The North West Passage – Franklin and Rae
Arctic Exploration - the Historical Background
Lecture for the John Rae Society, 29 September 2025
Good evening. It is wonderful to be back in Orkney at last! I do see some familiar faces, but for those in the audience whom I have not had the pleasure of meeting before, perhaps I should introduce myself:
I am indeed, as it says on the tin, you might say, a Franklin descendant, though not directly from Sir John, who only had one daughter, by his first marriage. My three-greats-grandfather was Sir Willingham Franklin, an elder brother of Sir John, who joined the Indian Civil Service and became a Puisne Judge in the High Court in Madras. He and his wife both died within weeks of each other in a cholera epidemic and their orphaned infant daughter Catherine, my great-great grandmother, became the ward of her uncle Sir John.
That is really my only qualification for being here today! I am very grateful therefore to your Society and to Andrew Appleby for giving me this opportunity to return once again to Orkney, and for making all the necessary arrangements.
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While it is of course Dr. John Rae who is the raison d’être for this gathering, he will not appear this evening but is waiting patiently in the wings until tomorrow.
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In order to put Rae’s great achievements into context, I would like to talk today about the background history of Arctic exploration in general and the search for a north-west passage in particular.
As a preamble therefore, I would like to quote briefly from the Preface to Peter Whitfield’s New Found Lands – Maps in the History of Exploration, in the edition republished by the Folio Society in 2000.
He writes:
“European exploration, during what we may call its classic period between 1500 and 1900, is the story of the growth of knowledge, geographical knowledge that was recorded, centralised and used as never before. But discovery is a relative and misleading term… since the lands discovered were of course inhabited or known for centuries before Europeans arrived… Newly-discovered routes… invariably represented knowledge simply borrowed from native peoples.”
Whitfield goes on to make the point that,
“The European discoverer of a certain land, or the route to it, may have been simply the first to record his discovery and incorporate it into the body of European knowledge. In order to do this, he had obviously to find his way home again, therefore the first duty of an explorer was to survive…”
Indeed. And this is where Dr. John Rae succeeded, but Sir John Franklin and the crew of his last expedition tragically did not. The paradox is that because Franklin and his ships and crews disappeared without trace after they sailed from Stromness in 1835, the mystery of their disappearance has captured the imagination of the public ever since. Everybody loves a good mystery.
While Rae eventually discovered the fate of Franklin’s crew, as we shall hear in the second of these talks, it is only in the very recent past, thanks to the melting of the ice and to modern technology that we have learned the fate of his ships and their exact location under the ice.
There is a great deal more to be discovered, and I greatly regret that I probably will not live long enough to hear the end of the story. What if the log-books of either Erebus or Terror have survived, preserved by the low temperatures under the ice, and can be deciphered? THAT would be stupendous!
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So, to return to the background. The furtherance of the growth of geographical knowledge was just one reason for the discovery, exploration and the mapping of unknown lands. It was seldom the only motive. There were other motives, less disinterested.
Annexation of territory and its subsequent exploitation for the benefit of the nation making the discovery was another, even if not overtly declared. Or evangelisation perhaps –saving the souls of the savages by converting them to Christianity. A respectable veneer for land-grabbing. One of the most powerful motives of all however was probably trade.
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The dream of discovering a navigable northern sea route from Europe to the Indies, has a very long history. It is something of a ‘spicy story’.
Highly prized spices, such as cloves mace and nutmeg, were imported to Europe in antiquity, but it was at the height of the Roman Empire, when the Pax Romana made it less hazardous, that the trade in spices really took off. Spices arrived in the Mediterranean via three overland routes: through Central Asia, through the Middle East via the Red Sea, and up from the Horn of Africa. For over a thousand years this trade depended on Indonesian sailors, who carried the spices from the Spice Islands to the Malay Peninsula, Java and Sumatra, whence they were distributed by Indian and Arab sailors across the rest of the Indian Ocean, and through the Red Sea to Alexandria or via the Persian Gulf to ports in the Levant, whence Venetian traders took them on to the European markets.
Where the spices came from remained a very closely guarded secret until the early 1500s. It was only after the Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama had discovered the sea route to India and South-East Asia via the southern tip of Africa, that the source of supply of these valuable products, the so-called ‘Spice Islands’, was revealed. As soon as the cat was out of the bag, the Portuguese Viceroy of India lost no time in despatching ships to these islands, where the crews hastened to fill the holds with priceless cargoes of cloves, nutmegs and mace.
However, it was not enough to know the source of supply. The precious spices had to be transported to the market.
It was a long and hazardous journey from Europe to the Far East via the Cape of Good Hope. From the middle of the sixteenth century, abortive attempts to find a north-east passage to China and Indonesia, in part to avoid the Spanish and the Portuguese who monopolised the southern route. were made by, among others, Sir Hugh Willoughby and Richard Chancellor (who both ended up in watery graves), Stephen Borough and other English navigators.
Henry Hudson, of whom we shall hear more in a moment, also made a couple of unsuccessful expeditions during this period, and much later in 1818, while still only a Lieutenant in the Royal Navy, John Franklin, in company with Commander David Buchan tried to reach the Bering Strait by way of Spitzbergen but they were stopped by ice before they got very far.
During the time when the Low Countries were under the jurisdiction, of the Spanish Crown, and following the Spanish interdiction of trade with Portugal, the Dutch also sent out expeditions. Willem Barents, the best known of the Dutch navigators, led three expeditions. On the third attempt he succeeded in rounding the north point of the island of Novaya Zemlaya only to become icebound for the whole winter and having to abandon his ship. He died a week later as a result of his prolonged exposure to the rigours of the Arctic winter. His posthumous consolation was to have the sea to the east of Spitzbergen, which he had successfully navigated, named after him.
Various Russian expeditions at different times charted the entire north coast of Russia, but it was not until 1878/9 that the whole length of the north-east passage was successfully navigated. Meanwhile the focus of attention was turned towards the west. The eastern route to the north of Russia having been found impracticable, what about seeking a north-western passage from the Atlantic to the Pacific and reaching the Far East from the opposite direction?
The Italian Giovanni Caboto, anglicised to John Cabot, about 1450 to 1498, most probably the Captain of a merchant ship trading to the Levant, is said on one of his voyages to have visited Mecca and been amazed by the market in spices and silks which he found there. He learned that these spices were transported overland by caravan from Asia.
Cabot, with an eye to the main chance, conceived the notion that it might be possible to open up a sea route across the western ocean to Cathay for the purpose of bringing these luxury items to Europe. Having found the European Courts unreceptive to this idea he brought his family to England and tried to persuade the merchants of Bristol to finance an expedition in search of such a route.
While this was being organised, the news came through that Christopher Columbus, (usually considered also to be Italian, but in fact possibly a Spanish Sephardic Jew), sailing west, had reached the West Indies. This news galvanised the English establishment, and Henry VII granted Cabot letters patent to undertake a voyage to the west in the hope of finding a navigable route to Cathay via the north west. He set sail in the Mathew, a small vessel with a crew of only 18 men in May 1497 and on 24th June sighted one of the northern capes of Newfoundland, promptly taking possession in the name of the King, of what he was convinced was an island off the coast of Cathay. Quite by chance on the return voyage they sailed over what are now known as the Grand Banks of Newfoundland where they had only to lower buckets over the side to catch huge quantities of cod. This accidental discovery led directly to the foundation of the Newfoundland cod fishing industry.
That expedition marked the beginning of the serious search for a navigable northern sea route to the markets of the far east, though it was still to be a few years before it was realised that Newfoundland was not an island, but part of a very large continent blocking the route, and that Cathay was many thousands of miles still further to the west.
What eventually was to prove the catalyst which prompted more concentrated efforts to find as soon as possible a navigable sea route to the sources of such potential wealth, was the completion of the conquest of the entire eastern Mediterranean by the Ottoman Empire. The overland caravan trade routes over which the products of the East, including the precious spices, had been brought to Europe for centuries were thus cut off.
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In 1493 Pope Alexander VI (on whose authority one might ask?) drew a line 370 leagues, (a league at sea being roughly three nautical miles) to the west of Cape Verde on the westernmost point of Africa, and awarded all newly discovered lands to the west of this line to Portugal and to the east to Spain.
As far as Britain was concerned, in view of the ongoing hostilities with Spain and Portugal, the use of the sea routes through the Magellan Strait in Chile, and the Cape of Good Hope to the south of Africa, were no longer available and it now became even more important to find a navigable sea route for the increasingly lucrative trade in spices. The north east route having proved impracticable, perhaps a route could be found to the west or north-west?
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Here our story really begins.
Once it was realised that the earth is not flat but is in fact a sphere, it was assumed that if one sailed from Europe far enough to the west one would eventually reach the shores of Cathay and the fabled East. The discovery of the American continent by Christopher Columbus, a Genoese adventurer, put paid to the notion of a westward route. That left the remaining option – a route to the north of the continent of America via the Arctic.
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Columbus, in quest of Japan, in 1492 had first discovered the islands of the Bahamas, which he took to be India, therefore naming the natives, ‘Indians’, and on discovering shortly thereafter the island of Cuba he assumed that as it looked so unlike Japan, it must be an outlying promontory of China. On a second voyage, financed by the Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain, he discovered several other Caribbean islands, and revisited Cuba, still convinced that it was a promontory of China.
A third voyage of exploration brought the realisation that the main land mass he had discovered was not Asia at all, as he had at first been convinced. He attempted to find a passage through the area of Panama, as he had been informed by natives that there was another ocean not far away, but of course until the Panama Canal was built there was no such passage. He was credited with the discovery of America nonetheless, though what is now the USA still remained unknown to Europeans. (A few years later another Florentine merchant adventurer called Amerigo Vespucci laid claim to having been the first European to reach the mainland of the continent named after him, but the veracity of his claim has been considered doubtful.)
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The race was now on. The principal actors were the English and the Dutch. Sir Humphrey Gilbert in 1555 petitioned Queen Elizabeth I to support an attempt to find a passage to Cathay via a northern route, which, equating America with the lost continent of Atlantis, he was convinced, from his reading of Plato, Aristotle and other ancient writers, must exist.
The Queen was evidently sceptical, since nothing came of his petition, though a letter from Sir Humphrey to his brother Sir John Gilbert postulating the existence of a commercially feasible route to the east, a letter which remained in circulation for ten years before it was published, probably helped to promote the idea of seeking such a passage. Gilbert seems to have had a bee in his bonnet on the subject, though he was not the only one – Richard Hakluyt, something of an armchair traveller in the 16th century, seems equally to have been obsessed with the idea, and quoting the accounts of a number of hopeful explorers made an imaginary voyage to Cathay via a north-west route.
In spite of the failure of all these voyages of discovery,akluyt, the contemporary geographer, among other armchair explorers, maintained, quoting dubious and circumstantial evidence of various kinds, that a north-west passage not only existed, but had been successfully navigated by assorted ‘inverted commas’ Indians. the interest remained, and in the last quarter of the sixteenth century the search for the fabled north-west passage really began in earnest.
Martin Frobisher made three voyages, in 1576, 1577 and 1578, reaching a sizeable inlet in the southeast corner of Baffin Island. Here he discovered, on his second voyage, what he took to be gold. With a fleet of no less than fifteen vessels he undertook a third voyage in 1578 in order to recover the ‘gold’ he had discovered and therewith make his fortune. He was doomed to disappointment, as the ‘gold’ turned out to be iron pyrites, or ‘fool’s gold’.
Frobisher was followed in 1585, 1586 and 1587 by John Davis, who penetrated a little further north, discovering the strait which divides western Greenland from Baffin Island later named after him.
The English navigator and freelance explorer Henry Hudson now appears on the scene. In 1607 he made two unsuccessful attempts to find a sea route to China. The first attempt was to be made via the North Pole but having got no further than Spitzbergen before being blocked by ice, he attempted to find a north-eastern route, via the Barents Sea, but was once again prevented by ice. Undeterred, at the end of the following year he accepted a commission from the Dutch East India Company to seek for a passage to China by either a north-east or north-western route. His attempt to find an eastern route being foiled again by impenetrable ice in the Barents Sea, he talked his already mutinous crew into crossing the Atlantic and trying to find a route via a north-west passage.
Making landfall in North Virginia in August 1609 he entered New York Bay and sailed northwards for some 150 miles up the river subsequently named after him, proving that it was not a strait as had previously been thought.
On his return to England, not surprisingly, he was forbidden thenceforward to offer his future services to the Dutch.
Undeterred by his failure so far to locate it, Hudson was still convinced of the existence of a north-west passage, and the following year once again set sail in the 55-ton aptly named Discovery. Leaving Harwich on 1st May 1610, he sailed north to Orkney, on the same course which would be set two centuries later by Sir John Franklin.
Passing the Faroe Islands, the expedition anchored in a thick fog off Iceland, where according to the account of the voyage given by Abacuk Pricket, the navigator, they caught a large quantity of cod and ling while waiting for a favourable wind and for the fog to clear.
Pricket gives a graphic description of the topography of the west coast of Iceland as they continued the voyage, passing the most active volcano in Iceland, Mount Hecla, which was ‘spitting out much fire’ a sign, he wrote, indicating bad weather to come. A hot spring was found on the shore, wherein the crew bathed, even though the water was apparently so hot that it would “scald a fowl”.
At the beginning of June 1610, the expedition raised Greenland but were unable to land because of the ice. Pricket gives a graphic description of the ice-fields they had to negotiate, and the icebergs or “islands of ice” one of which they observed overturn – a salutary warning not to approach too close. A quantity of whales was seen, one of which, passing right under the ship, frightened the life out of the crew, who expected to be capsized at any moment. To their chagrin they failed to despatch a polar bear spotted on an ice floe, which had they succeeded in bagging it, would have been a welcome addition to the shipboard diet.
Fortunately for the bear, the ice floe floated it away out of range. In due course the Discovery entered the strait between Baffin Island and Nunavut, later named after Hudson, and on 3rd August entered what we now know as Hudson Bay. The next two months were spent investigating and charting the shores of the Bay, Hudson assiduously naming the various bays, islands and prominent features after members of the Royal family and the nobility. Eventually the ship became ice-bound and had to over-winter in the south-west corner of the Bay.
Hudson then convened a ‘council of war’ with the whole crew and producing a chart, demonstrated to them that they had already reached a point 100 leagues further than any Englishman hitherto had ever sailed, and asked whether once free of the ice they should continue to seek the north-west passage, or give up the expedition and sail for home. Opinion was divided, and there was, Pricket implies, already an ominous undercurrent of grumbling.
No decision was therefore reached, but the first task in any case was to extricate themselves from the ice. This they did succeed in doing after much labour but the hardship and privations the crew had had to endure finally led to open mutiny. The ringleader was Hudson’s ne’er-do-well protégé, one Henry Greene. Hudson was tied up and with his teenage son, the sick members of the crew and several others was forced at gunpoint into the shallop or tender, cast adrift and abandoned to his fate.
The remainder of the crew set sail for home on 22nd June 1611, but not before Greene and several others were killed in a fight with the Inuit. Several more died before the ship reached England in September. The survivors, including Pricket were tried and sent to prison.
The eventual fate of Hudson and his fellow castaways remains unknown to this day.
Further expeditions were undertaken by William Baffin who in the course of five voyages between 1612 and 1616, reached as far as the northern end of the bay dividing Baffin Island and Greenland, which was subsequently named after him, and further expeditions led by Luke Fox and Thomas James established only that there was no passage through the western shore of Hudson Bay.
One result of all this was however the creation of the Hudson’s Bay Company, established to exploit the lucrative trade in furs. By the terms of is charter the Company was bound to continue the search for a viable route from the Atlantic to the Pacific to the north of their territory, and they came in for considerable criticism for failing to do so. To silence that criticism various rather half-hearted sea voyages around Hudson Bay were undertaken, but without result.
Various overland journeys were also organised, the most important being that led in 1771 by Samuel Hearne, who discovered the Coppermine River, which was later to become the route of one of Franklin’s early expeditions. A few years later Sir Alexander Mackenzie discovered the river named after him, to the west of the Coppermine. Captain James Cook, in the course of his third circumnavigation explored western Alaska, and via the Bering Strait reached what he named Icy Cape at the north-western extremity of the peninsula.
The general outline of the North American continent was now bit by bit gradually taking shape. *
Apart from the expeditions I have just mentioned, which followed the period of the greatest discoveries in the 17th century, interest in discovering a polar route then fell into the doldrums for a couple of hundred years.
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It was not until the 19th century, following the industrial revolution and the huge expansion in international trade, that it became increasingly important to determine whether or not a navigable north-west passage did actually exist between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, through the chain of islands by the most direct route to the north of British North America, as it still was at the time. (As you may well already know, the Dominion of Canada, being the amalgamation of the Provinces of Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, was not created until the passing of the British North America Act in 1867).
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Ship-building, navigation and naval discipline, were all considered to have improved enormously since the search for the elusive North West Passage had been abandoned almost two centuries earlier. By the 19th century, the period we are now concerned with, the discovery of a viable north-western sea route from the Atlantic to the Pacific was not any longer so much a question of trade, as of national pride.
The prospect of Russia, already claiming sovereignty over Alaska, getting there first and thus gaining control of northern access to the Pacific, was viewed with considerable alarm at the British Admiralty, and a series of Polar expeditions was therefore launched as a matter of some urgency, in the hope that if such a passage did exist, Britain should be the first in the field. *
A further consideration was that after the victory of Waterloo in 1815, which abruptly ended the Napoleonic Wars, the British Admiralty had on their hands a large pool of experienced and battle-hardened naval officers, many of them at a loose end and on half-pay. So, more for reasons of national prestige and scientific knowledge than from any serious thought of finding a new navigable route from the Atlantic to the Pacific Oceans, My Lords of the Admiralty once again turned their attention to the still unresolved question of discovering a North-West Passage.
Captain John Ross, uncle of James Clark Ross of Antarctic fame; William Parry, who led three expeditions, and others penetrated further west and filled some of the blanks on the charts of the complex Arctic archipelago, but none of them actually got far enough west to reach the Bering Strait.
William Parry, who took part in or led more than one of these expeditions, apparently studied the Inuit way of life, the way they dressed, travelled and hunted, but unfortunately failed to draw the conclusion that European explorers in the Arctic might do well to copy the native way of life. This John Rae was to do so successfully in after years.
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From 1818 to 1859, a very lengthy stretch of the north coast of North America, filling in the gaps between the earlier land-based expeditions, had been mapped. This work was achieved mainly by British explorers including among others, John Ross, William Parry, who was an hydrographer, and James Ross (nephew of John).
John Franklin had also made two perilous overland expeditions, one of them via the Coppermine River, as mentioned earlier, and a third, rather unsatisfactory voyage by sea, during the process making further discoveries; charting a very considerable additional part of that coast and establishing in the process the strong probability (rather than the wishful thinking of earlier times) of a navigable sea route from east to west. Franklin and his companions endured terrible hardships and privations. (They might have suffered less if like John Rae, they had learned and adopted the Inuit survival techniques).
Polar exploration had now become a hot topic, and by 1844 there remained just a short stretch of coastline unexplored. The race to discover that last link was on. Apart from the danger of Russia getting there first, the credit for the discovery of such a link would be an enormous feather in the cap of the nation responsible. Sir John Barrow, promoted to First Secretary at the Admiralty, now aged eighty and about to retire, was very keen to crown his career with the credit for discovering the missing link - the Holy Grail of Polar exploration – the fabled North-West Passage.
However, the British Government, which under Barrow’s aegis had already invested so much in Polar exploration, took some persuading to invest yet more money in this elusive project. And this, even though James Clark Ross’s highly successful expedition to the Antarctic from 1839 to 1843 had given a boost to the official appetite for Arctic exploration. Towards the end of 1834 however, after much vacillation on the part if the British Government, Barrow was at last successful in persuading them to finance one last push.
All naval expeditions were traditionally undertaken in two ships, and this last attempt on the north-west passage was to be no exception. Her Majesty’s Ships Erebus and Terror, sturdy ‘bomb ships,’ veterans of the Napoleonic Wars and recently returned from Ross’s Antarctic expedition, were the obvious choice of vessels and the burning question was then, who should lead such an expedition?
The names of various tried and trusted veterans of Arctic exploration were considered. There was no shortage of interested parties, much intriguing and jockeying for position, and many hopefuls bent the ears of those with influence.
At that time, who you knew rather than necessarily what you knew, was of the utmost importance. Influence was all. Even though nothing was definitely known, rumours abounded, and a good deal of intrigue was going on behind the scenes. One who felt that he had a good chance of being appointed to lead such an expedition if it should go ahead, was James Fitzjames, who though young and relatively untried, was a great friend of Sir John Barrow’s son. Another possible candidate was the Arctic veteran Sir Francis Crozier.
After 1815 Captain John Franklin, as he now was, had been one of the experienced half-pay naval officers I mentioned a moment ago, cooling his heels in England without a command. He had, from the Battle of the Nile to that of Trafalgar, been in the thick of all the major naval engagements of the war against Napoleon, as well as enduring the subsequent hazards of Arctic exploration, and had thus far miraculously escaping unscathed, even though he had had some very narrow squeaks in the course of his overland journeys in the frozen wastes of North America. Following his last land expedition during which starvation loomed for all his crew, Franklin became notorious in the popular imagination as ‘the man who ate his boots.’
At this point we make the acquaintance of Jane, Lady Franklin, who was to play such an important part in subsequent events. She was born in 1792, the eldest of three daughters of John Griffin, a silk-weaver and liveryman of the City of London, descended from a French Huguenot family. John’s father, so the story goes, had been smuggled into England as a young child, concealed in an armoire.
John Griffin was a man of culture, addicted to travel, a passion which he had the means to indulge, and as a widower, he took his young daughters on extended tours of Europe. This wanderlust he passed on to Jane, who fortunately for posterity kept voluminous diaries of her travels for the rest of her life. These diaries are now held, I believe, in the archives of the Scott Polar Research Institute in Cambridge. She was herself an inveterate traveller and also a prodigious letter-writer - to her husband when they were apart, to her friends and to members of her family. Many of these letters have been preserved, and my great- great-uncle, Willingham Rawnsley published a Life and selection of Jane’s letters which makes fascinating reading.
