Index of Titles and First Lines

 

This includes the sections of In Memoriam, and the songs from The Princess, Idylls of the King and elsewhere. A dagger indicates a poem included in this Selected Edition.

  A city clerk, but gently born and bred II 588

  A dark Indian maiden I 309

  A foolish book had made me wroth III 626

  A garden here – May breath and bloom of spring III 17

†A happy lover who has come p. 352

  A mighty matter I rehearse I 187

  A million gossamers in field and fold I 516

  A plague upon the people fell II 694

  A quotable snatch of Ovidian song III 218

†A rose, but one, none other rose had I p. 914

†A spirit haunts the year’s last hours p. 13

†A still small voice spake unto me p. 102

†A storm was coming, but the winds were still p. 807

  A thousand summers ere the time of Christ III 139

†A touch, a kiss! the charm was snapt p. 174

  A Voice spake out of the skies II 693

  Achilles Over the Trench II 655, III 603

  Act first, this Earth, a stage so gloomed with woe III 217

  Adeline I 237

†Again at Christmas did we weave p. 417

  Ah, fade not yet from out the green arcades II 75

  Ah God! the petty fools of rhyme II 182

  Ah! yes, the lip may faintly smile I 148

  Airy, fairy Lilian I 200

  Akbar’s Dream III 235

  Alas! how weary are my human eyes I 508

  Alexander I 510

†All along the valley, stream that flashest white p. 590

†All precious things, discovered late p. 172

  All Things Will Die I 249

  All thoughts, all creeds, all dreams are true I 281

  All yesternight you met me not I 416

  Almeida, love me, love me III 609

  Almighty Love! whose nameless power I 157

  Along this glimmering gallery II 32

  Along yon vapour-mantled sky I 109

†Although I be the basest of mankind p. 125

  Among some Nations Fate hath placed too far I 184

  Amphion II 115

  Amy I 283

  Anacaona I 308

  Anacreontics I 313

  Ancient Pistol, peacock Payne III 11

  Ancient Sage, The III 138

†And all is well, though faith and form p. 472

  And ask ye why these sad tears stream? I 127

  And now – methinks I gaze upon thee now I 267

†And on her lover’s arm she leant p. 175

  And thou hast lost a day! Oh mighty boast! I 293

†And was the day of my delight p. 369

  And when they came together in one place III 603

  And Willy, my eldest-born, is gone, you say, little Anne? II 599

  Angels have talked with him, and showed him thrones I 252

  Answer, The [The Window] II 703

  Ante-Chamber, The I 549

  Antony to Cleopatra I 102

†Are these the far-famed Victor Hours p. 985

  Are you sleeping? have you forgotten? do not sleep, my sister dear! II 86

  Armageddon I 73

  Arouse thee, O Greece! and remember the day I 159

Arrival, The [The Day-Dream] p. 172

  Art for Art’s sake III 12

  Art for Art’s sake! Hail, truest Lord of Hell! III 12

  Artemis, Artemis, hear us, O Mother, hear us, and bless us! III 567

†As sometimes in a dead man’s face p. 414

  As the host of the locusts in numbers, in might I 121

†As through the land at eve we went p. 239

  As to one who listeneth eagerly III 611

  As when with downcast eyes we muse and brood I 499

  As with chaste glory from below I 548

†Ask me no more: the moon may draw the sea p. 313

  At Flores in the Azores Sir Richard Grenville lay III 25

†At Francis Allen’s on the Christmas-eve p. 146

  At the Window [The Window] II 699

†At times our Britain cannot rest p. 659

†Athelstan King p. 621

Audley Court p. 193

  Author and Critics III 232

  Ay [The Window] II 703

†Ay, ay, O ay – the winds that bend the brier! p. 940

†Ay me! ay me! the woods decay and fall p. 992

  Ay me! those childish lispings roll I 286

  Aylmer’s Field II 657

 

  Babble in bower III 566

  Baby Boy, The II 302

  Babylon I 155

Balin and Balan p. 787

  Ballad of Oriana, The I 270

  Bandit’s Death, The III 232

  Banner of England, not for a season, O banner of Britain, hast thou III 36

Battle of Brunanburh p. 620

  Be merry, all birds, today II 703

†Be merry, be merry: the woods begin to blow p. 725

†Be near me when my light is low p. 392

  ‘Beat, little heart – I give you this and this’ III 211

  Beautiful City III 216

  Beautiful city, the centre and crater of European confusion III 216

  Because she bore the iron name II 183

  Beggar Maid, The I 604

†Below the thunders of the upper deep p. 17

  Beware, beware, ere thou takest I 150

  Birds’ love and birds’ song II 700

  Birth and circumstance are Fate III 7

  Black Bull of Aldgate, may thy horns rot from the sockets! II 93

  Blackbird, The II 47

  Bless thy full cheeks my noble boy II 302

†Blow trumpet, for the world is white with May p. 692

  Blow ye the trumpet, gather from afar I 498

  Bluebeard III 636

  Bluebeard spake to his wife in tones of tender affection III 636

  Boädicea II 613

  Bold Havelock marched II 598

  Bow, daughter of Babylon, bow thee to dust! I 155

†Break, break, break p. 165

  Bridal, The I 181

  Bridesmaid, The II 90

†Bright is the moon on the deep p. 978

  Britons, Guard Your Own II 470

  Brook, The II 500

  Brooks, for they called you so that knew you best III 16

  Buonaparte I 385

  Burial of Love, The I 222

†Bury the Great Duke p. 489

  By a Darwinian III 10

  By all my grief for that which I did say II 76

  By all the deer that spring III 572

  By an Evolutionist III 201

†By night we lingered on the lawn p. 437

 

†Calm is the morn without a sound p. 356

  Captain, The II 27

  ‘Captain, Guide!’ III 639

  Caressed or chidden by the slender hand II 78

  Cephalis III 202

  Chains, my good lord: in your raised brows I read III 49

Character, A p. 14

  Charge of the Heavy Brigade, The III 92

Charge of the Light Brigade, The p. 508

  Charity III 230

  Check every outflash, every ruder sally I 322

  Child-Songs II 303

  Chorus, in an Unpublished Drama I 259

  Christ of Ammergau, The III 2

  Christian Penitent, The I 509

  Church-Warden and the Curate, The III 227

  Circumstance I 273

  City Child, The II 303

  Claribel I 199

  Clear-headed friend, whose joyful scorn I 210

  Clearly the blue river chimes in its flowing I 249

  Cleopatra’s Needle III 34

  Coach of Death, The I 85

  Columbus III 49

†Come down, O maid, from yonder mountain height p. 320

  Come hither, canst thou tell me if this skull I 165

†Come in, the ford is roaring on the plain p. 746

  Come not, when I am dead II 130

†Come, when no graver cares employ p. 505

Coming of Arthur, The p. 677

  Compromise III 128

†Comrades, leave me here a little, while as yet’tis early morn p. 183

  Conclusion [The May Queen] I 459

  Conrad! why call thy life monotonous? I 296

†Contemplate all this work of Time p. 464

  Contrast, A I 152

†Could I have said while he was here p. 419

  Could I outwear my present state of woe I 264

†Could we forget the widowed hour p. 383

†‘Courage!’ he said, and pointed toward the land p. 71

Crossing the Bar p. 665

  Curse you, you wandering gemmule III 10

 

