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Market-Clock, For a, 181.

Mathematical Problem, A, 13.
Melancholy: a Fragment, 34.

Melancholy Letter, Lines to a Friend in Answer

to a, 43.

Metre, Experiments in, 470.

Metrical Feet, a Lesson for a Boy, 140.

Milton, Adaptation of, 473.

Minstrel, A Stranger, 155.

Miser, Epitaph on a Mercenary, 448.

Moles [included in Limbo '], 189.

Monk, The Mad, 156.

Monody on a Tea-Kettle, 12.

Monody on the Death of Chatterton-First Ver-

sion, 8; Latest Version, 61.

Moon, Sonnet to the Autumnal, 3.
Morgan, To Mrs., and her Sister, 179.
Moriens Superstiti, 29.
Morienti Superstes, 29.

Maporopía, or Wisdom in Folly, 449.
Motto for a Transparency, 450.
Muse, To the, 5.

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Picture, The, or the Lover's Resolution, 162.
Pindar, Translation from, 464.

Pitt, Sonnet on, 40.

Pixies, Songs of the, 21.

Poem, To a Friend with an Unfinished, 37.
Pondere non numero, 447.

Poole, Lines to Thomas, 459.

Prayer, A Child's Evening, 175.

Premiers and First Consuls, A Hint to, 446.

Pridham, To Mary, 203.

Priestley, Sonnet on, 39.
Primrose, To a, 64.

Prize Ode on the Slave Trade, Greek, 476.
Profuse Kindness, 468.

Progress of Vice, 8.

Published, To one who, in Print what had been
entrusted to him by my Fireside, 448.

Pye, To Mr., 444.

QUÆ nocent docent, 4.

RAIN, An Ode to the, 168.

Raven, The, 18, 475.

Reader of his own Verses, On a, 444.

Reason for Love's Blindness, 181.

Recantation, illustrated in the Story of the Mad
Ox, 133.

Recantation, The [i.e.' France: an Ode'], 124.

Recollection, 566.

Recollections of Love, 178.

Reflections on having left a place of Retire-

ment, 52.

Religious Musings, 53.

REMORSE, 360.

Remorse, Prologue and Epilogue to, 547.

Reproof and Reply, The, 191.

Revisiting the Sea-shore, On, 159.

Rime of the Ancient Mariner, The, 95, 512.

'Robbers, The,' To the Author of, 34.
ROBESPIERRE, THE FALL OF, 211.

Rose, The, 23.

Ross, Lines written at the King's Arms, 33.
Ruined House in a romantic Country, On a, III.
Rumford, Count, 64.

SABBATH-DAY, 456.

Saddleback, A Thought suggested by a View

of, 175.

Sancti Dominici Pallium, a Dialogue, 198.
Schiller, Sonnet to, 34.

School for College, Sonnet on quitting, 15.
Sea-shore, On revisiting the, 159.

Self-knowledge, 208.

Self-love, Duty surviving, 197

Sentimental, 451.

Separation, 175.

Sheridan, Sonnet to R. B., 42.

Shipwreck, To a Lady with Falconer's, 185.
Shurton Bars, Lines written at, 47.
Siddons, Sonnet on Mrs., 41.

Sigh, The, 29.

Silver Thimble, The, 51.
Simplicity, To, 110.

Singer, On a Bad, 445.

Sister, On seeing a Youth affectionately wel-
comed by a, 13.

Sister's Death was inevitable, On receiving an
Account that his only, 13.

Sisters, To Two, 179.
Slanderer, On a, 443.

Slave Trade, Greek Prize Ode on the, 476.
Sleep, The Pains of, 170.
Snow-drop, The, 158.

Sober Statement of Human Life, A, 473.

Solitude, Fears in, 127.

Something childish, but very natural, 146.
Song, ex improviso, 206.

Songs of the Pixies, 21.

Sonnet to a Friend who asked how I felt when the

66.

