| Poem Title | First Lines | Period | # Lines | # Reads |
| 1: A London Idyll | On grass, on gravel, in the sun, | | 51 | 800 |
| 2: A Protest | Light words they were, and lightly, falsely said: | 1845 | 28 | 1019 |
| 3: A River Pool | Sweet streamlet bason! at thy side | 1840 | 17 | 1146 |
| 4: A Song of Autumn | My wind is turned to bitter north, | | 16 | 1131 |
| 5: Actæon 1 | Over a mountain slope with lentisk, and with abounding | | 33 | 773 |
| 6: Ah! Yet Consider It Again! | Old things need not be therefore true,’ | 1851 | 16 | 852 |
| 7: Alcaics | So spake the voice: and as with a single life | | 12 | 801 |
| 8: All is well | Whate’er you dream with doubt possest, | | 14 | 758 |
| 9: Alteram Partem | Or shall I say, Vain word, false thought, | 1849 | 20 | 795 |
| 10: Am I with you, or you with me? | Am I with you, or you with me? | 1852 | 16 | 1049 |
| 11: Amours De Voyage - Canto II | Is it illusion? or does there a spirit from perfecter ages, | | 351 | 743 |
| 12: Amours De Voyage - Canto III | Yet to the wondrous St. Peter’s, and yet to the solemn Rotonda, | | 306 | 686 |
| 13: Amours De Voyage - Canto IV | Eastward, or Northward, or West? I wander and ask as I wander, | | 84 | 738 |
| 14: Amours De Voyage - Canto V | There is a city, upbuilt on the quays of the turbulent Arno, | | 228 | 742 |
| 15: Amours De Voyage. | Over the great windy waters, and over the clear-crested summit, | | 294 | 790 |
| 16: An Evening Walk In Spring | It was but some few nights ago | 1836 | 72 | 753 |
| 17: An Incident | Twas on a sunny summer day I trod a mighty city’s street, | 1836 | 40 | 781 |
| 18: At Rome | O, richly soiled and richly sunned, | | 54 | 766 |
| 19: Bethesda | I saw again the spirits on a day, | 1849 | 37 | 814 |
| 20: Blessed are they that have not seen! | O happy they whose hearts receive | | 32 | 714 |
| 21: Cold Comfort | Say, will it, when our hairs are grey, | | 26 | 1053 |
| 22: Columbus | How in God’s name did Columbus get over | | 33 | 705 |
| 23: Come back, come back, behold with straining mast | Come back, come back, behold with straining mast | | 40 | 1067 |
| 24: Come home, come home! and where is home for me | Come home, come home! and where is home for me, | 1852 | 30 | 1103 |
| 25: Come, Poet, Come! | Come, Poet, come! A thousand labourers ply their task, | | 42 | 737 |
| 26: Darkness | But that from slow dissolving pomps of dawn | | 6 | 901 |
| 27: Dipsychus - Part I | The scene is different, and the place, the air | | 560 | 725 |
| 28: Dipsychus - Part II | Thunder and rain! O dear, O dear! | | 1226 | 714 |
| 29: Dipsychus Continued - (A Fragment.) | O God! O God! and must I still go on | | 206 | 737 |
| 30: Duty | Duty that’s to say, complying, | | 44 | 912 |
| 31: Easter Day | Through the great sinful streets of Naples as I past, | 1849 | 148 | 786 |
| 32: Easter Day II | So in the sinful streets, abstracted and alone, | | 41 | 788 |
| 33: Elegiacs | From thy far sources, ’mid mountains airily climbing, | 1861 | 32 | 712 |
| 34: Epi-strauss-ium | Matthew and Mark and Luke and holy John | | 15 | 775 |
| 35: Epilogue To Dipsychus | I don’t very well understand what it’s all about, | | 20 | 827 |
| 36: Even the Winds and the Sea obey | Said the Poet, I wouldn’t maintain, | | 24 | 695 |
| 37: Farewell, farewell! Her vans the vessel tries | Farewell, farewell! Her vans the vessel tries, | 1852 | 28 | 1027 |
| 38: Fragments of the Mystery of the Fall 1 | Since that last evening we have fallen indeed! | | 845 | 747 |
| 39: Genesis XXIV | Who is this man that walketh in the field, | | 64 | 971 |
| 40: Green fields of England! wheresoe’er | Green fields of England! wheresoe’er | 1852 | 13 | 1111 |
| 41: High and Low | The grasses green of sweet content | | 24 | 779 |
| 42: Ho Thëos meta sou — God be with you | Farewell, my Highland lassie! when the year returns around, | | 24 | 935 |
| 43: Hope evermore and believe! | Hope evermore and believe, O man, for e’en as thy thought | | 26 | 789 |
| 44: In a Lecture Room | Away, haunt thou me not, Thou vain Philosophy! | | 15 | 705 |
