Author:Arthur Hugh Clough

Works

 * The Bothie of Toper-na-fuosich: A Long-vacation Pastoral (1848)
 * Ambarvalia (1849), a joint publication with Thomas Burbidge
 * Poems (1862)
 * The Poems And Prose Remains of Arthur Hugh Clough, With A Selection From His Letters And A Memoir; edited by his Wife (1869), in 2 vols.
 * Vol. I., Vol. II.

Early Poems
 * The Poems and Prose Remains of Arthur Hugh Clough
 * Thoughts of Home
 * An Evening Walk in Spring
 * An Incident|
 * The Thread of Truth
 * Revival
 * The Shady Lane
 * The Higher Courage
 * Written on a Bridge
 * A River Pool
 * In a Lecture-Room
 * 'Blank Misgivings of a Creature moving about in Worlds not realised'
 * Includes How often sit I
 * A Song of Autumn
 * Τò καλóν
 * Χρυσέα κλῂς ἐπὶ γλώσσᾳ
 * The Silver Wedding
 * The Music of the World and of the Soul
 * Love, not Duty
 * Love and Reason
 * Ὁ Θεòς μετὰ σοῦ!
 * Wirkung in der Ferne
 * Ἐπὶ Λάτμῳ
 * A Protest
 * Sic Itur
 * Parting
 * Qua Cursum Ventus
 * 'Wen Gott betrügt, ist wohl betrogen'*

'''Poems on Religious and Biblical Subjects. '''
 * Fragments of the Mystery of the Fall
 * The Song of Lamech
 * Genesis XXIV.
 * Jacob
 * Jacob’s Wives
 * The New Sinai
 * Qui laborat, orat
 * ὕμνος ἄυμνος
 * The Hidden Love
 * Shadow and Light
 * 'With Whom is no Variableness, neither Shadow of Turning'
 * In Stratis Viarum
 * 'Perchè pensa? Pensando s' invecchia'
 * 'O thou of little Faith'
 * 'Through a Glass darkly'
 * Ah! Yet Consider it Again!
 * Noli æmulari
 * 'What went ye out for to see?' also called Across the Sea Along the Shore
 * Epi-strauss-ium
 * The Shadow (a Fragment)
 * Easter Day (Naples, 1849)
 * Easter Day, II

Dipsychus
 * Dipsychus/Prologue
 * Dipsychus/Part I
 * Dipsychus/Part II
 * Dipsychus/Epilogue
 * Dipsychus Continued

Poems on Life and Duty
 * Duty
 * Life is Struggle
 * In the Great Metropolis
 * The Latest Decalogue
 * The Questioning Spirit
 * Bethesda
 * Hope evermore and believe!
 * Blessed are they that have not seen!
 * Cold Comfort
 * Sehnsucht
 * High and Low
 * All Is Well
 * παντα ρει· ουδεν μενει
 * The Stream of Life
 * In a London Square

The Bothie of Toper-na-fuosich: a Long-Vacation:Pastoral

Idyllic Sketches
 * Ite Domum Saturæ, venit Hesperus
 * A London Idyll
 * Natura naturans

Amours de Voyage
 * Canto I
 * Canto II
 * Canto III
 * Canto IV
 * Canto V


 * Seven Sonnets on the Thought of Death

Mari Magno or Tales on Board
 * The Lawyer’s First Tale: Primitiæ or Third Cousins
 * The Clergyman’s First Tale: Love is Fellow-service
 * My Tale: A la banquette, or a Modern Pilgrimage
 * The Mate’s Story
 * The Clergyman’s Second Tale
 * The Lawyer’s Second Tale: Christian


 * Songs in Absence
 * Where lies the land to which the ship would go?
 * Ye Flags of Piccadilly

Essays in Classical Metres


 * Translations of Iliad
 * Elegiacs
 * Alcaics
 * Actæon

Miscellaneous Poems
 * Come, Poet, come!
 * The Dream Land
 * In the Depths
 * It Fortifies my Soul to Know
 * Darkness (a Fragment)
 * Two Moods
 * Youth and Age
 * Solvitur acris Hiems
 * Thesis and Antithesis
 * ανεμωλια
 * Columbus
 * Even the Winds and the Sea obey
 * Repose in Egypt
 * To a Sleeping Child
 * Translations from Goethe
 * Uranus
 * Selene
 * At Rome
 * Last Words. Napoleon and Wellington
 * Peschiera
 * Alteram Partem
 * Say Not the Struggle Naught Availeth


 * How In All Wonder...
 * There Is No God, the Wicked Sayeth

Editor / Translator

 * Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans (1859) by Plutarch and John Dryden
 * Plutarch's essays and miscellanies (1909) in 5 volumes. A revision of Goodwin's edition


 * Articles signed as in the Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology

Notes

Works about Clough

 * "Memoir of Arthur Hugh Clough", in The Poems and Prose Remains of Arthur Hugh Clough, Volume 1 (1869)
 * Arthur Hugh Clough; a monograph (1883), by Samuel Waddington
 * Written after reading a memoir of Clough, a poem by Bertram Dobell
 * Arthur Hugh Clough (1920), by James Insley Osborne
 * Written after reading a memoir of Clough, a poem by Bertram Dobell
 * Arthur Hugh Clough (1920), by James Insley Osborne
 * Written after reading a memoir of Clough, a poem by Bertram Dobell
 * Arthur Hugh Clough (1920), by James Insley Osborne