| Book First |
| On the Spring by Thomas Gray |
| Ode: To the Cuckoo by Michael Bruce |
| Ode to the Gowdspink by Robert Fergusson |
| The Enthusiast: An Ode by William Whitehead |
| A Satire by Samuel Johnson |
| To Mrs. Thrale by Samuel Johnson |
| An Ode on Miss Harriet Hanbury, Six Years Old by Sir Charles Hanbury Williams |
| To Charlotte Pulteney by Ambrose Philips |
| To the Honourable Miss Carteret by Ambrose Philips |
| To Miss Georgiana Carteret by Ambrose Philips |
| Ode to Leven Water by Tobias George Smollett |
| Fati Valet Hora Benigni by Samuel Bishop |
| Song: Perhaps it is not love, said I by William Shenstone |
| Miras Song by Mary Leapor |
| Paties Song by Allan Ramsay |
| To Her I Love by James Thomson |
| The Young Laird and Edinburgh Katie by Allan Ramsay |
| Flavia by William Shenstone |
| Fair Hebe by John West, Earl De La Warr |
| The Je Ne Sais Quoi by William Whitehead |
| To Celia by Henry Fielding |
| Written Extempore on a Halfpenny by Henry Fielding |
| O Merry May the Maid Be by Sir John Clerk |
| The Happy Swain by Ambrose Philips |
| The Touch Stone by Samuel Bishop |
| O Memory! Thou Fond Deceiver by Oliver Goldsmith |
| When Lovely Woman Stoops to Folly by Oliver Goldsmith |
| Come, Come, My Good Shepherds by David Garrick |
| Doun the Burn, Davie by Robert Crawford |
| Song: When Delia on the plain appears by George, Lord Lyttelton |
| Anna Grenville, Countess Temple Appointed Poet Laureate to the King of the Fairies by Horace Walpole, Earl of Orford |
| If Rightly Tuneful Bards Decide by Mark Akenside |
| Kate of Aberdeen by John Cunningham |
| When I upon Thy Bosom Lean by John Lapraik |
| Tweedside by Robert Crawford |
| Absence by Richard Jago |
| Too Plain, Dear Youth, These Tell-tale Eyes by Soame Jenyns |
| Song: Oer desert plains, and rushy meres by William Shenstone |
| Wooed and Married and a by Alexander Ross |
| For Ever, Fortune, Wilt Thou Prove by James Thomson |
| The Second Marriage by Samuel Bishop |
| The Sailors Wife by William Julius Mickle |
| The Complaint by Mark Akenside |
| Song: Oh! forbear to bid me slight her by Aaron Hill |
| To Fix Her,Twere a Task As Vain by Tobias George Smollett |
| The Ewe-Buchtins Bonnie by Lady Grisel Baillie |
| For Lack of Gold by Adam Austin |
| Jemmy Dawson by William Shenstone |
| Song from Aella by Thomas Chatterton |
| Tweedside by John Hay, Marquess of Tweeddale |
| Dirge in Cymbeline by William Collins |
| Eclogue by Thomas Chatterton |
| Werena My Heart Licht I Wad Dee by Lady Grisel Baillie |
| Bothwell Bank by John Pinkerton |
| Leith Races by Robert Fergusson |
| The Daft Days by Robert Fergusson |
| Braid Claith by Robert Fergusson |
| An Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog by Oliver Goldsmith |
| Elegy on Madam Blaize by Oliver Goldsmith |
| Elegy on the Death of Scots Music by Robert Fergusson |
| Elegy on Maggie Johnston by Allan Ramsay |
| The Sitting of the Session by Robert Fergusson |
| Tullochgorum by John Skinner |
| Caller Water by Robert Fergusson |
| An Ode to the Earl of Bath by Sir Charles Hanbury Williams |
| Epistle to Sir Robert Walpole by Henry Fielding |
| Another to the Same by Henry Fielding |
| Ode on the Popular Superstitions of the Highlands of Scotland by William Collins |
| To the Tron-Kirk Bell by Robert Fergusson |
| The Passions by William Collins |
| Prayer for Indifference by Frances Greville |
| The Progress of Poesy by Thomas Gray |
| On a Distant Prospect of Eton College by Thomas Gray |
| The Bard by Thomas Gray |
| Retaliation by Oliver Goldsmith |
| Prologue Spoken by Mr. Garrick at the Opening of the Theatre-Royal by Samuel Johnson |
| Song, in Connection with the Shakespeare Jubilee at Stratford upon Avon by David Garrick |
| Song to Ælla Lord of the Castle of Bristol in the Days of Yore by Thomas Chatterton |
| Chorus from Goddwyn by Thomas Chatterton |
| Rule Britannia by James Thomson |
| Ballad of Admiral Hosiers Ghost by Richard Glover |
| Logie o Buchan by George Halket |
| Johnnie Cope by Adam Skirving |
| Inscription on a Fountain by Edward Lovibond |
| To the River Lodon by Thomas Warton |
| After Seeing the Collection of Pictures at Wilton House by Thomas Warton |
