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 It also includes numerous unpublished poems from the Rawnsley Archives.
Eagles
The Eagle, at the Zoological Gardens, Clifton, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 83.
Easter
An Old Conspiracy, Good Words, 31 (February 1890), p. 117; Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 181-185.
Crosthwaite Churchyard: Easter Morning, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1887.
Easter Day, 1915, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 197.
Easter Eve, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 79.
Good Friday, 1915, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 196.
Good Friday in Bristol, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 36.
Holiday Makers on Good Friday, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 78.
Lent-Lilies, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 64.
On Hearing Bells on Easter Morning, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 37.
Whitby Abbey: A Memory of the Synod 664, with its Settlement of the Easter Controversy, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 172.
Edward VI ( King)
An Anniversary, June 24th, 1903, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Hymn for the Anniversary of the King’s Coronation, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1903.
Hymn of Thanksgiving for the King’s Recovery, (Carlisle Archives, PR/120/125).
Hymns for the Coronation Day of their Majesties King Edward and Queen Alexandra, (Carlisle Archives, PR/120/125).
The Anniversary of the Coronation, Bath Chronicle and Weekly Gazette, 13 August 1903, p. 6; Carlisle Journal, 14 August 1903, p. 6.
The Coronation: (After), A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 33.
The Coronation: (Before), A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 32.
The Coronation Bonfires, June 30, 1902, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 28.
The Crowning of the King, August 9th, 1902, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1902; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 31.
The Delhi Durbar, January 1, 1903, Westminster Gazette, 10 January 1903, p. 2; Carlisle Journal, 13 January 1903, p. 6; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 41.
The King Dead, World, 10 May 1910, p. 795; Carlisle Journal, 13 May 1910, p. 6.
The King’s Funeral: A Retrospect, Carlisle Journal, 24 May 1910, p. 4.
The Skiddaw Bonfire, On the Evening of June 26th, 1902, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 29.
Egerton, Frederick Greville
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.
Egrets
My Feathered Lady, Nature Notes, 4 (December 1893), pp. 225-227.
The Egret’s Royal Charter, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1906; Nature Notes, 17 (June 1906), p. 105.
Egypt
Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile (1894) contains over sixty poems about Egypt. A complete list of the title of each poem can be viewed in the section on ‘Books by HDR’ in the Heading on this web site titled ‘Bibliography – HDR Publications’. Each individual poem will also have one or more entries in this Subject Index. Another poem on Egypt, written at a later date is:
Bilâl the Muedzzin, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 23-29.
Eiffel Tower
In Praise of Vulcan: II – The Eiffel Tower, Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, 147 (March 1890), p. 429; Living Age, 185 (19 April 1890), p. 130.
Elephantine
A Potsherd at Elephantine, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 139-141.
Elijah
Elijah at the Brook Cherith, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 186-189.
Elisabeth of Austria (Empress)
The Empress of Austria: In Memoriam, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October 1898.
Elisabeth of Bavaria (Queen of Belgium)
The Landing of the Queen of the Belgians, December 2nd, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 141.
Elliot, Ann
‘She gave us more than gold could buy’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 January 1900, p. 5.
Ellis, Thomas Edward
In Memoriam: Ellis, so full of fire and force and mirth’, South Wales Daily News, 8 April 1899, p. 6.
Elmhurst, Sophia Elizabeth (née Rawnsley – HDR’s aunt)
The Poet’s ‘Lilian.’ In Memory of S. E., Shawell, October 14th, 1889, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 132.
Emigration
Sunset and the Westmorland Emigrant, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 46.
Empire see India
Engelberg (Switzerland)
Abbot’s Day, May 15, Engelberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 38.
At the Sign of the ‘Angel’, Engelberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 36.
Blessing the Pastures on the Blachenalp, Engelberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 45.
Gold-Boden, Engelberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 39.
St. Florian, In the Monastery Church at Engelberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 44.
The Monastery, Engelberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 37.
To Engelberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 35.
Entef
Siste Viator, Ora Pro Nobis!, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 40-42.
Esau, Abraham
In Honour of Abraham Esau, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 7.
Eskmeals
Eskmeals, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 114; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 81.
Esthwaite Lake see Lakes
Evans, Edgar
In Memory of Petty Officer Edgar Evans, British Review, April 1913, p. 83.
To the Heroes of the Terra Nova, British Review, April 1913, p. 80.
Evening
A Calm Evening, from Ashley Hill, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 49.
A Sunset at Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 170.
Bristol by Gaslight, from Ashley Hill, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 50.
Clouds at Night Moving to the Sea, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Early Morn and Eventide, in Leigh Woods, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 69.
Evening at Sacro Monte, Varese, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 73.
Evening, By the Nile, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 64-65.
Evening from San Salvatore, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 65.
First Frost, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 15.
Home Thoughts at Sunset, Leysin, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 156.
June Twilight at Eversley, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 46-47.
Light at Eventide, Lugano, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 68.
Lights on Whitby Church Stairs, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 178.
Low-Wood, at Evening, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 42.
Moonlight at Pension Reitzel, Leysin, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 152.
Moon-Rise Over Wansfell, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 92.
Moonrise Mistaken for the Northern Lights, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 63.
Nature’s Evensong, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 54.
Night Watchers, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 66-68.
On Leaving Florence by Starlight, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 15.
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 After-Glow, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 83.
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 Gardens by Moonlight, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 135.
True Love; or, In St. Jude’s, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 86.
Twilight at La Prafondaz, Leysin, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 155.
Eversley
June Twilight at Eversley, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 46-47.
Ewing, James
The Ballad of the Violet May, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
Explorers
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.
At Livingstone’s Funeral, Westminster Abbey, April, 1874, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 58.
Sir John Franklin, Valete: Tennyson and Other Poems, 1893, p. 53.
To H. M. Stanley, Pall Mall Gazette, 26 April 1890, p. 2.
To Nansen – England’s Welcome, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
To Sir John Franklin, (By His Statue in the Spilsby Market-Place, At Night), Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 219.
To the Heroes of the Antarctic: A Sonnet Sequence, British Review, April 1913, pp. 80-84. [Individual sonnets in the sequence have been given individual titles as follows:
To the Heroes of the Terra Nove, p. 80
Memorial Service at St. Paul’s, February 14th, 1913, p. 81.
In Memory of Captain Scott, March 17th, 1912, p. 81.
In Memory of Captain Oates, p. 82.
In Memory of Dr. E. A. Wilson, Naturalist to the Scott Antarctic Expedition, p. 82.
In Memory of Lieutenant H. R. Bowers, Commissariat Officer to the Expedition, p. 83.
In Memory of Petty Officer Edgar Evans, p. 83.
The Heroes at Rest, p. 84.
To Commander E. R. G. Evans, Lieut. Campbell, Lieut. Bruce, Surgeon Atkinson, and the Survivors, p. 84.
To the Heroes of the Terra Nova, London Daily News, 12 February 1913, p. 6.
Factories
Blast Furnace at Ashton Iron Works, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 63.
The Hooter, or Steam-Horn, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 57.
Faido (Switzerland)
At Faido, on the St. Gothard, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 47.
Fairfield
Cloud-Rest on Fairfield, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 8.
Faith
Dead Man’s Pool, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 217-227.
Faith, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Falls of Foyers
‘Must Foyers fail, its thunders sound no more’, Nature Notes, 6 (October 1895), pp. 190-191.
Falmouth
Falmouth, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 23.
Farringford
Farringford, Isle of Wight, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 7; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 17.
On Leaving Farringford, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 12.; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 18.
Father Damien
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.
Favell, Rosellen Eliza
In Memoriam: Rosellen Eliza Favell, 13th August, 1908, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1908.
Fawcett, Thomas
A Farewell to Thomas Fawcett? of Wray on his Leaving for South Africa April 24th 1884, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
February
A February Song, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 36-37.
February, Sphere, 21 February 1914, p. 34.
February, Carlisle Journal, 5 February 1915, p. 8.
Fells see Mountains
Fens
The East Fen, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 217.
The Lincolnshire Marsh, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 21.
Ferguson, Richard Saul
At the Funeral of Chancellor Ferguson: Stanwix, March 7th, Carlisle Journal, 9 March 1900, p. 6.
Fieldfares
Fieldfares, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 74-75.
Fire
The Great Fire in Christmas Street, 1876, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 88.
Fire Fly
The Fire-Fly, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 56.
Fishing and Fishermen
A Retrospect. Off to the Fishing-Ground, Runswick, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 154.
After the Herrings, Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 173.
Char Fishers, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 58.
Herring Fishing: Clovelly, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Herrings Fine!, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 174.
In the Upper Harbour, Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 175.
Flamborough (Yorkshire)
Flamborough, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 205.
The Dane’s Dyke, Flamborough Head, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 204.
Fletcher, Alice
A Drear Night-Walk, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 162.
A Sad Communion, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 160.
A Valentine to the Lady Alice, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Alice Buried, February 26th, 1884, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 157.
Alice, February 24th, 1884, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 153.
Death the Enlightener, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 154.
Hymn: Sung at the Grave of A. F., Brathay Churchyard, February 26th, 1884, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, pp. 164-166.
In Brathay Churchyard, Valete: Tennyson and Other Poems, 1893, p. 158.
Present but Absent, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 159.
Star-Rising, Valete: Tennyson and Other memorial Poems, 1893, p. 163.
The Haunted Room, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 161.
The Rush of Death, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 155.
Vain Regrets, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 156.
Fletcher, Herbert (Brother of Alice Fletcher)
A Valentine to Sir Herbert, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Fletcher, William
Fletcher’s Fight, a Ballad of Nyasa Land, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 131-134.
Floods see Rain
Florence
On Leaving Florence by Starlight, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 15.
Flowers
A February Song, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 36-37.
Alpine Anemones in the Blumenthal at Murren, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 96.
Alpine Anemone-Seed, Leysin, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 157.
Clematis in Leaf on the Downs, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 78.
Dandelions and Daisies on the Downs; or, Jealousy, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 77.
Flora Day at Helston (Furry Day), May 8, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 34.
Foxgloves at Brandelhow, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 45.
Gold-Boden, Engelberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 39.
Heather on Lonscale, Aug. 18th, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 51-52.
Lent-Lilies, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 64.
May Day, in Sneyd Park Woods, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 79.
May-time on Monte Subasio, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 1-6.
On Finding the Wild Strawberry in Nightingale Valley, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 70.
Orange-Flowers at Baveno, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 57.
Pickering Moor, From Near Saltersgate, in Heather-Time, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 190.
Plucking Daisies; or, the Orphanage at the Foot of Ashley Hill, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 53.
Snowdrops by Esthwaite Lake, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, 81.
Sonnet Dedicatory to John Ruskin, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. vi.
Spring Crocuses in the Blumenthal, Murren, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 97.
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 Black Helebore (Christmas Rose), at Down House, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 114.
The Crocus Legions on the Rigi, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 21.
The Gentianella (Gentiana Verna), Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 116.
The Leven, and Rhododendrons at Lake Side, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 106.
The Pheasant-Eye Narcissus, Up Monte Motterone, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 62.
The Tropaeolum Speciosum, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 54.
The Witness of the Flowers, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 79.
To a Red Rose, Growing at Ashley Grange, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 115.
Violas on the Col de Balme, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 151.
Water-Lilies in Pullwyke Bay, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 12.
Wild Flowers on Loughrigg, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 97.
Yellow Poppies at Wray Castle, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 84.
Foch, Ferdinand (General)
General Foch, July 19, 1918, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
Forshaw, William Thomas (Lieutenant)
Lieutenant Forshaw’s Gallant Deed, Carlisle Journal, 29 October 1915, p. 8.
Forster, William Edward
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.
Forts see Castles
Foster, Thomas
Brave Pit Lads of Penicuick, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 202-205.
Fowler, Amy C. see Sister Rose Gertrude
Fox How
From Fox How, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 10.
Foxgloves
Foxgloves at Brandelhow, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 45.
France
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.
French Justice and God’s Truth, London Daily News, 12 September 1899, p. 6; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 16 September 1899, p. 4.
In Praise of Vulcan: II – The Eiffel Tower, Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, 147 (March 1890), p. 429; Living Age, 185 (19 April 1890), p. 130.
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.
The New Year’s Hope, 1899, Penrith Observer, 10 January 1899, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1899.
Franklin, Lady Jane
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).
To the Memory of Lady Jane Franklin, July 23rd, 1875, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 54.
Franklin, Sir John
Sir John Franklin, Valete: Tennyson and Other Poems, 1893, p. 53.
To Sir John Franklin, (By His Statue in the Spilsby Market-Place, At Night), Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 219.
Fraser, James (Bishop)
Bishop Fraser, October 22nd, 1885, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1883, p. 76.
Frederick III
Frederick III, Frederick III, Spectator, 61 (30 June 1888), p. 886; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 48.
The Crown of Thorns, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 44.
The Emperor Frederick, June 15th, 1888, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 47.
The Letter of Frederick III to Prince Bismarck, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1888; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 46.
Free Church of Scotland
The Church of the Free, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 60.
Freeman, P. T.
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.
Freshwater (Isle of Wight)
By the Barrow on Afton Down, Freshwater, Isle of Wight, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 11.
Fry, Elizabeth
Mrs. Fry Visiting Newgate, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 55.
Furness
A Launch from the Furness Docks, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 79.
Furness Abbey, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 111.
Hawkshead from Furness Fells, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 91.
The Crusader’s Tomb, Furness Abbey, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 89.
Gales see Wind
Garden City
The Garden City, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 79.
Gardens
In a Vicarage Garden, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, June 1908.
In the Wray Garden, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 111.
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.
Garvin, Roland Gerard (Lieutenant)
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.
Gascoyne-Cecil, Robert Arthur, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury
The Pilot’s Home-Going, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 34.
Gemmi Pass (Switzerland)
At the Sign of the Wildstrubel on the Gemmi, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 143.
Blanc-See and Daubensee, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 142.
On the Gemmi Road Above Gastern-Thal, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 140.
The Daubenhorn Cliffs Over the Gemmi, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 144.
Wayfarers on the Gemmi, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 141.
Gemstones
The Jet Worker, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 182.
Gentians
Sonnet Dedicatory to John Ruskin, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. vi.
The Gentianella (Gentiana Verna), Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 116.
George V (King)
God Save the King! European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 71.
Hymn for the Occasion of the Royal Marriage, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1893.
The King in France, November 30th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 129.
The King’s Appeal, March 31st, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 195.
Germany
German Hate, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
Louvain, August 25th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 50.
Rheims Cathedral, September 20th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 78.
The Chancellor’s Speech in the Reichstag, December 2nd, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 139.
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 Kaiser’s Letter to His Chancellor, Oct. 31, 1916, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 19 January 1917, p. 4.
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.
To Prussia, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 200-201.
To the Kaiser, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 17.
To the Kaiser, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 22.
To the Officer in Command at Aerschott, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 45.
What’s In a Name?, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 51.
‘Within our hearts is Teuton blood’, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1909.
Giant’s Cave (Bristol)
Pleasures of Imagination; or, the Jackdaws Above Ghyston Cave, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 76.
Gilpin, Bernard
Bernard Gilpin, 1517-1584, Northern Counties Magazine, 2 (April 1901), p. 2.
Giza (Egypt)
A Queen’s Gazelle (In the Gȋzeh Museum), Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 47-49.
Before the Statue of Chephren (Gȋzeh Museum), Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 39.
Mena House, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 25-26.
Morning Mist on the Great Pyramid, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 30-32.
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 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.
Glaciers
At the Upper Glacier, Grindelwald, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 108.
Gladstone, William Ewart
In Memoriam: Funeral of William Ewart Gladstone, May 28th, 1898, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, June 1898.
To W. E. Gladstone: Liverpool, September 24th, 1896, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 54.
To W. E. Gladstone, On His Eighty-Seventh Birthday, Westminster Gazette, 29 December 1896, p. 3.
Gladstone, William Glynne Charles
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.
Glaisdale (Yorkshire)
Beggar’s Bridge, Glaisdale, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 188.
In Glaisdale Wood, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 193.
Glendower, Owen
The Haunted Oak of Nannau, Pall Mall Magazine, 3 (July 1894), pp. 353-361.
Glenthorne
Glenthorne, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
To My Father / At Glenthorne, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Goathland (Yorkshire)
Goathland, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 192.
Goats
The Chamois of Lauterbrunnen, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 90.
Goblin Coombe
Goblin Combe, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 120.
Golf
On the Links, Saint Andrews, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 118.
Goodwin, Harry
At a Picture Exhibition, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1907.
Goodwin, Harvey (Bishop)
At Bishop Goodwin’s Grave, the Day After the Funeral, November 29th, 1891, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 88.
At the Bishop’s Grave, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1892; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 87.
We are the People of His Pasture and the Sheep of His Hand, Carlisle Journal, 27 November 1891, p. 5; Carlisle Patriot, 4 December 1891, p. 6; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 5 December 1891, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1891.
Gordon, Charles George
General Gordon, January 26th, 1885, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 56.
The Spirit of Gordon: A Sonnet on Omdurman, Lancashire Evening Post, 2 September 1898, p. 9; Bradford Daily Telegraph, 6 September 1898, p. 2; South Wales Echo, 6 September 1898, p. 3; Shields Daily News, 7 September 1898, p. 4; Durham County Advertiser, 9 September 1898, p. 3; Lowestoft Journal, 10 September 1898, p. 7.
Gosforth Cross
The Gosforth Cross, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 95.
The Runic Cross in Gosforth Churchyard, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 113.
Gospel (The)
The Imperishable Gospel. A Legend of the Solway, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1877, p. 109.
Gossamer
Gossamers on the Down, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 81.
