| | Poem Title | First Lines | Period | # Lines | # Reads |
| 1: | Monday Night May 11th 1846 - Domestic Peace | Why should such gloomy silence reign; | | 28 | 750 |
| 2: | A Fragment | Maiden, thou wert thoughtless once | | 56 | 796 |
| 3: | A Hymn | Eternal power of earth and air, | | 48 | 907 |
| 4: | A Prayer | My God (oh, let me call Thee mine, | | 16 | 789 |
| 5: | A Prisoner In A Dungeon Deep | A prisoner in a dungeon deep | | 56 | 860 |
| 6: | A Reminiscence | Yes, thou art gone ! and never more | | 16 | 932 |
| 7: | A Voice From The Dungeon | I'm buried now; I've done with life; | | 54 | 829 |
| 8: | A Word To The 'Elect' | You may rejoice to think yourselves secure; | | 48 | 1004 |
| 9: | A Word To The Calvinists | You may rejoice to think yourselves secure, | | 48 | 813 |
| 10: | Alexander And Zenobia | Fair was the evening and brightly the sun | | 275 | 713 |
| 11: | An Orphan's Lament | She's gone, and twice the summer's sun | | 48 | 794 |
| 12: | Appeal | Oh, I am very weary, Though tears no longer flow; | | 12 | 821 |
| 13: | Call Me Away | Call me away; there's nothing here, | | 79 | 869 |
| 14: | Confidence | Oppressed with sin and woe, A burdened heart I bear, | | 24 | 761 |
| 15: | Despondency | I have gone backward in the work; | | 32 | 730 |
| 16: | Domestic Peace | Why should such gloomy silence reign, | | 28 | 790 |
| 17: | Dreams | While on my lonely couch I lie, | | 28 | 748 |
| 18: | Farewell | Farewell to thee! but not farewell | | 28 | 745 |
| 19: | Fluctuations | What though the sun had left my sky; | | 36 | 665 |
| 20: | Fragment | Yes I will take a cheerful tone | | 4 | 775 |
| 21: | Gloomily The Clouds | Gloomily the clouds are sailing | | 44 | 715 |
| 22: | Home | How brightly glistening in the sun | | 28 | 719 |
| 23: | If This Be All | O God! if this indeed be all | | 32 | 661 |
| 24: | In Memory Of A Happy Day In February | Blessed be Thou for all the joy | | 48 | 701 |
| 25: | Last Lines | A dreadful darkness closes in | | 64 | 757 |
| 26: | Lines Composed In A Wood On A Windy Day | My soul is awakened, my spirit is soaring | | 12 | 795 |
| 27: | Lines Inscribed On The Wall Of A Dungeon In The Southern P Of I | Though not a breath can enter here, | | 40 | 689 |
| 28: | Lines Written At Thorp Green | That summer sun, whose genial glow | | 24 | 725 |
| 29: | Lines Written From Home | Though bleak these woods, and damp the ground, | | 36 | 731 |
| 30: | Memory | Brightly the sun of summer shone, | | 48 | 721 |
| 31: | Mirth And Mourning | O cast away your sorrow; | | 60 | 661 |
| 32: | Music On Christmas Morning | Music I love, but never strain | | 42 | 715 |
| 33: | My God! O Let Me Call Thee Mine! | My God! O let me call Thee mine! | | 20 | 688 |
| 34: | My Soul Is Awakened | My soul is awakened, my spirit is soaring, | | 12 | 750 |
| 35: | Night | I love the silent hour of night, | | 12 | 830 |
| 36: | Oh, They Have Robbed Me Of The Hope | Oh, they have robbed me of the hope | | 12 | 714 |
| 37: | Parting Address From Z.Z. To A.E. | O weep not, love! each tear that springs | | 28 | 631 |
| 38: | Past Days | Tis strange to think, there was a time | | 30 | 695 |
| 39: | Power of Love | Love, indeed thy strength is mighty | | 60 | 835 |
| 40: | Retirement | O, let me be alone a while, | | 12 | 695 |
| 41: | Self Communion | The mist is resting on the hill; | | 334 | 664 |
| 42: | Self-Congratulation | Ellen, you were thoughtless once | | 56 | 642 |
| 43: | Severed and Gone | Severed and gone, so many years! | | 68 | 660 |
| 44: | Song | We know where deepest lies the snow, | | 21 | 683 |
| 45: | Song 2 | Come to the banquet, triumph in your songs! | | 36 | 688 |
| 46: | Stanzas | Oh, weep not, love! each tear that springs | | 28 | 687 |
| 47: | The Arbour | I'll rest me in this sheltered bower, | | 28 | 695 |
| 48: | The Bluebell | A fine and subtle spirit dwells | | 48 | 799 |
| 49: | The Captive Dove | Poor restless dove, I pity thee; | | 28 | 711 |
| 50: | The Captive's Dream | Methought I saw him but I knew him not; | | 27 | 705 |
| 51: | The Consolation | Though bleak these woods and damp the ground | | 32 | 699 |
| 52: | The Doubter's Prayer | Eternal Power, of earth and air! | | 48 | 712 |
| 53: | The Narrow Way | Believe not those who say | | 40 | 733 |
| 54: | The North Wind | That wind is from the North, I know it well; | | 40 | 659 |
| 55: | The Parting | The chestnut steed stood by the gate | | 63 | 702 |
| 56: | The Parting (2) | The lady of Alzerno's hall | 1837 | 62 | 709 |
| 57: | The Penitent | I mourn with thee and yet rejoice | | 12 | 653 |
| 58: | The Student's Serenade | I have slept upon my couch, | | 40 | 732 |
| 59: | The Three Guides. [First published in Fraser's Magazine.] | Spirit of Earth! thy hand is chill: | | 216 | 694 |
| 60: | To -------- | I will not mourn thee, lovely one, | | 36 | 682 |
| 61: | To Cowper | Sweet are thy strains, celestial Bard; | | 44 | 705 |
| 62: | Vanitas Vanitatis, Etc. | In all we do, and hear, and see, | | 45 | 697 |
| 63: | Vanitas Vanitatum, Omnia Vanitas | In all we do, and hear, and see, | | 45 | 711 |
| 64: | Verses By Lady Geralda | Why, when I hear the stormy breath | | 100 | 648 |
| 65: | Verses To A Child | O raise those eyes to me again | | 56 | 781 |
| 66: | Views Of Life | When sinks my heart in hopeless gloom, | | 170 | 705 |
| 67: | Weep Not Too Much | Weep not too much, my darling; | | 64 | 738 |
| 68: | Yes Thou Art Gone | Yes, thou art gone! and never more | | 16 | 786 |
| 69: | Z---------'s Dream | I dreamt last night; and in that dream | | 150 | 757 |