Jane, still a spinster in her late thirties, was a friend of John Franklin’s first wife Eleanor Porden, who died in 1825, while Franklin was away in the Arctic on his second land expedition to map the coast of North America. It is evident from Jane’s diaries that she had quite an admiration for the dashing Captain Franklin and following his return from the Arctic she made a dead set for him.
They became engaged to be married, and together they took the unusual step for the time of going together on an adventurous trip to Russia before the nuptials were solemnised. The wedding took place in November 1828, when Jane, six years younger than her husband, was already thirty-nine.
Captain Franklin was knighted the following year for his services to Arctic exploration and after two years ashore without a ship, he was given a new command, spending the next three years with HMS Rainbow on duty in the Mediterranean, mainly keeping the peace in Greece, for which service he was decorated by King Otho.
During his absence he and Jane wrote long and frequent letters to each other, and Jane’s very first letter to her husband after he left for the Mediterranean was full of encouragement for him to engage in another expedition to the Arctic.
“All the world knows what you can do,” she wrote, and “deathless glory” would await him, if he could obtain such a post. Prophetic perhaps? … Poor Sir John,…
Although officer’s wives were not allowed on board ship, the couple managed to spend at least one winter together in Corfu, where Lady Franklin, as she had now become, seems to have experienced more than one earthquake; writing to her sister that she had been awakened by the shaking of her bed to and fro. Then all the church bells started ringing, not caused, she says, by the earthquake, but by the ringers who rushed to raise the alarm. Earthquakes in Corfu did not it seems often do much damage. Nonetheless, she wrote,
“Some days previous to the earthquake, the front wall of our house was cracked and the window of the anteroom to our drawing room fell altogether in and was smashed, but this was owing to the firing upon the esplanade upon the Queen’s birthday.”
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By Christmas 1833 Franklin was back in Portsmouth at the end of his 3-year commission in the Mediterranean, but his wife, still on her travels, was now in Alexandria, preparing to sail up the Nile. She did not return to England until the end of 1834.
Two years later, and still without a commission, Sir John was offered a six-year contract as Lieutenant-Governor of Van Diemen’s Land, (as Tasmania was then known), at that time a penal colony. This was a posting for which he was perhaps ill-suited, as later events were to demonstrate, but he accepted it with alacrity, and he and Lady Franklin, accompanied by Sir John’s daughter Eleanor, by then a girl of thirteen, and his niece Sophy Cracroft, set sail for the Antipodes.
Sophy would remain with Lady Franklin as her constant companion and amanuensis for the remainder of Jane’s life.
Franklin was not really temperamentally suited to the life in Tasmania, and as a result of various intrigues against him, was eventually recalled, under something of a cloud, but not before both he and his wife had made many welcome improvements to the lives of the settlers and the convicts in particular.
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Once more back in England, and presumably again on half-pay, Franklin was, despite his terrible near-death experiences on earlier overland expeditions, keen to return to the familiar and uncomplicated world of the Navy. Once he heard that one last expedition in search of the North-West Passage was in the wind, he was more than anxious to go back to the Arctic in order to complete the task of mapping which he had begun years before.
Sir James Ross had evidently been in touch with him on the subject, and had dropped a hint that the expedition was likely to be approved, as on Christmas Eve 1844 Franklin wrote to Ross:
“I purpose going up to London on Thursday next and will then make a point of seeing Sir John Barrow, Beaufort and Parry, I shall go in fact to them for the purpose of enquiring of them how the question stands as to the Expedition and to let them know that providing you do not go in command of it, I hope to do so… If I find that the Expedition, as your note seems to imply, has been approved by the Admiralty and is in course of preparation, I shall certainly offer myself for the Command of it…
A week later, on 31 December, we learn from Franklin’s letter to his wife, that he had just visited Sir William Parry at the Admiralty, who had informed him that nothing definite had yet been decided.
Rumours however were rife, and journalists had obviously been jumping to conclusions, since Franklin ends the letter by observing that “The Times had a short paragraph alluding to the Expedition and says it is to be offered to Ross, and if he declines, the command falls to me.”
Sir James Ross would have been an obvious choice. He however was very recently married and therefore, as he must have hinted to Franklin. had ruled himself out, Captain Francis Crozier, another Arctic veteran would also be a possibility.
All of this remained speculation or wishful thinking right up to the very last possible minute – as James Fitzjames, who had aspirations himself to command any such expedition, should it be decided upon, wrote on 7th February 1845, somewhat peevishly, to his good friend John Barrow Junior,
My dear Barrow,
“I have been very anxious to hear about the Northern business, which I had hoped would be settled last Wednesday. … I have heard that the command of the expedition has been offered to Sir James Ross who has refused it, and that Captain Stokes was to be appointed if Sir John Franklin refused which looks like Captain Stokes going 2nd if Sir John does go.
“ Now Captain Stokes is a Commander very little senior to me and being in an expedition of the sort I should like to go with such men as Franklin and Ross of known experience in icy affairs or in command myself – for I think I could do as well as Captain Stokes…
“Besides all this, he added,
“If the ships be not commissioned immediately and fitted out as quickly as possible, they will be too late to start this year with advantage…
Jumping to conclusions, he went on,
Franklin’s last expedition should sail on the 20th of April and being towed to the ice by a large steamer should arrive off Lancaster Sound where the work is to begin, on 1st July – not a bit too early…
Fitzjames ends the letter:
“I write this in heaviness of heart, for I have now nearly given up all idea of going. This is a great disappointment to me and will be a sad one to those officers who have been hoping to go with me…”
In the event, on the recommendation of Sir James Ross, Franklin was duly appointed to command the expedition. Misgivings about him had been expressed by My Lords of the Admiralty, because of his age – he was already approaching sixty and might have been excused for preferring to retire gracefully on his reputation, but like so many others before and since, he had got the Arctic ‘bug’ and was very keen to go.
On 8th February he wrote to Sir James Ross:
“I have just received your note and give you many thanks for it. I was in the act of writing to you when your note came, to tell you that I had received a note last evening to tell me that I was to have command of the expedition…”
Captain Crozier, himself an Arctic veteran who might well have been considered, had already intimated to Ross that while he did not feel up to the leadership of the expedition, he would be happy to join it as second-in-command to Sir John Franklin. Ross took the hint, and Crozier was duly appointed to command the Terror. HMS Erebus would be Franklin’s flagship.
From then on, events moved at lightning speed. Since this was likely to be the last chance to find that elusive last link in the fabled North-West Passage, the Admiralty pulled out all the stops, and no expense was spared in fitting out the expedition. The hulls of Erebus and Terror already stoutly built as bomb-ships, to resist crushing by ice should they get locked in during the Arctic winter, were reinforced further with an extra thickness of planking; stores sufficient for a three years’ voyage were taken on board and the officers and crews signed on.
The dockyard at Woolwich was day and night a hive of frantic activity, too frequently interrupted by the hordes of visitors who came see how the work was getting on; and to bid farewell to their loved ones.
The young James Fitzjames was given the rank of Commander and was appointed by the Admiralty as second to Franklin in Erebus, a fortunate choice for posterity as many of the long and entertaining letters to his friends and family which have survived are among the principal sources of information about the fitting out of the ships, the characters of the crew, and so on. Around fifty of these letters have been published in the comprehensive and very moving collection of correspondence to and from members of the expedition, published by McGill University in 2022 under the title, May We be Spared to Meet on Earth.
The fitting out being more or less completed, on 12th May Erebus and Terror, quite low in the water from the weight of stores and equipment, with even the crew’s cabins being crammed with supplies so that the occupants had hardly room left to move, left Woolwich dockyard and moved downstream to Greenhithe. Here the crews, with the addition of a monkey, given by Lady Franklin, a dog and a cat, were able to ‘shake down’ and get to know each other.
Many last letters were written and despatched, and the final preparations made for departure. A photographer came aboard at the instance of Lady Franklin and took daguerreotype portraits of Franklin and his officers. Some of these have miraculously survived, and a set was recently sold at auction for £445,000.
On 19th May 1835, just over three months after the decision was made for the expedition to go ahead, HMS Erebus and Terror, fitted out with all the most up-to-date equipment, as well auxiliary steam engines adapted from railway locomotives, finally set sail for the Thames Estuary, in company with the transport ship Baretto Junior.
In spite of contrary winds which slowed their progress, they made quite good time up the east coast with the aid of the steam-powered support vessels Rattler and Monkey. Monkey was however damaged in a gale quite early in the voyage, and was eventually replaced by Blazer, but not until the flotilla reached the latitude of Aberdeen. In fact, the worst weather encountered by the expedition on the whole voyage to Greenland was that experienced on the trip up the east coast of England, when Erebus & Terror due to contrary winds, had ignominiously to be towed most of the way by the indomitable Rattler. After rounding John o’Groats, landfall was eventually made at Stromness, the last port of call in the UK, on 31 May 1845.
The expedition remained at Stromness hardly more than 48 hours, just long enough for the ships to take on final supplementary stores, including some live bullocks, to replace the three which due to the rough weather encountered up the east coast, had died on board. Water was taken on at Logan’s Well. The crew were forbidden shore leave, though it seems possible that Sir John Franklin found the time to go ashore, as tradition has it that he stayed the night with the Hamiltons, John Rae’s sister and brother-in law, and that Rae’s mother was also of the party. (As Bryce Wilson has observed, no doubt Franklin, as a distinguished visitor, would have been showered with invitations during his brief visit to Stromness).
Whether Franklin did indeed take time off ashore to visit the Hamiltons; remains, in the absence of any concrete evidence, an open question. It does however seem rather unlikely that he found time to leave the Erebus at all, in view of all the last-minute paperwork and preparations that he had to deal with before the final departure. If he did indeed dine ashore, it is even more surprising that he did not mention it in the surviving letter to his wife, posted from Stromness.
Never mind – it remains a charming idea!
Last letters were received and despatched, a rousing farewell dinner for the crews was held on board, and early in the morning of June 3rd, 1845, the fleet, consisting of HMS Erebus and HMS Terror, with the two steamers Rattler and Blazer and the supply ship Baretto Junior set sail from Stromness for the coast of Greenland. The flotilla must have presented a fine spectacle to those assembled on shore to see them off.
Rattler and Blazer left the expedition’s ships off the island of Rona. The Baretto Junior accompanied Erebus and Terror as far as Whalefish Island, off the west coast of Greenland, where the stores were transferred, and on 12th July the last mailbags were transferred to the supply ship before she left to return to England. In the very last letter, from Charles Osmer to his wife, he wrote:
“At the last moment I have just that time to say God bless you. The transport is now four miles out of the harbour whilst I write these few lines. I shall get on board the Erebus by 12 o’clock tonight. 296 icebergs in sight from the masthead.”
Erebus & Terror with their crews full of hope and optimism for the success of the venture, set off the next day for the Arctic.
Thereafter, apart from a couple of sightings by whalers, the whole expedition disappeared off the face of the earth.
Though of course nobody for a moment considered it a possibility, neither Franklin nor any of his crew would ever see their homeland again.
To begin with nobody at home was too worried as to the lack of communication, since it was likely that the ships would have to overwinter in the ice before they had completed their mission and might well not make it home for at least two years.
The Royal Navy had intimated to the crews that they would accept and endeavour to deliver letters when opportunity afforded.
As the ships had still not returned by January 1848 the first mailbags were sent out with HMS Plover and the North Star. Neither ship found any trace of the expedition and all the letters were accordingly returned undelivered. Later on, letters were despatched with the various search expeditions on the off chance that they might be picked up, but these too were brought back undelivered and were all returned to sender.
In 1845, as was learned much later, Franklin, fortunately for him perhaps, died during the voyage. As a result, although posthumously credited with the discovery of the North-West Passage, he escaped the terrible fate of the remainder of his crew.
So there, as the expedition, full of hope and enthusiasm, disappears into oblivion, we leave them.**
Dr. John Rae awaits us tomorrow.
- Hits: 13
The Subject Index covers all the poems published by HDR in his poetry books as well as the many individual poems found in newspapers, journals and the Crosthwaite Parish Magazine. It also includes numerous unpublished poems from the Rawnsley Archives.
Varallo (Italy)
The Monte Sacro at Varallo, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 63.
Varese (Italy)
At the Chapel of the Annunciation, Sacro Monte, Varese, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 72.
Evening at Sacro Monte, Varese, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 73.
Venizelos, E. K.
To Venizelos, Carlisle Journal, 13 October 1916, p. 8.
Venus
Jupiter and Venus, March, 1905, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1905; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 69; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 107.
Vernede, Robert Ernest
In Memoriam. Robert Ernest Vernede, Rifle Brigade, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
Victor, Albert (Prince, Duke of Clarence)
The Crown of Thorns, St. George’s Chapel, Windsor, January 20th, 1892, Pall Mall Gazette, Literary Supplement, 28 January 1892; Reading Mercury, 30 January 1892, p. 2; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1892; Valete: Tennyson and Other Poems, 1893, p. 50.
The Dead Prince, Jan. 14, 1892, Pall Mall Gazette, 15 January 1892, p. 1; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1892; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 49.
Victor, Christian (Prince)
At a Soldier-Prince’s Funeral, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 200-201.
Victoria, Princess Royal
A Brave Empress, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 43.
Victoria, Queen
1887, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1887.
A Jubilee Hymn, Scottish Church, April 1887; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 9 April 1887, p. 5; Christian World Pulpit, 31 (25 May 1887), p. 335.
Across the Flood, Penrith Observer, 5 February 1901, p. 7; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 15.
Children’s Jubilee Hymn, Christian World Pulpit, 31 (8 June 1887), p. 367.
Hymn for the Advent of the Jubilee Year of Queen Victoria, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1886.
Hymn in Grateful and Loyal Memory of Her Most Gracious Majesty, The Queen – Hymn 1, (Carlisle Archives, PR/120/125).
Hymn in Grateful and Loyal Memory of Her Most Gracious Majesty, The Queen – Hymn 2, (Carlisle Archives, PR/120/125).
In Memoriam, V.R.I., Lancashire Evening Post, 24 January 1901, p. 4.
In Memoriam: V.R.I., A Voice From the Colonies, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
In Memory of September 23, 1896, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October 1896.
Jubilee Bonfires—Prospect, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1887.
Jubilee Bonfires—Retrospect, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1887.
Love in Death, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 13.
‘Now let the stars from heaven to earth be shed’, West Cumberland Times, 19 June 1897, p. 6.
Ode of Congratulation to Her Most Glorious Majesty Queen Victoria on Her Diamond Jubilee from the Women of England, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
The Harvest of Love, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 16.
The Jubilee—A Retrospect, Aberdeen Press and Journal, 16 April 1887, p. 8; Pall Mall Gazette, April 1887; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, June 1887.
The Mother of Her People, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 21.
The Passing of the Queen, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 11.
The Queen at Netley, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 131.
The Queen to Lady Roberts, With the Victoria Cross, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 78.
The Queen’s Memorial. Plea for a National Valhalla, Lowestoft Journal, 9 March 1901, p. 8.
The Royal Buck-Hounds: A Deputation to Windsor, Nature Notes, 8 (January 1897), p. 11.
The Sorrow of the Fleet, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 14.
The Way of Peace, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 18.
To a Dumb Mourner, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 12.
To the Queen, Ballads of the War, 1902, pp. 218-219.
To Victoria: A Birthday Greeting, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, June 1899.
Vikings
The Death of Olaf the Dane – Sunset Beyond the Isle of Man, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 85.
Villars (Switzerland)
The Morning Play at Villars, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 158.
Von Dollinger, Johann Josef
Dr. Dollinger, January 10th, 1890, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 113.
Von Moltke, Helmuth the Elder
Field Marshall von Moltke, April 24th, 1891, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 65.
Von Strattlingen, Heinrich
The Tombstone of Heinrich von Strattlingen, the Bard, in the Bächihölzi, Thun, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 126.
Von Winkelried
Arnold von Winkelried, at Stanz, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 34.
At Stanz, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 33.
Wada, Duke
The Giant of Mulgrave Dale, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 156.
Wagtails
The Wagtail, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 55.
Wainfleet, William
William of Wainfleet, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 215.
Wakefield, Mary Augusta
The Northern Nightingale. On Hearing a Ballad Sung in the North Country Dialect by Miss Wakefield, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 109.
To Mary Wakefield, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 20.
Wales
A Retrospect from Mawddach Crag, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 68.
At Barmouth, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 64.
Barmouth Bridge, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 69.
Barmouth Shore, a Walk to Llanaber, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 67.
Bronwyn the Fair, Harlech, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 73.
Cottages of St. George, Barmouth, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 70.
Harlech, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 72.
Low Tide in the Estuary, Barmouth, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 66.
The Abermaw, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 65.
The Buried City of Cardigan Bay, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 74.
The Haunted Oak of Nannau, Pall Mall Magazine, 3 (July 1894), pp. 353-361.
The Seasonless Ocean, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 63.
The Torrent Walk, Dolgelly, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 71.
Walker, Henry
To My Friends, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Walker, On Their Diamond Wedding Day, June 7th, 1909, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1909.
Walker, Mary
‘Humble of heart, and unto all a friend’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 22 October 1892, p. 5.
Hymn in Memory of Mary Walker, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1892.
Walker, Robert
Conscience the Founder, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1912.
Walker, William
A Cumberland Miner’s Story, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 78-82.
Walls, Minnie
Minnie: Died 25 July 1877, Buried at Welton, , 31 July, Aged 19 Years, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Walton, Miss
‘I am the mistress of the post’, Manchester Times, 30 March 1900, p. 14.; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 165.
Wansfell
Moon-Rise Over Wansfell, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 92.
War see Boer War; Conflicts and Battles; War Heroes; World War 1
War Heroes (Pre-WW1)
A Crosthwaite Hero in Matabele Land, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 25-27.
A Gallant Midshipman, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 36-38.
A Hero of Belmont, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 2 December 1899, p. 5; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 33-34.
A Hero of Spion Kop, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 108-112.
An Estcourt Hero, South Wales Echo, 21 November 1899, p. 2; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 32.
At Caesar’s Camp, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 93.
At the Burial of General Wauchope, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 52-56.
At the Grave of Major Scott Turner, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 42-43.
Bible v. Bullet, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 39-40.
Brave Beresford, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 17-19.
Captain Baird, In Memoriam, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 23-24.
Carbineers to the Rescue, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 47-50.
Commander Wyatt Rawson, September 13th, 1882, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 55.
Edith Cavell. Oct. 13th, 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
Fletcher’s Fight, a Ballad of Nyasa Land, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 131-134.
General Gordon, January 26th, 1885, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 56.
Harley’s Eight, A Ballad of Chitral—April 16, 1895, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 127-130.
Heroes of Chitral, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 20-22.
Hosan the Faithful, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 140-142.
How They Saved the Wagon Bridge at Bethulie, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 161-164.
In a Battery, Captain Peel, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 4-9.
In Honour of Abraham Esau, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 7.
In Honour of Frederick Greville Egerton, Gunnery-Lieutenant, H.M.S. “Powerful”, Ladysmith, November 2, 1899, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 22-25.
In Memory of Flight-Lieutenant R. A. J. Warneford, V.C., Legion of Honour, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
In Memory of John Travers Cornwell. First Class Boy of H.M.S. ‘Chester’, The Battle of Jutland, May 31, 1916, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
In Memory of Lieutenant Cecil Arbuthnot White, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 86-90.
In Memory of the Late Earl of Ava, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 85.
Jacob’s Well. An Incident in the Skirmish of Doornkop, Transvaal, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 138-139.
Light in the Darkness: In Honour of Captain E. B. Towse, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 174-177.
Michael Hardy, Before the Redan—June 18, 1854, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 1-3.
“On, Lads, On!”, London Daily News, 14 April 1898, p. 2.
The Drummer Boy of the Malakand Pass, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 124-126.
The Hero-Corporal of Ontario, Thiepval, Sept, 30, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
The Warriors’ Death-Song, Wilson’s Last Stand, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 13-16.
To Major E. J. Phipps-Hornby, V.C., of Battery “Q”, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 168-169.
To the Hero of Kimberley, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 122-125.
To Winston Churchill, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 28-31.
War Heroes (WW1)
A Brave Doctor. In Honour of Dr. D. C. Turnbull, Sheffield Daily Telegraph, 31 March 1915, p. 6; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 184-185.
A French Hero, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 126-127.
A Scottish V.C., Scotsman, 23 August 1915, p. 11; Carlisle Journal, 24 August 1915, p. 6.
Captain A. Noel Loxley, H.M.S. “Formidable”, January 1st 1915, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 150-151.
Captain Mark Haggard, September 14th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 79.
Captain Noel Godfrey Chavasse, V.C., R.A.M.C., Died of Wounds in France, August, 1917, Liverpool Echo, 15 August 1917, p. 3.
Commander Edward Unwin, R.N., V.C., H.M.S. River Clyde, The Dardanelles, April 25, 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
How George Wilson Won the Victoria Cross, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 74-77.
How Lieutenant Leach and Sergeant Hogan Won the Victoria Cross, October 28th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 191-192.
How Piper Laidlaw Won the Victoria Cross, Loos, September, 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
In Face of Death, Sept. 25th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 89-90.
In Honour of Battery L, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 72-73.
In Honour of Lieutenant-Commander H. de P. Rennick, T.P.’s Journal of Great Deeds of the Great War, 2 (January 1915), p. 59; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 87-88.
In Honour of Private James Miller, V.C., Lancashire Evening Post, 14 September 1916, p. 4.
In Memoriam: Captain Andrew Ferguson Chance, Carlisle Journal, 12 October 1915, p. 6.
In Memoriam: 2nd Lieutenant G. B. F. Monk, Royal Warwicks, Near La Bassée, December 18th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 189-190.
In Memoriam. Major M. P. Buckle, D.S.O., October 27th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 116.
In Memory of Rev. T. B. Hardy V.C., DSO., MC., Chaplain to the King, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
In Praise of Havildar Ganga Singh, V.C., European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 107-108.
Khudadad Khan, V.C., European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 119-120.
Lieutenant Forshaw’s Gallant Deed, Carlisle Journal, 29 October 1915, p. 8.