†Dagonet, the fool, whom Gawain in his mood p. 921

  Dainty little maiden, whither would you wander? II 303

Daisy, The p. 501

  Dancing above was heard III 632

†Dark house, by which once more I stand p. 351

  Darwin’s Gemmule III 10

  Dawn, The III 247

Day-Dream, The p. 168

  De Profundis III 67

†Dead! p. 637

  Dead mountain flowers, dead mountain-meadow flowers III 567

  Dead Princess, living Power, if that, which lived III 35

Dead Prophet, The p. 635

†Dear friend, far off, my lost desire p. 475

  Dear friend, whom to have seen and known III 614

  Dear Master in our classic town III 219

  Dear, near and true – no truer Time himself II 683

  Dear P. III 631

  Dearest Polly, when oh when III 623

  Death of OEnone, The III 220

  Death of the Duke of Clarence and Avondale, The III 244

  Death of the Old Year, The I 502

  Dedication, A II 683

Dedication [Idylls of the King] p. 675

  Dedicatory Poem to the Princess Alice III 35

  Deep on the convent-roof the snows I 605

  Defence of Lucknow, The III 36

  Deity, The III 642

  Dell of E–, The I 100

  Demeter and Persephone III 163

Departure, The [The Day-Dream] p. 175

  Deserted House, The I 261

  Desolate, why, crowned city of High God? III 632

  Despair III 86

  Devil and the Lady, The I 13, III 611

  Did not thy roseate lips outvie I 112

†Dip down upon the northern shore p. 420

  Dirge, A I 255

  Doctor’s Daughter, The I 307

†Do we indeed desire the dead p. 393

†Doors, where my heart was used to beat p. 465

  Dora II 67

†Dosn’t thou’ear my’erse’s legs, as they canters awaäy? p. 617

  Dost ask why Laura’s soul is riven I 152

†Dost thou look back on what hath been p. 405

  Doubt and Prayer III 249

  Doubt no longer that the Highest is the wisest and the best III 250

  Down Savoy’s hills of stainless white I 122

Dream of Fair Women, A p. 80

  Dreamer, The III 252

  Drinking Song III 570

  Druid’s Prophecies, The I 116

  Dualisms I 276

  Duke of Alva’s Observation on Kings, The I 147

  Dust are our frames; and, gilded dust, our pride II 659

  Dying Christian, The III 644

  Dying Man to His Friend, The I 166

Dying Swan, The p. 15

 

Eagle, The p. 96

  Early Spring [1833] I 537

  Early Spring [1883] III 103

  Early Verses of Compliment to Miss Rose Baring II 60

  Early-wise, and pure, and true III 119

  Edward Gray II 165

Edwin Morris p. 197

  Egypt III 641

  Eh? good daäy! good daäy! thaw it bean’t not mooch of a daäy III 228

†Elaine the fair, Elaine the loveable p. 834

  Eleänore I 401

  Elegiacs I 285

  England and America in 1782 II 42

  English Warsong I 274

Enoch Arden p. 591

Epic, The [Morte d’Arthur] p. 146

  Epigram on a Musician I 139

  Epigrams 1868–1874 III 7

  Epilogue [The Charge of the Heavy Brigade] III 95

Epilogue [The Day-Dream] p. 178

  Epitaph on Caxton III 105

  Epitaph on General Cordon III 133

  Epitaph on Lord Stratford de Redcliffe III 119

  Ere yet my heart was sweet Love’s tomb I 259

  Every day hath its night I 242

  Exhortation to the Greeks I 159

  Exile’s Harp, The I 96

  Expedition of Nadir Shah into Hindostan, The I 120

  Eyes not down-dropt nor over-bright, but fed I 201

 

  Faded every violet, all the roses III 638

  Faint as a climate-changing bird that flies III 164

  Fair face! fair form III 610

  Fair is her cottage in its place II 685

  Fair is that cottage in its place II 32

†Fair ship, that from the Italian shore p. 353

  Fair things are slow to fade away III 162

  Faith III 250

  Fall of Jerusalem, The I 140

Far-Far-Away p. 657

  Far off in the dun, dark Occident I 86

  Far shines that land of promise girt by waves III 633

  Fare thee well! for I am parting I 166

Farewell, A p. 180

  Farewell, Macready, since tonight we part II 462

  Farewell, whose living like I shall not find III 138

Fatima p. 33

  Fifty times the rose has flowered and faded III 160

  First drink a health, this solemn night II 475

  First pledge our Queen this solemn night III 98

  First Quarrel, The III 39

  Fleet, The III 131

  Flight, The II 86

†Flow down, cold rivulet, to the sea p. 180

  Flower, The II 684

†Flower in the crannied wall p. 619

  For the Penny-Wise II 472

  For you and yours I have small respect III 8

  Forlorn II 507

  Fragment, A [Where is the Giant of the Sun] I 313

  France that has no private ends III 630

‘Frater Ave atque Vale’ p. 627

†Free love – free field – we love but while we may p. 928

  Freedom III 128

  Frenchman, a hand in thine! III 627

  Fresh blossom beautiful in hue II 62

  Friend more than servant, loyal, truthful, brave! III 639

  Friendship I 125

†From art, from nature, from the schools p. 392

†From noiseful arms, and acts of prowess done p. 876

  From sorrow sorrow yet is born I 607

  From the East of life joybeams did strike I 507

  Full knee-deep lies the winter snow I 502

  Full light aloft doth the laverock spring I 185

 

  Ganges, The I 175

  Gardener’s Daughter, The I 552, III 583

Gareth and Lynette p. 693

  Gaspar and Melchior and Balthazar III 626

  Gee oop! whoä! Gee cop! whoä! III 568

  Gentle Life, The III 12

  Gentle Life – what a title! here’s a subject III 13

Geraint and Enid p. 761

  Glory of warrior, glory of orator, glory of song II 707

  Glossy curl-clusters crowd and gather III 624

  Go forth, thou man of force! I 151

  God and the Universe III 251

  God bless our Prince and Bride! III 628

  Godiva II 171

  God’s Denunciations against Pharaoh-Hophra, or Apries I 135

†Golden-haired Ally whose name is one with mine p. 627

  Golden Supper, The I 371

Golden Year, The p. 206

  Gone [The Window] II 700

  Gone! II 700

  Goose, The I 532

  Grandmother, The II 599

  Grasshopper, The I 257

  Grateful guests to gracious host III 639

  Grave of a Suicide, The I 136

  Guess well, and that is well. Our age can find III 15

Guinevere p. 941

 

