| from Song of myself | 17 |
| The daffodils | 37 |
| Lines composed a few miles above Tintern Abbey | 38 |
| Personal talk | 45 |
| Hymn on solitude | 46 |
| "When to the sessions of sweet silent thought" | 48 |
| Solitude | 49 |
| In Hilly Wood | 50 |
| To autumn | 51 |
| A hymn to the moon | 52 |
| Solitude | 53 |
| The Lake Isle of Innisfree | 54 |
| Ode to tranquillity | 55 |
| Newark Abbey | 57 |
| Solitude | 59 |
| Emerson Brahma | 60 |
| My way | 61 |
| Limelight memorandum | 62 |
| The walking | 63 |
| To a waterfowl | 65 |
| Summer day in the mountains | 67 |
| Drinking alone by moonlight | 68 |
| Sitting in quietude | 69 |
| Ordinary days | 70 |
| "I gaze on myself in the stream's emerald flow" | 71 |
| "The hermit escapes the human world" | 72 |
| Careless content | 73 |
| Best society | 76 |
| Written on visiting a scene in Argyleshire | 78 |
| How to mediate | 80 |
| "Weak is my voice, but my will isn't weakening" | 81 |
| Solitude | 82 |
| Alone | 83 |
| Strolls | 84 |
| Fern Hill | 86 |
| My name | 89 |
| The solitary | 90 |
| Waiting | 91 |
| Danse Russe | 92 |
| Autobiographia literaria | 93 |
| "I am" | 97 |
| "Where shall I refuge seeke, if you refuse mee? | 98 |
| "Oft have I sigh'd for him that heares me not" | 99 |
| Writing | 100 |
| Lines composed while climbing | 101 |
| Isolation | 102 |
| "Am I a bad man? : am I a good man?" | 103 |
| "Huffy Henry hid the day" | 104 |
| The gift to oneself | 105 |
| To the harbormaster | 107 |
| Villanelle : the psychological hour | 108 |
| Nobody comes | 111 |
| Absences | 112 |
| Home is so sad | 113 |
| Depending on the wind | 114 |
| A visit | 116 |
| "I go to this window" | 117 |
| Mr. Cogito on a set theme : "friends depart" | 118 |
| Self and the otherself | 127 |
| "I wake and feel the fell of dark, not day" | 128 |
| "It might be lonelier" | 129 |
| "The loneliness one dare not sound" | 130 |
| "Me from myself - to banish" | 131 |
| The hounds | 132 |
| To the South Downs | 133 |
| "I am" | 134 |
| Refugee | 135 |
| Hope [1] | 136 |
| Life supports | 137 |
| Not waving but drowning | 138 |
| Study of loneliness | 139 |
| Nest | 140 |
| The poet with his face in his hands | 144 |
| Snow line | 145 |
| White towels | 146 |
| Loneliness | 147 |
| Desert places | 148 |
| "No time ago" | 149 |
| "l(a" | 150 |
| "Poor soul, the centre of my sinful earth" | 153 |
| My mind | 154 |
| "How do I find my soul's extremist anguish" | 155 |
| Peace | 156 |
| "A noiseless patient spider" | 157 |
| Mind | 158 |
| The guardian angel of the private life | 159 |
| Meditation. Joh. 6.51. I am the living bread | 164 |
| An address to the soul occasioned by a rain | 166 |
| "So tyr'd are all my thoughts" | 168 |
| Epigram | 169 |
| Abandoned conversation with the senses | 170 |
| Soliloquy of the solipsist | 171 |
| "My mind to me a kingdom is" | 173 |
| My philosophy of life | 175 |
| Soul says (afterword) | 179 |
| "O why was I born with a different face?" | 183 |
| Maximus, to himself | 184 |
| Duty surviving self-love | 187 |
| The weary one | 188 |
| "There pass the careless people" | 189 |
| Alone | 190 |
| Homesickness | 191 |
| The solitary | 193 |
| Solitude | 194 |
| "I am a hunchback" | 197 |
| The solitary reaper | 198 |
| "To seem the stranger lies my lot" | 200 |
| "He had followers but they could not find him" | 201 |
| Chemin de Fer | 202 |
| Empty room | 203 |
| The abnegation | 205 |
| Lonesome corner | 206 |
| In the reading room | 207 |
| The lantern | 208 |
| Telescope | 210 |
| "Weary with toil, I haste my to be bed" | 213 |
| "How can I then return in happy plight" | 214 |
| "Tonight I've watched" | 215 |
| Rain | 216 |
| Insomnia at the solstice | 217 |
| Hymn to the night | 219 |
| Solitary observation brought back from a short sojurn in hell | 221 |
| Meditation under stars | 222 |
| Brooding in the still night | 226 |
| Souls lake | 227 |
| Night journey | 229 |
| Cricket cricket | 230 |
| Mayflies | 231 |
| Hour | 232 |
| Mirrors at 4 a.m | 234 |
| Poem partly stolen from Montale | 235 |
| On looking up by chance at the constellations | 236 |
| "When night is almost done" | 237 |
| A clear midnight | 238 |