Poems by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Sonnet X. To Erskine
... Spread her broad wings, that fluttered with affright, ...
Sonnet VI.
... Betrayed, then cast thee forth to Want and scorn! ...
A Couplet, Written In A Volume Of Poems Presented By Mr. Coleridge To Dr. A.
... To meet, to know, to love--and then to part, ...
Lines To A Beautiful Spring In A Village
... Once more, sweet stream! with slow foot wand'ring near, ...
Sonnet XIX. To A Friend, Who Asked How I Felt When The Nurse First Presented My Infant To Me
... Charles! my slow heart was only sad, when first ...
The Visionary Hope
... That Hope, which was his inward bliss and boast, ...
To A Lady, With Falconer's 'Shipwreck'
... Now groans, and shivers, the replunging bark! ...
Phantom
... All look and likeness caught from earth ...
Recollections Of Love
... But when those meek eyes first did seem ...
A Tombless Epitaph
... not a rill There issues from the fount of Hippocrene, ...
The Three Sorts of Friends (fragment)
... The friend I've mourned with, and the maid I woo! ...
Water Ballad
... -- Say, when I there have placed thee, ...
What Is Life?
... And all the thoughts, pains, joys of mortal breath, ...
Religious Musings : A Desultory Poem Written On The Christmas Eve Of 1794
... But 'tis God Diffused through all, that cloth make all one whole ...
Lines To W. L. While He Sang A Song To Purcell's Music
... Methinks, such strains, breathed by my angel-guide, ...