- A Parody
- A Pastoral Ballad
- A Pastoral Ballad I: Absence
- A Pastoral Ballad Ii: Hope
- A Pastoral Ballad Iii: Solicitude
- A Pastoral Ballad Iv: Disappointment
- A Pastoral Ode. To The Hon. Sir Richard Lyttleton
- A Simile
- An Irregular Ode, After Sickness
- Anacreontic
- Charms Of Precedence - A Tale
- Colemira : A Culinary Eclogue
- Colemira. A Culinary Eclogue
- Comparison
- Cupid And Plutus
- Daphne's Visit
- Economy, A Rhapsody, Addressed To Young Poets
- Elegy I. He Arrives At His Retirement In The Country
- Elegy Ii. On Posthumous Reputation - To A Friend
- Elegy Iii. On The Untimely Death Of A Certain Learned Acquainance
- Elegy Iv. Ophilia's Urn. To Mr. Graves
- Elegy Ix. He Describes His Disinterestedness To A Friend
- Elegy V. He Compares The Turbulence Of Love With The Tranquillity Of Friendship
- Elegy Vi. To A Lady, On The Language Of Birds
- Elegy Vii. He Describes His Vision To An Acquaintance
- Elegy Viii. He Describes His Early Love Of Poetry, And Its Consequences
- Elegy X. To Fortune, Suggesting His Motive For Repining At Her Dispensations
- Elegy Xi. He Complains How Soon The Pleasing Novelty Of Life Is Over
- Elegy Xii. His Recantation
- Elegy Xiii. To A Friend, On Some Slight Occasion Estranged From Him
- Elegy Xiv. Declining An Invitation To Visit Foreign Countries
- Elegy Xix. - Written In Spring, 1743
- Elegy Xv. In Memory Of A Private Family In Worcestershire
- Elegy Xvi. He Suggests The Advantage Of Birth To A Person Of Merit
- Elegy Xvii. He Indulges The Suggestions Of Spleen.-- An Elegy To The Winds
- Elegy Xviii. He Repeats The Song Of Colin, A Discerning Shepherd
- Elegy Xx. He Compares His Humble Fortune With The Distress Of Others
- Elegy Xxi. Taking A View Of The Country From His Retirement
- Elegy Xxii. Written In The Year ----, When The Rights Of Sepulture Were So Frequently Violated
- Elegy Xxiii. Reflections Suggested By His Situation
- Elegy Xxiv. He Takes Occasion, From The Fate Of Eleanor Of Bretagne
- Elegy Xxv. To Delia, With Some Flowers
- Elegy Xxvi. Describing The Sorrow Of An Ingeneous Mind
- Epilogue - To The Tragedy Of Cleone
- Extent Of Cookery
- Flirt And Phil
- Hint From Voiture
- Impromptu To Miss Utrecia Smith
- Inscription For A Medicinal Fountain At The Leasowes
- Jemmy Dawson
- Love And Honor
- Love And Music. Written At Oxford, When Young
- Nancy Of The Vale
- Ode - So Dear My Lucio Is To Me
- Ode To A Young Lady
- Ode To Cynthia, On The Approach Of Spring
- Ode To Health, 1730
- Ode To Indolence
- Ode To Memory
- Ode, Written 1739
- On Certain Pastorals
- On Miss M--'s's Dancing
- On Mr. C -- Of Kidderminster's Poetry
- Rural Elegance, An Ode To The Late Duchess Of Somerset
- Slender's Ghost
- Song
- Song Ii. The Landscape
- Song Iii. - Ye Gentle Nymphs And Generous Dames
- Song Ix. - The Fatal Hours Are Wondrous Near
- Song V. - On Every Tree, In Every Plain
- Song Vii. - When Bright Roxana Treads The Green
- Song Vii. - When Bright Roxana Treads The Green
- Song X. - The Lovely Delia Smiles Again!
- Song Xi. - Perhaps It Is Not Love
- Song Xii. - O'Er Desert Plains, And Rushy Meres
- Song Xiii. - Winter
- Song Xix. - When Bright Ophelia Treads The Green
- Song Xviii. - Imitated From The French
- Stanzas - To The Memory Of An Agreeable Lady, Buried In Marriage To A Person Undeserving Her
- The Attribute Of Venus
- The Beau To The Virtuosos
- The Dying Kid
- The Extent Of Cookery
- The Halcyon
- The Invidious
- The Judgement Of Hercules
- The Landskip
- The Poet And The Dun
- The Price Of An Equipage
- The Princess Elizabeth, When A Prisoner At Woodstock, 1554
- The Progress Of Taste, Or The Fate Of Delicacy
- The Rape Of The Trap. A Ballad
- The Rose-Bud
- The Ruined Abbey, Or, The Affects Of Superstition
- The School-Mistress. In Imitation Of Spenser (Excerpt)
- The Skylark
- The Speeches Of Sloth And Virtue
- To A Friend
- To A Lady Of Quality, Fitting Up Her Library
- To A Lady, With Some Coloured Patterns Of Flowers
- To The Virtuosi
- Upon A Visit To A Lady Of Quality
- Valentine's Day
- Verses, To William Lyttleton, Esq.
- Written At An Inn At Henley
- Written In A Collection Of Bacchanalian Songs
- Written In A Flower Book, Of My Own Colouring, Designed For Lady Plymouth