But O! how grateful to a wounded heart
The tale of Misery to impart—
From others' eyes bid artless sorrows flow,
And raise esteem upon the base of woe! 15

Shaw.

The communicativeness of our Nature leads us to describe our own
sorrows; in the endeavour to describe them, intellectual activity is exerted;
and from intellectual activity there results a pleasure, which is gradually
associated, and mingles as a corrective, with the painful subject of the 20
description. "True!" (it may be answered) "but how are the Public
interested in your Sorrows or your Description?" We are for ever
attributing personal Unities to imaginary Aggregates.—What is the Public,
but a term for a number of scattered Individuals? Of whom as many
will be interested in these sorrows, as have experienced the same or 25
similar.

"Holy be the lay,
Which mourning soothes the mourner on his way."

If I could judge of others by myself, I should not hesitate to affirm, that
the most interesting passages in our most interesting Poems are those, in 30
which the Author developes his own feelings. The sweet voice of Cona[1144:1]
never sounds so sweetly as when it speaks of itself; and I should almost
suspect that man of an unkindly heart, who could read the opening of the
third book of the Paradise Lost without peculiar emotion. By a law of
our Nature, he, who labours under a strong feeling, is impelled to seek for 35
sympathy; but a Poet's feelings are all strong. Quicquid amet valde amat.
Akenside therefore speaks with philosophical accuracy, when he classes
Love and Poetry, as producing the same effects:

"Love and the wish of Poets when their tongue
Would teach to others' bosoms, what so charms 40
Their own."—Pleasures Of Imagination.

There is one species of Egotism which is truly disgusting; not that
which leads us to communicate our feelings to others, but that which
would reduce the feelings of others to an identity with our own. The
Atheist, who exclaims, "pshaw!" when he glances his eye on the praises 45
of Deity, is an Egotist: an old man, when he speaks contemptuously of
Love-verses is an Egotist: and the sleek Favorites of Fortune are
Egotists, when they condemn all "melancholy, discontented" verses.
Surely, it would be candid not merely to ask whether the poem pleases
ourselves but to consider whether or no there may not be others to whom 50
it is well-calculated to give an innocent pleasure.

I shall only add that each of my readers will, I hope, remember that
these Poems on various subjects, which he reads at one time and under
the influence of one set of feelings, were written at different times and
prompted by very different feelings; and therefore that the supposed 55
inferiority of one Poem to another may sometimes be owing to the temper
of mind, in which he happens to peruse it.

[Pp. [xvii]-xx.]

PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION

I return my acknowledgments to the different Reviewers for the
assistance, which they have afforded me, in detecting my poetic deficiencies.
I have endeavoured to avail myself of their remarks: one third of
the former Volume I have omitted, and the imperfections of the republished
part must be considered as errors of taste, not faults of carelessness. My 5
poems have been rightly charged with a profusion of double-epithets, and
a general turgidness. I have pruned the double-epithets with no sparing
hand; and used my best efforts to tame the swell and glitter both of
thought and diction. This latter fault however had insinuated itself
into my Religious Musings with such intricacy of union, that sometimes 10
I have omitted to disentangle the weed from the fear of snapping the
flower. A third and heavier accusation has been brought against me, that
of obscurity; but not, I think, with equal justice. An Author is obscure
when his conceptions are dim and imperfect, and his language incorrect,
or unappropriate, or involved. A poem that abounds in allusions, 15
like the Bard of Gray, or one that impersonates high and abstract
truths, like Collins's Ode on the poetical character, claims not to be
popular—but should be acquitted of obscurity. The deficiency is in the
Reader. But this is a charge which every poet, whose imagination is
warm and rapid, must expect from his contemporaries. Milton did not 20
escape it; and it was adduced with virulence against Gray and Collins.
We now hear no more of it; not that their poems are better understood
at present, than they were at their first publication; but their fame is
established; and a critic would accuse himself of frigidity or inattention,
who should profess not to understand them. But a living writer is yet 25
sub judice; and if we cannot follow his conceptions or enter into his
feelings, it is more consoling to our pride to consider him as lost beneath,
than as soaring above, us. If any man expect from my poems the same
easiness of style which he admires in a drinking-song, for him I have not
written. Intelligibilia, non intellectum adfero. 30

I expect neither profit nor general fame by my writings; and I consider
myself as having been amply repayed without either. Poetry has been to
me its own[1146:1] "exceeding great reward": it has soothed my afflictions: it
has multiplied and refined my enjoyments; it has endeared solitude;
and it has given me the habit of wishing to discover the Good and the 35
Beautiful in all that meets and surrounds me.

There were inserted in my former Edition, a few Sonnets of my Friend
and old School-fellow, Charles Lamb. He has now communicated to me
a complete Collection of all his Poems; quae qui non prorsus amet, illum
omnes et Virtutes et Veneres odere. My friend Charles Lloyd has 40
likewise joined me; and has contributed every poem of his, which he
deemed worthy of preservation. With respect to my own share of the
Volume, I have omitted a third of the former Edition, and added almost
an equal number. The Poems thus added are marked in the Contents by
Italics. 45

S. T. C.

Stowey,
May, 1797.

MS. Notes attached to proof sheets of the second Edition.

(a) As neither of us three were present to correct the Press, and as my handwriting is not eminently distinguished for neatness or legibility, the Printer has made a few mistakes. The Reader will consult equally his own convenience, and our credit if before he peruses the volume he will scan the Table of Errata and make the desired alterations.

S. T. Coleridge.

Stowey,
May 1797.