  Had the fierce ashes of some fiery peak III 225

  Hail Briton! in whatever zone I 522

  Hail, Light, another time to mortal eyes I 304

† Half a league, half a league p. 508

  Hallowed be Thy name – Halleluiah! III 69

  Hands All Round! [1852] II 475

  Hands All Round [1882] III 98

  Hapless doom of woman happy in betrothing! III 564

  Happy: The Leper’s Bride III 189

  Hark! how the gale, in mournful notes and stern I 136

  Hark! the dogs howl! the sleetwinds blow I 608

  Harp, harp, the voice of Cymry II 586

  Have ye not found while hid in clouds of guilt III 622

  Havelock II 598

†He clasps the crag with crookèd hands p. 96

  ‘He is fled – I wish him dead – II 508

†He past; a soul of nobler tone p. 403

  He rose at dawn and, fired with hope II 300

†He tasted love with half his mind p. 433

  He that only rules by terror II 28

  He thought to quell the stubborn hearts of oak I 385

†He was too good and kind and sweet p. 982

  Hear you the sound of wheels? III 606

†Heart-affluence in discursive talk p. 456

  Heaven weeps above the earth all night till morn I 262

  Helen’s Tower II 621

  Helen’s Tower, here I stand II 622

Hendecasyllabics p. 615

  Her arms across her breast she laid I 604

†Her eyes are homes of silent prayer p. 376

  Her, that yer Honour was spakin’ to? Whin, yer Honour? last year III 121

  Here, by this brook, we parted; I to the East II 501

  Here far away, seen from the topmost cliff I 328

  Here, I that stood in On beside the flow III 34

  Here, it is here, the close of the year II 721

  Here lies Peter Haythornthwaite III 634

  Here often, when a child, I lay reclined I 541

  Hero to Leander I 250

  Hesperides, The I 461

  Hide me, Mother! my Fathers belonged to the church of old III 124

  High-Priest to Alexander, The I 151

†High wisdom holds my wisdom less p. p. 459

  Higher Pantheism, The II 705

  Highminded and pure-thoughted, chaste and simple I 283

  His eyes in eclipse I 222

  Hold thou, my friend, no lesser life in scorn III 640

Holy Grail, The p. 875

  Home I 183

  Home is home, though never so homely III 9

†Home they brought her warrior dead p. 301

†Home they brought him slain with spears p. 980

  Hope journeyed with me as the Sun with one III 617

  ‘How’ and the ‘Way’, The I 204

†How fares it with the happy dead? p. 387

  How gaily sinks the gorgeous sun within his golden bed I 153

  How is it that men have so little grace III 10

  How long, O God, shall men be ridden down I 499

†How many a father have I seen p. 395

  How much I love this writer’s manly style! II 478

†How pure at heart and sound in head p. 436

  How thought you that this thing could captivate? II 80

  Human Cry, The [De Profundis] III 69

  Hymn [Akbar’s Dream] III 243

 

  I am any man’s suitor I 204

†I built my soul a lordly pleasure-house p. 52

  I came in haste with cursing breath I 147

†I cannot love thee as I ought p. 394

†I cannot see the features right p. 410

  I cannot take that pleasure now III 611

†I climb the hill: from end to end p. 446

  I come from haunts of coot and hern II 502

  I dare not write an Ode for fear Pimplæa I 170

  I die – my limbs with icy feeling III 644

†Idreamed there would be Spring no more p. 409

†II envy not in any moods p. 371

†II had a vision when the night was late p. 210

†II hate the dreadful hollow behind the little wood p. 516

  I have got two wives, both fair, and they dwell with me under a dome III 203

† hear the noise about thy keel p. 355

†I held it truth, with him who sings p. 344

†I keep no more a lone distress p. 985

  I knew an old wife lean and poor I 532

  I know her by her angry air I 497

†I know that this was Life, – the track p. 369

†I leave thy praises unexpressed p. 414

  I lingered yet awhile to bend my way II 74

  I live through drink and through drink strive to speak III 622

  I loving Freedom for herself II 43

†I past beside the reverend walls p. 429

  I ran upon life unknowing, without or science or art III 7

†I read, before my eyelids dropt their shade p. 81

  I really cannot say III 637

  I ruled the people well III 632

  I see the chariot, where I 132

  I see the wealthy miller yet I 407

†I send you here a sort of allegory p. 49

  I sent no ambassador forward III 621

†shall not see thee. Dare I say p. 436

†I sing to him that rests below p. 365

†I sometimes hold it half a sin p. 348

  I stood on a tower in the wet II 691

  I stood upon the Mountain which o’erlooks I 190

  I think no portion of my mind misgives III 576

  I thought to pass away before, and yet alive I am I 459

†trust I have not wasted breath p. 466

†I vex my heart with fancies dim p. 385

†I wage not any feud with Death p. 420

  I waited for the train at Coventry II 172

  I wander in darkness and sorrow I 104

  I was the chief of the race – he had stricken my father dead III 62

  I weeded my garden for hours and hours III 244

  I will hang thee, my Harp, by the side of the fountain I 96

  I will not seek my Father’s groves I 173

†I will not shut me from my kind p. 455

  I wish I were as in the years of old I 624

  I wish I were her earring I 414

  I wished to see him: who may feel I 630

  I would gladly climb the Blorenge III 646

  Idealist, The I 187

  Idle Rhyme, An II 91

Idylls of the King p. 667, p. 994

†If any vague desire should rise p. 418

†If any vision should reveal p. 435

  If chance along the spicy groves III 611

  If he did not see Loch Coruisk III 627

  If I were loved, as I desire to be I 386

† If, in thy second state sublime p. 404

†If one should bring me this report p. 358

†If Sleep and Death be truly one p. 386

†If these brief lays, of Sorrow born p. 391

  If you’re waking call me early, call me early, mother dear I 457

  Ilion, Ilion I 281

  Ilion, Ilion, dreamy Ilion, pillared Ilion, holy Ilion I 282

†Illyrian woodlands, echoing falls p. 487

  ‘I’m glad I walked. How fresh the meadows look II 132

  Immeasurable sadness! III 9

  In deep and solemn dreams I view I 301

  In early Spring when frequent showers call III 618

  In her ear he whispers gaily II 25

†In Love, if Love be Love, if Love be ours p. 818

I In Memoriam A. H. H. p. 331, p. 980

  In Memoriam W. G Ward III 137

  In the Children’s Hospital III 47

In the Garden at Swainston p. 619

  I’ the glooming light I 235

I In the Valley of Cauteretz p. 590

†In those sad words I took farewell p. 401

  Inscription by a Brook I 515

  Invasion of Russia by Napoleon Buonaparte, The I 177

  Inverlee I 174

  Isabel I 201

  Is it the wind of the dawn that I hear in the pine overhead? III 565

†Is it, then, regret for buried time p. 463

  Is it you, that preached in the chapel there looking over the sand? III 87

  Islet, The II 685

†It is the day when he was born p. 454

  It is the miller’s daughter I 414

  It is the solemn even-time I 125

†It little profits that an idle king p. 141

  It was the time when lilies blow II 65

 

  Jack and the Beanstalk III 634

  Jack Tar II 604

  Jack was a poor widow’s heir, … III 634

  Jerusalem! Jerusalem! I 141

  Juliana, Julietta III 624

June Bracken and Heather p. 664

  June on many a flower reposes II 60

 

  Kapiolani III 245

  Kate I 496

†King Arthur made new knights to fill the gap p. 903

  King Charles was sitting all alone I 161

  King Charles’s Vision I 160

  King, that hast reigned six hundred years, and grown II 691

  Kings, when to private audience they descend I 147

Kraken, The p. 17

 

