Fragments:
A wanderer.
Life rounded with
sleep.
‘I faint, I perish
with my love’.
The lady of
the south.
Zephyrus the awakener.
Rain.
‘When soft
winds and sunny skies’.
‘And that
I walk thus proudly crowned’.
‘The rude
wind is singing’.
‘Great spirit’.
‘O thou immortal
deity’.
The false laurel
and the true.
May the limner.
Beauty’s Halo.
‘The death
knell is ringing’.
‘I stood upon
A heaven-cleaving turret’.
Note on poems of 1821, by Mrs. Shelley.
Poems written in 1822:
The Zucca.
The magnetic lady to her patient.
Lines: ‘When the lamp is shattered’.
To Jane: The invitation.
To Jane: The recollection.
The pine forest of the Cascine near Pisa.
With A guitar, to Jane.
To Jane: ‘The keen stars were twinkling’.
A dirge.
Lines written in the bay of Lerici.
Lines: ‘We meet not as we parted’.
The isle.
Fragment: To the moon.
Epitaph.
Note on poems of 1822, by Mrs. Shelley.
***
EARLY POEMS [1814, 1815].
[The poems which follow appeared, with a few exceptions, either in the volumes published from time to time by Shelley himself, or in the “Posthumous Poems” of 1824, or in the “Poetical Works” of 1839, of which a second and enlarged edition was published by Mrs. Shelley in the same year. A few made their first appearance in some fugitive publication—such as Leigh Hunt’s “Literary Pocket-Book”—and were subsequently incorporated in the collective editions. In every case the editio princeps and (where this is possible) the exact date of composition are indicated below the title.]
***