(b) Table of Contents. (N.B. of my Poems)—and let it be printed in the same manner as Southey's Table of Contents—take care to mark the new poems of the Edition by Italics.

Dedication.

Preface to the first Edition.

Refer to the Second Edition.

Ode on the departing Year.

Monody on the death of Chatterton, etc., etc.—

[MS. R.]

P. [69].

[Half-title] Sonnets, / Attempted in the Manner / Of The / Rev. W. L. Bowles. / Non ita certandi cupidus, quam propter amorem / Quod te Imitari aveo. / Lucret.

[Pp. 71-74.]

INTRODUCTION TO THE SONNETS

For lines 1-63 vide ante, No. III, The Introduction to the 'Sheet of Sonnets'. Lines 64 to the end are omitted, and the last paragraph runs thus:

The Sonnet has been ever a favourite species of composition with me; but I am conscious that I have not succeeded in it. From a large number I have retained ten only, as seemed not beneath mediocrity. Whatever more is said of them, ponamus lucro.

S. T. Coleridge.

[Note. In a copy of the Edition of 1797, now in the Rowfant Library, S. T. C. comments in a marginal note on the words 'I have never yet been able to discover sense, nature, or poetic fancy in Petrarch's poems,' &c.—'A piece of petulant presumption, of which I should be more ashamed if I did not flatter myself that it stands alone in my writings. The best of the joke is that at the time I wrote it, I did not understand a word of Italian, and could therefore judge of this divine Poet only by bald translations of some half-dozen of his Sonnets.']

[Pp. 243-245.]

ADVERTISEMENT

I have excepted the following Poems from those, which I had determined to omit. Some intelligent friends particularly requested it, observing, that what most delighted me when I was "young in writing poetry, would probably best please those who are young in reading poetry: and a man must learn to be pleased with a subject, before he can yield that attention to it, which is requisite in order to acquire a just taste." I however was fully convinced, that he, who gives to the press what he does not thoroughly approve in his own closet, commits an act of disrespect, both against himself and his fellow-citizens. The request and the reasoning would not, therefore, have influenced me, had they not been assisted by other motives. The first in order of these verses, which I have thus endeavoured to reprieve from immediate oblivion, was originally addressed "To the Author of Poems published anonymously, at Bristol." A second edition of these poems has lately appeared with the Author's name prefixed; and I could not refuse myself the gratification of seeing the name of that man among my poems, without whose kindness they would probably have remained unpublished; and to whom I know myself greatly and variously obliged, as a Poet, a Man and a Christian.

The second is entitled "An Effusion on an Autumnal Evening; written in early youth." In a note to this poem I had asserted that the tale of Florio in Mr. Rogers' "Pleasures of Memory" was to be found in the Lochleven of Bruce. I did (and still do) perceive a certain likeness between the two stories; but certainly not a sufficient one to justify my assertion. I feel it my duty, therefore, to apologize to the Author and the Public, for this rashness; and my sense of honesty would not have been satisfied by the bare omission of the note. No one can see more clearly the littleness and futility of imagining plagiarisms in the works of men of Genius; but nemo omnibus horis sapit; and my mind, at the time of writing that note, was sick and sore with anxiety, and weakened through much suffering. I have not the most distant knowledge of Mr. Rogers, except as a correct and elegant Poet. If any of my readers should know him personally, they would oblige me by informing him that I have expiated a sentence of unfounded detraction, by an unsolicited and self-originating apology.

Having from these motives re-admitted two, and those the longest of the poems I had omitted, I yielded a passport to the three others, [pp. 256, 262, 264] which were recommended by the greatest number of votes. There are some lines too of Lloyd's and Lamb's in this Appendix. They had been omitted in the former part of the volume, partly by accident; but I have reason to believe that the Authors regard them, as of inferior merit; and they are therefore rightly placed, where they will receive some beauty from their vicinity to others much worse.

VI

Fears in Solitude, / Written in 1798, during the Alarm of an Invasion. / To which are added, / France, an Ode; / And / Frost at Midnight. / By S. T. Coleridge. / London: / Printed for J. Johnson, in St. Paul's Churchyard. / 1798. /

[4o.

Collation.—Half-title, Fears in Solitude, . . . Frost at Midnight, (six lines) [Price One Shilling and Sixpence.], one leaf, unpaged; Title, one leaf, unpaged; Text, pp. [1]-23; Advertisement of 'Poems, by W. Cowper', p. [24].

VII

The / Piccolomini, / or the / First Part of Wallenstein, / A Drama / In Five Acts. / Translated From The German Of / Frederick Schiller / By / S. T. Coleridge. / London: / Printed for T. N. Longman and O. Rees, Paternoster Row. / 1800. /

[8o.

Collation.—Half-title, Translation from a Manuscript Copy attested by the Author / The Piccolomini, or the First Part of Wallenstein. / Printed by G. Woodfall, Pater-noster Row /, one leaf, unpaged; Title, one leaf, unpaged; Preface of the Translator, pp. [i]-ii; two pages of Advertisements commencing with: Plays just published, etc.; one leaf unpaged; on the reverse Dramatis Personae; Text, pp. [1]-214; In the Press, and speedily will be published, From the German of Schiller, The Death Of Wallenstein; Also Wallenstein's Camp, a Prelude of One Act to the former Dramas; with an Essay on the Genius of Schiller. By S. T. Coleridge. N.B. The Drama will be embellished with an elegant Portrait of Wallenstein, engraved by Chapman, pp. [215]-[216].

