[1150:1] The 'Eolian Harp', with the title 'Effusion xxxv. Composed August 20, 1795, at Clevedon, Somersetshire', was first published in 1796, and included as 'Composed at Clevedon' in 1797 and 1803. It is possible that it may have been originally printed in a newspaper.
[1150:2] The fourth and last edition of the Lyrical Ballads was issued in 1805.
[1151:1] The List numbers thirty, and of these not more than twenty are strictly speaking Errata. Of the remainder the greater number are textual corrections, emendations, and afterthoughts.
[1151:2] The allusion is to the prolonged and embittered controversy between Coleridge and his friends at Bristol, who had printed his works and advanced him various sums of money on the security of the sheets as printed and the future sale of the works when published. They were angry with him for postponing completion of these works, and keeping them out of their money, and he was naturally and reasonably indignant at the excessive sum charged for paper and printing. The fact was that they had done and intended to do him a kindness, but that in so far as it was a business transaction he suffered at their hands.
[1151:3] The title of these Iambic lines is 'Relictis Aliis Studiis Philosophiam Epicuream amplectitur'.
[1169:1] See Wordsworth's P. W. 1896, in. 21: The Small Celandine, ll. 21, 22.
| PAGE | ||
| 1. | Poems, supposed to have been written. . . By Thomas Rowley,. . .1794. | |
| Monody on the Death of Chatterton | xxv | |
| 2. | Poems by Francis Wrangham, M.A., 1795. | |
| Translation of Hendecasyllabi ad Bruntonam, &c. | 79 | |
| To Miss Brunton with the Preceding Translation. | ||
| 3. | Poems on the Death of Priscilla Farmer. By her grandson Charles Lloyd, 1796. | |
| Sonnet. 'The Piteous sobs', &c. | ||
| 4. | Lyrical Ballads, 1798. | |
| The Rime of the Ancyent Marinere | 1 | |
| The Foster Mother's Tale | 53 | |
| The Nightingale | 63 | |
| 5. | Lyrical Ballads (in two volumes), 1800. | |
| Vol. I. Love [with the four poems published in 1798] | 138 | |
| 6. | Annual Anthology, 1800. | |
| *Lewti, or The Circassian Love-Chant | 23 | |
| *To a Young Lady, on her first Appearance after a Dangerous Illness. | 32 | |
| *Recantation, Illustrated in the Story of the Mad Ox | 59 | |
| *Lines Written in the Album at Elbingerode, in the Hartz Forest | 74 | |
| *A Christmas Carol | 79 | |
| To a Friend, who had declared his intention of writing no more Poetry | 103 | |
| This Lime-Tree Bower my Prison. A Poem, addressed to Charles Lamb, of the India House, London | 140 | |
| To W. L. Esq. while he sung a Song to Purcell's Music. | 156 | |
| *The British Stripling's War-Song | 173 | |
| Something childish, but very natural. Written in Germany | 192 | |
| Home-Sick. Written in Germany | 193 | |
| *Ode to Georgiana, Dutchess of Devonshire | 212 | |
| *Fire, Famine, and Slaughter. A War Eclogue | 231 | |
| *The Raven | 240 | |
| *To an unfortunate Woman. 'Sufferer, that with sullen brow' | 291 | |
[Note. Poems marked with an asterisk were reprinted from the Morning Post.] |
||
| 7. | Memoirs of the late Mrs. Robinson, &c. Four volumes, 1801. | |
| A Stranger Minstrel | Vol. iv, p. 141 | |
| 8. | Melmoth's Beauties of British Poets, 1801. | |
| To a Young Ass | 21 | |
| To a Spring in a beautiful Village | 119 | |
| The Sigh | 167 | |
| The Kiss | 201 | |
| 9. | The Wild Wreath. Edited by M. E. Robinson, 1804. | |
| The Mad Monk | 142 | |
| 10. | The Poetical Register and Repository of the Fine Arts. | |
| Vol. II. For 1802 (1803). | ||
| *Chamouny. The Hour before Sunrise. A Hymn | 308 | |
| *Inscription on a Jutting Stone over a Spring | 338 | |
| *The Picture; or, The Lover's Resolution | 354 | |
| Vol. III. For 1803 (1805). | ||
| From the German of Leasing. 'I ask'd my fair', &c. [Signed 'Harley Philadelphia'.] | 274 | |
| Sonnets, Attempted in the Manner of 'Contemporary Writers' | 346 | |
| Vol. IV. For 1804 (1805). | ||
| The Exchange. | ||
| Vol. VI. For 1806, 1807 (1811). | ||
| On a Late Connubial Rupture in High Life | 365 | |
| Vol. VII. For 1808, 1809 (1812). | ||
| Fears in Solitude. By S. T. Coleridge, Esq. | 227 | |
| France, An Ode. By S. T. Coleridge, Esq. | 332 | |
| Frost at Midnight. By S. T. Coleridge Esq. | 530 | |
