Author:Robert Herrick (1591-1674)/Poems

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 * "Untitled poem" (This crosstree here)

A

 * Abel's Blood
 * Abstinence
 * Accusation
 * The Admonition
 * Adversity (Adversity hurts none, but only such)
 * Adversity (Love is maintain'd by wealth; when all is spent)
 * Advice the Best Actor
 * Affliction
 * After Autumn, Winter
 * Again (When I thy singing next shall hear)
 * Again (Who with a little cannot be content)
 * Against Love
 * Age Unfit for Love
 * All Things Decay and Die
 * All Things Run Well for the Righteous
 * Alms (Give, if thou canst, an alms; if not, afford)
 * Alms (Give unto all, lest he, whom thou deni'st)
 * The Amber Bead
 * Ambition (In man ambition is the common'st thing)
 * Ambition (In ways to greatness, think on this)
 * Anacreontic (Born I was to be old)
 * Anacreontic (I must not trust)
 * Anacreontic Verse
 * Angels
 * Anger
 * Another (Abel's Blood)
 * Another (Another to the Maids)
 * Another (Confusion of Face)
 * Another (Charms) (Let the superstitious wife)
 * Another (Charms) (If ye fear to be affrighted)
 * Another (Charms) (In the morning when ye rise)
 * Another (God's Presence)
 * Another (Of God)
 * Another (On Love)
 * Another (Predestination)
 * Another (Sin) (Sin is an act so free, that if we shall)
 * Another (Sin) (Sin is the cause of death; and sin's alone)
 * Another (The Virgin Mary)
 * Another (To His Book, To read my book the virgin shy) (To read my book the virgin shy)
 * Another (To His Book, Who with thy leaves shall wipe, at need) (Who with thy leaves shall wipe, at need)
 * Another (To His Ever-Loving God)
 * Another (Upon Himself)
 * Another (Upon M. Ben. Jonson)
 * Another Charm for Stables
 * Another Grace for a Child
 * Another New-year's Gift: Or, Song for the Circumcision
 * Another of God
 * Another of the Same
 * Another on Her
 * Another on Love
 * Another to Bring in the Witch
 * Another to God (Lord, do not beat me)
 * Another to God (Though Thou be'st all that active love)
 * Another to His Saviour
 * Another to Neptune
 * Another to the Maids
 * Another Upon Her
 * Another Upon Her Weeping
 * Anthea's Retractation
 * The Apparition of His Mistress Calling Him to Elysium
 * The Apron of Flowers
 * The Argument of His Book
 * Art Above Nature: To Julia
 * The Ass

B

 * A Bacchanalian Verse (Drink up / Your cup)
 * A Bacchanalian Verse (Fill me a mighty bowl)
 * Bad May Be Better
 * Bad Princes Pill the People
 * The Bad Season Makes the Poet Sad
 * Bad Wages for Good Service
 * The Bag of the Bee
 * Baptism
 * Barley-break; or, Last in Hell
 * Bashfulness
 * Bastards
 * Beauty
 * The Bedman, or Gravemaker
 * The Beggar
 * The Beggar to Mab, the Fairy Queen
 * Beggars
 * Beginning Difficult
 * Beginnings and Endings
 * Being Once Blind, His Request to Bianca
 * The Bellman (Along the dark and silent night)
 * The Bellman (From noise of scare-fires rest ye free)
 * Best to Be Merry
 * Biting of Beggars
 * Blame
 * Blame the Reward of Princes
 * The Bleeding Hand; or, the Sprig of Eglantine Given to a Maid
 * The Body
 * The Bondman
 * The Bracelet of Pearl: To Silvia
 * The Bracelet to Julia
 * Bribes and Gifts Get All
 * The Bride-cake
 * The Broken Crystal
 * The Bubble. A Song
 * A Bucolic, or Discourse of Neatherds
 * A Bucolic Betwixt Two: Lacon and Thyrsis
 * Burial
 * By Use Comes Easiness

C

 * Calling and Correcting
 * The Candour of Julia's Teeth
 * A Canticle to Apollo
 * The Captiv'd Bee, or the Little Filcher
 * The Carcanet
 * Care a Good Keeper
 * A Carol Presented to Dr. Williams, Bishop of Lincoln as a New-Year's Gift
 * Casualties
 * A Caution
 * Caution in Counsel
 * The Ceremonies for Candlemas Day
 * Ceremonies for Candlemas Eve
 * Ceremonies for Christmas
 * Ceremony Upon Candlemas Eve
 * Change Common to All
 * Change Gives Content
 * The Changes to Corinna
 * A Charm, or an Allay for Love
 * Charms (Bring the holy crust of bread)
 * Charms (This I'll tell ye by the way)
 * Charon and Philomel; A Dialogue Sung
 * The Cheat of Cupid; or, the Ungentle Guest
 * Cheerfulness in Charity; or, the Sweet Sacrifice
 * Cherry-pit
 * Cherry-ripe
 * The Chewing the Cud
 * Choose for the Best
 * Chop-cherry
 * Christ
 * Christ's Action
 * Christ's Birth
 * Christ's Incarnation
 * Christ's Part
 * Christ's Sadness
 * Christ's Suffering
 * Christ's Twofold Coming
 * Christ's Words on the Cross: My God, My God
 * The Christian Militant
 * Christmas-eve, Another Ceremony
 * A Christmas Carol Sung to the King in the Presence at Whitehall
 * Clemency
 * Clemency in Kings
 * Clothes Are Conspirators
 * Clothes Do but Cheat and Cozen Us
 * Clothes for Continuance
 * The Cloud
 * Clouds
 * Co-heirs
 * The Cobblers' Catch
 * Cock-crow
 * Comfort in Calamity
 * Some Comfort in Calamity
 * Comforts in Contentions
 * Comforts in Crosses
 * Comfort to a Lady Upon the Death of Her Husband
 * Comfort to a Youth That Had Lost His Love
 * The Coming of Good Luck
 * Coming to Christ
 * Confession
 * Conformity
 * Conformity Is Comely
 * Confusion of Face
 * A Conjuration to Electra
 * Connubii Flores, or the Well-wishes at Weddings
 * Consultation
 * Content, Not Cates
 * Contention
 * Corinna's Going A-maying
 * Correction
 * Counsel
 * A Country-life: To His Brother, Mr. Tho. Herrick
 * The Country Life, to the Honoured M. End. Porter, Groom of the Bedchamber to His Majesty
 * Courage Cooled
 * The Covetous Still Captives
 * The Credit of the Conqueror
 * Cross and Pile
 * Crosses (Our crosses are no other than the rods)
 * Crosses (Though good things answer many good intents)
 * The Crowd and Company
 * The Cruel Maid
 * Cruelties
 * Cruelty
 * Cruelty Base in Commanders
 * Crutches
 * Cunctation in Correction
 * The Curse: A Song
 * The Custard