VIII

The / Death / of / Wallenstein. A Tragedy / In Five Acts. / Translated from the German of / Frederick Schiller, / By / S. T. Coleridge. / London: / Printed for T. N. Longman and O. Rees, Paternoster Row, / By G. Woodfall, No. 22, Paternoster-Row. / 1800. /

[8o.

Collation.—Title, one leaf, unpaged; General Title, Wallenstein. / A Drama / In Two Parts. / Translated, &c., ut supra, one leaf, unpaged; Preface of the Translator, two leaves, unpaged; on reverse of second leaf Dramatis Personae; Text, pp. [1]-157; The Imprint, Printed by G. Woodfall, No. 22, Paternoster-Row, London, is at the foot of p. 157; Advertisement of 'Books printed by T. N. Longman', &c., p. [158].

[The Frontispiece (sometimes attached to No. VII) is an engraving in stipple of Wallenstein, by J. Chapman.]

IX

Poems, / By / S. T. Coleridge. / Felix curarum, &c. (six lines as on title of No. II). Third edition. / London: / Printed by N. Biggs, Crane-Court, Fleet-street, / For T. N. Longman and O. Rees, Pater- / Noster-Row. / 1803. /

[8o.

Collation.—Title, one leaf, p. [i]; Contents, pp. [iii]-[iv]; Preface, pp. [v]-xi; Text, pp. [1]-202; The Imprint, Biggs, Printer, Crane-Court, Fleet-street, is at the foot of p. 202.

[The Preface consists of the Preface to the First and Second Editions as reprinted in No. IV, with the following omissions from that to the Second Edition, viz. Lines 1-5, and Lines 37-45. The Preface to the First Edition (pp. [v]-viii) is signed S. T. C. The Preface to the Second Edition (pp. ix-xi) has no heading, but is marked off by a line from the Preface to the First Edition.

The Third Edition contains all the poems published in the First and Second Editions except (1) To the Rev. W. J. H. (1796); (2) Sonnet to Kosciusko (1796); (8) Written after a Walk (1796); (4) From a Young Lady (1796); (5) On the Christening of a Friend's Child (1797); (6) Introductory Sonnet to C. Lloyd's 'Poems on the Death of Priscilla Farmer' (1797). The half-title to the Sonnets, p. [79], omits the words 'Attempted in the Manner, &c. (see No. V).

The Introduction to the Sonnets is reprinted on pp. 81-4, verbatim from the Second Edition.]

X

Poems, / By / S. T. Coleridge, Esq. / [8o.

Collation.—Half-title (as above), one leaf, p. [1]; The Imprint, Law and Gilbert, Printers, St. John's Square, London, is at the foot of p. [2]; Text, pp. [3]-16; The Imprint, Printed by Law and Gilbert, St. John's Square, London, is at the foot of p. 16 [n. d. ? 1812].

Contents.

Fears in Solitude, pp. [3]-9: France, an Ode, pp. 10-13: Frost at Midnight, pp. 14-16.

[The three poems which form the contents of the Pamphlet were included in the Poetical Register for 1808-1809 which was reissued in 1812. The publishers were F. G. and S. Rivington, the printers Law and Gilbert, St. John's Square, Clerkenwell. The type of the pamphlet is the type of the Poetical Register, but the poems were set up and reprinted as a distinct issue. There is no record of the transaction, or evidence that the pamphlet was placed on the market. It was probably the outcome of a private arrangement between the author and the publisher of the Poetical Register.]

XI

Remorse. / A Tragedy, / In Five Acts. / By S. T. Coleridge. / Remorse is as the heart, in which it grows: / If that be gentle, it drops balmy dews / Of true repentance; but if proud and gloomy, / It is a poison-tree, that pierced to the inmost / Weeps only tears of poison! / Act I. Scene I. / London: / Printed for W. Pople, 67, Chancery Lane. / 1813. / Price Three Shillings. /

[8o.

Collation.—Title, one leaf, pp. [i]-[ii]; The Imprint, W. Pople, Printer, 67, Chancery Lane, is at the foot of the Reverse; Preface, pp. [iii]-viii; Prologue, pp. [ix]-[x]; Dramatis Personae, p. [xi]; Text, pp. [1]-72; The Imprint, W. Pople, Printer, 67, Chancery Lane, London, is at the foot of p. 72.

XII

Remorse, &c. (as in No. XI); Second Edition. / London: / Printed for W. Pople, 67, Chancery Lane. / 1813. / Price Three Shillings. /

[8o.

Collation.—Title, one leaf, pp. [i]-[ii]; The Imprint, W. Pople, Printer, 67, Chancery Lane, is at the foot of p. [ii]; Preface, pp. [iii]-vi; Prologue, pp. [vii]-[viii]; Dramatis Personae, p. [ix]; Text, pp. [1]-73; Appendix, pp. [75]-78; The Imprint, W. Pople, Printer, 67, Chancery Lane, London, is at the foot of p. 78.

XIII

Remorse, &c. (as in No. XI); Third Edition. / London: Printed for W. Pople, 67, Chancery Lane. / 1813. /

[8o.

For collation vide supra, No. XII.

XIV

Sibylline Leaves: / A / Collection of Poems. / By / S. T. Coleridge, Esq. / London: / Rest Fenner, 23, Paternoster Row. / 1817. /

[8o.

