CONTENTS OF THE TWO VOLUMES

VOLUME I
PAGE
Preface[iii]
1787
Easter Holidays. [MS. Letter, May 12, 1787.][1]
Dura Navis. [B. M. Add. MSS. 34,225][2]
Nil Pejus est Caelibe Vitâ. [Boyer's Liber Aureus.][4]
1788
Sonnet: To the Autumnal Moon[5]
1789
Anthem for the Children of Christ's Hospital. [MS. O.][5]
Julia. [Boyer's Liber Aureus.][6]
Quae Nocent Docent. [Boyer's Liber Aureus.][7]
The Nose. [MS. O.][8]
To the Muse. [MS. O.][9]
Destruction of the Bastile. [MS. O.][10]
Life. [MS. O.][11]
1790
Progress of Vice. [MS. O.: Boyer's Liber Aureus.][12]
Monody on the Death of Chatterton. (First version.) [MS. O.: Boyer's Liber Aureus.][13]
An Invocation. [J. D. C.][16]
Anna and Harland. [MS. J. D. C.][16]
To the Evening Star. [MS. O.][16]
Pain. [MS. O.][17]
On a Lady Weeping. [MS. O. (c).][17]
Monody on a Tea-kettle. [MSS. O., S. T. C.][18]
Genevieve. [MSS. O., E.][19]
1791
On receiving an Account that his Only Sister's Death was Inevitable. [MS. O.][20]
On seeing a Youth Affectionately Welcomed by a Sister[21]
A Mathematical Problem. [MS. Letter, March 31, 1791: MS. O. (c).][21]
Honour. [MS. O.][24]
On Imitation. [MS. O.][26]
Inside the Coach. [MS. O.][26]
Devonshire Roads. [MS. O.][27]
Music. [MS. O.][28]
Sonnet: On quitting School for College. [MS. O.][29]
Absence. A Farewell Ode on quitting School for Jesus College, Cambridge. [MS. E.][29]
Happiness. [MS. Letter, June 22, 1791: MS. O. (c).][30]
1792
A Wish. Written in Jesus Wood, Feb. 10, 1792. [MS. Letter, Feb. 13, [1792].][33]
An Ode in the Manner of Anacreon. [MS. Letter, Feb. 13, [1792].][33]
To Disappointment. [MS. Letter, Feb. 13, [1792].][34]
A Fragment found in a Lecture-room. [MS. Letter, April [1792], MS. E.][35]
Ode. ('Ye Gales,' &c.) [MS. E.][35]
A Lover's Complaint to his Mistress. [MS. Letter, Feb. 13, [1792].][36]
With Fielding's 'Amelia.' [MS. O.][37]
Written after a Walk before Supper. [MS. Letter, Aug. 9, [1792].][37]
1793
Imitated from Ossian. [MS. E.][38]
The Complaint of Ninathóma. [MS. Letter, Feb. 7, 1793.][39]
Songs of the Pixies. [MS. 4o: MS. E.][40]
The Rose. [MS. Letter, July 28, 1793: MS. (pencil) in Langhorne's Collins: MS. E.][45]
Kisses. [MS. Letter, Aug. 5, 1793: MS. (pencil) in Langhorne's Collins: MS. E.][46]
The Gentle Look. [MS. Letter, Dec. 11. 1794: MS. E.][47]
Sonnet: To the River Otter[48]
An Effusion at Evening. Written in August 1792. (First Draft.) [MS. E.][49]