Major McCudden, V.C., DSO, Mc, MM, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
Michael O’Leary and How He Won the Victoria Cross, February 1st, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 177-179.
Rhodes-Moorhouse, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 212-214.
Take Me Home, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 204-206.
The Ballad of the Violet May, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
The Martyrdom of Father Dergent, Aerschott, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 46-47.
The “Vindictive’s” Grave, Ostend, May 9-10, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
To a German Hero, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 128.
To Captain F. C. Grenfell, 9th Lancers, Le Cateau, August 31st, 1914, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 10 September 1914, p. 4; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 70.
To Flight Sub-Lieutenant R. A J. Warneford V.C. June 7th 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
To General Leman, the Defender of Liege, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 44.
To Lieutenant Holbrook and His Gallant Crew of Submarine B11, December 13th, T.P.’s Journal of Great Deeds of the Great War, 2 (13 February 1915), p. 124; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 135.
To Naik Darwan Sing Negi, V.C., 1st Battalion 39th Garhwalis, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 113-114.
‘When this wild storm of war is overblown’, Burnley News, 22 March 1916, p. 6.
Warblers
The Chiff-Chaff, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 70.
The Garden Warbler, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
The Garden-Warbler, The Parents’ Review, XXIX (July 1918), p. 504.
The Warbler’s Song, Grindelwald, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 107.
Willow-Warbler, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 22.
Ward, James Clifton
Geologist’s Funeral: In Memoriam J. Clifton Ward, Buried at Keswick, April 20th, 1880, Sonnets at the English Lakes, p. 23.
Warkworth
Warkworth Castle Hill, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 124.
Warneford, Reginald Alexander John
In Memory of Flight-Lieutenant R. A. J. Warneford, V.C., Legion of Honour, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
To Flight Sub-Lieutenant R. A J. Warneford V.C. June 7th 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
Warsett Brow (Yorkshire)
From Warsett Brow, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 143.
Water Lifting
The Sakȋyeh at the Fountain of the Sun, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 19-20.
The Shadûf-Man, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 73-74.
Water-Carriers (Hope), Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 77-78.
Water-Carriers (Joy), Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 79.
Water-Carriers (Sorrow), Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 80-81.
Water Lilies
The Falls of the Reichenbach, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 83.
Water-Lilies in Pullwyke Bay, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 12.
Waterfalls
Shooting the Cataract, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 142-144.
Watts, George Frederic
At the Unveiling of the Tennyson Statue, Lincoln, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 75.
Death, the Angel Friend, In Memoriam—G. F. Watts, R.A., July 1, 1904, Century, 69 (February 1905), p. 576; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 59.
Four Portraits of the Painter, at the Watts’ Exhibition, 1905, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 68.
The Altar of Fashion: A Picture by G. F. Watts, R.A., Nature Notes, 9 (May 1898), p. 81.
To G. F. Watts, R.A., On His 87th Birthday, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 52.
To My Friends at Limnerslease: G.J. and Mrs Watts. On the Ninth Anniversary of Their Wedding-Day, Nov. 20th 1898, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Wauchope, Andrew (Major-General)
At the Burial of General Wauchope, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 52-56.
Waye, John
The Falling Star. Brave John Waye, the Overman, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 40-43.
Wengen (Switzerland)
The Rainbow Fields of Wengen, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 100.
The Wengen Thrush, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 99.
West, Harry
‘There is glory now by Anker stream’, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 4 May 1904, p. 7; Tamworth Herald, 7 May 1904, p. 8; Northampton Mercury, 13 May 1904, p. 6.
Westcott, Brooke Foss (Bishop)
In Memory of Bishop Westcott, Northern Counties Magazine, 2 (September 1901), p. 402.
Westminster, 1st Duke of see Grosvenor, Hugh Lupus
Westminster
The Memorial Shrine, Westminster, Sphere, 26 April 1919, p. 24.
Westminster Abbey
Unveiling of the Rose-Window, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 35.
Westmoreland
A Westmoreland Song, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 98-99.
Home Memories, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 56.
The Westmoreland Emigrant, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 100-101.
Whales
‘A wasted life is like a wreck that lies’, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Whitby
A Contrast: Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 167.
A Memory of Caedmon, Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 168.
A Sunset at Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 170.
After the Herrings, Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 173.
At Whitby Abbey, December 16th, Carlisle Journal, 22 December 1914, p. 6; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 144.
By the Esk at Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 166.
Drowned by the Upsetting of the Life-Boat, October 6, 1841. A Hero’s Grave in Whitby Churchyard, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 185.
Farewell to Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 186.
Herrings Fine!, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 174.
In the Upper Harbour, Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 175.
Lights on Whitby Church Stairs, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 178.
On the Harbour Pier, Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 177.
Saint Hilda, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 165.
Saint Hilda’s Lights, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 179.
Service in the Old Parish Church, Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 184.
Six O’clock Bell, Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 181.
Sunrise at Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 169.
Sunset Lights on the Windows of Saint Mary’s Church, Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 180.
The Bell Buoy at the Harbour Mouth, Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 176.
The Enchanted Castle Between Saltburn and Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 144.
The Jet Worker, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 182.
The Penny Hedge, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 187.
The Sorrow of the Sea, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 163.
The Whitby Bells, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 183.
Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 164.
Whitby Abbey, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 171.
Whitby Abbey: A Memory of the Synod 664, with its Settlement of the Easter Controversy, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 172.
Whitchurch, Henry Frederick
Heroes of Chitral, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 20-22.
White, Cecil Arbuthnot
In Memory of Lieutenant Cecil Arbuthnot White, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 86-90.
White, George Stuart
To General Sir George White, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 140-141.
White Moss, Cumbria
The Cave at White Moss, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 103.
Whitehead, Frank
The Mate of the “Norham Castle”, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 94-98.
Whitehouse, Thomas
A Lincolnshire Hero, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 135-137.
Whitman, Walt
Walt Whitman, March 26th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 105.
Whittier, John Greenleaf
John Greenleaf Whittier, Dial, 15 (1 November 1893), p. 267; Critic, 21 (23 June 1894), p. 422; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 106.
Whitworth Hall (Manchester)
Owens College Jubilee, the Opening of the Whitworth Hall, March 12, 1902, St. James’s Gazette, 12 March 1902, p. 10.
Wilhelm I
Emperor William I On His Ninetieth Birthday, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 40.
Mourners Absent from the Kaiser’s Funeral, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 45.
The Dying Kaiser, March 8th, 1888, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 41.
The Kaiser at Peace, March 9th, 1888, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 42.
To the Churches in Germany and Lovers of the Fatherland: A Funeral Hymn for the Emperor, Christian World Pulpit, 33 (21 March 1888), p. 183.
Wilhelm II
A Day of Kings, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
A Welcome to the Kaiser at Dunmail Riase, Penrith Observer, 20 August 1895, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1895.
The Kaiser’s Letter to His Chancellor, Oct. 31, 1916, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 19 January 1917, p. 4.
To the Kaiser, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 17.
To the Kaiser, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 22.
Williams, William
The Wreck of the “Ocean Queen”. To the Heroes of Colwyn Bay—Nov. 7, 1890, MacMillan’s Magazine, 63 (January 1891), pp. 189-91; Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 103-109.
Williams-Freeman, Frederick Arthur Peere
In Face of Death, Sept. 25th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 89-90.
Wilmut, Mr.
An Incident of the Floods in Picton Street, Western Daily Press, 11 December 1894, p. 5; Mid Sussex Times, 18 December 1894, p. 2; Bognor Regis Observer, 19 December 1894, p. 7.
Wilson, Allan
The Warriors’ Death-Song, Wilson’s Last Stand, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 13-16.
Wilson, Annie
Hymn on the Death of Annie Wilson, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1896.
Wilson, Edward Adrian
In Memory of Dr. E. A. Wilson, Naturalist to the Scott Antarctic Expedition, March 29th, 1912, British Review, April 1913, p. 82.
To the Heroes of the Terra Nova, British Review, April 1913, p. 80.
Wilson, George
How George Wilson Won the Victoria Cross, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 74-77.
Wilson, Harold Alfred Cobbe
A Hero of Spion Kop, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 108-112.
Wilson, William
In Memory of William Wilson, Keswick Hotel, 8th Oct., 1900, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 October 1900, p. 5; Cumberland and Westmorland Herald, 13 October 1900, p. 5.
Wilson, Woodrow
In Memory of President Wilson’s Speech in Congress, Feb. 3rd, 1917, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 -view full text).
Winchester Cathedral
Conscience the Founder, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1912.
Wind
At Muncaster, After the Gale of December 11, 1883, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 84.
East Wind in Spring, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 44.
The Fohn-Wind, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 40.
The Wooing of the North Wind: Its Beginning and End, Uppingham School Magazine, June 1870, pp. 147-157.
To the West Wind, from Clifton Down, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Windermere see also Lakes; Rivers
The White Cross on Windermere, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 76.
Water-Lilies in Pullwyke Bay, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 12.
Windermere—Autumn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 4.
Winter
Early Death, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 71.
Early Snow, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 33.
Resurrection, or Lake Mists on a Winter Morn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 68.
The Seasons, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 33-35.
The Winter Steam-Boat, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 60.
Up Nab Scar, from Rydal Mount, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 75.
Winter Sunrise on the Fells, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 20.
Wishart, George
George Wishart, Martyred at Saint Andrews March 1, 1545, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 114.
Witches see Superstitions
Woods
In Glaisdale Wood, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 193.
Wordsworth, William
A Day of Kings, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
A Tree Planted by William Wordsworth at Wray Castle, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 51.
At Mablethorpe: An Episode in the Publication of the “Poems by Two Brothers,” Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 218.
At Wordsworth’s Grave, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 219.
Hawkshead from Furness Fells, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 91.
On Seeing a Telegraph Wire and Pillar-Post Below Wordsworth’s House, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 35.
St. George’s Day, April 23rd, 1900, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1900; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 4.
Up Nab Scar, from Rydal Mount, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 75.
Wordsworth’s Seat, Rydal, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 9.
Wordsworth’s Tomb, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 62.
Working Men and Women see also Strikes
All for Each and Each for All, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
Blencathra Sanatorium: The Cry of the Poor Consumptives, Carlisle Journal, 1 May 1903, p. 5; Dundee Evening Telegraph, 19 October 1903, p. 3.
Games for Working Men. A Plea, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 93.
In the Fields of Mȋt-Rahȋneh, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 53.
Munition Girls, Carlisle Journal, 25 December 1917, p. 2.
Night Watchers, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 66-68.
On the Quay: the Lumper, or Corn-Runner, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 97.
Street Cries (In Cairo), Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 11-13.
The Jet Worker, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 182.
The Munition Workers, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
The Shadûf-Man, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 73-74.
The Way of Freedom, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 24 August 1911, p. 6; Wigton Advertise, 26 August 1911, p. 5.
The Workhouse Nurse, Carlisle Patriot, 3 December 1897, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1897.
Water-Carriers (Hope), Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 77-78.
Wills’ Manufactory, Redcliffe Street, the Portrait Gallery of Old Servants In, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 96.
Written for the Opening of the “Victoria” Working Men’s Reading Room, Keswick, November 28th, 1896, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1896.
World War 1 (1914)
A Battle Call, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 23-25.
A Call to Arms, Carlisle Journal, 8 September 1914, p. 6; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 30.
A Cumberland War Song, Millom Gazette, 18 September 1914, p. 7; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 52-53.
A French Hero, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 126-127.
A French Mother’s Message, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 96.
A Gallant Rescue, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 130-131.
A Hymn in Time of War, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 55.
A Marching Song, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 37-38.
A Modern Horatius, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 85-86.
A Mother’s Last Farewell, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 133.
A Nameless Hero of the Lancashire Fusiliers, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 80-81.
A Prayer for Peace, Westminster Gazette, 4 August 1914, p. 2; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 17; Songs and Sonnets for England in War-Time: Being a Collection of Lyrics by Various Authors Inspired by the Great War, 1914.
A Prayer for Recruits, Hull Daily Mail, 12 September 1914, p. 3. [Prose]
A Prisoner At Dunnabeck, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 97.
A Reverie, August 23rd, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 57.
A Vesper Hymn, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 56.
All Saints’ Day, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 121.
An Incident in the Trenches, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 102-103.
An Invitation and a Refusal, Antwerp, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 109-110.
Antwerp, October 9th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 106.
At a Soldier’s Grave, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 134.
At the Newbolt Dinner, Lyceum Club, Feb. 23rd, 1914, (Cumbria Archives, WDCAT3, Box 3).
At Whitby Abbey, December 16th, Carlisle Journal, 22 December 1914, p. 6; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 144.
Belgium, Times, 7 November 1914, p. 9; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 101.
Captain Mark Haggard, September 14th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 79.
Christmas Cheer for the Trenches, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 147.
Crucified Belgium, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 104.
Field-Marshall Lord Roberts, V.C. In Memoriam, November 14th, Manchester Evening News, 17 November 1914, p. 7; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 122.
General Joffre, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 111.
God Save the King! European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 71.
‘Hark to the moaning of the Northern Sea’, Times, 26 September 1914, p. 9.
Help From the Stars, August 27th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 60.
How George Wilson Won the Victoria Cross, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 74-77.
How Lieutenant Leach and Sergeant Hogan Won the Victoria Cross, October 28th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 191-192.
In a Churchyard at Liege, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 42-43.
In Face of Death, Sept. 25th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 89-90.
In Honour of Battery L, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 72-73.
In Honour of Lieutenant-Commander H. de P. Rennick, T.P.’s Journal of Great Deeds of the Great War, 2 (January 1915), p. 59; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 87-88.
In Memoriam: 2nd Lieutenant G. B. F. Monk, Royal Warwicks, Near La Bassée, December 18th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 189-190.
In Memoriam. Major M. P. Buckle, D.S.O., October 27th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 116.
In Praise of Havildar Ganga Singh, V.C., European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 107-108.
In Praise of Submarine E4, August 27th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 63-64.
In Trafalgar Square, October 21st, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 115.
India’s Gift, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 92.
Khudadad Khan, V.C., European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 119-120.
Life Beyond Death, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 137.
Lord Roberts, Home-going, Ascot, November 17th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 123.
Loss of H.M.S. “Bulwark”, Sheerness, November 26th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 125.
Louvain, August 25th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 50.
Love the Conqueror, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 91.
Michaelmas Day, Grasmere, September 29th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 93.
Mountain Calm and Man’s Unrest, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 36.
Mud in Flanders, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 145.
Night and Day, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 21.
Off to the War, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 48-49.
On Saint Oswald’s Day, August 5th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 34-35.
Rheims Cathedral, September 20th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 78.
Sister Julie, Gerbévillier, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 105.
St. Paul’s, November 19th, Westminster Gazette, 19 November 1914, p. 2; Carlisle Journal, 24 November 1914, p. 6; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 124.
Sunshine and War, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 31.
The Battle of the Bight, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 66-68.
The Bridge-Breakers, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 83-84.
The Chancellor’s Speech in the Reichstag, December 2nd, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 139.
The Child and the War, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 29.
The Christmas Bells, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 146.
The Crime of Wittenberg, 1914, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1914 – view full text).
The Dawn, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1914 – view full text).
The Day of Intercession, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 54.
The German Raid, Scarborough, December 16th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 143.
The “Gneisenau”, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 142.
The Greater Love, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 140.
The Gunners’ Farewell, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 95.
The King in France, November 30th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 129.
The Lad Who Ran From Home, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 39-40.
The Landing of the Queen of the Belgians, December 2nd, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 141.
The List of Casualties, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 65.
The Martyrdom of Father Dergent, Aerschott, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 46-47.
The Massacres in the Province of Namur, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 61.
The New Evangelists, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 26.
The Sorrow of the Northern Sea, September 22nd, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 82.
The Turk of West and East, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 138.
To a City Bereaved, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 136.
To a German Hero, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 128.
To Captain F. C. Grenfell, 9th Lancers, Le Cateau, August 31st, 1914, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 10 September 1914, p. 4; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 70.
To General Leman, the Defender of Liege, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 44.
To Great Britain, English Review, 18 (November 1914), p. 403; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 19-20.
To Lieutenant Holbrook and His Gallant Crew of Submarine B11, December 13th, T.P.’s Journal of Great Deeds of the Great War, 2 (13 February 1915), p. 124; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 135.
To Lord Roberts, On His 82nd Birthday, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 94.
To Max, Burgomaster of Brussels, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 100.
To Naik Darwan Sing Negi, V.C., 1st Battalion 39th Garhwalis, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 113-114.
To Sir Edward Grey, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 18.
To the 4th Battalion Border Regiment, A Farewell, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 117.
To the 4th Battalion Border Regiment, On Their Sailing for Burmah, October 29th, Penrith Observer, 10 November 1914, p. 6; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 118.
To the Football Player, An Appeal, Westminster Gazette, 30 November 1914, p. 2; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 132.
To the Gallant Gunners of Liege, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 41.
To the Heroes of Mons, August 23rd, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 58-59.
To the Heroes of the Northern Sea, Westminster Gazette, 19 September 1914, p. 2; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 62.
To the Kaiser, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 22.
To the 9th Lancers, August 31st, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 69.
To the Men of H.M.S. “Hawke”, October 17th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 112.
To the Officer in Command at Aerschott, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 45.
War and Love, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 148-149.
What the Sergeant Said, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 98-99.
What’s In a Name?, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 51.
“Your Country Needs You—Come!”, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 27-28.
World War 1 (1915)
A Brave Doctor. In Honour of Dr. D. C. Turnbull, Sheffield Daily Telegraph, 31 March 1915, p. 6; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 184-185.
A Contrast, British Review, 9 (January 1915), p. 83; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 154.
A Lover’s Lament, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 183.
A Plea for Military Bands, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 168.
A Scottish V.C., Scotsman, 23 August 1915, p. 11; Carlisle Journal, 24 August 1915, p. 6.
After a Sermon in St. Margaret’s, Westminster, March 28th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 194.
At the Wishing-Gate, Grasmere, New Year’s Day, 1915, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 158.
At Wordsworth’s Grave, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 219.
Britain’s Call to the Colours, Carlisle Journal, 9 November 1915, p. 6.
Captain A. Noel Loxley, H.M.S. “Formidable”, January 1st 1915, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 150-151.
‘Children, when you plant your tree’, Manchester Evening News, 18 March 1915, p. 6.
Commander Edward Unwin, R.N., V.C., H.M.S. River Clyde, The Dardanelles, April 25, 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
Easter Day, 1915, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 197.
Edith Cavell. Oct. 13th, 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
General Joffre’s Farewell, T.P.’s Journal of Great Deeds of the Great War, 2 (20 March 1915), p. 255.
Good Friday, 1915, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 196.
Helm Crag, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 199.
Homeward Bound. In Memory of Nowell Oxland, the Writer of the Poem “Outward Bound”, Who Fell at Suvla Bay, Aug 9, 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
Honour to the Dead, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 174.
Hope for the Dawn, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 193.
How Piper Laidlaw Won the Victoria Cross, Loos, September, 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
In a Harvest Field, British Review, 9 (January 1915), p. 83; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 152.
In Memoriam: Captain Andrew Ferguson Chance, Carlisle Journal, 12 October 1915, p. 6.
In Memory of Flight-Lieutenant R. A. J. Warneford, V.C., Legion of Honour, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
In Memory of 2nd Lieutenant W. G. C. Gladstone, M.P., April 13th, Chester Chronicle, 15 May 1915, p. 2; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 202-203.
July, Carlisle Journal, 6 July 1915, p. 6.
Lieutenant Forshaw’s Gallant Deed, Carlisle Journal, 29 October 1915, p. 8.
Love on the Battlefield, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 172-173.
Love’s Gift, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 208-210.
May Time, 1915, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 216-217.
Michael O’Leary and How He Won the Victoria Cross, February 1st, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 177-179.
New Year, 1915, Times, 1 January 1915, p. 7; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 159.
‘Not for vainglorious boast or mock parade’, Carlisle Journal, 3 December 1915, p. 7.
Our Angel-Host of Help. In Memory of Raymond Lodge, fell in Flanders, Sept. 14th, 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
Peace on Earth, Carlisle Journal, 24 December 1915, p. 8.
Penrith Grammar School Song, Penrith Observer, 30 March 1915, p. 7.
Rhodes-Moorhouse, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 212-214.
Rupert Brooke, Lemos, April 23rd, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 211.
Springtime and War, Carlisle Journal, 6 April 1915, p. 6; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 186-187.
Starlight, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 198.
Switzerland the Good Samaritan, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 188.
Take Me Home, T.P.’s Journal of Great Deeds of the Great War, 3 (15 May 1915), p. 132; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 204-206.
Tares and Wheat, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 153.
The Bible of Peace, Dunnabeck, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 215.
The Blessing of War, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 156.
The Blockade, February 18th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 180.
The Boy Sentry at Ypres, Carlisle Journal, 13 August 1915, p. 8.
The Call of May, Carlisle Journal, 1 June 1915, p. 6.
The Curse of War, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 163.
The Day of Intercession, January 3rd, Westminster Gazette, 2 January 1915, p. 2; Carlisle Journal, 5 January 1915, p. 6; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 160.
The Ever-Living Ones, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 207.
The Grandeur of War, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 157.
The King’s Appeal, March 31st, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 195.
The “Lion’s” Chase, January 24th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 165-167.
The “Lusitania”, May 7th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 218.
The Nation’s Teachers, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 164.
The Premier’s Speech to Labour Delegates, Jan. 15, 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
The Rajput’s Desire, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
The Return of Spring, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 169-170.
The Soldier’s Prayer, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 155.
The Two Springs, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 175-176.
To America, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 171.
To Bulgaria: The Earthquake’s Warning, Carlisle Journal, 8 October 1915, p. 8.
To Flight Sub-Lieutenant R. A J. Warneford V.C. June 7th 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
To Paul Sabatier, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 161.
To Prussia, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 200-201.
To the Men on Strike, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 182.
To the Strikers, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 181.
World War 1 (1916)
A Plea for Song in War-Time, Carlisle Journal, 25 August 1916, p. 6.
A Soldier’s Death in May, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
A Tribute to Keswick Heroes, Carlisle Journal, 8 September 1916, p. 7; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1916.
