Author:Henry David Thoreau/Poetry
Appearance
Indexed poems
[edit]A
[edit]- Ah, 't is in vain the peaceful din
- An early unconverted Saint
- Anacreon's Ode to the Cicada (We pronounce thee happy, cicada) Tr.
- The Assabet (Up this pleasant stream let's row)
- At midnight's hour I raised my head
- The Atlantides (The smothered streams of love, which flow)
- The Aurora of Guido (The god of day his car rolls up the slopes)
- Autumnal Sun (see "Nature's Child")
B
[edit]- Better wait
- The Black Knight (see last fourteen lines of "Independence")
- The Bluebirds (In the midst of the poplar that stands by our door)
- Boat Song (Thus, perchance, the Indian hunter)
- The "Book of Gems" (With cunning plates the polished leaves were decked)
- The Breeze's Invitation (Come let's roam the breezy pastures)
- But since we sailed
- By a strong liking we prevail
C
[edit]- Cliffs (The loudest sound that burdens here the breeze)
- Conscience (Conscience is instinct bred in the house)
- The Crow (Thou dusky spirit of the wood)
- Cupid Wounded (Love once among roses)
D
[edit]- Death cannot come too soon
- Delay (No generous action can delay)
- The Departure (In this roadstead I have ridden)
- The deeds of king and meanest hedger
- Ding Dong (When the world grows old by the chimney-side)
- The Dream Valley (Last night, as I lay gazing with shut eyes)
E
[edit]- Each more melodious note I hear
- Each summer sound
- The Earth
- The Echo of the Sabbath Bell Heard in the Woods (Dong, sounds the brass in the east)
- The evening of the year draws on (see "The Fall of the Leaf")
- The Evening Wind (The eastern mail comes lumbering in)
F
[edit]- Faith, then ye have (see "Here lies an honest man")
- The Fall of the Leaf (Thank God who seasons thus the year)
- Fair Haven (see "Stanzas Written at Walden")
- Far o'er the bow
- Farewell (see "Light-hearted, thoughtless, shall I take my way")
- A finer race and finer fed
- The Fisher's Boy (My life is like a stroll upon the beach)
- The Fisher's Son (I know the world where land and water meet)
- Fog (Thou drifting meadow of the air)
- Free Love (My love must be as free)
- The Freshet (A stir is on the Worcester hills)
- Friendship (I think awhile of Love, and while I think)
- Friendship (Let such pure hate still underprop)
- Friendship (Now we are partners in such legal trade)
- Friendship's Steadfastness (True friendship is so firm a league)
- The Funeral Bell (One more is gone)
G
[edit]- Godfrey of Boulogne
- The Good how can we trust?
- Greater is the depth of sadness
- Greece (When life contracts into a vulgar span)
- Greece, who am I that should remember thee (see also "Greece")
H
[edit]- Haze (Woof of the sun, ethereal gauze)
- Here lies an honest man
- The Hero (What doth he ask?)
- His steady sails he never furls
- How little curious is man
I
[edit]- I am bound, I am bound, for a distant shore
- I fain would stretch me by the highway-side
- I have rolled near some other spirit's path
- I hearing get, who had but ears
- I make ye an offer
- I mark the summer's swift decline
- I sailed up a river with a pleasant wind
- I see the civil sun drying earth's tears
- I seek the present time
- I was born upon thy bank, river
- If from your price ye will not swerve
- In the busy streets, domains of trade
- In two years' time 't had thus
- Independence (My life more civil is and free)
- Inspiration (If thou wilt but stand by my ear)
- Inspiration (Whate'er we leave to God, God does)
- The Inward Morning (Packed in my mind lie all the clothes)
- It doth expand my privacies
- It is no dream of mine
- I've seen ye, sisters, on the mountain-side
L
[edit]- Light-hearted, thoughtless, shall I take my way
- Lines (Though all the fates should prove unkind)
- Lines (All things are current found)
- Love (We two that planets erst had been)
- Love's Farewell (see "Light-hearted, thoughtless, shall I take my way")
- Love equals swift and slow
M
[edit]- Man's little acts are grand
- May Morning (The school-boy loitered on his way to school)
- Men are by birth equal in this, that given
- Men dig and dive but cannot my wealth spend
- Men say they know many things
- Methinks that by a strict behavior
- Mission (I've searched my faculties around)
- Mist (Low-anchored cloud)
- The Moon (The full-orbed moon with unchanged ray)
- Mountains (With frontier strength ye stand your ground)
- My Boots (Anon with gaping fearlessness they quaff)
- My friends, why should we live?
