part, The Poems -- chapter 210 ‘A winged City, like a ?[troop] of cloud’ -- chapter 212 ‘I have had a dream tonight’ -- chapter 213 ‘He [ ] cometh forth ?[from] among men’ -- chapter 215 ‘I love. What me? aye child, I love thee too’ -- chapter 216 ‘To lay my weary head upon thy lap’ -- chapter 218 ‘Come thou Awakener of the spirit’s Ocean’ -- chapter 219 ‘His face was like a Snake’s, wrinkled and loose’ -- chapter 220 ‘Like an eagle hovering’ -- chapter 221 ‘I hear, ye hear/The sudden whirlwind’ -- chapter 222 ‘A lone wood walk, where meeting branches lean’ -- chapter 223 ‘?[Oh] Music, thou art not “the food of Love”’ -- chapter 224 To Night -- chapter 225 ‘And like a dying lady lean and pale’ [The Waning Moon] -- chapter 226 ‘Mine eyes [ ] like two ever-bleeding wounds’ -- chapter 227 ‘?[Minds] perceive but not create’ -- chapter 228 ‘Polluting darkness tremblingly quivers’ -- chapter 230 ‘The fitful alternations of the rain’ -- chapter 231 The Mask of Anarchy -- chapter 232 ‘And in that deathlike [ ] cave’ -- chapter 233 ‘her dress/Antique and strange and beautiful’ -- chapter 235 ‘The roses arose early to blossom’ -- chapter 236 ‘[Bind] eagle wings upon the lagging hours’ -- chapter 237 ‘With weary feet chasing Unrest and Care’ -- chapter 239 Peter Bell the Third -- chapter 239 Appendix Drafts for Peter Bell’s ‘Ode to the Devil’ -- chapter 240 ‘My dear Brother Harry—for if all Kings are brothers’ -- chapter 241 ‘A golden-wingèd Angel stood’ -- chapter 242 ‘A daughter, mother and a grandmother’ -- chapter 243 ‘Proteus Wordsworth, who shall bind thee?’ -- chapter 244 An Ode (‘Arise, arise, arise!’) A. An Ode, Written, October, 1819, before the Spaniards had recovered their Liberty B. Ode for Music -- chapter 245 ‘Gather from the uttermost’ -- chapter 246 ‘If I walk in Autumn even’ -- chapter 247 ‘A swift and hidden Spirit of decay’ -- chapter 248 ‘The memory of the good is ever green’ -- chapter 249 ‘His bushy, wide and ?[solid beard]’ -- chapter 250 ‘The vale is like a vast Metropolis’ -- chapter 251 Ode to Heaven -- chapter 252 To S[idmouth] and C[astlereagh] -- chapter 253 ‘As deaf as adders—and as poisonous too’ -- chapter 254 ‘My lost William, thou in whom’ [To William Shelley] -- chapter 255 England in 1819 -- chapter 256 ‘’Twas the 20th of October’ -- chapter 257 ‘And what art thou, presumptuous, who profanest’ -- chapter 258 ‘Within the surface of the fleeting river’ -- chapter 259 Ode to the West Wind -- chapter 260 ‘Is not today enough? [why do I peer]’ -- chapter 261 ‘Child of Despair and Desire’ -- chapter 262 ‘What hast thou done then . . . Lifted up the curtain’ -- chapter 263 On the Medusa of Leonardo da Vinci, in the Florentine Gallery -- chapter 264 Love’s Philosophy -- chapter 265 ‘An infant in a boat without a helm’ -- chapter 266 ‘Sucking hydras hashed in sulphur’ -- chapter 267 ‘A Poet of the finest water’ -- chapter 268 ‘Now the day has died away’ -- chapter 269 ‘One atom of golden cloud, like a fiery star’ -- chapter 270 ‘Why would you overlive your life again?’ -- chapter 271 ‘Thou art fair, and few are fairer’ [To Sophia] -- chapter 272 To ——— (‘I fear thy kisses, gentle maiden’) -- chapter 273 Music (‘I pant for the music which is divine’) -- chapter 274 On a Dead Violet: To ——— -- chapter 274A ‘Follow to the deep wood, sweetest’ -- chapter 275 Time Long Past -- chapter 276 ‘Holy, my sweet love’ -- chapter 277 Goodnight -- chapter 278 ‘a metropolis/Hemmed in with mountainous walls and [craglike] towers’ -- chapter 279 ‘He wanders, like a day-appearing dream’ -- chapter 280 God and the Devil -- chapter 281 ‘People of England, ye who toil and groan’ -- chapter 282 ‘What men gain fairly, that should they possess’ -- chapter 283 An Exhortation -- chapter 284 ‘It was