At a Sailor’s Grave, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
Before Verdun, March 1916, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
Christmas Day, 1916, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 23 December 1916, p. 4.
Death the Revealer, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 24 April 1916, p. 4.
Gallipoli Farewell!, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
In Honour of Private James Miller, V.C., Lancashire Evening Post, 14 September 1916, p. 4.
In Memoriam: Acting-Lieutenant Courtenay Tennyson, Carlisle Journal, 4 February 1916, p. 8.
In Memoriam: Stanley Theodore Carr, Carlisle Journal, 13 October 1916, p. 7.
In Memory of John Travers Cornwell. First Class Boy of H.M.S. ‘Chester’, The Battle of Jutland, May 31, 1916, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
In Memory of Lieutenant R. G. Garvin, Pall Mall Gazette, 12 August 1916, p. 2; Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 12 August 1916, p. 6.
Lord Kitchener. In Memoriam, June 5, 1916, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
Lord Kitchener, 5th June, 1916, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
Oor Lad Wha Nobbut Cooms I’ Dreams, Carlisle Journal, 29 December 1916, p. 7; Penrith Observer, 3 January 1917, p. 6.
Our Lady of Pity, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
The Coming of Spring, Carlisle Journal, 7 March 1916, p. 6; Penrith Observer, 7 March 1916, p. 6.
The Garden Warbler, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
The Hero-Corporal of Ontario, Thiepval, Sept, 30, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
The New Year, Carlisle Journal, 7 January 1916, p. 8.
The Patriot Thrush, May 31st, 1916, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
The Soldier’s Last Will and Testament: Verdun, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 21 April 1916, p. 4.
To a Mother Twice Bereaved on Hearing of the Death of Her Son Lieutenant Harvey Hodgson, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
To the Memory of Our Gallant Seamen Who Perished in the Battle of Horn Reef, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
To the Mother of Four Sons Gone to War, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
To Venizelos, Carlisle Journal, 13 October 1916, p. 8.
“Ubi Aves, Ubi Angeli”, Carlisle Journal, 4 February 1916, p. 8.
‘When this wild storm of war is overblown’, Burnley News, 22 March 1916, p. 6.
William Shakespeare, April 23, 1916, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
World War 1 (1917)
Alma Mater Medicatrix, at Oxford 1917, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
At Mizpeh, Nov. 20, 1917, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
At the Church of St. George, Shellal Mound, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
Capt. F. C. Selous D.S.O., (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
Captain Noel Godfrey Chavasse, V.C., R.A.M.C., Died of Wounds in France, August, 1917, Liverpool Echo, 15 August 1917, p. 3.
Comin’ Yham Fra T’ Front, Carlisle Journal, 28 December 1917, p. 7.
In Honour of Dr. Elsie Inglis, Westminster Gazette, 3 December 1917, p. 2.
In Honour of H.M.S. Swift and Broke, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
In Honour of Jemadar Lieutenant Singh V.C., (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
In Memoriam. Robert Ernest Vernede, Rifle Brigade, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
In Memory of President Wilson’s Speech in Congress, Feb. 3rd, 1917, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 -view full text).
Lieutenant Colin MacLehose, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
Munition Girls, Carlisle Journal, 25 December 1917, p. 2.
Near Lens, June 17, 1917, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
The Battle of Messines Ridge, June 7th, 1917, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
The Carrier Pigeon, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
The Cuckoo, April 19th 1917, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
The Fall of Jerusalem, Dec. 9th, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
The Kaiser’s Letter to His Chancellor, Oct. 31, 1916, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 19 January 1917, p. 4.
The Speech of General Smuts, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
The War-Worn Horses’ Appeal, Bournemouth Graphic, 13 April 1917, p. 5.
To the Memory of Lance-Corporal Dalzell for Many Years Winner of the Grasmere Guides’ Race, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
To Viscount Bryce, May 14, 1917, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
World War 1 (1918)
At Baslieux, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
‘Dar bon! but it were gude to hear’, Carlisle Journal, 31 December 1918, p. 8; Wigton Advertiser, 4 January 1919, p. 3.
Friday, March 22nd, 1918, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
General Foch, July 19, 1918, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
Hymns of Thanksgiving for the Ending of the War, (Carlisle Archives, PR/120/125).
In Memory of Rev. T. B. Hardy V.C., DSO., MC., Chaplain to the King, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text)
In the Choir of Gloucester Cathedral,: 9 June, Gloucester Journal, 15 June 1918, p. 3.
King Albert’s Return, Brussels, November 22nd, 1918, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
Major McCudden, V.C., DSO, Mc, MM, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
Peace Upon Earth, Xmastide 1918, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
Pheidippides at the Front, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
The Advent of Peace, Carlisle Journal, 12 November 1918, p. 5.
The Armistice, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
The Ballad of the Violet May, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
The Deliverance of Damascus, October 1st 1918, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full txt).
The Deliverance of Lille, Oct 17, 1918, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
The Two Springs, Carlisle Journal, 30 April 1918, p. 2.
The “Vindictive’s” Grave, Ostend, May 9-10, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
World War 1 (Undated Poems)
A Song of Peace, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
A Thought of Home in the Trenches, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
A Welcome to Jack on Leave, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
All for Each and Each for All, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
German Hate, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
Hymns in Time of War, (Carlisle Archives, PR/120/125).
Maytide’s Memorial, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
Memorial Hymn, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
Race Meetings and the War, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
Sorrow in May, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full txt).
The Blind Soldier’s Return, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
The Munition Workers, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
The Voice of the Striker, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
The Voyage of Life, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
To the Good Ship “Jason” (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
‘We have sworn war shall not cease’, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
World War 1 (Aftermath)
A Voice in the Silence: Armistice Day, 1919, Carlisle Journal, 18 November 1919, p. 4.
An Appeal, Carlisle Journal, 3 October 1919, p. 7.
At General Botha’s Grave, August 30 1919, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1919 – view full text).
Christmas Day, 1919, Carlisle Journal, 26 December 1919, p. 7.
In Vienna, Carlisle Journal, 30 December 1919, p. 4.
New Year’s Day, 1919, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1919 – view full text).
‘Oor Jack he cam’ fra ower t’ sea’, Carlisle Journal. 6 January 1920, p. 6.
Peace, June 24th 1919, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1919 – view full text).
The Home-Coming of Nurse Cavell, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1919 – view full text).
The Memorial Shrine, Westminster, Sphere, 26 April 1919, p. 24.
Wray
A Harvest Festival at Wray, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
A Tree Planted by William Wordsworth at Wray Castle, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 51.
At Wray Cottage, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 29.
In the Wray Garden, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 111.
The Children Gone, Balla-Wray, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 69.
The Streamlet at the Wray, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 112-113.
Wray Castle, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 6.
Yellow Poppies at Wray Castle, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 84.
Wynd Cliff
Moss Cottage at the Wynd-Cliff, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 132.
On Descending the Wynd-Cliff by the Steps to the Moss Cottage, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 133.
The Wynd-Cliff, on an April Day, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 131.
Wyness-Stuart, Athole (Lieutenant)
The Unforgotten Dead: To the Memory of Capt. Hamilton, Lieut. Wyness-Stuart, Hitchin, Sept. 6; and Lieut. Bettington, Wolvercote, Sept. 10, Army and Navy Gazette, 5 October 1912, p. 2.
Yewdale Crags
At Yewdale Farm, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 100.
Yewdale Crags, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 99.
Yews
Alas for the Yews of Borrowdale, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
‘Blind was the storm, from wild Atlantic brought’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 21 June 1884, p. 5.
York
At Saint William’s College, York, May 18, 1911, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 19 May 1911, p. 6.
Yorkshire
Sonnets Round the Coast (1887), contains over seventy sonnets on the Yorkshire Coast, focusing particularly on Saltburn, Runswick Bay, Whitby and Scarborough. A complete list of the title of each sonnet can be viewed in the section on ‘Books by HDR’ in the Heading on this web site titled ‘Bibliography – HDR Publications’. Each individual sonnet will also have one or more entries in this Subject Index.
Zoos
Hannibal, the Lion in the Clifton Zoological Gardens, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 84.
The Eagle, at the Zoological Gardens, Clifton, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 83.
Zermatt (Switzerland)
Going to Zermatt, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 145.
The Chapel of Our Lady of the Snows at the Schwarz-See, Zermatt, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 147.
Zola, Émile
Zola Dead, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 37.
Zwingli, Ulrich
The Statue of Zwinglius, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 31.
- Hits: 916
The Subject Index covers all the poems published by HDR in his poetry books as well as the many individual poems found in newspapers, journals and the Crosthwaite Parish Magazine. It also includes numerous unpublished poems from the Rawnsley Archives.
O’Leary, Michael John
Michael O’Leary and How He Won the Victoria Cross, February 1st, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 177-179.
Oakley, John (Dean)
Dean Oakley, June 10th, 1890, Penrith Observer, 17 June 1890, p. 7; Carlisle Diocesan Magazine, 1 (September 1890), p. 37; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 82.
Oaks
The Haunted Oak of Nannau, Pall Mall Magazine, 3 (July 1894), pp. 353-361.
Oates, Lawrence
In Memory of Captain Oates, British Review, April 1913, pp. 82.
Oceans see Seas and Oceans
October
The Seasons, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 33-35.
Odell, Thomas
Dead Man’s Pool, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 217-227.
Ogilvy, David Stanley, 11th Earl of Airlie
The Gallant Earl of Airlie, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 186-187.
Old Times
Old Times, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 122-129.
Oliver’s Mount (Yorkshire)
Oliver’s Mount, Scarborough, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 202.
Orphanage
“Little Johnny,” at the Cripples’ Home, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 45.
Müller’s Orphanage, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 52.
Plucking Daisies; or, the Orphanage at the Foot of Ashley Hill, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 53.
The Cripples’ Home, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 44.
Ostle, John Sharpe
To My Colleague John Sharpe Ostle, On Leaving the Parish and Church of St. Kentigern, Crosthwaite, after Five Years, Faithful Friendship and Service, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 3 November 1888, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1888.
Owen, Sir Richard
Sir Richard Owen, December 18th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 119.
Oxen
A Buffalo Ride, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 82.
Oxford
Alma Mater Medicatrix, at Oxford 1917, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
Magdalen Meadows, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
The Rooks in Magdalen Walk, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Oxland, Nowell (Second Lieutenant)
Homeward Bound. In Memory of Nowell Oxland, the Writer of the Poem “Outward Bound”, Who Fell at Suvla Bay, Aug 9, 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
Palm Trees
The Marriage of the Palms, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 75-76.
Paton, William
A River Tragedy, Barmouth, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 64-65.
Patriotism
Patriotism. In Mulgrave Woods, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 157.
Payne, Geoffrey
In Grateful Memory of Geoffrey Payne (Aged 23 Years) Who Fell on Sleep at Keswick, 5th October, 1908, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1908.
Peace
A New Year’s Greetings, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1896.
A New Year’s Sonnet: The Tide of Love, 1904, Westminster Gazette, 1 January 1904, p. 11; Lowestoft Journal, 9 January, p. 8; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 50.
A Prayer for Peace, Westminster Gazette, 4 August 1914, p. 2; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 17; Songs and Sonnets for England in War-Time: Being a Collection of Lyrics by Various Authors Inspired by the Great War, 1914.
A Song of Peace, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
A Voice in the Silence: Armistice Day, 1919, Carlisle Journal, 18 November 1919, p. 4.
At Harlaw: July 24, 1914, Aberdeen Press and Journal, 25 July 1914, p. 6.
Christmas, 1905, London Daily News, 25 December 1905, p. 6; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 84.
‘Dar bon! but it were gude to hear’, Carlisle Journal, 31 December 1918, p. 8; Wigton Advertiser, 4 January 1919, p. 3.
Freedom’s Spring-Tide, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1912.
L’Entente Cordiale, April, 1904, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 58.
L’Entente Cordiale, July 8, 1903, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 45.
L’Entente Cordiale, On Board the “Victory,” Portsmouth, 9th August, 1905, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 76.
New Year, 1902, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 24.
Peace, June 24th 1919, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1919 – view full text).
Peace on Earth, Carlisle Journal, 24 December 1915, p. 8.
The Advent of Peace, Carlisle Journal, 12 November 1918, p. 5.
The Angel-Whisper, Peace, London Daily News, 26 May 1902, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, June 1902; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 27.
The Anglo-Japanese Treaty, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October 1905.
The Chiffchaff’s Message, Nature Notes, 8 (June 1897), p. 116.
The Dreamers of Peace, London Daily News, 23 August 1905, p. 7.
The New Year’s Hope, 1899, Penrith Observer, 10 January 1899, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1899.
The Peace Conference, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1899.
The Tsar’s Manifesto: Aug. 30th, 1898, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1898; Westminster Gazette, 19 December 1898, p. 2.
The Way of Peace, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 18.
To England and America: A Christmas Greeting, Christian World Pulpit, 49 (1 January 1896), p. 11; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1896.
To the Mikado: Portsmouth, USA, 29th August, 1905, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1905; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 77.
Peart, Walter
The Railway Heroes, London Daily News, 27 July 1898, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1898.
Peel, Sir William
In a Battery, Captain Peel, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 4-9.
Peel, William
In Memoriam: William Peel, Killed at Bassenthwaite Station, by the Excursion Train, July 11th, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 14 June 1890, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1890.
Penny Hedge
The Penny Hedge, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 187.
Penrith
Penrith Grammar School Song, Penrith Observer, 30 March 1915, p. 7.
Periton, Daniel
Daniel Periton. A Ballad of the Conemaugh Flood, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 136-140.
Philae
At Philae, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 145-147.
Phillips, James Robert
In Memory of Acting Consul-General Phillips, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1897.
‘We keep Christ’s Day in Cumberland’, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1898.
Phipps-Hornby, Edmund John
To Major E. J. Phipps-Hornby, V.C., of Battery “Q”, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 168-169.
Pickering (Yorkshire)
Pickering Moor, From Near Saltersgate, in Heather-Time, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 190.
Pier
On the Harbour Pier, Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 177.
The Pier at Saltburn-by-the-Sea, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 132.
Pigeons
Pigeon Shooting at Ambleside, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 52.
The Carrier Pigeon, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
The Pigeons’ Sanctuary, Nature Notes, 8 (March 1897), p. 52.
Tumbler Pigeons, Over Bristol, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 85.
Pigs
A Farm-Yard Soliloquy, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 197-201.
Pilatus (Switzerland)
Dayspring on Pilatus, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 17.
Pine
In a Pinewood, at the Gutsch, Lucerne, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 3.
Planets
Jupiter and Venus, March, 1905, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 69; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 107.
Pliny
At Como Cathedral, Pliny’s Statue, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 77.
Plymouth
Old Eddystone Lighthouse, Plymouth Hoe, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 17.
Plymouth Harbour – Sunday, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 16.
Poddish
A Traveller’s Tale, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 2 January 1892, p. 5.
Old Mary’s Secret, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 29 December 1906, p. 4; West Cumberland Times, 29 December 1906, p. 2.
The Secret of Old Age, Cumberland and Westmorland Herald, 28 December 1901, p. 5; West Cumberland Times, 28 December 1901, p. 5.
Poetry
Introductory, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, p. 1.
Politics
A Keswick Voter, Christmas 1909, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 1 January 1910, p. 5.
A Sonnet of the Welsh Church Bill: To Our Legislators, An Appeal, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 13 January 1913, p. 6.
‘Dar bun! Parrish Cooncils can deu out they like’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 29 December 1894, p. 4.
Pollution
Bristol Smoke in Early Morning, October, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 48.
Popham (Lieutenant)
How They Saved the Wagon Bridge at Bethulie, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 161-164.
Poplars
Poplars at the Friends’ Meeting House, Colthouse, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 101.
Poppies
Yellow Poppies at Wray Castle, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 84.
Portbury
Carter’s Lane, Portbury, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 117.
Portland
Portland, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 14.
Pottery
At Keneh, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 102-103.
Poverty
A Christmas Message, 1902, Carlisle Journal, 26 December 1902, p. 6; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 39.
A Monkish Swimmer, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 88-89.
A Traveller’s Tale, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 2 January 1892, p. 5.
Death the Befriender, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 116-121.
Old Times, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 122-129.
The Queen’s Appeal, 13th November, 1905, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1905; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 83.
The Village Carpenter, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 92-98.
To All Who Helped, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1901.
Prayer
Bilâl the Muedzzin, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 23-29.
El Fât’ha, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 7. [Islam’s equivalent of the Lord’s Prayer]
The First Call to Prayer (In the Citadel Courtyard, Cairo, at Sunset), Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 2-4.
Pugsley, Mother
Mother Pugsley’s Field, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 12-13.
Pyramids see Monuments (Egypt)
Quakers
Poplars at the Friends’ Meeting House, Colthouse, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 101.
Quails
Quails and the Vocal Memnon, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 132.
Rabbeth, Doctor
A Brave Doctor, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 87-89.
Rabbits
Noble Sport, Nature Notes, 7 (December 1896), p. 256.
The Bitter Cry of Brer Rabbit, Cornhill Magazine, 18 (May 1892), pp. 541-543.
Raika (Bulgarian Revolutionary)
Raika, “Queen of the Bulgarians”, Western Daily Press, 5 September 1876, p. 3.
Railway Accidents and Heroes
A Gallant Engine Driver, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 196-198.
A Lincolnshire Hero, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 135-137.
A Woman Saviour, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 193-196.
Brave Plate-Laying, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 143-144.
In Memoriam: John Chiddy, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 47; Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 212-213.
In Memoriam: William Peel, Killed at Bassenthwaite Station, by the Excursion Train, July 11th, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 14 June 1890, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1890.
The Engine-Driver, On the Pennsylvanian Railway, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890-pp. 238-243.
The Heroic Engine-Driver, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
The Railway Heroes, London Daily News, 27 July 1898, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1898.
‘They who, with sight of Death, see Duty clear’, Westminster Gazette, 24 January 1899, p. 2; Peterborough Advertiser, 1 February 1899, p. 3.
Railways
On a Moorland Railway, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 189.
Over the St. Gothard, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 46.
Rain
A Storm on Monte Generoso, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 70.
After a Storm at Kanzeli, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 117.
An Incident of the Floods in Picton Street, Western Daily Press, 11 December 1894, p. 5; Mid Sussex Times, 18 December 1894, p. 2; Bognor Regis Observer, 19 December 1894, p. 7.
April with Rain—A Sequel, Spectator, 60 (30 April 1887), p. 590; Carlisle Journal, 20 May 1887, p. 6. Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 42.
Daniel Periton. A Ballad of the Conemaugh Flood, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 136-140.
Locarno in Rain, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 48.
Rain After Drought, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 70.
The Drought, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Rainbows
The Rainbow Fields of Wengen, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 100.
Rainy, Robert
In Memoriam: Principal Rainy, Hamilton Herald and Lanarkshire Weekly News, 29 December 1906, p. 8.
Raleigh, Sir Walter
Falmouth, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 23.
Ram Buksh
Ram Buksh, the Leper, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 168-172.
Rameses II
Lifting the Colossal Statue of Rameses II, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 54-55.
Ranavalona III
To Ranavalona: Queen of Madagascar, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Rathbone, Edward
In Memoriam: September 9, 1886, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October 1886; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 127. [Edward Rathbone]
Rawlings, Victor
A Hero of the Mohegan, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Rawnsley, Arthur (A Younger Brother of HDR)
“Arthur”, Died April 26th 1880, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Rawnsley, Catherine (Hardwicke’s Mother)
A Grandmother’s Dream, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Dedicatory: To My Mother, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 1.
Rawnsley, Edith (Hardwicke’s first Wife)
Going Home, Carlisle Journal, 5 January 1917, p. 8; Penrith Observer, 9 January 1917, p. 7.
Rawnsley, Eleanor Foster (Hardwicke’s second wife, née Simpson)
Between April 1917 and June 1918, Hardwicke wrote a series of love poems to Eleanor Foster Simpson which have never been published. These poems chart their developing courtship from close friends to marriage. Thay also lay bare the love of both of them for Edith, Hardwicke’s first wife. The poems are contained in the Rawnsley Archive Notebook RR/3/2. A list of the titles of these poems, in the chronological order they were probably written, can be viewed by clicking the link Poems to Eleanor Foster Simpson (1917-18) on the web site www.hdrawnsley.com
An Anniversary, June 1 1919, (Cumbria Archives, WDCAT3, Box 3).
Rawnsley, Emily Margaret (An Older Sister of HDR)
In Memoriam: E.M.R. and D.A., 14 Jan., 1872, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Rawnsley, Noel (Hardwicke’s Son)
A Grandmother’s Dream, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Noel’s First Birthday, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
To N. H. & V. H. R., (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Rawnsley, Robert (Hardwicke’s Father)
Christmas With Him, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Christmas Without Him, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Dedicatory: To the Dear Memory of My Father, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 2.
To My Father / At Glenthorne, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Valedictory, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, p. 246.
Rawnsley, Sophia Elizabeth see Elmhirst, Sophia Elizabeth
Rawnsley, Willingham Franklin (Hardwicke’s Older Brother)
A Wedding Sonnet, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
The Stars on the Wedding Night, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Rawson, George
A Hero of Walhalla, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 83-90.
Rawson, Wyatt
Commander Wyatt Rawson, September 13th, 1882, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 55.
Redstart
The Red-Start, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 86.
Renan, Ernest
Ernest Renan, Obiit, Paris, October 2nd, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 118.
Rennick, Henry Edward de Parny (Lieutenant-Commander)
In Honour of Lieutenant-Commander H. de P. Rennick, T.P.’s Journal of Great Deeds of the Great War, 2 (January 1915), p. 59; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 87-88.
Renshaw, Elizabeth
In Memory of Lizzie Renshaw, Who Entered Rest 14th March, 1908, Aged 87, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1908.
Rhodes, Cecil
Rhodes Dead, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1902; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 25.
Rhodes-Moorhouse, William Barnard (2nd Lieutenant)
Rhodes-Moorhouse, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 212-214.
Rhododendrons
Sybil’s Grotto: Or Rhododendrons at Croft, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 96.
