| Preface | 
| Introduction | 
| Part
          I  the editions | 
| Poems,
          chiefly lyrical published 1830 | 
| Poems
          published 1832-3 | 
| Poems
          in two volumes, published 1842 | 
| alterations | 
| Part
          II  comparison of the editions | 
| Part
          III  grouping the poems | 
| Part
          IV  "Art for art, art for truth." | 
| Early
          Poems | 
| To
          the Queen | 
| Claribel
           a Melody | 
| Lilian | 
| Isabel | 
| Mariana | 
| To
            ("Clear-headed friend, whose joyful scorn") | 
| Madeline | 
| Song
           The Owl | 
| Second
          Song to the Same | 
| Recollections
          of the Arabian Nights | 
| Ode
          to Memory | 
| Song
          ("A spirit haunts the year's last hours") | 
| Adeline | 
| A
          Character | 
| The
          Poet | 
| The
          Poet's Mind | 
| The
          Sea-Fairies | 
| The
          Deserted House | 
| The
          Dying Swan | 
| A
          Dirge | 
| Love
          and Death | 
| The
          Ballad of Oriana | 
| Circumstance | 
| The
          Merman | 
| The
          Mermaid | 
| Sonnet
          to J. M. K. | 
| The
          Lady of Shalott | 
| Mariana
          in the South | 
| Eleänore | 
| The
          Miller's Daughter | 
| Fatima | 
| OEnone | 
| The
          Sisters | 
| To
            -("I send you here a sort of allegory") | 
| The
          Palace of Art | 
| Lady
          Clara Vere de Vere | 
| The
          May Queen | 
| New
          Year's Eve | 
| Conclusion | 
| The
          Lotos-Eaters | 
| Dream
          of Fair Women | 
| Margaret | 
| The
          Blackbird | 
| The
          Death of the Old Year | 
| To
          J. S. | 
| "You
          ask me, why, tho' ill at ease" | 
| "Of
          old sat Freedom on the heights" | 
| "Love
          thou thy land, with love far-brought" | 
| The
          Goose | 
| The
          Epic | 
| Morte
          d'Arthur | 
| The
          Gardener's Daughter; or, The Pictures | 
| Dora | 
| Audley
          Court | 
| Walking
          to the Mail | 
| Edwin
          Morris; or, The Lake | 
| St.
          Simeon Stylites | 
| The
          Talking Oak | 
| Love
          and Duty | 
| The
          Golden Year | 
| Ulysses | 
| Locksley
          Hall | 
| Godiva | 
| The
          Two Voices | 
| The
          Day-Dream:  Prologue | 
| The
          Sleeping Palace | 
| The
          Sleeping Beauty | 
| The
          Arrival | 
| The
          Revival | 
| The
          Departure | 
| L'Envoi | 
| Epilogue | 
| Amphion | 
| St.
          Agnes | 
| Sir
          Galahad | 
| Edward
          Gray | 
| Will
          Waterproof's Lyrical Monologue | 
| To
            , after reading a Life and Letters | 
| To
          E.L., on his Travels in Greece | 
| Lady
          Clare | 
| The
          Lord of Burleigh | 
| Sir
          Launcelot and Queen Guinevere: a Fragment | 
| A
          Farewell | 
| The
          Beggar Maid | 
| The
          Vision of Sin | 
| "Come
          not, when I am dead" | 
| The
          Eagle | 
| "Move
          eastward, happy earth, and leave" | 
| "Break,
          break, break" | 
| The
          Poet's Song | 
| Appendix
           Suppressed Poems | 
| Elegiacs | 
| The
          "How" and the "Why" | 
| Supposed
          Confessions | 
| The
          Burial of Love | 
| To
            ("Sainted Juliet! dearest name !") | 
| Song
          ("I' the glooming light") | 
| Song
          ("The lintwhite and the throstlecock") | 
| Song
          ("Every day hath its night") | 
| Nothing
          will Die | 
| All
          Things will Die | 
| Hero
          to Leander | 
| The
          Mystic | 
| The
          Grasshopper | 
| Love,
          Pride and Forgetfulness | 
| Chorus
          ("The varied earth, the moving heaven") | 
| Lost
          Hope | 
| The
          Tears of Heaven | 
| Love
          and Sorrow | 
| To
          a Lady Sleeping | 
| 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") | 
| Love | 
| The
          Kraken | 
| English
          War Song | 
| National
          Song | 
| Dualisms | 
| We
          are Free | 
| "Mine
          be the strength of spirit, full and free" | 
| To
           ("All good things have not kept aloof) | 
| Buonaparte | 
| Sonnet
          ("Oh, Beauty, passing beauty! sweetest Sweet!") | 
| The
          Hesperides | 
| Song
          ("The golden apple, the golden apple, the hallowed fruit") | 
| Rosalind | 
| Song
          ("Who can say") | 
| Kate | 
| Sonnet
          ("Blow ye the trumpet, gather from afar") | 
| Poland | 
| To
           ("As when with downcast eyes we muse and brood") | 
| O
          Darling Room | 
| To
          Christopher North | 
| The
          Skipping Rope | 
| Timbuctoo | 
| Bibliography
          of the Poems of 1842 |