| Written at an Inn at Henley by William Shenstone |
| Hymn to Adversity by Thomas Gray |
| Ode on the Pleasure Arising from Vicissitude by Thomas Gray |
| An Excelente Balade of Charitie by Thomas Chatterton |
| Eclogue: A Man, a Woman, Sir Roger by Thomas Chatterton |
| The Accounte of W. Canynges Feast by Thomas Chatterton |
| A Useful Hint by Aaron Hill |
| Ode to Simplicity by William Collins |
| Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard by Thomas Gray |
| Elegy Written in Spring by Michael Bruce |
| Ode, Written in the Beginning of the Year 1746 by William Collins |
| On the Death of a Particular Friend by James Thomson |
| On Parent Knees, a Naked New-born Child by Sir William Jones |
| The Braes of Yarrow by John Logan |
| Hardyknute by Elizabeth, Lady Wardlaw |
| Cumnor Hall by William Julius Mickle |
| The Braes of Yarrow by William Hamilton of Bangour |
| William and Margaret by David Mallet |
| A Retrospect by Aaron Hill |
| On a Favourite Cat, Drowned in a Tub of Gold Fishes by Thomas Gray |
| In a Hermitage by William Whitehead |
| A Song to David by Christopher Smart |
| The Deserted Village by Oliver Goldsmith |
| Bristowe Tragedie by Thomas Chatterton |
| Eclogue: Robert and Raufe by Thomas Chatterton |
| On the Death of Dr. Robert Levet by Samuel Johnson |
| Last Verses by Thomas Chatterton |
| Epitaph, Intended for Himself by James Beattie |
| The Grave by Robert Blair |
| The Complaint of Nature by Michael Bruce |
| To the Evening Star by Mark Akenside |
| Ode to Evening by William Collins |
| An Ode, in Imitation of Alcaeus by Sir William Jones |
| The Worlds Treasures by Edward Moore |
| Hope by John Langhorne |
| |
| Book Second |
| To the Muses by William Blake |
| Hear the Voice by William Blake |
| To Spring by William Blake |
| Song: Fresh from the dewy hill, the merry year by William Blake |
| Gloomy Winters Now Awa by Robert Tannahill |
| Song: How sweet I roamd from field to field by William Blake |
| The Echoing Green by William Blake |
| Eternity by William Blake |
| To the Butterfly by Samuel Rogers |
| The Lily and the Rose by William Cowper |
| My Pretty Rose-tree by William Blake |
| The Rose by William Cowper |
| Ah! Sun-flower by William Blake |
| The Groves of Blarney by Richard Alfred Millikin |
| Logan Braes by John Mayne |
| The Rowan Tree by Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne |
| Burnham-beeches by Henry Luttrell |
| Reeds of Innocence by William Blake |
| Infant Joy by William Blake |
| Infant Sorrow by William Blake |
| A Cradle Song by William Blake |
| Cradle Song by Richard Gall |
| Nurses Song by William Blake |
| The Lamb by William Blake |
| Laughing Song by William Blake |
| The School Boy by William Blake |
| The Chimney Sweeper by William Blake |
| The Chimney-sweeper by William Blake |
| The Little Black Boy by William Blake |
| Holy Thursday by William Blake |
| A Little Boy Lost by William Blake |
| The Little Boy Lost by William Blake |
| The Little Boy Found by William Blake |
| A Dream by William Blake |
| Auguries of Innocence by William Blake |
| Song: They who may tell loves wistful tale by Joanna Baillie |
| Loves Secret by William Blake |
| A Red, Red Rose by Robert Burns |
| O Were My Love Yon Lilac Fair by Robert Burns |
| My Damon Was the First to Wake by George Crabbe |
| Dry Be That Tear by Richard Brinsley Sheridan |
| Thou Canst Not Boast by Richard Brinsley Sheridan |
| Saw Ye My Wee Thing? by Hector MacNeil |
| The Crook and Plaid by Isabel Pagan |
| Mary Morison by Robert Burns |
| I Loed Neer a Laddie but Ane by Hector MacNeil |
| O, Wert Thou in the Cauld Blast by Robert Burns |
| The Maid That Tends the Goats by William Dudgeon |
| Of a the Airts the Wind Can Blaw by Robert Burns |
| Lass, Gin Ye Loe Me by James Tytler |
| Oh! Dinna Ask Me Gin I Loe Thee by John Dunlop |
| Bonnie Lesley by Robert Burns |
| Jessie, the Flower o Dunblane by Robert Tannahill |
| Mailligh Mo Stoir by George Ogle |
| The Hazelwood Witch by Richard Gall |
| The Maid of Llanwellyn by Joanna Baillie |
| The Lass o Arranteenie by Robert Tannahill |
| My Bonnie Mary by Robert Burns |
| Kate of Garnavilla by Edward Lysaght |
| The Lass o Gowrie by Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne |
