Sonnet on resuming the Lyre |
3 |
Address to Hope |
4 |
Sonnet |
7 |
Irregular Stanza, written during affliction |
8 |
To a beloved Sister, on her birth-day |
9 |
Lines sent with a plain hair ring to a dear Friend |
10 |
Written in a Grotto, at Runcton, near Lynn Regis,
Norfolk |
11 |
Stanzas written during a Storm at Middleton |
12 |
An Adieu |
13 |
To Death |
14 |
To Marianne |
15 |
Lines written on a court-plaister case |
16 |
Song |
17 |
To Sarah J------- |
18 |
To the memory of an affectionate Mother |
19 |
Sonnet |
20 |
To ------- |
21 |
Stanzas to a Rose |
22 |
To Ariel |
24 |
Midnight Stanzas |
25 |
Sonnet, the idea taken from Ossians Hymn
to the Evening Star |
27 |
Sonnet written during sickness and sorrow |
28 |
Written in an Album |
29 |
Irregular Stanzas |
30 |
Serenade |
33 |
Ladys Answer |
35 |
Lines written during the severe illness of my youngest
Girl |
38 |
To ---------- |
39 |
Lines written after the death of the beat of Mothers,
1815 |
45 |
On attending the Sacrament |
48 |
Stanzas |
50 |
Fragment |
52 |
To Julia |
54 |
Sonnet to my sleeping Infant |
56 |
To ----------- |
58 |
To a young Lady who indulged in melancholy on a
trifling occasion |
60 |
Flower girls Song |
62 |
Written in the very small Album of a widowed Friend |
64 |
Stanzas for Music |
65 |
Address to the Evening Star |
67 |
To a beautiful and amiable Girl, on seeing her
very plainly attired for a Ball |
68 |
Song |
71 |
Stanzas written on a beautiful Summers night,
which brought back the recollection of happier hours |
72 |
Sonnet. To my eldest Daughter |
74 |
Stanzas |
75 |
Sonnet, occasioned by finding a birds nest
blown down by the high wind, April 1829 |
77 |
To a young Friend, who, with some others and myself,
had represented characters in Miss Porters beautiful novel
of the Scottish Chiefs |
78 |
To my second Child, on the Anniversary of her birth,
February 15th, 1828 |
80 |
Lines written in an Album Card of a young Lady
belonging to the Society of Friends, who had repeatedly said, "Thou
are not a Friend" |
85 |
Sonnet to a Primrose blooming on a barren bank
early in the Month of January, 1829 |
86 |
Written in the elegant Album of Miss R. who particularly
desired I would write some Lines for her |
87 |
Written in White-house Wood, the favourite walk
of the Authoress |
89 |
Sonnet |
91 |
Written to an amiable Quakeress, on her requesting
me to write a few lines in her Album |
92 |
Written in the Album of a young Lady very fond
of angling, on hearing she was receiving the address of Mr. Brooks |
94 |
To my Husband |
95 |
On the Death of -------- |
98 |
Sonnet |
99 |
Morning Address to my Children |
100 |
Sonnet |
102 |
Written in my Nephews Souvenir |
103 |
To Eliza |
106 |
Sonnet to my eldest Boy, on his tenderly inquiring
why I so often looked unhappy |
107 |
Stanzas |
108 |
Written under the expectation of shortly leaving
the place where I had passed the early part of my life |
111 |
Sonnet written after passing a day with a beloved
Friend after a very long separation |
114 |
Song |
115 |
On the death of a beloved heart-broken Friend,
dedicated to her sorrowing Relatives |
119 |
Stanzas |
124 |
To a Chestnut Tree, planted in commemoration of
the birth of the Authoress |
129 |
Written on the 23rd of June, 1829, the
Anniversary of the birth of a favourite Niece |
135 |
Farewell to the Lyre |
136 |
Written on the arrival of a newly married pair
at the residence of the Bridegrooms father |
138 |