A Selection of British Poetry: Auden: Many Auden poems, including "Canzone", "As We Like It", "The Labyrinth" and selections from "Songs and Musical Pieces"
As I Walked Out One Evening: Text at the University of Calgary.
Bumbleshoot: W.H. Auden: Twenty-eight poems by Auden. Includes many short poems.
Demon or Gift: from Later Auden: This, the first chapter from Edward Mendelson's book "Later Auden," analyses the poem "In Memory of W.B. Yeats."
Edward Lear: Auden's sonnet on this Victorian writer, at the Edward Lear Home Page.
Frank Kermode on Auden's Shakespeare: Auden's Lectures on Shakespeare (ed. Arthur Kirsch), reviewed for the London Review of Books by Frank Kermode.
Funeral Blues: Text, discussion of the correct title, and scans of the original published version of this Auden poem.
Horae Canonicae: Text of Auden's sequence of religious poems.
Law Like Love: Text of this Auden poem. First line: "Law, say the gardeners, is the sun".
Lullaby: Text of Auden's poem. First lines: "Lay your sleeping head, my love/Human on my faithless arm."
Musée des Beaux Arts: Analysis of poem. First line: "About suffering they were never wrong." Includes Breughel's painting "The Fall of Icarus", which the poem refers to.
Narrator: The last speaking part of Auden's Christmas oratorio "For the Time Being."
Night Mail: Text of this song, written for the documentary movie "The Night Mail", on the British postal system.
Readings: Two Songs for Hedli Anderson: Text of two Auden poems, "Funeral Blues" and "Johnny".
Redeeming the Rake by David Schiff: Discussion of Stravinsky's Opera, "The Rake's Progress", for which Auden wrote the libretto.
Salon.com Audio: W. H. Auden: Recordings of Auden reading two poems, "Under Which Lyre" and "Law Like Love". Available in mp3 and RealMedia formats.
Song Texts: Texts of poems that have been set to music by Stravinsky, Benjamin Britten and others, including "Lullaby", "Nocturne" and "Elegy for JFK".
The Dyer's Hand: A review of Auden's collection of essays, by the poet John Berryman.
The Secret Agent: A famous if obscure early Auden poem.
The Shield of Achilles: Text of this frequently anthologized poem.
The Virtual Streetband: Words from W.H. Auden put to music with animations.
The Watershed: One of Auden's earliest poems.
There Will be no Peace: Text of this Auden poem at Jagiellonian University,Kraków, Poland.
Under Which Lyre: Text of this poem, subtitled "A Reactionary Tract for the Times".
W.H. Auden at the University of Dundee: Text of "In Praise of Limestone" and three short poems.