| Loch Erroch Side by James Tytler |
| By Yon Burn Side by Robert Tannahill |
| Ca the Yowes to the Knowes by Robert Burns |
| Ca the Yowes by Isabel Pagan |
| The Braes o Balquhither by Robert Tannahill |
| Oer the Muir amang the Heather by Jean Glover |
| Green Grow the Rashes by Robert Burns |
| Could I Find a Bonnie Glen by Anne Grant (MVicar) of Laggan |
| Epistle from Lord Boringdon to Lord Granville by George Canning |
| The Sleeping Beauty by Samuel Rogers |
| O, Are Ye Sleepin, Maggie? by Robert Tannahill |
| Blow High! Blow Low! by Charles Dibdin |
| The Laird o Cockpen by Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne |
| Come under My Plaidie by Hector MacNeil |
| Loudouns Bonnie Woods and Braes by Robert Tannahill |
| Duncan Gray by Robert Burns |
| Saw Ye Johnny Comin? by Joanna Baillie |
| Wood and Married and a by Joanna Baillie |
| Kind Robin Loes Me by Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne |
| Auld Robin Gray by Lady Anne Lindsay |
| Roys Wife by Mrs. Elizabeth Grant of Carron |
| John Anderson, My Jo by Robert Burns |
| The Boatie Rows by John Ewen |
| The Angel by William Blake |
| To Mary by William Cowper |
| To Mary Unwin by William Cowper |
| A Comparison by William Cowper |
| Another, To a Young Lady by William Cowper |
| And Ye Shall Walk in Silk Attire by Susanna Blamire |
| Song: Had I a heart for falsehood framed by Richard Brinsley Sheridan |
| The Braes o Gleniffer by Robert Tannahill |
| Saw Ye Neer a Lanely Lassie? by Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne |
| The Lovely Lass o Inverness by Robert Burns |
| The Banks o Doon by Robert Burns |
| My Mother Bids Me Bind My Hair by Mrs. Anne Hunter |
| Ae Fond Kiss by Robert Burns |
| Remembrance by Anne Hunter |
| Highland Mary by Robert Burns |
| Song: My silks and fine array by William Blake |
| To Mary in Heaven by Robert Burns |
| Cauld Kail in Aberdeen by Alexander, Duke of Gordon |
| The Diverting History of John Gilpin by William Cowper |
| Halloween by John Mayne |
| Epitaph for the tombstone erected over the Marquis of Angleseas leg, lost at Waterloo by George Canning |
| The Friend of Humanity and the Knife-grinder by George Canning |
| Banish Sorrow by George Ogle |
| Willie Brewed a Peck o Maut by Robert Burns |
| Drinking Song by Richard Brinsley Sheridan |
| A Cogie o Yill by Andrew Shirrefs |
| Tam o Shanter by Robert Burns |
| The Year Thats Awa by John Dunlop |
| Auld Lang Syne by Robert Burns |
| Ambition by Edward Lysaght |
| To a Kitten by Joanna Baillie |
| On a Goldfinch Starved to Death in His Cage by William Cowper |
| On a Spaniel, Called Beau, Killing a Young Bird by William Cowper |
| Beaus Reply by William Cowper |
| The Dog and the Water-Lily by William Cowper |
| On a Tear by Samuel Rogers |
| Cavaliers Song by Robert Graham of Gartmore |
| The Outlaws Song by Joanna Baillie |
| A Mans a Man for a That by Robert Burns |
| Caller Herrin by Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne |
| The Shepherd by William Blake |
| The Pleughman by Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne |
| Blithe Are We Set wi Ither by Ebenezer Picken |
| Song: I love the jocund dance by William Blake |
| A Wish by Samuel Rogers |
| An Italian Song by Samuel Rogers |
| The Auld House by Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne |
| The Poplar Field by William Cowper |
| The Shrubbery by William Cowper |
| Echo and Silence by Sir Samuel Egerton Brydges |
| The Wood of Craigie Lea by Robert Tannahill |
| London by William Blake |
| To a Mouse by Robert Burns |
| The Worm by Thomas Gisborne |
| To a Mountain Daisy by Robert Burns |
| Poverty Parts Gude Companie by Joanna Baillie |
| Blind-mans Buff by William Blake |
| The Cotters Saturday Night by Robert Burns |
| On the Receipt of My Mothers Picture out of Norfolk by William Cowper |
| The Nabob by Susanna Blamire |
| My Spectre by William Blake |
| Mock on, Mock on, Voltaire, Rousseau by William Blake |
| The Mental Traveller by William Blake |
| The Crystal Cabinet by William Blake |
| Boadicea: an Ode by William Cowper |
| Symon and Janet by Andrew Scott |
| Bannockburn by Robert Burns |
