CONTENTS.

PAGE
[EARLY POEMS.]
An Evening Walk in Spring[3]
An Incident[5]
The Thread of Truth[6]
Revival[7]
The Shady Lane[8]
The Higher Courage[9]
Written on a Bridge[10]
A River Pool[10]
In a Lecture-Room[11]
‘Blank Misgivings of a Creature moving about in Worlds not realised’[12]
A Song of Autumn[18]
τὸ καλόν[19]
Χρυσέα κλῄς ἐπὶ γλώσσᾳ[20]
The Silver Wedding[20]
The Music of the World and of the Soul[23]
Love, not Duty[25]
Love and Reason[26]
Ὁ Θεὸς μετὰ σοῦ![29]
Wirkung in der Ferne[30]
ἐπὶ Λάτμῳ[31]
A Protest[34]
Sic Itur[35]
Parting[36]
Qua Cursum Ventus[38]
‘Wen Gott betrügt, ist wohl betrogen’[39]
[POEMS ON RELIGIOUS AND BIBLICAL SUBJECTS.]
Fragments of the Mystery of the Fall[43]
The Song of Lamech[69]
Genesis XXIV.[72]
Jacob[74]
Jacob’s Wives[77]
The New Sinai[81]
Qui laborat, orat[85]
ὕμνος ἄυμνος[86]
The Hidden Love[87]
Shadow and Light[89]
‘With Whom is no Variableness, neither Shadow of Turning’[90]
In Stratis Viarum[90]
‘Perchè pensa? Pensando s’invecchia’[91]
‘O thou of little Faith’[91]
‘Through a Glass darkly’[92]
Ah! yet consider it again![93]
Noli æmulari[93]
‘What went ye out for to see?’[94]
Epi-strauss-ium[95]
The Shadow (a Fragment)[96]
Easter Day (Naples, 1849)[100]
Easter Day, II.[104]
[DIPSYCHUS][107]
Prologue[108]
Part I.[109]
Part II.[127]
Epilogue[167]
[DIPSYCHUS CONTINUED] (a Fragment)[171]
[POEMS ON LIFE AND DUTY.]
Duty[181]
Life is Struggle[182]
In the Great Metropolis[183]
The Latest Decalogue[184]
The Questioning Spirit[185]
Bethesda (a Sequel)[186]
Hope evermore and believe![188]
Blessed are they that have not seen![189]
Cold Comfort[190]
Sehnsucht[191]
High and Low[193]
All is well[194]
πάντα ῥεῖ· οὐδὲν μένει[195]
The Stream of Life[196]
In a London Square[197]
[THE BOTHIE OF TOBER-NA-VUOLICH:] a Long-Vacation Pastoral[199]
[IDYLLIC SKETCHES.]
Ite Domum Saturæ, venit Hesperus[259]
A London Idyll[260]
Natura naturans[262]
[AMOURS DE VOYAGE][267]
[SEVEN SONNETS ON THE THOUGHT OF DEATH][317]
[MARI MAGNO]; or, TALES ON BOARD[323]
The Lawyer’s First Tale: Primitiæ, or Third Cousins[329]
The Clergyman’s First Tale: Love is Fellow-service[352]
My Tale: A la banquette; or, a Modern Pilgrimage[361]
The Mate’s Story[371]
The Clergyman’s Second Tale[374]
The Lawyer’s Second Tale: Christian[384]
[SONGS IN ABSENCE][399]
[ESSAYS IN CLASSICAL METRES.]
Translations of Iliad[417]
Elegiacs[422]
Alcaics[423]
Actæon[423]
[MISCELLANEOUS POEMS.]
Come, Poet, come![427]
The Dream Land[428]
In the Depths[430]
Darkness (a Fragment)[430]
Two Moods[431]
Youth and Age[432]
Solvitur acris Hiems[434]
Thesis and Antithesis[434]
ἀνεμώλια[436]
Columbus[437]
Even the Winds and the Sea obey[438]
Repose in Egypt[439]
To a Sleeping Child[440]
Translations from Goethe[441]
Uranus[442]
Selene[443]
At Rome[446]
Last Words. Napoleon and Wellington[448]
Peschiera[450]
Alteram Partem[452]
Say not the struggle nought availeth[452]