- ''Less than the Dust''
- ''To the Unattainable''
- ''In the Early, Pearly Morning'': Song by Valgovind
- Reverie of Mahomed Akram at the Tamarind Tank
- Verses
- Song of Khan Zada
- The Teak Forest
- Valgovind's Boat Song
- Kashmiri Song by Juma
- Zira: in Captivity
- Marriage Thoughts: by Morsellin Khan
- To the Unattainable: Lament of Mahomed Akram
- Mahomed Akram's Appeal to the Stars
- Reminiscence of Mahomed Akram
- Story by Lalla-ji, the Priest
- Request
- Story of Udaipore: Told by Lalla-ji, the Priest
- Valgovind's Song in the Spring
- Youth
- When Love is Over: Song of Khan Zada
- ''Golden Eyes''
- Kotri, by the River
- Farewell
- Afridi Love
- Yasmini
- Ojira, to Her Lover
- Thoughts: Mahomed Akram
- Prayer
- The Aloe
- Memory
- The First Lover
- Khan Zada's Song on the Hillside
- Deserted Gipsy's Song: Hillside Camp
- The Plains
- ''Lost Delight'': After the Hazara War
- Unforgotten
- Song of Faiz Ulla
- Story of Lilavanti
- The Garden by the Bridge
- Fate Knows no Tears
- Verses: Faiz Ulla
- Two Songs by Sitara, of Kashmir
- Second Song: The Girl from Baltistan
- Palm Trees by the Sea
- Song by Gulbaz
- Kashmiri Song
- Reverie of Ormuz the Persian
- Sunstroke
- Adoration
- Three Songs of Zahir-u-Din
- Second Song
- Third Song, written during Fever
- The Regret of the Ranee in the Hall of Peacocks
- Protest: by Zahir-u-Din
- Famine Song
- The Window Overlooking the Harbour
- Back to the Border
- Reverie: Zahir-u-Din
- Sea Song
- To the Hills!
- Till I Wake
- His Rubies: Told by Valgovind
- Song of Taj Mahomed
- The Garden of Kama: Kama the Indian Eros
- Camp Follower's Song, Gomal River
- Song of the Colours: by Taj Mahomed
- Lalila, to the Ferengi Lover
- On the City Wall
- ''Love Lightly''
- No Rival like the Past
- Verse by Taj Mahomed
- Lines by Taj Mahomed
- ''There is no breeze to cool the heat of Love''
- Malay Song
- The Temple Dancing Girl
- Hirah-Singh's Farewell to Burmah
- Starlight
- Sampan Song
- Song of the Devoted Slave
- The Singer
- Malaria
- Fancy
- Feroza
- This Month the Almonds bloom at Kandahar
Laurence Hope was the nom de plume of Adela Florence Nicolson, a British poet who wrote verses inspired by India, where she lived. This collection, her first, was originally published in 1901. (summary by Newgatenovelist)
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