- A Dialogue
- A Head Piece.
- A Scene In The Same Prison, On The Night Of The 16th Of May, 1820.
- A Sonnet
- A View From The Tandle Hills, In The Month Of May.
- A Voice From Spain.
- A Winter's Day And Night.
- An Appeal On The Potatoe Famine
- Autumn And Winter.
- Brandreth's Soliloquy In Prison.
- Bright Eyes.
- Dialogue With Fame.
- Doctor Healey's Address To His Friends
- Epitaph,
- Epitaph, On A Young Man Who Was Drowned.
- Farewell To My Cottage.
- God Help The Poor.
- God Save The Queen.
- Gowden-Haired Hester.
- Habakkuk Hyde.
- Her Epitaph.
- Homely Rhymes On Bad Times.
- Hours In The Bowers.
- Hymn To Hope.
- Hymn To Spring.
- La Lyonnaise,
- Lament For My Daughter.
- Lines Occasioned By The Death Of Lord Byron, And By Some Circumstances Connected Therewith.
- Lines On A Quack Doctor
- Lines On Another Doctor.
- Lines To A Plotting Parson
- Lines Written At Farley
- Lines, Addressed To H ———, - Poe
- Lines, Addressed To My Wife During Her Recovery From A Long Illness.
- Lines, Addressed To My Wife From The King's Bench Prison, May I5, 1820.
- Lines, On Reading, In A Manchester Newspaper, An Account Of The Death Of A Late Worthy And Highly Respected M.P.
- Lines, On The Death Of My Friend, Joseph Taylor, Of Oldham.
- Lines, On The Death Of The Late John Horsefield, Botanist, Of Prestwich,
- Lines, On The Liberation Of Sir Charles Wolseley, In 1821
- Lines, Relating To A Beautifully Rural Cottage In Hopwood.
- Lines, To Mr. Samuel Bamford, On His Seventy-Sixth Birthday, February 28th, 1864.
- Lines, Written At The Blue Ball, Rochdale.
- Lines, Written During The Author's Confinement
- Lines, Written In The Travellers' Room, Wolseley Arms Inn
- Lines, Written Oct. 15, 1836, Being The Anniversary Of My Daughter's Decease, And Two Years After That Event.
- Lines, Written Upon Leaving The Employ Of Messrs.
- London, Fare Thee Well.
- Lovely Mary
- Morisa.
- Morning.