The Map and the Clock
Page 49
In our primary school 575
In our town, people live in rows 351
In Parenthesis 403
In Praise of a Girl 155
In the bleak mid-winter 278
In the mustardseed sun 437
In the season of summer with the sun at its highest 47
Incantata 598
Infelice 453
Inglan is a Bitch 614
Innocent England 395
Insensibility 364
Interrogation, The 401
Inviting a Friend to Supper 106
Irish Airman Foresees his Death, An 326
Is this a holy thing to see 208
It reeled across the North, to the extent 645
It’s all the same to morning what it dawns on 619
It’s difficult with the weight of the rifle 403
It’s little more than a bump in the land, a footnote 30
It was a day peculiar to this piece of the planet 531
It was a yellow voice, a high, shrill treble in the nursery 533
It was the garden of the golden apples 454
Jane, Jane 404
Jesus and the Sparrows 4
Jubilate Agno 185
Julia in Silks 128
Just for the sake of recovering 495
Keen for the Coins, A 554
King John 98
King of Connacht, The 15
King of the perennial holly-groves, the riven sandstone 547
King Richard II 103
Known throughout Britain this noble city 26
Lady Greensleeves 119
Lady Poverty, The 307
Lament for Culloden 216
Land o’ the Leal, The 220
Last night I did not fight for sleep 425
Last night in Scotland Street I met a man 464
Last night we started with some dry vermouth 339
Late summer, and at midnight 553
Late Wasp, The 402
Laughter, with us, is no great undertaking 350
Lessons of the War 422
Let in the wind 459
Let us go then, you and I 369
let’s put aside 578
Liberty, The 168
Life and Death 136
Like as the armed knight 76
‘Like as the damask rose you see’ 134
Like as the damask rose you see 134
Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey 229
Lion and Albert, The 346
Listen Mr Oxford Don 593
Listening to Collared Doves 457
Litany for Doneraile, The 202
Liverpool Blues 662
Lo thus in brief (most sacred Majesty) 80
Loch Thom 495
London Eye, The 658
London Snow 303
London. The grimy lilac softness 542
Long Garden, The 454
Lord Walter’s Wife 259
Lost Woman, The 529
Love 129
Love bade me welcome; yet my soul drew back 129
Love is like a dizziness 221
‘Love like a juggler comes to play his prize’ 122
Love like a juggler comes to play his prize 122
Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock, The 369
Love’s Labour’s Lost 100
Lovely daughter of Conn O’Neill 164
Lovers are Separate 447
Lovers whose lifted hands are candles in winter 469
Lunch Hour 357
Mabinogi: Rhiannon, The 30
Maggie Lauder 143
Manly Sports 306
Mappamundi 642
Mark but this flea, and mark in this 115
Marriage of the Dwarfs 141
Mars is braw in crammasy 386
Mary Morison 212
Mary’s Song 388
May Poem 66
Me not no Oxford don 593
Meditation at Kew 351
Meeting at Night 271
Men went to Catraeth, keen their war-band 9
Men went to Catraeth. The luxury liner 545
Mercian Hymns 547
Midge 510
Midnight. The wind yawing nor-east 521
Mr and Mrs Scotland Are Dead 647
Mrs Evans fach, you want butter again 392
Mrs Reece Laughs 350
Money 522
Money, thou bane of bliss, and source of woe 130
Month of plants and of honey 178
Moon in Lleyn, The 500
Moors, The 244
Mother’s Lament for Her Child, The 181
Motor Bus, The 312
Mountain over Aberdare, The 428
Mower to the Glow-Worms, The 148
Music of a thrush, clearbright 45
My dearest, you may pray now it is Lent 149
My Grandmother 532
My grandmother came down the steps into the garden 448
My hope and my love 35
My life is my own bible 629
My luve is like a red, red rose 213
My mother went with no more warning 529
My mother’s old leather handbag 561
My passion is as mustard strong 174
Na, na, I wunna pairt wi’ that 250
Nation, The 560
Nature and Time are against us now 461
Nature’s Cook 158
Neutral Tones 296
New Song of New Similes, A 174
New Year Behind the Asylum 581
Night Mail 411
Nightingale Near the House, The 344
No 336
No doubt they’ll soon get well; the shock and strain 352
No Second Troy 323
No, this is not my life, thank God 477
Nobody in the lane, and nothing, nothing but blackberries 476
‘Nor rural sights alone, but rural sounds’ 187
Nor rural sights alone, but rural sounds 187
Northumbrian Sequence: IV 459
November ’63: eight months in London 564
Now as Heaven is my Lot, they’re the Pests of the Nation 235
Now as I was young and easy under the apple boughs 435
Now let me turn again to tell my tale 43
Now mirk December’s dowie face 199
Now we must praise to the skies, the Keeper of the heavenly kingdom 3
‘Now winter nights enlarge’ 104
