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Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 2001 - (9780691004846)

Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge (Innbundet (stive permer))

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Poetry in its many guises is at the center of Coleridge's multifarious interests, and this long-awaited new edition of his complete poetical works marks the pinnacle of the Bollingen Collected Coleridge. The three parts of Volume 16 confirm and expand the sense of the Coleridge who has emerged over the past half-century, with implications for English Romantic writing as a whole. Setting new standards of comprehensiveness in the presentation of Romantic texts, they will interest historians and editorial theorists, as well as readers and students of poetry. They represent a work of truly monumental importance. The second part presents the same 706 poems as the first, in the same chronological sequence, but differently records in each case all known textual information in collated form - allowing for alternative construals of the reading texts. An additional 135 items are inserted into the same sequence, comprising poems mistakenly ascribed to Coleridge or of dubious authenticity and poems that remained only in the planning stage or that are referred to but have not been recovered. The index of titles and first lines incorporates the full range of variants.All told, the "Collected Coleridge" variorum sequence collates over a third more additional texts - in more detailed and accurate form - than those found in the previous standard edition, by E. H. Coleridge. The presentation method in this second part will interest editorial theorists as well as those interested primarily in Coleridge and/or the making of poetry. The unusually detailed textual information also reveals changes in such areas as linguistic and grammatical usage, patterns of transcription and circulation among anthologists, and contemporary publishers' house styles.

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS xxxvii EDITORIAL PRACTICE, SYMBOLS, AND ABBREVIATIONS xli Poetical Works PART 1 1782-1790 1 "First attempt at making a verse" 3 2 Fragments of an Ode on Punning 3 3 Dura Navis 4 4 Greek Epigram on Aphrodite and Athena 5 4.X I Translations of Synesius 5 5 Easter Holidays 6 6 Nil Pejus Est Caelibe Vitd 7 7 De Medio Fonte Lepor-um Surgit Aliquid Amari 8 8 Oh! Mihi Prxteritos Referat si Jupiter Annos! 8 9 Sonnet: To my Muse 0 10 Sonnet: "As late I joumey'd o'er th' extensive plain 11 10 11 The Nose: An Odaic Rhapsody 11 12 Conclusion to a Youthful Poem 14 13 An Ode on the Destruction of the Bastile 14 14 Sonnet: To the Evening Star 16 15 Sonnet: Composed in Sickness 17 16 A Few Lines Written by Lee when Mad 19 17 Sonnet: Genevieve 20 18 Nemo Repente Turpissimus 22 19 Sonnet: Anna and Harland 24 20 The Abode of Love 25 21 Monody on a Tea Kettle 26 22 An Invocation 28 1791 22.Xl Epitaph: By a Son on his Deceased Father 29 22.X2 Schoolboy Poem Sent to George Coleridge 29 23 Honos Alit Artes 30 24 Prospectus and Specimen of a Translation of Euclid 30 25 Sonnet: On Receiving an Account that my Sister's Death was Inevitable 34 26 Sonnet: On Seeing a Youth Affectionately Welcomed by his Sister 36 26.Xl Version of an Epitaph on a Young Lady 37 27 Ardua Prima Via Est 38 28 Greek Imitation of A Winter Piece 39 29 0 Curas Hominum! 0 Quantum Est in Rebus Inane! 40 30 Happiness: A Poem 42 31 An Anthem for the Children of Christ's Hospital 48 32 Sonnet: Sent to Mrs - with Fielding's Amelia 49 33 Sonnet: On Quitting Christ's Hospital 50 34 Ode to Sleep 51 35 Plymtree Road 53 36 Ode on the Ottery and Tiverton Church Music 54 37 Epigram on my Godmother's Beard 56 38 On Imitation 57 39 Absence: An Ode 58 40 Greek Epitaph on an Infant 60 40.Xl Translations of Anacreon 61 1792 41 An Ode in the Manner of Anacreon 61 42 A Wish Written in Jesus Wood 62 43 A Lover's Complaint to his Mistress 62 44 To Disappointment 63 45 Fragment Found in a Mathematical Lecture Room 63 46 On a Lady Weeping 64 47 Greek Epitaph for Howard's Tomb 66 48 Sors Misera Servorum in Insulis Indix Occidentalis 66 48.Xl Cambridge Prize Poems, 1792 72 49 A Siniile; Written after a Walk before Supper 73 50 Latin Lines on Ottery's Inhabitants 75 1793 50.Xl Imitations from the Modern Latin Poets 75 50.X2 Sonnet to the Earl of Lauderdale 76 51 The Complaint of Ninathoma 76 52 Two Lines on the Poet Laureate 79 53 0 Turtle-eyed Affection! 