Gotthard Pass
Over the St. Gothard, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 46.
Gowbarrow
At Yew Crag, Gowbarrow Fell, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1906.
Gowbarrow, An Appeal to the People of Leeds, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 80.
Grasmere
At the Grasmere Rushbearing. In Praise of St. Oswald, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
At the Wishing-Gate, Grasmere, New Year’s Day, 1915, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 158.
Grasmere, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 16.
Grasmere Revisited, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 48.
Grasmere Sports, Old Style, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 25.
The Vale of Rest, Grasmere 1920, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/8).
Grave, Robert
To the Memory of Robert Grave, the Village Weaver, 1891, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1891; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 138.
Gray, Percival
A River Tragedy, Barmouth, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 64-65.
Great Britain
To Great Britain, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 19-20.
Great Tit
The Great Tit, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 73.
Greece
Christmas in Crete, Cumberland and Westmoreland Herald, 31 December 1898, p. 7.
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.
The Chiffchaff’s Message, Nature Notes, 8 (June 1897), p. 116.
To Venizelos, Carlisle Journal, 13 October 1916, p. 8.
Green, John Richard
John Richard Green, 1837-1883, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 112.
Green, Thomas Hill
Thomas Hill Green, Oxford, March 26th, 1882, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 110.
Greenip, William
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.
Grenfell, Francis Octavius (Captain)
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.
Grey, Edward (Sir)
To Sir Edward Grey, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 18.
Grindal, Edmund
Archbishop Grindal, Founder of Saint Bees Grammar School 1587, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 98.
Grisdale, Alice
On Hearing of the Death of Alice Grisdale, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, June 1895.
Grosvenor, Hugh Lupus, 1st Duke of Westminster
Unveiling of the Rose-Window, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 35.
Gurnard’s Head (Cornwall)
Foam-Fringe at Gurnard’s Head, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 42.
Guyard, Auguste
Auguste Guyard, Barmouth, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 125.
Haggard, Mark (Captain)
Captain Mark Haggard, September 14th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 79.
Hallam, Arthur
Old Clevedon Churchyard, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 141.
Ham Green, Somerset
Ham Green; or, Reflection, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 68.
Hamilton, Mitchell
Brave Pit Lads of Penicuick, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 202-205.
Hamilton, Patrick (Captain)
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.
Hammond, George
Brave Little Lads of Lincolnshire, Yorkshire Evening Post, 31 December 1898, p. 5.
Hammond, Henry
Brave Little Lads of Lincolnshire, Yorkshire Evening Post, 31 December 1898, p. 5.
Hardisty, Mary Ann
To the Mother of Four Sons Gone to War, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
Hardy, Michael
Michael Hardy, Before the Redan—June 18, 1854, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 1-3.
Hardy, Theodore Bayley (Chaplain)
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).
Harford-Battersby, Thomas Dundas
In Memoriam: Thomas Dundas Harford-Battersby, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 28 July 1883, p. 5.
Harlech
Bronwyn the Fair, Harlech, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 73.
Harlech, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 72.
Harley, H. K. (Lieutenant)
Harley’s Eight, A Ballad of Chitral—April 16, 1895, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 127-130.
Harrison, Dorothy
Good-bye, Old Friend, Good-bye!, The Funeral, February 25th, 1890, Valete: Tennyson and Other memorial Poems, 1893, p. 135.
Last of the Dorothys that Rydal Knew, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 134.
Harrison, Martha
To the Memory of Martha Harrison, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1895.
Harvest Festivals
A Harvest Festival at Wray, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
A Harvest Hymn, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Harvest Thanksgiving, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 32.
Harvest Thanksgiving at St. Barnabas, Western Daily Press, 1876, 9 September, p. 3; A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 39.
Harwood, John
To Sir John Harwood, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 October 1894, p. 5.
Hatshepsut
Queen Hatasu, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 124-125.
Hatton, E. A.
In Honour of E. A. Hatton, Seaman of the Dunbar Castle”, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, p. 145.
Hawell, Joseph
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.
Hawkshead
Hawkshead Church, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 82.
Hawkshead from Furness Fells, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 91.
Heather
Heather on Lonscale, Aug. 18th, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 51-52.
Pickering Moor, From Near Saltersgate, in Heather-Time, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 190.
Heaven and Hell
“Chaäsing the Sun”; Or, “The Trak Wi’ the Terrible Naäme”, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 111-115.
Heliopolis
At Heliopolis, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 22-23.
The Obelisk at Heliopolis, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 23-24.
Helm Crag
Helm Crag, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 199.
The Lion and the Lamb: Or Helm Crag after a Shower, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 31.
Helston (Cornwall)
Flora Day at Helston (Furry Day), May 8, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 34.
Helvellyn
Helvellyn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 105.
Hemans, Felicia
Dovenest, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 43.
Henbury (Bristol)
Scene from Skittim Hill, Henbury. In Spring, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 121.
View of Henbury Plain, from Fern Hill, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 122; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 57.
Henderson, George Francis Robert
Colonel Henderson, Westminster Gazette, 11 March 1903, p. 2; Carlisle Journal, 13 March 1903, p. 6.
Hengwrt
At Hengwrt: April 5, 1904, In Memory of Francis Power Cobbe, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 53.
Henry of Battenberg (Prince)
A Royal Wedding: July 23, 1885, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1885.
At the Funeral of Prince Henry of Battenburg, 5th February, 1896, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1896.
Henry VI, King
At King Henry’s Chapel, Muncaster. Autumn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 112; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 82.
Herbert, Henry Howard, 4th Earl of Carnarvon
Lord Carnarvon, June 28th, 1890, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 64.
Heroes – see also Explorers; Mining Disasters; Railway Accidents; Sea and River Tragedies; War Heroes
A Brave Bishop, Zululand, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 66-69.
A Brave Doctor, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 87-89.
A Brave Postmistress, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 165.
A Hero of Walhalla, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 83-90.
Alice Ayres, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 10-12.
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.
Bishop Mannington: Massacred With His Followers in Masai Land, Central Africa, October, 1885, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 77.
Bishop Muldoon: At the Burning Theatre, Chicago, 30th December, 1903, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1904.
Brave Little Lads of Lincolnshire, Yorkshire Evening Post, 31 December 1898, p. 5.
Father Damien, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 65-69.
Father Damien, April 1889, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 57.
From the Rigi-Kulm, At Sunrise, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 19.
Murphy the Fireman, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 74-77.
“Old Charlie.” In Memory of Charles Bird, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1909.
Ram Buksh, the Leper, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 168-172.
Sister Rose Gertrude, Poems, Ballads, Bucolics, 1890, pp. 39-45.
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.
Herrings
After the Herrings, Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 173.
Herring Fishing: Clovelly, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Herrings Fine!, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 174.
Hewetson, Henry
In Memoriam: Henry Hewetson, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1895.
Hewetson, Mary
Hymn Written for the Occasion of the Opening of the Mary Hewetson Cottage Hospital, August 9th, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1892.
Hewison, Hereward
A Modern Viking, Newcastle, Western Australia, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 91-93.
Heywood, Oliver
To the Memory of Oliver Heywood, Manchester, March 17th, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Poems, 1893, p. 142.
High Close (Lake District)
The Sycamore at High Close, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 80.
Highton, Thomas
In Memoriam: T. E. Highton, Entered Rest Saturday, June 15th, 1907, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1907.
Hill, Octavia
Octavia Hill: August 13th, 1912, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1912.
Hinderwell (Yorkshire)
Hinderwell, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 151.
Hoar, Rockwood
Senator Hoar, 1906, Century, 72 (July 1906), p. 379; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 84.
Hoare, Frances Elizabeth
To Mrs Hoare. On Her Leaving St. John’s Parsonage, 26th June, 1901, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1901.
Hoare, John Newenham (Revd.)
In Memory of the Vicar of St. John’s, Keswick, 1st May, 1901, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1901.
Hodgson, Isaac Harvey (Lieutenant)
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).
Hogan, John (Sergeant)
How Lieutenant Leach and Sergeant Hogan Won the Victoria Cross, October 28th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 191-192.
Hogarth, Stephen
Hymn in Memory of the Bell-Master—Stephen Hogarth, West Cumberland Times, 7 December 1907, p. 2.
In Memory of the Bell-Master—Stephen Hogarth, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1907.
Hogg, James
On Reading, After His Death, Principal Shairp’s Last Public Lecture on Hogg, the Ettrick Shepherd, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 116.
Holbrook, Norman Douglas (Lieutenant)
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.
Home
A Memory, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 119-120.
A Return to the Lakes, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 40.
A Thought of Home in the Trenches, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW!, not dated – view full text).
Home, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 119.
Home from Italy, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1898; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 102.
Home from Lombardy, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1899; Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 163.
Home from Lucerne, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1912.
Home from the East, Among the Drigg Sand-Hills, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 86.
Homeward Bound. Midsummer, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 100.
‘I, in tranquil May-tide’s afterglow’, Maryport Advertiser, 3 June 1905, p. 6.; West Cumberland Times, 3 June 1905, p. 6.
“I Will Lift Up Mine Eyes to the Hills”, West Cumberland Times, 26 March 1904, p. 3; Millom Gazette, 31 March, 1904, p. 7.
To the River Greta, On Returning from Abroad, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 71.
Hope
Hope, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Hope (Sergeant)
At Caesar’s Camp, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 93.
Horne, Charles Silvester
In Memoriam: Silvester Horne, M.P., Westminster Gazette, 7 May 1914, p. 2.; Carlisle Journal, 12 May 1914, p. 6.
Horses
Death Aboard Our Transports, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 27.
Leaving Home. Mr. La Thangue’s Picture in the New Gallery, Living Age, 187 (25 October 1890), p. 194.
Starved to Death, at Ladysmith, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 147-148.
The Dying Charger, Royal Cornwall Gazette, 24 May 1900, p. 6; Church of England Pulpit and Ecclesiastical Review, 49 (26 May 1900), p. 252; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 26 May 1900, p. 5; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 184-185.
The End, The Animal’s Guardian, (March 1910); Fife Free Press and Kirkcaldy Guardian, 19 March 1910, p. 3; Cornishman, 24 March 1910, p. 3.
The Home of Rest for Horses, Middlesex and Surrey Express, 8 January 1900, p. 3; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 57.
The War-Worn Horses’ Appeal, Bournemouth Graphic, 13 April 1917, p. 5.
Hosan, Morgan
Hosan the Faithful, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 140-142.
Howard, Charles James Stanley, 10th Earl of Carlisle
In Memory of Lord Carlisle: Lanercost, January 24th, 1912, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1912.
Howard, Henry Charles
In Memoriam: Mr. Henry Howard, Penrith Observer, 11 August 1914, p. 7.
Huddart, Cymberline Alonso
A Gallant Midshipman, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 36-38.
Hunt, William Holman
The Triumph of the Innocents, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Hunt Cliff (Saltburn)
Beneath Huntcliff, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 131.
The Huntcliff, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 130.
Hymns
A Battle Hymn, Church Family Newspaper, 21 (27 March 1914), p. 10.
A Children’s Christmas Hymn, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1904.
A Funeral Hymn, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 104.
A Harvest Hymn, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
A Hymn in Memory of the Master of Balliol, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
A Hymn in Time of War, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 55.
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.
A Vesper Hymn, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 56.
Children’s Jubilee Hymn, Christian World Pulpit, 31 (8 June 1887), p. 367.
Church Congress Hymn, Church Family Newspaper, 13 (28 September 1906), p. 703.
Confirmation Hymns, St Kentigern’s, 16th March 1894, (Carlisle Archives, PR/120/125).
Consecration Hymn, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 28 March 1885, p. 5.
Funeral Hymn. Sung in the School Chapel at the Burial Service, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, p. 105.
Harvest Hymn, (Carlisle Archives, PR/120/125).
Hymn for St. Kentigern’s Day, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1894.
Hymn for the Advent of the Jubilee Year of Queen Victoria, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1886.
Hymn for the Anniversary of the King’s Coronation, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1903.
Hymn for the Armenian Relief Fund, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 59.
Hymn for the Occasion of the Re-Opening of the Church of St. John’s in the Vale, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1893.
Hymn for the Occasion of the Royal Marriage, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1893.
Hymn for the Pan-Anglican Congress, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 30 May 1908, p. 5.
Hymn for the Re-Opening of Buttermere Church, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1886.
Hymn for the Tercentenary of the Spanish Armada, Christian World Pulpit, 34 (23 July 1888), pp. 63-64; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1888.
Hymn in Loving Memory of John Ruskin, Coniston, January 25th, 1900, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 27 January 1900, p. 5.
Hymn in Memory of Lord Tennyson, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1892.
Hymn in Memory of Mary Walker, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1892.
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 of Thanksgiving for the King’s Recovery, (Carlisle Archives, PR/120/125).
Hymn on the Death of Annie Wilson, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1896.
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]
Hymn Written for the Occasion of the Opening of the Mary Hewetson Cottage Hospital, August 9th, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1892.
Hymns for the Coronation Day of their Majesties King Edward and Queen Alexandra, (Carlisle Archives, PR/12/125).
Hymns in Grateful and Loyal Memory of Her Most Gracious Majesty, The Queen, (Carlisle Archives, PR/120/125).
Hymns in Time of War, (Carlisle Archives, PR/120/125).
Hymns of Thanksgiving for the Ending of the War, (Carlisle Archives, PR/120/125).
‘King of the king of all the earths’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 14 May 1910, p. 8; Carlisle Journal, 24 May 1910, p. 6.
‘Lord God of love, here gathered now’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 12 September 1885, p. 5.
‘Lord, who before hast set’, Carlisle Journal, 20 July 1888, p. 6; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guadian, 21 July 1888, p. 5.
Memorial Hymn, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, not dated – view full text).
Special Hymn, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1885.
Thanksgiving and Coronation, (Carlisle Archives, PR/120/125).
The Church at Rest: A Hymn of Thanksgiving, (Carlisle Archives, PR/120/125).
The Warrior’s Funeral Hymn: In Memoriam Charles Haddon Spurgeon, Christian World Pulpit, 41 (17 February 1892), p. 99.
‘Thou, Who, at the marriage call’, Carlisle Journal, 30 December 1887, p. 6.
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.
We are the People of His Pasture and the Sheep of His Hand, Carlisle Journal, 27 November 1891, p. 5; Carlisle Patriot, 4 December 1891, p. 6; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 5 December 1891, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1891. [Harvey Goodwin]
‘When death in gentlest accent calls’, Westmorland Gazette, 22 February 1890, p. 8; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1890. [Mary Stanger]
- Hits: 911
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.
Cabot, Sebastian
The Vision That Helped Sebastian Cabot, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 48.
Caedmon
A Memory of Caedmon, Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 168.
Caer Gwyddno
The Buried City of Cardigan Bay, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 74.
Calgarth
The Haunted Hall at Calgarth, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 7.
Calixtus
Calixtus, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Campbell-Bannerman, Henry
To a Statesman: Bereaved August 30th, 1906, Westminster Gazette, 1 September 1906, p. 2; Lancashire Evening Post, 3 September 1906, p. 2.
Cannynge
“Tempora Mutantur.” Jefferies’ Book-Shop, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 19.
Cape, Joe
In Memoriam: Joe Cape, the Clogger, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March, 1893; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 143.
Carlisle
Dawn in the Abbey Precincts, Carlisle, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1909; Journal of the Fell and Rock Climbing Club, 1 (1909), p. 252.
The Birthday of a County Borough: Carlisle, April 1st, 1914, Carlisle Journal, 3 April 1914, p. 7.
Carlyle, Thomas
Carlyle, Chelsea, February 5th, 1881, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 193. p. 109.
Carr, Stanley Theodore (Lieutenant)
In Memoriam: Stanley Theodore Carr, Carlisle Journal, 13 October 1916, p. 7.
Cartmel, Walter
Hymn: In Memory of Walter Cartmel and Gerald Storey, Who Perished in Derwentwater, February 3rd, 1907, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1907.
Castel di Poggio (Italy)
Sabbath Dawn at Castel di Poggio, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 11-12.
Sunrise at Castel di Poggio, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 13.
Castles see also Monuments
At Buck Castle, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 109-110.
At the Castle, Thun, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 130.
Bamborough Castle, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 121.
Bronwyn the Fair, Harlech, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 73.
Chepstow Castle, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 130.
Dundry Tower, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 64.
Harlech, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 72.
In the Dungeon at Chillon, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 160.
Kendal Castle: or the Power of Tradition, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 30.
Mount St. Michael, Penzance, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 35.
Scarborough Castle, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 200.
The Giant of Mulgrave Dale, Sonnets Round the Coast, , 1887, p. 156.
To and From Mulgrave Castle, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 158.
Warkworth Castle Hill, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 124.
Wray Castle, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 6.
Cats
The Father of the Cats, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 14-16.
The Old-Fashioned “Tortossy” Cat, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 46-52.
Cattle
The Grave of “Old Rose”, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 85.
Cavell, Edith Louisa
Edith Cavell. Oct. 13th, 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, Unpublished, dated 1915 – view full text).
The Home-Coming of Nurse Cavell, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1919 – view full text).
Caves
Pigeon Hugo, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 32.
Chaffinch
The Chaffinch’s Nest at Dunnabeck, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 61-62.
Chamounix (Switzerland)
Going to Nettleship’s Grave, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 149.
To R. L. Nettleship, In Chamounix Churchyard, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 150.
Chance, Andrew Ferguson (Captain)
In Memoriam: Captain Andrew Ferguson Chance, Carlisle Journal, 12 October 1915, p. 6.
Char
Char Fishers, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 58.
Charity
Books for the Blind: An Appeal, Westminster Gazette, 16 April 1914, p. 2.
