Hymen, poetical allusions to, 232.
Hymn of a Virgin of Delphi, at the Tomb of her Mother, 62. Hyperborean, song of a, 307.
I care not for the idle state (Ode viii. Anacreon), 11.
I dreamt that in the Paphian groves, 59. I had, last night, a dream of thee, 478. I fear that love disturbs my rest (Ana- creontic), 45.
I found her not-the chamber seem'd, 79.
I know that heaven hath sent me here (Ode XL. Anacreon), 30.
I know thou lov'st a brimming measure (Anacreontic), 45.
I often wish this languid lyre (Ode xxiii. Anacreon), 21.
Intolerance, a Satire: Account of" Cor- ruption" and "Intolerance." See xxv. Preface to Intolerance and Cor- ruption, 132, 133. The Satire, 142. Invisible Girl, the, 71.
Invitation to dinner; addressed to Lord Lansdowne, 461.
Iran, Land of, 394. See Lalla Rookh, passim.
Ireland, and her national music, xxix. xxxiv.
Ireland; certain traditions and romances respecting, 173. 178. 185. 187, 188. 190. 203. 208, 209. 211, 212, 213, 214. Ireland, politics and political sensibility of the kingdom of (see the Fudge Fa- mily), 402-427. 583. The penal code 498. The outbreak of 1798, xxi. et seq. Romanism in, 573. Thoughts on the present government of (1828),
I pray thee, by the gods above! (Ode | Irish antiquities, 527. IX. Anacreon), II.
I pray you, let us roam no more, 113.
I saw, from yonder silent cave, 267.
I saw from the beach, when the morning was shining, 195.
I saw the moon rise clear, 293.
I saw the smiling bard of pleasure, (Ode 1. Anacreon), 8.
I saw thy form in youthful prime, 185. I stole along the flowery bank, 116. I thought this heart enkindled lay, 62. I've a secret to tell thee, 212.
I will, I will, the conflict's past (Ode XIII. Anacreon), 13.
I wish I was by that dim lake, 209. länthe, 252. Before her glass, 253. I'd mourn the hopes that leave me, 192
Idols in the house of Azor, 396. Of King Crack, 164. Of Jaghernaut, 319. If hoarded gold possess'd the power (Ode XXXVI. Anacreon), 28.
If I swear by that eye, you'll allow, 51. If I were yonder wave, my dear, 115. If in loving, singing, night and day, 238. If thou'lt be mine, 199.
Irish bed of roses, an, 171. n. Irishman, Satires, &c., addressed to an Englishman by an, 133-142.
Irish Melodies, 172. Dedication to the Marchioness Dowager of Donegall, 172. Preface, 172. The Melodies, 172. 222. Advertisements to the first and second Nos., 216.; to the third, 216. Letter on Irish music, 217. Adver- tisements to the fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh Nos., 220-222. Dedica- tion to the Marchioness of Headfort, 222. See National Airs, 223. et seq. Irish Peasant to his Mistress, 182. Irish Slave, the, 509.
Irving, Washington, 1. 208.
Is it not sweet to think, hereafter, 251. (Haydn.)
Is not thy mind a gentle mind? 54. Israfil, the angel of Music, 395. 465.
It is not the tear at this moment shed, 183.
Labyrinth, in Egypt, 634. n. Lahore, description of the city of, and the midland districts of India, 358, &c. Lake of the Dismal Swamp, 108. Lake of the Temples, 608. Lalla Rookh, an Eastern Romance; history of this poem, xxxix. et seq. Representation of it as a dramatic pageant of the Château Royal, Ber- lin, in 1822, when the emperor and empress of Russia personated Aliris and Lalla Rookh, xliii. "The veiled prophet of Khorassan," 320- 347. The criticisms by Fadladeen on this story, 347. Paradise and the Peri, 350. Fadladeen renews his cri- ticism, 356. The Fire-worshippers, 359-385. The Light of the Haram, 386. Design of this poetic under- taking related, xxi. 1. Lama, the Little Grand, 434. Lansdowne, Lord, invitation, to dinner, addressed to, 461.
