- I. 'Quickly and pleasantly the seasons blow'
- II. 'The golden spring redeems the withered year'
- III. 'Then judge me as thou wilt, I cannot flee'
- IV. 'To make my days impatient with unrest'
- IX. 'I love devoutly; thou shalt seek for long'
- Lullaby
- V. 'I cannot yet admit unchecked despair'
- VI. 'How should I think of thee but with delight?'
- VII. 'How strange it is that thine ethereal grace'
- VIII. 'The rising deluges of circumstance'
- X. 'Let those who love hear me; I speak as one'
- XI. 'We have come back to one another; yes'
- XII. 'I will fling wide the windows of my soul'
- XIII. 'Poor faltering lines, my weary soul's relief'
- XIV. 'Let all men see the ruins of the shrine'
- XIX. 'Although the spring is hastening to pursue'
- XV. 'How oft the traitor trumpet sounds retreat'
- XVI. 'Even as love grows more, I write the less'
- XVII. 'Voice that art life to me, I almost hear'
- XVIII. 'Lovely art thou, and everything of thine'
- XX. 'To walk beside the river in the dawn'
- XXI. 'Two lovers stood alone beneath the night'
- XXII. 'Fly, joyous wind, through all the wakened earth'
- XXIII. 'Over the waters but a single bough'
- XXIV. 'There was a boy in some forgotten spring'
- XXIX. 'Speak not of waning love and changing days'
- XXV. 'Now would that thou wert here, my happiness'
- XXVI. 'What though the night be dissonant with rain'
- XXVII. 'About the headlands and the rocky shoals'
- XXVIII. 'The insurgent sea sweeps through the barrier'
- XXX. 'Who follows Love shall walk in outland places'
- XXXI. 'Only last night we dwelt together, we'
- XXXII. 'Thou only wert my hope, and thou art gone'
- XXXIII. 'If in some fair Elysian seclusion'
- XXXIV. 'Long after both of us are scattered dust'