a winter such as when birds die’ -- chapter 285 ‘At the creation of the Earth’ [The Birth of Pleasure] -- chapter 286 An Allegory -- chapter 287 ‘The dashing of the [stream] is as the voices’ -- chapter 289 ‘’Twas in a wilderness of roses, where’ -- chapter 290 A Satire upon Satire -- chapter 291 Song: To the Men of England -- chapter 292 To ——— (‘Corpses are cold in the tomb’) -- chapter 293 ‘Thou widowed mother, whose wan breasts are dry’ -- chapter 294 ‘O thou power, the swiftest’ -- chapter 295 ‘By the everlasting God’ -- chapter 296 The Sensitive-Plant -- chapter 297 ‘What if the suns and stars and Earth’ -- chapter 298 ‘If the clouds which roof the sky’ -- chapter 300 Liberty -- chapter 301 ‘Time who outruns and oversoars whatever’ -- chapter 302 ‘Thou at whose dawn the Everlasting Sun’ -- chapter 303 ‘There is a wind which language faints beneath’ -- chapter 304 ‘O thou, Immortal Deity’ -- chapter 305 To ——— [Lines to a Reviewer] -- chapter 306 ‘una vallata verde’ -- chapter 307 ‘Pantherlike Spirit! beautiful and swift’ -- chapter 308 ‘Is it that in some ?[happier] sphere’ -- chapter 309 ‘Is there more on earth than we’ -- chapter 310 ‘I sing of one I knew not’ -- chapter 312 ‘Arethusa was a maiden’ -- chapter 313 ‘God save the Queen!’ [A New National Anthem] -- chapter 314 Dante’s Purgatorio Canto I, 1–6 -- chapter 315 Song of Proserpine, While Gathering Flowers on the Plain of Enna -- chapter 316 Song (‘Rarely, rarely comest thou’) -- chapter 317 Song of Apollo -- chapter 318 Song of Pan -- chapter 319 The Cloud -- chapter 320 ‘Like a black spider caught’ -- chapter 322 Ode to Liberty -- chapter 323 ‘Within a cavern of man’s inmost spirit’ -- chapter 324 Evening. Ponte a Mare, Pisa -- chapter 325 Letter to Maria Gisborne -- chapter 326 ‘It was a bright and cheerful afternoon’ -- chapter 327 ‘Ever round around thee flowering’ -- chapter 328 To Music (‘Silver key of the fountains of tears’) -- chapter 329 ‘In isles of odoriferous pines’ -- chapter 330 To a Sky-Lark -- chapter 331 Dante’s Purgatorio Canto XXVIII, 1–51 [Matilda Gathering Flowers] -- chapter 331 Appendix Medwin’s text of Shelley’s translation of Dante, Purgatorio XXVIII, 1–9, 22–51 -- chapter 332 ‘[ ? ] [sweet flower that I had sung]’ -- chapter 333 Appendix Draft passages for A Ballad not retained in the fair copy -- chapter 333A To ——— [the Lord Chancellor] -- chapter 334 ‘I had two babes—a sister and a brother’ -- chapter 335 To ——— [Lines to a Critic] -- chapter 336 Hymn to Mercury -- chapter 337 Death -- chapter 338 ‘An eagle floating in the golden [glory]’ -- chapter 339 ‘Where art thou, beloved Tomorrow?’ -- chapter 340 ‘If the good money which I lent to thee’ -- chapter 341 The Witch of Atlas -- chapter 341 Appendix Unused stanzas for The Witch of Atlas -- chapter 342 Sonnet: Political Greatness -- chapter 343 Ode to Naples -- chapter 344 Oedipus Tyrannus; or, Swellfoot the Tyrant -- chapter 344 Appendix Fragments connected with Oedipus Tyrannus -- chapter 345 ‘Bound in my hollow heart they lie’ -- chapter 346 ‘Deluge and dearth, ardours and frosts and earthquake’ -- chapter 347 ‘I stood upon a heaven-cleaving turret’ -- chapter 348 ‘Eagle! why soarest thou above that tomb?’ [Spirit of Plato] -- chapter 349 To Zanthippe -- chapter 350 ‘A man who was about to hang himself ’ [Circumstance] -- chapter 351 ‘Kissing Helena, together’ -- chapter 352 To Stella -- chapter 353 ‘[Archeanassa, thou of Colophon]’ -- chapter 354 ‘The lancinated gossamers were glancing’ -- chapter 355 ‘The dewy silence of the breathing night’ -- chapter 356 ‘Ye hasten to the [grave]! What seek ye there’ -- chapter 357 ‘The death knell is ringing’ -- chapter 358 From the Arabic—imitation.
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