See what a lovely shell (Maud), T 522 Self-deception, Ar 714 Sequence of Sonnets on the death of Robert Serenade, Indian, Sh 299 Seventy-fifth birthday, On his, L 456 Shades of Agamemnon and Iphigeneia, L 433 Shakespeare, Ar 708 Shakespeare, William, Sw 899 Shame upon you Robin (Queen Mary), T She dwelt among the untrodden ways, W Shelley, R 812 Shelley (Cor cordium), Sw 888 She walks in beauty, B 186 She was a phantom of delight, W 42 Simplon Pass, The, W 12 Singing lesson, A, Sw 902 Sir Giles' war-song, M 838 Sister's sleep, My, R 774 Sisters, Song from the, T 549 Skylark, To a, W 45 Skylark, To a, W 58 Skylark, To a, Sh 344 Sleep, To, W 50 Sleep, To, K 423 Sleep and poetry, K 374 Slumber did my spirit seal, A, W 15 So fair, so sweet, withal so sensitive, W 62 Soldier rest, thy warfare o'er, Sc 159 Solitary reaper, The, W 38 Solitude, W 18 Solitude, A, Sw 902 Song from Zapolya, C 101 Song in time of order, Sw 866 Song of Saul before his last battle, B 187 Song of the echoes (Prometheus unbound), Songs from Chastelard, Sw 871 Songs from Ferishtah's fancies, RB 681 Songs of Orpheus and the sirens (Life and Song-throe, The, R 802 Song, The miller's daughter, T 463 Song, Where shall the lover rest, Sc 125 Sonnet, The, R 793 Sonnet, England in 1819, Sh 297 Sonnet on Chillon, B 206 Sonnet, Political greatness, Sh 358 Sonnet, Scorn not the, W 58 Sonnets from the Portuguese, EBB 555 Sonnets on the death of Robert Browning, Sw 909 Sonnets on the thought of death, Cl 705 Sonnet, To an octogenarian, W 63 Sonnet to Lake Leman, B 214 So then, I feel not deeply, L 455 Southey, On the death of, L 456 So we'll go no more a-roving, B 271 Splendor falls on castle walls, The, T 498 Stanzas for music (There be none of beauty's daughters), B 189 Stanzas for music (There's not a joy), B 187 Stanzas from the Grande Chartreuse, Ar 754 mann, Ar 725 Stanzas to Augusta, B 209 Stanzas written in dejection near Naples, Sh 296 Sun upon the Weirdlaw Hill, The, Sc 164 Surprised by joy, impatient as the wind, Swallow, swallow, flying, flying south, T 498 Sweet and low, T 498 Sweet-briar, Upon a, L 432 Switzerland, From, Ar 756 Switzerland, Thought of a Briton on the Tables turned, The, W 9 Tamar and the sea-nymph, Loves of, L 426 "There is no God," the wicked saith, Cl 694 There's a woman like a dewdrop, RB 602 Theseus and Hippolyta, L 457 This lime-tree bower my prison, C 70 This world is very odd, we see, Cl 695 Thomas Carlyle and George Eliot, On the To Augusta, Stanzas, B 209 To a young lady, W 46 To B. R. Haydon, W 55 To Chaucer, Invocation (Life and death of To Coleridge, Sh 275 To Hartley Coleridge, W 33 To Ianthe, Lyrics, L 430, 441 To Leigh Hunt Esq., K 360 To Mary (Revolt of Islam), Sh 291 To Mr. Murray, B 270, 271 To-night, Sh 357 Ulysses, T 487 ὕμνος άυμνος, C1 699 Unremitting voice of nightly streams, The, Up at a villa-down in the city, RB 619 Vale of Chamouni, In the, C 96 Venetian pastoral, For a, R 779 Verse-making was least of my virtues (Fer · ishtah's fancies), RB 681 Villon, Ballad of François, Sw 891 Violet, On a faded, Sh 293 Violet, The, Sc 108 Virgil, To, T 550 Vision of judgment, The, B 257 Vision of sin, The, T 494 Vivien's song (Merlin and Vivien), T 524 Voice by the cedar-tree, A (Maud), T 519 West London, Ar 762 Westminster Bridge, Composed upon, W 31 When a man hath no freedom, B 271 When Helen first saw wrinkles in her face, When I have borne in memory, W 33 When the enemy is near thee, Cl 695 Where lies the land (Songs in absence), Cl Where shall the lover rest (Marmion), Se 126 Whirl-blast from behind the hill, A, W 8 Who kill'd John Keats, B 271 Why from the world (Ferishtah's fancies), Why I am a Liberal, RB 682 -With whom is no variableness, Cl 702 Wordsworth, To, Sh 276 Wordsworth, To, L 438 Wordsworth, To William, C 99 Word with the wind, A, Sw 908 Work without hope, C 101 World is a bundle of hay, The, B 271 World's great age begins anew, The, Sh 367 Written among the Euganean Hills, Sh 293 Written in Kensington Gardens, Ar 724 Written in