive wail): 10574
Written at Berkeley Castle, on the Close of an Election for the County (Sweet vale! where fondest memory): 4901
Written at Midnight, During a Storm, on the Upper Lake of Killarney (A mad disturbance reins among the mountains!): 8024
Written During a Gloom on the Upper Lake of Killarney (When last thy horrors blacken'd on my sight): 8025
Written in a Churchyard. 1822 (Though tied by tightest tenderest links man knows): 10318
Written in a Copy of Lalla Rookh, Presented to — (With wishes fond, and vows that burn): 2940
Written in Dust (I sat one morning sadly): 2731
Written in July, 1834 (Grey, thou hast served, and well, the sacred Cause): 4199
Written in Liverpool, July 1838 (Calm worshipper of Nature, seek the wood): 11539
Written in the Deepdene Album (Thou record of the votive throng): 11940
Written in the Sand ("'Tis writ in the sand," a current phrase has pass'd): 3185
Written in the Sand on the Beach at Cumbraes, 1814 (Next when ocean's rising wave): 3361
Written in the Walks of Trinity College, Cambridge (The time, the place—Ah! woe is me): 14042
Written on Leaving a Ball at Almacks (Oh! she came on my sight as the bloom of the spring): 4802
Written on My Brother James's Birthday. 18th July 1841 (On thy little grave, my brother): 5279
Written on the Top of Mangerton, Killarney (In toiling up a mountain's lengthening steep): 8026
Wyatt's Lament for Anne Boleyn (We hunted all that bright May day): 12178
X. "I look'd upon a steam-engine, and thought" (I look'd upon a steam-engine, and thought): 11266
X. ("Am I so far from thee, or all too near?") (Am I so far from thee, or all too near?): 16062
X. ("Archeanassa is my mistress now") (Archeanassa is my mistress now): 11871
X. ("Hang there and linger on that folding door") (Hang there and linger on that folding door): 11608
X. ("In the morning, when heavy with last night's revel") (In the morning, when heavy with last night's revel): 16073
X. ("Wend onward, goat-herd mine, along that lane") (Wend onward, goat-herd mine, along that lane): 11773
X. (Orpheus, no more shalt thou, or beasts, or rocks): 11645
X. A Prudent Astrologer ("Olympic Seer,"—said a wayfaring man): 11580
X. An Enigma (Hater of poverty, and scourge of those): 11788
X. Epitaph (Architeles the mason for his son): 11746
X. Hercules Wrestling With Antæus (Who hath impressed on brass that mournful air): 11514
X. Mary at the Feet of Christ (Oh! blest beyond all Daughters of the Earth!): 11338
X. On a Statue of Cupid Manacled (Ay! groan, and weep): 11832
X. On Berytus, Destroyed by an Earthquake (Stop not thy vessel's course, for the sake of me): 11730
X. On Myro's Statue of the Runner Ladas (As when with eager haste, and rapid bound): 11530
X. On the Death of Aristomenes (And shall the vessel henceforth fear not thee?): 14161
X. Parting Words (Leave me, oh! leave me!—unto all below): 10301
X. Peace (Call not our mission exile; who shall dare): 9225
X. The Mouse and the Cat (What modern fables can compare with): 11487
X. To Philinnion (A small brunette): 11851
X.—Seventh Sunday After Trinity (Bowed with the guilt of sin, O God): 16017
X.—Twilight (The sunset's roses faint and fain decline): 14543
Xanthoula (I saw, I saw Xanthoula): 14574
Xerxes (He look'd upon the ocean bright): 15529
Xerxes (The monarch on his vast array look'd down): 11806
XI (We were two pretty babes, the youngest she): 8248
XI. "(She that was called the Beautiful—(so named))" (She that was called the Beautiful—(so named)): 11646
XI. "Poor affluence of Words, how weak thy power" (Poor affluence of Words, how weak thy power): 11267
XI. "The Spirit of the Age" (The brazen image of Jove's patient son): 11581
XI. ("His darling son a certain Doctor brought") (His darling son a certain Doctor brought): 11789
XI. ("Methinks that thou has led me to a vast") (Methinks that thou has led me to a vast): 16063
XI. ("Now blooms the rose, my Sosylus, resort") (Now blooms the rose, my Sosylus, resort): 11833
XI. ("Offtimes have I said it, and again I say it") (Offtimes have I said it, and again I say it): 16074
XI. ("Relentless Ades, why of life bereave") (Relentless Ades, why of life bereave): 11515
XI. Alco and his Ox (His aged ox, worn out by toilsome days): 14162
XI. Epitaph on Timon the Misanthrope (Twist round me, thou rough earth, the prickly thorn): 11531
XI. On a Statue of Opportunity ("Whence did he come, and what thy sculptor's name?"): 11609
XI. On a Tantalus Sculptured on a Drinking Cup (See how the guest of Gods, who often quaffed): 11747
XI. On an Eclipse of the Sun (Nothing unhoped for, nor aught passing strange): 11852
XI. The Sisters of Bethany after the Death of Lazarus (One grief, one faith, O sisters of the dead!): 11339
XI. The Summons (The vesper-bell, from church and tower): 10302
XI. The Two Rabbits (With a ravenous pack of dogs at his back): 11488
XI.—Eleventh Sunday After Trinity (To me a sinner, chief of all): 16018
XII. "A troop went pacing by in easy ken" (A troop went pacing by in easy ken): 11268
XII. ("A dealer in cabbage and rue") (A dealer in cabbage and rue): 11790
XII. ("I stand alone upon a mountain height") (I stand alone upon a mountain height): 16064
XII. ("The dust of this body of mine is the veil of the face of the soul") (The dust of this body of mine is the veil of the face of the soul): 16075
XII. ("Trembling with age, propped by her guiding staff") (Trembling with age, propped by her guiding staff): 11532
XII. ("Ye pensile boughs of the far-spreading oak") (Ye pensile boughs of the far-spreading oak): 11748
XII. Epitaph on an Angler (Parmis, the son of Callignotus, he): 11610
XII. Epitaph on Aristion, a Dancing Girl (Aristion, who skillfully could beat): 11647
XII. Human Life (Which the best way of life? the forum rings): 11582
XII. Inscription on a Trophy at Thyrea (Sparta our country,—we thy thirty sons): 11516
XII. On a Fountain Called the Pure (The pure—ye nymphs, you fondly gave the name): 14163
XII. On a Small Island (An island I—whose length, with little toil): 11834
XII. On a Votive Conch (Who found thee, say, thou labyrinth marine): 11853
XII. The Bard's Wish (Oh were I laid): 9001
XII. The Chest of Tea and the Chest of Sage (One morning, as they chanced to meet at sea): 11489
XII. The Memorial of Mary (Thou hast thy record in the Monarch's hall.): 11340
XII.—Sixteenth Sunday After Trinity (Jesus, when I fainting lie): 16019
XIII. "That mountains gather clouds I know" (That mountains gather clouds I know): 11269
XIII. "The fruit of Bacchus in profusion spread" (The fruit of Bacchus in profusion spread): 11648
XIII. ("Like the soft breeze that round the cordage sighs") (Like the soft breeze that round the cordage sighs): 11533
XIII. ("Oh! would I were a breeze, that when the light") (Oh! would I were a breeze, that when the light): 11517
XIII. Another View of the Same Subject (Many the ways of life: the forum rings): 11583
XIII. Cleson's Goat (Through the whole mirksome night, did Cleson's goat): 11854
XIII. On a Vineyard Guarded by Pan (High on the mountains' dark green foliage here): 14164
XIII. On Her Child's Picture (This is Melinna's self: the gentle child): 11835
XIII. On the Iliad and Odyssey (Who are ye, Books, and what do ye contain?): 11749
XIII. The Owl; and XIV. The Dog and the Ragman (Some critics, of the coward sort): 11536
XIII. The Women of Jerusalem at the Cross (Like those pale stars of tempest-hours, whose gleam): 11341
XIII.—Seventeenth Sunday After Trinity (O why on death so bent?): 16020
Ximene (If only I might grieve my whole life long): 12309
XIV. "When the Titan brought fire to men on earth" (When the Titan brought fire to men on earth): 11270
XIV. ("The bones, perchance, of toil-worn mortal these") (The bones, perchance, of toil-worn mortal these): 11534
XIV. ("View not my tomb with pity, passer-by") (View not my tomb with pity, passer-by): 11649
XIV. ("Why this vain toil and trouble, mortal man!") (Why this vain toil and trouble, mortal man!): 11836
XIV. Mary Magdalene at the Sepulchre (Weeper! to thee how bright a morn was given): 11342
XIV. On a Statue of Venus in Cnidos (Who hath Cythera seen on earth? Who given): 11518
XIV. On a Temple to Venus (This temple rising from the rocky deep): 14165
XIV. On Pindar (Loud as the trumpet's swell excells the sound): 11750
XIV.—Twenty-First Sunday After Advent (Ten thousand times ten thousand): 16021
XIX. "Loud sceptic cock, I see thee stand" (Loud sceptic cock, I see thee stand): 11275
XIX. Hymn to Venus (Hail to thee, goddess dicine): 14170
XL. "The working fire is Action strong and true" (The working fire is Action strong and true): 11296
XLI. "One without stockings may wear a shoe" (One without stockings may wear a shoe): 11297
XLII. "Be busy in trading, receiving, and giving" (Be busy in trading, receiving, and giving): 11298
XLIII. "Think'st thou, friend, that legends lying" (Think'st thou, friend, that legends lying): 11304
XLIV. "Speak not, but mutely think !—the cynic cries" (Speak not, but mutely think !—the cynic cries): 11299
XLV. "A sage in rapture is a seer" (A sage in rapture is a seer): 11300
XLVI. "'Mid all the tribes of airy foul" ('Mid all the tribes of airy foul): 11301
XLVII. "To build a temple, more we need than toil" (To build a temple, more we need than toil): 11302
XLVIII. "I've known great wits whose wisdom all has lain" (I've known great wits whose wisdom all has lain): 11303
XV. "Some dæmon seized the bridegroom, seized the bride" (Some dæmon seized the bridegroom, seized the bride): 14166
XV. "The world sent forth a stately ship that long in glory sail'd" (The world sent forth a stately ship that long in glory sail'd): 11271
XV. ("Toss'd on a sea of troubles, oh! my soul") (Toss'd on a sea of troubles, oh! my soul): 11837
XV. (My youth's rich harvest cropped in all its bloom): 11650
XV. A Prayer (Unprayed or prayed for, grant us only good): 11519
XV. Epitaph on a Child (The boy, Callimachus, who grief ne'er knew): 11751
XV. Mary Magdalene Bearing Tidings of the Resurrection (Then was a task of glory all thine own): 11343
XV. On Appelles' Picture of Venus Anadyomene (From her own mother's bosom just escaped): 11535
XV. The Frog and the Frogling (From their dwelling in a bog): 11490
XV.—Twenty-Fifth Sunday After Trinity (Our year of grace is waning to its close): 16022
XVI. "Thou whose mental eye is keen" (Thou whose mental eye is keen): 11272
XVI. A Drinking Song (How sweet the compulsion of Cypris and Bacchus): 11838
XVI. On a Fountain Dedicated to Silence (In silence draw): 11651
XVI. On a Statue of Pan Piping (Keep silence now, ye Dryads' craggy rocks): 11520
XVI. The Ivy and the Vine (Ivy—with sidelong, creeping pace): 14167
XVI.—Ein Feste Burg ist Unser Gott (A tower of strength is God our Lord): 16023
XVII. "If all the forest leaves had speech" (If all the forest leaves had speech): 11273
XVII. (Where is thy stately beauty, Corinth now): 11652
XVII. A Faithful Disciple (The winged Mercury, the god): 14168
XVIII. "A Russian, looking at a map of earth" (A Russian, looking at a map of earth): 11274
XVIII. On an Image of Pan (The goat-herd Philoxenides for thee): 14169
XX. "How many giants, each in turn, have sought" (How many giants, each in turn, have sought): 11276
XXI. "Good friend, so worthlessly complete" (Good friend, so worthlessly complete): 11277
XXII. "A Frenchman gather'd salad for his dinner" (A Frenchman gather'd salad for his dinner): 11278
XXIII. "When he who told Ulysses' tale in song" (When he who told Ulysses' tale in song): 11279
XXIV. "A sleeper, sunk in dark discordant woes" (A sleeper, sunk in dark discordant woes): 11280
XXIX. On the Faun in the Tribune of the Florence Gallery (Though no Bacchante treads with thee the lawn): 11285
XXV. "I saw a flower-girl selling brightest flowers" (I saw a flower-girl selling brightest flowers): 11281
XXVI. "In Florence Dante's voice no more is booming" (In Florence Dante's voice no more is booming): 11282
XXVII. "I stood amid the Pitti's gilded halls" (I stood amid the Pitti's gilded halls): 11283
XXVIII. "True, O Sage! that mortal man" (True, O Sage! that mortal man): 11284
XXX. Raphael's Madonna Del Cardellino (Oh, Maid divine ! beholding in thy son): 11286
XXXI. The Tribune in the Florence Gallery (Where Venus shuns and more attracts the eye): 11287
XXXII. Michael Angelo's Statues on the Tombs of the Medici (Ye crown'd unmoving truths that had your birth): 11288
XXXIII. The Medicean Venus (Woman divine ! fair child of Grecian seas): 11289
XXXIV. The Belvedere Apollo (Bold and beaming in triumph looks the Lord of the Sun): 11290
XXXIX. "Many work to gain their wages" (Many work to gain their wages): 11295
XXXV. San Miniato, Near Florence (While slow on Miniato's height I roam): 11291
XXXVI. "Old flaming Ages full of struggling" (Old flaming Ages full of struggling): 11292
XXXVII. "Yellow, small Canary bird" (Yellow, small Canary bird): 11293
XXXVIII. "Candle that in deepest dark" (Candle that in deepest dark): 11294
Yarra (Poor Yarra comes to bid farewell): 5808
Yarrow (The simmer day was sweet an' lang): 3629
Yarrow Revisited (The gallant youth, who may have gained): 11655
Yarrow Stream (From Selkirk unto Newark Tower): 4370
Yarrow Unvisited (From Stirling Castle we had seen): 7750
Yarrow Unvisited. Written in 1803 (From Stirling Castle we had seen): 2998
Yarrow Visited. Written in September 1814 (And is this Yarrow? This the stream): 2999
Ye Are Not Miss'd, Fair Flowers (Ye are not miss'd, fair flowers, that late were spreading): 3430
Ye Gentlemen of England. An Excellent New Whig Song (Ye Gentlemen of England, ye Tories tough and true): 9882
Ye Penitential Duster. (Ye tune yt goeth to S. Betsye Bakere) (Miss Saurin, in that "convent case"): 13595
Ye Pugilists of England. As Sung by Messrs Price, Tims, and Woods (Son of the Fighting Waterman), on the 4th of September 1819, near the Linn of Dee (Ye Pugilists of England): 7805
Ye Years! ('Tis but the ghost of a feeling): 6976
Year After Year: A Love Song (Year after year the cowslips fill the meadow): 14250
Yearning (Over the west the glory dies away): 4649
Yearning for Wonderland. [From the German of Schiller] (Ah! that I could wing my way): 5809
Yellow Crocuses (The wind has wailed itself to rest): 4585
Yesterday (I see it now, through bygone years): 5995
Yesterday (It only seems like yesterday): 3608
Yesterday (What makes the king unhappy?): 3302
Yesterday and To-Day (The vale lay green as Eden): 1920
Yesterday Comes Not (I had a diamond ring): 7567
Yolande (A passing shower beats on the castle wall): 13160
York Minster (Just so it looked, you know): 4853
You and I (We stood by the shining summer sea): 13056
You Did! (As children, when we used to play): 3292
You Tides with ceaseless swell (You tides with ceaseless swell! you power that does this work!): 13688
You'll Never Guess (I know two eyes, two soft brown eyes): 2779
Young and Old (We were but foolish, dear): 6293
Young Janet (One morning young Janet): 9117
Young Nimrod's First Love. July (A summer noon is brightening): 237
Young Randal (Oh Randal was a bonnie lad when he gaed awa'): 10303
Young Randal (Young Randal was a bonnie lad, when he was gaed awa): 3014
Young's Night Thoughts (There was a time when every sort of people): 8179
Your Letter (I am going to burn your letter; I sit by the hearth alone): 4186
Your Loss Will Break My Heart (Why will you wear those ribbons, the red and blue cockade?): 12330
Your poem must eternal be (Your poem must eternal be): 3052
Youth (How beautiful the scenes of youth): 8765
Youth (O youth! in such a world as this): 15086
Youth (Who may be proud? the young: for why? the pride): 9125
Youth and Age (I sang a song, when life was young): 7566
Youth and Age (When I am old, these hills that bound): 12987
Youth and Age (When Time was young, and the faint golden spears): 13213
Youth and Age (With cheerful step the traveller): 2849
Youth and Age. New Version (With anxious eyes and rigid arms): 12583
Youth and Love. A Song (Sing of smiles, and not of tears): 13360
Youth and Summer (Summer's full of golden things!): 5243
Youth in Exile (The sun is down behind the hill): 12065
Youth Will Neads Have Dalliance, attributed to King Henry VIII (Pastime with good company): 2227
Youth's Glory (The bud is fairer than the full-blown flower): 2676
Youth's Return (Little Maid, whose day-break eyes): 1785
Zachary Meldrum (I knew a Parson once, but death has laid): 9714
Zara's Ear-rings (My ear-rings! my ear-rings! they've dropt into the well): 7838
Zebedee (I think the Lord would often come to see thee): 4331
Zembo and Nila (Where the western Niger roll’d): 15814
Zephyrs (All around was dark in mist): 11354
Zerotes (Zerotes is a man of stone): 6410
Zike Mouldom (The Devil took the soul of a man): 15894
Zuleikha (He loves me! yes, he loves me! these gay flowers): 4456
Δαιμονιζόμενος (You were clear as a sandy spring): 769
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’Arif
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À Beckett, Gilbert
A Correspondent
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A Dog
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Abbey, Henry
Abdülbâkî, Mahmud (pseudonym: “Bāky”)
Abdy, Maria
Acton, Rose
Adams, Charles Warren
Adams, Henry Gardiner
Adams, Lucy
Adcock, Arthur St. John
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Addey, Elizabeth
Addey, M. Louisa
Addis, John
Addleshaw, Percy (pseudonym “Percy Hemingway”)
Adye, S.
