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Complete poetry and selected prose  Cover Image Book Book

Complete poetry and selected prose / edited, with an introd., by Harold Edgar Briggs.

Record details

  • Physical Description: xxxvi, 515 pages ; 19 cm.
  • Publisher: New York, N.Y. : Modern Library, [1951]

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note:
Bibliography: p. xxxiii-xxxiv.
Formatted Contents Note:
Imitation of Spenser -- Sonnet on peace -- Fill for me a brimming bowl -- On death -- Sonnet to Byron -- Stay, ruby-breasted warble - stay -- Sonnet to Chatterton -- Written on the day the Mr. Leigh hunt left prison -- To hope -- Ode to Appollo -- Anniversary of Charles II's restoration -- To some ladies -- On receiving a curious shell -- To Emma -- To solitude -- To George Felton Mathew -- Hadst thou liv'd in days of old -- Had I a man's fair form, then might my sighs -- As from the darkening gloom -- How many bards -- Specimen of an induction -- Calidore -- Woman! when I behold thee flippant, vain -- Light feet, dark violet eyes, and parted hair -- Ah! who can e'er forget so fair a being -- Woman, wine, and snuff -- To one who as been long in city pent -- To a friend who sent me some roses -- Oh how I love -- Sonnet to my brother George -- Epistle to my brother George -- To Charles Cowden Clarke -- On first looking into Chapman's Homer -- Highmindedness, a jealousy for good -- Keen, fitful gusts -- Sonnet to a young lady who sent me a laurel crown -- To my Brothers -- Addressed to the same -- Before he went to feed with owls and bats -- On leaving some friends at an early hour -- To G.A.W. -- To Kosciusko -- Happy is England -- The poet -- Sonnet written in disgust of vulgar superstition -- On the grasshopper and cricket -- Sleep and poetry -- I stood tip-toe -- After dark vapours -- Sonnet on receiving a Laurel Crown from Leigh Hunt -- Sonnet to the ladies who say me crown'd -- Dedication to Leigh Hunt, Esq -- This pleasant tale is like a little copse -- On seeing the Elgin marbles for the first time -- To Haydon, with a sonnet on the Elgin marbles -- On the engraved gem of Leander -- On Leigh Hunt's poem "The story of Rimini" -- Hymn to Apollo -- On the sea -- Endymion -- The sun from Meridian Height -- On Oxford, a parody -- Think not of it, sweet one -- Unfelt, unheard, unseen -- Apollo and the graces -- Hither, hither, love -- You say you love -- In drear-nighted December -- Sonnet to a cat -- Lines on seeing a lock of Milton's hair -- On sitting down to read King Lear once again -- Welcome joy, and welcome sorrow -- The castle builder -- When I have fears -- O blush not so! -- Hence burgundy, claret, and port -- God of the meridian -- Spirit here that reignest -- Lines on the Mermaid Tavern -- Robin Hood -- To a lady seen for a few moments at Vauxhall -- To the Nile -- To Spenser -- Answer to a sonet ending: "Dark eyes" -- What the thrush said -- O! were I one of the Olympian twelve -- The sun, with his great eye -- When wedding fiddles are a-playing -- Oh, I am frighten'd with most hateful thoughts! -- The stranger lighted from his steed -- Asleep! O sleep a little while, white pearl -- The human seasons -- Some Doggerel -- The Devon maid -- Dawlish fair -- Epistle to John Hamilton Reynolds -- Isabella; or the Pot of Basil -- Shed not tear! oh shed no tear! -- Ah! woe is me! poor silver-wing! -- Sonnet, to A.G.S -- Sonnet, to James Rice -- To Homer -- Fragment of an Ode to Maria -- Acrostic, to Georgiana Augusta Keats -- Sweet, sweet is the greeting of eyes -- Sonnet on visiting the tomb of Burns -- A song of myself -- Old Meg -- A Galloway song -- To Ailsa Rock -- Written in the cottage where Burns was born -- The gadfly -- On hearing the bag-pipe and seeing "The stranger" played at Inverary -- Lines written in the Highlands -- Not Aladdin magian -- Written upon the top of Ben Nevis -- Ben Nevis: a dialogue -- Stanzas on some skulls in Beauley Abbey -- Translation from a sonnet of Ronsard -- Hyperion -- Spenserian stanza -- A prophecy -- Where's the poet -- Fancy -- Ode -- I had a dove -- Hush, hush! Tread softly -- The eve of St. Agnes -- First ode to Fanny Brawne -- Modern love -- The eve of Saint Mark -- Why did I laugh to-night? -- When they were come -- Character of Charles Brown -- Two or three posies -- On a dream -- Bright star -- Second ode to Fanny Brawne -- La belle dame sans merci (original) -- La belle dame sans merci (revised) -- Song of four fairies -- To sleep -- Fame, like a wayward girl, will still be coy -- How fever'd is the man, who cannot look -- On the sonnet -- Ode to Psyche -- Ode to a nightingale -- Ode on melacholy -- Ode on a Grecian urn -- Ode on Indolence -- The house of mourning -- Otho the great -- Lamia -- The fall of Hyperion, a dream -- A party of lovers -- To Autumn -- The day is gone -- King Stephen, a fragment -- The cap and bells; or The jealousies -- To Fanny (I cry your mercy - pity - love - aye love!) -- To Fanny Brawne (This living hand, now warm and capable) -- Prose: selected letters -- To Charles Cowden Clarke (Nov. 1816) -- To Benjamin Robert Haydon (Nov. 1816) -- To Fanny Keats (Sept. 1817) -- To Benjamin Bailey (Oct. 1817) -- To Benjamin Bailey (Nov. 1817) -- To Benjamin Robert Haydon (Jan. 1818) -- To George and Thomas Keast (Jan. 1818) -- To John Taylor (Jan. 1818) -- To George and Thomas Keats (Feb. 1818) -- To John Taylor (Feb. 1818) -- To John Hamilton Reynolds (Apr. 1818) -- To Benjamin Bailey (June 1818) -- To John Hamilton Reynolds (July 1818) -- To James Augustus Hessey (Oct. 1818) -- To Richard Woodhouse (Oct. 1818) -- To Fanny Keats (Dec. 1818) -- To Miss Jeffrey (June 1819) -- To Fanny Brawne (July 1819) -- To John Hamilton Reynolds (July 1819) -- To Fanny Brawne (July 1819) -- To Benjamin Bailey (Aug. 1819) -- To John Taylor (Aug. 1819) -- To John Hamilton Reynolds (Sept. 1819) -- To Fanny Keats (Dec. 1819) -- Fanny Keats (Feb. 1820) -- Fanny Brawne (Feb. 1820) -- To Fanny Brawne (March 1820) -- To Fanny Brawen (March 1820) -- To Fanny Keats (March 1820?) -- To Fanny Keats (June 1820) -- To Fanny Brawne (July 1820) -- To Fanny Keats (Aug. 1820) -- To Percy Bysshe Shelley (Aug. 1820) -- To Charles Brown (Aug. 1820) -- To Charles Brown (Nov. 1820) --
Subject: English poetry > 18th century
English prose literature > 18th century
English literature > 18th century

Available copies

  • 3 of 3 copies available at Sage Library System. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Treasure Valley Community College.
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Treasure Valley Community College Library. (Show)

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 3 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Circulation Modifier Status Due Date Courses
Treasure Valley Community College Library 821.78 K224co (Text) 32220000618450 Adult Non-Fiction Available -

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