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ADONAIS.

1821.

An Elegy on the Death of John Keats, Author of Endymion, Hyperion, &c. By Percy B. Shelley. Pisa: With the types of Didot. 1821. 4to, pp. 25.

Αστήρ τρὶν μὲν ἔλαμπες ενι ζῶοισιν επος.

Νυν δε θανῶν, λαμπεις ἔσπερος εν φθίμενοις.-Plato.

EPIPSYCHIDION. Verses addressed to the Noble and Unfortu

nate Lady Emilia V

of

now imprisoned in the Convent London: C. & J. Ollier, Vere Street, Bond Street.

1821. 8vo, pp. 31.

L'anima amante si slancia fuori del creato, e si crea nel infinito un Mondo tutto per essa, diverso assai da questo oscuro e pauroso baratro.

1822.

HER OWN WORDS.

HELLAS.

London:

1822.

A Lyrical Drama. By Percy B. Shelley. Charles and James Ollier, Vere Street, Bond Street. 8vo, pp. xii. 60.

MANTIZ EIM' EZOAON 'ATONON.-Odip. Colon.

The last work published by Shelley himself. The remainder are pos thumous publications.

POSTHUMOUS PUBLICATIONS.

POSTHUMOUS POEMS OF PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. London: Printed for John and Henry L. Hunt, Tavistock Street, Covent Garden. 1824. 8vo, pp. xii. 415.

In nobil sangue vita umile e queta,
Ed in alto intelletto un puro core;
Frutto senile in sul giovenil fiore,

E in aspetto pensoso anima lieta.-Petrarca.

THE MASQUE OF ANARCHY. A Poem. By Percy Bysshe Shelley. Now first published, with a Preface by Leigh Hunt. London: Edward Moxon, 64 New Bond Street. 1832. Fcp. 8vo, pp. xxx. 47.

Hope is strong:

Justice and Truth their winged child have found.-Revolt of Islam.

THE SHELLEY PAPERS. Memoir of Percy Bysshe Shelley, by T. Medwin, Esq., and Original Poems and Papers, by Percy Bysshe Shelley. Now first collected. London: Whittaker, Treacher, & Co. 1833. 18m0, pp. viii. 180.

ESSAYS, LETTERS FROM ABROAD, TRANSLATIONS AND FRAGMENTS. By Percy Bysshe Shelley. Edited by Mrs. Shelley. In two volumes. London: Edward Moxon, Dover Street. 1840. Crown 8vo, pp. xxxii. 320, viii. 360.

RELICS OF SHELLEY. Edited by Richard Garnett. London: Edward Moxon & Co., Dover Street. 1862. Fcp. 8vo, pp. xvi. 191.

"Sing again, with your dear voice revealing
A tone

Of some world far from ours,

Where music and moonlight and feeling
Are one.'

CONTENTS (Preface)-Prologue to Hellas (with note)-The Magic Plant (with note)-Orpheus (with note)-Scene from Tasso (with note)-Fiordispina (with note)-To his Genius-Love, Hope, Desire, and Fear-Lines (We meet not as we parted ")-Lines written in the Bay of Lerici-Frag ments of the Adonais (with notes)-Translation of the First Canzone of Dante's Convito.

INDEX.

ADDISON, his Cato, ii. 16
Eschylus, quoted, ii. 340
Alfieri, ii. 390

Alps, the, i. 119, 120, 348
Anacreon's swallow, ii. 359
Anastasius, ii. 341

Annual Parliaments, i. 364, 365
Apollodorus, a pupil of Socrates,

ii. 49

Apollonius Rhodius, i. 410
Ariosto, tomb of, ii. 245; his arm-
chair, 246; handwriting of, 247
Aristotle, ii. 49

Aspasia, ii. 134, 135

Juan, 241; his Childe Harold,
259; his low debauchery, ib.;
a great poet, 260; visit to, at
Ravenna, 332-345; his Letter to
Bowles, 342; his Cain, 355; at
Leghorn, 362, 364