D

 * Dangers Wait on Kings
 * Death Ends All Woe
 * A Defence for Women
 * The Definition of Beauty
 * Delay
 * The Delaying Bride
 * Delight in Disorder
 * The Deluge
 * Denial in Women No Disheartening to Men
 * The Departure of the Good Demon
 * The Description of a Woman
 * Devotion Makes the Deity
 * A Dialogue Between Himself and Mistress Eliza Wheeler, Under the Name of Amaryllis
 * A Dialogue Betwixt Horace and Lydia, Translated Anno 1627, and Set by Mr. Ro. Ramsey
 * Diet
 * The Difference Betwixt Kings and Subjects
 * The Dirge of Jephthah's Daughter: Sung by the Virgins
 * A Dirge Upon the Death of the Right Valiant Lord, Bernard Stuart
 * Discontents in Devon
 * Discord Not Disadvantageous
 * Dissuasions From Idleness
 * Distance Betters Dignities
 * Distrust (To safeguard man from wrongs, there nothing must)
 * Distrust (Whatever men for loyalty pretend)
 * Divination by a Daffodil
 * Doomsday
 * Draw-gloves
 * Draw and Drink
 * The Dream (Methought last night love in an anger came)
 * The Dream (By dream I saw one of the three)
 * Dreams
 * Duty to Tyrants

E

 * Earrings
 * Ease
 * An Eclogue or Pastoral Between Endymion Porter and Lycidas Herrick, Set and Sung
 * Empires
 * The End (If well thou hast begun, go on fore-right)
 * The End (Conquer we shall, but we must first contend)
 * An End Decreed
 * The End of His Work
 * The Entertainment; or, Porch-verse, at the Marriage of Mr. Henry Northly and the Most Witty Mrs. Lettice Yard
 * Epitaph on the Tomb of Sir Edward Giles and His Wife in the South Aisle of Dean Prior Church, Devon
 * An Epitaph Upon a Child
 * An Epitaph Upon a Sober Matron
 * An Epitaph Upon a Virgin
 * An Epithalamy to Sir Thomas Southwell and His Lady
 * Eternity
 * The Eucharist
 * Evensong
 * Event of Things Not in Our Power
 * Evil
 * Examples; or, Like Prince, Like People
 * Excess
 * Expenses Exhaust
 * The Eye (A wanton and lascivious eye)
 * The Eye (Make me a heaven, and make me there)
 * The Eyes
 * The Eyes Before the Ears

F

 * Factions
 * Fair After Foul
 * Fair Days: or, Dawns Deceitful
 * The Fairies
 * Fair Shows Deceive
 * The Fairy Temple; or, Oberon's Chapel Dedicated to Mr. John Merrifield, Counsellor-at-law
 * Faith
 * Faith Four-square
 * False Mourning
 * Fame
 * Fame Makes Us Forward
 * Farewell Frost, or Welcome the Spring
 * The Fast, or Lent
 * Fear
 * Fear Gets Force
 * Felicity Knows No Fence
 * Felicity Quick of Flight
 * Few Fortunate
 * The First Mars or Makes
 * First Work, and Then Wages
 * Flattery
 * Foolishness
 * Fortune
 * Fortune Favours
 * Four Things Make Us Happy Here
 * The Frankincense
 * Free Welcome
 * Fresh Cheese and Cream
 * A Frolic
 * The Frozen Heart
 * The Frozen Zone; or, Julia Disdainful
 * The Funeral Rites of the Rose

G

 * Gain and Gettings
 * Gentleness
 * Glory (Glory no other thing is, Tully says)
 * Glory (I make no haste to have my numbers read)
 * God (God, as the learned Damascene doth write)
 * God (God, in the holy tongue, they call)
 * God (God is more here than in another place)
 * God (In God there's nothing, but 'tis known to be)
 * God's Anger
 * God's Anger Without Affection
 * God's Blessing
 * God's Bounty (God's bounty, that ebbs less and less)
 * God's Bounty (God, as He's potent, so He's likewise known)
 * God's Commands
 * God's Descent
 * God's Dwelling
 * God's Gifts Not Soon Granted
 * God's Grace
 * God's Hands
 * God's Keys
 * God's Mercy
 * God's Mirth: Man's Mourning
 * God's Pardon
 * God's Part
 * God's Power
 * God's Presence (God is all-present to whate'er we do)
 * God's Presence (God's evident, and may be said to be)
 * God's Presence (God's present everywhere, but most of all)
 * God's Price and Man's Price
 * God's Providence
 * God's Time Must End Our Trouble
 * God, and Lord
 * God and the King
 * God Has a Twofold Part
 * God Hears Us
 * God Is One
 * God Not to Be Comprehended
 * God Sparing in Scourging
 * God to Be First Served
 * Gold and Frankincense
 * Gold Before Goodness
 * The Good-night or Blessing
 * Good and Bad
 * Good Christians
 * A Good Death
 * Good Friday: Rex Tragicus; Or, Christ Going to His Cross
 * A Good Husband
 * Good Luck Not Lasting
 * Good Manners at Meat
 * Good Men Afflicted Most
 * The Goodness of His God
 * Good Precepts or Counsel
 * Graces for Children
 * Great Boast Small Roast
 * Great Grief, Great Glory
 * Great Maladies, Long Medicines
 * Great Spirits Supervive
 * Grief (Consider sorrows, how they are aright)
 * Grief (Sorrows divided amongst many, less)
 * Griefs

