| PAGE |
| Juvenile Poems |
| Genevieve | [9] |
| Sonnet to the Autumnal Moon | 10 |
| Time, Real and Imaginary. An Allegory | 11 |
| Monody on the Death of Chatterton | 12 |
| Songs of the Pixies | 19 |
| The Raven | 25 |
| Absence. A Farewell Ode | 28 |
| Lines on an Autumnal Evening | 30 |
| The Rose | 35 |
| The Kiss | 37 |
| To a Young Ass | 39 |
| Domestic Peace | 41 |
| The Sigh | 42 |
| Epitaph on an Infant ['Ere Sin could blight'] | 43 |
| Lines written at the King's-Arms, Ross | 44 |
| Lines to a beautiful Spring in a Village | 46 |
| On a Friend who died of a Frenzy-fever induced by calumnious reports | 48 |
| To a Young Lady with a Poem on the French Revolution | 51 |
| Sonnet | I. | My heart has thanked thee, Bowles | 54 |
| " | II. | As late I lay in Slumber's Shadowy Vale | 55 |
| " | III. | Though roused by that dark Vizir Riot rude | 56 |
| " | IV. | When British Freedom for an happier land | 57 |
| " | V. | It was some Spirit, Sheridan! | 58 |
| " | VI. | O what a loud and fearful Shriek | 59 |
| " | VII. | As when far off | 60 |
| " | VIII. | Thou gentle Look | 61 |
| " | IX. | Pale Roamer through the Night | 62 |
| " | X. | Sweet Mercy! | 63 |
| " | XI. | Thou bleedest, my Poor Heart | 64 |
| " | XII. | To the Author of The Robbers | 65 |
| Lines, composed while climbing Brockley Coomb | 66 |
| Lines in the Manner of Spenser | 67 |
| Imitated from Ossian | 70 |
| The Complaint of Ninathoma | 72 |
| Imitated from the Welsh | 73 |
| To an Infant | 74 |
| Lines in answer to a Letter from Bristol | 76 |
| To a Friend in Answer to a melancholy Letter | 82 |
| Religious Musings | 84 |
| The Destiny of Nations. A Vision | 104 |
| |
| Sibylline Leaves |
| Half-title |
| I. Poems Occasioned by Political Events or / Feelings Connected with Them | [127] |
| Motto—fourteen lines—'When I have borne in memory what has tamed', Wordsworth | [128] |
| Ode to the Departing Year | 131 |
| France, an Ode | 139 |
| Fears in Solitude | 144 |
| Fire, Famine, and Slaughter | 155 |
| |
| Half-title |
| II. Love Poems | [159] |
| Motto—eleven lines of a Latin Poem by Petrarch | [160] |
| Love | 161 |
| Lewti, or the Circassian Love-chaunt | 167 |
| The Picture, or the Lover's Resolution | 171 |
| The Night Scene, a Dramatic Fragment | 179 |
| To an Unfortunate Woman | 184 |
| To an Unfortunate Woman at the Theatre | 186 |
| Lines composed in a Concert Room | 188 |
| The Keepsake | 191 |
| To a Lady, with Falconer's Shipwreck | 194 |
| To a Young Lady on her recovery from a Fever | 196 |
| Something Childish, but very Natural | 198 |
| Home-sick: written in Germany | 200 |
| Answer to a Child's Question | 202 |
| The Visionary Hope | 203 |
| The Happy Husband | 205 |
| Recollections of Love | 207 |
| On revisiting the Sea-shore | 209 |
| |
| Half-title |
| III. Meditative Poems. / In Blank Verse | [211] |
| Motto—eight lines (translated) from Schiller | [212] |
| Hymn before Sun-rise, in the Vale of Chamouny | 213 |
| Lines written in an Album at Elbingerode, in the Hartz Forest | 218 |
| On Observing a Blossom on the First of February | 221 |
| The Eolian Harp | 223 |
| Reflections on having left a place of Retirement | 227 |
| To the Rev. George Coleridge | 231 |
| Inscription for a Fountain on a Heath | 235 |
| A Tombless Epitaph | 237 |
| This Lime-tree Bower my Prison | 239 |
| To a Friend who had declared his intention of writing no more Poetry | 244 |