CALDERON, i. 388, ii. 14, 305, 306;
his Magico Prodigioso, 353, 354
Calvin and Servetus, i. 229
Castlereagh, ii. 268
Catholic emancipation, i. 242 sqq.
Charlotte, Princess, death of, i.
369

Chaucer, ii. 27

BACON, quoted, ii. 4; a poet, 8, Chesterfield, Lord, his distinction

49

Barthélemi, ii. 44

Bisham wood, ii. 278

Blackstone, quoted, i. 254
Boccaccio, ii. 294, 295

Buffon, his sublime but gloomy
theory respecting the future of
this globe, i. 352

Byron, Lord, his Hours of Idle-
ness, quotations or plagiarisms
from? i. 132, 174; visit to, at
Ravenna, 390, 391; his meeting
with "Monk Lewis, ii. 208;
at Venice, 226; a gondoliere's
opinion of, 236; Shelley's visit
to, at Venice, 237; his Don

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between simulation and dissimu-
lation, ii. 394

Chillon, castle of, i. 340
Cicero, ii. 8, 49
Clarens, i. 341

Cobbett, William, on Annual Par-
liaments, i. 365; ii. 276, 289
Coleridge, S. T., his tragedy of
Remorse, ii. 292, 353, 354
Coliseum, the, i. 394; ii. 260
Como, ii. 223-225

Comyns, Lord Chief Baron, his
definition of libel, i. 254
Constantine, the first Christian
Emperor, atrocities of, i. 306;
arch of, ii. 261, 280, 281

Correggio, two pictures of, ii. 249,
250

DANTE, i. 385; ii. 24; the first
religious reformer, 27, 40; tomb
of, 344

Danube, the, i. 15, 32
Democritus, i. 400

Diotima, the prophetess, ii. 88, 89
Dowden, Professor, ii. 387
Drummond, Sir William, his Aca-
demical Questions, i. 327; ii. 176

EATON, Daniel Isaac, sentence on,
for publishing Paine's Age of
Reason, ii. 369-386
Ellenborough, Lord, Shelley's
letter to, ii. 369-386
Epicurus, i. 421

Evian, town of, i. 335, 336

FINNERTY, Mr. Peter, i. 255; ii.
399

Fitzwilliam, Lord, recall of, ii.
303

Fletcher, John, his Two Noble
Kinsmen, ii. 255

Forsyth's Travels in Italy, ii. 285
Fox, Charles James, i. 238
Franceschini, pictures of, ii. 251,
252

Fust, specimens of his press, ii.
344

GENOA, i. 153

George III., i. 237
George IV., i. 238

Gibbon, his house at Lausanne, i.
343

Gisborne, Mr. and Mrs., letters to,
ii. 229-231, 290-291, 296-299,
301-309, 312-319, 326-330, 350-
356

Gisborne, Mrs., ii. 228, 229
Godwin, William, his novels, i.
412-416; letter to, ii. 231-233,
317; his answer to Malthus,

352; his lawsuit and pecuniary
embarrassments, 360, 361
Goethe, his Faust, ii. 353
Guercino, pictures by, ii. 253
Guiccioli, Contessa, Byron's liai-
son with, ii. 333, 337, 340; her
letter to Shelley, 343, 350, 351
Guido, his picture of the Rape of
Proserpine, ii. 249; his Samson,
250; his Murder of the Inno-
cents, 250, 251; his "Fortune,"
251; his "Madonna Lattante,"
ib.; his picture of Beatrice
Cenci, 293
HERACLITUS, i. 400

Hermance, village of, described,
i. 333

Hesiod, quoted, ii. 61
Heyne, on the opinions entertained
of the Jews by ancient poets and
philosophers, i. 301

