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The Works of Lord Byron, Vol. 7. - Poetry
by George Gordon Byron
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Teuman, king of Elam, v. 4

Thackeray, W.M., Vanity Fair, vi. 197

Thakombau, king, v. 600

Thamas Kouli Khan, Nadir Shah, vi. 384

Thames, ii. 66; vi. 434

The Harp the Monarch Minstrel swept, iii. 382

The spell is broke, the charm is flown, iii. 12

Thatre Imprial Lyrique, v. 2

Theatre Royal, Brussels, v. 2

Theatre Royal, Haymarket, Werner at, v. 324

Theatre Royal, Manchester, Sardanapalus at, v. 2

Thebes, ii. 93

Thellusson, Peter Isaac (Lord Rendlesham), banker, i. 425, 471

Themistocles, ii. 190; iii. 85; iv. 423

Theodoret, Hist. Eccl., ii. 521

Theodoric, iv. 386

Theodosius, ii. 390, 472

There was a time, I need not name, i. 264

Thermia (Kythnos) island, ii. 156

Thermopyl, ii. 149; iii. 21, 91

Theseus, ii. 102; vi. 255; Temple of, i. 459; iii. 272

Thessaly, ii. 126

Thetis, v. 489; vi. 184

Thibault, Mes Souvenirs de vingt ans de Sjour Berlin, ou Frdric le Grand, etc., v. 637

Thirty Years' War, the, ii. 186; v. 340

Thirza, Abel's wife, v. 209

Thisbe, vi. 235

Thistlewood, vi. 67

Thomas, wreck of the, vi. 103, 110

Thomson (Seasons), ii. 5, 65, 489; iii. 224; v. 615; vi. 200; his use of "shook," v. 135; Castle of Indolence, v. 502; Liberty, vi. 200

Thomson, Ninian Hill, translation of Machiavelli's Il Principe, vi. 424

Thornton, Thomas, Present State of Turkey, ii. 191, 194-196, 206

Thoroton, History of Nottinghamshire, iv. 35

Thorpe, Markham, iii. 425

Thorwaldsen, vi. 79

Thou art not false, but thou art fickle, iii. 64

Thoughts suggested by a College Examination, i. 28

Thrasybulus, ii. 150, 185; iv. 440

Thrasymene, Lake, ii. 377-379; battle of, ii. 505

Throsby, Thornton's History of Nottinghamshire, iv. 35

Thun, Lake, iv. 119

Thurlow, Edward Hovell, Lord, Poems on Several Occasions, vii. 17-19; Hermilda in Palestine, vii. 19

Thy days are done, iii. 391

Thyrza, iii. 30, 388

Tiber, ii. 390

Tiberius Csar, ii. 374, 408, 488

Tibullus, i. 73; Sulpicia ad Cerinthum, i. 74; Eleg., iii. 199

Tickell, pasquinade on Wilkes, iv. 511

Ticknor, George, History of Spanish Literature, iv. 484, 496, 523, 530; v. 207; vi. xx, 40, 41

Tigris, river, v. 13

Tilleman, Peter, his picture of Newstead Abbey, vi. 590

Tillotson, Archbishop, vi. 128, 303

Tilly, Johann Tserclas, Count von, v. 371, 416

Tilly, Mr., possessor of Tom Paine's bones, vii. 65

Timariots, the, iii. 166

Timbuctoo, vi. 51

Times, The, ii. xii, 11, 288, 401; iii. 534; v. 114, 324; vi. 275; vii. 27, 28

Timoleon, iii. 452; iv. 423

Timon, ii. 8

Timophanes, iii. 452; iv. 423

Timor island, v. 583

Timr Bey, or Timr Lang (Tamerlane), iii. 312; v. 489

Tindal, Dr., i. 449

Tio Jorge (Jorge Ibort), v. 559

Tipaldo, Biografia degli Italian Illustri, iv. 245, 457

Tiraboschi, Storia delta Letteratura Italiana, ii. 481, 486, 494, 496, 501

Tiresias, vi. 535

Tirhakah (Tarku), king of Ethiopia, v. 4

Titans, vi. 385

Tithonus, v. 497

Titian, iv. 141; vi. 502, 589; Venus of, iv. 162; his portrait of, Ariosto, iv. 162

Titius, ii. 492

Titus, ii. 392, 409, 410, 424, 445; iii. 401; vi. 139, 174; "Amici, diem perdidi," vi. 575

Titus Andronicus, ii. 22

Tlepolemus, a worker in wax, ii. 168

To——, i. 242; iv. 564

To a beautiful Quaker, i. 38

To a knot of Ungenerous Critics, i. 38, 213

To a Lady, i. 189; iv. 37

To a Lady, on being asked my reason for quitting England in the Spring, i. 282

To a Lady who presented the Author with the velvet band which bound her tresses, i. 212, 233

To a Lady, who presented to the Author a lock of hair braided with his own, and appointed a night in December to meet him in the garden, i. 36

To a vain Lady, i. 70, 244

To a youthful friend, i. 271

To an Oak at Newstead, i. 256

To Anne, i. 70, 246, 251

To Belshazzar, iii. 421

To Caroline, i. xi, 8, 9, 21, 23

To D——, i. 7

To Dives. A Fragment, ii. 37; vii. 7

To E——, i. 4, 20

To Edward Noel Long, i. 101, 184, 244

To Eliza, i. xi, 47

To Emma, i. 12

To Florence, iii. 4, 5

To Genevra (sonnet), iii. 67, 70, 71

To George, Earl of Delawarr, i. 7, 126

To George Anson Byron, vii. 41

To Harriet, i. 263

To her who can best understand them (spurious), iii. xxi

To Ianthe, ii. 11; iii. 65, 384

To Inez, ii. 59, 75; iii. 1

To Lady Caroline Lamb (spurious), iii. xxi

To Lesbia, i. 41

To Lord Thurlow, vii. 19

To M—, i. 68

To M.S.G., i. 76, 79

To Marion, i. 129, 263

To Mary, i. xi, xiii

To Mary, on receiving her Picture, i. 32, 192

To Miss Chaworth (spurious), iii. xx

To Miss E.P. [To Eliza], i. xi

To Mr. Murray, vii. 44, 56, 76

To my dear Mary Anne (spurious), iii. xx

To my Son, i. 260; vi. 591

To Penelope, vii. 71

To Romance, i. 174

To the Author of a Sonnet beginning, "'Sad is my Verse,' you say, 'And yet no tear'", i. 252

To the Countess of Blessington, iv. 565

To the Duke of Dorset, i. 194

To the Earl of Clare, i. 200

To the Hon. Mrs. George Lamb, vii. 15

To the Lily of France (spurious), iii. xx

To the sighing Strephon, i. 63

To Thomas Moore, vii. 43, 46

To Thomas Moore, written the Evening before his visit to Mr. Leigh Hunt in Horsemonger Lane Gaol, May 19, 1813, vii. 16

To Thyrza, ii. 104; iii. 30

To Woman, i. 43

Toa, a drooping casuarina, v. 599

Tobacco, in praise of, v. 615

Tobit, v. 286, 527

Todd, Rev. J.H., Archdeacon of Cleveland ("Oxoniensis"), A Remonstrance to Mr. John Murray respecting a Recent Publication, v. 202

