| The Cambridge Intelligencer. |
| Lines written at the King's Arms, Ross, formerly the House of the Man of Ross | Sept. 27, 1794 |
| Absence | Oct. 11, 1794 |
| Sonnet [Anna and Harland] | Oct. 25, 1794 |
| Sonnet [Genevieve] | Nov. 1, 1794 |
| To a Young Man of Fortune, &c. | Dec. 17, 1796 |
| Ode for the Last Day of the Year, 1796 | Dec. 31, 1796 |
| Parliamentary Oscillators | Jan. 6, 1798 |
| The Morning Chronicle. |
| To Fortune | Nov. 7, 1793 |
| Elegy [Elegy imitated from Akenside] | Sept. 23, 1794 |
| Epitaph on an Infant. 'Ere sin could blight', &c. | Sept. 23, 1794 |
| Sonnets on Eminent Characters. |
| i. | To the Honourable Mr. Erskine | Dec. 1, 1794 |
| ii. | Burke | Dec. 9, 1794 |
| iii. | Priestley | Dec. 11, 1794 |
| iv. | La Fayette | Dec. 15, 1794 |
| v. | Kosciusko | Dec. 16, 1794 |
| vi. | Pitt | Dec. 23, 1794 |
| vii. | To the Rev. W. L. Bowles | Dec. 26, 1794 |
| viii. | Mrs. Siddons | Dec. 29, 1794 |
| ix. | To William Godwin | Jan. 10, 1795 |
| x. | To Robert Southey | Jan. 14, 1795 |
| xi. | To Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Esq. | Jan. 29, 1795 |
| To Lord Stanhope | Jan. 31, 1795 |
| Address to a Young Jack Ass and its tethered Mother, In Familiar Verse | Dec. 30, 1794 |
| |
| The Watchman. |
| No. 1. To a Young Lady with a Poem on the French Revolution | Mar. 1, 1796 |
| No. 2. Casimir. Ad Lyram. Imitation. 'The solemn-breathing air', &c. | Mar. 9, 1796 |
| No. 3. Elegy. 'Near the lone Pile', &c. | Mar. 17, 1796 |
| The Hour when we shall meet again. 'Dim hour', &c. | Mar. 17, 1796 |
| No. 4. 'The early Year's fast-flying Vapours stray' | Mar. 25, 1796 |
| A Morning Effusion. 'Ye Gales', &c. | Mar. 25, 1796 |
| No. 5. To Mercy. 'Not always should the Tears', &c. | Apr. 2, 1796 |
| Recollection. 'As the tir'd savage', &c. | Apr. 2, 1796 |
| No. 6. Lines on Observing a Blossom on the First of February, 1796. 'Sweet Flower that peeping', &c. | Apr. 11, 1796 |
| No. 8. To a Primrose. 'Thy smiles I note', &c. | Apr. 27, 1796 |
| No. 9. Epitaph on an Infant. [Reprinted from the Morning Chronicle, Sept. 23, 1794.] 'Ere Sin could blight', &c. | May 5, 1796 |
| |
| The Monthly Magazine. |
| On a Late Connubial Rupture, (ii, p. 647) | Sept. 1796 |
| Reflections on Entering into Active Life, (ii, p. 732.) 'Low was our pretty Cot', &c. | Oct. 1796 |
| Sonnets attempted in the Manner of Contemporary Writers, (iv, p. 374) | Nov. 1797 |
| |
| The Annual Register. |
| Lines to a Beautiful Spring in a Village, (xxxviii, pp. 494-5) | 1796 |
| Tranquillity, An Ode. (xliii, pp. 525-6) | 1801 |
| Stanzas Addressed to a Lady on Her Recovery from a severe attack of Pain. (The Two Founts.) (lxix, pp. 537-8) | 1827 |
| |
| The Morning Post. |
| To an Unfortunate Woman in the Back Seats of the Boxes at the Theatre. 'Maiden that with sullen brow' | Dec. 7, 1797 |
| Melancholy: A Fragment | Dec. 12, 1797 |
| Fire, Famine, and Slaughter: A War Eclogue | Jan. 8, 1798 |
| The Old Man of the Alps. | Mar. 8, 1798 |
| The Raven | Mar. 10, 1798 |
| Lines Imitated from Catullus. 'My Lesbia', &c. | Apr. 11, 1798 |
| Lewti, or the Circassian Love Chaunt | Apr. 13, 1798 |
| The Recantation: An Ode | Apr. 16, 1798 |
| Moriens Superstiti. 'The hour-bell sounds', &c. | May 10, 1798 |
| A Tale. [Recantation. Illustrated in the Story of the Mad Ox] | July 30, 1798 |
| The British Stripling's War-Song | Aug. 24, 1799 |
| The Devil's Thoughts | Sept. 6, 1799 |
| Lines written in the Album at Elbingerode | Sept. 17, 1799 |
| Lines Composed in a Concert Room | Sept. 24, 1799 |
| To a Young Lady. 'Why need I say', &c. | Dec. 9, 1799 |
| Introduction to the Tale of the Dark Ladié | Dec. 21, 1799 |
| Ode to Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire | Dec. 24, 1799 |
| A Christmas Carol | Dec. 25, 1799 |
| Talleyrand to Lord Granville | Jan. 10, 1800 |
| The Mad Monk | Oct. 13, 1800 |
| Inscription for a Seat by the Road-side, &c. | Oct. 21, 1800 |
| Alcaeus to Sappho | Nov. 24, 1800 |
| The Two Round Spaces: A Skeltoniad | Dec. 4, 1800 |
| On Revisiting the Sea Shore | Sept. 15, 1801 |
| Tranquillity, An Ode | Dec. 4, 1801 |
| The Picture, or The Lover's Resolution | Sept. 6, 1802 |