  Lady Clara Vere de Vere II 63

  Lady Clara Vere de Vere II 63

  Lady Clare II 65

†Lady, let the rolling drums p. 978

Lady of Shalott, The p. 18

  Lamentation of the Peruvians I 144

Lancelot and Elaine p. 834, p. 994

  Land of bright eye and lofty brow! I 114

  Lark, The I 185

Last Tournament, The p. 920

†Late, late, so late! and dark the night and chill! p. 946

†Late, my grandson! half the morning have I paced these sandy tracts p. 641

L’Envoi [The Day-Dream] p. 176

†Leodogran, the King of Cameliard p. 679

  Leonine Elegiacs I 203

†Let Death and Memory keep the face p. 984

  Letter, The [The Window] II 701

  Letters, The II 585

  Life I 321

  Life and Thought have gone away I 261

  Life of the Life within my blood I 549

  ‘Light of the nations’ asked his Chronicler III 236

  Light, so low upon earth II 704

†Like souls that balance joy and pain p. 97

  Lilian I 200

  Lines [Here often, when a child, I lay reclined] I 541

  Lines on Cambridge of 1830 I 311

  Lisette I 320

  Listen! bells in yonder town II 104

  Literary Squabbles II 182

  Little Aubrey in the West! little Alfred in the East III 637

  Little bosom not yet cold II 464

  Little crescent-curve III 577

  Little Lady, The II 302

  Little Maid, The II 31

  Live thy Life III 219

†Lo, as a dove when up she springs p. 357

  Lo! how, as in the early Summer days I 301

Locksley Hall p. 181

Locksley Hall Sixty Years After p. 640

  Long as the heart beats life within her breast II 683

†Long lines of cliff breaking have left a chasm p. 592

  Long live Richard III 570

  Look what love the puddle-pated squarecaps have for me! I 305

  Lord of Burleigh, The II 25

  Losing of the Child, The II 299

  Lost Hope I 260

Lotos-Eaters, The p. 70

  Love [Almighty Love!] I 157

  Love [Thou, from the first] I 266

  Love and Death I 268

  Love and Duty II 166

  Love and Friendship III 615

  Love and Sorrow I 262

  Love flew in at the window III 570

†Love is and was my Lord and King p. 471

  Love is come with a song and a smile III 565

  Love, Pride, and Forgetfulness I 258

  Love that hath us in the net I 416

  Love thou thy land, with love far-brought II 36

  Lover’s Tale, The I 325, III 578

  Love’s latest hour is this I 638

  Low-flowing breezes are roaming the broad valley dimmed in the gloaming I 203

  Lucilia, wedded to Lucretius, found II 708

  Lucretius II 707

 

  Madeline I 211

  Madonna, wise and mild and rare I 325

  Maid of Savoy, The I 122

  Making of Man, The III 248

  Man is as mortal as men III 8

  Many a hearth upon our dark globe sighs after many a vanished face III 134

  Many, many welcomes II 692

  Margaret I 493

Mariana p. 3

Mariana in the South p. 27

  Marion I 318

  Marriage Morning [The Window] II 704

Marriage of Geraint, The p. 735

Maud p. 511, p. 988

  May a cock-sparrow III 605

  May Queen, The I 456

  Me my own Fate to lasting sorrow doometh I 312

  Mechanophilus I 534

  Mellow moon of heaven III 174

  Memory [Ay me!] I 286

  Memory [Memory! dear enchanter] I 94

  Memory! dear enchanter! I 94

  Merlin and the Gleam III 205

Merlin and Vivien p. 805

  Mermaid, The I 214

  Merman, The I 213

  Midnight I 123

†Midnight – in no midsummer tune p. 626

  Milk for my sweet-arts, Bess! fur it mun be the time about now III 116

  Miller’s Daughter, The I 406

  Milton: Alcaics II 651

  Milton’s Mulberry I 305

  Mine be the strength of spirit, full and free I 382

  Mine Host II 31

  Minnie and Winnie [Child-Songs] II 303

  Minnie and Winnie II 303

  Mithridates Presenting Berenice with the Cup of Poison I 138

  Mona! with flame thine oaks are streaming I 117

  Montenegro III 23

  Moon on the field and the foam III 567

  Moral [The Day-Dream] p. 176

†‘More than my brothers are to me’ p. 418

Morte d’Arthur p. 148

  Most glorious Ganga! down whose golden tide I 176

  Mother’s Ghost, The I 631

†Move eastward, happy earth, and leave p. 179

  My father left a park to me II 115

  My friend should meet me somewhere hereabout III 72

  My friends since you wish for a health from the host II 95

†My good blade carves the casques of men p. 166

  My heart is wasted with my woe I 271

  My hope and heart is with thee – thou wilt be I 280

  My life is full of weary days I 383

  My light Lisette I 320

  My Lords, we heard you speak: you told us all II 473

†My love has talked with rocks and trees p. 441

†My own dim life should teach me this p. 377

  My Rosalind, my Rosalind,/Bold, subtle I 479

  My Rosalind, my Rosalind,/My frolic falcon I 477

  Mystery of mysteries I 237

  Mystic, The I 251

 

  Naäy, noä mander o’ use to be callin’’im Roä, Roä, Roä III 169

  Napoleon’s Retreat from Moscow: see The Invasion of Russia by Napoleon

  Buonaparte

  National Song I 275

†Nature, so far as in her lies p. 136

  New Timon, and the Poets, The [Part I] II 178

  New Timon, and the Poets, The [Part II] II 180

  New Year’s Eve II 104

  New-Year’s Eve [The May Queen] I 457

  Night drew her shadowy sketch of waving hill III 609

†Nightingales warbled without p. 620

  No Answer [The Window] II 702

  No More I 175

  No portion of my mind misgives I 324

  No portion of my soul misgives III 575

  Nor lingered Paris in the lofty house III 604

  Northern Cobbler, The III 41

Northern Farmer, New Style p. 617

  Northern Farmer, Old Style II 619

  Not a whisper stirs the gloom I 632

  Not here! the white North has thy bones; and thou III 16

  Not only with no sense of shame III 638

  Not this way will you set your name III 95

  Not to Silence would I build III 629

  Nothing Will Die I 247

  Now doth the vollied and rebellowing thunder I 16

†Now fades the last long streak of snow p. 462

  Now first we stand and understand I 534

  Now is done thy long day’s work I 255

†Now sleeps the crimson petal, now the white p. 318

†Now, sometimes in my sorrow shut p. 368

  Now the King is home again, and nevermore to roam again III 573

 

