| | Poem Title | First Lines | Period | # Lines | # Reads |
| 1: | | Craft of King Hiram and St. John, | | 24 | 49 |
| 2: | A Bird's Nest. | An old man who had charge of field, | | 16 | 60 |
| 3: | Adventures With Bears. | I bought of land two miles square, | | 90 | 64 |
| 4: | Advice To A Little Girl. | Dressing in fashion will be called vain, | | 30 | 61 |
| 5: | Agricultural Implements. | Poor laborers they did sad bewail, | | 24 | 60 |
| 6: | All Men Are Brothers. | We are in ancient stories told | | 10 | 63 |
| 7: | American Poets. | Like fruit that's large and ripe and mellow, | | 12 | 61 |
| 8: | Baby Darling. | A miner in California mine, | | 28 | 75 |
| 9: | Beachville. | Of Beachville, village of the plain, | | 14 | 60 |
| 10: | Bear And Falls. | Strange incidents do happen ever | | 36 | 66 |
| 11: | Bear And Whale. | Russians suffer sad distress | | 32 | 60 |
| 12: | Bear Hunt. | Two youths came over from York state, | | 32 | 64 |
| 13: | Big Bear The Indian Chief. | Sad memories it doth awake, | | 28 | 72 |
| 14: | Bird Sent By Providence. | A poor man stood beside his door, | | 16 | 48 |
| 15: | Birth Of Canada As A Nation, July First, 1867. | Hail Britannia's noblest daughter, | | 16 | 79 |
| 16: | Brain Engravings. | Great wonder is the human brain, | | 24 | 60 |
| 17: | Brantford. | Brantford as thriving city's famed, | | 24 | 66 |
| 18: | Broken Raft Adventure. | A man on Nova Scotian Bay | | 22 | 50 |
| 19: | Bryant. | Some in front rank will defiant, | | 2 | 117 |
| 20: | Burns And Scott In Edinburgh. | When Burns did make triumphant entry | | 20 | 54 |
| 21: | Byron. | Poets they do pursue each theme, | | 10 | 66 |
| 22: | Caledonia Springs, New York. | The water spouts up from the ground | | 24 | 59 |
| 23: | Canada Before The Confederation Of The Provinces. | Canadian provinces they lay | | 28 | 61 |
| 24: | Canada Our Home, 1883. | Then poets will arise and high their lays will soar, | | 8 | 63 |
| 25: | Canada's Future. | Canada is a young giant, | | 36 | 61 |
| 26: | Canada's Resources. | Small Scotland nobly held its own | | 36 | 61 |
| 27: | Canadian Charms. | Here industry is not in vain, | | 7 | 53 |
| 28: | Canadian Hunter. | Of Kentucky's great hunter bold | | 28 | 58 |
| 29: | Canadian Rivers And Lakes. | We have here a sight as fair | | 12 | 57 |
| 30: | Canadian Romance. | An English youth to Canada came, | | 136 | 61 |
| 31: | Canadian Sports And Games And Plays. | Burns sang of joys of Hallowe'en | | 52 | 67 |
| 32: | Canadian Voyageurs On The Nile. | The British soldiers on the Nile | | 32 | 61 |
| 33: | Captain's Adventure. | Three years ago my vessel lay | | 56 | 66 |
| 34: | Castle Gordon. | In youth we spent a pleasant day | | 6 | 65 |
| 35: | Cheese Curd For Bait. | Cheese buyers in hours of leisure | | 28 | 54 |
| 36: | Child Made Happy. | In a great city hospital | | 32 | 54 |
| 37: | Child Saved By Dog. | Johnston he is an engineer, | | 52 | 45 |
| 38: | Coleridge, Southey And Wordsworth. | England had triplets at a birth, | | 8 | 50 |
| 39: | Coon Hunting. | Canadians oft by light of moon | | 16 | 51 |
| 40: | Corner Stone Laying. | In this quiet spot this day of June, | | 16 | 71 |
