Sonnet to Keats, dated March, 1841. Boston Miscellany, January.
[Agatha], dated September, 1840. Boston Miscellany, January.
To Perdita Singing, dated February, 1841. Boston Miscellany, January.
Song: “Violet! sweet violet!” Graham’s Magazine, January.
Sonnet: To the Spirit of Keats. Arcturus, January.
Sonnet: Sunset and Moonshine. Arcturus, January.
Sonnet: “Poet! thou art most wealthy, being poor,” dated November 25, 1841. Arcturus, February.
An Ode: “In the Old Days of awe and keen-eyed wonder,” dated December, 1841. Boston Miscellany, February.
Sonnet: “Like some black mountain glooming huge aloof,” dated October, 1841. Boston Miscellany, February.
Rosaline. Graham’s Magazine, February.
Sonnet: “If some small savor creep into my rhymes.” Graham’s Magazine, February.
Fancies about a Rosebud pressed in an old copy of Spenser. Graham’s Magazine, March.
[Getting up.] Boston Miscellany, March.
[Disquisition on Foreheads. By Job Simifrons.] Boston Miscellany, March.
The Old English Dramatists. (Unsigned.) Boston Miscellany, April.
Sonnet: “Whene’er I read in mournful history,” dated 25 September, 1841. Boston Miscellany, May.
The Old English Dramatists, No. II. Boston Miscellany, May.
The Two, dated November, 1840. Boston Miscellany, May.
The First Client. (Unsigned.) Boston Miscellany, May.
Sonnet: “My Father, since I love, thy presence cries,” dated November 29, 1841. Arcturus, May.
Sonnet: “The hope of truth grows stronger day by day,” dated December 10, 1841. Arcturus, May.
Sonnet: “I love those poets, of whatever creed,” dated April 20, 1841. Arcturus, May.
Sonnets:
| I. | “As the broad ocean endlessly upheaveth.” |
| II. | “Once hardly in a cycle blossometh.” |
| III. | “The love of all things springs from love of one.” |
| IV. | “A poet cannot strive for despotism.” |
| V. | “Therefore think not the Past is wise alone.” |
| VI. | “Far ’yond this narrow parapet of time.” |
The United States Magazine and Democratic Review, May. | |
Reprinted in Poems as “On reading Wordsworth’s Sonnets in Defence of Capital Punishment.” | |
Farewell. Graham’s Magazine, June.
A Dirge. Graham’s Magazine, July.
A Fantasy, dated 12 January, 1842. Boston Miscellany July.
[The True Radical.] Boston Miscellany, August.
The Old English Dramatists, No. III. Boston Miscellany, August.
Sonnet: “Poet, if men from wisdom turn away.” (Unsigned.) National Anti-Slavery Standard, 1 September.
The Shepherd of King Admetus. Boston Miscellany, September.
An Incident in a Railroad Car, dated Boston, April, 1842. The United States Magazine and Democratic Review, October.
[To an Æolian Harp at Night], dated February, 1842. Boston Miscellany, December.
Sonnet: “Great Truths are portions of the Soul of man.” The Liberty Bell.
Sonnet: “If ye have not the one great lesson learned.” The Liberty Bell.
Pierpont: “The hungry flames did never yet seem hot.” The Liberty Bell.
1843.
Introduction. The Pioneer, January.
[Voltaire.] The Pioneer, January.
[The Follower.] The Pioneer, January.
Sonnet: “Our love is not a fading earthly flower.” The Pioneer, January.
The Plays of Thomas Middleton. The Pioneer, January.
The Rose. The Pioneer, January.
[Dickens’s “American Notes.”] The Pioneer, January.
[Hawthorne’s Historical Tales for Youth.] The Pioneer, January.
A Parable. The United States Magazine and Democratic Review, February.
The Moon. Graham’s Magazine, February.
Song Writing. The Pioneer, February.
To M. O. S. The Pioneer, February.
[The Book of British Ballads.] The Pioneer, February.
[Longfellow’s “Poems on Slavery.”] The Pioneer, February.
[Macaulay’s “Lays of Ancient Rome.”] The Pioneer, February.
[Two Sonnets to Wordsworth.] Graham’s Magazine, March.
The Street. The Pioneer, March.
Stanzas on Freedom, sung at the Anti-Slavery Picnic in Dedham, on the Anniversary of West-Indian Emancipation, 1 August.