Lines: On an Autumnal Evening[51]
To Fortune[54]
1794
Perspiration. A Travelling Eclogue. [MS. Letter, July 6, 1794.][56]
[Ave, atque Vale!] ('Vivit sed mihi,' &c.) [MS. Letter, July 13, [1794].][56]
On Bala Hill. [Morrison MSS.][56]
Lines: Written at the King's Arms, Ross, formerly the House of the 'Man of Ross'. [MS. Letter, July 13, 1794: MS. E: Morrison MSS: MS. 4o.][57]
Imitated from the Welsh. [MS. Letter, Dec. 11, 1794: MS. E.][58]
Lines: To a Beautiful Spring in a Village. [MS. E.][58]
Imitations: Ad Lyram. (Casimir, Book II, Ode 3.) [MS. E.][59]
To Lesbia. [Add. MSS. 27,702][60]
The Death of the Starling. [ibid.][61]
Moriens Superstiti. [ibid.][61]
Morienti Superstes. [ibid.][62]
The Sigh. [MS. Letter, Nov. 1794: Morrison MSS: MS. E.][62]
The Kiss. [MS. 4o: MS. E.][63]
To a Young Lady with a Poem on the French Revolution. [MS. Letter, Oct. 21, 1794: MS. 4o: MS. E.][64]
Translation of Wrangham's 'Hendecasyllabi ad Bruntonam e Granta Exituram' [Kal. Oct. MDCCXC][66]
To Miss Brunton with the preceding Translation[67]
Epitaph on an Infant. ('Ere Sin could blight.') [MS. E.][68]
Pantisocracy. [MSS. Letters, Sept. 18, Oct. 19, 1794: MS. E.][68]
On the Prospect of establishing a Pantisocracy in America[69]
Elegy: Imitated from one of Akenside's Blank-verse Inscriptions. [(No.) III.][69]
The Faded Flower[70]
The Outcast[71]
Domestic Peace. (From 'The Fall of Robespierre,' Act I, l. 210.)[71]
On a Discovery made too late. [MS. Letter, Oct. 21, 1794.][72]
To the Author of 'The Robbers'[72]
Melancholy. A Fragment. [MS. Letter, Aug. 26,1802.][73]
To a Young Ass: Its Mother being tethered near it. [MS. Oct. 24, 1794: MS. Letter, Dec. 17, 1794.][74]
Lines on a Friend who Died of a Frenzy Fever induced by Calumnious Reports. [MS. Letter, Nov. 6, 1794: MS. 4o: MS. E.][76]
To a Friend [Charles Lamb] together with an Unfinished Poem. [MS. Letter, Dec. 1794][78]
Sonnets on Eminent Characters: Contributed to the Morning Chronicle, in Dec. 1794 and Jan. 1795:—
I.To the Honourable Mr. Erskine[79]
II.Burke. [MS. Letter, Dec. 11, 1794.][80]
III.Priestley. [MS. Letter, Dec. 17, 1794.][81]
IV.La Fayette[82]
V.Koskiusko. [MS. Letter, Dec. 17, 1794.][82]
VI.Pitt[83]
VII.To the Rev. W. L. Bowles. (First Version, printed in Morning Chronicle, Dec. 26, 1794.) [MS. Letter, Dec. 11, 1794.][84]
(Second Version.)[85]
VIII.Mrs. Siddons[85]
1795.