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Agathias Scholasticus
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Aird, Thomas
Airey
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Aitken, David Russell
Aitken, James Alfred
Aitken, John
Aitken, William
Alamanni, Antonio
Alcmæon (pseudonym)
Alderson, E. Maude
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Aldis, Thomas
Alexander, Anton (pseudonym Anastasius Grün)
Alexander, Cecil Frances
Alexander, D.
Alexander, Eleanor
Alexander, M. M. (pseudonym “Myra”)
Alexander, Patrick Proctor
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Alexander, W.
Alexander, W. L.
Alexander, William
Alford, Charles
Alford, Henry
Algernon Charles Swinburne (allonym)
Alighieri, Dante
Alison, Richard
Allan, Robert
Allen, Robin
Allingham, Helen
Allingham, William
Allom, Thomas
Alma-Tadema, Laurence (1865-1940; daughter of Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema)
Alma-Tadema, Lawrence (1836-1912)
Alpheus of Mitylene
Alsop, Anne
Ames, Minnie
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Anderson, William
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Antipater of Thessalonica
Antiphanes of Macedon
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Antiphilus of Byzantium
AOI△OƩ (pseudonym)
Apollodorus
Apollonidas of Smyrna
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Archer, James
Archias
Archilochus
Ardans
Argentarius, Marcus
Argles, Daisy
Argus (pseudonym)
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Aristophanes
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Armstead, Henry Hugh
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Author of “Poland”
Author of “The Garland,” &c.
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Aylmer, Isabella Eleanor (pseudonym “I. D. Fenton”)
Aytoun, William Edmonstoune
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Beale, James (junior)
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Beamish, A. M.
Beattie, James (1735-1803)
Beattie, James (1796-1838)
Beattie, William
Beaufort, M. E.
Beaumont, Francis
Beck, Ellen (pseudonym “Magdalen Rock”)
Becker, Nikolaus
Bécquer, Gustavo Adolfo
Beddoes, Thomas Lovell
Beech, H.
Beers, Ethel Lynn
Beg, Raf'at
Begbie, A. J.
Begbie, Agnes Helen
Begbie, E. H.
Beith, R.
Bell, Charles D.
Bell, Feodora
Bell, John Joy
Bell, Jonathan Anderson
Bell, Robert
Belleau, Rémy
ben Samuel, Judas Hallevy
Bendall, Ernest A.
Bendall, Gerard
Benham, H.
Bennet, William
Bennett, Charles Henry
Bennett, E. L.
Bennett, G. H.
Bennett, L. M.
Bennett, Lucy A.
Bennett, Mary
Bennett, William
Bennett, William Cox
Bennoch, Francis
Benson, Arthur Christopher
Benson, Ralph Augustus
Bentinck, Henry William Cavendish
Bentley, Charles
Bentley, J.
Beranger, Pierre-Jean de
Berger, Florence K.
Berger, Janet S.
Berkeley, Grantley
Bernal Osborne, Ralph (1808-1882)
Bernal, Ralph (1783-1854)
Bernard, Pierre-Joseph
Berry (pseudonym “Carradorne”)
Berry, Lizzie
Besemeres, Jane (pseudonym “Janet Byrne”)
Beth (pseudonym)
Betham-Edwards, Matilda
Bethune, Alexander
Bethune, John
Bethune, John Elliott Drinkwater
Bianor
Bicci, Ersilio
Bickmore, Charles
Biddle, Richard Julian
Bielby, Mena
Bieldfeld
Billi, Marianna Giarrè
Bingham, Clifton
Binns, George
Binyon, Laurence
Bion of Smyrna
Bird, H. M. (pseudonym “Jetta Vogel,” “Jetty Vogel”)
Bird, James
Bird, John
Bird, Mary Page
Birks, Edmund Charles
Bishop of Limerick
Bjørnson, Bjørnstjerne Martinius
Black, William
Blackie, John Stuart
Blackmore, Richard (1654-1729)
Blackmore, Richard D. (1825-1900)
Blackmore, W. P.
Blackwell, Anna
Blackwood, Helen Selina
Blagden, Isa
Blaikie, John Arthur
Blakeney, Edward H.
Blamire, Susanna
Blanchard, Samuel Laman
Blatchley, W. D.
Blatherwick, Charles
Blew, William John
Blind, Mathilde
Blind, Rudolf
Blomfield, Alfred
Blomfield, Dorothy Frances
Blood, L.
Bloomfield, Robert
Blunt, Wilfrid Scawen
Boag, J.
Bob Buller of Brazennose
Boccaccio
Bode, John Ernest
Boden, C. J.
Boger, Edmund
Bogle, William Lockhart
Boiardo, Matteo Maria
Boito, Arrigo
Bolton, A. D.
Bolton, Sarah T.
Bond, Richard Warwick
Bone, Robert Trewick
Boner, Charles
Bonington, Richard Parkes
Bonne, W.
Booker, Luke
Borrow, George
Bosanquet, Fabien
Bosquet, Amelie
Bostock, John
Bostock, W.
Bothams, Walter
Botticelli, Sandro
Boughton, W. H.
Boulger (née Havers), Dora (pseudonym “Theo. Gift”)
Bourges, Léonide
Bourne, Vincent
Bourne, W. St. Hill
Bowen, Charles Inniss
Bowen, Edward Ernest
Bowen, H. Courthope
Bowers, Georgina
Bowker, James
Bowles, William Lisle
Bowley, Ada Leonora
Bowley, May
Bowring, Edgar Alfred
Bowring, John
Bowron, William A.
Bowzy Beelzebub
Boyd, A.
Boyd, Alexander Stuart
Boyd, C. W.
Boyd, H.
Boyd, Percy
Boyesen, Hjalmar Hjorth
Boyle, J.
Boyle, Mary Louisa
Boyson, V. Fenton
Brachmann, Louise
Bradburn
Bradford (pseudonym “Ida Mary Forde”)
Bradford, Edwin Emmanuel
Bradley, Andrew Cecil
Bradley, Basil
Bradley, Edward (pseudonym “Cuthbert Bede”)
Bradley, Francis Ernest
Bradley, Katharine Harris (pseudonym “Michael Field”)
Bradwell, Jack
Brainard, John G. C.
Bramwell, H. F.
Brandreth, Henry
Braun, S. E.
Bray, Anna Eliza
Brazier, Adam
Breakspeare, Ada
Brenan, John Churchill
Brennan, Alfred Laurens
Brent, John
Breton, Jules
Brett, Cecil Winton
Brewtnall, Edward Frederick
Bridell-Fox, Eliza Florance
Bridges, Robert
Bridgman, L. J.
Briggs, S. Constance Isabelle
Brindley, Louis H.
Brine, Emily
Briss, Vida
Brock, E. G. C.
Brock, Lucy
Broderick, Albert
Broderip, Frances Freeling (née Hood)
Brodie-Innes, Francis Annesley
Brodrick, Alan
Bromage, L. Muriel Raikes
Brome, Alexander
Bromley, Beatrice M.
Bromley, Clough W.
Brontë, Charlotte
Brontë, Emily
Brooke, Richard Sinclair
Brookfield, William Henry
Brooks, Shirley
Brooks, Thomas
Broome, Frederick Napier
Brotherton, Alice Williams
Brotherton, Mary
Brough, Robert Barnabas
Brown
Brown, David
Brown, Edward Noyce
Brown, Ellen F.
Brown, Ford Madox
Brown, Henry Rowland (pseudonym “Oliver Grey”)
Brown, J. K.
Brown, J. O.
Brown, James (pseudonym “J. B. S.,” “J. B. Selkirk”)
Brown, James Pennycook
Brown, James Walter
Brown, John
Brown, John (1822-)
Brown, Robert
Brown, Thomas (1778-1820)
Brown, Thomas Edward
Brown, W.
Brown, W.
Brown, William
Browne (Brown), Frances
Browne, A. K.
Browne, E.
Browne, Gordon
Browne, Hablot Knight (pseudonym “Phiz”)
Browne, Marie Hedderwick
Browne, Mary Ann (Mrs. James Grey)
Browne, Washington
Browning, Alma
Browning, Elizabeth Barrett
Browning, Oscar
Browning, Robert
Bruce, Michael
Bruce, Wallace
Bryant, William Cullen
Brydges, Egerton
Buchanan, George
Buchanan, Marion
Buchanan, Robert Williams
Buchanan, Walter
Buck, Ruth
Buckman, Edwin
Buckner, Richard
Buller (pseudonym)
Bulwer-Lytton, Edward
Bulwer-Lytton, Robert (pseudonym “Owen Meredith”)
Burdette, Robert J.
Burdock
Bürger, Gottfried August
Burgess, Arthur
Burgess, James John Haldane
Burgess, W. A. S.
Burke, Christian Caroline Anna
Burlingham, A. S.
Burnand, Francis Cowley
Burne-Jones, Edward
Burney, Edward Francisco
Burney, F. H.
Burnley, James
Burns, David
Burns, Elizabeth Rollit
Burns, Robert
Burnside, Helen Marion
Burton, Henry
Burton, William Paton
Burton, William Shakespeare
Busby, Ellen
Busk, Mary Margaret
Busy-Body
Butcher, Charles Henry
Butler, Alexander Hume
Butler, Henry Montagu
Butler, William Archer
Butt, Beatrice May
Butt, Geraldine
Butters, Robert W.
By a Provisional Committee of Contributors
By One Who Knew Her
By the Author of “Tales and Sketches”
By the Translator of Homer’s Hymns
Byron, George Gordon
Byron, H. J.
C. (poet; Blackwood's)
C. (poet; Chambers's)
C. (poet; Good Words)
C. (poet; Once a Week)
C. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
C. B. (poet; Good Words)
C. B. (translator; Chambers's)
C. C. (poet; Once a Week)
C. C. (translator; Chambers's)
C. C. C. (poet; Once a Week)
C. C. H. (poet; Once a Week)
C. D. C. (poet; Cornhill)
C. E. C. (poet; Once A Week)
C. E. I. (poet; Once a Week)
C. E. P. (poet; Macmillan’s)
C. E. S. (poet; Dark Blue)
C. F. (poet; Chambers's)
C. F. (poet; Macmillan’s)
C. F. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
C. F. B. (poet; Good Words)
C. G. (A Lady in Lerwick) (poet; Chambers's)
C. H. (poet; Once a Week)
C. H. (poet; The Penny Magazine)
C. H. T. (poet; Good Words)
C. H. W. (poet; Once a Week)
C. I. E. (poet; Once a Week)
C. I. M. B. (poet; Atalanta)
C. J. M. B. (poet; Atalanta)
C. K. B. (translator; Once a Week)
C. M. (poet; Good Words)
C. M. A. C. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
C. M. I. (poet; Once a Week)
C. M. L. F. (poet; Good Words)
C. M. O’N. (poet; Blackwood's)
C. M. P. (poet; Chambers's)
C. N. (poet; Blackwood's)
C. N. S. (poet; Blackwood's)
C. O. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
C. P. (poet; Good Words)
C. R. B. (translator; Once a Week)
C. S. (illustrator)
C. S. (poet; Forget Me Not)
C. S. C. (poet; Once a Week)
C. S. F. (poet; Good Words)
C. S. G. (poet; Once a Week)
C. St***g (poet; Forget me Not)
C. T. (poet; Chambers's)
C. U. D. (poet; Cornhill)
C. U. D. (poet; Macmillan's)
C. W. B. (poet; Blackwood's)
C. W. C. (poet; Once a Week)
C+L+N+O (poet; Blackwood's)
Caddell, Cecilia Mary
Caddick, H. C.
Calder, Robert Hogg (pseudonym “Woodburn”)
Caldwell, Robert Charles
Call, Wathen Mark Wilks
Callanan, Jeremiah Joseph
Callimachus
Calverley, Charles Stuart
Calvert, Edwin Sherwood
Calvert, William
Cambridge, Ada
Cameron, Hugh
Cameron, J.
Cameron, Julia Margaret
Cameron, William C.
Campbell, (Robert) Calder
Campbell, E.
Campbell, George
Campbell, Gerald
Campbell, Gordon
Campbell, John
Campbell, Lewis
Campbell, P. M.
Campbell, Robert Lee
Campbell, Thomas
Campbell, W. A.
Campbell, William Wilfred
Canning, George
Canton, William
Cape, George Augustus
Capern, Edward
Capuana, Luigi
Caradoc, A. M.
Carducci, Giosuè
Carew, Thomas
Carey, E. G.
Carey, Elizabeth Sheridan
Carey, Henry
Carlisle, Mabel Beatrice
Carlyle, F.
