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The Complete Poems - Samuel Taylor Coleridge; Willia
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2022-02-24 02:20:48
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  • Cover
  • About the Author
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • CONTENTS
  • INTRODUCTION
  • ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
  • TABLE OF DATES
  • FURTHER READING
  • The Completed Poems
  • Dura navis
  • Nil pejus est caelibe vita
  • Sonnet to the Autumnal Moon
  • Julia
  • Quae nocent docent
  • The Nose
  • Life
  • To the Muse
  • Destruction of the Bastile
  • Anthem for the Children of Christ’s Hospital
  • Progress of Vice
  • Monody on the Death of Chatterton (first version)
  • Monody on the Death of Chatterton (second version)
  • An Invocation
  • Anna and Harland
  • To the Evening Star
  • Pain
  • On a Lady Weeping
  • Monody on a Tea-Kettle
  • Genevieve
  • On Receiving an Account that his Only Sister’s Death Was Inevitable
  • On Seeing a Youth Affectionately Welcomed by a Sister
  • A Mathematical Problem
  • Honour
  • On Imitation
  • Inside the Coach
  • Devonshire Roads
  • Music
  • Absence: A Farewell Ode on Quitting School for Jesus College, Cambridge
  • Sonnet on the Same
  • Happiness
  • A Wish Written in Jesus Wood, Feb. 10th, 1792
  • To Disappointment
  • A Fragment Found in a Leacture-Room
  • Ode
  • A Lover’s Complaint to his Mistress
  • With Fielding’s Amelia
  • Written After a Walk Before Supper
  • Imitated from Ossian
  • The Complaint of Ninathòma, from the Same
  • The Rose
  • Kisses
  • Sonnet (‘Thou gentle look’)
  • Sonnet to the River Otter
  • Lines on an Autumnal Evening
  • To Fortune: On Buying a Ticket in the Irish Lottery
  • Perspiration: A Travelling Eclogue
  • Lines written at the King’s Arms, Ross, formerly the House of the ‘Man of Ross’
  • Imitated from the Welsh
  • Lines to a Beautiful Spring in a Village
  • Imitations Ad Lyram
  • The Sigh
  • The Kiss
  • To a Young Lady, with a Poem on the French Revolution
  • Translation of Wrangham’s ‘Hendecasyllabi ad Bruntonam e Granta Exituram’
  • To Miss Brunton with the Preceding Translation
  • Epitaph on an Infant
  • [Pantisocracy]
  • On the Prospect of Establishing a Pantisocracy in America
  • Elegy, Imitated from One of Akenside’s Blank-Verse Inscriptions
  • The Faded Flower
  • Sonnet (‘Pale Roamer through the night!’)
  • Domestic Peace
  • Sonnet (‘Thou bjleedest, my poor Heart!’)
  • Sonnet to the Author of the ‘Robbers’
  • Melancholy: A Fragment
  • Songs of the Pixies
  • To a Young Ass, its Mother being Tethered Near it
  • Lines on a Friend Who Died of a Frenzy Fever Induced by Calumnious Reports
  • To a Friend, together with an Unfinished Poem
  • Sonnets on Eminent Characters:
  • 2. Burke
  • 3. Priestley
  • 4. La Fayette
  • 5. Koskiusko
  • 6. Pitt
  • 7. To the Rev. W. L. Bowles (two versions)
  • 8. Mrs Siddons
  • 9. To William Godwin, Author of ‘Political Justice’
  • 10. To Robert Southey, of Balliol College, Oxford, Author of the ‘Retrospect’, and Other Poems
  • 11. To Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Esq.
