All songs by Alfred Lord Tennyson
A Character
A Dream of Fair Women
A Farewell
A Question by Shelley
A dirge
Adeline
Alfred Lord Tennysons Ulysses
All Things Will Die
Amphion
Audley Court
Break break break...
Buonaparte
Buonoparte
By Night We LIngered on The Lawn In Memorium A.H.H. XCV
CVI Ring Out Wild Bells
Chorus: The varied earth...
Circumstance
Claribel
Come Into the Garden Maud I.XXii
Come not when I am dead...
Conclusion
Crossing the Bar
Demeter and Persephone
Dora
Dualisms
ESledd—Lady of Shalott
Edward Grey
Edwin Morris or The Lake
Elegiacs
Eleänore
English War Song
Fatima
Godiva
Hero to Leander
Home They Brought Her Warrior Dead
I
I have led her home my love my only friend From Maud I.xviii
II
III
IV
IX
Idylls of the King - Balin and Balan
Idylls of the King - Dedication
Idylls of the King - Gareth and Lynette
Idylls of the King - Geraint and Enid
Idylls of the King - Guinevere
Idylls of the King - Lancelot and Elaine
Idylls of the King - Merlin and Vivien
Idylls of the King - Pelleas and Ettarre
Idylls of the King - The Coming of Arthur
Idylls of the King - The Holy Grail
Idylls of the King - The Last Tournament
Idylls of the King - The Marriage of Geraint
Idylls of the King - The Passing of Arthur
Idylls of the King - To the Queen
If I were loved as I desire to be
If Sleep and Death be Truly One
In Memoriam A. H. H. OBIIT MDCCCXXXIII: 129
Isabel
Kate
LEnvoi
Lady Clara Vere de Vere
Lady Clare
Lilian
Locksley Hall
Locksley Hall: Sixty Years After
Lost Hope
Love
Love Pride and Forgetfulness
Love and Death
Love and Duty
Love and Sorrow
Love thou thy land with love far-brought
Madeline
Margaret
Mariana
Mariana in the South
Maud A Monodrama
Mine be the strength of spirit...
Morte dArthur
Move eastward happy earth...
National Song
New Years Eve
Northern Farmer- New Style
Nothing Will Die
Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal
O Darling Room
O Let the Solid Ground From Maud I.X1
O that twere possible - Maud II.iv
OEnone
Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington
Ode to Memory
Of old sat Freedom on the heights
Poets and Their Bibliographies
Poland
Prologue
Recollections of the Arabian Nights
Rosalind
Second Song to the Same
Sir Galahad
Sir Launcelot and Queen Guinevere
Song A spirit haunts the years last hours
Song Every day hath its night...
Song Ithe glooming light...
Song The Owl
Song The golden apple...
Song The lintwhite and the throstlecock...
Song Who can say...?
Song: Tears Idle Tears
Sonnet to J. M. K.
Sonnet Blow ye the trumpet gather from afar...
Sonnet Could I outwear my present state of woe...
Sonnet Oh beauty passing beauty...
Sonnet Shall the hag Evil die with child of Good...
Sonnet The pallid thunderstricken sigh for gain...
Sonnet Though Night hath climbed her peak of highest noon...
St Simon Stylites
St. Agnes
Supposed Confessions...
The Ballad of Oriana
The Beggar Maid
The Blackbird
The Brook
The Bugle-Song
The Burial of Love
The Charge of the Light Brigade
The Day-Dream
The Death of the Old Year
The Departure
The Deserted House
The Dying Swan
The Eagle
The Epic
The Eve of Christmas From In Memoriam A.H.H.
The Gardeners Daughter
The Golden Year
The Goose
The Grasshopper
The Hesperides
The How and the Why
The Kraken
The Lady of Shalott
The Lady of Shalott Brit Lit
The Lord of Burleigh
The Lotos Eaters
The May Queen
The Mermaid
The Merman
The Millers Daughter
The Mystic
The Outcast
The Palace of Art
The Poets Song
The Queen
The Revival
The Sea-Fairies
The Sisters
The Skipping Rope
The Sleeping Beauty
The Sleeping Palace
The Splendor Falls
The Talking Oak
The Tears of Heaven
The Two Voices
The Vision of Sin
Thy Voice is On the Rolling Air In Memoriam A.H.H. CXXX
Timbuctoo
Tithonus
To Christopher North
To E. L.
To J. S.
To a Lady Sleeping
To -I send you here a sort of allegory
To As when with downcast eyes...
To Clear-headed friend whose joyful scorn
To My life is full...alfred
Ulysses
Ulysses Poem
Ulysses for David K and Julio P
Ulysses last 9 lines
V
VI
VII
VIII
Wages
Walking to the Mail
We are Free
When on my bed the moonlight falls In Memoriam A.H.H. LXVII
Will Waterproofs Lyrical Monologue
X
XI
XII
XIII
XIV
XV
XVI
XVII
XVIII
You ask me why tho ill at ease