Carman, Bliss
Carmichael
Carmichael, John Wilson
Carnegie, James
Carpenter, H. Boyd
Carpenter, Mary
Carpenter, William Boyd
Carphylides
Carr, Ernest A.
Carrington, Nicholas Toms
Carter, Alice Staples
Carter, E.
Carter, H. C.
Carter, Kate
Cary, Alice
Cary, Phoebe
Cassiani, Giuliano
Castleman, E.
Catholicus Sudans (pseudonym)
Cattermole, George
Cattermole, Richard
Catty, Charles
Catullus, Gaius Valerius
Caulfield, H. C.
Caunter, John Hobart
Cavalcanti, Guido
Cave, Dora
Cave, Eastwood
Cavell
Cavendish, Margaret
Cay, John
Cayley, George John
Celano, Thomas of
Cerealius
Chalkhill, John
Chalklen, Charles William
Chalon, A.
Chalon, Alfred Edward
Chambers, James
Chambers, Robert
Chambers, William
Chamier, Frederick
Chanter (Longworth Knocker), Gratiana
Chapman, Elizabeth Rachel
Chapman, Matthew James
Charles, Elizabeth Rundle
Charlesworth, Edward Gomersall
Charnock, Mary Anna E. (née Peterson)
Charrin, Pierre-Joseph
Chartier, Alain
Chatterton
Chaucer, Geoffrey
Cheetham, Mary
Chénier, André
Chester, J.
Chester, John
Chettow, John
Chetwynd Griffith-Jones, Elizabeth (pseudonym “George Earnest”)
Child-Villiers, Margaret Elizabeth
Chisholme, Alexander
Cholmondeley Pennell, Henry
Chorley, Henry F.
Chorley, John R.
Christie, James Elder
Christie, M. C.
Christopher North (pseudonym)
Christopoulos, Athanasios
Church, Alfred J.
Churchill, Rosie
Chylde, Christmas E.
Cibber, Colley
Clanvowe, John
Clare, John
Clark, John Haldenby
Clark, Margaret S.
Clark, W. G.
Clarke, Edward Daniel
Clarke, Edward Francis C.
Clarke, H.
Clarke, Henry Savile
Clarke, M.
Clarke, Mary Victoria Cowden
Clarke, S.
Clarke, William Branwhite
Claudian
Cleaver, Mary
Clegg, John Trafford
Clennell, Luke
Clerke, Agnes Mary
Clerke, Ellen M.
Cleugh, J.
Cleugh, James
Clifford, Hugh Charles
Clifton, Arthur (pseudonym “Arthur Marvell”)
Clifton, William John
Clive, Caroline
Close, Charles A.
Close, John (pseudonym “Poet Close”)
Clowes, William Laird
Coates, Elizabeth (née Youatt)
Cobbe, Frances Power
Cobbett, William
Cobbold, Elizabeth
Cochrane-Baillie, Alexander
Cochrane, Alfred
Cochrane, Robert
Cockle, Mary
Colborne Veel, Mary
Coleridge, Hartley
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor
Colin
Colin Clout (pseudonym)
Coller, Edwin
Collier, J. Payne
Colling, Elizabeth (pseudonym "Eta")
Colling, Mary Maria
Collins, John (1742-1808)
Collins, John C. (1848-1908)
Collins, Mortimer
Collinson, Septimus
Colomb, George Hatton
Colomb, Wellington
Compton, Herbert
Conder, Josiah
Congreve, T.
Connell, M. A.
Conway, Charles Denys
Conybeare, John C.
Coode, Helen Hoppner
Cook, Eliza
Cooke, A.
Cooke, Philip Pendleton
Cookson, Christopher
Cooper
Cooper, Abraham
Cooper, Edith Emma (pseudonym “Michael Field”)
Cooper, James Davis
Cooper, Katharine (also Katherine) (née Saunders)
Cooper, M.
Cooper, R.
Cooper, Thomas
Coppée, François
Corbaux, Fanny
Corbet, Richard
Corbould, Edward Henry
Corbould, H. C.
Corbould, Henry
Cordner, Charlotte
Coritanus (pseudonym)
Costello, Louisa Stuart
Cotes, Digby
Cotes, E. [M.?]
Cotterell, George
Courtney, E. J.
Cowan, Alexander
Cowan, William
Cowell, Edward Byles
Cowell, Sydney
Cowen, William
Cowley-Brown, G. J.
Cowley, Abraham
Cowper, William
Cox, F. J.
Cox, L. S.
Cox, Palmer
Coxhead, Ethel
Crabbe, George
Cradock, John Hobart
Craig (Knox), Isa
Craig, John
Craig, Mary A.
Craig, Robert
Craig, Robert Smith
Craik, Dinah
Cramp, William Archibald
Crane, Beatrice
Crane, Walter
Cregan, Beatrice
Cresandia (pseudonym)
Crespi, C. R.
Creswick, Thomas
Crinagoras
Cristall, Joshua
Croker, Thomas Crofton
Croly, George
Crombie, John William
Crompton, R. S.
Crosland, Camilla (née Toulmin)
Crosland, Newton
Cross, Albert Francis
Cross, Edythe H.
Cross, Mary
Crossley, James
Crossman, W.
Crouch, Elizabeth
Crow, Louisa
Crowe, Eyre Evans
Crowe, Mary J.
Crowe, William
Crowley, Nicholas Joseph
Cryan, Robert W.
Cumming
Cumming, C.
Cunningham, Allan
Cunninghame, R. B.
Cunston
Currie, Mary Montgomerie (pseudonym “Violet Fane”)
Cursham, Mary Anne
Curwen, Henry
Custance, Olive
Cutter, William
Cyrus the Poet
D. (poet; Chambers's)
D. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
D. F. A. (poet; Blackwood's)
D. G. B. (poet; Good Words)
D. G. R. (poet; Once a Week)
D. H. (poet; Chambers's)
D. J. M. (poet; Blackwood's)
D. L. P. (poet; Chambers's)
D. M. (poet; Chambers's)
D. T. (poet; Blackwood's)
D'Oyly, Thomas
d'Urfey, Thomas
D’Annunzio, Gabriele
d’Orléans, Charles
Da Costa, Isaac
da Filicaja, Vincenzo
Dadd, Frank
Dafforne, J.
Dagmar (pseudonym)
Daintrey, George
Dale, Thomas
Dalmon, Charles William
Dalton, Cornelius Neale
Dalton, James Forbes
Dalziel
Dalziel, Edward Gurden
Dalziel, L. Beith (pseudonym “Bessie Dill”)
Dalziel, Thomas
Damagetus
Daman, R.
Dana, Richard H.
Danby, B. M
Danby, William
Daniel, Mary
Daniel, Samuel
Daniell, Martin
Daniell, William
Darby, E., Jun.
Darby, Eleanor
Darnell, Martin
Dasent, George Webbe
Daumas, Melchior Joseph Eugène
Davenant, William
Davids, C. J.
Davidson, Alexander
Davidson, Catharine
Davidson, John
Davidson, John William
Davidson, Lucretia Maria
Davidson, T.
Davidson, Thomas
Davies, Charles Maurice
Davies, G. Christopher
Davies, J. H.
Davies, Joseph
Davis, Israel
Davis, J. H.
Davis, John Philip
Davis, Thomas Osborne
Davis, Valentine
Davlin, Charles
Dawes, Rufus
Dawson, James
Day, Julia
Dayka, Gábor
de Argensola, Bartolomé Leonardo
de Argensola, Lupercio Leonardo
de Banville, Théodore
de Beauharnais, Hortense
de Burgh, Hubert
de Bury, Marie Blaze
de Castellana
de Cetina, Gutierre
de Chateaubriand, François-René
de Chatelain, Clara
de Heredia, Jose Maria
de Heussy, M.
de la Fontaine, Jean
de la Vega, Garcilaso
de Lamartine, Alphonse
de Lemene, Francesco
de Mapes, Walter
de Mattos, Katharine
de Mendoza, Diego Hurtado
de Musset, Alfred
de Quental, Anthero
de Quevedo, Francisco
de Rioja, Francisco
de Ronsard, Pierre
de Vega, Lope
De Vere, Aubrey
De Vigny, Alfred
de Villegas, Esteban Manuel
de Wilde, George James
De' Medici, Lorenzo
Deakin, H. C.
Deane, Anthony C.
Deans, George
Dearmer, Mabel
Deazeley, John Howard
Debat-Ponsan, Édouard
Deinhardstein, Johann Ludwig
della Casa, Giovanni
Dempster, Charlotte
Dendy, Alice
Denham, John
Denison, William Joseph
Dennis, John
Dent, Annie
Dent, Jessie C.
Desanges, Louis William
Deuern
Deutsch, Emanuel
Devas, Martha Anne
Devereux, W.
Dewey, Edgar
Dibdin, Thomas John
Dickens, Charles
Dickinson, Emily
Dickinson, R.
Dicksee, Frank
Dicksee, Margaret
Dickson, Antonia
Dickson, Maria Frances
Dietrich, Christian Wilhelm Ernst
Digges, Leonard
Dilks, T. Bruce
Dill (pseudonym “Bee”)
Dilly, J. J.
Dilly, Joseph
Dinton, Elise
Dionysius
Dioscorides
Ditchfield, Peter Hampson
Doane, George Washington
Dobell, Clarence
Dobell, Eva (pseudonym “Eva D.”)
Dobell, Sydney
Dobie, W. Fraser
Dobson, Austin
Dockray, Louisa
Dodge, Mary B.
Dodgson, Charles Lutwidge (pseudonym “Lewis Carroll”)
Dods, Mary Diana (pseudonym “David Lyndsay”)
Doering, Heinrich
Doherty, Francis Malcolm
Domett, Alfred
Donald, George (1800-1851)
Donald, George (1826-)
Donald, J.
Donne, John
Dorat, Claude Joseph
Doubleday, Thomas
Doudney, Sarah
Dougall, William
Doveton, Frederick Bazett
Dow, J.
Dowden, Edward
Dowding, F. Townley
Dowie, Menie Muriel
Downes, George
Downes, Louisa June Campbell (pseudonym “Vere Haldane”)
Downing, Harriet
Dowson, Ernest
Doyle, Arthur Conan
Doyle, Charles Altamont
Doyle, Francis Hastings Charles
Dr. James Scott (allonym)
Drayton, Michael
Dreves, Lebrecht
Driver, F.
Drummond, W.
Drummond, William (Drummond of Hawthornden)
Drury, Anna H.
Dryden, John
Du Bellay, Joachim
Du Fu
Du Maurier, George
Duff-Gordon, Lucie
Dumas, Alexandre
Dunbar, William
Duncan, A. S.
Duncan, D. M.
Duncan, Edward
Duncan, Eric
Dupont, Pierre
Duthie, William
Dutt, Govin Chunder
Dutt, Shoshee Chunder
Dutton
Dutton, Frank R.
Dyer, Edward
Dykes, T.
Dyson, Emily
E. (poet; Blackwood's)
E. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
E. (poet; Good Words)
E. A. D. (poet; Atalanta)
E. A. S. (poet; Good Words)
E. B. (poet; Chambers's)
E. B. (poet; Macmillan’s)
E. B. (translator; Chambers's)
E. B. H. (translator; Blackwood's)
E. B. P. (poet; Cornhill)
E. B. P. (poet; English Woman's Journal)
E. C. (poet; Macmillan’s)
E. C. G. (poet; Good Words)
E. D. (poet; Blackwood's)
E. D. C. (poet; Chambers's)
E. D. C. (translator; Chambers's)
E. D. S. (poet; Macmillan’s)
E. E. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
E. E. W. (poet; Once a Week)
E. F. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
E. F. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
E. F. M. (poet; Chambers's)
E. G. H. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
E. H. (illustrator)
E. H. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
E. H. (poet; Good Words)
E. H. C. D. (poet; Chambers’s)
E. H. E. (poet; Once a Week)
E. H. G. (illustrator)
E. H. K. (poet; Victorian Magazine)
E. H. O. (poet; Cornhill)
E. H. S. (poet; Good Words)
E. H. T. (poet; Blackwood's)
E. H. T. (poet; The Keepsake)
E. J. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
E. J. M. (poet; Once a Week)
E. M. B. (poet; Once a Week)
E. M. M. (poet; Chambers's)
E. M. P. (poet; Once a Week)
E. N. (poet; Atalanta)
E. N. P. R. (poet; Chambers's)
E. N. P. R. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
E. P. (poet; Chambers's)
E. P. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
E. P. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
E. R. (Good Words; illustrator)
E. R. (poet; Chambers’s)
E. S. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
E. S. (poet; The Keepsake)
E. S. C. (poet; Good Words)
E. S. D. (poet; Once a Week)
E. W. H. (illustrator)
Eagles, John
Earle
Earp, Thomas
Eastman, Charles G.
Eastwood, John R.
Ebert, Karl Egon von
Eccles (pseudonym)
Echtler, A.
Eckley, Sophie May
Ede, Charles
Edenborough, A.
Edmonds, Elizabeth Mayhew
Edmondson, William
Edmonstone, Archibald
Edward
Edwards, Amelia B.
Edwards, Annie
Edwards, George Henry
Edwards, Henry Sutherland
Edwards, Kate
Edwards, Mary Ellen (Mrs Freer, Mrs John C. Staples)
Edwards, Thomas
Eeles, E.
Egerton, Francis (Leveson-Gower)
Egremont, Godfrey
Eliot, Marynx
Elliot, Charlotte
Elliot, Mary L.
Elliot, William
Elliott, Ebenezer
Elliott, F. G.
Elliott, J. A.
Elliott, Lucinda
Ellis
Ellis, B. Trapp
Ellis, Henry
Ellis, John
Ellis, Robinson
Elpis (pseudonym)
Elton, Charles Abraham
Elton, Charles Isaac
Eltze, Frederick
Emerson, Ralph Waldo
Emmerson
Emra, Elizabeth
English, Elizabeth
Ennius
Ensor, Robert Charles K.
Epp, R.
Erle
Erskine Norton, Eliza Bland
Erskine, Henry
Erycius Cyzicenus
Etheridge, Annie
Etherington
Ettrick Shepherd
Eubulus
Euripides
Evans, Anne
Evans, Marian (pseudonym “George Eliot”)
Evans, Sebastian
Evelyn
Evered, Robert
Evezard, Alice
Ewen, Marie J.
Eyre, Mary
Eytinge, Margaret
Eωҁ (pseudonym)
F. (poet; Blackwood's)
F. (poet; Macmillan's)
F. A. (poet; Atalanta)
F. B. S. (poet; Chambers's)
F. E. C. (poet; Once a Week)
F. E. T. (poet; Cornhill)
F. F. (poet; Chambers's)
F. G. (poet; Good Words)
F. M. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
F. M. H. (poet; Once a Week)
F. N. B. (poet; Macmillan’s)
F. S. H. (poet; Chambers's)
F. T. (poet; Chambers's)
F. W. (poet; Once a Week)
F. W. B. (illustrator)
Faber, Frederick William
Fairfax-Muckley, Louis
Fairfield, A. R.
Fairlie, Louisa
Falconer, Agnes S.
Falconer, Alexander
Falconer, Mary W. M.
Fallon, Daniel
Fane, Julian Charles Henry
Fargus, Frederick John (pseudonym “Hugh Conway”)
Farmar, Constance
Farmer, Fanny
Farren, E.
Farrer, A.
Farrier, Robert
Farrow, T.
Favart, Charles Simon
Fawkes, Francis
Fāzil
Fearn, Joseph
Feller, Frank
Fellows, Louisa
Fénelon, François
Fenn, George Manville
Fenn, Henry
Ferguson
Ferguson, Samuel
Ferguson, Tom
Fergusson, James R.