Collation.—Half-title, one leaf, Sibylline Leaves. / By / S. T. Coleridge Esq. /, unpaged; Title, one leaf, unpaged; The Imprint, S. Curtis, Printer, Camberwell, is at the foot of the Reverse of the Title; Preface, pp. [i]-iii; 'Time, Real and Imaginary,' 'The Raven,' 'Mutual Passion,' pp. v-x; Errata, pp. [xi]-[xii]; Half-title, The Rime / Of The / Ancient Mariner / In Seven Parts, p. [1]; Motto from T. Burnet, Archæol. Phil., p. 68, p. [2]; Text, pp. 3-303; The Imprint, Printed by John Evans & Co. St. John-Street, Bristol, is at the foot of p. [304].

[Signatures B-U are marked Vol. ii, i. e. Vol. ii of the Biographia Literaria. The printer's bills, which are in my possession, show that in the first instance the Poems were reckoned as Volume ii, and that, in 1816, when the prose work had grown into a second volume, as Volume iii. The entire text of the second volume, afterwards entitled Sibylline Leaves, with the exception of the preliminary matter, pp. [i]-[xii], was printed by John Evans & Co. of Bristol—signatures B-G in November-December 1814, and signatures H-U between January and July 1815. The unbound sheets, which were held as a security for the cost of printing &c., and for money advanced, by W. Hood of Bristol, John Matthew Gutch, and others, were redeemed in May 1817 by a London publisher, Rest Fenner, and his partner the Rev. Samuel Curtis of Camberwell. The Biographia Literaria was published in July and Sibylline Leaves in August, 1817. See note by J. D. Campbell in P. W., 1893, pp. 551, 552.]

PREFACE

The following collection has been entitled Sibylline Leaves, in allusion to the fragmentary and widely scattered state in which they have been long suffered to remain. It contains the whole of the author's poetical compositions, from 1793 to the present date, with the exception of a few works not yet finished, and those published in the first edition of his juvenile poems, over which he has no controul.[1150:1] They may be divided into three classes: First, A selection from the Poems added to the second and third editions, together with those originally published in the Lyrical Ballads,[1150:2] which after having remained many years out of print, have been omitted by Mr. Wordsworth in the recent collection of all his minor poems, and of course revert to the author. Second, Poems published at very different periods, in various obscure or perishable journals, etc., some with, some without the writer's consent; many imperfect, all incorrect. The third and last class is formed of Poems which have hitherto remained in manuscript. The whole is now presented to the reader collectively, with considerable additions and alterations, and as perfect as the author's judgment and powers could render them.

In my Literary Life, it has been mentioned that, with the exception of this preface, the Sibylline Leaves have been printed almost two years; and the necessity of troubling the reader with the list of errata[1151:1] [forty-seven in number] which follows this preface, alone induces me to refer again to the circumstances, at the risk of ungenial feelings, from the recollection of its worthless causes.[1151:2] A few corrections of later date have been added.—Henceforward the author must be occupied by studies of a very different kind.

Ite hinc, Camœnæ! Vos quoque ite, suaves,
Dulces Camœnæ! Nam (fatebimur verum)
Dulces fuistis!—Et tamen meas chartas
Revisitote: sed pudenter et raro!

Virgil, Catalect. vii.[1151:3]

At the request of the friends of my youth, who still remain my friends, and who were pleased with the wildness of the compositions, I have added two school-boy poems—with a song modernized with some additions from one of our elder poets.[1151:4] Surely, malice itself will scarcely attribute their insertion to any other motive, than the wish to keep alive the recollections from early life.—I scarcely knew what title I should prefix to the first. By imaginary Time,[1151:5] I meant the state of a school-boy's mind when, on his return to school, he projects his being in his day dreams, and lives in his next holidays, six months hence: and this I contrasted with real Time.

CONTENTS

[Poems first published in 1796 and in 1797 are marked with an asterisk. Poems first published in 1817 are italicized. N.B. The volume was issued without any Table of Contents or Index of First Lines.]

PAGE
Time, Real and Imaginary: an Allegory v
The Raven vi
Mutual Passion ix
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner [with the marginal glosses] 3
The Foster-Mother's Tale 41
 
Half-title
Poems / Occasioned By Political Events / Or / Feelings Connected With Them [47]
Wordsworth's sonnet beginning 'When I have borne in memory what has tamed' is printed on [48]
*Ode to the Departing Year [Half-Title] [49]
France: An Ode 59
Fears in Solitude 64
Recantation. Illustrated in the Story of the Mad Ox 75
Parliamentary Oscillators 83
Half-title
Fire, Famine, and Slaughter. / A War Eclogue. / With / An Apologetic Preface / [87]
Mottoes from Claudian and Ecclesiasticus [88]
[An Apologetic Preface] 89
Fire, Famine and Slaughter 111
 
Half-title
Love-Poems [117]
Motto (eleven lines) from 'Petrarch' [118]
Love 119
Lewti, or the Circassian Love-chant 124
The Picture, or the Lover's Resolution 128
The Night-Scene: A Dramatic Fragment 136
*To an Unfortunate Woman, Whom the Author had known in the days of her Innocence 141
To an Unfortunate Woman at the Theatre 142
Lines composed in a Concert-room 144
The Keep-sake 146
To a Lady, with Falconer's 'Shipwreck' 148
To a Young Lady, On her Recovery from a Fever 150
Something Childish, but very Natural. Written in Germany 152
Home-sick. Written in Germany 153
Answer to a Child's Question 154
The Visionary Hope 155
The Happy Husband. A Fragment 157
Recollections of Love 159
On Re-visiting the Sea-Shore, After Long Absence, Under strong medical recommendation not to bathe 161
 
