Author:Alfred Tennyson

Works
The following are Tennyson's principal published works (English editions), derived from The Bibliography of Tennyson (1896) by Richard Herne Shepherd.
 * Poems by Two Brothers (1827)
 * "Timbuctoo", first printed in Prolusiones Academicæ (1829)
 * Poems, Chiefly Lyrical (1830)
 * Poems (1833)
 * The Lover's Tale. A Fragment (1833)
 * Poems (1843), in 2 vols.
 * The Princess: a Medley (1847)
 * In Memoriam (1850)
 * Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington (1852) [included in "Maud, and Other Poems"]
 * The Charge of the Light Brigade (1855), privately printed for distribution among the soldiers before Sebastopol. [included in "Maud, and Other Poems"]
 * Maud, and other poems (1855)
 * Enid and Nimuë; or, The True and the False (1857), privately printed.
 * The Idylls of the King (1859)
 * A Welcome (1863)
 * Enoch Arden, etc (1864)
 * The Victim (1867), privately printed.
 * The Holy Grail, and Other Poems (1870)
 * The Window; or the Songs of the Wrens (1871), with music by Arthur Seymour Sullivan
 * Gareth and Lynette (1872)
 * A Welcome (to Marie Alexandrovna, Duchess of Edinburgh) (1874)
 * The Lover's Tale, and Other Poems (1875)
 * The Lover's Tale (1879)
 * Ballads and Other Poems (1880)
 * Tiresias, and Other Poems (1885)
 * Locksley Hall Sixty Years After, etc. (1886)
 * To Edward Lear, and other poems (1889), illustrated by Edward Lear
 * Demeter and other poems (1889)
 * The death of Oenone, Akbar's dream, and other poems (1892)

From Poems, Chiefly Lyrical (1830)

 * The "How" and the "Why"
 * The Burial of Love
 * Hero to Leander
 * The Mystic
 * The Grasshopper
 * Love, Pride and Forgetfulness
 * Lost Hope
 * The Deserted House
 * The Tears of Heaven
 * Love and Sorrow
 * Nothing will die
 * All things will die
 * To a Lady Sleeping
 * English Warsong
 * National Song
 * Dualisms
 * The Sleeping Beauty

Poems (1833)

 * The Hesperides
 * Note to Rosalind


 * The New Timon, and the Poets
 * Britons, Guard Your Own
 * For the Penny-Wise
 * Suggested by Reading an Article in a Newspaper
 * Stanzas on the Marriage of the Princess Royal
 * Epitaph on the Duchess of Kent
 * The Ringlet
 * 1865-1866
 * And Ask Ye Why These Sad Tears Stream?
 * Kate
 * O Darling Room
 * To Christopher North

Volume 1

 * Claribel
 * Lilian
 * Isabel
 * Mariana
 * To
 * Madeline
 * Song—The Owl
 * Second Song—To the Same
 * Recollections of the Arabian Nights
 * Ode to Memory
 * Song (A spirit haunts the year's last hours)
 * Adeline
 * A Character
 * The Poet
 * The Poet's Mind
 * The Dying Swan
 * A Dirge
 * Love and Death
 * The Ballad of Oriana
 * Circumstance
 * The Merman
 * The Mermaid
 * Sonnet to J. M. K.
 * The Lady of Shalott
 * Mariana in the South
 * Eleanore
 * The Miller's Daughter
 * Fatima
 * Œnone
 * The Sisters
 * To
 * The Palace of Art
 * Lady Clara Vere de Vere
 * The May Queen
 * New Year's Eve
 * Conclusion
 * The Lotos-Eaters
 * A Dream of Fair Women
 * Margaret
 * The Blackbird
 * The Death of the Old Year
 * To J. S.
 * "You Ask Me, Why, Though Ill at Ease"
 * "Of Old Sat Freedom On the Heights"
 * "Love Thou Thy Land, With Love Far-Brought"
 * The Goose

Volume 2

 * The Epic
 * Morte d'Arthur
 * The Gardener's Daughter; or, the Pictures
 * Dora
 * Audley Court
 * Walking to the Mail
 * St. Simeon Stylites
 * The Talking Oak
 * Love and Duty
 * Ulysses
 * Locksley Hall
 * Godiva
 * The Two Voices
 * The Day-Dream
 * Amphion
 * St. Agnes
 * Sir Galahad
 * Edward Gray
 * Will Waterproof's Lyrical Monologue
 * Lady Clare
 * The Lord of Burleigh
 * Sir Launcelot and Queen Guinevere
 * A Farewell
 * The Beggar Maid
 * The Vision of Sin
 * The Skipping-Rope
 * "Move eastward, happy earth, and leave"
 * "Break, Break, Break"
 * The Poet's Song

