Elegiac Sonnets and Other Poems Volume I

Published in the First Edition (1784)
Sonnet I - (The Partial Muse)

Sonnet II - Written at the Close of Spring

Sonnet III - To a Nightingale

Sonnet IV - To the Moon

Sonnet V - To the South Downs

Sonnet VI - To Hope

Sonnet VII - On The Departure of the Nightingale

Sonnet VIII - To Spring

Sonnet IX - (Blest is Yon Shepherd)

Sonnet X - To Sleep

Chanson

Imitation

The Origin of Flattery

From Petrarch (Loose to the Wind)

From Petrarch (Where the Green Leaves)

From Petrarch (Ye Vales and Woods)

Supposed to be written by Werter (Go, Cruel Tyrant)

Supposed to be written by Werter (To Solitude)

Supposed to be written by Werter (Make There My Tomb)

Published in the Third Edition (1786)
Sonnet X - To Mrs. G.

Sonnet XII - Written on the Sea Shore

Sonnet XIII - From Petrarch (Oh! Place Me Where the Burning Noon)

Sonnet XVII - From the Thirteenth Cantata of Metastasio

Sonnet XVIII - To the Earl of Egremont

Sonnet XIX - To Mr. Hayley

Sonnet XX - To the Countess of A --

Sonnet XXIII - To The North Star

Sonnet XXV - Just Before His Death

Sonnet XXVI - To the River Arun (On the Wild Banks)

Sonnet XXVII - (Yon Little Troop)

Sonnet XXVIII - To Friendship

Sonnet XXIX - To Miss C --

Sonnet XXX - To the River Arun (Be the Proud Thames)

Sonnet XXXI - Written in Farm Wood

Sonnet XXXII - To Melancholy

Sonnet XXXIII - To the Naiad of the Arun

Sonnet XXXIV - To a Friend

Sonnet XXXV - To Fortitude

Sonnet XXXVI - (The Lone Wanderer)

Published in the Fifth Edition (1789)
Sonnet XXXVII - Sent to the Honorable Mrs. O'Neill, with painted flowers

Sonnet XXXVIII - From the Novel of Emmeline

Sonnet XXXIX - To Night

Sonnet XL - (Far on the Sands)

Sonnet XLI - To Tranquillity

Sonnet XLII - Composed during a walk on the Downs

Sonnet XLIII - (The Unhappy Exile)

Sonnet XLIV - Written in the church-yard at Middleton in Sussex

Sonnet XLV - On leaving a part of Sussex

Sonnet XLVI - Written at Penshurst

Sonnet XLVII - To Fancy

Sonnet XLVIII - To Mrs. ****

Ode to Despair

Elegy

Song (From The French of Cardinal Bernis)

Published in the Sixth Edition (1792)
Sonnet XLIX - Supposed to Have Been Written in a Church-Yard, Over the Grave of a Young Woman of Nineteen

Sonnet L - (Farewell, ye lawns!)

Sonnet LI - Supposed to Have Been Written in the Hebrides

Sonnet LII - The Pilgrim

Sonnet LIII - The Laplander

Sonnet LIV - The Sleeping Woodman

Sonnet LV - The Return of the Nightingale

Sonnet LVI - The Captive escaped in the Wilds of America

Sonnet LVII - To Dependence

Sonnet LVIII - The Glow-worm

Sonnet LIX - Written During a Remarkable Thunder Storm

The Peasant of the Alps

Song (Does Pity Give)

Thirty-eight