Half-title
'Meditative Poems / in / Blank Verse' [163]
Motto (eight lines) from Schiller [164]
Hymn Before Sunrise, in the Vale of Chamouny 165
Lines Written in the Album at Elbingerode, in the Hartz Forest 170
*On observing a Blossom On the 1st February, 1796 173
*The Eolian Harp, Composed at Clevedon, Somersetshire 175
*Reflections On having left a Place of Retirement 178
*To the Rev. George Coleridge, Of Ottery St. Mary, Devon. With some Poems 182
Inscription For a Fountain on a Heath 186
A Tombless Epitaph 187
This Lime-tree Bower my Prison 189
To a Friend Who had declared his intention of writing no more Poetry 194
To A Gentleman. Composed on the night after his recitation of a Poem on the Growth of an Individual Mind 197
The Nightingale; a Conversation Poem 204
Frost at Midnight 210
Half-title
The / Three Graves / [215]
The Three Graves. A Fragment of a Sexton's Tale 217
 
Half-title
Odes / and / Miscellaneous Poems [235]
Dejection: An Ode 237
Ode to Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, On the 24th stanza in her 'Passage over Mount Gothard' 244
Ode to Tranquillity 249
*To a Young Friend, On his proposing to Domesticate with the Author Composed in 1796 251
Lines To W. L., Esq., while he sang a song to Purcell's Music 255
Addressed to a Young Man of Fortune Who abandoned himself to an indolent and causeless Melancholy 256
*Sonnet to the River Otter 257
*Sonnet. Composed on a journey homeward; the Author having received intelligence of the birth of a Son, September 20, 1796 258
*Sonnet, To a Friend who asked, how I felt when the Nurse first presented my Infant to me 259
The Virgin's Cradle-Hymn. Copied from a Print of the Virgin, in a Catholic village in Germany 260
Epitaph, on an Infant. ['Its balmy lips the Infant blest.'] 261
Melancholy. A Fragment 262
Tell's Birth-place. Imitated from Stolberg 263
A Christmas Carol 265
Human Life. On the Denial of Immortality. A Fragment 268
An Ode to the Rain. Composed before daylight [etc.] 270
The Visit of the Gods. Imitated from Schiller 274
America to Great Britain. Written in America, in the year 1810. [By Washington Allston, the Painter.] 276
Elegy, Imitated from one of Akenside's Blank-verse Inscriptions 279
The Destiny of Nations. A Vision 281

XV

קינת ישרון

A Hebrew Dirge, / Chaunted in the Great Synagogue, / St. James's Place, Aldgate, / On the / Day of the Funeral of her Royal Highness / The / Princess Charlotte. / By Hyman Hurwitz, / Master of the Royal Academy, / Highgate: / With a Translation in / English Verse, By S. T. Coleridge, Esq. / London: / Printed by H. Barnett, 2, St. James's Place, Aldgate; / And Sold by T. Boosey, 4, Old Broad Street; / Lackington, Allen, and Co. Finsbury Square; / Briggs and Burton, 156, Leadenhall Street; and / H. Barnett, Hebrew Bookseller, 2, St. James's / Place, Aldgate. / 1817.

[8o.

Collation.—Half-title, קינת ישרון / A Hebrew Dirge. /, pp. [1]-[2]; Title, p. [3]; Text, pp. [4]-13. The text of the translation is printed on pp. 5, 7, 9, 11, and 13.

XVI

Christabel: / Kubla Khan, / A Vision; / The Pains of Sleep. / By / S. T. Coleridge, Esq. / London: Printed For John Murray, Albemarle-Street, / By William Bulmer and Co. Cleveland-Row, / St. James's. / 1816. /

[8o.

Collation.—Half-title, one leaf, Christabel, &c., pp. i-ii; Title, one leaf, pp. iii-iv; Preface, pp. [v]-vii; Second half-title, Christabel. / Part 1, pp. [1]-[2]; Text, pp. [3]-48; 'Kubla Khan / or / A Vision in a Dream': Half-title, one leaf, pp. [49]-[50]; 'Of the / Fragment of Kubla Khan', pp. [51]-54; Text, pp. [55]-58; 'The Pains of Sleep': Half-title, pp. [59]-[60]; Text, pp. 61-61; The Imprint, London: Printed by W. Bulmer and Co. / Cleveland-row, St. James's /, is at the foot of p. 64.

[The pamphlet (1816) was issued 'price 4s. 6d. sewed'. The cover was of brown paper.]

XVII

Christabel, &c. / By S. T. Coleridge, Esq. / Second Edition. / London: / Printed For John Murray, Albemarle-Street, / By William Bulmer and Co. Cleveland-Row, / St. James's. / 1816. /

[8o.

Collation.Vide No. XVI.

[The half-title, Christabel, is in Gothic Character.]

XVIII

Christabel, &c. / By / S. T. Coleridge, Esq. / Third Edition. / London: / Printed For John Murray, Albemarle-Street, / By William Bulmer and Co. Cleveland-Row, / St. James's. / 1816. /

[8o.

Collation.Vide No. XVI.

[The half-title, Christabel, is in Gothic Character.]

XIX

Zapolya: A / Christmas tale, / In Two Parts: / The Prelude / Entitled / "The Usurpers' Fortune;" And / The Sequel / Entitled / "The Usurper's Fate." / By / S. T. Coleridge, Esq. / London: Printed for Rest Fenner, Paternoster Row. / 1817. /

[8o.