| Whall Be King but Charlie? by Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne |
| Charlie Is My Darling by Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne |
| Therell Never Be Peace Till Jamie Comes Hame by Robert Burns |
| The White Rose o June by Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne |
| Lewie Gordon by Alexander Geddes |
| Hes Ower the Hills That I Loe Weel by Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne |
| The Flowers of the Forest by Jane Elliott |
| It Was a for Our Rightfu King by Robert Burns |
| The Deserters Meditation by John Philpot Curran |
| The Bay of Biscay, O! by Andrew Cherry |
| On the Loss of the Royal George by William Cowper |
| Verses Supposed to Be Written by Alexander Selkirk During His Solitary Abode on the Island of Juan Fernandez by William Cowper |
| The Castaway by William Cowper |
| The Tiger by William Blake |
| Song: Memory, hither come by William Blake |
| The Garden of Love by William Blake |
| The Whistling Boy That Holds the Plough by George Crabbe |
| Weve Trod the Maze of Error Round by George Crabbe |
| Written at Ostend by William Lisle Bowles |
| Give Me a Cottage on Some Cambrian Wild by Henry Kirke White |
| Life by Anna Letitia Barbauld |
| Sir Eustace Grey by George Crabbe |
| Influence of Time on Grief by William Lisle Bowles |
| Written under the Influence of Delirium by William Cowper |
| Tom Bowlings Epitaph by Charles Dibdin |
| Epitaph on a Hare by William Cowper |
| November, 1793 by William Lisle Bowles |
| Bereavement by William Lisle Bowles |
| The Sick Rose by William Blake |
| A Retrospect by George Crabbe |
| To Him Is Reared No Marble Tomb by William Lisle Bowles |
| Dedication of the Designs to Blairs Grave by William Blake |
| Tomorrow by John Collins |
| Night by William Blake |
| Bonnie Ran the Burnie Doon by Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne |
| Good Night by Robert Tannahill |
| Midges Dance aboon the Burn by Robert Tannahill |
| Fragment of an Ode to the Moon by Henry Kirke White |
| Before the Sacrament by Reginald Heber |
| By Cool Siloams Shady Rill by Reginald Heber |
| The Star of Bethlehem by Henry Kirke White |
| From Greenlands Icy Mountains by Reginald Heber |
| Heavenward by Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne |
| The Land o the Leal by Carolina Oliphant, Lady Nairne |
| The Land of Dreams by William Blake |
| The Divine Image by William Blake |
| |
| Book Third |
| Proem by John Keats |
| Hymn before Sunrise, in the Vale of Chamouni by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| Composed upon Westminster Bridge by William Wordsworth |
| To Jane: the Invitation by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Hunting Song by Sir Walter Scott |
| Written in March by William Wordsworth |
| To My Sister by William Wordsworth |
| After Dark Vapours Have Oppressed Our Plains by John Keats |
| Song to May by Edward Hovell-Thurlow, Lord Thurlow |
| Fragment of an Ode to Maia by John Keats |
| The Skylark by James Hogg |
| To a Skylark by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| To a Sky-Lark by William Wordsworth |
| To a Sky-Lark by William Wordsworth |
| On a Faded Violet by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Hie away, Hie away by Sir Walter Scott |
| The Beech Trees Petition by Thomas Campbell |
| The Green Linnet by William Wordsworth |
| To the Cuckoo by William Wordsworth |
| Fiesolan Idyl by Walter Savage Landor |
| To the Daisy by William Wordsworth |
| The Small Celandine by William Wordsworth |
| Upon a Sweet-Briar by Walter Savage Landor |
| The Sparrows Nest by William Wordsworth |
| To a Butterfly by William Wordsworth |
| To a Butterfly by William Wordsworth |
| O Nightingale, Thou Surely Art by William Wordsworth |
| The Heron by Edward Hovell-Thurlow, Lord Thurlow |
| On the Grasshopper and Cricket by John Keats |
| The Sylvan Life by Edward Hovell-Thurlow, Lord Thurlow |
| Hymn to Pan by John Keats |
| Hymn of Pan by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Invocation to the Spirit of Achilles by Lord Byron |
| Echo by Thomas Moore |
| Ode to Psyche by John Keats |
