William Cowper Poems
- 101. To Mrs. King, On Her Kind Present To The Author, A Patchwork Counterpane Of Her Own Making.
- 102. Translations Of The Italian Poems
- 103. To Mrs. Throckmorton, On Her Beautiful Transcript Of Horace's Ode, "ad Librum Suum."
- 104. Truth.
- 105. Love Constraining To Obedience.
- 106. On The Loss Of The Royal George.
- 107. Verses To The Memory Of Dr. Lloyd.
- 108. To Mrs. Unwin.
- 109. Lines.
- 110. Sonnet, Addressed To William Hayley, Esq.
- 111. Welcome Cross.
- 112. Prayer For Patience.
- 113. The Rose.
- 114. To Giovanni Battista Manso, Marquis Of Villa.
- 115. The Iliad Of Homer: Translated Into English Blank Verse: Book I.
- 116. On The Death Of The Bishop Of Ely.[1] Anno Aetates 17.
- 117. Praise For Faith.
- 118. On A Spaniel, Called Beau, Killing A Young Bird.
- 119. Epitaph On Mrs. M. Higgins, Of Weston.
- 120. The Happy Change.
- 121. On The Ice Islands Seen Floating In The German Ocean.
- 122. Epitaph On Mr. Chester, Of Chicheley.
- 123. The Cock-fighter's Garland.[1]
- 124. Verses Written At Bath, On Finding The Heel Of A Shoe.
- 125. Another To The Same. (to Leonora)
- 126. The Valley Of The Shadow Of Death.
- 127. The Negro's Complaint.
- 128. A Living And A Dead Faith.
- 129. The Flatting Mill.
- 130. Wisdom. - Proverbs Viii.22-31.
- 131. Addressed To Miss ----, On Reading The Prayer For Indifference, An Ode, By Mrs. Greville.
- 132. Looking Upwards In A Storm.
- 133. To The Rev. William Bull.
- 134. On The Death Of Mrs. (afterwards Lady) Throckmorton's Bullfinch.
- 135. Jehovah-shammah. - Ezekiel Xlviii.35.
- 136. The Dog And The Water Lily. No Fable.
- 137. The Narrow Way.
- 138. Psalm Cxiv [1]
- 139. Walking With God. - Genesis V.24.
- 140. Jehovah Jesus.
- 141. To Mary.
- 142. Hatred Of Sin.
- 143. Submission.
- 144. Catharina: The Second Part: On Her Marriage To George Courtenay, Esq.
- 145. The Morning Dream.
- 146. To Warren Hastings, Esq. By An Old Schoolfellow Of His At Westminster.
- 147. Inscription For A Hermitage In The Author's Garden.
- 148. To Giovanni Salzilli, A Roman Poet, In His Illness. Scazons.[1]
- 149. To The Nightingale, Which The Author Heard Sing On New Year's Day.
- 150. Epitaph On A Hare.