In Sadness. Graham’s Magazine, August.
Prometheus, dated Cambridge, Mass., June, 1843. The United States Magazine and Democratic Review, August.
Forgetfulness. New York Mirror [copied into National Anti-Slavery Standard, 7 September.]
A Glance behind the Curtain. The United Magazine and Democratic Review, September.
A Reverie. Graham’s Magazine, October.
The Fatherland. The United States Magazine and Democratic Review, October.
Poems | by | James Russell Lowell | Cambridge: | Published by John Owen. | MDCCCXLIV.
1844.
Rallying Cry for New England against the Annexation of Texas, by a Yankee. Boston Courier, 19 March.
New Translations of the Writings of Miss Bremer. North American Review, April.
Introduction to Whittier’s “Texas: Voice of New England.” Boston Courier, 17 April.
A Mystical Ballad. Graham’s Magazine, May.
New-Year’s Eve, 1844; a Fragment. Graham’s Magazine, July.
On the Death of a Friend’s Child, dated Cambridge, Mass., September 3, 1844. The United States Magazine and Democratic Review, October.
A Chippewa Legend. The Liberty Bell.
Conversations | on some of | The Old Poets | by | James Russell Lowell |
Cambridge: | Published by John Owen | MDCCCXLV.
1845.
To the Dandelion. Graham’s Magazine, January.
A Song to my Wife. The Broadway Journal, 4 January.
The Epitaph: “What means this glosing epitaph?” dated Rockwood, 7 February, 1844. The Broadway Journal, 11 January.
Our Position. Pennsylvania Freeman, 16 January.
Now is always best. The Broadway Journal, 25 January.
An Epigram on Certain Conservatives. The Broadway Journal, 25 January.
[Texas]. The Pennsylvania Freeman, 30 January.
Anti-Texas, written on occasion of the Convention in Faneuil Hall, January 29. Boston Courier, 30 January, under title Another Rallying Cry by a Yankee.
Edgar Allan Poe. Graham’s Magazine, February.
[The Prejudice of Color]. The Pennsylvania Freeman, 13 February.
Remembered Music. The Broadway Journal, 15 February.
The Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. The Broadway Journal, 22 February.
The Church and the Clergy. The Pennsylvania Freeman, 27 February, 27 March.
The Ghost-Seer. The Broadway Journal, 8 March.
[President Tyler’s Message on the African Slave Trade]. The Pennsylvania Freeman, 13 March.
[The Union]. The Pennsylvania Freeman, 10 April.
An Incident of the Fire at Hamburg. Graham’s Magazine, May.
Review of Fitz-Greene Halleck’s “Alnwick Castle, with other Poems.” The Broadway Journal, 3 May.
Lines on reading of the capture of certain fugitive slaves near Washington. Boston Courier, 19 July.
To the Future. Graham’s Magazine, August.
Orpheus. The American Review, August.
To a Pine Tree, dated Elmwood, July 16, 1845. The Harbinger, 2 August.
A Contrast. The Liberty Chime.
The Falconer, afterward, abridged, The Falcon, dated 26 November, 1845. The Liberty Bell.
The Happy Martyrdom. The Liberty Bell.
Verses suggested by the Present Crisis, afterward The Present Crisis. Boston Courier, 11 December.
An Interview with Miles Standish. Boston Courier, 30 December.
1846.
To the Past. Graham’s Magazine, January.
Lines on the Death of Charles Turner Torrey. Boston Courier, 23 May.
Anti-Slavery in the United States. London Daily News, 2 February, 18 March, 17 April, 18 May.
A Letter from Mr. Ezekiel Biglow of Jaalam to the Hon. Joseph T. Buckingham, editor of the Bottom Courier, inclosing a poem of his son, Mr. Hosea Biglow (Biglow Papers, I.) Boston Courier, 17 June.
Daniel Webster. National Anti-Slavery Standard,[112] 2 July.
The Royal Pedigree. Boston Courier, 4 December.
The Oak. Standard, 31 December.
1847.
Letter from Boston, postmarked 27 December, 1846. The Pennsylvania Freeman, January.
Above and Below. The Young American, January.
Si descendero in infernum, ades. The Harbinger, 10 January.
The Search. Standard, 25 February.
The New Timon. North American Review, April.
Hebe. The Young American, May.
D’Israeli’s Tancred, or the New Crusade. North American Review, July.
