Sonnet

Félix Arvers

 * Sonnet ("My soul has a secret that no mortal must hear")

Richard Barnfield
From The Affectionate Shepheard (1594):
 * Sonnet ("Loe here behold these tributarie Teares")

From Cynthia, with certaine Sonnets and the Legend of Cassandra (1595):
 * Sonnet 1 ("Sporting at fancie, setting light by love")
 * Sonnet 2 ("Beuty and Maiesty are falne at ods")
 * Sonnet 3 ("The Stoicks thinke, (and they come neere the truth)")
 * Sonnet 4 ("Two stars there are in one faire firmament")
 * Sonnet 5 ("It is reported of faire Thetis Sonne")
 * Sonnet 6 ("Sweet Corrall lips, where Nature's treasure lies")
 * Sonnet 7 ("Sweet Thames I honour thee, not for thou art")
 * Sonnet 8 ("Sometimes I wish that I his pillow were")
 * Sonnet 9 ("Diana (on a time) walking the wood")
 * Sonnet 10 ("Thus was my love, thus was my Ganymed")
 * Sonnet 11 ("Sighing, and sadly sitting by my Love")
 * Sonnet 12 ("Some talke of Ganymede th' Idalian Boy")
 * Sonnet 13 ("Speake Eccho, tell; how may I call my loue? Loue")
 * Sonnet 14 ("Here, hold this glove (this milk-white cheveril glove)")
 * Sonnet 15 ("A fairest Ganymede, disdaine me not")
 * Sonnet 16 ("Long haue I long'd to see my Loue againe")
 * Sonnet 17 ("Cherry-Lipt Adonis in his snowie shape")
 * Sonnet 18 ("Not Megabætes nor Cleonymus")
 * Sonnet 19 ("Ah no; nor I my seife: though my pure love")
 * Sonnet 20 ("But now my Muse toyled with continuall care")

From Poems: in divers humors (1598):
 * Sonnet 1 ("If Musique and sweet Poetrie agree")
 * Sonnet 2 ("Chaucer is dead; and Gower lyes in grave")

Brooke Boothby

 * Sonnet I ("Life's summer flown, the wint'ry tempest rude")
 * Sonnet II ("Why died I not before that fatal morn")
 * Sonnet III ("Did I not weep for him that was in pain!")
 * Sonnet V ("Death! Thy cold hand the brightest flower has chill'd")
 * Sonnet VI ("What art thou, Life? The shadow of a dream")
 * Sonnet XII ("Well has thy classick chisel, Banks, express'd")
 * Sonnet XV ("Dear Mansergh! Of the few this breast who share")

Anne Lynch Botta

 * Sonnet ("Oh! in that better land to which I go")

Nicholas Breton

 * Sonnet ("The worldly prince doth in his sceptre hold")

Rupert Brooke

 * Sonnet ("I said I splendidly loved you")
 * Sonnet ("Oh! Death will find me")
 * Sonnet ("Not with vain tears, when we're beyond the sun")

George Gordon Byron

 * Sonnet, to Genevra ("Thine eyes' blue tenderness, thy long fair hair"), 1814.
 * Sonnet, to Genevra ("Thy cheek is pale with thought, but not from woe"), 1814.

G. K. Chesterton

 * Sonnet with the Compliments of the Season ("I know you. You will hail the huge release")
 * Sonnet ("If you have picked your lawn of leaves and snails")
 * Sonnet ("High on the wall that holds Jerusalem")

Thomas Holley Chivers

 * Sonnet: On Reading Milton's Paradise Lost ("Sweet as that soul-uplifting Hydromel")
 * Sonnet: The Release of Fionnuala ("Beside an island in an inland sea")

Eliza Cook

 * Sonnet

Annie Isabel Curwen

 * Sonnet

John Donne

 * Sonnet: The Token ("Send me some tokens, that my hope may live")

Paul Laurence Dunbar

 * Sonnet ("Emblem of blasted hope and lost desire")

William Fowler

 * Sonnet ("The day is done, the sun doth als declyne")
 * Sonnet ("Far from these eyes, and sundered from that face")
 * Sonnet ("I hope, sweet soul, to see, at my return")
 * Sonnet ("I walk within this wood to vent my woes")
 * Sonnet ("Ten thousand times from side to side I turn")