IX.To William Godwin, Author of 'Political Justice.' [Lines 9-14, MS. Letter, Dec. 17, 1794.][86]
X.To Robert Southey of Baliol College, Oxford, Author of the 'Retrospect' and other Poems. [MS. Letter, Dec. 17, 1794.][87]
XI.To Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Esq. [MS. Letter, Dec. 9, 1794: MS. E.][87]
XII.To Lord Stanhope on reading his Late Protest in the House of Lords. [Morning Chronicle, Jan. 31, 1795.][89]
To Earl Stanhope[89]
Lines: To a Friend in Answer to a Melancholy Letter[90]
To an Infant. [MS. E.][91]
To the Rev. W. J. Hort while teaching a Young Lady some Song-tunes on his Flute[92]
Pity. [MS. E.][93]
To the Nightingale[93]
Lines: Composed while climbing the Left Ascent of Brockley Coomb, Somersetshire, May 1795[94]
Lines in the Manner of Spenser[94]
The Hour when we shall meet again. (Composed during Illness and in Absence.)[96]
Lines written at Shurton Bars, near Bridgewater, September 1795, in Answer to a Letter from Bristol[96]
The Eolian Harp. Composed at Clevedon, Somersetshire. [MS. R.][100]
To the Author of Poems [Joseph Cottle] published anonymously at Bristol in September 1795[102]
The Silver Thimble. The Production of a Young Lady, addressed to the Author of the Poems alluded to in the preceding Epistle. [MS. R.][104]
Reflections on having left a Place of Retirement[106]
Religious Musings. [1794-1796.][108]
Monody on the Death of Chatterton. [1790-1834.][125]
1796
The Destiny of Nations. A Vision[131]
Ver Perpetuum. Fragment from an Unpublished Poem[148]
On observing a Blossom on the First of February 1796[148]
To a Primrose. The First seen in the Season[149]
Verses: Addressed to J. Horne Tooke and the Company who met on June 28, 1796, to celebrate his Poll at the Westminster Election[150]
On a Late Connubial Rupture in High Life [Prince and Princess of Wales]. [MS Letter, July 4, 1796][152]
Sonnet: On receiving a Letter informing me of the Birth of a Son. [MS. Letter, Nov. 1, 1796.][152]
Sonnet: Composed on a Journey Homeward; the Author having received Intelligence of the Birth of a Son, Sept. 20, 1796. [MS. Letter, Nov. 1, 1796.][153]
Sonnet: To a Friend who asked how I felt when the Nurse first presented my Infant to me. [MS. Letter, Nov. 1, 1796][154]
Sonnet: [To Charles Lloyd][155]
To a Young Friend on his proposing to domesticate with the Author. Composed in 1796[155]
Addressed to a Young Man of Fortune [C. Lloyd][157]
To a Friend [Charles Lamb] who had declared his intention of writing no more Poetry[158]
Ode to the Departing Year[160]
1797
The Raven. [MS. S. T. C.][169]
To an Unfortunate Woman at the Theatre[171]
To an Unfortunate Woman whom the Author had known in the days of her Innocence[172]
To the Rev. George Coleridge[173]
On the Christening of a Friend's Child[176]
Translation of a Latin Inscription by the Rev. W. L. Bowles in Nether-Stowey Church[177]
This Lime-tree Bower my Prison[178]
The Foster-mother's Tale[182]
The Dungeon[185]
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner[186]
Sonnets attempted in the Manner of Contemporary Writers[209]
Parliamentary Oscillators[211]
Christabel. [For MSS. vide p. [214]][213]
Lines to W. L. while he sang a Song to Purcell's Music[236]
1798
Fire, Famine, and Slaughter[237]
Frost at Midnight[240]
France: An Ode.[243]
The Old Man of the Alps[248]
To a Young Lady on her Recovery from a Fever[252]
Lewti, or the Circassian Love-chaunt. [For MSS. vide pp. [1049-62]][253]
Fears in Solitude. [MS. W.][256]
The Nightingale. A Conversation Poem[264]