| 45: In a London Square | Put forth thy leaf, thou lofty plane, | | 16 | 786 |
| 46: In Stratis Viarum | Blessed are those who have not seen, | | 16 | 1030 |
| 47: In The Depths | It is not sweet content, be sure, | | 12 | 836 |
| 48: In the Great Metropolis | Each for himself is still the rule | | 20 | 800 |
| 49: Ite Domum Saturæ, venit Hesperus | The skies have sunk, and hid the upper snow | | 46 | 766 |
| 50: Jacob | My sons, and ye the children of my sons, | | 98 | 775 |
| 51: Jacob’s Wives | These are the words of Jacob’s wives, the words | | 125 | 781 |
| 52: Last Words. Napoleon and Wellington | Is it this, then, O world-warrior, | 1852 | 70 | 739 |
| 53: Life is Struggle | To wear out heart, and nerves, and brain, | | 22 | 778 |
| 54: Love and Reason | When panting sighs the bosom fill, | 1844 | 90 | 802 |
| 55: Love, Not Duty | Thought may well be ever ranging, | 1841 | 27 | 970 |
| 56: Mari Magno or Tales on Board1 | A youth was I. An elder friend with me, | | 108 | 938 |
| 57: My Tale | I stayed at La Quenille, ten miles or more | | 320 | 945 |
| 58: Natura naturans | Beside me, in the car, she sat, | | 88 | 958 |
| 59: Noli Æmulari | In controversial foul impureness | | 16 | 911 |
| 60: O ship, ship, ship | O ship, ship, ship, That travellest over the sea, | 1853 | 16 | 1088 |
| 61: O Thou of Little Faith. | It may be true That while we walk the troublous tossing sea, | | 17 | 927 |
| 62: Parting | O tell me, friends, while yet we part, | | 42 | 915 |
| 63: Perchè pensa? Pensando s’ invecchia. | To spend uncounted years of pain, | | 11 | 925 |
| 64: Peschiera | What voice did on my spirit fall, | 1849 | 40 | 954 |
| 65: Prologue To Dipsychus | I hope it is in good plain verse,’ said my uncle, | | 2 | 717 |
| 66: Qua Cursum Ventus | As ships, becalmed at eve, that lay | | 28 | 961 |
| 67: Qui Laborat, Orat | O only Source of all our light and life, | | 28 | 1064 |
| 68: Repose in Egypt | O happy mother! while the man wayworn | | 30 | 1011 |
| 69: Revival | So I went wrong, Grievously wrong, but folly crushed itself, | 1839 | 20 | 994 |
| 70: Say Not the Struggle Nought Availeth | Say not, the struggle nought availeth, | 1849 | 16 | 1068 |
| 71: Sehnsucht | Whence are ye, vague desires, Which carry men along, | | 73 | 1039 |
| 72: Selene | My beloved, is it nothing Though we meet not, neither can, | | 74 | 1016 |
| 73: Seven Sonnets on the Thought of Death 1 | That children in their loveliness should die | | 95 | 1004 |
| 74: Shadow and Light | Cease, empty Faith, the Spectrum saith, | | 32 | 1044 |
| 75: Sic Itur | As, at a railway junction, men | 1845 | 21 | 1104 |
| 76: Solvitur acris Hiems | Youth, that went, is come again, | | 24 | 1010 |
| 77: Some future day when what is now is not | Some future day when what is now is not, | 1852 | 20 | 1055 |
| 78: Songs in Absence 1 | Farewell, farewell! Her vans the vessel tries, | | 334 | 998 |
| 79: That out of sight is out of mind | That out of sight is out of mind | 1853 | 28 | 1041 |
| 80: The Bothie of Tober-na-vuolich | It was the afternoon; and the sports were now at the ending. | | 180 | 1082 |
| 81: The Bothie of Tober-na-vuolich - II | Morn, in yellow and white, came broadening out from the mountains, | | 279 | 919 |
| 82: The Bothie of Tober-na-vuolich - III | So in the golden morning they parted and went to the westward. | | 263 | 966 |
| 83: The Bothie of Tober-na-vuolich - IV | So in the golden weather they waited. But Philip returned not. | | 249 | 919 |
| 84: The Bothie of Tober-na-vuolich - IX | So on the morrow’s morrow, with Term-time dread returning, | | 203 | 752 |
| 85: The Bothie of Tober-na-vuolich - V | So in the cottage with Adam the pupils five together | | 128 | 918 |
| 86: The Bothie of Tober-na-vuolich - VI | Bright October was come, the misty-bright October, | | 105 | 756 |
| 87: The Bothie of Tober-na-vuolich - VII | For she confessed, as they sat in the dusk, and he saw not her blushes, | | 189 | 732 |
| 88: The Bothie of Tober-na-vuolich - VIII | But a revulsion again came over the spirit of Elspie, | | 181 | 741 |
