- Contents
- Threnodia
- The Serenade
- Song. "life up the curtains of thine eyes"
- The Departed
- The Boblink
- Song. "What reck I of the stars, when I"
- The Poet
- Flowers
- The Lover
- To E. W. G.
- Isabel
- Music
- Song. "O! I must look on that sweet face"
- Ianthe
- Love's Altar
- My Love
- With a Pressed Flower
- Impartiality
- Bellerophon
- Something Natural
- The Syrens
- A Feeling
- The Beggar
- Serenade
- Irené
- The Lost Child
- The Church
- The Unlovely
- Love-Song
- Song. "All things are sad
- A Love-Dream
- Fourth of July Ode
- Sphinx
- Sonnets.
- I. Disappointment
- II. "Great human nature"
- III. To a Friend
- IV. Continued
- V. "O child of Nature"
- VI. "For this true nobleness"
- VII. To —
- VIII. Continued
- IX. "Why should we ever weary"
- X. Green Mountains
- XI. "My friend, adown Life's valley"
- XII. "Verse cannot say how beautiful"
- XIII. "The soul would fain"
- XIV. "I saw a gate"
- XV. "I would not have this perfect love"
- XVI. "To the dark, narrow house"
- XVII. "I fain would give to thee"
- XVIII. "Much had I mused"
- XIX. "Sayest thou, most beautiful"
- XX. "Poet! who sittest in thy pleasant room"
- XXI. To a Voice heard in Mount Auburn
- XXIII. On reading Spenser again
- XXIV. "Light of mine eyes!"
- XXV. "Silent as one who treads"
- XXVI. "A gentleness that grows of steady faith"
- XXVII. "When the glad soul is full"
- XXVIII. To the Evening-star
- XXIX. Reading
- XXX. To —, after a Snow-storm
- Sonnets on names.
- I. Edith
- II. Rose
- III. Mary
- IV. Caroline
- V. Anne
- "Goe, Little Booke!"
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