The complete poems
Poems (Originaltittel) · Samuel Taylor Coleridge ; edited by William KeachLedig
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*0010018437 *003NO-LaBS *00520220720153749.0 *007t *008970604b1997 xx e b 1 0 eng d *009 cam *019 $bl *020 #$a978-0-140-42353-2$c150.00 *035 $a(NO-LaBS)12746614(bibid) *08204$a82 *1001#$aColeridge, Samuel Taylor$d1772-1834$6(NO-LaBS)18437-1$_12233000 *109 $ 2 *119 $ 2 *129 $ 2 *139 $ 2 *149 $ 2 *159 $ 2 *169 $ 2 *179 $ 2 *189 $ 2 *190 $ 2 *191 $ 2 *192 $ 2 *193 $ 2 *194 $ 2 *195 $ 2 *196 $ 2 *197 $ 2 *198 $ 2 *199 $ 2 *209 $ 2 *219 $ 2 *229 $ 2 *239 $22 *24514$aThe complete poems$cSamuel Taylor Coleridge ; edited by William Keach *2461#$aPoems$iOriginaltittel *249 $32 *254 $42 *255 #$42 *256 $42 *259 $42 *260 #$42 *260 #$aNew York$bPenguin Books$c1997 *269 $42 *270 $42 *279 $42 *289 $42 *290 $42 *291 $42 *292 $42 *293 $42 *300 #$axxx, 626 p. *336 #$atekst$0http://rdaregistry.info/termList/RDAContentType/1020$2rdaco *337 #$auformidlet$0http://rdaregistry.info/termList/RDAMediaType/1007$2rdamt *338 #$abind$0http://rdaregistry.info/termList/RDACarrierType/1049$2rdact *386 $mNasjonalitet/regional gruppe$beng.$0(NO-LaBS)18437-1 *386 $mNasjonalitet/regional gruppe$beng.$0(NO-LaBS)18437-2 *4901#$aPenguin classics *60014$aColeridge, Samuel Taylor$d1772-1834$6(NO-LaBS)18437-2$_12233000 *7001#$aKeach, William$d1942-$_12233100 *7400#$aA Christmas carol *7400#$aA character *7400#$aA child's evening prayer$uchild's evening prayer *7400#$aA day dream *7400#$aA fragment found in a lecture-room *7400#$aA letter to --------, april 4, 1802. - Sunday evening *7400#$aA mathematical problem *7400#$aA solioquy of the full moon, she being in a mad passion *7400#$aA stranger minstrel *7400#$aA thought suggested by a view a saddleback in Cumberland *7400#$aA tombless epitaph *7400#$aA wish written in Jesus wood, feb. 10th, 1792 *7400#$aAbsence: a farewell ode on quitting school for Jesus college, Cambridge *7400#$aAd vilmum axiologum *7400#$aAddressed to a young man of fortune who abandoned himself to an indolent and causeless melancholy *7400#$aAlice du clos: or the forked tongue. A ballad *7400#$aAn angel visitant *7400#$aAn innovaction: from Remorse *7400#$aAn invocation$iinvocation *7400#$aAn ode in the manner of anacreon *7400#$aAn ode to the rain *7400#$aAnna and Harland *7400#$aAnswer to a child's question *7400#$aAnthem for the children of Christ's hospital *7400#$aApologia pro vita sua *7400#$aBurke *7400#$aCatullian Hendecasyllables *7400#$aCharity in thought *7400#$aCholera cured before hand *7400#$aChristabel *7400#$aCologne *7400#$aConstancy to an ideal object *7400#$aDejection : an ode *7400#$aDesire *7400#$aDestruction of the Bastile *7400#$aDevonshire roads *7400#$aDomestic peace *7400#$aDrinking versus thinking *7400#$aDura navis *7400#$aDuty surviving self-love *7400#$aEaster holidays *7400#$aEffusion XXXV. Composed August 20th, 1795, at Clevedon, Somersetshire *7400#$aElegy, imitated from one of Akenside's blank-verse inscriptions *7400#$aEpitaph *7400#$aEpitaph on an infant *7400#$aEpitaphium testamentarium *7400#$aFaith, hope, and charity. From the Italian of Guarini *7400#$aFancy in Nubibus *7400#$aFarewell to love *7400#$aFears in solitude *7400#$aFire, famine, and slaughter *7400#$aFirst advent of love *7400#$aFragment of an ode on Napoleon *7400#$aFragment: 'Two wedded hearts' *7400#$aFragmentary translation of the song of Deborah *7400#$aFrance, an ode *7400#$aFrom an unpublished poem *7400#$aFrom the german *7400#$aFrost at midnight *7400#$aGenevieve *7400#$aGently I took that which ungently *7400#$aGod's omnipresence, a hymn *7400#$aHappiness *7400#$aHexameters: William, my teacher, my friend *7400#$aHome-sick, written in Germany *7400#$aHomeless *7400#$aHonour *7400#$aHuman life, on the denial of immortality *7400#$aHumility the mother *7400#$aHunting song from Zapaloya *7400#$aHymn before sun-rise, in the vale of Chamouni *7400#$aImitated from Ossian *7400#$aImitated from the welsh *7400#$aImitations ad lyram *7400#$aInscription by the rev. W. L. Bowles in Nether Stowey church *7400#$aInscription for a fountain on a heath *7400#$aInscription for a