Richard Watson Gilder

 * Sonnet ("I know not if I love her overmuch")
 * Sonnet ("I like her gentle hand that sometimes strays")
 * The Sonnet ("What is a sonnet? 'T is the pearly shell")

Paul Hamilton Hayne

 * Sonnet ("The brave old Poets sing of nobler themes")

Felicia Hemans
As Felicia Dorothea Browne:
 * Sonnet ("Where nature's grand romantic charms invite"), 1808.
 * Sonnet ("'Tis sweet to think the spirits of the blest"), 1808.
 * Sonnet ("Ah! now farewell, thou sweet and gentle maid"), 1808.
 * Sonnet ("I love to hail the mild the balmy hour"), 1808.

Jane Elizabeth Roscoe Hornblower

 * Sonnet (Yes! there are sympathies fate cannot part)
 * Sonnet (Wrentnall! farewell! where many a smiling day)
 * Sonnet (Upon the hill of Mars the Apostle trod)
 * Sonnet (Unhappy he, who breathes this mortal breath)
 * Sonnet (Thou art enshrined, although thou knowst it not)
 * Sonnet (There is an hour in which I think of thee)
 * Sonnet (The sun shone on me with a scorching heat)
 * Sonnet (That face—Oh! it is eloquent with love)
 * Sonnet (She fell asleep, and she was beautiful)
 * Sonnet (Pent in the city's darksome walls, I pine)
 * Sonnet (Oh! open to that young and suffering heart)
 * Sonnet (O ye wild winds, that with resistless sweep)
 * Sonnet (O world of spirits! O glorious world of mind)
 * Sonnet (O beautiful in life and spirit! Thou)
 * Sonnet (O Lead me by thy hand, where living streams)
 * Sonnet (O! do not pity me because I weep)
 * Sonnet (O! blest with all life's holiest aims can give)
 * Sonnet (Jesus walked forth into Gethsemane)
 * Sonnet (In the pale shadows of the silent night)
 * Sonnet (In the last days shall fools and scoffers rise)
 * Sonnet (In morning's radiant beam, Almighty One,)
 * Sonnet (Immortal visions dawn upon me now)
 * Sonnet (I raise my eyes to Thee, great light Supreme)
 * Sonnet (I cannot part from thee—thine image still)
 * Sonnet (How oft beneath His blest and healing wings)
 * Sonnet (How blest of virtuous minds the union sweet)
 * Sonnet (Her cheek was pale, and, in life's opening pride)
 * Sonnet (He who denied his Lord, at the mild gaze)
 * Sonnet (Go to thy bed of down, but as the storm)
 * Sonnet (Father of Heaven! thy glorious smile of love)
 * Sonnet (Farewell! the memory of thee will not fly)
 * Sonnet (Bright Rose! that on my Father's honoured vest)
 * Sonnet (Art thou of earth? thine is a sainted brow)
 * Sonnet (Amidst the darkness of the ancient time)

John Keats

 * Sonnet ("O thou! whose face hath felt the Winter's wind")

Frances Anne Kemble

 * Sonnet (Whene'er I recollect the happy time)
 * Sonnet (Whence should they come, lady! those happy days)
 * Sonnet (Though thou return unto the former things)
 * Sonnet (Thou poisonous laurel leaf, that in the soil)
 * Sonnet (There 's not a fibre in my trembling frame)
 * Sonnet (Spirit of all sweet sounds! who in mid air)
 * Sonnet (Say thou not sadly, "never," and "no more")
 * Sonnet (Oh weary, weary world! how fall thou art)
 * Sonnet (Oh, modest maiden morn! why dost thou blush)
 * Sonnet (Oft let me wander hand in hand with Thought)
 * Sonnet (Not in our dreams, not even in our dreams)
 * Sonnet (Like one who walketh in a plenteous land)
 * Sonnet (Lady, whom my beloved loves so well)
 * Sonnet (I would I knew the lady of thy heart)
 * Sonnet (I hear a voice low in the sunset woods)
 * Sonnet (Cover me with your everlasting arms)
 * Sonnet (By jasper founts, whose falling waters make)
 * Sonnet (But to be still! oh, but to cease awhile)
 * Sonnet (Blaspheme not thou thy sacred life, nor turn)
 * Sonnet (Away, away! bear me away, away)
 * Sonnet (Art thou already weary of the way?)
 * Sonnet ('Twas but a dream! and oh! what are they all)

