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9780631199168

The Victorians: An Anthology of Poetry & Poetics

by Cunningham, Valentine
  • ISBN13:

    9780631199168

  • ISBN10:

    0631199160

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2000-01-01
  • Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
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List Price: $41.95

Summary

This magnificent anthology presents the cornucopia of Victorian poetry within a single volume.

Table of Contents

List of Authors
xxx
Acknowledgements xxxii
Introduction xxxv
Anon. Street Ballads
1(8)
Albert's Fashions, and Description of England
1(2)
Arrived at Last: An Heir to the Throne of England
3(1)
Have You Been to the Chrystal Palace
4(2)
A Chapter of Cheats, or The Roguery of Every Trade
6(1)
The Cotton Lords of Preston
7(2)
Eliza Lynn Linton (1822--98) with W. H. Wills (1810--80)
9(5)
Street Minstrelsy (Household Words, 21 May 1859)
10(4)
William Wordsworth (1770--1850)
14(3)
`A Poet! -- He hath put his heart to school'
15(1)
`The most alluring clouds that mount the sky'
15(1)
On the Projected Kendal and Windermere Railway
15(1)
`Forth from a jutting ridge, around whose base'
16(1)
Illustrated Books and Newspapers
16(1)
Walter Savage Landor (1775--1864)
17(2)
`Twenty years hence my eyes may grow'
17(1)
`Yes; I write verses now and then'
17(1)
To Robert Browning
18(1)
Ebenezer Elliott (1781--1849)
19(2)
Sonnet (`In these days, every mother's son or daughter')
19(1)
Woman
20(1)
Epigram (`What is a communist?')
20(1)
Song (`Donought would have everything')
20(1)
Leigh Hunt (1784--1859)
21(2)
Abou Ben Adhem
22(1)
Rondeau (`Jenny kiss'd me')
22(1)
On the Death of His Son Vincent
23(1)
Charlotte Elliott (1789--1871)
23(2)
Just As I am
24(1)
Thy Will Be Done
24(1)
John Keble (1792--1866)
25(4)
Morning
26(1)
Septuagesima Sunday
27(1)
The Purification
28(1)
Holy Matrimony
29(1)
John Clare (1793--1864)
29(10)
Song (`I wish I was where I would be')
30(1)
`Here is the scenes the rural poet made'
31(1)
I've Had Many & CR
31(1)
Sonnet: The Nightingale
32(1)
Sonnet: `I Am'
32(1)
The Round Oak
32(1)
Sonnet: The Crow
33(1)
Pleasant Sounds
33(1)
To Miss Mary Ann C.
33(1)
The Bean Field
34(1)
Song (`Sweet is the violet scented pea')
34(1)
`There is a charm in Solitude that Cheers'
35(1)
`There's music in the songs of birds'
35(1)
Song (`The hurly burly wind')
36(1)
The Dark Days of Autumn
37(1)
Song (`O sweet is the song o' the Thrush i' the spring mornings')
37(1)
The Nursery Garden
38(1)
Fragment (`Vetches; both yellow, and blue')
38(1)
The Rawk o' the Autumn
39(1)
Henry Francis Lyte (1793--1847)
39(2)
Abide With Me
40(1)
Janet Hamilton (1795--1873)
41(2)
Woman
41(1)
The Horrors of War: Verses Suggested by the War in the Crimea, 1854
42(1)
Our Local Scenery
42(1)
Comparative Slavery
43(1)
Thomas Carlyle (1795--1881)
43(10)
Luther's Psalm (Fraser's Magazine, 1831)
43(4)
Clothes for Thoughts and Thoughts on Clothes (From: Sartor Resartus [1833--4], 1838)
47(6)
Mary Sewell (1797--1884)
53(2)
The London Attic (Another Story)
53(2)
James Henry (1798--1876)
55(5)
`The Roman Lyrist's soul, 'tis said'
55(1)
`Odds bobs, brother Tom, do you know, by the Powers'
56(1)
`I am a versemaker by trade'
56(1)
`Two hundred men and eighteen killed'
57(1)
`I am the pink of courtesy'
58(2)
Mary Howitt (1799--1888)
60(1)
The Barley-Mowers' Song
60(1)
Thomas Hood (1799--1845)
61(6)
A Drop of Gin
62(1)
The Song of the Shirt
63(2)
The Bridge of Sighs
65(1)
I Remember, I Remember
66(1)
Charles (Lord) Neaves (1800--76)
67(4)
Grimm's Law: A New Song
67(2)
O Why Should a Woman Not Get a Degree": On Female Graduation and Ladies' Lectures
69(1)
Let Us All Be Unhappy on Sunday: A Lyric for Saturday Night
70(1)
T. B. Macaulay (1800--59)
71(8)
Horatius: A Lay Made About the Year of the City CCCLX
72(7)
William Barnes (1801--86)
79(10)
The Blackbird
80(1)
Vellen the Tree
81(1)
Christmas Invitation
81(1)
Keepen up o' Chris'mas
82(1)
The Vaices That Be Gone
83(1)
Rustic Childhood
83(1)
My Orchet n Linden Lea
84(1)
The Bean Vield
85(1)
Lwonesomeness
86(1)
Winter Weather
86(1)
Winter Weather
87(1)
The Vield Path
88(1)
The Field Path
89(1)
John Henry Newman (1801--90)
89(21)
The Pillar of the Cloud
90(1)
The Dream of Gerontius
91(19)
L.E.L.: Letitia Elizabeth Landon (1802--38)
110(9)
Songs
110(1)
`I loved her! and Her azure eyes'
110(1)
`A mouth that is itself a rose'
110(1)
`I send back thy letters'
111(1)
`As steals the dew along the flower'
111(1)
Subjects for Pictures
111(2)
The Banquet of Aspasia and Pericles
111(1)
Calypso Watching the Ocean
112(1)
The Moorish Maiden's Vigil
113(2)
A Suttee
115(1)
Felicia Hemans
116(1)
The Factory: 'Tis an Accursed Thing!
