| BOOK FIRST |
| I. | Spring. T. Nash |
| II. | Summons to Love. W. Drummond of Hawthornden |
| III. | Time and Love. W. Shakespeare |
| IV. | Since brass, nor stone, nor earth, nor boundless sea. W. Shakespeare |
| V. | Passionate Shepherd to His Love. C. Marlowe |
| VI. | A Madrigal. W. Shakespeare |
| VII. | Under the greenwood tree. W. Shakespeare |
| VIII. | It was a lover and his lass. W. Shakespeare |
| IX. | Present in Absence. Anonymous |
| X. | Absence. W. Shakespeare |
| XI. | How like a winter hath my absence been. W. Shakespeare |
| XII. | A Consolation. W. Shakespeare |
| XIII. | Unchangeable. W. Shakespeare |
| XIV. | To me, fair Friend, you never can be old. W. Shakespeare |
| XV. | Diaphenia. H. Constable |
| XVI. | Rosaline. T. Lodge |
| XVII. | Colin. The Shepherd Tonie |
| XVIII. | To His Love. W. Shakespeare |
| XIX. | When in the chronicle of wasted time. W. Shakespeare |
| XX. | Love's Perjuries. W. Shakespeare |
| XXI. | A Supplication. Sir T. Wyatt |
| XXII. | To Aurora. W. Alexander, Earl of Sterline |
| XXIII. | Man's Love. W. Shakespeare |
| XXIV. | A Ditty. Sir P. Sidney |
| XXV. | Love's Omnipresence. J. Sylvester |
| XXVI. | Carpe Diem. W. Shakespeare |
| XXVII. | Winter. W. Shakespeare |
| XXVIII. | That time of year thou may'st in me behold. W. Shakespeare |
| XXIX. | Remembrance. W. Shakespeare |
| XXX. | Revolutions. W. Shakespeare |
| XXXI. | Farewell! thou art too dear for my possessing. W. Shakespeare |
| XXXII. | Life without Passion. W. Shakespeare |
| XXXIII. | Lover's Appeal. Sir T. Wyatt |
| XXXIV. | Nightingale. R. Barnefield |
| XXXV. | Care-charmer Sleep, son of the sable Night. S. Daniel |
| XXXVI. | Madrigal. W. Shakespeare |
| XXXVII. | Love's Farewell. M. Drayton |
| XXXVIII. | To His Lute. W. Drummond |
| XXXIX. | Blind Love. W. Shakespeare |
| XL. | Unfaithful Shepherdess. Anonymous |
| XLI. | A Renunciation. E. Vere, Earl of Oxford |
| XLII. | Blow, blow, thou winter wind. W. Shakespeare |
| XLIII. | Madrigal. W. Drummond |
| XLIV. | Dirge of Love. W. Shakespeare |
| XLV. | Fidele. W. Shakespeare |
| XLVI. | A Sea Dirge. W. Shakespeare |
| XLVII. | A Land Dirge. J. Webster |
| XLVIII. | Post Mortem. W. Shakespeare |
| XLIX. | Triumph of Death. W. Shakespeare |
| L. | Madrigal. W. Shakespeare |
| LI. | Cupid and Campaspe. J. Lyly |
| LII. | Pack, clouds, away, and welcome day. T. Heywood |
| LIII. | Prothalamion. E. Spenser |
| LIV. | Happy Heart. T. Dekker |
| LV. | Sic Transit. W. Drummond |
| LVI. | Soul and Body. W. Shakespeare |
| LVII. | Life. Lord Bacon |
| LVIII. | Lessons of Nature. W. Drummond |
| LIX. | Doth then the world go thus, doth all thus move? W. Drummond |
| LX. | World's Way. W. Shakespeare |
| LXI. | Saint John Baptist. W. Drummond |
| |
| BOOK SECOND |
| LXII. | Ode on the Morning of Christ's Nativity. J. Milton |
| LXIII. | Song for St. Cecilia's Day, 1687. J. Dryden |
| LXIV. | On the Late Massacre in Piemont. J. Milton |
| LXV. | Horatian Ode upon Cromwell's Return from Ireland. A. Marvell |
| LXVI. | Lycidas. J. Milton |
| LXVII. | On the Tombs in Westminster Abbey. F. Beaumont |
| LXVIII. | Last Conqueror. J. Shirley |
| LXIX. | Death the Leveller. J. Shirley |
| LXX. | When the Assault Was Intended to the City. J. Milton |
| LXXI. | On His Blindness. J. Milton |
| LXXII. | Character of a Happy Life. Sir H. Wotton |