The Princess; a Medley (1847)

 * The Princess (1847)
 * As thro' the Land
 * Sweet and Low
 * The Splendour Falls
 * Tears, Idle Tears
 * O Swallow, Swallow
 * Thy Voice Is Heard
 * Home They Brought Her Warrior Dead
 * Our Enemies have Fall'n
 * Ask Me No More
 * Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal
 * Come Down, O Maid

In Memoriam (1850)

 * In Memoriam
 * Ring Out, Wild Bells, Canto CIV (based on 1st edition)
 * "Ring Out the Old, Ring In the New", hymn derived from this poem

Maud, and Other Poems (1855)

 * Maud
 * The Brook; an Idyl
 * The Letters
 * Ode On the Death of the Duke of Wellington
 * The Daisy
 * To the Rev. F. D. Maurice
 * Will
 * The Charge of the Light Brigade

Idylls of the King (1859)

 * Idylls of the King (1856-1885)
 * Dedication
 * The Coming of Arthur
 * Gareth and Lynette
 * The Marriage of Geraint
 * Geraint and Enid
 * Balin and Balan
 * Merlin and Vivien
 * Lancelot and Elaine
 * The Holy Grail
 * Pelleas and Ettarre
 * The Last Tournament
 * Guinevere
 * The Passing of Arthur
 * To the Queen

Enoch Arden, etc. (1864)

 * Enoch Arden
 * Aylmer's Field
 * Sea Dreams
 * The Grandmother
 * Northern Farmer
 * Tithonus
 * The Voyage
 * In the Valley of Cauteretz
 * The Flower
 * Requiescat
 * The Sailor Boy
 * The Islet
 * The Ringlet
 * A Welcome to Alexandra
 * A Dedication
 * Experiments
 * Boädicéa

Experiments

 * Boadicea
 * Hexameters and Pentameters
 * Milton (Alcaics)
 * Hendecasyllabics ("O you chorus of indolent reviewers")
 * Specimen of a Translation of the Iliad in Blank Verse

The Window; or, The Song of the Wrens (1871)

 * The Window
 * Spring

The Lover's Tale, and Other Poems (1875)

 * To Alfred Tennyson, My Grandson
 * The First Quarrel
 * Rizpah
 * The Northern Cobbler
 * The Revenge: A Ballad of the Fleet
 * The Village Wife
 * In the Children's Hospital
 * Sir John Oldcastle, Lord Cobham
 * Columbus
 * The Voyage of Maeldune
 * Prefatory Sonnet to the 'Nineteenth Century'
 * To the Rev. W. H. Brookfield
 * Prefatory Sonnet to the 'Nineteenth Century'
 * To the Rev. W. H. Brookfield
 * To the Rev. W. H. Brookfield

Tiresias, and Other Poems (1885)

 * To E. Fitzgerald
 * Tiresias
 * The Wreck
 * Despair
 * The Ancient Sage
 * The Flight
 * Tomorrow
 * The Spinster's Sweet-Arts
 * Locksley Hall Sixty Years After
 * Prologue to General Hamley
 * The Charge of the Heavy Brigade at Balaclava
 * Epilogue
 * To Virgil
 * The Dead Prophet
 * Early Spring
 * Prefatory poem to my Brother's Sonnets
 * 'Frater Ave atque Vale'
 * Helen's Tower
 * Epitaph on Lord Stratford de Redcliffe
 * Epitaph on General Gordon
 * Epitaph on Caxton
 * To the Duke of Argyll
 * Hands all Round
 * Freedom
 * To H. R. H. Princess Beatrice
 * The Fleet
 * Opening of the Indian and Colonial Exhibition by the Queen
 * Poets and their Bibliographies
 * To W. C. Macready

Demeter, and Other Poems (1889)