80 54 Latin Verses, Sent to George Coleridge 80 55 Imitated from Ossian 81 55.Xl Laus Astrononiiae 83 55.X2 Cambridge Prize Poems, 1793 88 56 On Presenting a Moss Rose to Miss F. Nesbitt 89 57 Cupid Tum'd Chymist 92 58 An Extempore 95 58.Xl Adaptation of John Bampfylde's To Evening 96 59 Elegy 98 60 Absence: A Poem 100 61 Sonnet: To the Autumnal Moon 111 61.Xl Est Quxdam Flere Voluptas 113 62 To a Painter 113 63 To Miss Dashwood Bacon of Devonshire 114 64 Songs of the Pixies 114 64.Xl To the Rt Hon C. J. Fox 123 65 To Fortune, on Buying a Ticket in the Irish Lottery 123 1794 65.Xl A Soliloquy of Roberspierre 124 66 Domestic Peace 124 66.Xl Sonnet: On Reading Miranda's Sonnet to a Sigh 126 67 Song: Imitated from Casimir 128 67.Xl Cambridge Prize Poems, 1794 128 68 To a Friend in Answer to a Melancholy Letter 129 68.Xl Lines Written in a Prayer Book: After Bowles 130 69 From Perspiration: A Travelling Eclogue 132 70 Lines on the "Man of Ross" 132 70.Xl Adaptation of Bowles's "I shall behold far off hy barren crest" 138 70.X2 Fragmentary Adaptation of a Welsh Sonnet 139 71 Latin Lines on Mary Evans 141 72 Stanzas from an Elegy on a Lady 141 73 Imitated from the Welsh 143 73.Xl The Faded Flower 144 73.X2 Sonnet: To an Infant at the Breast 144 74 Lines to a Beautiful Spring in a Village 145 75 The Sigh 147 76 The Kiss 150 77 Two Versions of an Epitaph on an Infant 153 77.Xl The Triumphs of the New Cabinet 155 78 Sonnet on Pantisocracy (with Samuel Favell) 155 78.Xl Sonnet: On Establishing Pantisocracy in America 157 78.X2 Revisions to Various Early Poems by Robert outhey 157 78.X3 On Bala Hill 159 79 To Ann Brunton: Iniitated from the Latin of Francis Wrangham 159 80 To Eliza Brunton, on Behalf of Francis Wrangham 160 81 To a Young Lady, with a Poem on the French Revolution 161 82 Monody on the Death of Chatterton 166 83 Sonnet: To my Own Heart 188 84 To a Young Ass, its Mother Being Tethered near It 189 85 Lines on a Friend, Who Died of a Frenzy Fever, Induced by Calumnious Reports 193 86 Sonnet: To the Author of The Robbers 197 87 Sonnet: On Hope (with Charles Lamb) 199 88 Sonnet: To an Old Man in the Snow (with Samuel Favell) 201 89 Sonnet: To the Hon Mr Erskine 203 90 Sonnet: To Burke 204 91 Sonnet: To Priestley 208 92 Sonnet: To Fayette 209 93 Sonnet: To Kosciusko 211 94 Sonnet: To Pitt 212 95 Sonnet: To Bowles 213 96 Sonnet: To Mrs Siddons (with Charles Lamb) 216 97 Sonnet: To William Godwin, Author of Political Justice 218 98 Sonnet: To Robert Southey, of Baliol College, Oxford, Author of the "Retrospect," and Other Poems 218 99 Sonnet: To Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Esq. 219 100 To a Friend, together with an Unfinished Poem 222 101 Religious Musings 224 1795 101.XL Sonnet: To Mrs Siddons 263 101.X2 Sonnet: To Lord Stanhope 263 101.X3 Sonnet: To Gilbert Wakefield 263 101.X4 Sonnet: Written on Contemplating a Very Fine Setting Sun. To Lord Stanhope 264 102 Sonnet: To Lord Stanhope 264 102.Xl Translation of Four Lines in French 265 103 Adaptation of Robert Southey's Sonnet "Pale Roamer thro' the Night!" 266 104 Adaptation of Charles Lamb's Sonnet Written at Midnight, by the Sea-side 268 105 To an Infant 269 105.Xl Lines Probably Borrowed from John Gaunt 272 106 Contribution to The Soldier's Wife, by Robert Southey 274 107 Allegoric Vision 275 108 Composed While Climbing the Left Ascent of Brockley Coomb, in the County of Somerset 287 109 To the Rev W.J.H. While Teaching a Young Lady Some Song-tunes on his Flute 288 110 Contributions to Joan of Arc, by Robert Southey 288 110.Xl Untitled Stanzas on Grace 309 11O.X2 Report on Mr Cottel 310 111 In the Manner of Spenser 310 112 To the Nightingale 313 113 Adaptation of Charles Lamb's Sonnet "Was it some sweet device of faery land ?" 313 114 Adaptation of Charles Lamb's Sonnet "Methinks, how dainty sweet it were" 315 115 The Eolian Harp: Composed at Clevedon, Somersetshire 316 116 Ode to Sara, Written at Shurton Bars, near Bridgewater, in Answer to a Letter from Bristol 328 117 Lines to Joseph Cottle 334 118 Translations of Homer Iliad 1.34, 49 337 119 The Silver Thimble (with Sara Fricker Coleridge) 337 120 Fragments of an Epistle to Thomas Poole 341 121 Summary Version of Horace 344 122 Fragments from the Gutch Notebook 344 1796 122.X I Habent sua Fata-Poetae 345 123 The Hour When We Shall Meet Again 346 124 Lines on Observing a Blossom 347 125 Verse Motto to Poetical Epistles 349 126 Lines on the Portrait of a Lady 350 126.Xl Lines Combined from Bowles 350 127 From an Unpublished Poem 351 127.Xl Epigram: "Said William to Edmund. 351 127.X2 To the Rev W. L. Bowles 351 128 Recollection 352 129 Reflections on Having Left a Place of Retirement 352 130 Irregular Sonnet: To John Tbelwall 357 130.Xl Epigram: On a Late Marriage 360 130.X2 Epigram: On an Amorous Doctor 360 130.X3 Epigram: "Of smart pretty Fellows in Bristol are numbers" 360 130.X4 To a Primrose 361 130.X5 Haleswood Poem 361 130.X6 Hymns to the Elements 362 131 To the Princess of Wales: Written during her Separation from the Prince 362 132 Poetical Address for Home Tooke 365 132.Xi Sonnet: To Poverty 368 133 To a Friend Who Had Declared his Intention of Writing No More Poetry 368 134 Sonnet: Written on Receiving Letters Informing Me of the Birth of a Son, I Being at Birmingham 371, 1374 135 Sonnet: Composed on a Journey Homeward, the Author Having Received Intelligence of the Birth of a Son 372 136 Sonnet: To a Friend, Who Asked How I Felt, When the Nurse First Presented my Infant to