The Three Graves. [Parts I, II. MS. S. T. C.][267]
The Wanderings of Cain. [MS. S. T. C.][285]
To ——[292]
The Ballad of the Dark Ladié[293]
Kubla Khan[295]
Recantation: Illustrated in the Story of the Mad Ox[299]
1799
Hexameters. ('William my teacher,' &c.)[304]
Translation of a Passage in Ottfried's Metrical Paraphrase of the Gospel[306]
Catullian Hendecasyllables[307]
The Homeric Hexameter described and exemplified[307]
The Ovidian Elegiac Metre described and exemplified[308]
On a Cataract. [MS. S. T. C.][308]
Tell's Birth-Place[309]
The Visit of the Gods[310]
From the German. ('Know'st thou the land,' &c.)[311]
Water Ballad. [From the French.][311]
On an Infant which died before Baptism. ('Be rather,' &c.) [MS. Letter, Apr. 8, 1799][312]
Something Childish, but very Natural. Written in Germany. [MS. Letter, April 23, 1799.][313]
Home-Sick. Written in Germany. [MS. Letter, May 6, 1799.][314]
Lines written in the Album at Elbingerode in the Hartz Forest. [MS. Letter, May 17, 1799.][315]
The British Stripling's War-Song. [Add. MSS. 27,902][317]
Names. [From Lessing.][318]
The Devil's Thoughts. [MS. copy by Derwent Coleridge.][319]
Lines composed in a Concert-room[324]
Westphalian Song[326]
Hexameters. Paraphrase of Psalm xlvi. [MS. Letter, Sept. 29, 1799.][326]
Hymn to the Earth. [Imitated from Stolberg's Hymne an die Erde.] Hexameters[327]
Mahomet[329]
Love. [British Museum Add. MSS. No. 27,902: Wordsworth and Coleridge MSS.][330]
Ode to Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, on the Twenty-fourth Stanza in her 'Passage over Mount Gothard'[335]
A Christmas Carol[338]
1800
Talleyrand to Lord Grenville. A Metrical Epistle[340]
Apologia pro Vita sua. ('The poet in his lone,' &c.) [MS. Notebook.][345]
The Keepsake[345]
A Thought suggested by a View of Saddleback in Cumberland. [MS. Notebook.][347]
The Mad Monk[347]
Inscription for a Seat by the Road Side half-way up a Steep Hill facing South[349]
A Stranger Minstrel[350]
Alcaeus to Sappho. [MS. Letter, Oct. 7, 1800.][353]
The Two Round Spaces on the Tombstone. [MS. Letter, Oct. 9, 1800: Add. MSS. 28,322][353]
The Snow-drop. [MS. S. T. C.][356]
1801
On Revisiting the Sea-shore. [MS. Letter, Aug. 15, 1801: MS. A.][359]
Ode to Tranquillity[360]
To Asra. [MS. (of Christabel) S. T. C. (c).][361]
The Second Birth. [MS. Notebook.][362]
Love's Sanctuary. [MS. Notebook.][362]
1802
Dejection: An Ode. [Written April 4, 1802.] [MS. Letter, July 19, 1802: Coleorton MSS.][362]
The Picture, or the Lover's Resolution[369]
To Matilda Betham from a Stranger[374]
Hymn before Sun-rise, in the Vale of Chamouni. [MS. A. (1803): MS. B. (1809): MS. C. (1815).][376]
The Good, Great Man[381]
Inscription for a Fountain on a Heath[381]
An Ode to the Rain[382]
A Day-dream. ('My eyes make pictures,' &c.)[385]
Answer to a Child's Question[386]
The Day-dream. From an Emigrant to his Absent Wife[386]
The Happy Husband. A Fragment[388]
1803
The Pains of Sleep. [MS. Letters, Sept. 11, Oct 3, 1803.][389]
1804
The Exchange[391]
1805
Ad Vilmum Axiologum. [To William Wordsworth.] [MS. Notebook.][391]
An Exile. [MS. Notebook.][392]
Sonnet. [Translated from Marini.] [MS. Notebook.][392]
Phantom. [MS. Notebook.][393]
A Sunset. [MS. Notebook.][393]
What is Life? [MS. Notebook.][394]
The Blossoming of the Solitary Date-tree[395]
Separation. [MS. Notebook.][397]
The Rash Conjurer. [MS. Notebook.][399]
1806
A Child's Evening Prayer. [MS. Mrs. S. T. C.][401]
Metrical Feet. Lesson for a Boy. [Lines 1-7, MS. Notebook.][401]
Farewell to Love[402]