Fergusson, Robert
Ferrar, William John
Ferrier, James Frederick
Ferrier, Susan
Fidler, Gideon M.
Fields, Annie Adams
Fields, Florence
Fields, James T.
Fildes, (Samuel) Luke
Finch Hatton, George James
Finlay, John
Finnemore, Joseph
Fisk, William (1796-1872)
Fisk, William Henry (1827-1884)
Fitz-Andrew (pseudonym)
Fitz-Gerald, Desmond G.
Fitzgerald, Clare
Fitzgerald, Edward
Fitzgerald, Geraldine
Fleet, John George
Fleetwood, Peter Hesketh
Fleming
Fleming, James M.
Fletcher, Giles
Fletcher, John
Fletcher, Joseph Smith
Fletcher, Phineas
Flintoff, Albert
Flintoff, C. E.
Fogazzaro, Antonio
Fogg, L. M.
Fonblanque, Albany Jr.
Ford, Jane H. C.
Ford, John
Forrest, James
Forrester, Fanny
Forsayth, Thomas Gifford
Forsyth, J. B.
Forsyth, William
Fort, Frederick
Foscolo, Ugo
Foster, Myles Birket
Foster, Will
Fowler, Ellen Thorneycroft
Fox, Edward
Fox, Joseph
Fox, Sarah Hustler
Fradelle, Henri Jean-Baptiste Victoire
Francillon, Robert Edward
Francis, C.
Franks, Bessy
Franzen, Frans Michael
Fraser-Tytler, Christina Catherine
Fraser-Tytler, Mary Seton
Fraser, B. M.
Fraser, Francis Arthur
Fraser, John W.
Fraser, Robert
Fraser, Robert Winchester
Fraser, W. (pseudonym “Randolph Fitz-Eustace”)
Freeland, William
Freeman, E. D.
Freeman, Mary E. Wilkins
Freiligrath, Ferdinand
French, Harry
Frere, John Hookham
Frere, Mary Eliza Isabella
Friend Richard
Friese, J.
Frith, William Powell
Fritz (illustrator)
Fritz (pseudonym)
Fröhlich, Lorens
From the Papers of a Country Curate
Froude, James Anthony
Fucini, Renato
Fuller, F. L.
Fuller, James Franklin
Fullerton, William Morton
Fulton, Florence M.
Furley, Catherine Grant
Furlong, Alice
Furlong, Mary
Fyfe (pseudonym “Senga”)
Fyvie Mayo, Isabella
G. (poet; Good Words)
G. (poet; Once a Week)
G. (translator; Blackwood's)
G. (translator; Keepsake)
G. B. (poet; Blackwood's)
G. B. (poet; Cornhill)
G. C. (poet; Chambers's)
G. D. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
G. F. (illustrator)
G. F. R. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
G. H. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
G. K. T. (illustrator)
G. L. (illustrator)
G. M. (poet; Chambers's)
G. M. (translator; Macmillan's)
G. M. F. (poet; Once a Week)
G. P. S. (poet; Good Words)
G. T. (poet; Once a Week)
G. W. (poet; Cornhill)
G. W. Y. (poet; Blackwood's)
Gale, Norman
Gallagher, William Joseph
Gallus, Cornelius
Galt, John
Galton, Arthur
Gandar, W. B.
Gardiner, Annie Walker
Gardiner, Linda
Gardiner, Marguerite
Gardiner, William
Gardner, Alan Legge
Gardner, William Biscombe
Garnett, E.
Garnett, Lucy
Garnett, Richard
Garrett, Edmund H.
Garrow, Theodosia
Gaskell, Elizabeth
Gaskell, William
Gaugain, Philip A.
Gautier, Théophile
Gay, Walter
Geddes, E.
Geibel, Emmanuel
Gemmer, C. M.
Geoghegan, Mary
George, Frances (née Southwell)
Geraldine (pseudonym)
Gerard, Emily
Gerhardt, Paul
Germanicus (pseudonym)
Gerok, Karl von
Giacomelli, Hector
Gianni, Lapo
Gibb, E. J. W.
Gibb, W.
Gibbs, William Alfred
Gibney, Edward S.
Gibson, C.
Gibson, C. G.
Gibson, Elizabeth
Gibson, Mary W. A.
Gibson, T. H.
Gibson, Wilfrid Wilson
Gidley, Lewis
Gil, A. O.
Gilbert, Bryan
Gilbert, Nicolas Joseph Laurent
Gilbert, W. S.
Gilchrist, Alexander
Giles, Elizabeth
Gilfillan, Robert
Gill, M. P.
Gillespie, Thomas (1778-1844) (pseudonym “Juvenalis Junior”)
Gillespie, Thomas (Chartist poet)
Gillies, Robert Pearse
Gillington, May Clarissa (Byron)
Giusti, Giuseppe
Gladstone, William Ewart
Glanville, Charlotte
Glase, Agnes E.
Glasse, John
Glatigny, Albert
Glaucus
Gleig, George Robert
Gleim, Johann Wilhelm
Glover, Evelyn H. M.
Goddard, George Bouverie
Goddard, Julia
Godley, Alfred Denis
Godwin, Catherine Grace (née Garnett)
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von
Goldie, G.
Góngora, Luis de
Good, John Mason
Goodale Eastman, Elaine
Goodale, Dora Reade
Goodhart, C. W.
Goodrich, Samuel Griswold
Gordon, Adam Lindsay
Gordon, George Huntly
Gordon, James A.
Gore-Booth, Eva
Gore, Catherine Frances (née Moody)
Gorges, Mary
Gosnell, William
Goss, William Henry
Gosse, Edmund
Gostick, Joseph
Gough, Benjamin
Gould, Hannah Flagg
Gow, Mary L.
Gowen, J. R.
Gracie, A.
Graham
Graham, Eleanor (Grimshaw)
Graham, James
Graham, James (1612-1650)
Graham, John
Graham, M.
Graham, Thomas Alexander Ferguson
Grahame, James
Grahame, Kenneth
Grant, Alexander
Grant, Anne (née MacVicar)
Grant, Francis
Grant, James Gregor
Grant, Ludovic James
Grant, N. D.
Grant, William James
Graves, Alfred Perceval
Graves, Charles L.
Graves, Clotilde
Gray, Alex
Gray, Charles
Gray, J.
Gray, John
Gray, Paul Mary
Gray, Robert
Gray, William
Green, Charles
Green, Eliza Craven
Green, Kathleen Haydn
Green, S. G.
Green, Saretta
Green, T.
Green, T. J.
Green, W.
Green, William Charles
Green, William Henry
Greene, Gerald B.
Greenlaw, M.
Greenwell, Dora
Greenwood, Frederick
Greg, Samuel
Gregor, W. Gow
Grey, G. Duncan
Grey, John
Grieve, John
Griffin, C. J.
Griffin, Edmund D.
Griffin, Gerald
Griffith, W. G.
Griffiths, M. M.
Grindrod, Charles
Grob, Conrad
Groser, Horace George
Grosvenor, Thomas
Grote, Harriet
Groth, Klaus
Gruchy, Gabriel
Grundy, Sydney
Guerrini, Olindo
Guidi, Carlo Alessandro
Gulland, Elizabeth
Gun, Gordon
Gurner, Walter
Gush, William
Guthrie, H.
Gwynn, Stephen
H. (poet; Blackwood's)
H. (poet; Chambers's)
H. (poet; Good Words)
H. (poet; Once a Week)
H. (translator; Once a Week)
H. A. D. (poet; Once a Week)
H. B. (poet; Chambers’s)
H. B. H. (translator; Blackwood’s)
H. B.-D. (poet; Woman's World)
H. C. (poet; Atalanta)
H. C. (poet; Chambers's)
H. C. B. (poet; Chambers's)
H. C. C. (poet; Chambers's)
H. C. G. M. (poet; Macmillan's)
H. D. H. (illustrator)
H. D. W. (poet; Once a Week)
H. E. B. H. (poet; Cornhill)
H. E. M. (translator; Blackwood’s)
H. F. C. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
H. G. (poet; Blackwood's)
H. G. K. (pseudonym; Blackwood’s)
H. G. W. (illustrator)
H. H. (poet; Good Words)
H. H. (poet; Once a Week)
H. H. O. (poet; Chambers's)
H. I. H. O. (poet; Chambers's)
H. J. H. (poet; Atalanta)
H. J. O. (poet; Good Words)
H. K. (poet; Blackwood’s)
H. K. (translator; Blackwood's)
H. L. (poet; Macmillan's)
H. L. (translator; English Woman’s Journal)
H. M. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
H. M. Junr. (poet; Chambers's)
H. M’D. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
H. N. (translator; Forget-Me-Not)
H. P. (poet; Macmillan’s)
H. P. (poet; Once a Week)
H. R. (poet; Chambers's)
H. R. W. (poet; Once a Week)
H. T**y (pseudonym)
H. W. (poet; Chambers's)
H., Alice
Habert, François
Habington, William
Hackett, Wilfred S.
Hafez
Hahn, Johannes Theophilus
Haines, C. R.
Haines, Florence M.
Hale, Philip
Hale, W. P.
Hales, John Wesley
Haley, Alice (pseudonym “Allison Hughes”)
Haliburton, Robert Grant
Halkett, Violet Mary Craigie
Hall, Fanny
Hall, Henry Bryan
Hall, Lydia S. (pseudonym “Adelaide”)
Hall, Samuel Carter
Hall, William C.
Halleck, Fitz-Greene
Haller, Albrecht von
Hallevi, Jehudah
Hallward, Reginald
Halse, George (pseudonym “Rattlebrain”)
Halsey, Grace Virginia
Halswelle, Keeley
Hamilton, C.
Hamilton, Eliza Mary
Hamilton, Richard Winter
Hamilton, Thomas
Hamilton, William
Hamley, Edward Bruce
Hancock, Charles
Hankin, Julian de Kestel
Hankin, Mary Louisa (née Perralt)
Hanley, Kate
Hanmer, John
Hannay, E. H. C.
Harding, Emily Grace
Harding, James Duffield
Harding, Joseph
Hardinge, William Money
Hardy, Heywood
Hardy, J.
Hardy, Paul
Hardy, Thomas
Harford, L.
Häring, Georg Wilhelm Heinrich (pseudonym “Willibald Alexis”)
Harington, Margaret Agneta
Harkness, Thomas
Harlamoff, Alexei
Harland, Aline
Harman, E. King
Harnett, A. W.
Harper
Harper, Henry Arthur
Harriet (pseudonym)
Harrington, Elsie
Harris, A. L.
Harris, John
Harrison, Jane Ellen
Harrison, William Henry
Hart, Elizabeth Anna
Hart, Solomon Alexander
Hartwig, Gustav
Harvey, Florence
Harvey, G.
Harvey, Laura
Harvey, S. W.
Harvey, W. F.
Hasell, Elizabeth Julia
Haslehurst, Ernest William
Haslehurst, F. W.
Hassam, Childe
Hastings, Barbara Rawdon
Hatton, Joshua (pseudonym “Guy Roslyn”)
Haughton, Julia
Havergal, Francis Ridley
Havers, Alice Mary
Havilah (pseudonym)
Hawcroft, Joseph Mowbray
Haweis, Hugh Reginald
Haweis, Mary Eliza (née Joy)
Hawker, Robert Stephen
Hawkey, Charlotte
Hawkins, Annie
Hawkins, John
Hawksley, Julia M. A.
Hawtrey, Phyllis
Hay, Mary Cecil
Hay, Robert W.
Hay, William Mcleager
Hayes, Alfred
Hayman, Henry
Hayne, Paul Hamilton
Hays, Matilda
Hayter, George
Hayter, John
Hayward, Gerald
Hearne, Thomas
Heath, Helena
Heaton, Arthur Frederick
Heaven, Frederick Charles
Hebbel, Christian Friedrich
hebdomadal hand [symbol]
Heber, Reginald
Hedderwick, James
Hedges, John
Heine, Heinrich
Hemans, Felicia
Hemery, Francis H.
Henderson
Henderson, H. L.
Henderson, H. S.
Henderson, J.
Henderson, J. H.
Henderson, James
Henderson, John
Hendry, Hamish
Hendry, James
Henley, William Ernest
Hennessy, William John
Henniker (née Milnes), Florence
Henry, R.
Henryson, Robert
Heraclides
Heraud, John Abraham
Herbert, Auberon
Herbert, George
Herbert, Henry
Herbert, Jane Emily
Herbert, John Rogers
Herbertson, Agnes Grozier
Herder, Johann Gottfried von
Herford, Oliver
Hering, George Edwards
Herkomer, Hubert Von
Hermione (pseudonym)
Hermocreon
Herodotus
Herrick, Robert
Herrick, William Salter
Herschel, John
Hervey, Eleanora Louisa
Hervey, Thomas Kibble
Herz (pseudonym)
Hesper (pseudonym)
Hetherington, William Maxwell
Heward, John
Hewett, Sarah F.
Heywood, Thomas
Hibernian (pseudonym)
Hichens, Robert Smythe
Hickey, Emily
Hickey, Thomas E.
Higginbotham, Elsie
Higgins, H. W.
Higginson, Agnes Shakespeare (pseudonym “Moira O’Neill”)
Hildyard, Ida Jane (pseudonym “Ida J. Lemon”)
Hill, Alsager Hay
Hill, George
Hill, Grace H.
Hill, Isabel
Hill, Louisa
Hill, Will
Hill, William K.
Hills, Robert
Hills, Walter Alfred
Hilse (pseudonym)
Hilton, Arthur Clement
Hine, Maud Egerton
Hingston, Francis
Hislop, James
Hitchcock, George
Hitchings, Charles H.
Hitchman, James Francis
Hoare, Mary Anne
Hobart-Hampden, Lucy Pauline
Hobden, Frank
Hodges, J. H.
Hodges, Sydney
Hodgson, G. G.
Hodson, Magaret
Hogg, Henry
Hogg, James
Hogg, Robert
Hogg, Walter
Hoggan, James
Holden, Mary
Hole, Samuel Reynolds
Holland, Elizabeth (née Gaskell)
Holland, Henry W.
Holland, James
Holland, John
Holland, Laurence Gifford
Holland, M. A.
Holland, Richard George
Hollings, Fanny Sophia
Hollings, James Francis
Hollingshead, John
Hollins, Dorothy
Holman Hunt, William
Holme, James Wilson
Holme, Margaret Torre
Holme, T. M.
Holmes, F. B.
Holmes, James
Holmes, Oliver Wendell
Hölty, Ludwig Christoph Heinrich
Home, F. Wyville
Homer
Homewood, A. S.
Homikoff
Hood, Thomas
Hood, Tom (Jnr)
Hook, Theodore Edward
Hope, Constance
Hopkins, Arthur
Hopkins, Everard
Hopkins, Frances Anne (née Beechey)
Hopkins, Gerard Manley
Hopkins, Jane Ellice
Hopkins, Manley
Hopper, Nora
Horace
Hormazdi, [N. J.?]
Horne, Edward H.
Horne, Herbert P.
Horne, Richard Hengist
Hornklofi, Þórbjǫrn
Hornung, E. W.
Horton, Alice
Horton, Robert Forman
Hough, Lewis
Houghton, Arthur Boyd
Housman, A. E.
Housman, Laurence
Housman, R. F.
Houston, Maud
Houston, Robert
Hovenden, Robert Meyrick
How, William Walsham
Howard, C. W.