Token-flowers, iii. 17

Tolbooth prison, Edinburgh, i. 334

Toledo, Judah de, translation of Avicenna's Works, iv. 523

Tolstoi, War and Peace, vi. 351

Tomaros, Mount (Olytsika), ii. 132, 134, 182

Tomasini, Petrarca Redivivus, ii. 373

Tonson, Jacob, publisher of The Spectator, vi. 555; vii. 56

Toobo Neuha, a Tongau chieftain, v. 609

Tooke, Andrew, Pantheon, vi. 26

Tooke, John Home (Pantheon), ii. 156; iv. 513, 516; vi. 580

Tooke, Thomas, vi. 480

Tooke, W., Life of Catherine II., vi. 314, 370, 386, 389, 395, 417

Tophaike, musquet, iii. 96

Topham, Captain, editor of The World, i. 353, 358

Tornabuoni, Lucrezia, iv. 280

Torniellus, v. 306

Torrens. W.T. M'Cullagh, Memoirs of Viscount Melbourne, i. 476

Torriano, Anonimo, iv. 332

Torstenson, Lennart, Swedish General, v. 371

Tortoises, in the Troad, vi. 204

Tott, Baron de, Memoirs concerning the State of the Turkish Empire, vi. 261, 277

Tournefort, Joseph Pitton de, Relation d'un Voyage du Levant, iii. 121, 295; v. 294; vi. 216, 233

Tower of London, i. 438

Towneley Plays, v. 207

Townly, i. 399

Townsend, Rev. George, Canon of Durham, Armageddon, i. 403

Townshend, Lord John, pasquinade on Wilkes, iv. 511

Tozer, H.F. Geography of Greece; Childe Harold, ii. 60, 62, 113, 117, 123, 134, 139, 143, 146, 158, 167, 180-182, 186, 217, 271, 292, 344, 373, 452

Tractors, metallic, i. 307

Trafalgar, ii. 126, 178, 459

Trajan, his column, ii. 410, 411

Tranchant de Laverne, L.M.P., The Life of Field Marshal Souvaroff, vi. 222, 320-322

Translation from Adrian, i. 20

Translation from Anacreon, i. 147, 149, 228

Translation from Catullus, Ad Lesbiam, i. 72

Translation from Horace, i. 81

Translation from Prometheus Vinctus of schylus, i. 14

Translation from the Medea of Euripides, i. 168

Translation from Vittorelli, iv. 535

Translation of a Romaic Love Song, iii. 62

Translation of the Epitaph on Virgil and Tibullus by Domitius Marsus, i. 73

Translation of the famous Greek War Song, [Greek: Deute paides tv HEll/nn ], iii. 20

Translation of the Nurse's Dole in the Medea of Euripides, vii. 10

Translation of the Romaic Song, [Greek: Mre/n mes' to peribo/li, Hraiota/t Chad/, k.t.l.], iii. 22

Travis, Archdeacon George, ii. 283

Treason Bill, iv. 511

Trecentisti, the, vi. 168

Tree, Miss Ellen (afterwards Mrs. Charles Kean), iv. 78; as "Myrrha" in Sardanapalus, v. 2

Trelawny, E.T., Records of Shelley, Byron, and the Author, iv. 539; vii. 78; Recollections, etc., vi. 608

Trvoux, Journal de (Mmoires de), iv. 578

Trimmer, Sarah, Easy Introduction to the Study of Nature; History of the Robins, vi. 18

Tripolitza, iii. 447

Tripp, Baron, i. 476, 499

Triptolemus, v. 570

Tritonia, or Tritogenia, epithet of Athene, ii. 156

Troad, the, vi. 204

Trocnow, John of (surnamed žižka, or the "One-eyed"), v. 549

Troilus and Cressida, ii. 124; iv. 319

Troppau, Congress at, v. 563

Troubadours, the, ii. 6

Troy, ii. 294; iv. 243, 334; vi. 173, 211

Troyes, Bishop of, ii. 338

Tschairowsky, "Manfred Symphony," iv. 78

Tubal-Cain, v. 291

"Tuism," vi. 575

Tullia, Cicero's daughter, ii. 405

Tully, iv. 253

Tully, Richard, Narrative of a Ten Years' Residence in Tripoli in Africa, etc., vi. 160

Turcomans, the, iii. 453

Turenne, Marshal, i. 493; iv. 262

Turgot, v. 554

Turin, Agilulf, Duke of, ii. 489

Turkey, travelling in, ii. 204

Turks, ii. 206; their hatred of the Arabs, iii. 163; defeated by Greeks near Lerna, v. 556

Turnus, i. 157, 161, 163

Turtukey, or Tutrahaw, fall of, vi. 370

Tuscan, "that soft bastard Latin," iv. 173

Tuscany and its Dukes, ii. 503

Tusculum, ii. 454, 522

Tweddell, Remains of the late John, iii. 4

Tweed, river, i. 334

Twelfth Night, vi. 268, 272

Two Foscari, The, ii. 187, 327; iv. 364, 477, 479; v. 3, 5, 9, 113-196, 199, 203, 469; vi. 199, 586; vii. 77

Two Gentlemen of Verona, vi. 189

Tyndal, N., translation of Cantemir's Othman Empire, vi. 259

Tyrants, the Thirty, vi. 446

Tyrconnel, Fanny Jennings, Duchess of, vi. 496

Tyre, i. 376; v. 4; vi. 348

Tyrian purple, vi. 574

Tyrwhitt, Rev. Edmund, vii. 27

Tyrwhitt, Thomas, editor of Canterbury Tales, vii. 27

Tyrwhitt, Sir Thomas, Private Secretary to the Prince of Wales, auditor of the Duchy of Cornwall, Lord Warden of the Stannaries, Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod, vii. 27

Tzigaras, A., ii. 198



U

Uberti, Fazio degli, iv. 248

Ude, Louis Eustache, The French Cook, vi. 562

Uffizi Gallery, Florence, ii. 365

Ugolino, iv. 258

Ukraine, Russian, or frontier region, iv. 201, 220

Ulysses, vi. 117, 149

Umbrinus, ii. 416, 516

United States of America, war with England, i. 496

Unspunnen, Castle of, iv. 110, 129

Upton, William, Poems on Several Occasions; Words of the most Favourite Songs, Duets, etc., vii. 59

Urban V., ii. 482

Urbino, Duke of, ii. 503

Urbino, Simone di Battista di Ciarla da, iv. 174

Urdamanɇ, king of Ethiopia, v. 4

Urlichs, Dr. H.S., The Elder Pliny's Chapters on the History of Art, ii. 432

Urquhart, translation of Rabelais' Gargantua, v. 354

Ursinus, Fulvius, ii. 510, 517

Usbergo, or sbergo, iv. 308

Ushant, battle of, vi. 12

Uticans, the, v. 506

Utraikey, or Lutraki, ii. 142, 143

Utrecht, Peace of, iv. 334



V

Vacca, Flaminius, ii. 508, 509, 511, 515

Vaccination, i. 307; vi. 50

Vaga, Pierrin del, ii. 437

Valentia, George Annesley, Viscount, Voyages and Travels, etc., i. 378, 379

Valenza, Cardinal of, ii. 367

Valerianus, I.P., De fulminum significationibus Declamatio, ii. 489

Valerius Flaccus, Argonaut, i. 200

Valerius Maximus, Factorum Dictorumque Memorabilia, ii. 437; iii. 307; v. 543; vi. 46

Valetta, iii. 24

Valid, son of Abdalmalek, iii. 120

Vallance, General Charles, R.E., Essay on the Celtic Language, vi. 337

Vallaresso, Ermolao, v. 134

Valley of Sweet Waters, ii. 153

Valori, vi. 337

Valpy, A.J., ii. 437

Vampires, iii. 121-123

Vanbrugh, The Provoked Husband, i. 399

Vandals, the, iii. 235, 251

Vansittart, i. 471

Varchi, Ercolano, ii. 495

Varro, M. Terentius, ii. 92; iv. 253; Rerum Rusticarum, vi. 348

Vasari, iv. 163

Vasilly the Albanian, ii. 75, 130

Vathek (W. Beckford), ii. 37; iii. 59, 76, 87, 105, 109, 110, 121, 145, 478; iv. 45, 89, 113, 244

