The Poems of Shelley: Volume One(Longman Annotated English Poets) hardcover 642 p. 89
内容
目次
Note by the General Editor, John Barnard; Chronological Table of Shelley’s Life and Publications, Geoffrey Matthews; Part 1 The Poems Chapter 1‘A Cat in distress’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 2 Written in Very Early Youth , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 3 Sadak the Wanderer. A Fragment , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 4 To the Moonbeam , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 5 Song. Translated from the German , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 6 The Irishman’s Song , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 7 Henry and Louisa , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 8 Revenge , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 9 Song , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 10 Ghasta; or the Avenging Demon!!! , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 11 The Wandering Jew; or the Victim of the Eternal Avenger , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 12 Olympia , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 13 The Revenge , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 14 February 28th 1805: To St Irvyne , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 15 Song , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 16 ‘How swiftly through Heaven’s wide expanse’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 17 ‘How eloquent are eyes!’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 18 ‘Hopes that bud in youthful breasts’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 19 Song: Despair , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 20 ‘Cold are the blasts’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 21 Song. Translated from the Italian , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 22 Fragment, or the Triumph of Conscience , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 23 Song: Sorrow , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 24 Song: Hope , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 25 Song: To—— , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 26 Song: To —— , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 27 Song: ‘How stern are the woes’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 28 Song: ‘Ah! faint are her limbs’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 29 ‘Late was the night’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 30 ‘Ghosts of the dead!’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 31 Ballad: ‘The death-bell beats!’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 32 ‘Ambition, power, and avarice’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 33 Fragment. Supposed to be an Epithalamium of Francis Ravaillac and Charlotte Cordé , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 34 Despair , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 35 Fragment , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 36 The Spectral Horseman , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 37 Melody to a Scene of Former Times , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 38 To Mary-I , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 39 To Mary-II , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 40 To Mary who died in this opinion , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 41 To Mary-III , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 42 To the Lover of Mary , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 43 To Death , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 44 To the Emperors of Russia and Austria , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 45 To Liberty , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 46 The Solitary , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 47 The Monarch’s Funeral: An Anticipation , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 48 The Wandering Jew’s Soliloquy , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 49 ‘I will kneel at thine altar’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 50 On an Icicle that clung to the grass of a grave , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 51 Fragment of a Poem , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 52 A Translation of the Marseillaise Hymn , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 53 ‘Dares the llama’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 54 A Dialogue , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 55 ‘Why is it said thou canst but live’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 56 Letter to Edward Fergus Graham , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 57 Second Letter to Edward Fergus Graham , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 58 Zeinab and Kathema , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 59 ‘Sweet star!’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 60 On a Fête at Carlton House , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 61 Written at Cwm Elan , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 62 ‘Death-spurning rocks!’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 63 To Harriet ********* , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 64 To November , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 65 ‘Full many a mind with radiant genius fraught’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 66 Passion: To the [Woody Nightshade] , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 67 A Winter’s Day , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 68 A Tale of Society as it is: from facts, 1811 , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 69 A Sabbath Walk , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 70 The Crisis , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 71 The Tombs , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 72 On Robert Emmet’s Tomb , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 73 To the Republicans of North America , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 74 ‘The Ocean rolls between us’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 75 ‘Bear witness, Erin!’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 76 Falsehood and Vice: A Dialogue , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 77 Written on a Beautiful Day in Spring , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 78 ‘Dark Spirit of the desert rude’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 79 The Retrospect: Cwm Elan 1812 , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 80 To Harriet , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 81 Mary to the Sea-Wind , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 82 Sonnet: To Harriet on her Birthday, August 1 1812 , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 83 The Devil’s Walk: A Ballad , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 84 Sonnet: On Launching some Bottles filled with Knowledge into the Bristol Channel , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 85 Sonnet: To a Balloon, Laden with Knowledge , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 86 A Retrospect of Times of Old , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 87 To Harriet , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 88 Sonnet: On Waiting for a Wind to Cross the Bristol Channel from Devonshire to Wales , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 89 The Voyage. A Fragment… Devonshire-August 1812 , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 90 On Leaving London for Wales , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 91 To Harriet , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 92 Queen Mab , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 93 ‘The pale, the cold, and the moony smile’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 94 To Harriet , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 95 To Ianthe , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 96 Evening: To Harriet , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 97 To Harriet , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 98 Stanza, written at Bracknell , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 99 Lines: ‘That moment is gone for ever’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 100 Fragments written in Claire Clairmont’s Journal , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 101 Stanzas.-April, 1814 , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 102 ‘Mine eyes were dim with tears unshed’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 103 ‘Dear Home …’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 104 ‘On her hind paws the Dormouse stood’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 105 ‘What Mary is …’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 106 ‘O! there are spirits of the air’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 110 Guido Cavalcanti to Dante Alighieri , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 111 To Wordsworth , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 112 Feelings of a Republican on the Fall of Bonaparte , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 113 Mutability , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 114 114 Alas tor; or, The Spirit of Solitude , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 115 The Daemon of the World , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 115a [Fragment revised from Queen Mab v 1–15] , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 116 The Sunset , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 117 Verses written on receiving a Celandine in a letter from England , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 118 Lines to Leigh Hunt , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 119 ‘A shovel of his ashes’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 120 To Laughter , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 121 ‘Upon the wandering winds’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 122 ‘O that a chariot of cloud were mine’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 123 Hymn to Intellectual Beauty , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 124 Mont Blanc. Lines Written in the Vale of Chamouni , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 125 ‘My thoughts arise and fade in solitude’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 126 ‘Her voice did quiver as we parted’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 127 To [ ] , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 128 To[ ] , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 129 ‘They die-the dead return not’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 130 A Hate-Song (improvised) , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 131 To the [Lord Chancellor] , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 132 ‘Maiden / Thy delightful eyne’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 133 ‘In the yellow western sky’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 134 To Wilson S_____th , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 135 Otho , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 136 ‘Mighty Eagle, thou that soarest’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 137 ‘I visit thee but thou art sadly changed’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 138 Marianne’s Dream , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 139 ‘The billows on the beach are leaping around it’ , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 140 Translated from an Epigram of Plato, cited in the Apologia of Apuleius , Percy Bysshe Shelley; Chapter 141 ‘Shapes about my steps assemble’;