March, W 26 Written in the album at Elbingerode, C 93 Yarrow revisited, W 59 Year's at the spring, The (Pippa passes), RB Years, many parti-colored years, L 455 You ask me why, tho' ill at ease, T 479 Young Lochinvar (Marmion), Sc 141 Youth and age, C 101 Youth and calm, Ar 761 Youth of nature, The, Ar 719 Youth of the year, The (Atalanta in Caly. Youth's antiphony, R 795 Zapolya, Song from, C 101 INDEX OF FIRST LINES After dark vapors have oppressed our plains, K 380 Again at Christmas did we weave, T 506 Agnes went through the meadows a-weeping, M 862 A golden gilliflower to-day, M 832 Ah! County Guy, the hour is nigh, Sc 165 Ah what avails the sceptred race, L 428 Alas! how soon the hours are over, L 443 All along the valley, stream that flashest white, T 539 All day long and every day, M 826 161 All I can say is I saw it! RB 674 All June I bound the rose in sheaves, RB 629 All nature scens at work. Slugs leave their lair, C 101 All service ranks the same with God, RB 572 All that I know, RB. 626 All the bells of heaven may ring, Sw 900 All the breath and the bloom of the year in the bag of one bee, RB 683 All the night sleep came not upon my eyelids, Sw 878 All thoughts, all passions, all delights, C 91 Among the wondrous ways of men and time, Sw 910 An aged man who loved to doze away, L 458 Andromeda, by Perseus saved and wed, R 786 And so you found that poor room dull, RB 674 And the first gray of morning fill'd the east, Ar 728 And therefore if to love can be desert, EBR 557 And thou art dead, as young and fair, B 171 And thou, O life, the lady of all bliss, R 808 And what though winter will pinch severe, Sc 163 And wilt thou have me fashion into speech, EBB 557 And ye maun braid your yellow hair, Sw 899 And yet, because thou overcomest, EBB 558 62 A rainbow's arch stood on the sea, Sh 310 Arches on arches! as it were that Rome, B 237 Arethusa arose, Sh 346 Ariel to Miranda - Take, Sh 368 A rock there is whose homely front, W 59 Artemidora! Gods invisible, L 436 A sensitive plant in a garden grew, Sh 338 As growth of form or momentary glance, R 802 A ship with shields before the sun, M 838 - A simple child, W 6 A simple ring with a single stone, RB 683 As I ride, as I ride, RB 593 Ask me no more; the moon may draw the sea, T 499 Ask nothing more of me, sweet, Sw 899 A slumber did my spirit seal, W 15 A sonnet is a moment's monument, R 793 A still, serene, soft day: enough of sun, L 441 As two whose love, first foolish, widening scope, R 802 A sunny shaft did I behold, C 101 As when desire, long darkling, dawns, and first, R 793 As when far off the warbled strains are heard, C 69 As when two men have loved a woman well, R 806 At Flores in the Azores Sir Richard Grenville lay, T 543 A thing of beauty is a joy for ever, K 381 At the midnight in the silence of the sleeptime RB 686 Ave Maria! blessed be the hour, B 251 A wanderer is man from his birth, Ar 724 Away, ye gay landscapes, ye gardens of roses, A whirl-blast from behind the hill, W 8 A widow bird sate mourning for her love, Sh 369 Beneath yon birch with silver bark, C 92 Between the hands, between the brows, R 792 Between the moondawn and the sundown here, Sw 892 Between the sunset and the sea, Sw 872 Birds in the high Hall-garden, T 519 Bob Southey! you're a poet-Poet-laureate Boot, saddle, to horse and away, RB 593 Borgia, thou once wert almost too august, L 438 Break, break, break, T 497 Bright clouds float in heaven, Sh 329 Bright flower! whose home is everywhere, W 35 Calm is the morn without a sound, T 501 Can it be right to give what I can give, EBB 557 Can tyrants but by tyrants conquer'd be, B 236 Child of a day, thou knowest not, L 430 Come back, come back, behold with straining mast Cl 700 Come back, ye wandering muser, come back home, L 555 Come, dear children, let us away, Ar 708 Come hither, all sweet maidens, soberly, K 380 Come hither, lads, and harken, for a tale there is to tell, M 860 Come home, come home! and where is home for me, Cl 700 Come into the garden, Maud, T 521 |