  O beauty, passing beauty! sweetest Sweet! I 385

  O blackbird! sing me something well II 47

  O bosky brook, which I have loved to trace I 289

  O Bridesmaid, ere the happy knot was tied II 90

  O, Cleopatra! fare thee well I 102

  O Darling Room I 500

  O darling room, my heart’s delight I 500

†O days and hours, your work is this p. 463

  O Friend, dear Friend, I cannot speak of her III 615

  O God, make this age great that we may be I 185

†O God! my God! have mercy now p. 7

  O great and gallant Scott III 233

  O happy lark, that warblest high III 569

†O Lady Flora, let me speak p. 168

†O living will that shalt endure p. 477

†O Love, Love, Love! O withering might! p. 33

†O love, what hours were thine and mine p. 501

†O loyal to the royal in thyself p. 973

  O maiden, fresher than the first green leaf I 262

  O man, forgive thy mortal foe III 568

†O me, my pleasant rambles by the lake p. 198

  O mighty-mouthed inventor of harmonies II 652

†O morning star that smilest in the blue p. 715

  O mother Britain lift thou up II 46

  O Patriot Statesman, be thou wise to know III 86

  O plump head-waiter at The Cock II 96

†O purblind race of miserable men p. 762

†O Sorrow, cruel fellowship p. 346

†O Sorrow, wilt thou live with me p. 402

†‘O Sorrower for the faded leaf’ p. 981

†O Sun, that wakenest all to bliss or pain p. 725

†O Swallow, Swallow, flying, flying South p. 269

  O sweet pale Margaret I 493

  O tell me not of vales in tenderest green I 128

  O thou most holy Friendship! wheresoe’er I 126

  O thou so fair in summers gone III 129

†O thou that after toil and storm p. 376

  O thou, that sendest out the man II 42

  O thou whose fringèd lids I gaze upon I 263

†O true and tried, so well and long p. 478

  O wake ere I grow jealous of sweet Sleep I 316

†O well for him whose will is strong! p. 500

  O where is he, the simple fool II 467

†O you chorus of indolent reviewers p. 616

  O you that were eyes and light to the King till he past away III 67

  O young Mariner III 206

  Oak, The III 219

  Ode: O Bosky Brook I 288

Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington p. 488

  Ode Sung at the Opening of the International Exhibition II 622

  Ode to Memory I 231

Œnone p. 35

  Œnone sat within the cave from out III 221

  Of love that never found his earthly close II 167

  Of old sat Freedom on the heights II 40

  Oh! Berenice, lorn and lost I 138

  Oh but alas for the smile of smiles III 640

  Oh go not yet, my love I 250

  Oh sad No More! Oh sweet No More! I 175

  †Oh! that ’twere possible p. 989

  Oh! ’tis a fearful thing to glance I 98

†Oh, wast thou with me, dearest, then p. 467

  Oh, what care I how many a fluke II 91

†Oh! who would fight and march and countermarch p. 195

  Oh! ye wild winds, that roar and rave I 154

†Oh yet we trust that somehow good p. 396

  Old Chieftain, The I 140

†Old Fitz, who from your suburb grange p. 631

  Old ghosts whose day was done ere mine began III 18

  Old poets fostered under friendlier skies III 110

  Old Sword, The I 105

  Old Sword! though dim and rusted I 105

†Old warder of these buried bones p. 382

†Old Yew, which graspest at the stones p. 346

  On a Dead Enemy I 146

  On a midnight in midwinter when all but the winds were dead III 252

On a Mourner p. 135

†On either side the river lie p. 20

  On One Who Affected an Effeminate Manner III 217

  On Sublimity I 128

†On that last night before we went p. 449

  On the Hill [The Window] II 698

  On the Jubilee of Queen Victoria III 159

  On the Moon-light Shining upon a Friend’s Grave III 643

  On the Sympathy of Nature III 622

  On Translations of Homer II 651

  Once again thou flamest heavenward, once again we see thee rise III 243

  Once in a golden hour II 684

  Once more the gate behind me falls II 105

  Once more the Heavenly Power [1833] I 538

  Once more the Heavenly Power [1883] III 103

†One writes, that ‘Other friends remain’ p. 349

  Opening of the Indian and Colonial Exhibition III 147

  Orlando Gibbons III 639

  Our birches yellowing and from each III 91

  Our doctor had called in another, I never had seen him before III 47

†Our enemies have fallen, have fallen: the seed p. 302

  Our thrones in Heaven are cold III 612

  ‘Ouse-keeper sent tha my lass, fur New Squire coomed last night III 58

  Out of the deep, my child, out of the deep III 68

  Outcast, The I 172

  Over an old gate leaning i’ the mellow time of the gleaning I 286

  Over the dark world flies the wind I 632

  Over! the sweet summer closes III 565

  Owd Roä III 169

 

Palace of Art, The p. 50

Parnassus p. 662

Passing of Arthur, The p. 959

  Passions, The I 150

†Peace; come away: the song of woe p. 400

  Peace is thirty-seven years old II 469

†Pellam the King, who held and lost with Lot p. 788

Pelleas and Ettarre p. 903

  Penny-Wise, The II 467

  Perdidi Diem I 293

  Persia I 113

Philosopher, The p. 982

  Pierced through with knotted thorns of barren pain I 513

  Play, The III 217

  Playfellow Winds I 181

  Playfellow winds and stars, my friends of old I 181

  Poet, The I 243

  Poets and Critics I 544

  Poets and their Bibliographies III 110

  Poet’s Mind, The I 245

  Poet’s Song, The II 177

  Poland I 498

  Politics III 131

  Popular, Popular, Unpopular! III 14

  Popularity [Epigrams 1868–74] III 14

  Post Hotel good and nobody to tout III 634

Prefatory Poem to My Brother’s Sonnets p. 625

  Prefatory Sonnet to the ‘Nineteenth Century’ III 23

  Prince Leopold III 119

Princess, The p. 219, p. 976

  Progress of Spring, The I 516

Prologue [The Day-Dream] p. 168

  Prologue to General Hamley III 91

 

†Queen Guinevere had fled the court, and sat p. 942

  Queen of the Isles, The II 95

 

†Rain, rain, and sun! a rainbow in the sky! p. 681

  Rainbow, stay III 566

  Raise, raise the song of the hundred shells! I 140

  Ralph would fight in Edith’s sight II 301

  Recollections of the Arabian Nights I 225

  Red of the Dawn! III 247

  Refulgent Lord of Battle tell me why III 608

  Religion be thy sword; the armoury I 186

  Remembering him who waits thee far away III 224

  Remorse I 98

  Requiescat II 685

  Reticence III 628

  Revenge, The III 25

†Revered, beloved – O you that hold p. 485

Revival, The [The Day-Dream] p. 174

  Rifle Clubs!!! II 469, III 600

  Riflemen Form! II 603

  Riflemen, form in town and in shire III 601

  Ring, The III 173

†Ring out, wild bells, to the wild sky p. 453

  Ringlet, The II 687

  Rise, Britons, rise, if manhood be not dead II 470

†Risest thou thus, dim dawn, again [LXXII] p. 412

†Risest thou thus, dim dawn, again [XCIX] p. 445

  Rizpah III 30

†Roman Virgil, thou that singest p. 628

  Romney’s Remorse III 210

  Rosalind I 477

  Rosamund’s Bower II 177

†Rose, on this terrace fifty years ago p. 664

  Rosebud, The II 61

Roses on the Terrace, The p. 664

  Roused is thy spirit now I 168

†Row us out from Desenzano, to your Sirmione row! p. 628

  Ruined Kiln, The I 515

 

†Sad Hesper o’er the buried sun p. 466

  Sadness III 9

  [Saint: see St]

