| 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] |