A hymn to my God in a night of my late sickness | p. 3 |
On his mistress, the Queen of Bohemia | p. 3 |
The flea | p. 4 |
The good morrow | p. 5 |
Song | p. 6 |
Woman's constancy | p. 7 |
The undertaking | p. 7 |
The sun rising | p. 8 |
The canonization | p. 9 |
The triple fool | p. 11 |
Song | p. 12 |
Air and angels | p. 13 |
The anniversary | p. 14 |
Twickenham garden | p. 15 |
Valediction to his book | p. 16 |
The dream | p. 18 |
A valediction of weeping | p. 19 |
The curse | p. 20 |
A nocturnal upon St. Lucy's day, being the shortest day | p. 21 |
The apparition | p. 22 |
A valediction : forbidding mourning | p. 23 |
The ecstasy | p. 24 |
The funeral | p. 27 |
The relic | p. 28 |
Elegy : to his mistress going to bed | p. 29 |
Elegy : his picture | p. 30 |
'As due by many titles' | p. 31 |
'At the round Earth's imagined corners' | p. 31 |
'Death be not proud' | p. 32 |
'What if this present' | p. 32 |
'Batter my heart' | p. 33 |
'Since she whom I loved' | p. 33 |
Good Friday, 1613 : riding westward | p. 34 |
A hymn to Christ, at the author's last going into Germany | p. 35 |
A hymn to God the Father | p. 36 |
Hymn to God my God, in my sickness | p. 37 |
[Parted souls] | p. 38 |
Elegy over a tomb | p. 39 |
The thought | p. 40 |
Sonnet : on the groves near Merlou Castle | p. 42 |
An ode upon a question moved, whether love should continue for ever? | p. 42 |
A meditation upon his wax candle burning out | p. 47 |
A dialogue betwixt time and a pilgrim | p. 49 |
'Though regions far divided' | p. 51 |
Pure simple love | p. 53 |
To Cynthia : on her embraces | p. 56 |
To Cynthia : on her mother's decease | p. 57 |
Upon platonic love : to mistress Cicely Crofts, maid of honour | p. 58 |
The legacy | p. 60 |
The exequy | p. 62 |
Sic Vita | p. 65 |
A contemplation upon flowers | p. 65 |
On a monument | p. 66 |
The altar | p. 67 |
Redemption | p. 67 |
Easter wings | p. 68 |
Prayer (I) | p. 69 |
Jordan (I) | p. 69 |
Church-monuments | p. 70 |
Virtue | p. 71 |
The pearl : Matthew 13 | p. 71 |
Mortification | p. 73 |
Affliction (IV) | p. 74 |
Life | p. 75 |
Jordan (II) | p. 76 |
The pilgrimage | p. 76 |
The collar | p. 78 |
The pulley | p. 79 |
The flower | p. 80 |
Aaron | p. 81 |
The forerunners | p. 82 |
Discipline | p. 83 |
Death | p. 85 |
Doomsday | p. 86 |
Love (III) | p. 87 |
Perseverance | p. 87 |
Church festivals | p. 88 |
To my mistress sitting by a river's side : an eddy | p. 89 |
To my mistress in absence | p. 90 |
A rapture | p. 91 |
To a lady that desired I would love her | p. 95 |
To my worthy friend master George Sandys, on his translation of the Psalms | p. 97 |
A song | p. 98 |
The second rapture | p. 99 |
An elegy upon the death of the dean of St. Paul's, Dr. John Donne | p. 100 |
The present | p. 103 |
The vow-breach | p. 104 |
The reconcilement | p. 105 |
Upon his picture | p. 106 |
To time | p. 106 |
Against them who lay unchastity to the sex of woman | p. 107 |
Nox Nocti indicat scientiam (David) | p. 108 |
For the lady Olivia Porter :a present, upon a new year's day | p. 110 |
Song : to two lovers condemned to die | p. 110 |
The dream : to Mr. George Porter | p. 111 |
Song | p. 115 |
Song : Endymion Porter, and Olivia | p. 116 |
Song | p. 117 |
The bud | p. 118 |
An apology for having loved before | p. 118 |
Of the last verses in the book | p. 119 |
On time | p. 120 |
At a solemn music | p. 121 |
On Shakespeare : 1630 | p. 122 |
