| LOVE POEMS |
| John Donne. | 1. | Good-morrow |
| 2. | Goe, and catche a falling starre |
| 3. | Sunne Rising |
| 4. | Lovers infinitenesse |
| 5. | Sweetest love, I do not goe |
| 6. | Aire and Angels |
| 7. | Anniversarie |
| 8. | Twicknam garden |
| 9. | Dreame |
| 10. | A Valediction: of weeping |
| 11. | Message |
| 12. | A nocturnall upon S. Lucies day |
| 13. | A Valediction: forbidding mourning |
| 14. | Extasie |
| 15. | Funerall |
| 16. | Blossome |
| 17. | Relique |
| 18. | Prohibition |
| 19. | Expiration |
| John Hoskins. | 20. | Absence |
| Sir Henry Wotton. | 21. | On his Mistris, the Queen of Bohemia |
| Aurelian Townshend. | 22. | Loves Victory |
| 13. | Upon kinde and true Love |
| Lord Herbert of Cherbury. | 24. | Elegy over a Tomb |
| 25. | An Ode upon a Question moved |
| Thomas Carew. | 26. | Mediocrity in love rejected |
| 27. | To my inconstant Mistris |
| 28. | A deposition from love |
| 29. | Ingratefull beauty threatned |
| 30. | Eternity of Love protested |
| 31. | To a Lady that desired I would love her |
| 32. | Ask me no more where Jove bestowes |
| William Habington. | 33. | To Roses in the bosome of Castara |
| Sir John Suckling. | 34. | Of thee (kind boy) I ask no red and white |
| 35. | Oh! for some honest Lovers ghost |
| 36. | My dearest Rival, least our Love |
| 37. | Out upon it, I have lov'd |
| Sir Francis Kynaston. | 38. | To Cynthia. On concealment of her beauty |
| Sidney Godolphin. | 39. | Noe more unto my thoughts appeare |
| 40. | Cloris, it is not thy disdaine |
| John Cleveland. | 41. | Upon Phillis walking in a morning before Sun-rising |
| Sir William Davenant. | 42. | Lark now leaves his watry Nest |
| 43. | Before we shall again behold |
| Richard Crashaw. | 44. | Loves Horoscope |
| 45. | Wishes. To his (supposed) Mistresse |
| Richard Lovelace. | 46. | To Lucasta, Going beyond the Seas |
| 47. | To Lucasta, Going to the Warres |
| 48. | Gratiana dauncing and singing |
| 49. | Scrutinie |
| 50. | To Althea, From Prison |
| Henry Vaughan. | 51. | To Amoret gone from him |
| John Hall. | 52. | Call |
| 53. | An Epicurean Ode |
| Thomas Stanley. | 54. | Repulse |
| 55. | To Celia pleading want of Merit |
| 56. | La Belle Confidente |
| 57. | Divorce |
| 58. | Exequies |
| Henry King. | 59. | Tell me no more how fair she is |
| Abraham Cowley. | 60. | Spring |
| 61. | Change |
| Andrew Marvell. | 62. | To his Coy Mistress |
| 63. | Gallery |
| 64. | Fair Singer |
| 65. | Definition of Love |
| 66. | Picture of little T. C. in a Prospect of Flowers |
| Katherine Philips. | 67. | To my Excellent Lucasia, on our Friendship |
| 68. | To my Lucasia, in defence of declared Friendship |
| |
| DIVINE POEMS |
| John Donne. | Holy Sonnets |
| | 69. Thou hast made me, And shall thy worke decay? |
| | 70. This is my playes last scene, here heavens appoint |
| | 71. At the round earths imagin'd corners, blow |
| | 72. Death be not proud, though some have called thee |
| | 73. What if this present were the worlds last night? |
| | 74. Batter my heart, three person'd God; for, you |
| | 75. Show me deare Christ, thy spouse, so bright and clear |
| 76. | Goodfriday, 1613. Riding Westward |
| 77. | A Hymne to Christ |
| 78. | Hymne to God my God, in my sicknesse |
| 79. | To Christ |
| Sir Henry Wotton. | 80. | A Hymn to my God in a night of my late Sicknesse |
| Ignoto. | 81. | A Dialogue betwixt God and the Soul |
| John Milton. | 82. | On the Morning of Christs Nativity |
| George Herbert. | 83. | Redemption |
| 84. | Easter wings |
| 85. | Affliction |
| 86. | Jordan |
| 87. | Church-floore |
| 88. | Windows |
| 89. | Vertue |
| 90. | Life |
| 91. | Jesu |
| 92. | Collar |
| 93. | Aaron |
| 94. | Discipline |
| 95. | Love |
| Francis Quarles. | 96. | Why dost thou shade thy lovely face? |
| 97. | Ev'n like two little bank-dividing brookes |
| William Habington. | 98. | Nox nocti indicat Scientiam |
| Sidney Godolphin. | 99. | Lord when the wise men came from farr |
| Richard Crashaw. | 100. | To the Countesse of Denbigh |
| 101. | Hymn of the Nativity |
| 102. | Hymn in Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament |
| 103. | Saint Mary Magdalene |
| 104. | Hymn to Saint Teresa |
| Henry Vaughan. | 105. | Regeneration |
| 106. | Retreate |
| 107. | And do they so? have they a Sense |
| 108. | Man |
| 109. | Ascension-Hymn |
| 110. | As time one day by me did pass |
| 111. | Dwelling-place |
| 112. | Night |
| 113. | Water-fall |
| 114. | Quickness |
| John Hall. | 115. | A Pastorall Hymne |
| Edward Sherburne. | 116. | Proud Ægyptian Queen, her Roman Guest |
| Sir William Davenant. | 117. | Christians reply to the Phylosopher |
| Andrew Marvell. | 118. | A Dialogue between Soul and Pleasure |
| 119. | Coronet |
| 120. | A Dialogue between the Soul and Body |
| |
| MISCELLANIES. Elegies, Epistles, Satires, and Meditations |
| John Donne. | 121. | His Picture |
| 122. | On his Mistris |
| 123. | Satyre |
| 124. | To Sir H. W. at his going Ambassador to Venice |
| 125. | To the Countesse of Bedford |
| Ignoto. | 126. | Farewel ye guilded follies, pleasing troubles |
| Thomas Carew. | 127. | An Elegie upon the death of Dr. John Donne |
| 128. | To my worthy friend Mr. George Sandys |
| 129. | Maria Wentworth, Thomæ Comitis Cleveland |
| John Milton. | 130. | On Shakespear. 1630 |
| John Cleveland. | 131. | An Elegy on Ben. Jonson |
| Sir William Davenant. | 132. | To the Queen |
| 133. | For the Lady Olivia Porter |
| Richard Lovelace. | 134. | Grasse-hopper |
| Abraham Cowley. | 135. | Of Wit |
| 136. | Against Hope |
| Richard Crashaw. | 137. | Answer for Hope |
| Abraham Cowley. | 138. | On the Death of Mr. Crashaw |
| 139. | Destinie |
| 140. | To Light |
| John Hall. | 141. | On an Houre-glasse |
| Henry King. | 142. | Exequy |
| 143. | A Contemplation upon flowers |
| Andrew Marvell. | 144. | On a Drop of Dew |
| 145. | Garden |
| Samuel Butler. | 146. | Metaphysical Sectarian |