Robert burns
Mary Morison (WR. 1784?, PUBL.
1800)
The holy fair (WR. 1785,
PUBL. 1786)
To A louse (WR. 1785, PUBL.
1786)
Epistle to J. LAPRAIK (WR. 1785,
PUBL. 1786), Stanzas 9-13
the Cotter’s Saturday
night (WR. 1785-86, PUBL. 1786)
To A Mouse (1786)
to A mountain daisy (1786)
epistle to A young friend
(1786)
A bard’s epitaph (1786)
address to the unco
guid (1787)
John Anderson, my Jo (WR.
c. 1788, PUBL. 1790)
The lovely lass of
Inverness (WR. c. 1788, PUBL. 1796)
A red, red rose (WR. c.
1788, PUBL. 1796)
Auld lang syne (WR. c.
1788, PUBL. 1796)
Sweet Afton (WR. c. 1789, PUBL.
1796)
The happy Trio (WR. 1789,
PUBL. 1796)
To Mary in heaven
(WR. 1789, PUBL. 1796)
Tam O’ Shanter (WR. 1790,
PUBL. 1791)
Ae fond kiss (WR. 1791,
PUBL. 1792)
Duncan gray (WR. 1792, PUBL.
1798)
Highland Mary (WR. 1792, PUBL.
1799)
Scots, wha hae (WR. 1793,
PUBL. 1794)
Is there for honest
poverty (WR. 1794, PUBL. 1795)
Last may A braw wooer
(WR. c. 1795, PUBL. 1799)
O, wert thou in the
cauld blast (WR. 1796, PUBL. 1800)
Erasmus Darwin
the botanic garden (1789-92),
part I, Canto I, ll. 1-38;
Part II,
Canto I, ll. 299-310
William blake
to winter (1783)
song: Fresh from the
dewy hill (1783)
to the muses (1783)
introduction to songs of
innocence (1789)
the lamb (1789)
the little black boy
(1789)
A cradle song (1789)
holy Thursday (1789)
the divine image (1789)
on another’s sorrow
(1789)
the book of Thel (1789)
the French revolution (printed
1791), ll, 198-240
A song op liberty (c. 1792),
Sec.Sec. 1-3, 12, 18-20, And chorus
the fly (1794)
the tiger (1794)
holy Thursday (1794)
the garden of love
(1794)
A little boy lost (1794)
the school-boy (1794)