 * To the Marquis of Dufferin and Ava
 * On the Jubilee of Queen Victoria
 * To Professor Jebb
 * Demeter and Persephone
 * Owd Roä
 * Vastness
 * The Ring
 * Forlorn
 * Happy
 * To Ulysses
 * To Mary Boyle
 * The Progress of Spring
 * Merlin and the Gleam
 * Romney's Remorse
 * Parnassus
 * By an Evolutionist
 * Far—far—away
 * Politics
 * Beautiful City
 * The Roses on the Terrace
 * The Play
 * On One who affected an Effeminate Manner
 * To One who ran down the English
 * The Snowdrop
 * The Throstle
 * The Oak
 * In Memoriam-William George Ward
 * Crossing the Bar

The Death of Oenone, Akbar's Dream, and Other Poems (1892)

 * June Bracken and Heather
 * To the Master of Balliol
 * The Death of Oenone
 * St. Telemachus
 * Akbar's Dream
 * The Bandit's Death
 * The Church-warden and the Curate
 * Charity
 * Kapiolani
 * The Dawn
 * The Making of Man
 * The Dreamer
 * Mechanophilus
 * Riflemen Form!
 * The Tourney
 * The Bee and the Flower
 * The Wanderer
 * Poets and Critics
 * A Voice spake out of the Skies
 * Doubt and Prayer
 * Faith
 * The Silent Voices
 * God and the Universe
 * The Death of the Duke of Clarence and Avondale

Others, to sort

 * Song from Maud
 * Leonine Elegiacs
 * Supposed Confessions of a Second-rate Sensitive Mind
 * The Kraken
 * Song (The winds as at their hour of birth)
 * The Sea-Fairies
 * Rosalind
 * My Life is Full of Weary Days
 * On a Mourner
 * You ask me why
 * Of old sat Freedom on the heights
 * Love thou thy land
 * England and America in 1782
 * The Third of February 1852
 * Ode sung at the Opening of the International Exhibition
 * A Welcome to Her Royal Highness Marie Alexandrovna, Duchess of Edinburgh
 * Northern Farmer, New Style
 * In the Garden at Swainston
 * Child-Songs
 * The Spiteful Letter
 * Literary Squabbles
 * The Victim
 * Wages
 * The Higher Pantheism
 * The Voice and the Peak
 * Flower in the Crannied Wall
 * Edwin Morris; or, the Lake
 * The Captain
 * The Eagle
 * Come not, when I am dead
 * To -, after reading a Life and Letters
 * To E. L., on his Travels in Greece
 * Crossing the Bar
 * To E. L., on his Travels in Greece
 * Crossing the Bar


 * Sonnet, (Check every outflash, every ruder sally)
 * The Bugle Song (excerpt from The Princess)
 * The Grandmother's Apology, 1859
 * To the Queen

Translations, etc.

 * Battle of Brunanburh
 * Achilles over the Trench
 * To Princess Frederica on her Marriage
 * Sir John Franklin
 * To Dante

Plays

 * Queen Mary: A Drama
 * Harold: A Drama
 * Becket
 * The Cup: A Tragedy
 * The Falcon
 * The Promise of May
 * The Foresters: Robin Hood and Maid Marian

Works about Tennyson

 * Tennyson, a poem by Florence Earle Coates.
 * Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1908), "Tennyson" in Varied Types.
 * "Life of Tennyson" in Leslie Stephen's Studies of a Biographer vol. 2 (1898)
 * The Mind of Tennyson: His thoughts of God, Freedom, and Immortality (1900) by Elias Hershey Sneath
 * "Alfred Lord Tennyson", a poem by Dorothy Parker (1928)
 * Tennyson, a poem by Florence Earle Coates.
 * Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1908), "Tennyson" in Varied Types.
 * "Life of Tennyson" in Leslie Stephen's Studies of a Biographer vol. 2 (1898)
 * The Mind of Tennyson: His thoughts of God, Freedom, and Immortality (1900) by Elias Hershey Sneath
 * "Alfred Lord Tennyson", a poem by Dorothy Parker (1928)
 * The Mind of Tennyson: His thoughts of God, Freedom, and Immortality (1900) by Elias Hershey Sneath
 * "Alfred Lord Tennyson", a poem by Dorothy Parker (1928)

On his works

 * Tennysoniana, 2nd edition (1879), by Richard Herne Shepherd
 * Tennyson: the Leslie Stephen lecture (1909) by William Paton Ker
 * Tennyson: the Leslie Stephen lecture (1909) by William Paton Ker
 * Tennyson: the Leslie Stephen lecture (1909) by William Paton Ker