by Homer
Cloe
Cold’s the Wind
Come Under My Plaidie
Complaint of the Absence of Her Lover Being upon the Sea
Composed at Neidpath Castle, the Property of Lord Queensberry
Concerning the Philosophers Stone
Concord Hymn
Confessio Amantis. Incipit Liber Primus
Connent
Content and Resolute
Contentment
Corinna to Tanagra, from Athens
Corinna’s Maying
Coronach
Country Glee
Crabbed Age and Youth
Cristina
Crossing the Bar
Cupid and Campaspe
Darkness
Datur Hora Quieti
Dawn Song
Dawn Song
Days
Dear Heart Why Will You Use Me So?
Death
Death Stands Above Me
Dedication of the Ring and the Book
Dejection: an Ode
Departure
Description of Paradise: Paradise Lost Book IV
Desideria
Diaphenia
Dido’s Appeal to Aeneas and Her Death: Book IV
Dirce
Dirge of Love
Disabled
Do You Remember Me?
Don Juan: Canto the First
Dover Beach
Dover Cliffs
Dreams
Drinking
Drinking Song
Drummer Hodge
Dulce Et Decorum Est
Easter
Easter Song
Ecce Puer
Echo
Eclogue I
Eclogue III
Eclogue X
Edmund’s ‘Now Gods Stand Up for Bastards’ Speech (King Lear)
Edward
Eighteenth Sonnet
Eighty-seventh Sonnet
Elegy
Elegy on Thyrza
Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard
Eleu Loro
Elizabeth of Bohemia
Endymion Book I.
England and Switzerland
England, My England
Enid’s Song
Epigram
Epilogue
Epistle to Augusta
Epitaph on Charles II
Epitaph on Elizabeth L. H.
Epithalamion
Epode
Ethiopia Saluting the Colors
Evangeline
Evelyn Hope
Evil Be Thou My Good Extract: Paradise Lost Book IV
Exposure
Faerie Queene: Book I. The Legend of the Knight of the Red Crosse. Canto I
Fair Ines
Fair Is My Love
Faith is a fine invention
Famous Description of Cleopatra on the Barge (Anthony and Cleopatra)
Fancy
Fare Thee Well
Farewell, Rewards and Fairies
Fidele
Fidele’s Dirge
Fifty-fifth Sonnet
Fifty-fourth Sonnet
Fifty-seventh Sonnet
Flower in the Crannied Wall
Follow thy Fair Sun
Follow your Saint
Footsteps of Angels
For an Epitaph at Fiesole
For Annie
For Lack of Gold
For Music
For the Magdalene
Fortune Befirends the Bold: Book X
Fra Lippo Lippi
Freedom and Love
Futility
Gathering Song of Donald the Black
Gaunt’s ‘This England’ Speech (Richard II)
Genius in Beauty
Georgic I
Georgic IV
Get Up and Bar the Door
Gifts
Give All to Love
Give Me More Love
Give Me the Splendid Silent Sun
Glengariff
Gloomy Winter’s Now Awa’
Go, Lovely Rose!
Goblin Market
Good-Bye
Great Spirits Now on Earth Are Sojourning
Hame, Hame, Hame
Hamlet’s ‘To Be or Not to Be’ Speech
Handsome Nell
Hap
Happiness
Happy Insensibility
Harp of the North, Farewell!
He’s Ower the Hills That I Lo’e Weel
Heart’s Compass
Heart’s Hope
Heaven — is what I cannot reach!
Heaven has different Signs — to me
Hector’s Farewell of His Wife Andromache and Son: Book VI
Hellas
Henry V’s ‘Once More unto the Breach’ Speech
Her Gifts
Her Reply (Written by Sir Walter Raleigh)
Heraclitus
Here’s a Health to King Charles
Heredity
Hester
Highland Mary
Hind Horn
His Pilgrimage
His Supposed Mistress
Hohenlinden
Holy Thursday
Home They Brought Her Warrior Dead
Home-thoughts, from Abroad
Home-thoughts, from the Sea
Hope is the thing with feathers
Horatian Ode upon Cromwell’s Return from Ireland
How Love Looked for Hell
How They Brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix [16 — ]
Hugh of Lincoln
Human Folly
Hunting Song
Hymn
Hymn Before Sunrise, in the Vale of Chamouni
Hymn of Pan
Hymn to Adversity
Hymn to Aphrodite
Hymn to Diana
Hymn to the Night
Hymn to the Spirit of Nature
I Fear Thy Kisses
I Know The Music
I Lo’ed Ne’er a Laddie but Ane
I Loved a Lass
If Doughty Deeds
In a London Square
In the Highlands
In the Round Tower at Jhansi
In the Valley of Cauteretz
In Time of ‘The Breaking of Nations’
In Time of Pestilence
Integer Vitae
Invictus
Invocation
Iphigeneia
Itylus
Jaques’ ‘All the World’s a Stage’ Speech (As You Like It)
Jenny Kiss’d Me
Jerusalem: Chapter I.
