To —

Anne Lynch Botta

 * To  (Within these leafless trees)
 * To II (I do not ask if an illustrious name)
 * To III (Give me but the energy)
 * To IV (This life is to thee like a region enchanted)
 * To V (In the noble army of Reform)
 * To VI (The brilliant west is glowing)
 * To VII (Upon the sea of life)
 * To VIII (Thou dost not dwell in this dark world of ours)
 * To IX (They may talk of the eloquence famous in story)
 * To X (Like the river's current rapid)

Anne Brontë

 * To -- (I will not mourn thee, lovely one)

George Gordon Byron

 * To —— (Oh! well I know your subtle Sex)
 * To —— (But once I dared to lift my eyes)

Edmund Cartwright

 * To -- (Chained to the oar and hopeless of reprieve)

Roderick J. Flanagan

 * To——————— (Farewell to thee, that bliss farewell)
 * To * * * * (When from the moulding hand complete)
 * To * * * * * * (Those radiant eyes of brightest glow)

Grace Greenwood

 * To

John Keats

 * To ——— (Had I a man's fair form, then might my sighs)
 * To ——— (What can I do to drive away)

Frances Anne Kemble

 * To (Yet once again, but once, before we sever)
 * To (When we first met, dark wintry skies were glooming)
 * To (When the glad sun looks smiling from the sky)
 * To (When the dawn)
 * To (What recks the sun, how weep the heavy flowers)
 * To (The fountain of my life, which flowed so free)
 * To (Is it a sin to wish that I may meet thee)
 * To (I would I might be with thee, when the year)

Letitia Elizabeth Landon

 * To ——— (Oh! say not, that I love not nature's face)

Sidney Lanier

 * To —— (The Day was dying; his breath)

Eliza Gabriella Lewis

 * To (Yes, love me for myself alone)
 * To (We may not break, beloved)
 * To (Thy mellow voice is still upon mine ear)
 * To (Star of my fate! my life—my love—my joy)
 * To (It told me thou wert all my own)

Edith May

 * To

Mary Noel McDonald

 * To

Ewart Alan Mackintosh

 * To (You have destroyed my early loves)

Frances Sargent Osgood

 * To (You are not what you used to be)
 * To (They tell me I was false to thee)
 * To (Let your summer friends go by)
 * To (In Fashion's illumined saloon)

Edgar Allan Poe

 * To —— (The bowers whereat, in dreams)
 * To —— (I heed not that my earthly lot)
 * To —— (I saw thee on thy bridal day)
 * To —— (Should my early life seem)
 * To —— (Sleep on, sleep on, another hour)
 * To —— —— (Not long ago, the writer of these lines)

Louise Jopling Rowe

 * To (Would you care, dear love, if you knew)
 * To (What need is there to tell thee how)
 * To (To life once given there shall be no end)
 * To (The bright dream's fled; it could not last')
 * To (Fell in my hand, a pearl of price)
 * To (Ah! happy Traveller flying South)

Epes Sergent

 * To ---, also called To Egeria (Leagues of blue ocean are between us spread)

Percy Bysshe Shelley

 * To —— (I fear thy kisses, gentle maiden)
 * To —— (Music, when soft voices die)
 * To: —— (Oh! there are spirits of the air)
 * To —— (One word is too often profaned)
 * To —— (When passion's trance is overpast)
 * To —— (Yet look on me—take not thine eyes away)

William Robert Spencer

 * To —— (Too late I stayed—forgive the crime)

Robert Louis Stevenson

 * To —— (I knew thee strong and quiet like the hills)

Alfred Tennyson

 * To (All good things have not kept aloof)
 * To (Clear-headed friend, whose joyful scorn)
 * To (I send you here a sort of allegory)
 * To (Sainted Juliet! dearest name!)

Frances Auretta Fuller Victor

 * To — (Had I not known all that the heart can tell)

Metta Victoria Fuller Victor

 * To — (The whole of this June day replete with roses.)

Amelia Welby

 * To

William Wordsworth

 * To (From the dark chambers of dejection freed)