117(2)
Winthrop Mackworth Praed (1802--39)
119(3)
Letters From Teignmouth II: Private Theatricals
119(2)
To Helen: With Crabbe's Poems, a Birthday Present
121(1)
To Helen: With Southey's Poems
121(1)
To Helen
122(1)
Thomas Lovell Beddoes (1803--49)
122(3)
Song. By Female Voices
123(1)
Athulf's Song
123(1)
A Crocodile
124(1)
Insignificance of the World
124(1)
Sad and Cheerful Songs Contrasted
124(1)
Sonnet: To Tartar, a Terrier Beauty
125(1)
James Clarence Mangan (1803--49)
125(5)
Twenty Golden Years Ago
126(1)
Siberia
127(1)
The Night is Falling
128(1)
Gone in the Wind
129(1)
Edward Bulwer-Lytton (1803--73)
130(3)
The Soul of Books
130(3)
Robert Stephen Hawker (1803--75)
133(2)
To Alfred Tennyson, Laureate, D.C.L.: On His `Idylls of the King'
134(1)
A Croon on Hennacliff
134(1)
R. E. Egerton-Warburton (1804--91)
135(5)
The Paper Knife
136(1)
Modern Chivalry
137(1)
A New Denomination
137(1)
A Lawyer's Bill
138(1)
Past and Present
138(1)
`Il Sonnetto'
138(1)
My Dentist
139(1)
Sarah Flower Adams (1805--48)
140(1)
Nearer, My God, to Thee
140(1)
Thomas Cooper (1805--92)
141(7)
Chartist Chaunt
142(1)
Chartist Song
142(1)
Chrtist Poets: Chartist Life: 1842 (From: The Life of Thomas Cooper, Written by Himself, 1872)
143(5)
Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806--61)
148(26)
Felicia Hemans. To L.E.L., Referring to Her Monody on That Poetess
149(1)
Cowper's Grave
150(2)
To George Sand: A Desire
152(1)
To George Sand: A Recognition
152(1)
The Cry of the Children
152(1)
L.E.L.'s Last Question
152(4)
The Runaway Slave at Pilgrim's Point
156(1)
Sonnets From the Portuguese
157(9)
`What can I give thee back, O liberal'
163(1)
`And wilt thou have me fashion into speech'
163(1)
`I never gave a lock of hair away'
163(1)
`Let the world's sharpness like a clasping knife'
164(1)
`My own Beloved, who hast lifted me'
164(1)
`My letters! All dead paper,...mute and white!'
164(1)
`First time he kissed me, he but only kissed'
165(1)
`How do I love thee? Let me count the ways'
165(1)
`Beloved, thou hast brought me many flowers'
165(1)
From: Aurora Leigh. First Book
166(7)
A Musical Instrument
173(1)
Frederick Tennyson (1807--98)
174(2)
Ten Years Ago
175(1)
Peaceful Rest
175(1)
Old Age
176(1)
Caroline Norton (1808--77)
176(2)
My Heart is Like a Withered Nut!
177(1)
I Was Not False to Thee
177(1)
Sonnet XIII. The Weaver
178(1)
Charles (Tennyson) Turner (1808--79)
178(4)
The Vacant Cage
179(1)
The Vacant Cage (Continued)
179(1)
The Critics at Gethsemane
180(1)
The `Higher Criticism'
180(1)
Leben Jesu and vie de Jesus
180(1)
Alice Wade Versus Small-Pox
181(1)
On Seeing a Little Child Spin a Coin of Alexander the Great
181(1)
Letty's Globe
182(1)
Edward Fitzgerald (1809--83)
182(9)
Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, the Astronomer-Poet of Persia
183(8)
Fanny Kemble (1809--93)
191(2)
Song (`Pass thy hand through my hair, love')
192(1)
Sonnet (`What is my lady like?')
192(1)
The Black Wallflower
193(1)
Alfred (Lord) Tennyson (1809--92)
193(102)
The Lady of Shalott
195(2)
The Palace of Art
197(6)
St Simeon Stylites
203(5)
Ulysses
208(1)
Morte d'Arthur
209(5)
`Break, Break, Break'
214(1)
Lady Clara Vere de Vere
215(1)
The Poet's Song
216(1)
The New Timon, and the Poets
216(1)
After-Thought
216(1)
From: The Princess, A Medley
217(1)
`Tears, idle tears, I know not what they mean'
217(1)
`Now sleeps the crimson Petal, now the white'
217(1)
`Come down, O maid, from yonder mountain height'
218(1)
In Memoriam
218(34)
Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington
252(6)
The Brook: An Idyl
258(4)
The Charge of the Light Brigade
262(2)
Maud
264(29)
Prefatory Poem to My Brother's Sonnets: Midnight, June 30, 1879
293(1)
Crossing the Bar
294(1)
Hippolyte Adolphe Taine (1828--93)
295(4)
The Favourite Poet of a Nation (From: History of English Literature, 1871)
295(4)
William Miller (1810--72)
299(2)
Willie Winkie
299(1)
Spring
300(1)
November
301(1)
Martin F. Tupper (1810--89)
301(9)
Of the Bible
302(4)
Of Home
306(4)
Arthur Henry Hallam (1811--33)
310(3)
A Scene in Summer
311(1)
Sonnet (`Why throbbest thou, my heart, why thickly breathest?')
312(1)
Sonnet (`Still here -- thou hast not faded from my sight')
312(1)
Sonnet (`Lady, I bid thee to a sunny dome')
312(1)
Alfred Domett (1811--87)
313(5)
A Christmas Hymn (Old Style. 1837)
313(1)
Invisible Sights
314(1)
Fireworks
315(3)
William Makepeace Thackeray (1811--63)
318(4)
The Ballad of Bouillabaisse
318(2)
The Cane-Bottomed Chair
320(2)
Sorrows of Werther
322(1)
William Bell Scott (1811--90)
322(7)
To the Artists Called P.R.B.