| LXXIII. | Noble Nature. B. Jonson |
| LXXIV. | Gifts of God. G. Herbert |
| LXXV. | Retreat. H. Vaughan |
| LXXVI. | To Mr. Lawrence. J. Milton |
| LXXVII. | To Cyriack Skinner. J. Milton |
| LXXVIII. | Hymn to Diana. B. Jonson |
| LXXIX. | Wishes for the Supposed Mistress. R. Crashaw |
| LXXX. | Great Adventurer. Anonymous |
| LXXXI. | Child and Maiden. Sir C. Sedley |
| LXXXII. | Counsel to Girls. R. Herrick |
| LXXXIII. | To Lucasta, on Going to the Wars. Colonel Lovelace |
| LXXXIV. | Elizabeth of Bohemia. Sir H. Wotton |
| LXXXV. | To the Lady Margaret Ley. J. Milton |
| LXXXVI. | Loveliness of Love. Anonymous |
| LXXXVII. | True Beauty. T. Carew |
| LXXXVIII. | To Dianeme. R. Herrick |
| LXXXIX. | Go, lovely Rose! E. Waller |
| XC. | To Celia. B. Jonson |
| XCI. | Cherry-Ripe. Anonymous |
| XCII. | Poetry of Dress. R. Herrick |
| XCIII. | Whenas in silks my Julia goes. R. Herrick |
| XCIV. | My Love in her attire doth show her wit. Anonymous |
| XCV. | On a Girdle. E. Waller |
| XCVI. | To Anthea Who May Command Him Any Thing. R. Herrick |
| XCVII. | Love not me for comely grace. Anonymous |
| XCVIII. | Not, Celia, that I juster am. Sir C. Sedley |
| XCIX. | To Althea from Prison. Colonel Lovelace |
| C. | To Lucasta, Going beyond the Seas. Colonel Lovelace |
| CI. | Encouragements to a Lover. Sir J. Suckling |
| CII. | A Supplication. A. Cowley |
| CIII. | Manly Heart. G. Wither |
| CIV. | Melancholy. J. Fletcher |
| CV. | To a Lock of Hair. Sir W. Scott |
| CVI. | Forsaken Bride. Anonymous |
| CVII. | Fair Helen. Anonymous |
| CVIII. | Twa Corbies. Anonymous |
| CIX. | To Blossoms. R. Herrick |
| CX. | To Daffodils. R. Herrick |
| CXI. | Thoughts in a Garden. A. Marvell |
| CXII. | L'Allegro. J. Milton |
| CXIII. | Il Penseroso. J. Milton |
| CXIV. | Song of the Emigrants in Bermuda. A. Marvell |
| CXV. | At a Solemn Music. J. Milton |
| CXVI. | Alexander's Feast; or, the Power of Music. J. Dryden |
| |
| BOOK THIRD |
| CXVII. | Ode on the Pleasure Arising from Vicissitude. T. Gray |
| CXVIII. | Quiet Life. A. Pope |
| CXIX. | Blind Boy. C. Cibber |
| CXX. | On a Favourite Cat Drowned in a Tub of Goldfishes. T. Gray |
| CXXI. | To Charlotte Pulteney. A. Philips |
| CXXII. | Rule, Britannia. J. Thomson |
| CXXIII. | Bard. T. Gray |
| CXXIV. | Ode Written in 1746. W. Collins |
| CXXV. | Lament for Culloden. R. Burns |
| CXXVI. | Lament for Flodden. J. Elliott |
| CXXVII. | Braes of Yarrow. J. Logan |
| CXXVIII. | Willie Drowned in Yarrow. Anonymous |
| CXXIX. | Loss of the "Royal George." W. Cowper |
| CXXX. | Black-Eyed Susan. J. Gay |
| CXXXI. | Sally in Our Alley. H. Carey |
| CXXXII. | A Farewell. R. Burns |
| CXXXIII. | If doughty deeds my lady please. R. Graham of Gartmore |
| CXXXIV. | To a Young Lady. W. Cowper |
| CXXXV. | Sleeping Beauty. S. Rogers |
| CXXXVI. | For ever, Fortune, wilt thou prove. J. Thomson |
| CXXXVII. | Merchant, to secure his treasure. M. Prior |
| CXXXVIII. | When lovely woman stoops to folly. O. Goldsmith |
| CXXXIX. | Ye banks and braes o' bonnie Doon. R. Burns |
| CXL. | Progress of Poesy. T. Gray |
| CXLI. | Passions. W. Collins |
| CXLII. | Ode on the Spring. T. Gray |
| CXLIII. | Poplar Field. W. Cowper |
| CXLIV. | To a Mouse. R. Burns |
| CXLV. | A Wish. S. Rogers |
| CXLVI. | To Evening. W. Collins |
| CXLVII. | Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard. T. Gray |
