Arthur Johnson Memorial Library

20160731 frey50

The great romantics selected poems - New York Quality Paperback book club 1993 - 1019 p.

Includes indexes

Childe Harold's pilgrimage ; Elegy on Newstead Abbey ; To a knot of ungenerous critics ; The duel ; Stanzas. 'could love for ever' ; 'She walks in beauty' ; 'Oh! snatch'd away in beauty's bloom' ; 'Dear doctor, I have read your play' ; 'My dear Mr. Murray' ; The new Vicar of Bray ; Journal in Cephalonia ; English bards and Scotch reviewers ; The corsair, canot III ; The prisoner of Chillon ; Manfred ; Cain ; Don Juan ; Letters / Lord Byron -- Queen Mab ; Alsator, or the spirit of solitude ; Rosalind and Helen ; Julian and Maddalo ; Prometheus unbound ; The Mask of anarchy ; Peter Bell the third ; Epipsychidion ; Adonais, an elegy on the death of John Keats ; Hellas ; Evening, to Harriet ; To Ianthe ; Stanza written at Bracknell ; To, 'Oh, there are spirits of the air' ' ; To, 'Yet look on me--take not thine eyes away' -- Stanzas, April 1814 ; To Harriet ; To Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin ; Mutability ; On death ; A summer evening churchyard ; To Wordsworth ; Feelings of a republican on the fall of Bonaparte ; Lines 'The cold earth slept below' ; The sunset ; Hymn to intellectual beauty ; Mont Blanc, lines written in the vale of Chamouni ; Marianne's dream ; To constantia singing ; To the Lord Chancellor ; To William Shelley ; On Fanny Godwin ; Lines 'That time is dead forever, child' ; Death ; Sonnet. Ozymandias ; Lines to a critic ; Sonnet, to the Nile ; Passage of the Apennines ; The past ; On a faded violet ; Lines written among the Euganean Hills ; Invocation to misery ; Stanzas written in dejection, near Naples ; Sonnet, 'Lift not the painted veil which those who live ' ; Lines written during the Castlereagh administration ; Song to the men of England ; To Sidmouth and Castlereagh ; England in 1819 ; National anthem ; Ode to heaven ; An exhortation ; Ode to the west wind ; An ode written October 1819, before the Spaniards had recovered their liberty ; On the Medusa of Leonardo da Vinci in the Florentine Gallery ; The Indian serenade ; To Sophia ; Love's philosophy ; The sensitive plant ; A vision of the sea ; The cloud ; To a skylark ; Ode to liberty ; To, 'I fear thy kisses, gentle maiden' ; Arethusa ; Song of Proserpine while gathering flowers on the plain of Enna ; Hymn of Apollo ; Hymn of Pan ; The question ; The two spirits ; Letter to Maria Gisbornd ; Ode to Naples ; Autumn, a dirge ; Death ; Liberty ; Summer and winter ; The tower of Famine ; An allegory 'a portal as of shadowy adamant' ; The world's wanderers ; Sonnet 'Ye hasten to the grave! What see ye there' ; Lines to a reviewer ; Time long past ; Buona notte ; Good-night ; Dirge for the year ; Time ; From the Arabic, an imitation ; Song 'rarely, rarely comest thou ; To night ; To, 'Music, when soft voices die' ; To, 'When passion's trance is overpast' ; Mutability ; Lines 'Far, far away, O ye' ; The fugitives ; Lines written on hearing the news of the death of Napoleon ; Sonnet, political greatness ; A bridal song ; Epithalamium ; Another version ; Evening, Ponte al Mare, Pisa ; The aziola ; To, 'One word is too ofter profaned' ; Remembrance ; To Edward Williams ; To-morrow ; Lines 'If I walk in autumn's even' ; A lament 'O world! O live! O time!' ; Lines 'When the lamp is shattered' ; The magnetic lady to her patient ; To Jane ; Epitaph 'These are two friends whose lives were undivided' ; The isle ; A dirge 'Rough wind, that moanest loud' ; Lines written in the Bay of Lerici ; The Daemon of the world ; Prince Athanase ; The Woodman and the nightingale ; Otho ; Tasso ; Marenghi ; Lines written for Julian and Maddalo ; Lines written for Prometheus unbound ; Lines written for the ode to liberty ; Stanza written for the ode written October, 1819 ; Lines connected with Epipsychidion ; Lines written for Adonais ; Lines written for Hellas ; The pine forest of the Cascine near Pisa ; Orpheus ; Fiordispina ; The birth of pleasure ; Love, hope, desire, and fear ; A satire on satire ; Ginevra ; The boar on the Serchio ; The Zucca ; Lines 'We meet not as we parted' ; Charles the first ; Fragments of an unfinished drama ; The triumph of life / Percy Bysshe Shelley -- Imitation of Spenser ; On death ; To Chatterton ; To Byron ; 'Woman! when I behold thee flippant, vain' ; To some ladies ; On receiving a curious shell and a copy of verses from the same ladies ; Written on the day that Mr. Leigh Hunt left prison ; To hope ; Ode to Apollo ; Hymn to Apollo ; To a young lady who sent me a laurel crown ; Sonnet, 'How many bards gild the lapses of time' ; Sonnet, 'Keen, fitful, gusts are whisp'ring here and there' ; Spenserian stanza ; On leaving some friends at an early hour ; On first looking into Chapman's Homer ; Epistle to George Felton Mathew ; To, 'Hadst though liv'd in day of old ; Sonnet, 'As from the darkening gloom a silver dove' ; Sonnet to solitude ; Sonnet, 'To on who has bee long in city pent' ; To a friend who sent me some roses ; Sonnet, 'Oh! How I love, on a fair summer's eve' ; 'I stood tiptoe upon a little hill' ; Sleep and poetry ; Epistle to my brother George ; To my brother George ; To, 'Had I a man's fair form, the might my sighs' ; Specimen of an induction to a poem ; Calidore, a fragment ; Epistle to Charles Cowden Clarke ; To my brothers ; 'Great spirits now on earth are sojourning' ; 'Highmindedness, a jealousy for good' ; To Kosciusko ; To G.A.W. ; Stanzas, 'In a drear-nighted December' ; Written in disgust of vulgar superstition ; Sonnet, 'Happy is England! I could be content' ; On the grasshopper and cricket ; Sonnet, 'After dark vapours have oppress'd our plains' ; Written on the blank space at the end of Chaucer's tale of 'The Floure and the lefe' ; On seeing the Elgin marbles ; To Haydon ; To Leigh Hunt, esq ; On the sea ; Lines, 'Unfelt, unheard, unseen ; On, 'Think not of it, sweet one, so' ; On a picture of Leander ; On Leigh Hunt's poem 'The story of Rimini' ; Sonnet, 'When I have fears that I may cease to be' ; On seeing a lock of Milton's hair ; On sitting down to read 'King Lear' once again ; Lines on the Mermaid Tavern ; Robin Hood ; To the Nile ; To Spenser ; Sont written on a blank page in Beaumont and Fletcher's works ; 'Welcome joy and welcome sorrow' ; What the thrush said ; In answer to a sonnet ending thus: 'Dark eyes are dearer far than those that mock the hyacinthine bell' ; To John Hamilton Reynolds ; The human seasons; Endymion ; Isabella ; To Homer ; Fragment of an ode to Maia ; Song, Hush, hush! tread softly! Hush, hush, my dear' ; On visiting the tomb of Burns ; Written in the cottage where Burns was born ; At Fingal's cave ; Written upon the top of Ben Nevis ; Translation from a sonnet of Ronsard ; To a lady seen for a few moments at Vauxhall ; Fancy ; Ode, 'Bards of passion and of mirth' ; Song, 'I had a dove and the sweet dove died' ; Ode on melancholy ; The eve of St. Agnes ; Ode on a Grecian urn ; Sonnet, 'Why did I laugh tonight! No voice will tell' ; Ode to Fanny ; A dream, after reading Dante's episode of Paolo and Francesca ; La belle dame sans merci ; Chorus of fairies ; Shed no tear! O shed no tear! ; Ah! Woe is me! Poor silverwing! ; On fame ; Another on fame ; To sleep ; Ode to Psyche ; Sonnet, 'If by dull rhymes our English must be chain'd ; Ode to a nightingale ; Lamia ; Otho the great ; King Stephen ; The ever of St. Mark ; Hyperion ; To autumn ; Sonnet, 'The day is gone and all its sweets are gone ; Lines to Fanny ; To Fanny, 'I cry your mercy, pity, love, ay, love ; The cap and bells ; The last sonnet ; Hyperion, a vision ; "Where's the poet? Show him! Show him! ; Modern love ; Fragments of the castle builder ; Extracts from an opera ; Stanzas to Miss Wylie ; Epistle to John Hamilton Reynolds ; A draught of sunshine ; At Teighmouth ; The Devon maid ; Acrostic Georgiana Augusta Keats ; Meg Merrilies ; A song about myself ; To Thomas Keats ; The gadfly ; On hearing the bagpipe and seeing the stranger played at Inverary ; Lines written in the Highlands after a visit to Burns's country ; Mrs. Cameron and Ben Nevis ; Sharing Eve's apple ; A prophecy, To George Keats in America ; A little extempore ; Spenserian stanzas on Charles Armitage Brown ; 'Two or three posies' ; A party of lovers ; To George Keats, written in sickness ; On Oxford ; To a cat / John Keats.


English Literature--18th century
English literature--19th century
Romanticism Great Britain

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