| To a Gentleman [Wordsworth] composed on the night after his recitation of a Poem on the growth of an individual mind | 247 |
| [The Nightingale; a Conversation Poem | 253] |
| Frost at Midnight | 261 |
| |
| Half-title | [265] |
| The Three Graves | [267] |
| |
| Half-title | |
| Odes / And / Miscellaneous Poems | [287] |
| Dejection, An Ode | 289 |
| Ode to Georgiana Duchess of Devonshire | 296 |
| Ode to Tranquillity | 300 |
| To a Young Friend, on his proposing to domesticate with the Author | 302 |
| Lines to W. L., Esq., while he sang a song to Purcell's Music | 306 |
| Addressed to a Young Man of Fortune | 307 |
| Sonnet To the River Otter | 309 |
| —— Composed on a journey homeward after hearing of the birth of a Son | 310 |
| —— To a Friend | 311 |
| The Virgin's Cradle Hymn | 312 |
| Epitaph on an Infant. ['Its balmy lips the Infant blest'] | 313 |
| Melancholy, A Fragment | 314 |
| Tell's Birth-place | 315 |
| A Christmas Carol | 317 |
| Human Life | 320 |
| The Visit of the Gods | 321 |
| Elegy, imitated from Akenside | 324 |
| |
| Half-title |
| Kubla Khan: / Or, / A Vision In A Dream | [327] |
| Of The Fragment Of Kubla Khan | [329] |
| Kubla Khan | [332] |
| [The Pains of Sleep | 334] |
| Apologetic Preface to "Fire, Famine, and Slaughter" | 337 |
| END OF VOL. I |
| |
| Volume II |
| Half-title |
| The Rime / of / The Ancient Mariner. / In Seven Parts. / | [1] |
| Motto (From T. Burnet, Archæol. Phil., p. 68) | [2] |
| The Ancient Mariner. | Part I | 3 |
| Part II | 8 |
| Part III | 12 |
| | Part IV | 17 |
| | Part V | 21 |
| | Part VI | 27 |
| | Part VII | 33 |
| |
| Half-title |
| Christabel | [39] |
| Preface | [41] |
| Christabel. | Part I | 43 |
| | Conclusion to Part I | 56 |
| | Part II | 59 |
| | Conclusion to Part II | 73 |
| |
| Half-title |
| Prose in Rhyme: Or, / Epigrams, Moralities, and Things / Without a Name | [75] |
| Mottoes:— |
| Ἔρωϛ ἀεὶ λάληθρος ἑταῖρος. |
| In many ways does the full heart reveal |
| The presence of the love it would conceal; |
| But in far more th' estranged heart lets know, |
| The absence of the love, which yet it fain would shew. |
| Duty surviving Self-love | [77] |
| Song. ['Tho' veiled in spires,' &c.] | 78 |
| Phantom or Fact? A Dialogue in Verse | 79 |
| Work without Hope | 81 |
| Youth and Age | 82 |
| A Day-dream. ['My eyes make pictures,' &c.] | 84 |
| To a Lady, offended by a sportive observation | 86 |
| Reason for Love's Blindness | 86 |
| Lines suggested by the Last Words of Berengarius | 87 |
| The Devil's Thoughts | 89 |
| The Alienated Mistress | 93 |
| Constancy to an Ideal Object | 94 |
| The Suicide's Argument | 96 |
| The Blossoming of the Solitary Date-tree | 97 |
| Fancy in Nubibus | 102 |
| The Two Founts | 103 |
| Prefatory Note to the Wanderings of Cain | 105 |
| The Wanderings of Cain | 109 |
| |
| Half-title |
| Remorse. / A Tragedy. / In Five Acts. / | [119] |
| Remorse. A Tragedy | 121 |
| Appendix | [232] |
| |
| Half-title |
| Zapolya: / A Christmas Tale. / In Two Parts. | [237] |
| Πὰρ πυρὶ χρὴ τοιαῦτα λέγειν χειμῶνος ἐν ὥρᾳ |
| Apud Athenæum. |
| Advertisement | [238] |
| Part I. The Prelude / Entitled / "The Usurper's Fortune." / | [241] |
| Part II. The Sequel / Entitled / "The Usurper's Fate" | 274 |
| |
| Volume III |
| The Piccolomini, / Or / The First Part of Wallenstein. / A Drama. / |
| Translated from the German of Schiller / | 1 |
| The / Death of Wallenstein. / A Tragedy, / In Five Acts | 249 |