Jeffrey, Francis Lord, the author's visit Lawrence, Dr., friend of Edmund to Craig Crook, xxxvii.
If thou wouldst have me sing and play, Jehan Gheer, or Jehanguire, Emperor
If to see thee be to love thee, 261. Ill omens:- Young Kitty, &c., 181. Imagination, 256.
Imitation, from the French, 461. See also Anthologia, Horace, &c. Immortality, stars the beacons of, 640. Impromptu, 61. 95. 130. 171.
In myrtle wreaths my votive sword, 312. In the morning of life, 197.
In wedlock a species of lottery lies, 61. Ina, by Lady Dacre, 602. Incantation, an, 505. Inconstancy, 60.
India, poetical allusions to, 317. 385.
393, 394. et seq.
Indian boat, the, 284.
Indian maid, the young, 302.
Inkstand, the poet's, 461.
Innisfail, Song of, 212.
Innisfallen, isle of, 206. Insurrection of the Papers; a Dream,
Intercepted Despatch, Diabolo's, 498. Intercepted Letters, the, of the Two- penny Post-bag, 149, &c.
of Delhi and Hindostan, 387. palace, 393. n. His early name of Selim, 390. His bride, 393. 396. Jerome's love (St.), 242. St. Jerome's first visit on earth, 546. His second visit, 547.
Jerusalem, the holy city of, 242. Jessica, young, 297.
Johnson, Dr. Samuel, on Mallet, 598. n. Joy alone be remembered now, 298. Joys of youth, how fleeting! 229. Juan, Don, 166.
Jubal's shell, alluded to, 254. Judgment Day, and a supposed wind from Syria Damascena to announce it, 397. n.
Judgment, the day of, 247. Julia, to, in allusion to some illiberal criticisms, 55. Mock me no more with Love's beguiling dream, 55. Though Fate, my girl, may bid us part, 56. On her Birth-day, 57. To Julia, weeping, 58. Inconstancy, 60. Elegiac Stanzas, supposed to be writ- ten by Julia, on the death of her bro- ther, 61. I saw the peasant's hand unkind, 62. Sympathy, 63.
Burke; his letter to Dr. Hume re-
specting the version of Anacreon by Mr. Moore, xx.
Lay his sword by his side, 214.
Leaf and the Fountain, a ballad, 281. Learning, 88.
Lebanon, Mount, 249.
Legacy, the, 176.
Leila's lute, 601.
Les hommes automates, 553. Lesbia, to, 460.
Lesbia hath a beaming eye, 185. Let Erin remember the days of old, 178.
Let me resign this wretched breath (Anacreontic), 45.
Let's take this world as some wide scene, 301.
Let us drain the nectar'd bowl (Ode XXXVIII. Anacreon), 29. Leucadia, legends of, 264. Levée and couchée, the, 261. Libel, a Case of, 507.
Liberty, 179. 195. 214, 215. 235. 262. 267. 602.
Liberty, the Torch of, 431.
Life is waning, Do not say that, 236. Life is all chequer'd with pleasures and woes, 187.
Life for me hath joy, &c., 299.
Life without freedom, 293.
Light sounds the harp when the combat is over, 69.
Lover, the, 240. 254. 268, 281. n.; 473. Ministers, the new costume of the, 167. 475.
Like morning, when her early breeze, Lover, the Russian, 317. 248.
Like one who doom'd o'er distant seas, 239.
Like some wanton filly sporting (Ode LXV. Anacreon), 42.
Like the bright lamp that shone in Kildare's holy fane, 179.
Lily of the Nile, the white, 616. Limbo of lost reputations, 518. Lion, dead, and the living dog, 517. Lionardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa, 259. Listen to the Muse's lyre (Ode 1. Anacreon), 9.
Literary advertisement, to authors, 508. Literati, sick, 572.
Literature, speed of, 570.
Little Grand Lama, the, 434.
Little Man and Little Soul, a ballad, particulars respecting it, xxvii. The poem, 170.
Lizard (Stellio), account of the, 386. n. Long years have passed, old friend, since we, 316.
Looking-glasses, the, 430.
Lord, who shall bear that day, 247.