William Kirby

 * Sonnet ("God numbers them, His servants' hoary hairs")

Ján Kollár

 * Sonnets 1–363+ in The Daughter of Sláva

Ellen P. Laflin

 * Sonnet ("When Flora, on her fairy wings")

Letitia Elizabeth Landon

 * Sonnet ("Green willow! over whom the perilous blast")
 * Sonnet ("It is not in the day of revelry")
 * Sonnet ("I envy not the traveller's delight")
 * Sonnet. To Miss Kelly, on her Performance of Juliet ("'Twas the embodying of a lovely thought")

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

 * Sonnet ("O precious evenings! all too swiftly sped!")

James Russell Lowell

 * Sonnet ("The Maple puts her corals on in May")

Louisa Anne Meredith

 * Sonnet ("Weary with uncongenial employ")

Alice Meynell

 * Sonnet, also called The Poet to Nature ("I have no secrets from thee, lyre sublime")
 * Sonnet, also called A Shattered Lute ("I touched the heart that loved me as a player")
 * Sonnet, also called The Love of Narcissus ("Like him who met his own eyes in the river")
 * Sonnet, also called The Garden ("My heart shall be thy garden. Come, my own")
 * Sonnet, also called Spring on the Alban Hills ("O'er the Campagna it is dim warm weather")
 * Sonnet, also called At a Poet's Grave ("Rather unto the Truth than unto one")
 * Sonnet, also called In February ("Rich meanings of the prophet-Spring adorn")
 * Sonnet, also called To a Daisy ("Slight as thou art, thou art enough to hide")
 * Sonnet, also called A Poet of one Mood ("Thou poet of one mood in all thy lays")
 * Sonnet, also called Thoughts in Separation ("We never meet; yet we meet day by day")
 * Sonnet, also called The Young Neophyte ("Who knows what days I answer for to-day")
 * Sonnet, also called To One Poem in a Silent Time ("Who looked for thee, thou little song of mine")
 * Sonnet, also called Your Own Fair Youth ("Your own fair youth, you care so little for it")

Mary Russell Mitford

 * Sonnet

Gérard de Nerval

 * Sonnet ("Believest thou thyself the sole thinker, O man")

Petrarch

 * 317 sonnets in Il Canzoniere

Edgar Allan Poe

 * Sonnet — To Science ("Science! true daughter of Old Time thou art!")
 * Sonnet — To Zante ("Fair isle, that from the fairest of all flowers")

Christina Rossetti

 * Monna Innominata: Sonnet of Sonnets ("I wish I could remember that first day")

Louise Jopling Rowe

 * Sonnet

Mary C. Ryan

 * Sonnet

Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve

 * Sonnet ("Awake in bed, I listened to the rain!")

Juvenilia

 * "Sonnet" ("Above the ruin of God's holy place")
 * "Sonnet" ("Amid the florid multitude her face")
 * "Sonnet" ("Down the strait vistas where a city street")
 * "Sonnet" ("Give me the treble of thy horns and hoofs")
 * "Sonnet" ("Her courts are by the flux of flaming ways")
 * "Sonnet" ("I fancied, while you stood conversing there")
 * "Sonnet" ("It may be for the world of weeds and tares")
 * "Sonnet" ("Like as a dryad, from her native bole")
 * "Sonnet" ("Oft as by chance, a little while apart")
 * "Sonnet" ("A splendor, flamelike, born to be pursued")
 * "Sonnet" ("There was a youth around whose early way")
 * "Sonnet" ("A tide of beauty with returning May")
 * "Sonnet" ("To me, a pilgrim on that journey bound")
 * "Sonnet" ("Up at his attic sill the South wind came")
 * "Sonnet" ("To me, a pilgrim on that journey bound")
 * "Sonnet" ("When among creatures fair of countenance")
 * "Sonnet" ("Who shall invoke her, who shall be her priest")