Vauban, vi. 344

Vaughan, Charles Richard, Narrative of the Siege of Saragoza, ii. 91, 94

Vaughan, Taylor, A Familiar Epistle, etc., i. 445; iv. 74

Vault, The, vii. 35

Vaux, James Hardy, Vocabulary of the Flash Language, vi. 431

Velinus, Lake, ii. 382, 384

Vely Pasha, Vizier of the Morea, ii. 203, 205

Vendme Column, v. 548

Vendoti, Georgie (Bentotes, or Bendotes), ii. 197; iii. 121

Venetian Institute, the, iv. 457

Venetian Lombardy, iv. 197

Venetians, besiege Athens, ii. 165; their love of music and poetry, ii. 471; their society and manners, iv. 469

Veneziano, Luca, iv. 283

Venezuela, v. 555

Venice, ii. 327; decline of, ii. 477; iv. 193-198, 456; Alamanni's prophecy, iv. 459

Venice, a Fragment, iv. 537

Veniero, Sebastian, ii. 340

Venturi, iv. 318

Venus de' Medici, ii. 365, 489; vi. 200

Venus, cestus of, ii. 272

Venus and Adonis, vi. 487

Venuti, Ab. R., Accurata et Succincta Descrizione di Roma moderna, ii. 513, 517

Vercingetorix, iv. 331

Vernet, vi. 502

Vernon, Admiral Edward, vi. 12

Vernon, Lady, Journal of Mary Frampton, vii. 40

Veroccio, Andrea, iv. 336

Verona, Congress at, v. 537-539, 562, 573, 574, 575, 576; vi. 453; amphitheatre at, v. 561

Verres, i. 455; ii. 168, 170

Verrucchio, Gianciotto da, iv. 316

Verrucchio, Malatesta da, Lord of Rimini, iv. 316

Verrucchio, Paolo da, iv. 316

Verses addressed in the Year 1812 to the Hon. Mrs. George Lamb, iii. 32

Verses found in a Summer-house at Hales-Owen, iii. 59

Versicles, vii. 45

Version of Ossian's Address to the Sun, A, vii. 2

Very mournful Ballad on the Siege and Conquest of Alhama, A, iii. xix; iv. 529

Vespasian, ii. 298, 392, 408, 410, 512, 524

Vespucci, Amerigo, iv. 262

Vestris, i. 347

Vesuvius, v. 552

Vevey, ii. 277, 303

Vianolo, L'Histoire Vnitienne, v. 124

Vicovaro, village of, ii. 523

Vienna, Congress of, ii. 402; v. 538, 550, 562; vi. 399; Siege of, iii. 458; taken by the French, v. 550; Treaty of, v. 550

Villa Ludovisi, ii. 432

Villani, P., Liber de Florenti Famosis Civibus, iv. 309

Villanuova, Alberti di, Dizzionario Universale, iv. 309

Villari, Professor, ii. 415

Villehardouin, ii. 329

Villle, M. de, v. 575

Villeneuve, town, iv. 18, 26, 120

Villeneuve, Jrme Petion de, Mayor of Paris, vi. 13

Villiers, De, Le Festin de Pierre, ou le fils criminel, vi. xvi

Vimercato, Augustino, Canzoni di Dante, etc., iv. 248

Vimiera, battle of, ii. 39

Virgil, iv. 319; vi. 73, 478; neid, i. xii, 25, 151, 372, 382, 451, 477; ii. 64, 71, 133, 143, 189, 384, 396, 407, 510, 514; vi. 521, 526; Domitius Marsus' epitaph on, i. 73; "and Maro sang," i. 312; Georgics, i. 362, 440; ii. 379; vi. 323; "forced no more to groan O'er Virgil's devilish verses," i. 405; Heyne's edition of, i. 490; "Alas, for Virgil's lay," ii. 392; Petrarch's, ii. 480; Mantua his birthplace, ii. 507; Eclogues, iv. 567; v. 289; vi. 26, 185, 492

Visconti, Ennius Quirinus, ii. 324, 518

Visconti, Filippo, Duke of Milan, v. 116

Vision of Belshazzar, iii. 397

Vision of Don Roderick, i. 436; ii. 4, 51

Vision of Judgment, i. 305; iv. 280, 473-525, 579; v. 196; vi. xvi, 4, 75, 338, 445

Vitellius, ii. 299

Vitepsk, battle of, iv. 207

Vitiges, a Dalmatian, ii. 390

Vittorelli, Jacopo, iv. 535

Vittoria, battle of, iii. 416

Vittoria Colonna, iv. 262

Vivian, General, ii. 234

Viviani, Vincenzo, ii. 369

Vlack (Wallachia), Bey of, ii. 199

Vocabolario Italiano-Latino, iv. 308

Vog, Viscount E. Melchior de, Le Fils de Pierre Le Grand, Mazeppa, etc., iv. 203, 220

Voart, Madame Elise, Chants Populaires des Servics, iii. 188

Volondorako, ii. 142

Voltaire, Franois Marie Arouet de, Pucelle, i. 437; Candide, ou l'Optimisme, ii. 41, 89, 281; vi. 226; Rousseau and, ii. 266; imprisoned in the Bastille, ii. 282; his Ferney Estate, ii. 306; Henriade, iii. 361; Mariamne, iii. 400; Benjamin Brue, iii. 442; Byron's Sonnet to Lake Leman, iv. 53; Wordsworth and Coleridge v., iv. 184; vi. 363; Histoire de Charles XII., iv. 201, 205, 220; OEuvres, iv. 212; on Venice, iv. 456; La Bible enfin explique, etc., v. 208; Dieu et les Hommes, v. 210; his grave, v. 548; Essai sur les Moeurs et L'Esprit des Nations, v. 549; Nino de Lenclos' bequest, vi. 246; Byron's two quotations from, vi. 266; and Frederick the Great, vi. 337; Correspondence avec L'Emperatrice de Russie, vi. 381; lments de la Philosophie de Newton, vi. 400; "la bonne socit rgle tout," vi. 470

Volume of Nonsense, A, vii. 70

von Duhn, F., ii. 395

von Ranke, Leopold, History of Servia, iii. 188

von Stolberg, Louise, ii. 369

von Talvi, Volkslieder der Serben, iii. 188

Vopiscus, ii. 520

Vrskla river, iv. 208, 233

Vossius, I., De Ant. Urb. Rom. Mag., ii. 516

Vostizza, ii. 60

Voygoux, Louis Charles Antoine Desaix de, vi. 14

Vuilliemin, Chillon tude Historique, iv. 5

Vuillier, G. (Heinemann), History of Dancing, i. 492



W

Waddington, Samuel Ferrand, A Key to a Delicate Investigation. An Address to the People of the United Kingdom, vi. 265

Wagner, Richard, Rienzi, ii. 415

Wahabees, the, ii. 151, 186

Waithman, Sir Robert ("Bobby"), M.P. for the City of London, vii. 67, 68

Wake, Kyd, iv. 511

Walcheren Expedition, the, vii. 29

Waldegrave, James Earl, Memoirs, vii. 76

Waldie, Miss Jane, iii. 313; Sketches Descriptive of Italy, iv. 471

Waldstein, Albrecht Wenceslaus Eusebius, Count of, v. 371

Wales, Princess Charlotte of, vi. 19

Waliszewski, K., The Story of a Throne, vi. 381, 389, 399, 412; Romance of an Empress, vi. 388

Walker, Wolcot v., v. 204

Wallace Collection, the, iv. 461

Wallach, J.W., as "Ulric" in Werner, v. 324

Wallachia (Vlack), Bey of, ii. 199; conquered by the Austrians, vi. 222

Waller, i. 306

Walpole, Horace, ii. 480; vi. 208; Memoirs of the Reign of King George II., iii. 299; vii. 76; Letters, iv. 339, 367; vi. 528; Castle of Otranto; Mysterious Mother, iv. 339, 367; "the summer has set in with its usual severity," iv. 505