Lotus wreath, 394.
Lotus branch, and the bird taking flight, mythos of the, 620.
Lotus flower, 94. Statue of the winged boy seated on a, 625. The spell, 625. An emblem of beauty, 361. n. Louis Philippe, King, account of, when at Donington Park, xlv.
Louis the Fourteenth's Wig, 437. Love, a tutor, 641.
Love alone, 241.
Love, all-defying Love, 361.
Love and Hope, 227. (Swiss Air.)
Love resting his wings, 394.
Love and the vine, 279.
Love a sentinel: Glee-Hush, Hush,
Loves of the angels, li. Preface to the poems, 464. The poem, 465. First Angel's story, 466. Second Angel's Story, 471. Third Angel's Story, 482. Loves, the Sale of, 59.
Lowe, Sir Hudson, to, 491. Lusitanian war-song, 296. Lute, the, 393. 601. Lying, 65.
Lyre, the poet's, 239. Lyre, the tell-tale, 85.
Machiavelian policy, condemned, 444. · Macrianus, prætorian prefect, 663. Magan, Patrick, Esq., his Epistles to a Curate in Ireland, 581, 587.599. Magic Mirror, the, 283. Magnet, woman a, 476.
The Sale of the Tools, 169. Ministers, wreaths for the, 165. Minstrel Boy, the, 190.
Miriam's Song, 244.
Miscellaneous Poems, 456, 486. 602. Mischief, thoughts on, by Lord St-a- 1-y, his first attempt, 578. Missing, Lord de ***, 535. Mix me, child, a cup divine (Anacreon- tic), 46.
Mæris, island of the lake, 635.
Mohawk River, lines written at the Cohos or Falls of the, 124.
Mokanna, the prophet-chief of Kho- |
rassan, 320, 321. et seq.
Monarch Love, resistless boy (Ode LXXIV. Anacreon), 44.
Monopoly, present spirit of, 495. Mont-Blanc, sublime prospect of 442. Montaigne quoted, 440.
Montpensier, Duke of, to the, 92.
Moon, poetical mention of the, 268, 209. 277. et passim.
Mahomet, religion of (see Lalla Rookh), Moon, that high in heav'n art shining.
Mahomet, the Seal of preceding pro- phecy, 477. The familiar dove of, 479.505.
Mahometans, belief of the, 465, 467.470. 478. 482. The chief angels, 465, 466. 470, 471. 478. Mahommed Shaw, feast and throne of, 398. n.
Maiden, the sleeping, 237. Maidens of Zea, 269. et passim. Malthus, allusions to, 489. 492. 516. March! nor heed those arms that hold thee, 278.
Martyrs, the, 250. 664, 665., et seq.; the
crown of martyrdom, 666, 667.
Mary, star of the sea, 270.
Mary, I believ'd thee true, 84.
Mathews, Mr. Charles, 560.
Moore, Mrs., xxxi. Tomy mother, 403. Moore, to Miss, from Norfolk in Vir- ginia, 107.
Moral positions, a dream, 542. Morality, an epistle, 84. Morgan, George, Esq. (of Norfolk, Vir- ginia), epistle to, from Bermuda, 110. Morning, 195. 248.
Morning Herald, the, 499. Morning Post, the, 594.
Morris, Capt., his song, "My Muse, too,
when her wings are dry," xxxviii. Moschus, his first Idyl, quoted, 20. m. Moses, 248.
Mountain Sprite, the, 208,
"Mum" to the editor of the Morning Chronicle, 399.
Murray, Mr.; his contemplated Mail- coach edition of Rokeby, 153.
Matriculation, scene from a play acted Muse, the, 261. at Oxford, called, 549. Mauri-ga-Sima, or the sunken island,
Music, Angel of, 315. n. Music and Melodies, an account of some of our modern poets who had a taste I for, and a knowledge of, xxxvi, et seq. Music, the Prefatory Letter on Irish. 217.
Music, on: - -Song, 183. 309. Music, poetical allusions to, 20. 25. 236, 237. 485.
Music, a Melologue upon National, 25 -287.
Music of the spheres, 472.