323(1)
A Rhyme of the Sun-Dial
323(1)
The Witch's Ballad
324(3)
The Nightingale Unheard
327(1)
Music
328(1)
Charles Dickens (1812--70)
329(3)
Old Lamps for New Ones (Household Words, 15 June 1850)
329(3)
Robert Browning (1812--89)
332(46)
My Last Duchess: Ferrara
334(1)
The Lost Leader
335(1)
Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister
336(1)
Porphyria's Lover
337(2)
Home-Thoughts, from Abroad
339(1)
The Bishop Orders His Tomb at Saint Praxed's Church: Rome, 15---
339(3)
Meeting at Night
342(1)
Parting at Morning
342(1)
Love Among the Ruins
342(3)
Fra Lippo Lippi
345(7)
A Tocca of Galuppi's
352(2)
`Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came' (See Edgar's song in Lear)
354(5)
Memorabilia
359(1)
Andrea del Sarto (Called `The Faultless Painter')
360(5)
Two in the Campagna
365(1)
A Grammarian's Funeral (Time -- Shortly after the Revival of Learning in Europe)
366(3)
Caliban Upon Setebos; or, Natural Theology in the Island
369(6)
Pisgah-Sights. I
375(1)
Pisgah-Sights. II
376(1)
Never the Time and the Place
377(1)
[Rhyme for a Child Viewing a Naked Venus in a Painting of `The Judgement of Paris']
378(1)
Edward Lear (1812--88)
378(6)
`There was an Old Person of Spain'
378(1)
`There was an old person of Wick'
379(1)
`There was an old man at a Station'
379(1)
`There was an old person of Woking'
379(1)
`There was an old person of Stroud'
379(1)
`There was an old man of Thames Ditton'
379(1)
The Dong With a Luminous Nose
379(2)
`How pleasant to know Mr Lear!'
381(1)
The Jumblies
382(2)
James R. Withers (1812--92)
384(4)
On the Death of My Child
384(1)
When I Was a Boy
385(1)
Insensibility to Death Around Us
386(1)
Little Rill
386(1)
The Poet
387(1)
Jemima Luke (1813--1906)
388(1)
`I think when I read that sweet story of old'
388(1)
William Edmonstoune Aytoun (1813--65)
389(18)
Firmilian: A Tragedy (Blackwood's Magazine, May 1854)
389(18)
Charlotte Bronte (1816--55)
407(4)
Presentiment
408(1)
The Missionary
408(2)
`The truest love that ever heart'
410(1)
24 December
411(1)
21 June 1849
411(1)
Branwell Bronte (1817--48)
411(2)
`Why dost thou sorrow for the happy dead?'
412(1)
Thorp Green
413(1)
`When all our cheerful hours seem gone for ever'
413(1)
George Henry Lewes (1817--78)
413(13)
The Principles of Success in Literature: Ch. 3, Of Vision in Art (Fortnightly Review, July 1865)
414(12)
John Mason Neale (1818--66)
426(3)
Jerusalem the Golden (From: The Rhythm of Bernard de Morlaix)
427(1)
The Pilgrims of Jesus
428(1)
Emily Bronte (1818--48)
429(5)
`What winter floods, what showers of spring'
429(1)
`Long neglect has worn away'
430(1)
`The night is darkening round me'
430(1)
`All hushed and still within the house'
430(1)
`O Dream, where art thou now?
430(1)
`How still, how happy! those are words'
431(1)
`Mild the mist upon the hill'
431(1)
`Come, walk with me'
432(1)
To Imagination
432(1)
`No coward soul is mine'
433(1)
Emily Bronte or Charlotte Bronte
434(1)
`Ofter rebuked, yet always back returning'
434(1)
Eliza Cook (1818--89)
435(5)
The Old Arm-Chair
435(1)
Snow
436(1)
The Gallant English Tar
437(1)
A Song for the Workers (Written for the Early Closing Movement)
437(1)
Shakespeare (Written On Hearing of the Tercentenry Movement, 1864)
438(1)
`Poor Hood' (Written at Kensal-Green Cemetery)
439(1)
C. F. Alexander (1818--95)
440(2)
Maker of Heaven and Earth (All Things Bright and Beautiful)
440(1)
Who Was Conceived by the Holy Ghost, Born of the Virgin Mary (Once in Royal David's City)
441(1)
Suffered Under Pontius Pilate, Was Crucified, Dead, and Buried (There is a Green Hill Far Away)
441(1)
Arthur Hugh Clough (1819--61)
442(36)
The Latest Decalogue
443(1)
`Say not the struggle naught availeth'
443(1)
`To spend uncounted years of pain'
444(1)
Amours de Voyage
444(26)
From: Dipsychus
470(7)
`As I sat at the cafe, I said to myself
470(2)
`I dreamt a dream; till morning light'
472(2)
```There is no God,'' the wicked saith'
474(1)
`There have been times, not many, but enough'
475(2)
`That there are powers above us I admit'
477(1)
`If to write, rewrite, and write again'
477(1)
Earnest Jones (1819--68)
478(3)
The Factory Town
479(1)
The Song of the Low
480(1)
John Ruskin (1819--1900)
481(13)
[Nature Untenanted]
482(1)
La Madonna Dell' Acqua
483(1)
Of the Pathetic Fallacy (From: Modern Painters, III, 1856)
483(9)
`My Own Article on Whistler'
492(2)
Charles Kingsley (1819--75)
494(4)
Airly Beacon
495(1)
The Sands of Dee
496(1)
`My Last Words'
496(1)
The Tide River
497(1)
Young and Old
497(1)
George Eliot (1819--80)
498(9)
In a London Drawingroom
499(1)
`O May I Join the Choir Invisible'
499(1)
Brother and Sister
500(4)
Notes on Form in Art (1868)
504(3)
Ebenezer Jones (1820--60)
507(2)
High Summer
507(1)
Eyeing the Eyes of One's Mistress
507(1)
A Coming Cry
508(1)
Jean Ingelow (1820--97)
509(4)
Divided
590
The Long White Seam
512(1)
Anne Bronte (1820--49)
513(2)
`Oh, they have robbed me of the hope'
513(1)
Lines Written at Thorp Green
513(1)
To Cowper
514(1)
Monday Night May 11th 1846
514(1)
The Narrow Way
515(1)
Frederick Locker (-Lampson) (1821--95)
515(3)
The Bear Pit: At the Zoological Gardens
516(1)
A Terrible Infant
517(1)
My Mistress's Boots
517(1)
Dora Greenwell (1822--82)
518(4)
A Picture
519(1)
To Elizabeth Barrett Browning in 1851
519(1)
To Elizabeth Barrett Browning in 1861
520(1)
A Scherzo (A Shy Person's Wishes)
520(1)
Veni, Veni, Emmanuel!