Charity, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Chatterton, Thomas
Chatterton, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 18.
Sonnet on Chatterton, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Chavasse, Noel Godfrey (Captain)
Captain Noel Godfrey Chavasse, V.C., R.A.M.C., Died of Wounds in France, August, 1917, Liverpool Echo, 15 August 1917, p. 3.
Chiddy, John
In Memoriam: John Chiddy, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 47.
Chiffchaff
The Chiff-Chaff, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1906; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 70.
The Chiff-Chaff, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 70-71.
The Chiffchaff’s Message, Nature Notes, 8 (June 1897), p. 116.
The Chiff-Chaff’s Return, Nature Notes, XIV (June 1903), p. 132.
Children
A Children’s Christmas Hymn, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1904.
Children On the Shore, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 209.
Children’s Hospital, Bristol, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 46.
Cripples’ Home, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 44.
In Vienna, Carlisle Journal, 30 December 1919, p. 4.
“Little Johnny,” at the Cripples’ Home, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 45.
Love’s Spring-Tide, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 5.
Mountain Scholars up the Vitznau-Stock, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 24.
Müller’s Orphanage, Ashley Down, 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.
Red Maids’ School, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 54.
The Children Are Singing in Kendal Town, Lakes Herald, 3 May 1895, p. 4.
The Children Gone, Balla-Wray, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 69.
The Children’s Day at Seascale. Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1908.
The Gordon Home: An Appeal, Spectator, 67 (15 August 1891), p. 225.
The Island Home. A Ballad of the East River, New York, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 101-110.
Chillon (Switzerland)
In the Dungeon at Chillon, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 160.
Choirs see Music
Christmas see also Keswick Old Folks Do
A Belfry Sermon on Christmas Morn., Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 77.
A Children’s Christmas Hymn, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1904.
A Christmas Holiday, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
A Christmas Message, 1902, Carlisle Journal, 26 December 1902, p. 6; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 39.
A Christmas Sonnet, Spectator, 60 (8 January 1887), p. 44.
A Christmas Thought, 1903, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 49.
A Happier Christmas: 1896, A Christmas Hope for Armenia, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Christmas, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 56.
Christmas, 1905, London Daily News, 25 December 1905, p. 6; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 84.
Christmas Bells, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 175-180.
Christmas Cheer for the Trenches, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 147.
Christmas Day at Halton, 1874, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Christmas Day, 1901, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 23.
Christmas Day, 1907, London Daily News, 25 December 1907, p. 4.
Christmas Day, 1916, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 23 December 1916, p. 4.
Christmas Day, 1919, Carlisle Journal, 26 December 1919, p. 7.
Christmas in Crete, Cumberland and Westmorland Herald, 31 December 1898, p. 7.
Christmas Without the Laureate, 1892, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 32.
Peace on Earth, Carlisle Journal, 24 December 1915, p. 8.
Peace Upon Earth, Xmastide 1918, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
The Choir Invisible: Christmas Day, 1900, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 215; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 8.
The Christmas Bells, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 146.
The Keswick Old Folks’ Dinner, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 57.
To England and America: A Christmas Greeting, Christian World Pulpit, 49 (1 January 1896), p. 11; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1896.
Church of England see also Free Church of Scotland
A Sonnet of the Welsh Church Bill: To Our Legislators, An Appeal, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 13 January 1913, p. 6.
At Saint William’s College, York, May 18, 1911, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 19 May 1911, p. 6.
Charity, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Church and State, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1885.
Church Congress Hymn, Church Family Newspaper, 13 (28 September 1906), p. 703.
Faith, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Flavel Cook v Jenkins, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 32.
Flavel Cook v Jenkins, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 33.
Hope, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Hymn for the Pan-Anglican Congress, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 30 May 1908, p. 5.
The Choosing of Matthias, Church Monthly, 3 (circa. January 1891); English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 31 January 1891, p. 5.
The Cry of the Women To Our Church Councillors, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 46.
The Pan-Anglican Congress, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1908.
To the Elders of the Church in Europe, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1897.
‘We keep Christ’s Day in Cumberland’, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1898.
Churches, Abbeys and Cathedrals
A Memory of Caedmon, Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 168.
A Sermon in the Church at St. Beatenberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, p. 118.
At Como Cathedral, Pliny’s Statue, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 77.
At Guisborough Abbey, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 141.
At King Henry’s Chapel, Muncaster. Autumn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 112.
At the Balcony of the Church of the Madonna del Sasso, Locarno, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 51.
At the Chapel of the Annunciation, Sacro Monte, Varese, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 72.
At the Chapel of the Madonna del Belmone above Taponacchio, Fobello, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 20.
At the Church of St. George, Shellal Mound, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
At the Monument of St. Benedict Above Einsiedeln, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 30.
At the Parish Church, Scarborough, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 201.
At Skelton Old Church, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 140.
‘Born of the love of Bridget when her soul’, West Cumberland Times, 16 December 1899, p. 2. [Re-Opening of Kirkbride Church]
Boston Church Tower, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 216.
Bristol Mission of 1877. On Hearing that Funds were Needed for the Completion of the Cathedral, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 140.
Clifton Hill. Clifton Parish Church, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 29.
Conscience the Founder, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1912.
Furness Abbey, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 111.
Going to Church at Ob-Bürgen, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 16.
Hawkshead Church, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 82.
In Milan Cathedral, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 75.
In Rugby Chapel, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
In the Choir of Gloucester Cathedral,: 9 June, Gloucester Journal, 15 June 1918, p. 3.
In the Church of S. Maria Degli Angioli, Lugano, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 67.
In the Refectory, Milan, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 76.
Lights on Whitby Church Stairs, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 178.
Middle Age; or, at Tintern Abbey, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 125; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 58.
Old Age Coming On; or, At Tintern Abbey, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, pp. 126-127; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 59.
Old Skegness Church, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 213.
On Laying the Foundation Stone of the New Church at Plumpton, All Saints’ Day, 1907, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1907.
On the Roof of the Duomo, Milan, at Anthem Time, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 74.
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.
Solitudo Continuata Dulcescit. An Inscription at the Gate of the Convent of the Madonna del Sasso, Locarno, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 50.
Spire of St. Mary Redcliffe, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 16; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 52.
St. Botolph’s Tower. The Sexcentenary of Boston Church, Boston Guardian, 19 June 1909, p. 9.
St. Florian, In the Monastery Church at Engelberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 44.
St. Mary Redcliffe, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 17.
St. Mary’s Church, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
St. Stephen’s Tower, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 22-23.
St. Werburgh’s Tower, Western Daily Press, 7 March 1876, p. 3; A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 24-25.
Sunset Lights on the Windows of Saint Mary’s Church, Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 180.
The Cathedral Service, Yorkshire Gazette, 28 August 1886, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1886.
The Chapel of Our Lady of the Snows at the Schwarz-See, Zermatt, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 147.
The Crusader’s Tomb, Furness Abbey, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 89.
The Monastery, Engelberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 37.
The Monte Sacro at Varallo, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 63.
The Nunnery of Lanherne, Mawgan, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 45.
The Old Parish Church, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1887.
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 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.
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.
Churchill, Winston
To Winston Churchill, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 28-31.
Churchyards, Cemetries, Tombs etc.
A Nameless Grave at Marske, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 129.
Arno’s Vale Cemetery, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 43.
At a Sowers Grave – Tyn y Ffynon – May 1897, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
At an Archbishop’s Grave, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
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.
Brathay Churchyard, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 49.
Churchyard Gate, at Abbot’s Leigh, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 66.
Crosthwaite Churchyard: Easter Morning, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1887.
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.
In Thun Churchyard, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 129.
Old Clevedon Churchyard, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 141; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 56.
St. James’ Churchyard, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, pp. 26-27.
The Churchyard, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 72.
The Crusader’s Tomb, Furness Abbey, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 89.
The Fiddler’s Funeral, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 95-97.
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 Grave, Edward Thring, Teacher and Poet, 1889, pp. 102-103.
The Miser’s Funeral, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 56.
The Runic Cross in Gosforth Churchyard, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 113.
The Tombstone of Heinrich von Strattlingen, the Bard, in the Bächihölzi, Thun, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 126.
The Village Carpenter, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 92-98.
The Wanderer’s Tomb on the Filey Heights, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 203.
The Widower from Latrigg, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 141-143.
To R. L. Nettleship, In Chamounix Churchyard, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 150.
Tomb of Thomas de Cottingham, Obiit 1300, Saint Bees, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 99.
Wordsworth’s Tomb, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 62.
Claife
The Crier of Claife, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 28.
Clematis
Clematis in Leaf on the Downs, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 78.
Cleopatra
A Portrait of Cleopatra, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 106.
Clevedon
Old Clevedon Churchyard, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 141; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 56.
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.
Cleveland (Yorkshire)
Cleveland, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 128.
Clifton
Clifton College Chapel / The Sunday of Return to School, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 30.
Clifton Hill. Clifton Parish Church, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 29.
Sermon in the College Chapel, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 31.
Clouds
Cloud-Rest on Fairfield, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 8.
Heaven’s Glory and Earth’s Peace, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1895.
Clovelly
Herring Fishing: Clovelly, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text)
Coal
Sea Coal, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 210.
Cobbe, Francis Power
A Birthday Greeting: To Miss F. P. Cobbe – Dec 3rd 1892, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
At Hengwrt: April 5, 1904, In Memory of Francis Power Cobbe, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 53.
At Hengwrt: May 18th 1897, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
At Hengwrt: The Guardian Cypress Trees, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Hengwrt: October 21st 1894, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
To Francis Power Cobbe: On Her 70th Birthday, Dec. 4th 1902, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Cockbain, Ann
In Memory of Ann Cockbain, November 14th, 1901, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1901.
Cockbain, Mark
Mark Cockbain: Laid to Rest in Crosthwaite Churchyard, Feb. 15th, 1905, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1905.
Cockbain, Mary
In Memory of Mary Cockbain, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1909.
Col de Balme (Switzerland)
Violas on the Col de Balme, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 151.
Coleridge, Hartley
Nab Cottage: A Memory of Hartley Coleridge, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 38.
Collis (Lieutenant)
Carbineers to the Rescue, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 47-50.
Colossi of Memnon
An Inscription on the Vocal Memnon, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 130-131.
How the Colossi Came to Thebes, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 126-129.
Quails and the Vocal Memnon, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 132.
Colston, Edward
Colston Honoured; or, True Conservatism, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 106.
Edward Colston. Born in this City, November 2, 1636, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 105.
Colthouse
Poplars at the Friends’ Meeting House, Colthouse, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 101.
Colville, William (Rev.)
To the Rev. W. Colville on His Leaving Keswick, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1889.
Como (Italy)
At Como Cathedral, Pliny’s Statue, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 77.
Conflicts and Battles see also Armenia, Boer War, Japan, Russia, World War 1
A Crosthwaite Hero in Matabele Land, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 25-27 [First Matabele War (1893-94)]
A Christmas Thought, 1903, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 49.
A Voice from Santa Sophia, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1912. [Bulgaria]
At the Baptism of the Czarevitch, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 61.
At Harlaw: July 24, 1914, Aberdeen Press and Journal, 25 July 1914, p. 6.
After the Battle of Mahuta, Idylls and lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 52.
Brave Beresford, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 17-19. [Anglo-Zulu conflict (1879)]
Captain Baird, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 23-24. [Chitral Expedition (1895)]
Fletcher’s Fight, a Ballad of Nyasa Land, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 131-134.
Harley’s Eight, A Ballad of Chitral—April 16, 1895, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 127-130 [Chitral Expedition (1895)]
Heroes of Chitral, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 20-22.
Hosan the Faithful, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 140-142. [Sudan]
In a Battery, Captain Peel, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 4-9 [Crimean War]
Jacob’s Well. An Incident in the Skirmish of Doornkop, Transvaal, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 138-139 [Jameson Raid (1896)]
Liao-Yang, Sept. 1st, 1904, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1904; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 62. [Russo-Japanese War]
Michael Hardy, Before the Redan—June 18, 1854, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 1-3 [Crimean War]
“On, Lads, On!”, London Daily News, 14 April 1898, p. 2. [Mahdist War]
Raika, “Queen of the Bulgarians”, Western Daily Press, 5 September 1876, p. 3.
Red Sunday in St. Petersburg, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (February 1905); A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 67.
Rumour of War, June, 1876. Kingsweston, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, pp. 118-119.
Schacke, the Brave, Daily Gazette for Middlesborough, 12 September 1896, p. 3. [Armenia]
Such As Sit in Darkness and in the Shadow of Death, Daily Gazette for Middlesborough, 12 September 1896, p. 3. [Armenia]
The Battle of Tsu-shima, May 27-28, 1905, Millom Gazette, 12 April 1906, p. 5. [Russia-Japan War]
The Cry of Macedonia, November, 1903, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1903; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 42.
The Drummer Boy of the Malakand Pass, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 124-126. [Chitral Expedition (1895)]
The Khalifa Dead! Om Debrikat, Nov. 23, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1899. [Sudan]
The Mahdi’s Message, March 11, 1884, Idylls and lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 148.
The Spirit of Gordon: A Sonnet on Omdurman, Lancashire Evening Post, 2 September 1898, p. 9; Bradford Daily Telegraph, 6 September 1898, p. 2; South Wales Echo, 6 September 1898, p. 3; Shields Daily News, 7 September 1898, p. 4; Durham County Advertiser, 9 September 1898, p. 3; Lowestoft Journal, 10 September 1898, p. 7. [Sudan – Omdurman]
The Tide of Love, New Year, 1904, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 50.
The Two Angels, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1912. [Balkan War]
The Warriors’ Death-Song, Wilson’s Last Stand, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 13-16 [First Matabele conflict (1893-94)]
To Admiral Togo, Tsushima, May, 27-28, 1905, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1905; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 73.
To the Honour of Trooper Frank William Baxter, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1896. [Second Matabele War 1896-1897]
To the Mikado: Portsmouth, USA, 29th August, 1905, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1905; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 77.
Voices from the Dust, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 66.
Conservation see also National Trust
Ashton Clump and Lansdown, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 61.
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.
‘Must Foyers fail, its thunders sound no more’, Nature Notes, 6 (October 1895), pp. 190-191.
Nature’s Gospel, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 3.
St. Werburgh’s Tower, Western Daily Press, 7 March 1876, p. 3; A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, pp. 24-25.
Stock Ghyll Barred. A Protest, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 17.
Thirlmere: Loss and Gain, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 October 1894, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1894.
The Cry of the Avon Banks, London Daily News, 1 October 1904, p. 6.
The Garden City, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 79.
The Gift of Leigh Woods to Bristol, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 86.
The Vision That Helped Sebastian Cabot, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 48.
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 London’s Heart: An Appeal for the Churchyard Bottom Wood, Highgate, Nature Notes, 8 (April 1897), p. 74.
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.
Cook, Flavel
Flavel Cook v Jenkins, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 32.
Flavel Cook v Jenkins, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 33.
Cook, James
A Nameless Grave at Marske, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 129.
Captain Cook: Boyhood at Staithes, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1877, p. 148.
Cook, James (Captain, son of the above)
A Nameless Grave at Marske, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 129.
Captain Cook: Boyhood at Staithes, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1877, p. 148.
Cooper, John (Archdeacon)
Archdeacon Cooper: In Memoriam, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1896.
Corals
Corals and Coral Islands. The Strikes. Lecture by Dr. Duncan, Colston Hall, March 6, 1876, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 108.
Cornwall
Sonnets of the Cornish Coast, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, pp. 21-46.
Cornwell, John Travers
In Memory of John Travers Cornwell. First Class Boy of H.M.S. ‘Chester’, The Battle of Jutland, May 31, 1916, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems of WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
Cows
Cowbells on the Rischeren Alp, Amisbuhl, Beatenberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 122.
Cremer, E. R. (Able-Seaman)
In Face of Death, Sept. 25th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 89-90.
Crewdson, William Dillworth
In Memoriam: W. D. Crewdson, January 13th, 1908, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1908.
Crete
Christmas in Crete, Cumberland and Westmoreland Herald, 31 December 1898, p. 7.
Crickets
In Butterfly-Land, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 114.
Crichton, Cyril (2nd Lieutenant)
Take Me Home, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 204-206.
Crocuses
Spring Crocuses in the Blumenthal, Murren, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 97.
The Crocus Legions on the Rigi, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 21.
Croft (Ambleside)
Croft, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 88.
Sybil’s Grotto: Or Rhododendrons at Croft, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 96.
Cromwell, Oliver
Honour to Whom Honour is Due, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Oliver’s Mount, Scarborough, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 202.
Crossley, Francis William
In Memoriam: Frank W. Crossley, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1897.
Crosthwaite
A Crosthwaite Belfry Song, January 1st, 1906, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1906; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 58.
Crosthwaite Churchyard: Easter Morning, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1887.
In a Vicarage Garden, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, June 1908.
The Old Parish Church, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1887.
Crosthwaite, John Fisher
In Grateful Memory of John Fisher Crosthwaite. Died June 2nd, 1897, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1897.
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.
Crosthwaite, Mrs.
A Happy Death, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 16 February, 1884, p. 5.
Cuckoos
The Cuckoo, April 19th 1917, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
The Cuckoo at Lucerne, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1891.
Windermere—Autumn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 4.
Cumberland see Lake District
Cumberland and Westmorland Association of London
‘Alas! your annual feast should come’, West Cumberland Times, 7 April 1906, p. 3.
To My Friends Well-Met, 31st March, West Cumberland Times, 7 April 1906, p. 3; Wigton Advertiser, 13 February 1909, p. 5.
Da Vinci, Leonardo
In the Refectory, Milan, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 76.
