| 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] |