The Alpine Rose, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 106.
The Leven, and Rhododendrons at Lake Side, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 106.
Richardson, John
In Memoriam: John Richardson, the Cumberland Poet and Village Schoolmaster. Obiit St. John’s Vale, April 30, 1886, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 8 May 1886, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, June 1886; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 128.
Riches, A.
The Harvest of Courage. A Ballad of the Boston Deeps—August, 1895, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 53-56.
Rigi see Mountains
Rimington, Michael Frederic
To Rimington, King of the Scouts, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 154-158.
Ring, Charles Gore
In Memoriam: Charles Gore Ring, Medical Officer of Health for Keswick, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1897.
Ripon (Yorkshire)
The Banquet, Yorkshire Gazette, 28 August 1886, p. 6.
The Cathedral Service, Yorkshire Gazette, 28 August 1886, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1886.
Rivers see also Lakes
By the Esk at Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 166.
‘Now let the ocean wanderers, going free’, Lakes Herald, 5 January 1894, p. 4.
The Abermaw, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 65.
The Leven, and Rhododendrons at Lake Side, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 106.
The River Message, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 95.
The Streamlet at the Wray, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 112-113.
To the River Greta, On Returning from Abroad, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 71.
To the River Reuss, Lucerne, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 8.
Rivo Torto (Italy)
On the Way to Rivo Torto, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 7-9.
Robert the Bruce
Skelton, the Birthplace of Robert Bruce’s Ancestors. A Dream of Robert the Bruce, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 138.
Roberts, Frederick Sleigh
Field-Marshall Lord Roberts, V.C. In Memoriam, November 14th, Manchester Evening News, 17 November 1914, p. 7; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 122.
Lord Roberts, Home-going, Ascot, November 17th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 123.
St. Paul’s, November 19th, Westminster Gazette, 19 November 1914, p. 2; Carlisle Journal, 24 November 1914, p. 6; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 124.
To Earl Roberts: A Welcome Home, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 3-4.
To Lord Roberts, On His Departure from England as Commander-In-Chief in South Africa, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 77.
To Lord Roberts, On His 82nd Birthday, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 94.
Roberts, Frederick Hugh Sherston
The Queen to Lady Roberts, With the Victoria Cross, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 78.
Roberts, John
The Wreck of the “Ocean Queen”. To the Heroes of Colwyn Bay—Nov. 7, 1890, MacMillan’s Magazine, 63 (January 1891), pp. 189-91; Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 103-109.
Robin
To a Robin, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
To a Robin II (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Robin Hood’s Bay
Bay Town, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 199.
Robin Hood’s Town, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 197.
To Robin Hood’s Bay, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 198.
Rogers, Mary
Stewardess of the Stella, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 6 May 1899, p. 7; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 May 1899, p. 5.
Rooke, M. S.
In Memoriam: M. S. Rooke. Obiit March 26, 1886, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1886.
Rooks
The Rooks in Magdalen Walk, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Roseberry Topping (Yorkshire)
Roseberry Topping, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 142.
Rosemarie see Dacre, Rosemary
Rosenlaui Glacier (Switzerland)
Between Rosenlaui and the Schwarzwald, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 85.
From Meiringen to Rosenlaui, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 84.
Roses
The Alpine Rose, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 106.
The Black Helebore (Christmas Rose), at Down House, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 114.
To a Red Rose, Growing at Ashley Grange, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 115.
Rossetti, Dante Gabriel
Dante Gabriel Rossetti, April 9th, 1882, Valete: Tennyson and Other memorial Poems, 1893, p. 95.
Rugby
In Rugby Chapel, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Runswick
A Retrospect. Off to the Fishing-Ground, Runswick, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 154.
At Runswick, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 152.
The Fisher Houses at Runswick Bay, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 153.
The Warrior’s Cradle-Song, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 147.
Rushbearing
At the Grasmere Rushbearing. In Praise of St. Oswald, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Ruskin, John
At Ruskin’s Funeral, Saint George: The Journal of the Ruskin Society of Birmingham, III ((April 1900), pp. 76-79. [Three stanzas of this poem were published under the title, ‘At Ruskin’s Grave’, in the Wells Journal, 1 February 1900, p. 2.]
At Ruskin’s Grave, On His Birthday, 8th February, 1900, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 10 February 1900, p. 4; Saint George: The Journal of the Ruskin Society of Birmingham, III (April 1900). P. 75; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 82.
Cottages of St. George, Barmouth, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 70.
Hymn in Loving Memory of John Ruskin, Coniston, January 25th, 1900, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 27 January 1900, p. 5.
Ruskin at Rest, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1900; Saint George: The Journal of the Ruskin Society of Birmingham, III (April 1900), p. 74; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 3; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 81.
Sonnet Dedicatory to John Ruskin, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. vi.
To John Ruskin: On His 78th Birthday, February 8 1897, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
To John Ruskin On His 79th Birthday, Nottinghamshire Guardian, 12 February 1898, p. 4; Dial, 24 (1 March 1898), p. 156.
To John Ruskin: On His 80th Birthday, 8th February, 1899, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1899; Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. x.
‘Today the land remembers him who fought’, Sheffield Daily Telegraph, 25 April 1904, p. 7; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 54.
Russia
At the Baptism of the Czarevitch, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 61.
Liao-Yang, Sept. 1st, 1904, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1904; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 62.
Red Sunday in St. Petersburg, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1905; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 67.
The Battle of Tsu-shima, May 27-28, 1905, Millom Gazette, 12 April 1906, p. 5.
To Admiral Togo, Tsushima, May, 27-28, 1905, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1905; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 73.
Voices from the Dust, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 66.
Rutli (Switzerland)
Herrn Rütli, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 43.
Rutter, Arthur
The Greater Love: The Heroes of East Ham—July 1, 1895, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 35-36.
Rydal
Cave at White Moss, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 103.
Song and Life, Rydal, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 19.
Songs in Silence, Rydal, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 98.
The Twin Spruces at Rydal, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 67.
Up Nab Scar, from Rydal Mount, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 75.
Upper Falls, Rydal, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 53.
War Notes in Rydal Vale, sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 74.
Wordsworth’s Seat, Rydal, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 9.
- Hits: 1140
The Subject Index covers all the poems published by HDR in his poetry books as well as the many individual poems found in newspapers, journals and the Crosthwaite Parish Magazine. It also includes numerous unpublished poems from the Rawnsley Archives.
Sabatier, Paul
To Paul Sabatier, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 161.
Sailors
Brave Sailing, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 89.
Saint Andrews
Farewell to Saint Andrews, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 120.
On the Links, Saint Andrews, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 118.
The Under-Song, Scotsman, 14 September 1911, p. 8.
Saint Bede
Unveiling of the Bede Memorial, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 64.
Saint Bega
The Legend of St. Bees, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 155-167.
Saint Botolph
St. Botolph’s Tower. The Sexcentenary of Boston Church, Boston Guardian, 19 June 1909, p. 9.
Saint Cuthbert
The Imperishable Gospel. A Legend of the Solway, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1877, p. 109.
Saint Florian
St. Florian, In the Monastery Church at Engelberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 44.
Saint Francis
A Dream of St. Francis, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 26.
May-time on Monte Subasio, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 1-6.
On the Way to Rivo Torto, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 7-9.
St. Francis, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 10.
Saint George
St. George’s Day, April 23rd, 1900, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1900; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 4.
‘To-day the land remembers him who fought’, Sheffield Daily Telegraph, 25 April 1904, p. 7; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 54.
Saint Hilda
Saint Hilda, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 165.
Saint Hilda’s Lights, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 179.
Saint John the Baptist
Three Pictures of St. John Baptist, in the Billiard Room at Leigh Court, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 143.
Saint Jude, Bristol
True Love; or, In St. Jude’s, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 86.
Saint Kentigern
Hymn for St. Kentigern’s Day, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1894.
St. Kentigern’s Spinners Song, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 25 January 1890, p. 4; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1890.
The Widower from Latrigg, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 141-143.
Saint Madron
St. Madron’s Well, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 37.
Saint Michael
Mount St. Michael, Penzance, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 35.
Saint Oswald
At the Grasmere Rushbearing. In Praise of St. Oswald, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
On Saint Oswald’s Day, August 5th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 34-35.
Saint Rumon
St. Rumon’s Well, at Grade, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 28.
Saint Vincent
Pleasures of Imagination; or, the Jackdaws Above Ghyston Cave, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 76.
The Power of Spring; or, On St. Vincent’s Rocks, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 75.
Saint William
At Saint William’s College, York, May 18, 1911, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 19 May 1911, p. 6.
Salisbury (Lord)
Lord Salisbury: In Memoriam, August 22nd, 1903, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1903.
Saltburn
A Child’s Face on the Shore, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 127.
Beneath Huntcliff, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 131.
The Enchanted Castle Between Saltburn and Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 144.
The Gardens by Moonlight, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 135.
The Gardens Illuminated, Saltburn-by-the-Sea, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 134.
The Gardens, Saltburn-by-the-Sea, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 133.
The Huntcliff, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 130.
The Pier at Saltburn-by-the-Sea, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 132.
The Saltburn Viaduct, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 136.
Sanatorium
Blencathra Sanatorium: The Cry of the Poor Consumptives, Carlisle Journal, 1 May 1903, p. 5; Dundee Evening Telegraph, 19 October 1903, p. 3.
‘Not to make smooth the pathway to the grave’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 4 March 1899, p. 5.
Sands
A Child’s Face on the Shore, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 127.
Children On the Shore, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 209.
On Shining Sands, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 113.
Savage, Richard
Richard Savage; or, In Front of St. Peter’s Hospital, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 42.
Scafell see also Fells; Mountains
A Shadow on Scafell, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 108.
Scarborough
At the Parish Church, Scarborough, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 201.
Flamborough, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 205.
Oliver’s Mount, Scarborough, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 202.
Scarborough Castle, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 200.
The Dane’s Dyke, Flamborough Head, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 204.
The Wanderer’s Tomb on the Filey Heights, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 203.
Schacke
Schacke, the Brave, Daily Gazette for Middlesborough, 12 September 1896, p. 3.
Schools
Archbishop Grindal, Founder of Saint Bees Grammar School 1587, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 98.
Clifton College Chapel / The Sunday of Return to School, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 30.
Glen Almond, Spectator, 61 (25 August 1888), p. 1162.
Penrith Grammar School Song, Penrith Observer, 30 March 1915, p. 7.
Red Maids’ School, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 54.
Schynige Platte (Switzerland)
At Breitlauenen, Schynige Platte, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 88.
On the Geisshorn, Schynige Platte, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 89.
Scott, Robert Falcon
In Honour of Captain Scott, March 17th, 1912, British Review, April 1913, p. 81.
Memorial Service at St. Paul’s, February 14th, 1913, British Review, April 1913, p. 81.
To the Heroes of the Terra Nova, British Review, April 1913, p. 80.
Sea and River Tragedies
A Ballad of Port Blair, Atalanta, 5 (March 1892), pp. 332-333; Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 44-47.
A Hero of the Mohegan, Rawnsley Archives (RR/3/1 – view full text).
.A Hero’s Crown, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 206-207.
A Modern Viking, Newcastle, Western Australia, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 91-93.
A Pearl for Our Sea-king’s Crown, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 37-39.
A River Tragedy, Barmouth, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 64-65.
Ballad of the “Cleopatra”, Cornhill Magazine, 11 (August 1888), pp. 151-156; Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 53-62.
Captain A. Noel Loxley, H.M.S. “Formidable”, January 1st 1915, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 150-151.
Catherine Watson, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 208-211.
Daniel Periton. A Ballad of the Conemaugh Flood, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 136-140.
Drowned by the Upsetting of the Life-Boat, October 6, 1841. A Hero’s Grave in Whitby Churchyard, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 185.
‘Hark to the moaning of the Northern Sea’, Times, 26 September 1914, p. 9.
Hymn: In Memory of Walter Cartmel and Gerald Storey, Who Perished in Derwentwater, February 3rd, 1907, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (March 1907).
In Honour of E. A. Hatton, Seaman of the Dunbar Castle”, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, p. 145.
In Honour of Lieutenant-Commander H. de P. Rennick, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 87-88.
In Honour of William Thompson Stephenson, West Cumberland Times, 26 December 1896, p. 4.
In Memory of the Men of H.M.S. “Tiger”: April 2, 1908, Fife Free Press & Kirkaldy Guardian, 11 April 1908, p. 6.
Life-boat Heroes, The Upsetting of the St. Anne’s Lifeboat, December 1886, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 129.
Loss of H.M.S. “Bulwark”, Sheerness, November 26th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 125.
Loss of ‘The Captain’, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
M’Dermott’s Deed, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 48-52.
Stewardess of the Stella, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 6 May 1899, p. 7; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 May 1899, p. 5.
The “Aidar’s” Master, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 146-148.
The Ballad of the Violet May, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
The Brothers, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 114-118.
The Foreman King, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 74-78.
The “Gneisenau”, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 142.
The Harvest of Courage. A Ballad of the Boston Deeps—August, 1895, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 53-56.
The Loss of the “Serpent”, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 70-73.
The “Lusitania”, May 7th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 218.
The Mate of the “Norham Castle”, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 94-98.
The Music of Hope: In Memory of the Bandsmen of the Titanic, London Daily News, 27 April 1912, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1912.
The Sorrow of the Northern Sea, September 22nd, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 82.
The “Vindictive’s” Grave, Ostend, May 9-10, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
The Wreck of the “Ocean Queen”. To the Heroes of Colwyn Bay—Nov. 7, 1890, MacMillan’s Magazine, 63 (January 1891), pp. 189-91; Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 103-109.
‘There is glory now by Anker stream’, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 4 May 1904, p. 7; Tamworth Herald, 7 May 1904, p. 8; Northampton Mercury, 13 May 1904, p. 6. [Harry West]
To the Memory of Our Gallant Seamen Who Perished in the Battle of Horn Reef, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 - view full text).
To the Men of H.M.S. “Hawke”, October 17th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 112.
Tried in the Fire, the Stewardess of the Iona, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 99-102.
“Well done, ‘Calliope’!”, Atalanta, 6 (November 1892), pp. 130-131; Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 57-63.
Seacote Hotel
Sea-Cote, Saint Bees, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 104.
Seagulls
In a Gullery, Nature Notes, 9 (June 1898), p. 109.
Music of Two Worlds, Saint Bees Head, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 108.
Sea-Gulls at Saint Bees, Carlisle Journal, 25 March 1887, p. 6; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 105.
Seals
The Dead Seal Children, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Seamen
Plymouth Harbour – Sunday, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 16.
Seas and Oceans
Deep-Sea Calm, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 21.
Ocean, the Captive, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 4.
Sea Sympathy, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 206.
The Gladness of the Sea, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 110.
The Seasonless Ocean, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 63.
The Sorrow of the Sea, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 163.
Seascale
At Seascale, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 90.
Rock Ruins at Seascale, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 94.
Seascale Memories, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1884; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 96.
The Children’s Day at Seascale. Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1908.
The Druid Stone Near Millbeck, Seascale, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 88.
The Light-Ship, Seen from Seascale, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 87.
The Old Wreck at Seascale, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 115; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 92.
Sedding, John Dando
J. D. Sedding, In Holy Trinity Church, Sloane Street, 1891, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 141.
Seeley, E. P.
E. P. Seeley, Died in the Lebanon, Engaged in Mission Work, October 25th, 1881, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 123.
Seithenyn
The Buried City of Cardigan Bay, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 74.
Selous, Frederick Courteney
Capt. F. C. Selous D.S.O., (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
September
A September Day—Latrigg, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October 1912.
September, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
September at the Lakes, in the Vale of St. John, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 53.
Seqenenre Tao
An Old-World Hero, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 51.
Sesostris
The Mummy of Sesostris, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 50.
Sexton, Joseph
A Song of Life, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1897.
At the Old Sexton’s Grave, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 12 January 1901, p. 5.
Shairp, John Campbell
In Memoriam Principal Shairp, September 1885, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 115; Valete: Tennyson and Other Poems, 1893, p. 75.
On Reading, After His Death, Principal Shairp’s Last Public Lecture on Hogg, the Ettrick Shepherd, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 116.
Shakespeare, William
St. George’s Day, April 23rd, 1900, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 4.
William Shakespeare, April 23, 1916, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
Sheffield
St. George’s Day, 1904, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 54.
Shepherds
Joseph Hawell, February 20th, 1891, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1891; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 28 March 1891, p. 5; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 139.
The Fell Shepherd’s Death, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1890.
Shiplake
Ode to Shiplake (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/3).
Ships, Steamers and Boats see also Heroes – In Sea and Water; Ship and River Tragedies
A Farewell to the “Sunbeam”, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 22.
A Launch from the Furness Docks, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 79.
A Nile Boat-Load, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 86-87.
Going to Assiout, A Nile Boatman’s Song, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 96.
Homeward Bound. Midsummer, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 100.
Launch of the Japanese Battleship “Katori” by Princess Arisugawa, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 74.
Loss of H.M.S. Victoria, Off Tripoli, June 22nd, 1893, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 28-34.
Nile Boats, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 69-70.
On Seeing Two Vessels (Cutter-Rigged) Pass One Another at Avonmouth, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, pp. 102-103.
Outward Bound, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 99.
Sea Coal, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 210.
The Demerara’s Figure-Head. The Giant Savage Opposite the Stone Bridge, Quay Head, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 92.
The Lake Steamer in Autumn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 47.
The Miguel D’Aquenda: Weymouth, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 15.
The Old Wreck at Seascale, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 115; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 92.
The Winter Steam-Boat, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 60.
Shooting
Pigeon Shooting at Ambleside, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 52.
War Notes in Rydal Vale, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 74.
Simpson, Eleanor Foster see Rawnsley, Eleanor Foster
Singers and Singing see Music
Singh, Ganga
In Praise of Havildar Ganga Singh, V.C., European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 107-108.
Singh, Gobind
In Honour of Jemadar Lieutenant Singh V.C., (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
Singh, Pertab (Sir)
The Rajput’s Desire, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated – view full text).
Sister Julie (née Amélie Rigard)
Sister Julie, Gerbévillier, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 105.
Sister Rose Gertrude (née Amy Fowler)
Sister Rose Gertrude, Poems, Ballads, Bucolics, 1890, pp. 39-45.
To Sister Rose Gertrude, Pall Mall Gazette, 3 February 1890, p. 2; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 15 February, 1890, p. 4.
Skating
Skating on Derwentwater, Carlisle Journal, 7 March 1902, p. 6; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 55.
Skegness
New Skegness, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 214.
Old Skegness Church, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 213.
Skegness House, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 211.
Skelton
At Skelton Old Church, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 140.
Skelton, the Birthplace of Robert Bruce’s Ancestors. A Dream of Robert the Bruce, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 138.
The Bells of Skelton New Church Tower, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 139.
Slack, Anne Ainsworth
In Memory of A. A. Slack, Derwent Hill, Oct. 24th, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1904.
Slack, Robert
In Memoriam: Robert Slack, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October 1893.
Smith, Alfred Victor (Second Lieutenant)
‘When this wild storm of war is overblown’, Burnley News, 22 March 1916, p. 6.
Smith, Donald Alexander, 1st Baron Strathcona
In Memory of Lord Strathcona, Carlisle Journal, 30 January 1914, p. 8.
Smuts, Jan
The Speech of General Smuts, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
Snails
To a Snail, I, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
To a Snail, II, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text)..
Snow
An April Snowstorm, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 83.
Early Snow, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 33.
The Snow Miracle, A Legend of Saint Bees, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 101.
Snowdrops
Snowdrops by Esthwaite Lake, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, 81.
So Songolo
So Songolo: The Crosthwaite Boy on Lake Nyasa, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1886.
Soglio (Switzerland)
Morning at Soglio, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 78.
The Witness of the Flowers, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 79.
Somersby (Lincolnshire)
Somersby, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 15.
Somerset, Elizabeth
Monument at Duchess’ Woods, on the Anniversary of Lady Elizabeth’s Death, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 59.
Spain
Hymn for the Tercentenary of the Spanish Armada, Christian World Pulpit, 34 (23 July 1888), pp. 63-64; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1888.
Spencer, Herbert
Herbert Spencer, Obiit Dec. 7, 1903, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 47.
Spencer-Bell. James Frederick S.
In Memoriam: September 9, 1886, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October 1886; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 127. [James Spencer-Bell]
Spiders
The Spider’s Message, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October 1908; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 78.
Spilsby (Lincolnshire)
To Sir John Franklin, (By His Statue in the Spilsby Market-Place, At Night), Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 219.
Spinning
St. Kentigern’s Spinners Song, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 25 January 1890, p. 4; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1890.
Splugen Pass (Switzerland)
My Friend and I, the Splugen Pass, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 81.
Over the Splugen, the Navvy’s Cross, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 80.
Sports
Grasmere Sports, Old Style, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 25.
On the Links, Saint Andrews, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 118.
Spring
A Late Spring, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1907.
A Spring Song at the Lakes, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1898; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 38.
East Wind in Spring, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 44.
Home, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 119.
In a Vicarage Garden, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, June 1908.
Scene from Skittim Hill, Henbury. In Spring, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 121.
Spring Days, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 93.
Spring the Beloved, Spectator, 64 (3 May 1890), p. 624; Living Age, 187 (25 October 1890), p. 706.
Springtime and War, Carlisle Journal, 6 April 1915, p. 6; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 186-187.
The Coming of Spring, Carlisle Journal, 7 March 1916, p. 6; Penrith Observer, 7 March 1916, p. 6.
The Power of Spring; or, On St. Vincent’s Rocks, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 75.
The Return of Spring, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 169-170.
The Seasons, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 33-35.
The Thrush in Spring, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 26.
The Two Springs, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 175-176.
The Two Springs, Carlisle Journal, 30 April 1918, p. 2.
Upper Falls, Rydal, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 53.
When Spring and the Throstle Come Back from the Sea, Nature Notes, 6 (April 1895), p. 66.
Spruces
The Twin Spruces at Rydal, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 67.
Spurgeon, Charles
Spurgeon, February 4th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 91.
