| Prufrock--1917 | 1 |
| The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock | 3 |
| Portrait of a Lady | 8 |
| Preludes | 13 |
| Rhapsody on a Windy Night | 16 |
| Morning at the Window | 19 |
| The Boston Evening Transcript | 20 |
| Aunt Helen | 21 |
| Cousin Nancy | 22 |
| Mr. Apollinax | 23 |
| Hysteria | 24 |
| Conversation Galante | 25 |
| La Figlia che Piange | 26 |
| Poems--1920 | 27 |
| Gerontion | 29 |
| Burbank with a Baedeker: Bleistein with a Cigar | 32 |
| Sweeney Erect | 34 |
| A Cooking Egg | 36 |
| Le Directeur | 38 |
| Melange Adultere de Tout | 39 |
| Lune de Miel | 40 |
| The Hippopotamus | 41 |
| Dans le Restaurant | 43 |
| Whispers of Immortality | 45 |
| Mr. Eliot's Sunday Morning Service | 47 |
| Sweeney Among the Nightingales | 49 |
| The Waste Land--1922 | 51 |
I. | The Burial of the Dead | 53 |
II. | A Game of Chess | 56 |
III. | The Fire Sermon | 60 |
IV. | Death by Water | 65 |
V. | What the Thunder Said | 66 |
| Notes on 'The Waste Land' | 70 |
| The Hollow Men--1925 | 77 |
| Ash-Wednesday--1930 | 83 |
I. | Because I do not hope to turn again | 85 |
II. | Lady, three white leopards sat under a juniper-tree | 87 |
III. | At the first turning of the second stair | 89 |
IV. | Who walked between the violet and the violet | 90 |
V. | If the lost word is lost, if the spent word is spent | 92 |
VI. | Although I do not hope to turn again | 94 |
| Ariel Poems | 97 |
| Journey of the Magi--1927 | 99 |
| A Song for Simeon--1928 | 101 |
| Animula--1929 | 103 |
| Marina--1930 | 105 |
| The Cultivation of Christmas Trees--1954 | 107 |
| Unfinished Poems | 109 |
| Sweeney Agonistes | 111 |
| Fragment of a Prologue | 111 |
| Fragment of an Agon | 118 |
| Coriolan | 125 |
I. | Triumphal March--1931 | 125 |
II. | Difficulties of a Statesman | 127 |
| Minor Poems | 131 |
| Eyes that last I saw in tears | 133 |
| The wind sprang up at four o'clock | 134 |
| Five-finger exercises | 135 |
I. | Lines to a Persian Cat | 135 |
II. | Lines to a Yorkshire Terrier | 135 |
III. | Lines to a Duck in the Park | 136 |
IV. | Lines to Ralph Hodgson Esqre | 136 |
V. | Lines for Cuscuscaraway and Mirza Murad Ali Beg | 137 |
| Landscapes | 138 |
I. | New Hampshire | 138 |
II. | Virginia | 139 |
III. | Usk | 140 |
IV. | Rannoch, by Glencoe | 141 |
V. | Cape Ann | 142 |
| Lines for an Old Man | 143 |
| Choruses From 'the Rock'--1934 | 145 |
I. | The Eagle soars in the summit of Heaven | 147 |
II. | Thus your fathers were made | 152 |
III. | The Word of the Lord came unto me, saying | 155 |
IV. | There are those who would build the Temple | 158 |
V. | O Lord, deliver me from the man of excellent intention and impure heart | 159 |
VI. | It is hard for those who have never known persecution | 160 |
VII. | In the beginning God created the world | 162 |
VIII. | O Father we welcome your words | 165 |
IX. | Son of Man, behold with thine eyes, and hear with thine ears | 167 |
X. | You have seen the house built, you have seen it adorned | 169 |
| Four Quartets | 173 |
| Burnt Norton--1935 | 175 |
| East Coker--1940 | 182 |
| The Dry Salvages--1941 | 191 |
| Little Gidding--1942 | 200 |
| Occasional Verses | 211 |
| Defense of the Islands | 213 |
| A Note on War Poetry | 215 |
| To the Indians Who Died in Africa | 217 |
| To Walter de la Mare | 219 |
| A Dedication to My Wife | 221 |