Preface
|
Introduction
|
Part
I the editions
|
Poems,
chiefly lyrical published 1830
|
Poems
published 1832-3
|
Poems
in two volumes, published 1842
|
alterations
|
Part
II comparison of the editions
|
Part
III grouping the poems
|
Part
IV "Art for art, art for truth."
|
Early
Poems
|
To
the Queen
|
Claribel
a Melody
|
Lilian
|
Isabel
|
Mariana
|
To
("Clear-headed friend, whose joyful scorn")
|
Madeline
|
Song
The Owl
|
Second
Song to the Same
|
Recollections
of the Arabian Nights
|
Ode
to Memory
|
Song
("A spirit haunts the year's last hours")
|
Adeline
|
A
Character
|
The
Poet
|
The
Poet's Mind
|
The
Sea-Fairies
|
The
Deserted House
|
The
Dying Swan
|
A
Dirge
|
Love
and Death
|
The
Ballad of Oriana
|
Circumstance
|
The
Merman
|
The
Mermaid
|
Sonnet
to J. M. K.
|
The
Lady of Shalott
|
Mariana
in the South
|
Eleänore
|
The
Miller's Daughter
|
Fatima
|
OEnone
|
The
Sisters
|
To
-("I send you here a sort of allegory")
|
The
Palace of Art
|
Lady
Clara Vere de Vere
|
The
May Queen
|
New
Year's Eve
|
Conclusion
|
The
Lotos-Eaters
|
Dream
of Fair Women
|
Margaret
|
The
Blackbird
|
The
Death of the Old Year
|
To
J. S.
|
"You
ask me, why, tho' ill at ease"
|
"Of
old sat Freedom on the heights"
|
"Love
thou thy land, with love far-brought"
|
The
Goose
|
The
Epic
|
Morte
d'Arthur
|
The
Gardener's Daughter; or, The Pictures
|
Dora
|
Audley
Court
|
Walking
to the Mail
|
Edwin
Morris; or, The Lake
|
St.
Simeon Stylites
|
The
Talking Oak
|
Love
and Duty
|
The
Golden Year
|
Ulysses
|
Locksley
Hall
|
Godiva
|
The
Two Voices
|
The
Day-Dream: Prologue
|
The
Sleeping Palace
|
The
Sleeping Beauty
|
The
Arrival
|
The
Revival
|
The
Departure
|
L'Envoi
|
Epilogue
|
Amphion
|
St.
Agnes
|
Sir
Galahad
|
Edward
Gray
|
Will
Waterproof's Lyrical Monologue
|
To
, after reading a Life and Letters
|
To
E.L., on his Travels in Greece
|
Lady
Clare
|
The
Lord of Burleigh
|
Sir
Launcelot and Queen Guinevere: a Fragment
|
A
Farewell
|
The
Beggar Maid
|
The
Vision of Sin
|
"Come
not, when I am dead"
|
The
Eagle
|
"Move
eastward, happy earth, and leave"
|
"Break,
break, break"
|
The
Poet's Song
|
Appendix
Suppressed Poems
|
Elegiacs
|
The
"How" and the "Why"
|
Supposed
Confessions
|
The
Burial of Love
|
To
("Sainted Juliet! dearest name !")
|
Song
("I' the glooming light")
|
Song
("The lintwhite and the throstlecock")
|
Song
("Every day hath its night")
|
Nothing
will Die
|
All
Things will Die
|
Hero
to Leander
|
The
Mystic
|
The
Grasshopper
|
Love,
Pride and Forgetfulness
|
Chorus
("The varied earth, the moving heaven")
|
Lost
Hope
|
The
Tears of Heaven
|
Love
and Sorrow
|
To
a Lady Sleeping
|
Sonnet
("Could I outwear my present state of woe")
|
Sonnet
("Though Night hath climbed her peak of highest noon")
|
Sonnet
("Shall the hag Evil die with child of Good")
|
Sonnet
("The pallid thunderstricken sigh for gain")
|
Love
|
The
Kraken
|
English
War Song
|
National
Song
|
Dualisms
|
We
are Free
|
"Mine
be the strength of spirit, full and free"
|
To
("All good things have not kept aloof)
|
Buonaparte
|
Sonnet
("Oh, Beauty, passing beauty! sweetest Sweet!")
|
The
Hesperides
|
Song
("The golden apple, the golden apple, the hallowed fruit")
|
Rosalind
|
Song
("Who can say")
|
Kate
|
Sonnet
("Blow ye the trumpet, gather from afar")
|
Poland
|
To
("As when with downcast eyes we muse and brood")
|
O
Darling Room
|
To
Christopher North
|
The
Skipping Rope
|
Timbuctoo
|
Bibliography
of the Poems of 1842
|