Sonnet II | p. 122 |
[Love's clock] | p. 123 |
Against fruition | p. 124 |
[The constant lover] | p. 125 |
Farewell to love | p. 126 |
Constancy | p. 128 |
'Lord, when the wise men' | p. 129 |
'Madam, 'tis true' | p. 130 |
Elegy on Dr. Donne | p. 131 |
A sigh sent to his absent love | p. 133 |
No platonic love | p. 134 |
A letter to her husband, absent upon public employment | p. 135 |
On Mr. George Herbert's book entitled 'the temple of sacred poems', sent to a gentlewoman | p. 136 |
To the noblest and best of ladies, the countess of Denbigh :persuading her to resolution in religion, and to render herself without further delay into the communion of the Catholic Church | p. 136 |
A hymn of the nativity, sung as by the shepherds | p. 138 |
New year's day | p. 143 |
Upon the body of our blessed Lord, naked and bloody | p. 144 |
Saint Mary Magdalene, or the weeper | p. 144 |
A hymn to the name and honour of the admirable Saint Teresa | p. 151 |
An epitaph upon a young married couple dead and buried together | p. 156 |
Mr. Crashaw's answer for hope | p. 156 |
The hecatomb to his mistress | p. 158 |
The anti-platonic | p. 161 |
To the same : the tears | p. 162 |
On myself being sick of a fever | p. 163 |
To her at her departure | p. 164 |
Sonnet : to his mistress confined | p. 165 |
Written in juice of lemon | p. 166 |
All-over, love | p. 168 |
Against hope | p. 169 |
The enjoyment | p. 170 |
My picture | p. 171 |
Ode : of wit | p. 172 |
On the death of Mr. Crashaw | p. 174 |
Hymn to light | p. 177 |
Song : to Lucasta, going beyond the seas | p. 181 |
Song : to Lucasta, going to the wars | p. 182 |
The grasshopper : to my noble friend Mr. Charles Cotton : ode | p. 183 |
To Althea, from prison : song | p. 185 |
La Bella Bona Roba | p. 186 |
A dialogue between the resolved soul and created pleasure | p. 187 |
On a drop of dew | p. 190 |
The coronet | p. 191 |
Bermudas | p. 192 |
A dialogue between the soul and body | p. 193 |
The nymph complaining for the death of her fawn | p. 195 |
To his coy mistress | p. 198 |
Mourning | p. 199 |
The definition of love | p. 201 |
The picture of little T. C. in a prospect of flowers | p. 202 |
Damon the mower | p. 204 |
The garden | p. 207 |
An Horatian ode upon Cromwell's return from Ireland | p. 209 |
Regeneration | p. 213 |
The retreat | p. 216 |
The morning-watch | p. 217 |
'Silence, and stealth of days' | p. 218 |
Unprofitableness | p. 219 |
Idle verse | p. 219 |
The world | p. 220 |
Man | p. 222 |
'I walked the other day' | p. 223 |
'They are all gone into the world of light' | p. 226 |
The star | p. 227 |
'As time one day by me did pass' | p. 228 |
The waterfall | p. 230 |
Quickness | p. 231 |
The quaere | p. 232 |
Love's contentment | p. 232 |
The glow-worm | p. 234 |
The bracelet | p. 234 |
The exequies | p. 235 |
The life | p. 236 |
The dart | p. 236 |
To my husband | p. 237 |
An Epicurean ode | p. 238 |
The epitome | p. 239 |
An epitaph | p. 239 |
To my excellent Lucasia, on our friendship | p. 240 |
A dialogue of friendship multiplied | p. 241 |
Orinda to Lucasia | p. 242 |
The preparative | p. 243 |
Felicity | p. 245 |
Shadows in the water | p. 246 |
Consummation | p. 246 |
Love and life | p. 251 |
Song : a young lady to her ancient lover | p. 251 |
Upon nothing | p. 252 |
Greatness in little | p. 255 |
The echo | p. 257 |
On a sunbeam | p. 258 |
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