Last Poems

 * "Sonnet" ("Apart sweet women (for whom Heaven be blessed)")
 * "Sonnet" ("Clouds rosy-tinted in the setting sun")
 * "Sonnet" ("I have sought Happiness, but it has been")
 * "Sonnet" ("If I was drawn here from a distant place")
 * "Sonnet" ("Not that I always struck the proper mean")
 * "Sonnet" ("Oh, love of woman, you are known to be")
 * "Sonnet" ("Oh, you are more desirable to me")
 * "Sonnet" ("Seeing you have not come with me, nor spent")
 * "Sonnet" ("Sidney, in whom the heyday of romance")
 * "Sonnet" ("There have been times when I could storm and plead")
 * "Sonnet" ("Well, seeing I have no hope, then let us part")
 * "Sonnet" ("Why should you be astonished that my heart")

Percy Bysshe Shelley

 * Sonnet ("Ye hasten to the grave! What seek ye there")
 * Sonnet ("Lift not the painted veil which those who live")

Geoffrey Bache Smith

 * A Sonnet ("There is a wind that takes the heart of a man")
 * Sonnet ("To-night the world is but a prison house")

Robert Southey

 * Sonnet 1 ("Hold your mad hands! for ever on your plain")
 * Sonnet 2 ("Why dost thou beat thy breast and rend thine hair")
 * Sonnet 3 ("Oh he is worn with toil! the big drops run")
 * Sonnet 4 (Tis Night; the mercenary tyrants sleep")
 * Sonnet 5 ("Did then the bold Slave rear at last the Sword")
 * Sonnet 6 ("High in the air expos'd the Slave is hung")
 * Sonnet 1 ("Go Valentine and tell that lovely maid")
 * Sonnet 2 ("Think Valentine, as speeding on thy way")
 * Sonnet 3 ("Not to thee, Bedford! mournful is the tale")
 * Sonnet 4 ("What tho' no sculptured monument proclaim")
 * Sonnet 5 ("Hard by the road, where on that little mound")
 * Sonnet 6 - To a Brook near the Village of Corston
 * Sonnet 7 - To the Evening Rainbow
 * Sonnet 8 ("With many a weary step, at length I gain")
 * Sonnet 9 ("Fair is the rising morn when o'er the sky")
 * Sonnet 10 ("How darkly o'er yon far-off mountain frowns")

Edmund Spenser

 * Sonnets 1-89 in Amoretti
 * Sonnet 29
 * Sonnet 30
 * Sonnet 67
 * Sonnet 68
 * Sonnet 75
 * Sonnet 79
 * Sonnet 80

R. Howard Spring

 * Sonnet, also called Knowledge ("Talk not to me of knowledge, I would fain")

Charles Hamilton Sorley

 * A Sonnet ("When you see millions of the mouthless dead")

Joséphin Soulary

 * Sonnet ("For days, weeks, months, and long wearisome years")

Bayard Taylor

 * Sonnet ("Who, harnessed in his mail of Self, demands")

Sara Teasdale

 * Sonnet ("I saw a ship sail forth at evening time")

Alfred Tennyson

 * Sonnet ("Could I outwear my present state of woe")
 * Sonnet ("Though Night hath climbed her peak of highest noon")
 * Sonnet ("Shall the hag Evil die with child of Good")
 * Sonnet ("The pallid thunderstricken sigh for gain")
 * Sonnet ("Mine be the strength of spirit fierce and free")
 * Sonnet ("O beauty, passing beauty! sweetest Sweet!")
 * Sonnet ("But were I loved, as I desire to be,")
 * Sonnet ("Blow ye the trumpet, gather from afar")
 * Sonnet ("How long, O God, shall men be ridden down")
 * Sonnet ("As when with downcast eyes we muse and brood")

Henry Timrod

 * Sonnet ("Fate! seek me out some lake, far off and lone")

Edith Wharton

 * The Sonnet ("Pure form, that like some chalice of old time")

Oscar Wilde

 * Sonnet: On Hearing the Dies Iræ Sung in the Sistine Chapel ("Nay, Lord, not thus! white lilies in the spring")
 * Sonnet: On the Massacre of the Christians in Bulgaria ("Christ, dost Thou live indeed? or are Thy bones")
 * Sonnet: On the Sale by Auction of Keats' Love Letters
 * Sonnet: Written in Holy Week at Genoa

Ella Wheeler Wilcox

 * Sonnet ("Methinks ofttimes my heart is like some bee")
 * The Sonnet ("Alone it stands in Poesy's fair land")

William Wordsworth

 * Sonnet ("Though narrow be that Old Man's cares, and near")