Howard, Charles
Howard, Edward
Howard, George William Frederick
Howard, Henry
Howard, Rose
Howden, Jessie C.
Howden, Walter C.
Howie, David
Howitt, Mary
Howitt, Richard
Howlett, Arthur Waltham
Howson, Edmund Whytehead
Howson, J. S.
Hudson, John
Hudson, Mary
Hüffer, Franz
Hughes, Arthur
Hughes, Edward
Hughes, John
Hughes, Mabel L. V.
Hugo, Victor
Huie, Richard
Hulbert, Howard
Hull, Edward
Hull, John Dawson
Hume, Alexander
Hume, Mary Catherine
Humphreys
Hunt, F. E.
Hunt, J. F.
Hunt, John
Hunt, Leigh
Hunt, M. V. G.
Hunt, Violet
Hunter, Anne
Hunter, Harriett Eliza
Hunter, Sissie
Hutchinson, J. P.
Hutton, J.
Huxley, Henrietta Anne
Huxley, Thomas Henry
Hyde, Douglas
I. (poet; Macmillan’s)
I. A. C. (poet; Chambers's)
I. C. (poet; Good Words)
I. D. F. (poet; Once a Week)
I. H. R. (poet; Chambers's)
I. K. (poet; Good Words)
I. P. C. (translator; Forget-Me-Not)
I. R. V. (poet; Chambers's)
Iago, William
Ibbs, J. C.
Ibsen, Henrik
Icarus (pseudonym)
Ilimon
Illegible Illustrator
Image, Selwyn
Imlach, A. F.
Immermann, Karl Leberecht
Ingelow, Jean
Ingelrain
Ingham, Jane Sarson Cooper
Inglis, Henry D. (pseudonym “Derwent Conway”)
Inglis, William F. E.
Innes, Alexander Taylor
Ireland, Ethel
Irving, Edward A.
Irving, Washington
Irwin, Edward
Isaac Tomkins (allonym)
Isaacs
Iselin, Sophia
Iseult (pseudonym)
Isidorus Ægeates
Israëls, Josef
Issel, M.
Italicus, Silius
Izmali, Hamet al
J. (poet; Good Words)
J. (poet; Once a Week)
J. (translator; Once a Week)
J. A. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. A. (poet; Chambers's)
J. A. (poet; Good Words)
J. A. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
J. A. of Wadham College, Oxford
J. A. P. (poet; Good Words)
J. B. (poet; Chambers's)
J. B. (translator; Once a Week)
J. B. L. (poet; Chambers's)
J. B. M. (poet; Chambers's)
J. B. S. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
J. B. S. (poet; Once a Week)
J. B. Y. (illustrator)
J. C. (poet; Chambers's)
J. C. (poet; Chartist Circular)
J. C. (poet; Once a Week)
J. C. A. (poet; Good Words)
J. C. H. J. (poet; Once a Week)
J. D. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. D. (poet; Chambers's)
J. D. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
J. D. H. (poet; Chambers's)
J. E. (poet; Good Words)
J. E. B. (illustrator)
J. E. E. (poet; Chambers's)
J. E. H. (poet; Chambers's)
J. F. (poet; Chambers's)
J. F. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
J. F. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
J. F. (poet; Once a Week)
J. F. (translator; Blackwood's)
J. F. H. (poet; Good Words)
J. F. J. (poet; Once a Week)
J. G. (poet; Chambers's)
J. G. (poet; Good Words)
J. H. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. H. (poet; Chambers's)
J. H. (poet; Good Words)
J. H. B. (poet; Chambers's)
J. H. C. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
J. H. R. (poet; Chambers's)
J. J. (poet; Chambers's)
J. J. C. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. M. (poet; Chambers's)
J. M. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
J. M. (poet; Macmillan's)
J. M. (poet; Once a Week)
J. M. H. (poet; Chambers's)
J. M’C. Junr. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
J. O. B. (poet; Chambers's)
J. P. (poet; Chambers's)
J. P. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
J. P. M. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. P. M. (translator; Blackwood’s)
J. P. S. (poet; Good Words)
J. P. W. (poet; Good Words)
J. R. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. R. C. (poet; Once a Week)
J. R. O. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
J. S. (poet; Chambers's)
J. S. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
J. S. B. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. S. D. (poet; Macmillan’s)
J. T. (poet; Blackwood's)
J. T. C. of Brazen-nose
J. T. P. (poet; Chambers's)
J. T. R. (poet; Good Words)
J. V. (poet; Once a Week)
J. W. (illustrator)
J. W. (poet; Chambers's)
J. W. (poet; Good Words)
Jackson, Blomfield
Jackson, E. W.
Jackson, Henry Kains
James (pseudonym)
James, F.
James, George Payne Rainsford
James, John Kingston
James, M. J.
James, Marian E.
James, Paul Moon
James, R. A. S.
James, Sophie A. M.
Jameson, A. E.
Jamieson, Robert
Japp, Alexander Hay
Japy, Louis Aimé
Jaumi
Jeaffreson, Mary
Jebb, Richard Claverhouse
Jefferson, S.
Jeffrey, Francis
Jelf-Sharp, C.
Jemmett-Browne, Jemmett
Jenkins, Joseph John
Jenner, Alice Hay
Jennings, E.
Jerdan, William
Jermyn, Letitia
Jerrold, Douglas William
Jerrold, William Blanchard
Jervis, Swynfen
Jewsbury, Geraldine
Jewsbury, Maria Jane
Jim's Wife
Jocelyn, Robert
John Bull (pseudonym)
Johns, Benjamin G.
Johns, Bennett George
Johns, Richard
Johnson, Edward Killingworth
Johnson, F.
Johnson, H.
Johnson, James W.
Johnson, Lionel Pigot
Johnson, Samuel
Johnston, Andrew
Johnston, D.
Johnston, Henry
Johnston, M.
Johnston, T. P.
Johnstone, Christian Isobel
Johnstone, Elizabeth M.
Johnstone, William
Jones, Alice
Jones, Ebenezer
Jones, Eustace Hinton
Jones, Harry
Jones, Henry Longueville
Jones, Jacob
Jones, Jessy
Jones, John
Jones, Robert
Jones, Thomas
Jones, W. L.
Jones, William
Jonson, Ben
Jopling, Louise
Joy, Thomas Musgrave
Julian the Egyptian
Junqueiro, Guerra
Jupp, Lawrence B.
Juvenal
Juvenis (pseudonym)
K. C. S. (translator; Macmillan's)
K. G. (poet; Macmillan’s)
K. H. (poet; Blackwood's)
K. M. (poet; Chambers's)
K. S. B. (poet; Once a Week)
K. T. (poet; Chambers's)
Kaye, John William
Keary, Eliza
Keating, Eliza H.
Keats, John
Keble, John
Keeling, William Knight
Keene
Keene, Charles
Keene, Henry George
Keene, William Caxton
Kelly, C. A.
Kelly, Francis
Kelly, Thomas W.
Kemble, Adelaide
Kemble, Fanny
Kemp, Robert
Kempe, Dorothy
Kendall, Elsie
Kendall, Harriet
Kennedy
Kennedy, D. H.
Kennedy, M. E.
Kenney, James
Kent, Armine Thomas
Kent, Charles
Kenward, James (pseudonym "Elvyndd")
Kenyon, Charles Frederick
Kenyon, John
Kerner, Justinus
Kerr, E. H.
Kettle, A.
Khayyam, Omar
Kidd, William
Kidson, Eastwood
Kier, Peter
Kilburne, George Goodwin
King David of Israel
King Henry VIII
King James I of Scotland
King Oscar I of Sweden
King Ptolemy
King Richard I
King, Alice
King, H.
King, Harriet Eleanor Hamilton
King, Henry (1592-1669)
King, Henry (1817-1888)
King, J. A.
King, James
King, John William
King, Violet M.
Kinglake, Christina
Kingsley Tarpey, William
Kingsley, Charles
Kingston, Mary
Kinney, Elizabeth Clementine
Kipling, Rudyard
Kirkman Finlay (allonym)
Kirkpatrick, John
Kirtle (pseudonym)
Kitton, E. E.
Kletke, Hermann
Kleyn, Adelaide
Klopstock, Friedrich Gottlieb
Knight, Charles
Knight, Edward
Knight, J.
Knight, John Prescott
Knight, Joseph
Knowles, Annie L.
Knowles, Davidson
Knowles, Herbert
Knowles, James
Knox
Knox, Lucy
Koo-ri-tsan-koo
Körner, Theodore
Kortright, Frances Aikin
Kosloff, Ivan
Koumanin, Alexander
Krasiński, Zygmunt
Krummacher, Friedrich Adolf
Kurtz
L. (poet; Once a Week)
L. (translator; Once a Week)
L. B. (illustrator)
L. B. (translator; Once a Week)
L. B. H. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
L. F. C. (poet; Chambers's)
L. F. D. C. (poet; Chambers's)
L. G. M. (poet; Good Words)
L. I. C. D. (poet; Once a Week)
L. I. L. (poet; Macmillan’s)
L. J. (translator; Forget-Me-Not)
L. J. G. (poet; Blackwood's)
L. L. (poet; Blackwood's)
L. M. L. (translator; Chambers's)
L. N. (poet; Good Words)
L. R. (poet; Chambers’s)
L. R. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
L. S. (translator; Once a Week)
L. V. (illustrator)
L. W. M. L. (poet; Blackwood's)
La Creevy, C.
La Mont, Elizabeth
la Motte Fouqué, Friedrich de
Labrunie, Gérard (pseudonym “Gérard de Nerval”)
Laing, Alexander
Laird, A. (pseudonym “Hugh Lindsay”)
Lake Price, William
Lamb, Caroline
Lamb, Charles
Lamb, Mary
Lamont, Alexander
Lamont, J. K.
Lamont, Thomas Reynolds
Lampman, Archibald
Lancaster, Charles S.
Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (pseudonym "L. E. L.")
Landor, Walter Savage
Landseer, Edwin
Lane, Clara
Lang, Andrew
Langan, Thomas
Langbridge, Frederick
Langford, John Alfred
Langhorne, John
Langston, Joseph G.
Lapraik, John
Lapworth, W.
Larken, E. P.
Latchmore, W. H.
Latto, Thomas C.
Laundy, George A.
Laurel-Honouring Laureate
Laurence, H.
Laurenson, Arthur
Law, Isabella
Lawless, Matthew James
Lawrence, Robert Harding
Lawrence, Thomas
Lawrence, Walter J.
Lawrie
Lawson, Cecil Gordon
Lawson, E.
Lawson, Francis Wilfred
Lawson, J. K.
Lawson, John
Layard, George Somes
Layton, E.
Layton, Nina
Le Brun, Élisabeth Vigée
Le Fanu, S.
Le Gallienne, Richard
Le Jeune, Henry
Leary, Thomas Humphrys Lindsay
Leask, William Keith
Leatham, Edith Rutter
Leatherdale, V. J.
Lecky, (William) Edward Hartpole
Lee-Hamilton, Eugene
Lee, Henry
Lee, Jessie
Lee, Rona
Lee, William
Leech, John
Lehmann, F.
Lehmann, Rudolph Chambers
Leifchild, Sara A.
Leigh Cliffe (pseudonym)
Leigh, Chandos
Leigh, Cholmeley A.
Leigh, Henry Sambrooke
Leighton, Edmund Blair
Leighton, Frederic
Leighton, John
Leighton, Robert
Leighton, William
Leitch, Richard Principal
Leith, E.
Leland, Charles Godfrey
Lemoine, Gustave
Lemon, J.
Lemon, Mark
Lenox-Conyngham, Elizabeth Emmet
Leonard, George Hare
Leonard[, M. A.?]
Leonidas of Tarentum
Leontine (pseudonym)
Leopardi, Giacomo
Lermontov, Mikhail Yuryevich
Leslie, Charles Robert
Leslie, Eliza
Lester, E. C. (pseudonym “Christie”)
Letham, Alexander
Letherbrow, E.
Leveaux, Florence Malcolm
Levens, J. T.
Levy, Amy
Levy, Edith Grace
Lewin, Thomas Herbert
Lewis
Lewis, John Delaware
Lewis, Matthew
Lewis, T. C.
Lewis, W.
Lewis, W. J.
Lewis, Walter
Lex Rex (pseudonym)
Leyden, John
Lhermitte, Léon Augustin
Li-Tai-Pe
Lida (pseudonym)
Liddell, Henry
Lincolnshire Rector
Lindsay, Alexander
Lindsay, Caroline Blanche Elizabeth
Linney, W.
Linskill, Mary Jane
Linton, James Drogmole
Linton, William James
Linwood, James Smart
Liolett (pseudonym)
Lister, Thomas Henry
Lithgow, William
Little, E. A.
Little, F. D.
Little, J. M.
Littson
Liverseige, H.
Lloyd, Charles
Locker-Lampson, Frederick
Locker, Arthur
Lockhart, John Gibson
Lodge, Adam
Lodge, Reginald B.
Logan, John
Logie, Alexander
Lomond, A.
Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth
Longfield, Claude Robert
Longmore
Longridge, F.
Loots, Cornelis
Lord *** (pseudonym)
Lord Byron (allonym)
Lord, A. R.
Lorinda, C.
Loughlin, T.
Lovejoy, Newell
Lovell, George (1826-1881)
Lovell, George William (1804-1878)
Lover, Samuel
Lowdnes, Dorothy (pseudonym “Dolf Wyllarde”)
Lowe, Helen
Lowe, John
Lowe, Robert
Lowell, James Russell
Lowry, Henry Dawson
Lowther, John Henry
Loye, Charles Auguste (pseudonym “George Montbard”)
Luard, John Dalbiac
Lucas, Horatio Joseph
Lucas, John
Lucianus
Lucillius
Luck, Katie M.
Luckey, Jane
Ludolf, George H.
Lummis, Edward W.
Lumsden, Henry William
Lungren, Fernand
Luscombe, John
Lusted, Charles T.
Luttrell, Henry
Lyall, Alfred Comyn
Lyall, John
Lyle, William
Lyly, John
Lynch, Albert
Lynch, G. D.
Lynd, R.
Lyons, James Gilbourne
M C G. (poet; Century Guild)
M. (poet; Blackwood's)
M. (poet; Chambers's)
M. (poet; Cornhill)
M. (poet; Good Words)
M. (poet; Once a Week)
M. (translator; Once a Week)
M. A. (poet; Chambers's)
M. A. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
M. A. B. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
M. A. D. (poet; Chambers's)
M. A. G. (poet; Chambers's)
M. A. H. (poet; Good Words)
M. and A. (pseudonym)
M. B. (poet; Chambers's)
M. B. (poet; Good Words)
M. B. (poet; Macmillan’s)
M. B. T. (poet; Good Words)
M. C. C. (poet; Macmillan’s)
M. E. B. (poet; Atalanta)
M. H. (poet; Blackwood's)
M. H. (poet; Chambers's)
M. H. (poet; Good Words)
M. H. A. (translator; Good Words)
M. H. W. (poet; Atalanta)
M. J. (poet; Blackwood's)
M. J. L. (poet; Blackwood's)
M. J. L. (poet; Chambers's)
M. L. (poet; Chambers's)
M. L. (poet; The Keepsake)
M. L. S. (poet; Chambers's)
M. M. (translator; Once a Week)
M. M. M. (poet; Good Words)
M. M. M. (poet; Macmillan’s)
M. P. (poet; Chambers's)
M. R. (poet; Blackwood's)
M. R. L. (poet; Good Words)
M. S. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
M. S. (poet; Macmillan's)
M. S. J. (poet; Chambers's)
M. S. J. (translator; Chambers's)
M. T. F. (poet; Once a Week)
M. T. H. (poet; Chambers's)
M. W. S. (poet; Once a Week)
M. Y. G. (poet; Chambers's)
M'Gregor
M’Douall, W.
