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Poems by Hartley Coleridge
With a Memoir of his Life by his Brother. In Two Volumes
Coleridge, Hartley (1796-1849)
I.
VOL. I
II.
VOL. II.
POSTHUMOUS POEMS.
SONNETS.
SONNETS SUGGESTED BY THE SEASONS.
SONNETS AND OTHER POEMS ON BIRDS, INSECTS, AND FLOWERS.
SONNETS AND OTHER POEMS REFERRING TO THE PERIOD OF INFANCY AND CHILDHOOD.
MEDITATIVE AND DESCRIPTIVE PIECES.
MISCELLANEOUS POEMS, CHIEFLY LYRICAL.
THE BLIND MAN'S ADDRESS TO HIS LOVE.
SONG.
ON SEEING THREE YOUNG LADIES ON GRASMERE LAKE.
MARRIED LIFE.
A POOR MAN'S REASONS FOR NOT MARRYING.
LINES WRITTEN IMPROMPTU AFTER HEARING A LADY SINGING.
GOOD NIGHT.
VALENTINE, BY AN AGED LOVER.
LINES.
[As the dew of the morning bestars every blade]
[Never till now I felt myself so old]
TO A FRIEND LEAVING GRASMERE.
SONG.
SONG.
THE SOLACE OF SONG.
A SONG WITHOUT A TUNE.
GOD SAVE THE QUEEN.
[A wanton bard in heathen time]
THE GUERNSEY LILY.
TO A YOUNG LADY FROM A FOREIGN CLIME.
AN AUTOGRAPH.
SONG.
THE OLD ARM-CHAIR:
TO THE MAGPIE.
TO A RED HERRING.
TO A CAT.
[Angels have wings? Well, let them grow—]
DE ANIMABUS BRUTORUM.
TO GOODY TWOSHOES.
TO ROBERT SOUTHEY,
THE LARCH GROVE.
DENT.
GEOLOGY.
TRANSLATIONS.
[subsection]
SKETCHES OF ENGLISH POETS.
SONNETS AND OTHER SHORT POEMS ON SCRIPTURAL AND RELIGIOUS SUBJECTS.
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Poems by Hartley Coleridge
327
SWIFT.
First
in the list behold the caustic Dean,
Whose muse was like himself compact of spleen;
Whose sport was ireful, and whose laugh severe,
His very kindness cutting, cold, austere.
Poems by Hartley Coleridge