Me 374, 1374 137 Sonnet: Introducing Charles Lloyd's Poems on the Death of Priscilla Farmer 376 138 To Charles Lloyd, on his Proposing to Domesticate with the Author 377 138.Xl Nursery Song 381 139 The Destiny of Nations: A Vision 381 140 Sonnet: To the River Otter 408 141 Adaptation of Thomas Derinody 411 142 Ode on the Departing Year 411 143 Lines to a Young Man of Fortune Who Abandoned Himself to an Indolent and Causeless Melancholy 429 143.Xl Prospect of Peace 432 1797 144 On Quitting Oxford Street, Bristol, for Nether Stowey, New Year's Day 1797 432 145 The Raven 433 146 To Thomas Poole: Invitation to Dine 438 147 On the Christening of a Friend's Child 439 148 To an Unfortunate Woman, Whom I Knew in the Days of her Innocence: Composed at the Theatre 439 149 Allegorical Lines on the Same Subject 442 150 To the Rev George Coleridge of Ottery St Mary, Devon, with Some Poems 445 151 Song from OsoriolRemorse 448 152 The Foster-mother's Tale: A Dramatic Fragment 451 153 The Dungeon 458 153.Xl The Brook 459 154 Melancholy: A Fragment 460 155 Continuation of The Three Graves, by William Wordsworth 462 156 This Lime-tree Bower my Prison 480 157 Sonnet: To William Linley, Esq., While He Sang a Song to Purcell's Music 487 158 Sonnets Attempted in the Manner of "Contemporary Writers" 489 159 Sonnet: To a Lady 491 160 The Wanderings of Cain 492 161 The Rime of the Ancient Mariner 504 161.Xl Translation from Wieland's Oberon 540 162 Parliamentary Oscillators 540 163 Studies in Cloud Effects 542 164 On Deputy - - 543 165 The Apotheosis; or, The Snow-drop 543 166 To a Well-known Musical Critic, Remarkable for his Ears Sticking thro' his Hair 548 167 Fire, Famine, and Slaughter: A War Eclogue, with an Apologetic Preface 548 167.Xl Ideas or Lines for a Poem 565 168 The Old Man of the Alps 566 1798 169 Modification of Translation of a Celebrated Greek Song, by William Wordsworth 566 170 De Papa: Vaticinium Haud Valde Obscurum, Nec 38 Incredibile, 1798 568 171 Frost at Midnight 569 172 Lewti; or, The Circassian Love-chant 574 173 Welcoming Lines to Lavinia Poole 583 174 France: An Ode 585 174.X 1 To - - ("I niix in life, and labour to 45 seem free") 593 175 Fears in Solitude: Written in April 1798, during 51 the Alarm of an Invasion 593 176 Christabel 606 177 The Story of the Mad Ox 662 177.Xl To Lesbia 668 177.X2 The Death of the Starling 669 177.X3 Moriens Superstiti 669 177.X4 Morienti Superstes 669 178 Kubla Khan; or, A Vision in a Dream 669 179 Contribution to We Are Seven, by William Wordsworth 678 180 The Nightingale: A Conversation Poem 679 181 To William Wordsworth, with The Nightingale 684 182 The Ballad of the Dark Ladi6: A Fragment 684 183 Translation of an Inscription in Stowey Church 691 183.Xl Epigram: "To be ruled like a Frenchman the 10 Briton is loth" 691 ~183.X2 Contributions to The Morning Post 692 ~184 Lines Describing "Tbe silence of a City" 692 185 English Hexameters 693 186 English Duodecasyllables, Adapted from 18 Matthisson 695 187 The Homeric Hexameter Described and 18 Exemplified, Adapted from Schiller 696 188 The Ovidian Elegiac Metre Described and 56 Exemplified, from Schiller 697 189 Something Childish but Very Natural, from the German 698 190 The Visit of the Gods, Iniitated from Schiller 699 1799 191 Translation of Otfrid 702 192 Alcaeus to Sappho (revising William Wordsworth) 702 193 On an Infant Who Died before its Christening, Perhaps Inspired by Lessing 703 194 Metrical Adaptation of Gessner 704 195 Lines in a German Student's Album 704 196 Homesick: Written in Germany, Adapted from Biirde 705 197 Adapted Lines on Fleas 707 198 Extempore Couplet on German Roads and Woods 707 199 The Virgin's Cradle-hymn, Copied from a Print of the Virgin in a Catholic Villaize in Germany 708 200 Lines Written in the Album at Elbingerode, in the Harz Forest 710 200.Xl German Album Verses 713 201 Epigram on Goslar Ale, from the German 714 202 Epitaph on Johann Reimbold of Catlenburg, from the German 715 203 Epigram on Kepler, from Kdstner 715 204 Epigram: "Jack drinks fine wines", from Kiistner 716 205 Epigram on Mr Ross, Usualy "Nosy" 717 206 Epigram: "0 would the Baptist come again", from Logau 717 207 On the United Irishmen 718 208 Epigram on a Reader of his Own Verses, Inspired by Wemicke 719 209 Epigram on Neaera's Portrait, Inspired by Lessing 721 210 Epigram on Exchanging Friends, from Logau 721 211 Epigram on a Slanderer, from Lessing 721 212 The British Stripling's War-song, from Stolberg 723 213 Epigram on Hippona, from Lessing 726 214 The Devil's Thoughts 726 215 Before Gleim's Cottage: Elegiacs from Voss 751 216 Mahomet: A Fragment 752 217 Specimen Elegiacs, Adapting Ossian 753 217.Xl Rigmarole Verses about Samuel Jackson Pratt 754 218 Epigram on a Report of a Minister's Death, from Lessing 754 219 Epigram to a Proud Parent, from Lessing 755 220 Epigram on a Notorious Liar, from Lessing 756 PART 2 221 Epitaph on a Bad Man, Perhaps after Vicesimus Knox 759 222 Two Versions of an Epigram on Lying, from