  Sailor Boy, The II 300

  Sainted Juliet! dearest name! I 223

  Scotch Song I 124

  Sea Dreams II 587

  Sea-Fairies, The I 278

  Sea-kings’ daughter from over the sea II 650

  Second Song. To the Same [The Owl] I 224

  See! how Soracte’s hoary brow I 4

  Semele I 630

  Sense and Conscience I 296

  Shall the hag Evil die with child of Good I 265

  Shame upon you, Robin III 564

  She owns that fullness of the form III 624

  She took the dappled partridge fleckt with blood I 304

  She travelled far from Indian streams III 625

  Shout for thy sins are all forgiven III 622

  Show-Day at Battle Abbey, 1876 III 17

  Show not, O Moon! with pure and liquid beam III 644

  Silent Voices, The III 251

  Sir, do you see this dagger? nay, why do you start aside? III 233

Sir Galahad p. 165

  Sir John Franklin III 16

  Sir John Oldcastle III 71

Sir Launcelot and Queen Guinevere p. 97

†Sir Walter Vivian all a summer’s day p. 222

  Sisters, The [They have left the doors ajar] III 78

  Sisters, The [We were two daughters of one race] I 434

  Skipping-Rope, The II 85

†Sleep, Ellen Aubrey, sleep, and dream of me p. 196

†Sleep, kinsman thou to death and trance p. 411

Sleeping Beauty, The [The Day-Dream] p. 172

Sleeping Palace, The [The Day-Dream] p. 169

  Slow fire! inch by inch to die III 575

  Slow fire – inch by inch to die – to creep III 575

  Slow sailed the weary mariners and saw I 278

  Snowdrop, The II 692

†So all day long the noise of battle rolled p. 150

†‘So careful of the type?’ but no p. 398

  So Hector spake; the Trojans roared applause II 654

†So, Lady Flora, take my lay [Epilogue] p. 178

†So, Lady Flora, take my lay [Moral] p. 176

†So many worlds, so much to do p. 413

  So saying, light-foot Iris passed away II 655

  Soft, shadowy moon-beam! by thy light I 136

  Sole rose of beauty, loveliness complete II 76

  Some pleasure an exceeding pain III 13

  Some used to call you ‘The coming Light’ III 232

  Somebody being a nobody III 8

Song [A spirit haunts the year’s last hours] p. 13

  Song [Every day hath its night] I 242

  Song [I’ the glooming light] I 235

  Song [It is the solemn even-time] I 125

  Song [The lintwhite and the throstlecock] I 241

  Song – The Owl I 223

  Song [The winds, as at their hour of birth] I 277

  Song [To sit beside a chrystal spring] III 646

  Song [who can say] I 493

  Songs from the Plays III 564

  Sonnet [Ah, fade not yet from out the green arcades] II 75

  Sonnet [Alas! how weary are my human eyes] I 508

  Sonnet [Check every outflash] I 322

  Sonnet [Conrad! why call thy life monotonous?] I 296

  Sonnet [Could I outwear my present state of woe] I 264

  Sonnet [Guess well, and that is well ] III 14

  Sonnet [How thought you that this thing could captivate?] II 79

  Sonnet [I lingered yet awhile to bend my way] II 74

  Sonnet [Me my own Fate to lasting sorrow doometh] I 312

  Sonnet [O beauty, passing beauty!] I 385

  Sonnet: Salve Lux Renata! I 304

  Sonnet [Shall the hag Evil die with child of Good] I 265

  Sonnet [She took the dappled partridge] I 304

  Sonnet [The pallid thunderstriken sigh for gain] I 266

  Sonnet [The Wise, the Pure] I 511

  Sonnet [There are three things] I 323

  Sonnet [Though Night hath climbed her peak of highest noon] I 264

  Sonnet [When that rank heat] I 317

  Sonnet [Woe to the double-tongued] I 512

  Sonnet Written on hearing of the outbreak of the Polish Insurrection I 497

†Speak to me from the stormy sky! p. 980

  Speak to the Lord: He is close at thy hand II 705

  Specimen of a Translation of the Iliad in Blank Verse II 653

  Spinster’s Sweet-Arts, The III 115

  Spirit of Prophecy whose mighty grasp I 74

  Spiteful Letter, The II 721

  Spring [The Window] II 700

†‘Spring-flowers’! While you still delay to take p. 654

  Spurge with fairy crescent set III 608

  St Agnes’ Eve I 605

  St Lawrence I 324, III 574

St Simeon Stylites p. 124

  St Telemachus III 224

  Stanzas [What time I wasted youthful hours] I 536

  Steersman, be not precipitate in thine act III 128

  Still on the tower stood the vane II 585

†Still onward winds the dreary way p. 370

†Strong Son of God, immortal Love p. 341

  Strow lilies o’er me when I die III 610

  Suggested by Reading an Article in a Newspaper II 477

  ‘Summer is coming, summer is coming III 102

  Sun comes, moon comes II 704

†Sunset and evening star p. 665

Supposed Confessions of a Second-Rate Sensitive Mind p. 7

  Sure never yet was Antelope II 85

  †Sweet after showers, ambrosial air p. 428

†Sweet and low, sweet and low p. 253

  Sweet, ask me not why I am sad II 62

  Sweet Emma Moreland of yonder town II 165

†Sweet is true love though given in vain, in vain p. 862

  Sweet Kitty Sandilands I 307

†Sweet soul, do with me as thou wilt p. 406

  Switzerland III 645

 

