The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Works of Lord Byron, Vol. 7. Poetry This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook. Title: The Works of Lord Byron, Vol. 7. Poetry Author: Baron George Gordon Byron Byron Editor: Ernest Hartley Coleridge Release date: December 20, 2008 [eBook #27577] Language: English Credits: Produced by Jonathan Ingram, David Cortesi, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WORKS OF LORD BYRON, VOL. 7. POETRY *** Produced by Jonathan Ingram, David Cortesi, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE: This file contains only characters from the Latin-1 character set. The original work used accented characters not available in the Latin-1 set. These accents are represented here using a bracket notation as follows: [-a] a with macron [a,] a with ogonek (tail) ['c] c with acute accent [vc] c with caron [-e] e with macron [ve] e with caron [e,] e with ogonek [)e] e with breve [-i] i with macron [)i] i with breve [/l] ell with stroke ['m] m with acute accent ['n] n with acute accent [vn] n with caron [-o] o with macron [vr] r with caron [.r] r with dot over ['s] s with acute accent [vs] s with caron [-u] u with macron ['z] z with acute accent [.Z] Z with dot over [vz] z with caron The original work also uses Greek, Cyrillic and Hebrew characters. These are represented by latin transliterations in brackets, for example [Cyrillic: lorda Bairona] or [Greek: Paroramata]. The original work used occasional superscript characters, which are shown here using a carat, for example L^n (abbreviation of London), Esq^re^ or Hon^ble^. In the section entitled NOTES, the original work showed how lines of text were hand-edited, including words or phrases that were deleted by striking a line through them. These are shown thus: (-stricken text-). The Works OF LORD BYRON A NEW, REVISED AND ENLARGED EDITION WITH ILLUSTRATIONS. Poetry. Vol. VII. EDITED BY ERNEST HARTLEY COLERIDGE, M.A., HON. F.R.S.L. LONDON: JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET. NEW YORK: CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS. 1904. PREFACE TO THE SEVENTH VOLUME. Of the seventy-three "Epigrams and Jeux d'Esprit," which are printed at the commencement of this volume, forty-five were included in Murray's one-volume edition of 1837, eighteen have been collected from various publications, and ten are printed and published for the first time. The "Devil's Drive," which appears in Moore's _Letters and Journals_, and in the sixth volume of the Collected Edition of 1831 as an "Unfinished Fragment" of ninety-seven lines, is now printed and published for the first time in its entirety (248 lines), from a MS. in the possession of the Earl of Ilchester. "A Farewell Petition to J.C.H. Esq.;" "My Boy Hobbie O;" "[Love and Death];" and "Last Words on Greece," are reprinted from the first volume of _Murray's Magazine_ (1887). A few imperfect and worthless poems remain in MS.; but with these and one or two other unimportant exceptions, the present edition of the Poetical Works may be regarded as complete. In compiling a "Bibliography of the successive Editions and Translations of Lord Byron's Poetical Works," I have endeavoured, in the first instance, to give a full and particular account of the collected editions and separate issues of the poems and dramas which were open to my inspection; and, secondly, to extract from general bibliographies, catalogues of public and private libraries, and other sources bibliographical records of editions which I have been unable to examine, and were known to me only at second-hand. It will be observed that the _title-pages_ of editions which have passed through my hands are aligned; the _titles_ of all other editions are italicized. I cannot pretend that this assortment of bibliographical entries is even approximately exhaustive; but as "a sample" of a bibliography it will, I trust, with all its imperfections, be of service to the student of literature, if not to the amateur or bibliophile. With regard to nomenclature and other technicalities, my aim has been to put the necessary information as clearly and as concisely as possible, rather than to comply with the requirements of this or that formula. But the path of the bibliographer is beset with difficulties. "Al Sirat's arch"--"the bridge of breadth narrower than the thread of a famished spider, and sharper than the edge of a sword" (see _The Giaour_, line 483, _note_ I)--affords an easier and a safer foothold. To the general reader a bibliography says little or nothing; but, in one respect, a bibliography of Byron is of popular import. It affords scientific proof of an almost unexampled fame, of a far-reaching and still potent influence. Teuton and Latin and Slav have taken Byron to themselves, and have made him their own. No other English poet except Shakespeare has been so widely read and so frequently translated. Of _Manfred_ I reckon one Bohemian translation, two Danish, two Dutch, three French, nine German, three Hungarian, three Italian, two Polish, one Romaic, one Roumanian, four Russian, and three Spanish translations, and, in all probability, there are others which have escaped my net. The question, the inevitable question, arises--What was, what is, the secret of Byron's Continental vogue? and why has his fame gone out into all lands? Why did Goethe enshrine him, in the second part of _Faust_, "as the representative of the modern era ... undoubtedly to be regarded as the greatest genius of our century?" (_Conversations of Goethe_, 1874, p. 265). It is said, and with truth, that Byron's revolutionary politics commended him to oppressed nationalities and their sympathizers; that he was against "the tramplers"--Castlereagh, and the Duke of Wellington, and the Holy Alliance; that he stood for liberty. Another point in his favour was his freedom from cant, his indifference to the pieties and proprieties of the Britannic Muse; that he had the courage of his opinions. Doubtless in a time of trouble he was welcomed as the champion of revolt, but deeper reasons must be sought for an almost exclusive preference for the works of one poet and a comparative indifference to the works of his rivals and contemporaries. He fulfilled another, perhaps a greater ideal. An Englishman turns to poetry for the expression in beautiful words of his happier and better feelings, and he is not contented unless poetry tends to make him happier or better--happier because better than he would be otherwise. His favourite poems are psalms, or at least metrical paraphrases, of life. Men of other nations are less concerned about their feelings and their souls. They regard the poet as the creator, the inventor, the maker _par excellence_, and he who can imagine or make the greatest _eidolon_ is the greatest poet. _Childe Harold_ and _The Corsair_, _Mazeppa_ and _Manfred, Cain_ and _Sardanapalus_ were new creations, new types, forms more real than living man, which appealed to their artistic sense, and led their imaginations captive. "It is a mark," says Goethe (_Aus meinem Leben: Dichtung und Wahreit_, 1876, iii. 125), "of true poetry, that, as a secular gospel, it knows how to free us from the earthly burdens which press upon us, by inward serenity, by outward charm.... The most lively, as well as the gravest works have the same end--to moderate both pleasure and pain through a happy mental representation." It is passion translated into action, the pageantry of history, the transfiguration into visible lineaments of living moods and breathing thoughts which are the notes of this "secular gospel," and for one class of minds work out a secular redemption. It was not only the questionable belief that he was on the side of the people, or his ethical and theological audacities, or his prolonged Continental exile, which won for Byron a greater name abroad than he has retained at home; but the character of his poetry. "The English may think of Byron as they please" (_Conversations of Goethe_, 1874, p. 171), "but this is certain, that they can show no poet who is to be compared to him. He is different from all the others, and, for the most part, greater." The English may think of him as they please! and for them, or some of them, there is "a better oenomel," a _vinum Dæmonum_, which Byron has not in his gift. The evidence of a world-wide fame will not endear a poet to a people and a generation who care less for the matter than the manner of verse, or who _believe_ in poetry as the symbol or "_credo_" of the imagination or the spirit; but it should arrest attention and invite inquiry. A bibliography is a dull epilogue to a poet's works, but it speaks with authority, and it speaks last. _Finis coronat opus!_ I must be permitted to renew my thanks to Mr. G.F. Barwick, _Superintendent of the Reading Room_, Mr. Cyril Davenport, and other officials of the British Museum, of all grades and classes, for their generous and courteous assistance in the preparation and completion of the Bibliography. The consultation of many hundreds of volumes of one author, and the permission to retain a vast number in daily use, have entailed exceptional labour on a section of the staff. I have every reason to be grateful. I am indebted to Mr. A.W. Pollard, of the British Museum, for advice and direction with regard to bibliographical formulas; to Mr. G.L. Calderon, late of the staff, for the collection and transcription of the title-pages of Polish, Russian, and Servian translations; and to Mr. R. Nisbet Bain for the supervision and correction of the proofs of Slavonic titles. To Mr. W.P. Courtney, the author of _Bibliotheca Cornubiensis_, I owe many valuable hints and suggestions, and the opportunity of consulting some important works of reference. I have elsewhere acknowledged the valuable information with regard to certain rare editions and pamphlets which I have received from Mr. H. Buxton Forman, C.B. My especial thanks for laborious researches undertaken on my behalf, and for information not otherwise attainable, are due to M. J.E. Aynard, of Lyons; Signor F. Bianco; Professor Max von Förster, of Wurtzburg; Professor Lajos Gurnesovitz, of Buda Pest; Dr. Holzhausen, of Bonn; Mr. Leonard Mackall, of Berlin; Miss Peacock; Miss K. Schlesinger; M. Voynich, of Soho Square; Mr. Theodore Bartholomew, of the University Library of Cambridge; Mr. T.D. Stewart, of the Croydon Public Library; and the Librarians of Trinity College, Cambridge, and University College, St. Andrews. I have also to thank, for special and generous assistance, Mr. J.P. Anderson, late of the British Museum, the author of the "Bibliography of Byron's Works" attached to the Life of Lord Byron by the Hon. Roden Noel (1890); Miss Grace Reed, of Philadelphia, for bibliographical entries of early American editions; and Professor Vladimir Hrabar, of the University of Dorpat, for the collection and transcription of numerous Russian translations of Byron's Works. To Messrs. Clowes, the printers of these volumes, and to their reader, Mr. F.T. Peachey, I am greatly indebted for the transcription of Slavonic titles included in the Summary of the Bibliography, and for interesting and useful information during the progress of the work. In conclusion, I must once more express my acknowment of the industry and literary ability of my friend Mr. F.E. Taylor, of Chertsey, who has read the proofs of this and the six preceding volumes. The Index is the work of Mr. C. Eastlake Smith. ERNEST HARTLEY COLERIDGE. November, 1903. CONTENTS OF VOL. VII. Preface to Vol. VII. of the Poems. _v_ JEUX D'ESPRIT AND MINOR POEMS, 1798-1824. Epigram on an Old Lady who had some Curious Notions respecting the 1 Soul. First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 28. Epitaph on John Adams, of Southwell. First published, _Letters and 1 Journals_, 1830, i. 106. A Version of Ossian's Address to the Sun. First published, 2 _Atlantic Monthly_, December, 1898. Lines to Mr. Hodgson. Written on board the Lisbon Packet. First 4 published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 230-232. [To Dives. A Fragment.] First published, _Lord Byron's Works_, 7 1833, xvii. 241. Farewell Petition to J.C.H., Esq^re.^ First published, _Murray's 7 Magazine_, 1887, vol. i. pp. 290, 291. Translation of the Nurse's Dole in the _Medea_ of Euripides. First 10 published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 227. My Epitaph. First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 240. 10 Substitute for an Epitaph. First published, _Lord Byron's Works_, 11 1832, ix. 4. Epitaph for Joseph Blacket, late Poet and Shoemaker. First 11 published, _Lord Byron's Works_, 1832, ix. 10. On Moore's Last Operatic Farce, or Farcical Opera. First published, 12 _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 295 (_note_). [R.C. Dallas.] First published, _Life, Writings, Opinions, etc._, 12 1825, ii. 192. An Ode to the Framers of the Frame Bill. First published, _Morning 13 Chronicle_, March 2, 1812. To the Honorable Mr. George Lamb. First published, _The Two 15 Duchesses_, by Vere Foster, 1898, p. 374. [La Revanche.] _MS.M_. 15 To Thomas Moore. Written the Evening before his Visit to Mr. Leigh 16 Hunt in Horsemonger Lane Gaol, May 19, 1813. First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 401. On Lord Thurlow's Poems. First published, _Letters and Journals_, 17 1830, i. 396. To Lord Thurlow. First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 19 397. The Devil's Drive. First published (stanzas 1-5, 8, 10-12, 17, 18), 21 _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 471-474; and (stanzas 6, 7, 9, 13-16, 19-27) from a MS. in the possession of the Earl of Ilchester. Windsor Poetics. First published, _Poetical Works_, Paris, 1819, 35 vi. 125. [Another Version.] On a Royal Visit to the Vaults. From an 36 autograph MS. in the possession of the Hon. Mrs. Norbury, now for the first time printed. Ich Dien. From an autograph MS. in the possession of Mr. A.H. 36 Hallam Murray, now for the first time printed. Condolatory Address, To Sarah Countess of Jersey. First published, 37 _The Champion_, July 31, 1814. Fragment of an Epistle to Thomas Moore. First published, _Letters 39 and Journals_, 1830, i. 561, 562 (_note_). Answer to----'s Professions of Affection. _MS_. 40 On Napoleon's Escape from Elba. First published, _Letters and 41 Journals_, 1830, i. 611. Endorsement to the Deed of Separation, in the April of 1816. First 41 published, _Poetical Works_, 1831, vi. 454. [To George Anson Byron (?).] First published, _Nicnac_, March 25, 41 1823. Song for the Luddites. First published, _Letters and Journals_, 42 1830, ii. 58. To Thomas Moore ("What are you doing now?"). First published, 23 _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 58, 59. To Mr. Murray ("To hook the Reader," etc.). First published, 44 _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 91. Versicles. First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 87. 45 Quem Deus vult perdere prius dementat. First published, _Letters_, 1900, iv. 45 To Thomas Moore ("My boat is on the shore"). First published, 46 _Waltz_, London, 1821, p. 29. Epistle from Mr. Murray to Dr. Polidori. First published, _Letters 47 and Journals_, 1830, ii. 139-141. Epistle to Mr. Murray. First published (stanzas 1, 2, 4, 7-9), 51 _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 156, 157; and (stanzas 3, 5, 6, 10, 11) _Letters_, 1900, iv. 191-193. On the Birth of John William Rizzo Hoppner. First published, 54 _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 134. [E Nihilo Nihil; or, An Epigram Bewitched.] _MS.M_. 55 To Mr. Murray. First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 56 171. Ballad. To the Tune of "Sally in our Alley." _MS.M_. 58 Another Simple Ballat. _MS.M_. 61 Epigram. From the French of Rulhiéres. First published, _Letters 62 and Journals_, 1830, ii. 235. Epilogue. First published, _Philadelphia Record_, December 28, 63 1891. On my Wedding-Day. First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, 64 ii. 294. Epitaph for William Pitt. First published, _Letters and Journals_, 64 1830, ii. 295. Epigram ("In digging up your bones, Tom Paine"). First published, 65 _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 295. Epitaph ("Posterity will ne'er survey"). First published, _Lord 65 Byron's Works_, 1833, xvii. 246. Epigram ("The world is a bundle of hay"). First published, _Letters 65 and Journals_, 1830, ii. 494. My Boy Hobbie O. First published, _Murray's Magazine_, March, 1887, 66 vol. i. pp. 292, 293. Lines, Addressed by Lord Byron to Mr. Hobhouse on his Election for 69 Westminster. First published, _Miscellaneous Poems_, 1824. A Volume of Nonsense. First published, _Letters_, 1900, v. 83. 70 Stanzas. First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 377. 70 To Penelope. First published, Medwin's _Conversations_, 1824 p. 106. 71 The Charity Ball. First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, 71 ii. 540. Epigram, On the Braziers' Address, etc. First published, _Letters 72 and Journals_, 1830, ii. 442. On my Thirty-third Birthday. First published, _Letters and 73 Journals_, 1830, ii. 414. Martial, Lib. I. Epig. I. First published, _Lord Byron's Works_, 74 1833, xvii. 245. Bowles and Campbell. First published, _The Liberal_, 1823, No. II. 74 p. 398. Elegy. First published, Medwin's _Conversations_, 1824, p. 121. 75 John Keats. First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 506. 76 From the French ("Ægle, beauty and poet," etc.). First published, 76 _The Liberal_, 1823, No. II. p. 396. To Mr. Murray ("For Orford," etc.). First published, _Letters and 76 Journals_, 1830, ii. 517. [Napoleon's Snuff-box.] First published, _Conversations of Lord 77 Byron_, 1824, p. 235. The New Vicar of Bray. First published, _Works_ (Galignani), 1831, 78 p. 116. Lucietta. A Fragment. _MS.M_. 81 Epigrams. First published, _The Liberal_, No. I. October 18, 1822, 81 p. 164. The Conquest. First published, _Lord Byron's Works_, 1833, xvii. 82 246. Impromptu ("Beneath Blessington's eyes"). First published, _Letters 82 and Journals_, 1830, ii. 635. Journal in Cephalonia. First published, _Letters_, 1901, vi. 238. 83 Song to the Suliotes. _MS.M_. 83 [Love and Death.] First published, _Murray's Magazine_, February, 84 1887, vol. i. pp. 145, 146. Last Words on Greece. First published, _Murray's Magazine_, 85 February, 1887, vol. i. p. 146. On this Day I complete my Thirty-sixth Year. First published, 86 _Morning Chronicle_, October 29, 1824. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE SUCCESSIVE EDITIONS AND TRANSLATIONS OF LORD 89 BYRON'S _POETICAL WORKS_. NOTES-- Note (1).--On Genuine and Spurious Issues of _English Bards, and 305 Scotch Reviewers_. Note (2).--Correspondence between the First Edition as numbered and 307 the Present Issue as numbered. Note (3).--The Annotated Copies of the Fourth Edition of 1811 310 APPENDIX TO BIBLIOGRAPHY 314 CONTENTS OF BIBLIOGRAPHY 317 SUMMARY OF BIBLIOGRAPHY 319 INDEX 349 INDEX TO FIRST LINES 449 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 1. Mrs. Birdmere's House, Southwell 2 2. Annesley Hall 38 3. Diadem Hill (Annesley Park), where Lord Byron parted 304 from Mary Chaworth 4. The Prison Called Tasso's Cell, in the Hospital of 348 Sant'Anna, at Ferrara JEUX D'ESPRIT AND MINOR POEMS, 1798-1824. EPIGRAM ON AN OLD LADY WHO HAD SOME CURIOUS NOTIONS RESPECTING THE SOUL. IN Nottingham county there lives at Swan Green,[1] As curst an old Lady as ever was seen; And when she does die, which I hope will be soon, She firmly believes she will go to the Moon! 1798. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 28.] FOOTNOTES: [1] "Swan Green" should be "Swine Green." It lay about a quarter of a mile to the east of St. James's Lane, where Byron lodged in 1799, at the house of a Mr. Gill. The name appears in a directory of 1799, but by 1815 it had been expunged or changed _euphoniæ gratiâ_. (See _A New Plan of the Town of Nottingham_, ... 1744.) Moore took down "these rhymes" from the lips of Byron's nurse, May Gray, who regarded them as a first essay in the direction of poetry. He questioned their originality. EPITAPH ON JOHN ADAMS, OF SOUTHWELL, A CARRIER, WHO DIED OF DRUNKENNESS. JOHN ADAMS lies here, of the parish of Southwell, A _Carrier_ who _carried_ his can to his mouth well; He carried so much and he carried so fast, He could carry no more--so was carried at last; For the liquor he drank being too much for one, He could not _carry_ off;--so he's now _carri-on_. _September_, 1807. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 106.] [Illustration: MRS. BIRDMERE'S HOUSE, SOUTHWELL.] A VERSION OF OSSIAN'S ADDRESS TO THE SUN. FROM THE POEM "CARTHON." O THOU! who rollest in yon azure field, Round as the orb of my forefather's shield, Whence are thy beams? From what eternal store Dost thou, O Sun! thy vast effulgence pour? In awful grandeur, when thou movest on high, The stars start back and hide them in the sky; The pale Moon sickens in thy brightening blaze, And in the western wave avoids thy gaze. Alone thou shinest forth--for who can rise Companion of thy splendour in the skies! The mountain oaks are seen to fall away-- Mountains themselves by length of years decay-- With ebbs and flows is the rough Ocean tost; In heaven the Moon is for a season lost, But thou, amidst the fullness of thy joy, The same art ever, blazing in the sky! When tempests wrap the world from pole to pole, When vivid lightnings flash and thunders roll, Thou far above their utmost fury borne, Look'st forth in beauty, laughing them to scorn. But vainly now on me thy beauties blaze-- Ossian no longer can enraptured gaze! Whether at morn, in lucid lustre gay, On eastern clouds thy yellow tresses play, Or else at eve, in radiant glory drest, Thou tremblest at the portals of the west, I see no more! But thou mayest fail at length, Like Ossian lose thy beauty and thy strength, Like him--but for a season--in thy sphere To shine with splendour, then to disappear! Thy years shall have an end, and thou no more Bright through the world enlivening radiance pour, But sleep within thy clouds, and fail to rise, Heedless when Morning calls thee to the skies! Then now exult, O Sun! and gaily shine, While Youth and Strength and Beauty all are thine. For Age is dark, unlovely, as the light Shed by the Moon when clouds deform the night, Glimmering uncertain as they hurry past. Loud o'er the plain is heard the northern blast, Mists shroud the hills, and 'neath the growing gloom, The weary traveller shrinks and sighs for home. 1806. [First published, _Atlantic Monthly_, December, 1898.][2] FOOTNOTES: [2] [I am indebted to the courtesy of Mr. Pierre De La Rose for sending me a copy of the foregoing _Version of Ossian's Address to the Sun_, which was "Privately printed at the Press of Oliver B. Graves, Cambridge, Massachusetts, June the Tenth, MDCCCXCVIII.," and was reprinted in the _Atlantic Monthly_ in December, 1898. A prefatory note entitled, "From Lord Byron's Notes," is prefixed to the Version: "In Lord Byron's copy of _The Poems of Ossian_ (printed by Dewick and Clarke, London, 1806), which, since 1874, has been in the possession of the Library of Harvard University as part of the Sumner Bequest. The notes which follow appear in Byron's hand." (For the _Notes_, see the _Atlantic Monthly_, 1898, vol. lxxxii. pp. 810-814.) It is strange that Byron should have made two versions (for another "version" from the Newstead MSS., see _Poetical Works_, 1898, i. 229-231) of the "Address to the Sun," which forms the conclusion of "Carthon;" but the Harvard version appears to be genuine. It is to be noted that Byron appended to the earlier version eighteen lines of his own composition, by way of moral or application.] LINES TO MR. HODGSON. WRITTEN ON BOARD THE LISBON PACKET. 1. HUZZA! Hodgson[3], we are going, Our embargo's off at last; Favourable breezes blowing Bend the canvas o'er the mast. From aloft the signal's streaming, Hark! the farewell gun is fired; Women screeching, tars blaspheming, Tell us that our time's expired. Here's a rascal Come to task all, Prying from the Custom-house; Trunks unpacking Cases cracking, Not a corner for a mouse Scapes unsearched amid the racket, Ere we sail on board the Packet. 2. Now our boatmen quit their mooring, And all hands must ply the oar; Baggage from the quay is lowering, We're impatient, push from shore. "Have a care! that case holds liquor-- Stop the boat--I'm sick--oh Lord!" "Sick, Ma'am, damme, you'll be sicker, Ere you've been an hour on board." Thus are screaming Men and women, Gemmen, ladies, servants, Jacks; Here entangling, All are wrangling, Stuck together close as wax.-- Such the general noise and racket, Ere we reach the Lisbon Packet. 3. Now we've reached her, lo! the Captain, Gallant Kidd,[4] commands the crew; Passengers their berths are clapt in, Some to grumble, some to spew. "Hey day! call you that a cabin? Why't is hardly three feet square! Not enough to stow Queen Mab in-- Who the deuce can harbour there?" "Who, sir? plenty-- Nobles twenty Did at once my vessel fill."-- "Did they? Jesus, How you squeeze us! Would to God they did so still! Then I'd 'scape the heat and racket Of the good ship, Lisbon Packet." 4. Fletcher! Murray! Bob![5] where are you? Stretched along the deck like logs-- Bear a hand, you jolly tar, you! Here's a rope's end for the dogs. Hobhouse muttering fearful curses, As the hatchway down he rolls, Now his breakfast, now his verses, Vomits forth--and damns our souls. "Here's a stanza[6] On Braganza-- Help!"--"A couplet?"--"No, a cup Of warm water--" "What's the matter?" "Zounds! my liver's coming up; I shall not survive the racket Of this brutal Lisbon Packet." 5. Now at length we're off for Turkey, Lord knows when we shall come back! Breezes foul and tempests murky May unship us in a crack. But, since Life at most a jest is, As philosophers allow, Still to laugh by far the best is, Then laugh on--as I do now. Laugh at all things, Great and small things, Sick or well, at sea or shore; While we're quaffing, Let's have laughing-- Who the devil cares for more?-- Some good wine! and who would lack it, Ev'n on board the Lisbon Packet? Falmouth Roads, _June_ 30, 1809. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 230-232.] FOOTNOTES: [3] [For Francis Hodgson (1781-1852), see _Letters_, 1898, i. 195, _note_ 1.] [4] [Compare Peter Pindar's _Ode to a Margate Hoy_-- "Go, beauteous Hoy, in safety ev'ry inch! That storm should wreck thee, gracious Heav'n forbid! Whether commanded by brave Captain Finch Or equally tremendous Captain Kidd."] [5] [Murray was "Joe" Murray, an ancient retainer of the "Wicked Lord." Bob was Robert Rushton, the "little page" of "Childe Harold's Good Night." (See _Poetical Works_, 1899, ii. 26, _note_ 1.)] [6] [For "the stanza," addressed to the "Princely offspring of Braganza," published in the _Morning Post_, December 30, 1807, see _English Bards, etc._, line 142, _note_ 1, _Poetical Works_, 1898, i. 308, 309.] [TO DIVES.[7] A FRAGMENT.] UNHAPPY Dives! in an evil hour 'Gainst Nature's voice seduced to deeds accurst! Once Fortune's minion now thou feel'st her power; Wrath's vial on thy lofty head hath burst. In Wit, in Genius, as in Wealth the first, How wondrous bright thy blooming morn arose! But thou wert smitten with th' unhallowed thirst Of Crime unnamed, and thy sad noon must close In scorn and solitude unsought the worst of woes. 1809. [First published, _Lord Byron's Works_, 1833, xvii. 241.] FOOTNOTES: [7] [Dives was William Beckford. See _Childe Harold_, Canto I. stanza xxii. line 6, _Poetical Works_, 1899, ii. 37, _note_ 1.] FAREWELL PETITION TO J. C. H., ESQ^RE^. O THOU yclep'd by vulgar sons of Men Cam Hobhouse![8] but by wags Byzantian Ben! Twin sacred titles, which combined appear To grace thy volume's front, and gild its rear, Since now thou put'st thyself and work to Sea And leav'st all Greece to _Fletcher_[9] and to me, Oh, hear my single muse our sorrows tell, _One_ song for _self_ and Fletcher quite as well-- First to the _Castle_ of that man of woes Dispatch the letter which _I must_ enclose, And when his lone Penelope shall say _Why, where_, and _wherefore_ doth my William stay? Spare not to move her pity, or her pride-- By all that Hero suffered, or defied; The _chicken's toughness_, and the _lack_ of _ale_ The _stoney mountain_ and the _miry vale_ The _Garlick_ steams, which _half_ his meals enrich, The _impending vermin_, and the threatened _Itch_, That _ever breaking_ Bed, beyond repair! The hat too _old_, the coat too _cold_ to wear, The Hunger, _which repulsed from Sally's door_ Pursues her grumbling half from shore to shore, Be these the themes to greet his faithful Rib So may thy pen be smooth, thy tongue be glib! This duty done, let me in turn demand Some friendly office in my native land, Yet let me ponder well, before I ask, And set thee swearing at the tedious task. First the Miscellany![10]--to Southwell town _Per coach_ for Mrs. _Pigot_ frank it down, So may'st them prosper in the paths of Sale,[11] And Longman smirk and critics cease to rail. All hail to Matthews![12] wash his reverend feet, And in my name the man of Method greet,-- Tell him, my Guide, Philosopher, and Friend, Who cannot love me, and who will not mend, Tell him, that not in vain I shall assay To tread and trace our "old Horatian way,"[13] And be (with prose supply my dearth of rhymes) What better men have been in better times. Here let me cease, for why should I prolong My notes, and vex a _Singer_ with a _Song_? Oh thou with pen perpetual in thy fist! Dubbed for thy sins a stark Miscellanist, So pleased the printer's orders to perform For Messrs. _Longman_, _Hurst_ and _Rees_ and _Orme_. Go--Get thee hence to Paternoster Row, Thy patrons wave a duodecimo! (Best form for _letters_ from a distant land, It fits the pocket, nor fatigues the hand.) Then go, once more the joyous work commence[14] With stores of anecdote, and grains of sense, Oh may Mammas relent, and Sires forgive! And scribbling Sons grow dutiful and live! Constantinople, _June_ 7^th^, 1810. [First published, _Murray's Magazine_, 1887, vol. i. pp. 290, 291.] FOOTNOTES: [8] [For John Cam Hobhouse (1786-1869), afterwards Lord Broughton de Gyfford, see _Letters_, 1898, i. 163, _note_ i.] [9] [Fletcher was an indifferent traveller, and sighed for "a' the comforts of the saut-market." See Byron's letters to his mother, November 12, 1809, June 28, 1810.--_Letters_, 1898, i. 256, 281.] [10] [Hobhouse's Miscellany (otherwise known as the _Miss-sell-any_) was published in 1809, under the title of _Imitations and Translations from The Ancient and Modern Classics_. Byron contributed nine original poems. The volume was not a success. "It foundered ... in the Gulph of Lethe."--Letter to H. Drury, July 17, 1811, _Letters_, 1898, i. 319.] [11] [The word "Sale" may have a double meaning. There may be an allusion to George Sale, the Orientalist, and translator of the Koran.] [12] ["In Matthews I have lost my 'guide, philosopher, and friend.'"--Letter to R.C. Dallas, September 7, 1811, _Letters_, 1898, ii. 25. (For Charles Skinner Matthews, see _Letters_, 1898, i. 150, _note_ 3.)] [13] [Compare-- "In short, the maxim for the amorous tribe is Horatian, 'Medio tu tutissimus ibis.'" _Don Juan_, Canto V. stanza xvii. lines 8, 9. The "doctrine" is Horatian, but the words occur in Ovid, _Metam._, lib. ii. line 137.--_Poetical Works_, 1902, vi. 273, _note_ 2.] [14] [Hobhouse's _Journey through Albania and other Provinces of Turkey_, 4^to^, was published by James Cawthorn, in 1813.] TRANSLATION OF THE NURSE'S DOLE IN THE _MEDEA_ OF EURIPIDES. OH how I wish that an embargo Had kept in port the good ship Argo! Who, still unlaunched from Grecian docks, Had never passed the Azure rocks; But now I fear her trip will be a Damn'd business for my Miss Medea, etc., etc.[15] _June_, 1810. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 227.] FOOTNOTES: [15] ["I am just come from an expedition through the Bosphorus to the Black Sea and the Cyanean Symplegades, up which last I scrambled with as great risk as ever the Argonauts escaped in their hoy. You remember the beginning of the nurse's dole in the _Medea_ [lines 1-7], of which I beg you to take the following translation, done on the summit;--[A 'damned business'] it very nearly was to me; for, had not this sublime passage been in my head, I should never have dreamed of ascending the said rocks, and bruising my carcass in honour of the ancients."--Letter to Henry Drury, June 17, 1810, _Letters_, 1898, i. 276. Euripides, _Medea_, lines 1-7-- [Greek: Ei)/th' ô)/phel' A)rgou~s mê\ diapta/sthai ska/phos k.t.l.] ] MY EPITAPH.[16] YOUTH, Nature, and relenting Jove, To keep my lamp _in_ strongly strove; But Romanelli was so stout, He beat all three--and _blew_ it _out_. _October_, 1810. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 240.] FOOTNOTES: [16] ["The English Consul ... forced a physician upon me, and in three days vomited and glystered me to the last gasp. In this state I made my epitaph--take it."--Letter to Hodgson, October 3, 1810, _Letters_, 1898, i. 298.] SUBSTITUTE FOR AN EPITAPH. KIND Reader! take your choice to cry or laugh; Here HAROLD lies--but where's his Epitaph? If such you seek, try Westminster, and view Ten thousand just as fit for him as you. Athens, 1810. [First published, _Lord Byron's Works_, 1832, ix. 4.] EPITAPH FOR JOSEPH BLACKET, LATE POET AND SHOEMAKER.[17] STRANGER! behold, interred together, The _souls_ of learning and of leather. Poor Joe is gone, but left his _all_: You'll find his relics in a _stall_. His works were neat, and often found Well stitched, and with _morocco_ bound. Tread lightly--where the bard is laid-- He cannot mend the shoe he made; Yet is he happy in his hole, With verse immortal as his _sole_. But still to business he held fast, And stuck to Phoebus to the _last_. Then who shall say so good a fellow Was only "leather and prunella?" For character--he did not lack it; And if he did, 'twere shame to "Black-it." Malta, _May_ 16, 1811. [First published, _Lord Byron's Works_, 1832, ix. 10.] FOOTNOTES: [17] [For Joseph Blacket (1786-1810), see _Letters_, 1898, i. 314, _note_ 2; see, too, _Poetical Works_, 1898, i. 359, _note_ 1, and 441-443, _note_ 2. The _Epitaph_ is of doubtful authenticity.] ON MOORE'S LAST OPERATIC FARCE, OR FARCICAL OPERA.[18] GOOD plays are scarce, So Moore writes _farce_: The poet's fame grows brittle[i]-- We knew before That _Little_'s Moore, But now't is Moore that's _little_. _September_ 14, 1811. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 295 (_note_).] FOOTNOTES: [i] _Is fame like his so brittle_?--[_MS_.] [18] ["On a leaf of one of his paper books I find an epigram, written at this time, which, though not perhaps particularly good, I consider myself bound to insert."--Moore, _Life_, p. 137, _note_ 1. The reference is to Moore's _M.P.; or, The Blue Stocking_, which was played for the first time at the Lyceum Theatre, September 9, 1811. For Moore's _nom de plume_, "The late Thomas Little, Esq.," compare Praed's _The Belle of the Ball-Room_-- "If those bright lips had quoted Locke, I might have thought they murmured Little."] [R.C. DALLAS.][19] YES! wisdom shines in all his mien, Which would so captivate, I ween, Wisdom's own goddess Pallas; That she'd discard her fav'rite owl, And take for pet a brother fowl, Sagacious R.C. Dallas. [First published, _Life, Writings, Opinions, etc._, 1825, ii. 192.] FOOTNOTES: [19] ["A person observing that Mr. Dallas looked very wise on a certain occasion, his Lordship is said to have broke out into the following impromptu."--_Life, Writings, Times, and Opinions of Lord Byron_, 1825, ii. 191.] AN ODE[20] TO THE FRAMERS OF THE FRAME BILL.[21] 1. OH well done Lord E---- n! and better done R----r![22] Britannia must prosper with councils like yours; Hawkesbury, Harrowby, help you to guide her, Whose remedy only must _kill_ ere it cures: Those villains; the Weavers, are all grown refractory, Asking some succour for Charity's sake-- So hang them in clusters round each Manufactory, That will at once put an end to _mistake_.[23] 2. The rascals, perhaps, may betake them to robbing, The dogs to be sure have got nothing to eat-- So if we can hang them for breaking a bobbin, 'T will save all the Government's money and meat: Men are more easily made than machinery-- Stockings fetch better prices than lives-- Gibbets on Sherwood will heighten the scenery, Shewing how Commerce, how Liberty thrives! 3. Justice is now in pursuit of the wretches, Grenadiers, Volunteers, Bow-street Police, Twenty-two Regiments, a score of Jack Ketches, Three of the Quorum and two of the Peace; Some Lords, to be sure, would have summoned the Judges, To take their opinion, but that they ne'er shall, For LIVERPOOL such a concession begrudges, So now they're condemned by _no Judges_ at all. 4. Some folks for certain have thought it was shocking, When Famine appeals and when Poverty groans, That Life should be valued at less than a stocking, And breaking of frames lead to breaking of bones. If it should prove so, I trust, by this token, (And who will refuse to partake in the hope?) That the frames of the fools may be first to be _broken_, Who, when asked for a _remedy_, sent down a _rope_. [First published, _Morning Chronicle, Monday, March_ 2, 1812.] [See a _Political Ode by Lord Byron, hitherto unknown as his production_, London, John Pearson, 46, Pall Mall, 1880, 8º. See, too, Mr. Pearson's prefatory Note, pp. 5, etc.] FOOTNOTES: [20] ["LORD BYRON TO EDITOR OF THE _MORNING CHRONICLE_. Sir,--I take the liberty of sending an alteration of the two last lines of stanza 2^d^, which I wish to run as follows:-- 'Gibbets on Sherwood will _heighten_ the scenery, Shewing how commerce, _how_ liberty thrives.' I wish you could insert it tomorrow for a particular reason; but I feel much obliged by your inserting it at all. Of course do _not_ put my name to the thing--believe me, Your obliged and very obedient servant, BYRON. 8, St. James's Street, _Sunday, March_ 1, 1812."] [21] [For Byron's maiden speech in the House of Lords, February 27, 1812, see _Letters_, 1898, ii. 424-430.] [22] [Richard Ryder (1766-1832), second son of the first Baron Harrowby, was Home Secretary, 1809-12.] [23] Lord E., on Thursday night, said the riots at Nottingham arose from a "_mistake_." TO THE HON^BLE^ M^RS^ GEORGE LAMB.[24] 1. The sacred song that on mine ear Yet vibrates from that voice of thine, I heard, before, from one so dear-- 'T is strange it still appears divine. 2. But, oh! so sweet that _look_ and _tone_ To her and thee alike is given; It seemed as if for me alone That _both_ had been recalled from Heaven! 3. And though I never can redeem The vision thus endeared to me; I scarcely can regret my dream, When realised again by thee. 1812. [First published in _The Two Duchesses_, by Vere Foster, 1898, p. 374.] FOOTNOTES: [24] [Caroline Rosalie Adelaide St. Jules (1786-1862) married, in 1809, the Hon. George Lamb (see _English Bards, etc_., line 55, _Poetical Works_, 1898, i. 300, note 1), fourth son of the first Viscount Melbourne.] [LA REVANCHE.] 1. There is no more for me to hope, There is no more for thee to fear; And, if I give my Sorrow scope, That Sorrow thou shalt never hear. Why did I hold thy love so dear? Why shed for such a heart one tear? Let deep and dreary silence be My only memory of thee! 2. When all are fled who flatter now, Save thoughts which will not flatter then; And thou recall'st the broken vow To him who must not love again-- Each hour of now forgotten years Thou, then, shalt number with thy tears; And every drop of grief shall be A vain remembrancer of me! Undated, ?1812. [From an autograph MS. in the possession of Mr. Murray, now for the first time printed.] TO THOMAS MOORE. WRITTEN THE EVENING BEFORE HIS VISIT TO MR. LEIGH HUNT IN HORSEMONGER LANE GAOL, MAY 19, 1813. OH you, who in all names can tickle the town, Anacreon, Tom Little, Tom Moore, or Tom Brown,--[25] For hang me if I know of which you may most brag, Your Quarto two-pounds, or your Two-penny Post Bag; * * * * * But now to my letter--to _yours_ 'tis an answer-- To-morrow be with me, as soon as you can, sir, All ready and dressed for proceeding to spunge on (According to compact) the wit in the dungeon--[26] Pray Phoebus at length our political malice May not get us lodgings within the same palace! I suppose that to-night you're engaged with some codgers, And for Sotheby's Blues[27] have deserted Sam Rogers; And I, though with cold I have nearly my death got, Must put on my breeches, and wait on the Heathcote;[28] But to-morrow, at four, we will both play the _Scurra_, And you'll be Catullus, the Regent Mamurra.[29] [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 401.] FOOTNOTES: [25] [Moore's "_Intercepted Letters; or, The Twopenny Post-Bag_, By Thomas Brown, the Younger," was published in 1813.] [26] [James Henry Leigh Hunt (1784-1859) was imprisoned February, 1813, to February, 1815, for a libel on the Prince Regent, published in the _Examiner_, March 12, 1812.--_Letters_, 1898, ii. 205-208, _note_ 1.] [27] [For "Sotheby's Blues," see Introduction to _The Blues, Poetical Works_, 1901, iv. 570, _et ibid_., 579, 580.] [28] [Katherine Sophia Manners was married in 1793 to Sir Gilbert Heathcote. See _Letters_, 1898, ii. 402, 406.] [29] [See _Catullus_, xxix. 1-4-- "Quis hoc potest videre? quis potest pati, Nisi impudicus et vorax et aleo, Mamurram habere, quod Comata Gallia Habebat uncti et ultima Britannia?" etc.] ON LORD THURLOW'S POEMS.[30] 1. WHEN Thurlow this damned nonsense sent, (I hope I am not violent) Nor men nor gods knew what he meant. 2. And since not even our Rogers' praise To common sense his thoughts could raise-- Why _would_ they let him print his lays? 3. * * * * * 4. * * * * * 5. To me, divine Apollo, grant--O! Hermilda's[31] first and second canto, I'm fitting up a new portmanteau; 6. And thus to furnish decent lining, My own and others' bays I'm twining,-- So, gentle Thurlow, throw me thine in. June 2, 1813. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 396.] FOOTNOTES: [30] [One evening, in the late spring or early summer of 1813, Byron and Moore supped on bread and cheese with Rogers. Their host had just received from Lord Thurlow [Edward Hovell Thurlow, 1781-1829] a copy of his _Poems on Several Occasions_ (1813), and Byron lighted upon some lines to Rogers, "On the Poem of Mr. Rogers, entitled 'An Epistle to a Friend.'" The first stanza ran thus-- "When Rogers o'er this labour bent, Their purest fire the Muses lent, T' illustrate this sweet argument." "Byron," says Moore, "undertook to read it aloud;--but he found it impossible to get beyond the first two words. Our laughter had now increased to such a pitch that nothing could restrain it. Two or three times he began; but no sooner had the words 'When Rogers' passed his lips, than our fit burst forth afresh,--till even Mr. Rogers himself ... found it impossible not to join us. A day or two after, Lord Byron sent me the following:--'My dear Moore, "When Rogers" must not see the enclosed, which I send for your perusal.'"--_Life_, p. 181; _Letters_, 1898, ii. 211-213, _note_ 1.] Thurlow's poems are by no means contemptible. A sonnet, "To a Bird, that haunted the Water of Lacken, in the Winter," which Charles Lamb transcribed in one of Coleridge's note-books, should be set over against the absurd lines, "On the Poems of Mr. Rogers." "O melancholy bird, a winter's day Thou standest by the margin of the pool; And, taught by God, dost thy whole being school To Patience, which all evil can allay: God has appointed thee the fish thy prey; And giv'n thyself a lesson to the fool Unthrifty, to submit to moral rule, And his unthinking course by thee to weigh. There need not schools nor the professor's chair, Though these be good, true wisdom to impart; He, who has not enough for these to spare Of time, or gold, may yet amend his heart, And teach his soul by brooks and rivers fair, Nature is always wise in every part." _Select Poems_, 1821, p. 90. [See "Fragments of Criticism," _Works of Charles Lamb_, 1903, iii. 284.] [31] [_Hermilda in Palestine_ was published in 1812, in quarto, and twice reissued in 1813, as part of _Poems on Various Occasions_ (8vo). The Lines upon Rogers' _Epistle to a Friend_ appeared first in the _Gentleman's Magazine_ for April, 1813, vol. 83, p. 357, and were reprinted in the second edition of _Poems, etc._, 1813, pp. 162, 163. The lines in italics, which precede each stanza, are taken from the last stanza of Lord Thurlow's poem.] TO LORD THURLOW.[32] 1. "_I lay my branch of laurel down_." "_THOU_ lay thy branch of _laurel_ down!" Why, what thou'st stole is not enow; And, were it lawfully thine own, Does Rogers want it most, or thou? Keep to thyself thy withered bough, Or send it back to Doctor Donne:[33] Were justice done to both, I trow, He'd have but little, and thou--none. 2. "_Then, thus, to form Apollo's crown_." A crown! why, twist it how you will, Thy chaplet must be foolscap still. When next you visit Delphi's town, Enquire amongst your fellow-lodgers, They'll tell you Phoebus gave his crown, Some years before your birth, to Rogers. 3. "_Let every other bring his own_." When coals to Newcastle are carried, And owls sent to Athens, as wonders, From his spouse when the Regent's unmarried, Or Liverpool weeps o'er his blunders; When Tories and Whigs cease to quarrel, When Castlereagh's wife has an heir, Then Rogers shall ask us for laurel, And thou shalt have plenty to spare. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 397.] FOOTNOTES: [32] ["On the same day I received from him the following additional scraps ['To Lord Thurlow']. The lines in Italics are from the eulogy that provoked his waggish comments."--_Life_, p. 181. The last stanza of Thurlow's poem supplied the text-- "Then, thus, to form Apollo's crown, (Let ev'ry other bring his own,) I lay my branch of laurel down."] [33] [Lord Thurlow affected an archaic style in his Sonnets and other verses. In the Preface to the second edition of _Poems, etc._, he writes, "I think that our Poetry has been continually declining since the days of Milton and Cowley ... and that the golden age of our language is in the reign of Queen Elizabeth."] THE DEVIL'S DRIVE.[ii][34] 1. THE Devil returned to Hell by two, And he stayed at home till five; When he dined on some homicides done in _ragoût_, And a rebel or so in an _Irish_ stew, And sausages made of a self-slain Jew, And bethought himself what next to do, "And," quoth he, "I'll take a drive. I walked in the morning, I'll ride to-night; In darkness my children take most delight, And I'll see how my favourites thrive. 10 2. "And what shall I ride in?" quoth Lucifer, then-- "If I followed my taste, indeed, I should mount in a waggon of wounded men, And smile to see them bleed. But these will be furnished again and again, And at present my purpose is speed; To see my manor as much as I may, And watch that no souls shall be poached away. 3. "I have a state-coach at Carlton House, A chariot in Seymour-place;[35] 20 But they're lent to two friends, who make me amends By driving my favourite pace: And they handle their reins with such a grace, I have something for both at the end of the race. 4. "So now for the earth to take my chance," Then up to the earth sprung he; And making a jump from Moscow to France, He stepped across the sea, And rested his hoof on a turnpike road, No very great way from a Bishop's abode.[36] 30 5. But first as he flew, I forgot to say, That he hovered a moment upon his way, To look upon Leipsic plain; And so sweet to his eye was its sulphury glare, And so soft to his ear was the cry of despair, That he perched on a mountain of slain; And he gazed with delight from its growing height, Nor often on earth had he seen such a sight, Nor his work done half as well: For the field ran so red with the blood of the dead, 40 That it blushed like the waves of Hell! Then loudly, and wildly, and long laughed he: "Methinks they have little need here of _me_!" 6. Long he looked down on the hosts of each clime, While the warriors hand to hand were-- Gaul--Austrian and Muscovite heroes sublime, And--(Muse of Fitzgerald arise with a rhyme!) A quantity of _Landwehr_![37] Gladness was there, For the men of all might and the monarchs of earth, 50 There met for the wolf and the worm to make mirth, And a feast for the fowls of the Air! 7. But he turned aside and looked from the ridge Of hills along the river, And the best thing he saw was a broken bridge,[38] Which a Corporal chose to shiver; Though an Emperor's taste was displeased with his haste, The Devil he thought it clever; And he laughed again in a lighter strain, O'er the torrent swoln and rainy, 60 When he saw "on a fiery steed" Prince Pon, In taking care of Number _One_-- Get drowned with a great _many_! 8. But the softest note that soothed his ear Was the sound of a widow sighing; And the sweetest sight was the icy tear, Which Horror froze in the blue eye clear Of a maid by her lover lying-- As round her fell her long fair hair, And she looked to Heaven with that frenzied air 70 Which seemed to ask if a God were there! And stretched by the wall of a ruined hut, With its hollow cheek, and eyes half shut, A child of Famine dying: And the carnage _begun_, when _resistance_ is done, And the fall of the vainly flying! 9. Then he gazed on a town by besiegers taken, Nor cared he who were winning; But he saw an old maid, for years forsaken, Get up and leave her spinning; 80 And she looked in her glass, and to one that did pass, She said--"pray are the rapes beginning?"[39] 10. But the Devil has reached our cliffs so white, And what did he there, I pray? If his eyes were good, he but saw by night What we see every day; But he made a tour and kept a journal Of all the wondrous sights nocturnal, And he sold it in shares to the _Men_ of the _Row_, Who bid pretty well--but they _cheated_ him, though! 90 11. The Devil first saw, as he thought, the _Mail_, Its coachman and his coat; So instead of a pistol he cocked his tail, And seized him by the throat; "Aha!" quoth he, "what have we here? 'T is a new barouche, and an ancient peer!"[40] 12. So he sat him on his box again, And bade him have no fear, But be true to his club, and staunch to his rein, His brothel and his beer; 100 "Next to seeing a Lord at the Council board, I would rather see him here." 13. Satan hired a horse and gig With promises to pay; And he pawned his horns for a spruce new wig, To redeem as he came away: And he whistled some tune, a waltz or a jig, And drove off at the close of day. 14. The first place he stopped at--he heard the Psalm That rung from a Methodist Chapel: 110 "'T is the best sound I've heard," quoth he, "since my palm Presented Eve her apple! When _Faith_ is all, 't is an excellent sign, That the _Works_ and Workmen both are mine." 15. He passed Tommy Tyrwhitt,[41] that standing jest, To princely wit a Martyr: But the last joke of all was by far the best, When he sailed away with "the Garter"! "And"--quoth Satan--"this Embassy's worthy my sight, Should I see nothing else to amuse me to night. 120 With no one to bear it, but Thomas à Tyrwhitt, This ribband belongs to an 'Order of Merit'!" 16. He stopped at an Inn and stepped within The Bar and read the "Times;" And never such a treat, as--the epistle of one "Vetus,"[42] Had he found save in downright crimes: "Though I doubt if this drivelling encomiast of War Ever saw a field fought, or felt a scar, Yet his fame shall go farther than he can guess, For I'll keep him a place in my _hottest Press_; 130 And his works shall be bound in Morocco _d'Enfer_, And lettered behind with his _Nom de Guerre_." 17. The Devil gat next to Westminster, And he turned to "the room" of the Commons; But he heard as he purposed to enter in there, That "the Lords" had received a summons; And he thought, as "a _quondam_ Aristocrat," He might peep at the Peers, though to _hear_ them were flat; And he walked up the House so like one of his own, That they say that he stood pretty near the throne. 140 18. He saw the Lord Liverpool seemingly wise, The Lord Westmoreland certainly silly, And Jockey of Norfolk--a man of some size-- And Chatham, so like his friend Billy;[43] And he saw the tears in Lord Eldon's eyes, Because the Catholics would _not_ rise, In spite of his prayers and his prophecies; And he heard--which set Satan himself a staring-- A certain Chief Justice say something like _swearing_.[44] And the Devil was shocked--and quoth he, "I must go, 150 For I find we have much better manners below. If thus he harangues when he passes my border, I shall hint to friend Moloch to call him to order." 19. Then the Devil went down to the humbler House, Where he readily found his way As natural to him as its hole to a Mouse, He had been there many a day; And many a vote and soul and job he Had bid for and carried away from the Lobby: But there now was a "call" and accomplished debaters 160 Appeared in the glory of hats, boots and gaiters-- _Some_ paid rather more--but _all_ worse dressed than Waiters! 20. There was Canning for War, and Whitbread for peace, And others as suited their fancies; But all were agreed that our debts should increase Excepting the Demagogue Francis. That rogue! how could Westminster chuse him again To leaven the virtue of these honest men! But the Devil remained till the Break of Day Blushed upon Sleep and Lord Castlereagh:[45] 170 Then up half the house got, and Satan got up With the drowsy to snore--or the hungry to sup:-- But so torpid the power of some speakers, 't is said, That they sent even him to his brimstone bed. 21. He had seen George Rose--but George was grown dumb, And only lied in thought![46] And the Devil has all the pleasure to come Of hearing him talk as he ought. With the falsest of tongues, the sincerest of men-- His veracity were but deceit-- 180 And Nature must first have unmade him again, Ere his breast or his face, or his tongue, or his pen, Conceived--uttered--looked--or wrote down letters ten, Which Truth would acknowledge complete. 22. Satan next took the army list in hand, Where he found a new "Field Marshal;" And when he saw this high command Conferred on his Highness of Cumberland,[47] "Oh! were I prone to cavil--or were I not the Devil, I should say this was somewhat partial; 190 Since the only wounds that this Warrior gat, Were from God knows whom--and the Devil knows what!" 23. He then popped his head in a royal Ball, And saw all the Haram so hoary; And who there besides but Corinna de Staël![48] Turned Methodist and Tory! "Aye--Aye"--quoth he--"'t is the way with them all, When Wits grow tired of Glory: But thanks to the weakness, that thus could pervert her, Since the dearest of prizes to me's a deserter: 200 _Mem_--whenever a sudden conversion I want, To send to the school of Philosopher Kant; And whenever I need a critic who can gloss over All faults--to send for Mackintosh to write up the Philosopher."[49] 24. The Devil waxed faint at the sight of this Saint, And he thought himself of eating; And began to cram from a plate of ham Wherewith a Page was retreating-- Having nothing else to do (for "the friends" each so near Had sold all their souls long before), 210 As he swallowed down the bacon he wished himself a Jew For the sake of another crime more: For Sinning itself is but half a recreation, Unless it ensures most infallible Damnation. 25. But he turned him about, for he heard a sound Which even his ear found faults in; For whirling above--underneath--and around-- Were his fairest Disciples Waltzing![50] And quoth he--"though this be--the _premier pas_ to me, Against it I would warn all-- 220 Should I introduce these revels among my younger devils, They would all turn perfectly carnal: And though fond of the flesh--yet I never could bear it Should quite in my kingdom get the upper hand of Spirit." 26. The Devil (but 't was over) had been vastly glad To see the new Drury Lane, And yet he might have been rather mad To see it rebuilt in vain; And had he beheld their "Nourjahad,"[51] Would never have gone again: 230 And Satan had taken it much amiss, They should fasten such a piece on a friend of his-- Though he knew that his works were somewhat sad, He never had found them _quite_ so bad: For this was "the book" which, of yore, Job, sorely smitten, Said, "Oh that _mine_ enemy, _mine_ enemy had written"! 27. Then he found sixty scribblers in separate cells,[52] And marvelled what they were doing, For they looked like little fiends in their own little hells, Damnation for others brewing-- 240 Though their paper seemed to shrink, from the heat of their ink, They were only _coolly_ reviewing! And as one of them wrote down the pronoun "_We_," "That Plural"--says Satan--"means _him_ and _me_, With the Editor added to make up the three Of an Athanasian Trinity, And render the believers in our 'Articles' sensible, How many must combine to form _one_ Incomprehensible"! _December_ 9, 1813. [Stanzas 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 8, 10, 11, 12, 17, 18, first published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 471-474: stanzas 6, 7, 9, 13, 14, 15, 16, 19-27, now published for the first time from an autograph MS. in the possession of the Earl of Ilchester.] FOOTNOTES: [ii] The Devil's Drive. _A Sequel to Porson's_ Devil's Walk.--[MS. H.] [34] ["I have lately written a wild, rambling, unfinished rhapsody, called 'The Devil's Drive,' the notion of which I took from Porson's _Devil's Walk_."--_Journal_, December 17, 18, 1813, _Letters_, 1898, ii. 378. "Though with a good deal of vigour and imagination, it is," says Moore, "for the most part rather clumsily executed, wanting the point and condensation of those clever verses of Coleridge and Southey, which Lord Byron, adopting a notion long prevalent, has attributed to Porson." The _Devil's Walk_ was published in the _Morning Post_, September 6, 1799. It has been published under Porson's name (1830, ed. H. Montague, illustrated by Cruikshank). (See _Poetical Works_, 1898, i. 30, _note_ 1.)] [35] [Lord Yarmouth, nicknamed "Red Herrings," the eldest son of the Regent's elderly favourite, the Marchioness of Hertford (the "Marchesa" of the _Twopenny Post-Bag_), lived at No. 7, Seamore Place, Mayfair. Compare Moore's "Epigram:" "'I want the Court Guide,' said my lady, 'to look If the House, Seymour Place, be at 30 or 20,'" etc.--_Poetical Works_, 1850, p. 165.] [36] [The allusion may be to a case which was before the courts, the Attorney-General _v_. William Carver and Brownlow Bishop of Winchester (see _Morning Chronicle_, November 17, 1813). Carver held certain premises under the Bishop of Winchester, at the entrance of Portsmouth Harbour, which obstructed the efflux and reflux of the tide. "The fact," said Mr. Serjeant Lens, in opening the case for the Crown, "was of great magnitude to the entire nation, since it effected the security, and even the existence of one of the principal harbours of Great Britain."] [37] [The Russian and Austrian troops at the battle of Leipsic, October 16, 1813, were, for the most part, veterans, while the Prussian contingent included a large body of militia.] [38] [For the incident of the "broken bridge" Byron was indebted to the pages of the _Morning Chronicle_ of November 8, 1813, "Paris Papers, October 30"-- "The Emperor had ordered the engineers to form fougades under the grand bridge which is between Leipsic and Lindenau, in order to blow it up at the latest moment, and thus to retard the march of the enemy and give time to our baggage to file off. General Dulauloy had entrusted the operation to Colonel Montford. The Colonel, instead of remaining on the spot to direct it, and to give the signal, ordered a corporal and four sappers to blow up the bridge the instant the enemy should appear. The corporal, an ignorant fellow, and ill comprehending the nature of the duty with which he was charged, upon hearing the first shot discharged from the ramparts of the city, set fire to the fougades and blew up the bridge. A part of the army was still on the other side, with a park of 80 pieces of artillery and some hundreds of waggons. The advance of this part of the army, who were approaching the bridge, seeing it blow up, conceived it was in the power of the enemy. A cry of dismay spread from rank to rank. 