| Arethusa by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Sappho to Hesperus by Walter Savage Landor |
| Loves Philosophy by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Loves Young Dream by Thomas Moore |
| True-Love, an Thou Be True by Sir Walter Scott |
| The Young May Moon by Thomas Moore |
| For Music by Lord Byron |
| She Walks in Beauty by Lord Byron |
| The Question by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Hearts Ease by Walter Savage Landor |
| Times Sea Hath Been Five Years at Its Slow Ebb by John Keats |
| Love by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| With a GuitarTo Jane by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| The Indian Serenade by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Eileen Aroon by Thomas Furlong |
| Of Clementina by Walter Savage Landor |
| To Lady Anne Hamilton by William Robert Spencer |
| Verses: Why write my name midst songs and flowers by Francis Jeffrey |
| Time to Be Wise by Walter Savage Landor |
| Lesbia Hath a Beaming Eye by Thomas Moore |
| To Ianthe by Walter Savage Landor |
| Let Love Remain by Walter Savage Landor |
| Do You Remember Me? by Walter Savage Landor |
| Ianthe! You Are Calld to Cross the Sea! by Walter Savage Landor |
| On the Smooth Brow by Walter Savage Landor |
| The Adieu by William Robert Spencer |
| The Devon Maid by John Keats |
| To by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Believe Me, If All Those Endearing Young Charms by Thomas Moore |
| Maid of Athens, Ere We Part by Lord Byron |
| Kilmeny by James Hogg |
| She Was a Phantom of Delight by William Wordsworth |
| The Solitary Reaper by William Wordsworth |
| To a Highland Girl by William Wordsworth |
| The Hamadryad by Walter Savage Landor |
| When the Kye Come Hame by James Hogg |
| On a Picture of Leander by John Keats |
| Epipsychidion by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Music, When Soft Voices Die by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Last Sonnet: Bright Star, would I were steadfast as thou art by John Keats |
| Noras Vow by Sir Walter Scott |
| Brignall Banks by Sir Walter Scott |
| Lord Ullins Daughter by Thomas Campbell |
| Isabella, or The Pot of Basil by John Keats |
| Jock o Hazeldean by Sir Walter Scott |
| Allen-a-Dale by Sir Walter Scott |
| County Guy by Sir Walter Scott |
| By That Lake Whose Gloomy Shore by Thomas Moore |
| Lochinvar by Sir Walter Scott |
| The Eve of St. Agnes by John Keats |
| To a Bride by Walter Savage Landor |
| The Three Roses by Walter Savage Landor |
| Harmony in Unlikeness by Charles Lamb |
| Wife, Children, and Friends by William Robert Spencer |
| The Babie by Hugh Miller |
| A Childs a Plaything for an Hour by Mary Lamb |
| Little Aglae by Walter Savage Landor |
| The Children Band by Sir Aubrey de Vere |
| The Two April Mornings by William Wordsworth |
| Love, Hope, and Patience in Education by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| Child of a Day by Walter Savage Landor |
| On an Infant Dying As Soon As Born by Charles Lamb |
| My Love Shes but a Lassie Yet by James Hogg |
| To a Young Lady by William Wordsworth |
| A Boys Song by James Hogg |
| Absence by Walter Savage Landor |
| Why Art Thou Silent? by William Wordsworth |
| Lucy Ashtons Song by Sir Walter Scott |
| Separation by Walter Savage Landor |
| Rose Aylmer by Walter Savage Landor |
| Rose Aylmers Hair, Given by Her Sister by Walter Savage Landor |
| In After Time by Walter Savage Landor |
| Pleasure! Why Thus Desert the Heart by Walter Savage Landor |
| One Year Ago by Walter Savage Landor |
| The Appeal by Walter Savage Landor |
| The Test by Walter Savage Landor |
| Twenty Years Hence by Walter Savage Landor |
| Proud Word You Never Spoke by Walter Savage Landor |
| Well I Remember How You Smiled by Walter Savage Landor |
| Verse: Past ruind Ilion Helen lives by Walter Savage Landor |
| Away My Verse by Walter Savage Landor |
| With an Album by Walter Savage Landor |
| Written on the Road between Florence and Pisa by Lord Byron |
| To by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Clycines Song by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| Could Love For Ever by Lord Byron |
| Longing by Lord Byron |