  • 12. To Lord Stanhope, on Reading his Late Protest in the House of Lords
  • To Earl Stanhope
  • Lines to a Friend in Answer to a Melancholy Letter
  • To an Infant
  • To the Rev. W. J. Hort, while teaching a young lady some song-tunes on his flute
  • Sonnet (‘Sweet Mercy! how my very heart has bled’)
  • To the Nightingale
  • Lines composed while climbing the left ascent of Brockley Coomb, Somersetshire, May, 1795
  • Lines in the Manner of Spenser
  • To the Author of Poems published anonymously at Bristol in September 1795
  • The Production of a Young Lady, addressed to the author of the poems alluded to in the preceding epistle
  • Effusion XXXV. Composed August 20th, 1795, at Clevedon, Somersetshire
  • The Eolian Harp
  • Lines written at Shurton Bars, near Bridgewater, September, 1795, in answer to a letter from Bristol
  • Reflections on Having Left a Place of Retirement
  • On Donne’s Poetry
  • The Hour When We Shall Meet Again
  • The Destiny of Nations
  • Religious Musings
  • From an Unpublished Poem
  • On Observing a Blossom on the First of February, 1796
  • Verses addressed to J. Horne Tooke
  • On a Late Connubial Rupture in High Life
  • Sonnet written on receiving letters informing me of the birth of a Son, I being at Birmingham
  • Sonnet composed on a journey homeward; the author having received intelligence of the birth of a son, Sept. 20th, 1796
  • Sonnet to a friend who asked, how I felt when the nurse first presented my infant to me
  • Sonnet [to Charles Lloyd]
  • To a Young Friend, on his Proposing to Domesticate with the Author. Composed in 1796
  • Addressed to a Young Man of Fortune Who Abandoned Himself to an Indolent and Causeless Melancholy
  • To a Friend Who Had Declared his Intention of Writing No More Poetry
  • Ode to the Departing Year
  • The Raven
  • To an Unfortunate Woman at the Theatre
  • To an Unfortunate Woman
  • To the Rev. George Coleridge
  • On the Christening of a Friend’s Child
  • This Lime-Tree Bower My Prison
  • The Foster-Mother’s Tale
  • The Dungeon
  • Sonnets Attempted in the Manner of Contemporary Writers:
  • Sonnet II
  • Sonnet III
  • Parliamentary Oscillators
  • The Rime of the Ancyent Marinere (1798)
  • The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1834)
  • Christabel
  • Lines to W. L. while he Sang a Song to Purcell’s Music
  • The Three Graves
  • The Wanderings of Cain
  • Fire, Famine, and Slaughter
  • The Old Man of the Alps
  • The Apotheosis, or The Snow-Drop
  • Frost at Midnight
  • France. An Ode
  • Lewti, or the Circassian Love-Chaunt
  • To a Young Lady on her Recovery from a Fever
  • Fears in Solitude
  • The Nightingale
  • The Ballad of the Dark Ladie
  • Kubla Khan: Or, A Vision in a Dream
  • [Lines from a notebook – September 1798]
  • [Hexameters:] William, My Teacher, My Friend!
  • [Translation of a passage in Ottfried’s metrical paraphrase of the Gospel]
  • [Fragmentary translation of the Song of Deborah]
  • Catullian Hendecasyllables
  • The Homeric Hexameter Described and Exemplified
  • The Ovidian Elegiac Metre Described and Exemplified
  • On a Cataract
  • Tell’s Birth-Place
  • The Visit of the Gods
  • On an Infant which Died before Baptism
  • Something Childish, but Very Natural
  • Home-Sick, Written in Germany
  • The Virgin’s Cradle-Hymn
  • Lines written in the album at Elbingerode, in the Hartz Forest
  • The British Stripling’s War-Song
  • The Devil’s Thoughts
  • Lines Composed in a Concert-Room
  • The Exchange
  • [Paraphrase of Psalm 46. Hexameters]
  • Hymn to the Earth. Hexameters
  • Mahomet
  • Ode to Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire
  • A Christmas Carol
  • On an Insignificant
  • Job’s Luck
  • Love
  • The Madman and the Lethargist, an Example
  • On a Volunteer Singer
  • Talleyrand to Lord Grenville
  • The Two Round Spaces on the Tomb-Stone
  • The Mad Monk
  • A Stranger Minstrel
  • Inscription for a Seat by the Road Side Half-Way Up a Steep Hill Facing South
  • Apologia Pro Vita Sua
  • The Night-Scene: A Dramatic Fragment
  • On Revisiting the Sea-Shore
  • Inscription for a Fountain on a Heath
  • Drinking versus Thinking
  • An Ode to the Rain
  • The Wills of the Wisp
  • Ode to Tranquillity
  • A Letter to——, April 4, 1802. – Sunday Evening
  • Dejection: An Ode
  • [A Soliloquy of the full Moon, She being in a Mad Passion–]
  • Answer to a Child’s Question
  • A Day Dream
  • The Day-Dream
  • To Asra
  • The Happy Husband
  • A Thought Suggested by a View of Saddleback in Cumberland
  • [Untitled]
  • The Keepsake
  • The Picture, or the Lover’s Resolution
  • Hymn before Sun-Rise, in the Vale of Chamouni
  • The Good, Great Man
  • The Knight’s Tomb
  • To Matilda Betham from a Stranger
  • Westphalian Song
  • The Pains of Sleep
  • [Lines from a notebook – September 1803]
  • [Lines from a notebook – February-March 1804]
  • [What is Life?]
