Sibylline Leaves (Coleridge)
SIBYLLINE LEAVES:
A
Collection of Poems.
BY
S. T. COLERIDGE, ESQ.
LONDON:
REST FENNER, 23, PATERNOSTER ROW.
1817.
Poems (not listed in original)
Poems Occasioned by Political Events Or Feelings Connected With Them.
- "When I have borne in memory what has tamed": Wordsworth
- Ode to the Departing Year
- France; an Ode
- Fears in Solitude
- Recantation - Illustrated in the Story of the Mad Ox
- Parliamentary Oscillators
- Fire, Famine & Slaughter
Love-poems
- Quas humilis tenero stylus olim effudit in aevo - Petrarch
- Love
- Lewti
- The Picture
- The Night Scene
- To an Unfortunate Woman, Whom the Author had known in the days of her Innocence
- To an Unfortunate Woman at the Theatre
- Lines composed in a concert room
- The Keep-sake
- To a Lady
- To a Young Lady
- Something Childish, but very natural
- Home-sick
- Answer to a child's question
- The Visionary Hope
- The Happy Husband
- Recollections of Love
- On re-visiting the sea-shore after long absence
Meditative Poems in Blank Verse
- "Yea, he deserves to find himself deceived" - Schiller
- Hymn, before Sun-rise, in the Vale of Chamouny
- Lines, written in the Album at Elbingerode
- On Observing a Blossom
- The Eolian Harp
- Reflections on having left a Place of Retirement
- To the Reverend George Coleridge
- Inscription, for a Fountain on a Heath
- A Tombless Epitaph
- This Lime Tree Bower My Prison
- To a Friend
- To a Gentleman
- The Nightingale
- Frost at midnight
- The Three Graves
Odes and Miscellaneous Poems
- Dejection: an Ode
- Ode to Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire
- Ode to Tranquillity
- To a Young Friend
- Lines to W. L. Esq. while he sang a Song to Purcell's Music
- To a Young Man of Fortune
- Sonnet to the River Otter
- Sonnet, composed on a journey homeward
- Sonnet, to a Friend who asked, how I felt when the Nurse first presented my Infant to me.
- The Virgin's Cradle-Hymn
- Epitaph, on an Infant
- Melancholy. A Fragment.
- Tell's Birth-place
- A Christmas Carol
- Human Life
- An Ode to the Rain
- The Visit of the Gods
- America to Great Britain
- Elegy, imitated from one of Akenside’s blank-verse inscriptions
- The Destiny of Nations
Printed by John Evans & Co. St. John-Street. Bristol.