H

 * The Hag (The hag is astride)
 * The Hag (The staff is now greas'd)
 * Hanch, a Schoolmaster
 * The Hand and Tongue
 * Happiness
 * Happiness to Hospitality; or, a Hearty Wish to Good Housekeeping
 * Hardening of Hearts
 * Haste Hurtful
 * The Headache
 * Health
 * The Heart
 * Heaven (Heaven is most fair; but fairer He)
 * Heaven (Heaven is not given for our good works here)
 * Hell (Hell is no other but a soundless pit)
 * Hell (Hell is the place where whipping-cheer abounds)
 * Hell Fire (The fire of hell this strange condition hath)
 * Hell Fire (One only fire has hell; but yet it shall)
 * Her Bed
 * Her Legs
 * His Age, Dedicated to His Peculiar Friend, M. John Wickes, Under the Name of Posthumus
 * His Alms
 * His Answer to a Friend
 * His Answer to a Question
 * His Anthem to Christ on the Cross
 * His Cavalier
 * His Change
 * His Charge to Julia at His Death
 * His Comfort
 * His Coming to the Sepulchre
 * His Confession
 * His Content in the Country
 * His Covenant; or, Protestation to Julia
 * His Creed
 * His Desire
 * His Dream
 * His Ejaculation to God
 * His Embalming to Julia
 * His Farewell to Sack
 * His Grange
 * His Grange, or Private Wealth
 * His Hope or Sheet Anchor
 * His Lachrymae; or, Mirth Turned to Mourning
 * His Last Request to Julia
 * His Litany to the Holy Spirit
 * His Loss
 * His Meditation upon Death
 * His Misery in a Mistress
 * His Mistress to Him at His Farewell
 * His Offering, with the Rest, at the Sepulchre
 * His Own Epitaph
 * His Parting From Mrs. Dorothy Kennedy
 * His Petition
 * His Poetry His Pillar
 * His Power
 * His Prayer for Absolution
 * His Prayer to Ben Jonson
 * His Protestation to Perilla
 * His Recantation
 * His Request to Julia
 * His Return to London
 * His Sailing From Julia
 * His Saviour's Words Going to the Cross
 * His Tears to Thamesis
 * His Weakness in Woes
 * His Winding-sheet
 * His Wish (Fat be my hind; unlearned be my wife)
 * His Wish (It is sufficient if we pray)
 * His Wish to God
 * His Wish to Privacy
 * His Words to Christ Going to the Cross
 * The Hock-cart or Harvest Home. To the Right Honourable Mildmay, Earl of Westmoreland
 * The Honeycomb
 * Honours Are Hindrances
 * Hope Heartens
 * Hope Well and Have Well: or, Fair After Foul Weather
 * The Hour-glass
 * How He Would Drink His Wine
 * How His Soul Came Ensnared
 * How Lilies Came White
 * How Marigolds Came Yellow
 * How Pansies or Heart's-ease Came First
 * How Primroses Came Green
 * How Roses Came Red (Roses at first were white)
 * How Roses Came Red ( 'Tis said, as Cupid danc'd among)
 * How Springs Came First
 * How the Wall-flower Came First, and Why So Called
 * How Violets Came Blue
 * Humility
 * Hunger
 * A Hymn to Bacchus (Bacchus, let me drink no more)
 * A Hymn to Bacchus (I sing thy praise, Iacchus)
 * A Hymn to Cupid
 * An Hymn to Juno
 * An Hymn to Love
 * A Hymn to Sir Clipseby Crew
 * A Hymn to the Graces
 * A Hymn to the Lares
 * A Hymn to the Muses (Honour to you who sit)
 * A Hymn to the Muses (O you the virgins nine!)
 * A Hymn to Venus and Cupid

I

 * I Call and I Call
 * Ill Government
 * Impossibilities to His Friend
 * In Praise of Women
 * In the Dark None Dainty
 * The Invitation

J

 * Jack and Jill
 * Jehovah
 * The Jimmall Ring or True-love Knot
 * The Judgment-day (God hides from man the reck'ning day, that he)
 * The Judgment-day (In doing justice God shall then be known)
 * Julia's Churching, or Purification
 * Julia's Petticoat
 * A Just Man

K

 * A King and No King
 * King Oberon's Clothing (attributed to Herrick by some sources)
 * Kings
 * Kings and Tyrants
 * A Kiss
 * The Kiss. A Dialogue
 * Kisses
 * Kisses Loathsome
 * Kissing and Bussing
 * Kissing Usury
 * Knowledge

L

 * Labour
 * The Lamp
 * Lar's Portion and the Poet's Part
 * Large Bounds Do but Bury Us
 * Lasciviousness
 * The Last Stroke Strikes Sure
 * Laugh and Lie Down
 * The Lawn
 * Laws (When laws full power have to sway, we see)
 * Laws (Who violates the customs, hurts the health)
 * Laxare Fibulam
 * Leander's Obsequies
 * Leaven
 * Lenity
 * Leprosy in Clothes
 * Leprosy in Houses
 * Liberty
 * Life Is the Body's Light
 * Like Loves His Like
 * Like Pattern, Like People
 * The Lily in a Crystal
 * Lines Have Their Linings, and Books Their Buckram
 * Lip-labour
 * Lips Tongueless
 * Little and Loud
 * Littleness No Cause of Leanness
 * Loading and Unloading
 * Long-looked-for Comes at Last
 * Long and Lazy
 * Long Life
 * Loss From the Least
 * Lots to Be Liked
 * Love
 * Love's Play at Push-Pin
 * Love, What It Is
 * Love Dislikes Nothing
 * Love Is a Syrup
 * Love Killed by Lack
 * Love Lightly Pleased
 * Love Me Little, Love Me Long
 * Love Palpable
 * Love Perfumes All Parts
 * Lovers: How They Come and Part
 * Lyric for Legacies
 * A Lyric to Mirth

M

 * The Mad Maid's Song
 * The Maiden-blush
 * Maids' Nays Are Nothing
 * Man's Dying-place Uncertain
 * Manna
 * Martha, Martha
 * Matins; or, Morning Prayer
 * The May-pole
 * The Meadow-verse; or, Anniversary to Mistress Bridget Lowman
 * The Mean (Imparity doth ever discord bring)
 * The Mean ( 'Tis much among the filthy to be clean)
 * A Mean in Our Means
 * Mean Things Overcome Mighty
 * Meat Without Mirth
 * A Meditation for His Mistress
 * Men Mind No State in Sickness
 * Mercy
 * Mercy and Love
 * Merits Make the Man
 * Mirth
 * Miseries
 * Moderation (In things a moderation keep)
 * Moderation (Let moderation on thy passions wait)
 * Money Gets the Mastery
 * Money Makes the Mirth
 * Montes Scripturarum: The Mounts of the Scriptures
 * Mora Sponsi, the Stay of the Bridegroom
 * The More Mighty, the More Merciful
 * More Modest, More Manly
 * More Potent, Less Peccant
 * Most Words, Less Works
 * The Mount of the Muses
 * Mr. Herrick: His Daughter's Dowry
 * Mr. Robert Herrick: His Farewell unto Poetry
 * Mrs. Eliz. Wheeler, Under the Name of the Lost Shepherdess
 * Multitude

