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A Dream of Fair Women

Alfred, Lord Tennyson

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

οἱ ῥέοντες.

“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