Author:Robert Louis Stevenson/Index of Poem Titles
Appearance
A
[edit]- "About my fields, in the broad sun"
- "About the sheltered garden ground"
- Ad Magistrum Ludi
- Ad Martialem
- Ad Nepotem
- Ad Olum
- Ad Piscatorem
- Ad Quintilianum
- Ad Se Ipsum
- "The Adorner of the uncomely—those"
- After Reading "Antony and Cleopatra"
- Air of Diabelli's
- "All influences were in vain"
- "All night through, raves or broods"
- "All things on earth and sea"
- "And thorns, but did the sculptor spare"
- "The angler rose, he took his rod"
- Apologetic Postscript of a Year Later
- Armies in the Fire
- "As Daniel, bird-alone, in that far land"
- "As in the hostel by the bridge I sate"
- "As in their flight the birds of song"
- "As one who having wandered all night long"
- "As starts the absent dreamer when a train"
- "At last she comes, O never more"
- "At morning on the garden seat"
- At the Sea-side
- Auntie's Skirts
- Autumn Fires
- "Away with funeral music—set"
- "Aye mon, it's true; I'm no that weel"
B
[edit]- Bed in Summer
- "Before this little gift was come"
- "Behold, as goblins dark of mein"
- The Blast—1875
- Block City
- The Bour-Tree Den
- "Bright is the ring of words"
C
[edit]- A Camp
- The Canoe Speaks
- The Celestial Surgeon
- Christmas at Sea
- "The cock's clear voice into the clearer air"
- "Come, here is adieu to the city"
- "Come, my beloved, hear from me"
- "Come, my little children, here are songs for you"
- The Counterblast—1886
- The Counterblast Ironical
- The Country of the Camisards
- The Cow
- The Cruel Mistress
D
[edit]- The Daughter, Teuila, Native Name for Adorner
- The Daughter of Herodias
- Death (see "We are as maidens one and all")
- "Death, to the dead forevermore"
- De Cœnatione Micæ
- De Erotio Puella
- De Hortis Julii Martialis
- De Ligurra
- De M. Antonio
- Dedication
- Dedicatory Poem for "Underwoods"
- The Departed Friend (see "Verses written in 1872")
- Ditty ("The cock shall crow")
- Duddingstone
- The Dumb Soldier
E
[edit]- "Early in the morning I hear on your piano"
- "Eh, man Henley, you're a Don!"
- Embro Hie Kirk
- An End of Travel
- An English Breeze
- Envoy
- Envoy for "A Child's Garden of Verses" ("Whether upon the garden seat")
- Epistle to Albert Dew-Smith
- Epistle to Charles Baxter
- Epitaphium Erotii
- Escape at Bedtime
- Et tu in Arcadia vixisti
- Evensong
F
[edit]- "Far over seas an island is"
- "Far you have come, my lady, from the town"
- The Far-Farers
- "Farewell, and when forth"
- "Farewell, fair day and fading light!"
- Farewell to the Farm
- The Feast of Famine
- "Fear not, dear friend, but freely live your days"
- "Fixed is the doom"
- "Flower god, god of the spring, beautiful, bountiful"
- The Flowers
- For Richmond's Garden Wall
- Foreign Children
- Foreign Lands
- Fragments
- From Wishing-land
- From a Railway Carriage
G
[edit]- The Gardener
- "Gather ye roses while ye may"
- "Go, little book—the ancient phrase"
- "God gave to me a child in part"
- Good and Bad Children
- A Good Boy
- "Good old ale, mild or pale"
- A Good Play
H
[edit]- "Had I the power that had the will"
- "Hail! Childish slaves of social rules"
- "Hail, guest, and enter freely!"
- Happy Thought
- The Hayloft
- "He hears with gladdened heart the thunder"
- Heather Ale
- Henry James
- "Her name is as a word of old romance"
- "Here he comes, big with statistics"
- Here lies Erotion ("Mother and sire, to you I do commend")
- "Here you rest among the valleys"
- Historical Associations
- "Home from the daisied meadows"
- "Home no more home to me, whither must I wander?"