| 41: | Credit Valley Trip. | Whene'er we take a tour abroad | | 20 | 65 |
| 42: | Crimean War. | When the British Lion offered aid to the Turk, | | 14 | 63 |
| 43: | Dairy Odes. | The sweet milkmaid of early days | | 56 | 52 |
| 44: | Danger Of Fire Arms. | For to save life one great solver | | 16 | 62 |
| 45: | Departed Statesmen. | Joseph Howe, none higher stood than thou, | | 16 | 54 |
| 46: | Dick And Edward. | The Thurso baker Robert Dick | | 8 | 62 |
| 47: | Disaster To Steamer Victoria At London. | At London Thames is a broad stream, | | 8 | 54 |
| 48: | Donald Ross. | By the side of a moss | | 40 | 66 |
| 49: | Dryden And Pope. | Genius of Dryden and of Pope, | | 6 | 60 |
| 50: | Duck And Oyster. | Once on a time there lived a duck, | | 48 | 56 |
| 51: | Eagle And Salmon. | Wilmot of fish culutre fame, | | 32 | 71 |
| 52: | Elf Shot. | A lad brought up in Highland vale | | 34 | 58 |
| 53: | Embro. | O'er various counties of the north, | | 16 | 59 |
| 54: | English Names On Canadian Thames. | England has given us the names | | 40 | 54 |
| 55: | English Poets. | Three centuries have passed away | | 40 | 47 |
| 56: | Ensilage. | The farmers now should all adorn | | 12 | 60 |
| 57: | Every Rose Hath Its Thorn. | There was a maiden all forlorn, | | 24 | 53 |
| 58: | Farrington, 1866, Factory System. | The farmers they now all make rich | | 10 | 51 |
| 59: | Father Ranney, The Cheese Pioneer. | When Father Ranney left the States, | | 70 | 59 |
| 60: | Female Revenge. | I heard Bill say to-day, Mary, | | 12 | 62 |
| 61: | Fertile Lands And Mammoth Cheese. | In barren district you may meet | | 12 | 51 |
| 62: | Fight Of A Buffalo With Wolves. | A buffalo, lord of the plain, | | 48 | 49 |
| 63: | Fight With A Bear In The Northwest. | Two youths employed at the fur fort | | 36 | 63 |
| 64: | Fighting For Conquest. | Tis noble for to fight for home, | | 20 | 61 |
| 65: | Fighting For Home. | A hawk while soaring on the wing, | | 16 | 67 |
| 66: | Four Acre Farm. | This is a tale, but it is truth, | | 32 | 50 |
| 67: | Galt And Dunlop. | John Galt and Doctor Dunlop witty | | 12 | 62 |
| 68: | George Menzies' Poems, 1883. | One day while passing 'long the road | | 16 | 76 |
| 69: | Golden Egg. | In ancient times we have been told | | 28 | 64 |
| 70: | Good Shot. | At great reunion of the South, | | 28 | 51 |
| 71: | Gordon And Burnaby, 1885. | When the Chinese did rebel, | | 28 | 57 |
| 72: | Gray Hairs. | Once on a time a lady quarrelled | | 8 | 43 |
| 73: | Great Fire In Ingersoll, May, 1872. | Twas on a pleasant eve in May, | | 12 | 73 |
| 74: | Hallowe'en. | A tale we'll tell of what hath been | | 24 | 66 |
| 75: | Harvest Home Festival. | In summer time it doth seem good | | 24 | 52 |
| 76: | Help In Need. | A poor man's horse it ran away, | | 16 | 71 |
| 77: | Her Lover's Step. | Step, step, step, 'tis her lover's walk, | | 28 | 72 |
| 78: | High In Masonry. | Give me a board so I can trace on | | 16 | 48 |
| 79: | Highland Sketches. | The Romans, Saxons and the Danes | | 48 | 54 |
| 80: | Hints To Cheese Makers. | All those who quality do prize | | 12 | 68 |