Jessie, the Flower o’ Dunblane
Joan of Arc. The First Book.
Jock of Hazeldean
John Anderson My Jo
Johnie Armstrong
June
Key Passages from ‘The Odyssey’
Killed at the Ford
Kilmeny
Kinmont Willie
Know, Celia
Kubla Khan
La Belle Dame Sans Merci
Lament for Flodden
Lament of the Irish Emigrant
Laodamia
Last Lines
Last Sonnet: Bright Star! would I were steadfast as thou art
Lear and the Fool on the Heath (King Lear)
Leda And The Swan
Lenore
Let Us Drink and Be Merry
Letty’s Globe
Life
Life
Life
Like as the Culver, on the Bared Bough
Lines
Lines to an Indian Air
Lines to Fanny
Liz
Lochinvar
Lock the Door, Lariston
Locksley Hall
Logie o’ Buchan
London, MDCCCII
London, September, 1855
Longing
Lord Thomas and Fair Annet
Lord Ullin’s Daughter
Loss of the Royal George
Love
Love
Love Gregor
Lov
e in Her Eyes Sits Playing
Love in the Valley
Love Thou Thy Land
Love Will Find Out the Way
Love’s Deity
Love’s Farewell
Love’s Omnipresence
Love’s Perjuries
Love’s Philosophy
Love’s Secret
Lover’s Infiniteness
Lovesight
Love-Sweetness
Lucy
Lucy Ashton’s Song
Lullaby
Lycidas
Macbeth’s ‘To-morrow’ Speech
Madrigal
Maid of Athens
Margaritæ Sorori
Mary Hamilton
Massachusetts to Virginia
Master Francis Beaumont’s Letter to Ben Jonson
Maud Muller
Maud. Part I
Maud. Part II
Melancholy
Memorabilia
Memorial Verses
Mental Cases
Michael
Mimnermus in Church
Miniver Cheevy
Modern Love
Morte d’Arthur
Mother, I Cannot Mind My Wheel
Mr. Flood's Party
Music, When Soft Voices Die
My Dear and Only Love
My Garden
My Heart Leaps Up
My Heart’s In The Highlands
My Last Duchess
My Lost Youth
My Love Is in a Light Attire
My Mind to Me a Kingdom Is
My Mother Bids Me Bind My Hair
Nature and the Poet
Nature is what we see
Never the Time and the Place
Night
Ninetieth Sonnet
Ninety-eighth Sonnet
Ninety-fourth Sonnet
Ninety-seventh Sonnet
No, My Own Love
Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal
Nox Nocti Indicat Scientiam
Nurse’s Song
O Captain! My Captain!
O It Was Out by Donnycarney
O Mistress Mine
O Swallow, Swallow
O Sweet Content
Ode
Ode 1.5 Quis multa gracilis.
Ode I.11 Tu ne quaesieris. (‘The Carpe Diem Poem’)
Ode III.2. Angustam amice. “It is sweet and honorable to die for one’s country.”
Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College
Ode on a Grecian Urn
Ode on Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood
Ode on Melancholy
Ode on the Pleasure Arising from Vicissitude
Ode on the Poets
Ode on the Spring
Ode Recited at the Harvard Commemoration
Ode to a Nightingale
Ode to Autumn
Ode to Duty
Ode to Psyche
Ode to the North-east Wind
Ode To the Pious Memory of the accomplished young lady, Mrs. Anne Killigrew, excellent in the two sister arts of Poesy and Painting
Ode to the West Wind
Ode to Winter
Ode Written in MDCCXLVI
Odysseus’ Visit to the Underworld: Book VI
Old Ironsides
On a Certain Lady at Court (Henrietta Howard, Countess of Suffolk)
On a Favourite Cat, Drowned in a Tub of Gold Fishes
On a Girdle
On an Infant Dying as Soon as Born
On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer
On His Seventy-Fifth Birthday
On Living Too Long
On Lucretia Borgia’s Hair
On Lucy, Countess of Bedford
On Milton
On Parent Knees a Naked New-born Child
On Salathiel Pavy
On Shakespeare
On the Castle of Chillon
On the Countess Dowager of Pembroke
On the Death of a Young Lady (Cousin to the Author, and very dear to him)
On the Death of Dr. Robert Levet
On the Death of Mr. William Hervey
On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic
On the Grasshopper and Cricket
On the Last Epiphany (or Christ Coming To Judgment)
On the Morning of Christ’s Nativity
On the Queen’s Return from the Low Countries
On the Receipt of My Mother’s Picture out of Norfolk
On the Tombs in Westminster Abbey
On This Day I Complete My Thirty-Sixth Year
One Day I Wrote Her Name Upon the Strand
One Hundred and Eleventh Sonnet
One Hundred and Forty-eighth Sonnet
One Hundred and Forty-sixth Sonnet
One Hundred and Fourth Sonnet
One Hundred and Ninth Sonnet
One Hundred and Seventh Sonnet
One Hundred and Sixteenth Sonnet
One Hundred and Sixth Sonnet
One Hundred and Tenth Sonnet
One Hundred and Twenty-ninth Sonnet
One Word is Too Often Profaned
One Word More
One’s-Self I Sing
Opening Invocation of the Muse: Book I
Opening of the Epic: Book I
Ophelia’s Song
Othello’s ‘Put Out the Light’ Speech
Our Blessed Lady’s Lullaby
Ozymandias of Egypt
Pack, Clouds, Away
Paradise Lost: Book 1
Paris and Œnone
Parting at Morning
Past and Present
Paul Revere’s Ride
Peggy
Perigot and Willie’s Roundelay
Phillada Flouts Me
Phillida and Coridon
Phillis
Pioneers! O Pioneers!
