Transfer from Circ
. Dept Muhlenbeeg-Pecueil FEB 19 1909
Page
Page
MEMOIR OF SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE
Religious Musings; a Desultory Poem , 13
The Destiny of Nations; a Vision ..... 17
JUVENILÉ POEMS
1
Genevieve
2 SIBYLLINE LEAVES :-
Sonnet, to the Autumnal Moon .
ib.
I. POEMS OCCASIONED BY POLITICAL EVENTS, OR
Time, Real and Imaginary, an Allegory :
ib.
FEELINGS CONNECTED WITH THEM.
Monody on the death of Chatterton ib.
Ode to the Departing Year
21
Songs of the Pixies
4
France; an Ode
23
The Raven, a Christmas Tale, told by a
Fears in Solitude ; written in April, 1798,
School-boy to his little Brothers and Sisters 5
during the alarm of an Invasion .. 24
Absence: a Farewell Ode on quitting School
for Jesus College, Cambridge.
Fire, Famine, and Slaughter; a War Eclogue 26
ib.
Lines on an Autumnal Evening.
ib.
Recantation-illustrated in the Story of the
Mad Ox
27
The Rose
6
The Kiss
ib. II. LOVE POEMS.
To a Young Ass—its Mother being tethered
Introduction to the tale of the Dark Ladie 28
near it
7
Lewti, or the Circassian Love Chaunt. 29
Domestic Peace.
ib.
The Picture, or the Lover's Resolution 30
The Sigh
ib.
The Night Scene; a Dramatic Fragment . 31
Epitaph on an Infant.
ib.
To an Unfortunate Woman, whom the Au-
Lines written at the King's Arms, Ross ib.
Lines to a beautiful Spring in a Village .
thor had known in the days of her inno-
8
cence..
32
Lines on a Friend, who died of a frenzy fe-
To an Unfortunate Woman at the Theatre 33
ver induced by calumnious reports ib.
Lines, composed in a Concert-room
ib.
To a Young Lady, with a Poem on the French
The Keepsake
ib.
Revolution.
ib.
To a Lady, with Falconer's “ Shipwreck”. 34
Sonnet. “My heart has thanked thee, Bowles!
To a Young Lady, on her Recovery from a
for those soft strains"
9
Fever..
ib.
“As late I lay in slumber's shadowy Something childish, but very natural-writ-
vale"
ib.
ten in Germany
ib.
“Though roused by that dark vizir,
Home-sick-written in Germany
ih.
Riot rude"
ib.
Answer to a Child's Question .
ib.
" When British Freedom for a hap-
The Visionary Hope .
35
pier land"
ib.
The Happy Husband; a Fragment. ib.
" It was some spirit, Sheridan! that
Recollections of Love .
ib.
breathed"
ib.
On Revisiting the Sea-shore after long ab.
" ( what a loud and fearful shriek
sence.
ib.
was there"
ib.
The Composition of a Kiss
36
-“As when far off the warbled strains
are heard"
10
III. MEDITATIVE POEMS.
“ Thou gentle look, that didst my
Hymn before Sun-rise, in the Vale of Cha.
soul beguile"
ib.
mouny
ib.
Pale roamer through the night!
Lines written in the Album at Elbingerode,
thou poor forlorn!"
ib. in the Hartz Forest
37
-“ Sweet Mercy! how my very heart
On observing a Blossom on the 1st of Feb-
has bled"
ib.
ruary, 1796
ib.
-"Thou bleedest, my poor heart! and
The Eolian Harp—composed at Clevedon,
thy distress"
ib.
Somersetshire
ib.
To the Author of the Robbers" ib. Reflections on having left a Place of Retire-
Lines composed while climbing the left as-
ment
38
cent of Brockley Coomb, Somersetshire, To the Rev. Geo. Coleridge of Ottery St.
May, 1795.
ib. Mary, Devon-with some Poems . 39
Lines, in the manner of Spenser
11 Inscription for a Fountain on a Heath ib.
imitated from Ossian
ib. A Tombless Epitaph.
39
The Complaint of Ninathoma
ib. This Lime-tree Bower my Prison
40
Lines, imitated from the Welsh .
ib. To a Friend, who had declared his intention
to an infant
ib.
of writing no more Poetry
ib.
in answer to a Letter from Bristol .. 12 To a Gentleman-composed on the night
to a Friend, in answer to a melancholy
after his Recitation of a Poem on the
Letter
13
Growth of an Individual Mind
3