| 81: | Holland River And Its Tributaries. | We love to sing of tiny stream, | | 40 | 61 |
| 82: | Holmes. | O'er flowery fields full oft he roams, | | 2 | 100 |
| 83: | Hunters And Trappers. | Two hunters near to Hudson Bay, | | 48 | 76 |
| 84: | In Memoriam. | His mother from celestial bower, | | 10 | 62 |
| 85: | Indian Mutiny. | British infants who were nobly born | | 8 | 64 |
| 86: | Indian Romance. | We know a hill is smooth and round, | | 32 | 53 |
| 87: | Ingersoll. | The Thames and tributary rills, | | 14 | 66 |
| 88: | Irish Poets. | Moore found the ballads of Green Isle | | 32 | 62 |
| 89: | Jackal And Child. | In the great Province of Bengal, | | 56 | 58 |
| 90: | James Hogg. | The wondrous shepherd James Hogg | | 24 | 57 |
| 91: | Lament Of The Maple Tree. A Vision. | I laid me down one day in June, | | 88 | 58 |
| 92: | Land Clearing. | The first winter which I did spend | | 28 | 61 |
| 93: | Lay Of The Spring. | Let others sing their favourite lay, | | 28 | 58 |
| 94: | Leach The Engineer. | The engineer who drives the train, | | 28 | 57 |
| 95: | Life In The Woods. | Canada hath wealthy yeomen | | 16 | 53 |
| 96: | Lines Addressed To An Old Bachelor. | In summer time we roam o'er dingle, | | 16 | 53 |
| 97: | Lines On A Fountain. | We love cold water as it flows from the fountain, | | 12 | 60 |
| 98: | Lines On A Lawn Party. | We own we felt a little curious, | | 6 | 56 |
| 99: | Lines On A Typewriter. | You glory in your typewriter, | | 8 | 54 |
| 100: | Lines On Methodist Union, September, 1883. | A pleasing sight to-day we see, | | 8 | 53 |
| 101: | Lines On South Of Scotland. | The South of Scotland did produce | | 6 | 49 |
| 102: | Lines On Thamesford. | The middle branch of Thames doth flow | | 12 | 48 |
| 103: | Lines On The Death Of A Farmer's Wife. | This good woman when in this life, | | 12 | 51 |
| 104: | Lines On The Finding Of A Young Man's Body In Toronto Bay. | A young man's body long it lay | | 16 | 61 |
| 105: | Lines On Thorold. | Thorold is famous for its mills, | | 28 | 67 |
| 106: | Lines On Violets. | Once, while digging 'neath the snow, | | 10 | 59 |
| 107: | Lines On Woodstock. | English Woodstock had a palace | | 22 | 61 |
| 108: | Lines Read At A Dairymaids' Social, 1887. | Throughout the world they do extol | | 18 | 54 |
| 109: | Lines Read At A Dairymen's Supper. | It almost now seems all in vain | | 12 | 53 |
| 110: | Lines Read At A Ladies' Aid. | After chatting with each friend, | | 12 | 49 |
| 111: | Lines Read At A Maple Sugar Social, April, 1888. | Our first Canadian job when boy, | | 32 | 63 |
| 112: | Lines Read at a Parsonage Opening at the Village where Ranney had once flourished, 1883. | Some do boast of their pedigrees, | | 20 | 59 |
| 113: | Lines Read At A Scottish Anniversary At Embro. | Scotsmen have wandered far and wide | | 16 | 56 |
| 114: | Lines Read At St. Andrew's Anniversary, 1868. | Scotia's sons to-night we meet thee, | | 24 | 55 |
| 115: | Lines Sent To Alexander Mclaughlan, Amaranth Station, With A Copy Of My Poems | We send to you these rugged rhymes | | 4 | 64 |
| 116: | Lines Sent To Thomas Conant Of Oshawa, A Writer Of Canadian Sketches | We do greet thee Thomas Conant, | | 8 | 63 |