  • [Lines from a notebook – April 1805]
  • [Lines from a notebook – May-June 1805]
  • Phantom
  • [An Angel Visitant]
  • Reason for Love’s Blindness
  • [Untitled]
  • Constancy to an Ideal Object
  • [Lines from a notebook – March 1806]
  • [Lines from a notebook – June 1806]
  • Farewell to Love
  • Time, Real and Imaginary
  • [Lines from a notebook – 1806]
  • [Lines from a notebook – October-November 1806]
  • [Lines from a notebook-1806]
  • [Lines from a notebook – November-December 1806]
  • [Lines from a notebook – February 1807]
  • [Lines from a notebook – February 1807]
  • [Lines from a manuscript – 1807 – 8]
  • [Lines from a notebook – July 1807; includes lines previously published separately as ‘Coeli enarrant’]
  • [Lines from a notebook – January 1808]
  • To William Wordsworth
  • Metrical Feet. Lesson for a Boy
  • Recollections of Love
  • The Blossoming of the Solitary Date-Tree. A Lament
  • To Two Sisters
  • On Taking Leave of ——, 1817
  • A Child’s Evening Prayer
  • Ad Vilmum Axiologum
  • Psyche
  • [Sonnet – translated from Marino]
  • [Fragment: ‘Two wedded Hearts’]
  • A Tombless Epitaph
  • On a Clock in a Market-Place
  • Separation
  • The Visionary Hope
  • [Lines from a notebook – March 1810]
  • [Lines from a notebook – April-June 1810]
  • [Lines from a notebook – May 1810]
  • Epitaph on an Infant
  • [Lines from a notebook – 1811]
  • [Fragment of an ode on Napoleon]
  • [Lines inscribed on the fly-leaf of Benedetto Menzini’s ‘Poésie’ (1782)]
  • [Lines from a notebook – May–June 1811]
  • [Lines from a notebook – May – July 1811]
  • [Lines from a notebook – May 1814?]
  • [Lines from a notebook – 1815–16]
  • [Lines from a notebook – 1815–16]
  • On Donne’s First Poem
  • Limbo
  • Moles
  • Ne plus ultra
  • The Suicide’s Argument
  • [An Invocation: from ‘Remorse’]
  • God’s Omnipresence, a Hymn
  • To a Lady. With Falconer’s ‘Shipwreck’
  • Human Life, On the Denial of Immortality
  • [Song from ‘Zapolya’]
  • [Hunting Song from ‘Zapolya’]
  • [Faith, Hope, and Charity. From the Italian of Guarini]
  • Fancy in Nubibus
  • Israel’s Lament
  • A Character
  • Lines to a Comic Author, on an Abusive Review
  • To Nature
  • The Tears of a Grateful People
  • First Advent of Love
  • [Reason]
  • [Lines from a notebook – 1822]
  • From the German
  • The Reproof and Reply
  • Youth and Age
  • Desire
  • The Delinquent Travellers
  • Song, ex improviso
  • Work Without Hope
  • The Two Founts
  • The Pang More Sharp Than All
  • Sancti Dominici Pallium
  • The Improvisatore
  • Love’s Burial-Place: A Madrigal
  • Lines Suggested by the Last Words of Berengarius
  • Epitaphium testamentarium
  • Duty Surviving Self-Love
  • [Homeless]
  • ’Eρως àει´ λáληθρoς έταîρoς
  • Song
  • Profuse Kindness
  • Written in an Album
  • To Mary Pridham
  • Verses Trivocular
  • Water Ballad
  • Cologne
  • On my Joyful Departure from the Same City
  • [The Netherlands]
  • The Garden of Boccaccio
  • Alice du Clos: Or The Forked Tongue. A Ballad
  • Love, Hope, and Patience in Education
  • [Lines written in commonplace book of Miss Barbour]
  • To Miss A. T.
  • Love and Friendship Opposite
  • Not at Home
  • W.H. Eheu!
  • Phantom or Fact?
  • Charity in Thought
  • Humility the Mother of Charity
  • [‘Gently I took that which ungently came’]
  • Cholera Cured Before Hand
  • Love’s Apparition and Evanishment
  • To the Young Artist, Kayser of Kaserwerth
  • Know Thyself
  • My Baptismal Birth-Day
  • Epitaph
  • APPENDICES
  • APPENDIX 2
  • NOTES
  • INDEX OF TITLES
  • INDEX OF FIRST LINES
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