Letter from a Volunteer in Saltillo (Biglow Papers, II.). Boston Courier, 18 August.
The Landlord. The People’s Journal, 4 September.
What Mr. Robinson thinks (Biglow Papers, III.). Boston Courier, 2 November.
Extreme Unction. The Liberty Bell.
Remarks of Increase D. O’Phace, esquire (Biglow Papers, IV.). Boston Courier, 28 December.
1848.
Poems | by | James Russell Lowell.| Second series. | Cambridge: Published by | George Nichols.| Boston: | B. B. Mussey and Company. | 1848. Copyright, 1847.
Review of Tennyson’s “Princess.” Massachusetts Quarterly Review, March.
Browning’s Plays and Poems. North American Review, April.
Ode to France, dated February, 1848. Standard, 6 April.
The French Revolution of 1848. Standard, 13 April.
Shall we ever be Republicans? Standard, 20 April.
The Debate in the Sennit (Biglow Papers, V.). Boston Courier, 3 May.
The Pious Editor’s Creed (Biglow Papers, VI.). Standard, 4 May.
A Parable. Standard, 18 May.
An Imaginary Conversation. Standard, 18 May.
A Letter from a Candidate for the Presidency (Biglow Papers, VII.). Standard, 1 June.
The Sacred Parasol. Standard, 8 June.
Freedom. Standard, 15 June.
The Nominations for the Presidency. Standard, 29 June.
Sympathy with Ireland. Standard, 29 June.
A Second Letter from B. Sawin, esq. (Biglow Papers, VIII.). Standard, 6 July.
What will Mr. Webster do? Standard, 13 July.
Leaving the Matter open, a Tale by Homer Wilbur, A. M., reprinted in Introduction to Biglow Papers. Standard, 27 July.
To Lamartine. Standard, 3 August.
The Buffalo Convention. Standard, 10 August.
The Irish Rebellion. Standard, 24 August.
Fanaticism in the Navy. Standard, 31 August.
Exciting Intelligence from South Carolina. Standard, 7 September.
Editorial article, beginning: “When we first went to the theatre, that which delighted us most, among the thousand and one marvels, was the swiftness with which a change of costume was effected.” Standard, 14 September.
To the Memory of Hood. Standard, 21 September.
Another Letter from B. Sawin, esq. (Biglow Papers, IX.). Standard, 28 September.
Editorial article, beginning: “Chance has thrown in our way a stray number of the ‘Christian Observer.’” Standard, 5 October.
Review of “The Conquerors of the New World and their Bondsmen.” Standard, 12, 26 October.
The Day of Small Things, afterward To W. L. Garrison. Standard, 19 October.
Reader! Walk up at once (it will soon be too late) and | buy at a perfectly ruinous rate | a | FABLE FOR CRITICS; | or | Better— | I like, as a thing that the reader’s first fancy may strike, | an old-fashioned title-page, | such as presents a tabular view of the volume’s contents— | A GLANCE | AT A FEW OF OUR LITERARY PROGENIES| (Mrs. Malaprop’s word)| from | the Tub of Diogenes; | a Vocal and Musical Medley. | That is, | a Series of Jokes. | BY A WONDERFUL QUIZ, | who accompanies himself with a rub-a-dub-dub, FULL OF SPIRIT AND GRACE, | on the top of the tub. | SET FORTH IN | October the 21st day, in the year ’48. By | G. P. PUTNAM, Broadway.
Ode, written for the celebration of the introduction of the Cochituate water into the city of Boston, 25 October.
The Ex-Mayor’s Crumb of Consolation: a Pathetic Ballad. Standard, 26 October.
To John G. Palfrey. Standard, 2 November.
Calling things by their Right Names. Standard, 9 November.
Melibœus Hipponax. | The Biglow Papers, | Edited, | with an Introduction, Notes, Glossary, | and Copious Index, | by Homer Wilbur, A. M., | Pastor of the First Church in Jaalam, and (prospective) member of | many Literary, Learned and Scientific societies, | (for which see page v.) | Cambridge: Published by George Nichols.
The Sower. Standard, 16 November.
Editorial article, beginning: “If, as it has been often said, America be a kind of posterity in relation to Europe.” Standard, 23 November.
Editorial article, beginning: “The recent decision of the English Government.” Standard, 30 November.
The Works of Walter Savage Landor. Massachusetts Quarterly Review, December.
