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The serpent is shut out from paradise, iii. 348.

The sleepless Hours who watch me as I lie, iii. 290.
The spider spreads her webs whether she be, iii. 297.
The star-light smile of children, the sweet looks, i. 157.
The sun is set; the swallows are asleep, iii. 343.
The sun is warm, the sky is clear, iii. 221.

The sun makes music as of old, iv. 240.

The transport of a fierce and monstrous gladness, i. 323.
The viewless and invisible Consequence, iv. 96.

The voice of the Spirits of Air and of Earth, ii. 171.

The warm sun is failing, the bleak wind is wailing, iii. 315.

The waters are flashing, iii. 335.

The wind has swept from the wide atmosphere, iii. 169.

The world is dreary, iv. 78.

The world is now our dwelling-place, iv. 80.

The world's eyeless charioteer, iii. 139.

The world's great age begins anew, iii. 153.

Then weave the web of the mystic measure, ii. 175.
There is an obsolete and doubtful law, ii. 232.

There is a voice, not understood by all, iii. 422.
There is a warm and gentle atmosphere, iv. 98.

There late was One within whose subtle being, iii. 174.
There was a little lawny islet, iii. 366.

There was a Power in this sweet place, iii. 251.

There was a youth, who, as with toil and travel, iii. 395.

These are two friends whose lives were undivided, iii. 366.
They are about it now, ii. 274.

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This is the day, which down the void abysm, ii. 192.
Those whom nor power, nor lying faith, nor toil, iv. 87.
Thou art fair, and few are fairer, iii. 243.

Thou supreme goddess! by whose power divine, iii. 5.
Thou wert not, Cassius, and thou couldst not be, iii. 410.
Thou wert the morning star among the living, iv. 190.

Thou voice which art, iii. 149.

Three days the flowers of the garden fair, iii. 253.

Thrice three hundred thousand years, ii. 84.

Thus do the generations of the earth, i. 40.

Thus to be lost and thus to sink and die, iii. 191.

Thy country's curse is on thee, darkest crest, iii. 193.

Thy dewy looks sink in my breast, iii. 160.
Thy little footsteps on the sands, iv. 81.

Thy look of love has power to calm, iii. 164.

'Tis midnight, and Orsino comes not yet, ii. 257.

'Tis midnight now-athwart the murky air, iv. 292.
'Tis the terror of tempest. The rags of the sail, iii. 259.
To the deep, to the deep, ii. 133.

To thirst and find no fill-to wail and wander, iv. 100.
Tremble Kings despised of man! iv. 303.

'Twas dead of the night, when I sat in my dwelling, iv. 277.

Unfathomable Sea! whose waves are years, iii. 327.
Unrisen splendor of the brightest sun, iv. 88.

Vessels of heavenly medicine! may the breeze, iv. 325.
Victorious Wrong, with vulture scream, iii. 149.

Wake the serpent not-lest he, iv. 99.

Was there a human spirit in the steed, i. 294.
Wealth and dominion fade into the mass, iv. 100.
We are as clouds that veil the midnight moon, iii. 167.
Weave the dance on the floor of the breeze, ii. 172.
We come from the mind, ii. 173.

We join the throng, ii. 173.

Welcome, my friends and kindsmen; welcome ye, ii. 215.
We meet not as we parted, iii. 465.

We strew these opiate flowers, iii. 111.

Weep not, my gentle boy; he struck but me, ii. 224.

Were it not a sweet refuge, Emily, iii 429.

What! alive and so bold, O Earth, iii. 338.

What art thou, presumptuous, who profanest, iv. 86.

What is that joy which serene infancy, iii. 429.

What is the glory far above, iv. 230.

What Mary is when she a little smiles, iv. 196.

What men gain fairly, that they should possess, iv. 87.

What think you the dead are? iii. 421.

What thoughts had sway o'er Cythna's lonely slumber, i. 176.
What veilèd form sits on that ebon throne? ii. 135.

What was the shriek that struck fancy's ear, iv. 299.

When a lover clasps his fairest, iv. 94.

When passion's trance is overpast, iii. 333.
When soft winds and sunny skies, iv. 90.

When the lamp is shattered, iii. 353.

When the last hope of trampled France had failed, i. 133.
When winds that move not its calm surface sweep, iv. 190.