Maberly, Catherine Charlotte
Macalpine, Mary
MacAndrew, Barbara Miller
Macaulay, Thomas Babington
Macbeth, Robert Walker
MacCarthy, Denis Florence
MacConachie, J.
MacDonald, Alastair
MacDonald, Alexander
MacDonald, Alice
MacDonald, F. R.
MacDonald, George
MacDonald, J. A.
Macdonald, Leila
MacDonald, Maggie
MacDonald, Margaret
MacDonald, Mosse
Macdonell, Annie
Macduff, John Ross
Macedonius
Macfarlan, James
MacFarlane, Harold
Macfie, Ronald Campbell
MacGregor, James
Machar, Agnes Maule
Macindoe, George
Macintosh, Eliza Anne (née Griffiths)
Mackay, Alice
Mackay, Charles
Mackay, George Eric
Mackay, Jessie
MacKay, L. M.
Mackay, W. D.
Mackenzie, A.
Mackenzie, Charles
Mackenzie, David James
Mackenzie, Helen
Mackenzie, John
Mackenzie, Robert Shelton
Mackenzie, William Andrew
Mackie, Gascoigne
Maclachlan, Elsie J. Campbell
Maclagan, Alexander
Maclaren, Mabel
Maclean
Maclehose, Agnes
Macleod, Donald
Macleod, J.
Macleod, John (of Culkein, Stoer)
Macleod, John (of Govan)
Macleod, John (of Morven)
Macleod, Mary
Macleod, Norman
MacLiag, Muircheartach mac Con Ceartaich
Maclise, Daniel
Macmillan, Alexander
Macmillan, Hugh
MacNab, Peter
MacNair, Jean H.
Macnamara, Rachel Swete
Macnish, Robert
Maconachie, Agnes M.
Macpherson, A.
Macpherson, C.
Macpherson, James
Macquoid, Katharine Sarah
Macquoid, Percy Thomas
Macquoid, Thomas Robert
Macray, John
Macready, Catherine Frances Birch
MacWhirter, John
MacWilliam, R. A.
Madden, Richard Robert
Mademoiselle Olga S**
Maginn, William
Magra, Augusta A. L.
Mahoney, J.
Mahony, Francis Sylvester (pseudonym “Father Prout”)
Main, Isa
Maitland, Ella Fuller
Major, Rosa
Malcolm, John
Malden, Henry
Malet, Henry Charles Eden
Malherbe, François de
Mallock, William Hurrell
Malone, Robert L.
Maltby, F. W.
Mangan, James Clarence
Manners, Charles Cecil John
Manners, Janetta
Manners, John
Manrique, Jorge
Mant, Richard
Mantegna, Andrea
Manzoni, Alessandro
Maquet, Auguste
Mara (pseudonym)
Margetts, Constance Berkeley
Marianus
Marion (pseudonym)
Marks, Ed. (Edward?) W.
Marks, Mary A. M. (née Hoppus)
Marlowe, Christopher
Marot, Clément
Marradi, Giovanni
Marriage
Marryat, Frederick
Marshall, M. J.
Marshall, M. T.
Marshall, Thomas Falcon
Marston, Philip Bourke
Martial
Martin, A. C.
Martin, Frances
Martin, John
Martin, P.
Martin, Stanley
Martin, Theodore
Martin, W.
Martyn, M. E.
Marvell, Andrew
Mary (pseudonym)
Mary Queen of Scots
Mary-Anne (pseudonym)
Marzials, Frank Thomas
Marzials, Theo
Mason, William
Massey, Gerald
Massey, Henry Gibbs
Massey, Lucy
Massey, S. R.
Master Ambrose
Mataragkas
Mather, May
Matheson, Annie
Matheson, E.
Matson, William Tidd
Matthews, John
Matthey, Ellen
Maude, Thomas
Maunsell, W. Pryce
Mauve, Anton
Maxwell, Herbert
May, Anna M.
May, Julia H.
Mayhew, Neville
Maykov, Apollon
Maynard, Julia
Mayo, Herbert
McColl, Evan
McCormick, A. D.
McDiarmid, John
McDonnell, Randal William
McDouall, Peter Murray
McEvoy, Cuthbert
McEwan, Tom
McKay, A.
McKay, Archibald
McKendrick, John Gray
McKenzie, Charles
McKeown, Robert L.
McLachlan, Thomas Hope
McLellan, Archibald
McLellan, Isaac
McLennan
McNaghten, Robert Adair
McNay, A. M. (pseudonym “Graham”)
McPhail, N.
McQueen, Thomas
McSheehy
McTaggart, William
McWhirter, John W.
Meadows, K.
Mearns, Lois
Medhurst, Walter Henry
Meikle, S.
Meleager
Mellen, Grenville
Mellersh, Kate
Memor (pseudonym)
Menètrier, Casimir
Mennes, John
Mercer, Edmund
Meredith, Arthur G.
Meredith, G. E.
Meredith, George
Meredith, Louisa Anne
Meredith, William Macdonald
Merivale, Herman Charles
Merry, William Walter
Mesomedes
Metastasio, Pietro
Methuen, W.
Metrodorus
Mew, James
Meynell, Wilfred
Meyrick, Robert
Miall, A. Bernard
Michell, John
Michell, Nicholas
Michie, T.
Miles, Sibella Elizabeth (née Hatfield)
Millais, John Everett
Millar, Harold Robert
Millar, Mary M.
Miller, Charles
Miller, Cincinnatus Heine (pseudonym “Joaquin Miller”)
Miller, Ellen
Miller, Frank
Miller, Hugh
Miller, James William
Miller, Jex
Miller, Thomas
Millevoye, Charles Hubert
Milliken, Edwin James
Millington, James
Mills, Frederick S.
Mills, J. S.
Mills, Rebe
Milman, Constance
Milman, Henry Hart
Milnes, Richard Monckton
Milton, John
Mincius (pseudonym)
Minshall
Minty, Joshua
Miskeen
Mitchell, Elizabeth Harcourt
Mitchell, J. T.
Mitchell, John
Mitford, Mary Russell
Modaffar of Abiward
Moir, David Macbeth (pseudonym “Delta,” ∆)
Moir, George
Molesworth, Olive
Molyson, David
Money-Coutts, Francis Burdett
Monkhouse, William Cosmo
Monreal, George
Monsell, John Samuel Bewley
Montagu, H. Irving
Montalba, Clara
Montgomery the Third (pseudonym)
Montgomery, Bartholomew Sparrow
Montgomery, James
Moodie, Susanna
Moore
Moore, C.
Moore, Dugald
Moore, E.
Moore, Edith S.
Moore, G.
Moore, George Logan
Moore, Louise
Moore, T. Sturge
Moore, Thomas (1779-1852)
More, Hannah
Moresby, Jane
Moresby, Lily M.
Morgan Odoherty (also Mr Odoherty, Ensign Odoherty) (pseudonym)
Morgan, F. Somerville
Morice, Francis David
Morier, James Justinian
Morine, George
Morison, H. N.
Morley, Henry
Morot, Aimé
Morris, Alfred
Morris, Charles
Morris, Lewis
Morris, William
Morrow, Albert George
Morten, Thomas
Mortimer, A.
Morton, George
Morton, Thomas
Moschus
Moseley, Litchfield
Motherwell, William
Moule, Charles Walter
Moule, Horace
Moulton, Louise Chandler
Moultrie, Gerard
Moultrie, John
Moxon, Edward
Mr Ambrose (pseudonym)
Mr. J―nes (pseudonym)
Mr. W. W. (pseudonym)
Mrs M’Whirter (pseudonym)
Müchler, Karl Friedrich
Mudford, William
Mulholland, Rosa
Muller, F.
Müller, Friedrich Max
Müller, Wilhelm
Mullins, Alice
Müllner, Adolphus
Mulvany, Charles Pelham
Munby, Arthur J.
Mundy, Godfrey Charles
Mungo Glen (pseudonym)
Munns, B.
Munro, Georgina C.
Munro, Neil
Munro, Robert
Münster, Mary C. F.
Murchie, Mary J.
Murger, Henri
Murphy, Jeremiah Daniel
Murphy, Joseph John
Murray
Murray, A. H.
Murray, Charles
Murray, Charles Oliver
Murray, E. M.
Murray, George
Murray, John Fisher
Murray, John H.
Musa (pseudonym)
Musaeus
Mutch, Robert S.
Myers, Ernest
Myers, Frederic W. H.
Myrinus
Myron, A.
N—k (pseudonym)
N. H. M. (poet; Chambers's)
N. J. (poet; Once a Week)
N. J. T. (poet; Chambers's)
N. K. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
N. R. (poet; Blackwood's)
N. T. H. B. (poet; Blackwood's)
Naden, Constance
Nairne, A.
Napier, John
Nash, Joseph (1808-1878)
Nauen, Paul
Neaves, Charles
Neele, Henry
Neilson, James M.
Neilson, Robert A.
Nekrasof, Nikolay
Nencioni, Enrico
Nesbit, Edith
Neuman, B. Paul
Neumann, A.
Nevay, J.
Nevinson, Henry W.
Newman, John Henry
Newton-Robinson, Charles
Newton, John Joseph Cradock
Nicarchus
Nichol, H. Ernest
Nichol, John
Nichols, Bowyer
Nicholson, Frances
Nicholson, John Gambril F.
Nicol, R. E. (pseudonym “Edward Roedni”)
Nicoll, Robert
Nicoll, W. Robertson
Nicolson, Alexander
Nicolson, Laurence James
Niel, Mary (Daniel?)
Nisbet, Hume
Nisbet, James
Nixon, Florence
Noble, Irene
Noble, James Ashcroft
Noel, Roden
Norman, A.
Norman, Charlotte
Norris, Alfred
Norris, G. H. F.
Norris, Maria
North, Caroline
North, John William
Northwich, E. T.
Norton, Augusta
Norton, Caroline
Nossis
Nugent Grenville, Anne Lucy
Nugent-Grenville, George
O. (81st Regt.)
O. (poet; Chambers's)
O. (poet; Macmillan’s)
O. H. C. (poet; Good Words)
O. P. (translator; Blackwood's)
O'Doherty, Eva
O'Donnell, John Francis
O'Donoghue, Nannie Power
O'Moore, Dennis
O'Neill, Alicia Jane (née Sparrow)
O'Reilly, John Boyle
O'Ryan, Owen
O'Shaughnessy, Arthur W. E.
O’Hara, Millicent
O’Neil, Henry
Oakley, Henry H.
Octogenarius
Odontist (pseudonym)
Oehlenschläger, Adam
Ofella (pseudonym)
Ofellus (pseudonym)
Ogilby, John
Ogilvy, Eliza
Ogilvy, H.
Ogilvy, William Balfour
Ogle, Nathaniel
Ohlson, E. E.
Old Indian
Oldham, James Bertram (pseudonym “Bertram Romilly”)
Oliphant, Margaret
Oliphant, Margaret Ethel Blair
Oliver, Edwin
Ollier, Edmund
Omai
Omond, T. S.
One of the Authors of “Child World”
One Who Has Known Poets
Onestes
Opie, Amelia
Oppian
Ora (pseudonym)
Oram, Blanche (pseudonym “Roma White”)
Orchardson, William Quiller
Ord, John Walker
Orielensis (pseudonym)
Ormerod, H. J.
Orne, Caroline F.
Orpen, A. M.
Orred, Meta
Osborn, Edward Haydon
Osborne
Osborne, C.
Osgood, Frances Sargent
Osgood, Kate Putnam
Otway-Page, Ellen F. S.
Ouston, Helen
Outram, George S.
Overend, William Heysham
Ovid
Owen, Ellen Culley
Owen, Frances Mary
Owen, Octavius Freire
Owen, Samuel
Oxenford, John
P. (poet; Blackwood's)
P. (poet; Chambers's)
P. A. (poet; Good Words)
P. J. (translator; Good Words)
P. K. (poet; Blackwood's)
P. M. Cantab (pseudonym)
P. S. (poet; Chambers's)
P. W. (poet; Blackwood's)
P*. (poet; The Keepsake)
Pacificus (pseudonym)
Paddy
Page, Ellen
Page, Mary Anne
Paine, C. M.
Palgrave, Francis Turner
Palladas of Alexandria
Palmer, John
Panton, Jane Ellen (née Frith)
Panzacchi, Enrico
Papa, Pasquale
Pardoe, Julia
Pares, Anne (pseudonym “Evelyn Forest”)
Paris, E. T.
Park, Andrew
Park, J. H.
Park, Oscar
Park, William
Parke, Walter (pseudonym “The London Hermit”)
Parker
Parker Douglas, Sarah
Parker, Emma J.
Parker, Gilbert
Parker, Jane
Parker, Martin
Parkes (Belloc), Bessie Rayner
Parkes, W. Theodore
Parkinson, George
Parkinson, Henry W.
Parkinson, Richard
Parkinson, William
Parmenio
Parr, Harriet (pseudonym “Holme Lee”)
Parris, Edmund Thomas
Parry, Charles Hubert Hastings
Parry, Edward
Parsons, Edward
Partridge, Samuel William
Pasha, Hafiz
Pasquier, James Abbott
Passerat, Jean
Passmore, T. H.
Paterson, George (poet)
Paterson, George M. (illustrator and painter)
Paterson, John Curle
Paterson, Walter
Patmore, Coventry
Patmore, Peter James
Paton, A.
Paton, Allan Park
Paton, Frederick Noel
Paton, Joseph Noël
Paton, Waller Hugh
Patrick, Mary
Patterson, James C.
Paul of Thessalonica
Paul the Silentiary
Paul, Charles Kegan
Paul, John Dean (1775-1852)
Paulin, George
Paulus Silentiarius
Paylor, T. W.
Payn, Deline
Payn, Harriet F. (“Tiny”)
Payn, James
Peabody, W. O.
Peach, Louisa Courtenay
Peacock, Florence
Peacock, John
Peacock, Mabel
Pearce, Charles Sprague
Pearce, Maresco
Pearson, Andrew
Pearson, Emma Maria
Peddie, Robert
Pedley, Ethel
Peel, Edmund
Pegolotti, Alessandro
Pember, Edward Henry
Pemberton, Jane Elizabeth
Penn Venn
Penney[, F. G.?]
Pennington, B. J.
Pennington, Marianne
Penny, Anne Judith
Penstone, John Jewel
Pentaur
Peppin, Mary E.
Perceval, Rosamund
Percie
Percival, James Gates
Percy, J.
Percy, Thomas
Peregrine Wilton
Perring
Perrott (Miss)
Perry
Petley, Edmund
Petőfi, Sándor
Petrarch
Pettie, John
Pfizer, Gustav
Philemon
Philip of Thessalonica
Philippus
Phillips, G. C.
Phillips, S.
Phillips, Stephen
Phillips, Susan K.
Phillips, Thomas
Phillips, W. A.
Philo (pseudonym)
Philodemus
Philp, Maud
Phipps, Charles B.
Phipps, Edmund
Piatt, Sarah M. B.
Picken, Andrew L.
Pickersgill, Frederick Richard
Pickersgill, Maria
Pierpoint, Folliott Sandford
Pierrepont, Charles Evelyn
Pike, Albert
Pike, Florence
Pinchard, William Pryce
Pindar
Pinkerton, Susan
Pinwell, George John
Piozzi, Hester Lynch Thrale
Piper, Mary
Pitman, J.