Collation.—Half-title, Zapolya, one leaf; Title, one leaf; Advertisement, one leaf; Characters, one leaf; Four leaves unpaged; Text, Prelude, pp. [1]-31; Additional Characters, p. [34]; Zapolya (headed, Usurpation Ended; / or / She Comes Again. /), pp. [85]-128. The imprint, S. Curtis, Camberwell Press, is at the foot of p. 128. Eight pages of advertisements dated September, 1817, are bound up with the volume as issued in a brown paper cover.

XX

The / Poetical Works / Of / S. T. Coleridge, / Including the Dramas of / Wallenstein, Remorse, and Zapolya. / In three Volumes. / Vol. I. / [Vol. II, &c.] London: / William Pickering. / mdcccxxviii. /

[8o.

Collation.—Vol. I. Half-title, one leaf, The / Poetical Works / of / S. T. Coleridge. / Vol. I. /, p. [i]; Title, one leaf, p. [iii]; The Imprint, Thomas White, Printer, / Johnson's Court. /, is at the foot of p. [iv]; Contents, Volume I, Volume II, Volume III, pp. [v]-x; Preface, To the First and Second Editions, pp. [1]-6; Half-title, one leaf, Juvenile Poems, p. [7]; Text, pp. [9]-363; The Imprint, Thomas White, Printer, / Crane Court. /, below the figure of a girl watering flowers surmounted by the motto TE FAVENTE VIREBO, is in the centre of p. [554]. [A vignette and double wreath of oak and bay leaves is in the centre of the title-page of Vols. I, II, III.]

Vol. II. Half-title, one leaf; Title, one leaf, with Imprint at the foot of the Reverse, unpaged; Half-title, The Rime / Of / The Ancient Mariner. / In Seven Parts. /, p. [1]; Motto from T. Burnet, in centre of p. [2]; Text, pp. [3]-370; The Imprint, Thomas White, Printer, / Johnson's Court. /, is at the foot of p. 370.

Vol. III. Half-title, one leaf; Title, one leaf; The Imprint, Thomas White, Printer, / Johnson's Court. /, is at the foot of the Reverse, unpaged; Half-title, The / Piccolomini, / Or / The First Part of Wallenstein. / A Drama. / Translated from the German of Schiller /, p. [1]; Preface of the Translator, p. [3]; Text, pp. [5]-428; The Imprint Thomas White, Printer / Johnson's Court. /, is at the foot of p. 428.

[Pp. [1]-6]

PREFACE

[The Preface is the same as that of 1803.]

CONTENTS

Volume I
PAGE
Juvenile Poems
Genevieve [9]
Sonnet to the Autumnal Moon 10
Time, Real and Imaginary. An Allegory 11
Monody on the Death of Chatterton 12
Songs of the Pixies 19
The Raven 25
Absence. A Farewell Ode 28
Lines on an Autumnal Evening 30
The Rose 35
The Kiss 37
To a Young Ass 39
Domestic Peace 41
The Sigh 42
Epitaph on an Infant ['Ere Sin could blight'] 43
Lines written at the King's-Arms, Ross 44
Lines to a beautiful Spring in a Village 46
On a Friend who died of a Frenzy-fever induced by calumnious reports 48
To a Young Lady with a Poem on the French Revolution 51
Sonnet I. My heart has thanked thee, Bowles 54
" II. As late I lay in Slumber's Shadowy Vale 55
" III. Though roused by that dark Vizir Riot rude 56
" IV. When British Freedom for an happier land 57
" V. It was some Spirit, Sheridan! 58
" VI. O what a loud and fearful Shriek 59
" VII. As when far off 60
" VIII. Thou gentle Look 61
" IX. Pale Roamer through the Night 62
" X. Sweet Mercy! 63
" XI. Thou bleedest, my Poor Heart 64
" XII. To the Author of The Robbers 65
Lines, composed while climbing Brockley Coomb 66
Lines in the Manner of Spenser 67
Imitated from Ossian 70
The Complaint of Ninathoma 72
Imitated from the Welsh 73
To an Infant 74
Lines in answer to a Letter from Bristol 76
To a Friend in Answer to a melancholy Letter 82
Religious Musings 84
The Destiny of Nations. A Vision 104
 
Sibylline Leaves
Half-title
I. Poems Occasioned by Political Events or / Feelings Connected with Them [127]
Motto—fourteen lines—'When I have borne in memory what has tamed', Wordsworth [128]
Ode to the Departing Year 131
France, an Ode 139
Fears in Solitude 144
Fire, Famine, and Slaughter 155
 
Half-title
II. Love Poems [159]
Motto—eleven lines of a Latin Poem by Petrarch [160]
Love 161
Lewti, or the Circassian Love-chaunt 167
The Picture, or the Lover's Resolution 171
The Night Scene, a Dramatic Fragment 179
To an Unfortunate Woman 184
To an Unfortunate Woman at the Theatre 186
Lines composed in a Concert Room 188
The Keepsake 191
To a Lady, with Falconer's Shipwreck 194
To a Young Lady on her recovery from a Fever 196
Something Childish, but very Natural 198
Home-sick: written in Germany 200
Answer to a Child's Question 202
The Visionary Hope 203
The Happy Husband 205
Recollections of Love 207
On revisiting the Sea-shore 209
 