Lessing 760 223 Epigram on an Oxford Brothelhouse, Adapted from Lessing 761 224 Epigram on a Lady's Too Great Fondness for her Dog, from Lessing 762 225 Epigram on Mimulus, from Lessing 764 226 Epigram on Paviun, from Lessing 764 227 Epitaph on an Insignificant, Adapted from Lessing 765 228 Epigram on Marriage, from Lessing 766 229 Epigram on Maids and Angels, from Lessing 767 230 Epigram to a Virtuous CEconornist, from Wemicke 767 231 Epigram on Gripus, from Lessing 768 232 On the Sickness of a Great Minister, from Lessing 769 233 Epigram to an Author, from Lessing 770 234 The Lethargist and Madman: A Political Fable, after the Greek Anthology 771 235 Epigram to a Critic, Who Extracted a Passage from a Poem 773 236 Names, from Lessing 774 237 Epigram: Always Audible, from Kdstner 776 238 Over the Door of a Cottage, after Logau 777 239 The Devil Outwitted; or, Job's Luck, after Logau and John Owen 778 240 Epigram on the Speed with Which Jack Writes Verses, after von Halem 780 241 Epigram on a Bad Singer, after Pfeffel and Martial 781 242 Epigram on a Joke without a Sting 782 243 To a Living Ninon d'Enclos 783 244 Epigram on a Maiden More Sentimental than Chaste 784 245 The Exchange of Hearts 784 246 Epigram on a Supposed Son 786 247 Pondere, Non Numero, from Logau 786 248 Lines Composed in a Concert-room 787 249 Hexametrical Translation of Psalm 46 790 250 Epigram on Sir Rubicund Naso 790 251 To Delia 791 251.Xl Epigrams from Lessing 792 25 1.X2 Epigram: "Doris can find no taste in Tea" 792 252 Couplet on Grosvenor Bedford 792 253 Love 793 254 Ode to Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, on the 24th Stanza in her Passage over Mount Gothard 807 265 Two Lines on the Stars and the Mountains 823 266 On the Poet's Eye 823 267 The Two Round Spaces on the Tombstone: A Skeltoniad (to be Read in the Recitative Lilt) 824 268 Six Lines on a Keswick Holiday 832 269 The Mad Monk 833 270 Inscription for a Seat by a Road Side, Half-way up a Steep Hill, Facing the South 835 271 A Stranger Minstrel 836 272 The Night-scene: A Dramatic Fragment 838 273 Two Lines on Remorse 839 1801 273.Xl lambics: "No cold shall thee benumb" 839 273.X2 The Second Birth 839 274 Two Lines on the Cur, Arthritis 839 274.Xl An Expostulatory and Panegyrical Ode 840 274.X2 A Philosophical Apology for the Ladies 840 275 After Bathing in the Sea at Scarborough in Company with T. Hutchinson, August 1801 841,1374 276 Verse Letter to Miss Isabella Addison and Miss Joanna Hutchinson 844 277 Inscription for a Fountain on a Heath 845 278 Song to be Sung by the Lovers of All the Nobic Liquors Comprised under the Name of Ale 847 279 Drinking versus Thinking; or, A Song against the New Philosophy 847 280 Lines Written in Bed at Grasmere 848 281 The Wills of the Wisp: A Sapphic, from Stolberg 853 282 Lines Translated from Barbarous Latin 853 283 Ode to Tranquillity 854 284 To a Certain Modem Narcissus, from Hagedom 858 285 Pastoral from Gessner 858 286 Adaptation of Ben Jonson's The Poetaster 859 286.Xl The Complaint Qualified 859 1802 287 Fragment on Time, from Schiller 860 287.Xl Experiment for a Metre (1) 860 288 Lines on the Breeze and Hope 861 288.Xl Experiment for a Metre (2) 861 289 A Letter to - 861 289.Xl Verses Sent to Dorothy Wordsworth 876 290 A Soliloquy of the Full Moon, She Being in a Mad Passion 876 290.Xl "Dear Messieurs Trippeaux" 880 291 Answer to a Child's Question 880 291.Xl The Destruction of Jerusalem by Titus 882 292 Epitaph on Lord Lonsdale 883 293 Dejection: An Ode 884 294 The Day Dream 897 294.Xl The Soother of Absence 899 295 Sonnett o Asra 900 295.X1 Translation into Blank Verse of Salomon Gessner's Der erste Schiffer 900 296 Lines Composed during a Night Rarnble behind Skiddaw, at the Foot of Mount Blencarthur, in 1802 901 297 Sonnet Adapted from Petrarch 904 298 A Version of a Nursery Rhyme 905 299 The Keepsake 906 300 The Picture; or, The Lover's Resolution 909 301 Hymn before Sun-rise, in the Vale of Chamouny 922 302 Dialogue concerning a Good Great Man 933 302.Xl Effusion, after Reading the Interesting Account of the Young Savage of Aveyron 935 303 The Knight's Tomb 935 304 To Matilda Betham, from a Stranger 938 305 EDiizram on Eiigrams, from Wemicke 940 306 Epigram on a Congenital Liar, from Wemicke 941 307 Epigram on the Devil, from a German Original? 942 308 Epigram Addressed to One Who Published in Print What Had Been Entrusted to Him by my Fire-side, from Wemicke 942 309 On the Curious Circumstance, that in the German Language the Sun is Feminine, and the Moon Masculine, after Wernicke 943 310 Epigram on Spots in the Sun, from Wernicke 944 311 Epigram on Surface, from Wernicke 945 312 A Dialogue between an Author and his Friend, after Wemicke 946 313 Epigram on Possession, from a German Original 947 314 Epigram on Castles in the Air, from Wernicke 948 315 To a Vain Lady, from the German and from Martial 949 316 Epigram to my Candle, after Wemicke 950 317 From an Old German Poet (after Wernicke) 951 318 Epigram on Bond Street Bucks, Adapted from Wemicke 952 319 Epigram on Virgil's "Obscuri sub luce maligna", after Wemicke 952 320 M(opocFo(piu.; or, Wisdom in Folly, from a German Original? 