Ambrose. Standard, 7 December.
The President’s Message. Standard, 14 December.
Review of Whittier’s Poems. Standard, 14 December.
El Dorado. Standard, 21 December.
A Washington Monument. Standard, 28 December.
1849.
The Mill, afterward Beaver Brook. Standard, 4 January.
Editorial article, beginning: “There is no need of any speculation as to the course Whigs as Whigs will take.” Standard, 11 January.
Our Southern Brethren. Standard, 18 January.
Politics and the Pulpit. Standard, 25 January.
Ethnology. Standard, 1 February.
The Parting of the Ways. Standard, 8 February.
Mr. Calhoun’s Report. Standard, 15 February.
The Moral Movement against Slavery. Standard, 22 February.
Editorial article, beginning: “Next to the charge of being possessed with only a single idea.” Standard, 1 March.
A Day in June, afterward, enlarged, Al Fresco. Standard, 8 March.
Editorial article, beginning: “The long succession of Democratic rulers has at length been broken.” Standard, 15 March.
Mr. Clay as an Abolitionist.—Second appearance in Fifty Years. Standard, 22 March.
Lines suggested by the Graves of Two English Soldiers on Concord Battle-Ground. Standard, 29 March.
An Oriental Apologue. Standard, 12 April.
Editorial article, beginning: “The German poet Schiller in a little poem.” Standard, 19 April.
Anti-Slavery Criticism upon Mr. Clay’s Letter. Standard, 26 April.
King Retro. Standard, 10 May.
Editorial article, beginning: “In the Standard of April 19th an article was copied.” Standard, 10 May.
Bibliolatres. Standard, 24 May.
Mobs. Standard, 14 June.
Two Sonnets, afterward named Trial. Standard, 28 June.
Longfellow’s Kavanagh: Nationality in Literature. North American Review, July.
The Roman Republic. Standard, 12 July.
Fourth of July in Charleston. Standard, 26 July.
Moderation. Standard, 9 August.
Eurydice. Standard, 23 August.
Kossuth. Standard, 6 September.
Editorial article, beginning: “Our readers have had, from time to time, the privilege of seeing extracts from Southern newspapers.” Standard, 20 September.
Editorial article, beginning: “Every now and then we see it asserted.” Standard, 4 October.
To —— : “We, too, have autumns, when our leaves.” Standard, 18 October.
Canada. Standard, 1 November.
The Lesson of the Pine, afterward enlarged and entitled, A Mood. Standard, 15 November.
California. Standard, 29 November.
Review of “A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers,” Massachusetts Quarterly Review, December.
General Bem’s Conversion. Standard, 6 December.
Editorial article, beginning: “The last European steamer brings us what is said to be the final determination of the Turkish government in regard to the Hungarian exiles.” Standard, 13 December.
The Burial of Theobald. The Liberty Bell.
The First Snow-Fall. Standard, 27 December.
1850.
What shall be done for the Hungarian Exiles? Boston Courier, 3 January.
New Year’s Eve, 1850. Standard, 10 January.
A Review of Judd’s “Philo.” Standard, 24 January.
Editorial article, beginning: “When King Log first made his avatar among the frogs.” Standard, 21 February.
Compromise. Standard, 7 March.
Mr. Webster’s Speech. Standard, 21 March.
Out of Doors. Graham’s Magazine, April.
Editorial article, beginning: “In the comment which we made a fortnight ago on Mr. Webster’s speech.” Standard, 4 April.
Mahmood the Image Breaker. Standard, 18 April.
Dara. Graham’s Magazine, July.
The Northern Sancho Panza and his vicarious Cork tree. Standard, 18 July.
Pseudo Conservatism. Standard, 14 November.
A Dream I had. Standard, 28 November.
To J. F. H., afterward An Invitation to J. F. H. Graham’s Magazine, December.
Mr. Bowen and the Christian Examiner, I. Boston Daily Advertiser, 28 December.
1851.
Mr. Bowen and the Christian Examiner, II. Boston Daily Advertiser, 2 January.
Anti-Apis. Standard, 30 January.
Appledore, No. V., in Pictures from Appledore. Graham’s Magazine, February.
The Unhappy Lot of Mr. Knott. Graham’s Magazine, April.
On Receiving a piece of Flax Cotton, dated 18 April, 1851. Standard, 1 May.
1853.
The Fountain of Youth. Putnam’s Magazine, January.