| Song: A weary lot is thine, fair maid by Sir Walter Scott |
| The Irish Peasant to His Mistress by Thomas Moore |
| When He Who Adores Thee by Thomas Moore |
| I Had a Dove by John Keats |
| Well Go No More A-Roving by Lord Byron |
| When We Two Parted by Lord Byron |
| Fare Thee Well by Lord Byron |
| When the Lamp Is Shattered by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Rosabelle by Sir Walter Scott |
| Song of the Indian Maid by John Keats |
| The Ballad of the Dark Ladié by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| The Eve of Saint John by Sir Walter Scott |
| They Say That Hope Is Happiness by Lord Byron |
| As Hermes Once Took to His Feathers Light by John Keats |
| To Fanny by John Keats |
| Christabel by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| La Belle Dame Sans Merci by John Keats |
| Alonzo the Brave and Fair Imogine by Matthew Gregory Lewis (Monk Lewis) |
| St. Swithins Chair by Sir Walter Scott |
| The Liddel Bower by James Hogg |
| The Violet by Sir Walter Scott |
| Mother, I Cannot Mind My Wheel by Walter Savage Landor |
| Proud Maisie by Sir Walter Scott |
| The Maid of Neidpath by Sir Walter Scott |
| Tis Sair to Dream by Robert Gilfillan |
| Song: Where shall the lover rest by Sir Walter Scott |
| Alice Brand by Sir Walter Scott |
| Oh! Snatchd away in Beautys Bloom by Lord Byron |
| Tis Said That Some Have Died for Love by William Wordsworth |
| The Maids Lament by Walter Savage Landor |
| The Eve of St. Mark by John Keats |
| Ode on a Grecian Urn by John Keats |
| On Seeing the Elgin Marbles by John Keats |
| Kubla Khan by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| Lord William by Robert Southey |
| To One Who Has Been Long in City Pent by John Keats |
| My Heart Leaps up by William Wordsworth |
| Influence of Natural Objects by William Wordsworth |
| Frost at Midnight by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| To Jane: The Recollection by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| The Cloud by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| This Lime-Tree Bower My Prison by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| Michael by William Wordsworth |
| I Wandered Lonely As a Cloud by William Wordsworth |
| To Solitude by John Keats |
| The Trosachs by William Wordsworth |
| Most Sweet It Is with Unuplifted Eyes by William Wordsworth |
| The Fountain by William Wordsworth |
| The Wishing-gate by William Wordsworth |
| The Wishing-gate Destroyed by William Wordsworth |
| Yarrow Unvisited by William Wordsworth |
| Yarrow Visited by William Wordsworth |
| Yarrow Revisited by William Wordsworth |
| Expostulation and Reply by William Wordsworth |
| The Tables Turned by William Wordsworth |
| Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey by William Wordsworth |
| Lines Written in the Album at Elbingerode, in the Hartz Forest by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| Corinna to Tanagra, from Athens by Walter Savage Landor |
| To Homer by John Keats |
| To Robert Browning by Walter Savage Landor |
| Shakespeare and Milton by Walter Savage Landor |
| To Thomas Moore by Lord Byron |
| The Garden of Boccaccio by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| On First Looking into Chapmans Homer by John Keats |
| On Catullus by Walter Savage Landor |
| Meg Merrilies by John Keats |
| Robin Hood by John Keats |
| Bards of Passion and of Mirth by John Keats |
| Lines on the Mermaid Tavern by John Keats |
| On the Sea by John Keats |
| Spanish Point by Sir Aubrey de Vere |
| Glengariff, I by Sir Aubrey de Vere |
| Glengariff, II by Sir Aubrey de Vere |
| Gougane Barra by Sir Aubrey de Vere |
| The Rock of Cashel by Sir Aubrey de Vere |
| As Slow Our Ship by Thomas Moore |
| The Meeting of the Waters by Thomas Moore |
| The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| The Inchcape Rock by Robert Southey |
| Clarion by Sir Walter Scott |
| Pibroch of Donald Dhu by Sir Walter Scott |
| Bonny Dundee by Sir Walter Scott |
| Lock the Door, Lariston by James Hogg |
| Border Ballad by Sir Walter Scott |
| Hail to the Chief by Sir Walter Scott |
| Lochiels Warning by Thomas Campbell |
| Ye Mariners of England by Thomas Campbell |
