[Note.—This edition, the last printed in the lifetime of the author, was reprinted in 1835, 1840, 1844, 1847, &c. The Title-page is ornamented with the Aldine device and motto as in No. XXI.]
CONTENTS
[Preface, same as 1829, No. XXI, pp. [v]-x; the titles of Poems not published or collected before 1834 are italicized.]
| Page | Page of the | |||
| 1834 | present | |||
| edition | ||||
| Half-title | ||||
| Juvenile Poems | [1] | |||
| Genevieve | 3 | [19] | ||
| Sonnet. To the Autumnal Moon | 3 | [5] | ||
| Anthem for the Children of Christ's Hospital | 4 | [5] | ||
| Time, real and imaginary | 5 | [419] | ||
| Monody on the Death of Chatterton | 6 | [13] | ||
| Songs of the Pixies | 13 | [40] | ||
| The Raven | 18 | [169] | ||
| Music | 20 | [28] | ||
| Devonshire Roads | 21 | [27] | ||
| Inside the Coach | 22 | [26] | ||
| Mathematical Problem | 23 | [21] | ||
| The Nose | 27 | [8] | ||
| Monody on a Tea-Kettle | 29 | [18] | ||
| Absence, a Farewell Ode | 30 | [29] | ||
| Sonnet. On Leaving School | 31 | [29] | ||
| To the Muse | 32 | [9] | ||
| With Fielding's Amelia | 33 | [37] | ||
| Sonnet. On hearing that his Sister's Death was inevitable | 33 | [20] | ||
| On Seeing a Youth affectionately welcomed by a Sister | 34 | [21] | ||
| The same | 35 | [78] | ||
| Pain | 35 | [17] | ||
| Life | 36 | [11] | ||
| Lines on an Autumnal Evening | 36 | [51] | ||
| The Rose | 40 | [45] | ||
| The Kiss | 41 | [63] | ||
| To a Young Ass | 43 | [74] | ||
| Happiness | 44 | [30] | ||
| Domestic Peace | 48 | [71] | ||
| The Sigh | 48 | [62] | ||
| Epitaph on an Infant | 49 | [68] | ||
| On Imitation | 50 | [26] | ||
| Honor | 50 | [24] | ||
| Progress of Vice | 53 | [12] | ||
| Lines written at the King's Arms, Ross | 54 | [57] | ||
| Destruction of the Bastile | 55 | [10] | ||
| Lines to a beautiful Spring in a Village | 57 | [58] | ||
| On a Friend who died of a Frenzy Fever induced by calumnious reports | 58 | [76] | ||
| To a Young Lady, with a Poem on the French Revolution | 60 | [64] | ||
| Sonnet | I. | "My Heart has thanked thee, Bowles" | 62 | [84] |
| —— | II. | "As late I lay in Slumber's Shadowy Vale." | 63 | [80] |
| —— | III. | "Though roused by that dark vizir Riot rude" | 64 | [81] |
| —— | IV. | "When British Freedom for a happier land" | 64 | [79] |
| —— | V. | "It was some Spirit, Sheridan!" | 65 | [87] |
| —— | VI. | "O what a loud and fearful shriek" | 66 | [82] |
| —— | VII. | "As when far off" | 66 | [82] |
| —— | VIII. | "Thou gentle look" | 67 | [47] |
| —— | IX. | "Pale Roamer through the Night!" | 68 | [71] |
| —— | X. | "Sweet Mercy!" | 68 | [93] |
| —— | XI. | "Thou Bleedest, my Poor Heart!". | 69 | [72] |
| —— | XII. | To the Author of the Robbers. | 70 | [72] |
| Lines composed while climbing Brockley Coomb | 70 | [94] | ||
| Lines in the Manner of Spenser | 71 | [94] | ||
| Imitated from Ossian | 73 | [38] | ||
| The Complaint of Ninathoma | 74 | [39] | ||
| Imitated from the Welsh | 75 | [58] | ||
| To an Infant | 75 | [91] | ||
| Lines in Answer to a Letter from Bristol | 76 | [96] | ||
| To a Friend in Answer to a melancholy Letter | 80 | [90] | ||
| Religious Musings | 82 | [108] | ||
| The Destiny of Nations, a Vision | 98 | [131] | ||
| Half-title | ||||
| Sibylline Leaves. / I. Poems occasioned by Political Events / Or Feelings Connected / With them. / | [119] | |||
| Motto—When I have borne in memory, &c. (fourteen lines), Wordsworth | [120] | |||
| Ode to the Departing Year | [121] | [160] | ||
| France, an Ode | 128 | [243] | ||
| Fears in Solitude | 132 | [256] | ||
| Fire, Famine, and Slaughter | 141 | [237] | ||
| II. Love Poems | [145] | |||
| Motto—eleven lines from a Latin poem of Petrarch | [145] | |||
| Love | [145] | [330] | ||
| The Ballad of the Dark Ladie. A Fragment | 150 | [293] | ||
| Lewti, or the Circassian Love Chaunt | 152 | [253] | ||
| The Picture, or the Lover's Resolution | 155 | [369] | ||
| The Night Scene, a Dramatic Fragment | 162 | [421] | ||
