No. III
POEMS INCLUDED IN ANTHOLOGIES AND OTHER WORKS
| PAGE | ||
| 1. | Poems, supposed to have been written. . . By Thomas Rowley,. . .1794. | |
| Monody on the Death of Chatterton | xxv | |
| 2. | Poems by Francis Wrangham, M.A., 1795. | |
| Translation of Hendecasyllabi ad Bruntonam, &c. | 79 | |
| To Miss Brunton with the Preceding Translation. | ||
| 3. | Poems on the Death of Priscilla Farmer. By her grandson Charles Lloyd, 1796. | |
| Sonnet. 'The Piteous sobs', &c. | ||
| 4. | Lyrical Ballads, 1798. | |
| The Rime of the Ancyent Marinere | 1 | |
| The Foster Mother's Tale | 53 | |
| The Nightingale | 63 | |
| 5. | Lyrical Ballads (in two volumes), 1800. | |
| Vol. I. Love [with the four poems published in 1798] | 138 | |
| 6. | Annual Anthology, 1800. | |
| *Lewti, or The Circassian Love-Chant | 23 | |
| *To a Young Lady, on her first Appearance after a Dangerous Illness. | 32 | |
| *Recantation, Illustrated in the Story of the Mad Ox | 59 | |
| *Lines Written in the Album at Elbingerode, in the Hartz Forest | 74 | |
| *A Christmas Carol | 79 | |
| To a Friend, who had declared his intention of writing no more Poetry | 103 | |
| This Lime-Tree Bower my Prison. A Poem, addressed to Charles Lamb, of the India House, London | 140 | |
| To W. L. Esq. while he sung a Song to Purcell's Music. | 156 | |
| *The British Stripling's War-Song | 173 | |
| Something childish, but very natural. Written in Germany | 192 | |
| Home-Sick. Written in Germany | 193 | |
| *Ode to Georgiana, Dutchess of Devonshire | 212 | |
| *Fire, Famine, and Slaughter. A War Eclogue | 231 | |
| *The Raven | 240 | |
| *To an unfortunate Woman. 'Sufferer, that with sullen brow' | 291 | |
[Note. Poems marked with an asterisk were reprinted from the MorningPost.] | ||
| 7. | Memoirs of the late Mrs. Robinson, &c. Four volumes, 1801. | |
| A Stranger Minstrel | Vol. iv, p. 141 | |
| 8. | Melmoth's Beauties of British Poets, 1801. | |
| To a Young Ass | 21 | |
| To a Spring in a beautiful Village | 119 | |
| The Sigh | 167 | |
| The Kiss | 201 | |
| 9. | The Wild Wreath. Edited by M. E. Robinson, 1804. | |
| The Mad Monk | 142 | |
| 10. | The Poetical Register and Repository of the Fine Arts. | |
| Vol. II. For 1802 (1803). | ||
| *Chamouny. The Hour before Sunrise. A Hymn | 308 | |
| *Inscription on a Jutting Stone over a Spring | 338 | |
| *The Picture; or, The Lover's Resolution | 354 | |
| Vol. III. For 1803 (1805). | ||
| From the German of Leasing. 'I ask'd my fair', &c. [Signed 'Harley Philadelphia'.] | 274 | |
| Sonnets, Attempted in the Manner of 'Contemporary Writers' | 346 | |
| Vol. IV. For 1804 (1805). | ||
| The Exchange. | ||
| Vol. VI. For 1806, 1807 (1811). | ||
| On a Late Connubial Rupture in High Life | 365 | |
| Vol. VII. For 1808, 1809 (1812). | ||
| Fears in Solitude. By S. T. Coleridge, Esq. | 227 | |
| France, An Ode. By S. T. Coleridge, Esq. | 332 | |
| Frost at Midnight. By S. T. Coleridge Esq. | 530 | |
[Note. Sonnets Attempted, &c., in Vol. III, and On a Late, &c., inVol. VI, were reprinted from the Monthly Magazine: the three poems inVol. VII were reprinted from the quarto pamphlet of 1798, and were againset up as a small octavo pamphlet by Law & Gilbert, the printers of thePoetical Register. Vide Bibliography, No. [X].] | ||
| 11. | Selection of Poems for Young Persons, by J. Cottle. Third edition, n. d. | |
| Epitaph on an Infant | 129 | |
| Sonnet to the River Otter | 155 | |
| Domestic Peace | 157 | |
| 12. | English Minstrelsy; being a Selection of Fugitive Poetry from the Best English Authors. Two volumes, 1810. | |
| Vol. II. | ||
| Fragment. S. T. Coleridge ['Introduction to the Tale of the dark Ladie' as published in the Morning Post] | 131 | |
| 13. | Poetical Class-Book. Edited by W. F. Mylius, 1810. | |