Walpole, Sir Robert, i. 414; vii. 68

Walpole, Rev. Robert, ii. 204

Walsh, Rev. Dr. R., Narrative of a Resident in Constantinople, iii. 16

Walton, Izaak, vi. 513

Waltz, The, i. 475-502; ii. 53, 177; iii. 251; v. 537; vi. 151, 448, 451; vii. 33, 46

Warburton, Bishop (The Divine Legation of Moses, etc.), v. 209; vi. 487; "orthodoxy is my doxy," vi. 267; Works of Pope, vi. 453

Ward, Hon. J.W., iii. 217, 499; vii. 49, 54

Warden, William, Letters written on board His Majesty's Ship the Northumberland, and at St. Helena, v. 545

Wardle, Colonel Gwyllim Lloyd, i. 391

Ware, ii. 66, 88; bed of, vi. 272

Warens, Madame de, ii. 266, 303

Waring, Major John Scott, ii. 7

Warner, Mrs., as "Josephine" in Werner, v. 324

Warton, Dr. Joseph, ii. 480

Warton, Dr. Thomas, poet-laureate, i. 305, 411; iii. 452, 474; vi. 166; History of English Poetry, v. 200, 207

Warville, Jean Pierre Brissot de, vi. 13

Washington, George, iv. 516; v. 554; vi. 331, 376

Waterloo, ii. 226, 255, 293, 459; iii. 429, 431; v. 538; vi. 345, 375, 539

Watkins, Dr. John, Memoirs, etc., of Lord Byron, v. 203, 474

Watson, James, a Radical agitator, vi. 265

Watson, Richard, Bishop of Llandaff, ii. 283; Anecdotes of the Life of, v. 208

Watts, A.A., iii. 280

Waverley, iv. 334; v. 209; vi. 272, 404

Way, Billy, i. 348

Webb, William Frederick, vi. 497

Webb, Miss Geraldine (Lady Chermside), vi. 497

Weber, W.H. (Scott's amanuensis), Metrical Romances of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Centuries, i. 396; iii. 145

Webster, Lady Elizabeth (afterwards Lady Holland), ii. 80

Webster, Lady Frances Wedderburn, iii. 67, 69, 149, 218, 319, 390; vi. 375, 451

Webster, James Wedderburn, iii. 149, 381; iv. 459 Waterloo and other Poems, vii. 45

Webster, Sir Godfrey, Bart., ii. 80

Weekly Messenger (Boston), iii. 297, 307

Weekly Political Register, ii. 40

Weekly Register, v. 540, 572; vi. 266

Weevers, John, Funerall Monuments, vi. 422

Well! thou art happy, i. 277; iv. 37

Wellesley, Marquis of, ii. 79, 497

Wellesley, William Pole Tylney Long, vi. 451

Wellington, Duke of, i. 485; v. 568, 575-577; "new victories," i. 496; Childe Harold on, ii. xi; Convention of Cintra, ii. 39, 86; has enacted marvels, ii. 88; Lady de Ros, ii. 230; The "Holy Alliance," ii. 402; Waterloo, ii. 459; vi. 345; in Parenthetical Address, iii. 57; Mrs. Boehm's masquerade, iv. 177; Achilles statue in Hyde Park inscribed to, v. 535; at the Vienna Congress, v. 539; "filled the sign-posts then, like Wellesley now," vi. 12; "great moral lesson," vi. 266; and Dan Mackinnon, vi. 276; Don Juan, Canto IX., vi. 373; the Kinnaird-Marinet incident, vi. 374; "I have seen a Duke turn politician stupider," vi. 452; "has but enslaved the whites," vi. 461

Wellington Despatches, ii. 50, 51; vi. 345, 374

Wells, Bishop Hugh de, vi. 596

Welschinger, Henri, L'Ami de M. de Tallyrand, vi. 507

Wentworth, Lord, i. 437

Wentworth, W.C., A Statistical Description, etc., of N.S. Wales, v. 588

Were my bosom as false, etc., iii. 399

Werner, i. 369; iii. 521; iv. 19, 21, 81, 122, 226; v. 279, 323-466, 543, 549, 611, 612; vi. 148

Werner, Franz von (Murad Effendi), iv. 329

Werner, Friedrich Ludwig Zacharias, v. 347

Werther, i. 476, 494

Wesley, John, iv. 522; vi. 303

West, Benjamin, i. 389, 466

West, Mrs. W., actress, iv. 324

Westall, W., A.R.A., ii. 11; vi. 478

Western, v. 572

Westminster, Marquis of (Lord Robert Grosvenor), i. 412

Westminster Review, iii. 25, 76; vi. 3; vii. 86

Westmoreland, John Fane, 10th Earl of, vii. 28

Westphalia, Peace of, v. 340, 372; Congress of, vi. 531

Wharton, Henry Thornton, Sappho, vi. 180

Wheat, prices in England (1818-1822), v. 539

Wheatley, H.B., London Past and Present, iv. 161

When coldness wraps this suffering clay, iii. 395

When I roved a young Highlander, i. 191

When we two parted, iii. 410

Whig Club of Fox's time, its uniform of blue and buff, vi. 9

Whig Club, Cambridge, vii. 66, 68

Whiskey, a light carriage, ii. 65

Whist, vi. 173

Whiston, vi. 400

Whitbread, Samuel, iii. 54; iv. 75, 519; vi. 451; vii. 30

White, Henry Kirke, i. 363; ii. 123; Remains, iv. 522

White, Miss Lydia, Sydney Smith's "Tory Virgin," iv. 569; "Miss Diddle" of The Blues, iv. 570; her death, iv. 587

Whitefield, i. 412

Whitworth, Earl of, i. 195

Wicklow, the Irish gold-mine in, i. 426

Wicksteed, Rev. Philip H., iv. 248

Wiel, Alethea, Two Doges of Venice, v. 119, 121, 133, 143, 171, 178, 179, 183, 190, 193

Wieland's Oberon, i. 362; iii. 263

Wilberforce, iv. 181; vi. 461, 549

Wild Gazelle, The, iii. 384

Wilderswyl, village of, iv. 119

Wildman, Colonel Thomas, i. 89, 257; vi. 496, 497, 589

Wilhelm, Paul, ii. 299

Wilkes, John, iv. 476, 480, 508-511

Wilkie, Dr. W., i. 403; Epigoniad, i. 436

Wilkie, Sir David, "The Defence of Saragossa," ii. 92

William the Conqueror, iv. 543; vi. 410

William and Mary, vi. 496

William I. of Germany, his "triumphant piety," vi. 370

William I. of Holland, ii. 225

William III., i. 198

Williams, Edward, v. 331

Williams, Hugh W., Travels in Italy, Greece, etc., iii. 15, 16

Williams (Anthony Pasquin), i. 304

Williams, Dr., Theol. Lib., iv. 479

Willis, Chief Justice, iv. 585

Willis, Rev. Dr. Francis, i. 416; ii. 43

Willis, John, i. 416

Willis, Margaret (Lady Beaumont), iv. 585

Willis' Rooms, i. 347

Wilmot, Juliana, Lady, iii. 381

Wilmot, Mrs. (Barberina Ogle), afterwards Lady Wilmot Horton, then Lady Dacre, the original of "She walks in Beauty," iii. 381; iv. 569, 570; vii. 48, 54; Ina, a Tragedy, vii. 48

Wilmot, Sir Robert John (afterwards Wilmot Horton), iii. 381; vii. 54

Wilmot, Sir Robert, iii. 381

Wilson, printer, i. 452

Wilson, John (Christopher North), ii. 315, 462; Isle of Palms, iii. 230; on Moore, iv. 61; v. 280; on Manfred, iv. 80, 81; on Marino Faliero, iv. 329; City of the Plague, iv. 339; Noctes Ambrosian, iv. 570; on Heaven and Earth, v. 280, 282; on Don Juan, vi. 213