521(1)
Matthew Arnold (1828--88)
522(28)
Preface to the First Edition of Poems (1853)
523(7)
Preface to the Second Edition of Poems (1854)
530(1)
To Marguerite, In Returning a Volume of the Letters of Ortis
531(1)
Self-Dependence
531(1)
Dover Beach
532(1)
The Scholar-Gipsy
533(5)
Haworth Churchyard: April, 1855
538(4)
Thyrsis: A Monody, to Commemorate the Author's Friend, Arthur Hugh Clough, who Died at Florence, 1861
542(5)
Growing Old
547(1)
The Progress of Poesy: A Variation
548(1)
The Last Word
548(1)
The Superior Adequacy of Poetry (Preface, the Hundred Greatest Men: Portraits of the One Hundred Greatest Men of History, I, Poetry: Poets, Dramatists, Novelists, 1879)
549(1)
Eliza Keary (?1822--?89)
550(2)
Old Age
550(1)
Lucy
551(1)
Incomplete -- Complete
551(1)
William (Johnson) Cory (1823--92)
552(2)
An Invocation
552(1)
Hersilia
553(1)
Anna Laetitia Waring (1823--1910)
554(3)
`In Heavenly Love abiding'
555(1)
`O loving spirit do not go!'
555(2)
Coventry Patmore (1823--96)
557(8)
From: The Angel in the House
557(4)
The Paragon
557(2)
The Wife's Tragedy
559(1)
The Foreign Land
559(1)
Felicity
559(1)
The Married Lover
560(1)
Winter
561(1)
The Toys
562(1)
Arbor Vitae
562(1)
To the Body
563(1)
The Girl of All Periods: An Idyll
564(1)
William Brightly Ranks (1823--82)
565(3)
Doll Poems
566(2)
The Picture
566(1)
The Love Story
566(1)
Dressing Her
567(1)
William Allingham (1824--89)
568(6)
The Fairies: A Nursery Song
569(1)
The Winding Banks of Erne: Or, The Emigrant's Adieu to Ballyshannon. A Local Ballad
570(2)
`The Boy from his bedroom-window;
572(1)
`Everything passes and vanishes'
573(1)
`No funeral gloom, my dears, when I am gone'
573(1)
Three Sisters
573(1)
`Four ducks on a pond'
573(1)
Writing
573(1)
`I will not be a critic where I love'
574(1)
Sydney Dobell (1824--74)
574(3)
The Wounded
575(1)
Desolate
575(1)
Where Are You, Poets
576(1)
Song of a Mad Girl, Whose Lover Has Died at Sea
576(1)
George MacDonald (1824--1905)
577(7)
What Professor Owl Knows
578(1)
A Manchester Poem
578(5)
The Shortest and Sweetest of Songs
583(1)
Henry S, Sutton (1825--1901)
584(1)
Man
584(1)
Who Shall Deliver?
584(1)
The Earth Defaced
585(1)
William McGonagall (1825--1902)
585(3)
The Tay Bridge Disaster
585(2)
Death and Burial of Lord Tennyson
587(1)
Adelaide Anne Procter (1825--64)
588(4)
A Woman's Question
588(1)
Thankfulness
589(1)
A Lost Chord
590(1)
A Woman's Answer
591(1)
Walter Bagehot (1826--77)
592(11)
`Wordsworth, Tennyson, and Browning,; or Pure, Ornate, and Grotesque Art in English Poetry', The National Review (November 1864)
593(10)
Dinah Maria Mulock (1826--87)
603(1)
To Elizabeth Barrett Browning on Her Later Sonnets. 1856
603(1)
Mortimer Collins (1827--76)
604(4)
A Letter to the Right Hon. Benjamin Disraeli, M. P.
604(3)
To F.C.: 20th February 1875
607(1)
Sonnet to F.C.
607(1)
Sea Sonnet II
608(1)
Martial in London
608(1)
George Meredith (1828--1909)
608(10)
From: Modern Love
609(7)
`By this he knew she wept with waking eyes'
609(1)
`A message from her set his brain aflame'
609(1)
`It chanced his lips did meet her forehead cool'
610(1)
`She issues radiant from her dressing-room'
610(1)
`Yet it was plain she struggled, and that salt'
610(1)
`He felt the wild beast in him betweenwhiles'
611(1)
`What soul would bargain for a cure that brings'
611(1)
`In our old shipwreck'd days there was an hour'
611(1)
`At dinner, she is hostess, I am host'
612(1)
`T is Christmas weather, and a country house'
612(1)
`The misery is greater, as I live!'
612(1)
`You like not that French novel? Tell me why'
613(1)
`Am I failing? for no longer can I cast'
613(1)
`This golden head has wit in it. I live'
613(1)
`Madam would speak with me. So, now it comes'
613(1)
`It is no vulgar nature I have wived'
614(1)
`I am to follow her. There is much grace'
614(1)
`We saw the swallows gathering in the sky'
614(1)
`Their sense is with their senses all mix'd in'
615(1)
`He found her by the ocean's moaning verge'
615(1)
`Thus piteously Love closed what he begat'
615(1)
Lucifer in Starlight
616(1)
The Point of Taste
616(1)
Society
617(1)
England Before the Storm
617(1)
Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828--82)
618(13)
The Blessed Damozel
619(2)
Jenny
621(4)
The Woodspurge
625(1)
Even So
625(1)
For The Wine of Circe: By Edward Burne Jones
625(1)
From: The House of Life: A Sonnet-Sequence
626(4)
The Kiss
626(1)
Supreme Surrender
626(1)
The Love-Letter
626(1)
Mid-Rapture
627(1)
Without Her
627(1)
Love's Fatality
627(1)
Autumn Idleness
628(1)
Soul's Beauty
628(1)
Body's Beauty
628(1)
Memorial Thresholds
629(1)
Hoarded Joy
629(1)
A Superscription
629(1)
The One Hope
630(1)
Nuptial Sleep
630(1)
`Found' (For a Picture)
631(1)
Gerald Massey (1828--1907)
631(7)
Song of the Red Republican
632(1)
They Are But Giants While We Kneel
633(1)
O Lay Thy Hand in Mine, Dear!