| CXLVIII. | Mary Morison. R. Burns |
| CXLIX. | Bonnie Lesley. R. Burns |
| CL. | O my Luve's like a red, red rose. R. Burns |
| CLI. | Highland Mary. R. Burns |
| CLII. | Auld Robin Gray. Lady A. Lindsay |
| CLIII. | Duncan Gray. R. Burns |
| CLIV. | Sailor's Wife. W. J. Mickle |
| CLV. | Jean. R. Burns |
| CLVI. | John Anderson. R. Burns |
| CLVII. | Land o' the Leal. Lady Nairn |
| CLVIII. | Ode on a Distant Prospect of Eton College. T. Gray |
| CLIX. | Hymn to Adversity. T. Gray |
| CLX. | Solitude of Alexander Selkirk. W. Cowper |
| CLXI. | To Mary Unwin. W. Cowper |
| CLXII. | To the Same. W. Cowper |
| CLXIII. | Dying Man in His Garden. G. Sewell |
| CLXIV. | To-Morrow. J. Collins |
| CLXV. | Life! I know not what thou art. A. L. Barbauld |
| |
| BOOK FOURTH |
| CLXVI. | On First Looking into Chapman's "Homer." J. Keats |
| CLXVII. | Ode on the Poets. J. Keats |
| CLXVIII. | Love. S. T. Coleridge |
| CLXIX. | All for Love. Lord Byron |
| CLXX. | Outlaw. Sir W. Scott |
| CLXXI. | There be none of Beauty's daughters. Lord Byron |
| CLXXII. | Lines to an Indian Air. P. B. Shelley |
| CLXXIII. | She walks in beauty, like the night. Lord Byron |
| CLXXIV. | She was a Phantom of delight. W. Wordsworth |
| CLXXV. | She is not fair to outward view. H. Coleridge |
| CLXXVI. | I fear thy kisses, gentle maiden. P. B. Shelley |
| CLXXVII. | Lost Love. W. Wordsworth |
| CLXXVIII. | I travell'd among unknown men. W. Wordsworth |
| CLXXIX. | Education of Nature. W. Wordsworth |
| CLXXX. | A slumber did my spirit seal. W. Wordsworth |
| CLXXXI. | Lord Ullin's Daughter. T. Campbell |
| CLXXXII. | Jock of Hazeldean. Sir W. Scott |
| CLXXXIII. | Freedom and Love. T. Campbell |
| CLXXXIV. | Love's Philosophy. P. B. Shelley |
| CLXXXV. | Echoes. T. Moore |
| CLXXXVI. | A Serenade. Sir W. Scott |
| CLXXXVII. | To the Evening Star. T. Campbell |
| CLXXXVIII. | To the Night. P. B. Shelley |
| CLXXXIX. | To a Distant Friend. W. Wordsworth |
| CXC. | When we two parted. Lord Byron |
| CXCI. | Happy Insensibility. J. Keats |
| CXCII. | Where shall the lover rest. Sir W. Scott |
| CXCIII. | La Belle Dame Sans Merci. J. Keats |
| CXCIV. | Rover. Sir W. Scott |
| CXCV. | Flight of Love. P. B. Shelley |
| CXCVI. | Maid of Neidpath. Sir W. Scott |
| CXCVII. | Maid of Neidpath. T. Campbell |
| CXCVIII. | Bright Star! would I were steadfast as thou art. J. Keats |
| CXCIX. | Terror of Death. J. Keats |
| CC. | Desideria. W. Wordsworth |
| CCI. | At the mid hour of night. T. Moore |
| CCII. | Elegy on Thyrza. Lord Byron |
| CCIII. | One word is too often profaned. P. B. Shelley |
| CCIV. | Gathering Song of Donald the Black. Sir W. Scott |
| CCV. | A wet sheet and a flowing sea. A. Cunningham |
| CCVI. | Ye Mariners of England. T. Campbell |
| CCVII. | Battle of the Baltic. T. Campbell |
| CCVIII. | Ode to Duty. W. Wordsworth |
| CCIX. | On the Castle of Chillon. Lord Byron |
| CCX. | England and Switzerland, 1802. W. Wordsworth |
| CCXI. | On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic. W. Wordsworth |
| CCXII. | London, 1802. W. Wordsworth |
| CCXIII. | Same. W. Wordsworth |
| CCXIV. | When I have borne in memory what has tamed. W. Wordsworth |
| CCXV. | Hohenlinden. T. Campbell |
| CCXVI. | After Blenheim. R. Southey |
| CCXVII. | Pro Patria Mori. T. Moore |
| CCXVIII. | Burial of Sir John Moore at Corunna. C. Wolfe |