Our Own, his Wanderings and Personal Adventures. Putnam’s Magazine, April, May, June.
A Moosehead Journal. Putnam’s Magazine, November.
1854.
The Singing Leaves. Graham’s Magazine, January.
A Winter Evening Hymn to my Fire. Putnam’s Magazine, March.
Without and Within. Putnam’s Magazine, April.
Fireside Travels. Putnam’s Magazine, April, May.
Leaves from my Italian Journal. Graham’s Magazine, April, May, July.
[Without and Within, II. The Restaurant.] Putnam’s Magazine, May.
The Windharp. Putnam’s Magazine, December.
Auf Wiedersehen. Putnam’s Magazine, December.
1855.
Hakon’s Lay. Graham’s Magazine, January.
My Appledore Gallery, No. I. August afternoon, afterward with changes I.-IV. of Pictures from Appledore. The Crayon, 3 January.
My Appledore Gallery, No. II. Sunset and Moonset, afterward VI. of Pictures from Appledore. The Crayon, 31 January.
Invita Minerva. The Crayon, 30 May.
1857.
The Origin of Didactic Poetry. Atlantic Monthly, November.
Sonnet: “The Maple puts her corals on in May.” Atlantic Monthly, November.
The Round Table. Atlantic Monthly, November.
My Portrait Gallery. Atlantic Monthly, December.
Memoir of Shelley, prefixed to The Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley. Boston: Little, Brown & Co.
1858.
Béranger (translated from Sainte-Beuve). Atlantic Monthly, February.
The Nest. Atlantic Monthly, March.
Review of Guerrazzi’s Beatrice Cenci. Atlantic Monthly, March.
Happiness. Atlantic Monthly, April.
Mr. Buchanan’s Administration. Atlantic Monthly, April.
Review of Smith’s Library of Old Authors. Atlantic Monthly, April, May.
Epigram on J. M. Atlantic Monthly, May.
Beatrice, afterward Das Ewig-Weibliche. Atlantic Monthly, June.
Shipwreck. Atlantic Monthly, June.
Review of Dramatic Works of John Webster. Atlantic Monthly, June.
The American Tract Society. Atlantic Monthly, July.
The Trustees’ Lament. Atlantic Monthly, August.
The Pocket Celebration of the Fourth. Atlantic Monthly, August.
The Dead House. Atlantic Monthly, October.
A Sample of Consistency. Atlantic Monthly, November.
1859.
White’s Shakespeare. Atlantic Monthly, January, February.
Longfellow’s “The Courtship of Miles Standish.” Atlantic Monthly, January.
Holland’s “Bitter-Sweet.” Atlantic Monthly, May.
Allibone’s “Dictionary of Authors.” Atlantic Monthly, June.
Trübner’s “Bibliographical Guide to American Literature.” Atlantic Monthly, June.
Notice of “Index to Catalogue of Boston City Library.” Atlantic Monthly, June.
Notice of “Memoir of Theophilus Parsons.” Atlantic Monthly, July.
Dana’s “To Cuba and Back.” Atlantic Monthly, July.
Palmer’s “The New and the Old.” Atlantic Monthly, September.
Copeland’s “Country Life.” Atlantic Monthly, September.
Review of “Dictionary of Americanisms,” and other works on Language. Atlantic Monthly, November.
Coolidge and Mansfield’s “History and Description of New England.” Atlantic Monthly, November.
Gould’s “Reply to the Statement of the Trustees of the Dudley Observatory.” Atlantic Monthly, November.
Italy, 1859. Atlantic Monthly, December.
Notice of “Forty-four Years of the Life of a Hunter, being Reminiscences of Meshach Browning.” Atlantic Monthly, December.
Milburn’s “Ten Years of Preacher-Life.” Atlantic Monthly, December.
Notice of “A First Lesson in Natural History.” Atlantic Monthly, December.
Dante. Appleton’s New American Encyclopædia. Reprinted, May, 1886, in fifth annual report of the Dante Society.
1860.
Notice of “Sir Rohan’s Ghost.” Atlantic Monthly, February.
To the Muse. Atlantic Monthly, March.
Marsh’s “Lectures on the English Language.” Atlantic Monthly, April.
Hawthorne’s “The Marble Faun.” Atlantic Monthly, April
Notice of “Poems by Two Friends.” Atlantic Monthly, April.