634(1)
My Love
635(1)
Only a Dream
635(1)
Womankind
636(1)
A Very Early Riser
636(1)
An Angel in the House
636(1)
On a Wedding-Day
636(2)
J. Stanyan Bigg (1828--65)
638(2)
Hartley Pit Catastrophe
638(1)
An Irish Picture
639(1)
Arthur J. Munby (1828--1910)
640(5)
Scent and Jewels
640(1)
The Sexes
641(1)
The Serving Maid
641(1)
Post Mortem
642(2)
Christmas
644(1)
A Deathbed: July Ist, 18---
644(1)
Bessie Rayner Parkes (1829--1925)
645(2)
To Elizabeth Barrett Browning
645(1)
For Adelaide
646(1)
Lizzie Siddal (1829--62)
647(3)
A Silent Wood
647(1)
Lord May I Come?
648(1)
Dead Love
649(1)
Worn Out
649(1)
William Michael Rossetti (1829--1919)
650(4)
Praeraphaelitism (1851) (From: Fine Art, Chiefly Contemporary: Notices Reprinted, with Revisions, 1867)
650(4)
T. E. Brown (1830--97)
654(8)
Clevedon Verses: VIII. The Bristol Channel
655(1)
`Ne Sit Ancillae'
655(1)
My Garden
656(1)
The Well
656(1)
A Sermon at Clevedon: Good Friday
657(1)
Dartmoor: Sunset at Chagford: Homo Loquitur
658(4)
Christina G. Rossetti (1830--94)
662(13)
Song (`She sat and sang alway')
662(1)
Song (`When I am dead, my dearest')
663(1)
`A Bruised Reed Shall He Not Break'
663(1)
Echo
663(1)
In an Artist's Studio
663(1)
A Better Resurrection
664(1)
Another Spring
664(1)
A Birthday
664(1)
An Apple Gathering
665(1)
What Would I Give?
665(1)
Up-hill
665(1)
Winter Rain
666(1)
Goblin Market
666(5)
Promises like Pie-Crust
671(1)
The Lowest Place
672(1)
Twice
672(1)
`Summer is Ended'
673(1)
From: Later Life: A Double Sonnet of Sonnets
673(1)
`This Life is full of numbness and of balk'
673(1)
`I have dreamed of Death: -- what will it be to die'
673(1)
A Christmas Carol
673(1)
Touching `Never'
674(1)
Yet A Little While
674(1)
Alexander Smith (1830--67)
675(2)
Glasgow
675(2)
Isa Knox (1831--1903)
677(2)
The Box. St. Mark xiv.3
677(1)
Unto This Last. St. Matthew xx.16
678(1)
C. S. Calverley (1831--84)
679(5)
Charades: No. VI (``Sikes, housebreaker, of Houndsditch')
680(1)
Contentment: After the Manner of Horace
681(1)
`Forever'
681(1)
Lovers, and a Reflection
682(1)
April: Or, The New Hat
683(1)
Lewis Carroll (1832--98)
684(19)
`How doth the little crocodile'
685(1)
```You are old, Father William,'' the young man said'
685(1)
Jabberwocky
686(1)
`In winter, when the Fields are white'
687(1)
The Hunting of the Snark: An Agony in Eight Fits
688(12)
Poeta Fit, Non Nascitur
700(3)
Joseph Skipsey (1832--1903)
703(2)
Mother Wept
703(1)
`Get up!'
704(1)
The Collier Lad
704(1)
R. W. Dixon (1833--1900)
705(4)
St Mary Magdalene
706(2)
Dream
708(1)
Sonnet (`Give me the darkest corner of a cloud')
709(1)
William Morris (1834--96)
709(17)
The Defence of Guenevere
711(7)
The Haystack in the Floods
718(3)
Summer Dawn
721(1)
The March of the Workers
721(1)
A Garden by the Sea
722(1)
Verses for Pictures: Pomona
723(1)
The End of May
723(1)
How I Became a Socialist (Justice, June 1894)
724(2)
James Thomson (1834--82)
726(23)
A Real Vision of Sin
727(3)
Once in a Saintly Passion
730(1)
Art
731(1)
In the Room
732(5)
From: The City of Dreadful Night
737(11)
Poem
737(1)
`The City is of Night; perchance of Death'
738(2)
`Some say that phantoms haunt those shadowy streets'
740(1)
`It is full strange to him who hears and feels'
740(1)
`What men are they who haunt these fatal glooms'
741(1)
`Large glooms were gathered in the mighty fane'
741(2)
`I wandered in a suburb of the north'
743(2)
`The mighty river flowing dark and deep'
745(1)
`Anear the centre of that northern crest'
746(2)
Despotism Tempered by Dynamite
748(1)
Ellen Johnston (?1835--?74)
749(3)
The Last Sark: Written in 1859
749(1)
An Address to Nature on its Cruelty
750(2)
John Leicester Warren, Lord De Tabley (1835--95)
752(4)
`Maga Circe': A Picture at Rome
753(1)
The Power of Interval
754(1)
Circe
754(1)
The Study of a Spider
755(1)
Thomas Ashe (1836--89)
756(3)
Cousin Carrie
757(1)
Pall-Bearing
757(1)
Remember
758(1)
W. S. Gilbert (1836--1911)
759(2)
(The Æsthete)
759(1)
(Anglicized Utopia)
760(1)
Frances Ridley Havergal (1836--79)
761(4)
The Ministry of Song
762(1)
A Worker's Prayer (`Lord, speak to me that I may speak')
763(1)
Consecration Hymn (`Take my life, and let it be')
764(1)
My Master (`I love, I love my Master')
764(1)
H. Cholmondeley Pennell (1836--?)
765(3)
Little Bo-Peep
765(1)
`Faite a Peindre'
766(1)
The Night Mail North (Euston Square, 1840)
766(2)
Augusta Webster (1837--94)
768(3)
Dead Amy
768(1)
From: Marjory: English Stornelli. Summer:
769(1)
The Heart that Lacks Room
769(1)
The Lovers
769(1)
In the Pamfili-Doria Gardens
770(1)
Henry S. Leigh (1837--83)
771(3)
Crooked Answers (Dedicated to the Laureate)
771(2)
No. 1 -- Vere de Vere
771(1)
No. 2 -- Maud
772(1)
Weatherbound in the Suburbs
773(1)
Songs of the Sick Room: No. 1 -- Cod-Liver Oil
773(1)
Algernon Charles Swinburne (1837--1909)
774(19)
Itylus
775(1)
Anactoria
776(6)
Ilicet
782(3)
Hermaphroditus
785(1)
Fragoletta
786(2)
A Cameo
788(1)
The Garden of Proserpine
788(2)
Love and Sleep
790(1)
`Non Dolet'
791(1)
The Lake of Gaube
791(2)
Walter Pater (1839--94)
793(3)
Conclusion, Studies in the History of the Renaissance ([1868], 1873)
794(2)
Austin Dobson (1840--1921)
796(3)
Love in Winter
796(1)
The Ballad of Prose and Rhyme (Ballade a Double Refrain)
797(1)
The Ballad of Imitation (Ballade)
798(1)
On the Hurry of this Time (To F.G.)
