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ROBERT WILLIAMS BUCHANAN (1841-1901)

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ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF POEMS ON THIS SITE

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Aage and Elsie     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

Ad Carissimam Amicam     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Ad Madonnam     (from The Ballad of Mary the Mother: a Christmas carol, 1897)

Agnes     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

Alone In London     (from The Olympic Programme and Looker-On, November, 1885)

Antiphones     (from The Ballad of Mary the Mother: a Christmas carol, 1897 including the following:

An Artisan’s Story     (from Good Words, April 1861)

Artist And Model     (from London Poems, 1866)

Attorney Sneak     (from London Poems, 1866)

Atys     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Augurs     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Axel and Walborg     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

Baby Grace     (from The St. James’s Magazine, June 1862)

The Bachelor Dreams     (from The Argosy, May 1866)

Balder The Beautiful: A Song of Divine Death     (1877)

The Ballad-Maker     (from North Coast and Other Poems, 1867)

The Ballad Of Judas Iscariot     (from Miscellaneous Poems and Ballads (1878-83) in the 1884 collected edition)

The Ballad Of Kiplingson     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Ballad Of Mary The Mother     (from The Ballad of Mary the Mother: a Christmas carol, 1897)

The Ballad of Resurrection     (from The New York Herald, August, 1889)

The Ballad Of The Stork     (from North Coast and Other Poems, 1867)

Barbara Gray     (from London Poems, 1866)

Barstone Water     (from The St. James's Magazine, June 1863)

The Battle Of Drumliemoor     (from North Coast and Other Poems, 1867)

The Battle Of Isandúla     (from the Contemporary Review, April 1879)

Be Pitiful     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Belgravia     (‘London Poems: V’ published in Temple Bar, May 1861)

Bexhill, 1866     (from London Poems, 1866)

Bicycle Song     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Blind Linnet     (from London Poems, 1866, aka ‘The Linnet’)

The Blue Colour     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

The Bonnie Groom     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

The Book of Orm     (1870, which includes the following:

The Bookworm     (from the London Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)

The Brook     (from North Coast and Other Poems, 1867 - aka ‘To The Luggie’ in the 1884 collected edition)

By the Seaside     (from Temple Bar, June 1862)

Carlyle     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Carmen Deific     (from The New Rome, 1898, including the following:

A Catechism     (from The Ballad of Mary the Mother: a Christmas carol, 1897)

Celtic Mystics     (from North Coast and Other Poems, 1867 -  contains material revised for The Book of Orm, 1870)

The Charter’d Companie     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Children In The Moon     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

Christmas in the City     (‘London Poems: VIII’ published in Temple Bar, January 1862)

The City Asleep     (from the London Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)

A City Preacher     (‘London Poems: VI’ published in Temple Bar, July 1861)

Clari In The Well     (from the Miscellaneous Poems (1866-70) section in the 1884 collected edition)  

Cloister Robbing     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

Coruisken Sonnets (Loch Coruisk, Isle Of Skye)     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Cry For Life     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Cry From The Mine     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Dame Martha’s Well     (from Good Words, October 1870  - translation)

The Dead     (‘London Poems: II’ published in Temple Bar, January 1861)

The Dead Baby     (from Temple Bar, June 1861)

The Death Of Roland     (from London Poems, 1866)

De Berny     (from the London Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)

The Destitute     (‘London Poems: IV’ published in Temple Bar, March 1861)

The Devil’s Case     (1896)

The Devil’s Peepshow     (from Miscellaneous Poems and Ballads (1878-83) in the 1884 collected edition)

The Devil’s Sabbath     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Dismal Throng     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Doctor B.     (from The New Rome, 1898)

A Drawing-Room Ballad     (‘London Lyrics’ published in London Society, July 1868)

The Dreamer Of Dreams     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Earthquake     (1885)

Ebbe Skammelson     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

Edward Crowhurst; Or, “A New Poet”     (from London Poems, 1866)

The Elf Dance     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

An English Eclogue     (from North Coast and Other Poems, 1867)

The English Huswife’s Gossip     (from Idyls and Legends of Inverburn, 1865)

L’Envoi To London Poems     (from the London Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)

L’Envoi to The Ballad of Mary the Mother     (from The Ballad of Mary the Mother: a Christmas carol, 1897)

Even-Song     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

The Exiles Of Oona     (from North Coast and Other Poems, 1867)

The Faces     (‘London Lyrics’ published in London Society, October 1868)

Faces on the Wall     (first published in St. Pauls Magazine (May 1872), includes the following:

The Faery Foster-Mother     (from Idyls and Legends of Inverburn, 1865)