Norton’s “Notes of Travel and Study in Italy.” Atlantic Monthly, May.
Webster’s “American Dictionary of the English Language.” Atlantic Monthly, May.
Worcester’s “A Dictionary of the English Language.” Atlantic Monthly, May.
Coles’s “Dies Iræ.” Atlantic Monthly, June.
Collins’s “A Voyage down the Amoor.” Atlantic Monthly, June.
Lowell’s “Fresh Hearts that failed Three Thousand Years ago.” Atlantic Monthly, June.
The New Tariff Bill. Atlantic Monthly, July.
Wedgwood’s “A Dictionary of English Etymology.” Atlantic Monthly, August.
Leslie’s “Autobiographical Recollections.” Atlantic Monthly, September.
Trowbridge’s “The Old Battle Ground.” Atlantic Monthly, September.
July reviewed by September (with W. B. Rogers). Atlantic Monthly, September.
The Election in November. Atlantic Monthly, October.
Mr. Jarves’s Collection. Atlantic Monthly, October.
Olmsted’s “A Journey in the Back County.” Atlantic Monthly, November.
Whittier’s “Home Ballads and Poems.” Atlantic Monthly, November.
A Plea for Freedom from Speech and Figures of Speech Makers. Atlantic Monthly, December.
Bryant’s “A Forest Hymn.” Atlantic Monthly, December.
Stoddard’s “Loves and Heroines of the Poets.” Atlantic Monthly, December.
Palmer’s “Folk Songs.” Atlantic Monthly, December.
1861.
The Question of the Hour. Atlantic Monthly, January.
Prior’s “Ancient Danish Ballads.” Atlantic Monthly, January.
Chambers’s “Edinburgh Papers.” Atlantic Monthly, January.
Holland’s “Miss Gilbert’s Career.” Atlantic Monthly, January.
E. Pluribus Unum. Atlantic Monthly, February.
Parton’s “Life of Andrew Jackson.” Atlantic Monthly, March.
Rose Terry’s “Poems.” Atlantic Monthly, March.
Holmes’s “Elsie Venner.” Atlantic Monthly, April.
The Pickens-and-Stealins’ Rebellion. Atlantic Monthly, June.
Ode to Happiness. Atlantic Monthly, September.
The Washers of the Shroud. Atlantic Monthly, November.
Self-Possession vs. Prepossession. Atlantic Monthly, December.
1862.
Birdofredum Sawin, Esq., to Mr. Hosea Biglow, Atlantic Monthly, January, March.
Arnold’s “On Translating Homer” and Newman’s “Homeric Translation in Theory and Practice.” Atlantic Monthly, January.
Mason and Slidell: a Yankee Idyl. Atlantic Monthly, February.
Müller’s “Lectures on the Science of Language.” Atlantic Monthly, March.
A Message of Jeff Davis in Secret Session. Atlantic Monthly, April.
Speech of Honble Preserved Doe in Secret Caucus. Atlantic Monthly, May.
Sunthin’ in the Pastoral Line. Atlantic Monthly, June.
1863.
In the Half-Way House. Atlantic Monthly, January.
Latest Views of Mr. Biglow. Atlantic Monthly, February.
Russell’s “My Diary, North and South.” Atlantic Monthly, March.
Story’s “Roba di Roma.” Atlantic Monthly, April.
Two Scenes from the Life of Blondel. Atlantic Monthly, November.
1864.
Memoriæ Positum R. G. S. Atlantic Monthly, January.
The President’s Policy. North American Review, January.
Longfellow’s “Tales of a Wayside Inn.” North American Review, January.
Whittier’s “In War Time.” North American Review, January.
Stedman’s “Alice of Monmouth.” North American Review, January.
The Black Preacher. Atlantic Monthly, April.
McClellan’s Report. North American Review, April.
Gurowski’s Diary. North American Review, April.
Diplomatic Correspondence. North American Review, April.
Beecher’s Autobiography. North American Review, April.
Thackeray’s “Roundabout Papers.” North American Review, April.
Chaucer’s “Legende of Goode Women” and “Child’s Observations on the Language of Chaucer.” North American Review, April.
Jean Ingelow’s Poems. North American Review, April.
Barnes’s “Poems in the Dorset Dialect.” North American Review, April.
To a Friend who sent me a Meerschaum. Spirit of the Fair, 12 April.