Hogg, Thomas Jefferson, his
Memoirs of Prince Alexy Hai-
matoff, ii. 387-396

Homer, quoted, ii. 56, 62; on
Calamity, 80, 81; the most
admirable of all poets, 115;
quoted, 124, 126, 127
Horace, quoted, i. 105; ii. 275
Hume, on causation, i. 327
Hunt, Leigh, letters to, i. 381-
391; invited by Lord Byron to
Italy, ii. 268; letter to, 294-
296, 317, 362, 364

KEAN, Edmund, ii. 293
Keats, John, his Endymion, ii.
322-324; his sufferings, 323;
death of, 327

LAFAYETTE, words of, i. 262
Lamb, Charles, i. 384; ii. 295
Laplace, demonstration of, i. 319
Lausanne, i. 343
Lear, King, ii. 14
Lewis, M. G., his ghost stories, ii.
208-212

Livy, ii. 9; description by, 256
Lloyd, Charles, ii. 295
Locke, on sensation, i. 327
Lucretius, quoted, i, 296
Luther, ii. 27

Lyttelton, Lord, ii. 210, 211, 212

Macbeth, quoted, i. 47, 93, 273;
ii. 21, 31, 375
Macchiavelli, on political institu-
tions, ii. 17

Malthus, i. 280, 281; Godwin's
answer to, ii. 232, 352; a very
clever man, 243

Marlow, ii. 223; Shelley's house
at, 226

Marsyas, ii. 106, 107
Mellerie, i. 336, 337
Michael Angelo, i. 384, 385; his
Bacchus, 409

Milan Cathedral, ii. 225
Milton, death of, i. 370
Milton, his Paradise Lost quoted,
i. 146, 415; stood alone, ii. 16;
his Paradise Lost, 25,33; quoted,
35
Mirabaud's Système de la Nature,
i. 326

Mont Blanc, i. 348

Moore, Thomas, ii. 339, 357, 358,
361

Music, ii. 70, 71

NERNI, village of, described, i.
334

Newton, Sir Isaac, ii. 374

OBSCENITY, blasphemy against
the divine beauty in life, ii. 17
O'Neill, Miss, part of Beatrice
Cenci fitted for, ii. 293
Oxford, reminiscence of, ii. 193

PAINE, THOMAS, i. 278
Peacock, Thomas Love, letters to,
ii. 221-229, 241-290, 291-293
Petrarch, ii. 40

407

Petronius, poetical description of,
ii. 265

Plato, i. 421; essentially a poet,
ii. 7, 22, 24; the greatest among
the Greek philosophers, 48; his
Symposium, 232

Pliny quoted, i. 294
Pompeii, ii. 270-275

Queen Mab, piratical republication
of, ii. 328, 350

RAPHAEL, i. 384; his St. Cecilia,
Ravenna, ii. 338
ii. 252, 253

Reveley, Henry, letters to, ii. 299-
301, 309-312, 325, 326
Richardson, Samuel, his Grandi-
son quoted, ii. 237

Rome, a city of the dead, ii. 261;
English burying-place at, 262
Rousseau, his Julie, i. 333, 337,
339-341, 343; essentially a poet,
ii. 30

SCHILLER, his Jungfrau von Or-
leans, ii. 352

Scott's Lay of the Last Minstrel
quoted, i. 47, 212; Marmion
quoted, 100

Shakespeare, quoted, i. 384; the
greatest individual mind, ii. 40;
attribution to him of part of The
Two Noble Kinsmen, 255
Shelley, Mrs., her Frankenstein,
i. 417-419
Socrates, ii. 53-135, 381
Southey, Robert, Shelley's visit to,
Sophocles, ii. 317
Spinosa, quoted, i. 328
at Keswick, ii. 295
St. Gingoux, village of, i. 338
St. Peter's, Rome, ii. 282, 283
Suetonius, quoted, i. 294

TASSO, bold and true words of,
ii. 35, 175; manuscripts of, 246,
247

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