'The enemy are close upon our rear, and the bridges are destroyed!' The unfortunate soldiers dispersed, and endeavoured to effect their escape as well as they could. The Duke of Tarentum swam across the river. Prince Poniatowsky, mounted on a spirited horse, darted into the water and appeared no more. The Emperor was not informed of this disaster until it was too late to remedy it.... Colonel Montfort and the corporal of the sappers have been handed over to a court-martial."] [39] [Compare _Don Juan_, Canto VIII. stanza cxxxii. line 4. Sir Walter Scott (_Journal_, October 30, 1826 [1890, i. 288]), tells the same story of "an old woman who, when Carlisle was taken by the Highlanders in 1745, chose to be particularly apprehensive of personal violence, and shut herself up in a closet, in order that she might escape ravishment. But no one came to disturb her solitude, and ... by and by she popped her head out of her place of refuge with the pretty question, 'Good folks, can you tell me when the ravishing is going to begin?'" In 1813 Byron did not know Scott, and must have stolen the jest from some older writer. It is, probably, of untold antiquity.] [40] [The "Four-Horse" Club, founded in 1808, was incorrectly styled the Four-in-Hand Club, and the Barouche Club. According to the Club rules, the barouches were "yellow-bodied, with 'dickies,' the horses bay, with rosettes at their heads, and the harness silver-mounted. The members wore a drab coat reaching to the ankles, with three tiers of pockets, and mother-o'-pearl buttons as large as five-shilling pieces. The waistcoat was blue, with yellow stripes an inch wide; breeches of plush, with strings and rosettes to each knee; and it was _de rigueur_ that the hat should be 3-1/2 inches deep in the crown." (See _Driving_, by the Duke of Beaufort, K.G., 1894, pp. 251-258.) The "ancient peer" may possibly be intended for the President of the Club, Philip Henry, fifth Earl of Chesterfield (1755-1815), who was a member of the Privy Council, and had been Postmaster-General and Master of the Horse.] [41] [Sir Thomas Tyrwhitt (_circ_. 1762-1833) was the son of the Rev. Edmund Tyrwhitt, Rector of Wickham Bishops, etc., and nephew of Thomas Tyrwhitt, the editor of the _Canterbury Tales_. He was Private Secretary to the Prince of Wales, auditor of the Duchy of Cornwall (1796), and Lord Warden of the Stannaries (1805). He was knighted May 8, 1812. He was sent in the following year in charge of the Garter mission to the Czar, and on that occasion was made a Knight of the Imperial Order of St. Anne, First Class. He held the office of Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod, 1812-1832. "Tommy Tyrwhitt" was an important personage at Carlton House, and shared with Colonel McMahon the doubtful privilege of being a confidential servant of the Prince Regent. Compare Letter III. of Moore's _Twopenny Post-Bag_, 1813, p. 12. "From G.R. to the E. of Y----th." "I write this in bed while my whiskers are airing, And M--c has a sly dose of jalap preparing For poor T--mm--y T--rr--t at breakfast to quaff-- As I feel I want something to give me a laugh, And there's nothing so good as old T--mm--y kept close To his Cornwall accounts, after taking a dose!" See _Gentleman's Magazine_, March, 1833, vol. 103, pt. i. pp. 275, 276.] [42] ["Vetus" [Edward Sterling] contributed a series of letters to the _Times_, 1812, 1813. They were afterwards republished. Vetus was not a Little Englander, and his political sentiments recall the _obiter dicta_ of contemporary patriots; _e.g._ "the only legitimate basis for a treaty, if not on the part of the Continental Allies, at least for England herself [is] that she should conquer all she can, and keep all she conquers. This is not by way of retaliation, however just, upon so obdurate and rapacious an enemy--but as an indispensable condition of her own safety and existence." The letters were reviewed under the heading of "Illustrations of Vetus," in the _Morning Chronicle_, December 2, 10, 16, 18; 1813. The reviewer and Byron did not take the patriotic view of the situation.] [43] [Robert Banks Jenkinson (1770-1828), second Earl of Liverpool, on the assassination of Perceval, became Prime Minister, June 7, 1812; John Fane (1759-1841), tenth Earl of Westmoreland, was Lord Privy Seal, 1798-1827; Charles Howard (1746-1815), eleventh Duke of Norfolk, known as "Jockey of Norfolk," was a Protestant and a Liberal, and at one time a friend of the Prince of Wales. Wraxall, _Posthumous Memoirs_, 1836, i. 29, says that "he might have been mistaken for a grazier or a butcher by his dress and appearance." He figures _largely_ in Gillray, see _e.g._ "Meeting of the Moneyed Interest," December, 1798. John Pitt (1756-1835), second Earl of Chatham, the hero of the abortive Walcheren expedition, had been made a general in the army January 1, 1812. He "inherited," says Wraxall, _ibid._, iii. 129, "his illustrious father's form and figure; but not his mind."] [44] [Edward Law (1750-1818), first Baron Ellenborough, Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench, 1802-18, was given to the use of strong language. His temper (see Moore's "Sale of the Tools") was "none of the best." On one occasion, speaking in the House of Lords (March 22, 1813) with regard to the "delicate investigation," he asserted that the accusation ["that the persons intrusted had thought fit to fabricate an unauthorized document"] "was as false as hell;" and by way of protest against the tedious harangues of old Lord Darnley, "I am answerable to God for my time, and what account can I give at the day of judgment if I stay here longer?"] [45] [Compare Moore's "Insurrection of the Papers"-- "Last night I toss'd and turn'd in bed, But could not sleep--at length I said, 'I'll think of Viscount C--stl--r--gh, And of his speeches--that's the way.'"] [46] [George Rose (1744-1818) was at this time Treasurer of the Navy. Wraxall, who quotes the "Probationary Odes" with regard to his alleged duplicity, testifies that he "knew him well in his official capacity, during at least twelve years, and never found him deficient in honour or sincerity" (_Posthumous Memoirs_, 1836, i. 148). Moore ("Parody of a Celebrated Letter") makes the Regent conceive how shocked the king would be to wake up sane and find "that R--se was grown honest, or W--stm--rel--nd wiser."] [47] [Ernest Augustus (1771-1851), Duke of Cumberland and King of Hanover, fifth son of George III., was gazetted as Field-Marshal November 27, 1813. His "wounds," which, according to the Duke's sworn testimony, were seventeen in number, were inflicted during an encounter with his valet, Joseph Sellis (? Sélis), a Piedmontese, who had attempted to assassinate the Prince (June 1, 1810), and, shortly afterwards, was found with his throat cut. A jury of Westminster tradesmen brought in a verdict of _felo de se_ against Sellis. The event itself and the trial before the coroner provoked controversy and the grossest scandal. The question is discussed and the Duke exonerated of the charges brought against him, by J.H. Jesse, _Memoirs, etc., of George III._, 1864, iii. 545, 546, and by George Rose, _Diaries, etc._, 1860, ii. 437-446. The scandal was revived in 1832 by the publication of a work entitled _The Authentic Memoirs of the Court of England for the last Seventy Years._ The printer and publisher of the work was found guilty. (See _The Trial of Josiah Phillips for a Libel on the Duke of Cumberland_, 1833.)] [48] ["At half-past nine [Wednesday, December 8, 1813] there was a grand dress party at Carlton House, at which her Majesty and the Prince Regent most graciously received the following distinguished characters from the Russian Court, viz. the Count and Countess Leiven, Mad. La Barrone (_sic_) de Staël, Monsieur de Staël," etc.--_Morning Chronicle_, December 10, 1813.] [49] [In the review of Madame de Staël's _De L'Allemagne_ (_Edinburgh Review_, October, 1813, vol. 22, pp. 198-238), Sir James Mackintosh enlarged upon and upheld the "opinions of Kant" as creative and seminal in the world of thought. In the same article he passes in review the systems of Hobbes, Paley, Bentham, Reid, etc., and finds words of praise and admiration for each in turn. See, too, a passage (p. 226) in which he alludes to Coleridge as a living writer, whose "singular character and unintelligible style" might, in any other country but England, have won for him attention if not approval. His own "conversion" from the extreme liberalism of the _Vindiciæ Gallicæ_ of 1791 to the philosophic conservatism of the _Introductory Discourse_ (1798) to his lecture on _The Law of Nature and Nations_, was regarded with suspicion by Wordsworth and Coleridge, who, afterwards, were still more effectually "converted" themselves.] [50] [See Introduction to _The Waltz, Poetical Works_, 1898, i. 475.] [51] [_Illusion, or the Trances of Nourjahad_, a melodrama founded on _The History of Nourjahad_, By the Editor of Sidney Bidulph (Mrs. Frances Sheridan, _née_ Chamberlaine, 1724-1766), was played for the first time at Drury Lane Theatre, November 25, 1813. Byron was exceedingly indignant at being credited with the authorship or adaptation. (See Letter to Murray, November 27, 1813, _Letters_, 1898, ii. 288, _note_ 1.) Miss Sophia Lee, who wrote some of the _Canterbury Tales_, "made a very elegant musical drama of it" (_Memoirs of Mrs. F. Sheridan_, by Alicia Lefanu, 1824, p. 296); but this was not the _Nourjahad_ of Drury Lane.] [52] [Millbank Penitentiary, which was built in the form of a pentagon, was finally taken in hand in the spring of 1813. Solitary confinement in the "cells" was, at first, reserved as a punishment for misconduct.--_Memorials of Millbank_, by Arthur Griffiths, 1875, i. 57.] WINDSOR POETICS. LINES COMPOSED ON THE OCCASION OF HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS THE PRINCE REGENT BEING SEEN STANDING BETWEEN THE COFFINS OF HENRY VIII. AND CHARLES I., IN THE ROYAL VAULT AT WINDSOR. FAMED for contemptuous breach of sacred ties, By headless Charles see heartless Henry lies; Between them stands another sceptred thing-- It moves, it reigns--in all but name, a king: Charles to his people, Henry to his wife, --In him the double tyrant starts to life: Justice and Death have mixed their dust in vain, Each royal Vampire wakes to life again. Ah, what can tombs avail!--since these disgorge The blood and dust of both--to mould a George.[53] [First published, _Poetical Works_, Paris, 1819, vi. 125.] [ANOTHER VERSION.] ON A ROYAL VISIT TO THE VAULTS.[54] [OR CAESAR'S DISCOVERY OF C.I. AND H. 8. IN YE SAME VAULT.] FAMED for their civil and domestic quarrels See heartless Henry lies by headless Charles; Between them stands another sceptred thing, It lives, it reigns--"aye, every inch a king." Charles to his people, Henry to his wife, In him the double tyrant starts to life: Justice and Death have mixed their dust in vain. The royal Vampires join and rise again. What now can tombs avail, since these disgorge The blood and dirt[55] of both to mould a George! FOOTNOTES: [53] ["I cannot conceive how the _Vault_ has got about; but so it is. It is too _farouche_; but truth to say, my satires are not very playful."--Letter to Moore, March 12, 1814, _Letters_, 1899, iii. 57-58. Moore had written to him, "Your lines about the bodies of Charles and Henry are, I find, circulated with wonderful avidity; even some clods in this neighbourhood have had a copy sent to them by some 'young ladies in town.'"--_Ibid_., p. 57, _note_ 3. The discovery "that King Charles I. was buried in the vault of King Henry VIII.," was made on completing the mausoleum which George III. caused to be built in the tomb-house. The Prince Regent was informed of the circumstance, and on April 1, 1813, the day after the funeral of his mother-in-law, the Duchess of Brunswick, he superintended in person the opening of the leaden coffin, which bore the inscription, "King Charles, 1648" (_sic_). See _An Account of what appeared on Opening the Coffin of King Charles the First_, by Sir H. Halford, Bart., 1813, pp. 6, 7. Cornelia Knight, in her _Autobiography_ (1861, i. 227), notes that the frolic prince, the "Adonis of fifty," who was in a good humour, and "had given to Princess Charlotte the centre sapphire of Charles's crown," acted "the manner of decapitation on my shoulders." He had "forgotten" Cromwell, who, as Lord Auchinleck reminded Dr. Johnson, had "gart kings ken that they had a _lith_ in their neck!"] [54] [From an autograph MS. in the possession of the Hon. Mrs. Norbury. The first wrapper has written upon it, "The original Impromptu within is in the handwriting of the noble author Lord Byron, given to Mr. Norbury [private secretary to Lord Granville] by Mr. Dallas, his Lordship's valued relative." Second wrapper, "Autograph of Lord Byron--tres précieux." Third (outside) wrapper, "Autographe célèbre de Lord Byron."] [55][ [Greek: Pêlòn ai(/mati pephyramhenon] "Clay kneaded with blood." Suetonius, in _Tiberium_, cap. 57.] ICH DIEN. FROM this emblem what variance your motto evinces, For the _Man_ is his country's--the Arms are the Prince's! ?1814. [From an autograph MS. in the possession of Mr. A.H. Hallam Murray, now for the first time printed.] CONDOLATORY ADDRESS TO SARAH COUNTESS OF JERSEY, ON THE PRINCE REGENT'S RETURNING HER PICTURE TO MRS. MEE.[56] WHEN the vain triumph of the imperial lord, Whom servile Rome obeyed, and yet abhorred, Gave to the vulgar gaze each glorious bust, That left a likeness of the brave, or just; What most admired each scrutinising eye Of all that decked that passing pageantry? What spread from face to face that wondering air? The thought of Brutus[57]--for his was not there! That absence proved his worth,--that absence fixed His memory on the longing mind, unmixed; 10 And more decreed his glory to endure, Than all a gold Colossus could secure. If thus, fair Jersey, our desiring gaze Search for thy form, in vain and mute amaze, Amidst those pictured charms, whose loveliness, Bright though they be, thine own had rendered less: If he, that VAIN OLD MAN, whom truth admits Heir of his father's crown, and of his wits, If his corrupted eye, and withered heart, Could with thy gentle image bear to part; 20 That tasteless shame be _his_, and ours the grief, To gaze on Beauty's band without its chief: Yet Comfort still one selfish thought imparts, We lose the portrait, but preserve our hearts. What can his vaulted gallery now disclose? A _garden_ with all flowers--except the rose;-- A _fount_ that only wants its living stream; A _night_, with every star, save Dian's beam. Lost to our eyes the present forms shall be, That turn from tracing them to dream of thee; 30 And more on that recalled resemblance pause, Than all he _shall_ not force on our applause. Long may thy yet meridian lustre shine, With all that Virtue asks of Homage thine: The symmetry of youth--the grace of mien-- The eye that gladdens--and the brow serene; The glossy darkness of that clustering hair,[58] Which shades, yet shows that forehead more than fair! Each glance that wins us, and the life that throws A spell which will not let our looks repose, 40 But turn to gaze again, and find anew Some charm that well rewards another view. These are not lessened, these are still as bright, Albeit too dazzling _for a dotard's sight_; And those must wait till ev'ry charm is gone, To please the paltry heart that pleases none;-- That dull cold sensualist, whose sickly eye In envious dimness passed thy portrait by; Who racked his little spirit to combine Its hate of _Freedom's_ loveliness, and _thine_. 50 _May_ 29, 1814. [First published in _The Champion_, July 31, 1814.] FOOTNOTES: [56] ["The gentlemen of the _Champion_, and Perry, have got hold (I know not how) of the condolatory Address to Lady Jersey on the picture-abduction by our Regent, and have published them--with my name, too, smack--without even asking leave, or inquiring whether or no! Damn their impudence, and damn every thing. It has put me out of patience, and so, I shall say no more about it."--Letter to Moore, August 3, 1814, _Letters_, 1899, iii. 118. For Byron's letter to Lady Jersey, of May 29, 1814, and a note from her with reference to a lost(?) copy of the verses, _vide ibid_., p. 85. Mrs. Anne Mee (1775?-1851) was a miniature-painter, who was employed by the Prince Regent to take the portraits of fashionable beauties.] [57] [Compare _Childe Harold_, Canto IV. stanza lix. line 3, _Poetical Works_, 1899, ii. 374, _note_ 2.] [58] [See _Conversations ... with the Countess of Blessington_, 1834, p. 50.] [Illustration: ANNESLEY HALL.] FRAGMENT OF AN EPISTLE TO THOMAS MOORE. "WHAT say _I_?"--not a syllable further in prose; I'm your man "of all measures," dear Tom,--so here goes! Here goes, for a swim on the stream of old Time, On those buoyant supporters, the bladders of rhyme. If our weight breaks them down, and we sink in the flood, We are smothered, at least, in respectable mud, Where the divers of Bathos lie drowned in a heap, And Southey's last Pæan has pillowed his sleep; That _Felo de se_ who, half drunk with his Malmsey, Walked out of his depth and was lost in a calm sea, 10 Singing "Glory to God" in a spick and span stanza, The like (since Tom Sternhold was choked) never man saw.[59] The papers have told you, no doubt, of the fusses, The fêtes, and the gapings to get at these Russes,[60]-- Of his Majesty's suite, up from coachman to Hetman,-- And what dignity decks the flat face of the great man. I saw him, last week, at two balls and a party,-- For a Prince, his demeanour was rather too hearty. You know, _we_ are used to quite different graces, * * * * * The Czar's look, I own, was much brighter and brisker, 20 But then he is sadly deficient in whisker; And wore but a starless blue coat, and in kersey- mere breeches whisked round, in a waltz with the Jersey,[61] Who, lovely as ever, seemed just as delighted With Majesty's presence as those she invited. * * * * * * * * * * _June_, 1814. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 561, 562 (note).] FOOTNOTES: [59] [The two first stanzas of Southey's "_Carmen Triumphale_, for the Commencement of the Year 1814," end with the line-- "Glory to God--Deliverance for Mankind!"] [60] ["The newspapers will tell you all that is to be told of emperors, etc. They have dined, and supped, and shown their flat faces in all thoroughfares and several saloons."--Letter to Moore, June 14, 1814, _Letters_, 1899, iii. 93, 94. From June 6 to June 27, 1814, the Emperor of Russia, and the King of Prussia were in England. Huge crowds watched all day and night outside the Pulteney Hotel (105, Piccadilly), where the Emperor of Russia stayed. Among the foreigners in London were Nesselrode, Metternich, Blücher, and Platoff, Hetman of the Cossacks. The two latter were the heroes of the mob. _Ibid_., p. 93, _note_ 1.] [61] ["The Emperor," says Lady Vernon (_Journal of Mary Frampton_, pp. 225, 226), "is fond of dancing.... He waltzed with Lady Jersey, whom he admires, to the great discomposure of the Regent, who has quarrelled with her."] ANSWER TO----'S PROFESSIONS OF AFFECTION. IN hearts like thine ne'er may I hold a place Till I renounce all sense, all shame, all grace-- That seat,--like seats, the bane of Freedom's realm, But dear to those presiding at the helm-- Is basely purchased, not with gold alone; Add Conscience, too, this bargain is your own-- 'T is thine to offer with corrupting art The _rotten borough_[62] of the human heart. ?1814. [From an autograph MS., now for the first time printed.] FOOTNOTES: [62] [The phrase, "rotten borough," was used by Sir F. Burdett, _Examiner_, October 12, 1812.] ON NAPOLEON'S ESCAPE FROM ELBA.[63] ONCE fairly set out on his party of pleasure, Taking towns at his liking, and crowns at his leisure, From Elba to Lyons and Paris he goes, Making _balls for_ the ladies, and _bows to_ his foes. _March 27, 1815._ [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, i. 611.] FOOTNOTES: [63] [It may be taken for granted that the "source" of this epigram was a paragraph in the _Morning Chronicle_ of March 27, 1815: "In the _Moniteur_ of Thursday we find the Emperor's own account of his _jaunt_ from the Island of Elba to the palace of the Thuilleries. It seems certainly more like a jaunt of pleasure than the progress of an invader through a country to be gained."] ENDORSEMENT TO THE DEED OF SEPARATION, IN THE APRIL OF 1816. A YEAR ago you swore, fond she! "To love, to honour," and so forth: Such was the vow you pledged to me, And here's exactly what 't is worth. [First published, _Poetical Works_, 1831, vi. 454.] [TO GEORGE ANSON BYRON(?)[64]] 1. AND, dost thou ask the reason of my sadness? Well, I will tell it thee, unfeeling boy! 'Twas ill report that urged my brain to madness, 'Twas thy tongue's venom poisoned all my joy. 2. The sadness which thou seest is not sorrow; My wounds are far too deep for simple grief; The heart thus withered, seeks in vain to borrow From calm reflection, comfort or relief. 3. The arrow's flown, and dearly shalt thou rue it; No mortal hand can rid me of my pain: My heart is pierced, but thou canst not subdue it-- Revenge is left, and is not left in vain. ?1816. [First published, _Nicnac_, March 25, 1823.] FOOTNOTES: [64] ["A short time before Lord Byron quitted England, in 1816, he addressed these lines to an individual by whom he deemed himself injured; they are but little known."--_Nicnac_, March 25, 1823.] SONG FOR THE LUDDITES.[65] 1. AS the Liberty lads o'er the sea Bought their freedom, and cheaply, with blood, So we, boys, we Will _die_ fighting, or _live_ free, And down with all kings but King Ludd! 2. When the web that we weave is complete, And the shuttle exchanged for the sword, We will fling the winding sheet O'er the despot at our feet, And dye it deep in the gore he has poured. 3. Though black as his heart its hue, Since his veins are corrupted to mud, Yet this is the dew Which the tree shall renew Of Liberty, planted by Ludd! December 24, 1816. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 58.] FOOTNOTES: [65] [The term "Luddites" dates from 1811, and was applied first to frame-breakers, and then to the disaffected in general. It was derived from a half-witted lad named Ned Lud, who entered a house in a fit of passion, and destroyed a couple of stocking-frames. The song was an impromptu, enclosed in a letter to Moore of December 24, 1816. "I have written it principally," he says, "to shock your neighbour [Hodgson?] who is all clergy and loyalty--mirth and innocence--milk and water." See _Letters_, 1900, iv. 30; and for General Lud and "Luddites," see _Letters_, 1898, ii. 97, note 1.] TO THOMAS MOORE. What are you doing now, Oh Thomas Moore? What are you doing now, Oh Thomas Moore? Sighing or suing now, Rhyming or wooing now, Billing or cooing now, Which, Thomas Moore? But the Carnival's coming, Oh Thomas Moore! The Carnival's coming, Oh Thomas Moore! Masking and humming, Fifing and drumming, Guitarring and strumming, Oh Thomas Moore! December 24, 1816. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 58, 59.] TO MR. MURRAY. TO hook the Reader, you, John Murray, Have published "Anjou's Margaret,"[66] Which won't be sold off in a hurry (At least, it has not been as yet); And then, still further to bewilder him, Without remorse, you set up "Ilderim;"[67] So mind you don't get into debt,-- Because--as how--if you should fail, These books would be but baddish bail. And mind you do _not_ let escape These rhymes to _Morning Post_ or Perry, Which would be _very_ treacherous--_very_, And get me into such a scrape! For, firstly, I should have to sally, All in my little boat, against a _Galley_; And, should I chance to slay the Assyrian wight, Have next to combat with the female Knight: And pricked to death expire upon her needle, A sort of end which I should take indeed ill! March 25, 1817. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 91.] FOOTNOTES: [66] [_Margaret of Anjou_, by Margaret Holford, 1816.] [67] [_Ilderim, a Syrian Tale_, by H. Gaily Knight, 1816.] VERSICLES. I READ the "Christabel;"[68] Very well: I read the "Missionary;"[69] Pretty--very: I tried at "Ilderim;" Ahem! I read a sheet of "Marg'ret of _Anjou_;" _Can you_? I turned a page of Webster's "Waterloo;"[70] Pooh! pooh! I looked at Wordsworth's milk-white "Rylstone Doe;"[71] Hillo! I read "Glenarvon," too, by Caro Lamb;[72] God damn! March 25, 1817. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 87.] FOOTNOTES: [68] [_Christabel, etc._, by S.T. Coleridge, 1816.] [69] [_The Missionary of the Andes, a Poem_, by W.L. Bowles, 1815.] [70] [_Waterloo and other Poems_, by J. Wedderburn Webster, 1816.] [71] [_The White Doe of Rylstone, or the Fate of the Nortons, a Poem_, by W. Wordsworth, 1815.] [72] [_Glenarvon, a Novel_ [by Lady Caroline Lamb], 1816.] QUEM DEUS VULT PERDERE PRIUS DEMENTAT.[73] God maddens him whom't is his will to lose, And gives the choice of death or phrenzy--choose. [First published, _Letters_, 1900, iv. 93.] FOOTNOTES: [73] [_À propos_ of Maturin's tragedy, _Manuel_ (_vide post_, p. 48, _note_ 1), Byron "does into English" the Latin proverb by way of contrast to the text, "Whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth; blessed be the Name of the Lord" (Letter to Murray, April 2, 1817).] TO THOMAS MOORE. 1. My boat is on the shore, And my bark is on the sea; But, before I go, Tom Moore, Here's a double health to thee! 2. Here's a sigh to those who love me, And a smile to those who hate; And, whatever sky's above me, Here's a heart for every fate. 3. Though the Ocean roar around me, Yet it still shall bear me on; Though a desert shall surround me, It hath springs that may be won. 4. Were't the last drop in the well, As I gasped upon the brink, Ere my fainting spirit fell, 'T is to thee that I would drink. 5. With that water, as this wine, The libation I would pour Should be--peace with thine and mine, And a health to thee, Tom Moore.[74] July, 1817. [First published, _Waltz_, London, W. Benbow, 1821, p. 29.] FOOTNOTES: [74] ["This should have been written fifteen months ago; the first stanza was."--Letter to Moore, July 10, 1817.] EPISTLE FROM MR. MURRAY TO DR. POLIDORI.[75] DEAR Doctor, I have read your play, Which is a good one in its way,-- Purges the eyes, and moves the bowels, And drenches handkerchiefs like towels With tears, that, in a flux of grief, Afford hysterical relief To shattered nerves and quickened pulses, Which your catastrophe convulses. I like your moral and machinery; Your plot, too, has such scope for Scenery! 10 Your dialogue is apt and smart; The play's concoction full of art; Your hero raves, your heroine cries, All stab, and every body dies. In short, your tragedy would be The very thing to hear and see: And for a piece of publication, If I decline on this occasion, It is not that I am not sensible To merits in themselves ostensible, 20 But--and I grieve to speak it--plays Are drugs--mere drugs, Sir--now-a-days. I had a heavy loss by _Manuel_--[76] Too lucky if it prove not annual,-- And Sotheby, with his _Orestes_,[77] (Which, by the way, the old Bore's best is), Has lain so very long on hand, That I despair of all demand; I've advertised, but see my books, Or only watch my Shopman's looks;-- 30 Still _Ivan_, _Ina_,[78] and such lumber, My back-shop glut, my shelves encumber. There's Byron too, who once did better, Has sent me, folded in a letter, A sort of--it's no more a drama Than _Darnley_, _Ivan_, or _Kehama_; So altered since last year his pen is, I think he's lost his wits at Venice. * * * * * * * * * * In short, Sir, what with one and t' other, I dare not venture on another. 40 I write in haste; excuse each blunder; The Coaches through the street so thunder! My room's so full--we've Gifford here Reading MS., with Hookham Frere, Pronouncing on the nouns and particles, Of some of our forthcoming Articles. The _Quarterly_--Ah, Sir, if you Had but the Genius to review!-- A smart Critique upon St. Helena, Or if you only would but tell in a 50 Short compass what--but to resume; As I was saying, Sir, the Room-- The Room's so full of wits and bards, Crabbes, Campbells, Crokers, Freres, and Wards And others, neither bards nor wits: My humble tenement admits All persons in the dress of Gent., From Mr. Hammond to Dog Dent.[79] A party dines with me to-day, All clever men, who make their way: 60 Crabbe, Malcolm,[80] Hamilton,[81] and Chantrey, Are all partakers of my pantry. They're at this moment in discussion On poor De Staël's late dissolution. Her book,[82] they say, was in advance-- Pray Heaven, she tell the truth of France! 'T is said she certainly was married To Rocca, and had twice miscarried, No--not miscarried, I opine,-- But brought to bed at forty-nine. 70 Some say she died a Papist; some Are of opinion that's a Hum; I don't know that--the fellows Schlegel,[83] Are very likely to inveigle A dying person in compunction To try th' extremity of Unction. But peace be with her! for a woman Her talents surely were uncommon, Her Publisher (and Public too) The hour of her demise may rue-- 80 For never more within his shop he-- Pray--was not she interred at Coppet? Thus run our time and tongues away;-- But, to return, Sir, to your play: Sorry, Sir, but I cannot deal, Unless 't were acted by O'Neill. My hands are full--my head so busy, I'm almost dead--and always dizzy; And so, with endless truth and hurry, Dear Doctor, I am yours, 90 JOHN MURRAY. August 21, 1817. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 139-141. Lines 67-82 first published, _Letters_, 1900, iv. 161.] FOOTNOTES: [75] ["By the way," writes Murray, Aug. 5, 1817 (_Memoir, etc._, i. 386), "Polidori has sent me his tragedy! Do me the kindness to send by return of post a _delicate_ declension of it, which I engage faithfully to copy." "I never," said Byron, "was much more disgusted with any human production than with the eternal nonsense, and _tracasseries_, and emptiness, and ill-humour, and vanity of this young person; but he has some talent, and is a man of honour, and has dispositions of amendment. Therefore use your interest for him, for he is improved and improvable;" and, in a letter to Murray, Aug. 21, 1817, "You want a 'civil and delicate declension' for the medical tragedy? Take it."--For J.W. Polidori (1795-1821), see _Letters_, 1899, iii, 284 _note_ I.] [76] [Maturin's second tragedy, _Manuel_, produced at Drury Lane, March 8, 1817, with Kean as "Manuel Count Valdis, failed, and after five nights was withdrawn." It was published in 1817. "It is," says Byron (letter to Murray, June 14, 1817), "the absurd work of a clever man."--_Letters_, 1900, iv. 134, and _note_ I.] [77] [Sotheby published, in 1814, _Five Tragedies_, viz. "The Confession," "Orestes," "Ivan," "The Death of Darnley," and "Zamorin and Zama."] [78] [_Ina, A Tragedy_, by Mrs. Wilmot [Barberina Ogle (1768-1854), daughter of Sir Chaloner Ogle], afterwards Lady Dacre, was produced at Drury Lane, April 22, 1815. Her "tragedy," writes Byron to Moore, April 23, 1815, "was last night damned." See _Letters_, 1898, ii. 332, _note_ 3, etc.; _ibid._, 1899, iii. 195, _note_ I.] [79] [George Hammond (1763-1853) was a distinguished diplomatist, who twice (1795-1806 and 1807-1809) held the office of Under-secretary of State for Foreign Affairs. He is associated with the foundation of the _Anti-Jacobin_ and the _Quarterly Review_. In the drawing-room of Albemarle Street, he was Murray's "chief 4-o'clock man," until his official duties compelled him to settle at Paris.--_Letters_, 1900, iv. 160, _note_ 1. John Dent, M.P., a banker, was nicknamed "Dog Dent" because he was concerned in the introduction of the Dog-tax Bill in 1796. In 1802 he introduced a Bill to abolish bull-baiting.--_Ibid_] [80] [Sir John Malcolm (1769-1833), soldier, administrator, and diplomatist, published (January, 1815) his _History of Persia.--Letters_, 1899, iii. 113, _note_ 1.] [81] [For "Dark Hamilton," W.R. Hamilton (1777-1859), see _Childe Harold_, Canto II. stanza xiii. _var_. I, _Poetical Works_, 1899, ii. 108, _note_ 1. Lines 61, 62 were added October 12, 1817.] [82] [Madame de Staël's _Considérations sur la Révolution Française_ was offered to Murray in June, 1816 (_Memoir, etc., 1891_, i. 316), and the sum of £4000 asked for the work. During the negotiations, Madame de Staël died (July 14, 1817), and the book was eventually published by Messrs. Baldwin and Cradock.--_Letters_, 1900, iv. 94, _note_.] [83] [Byron and the elder Schlegel met at Copet, in 1816, but they did not take to each other. Byron "would not flatter him," perhaps because he did not appreciate or flatter Byron.] EPISTLE TO MR. MURRAY. 1. MY dear Mr. Murray, You're in a damned hurry To set up this ultimate Canto;[84] But (if they don't rob us) You'll see Mr. Hobhouse Will bring it safe in his portmanteau. 2. For the Journal you hint of,[85] As ready to print off, No doubt you do right to commend it; But as yet I have writ off The devil a bit of Our "Beppo:"--when copied, I'll send it. 3. In the mean time you've "Galley"[86] Whose verses all tally, Perhaps you may say he's a Ninny, But if you abashed are Because of _Alashtar_, He'll piddle another _Phrosine_.[87] 4. Then you've Sotheby's Tour,--[88] No great things, to be sure,-- You could hardly begin with a less work; For the pompous rascallion, Who don't speak Italian Nor French, must have scribbled by guess-work. 5. No doubt he's a rare man Without knowing German Translating his way up Parnassus, And now still absurder He meditates Murder As you'll see in the trash he calls _Tasso's_. 6. But you've others his betters The real men of letters Your Orators--Critics--and Wits-- And I'll bet that your Journal (Pray is it diurnal?) Will pay with your luckiest hits. 7. You can make any loss up With "Spence"[89] and his gossip, A work which must surely succeed; Then Queen Mary's Epistle-craft,[90] With the new "Fytte" of "Whistlecraft," Must make people purchase and read. 8. Then you've General Gordon,[91] Who girded his sword on, To serve with a Muscovite Master, And help him to polish A nation so owlish, They thought shaving their beards a disaster. 9. For the man, "_poor and shrewd_,"[92] With whom you'd conclude A compact without more delay, Perhaps some such pen is Still extant in Venice; But please, Sir, to mention _your pay_. 10. Now tell me some news Of your friends and the Muse, Of the Bar, or the Gown, or the House, From Canning, the tall wit, To Wilmot,[93] the small wit, Ward's creeping Companion and _Louse_, 11. Who's so damnably bit With fashion and Wit, That he crawls on the surface like Vermin, But an Insect in both,-- By his Intellect's growth, Of what size you may quickly determine.[94] Venice, _January_ 8, 1818. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 156, 157; stanzas 3, 5, 6, 10, 11, first published, _Letters_, 1900, iv. 191-193.] FOOTNOTES: [84] [The Fourth Canto of _Childe Harold_.] [85] [Murray bought a half-share in _Blackwood's Edinburgh Monthly Magazine_ in August, 1818, and remained its joint proprietor till December, 1819, when it became the property of William Blackwood. But perhaps the reference is to Byron's Swiss Journal of September, 1816.] [86] [Henry Gaily Knight (1786-1846), who was a contemporary of Byron at Trinity College, Cambridge, was a poetaster, and, afterwards, a writer of works on architecture. His Oriental verses supplied Byron with a subject for more than one indifferent _jeu d'esprit_.] [87] [_Phrosyne_, a Grecian tale, and _Alashtar_, an Arabian tale, were published in 1817. In a letter to Murray, September 4, 1817, Byron writes, "I have received safely, though tardily, the magnesia and tooth-powder, _Phrosine_ and _Alashtar_. I shall clean my teeth with one, and wipe my shoes with the other."--_Letters_, 1901, iv.] [88] [Sotheby's _Farewell to Italy_ and _Occasional Poems_ were published in 1818, as the record of a tour which he had taken in 1816-17 with his family, Professor Elmsley, and Dr. Playfair. For Byron's unfinished skit on Sotheby's Tour, see _Letters_, 1900, iv. Appendix V. pp. 452, 453.] [89] [_Observations, Anecdotes, and Characters of Books and Men_, by the Rev. Joseph Spence, arranged, with notes, by the late Edmund Malone, Esq., 1 vol. 8vo, 1820.] [90] [_The Life of Mary Queen of Scots_, by George Chalmers, 2 vols. 4to, 1819.] [91] [Thomas Gordon (1788-1841) entered the Scots Greys in 1808. Two years later he visited Ali Pasha (see _Letters_, 1898, i. 246, _note_ 1) in Albania, and travelled in Persia and Turkey in the East. From 1813 to 1815 he served in the Russian Army. He wrote a _History of the Greek Revolution_, 1832, 2 vols., but it does not appear that he was negotiating with Murray for the publication of any work at this period.] [92] _Vide_ your letter. [93] [Probably Sir Robert John Wilmot (1784-1841) (afterwards Wilmot Horton), Byron's first cousin, who took a prominent part in the destruction of the "Memoirs," May 17, 1824. (For Lady Wilmot Horton, the original of "She walks in beauty," see _Poetical Works_, 1900, iii. 381, _note_ I.)] [94] [Stanzas 12, 13, 14 cannot be published.] ON THE BIRTH OF JOHN WILLIAM RIZZO HOPPNER.[95] HIS father's sense, his mother's grace, In him, I hope, will always fit so; With--still to keep him in good case-- The health and appetite of Rizzo. _February_ 20, 1818. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 134.] FOOTNOTES: [95] [Richard Belgrave Hoppner (1786-1872), second son of John Hoppner, R.A., was appointed English Consul at Venice, October, 1814. (See _Letters_, 1900, iv. 83, _note_ I.) The quatrain was translated (see the following poem) into eleven different languages--Greek, Latin, Italian (also the Venetian dialect), German, French, Spanish, Illyrian, Hebrew, Armenian, and Samaritan, and printed "in a small neat volume in the seminary of Padua." For nine of these translations see _Works_, 1832, xi. pp. 324-326, and 1891, p. 571. Rizzo was a Venetian surname. See W. Stewart Rose's verses to Byron, "Grinanis, Mocenijas, Baltis, Rizzi, Compassionate our cruel case," etc., _Letters_, iv. 212.] [E NIHILO NIHIL; OR AN EPIGRAM BEWITCHED.] OF rhymes I printed seven volumes--[96] The list concludes John Murray's columns: Of these there have been few translations[97] For Gallic or Italian nations; And one or two perhaps in German-- But in this last I can't determine. But then I only sung of passions That do not suit with modern fashions; Of Incest and such like diversions Permitted only to the Persians, Or Greeks to bring upon their stages-- But that was in the earlier ages Besides my style is the romantic, Which some call fine, and some call frantic; While others are or would seem _as_ sick Of repetitions nicknamed Classic. For my part all men must allow Whatever I was, I'm classic now. I saw and left my fault in time, And chose a topic all sublime-- Wondrous as antient war or hero-- Then played and sung away like Nero, Who sang of Rome, and I of Rizzo: The subject has improved my wit so, The first four lines the poet sees Start forth in fourteen languages! Though of seven volumes none before Could ever reach the fame of four, Henceforth I sacrifice all Glory To the Rinaldo of my Story: I've sung his health and appetite (The last word's not translated right-- He's turned it, God knows how, to vigour)[98] I'll sing them in a book that's bigger. Oh! Muse prepare for thy Ascension! And generous Rizzo! thou my pension. _February_, 1818. [From an autograph MS. in the possession of Mr. Murray, now for the first time printed.] FOOTNOTES: [96] [Byron must have added the Fourth Canto of _Childe Harold_ to the complete edition of the _Poetical Works_ in six volumes. See Murray's list, dated "Albemarle Street, London, January, 1818." The seventh volume of the Collected Works was not issued till 1819.] [97] [A French translation of the _Bride of Abydos_ appeared in 1816, an Italian translation of the _Lament of Tasso_ in 1817. Goethe (see _Letters_, 1901, v. 503-521) translated fragments of _Manfred_ in 1817, 1818, but the earliest German translation of the entire text of _Manfred_ was issued in 1819.] [98] [See the last line of the Italian translation of the quatrain.] TO MR. MURRAY. 1. Strahan, Tonson, Lintot of the times,[99] Patron and publisher of rhymes, For thee the bard up Pindus climbs, My Murray. 2. To thee, with hope and terror dumb, The unfledged MS. authors come; Thou printest all--and sellest some-- My Murray. 3. Upon thy table's baize so green The last new Quarterly is seen,-- But where is thy new Magazine,[100] My Murray? 4. Along thy sprucest bookshelves shine The works thou deemest most divine-- The Art of Cookery,[101] and mine, My Murray. 5. Tours, Travels, Essays, too, I wist, And Sermons, to thy mill bring grist; And then thou hast the _Navy List_, My Murray. 6. And Heaven forbid I should conclude, Without "the Board of Longitude,"[102] Although this narrow paper would, My Murray. Venice, _April 11_, 1818. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 171.] FOOTNOTES: [99] [William Strahan (1715-1785) published Johnson's _Dictionary_, Gibbon's _Decline and Fall_, Cook's _Voyages, etc_. He was great-grandfather of the mathematician William Spottiswoode (1825-1883). Jacob Tonson (1656?-1736) published for Otway, Dryden, Addison, etc. He was secretary of the Kit-Cat Club, 1700. He was the publisher (1712, etc.) of the _Spectator_. Barnaby Bernard Lintot (1675-1736) was at one time (1718) in partnership with Tonson. He published Pope's _Iliad_ in 1715, and the _Odyssey_, 1725-26.] [100] [See note 2, p. 51.] [101] [Mrs. Rundell's _Domestic Cookery_, published in 1806, was one of Murray's most successful books. In 1822 he purchased the copyright from Mrs. Rundell for £2000 (see _Letters_, 1898, ii. 375; and _Memoir of John Murray_, 1891, ii. 124).] [102] [The sixth edition of _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_ (1813) was "printed by T. Davison, Whitefriars, for John Murray, Bookseller to the Admiralty, and the Board of Longitude." Medwin (_Conversations_, 1824, p. 259) attributes to Byron a statement that Murray had to choose between continuing to be his publisher and printing the "Navy Lists," and "that there was no hesitation which way he should decide: the Admiralty carried the day." In his "Notes" to the _Conversations_ (November 2, 1824) Murray characterized "the passage about the Admiralty" as "unfounded in fact, and no otherwise deserving of notice than to mark its absurdity."] BALLAD. TO THE TUNE OF "SALLEY IN OUR ALLEY." 1. OF all the twice ten thousand bards That ever penned a canto, Whom Pudding or whom Praise rewards For lining a portmanteau; Of all the poets ever known, From Grub-street to Fop's Alley,[103] The Muse may boast--the World must own There's none like pretty Gally![104] 2. He writes as well as any Miss, Has published many a poem; The shame is yours, the gain is his, In case you should not know 'em: He has ten thousand pounds a year-- I do not mean to vally-- His songs at sixpence would be dear, So give them gratis, Gaily! 3. And if this statement should seem queer, Or set down in a hurry, Go, ask (if he will be sincere) His bookseller--John Murray. Come, say, how many have been sold, And don't stand shilly-shally, Of bound and lettered, red and gold, Well printed works of Gally. 4. For Astley's circus Upton[105] writes, And also for the Surry; (_sic_) Fitzgerald weekly still recites, Though grinning Critics worry: Miss Holford's Peg, and Sotheby's Saul, In fame exactly tally; From Stationer's Hall to Grocer's Stall They go--and so does Gally. 5. He rode upon a Camel's hump[106] Through Araby the sandy, Which surely must have hurt the rump Of this poetic dandy. His rhymes are of the costive kind, And barren as each valley In deserts which he left behind Has been the Muse of Gally. 6. He has a Seat in Parliament, Is fat and passing wealthy; And surely he should be content With these and being healthy: But Great Ambition will misrule Men at all risks to sally,-- Now makes a poet--now a fool, And _we_ know _which_--of Gally. 7. Some in the playhouse like to row, Some with the Watch to battle, Exchanging many a midnight blow To Music of the Rattle. Some folks like rowing on the Thames, Some rowing in an Alley, But all the Row my fancy claims Is _rowing_--of my _Gally_. _April_ 11, 1818.[107] FOOTNOTES: [103] [For Fop's Alley, see _Poetical Works_, 1898, i. 410, _note_ 2.] [104] [H. Gally Knight (1786-1846) was at Cambridge with Byron.] [105] [William Upton was the author of _Poems on Several Occasions_, 1788, and of the _Words of the most Favourite Songs, Duets, etc._, sung at the Royal Amphitheatre, Westminster Bridge, etc. In the dedication to Mrs. Astley he speaks of himself as the author of the _Black Cattle_, _Fair Rosamond_, etc. He has also been credited with the words of James Hook's famous song, _A Lass of Richmond Hill_, but this has been disputed. (See _Notes and Queries_, 1878, Series V. vol. ix. p. 495.)] [106] [Compare-- "Th' unloaded camel, pacing slow. Crops the rough herbage or the tamarisk spray." _Alashtar_ (by H.G. Knight), 1817, Canto I, stanza viii, lines 5, 6.] [107] [From an autograph MS. in the possession of Mr. Murray, now for the first time printed. For stanzas 3, 4, 6, see _Letters_, 1900, iv. 219, 220. For stanzas 1, 2, 3 of "Another Simple Ballat. To the tune of Tally i.o. the Grinder" (probably a variant of Dibdin's song, "The Grinders, or more Grist to the Mill"), _vide ibid._, pp. 220, 221.] ANOTHER SIMPLE BALLAT. 1. MRS. WILMOT sate scribbling a play, Mr. Sotheby sate sweating behind her; But what are all these to the Lay Of Gally i.o. the Grinder? Gally i.o. i.o., etc. 2. I bought me some books tother day, And sent them down stairs to the binder; But the Pastry Cook carried away My Gally i.o. the Grinder. Gally i.o. i.o., etc. 3. I wanted to kindle my taper, And called to the Maid to remind her; And what should she bring me for paper But Gally i.o. the Grinder. Gally i.o. i.o., etc. 4. Among my researches for EASE I went where one's certain to find her: The first thing by her throne that one sees Is Gally i.o. the Grinder. Gally i.o. i.o., etc. 5. Away with old Homer the blind-- I'll show you a poet that's blinder: You may see him whene'er you've a mind In Gally i.o. the Grinder. Gally i.o. i.o., etc. 6. Blindfold he runs groping for fame, And hardly knows where he will find her: She don't seem to take to the name Of Gally i.o. the Grinder. Gally i.o. i.o., etc. 7. Yet the Critics have been very kind, And Mamma and his friends have been kinder; But the greatest of Glory's behind For Gally i.o. the Grinder. Gally i.o. i.o., etc. _April_ 11, 1818. [From an autograph MS. in the possession of Mr. Murray, now for the first time printed.] EPIGRAM. FROM THE FRENCH OF RULHIÈRES.[108] IF for silver, or for gold, You could melt ten thousand pimples Into half a dozen dimples, Then your face we might behold, Looking, doubtless, much more snugly, Yet even _then_ 'twould be damned ugly. _August_ 12, 1819. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 235.] FOOTNOTES: [108] ["Would you like an epigram--a translation? It was written on some Frenchwoman, by Rulhières, I believe."--Letter to Murray, August 12, 1819, _Letters_, 1900, iv. 346. Claude Carloman de Rulhière (1718-1791), historian, poet, and epigrammatist, was the author of _Anecdotes sur la revolution de Russie en l'anneé_ 1762, _Histoire de l'anarchie de Pologne_ (1807), etc. His epigrams are included in "Poésies Diverses," which are appended to _Les jeux de Mains_, a poem in three cantos, published in 1808, and were collected in his _Oeuvres Posthumes_, 1819; but there is no trace of the original of Byron's translation. Perhaps it is _after_ de Rulhière, who more than once epigrammatizes "Une Vieille Femme."] EPILOGUE.[109] 1. THERE'S something in a stupid ass, And something in a heavy dunce; But never since I went to school I heard or saw so damned a fool As William Wordsworth is for once. 2. And now I've seen so great a fool As William Wordsworth is for once; I really wish that Peter Bell And he who wrote it were in hell, For writing nonsense for the nonce. 3. It saw the "light in ninety-eight," Sweet babe of one and twenty years![110] And then he gives it to the nation And deems himself of Shakespeare's peers! 4. He gives the perfect work to light! Will Wordsworth, if I might advise, Content you with the praise you get From Sir George Beaumont, Baronet, And with your place in the Excise! 1819. [First published, _Philadelphia Record_, December 28, 1891.] FOOTNOTES: [109] [The MS. of the "Epilogue" is inscribed on the margin of a copy of Wordsworth's _Peter Bell_, inserted in a set of Byron's _Works_ presented by George W. Childs to the Drexel Institute. (From information kindly supplied by Mr. John H. Bewley, of Buffalo, New York.) The first edition of _Peter Bell_ appeared early in 1819, and a second edition followed in May, 1819. In Byron's Dedication of _Marino Faliero_, "To Baron Goethe," dated October 20, 1820 (_Poetical Works_, 1891, iv. 341), the same allusions to Sir George Beaumont, to Wordsworth's "place in the Excise," and to his admission that _Peter Bell_ had been withheld "for one and twenty years," occur in an omitted paragraph first published, _Letters_, 1891, v. 101. So close a correspondence of an unpublished fragment with a genuine document leaves little doubt as to the composition of the "Epilogue."] [110] [The missing line may be, "To _permanently_ fill a station," see Preface to _Peter Bell_.] ON MY WEDDING-DAY. HERE'S a happy New Year! but with reason I beg you'll permit me to say-- Wish me _many_ returns of the _Season_, But as _few_ as you please of the _Day_.[111] _January_ 2, 1820. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 294.] FOOTNOTES: [111] [Medwin (_Conversations_, 1824, p. 156) prints an alternative-- "You may wish me returns of the season, Let us, prithee, have none of the day!"] EPITAPH FOR WILLIAM PITT. WITH Death doomed to grapple, Beneath this cold slab, he Who lied in the Chapel Now lies in the Abbey. _January_ 2, 1820. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 295.] EPIGRAM. IN digging up your bones, Tom Paine, Will. Cobbett[112] has done well: You visit him on Earth again, He'll visit you in Hell. or-- You come to him on Earth again He'll go with you to Hell! _January_ 2, 1820. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 295.] FOOTNOTES: [112] [Cobbett, by way of atonement for youthful vituperation (he called him "a ragamuffin deist") of Tom Paine, exhumed his bones from their first resting-place at New Rochelle, and brought them to Liverpool on his return to England in 1819. They were preserved by Cobbett at Normanby, Farnham, till his death in 1835, but were sold in consequence of his son's bankruptcy in 1836, and passed into the keeping of a Mr. Tilly, who was known to be their fortunate possessor as late as 1844. (See _Notes and Queries_, 1868, Series IV. vol. i. pp. 201-203.)] EPITAPH. POSTERITY will ne'er survey A nobler grave than this; Here lie the bones of Castlereagh: Stop traveller, * * _January_ 2, 1820. [First published, _Lord Byron's Works_, 1833, xvii. 246.] EPIGRAM. The world is a bundle of hay, Mankind are the asses who pull; Each tugs it a different way,-- And the greatest of all is John Bull! [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 494.] MY BOY HOBBIE O.[113] New Song to the tune of "_Whare hae ye been a' day, My boy Tammy O.! Courting o' a young thing Just come frae her Mammie O._" 1. HOW came you in Hob's pound to cool, My boy Hobbie O? Because I bade the people pull The House into the Lobby O. 2. What did the House upon this call, My boy Hobbie O? They voted me to Newgate all, Which is an awkward Jobby O. 3. Who are now the people's men, My boy Hobbie O? There's I and Burdett--Gentlemen And blackguard Hunt and Cobby O. 4. You hate the house--_why_ canvass, then? My boy Hobbie O? Because I would reform the den As member for the Mobby O. 5. Wherefore do you hate the Whigs, My boy Hobbie O? Because they want to run their rigs, As under Walpole Bobby O. 6. But when we at Cambridge were My boy Hobbie O, If my memory don't err You founded a Whig Clubbie O. 7. When to the mob you make a speech, My boy Hobbie O, How do you keep without their reach The watch within your fobby O? 8. But never mind such petty things, My boy Hobbie O; God save the people--damn all Kings, So let us Crown the Mobby O! Yours truly, (Signed) _INFIDUS SCURRA_. _March 23d_, 1820. [First published _Murray's Magazine_, March, 1887, vol. i. pp. 292, 293.] FOOTNOTES: [113] [John Cam Hobhouse (1786-1869) (see _Letters_, 1898, i. 163, _note_ 1) was committed to Newgate in December, 1819, for certain passages in a pamphlet entitled, _A Trifling Mistake in Thomas Lord Erskine's recent Preface_, which were voted (December 10) a breach of privilege. He remained in prison till the dissolution on the king's death, February 20, 1820, when he stood and was returned for Westminster. Byron's Liberalism was intermittent, and he felt, or, as Hobhouse thought, pretended to feel, as a Whig and an aristocrat with regard to the free lances of the Radical party. The sole charge in this "filthy ballad," which annoyed Hobhouse, was that he had founded a Whig Club when he was an undergraduate at Cambridge. He assured Murray (see his letter, November, 1820, _Letters_, vol. iv. Appendix XI. pp. 498-500) that he was not the founder of the club, and that Byron himself was a member. "As for his Lordship's vulgar notions about the _mob_" he adds, "they are very fit for the Poet of the _Morning Post_, and for nobody else." There is no reason to suppose that Byron was in any way responsible for the version as sent to the _Morning Post_.] "MY BOY HOBBY O. [ANOTHER VERSION.] To the Editor of the _Morning Post_. Sir,--A copy of verses, to the tune of '_My boy Tammy_,' are repeated in literary circles, and said to be written by a Noble Lord of the highest poetical fame, upon his quondam friend and annotator. My memory does not enable me to repeat more than the first two verses quite accurately, but the humourous spirit of the Song may be gathered from these:-- 1. Why were you put in Lob's pond, My boy, HOBBY O? (_bis_) For telling folks to pull the House By the ears into the Lobby O! 2. Who are your grand Reformers now, My boy, HOBBY O? (_bis_) There's me and BURDETT,--gentlemen, And Blackguards HUNT and COBBY O! 3. Have you no other friends but these, My boy, HOBBY O? (_bis_) Yes, Southwark's Knight,[*] the County BYNG, And in the City, BOBBY O! [*] "Southwark's Knight" was General Sir Robert Thomas Wilson (1777-1849), who was returned for Southwark in 1818, and again in 1820; "County Byng" was George Byng, M.P. for Middlesex; and "Bobby" was Sir Robert Waithman (1764-1833), who represented the City of London in 1818, but lost his seat to Sir William Curtis in 1820. All these were advanced Liberals, and, as such, Parliamentary friends of Hobhouse. 4. How do you recreate yourselves, My boy, HOBBY O? (_bis_) We spout with tavern Radicals, And drink with them hob-nobby O! 5. What purpose can such folly work, My boy, HOBBY O? (_bis_) It gives our partisans a chance Watches to twitch from fob-by O! 6. Have they no higher game in view, My boy, HOBBY O? (_bis_) Oh yes; to stir the people up, And then to head the mob-by O. 7. But sure they'll at their ruin pause, My boy, HOBBY O? (_bis_) No! they'd see King and Parliament Both d--d without a sob-by O! 8. But, if they fail, they'll be hanged up, My boy, HOBBY O? (_bis_) Why, then, they'll swing, like better men, And that will end the job-by O! PHILO-RADICLE. April 15, 1820." LINES ADDRESSED BY LORD BYRON TO MR. HOBHOUSE ON HIS ELECTION FOR WESTMINSTER.[114] WOULD you go to the house by the true gate, Much faster than ever Whig Charley went; Let Parliament send you to Newgate, And Newgate will send you to Parliament. _April 9, 1820_. [First published, _Miscellaneous Poems_, printed for J. Bumpus, 1824.] FOOTNOTES: [114] ["I send you 'a Song of Triumph,' by W. Botherby, Esq^re^ price sixpence, on the election of J.C.H., Esqre., for Westminster (_not_ for publication)."--Letter to Murray, April 9, 1820, _Letters_, 1901, v. 6.] A VOLUME OF NONSENSE. DEAR MURRAY,-- You ask for a "_Volume of Nonsense_," Have all of your authors exhausted their store? I thought you had published a good deal not long since. And doubtless the Squadron are ready with more. But on looking again, I perceive that the Species Of "Nonsense" you want must be purely "_facetious_;" And, as that is the case, you had best put to press Mr. Sotheby's tragedies now in M.S., Some Syrian Sally From common-place Gally, Or, if you prefer the bookmaking of women, Take a spick and span "Sketch" of your feminine _He-Man_.[115] _Sept. 28, 1820._ [First published, _Letters_, 1900, v. 83.] FOOTNOTES: [115] [For Felicia Dorothea Browne (1793-1835), married in 1812 to Captain Hemans, see _Letters_, iii. 368, _note_ 2. In the letter which contains these verses he writes, "I do not despise Mrs. Heman; but if she knit blue stockings instead of wearing them it would be better." Elsewhere he does despise her: "No more _modern_ poesy, I pray, neither Mrs. Hewoman's nor any female or male Tadpole of poet Wordsworth's."--_Ibid._, v. 64.] STANZAS.[116] WHEN a man hath no freedom to fight for at home, Let him combat for that of his neighbours; Let him think of the glories of Greece and of Rome, And get knocked on the head for his labours. To do good to Mankind is the chivalrous plan, And is always as nobly requited; Then battle for Freedom wherever you can, And, if not shot or hanged, you'll get knighted. _November 5, 1820_. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 377.] FOOTNOTES: [116] [The lines were sent in a letter to Moore (November 5, 1820) by way of _Autoepitaphium_, "if 'honour should come unlooked for' to any of your acquaintance;" i.e. if Byron should fall in the cause of Italian revolution, and Moore should not think him worthy of commemoration, here was a threnody "ready at hand."] TO PENELOPE.[117] JANUARY 2, 1821. THIS day, of all our days, has done The worst for me and you:-- 'T is just _six_ years since we were _one_, And _five_ since we were _two_. _November 5, 1820._ [First published, Medwin's _Conversations_, 1824, p. 106.] FOOTNOTES: [117] ["For the anniversary of January 2, 1821, I have a small grateful anticipation, which, in case of accident, I add."--Letter to Moore, November 5, 1820, _Letters_, 1891, v. 112.] THE CHARITY BALL.[118] WHAT matter the pangs of a husband and father, If his sorrows in exile be great or be small, So the Pharisee's glories around her she gather, And the saint patronises her "Charity Ball!" What matters--a heart which, though faulty, was feeling, Be driven to excesses which once could appal-- That the Sinner should suffer is only fair dealing, As the Saint keeps her charity back for "the Ball!" _December 10, 1820._ [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 540.] FOOTNOTES: [118] [Written on seeing the following paragraph in a newspaper: "Lady Byron is this year the lady patroness at the annual Charity Ball, given at the Town Hall, at Hinckley, Leicestershire...."--_Life_, p. 535. Moore adds that "these verses [of which he only prints two stanzas] are full of strong and indignant feeling,--every stanza concluding pointedly with the words 'Charity Ball.'"] EPIGRAM ON THE BRAZIERS' ADDRESS TO BE PRESENTED IN _ARMOUR_ BY THE COMPANY TO QUEEN CAROLINE.[119] IT seems that the Braziers propose soon to pass An Address and to bear it themselves all in brass; A superfluous pageant, for by the Lord Harry! They'll _find_, where they're going, much more than they carry. Or-- THE Braziers, it seems, are determined to pass An Address, and present it themselves all in brass:-- A superfluous {pageant/trouble} for, by the Lord Harry! They'll find, where they're going, much more than they carry. _January 6, 1821._ [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 442.] FOOTNOTES: [119] [The allusion is explained in Rivington's _Annual Register_, October 30, 1820 (vol. lxii. pp. 114, 115)-- "ADDRESSES TO THE QUEEN. " ... The most splendid exhibition of the day was that of the brass-founders and braziers. The procession was headed by a man dressed in a suit of burnished plate armour of brass, and mounted on a handsome black horse, the reins being held by pages ... wearing brass helmets.... A man in a complete suite of brass armour ... was followed by two persons, bearing on a cushion a most magnificent imitation of the imperial Crown of England. A small number of the deputation of brass-founders were admitted to the presence of her Majesty, and one of the persons in armour advanced to the throne, and bending on one knee, presented the address, which was enclosed in a brass case of excellent workmanship."--See _Letters_, 1901, v. 219, 220, _note_ 2. In a postscript to a letter to Murray, dated January 19, 1821, he writes, "I sent you a line or two on the Braziers' Company last week, _not_ for publication. The lines were even worthy 'Of ----dsworth the great metaquizzical poet, A man of great merit amongst those who know it, Of whose works, as I told Moore last autumn at _Mestri_ I owe all I know to my passion for _Pastry_.'" He adds, in a footnote, "_Mestri_ and _Fusina_ are the ferry trajects to Venice: I believe, however, that it was at Fusina that Moore and I embarked in 1819, when Thomas came to Venice, like Coleridge's Spring, 'slowly up this way.'" Again, in a letter to Moore, dated January 22, 1821, he encloses slightly different versions of both epigrams, and it is worth noting that the first line of the pendant epigram has been bowdlerized, and runs thus-- "Of Wordsworth the grand metaquizzical poet." --_Letters_, 1901, v. 226, 230.] ON MY THIRTY-THIRD BIRTHDAY. JANUARY 22, 1821.