N

 * Need
 * Neglect
 * Neutrality Loathsome
 * Never Too Late to Die
 * The New Charon: Upon the Death of Henry, Lord Hastings
 * The New-year's Gift
 * The New-year's Gift: Or, Circumcision's Song. Sung to the King in the Presence at Whitehall
 * A New-year's Gift Sent to Sir Simon Steward
 * The Night-piece, to Julia
 * No Action Hard to Affection
 * No Bashfulness in Begging
 * No Coming to God Without Christ
 * No Danger to Men Desperate
 * No Despite to the Dead
 * No Difference I' Th' Dark
 * No Escaping the Scourging
 * No Fault in Women
 * No Loathsomeness in Love
 * No Lock Against Letchery
 * No Luck in Love
 * No Man Without Money
 * None Free From Fault
 * None Truly Happy Here
 * No Pains, No Gains
 * Nor Buying or Selling
 * North and South
 * No Shipwreck of Virtue. To a Friend
 * No Spouse but a Sister
 * Not Every Day Fit for Verse
 * Nothing Free-cost
 * Nothing New
 * No Time in Eternity
 * Not to Covet Much Where Little Is the Charge
 * Not to Love
 * No Want Where There's Little
 * The Number of Two
 * A Nuptial Song or Epithalamy on Sir Clipseby Crew and His Lady
 * A Nuptial Verse to Mistress Elizabeth Lee, Now Lady Tracy

O

 * Obedience
 * Obedience in Subjects
 * Oberon's Feast
 * Oberon's Palace
 * Observation (The Jews, when they built houses, I have read)
 * Observation (The Virgin Mother stood at distance, there)
 * Observation (Who to the north, or south, doth set)
 * An Ode, or Psalm to God
 * An Ode for Him
 * An Ode on the Birth of Our Saviour
 * An Ode to Master Endymion Porter, Upon His Brother's Death
 * An Ode to Sir Clipseby Crew
 * Of Horne, a Combmaker
 * Of Love (I do not love, nor can it be)
 * Of Love (I'll get me hence)
 * Of Love (Instruct me now what love will do)
 * Of Love. A Sonnet
 * The Old Wives' Prayer
 * The Olive Branch
 * On a Perfumed Lady
 * Once Poor, Still Penurious
 * Once Seen and No More
 * On Fortune
 * On Gilly-flowers Begotten
 * On Heaven
 * On Himself (A wearied pilgrim, I have wandered here)
 * On Himself (Ask me why I do not sing)
 * On Himself (Born I was to meet with age)
 * On Himself (Here down my wearied limbs I'll lay)
 * On Himself (I fear no earthly powers)
 * On Himself (I will no longer kiss)
 * On Himself (If that my fate has now fulfill'd my year)
 * On Himself (I'll sing no more, nor will I longer write)
 * On Himself (I'll write no more of love; but now repent)
 * On Himself (Let me not live if I not love)
 * On Himself (Live by thy muse thou shalt, when others die)
 * On Himself (Lost to the world; lost to myself; alone)
 * On Himself (Love-sick I am, and must endure)
 * On Himself (One ear tingles; some there be)
 * On Himself (Some parts may perish, die thou canst not all)
 * On Himself (The work is done: young men and maidens, set)
 * On Himself (Weep for the dead, for they have lost this light)
 * On Himself (Young I was, but now am old)
 * On His Book
 * On Joan
 * On Julia's Breath
 * On Julia's Lips
 * On Julia's Picture
 * On Love (Love bade me ask a gift)
 * On Love (Love is a kind of war: hence those who fear!)
 * On Love (That love 'twixt men does ever longest last)
 * On Poet Prat
 * On Tomasin Parsons
 * Orpheus
 * Our Own Sins Unseen
 * Out of Time, Out of Tune

P

 * Pain and Pleasure
 * Pain Ends in Pleasure
 * Pains Without Profit
 * Painting Sometimes Permitted
 * A Panegyric to Sir Lewis Pemberton
 * Paradise
 * A Paranæticall, or Advisive Verse, to His Friend, M. John Wicks
 * The Parasceve, or Preparation
 * The Parcae; or, Three Dainty Destinies: The Armillet
 * Parcel-gilt Poetry
 * Pardon
 * Pardons
 * The Parliament of Roses to Julia
 * The Parting Verse, the Feast There Ended
 * The Parting Verse or Charge to His Supposed Wife When He Travelled
 * Passion
 * A Pastoral Sung to the King: Montano, Silvio, and Mirtillo, Shepherds
 * A Pastoral Upon the Birth of Prince Charles. Presented to the King, and Set by Mr. Nic. Laniere
 * Patience: Or, Comforts in Crosses
 * Patience in Princes
 * Peace Not Permanent
 * Penitence (The doctors, in the Talmud, say)
 * Penitence (Who after his transgression doth repent)
 * Penitency
 * The Perfume
 * Persecutions Profitable
 * Persecutions Purify
 * Perseverance
 * The Peter-penny
 * Physicians
 * The Pillar of Fame
 * Pity and Punishment
 * Pity to the Prostrate
 * The Plaudit, or End of Life
 * Pleasures Pernicious
 * Plots Not Still Prosperous
 * The Plunder
 * The Poet's Good Wishes for the Most Hopeful and Handsome Prince, the Duke of York
 * The Poet Hath Lost His Pipe
 * The Poet Loves a Mistress, but Not to Marry
 * Poetry Perpetuates the Poet
 * Poets
 * Policy in Princes
 * The Pomander Bracelet
 * The Poor's Portion
 * The Poor Man's Part
 * A Position in the Hebrew Divinity
 * Possessions
 * Posting to Printing
 * Potentates
 * Poverty and Riches
 * Poverty the Greatest Pack
 * Power and Peace
 * The Power in the People
 * Pray and Prosper
 * Prayer
 * Prayers Must Have Poise
 * Precepts
 * Predestination
 * Prescience
 * Presence and Absence
 * The Present; or, the Bag of the Bee
 * Present Government Grievous
 * The Present Time Best Pleaseth
 * Prevision or Provision
 * Pride Allowable in Poets
 * The Primitiæ to Parents
 * The Primrose
 * Princes and Favourites
 * A Prognostic
 * Proof to No Purpose
 * A Psalm or Hymn to the Graces
 * Purgatory
 * Purposes
 * Putrefaction

Q

 * The Quintell

R

 * Rags
 * The Rainbow
 * The Rainbow, or Curious Covenant
 * Rapine Brings Ruin
 * Readiness
 * Recompense
 * The Recompense
 * Regression Spoils Resolution
 * Repletion
 * A Request to the Graces
 * Rest
 * Rest Refreshes
 * The Resurrection
 * The Resurrection Possible and Probable
 * Revenge
 * Reverence
 * Reverence to Riches
 * Reward and Punishments
 * Rewards
 * Riches and Poverty
 * The Right Hand
 * A Ring Presented to Julia
 * Roaring
 * The Rock of Rubies, and the Quarry of Pearls
 * The Rod
 * The Rosary
 * The Rose
 * The Rosemary Branch
 * Rules for Our Reach