Memory, poetical allusions to, 226. 466. 482. Memphis, on the Nile, 615.; sacred col- My gentle harp, 197. lege of, 628.
Musical Box, the:- Rose and the Poet. 309.
Menage, Anacreontic in Greek by, with a translation, 24. n.
Merou, city of Khorassan, 320.343. Methinks the pictur'd bull we see (Ode LIV. Anacreon), 36. Miguel, Don, Ode to, 517. Milesius and the Milesians, 212. Millennium, the, and the Rev. Mr. Irving, 499.
Miltiades, the Ghost of, 531. Minaret, chants from an illuminated, 387. n.
Minerva, or Pallas, and Love, 275.
sions to his fallen fortunes, 162. 165. 487.602.
Natal Genius, the, a Dream: to—, the morning of her birthday, 60. National Airs, 223, &c.
National Music, a Melologue upon, 285-287.
Nature's Labels, a fragment, 56. Nay, do not weep, my Fanny dear, 87. Nay, look not there, my love, 477. Nay, tempt me not to love again, 112. Nea, Odes to: Written at Bermuda, 112 118.
Necropolis, and lake near Memphis, 617. et seq.
Nets and Cages, 233.
Ne'er ask the hour, what is it to us? 201.
Ne'er talk of Wisdom's gloomy schools, 235.
Never mind how the pedagogue proses, 60.
Night Dance, the, 213. Night-thought, a, 81.
Nightingales, song of, 296. 303. 307. 387.
Nights, such as Eden's calm recall, 259. Nile, river, 637; the Isle of Gardens, or
Antirrhodus, near Alexandria, 626. Nile, navigation of the, 615, 636. 639.641. Nile, nymphs of the, 641.
Nile, the Garden of the, 393. Sources of the river, 445.
No life is like the mountaineer's, 273. No, not more welcome the fairy num- bers, 193.
Noble and illustrious authors, 525. 529. Nonsense, 83.
Not from thee the wound should come, 314.
Nourjehan," the Light of the World," 386. n.
Nourmahal, the Light of the Haram, 386. 388, 389. Her spells, 390. Her sleep, 391. She is regretted by Selim, 393. Her disguise, 394, 395. The Georgian maid's song, 394. Suc- ceeded by that of Nourmahal herself, 395. Her reconciliation with Selim, 296.
Now Neptune's month our sky deforms (Ode LXVIII. Anacreon), 43.
Now the star of day is high (Ode xvIII. Anacreon), 18.
Nymph of a fair but erring line, 350. Nymphs of the Nile, 641.
O'Branigan, Larry, to his wife Judy, 588. 596. To Murtagh O'Mulligan,
O'Connell, his election for Clare, 523. O'Connor, Arthur, Esq., xxx. O'Donohue's Mistress, 203. O'Keefe's song for the character of Spado, xxxviii.
O'Mulligan, Mortimer, his epistle (vide "Fudge Family in England"), 598. O'Ruark, Prince of Breffni, the song of, 190.
Oblivion, the fabled gates of, 620. Observe when mother earth is dry (Ode XXI. Anacreon), 20. Oft, in the stilly night, 226.
Oft, when the watching stars grow pale, Palestine and the river Jordan, 354. 234.
Oh! Abyssinian tree, 650.
Oh! breathe not his name, 173.
Oh! banquet not in those shining bowers, 204.
Oh! blame not the bard, if he fly to the bowers, 180.
Oh! but to see that head recline, 469. Oh! call it by some better name, 290. Oh! come to me when daylight sets, 226. Oh! could we do with this world of ours! 214.
Oh! days of youth and joy, 231. Oh, do not look so bright and blest, 308. Oh! doubt me not, -the season, 191. Oh fair! oh purest! be thou the dove, 246.
Oh for the swords of former time! 201. Oh, guard our affection, 237.
Oh! had we some bright little isle of our own, 190.
Oh hint to the bard, 'tis retirement alone, 1.
Oh! idol of my dreams! 475. Oh! Love, Religion, Music, all, 483. Oh, Memory, how coldly, 268.