| To an Unfortunate Woman | 166 | [172] | ||
| To an Unfortunate Woman at the Theatre | 167 | [171] | ||
| Lines Composed in a Concert Room | 168 | [324] | ||
| The Keepsake | 170 | [345] | ||
| To a Lady, with Falconer's Shipwreck | 172 | [424] | ||
| To a Young Lady on her recovery from a Fever | 173 | [252] | ||
| Something Childish, but very Natural | 174 | [313] | ||
| Home-sick: written in Germany | 175 | [314] | ||
| Answer to a Child's Question | 176 | [386] | ||
| A Child's Evening Prayer | 176 | [401] | ||
| The Visionary Hope | 177 | [416] | ||
| The Happy Husband | 178 | [388] | ||
| Recollections of Love | 179 | [409] | ||
| On revisiting the Sea-Shore | 181 | [359] | ||
| III. Meditative Poems. / In Blank Verse | [183] | |||
| Motto—eight lines translated from Schiller | [183] | |||
| Hymn before Sunrise, in the Vale of Chamouni | 183 | [376] | ||
| Lines written in the Album at Elbingerode in the Hartz Forest | 187 | [315] | ||
| On observing a Blossom on the First of February | 189 | [148] | ||
| The Æolian Harp | 190 | [100] | ||
| Reflections on having left a place of Retirement | 393 | [106] | ||
| To the Rev. George Coleridge | 196 | [173] | ||
| Inscription for a Fountain on a Heath | 199 | [381] | ||
| A Tombless Epitaph | 200 | [413] | ||
| This Lime-Tree Bower my Prison | 201 | [178] | ||
| To a Friend, who had declared his intention of writing no more Poetry | 205 | [158] | ||
| To William Wordsworth, composed on the night after his recitation of a Poem on the growth of an individual mind | 206 | [403] | ||
| The Nightingale | 211 | [264] | ||
| Frost at Midnight | 216 | [240] | ||
| The Three Graves | 219 | [267] | ||
| Odes and Miscellaneous Poems | 235 | |||
| Dejection, an Ode | 235 | [362] | ||
| Ode to Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire | 241 | [335] | ||
| Ode to Tranquillity | 244 | [360] | ||
| To a Young Friend, on his proposing to domesticate with the Author | 246 | |||
| Lines to W. L. while he sang a song to Purcell's Music | 249 | [286] | ||
| Addressed to a Young Man of Fortune | 249 | [157] | ||
| Sonnet. To the River Otter | 250 | [48] | ||
| —— Composed on a journey homeward after hearing of the birth of a son | 251 | [153] | ||
| —— To a Friend | 252 | [154] | ||
| The Virgin's Cradle Hymn | 252 | [417] | ||
| Epitaph on an Infant | 253 | [417] | ||
| Melancholy, a Fragment | 253 | [73] | ||
| Tell's Birth Place | 254 | [309] | ||
| A Christmas Carol | 256 | [338] | ||
| Human Life | 258 | [425] | ||
| Moles | 259 | [430] | ||
| The Visit of the Gods | 259 | [310] | ||
| Elegy, imitated from Akenside | 261 | [69] | ||
| Separation | 262 | [397] | ||
| On Taking Leave of —— | 263 | [410] | ||
| The Pang more sharp than all | 263 | [457] | ||
| Kubla Khan | 266 | [295] | ||
| The Pains of Sleep | 270 | [389] | ||
| Limbo | 272 | [429] | ||
| Ne plus ultra | 273 | [431] | ||
| Apologetic Preface to Fire, Famine, and Slaughter | 274 | |||
| END OF VOL. I | ||||
| Volume II | ||||
| The Ancient Mariner. | ||||
| Part | I. | 1 | [187] | |
| " | II. | 5 | [189] | |
| " | III. | 7 | [192] | |
| " | IV. | 10 | [196] | |
| " | V. | 13 | [198] | |
| " | VI. | 18 | [202] | |
| " | VII. | 23 | [206] | |
| Christabel, Part I | 28 | [213] | ||
| Conclusion to Part I | 39 | [225] | ||
| Part II | 41 | [227] | ||
| Conclusion to Part II | 53 | [235] | ||
| Half-title | ||||
| Miscellaneous Poems | [55] | |||
| Motto Ἔρωϛ ἀεί, &c. In many ways, &c. (four lines) | ||||
| Alice du Clos; or, the Forked Tongue. A Ballad | 57 | [469] | ||
| The Knight's Tomb | 64 | [432] | ||
| Hymn to the Earth | 65 | [327] | ||
| Written during a temporary blindness, 1799 | 67 | [305] | ||
| Mahomet | 68 | [329] | ||
| Catullian Hendecasyllables | 69 | [307] | ||
| Duty surviving Self-Love | 69 | [459] | ||
| Phantom or Fact? a dialogue in Verse | 70 | [484] | ||
| Phantom | 71 | [393] | ||
| Work without Hope | 71 | [447] | ||
| Youth and Age | 72 | [439] | ||