798(1)
Cosmo Monkhouse (1840--1901)
799(3)
Any Soul to Any Body
799(1)
Recollections of Alfred Tennyson: A Day Dream (1869)
800(2)
Thomas Hardy (1840--1928)
802(11)
Her Dilemma (In---Church)
803(1)
Neutral Tones
803(1)
Friends Beyond
804(1)
Nature's Questioning
805(1)
`I Look Into My Glass'
805(1)
`To Life
806(1)
Long Plighted
806(1)
The Self-Unseeing
807(1)
De Profundis I
807(1)
De Profundis II
807(1)
De Profundis III
808(1)
Retrospect: `I Have Lived With Shades'
808(1)
An August Midnight
809(1)
The Darkling Thrush
810(1)
Observations, on Life, Art, and Poetry (From: The Early Life of Thomas Hardy 1840--1891, 1928)
811(2)
W. S. Blunt (1840--1922)
813(3)
A Day in Sussex
813(1)
To Hester on the Stair
814(1)
The Idler's Calendar, May: The London Season
814(1)
Lost Threads
815(1)
After Tennyson
815(1)
John Addington Symonds (1840--93)
816(4)
A Dream
817(1)
An Invitation to the Sledge
817(1)
Vintage
818(1)
Personality
819(1)
Mathilde Blind (1841--96)
820(2)
Autumn Tints
820(1)
The Dead
821(1)
Manchester By Night
821(1)
A Winter Landscape
821(1)
Once We Played
822(1)
Robert Buchanan (1841--1901)
822(17)
The Cities
823(1)
Song of the Slain
824(1)
The Shower
825(1)
Nietzsche
826(1)
Doctor B. (On Re-reading A Collection of Poems)
826(2)
The Fleshly School of Poetry: Mr D. G. Rossetti, by `Thomas Maitland' (The Contemporary Review, October 1871)
828(11)
George Augustus Simcox (1841--1905)
839(1)
Love's Votary
839(1)
Falling Leaves
839(1)
William John Courthope (1842--1917)
840(1)
Tobacco
840(1)
Edward Dowden (1843--1913)
841(3)
In the Garden: VI. A Peach
842(1)
In the Garden: VIII. Later Autumn
842(1)
Burdens
842(1)
The Inner Life: III. Seeking God
843(1)
From April to October: VIII. In July
843(1)
David and Michal (2 Samuel vi. 16)
843(1)
Margaret Veley (1843--87)
844(3)
A Japanese Fan
844(2)
A Town Garden
846(1)
Sonnet (`Have not all songs been sung -- all loves been told?)
847(1)
Arthur W. E. O'Shaughnessy (1844--81)
847(3)
Ode (`We are the music makers')
847(2)
Living Marble
849(1)
Black Marble
849(1)
Andrew Lang (1844--1912)
850(3)
Ballade of Aesthetic Adjectives
851(1)
On the Death of Lord Tennyson
851(1)
Ballade of Cricket
852(1)
The Haunted Homes of England
852(1)
Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844--89)
853(18)
From: Author's Preface
854(2)
The Habit of Perfection
856(1)
The Wreck of the Deutschland
857(6)
God's Grandeur
863(1)
Spring
864(1)
In the Valley of the Elwy
864(1)
The Windhover: To Christ our lord
865(1)
Pied Beauty
865(1)
Binsey poplars: Felled 1879
865(1)
Felix Randal
866(1)
`As kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw flame'
866(1)
Spelt from Sibyl's Leaves
867(1)
(Carrion Comfort)
867(1)
`No worst, there is none. Pitched past pitch of grief
868(1)
`To seem the stranger lies my lot, my life'
868(1)
`I wake and feel the fell of dark, not day'
868(1)
`Patience, hard thing! the hard thing but to pray'
869(1)
`My own heart let me more have pity on; let'
869(1)
Tom's Garland: Upon the Unemployed
869(1)
That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire and of the Comfort of the Resurrection
870(1)
`Thou art indeed just, Lord, if I contend'
871(1)
Edward Carpenter (1844--1929)
871(6)
From: Towards Democracy
872(5)
`Heroes, lovers, judges'
872(1)
`England spreads like a map below me'
872(2)
`In silence I wait and accept all'
874(1)
`Beautiful is the figure of the lusty full-grown groom'
874(1)
In a Manufacturing Town
875(1)
The Elder Soldier in the Brotherhood to the Younger
876(1)
Parted Lips
876(1)
Robert Bridges (1844--1930)
877(4)
London Snow
878(1)
On a Dead Child
878(1)
`I never shall love the snow again'
879(1)
`The north wind came up yesternight'
880(1)
L. S. Bevington (1845--95)
881(2)
Twilight
881(1)
`Egoisme a Deux'
882(1)
Stanza (``The sweetest song that a poet sings')
883(1)
Love and Language
883(1)
Am I to Lose You?
