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Index
Cover
Title Page
Contents
About the Author
Introduction
Note on the Texts
THE POEMS
The Irishman’s Song
Song (‘Fierce roars the midnight storm’)
‘How eloquent are eyes!’
Fragment, or The Triumph of Conscience
Song (‘Ah! faint are her limbs’)
The Monarch’s funeral: An Anticipation
A Winter’s Day
To the Republicans of North America
On Robert Emmet’s Tomb
To Liberty
Written on a Beautiful Day in Spring
‘Dark Spirit of the desart rude’
The Retrospect: Cwm Elan 1812
QUEEN MAB
‘Mine eyes were dim with tears unshed’
‘O! there are spirits of the air’
A Summer-Evening Church-Yard, Lechlade, Gloucestershire
Sonnet. From the Italian of Dante
To Wordsworth
Feelings of a Republican on the Fall of Bonaparte
Mutability
ALASTOR; OR, THE SPIRIT OF SOLITUDE
Verses written on receiving a Celandine in a letter from England
Hymn to Intellectual Beauty [Versions A and B]
Mont Blanc [Versions A and B]
Dedication before LAON AND CYTHNA
To Constantia
Ozymandias
Lines Written among the Euganean Hills, October, 1818
JULIAN AND MADDALO
Stanzas Written in Dejection— December 1818, near Naples
The Two Spirits—An Allegory
Sonnet (‘Lift not the painted veil’)
PROMETHEUS UNBOUND
THE CENCI
THE MASK OF ANARCHY
PETER BELL THE THIRD
Ode to the West Wind
To S[idmouth] and C[astlereagh]
Love’s Philosophy
Goodnight
Time Long Past
On a Dead Violet: To —–
On the Medusa of Leonardo da Vinci, In the Florentine Gallery
To Night
England in 1819
Song: To the Men of England
To —– (‘Corpses are cold in the tomb’)
The Sensitive-Plant
An Exhortation
Song of Apollo
Song of Pan
The Cloud
‘God save the Queen!’ [A New National Anthem]
Translation of Dante’s Purgatorio, Canto XXVIII, lines 1–51
Evening. Ponte a Mare, Pisa
Ode to Liberty
To a Sky-Lark
Letter to Maria Gisborne
To —– [the Lord Chancellor]
THE WITCH OF ATLAS
Sonnet: Political Greatness
Sonnet (‘Ye hasten to the grave!’)
The Fugitives
Memory (‘Rose leaves, when the rose is dead’)
Dirge for the Year
EPIPSYCHIDION
ADONAIS
‘When passion’s trance is overpast’
Written on hearing the news of the death of Napoleon
Epithalamium
The Aziola
HELLAS
‘The flower that smiles today’
The Indian Girl’s Song
‘Rough wind that moanest loud’
To the Moon
Remembrance
Lines to —– [Sonnet to Byron]
To —– (‘The serpent is shut out from Paradise’)
To Jane. The Invitation
To Jane—The Recollection
‘When the lamp is shattered’
‘One word is too often prophaned’
The Magnetic lady to her patient
With a Guitar. To Jane
‘Far, far away, O ye / Halcyons of Memory’
‘Tell me star, whose wings of light’
THE TRIUMPH OF LIFE
To Jane (‘The keen stars were twinkling’)
Lines Written in the Bay of Lerici
THE PROSE
From History of a Six Weeks’ Tour
From Preface to LAON AND CYTHNA
An Address to the People on the Death of the Princess Charlotte
From On Christianity
On Love
On Life
The Coliseum
From On the Devil, and Devils
From A Philosophical View of Reform
A Defence of Poetry
Appendix: The Contents of Shelley’s Volumes of Verse Published in His Lifetime
Notes
Chronology
Further Reading
Acknowledgements
Follow Penguin
Copyright Page
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