- XV In Memoriam — Harris Simons
- XIV “Are These Wild Thoughts, Thus Fettered in My Rhymes”
- XIII “I Thank You, Kind and Best Beloved Friend”
- XI “Which Are the Clouds, and Which the Mountains? See”
- X “Were I the Poet-Laureate of the Fairies”
- IX “I Know Not Why, But All This Weary Day”
- VIII “At Last, Beloved Nature! I Have Met”
- VII “Grief Dies Like Joy; the Tears Upon My Cheek”
- VI “I Scarcely Grieve, O Nature! at the Lot”
- V “Some Truths There Be Are Better Left Unsaid”
- IV “They Dub Thee Idler, Smiling Sneeringly”
- III “Life Ever Seems as from Its Present Site”
- II “Most Men Know Love But as a Part of Life”
- I “Poet! If on a Lasting Fame Be Bent”
- Ode Sung on the Occasion of Decorating the Graves of the Confederate Dead,
- Christmas
- The Two Armies
- The Unknown Dead
- Carmen Triumphale
- Ethnogenesis
- Ripley
- Charleston
- A Cry to Arms
- Carolina