Wilson, Sir Robert Thomas, "Southwark's Knight," vii. 67

Wilson, W., A Missionary Voyage to the South Pacific Ocean, etc., v. 605

Winckelmann, Storia delle Arti, etc., ii. 396, 431, 432, 490, 509, 511, 512, 518

Windsor Poetics. Lines composed on the Occasion of His Royal Highness the Prince Regent being seen standing between the coffins of Henry VIII. and Charles I. in the Royal Vault at Windsor, vii. 35

Wingfield, Hon. John, i. 96; ii. 81, 82, 94

Winsor, Justin, History of America, iv. 198

Wirt, William, Life of Patrick Henry, v. 560

Wolcot, Dr. John (Peter Pindar), i. 294, 304, 390, 395, 412; iv. 158; Instructions to a Laureat, iv. 519; Ode to a Margate Hoy, vii. 5

Wolcot v. Walker, v. 204

Wolf of the Capitol, Rome, ii. 396

Wolf, F., Primavera y Flor de Romances, iv. 529

Wolfe, General James, vi. 12

Wolfe, Rev. C., vi. 165

Wolmar, Madame, ii. 305

Wolseley, Lord, Decline and Fall of Napoleon, v. 551

Woman's Hair, A, i. 233; iii. 12

Wood, J.T., Modern Discoveries on the Site of Ancient Ephesus, ii. 441

Wood, the pedestrian, i. 322

Woodhouselee, Alexander Fraser Tytler, Lord, Essay on Petrarch, ii. 351

Woodward, Dr. John, Fossils of England, v. 632

Worcester, battle of, ii. 395

Wordsworth, Miss Dorothy, i. 422; iv. 585

Wordsworth, John, captain of The Earl of Abergavenny, vi. 91

Wordsworth, William, i. 305, 318, 331; ii. 311; iii. 149; vi. 39, 80, 587; vii. 70 Byron's review of his Poems, i. 234; Lyrical Ballads, i. 315, 316; iv. 269; Distributor of Stamps for the County of Westmorland, i. 321; iv. 582; vi. 5; "Yet let them not to vulgar Wordsworth stoop," etc., i. 368; "Let simple Wordsworth chime his childish verse," i. 369; "write but like Wordsworth—live beside a lake," i. 422; on Bland Burges, i. 437; Concerning the Relations of Great Britain, Spain, and Portugal, ii. 87; "l'acent Wordsworthien," ii. 115; iv. 6; as preached by Shelley, ii. 219; Emperors and Kings, etc., ii. 227; "Not in the Lucid Intervals of Life," ii. 258; Tintern Abbey, ii. 261, 272; v. 613; Intimations of Immortality, ii. 271, 352; Excursion, ii. 272, 281; v. 94, 613; vi. 4, 176; On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic, ii. 336; In the Pass of Killycranky, ii. 337; Near the Lake of Thrasymene, ii. 377, 378; Descriptive Sketches, ii. 385; "How clear, how keen, how marvellously bright!" iii. xx; Coleridge's Lines to a Gentleman, iii. 336; his quarrel with Byron, iii. 533; iv. 479; Song at the Feast of Brougham Castle, iv. 16, 27; Ruth, iv. 24; Works, iv. 25, 27, 33, 220; A Poet's Epitaph, iv. 26; Byron an admirer of, iv. 47; "Wordsworth and Co.," iv. 182; depreciates Voltaire, iv. 184; Resolution and Independence (originally The Leech-gatherer), iv. 267, 582 Two Addresses to the Freeholders of Westmorland, iv. 341; Peter Bell, iv. 341; vi. 177; vii. 63, 64; Hazlitt on, iv. 518; referred to in The Blues, iv. 585; Sonnet to a Painter, v. 251; "crazed beyond all hope," vi. 74; "unexcised, unhired," vi. 175; Benjamin the Waggoner, vi. 177; "poet Wordy," vi. 214; Supplement to the Preface (Poems), ibid.; compared with Jacob Benmen, vi. 268; Thanksgiving Ode, vi. 332; "has supporters two or three," vi. 445; Mackintosh, vii. 32; The White Doe of Rylstone; or, The Fate of the Nortons, a Poem, vii. 45; "the great metaquizzical poet," vii. 72, 73

World, The, i. 358; vi. 525

Wormeley, Katharine Prescott, translation of Prince de Ligne's Memoirs, vi. 415

Wraxall, Sir N.W., Historical Memoirs, vi. 478; Posthumous Memoirs, vii. 29, 30

Wren, C., i. 438

Wright, John, ii. 217; iii. 75, 443; iv. 63

Wright, Walter Rodwell, Hor Ionic, i. 366; ii. x, 104, 202

Wright, Professor, Kufic Tombstones in the British Museum, iii. 120

Written after swimming from Sestos to Abydos, iii. 13; vi. 112

Wul-wulleh, death-song of Turkish women, iii. 205

Wyatt, Sir Thomas, iv. 239

Wycherley, i. 322

Wylde, G., i. 45

Wynn, iv. 520

Wynne, iv. 476



X

Xantippe, iv. 253

Xeres, v. 565

Xerxes, ii. 166; iv. 259; vi. 46, 169



Y

Yakintu, king of Arvad, v. 4

Yanina, Janina, or Joannina, lake of, ii. 179, 189

Yarmouth, Maria Fagniani, Lady, i. 501

Yarmouth, Lord, "Red Herrings," i. 493, 497, 501; vii. 22

Yearsley, Ann, i. 329

Yesouko, Lieutenant-Colonel, vi. 354

Yonge, C.D., translation of Athenus' Deipno., v. 11

York, Duchess of, iii. 45

York, Duke of, i. 3, 391; ii. 169; iii. 45; iv. 587; vi. 67, 451, 507

Young, Edward, Revenge, i. 26, 409; iii. 158, 200; Night Thoughts, ii. 95, 161; iii. 129, 262; vi. 186, 450; Resignation, vi. 450; Love of fame, the Universal Passion, vi. 461

Young, Rosalind A., The Mutiny, etc., v. 622

Young Lochinvar, ii. 70



Z

Zama, battle of, ii. 459

Zanetti, ii. 472

Zanga, a character in Young's Revenge, i. 26, 409

Zappi, Giovanni Battista, iv. 271

Zara, siege of, iv. 331, 332

Zaragoza, Augustina, maid of, ii. 58, 91

Zarina, Queen, character in Sardanapalus, v. 12

Zarotti, iv. 287

Zechariah, v. 286

Zegri, the, a Moorish tribe, v. 558

Zela, battle of, ii. 398

Zeller, Dr. E., Socrates and the Socratic Schools, ii. 103

Zend-Avesta, iii. 110; iv. 112

Zendrini, A., Elogio di Jacopo Morelli, iv. 457

Zeno, Carlo, ii. 477, 497

Zeus Olympius, Temple of, ii. 167

Ziani, Doge Sebastian, ii. 473

Zibeon, Esau's wife, v. 285

Zimri, king of Israel, v. 107

Zitza, convent and village of, ii. 129, 174, 180; iii. 7

žižka, John of Trocnow, v. 549

Zoffani, iv. 508

Zoili of Albemarle Street, the, vi. xix, 467

Zonaras, Annales, ii. 202

Zonta of Twenty, the, iv. 385, 441

Zoritch, or Zovitch, Catherine II.'s favourite, vi. 388

Zoroaster, the creed of, vi. 491

Zosimado, ii. 197

Zosimus, Histori, ii. 172

Zoubof, Plato, Catherine II.'s favourite, vi. 388

Zrini, Hungarian commander, iii. 442

Zsigetvar, siege of, iii. 442

Zuccari, ii. 437

Zuccato, Bartolommeo, iv. 332

Zuleika, Persian name of Potiphar's wife, iii. 187; vi. 254



INDEX TO FIRST LINES.