Oh, no! not ev'n when first we lov'd, 227.
Oh, say thou best and brightest, 239. Oh, soon return, 295.
Paradise and the Peri, 350-356. Criti- cisms of Fadladeen on this romance, 356.
Paradise, of Epicurus, 625. Of Maho- met, 470.
Parliament, the recess of, a hymn, 495. Occasional Address, for the opening of the New Theatre of St. Stephen (Nov. 24. 1812.), 168. Satirical no- tice of some Members of the H. of Lords, 525-534. 539. 541. Report of Speeches relative to Maynooth col- lege, 569. Exhibition of models of the two Houses of, 569. Passion, 250. 290. 315. Patrick's Purgatory, and mystic lake in Donegall, 209.
Patrons and Puffs, &c., 577. Paul the Silentiary, 111. 310, 311. Peace, 656.
Peace and glory, 86.
Peace be around thee, 228.
Peace to the slumberers! 232. Peace! Peace to him that's gone, 298. Pearls, 114. 236. 476. Mythos as to their production, 394. n.
Pearls, Irish, 207.
Peer, how to make oneself a, 553. Peers, batch the first, 512.
Oh stranger! if Anacreon's shell (An- Perceval, Right Hon. Spencer, on the thologia), 47.
Oh! teach me to love thee, 247. Oh! the sight entrancing, 205. Oh! think not my spirits are always as light, 174.
Oh think, when a hero is sighing, 601. Oh thou! of all creation blest (Ode XXXIV. Anacreon), 27.
Oh! thou who dry'st the mourner's tear, 243.
Oh, tidings of freedom! Oh accents of hope, 524.
Oh! where art thou dreaming? 259. Oh! where's the slave so lowly, 194. Oh woman, if through sinful wile, 83. Oh, ye dead! 203.
Olden time, The Song of the, 299. Olympus, latest accounts from, 576. One dear smile, 295.
On one of those sweet nights that oft, Philosophy: Poems relative to, treat.
ing of Philosophers, ancient and mo- dern, 66. 188. 471. Aristotle, 98. n. Pythagoras, 98. Democritus, 98. Plato, 98. n. Epicurus, 608. n.; 646. et seq. Alciphron, 143. et seq. Pyr- rho, 66. Aristippus, 85. Zeno, 67. Maupertuis, n.
Philostratus, a thought of, imitated by Ben Jonson, 8. n.
Pictures, Italian galleries of, xlvi. Pigeons, carrier, 242. Pilgrim, Man a, 249. Pilgrim, the, 272. Still thus, when twi- light gleam'd, 283. Planets, the, 471. n.
Plato, Epigram of, 19. n. He wrote in bed, 446.
Platonic philosophy, and followers of Plato, 97. et seq.
Pleasure contrasted with Pain, 234. Plumassier, to a (Anacreontic), 163. Poco-Curante Society, the, 439. (See
Rhymes on the Road.) Song of, 604. Poesy, 211. 214.
Sannazaro, his Gallicio nell' Arcadia, quoted, 10. n.
Sappho, lyre of, 259. Legends of Leu- cadia, 264.
Poet's dream: Dinner of Type and Co., Resemblance, the: Yes, if 'twere any Sailor boy, 'tis day, 312. 574. Police Reports, case of imposture, 568. Political allusions, by the author, xxv. et seq.; and Satirical Poems, 215. 235. See The Fudge Family," 482. et seq.; 581. et seq. See the Satirical Poems, 491. &c. See also 491–580. et passim. For the poet's allusions to the affairs of N. America and of France, see 105 -131.
Political and Satirical Poems, 399. &c. Politician, how to make a good, 530. Politics, Irish, allusions to, xxix. et seq. See 491-580. et passim. Polycrates of Samos, 3. Poor broken flower, 290. Porcelain and China, 394. 396. Porte, Ode to the Sublime, 506. Power, Mr. Richard, xlviii. Prayer of Mahometans, 355.
Press the grape, and let it pour, 54. "Press, the," newspaper, xxx. Priestess of the Moon, the, 631. Prologue, spoken at the opening of the Kilkenny Theatre, October, 1809, 457. Proxy, how to write by, 519.