[120] THROUGH Life's dull road, so dim and dirty, I have dragged to three-and-thirty. What have these years left to me? Nothing--except thirty-three. [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 414.] FOOTNOTES: [120] ["To-morrow is my birthday--that is to say, at twelve o' the clock, midnight; _i.e._ in twelve minutes I shall have completed thirty and three years of age!!! and I go to my bed with a heaviness of heart at having lived so long, and to so little purpose. * * * It is three minutes past twelve--''Tis the middle of night by the castle clock,' and I am now thirty-three!-- 'Eheu, fugaces, Posthume, Posthume, Labuntur anni;'-- but I don't regret them so much for what I have done, as for what I might have done."--Extracts from a Diary, January 21, 1821, _Letters_, 1901, v. 182. In a letter to Moore, dated January 22, 1821, he gives another version-- "Through Life's road, so dim and dirty, I have dragged to three-and-thirty. What _have_ these years left to me? Nothing--except thirty-three." _Ibid._, p. 229.] MARTIAL, LIB. I. EPIG. I. "Hic est, quem legis, ille, quem requiris, Toto notus in orbe Martialis," etc. HE, unto whom thou art so partial, Oh, reader! is the well-known Martial, The Epigrammatist: while living, Give him the fame thou would'st be giving; So shall he hear, and feel, and know it-- Post-obits rarely reach a poet. [N.D. ?1821.] [First published, _Lord Byron's Works_, 1833, xvii. 245] BOWLES AND CAMPBELL. To the air of "How now, Madam Flirt," in the _Beggar's Opera_.[121] BOWLES. "WHY, how now, saucy Tom? If you thus must ramble, I will publish some Remarks on Mister Campbell. Saucy Tom!" CAMPBELL. "WHY, how now, Billy Bowles? Sure the priest is maudlin! (_To the public_) How can you, d--n your souls! Listen to his twaddling? _Billy Bowles_!" _February 22, 1821._ [First published, _The Liberal_, 1823, No. II. p. 398.] FOOTNOTES: [121] [Compare the Beggar's Opera, act ii. sc. 2-- Air, "Good morrow, Gossip Joan." "Polly. _Why, how now, Madam Flirt? If you thus must chatter, And are for flinging dirt, Let's try who best can spatter, Madam Flirt_! "Lucy. _Why, how now, saucy jade? Sure the wench is tipsy! How can you see me made The scoff of such a gipsy_? [To him.] _Saucy jade_!" [To her.] Bowles replied to Campbell's Introductory Essay to his _Specimens of the English Poets_, 7 vols., 1819, by _The Invariable Principles of Poetry_, in a letter addressed to Thomas Campbell. For Byron's two essays, the "Letter to.... [John Murray]" and "Observations upon Observations," see _Letters_, 1901, v. Appendix III. pp. 536-592.] ELEGY. BEHOLD the blessings of a lucky lot! My play is _damned_, and Lady Noel _not_. _May 25, 1821._ [First published, Medwin's _Conversations_, 1824, p. 121.] JOHN KEATS.[122] WHO killed John Keats? "I," says the Quarterly, So savage and Tartarly; "'T was one of my feats." Who shot the arrow? "The poet-priest Milman (So ready to kill man) "Or Southey, or Barrow." _July 30, 1821._ [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 506.] FOOTNOTES: [122] [For Croker's "article" on Keats's _Endymion_ (_Quarterly Review_, April, 1818, vol. xix. pp. 204-208), see _Don Juan_, Canto XI. stanza lx. line 1, _Poetical Works_, 1902, vi. 445, _note_ 4.] FROM THE FRENCH. ÆGLE, beauty and poet, has two little crimes; She makes her own face, and does not make her rhymes. _Aug. 2, 1821._ [First published, _The Liberal_, 1823, No. II. p. 396.] TO MR. MURRAY. 1. FOR Orford[123] and for Waldegrave[124] You give much more than me you _gave_; Which is not fairly to behave, My Murray! 2. Because if a live dog, 't is said, Be worth a lion fairly sped, A live lord must be worth _two_ dead, My Murray! 3. And if, as the opinion goes, Verse hath a better sale than prose,-- Certes, I should have more than those, My Murray! 4. But now this sheet is nearly crammed, So, if _you will_, _I_ shan't be shammed, And if you _won't_,--_you_ may be damned, My Murray![125] _August 23, 1821._ [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 517.] FOOTNOTES: [123] [Horace Walpole's _Memoirs of the Last Nine Years of the Reign of George II._ ] [124] [_Memoirs_ by James Earl Waldegrave, Governor of George III. when Prince of Wales.] [125] ["Can't accept your courteous offer [_i.e._ £2000 for three cantos of _Don Juan, Sardanapalus_, and _The Two Foscari_.] These matters must be arranged with Mr. Douglas Kinnaird. He is my trustee, and a man of honour. To him you can state all your mercantile reasons, which you might not like to state to me personally, such as 'heavy season'--'flat public'--'don't go off'--'lordship writes too much'--'won't take advice'--'declining popularity'--'deductions for the trade'--'make very little'--'generally lose by him'--'pirated edition'--'foreign edition'--'severe criticisms,' etc., with other hints and howls for an oration, which I leave Douglas, who is an orator, to answer."--Letter to Murray, August 23, 1821, _Letters_, 1901, v. 348.] [NAPOLEON'S SNUFF-BOX.][126] LADY, accept the box a hero wore, In spite of all this elegiac stuff: Let not seven stanzas written by a bore, Prevent your Ladyship from taking snuff! 1821. [First published, _Conversations of Lord Byron_, 1824, p. 235.] FOOTNOTES: [126] [Napoleon bequeathed to Lady Holland a snuff-box which had been given to him by the Pope for his clemency in sparing Rome. Lord Carlisle wrote eight (not seven) stanzas, urging her, as Byron told Medwin, to decline the gift, "for fear that horror and murder should jump out of the lid every time it is opened."--_Conversations_, 1824, p. 362. The first stanza of Lord Carlyle's verses, which _teste_ Medwin, Byron parodied, runs thus-- "Lady, reject the gift! 'tis tinged with gore! Those crimson spots a dreadful tale relate; It has been grasp'd by an infernal Power; And by that hand which seal'd young Enghien's fate." The snuff-box is now in the jewel-room in the British Museum.] THE NEW VICAR OF BRAY. 1. DO you know Doctor Nott?[127] With "a crook in his lot," Who seven years since tried to dish up A neat Codi_cil_ To the Princess's Will,[128] Which made Dr. Nott _not_ a bishop. 2. So the Doctor being found A little unsound In his doctrine, at least as a teacher, And kicked from one stool As a knave or a fool, He mounted another as preacher. 3. In that Gown (like the Skin With no Lion within) He still for the Bench would be driving; And roareth away, A new Vicar of _Bray_, Except that _his bray_ lost his living. 4. "Gainst Freethinkers," he roars, "You should all block your doors Or be named in the Devil's indentures:" And here I agree, For who e'er would be A Guest where old Simony enters? 5. Let the Priest, who beguiled His own Sovereign's child To his own dirty views of promotion, Wear his Sheep's cloathing still Among flocks to his will, And dishonour the Cause of devotion. 6. The Altar and Throne Are in danger alone From such as himself, who would render The Altar itself But a step up to Pelf, And pray God to pay his defender. 7. But, Doctor, one word Which perhaps you have heard "He should never throw stones who has windows Of Glass to be broken, And by this same token As a sinner, you can't care what Sin does. 8. But perhaps you do well: Your own windows, they tell, Have long ago sufferéd censure; Not a fragment remains Of your character's panes, Since the Regent refused you a glazier. 9. Though your visions of lawn Have all been withdrawn, And you missed your bold stroke for a mitre; In a very snug way You may still preach and pray, And from bishop sink into backbiter!" [First published, _Works_ (Galignani), 1831, p. 116.] FOOTNOTES: [127] [George Frederick Nott (1767-1841), critic and divine, was Rector of Harrietsham and Woodchurch, a Prebendary of Winchester and of Salisbury. He was Bampton Lecturer in 1802, and, soon afterwards, was appointed sub-preceptor to the Princess Charlotte of Wales. He was a connoisseur of architecture and painting, and passed much of his time in Italy and at Rome. When he was at Pisa he preached in a private room in the basement story of the house in Pisa where Shelley was living, and fell under Byron's displeasure for attacking the Satanic school, and denouncing _Cain_ as a blasphemous production. "The parsons," he told Moore (letter, February 20, 1820), "preached at it [_Cain_] from Kentish Town to Pisa." Hence the apostrophe to Dr. Nott. (See _Records of Shelley, Byron, and the Author_, by E.T. Trelawny, 1887, pp. 302, 303.)] [128] [According to Lady Anne Hamilton (_Secret History of the Court of England_, 1832, i. 198-207), the Princess Charlotte incurred the suspicion and displeasure of her uncles and her grandmother, the Queen, by displaying an ardent and undue interest in her sub-preceptor. On being reproved by the Queen for "condescending to favour persons in low life with confidence or particular respect, persons likely to take advantage of your simplicity and innocence," and having learnt that "persons" meant Mr. Nott, she replied by threatening to sign a will in favour of her sub-preceptor, and by actually making over to him by a deed her library, jewels, and all other private property. Lady Anne Hamilton is not an accurate or trustworthy authority, but her extremely circumstantial narrative was, no doubt, an expansion of the contemporary scandal to which Byron's lampoon gave currency.] LUCIETTA. A FRAGMENT. LUCIETTA, my deary, That fairest of faces! Is made up of kisses; But, in love, oft the case is Even stranger than this is-- There's another, that's slyer, Who touches me nigher,-- A Witch, an intriguer, Whose manner and figure Now piques me, excites me, Torments and delights me-- _Cætera desunt_. [From an autograph MS. in the possession of Mr. Murray, now for the first time printed.] EPIGRAMS. OH, Castlereagh! thou art a patriot now; Cato died for his country, so did'st thou: He perished rather than see Rome enslaved, Thou cut'st thy throat that Britain may be saved! * * * * * So Castlereagh has cut his throat!--The worst Of this is,--that his own was not the first. * * * * * So _He_ has cut his throat at last!--He! Who? The man who cut his country's long ago. _?August, 1822._ [First published, _The Liberal_, No. I. October 18, 1822, p. 164.] THE CONQUEST.[129] THE Son of Love and Lord of War I sing; Him who bade England bow to Normandy, And left the name of Conqueror more than King To his unconquerable dynasty. Not fanned alone by Victory's fleeting wing, He reared his bold and brilliant throne on high; The Bastard kept, like lions, his prey fast, And Britain's bravest Victor was the last. _March 8-9, 1823._ [First published, _Lord Byron's Works_, 1833, xvii. 246.] FOOTNOTES: [129] [This fragment was found amongst Lord Byron's papers, after his departure from Genoa for Greece.] IMPROMPTU.[130] BENEATH Blessington's eyes The reclaimed Paradise Should be free as the former from evil; But if the new Eve For an Apple should grieve, What mortal would not play the Devil? _April, 1823._ [First published, _Letters and Journals_, 1830, ii. 635.] FOOTNOTES: [130] [With the view of inducing these friends [Lord and Lady Blessington] to prolong their stay at Genoa, he suggested their taking a pretty villa, called "Il Paradiso," in the neighbourhood of his own, and accompanied them to look at it. Upon that occasion it was that, on the lady expressing some intention of residing there, he produced the following impromptu.--_Life_, 577.] JOURNAL IN CEPHALONIA. THE dead have been awakened--shall I sleep? The World's at war with tyrants--shall I crouch? The harvest's ripe--and shall I pause to reap? I slumber not; the thorn is in my Couch; Each day a trumpet soundeth in mine ear, Its echo in my heart---- _June 19, 1823._ [First published, _Letters_, 1901, vi. 238.] SONG TO THE SULIOTES. 1. UP to battle! Sons of Suli Up, and do your duty duly! There the wall--and there the Moat is: Bouwah![131] Bouwah! Suliotes! There is booty--there is Beauty, Up my boys and do your duty. 2. By the sally and the rally Which defied the arms of Ali; By your own dear native Highlands, By your children in the islands, Up and charge, my Stratiotes, Bouwah!--Bouwah!--Suliotes! 3. As our ploughshare is the Sabre: Here's the harvest of our labour; For behind those battered breaches Are our foes with all their riches: There is Glory--there is plunder-- Then away despite of thunder! [From an autograph MS. in the possession of Mr. Murray, now for the first time printed.] FOOTNOTES: [131] "Bouwah!" is their war-cry. [LOVE AND DEATH.] 1. I WATCHED thee when the foe was at our side, Ready to strike at him--or thee and me. Were safety hopeless--rather than divide Aught with one loved save love and liberty. 2. I watched thee on the breakers, when the rock Received our prow and all was storm and fear, And bade thee cling to me through every shock; This arm would be thy bark, or breast thy bier. 3. I watched thee when the fever glazed thine eyes, Yielding my couch and stretched me on the ground, When overworn with watching, ne'er to rise From thence if thou an early grave hadst found. 4. The earthquake came, and rocked the quivering wall, And men and nature reeled as if with wine. Whom did I seek around the tottering hall? For thee. Whose safety first provide for? Thine. 5. And when convulsive throes denied my breath The faintest utterance to my fading thought, To thee--to thee--e'en in the gasp of death My spirit turned, oh! oftener than it ought. 6. Thus much and more; and yet thou lov'st me not, And never wilt! Love dwells not in our will. Nor can I blame thee, though it be my lot To strongly, wrongly, vainly love thee still.[132] [First published, _Murray's Magazine_, February, 1887, vol. i. pp. 145, 146.] FOOTNOTES: [132] ["The last he ever wrote. From a rough copy found amongst his papers at the back of the 'Song of Suli.' Copied November, 1824.--John C. Hobhouse." "A note, attached to the verses by Lord Byron, states they were addressed to no one in particular, and were a mere poetical Scherzo. --J.C.H."] LAST WORDS ON GREECE. WHAT are to me those honours or renown Past or to come, a new-born people's cry? Albeit for such I could despise a crown Of aught save laurel, or for such could die. I am a fool of passion, and a frown Of thine to me is as an adder's eye. To the poor bird whose pinion fluttering down Wafts unto death the breast it bore so high; Such is this maddening fascination grown, So strong thy magic or so weak am I. [First published, _Murray's Magazine_, February, 1887, vol. i. p. 146.] ON THIS DAY I COMPLETE MY THIRTY-SIXTH YEAR.[133] 1. 'T IS time this heart should be unmoved, Since others it hath ceased to move: Yet, though I cannot be beloved, Still let me love! 2. My days are in the yellow leaf; The flowers and fruits of Love are gone; The worm, the canker, and the grief Are mine alone! 3. The fire that on my bosom preys Is lone[iii] as some Volcanic isle; No torch is kindled at its blaze-- A funeral pile. 4. The hope, the fear, the jealous care, The exalted portion of the pain And power of love, I cannot share, But wear the chain. 5. But 't is not _thus_--and 't is not _here_--[iv] Such thoughts should shake my soul, nor now Where Glory decks the hero's bier,[v] Or binds his brow. 6. The Sword, the Banner, and the Field,[vi] Glory and Greece, around me see! The Spartan, borne upon his shield,[134] Was not more free. 7. Awake! (not Greece--she _is_ awake!) Awake, my spirit! Think through _whom_ Thy life-blood tracks its parent lake,[vii] And then strike home! 8. Tread those reviving passions down,[viii] Unworthy manhood!--unto thee Indifferent should the smile or frown Of Beauty be. 9. If thou regret'st thy youth, _why live_? The land of honourable death Is here:--up to the Field, and give Away thy breath! 10. Seek out--less often sought than found-- A soldier's grave, for thee the best; Then look around, and choose thy ground, And take thy Rest. Missolonghi, _Jan_. 22, 1824. [First published, _Morning Chronicle_, October 29, 1824.] FOOTNOTES: [133] ["This morning Lord Byron came from his bedroom into the apartment where Colonel Stanhope and some friends were assembled, and said with a smile--'You were complaining, the other day, that I never write any poetry now:--this is my birthday, and I have just finished something, which, I think, is better than what I usually write.' He then produced these noble and affecting verses, which were afterwards found written in his journals, with only the following introduction: 'Jan. 22; on this day I complete my 36^th^ year.'"--_A Narrative of Lord Byron's Last Journey to Greece_, 1825, p. 125, by Count Gamba. In the _Morning Chronicle_, October 29, 1824, the lines are headed, "Lord Byron's Latest Verses," and are prefaced by the following note: "We have been indebted to a friend for the following immortal verses, the last he ever composed. Four of the lines have already appeared in an article in the _Westminster Review_" ("Lord Byron in Greece," July, 1824, vol. ii. p. 227).] [iii] _Is like to_----.--[M.C.] [iv] ---- _it is not here_.--[M.C.] [v] ---- _seals the hero's bier_.--[M.C.] [vi] _The steed--the Banner--and the Field.--_[MS. B.M.] [134] I. [The slain were borne on their shields. Witness the Spartan mother's speech to her son, delivered with his buckler: "either _with_ this _or on_ this" (B.M. Addit. MS. 31,038).] [vii] _My life-blood tastes_----.--[M.C.] [viii] _I tread reviving_----.--[M.C.] A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE SUCCESSIVE EDITIONS AND TRANSLATIONS OF LORD BYRON'S _POETICAL WORKS_. COLLECTED EDITIONS. I. The/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ In Two Volumes./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II.] From the last London Edition./ Philadelphia:/ Published by Moses Thomas,/ No. 52, Chesnut Street./ William Fry, Printer./ 1813./ [16º. [A bound copy: smooth blue calf, lettered "LORD BYRON."] _Collation_-- Vol. I.--Title, one leaf; Cont.; Half-title; Dedication; and Text, pp. _1_-203. Vol. II--Title, one leaf; Cont.; Half-title; Preface, etc, pp. i.-xii.; Text, pp. _1_-261. _Contents_-- Vol. I.:--Poems, Original and Translated p. 1 English Bards, etc. p. 137 Vol. II.:--Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Canto I. p. 13 (xciii. stanzas) Canto II. (lxxxviii. stanzas) p. 9 Notes p. 99 Poems (xx.) p. 156 The Giaour (1215 lines) p. 205 Note p. 261 _Note_ (Vol. I.).--On fly-leaf: "To the Rt. Honourable Lord Byron from his obt. servant Geo Ticknor, June 20. 1815." "This book was given to me by Lord Byron, April 20, 1816, on his leaving England. Scrope Davies." [Greek: APO: IÔ:] [Greek: Keph. Th.] [Greek: Kai\ e)n tai~s ê(me/rais e)kei/nais zêtê/sousin oi( a)/nthrôpoi to\n tha/naton kai\ ou)ch eu(rê/sousin au)to\n' kai\ e)pithymê/sousin a)pothanei~n, kai\ pheu/xetai o( tha/natos a)p' au)tô~n.] On second fly-leaf: "Semper ego tui memoriam colam; semper tua imago ante oculos observabitur; semper idem mihi eras; qui idem semper eras bonis omnibus." These volumes which were presented by George Ticknor to Lord Byron,[A] and, in turn, presented by him to Scrope Davies, passed into the hands of Sir Francis Burdett (1770-1844), and are now in the possession of his grandson, Mr. F.B. Money-Coutts. FOOTNOTES: [A] "He [Byron] spoke to me of a copy of the American edition of his poems, which I had sent him, and expressed his satisfaction at seeing it in a small form, because in that way, he said, nobody would be prevented from purchasing it" ("Journal," June 21, 1815).--_Life, Letters, and Journals_ of George Ticknor, Boston, 1876, i. 62. II. The/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ From the last London Edition./ In Two Volumes./ Volume I./ [Vol. II.] Boston:/ Published by Cummings & Hilliard,/ No. I, Cornhill./ Joseph T. Buckingham, Printer,/ 1814./ [12º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. xi. + 308--Title, one leaf, pp. i., ii.; Cont., pp. iii., iv.; _Lord Byron_ [excerpt from the _Analectic Magazine_], pp. v.-xi.; Text, pp. 1-308. Vol. II.: pp. iv. + 251--Title, one leaf, pp. i, ii; Cont., pp. iii, iv; Text, pp. 1-251. _Contents_-- Vol. I.:--Poems, Original and Translated p. 1 English Bards, etc. (Third Edition) (1050 lines), with p. 123 Postscript Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Cantos I., II. (First Edition), p. 179 with Notes, etc. Vol. II.:--Poems [Twenty-six, _i.e._ poems issued with p. 1 Sec. Ed. of _Childe Harold_, and six (not tabulated) issued with the _Corsair_] The Giaour (Fifth Edition) p. 47 The Bride of Abydos (Seventh Edition) p. 103 The Corsair (Sixth Edition) p. 159 Prize Prologue (Oct. 1812) (Second Edition) p. 241 Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte (Second Edition: sixteen stanzas) p. 245 III. The/ Works/ of/ The Right Honorable/ Lord Byron./ In Four Volumes./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II., etc.] Childe Harold./ London:/ Printed for John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1815./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. xviii. + 218--Gen. Half-title, one leaf, pp. i., ii.; Title (_R.T. Davison, Lombard-Street,/ White-Friars, London_.), pp. iii., iv.; General Contents to the Four Volumes, pp. v.-x.*; Half-title (R. Motto--_Le Cosmopolite_), _n.p._; Prefaces, pp. xi.-xviii.; Cont. to Vol. I., one leaf, _n.p._; Text, pp. 1-218. The Imprint is at the foot of p. 218. _Note_.--In the earlier copies of Vol. I. of this edition, the misplaced "Advertisement" to _The Giaour_ is on pp. i., ii., and pp. ix.*, x.*, giving Cont. of _Hebrew Melodies_, are not inserted. Vol. II.: pp. 1-202--Gen. Half-title, one leaf; Title (R. Imprint); Cont. to Vol. II.; Half-title; Dedication; Text, pp. 1-202. The Imprint is in the centre of the last page, p. [204]. Vol. III.: pp. viii. + 9-228--Gen. Half-title, one leaf; Title (R. Imprint); Cont. to Vol. III.; Half-title, pp. i., ii.; Dedication to Thomas Moore, Esq., pp. iii.-viii.; Text, pp. 9-228. The Imprint is at the foot of p. 228. Vol. IV.: pp. viii. [ix.*, x.*] + 203--Gen. Half-title, one leaf; Title (R. Imprint), pp. i.-iv.; Cont. to Vol. IV., pp. v.-x.*; Text, pp. 1-203. _Contents_-- Vol. I.:--To Ianthe, Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Cantos I., II., p. 3 (N. App.) Romaic Books and Authors, etc. p. 188 Vol. II.:--The Giaour (N.) p. 1 The Bride of Abydos, Cantos I., II. (N.) p. 103 Vol. III.:--The Corsair, Cantos I.-III. (N.) p. i. Lara, Cantos I., II. (N.) p. 133 Vol. IV.:--Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte (N.) p. 1 Poems (N.) [xxxvi., consisting of xxix. pub. in the Seventh Ed. p. 17 of _Childe Harold_, vi. pub. in the Second Ed. of the _Corsair_, and Verses on Sir P. Parker.] Hebrew Melodies (24) p. 143 _Note_.--In later issues of Vol. III., 1815, the note on the "Pirates of Barrataria" is inserted and paginated 133*-137*. IV. The/ Works/ of The/ Right Hon. Lord Byron./ In Two Volumes./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II.] London:/ Printed for John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1815/ [8º. _Contents_-- Vol. I.: The Title, as above, is prefixed to _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_, Cantos I., II. (Fourth Ed.), 1812, and _Hebrew Melodies_ (First Ed.), 1815, pp. 1-53. Vol. II.: The Title, as above, is prefixed to _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_, Canto III.; _Childe Harold_, etc., Canto the Fourth; _Romance Muy Doloroso_, Translation, etc., pp. xiv. + 257; _The Lament of Tasso_ (Sixth Ed.), 1818, pp. 1-18; _Poems_ (N.) (Second Ed.), 1816; _Monody_, etc. (New Ed.), 1810; _Ode to Napoleon_ (Second Ed.), 1814, pp 1-14. _Note_.--These general titles were advertised, in July, 1815, for the purpose of binding, in two volumes, poems which were uniformly printed but had been separately issued. It is evident that they were still to be procured after the collected editions of 1815, 1817, 1818 had been published. In other copies the Contents are arranged in a different order. V. _The Poetical Works_, etc. From the last London Edition. In Three Volumes. New York: Published by David Huntington. 1815. [E. Kölbing, _Prisoner of Chillon_, 1896.] VI. _The Works_, etc. Including several poems now first collected. Together with an Original Biography. Embellished with a portrait, title-page, and six other engravings. In Three Vols. Philadelphia: Published by Moses Thomas, J. Maxwell, Printer. 1816. [12º. [Kölbing.] VII. The/ Works/ of/ The Right Honourable/ Lord Byron./ In Five Volumes./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II., etc.] Childe Harold./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1817. [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.:--Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Half-title (R. Motto), pp. v., vi.; Pref., pp. vii.-xiv.; Cont., _n.p._; Text, pp. 1-218. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard Street,/ Whitefriars, London_/), is in the centre of the last page. Vol. II.: pp. 1-202--Title, one leaf; Cont. to Vol. II.; Half-title; Dedication; Advertisement; Text, pp. 1-202. The Imprint is in the centre of the last page, p. [204]. Vol. III.: pp. viii. + 9-222: Title, one leaf; Cont. to Vol. III.; Half-title, pp. i. ii.; Dedication to Thomas Moore, Esq., pp. iii.-viii.; Text, pp. 9-222. The Imprint is in the centre of the last page, p. [224]. Vol. IV.: Title, one leaf; pp. iii., iv.; Cont. to Vol. IV., v.-viii.; Text. The Imprint is in the centre of the last page. Vol. V.: pp. vi. + 184--Title, one leaf; Dedication, pp. i., ii.; Advertisement, pp. iii., iv.; Cont. to Vol. V., pp. v., vi.; Half-title; Text, pp. 1-184. The Imprint is at the foot of p. 184. _Note_.--The Cont. of Vols. I.-IV., 1817, are identical with the Cont. of Vols. I.-IV., 1815. _Contents_-- Vol. V.:-Siege of Corinth (N.) p. 1 Parisina (N.) p. 79 Poems (eleven, as pub. in _Poems_, 1816) p. 127 Monody, etc. (N.) p. 171 VIII. Poems./ By Lord Byron./ New-York:/ Published by Thomas Kirk and Thomas R. Mercein,/ Moses Thomas, M. Carey and Son, Philadelphia;/ Wells and Lilly, Boston;/ and Coale and Maxwell, Baltimore./ T. and W. Mercein, Printers, 93, Gold Street./ 1817./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 1-64 (title-page unnumbered). IX. The/ Works/ of/ The Right Honourable/ Lord Byron./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II., etc.] Childe Harold./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1818. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. xiv. + 218--Half-title (_R.T. Davison, Lombard Street,/ Whitefriars, London_./), etc. (_Vide supra_, Vol. I., 1817). Vol. II.: pp. 1-202--Half-title (R. Imprint), etc. (_Vide supra_, Vol. II., 1817). Vol. III.: pp. viii. + 9-222 (_Vide supra_, Vol. III., 1817). Vol. IV.: pp. viii. + 203--Half-title (R. Imprint) (_Vide supra_, Vol. IV., 1817). Vol. V.:/ pp. 1-184--Half-title, _The Siege_, etc., one leaf; Title [The/ Works/ etc./ The Siege of Corinth--Parisina--Poems./ London:/John Murray, Albemarle-Street,/ 1818./]; Cont. of Vol. V.; Advertisement; Dedication, "To John Hobhouse, Esq.;" Text, pp. 1-104; The Imprint, _T. Davison, Lombard-street_,/ Whitefriars, London,/ is at the foot of p. 184. Vol. VI.: pp. 1-187--Gen. Half-title (R. _T. Davison, Lombard Street, Whitefriars, London_); Title, one leaf [The Works,/ etc. _In Six Volumes_ (in some copies "In six," etc., does not appear)]; Cont. to Vol. VI.; Half-title; Text, pp. 1-187, + Publisher's List, pp. 189-192. The Imprint is at the foot of p. 192. Vol. VII.: pp. 1-273--Title [The/ Works, etc./ 1819.] (R. _London:/ Printed by T. Davison, Whitefriars_/); Cont. to Vol. VII.; Text, pp. 1-273 + Publisher's Advertisement of Historical Illustrations (R. _London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_/). Vol. VIII.: pp. 1-165--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint); Title [The/ Works, etc./ 1820]; Cont. to Vol. VIII.; Text, pp. 1-165 + Publisher's List (ten pages, with Imprint at the foot of p. [10]). _Note_.--For Contents for Vols. I.-V., _vide supra_, Ed. 1817. _Contents_-- Vol. VI.: -- Sonnet p. 1 The Prisoner of Chillon (N.) (and six poems, N.) p. 3 To Manfred (N.) p. 67 Lament of Tasso p. 169 Vol. VII.: -- Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Canto III. (N.) p. 1 Canto IV. (N.) p. 81 Vol. VIII.: -- Beppo (N.) p. 1 Mazeppa p. 57 Ode p. 113 A Fragment p. 127 Romance Muy Doloroso (Transl.) p. 145 Sonetto di Vittorelli (Transl.) p. 162 _Note_.--Vols. I.-IV. of the Edition of 1818 are illustrated by "Twelve Plates engraved by Charles Heath, and other Artists, from the original Designs of [Tho.] Stothard." The "original Designs," water-colour drawings, were presented by Lord Byron to the third Lord Holland, and are now in the possession of the Earl of Ilchester. X. _The Works of the right honourable Lord Byron_. Comprehending all his suppressed poems. Embellished with a portrait, and a Sketch of his Lordship's life. Vols. I.-VI. Paris: Published by Galignani, at the French, English, Italian, German and Spanish library, Nº 18, Rue Vivienne, 1818, in 12º. [_Bibliographie de la France_, June 13, 1818.] XI. _The Works of Lord Byron_. In Thirteen Volumes. Published by Gerard Fleischer. Leipzic. 1818-1822. [8º. [Kayser, _Index Verborum_. 1834. See, too, _Jahrbücher der Literatur_. Vienna, 1821. Vol. xv. pp. 105-145.] XII. The/ Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II., etc.] London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1819./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. xv. + 479--Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Cont. to Vol. I., pp. v., vi.; Half-title, with Motto, pp. vii., viii.; Preface, etc., pp. ix.-xv.; Text, pp. 1-479. The Imprint (_London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_./) is in the centre of the last page, p. [480]. Vol. II.: pp. 1-491--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint); Title, one leaf; Cont. to Vol. II.; Text, pp. 1-491; Notes to _Beppo_, p. [493], one leaf. Vol. III.: pp. viii. + 330--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint), pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Cont. to Vol. III., pp. v.-viii.; Text, pp. 1-330. The Imprint is at the foot of the last page, p. 330. _Note_.--In Vol. I. the text and notes of Cantos I., II. of _Childe Harold_ are identical with the Eleventh Edition of 1819, the text with the Tenth Edition of 1815. The text of Cantos III. and IV. is all but identical with the text of the editions of 1816, 1818, but the notes have been reset. _Contents_-- Vol. I.: Childe Harold's, etc. Cantos I., II. (N.) p.1 Canto III. (N.). p. 195 Canto IV. (N.). p. 273 Vol. II.:--The Giaour (N.) p. 1 The Bride of Abydos (N.) p. 79 The Corsair (N.) p. 149 Lara (N.) p. 251 The Siege of Corinth (N.) p. 317 Parisina (N.) p. 373 The Prisoner of Chillon (N.) p. 411 Beppo (N.) p. 439 Vol. III.:--Manfred (N.) p. 1 Hebrew Melodies (23) p. 81 Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte (N.) p. 121 Monody, etc. (N.) p. 137 Lament of Tasso p. 147 Poems (N.) p. 163 _Note_.--The _Poems_ include thirty pub. with _Childe Harold_, Ed. 10, 1815; six pub. with the _Corsair_, Ed. 2, 1814; eleven pub. in _Poems_, 1816; _A Sketch_, etc. (now first included); six pub. with _The Prisoner of Chillon_, 1816, and the translation from the Spanish Ballad (_Romance_, etc.) and the Italian Sonnet pub. with _Childe Harold_, Canto IV., 1818-fifty-six pieces in all. XIII. The/ Works/ of/ The Right Honourable/ Lord Byron./ Comprehending all his Suppressed Poems,/ Embellished with a Portrait and a Sketch of His/ Lordship's Life./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II., etc.] Childe Harold's Pilgrimage,/ Cantos I. and II.--The Giaour./ Second Edition./ Paris./ Published by Galignani,/ At the French, English, Italian, German and Spanish/ Library, No. 18, Rue Vivienne./ 1819 [12º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. viii. + viii. + 276--Title, one leaf; Advertisement, one leaf; Memoir of the R.H. Lord Byron, pp. i.-viii.; Text, pp. i.-viii., 9-284. Frontispiece: Portrait of Lord Byron by G. Harlow, Lith. de G. Engelmann. Vol. II.: pp. 1-244--Gen. Half-title (R. _Printed by A. Belin_); Title, one leaf; Text, pp. 1-244. Vol. III.: pp. 1-230--Gen. Half-title, etc., as above; Text, pp. 1-230. Vol. IV.: pp. 1-211--Gen. Half-title, etc., as above; Text, pp. 1-211. Vol. V.: pp. 1-225--Gen. Half-title, as above; Dedication, pp. iii.-x.; Text, pp. 11-235. Vol. VI.: pp. 1-130--Gen. Half-title, etc., as above; Text, pp. 1-130 + six pages of General Index. _Contents_-- Vol. I.:--Childe Harold's, etc., Cantos I., II. (N.) p. 9 The Giaour (N.) p. 207 Vol. II.:--The Bride, etc. (N.) p. 1 The Corsair (N.) p. 71 Lara (N.) p. 179 Vol. III.:--Ode to N.B. (N.) p. 1 Poems (xxxvi.) (N.) p. 13 Hebrew Melodies p. 79 The Siege, etc. (N.) p. 107 Parisina (N.) p. 163 Poems, 1816 p. 195 Monody, etc. (N.) p. 222 Vol. IV.:--The Prisoner of Chillon, etc. (N.) p. 1 Manfred (N.) p. 51 The Lament of Tasso p. 125 Childe Harold's, etc., Canto IV. (N.) p. 139 Vol. V.:--Childe Harold's, etc., Canto IV. (N.) p. 1 Publisher's Advt. p. [220] Romance Muy Doloroso (Transl.) p. 221 Sonetto di Vittorelli (Transl.) p. 234 Vol. VI.:--Beppo p. 1 Suppressed Poems: English Bards, etc. p. 47 Ode ("Oh, shame to thee," etc.) p. 121 Windsor Poetics p. 125 A Sketch p. 126 Mazeppa p. 5 Ode (To Venice) p. 47 A Fragment p. 57 _Note_.--Bound up with, and, possibly, an integral part of Vol. VI., is _Mazeppa_. _Collation_: pp. 1-69. 12º. Half-title (R. _Printed by A. Belin_); pp 1, 2; Title, one leaf (Mazeppa,/ A Poem.: By Lord Byron./ Second Edition./ Paris:/ Published by Galignani,/ At the French, English, Italian, German and Spanish/ Library, Nº 18, Rue Vivienne./ 1819./), pp. 3, 4; Second half-title; Advertisement, pp. 7, 8; and Text, pp. 9-69. (For Contents, _vide supra_.) XIV. _The Works of the R.H. Lord Byron_. In Six Volumes. Zwickau. Printed for Brothers Schumann, 1819. [_Jahrbücher der Lit_.] XV. _The Works_, etc. In Seven Volumes. Brussels: published at the English Repository of Arts, 1819. [Kölbing.] XVI. _Works of Lord Byron_. New York. 1820. Four Volumes. [18º. [Cat. of Library of _Boston Athenæum_.] _Contents_-- Vol. I.:--Childe Harold's, etc. Vol. II.:--Bride, etc.--Corsair--Lara--The Giaour. Vol. III.:--Siege, etc.--Prisoner of Chillon--Parisina--Beppo--English Bards, etc.--Mazeppa--Ode--Fragment--Don Juan. Vol. IV.:--Hebrew Melodies--Ode to N.B.--Monody, etc.--Lament of Tasso--Manfred--Poems. XVII. The/ Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II., etc.] London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 18217 [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. xvi. + 216--Gen. Half-title (R. (_a_) _Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_.) pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Cont. to Vol. I., pp. v., vi.; Preface, etc., pp. vii.-xi.; Text, pp. 1-216. The Imprint (_b_) (_London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_.) is at the foot of p. 216. Vol. II.: pp. 1-272--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint (_a_)); Title, one leaf; Cont. to Vol. II.; Text, pp. 1-237. The Imprint (_b_) is at the foot of p. 272. Vol. III.: pp. 1-237--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint (_a_)); Title, one leaf; Cont. to Vol. III.; Text, pp. 1-237. The Imprint (_b_) is in the centre of p. [240]. Vol. IV.: pp. 1-274--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint (_a_)); Title, one leaf; Cont. to Vol. IV.; Text, pp. 1-274. The Imprint (_b_) is in the centre of p. [276]. Vol. V.: pp. viii. + 284--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint (_a_)), pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf; Cont. to Vol. V., pp.[v.]-viii.; Text, pp. 1-284. The Imprint (_b_) is at the foot of p. 284. _Contents_-- Vol. I.:--Childe Harold's, etc., Cantos I., II. (N. App.) p. i. Vol. II.:--Childe Harold's, etc., Canto III. (N.) p. 1 Canto IV. (N.) p. 77 Vol. III.:--The Giaour (N.) p. 1 The Bride, etc. (N.) p. 75 The Corsair (N.) p. 143 Vol. IV.:--Lara (N.) p. 1 The Siege (N.) p. 63 Parisina p. 117 The Prisoner (N.) p. 153 Beppo (N.) p. 179 Mazeppa p. 235 Vol. V.:--Manfred (N.) p. 1 Hebrew Melodies p. 73 Ode to N.B. (N.) p. 104 Monody, etc. p. 121 Lament of Tasso p. 127 Poems (N.) p. 141 _Note_.--The Poems (fifty-seven in all) include the _Ode to Venice_. XVIII. Lord Byron's/ Works./ Volume the First./ [Volume the Second, etc.] Containing:/ The Bride of Abydos--The Corsair--Lara--/Parisina, etc./ Paris/ Sold by François Louis,/ At his French and English Library,/ Rue Hautefeuille, Nº 10;/ And Baudry,/ At the Foreign Library,/ Rue du Coq Saint Honoré, Nº 9./ 1821./ [12º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. xii. + 216--Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; "Memoir of Lord Byron," pp. v.-xii.; Text, pp. 1-216. Vol. II. pp. 1-240--Title, one leaf; Text, pp. 1-240. Vol. III.: pp. 1-[224]--Title, one leaf; Text, pp. 1-224 + 4 _n.p._ Vol. IV.: pp. 1-[228]--Title, one leaf; Text, pp. 1-224 + 4 _n.p._ Vol. V.: pp. 1-244--Title, one leaf; Text, pp. 1-244. _Contents_-- Vol. I.:--The Bride, etc., Cantos I., II. (N.) p. 1 The Corsair, Cantos I.-III. (N.) p. 55 Lara, Cantos I., II. (N.) p. 131 Parisina p. 179 Ode to N.B. p. 203 Ode to Venice p. 211 Vol. II.:--English Bards, etc. p. 1 Don Juan, Cantos I., II. (N.) p. 55 The Giaour (N.) p. 167 Vol. III.:--Childe Harold, Cantos I.-IV.(N.) p. 1 Beppo p. 187 Fare Thee Well p. 219 Darkness p. 221 Stanzas for Music ("There be none," etc.) p. [224] Vol. IV.:--Siege, etc. (N.) p. 1 Manfred (N.) p. 43 Mazeppa p. 107 Prisoner of Chillon, a Fable, Sonnet, etc. (N.) p. 139 Sonnet ("Rousseau," etc.) p. 160 Lament of Tasso p. 161 Various Poems:[B] A Sketch, etc. (and 34 others) p. 173 Vol. V.:--Hours of Idleness (_i.e._ Poems Original and p. 1 Translated), "The Second English Edition," On Leaving Newstead Abbey, etc. Critique, etc. p. 116 Fugitive Pieces (including _Windsor Poetics_, first pub. by p. 163 Murray, and the spurious _Ode_, "Oh, shame to thee," etc.) The Curse of Minerva (full text) p. 177 Avis ("Le Vampire, faussement attribué à Lord Byron, est de p. 191 _Polidori_, jeune médecin qui a vécu quelque temps à Genève avec le poëte anglais," etc.) The Vampyre, A Tale p. 192 Extract of a Letter from Geneva p. 194 Introduction p. 201 The Vampyre p. 207 A Fragment (June 17, 1816) p. 237 FOOTNOTES: [B] [Six "Hebrew Melodies" are included in Various Poems.] XIX. The/ Works/ of/ Lord Byron,/ comprehending the/ Suppressed Poems./ Embellished with a Portrait, And a Sketch of His Life./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II., etc.] Paris:/ Published by A. and W. Galignani,/ At the French, English, Italian, German and Spanish Library,/ Nº 18, Rue Vivienne./ 1822.7 [8º. _Collation_--Vol. I.: pp. 106 + 265--Gen. Half-title (R. _Printed by A. Belin_); Title, one leaf, pp. 1, 2; Contents to Vol. I., pp. 3, 4; _The Life of Lord Byron_ [By J.W. Lake], pp. 5-106; Text, pp. 1-264. Vol. XVI: pp. 204--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint); Title, one leaf; Text, pp. 1-204. _Contents_-- Vol. I.:--Hours of Idleness p. 1 Translations and Imitations p. 63 Fugitive Pieces p. 97 Critique [E.R. Jan. 1808] p. 153 English Bards, etc. p. 161 Lines written by Mr. Fitzgerald in a copy of _English p. 234 Bards_, etc., with his Lordship's Reply The Curse of Minerva p. 235 An Ode ("Oh, shame to thee," etc.) p. 255 Windsor Poetics p. 259 A Sketch, etc. p. 260 Vol. XVI.:--The Deformed Transformed p. 1 Transl. of Morgante Maggiore p. 105 Lord Byron's Speeches p. 157 _Note_.--The frontispiece of Vol. I. is an engraving of the Portrait by G. Sanders. _Don Juan_ was included in successive volumes in accordance with the date of publication: Cantos I., II. in Vol. VII.; Cantos III., IV., V. in Vol. VIII.; Cantos VI.-XI. in Vol. XIV; and Cantos XII.-XVI. in Vol. XV. Volumes XIII.-XV. of this Edition were issued in 1823, and Vol. XVI. in 1824. XX. The/ Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ In Four Volumes./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II., etc.] London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1823 [8º _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. xi. + 303--Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Gen. Cont., pp. v., xi.; Cont. of Vol. I.; Text, pp. 1-303. The Imprint (_London:_/ _Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_/) is in the centre of the last page. Vol. II.: pp. 1-359--Title, one leaf; Cont. of Vol. II.; Text, pp. 1-359. The Imprint is in the centre of the last page, p. [360]. Vol. III.: pp. 1-345--Title, one leaf; Cont. of Vol. III.; Text, pp. 1-345; Notes to _Beppo_, one leaf, p. [347]. The Imprint is in the centre of the last page, p. [348]. Vol. IV.: pp. viii. + 372--Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Cont. of Vol. IV., pp. v.-viii.; Text, pp. 1-372. The Imprint is at the foot of p. 372. _Contents_-- Vol. I.:--Childe Harold's, etc., Cantos I., II. (N. App.) p. 1 Canto III. (N.) p. 223 Vol. II.:--Childe Harold's, etc., Canto IV. (N.) p. 1 The Giaour (N.) p. 207 The Bride, etc., Cantos I., II. (N.) p. 287 Vol. III.:--The Corsair, Cantos I.-III. (N.) p. 1 Lara, Cantos I., II. (N.) p. 105 The Siege, etc. (N.) p. 169 Parisina (N.) p. 225 The Prisoner of Chillon, Sonnet (N.) p. 265 Beppo (N.) p. 293 Vol. IV.:--Mazeppa (N.) p. 1 Manfred (N.) p. 43 Hebrew Melodics (N.) p. 121 Ode to N.B. (N.) p. 159 Monody, etc. (N.) p. 175 Lament of Tasso p. 185 Poems (57) (N.) p. 203 _Note_.--This edition of 1823, 4 vols. 8º, differs from the 3 vols. 8º of 1819, by the addition of _Mazeppa_ and the _Ode to Venice_. The Front, of Vol. I. is "Lord Byron," by T. Phillips, R.A., engr. by C. Warren. XXI. _The Works of Lord Byron_. In Twelve Vols. Paris: Printed for Baudry, etc. 1822-1824. [12º. _Note_.--The _Life and Genius of Lord Byron_, by Sir Cosmo Gordon, is affixed to the twelfth volume. See _La France Littéraire_, by J.M. Quérard. 1827. XXII. _The Works of Lord Byron_, comprehending the suppressed Poems. Embellished with a portrait, and a sketch of his life. In Twelve Volumes. Printed by A. Belin. Published by Galignani. 1823. [12º. [_B. de la F._, May 24, 1823.] XXIII. The/ Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ Vol. V./ Containing/ Hours of Idleness--Fugitive Pieces--English/ Bards and Scotch Reviewers--Waltz--/Miscellaneous Poems, etc./ London:/ Knight and Lacey, Paternoster-Row./ 1824./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. V.: pp. xiii. + 154 + 9 + vi. + 57 + vii. + 61--Gen. Half-title; Title (R. _T.C. Hansard, Paternoster-Row Press_); Preface; Cont., pp. [i.]-xiii.; Second Half-title; Text, pp. 2-154, etc. _Note_.--The Imprint (_T.C. Hansard/ Paternoster-Row_/) is at the foot of the last page (p. 62). Four pages (_n.p._) of publishers' list of Sherwood, Jones & Co., etc., dated London, June, 1824, are bound up with Vol. V. Vol. VI.: pp. vi. + 308 + 2 pages (_n.p._)--Gen. Half-title; Title [The/ etc. In Seven Volumes./ Vol. VI./ London:/ Printed for John and Henry L. Hunt,/ Tavistock Street./ 1824./] (R. _London:/ Printed By C.H. Reynell, Broad-Street, Golden-Square_/); Second Half-title; Dedication; Preface, pp. i.-vi.; Dramatis Personæ, p. [viii.] (_B.A._); Text, pp. 9-308; Note to the Translation of the _Morgante Maggiore_, one leaf, pp. [309, 310]. Vol. VII.: pp. 1-286--Gen. Half-title; Title [The, etc./ Tavistock-Street./ 1825./], (R. Imprint as above); Text, pp. 1-286. _Contents_-- Vol. V.:--Hours of Idleness p. 1 Review, etc. p. 1 English Bards, etc. p. i. Waltz [N] p. i. Ode ("Oh, shame to thee," etc.) p. 19 Adieu to Malta p. 23 Madame Lavalette p. 26 The Curse of Minerva (111 lines) p. 28 Farewell to England p. 35 To my Daughter, etc. p. 46 Ode to ... St. Helena p. 50 To the Lily of France p. 53 To Jessy p. 56 To T. Moore, Esq. ("My Boat," etc.) p. 58 Lines to Mr. Hobhouse p. 60 Enigma [H.] p. 61 Vol. VI.:--Werner p. i. Heaven and Earth p. 197 Transl. of Morgante Maggiore (Advt.) p. 259 Vol. VII.:--The Age of Bronze p. 1 The Island p. 37 Appendix (Extract from the Voyage of Capt. Bligh) p. 109 The Vision of Judgment p. 125 Appendix (Court of King's Bench, Thursday, January 15, 1824. p. 187 The King _v_. John Hunt) The Deformed Transformed p. 191 _Note_ (1).--In Vol. V. the pagination of the "Postscript" of _English Bards, etc._, pp. 45-47, is incorrect. _Note_ (2).--In Vol. VII. (pp. 125, _sq_.) in the edition of the _Vision of Judgment_, issued after the verdict in the case of the King _v._ John Hunt, January 15, 1824, stanzas viii., ix. (lines 1, 2), xliii. (lines 1-6), xliv., xlv. (lines 1-6), xlvii. (lines 4, 8), are omitted in the text, but are quoted in the report of the trial. _Note_ (3).--The following slip, headed "Notice to the Binder," is inserted between a fly-leaf and the general half-title of Vols. VI., VII.: "_In order that each purchaser of the two concluding volumes of Lord Byron's Works may be enabled with them to complete his particular set,--whatever edition he possesses, an extra Title-page is given with each--there being several editions in print, comprising the same marks in different numbers of volumes. In binding these two last volumes, therefore, the binder should be instructed which of the Title-pages to retain._" Four pages (_n.p._) consisting of General Half-title (_B.R._) and Title-page as above [In Eight volumes./ Vol. VII., Vol. VIII./] with Imprint as above, at foot of Reverse, are bound up with Vols. VI., VII. Volume VIII. was not issued. XXIV. _The Works_, etc. In Eight Volumes. London: John Murray, etc., 1825. [Small] 8º. XXV. The/ Works /of/ Lord Byron./ In Six Volumes./ Vol. V./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1825./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. V.: pp. 1-404--Title, one leaf; Cont. of Vol. V.; Text, pp. 1-404. The Imprint (_London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_/) is at the foot of p. 404. Vol. VI.: pp. viii. + 319--Title, one leaf; Cont. of Vol. VI.; Text, pp 1-319. The Imprint is in the centre of the last page, p. [320]. _Contents_-- Vol. V.:--Marino Faliero (N. App.) p. 1 Prophecy of Dante, Cantos I.-IV. (N.) p. 243 Cain p. 291 Vol. VI.:--Sardanapalus (N) p. 1 The Two Foscari (App.) p. 171 XXVI. The/ Complete Works/ of/ Lord Byron/ With/ A Biographical and Critical notice/ By J.W. Lake, Esq./ Vol. I. [Vol. II., etc.] Childe Harold's Pilgrimage./ [Monogram.] Paris/ From the Press of Jules Didot senior,/ vi, Rue Du Pont-de-Lodi./ Published by Baudry, Rue du Coq-Saint-Honoré,/ And Amyot, Rue De La Paix./ 1825./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. c. + 353--Title, one leaf; Cont. of the First Vol.; A Biographical, etc., pp. i.-c.; Text, pp. 1-353. Vol. II.: pp. 1-432--Title, one leaf; Cont. of the Second Vol.; Text, pp. 1-432. Vol. III.: pp. 1-466--Title, one leaf; Cont. of the Third Vol.; Text, pp. 1-466. Vol. IV.: pp. 1-426--Title, one leaf; Cont. of the Fourth Vol.; Text, pp. 1-426. Vol. V.: pp. 1-435--Title, one leaf; Cont. of the Fifth Vol.; Text, pp. 1-435; Note to Cain, one leaf, p. [437]. Vol. VI.: pp. vii. + 529--Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Cont. of the Sixth Vol., pp. v.-viii.; Text, pp. 1-529. Vol. VII.: pp. viii. + 528--Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Cont. of the Seventh Vol., pp. v.-viii.; Text, pp. 1-528. _Note_.--The Frontispiece of Vol. I. is an engraving of the Portrait of Lord Byron by G. Sanders. _Contents_-- Vol. I.:--A Biographical, etc. p. i Childe Harold's, etc., Cantos I.-III (N.) p. 1 Dedication p. 205 Canto IV. (N.) p. 213 Vol. II.:--Don Juan, Cantos I.-V. (N.) p. 1 Preface to Cantos VI., VII., VIII. p. 301 Cantos VI.-VIII. (N.) p. 307 Vol. III.:--Don Juan, etc., etc. Canto IX. (N.) p. 1 Canto XVI. (N.) p. 247 Beppo (N.) p. 295 The Vision of Judgment (N.) p. 333 The Giaour (N.) p. 373 Parisina p. 435 Vol. IV.:--Manfred (N.) p. 1 Marino Faliero (N.), Preface, etc. p. 267 Vol. V.:--The Two Foscari (N.) p. 1 Appendix p. 123 Werner (N.) p. 143 Cain (N.) p. 331 Vol. VI.:--Heaven and Earth (N.) p. i The Deformed, etc. (N.) p. 53 The Bride, etc. (N.) p. 133 The Corsair (N.) p. 193 Lara (N.) p. 279 The Siege, etc. (N.) p. 331 The Prisoner of Chillon (N.), Sonnet, etc. p. 377 Mazeppa (N.), Advt., etc. p. 399 The Island (N.), Advt., etc. p. 435 The Lament of Tasso, Advt. p. 517 Vol. VII.:--The Prophecy of Dante (N.), Dedication, etc. p. 1 The Age of Bronze (N.) p. 45 The Curse of Minerva (N.) p. 77 Hours of Idleness p. 95 Critique, etc. p. 211 English Bards, etc., Preface p. 221 Hebrew Melodies p. 277 Miscellaneous Poems, and The Dream, etc. p. 301 Morgante Maggiore (N.), Advt. p. 439 Letter to * * * p. 475 Parliamentary Speeches, Debate on the Framework Bill p. 505 _Note_.--The Miscellaneous Poems (67) include the following forgeries: Ode ("Oh, shame to thee," etc.), p. 345; Madame Lavalette, p. 349; Farewell to England, p. 356; To my Daughter, P. 366. XXVII. _Works of Lord Byron. Philadelphia_. 1825. Eight Vols. [8º. _Contents_-- Vol. I.:--Childe Harold's Pilgrimage. Vol. II.:--Giaour--Two Foscari--Werner. Vol. III.:--Bride, etc.--Corsair--Cain, a Mystery--Sardanapalus. Vol. IV.:--Lara--English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers--Marino Faliero-Siege, etc.--Prisoner of Chillon--Song. Vol. V.:--Manfred--Parisina--Deformed Transformed--Vision of Judgment--Beppo--Age of Bronze--Heaven and Earth--Curse of Minerva, etc. Vol. VI.:--Mazeppa--The Dream--The Island--Prophecy of Dante--Lament of Tasso--Ode to Buonaparte--Monody, etc.--Hebrew Melodies--Miscellaneous Poems. Vols. VII., VIII.:--Don Juan. [Catalogue of the Boston Athenæum Library, 1874.] XXVIII. _The Works of the R.H. Lord Byron_. In Eight Vols. New York: published by Wm. Borrodaile, at his wholesale Book Store, 114, Fulton Street. 1825. [Kölbing.] XXIX. _The Works of Lord Byron_. Complete in Thirty-two Volumes. Published by the Brothers Schumann, Zwickau. 1825-1827. [16º. _Note_.--Vol. XXXIII. was issued in 1838. [Kayser, 1841.] XXX. _The Works of Lord Byron_, comprising the suppressed poems. In Thirteen Volumes. Paris. Printed by Didot aîné. Published by A. and W. Galignani, No. 18, Rue Vivienne. 1826. [32º. [_B. de la F._, June 3, 1826.] XXXI. The/ Works/ of/ Lord Byron/ Including/ The Suppressed Poems./ Complete in one volume/. Paris:/ Published by A. and W. Galignani,/ No. 18, Rue Vivienne./ 1826./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xliii. + 716--Gen. Half-title (R. _Printed by Jules Didot, Senior,/ Printer to his Majesty, Rue du Pont de Lodi, Nº 6_/); Title-page, one leaf, pp. i., ii.; Cont., pp. iii., iv.; The Life of Lord Byron [by J.W. Lake], pp. v.-xliii.; Text, pp. 1-716. The Front. is a Portrait of Lord Byron by F. Sieurac, engr. by J.T. Wedgwood. The Title-vignette is a harp, etc., resting on foliage (bays and oak leaves). The Facsimile of the Letter from Lord Byron to M. Galignani, dated Venice, April 27, 1819, is inserted between the "Contents" and the "Life," etc. _Note_ (1).--Among MISCELLANEOUS POEMS are _The Irish Avatar_, p. 515; _Ode_ ("Oh, shame to thee," etc.), p. 539; _Windsor Poetics_, p. 540; and _Carmina Byronis in C. Elgin_, p. 541. The Volume concludes (pp. 711-716) with _Poems Attributed to Lord Byron_, viz.-- Childish Recollections (32 lines) p. 711 Lord Byron to his Lady ("How strangely," etc.) ib. Ode to the Island of St. Helena ib. To the Lily of France p. 712 Madame Lavalette ib. Adieu to Malta ib. Enigma ("'Twas whispered," etc.) p. 713 The Triumph of the Whale ib. To Jessy ib. To my Daughter p. 714 To Lady Caroline Lamb p. 715 The Farewell ("When man compelled," etc.) ib. Lines ("Would you get to the House," etc.) ib. Verses ("All hail, Mont Blanc," etc.) ib. To a Lady ("And wilt thou weep," etc.) p. 716 Stanzas ("I heard thy fate," etc.)[C] ib. Lines found in the Travellers' Book at Chamouni ib. Lines found in Lord Byron's Bible[D] ib. _Note_ (2).--This edition was reissued, in 1827, on different paper. An impression of the portrait by F. Sieurac, in an unfinished state, precedes the Frontispiece. FOOTNOTES: [C] "Stanzas" were published _Poetical Works_, 1899, iii. 425, 426, with the title, "On the Death of the Duke of Dorset." Note (I) on p. 425 is incorrect. [D] "Lines Found in Lord Byron's Bible" are by Sir Walter Scott (see _Monastery_, chap. xii.). XXXII. _The Works_, etc. Complete. One Vol. Frankfort o. M. Printed by and for H.L. Broenner. 1826. 4º, pp. xvi. + 776. [Kölbing.] _Note_.--A Second Edition, pp. xlvi. + 804, including _Morgante Maggiore_ and _Parliamentary Speeches_, was issued in 1829, _vide post_, No. xl.; and a third, pp. xxx. + 784, including _Francesca di Rimini, Hints from Horace_, and _The Blues_, etc., in 1837. According to Kayser, the First Edition appeared in 1827, a second in 1829, and a third, "considerably augmented," in 1837. XXXIII. _The Works_, etc. In Six Volumes. London: John Murray, etc. 1827. [Small 8º. [Kölbing.] XXXIV. The/ Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ In Four Volumes./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II., etc.] London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1828./ [12º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. ix. + 362--Gen. Half-title, Works/ of/ Lord/ Byron./ (R. _London: Printed by Thomas Davison Whitefriars_/), pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Gen. Cont., pp. v.-ix.; Cont. of Vol. I. (_n.p._); Text, pp. 1-362. The Front., "Lord Byron," is engr. by E. Finden from a portrait by G. (_sic_) Phillips, R.A. Vol. II.: pp. 1-424--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint); Cont. of Vol. II.; Text, pp. 1-424. The Imprint is at the foot of p. 424. The Front., "Medora" (_Corsair_, i. 379), is engr. by E. Finden from a drawing by H. Corbould. Vol. III.: pp. vii. + 383--Half-title (R. Imprint), pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Cont. of Vol. III., pp. v.-vii.; Text, pp. 1-383. The Imprint is in the centre of the last page, p. [384]. The Front., "Lord Byron" ("When late I saw thy ... child"), is engr. by E. Finden from a drawing by H. Corbould. Vol. IV.: pp. 1-429--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint); Title, one leaf; Cont. of Vol. IV.; Text, pp. 1-429. The Imprint is in the centre of the last page, p. [430]. The Front., "Sardanapalus" (act iv. sc. 1, line 1), is engr. by E. Finden from a drawing by H. Corbould. _Contents_-- Vol. I.:--Childe Harold's, etc., Cantos I.-IV. (N.) p. 1 Vol. II.:--The Giaour (N.) p. 1 The Corsair, Cantos I.-III. (N.) p. 61 Lara, Cantos I., II. (N.) p. 143 The Bride, etc., Cantos I., II. (N.) p. 195 Siege, etc. (N.) p. 253 Parisina (N.) p. 299 The Prisoner of Chillon, Sonnet, etc. (N.) p. 331 Beppo (N.) p. 353 Mazeppa p. 391 Vol. III.:--Manfred (N.) p. 1 Hebrew Melodies: "She walks in beauty" (and 22 others) p. 61 Ode to N.B. (N.) p. 89 Monody, etc. p. 99 Lament of Tasso p. 105 Poems: Written in an Album (and 55 others) p. 119 Ode [to Venice] p. 249 Notes to the Poems p. 255 Prophecy of Dante, Cantos I.-IV. (N.) p. 259 Cain p. 299 Vol. IV.:--Marino Faliero (App.) p. 1 Sardanapalus (N.) p. 175 The Two Foscari (App.) p. 303 XXXV. The/ Works/ of/ Lord Byron/ Including/ The Suppressed Poems./ Complete in One Volume./ Paris:/ Published by A. and W. Galignani,/ No. 18, Rue Vivienne./ 1828./ 8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xl. + 718. _Note_.--This edition closely corresponds with that issued by A. and W. Galignani in 1826-7, _q.v. ante_, No. xxxi. The "Life of Lord Byron," by J.W. Lake, is abbreviated and corrected. Among ATTRIBUTED POEMS are the following additions: _A Drinking Song_ ("Fill the goblet," etc.), p. 716; _Remember Thee_, _ibid_.; _To Mary_ ("Remind me not," etc.), p. 717; Verses ("There was a time," etc.), _ibid_.; _On Leaving England_, _ibid._; and the following omissions: Verses ("All hail, Mont Blanc," etc.), 1826, p. 715; and _Lines found in Lord Byron's Bible_, 1826, p. 716. XXXVI. _The Works of Lord Byron_. Complete in One Volume. Title-Vignette. Published by Broenner, Frankfort. 1828, 8º. _Note_.--A Second Edition was issued in 1829, and a third, "considerably augmented," in 1837. [Kayser.] XXXVII. The/ Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ In Six Volumes./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II., etc.] London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1829./ 8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.:--Gen. Half-title, "Byron" (R. _London: Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriar's_), pp. i., ii; Title, one leaf, pp. iii, iv.; General Cont., pp. v.-ix.; Cont. of Vol. I., _n.p._; Text, pp. 1-235. The Imprint is in the centre of the last page, p. [236]. Vol. II.: Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint); Title, one leaf; Cont. of Vol. II.; Text, pp. 1-297. The Imprint is in the centre of the last page, p. [300]. Vol. III.: Gen. Half-title, etc., as in Vol. II.; Text pp. 1-282. The Imprint is in the centre of the last page, p. [284]. Vol. IV.: pp. vii. + 275--Half-title (R. Imprint), pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Cont. of Vol. IV., pp. v.-vii.; Text, pp. 1-275. The Imprint is in the centre of the last page, p. [276]. Vol. V.: Half-title, etc., as in Vol. II.; Text, pp. 1-26. The Imprint is at the foot of p. 264. Vol. VI.: pp. viii. + 266--Half-title (R. Imprint), pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii, iv.; Cont. of Vol. VI. (_B.R._), pp. v., vi.; Preface, pp. vii., viii.; Text, pp. 1-266. The Imprint is in the centre of the last page, p. [268]. _Contents_-- Vol. I.:--Childe Harold's, etc., Cantos I.-III. (Pref. N.) p. 1 Vol. II.:--Childe Harold's, etc., Canto IV. (N.) p. 1 The Giaour (N.) p. 157 The Corsair, Cantos I.-III. (N.) p. 217 Vol. III.:--Lara, Cantos I., II. (N.) p. 1 The Bride, etc., Cantos I., II. (N.) p. 53 Siege, etc. (N.) p. 111 Parisina (N.) p. 157 The Prisoner, etc. (Sonnet, N.) p. 189 Beppo (N.) p. 211 Mazeppa p. 249 Vol. IV.:--Manfred (N.) p. 1 Hebrew Melodies: "She walks," etc. (and 21 others) p. 61 Ode to N.B. (N.) p. 85 Monody, etc. p. 95 Lament of Tasso p. 101 Poems: Written in an Album (and 56 others) (N.) p. 115 Prophecy of Dante, Cantos I.-IV. (N.) p. 235 Vol. V.:--Marino Faliero (A) p. 1 Cain p. 179 Vol. VI.:-Sardanapalus (N.) p. 1 The Two Foscari (A) p. 135 Notes to Captain Medwin's, etc. p. 253 XXXVIII. The/ Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ In Four Volumes./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II., etc.] London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1829./ 12º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.:--Gen. Half-title, "Byron" (R. (_a_) _Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_); Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Gen. Cont., pp. v.-x.; Cont. of Vol. I., _n.p._; Text, pp. 1-357. The Imprint (_b_) (_London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_/), is in the centre of the last page, p. [360]. Vol. II.: pp. 1-424--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint (_a_)); Title, one leaf; Cont. of Vol. II.; Text, pp. 1-424. The Imprint (_b_) is at the foot of p. 424. Vol. III.:--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint (_a_)); Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Cont. of Vol. III., pp. v.-viii.; Text, pp. 1-383. The Imprint (_b_) is at the foot of the last page, p. [384]. Vol. IV.: pp. 1-412--Half-title (R. Imprint (_a_)); Title, one leaf; Cont. of Vol. IV.; Text, pp. 1-412. The Imprint (_b_) is at the foot of p. 412. _Contents_-- The Cont. of Vols. I., II., III. of the Edition of 1829 are identical with the Cont. of Vols. I., II., III. of the Edition of 1828. The pagination of the Text 1829 follows the pagination of the Text 1828, but the type of 1829 is not the type of 1828. Vol. IV. (1829):--Marino Faliero p. 1 Appendix p. 147 Sardanapalus (N.) p. 161 The Two Foscari p. 289 Appendix p. 381 Notes on Captain Medwin's "Conversations of Lord Byron" p. 401 _Note_.--The original Italian and French Versions of the _Cronica di Sanuto_, and the extracts from the works of P. Daru and P.L. Ginguené, which appeared in 1828, are omitted in 1829, and the notes (by John Murray) on Captain Medwin's _Conversations, etc._ (1824), are inserted. XXXIX. _The Poetic Works_, etc., including his _Don Juan_--all his minor poems, and the suppressed pieces of _Cain_, and the _V. of Judgment_, all complete. In Two Vols. Second Edition. Philadelphia: Published by the Washington Press. 1829. [4º and 6º. XL. The/ Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ Complete/ In One Volume./ [Title-vignette, "Ship in Storm," engraved on steel by C. Tremonet.] The Second Edition, considerably augmented./ Francfort O.M./ Printed by and for H.L. Broenner./ 1829./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xlvi + Cont., one leaf + 804--Title, one leaf; _Life_, etc., by J.W. Lake, pp. i.-xli. + A Character of Lord Byron, by Sir W. Scott, pp. xlii., xliii. + "Goethe und Byron" (including the stanzas "Ein freundlich Wort," etc.) + "Lord Byron's Last Lines," pp. xliv.-xlivi. + Cont., one leaf, _n.p._ + Text, pp. 1-804. _Note_.--The Miscellaneous Poems include Ode "Oh, shame to thee," etc., and On Sir John Moore's Burial, p. 650. The ATTRIBUTED POEMS are identical with those published in Paris, 1826 (No. xxxi.), except that they include To Miss Chaworth ("Remind me not," etc.), and exclude Lines Found in Lord Byron's Bible. The Notes to _Childe Harold's, etc._, and other poems are printed continuously, pp. 715-792. _The Waltz_, together with the _Notes_, is on pp. 795-798. XLI. The/ Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ In Four Volumes./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II., etc.] London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1830./ [16º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. ix. + 359--Title (R. (_a_) _Thomas Davison, London._), pp. i., ii.; General Cont., pp. iii.