Dacre, Rosemary
The Ballad of Rosemarie; Or, the White Cockade, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 144-154.
Daffodils
Lent-Lilies, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 64.
Daisies
Dandelions and Daisies on the Downs; or, Jealousy, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 77.
Plucking Daisies; or, the Orphanage at the Foot of Ashley Hill, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 53.
Dalzell, Ernest Harford (Lance-Corporal)
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).
Dandelions
Dandelions and Daisies on the Downs; or, Jealousy, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 77.
Dane’s Dyke
The Dane’s Dyke, Flamborough Head, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 204.
Darling, Grace
Grace Darling, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 122.
Davy, Mary
A Cornish Saint, Mawgan. In Memoriam Mary Davy, Obiit May 18, 1884, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 46.
Dawn Chorus
The Chorus of the Dawn, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 67-68.
The Waking of the Birds, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 69.
Days of the Week
Good Friday in Bristol, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 36.
On Hearing the Birds Sing, Ash Wednesday Morning, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 35.
Sunday in Bristol, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 34.
The Sabbath, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Today, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Whit Monday, from Ashley Hill, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 38.
De Cottingham, Thomas
Tomb of Thomas de Cottingham, Obiit 1300, Saint Bees, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 99.
De Harcla (1st Earl of Carlisle)
The Undoing of De Harcla: A Ballad of Cumberland, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 26 December 1891, p. 5.
De Montfort, Eleanor
Eleanor de Montfort In Bristol Castle, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 4.
De Vet, Christiaan
To De Vet, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 209-210.
De Veuster, Josef see Father Damien
Dean, Harry
The Railway Heroes, London Daily News, 27 July 1898, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1898.
Death see also Memorial Poems
A Sad Letter, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 99-100.
Aȋsha’s Tears, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 8-10.
Consolation, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Crosthwaite Churchyard: Easter Morning, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1887.
Death the Befriender, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 45.
Death the Befriender, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 116-121.
Deserted by the Caravan, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 17-18.
Grand-Dad’s Annie, Dead, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 13-19.
In Thun Churchyard, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 129.
The Fiddler’s Funeral, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 95-97.
The Miser’s Funeral, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 56.
The Old Partner’s Gone, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 34-38.
The Village Carpenter, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 92-98.
The Village Dance at Adelboden, A Sad Face, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 137.
The Young Herdsman’s Death, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 103.
December
The Seasons, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 33-35.
Deer
The Royal Buck-Hounds: A Deputation to Windsor, Nature Notes, 8 (January 1897), p. 11.
The Stag Impaled, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 106.
Denderah (Egypt)
A Portrait of Cleopatra, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 106.
At Denderah, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 104-105.
Dergent, Pieter Jozef (Pastor)
The Martyrdom of Father Dergent, Aerschott, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 46-47.
Dervish
The Dancing Dervishes, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 5-6.
Dialect Poems (Lake District)
A Keswick Voter, Christmas 1909, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 1 January 1910, p. 5.
Auld Ganny’s Cursmas Teal, Cumberland and Westmorland Herald, 30 December 1911, p. 1.
Comin’ Yham Fra T’ Front, Carlisle Journal, 28 December 1917, p. 7.
‘Dar bon! but it were gude to hear’, Carlisle Journal, 31 December 1918, p. 8; Wigton Advertiser, 4 January 1919, p. 3.
‘Dar bun! Parrish Cooncils can deu out they like’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 29 December 1894, p. 4.
Old Mary’s Secret, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 29 December 1906, p. 4; West Cumberland Times, 29 December 1906, p. 2.
‘Oor Jack he cam’ fra ower t’ sea’, Carlisle Journal. 6 January 1920, p. 6.
Oor Lad Wha Nobbut Cooms I’ Dreams, Carlisle Journal, 29 December 1916, p. 7; Penrith Observer, 3 January 1917, p. 6.
T’ Ald Fwoake’s Dinner, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 3 January 1885, p. 4.
T’ Auld Fwoks’ Cursmas Do, Carlisle Journal. 1 January 1904, p. 3; West Cumberland Times, 2 January 1904, p. 3.
T’ Auld Fwoks’ Kessick Do—Cursmas, 1913. Carlisle Journal, 2 January 1914, p. 5.
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.
T’ Kessick Auld Fwokes’ Do, 1905, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 30 December 1905, p. 5; West Cumberland Times, 30 December 1905, p. 3.
T’ Oald Fwoks’ Cursmas Dea, 1904. Barns Yance Agean, West Cumberland Times, 7 January 1905, p. 3. [This is the correct version of the poem first published in the same newspaper on 31 December 1904.]
The Secret of Old Age, Cumberland and Westmorland Herald, 28 December 1901, p. 5; West Cumberland Times, 28 December 1901, p. 5.
Dialect Poems (Lincolnshire)
A Farm-Yard Soliloquy, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 197-201.
A Libel, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 190-192.
A Sad Letter, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 99-100.
At the Ram-Show Dinner. After the Member’s Speech, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 244-245.
“Chaäsing the Sun”; Or, “The Trak Wi’ the Terrible Naäme”, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 111-115.
Dreeams, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 63-64.
Grand-Dad’s Annie, Dead, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 13-19.
In the Pig Market, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 90-91.
Lincolnshire Witches, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 130-135.
New Fangledy Waäys, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 228-237.
Old Times, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 122-129.
The Evil Eye, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 70-73.
The Fox and Hound, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 214-216.
The Monkey-O’-Herse-Back Methody Man, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 79-85.
The Old-Fashioned “Tortossy” Cat, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 46-52.
The Old Partner’s Gone, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 34-38.
Dickens, Charles
In Honour of Charles Dickens: February 7th, 1912, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1912.
Digby, Walter
The Greater Love: The Heroes of East Ham—July 1, 1895, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 35-36.
Disraeli, Benjamin
At Hughenden, April 19th, 1881, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 61.
Dobinson, Henry Hughes (Archdeacon)
‘We keep Christ’s Day in Cumberland’, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1898.
Dogs
The Royal Buck-Hounds: A Deputation to Windsor, Nature Notes, 8 (January 1897), p. 11.
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).
We Meet at Morn, My Dog and I, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 91-92.
Dolgelly
The Torrent Walk, Dolgelly, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 71.
Dodd, William
Dodd, the Hero of Audley Mine, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 110-113.
Dovenest
Dovenest, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 43.
Downs (Bristol)
Clematis in Leaf on the Downs, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 78.
Dandelions and Daisies on the Downs; or, Jealousy, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 77.
Gossamers on the Down, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 81.
Selfishness; or, Quiet on the Downs, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 82 Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 54.
Drake, Sir Francis
Sir Francis Drake, The Hoe, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 18.
Drakestone Edge
Drakestone Edge, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, pp. 136-137; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 60.
Dreams
Dreeams, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 63-64.
Dreyfus, Alfred
French Justice and God’s Truth, London Daily News, 12 September 1899, p. 6; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 16 September 1899, p. 4.
Drigg
Home from the East, Among the Drigg Sand-Hills, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 86.
Drought
The Drought, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Druids
The Druid Stone Near Millbeck, Seascale, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 88.
Dundry Tower
Dundry Tower, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 64.
Dunes
Home from the East, Among the Drigg Sand-Hills, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 86.
Dunmail Raise
Dunmail Raise, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 18.
Dunnabeck
A Prisoner At Dunnabeck, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 97.
At Dunnabeck, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 103-104.
The Bible of Peace, Dunnabeck, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 215.
Dunne, John Francis
The Bugler’s Wish, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 116-117.
Durrant, Robert
The Greater Love: The Heroes of East Ham—July 1, 1895, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 35-36.
- Hits: 909
1870
The Wooing of the North Wind: Its Beginning and End, Uppingham School Magazine, June 1870, pp. 147-157.
1876
St. Werburgh’s Tower, Western Daily Press, 7 March 1876, p. 3.
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.
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.
Raika, “Queen of the Bulgarians”, Western Daily Press, 5 September 1876, p. 3.
Harvest Thanksgiving at St. Barnabas, Sept. 5, 1876, Western Daily Press, 1876, 9 September, p. 3.
1877
“The Miners’ Rescue”. Troedyrhiw Colliery, Rhondda Vale, Glamorganshire, April 20, 1877: A Poem. (Published as a pamphlet).
1883
In Memoriam: Thomas Dundas Harford-Battersby, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 28 July 1883, p. 5.
‘Some good friends have said the parson’s a sinner’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 29 December 1883, p. 4.
‘Old last year’s friends brought together’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 29 December 1883, p. 5. [Poem written with Edith Rawnsley]
1884
A Happy Death, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 16 February, 1884, p. 5.
‘Blind was the storm, from wild Atlantic brought’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 21 June 1884, p. 5.
‘Now from the sacred grove of Borrowdale’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 21 June 1884, p. 5.
‘Ill could we spare the Tree St. Patrick knew’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 21 June 1884, p. 5.
Seascale Memories, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (August 1884).
1885
T’Ald Fwoake’s Dinner, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 3 January 1885, p. 4.
A Royal Wedding: July 23, 1885, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (August 1885).
Church and State, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (December 1885).
1886
‘Once more, from hall and cottage home, we meet’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 2 January 1886, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (February 1886).
A Cry for Ireland, Spectator, 59 (13 March 1886), p. 355.
In Memoriam: M. S. Rooke. Obiit March 26, 1886, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (April 1886).
In Memoriam: W. E. Forster. Obiit April 5, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 24 April 1886, p. 5.
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).
August in the Keswick Vale, Spectator, 59 (31 July 1886), p. 1022; Westmoreland Gazette, 7 August 1886, p. 3; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (August 1886).
The Cathedral Service, Yorkshire Gazette, 28 August 1886, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1886).
The Banquet, Yorkshire Gazette, 28 August 1886, p. 6.
In Memoriam: September 9, 1886, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (October 1886). [Poem on the death of Edward Rathbone]
In Memoriam: September 9, 1886, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (October 1886). [Poem on the death of James Spencer-Bell]
November at the Lakes, Spectator, 59 (13 November 1886), p. 1527; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (November 1886).
So Songolo: The Crosthwaite Boy on Lake Nyasa, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (December 1886).
1887
A Christmas Sonnet, Spectator, 60 (8 January 1887), p. 44.
1887, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1887).
The Old Parish Church, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (February 1887).
Sea Gulls at St. Bees, Carlisle Journal, 25 March 1887, p. 6.
The Jubilee—A Retrospect, Aberdeen Press and Journal, 16 April 1887, p. 8; Pall Mall Gazette, April 1887; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (June 1887).
A Rainless April, Spectator, 60 (23 April 1887), p. 558.
April with Rain – A Sequel, Spectator, 60 (30 April 1887), p. 590; Carlisle Journal, 20 May 1887, p. 6.
Crosthwaite Churchyard: Easter Morning, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (May 1887).
July at the Lakes, Spectator, 60 (16 July 1887), p. 959; Carlisle Journal, 5 August 1887, p. 6.
August at the Lakes, Spectator, 60 (6 August 1887), p. 1057.
On Hearing a Sermon by the Rev. Phillips Brooks, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (August 1887).
Jubilee Bonfires—Prospect, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1887).
Jubilee Bonfires—Retrospect, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1887).
Edward Thring, Spectator, 60 (5 November 1887), p. 1488.
‘For rich or poor or high or low’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 31 December 1887, p. 4.
1888
The Legend of St. Bees, The Scots Magazine, 1 January 1888, p. 47 [These verses are taken from a much longer poem published in full in Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 155-167.]
The Letter of Frederick III to Prince Bismarck, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (April 1888).
A Sonneteer at the New Gallery, Pall Mall Gazette, 17 May 1888, p. 14.
Life thro’ Death: St. Helen’s Colliery Explosion, Thursday, April 19th, 1888, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (May 1888).
Frederick III, Spectator, 61 (30 June 1888), p. 886.
The Ballad of the ‘Cleopatra’, Cornhill Magazine, 11 (August 1888), pp. 151-156.
Glen Almond, Spectator, 61 (25 August 1888), p. 1162.
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).
1889
New Year Joy, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1889).
Ned Brown: Killed at His Post, Thornthwaite Mines, January 8th, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (February 1889).
John Bright, Murray’s Magazine, 5 (May 1889), p. 660.
Father Damien, Macmillan’s Magazine, 60 (July 1889), p. 182; Westmoreland Gazette, 6 July 1889, p. 3.
To Lord Tennyson: On His Eightieth 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).
In Memoriam: Horatius Bonar D.D., Good Words, 30 (October 1889), p. 695; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (October 1889).
To the Rev. W. Colville on His Leaving Keswick, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (November 1889).
Robert Browning: Westminster Abbey, December 30th, 1889, Pall Mall Gazette, 31 December 1889, p. 2.
1890
Robert Browning, Westminster Abbey, December 30th, 1889, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 4 January 1890, p. 5. [Same poem as the entry above]
In Memoriam: Bishop Lightfoot, Westmoreland Gazette, 4 January 1890, p. 8.
Westminster Abbey, Critic, 13 (25 January 1890), p. 46.
St. Kentigern’s Spinners Song, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 25 January 1890, p. 4; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (February 1890).
In Memoriam: Margaret Mitchell, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1890).
To Sister Rose Gertrude, Pall Mall Gazette, 3 February 1890, p. 2; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 15 February, 1890, p. 4.
An Old Conspiracy, Good Words, 31 (February 1890), p. 117.
The Poet’s Home-Going, Murray’s Magazine, 7 (February 1890), pp. 145-150.
A Memory: M. S., Obiit Fieldside, Keswick, February 5, 1890, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (March 1890).
In Praise of Vulcan: I – The Forth Bridge, Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, 147 (March 1890), p. 429; Review of Reviews, 1 (March 1890), p. 203; Living Age, 185 (19 April 1890), p. 130.
In Praise of Vulcan: II – The Eiffel Tower, Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, 147 (March 1890), p. 429; Living Age, 185 (19 April 1890), p. 130.
To H. M. Stanley, Pall Mall Gazette, 26 April 1890, p. 2.
The Mavis and the Merle, Nature Notes, 1 (April 1890), p. 49.
Spring the Beloved, Spectator, 64 (3 May 1890), p. 624; Living Age, 187 (25 October 1890), p. 706.
Merry little Maidens, Oh!, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 3 May 1890, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (June 1890).
The Starling, Nature Notes, 1 (May 1890), p. 72.
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).
Dean Oakley, June 10th, 1890, Penrith Observer, 17 June 1890, p. 7; Carlisle Diocesan Magazine, 1 (September 1890), p. 37.
A Welcome to Stanley, Muray’s Magazine, 7 (June 1890), pp. 734-741.
To H. M. Stanley and Miss D. Tennant, Pall Mall Gazette, 12 July 1890, p. 4.
The Fell Shepherd’s Death, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (August 1890).
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.
Cardinal Newman, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1890).
Leaving Home. Mr. La Thangue’s Picture in the New Gallery, Living Age, 187 (25 October 1890), p. 194.
Village Naturalist, 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).
1891
‘O good New Year, we clasp’, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1891).
The Wreck of the “Ocean-Queen.” To the Heroes of Colwyn Bay. November 7th, 1890, MacMillan’s Magazine, 63 (January 1891), pp. 189-91.
The Choosing of Matthias, Church Monthly, 3 (circa. January 1891); English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 31 January 1891, p. 5.
To the Memory of Robert Grave, the Village Weaver, 1891, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (February 1891).
Joseph Hawell, February 20th, 1891, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 28 March 1891, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April, 1891.
In Memoriam: Archbishop Magee, Carlisle Diocesan Magazine, 1 (May 1891), p. 182; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (June 1891).
The Cuckoo at Lucerne, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (May 1891).
The Waking of the Birds, Nature Notes, 2 (15 May 1891), p. 84.
‘First cleanly be, and last be clean as well’, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (July 1891).
In Memoriam: Alice Lietch, Died at Derwent Bank, July 13th, 1891, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (August 1891).
The Gordon Home: An Appeal, Spectator, 67 (15 August 1891), p. 225.
In Memoriam: Henry Irwin Jenkinson, August 28th, 1891, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 5 September 1891, p. 4; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1891).
The Undoing of De Harcla: A Ballad of Cumberland, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 26 December 1891, p. 5.
1892
At the Bishop’s Grave, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1892).
A Traveller’s Tale, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 2 January 1892, p. 5.
The Dead Prince, Jan. 14, 1892, Pall Mall Gazette, 15 January 1892, p. 1; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (February 1892).
The Crown of Tears. St. George’s Chapel, Windsor, 20th January 1892, Pall Mall Gazette, Literary Supplement, 28 January 1892; Reading Mercury, 30 January 1892, p. 2; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (March 1892).
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.
A Ballad of Port Blair, Atalanta, 5 (March 1892), pp. 332-333.
The Bitter Cry of Brer Rabbit, Cornhill Magazine, 18 (May 1892), pp. 541-543.
The First Swallow, Nature Notes, 3 (May 1892), p. 92; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (May 1892).
‘Humble of heart, and unto all a friend’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 22 October 1892, p. 5.
“Well done, ‘Calliope’!”, Atalanta, 6 (November 1892), pp. 130-131.
Leaving Aldworth: Oct. 11, 1892, Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, 152 ((November 1892), p. 768.
The Laureate Dead, Academy, (November 1892); Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (November 1892); Living Age, 195 (17 December 1892), p. 706.
In Memory of the Old Folks Passed Away, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 31 December 1892, p. 5.
1893
In Memory of the Old Folks Passed Away, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1893). [Same poem as the above]
In Memoriam: Joe Cape, the Clogger, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (March 1893).
In Memoriam: Robert Slack, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (October 1893).