| Chamouni. The Hour before Sunrise. A Hymn | Sept. 11, 1802 |
| The Keepsake | Sept. 17, 1802 |
| How seldom Friend, &c. [The Good Great Man] | Sept. 23, 1802 |
| Inscription on a Jutting Stone over a Spring | Sept. 24, 1802 |
| Dejection: An Ode | Oct. 4, 1802 |
| Ode to the Rain | Oct. 7, 1802 |
| France: An Ode | Oct. 14, 1802 |
| The Language of Birds. 'Do you ask, what the Birds say?' &c. | Oct. 16, 1802 |
| The Day-dream. From an Emigrant to his Absent Wife | Oct. 19, 1802 |
| |
| The Courier. |
| The Exchange of Hearts | Apr. 16, 1804 |
| Lines on a King-and-Emperor-making Emperor and King (Adaptation) | Sept. 12, 1806 |
| Farewell to Love. [Morning Herald, Oct. 11, 1806] | Sept. 27, 1806 |
| To Two Sisters | Dec. 10, 1807 |
| Epitaph on an Infant. 'Its milky lips', &c. | Mar. 20, 1811 |
| The Hour Glass (Adaptation) | Aug. 30, 1811 |
| The Virgin's Cradle Hymn | Aug. 30, 1811 |
| Mutual Passion (Adaptation) | Sept. 21, 1811 |
| |
| The Friend. |
| [Ode to Tranquillity] | No. 1, June 1, 1809 |
| The Three Graves, A Sexton's Tale | No. 6, Sept. 21, 1809 |
| Hymn. Before Sun-rise, in the Vale of Chamouny | No. 11, Oct. 26, 1809 |
| Tis True, Idoloclastes Satyrane | No. 14, Nov. 23, 1809 |
| |
| The Gentleman's Magazine. |
| Farewell to Love. (lxxxv, p. 448) | 1815 |
| Overlooked Poem by Coleridge. The Volunteer Stripling. (xxix, p. 160, N. S.) | 1848 |
| |
| Felix Farley's Bristol Journal. |
| Fancy in Nubibus, or The Poet in the Clouds | Feb. 7, 1818 |
| Written on a Blank Leaf of Faulkner's Shipwreck, presented by a friend to Miss K | Feb. 21, 1818 |
| |
| Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine. |
| Fancy in Nubibus. (Vol. vi, p. 196) | Nov. 1819 |
| The poet in his lone, &c. [Apologia, &c.] (Vol. xi, p. 12) | Jan. 1822 |
| The Old Man's Sigh: A Sonnet. (Vol. xxxi, p. 956) | June, 1832 |
| |
| Co-operative Magazine and Monthly Herald. |
| On the Prospect of Establishing a Pantisocracy in America | Apr. 6, 1826 |
| |
| Literary Magnet. |
| An Impromptu on Christmas Day, &c. | N. S., Vol. iii, 1827, p. 71 |
| |
| The Evening Standard. |
| Sancti Dominici Pallium | May 21, 1827 |
| |
| The Crypt, a Receptacle for Things Past. |
| Job's Luck | 1827, pp. 30, 31 |
| |
| The Literary Souvenir. |
| The Exchange | 1826, p. 408 |
| Lines Suggested by the Last Words of Berengarius | 1827, p. 17 |
| [Epitaphium Testamentarium] | 1827, p. 17 |
| Youth and Age | 1828, p. 1 |
| What is Life? | 1829, p. 346 |
| |
| The Bijou, 1828. |
| The Wanderings of Cain. A Fragment | p. 17 |
| Work without Hope | 28 |
| Youth and Age | 144 |
| A Day Dream. 'My eyes make pictures' | 146 |
| The Two Founts | 202 |
| |
| The Amulet. |
| New Thoughts on Old Subjects. The Improvisatore | 1828, pp. 37-47 |
| Three Scraps | 1833, pp. 31, 32 |
| (i) | Love's Burial Place. |
| (ii) | The Butterfly. |
| (iii) | A Thought suggested by a View of Saddleback in Cumberland. |
| |
| New York Mirror. |
| Lines written in Miss Barbour's Common Place Book | Dec. 19, 1829 |
| |
| The Keepsake. |
| The Garden of Boccaccio | 1829, p. 282 |
| Song, Ex Improviso, &c. | 1830, p. 264 |
| The Poet's Answer to a Lady's Question, &c. 'O'er wayward Childhood', &c. | 1830, p. 279 |
| |
| The Athenæum. |
| Water Ballad | Oct. 29, 1831 |
| |
| Friendship's Offering, 1834. |
| |
| PAGE |
| My Baptismal Birthday | 163 |
| Fragments from the Wreck of Memory, &c.— |
| i. | Hymn to the Earth | 165 |
| ii. | English Hexameters, written during a temporary Blindness, in the Year 1799 | 167 |
| iii. | The Homeric Hexameter, &c. | 168 |
| iv. | The Ovidian Elegiac Metre, &c. | 168 |
| v. | A Versified Reflection. 'On stern Blencarthur's', &c. | 168. |
| Love's Apparition and Evanishment | 355 |
| Lightheartednesses in Rhyme— |
| i. | The Reproof and Reply | 356 |
| ii. | In Answer to a Friend's Question. 'Her attachment may differ', &c. | 359 |
| iii. | Lines to a Comic Author, on an abusive Review | 359 |
| iv. | An Expectoration, &c. 'As I am (sic) Rhymer', &c. | 360 |
| Expectoration the Second. 'In Coln, a town of monks and bones' | 360 |
| |
| The New Monthly Magazine. |
| The Faded Flower | Aug. 1836 |
| |
| Dublin University Magazine. |
| A Stranger Minstrel | 1845, xxvi, 112-13 |