Rupert Brooke (1887–1915). Collected Poems. 1916.
Contents
- Second Best
- Day That I Have Loved
- Sleeping Out: Full Moon
- In Examination
- Pine-Trees and the Sky: Evening
- Wagner
- The Vision of the Archangels
- Seaside
- On the Death of Smet-Smet, the Hippopotamus-Goddess
- The Song of the Pilgrims
- The Song of the Beasts
- Failure
- Ante Aram
- Dawn
- The Call
- The Wayfarers
- The Beginning
- Sonnet: Oh! Death Will Find Me, Long Before I Tire
- Sonnet: I Said I Splendidly Loved You; It’s Not True
- Success
- Dust
- Kindliness
- Mummia
- The Fish
- Thoughts on the Shape of the Human Body
- Flight
- The Hill
- The One Before the Last
- The Jolly Company
- The Life Beyond
- Lines Written in the Belief That the Ancient Roman Festival of the Dead Was Called Ambarvalia
- Dead Men’s Love
- Town and Country
- Paralysis
- Menelaus and Helen
- Libido
- Jealousy
- Blue Evening
- The Charm
- Finding
- Song
- The Voice
- Dining-Room Tea
- The Goddess in the Wood
- A Channel Passage
- Victory
- Day and Night
- Tiare Tahiti
- Retrospect
- The Great Lover
- Heaven
- Doubts
- There’s Wisdom in Women
- He Wonders Whether to Praise or to Blame Her
- A Memory
- One Day
- Waikiki
- Hauntings
- Sonnet
- Clouds
- Mutability
- The Busy Heart
- Love
- Unfortunate
- The Chilterns
- Home
- The Night Journey
- Song
- Beauty and Beauty
- The Way That Lovers Use
- Mary and Gabriel
- The Funeral of Youth: Threnody
VII. GrantchesterThe Old Vicarage, Grantchester