  Take, Lady, what your loyal nurses give III 234

†Take wings of fancy, and ascend p. 415

  Talking Oak, The II 105

†Tears, idle tears, I know not what they mean p. 266

  Tears of Heaven, The I 262

†Tears of the widower, when he sees p. 358

†That each, who seems a separate whole p. 390

  That is his portrait painted by himself I 550

†That story which the bold Sir Bedivere p. 952

†That which we dare invoke to bless p. 469

†The baby new to earth and sky p. 388

  The bee buzzed up in the heat III 572

  The blest will be cursed III 11

†The brave Geraint, a knight of Arthur’s court p. 736

  The breathing body of the Present drew III 574

  The bridal garland falls upon the bier III 245

†‘The Bull, the Fleece are crammed, and not a room p. 194

  The charge of the gallant three hundred, the Heavy Brigade! III 93

  The child was sitting on the bank II 299

†The churl in spirit, up or down p. 458

  The constant spirit of the world exults I 316

†The Danube to the Severn gave p. 364

  The empty thrones call out for Kings III 646

†The fire of Heaven has killed the barren cold p. 799

  The foes of the east have come down on our shore I 144

  The form, the form alone is eloquent! II 78

  The frost is here II 700

  The gleam of household sunshine ends II 184

  The gloomy chariot of the God of night I 8

  The groundflame of the crocus breaks the mould I 517

  The lamps were bright and gay I 181

†The last tall son of Lot and Bellicent p. 694

†The lesser griefs that may be said p. 364

†‘The light that shone when Hope was born’ p. 982

  The lights and shadows fly II 698

  The lintwhite and the throstlecock I 241

  The Lord has grown as commonplace III 14

  The Lord let the house of a brute to the soul of a man III 202

†The love that rose on stronger wings p. 474

  The mist and the rain, the mist and the rain! II 702

  The musky air was mute I 172

  The night is fair and the wind is dead II 302

  The night with sudden odour reeled II 61

†The noblest men are born and bred p. 986

  The Northwind fallen, in the newstarrèd night I 462

  The pallid thunderstricken sigh for gain I 266

†The path by which I walkt alone p. 972

†The path by which we twain did go p. 367

  The people’s fury cannot move I 4

  †The plain was grassy, wild and bare p. 15

  The poet in a golden clime was born I 243

  The rain had fallen, the Poet arose II 177

  The rich shall wed the rich, the poor the poor III 625

  The sombre pencil of the dim-grey dawn III 641

  The Son of him with whom we strove for power III 5

†The splendour falls on castle walls p. 265

  The stars are out along the hills I 174

  The sun goes down in the dark blue main I 146

  The sun, the moon, the stars, the seas, the hills and the plains II 706

  The tenth of April! is it not? II 93

†The time draws near the birth of Christ [XXVIII] p. 371

†The time draws near the birth of Christ [CIV] p. 451

  The town lay still in the low sun-light III 567

  The varied earth, the moving heaven I 259

†The varying year with blade and sheaf p. 169

  The voice and the Peak III 3

  The warrior Earl of Allendale III 569

  The wild-bee in the wide parterre III 609

†The wind, that beats the mountain, blows p. 93

  The winds, as at their hour of birth I 277

  The Wise, the Pure, the lights of our dull clime I 511

†The wish, that of the living whole p. 396

†The woods decay, the woods decay and fall p. 584

  Then when the snow-storm and the driving rain I 178

  There are tears o’ pity, an’ tears o’ wae I 124

  There are three things which fill my heart with sighs I 323

  There be rocks old and new! III 639

  There in a grove the fragile anemone blows III 626

  There is a sound of thunder afar II 603

  There is no land like England [1830] I 275

  There is no land like England [1892] III 571

†There lies a vale in Ida, lovelier p. 36

†There on the top of the down p. 664

†There rolls the deep where grew the tree p. 468

  There was a long, low, rushy dell, embossed I 101

  Therefore your Halls, your ancient Colleges I 312

  These lame hexameters the strong-winged music of Homer! II 651

†These to His Memory – since he held them dear p. 675

  They found her buried in the moor III 627

  They have left the doors ajar; and by their clash III 78

  They made the old Pope God III 2

  They rose to where their sovran eagle sails III 24

  They say some foreign powers have laid their heads together II 605

  Thine early rising well repaid thee III 631

  Third of February, 1852, The II 473

  This Earth is wondrous, change on change I 540

  This morning is the morning of the day I 553

  This Nature full of hints and mysteries III 620

  This thing, that thing is the rage I 544

†This truth came borne with bier and pall p. 423

  Those that of late had fleeted far and fast III 23

  Thou art not handsome, art not plain I 318

  Thou art not steeped in golden languors I 211

  Thou beast of the flood, who hast said in thy soul I 135

  Thou camest to thy bower, my love, across the musky grove I 149

†Thou comest, much wept for: such a breeze p. 361

  Thou, from the first, unborn, undying love I 266

  Thou land of the Lily! thy gay flowers are blooming I 107

  Thou mayst remember what I said I 307

  Thou third great Canning, stand among our best III 120

  Thou who stealest fire I 231

†Though if an eye that’s downward cast p. 404

  Though Night hath climbed her peak of highest noon I 264

  Though Sin too oft, when smitten by Thy rod III 249

†Though truths in manhood darkly join p. 379

  Three Sonnets to a Coquette II 78

  Three Translations of Horace I 3

  Throstle, The III 102

†Thy converse drew us with delight p. 457

  Thy dark eyes opened not I 401

  Thy natal day awakens bright II 77

  Thy prayer was ‘Light – more Light – while Time shall last!’ III 105

  Thy rosy lips are soft and sweet II 60

  Thy soul is like a landskip, friend I 306

†Thy spirit ere our fatal loss p. 384

  Thy tuwhits are lulled, I wot I 224

  Thy voice, great Master, echoes through the soul III 639

†Thy voice is heard through rolling drums p. 283

†Thy voice is on the rolling air p. 476

  Timbuctoo I 187

  Time: An Ode I 132

†Time is not merely lapse of hours p. 986

  Tiresias I 622

†’Tis held that sorrow makes us wise p. 460

  ’Tis midnight o’er the dim mere’s lonely bosom I 123

  ’Tis not alone the warbling woods I 609

†’Tis well; ’tis something; we may stand p. 362

Tithon p. 992

Tithonus p. 583, p. 992

  To a Lady Sleeping I 263

  To –, After Reading a Life and Letters II 297

To Alfred Tennyson My Grandson p. 627

  To – [As when with downcast eyes] I 499

  To Christopher North I 501

  To – [Clear-headed friend] I 209

  To Dante II 691

To E. FitzGerald p. 631

To E. L., on His Travels in Greece p. 486

  To Georgina 1834 II 62

  To H.R.H. Princess Beatrice III 133

  To J. M. K. I 280

To J. S. p. 93

  To know thee is all wisdom, and old age I 267

To Mary Boyle p. 654

  To One Who Ran Down the English III 218

  To Poesy [O God, make this age great] I 184

  To Poesy [Religion be thy sword] I 186

  To Princess Frederica on Her Marriage III 67

  To Professor Jebb III 162

  To Rosa II 75

  To – [Sainted Juliet!] I 223

  To sit beside a chrystal spring III 646

†To Sleep I give my powers away p. 348

  To sleep! to sleep! The long bright day is done III 570

  To the Duke of Argyll III 85

To the Marquis of Dufferin and Ava p. 659

  To the Master of Balliol III 219

To the Queen p. 485, p. 986

To the Queen [Idylls of the King] p. 973

To the Rev. F. D. Maurice p. 505

  To the Rev. W. H. Brookfield III 15

  To the Vicar of Shiplake II 459, III 601

  To thee, with whom my best affections dwell II 77

  To–. [Thou mayst remember what I said] I 306

To Ulysses p. 651

  To Victor Hugo III 24

To Virgil p. 628

  To W. C. Macready II 462

To–. With the Following Poem [The Palace of Art] p. 49

  Tomorrow III 120

†Tonight the winds begin to rise p. 359

†Tonight ungathered let us leave p. 452

  Tourney, The II 301

  Townsmen, or of the hamlet, young or old I 515

  Translation of Claudian’s ‘Rape of Proserpine’ I 7

†Turn, Fortune, turn thy wheel and lower the proud p. 746

  Two bees within a chrystal flowerbell rockèd I 276

  Two children in two neighbour villages I 274

  Two Greetings, The [De Profundis] III 68

  Two little hands that meet II 703

  Two poets and a mighty dramatist III 625

  Two Suns of Love make day of human life III 133

Two Voices, The p. 101

  Two young lovers in winter weather III 565

 

  Ulysses p. 138

†Ulysses, much-experienced man p. 652

  Unhappy man, why wander there I 167

†Unwatched, the garden bough shall sway p. 447

  Up with you, out of the forest and over the hills and away III 571

  Uplift a thousand voices full and sweet II 623

†Urania speaks with darkened brow p. 380

 

