The Man Who Saw
William Watson
- Preface
- Sonnets (section)
- The Man Who Saw
- The Fourth of August, 1914
- To the United States
- To the German Emperor, after the sack of Louvain
- Termonde
- Belgium
- To King Albert
- Tranquil Liberty
- The Gifts of Hindustan
- Arabia Felix
- To America, Concerning England
- You at the Helm
- Commemorative
- To Roosevelt
- To a Would-Be Umpire
- Condolence
- Das Volk
- The Dominant Three
- To Sir James Crichton-Browne
- To One From Beyond Humber
- To a Son of Wales [Owen Pritchard, Esq., M.D.]
- To the Right Hon. Sir Edward Carson, on Leaving Antrim, June 30, 1916
- The Three Alfreds1
- The Voice From the Sunset
- America Once More
- Other Poems (section)
- Crossing the Rubicon
- Liège
- The Harvest Moon
- The Soul of Rouget De Lisle
- The Battle of the Bight
- Veritas Victrix
- The Charge of the 9th Lancers
- Rheims
- The Fighting Five
- "A Place in the Sun"
- The Fields of the Future
- Who Was Aggressor?
- A False Prophet
- Desolation
- The Half-Man
- Kultur: a Dialogue
- An Earnest Petition
- Nurse Cavell
- The Year's Retrospect
- The Starved Lion
- Duty
- Ceres and Bellona
- The Yellow Pansy
- The Kaiser's Dirge
- Recruiting Verse
William Watson. The Man Who Saw and Other Poems Arising Out of the War. London: John Murray, 1917.