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XXVI
THE POETICAL WORKS Of / S. T. COLERIDGE / Vol. I, Vol. II, &c. / LONDON / William Pickering / 1834 / [8{o}.
_Collation._--Vol. I. Half-t.i.tle, The Poetical Works Of / S. T.
Coleridge / In Three Volumes / Vol. I, one leaf, p. [i]; t.i.tle, one leaf, pp. [iii]-[iv]; The Imprint, Charles Whittingham / London /, is at the foot of p. [iv]; Preface, pp. [v]-x; Contents, pp. [xi]-xiv; Text, pp. [1]-288; The Imprint, London: / Printed by C. Whittingham, Tooks Court. /, is at the foot of p. 288.
Vol. II. Half-t.i.tle (as in Vol. I), Vol. II, one leaf, pp. [i]-[ii]; t.i.tle, one leaf, pp. [iii]-[iv]; The Imprint (as in Vol. I) is at the foot of p. iv: Contents, pp. [v]-vi; Text, pp. [1]-338; The Imprint (as in Vol. I) is at the foot of p. 338.
Vol. III. Half-t.i.tle (as in Vol. I), pp. [i]-[ii]; t.i.tle, one leaf, pp.
[iii]-[iv]; The Imprint (as in Vol. I) is at the foot of p. [iv]; Half-t.i.tle, The Piccolomini, &c., p. [1]; Preface to the First Edition, p. [3]; Text, pp. [5]-330; 'Love, Hope, and Patience in Education', p.
331; Erratum, p. [332]; The Imprint (as in Vol. I) is at the foot of p.
[332].
[_Note._--This edition, the last printed in the lifetime of the author, was reprinted in 1835, 1840, 1844, 1847, &c. The t.i.tle-page is ornamented with the Aldine device and motto as in No. XXI.]
CONTENTS
[Preface, same as 1829, No. XXI, pp. [v]-x; the t.i.tles of Poems not published or collected before 1834 are italicized.]
Page Page of the Half-t.i.tle 1834 present edition 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 _Devons.h.i.+re 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 a.s.s 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-t.i.tle
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 Circa.s.sian 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 s.h.i.+pwreck 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-Sh.o.r.e 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 Alb.u.m at Elbingerode in the Hartz Forest 187 315 On observing a Blossom on the First of February 189 148 The aeolian 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, d.u.c.h.ess of Devons.h.i.+re 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 G.o.ds 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-t.i.tle
MISCELLANEOUS POEMS [55]
Motto ???? ?e?, &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 Friends.h.i.+p 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 s.p.a.ces 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 Alb.u.m_ 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 ""G???? sea?t??, _&c._ 150 487 "_Gently I took_," _&c._ 151 488 _My Baptismal Birthday_ 151 490 _Epitaph_ 152 491
Half-t.i.tle
Remorse! / A Tragedy. / In Five Acts. / [153]
Dramatis Personae. [154] 819 Remorse. 155 820 Appendix. [237] 881
Half-t.i.tle, Motto, &c.
Zapolya: / A Christmas Tale / In Two Parts / [241]
Advertis.e.m.e.nt. [242] 883 Zapolya. [243] 884
END OF VOL. II
VOLUME III
Half-t.i.tle
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-t.i.tle
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 c.o.x, 84 High Holborn. MDCCCx.x.xVI.
[8{o}, 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--
To meet, to know, to love--and then to part, Is the sad tale of many a human heart.
For the 'Couplet', vide _ante_, p. 410, 'To Two Sisters', ll. 1, 2. Dr.
A. was probably John Anster, LL.D., the translator of Goethe's _Faust_.
The Dramatic Works consist of 'The Piccolomini' and 'The Death of Wallenstein'.