| This Lime Tree Bower my Prison. | ||
| 14. | Nugæ Canoræ. Poems by Charles Lloyd, 1819. | |
| Sonnet. 'The piteous sobs ', &c. | 145 | |
| 15. | The British Minstrel. Glasgow, 1821. | |
| The Three Graves | ||
| 16. | Castle Dangerous. By Sir W. Scott, 1832. Notes by J. G. Lockhart. Galignani, 1834. | |
| The Knight's Tomb. 'Where is the grave', &c. | 10 | |
| 17. | A History of . . . Christ's Hospital. By the Rev. W. Trollope, 1834. | |
| Julia | 192 | |
| 18. | Letters, Conversations, &c., of S. T. Coleridge. In two volumes, 1836. | |
| Vol. I. | ||
| Farewell to Love | 143 | |
| To Nature. | 144 | |
| Sonnet. To Lord Stanhope | 217 | |
| Vol II. | ||
| 'What boots to tell how o'er his grave' | 75 | |
| 19. | Early Recollections, &c. By Joseph Cottle, 1837. | |
| Vol. I. | ||
| Monody on . . . Chatterton, ll. 137-54 | 32 | |
| To W. J. H. While playing on his flute | 33 | |
| The Fox and Statesman, &c. | 172 | |
| Sonnet. To Lord Stanhope | 203 | |
| Written After a Walk Before Supper | 209 | |
| To an unfortunate Young Woman, Whom I had known in the days of her Innocence. 'Maiden! that with sullen brow'. | 213 | |
| Allegorical Lines on the same subject. 'Myrtle Leaf, that ill besped' | 214 | |
| On an Unfortunate Woman at the Theatre | 216 | |
| On an Unfortunate, &c. | 217 | |
| Examples. 'O what a life', &c. | 226 | |
| Another Specimen, describing Hexameters, &c. | 226 | |
| Another Specimen. 'In the Hexameter', &c. | 227 | |
| The English Duodecasyllable. 'Hear my beloved', &c. | 227 | |
| Foster-Mother's Tale | 235 | |
| To a Friend, [Charles Lloyd (sic)] who had declared his intention, &c., ll. 17-35 | 245 | |
| Lines Addressed to Joseph Cottle | 283 | |
| 'As oft mine eye', &c. [The Silver Thimble] | 236 | |
| Sonnets, Attempted in the Manner of Contemporary Writers | 290 | |
| To the Author of the Ancient Mariner | 293 | |
| Vol. II. | ||
| Five 'Epigrams, translated . . . from the German' | 65-6 | |
| My Love. 'I ask'd my love', &c. | 67 | |
| Joan of Arc, Book the Second. 4o, 1796 (including the lines claimed by S. T. C.) | 241-52 | |
| 20. | The Book of Gems. Edited by S. C. Hall, 1838. | |
| The Garden of Boccaccio | 51 | |
| Love | 52 | |
| The Nightingale | 53 | |
| Lines written in the Album at Elbingerode, &c. | 58 | |
| Recollections of Love | 59 | |
| 21. | Memoirs of William Wordsworth. In two volumes, 1851. | |
| Vol. I. | ||
| English Hexameters. 'William, my teacher', &c. | 139 | |
| 22. | An Old Man's Diary. By J. Payne Collier, 1871, 2. | |
| My Godmother's Beard | Part I, pp. 34, 35. | |
| Epigram. 'A very old proverb commands', &c. | ||
| Epitaph on Sir James Mackintosh. [The Two Round Spaces on the Tombstone] | Part I, pp. 61, 62. | |
| A Character. 'A Bird who for his other sins' (15 lines) | Part IV, p. 57. | |
| 23. | Unpublished letters from Samuel Taylor Coleridge to the Rev. John Prior Estlin: Communicated to the Philobiblon Society. | |
| To An Unfortunate Princess. [On a Late Connubial, &c.] | 20 | |
| Lines Addressed to J. Horne Tooke. 'Britons! when last', &c. | 22 | |
| 24. | Letters from the Lake Poets. . . To Daniel Stuart, 1889. | |
| Alcaeus to Sappho | 16 | |
| 25. | Memorials of Coleorton. Edited by W. Knight. Two vols., 1887. | |
| Vol. I. | ||
| Mont Blanc, The Summit of the Vale of Chamouny, An Hour before Sunrise—A Hymn. [As sent to Sir George Beaumont.] | 26 | |
| To William Wordsworth. Composed for the greater part on the same night after the finishing of his recitation of the Poem in thirteen Books, on the Growth of his own Mind. [As sent to Sir G. Beaumont, Jan. 1807.] | ||
| 26. | Golden Treasury of Songs and Lyrics. Edited by F. T. Palgrave 1896. | |
| Love | 199 | |
| Kubla Khan | 308 | |
| Youth and Age | 323 | |