The Warrior’s Funeral Hymn: In Memoriam Charles Haddon Spurgeon, Christian World Pulpit, 41 (17 February 1892), p. 99.
Squirrels
The Squirrel, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 36.
St Bees
A Doubtful May. Tomline Head, Saint Bees, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 107.
Archbishop Grindal, Founder of Saint Bees Grammar School 1587, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 98.
Beowulf’s Stone, Saint Bees. Mammon Worship Rebuked, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 100.
Music of Two Worlds, Saint Bees Head, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 108.
Saint Bees, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 103.
Sea-Cote, Saint Bees, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 104.
Sea-Gulls at Saint Bees, Carlisle Journal, 25 March 1887, p. 6; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 105.
The Forester’s Tomb, Saint Bees, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 102.
The Lark on Tomline Head, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 106.
The Legend of St. Bees, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 155-167.
The Snow Miracle, A Legend of Saint Bees, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 101.
Tomb of Thomas de Cottingham, Obiit 1300, Saint Bees, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 99.
Staithes
At Staithes, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 149.
Captain Cook: Boyhood at Staithes, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1877, p. 148.
Staithes Beck, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 150.
Stanger, Mary
Mary Stanger, Fieldside, Keswick, February 5th, 1890, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1890; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 133.
‘When death in gentlest accent calls’, Westmorland Gazette, 22 February 1890, p. 8; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1890. [Mary Stanger]
Stanley, Arthur Penrhyn (Dean)
Dean Stanley, Buried in Westminster Abbey, July 27th, 1881, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 72.
Dean Stanley, His Work, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Dean Stanley, July 18th, 1881, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 71.
The Stanley Monument in Rugby Chapel, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 73.
Stanley, Augusta Elizabeth (Lady)
Lady Augusta Stanley: Wife of the Dean of Westminster, Buried in Henry VII’s Chapel, 9 March, 1876, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Stanley, Henry Morton (Sir)
A Welcome to Stanley, A Welcome to Stanley, Muray’s Magazine, 7 (June 1890), pp. 734-741; Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 20-33.
To H. M. Stanley, Pall Mall Gazette, 26 April 1890, p. 2.
To H. M. Stanley and Miss D. Tennant, Pall Mall Gazette, 12 July 1890, p. 4.
Stans (Switzerland)
Arnold von Winkelried, at Stanz, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 34.
At Stanz, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 33.
Starlings
Doll and the Starling: A Morning Call, Nature Notes, 9 (November 1898), p. 203.
My Friend the Starling, Nature Notes, 5 (May 1894), p. 89.
The Starling, Nature Notes, 1 (May 1890), p. 72.
Steevens, George Warrington
Balliol to George Steevens, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition 1902, pp. 143-145.
Stephenson, William Thompson
In Honour of William Thompson Stephenson, West Cumberland Times, 26 December 1896, p. 4.
Sterling, Antoinette
A Song of Life, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1897.
Stock Ghyll
Stock Ghyll, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 39.
Stock Ghyll After a Thaw, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 90.
Stock Ghyll Barred. A Protest, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 17.
Stoke Park, Bristol
Monument at Duchess’ Woods, on the Anniversary of Lady Elizabeth’s Death, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 59.
Stokesleigh Iron Age Camp
Bower-Wall and Stokesleigh Camps, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 72.
Stone Arthur
Stone Arthur, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 104.
Storey, Gerald
Hymn: In Memory of Walter Cartmel and Gerald Storey, Who Perished in Derwentwater, February 3rd, 1907, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1907.
Storms see Rain
Storrs (Lake District)
The Laurels at Storrs, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 94.
Strawberries
On Finding the Wild Strawberry in Nightingale Valley, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 70.
Strikes
A Voice in the Silence: Armistice Day, 1919, Carlisle Journal, 18 November 1919, p. 4.
Birds and the Coal Strike, 1912, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1912.
Christ and the Coal Strike, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
The Voice of the Striker, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
The Way of Freedom, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 24 August 1911, p. 6; Wigton Advertise, 26 August 1911, p. 5.
To the Men on Strike, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 182.
To the Strikers, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 181.
Sugar
Revival of the Sugar Trade, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, pp. 94-95.
Summer
The Seasons, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 33-35.
Sun
Dandelions and Daisies on the Downs; or, Jealousy, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 77.
The Day of Intercession, Prayer and the Sun’s Eclipse, August 21st, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 54.
Sunday Closing
‘We ask for those unresting thousands, rest’, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1894.
Sunrise see Morning
Sunset
A Sunset at Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 170.
Lights on Whitby Church Stairs, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 178.
Saint Hilda’s Lights, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 179.
Sunset and the Westmorland Emigrant, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 46.
Sunset at Abbot’s Leigh, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 67.
Sunset Lights on the Windows of Saint Mary’s Church, Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 180.
The Cottage Window at Sunset, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 117.
The Death of Olaf the Dane – Sunset Beyond the Isle of Man, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 85.
The First Call to Prayer (In the Citadel Courtyard, Cairo, at Sunset), Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 2-4.
Superstitions
Lincolnshire Witches, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 130-135.
The Evil Eye, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 70-73.
Swallows
The First Swallow, Nature Notes, 3 (May 1892), p. 92; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1892; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 44.
The First Swallow, Seen, April 10, on the Banks of the Frome, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 87.
Swans
The White Swan at Well, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text.)
Swinburne, Algernon Charles
Algernon Charles Swinburne, 10th April, 1909, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1909; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 87.
Switzerland
Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy (1899) contains over one hundred sonnets on Switzerland, its people, mountains, lakes and villages. A complete list of the title of each sonnet can be viewed in the section on ‘Books by HDR’ in the Heading on this web site titled ‘Bibliography – HDR Publications’. Each individual sonnet will also have one or more entries in this Subject Index. Other poems on Switzerland are:
Switzerland, Farewell!, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 162.
Switzerland the Good Samaritan, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 188.
The Sea-Wall; After Returning from Switzerland, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 80.
Sycamores
Sycamore at High Close, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 80.
Sycamore at High Close, 27th August, 1908, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 118.
Sycamore Tree, Ambleside, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 5.
Talbot, Francis
At a Sowers Grave – Tyn y Ffynon – May 1897, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Talbot, George Quartus Pine
The Painter’s Home-Going, In Memoriam G. Q. P. Talbot, Obiit May 28th, 1885, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 124.
Tarentum
Sea Liberty. Suggested by a Coin of Old Tarentum, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 3.
Tarns
Blelham Tarn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 24.
Loughrigg Tarn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 11.
The Tarn in Autumn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 41.
Telephone
America to England, Greeting, Westminster Gazette, 26 January 1903, p. 2; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 43.
Tell, William
At Bürglen, to the Memory of William Tell, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 28.
Temple, Frederick (Archbishop)
Archbishop Temple, A Sonnet Chronicle. 1906, p. 38.
Tennant, Dorothy
To H. M. Stanley and Miss D. Tennant, Pall Mall Gazette, 12 July 1890, p. 4.
Tennyson, Alfred
A Farewell to the “Sunbeam”, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 22.
A Story from the “Arabian Nights”, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 21.
After the Epilogue to the Charge of the Heavy Brigade, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 9.; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 24.
At Mablethorpe: An Episode in the Publication of the “Poems by Two Brothers,” Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 218; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 34.
At the Unveiling of the Tennyson Statue, Lincoln, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 75.
Christmas Without the Laureate, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 32.
Death and Fame, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 25.
Dedicatory, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893.
Farringford, Isle of Wight, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 7; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 17.
Hymn in Memory of Lord Tennyson, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1892.
“I Have Opened the Book.” At Aldworth, October 5th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 26.
In Memory of the Tennyson Centenary. At Somersby, August 5th, 1809, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1909.
Leaving Aldworth, October 11th, 1892, Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, 152 ((November 1892), p. 768; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 30.
Old Clevedon Churchyard, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 141.
On Hearing Lord Tennyson Read His Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 8; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 23.
On Leaving Farringford, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 12.; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 18.
Somersby, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 15.
Tennyson at Clevedon, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 142; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 55; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 16.
Tennyson. Obiit, Aldworth, October 6th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, pp. 3-14.
Tennyson’s Home-Going, October 11th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 29.
The Laureate Dead, October 6th, 1892, Academy, (November 1892); Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1892; Living Age, 195 (17 December 1892), p. 706; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 28.
The Poet’s Death-Chamber, October 6th, 1892, Dial, 15 (1 November 1893), p. 267; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 28.
The Poet’s ‘Lilian.’ In Memory of S. E., Shawell, October 14th, 1889, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 132.
The Two Poets, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 31.
To Alfred Lord Tennyson, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 6; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 19.
To Lord Tennyson, On His 80th Birthday, August 6th, 1889, Macmillan’s Magazine, 60 (August 1889), p. 293; St. James’s Gazette, 6 August 1889, p. 12; Westmoreland Gazette, 17 August 1889, p. 3; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1889; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 20.
Tennyson, Elizabeth (Alfred Tennyson’s Mother)
To a Portrait of the Mother of the Poets, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 35.
Tennyson, Emily (Alfred Tennyson’s Wife)
In Memoriam: Lady Tennyson, Academy, 50 (22 August 1896), p. 130; Cornishman, 27 August 1896, p. 4; Living Age, 210 (26 September 1896), p. 770.
Tennyson, Harold Courtenay (Alfred Tennyson’s Grandson)
In Memoriam: Acting-Lieutenant Courtenay Tennyson, Carlisle Journal, 4 February 1916, p. 8.
Terra Nova Expedition
To the Heroes of the Terra Nova, London Daily News, 12 February 1913, p. 6.
Tewdrig
Death; or, The Lennox Spring, Between Moss Cottage and Tintern, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, pp. 128-129.
Thebes
How the Colossi Came to Thebes, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 126-129.
Thi
At the Tomb of Thi, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 56-60.
Thirlmere
Thirlmere: Loss and Gain, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 October 1894, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1894.
To Sir John Harwood, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 October 1894, p. 5.
To the Promoters and Builders of the Thirlmere Waterworks, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 October 1894, p. 5.
To the Workmen, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 October 1894, p. 5.
Thomson, Basil
A Hero’s Crown, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 206-207.
Thomson, William (Archbishop)
Archbishop Thomson, Christmas Day 1890, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 83.
Thothmes IV
The Dream of Thothmes IV, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 33-38.
Thring, Edward
A Funeral Hymn, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 104.
Edward Thring, Headmaster of Uppingham, 1853-1887, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, pp. 98-99; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 79.
Edward Thring: In Memoriam, Academy, October 29, 1887; Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 98.
Edward Thring: In Memoriam, Spectator, 60 (5 November 1887), p. 1488; Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 97.
Edward Thring, October 22nd, 1887, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 98; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 80.
Funeral Hymn. Sung in the School Chapel at the Burial Service, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 105.
Schola Uppinghamiensis, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 112.
The Headmaster’s Chair, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 102.
The Headmaster’s Free Morning, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, pp. 99-100.
The Headmaster’s Funeral, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, pp. 106-108.
The Headmaster’s Grave, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, pp. 102-103.
The Headmaster’s Monument, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, pp. 103-104.
The Headmaster’s Study, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, pp. 100-101.
The School Chapel, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 101.
Thring, Sarah
The Gate of Rest, To the Memory of Mrs. Sarah Thring and Her Son, Theodore, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 144.
Thring, Theodore
The Gate of Rest, To the Memory of Mrs. Sarah Thring and Her Son, Theodore, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 144.
Thrushes
A Thrush in Spring, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 64.
The Angel in the Lilac-Bush, Nature Notes, 12 (August 1901), p. 147; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 73.
The Mavis and the Merle, Nature Notes, 1 (April 1890), p. 49; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 66.
The Missel Thrush and Irish Yew, Nature Notes, XIV (May 1903), p. 87.
The Patriot Thrush, May 31st, 1916, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
The Thrush in Spring, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 26.
The Thrush’s Funeral, Nature Notes, 19 (August 1908), p. 141.
The Thrush’s Word, Nature Notes, 23 (April 1912), p. 71.
The Wengen Thrush, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 99.
To a Thrush, Heard on Clifton Down in a January Mist, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 74; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 53.
To a Thrush on a Mid-March Morning, Nature Notes, 17 (April 1906), p. 61.
When Spring and the Throstle Come Back from the Sea, Nature Notes, 6 (April 1895), p. 66.
Thun (Switzerland)
At the Castle, Thun, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 130.
At the Church Gate, Oberhofen, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 124.
At the Minnesinger’s Seat Above Chartreuse, Thun, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 128.
At the Rabenfluh, Thun, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 132.
At the Schwabis, Thun, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 133.
Down the Lake to Thun, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 123.
In the Baumgarten at Thun, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 125.
In Thun Churchyard, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 129.
On Finding a Swift in the Castle Prison at Thun, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 131.
On the Inscription Over the Doorway of the Old Schloss at the Baumgarten, Thun, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 127.
The Golden Star of Thun, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 134.
Time
The Lost Half-Hour, Lugano, Midnight, May 31, 1894, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 71.
Tintern Abbey
Middle Age; or, At Tintern Abbey, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 125.
Old Age Coming On; or, At Tintern Abbey, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, pp. 126-127.
Tintern Abbey, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 134.
Titanic
The Music of Hope: In Memory of the Bandsmen of the Titanic, London Daily News, 27 April 1912, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1912.
Titlis (Switzerland)
Beneath Titlis, Engelberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 41.
Tod, W. (Sergeant)
An Estcourt Hero, South Wales Echo, 21 November 1899, p. 2; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 32.
Togo (Admiral)
The Battle of Tsu-shima, May 27-28, 1905, Millom Gazette, 12 April 1906, p. 5.
To Admiral Togo, Tsushima, May, 27-28, 1905, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1905; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 73.
Tolmie, Robert
Brave Pit Lads of Penicuick, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 202-205.
Tolzey Court, Bristol
One of the Tolzey Tables, Corn Street, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, pp. 90-91.
Tombs see Churchyards
Tourists
A Fear for Leysin, the Building of the Casino, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 153.
Holiday Makers on Good Friday, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 78.
Nature’s Music Dishonoured. Lake Trippers, and the Steamer Band, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, 66.
New Skegness, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 214.
Towse, Ernest Beachcroft
Light in the Darkness: In Honour of Captain E. B. Towse, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 174-177.
Trafalgar
In Trafalgar Square, October 21, 1905, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 81.
Nelson’s Last Prayer, October 21, 1805, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1905; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 82.
Trafalgar Day, October 21, 1905, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 21 October 1905, p. 8.
Trains see Railway Accidents; Railways
Trees
A February Song, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 36-37.
A Tree Planted by William Wordsworth at Wray Castle, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 51.
Alas for the Yews of Borrowdale, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Ashton Clump and Lansdown, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 61.
At Hengwrt: The Guardian Cypress Trees, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
At the Three Linden, Lucerne, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 10.
‘Blind was the storm, from wild Atlantic brought’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 21 June 1884, p. 5.
‘Children, when you plant your tree’, Manchester Evening News, 18 March 1915, p. 6.
‘Ill could we spare the Tree St. Patrick knew’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 21 June 1884, p. 5.
In a Pinewood, at the Gutsch, Lucerne, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 3.
Knotted Elm, at Abbot’s Leigh, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 65.
On Noticing that the Only Lime Tree not in Bud, at College Green, Fronted the Cathedral Porch, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 14.
Poplars at the Friends’ Meeting House, Colthouse, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 101.
Sycamore at High Close, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 80.
Sycamore at High Close, 27th August, 1908, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 118.
Sycamore Tree, Ambleside, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 5.
The Haunted Oak of Nannau, Pall Mall Magazine, 3 (July 1894), pp. 353-361.
The Larch, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 14.
The Laurels at Storrs, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 94.
The Marriage of the Palms, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 75-76.
The Twin Spruces at Rydal, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 67.
Trevalga Head (Cornwall)
The Cairns, Trevalga Head, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 44.
Tulloch, John
In Memoriam Principal Tulloch, February 1886, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 117; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 78.
Tuberculosis
Blencathra Sanatorium: The Cry of the Poor Consumptives, Carlisle Journal, 1 May 1903, p. 5; Dundee Evening Telegraph, 19 October 1903, p. 3.
‘Not to make smooth the pathway to the grave’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 4 March 1899, p. 5; Penrith Observer, 7 March 1899, p. 7.
Turkey
A Voice from Santa Sophia, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1912.
An Incident of the Adana Massacre. The Martyrs of Missis, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October 1909.
At Arabkir, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, pp. 34-25.
In the Burning Church at Oorfah, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, pp. 36-37.
Schacke, the Brave, Daily Gazette for Middlesborough, 12 September 1896, p. 3; The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 44.
Such As Sit in Darkness and in the Shadow of Death, Daily Gazette for Middlesborough, 12 September 1896, p. 3; The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 19.
The Parable of Aboukaiatyan: The Martyred Pastor of Oorfah, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 40.
The Turk of West and East, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 138.
The Two Angels, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1912.
Tried in the Fire, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, pp. 38-39.
Turnbull, Derwent Christopher
A Brave Doctor. In Honour of Dr. D. C. Turnbull, Sheffield Daily Telegraph, 31 March 1915, p. 6; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 184-185.
Turner, Charles Tennyson
Anniversary of Charles Tennyson Turner’s Death, 25th April, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 2.
At Mablethorpe: An Episode in the Publication of the “Poems by Two Brothers,” Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 218; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 34.
Barmouth Bridge, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 69.
In Memoriam: Charles Tennyson Turner, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 1; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 33.
Turner, Scott (Major)
At the Grave of Major Scott Turner, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 42-43.
Tyndale, William
Drakestone Edge, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, pp. 136-137.
Tyndale’s Pillar, at Nibley Knoll, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 135.
Ulverston
The Tower on the Hoad, Ulverston, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 116; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 78.
Unwin, Edward
Commander Edward Unwin, R.N., V.C., H.M.S. River Clyde, The Dardanelles, April 25, 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
Unwin, William
At William Unwin’s Grave, Crosthwaite, Jan. 11th, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 January 1900, p. 4.
Uppingham School
Adhuc Discipuli, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 111.
Amico P. D., Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 116.
Conditoribus Nostris, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, pp. 112-113.
Domino Imperatori, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, pp. 114-115.
His Testibus, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 113.
Magistris Defensoribus, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 115.
Regredientibus, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 117.
Schola Uppinghamiensis, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 112.
Spes Nostra, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, pp. 116-117.
Tempora Mutantur, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 114.
The Mother of Her People, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 21.
Urquhart, Beauchamp Colclough (Captain)
“On, Lads, On!”, London Daily News, 14 April 1898, p. 2.
- Hits: 1162
The Subject Index covers all the poems published by HDR in his poetry books as well as the many individual poems found in newspapers, journals and the Crosthwaite Parish Magazine. It also includes numerous unpublished poems from the Rawnsley Archives.
M’Dermott (Boatswain)
M’Dermott’s Deed, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 48-52.
M. K.
To M. K. On Her Eighteenth Birthday, Saint Andrews, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 119.
Mablethorpe (Lincolnshire)
At Mablethorpe: An Episode in the Publication of the “Poems by Two Brothers,” Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 218; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 34.
Macdonald (Captain)
The Ballad of Rosemarie; Or, the White Cockade, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 144-154.
Macedonia
A Christmas Thought, 1903, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 49.
The Cry of Macedonia, November, 1903, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1903; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 42.
MacLehose, Colin (Lieutenant)
Lieutenant Colin MacLehose, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
Madagascar
To Ranavalona: Queen of Madagascar, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Magee, Willaim Connor (Archbishop)
In Memoriam: Archbishop Magee, Carlisle Diocesan Magazine, 1 (May 1891), p. 182; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, June 1891; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 86.
Mahuta, Battle of
After the Battle of Mahuta, Idylls and lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 52.
Manchester
‘Now let the ocean wanderers, going free’, Lakes Herald, 5 January 1894, p. 4.
Thirlmere: Loss and Gain, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 October 1894, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1894.
To Sir John Harwood, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 October 1894, p. 5.
To the Promoters and Builders of the Thirlmere Waterworks, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 October 1894, p. 5.
To the Workmen, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 October 1894, p. 5.
Manning, Henry Edward (Cardinal)
At the Lying in State of Cardinal Manning, January 19th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Poems, 1893, p. 90.
Cardinal Manning, On Hearing of His Last Illness, January, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 89.
Mannington, James (Bishop)
Bishop Mannington: Massacred With His Followers in Masai Land, Central Africa, October, 1885, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 77.
Mannteufel
What’s In a Name?, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 51.
Maples, Chauncy (Bishop)
To the Memory of Bishop Chauncy Maples, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1895.
March
A March Day, on Ashley Hill, Looking Down on Bristol, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 51.
A March Song, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/4 – view full text).
Clear Weather in March, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 59.
March, Carlisle Journal, 6 March 1914, p. 8.
March—Summer, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 39-41.
To a Thrush on a Mid-March Morning, Nature Notes, 17 (April 1906), p. 61.
When Spring and the Throstle Come Back from the Sea, Nature Notes, 6 (April 1895), p. 66.
Marshall, Arthur Milnes
A Shadow on Scafell, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 108.
Marshes
The East Fen, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 217.
The Lincolnshire Marsh, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 212.
Marske-by-the-Sea (Yorkshire)
A Nameless Grave at Marske, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 129.
At Marske Mill, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 137.
Mary (Queen)
Hymn for the Occasion of the Royal Marriage, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1893.
Matthias
The Choosing of Matthias, Church Monthly, 3 (circa. January 1891); English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 31 January 1891, p. 5.
Mawddach
A Retrospect from Mawddach Crag, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 68.
Max. Adolphe
To Max, Burgomaster of Brussels, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 100.
May
A Doubtful May. Tomline Head, Saint Bees, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 107.
A May Song, West Cumberland Times, 11 May 1895, p. 2.
A Service of Song in Duchess’ Park, on a May Morning, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 58.
Death of a Parishioner. A Walk to the Duchess’ Woods from Baptist Mills, on a May Morn, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 60.
Flora Day at Helston (Furry Day), May 8, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 34.
In a Vicarage Garden, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, June 1908.
May Day, in Sneyd Park Woods, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 79.
May Time, 1915, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 216-217.