S

 * Sabbaths
 * The Sacrifice, by Way of Discourse Betwixt Himself and Julia
 * The Sadness of Things for Sappho's Sickness
 * Safety on the Shore
 * Safety to Look to Oneself
 * Saint Distaff's Day, or the Morrow After Twelfth Day
 * Salutation
 * Satan
 * Satisfaction for Sufferings
 * Sauce for Sorrows
 * The Scare-fire
 * The School or Pearl of Putney, the Mistress of All Singular Manners, Mistress Portman
 * Seek and Find
 * Shame No Statist
 * Shipwreck
 * The Shoe-Tying
 * Short and Long Both Likes
 * A Short Hymn to Lar
 * A Short Hymn to Venus
 * The Shower of Blossoms
 * Silence
 * The Silken Snake
 * Sin (Sin leads the way, but as it goes, it feels)
 * Sin (Sin never slew a soul unless there went)
 * Sin (Sin no existence; nature none it hath)
 * Sin (Sin once reached up to God's eternal sphere)
 * Sin (There is no evil that we do commit)
 * Sin (There's no constraint to do amiss)
 * Sin and Strife
 * Sincerity
 * Single Life Most Secure
 * Sinners
 * Sin Seen
 * Sin Severely Punished
 * Sins Loathed, and yet Loved
 * Slavery
 * Smart
 * The Smell of the Sacrifice
 * Sobriety in Search
 * Society
 * Soft Music
 * Song. His Mistress to Him at His Farewell
 * A Song
 * A Song to the Maskers
 * A Song Upon Silvia
 * A Sonnet of Perilla
 * Sorrows
 * Sorrows Succeed
 * The Soul
 * The Soul Is the Salt
 * Speak in Season
 * The Spell
 * The Staff and Rod
 * The Star-song: A Carol to the King Sung at Whitehall
 * Steam in Sacrifice
 * Stool-ball
 * Strength to Support Sovereignty
 * Studies to Be Supported
 * The Succession of the Four Sweet Months
 * Sufferance
 * Sufferings
 * Suffer That Thou Canst Not Shift
 * The Sum and the Satisfaction
 * Supreme Fortune Falls Soonest
 * Surfeits
 * Suspicion Makes Secure
 * The Suspicion Upon His Over-much Familiarity With a Gentlewoman
 * Sweetness in Sacrifice