| The Battle of the Baltic by Thomas Campbell |
| The Arethusa by Prince Hoare |
| The Battle of Blenheim by Robert Southey |
| Hohenlinden by Thomas Campbell |
| Waterloo by Sir Aubrey de Vere |
| Song of Saul before His Last Battle by Lord Byron |
| The Destruction of Sennacherib by Lord Byron |
| The Minstrel Boy by Thomas Moore |
| After the Battle by Thomas Moore |
| The Soldiers Dream by Thomas Campbell |
| Soldier, Rest! Thy Warfare oer by Sir Walter Scott |
| Sonnet on Chillon by Lord Byron |
| The Prisoner of Chillon by Lord Byron |
| France: An Ode by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| Regeneration by Walter Savage Landor |
| The Isles of Greece by Lord Byron |
| Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte by Lord Byron |
| On an Antique Gem Bearing the Heads of Pericles and Aspasia by George Croly |
| When I Have Borne in Memory What Has Tamed by William Wordsworth |
| It Is Not to Be Thought of That the Flood by William Wordsworth |
| London, 1802 by William Wordsworth |
| Written in London, September, 1802 by William Wordsworth |
| On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic by William Wordsworth |
| To Toussaint LOuverture by William Wordsworth |
| My Soul Is Like an Enchanted Boat by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Hymn to Intellectual Beauty by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Hellas by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Prometheus by Lord Byron |
| Rebeccas Hymn by Sir Walter Scott |
| The Right Use of Prayer by Sir Aubrey de Vere |
| A Vision of Repentance by Charles Lamb |
| At Home in Heaven by James Montgomery |
| Ode to Duty by William Wordsworth |
| Character of the Happy Warrior by William Wordsworth |
| Resolution and Independence by William Wordsworth |
| Dear Harp of My Country by Thomas Moore |
| Harp of the North, Farewell! by Sir Walter Scott |
| On Music by Walter Savage Landor |
| No, Not More Welcome by Thomas Moore |
| On Music by Thomas Moore |
| The Harp That Once through Taras Halls by Thomas Moore |
| Fancy by John Keats |
| Ode to Tranquillity by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| The Human Seasons by John Keats |
| The World Is Too Much with Us; Late and Soon by William Wordsworth |
| A Poet!He Hath Put His Heart to School by William Wordsworth |
| Inside of Kings College Chapel, Cambridge, I by William Wordsworth |
| Inside of Kings College Chapel, Cambridge, II by William Wordsworth |
| Great Spirits Now on Earth Are Sojourning by John Keats |
| The Sonnet, I by William Wordsworth |
| The Sonnet, II by William Wordsworth |
| When I Have Fears That I May Cease to Be by John Keats |
| Laodamia by William Wordsworth |
| Personal Talk, I by William Wordsworth |
| Personal Talk, II by William Wordsworth |
| Personal Talk, III by William Wordsworth |
| Personal Talk, IV by William Wordsworth |
| Tis the Last Rose of Summer by Thomas Moore |
| Ode to the West Wind by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| To Autumn by John Keats |
| Autumn by Walter Savage Landor |
| Ode to Winter by Thomas Campbell |
| The Holly Tree by Robert Southey |
| In a Drear-Nighted December by John Keats |
| Composed upon the Beach near Calais, 1802 by William Wordsworth |
| The Day Is Gone by John Keats |
| To Night by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Oh, Come to Me When Daylight Sets by Thomas Moore |
| Evening by Sir Walter Scott |
| Song to the Evening Star by Thomas Campbell |
| To the Evening Star by Thomas Campbell |
| To the Moon by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| The Feast of Dian by John Keats |
| Ode to a Nightingale by John Keats |
| The Nightingale by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| Song: Hear, sweet spirit, hear the spell by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| The Pains of Sleep by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| To Sleep by John Keats |
| The Light of Other Days by Thomas Moore |
| At the Mid Hour of Night by Thomas Moore |
| Ode on Melancholy by John Keats |
| Stanzas, Written in Dejection, near Naples by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| StanzasApril, 1814 by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Dejection: An Ode by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| Time by Sir Walter Scott |