Half-title
III. Meditative Poems. / In Blank Verse [211]
Motto—eight lines (translated) from Schiller [212]
Hymn before Sun-rise, in the Vale of Chamouny 213
Lines written in an Album at Elbingerode, in the Hartz Forest 218
On Observing a Blossom on the First of February 221
The Eolian Harp 223
Reflections on having left a place of Retirement 227
To the Rev. George Coleridge 231
Inscription for a Fountain on a Heath 235
A Tombless Epitaph 237
This Lime-tree Bower my Prison 239
To a Friend who had declared his intention of writing no more Poetry 244
To a Gentleman [Wordsworth] composed on the night after his recitation of a Poem on the growth of an individual mind 247
[The Nightingale; a Conversation Poem 253]
Frost at Midnight 261
 
Half-title [265]
The Three Graves [267]
 
Half-title  
Odes / And / Miscellaneous Poems [287]
Dejection, An Ode 289
Ode to Georgiana Duchess of Devonshire 296
Ode to Tranquillity 300
To a Young Friend, on his proposing to domesticate with the Author 302
Lines to W. L., Esq., while he sang a song to Purcell's Music 306
Addressed to a Young Man of Fortune 307
Sonnet To the River Otter 309
—— Composed on a journey homeward after hearing of the birth of a Son 310
—— To a Friend 311
The Virgin's Cradle Hymn 312
Epitaph on an Infant. ['Its balmy lips the Infant blest'] 313
Melancholy, A Fragment 314
Tell's Birth-place 315
A Christmas Carol 317
Human Life 320
The Visit of the Gods 321
Elegy, imitated from Akenside 324
 
Half-title
Kubla Khan: / Or, / A Vision In A Dream [327]
Of The Fragment Of Kubla Khan [329]
Kubla Khan [332]
[The Pains of Sleep 334]
Apologetic Preface to "Fire, Famine, and Slaughter" 337
END OF VOL. I
 
Volume II
Half-title
The Rime / of / The Ancient Mariner. / In Seven Parts. / [1]
Motto (From T. Burnet, Archæol. Phil., p. 68) [2]
The Ancient Mariner. Part I 3
Part II 8
Part III 12
  Part IV 17
  Part V 21
  Part VI 27
  Part VII 33
 
Half-title
Christabel [39]
Preface [41]
Christabel. Part I 43
  Conclusion to Part I 56
  Part II 59
  Conclusion to Part II 73
 
Half-title
Prose in Rhyme: Or, / Epigrams, Moralities, and Things / Without a Name [75]
Mottoes:—
Ἔρωϛ ἀεὶ λάληθρος ἑταῖρος.
In many ways does the full heart reveal
The presence of the love it would conceal;
But in far more th' estranged heart lets know,
The absence of the love, which yet it fain would shew.
Duty surviving Self-love [77]
Song. ['Tho' veiled in spires,' &c.] 78
Phantom or Fact? A Dialogue in Verse 79
Work without Hope 81
Youth and Age 82
A Day-dream. ['My eyes make pictures,' &c.] 84
To a Lady, offended by a sportive observation 86
Reason for Love's Blindness 86
Lines suggested by the Last Words of Berengarius 87
The Devil's Thoughts 89
The Alienated Mistress 93
Constancy to an Ideal Object 94
The Suicide's Argument 96
The Blossoming of the Solitary Date-tree 97
Fancy in Nubibus 102
The Two Founts 103
Prefatory Note to the Wanderings of Cain 105
The Wanderings of Cain 109
 
Half-title
Remorse. / A Tragedy. / In Five Acts. / [119]
Remorse. A Tragedy 121
Appendix [232]
 
Half-title
Zapolya: / A Christmas Tale. / In Two Parts. [237]
Πὰρ πυρὶ χρὴ τοιαῦτα λέγειν χειμῶνος ἐν ὥρᾳ
Apud Athenæum.
Advertisement [238]
Part I. The Prelude / Entitled / "The Usurper's Fortune." / [241]
Part II. The Sequel / Entitled / "The Usurper's Fate" 274
 
Volume III
The Piccolomini, / Or / The First Part of Wallenstein. / A Drama. /
Translated from the German of Schiller / 1
The / Death of Wallenstein. / A Tragedy, / In Five Acts 249

XXI

The / Poetical Works / Of / S. T. Coleridge, / Including the Dramas of / Wallenstein, Remorse, and Zapolya. / In Three Volumes. / Vol. I, Vol. II, &c. / London: William Pickering. / mdcccxxix.

[8o.

Collation.—Vol. I. Title, one leaf, p. [iii]; The Imprint, Thomas White, Printer, / Johnson's Court. /, is at the foot of p. [iv]; Contents, pp. [v]-x; Preface, pp. [1]-7; Half-title, Juvenile Poems, p. [9]; Text, pp. [11]-353; The Imprint, Thomas White, &c., below a figure of a girl as in No. XX, is in the centre of p. 354.

[The Half-title and Mottoes are the same as in Vol. I of 1828, No. XX.]

Vol. II. Title, one leaf; The Imprint, Thomas White, Printer, / Johnson's Court. /, is at the foot of the Reverse, unpaged; Half-title, The Rime / of / The Ancient Mariner. / In Seven Parts. /, p. [1]; Motto from T. Burnet, Archæol. Phil., p. 68, p. [2]; Text, pp. [3]-394; The Imprint, Thomas White, &c., is at the foot of p. 394.

[The Half-titles and Mottoes are the same as in Vol. II of 1828, No. XX.]

Vol. III. For Collation see Vol. III of 1828, No. XX.