883(1)
Eugene Lee-Hamilton (1845--1907)
883(4)
Fairy Godmothers
884(1)
King Christmas
885(1)
What the Sonnet Is
885(1)
Sunken Gold
885(1)
Song of the Arrow-Poisoners
885(1)
Noon's Dream-Song
886(1)
Among the Firs
887(1)
William Canton (1845--1926)
887(2)
Day-Dreams
888(1)
A New Poet
888(1)
Michael Field (Katherine Harris Bradley (1846--1914) and Edith Emma Cooper (1862--1913)
889(6)
`Maids, not to you my mind doth change'
890(1)
`Come, Gorgo, put the rug in place'
890(1)
La Gioconda, Leonardo da Vinci: The Louvre
891(1)
Spring, Sandro Botticelli: The Accademia of Florence
891(2)
A Pen-Drawing of Leda, Sodoma: The Grand Duke's Palace at Weimar
893(1)
`Sometimes I do despatch my heart'
893(1)
Love's Sour Leisure
893(1)
`Our myrtle is in flower'
894(1)
cyclamens
894(1)
George R. Sims (1847--1922)
895(3)
A Garden Song
895(1)
Undertones: By A Lunatic Laureate
896(1)
Christmassing A La Mode De Slumopolis
896(1)
The Lost Cord (With a Thousand Apologies)
897(1)
Alice Meynell (1847--1922)
898(3)
To One Poem in a Silent Time
898(1)
Renouncement
899(1)
After a Parting
899(1)
The Lady Poverty
900(1)
Cradle-Song at Twilight
900(1)
The Roaring Frost
900(1)
Digby Mackworth Dolben (1848--67)
901(3)
After Reading Aeschylus
902(1)
Sonnets:
902(2)
`One night I dreamt that in a gleaming hall'
902(1)
`I thank thee, Love, that thou hast overthrown'
902(1)
`A boyish friendship! No, respond the chimes'
902(1)
`O come, my king, and fill the palaces'
903(1)
`Lean over me -- ah so, -- let fall'
903(1)
W. H. Mallock (1849--1923)
904(7)
Lines On the Death of a Pet Dog Belonging to Lady Dorothy Nevill
904(1)
Too Late!
905(1)
Human Life
905(1)
Christmas Thoughts, by a Modern Thinker (After Mr. Matthew Arnold)
906(1)
On the Nature of Poetry (From: Every Man His Own Poet: or The Inspired Singer's Recipe Book, 1872)
907(4)
W. E. Henley (1849--1903)
911(16)
In Hospital
912(13)
Enter Patient
912(1)
Waiting
912(1)
Interior
913(1)
Before
913(1)
Operation
913(1)
After
914(1)
Vigil
914(1)
Staff-Nurse: Old Style
915(1)
Lady-Probationer
916(1)
Staff-Nurse: New Style
916(1)
Clinical
916(1)
Etching
917(1)
Casualty
918(1)
Ave, Caesar!
918(1)
`The Chief'
919(1)
House-Surgeon
919(1)
Interlude
919(1)
Children: Private Ward
920(1)
Scrubber
920(1)
Visitor
920(1)
Romance
921(1)
Pastoral
921(1)
Music
922(1)
Suicide
923(1)
Apparition
923(1)
Anterotics
923(1)
Nocturn
924(1)
Discharged
924(1)
`The past was goodly once, and yet, when all is said'
925(1)
Rain
925(1)
`A desolate shore'
925(1)
To W. R. (`Madam Life's a piece in bloom')
926(1)
Henry Bellyse Baildon (1849--1907)
927(4)
Alone in London
927(2)
To a Cabbage Leaf
929(1)
A Moth
929(1)
A Bluebottle
930(1)
Philip Bourke Marston (1850--87)
931(4)
Speechless: Upon the Marriage of Two Deaf and Dumb Persons
931(1)
Sore Longing
931(1)
After
932(1)
The Old Churchyard of Bonchurch
933(1)
To James Thomson, Author of `The City of Dreadful Night'
934(1)
Not Only Rooms Wherein Thy Love Has Been
935(1)
Robert Louis Stevenson (1850--94)
935(6)
The Land of Counterpane
936(1)
My Shadow
936(1)
Block City
937(1)
To Any Reader
937(1)
Christmas at Sea
938(1)
`Say not of me that weakly I declined'
939(1)
`I will make you brooches and toys for your delight'
940(1)
`I have trod the upward and the downward slope'
940(1)
If This Were Faith
940(1)
`My wife and I, in our romantic cot'
941(1)
Theo Marzials (1850--?after 1897)
941(3)
A Tragedy
942(1)
Love's Masquerades
943(1)
Love, the Poet
943(1)
Love, the Rebuker
943(1)
Love, the Traitor
943(1)
Love, the Ideal
943(1)
`I'd like to be the lavender'
944(1)
`The lords of state, and the thieving sparrows'
944(1)
William Renton (1852--? after 1905)
944(3)
Cloud Groupings
945(1)
The Foal
945(1)
Crescent Moon
945(1)
After Nightfall
946(1)
The Shadow of Himself
946(1)
Dull December
947(1)
The Fork of the Road
947(1)
Oscar Wilde (1854--1900)
947(11)
On the Sale by Auction of Keats' Love Letters
948(1)
Fantaisies Decoratives II: Les Ballons
949(1)
Symphony in Yellow
949(1)
The Artist
950(1)
The Ballad of Reading Gaol By C.3.3.
950(8)
Margaret L. Woods (1856--1945)
958(4)
Song (`Weep no more, for why should sorrow')
958(1)
Under the Lamp
959(3)
A Woman's Apology
962(1)
John Davidson (1857--1909)
962(9)
In Romney Marsh
963(1)
Thirty Bob A Week
964(2)
A Loafer
966(1)
A Northern Suburb
967(1)
In the Isle of Dogs
968(1)
Pre-Shakespearianism (From: The Man Forbid And Other Essay, 1910)
969(2)
A. Mary F. Robinson (1857--1949)
971(2)
Men and Monkeys
971(1)
Posies: I
972(1)
Death in the World
972(1)
Alternatives
972(1)
In Affliction
972(1)
An Orchard at Avignon
973(1)
Constance Naden (1889--89)
973(2)
Changed
974(1)
The Lady Doctor
974(1)
To Amy, On Receiving Her Photograph
975(1)
Dollie Radford (1858--1920)
975(2)
Song (`In the first light of the morning')
976(1)
Song (`When first I saw your face, love')
976(1)
Song (`I am wanting to send you a song, love')
976(1)
Soliloquy of a Maiden Aunt
976(1)
E. Nesbit (1858--1924)
977(2)
The Wife Of All Ages
977(1)
Vies Manquees
978(1)
Love's Guerdons
979(1)
J. K. Stephen (1859--92)
979(2)
A Parodist's Apology
980(1)
A Sonnet (`Two voices are there: one is of the deep')
980(1)
A. E. Housman (1859--1936)
981(8)
A. J. J.
982(1)
R. L. S. (`Home is the sailor, home from Sea')
982(1)
From: A Shropshire Lad
982(4)
1887
982(1)
`Loveliest of trees, the cherry now'
983(1)
Reveille
983(1)
`When I watch the living meet'
983(1)
`It nods and curtseys and recovers'
983(1)
To An Athlete Dying Young
983(1)
`Is my team ploughing'
984(1)
`Others, I am not the first'
984(1)
`On Wenlock Edge the wood's in trouble'
984(1)
`Into my heart an air that kills'
985(1)
`Shot? so quick, so clean an ending?'