Nurse first presented my Infant to me,
Sonnets attempted in the Manner of Contem-
porary Writers, 110.

Sonnets on Eminent Characters, 38.

Sonnets on receiving news of the Birth of a
Son, 66.

Southey, Sonnet to Robert, 42.

Southwell, Robert, Adaptation of, 473.
Spenser, Lines in the Manner of, 46.

Spring in a Village, Lines to a beautiful, 24.
Stanhope, Sonnet to Earl, 43.

Stanhope, Sonnet to Lord, 42.

Starling, The Death of the [Catullus], 29.
Stranger Minstrel, A, 155.

Stripling's War-Song, The British, 141.
Suicide's Argument, The,

Answer, 182.

Sun, Spots in the, 450.

Sunset, A, 172.

and

Supper, Written after a Walk before, 44.

TALLEYRAND to Lord Grenville, 151.

Tea-Kettle, Monody on a, 12.

Tears of a grateful People, 188.

Tell's Birth-place, 142.

Thimble, The Silver, 51.

Nature's

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Young Lady, To a vain, 448.

Young Lady, To a, with a Poem on the French
Revolution, 6.

Young Man of Fortune, Addressed to a, 68.

Youth affectionately welcomed by a Sister, On

seeing a, 13.

Youth and Age, 191.

ZAPOLYA: a Christmas Tale, 399.

INDEX TO FIRST LINES

An asterisk (*) indicates that the verses are now printed or collected for the first time.

A BIRD, who for his other sins, 195.

A blessed lot hath he, who having passed, 81.
*A chance may win that by mischance was lost,
473.

A green and silent spot, amid the hills, 127.
*A heavy wit shall hang at every lord,' 451.
A joke (cries Jack) without a sting, 445.
A little further, O my father, 113.

A long deep lane so overshadow'd, 455.

A lovely form there sate beside my bed, 207.

*A low dead Thunder mutter'd thro' the night,

*

462.

A maniac in the woods, 456.

A mount, not wearisome and bare and steep, 67.
Α' poor benighted Pedlar knock'd, 448.

*A sumptuous and magnificent Revenge, 461.
A sunny shaft did I behold, 186, 422.

A sworded man whose trade is blood, 175.
*A wind that with Aurora hath abiding, 469.
*Admire they know not what, 473.

Ah! cease thy tears and sobs, my little Life! 44.
Ah! not by Cam or Isis, famous streams, 185.
All are not born to soar-and ah! how few, 17.
All look and likeness caught from earth, 172.
All Nature seems at work. Slugs leave their

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*And this is your peculiar art, I know, 468.

And this place our forefathers made for men! 85.
And this reft house is that the which he built,

III.

*And with my whole heart sing the stately song,

457.

*And write Impromptus, 454.

*Are there two things, of all which men possess,

171.

As Dick and I at Charing Cross were walking,

445.

As I am rhymer, 452.

As late each flower that sweetest blows, 23.
*As late in wreaths gay flowers I bound, 19.
As late I journey'd o'er the extensive plain, 7.
As late I lay in slumber's shadowy vale, 38.
As late on Skiddaw's mount I lay supine, 155.
As oft mine eye with careless glance, 51.
As the appearance of a star, 469.

As the tir'd savage, who his drowsy frame, 566.
As when a child on some long winter's night, 41.
As when far off the warbled strains are heard, 39.
* As when the new or full Moon urges, 462.
At midnight by the stream I roved, 27.
Auspicious Reverence! Hush all meaner
song, 70.

Away, those cloudy looks, that labouring
sigh, 43.

'BE, rather than be call'd, a child of God,' 145.
Behind the thin grey cloud that cover'd, 456.
*Behold yon row of pines, that shorn and bow'd,
463.

Beneath the blaze of a tropical sun, 174.
*Beneath this stone does William Hazlitt lie, 446.
*Beneath this thorn when I was young, 85.
Beneath yon birch with silver bark, 136.
*Blind is that soul which from this truth can

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