| 89: The Clergyman’s First Tale | A youth and maid upon a summer night | | 284 | 1025 |
| 90: The Clergyman’s Second Tale | Edward and Jane a married couple were, | | 335 | 1049 |
| 91: The Dream Land | To think that men of former days | | 40 | 714 |
| 92: The Hidden Love | O let me love my love unto myself alone, | | 32 | 711 |
| 93: The Higher Courage 1 | Come back again, my olden heart! | 1840 | 56 | 702 |
| 94: The Latest Decalogue | Thou shalt have one God only; who | | 20 | 742 |
| 95: The Lawyers First Tale | Dearest of boys, please come to-day, | | 759 | 747 |
| 96: The Lawyer’s Second Tale | A highland inn among the western hills, | | 484 | 750 |
| 97: The Mate’s Story | I’ve often wondered how it is, at times | | 86 | 906 |
| 98: The mighty ocean rolls and raves | The mighty ocean rolls and raves, | 1853 | 36 | 1041 |
| 99: The Music of the World and of the Soul | Why should I say I see the things I see not? | | 59 | 1063 |
| 100: The New Sinai | Lo, here is God, and there is God! | 1845 | 126 | 919 |
| 101: The Questioning Spirit | The human spirits saw I on a day, | 1847 | 51 | 953 |
| 102: The Shadow 1 | I dreamed a dream: I dreamt that I espied, | | 106 | 1019 |
| 103: The Shady Lane | Whence comest thou? shady lane, and why and how? | 1839 | 14 | 1084 |
| 104: The Silver Wedding 1 | The silver Wedding! on some pensive ear | 1845 | 60 | 1042 |
| 105: The Song Of Lamech | Hearken to me, ye mothers of my tent: | | 101 | 1069 |
| 106: The Stream Of Life | O stream descending to the sea, | | 24 | 1070 |
| 107: The Thread of Truth | Truth is a golden thread, seen here and there | 1839 | 12 | 1046 |
| 108: There is No God, the Wicked Sayeth | There is no God,” the wicked saith, | | 32 | 1160 |
| 109: Thesis and Antithesis | If that we thus are guilty doth appear, | | 42 | 1139 |
| 110: Thoughts of Home.1 | I watched them from the window, thy children at their play, | | 30 | 998 |
| 111: Through a Glass Darkly | What we, when face to face we see | | 32 | 1017 |
| 112: To a Sleeping Child | Lips, lips, open! Up comes a little bird that lives inside | | 21 | 991 |
| 113: Translations from Goethe | Over every hill All is still; In no leaf of any tree | | 30 | 997 |
| 114: Translations Of Iliad | Goddess, the anger sing of the Pelean Achilles, | | 130 | 691 |
| 115: Two Moods | Ah, blame him not because he’s gay! | | 42 | 1031 |
| 116: Uranus1 | When on the primal peaceful blank profound, | | 33 | 1011 |
| 117: Wen Gott betrügt, ist wohl betrogen. | Is it true, ye gods, who treat us | | 28 | 942 |
| 118: Were you with me, or I with you | Were you with me, or I with you, | 1853 | 12 | 1003 |
| 119: What went ye out for to see? | Across the sea, along the shore, | 1851 | 28 | 945 |
| 120: Where lies the land to which the ship would go | Where lies the land to which the ship would go? | 1852 | 16 | 1026 |
| 121: Wirkung in der Ferne | When the dews are earliest falling, | | 27 | 979 |
| 122: Written on a Bridge | When soft September brings again | 1840 | 12 | 980 |
| 123: Ye Flags of Picadilly | Ye flags of Piccadilly, Where I posted up and down, | | 24 | 953 |
| 124: Youth and Age | Dance on, dance on, we see, we see | | 45 | 1011 |
| 125: ???????? (Greek - Poems and Prose Remains, Vol II) | Go, foolish thoughts, and join the throng | 1850 | 24 | 706 |
| 126: ??? ????? (Greek - Poems and Prose Remains, Vol II) | On the mountain, in the woodland, | | 110 | 688 |
| 127: ????? ???· ????? ????? (Greek - Poems and Prose Remains, Vol II) | Upon the water, in the boat, | | 24 | 904 |
| 128: ?ò ???ó? (Greek Poems - Poems and Prose Remains, Vol II) | I have seen higher holier things than these, | 1841 | 20 | 1047 |
| 129: ????? ?????? (Greek Poems) | O thou whose image in the shrine | | 40 | 880 |
| 130: ?????? ???? ??? ?????? (Greek Poems) | If, when in cheerless wanderings, dull and cold, | 1841 | 16 | 940 |
| 131: ‘Blank Misgivings Of A Creature Moving About In Worlds Not Realised.’ | Here am I yet, another twelvemonth spent, | 1841 | 184 | 700 |
| 132: ‘With Whom is No Variableness, Neither Shadow of Turning.’ | It fortifies my soul to know | | 6 | 881 |