(The first line is given of every Poem, and of each Canto of the longer Poems: that of the Plays is omitted.)

A noble Lady of the Italian shore (Poems 1816-1823), iv. 547

A Spirit passed before me: I beheld (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 406

A Year ago you swore, fond she! (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 41

Absent or present, still to thee (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 50

Adieu, adieu! my native shore (Childe Harold, Canto I.), ii. 26

Adieu, thou Hill! where early joy (Hours of Idleness), i. 237

Adieu, ye joys of La Valette (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 24

gle, beauty and poet, has two little crimes (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 76

Ah! gentle, fleeting, wav'ring sprite (Hours of Idleness), i. 20

Ah, heedless girl! why thus disclose (Hours of Idleness), i. 244

Ah! Love was never yet without (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 62

Ah!—What should follow slips from my reflection (Don Juan, Canto XV.), vi. 544

And dost thou ask the reason of my sadness? (Jeux of Esprit, etc.), vii. 41

And thou art dead, as young and fair (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 32, 41

And thou wert sad—yet I was not with thee (Poems of July-September, 1816), iv. 63

And "thy true faith can alter never" (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 65

And wilt thou weep when I am low? (Hours of Idleness), i. 266

Anne's Eye is liken'd to the Sun (Hours of Idleness), i. 244

As by the fix'd decrees of Heaven (Hours of Idleness), i. 231

As o'er the cold sepulchral stone (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 4

As the Liberty lads o'er the sea (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 42

Away, away, ye notes of Woe! (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 32, 35

Away, away,—your flattering arts (Hours of Idleness), i. 15

Away with your fictions of flimsy romance (Hours of Idleness), i. 82

Away, ye gay landscapes, ye gardens of rose (Hours of Idleness), i. 171

Behold the blessings of a lucky lot! (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 75

Belshazzar! from the banquet turn (Poems 1814-1816), iii. 421

Beneath Blessington's eyes (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 82

Beside the confines of the gean main (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 18

Bob Southey! You're a poet—Poet-Laureate (Don Juan, Dedication), vi. 3

Born in a garret, in the kitchen bred (Poems of the Separation), iii. 540

Breeze of the night in gentler sighs (Hours of Idleness), i. 262

Bright be the place of thy soul! (Poems 1814-1816), iii. 426

But once I dared to lift my eyes (Poems 1816-1823), iv. 564

By the rivers of Babylon we sat down and wept (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 402

Candour compels me, Becher! to commend (Hours of Idleness), i. 114

Chill and mirk is the nightly blast (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 7

Come, blue-eyed Maid of Heaven!—but Thou alas! (Childe Harold, Canto II.), ii. 99

Could I remount the river of my years (Poems of July-September, 1816), iv. 51

Could Love for ever (Poems 1816-1823), iv. 549

Cruel Cerinthus! does the fell disease (Hours of Idleness), i. 74

Dear are the days of youth! (Hours of Idleness), i. 177

Dear Becher, you tell me to mix with mankind (Hours of Idleness), i. 112

Dear Doctor, I have read your play (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 47

Dear Long, in this sequester'd scene (Hours of Idleness), i. 184

Dear Murray,—You ask for a "Volume of Nonsense" (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 70

Dear object of defeated care! (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 19

Dear simple girl, those flattering arts (Hours of Idlaiess), i. 15

Do you know Dr. Nott? (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 78

Dorset! whose early steps with mine have stray'd (Hours of Idleness), i. 194

Doubtless, sweet girl! the hissing lead (Hours of Idleness), i. 70

Eliza! What fools are the Mussulman sect! (Hours of Idleness), i. 47

Equal to Jove that youth must be (Hours of Idleness), i. 72

Ere the daughter of Brunswick is cold in her grave (Poems 1816-1823), iv. 555

Eternal Spirit of the chainless Mind (Sonnet on Chillon), iv. 7

Fame, Wisdom, Love, and Power were mine (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 394

Famed for the contemptuous breach of sacred ties (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 35

Famed for their civil and domestic quarrels (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 36

Fare thee Well! and if for ever (Poems of the Separation), ii. 274; iii. 499, 537

Farewell! if ever fondest prayer (Poems 1814-1816), iii. 409

Farewell to the Land, where the gloom of my Glory (Poems 1814-1816), iii. 427

Father of Light, great God of Heaven (Hours of Idleness), i. 224

Few years have pass'd since thou and I (Hours of Idleness), i. 271

Fill the goblet again! for I never before (Hours of Idleness), i. 283

For Orford and for Waldegrave (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 76

Friend of my youth! when young we rov'd (Hours of Idleness), i. 200

From out the mass of never-dying ill (Prophecy of Dante, Canto III.), iv. 261

From the last hill that looks on thy once holy dome (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 401

From this emblem what variance your motto evinces! (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 36

God maddens him whom 't is his will to lose (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 45

Good plays are scarce (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 12

Great Jove! to whose Almighty Throne (Hours of Idleness), i. 14

Harriet, to see such Circumspection (Hours of Idleness), i. 263

He, unto whom thou art so partial (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 74

He who, sublime, in epic numbers roll'd (Hours of Idleness), i. 73

Here once engaged the stranger's view (Hours of Idleness), i. 259

Here's a happy New Year! but with reason (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), ii. 322; vii. 64

High in the midst, surrounded by his peers (Hours of Idleness), i. 28

Hills of Annesley, Bleak and Barren (Hours of Idleness), i. 210

His father's sense, his mother's grace (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 54

How came you in Hob's pound to cool? (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 66

How pleasant were the songs of Toobonai! (Island, Canto II.), v. 598

How sweetly shines, through azure skies (Hours of Idleness), i. 131

Hush'd are the winds, and still the evening gloom (Hours of Idleness), i. 5

Huzza! Hodgson, we are going (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 4

I cannot talk of Love to thee (Poems 1814-1816), iii. 411

I enter thy garden of roses (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 22

I had a dream, which was not all a dream (Poems of July-September, 1816), iv. 42

I heard thy fate without a tear (Poems 1814-1816), iii. 425

I now mean to be serious;—it is time (Don Juan, Canto XIII.), vi. 481

I read the "Christabel" (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 45

I saw thee weep—the big bright tear (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 390

I speak not, I trace not, I breathe not thy name (Poems 1814-1816), iii. 319, 413

I stood beside the grave of him who blazed (Poems of July-September, 1816), iv. 45

I stood in Venice on the "Bridge of Sighs" (Childe Harold, Canto IV.), ii. 327

I want a hero: an uncommon want (Don Juan, Canto I.), vi. 11

I watched thee when the foe was at our side (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 84

I wish to tune my quivering lyre (Hours of Idleness), i. 147

I would I were a careless child (Hours of Idleness), i. 205

I would to Heaven that I were so much clay (Fragment on back of MS. of Don Juan, Canto I.), vi. 2

If Fate should seal my Death to-morrow (Hours of Idleness), i. 247

If for silver, or for gold (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 62

If from great Nature's or our own abyss (Don Juan, Canto XIV.), vi. 516

If, in the month of dark December (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 13

If sometimes in the haunts of men (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 46

If that high world, which lies beyond (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 383

Ill-fated heart! and can it be (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 48

In Coron's bay floats many a galley light (Corsair, Canto II.), iii. 249

In digging up your bones, Tom Paine (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 65

In hearts like thine ne'er may I hold a place (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 40

In law an infant, and in years a boy (Hours of Idleness), i. 128

In moments to delight devoted (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 71

In Nottingham county there lives at Swan Green (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 1

In one dread night our city saw and sighed (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 51

In one who felt as once he felt (Hours of Idleness), i. 253

In the beginning was the Word next God (Morgante Maggiore, Canto I.), iv. 285

In the dome of my Sires as the clear moonbeam falls (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 27

In the valley of waters we wept on the day (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 404