- Hopes ("Tho' day by day old hopes depart")
- The House Beautiful
- The House of Tembinoka
I
[edit]- "I am a hunchback, yellow-faced"
- "I am like one that for long days had sate"
- "I am like one that has sat alone"
- "I do not fear to own me kin"
- "I dreamed of forest alleys fair"
- "I have a friend; I have a story"
- "I have a hoard of treasure in my breast"
- "I have trod the upward and the downward slope"
- "I know not how, but as I count"
- "I know not how it is with you"
- "I look across the ocean"
- "I love to be warm by the red fireside"
- "I meanwhile in the populous house apart"
- "I now, O friend, whom noiselessly the snows"
- "I saw red evening through the rain"
- "I sit up here at midnight"
- "I who all the winter through"
- "I, whom Apollo sometime visited"
- "I will make you brooches and toys for your delight"
- "If I could arise and travel away"
- "If I had wings, my lady, like a dove"
- If this were Faith
- Ille Terrarum
- "In autumn when the woods are red"
- In Charidemum
- "In dreams, unhappy, I behold you stand"
- "The indefensible impulse of my blood"
- "The infinite shining heavens"
- In Lupum
- In Maximum
- In Memoriam E. H.
- In Memoriam F. A. S.
- "In the green and gallant Spring"
- "In the highlands, in the country places"
- In the States
- "It blows a snowing gale in the winter of the year"
- "It is not yours, O mother, to complain"
- "It is the season now to go"
- "It's an owercome sooth for age an' youth"
- "It's forth across the roaring foam, and on towards the west"
K
[edit]L
[edit]- The Lamplighter
- The Land of Counterpane
- The Land of Nod
- The Land of Story-Books
- "Last night we had a thunderstorm in style"
- The Last Sight
- "Late in the nicht in bed I lay"
- "Late, O miller"
- "Let Beauty awake in the morn from beautiful dreams"
- "Let love go, if go she will"
- "Light as my heart was long ago"
- "Light as the linnet on my way I start"
- The Light-Keeper
- "Link your arm in mine, my lad"
- The Little Land
- "Lo! In thine honest eyes I read"
- "Lo, now, my guest, if aught amiss were said"
- "Long time I lay in little ease"
- "The look of Death is both severe and mild"
- Looking Forward
- Looking-Glass River
- The Lost Occasion (see "Farewell, fair day and fading light!")
- "Loud and low in the chimney"
- "Love is the very heart of spring"
- "Love—what is love? A great and aching heart
- Love's Vicissitudes
- A Lowden Sabbath Morn
M
[edit]- Madrigal (see "Plain as the glistering planets shine")
- The Maker to Posterity
- "Man sails the deep awhile"
- Marching Song
A Martial Elegy for some Lead Soldiers ("For certain soldiers lately dead")
- Mater Triumphans
- "Men are Heaven's piers"
- "Men marvel at the works of man"
- A Mile an' a Bittock
- The Mill-House
- "Mine eyes were swift to know thee"
- The Mirror Speaks
- The Moon
- "The moon is sinking—the tempestuous weather"
- "The morning drum-call on my eager ear"
- Mother and Daughter
- Music at the Villa Marina
- My Bed Is a Boat
- "My body which my dungeon is"
- "My brain swims empty and light"
- My Conscience!
- "My heart, when first the blackbird sings"
- "My house, I say. But hark to the sunny doves"
- My Kingdom
- "My love was warm"
- My Shadow
- My Ship and I
- "My Stockton if I failed to like"
- My Treasures
- My Wife
- "My wife and I, in one romantic cot"
N
[edit]- "Nay, but I fancy somehow, year by year"
- Ne Sit Ancillæ Tibi Amor Pudor
- Nest Eggs
- The New House
- Night and Day
- "Nor judge me light, tho' light at times I seem"
- North-West Passage
- "Not roses to the rose, I trow"
- "Not undelightful, friend, our rustic ease"
- "Not yet, my soul, these friendly fields desert"
- "Now bare to the beholder's eye"
- "Now when the number of my years"
O
[edit]- "O dull cold northern sky"
- "O Henley, in my hours of ease"
- "O lady fair and sweet"
- "O now, although the year be done"
- "Of schooners, islands and maroons"
- "The old chimæras, old receipts"
- "The old lady (so they say), but I"
- "The old world moans and topes"
- On his Pitiable Transformation
- On Some Ghostly Companions at a Spa
- "On the gorgeous hills of morning"
- Our Lady of the Snows
- "Over the land is April"
- Over the Sea to Skye (see "Sing me a song of a lad that is gone")
P
[edit]- Picture-Books in Winter
- The Piper
- Pirate Story
- "Plain as the glistering planets shine"
- "The pleasant river gushes"
- Poem for a Class Re-union ("Whether we like it, or don't")
- A Portrait
- Prayer
- Prelude
R
[edit]- Rain
- "The rain is over and done"
- Requiem
- "The relic taken, what avails the shrine?"