Psaphon, his birds taught to pronounce his name, 445. Psyche, 79. 91. 486.
Puck, song of old, 567.
Puir, profligate Londoners, 534. Purgatory, 476.
Put off the vestal veil, nor, oh, 75. Pyramids of Memphis, 614. Rhodope, the Lady of the Pyramid, 620.
Quadrilles, 488. Episcopal, 540. Quakers, 595.
Quarterly Review, the, 532. 573. Re-
flections addressed to the Author of the article of "the Church" in the, 569.
Quick! we have but a second, 207.
Raise the buckler, poise the lance, 266. Raphael, his Fornarina, 447.
Rawdon, to the Lady Charlotte, from the banks of the St. Lawrence, 128. Romance of the Indian Spirit, 129. Reason, 87. 191. 225. 292. 311. Reason, Folly, and Beauty, 225. Red Fox, the, xxx.
Redbreast, the, in December, 225. Rector and his curate, the, 551. Reform, notions on, 545. Religion, the "Sacred Songs," 241. Religion and trade, 572.
Religion in the East, Brahma, &c., 321. (See Lalla Rookh.)
Religious emblems and types, 246. "In-
tolerance" satirized, 138. et seq. On Toleration, 154. et passim. Remember him thou leav'st behind, 52. Remember the time in La Mancha's shades, 295.
Remember thee! 198. Remonstrance: addressed to Lord John
Russell, after a conversation in which he had intimated some idea of giving up all political pursuits, 458.
common love, 70. Reuben and Rose, 53. Revenue, decimating, arithmetic, 511. Reverend Pamphleteer, the, 562. Reverends and Right Reverends, reso- lutions passed at a meeting of, 532. Reynolds, Mr. Thomas, 402. Rhodope, 620. Fable of the Lady of the Pyramid, 620.
Rhymes on the Road, extracted from the Journal of a Travelling Member of the Poco-Curante Society, in 1819, 439.
Sarpi, Fra Paolo, 444.
Satirical and Political Poems, 399. &c. Say, what shall be our sport to-day,
Say, what shall we dance, 288. Sceptic, the; a Philosophical Satire, 143. The Preface on Ancient Philo-
sophy, and the Pyrrhonists, 143. The | Satire, 144-147.
Rich and rare were the gems she wore, Scepticism, 486. 175.
Rich in bliss, I proudly scorn (Ode LXVII. Anacreon), 43.
Ring, the; a tale of Rupert, 72. Ring, the: The happy day at length arriv'd, 72.
Scott, Sir Walter, his musical taste. xxxvi. Interesting scene at the Edin- burgh theatre, xxxvii. Scriptures, the Holy, 246.
Sculptor, wouldst thou glad my soul (Ode v. Anacreon), 10.
Ring, the: No, Lady! Lady! keep Sea, the Old Man of the, 509. A Re.
the ring, 70.
Rings and Seals, 94.
Ripen'd by the solar beam (Ode LIX. Anacreon), 39.
Rival Topics: An Extravaganza, 560. Roche, Sir Boyle, his blunders, 516. Rock, Captain, his Epistle to Lord Lyndhurst, 579. His Letter to Terry Alt, 580.
Rogers, Mr., accompanied by the author to Paris, xliv. See the Dedications to Samuel Rogers, Esq. Rome, artists at, xlvi. The Palatine Mount, xlvii.
Rokeby, allusions to, 153. 156.
Romaika, the, danced in Zea, 265. et seq.
Romaldkirk, to the Curate of, 549. Rondeau :-"Good night! good night," 67.
Rosa, to, written during illness, 58. Rosa, to, 68. 83.
Rose of Cashmere, 386. Rose, the Alpine, 231.
Rose, the, and summer bee, 235. Rose of the Desert! 299. Rose and Nightingale, 307. Rose, the young, 296. Rose tree, the pretty, 291.
Rose in nettles hid, the: - Conundrum, 100.
Roses, the, Festival of the Scattering of, 318. 387. n. 396. Of the Garden of the Nile, 393. Attar Gul, 397.
