Fragments:- HARRIET, To: A Fragment, 681 And that I walk thus proudly crowned," Hate-Song, A, 505 589 Appeal to Silence, 520 A Roman's Chamber, 532 A Tale Untold, 532 A Wanderer, 588 Consequence, 566 False Laurels and True, 589 Fellowship of Souls, 531 "Follow to the deep wood's Weeds," 530 Forebodings, 531 From the Wandering Jew, 662 "Great Spirit," 589 Helen and Henry, 496 Home, 496 Hope, Fear, and Doubt, 566 "I Faint, I Perish, with my Love," 588 "I would not be a King," 580 Love Immortal, 505 Love's Atmosphere, 530 Love the Universe, 530. Heaven, Ode to, 525 Helen and Henry, 496 Helen, Rosalind and, 215 Helena, Kissing, 634 Prologue to; Fragments written for, 580 Home, 496 Homer, his Hymn to Castor and Pollux, 618 "Methought I was a Billow in the Crowd," ICICLE that clung to the Grass of a Grave, On 587 Milton's Spirit, 567 Of an Unfinished Drama, 455 Of the Elegy on the Death of Adonis, 635 Of the Elegy on the Death of Bion, 636 Omens, 661 On Keats, 587 "O Thou Immortal Deity," 589 Peace surrounding Life, 588 Poetry and Music, 531 Rain, 588 Rain and Wind, 532 Reminiscence and Desire, 531 Rome and Nature, 532 Song of the Furies, 531 The Awakener, 588 The Deserts of Sleep, 566 "The Lady of the South," 588 "The rude Wind is singing," 589 To Harriet, 681 To Italy, 532 To One freed from Prison, 504 To the Moon, 598 To the People of England, 523 Visitations of Calm Thoughts, 531 "What Men gain fairly," 523 Wine of Eglantine, 532 "GATHER, O gather," 525 Godwin, On Fanny, 503 To Mary Wollstonecraft, 486 Goethe's Faust, Scenes from, 651 Music, To, 500; Another Fragment to Music, RAIN, 588 500 Mutability, 487, 571 NAPLES, Ode to, 555, and Wind, 532 Remembrance, 573 Reminiscence and Desire, 531 Napoleon, Lines written on hearing of the Reviewer, Lines to a, 561 Republicans of North America, To the, 680 Death of, 572 National Anthem, A New, 523 Night, To, 568 Nightingale, The Woodman and the, 515 Nile, To the, 507 North America, To the Republicans of, 680 to Naples, 555. to the West Wind, 526 Revolt of Islam, The, 95 SATAN at Large, 505 Satire on Satire, Fragment of a, 561 St. Irvyne, or the Rosicrucian, Poems from, 665 Scenes from Calderon's Magico Prodigioso, 640 Sea, a Vision of the, 539 (Edipus Tyrannus; or Swellfoot the Tyrant, Sensitive Plant, The, 533; Cancelled Passage of, 389 Omens, A Fragment, 661 On a Faded Violet, 508 539 Serchio, The Boat on the, 585 On Death: "The pale, the cold, and the moony Shelley, Mary, To (two poems), 529 smile," 487 Orpheus, 562 Otho, 503; Fragments supposed to be parts of, 504 "Ŏ world! O life! O time," A Lament, 573 Verses on a Cat, 661 Vine amid Ruins, The, 520 Virgil's Tenth Eclogue, From, 637 Evening, Churchyard, Lechlade, Gloucester- Visitations of Calm Thoughts, 531 Summer and Winter, 559, shire, 487 Sun, Homer's Hymn to, 618 Sunset, The, 490 Vita Nuova of Dante, Fragment adapted from Viviani, Emilia, To, 570 WANDERER, A, 588 TALE of Society, A, as it is: From Facts, 1811, Wandering Jew, Fragment from the, 662 679 Untold, A, 532 "Tasso," Scene from, 512; Song for, 513 The Fight was o'er, 505 Thoughts in Solitude, 505 Time, 569 Long Past, 566 To Death: "Death! where is thy victory?" 664 To Mary here," 508 Tomb of Memory, The, 531 Weariness, 566 West Wind, Ode to the, 526 Woodman and the Nightingale, The, 515 YEAR, Dirge for the, 568 ZUCCA, The, 591 INDEX OF FIRST LINES1 A CAT in distress, 661 A gentle story of two lovers young, 530 A widow bird sate mourning, 474 A woodman whose rough heart was out of tune, Ah! faint are her limbs, and her footstep is Alas, good friend, what profit can you see, 561 Amid the desolation of a city, 559 And can'st thou mock mine agony, thus calm, And earnest to explore within-around, 639 And, if my grief should still be dearer to me, And like a dying lady, lean and pale, 558 And Peter Bell, when he had been, 355 And that I walk thus proudly crowned withal, And the green Paradise which western waves, As a violet's gentle eye, 532 BEAR witness, Erin! when thine injured isle, 681 Beside the dimness of the glimmering sea, 151 Bright wanderer, fair coquette of heaven, 598 CALM art thou as yon sunset! swift and strong, Chameleons feed on light and air, 527 DARES the lama, most fleet of the sons of the Dar'st thou amid the varied multitude, 663 Death is here and death is there, 558 Do evil deeds thus quickly come to end, 333 EAGLE! why soarest thou above that tomb, 634 FAINT with love, the Lady of the South, 588 False friend, wilt thou smile or weep, 341 Flourishing vine, whose kindling clusters glow 1 Including the first lines of some Lyrics which appear in the longer poems. S 22 |