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.
Poet’s Death-Chamber, Dial, 15 (1 November 1893), p. 267.
John Greenleaf Whittier, Dial, 15 (1 November 1893), p. 267.
My Feathered Lady, Nature Notes, 4 (December 1893), pp. 225-227.
1894
‘Now let the ocean wanderers, going free’, Lakes Herald, 5 January 1894, p. 4.
‘We ask for those unresting thousands, rest’, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (May 1894).
My Friend the Starling, Nature Notes, 5 (May 1894), p. 89.
John Greenleaf Whittier, Critic, 21 (23 June 1894), p. 422.
The Haunted Oak of Nannau, Pall Mall Magazine, 3 (July 1894), pp. 353-361.
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.
Thirlmere: Loss and Gain, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 October 1894, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (November 1894).
Matthew Arnold: In Laleham Churchyard, April 1888, Sheffield Weekly Telegraph, 27 October 1894, p. 27.
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.
‘Dar bun! Parrish Cooncils can deu out they like’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 29 December 1894, p. 4.
1895
The New Year, 1895, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1895).
Heaven’s Glory and Earth’s Peace, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (April 1895).
When Spring and the Throstle Come Back from the Sea, Nature Notes, 6 (April 1895), p. 66.
The Children Are Singing in Kendal Town, Lakes Herald, 3 May 1895, p. 4.
A May Song, West Cumberland Times, 11 May 1895, p. 2.
On Hearing of the Death of Alice Grisdale, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (June 1895).
In Memoriam: Henry Hewetson, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (July 1895).
To the Memory of Martha Harrison, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (August 1895).
A Welcome to the Kaiser at Dunmail Riase, Penrith Observer, 20 August 1895, p. 5; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1895).
‘Must Foyers fail, its thunders sound no more’, Nature Notes, 6 (October 1895), pp. 190-191.
To the Memory of Bishop Chauncy Maples, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (November 1895).
The Rhyme of the Keswick Old Folks’ Dinner, 1895’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 28 December 1895, p. 4.
1896
To England and America: A Christmas Greeting, Christian World Pulpit, 49 (1 January 1896), p. 11; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1896).
A New Year’s Greeting, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1896).
At the Funeral of Prince Henry of Battenburg, 5th February, 1896, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (March 1896).
To the Honour of Trooper Frank William Baxter, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (May 1896).
Archdeacon Cooper: In Memoriam, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (August 1896).
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.
Such As Sit in Darkness and in the Shadow of Death, Daily Gazette for Middlesborough, 12 September 1896, p. 3.
Schacke, the Brave, Daily Gazette for Middlesborough, 12 September 1896, p. 3.
In Memory of September 23, 1896, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (October 1896).
Archbishop Benson, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (November 1896).
Written for the Opening of the “Victoria” Working Men’s Reading Room, Keswick, November 28th, 1896, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (December 1896).
Noble Sport, Nature Notes, 7 (December 1896), p. 256.
In Honour of William Thompson Stephenson, West Cumberland Times, 26 December 1896, p. 4.
To W. E. Gladstone, On His Eighty-Seventh Birthday, Westminster Gazette, 29 December 1896, p. 3.
1897
A New Year’s Greeting, 1897, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1897).
The Royal Buck-Hounds: A Deputation to Windsor, Nature Notes, 8 (January 1897), p. 11.
In Memory of Acting Consul-General Phillips, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (February 1897).
Poem, Daily Chronicle, 11 March 1897; Star, 11 March 1897.
The Pigeons’ Sanctuary, Nature Notes, 8 (March 1897), p. 52.
In Memoriam: Frank W. Crossley, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (April 1897).
To London’s Heart: An Appeal for the Churchyard Bottom Wood, Highgate, Nature Notes, 8 (April 1897), p. 74.
In Memoriam: Charles Gore Ring, Medical Officer of Health for Keswick, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (May 1897).
The Chiffchaff’s Message, Nature Notes, 8 (June 1897), p. 116.
‘Now let the stars from heaven to earth be shed’, West Cumberland Times, 19 June 1897, p. 6.
In Grateful Memory of John Fisher Crosthwaite. Died June 2nd, 1897, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (July 1897).
To the Elders of the Church in Europe, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (August 1897).
A Song of Life, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (November 1897).
The Workhouse Nurse, Carlisle Patriot, 3 December 1897, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (December 1897).
1898
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.
‘We keep Christ’s Day in Cumberland’, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1898).
To John Ruskin on His 79th Birthday, Nottinghamshire Guardian, 12 February 1898, p. 4.
A Spring Song at the Lakes, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (February 1898).
Born in Our Monster Babylon, Dial, 24 (1 March 1898), p. 156.
King Alfred the Great, London Daily News, 19 March 1898, p. 6.
“On, Lads, On!”, London Daily News, 14 April 1898, p. 2.
The Blackbird Dead, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (April 1898).
The Altar of Fashion: A Picture by G. F. Watts, R.A., Nature Notes, 9 (May 1898), p. 81.
To America, Penrith Observer, 10 May 1898, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (May 1898).
In a Gullery, Nature Notes, 9 (June 1898), p. 109.
In Memoriam: Funeral of William Ewart Gladstone, May 28th, 1898, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (June 1898).
Home from Italy, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (July 1898).
The Railway Heroes, London Daily News, 27 July 1898, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (August 1898).
The Spirit of Gordon: A Sonnet on Omdurman, Lancashire Evening Post, 2 September 1898, p. 9; Bradford Daily Telegraph, 6 September 1898, p. 2; South Wales Echo, 6 September 1898, p. 3; Shields Daily News, 7 September 1898, p. 4; Durham County Advertiser, 9 September 1898, p. 3; Lowestoft Journal, 10 September 1898, p. 7.
The Tsar’s Manifesto: Aug. 30th, 1898, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1898); Westminster Gazette, 19 December 1898, p. 2.
The Empress of Austria: In Memoriam, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (October 1898).
Here’s to Kitchener, Daily Gazette for Middlesborough, 30 November 1898, p. 2.
To the Sirdar—A Welcome Home, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (November 1898).
Doll and the Starling: A Morning Call, Nature Notes, 9 (November 1898), p. 203.
A Farewell to Lord Kitchener, Wells Journal, 15 December 1898, p. 2.
Christmas in Crete, Cumberland and Westmoreland Herald, 31 December 1898, p. 7.
‘Our bridges now are breaking down’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 31 December 1898, p. 5.
Brave Little Lads of Lincolnshire, Yorkshire Evening Post, 31 December 1898, p. 5.
1899
The New Year’s Hope, 1899, Penrith Observer, 10 January 1899, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1899).
‘They who, with sight of Death, see Duty clear’, Westminster Gazette, 24 January 1899, p. 2; Peterborough Advertiser, 1 February 1899, p. 3.
The Peace Conference, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (February 1899).
To John Ruskin: On His 80th Birthday, 8th February, 1899, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (March 1899).
‘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.
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: Ellis, so full of fire and force and mirth’, South Wales Daily News, 8 April 1899, p. 6.
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.
To Victoria: A Birthday Greeting, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (June 1899).
Home from Lombardy, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (July 1899).
French Justice and God’s Truth, London Daily News, 12 September 1899, p. 6; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 16 September 1899, p. 4.
The Leonids and Ladysmith, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 18 November 1899, p. 5.
An Estcourt Hero, South Wales Echo, 21 November 1899, p. 2.
The Khalifa Dead! Om Debrikat, Nov. 23, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (December 1899).
A Hero of Belmont: November 23, 1899, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 2 December 1899, p. 5.
After the Battle, Daily Gazette for Middlesborough, 8 December 1899, p. 3.
‘Born of the love of Bridget when her soul’, West Cumberland Times, 16 December 1899, p. 2.
A Man of Straw at Ladysmith, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 30 December 1899, p. 5.
War and the Old Folks’ Creed, 1899, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 30 December 1899, p. 5.
1900
Harassed Horses, Middlesex and Surrey Express, 8 January 1900, p. 3.
At William Unwin’s Grave, Crosthwaite, Jan. 11th, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 January 1900, p. 4.
‘She gave us more than gold could buy’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 January 1900, p. 5.
‘He’s an absent-minded beggar — that’s no reason we should take’, Whitby Gazette, 19 January 1900, p. 8.
To the Men of the Border Regiment, Cumberland Sends Thanks and Greetings for 1900, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 20 January 1900, p. 5.
John Ruskin. At Rest, Brantwood—Sunday, January 21st, 1900, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (February 1900); Saint George: The Journal of the Ruskin Society of Birmingham, III (April 1900), p. 74.
At Ruskin’s Grave, Wells Journal, 1 February 1900, p. 2. [Three stanzas from the longer poem, ‘At Ruskin’s Funeral’, published in April in Saint George: The Journal of the Ruskin Society of Birmingham – see below.]
At Ruskin’s Grave: On His Birthday, February 8, 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.
‘Tenderly down the hill we bore them’, Westminster Gazette, 21 February 1900, p. 2; Southend Standard and Essex Weekly Advertiser, 22 February 1900, p. 5; Gloucester Citizen, 22 February 1900, p. 3; Carlisle Journal, 23 February 1900, p. 6.
To General Buller, South Wales Daily News, 3 March 1900, p. 6.
At the Funeral of Chancellor Ferguson: Stanwix, March 7th, Carlisle Journal, 9 March 1900, p. 6.
‘I am the mistress of the post’, Manchester Times, 30 March 1900, p. 14.
At Ruskin’s Funeral, Saint George: The Journal of the Ruskin Society of Birmingham, III ((April 1900), pp. 76-79.
‘Joubert is dead! far off the whisper ran’, Westminster Gazette, 2 April 1900, p. 2; Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser, 7 April 1900, p. 15.
St. George’s Day, April 23rd, 1900, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (May 1900).
The Dying Charger, Royal Cornwall Gazette, 24 May 1900, p. 6; Church of England Pulpit and Ecclesiastical Review, 49 (26 May 1900), p. 252; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 26 May 1900, p. 5.
A Brave Trumpeter, Westminster Gazette, 23 August 1900, p. 2.
In Memory of William Wilson, Keswick Hotel, 8th Oct., 1900, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 13 October 1900, p. 5; Cumberland and Westmoreland Herald, 13 October 1900, p. 5.
To Sir Redvers Buller: A Welcome Home, London Daily News, 10 November 1900, p. 3.
At the Last Old Folks’ “Do” of the Century, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 29 December 1900, p. 4.
1901
At the Old Sexton’s Grave, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 12 January 1901, p. 5.
In Memoriam, V.R.I., Lancashire Evening Post, 24 January 1901, p. 4.
Across the Flood, Penrith Observer, 5 February 1901, p. 7.
The Queen’s Memorial. Plea for a National Valhalla, Lowestoft Journal, 9 March 1901, p. 8.
Bernard Gilpin, 1517-1584, Northern Counties Magazine, 2 (April 1901), p. 2.
Welcome to Sir Alfred Milner, Morning Post, 24 May 1901, p. 4; Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser, 24 May 1901, p. 8.
In Memory of the Vicar of St. John’s, Keswick, 1st May, 1901, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (May 1901).
To Mrs Hoare. On Her Leaving St. John’s Parsonage, 26th June, 1901, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (July 1901).
The Angel in the Lilac-Bush, Nature Notes, 12 (August 1901), p. 147.
Love Triumphant. Buffalo, September 6th, 1901, London Daily News, 16 September 1901, p. 6; Lancashire Evening Post, 16 September 1901, p. 4.
To All Who Helped, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1901).
In Memory of Bishop Westcott, Northern Counties Magazine, 2 (September 1901), p. 402.
The Secret of Old Age, Cumberland and Westmoreland Herald, 28 December 1901, p. 5; West Cumberland Times, 28 December 1901, p. 5.
In Memory of Ann Cockbain, November 14th, 1901, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (December 1901).
1902
To England and America: A New Year’s Greeting, Carlisle Journal, 3 January 1902, p. 6; Picture Politics, (January-February 1902), pp. 3-7.
Skating on Derwentwater. Monday, February 17th, 1902, Carlisle Journal, 7 March 1902, p. 6.
Owens College Jubilee, the Opening of the Whitworth Hall, March 12, 1902, St. James’s Gazette, 12 March 1902, p. 10.
Rhodes Dead, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (April 1902).
The Angel-Whisper, Peace, London Daily News, 26 May 1902, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (June 1902).
The Crowning of the King, August 9th, 1902, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1902).
At the Declaring Open of the Brandelhow Estate by H.R.H. Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyle, October 16th, 1902, Cumberland and Westmoreland Herald, 18 October 1902, p. 5; West Cumberland Times, 18 October 1902, p. 2; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (November 1902).
A Christmas Message, Carlisle Journal, 26 December 1902, p. 6.
1903
The New Year, West Cumberland Times, 3 January 1903, p. 3; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1903).
Keswick Old Folks’ “Do,” New Year’s Eve, 1902, Carlisle Journal, 2 January 1903, p. 6; Cumberland and Westmoreland Herald, 3 January 1903, p. 1; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 3 January 1903, p. 5; West Cumberland Times, 3 January 1903, p. 3.
The Delhi Durbar, Westminster Gazette, 10 January 1903, p. 2; Carlisle Journal, 13 January 1903, p. 6.
America to England, Greeting, Westminster Gazette, 26 January 1903, p. 2.
In Memory of Edna Lyall: Bournemouth, 8th February, 1903, Christian World Pulpit, 63 (25 February 1903), pp. 125-126; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (March 1903).
Colonel Henderson, Westminster Gazette, 11 March 1903, p. 2; Carlisle Journal, 13 March 1903, p. 6.
The Missel Thrush and Irish Yew, Nature Notes, XIV (May 1903), p. 87.
Blencathra Sanatorium: The Cry of the Poor Consumptives, Carlisle Journal, 1 May 1903, p. 5; Dundee Evening Telegraph, 19 October 1903, p. 3.
The Chiff-Chaff’s Return, Nature Notes, XIV (June 1903), p. 132.
The Anniversary of the Coronation, Bath Chronicle and Weekly Gazette, 13 August 1903, p. 6; Carlisle Journal, 14 August 1903, p. 6.
Lord Salisbury: In Memoriam, August 22nd, 1903, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1903).
The Cry of Macedonia, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (November 1903).
1904
A New Year’s Sonnet: The Tide of Love, 1904, Westminster Gazette, 1 January 1904, p. 11; Lowestoft Journal, 9 January, p. 8.
T’Auld Fwoks’ Cursmas Do, Carlisle Journal. 1 January 1904, p. 3; West Cumberland Times, 2 January 1904, p. 3.
Bishop Muldoon: At the Burning Theatre, Chicago, 30th December, 1903, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1904).
“I Will Lift Up Mine Eyes to the Hills”, West Cumberland Times, 26 March 1904, p. 3; Millom Gazette, 31 March, 1904, p. 7.
‘To-day the land remembers him who fought’, Sheffield Daily Telegraph, 25 April 1904, p. 7.
‘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.
Liao-Yang, Sept. 1st, 1904, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1904).
The Cry of the Avon Banks, London Daily News, 1 October 1904, p. 6.
At the Bishop’s Grave, Raughtonhead, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (October 1904).
In Memory of A. A. Slack, Derwent Hill, Oct. 24th, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (November 1904).
T’Ald Fwoks’ Cursmas, December, 1904. Barns Yance Agean, West Cumberland Times, 31 December 1904, p. 5. [This poem was re-published a week later in 1905 after a number of errors were noted. See below.]
1905
The New Year, 1905, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1905).
T’Oald Fwoks’ Cursmas Dea, 1904. Barns Yance Agean, West Cumberland Times, 7 January 1905, p. 3. [This is the correct version of the poem first published in the same newspaper on 31 December 1904.]
Red Sunday in St. Petersburg, January 22nd, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (February 1905).
Death, the Angel Friend, Century, 69 (February 1905), p. 576.
Mark Cockbain: Laid to Rest in Crosthwaite Churchyard, Feb. 15th, 1905, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (March 1905).
Jupiter and Venus: March 1905, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (April 1905).
Dawn in Greece and Cumberland, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (May 1905).
Empire Day, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (June 1905).
‘I, in tranquil May-tide’s afterglow’, Maryport Advertiser, 3 June 1905, p. 6.; West Cumberland Times, 3 June 1905, p. 6.
To Admiral Togo: Tsu-shina, May 27-28, 1905, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (July 1905).
In Memory of Mary Jane Lowe, 27th July, 1905, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (August 1905).
The Dreamers of Peace, London Daily News, 23 August 1905, p. 7.
To the Mikado: Portsmouth, USA, 29th August, 1905, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1905).
To Sir Redvers Buller, V.C., Exeter, September 6th, Western Times, 8 September 1905, p. 10.
The Anglo-Japanese Treaty, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (October 1905).
Trafalgar Day, October 21, 1905, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 21 October 1905, p. 8.
Nelson’s Last Prayer, October 21st, 1805, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (November 1905).
The Queen’s Appeal, Nov. 13th, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (December 1905).
Christmas, 1905, London Daily News, 25 December 1905, p. 6.
T’ Kessick Auld Fwokes’ Do, 1905, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 30 December 1905, p. 5; West Cumberland Times, 30 December 1905, p. 3.
1906
The New Year, 1906, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1906).
A Crosthwaite Belfry Song, January 1st, 1906, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (February 1906).
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).
In Memory of W. B. H.: A Social Reformer, London Daily News, 21 February 1906, p. 6.
‘Alas! your annual feast should come’, West Cumberland Times, 7 April 1906, p. 3.
To My Friends Well-Met, 31st March, West Cumberland Times, 7 April 1906, p. 3.