Fireside Travels. | By | James Russell Lowell. | “Travelling makes a man sit still in his old age with satisfaction and travel over the world again in his chair and bed by discourse and thoughts.”
The Voyage of Italy, by Richard Lassels, Gent.
Boston: | Ticknor and Fields. | 1864.
The Rebellion: its Causes and Consequences. North American Review, July.
Hazlitt’s “Poems of Richard Lovelace.” North American Review, July.
The Next General Election, [afterward, McClellan or Lincoln.] North American Review, October.
1865.
On Board the ’76. Atlantic Monthly, January.
Palfrey’s “History of New England.” North American Review, January.
Mr. Hosea Biglow to the Editor of the “Atlantic Monthly.” Atlantic Monthly, April.
Reconstruction. North American Review, April.
Gold-Egg: a Dream Fantasy. Atlantic Monthly, May.
Scotch the Snake, or Kill it. North American Review, July.
Lord Derby’s “Translation of the Iliad.” North American Review, July.
Ode Recited at the Harvard Commemoration. Atlantic Monthly, September.
Thoreau’s “Letters.” North American Review, October.
Parkman’s “France and England.” North American Review, October.
1866.
What Rabbi Jehosha said. The Nation, 18 January.
A Worthy Ditty. The Nation, 25 January.
Carlyle’s “Frederick the Great.” North American Review, April.
The President on the Stump. North American Review, April.
Swinburne’s “Tragedies.” North American Review, April.
Mr. Worsley’s Nightmare. The Nation, 5 April.
Mr. Hosea Biglow’s Speech in March Meeting. Atlantic Monthly, May.
To J. B. on sending me a seven-pound trout. Atlantic Monthly, July.
At the Commencement Dinner, on acknowledging a toast to the Smith Professor, 19 July.
The Miner. Atlantic Monthly, August.
The Seward-Johnson Reaction. North American Review, October.
Wendell Phillips in Congress. The Nation, 4 October.
1867.
Fitz Adam’s Story. Atlantic Monthly, January.
Ward’s “Life and Letters of Percival.” North American Review, January.
Hob Gobbling’s Song. Our Young Folks, January.
A Familiar Epistle to a Friend. Atlantic Monthly, April.
Lessing. North American Review, April.
An Ember Picture. Atlantic Monthly, July.
Rousseau and the Sentimentalists. North American Review, July.
Parkman’s “France and England in North America.” North American Review, July.
Uncle Cobus’s Story. Our Young Folks, July.
The Nightingale in the Study. Atlantic Monthly, September.
The Winthrop Papers. North American Review, October.
A Great Public Character. Atlantic Monthly, November.
1868.
In the Twilight. Atlantic Monthly, January.
Witchcraft. North American Review, January.
Shakespeare Once More. North American Review, April.
After the Burial. Atlantic Monthly, May.
A June Idyl. Atlantic Monthly, June.
Dryden. North American Review, July.
The Footpath. Atlantic Monthly, August.
“Poems of John James Piatt.” North American Review, October.
Mr. Emerson’s New Course of Lectures. The Nation, 12 November.
Under the Willows | and | Other Poems. By | James Russell Lowell. | Boston: | Fields, Osgood & Co., | Successors to Ticknor and Fields. | 1869.
My Garden Acquaintance. The Atlantic Almanac, 1869.
1869.
The Flying Dutchman. Atlantic Monthly, January.
On a Certain Condescension in Foreigners. Atlantic Monthly, January.
A Look before and after. North American Review, January.
Bartlett’s “Familiar Quotations.” North American Review, July.
A Good Word for Winter. The Atlantic Almanac, 1870.
1870.
The Cathedral. Atlantic Monthly, January.
The Cathedral. | By | James Russell Lowell. | Boston: | Fields, Osgood & Co. | 1870.
Hazlitt’s “Library of Old Authors.” North American Review, April.
Among My Books. | By | James Russell Lowell, A. M. | Professor of Belles-Lettres in Harvard College. | Boston: | Fields, Osgood & Co. | 1870.
Chaucer. North American Review, July.
A Virginian in New England Thirty-five Years Ago, Introduction to. Atlantic Monthly, August.
1871.
Pope. North American Review, January.
Goodwin’s “Plutarch’s Morals.” North American Review, April.
My Study Windows. | By | James Russell Lowell, A. M. | Professor of Belles-Lettres in Harvard College. | Boston: | James R. Osgood and Company. | Late Ticknor & Fields, and Fields, Osgood & Co. | 1871.
