The Fate of Adelaide. Table of Contents
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The Fate of Adelaide
Table of Contents
Page
The Fate of Adelaide Canto I | Romantic Switzerland! thy scenes are traced | 1 |
The Fate of Adelaide Canto II | Once more my harp awakens; once again | 33 |
The Farewell | Farewell! companion of my solitude! | 69 |
Lines to — | Think of me, and I'll tell thee when | 71 |
Fragment | Love thee! yes, yes! the storms that rend aside | 73 |
Absence | I will not say, I fear your absent one | 75 |
Curtius | There is a multitude, in number like | 77 |
Sketch of a Painting of Santa Malvidera | She knelt upon the rock; her graceful arms | 81 |
Sonnet | Green willow! over whom the perilous blast | 83 |
Sonnet | It is not in the day of revelry | 84 |
Stanzas | I do not weep that thou art laid | 85 |
The Village of the Lepers | There was a curse on the unhappy race— | 86 |
Lines on — | I saw thy cheek when 'twas fresh as spring | 88 |
Fragment | It is not spring, but still the new-come year | 91 |
Portrait | I gaz'd admiringly upon his face | 93 |
To — | Oh! say not, that I love not nature's face | 95 |
Corinna | She stood alone; but on her every eye | 97 |
Sleeping Child | How innocent, how beautiful thy sleep! | 99 |
Lines addressed to Colonel H. | Who envies not the glory of the brave! | 101 |
Love's Parting Wreath | I give thee, love, a blooming braid | 103 |
Answer | The wreath you gave me, love, is dead | 105 |
Dirge | Oh, calm be thy slumbers! | 107 |
Sonnet | I envy not the traveller's delight | 109 |
Absence | Oh! never can we feel how dear | 110 |
A Lover's Dream | It was a dream, as bright as e'er | 113 |
The Phoenix and the Dove | My wings are bright with the rainbow's dyes | 115 |
Love's Choice | Too long the daring power of love | 116 |
The Star | Oh! would I might share thy wild car | 117 |
Stanzas adapted to music by — | My heart is as light as the gossamer veil | 119 |
Answer to — | Twine not the cypress round my harp— | 121 |
Castle Building | You may smile at the fanciful structures I rear | 123 |
Fable | Four souls, that on earth had just yielded their breath | 125 |
Sketch of Scenery | It was a little glen, which, like a thing | 129 |
Lines to — | No, no! thou hast broken the spell that entwin'd me— | 133 |
Lines addressed to Miss Bisset | Came it not like enchantment on the soul | 135 |
Fragment | I saw her amid pleasure's gayest haunts— | 137 |
Lines | She kneels by the grave where her lover sleeps | 139 |
The Storm | There was a vessel combating the waves | 141 |
Sir John Doyle Bart. | My heart has beat high at the heroes of old | 146 |
Fragment | Is not this grove | 149 |
Addressed to — | The bee, when varying flowers are nigh | 154 |
This work was published before January 1, 1930, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.
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