In the year since Jesus died for men (Siege of Corinth), iii. 449

In thee, I fondly hop'd to clasp (Hours of Idleness), i. 7

In this belovd marble view (Poems 1816-1823), iv. 536

Is thy face like thy mother's, my fair child? (Childe Harold, Canto III.), ii. 215

It is the hour when from the boughs (Parisina), iii. 505

It seems that the Braziers propose soon to pass (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 72

Kind Reader! take your choice to cry or laugh (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 11

Know ye the land where the cypress and myrtle (Bride of Abydos, Canto I.), iii. 157

Lady! if the cold and cloudy clime (Prophecy of Dante, Dedication), iv. 241

Lady! in whose heroic port (Poems 1816-1823), iv. 552

Lesbia! since far from you I've rang'd (Hours of Idleness), i. 41

Let Folly smile to view the names (Hours of Idleness), i. 4

Long years!—It tries the thrilling frame to bear (Lament of Tasso), iv. 143

Lucietta, my deary (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 81

Maid of Athens, ere we part (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 15; iv. 214

Many are Poets who have never penned (Prophecy of Dante, Canto IV.), iv. 269

Marion! why that pensive brow? (Hours of Idleness), i. 129

Mingle with the genial bowl (Hours of Idleness), i. 228

Montgomery! true the common lot (Hours of Idleness), i. 107

Mrs. Wilmot sate scribbling a play (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 61

Muse of the many-twinkling feet! whose charms (The Waltz), i. 483

Must thou go, my glorious Chief? (Poems 1814-1816), iii. 428

My boat is on the Shore (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 46

My dear Mr. Murray (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 51

My hair is grey, but not with years (Prisoner of Chillon), iv. 13

My Sister! my sweet Sister! if a name (Poems of July-September, 1816), iv. 57

My soul is dark—Oh! quickly string (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 389

Nay, smile not at my sullen brow (Childe Harold, Canto I.: To Inez), ii. 75

Newstead! fast-falling, once-resplendent dome! (Hours of Idleness), i. 116

Night wanes—the vapours round the mountains curled (Lara, Canto II.), iii. 348

Nisus, the guardian of the portal stood (Hours of Idleness), i. 151

No breath of air to break the wave (Giaour), iii. 85

No specious splendour of this stone (Hours of Idleness), i. 66

Nose and Chin that make a knocker (Poems 1816-1823), iv. 538

Not in those climes where I have late been staying (Childe Harold, Canto I.: To Ianthe), ii. 11

Nothing so difficult as a beginning (Don Juan, Canto IV.), vi. 183

O Love! O Glory! what are ye who fly? (Don Juan, Canto VII.), vi. 302

O Thou! who rollest in yon azure field (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 2

O thou yclep'd by vulgar sons of Men (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 7

O'er the glad waters of the dark blue sea (Corsair, Canto I.), iii. 227

Of all the barbarous middle ages, that (Don Juan, Canto XII.), vi. 455

Of rhymes I printed seven volumes (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 55

Of two fair Virgins, modest, though admired (Poems 1816-1823), iv. 535

Oh, Anne, your offences to me have been grievous (Hours of Idleness), i. 246

"Oh banish care"—such ever be (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 28

Oh, blood and thunder! and oh! blood and wounds! (Don Juan, Canto VIII.), vi. 330

Oh! could Le Sage's demon gift (Hours of Idleness), i. 56

Oh! did those eyes, instead of fire (Hours of Idleness), i. 68

Oh, factious viper! whose envenom'd tooth (Hours of Idleness), i. 34

Oh, Friend! for ever lov'd, for ever dear (Hours of Idleness), i. 18

Oh! had my Fate been join'd with thine (Hours of Idleness), i. 189

Oh how I wish that an embargo (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 10

Oh Lady! when I left the shore (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 5

Oh! little lock of golden hue (Hours of Idleness), i. 211, 233

Oh, Mariamne! now for thee (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 400

Oh! might I kiss those eyes of fire (Hours of Idleness), i. 75

Oh! my lonely—lonely—lonely—Pillow! (Poems, 1816-1823), iv. 563

Oh never talk again to me (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 1

Oh say not, sweet Anne, that the Fates have decreed (Hours of Idleness), i. 251

Oh! snatched away in beauty's bloom (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 388

Oh, talk not to me of a name great in story (Poems 1816-1823), vi. 562

Oh, thou! in Hellas deemed of heavenly birth (Childe Harold, Canto I.), ii. 15

Oh! thou that roll'st above thy glorious Fire (Hours of Idleness), i. 229

Oh Venice! Venice! when thy marble walls (Ode on Venice), iv. 193

Oh! weep for those that wept by Babel's stream (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 385

Oh well done Lord E—— n! and better done R—— r! (Jeux d' Esprit, etc.), vii. 13

Oh! well I know your subtle sex (Hours of Idleness), i. 242

Oh! Wellington! (or "Villainton")—for Fame (Don Juan, Canto IX.), vi. 373

Oh! when shall the grave hide for ever my sorrow? (Hours of Idleness), i. 21

Oh ye! who teach the ingenuous youth of nations (Don Juan, Canto II.), vi. 87

Oh! yes, I will own we were dear to each other (Hours of Idleness), i. 126

Oh you, who in all names can tickle the town (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 16

On Jordan's banks the Arab's camels stray (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 386

Once fairly set out on his party of pleasure (Jeux d' Esprit, etc.), vii. 41

Once more in Man's frail world! which I had left (Prophecy of Dante, Canto I.), iv. 247

One struggle more, and I am free (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 31, 32, 36

Our life is two fold: Sleep hath its own world (The Dream), iv. 33

Parent of golden dreams, Romance! (Hours of Idleness), i. 174

Posterity will ne'er survey (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 65

Rail on, Rail on, ye heartless crew (Hours of Idleness), i. 213

Remember him, whom Passion's power (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 67

Remember thee! Remember thee! (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 59

Remind me not, remind me not (Hours of Idleness), i. 268

River, that rollest by the ancient walls (Poems 1816-1833), iv. 545

Rousseau—Voltaire—our Gibbon—and De Stal (Poems of July-September, 1816), iv. 53

Saint Peter sat by the celestial gate (Vision of Judgment), iv. 487

She walks in Beauty, like the night (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 381

Since now the hour is come at last (Hours of Idleness), i. 12

Since our Country, our God—Oh, my Sire (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 387

Since the refinement of this polish'd age (Hours of Idleness), i. 45

Slow sinks, more lovely ere his race be run (Corsair, Canto III.), iii. 270

Slow sinks, more lovely ere his race be run (The Curse of Minerva), i. 457

So we'll go no more a-roving (Poems 1816-1823), iv. 411, 538

Sons of the Greeks, arise (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 20

Spot of my youth! whose hoary branches sigh (Hours of Idleness), i. 208

Star of the brave!—whose beam hath shed (Poems 1814-1816), iii. 436

Start not—nor deem my spirit fled (Hours of Idleness), i. 276

Still must I hear?—shall hoarse Fitzgerald bawl? (English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers), i. 297

Strahan, Tonson, Lintot of the times (Jeux d' Esprit, etc.), vii. 56

Stranger! behold interred together (Jeux d' Esprit, etc.), vii. 11

Sun of the sleepless! melancholy star! (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 399

Sweet girl, though only once we met (Hours of Idleness), i. 38

Tambourgi! Tambourgi! thy 'larum afar (Childe Harold, Canto II.), ii. 146

The antique Persians taught three useful things (Don Juan, Canto XVI.), vi. 572

The Assyrian came down like the wolf on the fold (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 404.

