Cargando…

The Poems of Charlotte Smith.

Annotation

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Smith, Charlotte
Otros Autores: Curran, Stuart
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Oxford : Oxford University Press, 1993.
Colección:Women writers in English 1350-1850.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Foreword; Introduction; Elegiac Sonnets and Other Poems; To William Hayley, Esq; Preface to the first and second editions; Preface to the third and fourth editions; Preface to the fifth edition; Preface to the sixth edition; Preface to the second edition of Volume II; I.; II. Written at the close of spring; III. To a nightingale; IV. To the moon; V. To the South Downs; VI. To hope; VII. On the departure of the nightingale; VIII. To spring; IX.; X. To Mrs. G.; XI. To sleep; XII. Written on the sea shore.-October, 1784; XIII. From Petrarch; XIV. From Petrarch; XV. From Petrarch.
  • XVI. From PetrarchXVII. From the thirteenth cantata of Metastasio; XVIII. To the Earl of Egremont; XIX. To Mr. Hayley; XX. To the Countess of A-; XXI. Supposed to be written by Werter; XXII. By the same. To solitude; XXIII. By the same. To the North Star; XXIV. By the same; XXV. By the same. Just before his death; XXVI. To the River Arun; XXVII.; XXVIII. To friendship; XXIX. To Miss C-; XXX. To the River Arun; XXXI. Written in Farm Wood, South Downs, in May 1784; XXXII. To melancholy. Written on the banks of the Arun; XXXIII. To the naiad of the Arun; XXXIV. To a friend; XXXV. To fortitude.
  • XXXVI. XXXVII. Sent to the Honorable Mrs. O'Neill; XXXVIII.; XXXIX. To night; XL.; XLI. To tranquillity; XLII. Composed during a walk on the Downs; XLIII.; XLIV. Written in the church-yard at Middleton in Sussex; XLV. On leaving a part of Sussex; XLVI. Written at Penshurst, in autumn 1788; XLVII. To fancy; XLVIII. To Mrs. ****; XLIX. Supposed to have been written in a church-yard; L.; LI. Supposed to have been written in the Hebrides; LII. The pilgrim; LIII. The Laplander; LIV. The sleeping woodman. Written in April 1790; LV. The return of the nightingale. Written in May 1791.
  • LVI. The captive escaped in the wilds of AmericaLVII. To dependence; LVIII. The glow-worm; LIX. Written September 1791, during a remarkable thunder storm; LX. To an amiable girl; LXI. Supposed to have been written in America; LXII. Written on passing by moonlight through a village; LXIII. The gossamer; LXIV. Written at Bristol in the summer of 1794; LXV. To Dr. Parry of Bath, with some botanic drawings; LXVI. Written in a tempestuous night, on the coast of Sussex; LXVII. On passing over a dreary tract of country; LXVIII. Written at Exmouth, midsummer, 1795.
  • LXIX. Written at the same place, on seeing a seaman returnLXX. On being cautioned against walking on an headland; LXXI. Written at Weymouth in winter; LXXII. To the morning star. Written near the sea; LXXIII. To a querulous acquaintance; LXXIV. The winter night; LXXV.; LXXVI. To a young man entering the world; LXXVII. To the insect of the gossamer; LXXVIII. Snowdrops; LXXIX. To the goddess of botany; LXXX. To the invisible moon; LXXXI.; LXXXII. To the shade of Burns; LXXXIII. The sea view; LXXXIV. To the Muse; LXXXV.; LXXXVI. Written near a port on a dark evening; LXXXVII. Written in October.