| 117: | Lines Written In A Mental Album. | In this album you may trace, | | 12 | 51 |
| 118: | Little Dora. | I tell you what my little Dora | | 16 | 57 |
| 119: | Little Hero. | Mong silver hills of Nevada | | 36 | 57 |
| 120: | Local Sketches. | On grassy amphitheatre, | | 16 | 59 |
| 121: | Lofty Actors Withdraw. | As one by one the lofty actors of the age | | 16 | 48 |
| 122: | London Flood, July 11th, 1883. | From the long continuous rains | | 28 | 50 |
| 123: | Lorne And Louise. | The tidings now all hearts do please, | | 20 | 58 |
| 124: | Lost Son Found. | An English ship when homeward bound, | | 28 | 54 |
| 125: | Lowell. | With pleasure we would love to dwell | | 2 | 109 |
| 126: | Millar. | And Millar poet of Sierras, | | 6 | 118 |
| 127: | Milton. | Like mightiest organ in full tone, | | 10 | 61 |
| 128: | Motto. | Politeness, perseverance and pluck, | | 2 | 124 |
| 129: | Mrs. Moody. | When this country it was woody, | | 16 | 48 |
| 130: | Niagara Dry. | It happened once in early spring, | | 32 | 61 |
| 131: | Niagara's Charms And Death Of Webb. | Gazing on rapids mighty sea, | | 40 | 62 |
| 132: | North-West Rebellion, 1885. | Hail Canada our young fair land, | | 52 | 51 |
| 133: | O For A Lodge. | O for a lodge in some vast wilderness | | 16 | 64 |
| 134: | Oddfellowship Lines Read At Concert, 1883. | We look in vain for our Past Grands, | | 26 | 55 |
| 135: | Ode On The Mammoth Cheese. | We have seen thee, queen of cheese, | | 24 | 58 |
| 136: | Oliver Goldsmith. | Goldsmith wrote of deserted village, | | 8 | 56 |
| 137: | Origin Of The Toboggan. | I am a hunter by profession, | | 44 | 56 |
| 138: | Oxford Cheese Ode. | The ancient poets ne'er did dream | | 36 | 58 |
| 139: | Patriot Fighting For His Home. | On the shores of the northern lakes | | 12 | 64 |
| 140: | Patriotic Ode. | Rejoice, rejoice, we all do stand, | | 8 | 58 |
| 141: | Poe. | A great enchanter too is Poe, | | 6 | 109 |
| 142: | Poetry. | Poetry to us is given, | | 22 | 55 |
| 143: | Poets And Philosophers. | Bacon, philosopher profound, | | 32 | 54 |
| 144: | Port Burwell. | In winter time who here resort, | | 8 | 52 |
| 145: | Port Stanley. | In winter time 'tis sad and dreary | | 18 | 57 |
| 146: | Power Of Love. | Love it is the precious loom, | | 4 | 99 |
| 147: | Prince Charlie's Grandsons. | Long 'ere Her Majesty the Queen | | 18 | 58 |
| 148: | Prologue To South Ontario Sketches. | My friends we sing Canadian themes, | | 34 | 53 |
| 149: | Providential Escape. | A wondrous tale we now do trace | | 36 | 60 |
| 150: | Province Of Ontario. | In the land of woods and lakes, | | 80 | 50 |
| 151: | Queen's Jubilee Ode, 1887. | Canada proves her devotion | | 24 | 51 |
| 152: | Ranney, 1856, Dairy System. | Ranney began with just two cows, | | 6 | 59 |
| 153: | Reminiscences | A wail went o'er broad Canada, | | 36 | 74 |
| 154: | Reply To The Toast Of Scottish Poets. | Burns sang so sweet behind the plow, | | 16 | 60 |
| 155: | Riding An Avalanche. | With our Canadian snow shoes, | | 60 | 72 |
| 156: | River Clyde. | The Glasgow people do take pride | | 24 | 62 |
