[AP] In all editions subsequent to that of 1816, this paragraph was omitted.—Ed.
[AQ] This "Advertisement" was prefixed to the poem, in all editions from 1816 to 1843. In 1845, when part of the Ode, beginning
Imagination—ne'er before content
was detached from the rest, and turned into a separate Ode, with the date 1815 appended, the "Advertisement" was thrown into a "note" at the end of the volume, and it retained this place in subsequent editions. In Lord Coleridge's copy of the edition of 1836-37—before the stanzas which were afterwards separated to form the second Ode—"Waterloo" is written.—Ed.
[AR] The heights of Wansfell and Loughrigg.—Ed.
[AS] The whole period of the Peninsular and Continental wars with Napoleon.—Ed.
[AT] Wellington.—Ed.
[AU] The outcome of Napoleonic ambition.—Ed.
[AV] "A discipline the rule whereof is passion" (Lord Brooke).—W. W. 1816.
[AW] Compare the lines beginning