953 321 Westphalian Song 954 322 A Hint to Premiers and First Consuls 954 323 Latin Lines to William Sotheby 955 324 Epigram on Aurelia, from Gryphius 955 325 For a House-dog's Collar, from Opitz 955 326 Epigram on Zoilus, from Opitz 956 327 Epitaph on a Mercenary Miser, from Opitz 956 327.Xl Stanzas Written after a Long Absence 958 328 Latin Lines on a Former Friendship 958 1803 329 Greek Lines on Achilles' Meal of Yesterday 959 330 The Kiss and the Blush 960 331 Grasmere in Sunshine 961 331.Xl Three Lines from the Bristol Notebook 962 332 Fragments of an Unwritten Poem 962 333 Three Lines on Loch Lomond 963 334 Lines on "Such love as mouming Husbands have" 963 335 The Pains of Sleep 963 336 Epitaph on Poor Col, by Himself 967 337 Brevity of the Greek and English Compared 968 338 Lines after Hearing William Wordsworth's Michael 969 1804 339 Lines Written at Dove Cottage 970 3413 PatiiDtic Stm7,as 970 340.Xl Lines Written at either Ottery or Walthamstow 971 341 A Triplet on Triplets 971 342 Hexameter Lines to Mrs Coleridge 971 343 Cartwright Modified 972 343.Xl "Sole Maid, associate sole, to me beyond" 972 343.X2 "I from the influence of thy looks receive" 973 343.X3 Verse Trifles Sent to Sir George Beaumont 973 344 Epigram on "Dear Anne" 973 345 Balsamum in Vitro 974 346 Tears and Sympathy 974 347 Phantom 974 348 To Captain Findlay 975 349 Mercury Descending: A Metrical Experiment 976 350 Description of the Sun Setting in a Mountainous Country: A Fragment 977 351 What is Life? A Metrical Experiment 978 352 Adaptation of Hagedorn 979 353 Metrical Experiments from Notebook 22 980 354 Recollections of Love 982 354.Xl Further Lines on The Soother of Absence 986 355 Fragment: "And laurel Crown..." 986 356 Fragment: "What never is, but only is to be" 987 357 Constancy to an Ideal Object 987 1805 358 "This yearning Heart ..." 990 359 Love-Why Blind? 990 360 Closing Lines in Notebook 21 992 361 Couplet Written in February 1805 992 361.Xl Twenty Lines Inscribed in The Poems of Ossian 993 362 Verses on Love and Moral Being 993 363 Doleful Dialogue 994 364 Curtailed Lines in Notebook 17 995 365 A Metaphor 995 366 Apostrophe to Beauty in Malta 996 367 To God 996 368 Irregular Lines on the Sick Man's Comforter 997 369 Lines Connected with the Grasmere Circle 997 370 Lines on Hearing a Tale 998 371 Lines Rewritten from Sannazaro 998 371.Xl Lines on Leaving the Mediterranean 999 372 On the Nairnes in a Malta Notebook 1001 373 Perhaps a Translation of Some Comically Bad Verses 1001 374 Latin Lines to William Wordsworth as Judge 1002 375 Epitaph on Major Dieman, with Comment 1002 376 On the Name "Chastenut Grove", Derived from Ariosto 1003 377 On Fetid, Who Died of a Catarrh 1004 378 On the Family Vault of the Burrs 1005 1806 379 Lines Written in a Dream 1007 380 A Single Line on Revenge 1007 381 Lines on a Death 1007 382 Written at Ossaia 1008 383 On Death at Pisa 1008 384 The Taste of the Times 1008 385 Lines Rewritten from Spenser's Epithalamium 1009 386 Lines on a King-and-Emperor-Making Emperor and King, Altered from Fulke Greville 1009 387 Farewell to Love 1010 388 Time, Real and Imaginary: An Allegory 1011 389 Two Epigrams on Pitt and Fox 1014 390 Adapted from Fulke Greville's Alaham 1016 391 More Lines Inspired by Fulke Greville 1016 392 Inspired by Fulke Greville's Alaham 1016 393 A Greek Song Set to Music and Sung by Hartley Coleridge, Esq"., Grecologian, Philometrist, and Philomelist 1017 394 Verses to Derwent Coleridge, Accompanying Greek Lessons 1019 395 To Derwent Coleridge: The Chief and Most Common Metrical Feet Expressed in Corresponding Metre 1019 396 The Blossoming of the Solitary Date-tree 1021 397 Lines Written in November-December 1806 1026 398 Written at Coleorton 1027 399 "Those eyes of deep & most expressive blue" 1027 400 A Line Written at Coleorton 1028 1807 401 To Williairn Wordsworth, Composed on the Night after his Recitation of a Poem on the Growth of an Individual Mind 1028 402 Psyche; or, The Butterfly 1036 403 A Metrical Conclusion? 1038 404 Lines on the Yellowhammer 1039 405 Parody Epitaph on Tom Navel 1039 406 Fragments Written in February 1807 1039 407 Allegorical Description 1040 408 Three Lines on Penitence 1041 409 Fate and Conscience 1041 410 Birds in May 1042 411 Epigram on Confessions Auricular 1042 412 The Pang More Sharp than All: An Allegory 1042 413 On the Roots of a Tree 1046 413.Xl Poems Suggested by Richard Heme Shepherd, from The Courier 1047 413.X2 Epigram: "Ned calls his wife his counter-part" 1048 413.X3 "A wind that with Aurora hath abiding" 1048 414 An Image Compressed from Crashaw 1048 415 Between Concurrences of Fate 1049 416 Imitations of Du Bartas etc 1049 417 Translation of a Distich by Schiller 1050 418 Translation of A Distich by Goethe and Schiller 1050 419 On Tom Poole's Meanderings 1051 420 Lines on Wordsworth and Coleridge 1051 420.Xl The Barberry-tree 1052 421 Versified from Bacon 1053 422 Adapted from a Shakespeare Sonnet 1053 423 To Two Sisters: A Wanderer's Farewell 1054 424 Thinking Merrily Alone 1055 425 Lines Prompted by Chapman 1055 426 A Line from a Lost Poem? 1056 1808 427 Two Lines: "Or like the Swallow. 