Now winter nights enlarge 104
Now, disbelieving, I will go 616
Numties, The 637
Nun’s Priest’s Tale, The 43
Nymph, nymph, what are your beads 345
O Cambridge, attend 184
O henny penny! Oh horsed half-crown 554
O, I have been wounded 132
O Jean, my Jean, when the bell ca’s the congregation 315
O, love, love, love 221
O lusty May, with Flora queen 66
O Mary, at thy window be 212
O pleasant exercise of hope and joy 227
O Robertson of Inverawe 159
O what can you give me 391
O why do you walk through the fields in gloves 399
O wild West Wind, thou breath of Autumn’s being 240
O women of the Merrie England Coffee Houses, Huddersfield 651
oa! hoy! awe! ba! mey 513
Ode on Solitude 177
Ode to the West Wind 240
Of a’ the waters that can hobble 196
Oh that my soul a marrow-bone might seize 310
Oh, to be in England 270
Oh what a pity, Oh! don’t you agree 395
Old Peter Grimes made Fishing his employ 205
Old Woman Speaks of the Moon, An 445
On a Dead Child 304
On ear and ear two noises too old to end 301
On hot summer mornings my aunt set glasses 517
On Inclosures 180
On the civic amenity landfill site 647
On the grass when I arrive 554
On the Grasshopper and
the Cricket 255
On the New Laureate 186
On the Road to the Sea 329
On the Roof of the World 628
Once I loved a woman 638
Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more 101
One duck stood on my toes 497
One thing I know for certain: that she 52
Oor Location 248
Oot behind a lorry 471
Orchids at Cwm y Gaer, The 616
Our town in England with the whole of India sundering 660
Our Town with the Whole of India! 660
Out of us all 341
Overheard on a Saltmarsh 345
Owl and Mouse 535
Owl and the Pussy-Cat, The 285
Paradise Lost 142
Parliament of Fowls, The 41
Passionate Shepherd to his Love, The 96
Pearl 52
Perfect little body, without fault or stain on thee 304
Peter Grimes 205
Phrase Book 621
Piano 394
Piers Plowman 47
Pleasant Sounds 244
Poem 468
Poem From Llanybri 466
Poem on His Birthday 437
Poet to Blacksmith 195
Poetry is a loose term and only 537
Poly-Olbion 94
Ponnage Pool, The 400
Poor Snow 593
Porphyria’s Lover 272
Post-Boy, The 188
Praises of God, The 23
Prayer 131
Prayer the Church’s banquet, Angels’ age 131
Prelude, The 227
Presents from my Aunts in Pakistan 624
Pride 639
Private Bottling, A 654
Prologue, The 54
Proud Songsters 294
Punishment 550
Quarterly, is it, money reproaches me 522
Queen of Hearts, The 280
Question Answered, A 209
Railway Bridge of the Silvery Tay, The 281
Red, Red Rose, A 213
Refugee Blues 409
Riddle, A 211
River & Fountain 565
River God of the River Mimram in Hertfordshire, The 452
Rolling English Road, The 338
Rooms 333
Sally is gone that was so kindly 335
Satire upon the Heads; or, Never a Barrel the Better Herring 184
Saturday in the ’20s, A 385
Satyr upon Sir Niel Laing 77
Say this city has ten million souls 409
Scherzo (a Shy Person’s Wishes), A 283
School Boy, The 207
Scotland 531
Sea and the Skylark, The 301
Seafarer, The 20
Seagull, The 44
Seamus, make me a side-arm to take on the earth 195
See, I was raised on the wild side, border country 586
Seed 626
Seven Times One: Exultation 284
Shakespeare at School 588
Shall I be one of those obsequious fools 168
Shall I have the girl I love 59
She came up the hill carrying water 584
She kept an antique shop – or it kept her 532
‘She walks in beauty, like the night’ 238
She walks in beauty, like the night 238
‘She was poor, but she was honest’ 308
She was poor, but she was honest 308
She was skilled in music and the dance 389
She was urgent to speak of the moon: she offered delight 445
She was wearing coral taffeta trousers 378
Shirt of a Lad 63
Sholto Peach Harrison you are no son of mine 452
Silent is the house: all are laid asleep 269
Silent One, The 358
‘silver swan, who living had no note, The’ 64
Sin 446
Singer, The 627
Singing, today I married my white girl 528
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight 50
Sir James Murray 511
Slip of loveliness, slim, seemly 155
Smooth gull on the sea’s lagoon 44
Snow 420
So forth issued the Seasons of the year 84
So the morning dawns when man remembers 50
‘So, we’ll go no more a roving’ 239
So, we’ll go no more a roving 239
So when the Queen of Love rose from the seas 173
Soaking, The 359
Soap Suds 419
Sofas, Fogs and Cinemas, The 478
Softly, in the dusk, a woman is singing to me 394
Soliloquy of a Maiden Aunt 313
Soliloquy of the full Moon, She being in a Mad Passion –, A 235
Some Poetry 537
Son-days 150