To William Wordsworth. [Coleorton MS: MS. W.][403]
An Angel Visitant. [? 1801.] [MS. Notebook.][409]
1807
Recollections of Love. [MS. Notebook.][409]
To Two Sisters. [Mary Morgan and Charlotte Brent][410]
1808
Psyche. [MS. S. T. C.][412]
1809
A Tombless Epitaph[413]
For a Market-clock. (Impromptu.) [MS. Letter, Oct. 9, 1809: MS. Notebook.][414]
The Madman and the Lethargist. [MS. Notebook.][414]
1810
The Visionary Hope[416]
1811
Epitaph on an Infant. ('Its balmy lips,' &c.)[417]
The Virgin's Cradle-hymn[417]
To a Lady offended by a Sportive Observation that Women have no Souls[418]
Reason for Love's Blindness[418]
The Suicide's Argument. [MS. Notebook.][419]
1812
Time, Real and Imaginary[419]
An Invocation. From Remorse [Act III, Scene i, ll. 69-82][420]
1813
The Night-scene. [Add. MSS. 34,225][421]
1814
A Hymn[423]
To a Lady, with Falconer's Shipwreck[424]
1815
Human Life. On the Denial of Immortality[425]
Song. From Zapolya (Act II, Sc. i, ll. 65-80.)[426]
Hunting Song. From Zapolya (Act IV, Sc. ii, ll. 56-71)[427]
Faith, Hope, and Charity. From the Italian of Guarini[427]
To Nature [? 1820][429]
1817
Limbo. [MS. Notebook: MS. S. T. C.][429]
Ne Plus Ultra [? 1826]. [MS. Notebook.][431]
The Knight's Tomb[432]
On Donne's Poetry [? 1818][433]
Israel's Lament[433]
Fancy in Nubibus, or the Poet in the Clouds. [MS. S. T. C.][435]
1820
The Tears of a Grateful People[436]
1823
Youth and Age. [MS. S. T. C.: MSS. (1, 2) Notebook.][439]
The Reproof and Reply[441]
1824
First Advent of Love. [MS. Notebook.][443]
The Delinquent Travellers[443]
1825
Work without Hope. Lines composed 21st February, 1825[447]
Sancti Dominici Pallium. A Dialogue between Poet and Friend. [MS. S. T. C.][448]
Song. ('Though veiled,' &c.) [MS. Notebook.][450]
A Character. [Add. MSS. 34,225][451]
The Two Founts. [MS. S. T. C.][454]
Constancy to an Ideal Object[455]
The Pang more Sharp than All. An Allegory[457]
1826
Duty surviving Self-love. The only sure Friend of declining Life.[459]
Homeless[460]
Lines suggested by the last Words of Berengarius; ob. Anno Dom. 1088[460]
Epitaphium Testamentarium[462]
Ἔρως ἀεὶ λάληθρος ἑταῖρος[462]
1827
The Improvisatore; or, 'John Anderson, My Jo, John'[462]
To Mary Pridham [afterwards Mrs. Derwent Coleridge]. [MS. S. T. C.][468]
1828
Alice du Clos; or, The Forked Tongue. A Ballad. [MS. S. T. C.][469]
Love's Burial-place[475]
Lines: To a Comic Author, on an Abusive Review [? 1825]. [Add. MSS. 34,225][476]
Cologne[477]
On my Joyful Departure from the same City[477]
The Garden of Boccaccio[478]
1829
Love, Hope, and Patience in Education. [MS. Letter, July 1, 1829: MS. S. T. C.][481]
To Miss A. T.[482]
Lines written in Commonplace Book of Miss Barbour, Daughter of the Minister of the U. S. A. to England[483]
1830
Song, ex improviso, on hearing a Song in praise of a Lady's Beauty[483]
Love and Friendship Opposite[484]
Not at Home[484]
Phantom or Fact. A Dialogue in Verse[484]
Desire. [MS. S. T. C.][485]
Charity in Thought[486]
Humility the Mother of Charity[486]
[Coeli Enarrant.] [MS. S. T. C.][486]
Reason[487]
1832
Self-knowledge[487]
Forbearance[488]
1833
Love's Apparition and Evanishment[488]
To the Young Artist Kayser of Kaserwerth[490]
My Baptismal Birth-day[490]
Epitaph. [For six MS. versions vide [Note], p. 491].[491]
End of the Poems
VOLUME II
DRAMATIC WORKS
1794
The Fall of Robespierre. An Historic Drama[495]
1797
Osorio. A Tragedy[518]
1800
The Piccolomini; or, The First Part of Wallenstein. A Drama translated from the German of Schiller.
