Poems by Hercules Rollock
- A wedding-poem on the most venerable marriage of James VI, king of Scots, and Anna, daughter of Frederick II king of Danes, held in Denmark on the 20th of August 1589, with George, Earl Marischal of Scotland standing in place of his majesty
- A defence against the insults and falsehoods of a certain Theo, who conceals his own name
- Sylva I: a lament on Fortune's inconstancy
- Sylva II: on a certain shrine, dedicated to the Muses and Music of Poitiers
- Sylva III: to the ambassador of the Queen of England, arriving in Poitiers
- Sylva IV: on the wretched state of Scotland, on account of internal war, contempt for God, and the pernicious tarrying of Papists in her
- Sylva V: to the most gentle Elizabeth, Queen of England, France, and Ireland
- Sylva VI: to the most noble knight, the enobled Thomas Sackville, Baron of Buckhurst, at his home in Southern England
- Sylva VII: a paraeneticon on the return of the Scottish nobles from exile, 1st November 1585
- A mournful song on the plague at Edinburgh which also raged far and wide through the rest of Scotland in the year 1585
- A poem of exhortation, to the youth of France on the civil war
- A visitor to La Rochelle, freed from siege
- To Joseph Scaliger, with a model of the globe
- To the same man, together with twelve honeycombs
- On Catherine de Medici
- To Emery Sabourin, on the birth of his daughter
- To the wife of the same man, on a difficult birth
- A monument to James Camillus
- A new years gift for Thomas Travers
- In praise of monarchy
- To the chief moderator of the college of Poitiers, on his steadfastness during the siege of the town
- On the comet, which appeared in the year 1577, to Catharine Medici, queen of France
- The epitaph of Lord Glamis
- A reverse new years gift, to Frances Walsingham
- Another in reverse fashion
- To Francis Milles, secretary to Frances Walsingham
- A present to the chief moderator of the college of Poitiers
- To Scévole de Saint-Marthe, royal counsellor, etc
- The epitaph of a certain married woman
- A fish, on the most beautiful table, talks to a woman
- To the most beautiful wife of Lord Chancellor Maitland, regarding his immense bed
- In the midst of gathering nuts with girls
- To the neat boy, writing skillfully
- The epitaph of Cardinal Lorraine
- On the merchant Dardanus, fixing crop prices
- On the slaughter of Christians
- To the reader