The Fairy Queen     (from The New Rome, 1898)

A Fashionable Love Affair     (‘London Lyrics’ published in London Society, March 1868)

Fra Giacomo     (from the Early Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)  

The Gift Of Burns     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Gift Of Eos     (from London Poems, 1866)

The Gifts. An Arab Paraphrase     (from The St. James's Magazine, September 1862)

The Glamour     (from London Poems, 1866)

The Gnome     (from The New Rome, 1898)

God Evolving     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Golden Year: An Ode on the Jubilee of the Empress Victoria    (from The Buchanan Ballads Old and New, 1892)

The Good Judge’s Soliloquy     (from The New York Herald, 16th August, 1889)

Granddad In The Ingle     (from Cassell’s Magazine, reprinted in Appleton’s journal, March 1874)

The Grand Old Man     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Green Gnome     (from Idyls and Legends of Inverburn, 1865)

Hahon (aka Hakon)     (from North Coast and Other Poems, 1867)

Hark Now, What Fretful Voices     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Haunted London     (‘London Poems: IX’ published in Temple Bar, February 1862)

Helga and Hildebrand     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

Hermioné     (from The Argosy, December, 1865)

How Sir Tonne Won His Bride     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

Hugh Sutherland’s Pansies     (from Idyls and Legends of Inverburn, 1865)

Hugo the Bastard     (from Temple Bar, October 1866)

I End As I Began     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Image in the Forum     (from The New Rome, 1898)

In a Fashionable Church     (from The Earthquake, 1885)

In London, March 1866     (from the London Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)

In The Camp     (from The St. James's Magazine, March 1863)

The Irishman To Cromwell     (from The New Rome, 1898)

James Avery     (from Miscellaneous Poems and Ballads (1878-83) in the 1884 collected edition)

Jane Lewson     (from London Poems, 1866)

The Jew Passes     (from The New Rome, 1898)

John Mardon, Mariner: his Strange Adventures in El Dorado     (from The Saint Paul’s Magazine, 1872)

The Joiner     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

Julia Cytherea: A Legend of the Renaissance     (from The Earthquake, 1885)

Justinian; Or, The New Creed     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Kitty Kemble     (from the London Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)

Langley Lane     (from London Poems, 1866)

A Lark’s Flight     (from the London Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)

The Last Bivouac     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Last Christians     (from The New Rome, 1898, including the following:

The Last Faith     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Last Night     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Last Of The Hangmen     (from the London Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)

The Lead-Melting     (First version from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation.
                                           
Second version from The New Rome, 1898)

The Legend Of The Little Fay     (from Idyls and Legends of Inverburn, 1865)

The Legend Of The Stepmother (aka The Dead Mother)     (from Idyls and Legends of Inverburn, 1865)

Lesbia (To Catullus)     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Lights Of Leith     (from Miscellaneous Poems and Ballads (1878-83) in the 1884 collected edition)

The Litany. De Profundis     (from The Devil’s Case, 1894)

Little Christina’s Dance     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

The Little Milliner     (from London Poems, 1866)

Liz     (from London Poems, 1866)

London, 1864     (from London Poems, 1866)     [1884 revised version]

Lord Ronald’s Wife     (from Idyls and Legends of Inverburn, 1865)

The Lords Of The Bread     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Lost Women     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Lover’s Stratagem     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

Lydia At The Savoy     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Maeterlinck     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Maid Avoraine     (from Once A Week, July 19, 1862)

Maid Mettelil     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

Man Of The Red Right Hand     (from The New Rome, 1898)

“Mark Now, How Close They Are Akin”     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Meg Blane     (from North Coast and Other Poems, 1867)

The Mercenaries     (from The New Rome, 1898, including the following:

The Mermaid     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Minister And The Elfin     (from Idyls and Legends of Inverburn, 1865)

The Modern Warrior     (from the London Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)

The Monkey and the Microscope     (first published in St. Pauls Magazine (August, 1872) XI, p. 240, reprinted in Under The Microscope by Algernon Charles Swinburne (Portland, Maine: Thomas B. Mosher, 1899).

