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Contents
- Close section Front Matter
- Close sectionThe Poems
- Close sectionDated Poems and Fragments
- 1. Will the day be bright or cloudy?
- 2. High waveing heather 'neath stormy blasts bending
- 3. Red breast early in the morning
- 4. There shines the moon, at noon of night
- 5. The night of storms has past
- 6. I saw thee child one summers day
- 7. O God of heaven! the dream of horror
- 8. Lord of Elbë, on Elbë hill
- 9. Alone I sat the summer day
- 10. The battle had passed from the height
- 11. A sudden chasm of ghastly light
- 12. Lines ("Far away is the land of rest")
- 13. The Old church tower and Garden wall
- 14. Now trust a breast that trusts in you
- 15. Sleep brings no joy to me
- 16. The night is darkening around me
- 17. O mother I am not regreting
- 18. To a Wreath of snow
- 19. Lines ("I die but when the grave shall press")
- 20. Song by Julius Angora
- 21. Fall leaves fall die flowers away
- 22. Weaned from life and torn away
- 23. The wide cathedral Isles are lone
- 24. Why do I hate that lone green dell?
- 25. O wander not so far away!
- 26. Gleneden's Dream
- 27. Song to A A
- 28. Darkness was over Gondall every face
- 29. None of my kindred now can tell
- 30. 'Twas one of those dark cloudy days
- 31. Dougleses Ride
- 32. For him who struck thy foreign string
- 33. The evening sun was sinking down
- 34. Song by Julius Brenzaida to G.S. ("Geraldine, the moon is shining")
- 35. Song by J. Brenzaida to G.S. ("I knew not 't was so dire a crime")
- 36. Where were ye all? and where wert thou
- 37. Light up thy halls! 'Tis closing day
- 38. O Dream, where art thou now?
- 39. Loud without the wind was roaring
- 40. A little while, a little while
- 41. How still, how happy! those are words
- 42. The bluebell is the sweetest flower
- 43. The night was Dark yet winter breathed
- 44. What winter floods what showers of Spring
- 45. From our evening fireside now
- 46. Song ("King Julius left the south country")
- 47. Lines ("The soft unclouded blue of air")
- 48. To the bluebell—
- 49. I am the only being whose doom
- 50. May Flowers are opening
- 51. Lines by Claudia ("I did not sleep 'twas noon of day")
- 52. I know not how it falls on me
- 53. Written on returning to the P. of I. on the 10th of January 1827—
- 54. Month after month year after year
- 55. A Farewell to Alexandria—
- 56. And now the housedog streched once more
- 57. Come hither child—who gifted thee
- 58. Shed no tears o'er that tomb
- 59. Mild the mist upon the hill
- 60. How long will you remain the midnight hour
- 61. "The starry night shall tidings bring"
- 62. Fair sinks the summer evening now
- 63. Alcona in its changing mood
- 64. The organ swells the trumpets sound
- 65. Song ("O between distress and pleasure")
- 66. The wind I hear it sighing
- 67. There was a time when my cheek burned
- 68. Stanzas to — ("Well, some may hate and some may scorn")
- 69. The wind was rough which tore
- 70. That wind I used to hear it swelling
- 71. Heavens glory shone where he was laid
- 72. Written in the Gaaldine prison caves To A.G.A.