[Note. Sonnets Attempted, &c., in Vol. III, and On a Late, &c., in Vol. VI, were reprinted from the Monthly Magazine: the three poems in Vol. VII were reprinted from the quarto pamphlet of 1798, and were again set up as a small octavo pamphlet by Law & Gilbert, the printers of the Poetical Register. Vide Bibliography, No. X.] |
||
| 11. | Selection of Poems for Young Persons, by J. Cottle. Third edition, n. d. | |
| Epitaph on an Infant | 129 | |
| Sonnet to the River Otter | 155 | |
| Domestic Peace | 157 | |
| 12. | English Minstrelsy; being a Selection of Fugitive Poetry from the Best English Authors. Two volumes, 1810. | |
| Vol. II. | ||
| Fragment. S. T. Coleridge ['Introduction to the Tale of the dark Ladie' as published in the Morning Post] | 131 | |
| 13. | Poetical Class-Book. Edited by W. F. Mylius, 1810. | |
| This Lime Tree Bower my Prison. | ||
| 14. | Nugæ Canoræ. Poems by Charles Lloyd, 1819. | |
| Sonnet. 'The piteous sobs ', &c. | 145 | |
| 15. | The British Minstrel. Glasgow, 1821. | |
| The Three Graves | ||
| 16. | Castle Dangerous. By Sir W. Scott, 1832. Notes by J. G. Lockhart. Galignani, 1834. | |
| The Knight's Tomb. 'Where is the grave', &c. | 10 | |
| 17. | A History of . . . Christ's Hospital. By the Rev. W. Trollope, 1834. | |
| Julia | 192 | |
| 18. | Letters, Conversations, &c., of S. T. Coleridge. In two volumes, 1836. | |
| Vol. I. | ||
| Farewell to Love | 143 | |
| To Nature. | 144 | |
| Sonnet. To Lord Stanhope | 217 | |
| Vol II. | ||
| 'What boots to tell how o'er his grave' | 75 | |
| 19. | Early Recollections, &c. By Joseph Cottle, 1837. | |
| Vol. I. | ||
| Monody on . . . Chatterton, ll. 137-54 | 32 | |
| To W. J. H. While playing on his flute | 33 | |
| The Fox and Statesman, &c. | 172 | |
| Sonnet. To Lord Stanhope | 203 | |
| Written After a Walk Before Supper | 209 | |
| To an unfortunate Young Woman, Whom I had known in the days of her Innocence. 'Maiden! that with sullen brow'. | 213 | |
| Allegorical Lines on the same subject. 'Myrtle Leaf, that ill besped' | 214 | |
| On an Unfortunate Woman at the Theatre | 216 | |
| On an Unfortunate, &c. | 217 | |
| Examples. 'O what a life', &c. | 226 | |
| Another Specimen, describing Hexameters, &c. | 226 | |
| Another Specimen. 'In the Hexameter', &c. | 227 | |
| The English Duodecasyllable. 'Hear my beloved', &c. | 227 | |
| Foster-Mother's Tale | 235 | |
| To a Friend, [Charles Lloyd (sic)] who had declared his intention, &c., ll. 17-35 | 245 | |
| Lines Addressed to Joseph Cottle | 283 | |
| 'As oft mine eye', &c. [The Silver Thimble] | 236 | |
| Sonnets, Attempted in the Manner of Contemporary Writers | 290 | |
| To the Author of the Ancient Mariner | 293 | |
| Vol. II. | ||
| Five 'Epigrams, translated . . . from the German' | 65-6 | |
| My Love. 'I ask'd my love', &c. | 67 | |
| Joan of Arc, Book the Second. 4o, 1796 (including the lines claimed by S. T. C.) | 241-52 | |
| 20. | The Book of Gems. Edited by S. C. Hall, 1838. | |
| The Garden of Boccaccio | 51 | |
| Love | 52 | |
| The Nightingale | 53 | |
| Lines written in the Album at Elbingerode, &c. | 58 | |
| Recollections of Love | 59 | |
| 21. | Memoirs of William Wordsworth. In two volumes, 1851. | |
| Vol. I. | ||
| English Hexameters. 'William, my teacher', &c. | 139 | |
| 22. | An Old Man's Diary. By J. Payne Collier, 1871, 2. | |
| My Godmother's Beard | Part I, pp. 34, 35. | |
| Epigram. 'A very old proverb commands', &c. | ||
| Epitaph on Sir James Mackintosh. [The Two Round Spaces on the Tombstone] | Part I, pp. 61, 62. | |
| A Character. 'A Bird who for his other sins' (15 lines) | Part IV, p. 57. | |
| 23. | Unpublished letters from Samuel Taylor Coleridge to the Rev. John Prior Estlin: Communicated to the Philobiblon Society. | |
| To An Unfortunate Princess. [On a Late Connubial, &c.] | 20 | |
| Lines Addressed to J. Horne Tooke. 'Britons! when last', &c. | 22 | |
| 24. | Letters from the Lake Poets. . . To Daniel Stuart, 1889. | |
| Alcaeus to Sappho | 16 | |
| 25. | Memorials of Coleorton. Edited by W. Knight. Two vols., 1887. | |
| Vol. I. | ||
| Mont Blanc, The Summit of the Vale of Chamouny, An Hour before Sunrise—A Hymn. [As sent to Sir George Beaumont.] | 26 | |
| To William Wordsworth. Composed for the greater part on the same night after the finishing of his recitation of the Poem in thirteen Books, on the Growth of his own Mind. [As sent to Sir G. Beaumont, Jan. 1807.] | ||
| 26. | Golden Treasury of Songs and Lyrics. Edited by F. T. Palgrave 1896. | |
| Love | 199 | |
| Kubla Khan | 308 | |
| Youth and Age | 323 | |