Preface to the First Edition[598]
The Piccolomini[600]
The Death of Wallenstein. A Tragedy in Five Acts.
Preface of the Translator to the First Edition[724]
The Death of Wallenstein[726]
1812
Remorse.
Preface[812]
Prologue[816]
Epilogue[817]
Remorse. A Tragedy in Five Acts[819]
1815
Zapolya. A Christmas Tale in Two Parts.
Advertisement[883]
Part I. The Prelude, entitled 'The Usurper's Fortune'[884]
Part II. The Sequel, entitled 'The Usurper's Fate'[901]

Epigrams
An Apology for Spencers[951]
On a Late Marriage between an Old Maid and French Petit Maître[952]
On an Amorous Doctor[952]
'Of smart pretty Fellows,' &c.[952]
On Deputy ——[953]
'To be ruled like a Frenchman,' &c.[953]
On Mr. Ross, usually Cognominated Nosy[953]
'Bob now resolves,' &c.[953]
'Say what you will, Ingenious Youth'[954]
'If the guilt of all lying,' &c.[954]
On an Insignificant[954]
'There comes from old Avaro's grave'[954]
On a Slanderer[955]
Lines in a German Student's Album[955]
[Hippona][955]
On a Reader of His Own Verses[955]
On a Report of a Minister's Death[956]
[Dear Brother Jem][956]
Job's Luck[957]
On the Sickness of a Great Minister[957]
[To a Virtuous Oeconomist][958]
[L'Enfant Prodigue][958]
On Sir Rubicund Naso[958]
To Mr. Pye[959]
[Ninety-Eight][959]
Occasioned by the Former[959]
[A Liar by Profession][960]
To a Proud Parent[960]
Rufa[960]
On a Volunteer Singer[960]
Occasioned by the Last[961]
Epitaph on Major Dieman[961]
On the Above[961]
Epitaph on a Bad Man (Three Versions)[961]
To a Certain Modern Narcissus[962]
To a Critic[962]
Always Audible[963]
Pondere non Numero[963]
The Compliment Qualified[963]
'What is an Epigram,' &c.[963]
'Charles, grave or merry,' &c.[964]
'An evil spirit's on thee, friend,' &c.[964]
'Here lies the Devil,' &c.[964]
To One Who Published in Print, &c.[964]
'Scarce any scandal,' &c.[965]
'Old Harpy,' &c.[965]
To a Vain Young Lady[965]
A Hint to Premiers and First Consuls[966]
'From me, Aurelia,' &c.[966]
For a House-Dog's Collar[966]
'In vain I praise thee, Zoilus'[966]
Epitaph on a Mercenary Miser[967]
A Dialogue between an Author and his Friend[967]
Μωροσοφία, or Wisdom in Folly[967]
'Each Bond-street buck,' &c.[968]
From an Old German Poet[968]
On the Curious Circumstance, That in the German, &c.[968]
Spots in the Sun[969]
'When Surface talks,' &c.[969]
To my Candle[969]
Epitaph on Himself[970]
The Taste of the Times[970]
On Pitt and Fox[970]
'An excellent adage,' &c.[971]
Comparative Brevity of Greek and English[971]
On the Secrecy of a Certain Lady[971]
Motto for a Transparency, &c. (Two Versions)[972]
'Money, I've heard,' &c.[972]
Modern Critics[972]
Written in an Album[972]
To a Lady who requested me to Write a Poem upon Nothing[973]
Sentimental[973]
'So Mr. Baker,' &c.[973]
Authors and Publishers[973]
The Alternative[974]
'In Spain, that land,' &c.[974]
Inscription for a Time-piece[974]
On the Most Veracious Anecdotist, &c.[974]
'Nothing speaks our mind,' &c.[975]
Epitaph of the Present Year on the Monument of Thomas Fuller[975]
Jeux d'Esprit[976]
My Godmother's Beard[976]
Lines to Thomas Poole[976]
To a Well-known Musical Critic, &c.[977]
To T. Poole: An Invitation[978]
Song, To be Sung by the Lovers of all the noble liquors, &c.[978]
Drinking versus Thinking[979]
