Hartley Coleridge's Sonettwerk - ZaunköniG - 15.11.2008
Hartley Coleridge's Sonettwerk
Veröffentlicht zu Lebzeiten:
- Dedicatory Sonnet to S. T. Coleridge
- To a Friend: When we were idlers with the loitering rills...
- To a Friend: In the great city we are met again...
- To a Friend: We parted on the mountains, as two streams...
- To a Friend: The Man, whose lady-love is virgin Truth...
- What was't awaken'd first the untried ear...
- I loved thee once, when every thought of mine
- Is Love a fancy, or a feeling? No,...
- Whither is gone the wisdom and the power
- Long time a child, and still a child, when years...
- Youth, love, and mirth, what are they but the portion...
- How long I sail'd, and never took a thought...
- Once I was young, and fancy was my all...
- Too true it is, my time of power was spent...
- On a picture of the Corpse of Napoleon lying in State
- To Wordsworth: There have been poets that in verse display...
- November: The mellow year is hasting to its close...
- On parting with a very pretty, but very little Lady
- Night
- The first Birthday
- Whither - Oh - whither, in the wandering air...
- Love is but folly, - since the wisest love...
- Youth, thou art fled, - but where are all the charms...
- I thank my God because my hairs are grey!...
- It must be so, - my infant love must find...
- From Country to Town - written in Leeds, July 1832
- Continued - 'Tis strange to me, who long have seen no face...
- If I have sinn'd in act, I may repent...
- To Shakespeare
- Why should I murmur at my lot forlorn?...
- What is young Pasion but a gusty breeze...
- From Petrarch: 'Solo e pensoso i piu deserti campi'
- The vale of Tempe had in vain been fair...
- To a lofty beauty, from her poor kinsman
- To Love: Sweet Love, the shadow of thy parting wings...
- May, 1832
- All Nature ministers to Hope...
- From Petrarch: Se lamentar augelli, o verdi fronde
- Homer
- To the Memory of Canning
- Liberty
- Who is the Poet?
- The use of a poet
- Young Love
RE: Hartley Coleridge's Sonettwerk - ZaunköniG - 15.11.2008
Sonette aus dem Nachlass
Veröffentlicht 1850
- To S. T. Coleridge: If when thou wert a living man, my sir...
- Oh! my dear mother, art thou still awake?...
- Hast thou not seen an aged rifted tower...
- Let me not deem that I was made in vain...
- Pains I have known, that cannot be again...
- When I review the course that I have run...
- A lonely wanderer upon earth am I...
- How many meanings may a single sigh...
- To a newly-married friend
- It were a state too terrible for man...
- Think upon Death, 'tis good to think of Death...
- What is the meaning of the word 'sublime'...
- Homer
- 'Twere surely hard to toil without an aim...
- To William Wordsworth: Yes, mighty Poet, we have read thy lines...
- To William Wordsworth: And those whose lot may never be to meet...
- Rydal
- From infancy to retrospective eld...
- To Alfred Tennyson
- To a friend: I know too little of thee, my dear friend...
- To Dr. Dalton
- To Joanna Baillie
- On reading the memoir of Miss Grizzle Baillie
- While I survey the long, and deep, and wide...
- Ah me! It is the saddest thing on earth...
- Accuse not gracious Nature of neglect...
- Music
- To a lady, on her singing a sweet old air
- I would, my friend, indeed, thou hadst been here
- Diana and Endymon
- Eclipse
- To an aged beauty
- I saw thee in the beauty of thy spring...
- To Miss Martha H -
- Second Nuptials
- Not in one clime we oped the infant eye
- Two nations are there of one common stock...
- Right merry lass, thy overweening joy...
- Keswick
- Edward - child and man
- To Miss Isabella Fenwick
- Written in a season of public disturbance
- To Mrs Charles Fox
- To Mrs. -
- To Louise Claude
- Hope
- Freedom
- To H. W.
- To H. N. Coleridge
- Faith
- Fear
- Prayer: There is an awful quiet in the air...
- There was a seed which the impassive wind...
- From Michelangelo
- Heard, not seen
- Still for the world he lives, and lives in bliss...
- By permission of Mr E. H. Coleridge
- Full well I know – my Friends
Sonnets of the seasons
- New-Year's Day, 1840
- February 1st, 1842
- March, 1846
- The vernal shower
- 1st of April, 1845
- May, 1840
- May morning
- May 25th, 1844
- To Dora Quillinan
- Oh, what a joy is in the vernal air!...
- Autumn flowers
- September
- November: Now the last leaves are hanging on the trees...
- Written in a period of great monetary distress
- Christmas day
- On a calm day towards the close of the year
- December, 1838
- St Thomas Day
Sonnets on Birds, Insects and flowers
- The cuckoo
- The cowslip and the lark
- The celandine and the daisy
- The snowdrop
- The dandelion
Sonnets referring to the period of infancy and childhood
- Childhood
- To an infant: Wise is the way of Nature, first to make
- To an infant: Sure 'tis a holy and a healing thought
- To an infant: Written on a snowy day
- To a deaf and dumb little girl
- The god-child
- Twins
- Boyhood und Girlhood
- To Margaret, on her first birthday
- Geology I
- Geology II
Sonnets on scriptural and religious subjects
- The bible
- The liturgy
- The just shall live by faith
- Believe and pray
- Eden
- Seth
- Enoch
- Abraham
- Hagar
- Isaac and Rebekah
- Leah
- Moses in the bulrushes
- On a picture of Jephthah and his daughter I.
- On a picture of Jephthah and his daughter II.
- Rizpah
- Solomon
- Elijah
- The jewish captives
- Ezra III, 11-13
- Simeon
- Jesus Praying: Luke VI, 12
- But Jesus slept
- The soul
- Prayer: Be not afraid to pray - to pray is right...
- Privileges
- Faith - how guarded
- Stay where thou art
- Psalm XCI, V. I.
- Isaiah XLVI, V. 9
- The Church
- On the consecration of a small chapel I.
- On the consecration of a small chapel II.
- 'Multum Dilexit'
|