| 157: | Robert Fleming Gourley. | There came to Oxford Robert Gourley, | | 12 | 61 |
| 158: | Sailor's Yarn. | While voyaging on northern seas | | 54 | 55 |
| 159: | Saxe. | The mind that's sad it doth relax | | 4 | 104 |
| 160: | Scottish Poets. | This night shall never be forgot | | 32 | 52 |
| 161: | Seal Fishing And Hunting. | Where frosts doth northern bays congeal, | | 28 | 60 |
| 162: | Shelly. | We have scarcely time to tell thee | | 4 | 108 |
| 163: | Shoe Black. | Gent on sidewalk held out his foot | | 32 | 58 |
| 164: | Snake And Its Young. | There is a peculiar snake, | | 28 | 60 |
| 165: | St. Andrew. | Our ancient custom to renew, | | 20 | 55 |
| 166: | St. Catharines. | St. Catharines famed for mineral waters | | 20 | 57 |
| 167: | St. Thomas, 1884. | Oddfellows once they had to trudge | | 20 | 67 |
| 168: | Strange Life Preserver. | A sailor he was swept from deck, | | 37 | 52 |
| 169: | Stratford. | Our Canadian county Perth, | | 12 | 54 |
| 170: | Survival Of The Fittest. | Now let the hero of our song, | | 24 | 66 |
| 171: | T. D. Mcgee. | D Arcy McGee, | | 20 | 66 |
| 172: | Tennyson. | Of our Laureate we now do sing, | | 10 | 64 |
| 173: | Thanksgiving Ode, November 15th, 1888. | September came and with it frost | | 20 | 49 |
| 174: | The Gates Ajar. | A good kind man who knew no malice, | | 28 | 58 |
| 175: | The Good Man. | Cheerful and happy was his mood, | | 10 | 59 |
| 176: | The Joys Of Prairie Farmers 1884. | We let Ontario farmers sing | | 22 | 59 |
| 177: | The Old Snake Fence. | In early times the pioneer | | 24 | 57 |
| 178: | The Shires On The Moray Frith. | Worthy of either song or story | | 44 | 51 |
| 179: | The Useful Weed. | Do not despise the humble weed, | | 24 | 53 |
| 180: | The Vale Of Thames. | In vale of Thames oft' times are seen | | 12 | 55 |
| 181: | Things Should Be Judged By Merit. | A picture hung in a public hall, | | 16 | 57 |
| 182: | Tiger And Elephant. | On Ganges banks roams the tiger, | | 28 | 54 |
| 183: | Tilsonburg. | After him who did the mills own, | | 12 | 55 |
| 184: | Tramp And Fish. | A hungry tramp did long for dish, | | 24 | 72 |
| 185: | United By Steel Rails. | When Indian tribes in the Northwest | | 36 | 61 |
| 186: | United States. | The United States is wondrous land, | | 32 | 53 |
| 187: | Virtues Of A Diamond Ring. | Of the strange virtues of a ring, | | 32 | 55 |
| 188: | Walt Whitman. | For erratic style he leads van, | | 6 | 59 |
| 189: | Wars In Queen Victoria's Reign. | We will now sing in thoughtful strain | | 58 | 50 |
| 190: | Welcome To The Prince Of Wales. | In his long voyage o'er the sea, | | 20 | 53 |
| 191: | Whale And Its Foes. | Six hundred miles north of Cape Flattery, | | 28 | 60 |
| 192: | When To Sell Grain And Farm Produce. | Grain it should be sold in the fall | | 28 | 55 |
| 193: | Whittier. | Others seek for music in the twitter | | 2 | 115 |
| 194: | Wild Goose Shot At Midnight, Nov., 1888. | From the regions of the north | | 16 | 64 |
| 195: | Will Carleton. | In homely apparel one | | 4 | 113 |
| 196: | Windmills And Stone Stables. | Cows suffered in the days of old | | 16 | 50 |