Maytide’s Memorial, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
May-time on Monte Subasio, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 1-6.
Merry little Maidens, Oh!, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 3 May 1890, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, June 1890.
Sorrow in May, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
Switzerland Once More, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 2.
The Call of May, Carlisle Journal, 1 June 1915, p. 6.
The Promise of May, Westminster Gazette, 2 May 1914, p. 2; Carlisle Journal, 5 May 1914, p. 6.
McCudden, James (Major)
Major McCudden, V.C., DSO, Mc, MM, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
McKinley, William
Love Triumphant, Buffalo, 6th September, 1901, London Daily News, 16 September 1901, p. 6; Lancashire Evening Post, 16 September 1901, p. 4; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 22.
Meiringen (Switzerland)
From Meiringen to Rosenlaui, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 84.
Memorial Poems
A Cornish Saint, Mawgan. In Memoriam Mary Davy, Obiit May 18, 1884, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 46.
A Memory at the Männlichen, Margaret, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 104.
A Peaceful End, Cross Syke, 1886, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 126.
A Shadow on Scafell, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 108. [Professor Arthur Milnes Marshall]
At a Sowers Grave – Tyn y Ffynon – May 1897, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
At General Botha’s Grave, August 30 1919, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1919 – view full text).
At Hengwrt: April 5, 1904, In Memory of Francis Power Cobbe, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 53.
At Livingstone’s Funeral, Westminster Abbey, April, 1874, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 58.
Auguste Guyard, Barmouth, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 125.
Centenary of Mozart, December 4th, 1891, Valete: Tennyson and Other memorial Poems, 1893, p. 104.
Captain Baird, In Memoriam, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 23-24.
Charles Kingsley, 1819-75, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 70.
Colonel Henderson, Westminster Gazette, 11 March 1903, p. 2; Carlisle Journal, 13 March 1903, p. 6.
Commander Wyatt Rawson, September 13th, 1882, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 55.
Dr. John Brown, Died at Edinburgh, May 11th, 1882, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 111.
E. P. Seeley, Died in the Lebanon, Engaged in Mission Work, October 25th, 1881, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 123.
Edith Cavell. Oct. 13th, 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
Edward Thring, Headmaster of Uppingham, 1853-1887, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, pp. 98-99; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 79.
Edward Thring: In Memoriam, Academy, October 29, 1887; Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 98.
Edward Thring: In Memoriam, Spectator, 60 (5 November 1887), p. 1488; Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 97.
Edward Thring, October 22nd, 1887, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 98; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 80.
Ernest Renan, Obiit, Paris, October 2nd, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 118.
Field-Marshall Lord Roberts, V.C. In Memoriam, November 14th, Manchester Evening News, 17 November 1914, p. 7; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 122.
In Honour of Dr. Elsie Inglis, Westminster Gazette, 3 December 1917, p. 2.
In Memoriam: Acting-Lieutenant Courtenay Tennyson, Carlisle Journal, 4 February 1916, p. 8.
In Memoriam: Frank W. Crossley, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1897.
In Memoriam, J. R. A., 20th March 1907, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 83. [J. R. Anderson?]
In Memoriam: J. R. Anderson. Died at Glasgow, March 26th, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1907.
In Memoriam: John Chiddy, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 47.
In Memoriam: Josephine Kipling, New York, March 6, Westminster Gazette, 10 March 1899, p. 2; Nottingham Evening Post, 11 March 1899, p. 2.
In Memoriam: Lady Tennyson, Academy, 50 (22 August 1896), p. 130; Cornishman, 27 August 1896, p. 4; Living Age, 210 (26 September 1896), p. 770.
In Memoriam Principal Shairp, September 1885, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 115; Valete: Tennyson and Other Poems, 1893, p. 75.
In Memoriam Principal Tulloch, February 1886, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 117; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 78.
In Memoriam. Robert Ernest Vernede, Rifle Brigade, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
In Memoriam: Stanley Theodore Carr, Carlisle Journal, 13 October 1916, p. 7.
In Memory of Flight-Lieutenant R. A. J. Warneford, V.C., Legion of Honour, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
In Memory of John Travers Cornwell. First Class Boy of H.M.S. ‘Chester’, The Battle of Jutland, May 31, 1916, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
In Memory of Lieutenant R. G. Garvin, Pall Mall Gazette, 12 August 1916, p. 2; Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 12 August 1916, p. 6.
In Memory of Lord Strathcona, Carlisle Journal, 30 January 1914, p. 8.
In Memory of Prof. Lushington, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
In Memory of W. B. H.: A Social Reformer, London Daily News, 21 February 1906, p. 6.
In the Church of St. George: (Built in Memory of H.R.H. Prince Leopold, Died at Cannes, March 28th, 1884), Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 39.
J. D. Sedding, In Holy Trinity Church, Sloane Street, 1891, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 141.
James Lappin, Late Chairman of the Liverpool Stock Exchange, October 25th, 1890, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 136.
Jenny Lind, November 2nd, 1887, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 96.
John Couch Adams, the English Discoverer of the Planet Neptune, Died at Cambridge, January 21st, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 116.
John Richard Green, 1837-1883, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 112.
Lady Augusta Stanley: Wife of the Dean of Westminster, Buried in Henry VII’s Chapel, 9 March, 1876, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Lord Justice General Inglis, August 20th, 1891, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 114.
Lord Kitchener. In Memoriam, June 5, 1916, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
Lord Kitchener, 5th June, 1916, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
Minnie: Died 25 July 1877, Buried at Welton, , 31 July, Aged 19 Years, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text). [Minnie Walls]
Octavia Hill: August 13th, 1912, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1912.
“Old Charlie.” In Memory of Charles Bird, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1909.
On the Schilthorn, June 21, 1896. The Anniversary of the Death by Lightning of Mrs. Arbuthnot, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 94.
Our Angel-Host of Help. In Memory of Raymond Lodge, fell in Flanders, Sept. 14th, 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
R. L. Nettleship, Died on Mount Blanc, August 25th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 117.
Sir George Airy, K.C.B., Died January 2nd, 1892, In His 92st Year, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 115.
Sir Richard Owen, December 18th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 119.
The Crown of Thorns, St. George’s Chapel, Windsor, January 20th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Poems, 1893, p. 50.
The Gate of Rest, To the Memory of Mrs. Sarah Thring and Her Son, Theodore, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 144.
The Master of Balliol: A Memory, Academy, 64 (7 October 1893), p. 294; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1893; Dial, 15 (1 November 1893), p. 253. [Benjamin Jowett]
The Painter’s Home-Going, In Memoriam G. Q. P. Talbot, Obiit May 28th, 1885, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 124.
Thomas Hill Green, Oxford, March 26th, 1882, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 110.
To the Memory of Oliver Heywood, Manchester, March 17th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Poems, 1893, p. 142.
Memorial Poems – Clergy
Archbishop Benson, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1896.
Archbishop Temple, A Sonnet Chronicle. 1906, p. 38.
Archbishop Thomson, Christmas Day 1890, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 83.
Archdeacon Cooper: In Memoriam, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1896.
At Bishop Goodwin’s Grave, the Day After the Funeral, November 29th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 88.
At Keble’s Grave, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 69.
At the Bishop’s Grave, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1892; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 87. [Bishop Harvey Goodwin]
At the Bishop’s Grave, Raughtonhead, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October 1904; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 63. [John Bardsley]
At the Lying in State of Cardinal Manning, January 19th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Poems, 1893, p. 90.
Bernard Gilpin, 1517-1584, Northern Counties Magazine, 2 (April 1901), p. 2.
Bishop Fraser, October 22nd, 1885, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1883, p. 76.
Bishop Mannington: Massacred With His Followers in Masai Land, Central Africa, October, 1885, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 77.
Bishop Phillips Brooks, Died at Boston, 23rd January, 1893, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 92.
Canon Liddon, Pall Mall Gazette, 16 September 1890, p. 2; Critic, 14 (11 October 1890, p. 184; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October 1890; Carlisle Diocesan Magazine, 1 (November 1890), p. 69; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 85.
Cardinal Newman, 1801-1890, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1890; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 84.
Dean Oakley, June 10th, 1890, Penrith Observer, 17 June 1890, p. 7; Carlisle Diocesan Magazine, 1 (September 1890), p. 37; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 82.
Dean Stanley, Buried in Westminster Abbey, July 27th, 1881, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 72.
Dean Stanley, July 18th, 1881, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 71.
Dr. Dollinger, January 10th, 1890, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 113.
Father Damien, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 65-69.
Father Damien, April 1889, Macmillan’s Magazine, 60 (July 1889), p. 182; Westmorland Gazette, 6 July 1889, p. 3; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 57.
General Booth: Congress Hall, Clapton, 26th August, 1912, Hull Daily Mail, 28 August 1912, p. 3; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1912.
George Wishart, Martyred at Saint Andrews, March 1, 1545, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 114.
In Memoriam: Archbishop Magee, Carlisle Diocesan Magazine, 1 (May 1891), p. 182; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, June 1891; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 86.
In Memoriam: Bishop Lightfoot, Westmoreland Gazette, 4 January 1890, p. 8; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 81.
In Memoriam: Principal Rainy, Hamilton Herald and Lanarkshire Weekly News, 29 December 1906, p. 8.
In Memoriam: Thomas Dundas Harford-Battersby, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 28 July 1883, p. 5.
In Memory of Bishop Westcott, Northern Counties Magazine, 2 (September 1901), p. 402.
In Memory of Rev. T. B. Hardy V.C., DSO., MC., Chaplain to the King, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
In Memory of the Vicar of St. John’s, Keswick, 1st May, 1901, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1901. [John Newenham Hoare]
The Master of the Temple, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 51.
The Warrior’s Funeral Hymn: In Memoriam Charles Haddon Spurgeon, Christian World Pulpit, 41 (17 February 1892), p. 99.
To the Memory of Bishop Chauncy Maples, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1895.
Memorial Poems – Lake District Inhabitants
A Drear Night-Walk, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 162. [Alice Fletcher]
A Happy Death, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 16 February, 1884, p. 5. [Mrs. Crosthwaite]
A Sad Communion, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 160. [Alice Fletcher]
Alice Buried, February 26th, 1884, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 157. [Alice Fletcher]
Alice, February 24th, 1884, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 153.
At Ruskin’s Grave, On His Birthday, 8th February, 1900, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 82.
At the Funeral of Chancellor Ferguson: Stanwix, March 7th, Carlisle Journal, 9 March 1900, p. 6.
At the Old Sexton’s Grave, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 12 January 1901, p. 5. [Joseph Birkett]
At William Unwin’s Grave, Crosthwaite, Jan. 11th, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 January 1900, p. 4.
E. R. and F. S. S. B., Drowned Whilst Sailing on Derwentwater in a Squall, September 9th, 1886, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 127; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October, 1886. [Edward Rathbone and James Fredreick S. Spencer-Bell]
Elizabeth Atlee, Wife of the Vicar of Buttermere, Who, While Engaged in Mission Work, Died on Mount Olivet, February 7th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, pp. 145-149.
From Fox How, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 10.
Geologist’s Funeral: In Memoriam J. Clifton Ward, Buried at Keswick, April 20th, 1889, Sonnets at the English Lakes, p. 23.
Good-bye, Old Friend, Good-bye!, The Funeral, February 25th, 1890, Valete: Tennyson and Other memorial Poems, 1893, p. 135.
Homeward Bound. In Memory of Nowell Oxland, the Writer of the Poem “Outward Bound”, Who Fell at Suvla Bay, Aug 9, 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
‘Humble of heart, and unto all a friend’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 22 October 1892, p. 5. [Miss Walker, Portinscale]
Hymn in Memory of the Bell-Master—Stephen Hogarth, West Cumberland Times, 7 December 1907, p. 2.
Hymn: In Memory of Walter Cartmel and Gerald Storey, Who Perished in Derwentwater, February 3rd, 1907, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1907.
Hymn: Sung at the Grave of A. F., Brathay Churchyard, February 26th, 1884, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, pp. 164-166. [Alice Fletcher]
In Brathay Churchyard, Valete: Tennyson and Other Poems, 1893, p. 158. [Alice Fletcher]
In Grateful Memory of Geoffrey Payne (Aged 23 Years) Who Fell on Sleep at Keswick, 5th October, 1908, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1908.
In Grateful Memory of John Fisher Crosthwaite. Died June 2nd, 1897, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1897.
In Memoriam: Alice Lietch, Died at Derwent Bank, July 13th, 1891, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1891; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 140.
In Memoriam: Charles Gore Ring, Medical Officer of Health for Keswick, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1897.
In Memoriam F. A. R., Obiit. Ambleside, December 20, 1879, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 87.
In Memoriam: Henry Hewetson, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1895.
In Memoriam: Henry Irwin Jenkinson, August 28th, 1891, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 5 September 1891, p. 4; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1891; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 80.
In Memoriam: Joe Cape, the Clogger, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1893; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 143.
In Memoriam: John Richardson, the Cumberland Poet and Village Schoolmaster. Obiit St. John’s Vale, April 30, 1886, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 8 May 1886, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, June 1886; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 128.
In Memoriam: M. S. Rooke. Obiit March 26, 1886, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1886.
In Memoriam. Major M. P. Buckle, D.S.O., October 27th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 116.
In Memoriam: Margaret Mitchell, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1890.
In Memoriam: Mr. Henry Howard, Penrith Observer, 11 August 1914, p. 7.
In Memoriam: Mrs Attlee, who died in mission work on Mount Olivet, February, 1892, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 20 February 1892, p. 5; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, pp. 145-149. [ Elizabeth Attlee, wife of the Vicar of Buttermere]
In Memoriam: Robert Slack, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October 1893.
In Memoriam: Rosellen Eliza Favell, 13th August, 1908, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1908.
In Memoriam: September 9, 1886, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October 1886; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 127. [Edward Rathbone]
In Memoriam: September 9, 1886, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October 1886; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 127. [James Spencer-Bell]
In Memoriam: T. E. Highton, Entered Rest Saturday, June 15th, 1907, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1907.
In Memoriam: Thomas Dundas Harford-Battersby, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 28 July 1883, p. 5.
In Memoriam: W. D. Crewdson, January 13th, 1908, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1908.
In Memoriam: William Peel, Killed at Bassenthwaite Station, by the Excursion Train, July 11th, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 14 June 1890, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1890.
In Memory of A. A. Slack, Derwent Hill, Oct. 24th, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1904.
In Memory of Ann Cockbain, November 14th, 1901, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1901.
In Memory of Lizzie Renshaw, Who Entered Rest 14th March, 1908, Aged 87, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1908.
In Memory of Mary Cockbain, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1909.
In Memory of Mary Jane Lowe, 27th July, 1905, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1905.
In Memory of the Bell-Master—Stephen Hogarth, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1907.
In Memory of the Vicar of St. John’s, Keswick, 1st May, 1901, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1901. [John Newenham Hoare]
In Memory of Thomas Bakewell, Cumberland and Westmorland Herald, 8 April 1916, p. 1.
In Memory of William Wilson, Keswick Hotel, 8th Oct., 1900, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 October 1900, p. 5; Cumberland and Westmorland Herald, 13 October 1900, p. 5.
Joseph Hawell, February 20th, 1891, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1891; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 28 March 1891, p. 5; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 139.
Keswick “Old Folks’ Do,” Christmas, 1897, In Honoured Memory of the Late President, J. Fisher Crosthwaite, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 1 January 1898, p. 5.
Last of the Dorothys that Rydal Knew, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 134. [Dorothy Harrison]
Mark Cockbain: Laid to Rest in Crosthwaite Churchyard, Feb. 15th, 1905, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1905.
Mary Stanger, Fieldside, Keswick, February 5th, 1890, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1890; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 133.
Ned Brown, Killed at His Post, Thornthwaite Mines, 1889, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 131.
On Hearing of the Death of Alice Grisdale, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, June 1895.
Present but Absent, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 159. [Alice Fletcher]
Ruskin at Rest, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 3 Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 81.
Sir Wilfrid Lawson: Obiit July 1, 1906, Westminster Gazette, 3 July 1906, p. 2; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 7 July 1906, p. 4; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1906.
T’Auld Fwoks’ Kursmas Do, In Memory of Henry Irwin Jenkinson, Cumberland and Westmorland Herald, 31 December 1910, p. 1; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 31 December 1910, p. 8; West Cumberland Times, 31 December 1910, p. 3.
The Haunted Room, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 161. [Alice Fletcher]
The Sorrow of Skelghyll, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1908. [Mary Ann Muncaster and her daughter Jane]
To the Memory of Lance-Corporal Dalzell for Many Years Winner of the Grasmere Guides’ Race, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
To the Memory of Martha Harrison, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1895.
To the Memory of Robert Grave, the Village Weaver, 1891, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1891; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 138.
To the Old Folks of Keswick and Neighbourhood, Dec 27th 1893: In Memory of Richard Mitchell, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
William Greenip, the Village Naturalist, Died at Keswick, November 2nd, 1890, Spectator, 65 (15 November 1890), p. 683; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 22 November 1890, p. 4; Nature Notes, 1 (December 1890), p. 188; Living Age, 187 (20 December 1890), p. 706; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1890; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 137; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 79.
Memorial Poems – Artists, Poets and Writers
Algernon Charles Swinburne, 10th April, 1909, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1909; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 87.
Anniversary of Charles Tennyson Turner’s Death, 25th April, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 2.
At Ruskin’s Grave, On His Birthday, 8th February, 1900, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 82.
Carlyle, Chelsea, February 5th, 1881, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 193. p. 109.
Dante Gabriel Rossetti, April 9th, 1882, Valete: Tennyson and Other memorial Poems, 1893, p. 95.
Death, the Angel Friend, In Memoriam—G. F. Watts, R.A., July 1, 1904, Century, 69 (February 1905), p. 576; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 59.
Herbert Spencer, Obiit Dec. 7, 1903, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 47.
Horatius Bonar, 31st July, 1889, Good Words, 30 (October 1889), p. 695; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October 1889; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 98.
In Honour of Charles Dickens: February 7th, 1912, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1912.
In Memoriam: Charles Tennyson Turner, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 1.
In Memory of Edna Lyall, Christian World Pulpit, 63 (25 February 1903), pp. 125-126; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1903; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 44.
In Memory of Lord Leighton – President of the Royal Academy, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
In Memory of the Tennyson Centenary. At Somersby, August 5th, 1809, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1909.
James Russell Lowell, August 12th, 1891, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 102.
John Greenleaf Whittier, Dial, 15 (1 November 1893), p. 267; Critic, 21 (23 June 1894), p. 422; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 106.
John Milton, 1608-1908, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 85.
John Richardson, Cumberland Poet and Schoolmaster, St. John’s Vale, April 30th, 1886, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 128.
Leaving Aldworth, October 11th, 1892, Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, 152 ((November 1892), p. 768; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 30.
Lowell’s Last Dream, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 103.
Matthew Arnold, In Laleham Churchyard, April, 1888, Sheffield Weekly Telegraph, 27 October 1894, p. 27; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 97.
Milton, 1608-1908, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1908.
Nab Cottage: A Memory of Hartley Coleridge, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 38.
Richard Savage; or, In Front of St. Peter’s Hospital, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 42.
Robert Browning, December 12th, 1889, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 99.
Robert Browning, Westminster Abbey, December 30th, 1889, Pall Mall Gazette, 31 December 1889, p. 2; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 4 January, 1890, p. 8; Critic, 13 (25 January 1890), p. 46; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 100.
Rupert Brooke, Lemos, April 23rd, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 211.
Ruskin at Rest, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1900; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 3 Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 81.
Tennyson. Obiit, Aldworth, October 6th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, pp. 3-14.
Tennyson’s Home-Going, October 11th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 29.
The Laureate Dead, October 6th, 1892, Academy, (November 1892); Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1892; Living Age, 195 (17 December 1892), p. 706; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 28.
The Poet’s Home-Going, Murray’s Magazine, 7 (February 1890), pp. 145-150; Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 2-12. [Robert Browning]
Walt Whitman, March 26th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 105.
Wordsworth’s Tomb, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 62.
Zola Dead, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 37.
Memorial Poems – Rawnsley Family
A Drear Night-Walk, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 162. [Alice Fletcher]
A Sad Communion, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 160. [Alice Fletcher]
Alice Buried, February 26th, 1884, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 157. [Alice Fletcher]
Alice, February 24th, 1884, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 153. [Alice Fletcher]
“Arthur”, Died April 26th 1880, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text). [Arthur Rawnsley]
Buried on New Year’s Day: At Plumtree, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text). [Emily Frances Burnside]
Dedicatory: To the Dear Memory of My Father, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 2.
Going Home, Carlisle Journal, 5 January 1917, p. 8; Penrith Observer, 9 January 1917, p. 7. [Edith Rawnsley]
Hymn: Sung at the Grave of A. F., Brathay Churchyard, February 26th, 1884, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, pp. 164-166. [Alice Fletcher]
In Brathay Churchyard, Valete: Tennyson and Other Poems, 1893, p. 158. [Alice Fletcher]
In Memoriam: Lady Franklin, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text)
In Memoriam: On Seeing the Monument to Sir John Franklin On the Morning of Lady Franklin’s Funeral, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Minnie: Died 25 July 1877, Buried at Welton, , 31 July, Aged 19 Years, (RR/1/7 – view full text). [Minnie Walls]
Present but Absent, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 159. [Alice Fletcher]
Sir John Franklin, Valete: Tennyson and Other Poems, 1893, p. 53.
The Haunted Room, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 161. [Alice Fletcher]
The Poet’s ‘Lilian.’ In Memory of S. E., Shawell, October 14th, 1889, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 132. [Sophia Elizabeth Elmhirst, HDR’s aunt.]
To the Memory of Lady Jane Franklin, July 23rd, 1875, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 54.
Memorial Poems – Royalty and Statesmen
At Hughenden, April 19th, 1881, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 61.
At the Funeral of Prince Henry of Battenburg, 5th February, 1896, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1896.
Field Marshall von Moltke, April 24th, 1891, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 65.
Frederick III, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 48.
