Page:The complete poetical works of Percy Bysshe Shelley, including materials never before printed in any edition of the poems.djvu/27

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xxi

CONTENTS

Poems written in 1820 (continued)—
PAGE
  Autumn: A Dirge
614
  The Waning Moon
615
  To the Moon
615
  Death
616
  Liberty
616
  Summer and Winter
616
  The Tower of Famine
617
  An Allegory
618
  The World's Wanderers
618
  Sonnet: ‘Ye hasten to the grave!’
618
  Lines to a Reviewer
619
  Fragment of a Satire on Satire
619
  Good-night
620
  Buona Notte
621
  Orpheus
621
  Fiordispina
624
  Time Long Past
626
  Fragments:
   The Deserts of Dim Sleep
626
   ‘The viewless and invisible consequence’
626
   A Serpent-face
627
   Death in Life
627
   ‘Such hope, as is the sick despair of good’
627
   ‘Alas ! this is not what I thought life was’
627
   Milton's Spirit
627
   ‘Unrisen splendour of the brightest sun’
628
   Pater Omnipotens
628
   To the Mind of Man
628
  Note on Poems of 1820, by Mrs. Shelley
629
Poems written in 1821.
  Dirge for the Year
630
  To Night
630
  Time
631
  Lines: ‘Far, far away’
631
  From the Arabic: An Imitation
631
  To Emilia Viviani
632
  The Fugitives
632
  To ——. ‘Music, when soft voices die’
633
  Song: ‘Rarely, rarely, comest thou’
633
  Mutability
633
  Lines written on hearing the News of the Death of Napoleon
634
  Sonnet: Political Greatness
635
  The Aziola
636
  A Lament
636
  Remembrance
637
  To Edward Williams
637
  To ——. ‘One word is too often profaned’
639
  To ——. ‘When passion's trance is overpast’
639
  A Bridal Song
639
  Epithalamium
640
  Another Version of the Same
640
  Love, Hope, Desire, and Fear
641