-ix.; Cont. of Vol. I., p. x.; Text, pp. 1-359. The Imprint (_b_) (_London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_/) is in the centre of the last page, p. [360]. The Frontispiece, "Lord Byron," is engraved by E. Finden from a portrait by T. Phillips, R.A. Vol. II.: pp. iv. + 424--Title (R. Imprint), pp. i., ii.; Cont. of Vol. II., pp. iii., iv.; Text, pp. 1-383. The Imprint (_b_) is at the foot of p. 424. Vol. III.: pp. vi. + 383--Title (R. Imprint), pp. i., ii.; Cont. of Vol. III., pp. iii.-vi.; Text, pp. 1-383. The Imprint (_b_) is in the centre of the last page, p. [384]. Vol. IV.: pp. 1-415--Title (R. Imprint); Cont. of Vol. IV., one leaf; Text, pp. 1-415. The Imprint (_b_) is in the centre of the last page, p. [384]. The Front, of Vol. II. is that of Vol. II., ed. 1828; the Front. of Vol. III. that of Vol. IV., 1828; and the Front. of Vol. IV. that of Vol. III., 1828. _Note_.--The Cont. of Vols. I.-IV., 1830, are identical with the Cont. of Vols. I.-IV., 1829. The Notes have been partly re-set. XLII. _The Complete Works_, etc., including his lordship's suppressed poems with others never before published. (With portrait and _fac-simile_.) Paris, Galignani, 1830. [12º. [Quérard, 1846.] XLIII. The/ Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ In Six Volumes./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II., etc.] London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1831./ [16º. _Collation_-- Vols. I.-IV. of Ed. 1831 are identical with Vols. I.-IV. of Ed. 1830. The Frontispieces of Vols. III., IV., which were transposed in Ed. 1830, are restored to their original position, as in Ed. 1828. Vol. V.: pp. xii. + 475--Gen. Half-title (R. (_a_) _Thomas Davison, London_), pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Editor's Advt. to _Hours of Idleness_, pp. v.-vii.; Cont. of Vol. V., pp. ix.-xii.; Text, pp. 1-475; Publisher's Advt. of the Life of Lord Byron (2 Vols. 4to).... by Thomas Moore, Esq., p. [477]. The Imprint (_b_) (_London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_:/) is in the centre of p. 476. The Frontispiece, "Heaven and Earth," is engr. by E. Finden from a drawing by H. Richter. Vol. VI.: pp. viii. + 459--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint), pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Cont. to Vol. VI., pp. v.-viii.; Text, pp. 1-459. The Imprint (_b_) is in the centre of the last page, p. [460]. The Frontispiece, "The Island," is engr. by E. Finden from a drawing by H. Richter. _Contents_-- Vol. V.:--Hours of Idleness: Preface, etc. p. 1 On leaving Newstead Abbey (and 64 others) p. 11 Critique from _Edinb. Rev._ p. 203 English Bards, etc. p. 209 Hints from Horace p. 273 The Curse of Minerva p. 329 The Waltz p. 345 Age of Bronze p. 365 The Vision of Judgment p. 397 Morgante Maggiore p. 441 Vol. VI.:--Werner p. 1 The Deformed Transformed p. 157 Heaven and Earth p. 227 The Island: Cantos I.-IV. App. p. 277 Poems: The Blues p. 351 Fragment ("Hills of Annesly") p. 368 The Prayer of Nature ib. Fragment ("Young Oak," etc., 10 lines) p. 371 On Revisiting Harrow p. 372 L'amitie, etc. p. 373 To my Son p. 377 Epitaph on John Adams p. 379 Fragment ("Forget this World," etc.) (20 lines) p. 380 To Mrs. ---- ("When man expell'd," etc.) p. 381 A Love-song ("Remind," etc.) p. 382 Stanzas to ---- ("There was a time," etc.) p. 383 To the Same ("And wilt thou weep," etc.) p. 384 Song ("Fill the goblet," etc.) p. 386 Stanzas to ---- on leaving England p. 387 Lines to Mr. Hodgson p. 390 Epistle to ("Oh, banish," etc.) p. 393 The Devil's Drive p. 396 Additional stanzas to the Ode to Napoleon p. 400 Stanzas for Music ("I speak not," etc.) p. 401 Address--at the Caledonian Meeting p. 402 Lines--for the opening of "The Siege of Corinth" p. 404 Extract, "Could I remount," etc. p. 406 To Augusta p. 407 On the bust of Helen by Canova p. 413 To Thomas Moore ("My boat," etc.) ib. To Mr. Murray ("Strahan," etc.) p. 414 Stanzas to the River Po p. 416 The Irish Avatar p. 419 On the Prince Regent's returning the picture, etc. p. 425 To Belshazzar p. 427 Sonnet to George the Fourth p. 428 Francesca of Rimini p. 429 Stanzas ("Oh, talk not to me," etc.) p. 431 To the Countess of B--- p. 432 Lines from a letter to T. Moore ("So we'll," etc.) p. 434 Epistle to Dr. [Polidori] ib. Ep. ("My dear Mr. Murray") p. 437 To Mr. J. Murray ("For Oxford," etc.) p. 439 On this Day, etc. p. 440 From the Portuguese p. 442 Paraphrase from ... the _Medea_ p. 443 Epitaph ("Youth, Nature," etc.) ib. On Moore's Last ... Farce p. 444 On Lord T.'s poems ib. To Lord T. p. 445 To Thomas Moore ("Oh, you," etc.) p. 446 Fragment of an Ep. to T. Moore ("What say I," etc.) p. 447 On Napoleon's Escape from Elba p. 449 Fragment ... On hearing that Lady Byron was ill (6 lines) ib. To Thomas Moore ("What are you," etc.) ib. Song for the Luddites p. 450 Versicles p. 451 To Mr. Murray ("To hook," etc.) ib. On the birth of J.W.R. Hoppner p. 452 Epigram (from Rulhieres) (_sic_) p. 453 Epigr. ("To-day it is," etc.) ib. Epigr. ("Here's a Happy," etc.) ib. Epigr. ("This day of all," etc.) p. 454 Endorsement to the deed, etc. ib. Epitaph for William Pitt ib. Epigr. ("In digging," etc.) p. 455 Stanzas ("When a man," etc.) ib. On his Thirty-third Birthday ib. Epigr. ("The Brasiers," etc.) p. 456 Epigr. ("The world," etc.) ib. The Charity Ball p. 457 Impromptu ib. Windsor Poetics p. 458 Lines in the Travellers' Book at Orchomenus ib. _Note_.--List of publications by John Murray, January 4, 1831--"A fifth and sixth vol. of Lord Byron's Works: containing _E.B., etc., Heaven & E., The Def. Trans., The Island_, etc., etc., forming the portion of the Works recently purchased by Mr. Murray, and rendering them the first and only complete edition (_Don Juan_ being alone excepted). 2 vols. 12º. Printed for the first time, to match with the Edition of Lord Byron's Works in 4 vols. 18º." XLIV. The/ Complete works/ of/ Lord Byron,/ Including/ his Lordship's Suppressed Poems,/ With others never before published./ In one Volume./ Paris./ Published by A. and W. Galignani,/ No. 18, Rue Vivienne./ 1831./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xxiv. + 730--Half-title (R. _Printed by J. Smith, Rue Montmorency, Paris_./); Title, one leaf; Cont., pp. i.-iv.; The Life of Lord Byron [abridged from the _Life_ by J.W. Lake] pp. v.-xxiv.; Text, pp. 1-730. The Frontispiece, a portrait of Lord Byron, engr. by J.T. Wedgwood from a painting by W.E. West, in arabesque frame, rests on miniatures of Newstead Abbey and Missolunghi (_sic_) designed by F. Sieurac. The Title-vignette is tomb, harp, willows, etc. A lithograph of letter, April 27, 1819, to the Editor of _Galignani's Messenger_, is inserted between the _Life_ and the Text. _Contents_-- This edition includes Hours of Idleness (Sec. Ed.), _English Bards_, etc., _The Curse of Minerva_, _The Waltz_, all poems published by John Murray before 1831, a selection of poems included in Moore's _Notices of the Life_, etc., poems published by John Hunt, Letter to ... on Bowles' Strictures on Pope, Fragment, Parliamentary Speeches, and the following spurious and additional poems:-- Madame Lavalette p. 699 Ode ("Oh, shame to thee," etc.) p. 705 _Carmina Byronis in C. Elgin_ p. 707 Ode to the Island of St. Helena ib. Enigma on the letter H p. 708 To Jessy ib. To my Daughter p. 709 Lines to Mr. Hobhouse p. 710 Lines found in the Travellers' book at Chamouni ib. Stanzas to her who can best understand them p. 712 In the Valley of Waters p. 713 Francesca ib. Faith, Wisdom, Love and Power ib. Thermopylæ p. 714 Song, "Do you know Dr. Nott?" p. 716 To Mr. Hobhouse, "What made you," etc. (20 lines) p. 717 Enigma on the letter I p. 720 To Memory ("Oh, memory," etc.) p. 721 To my dear Mary Anne ib. On an Old Lady ("In Nottingham," etc.) p. 722 _Note_.--Among the ATTRIBUTED POEMS are To the Lily of France, p. 729; The Triumph of the Whale, _ib._; To Lady C. Lamb, _ib._; Stanzas ("I heard thy fate," etc.), p. 730. XLV. _The Works_, etc., including the suppressed poems. Also a Sketch of his Life. By J.W. Lake. Complete in one Vol. Philadelphia. Published by Henry Adams and sold by John Griggs. 1831. [4º. _Collation_-- Pp. xxxix. + 176. XLVI. The/ Works/ of/ Lord Byron:/ With/ His Letters and Journals,/ And His Life,/ By Thomas Moore, Esq./ In Fourteen Volumes./ Vol. I. [Vol. II., etc.] London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 183./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. xv. + 359--Title (R. Imprint, _London:/ Printed by A. Spottiswoode,/ New-Street-Square_./), pp. i., ii.; Cont. of Vol. I., pp. iii., iv.; Half-title, pp. v., vi.; Dedication to Sir W. Scott, pp. vii., viii.; Preface to the First Vol. of First Ed., pp. ix., x.; Preface to the Sec. Vol., pp. xi.-xv.; Text (_Notices of the Life of Lord Byron_), pp. 1-359. The Frontispiece, "Lord Byron at the Age of 19," is engr. by W. Finden from the portrait by G. Sanders: the Title-vignette, "Cadiz," is engr. by E. Finden from a drawing by C. Stansfield. Vol. II.: pp. 1-341--The Frontispiece "Tepaleen," is engr. by F. Finden from a drawing by W. Purser; the Title-vignette, "Constantinople," is engr. by E. Finden from a drawing by C. Stansfield. Vol. III.: pp. 1-376--The Front., "Marathon," and the Title-vignette, "A Street in Athens," are engr. by E. Finden from drawings by C. Stansfield. Vol. IV.: pp. 1-359--The Front., "The Wengen Alps," and the Title-vignette, "The Coliseum from the Orto Farnese," are engr. by E. Finden from drawings by J.D. Harding. Vol. V.: pp. 1-376--The Front., "S^ta^ Maria Dalla Spina," is engr. by E. Finden from a drawing by J.M.W. Turner, R.A.; the Title-vignette, the "Hellespont," is engr. by E. Finden from a drawing by J.D. Harding. Vol. VI.: pp. 1-416--The Front., "Newstead Abbey" [from the Monk's Garden], and the Title-vignette, "The Fountain at Newstead Abbey," are engr. by E. Finden from drawings by W. Westall, A.R.A. Vol. VII.: pp. xv. + 319--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint), pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Advt. (editorial, June, 1832), pp. v.-vii.; Cont. of Vol. VII., pp. ix.-xv.; Text, pp. 1-319. The Imprint is in the centre of the last page, p. [320]. The Front., "The Gate of Theseus," and the Title-vignette, "The Plains of Troy," are engr. by E. Finden from drawings by J.M.W. Turner, R.A. A facsimile of the two first stanzas of To D---- faces p. 12. Vol. VIII.: pp. x. + 328--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint), pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Advt. (editorial, July 20, 1832), pp. v.-x.; Cont. of Vol. VIII., _n.p._; Text, pp. 1-328. The Imprint is at the foot of p. 328. The Front., "Bacharach," and the Title-vignette, "The Castle of St. Angelo," are engr. by E. Finden from drawings by J.M.W. Turner, R.A. A facsimile of _Childe Harold's, etc._, Canto III. stanza xci. faces p. 174. In earlier copies the facsimile faced p. [viii.] of Vol. IX. See Note on reverse of p. vii. of that volume. Vol. IX.: pp. vii. + 360--Title (R. Imprint), pp. i., ii.; Advt. (editorial, July 20, 1832), pp. iii., iv.; Cont. of Vol. IX., pp. v.-vii.; Text, pp. 1-360. The Imprint is at the foot of p. 360. The Front., "Petrarch's Tomb," is engr. by E. Finden from a drawing by J.M.W. Turner, R.A.; the Title-vignette, "Seville," is engr. by E. Finden. Vol. X.: pp. xix. + 316--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint), pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Advt. (editorial, September 16, 1832), pp. v.-xiii.; Cont. of Vol. X., pp. xv.-xix.; Text, pp. 1-316. The Imprint is at the foot of p. 316. The Front., "Corinth," is engr. by E. Finden from drawings by J.M.W. Turner, R.A., and W. Page; the Title-vignette, "Athens and the Island of Egina," is engr. by E. Finden from drawings by C. Stansfield and W. Page. Vol. XI.: pp. viii. + 326--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint), pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Advt. (editorial, October 10, 1832), pp. v., vi.; Cont. of Vol. XI., pp. vii., viii.; Text, pp. 1-326. The Imprint is at the foot of p. 326. The Front., "The Bridge of Sighs," and the Title-vignette, "The Bernese Alps," are engr. by E. Finden, from drawings by J.M.W. Turner, R.A. Vol. XII.: pp. vi. + 324--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint), pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Advt. (editorial, November 10, 1832), pp. v., vi.; Cont. of Vol. XII., _n.p._; Text, pp. 1-324. The Imprint is at the foot of p. 324. The Front., "Florence," is engr. by E. Finden from drawings by J.D. Harding and G. Moran, junr.; the Title-vignette, "San Georgio Maggiore," is engr. by E. Finden from a drawing by C. Stansfield, A.R.A. Vol. XIII.: pp. vi. + 369--Half-title (R. Imprint), pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Advt. (editorial, December 12, 1832), pp. v., vi.; Cont. of Vol. XIII., _n.p._; Text, pp. 1-369. The Imprint is in the centre of the last page, p. [370]. The Front., "The Arch of Titus," is engr. by E. Finden, from drawings by C. Stansfield and W. Page; the Title-vignette, "The Walls of Rome," is engr. by E. Finden from a drawing by J.M.W. Turner, R.A. Vol. XIV.: pp. 1-360--Gen. Half-title (R. Imprint), pp. [i., ii.]; Title, one leaf, pp. [iii., iv.]; Advt. (editorial, January 10, 1833), pp. [v., vi.]; Text, pp. 1-360. The Imprint is at the foot of p. 360. The Front., "Parnassus," and the Title-vignette, "The Field of Waterloo," are engr. by E. Finden from drawings by J.M.W. Turner, R.A. Vol. XV.: pp. vi. + 334--Half-title (R. Imprint), pp. i. ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Advt. (editorial, February 15, 1833), pp. v., vi.; Cont. of Vol. XV., _n.p._; Text, pp. 1-334. The Imprint is at the foot of p. 334. The Front., "Scio," and the Title-vignette, "Genoa," are engr. by E. Finden from drawings by J.M.W. Turner, R.A. Vol. XVI.: pp. vi. + 335--Half-title (R. Imprint), pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Advt. (editorial, March 15, 1833), pp. v., vi.; Cont. of Vol. XVI., _n.p._; Text, pp. 1-335. The Imprint is in the centre of the last page, p. [336]. The Front., "Cologne," and the Title-vignette, "St. Sophia," are engr. by E. Finden from drawings by J.M.W. Turner, R.A. Vol. XVII.: pp. viii. + 304--Half-title (R. Imprint), pp. i., ii; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Advt. (editorial, May 15, 1833), pp. v., vi.; Cont. of Vol. XVII., pp. vii., viii.; Text, pp. 1-248; Index, pp. 249-304. The Imprint is at the foot of p. 304. The Front., "The School of Homer," and the Title-vignette, "The Castellated Rhine," are engr. by E. Finden from drawings by J.M.W. Turner, R.A. _Contents_-- Vols. I.-V.:--Notices of the Life of Lord Byron. Vol. VI.:--The Life, etc., from February, 1823-April, 1824 p.1 App.: cont. two epistles from the Armenian, etc. p. 269 Miscellaneous Pieces in Prose: Review of Wordsworth's Poems, 1807 p. 293 Review of Gell's Geography of Ithaca, etc., 1811 p. 296 Parliamentary Speeches, etc. p. 314 A Fragment. [The Vampyre.] 1816 p. 339 Letter to John Murray, Esq., etc. p. 346 Observations upon "Observations," etc. [_Now first p. 382 published._] Vol. VII.:--Hours of Idleness: a Series of Poems, Original and Translated: Dedication. p. 1 Preface p. 5 On the Death of a Young Lady (and 69 others) p. 9 Article from the _Edin. Rev._ p. 188 Occasional Pieces: written in 1807-8: The Adieu (and 15 others) p. 195 English Bards and Scotch Reviewers p. 219 Occasional Pieces: written in 1808-1810: Well, thou art happy (and 15 others) p. 291 Vol. VIII.:--Childe Harold's Pilgrimage: Preface to the p. 3 First and Second Cantos To Ianthe p. 9 Canto the First [Canto the Second, etc.] p. 11 Dedication of Canto the Fourth p. 189 Historical Notes to Canto the Fourth p. 271 Vol. IX.:--Occasional Pieces: written in 1811-1813: Lines written beneath a Picture (and 31 others) p. 3 Hints from Horace p. 47 The Curse of Minerva p. 107 The Waltz p. 123 The Giaour p. 141 The Bride, etc. p. 203 The Corsair (Dedication, etc.) p. 257 Appendix: Remarks on the Romaic, etc. p. 339 Vol. X.:--Ode to N.B. p. 1 Lara (Cantos I., II. (N.)) p. 17 Hebrew Melodies: She walks in Beauty (and 22 others) p. 75 The Siege, etc. p. 99 Parisina p. 149 Domestic Pieces: Fare Thee Well (and five others) p. 185 Monody, etc. p. 211 The Prisoner of Chillon p. 221 The Dream p. 243 Occasional Pieces: 1814-1816: The Devil's Drive (and 28 others) p. 257 Vol. XI.:--Manfred p. 1 The Lament of Tasso p. 77 Beppo p. 95 Mazeppa p. 143 Ode on Venice p. 179 The Morgante Maggiore (Canto I.) p. 187 The Prophecy of Dante (Cantos I.-IV.) p. 259 Occasional Pieces: Versicles (and 14 others) p. 307 Vol. XII.:--Francesca of Rimini p. 1 Stanzas to the Po p. 13 Stanzas (Written on the Road, etc.) p. 19 The Blues p. 21 Marino Faliero (App.) p. 43 The Vision of Judgment (App.) p. 231 Occasional Pieces: Stanzas ["Could Love for ever"] (and 5 others) p. 317 Vol. XIII.:--Heaven and Earth p. 1 Sardanapalus p. 55 The Two Foscari p. 197 The Deformed Transformed p. 301 Vol. XIV.:--Cain (App.) p. 1 Werner p. 113 The Age of Bronze p. 263 The Island p. 299 Stanzas: To a Hindoo Air p. 357 Lines ("On this day," etc.) p. 358 Vol. XV.:--Preface to Don Juan p. 3 Testimonies of Authors p. 5 Letter to the Editor of "My Grandmother's Review" p. 41 Some Observations upon an article in _Blackwood's p. 55 Magazine_ (August, 1819. [Now first pub.]) Fragment ("I would to heaven," etc.) p. 100 Dedication to Robert Southey, Esq. p. 101 Don Juan (Cantos I.-III.) p. 109 Vol. XVI.:--Don Juan (Cantos IV., V., App.) p. 1 Preface to Cantos VI., VII., VIII. p. 127 Cantos VI.-X. p. 133 Vol. XVII.:--Don Juan (Cantos XI.-XVI.) p. 1 Appendix: Farewell to Malta (and nine additional p. 239 occasional pieces Concluding Page of Lord Byron's "Observations upon an p. 247 Article," etc. Index p. 249 _Note_ (1).--The Title-pages of Vols. XIII., XIV., XV., XVI., issued in 1833, do not specify the total number of volumes. The Title-pages of Vol. I. issued in 1835, Vol. II. in 1833, and Vol. IX. in 1834, print the words, "In Seventeen Volumes." There were probably other variations. There is an illustrated Title-page ornamented with a Title-vignette (_vide supra et ante_) to each volume. _Note_ (2).--The editor of these volumes was John Wright (1770?-1844), the editor of Cobbett's _Parliamentary History_, and the ninth and tenth volumes of Boswell's _Life of Johnson_ (1836), and of Sir Henry Cavendish's _Debates of the House of Commons during the Thirteenth Parliament of Great Britain, etc._, two vols. 1841-3. XLVII. _The Complete Works_, etc., including his suppressed poems and others never before published. In Four Volumes. Paris, Baudry. 1832. [8º. [_Katalog der Bucher_, von Eduard Grisebach, 1894, p. 127.] _Note_.--The Front. is "Lord Byron," from a portrait by Hopwood. Quérard, 1846, gives the names of the publishers of this edition as Baudry, Barrois, Amyot. XLVIII. _The Works_, etc., In Verse and Prose. Including his Letters, Journals, etc. With a sketch of his Life. New York: George Dearborn, Publisher. 1833. 4º. pp. xxviii., 203, 619. ["... The first complete edition of the Poetical and Prose Works of Lord Byron."--_Publisher's Advt._] _Note_.--The Catalogue of the Library of Congress, 1880, describes this or a Second Edition as consisting of two vols. in one, 8º. XLIX. The/ Complete Works/ of Lord Byron,/ Reprinted from the last London Edition,/ with considerable additions, now first published;/ Containing/ Notes and Illustrations/ By/ Moore, Walter Scott, Campbell, Jeffrey, Egerton Brydges, Wilson, Hobhouse,/ Dallas, Hunt, Milman, Lockhart, Bowles, Heber, Medwin, Gamba, Croby, Ugo Foscolo, Ellis,/ Kennedy, Parry, Stanhope, Gait, Nathan, Lady Blessington, Mrs. Shelley, etc./ And/ A Complete Index;/ To which is prefixed/ A Life,/ By Henry Lytton Bulwer, Esq., M.P.,/ In one Volume./ Paris/ Published by A. and W. Galignani and Co./ 1835./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xxxiii. + 935--Half-title (R. _Printed by H. and A. Firmin Didot, rue Jacob, No. 24._), pp. i., ii.; Title, pp. iii., iv.; (Publisher's) Advt., pp. v., vi.; Cont. pp. vii.-x.; The Life of Lord Byron, pp. xi.-xxxiii.; Text pp. 1-908; Index, pp. 909-935. The Frontispiece is a portrait of Lord Byron, engr. by J.T. Wedgwood from a painting by W.E. West. The portrait in arabesque frame rests on picture of Newstead Abbey and Missolunghi (_sic_), designed by F. Sieurac. There is a lithographed vignette of tomb, harp, wreath, etc., on the title-page, and a lithograph of the memorial tablet in the chancel of Hucknall Torkard. A facsimile of the letter dated Venice, April 27, 1819, precedes the text, and facsimiles of original MS. of "To D----," and of _Childe Harold_, Canto IV. stanza xcii., face pp. 3, 122. _Miscellaneous Poems_-- On an Old Lady ("In Nottingham," etc.) p. 842 On Lord Elgin ("Noseless himself," etc.) p. 864 Stanzas to her who can best understand them p. 887 Epigram from Martial ("The Laureate's House," etc.) p. 888 To Mr. Hobhouse ("Would you get," etc.) ib. To Mr. Hobhouse ("What made you," etc.) ib. On Queen Caroline p. 901 Elegy on the Recovery of Lady ---- p. 903 Song, "Do you know Doctor Nott?" ib. To ---- ("But once I dared," etc.) p. 904 On Sam Rogers ("Nose and Chin," etc.) ib. On Lady Milbank's Dog Trim p. 905 Lines to Lady Holland ("Lady, accept," etc.) ib. Attributed Poems: To Jessy ("There is a mystic," etc.) p. 906 Lines found in the Travellers' Book at Chamouni ib. To Lady Caroline Lamb p. 907 To the Prince of W_h_ales ib. On the letter I p. 908 To my dear Mary Anne ib. Stanzas ("I heard thy fate," etc.) ib. _Note_.--This edition includes the contents of "the last [edition] published in London in seventeen volumes," together with the poems published in the Appendix to the _Works of Lord Byron_ (1832-1833, xvii. 238-248), and the following pieces not recognized or collected by John Murray. L. _The Complete Works_, etc. In Four Volumes. Paris, Baudry, Amyot, Truchy. 1835. [8º. [Quérard, 1846.] _Note_.--This edition was reissued in 1840. LI. The/ Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ Complete In One Volume./ With Notes By/ Thomas Moore, Esq., Lord Jeffrey, Sir Walter Scott, Bishop Heber, Samuel Rogers, Esq., Professor Wilson, J.G. Lockhart, Esq., George Ellis, Esq., Thomas Campbell, Esq., Rev. H.H. Milmand, etc. etc. etc. London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1837./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. viii. + 827--Title (R. _London:/ Printed by A. Spottiswoode,/ New-Street-Square./_), pp. i., ii.; Contents, pp. iii.-vi.; Chronology of Lord Byron's Life and Works, pp. vii., viii.; Text, pp. 1-812; Index, pp. 813-827. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 827. The Frontispiece, "Lord Byron at the age of 19," is engr. by E. Finden from the portrait by G. Sanders. The illustrated Title is embellished with a vignette of "Newstead Abbey," engr. by E. Finden from a painting by T. Creswick. The Dedication is enclosed in an arabesque of oak branches issuing from a shield bearing the arms and motto. (_Industria_) of Sir Robert Peel. It runs as follows: To/ The Right Honorable/ Sir Robert Peel, Bart./ etc. etc. etc./ This/ Collective Edition/ of The Works of His/ "School and Form Fellow,"https://www.gutenberg.org/ Is/ Respectfully Inscribed/ By His/ Faithful and Obedient Servant/ John Murray,/ February Fifth./ MDCCCXXXVII./ Facsimiles of Lord Byron's Handwriting at Various Periods of His Life, viz.: I. _At Harrow in_ 1803. II. _From the Giaour_, 1813. _First draft_. III. _Marriage Signatures of Lord and Lady Byron_, January 2, 1815. IV. _From Lord Byron's Diary_, 1821. V. _From Lord Byron's last letter to Mr. Murray, dated Missalonghi, February 2_, 1824 (four pages, _n.p._) are inserted between the "Chronology," etc., and the Text. The first edition was bound in brown cloth. Lord Byron's Coat of Arms, with Coronet, Supporters and Motto, is stamped in gold on the cover. _Note_.--This Edition, which is printed in double columns enclosed by a double line, has been reissued at brief intervals from 1838 to 1902. The contents of this volume includes the contents of Vols. VII.-XVII. of the Ed. 1832, 1833, together with the following additions already printed (except No. 4) in Vols. I.-VI.:-- _Contents_-- 1. Translation of ... Nurse's Dole ("Oh, how I wish," etc.) p. 546 2. My Epitaph ("Youth, Nature," etc.) ib. 3. Remember thee! Remember thee! p. 554 4. John Keats p. 574 5. Impromptu ("Beneath Blessington's eyes") p. 577 6. To the Countess of Blessington ib. Appendix: Conversations of Lord Byron as related by Thomas p. 809 Medwin, Esq., compared with a Portion of His Lordship's Correspondence. Published, Ed. 1828, iv. 419-429. LII. The/ Complete Works/ of/ Lord Byron/ From the last London Edition,/ Now first collected and arranged, and Illustrated/ With all the notes/ By Sir Walter Scott [and 24 others--five lines] To which is prefixed the Life of the Author/ By John Galt, Esq./ In one Volume./ Paris:/ Baudry's European Library,/ Rue Du Coq, near the Louvre./ A. and W. Galignani and Co., 18, Rue Vivienne./ Sold also by Amyot, Rue de la Paix; Truchy, Boulevard des Italiens; Theophile Barrois, Jun.,/ Rue Richelieu; at the Librairie des Etrangers, 55, Rue Neuve-Saint-Augustin;/ And by all the Principal Booksellers on the Continent./ 1837./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. II + cxxii + 954--Half-title (R. _Printed by Casimir, 12, Rue de la Vieille-Monnaie_); Title, one leaf; Publisher's Advt., pp. 1-6; Contents, pp. 7-11; _The Life of Lord Byron_. By John Galt, Esq., pp. i.-cxxii.; Text, pp. 1-941; Index, pp. 943-954. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 954. The Frontispiece, "Lord Byron at the age of 17" (_sic_), is engr. by Blanchard from the painting by G. Sanders. The Title-page is embellished with a vignette of a shipwreck. Facsimiles of Lord Byron's Handwriting, etc. (as in No. li.), four pages (_n.p._), are inserted between the "Life," and the Text. _Note_.--This volume "contains all the works of Lord Byron carefully reprinted from the [last eleven volumes of the] London edition published by Mr. Murray in 1833." The prose pieces published in Vol. VI. of the same edition are included. The additional poems printed in the Appendix of Vol. XVII., 1833, "occupy respectively their proper places." Galt's _Life of Lord Byron_ was first published in 1830 as No. 1 of G.A. Gleig's "National Library." LIII. _The Works_, etc., Complete in one Vol. With Notes by Th. Moore, Lord Jeffrey, etc. Authorized Foreign Edition. London and Leipzig: Black and Armstrong. 1837. _Note_.--Kayser (1841) records the issue of _The Works_ in seventeen volumes, and _The Complete Works_ in ten volumes (pocket edition), by the same publisher. (See, too, _The Prisoner of Chillon_, by E. Kölbing, 1896) LIV. _Lord Byron's Complete Works_. In Seven Vols. Mannheim. Henry Hoff. 1837. [16º. [Kayser, 1841.] LV. _The Complete Works_, etc. Including the Suppressed Poems and Supplementary pieces selected from his papers after his Death. In one Vol. Paris. Published by Gamier, Palais-Royal. 1839. [4º. [Kölbing.] _Collation_-- Pp. xlv. + 724. LVI. The/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ In Eight Volumes./ Vol. I.--Part I./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street. 1839.-[4º. _Note_.--This edition (printed by A. Spottiswoode, New-Street-Square), together with _Letters and Journals of Lord Byron, etc., by T. Moore_. 2 v. 1830. 4º. ("to which have been added the Letter to [John Murray] on the Rev. W.L. Bowles' Strictures on the life and writings of Pope.... Second Edition, and a few other printed papers, also numerous views, portraits, autograph letters," etc.) bound in 44 vols. with the gen. Title (The/ Poetical Works,/ Letters and Journals,/ of/ Lord Byron:/ with/ Notices of His Life./ By/ Thomas Moore, Esq./ Vol. I. [Vol. II.] London: 1844./), printed expressly for the purpose and prefixed to each volume, which is known as the "Watts" Collection (B.M.C. 44, e-h), was arranged by the late William Watts, Esq., Member of the Philharmonic Society, who died at Jersey, December 28, 1859, aged 81. (See Kölbing's _P. of Chillon_, 1896, pp. 90-92.) LVII. _The Works_, etc. Complete in Five Vols. Leipzig: Bernhard Tauchnitz. 1842. [8º. [Kölbing.] _Note_.--A Second Edition was issued in 1886. LVIII. _The Works_, etc. A New Edition. Edited by Thomas Moore, Esq. Complete in four volumes. With Engravings. Philadelphia. Carey and Hart. 1843. [Kölbing.] LIX. _The Complete Works_, etc.... A Life by Thomas Moore, Esq. In One Volume. With a Portrait. Second Edition. Frankfort o. M. Published by Joseph Baer.; 1846. [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xlviii. + 1004. _Note_.--Another edition appeared in 1852 (_vide post_, No. lxv.). [Kölbing.] LX. The/ Works of Lord Byron;/ In Verse and Prose./ Including/ His Letters, Journals, etc./ With/ A Sketch of His Life./ Hartford:/ Published by Silas Andrus and Son./ 1847./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xxviii. + 319 + 627--Illustrated Title as above (_n.d._), pp. iii., iv.; Title (R. Publishers' Advt, New York, Jan. 1834), pp. v., vi.; Cont. pp. vii.--xiv.; _The Life of Lord Byron_ [By Fitz Green Halleck], pp. xv.-xxviii.; Text (i.) _Letters_ (635), Extracts from a Journal, and Prose Pieces, pp. 1-319; Text (ii.) _Poems_, etc., pp. 1-627. The Front., "Lady Noel Byron," is engr. by A. Dick from a painting by W.J. Newton. The vignette or illust. title is Lord Byron, engr. by A. Dick from a painting by W.E. West. To face p. 1 of the _Poems_ is "Diodati," engr. by M. Osborne from a sketch by W. Purser; to face p. 156, "_Mazeppa_," engr. by Illman and Pilbrow from a painting by H. Verner; facsimiles of Lord Byron's handwriting face pp. 25, 384. The volume was issued in roan binding, with portrait of Byron stamped in gold on the covers. Among "Poems not included in any Collection of Lord Byron's Works until after his Death," pp. 467-488, are the following pieces not included in the London editions of 1831, 1832, and of 1833. To my dear Mary Anne p. 472 To Miss Chaworth ("Oh, memory," etc.) ib. To Lady Caroline Lamb p. 480 "In the Valley of Waters," etc. p. 482 Stanzas to her who can best understand them p. 486 LXI. The/ Works/ of/ Lord Byron:/ With a/ Life and Illustrative Notes,/ By/ William Anderson, Esq.,/ Author of Landscape Lyrics, Scottish Popular Biography, etc./ In Two Volumes./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II.] A Fullarton & Co.:/ Stead's Place, Leith Walk, Edinburgh;/ and 106, Newgate Street, London./ _n.d._ [1850.] [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. ccxxiv. + 270--Title (R. Edinburgh:/ _Fullarton and Macnab, Printers, Leith Walk_), pp. i., ii.; Preface, pp. iii., iv.; Cont. of Vol. I. pp. v., vi.; Life of Lord Byron, pp. vii.-ccxxiv.; Text, pp. 1-270. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 270. The Front. ["Lord Byron at the age of 19"] is engr. by E. Finden from the painting by G. Sanders. The illustrated Title-page [The/ Works/ of/ Lord Byron/ With Notes and Illustrations./ Vol. I./ Edinburgh:/ A Fullarton & Co./ Stead's Place, Leith Walk./] is embellished with a vignette of "Lausanne," engr. by W. Finden from a drawing by C. Stansfield, A.R.A. Vol. II.: pp. 1-465--Title (R. Imprint as above); Cont. of Vol. II.; Text, pp. 1-465. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 465. The Front., "Newstead Abbey," is engr. by E. Finden from a drawing by W. Westall, A.R.A. The illustrated Title-page is embellished with a vignette, "Villeneuve," engr. by E. Finden from a drawing by C. Stansfield, A.R.A. _Note_.--These volumes contain all that "the existing laws of copyright [1850] allows to be free;" _e.g._ all the dramas except _Manfred_ and _Cain_, _The Island_, _The Age of Bronze_, etc., are omitted. In Vol. i. the Life and Text are illust. by 56 Plates; in Vol. II. the Text is illust. by 41 Plates. Two pages (B.R.) headed, "Directions for placing the Plates," and "Directions for placing Plates in Supplement," are bound up with Vol. II. LXII. The/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ Complete in One Volume./ Collected and Arranged, with Illustrative Notes,/ By/ Thomas Moore/ [and 9 others]. With a Portrait, and View of Newstead Abbey./ Philadelphia./ 1850./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 829. _Note_.--Reissued by the same firm with different addresses in 1854, 1869, 1878, etc. This edition is a reproduction of Murray's one-volume edition of 1837. LXIII. The/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ Containing/ The Giaour,/ [and 17 others]. Also/ Several Attributed and Suppressed Poems not/ Included in Other Editions./ With a Memoir,/ By/ Henry Lytton Bulwer, Esq./ London:/ Henry G. Bohn, York Street, Covent Garden./ 1851./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. xlviii. + 641. _Attributed Poems_-- Ode ("Oh, shame to thee") p. 624 Madame Lavalette p. 626 Farewell to England p. 627 To my Daughter, Etc. p. 627 Ode to the Island of St. Helena p. 636 To the Lily of France p. 638 To Jessy p. 640 Lines addressed to Mr. Hobhouse p. 641 Enigma (H.) ib. _Note_.--The Front. is "Lord Byron," by Harlow, Sanders, and Phillips (three vignettes), with arabesque border surmounted by arms and coronet. The Title-vignette (on illustrated Title-page, dated 1847) is "Newstead Abbey." LXIV. _The Poetical Works_, etc. Complete in One Volume. Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo and Co., successors to Grigg, Elliot and Co., Nº 14, North Fourth Street. 1851. [6º. _Note_.--A reissue, entitled _The Globe Edition_, Philadelphia, Claxton, Remsen, and Haffelfinger, appeared in 1870. LXV. The/ Complete Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ Reprinted from the Last London Edition;/ Containing Besides the/ Notes and Illustrations/ By/ Moore, (and 24 others = 4 lines). Considerable Additions and Original Notes;/ To which is Prefixed/ a Life/ By Thomas Moore, Esq./ [Abbreviated.] In One Volume, with a Portrait./ Second Edition./ Frankfort o.M./ Published by Joseph Baer, Bookseller./ 1852./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xlviii. + 1004. The Front., "Lord Byron at the age of 19," is engr. by C. Deucker from the painting by G. Sander (_sic_). The "Miscellaneous Poems" are identical with the Miscellaneous Poems of No. xlviii., save for the omission of the lines, "In Nottingham County," etc., and twelve lines from the ballad "On Mr. Hobhouse." LXVI. The/ Illustrated/ Byron/ with upwards of/ Two Hundred Engravings/ From Original Drawings/ By/ Kenny Meadows/ Birket Foster/ Hablot K. Browne/ Gustave Janet/ and/ Edward Morin./ Henry Vizetelly London. Gough Sq., Fleet St./ [1854, 1855.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. viii. + 632. LXVII. _Poetical Works_, with a memoir of his life. (2 vols.) Philadelphia. 1853. [8º. [Detroit Public Library.] LXVIII. _Poetical Works_, etc. With life and notes by Allan Cunningham. Family ed. London, Charles Daly, 17 Greville Street, Hatton Gardens. [1854.] [12º. [Cat. of Lib. of Congress, 1880.] _Collation_-- Pp. xxii. + 544. 10 pl. LXIX. _The Works_, etc., embracing his suppressed poems, and a sketch of his life. Illustrated. New edition, complete in one volume. Boston: Phillips, Sampson, and Company, 110 Washington Street. 1854. [4º. [Kölbing.] _Collation_-- Pp. vi. + 1071. LXX. The/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ In Six Volumes--Vol. I./ [Vol. II., etc.] A New Edition./ With Portrait./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1855./ [8º. _Note_.--Front., Portrait of Lord Byron, by T. Phillips, R.A., engr. by E. Finden. [Murray's "Library Edition," reissued in 1857 and in 1867.] LXXI. (In this Edition Objectionable Pieces have been excluded.)/ The/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ With Life./ Eight engravings on Steel./ Edinburgh:/ Gall and Inglis, 6 George Street;/ London: Houlston and Wright./ [1857.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xix. + 524. _Note_.--The Ed. omits Canto IV. of _Childe Harold_, all the dramas except _Manfred_, and gives "extracts" from _Don Juan_, "a poem unfit to be printed in this collection entire." Another edition, including the Fourth Canto of _Childe Harold's, etc., Mazeppa_, and the _Ode on Venice_, enclosed in coloured vignette borders, was issued in 1881. LXXII. _The Poetical Works_, etc. Complete in One Vol. Illustrated. New York. Leavitt and Allen. 1857. [4º. [Kölbing.] _Collation_-- Pp. xxxiii. + 935. LXXIII. The/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ Complete./ New Edition, The Text Carefully Revised./ With Portrait./ London: John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1857./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. viii. + 685. The Front., "Statue of Byron by Thorwaldsen," is engr. by W. Holl. _Note_.--The arrangement of the poems differs from the edition of 1837. [_Hours of Idleness_; Occasional Pieces; _Hebrew Melodies_; Domestic Pieces; Later "Occasional Pieces;" The Satires; _Childe Harold_; The Tales; The Dramas; _Beppo_; _Don Juan_; Notes; Index.] This edition is known as the "Pearl" Edition. There was a reissue in 1867, with a new Title-page and without the line-border. LXXIV. _The Poetical Works_, etc. Collected and arranged with notes by Sir Walter Scott, Lord Jeffrey, Professor Wilson, Thomas Moore, etc. New and Complete Edition. With Portrait and Illustrated Engravings. London: John Murray, etc. 1859. [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. x. + 827. _Note_.--This edition was reissued in 1866, 1873, 1876, and 1883. LXXV. _The Poetical Works_, etc. With copious illustrative notes, and a memoir of his life. Complete in One Vol. Illust. with elegant steel engravings. Philadelphia: James B. Smith & Co., No. 27, South Seventh Street. 1859. [8º. [Kölbing.] _Collation_-- Pp. 715. LXXVI. _The Poetical Works_, etc. Collected and arranged with notes by Sir Walter Scott, Lord Jeffrey, etc. New and Complete Edition. With Portrait. London: 1860. Leipzig. B. Tauchnitz. [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. x. + 828. _Note_.--An edition of _The Works, etc._, forming part of the "Collection of British Authors" (16º), was issued by B. Tauchnitz, at Leipzig, 1865-1870. [Kayser, 1865, 1871.] LXXVII. _The Poetical Works_, etc. In Three Vols. F.A. Brockhaus. Leipzig. 1860. [8º. _Note_.--Part of the "Library of British Poets." A Second Edition was issued in 1867. [Kayser, 1866.] LXXVIII. The/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ With Illustrations/ By Keeley Halswelle./ Edinburgh: William P. Nimmo, 2 St. David Street./ London: Simpkin, Marshall & Co./ 1861. [8º _Collation_-- Pp. xxii + 673. _Note_.--_The Life of Lord Byron_, pp. v.-xv., is by Alexander Leighton. The dramas are represented by _Manfred_, _Heaven and Earth_, and _Cain_; the Satires by _English Bards_, etc., _The Waltz_, and _Vision of Judgment_, ... _Don Juan_ by numerous extracts. Red line-borders. LXXIX. The/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ In Ten Volumes./ Vol. I. [Vol. II., etc.] Boston:/ Little, Brown and Company./ New York: Phinney, Blakeman and Mason./ Cincinnati: Rickey, Mallory and Co./ 1861./ [8º. _Note_ (1).--Vol. I. contains _Life of Lord Byron_ [Excerpt from the _Encycl. Brit._, by J.H. Lister], pp. xi.-xxxv.; _Hours of Idleness_ (71), and all the "Occasional Pieces," 1807-1824. Vol. II., The Satires; Ode to N.B.; _Heb. Melodies_; "Domestic Pieces;" _Ode on Venice_; _Monody, etc_.; _Lament of Tasso, etc_. Vol. III., _Beppo_; _Proph. of Dante_; _Francesca, etc_.; the Poems published in _The Liberal_; _The Age of Bronze_. Vol. IV., _Childe Harold's, etc._ Vol. V., "The Tales." Vols. VI., VII., VIII., The Dramas. Vols. IX., X., _Don Juan_. The Front. of Vol. I. is "Byron," by T. Phillips, R.A. _Note_ (2).--This edition professes to be an amended reprint of the London Edition of 1856 in Six Volumes. Doubtful and "attributed" poems are not included. LXXX. _The Poetical Works_, etc. With Life of the Author, and Copious Notes. Beautifully illustrated. Family Edition. Halifax: Milner and Sowerby. 1863. [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xv. + 702. _Note_.--Two other editions of the same work were issued in 1865 by the firm, imprinted _London; Milner and Sowerby, Paternoster Row_. [Kölbing.] LXXXI. The Poetical Works/ of Lord Byron./ With Illustrations./ [Life by A. Leighton.] New Edition Carefully Revised./ Edinburgh:/ William P. Nimmo./ [1868.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 437. _Note_.--This edition includes three dramas, _Manfred_, _Cain_, _Heaven and Earth_; _Childe Harold_, and _Don Juan_, but omits _Hints from Horace_, _The Age of Bronze_, _The Island_, _The Blues_, etc., and occasional Pieces first included in the ed. of 1831. LXXXII. The Poetical Works/ of Lord Byron./ Reprinted from the Original Editions./ With explanatory notes, etc./ London:/ Frederick Warne and Company./ Bedford Street, Covent Garden./ New York: Scribner, Welford and Co./ [1868.] [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. vii. + 638. _Note_.--Part of the "Chandos Classics." Kölbing notes another edition, pp. viii. + 668. A Third Edition: London and New York. A Fourth Edition: Portrait and Original Illustrations. Part of "The Lansdowne Poets." LXXXIII. The/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron:/ With/ Life and Portrait,/ and/ Sixteen Illustrations./ By F. Gilbert./ London:/ John Dicks, 313, Strand./ [1869.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xv. + 457. Double columns. LXXXIV. _The Poetical Works_, etc. New Edition. In Eight Volumes. London: John Murray, Albemarle Street. 1870. [8º. [Kölbing.] LXXXV. The/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ Edited, with a Critical Memoir,/ By/ William Michael Rossetti./ Illustrated by/ Ford Madox Brown./ London:/ E. Moxon, Son, & Co., Dover Street./ 1870./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xx. + 604. _Note_.--_Hints from Horace_, Translation of _Francesca of Rimini_, and Occasional Pieces, first included in the edition of 1831, are omitted. This edition was reissued in 1872. LXXXVI. The Complete/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron/ with an Introductory Memoir/ by/ William B. Scott/ With Illustrations/ London/ George Routledge and Sons/ The Broadway, Ludgate/ New York: 416, Broome Street/ [1874] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 750. _Note_.--Double columns bordered with red lines. LXXXVII. The Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron/ Illustrated Edition/ London/ Virtue and Co., City Road and Ivy Lane/ [1874] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. cliv. + 614. The Front., "Byron," is engr. by W.J. Edwards from the portrait by T. Phillips, R.A. The Title-vignette is "The Corsairs' Isle," and there are fifty other line engravings. _Note_.--This edition includes six "_Attributed Poems_," but omits _Hints from Horace_, Transl. of _Francesca of Rimini_, and the Occasional Pieces first collected in the editions of 1831 and 1832-1833. This edition was reissued in 1879. LXXXVIII. _Poetical Works_, etc., embracing his suppressed poems, and a sketch of his life. New Edition.... (Portrait ... 8 plates.) Boston: Lee & Shepard. 1874. [8º. [_Cat. of Lib. of Congress_, 1880.] LXXXIX. The/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ London:/ Ward, Lock, and Co., Warwick House,/ Dorset Buildings, Salisbury Square, E.C./ [1878.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. vii. + 604. [Double column.] XC. _The Poetical Works_, etc., complete in one Vol. Collected and arranged, with illustrative notes by Thomas Moore, etc., ... Boston: Lee and Shepard, 1878. [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 829. _Note_.--A reproduction of Murray's Edition of 1855. [Kölbing.] XCI. The/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ Edited, With a Critical Memoir,/ By/ William Michael Rossetti./ Illustrated by/ Thomas Seccombe./ London:/ Ward, Lock, & Co., Warwick House,/ Dorset Buildings, Salisbury Square, E.C./ [1880.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xx. + 604. _Note_.--Part of "Moxon's Popular Poets." This edition does not contain _Hints from Horace_, _Francesca of Rimini_, or the Occasional Pieces first collected in the editions of 1831, 1832-1833. The Prefatory Note is by W.M. Rossetti. Double columns bordered with red lines. The same edition, bordered with different red lines and printed on large paper, was issued in 1881. XCII. The Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ Reprinted from the Original Editions,/ With Life, Explanatory Notes, etc./ London:/ Frederick Warne and Co.,/ Bedford Street, Strand./ [1881.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xvi. + 720. _Note_.--"This edition (known as 'The Albion Edition') contains the whole of Byron's Poems and Dramas, with his Original Notes."--_Publisher's Preface_. The Albion Edition was reissued by Warne and Co. in 1897. XCIII. The Complete/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron/ With an Introductory Memoir/ By/ William B. Scott/ London/ George Routledge and Sons/ Broadway, Ludgate Hill/ New York: 9, Lafayette Place/ 1883/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 750. The Front. is the portrait of Lord Byron by G. Sanders; the vignette on Title-page is "Newstead Abbey." _Note_.--This edition (double column), which includes all poems published in the one-volume edition of 1837 (No. li.), was reissued in three volumes, 1883, 1886, 1887. Each volume concludes with an Index of First Lines. XCIV. The/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ With Life./ Engravings on Steel./ Gall & Inglis./ Edinburgh:/ Bernard Terrace./ London:/ 25 Paternoster Sq^r. / [1881.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xviii. + 576. _Note_.--This edition, which repeats the order and contents of that issued by Gall and Inglis in 1857 (No. lxxi.), adds the Fourth Canto of _Childe Harold's, etc._, _Mazeppa_, and the _Ode on Venice_. Coloured vignette-borders. XCV. The/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ With Original and Additional Notes./ In Twelve Volumes./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II., etc.] Hours of Idleness./ English Bards and Scotch Reviewers./ London:/ Suttaby and Co., Amen Corner./ New York:/ Scribner and Welford./ 1885./ [8º. _Note_.--This edition includes all poems contained in the edition of 1837, but omits the prose pieces. XCVI. _The Poetical Works_, etc. Complete in one vol. Collected and arranged with illustrative notes by Thomas Moore, etc. New York: P.F. Collier. [1886?] [Folio. _Collation_-- Pp. viii. + 820. [Kölbing.] XCVII. The Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ Edited by/ Mathilde Blind./ Miscellaneous Poems./ London:/ Walter Scott, 24, Warwick Lane, E.G./ and Newcastle-on-Tyne./ 1886./ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. xxviii. + 280. _Note_.--Part of the "Canterbury Poets." This volume contains _Introductory Notice_ by Mathilde Blind, pp. vii.-xxviii.; "Miscellaneous Poems" (including _Vision of Judgment_, _Manfred_, _Cain_, etc.), pp. 1-280. XCVIII. The Poetical Works/ etc. Edited by/ Mathilde Blind./ Childe Harold./ Don Juan./ London, etc./ 1886./ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 1-369. _Note_.--These volumes (Nos. xcvii., xcviii.) were issued separately. Red line-borders. XCIX. _The Life and Works of_, etc., With Notes and Illustrations. ["Centenary Edition."] In Two Volumes. Thomas C. Jack, London, Edinb. and Glasgow. 1888. [Kölbing.] C. The Complete/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron/ With an Introductory Memoir/ By/ William B. Scott/ London/ George Routledge and Sons, Limited/ Broadway, Ludgate Hill/ Glasgow, Manchester, and New York/ 1890/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 750. Double columns. _Note_.--Part of "Routledge's Popular Library." The Front. is an illust. of _Childe Harold_, Canto III. stanza xxi., and the Title-vignette, "Newstead Abbey." CI. _The Poetical Works_, etc. New York: John W. Lovell, Company, 50, Worth Street, Corner Mission Place. 1890? [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. ii. + 544. [Kölbing.] CII. The/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ With Original and Additional Notes./ In Twelve Volumes./ Vol. I. [Vol. II., etc.] Hours of Idleness./ English Bards and Scotch Reviewers./ Griffith Farran Okeden & Welsh/ Newbery House, Charing Cross Road/ London, and Sydney./ [1891.] [8º. _Note_.--This edition (The "Bijou Byron") is a reissue of _The Poetical Works_, etc., published by Suttaby and Co. (No. xcv.) in 1885. CIII. _The Poetical Works_, etc., Complete Edition. In Three Vols. William W. Gibbings. London. 1892. _Note_.--A reprint of the Leipzig edition of 1880, published by F.A. Brockhaus. CIV. _Works_. "Bijou Ed." 12 Vols. Philadelphia, J.B. Lippincott Co. 1892. [Pocket size. [_Amer. Cat._, 1892.] CV. _Dramatic and Poetical Works_. "Newstead Ed." Philadelphia, D. McKay. 1895. [8º. [_Amer. Cat._, 1895.] _Collation_-- Pp. 720. CVI. Oxford Miniature Byron/ The/ Poetical Works/ of/ Lord Byron/ In Four Volumes--Vol. I./ London/ Henry Frowde/ Oxford University Press Warehouse/ Amen Corner, E.C./ New York: 91 and 93, Fifth Avenue/ 1896/ [16º. _Note_.--"We are indebted to the courtesy of Mr. John Murray, publisher of the edition of 1867, for permission to use any copyright matter contained in that issue."--_Publisher's Advt._ CVII. The Poetical/ Works of/ Lord/ Byron/ London/ Bliss/ Sands & Co/ XII. Burl-/ Eigh St./ Strand/ W.C./ [1897] [4º. _Collation_-- Pp. xvi + 727. _Note_.--This edition forms part of "The Apollo Poets." The Front., "Lord Byron," is a _Lamerciergravure_, printed in Paris, of the portrait by T. Phillips, R.A. CVIII. _Poetical Works_, etc. New Edition, carefully revised. With illustrations. W.P. Nimmo. 1897. [8º. [_English Catalogue_, 1898.] _Note_.--Part of the "Edinburgh Library of Standard Authors." CIX. _Poetical Works_. (Ed. by T. Moore.) In four volumes. Philadelphia, J.B. Lippincott Co. 1897. [12º. [_Amer. Cat._, 1898.] CX. _The Poetical Works_, etc. With Notes, and a memoir of the author. Pictorial Edition. London: George Henny & Co., Bartholomew Close. [_n.d._] [Kölbing.] _Collation_-- Pp. cliv. + 344. CXI. _The Poetical Works_, etc. With explanatory notes and a life of the author, by Thomas Moore. Illustrated with numerous fine steel engravings, embracing the principal female characters, landscape and historical subjects. First quarto edition complete in [? one] volume. New York: Johnson, Fry and Company, 27 Beekman Street. _n.d._ [4º. [Kölbing.] _Collation_-- Pp. ii. + 740 + xxviii. CXII. _The Poetical Works_, etc. Complete in one volume. Collected and arranged with illustrative notes by Thomas Moore, etc. New York: P.F. Collier. [1889?] [Fol. [Kölbing.] _Collation_-- Pp. viii. + 820. CXIII. _The Poetical Works_, etc. New York: Hurst & Co., Publishers, 122 Nassau Street. [_n.d._] [Kölbing.] _Collation_-- Pp. vi. + 608. TRANSLATIONS OF COLLECTED EDITIONS. _French_. I. Oeuvres/ Complètes/ de Lord Byron,/ Traduites de l'Anglais/ Par MM.A.--P. et E.--D.S.; [Amédée Pichot et Eusèbe de Salle]/ Troisième édition,/ Entièrement revue et corrigée./ Tome premier./ Paris,/ Ladvocat, Libraire, Palais-Royal,/ Galerie de Bois, No. 195./ 1821./ [12º. _Note_.--Vols. I.-VIII. were issued in 1821; Vols. IX. and X. (in two parts) in 1822. Vol. I. (pp. i.-xlv.) is preceded by _Notice sur Lord Byron, et ses Ecrits_, par Amédée Pichot. Vols. XI.-XV. (Oeuvres, etc./ Traduites de l'Anglais/ Par A.P. ... T./) with Gen. half-title, Oeuvres/ de/ Lord Byron./ Inédites,/ were issued in 1824. In the Museum copy of this edition an unnumbered volume entitled Essai/ Sur le Génie et le Caractère/ de Lord Byron,/ Par A.P.... T.,/ Précédé/ d'une Notice Préliminaire/ Par M. Charles Nodier./ Extracts de la Quatrième Edition des Oeuvres/ Complètes de Lord Byron,/ (six volumes in-8 ornés de vignettes.) Paris./ Ladvocat, etc./ 1824,/ which includes an essay _Sur la Mort de Byron_, and a transl. of _Heaven and Earth_, pp. 195-252, is bound up with Vol. XV. _Note_ (1).--"Oeuvres de lord Byron. Quatrième édition, entièrement revue et corrigée par A.P.... T.; précédée d'une notice sur lord Byron, par M. Charles Nodier; ornée de vignettes ... _A Paris, chez Ladvocat, libraire, Palais-Royal, galerie de bois_, No. 195 (Impr. Firmin Didot), MDCCCXXII.-MDCCCXXV. (1822-1825), 8 vols. in-8, conv. impr. _Tome I_: [Tome II., etc. (in 8 vols.)], 2 ff. (faux-titre et titre); xvi. pp. (notice préliminaire de Ch. Nodier); clii. pp. (Essai sur lord Byron); 4 pp. (Table générale des matières pour les tomes I. à VI.); 249 pp.; et 1 f.n. ch. (annonce d'ouvrages). "Frontispiece gravé par Godefroy; portrait de lord Byron, gravé par Dequevauvilliers; et 5 figures gravées d'après Richard Westall, par Godefroy, Mougeot, Dequevauvilliers, etc. "_Tome II._, etc., etc. "Les tomes II., III., IV., V., portent la date de 1822; les tomes I. et VI., celle de 1823; le tome VII., celle de 1824; et le tome VIII., la date de 1825." [_Manuel de l'Amateur de Livres du XIX^e siècle_. Par Georges Vicaire. Paris, 1894. Fascic. 3 (1^re^ Partie), pp. 989, 990.] _Note_ (2).--"La prem. édit, de cette trad, parut de 1819 à 1820, et formait 10 vol. in-12; la seconde Ã[dit. fut. publ. de 1820 Ã 1822, et formait 5 vol. in-8." [Quérard, La France Littéraire, 1827, i. 581.] "Oeuvres complètes, VI. édit.... Paris, Ladvocat, Delangle, 1829 et ann. suiv., 20 vol. gr. in-18, fig.--Autre édit. Paris, Furne, 1830-35, 6 vol. in-8, et avec 6 vignettes ajoutées. XI. édit., avec une notice historique sur lord Byron, des notes et des pièces inédites. Paris, Furne, Ch. Gosselin, 1842, grand in-8 à deux colonnes, avec 15 vignettes." [Quérard, _La Littérature Française Contemporaine_. 1827-1844. 1846, ii. 486.] II. Oeuvres complètes/ de/ Lord Byron,/ avec notes et commentaires,/ Comprenant/ Ses Mémoires publiés par Thomas Moore,/ et ornées d'un beau portrait de l'auteur./ Traduction nouvelle/ Par M. Paulin Paris,/ de la Bibliothèque du roi./ Tome premier./ Paris./ Dondey-Dupré Père et Fils, impr.--libr., éditeurs,/ Rue Saint-Louis, Nº 46,/ et rue Richelieu, Nº 47 _bis._/ 1830./ [8º. _Note_ (1).--The Front. of Vol. I., "Noel Byron," is engr. by Adele Ethiou, after the portrait by T. Phillips, R.A. The engraver has added a wreath of bay leaves. Vols. I.-X. were issued in 1830; Vols. XI., XII., XIII., in 1831. _Note_ (2).-"Il y a une seconde édition, Paris, etc., Dondey-Dupré, 1836, in-8, 13 vol." [Quérard, 1846, ii. 486.] III. Oeuvres complètes/ de/ Lord Byron,/ Traduction nouvelle,/ d'après la dernière édition de Londres,/ Par/ Benjamin Laroche,/ Traducteur des Oeuvres de J. Bentham, Cooper, etc.;/ avec les notes et commentaires de Sir Walter Scott, etc. [Three Lines]. Précédées de/ l'histoire de la vie et des ouvrages de Lord Byron,/ Par John Galt./ Tome premier./ Paris./ Charpentier, Libraire-éditeur,/ Rue de Seine, No. 31./ 1836./ [8º. _Note_.--The Front. of Vol. I. is "Byron," after the portrait by T. Phillips, R.A. Vol. I. was issued in 1836, Vols. II.-IV. in 1837. The translator (_Post-Scriptum_, Vol. IV. p. [827]) claims to have accomplished his work from beginning to end without collaboration or assistance: "cette traduction a été commencée, poursuivie et achevée par MOI SEUL." "II^e édit.... précédée de l'histoire de la vie ... de lord Byron par _H. Romand_, Paris ... 1837, grand in 8, avec une gravure. "III^e édit., précédée d'une Notice sur la vie de lord Byron, par M. Émile Souvestre, Paris, 1838, in-8, avec portrait et _fac-simile_. "IV^e édit. Paris, 1840, 1841. 4 vol. in 12. "V^e édit, ornée d'un _fac-simile_, et précédée d'une Notice sur lord Byron ... par M. Villemain. Paris, 1843. Grand in-8." [Quérard, 1846, ii. 487.] "La I^re^ édition de cette traduction a été publiée en 1836, 4 vol.... Depuis elle a été réimprimée environ 10 fois, d'abord par M. Charpentier et puis par M. Lecou, et en dernier lieu par MM. Hachette et Cie." [Lorenz. _Cat. Gén._ 1867, i. 407.] IV. _Oeuvres, traduites en vers français_ par Orby Hunter, 2 vols. (Paris, Chapelle. 1841-1842.) [8º. [Lorenz, _Cat. Gén._, 1867, i. 407.] V. Oeuvres/ de/ Lord Byron/ Traduites en vers français/ Par/ Orby Hunter & Pascal Ramé/ Tome. fred,--Beppo,--Le Corsair,--Lara/ et Poésies diverses/ Paris/ Daussin,/ Libraire/ Place et rue Favart,/ 8 bis/ 1845/ [8º. Vols. I.-III. were issued in 1845. _Note_.--Vol. II. contains _Marino Faliero_; _La Fiancée_, etc.; _Parisina_; "Inscription sur le Monument d'un chien," etc.; _A Venise_; "Ode sur l'étoile," etc.; "Adieu!--Elégié." Vol. III. contains _Don Juan_, Chants I.-VI.; _Notes_. VI. _Oeuvres complètes de lord Byron_. Traduction nouvelle de Louis Barré, illustrée par Ch. Mettais, E. Bocourt, Ed. Frère, Edition Bry aîné Paris, _en vente à la librairie centrale des publications à 20 centimes, 5, rue du Pont-de-Lodi_, 5 (Typ. Gaittet et Cie.), 1856, gr. in 4. _Collation_-- 2 ff. (faux-titre et litre); et 400 pp. Texte imprimé sur deux colonnes. [_Manuel de l'Amateur_, etc., 1894. Fasc. 3 (I'e Partie), p. 990.] VII. Oeuvres/ de/ Lord Byron/ Traduction nouvelle/ Précédée d'un/ Essai sur Lord Byron/ Par/ Daniel Le Sueur/ Heures d'oisiveté--Childe Harold/ Paris/ Alphonse Lemerre, éditeur/ 23-31, passage Choiseul, 23-31./ 1891./ [12º. _Note_.--The Front., "Lord Byron," is engr. by Fredéric Massé after the portrait by G. Sanders. The Title-vignette bears a motto, _Fac et Spera_, and the initials A.L. A second volume (unnumbered), containing _Le Giaour_; _La Fiancée, etc._; _Le Corsair_; _Lara_, etc., was issued in 1892. This translation, advertised as _Oeuvres Complètes_, and described by Lorenz as "Traduction couronnée par l'Académie française," has not been continued. _German_. I. _Lord Byron's Poesien_. In 31 volumes. Brothers Schumann, Zwickau. 1821-1828. [16º. _Note_.--Among the several translators were Julius Körner, Wilhelm Reinhold, Heinrich Doering, August Schumann, Christian Karl Meissner, etc. Vols. I.-VI. appeared in 1821; Vols. VII.-XII. in 1822; Vols. XIII., XIV. in 1824; Vols. XV.-XX. in 1825; Vol. XXI. in 1826; Vols. XXII.-XXVIII. in 1827; and Vols. XXIX.-XXXI. in 1828. [_Lord Byron in Deutschland_, von Dr. Cäsar Flaischlen, _Centralblatt für Bibliothekswesen_, 1890, vii. 462-464.] II. Lord Byron's/ sämmtliche Werke./ Herausgegeben/ von/ Dr. Adrian,/ ordentlichem öffentlichem Professor der neueren Litteratur an der/ Universität zu Giessen./ Erster Theil./ Lord Byron's Leben./ Mit dem Bildniss, einem Facsimile der Handschrift und der/ Abbildung des Stammsitzes Lord Byron's./ Frankfurt am Main./ Gedruckt und verlegt von Johann David Sauerländer./ 1830./ [12º. _Note_.--Vols. X. and XII. were issued in 1831. The several translators were G.H. Barmann, O.L.B. Wolff, K.L. Kannegiesser, A. Hungari, P. von Haugwitz, Ph. A.G. von Meyer (the author of _Byron's Leben_, i. 3-326), and The Editor. This edition was reissued in twelve vols. (12º) in 1837. [Kayser, 1841.] III. _Dichtungen von Lord Byron_. Deutsch v. Gustav Pfizer. 4 Sammlungen. Stuttgart, Liesching. 1836-1839. [8º. _Note_.--There was a reissue of this work in 1851. [_Centralblatt, etc._, 1890, vii. 468, 469.] IV. _Lord Byron's sämmtliche Werke_. Deutsch v. Adolf Böttger [1 vol., with life and portrait.] Leipzig, Otto Wigand. 1839-40. [8º. [Kayser, 1841.]. _Note_.--This edition was reissued at Leipzig by Otto Wigand in 1 vol. 8º in 1841, 1844, 1845; in 12 vols. 16º in 1841, 1842, and 1847; in diamond edition, in 12 vols. 16º in 1850, 1852, 1856, 1860, 1861; and in 8 vols. 8º in 1854, 1863, 1864. For the latest edition, _vide post_, No. xiii. [Kayser, 1848, 1853, 1860, 1865. See, too, _Centralblatt, etc._, 1890, vii. 457.] V. Lord Byron's/ sämmtliche Werke./ Nach den/ Anforderungen unserer Zeit/ neu übersetzt von/ Mehreren./ Zweite unveränderte Ausgabe./ Erster Band./ Pforzheim./ Verlag von Dennig Finck & Co./ [Ten Vols.] 1842./ [16º. _Note_ (1).--The several translators were E. Ortlepp, Dr. Kottenkamp, H. Kurtz, Professor Duttenhofer, Bardili, Bernd von Guseck. _Note_ (2).--This edition was first issued in small octavo by Hoffmann at Stutgard, in 1839, and reissued (16º) by Scheible, Rieger, and Sattler, 1845, 1846; and in 12 vols. (16º) by Rieger at Stutgard, in 1856. [_Centralblatt, etc._, 1890, vii. 466.] VI. _Lord Byron's sämmtliche Werke_. [8 Bde.] Deutsch von A. Neidhardt. Berlin, Hofmann. 1865. [8º. [Kayser, 1871.] VII. Dichtungen/ von/ Lord Byron./ Deutsch/ von/ Wilhelm Schäffer./ Die Belagerung von Korinth./ Der Gefangene von Chillon. Die Insel./ Hildburghausen./ Verlag des Bibliographischen Instituts. 1865. [8º. _Note_.--This collected edition of translations forms part of the _Bibliothek ausländischer Klassiker, etc._ _Don Juan_, Cantos I.