Mordred     (from The St. James's Magazine, August 1863)

A Morning Invocation     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Nell     (from London Poems, 1866)     [1884 revised version]

The New Buddha     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The New Covenant     (written for the opening ceremony of the 1888 Glasgow International Exhibition)

The New Rome: A Dialogue     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Nietszche     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Northern Muse     (from North Coast and Other Poems, 1867)

The Northern Wooing     (from North Coast and Other Poems, 1867)

O Mariners     (from The Earthquake, 1885)

O’Murtogh     (from the London Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)

Old Rome     (from The New Rome, 1898)

On The Shore     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Outcasts     (‘London Poems: III’ published in Temple Bar, February 1861)

The Owl     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

Pan At Hampton Court     (from The Earthquake, 1885. Also included in The New Rome, 1898)

Pan: Epilogue     (from the London Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)

Patriotism     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Peace, Not A Sword     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Phil Blood’s Leap     (from Miscellaneous Poems and Ballads (1878-83) in the 1884 collected edition)

A Poem To David     (from North Coast and Other Poems, 1867)

Poet Andrew     (from Idyls and Legends of Inverburn, 1865)

Preamble (to Idyls and Legends of Inverburn, 1865 - verses 3 & 4 later reworked as ‘The Lowland Village’)

A Prelude     (from North Coast and Other Poems, 1867 - contains material revised for The Book of Orm, 1870)

Ramon Monat     (from The Earthquake, 1885)

The River     (‘London Poems: VII’ published in Temple Bar, September 1861)

Rizpah-Madonna     (from The Earthquake, 1885)

The Robin Redbreast     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Rose     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

The Sad Shepherd - To Thomas Hardy     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Saint’s Story     (from North Coast and Other Poems, 1867)

The Scaith O’ Bartle     (from London Poems, 1866)

A Scottish Eclogue     (from North Coast and Other Poems, 1867)

Seraphina Snowe     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Serapion     (from The Earthquake, 1885)

The Session of the Poets     (first published in the Spectator (September 15, 1866) XXXIX, p. 1028, reprinted in Under The Microscope by Algernon Charles Swinburne (Portland, Maine: Thomas B. Mosher, 1899).

Shepherds, Wake, It Is Christmas-Tide     (from The Ballad of Mary the Mother: a Christmas carol, 1897)

The Shower     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Signe at the Wake     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

Signelil The Serving-Maiden     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

Sigurd Of Saxony     (from North Coast and Other Poems, 1867)

Sir Morten of Fogelsong     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

Sir Tristem     (from Once A Week, March 22, 1862)

Sisters Of Midnight     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Skein     (from Broadway Magazine, December 1867)

Socrates In Camden     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Soldier     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

Soliloquy Of The Grand Être     (from The Earthquake, 1885)

A Song Of Jubilee     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Song Of The Fur-Seal     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Song Of The Slain     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Sphinx: On The Thames Embankment     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Spring Song After Snow     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Spring Song In The City     (from the London Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)

The Starling     (from London Poems, 1866)

Storm In The Night     (from The Earthquake, 1885)

The Stormy Ones     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Sunken City     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

Suspiria de Profundis     (from London Society, December, 1868 - Christmas edition)

The Swallows     (from the London Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)

Temple Bar     (‘London Poems: I’ published in Temple Bar, December 1860)

These Voices     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Tiger Bay     (from the London Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)

To A Poet Of The Empire     (from The New Rome, 1898)

To David In Heaven: Thirty Years After     (from The New Rome, 1898)

To George Bernard Shaw     (from The New Rome, 1898)

To Juvenal     (from The New Rome, 1898)

To Olive Schreiner    (from The New Rome, 1898)

To The Moon     (from the London Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)

Tom Dunstan; Or, The Politician     (from the London Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)

The Tramp’s Ditty     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Treasure-Seeker     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

The True Song Of Fairyland     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Twice-Wedded     (from Temple Bar, August 1861)

The Two Babes     (from Idyls and Legends of Inverburn, 1865)

The Two Sisters     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

The Union     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Up In An Attic     (from the London Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)

Victory     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Village Voices     (from Idyls and Legends of Inverburn, 1865)

Vox Dei     (from The New Rome, 1898)

Vox Populi     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Voyage Of Magellan     (from The Earthquake, 1885)

The Wake Of Tim O’Hara     (from the London Poems section in the 1884 collected edition)

Walt Whitman - “One Handshake, Walt!”     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Wandering Jew     (1893)    

The Wearing Of The Green     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Wee, Wee Gnome     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

White Lily Of Weardale-Head     (from Idyls and Legends of Inverburn, 1865)

The White Robe; Or, Zola In A Nutshell     (from The New Rome, 1898)

The Widow Mysie     (from Idyls and Legends of Inverburn, 1865)

Wife And I     (from Once A Week, June 21, 1862)

Willie Baird     (from Idyls and Legends of Inverburn, 1865)

Young Axelvold     (from Ballad Stories of the Affections: from the Scandinavian, 1866 - translation)

_____

 

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