The Battle of Tsu-shima, May 27-28, 1905, Millom Gazette, 12 April 1906, p. 5.
To a Thrush on a Mid-March Morning, Nature Notes, 17 (April 1906), p. 61.
The Egret’s Royal Charter, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (April 1906); Nature Notes, 17 (June 1906), p. 105.
The Chiff-Chaff, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (May 1906).
Senator Hoar, Century, 72 (July 1906), p. 379.
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).
To a Statesman: Bereaved August 30th, 1906, Westminster Gazette, 1 September 1906, p. 2; Lancashire Evening Post, 3 September 1906, p. 2.
At Yew Crag, Gowbarrow Fell, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1906).
Old Mary’s Secret, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 29 December 1906, p. 4; West Cumberland Times, 29 December 1906, p. 2.
In Memoriam: Principal Rainy, Hamilton Herald and Lanarkshire Weekly News, 29 December 1906, p. 8.
1907
The New Year, 1907, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1907).
Hymn: In Memory of Walter Cartmel and Gerald Storey, Who Perished in Derwentwater, February 3rd, 1907, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (March 1907).
In Memoriam: J. R. Anderson. Died at Glasgow, March 26th, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (April 1907).
A Late Spring, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (May 1907).
In Memoriam: T. E. Highton, Entered Rest Saturday, June 15th, 1907, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (July 1907).
At a Picture Exhibition, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (August 1907).
On Laying the Foundation Stone of the New Church at Plumpton, All Saints’ Day, 1907, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (November 1907).
Hymn in Memory of the Bell-Master—Stephen Hogarth, West Cumberland Times, 7 December 1907, p. 2.
In Memory of the Bell-Master—Stephen Hogarth, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (December 1907).
Christmas Day, 1907, London Daily News, 25 December 1907, p. 4.
1908
The New Year, Hampshire Telegraph, 4 January 1908, p. 10.
New Year’s Day, 1908, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1908).
In Memoriam: W. D. Crewdson, January 13th, 1908, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (February 1908).
In Memory of the Men of H.M.S. “Tiger”: April 2, 1908, Fife Free Press & Kirkaldy Guardian, 11 April 1908, p. 6.
‘Here, at the entrance of the street’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 25 April 1908, p. 8.
In Memory of Lizzie Renshaw, Who Entered Rest 14th March, 1908, Aged 87, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (April 1908).
The Sorrow of Skelghyll, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (May 1908).
In a Vicarage Garden, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (June 1908).
The Pan-Anglican Congress, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (July 1908).
The Thrush’s Funeral, Nature Notes, 19 (August 1908), p. 141.
The Children’s Day at Seascale. Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (August 1908).
In Memoriam: Rosellen Eliza Favell, 13th August, 1908, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1908).
The Spider’s Message, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (October 1908).
In Grateful Memory of Geoffrey Payne (Aged 23 Years) Who Fell on Sleep at Keswick, 5th October, 1908, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (November 1908).
Milton, 1608-1908, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (December 1908).
A Ballad of the Conemaugh Flood, Poems of American History, edited by Burton Egbert Stevenson, 1908, pp. 600-601.
1909
New Year’s Hope, 1909, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1909).
In Memory of Mary Cockbain, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (February 1909).
To My Friends Well Met, Wigton Advertiser, 13 February 1909, p. 5.
“Old Charlie.” In Memory of Charles Bird, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (March 1909).
Algernon Charles Swinburne, 10th April, 1909, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (May 1909).
St. Botolph’s Tower. The Sexcentenary of Boston Church, Boston Guardian, 19 June 1909, p. 9.
To My Friends, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Walker, On Their Diamond Wedding Day, June 7th, 1909, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (July 1909).
‘Within our hearts is Teuton blood’, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (August 1909).
In Memory of the Tennyson Centenary. At Somersby, August 5th, 1809, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1909).
An Incident of the Adana Massacre. The Martyrs of Missis, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (October 1909).
Dawn in the Abbey Precincts, Carlisle, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (November 1909); Journal of the Fell and Rock Climbing Club, 1 (1909), p. 252.
1910
A Keswick Voter, Christmas 1909, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 1 January 1910, p. 5.
The End, The Animal’s Guardian, (March 1910); Fife Free Press and Kirkcaldy Guardian, 19 March 1910, p. 3; Cornishman, 24 March 1910, p. 3.
The King Dead, World, 10 May 1910, p. 795; Carlisle Journal, 13 May 1910, p. 6.
At the Wellington Pit Mouth, London Daily News, 18 May 1910, p. 5; Carlisle Journal, 20 May 1910, p. 6.
The King’s Funeral: A Retrospect, Carlisle Journal, 24 May 1910, p. 4.
T’Auld Fwoks’ Kursmas Do, In Memory of Henry Irwin Jenkinson, Cumberland and Westmoreland 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.
1911
At Saint William’s College, York, May 18, 1911, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 19 May 1911, p. 6.
The Way of Freedom, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 24 August 1911, p. 6; Wigton Advertise, 26 August 1911, p. 5.
The Under-Song, Scotsman, 14 September 1911, p. 8.
Auld Ganny’s Cursmas Teal, Cumberland and Westmorland Herald, 30 December 1911, p. 1.
1912
The New Year, 1912, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (January 1912).
In Memory of Lord Carlisle: Lanercost, January 24th, 1912, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (February 1912).
In Honour of Charles Dickens: February 7th, 1912, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (March 1912).
Birds and the Coal Strike, 1912, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (April 1912).
The Thrush’s Word, Nature Notes, 23 (April 1912), p. 71.
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).
Home from Lucerne, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (July 1912).
Conscience the Founder, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (August 1912).
Octavia Hill: August 13th, 1912, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1912).
General Booth: Congress Hall, Clapton, 26th August, 1912, Hull Daily Mail, 28 August 1912, p. 3; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1912).
A September Day—Latrigg, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (October 1912).
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.
A Voice from Santa Sophia, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (November 1912).
The Miss Armitt Memorial Trust, Lakes Herald, 15 November 1912, p. 8.
The Two Angels, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (December 1912).
Freedom’s Spring-Tide, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (December 1912).
1913
A Sonnet of the Welsh Church Bill: To Our Legislators, An Appeal, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 13 January 1913, p. 6.
To the Heroes of the Terra Nova, London Daily News, 12 February 1913, p. 6; British Review, April 1913, p. 80.
To the Heroes of the Antarctic: A Sonnet Sequence, British Review, April 1913, pp. 80-84. [Individual sonnets in the sequence have been given individual titles as follows:
To the Heroes of the Terra Nove, p. 80
Memorial Service at St. Paul’s, February 14th, 1913, p. 81.
In Memory of Captain Scott, March 17th, 1912, p. 81.
In Memory of Captain Oates, p. 82.
In Memory of Dr. E. A. Wilson, Naturalist to the Scott Antarctic Expedition, p. 82.
In Memory of Lieutenant H. R. Bowers, Commissariat Officer to the Expedition, p. 83.
In Memory of Petty Officer Edgar Evans, p. 83.
The Heroes at Rest, p. 84.
To Commander E. R. G. Evans, Lieut. Campbell, Lieut. Bruce, Surgeon Atkinson, and the Survivors, p. 84.
1914
T’ Auld Fwoks’ Kessick Do—Cursmas, 1913. Carlisle Journal, 2 January 1914, p. 5.
The New Year, Carlisle Journal, 2 January 1914, p. 8.
La Giaconda, Carlisle Journal, 6 January 1914, p. 6.
In Memory of Lord Strathcona, Carlisle Journal, 30 January 1914, p. 8.
February, Sphere, 21 February 1914, p. 34.
March, Carlisle Journal, 6 March 1914, p. 8.
The Birthday of a County Borough: Carlisle, April 1st, 1914, Carlisle Journal, 3 April 1914, p. 7.
Books for the Blind: An Appeal, Westminster Gazette, 16 April 1914, p. 2.
The Promise of May, Westminster Gazette, 2 May 1914, p. 2; Carlisle Journal, 5 May 1914, p. 6.
In Memoriam: Silvester Horne, M.P., Westminster Gazette, 7 May 1914, p. 2.; Carlisle Journal, 12 May 1914, p. 6.
Maytide in Italy, Carlisle Journal, 5 June 1914, p. 8.
At Harlaw: July 24, 1914, Aberdeen Press and Journal, 25 July 1914, p. 6.
A Prayer for Peace, Westminster Gazette, 4 August 1914, p. 2.
In Memoriam: Mr. Henry Howard, Penrith Observer, 11 August 1914, p. 7.
A Call to Arms, Carlisle Journal, 8 September 1914, p. 6.
To Captain F. C. Grenfell, 9th Lancers: Le Cateau, August 31, 1914, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 10 September 1914, p. 4.
A Prayer for Recruits, Hull Daily Mail, 12 September 1914, p. 3. [Prose]
A Cumberland War Song, Millom Gazette, 18 September 1914, p. 7.
To the Heroes of the Northern Sea, Westminster Gazette, 19 September 1914, p. 2.
‘Hark to the moaning of the Northern Sea’, Times, 26 September 1914, p. 9.
To Great Britain, English Review, 18 (November 1914), p. 403.
Belgium, Times, 7 November 1914, p. 9.
“Fort en Loyaltie”, Carlisle Journal, 10 November 1914, p. 4.
To the 4th Battalion, Border Regiment: On Their Sailing for Burmah, Oct. 29th, 1914, Penrith Observer, 10 November 1914, p. 6.
Lord Roberts: In Memoriam, Manchester Evening News, 17 November 1914, p. 7.
St. Paul’s: November 19th, 1914, Westminster Gazette, 19 November 1914, p. 2; Carlisle Journal, 24 November 1914, p. 6.
To the Football Player: An Appeal, Westminster Gazette, 30 November 1914, p. 2.
At Whitby Abbey – December 16th, Carlisle Journal, 22 December 1914, p. 6.
1915
In a Harvest Field, British Review, 9 (January 1915), p. 83.
A Contrast, British Review, 9 (January 1915), p. 83.
1915, Times, 1 January 1915, p. 7.
Hoo Jossy Went T’War, Carlisle Journal, 1 January 1915, p. 7.
The Day of Intercession, Westminster Gazette, 2 January 1915, p. 2; Carlisle Journal, 5 January 1915, p. 6.
The New Year, Carlisle Journal, 8 January 1915, p. 8.
Sonnet in Honour of Lieut.-Commander H. de P. Rennick, T.P.’s Journal of Great Deeds of the Great War, 2 (January 1915), p. 59.
Belgium, Living Age, 284 (30 January 1915), p. 258.
February, Carlisle Journal, 5 February 1915, p. 8.
To Lieut. Holbrook and His Gallant Crew of B11 (December 13th), T.P.’s Journal of Great Deeds of the Great War, 2 (13 February 1915), p. 124.
To Great Britain, Living Age, 284 (20 February 1915), p. 450.
The Cross of Valour, Carlisle Journal, 26 February 1915, p. 8.
At the Funeral of Archdeacon Sherwen, Carlisle Journal, 12 March 1915, p. 8.
‘Children, when you plant your tree’, Manchester Evening News, 18 March 1915, p. 6.
General Joffre’s Farewell, T.P.’s Journal of Great Deeds of the Great War, 2 (20 March 1915), p. 255.
Penrith Grammar School Song, Penrith Observer, 30 March 1915, p. 7.
A Brave Doctor: In Honour of Dr. D. C. Turnbull, Sheffield Daily Telegraph, 31 March 1915, p. 6.
Springtime and War, Carlisle Journal, 6 April 1915, p. 6.
The King’s Example, Carlisle Journal, 13 April 1915, p. 6.
May Day, Carlisle Journal, 11 May 1915, p. 6.
In Memory of Lieut. W. G. C. Gladstone, M.P., April 13th, 1915, Chester Chronicle, 15 May 1915, p. 2.
Take Me Home, T.P.’s Journal of Great Deeds of the Great War, 3 (15 May 1915), p. 132.
The Call of May, Carlisle Journal, 1 June 1915, p. 6.
July, Carlisle Journal, 6 July 1915, p. 6.
The Boy Sentry at Ypres, Carlisle Journal, 13 August 1915, p. 8.
A Scottish V.C., Scotsman, 23 August 1915, p. 11; Carlisle Journal, 24 August 1915, p. 6.
To Bulgaria: The Earthquake’s Warning, Carlisle Journal, 8 October 1915, p. 8.
In Memoriam: Captain Andrew Ferguson Chance, Carlisle Journal, 12 October 1915, p. 6.
Lieutenant Forshaw’s Gallant Deed, Carlisle Journal, 29 October 1915, p. 8.
Britain’s Call to the Colours, Carlisle Journal, 9 November 1915, p. 6.
‘Not for vainglorious boast or mock parade’, Carlisle Journal, 3 December 1915, p. 7.
Peace on Earth, Carlisle Journal, 24 December 1915, p. 8.
1916
The New Year, Carlisle Journal, 7 January 1916, p. 8.
“Ubi Aves, Ubi Angeli”, Carlisle Journal, 4 February 1916, p. 8.
In Memoriam: Acting-Lieutenant Courtenay Tennyson, Carlisle Journal, 4 February 1916, p. 8.
The Coming of Spring, Carlisle Journal, 7 March 1916, p. 6; Penrith Observer, 7 March 1916, p. 6.
‘When this wild storm of war is overblown’, Burnley News, 22 March 1916, p. 6.
In Memory of Thomas Bakewell, Cumberland and Westmorland Herald, 8 April 1916, p. 1.
The Soldier’s Last Will and Testament: Verdun, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 21 April 1916, p. 4.
Death the Revealer, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 24 April 1916, p. 4.
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.
A Plea for Song in War-Time, Carlisle Journal, 25 August 1916, p. 6.
A Tribute to Keswick Heroes, Carlisle Journal, 8 September 1916, p. 7; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, (September 1916).
In Honour of Private James Miller, V.C., Lancashire Evening Post, 14 September 1916, p. 4.
In Memoriam: Stanley Theodore Carr, Carlisle Journal, 13 October 1916, p. 7.
To Venizelos, Carlisle Journal, 13 October 1916, p. 8.
Christmas Day, 1916, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 23 December 1916, p. 4.
Oor Lad Wha Nobbut Cooms I’ Dreams, Carlisle Journal, 29 December 1916, p. 7; Penrith Observer, 3 January 1917, p. 6. [See first poem of 1917 below]
1917
Oor Lad Wha Nobbut Cooms I’ Dreams, Carlisle Journal, 29 December 1916, p. 7; Penrith Observer, 3 January 1917, p. 6. [See last poem of 1916 above]
Going Home, Carlisle Journal, 5 January 1917, p. 8; Penrith Observer, 9 January 1917, p. 7.
The Kaiser’s Letter to His Chancellor, Oct. 31, 1916, Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 19 January 1917, p. 4.
The War-Worn Horses’ Appeal, Bournemouth Graphic, 13 April 1917, p. 5.
Captain Noel Godfrey Chavasse, V.C., R.A.M.C., Died of Wounds in France, August, 1917, Liverpool Echo, 15 August 1917, p. 3.
The Larger Spotted Woodpecker: Allan Bank, Grasmere, 1917, Selborne Magazine and Nature Notes, 28 (September 1917), pp. 106-107.
In Honour of Dr. Elsie Inglis, Westminster Gazette, 3 December 1917, p. 2.
Munition Girls, Carlisle Journal, 25 December 1917, p. 2.
Comin’ Yham Fra T’ Front, Carlisle Journal, 28 December 1917, p. 7.
1918
The Two Springs, Carlisle Journal, 30 April 1918, p. 2.
In the Choir of Gloucester Cathedral,: 9 June, Gloucester Journal, 15 June 1918, p. 3.
The Garden-Warbler, The Parent’s Review, XXIX (July 1918), p. 504.
The Advent of Peace, Carlisle Journal, 12 November 1918, p. 5.
A Welcome to President Wilson, Carlisle Journal, 31 December 1918, p. 7.
‘Dar bon! but it were gude to hear’, Carlisle Journal, 31 December 1918, p. 8. [See first poem of 1919 below]
1919
‘Dar bon! but it were gude to hear’, Wigton Advertiser, 4 January 1919, p. 3. [See last poem of 1918 above]
The Ideal Speaker, Lancashire Evening Post, 24 February 1919, p. 4.
The Memorial Shrine, Westminster, Sphere, 26 April 1919, p. 24.
An Appeal, Carlisle Journal, 3 October 1919, p. 7.
A Voice in the Silence: Armistice Day, 1919, Carlisle Journal, 18 November 1919, p. 4.
Christmas Day, Carlisle Journal, 26 December 1919, p. 7.
In Vienna, Carlisle Journal, 30 December 1919, p. 4.
1920
‘Oor Jack he cam’ fra ower t’ sea’, Carlisle Journal. 6 January 1920, p. 6.
To the May Queen of Keswick, Lancashire Evening Post, 7 May 1920, p. 3.
- Hits: 2652
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.
Abbeys see Churches, Abbeys and Cathedrals
Abbots Leigh
Churchyard Gate, at Abbot’s Leigh, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 66.
Knotted Elm, at Abbot’s Leigh, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 65.
Sunset at Abbot’s Leigh, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 67.
Abbott, William
A Crosthwaite Hero in Matabele Land, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 25-27.
Adelboden (Switzerland)
The Judgment Picture at Adelboden, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 136.
The Village Dance at Adelboden, A Sad Face, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 137.
Adams, John Couch
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.
Ainger, Alfred
The Master of the Temple, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 51.
Airy, George Biddell
Sir George Airy, K.C.B., Died January 2nd, 1892, In His 92st Year, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 115.
Albani, Emma
Madlle. Albani, at the Bristol Festival, 1876, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 113.