Planché, James Robinson
Plarr (pseudonym “M. I. T.,” “MIT.”)
Plarr, Victor Gustave
Plato
Plimsollides
Pluma (pseudonym)
Plumley, Matilda
Plumptre, Edward Hayes
Plunket, Isabel
Poe, Edgar Allan
Polehampton, Theodore S.
Polin, Edward
Pollock, Walter Herries
Polwhele, Richard
Ponsonby, Eliza Anne (née Skelton)
Poole
Pope, Alexander
Pope, Gustave
Porter, J.
Posidippus
Potter, Frederick Scarlett (also Scarlet)
Poulsson, Emilie
Poultney, Alfred H.
Powell, Frederick York
Powell, Thomas
Power, Ellen
Power, Harriet
Power, Marguerite Agnes
Power, Tyrone
Powers, Susan Rugeley
Poynter, Clara Singer
Poynter, Edward John
Praed, William Mackworth (1802-1839)
Pratt, Charles Stuart
Pray, Isaac Clarke
Prestage, Edgar
Preston, Margaret J.
Prevost, Francis
Price, Fitzjames Tucker
Prichard, C. E.
Prideaux, Sarah Treverbian
Prince Jem
Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia
Prince Rodolph of Liechtenstein
Prince, John Critchley
Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll
Pringle, C. I.
Pringle, Thomas
Prinsep, Henry Thoby
Prior, James
Prior, Matthew
Pritchett, Robert Taylor
Probyn, Laetitia
Probyn, May
Procter, Adelaide Anne
Procter, Bryan Waller (pseudonym “Barry Cornwall”)
Propertius
Prothero, Alice Mary
Prout, S. G.
Prout, Samuel
Prout, Victor
Provis, B. W.
Prower
Prower, Maude
Prowett, Charles Gipps
Prudentius
Prudhomme, Sully
Purves, David Laing
Pushkin, Alexander
Pye, R. H.
Pyle, Howard
Q.
QU.? (pseudonym)
Quarles, Francis
Quarry, A.
Queen Elizabeth I
Quillinan, Edward
Quintana, Manuel José
Quinton, Alfred Robert
Quinton, J. R.
Quintus Mæcius
R. (poet; Blackwood's)
R. (poet; Chambers's)
R. (poet; Macmillan's)
R. (poet; Once a Week)
R. A. B. (poet; Once a Week)
R. F. H. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
R. G. (poet; The Dark Blue)
R. G. O. (poet; Atalanta)
R. H. (poet; Blackwood's)
R. H. (poet; The Keepsake)
R. H. (translator; Blackwood's)
R. H. P. (poet; Blackwood's)
R. H. P. B. (illustrator)
R. H. W. D. (poet; Macmillan's)
R. J. (poet; Blackwood's)
R. J. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
R. K. A. E. (poet; Cornhill)
R. L. A.
R. M. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
R. M. S. (poet; The Keepsake)
R. N.
R. O.
R. P. (translator; Macmillan's)
R. R. (poet; Chambers's)
R. S. (poet; Chambers’s)
R. S. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
R. S. (translator; Chambers's)
R. S. M.
R. S. V. P.
R. T. (translator; Blackwood’s)
R. T. H. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
Rabelais, François
Rachan, Mills
Radcliffe, Ann
Radcliffe, Frederick Peter Delmé
Radford, Dollie
Raeside, David
Ragg, Frederick William
Raikes, Arthur Hamilton
Railton, Herbert
Raine, J.
Raleigh, Walter
Ralston, William (1848-1911)
Ralston, William Ralston Shedden (1828-1889)
Ramsay, Allan
Ramsay, John (1799-1870)
Randolph, Thomas
Rands, William Brighty
Ranken, W. B.
Rankin, Jessica
Rankine, William Macquorn
Ranking, B. Montgomerie
Raphael
Rawnsley, Hardwicke Drummond
Raymond, G.
Reade (pseudonym “Bee”)
Reade, F. E.
Reboul, Jean
Redding, Cyrus
Redi, Francesco
Reece, Robert (Jr.)
Reeve, Alice
Reeve, Henry
Reid, J.
Reid, John
Reid, Maria
Reid, P. T.
Reid, P. Y.
Reid, Robert (pseudonym “Robert Wanlock”)
Reid, Robert Payton
Reid, Samuel
Reinagle, George Philip
Reinick, Robert
Remington, Frederic
Rennie, Eliza
Renton, William
Renwick, James
Repton, Humphry
Retzsch, Moritz
Reynolds, [M. C.?]
Reynolds, Frederic Mansel
Reynolds, John Hamilton
Reynolds, Joshua
Reynolds, Mary[?] Frances
Rhees, J. L.
Rhoades, James
Rhyming Richard
Rhys, Ernest
Rhys, Oliver
Richards, Alfred B.
Richardson, [?R.]
Richardson, Catherine Eliza
Richardson, David Lester
Richardson, George Fleming
Richardson, Paul
Richardson, Robert
Richings, E. A.
Richmond, William Blake
Richter, Albert
Richter, Henry James
Ricketts, Charles
Riddell-Webster, T. W.
Riddell, Henry Scott
Ridley, Matthew White
Rigg, James
Righton, Henry
Rijfkogel, Albertine
Rischgitz, Edward
Ritchie, Leitch
Rivers, Leopold
Riviere, Briton
Robb, Thomas D.
Roberts
Roberts, Charles G. D.
Roberts, Emma
Roberts, Mary
Robertson, A.
Robertson, Alexander B.
Robertson, D.
Robertson, D. J.
Robertson, George
Robertson, James Logie (pseudonym “Hugh Haliburton”)
Robertson, Janet Logie (née Simpson)
Robertson, Maggie
Robertson, Patrick (Lord Robertson)
Robertson, Sarah Moir
Robertson, William
Robertson[, H. L.?]
Robinson
Robinson (Robertson), Stewart
Robinson, Agnes Mary Francis
Robinson, Annie (pseudonym “Marian Douglas”)
Robinson, David
Robinson, George Wade
Robinson, Richard
Robinson, Sybil A. H.
Rochat, F.
Rochlitz, Friedrich
Rock, James
Rockliff, Robert
Rodd, Rennell
Rodger, Alexander
Rogan, Ada Frances
Roger, William (pseudonym "Daphnis")
Rogers, Mary Eliza
Rogers, Samuel
Rogers, William Henry
Rogerson, John Bolton
Rolfe, Frederick William
Rolls, Mary (Mrs. Henry Rolls)
Rookes, Sophia E.
Roose, P. W.
Rosa (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
Rosa, Salvator
Roscoe, James
Roscoe, Thomas
Roscoe, William
Ross, G. Fanny
Ross, Janet
Ross, William Charles
Rossetti, Christina G.
Rossetti, Dante Gabriel
Rossetti, William Michael
Rossi, Giacomo
Rouget de Lisle, Claude Joseph
Routh, Harold Victor
Rowbotham, Elizabeth
Rowe, Cyril
Rowe, John
Rowe, William J. Monkhouse
Rowland, May
Rowley, William
Roxby, Genevieve Mary
Roy, J.
Rozier, Ella H.
Ruckert, Frederick
Rufinus
Rullmann, Ludwig
Runeberg, Johan Ludvig
Runge, Phillip Otto
Rushton, Edward
Ruskin, John
Russell, John
Russell, John (1792-1878)
Russo, Ferdinando
Rutter, Frances
Rutter, Richard Ball
Rutter, Robert
Ryland, Henry
S. (poet; Blackwood's)
S. (poet; Chambers's)
S. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
S. (poet; Good Words)
S. (poet; Once a Week)
S. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
S. A. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
S. A. A. (poet; Macmillan’s)
S. B. (poet; Once a Week)
S. C. (poet; Chambers's)
S. H. (translator; English Woman’s Journal)
S. H. S. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
S. M. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
S. M. C.
S. P. (poet; Blackwood's)
S. R. P. (poet; Good Words)
S. S. (poet; Blackwood's)
S. S. S. (poet; Blackwood’s)
S. W. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
Saadi of Shiraz
Sadler, J. K.
Sadler, M. E.
Saint Columba
Salakostas, George
Salmon, Arthur Leslie
Salmon, M. C.
Salter, William
Sanders, Mary Jane Davidson
Sanders, Samuel Farncombe
Sandford, Daniel Keyte
Sandham, Henry
Sands, J.
Sandys, Frederick
Sara (pseudonym)
Saunders, Donald S.
Saunders, John
Savage, Reginald
Savage, William
Savile, Charles Stuart
Savile, Jeremiah
Sawyer, W.
Sawyer, William
Saxby, Jane Euphemia
Saxby, Jessie Margaret Edmonston
Sayle, Charles
Scaife, Elizabeth
Scarr, G.
Schiller, Friedrich
Schubart, Christian Friedrich Daniel
Schultz, Adolph
Schütz-Wilson, Henry
Schütze-Wilson, F.
Schwab, Gustav
Scotigena Oxoniensis
Scott, Catherine Amy (née Dawson)
Scott, Clement W.
Scott, F. B.
Scott, H. D.
Scott, J.
Scott, J. R.
Scott, James Edward
Scott, John
Scott, John (Scott of Amwell)
Scott, L. M.
Scott, Walter
Scott, William Bell
Scudder, Eliza
Seaman, Owen
Searing, Laura Redden (pseudonym “Howard Glyndon”)
Seccombe, Gladys
Sedgwick, George
Sedwin, Walter
Seeley, E.
Seidl, Johann Gabriel
Selīm I
Sendall, Walter
Seneca
Serapion of Alexandria
Sere, A. L.
Sergeant Murphy
Sergeant, Adeline
Serle, Thomas James
Service, John
Setchel, Sarah
Seward, W.
Sewell, Mary
Seyffarth, Louisa (née Sharpe)
Seymour, Montague
Shadow
Shafto, Holt
Shairp, John Campbell
Shakespeare, William
Shanly, Charles Dawson
Shannon, Charles Haslewood
Sharp, Isaac
Sharp, William
Sharpe, Charles Kirkpatrick
Sharpe, Eliza
Sharpe, M. M.
Sharpe, M. W.
Sharpe, Richard Scrafton
Shaw, Alfred Capel
Shaw, J.
Shaw, John Begg
Shaw, Thomas Budd
Sheil, Edward
Sheil, George
Shelley, Mary
Shelley, Percy Bysshe
Sheridan, Charles Brinsley
Sheridan, Louisa Henrietta
Sheridan, Richard Brinsley
Sheridan, Thomas
Sherman, Frank Dempster
Shields, Frederic J.
Shipton, Anna (née Savage)
Shirley, James
Shoberl, Frederic (1775-1853)
Shoberl, Frederic, Jun. (-1852)
Shore, Arabella
Short, Paul
Shorter, Dora Sigerson
Shute, Anna Clara
Shute, E. L.
Shuttleworth, Philip Francis
Siddons (Miss)
Sidgwick, Henry
Sidney, Philip
Sigourney, Lydia Huntley
Sill, Joseph
Sillery, Charles Doyne
Silver, H.
Simcox, George Augustus
Simcox, William Henry
Simeon, John
Simmons, Bartholomew
Simmons, F. W.
Simonides of Ceos
Simpson, J.
Simpson, Jane Cross
Simpson, Samuel L.
Simson, Florence
Sinclair, Catharine
Sinclair, Ian
Sinclair, J. [K.?]
Sinclair, John Lang (pseudonym “Alfred Egerton”)
Sinclair, William
Singleton, Henry
Singleton, William
Skaldaspiller, Evind
Skelton, Percival
Sketchley, Richard Forster
Skill, Frederick John
Skipsey, Joseph
Skirving, Adam
Skrine, John Huntley
Skurray, Francis
Slader, C.
Slaney, James
Slater, P. F.
Slimon, James MacKintosh
Slinger, F. J.
Smail, James (pseudonym “Matthew Gotterson”)
Smales
Smales, Edwin C.
Small, William
Smart, Alexander
Smedley, Frank E.
Smedley, Menella Bute
Smetham, James
Smets, Wilhelm
Smibert, Thomas
Smirke, Robert
Smith, Agnes
Smith, Albert Richard
Smith, Alexander
Smith, Alexander Munro (1860-1933)
Smith, Edward
Smith, Ellen (pseudonym “Reseda”)
Smith, Enort
Smith, George Barnett
Smith, Goldwin
Smith, Horace
Smith, J.
Smith, J. F.
Smith, J. J.
Smith, James
Smith, James (1775-1839)
Smith, Lucy Caroline (née Cumming)
Smith, Lydia Bosworth
Smith, Nimmo
Smith, R. N.
Smith, Thomas
Smith, W. Alexander
Smith, W. Frank
Smith, Walter Chalmers
Smith, William
Smith, William Henry
Smoil, T.
Smyth, Amelia Gillespie
Smyth, William
Snow, Robert
Solomon, Abraham
Solomon, Simeon
Solomos, Dionysios
Somerset, Henry
Somerville, G. G.
Somerville, William
Sophocles
Sordel de Goit (Sordello)
Sorrel, Susan
Sotheby, William
Soulary, Josephin
Southall, Isabel
Southey, Caroline Bowles
Southey, Robert
Southwell, Robert
Sowden, John
Sparrow, Eliza Julia
Spence, Florence Elizabeth
Spence, Kate E.
Spencer, Aubrey George
Spencer, Peter
Spens, Walter C.
Spenser, Edmund
Spiers, Charlotte H.
Spode, Anna
Spofford, Harriet Prescott
Spratt
St. Barbe, Roger Frampton
St. Clair-Erskine, Robert
St. John, Isabella
St. Maur, Charlotte
St. Vincent, John
Stacey, Walter S.
Stackhouse, Jonathan Lett
Stafford, William Cooke
Staley, A. E.
Stanfield, Clarkson Frederick
Stanhope, Philip Henry
Stanhope, R. H.
Stanley, Arthur Penrhyn
Stanley, C.
Stanley, Edward
Stanton, George Clark
Stanton, Horace Hughes
Staples, John C.
Stapleton, Miles
Starkey, Digby Pilot
Starr, Sarah J.
Statyllius Flaccus
Stebbing, Henry
Stedman, John
Stedman, W.
Steedman, C. M.
Steele, Thomas
Steell, Gourlay
Stembridge, Albert E.
Stephanoff
Stephanoff, Francis Philip
Stephanoff, James
Stephens, L. B.
Stepney, Catherine (also Manners)
Sterling, John
Stevens, William B. B.
Stevenson, David
Stevenson, James J.
Stevenson, M. Lowsley
Stevenson, Robert Louis
Stevenson, Robert Macaulay
Stewart, Albyn
Stewart, Alexander
Stewart, Alexander D.
Stewart, June I.
Stewart, Louisa
Stewart, William John
Stigant, William (also Stigand)
Stirling Graham, Clementina
Stirling, A.
Stock, Elliot
Stock, Henry John
Stockall, Harriett
Stocks, Lumb
Stoddard, Lavinia
Stoddart, J.
Stoddart, Thomas Tod
Stokes, Marianne (née Preindlesberger)
Stolberg, Friedrich Leopold
Stone, Frank
Stone, Louisa F.
Stone, Samuel John
Stonehewer, Agnes
Stonhouse, Charles
Storr, Francis
Story, A. M. Sommerville
Story, Robert
Story, William Wetmore
Stothard, Thomas
Strachey, Jane Maria
Strachey, John St. Loe
Strahan, Alexander Stuart
Strahan, John
Strang, James
Strange, Edward F.