-VI., transl. by W. Schäffer, was issued in two vols. in 1867; _Childe Harold's, etc._, transl. by A.H. Janert, in 1868; _Corsair_, _Mazeppa_, _Beppo_, by W. Schäffer, in 1870; _Manfred_, _Cain_, _Heaven and Earth_, _Sardanapalus_, by W. Grüzmacher, in 1872; Lyrical Pieces, by Heinrich Stadelmann, in 1872; _The Giaour_, _Bride of Abydos_, _Lara_, _Parisina_, by Adolf Strodtmann, in 1872. VIII. _Lord Byron's ausgewählte Werke_, uebersetzt von Mehreren [4 bde.], herausg. von A. Strodtmann. Leipzig, Bibl. Inst. 1865-1872. [8º. [_Centralblatt, etc._, 1890, vii. 466.] IX. Lord Byron's/ sämmtliche Werke/ in drei Bänden./ Frei überzetzt/ von/ Adolf Seubert./ Erster Band./ Leipzig./ Druck und Verlag von Philipp Reclam jun./ [1874.] [8º. X. _Lord Byron's Werke_. Deutsch v. Dr. Adalbert Schroeter. [6 Bde.] Uebersetzt, mit Einleitung und Anmerkungen versehen. Stuttgart. In; Coll. Spemann. 1885-1890. [8º. [_Centralblatt, etc._, 1890, vii, 470.] XI. _Lord Byron's poetische Werke_. In älteren Uebertragungen; eingeleitet durch e. Studie v. Henry T. Tuckermann. Stuttgart. Cotta'sche Bibl. der Weltlitteratur, 1886. [In eight vols.] [8º. [Kayser, 1887.] XII. Lord Byron's Werke./ Uebersetz/ von/ Otto Gildemeister./ In sechs Bänden./ Erster Band./ Vierte Auflage./ Berlin./ Druck und Verlag von Georg Reimer./ 1888./ [8º. _Note_.--A First Edition appeared in 1864, a second in 1866, and a third in 1877. [Kayser, 1865, 1871, 1883.] XIII. Byron's/ sämmtliche Werke./ Von/ Adolf Böttger./ Achte Auflage./ Erster Band./ Leipzig,/ Verlag von Otto Wigand./ 1901./ [8 Bde.] [8º. _Modern Greek_. [Greek: Ta Apanta / tou / Byrônos / Tomos Prôtos / En Athênais / Ek tou typographeiou tôn katastêmatôn / Anestê kônstatinidou] 1895/ [Three Vols.] [8º. _Note_.--This translation includes _Mazeppa_, _Parisina_, _Childe Harold_, _The Siege of Corinth_, _The Bride of Abydos_, _The Corsair_, _The Curse of Minerva_, _Don Juan_, _The Giaour_. The paper wrapper and the title-page are embellished with a lithograph of the portrait by T. Phillips, R.A. _Italian_. I. Opere complete/ di/ Lord Byron/ voltate dall' originale inglese in prosa italiana/ Da/ Carlo Rusconi/ Con note ed illustrazioni del volgarizzatore/ nonchè dei signori/ Moore (and 33 others = 6 lines)/ a cui si aggiungono/ I dialoghi di Lord Byron compilati da M. Medwin/ Un saggio sul di lui genio--una prefazione--E un' appendice/ parte desunti da altri scritti, parte tradotti,/ parte originali./ Padova/ coi tipi della Minerva/ 1842/ [8º. _Note_.--This edition, which forms one volume, pp. xxxix. + 1561, was issued in two parts. A dedication ("A Sua Eccellenza/ Lord Holland/ Ministro Plenipotenziario D'Inghilterra/ alla Corte di Toscana"https://www.gutenberg.org/) is prefixed to Part I., pp. [ix.]-[xi.]. II. Opere/ di/ Giorgio Lord Byron/ Precedute/ da alcune avvertenze critiche/ Sulle stesse/ e da un discorso/ di/ Cesare Cantù/ prima edizione napolitana adorna di figure incise/ Napoli/ Francesco Rossi-Romano editore/ Trinità Maggiore, 6/ 1853/ [8º. _Note_.--The Front. is a lithograph of "Lord Byron nell' età di 17 anni," after the portrait by G. Sanders. The several translators were Giuseppe Gazzino, Giuseppe Nicolini, Pietro Isola, Pellegrino Rossi, Andrea Maffei, Marcello Mazzoni, and P.G.B. Cereseto. The translation includes _Childe Harold_, eight tales, and four dramas. III. _Opere di Lord Byron_ tradotte ed annotate da Gabr. De Stefano. Napoli, 1857. [8º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] _Collation_-- Pp. 625. IV. Opere/ di/ Lord Giorgio Byron/ Precedute/ da un saggio intorno al genio e al carattere/ Del medesimo/ Volume unico/ Napoli/ Presso Pasquale Perrone libraio-/Editore/ via Costantinopoli, 107./ 1886/ [8º. _Note_.--The translations include _Childe Harold_, _Don Juan_, eight tales, and seven dramas. A reissue with a portrait, and, apparently, wanting pp. 669-[711] of the appendix, appeared in 1891 (Ferdinando Bideri, editore/ Via Costantinopoli, 89). _Polish_. I. Poezye/ Lorda Byrona/ w t[/l]umaczeniu Polskiém. Wydane staraniem/ Boles[/l]awa Maurycego Wolffa./ Tom. I./ W[e,]drówki Czajlda-Harolda./ Petersburg./ Nakadem i Drukiem B.M. Wolffa./ 1857./ [12º. _Note_.--No more published. II. Poezye Lorda Byrona w przek[/l]adzie polskich poetów. Zbiorowe wydanie, pod red. Piotra Chmielowskiego. ("Biblioteka Najcelnijszych Utworów.") [8º. _Warszawa, 1885, etc._ _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Sochinenaiya Lorda Bairona V" perevodakh" russkikh" ] [Cyrillic: Poztov" izdainykhie pol" redaktsieyu N.V. Gerbelya] 5 TOM. [Cyrillic: S.-Peterburg"] 1864-66 [16º. Second edition of Gerbel. [Cyrillic: S.-Peterburg"], 1874-77. In 4 vols. Third edition. [Cyrillic: S.-Peterburg"], 1883-84. In 3 vols. II. [Cyrillic: Bairon". Evrope[)i]esk[-i]e Klassiki V" russkom" persvodie] [Cyrillic: P. Ve[)i]noerga S.-Peterburg"] 1876. _Note_.--The translations include _Hebrew Melodies_, _Sardanapalus_, _Manfred_, _Childe Harold's, etc._, and _Don Juan_. _Spanish_. Biblioteca Universal./ Coleccion/ de los/ Mejores autores/ Antiguos y modernos,/ Nationales y extranjeros./ Tomo LXIII./ Lord Byron/ Madrid./ Direccion y administracion/ calle de Leganitos, 18, 2.0/ 1880./ [16º. This translation includes _The Corsair_, _Lara_, _Darkness_, and _Hebrew Melodies_ (6), _The Lament of Tasso_. The _Prologo_ is by Rafael Ginard de La Rosa. _Swedish_. Byron's Poetiska Berättelser. Öfversättning af Talis Qualis [C.W.A. Strandberg]. 1. Maseppa.--2. Belägringen af Korinth.--3. Fången på Chillon.--4. Parisina--5. Beppo.--6. Giaurn.--7. Bruden från Abydos.--8. On Eller Christian OCH Hans Ställbröder. [8 vols.] Stockholm, J.L. Brudins Förlag. 1854-1856. [12º. SELECTIONS. I. _The Beauties of Byron_, with a sketch of his life and a dissertation on his genius and writings. By Thomas Parry. London: J. Sudbury. 1823. [Kölbing.] II. _The Beauties of Byron_. Extracts from the works of the Right Hon. Lord Byron. Embellished with engravings on steel. London: J. Limbird. 1827. [Kölbing.] III. Life/ and/ Select Poems/ of/ Lord Byron,/ Arranged, etc./ By C. Hulbert,/ Author of Literary Beauties, Poetical Bouquet, Museum of the World, etc./ London: Sold by all the Booksellers./ [1828.] [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 84. IV. _The Beauties of Lord Byron_, selected by B.F. French, 10th ed. [Pp. xi. + 204, 3 pl.] Philadelphia. 1828. [24º [_Cat. of Library of Congress_, 1880.] V. The/ Beauties/ of/ Byron,/ Consisting of/ Selections From His Works./ By J.W. Lake./ [L.B. in Gothic letters, enclosed in bay and oak leaves.] Paris,/ Baudry, at the English, Italian,/ Spanish, German, and Portuguese Library,/ Rue du Coq Saint-Honoré, No. 9./ Bobée and Hingray, rue de Richelieu, No. 14./ 1829./ [16º _Collation_-- Pp. viii. + 230. VI. _Lord Byron's Select Works_. Vols. I.-III. Frankfort a. M Brönner. 1831, 1832. [12º [Kayser, 1834.] VII. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_; The Giaour; The Siege, etc.; Parisina; The Island; The Prisoner, etc.; Beppo; Mazeppa; The Prophecy, etc.; The Waltz; The Lament, etc.; Hebrew Melodies; Misc. in Prose. By Lord Byron. Paris. 1832. (1 vol.) [8º. ["Le Moniteur de la librairie." _Courrier de l'amateur de livres_. Paris, Barrois. 4^e Annèe, 1845, p. 122. (Bibl. Nat. 9, 5610.)] VIII. _Lord Byron's Select Poetical Works_, containing the _Corsair_, _Lara_, the _Giaour_, the _Siege_, etc., the _Bride_, etc., _Parisina_, _Mazeppa_, the _Prisoner_, etc. Paris and Lyons. 1835. [12º. [Kayser, 1841.] IX. _Lord Byron's Select Works_. Consisting of _Cain, a Mystery_; _Hours of Idleness_; _English Bards_, etc., with Occ. Pieces and Life of the Author. Asher, London and Berlin. 1837. [32º. [Kayser, 1841.] X. The/ Beauties/ of/ Byron:/ Consisting of/ Selections from the Popular Works of/ This most admired Writer./ By Alfred Howard, Esq./ A new Edition./ London:/ Printed for Thomas Tegg and Son, 73, Cheapside;/ R. Griffin and Co., Glasgow./ T.T. and H. Tegg, Dublin:/ also, J. and S.A. Tegg, Sydney and Hobart Town./ 1837./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 192. XI. The/ Beauties/ of/ Byron,/ consisting of/ selections from his Works./ By Alfred Howard, Esq./ London:/ Printed by T. Davison,/ For Thomas Tegg, No. 73, Cheapside;/ R. Griffin and Co. Glasgow;/ and/ J. Cummings, Dublin./ [_n.d._] [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 212. _Note_.--The following advertisement is printed on the R. of the Gen. Half-title: "To the few persons who have not read Lord Byron's poems, but who, after perusing these specimens, will undoubtedly wish to read the whole of them, we beg leave to say that the only correct editions are published by Mr. Murray, of Albemarle Street, and Messrs. J. & H.L. Hunt, of Tavistock Street. The first eight volumes are to be had from the former publisher; the last two from the latter. All other editions are piracies, and inflict even more injury on the sense and poetry of the noble bard than they do on the property of the proprietors." XII. _Byron's Select Works_, containing the Corsair; Lara; Giaour; the Bride, etc.; the Siege, etc.; the Prisoner, etc.; Select Poems, etc., etc.; to which is prefixed a biographical notice of Lord B. by J.W. Lake. Paris, Truchy. 1843. [12º. [_Le Moniteur_, etc., 1845, p. 122. See, too, _Bibl. de la France_, Aug. 12, 1843, vol. xxxii. p. 413.] XIII. _A Selection from Lord Byron's Poetical Works_, containing, etc. Intended for the use of young people, and provided with explanatory German notes by Charles Graeser. Marienwerder, Edward Levysohn. 1846. [Kölbing.] XIV. _Select Poetical Works of Lord Byron_. Containing, etc. With a memoir by Henry Lytton Bulwer, Esq. London, Adam Scott. 1848. [Kölbing.] XV. _Lord Byron's Select Works_, with an Appendix, containing songs and ballads for the use of schools, edited by F. Breier. Oldenburg, Schulze. 1848. [8º. [Kayser, 1853.] XVI. Selections/ From The/ Writings of Lord Byron./ Poetry./ By a Clergyman./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1854./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. viii. + 175. _Note_.--The Selection (two vols.--Prose, Poetry) is one of a series called "Murray's Railway Reading." The editor was the Rev. Whitwell Elwin, sometime editor of the _Q.R_. XVII. Moxon's Miniature Poets./ A/ Selection From/ The Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ Edited and Prefaced by Algernon Chas. Swinburne./ London:/ Edward Moxon & Co., Dover Street./ 1866./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xxxii. + 244. _Note_.--The Selection was reissued by Ward, Lock, and Co. in 1885. XVIII. Songs by/ Lord Byron/ [Crest, motto _Crede Byron_.]/ London/ Virtue & Co., Publishers/ 26 Ivy Lane, Pater noster Row/ 1872/ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 270. _Note_.--There is an index of "Songs set to Music," pp. 268-270. XIX. _Selections from the Writings of Lord Byron_. New Edition. With Portrait. London, John Murray. 1874. [Kölbing.] XX. _Beautés de Byron_: Childe Harold, le Corsaire, Lara, le Giaour, le Siège, etc., Don Juan, Extraits (texte anglais) avec préface et notes en français, par A. Biard. Paris, Delagrave. 1876. [12º [Lorenz, 1886.] XXI. Favourite Poems./ By/ Lord Byron./ Illustrated./ Boston:/ James R. Osgood and Company./ Late Ticknor & Fields, and Fields, Osgood & Co./ 1877./ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 127. XXII. _The Beauties of Byron_. An Original Selection. Stuttgart, Paul Neff. [Kölbing.] XXIII. Poetry of Byron/ Chosen and Arranged by/ Matthew Arnold/ London/ Macmillan and Co./ 1881/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xxxvi. + 276. _Note_.--The title-page is illustrated by an engraving, by G.J. Stodart, of Thorwaldsen's statue of Lord Byron. The preface (pp. vii.-xxxi.) is by Matthew Arnold. XXIV. Routledge's World Library/ "Syllables govern the World." John Selden/ Gems from Byron/ With an Introduction/ By the/ Rev. Hugh Reginald Haweis, M.A./ London/ George Routledge and Sons/ Broadway, Ludgate Hill/ New York: 9 Lafayette Place/ 1886/ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 158. XXV. Selections/ From The Poetry of/ Lord Byron/ Edited with/ An Introduction and Notes/ By/ Frederic Ives Carpenter, Ph.D./ Instructor in English, the University of Chicago/ Dir in klar und truben Tagen/ Lied und Mut war schon und gross./ II. 'Faust,' iii. 1. 1426./ New York/ Henry Holt and Company/ 1900/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. lviii. + 412. XXVI. Poems/ of/ Lord Byron/ Selected and arranged for use in Schools/ By/ C. Linklater Thomson/ Head-Mistress of the Solihull School for Girls, [etc., three lines]./ London/ Adam and Charles Black/ 1901/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. ix. + 67. TRANSLATIONS OF SELECTIONS. _Armenian_. Lord Byron's/ Armenian Exercises/ and Poetry./ Venice/ In the Island of S. Lazzaro./ 1886/ [8º _Collation_-- Pp. 167 + Index, pp. [169]-[172]. _Note_.--The Title-page is dated 1886, the paper wrapper (yellow) 1870. Among the exercises are _Pieces of Armenian History_, _The Epistle of Paul to the Corinthians_, etc.; and among the translations are "The Destruction of Sennacherib," "On Waterloo," "To the Duke of Dorset," etc. _French_. I. _Choix de Poésies de Byron, de W. Scott et Th. Moore_; trad. libre de l'angl. Genève et Paris, Paschoud. 1820. [Two Vols.] [8º. [Quérard, 1827.] II. _Les Beautés de lord Byron_, galerie de quinze tableaux tirés de ses oeuvres, accompagnée d'un texte traduit par Amédée Pichot. Paris, Aubert, Giraldon. 1838. [4º. [Quérard, 1846.] III. Écrin poétique/ de/ littérature anglaise./ Traduction en vers français,/ Avec notes historiques,/ De poèmes, épisodes et fragments choisis/ de Lord Byron,/ Thomas Moore, Gray, Graham, etc./ Ornée du portrait de lord Byron/ et de jolies vignettes de Thompson./ Par D. Bonnefin./ Chevalier de la légion d'honneur,/ A Paris,/ Chez L. Hachette,/ Libraire de l'Université Royale de France,/rue Pierre-Sarrazin, no. 12./ 1841./ [8º _Collation_-- Pp. ix. + 473. IV. _Chefs-d'oeuvre de lord Byron_. (Le Pèlerinage, etc., Lara, la Fiancée, etc., Parisina, Mazeppa, le Siége, etc., le Prisonnier, etc.) La traduction françoise en regard par M. le comte d'Hautefeuille; précédés d'un essai sur la vie et les oeuvres de lord Byron et de ses contemporains, renfermant l'histoire de la poésie anglaise au xix^e siècle, par D. O'Sullivan. 1847. _Place de la Madelaine_, 24. [8º [Lorenz, 1866.] V. Rough Hewing/ of/ Lord Byron/ In French,/ With the English Text./ By Francis D'Autrey./ ... Obscurus fio./ Horace, Ars Poetica./ London:/ J.W. Kolckmann,/ Foreign Library,/ 1, Princes Street, Cavendish Square, W./ 1869./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 233. VI. _Chefs-d'oeuvre de lord Byron_. Traduits en vers français par A. Regnault. (Two Vols.) 1874. [8º. [Lorenz, 1876.] _German_. I. _Lord Byron's_ ausgewählte Dichtungen. Aus d. Engl. übertragen. Leipzig, Wienbrack. 1838. [8º. [Kayser, 1841.] II. Byron-Anthologie./ Auserwähltes/ aus/ Lord Byron's Dichtungen,/ übertragen/ von/ Eduard Hobein./ Schwerin./ Stiller'sche Hofbuchhandlung./ (G. Bolhoevener.) 1866. [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 187. III. _Auswahl aus Byron: Childe Harold_ (III. and IV.), _Prisoner, etc., Mazeppa_. Hrsg. v. J. Hengesbach. 1892. [12º. [Kayser, 1895.] _Collation_-- Pp. viii. + 116. _Note_.--Part of _Textausgaben französischer u. englischer Schriftsteller f. den Schulgebrauch_, hrsg. v. Osk. Schmager. _Italian_. I. Poemi/ di/ Lord G. Byron/ Tradotti/ dall' originale inglese/ da/ Pietro Isola/ Socio corrispondente della R. Accademia delle scienze ed arti/ di Alessandria/ Torino/ Presso Giuseppe Pomba/ 1827/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 204. II. _Opere scelte_, tradotte da M. Mazzoni. Milano. 1852. [8º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] III. A'Mici Amici./ [1873.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 27. _Note_.--A translation of a few detached passages, by P. Isola, entitled "In partendo dall' Inghilterra," etc. There is no Title-page. MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. I. An Ode./ On/ The Star of the Legion of Honour./ Napoleon's Farewell./ Fare Thee Well./ And/ A Sketch, etc./ By Lord Byron./ New-York:/ Published by Van Winkle and Wiley,/ No. 3 Wall-Street./ 1816./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Text, pp. 5-24. _Note_.--The Half-title is probably missing. The "Ode" is the _Ode from the French_ ("We do not curse thee, Waterloo!"). The edition contains the five pieces enumerated on the title. II. Three Poems,/ not Included in the Works of/ Lord Byron./ Lines to Lady J----./ The Ænigma./ The Curse of Minerva./ [Motto from _Ter. Andria_, five lines.] London:/ Printed for Effingham Wilson,/ Royal Exchange./ 1818./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title (R. _John Hill, Printer, 32, Water Lane, Blackfriars_.), pp. 3, 4; Note on the Lines to Lady Jersey, pp. 5, 6; Text and Notes, pp. 7-18. The second poem is Miss Fanshaw's Enigma (Letter H); the third, _The Curse of Minerva_ (112 lines). III. English Bards,/ and/ Scotch Reviewers;/ A Satire./ Ode to the Land of the Gaul.--Sketch/ From Private Life.--Windsor/ Poetics, etc./ By/ The Right Honorable/ Lord Byron./ Second Edition./ Paris:/ Published by Galignani/ At the French, English, Italian, German and Spanish/ Library, No. 18, Rue Vivienne,/ 1818./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 84, With half-title, "Suppressed/ Poems." _English Bards, etc._, a reprint of the Fourth Edition of 1811, numbers 1052 lines. IV. The/ Works/ of/ The Right Honourable/ Lord Byron;/ Containing/ English Bards, and/ Scotch Reviewers;/ The Curse of Minerva,/ And the Waltz,/ An/ Apostrophic Hymn./ Philadelphia:/ Published By M. Thomas./ 1820./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. viii. + 151. _Note_.--_The English Bards, etc._, is a reprint of the Fourth Edition of 1050 lines. The _Curse of Minerva_ is the complete edition of 312 lines. The "Fugitive Pieces" are: (1) To Jessy; (2) "My Boat is on the Shore;" (3) Lines addressed to Mr. Hobhouse; (4) Adieu to Malta; (5) Enigma [To the Letter H]. It will be observed that, with the exception of No. 5, all these pieces are genuine. V. Poems/ By/ The Right Honourable/ Lord Byron;/ With/ His Memoirs./ London:/ Published by Jones and Company,/ No. 3, Warwick Square./ 1825./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 292 + Cont., p. [293]. This edition contains _Hours of Idleness, English Bards, etc._ (3rd ed.), "Poems on His Domestic Circumstances" (twenty-five, including eight forgeries), and the whole of _Don Juan_. VI. The/ Miscellaneous Poems/ of/ Lord Byron./ London:/ Benbow, Printer and Publisher, 252, High/ Holborn./ 1825./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 94. _Note_.--The collection numbers fifty-three poems, including the twenty-five published by R. Bumpus in 1824 (No. xi. of "Poems on His Domestic Circumstances"), and twenty-eight others (all genuine), including the _Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte_, and the _Monody on the Death of Sheridan_. VII. Don Juan,/ Complete;/ English Bards and Scotch/ Reviewers;/ Hours of Idleness;/ The Waltz;/ and all the other Minor Poems:/ By/ Lord Byron./ [Emblem (Dove and olive-branch):--motto (_Perseverantia et Amicis_).] London:/ Printed and Published by J.F. Dove,/ St. John's Square./ 1827./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. iv. + 574. _Note_.--A second Title-page, with Title-vignette. _English Bards, etc._, numbers 1050 lines. Among the "Minor Poems" are the seven forgeries: (1) Farewell to England; (2) To my Daughter; (3) Ode--St. Helena; (4) To the Lily of France; (5) Ode ("Oh, shame to thee," etc.); (6) Madame Lavalette; (7) Enigma (Letter H); and _The Curse of Minerva_ (111 lines). VIII. Don Juan;/ Hours of Idleness;/ English Bards and Scotch Reviewers;/ The Waltz;/ and other Poems./ By Lord Byron./ In Two Volumes./ Vol. I. [Vol. II.] London: J.F. Dove, St. John's Square./ 1828./ [12º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. xiv. + 384. Vol. II.: pp. iv. + 428. _Note_.--These pirated volumes were occasionally bound up with Murray's four-volume edition of 1828, and numbered Vols. V., VI. IX. The/ Miscellaneous Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ Containing/ Werner, a Tragedy; Heaven and Earth;/ Morgante Maggiore; Age of Bronze; The Island;/ Vision of Judgment;/ and The Deformed Transformed./ London:/ Printed for Hunt and Clarke,/ Tavistock Street;/ and sold by all Booksellers./ 1830./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. vi. + 7-308 + 286--Title, one leaf; Half-title (Werner); pp. i., ii.; Dedication, pp. iii., iv.; Preface, pp. v., vi.; Dramatis Personæ, p. [8]; Text (_Werner_, _Heaven and Earth_, Translation of _Morgante Maggiore_), pp. 9-308; Text (_The Age of Bronze_, _The Island_ (App.), _The Vision of Judgment_ (App.), _The Deformed Transformed_), pp. 1-286. The Imprint (London:/ _Printed by C.H. Reynell, Broad Street, Golden Square_./) is at the foot of p. 286. X. _The Corsair--Lara_. Tales by Lord Byron, with a notice and explanatory arguments by Lake. Paris. 1830. [12º. [_Le Moniteur_, etc., 1845.] XI. _The Bride of Abydos_--The Corsair--Lara--Curse of Minerva--Morg. Magg.--Hours of Idleness--Engl. Bards, etc.--Miscell. Poems. [In one vol.] By Lord Byron. Paris. 1832. [8º. [_Le Moniteur_, etc., 1845.] XII. _Manfred_--Marino Faliero--Sardanapalus--The Two Foscari--Cain--Werner--Heaven and Earth--The Deformed Transf. By Lord Byron. [In one vol.] Paris. 1832. [8º. [_Le Moniteur_, etc., 1845.] XIII. _Don Juan_--The Age of Bronze--The Vision of Judgment. By Lord Byron. [In one vol.] Paris. 1832. [8º. [_Le Moniteur_, etc., 1845.] XIV. Miscellanies./ By/ Lord Byron./ In Three Volumes./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II., etc.] London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1837./ [12º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. vi. + 316. Vol. II.: pp. iv. + 305. Vol. III.: pp. viii. + 288. _Note_.--Vol. I. contains _Hours of Idleness_; _English Bards, etc._; _Hints from Horace_. Vol. II. contains _The Curse of Minerva_; _The Waltz_; _Ode to N.B._; _Hebrew Melodies_; _The Morgante Maggiore_; _The Prophecy of Dante_; _The Blues_; _The Vision of Judgment_; _The Age of Bronze_. Vol. III. contains "Occasional Pieces," 1807-1824; "Domestic Pieces," 1816; _Monody, etc._; _The Dream_; _Darkness_; _The Lament of Tasso_; _Ode on Venice_; _Francesco da Rimini_; and, interspersed with these, pp. 171-261, other minor pieces and epigrams. The App. (pp. 265-288) contains "Remarks on the Romaic," etc. XV. Tales./ By Lord Byron./ In Two Volumes./ Vol. I./ London:/ John Murray,/ Albemarle Street./ 1837./ [12º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. 263. Vol. II.: pp. 260. _Note_.--Vol. I. contains _The Giaour_; _The Bride, etc._; _The Corsair_; _Lara_. Vol. II. contains _The Siege, etc._; _Parisina_; _The Prisoner, etc._; _Beppo_; _Mazeppa_; _The Island_. XVI. Lord Byron's/ Tales:/ Consisting of/ The Giaour, The Bride of Abydos,/ The Corsair, Lara;/ With all the Notes:/ Hebrew Melodies,/ and other Poems./ Halifax:/ Printed and Published by William Milner,/ Cheapside./ 1845./ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. viii. + 9-256. _Note_.--Among the "Poems" are twelve pieces, "The Illuminated City," "The Wreath," "A Child at Prayer," etc., which are, apparently, attributed to Lord Byron, but are neither his compositions nor capable of being described as forgeries or imitations. They precede six genuine poems. For an interesting account (by W. Roberts) of other editions (1838, 1865, etc.), published at Halifax, see _Notes and Queries_, 1886, iv. S. v. 225, etc.; and _The Antiquarian Magazine_, vol. xii., July-November, 1887, pp. 101-106. XVII. The Giaour,/ and/ The Bride of Abydos./ By/ Lord Byron./ London:/ H.G. Clarke & Co., 278, Strand./ 1848./ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 154. _Note_.--- Part of "Clarke's Cabinet Series." XVIII. Miscellanies./ By Lord Byron./ In Two Volumes.--Vol. I./ [Vol. II.] London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1853./ [16º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. vii. + 364. Vol. II.: pp. viii. + 360. _Note_.--Vol. I. contains _Hours of Idleness_; _English Bards, etc._; _Hints from Horace_; _The Curse of Minerva_; _The Waltz_; _Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte_; _Hebrew Melodies_; Domestic Pieces; _Monody, etc._; _The Dream_. Vol. II. contains _The Lament of Tasso_; _Ode on Venice_; _The Morgante Maggiore_; _The Prophecy of Dante_; _Francesca of Rimini_; _The Blues_; _The Vision of Judgment_; _The Age of Bronze_; Occasional Pieces, 1807-1824. XIX. Tales and Poems/ By Lord Byron./ Containing/ The Giaour./ Bride of Abydos./ The Corsair./ Lara./ Siege of Corinth./ Parisina./ Prisoner of Chillon./ Mazeppa./ The Island./ London: John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1853./ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. vi. + 7-358. XX. Beppo and Don Juan./ By Lord Byron./ In Two Volumes.--Vol. I./ [Vol. II.] London:/John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1853./ [16º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. 353. Vol. II.: pp. 367. XXI. Poems/ By/ The Right Honourable/ Lord Byron;/ With/ His Memoirs./ London:/ Thomas Nelson & Sons,/ Paternoster Row./ 1855./ [32º. _Collation_-- Pp. xvi. + 174. _Note_.--"Poems on Domestic Circumstances," etc. (pp. 133-174) are identical with those published by J.F. Dove, 1827, pp. 536-574 (see No. vii.); and the entire contents of the volume are identical with Poems/ By the/ Right Honourable Lord Byron./, which form part (Vol. II. pp. 1-46) of "The Cabinet Edition of the British Poets." In Four Volumes./ London:/ Henry G. Bohn, York Street, Covent Garden./ 1851./ [8º. XXII. _Lord Byron's Tales and Poems_. Leipzig, Brockhaus. 1857. [8º. [Kayser, 1860.] XXIII. Poems./ By Lord Byron./ [Motto: "Like an archangel," etc., twelve lines, _Anon._] With Eight Illustrations,/ By Birket Foster, John Gilbert, etc./ London:/ Routledge, Warne, and Routledge,/ Farringdon Street;/ New York: 56, Walker Street./ 1859./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xxxii. + 539. XXIV. Eastern Tales:/ By/ Lord Byron./ Comprising/ The Corsair, Lara, The Giaour,/ The Bride of Abydos, and The Siege of Corinth./ With the Author's original Introductions and Notes./ Illustrated./ London:/ David Bogue, 86, Fleet Street./ [1859.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 5-265. XXV. Byron's/ Siege of Corinth/ And/ Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte./ With Notes/ For students for the first examination in Arts,/ University of Madras./ 1877./ Madras:/ Addison and Co., 18, Mount Road./ 18767 [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 56. XXVI. Poems/ By/ Lord Byron/ London/ George Routledge and Sons/ Broadway, Ludgate Hill./ New York: 416 Broome Street/ [1880.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xxxii. + 719. _Note_.--Part of the "Excelsior Series." XXVII. Poems/ of/ Lord Byron./ Carefully Selected./ In Two Volumes./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II.] Cassell & Company, Limited:/ London, Paris, New York, & Melbourne./ [1886.] [32º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. 3-316. Vol. II.: pp. x. + 11-316. _Note_.--Part of Cassell's "Miniature Library of the Poets." XXVIII. Byron's/ Prisoner of Chillon/ und/ Siege of Corinth./ Mit bibliographischem Material,/ litterarischer Einleitung und sachlichen/ Anmerkungen für Studierende/ Herausgegeben/ von/ J.G.C. Schuler./ Halle./ Max Niemeyer./ 1886./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 92 + "Lesarten aus Byron's MSS.," pp. 93, 94. _Note_.--No. 8 of "Materialen für das Neuenglische Seminar." Herausg. v. Ernst Regel. XXIX. The Corsair. Lara. Illustrated by Gambard and Mittis. With Introduction by M.F. Sweetser. Boston, Joseph Knight & Co. 1893. [32º. [_Amer. Cat._, 1894.] _Collation_-- Pp. 142. _Note_.--Part of the "World's Classics." TRANSLATIONS OF MISCELLANEOUS POEMS. _Bohemian_. Korsár. Lara/ Básnické Povídky/ Lorda Byrona/ P[.r]elo[vz]il/ C[ve]n[ve]k Ibl./ V Praze/ Tiskem A Nákladem Dra Ed. Grégra/ 1885/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 128. _Note_.--Poesie Svetova, Pt. xxiii., 1871, etc. _Danish_. I. Udvalgte/ Dramatiske Digte/ OG/ Fortoellinger/ Af/ Byron./ Oversatte af Edv. Lembcke./ Første Bind./ (Dramatiske Dicte.)/ KjøBenHavn./ Forlagt af J.H. Schubothes. Boghandel./ Græbes Bogtrykkeri./ 1873./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. 594. Vol. II.: [1876] pp. 422. _Note_.--Vol. I. contains _Sardanapalus_; _Manfred_; _Cain_; _Marino Faliero_. Vol. II. contains _The Siege, etc._; _Mazeppa_; _The Bride, etc._; _Corsair_; _Giaour_; _Lara_; _The Prisoner, etc._; _The Island_. II. Byron:/ Manfred,/ Fangen paa Chillon og Mazeppa./ Oversat af/ Alfred Ipsen./ København./ Forlagt af P. Hauberg & Comp. og Jul. Gjellerup./ Trykt hos Martius Truelsen. [1889?] [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 136. III. Beppo./ Dommedagssynet./ Af/ Lord Byron./ Oversatte/ Af/ Alfred Ipsen./ København,/ Forlagt Af I.H. Schubothes Boghandel./ Græbes Bogtrykkeri./ 1891./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 88. _Dutch_. I. Navolgingen/ van/ Lord Byron./ Door/ Nicolaas Beets./ De gevangene van Chillon./ Mazeppa. Parisina. Fragmenten. Joodsche zangen./ Verscheiden gedichten./ Nieuwe, Herziene Uitgave./ Vermeederd met een Woord over Byrons Poëzy./ Te Haarlem, By/ De Erven F. Bonn./ 1848./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xl. + 170. _Note_.--The vignette (a bunch of cornflowers) on the illustrated title-page (Gedichten/ van/ Nicolaas Beets./) is engraved by J.W. Kaiser. II. Gedichten/ van/ Lord Byron./ Door/ J.J.L. Ten Kate./ Eerste Volledige Uitgave./ Te Leiden, Bij A.W. Sijthoff. [1870?] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 242. _French_. I. _Le Corsaire_, _Mazeppa_, traduits en vers français suivis de poésies diverses, par Lucien Méchin, 1848. Paris, Paulin. [12º. [Lorenz, 1840-1865.] II. Le/ Prisonnier de Chillon/ Lara/ Parisina/ Poémes de Lord Byron,/ Traduits en vers/ et/ Poésies diverses/ Par H. Gomont/ Membre correspondant de l'Académie de Stanislas/ Paris/ Amyot, Libraire/ Rue de la Paix, 6/ [the second column] Nancy./ Mlle Gonet, libraire/ Rue des Dominicains, 14/ 1862/ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. viii. + 228. III. _Le Corsaire_, _Lara_, _le Siége de Corinthe_. Traduction nouvelle par Paul Lorencin. (_Libraire de la Bibliothèque Nationiale_, tom. 117.) 1868. [32º. [Lorenz, 1876.] IV. Chefs-D'oeuvre/ de/ Lord Byron/ Traduits en vers français/ par/ A. Regnault/ Bibliothécaire et archiviste honoraire du Conseil D'État/ Membre de l'Académie de Lyon/ Auteur d'une histoire du Conseil D'État,/ D'un Voyage en Orient (Gréce, Turquie, Egypte)/ Et de notices historiques sur Moscou et Saint-Pétersbourg/ Tome premier/ Paris/ Amyot, Librairie-Editeur/ 8, rue de la Paix, 8/ Et à la librairie, Galignani/ 224, rue de Rivoli, 224/ 1874/ Touts droits réservés/ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. xxxii. + 518. Vol. II.: pp. 511. _Note_.--Vol. I. contains _Childe Harold's, etc._; _The Bride, etc_.; _The Giaour_; _The Siege, etc._; _Manfred_ [Scènes Détachées]. Vol. II. contains _The Corsair_; _Lara_; _Mazeppa_; _The Prisoner, etc._; _Parisina_; _Beppo_; Juan and Haidee; Poésies Diverses. V. Lord Byron/ Les/ Deux Foscari/ Tragédie historique/ Beppo/ Poème humoristique/ Traduction en vers (ornée de 15 vignettes)/ Par/ Achille Morisseau/ Paris/ Calmann Lévy, éditeur/ 3, rue Auber, 3/ 1881/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xiii. + 258. VI. _Le Corsaire_. _Lara_. Illustrations de Gambard et Mittis. Paris, Dentre. 1892. [32º. Fait partie de la "Petite Collection Guillaume," Lorenz, 1900. _German_. I. _Gefangener von Chillon u. Parisina_, nebst e. Anh. seiner lyrischen Gedichte, übers. durch Paul Graf v. Haugwitz. Breslau, W.G. Korn. Übers. 1821. [8º. [Kayser, 1834.] II. _Manfred_.--_Die Finsterniss_.--_Der Traum_. Aus d. Engl. übersetzt von Er. Köpke. Berlin, Schröder. 1835. [8º. [Kayser, 1841.] III. _Der Giaur_. _Hebräische Gesänge_. Aus dem Engl. übers. von Friederike Friedmann. Leipzig. 1854. Brockhaus. [16º. [Kayser, 1860.] IV. Kain./ Ein Mysterium./ Mazeppa./ Von/ Lord Byron./ Aus dem Englischen übersetzt/ von/ Friederike Friedmann./ Leipzig:/ F.A. Brockhaus./ 1855./ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 154. V. _Manfred_. Der Gefangene von Chillon, Hebräische Gesänge, u. Lyrische Gedichte. Deutsch von A.R. Niele. Münster, Coppenrath. 1857. [16º. [Kayser, 1859.] VI. Lord Byron's/ Mazeppa, Korsar und Beppo./ In das Deutsche übertragen/ von/ Wilhelm Schäffer./ _Stulta est elementia, quam tot ubique_/ _Vatibus occurras, perituræ parcere chartæ_./ Juvenal./ [Emblem--Griffin with shield bearing motto "F.A.B. 1805."] Leipzig: F.A. Brockhaus./ 1864./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 138. VII. Die Braut von Abydos./ Der Traum./ Zwei Gedichte./ von/ Lord Byron./ Im Versmass des Originals übertragen/ von/ Dr. Otto Riedel./ Hamburg./ Hermann Grüning./ 1872./ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 80. VIII. _Der Gefangene v. Chillon_. _Mazeppa_. Von Lord Byron. [Kayser, 1877.] _Note_.--No. 557 of the "Universal Bibliothek." Leipzig, 1871-1876. IX. _Der Gefangene v. Chillon_. _Parisina_. Zwei poet. Erzählungen, übers. v. Otto Michaeli. Halle. 1887-1890. [8º. _Note_.--Part of the "Bibl. der Gesamt-Litteratur des In-u. Auslandes." [Kayser, 1891.] _Hungarian_. Byron Lord'/ Élete's Munkái./ Irta/ Petrichevich Horváth Lázár./ Harmadik Rész./ Pesten./ Nyomtatta Landerer és Heckenast./ 1842./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 154 + Sajtó-hibák, p. [155]. _Note_.--The translations include _Mazeppa_; _The Dream_; and sixteen lyrical pieces. _Icelandic_. Bandinginn Í Chillon/ og/ Dramurinn,/ Eptir/ Byron Lávard./ Steingrímur Thorsteinson,/ Íslenzkadi./ Kaupmannahöfn./ Utgefandi Páll Sveinsson./ Prentad Hjá Louis Klein./ 1866./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 70. _Italian_. I. Poemi/ di/ Lord G. Byron/ Tradotti dall' originale inglese/ Da/ Pietro Isola/ Socio corrispondente/ della R. Accademia delle scienze ed arti di Alessandria./ Primo volume/ Lugano/ coi tipi di Francesco Veladini e Comp./ 1832./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. 221 + Note, Indice, pp. [222]-[224]. N.B.--Pp. 1-19 are not numbered. Vol. II.: pp. 298 + Indice, p. [299], Pp. 1-13 are not numbered. II. Poemi/ di/ Giorgio Lord Byron/ Recati in italiano/ da/ Giuseppe Nicolini/ con alcuni componimenti originali/ del traduttore./ Milano/ Per Giuseppe Crespi e C./ 1834./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 433 + Indice, p. [435]. _Note_.--The Title-vignette is a portrait of Lord Byron. III. Poemi/ di Giorgio Lord Byron/ Recati in italiano/ Da Giuseppe Nicolini/ Nuova edizione eseguita su quella del 1837/ Riveduta ed aumentata dal traduttore/ Vol. I./ [Vol. II.] Milano/ Presso la ditta Angelo Bonfanti 1842/ [12º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. 283. Vol. II.: pp. 255. IV. _Poemi e novelle_. Milano, Sonzogno. 1882. [16º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] _Collation_-- Pp. 107. V. Opere/ Edite e postume/ di Giacinto Casella/ Già Accademico della Crusca/ Con prefazione del Prof. Alessandro d'Ancona,/ Uno scritto critico sul Properzio del Prof. G. Rigutini/ E una notizia biografica sull' autore/ Scritta da sua moglie./ Due Vol.--Vol. I./ Parte I.--Il Pellegrinaggio d'Aroldo, la Parisina,/ il Beppo e la sposa d'Abido, di Lord Byron.--Sopra M. Aurora., di S. Fenzi./ Un frammento dal _Lambros_, di D. Solomos./ Parte II.--Liriche originali./ Firenze,/ Tipografia di G. Barbéra./ 1884./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. lvi. + 438 + Errata Corrige, p. [439]. Vol. II.: pp. xviii. + 450 [Text = pp. 3-450] + _Indice_, etc., p. [451]. _Note_.--The translations of _Childe Harold_, _Parisina_, _Beppo_, and the _Bride, etc._, are on pp. 1-311 of the first part of the first volume. VI. _Misteri e canti_; Caino; Parisina; Un sogno. Traduzione di Andrea Maffei. Milano, Hoepli. 1886. [64º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] _Collation_-- Pp. 198. VII. _Misteri, novelle e liriche_. Traduzione di Andrea Maffei. Firenze, Le Monnier. 1890. [64º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] _Collation_-- Pp. xxxviii. + 441. _Polish_. I. _Poemata i powie['s]ci_ ... Przez B. hr. K. [Brunona hr. Kici['n]skiego]. Tom. 1. (Ob[/l][e,]['z]enie Koryntu, Korsarz.) _Warszawa_, 1820. [8º. _Part of "Biblioteka Romansów," etc. Wyd. przez W. Malcck[a,]_. II. _Powie['s]ci_, przek[/l]ad Wandy Maleckiéj. (Mazepa, przek. H. Dembi['n]skiego, Paryzyna, Giaur, Upiór.) pp. 196. _w druk, J. Wróblewskiego: Warszawa_, 1828. [8º. _Wybór Romansów, wyd. W. Maleckiéj. Tom. XIII_. [Another edition.] _Warszawa_, 1831. [8º. III. _Paryzyna_, Kalmar i Orla, dwa poemata ... Przek[/l]ad Ign. Szyd[/l]owskiego. pp. 58. _druk. J. Zawadzkiego: Wilno_, 1834. [8º. IV. Poezye/ Lorda Byrona/ t[/l]umaczone/ Giaur/ przez/ Adama Mickiewicza,/ Korsarz/ Przez/ Edwarda Ody['n]ca./ Wydanie Alexandra Je[/l]owickiego./ W. Pary[.z]u./ 1835/ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. xiv. + 202. V. T[/l]ómaczenia/ Antoniego Edwarda/ Ody['n]ca./ Tom Drugi./ Narzeczona z Abydos./ W Lipsku/ u Breitkopfa i Haertela./ 1838./ _Collation_-- Pp. 216. _Note_.--The translation of the _Bride of Abydos_, with the Notes, is on pp. 1-83 of this volume. VI. T[/l]omaczenia/ Antoniego Edwarda/ Ody['n]ca./ Tom Trzeci./ Korsarz./ Niebo i Ziemia./ W Lipsku/ u Breitkopfa i Haertela./ 1841./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 201. _Note_.--The translation of the _Corsair_, with Notes, is on pp. 1-112; of _Heaven and Earth_, pp. 116-201. VII. _Poemata_. Z orygina[/l]u prze[/l]o[vz]y[/l] Ant. Zawadzki. ([.Z]ale Tassa; Werner; Narzeczona z Abydos; Wyspa.) pp. 392. _H. Skimborowicz: Warszawa_, 1846. [8º. VIII. Pi[e,]['c] Poematów/ Lorda Birona/ Prze[/l]o[vz]y[/l]/ Franciszek Dzier[vz]ykraj Morawski./ Nakladem Autora./ Leszno./ Drukiem Ernesta Günthera./ 1853./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 272. _Note_.--The translations include _Manfred_; _Mazeppa_; _The Siege, etc._; _Parisina_; and _The Prisoner, etc_. IX. KRUZER (Karol) Przek[/l]ady i rymy w[/l]asne. 5 tom. _druk. E. Skiwskiego: Warszawa_, 1876. [8º. Tom. 3. Parisina. Lara. Kain. Poezje ulotne. Tom. 4. Poezje ulotne Lorda Byrona. _Portuguese_. Traducç[-o]es/ Poeticas/ de/ Francisco José Pinheiro Guimar[-a]es/ Bacharel em sciencias sociaes e juridicas/ Childe Harold e Sardanapalo,/ De Lord Byron;/ O Roubo da Madeixa, de Pope;/ Hernani, de Victor Hugo/ Rio de Janeiro/ Typographia universal de Laemmert/ Rua dos Invalidos, 61 B./ 1863./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 636. _Note_.--The Title-page, a Dedication, and _O Sonho_, an imitation of Byron's _Dream_, are unpaged. The translations of _Childe Harold_, Cantos I.-IV., and of _Sardanapalus_, are on pp. 1-424. _Roumanian_. Din Scrierile/ Loui/ Lord Byron/ 3 P^t/ Tradduce/ de/ J. Eliad/ Boukouresti/ In Tipographia loui Eliad/ 1834/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 74. _Note_.--The Title-page, in old Roumanian character, has been transliterated. The translations consist of _The Prisoner of Chillon_, _The Lament of Tasso_, and _Beppo_. The volume concludes with a Half-title, _The Vampire_. _Spanish_. I. Odas/ A Napoleon,/ Por lord Byron./ Traduccion castellana./ [Emblem--eagle flying to the sun.] Paris,/ Libreria americana,/ Calle del Temple, Nº 69./ 1830./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 60. _Note_.--The translations include the _Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte_; _Napoleon's Farewell_; _On the Star of "The Legion of Honour"_; _From the French_; _Ode from the French_. II. Biblioteca Jané./ Poemas/ de Lord/ Byron,/ Con notas, comentarios y aclaraciones/ Primera version española, en vista de la ultima edicion/ Por Ricardo Canales./ Lara.--El Sitio de Corinto.--Parisina.--Mazeppa./--La Peregrinacion de Childe--Harold.--Las Lamentaciones/ del Tasso.--Beppo./ Barcelona./ Jané Hermanos, Editores./ Ronda de San Antonia, 58./ [?1876.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 352 + _Indice_, p. [353]. III. Cuatro poemas/ de/ Lord Byron/ Traducidos en verso castellano/ Por/ Antonio Sellen/ Parisina.--El prisionero de Chillon.--/ Los lamentos del Tasso.--La novia de Abydos/ New York./ Imprenta y librería de N. Ponce Leon, 40 y 42 Broadway/ 1877/ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. xiii. + 15-111. IV. D. Juan/ El Hijo de Doña Inés/ Poema de/ Lord Byron/ seguido de/ Las lamentaciones del Tasso/ del proprio autor/ Version de/ J.A.R./ Ilustrada con dibujos à la pluma/ Por R. Escaler/ Barcelona/ Administracion: Nueva San Francisco, 11 y 13/ 1883/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. viii. + 9-414 + _Indice_, p. [415]. _Note_.--Part of the "Biblioteca Amena é Instructiva." COLLECTIONS OF DRAMAS. I. Dramas/ By/ Lord Byron./ In Two Volumes./ Vol. I./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1837./ [12º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. 403. Vol. II.: pp. 391. _Note_.--Vol. I. contains _Manfred_; _Marino Faliero_; _Heaven and Earth_; _Sardanapalus_. Vol. II. contains _The Two Foscari_; _Cain_; _The Deformed Transformed_; _Werner_. The Title-vignette on the illustrated Title-page of Vol. I. is "Fall of the Staubach," engraved by E. Finden, from a drawing by G. Bulmer from a sketch by Mrs. Somerville. These volumes, together with the _Miscellanies_, _Tales_, etc., were bound in green cloth, with Lord Byron's arms with supporters stamped in gold on one side. II. Dramas./ By Lord Byron./ In Two Volumes.--Vol. I./ Containing/ Manfred./ Marino Faliero./ Heaven and Earth./ Sardanapalus./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1853./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. 325. The Imprint (_Bradbury & Evans, Printers, Whitefriars_.) is at the foot of p. 325. Vol. II.: pp. 318. The Imprint (_London: Bradbury & Evans, Printers, Whitefriars_.) is at the foot of p. 318. _Note_.--Vol. II. contains _The Two Foscari_, _Cain_, _The Deformed Transformed_, and _Werner_. TRANSLATIONS OF COLLECTIONS OF DRAMAS. _German_. Lord Byrons/ Dramatische Werke./ Deutsch/ von/ W. Grüzmacher./ Manfred. Kain. Himmel und Erde. Sardanapal./ Hildburghausen./ Verlag des Bibliographischen Instituts./ 1870./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 323 + Inhalt, p. [324]. _Note_.--No. 112 of the "Bibliothek Ausländischer Klassiker." _Italian_. I. Marino Faliero/ E/ I Due Foscari/ Tragedie/ di/ Lord G. Byron/ Versione dall' originale inglese/ del/ P.G.B. Cereseto/ Delle scuole pie./ Savona 1845./ Presso Luigi Sambolino/ Editore-librajo./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 304. II. Tragedie/ di/ Giorgio Lord Byron/ Traduzione/ del/ Cav. Andrea Maffei./ Sardanapalo.--Marino Faliero./ I Due Foscari./ Firenze./ Felice Le Monnier./ 1862./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 493 + Indice, p. [495]. _Spanish_. Poemas dramáticos/ De Lord Byron/ Caín.--Sardanápalo.--Manfredo./ Traducidos en verso castellano/ Por D. José Alcalá Galiano/ con una carta prólogo de/ D. Marcellino Menéndez y Pelayo/ Madrid/ Imprenta de A. Pérez Dubrull/ Flor Baja, núm. 22./ 1886./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xxxvi. + 382. _Note_.--Vol. 45 of the "Coleccion de Escritores Castellanos." POEMS, DRAMAS, AND COLLECTIONS OF POEMS. _The Age of Bronze_. The/ Age of Bronze;/ or,/ Carmen Seculare et Annus Haud Mirabilis./ "Impar _Congressus_ Achilli."https://www.gutenberg.org/ London, 1823:/ Printed for John Hunt,/ 22, Old Bond street./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. _London: Printed by C.H. Reynell, Broad Street, Golden Square_./), pp. 1, 2; Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Text, pp. 5-36. The Imprint (_London:/ C.H. Reynell, Printer, 45, Broad-Street, Golden-Square_.) is at the foot of p. 36. _Note_.--The Second and Third Editions are identical with the First, save that in the Third Edition the Imprint at the foot of p. 36 runs thus: _London:/ Printed by C.H. Reynell, Broad Street, Golden-Square_. A page of advertisements ("_Works about to be published by_ Mr. John Hunt, 22, _Old Bond Street_") follows p. 36 in the Second Edition. The _Age of Bronze_ was reissued by John Hunt in 1825 and in 1830 (the Miscellaneous Works, Part II. pp. 1-35), and by (?) W. Dugdale, 1824, together with other poems; and, in France, by A. and W. Galignani, Paris, 1823 (12º.), but was not included in any of John Murray's Collected Editions till 1831. _Beppo_. I. Beppo,/ A Venetian Story./ ROSALIND. Farewell, Monsieur Traveller: Look, you lisp, and wear/ Strange suits; disable all the benefits of your own country; be out of love/ with your Nativity, and almost chide God for making you that countenance/ you are; or I will scarce think that you have swam in a GONDOLA./ AS YOU LIKE IT, Act iv. Sc. 1./ _Annotation of the Commentators_./ That is, been at _Venice_, which was much visited by the young English/ gentlemen of those times, and was then what _Paris_ is _now_--the seat of all dissoluteness. S.A./ Second Edition./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1818./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 49. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard-Street, Whitefriars, London_./) is at the foot of the Reverse of the Half-title. _Note_ (1).--The Text numbers 95 stanzas. _Note_ (2).--"Beppo, a Venetian Story. [Quotation.] London: _John Murray, Albemarle Street_. 1818. 8vo. Pp. 49" (the First Edition), is included in the catalogue of the _Rowfant Library_, 1886, p. 146. II. Beppo,/ A Venetian Story./ By Lord Byron./ [Motto, nine lines, as above.] Fifth Edition./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1818./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 51. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 51. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard-Street, Whitefriars_./) is at the foot of the Reverse of the Half-title. _Note_.--The Text numbers 99 stanzas. Byron sent four additional stanzas, viz. stanzas xxviii., xxxviii., xxxix., lxxx., to Murray _circ._ March 9, 1818. A Second Edition of Beppo, _vide supra_, was published March 12, 1818, and the fifth, May 30, 1818. The intervening editions, third and fourth, were not advertised in the _Morning Chronicle_, _Morning Post_, _Courier_, and, in the absence of direct evidence, it may be conjectured that the additional stanzas first appeared in the Fifth Edition. A Sixth Edition, and a Seventh Edition identical with the Fifth Edition, were issued in 1818. III. _Beppo; a Venetian Story_. Boston. 1818. [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 36. IV. _Beppo, A Venetian Story_. Paris, A. and W. Galignani. 1821. [12º. [Quérard, 1827.] _Translations of Beppo_. _Dutch_. Vertalingen/ En/ Navolgingen/ In Poezy/ door/ Mr. J. Van Lennep./ [Motto, seven lines.] Te Amsterdam, bij/ P. Meljer Warnars./ 1834./ [8º. _Collation_-- Beppo,/ Eine Venetiansche/ Vertelling./ Naar het Engelsch/ van/ Lord Byron./ pp. 119-159. _Note_.--The Title-vignette is the Muse of Poetry with Cupids and scrolls labelled Walter Scott, Moore, Byron, and Shakespeare. _French_. S. Clogenson/ Beppo/ Poëme/ de Byron/ Traduit en vers français, avec texte anglais en regard/ Paris,/ Michel Lévy frères, libraires éditeurs/ Rue Vivienne, 2 bis, et boulevard des Italiens, 15/ à la librairie-nouvelle./ 1865./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 159 + Notes, pp. [161, 162]. _Russian_. [Cyrillic: Beppo ... per. D. Minaeva]. [ [Cyrillic: Sovremennik"]," 1863. No. 8.] _Spanish_. _Beppo, novela veneciana_, por L.B. traduccion castellana. Paris, 1830. [8º. [_Le Moniteur_, etc., 1845.] _Swedish_. Beppo,/ En Venetiansk Historia/ AF/ Lord Byron./ Af Lord Byron./ Öfversättning/ Af/ Talis Qualis./ Stockholm,/ J.L. Brudins Förlag./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 48. (A Preliminary Note, _n.p._, on fly-leaf.) _Note_.--Part (No. 5) of "Byron's Poetiska Berättelser," 1853, etc. _Bride of Abydos_. I. The/ Bride of Abydos./ A Turkish Tale./ By Lord Byron./ Had we never loved so kindly,/ Had we never loved so blindly,/ Never met or never parted,/ We had ne'er been broken-hearted./ Burns./ London/ _Printed by T. Davison, Whitefriars_, For John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1813./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf; Dedication, one leaf; Text, pp. 1-60; Notes, pp. 61-72. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard Street,/ Whitefriars, London/_) is at the foot of p. 72. _Note_.--Canto I. numbers 483 lines; Canto II., 724 lines (_not_, as numbered, 722 lines, line 492 being numbered 490). II. The/ Bride of Abydos./ A Turkish Tale./ By Lord Byron./ [Motto, five lines, as above.] Second Edition./ London:/ _Printed by T. Davison, Whitefriars,/_ For John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1813./ [8º. _Collation_-- _Vide supra_. _Note_.--Canto II. numbers 730 lines (not, as numbered, 724). On p. 45, after line 401, six additional lines ("Blest as the Muezzin's, ... long-loved voice endears") are inserted; but line 414 is numbered 410, and the wrong enumeration of the First Edition is repeated. A Third Edition is identical with the Second. III. The/ Bride of Abydos,/ etc. Fourth Edition,/ etc. 1813./ [8º. _Collation_-- _Vide supra_. _Note_.--Canto II. numbers 732 lines. The additions in the Fourth Edition are lines 662, 663 (p. 157), "Hark---- to the hurried," etc. The enumeration of the lines is correct. A Fifth Edition is identical with the Fourth. IV. The/ Bride of Abydos,/ etc. Sixth Edition,/ etc. 1814./ [8º. This edition is identical with the Second and Third Editions. Lines 622, 623 are omitted. Seventh, Eighth, and Tenth Editions, issued in 1814, are identical with the Fourth. An Eleventh Edition was issued in 1815. V. The Bride of Abydos./ A Turkish Tale./ By Lord Byron./ Had we never loved so kindly,/ Had we never loved so blindly,/ Never met or never parted,/ We had ne'er been broken-hearted./ Burns./ Philadelphia:/ Published by Moses Thomas,/ No. 52 Chestnut-Street./ William Fry, Printer./ 1814./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 72. VI. The Bride of Abydos:/ A Turkish Tale,/ By Lord Byron./ [Motto.] [London, 1844.] _Collation_-- Pp. 1-39. _Note_.--Part of "Clarke's Home Library." _Translations of Bride of Abydos_. _Bohemian_. Lorda Byrona/ Nev[ve]sta z Abydu./ Pov[ve]st turecká./ Z anglického pr[ve]lo[vz]il/ Josef V. Fri[vc]./ V Praze./ Tisk a náklad Jaroslava Pospí[vs]ila./ 1854./ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 66. _Bulgarian_. [Cyrillic: Abidonska Neviesta, pobolgaril" N.D. Katramov". Moskva], 1850. _Dutch_. De/ Abydeensche/ Verloofde./ Uit het Engelsch van/ Lord Bijron/ door/ Mr. J. Van Lennep./ Te Amsterdam, bij/ P. Meijer Warnars./ 1826./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. iv. + 67. _Note_.--The Title-vignette represents a pillar with skull and cross-bones struck by lightning. The "ghastly-turbaned head" (line 1208) hovers above. There is a Half-title, with Motto and Transl., on the Reverse. _French_. I. _Zuleika et Selim, on la vierge d'Abydos_: par lord Byron: trad, de l'anglais par Léon Thiessé; et suivi de notes augmentées du _Fare Thee Well_, et autres morceaux du même auteur. A Paris, chez Plancher. 1816. [12º. [_B. de la France_, Oct. 5, 1816.] II. _La Fiancée d'Abydos_, poëme en 11 chants, avec des notes; imité de l'angl. par Aug. Clavareau, Gand, Houdin. 1823. [8º. [Quérard, 1827.] _German_. I. _Die Braut von Abydos_. Deutsch. v. Dr. J. v. Adrian. Frankfurt-a-M., Sauerländer. 1819. [8º. [_Centralblatt_, 1890, vii. 456.] II. _Die Braut von Abydos_, eine türkische Sage. Getreu in's Deutsche übers. u. seinen Schülern gewidmet von Finck de Bailleul. Landau. 1843. [8º. [Kayser, 1848.] III. _Die Braut von Abydos_. Aus der engl. in freie, deutsche Dichtg. übertrag. von Frdr. Kley. Halle, Schmidt. 1884. [8º. [Kayser, 1887.] _Collation_-- Pp. 62. _Hungarian_. _Az abydoszi ara_. [_The Bride of Abydos_, transl. by Tercsi.] Hangok a multból és Byrontol énekek. pp. 25-66. B'pest. 1884. [_Egyetemes Philologiai Közlöny_, 1901, xxv. 227.] _Italian_. _La fidanzata d'Abido_. Traduzione di Giov. Giovio. Milano, Guglielmini. 1854. [8º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] _Polish_. _Dziewica z Abydos, poema_. Prezkt. W[/l]. hr. Ostrowskiego. Warszawa, Glücksberg. 1818. [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 94. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Abidosskaya Neviesta. Turetskaya poviest". M. Kachenovski[)i].] [Cyrillic: Vyibor" iz" sochineniye lorda Bairona.] 1821. _Note_.--_Bride of Abydos_, pp. 177-255. II. [Cyrillic: Neviesta Abidosskaya. Turetskaya poviest" lorda Bairona.] [Cyrillic: Perevel" s" angliyeskago Ivan" Kozlov".] pp. i.-x. 1-92. [Cyrillic: S.-Peterburg"], 1826. 8º. Second Edition. [Cyrillic: S.-Peterburg"], 1831. 16º. III. [Cyrillic: Abidosskaya Neviesta ... Perediellana ... M. Politkovskoye. Moskva], 1859. _Collation_-- Pp. 1-57. _Swedish_. Bruden Från Abydos,/ En Turkisk Berättelse/ Af/ Lord Byron./ Öfversättning./ Stockholm,/ J.L. Brudins Förlag./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 72. _Note_.--No. 7 of "Byron's Poetiska Berättelser," 1853, etc. _Cain_. [_Note_.--_Cain, A Mystery_ was published by John Murray, together with _Sardanapalus, A Tragedy_, and _The Two Foscari, A Tragedy_, Dec. 21, 1821; _vide post, Sardanapalus, A Tragedy_, No. i. (p. 293).] I. Cain;/ A Mystery./ By the author of Don Juan./ "Now the Serpent was more subtil than any beast of/ the field which the Lord God had made."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Gen. iii. I./ London:/ _Printed for the Booksellers_,/ By W. Benbow, Castle-Street, Leicester-Square./ 1822./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. vii. + 8-93. II. Cain;/ A Mystery./ By Lord Byron./ To which is added/ a Letter from the Author/ To/ Mr Murray, the original Publisher./ "Now the Serpent was more subtil than any Beast of the Field which the Lord/ God had made."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Gen. iii. I./ Second Edition./ London:/ Printed and Published by R. Carlile, 55, Fleet Street./ 1822./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. iv. + 5-23 + Letter, etc., p. [24]. III. Cain;/ A Mystery./ By Lord Byron./ "Now the Serpent was more subtil than any beast of the/ field which the Lord God had made."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Gen. iii. I./ London:/ Printed for the Booksellers,/ _By H. Gray, No. 2, Barbican._/ 1822./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. vii. + 8-72. IV. _Cain, A Mystery_. New York. 1822. [24. _Collation_-- Pp. 100. V. _Cain, a Mystery_. Paris, A. and W. Galignani. 1822. [12º. [Quérard, 1827.] VI. Cain,/ A Mystery./ By Lord Byron./ "Now the Serpent was more subtil than any beast of the/ field which the Lord God had made."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Gen. iii. I./ London:/ Printed for the Booksellers,/ Published by W. Benbow, 252, High Holborn./ 1824./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. vii. + 8-85. VII. Lord Byron's/ Cain, A Mystery:/ with/ Notes:/ Wherein the/ Religion of the Bible/ Is considered, in reference to acknowledged/ Philosophy and Reason./ By Harding Grant;/ _Author of "Chancery Practice."_/ "Judge Righteous Judgment,"https://www.gutenberg.org/ "Prove all things."https://www.gutenberg.org/ "Justify the ways of God."https://www.gutenberg.org/ London:/ William Crofts, 19, Chancery Lane./ 1830./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xvi. + 432. VIII. Cain;/ A Mystery./ By Lord Byron./ "Now the Serpent was more subtil than any beast of the field/ which the Lord God had made."--Gen. iii. I./ To which is added/ A Letter from the Author/ To/ Mr. Murray, the original Publisher./ London:/ J. Watson, 33, Windmill Street,/ Finsbury./ 1832./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. iv. + 5-47 + Letter, etc., p. [48]. IX. _Cain, a Mystery_. Breslau, Kern. 1840. [16º. [Kayser, 1841.] X. Cain./ By/ Lord Byron./ "I tread on air, and sink not; yet I fear to sink."https://www.gutenberg.org/ New and Complete Edition.--Price One Penny./ London: J. Dicks, 313, Strand; and all Booksellers./ New York Samuel French & Son, 122, Nassau Street--Sole Agents./ 1883, etc./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 143-160. _Note_.--No. 203 of "Dicks' Standard Plays." _Translations of Cain_. _Bohemian_. Kain/ Dramatická Báse[vn]/ Lorda Byrona/ Pr[ve]lo[vz]il/ Jose Durdík/ V Praze/ Tisk a náklad dra. Ed. Grégra/ 1871/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 117. _French_. Caïn,/ Mystère dramatique/ En trois actes,/ De Lord Byron,/ Traduit en vers français,/ Et réfuté dans une suite de remarques philosophiques/ et critiques;/ Précédé/ d'une lettre adressée à Lord Byron, sur les motifs/ et le but de cet ouvrage,/ Par Fabre d'Olivet./ à Paris,/ Chez Servier, libraire,/ rue de L'Oratoire, No. 6./ 1823./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 248 + p. [249], Table (R. "Fautes à corriger"). _German_. I. _Cain, ein Mysterium_. Deutsch v. G. Parthey. Berlin, Nicola'ische Buchh. 1831. [12º. [_Centralblatt_, vii. 468.] II. _Cain. Ein Mysterium_. Von Lord Byron. Frei übers. v. Adf. Seubert. Leipzig. 1871-1876. [Kayser, 1877.] _Collation_-- Pp. 70. _Note_.--No. 779 of _Universal Bibliothek_. _Hebrew_. [Hebrew: Kine, shir-chizayon al-pi kitvey hakodesh / me'et / Lord Byron / tirgem me'anglit le'ivrit / David Frishman / Varsha TRS ] _Collation_-- Pp. xl. + 44. _Hungarian_. I. _Kain_. [_Cain_, transl. by Ilona Györy.] Franklin-Társulat 1895. [_Eg. Phil. Köz_., 1901, xxv. 222.] II. _Kain_. [_Cain_, transl. by Lajos Mikes.] (_Magyar Könyvtár_, p. 128.) B'pest, Lampel. 1898. [_Eg. Phil. Köz_., 1901, xxv. 224.] _International Language_. Kain./ Mistero/ de/ Lord Byron/ (Bajron)./ Tradukis A. Kofman./ Nurnbergo./ Presejo de W. Tümmel./ 1896./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. ix. + 102. _Italian_. _Caino: mistero_, tradotto da Andrea Maffei. Milano, Pirola. 1852-6. [8º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] _Polish_. Kain./ Poemat Dramatyczny/ Lorda Bajrona/ W trzech aktach/ prze[/l]o[.z]yl/ Adam Pajgert./ A wa[.z] by[/l] chytrzejszy nad wszystkie/ zwierz[e,]ta polne, które uczyni[/l] Pan Bóg./ Genezis R. III. w. I./ Lwów/ Nak[/l]adem Wydawnictwa Dziennika Literackiego./ 1868./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 125. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Kain" ... Perevod" Efrena barysheva. S.-Peterburg"], 1881. II. [Cyrillic: Kain" ... Perevod" P.A. Kalenova. Moskva], 1883. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_. I. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage./ A Romaunt./ By/ Lord Byron./ L'univers est une espèce de livre, dont on n'a lu que la première page quand on n'a vu que son pays./ J'en ai feuilleté un assez grand nombre, que j'ai trouvé également mauvaises. Cet examen ne m'a point/ été infructueux. Je haïssais ma patrie. Toutes les impertinences des peuples divers, parmi lesquels j'ai vécu,/ m'ont réconcilié avec elle. Quand je n'aurais tiré d'autre bénéfice de mes voyages que celui-là, je n'en re/gretterais ni les frais, ni les fatigues./ _Le Cosmopolite_./ London:/ Printed for John Murray, 32, Fleet-Street;/ William Blackwood, Edinburgh; and John Cumming, Dublin./ _By Thomas Davison, White-Friars./_ 1812./ [4º. _Collation_-- Title, one page, pp. i., ii.; Preface, pp. iii.-vi.; Cont. (_Errata_ on Reverse); Sec. Half-title, pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-226 + two pages of publisher's advertisements, pp. [227, 228]. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard Street,/ Whitefriars, London./_) is at the foot of p. [228]. _Contents_-- Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Canto I p. 1 Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Canto II p. 59 Notes to Canto I p. 111 Notes to Canto II p. 119 Poems-- I. Written in an Album p. 165 II. To... p. 166 III. Stanzas p. 169 IV. Stanzas p. 171 V. Written at Athens p. 177 VI. Written after Swimming, etc. p. 178 VII. Song p. 181 VIII. Translation of a Greek War Song p. 183 IX. Translation of a Romaic Song p. 186 X. Written Beneath a Picture p. 189 XI. On Parting p. 190 XII. To Thyrza p. 192 XIII. Stanzas p. 195 XIV. To Thyrza p. 197 Appendix-- Romaic Books and Authors p. 203 Specimens of the Romaic p. 207 Fac Simile of a Romaic Letter [inserted between Cont. and Half-title] II. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage./ A Romaunt./ By/ Lord Byron./ [Motto from _Le Cosmopolite_, seven lines.] The Second Edition./ London:/ Printed for John Murray, Fleet Street;/ William Blackwood, Edinburgh; and John Cumming,/ Dublin./ _By Thomas Davison, White-Friars._/ 1812./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title; Title, one leaf; Preface; Cont., pp. i.-xii.; Note on the Errors in the Inscriptions at Orchomenus, _n.p._; Text, pp. 1-300. The Imprint (_T. Davison_,/ _Lombard Street, Whitefriars, London_./) is at the foot of p. 300. _Contents_-- Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Cantos I. (93 stanzas), pp. 3-201 II. (88 stanzas) (N.) _Poems_ (as in First Ed., Nos. I.