1056 428 Prayer for Night: For Hartley and Derwent 1057 429 Ad Vilmum Axiologum 1058 430 Ad Vilmum Axiologum: Latin Version 1059 431 An Anagram of Mary Morgan's Face 1061 432 To Charlotte Brent 1061 433 Extremes Meet: A Fill-A-Sopha-Col Note 1062 433A Lines to Charlotte Brent 1375 434 On a Happy Household 1063 435 Latin Lines to Accompany a Personal Emblem 1063 436 Latin Lines to Accompany a Second Emblem 1064 437 A Motto to Accompany a Third Emblem 1064 438 An Exemplary Description 1064 439 Latin Elegiacs on Guy Fawkes 1065 440 Sonnet Translated from Marino 1066 441 Alternative Stanzas in the Manner of Marino 1066 441.Xl Fragmentary Lines in Pencil 1066 441.X2 Twenty-six-line Poem 1067 442 The Happy Husband: A Fragment 1068 443 Lines on the Moon 1070 444 Couplet on Singing in Church 1071 444.Xl Seven Cancelled Lines 1071 1809 445 To Mr Amphlett 1072 446 Adelphan Greek Riddle 1072 447 Verse Letter to Mrs Coleridge 1072 448 Another Epitaph on an Infant 1073 449 A Motto Adapted from Love's Labour's Lost 1074 450 Three-line Fragment 1075 451 Contribution to To my Thrushes, by Thomas Wilkinson 1075 452 For a Clock in a Market-place 1076 453 On Mr Baker's Marriage: A Fragment 1076 454 Verses Based on Paracelsus 1077 455 A Tombless Epitaph 1077 455.Xl The Good Old Customs 1079 456 Couplet Written in Autumn 1809 1080 457 Lines Written in Late Autumn 1809 1080 458 Verse Line, Late Autumn 1809 1080 459 Adaptation of Lines from Daniel's Civil Wars 1081 460 Cartwright Modified Again 1081 1810 461 Separation, after Charles Cotton 1082 462 Lines Altered from Fulke Greville's A Treatise of Humane Learning 1083 463 Futke Greville Modified 1084 464 Further Lines on Tranquillity 1085 465 Lines on the Body and the Soul 1085 466 Written in Dejection, May 1810 1085 467 The Visionary Hope 1086 468 Fragment in Blank Verse 1087 469 Humorous Lines, Spring 1810 1087 470 Voltaire Versified 1087 471 Gilbert White Versified, on the Owl 1088 472 Observation on Colour and Light 1088 473 Burlesque in the Manner of Walter Scott 1088 474 Translation of a Goethe Epigram 1089 1811 474.Xl Revisions of Mary Russell Mitford's Christina and Blanch 1089 475 8 The Moon on the Pacific Main 1090 475.Xl Lovers' Quarrels 1090 475.X2 Epigram on Damus 1090 476 On the First Poem in Donne's Book 1091 477 Moles 1098 478 Limbo: A Fragment 1098 479 Ne Plus Ultra 1098 480 Adaptation of Milton's Lines on Shakespeare 1099 481 Lines Inscribed in Benedetto Menzini 1099 482 Human Life, on the Denial of Immortality 1100 483 Phlegethon, Cocytus, and Euterpe: Abandoned Stanzas 1102 484 Fragmentary Lines on Change 1103 485 Lines Inspired by Jean Paul 1103 485.Xl Epigram on Samuel Whitbread 1103 486 Adaptation of Ben Jonson's A Nymph's Passion 1104 487 Adaptation of Ben Jonson's The Hour-glass 1105 488 Lavatorial Lines 1105 489 Latin Lines Perhaps Connected with John Morgan 1105 490 The Suicide's Argument, with Nature's Answer 1106 491 Sir John Davies on the Soul, Adapted to the Imagination 1109 492 To a Lady, Offended by a Sportive Observation that Women Have No Souls 1110 492.Xl The Comet, 1811 1111 493 Latin Distich on Giving and Receiving 1112 494 A Half-attempt at Verse 1113 495 A Droll Formulary to Raise Devils 1113 1812 496 Versified Note to J. J. Morgan 1115 497 Epigram on Maule and Mather 1116 498 On the Narning of Bombay 1116 498.Xl Love's Response 1117 498.X2 Epigram on Sir Humphry Davy's Marriage 1117 499 Faith, Hope, Charity, Translated from Guarini 1118 500 Metrical Experiment in May 1812 1118 500.Xl Lines Sent with a Collection of Manuscripts to John May 1119 501 The King of the North Countrie 1119 502 Epitaph on the Learned Robert Whitmore, E Who Died of a Diarrho~a, 4 August 1812,~ Etatis Sux 57 1120 502.Xl A Tear 1120 1813-1814 502.X4 Shakespeare Read Creatively 1121 503 Couplet on Lesbian Lovers 1122 504 On the Secrecy of a Certain Lady 1122 505 Maevius-Bavius Exemplum 1123 506 Lines on Looking Seaward 1123 507 Lines on Zephyrs 1123 508 National Independence: A Latin Fragment 1124 508.Xl Doggerel Rhymes 1125 509 To a Lady, with Falconer's Shipwreck 1126 510 God's Omnipresence: A Hymn 1128 511 A Couplet to Illustrate Paeon and Epitrite 1130 512 A Plaintive Movement, after Phineas Fletcher 1130 513 Motto for a Transparency 1131 514 On the Condition of Ireland, in the Manner of Daniel's Civil Wars 1132 515 Written in Richard Field's Of the Church 1132 515.Xl Puff and Slander 1133 516 Revisions of the Opening of Southey's Roderick 1133 516.Xl Improvements for Charles Bowker Ash 1134 1815 517 Glycine's Song from Zapolya 1134 517.X2 Napoleon 1139 517.X3 Lines in Walker's Dictionary, Largely Erased 1139 518 A Metrical Line in Notebook 22 1140 