1872.
Masson’s “Life of John Milton.” North American Review, January.
The Shadow of Dante. North American Review, July.
1874.
Agassiz. Atlantic Monthly, May.
An Epitaph. The Nation, 1 October.
Jeffries Wyman. The Nation, 8 October.
1875.
Spenser. North American Review, April.
Sonnet to F. A. Atlantic Monthly, May.
Ode read at the Concord Centennial. Atlantic Monthly, June.
Joseph Winlock. The Nation, 17 June.
James’s “Sketches.” The Nation, 24 June.
Sonnets from over Sea. Atlantic Monthly, July.
Under the Great Elm. Atlantic Monthly, August.
The World’s Fair, 1876. The Nation, 5 August.
Tempora Mutantur. The Nation, 26 August.
The Dancing Bear. Atlantic Monthly, September.
1876.
Forster’s “Swift.” The Nation, 13, 20 April.
“The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne.” The Nation, 27 April.
A Misconception. The Nation, 10 August.
Campaign Epigrams: A Coincidence; Defrauding Nature; The Widow’s Mite. The Nation, 14 September.
Campaign Epigrams: Moieties; The Astronomer Misplaced. The Nation, 12 October.
Among My Books. | Second Series. | By James Russell Lowell, | Professor of Belles-Lettres in Harvard College. | Boston: | James R. Osgood and Company, | Late Ticknor & Fields, and Fields, Osgood & Co. | 1876.
An Ode for the Fourth of July, 1876. Atlantic Monthly, December.
1877.
Birthday Verses. Atlantic Monthly, January.
Bankside. The Nation, 31 May.
Motley (a Note). The Nation, 7 June.
Three Memorial Poems. | By | James Russell Lowell.| Εῖς οἰωνὸς ἄριστος ἀμύνεσθαι περὶ πάτρης | Boston: | James R. Osgood and Company, | Late Ticknor & Fields, and Fields, Osgood & Co. 1877.
Night Watches. Atlantic Monthly, July.
1880.
After dinner speech at Déjeuner to American actors. Reported in The Era, London, 2 August.
1881.
Garfield. Spoken in London, 24 September.
Phœbe. The Century, November.
Stanley. Speech at Chapter House of Westminster Abbey, 13 December.
1882.
Estrangement. The Century, May.
1883.
Fielding. Address at Taunton, England, 4 September.
1884.
Wordsworth. Given 10 May.
Democracy. Delivered at Birmingham, England, 6 October.
1885.
Coleridge. Address at Westminster Abbey, 7 May.
An after dinner speech at the Celebration of Forefathers’ Day in Plymouth. 21 December.
Books and Libraries. Address at Chelsea, Massachusetts, 22 December.
Speech as presiding officer at dinner of Massachusetts Reform League, 29 December. Printed in Boston Post, 30 December.
1886.
International Copyright. The Century, February.
Gray. New Princeton Review, March.
Oration in Sanders Theatre on the Two Hundred and Fiftieth Anniversary of the Foundation of Harvard University. Delivered 8 November.
Democracy | and Other Addresses | by | James Russell Lowell | Boston and New York | Houghton, Mifflin & Company | The Riverside Press, Cambridge | 1887 [Copyright, 1886.]
1887.
Credidimus Jorem regnare. Atlantic Monthly, February.
Fancy or Fact? Atlantic Monthly, March.
Speech at Authors’ Reading, 28 November.
The Progress of the World. Introduction to “The World’s Progress.” Gately & O’Gorman, Boston.
1888.
The Secret. Atlantic Monthly, January.
Endymion: A Mystical Comment on Titian’s “Sacred and Profane Love.” Atlantic Monthly, February.
Some Letters of Walter Savage Landor, Introduction to. The Century, February.
The Late Mrs. Ann Benson Procter. The Nation, 29 March.
Turner’s Old Téméraire: under a Figure symbolizing the Church. Atlantic Monthly, April.
The Place of the Independent in Politics. Address delivered before the Reform Club of New York, 13 April.
Political Essays | By | James Russell Lowell | Boston and New York | Houghton, Mifflin and Company | The Riverside Press, Cambridge | 1888
Heartsease and Rue | By | James Russell Lowell | Boston and New York | Houghton, Mifflin and Company | The Riverside Press, Cambridge | 1888
1889.