Where art thou, beloved To-morrow? iii. 351.
Where man's profane and tainting hand, iv. 333.
Whether the Sensitive Plant, or that, iii. 258.
Whilst monarchs laughed upon their thrones, i. 343.
Why is it said thou canst not live, iv. 307.

Wild, pale, and wonder-stricken, even as one, iii. 449.
Wilt thou forget the happy hours, iii. 204.
Within a cavern of man's trackless spirit, iii. 423.
Within the silent centre of the earth, iv. 42.
Worlds on worlds are rolling ever, iii. 119.

Would I were the wingèd cloud, iii. 137.

Would you not like a broomstick? As for me, iv. 246.

Ye congregated powers of heaven, who share, ii. 149.
Ye Dorian woods and waves lament aloud, iv. 192.
Ye gentle visitations of calm thought, iv. 107.
Ye hasten to the grave! What seek ye there, iii. 321.
Ye who intelligent the Third Heaven move, iv. 197.
Ye wild-eyed Muses, sing the Twins of Jove, iv. 144.
Yes! all is past — swift time has fled away, iv. 298.
Yet look on me - take not thine eyes away, iii. 162.

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INDEX TO THE POEMS

ADONAIS, iii. 67.

Lines written for, iii. 430.
Adonis, Elegy on the Death of, iv. 193.
"Alas! this is not what I thought Life
was," iv. 106.

Alastor; or, The Spirit of Solitude, i.
83.

Allegory, An, iii. 320.

Anarchy, The Mask of, ii. 319.
Anthem, National, iii. 230.

Apennines, Passage of the, iii. 204.
Apollo, Hymn of, iii. 290.
Arabic, From the, iii. 328.
Arethusa, iii. 286.

Assertors of Liberty, To the, iii. 238.
Athanase, Prince, iii. 395.
Atlas, The Witch of, ii. 383.
Autumn; A Dirge, iii. 315.

Aziola, The, iii. 345.

Before and After, iv. 95.
Bereavement, iv. 285.
Bigotry's Victim, iv. 303.

Bion, From, Fragment of the Elegy

on the Death of Adonis, iv. 193.
Bion, Elegy on the Death of, iv. 192.
Birth of Pleasure, The, iii. 445.
Blanc, Mont, iii. 179.

Lines written for, iii. 422.
Boat on the Serchio, The, iii. 457.
Bonaparte, Feelings of a Republican
on the Fall of, iii. 171.

Bracknell, Stanza written at, iii. 160.
Bridal Song, A, iii. 340.
Buona Notte, iii. 324.
Byron, Sonnet to, iv. 83.

Calderon, From, Stanzas from Cisma
de Inglaterra, iv. 239.

Magico Prodigioso, Scenes from,
iv. 206.

Carlton House, On a Fête at, iv. 308.
Castlereagh Administration, Lines
written during the, iii. 225.
Castlereagh, To Sidmouth and, iii. 228.
Castor and Pollux, Homer's Hymn to,
iv. 144.

Cat, Verses on a, iv. 267.

Cavalcanti, From: Sonnet, Guido Cav-
alcanti to Dante Alighieri, iv. 206.
Cenci, The, ii. 195.

Chamouni, Lines written in the Vale
of, iii. 179.

Lines written for, iii. 422.

Charles the First, iv. 2.

Circumstance, iv. 189.

Cisma de Inglaterra, Calderon's, iv.
239.

Cloud, The, iii. 267.
Consequence, iv. 96.
Constantia, To, iv. 81.

To, singing, iii. 191.

Convito, First Canzone of the, iv. 197.
Critic, Lines to a, iii. 202.
Crowned, iv. 106.

Cyclops of Euripides, The, iv. 150.

Dæmon of the World, The, iii. 373.

Dante adapted from a Sonnet in the
Vita Nuova, iv. 196.

Sonnet, Dante Alighieri to Guido
Cavalcanti, iv. 196.

The First Canzone of the Con-
vito, iv. 197.

Matilda gathering flowers, iv. 200.
Ugolino, iv. 203.

Death: "Death is here and death is
there," iii. 316.

"They die the dead return not
Misery," iii. 200.

Death, On: "The pale, the cold and
the moony smile," iii. 168.

Death: Where is thy victory, iv. 274.
Dejection, Stanzas written in, iii. 221.
Deserts of Sleep, The, iv. 105.
Despair, iv. 296.

Devil's Walk, The: A Ballad, iv. 326.
Dialogue, A, iv. 270.