| Mutability by William Wordsworth |
| The River of Life by Thomas Campbell |
| Wasted, Weary, Wherefore Stay by Sir Walter Scott |
| Cavalier Song by Sir Walter Scott |
| Stanzas for Music by Lord Byron |
| Life by Sir Walter Scott |
| Time, Real and Imaginary by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| Stanzas Written in His Library by Robert Southey |
| My Birthday by Thomas Moore |
| On This Day I Complete My Thirty-sixth Year by Lord Byron |
| The Day Returns, My Natal Day by Walter Savage Landor |
| Epitaph upon the Year 1806 by William Robert Spencer |
| The Last Man by Thomas Campbell |
| In My Own Album by Charles Lamb |
| Cleone to Aspasia by Walter Savage Landor |
| Youth and Age by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| To Youth by Walter Savage Landor |
| Twist Ye, Twine Ye! by Sir Walter Scott |
| After-thought by William Wordsworth |
| Persistence by Walter Savage Landor |
| To a Cyclamen by Walter Savage Landor |
| The Worlds Wanderers by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Time Long Past by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| A Lament by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| The Visionary by William Robert Spencer |
| On Living Too Long by Walter Savage Landor |
| Plays by Walter Savage Landor |
| On Lucretia Borgias Hair by Walter Savage Landor |
| Late Leaves by Walter Savage Landor |
| Dirce by Walter Savage Landor |
| To My Ninth Decade by Walter Savage Landor |
| An Aged Man Who Loved to Doze away by Walter Savage Landor |
| Lately Our Songsters Loiterd in Green Lanes by Walter Savage Landor |
| On His Seventy-fifth Birthday by Walter Savage Landor |
| Death Stands above Me by Walter Savage Landor |
| Years by Walter Savage Landor |
| To Age by Walter Savage Landor |
| Wrinkles by Walter Savage Landor |
| Mutability by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| The Grandame by Charles Lamb |
| The Old Familiar Faces by Charles Lamb |
| The Butterfly by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| Why, Why Repine by Walter Savage Landor |
| Adonais by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| For an Epitaph at Fiesole by Walter Savage Landor |
| The Opening of the Tomb of Charlemagne by Sir Aubrey de Vere |
| Surprised by JoyImpatient As the Wind by William Wordsworth |
| And Thou Art Dead, As Young and Fair by Lord Byron |
| Strange Fits of Passion Have I Known by William Wordsworth |
| She Dwelt among the Untrodden Ways by William Wordsworth |
| I Travelled among Unknown Men by William Wordsworth |
| Three Years She Grew in Sun and Shower by William Wordsworth |
| A Slumber Did My Spirit Seal by William Wordsworth |
| Hester by Charles Lamb |
| Kathleen OMore by George Nugent Reynolds |
| Casas Dirge by David Macbeth Moir |
| Barthrams Dirge by Robert Surtees |
| Matthew by William Wordsworth |
| To the Sister of Elia by Walter Savage Landor |
| The Wake of William Orr by William Drennan |
| Coronach by Sir Walter Scott |
| Hymn for the Dead by Sir Walter Scott |
| The Death of Artemidora by Walter Savage Landor |
| Bishop Bruno by Robert Southey |
| Lucy Gray; Or, Solitude by William Wordsworth |
| We Are Seven by William Wordsworth |
| Ode on Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood by William Wordsworth |
| Ode on Indolence by John Keats |
| To Augusta by Lord Byron |
| Epistle to Augusta by Lord Byron |
| The Reverie of Poor Susan by William Wordsworth |
| The Affliction of Margaret by William Wordsworth |
| Farewell to Italy by Walter Savage Landor |
| The Sun upon the Weirdlaw Hill by Sir Walter Scott |
| Ozymandias by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Lines Written among the Euganean Hills by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| Work without Hope by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
| If This Great World of Joy and Pain by William Wordsworth |
| On Fame, I by John Keats |
| On Fame, II by John Keats |
| Song: Rarely, rarely, comest thou by Percy Bysshe Shelley |
| The Common Lot by James Montgomery |