Part 1 Anna Seward, (1742-1809): sonnet - By Derwent's rapid stream as oft I strayed,, An Evening in November, Autumn, To Colebrooke Dale. Part 2 Anna Laetitia Barbauld (nee Aikin) (1743-1825): from Corsica; Ode to spring; A Summer Evening's Meditation; Autumn. A Fragment. Part 3 Hannah More, (1745-1833): from The Search after Happiness; from The Search after Happiness. Part 4 Mary Hays, (1760-1843): An Invocation to the Nightingale; The Consolation; sonnet - Ah! let not hope fallacious, airy, wild,. Part 5 Charlotte Smith (nee Turner) (1749-1806): sonnet - To a Nightingale, To The South Downs, On the Departure of the Nightingale, Composed during a Walk on the Downs. Part 6 Eliza Knipe (later Cobbold) (1767-1824): On the Lake of Windermere; Keswick. Part 7 Anne Hunter (nee Home) (1742-1821): November, 1784; To the Nightingale. Part 8 Helen Maria Williams, (1762-1827): sonnet - To Twilight, To Expression; An Address to Poetry; sonnet - To Hope. Part 9 Mary Hunt, (1764-1834): Written on visiting the Ruins of Dunkeswell Abbey ..... Part 10 Ann Yearsley (nee Cromartie) (1752-1806): To Mr. ***, an Unlettered poet, on Genius Unimproved; Anarchy; Peace; Dedicated to Louis XIV. Part 11 Mary O'Brien, (fl. 1785-1790): Ode to Milton. Part 12 Joanna Baillie, (1762-1851): from A Winter Day; from A Summer Day; from Thunder; from Wind. Part 13 Anna Maria Jones, (nee Shipley) (1748-1829): Sonnet to Echo; stanzas - Marie Antoinette's Complaint in Prison; Ode to Fancy; Adieu to India. Part 14 Mary Robinson, (nee Darby) (1758-1800): Ode to the Nightingale; stanzas - Written between Dover and Calais, Written after Successive Nights of Melancholy Dreams; Ode to my Beloved Daughter. Part 15 Ann Radcliffe (nee Ward) (1764-1823): To the visions of Fancy; Song of a Spirit; Morning, on the Sea Shore; Rondeau. Part 16 Amelia Alderson, (later Opie) (1769-1853): To Twilight; Ode to Borrowdale; Ode on the Present Times, 27th January 1795; Stanzas Written under Aeolus's Harp. Part 17 Jane West (nee Iliffe) (1758-1852): Ode to Imaginations; sonnet - 'Her hair disheveled, and her robe untied,', To May. Part 18 Anna Maria Porter (1780-1832)?: Address to poetry, sonnet to a Sea-Gull. Part 19 Mary Tighe (nee Blachford) (1772-1810): Written at Scarborough; sonnet - For me would Fancy now her chaplet twine, Ye dear associates of my gayer hours; from Psyche - The Island of Pleasure. Part 20 Barbara Hoole (nee Wreaks, later Hofland) (1770-1844): Cumberland Rocks; sonnet - Composed on the Banks of Ulswater; Composed in a cell, (commonly called the Giant's Cave); Lines composed while Climbing some Rocks in Derbyshire. Part 21 Jane Taylor, (1783-1824): A Town; from A pair; from The World in the House. Part 22 Felicia Dorothea Hemans (nee Browne) (1793-1835): The Voice of Spring; The Treasures of the. (Part contents)..