- "Rivers and winds among the twisted hills"
- Rondels
S
[edit]- "Say not of me that weakly I declined"
- The Scotsman's Return from Abroad
- "She rested by the Broken Brook"
- The Sick Child
- "Since I am sworn to live my life"
- "Since thou hast given me this good hope, O God"
- "Since years ago for evermore"
- "Sing clearlier, Muse, or evermore be still"
- "Sing me a song of a lad that is gone"
- Singing
- "Sit doon by me, my canty freend"
- Skerryvore
- Skerryvore: The Parallel
- "Small is the trust when love is green"
- "So live, so love, so use that fragile hour"
- "So shall this book wax like unto a well"
- Song ("Light foot and tight foot")
- Song at Dawn
- A Song of the Road
- The Song of Rahéro
- Sonnets
- "Soon our friends perish"
- The Spaewife
- Spring Carol
- Spring Song
- St. Martin's Summer
- "Still I love to rhyme, and still more, rhyming, to wander"
- Storm
- "The stormy evening closes now in vain"
- Stormy Nights
- "Stout marches lead to certain ends"
- "Strange are the ways of men"
- "The strong man's hand, the snow-cool head of age"
- A Summer Night
- Summer Sun
- "The summer sun shone round me"
- The Sun's Travels
- The Susquehanna and the Delaware
- "Swallows travel to and fro"
- The Swing
- System
T
[edit]- "Take not my hand as mine alone"
- Tales of Arabia
- "Tall as a guardsman, pale as the east at dawn"
- "Tempest tossed and sore afflicted"
- Their Laureate to an Academy Class Dinner Club
- "There where the land of love"
- "These rings, O my beloved pair"
- "This gloomy northern day"
- "Thou strainest through the mountain fern"
- "Though deep indifference should drowse"
- A Thought
- Ticonderoga
- Time to Rise
- To ——
- To Alison Cunningham
- "To all that love the far and blue"
- To Andrew Lang
- To Any Reader
- To Auntie
- To Charles Baxter
- To Dr. Hake
- To Doctor John Brown
- To F. J. S.
- "To friends at home"
- To H. C. Bunner
- To H. F. Brown
- To Henry James
- To K. de M.
- To Kalakaua
- To Madame Garschine
- To Marcus
- To Master Andrew Lang
- To Mesdames Zassetsky and Garschine
- To Minnie
- To Miss Cornish
- To Miss Rawlinson
- To Mother Maryanne
- To Mrs. Macmarland
- To Mrs. Will. H. Low
- To my Father
- To My Mother
- To My Name-Child
- To my Old Familiars
- To my Wife
- To N. V. de G. S.
- To Ottilie
- To Priapus
- To Princess Kaiulani
- To Rosabelle
- To S. C.
- To S. R. Crockett
- To Sydney
- To W. E. Henley
- To Will. H. Low
- To Willie and Henrietta
- To a Gardener
- To A Youth
- To an Island Princess
- To the Commissioners of Northern Lights
- To the Muse
- To the Stormy Petrel
- "To what shall I compare her"
- "To you, let snow and roses"
- Travel
- Tropic Rain
- "The tropics vanish, and meseems that I"
U
[edit]- The Unforgotten—I (see "In dreams, unhappy, I behold you stand")
- The Unforgotten—II (see "She rested by the Broken Brook")
- The Unseen Playmate
V
[edit]- The Vagabond
- Variant Form of the Preceding Poem
- A Valentine's Song
- The Vanquished Knight
- Verses written in 1872 ("Though he that ever kind and true")
- A Visit from the Sea
- Voluntary
W
[edit]- Wandering Willie (see "Home no more home to me, whither must I wander?")
- "We are as maidens one and all"
- We have loved of Yore
- "We uncommiserate pass into the night"
- "We'll walk the woods no more"
- The Well-Head
- "What glory for a boy of ten"
- "What man may learn, what man may do"
- "When aince Aprile has fairly come"
- "When the sun comes after rain"
- Where Go the Boats?
- "Who would think, herein to look"
- "The whole day thro', in contempt and pity"
- Whole Duty of Children
- The Wind
- "The wind blew shrill and smart"
- "The wind is without there and howls in the trees"
- Windy Nights
- Winter
- Winter-Time
- The Woodman