T

 * Tapers
 * Tears (God from our eyes all tears hereafter wipes)
 * Tears (Our present tears here, not our present laughter)
 * Tears (Tears most prevail; with tears, too, thou may'st move)
 * Tears (The tears of saints more sweet by far)
 * Tears and Laughter
 * Tears Are Tongues
 * The Tear Sent to Her From Staines
 * Temporal Goods
 * Temptation (God tempteth no one, as St. Austin saith)
 * Temptation (Those saints which God loves best)
 * Temptations (No man is tempted so but may o'ercome)
 * Temptations (Temptations hurt not, though they have access)
 * A Ternary of Littles, Upon a Pipkin of Jelly Sent to a Lady
 * Thanksgiving
 * A Thanksgiving to God for His House
 * Things Mortal Still Mutable
 * Things of Choice Long A-coming
 * This, and the next World
 * Three Fatal Sisters
 * The Tinker's Song
 * The Tithe. To the Bride
 * To a Bed of Tulips
 * To a Friend
 * To a Gentlewoman Objecting to Him His Gray Hairs
 * To a Gentlewoman on Just Dealing
 * To All Young Men That Love
 * To a Maid
 * To Anthea (Ah, my Anthea! Must my heart still break?)
 * To Anthea (Anthea, I am going hence)
 * To Anthea (Come, Anthea, know thou this)
 * To Anthea (If, dear Anthea, my hard fate it be)
 * To Anthea (Let's call for Hymen, if agreed thou art)
 * To Anthea (Now is the time, when all the lights wax dim)
 * To Anthea (Sick is Anthea, sickly is the spring)
 * To Anthea, Who May Command Him Anything
 * To Anthea Lying in Bed
 * To Apollo
 * To Apollo. A Short Hymn
 * To Bacchus, a Canticle
 * To Be Merry
 * To Bianca
 * To Bianca, to Bless Him
 * To Blossoms
 * To Carnations. A Song
 * To Cedars
 * To Cherry-blossoms
 * To Christ
 * To Critics
 * To Crown It
 * To Cupid
 * To Daffodils
 * To Daisies, Not to Shut So Soon
 * To Dean Bourn, a Rude River in Devon, by Which Sometimes He Lived
 * To Death
 * To Dwes. A Song
 * To Dianeme (Dear, though to part it be a hell)
 * To Dianeme (Give me one kiss)
 * To Dianeme (I could but see thee yesterday)
 * To Dianeme (Show me thy feet; show me thy legs, thy thighs)
 * To Dianeme (Sweet, be not proud of those two eyes)
 * To Dianeme. A Ceremony in Gloucester
 * To Doctor Alabaster
 * To Electra (I dare not ask a kiss)
 * To Electra (I'll come to thee in all those shapes)
 * To Electra (Let not thy tombstone e'er be laid by me)
 * To Electra (More white than whitest lilies far)
 * To Electra (Shall I go to Love and tell)
 * To Electra ( 'Tis evening, my sweet)
 * To Electra. Love Looks for Love
 * To Enjoy the Time
 * To Find God
 * To Flowers
 * To Fortune
 * To God (Come to me, God; but do not come)
 * To God (Do with me, God, as Thou didst deal with John)
 * To God (God gives not only corn for need)
 * To God (God is all sufferance here; here He doth show)
 * To God (God! to my little meal and oil)
 * To God (God, who me gives a will for to repent)
 * To God (God's undivided, One in Persons Three)
 * To God (If anything delight me for to print)
 * To God (If I have played the truant, or have here)
 * To God (I'll come, I'll creep, though Thou dost threat)
 * To God (Lord, I am like to mistletoe)
 * To God (Make, make me Thine, my gracious God)
 * To God (Pardon me, God, once more I Thee entreat)
 * To God (The work is done; now let my laurel be)
 * To God (Thou hast promis'd, Lord, to be)
 * To God (With golden censers, and with incense, here)
 * To God: An Anthem Sung in the Chapel at Whitehall Before the King
 * To God, His Gift
 * To God: His Good Will
 * To God in Time of Plundering
 * To God: On His Sickness
 * To Groves
 * To Heaven
 * To His Angry God
 * To His Book (Be bold, my book, nor be abash'd, or fear)
 * To His Book (Before the press scarce one could see)
 * To His Book (Come thou not near those men who are like bread)
 * To His Book (Go thou forth, my book, though late)
 * To His Book (Have I not blest thee? Then go forth, nor fear)
 * To His Book (If hap it must, that I must see thee lie)
 * To His Book (Like to a bride, come forth, my book, at last)
 * To His Book (Make haste away, and let one be)
 * To His Book (Take mine advice, and go not near)
 * To His Book (Thou art a plant sprung up to wither never)
 * To His Book (While thou didst keep thy candor undefil'd)
 * To His Brother, Nicholas Herrick
 * To His Brother-in-law, Master John Wingfield
 * To His Closet-gods
 * To His Conscience
 * To His Dear God
 * To His Dear Valentine, Mistress Margaret Falconbridge
 * To His Dying Brother, Master William Herrick
 * To His Ever-loving God
 * To His Faithful Friend, M. John Crofts, Cup-bearer to the King
 * To His Friend, Mr. J. Jincks
 * To His Friend, on the Untunable Times
 * To His Friend to Avoid Contention of Words
 * To His Girls
 * To His Girls, Who Would Have Him Sportful
 * To His Honoured and Most Ingenious Friend, Mr. Charles Cotton
 * To His Honoured Friend, M. John Weare, Councillor
 * To His Honoured Friend, Sir John Mince
 * To His Honoured Friend, Sir Thomas Heale
 * To His Honoured Kinsman, Sir Richard Stone
 * To His Honoured Kinsman, Sir William Soame. Epig
 * To His Household Gods
 * To His Kinsman, M. Tho. Herrick, Who Desired to Be in His Book
 * To His Kinsman, Sir Thos. Soame
 * To His Kinswoman, Mistress Susanna Herrick
 * To His Kinswoman, Mrs. Penelope Wheeler
 * To His Learned Friend, M. Jo. Harmar, Physician to the College of Westminster
 * To His Lovely Mistresses
 * To His Maid, Prew
 * To His Mistress
 * To His Mistress Objecting to Him Neither Toying or Talking
 * To His Mistresses (Help me! help me! now I call)
 * To His Mistresses (Put on your silks, and piece by piece)
 * To His Muse (Go woo young Charles no more to look)
 * To His Muse (Were I to give thee baptism, I would choose)
 * To His Muse (Whither, mad maiden, wilt thou roam?)
