Thy look of love has power to calm, iii. 164. - 'Tis midnight, and Orsino comes not yet, ii. 257. 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. Vessels of heavenly medicine! may the breeze, iv. 325. Was there a human spirit in the steed, i. 294. We join the throng, ii. 173. Welcome, my friends and kindsmen; welcome ye, ii. 215. 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 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. Where art thou, beloved To-morrow? iii. 351. Wild, pale, and wonder-stricken, even as one, iii. 449. 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. INDEX TO THE POEMS ADONAIS, iii. 67. Lines written for, iii. 430. Alastor; or, The Spirit of Solitude, i. Allegory, An, iii. 320. Anarchy, The Mask of, ii. 319. Apennines, Passage of the, iii. 204. Assertors of Liberty, To the, iii. 238. Autumn; A Dirge, iii. 315. Aziola, The, iii. 345. Before and After, iv. 95. Bion, From, Fragment of the Elegy on the Death of Adonis, iv. 193. Lines written for, iii. 422. Calderon, From, Stanzas from Cisma Magico Prodigioso, Scenes from, Carlton House, On a Fête at, iv. 308. Lines written during the, iii. 225. 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 Lines written for, iii. 422. Charles the First, iv. 2. Circumstance, iv. 189. Cisma de Inglaterra, Calderon's, iv. | Cloud, The, iii. 267. To, singing, iii. 191. Convito, First Canzone of the, iv. 197. Cyclops of Euripides, The, iv. 150. Dæmon of the World, The, iii. 373. Sonnet, Dante Alighieri to Guido The First Canzone of the Con- Matilda gathering flowers, iv. 200. Death: "Death is here and death is "They die- the dead return not Death, On: "The pale, the cold and Death: Where is thy victory, iv. 274. Devil's Walk, The: A Ballad, iv. 326. Dirge, A, iii. 367. for the Year, iii. 326. Drama, Fragments of an Unfinished, Dream, A, iv. 105. Drowned Lover, The, iv. 286. Earth, Homer's Hymn to, iv. 148. England, To the People of, iv. 87. Lines connected with, iii. 424. Epitaphium, Latin version of the Epi- another version, iii. 342. Euganean Hills, Lines written among Euripides, The Cyclops of, iv. 150. Evening Ponte al Mare, Pisa, iii. 343. Faded Violet, On a, iii. 205. Feelings of a Republican on the Fall of Bonaparte, iii. 171. Fête at Carlton House, iv. 308. Fragments of an Unfinished Drama, Fragment of a Ghost Story, iv. 77. Fragment, supposed to be an Epitha- time has fled away," iv. 298. Gentle Story, A, iv. 92. - swift Hope, Fear, and Doubt, iv. 106. Hymn of Apollo, iii. 290. of Pan, iii. 291. to Intellectual Beauty, iii. 176. Ianthe, To, iii. 160. Icicle that clung to the Grass of a "I faint, I perish with my Love!" iv. "I would not be a king," iv. 97. Indian Serenade, The, iii. 242. In Horologium, iv. 270. Intellectual Beauty, Hymn to, iii. 176. Invocation to Misery, iii. 218. Ireland, To, iv. 315. "Is it that in some Brighter Sphere," "Is not To-day enough," iv. 99. written for Mont Blanc, iii. 422. written for the Ode to Liberty, written for Adonais, iii. 430. written in the Bay of Lerici, iii. written in the Vale of Chamouni, Lines written for, iii. 422. Mercury, Homer's Hymn to, iv. 111. Minerva, Homer's Hymn to, iv. 145. Moon, Homer's Hymn to the, iv. 147. To the, "Bright wanderer, fair To the,Art thou pale for weari- Mont Blanc, Lines written in the Vale Lines written for, iii. 422. Moschus, From: "When winds that Moschus, From: Pan, Echo, and the Moschus, From: Fragment of the El- egy on the Death of Bion, iv. 192. Music, To: "No, music, thou art not Mutability," We are as clouds that "My Thoughts," iv. 108. Ode to Heaven, iii. 232. to Liberty, iii. 274. to Liberty, Lines written for, iii. written October, 1819, before the to Naples, iii. 309. to the West Wind, iii. 235. Edipus Tyrannus; or, Swellfoot the "Oh, that a chariot of cloud were Omens, iv. 268. |