Dirge, A, iii. 367.

for the Year, iii. 326.

Drama, Fragments of an Unfinished,
iv. 41.

Dream, A, iv. 105.

Drowned Lover, The, iv. 286.

Earth, Homer's Hymn to, iv. 148.
England in 1819, iii. 229.
England, To the People of, iv. 87.
Epipsychidion, iii. 41.

Lines connected with, iii. 424.
Epitaph, iii. 366.

Epitaphium, Latin version of the Epi-
taph in Gray's Elegy, iv. 268.
Epithalamium, iii. 341.

another version, iii. 342.
Euganean Hills, Lines written among
the, iii. 206.

Euripides, The Cyclops of, iv. 150.

Evening Ponte al Mare, Pisa, iii. 343.

Evening To Harriet, iii. 159.

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Face, A, iv. 96.

Faded Violet, On a, iii. 205.
Falsehood and Vice, i. 343.
Famine, The Tower of, iii. 319.
Faust, Scenes from, iv. 240.

Feelings of a Republican on the Fall
of Bonaparte, iii. 171.
Fête at Carlton House, iv. 308.
"Fierce Beasts, The," iv. 104.
Fiordispina, iii. 442.
"Follow," iv. 89.

Fragments of an Unfinished Drama,
iv. 41.

Fragment of a Ghost Story, iv. 77.
Fragment of the Elegy on the Death
of Bion, iv. 192.

Fragment, supposed to be an Epitha-
lamium of Francis Ravaillac and
Charlotte Corday, iv. 292.
Fragment, "Yes! all is past

time has fled away," iv. 298.

Fugitives, The, iii. 335.
Furies, Song of the, iv. 94.

Gentle Story, A, iv. 92.

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swift

Ghost Story, Fragment of a, iv. 77.
Ginevra, iii. 449.

Gisborne, Letter to Maria, iii. 297.
Godwin, On Fanny, iii. 199.
Godwin, To Mary Wollstonecraft:
"Mine eyes were dim with tears
unshed," iii. 166.

Goethe: Scenes from the Faust of, iv.
240.

Good-Night, iii. 324.
"Great Spirit," iv. 107.

Guitar, With a: To Jane, iii. 362.

Harriet, To: ***** i. 3.

Harriet, To: "It is not blasphemy to
hope that Heaven," iv. 322.
Harriet, To: "Thy look of love has
power to calm," iii. 164.
Harriet, To: Fragment of a Sonnet,
iv. 322.

Hate-Song, A, iv. 96.

He wanders, iv. 104.

Heart's Tomb, The, iv. 105.

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"I would not be a king," iv. 97.
Imitation, An: From the Arabic, iii.
328.

Indian Serenade, The, iii. 242.
lines written for, iii. 423.
In Horologium, iv. 270.
Inspiration, iv. 87.

Intellectual Beauty, Hymn to, iii. 176.
Invitation, to Jane, iii. 356.

Invocation to Misery, iii. 218.
Ireland, To, iv. 315.

"Is it that in some Brighter Sphere,"
iv. 98.

"Is not To-day enough," iv. 99.
Islam, The Revolt of, i. 113.
Isle, The, iii. 366.
Italy, To, iv. 88.

Jane, To: The Invitation, iii. 356.
The Recollection, iii. 359.
With a Guitar, iii. 362.
"The keen stars were twinkling,"
iii. 365.

Julian and Maddalo, ii. 47.

Lines written for, iii. 421.

Keats, On, iv. 84.

Kissing Helena, iv. 190.

Lady of the South, The, iv. 92.
Lament, A, iii. 351.
Laurel, iv. 86.

Leaving London for Wales, On, iv. 333.
Lechlade, Gloucestershire, A Summer
Evening Churchyard at, iii. 169.
Lerici, Bay of, Lines written in the,
iii. 367.

Leonardo da Vinci, On the Medusa of,
iii. 240.

Letter to Maria Gisborne, iii. 297.
Liberty, Ode to, iii. 274.

Lines written for, iii. 423.

Liberty: "The fiery mountains answer
each other," iii. 317,

Life, The Triumph of, iv. 51.

Lines: Connected with Epipsychidion,
iii. 424.

"Far, far away, O, ye," iii.
335.

"If I walk in Autumn's even,"
iii. 351.

"That time is dead forever,
child," iii. 200.

"The cold earth slept below,"
iii. 172.

to a Critic, iii. 202.

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