 * To His Muse; Another to the Same
 * To His Nephew, to Be Prosperous in His Art of Painting
 * To His Paternal Country
 * To His Peculiar Friend, M. Jo. Wicks
 * To His Peculiar Friend, Mr. Thomas Shapcott, Lawyer
 * To His Peculiar Friend, Sir Edward Fish, Knight Baronet
 * To His Saviour
 * To His Saviour's Sepulchre: His Devotion
 * To His Saviour, a Child: A Present by a Child
 * To His Saviour. The New-year's Gift
 * To His Sister-in-law, M. Susanna Herrick
 * To His Sweet Saviour
 * To His Tomb-maker
 * To His Valentine on St. Valentine's Day
 * To His Verses
 * To His Worthy Friend, M. Arthur Bartly
 * To His Worthy Friend, M. John Hall, Student of Gray's Inn
 * To His Worthy Friend, M. Thos. Falconbirge
 * To His Worthy Kinsman, Mr. Stephen Soame
 * To Jealousy
 * To Jos., Lord Bishop of Exeter
 * To Julia (Help me, Julia, for to pray)
 * To Julia (Holy waters hither bring)
 * To Julia (How rich and pleasing thou, my Julia, art)
 * To Julia (I am zealless; prithee pray)
 * To Julia (Julia, when thy Herrick dies)
 * To Julia (Offer thy gift; but first the law commands)
 * To Julia (Permit me, Julia, now to go away)
 * To Julia (The saints'-bell calls, and, Julia, I must read)
 * To Julia, in Her Dawn, or Daybreak
 * To Julia, the Flaminica Dialis or Queen-priest
 * To Julia in the Temple
 * To Keep a True Lent
 * To Lar
 * To Laurels
 * To Live Freely
 * To Live Merrily and to Trust to Good Verses
 * To Love
 * To M. Denham on His Prospective Poem
 * To M. Henry Lawes, the Excellent Composer of His Lyrics
 * To M. Kellam
 * To M. Laurence Swetnaham
 * To M. Leonard Willan, His Peculiar Friend
 * To Marigolds
 * To Meadows
 * To Mistress Amy Potter
 * To Mistress Dorothy Parsons
 * To Mistress Katherine Bradshaw, the Lovely, That Crowned Him With Laurel
 * To Mistress Mary Willand
 * To Momus
 * To Music
 * To Music. A Song
 * To Music, to Becalm a Sweet-sick Youth
 * To Music, to Becalm His Fever
 * To My Dearest Sister, M. Mercy Herrick
 * To My Ill Reader
 * To Myrrha, Hard-hearted
 * To Oenone (Sweet Oenone, do but say)
 * To Oenone (Thou say'st Love's dart)
 * To Oenone (What conscience, say, is it in thee)
 * To Pansies
 * To Perenna (How long, Perenna, wilt thou see)
 * To Perenna (I a dirge will pen to thee)
 * To Perenna (Thou say'st I'm dull; if edgeless so I be)
 * To Perenna (When I thy parts run o'er, I can't espy)
 * To Perenna, a Mistress
 * To Perilla
 * To Phyllis, to Love and Live With Him
 * To Primroses Filled With Morning Dew
 * To Prince Charles Upon His Coming to Exeter
 * To Robin Redbreast
 * To Rosemary and Bays
 * To Roses in Julia's Bosom
 * To Sappho (Let us now take time and play)
 * To Sappho (Sappho, I will choose to go)
 * To Sappho (Thou say'st thou lov'st me, Sappho; I say no)
 * To Silvia (I am holy while I stand) (I am holy while I stand)
 * To Silvia (No more, my Silvia, do I mean to pray)
 * To Silvia (Pardon my trespass, Silvia; I confess)
 * To Silvia to Wed
 * To Sir Clipseby Crew (Give me wine, and give me meat)
 * To Sir Clipseby Crew (Since to the country first I came)
 * To Sir George Parry, Doctor of the Civil Law
 * To Sir John Berkley, Governor of Exeter
 * To Springs and Fountains
 * To Sycamores
 * To the Detractor
 * To the Earl of Westmoreland
 * To the Fever, Not to Trouble Julia
 * To the Generous Reader
 * To the Genius of His House
 * To the Handsome Mistress Grace Potter
 * To the High and Noble Prince George, Duke, Marquis, and Earl of Buckingham
 * To the Honoured Master Endymion Porter
 * To the King (Give way, give way, now, now my Charles shines here)
 * To the King (If when these lyrics, Cæsar, you shall hear)
 * To the King and Queen Upon Their Unhappy Distances
 * To the King, to Cure the Evil
 * To the King, Upon His Coming With His Army Into the West
 * To the King, Upon His Taking of Leicester
 * To the King, Upon His Welcome to Hampton Court. Set and Sung
 * To the Ladies
 * To the Lady Crew, Upon the Death of Her Child
 * To the Lady Mary Villars, Governess to the Princess Henrietta
 * To the Lark
 * To the Little Spinners
 * To the Lord Hopton, on His Fight in Cornwall
 * To the Maids to Walk Abroad
 * To the Most Accomplished Gentleman, M. Michael Oulsworth
 * To the Most Accomplished Gentleman, Master Edward Norgate, Clerk of the Signet to His Majesty
 * To the Most Comely and Proper M. Elizabeth Finch
 * To the Most Fair and Lovely Mistress Anne Soame, Now Lady Abdie
 * To the Most Illustrious, and Most Hopeful Prince, Charles, Prince of Wales
 * To the Most Learned, Wise, and Arch-antiquary, M. John Selden
 * To the Most Virtuous Mistress Pot, Who Many Times Entertained Him
 * To the Nightingale and Robin Redbreast
 * To the Painter, to Draw Him a Picture
 * To the Passenger
 * To the Patron of Poets, M. End. Porter
 * To the Queen
 * To the Reverend Shade of His Religious Father
 * To the Right Gracious Prince, Lodowick, Duke of Richmond and Lennox
 * To the Right Honourable Edward, Earl of Dorset
 * To the Right Honourable Mildmay, Earl of Westmoreland
 * To the Right Honourable Philip, Earl of Pembroke and Montgomery
 * To the Rose. A Song
 * To the Sour Reader
 * To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time
 * To the Water Nymphs Drinking at the Fountain
 * To the Western Wind
 * To the Willow-tree
 * To the Yew and Cypress to Grace His Funeral
 * To Violets
 * To Virgins
 * To Vulcan
 * To Women, to Hide Their Teeth if They Be Rotten or Rusty
 * To Youth
 * The Transfiguration
 * Treason
 * True Friendship
 * True Safety
 * Truth
 * Truth and Error
 * Truth and Falsehood
 * Twelfth Night: or, King and Queen
 * Twilight (The twilight is no other thing, we say)
 * Twilight (Twilight no other thing is, poets say)
 * Two Things Odious