Strettell, Alma
Stricker, Frederick
Strickland, Agnes
Strong, Charles
Stuart (Stewart?), Georgina
Stuart-Wortley, Emmeline
Stuart, Anita
Stuart, G. B.
Stubbs, Charles William
Sturgis, Julian Russell
Suckling, John
Sulman, Thomas
Sultan Murād IV
Sultan Süleyman I
Sutherland, Millicent
Suverkrop, Isabella Ann
Swain, Charles
Swayne, George Carless
Swayne, Margaret Sarah
Sweetman, Elinor M.
Swift, Edmund L.
Swift, Jonathan
Swinburne, Algernon Charles
Sydney, Charles
Sylvester, James Joseph
Syme, James
Symes, J. H.
Symington, A. M.
Symington, Andrew James
Symonds, John Addington
Symonds, P. B.
Symons, Arthur
Symons, Jelinger Cookson
Synge, W. W. Follett
T. (poet; Blackwood's)
T. (poet; Good Words)
T. (poet; Once a Week)
T. A. K. (poet; The Keepsake)
T. C. (poet; Blackwood's)
T. C. R. (poet; Chambers's)
T. D. (poet; Once a Week)
T. D. A. (poet; Chambers's)
T. D. C.
T. G. (poet; Chambers's)
T. M. (illustrator)
T. M. (poet; Blackwood's)
T. M. (translator; Blackwood’s)
T. R. (poet; Chambers's)
T. S. (poet; Once a Week)
T. T. (poet; Blackwood's)
T. W. B. (poet; The Keepsake)
T. W. S. (poet; Chambers's)
Tabb, John B.
Talbot, Frances
Talfourd, Thomas Noon
Tannahill, Robert
Tappan, Henry Philip
Tasso, Torquato
Tate, F. B.
Tate, William J.
Tatham, Emma
Taylor
Taylor, Arthur M. C.
Taylor, Bayard
Taylor, E.
Taylor, E. J.
Taylor, Emily
Taylor, Emily Howson
Taylor, George
Taylor, George R.
Taylor, John
Taylor, M.
Taylor, R.
Taylor, Tom
Taylor, W. L.
Taylor, W. V.
Tayside (poet; Chambers's)
Tchudi, Albert
Teale, William
Teetgen, Alexander Thomas
Tegnér, Esaias
Telbin, W.
Temple, J.
Tennant, Dorothy
Tennant, William
Tenniel, John
Tennyson, Alfred
Tennyson, Hallam
Terrell, Georgina (née Koberwein)
Teufelsdrockh (pseudonym)
Teulon, Harriet Mary
Thackeray, William Makepeace
Thackwell, Walter
Thallus the Milesian
Thaxter, Celia
Theocritus
Theodoridas
Theodosius, J.
Théolier, Philippe
Theta (pseudonym)
Thicknesse, Lily
Thom, William
Thomas, Jane
Thomas, Rose Haig
Thomas, W. Moy
Thompson, A.
Thompson, Annabel Charlotte
Thompson, Anne Harrison
Thompson, D. M.
Thompson, D'Arcy W.
Thompson, Edith M.
Thompson, H.
Thompson, Henry
Thompson, Sidney R.
Thompson, William Gill
Thomson, C.
Thomson, G. W.
Thomson, Gordon
Thomson, J. G.
Thomson, James (1700-1748)
Thomson, James (1825-)
Thomson, James (pseud. B. V.) (1834-1882)
Thomson, John Scoular
Thomson, John Stuart
Thomson, Richard
Thomson, William
Thorburn, Robert
Thorn, Ariell
Thornbury, George Walter
Thorold, Edmund
Thud, M.
Thyillus
Thymocles
Thyne, Philip
Tiddeman, L. E.
Tiffin
Tighe, Mary
Tildesley, James Carpenter
Tilton, Theodore
Timothy Tickler (pseudonym)
Tindal, Henrietta Euphemia
Tipsy Thammuz (pseudonym)
Todhunter, John (pseudonym “Aureolus Paracelsus”)
Tollemache, Beatrix L.
Tollens, Hendrik
Tomkins, Mary Jane (Plarr)
Tonkin, Sarah Eliza
Torceanu, M. Ricard
Townsend, Horatio
Townshend (Townsend), H. J.
Townshend, Chauncy Hare
Toynbee, William
Tranmar, Reid
Trench, Frederick
Trench, Richard Chenevix
Trevanion, Ada
Trevelyan, George Otto
Trevor
Trevor, George
Trollope, Frances
Trueba y Cosio, Joaquin Telesforo de
Truman, Joseph
Tschumakov, Teodor
Tuck, Harry
Tucker, Marwood
Tuckerman, M. P.
Tuckey, Jane
Turgenev, Ivan
Turner, Charles Tennyson
Turner, Florence
Turner, G.
Turner, J. M. W.
Turner, Rosetta
Tusser, Thomas
Tuttiett, Mary Gleed (pseudonym “Maxwell Gray”)
Tweedale, Violet
Tweedie, M. B.
Two "Long Spoons" (pseudonym)
Tylee, Edward Sydney
Tylee, Florence
Tymms, T. Vincent
Tymnas
Tynan (Hinkson), Katharine
Tyndale, Marcia
Tyndall, W. B.
Tyrwhitt, Richard St John
Tytler, Patrick Fraser
U. (poet; Macmillan's)
U. A. T. (poet; Cornhill)
U. L. T. (poet; Good Words)
U. T. (poet; Blackwood's)
Udall, Nicholas
Uhland, Johann Ludwig
Ulph, Margaret Kate
Ululans (pseudonym)
Unsigned
Urquhart, G. S.
Urquhart, Helen
Usher, Nora C.
Uwins, Thomas
V. (poet; Chambers's)
V. (poet; The Keepsake)
V. B. (poet; Good Words)
Valdés, Juan Meléndez
Valentine, F.
Valentine, Laura (née Jewry)
van Streek (née Brinkman)
Vanderlyn, Nathan
Vane, Charles William
Vassall-Fox, Henry Richard
Vaughan, Henry
Vaughan, Wilmot
Vauquelin de la Fresnaye, Jean
Veal, Joseph
Vedder, David
Veitch, John
Veley, Margaret
Verhaeren, Emile
Verney, Frances Parthenope (née Nightingale)
Vernon, Maud V.
Verrall, J.
Vickers, Alfred Gomersal (1810-1837)
Vidal, Peire
Villiers Sankey, William
Villon, François
Vinton, Matthew
Virgil
Vivanti, Annie
Vlachos, Angelos
Vogl, Heinrich
von Baldhoven, Martin
von Chamisso, Adelbert
von Hardenberg, Georg (pseudonym “Novalis”)
Von Malthison
von Münch-Bellinghausen, Eligius Franz Joseph (pseudonym Frederick Halm)
von Salis-Seewis, Johann Gaudenz
Vyse, Maude J.
W. (poet; Blackwood's)
W. (poet; Chambers's)
W. (poet; Once a Week)
W. A. (illustrator)
W. A. F. (poet; Blackwood's)
W. B. (illustrator)
W. B. R. (poet; Good Words)
W. B. S. (poet; Chambers's)
W. C. (poet; Once a Week)
W. E. L. (poet; Chambers's)
W. G. (poet; Blackwood's)
W. G. (poet; Once a Week)
W. G. C. (poet; Macmillan’s)
W. G. M. (poet; Blackwood's)
W. H. (poet; Macmillan’s)
W. H. B. (translator; Macmillan's)
W. H. H.
W. H. K.
W. H. W. (poet; Chambers's)
W. J. C. (poet; Cornhill)
W. J. W.
W. K. S. (poet; Atalanta)
W. M. (translator; Good Words)
W. M. G. (poet; Chambers's)
W. M. G. (poet; Once a Week)
W. M. S. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
W. M. T. (translator; Chambers's)
W. P. (illustrator)
W. P. (poet; Blackwood's)
W. P. L. (poet; Cornhill)
W. P. W. (poet; Chambers's)
W. R. (illustrator)
W. R. (poet; Once a Week)
W. S. (poet; Chambers's)
W. S. (poet; Good Words)
W. S. D. (poet; English Woman’s Journal)
W. S. F. (“A Police Constable”) (poet; Good Words)
W. S. M. (poet; Chambers's)
W. S. Y. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
W. T. (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
W. T. G. (poet; Once a Week)
W. T. M. (poet; Once a Week)
W. V. (poet; Good Words)
W. W. (poet; Blackwood's)
W. W. (poet; Good Words)
W. W. G. (poet; Macmillan’s)
W. Y. (translator; Macmillan's)
Waddington, Samuel
Waddy, Frederick
Wade, George Woosung
Wagner, E.
Wagner, Richard
Wagstaff, A.
Wain, Louis
Waithman, Helen Maud
Walcott, Mackenzie E. C.
Waldie, Agnes
Walford, Edward (pseudonym “Ralph de Peverel”)
Walford, Lucy Bethia
Walford, Neville
Walford, Olive Montagu
Walker, Elizabeth (Eliza)
Walker, Esther
Walker, Francis S.
Walker, Frederick
Walker, John (pseudonym "Rowland Thirlmere")
Walker, W. Sidney
Wall, J. (pseudonym “Iris”)
Wallace, Robert Bruce
Waller, Edmund
Waller, John Francis
Wallin, Johan Olaf
Walsh, Paul
Walton, Izaak
Ward, J.
Ward, James Warner
Ward, Mary Augusta
Ward, Thomas Humphry
Wardle, Arthur
Wardle, James
Waring, Anna Letitia
Waring, Charles H.
Waring, Eleanor Emma
Waring, H. E.
Waring, S.
Waring, Samuel Miller
Warner, John
Warr, George C.
Warren, Henry
Warren, John Byrne Leicester
Warren, Samuel
Warren, Thomas Herbert
Warrington, George
Warton, Thomas
Waterston, Robert Cassie
Watkins, Frank
Watkins, Morgan George
Watkins, S. Cornish
Watson, Elizabeth Sophia
Watson, J. (photographer)
Watson, James E.
Watson, John Dawson
Watson, L.
Watson, Robert
Watson, Robert Lancaster
Watson, Rosamund Marriott
Watson, Walter
Watson, William
Watt, J. Lauchlan MacLean
Wattier, Émile
Watts-Dunton, Theodore
Watts, Alaric Alexander
Watts, Alaric Alfred (Alfred A.) (1825-1901)
Watts, C. M.
Watts, George Frederick
Watts, Isaac
Watts, John George
Watts, Priscilla (Zillah) Maden
Waugh, Arthur
Waugh, F. G.
Waugh, Francis
Weatherly, Frederic Edward
Webb, Anna
Webb, K. E.
Webb, R. Chapman
Webb, W. Trego
Webber, Byron
Webster, Augusta
Webster, John
Weedon, Francis Charles (1831-1861)
Weid, Pauline Elisabeth Ottilie Luise zu (pseudonym “Carmen Sylva”)
Weir, Harrison
Weissensee, Philipp Heinrich
Welch, W. P.
Wellesley, Richard
Wells (Miss)
Wentworth, Ernest
Werner, Alice
West, Stainley
Westall, Richard
Westall, William
Westmacott, Richard (1799-1872)
Weston, Elizabeth Joanna
Whall, C. H.
Whewell, William
Whishaw, Frederick James
Whistler, James McNeil
Whitcher, John
White Friar
White, E.
White, James
White, Joseph Blanco
White, T.
Whitehead, Charles
Whitelocke, Samuel
Whiting, Sydney
Whitman, Walt
Whitney, Adeline Dutton Train
Whittier, John Greenleaf
Whymper, Charles
Whymper, Frederick Hayes
Wiegand, W. J.
Wiffen, Jeremiah Holmes
Wightwick, George
Wilberforce, Samuel
Wilde, Jane Francesca Agnes (pseudonym “Speranza”)
Wilkie, David
Wilkie, Helen
Wilkie, James
Wilkinson
Wilkinson, Thomas C.
William Morris (allonym)
William, C. P.
Williams, Antonia R.
Williams, Charles H.
Williams, Charles Hanbury
Williams, J.
Williams, J. D.
Williams, R. Stansby
Williams, Robert Folkstone
Williams, S. W.
Williams, Sarah
Williamson, David R.
Williamson, Effie
Williamson, R. R.
Willis, Nathaniel Parker
Wills, James
Wills, Ruth
Wills, William Henry
Wilson-Block, Elisabeth
Wilson, [Janet?]
Wilson, A. C.
Wilson, Alexander
Wilson, Andrew
Wilson, Ernest
Wilson, F. E.
Wilson, F. G.
Wilson, Florence Margaret
Wilson, George (1799-1873)
Wilson, George (1818-1859)
Wilson, George Washington (1823-1893)
Wilson, Helen K.
Wilson, J.
Wilson, James
Wilson, John
Wilson, John (pseudonym “Christopher North”)
Wilson, Margaret (née Harries) (Mrs. Cornwell Baron Wilson)
Wilson, Robert
Wilson, Sarah
Wilson, William
Wilton, Charles
Wilton, Richard
Wimperis, Edmund Morison
Windle, E. G.
Wingate, David
Winkworth, Catherine
Winstanley, Lilian
Winterwood, Geoffrey
Winther, Christian
Witcomb, Charles
Wither, George
Withers, Percy
Wohlbrück, Wilhelm August
Wolcot, John
Wolf, Joseph
Wolfe, Charles
Wolff, Betje
Wolff, Pius Alexander
Wolffsohn, Lily
Wollaston, John Thomas Burton
Wood
Wood, A.
Wood, Alfred
Wood, Elizabeth W.
Wood, Ellen
Wood, Francis Henry
Wood, G. W.
Wood, John
Wood, Lydia M.
Wood, Sam (pseudonym “Mortimer Mansell”)
Woodforde
Woodley, George
Woods, Margaret Louisa
Woods, Virna
Woodward, William
Wooley, Charles (Wolley, Wolley-Dod)
Woolmer, Alfred Joseph
Woolsey, Sarah Chauncey (pseudonym “Susan Coolidge”)
Wordsworth, William (1770-1850)
Wordsworth, William (1835-1917)
Worsley, H.
Worsley, Philip Stanhope
Wotton, Henry
Wotton, Mabel E.
Wrangham, Francis
Wratislaw, Theodore
Wren, Hildegarde
Wren, M. H.
Wright, Arthur
Wright, David
Wright, John Massey
Wyatt, Thomas
Wykehamist (pseudonym)
Wynne, Ellis J.
X. (poet; Blackwood's)
X. (poet; Chambers's)
X. (poet; Once a Week)
X. C. (poet; Chambers's)
X. L. (poet; Blackwood's)
X. Y. (poet; Blackwood's)
Xenocritus
Y. (translator; Blackwood’s)
Yates, Edmund Hodgson
Yeats, William Butler
Young, George
Young, Ruth
Yriarte, Charles
Yule, Henry
Z. (poet; The Chartist Circular)
Z. (translator; Chambers's)
Zappi, Giambattista Felice
Zedlitz, Joseph Christian Freiherr von
Zenodotus of Ephesus
Zeta (pseudonym)
Zimmermann
Zwecker, Johann Baptist
Αμφιων (pseudonym)
Αριαδνη (pseudonym)
Ελιας (pseudonym)
Έσπερος (pseudonym)
Θ
Κρεων (pseudonym)
Νομος (pseudonym)
Φασν (pseudonym)
Ω (poet; Blackwood's)
Ω (poet; Forget-Me-Not)
Фώνη (pseudonym)
Notes ?
Hashtags ?
Proofed?
True
False
Attributions proofed?
True
False
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