Transfer from Circa Depi Muhlenberg. Ocueil FEB 19 1909
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MEMOIR OF SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE
Religious Musings; a Desultory Poem , 13
The Destiny of Nations; a Vision . 17
JUVENILE 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 .
Absence: a Farewell Ode on quitting School
Fire, Famine, and Slaughter; a War Eclogue 26
for Jesus College, Cambridge.
ib.
Recantation-illustrated in the Story of the
Lines on an Autumnal Evening .
Mad Ox
27
The Rose
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
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
thor had known in the days of her inno-
Lines to a beautiful Spring in a Village 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
ib.
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 Coraplaint of Ninathoma
ib. This Lime-tree Bower my Prison
40
Lines, imitated from the Welsh .
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 ... 41
3