U

 * Ultimus Heroum: or, to the Most Learned, and to the Right Honourable, Henry, Marquis of Dorchester
 * Upon a Black Twist Rounding the Arm of the Countess of Carlisle
 * Upon a Blear-ey'd Woman
 * Upon a Cheap Laundress
 * Upon a Child
 * Upon a Child. An Epitaph
 * Upon a Child That Died
 * Upon a Comely and Curious Maid
 * Upon a Crooked Maid
 * Upon Adam Peapes
 * Upon a Delaying Lady
 * Upon a Fly
 * Upon a Free Maid, With a Foul Breath
 * Upon a Gentlewoman With a Sweet Voice
 * Upon a Hoarse Singer
 * Upon a Lady Fair but Fruitless
 * Upon a Lady That Died in Child-bed, and Left a Daughter Behind Her
 * Upon a Maid (Gone she is a long, long way)
 * Upon a Maid (Hence a blessed soul is fled)
 * Upon a Maid (Here she lies, in bed of spice)
 * Upon a Maid That Died the Day She Was Married
 * Upon an Old Man: A Residentiary
 * Upon an Old Woman
 * Upon a Painted Gentlewoman
 * Upon a Physician
 * Upon a Scar in a Virgin's Face
 * Upon a Sour-breath Lady
 * Upon a Virgin
 * Upon a Virgin Kissing a Rose
 * Upon a Wife That Died Mad With Jealousy
 * Upon a Young Mother of Many Children
 * Upon Batt
 * Upon Ben Jonson
 * Upon Bice
 * Upon Blanch (Blanch swears her husband's lovely; when a scald)
 * Upon Blanch (I have seen many maidens to have hair)
 * Upon Blinks
 * Upon Blisse
 * Upon Boreman
 * Upon Bran
 * Upon Bridget
 * Upon Brock
 * Upon Buggins
 * Upon Bunce
 * Upon Bungy
 * Upon Burr
 * Upon Candlemas Day
 * Upon Case
 * Upon Center, a Spectacle-maker With a Flat Nose
 * Upon Chub
 * Upon Clunn
 * Upon Cob
 * Upon Cock
 * Upon Comely, a Good Speaker but an Ill Singer
 * Upon Coone
 * Upon Crab
 * Upon Craw
 * Upon Croot
 * Upon Cuffe
 * Upon Cupid (As lately I a garland bound)
 * Upon Cupid (Love, like a beggar, came to me)
 * Upon Cupid (Love like a gipsy lately came)
 * Upon Cupid (Old wives have often told how they)
 * Upon Cuts
 * Upon Deb
 * Upon Doll (No question but Doll's cheeks would soon roast dry)
 * Upon Doll (Doll, she so soon began the wanton trade)
 * Upon Dundrige
 * Upon Eeles
 * Upon Electra
 * Upon Electra's Tears
 * Upon Faunus
 * Upon Flimsey
 * Upon Flood or a Thankful Man
 * Upon Fone a Schoolmaster
 * Upon Franck (Franck ne'er wore silk she swears; but I reply)
 * Upon Franck (Franck would go scour her teeth; and setting to 't)
 * Upon Gander
 * Upon Glasco
 * Upon Glass
 * Upon God (God is all fore-part; for, we never see)
 * Upon God (God is not only said to be)
 * Upon God (God, when He takes my goods and chattels hence)
 * Upon Gorgonius
 * Upon Greedy
 * Upon Groynes
 * Upon Grubs
 * Upon Grudgings
 * Upon Gryll
 * Upon Gubbs
 * Upon Guess
 * Upon Gut
 * Upon Her Alms
 * Upon Her Blush
 * Upon Her Eyes
 * Upon Her Feet
 * Upon Her Voice
 * Upon Her Weeping
 * Upon Himself (Come, leave this loathed country life, and then)
 * Upon Himself (I am sieve-like, and can hold)
 * Upon Himself (I could never love indeed)
 * Upon Himself (I dislik'd but even now)
 * Upon Himself (I lately fri'd, but now behold)
 * Upon Himself (Mop-eyed I am, as some have said)
 * Upon Himself (Thou shalt not all die; for, while love's fire shines)
 * Upon Himself (Thou'rt hence removing (like a shepherd's tent))
 * Upon Himself Being Buried
 * Upon His Departure Hence
 * Upon His Eyesight Failing Him
 * Upon His Grey Hairs
 * Upon His Julia
 * Upon His Kinswoman, Mistress Bridget Herrick
 * Upon His Kinswoman, Mistress Elizabeth Herrick
 * Upon His Kinswoman, Mrs. M. S
 * Upon His Sister-in-law, Mistress Elizabeth Herrick
 * Upon His Spaniel Tracy
 * Upon His Verses
 * Upon Hog
 * Upon Huncks
 * Upon Irene
 * Upon Jack and Jill
 * Upon Jolly's Wife
 * Upon Jolly and Jilly
 * Upon Jone and Jane
 * Upon Judith
 * Upon Julia's Breasts
 * Upon Julia's Clothes
 * Upon Julia's Fall
 * Upon Julia's Hair Bundled Up in a Golden Net
 * Upon Julia's Hair Fill'd With Dew
 * Upon Julia's Recovery
 * Upon Julia's Riband
 * Upon Julia's Sweat
 * Upon Julia's Unlacing Herself
 * Upon Julia's Voice
 * Upon Julia Washing Herself in the River
 * Upon Kings
 * Upon Leech
 * Upon Letcher
 * Upon Linnet
 * Upon Loach
 * Upon Love (A crystal vial Cupid brought)
 * Upon Love (I held Love's head while it did ache)
 * Upon Love (I played with Love, as with the fire)
 * Upon Love (In a dream, Love bade me go)
 * Upon Love (Love brought me to a silent grove)
 * Upon Love (Love, I have broke)
 * Upon Love (Love is a circle, and an endless sphere)
 * Upon Love (Love scorch'd my finger, but did spare)
 * Upon Love (Love's a thing, as I do hear)
 * Upon Love (Some salve to every sore we may apply)
 * Upon Love, by Way of Question and Answer
 * Upon Lucia
 * Upon Lucia Dabbled in the Dew
 * Upon Lucy
 * Upon Luggs
 * Upon Lulls
 * Upon Lungs
 * Upon Lupes
 * Upon Lusk
 * Upon M. Ben. Jonson
 * Upon M. William Lawes, the Rare Musician
 * Upon Madam Ursly
 * Upon Maggot, a Frequenter of Ordinaries
 * Upon Man
 * Upon Master Fletcher's Incomparable Plays
 * Upon Mease
 * Upon Meg
 * Upon Mistress Susanna Southwell, Her Cheeks
 * Upon Moon
 * Upon Mrs. Elizabeth Wheeler, Under the Name of Amarillis
 * Upon Much-more
 * Upon Mudge
 * Upon Nis
 * Upon Nodes
 * Upon One-ey'd Broomsted
 * Upon One Lily, Who Married With a Maid Called Rose
 * Upon One Who Said She Was Always Young
 * Upon Pagget
 * Upon Parrat
 * Upon Parson Beanes
 * Upon Parting
 * Upon Paske, a Draper
 * Upon Patrick, a Footman
 * Upon Paul
 * Upon Pearch
 * Upon Peason
 * Upon Penny
 * Upon Pievish
 * Upon Pimp
 * Upon Pink, an Ill-fac'd Painter
 * Upon Prew, His Maid
 * Upon Prickles
 * Upon Prig
 * Upon Prigg
 * Upon Prudence Baldwin: Her Sickness
 * Upon Punchin
 * Upon Puss and Her 'prentice
 * Upon Ralph (Curse not the mice, no grist of thine they eat)
 * Upon Ralph (Ralph pares his nails, his warts, his corns, and Ralph)
 * Upon Rasp
 * Upon Reape
 * Upon Rook
 * Upon Roots
 * Upon Roses
 * Upon Rump
 * Upon Rush
 * Upon Sappho
 * Upon Sappho Sweetly Playing and Sweetly Singing
 * Upon Scobble
 * Upon Shark
 * Upon Shewbread
 * Upon Shift
 * Upon Shopter
 * Upon Sibb
 * Upon Sibilla
 * Upon Silvia, a Mistress
 * Upon Skinns
 * Upon Skoles
 * Upon Skrew
 * Upon Skurf
 * Upon Slouch
 * Upon Smeaton
 * Upon Snare, an Usurer
 * Upon Sneape
 * Upon Some Women
 * Upon Spalt
 * Upon Spenke
 * Upon Spokes
 * Upon Spunge
 * Upon Spur
 * Upon Strut
 * Upon Sudds, a Laundress
 * Upon Tap
 * Upon Teage
 * Upon Tears
 * Upon the Bishop of Lincoln's Imprisonment
 * Upon the Death of His Sparrow
 * Upon the Lady Crew
 * Upon the Loss of His Finger
 * Upon the Loss of His Mistresses
 * Upon the Much-lamented Mr. J. Warr
 * Upon the Nipples of Julia's Breast
 * Upon the Roses in Julia's Bosom
 * Upon the Same
 * Upon the Troublesome Times
 * Upon Time
 * Upon Tooly
 * Upon Trap
 * Upon Trencherman
 * Upon Trigg
 * Upon Truggin
 * Upon Tubbs
 * Upon Tuck
 * Upon Umber
 * Upon Urles
 * Upon Ursley
 * Upon Vinegar
 * Upon Woman and Mary
 * Upon Wrinkles
 * Upon Zelot
 * Up Tails All

V

 * Verses
 * The Vine
 * The Virgin Mary (To work a wonder, God would have her shown)
 * The Virgin Mary (The Virgin Mary was, as I have read)
 * Virtue
 * Virtue Best United
 * Virtue Is Sensible of Suffering
 * The Vision (Methought I saw, as I did dream in bed)
 * The Vision (Sitting alone, as one forsook)
 * The Vision to Electra
 * The Voice and Viol
 * A Vow to Mars
 * A Vow to Minerva
 * A Vow to Venus

W

 * Wages
 * The Wake
 * Want (Need is no vice at all, though here it be)
 * Want (Want is a softer wax, that takes thereon)
 * War
 * The Wassail
 * The Watch
 * The Way
 * Any Way for Wealth
 * Way in a Crowd
 * The Weeping Cherry
 * The Welcome to Sack
 * Welcome What Comes
 * What God Is
 * What Kind of Mistress He Would Have
 * When He Would Have His Verses Read
 * Whips
 * The White Island: Or, Place of the Blest
 * Why Flowers Change Colour
 * The Widows' Tears: Or, Dirge of Dorcas
 * The Will Makes the Work; or, Consent Makes the Cure
 * The Willow Garland
 * The Will the Cause of Woe
 * A Will to Be Working
 * Wit Punished, Prospers Most
 * Women Useless
 * The Wounded Cupid. Song
 * The Wounded Heart
 * Writing

Y

 * Youth and Age

Z

 * Zeal Required in Love