Front cover image for The complete poetical works of Lord Byron

The complete poetical works of Lord Byron

George Gordon Byron Byron (Author), Paul Elmer More (Editor)
Print Book, English, 1905
Cambridge ed View all formats and editions
Houghton Mifflin, Boston, 1905
English poetry
xxi, 1055 pages : portrait ; 22 cm
1011019
Death of a young Lady
To E
To D
Epitaph on a Friend
A Fragment. "When to their airy Hall, My fathers' Voice
On Leaving Newstead Abbey
Lines Written In "Letters to an Italian Nun and an Engish Gentleman: By J.J Rousseau:Founded on Facts'
Adrian's Address to His Soul When Dying
Translation From Catullus. AD Lesblam
Translation of the Epitaph on Virgil and Tibullus
Imitation of Tibullus
Translation from Catullus
Translation from Horace
From Anacreon
The Anacreon
From The Prometheus Vinctus of AEschycus
To Emma
To M.S.G
To Caroline
To Caroline
To Caroline
To Caroline
To Caroline
Stanzas to Lady, With The Poems of Camoens
The First Kiss of Love
On a change of Masters at a Great Public School
To The Duke of Dorset
Fragment Written Shortly After the Marriage of Miss Chaworth
Granta -A Medley
On A Distantt View of the Village and school of Harrow on The Hill
To M
To Woman
To M.S.G
To Mary, On Receiving her Picture
To Lesbia
Lines Addressed to a Young Lady
Love's Last Adieu
Damaetas
To Marion
To A Lady
Oscar of Alva
The Episode of Nisus and Euryalus
Translation from the Medea of Euripides
Thoughts suggested by a College Examination
To A Beautiful Quaker
The Cornellian
An Occasional Prologue
On The death of Mr. Fox
The Tear
Reply to Verse of J.M.B. Pigot Esq., On The Cruely of His Mistress
To The Sighing Strephon
To Eliza
Lachin Y Gair
To Romance
Answer to Some Elegant Verses
Elegy on Newstead Abbey
Childish Recollections
Answer To Beautiful Poems, Entitled 'The Common lot'
Remembrance
To A Lady Who Presented The Author with the Velvet Band which Bound her Tresses
Lines Addressed to the Rev. J.T. Becher
The Death of Calmar and Orla
L'Amitie Est L'Amour Sans Ailes
The Prayer of Nature
To Edward Noel Long, Esq
To a Lady
'I would I were a Careless Child'
'Wh- I Roved A Young Highlander'
To George Earl Delaware
To The Earl of Claire
Lines Written Beneath An Elm in the Churchyard of Harrow
Translation from Anacreon
Osian's Adress to the sun in 'Carthon'
A Version of Ossian's Address to the Sun
Pignus Amoris
To a Knot of Ungenerous Critics
Soliloquy of a bard in the Country
To__
On the Eyes of Miss A__ H__
Stanzas to Jessy
Egotism. A Letter to J.T. Becher
Queries to Casuists
The Adieu
To A Vain Lady
To Anne
To The Same
To The Author of a Sonnet Beginning, '"Sad is My Verse, "You say, "and yet no tear"'
On Finding a Fan
Farewell to the Muse
To An Oak At Newstead
On Revisiting Harrow
To My Son
Song. 'Breeze of the Night, ' Etc
To Harriet
'Farewell! if Ever Fondest Prayer'
" Bright be the place of thy soul'
'When we two Parted'
"There was a time, I need not Name'
'And Wilt thou weep When I am Low?'
'Remind me not, Remind me not'
To A Youthful Friend
Lines Inscribed upon a Cup Formed from a Skull
Inscription on The Monument of a Newfoundland Dog
'Well! Thou Art Happy'
To A Lady on Being asked my Reason for Quitting England in the Spring
'Fill the Goblet'
Stanzas to a Lady on Leaving England
Lines to Mr. IIodgson
Lines Written in an Album at Malta
To Florence
Stanzas Composed During a Thunder-Storm
Stanzas Written in a Passing the Ambracian Gulf
'The Spell is broke the Charm is Flown'
The Girl of Cadiz
Written After Swimming from Sestos To Abydos
' Maid of Athens, ERF we part'
Fragment from the 'Monk of Athos'
Lines written beneath a picture
Substitute for an Epitaph
Translation of a famous Greek War Song
Translation of the Romaic Song
Lines written in the Travellers' Book at Orchomenus
On Parting
Epitaph For Joseph Blacket
Farwell to Malta
Newstead Abbey
Epistle to a Friend
To Thyrza
'Away away ye Notes of Woe!'
'One struggle more and I am Free'
Euthanasia
'And Thou art Dead, As Young and Fair'
Lines to lady Weeping
' If Sometimes in the Haunts of Men'
On A Cornellian Heart Which was Broken
'The Chain I gave'
Lines written on a Blank leaf of the 'Pleasures of Memory
Address Spoken at the Opening of Drury-Lane Theatre
Parenthetical Address
Verses Found in a Summer-House at Hales-Owen
'Remember Thee! Remember!'