Roses, political, 171. n.
Round the world goes, by day and night, 308.
Row gently here, 231.
Rubi, the second Angel, 470. His Story, 471.
Ruby, magnificent, 394.
Russell, Lord John, remonstrance on his intended retirement from politics, 458.
Russian Lover, the:- Fleetly o'er the moonlit snows, 317.
Sacred Songs, 241. Dedication to Ed- ward Tuite Dalton, Esq., 241. Sail on, sail on, thou fearless bark, 201.
See you, beneath yon cloud so dark, 130.
See the dawn from heaven, 233. Selim and Nourmahal, 389—16. Sephiroths or Splendors of the Cabala, 484. n.
Sepulture, ancient Egyptian mode of 621. Seraphim, 482.
Serapis, the God, 625.
Seth, traditions relative to the patriarch, 482.
Shalimar Palace, the, 393. 397.
Shall the Harp then be silent, 204. Shamrock, Oh the, 188.
Shannon, Stauzas from the banks of the, 528.
She is far from the land where her young hero sleeps! 186.
She never look'd so kind before, €2. She sung of Love, 209. She has beauty, but still you must keep your heart cool, 292. Sheridan, Rt. Hon. Richard Brinsley, Lines on the Death of, 400. His của- racter described, 401. Intended Le
Sheridan, Mrs., air composed by, 241. Shield, the, 57.
Shine out, stars, 291.
Ship a-hoy! Song, xxxvii.
Ships, and wrecks, 105. 111, 112 26 239. 249.
Ships, the Meeting of the, 287. Shiraz wine, 394.
Should those fond hopes, 293. Shrine, the, 55.
Silence, emblem of, 212.
Silence is in our festal halls, 215.
Silence, chain of, 196. n.
Simonides, epitaphs on Anacreon bg.
Sin, 466. 479.
Since first thy word, 249.
Sing, sweet harp, 211.
Sing, sing, music was given, 210.
Sinking Fund cried, 494.
Sirmio, peninsula of, 460
Slumber, ob slumber! if sleeping than
Slumber, poetical allusions to, 225
Soliman, throne of, was called the Star Swings, an Eastern pastime and exer-
Some mortals there may be, so wise, or so fine, 255.
Songs, some of the occasional, inter- woven in Mr. Moore's poems:-51, 52, 53. 59. 69. &c. Many early songs occur from p. 49-103. 172-222. 254, 255. 257, 258, 259, 260, 261. &c. Songs interspersed in the Evenings in Greece," 244--279. Songs from the Greek Anthology, 310-313. Unpub- lished songs, &c., 313-317. Occa- sional Songs, 558. 604. Songs from "M. P., or the Blue Stocking," 600- 602. Songs of the Church, No. 1., 566. Sovereign, a golden, 492.
Sovereign woman, a ballad, 605.
Sword, the warrior's, 201. 205. 211. 214. Sylph's Ball, the, 457. Sylphs and Gnomes, 476. n. Syra, holy fount of, 269.
Tables of Stone, the Seven, 631. Take back the sigh, 86. Take back the virgin page, 176. Take hence the bowl, 234. Tar barrels. Thoughts on, 548. Tara, the halls of, 174. Tear, the, 63. 173. 183. Tears, 245, 246. 291. 310.
Tears, poetical allusions to, 229. 234. 243. 250.
Sound the loud timbrel o'er Egypt's Teflis, or Tiflis, brooks of, 394. dark sea, 244.
Southey, to Robert, Esq., Announce-
ment of a new Thalaba, 559. Speculation, a, 463.
Speeches, a Corrected Report of some late, 541.
Spencer, Hon. W. R., lines addressed to him from Buffalo and Lake Erie, in N. America, 125.
Spirit of Joy, thy altar lies, 600.
Tell me, gentle youth, I pray thee (Ode Tighe, to Mrs. Henry, on reading her XI. Anacreon), 12.
Tell me not of joys above, 358.
Tell me, why, my sweetest dove (Ode XV. Anacreon), 15.
Temples, Lake of the, 608. Thalaba, announcement of a new, to Mr. Southey, 559.