In Memoriam: Ellis, so full of fire and force and mirth’, South Wales Daily News, 8 April 1899, p. 6. [Thomas Edward Ellis]
In Memoriam: Funeral of William Ewart Gladstone, May 28th, 1898, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, June 1898.
In Memoriam: Mr. Henry Howard, Penrith Observer, 11 August 1914, p. 7.
In Memoriam: Silvester Horne, M.P., Westminster Gazette, 7 May 1914, p. 2.; Carlisle Journal, 12 May 1914, p. 6.
In Memoriam, V.R.I., Lancashire Evening Post, 24 January 1901, p. 4.
In Memoriam: V.R.I., A Voice From the Colonies, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
In Memoriam: W. E. Forster. Obiit April 5, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 24 April 1886, p. 5; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 62.
In Memory of Acting Consul-General Phillips, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1897.
In Memory of Lord Carlisle: Lanercost, January 24th, 1912, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1912.
In Memory of 2nd Lieutenant W. G. C. Gladstone, M.P., April 13th, Chester Chronicle, 15 May 1915, p. 2; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 202-203.
John Bright, March 27th 1889, Murray’s Magazine, 5 (May 1889), p. 660; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 63.
Lord Carnarvon, June 28th, 1890, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 64.
Lord Salisbury: In Memoriam, August 22nd, 1903, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1903.
Love Triumphant, Buffalo, 6th September, 1901, London Daily News, 16 September 1901, p. 6; Lancashire Evening Post, 16 September 1901, p. 4; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 22. [William McKinley]
Rhodes Dead, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1902; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 25.
Senator Hoar, 1906, Century, 72 (July 1906), p. 379; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 84.
The Dead Prince, Jan. 14, 1892, Pall Mall Gazette, 15 January 1892, p. 1; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1892; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 49. [Prince Albert Victor]
The Emperor Frederick, June 15th, 1888, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 47.
The Empress of Austria: In Memoriam, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October 1898.
The Kaiser at Peace, March 9th, 1888, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 42.
The King Dead, World, 10 May 1910, p. 795; Carlisle Journal, 13 May 1910, p. 6. [Edward VII]
The King’s Funeral: A Retrospect, Carlisle Journal, 24 May 1910, p. 4. [Edward VII]
The Passing of the Queen, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 11.
Mên Scryfa (Cornwall)
Mên-Scryfa (The Written Stone), Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 39.
Milan
In Milan Cathedral, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 75.
In the Refectory, Milan, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 76.
On the Roof of the Duomo, Milan, at Anthem Time, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 74.
Miller, James
In Honour of Private James Miller, V.C., Lancashire Evening Post, 14 September 1916, p. 4.
Mills, Frederick
The Greater Love: The Heroes of East Ham—July 1, 1895, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 35-36.
Milner, Alfred
To Sir Alfred Milner, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 212-213; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 6.
Welcome to Sir Alfred Milner, Morning Post, 24 May 1901, p. 4; Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser, 24 May 1901, p. 8.
Milton, John
John Milton, 1608-1908, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 85.
Milton, 1608-1908, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1908.
Milton (Major, King’s Own York Light Infantry)
A Hero of Belmont, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 2 December 1899, p. 5; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 33-34.
Mines and Miners
Spring Dreams Amongst the Cornish Miners, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 36.
Mining Disasters
A Cumberland Miner’s Story, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 78-82.
At the Wellington Pit Mouth, London Daily News, 18 May 1910, p. 5; Carlisle Journal, 20 May 1910, p. 6.
Brave Pit Lads of Penicuick, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 202-205.
Dodd, the Hero of Audley Mine, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 110-113.
Life through Death, The Colliery Explosion at St. Helens, Workington, April 19th, 1888, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1888; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 130.
Ned Brown, Killed at His Post, Thornthwaite Mines, 1889, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1889; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 131.
The Falling Star. Brave John Waye, the Overman, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 40-43.
The Greater Love: The Heroes of East Ham—July 1, 1895, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 35-36.
The Heroes of Rhondda Vale, Pall Mall Gazette, 1 (September 1893), pp. 773-780; Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 119-123.
“The Miners’ Rescue”. Troedyrhiw Colliery, Rhondda Vale, Glamorganshire, April 20, 1877: A Poem. (Published as a pamphlet).
Missionaries
A Welcome to Stanley, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 20-33.
At Livingstone’s Funeral, Westminster Abbey, April, 1874, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 58.
Bishop Mannington: Massacred With His Followers in Masai Land, Central Africa, October, 1885, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 77.
Dr. Moffat; or, The London Mission Meeting at Colston Hall, September 22, 1876, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 110; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 74.
E. P. Seeley, Died in the Lebanon, Engaged in Mission Work, October 25th, 1881, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 123.
Father Damien, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 65-69.
Father Damien, April 1889, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 57.
In Memoriam: Mrs Attlee, who died in mission work on Mount Olivet, February, 1892, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 20 February 1892, p. 5; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, pp. 145-149.
Sister Rose Gertrude, Poems, Ballads, Bucolics, 1890, pp. 39-45.
To Sister Rose Gertrude, Pall Mall Gazette, 3 February 1890, p. 2; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 15 February, 1890, p. 4.
To the Memory of Bishop Chauncy Maples, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1895.
Mit Rahineh (Egypt)
In the Fields of Mȋt-Rahȋneh, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 53.
Mitchell, Margaret
In Memoriam: Margaret Mitchell, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1890.
Mitchell, Richard
To the Old Folks of Keswick and Neighbourhood, Dec 27th 1893: In Memory of Richard Mitchell, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Moffat, Robert
Dr. Moffat; or, The London Mission Meeting at Colston Hall, September 22, 1876, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 110; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 74.
Monasteries see Abbeys
Monk, George Bertram Fifield
In Memoriam: 2nd Lieutenant G. B. F. Monk, Royal Warwicks, Near La Bassée, December 18th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 189-190.
Monks
A Monkish Swimmer, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 88-89.
Montana (Switzerland)
Hotel du Parc et des Belles Fleurs, Lac de Chan, Montana, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 148.
Monuments see also Castles
At Como Cathedral, Pliny’s Statue, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 77.
At Marske Mill, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 137.
At the Unveiling of the Tennyson Statue, Lincoln, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 75.
Beowulf’s Stone, Saint Bees. Mammon Worship Rebuked, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 100.
Bower-Wall and Stokesleigh Camps, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 72.
Foam-Fringe at Gurnard’s Head, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 42.
Grace Darling, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 122.
‘Here, at the entrance of the street’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 25 April 1908, p. 8. [Wilfrid Lawson]
Lanyon Cromlech, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 38.
Lilla Cross, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 191.
Mên-Scryfa (The Written Stone), Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 39.
Monument at Duchess’ Woods, on the Anniversary of Lady Elizabeth’s Death, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 59.
Site of the Ancient High Cross, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, pp. 40-41.
Spurgeon, February 4th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 91.
St. Madron’s Well, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 37.
St. Rumon’s Well, at Grade, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 28.
The Bewcastle Cross, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 114-117.
The Buried City of Cardigan Bay, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 74.
The Cairns, Trevalga Head, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 44.
The Dane’s Dyke, Flamborough Head, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 204.
The Druid Stone Near Millbeck, Seascale, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 88.
The Forester’s Tomb, Saint Bees, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 102.
The Gosforth Cross, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 95.
The Headmaster’s Funeral, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, pp. 106-108.
The Headmaster’s Monument, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, pp. 103-104.
The Mother of Her People, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 21.
The Queen’s Memorial. Plea for a National Valhalla, Lowestoft Journal, 9 March 1901, p. 8.
The Runic Cross in Gosforth Churchyard, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 113.
The Stanley Monument in Rugby Chapel, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 73.
The Tombstone of Heinrich von Strattlingen, the Bard, in the Bächihölzi, Thun, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 126.
The Tower on the Hoad, Ulverston, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 116; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 78.
To All Who Are Interested in Pulling Down or Preserving to Grateful Memory the Sculptures of the Few Latin Fathers of the Western Church, now Erected on Either Side of the Cathedral Porch, Western Daily Press, 3 April 1876, p. 4.
To Sir John Franklin, (By His Statue in the Spilsby Market-Place, At Night), Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 219.
To the Memory of the Fathers of the Western Church, whose Memorial is Preserved by the Sculptures in the Cathedral Porch, Western Daily Press, 3 April 1876, p. 4.
Tomb of Thomas de Cottingham, Obiit 1300, Saint Bees, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 99.
Tyndale’s Pillar, at Nibley Knoll, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 135.
Unveiling of the Bede Memorial, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 64.
Monuments (Egypt)
A Portrait of Cleopatra, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 106.
A Potsherd at Elephantine, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 139-141.
A Queen’s Gazelle (In the Gȋzeh Museum), Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 47-49.
Ahmed the Carpenter, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 63.
An Inscription on the Vocal Memnon, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 130-131.
An Old-World Hero, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 51.
At Abydos, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 100-101.
At Denderah, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 104-105.
At Joseph’s Tomb, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 61-61.
At Kom Ombo, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 137-138.
At Philae, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 145-147.
At the Ramesseum (Pictures, and the Poem of Pentaur), Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 109-121.
At the Tomb of Ameni Amenemhât, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 90-92.
At the Tomb of Thi, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 56-60.
Before the Statue of Chephren (Gȋzeh Museum), Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 39.
How the Colossi Came to Thebes, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 126-129.
In a King’s Tomb, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 122-123.
Lifting the Colossal Statue of Rameses II, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 54-55.
Morning Mist on the Great Pyramid, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 30-32.
Queen Hatasu, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 124-125.
The Dream-City of Khuenâten, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 93-95.
The Dream of Thothmes IV, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 33-38.
The Lady Nefert (In the Gȋzeh Museum), Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 45-46.
The Mummy of Sesostris, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 50.
The Obelisk at Heliopolis, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 23-24.
The Pyramid of Men-Kau-Ra, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 27-29.
The Shêkh El Beled (In the Gȋzeh Museum), Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 43-44.
Monuments (Switzerland)
Over the Splugen, the Navvy’s Cross, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 80.
The Fountain in the Wine-Market, Lucerne, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 5.
The Lion of Lucerne, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 9.
The Statue of Zwinglius, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 31.
The Watch-Tower at Stanzstadt, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 14.
Moon
Moon-Rise Over Wansfell, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 92.
Moon-Thirst, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 49.
Moonrise Mistaken for the Northern Lights, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 63.
The Gardens by Moonlight, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 135.
Morning
A Service of Song in Duchess’ Park, on a May Morning, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 58.
A View of Bristol Early in the Morning, from Pur-Down, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 56.
Bristol Smoke in Early Morning, October, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 48.
Dawn in Greece and Cumberland, a Contrast, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1905; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 72; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 105.
Dawn in the Abbey Precincts, Carlisle, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1909; Journal of the Fell and Rock Climbing Club, 1 (1909), p. 252.
Daylight on Lago Maggiore, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 58.
Death of a Parishioner. A Walk to the Duchess’ Woods from Baptist Mills, on a May Morn, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 60.
Early Morn and Eventide, in Leigh Woods, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 69.
From the Rigi-Kulm, At Sunrise, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 19.
Hope for the Dawn, European War Poems 1914-1915, 1915, p. 193.
Morning at Soglio, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 78.
Resurrection, or Lake Mists on a Winter Morn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 68.
Sabbath Dawn at Castel di Poggio, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 11-12.
Sunday Morning from the Stanzerhorn, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 15.
Sunrise at Castel di Poggio, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 13.
Sunrise at Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 169.
Sunrise from Monte Motterone, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 61.
The Dawn, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1914 – view full text).
The Music of the Dawn, Hotel Splendide, Lugano, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 64.
’Twixt Sunrise and the Moon, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 63.
Winter Sunrise on the Fells, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 20.
Morris, William
The Star of Prayer: Written on Morris’s Tapestry in Exeter Chapel, Oxford, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Morschach (Switzerland)
At the Degenbalm, Morschach, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 25.
Evening at Morschach, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 26.
Mountains
A Glimpse of the Jungfrau, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 113.
A Memory at the Männlichen, Margaret, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 104.
A Shadow on Scafell, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 108.
A Storm on Monte Generoso, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 70.
Afterglow on the Abendberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 112.
At the Degenbalm, Morschach, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 25.
At the Mettlen Alp, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 102.
At the Sign of the Wildstrubel on the Gemmi, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 143.
At Weissenstein, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 161.
Beneath Titlis, Engelberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 41.
Blessing the Pastures on the Blachenalp, Engelberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 45.
Black Coombe, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 80.
Bowfell, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 102.
Cloud-Rest on Fairfield, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 8.
Dayspring on Pilatus, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 17.
Evening from San Salvatore, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 65.
From Orta to Varallo Over the Colma, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 16-19.
From the Rigi-Kulm, At Sunrise, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 19.
From the Staffel-Stock, Rigi, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 20.
Going to Zermatt, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 145.
Hawkshead from Furness Fells, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 91.
Helvellyn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 105.
Il Bel and High Street, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 13.
Langdale Pikes, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 34.
Latterbarrow, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 37.
‘Linkst Hand,’ on Sulegg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 101.
Lion and the Lamb: Or Helm Crag after a Storm, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 31.
May-time on Monte Subasio, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 1-6.
Moon-Rise Over Wansfell, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 92.
On a Seat Beneath the Dossenwand, above Vitznau, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 22.
On Chamossaire, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 159.
On Monte Motterone, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 60.
On the Geisshorn, Schynige Platte, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 89.
On the Schilthorn, June 21, 1896. The Anniversary of the Death by Lightning of Mrs. Arbuthnot, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 94.
Stone Arthur, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 104.
The Daubenhorn Cliffs Over the Gemmi, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 144.
The Jungfrau, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 87.
The Jungfrau Unveiled, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 105.
The Matterhorn, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 146.
The Pheasant-Eye Narcissus, Up Monte Motterone, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 62.
The Rigi, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 18.
The Schwarze Monch, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 98.
The Stockhorn, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 135.
The Vision of Kings, St. Beatenberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 111.
The Wissefluh on the Vitznau-Stock, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 23.
Sunrise from Monte Motterone, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 61.
Up Nab Scar, from Rydal Mount, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 75.
Wild Flowers on Loughrigg, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 97.
Winter Sunrise on the Fells, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 20.
Yewdale Crags, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 99.
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
Centenary of Mozart, December 4th, 1891, Valete: Tennyson and Other memorial Poems, 1893, p. 104.
Muldoon, Peter J. (Bishop)
Bishop Muldoon: At the Burning Theatre, Chicago, 30th December, 1903, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1904.
Mulgrave (Yorkshire)
Patriotism. In Mulgrave Woods, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 157.
The Giant of Mulgrave Dale, Sonnets Round the Coast, , 1887, p. 156.
The Mulgrave Stream, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 159.
To and From Mulgrave Castle, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 158.
Müller, George
Müller’s Orphanage, Ashley Down, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 52.
Mullyon Island (Cornwall)
Mullyon Island, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 33.
Muncaster
A Quiet Autumn Day, from the Terrace at Muncaster, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 83.
At King Henry’s Chapel, Muncaster. Autumn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 112; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 82.
At Muncaster, After the Gale of December 11, 1883, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 84.
Muncaster, Jane
The Sorrow of Skelghyll, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1908.
Muncaster, Mary Ann
The Sorrow of Skelghyll, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1908.
Murphy, William
Murphy the Fireman, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 74-77.
Murren (Switzerland)
Alpine Anemones in the Blumenthal at Murren, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 96.
In the Blumenthal, Murren, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 95.
On the Kurhaus Terrace, Murren, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 93.
Spring Crocuses in the Blumenthal, Murren, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 97.
The Wirtschaft on the Old Footpath to Murren, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 92.
Music see also Bells and Bell-Ringing
A Cumberland War Song, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 52-53.
A May Song, West Cumberland Times, 11 May 1895, p. 2.
A Plea for Military Bands, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 168.
A Plea for Song in War-Time, Carlisle Journal, 25 August 1916, p. 6.
A Song of Life, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1897.
Brathay Music, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 120.
Chorus from “Fall of Babylon.” Bristol Musical Festival, Thursday, October 19, 1876, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 112.
Madlle. Albani, at the Bristol Festival, 1876, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 113.
Nature’s Music Dishonoured, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, 66.
On Hearing the Organ in the Cathedral, While the Work in the Nave was Suspended, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 15.
Orpheus Glee Society, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 107.
Penrith Grammar School Song, Penrith Observer, 30 March 1915, p. 7.
Saturday Organ Recital in the Colston Hall, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 111.
St. Kentigern’s Spinners Song, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 25 January 1890, p. 4; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1890.
The Children Are Singing in Kendal Town, Lakes Herald, 3 May 1895, p. 4.
The Double Choir: To My Old Friend, Mr. P. T. Freeman, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 3 February 1906, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1906.
The Music of Hope: In Memory of the Bandsmen of the Titanic, London Daily News, 27 April 1912, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1912.
The Northern Nightingale. On Hearing a Ballad Sung in the North Country Dialect by Miss Wakefield, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 109.
The Tower of Song, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 110.
To the Conductor of the Orchestral Concert in Colston Hall, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 109.
To Mary Wakefield, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 20.
Nab Cottage
Nab Cottage: A Memory of Hartley Coleridge, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 38.
Nab Scar
Up Nab Scar, from Rydal Mount, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 75.
Nan’s Walk
Nan’s Walk, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 116.
Nannau
The Haunted Oak of Nannau, Pall Mall Magazine, 3 (July 1894), pp. 353-361.
Nansen, Fridtjof
To Nansen – England’s Welcome, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
To the Two Last Survivors of Nansen’s Team of 28 Sledge Dogs Who Were Shot, as Being of No Further use, on the Ice-Floe of Franz Josef Land, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Napoleon III
Napoleon III, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Narcissus
The Pheasant-Eye Narcissus, Up Monte Motterone, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 62.
Nasturtium
The Tropaeolum Speciosum, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 54.
National Trust
Brandelhow, October 16, 1902, Cumberland and Westmorland Herald, 18 October 1902, p. 5; West Cumberland Times, 18 October 1902, p. 2; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1902; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 36.
Gowbarrow, An Appeal to the People of Leeds, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 80.
Nature
Glen Almond, Spectator, 61 (25 August 1888), p. 1162.
Nature’s Evensong, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 54.
Nature’s Gospel, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 3.
Nature’s Music Dishonoured, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, 66.
Needles (The)
At the Needles, Isle of Wight, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 10.
The Lighthouse at the Needles, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 13.
Nefertiti
The Lady Nefert (In the Gȋzeh Museum), Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 45-46.
Negi, Darwan Sing (Corporal)
To Naik Darwan Sing Negi, V.C., 1st Battalion 39th Garhwalis, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 113-114.
Nelson, Horatio (Admiral)
At the Nelson Column, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
In Trafalgar Square, October 21, 1905, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 81.
In Trafalgar Square, October 21st, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 115.
L’Entente Cordiale, On Board the “Victory,” Portsmouth, 9th August, 1905, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 76.
Nelson’s Last Prayer, October 21, 1805, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1905; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 82.
Trafalgar Day, October 21, 1905, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 21 October 1905, p. 8.
Nettleship, Richard Lewis
Going to Nettleship’s Grave, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 149.
R. L. Nettleship, Died on Mount Blanc, August 25th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 117.
To R. L. Nettleship, In Chamounix Churchyard, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 150.
New Year
1887, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1887.
A Crosthwaite Belfry Song, January 1st, 1906, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1906; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 58.
A New Year’s Greeting, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1896.
A New Year’s Greeting, 1897, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1897.
A New Year’s Greeting 1898, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
A New Year’s Hope 1900, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
A New Year’s Sonnet: The Tide of Love, 1904, Westminster Gazette, 1 January 1904, p. 11; Lowestoft Journal, 9 January, p. 8; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 50.
Britain’s New Year, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 80.
Britain’s New Year Jan 1st 1900, Rawnsley Archives (RR/3/1 – view full text).
New Year, 1902, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 24.
New Year, 1915, Times, 1 January 1915, p. 7; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 159.
New Year Joy, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1889.
New Year’s Day, 1908, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1908.
New Year’s Day, 1919, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1919 – view full text).
New Year’s Hope, 1909, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1909.
‘O good New Year, we clasp’, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1891.
The New Year, Hampshire Telegraph, 4 January 1908, p. 10.
The New Year, 1895, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1895.
The New Year, 1900, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 79; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 2.
The New Year, 1903, West Cumberland Times, 3 January 1903, p. 3; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1903; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 40.
The New Year, 1905, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1905; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 65.
The New Year, 1906, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1906.
The New Year, 1907, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1907.
The New Year, 1912, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1912.
The New Year [1914], Carlisle Journal, 2 January 1914, p. 8.
The New Year [1916], Carlisle Journal, 7 January 1916, p. 8.
The New Year’s Hope, 1899, Penrith Observer, 10 January 1899, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1899.
To the Men of the Border Regiment, Cumberland Sends Thanks and Greetings for 1900, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 82.
Newgate
Mrs. Fry Visiting Newgate, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 55.
Newman, John Henry (Cardinal)
Cardinal Newman, 1801-1890, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1890; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 84.
Newquay
New Quay, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 43.
Nicholas II (Tsar)
The Czar at Balmoral: 24th Sept., 1896, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 53.
The Peace Conference, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1899.
The Tsar’s Manifesto: Aug. 30th, 1898, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1898; Westminster Gazette, 19 December 1898, p. 2.
Night see Evening
Nightingales
The Nightingale in Nightingale Valley, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 71.
The Nightingale of Lugano, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 66.
Nightingale Valley (Bristol)
On Finding the Wild Strawberry in Nightingale Valley, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 70.
The Nightingale in Nightingale Valley, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 71.
Nikolaevich, Alexei (Czarevitch)
At the Baptism of the Czarevitch, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 61.
Nile (The)
Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 1-148.
Nineteenth Century
To the Dying Century, Farewell!, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 9.
Noble, Alexander
The Ballad of the Violet May, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
November
November at the Lakes, Spectator, 59 (13 November 1886), p. 1527; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1886.
Nursing
The Workhouse Nurse, Carlisle Patriot, 3 December 1897, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1897.
Nutman, Willaim John
The “Aidar’s” Master, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 146-148.
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