W. (‘Kindly’I envy thy song’s perfection’)
To Mr T. W. (‘All hail sweet poet’)
To Mr T. W. (‘Haste thee harsh verse’)
To Mr T. W. (‘Pregnant again with th’old twins’)
To Mr T. W. (‘At once, from hence’)
To Mr C. B.
To Mr E. G.
To Mr S. B.
To Mr I. L. (‘Of that short roll’)
To Mr I. L. (‘Blest are your north parts’)
To Mr B. B.
To E. of D. with Six Holy Sonnets
To Sir Henry Goodyere (‘Who makes the past a pattern’)
A Letter Written by Sir H. G. and J. D. alternis vicibus
To Mrs M. H.
To the Countess of Bedford (‘Reason is our soul’s left hand’)
To the Countess of Bedford (‘Honour is so sublime perfection’)
To the Countess of Bedford (‘You have refined me’)
To the Countess of Bedford (‘T’have written then’)
To the Countess of Bedford, on New Year’s Day
To the Countess of Bedford, Begun in France but never perfected
To the Lady Bedford (‘You that are she’)
To Sir Edward Herbert, at Juliers
To the Countess of Huntingdon (‘That unripe side of earth’)
To the Countess of Huntingdon (‘Man to God’s image’)
A Letter to the Lady Carey, and Mistress Essex Rich, from Amiens
To the Countess of Salisbury, August, 1614
Funeral Elegies
Anniversaries
To the Praise of the Dead, and the Anatomy, [Probably by Joseph Hall]
The First Anniversary. An Anatomy of the World
A Funeral Elegy
The Harbinger to the Progress, [Probably by Joseph Hall]
The Second Anniversary. Of the Progress of the Soul
Epicedes and Obsequies
Elegy (‘Sorrow, who to this house’)
Elegy on the Lady Markham
Elegy on Mrs Bulstrode (‘Death I recant’)
Elegy upon the Death of Mrs Boulstred (‘Language, thou art too narrow’)
Elegy, On the Untimely Death of the Incomparable Prince, Henry
Obsequies upon the Lord Harrington, the Last that Died
A Hymn to the Saints, and to Marquesse Hamilton
Epitaph on Himself. To the Countess of Bedford
Epitaph on Anne Donne
Divine Poems
To the Lady Magdalen Herbert, of St Mary Magdalen
La Corona
Holy Sonnet 1 (II) (‘As due by many titles’)
Holy Sonnet 2 (IV) (‘O my black soul’)
Holy Sonnet 3 (VI) (‘This is my play’s last scene’)
Holy Sonnet 4 (VII) (‘At the round earth’s imagined corners’)
Holy Sonnet 5 (IX) (‘If poisonous minerals’)
Holy Sonnet 6 (X) (‘Death be not proud’)
Holy Sonnet 7 (XI) (‘Spit in my face, you Jews’)
Holy Sonnet 8 (XII) (‘Why are we by all creatures’)
Holy Sonnet 9 (XIII) (‘What if this present’)
Holy Sonnet 10 (XIV) (‘Batter my heart’)
Holy Sonnet 11 (XV) (‘Wilt thou love God’)
Holy Sonnet 12 (XVI) (‘Father, part of His double interest’)
Holy Sonnet 13 (I) (‘Thou hast made me’)
Holy Sonnet 14 (III) (‘O might those sighs and tears’)
Holy Sonnet 15 (V) (‘I am a little world’)
Holy Sonnet 16 (VIII) (‘If faithful souls be alike glorified’)
Holy Sonnet 17 (XVII) (‘Since she whom I loved’)
Holy Sonnet 18 (XVIII) (‘Show me, dear Christ’)
Holy Sonnet 19 (XIX) (‘O, to vex me’)
The Cross
Resurrection, Imperfect
The Annunciation and Passion
A Litany
Goodfriday, 1613. Riding Westward
The Lamentations of Jeremy, for the most part according to Tremelius
Translated out of Gazæus, Vota Amico Facta
Upon the Translation of the Psalms by Sir Philip Sidney and the Countess of Pembroke, His Sister
To Mr Tilman after He Had Taken Orders
A Hymn to Christ, at the Author’s Last Going into Germany
Hymn to God my God, in my Sickness
A Hymn to God the Father
To Mr George Herbert, with One of my Seals, of the Anchor and Christ
Prose
Prose Letters
Madam (‘I will have leave to speak like a lover’)
‘I send to you now that I may know how I do’
To the Right Worshipful Sir George More, Knight (‘If a very respective fear of your displeasure’)
Sir (‘I write not to you out of mine poor library’)
To Sir H[enry] Good[y]ere (‘Every Tuesday I make account’)
To Sir H[enry] G[oodyere] (‘It should be no interruption to your pleasures’)
Devotions upon Emergent Occasions
1. Meditation
4.
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