  Vale of Bones, The I 108

  Vastness III 134

  Vex not thou the poet’s mind I 246

  Vicar in that sunny spot III 601

  Vicar of that pleasant spot II 459

  Victim, The II 693

  Victor in Drama, Victor in Romance III 24

  Village Wife, The III 58

  Vine, vine and eglantine II 699

Vision of Sin, The p. 210

  Voice and the Peak, The III 3

  Voice of the summerwind I 257

  Voice Spake Out of the Skies, A II 692

  Voyage, The II 81

  Voyage of Maeldune, The III 62

 

  Waäit till our Sally cooms in, fur thou mun a’ sights to tell III 42

  Wages II 707

  Wailing, wailing, wailing, the wind over land and sea III 30

  ‘Wait a little,’ you say, ‘you are sure it’ll all come right’ III 39

  Wake middle classes, why so cold? III 626

  Walk at Midnight, The I 136

  Walking to the Mail II 131

  Wan Sculptor, weepest thou to take the cast II 79

  Wanderer, The II 184

  Warrior of God, man’s friend, and tyrant’s foe III 133

  Warrior of God, whose strong right arm debased I 510

  We come from monkeys – prove it who can III 8

  We have a rumour and a half-revealment III 616

  We know him, out of Shakspeare’s art II 179

†We leave the well-belovèd place p. 448

  We left behind the painted buoy II 81

  We lost you – for how long a time III 232

  We meet no more – the die is cast I 107

  We move, the wheel must always move III 131

†We ranging down this lower track p. 389

  We sin, and so we suffer, and alas I 509

†We sleep and wake and sleep, but all things move p. 207

  We used to fight the French II 473

  We were two daughters of one race I 434

  Welcome to Alexandra, A II 649

  Welcome to Her Royal Highness Màrie Alexandrovna, A III 5

  Welcome, welcome with one voice! III 147

†Well, you shall have that song which Leonard wrote p. 206

  What [ ] and in what III 617

  What am I doing, you say to me, ‘wasting the sweet summer hours’?

  III 230

†What be those crowned forms high over the sacred fountain? p. 663

  What did it profit me that once in Heaven III 620

  What did ye do, and what did ye saäy III 568

  What does little birdie say II 597

†What hope is here for modern rhyme p. 416

  What I most am shamed about III 7

  What I’ve come to, you know well III 9

  What rustles hither in the dark? II 177

  What shall sever me I 183

†What sight so lured him through the fields he knew p. 658

  What Thor Said to the Bard Before Dinner I 542

  What time I wasted youthful hours I 536

  What time the mighty moon was fathering light I 268

†What words are these have fallen from me? p. 360

  Whate’er I see, where’er I move III 605

†Whatever I have said or sung p. 471

  Wheer ’asta beän saw long and meä liggin’ ’ere aloän? II 619

  When [The Window] II 704

†When all among the fifes and the thundering drums p. 979

  When cats run home and light is come I 224

  When from the terrors of Nature a people have fashioned and worship a

  Spirit of Evil III 245

†When I contemplate all alone p. 421

†When in the down I sink my head p. 408

†When Lazarus left his charnel-cave p. 375

†When on my bed the moonlight falls p. 407

†When roars the fight to left and right p. 979

†When rosy plumelets tuft the larch p. 434

  When that rank heat of evil’s tropic day I 317

  When the breeze of a joyful dawn blew free I 226

  When the dumb Hour, clothed in black III 251

  When will the stream be aweary of flowing I 247

  When winds are east and violets blow III 608

  Where Claribel low-lieth I 199

  Where is another sweet as my sweet II 701

  Where is one that, born of woman, altogether can escape III 248

  Where is the Giant of the Sun, which stood I 314

  Where is the wonderful abode III 642

  Wherefore, in these dark ages of the Press II 153

  Wherever evil customs thicken I 543

  Whether he bask in Fame’s unsetting smiles III 626

  While about the shore of Mona those Neronian legionaries II 614

  While I live, the owls! III 12

  While man and woman still are incomplete III 218

  Whispers I 609

  ‘Whither, O whither, love, shall we go II 686

  Whither proud Spirit move thy daring wings? III 609

  Who are ye, Who are ye that ride so fierce and fast III 608

  Who can say I 493, III 619

†Who claps the gate p. 977

  Who fears to die? Who fears to die? I 274

  Who is it comes hither through the dew III 618

†Who loves not Knowledge? Who shall rail p. 461

  Who would be/A mermaid fair I 214

  Who would be/A merman bold I 213

  Why are my moments wasted in this strife? III 617

  ‘Why dost thou not string thine old Harp?’ says a friend I 139

  Why, Mab, what, Mab – I’ll not be fooled III 616

  Why should we weep for those who die? I 97

  Why suffers human life so soon eclipse? I 321

  Why to Blush is Better than to Paint I 300

  Why wail you, pretty plover? and what is it that you fear? III 190

†Wild bird, whose warble, liquid sweet p. 431

Will p. 500

  Will my tiny spark of being wholly vanish in your deeps and heights?

  III 251

  Will no one make this man secure II 180

  Will Waterproof ’s Lyrical Monologue II 96

  Window, The II 697

  Winds are loud and you are dumb II 702

  Winter [The Window] II 700

†Witch-elms that counterchange the floor p. 431

†With a half-glance upon the sky p. 14

  With all good wishes III 638

†With blackest moss the flower-plots p. 3

  With farmer Allan at the farm abode II 68

  With Memory’s eye III 645

†With one black shadow at its feet p. 28

  With roses muskybreathèd I 313

†With such compelling cause to grieve p. 372

  With sullen thunders to and fro III 631

†With trembling fingers did we weave p. 373

†With weary steps I loiter on p. 381

  Woe to the double-tongued, the land’s disease I 512

  Woman of noble form and noble mind! II 81

  Working high treason toward thy sovranty I 297

  Wreck, The III 123

  Written by an Exile of Bassorah I 107

  Written During the Convulsions in Spain I 168

 

†Year after year unto her feet p. 172

  Ye Gods, who in your azure skies I 3

  Yes, you prize him so dearly III 9

†Yet if some voice that man could trust p. 378

†Yet pity for a horse o’er-driven p. 405

  Yon huddled cloud his motion shifts II 31

  You ask me, why, though ill at ease I 531

  You cast to ground the hope which once was mine I 260

  You did late review my lays I 501

  You have spite enough – that is plain enough III 7

†You leave us: you will see the Rhine p. 443

  You make our faults too gross, and thence maintain III 218

  You might have won the Poet’s name II 297

  You must wake and call me early, call me early, mother dear I 456

†You say, but with no touch of scorn p. 440

†You shake your head. A random string p. 176

†You thought my heart too far diseased p. 407

  You, you, if you shall fail to understand III 132

†Young is the grief I entertain p. 983

  ‘Your ringlets, your ringlets II 687

  Youth I 633

  “Yours & caetera” O how cold! II 461

  Youth, lapsing through fair solitudes I 633

 

  σι ρεσντες [All thoughts, all creeds] I 281

 

  1865–1866 II 691