| CCXIX. | Simon Lee, the Old Huntsman. W. Wordsworth |
| CCXX. | Old Familiar Faces. C. Lamb |
| CCXXI. | Journey Onwards. T. Moore |
| CCXXII. | Youth and Age. Lord Byron |
| CCXXIII. | A Lesson. W. Wordsworth |
| CCXXIV. | Past and Present. T. Hood |
| CCXXV. | Light of Other Days. T. Moore |
| CCXXVI. | Invocation. P. B. Shelley |
| CCXXVII. | Stanzas Written in Dejection near Naples. P. B. Shelley |
| CCXXVIII. | Scholar. R. Southey |
| CCXXIX. | Mermaid Tavern. J. Keats |
| CCXXX. | Pride of Youth. Sir W. Scott |
| CCXXXI. | Bridge of Sighs. T. Hood |
| CCXXXII. | Elegy. Lord Byron |
| CCXXXIII. | Hester. C. Lamb |
| CCXXXIV. | Coronach. Sir W. Scott |
| CCXXXV. | Deathbed. T. Hood |
| CCXXXVI. | Rosabelle. Sir W. Scott |
| CCXXXVII. | On an Infant Dying as Soon as Born. C. Lamb |
| CCXXXVIII. | Affliction of Margaret. W. Wordsworth |
| CCXXXIX. | Hunting Song. Sir W. Scott |
| CCXL. | To the Skylark. W. Wordsworth |
| CCXLI. | To a Skylark. P. B. Shelley |
| CCXLII. | Green Linnet. W. Wordsworth |
| CCXLIII. | To the Cuckoo. W. Wordsworth |
| CCXLIV. | Ode to a Nightingale. J. Keats |
| CCXLV. | Upon Westminster Bridge. W. Wordsworth |
| CCXLVI. | Ozymandias of Egypt. P. B. Shelley |
| CCXLVII. | Composed at Neidpath Castle. W. Wordsworth |
| CCXLVIII. | Admonition to a Traveller. W. Wordsworth |
| CCXLIX. | To the Highland Girl of Inversnaid. W. Wordsworth |
| CCL. | Reaper. W. Wordsworth |
| CCLI. | Reverie of Poor Susan. W. Wordsworth |
| CCLII. | To a Lady, with a Guitar. P. B. Shelley |
| CCLIII. | Daffodils. W. Wordsworth |
| CCLIV. | To the Daisy. W. Wordsworth |
| CCLV. | Ode to Autumn. J. Keats |
| CCLVI. | Ode to Winter. T. Campbell |
| CCLVII. | Yarrow Unvisited. W. Wordsworth |
| CCLVIII. | Yarrow Visited. W. Wordsworth |
| CCLIX. | Invitation. P. B. Shelley |
| CCLX. | Recollection. P. B. Shelley |
| CCLXI. | By the Sea. W. Wordsworth |
| CCLXII. | To the Evening Star. T. Campbell |
| CCLXIII. | Datur Hora Quieti. Sir W. Scott |
| CCLXIV. | To the Moon. P. B. Shelley |
| CCLXV. | A widow bird sate mourning for her Love. P. B. Shelley |
| CCLXVI. | To Sleep. W. Wordsworth |
| CCLXVII. | Soldier's Dream. T. Campbell |
| CCLXVIII. | A Dream of the Unknown. P. B. Shelley |
| CCLXIX. | Inner Vision. W. Wordsworth |
| CCLXX. | Realm of Fancy. J. Keats |
| CCLXXI. | Hymn to the Spirit of Nature. P. B. Shelley |
| CCLXXII. | Written in Early Spring. W. Wordsworth |
| CCLXXIII. | Ruth, or the Influences of Nature. W. Wordsworth |
| CCLXXIV. | Written among the Euganean Hills, North Italy. P. B. Shelley |
| CCLXXV. | Ode to the West Wind. P. B. Shelley |
| CCLXXVI. | Nature and the Poet. W. Wordsworth |
| CCLXXVII. | Poet's Dream. P. B. Shelley |
| CCLXXVIII. | World is too much with us. W. Wordsworth |
| CCLXXIX. | Within King's College Chapel, Cambridge. W. Wordsworth |
| CCLXXX. | Youth and Age. S. T. Coleridge |
| CCLXXXI. | Two April Mornings. W. Wordsworth |
| CCLXXXII. | Fountain. W. Wordsworth |
| CCLXXXIII. | River of Life. T. Campbell |
| CCLXXXIV. | Human Seasons. J. Keats |
| CCLXXXV. | A Lament. P. B. Shelley |
| CCLXXXVI. | My heart leaps up when I behold. W. Wordsworth |
| CCLXXXVII. | Ode on Intimations of Immortality. W. Wordsworth |
| CCLXXXVIII. | Music, when soft voices die. P. B. Shelley |
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