The Wills of the Wisp[979]
To Captain Findlay[980]
On Donne's Poem 'To a Flea'[980]
[Ex Libris S. T. C.][981]
ΕΓΩΕΝΚΑΙΠΑΝ[981]
The Bridge Street Committee[982]
Nonsense Sapphics[983]
To Susan Steele, &c.[984]
Association of Ideas[984]
Verses Trivocular[985]
Cholera Cured Before-hand[985]
To Baby Bates[987]
To a Child[987]
Fragments from a Notebook. (circa 1796-1798)[988]
Fragments. (For unnamed Fragments see [Index of First Lines].)[996]
Over my Cottage[997]
[The Night-Mare Death in Life][998]
A Beck in Winter[998]
[Not a Critic—But a Judge][1000]
[De Profundis Clamavi][1001]
Fragment of an Ode on Napoleon[1003]
Epigram on Kepler[1004]
[Ars Poetica][1006]
Translation of the First Strophe of Pindar's Second Olympic[1006]
Translation of a Fragment of Heraclitus[1007]
Imitated from Aristophanes[1008]
To Edward Irving[1008]
[Luther—De Dæmonibus][1009]
The Netherlands[1009]
Elisa: Translated from Claudian[1009]
Profuse Kindness[1010]
Napoleon[1010]
The Three Sorts of Friends[1012]
Bo-Peep and I Spy—[1012]
A Simile[1013]
Baron Guelph of Adelstan. A Fragment[1013]
Metrical Experiments[1014]
An Experiment for a Metre ('I heard a Voice,' &c.)[1014]
Trochaics[1015]
The Proper Unmodified Dochmius[1015]
Iambics[1015]
Nonsense ('Sing, impassionate Soul,' &c.)[1015]
A Plaintive Movement[1016]
An Experiment for a Metre ('When thy Beauty appears')[1016]
Nonsense Verses ('Ye fowls of ill presage')[1017]
Nonsense ('I wish on earth to sing')[1017]
'There in some darksome shade'[1018]
'Once again, sweet Willow, wave thee'[1018]
'Songs of Shepherds, and rustical Roundelays'[1018]
A Metrical Accident[1019]
Notes by Professor Saintsbury[1019]
APPENDIX I
First Drafts, Early Versions, etc.
A. Effusion 35, August 20th, 1795. (First Draft.) [MS. R.][1021]
Effusion, p. 96 [1797]. (Second Draft.) [MS. R.][1021]
B. Recollection[1023]
C. The Destiny of Nations. (Draft I.) [Add. MSS. 34,225][1024]
The Destiny of Nations. (Draft II.) [ibid.][1026]
The Destiny of Nations. (Draft III.) [ibid.][1027]
D. Passages in Southey's Joan of Arc (First Edition, 1796) contributed by S. T. Coleridge[1027]
E. The Rime of the Ancyent Marinere [1798][1030]
F. The Raven. [M. P. March 10, 1798.][1048]
G. Lewti; or, The Circassian's Love-Chant. (1.) [B. M. Add. MSS. 27,902.][1049]
The Circassian's Love-Chaunt. (2.) [Add. MSS. 35,343.][1050]
Lewti; or, The Circassian's Love-Chant. (3.) [Add. MSS. 35,343.][1051]
H. Introduction to the Tale of the Dark Ladie. [M. P. Dec. 21, 1799.][1052]
I. The Triumph of Loyalty. An Historic Drama. [Add. MSS. 34,225.][1060]
J. Chamouny; The Hour before Sunrise. A Hymn. [M. P. Sept. 11, 1802.][1074]
K. Dejection: An Ode. [M. P. Oct. 4, 1802.][1076]
L. To W. Wordsworth. January 1807[1081]
M. Youth and Age. (MS. I, Sept. 10, 1823.)[1084]
Youth and Age. (MS. II. 1.)[1085]
Youth and Age. (MS. II. 2.)[1086]
N. Love's Apparition and Evanishment. (First Draft.)[1087]
O. Two Versions of the Epitaph. ('Stop, Christian,' &c.)[1088]
P. [Habent sua Fata—Poetae.] ('The Fox, and Statesman,' &c.)[1089]
Q. To John Thelwall[1090]
R. [Lines to T. Poole.] [1807.][1090]
APPENDIX II
Allegoric Vision[1091]
APPENDIX III
Apologetic Preface to 'Fire, Famine, And Slaughter'[1097]
APPENDIX IV
Prose Versions of Poems, etc.