[The Title-page of this edition (Vols. I, II, III) is ornamented with the Aldine Device, and the Motto, Aldi / Discip. / Anglvs./]

PREFACE

The Preface is the same as that of 1808 and 1828, with the addition of the following passage (quoted as a foot-note to the sentence:—'I have pruned the double-epithets with no sparing hand; and used my best efforts to tame the swell and glitter both of thought and diction.')—'Without any feeling of anger, I may yet be allowed to express some degree of surprize, that after having run the critical gauntlet for a certain class of faults, which I had, viz. a too ornate, and elaborately poetic diction, and nothing having come before the judgement-seat of the Reviewers during the long interval, I should for at least seventeen years, quarter after quarter, have been placed by them in the foremost rank of the proscribed, and made to abide the brunt of abuse and ridicule for faults directly opposite, viz. bald and prosaic language, and an affected simplicity both of matter and manner—faults which assuredly did not enter into the character of my compositions.—Literary Life, i. 51. Published 1817.' In the Biog. Lit. (loc. cit.) the last seven lines of the quotation read as follows—'judgement-seat in the interim, I should, year after year, quarter after quarter, month after month (not to mention sundry petty periodicals of still quicker revolution, 'or weekly or diurnal') have been for at least seventeen years consecutively dragged forth by these into the foremost rank of the proscribed, and forced to abide the brunt of abuse, for faults directly opposite, and which I certainly had not. How shall I explain this?'

Contents.—The Contents of Vols. I and III are identical with the Contents of Vols. I and III of 1828 (No. XX): A 'Song' (Tho' veiled in spires of myrtle wreath), p. 78, and 'The Alienated Mistress: A Madrigal' (If Love be dead, &c.), p. 93 of Vol. II, 1828, are omitted in Vol. II of 1829; and 'The Allegoric Vision,' 'The Improvisatore, or John Anderson, My Jo, John' [New Thoughts on old Subjects], and 'The Garden of Boccaccio' are inserted in Vol. II of 1829; between 'The Wanderings of Cain' and 'Remorse', pp. 116-42. The text of 1829, which J. D. Campbell followed in P. W., 1893, differs from that of 1828.

XXII

The / Poetical Works / Of / Coleridge, Shelley, and Keats. / Complete in One Volume. / Paris / Published by A. and W. Galignani / No. 18, Rue Vivienne / 1829. /

[8o.

Collation.—General half-title, one leaf; The imprint, Printed by Jules Didot Senior, / Printer to His Majesty, Rue du Pont-de-Lodi, No. 6, is on the reverse of the half-title; Title, one leaf, unpaged; Notice of the Publishers, one leaf, unpaged; half-title, The / Poetical Works / of / Samuel Taylor Coleridge. / pp. [i-ii]; Contents, pp. [iii]-iv; Memoir of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, pp. [v]-xi; Text, pp. [1]-225.

[Note.—A lithographed vignette of a Harp, &c., is in the centre of the title-page. The frontispiece consists of three portraits of Coleridge (Northcote), Shelley, and Keats, engraved by J. T. Wedgwood.

The contents are identical with those of 1829, with the following additions: (1) 'Recantation—illustrated in the story of the Mad Ox'; (2) 'The Introduction to the Tale of the Dark Ladie' (as published in the Morning Post, Dec. 21, 1799); (3) 'The Composition of a Kiss'; (4) 'To a Friend together with an unpublished Poem'; (5) 'The Hour when we shall meet again'; (6) 'Lines to Joseph Cottle'; (7) 'On the Christening of a Friend's Child'; (8) 'The Fall of Robespierre'; (9) 'What is Life?'; (10) 'The Exchange'; (11) Seven Epigrams, viz. (1) 'Names'; (2) Job's Luck'; (3) 'Hoarse Maevius', &c.; (4) 'There comes from old Avaro's', &c.; (5) 'Last Monday', &c.; (6) 'Your Poem ', &c. (7) 'Swans sing', &c. ('Job's Luck' had been republished in The Crypt, 1827, and the other six in The Keepsake, 1829.) 'Fancy in Nubibus, or the Poet in the Clouds' (vide ante, p. 435), p. 216, was repeated on p. 217, under the title 'Sonnet, composed by the Seaside, October 1817', with two variants, 'yield' for 'let' in line 4, and 'To' for 'Own' in line 5. 'Love's Burial-Place', and Song, 'Tho' veiled', &c., which had appeared in 1828, were not included in Galignani, 1829.]

XXIII

The Devil's Walk; / A Poem. / By / Professor Porson. / Edited with a Biographical Memoir and Notes, By / H. W. Montagu, / Author of Montmorency, Poems, etc. etc. etc. / Illustrated with Beautiful Engravings on wood by Bonner and / Sladen, After the Designs of R. Cruikshank. / Γνωθι σεαυτον / London: / Marsh and Miller, Oxford Street. / And Constable and Co. Edinburgh. [1830.]

[12o.

Collation.—Title, one leaf, p. [iii]; The Imprint, London: / Printed by Samuel Bentley, / Dorset-Street, Fleet-Street, is in the centre of p. [iv]; Preface, pp. [v]-viii; Text, pp. [9]-32; 'Variations', p. 33; Advertisement of New Works Published by Marsh and Miller, p. [34]-[36].

[Note.—The motto Γνωθι κ.τ.λ may have suggested Coleridge's lines entitled 'Self-knowledge' (ante, p. 487). The Pamphlet is enclosed in a paper cover, The Devil's Walk; / By / Professor Porson. / With Illustrations by R. Cruikshank. / London: / Marsh and Miller. / 1830. / Price One Shilling. / The Illustrations consist of a Frontispiece and five others to face pp. 10, 14, 19, 24, and 31.]