Contents
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Contents
- Close section Front Matter
- Escorial
- Aeschylus: Promethêus Desmotês
- Il Mystico
- A windy day in summer
- A fragment of anything you like
- A Vision of the Mermaids
- Close sectionWinter with the Gulf Stream
- Spring and Death
- [Fragments I—c. December 1863 to April 1864]
- Pilate
- 'She schools the flighty pupils of her eyes'
- [A soliloquy of one of the spies left in the wilderness]
- Close sectionThe Lover's Stars
- 'During the eastering of untainted morns'
- Close sectionThe peacock's eye
- Love preparing to fly
- Barnfloor and Winepress
- Close sectionNew Readings
- 'He hath abolish'd the old drouth'
- Close sectionRest and Heaven-Haven
- 'I must hunt down their prize'
- 'Why should their foolish bands, their hopeless hearses'
- 'Why if it be so, for the dismal morn'
- 'It was a hard thing to undo this knot'
- 'Glimmer'd along the square-cut steep'
- 'Of virtues I most warmly bless'
- 'Miss Story's character! too much you ask'
- 'Her prime of life—cut down too soon'
- 'Did Helen steal my love from me?'
- [Fragments II—July to September 1864
- Close section[Fragments of] Floris in Italy
- Close section[Epigrams]
- Io
- The Rainbow
- 'No, they are come; their horn is lifted up'
- 'Now I am minded to take pipe in hand'
- [Star Images: September to December 1864]
- A Voice from the World
- [Fragments III—October 1864 to April 1865]
- 'A pure gold lily, but by the pure gold lily'
- 'Although she be more white'
- Close section[St. Dorothea]
- 'Proved Etherege prudish, selfish, hypocrite, heartless';
- Close sectionRichard
- 'All as that moth call'd Underwing, alighted'
- The Queen's Crowning
- For Stephen and Barberie
- 'Boughs being pruned, birds preenèd, show more fair'
- 'I hear a noise of waters drawn away'
- 'When eyes that cast about the heights of heaven'
- The Summer Malison
- St. Thecla
- Easter Communion
- 'O Death, Death, He is come'
- 'Love me as I love thee. O double sweet!'
- Close sectionTo Oxford
- 'Where are thou friend, whom I shall never see'
- 'Confirmed beauty will not bear a stress'
- Close sectionThe beginning of the end
- The Alchemist in the city
- 'Myself unholy, from myself unholy'
- 'See how Spring opens with disabling cold'
- Continuation of R. Garnett's Nix
- [Fragments IV—July, August 1865]
- 'O what a silence is this wilderness!'
- Close sectionCastara Victrix
- 'My prayers must meet a brazen heaven'
- Shakspere
- 'Trees by their yield'
- 'Let me be to Thee as the circling bird'
- The Half-way House
- A Complaint
- 'Moonless darkness stands between'
- 'The earth and heaven, so little known'
- Close sectionAs it fell upon a day
- The Nightingale
- Close sectionThe Habit of Perfection and The Kind Betrothal
- Nondum
- Easter
- Summa
- [Jesu Dulcis Memoria]
- Inundatio Oxoniana
- Close sectionEcquis binas and 'How well Thou comfortest!'
- Close section[Latin Elegiacs]
- [Elegiacs after The Convent Threshold] 'Fraterno nobis'
- Cur me querellis exanimas tuis?
- Persicos odi, puer, apparatus
- Odi profanum volgus et arceo
- The Elopement
- To Jesus living in Mary
- In Festo Nativitatis: Ad Matrem Virginem
- 'Haec te jubent salvere, quod possunt, loca'
- 'O praedestinata bis'
- Ad Mariam
- O Deus, ego amo te: 'O God, I love thee, I love thee'
- Rosa Mystica
- 'Quique haec membra malis vis esse obnoxia multis'
- Close sectionOn St. Winefred
- 'Miror surgentum per puram Oriona noctem'
- Close sectionS. Thomae Aquinatis Rhythmus
- [Author's Preface on Rhythm]
- Close sectionThe Wreck of the Deutschland
- Close sectionThe Silver Jubilee, etc.
- Moonrise June 19 1876
- The Woodlark
- Close sectionPenmean Pool
- In Theclam Virginem
- Ochenaid Saint Francis Xavier
- [Margaret Clitheroe]
- 'Hope holds to Christ the mind's own mirror out'
- 'Murphy gives sermons so fierce and hell-fiery'
- God's Grandeur
- The Starlight Night
- The Lantern out of doors
- 'The dark-out Lucifer detesting this'
- 'As kingfishers catch fire, dragonflies draw flame'
- Ad Reverendum Patrem Fratrem Thomam Burke
- Spring and Death
- The Sea and the Skylark
- In the Valley of the Elwy
- The Windhover
- Pied Beauty
- Plates
- The Caged Skylark
- Close sectionMatchless Mercy, etc.
- Hurrahing in Harvest
- The Loss of the Eurydice
- The May Magnificat
- 'The furl of fresh-leaved dogrose'
- Close section'Denis, Whose motionable, alert, most vaulting wit', etc.
- Duns Scotus's Oxford
- Binsey Poplars
- Henry Purcell
- 'Repeat that, repeat'
- The Candle Indoors
- Close sectionThe Handsome Heart
- 'Who shaped these walls has shewn'
- Cheery Beggar
- The Bugler's First Communion
- Andromeda
- Morning, Midday, and Evening Sacrifice
- Peace
- At the Wedding March
- Felix Randal
- Brothers
- Spring and Fall
- Milton
- Inversnaid
- Angelus ad Virginem
- The Leaden Echo and the Golden Echo
- Ribblesdale
- Close sectionA Trio of Triolets
- The Blessed Virgin compared to the Air we Breathe
- 'The times are nightfall, look, their light grows less'
- Close sectionSt. Winefred's Well
- 'To seem the stranger lies my lot, my life'
- 'I wake and feel the fell of dark, not day'
- 'Strike, churl; hurl, cheerless wind, then; heltering hail'
- 'No worst, there is none. Pitched past pitch of grief'
- 'To what serves Mortal Beauty?'
- 'Not, I'll not, carrion comfort, Despair, not feast on thee'
- 'Yes. Why do we all, seeing of a soldier, bless him? bless'
- 'Thee, God, I come from, to thee go'
- 'Patience, hard thing! the hard thing but to pray'
- 'My own heart let me more have pity on'
- To his Watch
- Close section[Songs from Shakespeare, in Latin and Greek]
- Robert Bridges: 'In all things beautiful, I cannot see' [Incomplete Latin version]
- Spelt from Sibyl's Leaves
- On the Portrait of Two Beautiful Young People
- Harry Ploughman
- [Ashboughs]: 'Not all of my eyes see, wandering on the world'
- Tom's Garland
- Epithalamion
- 'The sea took pity: it interposed with doom'
- That Nature is a Heraclitean Fire
- 'What shall I do for the land that bred me'
- Close sectionSt Alphonus Rodriguez
- 'Thou art indeed just, Lord, if I content'
- 'The shepherd's brow, fronting forked lightning, owns'
- To R. B.
- Close section End Matter