-XIV.) pp. 205-237 XV. Euthanasia p. 241 XVI. Stanzas ("And thou art dead," etc.) p. 244 XVII. Stanzas ("If sometimes," etc.) p. 249 XVIII. On a Cornelian Heart, etc. p. 252 XIX. To a Youthful Friend p. 253 XX. To ---- ("Well! thou art happy") p. 260 Appendix p. 267 Specimens of the Romaic p. 273 Fac Simile of a Romaic Letter [inserted between Half-title and Title] III. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage,/ A Romaunt: and/ Other Poems./ By/ Lord Byron./ [Motto from _Le Cosmopolite_, six lines.] Third Edition./ London: _Printed by T. Davison, Whitefriars._/ For John Murray, Fleet Street;/ W. Blackwood, Edinburgh; and J. Cumming, Dublin./ 1812./ [8º. _Note_.--Collation and Cont. are identical with those of the Second Edition. The Note on the Errors in the Inscriptions at Orchomenus is omitted. The Fac Simile of a Romaic Letter is inserted at the end of the volume, after p. 300. IV. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage,/ a Romaunt:/ and/ Other Poems./ By Lord Byron./ [Motto from _Le Cosmopolite_, six lines.] Fourth Edition./ London:/ _Printed by T. Davison, Whitefriars_,/ For John Murray, Fleet Street;/ William Blackwood, and J. Ballantyne and Co. Edin-/ Burgh; and J. Cumming, Dublin./ 1812./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Preface, pp. v.-ix.; Addition to the Preface, pp. ix.-xii.; Cont., pp. xi., xii. (_sic_); Text, pp. 1-300. The Imprint is at the foot of p. 300. _Note_.--The Cont. are identical with those of the Second Edition. The Fac Simile of the Romaic Letter is inserted at the beginning of the volume (in a bound copy between pp. 184, 185). V. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage,/ A Romaunt:/ and/ Other Poems./ By/ Lord Byron./ [Motto from _Le Cosmopolite_, six lines.] Fifth Edition./ London:/ _Printed by T. Davison, Whitefriars_,/ For John Murray, (_removed to_) Albemarle-Street;/ William Blackwood, Edinburgh; and J. Cumming,/ Dublin./ 1812./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, pp. iii., iv.; Title, one leaf, pp. v., vi.; Preface, pp. vii.-xi.; Addition to the Preface, pp. xi.-xiv.; Cont., pp. xv.-xvi.; Text, pp. 1-300. The Imprint is at the foot of p. 300. _Note_.--The Cont. are identical with those of the Second Edition; but the Fac Simile of the Romaic Letter is not mentioned in the Table of Cont. nor inserted in the volume. VI. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage,/ A Romaunt:/ and/ Other Poems./ By Lord Byron./ [Motto--_Le Cosmopolite_.] The First American Edition./ Philadelphia:/ Published by Moses Thomas,/ No. 52, Chestnut-Street./ William Fry, Printer. 1812./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 179. _Note_.--"For sale in Philadelphia, by the publisher, M. Carey, and Bradford and Inskip; in New York, by Inskip and Bradford, and J. Eastburn; in Boston, by Munroe and Francis, and West and Blake; and in Baltimore, by F. Lucas, Junr. William Fry, Printer. 1812." VII. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage,/ A Romaunt:/ And/ Other Poems./ By/ Lord Byron./ [Motto from _Le Cosmopolite_, six lines.] The Sixth Edition./ London:/ _Printed by T. Davison, Whitefriars_,/ For John Murray, Bookseller to the Admiralty,/ And to the Board of Longitude,/ 50, Albemarle-Street./ 1813./ [8º. _Note_.--The Collation and Cont. are identical with those of the Fifth Edition; but in the Table of Cont. the words "Fac Simile of a Romaic Letter" occur as in the Fourth Edition; but in the copy belonging to the British Museum the letter is not inserted. In the Sixth Edition the words _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_ are printed in Roman type, and the words _A Romaunt_ in Gothic type, whereas in all other editions _Childe_, etc., is in Gothic, and _A Romaunt_ in Roman type. VIII. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage,/ A Romaunt:/ And/ Other Poems./ By/ Lord Byron./ [Motto from _Le Cosmopolite_, six lines.] Seventh Edition./ London:/ _Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_,/ For John Murray, Albemarle-Street,/1814./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title; Title, one leaf; Preface, etc.; Cent., pp. iii.-xvi.; Text, pp. 1-296. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard-Street,/ Whitefriars, London_./) is at the foot of p. 296. The Fac Simile of the Romaic Letter is inserted between pp. 294, 295. _Contents_-- To Ianthe p. 3 Childe Harold's, etc., Canto I. (93 stanzas) p. 6 Childe Harold's, etc., Canto II. (98 stanzas) p. 65 Notes to Canto I. p. 121 Notes to Canto II. p. 125 Poems-- Nos. I.-XX. as in Eds. II.-VI. p. 191 XXI. From the Portuguese p. 245 XXII. Impromptu in Reply to a Friend p. 246 XXIII. Address to Drury-Lane Theatre p. 246 XXIV. To Time p. 250 XXV. Translation of a Romaic Love Song p. 252 XXVI. A Song ("Thou art not false," etc.) p. 255 XXVII. Origin of Love p. 257 XXVIII. Remember him p. 257 XXIX. Lines inscribed upon a Cup formed from a Skull p. 261 Romaic Books and Authors p. 264 Specimen of the Romaic p. 271 IX. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage,/ A Romaunt:/ And/ Other Poems./ By/ Lord Byron./ [Motto from _Le Cosmopolite_, five lines.] Eighth Edition./ London:/ Printed for John Murray, Albemarle-Street:/ _By Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_./ 1814./ [8º. _Collation_--Title, one leaf, pp. i., ii.; Preface, pp. iii.-vii.; Addition to the Preface, pp. vii.-x; Cont., pp. xi., xii.; Text, pp. 1-296. _Note_.--The Cont. are identical with those of the Seventh Edition. X. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage,/ A Romaunt:/ And/ Other Poems./ By/ Lord Byron./ [Motto from _Le Cosmopolite_, five lines.] Tenth Edition./ London:/ Printed for John Murray; Albemarle-Street,/ 1815./ [8º. _Collation_--Title (R. _T. Davison, Lombard street/ Whitefriars, London./_), pp. i., ii.; Preface, pp. iii.-vii.; Addition to the Preface, pp. vii.-x.; Cont., pp. xi., xii.; Text, pp. 1-302. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard-Street, /Whitefriars, London._/) is in the centre of p. [304]. _Note_.--The Cont. are identical with those of the Seventh Edition, save for the insertion of a thirtieth (No. XXX., p. 263) poem, "On the Death of Sir Peter Parker." XI. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage./ Canto the Third./ By Lord Byron./ "Afin que cette application vous forçât de penser à autre chose; il n'y a/ en vérité de remède que celui-là et le temps."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Lettre du Roi de Prusse à D'Alembert, Sept. 7, 1776./ London:/ Printed for John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1816./ [8º. _Collation_--Half-title (R. Published THIS DAY in 8vo. 5_s_.6_d_./ THE PRISONER OF CHILLON;/ A DREAM;/ And Other Poems./ By the Right Hon. Lord Byron./ _T. Davison, Lombard Street,/ Whitefriars, London._/); Title, one leaf; Text, pp. 1-79. _Note_ (1).--The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 79; and on the reverse of p. 79, "List of the Poems," etc. _Note_ (2).--_Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_, Canto III., was published at Boston, 1817, 16º, pp. 72; and, together with _The Prisoner of Chillon_ and other Poems, at Philadelphia, 1817, 16º. XII. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage./ Canto the Fourth./ By Lord Byron./ Visto ho Toscana, Lombardia, Romagna,/ Quel Monte che divide, e quel che serra/ Italia, e un mare e l'altro, che la bagna./ Ariosto, Satira iii./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1818./ [8º. _Collation_--Title, pp. i., ii.; Dedication, pp. iii.-xiv.; Cont., _n.p._; Text, pp. 1-257. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard-Street, Whitefriars, London_.) is at the foot of p. [259]. _Contents_-- Childe Harold's, etc., Canto IV. [N.] p. 3 Poems. _Romance_, etc. p. 240 Translation p. 241 Per Monaca. Sonetto di Vittorelli p. 256 Translation p. 257 _Note_ (1).--In another copy, Cont., _n.p._, precedes the Dedication. _Note_ (2).--_Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_, Canto IV., to which are added _Beppo_, and other Poems, was published at Philadelphia in 1818, 24º, pp. 270. XIII. Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage./ Canto the Fourth./ By Lord Byron./ [Motto--Ariost., Sat. iii., four lines.] New York:/ Published by James Eastburn and Co./ At the Literary Rooms, Broadway./ Clayton & Kingsland, Printers./ 1818./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 143. XIV. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage,/ A Romaunt:/ And/ Other Poems./ By/ Lord Byron./ [Motto from _Le Cosmopolite_, six lines.] Eleventh Edition./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1819./ [8º. _Note_.--The Collation of the preliminary matter is identical with that of the Tenth Edition. The Cont. are also identical, save that on p. 274 a note headed "Conclusion" (on pp. 301, 302 of the Tenth Edition) is omitted. The Imprint (_London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars./_) is at the foot of p. 274. XV. Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage./ A Romaunt,/ In Four Cantos./ By the Right Honourable/ Lord Byron./ In Two Volumes./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II.] Containing Cantos I., II./ London:/ John Murray,/ Albemarle-Street./ 1819./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: Title (R. _London:/ Printed by T. Davison, Whitefriars./_), pp. iii., iv.; Half-title (R. Motto, _Le Cosmopolite_, eight lines), pp. v., vi.; Preface, pp. vii.-xiv.; Cont., one leaf; Text, pp. 1-218. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard Street,/ Whitefriars, London./_) is in the centre of p. [220]. Vol. II.: Title (R. Imprint, as above); Cont., one leaf; Text, pp. 1-273; Advt. of _Historical Illustrations_ (R. Imprint, _London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_), pp. [275, 276]. XVI. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_. [Two vols.] Leipzig, Brockhaus. 1820. [8º. [Kayser, 1834.] XVII. Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage./ A Romaunt./ By Lord Byron./ London:/ Printed and Published by W. Dugdale,/ Russell Court, Drury Lane./ 1825./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. vi. + 7-182. XVIII. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_. [Two vols.] Paris, A. and W. Galignani. 1825. [32º. XIX. Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage,/ A Romaunt:/ By Lord Byron./ London:/ Printed and Published by W. Dugdale/ 23, Russell Court, Drury Lane./ 1826./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. vi. + 1-162. XX. Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage;/ A Romaunt./ In Four Cantos./ By Lord Byron./ London:/ Printed for Thomas Colmer,/ 2, Bell-Isle, Battle Bridge./ 1827./ [24º. _Collation_-- Pp. vi. + 161. XXI. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_, a poem by Lord Byron. [Two vols.] Paris. 1827. [16º. [_Le Moniteur_; etc., 1845.] XXII. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage./ A Romaunt./ By the/ Right Hon. Lord Byron./ London:/ John Buncombe, 19, Little Queen Street,/ Holborn./ [1831?] [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. viii. + 9-270. _Note_.--The Front. is "Lord Byron," by T. Phillips, R.A., engraved by R. Page. XXIII. Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage./ A Romaunt/ By/ Lord Byron./ Campe's Edition./ Nuremberg and New York./ Printed and Published by/ Frederick Campe and Cº/ [1831.] [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 333. XXIV. Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage./ A Romaunt./ By Lord Byron./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1837. [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 329. The Imprint (_London:/ Printed by A. Spottiswoode,/ New-Street-Square._) is in the centre of p. [330]. _Note_.--The Front., "Byron," is engraved by E. Finden, from the portrait by E. Sanders. The Vignette, or illustrated Title, is the "Lake of Geneva," engraved by E. Finden from a drawing by G. Stainfield, R.A. This edition is bound in green cloth, stamped with coat-of-arms, uniform with No. xiv. of Miscellaneous Poems. XXV. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_. Mannheim, Hoffmann. 1837. [12º. [Kayser, 1841.] XXVI. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage./ A Romaunt./ By Lord Byron./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1841. [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. Motto from _Le Cosmopolite_, seven lines), pp. i., ii.; Title (R. _Bradbury and Evans, Printers extraordinary to the Queen, Whitefriars._), pp. iii., iv.; Preface, and Addition to Preface, pp. v.-viii.; List of Embellishments, pp. ix.-xi.; Half-title, pp. xiii., xiv.; To Ianthe, pp. xv., xvi.; Text, pp. 1-320. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 320. _Note_.--The Front. is a portrait of "Lord Byron, in his Albamanian Dress," by T. Phillips, R.A., engraved by W. Finden. The Title-vignette on illustrated title is the "Monument of Lysicrates," drawn by H. Warren, engraved by W. Finden. There are fifty-nine other "embellishments," and, inserted between pp. [228], [229], a Map of Lord Byron's Route through Spain, Portugal, Holland, etc., with "Picturesque Border." XXVII. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_, with Notes by Lord Byron, Carton demi rel. Jolie éd. London. 1842. [12º. [_Le Moniteur_, etc., 1845.] XXVIII. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage./ A Romaunt./ By Lord Byron./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1853./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xii. (To Ianthe, pp. xi., xii.) + 311. The Imprint (_London:/ Bradbury and Evans, Printers, Whitefriars./_) is in the centre of P. [312]. XXIX. _Childe Harold herausg. von Aug. Mommsen_. Hamburg, Th. Niemeyer. 1853. [Hamburg, 1869.] [8º. [Kayser, 1860.] _Collation_-- Pp. iv. + 189. XXX. _Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage_,/ von/ Lord Byron./ [Two Vols.] Erklärt/ von/ Ferd. Brockerhoff./ Erstes Bändchen./ Berlin./ Verlag von Th. Chr. Fr. Enslin./ 1854./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 163. _Note_.--Bdchn. of _Sammlung englischer Schriffsteller_. Berlin, Th. Enslin. 1853-1855. "Siebentes Bändchen" contains Cantos I., II.; "Neuntes Bändchen" (pp. 214), published in 1855, contains Cantos III., IV. XXXI. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage/ A Romaunt/ By Lord Byron/ Illustrated From Original Sketches/ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1859./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title (R. Motto, _Le Cosmopolite_, six lines; Note, two lines); Vignette, "Newstead Abbey" (R. The Illustrations drawn on Wood by Percival Skelton./ Engraved by J.W. Whymper and J. Cooper./); List of Illustrations, four pages; Text, pp. 1-329. The Imprint (_Printed by R. and R. Clark, Edinburgh_) is at the foot of p. 329. _Note_.--This edition was reissued in 1869. XXXII. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage./ A Romaunt./ By Lord Byron./ New Edition./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1860./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 192. The Imprint (_London: Printed by William Clowes and Sons, Stamford Street_) is at the foot of p. 192. _Note_.--Murray's Complete Edition. Price One Shilling. The Front. is "The Earliest Portrait of Byron. Taken at the age of 7 years, from an original by Kay, Edinburgh," engraved by E. Finden. XXXIII. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage./ A Romaunt./ By Lord Byron./ A New Edition./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1860./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 60. The Imprint (_London: Printed by William Clowes and Sons, Stamford Street,/ And Charing Cross./_) is on Reverse of Title. _Note_.--"Murray's Complete Edition." Price Sixpence. The Front. is a lithograph of the portrait of Lord Byron, by T. Phillips, R.A. XXXIV. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_. A Romaunt. Leipzig, B. Tauchnitz. 1862. [16º. [Kayser, 1865.] XXXV. Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage/ A Romaunt/ By/ Lord Byron/ With a Memoir/ By/ William Spalding, A.M./ Professor of Logic and Rhetoric in the University of Saint Andrews/ Illustrated/ London/ Charles Griffin and Company/Stationer's Hall Court/ [1866] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 180. _Note_.--The Front, is an engraving of the medallion by E.W. Wyon. XXXVI. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_. A Romaunt. Mit erläut. Anmerkungen zum Schul-u. Privatunterricht bearb. von P. Weeg. 1867. [8º. _Note_.--No. V., Sammlung gediegener u. interessanter Werke der englischen Litteratur. Münster, Brunn's Verl. 1868-1870. [Kayser, 1871.] XXXVII. Byron's/ Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage/ A Romaunt/ With Notes/ W. & R. Chambers/ London and Edinburgh/ 1877/ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 180. XXXVIII. Lord Byron/ Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage/ Édition classique/ Par/ James Darmesteter/ Docteur ès-Lettres/ Directeur-Adjoint à l'École des Hautes Études/ Paris/ librairie Ch. Delagrave/ 15, rue Soufflot, 15/ 1882/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xxxv. + 342. XXXIX. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_. Texte anglais, revu et annoté par l'abbé A. Julien. Paris, Poussielque frères. 1883. [12º. [Lorenz, 1886.] XL. Clarendon Press Series/ Byron/ Childe Harold/ Edited/ With Introduction and Notes/ By/ H.F. Tozer, M.A./ Fellow and Tutor of Exeter College, Oxford/ At the Clarendon Press/ 1885/ [_All rights reserved_]/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 336. XLI. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_. Illustrated. London, Chatto. 1885. [8º. [_Eng. Cat._, 1891.] XLII. Lord Byron,/ Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage./ A Romaunt./ Erklärt/ von/ August Mommsen./ Berlin./ Weidmannsche Buchhandlung./ 1885./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xxxvi. + 367. XLIII. Cassell's National Library./ Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage./ By/ Lord Byron./ Cassell & Company, Limited:/ London, Paris, New York & Melbourne./ 1886./ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 192. XLIV. Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage/ A Romaunt/ By Lord Byron/ Illustrated/ Boston/ Ticknor and Company/ 1886/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 236. XLV. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_: edited with Notes by W.J. Rolfe, Philadelphia. 1886. [16º. [Detroit Public Library.] XLVI. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_. Leipzig, Gressner & Schramm. 1886. [16º. [Kayser, 1887.] XLVII. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_. By Lord Byron. Im Auszuge m. Anmerkgn. zum Schulgebrauch hrsg. v. Mart. Krummacher. Mit Anmerkgn. unter dem Text. _Note_.--No. 13 of "English Authors." Bielefeld, Velhagen, and Klasing. 1885-1886. [Kayser, 1887.] XLVIII. Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage/ A Romaunt/ By/ Lord Byron/ London/ George Routledge and Sons/ Broadway, Ludgate Hill/ Glasgow and New York/ 1888/ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. viii. + 9-320. _Note_.--Part of "Routledge's Pocket Library." XLIX. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_. Im Auszuge hrsg. v. Mart. Krummacher. 1891. [Reissued in 1893.] [12º. _Note_.--Part of "English Authors," _vide supra_, No. xlvii. L. Sir John Lubbock's Hundred Best Books/ 29/ Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage/ A Romaunt/ By/ Lord Byron/ London/ George Routledge and Sons, Limited/ Broadway, Ludgate Hill/ Manchester and New York/ 1892/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. x. + 11-249. LI. Byron's/ Childe Harold/ With Introduction and Notes/ By/ H.G. Keene, Hon. M.A. Oxon.,/ Fellow of Calcutta University, Author of "A Manual of/ French Literature," etc./ London/ George Bell & Sons, York St., Covent Garden/ And New York/ 1893/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xx. + 255. LII. Byron/ Childe Harold/ Texte Anglais/ Publié avec une Notice, des Arguments/ Et des Notes en Français/ Par Émile Chasles/ Inspecteur général de l'Instruction publique/ Paris/ Librairie Hachette et C'ie/ 79, Boulevard Saint-Germain, 79/ 1893/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xxvi. + 261. _Note_.--This edition was reissued in 1894. LIII. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage: a Romaunt_. New York, T.Y. Crowell & Co. 1894. [_Amer. Cat._, 1895.] _Collation_-- Pp. 9 + 283. LIV. Arnold's British Classics for Schools/ General Editor:/ J. Churton Collins, M.A./ Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage/ Edited by/ The Rev. E.C. Everard Owen, M.A./ Late Fellow of New College, Oxford; Assistant Master/ In Harrow School./ Edward Arnold/ London/ 37 Bedford Street/ New York/ 70 Fifth Avenue/ [1897] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. lxii. + 236. LV. Childe/ Harold/ A Romaunt/ George/ Gordon/ Lord/ Byron/ 1898. Published. by. J.M. Dent. / And. Co.. Aldine. House. London. E.C./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xii. + 310 + Note (one leaf) by Editor, I.G., October 1, 1898. _Note_.--Part of the "Temple Classics," edited by Israel Gollmer, M.A. The Front. is a photogravure of the portrait of "George Gordon Lord Byron," by T. Phillips, R.A. LVI. Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage/ A Romaunt by Lord Byron/ Cantos I. and II./ Edited with Notes and an Introduction by/ Edward E. Morris/ Professor of English in the University of Melbourne/ London/ Macmillan and Co., Limited/ New York: The Macmillan Company/1899/ _All rights reserved/_ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xxxvi. + 115. LVII. Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage/ A Romaunt by Lord Byron/ Cantos III. and IV./ Edited with Notes and an Introduction by/ Edward E. Morris/ Professor of English in the University of Melbourne/ London/ Macmillan and Co., Limited/ New York: The Macmillan Company/ 1899/ _All rights reserved/_ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xxxvi. + 168. _Note_.--The Introduction (pp. vii.-xxxvi.) is a repetition of the Introduction to the preceding volume. LVIII. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage: a Romaunt_. Cantos 1, 2, 3, and 4; Edited with Notes and Introduction by E. Morris. New York, The Macmillan Co. [Two vols.] 1899. [8º. [_Amer. Cat._, 1900.] _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. 36 + 115. Vol. II.: pp. 36 + 168. _Note_.--Part of "Macmillan's English Classics." LIX. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage: a Romaunt_. Edited with Introduction and Notes by Andrew J. George. New York., The Macmillan Co. 1899. [16º. [_Amer. Cat._, 1900.] _Collation_-- Pp. 34 + 282. _Note_.--Part of "Macmillan's Pocket English Classics." LX. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_. New York, Cassell. 1900. [_Amer. Cat._, 1901.] _Collation_-- Pp. 192. _Note_.--Part of "Cassell's National Library," N.S. LXI. Lord Byron/ Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage/ Canto II./ Edited by/ John Downie, M.A./ Editor of Macaulay's Lives of Johnson and Goldsmith, Etc. Etc./ London/ Blackie and Son, Limited, 50 Old Bailey, E.C./ Glasgow and Dublin/ 1901/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 47. LXII. Lord Byron/ Childe Harold's/ Pilgrimage/ Canto III./ Edited by/ John Downie, M.A./ [etc., _vide supra_, No. lxi.] 1901/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 47. _Note_.--This and the preceding volume form part of "Blackie's English Classics." _Translations of Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_. _Armenian_. Lord Byron/ Childe Harold's Pilgrimage/ Italy/ [Canto IV.] Venice/ Printed/ at the Armenian Monastery of S. Lazarus/ 1872/ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 147. _Note_.--The Armenian verse, translated by Gheuond Alíshanian, accompanies the English original. The Notes are in the Armenian language. _Bohemian_. _Childe Haroldova pout'_ Prelozila El. Krásnohorská [in Kabinetní Knihovna]. 1890. _Danish_. Junker Harolds Pilgrimsfart./ Et Romantisk Kvad./ Af/ Byron./ Oversat af/Adolf Hansen/Kjøbenhavn./ Forlagt af J.H. Schubothes Boghandel./ Græbes Bogtrykkerei. 1880/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 237. _French_. I. _Le Pélerinage de Childe Harold_, poème romantique de lord Byron, traduit en vers français par l'auteur des _Helléniennes_ et des _Mélodies poétiques_. Paris, Dupont. 1828. [18º. [Quérard, 1846.] _Collation_-- Pp. 288. II. _Le Pélerinage de Childe Harold_, traduit par P.A. Deguer. Paris, Ponthieu. 1828. [18º. [Quérard, 1846.] _Collation_-- Pp. 84. III. Le Pélerinage/ de/ Childe Harold/ Traduction en vers français/ Par/ Eugène Quiertant./ [Motto, _Le Cosmopolite_, nine lines.] Paris/ Librairie de Ch. Blériot,/ rue Bonaparte, 25. 1861./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. viii. + 266 + "Note de L'Éditeur," one leaf. _Note_.--Le premier chant de cette traduction avail déja été publié en 1852. [Lorenz, 1867.] IV. Childe Harold/ Poëme de Lord Byron/ Traduit en vers français/ Par/ Lucien Davésiès de Pontès./ Tome premier./ Paris/ E. Dentu, libraire-éditeur,/ Galerie D'Orléans, Palais-Royal./ 1862./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. lv. + 232. Vol. II.: pp. 334 + "Errata," one leaf, p. [335]. V. _Le Pélerinage de Childe Harold_, traduit en vers d'après l'édition anglaise de 1812; précédé de Marie-Magdaleine, poëme, et de diverses poésies, par Victor Robert Jones, Saint-Quentin, _imprimerie Monreau_. 1862. [12º. [Lorenz, 1867.] VI. _Childe Harold_, poëme de lord Byron, traduit en vers français par Lucien Davésiès de Pontès, 2^e édition revue et corrigée par le bibliophile Jacob. Paris, _Amyot_. 1870. [12º. [Lorenz, 1876.] VII. _Childe Harold_. Expliqué littéralement, traduit en français et annoté par H. Bellet. Paris, _Hachette et Cie_. 1881. [12º. [Lorenz, 1886.] VIII. _Childe Harold's Pilgrimage_. Traduction française littérale, par l'Abbé A. Julien. Paris, _Poussielque frères_. 1883. [12º. [Lorenz, 1886.] IX. _Childe Harold_, Édition classique, précédée d'une notice littéraire, par M.A. Elwall. Paris, _Delalain frères_. 1892. [12º. [Lorenz, 1900.] X. _Childe Harold_, Édition classique, avec une notice biographique et littéraire, un appendice et des notes par Douglas Gibb. Paris, _Belin frères_. 1892. [12º. [Lorenz, 1900.] _German_. I. _Harold, der Verwiesene_. Aus. d. Engl. v. Karl Baldamus. Leipzig, Hartmann. 1835. [8º. [Kayser, 1841.] II. Ritter Harold's Pilgerfahrt./ Aus dem Englischen/ des/ Lord Byron./ Im Versmass des Originals übersetzt/von/ Zedlitz:/ Stuttgart und Tübingen,/ Verlag der J.G. Cotta'schen Buchhandlung. 1836./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xvi. + 381 + Berichtungen, p. [382]. III. _Jungherrn Harold's Pilgerfahrt_. Aus d. Engl. ins Deutsche übersetzt von Dr. Herm. v. Pommer Esche. Stralsund, Löffler'sche Buch. 1839. [8º. [Kayser, 1841.] IV. _Erster Gesang des Childe Harald_. Freie Uebertragung in Reimen v. C.D. Ansbach, Dollfuss. 1845. [12º. [Kayser, 1848.] V. Byron's/ Ritter Harold/ von/ Adolf Böttger/ Diamantausgabe./ Leipzig./ Druck und Verlag von Otto Wigand./ 1846./ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 194. _Note_.--The Front. is a portrait of "Byron" (by G. Sanders), engraved by A.H. Payne. VI. Childe Harold's/ Pilgerfahrt/ von/ Lord George Gordon Byron./ Aus dem Englischen im Versmass des Originals/ übersetzt/ von/ Alexander Büchner./ Frankfurt a/ M./ Verlag von Meidinger Sohn und Cie./ 1853./ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. xxiii. + 342. _Note_.--The translation was reissued in 1855. VII. Harold's/ Pilgerfahrt./ Aus dem Englischen des Lord Byron./ Uebersetzt von/ Erich von Monbart./ Köln, 1865./ Druck, Franz Greven, Burgmauer-Ecke 113. [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 143. VIII. Childe Harold's/ Pilgerfahrt/ von/ Lord Byron./ Deutsch/ von/ A.H. Janert./ Hildburghausen./ Verlag des Bibliographischen Instituts./ 1868./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 191. _Note_.--No. 87 of the "Bibliothek ausländischer Klassiker." IX. Jung Harold's/ Pilgerfahrt./ Von Byron./ Aus dem Englischen metrisch übersetzt/ von/ Ferdinand Schmidt./ Berlin./ Verlag von W.O.H. Stempelmann./ 1869./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 132 + "Anmerkungen," pp. [133, 134]. X. _Ritter Harold's Pilgerfahrt_. Eine Romanze v. Lord Byron. Frei ubers. v. Adf. Seubert. [16º. [Kayser, 1877.] _Collation_-- Pp. 224. _Note_.--Nos. 516, 517 of the "Universal Bibliothek," Leipzig, 1871-76. XI. _Childe Harold's Pilgerfahrt_. Ein Epos. Übertr. v. F. Dobbert. 1893. [8º. [Kayser, 1894.] _Collation_-- Pp. vi. + 192. _Note_.--Part of the "Bibliothek der Gesammtlitteratur d. In u. Auslandes." _Hungarian_. Childe Harold/ Byron/ után/ anya nyelvéböl magyarra forditotta/ Bickersteth Johanka/ Nyomtatta PUKY MIKLOS Genfben/ 1857/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 211. [Line-borders.] _Italian_. I. L'Italia,/ Canto IV./ del pellegrinaggio/ di Childe H_A_Rold,/ Scritto/ da Lord Byron,/ E tradotto/ da Michele Leoni./ Italia,/ 1819./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 77. II. _Il pellegrinaggio del Giovine Aroldo_: poema di Lord Byron, tradotto dá Giuseppe Gazzino genovese. Genova, tipografia arcivescovile, 1836. [8º. [_Bibl. Ital._, Nov.-Dec., 1836.] III. L'Italia/ Canto/ di Lord Byron/ Accomodato/ All' indole del verso italiano/ da/ Melchior Missirini/ Publicato per cura/ del professore/ Francesco Longhena./ Milano/ Coi tipi di Vincenzo Guglielmini/ 1848/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 95. IV. _Il pellegrinaggio del giovane Aroldo_: poema recato in italiano da Fr. Armenio. Napoli, 1858. [8º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] V. _Il pellegrinaggio del giovane Aroldo_: con la traduzione armena. Ultimo canto. Venezia. t.s. Lazard, 1860. [8º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] VI. Byron/ Pellegrinaggio D'Aroldo/ Traduzione/di/Giovanni Giovio/ [Then something on poetry/] Schak./ Milano/ Giuseppe Bernardoni/ Tipografo-editore/ 1866/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xxxiii. + 122 + "Note," pp. [125, 126]. VII. Italia/ Canto di Giorgio Byron/ Tradotto/ da/ Andrea Maffei./ Firenze,/ Successori le Monnier./ 1872./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 190. _Note_.--This edition was reissued in 1874 and in 1897. VIII. Il pellegrinaggio/ D'Aroldo./ Poema/ di Lord Byron/ Tradotto/ da Carlo Faccioli./ [Emblem, rose and butterfly, with motto, "_Non Bramo Altr' Esca._"] Firenze,/ G. Barbèra, editore./ 1873./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xii. + 249 + Indice, p. [251]. _Polish_. I. _Poezye w t[/l]umaczeniu polskiém_. Tom. I. (przez Micha[/l]a Budzyúskiego): Wedrówki Czaild Harolda. pp. 256. _M. Wolf: Petersburg_, 1857. [8º. II. _Pielgrzymka Czajlda Harolda_ ... z=polszczone przez Wiktora z Baworowa, _etc. we Lwowie_, 1857. [12º. III. _W[e,]drówki Czaild-Harolda_ ...Prze[/l]o[.z]y[/l] Frederyk Krauze. 1865-71. IV. _W[e,]drówki Rycerza Harolda_ ...Przek[/l]ad Jana Kasprowicza. _Warszawa_, 1895. V. _W[e,]drówki Czaild-Harolda_ ... T[/l]ómaczony ... przez A.A. K[rajewskiego], _Kraków_, 1896. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Chail"d"-Garol"d" ... per. D. Minaeva.] [" [Cyrillic: Russkoe Slovo]," 1864.] II. [Cyrillic: Chail'd"-Garol'd" ... per. P.A. Kozlova.] ["[Cyrillic: "Russkaya Miesl"]," 1890. No. 1, 2, 11.] _Swedish_. Childe Harolds/ Pilgrimsfärd/ Af/ Lord Byron./ Öfversatt Af/ A.F. Skjöldebrand./ Stockholm./ Tryckt Hos Johan Hörberg,/ 1832./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 192. _The Corsair_. I. The Corsair,/ A Tale./ By Lord Byron./ "---- I suoi pensieri in lui dormir non ponno."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Tasso, _Canto decimo, Gerusalemme Liberata_./ London:/ _Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_, For John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1814./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf, pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Dedication, "To Thomas Moore, Esq.," pp. v.-xi.; Text (and Notes), pp. 1-100. _Note_.--The Text numbers 1863 lines, the half-lines 154, 159, 669 being reckoned as whole lines. Other half-lines are not so reckoned, and the First Edition actually numbers 1860 lines. II. The Corsair,/ A Tale./ By Lord Byron./ "---- I suoi pensieri in lui dormir non ponno."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Tasso, _Canto decimo, Gerusalemme Liberata_./ Second Edition./ London:/ _Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_,/ For John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1814./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, etc. (_vide supra_); Text, with Notes and Six Poems, pp. 1-108. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard Street,/ Whitefriars, London./_) is at the foot of p. 108. _Poems_-- To a Lady weeping p. [101] From the Turkish p. 102 Sonnet, To Genevra ("Thine eyes," etc.) p. 104 Sonnet, To Genevra ("Thy cheek," etc.) p. 105 Inscription on the Monument of a Newfoundland Dog p. 106 Farewell ("Farewell! if ever," etc.) p. 108 III. The Corsair,/ A Tale./ ... Third Edition./ ... 1814./ [8º. _Collation_-- _Vide supra_, No. 1. The Imprint (_Printed by T. Davison, Lombard-Street,/ Fleet Street._/) is at the foot of p. 100. _Note_.--The Poems which were inserted in the Second Edition pp. [101]-108, were omitted in the Third Edition. IV. The Corsair,/ A Tale./ ... Fourth Edition.... 1814./ [8º. _Collation_-- _Vide supra_, the Second Edition, No. ii. _Note_.--The Poems inserted in the Second, and omitted in the Third, are included in the Fourth Edition. V. The Corsair,/ A Tale./ By Lord Byron./ [Motto as above, No. i.] Fifth Edition./ London:/ Printed for John Murray, Albemarle-Street;/ _By Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_,/ 1814./ [8º. _Collation_-- _Vide supra_, the Second Edition, No. ii. VI. The Corsair,/ A Tale./ ... Sixth Edition./ ... 1814./ [8º. _Collation_-- For Title, _vide supra_, the Fifth Edition, No. v. VII. The Corsair,/ A Tale./ ... Seventh Edition./ ... 1814./ [8º. _Collation_-- _Vide supra_, Second Edition, No. ii. _Note_.--In this edition the last four lines of Canto I. stanza xi. ("The first may turn ... still it stings!") were added, together with the Note, to Canto II., p. 33, line 18, "It has been objected," etc. The poem numbers 1863 lines, the additional lines not being included in the numeration. VIII. The Corsair,/ A Tale./ By Lord Byron./ [Motto as above.] From the Fifth London Edition./ New-York:/ Published by Eastburn, Kirk, and Co./ Literary Rooms, Corner of Wall and Nassau Streets./ 1814./ [6º. _Collation_-- Pp. xi. + 108. _Note_.--_The Corsair_ was also published in Philadelphia in 1814, 16º. IX. The Corsair;/ A Tale./ By Lord Byron./ [Motto as above.] Ninth Edition./ London:/ Printed for John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1815./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf, pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Dedication, pp. v.-xi.; Text, with Notes, pp. 1-112. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard-Street,/ Whitefriars, London._/) is at the foot of p. 112. _Note_.--The poem numbers 1864 lines, the four new lines at the end of Canto I. stanza xi. being included in the numeration. Pp. 101-104 contain "Note 17, p. 95, last line," on the Pirates of Barataria, and (secondly) on Archbishop Blackbourne. X. The Corsair,/ A Tale./ By Lord Byron./ [Motto as above.] Tenth Edition./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1818./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. _London:/ Printed by T. Davison, Whitefriars_./), pp. 1, 2; Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Dedication, pp. 5-9; Text, pp. 11-96; Notes, pp. 97-105; Poems, pp. [107]-114. _Note_.--The poem is (incorrectly) numbered 1873 lines, line 1506 being numbered 1511. XI. The Corsair./ A Tale./ By Lord Byron./ [Motto as above.] London: Printed and Published by W. Dugdale,/ _23, Russell Court, Drury Lane_./ 1825./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 72. XII. The Corsair./ A Tale./ By Lord Byron./ "---- I suoi pensieri in lui dormir non ponno"--Tasso./ [London, 1844.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. iv. + 5-48. _Note_.--Part of "Clarke's Home Library." XIII. The Corsair:/ A Tale./ By/ Lord Byron./ London: Archd. K. Murray & Co.,/ 30 Queen Square, W.C.:/ Glasgow: 243 Parliamentary Road./ 1867./ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 122. _Note_.--- Part of "Murray's Standard Poets." _Translations of The Corsair_. _German_. I. _Der Korsar_, eine Erzählung. [Deutsch v.] F.L. von Tschirsky. Berlin, Maurer. 1816. [12º. [_Centralblatt, etc._, 1890, vol. vii, p. 472.] II. _Der Korsar_, eine Erzählung. [Deutsch von] Elise von Hohenhausen. Altona, Hammerich. 1820. [8º. [_Centralblatt, etc._, 1890, vii. 461.] III. _Der Korsar_. Erzählung. Aus d. Engl. übers. v. Friederike Friedmann. Leipzig, Brockhaus. 1852. [16º. [Kayser, 1853.] _Collation_-- Pp. 90. IV. _Der Corsar_. Gedicht, Aus d. Engl. von Viet. v. Arentsschild. Mainz, Iabern. 1852. [16º. [Kayser, 1853.] _Collation_-- Pp. 139. V. _Der Korsar_. Eine Erzählg. v. Lord Byron. Frei übers. v. Adf. Seubert. Leipzig, Ph. Reclam, jr. [1871-76.] [16º. [Kayser, 1877.] _Collation_-- Pp. 69. _Note_.--No. 406 of the "Universal-Bibliothek." _Hungarian_. A Kalóz./ Irta/ Lord Byron./ Angolból Forditotta/ Kacziány Géza./ Budapest./ Franklin-Társulat/ Magyar Irod. Intézet és Könyvnyomda./ 1892./ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 74. _Italian_. I. Il Corsaro/ Novella/ di/ Lord Byron/ Versione in prosa/ di L.C./ Torino/ Vedova Pomba e figli/ 1819/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. v. + 131. _Note_.--The Front. is a lithograph of the portrait of "Giorgio Byron," by G.H. Harlow. A translation, "Al Tempo," "Time on whose arbitrary wing," pp. [129], 131, follows the Notes to the _Corsair_. The translation includes the four additional lines at the end of Canto I. stanza xi., but not the Note on the "Pirates of Barataria." II. Il Corsaro/ Novella/ di/ Lord Byron/ Versione in prosa/ di L.C./ Seconda edizione riveduta dall' autore./ Milano/ Presso Rodolfo Vismara/ 1820/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 4 + 5-123. _Note_.--For Front., _vide supra_, No. i. III. _Il Corsaro_, novella di lord Byron. Traduzione dall' inglese di Giuseppe Nicolini. Milano, tip. di Giovanni Silvestri. 1842. [16º. [_Bibl. Ital._, June, 1842.] _Collation_-- Pp. xlviii. + 106. IV. _Il Corsaro_, novella Inglese, tradotta da Eritreo Migdonio. Firenze, 1842, tipografia Piatti. [_Bibl. Ital._, July, 1843.] V. Il/ Corsaro/ di/ Lord Byron/ Versione del Cavaliere/ Luigi Serenelli Honorati/ Già Presid. di Corte d'Appello/ Bologna/ Tip. Mareggiani All' Insegna di Dante/ _1797, Via Malcontenti_, 1797/ 1870/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 95. VI. II Corsaro/ Novella di Lord Byron/ Versione/ di/ Carlo Rosnati/ [1879] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 96 + Sonnet, "Santa Rosa," p. [97]. _Russian_. [Cyrillic: Morskoye razboynik". Perevod" B. Olina (B" prozye). S.-Peterburg"], 1827. _Spanish_. I. _El Corsario_. Por el Byron, traducido en castellano por M.... Imp. de David à Paris. A Paris, rue du Temple, N. 69. 1827. [18º. [_Bibl. de le France_, Aug. 22, 1827.] II. _El_/ _Corsario_/ Por/ Lord Byron./ Valencia:/ Imprenta de Cabrerizo./ 1832./ [32º. _Collation_-- Pp. 272. _Swedish_. Corsaren./ Af/ Lord Byron./ [Motto as above.] Stockholm,/ Tryckt Hos Joh. Beckman, 1868./ _Collation_-- Pp. 96. _Note_.--"Ofversattning af Talis Qualis." _The Curse of Minerva_. I. The Curse of Minerva./ London:/ Printed by T. Davison, Lombard Street, Whitefriars./ 1812./ [4º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf, pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-25. The Imprint (_Printed by T. Davison, Lombard Street,/ Whitefriars, London_./) is in the centre of p. [27]. _Note_.--The pages of the Text measure 280 x 220. II. The/ Curse of Minerva./ A Poem,/ By the Right Honourable/ Lord Byron/---- Pallas te hac [_sic_] vulnere, Pallas/ Immolat, et poenam scelerato ex sanguine sumit./ Philadelphia:/ Printed for De-Silver and Co./ 1815./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 24. _Note_.--It is probable that this edition, which closely resembles the later separate issues of the _Corsair_, the _Bride of Abydos_, and the _Giaour_, was printed in London. III. The/ Curse of Minerva./ A Poem./ By the Right Honourable/ Lord Byron./---- Pallas te hac [_sic_] vulnere, Pallas/ Immolat, et poenam scelerato ex sanguine sumit./ Third Edition./ Paris./ Published by Galignani/ at the French, English, Italian, German and Spanish/ Library, No. 18, Rue Vivienne./ 1818./ [12º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf, pp. 1, 2; Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Text, pp. 5-[21]. The Imprint (_Printed by A. Belin_) is at the foot of P. [21]. _Note_ (1).--A Fourth Edition, identical with the Third, was issued by Galignani in 1820. Quérard (1827) records the issue of a Second Edition, published by A. and W. Galignani in 1818. _Note_ (2).--_The Curse of Minerva_ (full text) is included in the fifth volume of the edition of Byron's Works published by Louis and Baudry in 1825 (see W. No. xviii.); in the first volume of the Fifth Edition, in sixteen volumes, published by A. and W. Galignani in 1822 (see W. No. xix.), but was not published, in its entirety, in England till 1831 (see W. No. xliii.). For a bibliographical note on _The Curse of Minerva_, first published as _The Malediction of Minerva, or The Athenian Marble Market_ (111 lines), in the _New Monthly Magazine_, April, 1818, vol. iii. p. 240, and often reprinted in a mutilated form, see _Poetical Works_, 1898, i. 452. _The Deformed Transformed_. The/ Deformed Transformed;/ A Drama. By the/ Right Hon. Lord Byron./ London, 1824:/ Printed for J. and H.L. Hunt,/ Bond Street, and Tavistock Street./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. _London:/ Printed by C.H. Reynell, Broad Street, Golden Square./_), pp. 1, 2; Title, pp. 3, 4; Author's Advt., p. 6; _Dramatis Personæ_, one leaf, pp. 7, 8; Text, pp. 9-88. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 88. _Note_.--A Second and Third Editions, identical with the First, were issued in 1824. II. _The Deformed Transformed_, a drama by the Right hon. lord Byron. Impr. de A. Belin, à Paris, chez A. et W. Galignani, 1824. [12º. [_Bibl. de le France_, March 27, 1824.] _Note_.--_La Metamorphose du Bossu_ forms part (pp. 1-103) of Tome Quinzième of _Oeuvres Complètes_ de Lord Byron. Paris, Ladvocat/ 1824./ (See Transl. of Coll. Ed. No. i.) III. The/ Deformed Transformed./ By/ Lord Byron./ [Illustration, "What do I see?"] New and Complete Edition. --Price one Penny./ London: J. Dicks, 313, Strand; all Booksellers./ [1883, etc.] [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 583-597. _Note_.--The _Deformed Transformed_ is No. 113 of "Dicks' Standard Plays." _Translation_. _Hungarian_. Budapesti/ Árvizkönyv./ etc. Szerkeszti/ B. Eötvös József./ Negyedik Rötet./ Pesten,/ Kiadja Heckenast Gusztáv./ 1840./ [8º. _Collation_-- Lord Byron'/ Elváltoztatott Idomtalanjából/ Töredek,/ Lukács Móricztól./ pp. 111-140. _Don Juan_. _Cantos I., II._ I. Don Juan./ "Difficile est proprie communia dicere."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Hor. _Epist. ad Pison._/ London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars./ 1819./ [4º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf; Title, one leaf; Second Half-title, pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-227. The Imprint (_London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars./_) is in the centre of p. [228]. _Contents_-- Canto I. p. 3 Notes to Canto I. p. [115] Canto II. p. [119] _Note_ (1).--The following lines and stanzas are omitted: Canto I. stanzas xv,, cxxix. lines 7, 8, cxxx. lines 7, 8, cxxxi. The omissions were first included in the Text in the edition of 1833. (See vol. xv. p. 40.) _Note_ (2).--For the "Dedication" in pamphlet form, _vide post_, p. 304. II. Don Juan./ "Difficile est proprie communia dicere."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Hor. _Epist. ad Pison._/ A New Edition./ London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars./ 1819./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf; Title, one leaf; Second Half-title, pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-227. The Imprint, as above, is in the centre of p. [228]. _Note_.--For omitted lines and stanzas, _vide supra_, No. i. "A New Edition," identical with that of 1819, was issued in 1820. III. Don Juan./ "Difficile est," etc. Hor. _Epist. ad Pison_./ An exact Copy from the Quarto Edition./ London./ Published by J. Onwhyn, No. 4, Catherine-Street./ Strand./ Price Four Shillings./ 1819./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title, pp. 1, 2; Half-title, pp. 3, 4; Text, pp. 5-117. The Imprint (_E. Thomas, Printer, Denmark-Court, Strand_) is at the foot of p. 117. IV. Don Juan./ "Difficile est," etc./ Hor. _Epist. ad Pison._/ London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars./ 1820./ [8º. _Note_.--This edition is identical with the "New Edition" of 1820, but is in smaller type, and the size is crown, not post, octavo. V. Don Juan./ "Difficile," etc./ Hor. _Epist. ad Pison._/ An exact copy from the Quarto Edition./ London:/ Printed for Sherwin and Co. Paternoster Row./ Price Four Shillings./ 1820./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf, pp. 1, 2; Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Text, pp. 5-117. The Imprint (_Sherwin and Co. Printers, Paternoster Row_.) is at the foot of p. 117. VI. Don Juan./ "Difficile est proprie communia dicere."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Hor. _Epist. ad Pison._/ A New Edition./ London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars./ 1822./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. _London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars._/); Title, one leaf, etc., _vide supra_, No. ii. _Note_.--The "New Edition" of 1822, with the exception of the first Half-title, is identical with the "New Edition" of 1819. _Cantos III., IV., V._ I. Don Juan,/ Cantos III, IV, and V./ "Difficile est," etc./ Hor. _Epist. ad Pison_./ London: Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars./ 1821./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf; Title, one leaf; Second Half-title, pp. 1,2; Text, pp. 3-218. The Imprint, as above, is in the centre of p. [220]. _Contents_-- Canto III. p. 3 Notes to Canto III. p. 65 Canto IV. p. 71 Notes to Canto IV. p. 131 Canto V. p. 135 Notes to Canto V. p. 215 _Note_.--Canto V. stanza lxi. is omitted. This edition of Cantos III., IV., V. was issued in post and in crown octavo. II. Don Juan./ "Difficile est," etc./ Hor. _Epist. ad Pison_./ Cantos III. IV. and V./ London:/ Printed for Sherwin and Co. Paternoster Row./ Price Four Shillings./ 1821./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title, pp. 3, 4; Text, pp. 5-114. The Imprint (_Printed by Sherwin and Co./ Paternoster-Row./_) is at the foot of p. 114. III. Don Juan./ Cantos III, IV, and V./ "Difficile est," etc. Hor. _Epist. ad Pison._/ Fifth Edition,/ Revised and Corrected./ London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars./ 1822./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf; Title, one leaf; Second Half-title, pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-222. The Imprint (_London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_) is in the centre of p. [224]. _Note_.--The additional matter consists of the citations and corrections of ten of Bacon's apophthegms, and a defence of the literary merits of Voltaire, pp. 217-222, which was omitted from the First Edition (see letter to Murray, August 21, 1821, _Letters_, 1901, v. 351). _Cantos I.-V._ I. Don Juan./ A/ Poem,/ By/ Lord Byron./ London./ Printed & Sold by W. Benbow./ At the Lord Byron's Head./ 9, Castle Street, Leicester Square./ 1822./ [12º. _Collation_-- [Cantos I.-V.], pp. 214 + Notes to Canto First, etc., pp. [215]-[220]. The Imprint (_Sudbury, Printer, High Holborn_) is at the foot of p. [220]. II. Don Juan./ "Difficile est," etc./ Hor. _Epist. ad Pison._/ With/ A Preface,/ By a Clergyman./ London:/ Printed by and for Hodgson & Co.,/ 10, Newgate Street./ 1822./ [12º. _Collation_-- Half-title, pp. i., ii.; Title, pp. iii., iv.; Publisher's Preface, pp. v.-x.; Text, pp. 3-226. The Imprint (_Printed by Hodgson and Co. 10, Newgate Street, London_.) is at the foot of p. 226. _Note_.--The Front. is a lithograph of "Lord Byron." This edition was reissued in 1823 with another Front., a lithograph of "Lord Byron," after the portrait by G. Harlow. III. Don Juan./ In Five Cantos./ A New Edition, with Notes./ [Title-vignette,? Newstead Abbey.] And/ Three Engravings after Corbould./ London:/ Printed by and for Peter Griffin,/ Tabernacle Walk,/ and sold by all Booksellers in Town and Country./ [1823.] [12º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf; Title (R. _Arliss. Typ. London_); Second Half-title, with motto, "Difficile est," etc./ Hor./; Cont.; Text [Cantos I.-V.], pp. 1-180. _Note_.--A paper cover with ornamental border bears the date MDCCCXXIII. IV. Don Juan./ "Difficile est," etc./ Hor. Epist. ad Pison./ A Correct Copy from the original edition./ London:/ Printed by G. Smeeton, St. Martin's Church Yard,/ Charing Cross./ [1826?] [8º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf, pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-215 + Notes to Canto I., etc., pp. [217]-[228]. The Imprint (_Printed by G. Smeeton, St. Martin's Church Yard_.) is at the foot of p. [228]. _Note_.--There is an illustrated Title (Don Juan/ Cantos 1 to 5/ London./ Printed by G. Smeeton St. Martins Church Yard./) with Title-vignette, head of Lord Byron encircled with bay leaves, and six coloured illustrations by I.R. Cruikshank. _Cantos VI., VII, VIII._ I. Don Juan./ Cantos VI.--VII.--And VIII./ "Dost thou think because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more/ Cakes and Ale?"--"Yes, by St. Anne; and Ginger shall be hot i' the/ mouth too!"--_Twelfth Night, or What you Will._/ Shakespeare./ London, 1823:/ Printed for John Hunt,/ 38, Tavistock Street, Covent Garden, And/ 22, Old Bond Street./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title (R. London:/ _Printed by C.H. Reynell, Broad Street, Golden Square._/), pp. i., ii.; Preface to Cantos VI.--VII.--and VIII., pp. [iii.]-vii.; Second Half-title, one leaf; Text, pp. 1-184; "Publications by John Hunt ... July, 1823," pp. [185], [186]. _Note_.--Notes to Canto VIII. are on pp. [183], 184. This edition was reissued in 1825--Printed for Hunt and Clarke,/ Tavistock Street, Covent Garden./ The pagination, etc., is identical with that of the edition of 1823. The Imprint (_London:/ Printed by C.H. Reynell, Broad Street, Golden Square._/) is on p. [186]. II. Don Juan./ Cantos VI.--VII.--VIII./ "Dost thou think," etc. [Motto, four lines]./ London: Printed and Published by W. Dugdale, 19, Tower Street, Seven Dials./ 1823./ [12º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf, pp. i., ii.; Preface, pp. iii., iv.; Text, pp. 1-221 + Notes to Cantos IX. X. XI., pp. [223], [224]. The Imprint (_Benbow, Printer, 9, Castle-Street, Leicester-square, London._) is at the foot of p. [224]. _Note_.--This edition includes Cantos IX., X., XI. III. Don Juan./ Cantos VI.--VII.--VIII./ "Dost thou think," etc. [Motto, four lines]./ London: 1823./ Printed for John Hunt, 22, Old Bond-Street, and 38, Tavistock-/ Street, Covent Garden./ [12º. _Collation_-- Title (R. _London:/ Printed by C.H. Reynell, Broad Street, Golden Square._/), pp. i., ii.; Preface, pp. iii.-vi.; Text, pp. 7-97. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 97. _Cantos IX., X., XI._ I. Don Juan./ Cantos IX.--X.--And XI./ "Dost thou think because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more/ Cakes and Ale?"--"Yes, by St. Anne; and Ginger shall be hot i' the/ mouth too!"--_Twelfth Night_, or What you Will./ Shakspeare./ London, 1823:/ Printed for John Hunt,/ 38, Tavistock Street, Covent Garden, And/ 22, Old Bond Street./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf, pp. 1, 2; Half-title, pp. 3, 4; Text, pp. 5-151. The Imprint (_London;/ Printed by C.H. Reynell, Broad Street, Golden Square._/) is in the centre of p. [152]. _Note_ (1).--The Notes to Canto IX. are on pp. [49], 50; the Notes to Canto X. on pp. [97]-99; and the Notes to Canto XI. on pp. [149]-151. Canto XI. stanza lvii. lines 5-8 and stanza lviii. are omitted. _Note_ (2).--The motto is here given in full; and note "Shakspeare," not "Shakespeare," as before. II. Don Juan./ Cantos IX.--X.--XI./ "Dost thou think," etc. [Motto, four lines]./ Shakespeare./ London, 1823:/ Printed for John Hunt, 38, Tavistock Street, Covent/ Garden; and 22, Old Bond Street./ [12º. _Collation_-- Title (R. _Printed by G.H. Reynell,/ 45, Broad-Street, Golden-Square_,/), pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-72. _Cantos XII., XIII., XIV._ I. Don Juan./ Cantos XII.--XIII.--And XIV./ [Motto as above, three lines.] Shakspeare./ London, 1823:/ Printed for John Hunt,/ 38, Tavistock Street, Covent Garden, and/ 22, Old Bond-Street./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title (R. _London./ Printed by C.H. Reynell, Broad Street, Golden Square./_), pp. 1, 2; Half-title, pp. 3, 4; Text, pp. 5-168. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 168. _Note_.--The Notes to Canto XII. are on pp. [51], 52; the Notes to Canto XIII. on pp. [111], 112; and the Notes to Canto XIV. on pp. [167], 168. II. Don Juan./ Cantos XII.--XIII.--XIV./ "Dost thou think," etc. [Motto, four lines]./ London, 1823:/ Printed for John Hunt, 38, Tavistock Street, Covent/ Garden: and 22, Old Bond-Street./ [12º. _Collation_-- Title (R. _Printed by G.H. Reynell,/ 45, Broad-Street, Golden-Square./_), pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-83 + six pages of "Publications by John Hunt," dated December, 1823. This edition is bound in a paper cover with ornamental border--Don Juan./ Cantos/ XII. XIII. XIV./ Price One Shilling./ III. Don Juan./ Cantos XII.--XIII.--XIV./ "Dost thou think," etc. [Motto, four lines (Shakspeare)]./ London:/ Printed for the Booksellers./ 1823./ [12º. _Collation_-- Title (R. _Sudbury, Printer, 252, High Holburn_.), pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-83. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 83. IV. Don Juan,/ Cantos XII, XIII, XIV./ "Dost thou think," etc. [Motto, four lines (Shakespeare)]./ Paris:/ Published by A. and W. Galignani,/ at the French, English, Italian, German, and Spanish Library,/ No. 18, Rue Vivienne./ 1824./ [12º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. _Paris: Printed by A. Belin_.); Title, one leaf; Half-title, with Motto, pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-162 + Notes to Canto XIV., pp. [163], [164]. _Cantos XV., XVI._ I. Don Juan./ Cantos XV. And XVI./ [Motto as above, three lines.] Shakspeare./ London, 1824:/ Printed for John and H.L. Hunt,/ Tavistock Street, Covent Garden. [8º. _Collation_-- Title (R. Imprint as above), pp. 1, 2; Half-title, pp. 3, 4; Text, pp. 5-125; [Works] Published by John and H.L. Hunt, ... March, 1824, pp. [131], [132]. The Imprint, as above, is in the centre of p. [130]. _Note_.--The Notes to Canto XV. are on pp. [55]-57; the Notes to Canto XVI. on pp. [127]-129. The following note is on p. [126]: ["The errors of the press in this Canto,--if there be any,--are not to be attributed to the Author, as he was deprived of the opportunity of correcting the proof-sheets."] II. Don Juan./ Cantos XV. and XVI./ "Dost thou think," etc. [Motto, three lines]. Shakspeare./ London, 1824:/ Printed for John and H.L. Hunt,/ Tavistock Street, Covent Garden./ [12º. _Collation_-- Title (R. _London:/ Printed by C.H. Reynell, Broad Street, Golden Square./_), pp. 1, 2; Half-title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Text, pp. 5-130. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 130. III. Don Juan./ Cantos XV. and XVI./ "Dost thou think," etc. [Motto, four lines]./ Shakspeare./ London:/ Printed for the Booksellers./ 1824./ [12º. _Collation_ Title (R. _Sudbury, Printer, 252, High Holborn_.), pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-62. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 62. IV. Don Juan./ Cantos XV. and XVI./ "Dost thou think," etc. [Motto, three lines]./ Shakspeare./ London, 1824:/ Printed for John Hunt, 38, Tavistock-Street, Covent/ Garden; and 22, Old Bond-Street./ [12º. _Collation_-- Title (R. _Printed by G.H. Reynell/ 45, Broad-Street, Golden-Square./_), pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-62. _Note_.--The Title-page and setting of the Notes, and the quality of the paper of this edition differ from that of the preceding, but the text appears to have been set up from the same type. V. Don Juan,/ Cantos XV, XVI./ "Dost thou think," etc. [Motto, four lines]./ Paris: Published by A. and W. Galignani,/ At the French, English, Italian, German, and Spanish Library,/ No. 18, Rue Vivienne./ 1824./ [12º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. _Paris: Printed by A. Belin_.); Title, one page; Second Half-title, with Motto, pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-125. _Full Text_. I. Don Juan./ By/ Lord Byron./ Cantos I. To VI./ "Difficile est proprie communia dicere."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Hor./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II.] London: Printed for the Booksellers./ MDCCCXXVI./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: General Title (The/ Works/ of/ Lord Byron./ Vol. XII./ London:/ Printed for the Booksellers./ 1826); Title (R. _Thomas White, Printer,/ Johnson's Court./_); Text, pp. 1-353. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. [354]. Vol. II.: General Title (_The/ Works_,/ etc. Vol. XIII./ etc.); Title (Don Juan./ By/ Lord Byron./ Cantos VII. To XVI./ "Dost thou think," etc. [Motto, three lines]./ Shakspeare./ Vol. II., etc.) (R. Imprint as above); Half-title, pp. 1, 2; Text, PP. 3-398. II. Don Juan:/ In/ Sixteen Cantos./ By Lord Byron./ "Difficile est proprie communia dicere."https://www.gutenberg.org/ _Hor. Epist. ad Pison._/ Complete in one volume./ London:/ Printed for William Clark,/ 60, Paternoster-Row./ 1826./ [16º. _Collation_-- Title (R. _W. Wilson, Printer,/ 57, Skinner-Street, London./_), pp. i., ii.; Biographical Notice, pp. iii.-xii.; Text, pp. 1-432. The Imprint (_W. Wilson, Printer, 57, Skinner-Street, London_.) is at the foot of p. 452. III. Don Juan:/ In/ Sixteen Cantos./ By the/ Right Hon. Lord Byron./ Difficile est proprie communia dicere./ Hor. Epist. ad Pison./ Complete in one volume./ With a short Biographical Memoir of the/ Author./ [Title-vignette, the Royal Arms.] London:/ Printed for T. and J. Allman,/ Great Queen-Street, Lincoln's Inn Fields./ 1827./ [16º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf; Title (R. _Doncaster:/ Printed by C. and J. White, Baxter-Gate./_), pp. i., ii.; Biographical Memoir, pp. iii.-ix.; Text, pp. 1-537. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 537. _Note_.--The Front. (dated 1828) is a portrait of Lord Byron by T. Phillips, R.A., engraved by W. Wise. IV. Don Juan./ "Difficile est proprie communia dicere."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Hor. _Epist. ad Pison._/ In Two Volumes./ Vol. I./ London:/ Thomas Davison, Whitefriars./ 1828./ [8º. Don Juan./ "Dost thou think, because thou art virtuous, there shall be/ no more cakes and ale?--Yes, by St. Anne; and ginger/ shall be hot i' the mouth too!"--_Twelfth Night; or What/ you Will./_ Shakspeare./ In Two Volumes. Vol. II./ London:/ Thomas Davison, Whitefriars./ 1828./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: Half-title, one leaf; Title, one leaf; Text, pp. 1-343. The Imprint (_London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars./_) is in the centre of p. [344]. Vol. II.: Half-title, one leaf; Title, one leaf; Text, pp. 1-371. The Imprint, as above, is in the centre of p. [372]. _Note_.--The Front. to Vol. I. is "Don Juan, C. ii. St. 89," drawn by R. Westall, R.A., and engraved by E. Finden; the Front. to Vol. II. is "Don Juan, Canto II. St. 144," by the same artist and engraver. V. Don Juan./ By/ Lord Byron./ Cantos I. To VI./ "Difficile est proprie communia dicere."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Hor./ Vol. I./ London:/ Printed for the Booksellers./ 1828./ [8º. Don Juan./ By/ Lord Byron./ Cantos VII. To XVI./ "Dost thou think," etc. [Motto, three lines]./ Shakespeare./ Vol. II./ London: Printed for the Booksellers./ 1828./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: Half-title, one leaf; Title (R. _Hamblin, Printer_, 63, _Upper Thames Street_.); Text, pp. 1-351. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. [352]. Vol. II.: Half-title, one leaf; Title (R. Imprint as above); Second Half-title, one leaf, pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-392. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 392. VI. _Don Juan in 16 Cantos_. Campe's Edition. Nuremberg and New York, Campe and Co. 1832. [12º. [Kayser, 1834.] VII. Don Juan,/ In/ Sixteen Cantos,/ With Notes;/ By Lord Byron./ "Difficile est," etc./ Horace./ "Dost thou think," etc. [Motto, three lines. "Shaks."]/ London: Printed for Scott and Webster,/ 36, Charter-House Square./ 1833./ [12º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf, pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-359. The Imprint (_C. Morris, Printer, 20, Sydney Grove, Sydney St._) is at the foot of p. 359. _Note_.--The Front. is "Don Juan and Julia," by H. Corbould, engraved by C. Heath. The Title-vignette of the illustrated Title (Don Juan:/ Complete./ By Lord Byron./ London:/ Engraved for the English Classics,/ Published by Scott & Webster./) is from a drawing by H. Corbould, engraved by C. Heath. VIII. Don Juan,/ In/ Sixteen Cantos,/ With Notes;/ By Lord Byron./ "Difficile est," etc./ Horace./ "Dost thou think," etc. [Motto, three lines. "Shaks."]./ London/ Printed for the Booksellers. 1835./ [12º. _Collation_-- _Vide supra_, No. vii. _Note_.--The Front. and illustrated Title are omitted. IX. Don Juan./ By/ Lord Byron./ In Two Volumes./ Vol. I./ [Vol. II.] London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1837./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. 376. The Imprint (_London_:/ Printed by _A. Spottiswoode,/ New-Street-Square_./) is at the foot of p. 376. Vol. II.: pp. 395. The Imprint, as above, is in the centre of p. [396]. _Note_.--The Title-vignette of illustrated Title of Vol. I. is "Cape Colonna Sunium," engraved by E. Finden from a drawing by T. Helpman. The Title-vignette of illustrated Title of Vol. II. is "The Brig of Balgownie near Aberdeen," engraved by E. Finden from a drawing by G. Bulmer. The vols. are bound in green cloth, with coat-of-arms in gold. X. _Don Juan_. Mannheim, Hofmann. 1838. [16º. [Kayser, 1841.] XI. Don Juan:/ In/ Sixteen Cantos./ By/ Lord Byron./ "Difficile est," etc./ _Hor. Epist. ad Pison._/ London: H.G. Bohn, York Street, Covent Garden./ 1849./ [12º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf, pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-438. _Note_.--The Front. is "The Siesta of Haidée and Juan." The Title-vignette on illustrated Title (Don Juan,/ etc. London. MDCCCXLVI./ (_sic_)) is Newstead Abbey from the Lake. XII. Don Juan/ By Lord Byron/ Complete Edition with Notes/ "Dost thou think," etc. [Motto, three lines]/ London and New York/ George Routledge and Sons/ [1874] [16º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf, pp. 1, 2; Title (R. _Charles Dickens and Evans,/ Crystal Palace Press_./), pp. 3, 4; Text, pp. 5-431. The Imprint, as above, is in the centre of p. [432]. XIII. Don Juan./ By/ Lord Byron./ "Difficile est," etc./ "Dost thou think," etc. [Motto, three lines (Shakespeare)]./ London: Chatto & Windus, Piccadilly./ 1875./ [16º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf; Title, one leaf; List of Cantos, pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-359. _Note_.--Part of "The Golden Library." XIV. Don Juan/ By/ Lord Byron/ "Difficile est," etc./ Complete Edition, with Notes/ London/ George Routledge and Sons/ Broadway, Ludgate Hill/ New York: 9 Lafayette Place/ 1886/ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf; Title (R. Advt. of Routledge's Large Type Three-Volume Classics.); Text, pp. 1-476. The Imprint (_R. Clay and Sons, London and Bungay_.) is at the foot of p. 476. _Note_.--The Front. is "Don Juan," from Canto IV. stanza xvii. The same issue without the Front. forms part of Routledge's "Excelsior Series." _Translations of Don Juan_. _Danish_. I. Don Juan.... Metrisk bearbeidet efter den engelske Original af H. Schou. 1. Hefte Fredericia. 1854. [4º. _Collation_-- Pp. 16. _Note_.--No more published. Without Title-page; the above Title appears on the wrapper. II. Byron: Don Juan./ Oversat Paa Dansk/ Af/ Holger Drachmann./ Med Indledningsdigt Af Oversaetteren./ KjøBenHavn./ Forlagt Af J.H. Schubothes Boghandel./ Groebes Bogtrykkeri./ 1880./ [8º. _Note_.--The translation was issued in parts. The first volume, containing Cantos I.-VI. pp. 1-437, was completed in 1882. A second volume (1890-1902) contains Cantos VII.-XVI. pp. 1-465. _French_. I. Don Juan, poeme héroï-comique en 16 chants, traduit et précédé de la vie de Lord Byron [par A.P.] avec notes et commentaires. Tomes i. et ii. Deux Volumes. Impr. de P. Renouard à Paris. A Paris, rue Poupée, n. 16. 1827. [Tome III. was issued Sept. 15.] [18º. [_Bibl. de la France_, June 2, 1827.] II. _Don Juan_. Traduit en vers français. 2 vol. Paris, _Librairie centrale_. 1866. [12º. [Lorenz, 1876.] III. Paul Lehodey./ Don Juan/ de/ Lord Byron,/ Traduction nouvelle, précédée d'une préface/ de M. Legouvé,/ de l'Académie française./ Paris,/ DeGorge-Cadot, libraire-éditeur,/ 37, rue Serpente./ [1869.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xi. + 450 + Table des Matières, p. [451]. IV. _Don Juan_. Traduit en vers français par Adolphe Fauvel. Troisiéme Édition, entièrement revue et corrigée, 1878. Paris, Lemerre. [8º. [Lorenz, 1886.] _Note_.--La I^re^ édition de cette traduction est de 1866, la 2^e de 1868. _German_. I. _Don Juan, aus d. Engl._ Im Versmass des Originals übersetzt von Ad. v. Marées. Essen, Bädeker. 1839. [12º. [Kayser, 1841.] II. Byron's/ Don Juan/ übersetzt/ von/ Otto Gildemeister./ "Difficile est proprie communia dicere."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Horatius./ "Vermeinst du, weil du tugendhaft," etc. [Motto, six lines]./ Shakspeare./ Bremen./ Druck und Verlag von Carl Schünemann./ 1845./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. 314. Vol. II.: pp. 276. III. Byron's/ Don Juan/ von/ Adolf Böttger./ Diamantausgabe./ Leipzig,/ Verlag von Otto Wigand./ 1849./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 413. _Note_.--The Front. is "Haidie." This edition was reissued in 1858. IV. Byron's/ Don Juan./ Deutsch/ von/ Wilhelm Schäffer./ Erster Theil./ Erster und Zweiter Gesang./ Hildburghausen./ Verlag des Bibliographischen Instituts./ 1867./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. 124. Vol. II. (Cantos III.-VI.): pp. 152. _Note_.--Nos. 47, 48 of the "Bibliothek ausländischer Klassiker." _Italian_. I. _Don Giovanni_: poema, tradotto da Ant. Caccia. Torino, 1853. [16º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] II. _Don Giovanni_ ridotto in 8^a rima da Antonietta Sacchi, Milano, Guglielmini, 1865. [8º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] III. Giorgio Byron/ Aidea/ Episodio del don Giovanni/ Saggio d'una traduzione completa/ di/ Vittorio Betteloni/ Verona/ Stabilimento tipografico di G. Civelli/ 1875/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 119. IV. Il/ Don Juan/ di/ Lord Byron/ Recato/ In altrettante stanze italiane/ dal cavaliere/ Enrico Casali/ Milano/ Natale Battezzati editore/ 1876/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 548 + Indice, p. [549]. V. _Don Giovanni_. Traduzione di Vitt. Betteloni, Milano, Ottino, 1880. [8º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] _Polish_. I. Don [.Z]uan./ Lorda Bajrona./ Pie['s]['n]/ Pierwsza/ prze[/l]o[.z]ona/ przez/ Wiktora z Baworowa. Tarnopol./ Drukiem Józefa Paw[/l]owskiego./ 1863./ Na dochód Rannych./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. v. + 60. _Note_.--This edition was issued during the last Polish insurrection, for the benefit of the wounded. (_Part of Canto II._) II. Ust[e,]p z drugiéj pie['s]ni Don [.Z]uana, prze[/l]o[.z]y[/l] Wiktor z Baworowa. pp. 28. _Druk. "Czasu." Kraków, 1877_. [8º. (_Canto III._) III. _Don [.Z]uan_, pie['s]['n] trzecia, przek[/l]ad Wiktora z Baworowa. pp. 35. _redak. "Przegl[a,]du Polskiego," Druk. "Czasu." Kraków, 1877._ [8º. (_Cantos II., III., IV.--Haida._) IV. _Don [.Z]uan_, pie['s]['n] druga, trzecia i czwarta. Opowiadanie o Haidzie; przek[/l]ad Wiktora z Baworowa. pp. 118. viii. _Tow. Bratniéj Pomocy S[/l]uchaczów Wszechn. Lwowskiéj: Tarnopol, 1879_. [8º. V. _Don [.Z]uan_ ... Przek[/l]ad Edwarda Por[e,]bowicza. _Warszawa_, 1885. _Roumanian_. Don Juan/ dela/ Lord Byron./ Poema epica./ Tradusa de I. Eliade./ [Emblem--Cupid and Mask.]/ _Eliade: Bucuresc[)i]_./ In tipograsia lui Eliade./ 1847./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 183. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Don" Zhuan" ... Perevod" I. Zhandra. S.-Peterburg"], 1846. [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 1-91. II. [Cyrillic: Don" Zhuan" ... Vol"ny[)i] perevod" B. Liubich"-Romanovicha. S.-Peterburg"], [1847.] 2 vols. [12º. III. [Cyrillic: Don" Zhuan" ... Glava pervaia. Perevod" N.A. Markevicha. Le[)i]pzig"], 1862. [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 164. IV. [Cyrillic: Don" Zhuan" ... Perev. D. Minaeva. S.-Peterburg"], 1866, 67. V. [Cyrillic: Don" Zhuan" ... Perevod" P. Kozlova. Izdan[-i]e 2-e s" primiechan[-i]iami P. Ve[)i]nberga. S.-Peterburg"], 1889. 2 vols. VI. [Cyrillic: Don" Zhuan" ... Perevod" A. Kozlova. 2 TOM. S.-Peterburg"], 1892. _Servian_. [Cyrillic: Don-Zhuan" ... Perevod u prozi Okitse Glushcheviya 2 sves. Beograd], 1888. _Spanish_. I. _Don Juan, novela_. Por lord Byron. Deux Volumes. Impr. de Decourchant, à Paris, A Paris rue du Temple, N. 69. 1829. [18º. [_Bibl. de le France_, January 24, 1829.] II. Don Juan/ Poema/ de/ Lord Byron./ Traduccion de/ F. Villalva/ Difficile est proprie communia dicere./ Horacio. _Epistola á los Pisones._/ Tomo 1/ Madrid/ Librería de Leocadio Lopez/13--Calle del Cármen--13/ 1876/ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. xv. + 384 + Indice, p. [385]. Vol. II.: pp. 420 + Indice, p. [421]. _Swedish_. I. Don Juan/ Af/ Lord Byron./ Första Sången./ Med upplysande och utwalde Noter./ Öfversatt ifrån Engelska Originalet./ Stockholm,/ Nordströmska Boktryckeriet,/ 1838./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 80. II. Don Juan/ Af/ Lord Byron./ Förra Delen./ Sångerna I-VI./ Stockholm,/ J.L. Brudins Förlag. [1857.] [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. 349. Vol. II.: [Sednare Delen. Sångerna VII.-XVI.--1862], pp. 384. _Note_.--This edition ("Öfversättning Af Carl. Wilh. Aug. Strandberg") was issued in paper covers with vignette portrait of Lord Byron. _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_. I. The/ British Bards,/ A Satire./ [1808.] [4º. _Collation_-- No Title-page. Pp. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 [pp. 17, 18, 19, 20, proof-sheets of 84 lines:--(line 1), "Health to Immortal Jeffrey! once in name;"--(line 84), "Her son, and vanish'd in a Scottish mist" + p. 21, proof-sheet uniform with pp. 1-16, of 20 lines:--(line 1), "Illustrious Holland! hard would be his lot;"--(line 20), "Reforms each error, and refines the whole"], pp. 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29. Signature C is at the foot of p. 5; D, p. 9; E, p. 13; G, p. 21; H, p. 25. Pp. 1-16 contain 284 lines: (line 1), "Time was, e'er yet in these degenerate days;" (line 284), "Of Jefferies! monarch of the Scourge and, chain." (Lines 281-284 are erased.) Pp. 19-29 contain 200 lines: (line 1), "Now to the drama turn, oh! motley sight;" (line 200), "And urge thy bards, to gain a name like thine." The last line of p. 29 is numbered 520, and the date 1808 is subscribed. _Note_.--The page measures 278 X 218. The water-mark on the last page (p. 29) is 1807; the water-mark on the original wrapper, "J.W. & B.B. 1806." A wrapper of the original sheets is inscribed, "This is the original Satire which L^d B. put into my hands. It was printed in the Country, where he had been staying. He added 110 lines before it was published. R.C.D." (_B.M._, E.G. 2028.) II. English Bards,/ And/ Scotch Reviewers./ A Satire./ I had rather be a kitten, and cry, mew!/ Than one of these same metre ballad-mongers./ Shakspeare./ Such shameless Bards we have; and yet 'tis true,/ There are as mad, abandon'd Critics too./ Pope./ London:/ Printed for James Cawthorn, British Library,/ No. 24, Cockspur Street./ [1809.] [12º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf, pp. i., ii.; Title (R. _T. Collins, Printer, No. 1, Harvey's Buildings, Strand_), pp. iii., iv.; Preface, pp. v., vi.; Text (696 lines), pp. 1-54. The Imprint (_T. Collins, Printer, Harvey's Buildings, Strand_) is at the foot of p. 54. _Note_.--The words "Scotch Reviewers" on the Title are in Gothic characters. Facsimile of the Title-page faces p. xiv. of _Poetical Works_, 1898, vol. i. III. English Bards,/ And/ Scotch Reviewers;/ A Satire./ By/ Lord Byron./ I had rather be a kitten, and cry, mew!/ Than one of these same metre ballad-mongers./ Shakspeare./ Such shameless Bards we have; and yet 'tis true,/ There are as mad, abandon'd Critics too./ Pope./ Second Edition,/ With/ Considerable Additions and Alterations./ London:/ Printed for James Cawthorn, British Library, No. 24,/ Cockspur Street./ 1809./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf, pp. i., ii.; Title (R. _Printed by Deans & Co. Hart-Streeet, Covent Garden_./), pp. iii., iv.; Preface to the Second Edition, pp. v.-vii.; Text (1050 lines), pp. 1-82; Postscript, pp. 83-85. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 85. The Advt. (_In the Press,/ And speedily will be published_,/ HENRY COUNT DE KOLINSKY, a Polish Tale./) is in the centre of p. [86]. _Note_.--The words "A Satire" on the Title, and the words "Scotch Reviewers" on the Half-title, are in Gothic characters. IV. English Bards,/ And/ Scotch Reviewers;/ A Satire./ By/ Lord Byron./ I had rather be a kitten, and cry, mew!/ Than one of these same metre ballad-mongers./ Shakspeare./ Such shameless Bards we have; and yet 'tis true,/ There are as mad, abandon'd Critics too./ Pope./ Third Edition./ London:/ Printed for James Cawthorn, British Library, No. 24,/ Cockspur Street./ 1810./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf, pp. i., ii.; Title (R. Printed by _T. Collins, Harvey's Buildings, Strand, London_.), pp. iii., iv.; Preface to the Third Edition, pp. v.-vii.; Text (1050 lines), pp. 1-82; Postscript, pp. 83-85 + Advt. of "Books Published by James Cawthorn," etc., pp. [86]-[88]. The Imprint (_Printed by T. Collins, No. 1, Harvey's Buildings, Strand, London_.) is at the foot of p.[88]. _Note_.--The Advt. of "The British Circulating Library, 24 Cockspur Street," etc., is dated March 30, 1810. The words "A Satire" and "London" on the Title, and the words "English Bards" on Half-title, are in Gothic characters. V. English Bards,/ And/ Scotch Reviewers;/ A Satire./ By/ Lord Byron./ I had rather be a kitten, and cry, mew!/ Than one of these same metre ballad-mongers./ Shakspeare./ Such shameless Bards we have; and yet 'tis true,/ There are as mad, abandon'd Critics too./ Pope./ Fourth Edition./ London:/ Printed for James Cawthorn, British Library, No. 24,/ Cockspur Street./ 1810./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf, pp. i., ii.; Title (R._Printed by T. Collins, Harvey's Buildings, Strand, London_.), pp. iii., iv.; Preface to the Third Edition, pp. v.-vii.; Text (1050 lines), pp. 1-82; Postscript, pp. 83-85 + "Books Published by James Cawthorn," etc., pp.[86]-[88]. The Imprint (_Printed by T. Collins, No. 1, Harvey's Buildings, Strand, London_) is at the foot of p.[88]. _Note_.--The Advt. of the "British Circulating Library, 24, Cockspur Street," etc., is dated March 30, 1810. The words "Satire" and "London" on the Title, and the words "English Bards" on the Half-title, are in Gothic characters. VI. English Bards,/ And/ Scotch Reviewers;/ A Satire./ By/ Lord Byron./ I had rather be a kitten, and cry, mew!/ Than one of these same metre ballad-mongers./ _Shakespeare_/ Such shameless Bards we have; and yet 'tis true,/ There are as mad, abandon'd Critics too./ Pope./ Fourth Edition./ London:/ Printed for James Cawthorn, British Library, No. 24,/ Cockspur Street; and Sharpe and Hailes, Piccadilly./ 1811./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf, pp. i., ii.; Title (R. _Printed by Cox, Son, and Baylis, Gt. Queen Street, London_.), pp. iii., iv.; Preface, pp. v.-vii.; Text (1052 lines), pp. 1-82; Postscript, pp. 83-85 + "Books published by James Cawthorn," etc., pp. [87], [88]. The Imprint (_Printed by Cox, Son, and Baylis, Great Queen Street, Lincoln's-Inn-Fields_./) is at the foot of p. 85. _Note_.--On the Title-page of another copy of this edition there is a period instead of a comma after "James Cawthorn." The word "Satire" on the Title, and the words "Scotch Reviewers" on the Half-title, are in Gothic characters. VII. [Fifth Edition.] [8º. [For Title-page, _vide supra_, Fourth Edition, 1811, No. vi. No special Title-page for a Fifth Edition was printed.] _Collation_-- Text, pp. 1-83. [Signature B, p. [1]; C, p. 17; D, p. 33; E, p. 49; F, p. 65; G, p. 81.] There is no Imprint on pp. [1], 83, or on p. [84]. The Text numbers 1070 lines. _Note_ (1).--The Half-title prefixed to the Title-page of the Fourth Edition of 1811, which precedes the Museum copy of the Fifth Edition, bears the MS. signature, "R.C. Dallas," and a blank leaf the following note: "This is one of the very few copies preserved of the suppressed edition, which would have been the Fifth. No Title-page was printed--the one prefixed was taken from the preceding edition." _Note_ (2)--Mr. S. Leicester Warren (Lord de Tabley) records the following MS. notes inscribed in a copy of the Fifth Edition, which had formerly belonged to James Boswell, jun., and was then in the possession of Mr. J.R.P. Kirby, of Bloomsbury Street:-- A. A note on the abortive duel between Jeffrey and Moore is dated November 4, 1811. B. A note on the fly-leaf in the handwriting of James Boswell, jun.-- "This copy purports on the title-page to be the fourth edition, but is in truth the fifth. Having pointed out to Murray, the bookseller, a variation between the copy of the fifth edition and this, he borrowed it from me, that he might show it to Lord Byron to have the circumstance explained; that his lordship told him he had printed the fifth edition, but, before its publication, having repented of the work altogether, he determined to destroy the whole impression. But the printer, as he observed, must have retained at least this one copy, and, by putting a false title-page, had sold it as the fourth edition," etc.--_Notes and Queries_, 1887, Series V. vol. vii. pp. 203, 204. Mr. Murray's copy of the Fifth Edition contains, on the fly-leaves at the beginning of the volume, MS. versions of (1) _The Curse of Minerva_, pp. [i.]-[xi.]; (2) The Answer to Fitzgerald's Epigram, written at the "Alfred," on _English Bards, etc._, p. [xv.]; and on p. xvi. the following MS. Title-page:-- English Bards/ and Scotch Reviewers; a/ Satire/ By Lord Byron./ I had rather be a kitten, and cry, mew!/ Than one of these same metre ballad-mongers./ Shakspere./ Such shameless Bards we have; and yet 'tis true,/ There are as mad, abandon'd critics too./ Pope./ Fifth Edition,/ Unpublished; with considerable additions./ London:/ Printed for James Cawthorne,/ Cockspur Street./ 1812./ At the end of the volume a MS. version of "Lines on the Removing Lady Jersey's Portrait from the Gallery of Beauties," is on pp. [85], [86], and a MS. version of "On a Recent Discovery, 1813," on p. [89]. P. xiv. is headed by the following MS. note: "Lord Byron has two copies of this work, R.C. Dallas, Esq., has likewise two copies, and Mr. Leigh Hunt one." VIII. _English Bards, etc.; a Satire_. 1st Amer. from 3rd London Ed. Philadelphia. 1811. [8º. [Cat. of Boston Athenæum Library, 1874.] IX. _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers; A Satire_. By Lord Byron. Charleston: Moxford, Wellington & Co., 1811. [8º. X. _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_. Boston. 1814. [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 72. XI. English Bards/ And/ Scotch Reviewers;/ A Satire./ By Lord Byron./ From the last London Edition./ I had rather be a kitten, and cry mew!/ Than one of these same metre ballad-mongers./ Shakspeare./ Such shameless bards we have; and yet 'tis true/ There are as mad, abandon'd critics too./ Pope./ New York:/ Published by A.T. Goodrich & Co., 124 Broad-/Way, Corner of Cedar-Street./ _I. Seymour, print._/ 1817;./ [12º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf, pp. i., ii.; Preface to the Third Edition, pp. iii., iv.; Text, pp. 5-54. _Note_.--The text numbers 1050 lines, but lacks the Postscript. The misprint "ingenious" for "ingenuous youth," in footnote (p. 7) to line 56, which belongs to the Fourth Edition of 1811, and was corrected by Byron for the Fifth Edition, occurs in this edition. XII. English Bards, And/ Scotch Reviewers;/ A Satire./ Ode to the Land of the Gaul.--Sketch/ From Private Life.--Windsor/ Poetics, Etc./ By/ The Right Honorable/ Lord Byron./ Second Edition./ Paris:/ Published by Galignani/ At the French, English, Italian, German, and Spanish/ Library, No. 18, Rue Vivienne./ 1818./ [12º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf; Second Half-title, pp. 1, 2; Preface, pp. 3-5; Text, pp. 7-70; Postscript, pp. 71-73; Ode, etc., pp. 75-84. _Note_.--The Text numbers 1052 lines. This edition follows the Fourth Edition of 1811. The misprint "ingenious" for "ingenuous" is in a footnote, p. 10. A Third Edition, identical with the Second, was issued in 1819. XIII. English Bards,/ And/ Scotch Reviewers;/ A Satire./ With Notes and Preface,/ By/ Lord Byron./ Brussels,/ Published at the English Repository of Arts, No. 602,/ Rue de L'Impératrice./ Printed by Demanet, Rue des Bogards./ 1819./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf; Half-title with Mottoes, pp. 1, 2; Preface, pp. [3]-[5]; Text, pp. 7-62; Postscript, pp. 63, 64. _Note_.--The Front. is "Lord Byron," "_lith. par Toland_." The Text numbers 1052 lines. This edition follows the Fourth Edition of 1811. The misprint "ingenious" is at the foot of p. 10. XIV. English Bards,/ And/ Scotch Reviewers;/ A Satire./ By/ The Right Honorable/ Lord Byron./ I had rather be a kitten, and cry, mew!/ Than one of these same metre ballad-mongers./ _Shakspeare_./ Such shameless Bards we have; and yet 'tis true,/ There are as mad, abandon'd Critics too./ _Pope_./ Geneva:/ Published by P.G. Ledouble,/ No. 24, Rue de la Cité./ 1820./ [12º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. Advt. of Joseph Forsyth's Remarks on Antiquities, etc., and Imprint, _Printed by Sestié Fils_.); Title, one leaf, pp. 1, 2; Preface, pp. 3-5; Text, pp. 1-66; Postscript, pp. 67, 68. _Note_.--The Text numbers 1052 lines. This edition follows the Fourth Edition of 1811. XV. English Bards,/ and/ Scotch Reviewers./ A Satire./ By Lord Byron./ I had rather be a kitten, and cry, Mew!/ Than one of these same metre ballad-mongers./ _Shakespeare_./ Such shameless Bards we have; and yet, 'tis true,/ There are as mad, abandon'd Critics too./ _Pope_./ London:/ Benbow, Printer and Publisher, Byron's Head,/ Castle-Street, Leicester-Square./ 1823,/ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. v. + [7]-61. The Imprint (_W. Benbow, Printer, Castle-st. Leicester-sq._) is at the foot of p. 61. _Note_.--The Text numbers 1050 lines. This edition follows the Third Edition of 1810. XVI. English Bards/ And/ Scotch Reviewers;/ A Satire./ By Lord Byron./ [Mottoes as above, six lines.] A New Edition,/ With a Life of the Author./ To which is added/ Fare Thee Well, A Poem./ Glasgow:/ Printed by James Starke,/ and sold by All the Booksellers./ 1824./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. xiv. + 15-52 + Fare Thee Well! pp. [53], [54]. _Note_.--The Text numbers 1050 lines, as in the Third Edition. The misprint "ingenious" for "ingenuous" occurs in a footnote to p. 16. XVII. English Bards/ and/ Scotch Reviewers:/ A Satire./ By Lord Byron./ [Mottoes as above, six lines ("Shakspeare").] A New Edition,/ With a life of the Author./ To which is added/ Fare Thee Well, A Poem./ Glasgow:/ Printed for M'Intosh & Co./ And sold by All the Booksellers./ 1825./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. xiv. + 34. _Note_.--The Text numbers 1050 lines. This edition is differently paginated from the preceding, and the Notes are reset (the misprint "ingenious" is corrected), but the Text, Preface, and the "Life of the Author" seem to have been set up from the same type. XVIII. English Bards/ and/ Scotch Reviewers;/ A Satire,/ By Lord Byron./ London:/ Printed and Published by W. Dugdale,/ _23, Russell Court, Drury Lane_./ 1825./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 50. _Note_.--The Text numbers 1050 lines. The Notes are printed after the text, pp. 35-50. In Note 3 the misprint "ingenious" is retained. _The English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_ (Third Edition, of 1050 lines) was included in the _British Satirist_, Glasgow, 1826, 12º, pp. 1-46, and formed part (pp. 139-178) of a collection of Satires, Gilford's _Baviad and Mæviad_, etc., published by J.F. Dove, London, 1827, 12º. The misprint "ingenious" has been corrected in both these issues. XIX. English Bards,/ And/ Scotch Reviewers,/ A Satire./ By/ Lord Byron./ I had rather be a kitten, and cry, mew,/ Than one of these same metre ballad-mongers./ _Shakspeare_./ Such shameless bards we have; and yet, 'tis true,/ There are as mad abandoned critics too. _Pope_./ A New Edition./ London:/ Printed by T. Kay, at the Egyptian Press, 1, Welbeck Street,/ Cavendish Square, For the Booksellers./ 1827./ [8º _Collation_-- Half-title, pp. i., ii.; Title, pp. iii., iv.; Preface, pp. v.-vii.; Text, pp. 1-78; Postscript (_sic_), pp. [79]-80. The Imprint (_Printed by T. Kay, 1, Welbeck Street, Cavendish Square_.) is at the foot of p. 80. _Note_.--The Text follows the Third Edition of 1810. The misprint "ingenious" occurs in a footnote to p. 4. The words "A Satire," "Shakspeare," and "Pope" on the Title-page are in Gothic characters. _Fare Thee Well_. I. _Fare Thee Well_. First Version, consisting of Thirteen Stanzas, dated March 18, 1816. [249 x 190. _Collation_-- Pp. [1]-[3]. II. _Fare Thee Well_! [Printed and distributed, April 4, 1816.] [4º. _Collation_-- Pp. [1]-3. P. [4] is blank. A copy of this pamphlet in the British Museum is marked as "Privately printed for Lord Byron," and measures 237 x 173. The watermark is "J. GREEN, 1815." _Note_.--The Text numbers 60 lines. Lines 1-24 are on p. [1]; lines 25-56 on p. 2; and lines 57-60 on p. 3. In line 28 "may" is printed "['m]ay." _Fare Thee Well_ was first published in _The Champion_, Sunday, April 14, 1816. III. _Fare Thee Well_. Second Version, consisting of Sixty Lines, dated Monday, "April 7, 1816." [250 x 190. _Collation_-- Pp. 1-3. IV. _A Sketch from Private Life_, consisting of 104 lines, dated March 30th, 1816. [250 x 190. _Collation_-- Pp. [1]-4. V. _A Sketch, etc._ Another copy, dated March 30, 1816, and endorsed, "Correct with most particular care, and print off 50 copies, and keep standing. 1816, April 2." VI. _Fare Thee Well_!--A Sketch, etc.--Napoleon's Farewell.--On the Star of the Legion of Honour.--An Ode. By Lord Byron. London: _Printed for Sherwood, Neely and Jones, Paternoster Row_, 1816. [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 27. _Note_.--"Original blue paper cover."--_Catalogue of Rowfant Library_, 1886, p. 146. VII. Fare Thee Well,/ A Poem./ A Sketch/ From Private Life,/ A Poem,/ By Lord Byron./ Bristol:/ Printed for Barry & Son, High-Street./ 1816./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, pp. 1, 2; Title (R. _Barry & Son, Printers_.), pp. 3, 4; Text (_Fare Thee Well_), pp. 5-7; (A Sketch, etc.), pp. 8-12. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 12. The Text is identical with that of the pamphlet. VIII. Fare Thee Well!/ And/ Other Poems./ By Lord Byron./ Edinburgh:/ Printed for John Robertson,/ 132, High Street./ 1816./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf, pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-32. The Imprint (_Walker and Greig, Printers_) is at the foot of p. 32. _Contents_-- Fare Thee Well p. 3 A Sketch p. 7 Napoleon's Farewell p. 13 On the Star of "The Legion of Honour" p. 15 Ode from the French p. 18 Ode ("Oh, shame to thee," etc.) p. 25 Madame Lavalette p. 30 _Note_.--An editorial note (p. 24) states that the Ode "Oh, shame to thee" was first published in the _Morning Chronicle_, July 31, 1815, under the signature "Brutus." "It has been ascribed by many to the Author of the _Pleasures of Hope_." A second note (p. 30) apologizes for the inclusion of "Madame Lavalette" [first published in the _Examiner_, January 21, 1816], which "has appeared in some other Editions of these Poems." _The Giaour._ I. The Giaour,/ A Fragment of/ A Turkish Tale./ By Lord Byron./ "One fatal remembrance--one sorrow that throws/ "Its bleak shade alike o'er our joys and our woes--/ "To which Life nothing brighter nor darker can bring,/ "For which joy hath no balm--and affliction no sting."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Moore./ London:/ _Printed by T. Davison, Whitefriars_,/ For John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1813./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf; Title, one leaf; Dedication, "To Samuel Rogers, Esq.;" Text, pp. 1-41. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard-Street,/ Whitefriars, London_./) is in the centre of p. [42]. _Note_.--The First Edition of the _Giaour_ (June 5, 1813) numbers 685 lines. II. The Giaour,/ A Fragment of/ A Turkish Tale./ By Lord Byron./ "One fatal remembrance--one sorrow that throws/ "Its bleak shade alike o'er our joys and our woes-- / "O'er which Life nothing brighter nor darker can fling,/ "For which joy hath no balm--and affliction no sting." / Moore./ A New Edition, with some Additions./ London:/ _Printed by T. Davison, Whitefriars_,/ For John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1813./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf; Title, one leaf; Dedication as above; Advt., "The tale," etc.; Text, pp. 1-47. The Imprint, as above (No. i.), is in the centre of p. [48]. _Note_.--The Second Edition of the _Giaour_, published at the end of June or the beginning of July, numbers 816 lines. Note the misprints in third line of the motto, "O'er which" for "To which," and "fling" for "bring." The first edition of the Song, _A Selection of the Irish Melodies_, 1807, i. 45, and other editions read "bring." III. The Giaour,/ A Fragment of/ A Turkish Tale./ By Lord Byron./ "One fatal remembrance," etc. [Motto, four lines, as in the Second Edition]./ Moore./ Third Edition,/ With Considerable Additions./ London:/ _Printed by T. Davison, Whitefriars_,/ For John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1813./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. Advt. of "Madame de Stael's Long Suppressed Work" [_De L'Allemagne_]); Title, one leaf; Dedication; Advt., pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-53 + Advt. of "Books Lately Published by John Murray," pp. [54]-[56]. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard Street,/ Whitefriars, London_./) is at the foot of p. [56]. _Note_.--The Text numbers 950 lines. The numbers 5, 10, etc., are printed on the margin. The First and Second Editions are not numbered. IV. The Giaour,/ A Fragment of/ A Turkish Tale./ By Lord Byron./ "One fatal remembrance--one sorrow that throws/ It's bleak shade alike o'er our joys and our woes--/ O'er which Life nothing brighter nor darker can fling,/ For which joy hath no balm--and affliction no sting."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Moore./ From the Third London Edition./ Boston:/ Printed by John Eliot,/ No. 5, Court Street./ 1813. _Collation_-- Pp. 72. _Note_.--The _Giaour_ was also published at Philadelphia in 1813, 53 pp. 24º. V. The Giaour,/ A Fragment of/ A Turkish Tale./ By Lord Byron./ "One fatal remembrance," etc. [Motto, four lines, as in Second Edition]./ Moore./ Fifth Edition,/ With Considerable Additions./ London:/ _Printed by T. Davison, Whitefriars_,/ For John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1813./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf; Title, one leaf; Advt.; Text, pp. 1-66. _Note_.--The Text numbers 1215 lines. The concluding note, "The circumstance," etc., is enlarged (p. 66) by nine lines: "I do not know"--"Hall of Eblis." The Dedication is wanting in the copy of the Fifth Edition in the British Museum. VI. The Giaour,/ etc./ Sixth Edition,/ etc./ 1813./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf; Dedication; Advt.; Text, pp. 1-66. _Note_.--The Text numbers 1215 lines. The Half-title is missing in the Museum copy. VII. The Giaour,/ A Fragment of/ A Turkish Tale./ By Lord Byron./ "One fatal remembrance," etc. [Motto, four lines, as in the First Edition, "bring" for "fling," etc.]./ Moore./ Seventh Edition, With some Additions./ London:/ _Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_,/ For John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1813./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf; Title, one leaf; Dedication; Advt.; Text, pp. 1-75. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard Street_,/ Whitefriars, London./) is in the centre of p. [76]. _Note_.--The Text numbers 1334 lines. The Notes are printed at the end (pp. 65-75) of the volume. VIII. The Giaour,/ etc./ The Ninth Edition,/ etc./ 1814./ [8º. _Collation_-- _Vide supra_, No. vi. _Note_.--The Half-title is missing in the Museum copy. IX. The Giaour,/ etc./ The Tenth Edition,/ etc./ 1814./ [8º. _Collation_-- _Vide supra_, No. vi. _Note_.--Four pages of "Interesting Works Published in February, 1814, By John Murray, Bookseller of the Admiralty, and Board of Longitude," etc., are bound up with the Tenth Edition. X. The Giaour,/ etc./ The Eleventh Edition,/ etc./ 1814./ [8º. _Collation_-- _Vide supra_, No. vi. _Note_.--The Half-title is missing in the Museum copy. XI. The Giaour,/ etc./ The Twelfth Edition./ London:/ Printed for John Murray, Albemarle-Street:/ _By Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_./ 1814./ [8º. _Collation_-- _Vide supra_, No. vi. XII. The Giaour,/ etc./ The Fourteenth Edition./ London:/ Printed for John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1815./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf; Title (R. _T. Davison, Lombard-Street_,/ _Whitefriars, London_,/); Dedication; Advt.; Text, pp. 1-75. The Imprint, as above, is in the centre of p. [76]. _Note_.--Four pages of Advts., dated "Albemarle--Street, London, January, 1818," are bound up with the Fourteenth Edition. XIII. The Giaour;/ A Fragment of/ A Turkish Tale./ [Motto, four lines.] Moore./ London:/ Printed and Published by W. Dugdale,/ _23, Russell Court, Drury Lane_./ 1825./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 51. The Imprint (_W. Dugdale, Printer, 23, Russell Court, Drury Lane_) is at the foot of p. [52]. XIV. The Giaour:/ A/ Fragment of a Turkish Tale./ By/ Lord Byron./ London: John Murray, Albemarle Street./ Sold also by/ Tilt and Bogue, Fleet Street:/ Edinburgh, Oliver and Boyd: Dublin, John Gumming./ 1842./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 67. The Imprint (_London:/ Printed by A. Spottiswoode,/ New-Street-Square_./) is in the centre of p. [68]. XV. The Giaour:/ A Fragment of a Turkish Tale,/ By Lord Byron./ [Motto, four lines.] Moore./ [1844.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 40. The Imprint (_H.G. Clarke and Co., 66, Old Bailey_) is at the foot of p. 40. _Note_.--Part of "Clarke's Home Library." _Translations of The Giaour_. _French_. _Le Giaour_, fragments d'un cante turc, poème traduit de l'anglais de lord Byron, par J.M.H. Bigeon, Paris, Ponthieu, Ledoyen, 1828. [18º. [Quérard, 1846.] _German_. I. _Der Gauer_, Bruchstück einer türkischen Erzählung, nach der 7. englischen Ausgabe im Deutschen metrisch bearbeitet. Berlin, F. Dümmler. 1819. [12º. [_Centralblalt, etc._, 1890, vol. vii. p. 456.] II. _Der Gjaur_. In deutsche Verse übersetzt v. Arthur v. Nordstern. Mit d. engl. Text zur Seite. Leipzig, Göschen. 1820. [8º. [Kayser, 1834.] III. _Der Gjaur_. Bruchstück e. türk. Erzählg. v. Lord Byron. Frei übers. v. Adf. Seubert. Leipzig. 1871-76. [16º. [Kayser, 1877.] _Collation_-- Pp. 48. _Note_.--No. 669 of the _Universal-Bibliothek_. _Italian_. I. _Il Giaurro_, frammento di novella turca; recato dall' ingl. in versi ital. da Pellegrino Rossi. Genova e Parigi, Paschoud, 1817. [12º. [Quérard, 1827.] II. _Il Giaurro_. Traduzione di Andrea Maffei. Milano, Hoepli. 1884. [64º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] _Polish_. I. _Giaur_, u[/l]omki powie['s]ci tureckiéj, poema ... Przeldadania W[/l]adysl. hr. Ostrowskiego. pp. 83. _W drukarni bibliotecznéj; Pu[/l]awy_, 1830. [8º. II. _Giaur_, U[/l]amki powie['s]ci tureckiéj, t[/l]um. Adam Mickiewicz, _Ksiegarnia Katol._: Pary[.z], 1834 [_Wroc[/l]aw_, 1835]. [8º. _Romaic_. I. [Greek: Poiêmata Byrônos / ho Gkiaour / temachion / tourkikou Diêgêmatos / Metaphrasis / Ai)katerinês k. Dosiou / E)kdidetai to Deuteron / HYpo / A)r. K. Dosiou / A)thênêsi / Tupois A)ndreou Koromêla /] / 1873/ [4º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf; Title, one leaf; Translator's Advt.; [Greek: Prologos], pp. [Greek: a'-i']+ Text, pp. 1-69 + [Greek: Paroramata], p. [70]. II. [Greek: Sakellariou Bibliothêkê tou Laou / Poiêmata Burônos / ho Gkiaour / temachion / tourkikou / Diêgêmatos / Metaphrasis / Ai)katerinês k. Dosiou / E)n A)thênais / Tupois kai A)nalômasi P.D. Sakellariou / ] [1898?] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 91. The Imprint ( [Greek: Typographeion P.D. Sakellariou e)n A)thênais]) is in the centre of p. [92]. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Dzhiaur". Otryvki iz" odno[)i] turetsko[)i] poviesti.] "[Cyrillic: Vybor" pzh sochinen[-i][)i] lorda Bairona]" [Cyrillic: M. Kachenvekago.] pp. 107-176. 1821. II. [Cyrillic: Dzhiaur". Otryvki. ... turetsko[)i] poviesti Perevod" N.R.] pp. 31. [Cyrillic: Moskva], 1822. [8º. III. [Cyrillic: Gayur" ... Perevel" E. Mishel".] [In prose.] [Cyrillic: S.-Peterburg"], 1862. [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 49. IV. [Cyrillic: Gayur" ... Perev. razmierom" podlinnika V. Petrov". S.-Peterburg"], 1873. V. [Cyrillic: Gayur" Ba[)i]rona Kryemskie sonety Minkevicha. Perevel" V.A. Petrov" Izdanie 2-oe. S.-Peterburg"], 1874. _Servian_. [Cyrillic: Djaur lorda Bairona. Sroski od Ats. Popovidja.] pp. 67. [Cyrillic: D. Khipts: u Novot-Sadu], 1860. [12º. _Spanish_. _El Giaur ó el infiel_, por lord Byron. Traduccion Castellana. Paris, 1828: Madrid, lib. Europea. [12º. [_Dicc. Gen. de Bibl. Esp_. por D. Dion. Hidalgo, 1862.] _Swedish_. Giaurn,/ Ett. Stycke Af en Turkish Berättelse,/ Af/ Lord Byron./ Öfversättning / Stockholm./ J.L. Brudins Förlag./ 1855./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 80. _Note_.--No. 6 of "Byron's Poetiska Berattelser," translated by Talis-Qualis. _Heaven and Earth_. I. _[Note_.--For the First Edition of _Heaven and Earth_, see _The Liberal_, No. II., pp. 165-206 (London, L. Hunt, 1822).] Heaven and Earth,/ A Mystery;/ Founded on the Following Passage in Genesis,/ Chap. vi./ "And it came to pass ... that the sons of God saw the/ daughters of men that they were fair; and they took them/ wives of all which they chose."https://www.gutenberg.org/ "And woman wailing for her Demon lover."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Coleridge./ London:/ Benbow, Printer and Publisher, 252, High Holborn./ 1824./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 35 + "Benbow's Catalogue of Books," p. [36]. The Imprint (_Benbow, Printer, 9, Castle Street, Leicester Square, London_) is at the foot of p. [36]. II. _Heaven and Earth, a Mystery_, Paris, Galignani, 1823. [12º. [Quérard, 1827.] III. _Heaven and Earth, etc._ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 36. _Note_.--This edition, printed by (?) W. Dugdale in (?) 1825, bears neither Title-page nor Imprint, and is bound up with _The Bride of Abydos_, printed for Thomas Wilson in 1825, and _The Corsair_, printed and published by W. Dugdale in 1825. _Translations of Heaven and Earth_. _French_. Essai/ Sur Le Génie et Le Caractère/ de Lord Byron,/ Par A.P.... T.;/ etc./ Paris./ Ladvocat, Libraire, Palais-Royal,/ Galerie de Bois, No. 195./ 1824/ [12º. _Collation_-- Half-title, Le Ciel/ Et La Terre./ Mystère/ Fondé sur ce Passage de La Genèse:/ (Chap. VI)/: "Et il arriva ... que les fils de Dieu virent que les filles des/ hommes étaient belles; et ils prirent pour femmes/ celles d'entre elles qu'ils choisirent./ "La femme regrettant son dèmon bien-aimé."https://www.gutenberg.org/ (Coleridge.)/ (R. _Personnages_.), pp. [195], [196] + Text, pp. 197-252. _Italian_. _Cielo e terra_: mistero, tradotto da Andrea Maffei. Milano, Gnocchi, 1853. [16º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] _Russian_. [Cyrillic: Nebo i Zemlya. N.V. Gerbel",] "[Cyrillic: Polnoe sobranie stikhotvoreni[)i]]" TOM. I. _Hebrew Melodies_. I. A Selection of/ Hebrew Melodies/ Ancient and Modern/ with appropriate Symphonies and accompaniments/ By/ I: Braham & I: Nathan/ the Poetry written expressly for the work/ By the Right Hon^ble^/ Lord Byron/ ent^d at Sta^rs^ Hall/ [Title-vignette, angel holding crown] 1^st^ Number/ Published and Sold by I: Nathan No. 7 Poland Street Oxford Str^t / and to be had at the principal Music and Booksellers/ Price one Guinea/ [1815] [fol. [The Title-page is enclosed in an ornamental border, and below the words, "_Drawn by Edward Blore_" is the signature "I. Braham;" and below the words, "_Engraved by W. Lowry_," the signature "I. Nathan."] _Collation_-- Part I.: Illuminated Dedication "To Her Royal Highness the Princess Charlotte of Wales," one leaf; Preface, signed "I. Braham, I. Nathan," and dated "London, April, 1815," one leaf; Index to the First Number, one leaf; Music and Words, pp. 1-64. Part II.: Title (A Selection of,/ etc.... By the Right Honorable Lord Byron.)/ [Motto], "The harp the Monarch Minstrel swept," etc., five lines./ See Page 4./ Lord Byron./ 2^nd^ Number, Price 1 Guinea./ Ent^d at Stationers' Hall./ Published and Sold, etc./ _Prickett scrip. et sculp._/ [The Title-vignette is King David playing a harp with angel and tripod, engraved by H. Moses.] The title is signed "I. Nathan." _Collation_-- Title, one leaf; Dedication, as above, one leaf; Index to the Second Number, one leaf; Music and Words, pp. 65-133. _Contents_--Part I.-- She walks, etc. p. 1 The Harp, etc. p. 5 If that high World p. 14 The wild Gazelle p. 19 Oh, weep for those p. 25 On Jordan's Banks p. 29 Jephtha's Daughter p. 36 Oh, snatch'd away p. 41 My Soul is dark p. 44 I saw thee weep p. 49 Thy days are done p. 52 It is the Hour p. 63 Part II.-- Warriors and Chiefs p. 65 We sate down and wept p. 71 Vision of Belshazzar p. 75 Herod's Lament p. 83 Were my Bosom p. 86 The Destruction of Sennacherib p. 91 Thou whose spell p. 97 When Coldness wraps P. 107 Fame, Wisdom, Love p. 111 From the last Hill p. 115 Francisca p. 120 Sun of the Sleepless p. 129 _Note_.--For a reissue, with additions, of this collection, see _Fugitive Pieces and Reminiscences of Lord Byron, etc._, by I. Nathan, 1829, No. xii., p. 254. II. Hebrew Melodies./ By Lord Byron./ London:/ Printed for John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1815./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (Hebrew Melodies. _T. Davison, Lombard-Street,/ Whitefriars, London_./), one leaf; Title, one leaf; Advt.; Cont.; Text (_Hebrew Melodies_), pp. 1-53. _Note_.--The Cont. are identical with the preceding, save that the lines, "Francisca," a variant of _Parisina_ (lines 15-28), are omitted; the lines _From Job_ are inserted pp. 49, 50; and the stanzas "On the Death of Sir Peter Parker" (pp. 51-53) are printed at the end of the volume. III. _Hebrew Melodies_. Boston. 1815. [24º. _Collation_-- Pp. 2 + 43. IV. _Hebrew Melodies_. Philadelphia. 1815. [16º. V. Hebrew Melodies./ By the Right Honourable/ Lord Byron./ London: Printed and Published by W. Dugdale,/ _Green Street, Leicester Square_./ 1823./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 36. The Imprint (_Printed by W. Dugdale, Great Street, Leicester Square_./) is at the foot of p. 36. _Note_.--The lines "It is the Hour" (_Parisina_, 1-14) and "Francisca" (_ibid._, lines 15-28) are omitted. VI. Hebrew Melodies./ By Lord Byron./ London:/ Printed and Published by W. Dugdale,/ _23, Russell Court, Drury Lane_./ 1825./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 22. The Imprint (_Printed by W. Dugdale, 23, Russell Court, Drury Lane_.) is at the foot of p. 22. _Note_.--For Cont., _vide supra_, No. v. _Translations of Hebrew Melodies_. _Bohemian_. _Hebrcjské melodie_. P[vr]elo[vz]ili Jaroslen Vrchlický a J.V. Sládek. _v Praze_, 1890. _Danish_. Lord Byron:/ Jødiske sange./ oversatte/ af/ F. Andresen Halmrast/ Christiania./ Jacob Dybwads forlag./ 1889./ _Collation_-- Pp. 41 + Indhold, pp. [43], [44]. _German_. I. Hebräische Gesänge./ Aus dem Englischen/ des Lord Byron/ von/ Franz Theremin./ Mit beigedrucktem englischen Text./ Berlin./ Verlag von Dunker und Humblot./ 1820./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. viii. + 3-87. II. _Hebräische Gesänge_. Aus d. Engl. übersetzt von Jos. Emn. Hitscher. Mit gegenüberstehendem Originale. Laibach, 1833. [8º. [Kayser, 1841.] III. Germanische/ Melodien./ Theilweise/ frei nach Lord Byron's hebräischen Melodien/ von/ Hugo Oelbermann./ Bonn./ Rheinische Verlags-Anstalt./ 1862./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 49. IV. Lord Byron's/ Hebräische Gesänge./ Aus dem Englischen/ übertragen/ und mit sachlichen Einleitungen und Bemerkungen/ versehen/ von/ Eduard Nickles./ Karlsruhe./ Druck und Verlag von Friedrich Gutsch./ 1863./ _Collation_-- Pp. 105 + Anmerkung, p. 106 + Anhang, pp. 107-112. _Note_.--The English text is printed over against the German. The "Anhang" contains translations of "In the valley," etc., and "They say that hope," etc. V. Hebräischer Gesänge./ Aus d. Engl. übers. von Heinr. Stadelmann. Memmingen. 1866. Hartwig in Comm. [16º. [Kayser, 1871.] _Hebrew_. Hebrew Melodies/ of/ Lord Byron/ Translated by/ Dr. S. Mandelkern./ Leipzig./ 1890./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 45 + Cont. (Hebrew character) (R. Advt. of Hebrew Poems (with vowel points) of Dr. S. Mandelkern), pp. [47], [48]. _Note_.--The Hebrew translation is over against the English text. The Title-page, which is in Hebrew and English, is enclosed in an arabesque border. _Italian_. I. Melodie ebraiche/ di/ Lord G. Byron/ Versione/ di P.P. Parzanese/ Napoli/ dalla tipografia all' insegna di Tasso/ via Concezione a Toledo No. 3./ 1837/ _Collation_-- Pp. 47. _Note_.--Printed on green paper. II. _Le Melodie ebree_, coll' aggiunta di alcuni altri poemetti. Ivrea, 1855. [16º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] _Russian_. [Cyrillic: Evre[)i]skiya merevod" P. Kozlova. S.-Peterburg"], 1860. _Swedish_. Hebreiska Melodier/ af/ Lord Byron./ Öfversatta/ af/ Theodor Lind./ Helsingfors,/ Theodor Sederholms Forlag./ [1862.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 41 + Innehåll, p. [43]. _Fugitive Pieces and Minor Poems_. Fugitive Pieces By/ George Gordon Lord Byron/ A Facsimile Reprint of/ The Suppressed/ Edition of/ 1806/ [Title-vignette, Venus Anadyomene in shell with attendant Cupids.] London/ Printed for Private Circulation/ 1886/ [4º. _Collation_-- Advt. of issue (No. 22 of 100 numbered copies) of--_Printers,/ Chiswick Press, Tooks Court,/ Chancery Lane, London_./ signed (MS.) "Charles Whittingham & Co.," pp. i., ii.; Half-title (BYRON'S FUGITIVE PIECES), pp. iii., iv.; Title, one leaf, pp. v., vi.; Preface (editorial of facsimile), pp. vii.-x. + blank leaf + Half-title (FUGITIVE PIECES), one leaf + Dedication--"To/ Those Friends,/ At/ Whose Request They were printed,/ For whose/ Amusement or Approbation/ They are/ Solely Intended;/ These TRIFLES are respectfully Dedicated,/ by the/ Author."https://www.gutenberg.org/ (R. As these POEMS were never intended to meet the public eye, no apology is necessary for the form in which they now appear. They are printed merely for the perusal of a few friends to whom they are dedicated; who will look upon them with indulgence; and as most of them were composed between the age of 15 and 17, their defects will be pardoned or forgotten, in the youth and inexperience of the WRITER.) + Text, pp. [1]-66; (the Imprint (_Printed by S. and J. Ridge, Newark_.) is at the foot of p. 66) + p. [67] (emblem-heraldic lion with shield and monogram, subscribed with the Imprint, _Chiswick Press:--C. Whittingham and Co., Tooks Court,/ Chancery Lane./_). Contents- On Leaving N...st...d p. [i] To E. p. 3 On the Death of Young Lady, Cousin to the Author and very Dear p. 4 to him To D. p. 5 To... p. 6 To Caroline p. 7 To Maria ---- p. 10 Fragment of School Exercises, From the Prometheus Vinctus of p. 11 Oeschylus(_sic_) Lines in "Letters of an Italian Nun," etc. p. 12 Answer to the above, addresse'd to Miss ---- p. 13 On a change of Masters, At a Great Public School p. 14 Epitaph on a Beloved Friend p. 15 Adrian's Address to his Soul, when dying p. 16 Translation p. 16 To Mary p. 17 "When to their airy hall, my father's voice" p. 19 To ---- p. 20 "When I hear you express an, affection so warm" p. 21 On a distant view of the Village and School of Harrow on The p. 23 Hill. 1806. Thoughts Suggested by a College Examination p. 25 To Mary, on Receiving her Picture p. 28 On the Death of Mr. Fox, the following illiterate Impromptu p. 30 appeared in the _Morning Post_ To which the Author of these Pieces sent the subjoined Reply, p. 30 for insertion in the _Morning Chronicle_ To a Lady, who presented the Author a Lock of Hair, etc. p. 31 To a Beautiful Quaker p. 33 To Julia p. 36 To Woman p. 38 An Occasional Prologue, etc. p. 39 To Miss E.P. p. 41 To Tear p. 43 Reply to some verses of J.M.B. Pigot, Esq., on the Cruelty of p. 46 His Mistress Granta, A Medley p. 49 To the Sighing Strephon p. 54 The Cornelian p. 57 To A ---- p. 59 As the Author was discharging his Pistols in a Garden, Two p. 61 Ladies, etc. Translation form Catullus: Ad Lesbiam p. 63 Translation of the Epitaph on Virgil and Tibullus by Domitius p. 64 Marsus Imitation of Tibullus "Sulpitia ad Cerintum" Lib. Quart. p. 64 Translation from Cattulus: Luctus de Morte Passeris p. 65 Imitated from Catullus. To Anna p. 66 _Note_.--The original volume measures 8¾ ins. x 7½ ins. The wrapper is of plain greenish-grey paper. The full Titles are given in the Table of Cont. or in the heading of the Poems in _Poetical Works_, 1898, vol. i. pp. xviii., etc. In the original issue the pages are numbered on the head of each page, and subscribed with a double rule. "Ornaments" are to be found on pp. [1], 3, 13, 14, 16, 40, 58, 60, 64, 66. The signatures B (p. [1]) to S (p. 65) are in due sequence. The numbers at the head of the pages are subscribed with a double rule. II. Poems/ On/ Various Occasions./ VIRGINIBUS PUERISQUE CANTO./ Hor. Lib. 3. Od. 1./ Newark: Printed by S. & J. Ridge./ MDCCCVII./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 12 + 144--Half-title, one leaf, pp. [1], [2]; Title, one leaf, pp. [3], [4]; Dedication (as above), pp. [5], [6]; Author's Advt., dated December 23, 1806, pp. [7], [8]; Cont., pp. [9]-11; Text, 1-144. The Imprint (_Printed by S, and J. Ridge, Newark_.) is at the foot of p. 144. _Contents_-- On leaving Newstead p. 1 On a distant view, etc. p. 4 To D. p. 7 Epitaph on a beloved Friend p. 8 A Fragment p. 10 Fragments of School Exercises p. 11 To E. p. 13 Reply to some verses of J.M.B. Pigot, Esq., etc. p. 14 To the sighing Strephon p. 17 The Tear p. 21 To Miss ---- p. 26 Lines written in "Letters," etc. p. 28 Answer to the foregoing p. 29 The Cornelian p. 30 On the Death of a Young Lady p. 33 To Emma p. 35 To M.S.G. p. 38 To Caroline p. 41 To Caroline p. 43 To Caroline p. 46 Stanzas to a Lady with the Poems of Camoens p. 48 To Mary, on receiving her Picture p. 50 To Lesbia p. 52 To Woman p. 55 To M. p. 57 Lines addressed to a Young Lady p. 59 To M.S.G. p. 62 To a beautiful Quaker p. 64 To a Lady who presented the Author with a Lock of her hair p. 67 TRANSLATIONS AND IMITATIONS. Adrian's Address to his Soul p. 73 Translation p. 74 Translation from Catullus p. 75 Translation of the Epitaph on Virgil, etc. p. 77 Imitation from Tibullus p. 78 Translation from Catullus p. 79 Imitation from Catullus p. 81 Fragment from Horace p. 82 Translation p. 83 Fragment of a Translation from Virgil p. 85 FUGITIVE PIECES. On a change of Masters, etc. p. 89 Thoughts suggested, etc. p. 91 An occasional Prologue p. 95 On the Death of Mr. Fox p. 97 Granta, a Medley p. 100 The first kiss of Love p. 107 Childish Recollections p. 109 Answer to some verses from Montgomery p. 121 Love's last Adieu p. 125 Lines addressed to the Rev. J.T. Becher p. 128 Reply to a Friend p. 131 Elegy on Newstead Abbey p. 134 _Note_.--The Title measures 193 X 113. The first signature, C, is on p. 9; M, on p. 81; O (_not_ N), on p. 89; Q, on p. 105; U, on p. 137. Signature P is omitted on p. 97. The "ornaments" of the Quarto reappear on pp. [1], 9, 25, 32. The numbers at the head of the pages are subscribed with a double rule. A facsimile of the Title-page faces p. x. of vol. i. of the _Poetical Works_, 1898. III. Hours of Idleness,/ A/ Series of Poems,/ Original/ And/ Translated,/ By George Gordon, Lord Byron,/ A Minor./ [Greek: Mêt' ar me mal' ainee mête ti neikei]. / Homer. Iliad, 10./ Virginibus puerisque Canto;/ Horace./ He whistled as he went for want of thought./ Dryden./ Newark: Printed and sold by S. and J. Ridge;/ Sold also by B. Crosby and Co. Stationer's Court;/ Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme, Paternoster-/Row; F. and C. Rivington, St. Paul's Church-/Yard; and J. Mawman, In the Poultry,/ London./ 1807./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (Hours/ of/ Idleness.), one leaf, pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Preface, pp. [v.]-xiii. (R. _Errata_); Text, pp. [1]-187. The Imprint (_Printed by S. and F. Ridge, Newark_.) is at the foot of p. 187. _Contents_-- On leaving Newstead p. 1 On a distant view, etc. p. 4 Epitaph on a Friend p. 7 A Fragment p. 9 The Tear p. 10 An occasional Prologue p. 15 On the Death of Mr. Fox p. 17 Stanzas ... with the Poems of Camoens p. 20 The first Kiss of Love p. 22 To M---- p. 25 To Woman p. 27 To M.S.G. p. 29 To a beautiful Quaker p. 31 To ---- p. 34 To Mary, on receiving her Picture p. 37 Love's last Adieu p. 39 Damætas p. 43 To Marion p. 44 Oscar of Alva p. 47 TRANSLATIONS AND IMITATIONS. Adrian's Address, etc. p. 71 Translation p. 72 Translation from Catullus p. 73 Translation from the Epitaph of Virgil, etc. p. 75 Translation from Catullus p. 76 Imitation from Catullus p. 78 Translation from Anacreon. To the Lyre p. 79 Translation from Anacreon. Ode 3 p. 81 Fragments of School Exercises p. 84 Episode of Nisus and Euryalus p. 86 Translation from the Medea of Euripides p. 106 FUGITIVE PIECES. Thoughts suggested by a College Examination p. 113 Answer to some elegant Verses, etc. p. 118 Granta, a Medley p. 121 Lachin Y Gair p. 129 To Romance p. 133 Elegy on Newstead Abbey p. 137 Childish Recollections p. 148 The Death of Calmar and Orla p. 169 To E.N.L., Esq. p. 173 To ---- p. 184 _Note_ (1).--A facsimile of the Title-page (2) faces p. xii. of vol. i. of the _Poetical Works_, 1898. It has been alleged that large-paper copies of this edition were issued from the Newark press. It is certain that large copies (a copy in the British Museum, cut for binding, measures 220 X 122), printed on paper bearing a water-mark dated 1806, were thrown upon the market at an early period, but it has not been ascertained at what date or in what place they were printed. They are undoubtedly deliberate forgeries. They purport, even in respect of _errata_, to be identical with the genuine issue of 1807; but they were not set up from the same type, and it is inconceivable that a second issue, set up from different type and with slightly different ornaments, was printed by Ridge for piratical purposes. To cite a few obvious differences--in the title of the large-paper copies the first A of the word "TRANSLATED" is printed [Greek: L ], and the Greek [Greek: n] in [Greek: ainee] and [Greek: neikei] appears as [Greek: u] (not [Greek: n] reversed); in the Errata on the reverse of p. xiii., [Page] "153 Note" is incorrectly given as "163 Note," and this slip on the part of the _falsarius_ is more remarkable, as two other errata in the Errata are carefully reproduced; in the Greek motto on p. 22 the letter [Greek: r] twice appears as [Greek: s]; and, finally, the ornaments on pp. 1 and 187, though intended to be, are not identical. In the Museum copy a portrait of "Lord Byron, from a sketch taken on his leaving England," engraved by I. West, and "Published by V. Hone, Ludgate Hill, 1819," precedes the title-page, and, together with the binding, affords good, if not conclusive, proof that this copy was printed before 1820. See, for a correspondence on these L.P. copies of 1807, the _Athenæum_, June, 1898, pp. 694, 695. See, too, for further interesting and conclusive evidence that the ornament on p. 187 of the L.P. copies was not printed from the Newark block, _Newark as a Publishing Town_, by T.M. Blagg, 1898, pp. 28-30. _Note_ (2).--An autograph note, dated May 20th, 1812, signed "Byron," is inserted on the fly-leaf of a large-paper copy in the Rowfant Library (_Catalogue_, 1886, p. 144). IV. Poems/ Original and Translated,/ By/ George Gordon, Lord Byron./ [Greek: Mêt' ar' me mal' ainee mête ti neikei]. / Homer. Iliad, 10./ He whistled as he went for want of thought./ Dryden./ Second Edition./ Newark:/ Printed and sold by S. and J. Ridge;/ Sold also by B. Crosby and Co. Stationer's Court;/ Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme, Paternoster-/Row; F. & C. Rivington, S^t Paul's Church-/ Yard, and J. Mawman, in the/ Poultry, London./ 1808./ [8º. _Collation_-- [? a Half-title]; Title, one leaf, pp. ii., iii.; Dedication (To The Right Honourable/ Frederick,/ Earl of Carlisle,/ Knight of the Garter,/ etc., etc./ The Second Edition/ Of/ These Poems is inscribed,/, By/ His Obliged Ward,/ And/ Affectionate Kinsman,/ The Author.), pp. iv., v.; Cont, pp. [vi.]-viii. (R. _Errata_); Text, pp. [1]-174. The Imprint (_Printed by S. and J. Ridge, Newark-upon-Trent_) is at the foot of p. 174. _Contents_-- On leaving Newstead Abbey p. 1 Epitaph on a Friend p. 5 A fragment p. 7 The Tear p. 8 An occasional Prologue p. 13 On the death of Mr. Fox p. 15 Stanzas ... with the Poems of Camoens p. 18 To M. p. 20 To Woman p. 22 To M.S.G. p. 24 Song p. 26 To ---- p. 30 To Mary, on receiving her picture p. 33 Damætas p. 36 To Marion p. 38 Oscar of Alva p. 41 To the Duke of D. p. 62 TRANSLATIONS AND IMITATIONS. Adrian's address, etc. p. 71 Translation p. 72 Translation from Catullus p. 73 Translation of the Epitaph, etc. p. 75 Translation from Catullus p. 76 Imitated from Catullus p. 78 Translation from Anacreon. To his Lyre p. 79 Translation from Anacreon. Ode 3 p. 81 Fragments of School Exercises p. 84 Episode of Nisus and Euryalus p. 86 Translation from the Medea of Euripides p. 105 FUGITIVE PIECES. Thoughts suggested by a College Examination p. 111 To the Earl of ---- p. 116 Granta, a Medley p. 123 Lachin y Gair p. 131 To Romance p. 135 Elegy on Newstead Abbey p. 140 The death of Calmar and Orla p. 151 To E.N.L., Esq. p. 160 To ---- p. 165 Stanzas p. 168 Lines written beneath an Elm, in the Churchyard of p. 172 Harrow on the Hill _Note_.--The Front. is a lithograph of Harrow-on-the-Hill, with quotation-- "Ida! blest spot, where Science holds her reign! How joyous once I join'd thy youthful train!" A facsimile of the Title-page faces p. xii. of vol. i. of the _Poetical Works_, 1898. V. Imitations and Translations/ From the / Ancient and Modern Classics,/ Together with/ Original Poems/ Never Before Published./ Collected by/ J.C. Hobhouse, B.A./ of Trinity College, Cambridge./ "Nos hæc novimus esse nihil."https://www.gutenberg.org/ London:/ Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme,/ Paternoster-Row./ 1809./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title with Imprint (T. Davison, _Whitefriars,/ London_.), pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Preface, pp. v.-xi.; Cont., pp. xiii.-xv. (R. "Errata."); Text, pp. 1-255. The Imprint, as above, is in the centre of p. [256]. _Note_.--Lord Byron contributed nine poems (signed L.B.; see Preface, p. xi., to this volume) to this volume, viz.: (i.) _To a Youthful Friend_ ("Few years have past," etc.), p. 185; (ii.) _Inscription on the Monument of a Favourite Dog_, p. 190; (iii.) _To----_ ("Well! thou art happy," etc.), p. 192; (iv.) _The Farewell To a Lady_ ("When man expell'd," etc.), p. 195; (v.) _A Love Song to ----_ ("Remind me not," etc.), p. 197; (vi.) _Stanzas To the Same_ ("There was a time," etc.), p. 200; (vii.) _To the Same_ ("And wilt thou weep," etc.), p. 202; (viii.) _Song_ ("Fill the goblet again," etc.), p. 204; (ix.) _Stanzas to ---- on leaving England_ ("'Tis done," etc.), p. 227. VI. Hours of Idleness;/ A/ Series of Poems,/ Original and Translated,/ By George Gordon, Lord Byron,/ A Minor./ [Greek: Mêt' ar' me mal' ainee mête ti neikei]./ Homer. Iliad, 10./ He whistled as he went for want of thought./ Dryden./ Second Edition./ Paris:/ Published by Galignani,/ At the French, English, Italian, German, and Spanish/ Library, No. 18, Rue Vivienne./ 1819./ [12º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf; Title, one leaf; Advt.; Dedication; Cont.; Text, pp. 1-149 + "Critique ... _Ed. Rev_., No. 22," etc., pp. [150]-158. _Note_.