519 Metrical Version of Job, from Jacobi 1140 520 Specimen Translation of Pindar, "Word for Word" 1140 521 Contemporary Critics 1141 522 Translation of Dante 1141 523 Lines on Aurelia Coates 1141 524 Lines in Praise of Rabelais 1142 525 EFUENKAIRIAN: A Dithyrambic Ode 1143 526 To the Morgans 1143 527 Lines on Superstition 1144 528 Lines Headed "Orpheus" 1145 529 Lines Adapted from Jean Paul 1145 530 Further Lines Adapted from Jean Paul 1146 531 Epigram on Money 1146 532 Lines on Crimes and Virtues 1146 533 Elevated Diarrhoea 1147 533.Xl The Cherub 1147 1816-1818 534 Verse Lines from A Lay Sermon 1147 535 Alternative Translation of Virgil's Bucolics 1148 536 Motto for Memoranda in Notebook 25 1148 537 Lines after Punch 1149 538 Lines for an Autograph Hunter 1149 539 To a Young Lady Complaining of a Com 1151 540 Fancy in Nubibus 1152 541 Imitated from Aristophanes 1154 542 Part of a Sonnet to Miss Bullock 1155 543 Israel's Lament on the Death of the Princess Charlotte of Wales, Translated from the Hebrew of Hyman Hurwitz 1155 544 Rewriting of Lines by Beaumont and Fletcher 1158 545 A Description of a Nightingale 1159 546 Lines Suggested by Sir Thomas Browne 1159 546.Xl Three Epigrams on Bishop Watson 1160 546.X2 Translations from the Old Testament 1160 547 Couplet on the Heart Deaf and Blind 1161 548 Adaptation of Daniel's Epistle to Sir Thomas Egerton 1161 549 Adaptation of Donne's To Sir Henry Goodyere 1161 550 Adaptation of Daniel's Musophilus 1162 551 Adaptation of Donne's Eclogue 1613, December 26 1162 552 A Further Adaptation of Daniel's Musophilus 1163 553 Epigraph Verses for The Friend 1163 554 Adaptation of Lines from Dodsley's Select Collection of Old Plays 1163 555 Draft Fragment, Perhaps Describing Sara Coleridge 1164 1819-1821 556 Lines on the Usury of Pain 1165 557 Distich, Written in February 1819 1166 558 The Proper Unmodified Dochmius, i.e., Antispastus Hypercatalecticus 1166 559 "Beareth all things" 1167 560 To a Comic Author, on an Abusive Review 1167 561 A Character 1170 562 Extempore Specimen of the Pun Polysyllabic 1175 563 Riddle for Materialists 1175 564 Extempore, to Charles Mathews 1176 565 The Tears of a Grateful People 1176 566 Couplet on Anticipation and Theory, Genius and Cleverness 1177 567 Couplet on Man as Solar Animal 1177 568 Greek Couplet on Lauderdale 1178 569 On Footnotes, in a Letter 1178 570 A Practical Problem concerning Flies 1179 571 Music 1179 572 Sonnet: To Nature 1179 573 A Couplet Addressed to the Mind's Ear 1180 574 First Advent of Love 1180 575 Where is Reason? 1181 576 Adapted from H61ty 1182 576.Xl Lines on -, from the German of H61ty 1182 577 Lines from the Bhagavad-Gita, from Creuzer 1183 578 Fireside Anacreontic 1183 579 Mock Epitaph on Sir William Curtis 1184 580 Lines Recorded by Thomas Allsop 1185 1822-1824 581 Fickle Flowers: A Madrigal 1185 582 To a Lady: A Poem upon Nothing 1186 583 The Good, the True, the Fair 1186 584 Nonsense Sapphics, Written for James Gillman Jr 1187 584.Xl Virgil's Hexameters Converted to Sapphics 1187 585 The Reproof and Reply; or, The Flower-thief's Apology 1188 586 The Battle of the Bridge Rewritten 1191 587 Latin Couplet Adapted from John Swan 1191 588 Lines on Moonwort, with Du Bartas 1192 589 The Bridge Street Committee 1192 590 Parody Couplet on Wordsworth 1193 591 Lines on the Time, 10 September 1823 1194 592 Youth and Age 1194 593 Album Verses: "Dewdrops are the Gems of Morning" 1207 594 Translation of Goethe: "One friendly word . 1207 595 "Know'st thou the Land ... ?", from Goethe 1207 595.Xl Verses Sent to John Anster 1209 595.X2 To the Owl 1210 596 Heraclitus on the Sibyl's Utterance 1211 596.Xl Corrections to Wordsworth's Virgil 1212 597 Extempore Lines in Notebook 28 1221 598 Alternative Lines for Christopher Harvey's The Synagogue 1223 598.Xl Ballad 1223 599 The Delinquent Travellers 1224 600 To Miss Jones (or Miss A- T.) 1224 601 Adaptation of Daniel's To the Lady Margaret, Countess of Cumberland 1225 602 Lines on Edward Irving 1226 603 Epigram: "Such as it is" 1226 604 Album Verses on Original Sin 1226 1825-1826 605 Lines on J. F. Meckel's System der vergleichen den Anatomie 1227 606 Work without Hope 1228 607 The Three Sorts of Friends 1231 607.Xl Latin Elegiac Verse Lessons 1231 608 Lines on the Moss Bee, Bombyx Muscorum 1232 609 Captain Parry 1233 610 Lines on Rairnsgate Weather 1233 611 The Booksellers 1234 612 "He Gave them but One Heart between them" 1234 613 Lines to Eliza 1235 614 Adaptation of Herbert's The Dialogue 1237 615 Verses in the Margin of Martin Luther 1237 616 Adaptation of Lines from Paradise Lost Book X 1237 617 Adaptation of Marston 1238 617.Xl Atherstone's Herculaneum Emended 1238 618 The Two Founts: Stanzas Addressed to a Lady on her Recovery with Unblemished Looks, from a Severe Attack of Pain 1239 619 Virgil Applied to the Hon Mr B and Richard Heber 1243 620 Sancti Dorninici Pallium: A Dialogue between Poet and Friend 1243 621 Metre and Rhyme in The Life of Jerome of Prague 1248 622 The