To Love and Bacchus ever young, 211. n.
To Love, the soft and blooming child (Ode LXIII. Anacreon), 244.
To my Shadow, 477.
To sigh, yet feel no pain, 392.
To thee, the queen of nymphs divine (Ode LXVI. Anacreon), 245. To-day, dearest is ours, 397.
To see thee every day that came, 308. To weave a garland for the rose, 394. Too plain, alas, my doom is spoken, 159. Torch of Liberty, the, 438. Tories, destructive propositions of the, 646.
Tortoise-shell of Pegu, triple coloured,
Tory, Mad, and the Comet, 624. Tory Pledges, 628.
Tery, Doctor, and Dr. Whig, 630. Translations. See Horace, Anthology,
Tribune, the young, 720. 722.
Trinity College, Dublin, an examina- tion, political, et seq. 91. Tripe, tout pour la, 600. Truth, 117. 170. 416.
Truth characterised, 157. 172. 722. Tuckt Suliman, mountain, 72. n. Tulip, said to be of Turkish extraction, 11.
'Twas in a mocking dream of night (Ode xxx. Anacreon), 229. 'Twas night, and many a circling bowl (Ode XXXVII. Anacreon), 232. 'Twas noon of night, when round the pole (Ode xxx11. Anacreon), 230. 'Twas one of those dreams, 127. "Twas when the world was in its prime, 184.
'Twas but for a moment, and yet in that time, 343. Twin'st thou with lofty wreath thy brow? 395. Twopenny Post-Bag, by Thomas Brown the Younger, 546. Dedication to Stephen Woolriche, Esq., 546. The Preface, 546. The Intercepted Letters: From the Princess Char- lotte of Wales to Lady Barbara Ashley, Letter 1., 548. From Colonel M.Mahon to G. F.
Leckie, Esq., Letter II, 549. Its Postscript, 550. From the Regent to Lord Yarmouth, Letter III., 550. From the Rt. Hon. Patrick Duigenan to the Rt. Hon. Sir John Nichol, Letter IV., 551. (En- closing an Unanswerable Argument against the Papists,' 551.) From the Countess Dowager of Cork, Letter V., 551.
Its Postscript, 335. From Ab- dallah, in London, to Mohassan in Ispahan, Letter VI., 552. From Lackington and Co. to
Letter VII, 553. From Colonel Thomas to Skeffington, Esq., Letter VIII., 454. Appendix to these Epistles, 555-558.
Tyrolese Song of Liberty:- Merrily every bosom boundeth, 402.
Unbind thee, love, 416.
Up and march the timbrels sound, 375.
Up, sailor boy, 'tis day, 396.
Up with the sparkling brimmer, 379.
Valerian, the emperor, 719. Valletort, to Caroline Viscountess, written at Lacock Abbey in the year 1832, 433.
Valley of Visions, 688.
Valley, the Unequalled, 81. Van, The Euthanasia of, 610. Variety, 261.
Veil, the Silver, 321. Veiled Prophet of Khorassan, 11. Venice, former glory of, 515. Wars against the Turks, 516. Her tyran nical oligarchy, 516. Tortures, 516 Her fall a retribution, 516.
Venus, poetical allusions to the goddess, 130.
Venus, the planet, 121. 326. 421. Venus Anadyomene, 518. Venus Papyria, 578.
Virgin of Delphi, the, 272. Virtue, 322. 328. Vishnu, 600.
Vision, a, by the author of Christabel,
Voiture's Kiss, rendered by Mrs. —
Vulcan hear your glorious task (Ode IV. Anacreon), 215.
Wake thee, my dear-thy dreaming,
Wake up, sweet melody! 409. Wales, Princess Charlotte of, 548. et seq.
Walton, Isaac, 71. n. Waltz Duet, 354. Waltzing, 439. Warning, a, 304.
War against Babylon! 174. War's high-sounding harp, 174. Warrior, the Dying, 387.
Washington, city of, and the American rivers, &c., 333. 335. et seq. Watchman, the; a Glee, 423. Waterloo coin, Advertisement of a missing or lost, 621.
We care not; Song, 421.
We read the flying courser's name (Ode XXVII. Anacreon), 227.
Weep, Children of Israel! 171. Weep not for those whom the veil of the tomb, 167.
sunny air winging, 379. Well! peace to thy heart, though ano- ther's it be, 329.
Well, the Holy, alleged miraculous ap- pearance of the moon night and day in the, 31.
Wellington Spa, the, 644. Wellington, Field Marshal the Duke of, 93. Reinforcements for him, 573. His Grace and the Ministers, 575. 624. Wellington, Napoleon, aud Waterloo, 437.600.
Were not the sinful Mary's tears, 168. What's my thought like? 567. What shall I sing thee? 422.