Pippa’s Song
Poems from ‘La Vita Nuova’
Porphyria’s Lover
Portia’s ‘Quality of Mercy’ Speech (The Merchant of Venice)
Prayer of Columbus
Present in Absence
Priam Begs Achilles for Hector’s Corpse. Book XXIV
Pro Patria Mori
Prologue of the Earthly Paradise
Prologue to ‘Romeo and Juliet’
Prospero’s ‘Such Stuff as Dreams are Made on’ Speech (The Tempest)
Prospice
Prothalamion
Proud Word You Never Spoke
Puck’s Epilogue (Midsummer Night’s Dream)
Qua Cursum Ventus
Rabbi Ben Ezra
Randolph of Roanoke
Reeds of Innocence
Remember
Requiem
Requiescat
Resignation
Resolution and Independence
Retaliation
Richard Cory
Richard III’s Opening Lines
Rizpah
Robert Browning
Robert of Lincoln
Romeo Meets Juliet for the First Time
Rosabelle
Rosalind’s Madrigal
Rosaline
Rose Aylmer
Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam of Naishapur
Rudely Thou Wrongest My Dear Heart’s Desire
Rugby Chapel
Rule, Britannia
Ruth: Or the Influences of Nature
Sailing To Byzantium
Saint John Baptist
Sally in our Alley
Satire I. Qui fit, Maecenas.
Satire IX. Ibam forte via sacra.
Say Not the Struggle Naught Availeth
Serenade
Seventy-first Sonnet
Seventy-third Sonnet
Shakespeare
She is Not Fair
She Walks in Beauty
She Was a Phantom of Delight
Shorten Sail
Silent Noon
Silvia
Simon Lee the Old Huntsman
Simplex Munditiis
Sir Galahad
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Sir Patrick Spence
Sixtieth Sonnet
Sixty-fifth Sonnet
Sixty-fourth Sonnet
Sixty-sixth Sonnet
Skipper Ireson’s Ride
Sly Dick
Snake
So Oft as I Her Beauty do Behold
So We’ll Go No More a-Roving
Solitude
Song
Song
Song
Song
Song for St. Cecilia’s Day
Song from Ælla
Song of Marion’s Men
Song of Saul Before His Last Battle
Song of the Emigrants in Bermuda
Song to a Fair Young Lady, Going Out of the Town in the Spring
Sonnet
Sonnets from the Portuguese I
Sonnets from the Portuguese II
Sonnets from the Portuguese III
Sonnets from the Portuguese IV
Sonnets from the Portuguese IX
Sonnets from the Portuguese V
Sonnets from the Portuguese VI
Sonnets from the Portuguese VII
Sonnets from the Portuguese VIII
Sonnets from the Portuguese X
Sonnets from the Portuguese XI
Sonnets from the Portuguese XII
Sonnets from the Portuguese XIII
Sonnets from the Portuguese XIV
Sonnets from the Portuguese XIX
Sonnets from the Portuguese XL
Sonnets from the Portuguese XLI
Sonnets from the Portuguese XLII
Sonnets from the Portuguese XLIII (How do I love thee? Let me count the ways)
Sonnets from the Portuguese XLIV
Sonnets from the Portuguese XV
Sonnets from the Portuguese XVI
Sonnets from the Portuguese XVII
Sonnets from the Portuguese XVIII
Sonnets from the Portuguese XX
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXI
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXII
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXIII
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXIV
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXIX
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXV
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXVI
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXVII
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXVIII
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXX
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXXI
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXXII
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXXIII
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXXIV
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXXIX
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXXV
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXXVI
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXXVII
Sonnets from the Portuguese XXXVIII
Sordello Book the First.
Speech — is a prank of Parliament
Spring
Spring
Spring’s Welcome
Stanzas — April, 1814
Stanzas Written in Dejection Near Naples
Stay, O Sweet
Strange Meeting
Summons to Love
Sweet and Low
Sweet William’s Ghost
Sweetest Love, I do not Go
Take, O Take
Tam O’ Shanter
Tears, Idle Tears
Tempus edax rerum: Extract from ‘The Metamorphoses’ Book XV
Thanatopsis
That Holy Thing
The Aeneid
The Affliction of Margaret
The Apology