Alcohol
Mistaken Kindness, Whitby Gazette, 19 January 1900, p. 8; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 106-107.
The Fox and Hound, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 214-216.
To the Sillyman, Who Is the Wise Man After All, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Alexander II (Czar)
The Czar: Murdered March 1881, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Alfred, King
The Millenary of Alfred the King, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 19.
Alnmouth
At Alnmouth, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 123.
Akhenaten
(The) Dream-City of Khuenâten, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 93-95.
Alexandra, Queen
Hymn for the Anniversary of the King’s Coronation, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1903.
Hymns for the Coronation Day of their Majesties King Edward and Queen Alexandra, (Carlisle Archives, PR/12/125).
The Egret’s Royal Charter, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1906; Nature Notes, 17 (June 1906), p. 105.
The Queen’s Appeal, 13th November, 1905, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1905; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 83.
Albert 1 (King)
King Albert’s Return, Brussels, November 22nd, 1918, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
Alfred the Great (King)
King Alfred the Great, London Daily News, 19 March 1898, p. 6.
Ambleside
Pigeon Shooting at Ambleside, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 52.
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.
Sycamore Tree, Ambleside, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 5.
Amenemhat
At the Tomb of Ameni Amenemhât, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 90-92.
America
America to England, Greeting, Westminster Gazette, 26 January 1903, p. 2; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 43.
To America, Penrith Observer, 10 May 1898, p. 6; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1898).
To America, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 171.
To England and America: A Christmas Greeting, Christian World Pulpit, 49 (1 January 1896), p. 11; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, January 1896.
Anderson, J. R.
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.
Anemones
Alpine Anemones in the Blumenthal at Murren, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 96.
Alpine Anemone-Seed, Leysin, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 157.
Angus, William (Lance-Corporal)
A Scottish V.C., Scotsman, 23 August 1915, p. 11; Carlisle Journal, 24 August 1915, p. 6.
Animal Cruelty
‘A wasted life is like a wreck that lies’, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Death Aboard Our Transports, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 27.
Hannibal, the Lion in the Clifton Zoological Gardens, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 84.
My Feathered Lady, Nature Notes, 4 (December 1893), pp. 225-227.
Noble Sport, Nature Notes, 7 (December 1896), p. 256.
Pigeon Shooting at Ambleside, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 52.
Starved to Death, at Ladysmith, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 147-148.
The Altar of Fashion: A Picture by G. F. Watts, R.A., Nature Notes, 9 (May 1898), p. 81.
The Bitter Cry of Brer Rabbit, Cornhill Magazine, 18 (May 1892), pp. 541-543.
The Dead Seal Children, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
The Dying Charger, Royal Cornwall Gazette, 24 May 1900, p. 6; Church of England Pulpit and Ecclesiastical Review, 49 (26 May 1900), p. 252; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 26 May 1900, p. 5; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 184-185.
The Eagle, at the Zoological Gardens, Clifton, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 83.
The Egret’s Royal Charter, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine April 1906; Nature Notes, 17 (June 1906), p. 105.
The End, The Animal’s Guardian, (March 1910); Fife Free Press and Kirkcaldy Guardian, 19 March 1910, p. 3; Cornishman, 24 March 1910, p. 3.
The Greater Love, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
The Home of Rest for Horses, Middlesex and Surrey Express, 8 January 1900, p. 3; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 57.
The Pigeons’ Sanctuary, Nature Notes, 8 (March 1897), p. 52.
The Royal Buck-Hounds: A Deputation to Windsor, Nature Notes, 8 (January 1897), p. 11.
The Stag Impaled, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 106.
The War-Worn Horses’ Appeal, Bournemouth Graphic, 13 April 1917, p. 5.
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).
War Notes in Rydal Vale, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 74.
Animals see also Birds, Horses
A Buffalo Ride, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 82.
Cowbells on the Rischeren Alp, Amisbuhl, Beatenberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 122.
Hannibal, the Lion in the Clifton Zoological Gardens, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 84.
The Chamois of Lauterbrunnen, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 90.
The Dying Straggler, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 65.
The Eagle, at the Zoological Gardens, Clifton, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 83.
The Old-Fashioned “Tortossy” Cat, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 46-52.
The Squirrel, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 36.
To a Snail, I, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
To a Snail, II, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
We Meet at Morn, My Dog and I, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 91-92.
Annie
Grand-Dad’s Annie, Dead, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 13-19.
Antarctic
To the Heroes of the Antarctic: A Sonnet Sequence, British Review, April 1913, pp. 80-84. [Individual sonnets in the sequence have been given individual titles as follows:
To the Heroes of the Terra Nove, p. 80
Memorial Service at St. Paul’s, February 14th, 1913, p. 81.
In Memory of Captain Scott, March 17th, 1912, p. 81.
In Memory of Captain Oates, p. 82.
In Memory of Dr. E. A. Wilson, Naturalist to the Scott Antarctic Expedition, p. 82.
In Memory of Lieutenant H. R. Bowers, Commissariat Officer to the Expedition, p. 83.
In Memory of Petty Officer Edgar Evans, p. 83.
The Heroes at Rest, p. 84.
To Commander E. R. G. Evans, Lieut. Campbell, Lieut. Bruce, Surgeon Atkinson, and the Survivors, p. 84.
April see also Spring
A Rainless April, Spectator, 60 (23 April 1887), p. 558; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 43.
An April Snowstorm, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 83.
April Sunshine (Rawnsley Archives, RR/3/4).
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.
Brathay Music, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 120.
The First Swallow, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 44.
The Seasons, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 33-35.
Arbuthnot, Alice Charlotte
On the Schilthorn, June 21, 1896. The Anniversary of the Death by Lightning of Mrs. Arbuthnot, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 94.
Argles, Alice
The Bride, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
The Stars on the Wedding Night, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Armenia
A Call to England, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 25.
A Contrast, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 30.
A Cry for Edessa, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, pp. 42-43.
A Cry for the Shepherd, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, pp. 32-33.
A Dream: At Scutari, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 21.
A Happier Christmas: 1896, A Christmas Hope for Armenia, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
A Haunting Voice, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 17.
A Nation’s Funeral, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 52.
A Sunday in Armenia, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 31.
A Voice from Sancta Sophia, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 49.
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. 34-35.
Banner of England, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, pp. 28-29.
British Interests, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, pp. 50-51.
England and Armenia, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 23.
Harvest Here and There, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 22.
Hate’s After-Glow—Love’s Morning Star, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 56.
Hymn for the Armenian Relief Fune, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 59.
In Memory of September 23, 1896, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 55.
In the Burning Church at Oorfah, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, pp. 36-37.
“Out of the Deep Have I Called Unto Thee, Lord, Hear My Voice”, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, pp. 46-47.
Peace-False and True, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 48.
Quomodo Sedet Sola Civitas: Armenian Meeting in St. James’s Hall, Monday, 19th October, 1896, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 57.
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 Christ-King of Edessa, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 41.
The Crusaders—Then and Now, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 27.
The Czar at Balmoral: 24th Sept., The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 53.
The Darkened West, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 18.
The Madness of Despair: Ottoman Bank, Aug. 26th, 1896, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 45.
The Parable of Aboukaiatyan: The Martyred Pastor of Oorfah, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 40.
The Spectre of the Broken, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 20.
Thy Neighbour, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 24.
To W. E. Gladstone: Liverpool, September 24th, 1896, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 54.
Tried in the Fire, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, pp. 38-39.
Two Voices, The Darkened West: An Appeal to England for Armenia, 1896, p. 26.
Armitt Library
The Miss Armitt Memorial Trust, Lakes Herald, 15 November 1912, p. 8.
Arnold, Matthew
Matthew Arnold, In Laleham Churchyard, April, 1888, Sheffield Weekly Telegraph, 27 October 1894, p. 27; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 97.
Arnold, Thomas
From Fox How, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 10.
Art
A Sonneteer at the New Gallery, Pall Mall Gazette, 17 May 1888, p. 14.
At a Picture Exhibition, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1907.
At Como Cathedral, Pliny’s Statue, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 77.
At the Royal Academy, May 1897, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
At the Unveiling of the Tennyson Statue, Lincoln, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 75.
Four Portraits of the Painter, at the Watts’ Exhibition, 1905, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 68.
In the Church of S. Maria Degli Angioli, Lugano, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 67.
In the Refectory, Milan, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 76.
Leaving Home. Mr. La Thangue’s Picture in the New Gallery, Living Age, 187 (25 October 1890), p. 194.
Mrs. Fry Visiting Newgate, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 55.
The Altar of Fashion: A Picture by G. F. Watts, R.A., Nature Notes, 9 (May 1898), p. 81.
The Dying Gladiator, by Ctesilaus. A Cast in the Vestibule of the Museum, Bristol, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 104.
The Red Maids’ School, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 54.
The Star of Prayer: Written on Morris’s Tapestry in Exeter Chapel, Oxford, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
The Triumph of the Innocents, (Rawnsley Archives RR/3/1 – view full text).
Three Pictures of St. John Baptist, in the Billiard Room at Leigh Court, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 143.
To G. F. Watts, R.A., On His 87th Birthday, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 52.
Arth-Goldau (Switzerland)
At Arth-Goldau, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 29.
Arthur, King
A Legend of King Arthur (At Sennen), Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 40.
Stone Arthur, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 104.
Ash Wednesday
On Hearing the Birds Sing, Ash Wednesday Morning, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 35.
Ashley Hill (Bristol)
A Calm Evening, from Ashley Hill, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 49.
A March Day, on Ashley Hill, Looking Down on Bristol, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 51.
Bristol by Gaslight, from Asley Hill, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 50.
Müller’s Orphanage, Ashley Down, 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.
Ashton Court (Bristol)
Ashton Court, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 62.
Ashton Iron Works (Bristol)
The Blast Furnace at Ashton Iron Works, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 63.
Asquith, Herbert Henry
The Premier’s Speech to Labour Delegates, Jan. 15, 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
Attlee, Elizabeth
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.
August see also Summer
August at the Lakes, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 108.
August at the Lakes, Spectator, 60 (6 August 1887), p. 1057.
August in the Keswick Vale, Spectator, 59 (31 July 1886), p. 1022; Westmorland Gazette, 7 August 1886, p. 3; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1886.
Heather on Lonscale, Aug. 18th, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 51-52.
Pickering Moor, From Near Saltersgate, in Heather-Time, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 190.
The Seasons, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 33-35.
Austria
The Empress of Austria: In Memoriam, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October 1898.
In Vienna, Carlisle Journal, 30 December 1919, p. 4.
Autumn
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.
Autumn at Brandelhow, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 36.
Early Autumn, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
The Lake Mirror: In Autumn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 27.
The Lake Steamer in Autumn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 47.
The Seasons, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 33-35.
The Tarn in Autumn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 41.
Windermere—Autumn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 4.
Ava, Earl of
In Memory of the Late Earl of Ava, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 85.
Aviation
In Memory of Flight-Lieutenant R. A. J. Warneford, V.C., Legion of Honour, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
Major McCudden, V.C., DSO, Mc, MM, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text.
Rhodes-Moorhouse, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 212-214.
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.
To Flight Sub-Lieutenant R. A J. Warneford V.C. June 7th 1915, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1915 – view full text).
Avon
The Cry of the Avon Banks, London Daily News, 1 October 1904, p. 6.
The Sea-Wall; After Returning from Switzerland, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 80.
The Vision That Helped Sebastian Cabot, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 48.
Avonmouth Docks (Bristol)
Avonmouth Docks, Before Their Completion, 1876, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 101.
On Seeing Two Vessels (Cutter-Rigged) Pass One Another at Avonmouth, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, pp. 102-103.
Opening of the Avonmouth Docks, Saturday, February 24, 1877, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 144.
Axenstrasse (Switzerland)
On the Axenstrasse, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 27.
Ayres, Alice
Alice Ayres, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 10-12.
Baden-Powell, Robert
To Colonel, now General Baden-Powell, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 180-182.
Baird, John McDonald
Captain Baird, In Memoriam, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 23-24.
Bakewell, Thomas
In Memory of Thomas Bakewell, Cumberland and Westmorland Herald, 8 April 1916, p. 1.
Bamborough
Bamborough Castle, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 121.
Bardsley, John Wareing (Bishop)
At the Bishop’s Grave, Raughtonhead, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, October 1904; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 63.
Barmouth
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.
Cottages of St. George, Barmouth, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 70.
Low Tide in the Estuary, Barmouth, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 66.
Barrow, Sir John
The Tower on the Hoad, Ulverston, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 116; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 78.
Battles see Conflicts and Battles
Baveno (Italy)
At Baveno, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 55.
At the Church Door, Baveno, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 59.
Orange-Flowers at Baveno, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 57.
Baxter, Frank William
To the Honour of Trooper Frank William Baxter, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1896.
Bayly, Ada Ellen (aka Edna Lyall)
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.
Beatenberg (Switzerland)
A Return to St. Beatenberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 109.
A Sermon in the Church at St. Beatenberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, p. 118.
At Amisbuhl, St. Beatenberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 121.
Hotel de la Poste, 1890, St. Beatenberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 110.
The Birenfluh, St. Beatenberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 120.
The Vision of Kings, St. Beatenberg, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 111.
Beatrice (Princess)
A Royal Wedding: July 23, 1885, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1885.
Bede
Unveiling of the Bede Memorial, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 64.
Beetles
In Butterfly-Land, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 114.
Beggar’s Bridge, Glaisdale
Beggar’s Bridge, Glaisdale, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 188.
Belgium
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.
Belgium, Times, 7 November 1914, p. 9; European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 101.
Crucified Belgium, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 104.
In a Churchyard at Liege, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 42-43.
King Albert’s Return, Brussels, November 22nd, 1918, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1918 – view full text).
Life Beyond Death, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 137.
Louvain, August 25th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 50.
Rheims Cathedral, September 20th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 78.
The Boy Sentry at Ypres, Carlisle Journal, 13 August 1915, p. 8.
The Landing of the Queen of the Belgians, December 2nd, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 141.
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.
To General Leman, the Defender of Liege, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 44.
To Max, Burgomaster of Brussels, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 100.
To the Gallant Gunners of Liege, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 41.
To the Officer in Command at Aerschott, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 45.
What’s In a Name?, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 51.
Bells and Bell-Ringing
A Belfry Sermon on Christmas Morn., Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 77.
A Crosthwaite Belfry Song, January 1st, 1906, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1906; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 58.
Christmas Bells, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 175-180.
Christmas Day, 1919, Carlisle Journal, 26 December 1919, p. 7.
In Memory of the Bell-Master—Stephen Hogarth, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1907.
On Hearing Bells on Easter Morning, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 37.
On Hearing St. Matthew’s Peal, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 28.
Six O’clock Bell, Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 181.
The Bell Buoy at the Harbour Mouth, Whitby, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 176.
The Bell for Early Mass, from the Jesuit Church of St. Joseph, Lucerne, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 4.
The Bells of Skelton New Church Tower, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 139.
The Christmas Bells, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 146.
The Sabbath Bell, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 50.
The Whitby Bells, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 183.
Benson, Edward White (Archbishop)
Archbishop Benson, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1896.
Beresford, William
Brave Beresford, Ballads of Brave Deeds, 1896, pp. 17-19.
Bettington, Claude Albemarle (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.
Bird, Charles
“Old Charlie.” In Memory of Charles Bird, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, March 1909.
Birds
A Service of Song in Duchess’ Park, on a May Morning, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 58.
A Thrush in Spring, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 64.
Bird-Scaring, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 97.
Birds and the Coal Strike, 1912, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1912.
Doll and the Starling: A Morning Call, Nature Notes, 9 (November 1898), p. 203.
Eskmeals, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 114; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 81.
Fieldfares, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 74-75.
Home, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 119.
In a Gullery, Nature Notes, 9 (June 1898), p. 109.
Music of Two Worlds, Saint Bees Head, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 108.
My Feathered Lady, Nature Notes, 4 (December 1893), pp. 225-227.
My Friend the Starling, Nature Notes, 5 (May 1894), p. 89.
On Hearing the Birds Sing, Ash Wednesday Morning, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 35.
Paddy-Birds, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 84-85.
Pigeon Shooting at Ambleside, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 52.
Pleasures of Imagination; or, the Jackdaws Above Ghyston Cave, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 76.
Quails and the Vocal Memnon, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, p. 132.
Sea-Gulls at Saint Bees, Carlisle Journal, 25 March 1887, p. 6; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 105.
Talk, not Work, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 57.
The Altar of Fashion: A Picture by G. F. Watts, R.A., Nature Notes, 9 (May 1898), p. 81.
The Angel in the Lilac-Bush, Nature Notes, 12 (August 1901), p. 147; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 73.
The Birthday of the Singers, Dunnabeck, 21st May, 1908, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 72.
The Blackbird Dead, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1898; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 65.
The Carrier Pigeon, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
The Chaffinch’s Nest at Dunnabeck, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 61-62.
The Chiff-Chaff, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1906; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 70.
The Chiff-Chaff, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 70-71.
The Chiffchaff’s Message, Nature Notes, 8 (June 1897), p. 116.
The Chiff-Chaff’s Return, Nature Notes, XIV (June 1903), p. 132.
The Chorus of the Dawn, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 67-68.
The Cuckoo, April 19th 1917, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
The Cuckoo at Lucerne, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, May 1891.
The Eagle, at the Zoological Gardens, Clifton, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 83.
The Egret’s Royal Charter, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1906; Nature Notes, 17 (June 1906), p. 105.
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.
The Garden Warbler, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1916 – view full text).
The Garden-Warbler, The Parent’s Review, XXIX (July 1918), p. 504.