What the bee is to the floweret, 109. When Bacchus, Jove's immortal boy (Ode XLIX. Anacreon), 237.
When, casting many a look behind, 265.
When cold in the earth lies the Friend thou hast lov'd, 119.
When Cupid sees how thickly now,
(Ode LXXVIII. Anacreon), 218, When evening shades are falling, 372. When first that smile, 153.
When first I met thee warm and young,
When Gold, as fleet as zephyr's pinion (Ode LVIII. Anacreon), 243.
When he who adores thee has left b the name, 96,
When I behold the festive train (Ode LIII. Anacreon), 239.
When I lov'd you, I can't but allow, 264.
When Love is kind, 160.
When Love, rock'd by his mother, 130. When night brings the hour, 160. When Love was a child, 151. When my thirsty soul I steep (Ode XLVIII. Anacreon), 237.
When Spring adorns the dewy scene (Ode XLI. Anacreon), 234.
When o'er the silent seas alone, 422.
When the first summer bee, 156.
When the wine-cup is smiling before
When thou shalt wander, 153.
When the sad word “ Adieu," 395.
When though art nigh, it seems, 414.
When to sad music silent you listen,
When on the lip the sigh delays, 397. When through life unblest we rove,
When through the Piazzetta, 155. When Time, who steals our years away, 262.
When wearied wretches sink to sleep, 274.
When wine I quaff, before my eyes
(Ode L. Anacreon), 237. Whene'er I see those smiling eyes, 120 When twilight dews are falling soft, 404.
When 'midst the gay I meet, 404.
Where is the heart that would not give. 420.
Where are the visions, 157.
Where is your dwelling, ye sainted, 173. Where shall we bury our shame? 156. Whig, Dr., and Dr. Tory, their con- sultation, 630.
While gazing on the Moon's light, 103. While our rosy fillets shed (Ode XLIII. Anacreon), 235.
While we invoke the wreathed spring (Ode LV. Anacreon), 239. Who comes so gracefully, 378.
Who is the maid my spirit seeks, 166. Who'll buy my love-knots? 155. Who'll buy? 'tis Folly's shop, 356. Whose was the artist hand that spread (Ode LVII. Anacreon), 242. Why does azure deck the sky? 277. Why does she so long delay? 395. Wind thy horn, my hunter boy, 158. Wine-cup is circling, The, 134. Wine, praise of, in Lalla Rookh, 78. 80. See also other poems and songs, 96. 101. 111. 117. 128. 131. 134. 155. 156. 158. Wisdom, 110. 116. 156. Wit, 381. The quiver of, 110. With all my soul, then, let us part, 271. With twenty chords my lyre is hung (Ode LXXI. Anacreon), 246.
Within this goblet, rich and deep (Ode XLV. Anacreon), 235. Wo! wo unto him! 599. Woman, 133. 184. 189-191. 195, 336. 374.421.
Woman:-Away, away-you're all the same, 305.
Woods and Forests, Ode to the, 607. Woodpecker, the: I knew by the smoke, that so gracefully curl'd, 340. Word awaked my heart, Thy, 173. World, the fashionable, 349. World is all a fleeting show, This, 166. World, When broad in the, 159. Would that I were a tuneful lyre (Ode LXXVII. Anacreon), 247. Wreathe the bowl, 119.
Wreath and the Chain, the, 298. Write on, write on, ye Barons dear, 609.
Y-th, Earl of, 576. Letter addressed to, by Thomas Brown the Younger, 550. Some remarks on the same, 565. 568.571.
Years have pass'd, old friend, since we,
Yemen, and the rest of Arabia, alluded to, 48, et seq.
Yes, be the glorious revel mine (Ode XLII. Anacreon), 234.
Yes - loving is a painful thrill (Ode XXIX. Anacreon), 228.
Yes, sad one of Zion, if closely resem- bling, 123.
Yes, yes, when the bloom of Love's boyhood is o'er, 403.
You read it in these spell-bound eyes,
You bid me explain, my dear angry Ma'amselle, 625.
You remember Ellen, our hamlet's pride, 118.
You, who would try (vide the Epicu- rean), 680.
Young Love, 160. 387.
Young Love lived once in an humble shed, 392.
Youth, poetical allusions to, 151, 153.
Youth's endearing charms are fled (Ode
LXI. Anacreon), 244.
Youth and Age, 387. Youth and Death, 678.
Zaraph, 200. His bride, 202.
Zea, or Ceos, island of the Archipe lago:- Scene of the First Evening in Greece, 365. et seq.
Zeilan, king of, his ruby, 78. m. Zelica, see "The Veiled Prophet of Khorassan," 13. et seq.
Zinge, and the Zingians, 71. Zion, 166. 169.
Zodiac, the, 195, 692.
Zone of bells of an Indian dancing girl. 72.
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