- 73. Far, far away is mirth withdrawn
- 74. It is too late to call thee now
- 75. Stanzas ("I'll not weep that thou art going to leave me")
- 76. At such a time, in such a spot
- 77. If greif for greif can touch thee
- 78. Tis moon light summer moonlight
- 79. The night wind
- 80. Companions all day long we've stood
- 81. A.G.A. The Death of
- 82. And like myself lone wholey lone
- 83. The Old Stoic
- 84. Shall Earth no more inspire thee
- 85. Aye there it is! It wakes to night
- 86. I see around me tombstones grey
- 87. Geraldine
- 88. Rosina
- 89. I do not weep, I would not weep
- 90. In the same place, when Nature wore
- 91. Had there been falshood in my breast
- 92. Written in Aspin Castle—
- 93. Self-Interrogation
- 94. On the fall of Zalona
- 95. How Clear She Shines
- 96. To A.S. 1830 ("Where beams the sun the brightest")
- 97. Thy Guardians are asleep
- 98. In the earth, the earth shalt thou be laid
- 99. Hope
- 100. Lie down and rest—the fight is done
- 101. T'was yesterday at early dawn
- 102. The day is done—the winter sun
- 103. My Comforter
- 104. This summer wind, with thee and me
- 105. A Day Dream
- 106. How few, of all the hearts that loved
- 107. Song ("The linnet in the rocky dells")
- 108. To Imagination
- 109. Come, the wind may never again
- 110. Plead for Me
- 111. Faith and Despondency
- 112. From a Dungeon Wall in the Southern College—
- 113. Honour's Martyr
- 114. A Death-Scene
- 115. The Philosopher
- 116. Remembrance
- 117. Death
- 118. Stars
- 119. A thousand sounds of happiness
- 120a. Heavy hangs the raindrop
- 120b. Child of Delight! with sunbright hair
- 121. Anticipation
- 122. I know that tonight, the wind is sighing
- 123. Silent is the House—all are laid asleep
- 124. The Prisoner: A Fragment
- 125. No coward soul is mine
- 126. Why ask to know the date—the clime?
- 127. Why ask to know what date what clime
- Close sectionUndated Poems and Fragments
- 128. Love is like the wild rose briar
- 129. Sympathy
- 130. "Thou standest in the green-wood now"
- 131. Come, walk with me
- 132. Sleep not dream not this bright day
- 133. Alas that she
- 134. Deep deep down in the silent grave
- 135. Here with my knee upon thy stone
- 136. O come again what chains withhold
- 137. Was it with the feilds of green
- 138. How loud the Storm sounds round the Hall!
- 139. What use is it to slumber here
- 140. O evening why is thy light so sad?
- 141. Its over now Ive known it all
- 142. O Hinder me by no delay
- 143. I'll come when thou art sadest
- 144. I would have touched the heavnly key
- 145. It was night and on the mountains
- 146. Yes holy be thy resting place
- 147. Lonly at her window sitting
- 148. There are two trees in a lonely feild
- 149. And the wind swept past her hopeless ear
- 150. What is that smoke that ever still
- 151. Still as she looked the iron clouds
- 152. Away away resign me now
- 153. It will not shine again
- 154. None but one beheld him dying
- 155. Coldly bleakly drearily
- 156. Old Hall of Time ruined lonly now
- 157. Cold clear and blue the morning heaven
- 158. Tell me tell me smileing child
- 159. The inspiring musics thrilling sound
- 160. Strong I stand thought I have borne
- 161. I paused on the threshold I turned to the sky
- 162. O come with me thus ran the song
- 163. Woods you need not frown on me
- 164. How golden bright from earth and heaven
- 165. Not a vapour had stained the breezless blue
- 166. Only some spires of bright green grass
- 167. The sun has set and the long grass now
- 168. Lady in your palace Hall
- 169. And first an hour of mournful museing
- 170. Wind sink to rest in the heather
- 171. Long neglect has worn away
- 172. Awaking morning laughs from heaven
- 173. Her sisters and her brothers feet
- 174. O Harold while the darkness falls
- 175. Tis evening now the sun descends
- 176. We wander on we have no rest
- 177. What Shadow is it
- 178. There let thy bleeding branch atone
- 179. Upon her aching breast
- 180. I gazed within thine ernest eyes
- 181. All hushed and still within the house
- 182. Iernës eyes were glazed and dim
- 183. When days of Beauty deck the earth
- 184. Still beside that dreary water
- 185. There swept adown that dreary glen
- 186. In dungeons dark I cannot sing
- 187. I'm happiest when most away
- 188. Methinks this heart should rest awhile
- 189. That dreary lake that midnight sky
- 190. His land may burst the galling chain
- 191. It is not pride it is not shame
- 192. She dried her tears and they did smile
- 193. But the hearts that once adored me
- 194. Start not upon the minster wall
- 195. My heart is not enrapturd now
- 196. What woke it then? a little child
- 197. I heard it then you heard it too
- 198. Through the doors of yester night
- 199. Harp of wild and dream like Strain
- 200. All day I've toiled but not with pain
- 201. Stanzas ("Often rebuked, yet always back returning")
- Close sectionDated Poems and Fragments
- Close section End Matter