seat by the road side half-way up a steep hill facing south *7400#$aInside the coach *7400#$aIsrael's lament *7400#$aJob's luck *7400#$aJulia *7400#$aKisses *7400#$aKnow thyself *7400#$aKoskiusko *7400#$aKubla Khan: or, a vision in a dream *7400#$aLa Fayette *7400#$aLewti, or the circassian love-chaunt *7400#$aLife *7400#$aLimbo *7400#$aLines composed in a concert-room *7400#$aLines composed while climbing the left ascent of Brockley Coomb, Somersetshire, may, 1795 *7400#$aLines from a notebook *7400#$aLines from a notebook - 1822 *7400#$aLines from a notebook - May - June 1805 *7400#$aLines from a notebook - September 1798 *7400#$aLines from a notebook - september 1803 *7400#$aLines in the manner of Spenser *7400#$aLines inscribed on the fly-leaf of Benedetto Menzini's poesie (1782) *7400#$aLines on a friend who died of a frenzy fever induced by calumnious reports *7400#$aLines on an autumnal evening *7400#$aLines suggested by the last words of Berengarius *7400#$aLines to W. L. while he sang a song to Purcell's music *7400#$aLines to a beautiful spring in a village *7400#$aLines to a comic author, on an abusive review *7400#$aLines to a friend in answer to a melancholy letter *7400#$aLines written at Shurton bars, near bridgewater, September, 1795, in answer to a letter from Bristol *7400#$aLines written at the king's arms, ross, formerly the house of the 'man of ross' *7400#$aLines written in commonplace book of Miss Barbour *7400#$aLines written in the album at Elbingerode, in the Hartz forest *7400#$aLove *7400#$aLove and friendship opposite *7400#$aLove's apparition and Evanishment *7400#$aLove's burial-place: A madrigal *7400#$aLove, hope, and patience in education *7400#$aMahomet *7400#$aMelancholy: a fragment *7400#$aMetrical feet. Lesson for a boy *7400#$aMoles *7400#$aMonody on a tea-kettle *7400#$aMonody on the death of Chatterton (first version) *7400#$aMonody on the death of Chatterton (second version) *7400#$aMrs Siddons *7400#$aMusic *7400#$aMy baptismal birth-day *7400#$aNames *7400#$aNe plus ultra *7400#$aNil pejus est caelibe vita *7400#$aNot at home *7400#$aOde *7400#$aOde to Georgiana, duchess of Devonshire *7400#$aOde to the departing year *7400#$aOde to tranquillity *7400#$aOn Donne's first poem *7400#$aOn Donne's poetry *7400#$aOn a cataract *7400#$aOn a clock in a market-place *7400#$aOn a lady weeping *7400#$aOn a late connubial rupture in high life *7400#$aOn a volunteer singer *7400#$aOn an infant which died before baptism *7400#$aOn an insignificant *7400#$aOn imitation *7400#$aOn my joyful departure from the same city *7400#$aOn observing a blossom on the first of February *7400#$aOn receiving an account that his only sister's death was inevitable *7400#$aOn revisiting the sea-shore *7400#$aOn seeing a youth affectionately welcomed by a sister *7400#$aOn taking leave of ---------, 1817 *7400#$aOn the christening of a friend's child *7400#$aOn the prospect of establishing a pantisocracy in America *7400#$aPain *7400#$aPantisocracy *7400#$aParaphrase of psalm 46. hexameters *7400#$aParlimentary oscillators *7400#$aPerspiration: a travelling eclogue *7400#$aPhantom *7400#$aPhantom or fact? *7400#$aPitt *7400#$aPriestley *7400#$aProfuse kindess *7400#$aProgress of vice *7400#$aPsyche *7400#$aQuae nocent docent *7400#$aReason *7400#$aReason for love's blindness *7400#$aRecollections of love *7400#$aReflections on having left a place of retirement *7400#$aReligious musings *7400#$aSancti dominici pallium *7400#$aSeparation *7400#$aSomething childish, but very natural *7400#$aSong *7400#$aSong from Zapolya *7400#$aSong, ex improviso *7400#$aSongs of the Pixies *7400#$aSonnet *7400#$aSonnet ('Thou gentle look') *7400#$aSonnet (Pale roamer through the night) *7400#$aSonnet (thou bleedest, my poor heart!) *7400#$aSonnet - translated from Marino *7400#$aSonnet I *7400#$aSonnet II *7400#$aSonnet III *7400#$aSonnet [to Charles Lloyd] *7400#$aSonnet on the same *7400#$aSonnet to a friend who asked, how I felt when the nurse first presented my infant to me *7400#$aSonnet to the author of the robbers *7400#$aSonnet to the autumnal moon *7400#$aSonnet to the river otter *7400#$aSonnet written