Introduction / Donald A. Stauffer
Inscription for a fountain on a heath
The rime of the ancient mariner
Alice du Clos; or, The forked tongue
Love's apparition and evanishment
Reflections on having left a place of retirement
This lime-tree bower my prison
Lines written in the album of Elbingerode, in the Hartz Forest
Constancy to an ideal object
The pang more sharp than all
Sonnet: to the River Otter
To the author of The robbers
Sonnet to the Rev. W. L. Bowles
On an infant which died before baptism
Hymn before sun-rise, in the vale of Chamouni
Shakespeare's judgment equal to his genius
Summary of the characteristics of Shakespeare's dramas
On the principles of political knowledge: Essay XIII, on the law of nations
On the grounds of morals and religion, and the discipline of the mind requisite for a true understanding of the same
Essay VII, The necessity of ideas to scientific method
Essay IX, The Baconian method essentially one with the Platonic
Essay X, Existence of a self-organizing purpose in nature and man
From Essay XI, The meaning of existence
Aphorisms on that which is needed spiritual religion: IV, The characteristic difference between the discipline of the ancient philosophers and the dispensation of the gospel
VIII, Faith, reason and understanding
Henry More's theologcial works
Death, and grounds of belief in a future state
Formation of a more comprehensive theory of life.