Alternative 1248 623 The Improvisatore; or, "John Anderson, my Jo, John" 1248 624 The Alienated Mistress (Love's Burial Place) 1259 625 The Last Words of Berengarius and Related Poems 1261 625.Xl To Chloe 1264 625.X2 Album Verses and Charades 1264 626 Thou and 1 1265 627 Duty, Surviving Self-love, the Only Sure Friend of Declining Life: A Soliloquy 1266 628 An Impromptu on Christmas-day 1268 629 A Day Dream 1269 629.Xl A Sober Statement of Human Life 1271 1827-1829 630 Epigram on a Bitch and a Marc 1271 631 "Ep~wc aei nann0poc etaipoc" 1272 632 Bo-Peep and I Spy 1273 633 Song: "Tho' hid in spiral myrtle Wreath" 1273 634 Lines for Mrs Smudger's Album; and Sequel 1274 635 Song: ... Tis not the lily brow I prize" 1275 636 Profuse Kindness 1276 637 Written in William Upcott's Album 1277 638 To Mary S. Pridhatn 1279 639 Lines on Tears, as the Language of the Eye 1280 639.Xl Primitive Christian's Zeal for the Cross 1280 640 Romance; or, Tale of the Dark Age 1281 640.Xl Overscored Lines in Notebook 37 1282 641 Verses Trivocular 1283 642 Couplet on Joseph Cottle 1283 642.Xl A Tale of Horror 1284 643 Extempore on Three Surgeons 1284 644 On the Most Veracious Anecdotist, and Small-talk Man, Thomas Hill, Esq. 1285 645 Lines Based on Exodus 17 1285 646 Impromptu Lines at Namur 1286 647 Water Ballad, from Planard 1286 648 Two Expectorations from Cologne 1287 649 Impromptu on Hock Heimar 1288 650 Absurd German Rhymes 1289 650.Xl Examples of Dutch Latin and Dutch English 1289 651 The Netherlands 1290 652 The Garden of Boccaccio 1290 652.Xl Long Poem on the Rhine 1298 652.X2 Rewriting of Lines in Alaric Watts's Poetical Sketches 1299 653 To Baby Bates 1300 654 Exemplary Epitaph on a Black Cat 1301 655 Alice du C16s; or, The Forked Tongue: A Ballad 1302 656 Reply to a Lady's Question respecting the Accomplishments Most Desirable in an Instructress 1312 657 The Teacher's Office 1315 658 Lines Written in the Commonplace Book of Miss Barbour, Daughter of the United States Minister to England 1315 659 Doggerel on Sir Charles Scudamore 1317 660 Extempore on George Dawe 1317 661 To Susan Steele, on Receiving the Purse: Extrumpery Lines 1318 662 Epigraph Derived from Troilus and Cressida 1318 1830-1832 663 Donne by the Filter 1319 663.Xl Charles Tennyson Rephrased 1319 664 "King Solomon knew all things" 1320 665 Love and Friendship Opposite 1320 666 Not at Home 1321 667 Phantom or Fact? A Dialogue in Verse 1321 668 Charity in Thought 1322 669 Huniility the Mother of Charity 1322 670 Association of Ideas 1323 671 The Tooth in a Wine-glass: A Sudden Exclamation 1323 672 In a Lady's Album 1324 673 Inscription on a Time-piece 1324 674 An Extempore Couplet in Table Talk 1327 674.Xl Written at the Salutation Hotel, Ambleside 1327 675 An Elegiac Plusquam-Sesqui-Sonnet to my Tin Sha,ving-pot 132S 675.Xl Old Bailey Report 1331 676 The Three Patriots: Cockney Snip, Irish Blarney, and Me 1332 676.Xl The Retort 1333 677 The Irish Orator's Booze: A Sonnet 1333 678 Cholera Cured Beforehand 1334 679 Sciatic Rheumatism 1337 679.Xl A Natural Curiosity; or, A Curious Natural 1338 680 An Autograph on an Autopergamene 1338 681 Dialogue between a Nimble Doctor and a Crippled Patient 1339 681.Xl Stanza Interpolated into a Hymn 1340 682 My Baptismal Birth-day 1341 683 Epigram: A Guilty Sceptic's Death Bed 1345 684 Kind Advice and Invitation 1345 685 Specimen of Pure Latinity, Ex Tempore 1346 1833-1834 686 Two Lines in Spring 1346 687 The Hunger of Liars 1347 687.Xl Lines on a Willow Reflected in the Water, at Caen Wood 1347 688 Love's Apparition and Evanishment: An Allegoric Romance 1348 689 "Oh! riiight I but my Patrick love" 1353 690 "0 sing and be glad" 1354 691 To the Young Artist, Kayser of Kayserwerth 1355 692 From a Manuscript Poem of Athanasius Sphinx 1358 693 S.T.C. 1359 694 S. T. Coleridge, A~tat. Sux 63 1364 695 Adaptation of Isaiah 2.7 1364 696 Lines on Lady Mary Shepherd 1365 697 Other Lines on Lady Mary Shepherd 1366 698 Epitaph of the Present Year; or, A Monument to the Memory of Dr Thomas Fuller 1366 699 On an Ellipsis of John Kenyon's 1367 700 "E Coelo Descendit, Tvw0t Eeactov!" 1368 701 Splendida Bilis 1369 702 Latin Address to Christopher Morgan 1369 702.Xl Suggested Alterations in Thomas Pringle's African Sketches 1371 703 Lines on George Croly's Apocalypse 1372 704 A Motto for Reed's Shakespeare 1372 705 To Miss Fanny Boyce 1373 706 Doggerel Letter for an Autograph 1373 ADDENDA 134 Sonnet: Written on Receiving Letters Informing Me of the Birth of a Son, I Being at Birmingham 1374 136 Sonnet: To a Friend, Who Asked How I Felt, When the Nurse First Presented my Infant to Me 1374 275 After Bathing in the Sea at Scarborough in Company with T. Hutchinson, August 1801 1374 433A Lines to Charlotte Brent 1375 INDEX OF TITLES AND FIRST LINES 1377

Bokdetaljer
  • Utgitt: 2001
  • Innbinding: Innbundet (stive permer)
  • Språk: Engelsk
  • ISBN10: 0691004846
  • ISBN13: 9780691004846
  • Dewey: 821.7
  • Forlag: Princeton University Press
  • Sider: 1528