| A Day Dream | 74 | [385] | ||
| First Advent of Love | 76 | [443] | ||
| Names | 76 | [318] | ||
| Desire | 77 | [485] | ||
| Love and Friendship opposite | 77 | [484] | ||
| Not at home | 77 | [484] | ||
| To a Lady offended by a sportive observation | 78 | [418] | ||
| Lines suggested by the Last Words of Berengarius | 79 | [460] | ||
| Sancti Dominici Pallium | 80 | [448] | ||
| The Devil's Thoughts | 83 | [319] | ||
| The two round Spaces on the Tombstone | 87 | [353] | ||
| Lines to a Comic Author | 89 | [476] | ||
| Constancy to an Ideal Object | 90 | [455] | ||
| The Suicide's Argument | 91 | [419] | ||
| The Blossoming of the Solitary Date Tree | 92 | [395] | ||
| From the German | 95 | [311] | ||
| Fancy in Nubibus | 96 | [435] | ||
| The Two Founts | 96 | [454] | ||
| The Wanderings of Cain | 99 | [288] | ||
| Allegoric Vision | 109 | [1091] | ||
| New Thoughts on Old Subjects | 117 | [462] | ||
| The Garden of Boccaccio | 127 | [478] | ||
| On a Cataract | 131 | [308] | ||
| Love's Apparition and Evanishment | 132 | [488] | ||
| Morning Invitation to a Child | 133 | |||
| Consolation of a Maniac | 135 | |||
| A Character | 137 | [451] | ||
| The Reproof and Reply | 140 | [441] | ||
| Cholera Cured beforehand | 142 | |||
| Cologne | 144 | [477] | ||
| On my joyful departure from the same City | 144 | [477] | ||
| Written in an Album | 145 | |||
| To the Author of the Ancient Mariner | 145 | |||
| Metrical Feet. Lesson for a Boy | 145 | [401] | ||
| The Homeric Hexameter described and exemplified | 146 | [307] | ||
| The Ovidian Hexameter described and exemplified | 146 | [308] | ||
| To the Young Artist, Kayser of Kayserworth | 147 | [490] | ||
| Job's Luck | 147 | |||
| On a Volunteer Singer | 148 | |||
| On an Insignificant | 148 | |||
| Profuse Kindness | 148 | |||
| Charity in Thought | 148 | [486] | ||
| Humility the Mother of Charity | 149 | [486] | ||
| On an Infant which died before Baptism | 149 | [312] | ||
| On Berkeley and Florence Coleridge | 149 | |||
| "Γνῶθι σεαυτόν, &c. | 150 | [487] | ||
| "Gently I took," &c. | 151 | [488] | ||
| My Baptismal Birthday | 151 | [490] | ||
| Epitaph | 152 | [491] | ||
| Half-title | ||||
| Remorse! / A Tragedy. / In Five Acts. / | [153] | |||
| Dramatis Personae. | [154] | [819] | ||
| Remorse. | 155 | [820] | ||
| Appendix. | [237] | 881 | ||
| Half-title, Motto, &c. | ||||
| Zapolya: / A Christmas Tale / In Two Parts / | [241] | |||
| Advertisement. | [242] | [883] | ||
| Zapolya. | [243] | [884] | ||
| END OF VOL. II | ||||
| Volume III | ||||
| Half-title | ||||
| The Piccolomini; / Or, the First Part of Wallenstein. / A Drama. /Translated from the German of Schiller. / | [1] | |||
| Preface to the First edition | [3] | [598] | ||
| The Piccolomini | [5] | [600] | ||
| Half-title | ||||
| The / Death of Wallenstein. / A Tragedy. / In Five Acts: / | [193] | |||
| Preface of The Translator / To the First Edition. / | [195] | [724] | ||
| Dramatis Personae | [198] | [726] | ||
| The Death of Wallenstein | [199] | [726] | ||
| Love, Hope, and Patience in Education | 331 | [481] | ||
| Erratum | [332] | |||
XXVII
The Poetical and Dramatic Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge; With a Life of the Author. London: John Thomas Cox, 84 High Holborn. mdcccxxxvi.
[8o, pp. lxxviii + 403.
The Life of the Author is followed by an Appendix containing 'Coleridge's Will', and 'Contemporary Notices of the Writings and Character of Coleridge'.
The Contents consist of the Poems published in 1797, together with 'The Nightingale'; 'Love'; 'The Ancient Mariner'; 'The Foster Mother's Tale'; four poems and seven sonnets reprinted from 1796; 'On a late Connubial Rupture'; and the 'Three Sonnets . . . in the manner of Contemporary Writers' reprinted from the Poetical Register. The Poems conclude with 'A Couplet, written in a volume of Poems presented by Mr. Coleridge to Dr. A.'—a highly respected friend, the loss of whose society he deeply regretted—