- Section 19: “I brim with sorrow drowning song”
- Section 21: “I sing to him that rests below”
- Section 21: “private sorrow's barren song”
- Section 21: “I do but sing ... And pipe but as the linnets sing”
- Section 23: “breaking into song by fits”
- Section 29: “In dance and song and game and jest?”
- Section 30: “A merry song we sang with him”
- Section 37: “darkened sanctities with song”
- Section 38: “in the songs I ... sing A doubtful gleam of solace lives”
- Section 38: “these songs I sing of thee”
- Section 48: “Short swallow-flights of song”
- Section 49: “The slightest air of song shall breathe”
- Section 52: “Yet blame not thou thy plaintive song”
- Section 57: “the song of woe ... To sing so wildly”
- Section 75: “voice the richest-toned that sing”
- Section 75: “the breeze of song”
- Section 76: “the matin songs"
- Section 76: “thy songs are vain”
- Section 77: “songs, and deeds, and lives”
- Section 77: “Sung by a long-forgotten mind”
- Section 78: “dance and song”
- Section 88: “Wild bird, whose warble, liquid sweet”
- Section 95: “we sang old songs”
- Section 98: “With sport and song”
- Section 99: “A song that slights the coming care”
- Section 102: “Here thy boyhood sung Long since its matin song”
- Section 105: “neither song, nor game, nor feast”
- Section 107: “sing the songs he loved to hear.”
- Section 115: “The lark becomes a sightless song”
- Section 116: “the songs, the stirring air”
- Section 125: “He breathed the spirit of the song”
- Epilogue: “music more than any song”
- Epilogue: “songs I made As echoes out of weaker times”
Last modified 20 February 2010