The Great Tit, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 73.
The Lark on Tomline Head, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 106.
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 Music of the Dawn, Hotel Splendide, Lugano, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 64.
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.
The Patriot Thrush, May 31st, 1916, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on World War 1, dated 1916 – view full text).
The Pigeons’ Sanctuary, Nature Notes, 8 (March 1897), p. 52.
The Red-Start, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 86.
The Rooks in Magdalen Walk, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
The Starling, Nature Notes, 1 (May 1890), p. 72.
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 Tower of Song, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 110.
The Wagtail, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 55.
The Waking of the Birds, Nature Notes, 2 (15 May 1891), p. 84; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 69.
The Warbler’s Song, Grindelwald, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 107.
The Wengen Thrush, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 99.
The White Swan at Well, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
To a Robin, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
To a Robin II (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
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.
Tumbler Pigeons, Over Bristol, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 85.
When Spring and the Throstle Come Back from the Sea, Nature Notes, 6 (April 1895), p. 66.
Willow-Warbler, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 22.
Windermere—Autumn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 4.
Birkett, Joseph
At the Old Sexton’s Grave, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 12 January 1901, p. 5.
Black Coombe
Black Coombe, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 80.
Blackbird
The Blackbird Dead, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, April 1898; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 65.
The Mavis and the Merle, Nature Notes, 1 (April 1890), p. 49; Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 66.
Blelham Tarn
Blelham Tarn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 24.
The Tarn in Autumn, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 41.
Blind
Books for the Blind: An Appeal, Westminster Gazette, 16 April 1914, p. 2.
Boer War (1899-1902)
A Border Lament, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 178.
A Brave Trumpeter, A Brave Trumpeter, Westminster Gazette, 23 August 1900, p. 2; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 194-195.
A City’s Welcome to Her Volunteers, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 191-192.
A Cry from Cape Town to Westminster, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 114-115.
A Gallant Engine Driver, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 196-198.
A Gallant Midshipman, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 36-38.
A Generous Life-Guardsman, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 66-67.
A Gunner’s Story, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 58-59.
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.
A Man of Straw at Ladysmith, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 30 December 1899, p. 5; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 69-70.
A Timely Confession, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 57.
A Warlike Spring, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 152-153.
After the Battle, Daily Gazette for Middlesborough, 8 December 1899, p. 3; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 10-11.
An Arm-Chair Critic, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 68.
An Estcourt Hero, South Wales Echo, 21 November 1899, p. 2; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 32.
Another Philip Sydney, Colenso, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 60-62.
At a Soldier-Prince’s Funeral, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 200-201.
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.
Balliol to George Steevens, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 143-145.
Britain’s New Year, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 80.
Carbineers to the Rescue, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 47-50.
Dead For Joy, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 188-190.
Death Aboard Our Transports, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 27.
Gallant Manchesters, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 91-92.
Home from the Front for Christmas Day, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 72-75.
How the Naval Guns Came to Ladysmith, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 19-21.
How They Saved the Wagon Bridge at Bethulie, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 161-164.
‘I am the mistress of the post’, Manchester Times, 30 March 1900, p. 14.; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 165.
In a Camp Hospital, Elands-Laagte, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 12-15.
In the Burial-Ground at Ladysmith, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 139.
In the Graveyard at Mafeking, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 183.
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 the Late Earl of Ava, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 85.
In Memory of Lieutenant Cecil Arbuthnot White, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 86-90.
In the War School: A Recall to the Colours, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 5.
‘Joubert is dead! far off the whisper ran’, Westminster Gazette, 2 April 1900, p. 2; Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser, 7 April 1900, p. 15; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 166-167.
Light in the Darkness: In Honour of Captain E. B. Towse, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 174-177.
Love the Conqueror, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 127-128.
Mistaken Kindness, Whitby Gazette, 19 January 1900, p. 8; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 106-107.
Old Mortality. A Sketch at Ladysmith, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 70-71.
Pat O’Leary’s Grave, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 125-126.
Resolute, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 63.
Retrospect, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 216.
Sail Away “Tantallon”, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 44-45.
Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 129-130.
Starved to Death, at Ladysmith, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 147-148.
‘Tenderly down the hill we bore them’, Westminster Gazette, 21 February 1900, p. 2; Southend Standard and Essex Weekly Advertiser, 22 February 1900, p. 5; Gloucester Citizen, 22 February 1900, p. 3; Carlisle Journal, 23 February 1900, p. 6; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 97-98.
The Black Watch, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 46.
The Bugler’s Wish, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 116-117.
The Choir Invisible: Christmas Day, 1900, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 215; A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 8.
The City Imperial Volunteers at St. Paul’s, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 103-105.
The Day of Intercession, a Village Hymn, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 102-103.
The Dead Boy and the Dying Boer, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 99-101.
The Dying Charger, The Dying Charger, Royal Cornwall Gazette, 24 May 1900, p. 6; Church of England Pulpit and Ecclesiastical Review, 49 (26 May 1900), p. 252; English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 26 May 1900, p. 5; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 184-185.
The Gallant Earl of Airlie, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 186-187.
The Horrors of War, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 149.
The Last Question, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 81.
The Leonids and Ladysmith, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 18 November 1899, p. 5; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 26.
The New Year, 1900, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 79.
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 Relief of Kimberley, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 119-121.
The Relief of Ladysmith, South Wales Daily News, 3 March 1900, p. 6; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 135-137.
The Sailing of the “Maine”, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 64-65.
The Son Who Lives To-Day, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 204.
The Spring That Cannot Cheer, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 170-171.
The Star of Chivalry, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 150-151.
The Trooper Who Carried the Colonel In, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 16-18.
The Wounded Piper of Elands-Laagte, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 6-9.
To Captain George Kemp, M.P., Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 94-95.
To Colonel, now General Baden-Powell, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 180-182.
To De Vet, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 209-210.
To Earl Roberts: A Welcome Home, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 3-4.
To General Sir George White, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 140-141.
To Kronje on Majuba Day, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 132-133.
To Lord Kitchener, Commander-in-Chief of H. M. Forces in South Africa, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 206-207.
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 Major E. J. Phipps-Hornby, V.C., of Battery “Q”, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 168-169.
To Paul Kruger, at Marseilles, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 211.
To Rimington, King of the Scouts, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 154-158.
To Sir Alfred Milner, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 212-213.
To Sir Redvers Buller, a Welcome Home, London Daily News, 10 November 1900, p. 3; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 202-203.
To the C.I.V.—Greeting!, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 191.
To the Dhoolie Men, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 205.
To the Hero of Kimberley, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 122-125.
To the High Court of Parliament, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 113-114.
To the Men of the Border Regiment, Cumberland Sends Thanks and Greetings for 1900, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 20 January 1900, p. 5; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 82.
To the Queen, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 218-219.
To Winston Churchill, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 28-31.
War and the Old Folks’ Creed, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 30 December 1899, p. 5; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 75-76.
Welcome to Sir Alfred Milner, Morning Post, 24 May 1901, p. 4; Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser, 24 May 1901, p. 8.
Wounded on Good Friday, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 172-173.
Bonar, Horatius
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.
Bonfires
Jubilee Bonfires—Prospect, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1887.
Jubilee Bonfires—Retrospect, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1887.
‘Now let the stars from heaven to earth be shed’, West Cumberland Times, 19 June 1897, p. 6.
The Coronation Bonfires, June 30, 1902, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 28.
The Skiddaw Bonfire, On the Evening of June 26th, 1902, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 29.
Book of the Dead
A Papyrus Hunt, Idylls and Lyrics of the Nile, 1894, pp. 107-108.
Booth, William
General Booth: Congress Hall, Clapton, 26th August, 1912, Hull Daily Mail, 28 August 1912, p. 3; Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1912.
Border Regiment
A Border Lament, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 178.
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 World War 1, dated 1915 – view full text).
Hope for the Dawn, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 193.
In Honour of Battery L, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, pp. 72-73.
‘Not for vainglorious boast or mock parade’, Carlisle Journal, 3 December 1915, p. 7.
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 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, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 118.
To the Men of the Border Regiment, Cumberland Sends Thanks and Greetings for 1900, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 20 January 1900, p. 5; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, p. 82,
Borrowdale
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.
‘Ill could we spare the Tree St. Patrick knew’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 21 June 1884, p. 5.
‘Now from the sacred grove of Borrowdale’, English Lakes Visitor and Keswick Guardian, 21 June 1884, p. 5.
Boston (Lincolnshire)
Boston Church Tower, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 216.
St. Botolph’s Tower. The Sexcentenary of Boston Church, Boston Guardian, 19 June 1909, p. 9.
Botha, Louis
At General Botha’s Grave, August 30 1919, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1919 – view full text).
Bowers, Henry Robertson
In Memory of Lieutenant H. R. Bowers, Commissariat Officer to the Expedition, March 29th, 1912, British Review, April 1913, p. 83.
To the Heroes of the Terra Nova, British Review, April 1913, p. 80.
Bowfell
Bowfell, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 102.
Boy Scouts
‘Within our hearts is Teuton blood’, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1909.
Boyhood
East and West, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 77.
Bradford
Bradford, Then and Now, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 55.
Brandelhow
Brandelhow, October 16, 1902, Cumberland and Westmoreland 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.
Foxgloves at Brandelhow, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 45.
Branson, Emily
A Woman Saviour, Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 193-196.
Brathay
Brathay Churchyard, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 49.
Brathay Music, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 120.
The Churchyard, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 72.
The Mourner and the Brathay, Sonnets at the English Lakes, 1881, p. 21.
Breitlauenen (Switzerland)
At Breitlauenen, Schynige Platte, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 88.
Bridges
Barmouth Bridge, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 69.
Beggar’s Bridge, Glaisdale, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 188.
Clifton Suspension Bridge, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 73.
In Praise of Vulcan: I – The Forth Bridge, Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, 147 (March 1890), p. 429; Review of Reviews, 1 (March 1890), p. 203; Living Age, 185 (19 April 1890), p. 130.
Lights at the Harbour Mouth, as Seen from the Suspension Bridge, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 98.
On the Drawbridge, A Book of Bristol Sonnets, 1877, p. 89; Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 51.
Ponte Gula, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, pp. 21-22.
The Saltburn Viaduct, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 136.
Bright, John
John Bright, March 27th 1889, Murray’s Magazine, 5 (May 1889), p. 660; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 63.
Bristol
A Book of Bristol Sonnets (1877) contains over one hundred and twenty sonnets, written in 1876 and the early part of 1877, on Bristol and its surrounding villages and countryside. 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 Bristol written by HDR are:
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.
The Cry of the Avon Banks, London Daily News, 1 October 1904, p. 6.
The Gift of Leigh Woods to Bristol, Poems at Home and Abroad, 1909, p. 86.
The Vision That Helped Sebastian Cabot, A Sonnet Chronicle, 1906, p. 48.
Bronwyn
Bronwyn the Fair, Harlech, Sonnets Round the Coast, 1887, p. 73.
Brooke, Rupert
Rupert Brooke, Lemos, April 23rd, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 211.
Brooks, Phillips (Bishop)
Bishop Phillips Brooks, Died at Boston, 23rd January, 1893, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 92.
On Hearing a Sermon by the Rev. Phillips Brooks, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, August 1887.
Brown, John
Dr. John Brown, Died at Edinburgh, May 11th, 1882, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 111.
Brown, Ned
Ned Brown, Killed at His Post, Thornthwaite Mines, 1889, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, February 1889; Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 131.
Browning, Robert
A Cry from Florence, December 11th, 1889, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 101.
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.
The Poet’s Home-Going, Murray’s Magazine, 7 (February 1890), pp. 145-150; Poems, Ballads, and Bucolics, 1890, pp. 2-12.
The Two Poets, Valete: Tennyson and Other Memorial Poems, 1893, p. 31.
Brünig Pass (Switzerland)
Kurhaus, Brünig, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 82.
Bryce, James (Viscount)
To Viscount Bryce, May 14, 1917, (Rawnsley Archives, Poems on WW1, dated 1917 – view full text).
Buckle, Matthew Perceval (Major)
In Memoriam. Major M. P. Buckle, D.S.O., October 27th, European War 1914-1915 Poems, 1915, p. 116.
Bulgaria
A Voice from Santa Sophia, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, November 1912.
Freedom’s Spring-Tide, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1912.
Raika, “Queen of the Bulgarians”, Western Daily Press, 5 September 1876, p. 3.
The Two Angels, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, December 1912.
To Bulgaria: The Earthquake’s Warning, Carlisle Journal, 8 October 1915, p. 8.
Buller, Redvers Henry (Sir)
The Relief of Ladysmith, South Wales Daily News, 3 March 1900, p. 6; Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 135-137.
To Sir Redvers Buller, a Welcome Home, Ballads of the War, 2nd edition, 1902, pp. 202-203.
To Sir Redvers Buller, V.C., Exeter, September 6th, Western Times, 8 September 1905, p. 10.
Bürglen (Switzerland)
At Bürglen, to the Memory of William Tell, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 28.
Burnside, Emily Frances
Buried on New Year’s Day: At Plumtree, (Rawnsley Archives RR/1/7 – view full text).
Butter-Making
‘First cleanly be, and last be clean as well’, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, July 1891.
Butterflies
In Butterfly-Land, Sonnets in Switzerland and Italy, 1899, p. 114.
Buttermere
Hymn for the Re-Opening of Buttermere Church, Crosthwaite Parish Magazine, September 1886.
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These 30+ sonnets are a heartfelt cry from HDR to the British government that they are neglecting their duty to protect the Armenian people who were being slaughtered in their thousands by the Turks. Very rarely did he so publicly denounce the government for their inaction. In HDR’s eyes the conflict was religious, with the Muslim Turks determined to wipe out the Armenian Christians. The sonnets are amongst the most bitter and angry that HDR wrote and using language that did not appear in any of his other poems.
In the Preface to the book HDR wrote:
Armenia is cast to the dogs. The love of Christ and the love of man have no longer it seems any power of appeal to the heart of civilised Europe. Many of us are ashamed of being Englishmen. We think it is a mockery that the British flag, with the red cross of St. George upon it, should continue to fly above our heads; for England, in conjunction with her fellow Powers, has broken her pledges; and, not content with standing, hands behind her back, to watch a defenceless Christian people torn limb from limb in the shambles of the Sultan, is actually still upholding the butcher at his unholy work. And all this because she is, for politic reasons, afraid of precipitating a crisis which will come, so some think, and come with dishonour, at the last [p. 5]. . . .
This people, 30 millions in old time, had been reduced to 3 millions by constant persecution under Musselman rule. Then came the Berlin Congress in 1878 . . . [p. 6]. Since that time to 1891, by a slow process of most cruel exaction, the lives of the Armenians had been made intolerable [p. 7].
[This] people was to be wiped from the face of the earth at the will of the rottenest government that has ever disgraced the civilised world [p. 8]
So well has the “Shadow of God,” with apparently the full consent of Christian Europe, succeeded in his cruel work of extermination, that a country, 500 miles long by 300 miles broad, has been devastated by brigands and soldiers, whose inhuman deeds can only be described as the deeds of fiends from hell. 50,000 men, some say 100,000, mostly breadwinners, have perished; 47,000 houses and shops have been plundered or burned to the ground; 40,000 Christians have been forced by fear of torture and worse to embrace Islam; half a million, mostly women and children, are left without sufficient food, clothing, or means of support. This exclusive of 6,000 massacred and 1,000 missing in the butcheries in Constantinople [p. 8]
The nation of 30,000,000 (some say 8,000,000) has been reduced to 1,000,000 [p. 9]
But there are some English people who think that there may be another way of escape than this of suicide for some of the widows and orphans of Armenians. They have obtained a house and land which can be turned into an [p. 12] industrial farm, under British protection, and they are assured by employers of labour in the place that there is a demand for such labour as these Armenian refugees might perform [p. 13].
Contents
A Haunting Voice (p. 17)
The Darkened West (p. 18)
“Such As Sit in Darkness and in the Shadow of Death” (p. 19)
The Spectre of the Brocken (p. 20)
A Dream at Scutari (p. 21)
Harvest Here and There (p. 22)
England and Armenia (p. 23)
Thy Neighbour (p. 24)
A Call to England (p. 25)
Two Voices (p. 26)
The Crusades—Then and Now (p. 27)
Banner of England (pp. 28-29)
A Contrast (p. 30)
A Sunday in Armenia (p. 31)
A Cry for the Shepherd pp. 32-33)
At Arabkir (pp. 34-35)
In the Burning Church at Oorfah (pp. 36-37)
Tried in the Fire (pp. 38-39)
The Parable of Aboukaiatyan: The Martyred Pastor of Oorfah (p. 40)
The Christ-King of Edessa (p. 41)
A Cry from Edessa (pp. 42-43)
Schakhé, the Brave (p. 44)
The Madness of Despair: Ottoman Bank, Aug. 26th, 1896) (p. 45)
“Out of the Deep have I called Unto Thee, Lord, Hear My Voice” (pp. 46-47)
Peace—False and True (p. 48)
A Voice from Sancta Sophia (p. 49)
British Interests (pp. 50-51)
A Nation’s Funeral (p. 52)
The Czar at Balmoral: 24th Sept., 1896 (p. 53)
To W. E. Gladstone: Liverpool, September 24th, 1896 (p. 54)
In Memory of September 23, 1896 (p. 55)
Hate’s After-Glow—Love’s Morning Star (p. 56)
Quomodo Sedet Sola Civitas: Armenian Meeting in St. James’s Hall, Monday, 19th October, 1896 (p. 57)
Appendix
A Daily Prayer for Armenia (p. 58)
Hymn for the Armenian Relief Fund (p. 59)
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