Incoming Resources
- Literal imagination, Blake's vision of words, Nelson Hilton
- The Keats brothers, the life of John and George, Denise Gigante
- Wordsworth and Coleridge, the making of the major lyrics, 1802-1804, Gene W. Ruoff
- Old Mother Hubbard and her wonderful dog, illustrated by James Marshall
- Selfhood and redemption in Blake's Songs, Harold Pagliaro
- Sexuality and feminism in Shelley, Nathaniel Brown
- The Odes of Keats, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- John Keats, by Wolf Z. Hirst
- William Blake, comprehensive research and study guide, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- John Keats, a new life, Nicholas Roe
- The complete poems of Percy Bysshe Shelley, with notes by Mary Shelley
- The age of William Wordsworth, critical essays on the romantic tradition, edited by Kenneth R. Johnston and Gene W. Ruoff
- Childe Harold's pilgrimage and other romantic poems, Byron ; edited with an introd. and notes by John D. Jump
- Byron and the Websters, the letters and entangled lives of the poet, Sir James Webster and Lady Frances Webster, John Stewart
- The Cambridge companion to Keats, edited by Susan J. Wolfson
- Shelley and the romantic revolution, [by] F. A. Lea
- Keats, a brief life in nine poems and one epitaph, Lucasta Miller
- Endymion, John Keats
- The poetry of life, Shelley and literary form, Ronald Tetreault
- Coleridge
- The pursuit of death, a study of Shelley's poetry, With a new pref. by James D. Hart
- Eternity's sunrise, the imaginative world of William Blake, Leo Damrosch
- The complete poetry and prose of William Blake, edited by David V. Erdman ; commentary by Harold Bloom
- William Wordsworth and the age of English romanticism, Jonathan Wordsworth, Michael C. Jaye, Robert Woof, with the assistance of Peter Funnell ; foreword by M.H. Abrams
- A Byron chronology, Norman Page
- William Blake, selected poems, William Blake
- William Blake and the moderns, Robert J. Bertholf and Annette S. Levitt, editors
- Shelley: his thought and work
- The poems of John Keats, edited by Jack Stillinger
- William Blake vs. the world, John Higgs
- Jerusalem, the emanation of the giant Albion, William Blake ; edited with an introduction and notes by Morton D. Paley
- The portable Coleridge, edited and with an introd. by I. A. Richards
- Selected poetry of Lord Byron, edited by Leslie A. Marchand ; introduction by Thomas Disch ; notes by Jeffrey Vail
- Shelley's Poetry and prose, authoritative texts, criticism, selected and edited by Donald H. Reiman and Sharon B. Powers
- Shelley: a critical reading, [by] Earl R. Wasserman
- The love poems of John Keats, in praise of beauty, selected and with an introduction by David Stanford Burr
- The complete poems of John Keats
- Blake's sublime allegory, essays on The four Zoas, Milton, Jerusalem, edited by Stuart Curran and Joseph Anthony Wittreich, Jr
- A brighter word than bright, Keats at work, by Dan Beachy-Quick
- William Blake's The marriage of Heaven and Hell, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- Home at Grasmere, the Wordsworths and the Lakes, Penelope Hughes-Hallett
- Twinkle, twinkle, little star, Jerry Pinkney
- The Cambridge companion to William Blake, edited by Morris Eaves
- John Keats, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- Disowned by memory, Wordsworth's poetry of the 1790s, David Bromwich
- Moore's Irish melodies, the illustrated 1846 edition, Thomas Moore ; illustrated by Daniel Maclise
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge's the Rime of the ancient mariner, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- Word like a bell, John Keats, music and the romantic poet, John A. Minahan
- Wordsworth's influence on Shelley, a study of poetic authority, G. Kim Blank
- Lyrical ballads, edited by Michael Mason ; with a preface by John Mullan