Song about Myself, A 251
Song of a Wire Fence 638
Song of Sorrow, A 159
Song of Summer 178
Song of Wandering Aengus, The 322
Song to a Child 3
Song To Celia 111
Sonnet Found in a Deserted Mad-House 310
Sound of the Wind that is Blowing, The 450
Spotted cow that’s light and freckled 309
Still Falls the Rain 405
Still falls the Rain 405
Stop looking like a purse. How could a purse 498
Stop, stop and listen for the bough top 64
Suddenly as the riot squad moved in, it was raining exclamation marks 592
Summer ends now; now, barbarous in beauty, the stooks arise 301
Summer Evening 247
Sun Rising, The 116
Sunday, skilled in zealous verse I praise the Lord 527
Sunset and evening star 268
Survivors 352
Sweeney Astray 28
Sweet is the breath of Morn; her rising sweet 142
‘Sweet kiss, thy sweets I fain would sweetly indite’ 93
Sweet kiss, thy sweets I fain would sweetly indite 93
Sweit rois of vertew and of gentilnes 61
Swineherd 578
Symphony in Yellow 311
Take off the business suit, the old-school tie 446
Taliesin. I sing perfect metre 34
Tall Nettles 344
Tall nettles cover up, as they have done 344
Tam i’ the Kirk 315
Tempest, The 97
10th February: Queen 665
Tents, marquees, and baggage-waggons 209
That my old bitter heart was pierced in this black doom 170
The barge she sat in, like a burnished throne 99
The Chair she sat in, like a burnished throne 374
The child came to the dark library 385
The crags crash to the tarn; slow 503
The darkness crumbles away 356
The dirty licht that through the winnock seeps 387
The doubt of future foes exiles my present joy 78
The evening is perfect, my sisters 510
The fables told by poets in old times 54
The first warm day of spring 626
The five old bells 397
The frog, half fearful, jumps across the path 247
The Frost performs its secret ministry 232
The girls are quiet now in the house upstairs 568
The green warl’s awa, but the white ane can charm them 237
The grey sea and the long black land 271
The ladies bow, and partners set 313
The Lady Poverty was fair 307
The land of Y Llain was on the high marsh 450
The last quarter of the moon 500
The little lad, five years of age 4
The loch looks away, up at the crags 667
The lovely lass o’ Inverness 216
The men of my people will hunt him as game 16
The moon is sixpence 636
The morning they set out from home 526
The Mournes are cold tonight 28
The Muses are turned gossips; they have lost 189
The national day 560
The Owl and the Pussy-Cat went to sea 285
The owl wafts home with a mouse in its beak 535
The parsnip Numties: I was a teenager then 637
The poetry of earth is never dead 255
The Queen has lately lost a part 167
The rain has come, and the earth must be very glad 359
The rain set early in to-night 272
The room was suddenly rich and the great bay-window was 420
The rustling of leaves under the feet in woods and under hedges 244
The sea is calm to-night 277
The silver swan, who living had no note 64
The skyline in the moonlight, the river running thin 662
The snows of February had buried Christmas 444
The sun was shining on the sea 290
The thrushes sing as the sun is going 294
The time is come, I must depart 81
The trees are in their autumn beauty 321
The violet 593
The way to get on with a girl 27
The world is charged with the grandeur of God 300
‘There is a garden in her face’ 105
There is a garden in her face 105
There is death enough in Europe without these 472
There was a naughty boy 251
There was the noise like when the men in droves 581
There’s a famous seaside place called Blackpool 346
‘There’s a lady in these parts’ 22
There’s a lady in these parts 22
There’s Nae Luck about the House 181
There’s no dew left on the daisies and clover 284
There’s something dreadful about ghosts in new houses 420
These were hard times, heart-breaking 6
They are all gone into the world of light 153
They are cutting down the great plane-trees at the end of the gardens 332
They are waiting for me somewhere beyond Eden Rock 505
They drove to the Market with ringing pockets 519
‘They flee from me that sometime did me seek’ 75
They flee from me that sometime did me seek 75
They sent me a salwar kameez 624
They shut the road through the woods 316
This ae Night 36
This ae night, this ae night 36
This brand of soap has the same smell as once in the big 419
This house has been far out at sea all night 541
This is the farmer sowing his corn 74
This is the House That Jack Built 74
This is the Night Mail crossing the Border 411
this is thi 587