The chain I gave was fair to view (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 49

The dead have been awakened—shall I sleep? (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 83

The Devil returned to Hell by two (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 21

The fight was o'er; the flashing through the gloom (Island, Canto III.), v. 618

The Gods of old are silent on their shore (Poems 1816-1823), iv. 566

The "good old times"—all times when old are good (Age of Bronze), v. 541

The Harp the Monarch Minstrel swept (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 382

The Isles of Greece, The Isles of Greece (Don Juan, Canto III.), vi. 169

The King was on his throne (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 397

The kiss, dear maid! thy lip has left (Poems, 1809-1813), iii. 23

The Land where I was born sits by the seas (Francesca of Rimini), iv. 317

The man of firm and noble soul (Hours of Idleness), i. 81

The modest bard, like many a bard unknown (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 15

The Moorish King rides up and down (Poems 1816-1823), iv. 529

The Moralists tell us that Loving is Sinning (Hours of Idleness), i. 262

The morning watch was come; the vessel lay (Island, Canto I.), v. 587

The Night came on the Waters—all was rest (Poems 1814-1816), iii. 419

The "Origin of Love"!—Ah, why (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 65

The roses of Love glad the garden of life (Hours of Idleness), i. 109

The sacred song that on mine ear (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), iii. 32; vii. 15

The Serfs are glad through Lara's wide domain (Lara, Canto I.), iii. 323

The Son of Love and Lord of War I sing (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 82

The Spell is broke, the charm is flown (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 12

The Spirit of the fervent days of Old (Prophecy of Dante, Canto II.), iv. 255

The wild gazelle on Judah's Hills (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 384

The winds are high on Helle's wave (Bride of Abydos, Canto II.), iii. 178

The world is a bundle of hay (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 65

The world is full of orphans: firstly those (Don Juan, Canto XVII.), vi. 608

There be none of Beauty's daughters (Poems 1814-1816), iii. 435

There is a mystic thread of life (Hours of Idleness), i. 234

There is a tear for all that die (Poems 1814-1816), iii. 417

There is a tide in the affairs of men (Don Juan, Canto VI.), vi. 268

There is no more for me to hope (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 15

There was a time, I need not name (Hours of Idleness), i. 264

There's not a joy the world can give like that it takes away (Poems 1814-1816), iii. 423

There's something in a stupid ass (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 63

These locks, which fondly thus entwine (Hours of Idleness), i. 36

They say that Hope is happiness (Poems 1814-1816), iii. 438

Thine eyes' blue tenderness, thy long fair hair (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 70, 390

Think'st thou I saw thy beauteous eyes (Hours of Idleness), i. 8

This Band, which bound thy yellow hair (Hours of Idleness), i. 212

This day, of all our days, has done (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.). vii. 71

This faint resemblance of thy charms (Hours of Idleness), i. 32, 36

This votive pledge of fond esteem (Hours of Idleness), i. 78

Those flaxen locks, those eyes of blue (Hours of Idleness), i. 260

Thou art not false, but thou art fickle (Poems 1809-1818), iii. 64

Thou lay thy branch of laurel down (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 19

Thou Power! who hast ruled me through Infancy's days (Hours of Idleness), i. 254

Thou whose spell can raise the dead (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 392

Though the day of my Destiny's over (Poems of July-September, 1816), iv. 54

Through cloudless skies, in silvery sheen (Poems 1809-1818), iii. 11

Through Life's dull road, so dim and dirty (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 73

Through thy battlements, Newstead, the hollow winds whistle (Hours of Idleness), i. 1

Thy cheek is pale with thought, but not from woe (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 71

Thy days are done, thy fame begun (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 391

Thy verse is "sad" enough, no doubt (Hours of Idleness), i. 252

Time! on whose arbitrary wing (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 60

'T is done—and shivering in the gale (Hours of Idleness), i. 285

'T is done—but yesterday a King! (Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte), iii. 305

'T is done—I saw it in my dreams (Hours of Idleness), i. 211

'T is fifty years, and yet their fray (Poems 1816-1823), iv. 542

'T is known, at least it should be, that throughout (Beppo), iv. 159

'T is midnight—but it is not dark (Poems 1816-1823), iv. 537

'T is time this heart should be unmoved (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 86

Titan! to whose immortal eyes (Poems of July-September, 1816), iv. 48

To be the father of the fatherless (Poems 1816-1823), iv. 548

To hook the Reader, you, John Murray (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 44

'T was after dread Pultowa's day (Maseppa), iv. 207

'T was now the hour, when Night had driven (Hours of Idleness), i. 149

'T was now the noon of night, and all was still (Hours of Idleness), i. 217

Unhappy Dives! in an evil hour (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 7

Up to battle! Sons of Suli (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 83

Warriors and chiefs! should the shaft or the sword (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 393

We do not curse thee, Waterloo! (Poems 1814-1816), iii. 431

We sate down and wept by the waters (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 402

Weep, daughter of a royal line (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 45

Well! thou art happy, and I feel (Hours of Idleness), i. 277; iv. 37

Were my bosom as false as thou deem'st it to be (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 399

What are to me those honours or renown? (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 85

What are you doing now? (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 43

What matter the pangs of a husband and father? (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 71

What say I?—not a syllable further in prose (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vi. 39

When a man hath no freedom to fight for at home (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 70

When all around grew drear and dark (Poems of the Separation), iii. 544

When amatory poets sing their woes (Don Juan, Canto V.), vi. 218

When Bishop Berkeley said "there was no matter" (Don Juan, Canto XI.), vi. 427

When coldness wraps this suffering clay (Hebrew Melodies), iii. 395

When Dryden's fool, "unknowing what he sought" (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 59

When energising objects men pursue (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 55

When fierce conflicting passions urge (Hours of Idleness), i. 168

When Friendship or Love (Hours of Idleness), i. 49

When from the heart where Sorrow sits (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 69

When I hear you express an affection so warm (Hours of Idleness), i. 23

When I rov'd a young Highlander o'er the dark heath (Hours of Idleness), i. 191

When Man, expell'd from Eden's bowers (Hours of Idleness), i. 282

When Newton saw an apple fall, he found (Don Juan, Canto X.), vi. 400

When slow Disease, with all her host of Pains (Hours of Idleness [Childish Recollections]), i. 84

When some proud son of man returns to earth (Hours of Idleness), i. 280

When the last sunshine of expiring Day (Monody on the Death of Sheridan), iv. 71

When the vain triumph of the imperial lord (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 37

When Thurlow this damned nonsense sent (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 17

When Time, or soon or late, shall bring (Poems, 1809-1813), iii. 39

When, to their airy hall, my Father's voice (Hours of Idleness), i. 21

When we two parted (Poems 1814-1816), iii. 410

Whene'er I view those lips of thine (Hours of Idleness), i. 76

Where are those honours, Ida, once your own? (Hours of Idleness), i. 16

White as a white sail on a dusky sea (Island, Canto IV.), v. 626

Who hath not glowed above the page where Fame (Poems 1814-1816), iii. 415

Who killed John Keats? (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 76

Who would not laugh, if Lawrence, hired to grace (Hints from Horace), i. 389

Why, how now, saucy Tom? (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 74

Why, Pigot, complain? (Hours of Idleness), i. 53

Why should my anxious breast repine? (Hours of Idleness), i. 220

With Death doomed to grapple (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 64

Without a stone to mark the spot (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 30

Woman! Experience might have told me (Hours of Idleness), i. 43

Would you go to the house by the true gate? (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 69

Ye cupids, droop each little head (Hours of Idleness), i. 74

Ye scenes of my childhood, whose lov'd recollection (Hours of Idleness), i. 25

Yes! wisdom shines in all his mien (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 12

You call me still your Life.—Oh! change the word (Poems 1809-1813), iii. 72

You have asked for a verse:—the request (Poems 1816-1823), iv. 565

You say you love, and yet your eye (Hours of Idleness), i. 9

Young Oak! when I planted thee deep in the ground (Hours of Idleness), i. 256

Your pardon, my friend (Hours of Idleness), i. 63

Youth, Nature, and relenting Jove (Jeux d'Esprit, etc.), vii. 10



THE END.

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