on receiving letters informing me of the birth of a son, I being at Birmingham *7400#$aSonnets attempted in the manner of contemporary writers *7400#$aSonnets on eminent characters *7400#$aSweet mercy! how my very heart has bled *7400#$aTalleyrand to lord Grenville *7400#$aTell's birth-place *7400#$aThe British stripling's war-song *7400#$aThe Netherlands *7400#$aThe apotheosis, or the snow-drop *7400#$aThe ballad of the dark ladie *7400#$aThe blossoming of the solitary date-tree. A lament *7400#$aThe complaint of Ninathòma, from the same *7400#$aThe day-dream *7400#$aThe delinquent travellers *7400#$aThe destiny of nations *7400#$aThe devil's thoughts *7400#$aThe dungeon *7400#$aThe eolian harp *7400#$aThe exchange *7400#$aThe faded flower *7400#$aThe foster-mother's tale *7400#$aThe garden of Boccaccio *7400#$aThe good, great man *7400#$aThe happy husband *7400#$aThe homeric hexameter described and exemplified *7400#$aThe hour when we shall meet again *7400#$aThe improvisatore *7400#$aThe keepsake *7400#$aThe kiss *7400#$aThe knight's tomb *7400#$aThe mad monk *7400#$aThe madman and the lethargist, an example *7400#$aThe night-scene: a dramatic fragment *7400#$aThe nightingale *7400#$aThe nose$inose *7400#$aThe old man of the alps *7400#$aThe ovidian elegiac metre described and exemplified *7400#$aThe pains of sleep *7400#$aThe pang more sharp than all *7400#$aThe picture, or the lover's resolution *7400#$aThe production of a young lady, addressed to the author of the poems alluded to in the preceding epistle *7400#$aThe raven *7400#$aThe reproof and reply *7400#$aThe rime of the ancient mariner (1834) *7400#$aThe rime of the ancyent marinere (1798) *7400#$aThe rose *7400#$aThe sigh *7400#$aThe suicide's argument *7400#$aThe tears of a grateful people *7400#$aThe three graves *7400#$aThe two founts *7400#$aThe two round spaces on the tomb stone *7400#$aThe virgin's cradle-hymn *7400#$aThe visionary hope *7400#$aThe visit of the Gods *7400#$aThe wanderings of Cain *7400#$aThe wills of the wisp *7400#$aThis lime-tree bower my prison *7400#$aTime, real and imaginary *7400#$aTo Asra *7400#$aTo Earl Stanhope *7400#$aTo Mary Pridham *7400#$aTo Matilda Betham from a stranger *7400#$aTo Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Esq. *7400#$aTo Robert Southey, of Balliol college, Oxford, author of the 'retrospect', and other poems *7400#$aTo William Godwin, author of 'Politcal justice' *7400#$aTo William Wordsworth *7400#$aTo a friend who had declared his intention of writing no more poetry *7400#$aTo a lady. With Falconer's shipwreck *7400#$aTo a young ass, its mother being tethered near it *7400#$aTo a young friend, on his proposing to domesticate with the author. Composed in 1796 *7400#$aTo a young lady on her recovery from a fever *7400#$aTo a young lady, with a poem on the french revolution *7400#$aTo an infant *7400#$aTo an unfortunate woman *7400#$aTo an unfortunate woman at the theatre *7400#$aTo disappointment *7400#$aTo fortune : on buying a ticket in the irish lottery *7400#$aTo lord Stanhope, on reading his late protest in the house of lords *7400#$aTo miss A. T. *7400#$aTo miss Brunton with the preceding translation *7400#$aTo nature *7400#$aTo the author of poems published anonymously at Bristol in september 1795 *7400#$aTo the evening star *7400#$aTo the honourable mr. Erskine *7400#$aTo the muse *7400#$aTo the nightingale *7400#$aTo the rev. George Coleridge *7400#$aTo the rev. W. J. Hort, while teaching a young lady some song-tunes on his flute *7400#$aTo the rev. W. L. Bowles (two versions) *7400#$aTo the young artist, Kayser of Kaserwerth *7400#$aTo two sisters *7400#$aTranslation of Wrangham's hendecasyllabi ad bruntonam e granta exituram *7400#$aTranslation of a passage in Ottfried's metrical paraphrase of the gospel *7400#$aVerses addressed to J. Horne Tooke *7400#$aVerses trivocular *7400#$aW. H. Eheu! *7400#$aWater ballad *7400#$aWestphalian song *7400#$aWith fielding's Amalia *7400#$aWork without hope *7400#$aWritten after a walk before supper *7400#$aWritten in an album *7400#$aYouth and age *74002$aA lover's complaint to his mistress *830 0$aPenguin classics$_11784400 ^