Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).
Thomas Moore, Irish Melodies, Irish poet published in the United Kingdom
Sydney Owenson (later Lady Morgan), The Lay of an Irish Harp; or, Metrical Fragments, Irish poet published in the United Kingdom
Eaton Stannard Barrett, writing under the pen name "Polypus", All the Talents: A satirical poem, the book went through 19 editions this year
Samuel Egerton Brydges, Poems, the fourth, enlarged edition of Sonnets and other Poems 1785
Lord Byron:
Hours of Idleness, which will be attacked in the Edinburgh Review
Poems on Various Occasions, published anonymously, privately printed
George Crabbe, Poems, including "The Parish Register", nine editions by 1817
Richard Cumberland and Sir James Burges, The Exodiad
Catherine Ann Dorset, The Peacock 'At Home''', published anonymously ("written by a lady"); for children; extremely popular; a sequel to William Roscoe's The Butterfly's Ball, also published this year
James Grahame, Poems
Lady Anne Hamilton, The Epics of the Ton; or, The Glories of the Great World
William Hazlitt, editor, The Eloquence of the British Senate, published anonymously (anthology)
James Hogg, Thomas Mounsey Cunningham and others, The Forest Minstrel, includes poems published anonymously
James Hogg, The Mountain Bard
Ewen MacLachlan, Attempts in Verse
Thomas Moore, Irish Melodies
Sydney Owenson (later Lady Morgan), The Lay of an Irish Harp; or, Metrical Fragments
William Roscoe, The Butterfly's Ball and the Grasshopper's Feast, first published in the Gentleman's Magazine in November 1806
Charlotte Turner Smith, Beachy Head, with Other Poems
William Sotheby, Saul
Robert Southey, editor, Specimens of the Later English Poets, published as a complement to George Ellis's Specimens of the Early English Poems, 1790; anthology
Henry Kirke White, The Remains of Henry Kirke White, edited by Robert Southey (posthumous)
William Wordsworth's, Poems in Two Volumes includes:
"Resolution and Independence"
"I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud" (sometimes anthologized as "The Daffodils")
"My Heart Leaps Up"
"Ode: Intimations of Immortality"
"Ode to Duty"
"The Solitary Reaper"
"Elegiac Stanzas"
"Composed upon Westminster Bridge, September 3, 1802"
"London, 1802"
"The world is too much with us"
Richard Alsop and others, The Echo, With Other Poems, anthology of poems by the Hartford Wits that had appeared in the American Mercury magazine from 1791 to 1805, the primary contributors were Richard Alsop and Theodore Dwight; other contributors included Lemuel Hopkins, H.