Retirement. The Task: Book I (The sofa)
Book IV (The Winter evening)
Book V (The Winter morning walk)
Book VI (The winter walk at noon). Tirocinium. Miscellaneous poems: Verses written at Bath
'Mortals! around your destin'd heads
'Delia, th' unkindest girl on earth'
'This ev'ning, Delia, you and I
Attempt at the manner of Waller
'See where the Thames, the purest stream'
'How blest the youth whom Fate ordains'
Ode on the marraige of a friend
O her endeavouring to conceal her grief at parting
'Bid adieu, my sad heart'
Written after leaving her at New Barns
R.S.S. written in a fit of illness
Hope, like the short-liv'd ray'
Ode on Sir Charles Gradison
Lines written during a period of insanity
Song of Mercy and Judgment
the Tril of Admiral Keppel
A Tale, founded on a fact
The bee and the pine-apple
The pine-apple and the bee
On the promotion of Thurlow
The nightingale and glow-worm
On the burning of Lord Mansfield's library
On the Biographia Britannica
Report of an adjudged case
The love of the world reproved
A Reflection on the foregoing Ode
To Mr. Newton ('The swallows')
The poet, the oyster, and sensitive plant
Epistle to a protestant lady in France
to Mr. Newton ('Says the pipe')
The Distressed travellers
On the loss of the Royal George
In submersionem navigii cui Georgius regale nomen inditum
to a lady ('The star that beams')
Song ('When all within is peace')
Lines with two cockscombs
On the author of Letters on literatuare
The Poet's new-year's gift
Stanzas printed on bills of mortality 1787-1790, 1792, 1793
Sweet meat has sour suace
To Hayley ('Dear architect')
Incription for a bust of Homer
Answer to stanzas addressed to Lady Hesketh
Liens written on a shutter at Weston
Olney Hymns: Walking with God
O Lord, I will praise thee
The Future peace and glory of the church
Jehovah our righteousness
Priase for the fountain opended
Pleading for and with youth
On opening a place for social prayer
The Light and Glory of the word
On the death of a minister
The Waiting soul (By Newton)
Light shining out of darkness
Affictions sanctified by the word
Looking upwards in a storm
The Valley of the shadow of death
Joy and peace in believing
Levely hope, and gracious fear
My soul thirsteth for God
Love constraining to obedience
The Heart healed and changed by mercy
A living and a dead faith
I will praise the Lord at all times. Fragment
Stanza added to a hymn by Charles Wesley
Hymn for the Sunday school at Olney.
Translations from the Latin Classics: Horace, Book I. Satire V
Horace, Book I. Satire IX
Horace, Book I. Ode XXXVIII
Another translation of the same Ode
Virgil, Æneid, Book VIII. Line 18
Ovid, Tristia, Book V. Elegy XII. Translations from Vincent Bourne: The Glow-worm
On the picture of a sleeping child
Sparrows self-domesticated
Invitation to the redbreast
Ode on the death of a lady
No sorrow peculiar to the sufferer
The Cantab. Translation of verses to Lloyd
Translation of epitaph to Northcot
On the shortness of life (from Jortin). Epigrams, Translated from the Latin of Owen: On one ignorant and arrogant
'When little more than boy in age'
Sunset and sunrise. Translations of Greek verses: From Julianus
An epigram of Homer. Translation of prior's Chloe and Euphelia
Translation of Dryden's poem on mIlton
Translation of a simile in Pardise Lost
Translations from the Fables of Gay: Lepus multis amicus
Papilio et limax. Translations of the Latin and Italian poems of Milton: Complimentary pieces
Elegy II (On the death of the Cambridge beadle)
Elegy III (On the death of the Bishop of Winchester)
Elegy IV (To Thomas Young)
Elegy V (On the approach of spring)
Elegy VII. Epigrams: On the inventor of guns
The cottager and his landlord
Top Christina. Miscellaneous poems: On the death of the Vice-Chancellor
On the death of the Bishop of Ely
Nature unimpaired by time
Ode to Rouse. Italian poems
Sonnet ('As on a hill-top')
Sonnet ('Lady! It cannot be')
Sonnet (Enamour'd, artless).