That wrinkle, when first I espied it, 54. Temple, the, at Jerusalem, 246.249. The bird, let loose in Eastern skies, 242. The garland I send thee, 240.
Spirit, the Indian (or N. American), 128. Spirit of Love, whose locks unroll'd The more I view'd this world, 459. (Ode LXXV. Anacreon), 45.
Spirit of the Woods, the Evil:- Song, 124.
Spring and Autumn, 240. 312.
The Phrygian rock that braves the storm (Ode XXII. Anacreon), 20. The sky is bright, the breeze is fair,
St. Lawrence, river, 127, 128. ; the Gulph The song that lightens our languid way, of, 130.
St. Senanus and the Lady, 201. Star of the Waters, Sothis, 640. Stars, some of the poet's allusions to the, 176. 233, 234. 244. 270. 272. 275. 317. 471. 476. 639.
Steersman's Song, the, 119. Stephens, Henry, wrote on horseback, 440.
Stevenson, Sir John, poetical tribute to, 215. See also xxxix. n. 216. 243, 244, 245. 248. 251.
Still, like dew in silence falling, 312. Still thou fliest, and still I woo thee, 315. Still when daylight o'er the wave, 304. Storm at Sea Lines written in a, 112. Stranger, the heart-wounded, 284. Strangford, to Lord; written on board the Phaeton frigate, off the Azores, 105.
The time I've lost in wooing, 194. The turf shall be thy fragrant shrine,
The women tell me every day (Ode vii. Anacreon). 11.
The world had just begun to steal, 59. The world was hush'd, 305. The wreath you wove, 59. Thee, thee, only thee, 204. Then, fare thee well, 228. Then first from love, 315. Theocritus, in praise of Anacreon, 47. n. Theora of Alexandria, and her daughter Alethe, 642. Death of a mother, 645. There are sounds of mirth, 213. There comes a time, 227. There is a bleak desert, 249. There's something strange :- Song, 314.
Strew me a fragrant bed of leaves (Ode They know not my heart, 209.
They may rail at this life, 200.
XXXII. Anacreon), 25. Sublime was the warning that Liberty They met but once in youth's sweet
Sulpicia, Tibullus to, 460.
Time, a poet's allusions to the hand of, 185. 189. 228. 231. 237. 485.
'Tis gone, and for ever, the light we saw breaking, 195.
'Tis sweet to think that, where'er we rove, 182.
""Tis the vine ! 'tis the vine !" said the cup-loving boy, 279.
'Tis true, my fading years decline (Ode XLVII. Anacreon), 33.
'Tis time, I feel, to leave thee now, 96. 'Tis the last Rose of Summer, 189. Tithe Case, late, 550.
Tithe, Song of the Departing Spirit of,
To all that breathe the air of heaven (Ode XXIV. Anacreon), 22. To ladies' eyes around, 199.
To Love and Bacchus ever young, 5. n. To Love, the soft and blooming child (Ode LXIII. Anacreon), 42. To my Shadow, 585.
To sigh, yet feel no pain, 600.
To thee, the queen of nymphs divine (Ode LXVI. Anacreon), 42. To-day, dearest ! is ours, 289.
To see thee every day that came, 100. To weave a garland for the rose, 310. Too plain alas, my doom is spoken,
Torch of Liberty, the, 431.
Tories, destructive propositions of the, 564.
Tortoise-shell of Pegu, triple coloured, 397.
Tory, Mad, and the Comet, 542. Tory Pledges, 546.
Tory, Doctor, and Dr. Whig, 548. Translations. See Horace, Anthology, &c.
hour, 305. They tell how Atys, wild with love (Ode Tribune, the young, 665, 667. XII. Anacreon), 13. They tell us of an Indian tree, 463.
Summer webs that float and shine, They tell me thou'rt the favour'd guest,
Trinity College, Dublin, an examination political, xxxii. et seq. Tripe, tout pour la, 515. Truth, 195. 247. 309.
They wove the lotus band to deck (Ode Truth characterised, 236. 249. 667. LXIX. Anacreon), 43.
Tuckt Suliman, mountain, 387. n,
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