- My ground is high
- My life has been the poem I would have writ
- My Prayer (Great God, I ask thee for no meaner pelf)
N
[edit]- Nature (O Nature! I do not aspire)
- Nature's Child (I am the autumnal sun)
- Noon (Straightway dissolved)
- Not unconcerned Wachusett rears his head
- Now chiefly is my natal hour
O
[edit]- Oft, as I turn me on my pillow o'er
- The Old Marlborough Road (Where they once dug for money)
- Omnipresence (Who equaleth the coward's haste)
- On fields o'er which the reaper's hand has passed
- On Ponkawtasset, since, with such delay
- On the Sun Coming Out in the Afternoon (Methinks all things have travelled since you shined)
- Orphics: I. Smoke II. Haze (see individual poems "Smoke" and "Haze")
- Our uninquiring corpses lie more low
P
[edit]- The Peal of the Bells (see "Ding Dong")
- Pilgrims (Have you not seen)
- Ply the oars! away! away! (see "River Song")
- The Poet's Delay (In vain I see the morning rise)
- Poverty (If I am poor)
- Prayer (Great God! I ask thee for no meaner pelf)
R
[edit]- The Respectable Folks (The respectable folks)
- Return of Spring (Behold, how Spring appearing)
- A River Scene (The river swelleth more and more)
- River Song (Ply the oars! away! away!)
- Rumors from an Æolian Harp (There is a vale which none hath seen)
S
[edit]- Salmon Brook (Salmon Brook)
- Sea and land are but his neighbors
- The Shrike (Hark! hark! from out the thickest fog)
- Sic Vita (I am a parcel of vain strivings tied)
- Since that first "away! away!" (see also last stanza of "The Assabet")
- Smoke (Light-winged smoke, Icarian bird)
- Smoke in Winter (The sluggish smoke curls up from some deep dell)
- Some Tumultuous Little Rill (Some tumultuous little rill)
- Sometimes I hear the veery's clarion
- The Soul's Season (see "The Fall of the Leaf")
- Stanzas (Away! away! away! away!)
- Stanzas (Nature doth have her dawn each day)
- Stanzas Written at Walden (When Winter fringes every bough)
- Strange that so many fickle gods, as fickle as the weather
- Such near aspects had we
- Such water do the gods distil
- The Summer Rain (My books I'd fain cast off, I cannot read)
- Sympathy (Lately, alas! I knew a gentle boy)
T
[edit]- Tell me, ye wise ones, if ye can
- That Phaeton of our day
- The Thaw (I saw the civil sun drying earth's tears)
- Then idle Time ran gadding by
- Then spend an age in whetting thy desire
- They who prepare my evening meal below
- This is my Carnac, whose unmeasured dome
- To a Marsh Hawk in Spring (There is health in thy gray wing)
- To a Stray Fowl (Poor bird! destined to lead thy life)
- To My Brother (Brother, where dost thou dwell)
- To the Maiden in the East (Low in the eastern sky)
- True Kindness (True kindness is a pure divine affinity)
- Truth, Goodness, Beauty,—those celestial thrins
- 'T will soon appear if we but look
- Two years and twenty now have flown
V
[edit]- The Vireo (Upon the lofty elm-tree sprays)
W
[edit]- Wait not till I invite thee, but observe
- Walden [poem] (True, our converse a stranger is to speech)
- The waves slowly beat
- We see the planet fall
- We should not mind if on our ear there fell
- The western wind came lumbering in
- Westward, Ho! (The needles of the pine)
- "What is it gilds the trees and clouds" (see "The Inward Morning")
- What's the railroad to me?
- Where gleaming fields of haze
- Where I have been
- Where'er thou sail'st who sailed with me
- Who sleeps by day and walks by night
- Winter Memories (Within the circuit of this plodding life)
- A Winter Scene (The rabbit leaps)
- A Winter Walk (see "Stanzas Written at Walden")
- The work we choose should be our own
Y
[edit]Unindexed poems
[edit]- Epitaph on the World (Here lies the body of this world)
- Fog (Dull water spirit—and Protean god)
- Our Country (It is a noble country where we dwell)