985(1)
`Bring, in this timeless grave to throw'
985(1)
`Be still, my soul, be still; the arms you bear are brittle'
985(1)
`Now hollow fires burn out to black'
985(1)
`Terence, this is stupid stuff'
986(1)
`Oh who is that young sinner with the handcuffs on his wrists?'
986(1)
`The chestnut casts his flambeaux, and the flowers'
987(1)
Diffugere Nives
988(1)
`The laws of God, the laws of man'
988(1)
`The rain, it streams on stone and hillock'
989(1)
A Conan Doyle (1859--1930)
989(3)
The song of the Bow
990(1)
The Frontier Line
990(1)
A Ballad of the Ranks
991(1)
Francis Thompson (1859--1907)
992(5)
The Hound of Heaven
992(4)
The Way of a Maid
996(1)
The End of It
996(1)
To a Snow-flake
996(1)
Unto this Last
996(1)
Katharine Tynan (1861--1931)
997(2)
The Violet Farm
997(1)
Sheep and Lambs
998(1)
The Foggy Dew
999(1)
May Kendall (1861--1943)
999(3)
In the Drawing-Room
1000(1)
The Sandblast Girl and the Acid Man
1000(1)
A Bonus on Soap
1001(1)
Mary E. Coleridge (1861--1907)
1002(3)
Slowly
1002(1)
Gone
1002(1)
The Other Side of a Mirror
1003(1)
`I saw a stable, low and very bare'
1003(1)
An Insincere Wish Addressed to a Beggar
1004(1)
The Contents of an Ink-Bottle
1004(1)
`Two differing sorrows made these eyes grow dim'
1005(1)
Words
1005(1)
Amy Levy (1861--89)
1005(6)
Magdalen
1006(2)
Ballade of an Omnibus
1008(1)
London Poets (In Memoriam)
1008(1)
On the Threshold
1009(1)
Last Words
1009(1)
In the Mile End Road
1010(1)
Contradictions
1010(1)
Henry Newbolt (1862--1938)
1011(2)
Drake's Drum
1011(1)
Vitai Lampada
1012(1)
Victor Plarr (1863--1929)
1013(3)
In a Norman Church
1013(1)
Shadows
1014(1)
On a Reading of Matthew Arnold
1014(1)
A Nocturne at Greenwich
1015(1)
Arthur Symons (1865--1945)
1016(4)
The Street-Singer
1016(1)
Maquillage
1017(1)
The Absinthe-Drinker
1017(1)
April Midnight
1017(1)
Nora on the Pavement
1017(1)
Hallucination: I
1018(1)
Nerves
1018(1)
Song (Her eyes say Yes, her lips say No)
1018(1)
Bianca: VIII. Memory
1019(1)
Bianca: X. Liber Amoris
1019(1)
The Last Memory
1020(1)
W. B. Yeats (1865--1939)
1020(11)
He Remembers Forgotten Beauty
1022(1)
He Gives His Beloved Certain Rhymes
1022(1)
The Lake Isle of Innisfree
1023(1)
Who Goes With Fergus?
1023(1)
The Man Who Dreamed of Fairyland
1023(1)
To Ireland in the Coming Times
1024(2)
He Reproves the Curlew
1026(1)
The Cap and Bells
1026(1)
He Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven
1027(1)
The Symbolism of Poetry (From: Ideas of Good and Evil, 1903)
1027(4)
Laurence Housman (1865--1959)
1031(3)
Failure
1032(1)
As the Flocks for the Brooks
1032(1)
Love Importunate
1033(1)
Rudyard Kipling (1865--1936)
1034(7)
Tommy
1035(1)
Mandalay
1036(1)
Gentlemen-Rankers
1037(1)
Recessional, 1897
1038(1)
My Great and Only (From: Abaft the Funnel, 1909)
1039(2)
Richard Le Gallienne (1866--1947)
1041(3)
Happy Letter
1042(1)
The World is Wide
1042(1)
A Ballad of London
1042(1)
Jenny Dead
1043(1)
An Inscription
1043(1)
Song (`She's somewhere in the sunlight strong')
1044(1)
John Gray (1866--1934)
1044(4)
Less Demoiselles de Sauve
1045(1)
The Barber
1045(1)
The Vines
1046(1)
`Did we not, Darling, you and I'
1046(1)
Poem (`Geranium, houseleek, laid in oblong beds')
1047(1)
Spleen
1047(1)
April (1896)
1047(1)
Dora Sigerson Shorter (1866--1918)
1048(4)
In Wintry Weather
1048(1)
A Summer's Day
1049(1)
The Lover
1049(1)
A Vagrant Heart
1050(1)
The Wind on the Hills
1051(1)
The Rain
1051(1)
Ernest Dowson (1867--1900)
1052(3)
Vitae Summa Brevis Spem Nos Vetat Incohare Longam
1052(1)
Non Sum Qualis Eram Bonae Sub Regno Cynarae
1053(1)
Spleen
1053(1)
`You would have understood me, had you waited'
1054(1)
Terre Promise
1055(1)
Lionel Johnson (1867--1902)
1055(4)
Victory
1056(1)
The Church of a Dream
1057(1)
The Age of a Dream
1057(1)
The Roman Stage
1057(1)
The Dark Angel
1058(1)
Hilaire Belloc (1870--1953)
1059(5)
The Night
1060(1)
The Poor of London
1060(1)
The Justice of the Peace
1061(1)
The South Country
1061(2)
On the Gift of a Book to a Child
1063(1)
Further Reading 1064(16)
Index of Titles and First Lines 1080(15)
Index to the Notes 1095

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