To Time
Translation of a Romaic Love Song
'Thou art not False, But Thou Art Fickle'
On Being asked What was the 'Origin of Love'
On the Quotation, 'And my true Faith can alter never' Etc
To the Hon. Mrs. George Lamb
[La Revanche]
Remember Him Whom Passion's Power
Impromptu, in Reply to a Friend
Sonnet, To Genevra
Sonnet, To the Same
From the Portuguese 'Tu Mi Chamas'
The Devil's Drive
[Love and Gold]
Ode To Napoleon Buonaparte
Stanzas For Music. 'I Speak not, ' Etc
Address Intended to be Recited at the Caledonian Meeting
Condolatory Address to Sarah Countess of Jersey
Elegiac Stanzas on The Death of Sir Peter Parker Bart
Julian [A Fragment]
To Belshazzar. Stanzas For Music. 'There's Not A Joy, ' ETC
Stanzas. 'I heard thy fate without a tear,
Napoleon's Farewell
From The French
Ode from the French
Stanzas for Music. 'There be none of Beauty's Daughters'
On the Star of 'The Legion of Honour'
Darkness
Churchill's Grave
Prometheus
A Fragment. 'Could I remount, ' Etc
Sonnet to Lake Leman
Monody on the Death of the Right Hon, R.B. Sheridan
A Very Mournful Ballad on the Siege and Conguest of Alhama
Translation from Vittorelli
Venice
On Sam Rogers
The Duel
Stanzas to the Po
Sonnet on the Nuptials of the Marquis Antonio Cavalli with the Countess Clellia Rasponi of Ravenna
Sonnet to the prince Regent on the Repeal of Lord Edward Fitzgerald's Forfeiture
Stanzas, 'Could Love for Ever'
Ode to Lady Whose Lover was Killed by a Ball, Which at the same time Shivered a Portrait next to his Heart
The Irish Avatar
Stanzas Written on the Road Between Florence and Pisa
Stanzas to a Hindoo Air
To__
To The Countess of Blessington
Aristomenes
[Love and Death]
Last Words on Greece
On This Day I Complete my Thirty- sixth Year
Fare Thee Well
A Sketch
Stanzas to Augusta
Stanzas to Augusta
Epistle to Augusta
Lines on Hearing that Lady By-Ron was Ill
The Dream
'She walks in Beauty'
" The harp the Monarch Minstrel Swept'
' If That High Word'
' The Wild Gazelle'
'Oh! Weep for Those' __ 'On Jordan's Banks'
Jephtha's Daughter
'Oh! Snatch'd Away in Beauty's Bloom'
'My Soul is Dark'
'I Saw thee Weep'
" Thy Days are Done'
Song of Saul Before his Last Battle
Saul
'All is vanity Saith the Preacher'
'When coldness wraps this Suffering Clay'
Vision of Belshazzar
'Sun of the Sleepless'
'Were my Bosom as False as thou Deem'st it to Be'
Herod's Lament for Mariamne
On the Day of the Destruction of Jerusalem by Titus
By the Rivers of Babylon we sat Down and Wept
The Destruction of Sennscherib
'A Spirit Pass'd Before Me.' From Job
'In the Valley of Waiter'
Stanzas for Music." They say that Hope is Happiness'
Epigram on Old Lady who had Some Curious Notions Respecting the Soul
[To Dives (William Beckford). Fragment]
Epitaph On John Adams, of Southwell
Farewell Petition to J.C.H., Esq
'Oh How I Wish That an Embargo'
' Youth, Nature, and Relenting Jove'
'Good Plays are Scarce'
'What news, What News/ Queen Orraca'
An Ode to the Framers of the Frame Bill
[R.C. Dallas}
Oh You, Who in all names can Tickle The Town'
'When Thurlow this Damn'd Nonsense Sent'
To Lord Thurlow
Answer to __ 's Professioms of Affection
Fragment of an Epistle Thomas Moore
Winsdor Poetic
On a royal Visit to the Vaults
Ich Dien
'Here's to her who Long'
' Once Fairly set out on His Party of Pleasure'
'In This Beloved Marble View'
'And Dost Thou ask the Reason of my Sadness?'
'As The Liberty Lads o'er the Sea'
'So We'll go no More a Rovimg'
'I read the "Christabel"'
'To Hook The Reader, You John Murray'
'God Maddens him whom't Is his will to lose'
"My Boat is on the Shore'
'No Infant Sotheby, Whose Dautless Head'
'Dear Doctor, I Have Read your Play'
'My Dear Mr. Murray'
{E Nihilo Nihill; or an Epigram Bewitched}
On The Birth of John William Rizzo Hoppner
Ballad to the Tune of 'Sally in our Alley'
Another Simple Ballat
' Strahan, Tonson, Lintot of the Times'
' If For Silver or for Gold'
Epilogue
'Here's a Happy New Year! But with reason'
New Song to the Tune of 'Whare Hae Ye Been A 'Day'Etc
'Would you go to the House by the true gate'
'You ask for a "Volume of Nonsense"'
'When a man Hath no Freedom to Fight for at home'
Endorsement to the deed of separation, in the April of 1816
To Penelope, January 2,1821
'Though life's dull road, so dim and dirty
'The Braziers, it seems are preparing to pass'
Thoughts for a speech of Lucifer, in the tragedy of 'Cain'
Bowles and Campbell
Elegy
'The World is a Bundle of hay'
'Brave Champions! Go on with the Farce'
'Who kill'd John Keats?'
From the French
'For Orford and for Waldegrave'
'What matter the pangs of a husband and father'
[Napoleon's Snuff-Box]
Epigrams
The New Vicar of Bray
Luccietta. A Fragment
Martial. Lib. I. Epig. I
The Conquest
Impromptu
Journal in chephalonia
Song to the Suliotes
English Bards and Scotch reviewers
Hints From Horace
The Curse of Minerva
The waltz
The blues
The Vision of Judgment
The age of Bronze; or, Carmen Seculare Et Annus Haud Mirabilis
The Giaour
The Bride of Abydos
The Corsair
Lara
The Siege of Corinth
Parisina
The prisoner of Chillon
Mazeppa
The Island; or, Christian and his Comrades
The lament of tasso
Beppo
Ode on Venice
The
Half-title: Byron, edited by Paul Elmer More
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