A. Questions and Answers in the Court of Love[1109]
B. Prose Version of Glycine's Song in Zapolya[1109]
C. Work without Hope. (First Draft.)[1110]
D. Note to Line 34 of the Joan of Arc Book II. [4o 1796.][1112]
E. Dedication. Ode on the Departing Year. [4o 1796.][1113]
F. Preface to the MS. of Osorio[1114]
APPENDIX V
Adaptations
From Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke:
God and the World we worship still together[1115]
The Augurs we of all the world admir'd[1116]
Of Humane Learning[1116]
From Sir John Davies: On the Immortality of the Soul[1116]
From Donne: Eclogue. 'On Unworthy Wisdom'[1117]
Letter to Sir Henry Goodyere.[1117]
From Ben Jonson: A Nymph's Passion (Mutual Passion)[1118]
Underwoods, No. VI. The Hour-glass[1119]
The Poetaster, Act I, Scene i.[1120]
From Samuel Daniel: Epistle to Sir Thomas Egerton, Knight[1120]
Musophilus, Stanza CXLVII[1121]
Musophilus, Stanzas XXVII, XXIX, XXX[1122]
From Christopher Harvey: The Synagogue (The Nativity, or Christmas Day.)[1122]
From Mark Akenside: Blank Verse Inscriptions[1123]
From W. L. Bowles:—'I yet remain'[1124]
From an old Play: Napoleon[1124]
APPENDIX VI
Originals of Translations
F. von Matthison: Ein milesisches Mährchen, Adonide[1125]
Schiller: Schwindelnd trägt er dich fort auf rastlos strömenden Wogen[1125]
Im Hexameter steigt des Springquells flüssige Säule[1125]
Stolberg: Unsterblicher Jüngling![1126]
Seht diese heilige Kapell![1126]
Schiller: Nimmer, das glaubt mir[1127]
Goethe: Kennst du das Land, wo die Citronen blühn[1128]
François-Antoine-Eugène de Planard: 'Batelier, dit Lisette'[1128]
German Folk Song: Wenn ich ein Vöglein wär[1129]
Stolberg: Mein Arm wird stark und gross mein Muth[1129]
Lessing: Ich fragte meine Schöne[1130]
Stolberg: Erde, du Mutter zahlloser Kinder, Mutter und Amme![1130]
Friederike Brun: Aus tiefem Schatten des schweigenden Tannenhains[1131]
Giambattista Marino: Donna, siam rei di morte. Errasti, errai[1131]
MS. Notebook: In diesem Wald, in diesen Gründen[1132]
Anthologia Graeca: Κοινῇ πὰρ κλισίῃ ληθαργικὸς ἠδὲ φρενοπλὴξ[1132]
Battista Guarini: Canti terreni amori[1132]
Stolberg: Der blinde Sänger stand am Meer[1134]
BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE POETICAL WORKS OF SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE[1135]
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL APPENDIX
No. I. Poems first published in Newspapers or Periodicals[1178]
No. II. Epigrams and Jeux d'Esprit first published in Newspapers and Periodicals[1182]
No. III. Poems included in Anthologies and other Works[1183]
No. IV. Poems first printed or reprinted in Literary Remains, 1836, &c.[1187]
Poems first printed or reprinted in Essays on His Own Times, 1850[1188]
INDEX OF FIRST LINES[1189]