--A reproduction of _Poems Original and Translated_, Newark, 1808. VII. Hours of Idleness:/ A Series of Poems,/ Original and Translated./ By/ Lord Byron./ [Greek: Mêt' ar' me mal' ainee mête ti neikei]./ Homer. Iliad, 10./ He whistled as he went for want of thought./ Dryden./ London:/ Printed for Sherwin and Co. 24, Paternoster Row./ 1820./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, pp. i., ii.; Title, pp. iii., iv.; Dedication, pp. v., vi.; Cont., pp. vii., viii.; Text, pp. 1-160. The Imprint (_Sherwin and Co., Printers,/ Paternoster Row./_) is at the foot of p. 160. _Note_.--A reproduction of _Poems Original and Translated_, Newark, 1808. The Front. (a sketch of Harrow-on-the-Hill) is engraved by Eastgate from a painting by H. Halsted, Esq. It is a reproduction (re-touched) of the Front. to the Newark Edition of 1808. There were two issues of this edition (A and B). In A (Printed for Sherwin and Co. 24 Paternoster Row) the Front. is without letters; the past tenses and participles are printed "bloom'd," "mail-cover'd," etc.; and on p. 160 the Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 160. In B (Printed for W.T. Sherwin, etc.) the Front. is subscribed with the name of painter and engraver; the past tenses are printed "bloomed," etc., in full; and the Imprint (_Sherwin, Printer,/ Paternoster Row./_) is at the foot of p. 160. VIII. Hours of Idleness;/ etc./ Third Edition./ Paris: Published by Galignani,/ etc./ 1820./ [12º. _Collation_-- This edition is identical with that of 1819, No. vi. p. 252. The Cont. are printed at the end of the volume. IX. Hours of Idleness,/ A Series/ Of Poems,/ Original and Translated./ By a Noble Author./ Virginibus puerisque Canto./ Horace./ He whistled as he went for want of thought./ Dryden./ London:/ Benbow, Printer and Publisher, Castle Street,/ Leicester Square. 1822./ [12º. _Collation_-- Title, pp. i., ii.; Preface, pp. iii.-viii. + Cont. + Text, pp. 9-183. _Note_.--A reissue of _Hours of Idleness_, Newark, 1807. X. Hours of Idleness:/ A/ Series of Poems,/ Original and Translated./ By George Gordon, Lord Byron./ A Minor./ Paris:/ Published by A. and W. Galignani,/ At the French, English, Italian, German, and Spanish Library, No. 18, Rue Vivienne./ 1822./ [12º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. _Printed by A. Belin_), one leaf; Title, one leaf; Cont.; Text (including Second Half-title and Dedication), pp. 1-152 + _Critique_, etc., pp. [153]-168. _Note_.--A reissue of the Newark edition of 1808, but a distinct edition from those published by Galignani in 1819, 1820. XI. Hours of Idleness,/ A/ Series of Poems,/ Original and Translated./ By Lord Byron./ Virginibus puerisque canto.--Horace./ He whistled as he went, for want of thought.--Dryden./ A New Edition./ Glasgow.--Printed by J. Starke./ 1825./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf; Preface, pp. i.-iii. (R. Cont.); Text, pp. 1-84. _Note_.--This edition, a reissue of _Hours of Idleness_, Newark, 1807, was bound in a paper wrapper with ornamental border, uniform with "_English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_--price sixpence." XII. Fugitive Pieces/ and/ Reminiscences/ of/ Lord Byron:/ Containing an entire new Edition of/ The Hebrew Melodies,/ With the Addition of/ Several never before Published;/ The whole illustrated with/ Critical, Historical, Theatrical, Political, and Theological/ Remarks, Notes, Anecdotes, Interesting Conversations,/ And Observations, made by that Illustrious Poet;/ Together with his Lordship's Autograph;/ also some/ Original Poetry, Letters and Recollections/ of/ Lady Caroline Lamb./ By I. Nathan,/ Author of an Essay on the History and Theory of Music,/ The Hebrew Melodies, etc., etc./ "Pascitur in vivis Livor, post Fata quiescit:"https://www.gutenberg.org/ "Tune (_sic_) suus, ex merito, quemque tuetur Honos." Ovid./ London:/ Printed for Whittaker, Treacher, and Co./ Ave Maria Lane./ 1829./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xxxvi. + 196. The Imprint (_Plummer and Brewis, Printers, Love Lane, Eastcheap_.) is at the foot of p. 191. _Note_.--The Fugitive Pieces include the two selections from _Parisina_ included in _Hebrew Melodies_ No. i., and three "original pieces of Lord Byron, which have never before appeared in print;" viz. "I speak not--I trace not," etc., "In the valley of waters," and "They say that hope is happiness." _Poems_. Poems./ By Lord Byron./ Second Edition/ London:/ Printed for John Murray, Albemarle-Street;/ By W. Bulmer and Co. Cleveland-Row, St. James's,/ 1816./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title, one leaf, pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, iii., iv.; Advt., pp. v., vi.; Cont., pp. vii., viii.; Text, pp. 9-39 + Notes, p. [40]. The Imprint (_London: Printed by W. Bulmer and Co./ Cleveland-row, St. James's./_) is at the foot of p. [40]. _Contents_-- To ---- ("When all around," etc.) p. 9 Bright be the place p. 13 When we two parted p. 14 Stanzas for Music ("There's not a joy," etc.) p. 16 Stanzas for Music ("There be none," etc.) p. 19 Fare Thee Well p. 21 Ode (We do not curse," etc.) p. 25 From the French p. 31 On the Star, etc. p. 34 Napoleon's Farewell p. 37 To Samuel Rogers, Esq. p. 39 Notes p. 40 _Note_.--The motto from Coleridge's _Christabel_ ("Alas! they had been friends in youth") (14 lines) is on p. 20. _Poems on His Domestic Circumstances_. I. Poems/ on His/ Domestic/ Circumstances./ I. Fare Thee Well!/ II. A Sketch From Private Life./ By Lord Byron./ With the/ Star of the Legion of Honour,/ And other Poems./ London:/ Printed for W. Hone, 55, Fleet Street./ 1816./ Price One Shilling./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Text, pp. 5-31 + Note ("The first two Poems were last produced.--The other/ five follow in the order wherein they were written."https://www.gutenberg.org/ April, 1816.), p. [32]. The Imprint (_Hay and Turner, Printers, Newcastle Street, Strand_.) is at the foot of p. [40]. _Contents_-- Fare Thee Well p. 5 A Sketch, etc. p. 9 Ode ("Oh, shame to thee," etc.) p. 15 Fare Well to France p. 20 Madame Lavalette p. 22 Waterloo p. 24 On the Star, etc. p. 29 _Note_.--The Half-title is missing in the Museum copy. The Note prefixed to "Waterloo" in the _Morning Chronicle_ (March 15, 1816) is reprinted, together with the heading, "Said to be done into English Verse by R. S****, P.L. P.R. Master of the Royal Spanish Inqn.--etc., etc., etc." II. Poems/ on His/ Domestic Circumstances,/ etc./ With The/ Star of the Legion of Honour,/ And Four Other Poems./ Second Edition./ London:/ Printed for W. Hone, 55, Fleet Street,/ And Sold by J.M. Richardson, No. 23, Cornhill;/ J. Blacklock, Royal Exchange; G. Hebert, 36,/ Poultry; Simpkin and Marshall,/ Stationers'/ Court; W. Reynolds, 137, Oxford Street; and by/ All other Booksellers./ 1816./ [8º. _Collation_-- Gen. Half-title (New/ Poems,/ By/ Lord Byron./) (R. _Hay & Turner, Printers, Newcastle-Street, Strand_.), pp. 1, 2; Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Text, pp. 5-31. The Note and Imprint, as above, are on p. [32]. III. Poems,/ etc./ By Lord Byron./ With the/ Star of the Legion of Honour,/ etc., etc./ Sixth Edition./ Containing Eight Poems./ London:/ Printed for W. Hone, 55, Fleet Street,/ etc., etc. 1816./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title (Imprint as above), pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 3-31. The Note (altered to "The other Six follow," etc.) and the Imprint, as above, are on p. [32]. _Note_.--The additional poem is the _Adieu to Malta_ on pp. 12-14. The lines _Fare Thee Well_, which are printed in the First and Second Editions in stanzas, are in the Sixth Edition printed continuously. IV. Poems,/ etc./ By Lord Byron./ With His/ Memoirs and Portrait./ Eighth Edition./ Containing/ Nine Poems./ Fare Thee Well!/ A Sketch From Private Life./ On the Star of "The Legion of Honour."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Adieu to Malta./ The/ Curse of Minerva./ Waterloo./ And Three Others./ London:/ Printed for W. Hone, 55, Fleet Street,/ etc./ 1816./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title (R. Imprint as above), pp. 1, 2; Memoirs, etc., pp. 3-6; Text, pp. 7-32. _Note_.--The additional poem is the mutilated version of _The Curse of Minerva_ (111 lines). The Front. is a lithograph of "Lord Byron," after F. Sieurac. V. Poems/ etc./ By Lord Byron,/ etc./ Fifteenth Edition./ Containing/ Nine Poems,/ etc./ London:/ Printed for W. Hone, 55, Fleet Street,/ etc./ 1816./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title (R. Imprint as above), pp. 1, 2; Memoirs, etc., pp. 3-8 + Text, pp. 8-40. _Note_.--The Text of the Fifteenth Edition is identical with the Text of the Sixth Edition (pp. 3-[32]), including Note and Imprint on p. [32]. _The Curse of Minerva_ is on pp. 33-40. The Imprint, as above, is repeated on the foot of p. 40. VI. Lord Byron's/ Poems,/ on His Own/ Domestic Circumstances./ Fare Thee Well./ Dublin:/ Printed by W. Espy, 59, Dame-Street./ 1816./ [8º. _Collation_--Half-title (Poems, etc./ Entered at Stationers'-Hall./), one leaf, pp. 1, 2; Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Preface, pp. 5, 6; Text, pp. 7-15. _Note_.--The edition contains _Fare Thee Well_, and _A Sketch_, etc., without the other poems published by Hone. VII. Poems/ on His/ Domestic Circumstances,/ etc. etc./ By/ Lord Byron./ Second Edition./ 1. Fare Thee Well 2. A Sketch from Private Life 3. On the Star of "The Legion of Honour" 4. Ode 5. Waterloo 6. Madame Lavalette 7. Farewell to France 8. Adieu to Malta 9. The Curse of Minerva 10. Farewell to England 11. To my Daughter, etc 12. To the Lily of France. 13. Ode to the Island of St. Helena. 14. To ----. 15. Bright be the Place to thy Soul! 16. Stanzas for Music. 17. To ----. 18. Stanzas for Music. 19. To ----. 20. On Reading Lord Byron's Farewell to England. To which is Prefixed,/ Memoirs of His Life./ Bristol:/ _Printed for W. Sheppard, Exchange_,/ And may be had of all the Booksellers./ 1816./ [12º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf, pp. i., ii.; Memoirs, etc., pp. iii.-vi.; On Reading Lord Byron's Farewell to England, pp. i.-iii. (R. Cont.); Text, pp. 1-50. The Imprint (_Mary Bryan, Printer,(51)Corn-Street, Bristol_.) is at the foot of p. 50. _Note_.--This edition contains the nine poems published by Hone (1816), four forgeries, six of the _Poems_ published by Murray in 1816, and, with a separate pagination, the lines _On Reading Lord Byron's Farewell to England_ ("------- Still my bosom's indignation"). VIII. Poems on His Domestic Circumstances, etc. Boston. 1816. [24º. [Catalogue of the Boston Athenæum Library.] IX. Poems,/ etc./ By Lord Byron,/ etc./ Twenty-Third Edition./ Containing/ Nine Poems,/ etc./ London:/ Printed for W. Hone,/ 55, Fleet Street, and 67, Old Bailey,/ (_Three Doors from Ludgate Hill_,)/ And Sold By J.M. Richardson,/ etc./ 1817/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 32. X. Poems,/ on His/ Domestic Circumstances,/ By/ The Right Honourable/ Lord Byron:/ To which are added,/ Several Choice Pieces from His Lordship's Works./ "Lord BIRON.--By heaven I do love; and it hath taught me/ to rhyme, and to be melancholy; and here is part of my rhyme,/ and here my melancholy."https://www.gutenberg.org/ SHAKESPEARE'S LOVE'S LABOUR LOST./ London:/ Printed for J. Limbird, 355, Strand, (East End/ of Exeter 'Change),/ By W. Sears, 45, Gutter Lane, Cheapside./ 1823/ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. vi. + 48. The Imprint (_Printed by W. Sears, 45, Gutter Lane, Cheapside, London_.) is at the foot of p. 48. _Note_.--The collection contains twenty-four poems, including the forgeries, _To my Daughter_, etc.; _Farewell to England_; _Ode_ ("Oh, shame to thee," etc.); and _Madame Lavalette_. XI. Miscellaneous Poems,/ Including those on His/ Domestic Circumstances./ By Lord Byron./ To which are prefixed/ Memoirs of the Author, and a Tribute/ To his Memory/ By Sir Walter Scott./ London:/ Printed for John Bumpus, 85, Newgate Street;/ And R. Griffin, & Co., Glasgow./ 1824/ _Collation_-- Pp. xx. + 21-72. The Imprint (_Printed by A. Hancock, Middle Row Place, Holborn_.) is at the foot of p. 72. _Note_.--The collection numbers twenty-five poems, including the forgeries, _Ode_ ("Oh, shame to thee," etc.); _Madame Lavalette_; _Farewell to England_; _To my Daughter_, etc.; _Ode to--S^t Helena_; _To the Lily of France_; _The Enigma_ [H.]; and three (genuine) stanzas from the lines, "Well, thou art happy," here entitled _Song to Inez_; and the lines _To Jessy_. XII. Miscellaneous Poems/ on His Domestic and Other/ Circum-stances./ By Lord Byron./ London:/ Printed By and for William Cole,/ 10 Newgate-Street./ 1825./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 54. The Imprint (_Printed by William Cole, 10, Newgate Street_.) is at the foot of p. 54. _Note_.--The edition contains twenty-nine pieces, viz. the twenty-five poems published by John Bumpus in 1824 (No. xl.), together with _The Isles of Greece_; _Were my Bosom_, etc.; _Herod's Lament_, etc.; and _Lord Byron's Latest Verses_ ("On this day I complete my thirty-sixth year"). _Hints from Horace_. _Note_.--Two sets of proofs of a portion of _Hints from Horace_, formerly the property of R.C. Dallas, are preserved in the British Museum (_Eg_. 2029). Proof A consists of 100 lines of the English translation (lines 173-272); Proof B, pp. [87]-128, consists of 272 lines of the English translation (lines 1-272) and (on opposite pages) 188 lines of the original Latin. These proof-sheets, which must have followed proofs of the Fifth Edition of _English Bards_, _etc_., are preceded by a Half-title, _Hints from Horace_ (Gothic characters), and by the following subsidiary title:-- Hints from Horace:/ Being a/ Partial Imitation, in English Verse, of the Epistle,/ "Ad Pisones de Arte Poetica;"https://www.gutenberg.org/ And intended as a Sequel to/ English Bards and Scotch Reviewers./ [Gothic characters.] "Ergo fungar vice Cotis, acutum/ Reddere quæ ferrum valet, exsors ipsa secandi."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Hor. De Arte Poet. 304-5./ "Rhymes are difficult things; they are stubborn things, sir."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Fielding's Amelia, Vol. III./ Book and Chap. V./ Athens, Franciscan Convent,/ March 12, 1811./ The publication of _Hints from Horace_ had been entrusted by Dallas to Cawthorn in July-August, 1811. It may be gathered from various sources (_Letters_, 1898, ii. 24, 54, 56) that Byron was at work on the proofs as late as September 4; that by October 11 he had resolved to defer the publication of the _Hints_; and that, accordingly on October 13, 1811, "they stood still." It was not, however, till after the appearance of _Childe Harold's_, _etc_. (May-June, 1812) that Byron determined to suppress the already printed Fifth Edition of _English Bards_, and at the same time to abandon the publication of his two other Satires. At this time, says Dallas (_Recollections of the Life of Lord Byron_, 1898, p. 241), "the _Hints from Horace_ was far advanced." In his _Recollections, etc_. (pp. 104-113), he gives, by way of a "fair specimen," 156 "lines of the still-unpublished poem; and, as these extracts are taken from the first 211 lines, and his text corresponds with proof B (see Poetical Works, 1898, i. 390, variants ii., iii.), it may be inferred that Dallas transcribed them from his fragmentary proof-sheets, and that the press was stopped at line 272. In 1830, in his _Notices of the Life of Lord Byron_ (vol. i. pp. 263-269), Moore printed 165 lines of the "Paraphrase;" but his selections are drawn from lines 1-458, and it is evident that he had access to an original MS. (_MS. M._), which is now in Mr. Murray's possession. The full text, which follows the same MS., was first published in vol. v. pp. 273-327 of the six-volume edition of 1831 (_vide ante_, No. xliii. of "Collected Editions"). _The Irish Avatar_. Byron wrote the _Irish Avatar_ at Ravenna, September 16, 1821. On the 17th he sent a copy of the verses to Moore, then resident at Paris; and on September 20 he desired Moore to get "twenty copies of the whole carefully and privately printed off." A copy is in the possession of Mr. H. Buxton Forman, C.B., and I am indebted to his kindness for the following description: "The pamphlet consists of four 8vo leaves, viz. half-title ('The Irish Avatar,' in bold capitals, with blank verse), pp. [1], [2] + Text, pp. 3-8. The poem begins on the third page with a dropped head, 'The Irish Avatar' again, and the first four verses. Pp. 4-7 contain six verses each, and p. 8 the remaining four, making up thirty-two in all. The date at the end of p. 8 is 'September 16, 1821.' There is no title-page proper; a headline, 'The Irish Avatar,' occurs on pp. 4-8, which pages are numbered in Arabic figures in the outside corners, and the thirty-two stanzas are also numbered in Arabic figures. The poem is printed on a half-sheet of a peculiar fine-ribbed paper." Twenty stanzas of _The Irish Avatar_ were printed by Medwin in _Conversations of Lord Byron_, 1824, pp. 216-220, and in a second edition, 1824, pp. 332-338. In a "new edition" of the _Conversations, etc._, 1824, pp. 264-270, the entire poem, numbering thirty-two stanzas, was published for the first time in England (see _Athenæum_, July 27, 1901). _The Irish Avatar_ was first published by Murray in 1831 (Works, vi. 419-425). _The Island_. I. The Island,/ or/ Christian and His Comrades./ By the/ Right Hon. Lord Byron./ London, 1823:/ Printed for John Hunt,/ 22, Old Bond Street./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. _London: Printed by C.H. Riynell, Broad-Street, Golden-Square_), pp. 1, 2, Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Author's Advt., p. 6; Text, pp. 7-79 + Appendix, pp. 81-94. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 94. _Note_.--A Second and a Third Edition, identical with the First, were published by John Hunt in 1823. _The Island_ forms part (pp. 193-244) of a collection of Miscellaneous Poems, _Hebrew Melodies, The Deformed Transformed_, etc., printed and published by W. Dugdale, 23, Russell Court, Drury Lane, in 1825. II. The Island;/ or/ Christian and His Comrades./ By The Right Hon. Lord Byron./ Paris:/ Published by A. and W. Galignani,/ At the French, English, Italian, German, and Spanish Library,/ No. 18, Rue Vivienne./ 1823/ [12º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. _Paris: Printed by A. Belin_), one leaf; Title, one leaf; Second Half-title, pp. 1, 2; Author's Advt., pp. 3, 4; Text + App., pp. 5-95. III. _The Island, or Christian and His Comrades_. New York. 1823. [12º. [Cat. of Books in Bates Hall of Pub. Library of Boston.] _Translations of The Island_. _German_. _Die Insel_, ober Christian u. seine Kameraden. Aus d. Engl. (v. F.L. Breuer). Mit gegenübersteh. Originaltext. Leipzig, Brockhaus. 1827. [8º. [Kayser, 1834.] _Italian_. _L'Isola_, poema di lord Byron, traduzione di Morrone. Napoli, tipographia di De Muro, 1840. [8º. [_Bibliographia Italiana_, Oct., 1840.] _Polish_. Wyspa czyli Chrystyan i jego towarzysze ...Przek[/l]ad Adama Pajgerta. pp. 62, _druk. "Czasu": Kraków_, 1859. [8º. _Swedish_. Ön/ Eller/.. Christian och Hans Stallbröder./ Af/ Lord Byron./ Öfversättning. [Af/ Talis Qualis.] Stockholm,/ J.L. Brudins Förlag./ [1856.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 88. _Note_.--No. 8 of "Byron's Poetiska Berättelser." _The Lament of Tasso_. I. The/ Lament of Tasso./ By Lord Byron./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1817./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Note (on MSS., etc.), pp. 5, 6; Text, pp. 7-19 + p. [20], Advt. of Poems. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard-Street,/ Whitefriars, London./_) is at the foot of p. [20]. _Note_.--The Half-title (? missing) is not in the Museum copy. II. The/ Lament of Tasso./ By Lord Byron./ Second Edition./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1817/./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Advt., pp. 5, 6; Text, pp. 7-18. III. The/ Lament of Tasso./ etc./ Third Edition,/ etc./ 1817./ [8º. _Collation_-- _Vide supra_, No. i. IV. The/ Lament of Tasso,/ etc./ Fourth Edition,/ etc./ 1817./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (The Lament,/ etc./ Fourth Edition./ 1s. 6d.) (_R.T. Davison, Lombard-Street, Whitefriars, London_.), pp. 1, 2, etc. _Vide supra_, No. i. _Note_.--The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard-Street,/ Whitefriars, London./_) is at the foot of p. [20]. Twelve pp. of "Books Printed for John Murray," dated "August, 1817," are bound up with the Fourth Edition. V. The Lament,/ etc./ Sixth Edition./ 1818./ [8º. _Collation_--_Vide supra_, No. iv. _Note_.--Four pp. of Advts., dated "Albemarle-Street, London, January, 1818," are bound up with the Sixth Edition. _Translations of The Lament of Tasso_. Italian_. I. Lamento/ del/ Tasso/ di Lord Byron/ Recato in italiano/ Da Michele Leoni/ Pisa/ Presso Niccolò Capurro/ co' caratteri di F. Didot/ 1818/ [4º. _Collation_-- Pp. ix. + _1-27_ + Nota dell' Autore, p. [28]. _Note_.--The Front, is "Tasso in the Hospital of Sant' Anna," drawn by C. Meritoni, and engraved by Lasinio Figlio. The Italian translation is printed on opposite pages to the English Text. II. La/ Magion del Terrore/ ... La Fantasia e il Disinganno/ ed altri metrici componimenti/ di Gaetano Polidori/ colle sue traduzioni/ Del Lamento del Tasso/ di Lord Byron/ ... Londra 1843./ Impresso da J. Wilson e W. Ward nella pri-/vata stamperia dell' autore al numero 15 di/ Park Village East, Regent's Park./ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 112-133. III. Guglielmo Godio/ II Lamento di Tasso/ Versione da Byron/ [Six other pieces.] Torino/ Tipografia di Vincenzo Bona/Via Ospedale, 3 e Lagrange, 7/ 1873./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 21 + 23-47, _Estri Lontani_, etc. _Lara_. I. Lara,/ A Tale./ Jacqueline,/ A Tale./ London:/ Printed for J. Murray, Albemarle-Street,/ _By T. Davison, Whitefriars./_ 1814./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (Poems), one leaf; Title, one leaf; Advt.; Cont. (R. Note. Canto I., page 3, line 1, _The Serfs_, etc.); Second Half-title; Text, pp. 3-128 (_Lara_, pp. 1-93; _Jacqueline_, pp. 95-128) + "Books Printed for John Murray," etc., pp. [129]-[132]. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard-street,/ Whitefriars, London._/) is at the foot of p. [132]. _Note_.--This edition was issued in blue-paper boards with green back, the title-label being Lara/ Jacqueline/ 7s. 6d./ The pages measure 170 x 105. II. Lara,/ A Tale./ By Lord Byron./ Fourth Edition./ London:/ Printed for John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1814./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (Lara); Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard Street,/ Fleet-street_.), one leaf; Title, one leaf; Second Half-title; Text, pp. 8-70. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard-street,/ Whitefriars, London_./) is in the centre of p. [72]. In other copies the Text ends at p. 70, and a note on Section xxiv., Canto II. pp. 71-74, concludes the volume. The Imprint is not repeated. III. _Lara_. Boston. 1814. [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. iv. + 8-98. IV. _Lara_. New York. 1814. [24º. _Collation_-- Pp. 136. V. Lara,/ A Tale./ By Lord Byron./ Fifth Edition./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1817./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. _T. Davison, Lombard-street, Whitefriars, London_.); Title, one leaf; Text, pp. 1-74 + Advt. of "Poems By the Right Hon. Lord Byron" (R. _T. Davison, Lombard-street,/ Whitefriars, London_./), pp. [75], [76]. _Note_.--The additional pages (pp. 71-74) contain a note on "The event in section 24, Canto 2d, suggested by the death, or rather burial, of the Duke of Gandia." _Note_.--"Lara./ A Tale./ By Lord Byron."https://www.gutenberg.org/forms part (pp. 135-174) of a volume "Printed for Thomas Wilson, Oxford Street. 1825. 12º." The Imprint (_Printed by W. Dugdale_, etc.) is at the foot of p. 174. VI. Lara,/ a Tale by/ Lord Byron:/ Illustrated by C.B. Birch,/ Art-Union of London./ MDCCCLXXIX./ [fol. _Collation_-- Text, pp. 1-12. The Imprint (_Harrison and Sons, Printers in Ordinary to Her Majesty, S. Martin's Lane_.) is at the foot of p. 12. The Text is followed by twenty plates. _Translations of Lara_. _Bohemian_. _Lara_ ... P[vr]elo[vz]il [vc]. Ibla. [In "Poesie Sv[ve]tová."] _v Praze_, 1885. [8º. _German_. _Lara_. Übers. v. W. Schäffer u. A Strodtmann. 1886. Leipzig, Bibl. Institut. [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 91. _Note_.--No. 88 of "Meyer's Volksbücher." _Italian_. I. Il Lara/ di Lord Byron/ Tradotto dal signor/ Girolamo C^o Bazoldo,/ Maggiore di S.M. Britannica re d'Annover./ con giunta/ di tre altre traduzioni dall' inglese, una dal tedesco,/ e tre canzoni dell' autore./ [Title-vignette, Cupid with harp.] Parigi./ Dai Torchi di Pillet Maggiore,/ In via des Grands-Augustins, N'o. 7./ 1828./ [24º. _Collation_-- Pp. 1-83 + _Il Pensieroso_, etc., pp. 85-138 + Indice, p. [139]. _Note_.--This edition was issued in green-paper covers. II. _Lara_. Traduzione di Andrea Maffei, Milano, Hoepli, 1882. [64º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] _Polish_. _Lara_, poemat w 2 pie['s]niach, przek[/l]ad Jul. Korsaka. pp. 70 _druk. J. Zawadzkiego: Wilno_, 1833. [8º. _Servian_. [Cyrillic: Lara lorda Bajrona. Srbski od Ats. Popovidja]. pp. 72. [Cyrillic: D. Khipts: u Novot-Sadu], 1860. 12º. _Spanish_. _Lara_, novela española. Por lord Byron, traducida al castellano, Paris. 1828. [18º. [_B. de la France_, May 17, 1828.] _Swedish_. Lara/ Af/ Lord Byron./ Stockholm,/ Tryckt Hos Joh. Beckman./ 1869./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 5-64. _Note_.--"Öfversättning Af Tails Qualis"--a pseudonym of Carl Wilhelm August Strandberg. _Manfred_. I. Manfred,/ A/ Dramatic Poem./ By Lord Byron./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1817./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (Manfred) (R. _T. Davison, Lombard-Street, Whitefriars, London_), pp. 1, 2; Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Dramatis Personæ, pp. 5, 6; Text, pp. 7-75; Notes, pp. [79]-80. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard-Street,/ Whitefriars, London./_) is at the foot of p. 80. _Note_.--The First Edition was issued with another title-page (B): Manfred,/ A / Dramatic Poem./ "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,/ "Than are dreamt of in your philosophy." / By Lord Byron./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1817./ 8º. There is no half-title in the Museum copy of this alternative First Edition. II. Manfred,/ etc./ Second Edition,/ etc./ 1817./ [8º. _Note_.--The Second Edition is identical with the alternative form (B) of the First Edition. There is no Imprint on p. 80. An Advt. of "Poems by the Right Hon. Lord Byron" is on p. [82]. III. Manfred,/ A/ Dramatic Poem./ "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,/ Than are dreamt of in your philosophy."https://www.gutenberg.org/ By Lord Byron./ Philadelphia:/ Published by M. Thomas./ J. Maxwell, Printer./ 1817./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 72. _Note_.--_Manfred_ was also published at New York in 1817, 24º, pp. 70. IV. Manfred./ A Dramatic Poem./ By Lord Byron./ "There are more things," etc. [Motto, two lines]./ London:/ Printed and Published by W. Dugdale,/ _23, Russell Court, Drury Lane_./ 1824./ [12º. _Collation_-- pp. 55 + "Notes to Manfred," p. [56]. The Imprint (_Printed by W. Dugdale, Russell Court, Drury Lane, London_) is at the foot of p. [56]. _Note_.--Manfred./ A Dramatic Poem./ By Lord Byron./forms part (pp. 175-[216]) of a volume Printed for Thomas Wilson, Oxford Street./ 1825. 12º. The Imprint (_Printed by W. Dugdale_, etc.), as above, is at the foot of p. [216]. V. Manfred,/ A/ Dramatic Poem./ "There are more things in heaven and earth,/ Horatio,/ "Than are dreamt of in your philosophy."https://www.gutenberg.org/ By Lord Byron./ Brussels:/ Printed at the British Press./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Dramatis Personæ, pp. 5, 6; Text, pp. 7-72; Notes, pp. [73], 74; Observations, pp. [75]-81. VI. Manfred./ A Choral Tragedy,/ In Three Acts,/ By/ Lord Byron./ Thomas Hailes Lacy,/ 89, Strand, London./ [1863.] [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 1-41 + "Costumes," p. [42]. The Imprint (_Printed by Thomas Scott, Warwick Court, Holborn_.) is at the foot of p. 41. _Note_.--Vol. 60 of Lacy's "Acting Edition Plays." Pp. 2-6 contain the playbill of Manfred "As Performed at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane (under the Management of Messrs. Edmund Falconer and F.B. Chatterton), on Saturday, October 10th, 1863." VII. Manfred./ Lord Byron./ [Title-vignette, "Hear me, hear me--Astarte."] New and Complete Edition.--Price one Penny./ London. J. Dicks, 313 Strand; all Booksellers./ [1883, etc.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 161-173. _Note_.--No. 59 of "Dicks' Standard Plays." _Translations of Manfred_. _Bohemian_. _Manfred_ ... P[vr]elozil Jos. V. Fri[vc]. _Praze_, 1882. _Danish_. I. Manfred,/ af/ Lord Byron./ Oversat/ af/ P.F. Wulff./ There are more things, etc. [Motto, two lines.]/ Hamlet./ Kjøbenhavn, 1820./ Forlagt af Universitets-Boghandler Brummer./ Trykt i der Poppske Bogtrykkerie./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 107 + Rettelse, p. [108]. II. Manfred./ Et Dramatisk Digt/ af/ Byron./ Oversat/ af/ Edvard Lembcke./ Kjøbenhavn 1843./ I Commission hos C.A. Reikel./ Trykt hos Bianco Luno./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 109. _Dutch_. I. Manfred./ Een Dramatisch Gedicht/ Naar/ Lord Byron,/ Door/ Johan Rudolph Steinmetz./ Amsterdam,/ H.J. Van Kesteren./ 1857./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xv. + 59 + "Aanteekenigen," pp. [60]-[63] + "Verbeteringen," p. [64]. II. Byron's/ Manfred./ Een Dramatisch Gedicht./ Metrische Vertaling./ (Toegewijd AAN Mr. C. Vosmaer)/ Van/ W. Gosler./ Heusden.-H. Wuijster./ 1882./ [8º. _Collation_--Pp. vii. + 78. _Note_.--The Front, is a photograph of "Ernst Possart in de rol van Manfred" (Verg: _lllustrirte Zeitung_ van 12 Nov. 1881). _French_. I. Manfred/ Poëme dramatique/ Par/ Lord Byron,/ Traduit/ Par madame la comtesse de Lalaing/ Née comtesse de Maldeghem./ Horatio, il est dans le ciel et sur la terre/ plus de choses que n'en peut concevoir/ votre philosophie./ Hamlet./ Seconde édition./ Bruxelles./ Imprimerie de J. Stienon,/ Faubourg de Louvain, 19./ 1852/ [8º. _Collation_--Pp. 61 + "Notes," p. [63]. II. Manfred/ Poème dramatique de Byron/ Adaptation nouvelle, en vers/ de/ Émile Moreau/ Paris/ Paul Ollendorff, éditeur/ 28 _bis_, rue de Richelieu, 28 _bis_/ 1887/ Tous droits réservés/ [8º. _Collation_--Pp. vii. + 28. The Imprint (_Paris,--Typ. G. Chamervi, 19, Rue des Saints Pêres--20832_) is at the foot of p. 28. III. Lord Byron/ Manfred/ Poème dramatique en 3 actes/ Traduction en vers/ Par/ C. Trèbla/ Toulouse/ Edouard Privat, éditeur, rue des Tourneurs/ 1888/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xiii. + 15-89 + Errata, p. [91]. The Imprint (_Montauban, Imp. et Lith. Ed. Forestiè, rue du Vieux-Palais, 23_) is in the centre of p. [90]. _German_. I. Manfred./ A Tragedy/ By/ Lord Byron./ Leipzig:/ F.A. Brockhaus./ 1819./ Manfred./ Trauerspiel von Lord Byron./ Teutsch/ von/ Adolf Wagner./ Leipzig:/ F.A. Brockhaus./ 1819./ _Collation_-- English Title, as above, p. 2; German Title, as above, pp. 3, 4; Half-title (R. Dramatis Personæ), pp. 5, 6; _Personen_, p. 7; English and German Texts, pp. 8-209; Anmerkungen, pp. 211-239. The Imprint (_Druck und papier von Friedrick Vieweg_/ _In Braunschweig_/) is in the centre of p. 240. _Note_.--I am indebted to the kindness of Mr. Leonard L. Mackall, of Berlin, for the substance of the following note on this work:-- "Pages 213-233 of the Anmerkungen" are devoted to an essay on the play as a whole. This essay is evidently the "Appendix to an English Work," to which Byron refers in the letter accompanying the suppressed Dedication to _Marino Faliero_. "In the Appendix to an English Work, lately translated into German, and published at Leipzig, a judgment of yours upon English poetry is quoted as follows: 'That in English poetry great genius, universal power, a feeling of profundity, with sufficient tenderness and force are to be found, but that altogether these do not constitute poets,'" etc., etc. (see _Poetical Works_, 1901, v. 340, 341, and _Letters_, 1900, v. 100-103). The originals of the Dedication and Letters were conveyed to Goethe by John Murray the third, in 1830 (? 1831) (see _Goethe-Jahrbuch_, 1899, xx. pp. 31-35, where the "Dedication" is printed in full for the first time), and are preserved at Weimar in the "red portfolio" (cf. _Eckermann_, March 26, 1826), in which Goethe kept all his papers connected with Byron. The "judgments" quoted by Byron through "an Italian abstract" from Wagner's Appendix (pp. 217-218) there read _inaccurately_ as follows: "In der Englischen Poesie," sagt Goethe, "man findet durchaus einen grossen, tüchtigen, weltgeübten Verstand, ein tiefes, zartes, Gemüth, ein vortreffliches Wollen, ein leidenschaftliches Wirken ... das alles zuzammengenommen macht noch keinen Poeten ... nach dieser Ansicht zeigen die meisten Englischen Gedichte einen düstern Ueberdruss des Lebens." These sentences, which should be read in the light of the context, will be found in Goethe's _Dichtung und Wahrheit_, Th. iii. Buch. 13 (1814, now Wirke, Weimar ed. xxviii. 213, 214), the book (_Aus meinem Leben, Dichtung und Wahrheit_), which is held up to ridicule in the _Edinburgh Review_, June, 1816, vol. xxvi. pp. 304-317. II. _Manfred_, übersetzt von Thdr. Armin, Göttingen, Kübler, 1836. [8º. [Kayser, 1841.] III. Byron's Manfred./ Einleitung, Uebersetzung und/ Anmerkungen./ Ein Beitrag/ zur Kritik der gegenwärtigen deutschen dramatischen/ Kunst und Poesie./ von Posgarn./ [_i.e._ G.F.W. Suckow] Breslau,/ im Verlage bei Josef Mar und Komp./ 1839./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 212. IV. _Manfred_, Ein dramat. Gedicht übers. v. O.S. Seeman. Berlin, Weidle, 1843. [8º [Kayser, 1848.] V. Lord Byron's/ Manfred./ Deutsch/ von/ Hermann von Kösen./ "Mehr Dinge giebt's im Himmel und auf Erden/ Als eure Weisheit sich wohl träumen lässt."https://www.gutenberg.org/ (Hamlet.)/ Leipzig,/Voigt & Günther./ 1858./ [16º _Collation_-- Half-title, Title, and "Zueignung," 8 pp.; Text, pp. 1-86. The Imprint (_Druck von Giesecke & Devrient_) is at the foot of p. 86. VI. Byron's/ Manfred./ Erklärt und übersetzt/ von/ L. Freytag./ Berlin./ Verlag von Gebrüder Pætel./ 1872./ [16º _Collation_-- Pp. 158. The Imprint (_Druck von G. Bernstein in Berlin_) is at the foot of p. 158. VII. _Manfred_, dramat. Gedicht v. Lord Byron. Frei übers. v. Adf. Seubert. [16º. [Kayser, 1877.] _Collation_-- Pp. 47. _Note_.--No. 586 of the Universal-Bibliothek, Leipzig, 1871-76. VIII. Manfred./ Dramatische Dichtung in drei Abtheilungen/ von/ Lord Byron./ Musik von Robert Schumann./ Jeder Nachdruck dieses Textbuches, auch von Seiten der Theater-directionen für/ ihre Aufführungen, ist verboten./ Leipzig,/ Druck und Verlag von Breitkopf und Härtel./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 36. _Note_.--No. 66 of Serie III., Breitkopf und Härtel's _Textbibliothek_, 1879-90. IX. _Manfred_. Ein dramatisches Gedicht. Freie Uebersetzung von Thierry Preyer. Frankfurt, Neumann, 1883. [4º. [Kayser, 1883.] _Collation_-- Pp. 59. _Hungarian_. I. Byron Lord'/ Élete's Munkái/ Irta/ Petrichevich Horváth Lázár./ Második Rész./ Pesten./ Nyomtatta Landerer és Heckenast./ 1842./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xi. + 134 + Jegyzések Manfredhez, pp. [135], [136] + Sajtó-hibák, p. [137]. II. Manfred./ Drámai Költemény 3 Felvonásban./ Irta:/ Lord Byron György./ Angolból forditotta:/ D^r. Kludik Imre./ Byron és a Világfájdalom./ Irta: D^r. Kludik Imre./ Ára: 40 kr./ Második Kiadás./ Szolnok, 1884./ Nyomatott Bakos Istvánnál./ [8º. _Collation_-- Manfred, pp. 1-65 + Byron és a Világfájdalom, pp. 69-112. III. Manfred/ Lord Byron Drámai Költeménye/ Forditotta/ Ábrányi Emil./ Budapest 1891/ Singer és Wolfher Könyvkereskedése./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 98. _Italian_. I. _Manfredo_. Traduzione di Marcello Mazzoni. Milano, P.M. Visaj. 1832. [8º. [Library of Congress, Washington, 1880.] _Collation_-- Pp. 91. II. Tragedie/ di/ Silvio Pellico/ Francesca da Rimini/ [etc., five lines] Manfredo,/ Poema drammatico di Lord Byron,/ (versione in prosa)./ Firenze./ Felice le Monnier./ 1859./ [8º. _Collation_--Manfredo, etc., pp. 437-473. III. _Manfredo_: poema drammatico. Traduzione di Andrea Maffei. Firenze, Le Monnier, 1870. [16º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] _Collation_-- Pp. xi. + 100 _Polish_. I. _Manfred_, poemat dramatyczny, przek[/l]ad Edm. Stan. Bojanowskiego. _W.G. Korn: Wroc[/l]aw_, 1835. [12º. II. _Manfred_, poemat ... Przek[/l]ad wolny na wiersz polski przez Micha[/l]a Chod['z]ke ... Z4 obrazkami, wyrysowa[/l] Kossak, etc. pp. 89. _w drukarni L, Martinet: Pary[.z]_, [1859]. [8º. [_Published also by Schmidt at Halle_.] _Romaic_. [Greek: Mamphred / Dramatikon Poiêma / tou / Lordou Burônos. / Metaphrasis / Eppikou Gkrên. / ho ou)rano\s, HOra/ti), e)/cheiplei/onak)ê(gn / par) ho/sa ohi philo/sophoi phanta/zesthe ] / Shakspere. / [Greek: En Patrais / tupographeion kai Bibliopôleion Eustathiou P. Christodoulou. / Para\ tê\n hodo\n HErmou= ]./ 1864 [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 79 + [Greek: Paroramata], p. [80]. _Roumanian_. _Stoenescu_ (Th.M.) Teatru ... Manfred, dupe Lord Byron. _Editura "Reviste[)i] Literare:" Bucuresc[)i]_, 1896. [8º. _Collation-- _Manfred_, pp. 173-228. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Manphred. Dramatitseskaya poema v" trekh" dy[)i]stviyakh Perevod" M. Vronchenko.] II. [Cyrillic: Manphred ... Perevod A. Borodina.] ["[Cyrillic: Panteon"]," 1841. No. 2.] III. [Cyrillic: Manphred" ... Perev. E. Zarina] ["[Cyrillic: Biblioteka dlya Chteniya]" [Cyrillic: S.-Peterburg"], 1858, No. 8.] IV. [Cyrillic: Manphred ... Perebod" D. Minaeva.]["[Cyrillic: Russkoe Slovo]," 1863. No. 4.] _Spanish_. I. _Manfredo, drama en tres actos_. Por lord Byron. Imp. de Decourchant à Paris. A Paris, rue du Temple, n. 69. 1829. [18º [_Bibl. de la France_, October 17, 1829.] II. Manfredo,/ Poema dramático/ de/ Lord Byron./ Traducido en verso directamente del inglés al castellano/ Por/ D. José Alcalá Galiano/ y Fernandez de las Peñas./ Madrid:/ Imprenta de A. Vicente, Preciados, 74./ 1861./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xiii. + 85. III. Lord Byron./ Manfredo/ y/ Oscar de Alva/ Version castellana/ de Ángel R. Chaves./ Madrid,/ Imprenta de Eduardo Martinez,/ Calle del príncipe, número, 25./ 1876./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xix. + Manfredo, 1-54 + Oscar de Alva, pp. 55-78 + Indice, p. [79]. _Marino Faliero_. I. Marino Faliero,/ Doge of Venice./ An Historical Tragedy,/ In Five Acts./ With Notes./ The Prophecy of Dante,/ A Poem./ By Lord Byron./ London: John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1821./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. _London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_) pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Cont., pp. v., vi.; Half-title, with Motto ("_Dux_ inquieti turbidus Adriæ."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Horace./), pp. vii., viii.; Preface, pp. ix.-xxi.; Text, pp. 1-261. The Imprint, as above, is in the centre of p. [262]. _Contents_-- Marino Faliero p. 1 Notes p. 169 Appendix p. 173 Prophecy of Dante p. 209 Notes p. 257 II. Marino Faliero, etc./ Second Edition, etc./ 1821./ [8º. _Collation_-- _Vide supra_, No. i. Note that in some copies of the First Edition lines 500-507, act v. sc. 1, do not appear. In the Second Edition and in other copies of the First Edition they have been inserted. (See _Poetical Works_, 1901, iv. 447.) _Note_.--Another edition (pp. xxi. + 261), in small octavo, was issued by John Murray in 1823. III. _Marino Faliero, Doge of Venice_. 179 pp. Philadelphia, M. Carey and Sons. 1821. [8º. [Library of Congress, Washington, 1880.] IV. _Marino Faliero, doge of Venice_, an historical tragedy in five acts, with notes. By the right hon. lord Byron. Impr. de Belin à Paris--A Paris chez Galignani. [12º. [_Bibl. de la France_, June 29, 1821.] V. Marino Faliero,/ Doge of Venice:/ An Historical Tragedy,/ In Five Acts./ By/ Lord Byron./ "Dux inquieti turbidus Adriæ."--Horace./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street./ Sold also by/ Tilt and Bogue, Fleet Stree nburgh, Oliver and Boyd: Dublin, John Cumming./ 1842./ [12º. _Collation_-- Title (R. _London:/ Printed by H. Spottiswoode,/ New-Street-Square_./); Text, pp. 3-162. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 162. VI. Marino Faliero./ By/ Lord Byron./ [Title-Vignette, "The Gory Head rolls down the Giant's steps!"]/ New and Complete Edition.--Price one Penny./ London J. Dicks 313 Strand; All Booksellers./ [1883, etc.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 461-492. _Note_.--No. 153 of "Dicks' Standard Plays." _Translations of Marino Faliero_. _German_. I. Marino Faliero/ Doge von Venedig./ Geschichtliche Tragödie/ von/ Lord Byron./ Freie Übersetzung/ von/ Thierry Preyer./ Frankfurt am Main./ Alfred Neumann'sche Buchhandlung./ 1883./ [4º. _Collation_--Title, one leaf; Personen; Vorrede, 8 pp. + Text, pp. 1-147. The Imprint (_C. Naumann's Druckerei, Frankfurt a. M._) is in the centre of p. [148]. II. Lord Byron's/ Marino Faliero./ Für das herzoglich Sachsen-Meiningen'sche Hoftheater/ übersetzt und bearbeitet/ von A. Fitger./ Oldenburg./ Schulzesche Hof-Buchhandlung und Hof-Buchdruckerei./ (A. Schwartz.)/ [8º. _Collation_-- Title (R. _Alle Rechte Vorbehalten_); Vorwort (R. "Personen"); Text, pp. 1-84. _Mazeppa_. I. Mazeppa,/ A Poem./ By Lord Byron./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1819./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. _London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_.); Title, one leaf; Half-title (Mazeppa), pp. 1, 2; Advt. (quotation from Voltaire, _Hist, de Charles XII._, pp. 196, 216), pp. 3, 4; Text, pp. 5-69. The Imprint, as above, is in the centre of p. [70] + "Lord Byron's Poems," etc., p. 71. _Contents_-- Mazeppa p. 5 Ode ("Oh Venice! Venice!") p. 47 A Fragment (Augustus Darvell) p. 57 II. Mazeppa, A Poem./ By Lord Byron./ Second Edition./ Paris:/ Published by Galignani,/ At the French, English, Italian, German, and Spanish/ Library, Nº 18, Rue Vivienne./ 1819 [12º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. _Printed by A. Belin_), pp. 1, 2; Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Second Half-title, pp. 5, 6; Advt., pp. 7, 8; Text, pp. 9-69. _Contents_-- Mazeppa p. 9 Ode ("Oh Venice!" etc.) p. 47 A Fragment p. 57 III. _Mazeppa_, a poem [with fragments]. Boston. 1819. [24º. [Cat. of Books in Bates Hall of Pub. Lib. of Boston, 1866.] _Collation_-- Pp. 56. IV. _Mazeppa, a Poem_. Paris, Galignani, 1822. [12º. [Quérard, 1827.] V. Mazeppa,/ A Poem./ By Lord Byron./ London:/ Printed and Published by W. Dugdale,/ _52 Russell Court, Drury Lane_, 1824./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. ii. + 5-35. The Imprint (_Printed by W. Dugdale, Russell Court, Drury Lane, London_.) is at the foot of p. 35. VI. _Mazeppa. a Poem_. Mit Worterklärung u. einer Lebenskizze des Dichters, von H.M. Melford. Braunschweig, Vieweg. 1834. [12º. [Kayser, 1841.] VII. Mazeppa,/ or the/ Wild Horse/ of the/ Ukraine,/ A Poem, by/ Lord Byron./ London:/ T. Goode, 30, Aylesbury-st.,/ Clerkenwell./ [1854?] [32º. _Collation_-- Pp. 48. _Note_.--The Front, (lithograph of Lord Byron) is on p. 1. The Title is printed on the wrapper (black glazed paper) in gold letters. The volume measures 60 X 40. _Translations of Mazeppa_. _Danish_. Mazeppa./ AF / Lord Byron./ Öfversättning. [Af Talis Qualis.] Stockholm,/Alb. Bonniers Förlag./ [1853.] [8º. Part of "Byron's Poetiska Berättelser." _German_. I. _Mazeppa. Ein Gedicht_. Aus d. Engl. treu übertragen v. Th. Hell. Nebst beigedr. Urschrift. Leipzig, Hinrichs. 1820. [8º. [Kayser, 1834.] II. _Mazeppa_, übers. im Versmass des Originals v. D^r. jur. Everhard Brauns. Herausg. von D^r. jur. Engelbrecht, Göttingen, Kübler. 1836. [8º. [Kayser, 1841.] III. Nachgelassenes/ von/ Ferdinand Freiligrath./ Mazeppa,/ nach Lord Byron./ der Eggesterstein,/ Erzählung./ Stuttgart./ G.J. Göschen'sche Verlagshandlung./ 1883./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. viii. + 88. _Hungarian_. Byron Lord'/ Élete's munkái./ Irta/ Petrichevich Horváth Lázár./ Harmadik Rész./ Pesten./ Nyomtatta Landerer és Heckenast. 1842./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf; Half-title, one leaf; Dedication; Figyelmezletés (Advt.); Second Half-title; Text (Mazeppa), pp. _1_-[80] + Oda, etc., pp. [81]-154 + Sajtó-hibák, p. [155]. _Italian_. I. _Il Mazeppa_. Versione di Ant. Arioti. Palermo, Lo Bianco. 1847. [16º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] II. Mazeppa./ Traduzione/ da/ Georgio Byron./ Di/ I. Virzì./ Palermo,/Luigi Pedone Lauriel/ Editore/ 1876./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 63. III. _Mazeppa_. Traduzione di Andrea Maffei. Milano, Hoepli. 1886. [64º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] _Polish_. I. _Mazepa_, poemat. Przek[/l]ad wolny na wiersz polski przez Micha[/l]a Chod['z]k[e,]. pp. 39. _Schmidt: w Hali_, 1860. [8º. II. (Together with Lamartine's _Death of Jonathan_.) _Mazepa_, poemat, przek[/l]ad wolny na wiersze polskie przez Micha[/l]a Chod['z]k[e,], wydanie ozdobione rycinami, _etc._ pp. 66. _Ksi[e,]g. polska: Pary['z]_ [1860]. [8º. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Viebor" iz" sochineniye lorda Bairona. M. Kachenovskago.] 1821. _Collation_-- _Mazepa_, pp. 69-107. _Note_.--In Prose. II. [Cyrillic: Mazepa. Iz" sochineniye lorda Bairona. A. Boeikova] "[Cyrillic: Novosti literatyry]," 1824. [Cyrillic: kn.] x. pp. 9-33. _Note_.--In Prose. III. [Cyrillic: Mazepa ...per. D. Mikhailovskago.] ["[Cyrillic: Sovremennikh]," 1858. No. 5.] IV. [Cyrillic: Mazepa ... Perev. I. Gognieva.] ["[Cyrillic: Dramaticheskiye Sbornik"]." [Cyrillic: S.-Peterburg"], 1860, [Cyrillic: kn.] 4.] _Spanish_. _Mazeppa_, novela, por L.B. traducida al castellano. Paris, 1830. [18º. [_Moniteur_, etc., 1845.] _Monody, etc_. I. Monody/ On the Death of/ The Right Honourable/ R.B. Sheridan,/ Written at the Request of a Friend,/ To be spoke at/ Drury Lane Theatre./ London: Printed for John Murray, Albemarle Street./ 1816./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (Monody./ [Price One Shilling.]/ Entered at Stationers' Hall) (_R. London: Printed by C. Roworth, Bell-yard, Temple-bar_.), pp. 1, 2; Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Text, pp. 5-11 + pp. [13]-[15], Advts. of Books published by John Murray. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. [15]. II. Monody/ on the Death of/ The Right Honourable/ R.B. Sheridan./ Spoken at/ Drury Lane Theatre./ By Lord Byron./ New Edition./ London:/ Printed for John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1817./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title as above (R. _T. Davison, Lombard-street, Whitefriars, London_.), pp. 1, 2; Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Text, pp. 5-11 + List of the Poems, etc., p. [12]. The Imprint (_T. Davison, Lombard-Street_,/ _Whitefriars, London_./) is at the foot of p. [12]. III. Monody,/ etc./ New Edition,/ etc./ 1818./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. _London:/ Printed by T. Davison, Whitefriars_.), pp. 1, 2; Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Text, pp. 5-11 + "Lord Byron's Poems," etc., p. [12]. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. [12]. _Note_.--Four pp. of Advts., dated "Albemarle-Street, London, May, 1818," are bound up with this edition. _An Ode to the Framers of the Frame Bill_. A Political/ Ode/ By/ Lord Byron/ Hitherto Unknown as His Production./ London/ John Pearson 46 Pall Mall./ 1880./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. [One hundred copies privately printed.]), pp. 1, 2; Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Note, pp. 5, 6; [Copy of Lord Byron's Letter ... March 1, 1812], pp. 7, 8; Text, pp. [9], [10], 11. _Ode From the French_. _Translation_. _French_. Traduction de l'Ode/ de/ Lord Byron,/ Sur/ La bataille de Waterloo./ Par Aristide Guilbert./ Londres:/ Hunt et Clark,/ 38, Tavistock Street./ MDCCCXXVI./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. vii. + 9-28. The Imprint (_De l'Imprimerie de Thomas Davison_,/ 10, Duke Street, Smithfield, London./) is at the foot of p. 28. _Contents_-- Preface p. v. Ode p. 9 Notes p. 17 _Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte_. I. Ode/ To/ Napoleon Buonaparte./ "Expende Annibalem:--quot libras in duce summo/ Invenies?"---- / Juvenal, Sat. X./ The Second Edition./ London:/ Printed for John Murray, Albemarle-Street,/ By W. Bulmer and Co. Cleveland-Row,/St James'./ 1814/ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (Ode, etc./ Entered at Stationers' Hall./), pp. 1, 2; Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Note from Gibbon's _Decl. and Fall_ (vol. 6, p. 220), pp. 5, 6; Text (xv. stanzas), pp. 7-14 + Advt. of books "By the Right Hon. Lord Byron," p. [15]. The Imprint (_Printed by W. Bulmer and Co_./ _Cleveland-Row, St James's_./) is at the foot of p. [15]. _Note_.--The First Edition of the _Ode_ is in the Rowfant Library Catalogue, 1886, p. 145. II. _An Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte_. From the 3d Lond. ed. Philadelphia, E. Earle. 1814. [8º. [Catalogue of Library of Congress, 1880.] _Collation_-- Pp. 11. _Note_.--The _Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte_ was also published at Boston, 1814, 8º, pp. 13; and at New York, 1814, 8º, pp. 13. III. _Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte_. Sixth Edition. London. 1814. [8º. [Cat. of Manchester Free Library, 1864.] _Collation_-- Pp. 17. IV. _Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte_. Ninth Edition. London, M. 1814. [8º. [Library of the University, St. Andrews, N.B.] _Collation_-- Pp. 17. V. Ode/ To/ Napoleon Buonaparte./ By Lord Byron./ etc./ Twelfth Edition./ London:/ Printed for John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1816./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (Ode, etc.) (_R.T. Davison, Lombard-street,/ Whitefriars, London_./), pp. 1, 2; Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Note, pp. 5, 6; Second Half-title, pp. 7, 8; Text (xvi. stanzas), pp. 9-17 + Advt. of books "By the Right Hon. Lord Byron," p. [19]. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. [19]. VI. Ode,/ etc./ Thirteenth Edition./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1818./ [8º. _Collation_-- _Vide supra_, No. i. _Translation of the Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte_. _Spanish_. _Odas a Napoleon_. Por Lord Byron. Imp. de Decourchant, à Paris. 1829. A Paris, rue du Temple, n. 69. [18º. [_Bibl. de la France_, October 17, 1829.] _Parisina_. [For First Edition of _Parisina_, _vide infra_, _The Siege of Corinth_, No. i.] _Translations_. _Danish_. Parisina./ Af/ Lord Byron./ Öfversättning. [Af Talis Qualis.] Stockholm, J.W. Brudins Förlag. [1854.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 36. No. 4 of "Byron's Poetiska Berättelser." _French_. Adolphe Krafft/ Parisina/ Poème/ de Lord Byron/ et fragment de/ Nicolas de Ferrare/ Drame/ Tiré des documents historiques/ Avec commentates et notices./ Paris/ Ernest Leroux, éditeur/ 28, rue Bonaparte, 28/ 1900 Tous droits réservés./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xiv. + 55 + Errata, p. [57] + Table des Matières, p. [59]. _Note_.--The Text of _Parisina_ is on pp. 8-26. _German_. Gedichte/ von/ Jacob Vinc. Cirkel./ Mit übersetzungen/ von W. Scott's Feld von Waterloo und Byrons/ Parisina etc./ Münster,/ in Commission der Coppenrathschen Buch-und Kunsthandlung./ 1825./ [8º. _Collation_--Pp. 159. The Imprint (_Münster, gedruckt mit Coppenrathschen Schriften_) is on p. [160]. _Note_.--The Text of _Parisina, etc._, is on pp. 127-156. _Italian_. I. Parisina/ Poema/ di/ Lord Byron/ Traduzione italiana in versi./ Milano/ Da Placido Maria Visaj/ Stampatore-Librajo nei Tre Re/ 1821./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 27. II. _Parisina_: poema tradotto da Andrea Maffei. Milano, Gnocchi. 1853. [16º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] _Collation_-- Pp. 40. III. _Parisina_. Traduzione di Carlo Dall'Oro. Mantova, Negretti. 1854. [8º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] IV. _Parisina_, Traduzione in versi sciolti di Paolo Pappalardo. Palermo. 1855. [8º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] V. _Parisina_. Traduzione di Ant. Canepa. Geneva, Artisti tip. 1864. [16º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] _Collation_-- Pp. 24. _Russian_. [Cyrillic: Paritsina ... Perevod V. Verderevskago. S.-Peterburg"], 1827 _Spanish_. _Parisina_, novela. For L.B. Imp. de Decourchant, à Paris. 1830. [18º. [_Bibl. de la France_, October 17, 1829.] _The Prisoner of Chillon_. I. The/ Prisoner of Chillon,/ And/ Other Poems./ By Lord Byron./ London:/ Printed for John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1816./ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (The/ Prisoner of Chillon,/ etc./) (R. Advt. of Third Canto of Childe Harold, and Imprint, _T. Davison, Lombard-street,/ Whitefriars, London_./), one leaf; Title, one leaf; Cont.; ext, pp. 1-60. _Contents_-- Sonnet on Chillon p. 1 The Prisoner of Chillon p. 3 Poems-- Sonnet p. 23 Stanzas to ---- p. 24 Darkness p. 27 Churchill's Grave p. 32 The Dream p. 35 The Incantation p. 46 Prometheus p. 50 Notes p. 55 _Note_.--On p. 3 the Text is headed "The Prisoner of Chillon. A Fable." II. The/ Prisoner of Chillon./ A Poem/ By Lord Byron./ Lausanne./ Hignou & Company. Book-sellers./ 1818./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf, pp. 1, 2; Text, pp. 8-29. _Note_.--The Front, is a lithograph of "Chillon." The seven poems are not included in this edition. III. The/ Prisoner/ of/ Chillon,/ By Lord Byron,/ London:/ Printed by W. Chubb, Fetter Lane./ 1824./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 35. The Imprint (_W.P. Chubb, Printer, Fetter Lane, London_.) is at the foot of p. 35. IV. The/ Prisoner of Chillon,/ By Lord Byron./ [n.d.? 1825.] [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 1-18. _Note_.--This edition, which is without a separate Title-page and bears no Imprint, is bound up with _The Bride of Abydos_, etc., Printed for Thomas Wilson, Oxford Street. 1825. V. The/ Prisoner/ of/ Chillon./ By Lord Byron./ Geneva./ Published by Barbezat and Delarue,/ Booksellers, 177, Rue du Rhône./ 1830/ [16º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. _Printed by Barbezat and Dalarue_.), pp. 1, 2; Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Sonnet on Chillon, pp. 5, 6; Text, pp. 7-32. _Note_.--The volume with the above title is bound in pink paper cover with title-vignette (helmet, spear, and wreath of bay-leaves), and dated M.DCCC'XVIII. VI. The/ Prisoner of Chillon/ By/ Lord Byron/ Le prisonnier de Chillon/ Par/ Lord Byron/ précédé d'une/ Notice historique sur le château de Chillon/ Par/ D. Martignier/ Lausanne/ Librairie Martignier et Chavannes/ 1857/ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. _Lausanne.--Printed by Corbaz and Rouiller sen_.), pp. 1, 2; Title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Notice, etc., pp. 5-7; Hist. de Chillon, pp. 8-21; Text and Notes, pp. 25-46. The seven poems are not included in this edition. VII. The/ Prisoner/ of/ Chillon Poem/ By/ Lord Byron./ Illuminated by/ W. & G. Audsley./ Architects./ 1865 [4º. _Collation_-- Illuminated Half-title; Title; 17 pp. of Text with illuminated borders, etc. + p. 18 (Chromo-lithographed/ By/ W.R. Tymms./ Printed & Published by/ Day & Son,/ [Limited],/ London)./ VIII. Byron's/ Prisoner of Chillon./ With Notes for Teachers and Scholars./ London:/ T.J. Allman, 463, Oxford Street./ [1874.] [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 32. _Note_.--No. 8 of "Allman's English Classics for Elementary Schools." IX. Byron's/ Prisoner of Chillon./ With Life, Notes,/ Grammatical & Miscellaneous Questions,/ etc., etc./ By R.S. Davies,/ Head Master of Holy Trinity Schools, Hull./ Hull: A. Brown, Scholastic Publisher./ London: Simpkin, Marshall, & Co./ Leeds: Arnold; Bean & Son./ Darlington: The Education Depot./ Price Twopence./ [1877-] [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 24. _Note_.--Part of "Brown's Series of English Classics." X. The/ Prisoner of Chillon./ By/ Lord Byron./ With Prefatory and Explanatory Notes./ [Monogram, with Motto, _Lucem Libris Disseminamus_.] London: Blackie & Son, 49 & 50 Old Bailey, E.C./ Glasgow, Edinburgh, and Dublin./ 1879./ [6º. _Collation_-- Pp. 32. _Note_.--Part of "Blackie's School Classics." XI. Byron's/ Prisoner of Chillon:/ With Life and Notes./ For Pupil Teachers and the Upper Standards in/ Schools./ Manchester: J.B. Ledsham, 31, Corporation Street;/ London: Simpkin, Marshall & Co./ [1879.] [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 35. _Note_.--Part of the "World School Series." XII. The/ Prisoner of Chillon/ By/ Lord Byron/ And Part of/ The 3rd Canto of Child [_sic_] Harold/ With a Short Description of the Castle/ And a Notice of the Chief Historical Events/ and Legends connected with its History/ Selected from authentic sources by an English resident./ Fourth Edition/ Vevey/ Loertscher & Son, Editors/ 1880/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 59. The Text of _The Prisoner of Chillon_ is on pp. 43-53. XIII. _The Prisoner of Chillon. A Fable_. Erklärt v. F. Fischer. Berlin, Weidmann. 1884. [8º. [Kayser, 1887.] XIV. _The Prisoner of Chillon_, with introduction and explanatory notes by Th. C. Cann, Firenze, Bencini, 1885. [16º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] XV. _Byron's Prisoner of Chillon_ and Part of Mazeppa. With Life and Notes. London and Edinburgh. 1894. [Kölbing, p. 257.] _Note_.--Part of "Chambers' Reprints of English Classics." XVI. _The Prisoner of Chillon, by Lord Byron_. Special Subject. London. Stewart & Co., The Holborn Viaduct Steps, E.C. Edinburgh and Glasgow: Menzies & Co. [Kölbing, p. 257.] XVII. The/ Prisoner of Chillon/ By/ Lord Byron/ With Notes/ Explanatory, Analytical, and Grammatical/ Embracing/ Figures of Speech, and Metre/ By the/ Rev. Henry Evans, D.D./ Commissioner of National Education/ Dublin/ Blackie & Son, Limited, 89 Talbot Street/ London and Glasgow/ 1896/ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 36. _Note_--Part of "English Classics for Intermediate Schools and Colleges." XVIII. Byron./ The Prisoner of Chillon./ A Fable./ With Life, Introduction, Notes, etc./ Dublin:/ Fallon & Co., 16 Lower Sackville Street./ [Copyright. All Rights Reserved.] [1896.] [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 36. _Note_.--Part of "School and College Series. Edited by Rev. T.A. Finlay, M.A., F.R.U.I. Price Sixpence, Net." XIX. The/ Prisoner of Chillon/ And/ Other Poems/ By/ Lord Byron/ In kritischen Texten/ Mit/ Einleitung und Anmerkungen/ Herausgegeben/ von Eugen Kölbing/ Weimar/ Verlag von Emil Felber/ 1896/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. ix. + 450. _Translations of The Prisoner of Chillon_. _Dutch_. _De Gevangene van Chillon_; in: Gedichten van K.L. Ledeganck' met eene Levensschets des Dichters door J.F.J. Heremans. Gent, 1856. [Kölbing, p. 265.] _French_. I. _Le Prisonnier de Chillon_, Poème de Lord Byron librement traduit en vers blancs, précédé d'une notice historique et descriptive du château de Chillon. Vevey. G. Blanchoud, libraire-éditeur. [Kölbing, p. 264.] II. Bonnivard/ A/ Chillon/ _Souviens-toi du temps d'autrefois_./ (Deut. xxxii. 7.)/ Drame historique/ En un acte et trois tableaux/ Suivi d'une notice historique et du poème de lord Byron, intitulé: Le Prisonnier de Chillon/ Par un Huguenot/ Genève/ Imprimerie Wyss et Duchêne, rue Verdaine/ 1892/ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 96. There is a prose translation of _The Prisoner of Chillon_, pp. 74-85. _Note_.--The Front, is a lithograph of "Chillon." _German_. I. _Lord Byron's Gefangener von Chillon_ (am Genfer See). Aus dem Englischen metrisch übertragen von G. Kreyenberg. Lausanne, 1861. [Kölbing, p. 261.] II. Der/ Gefangene von Chillon./ Dichtung/ von/ Lord Byron./ In deutscher Uebersetzung mit historischer Einleitung / von / M. von der Marwitz./ Vevey & Lausanne,/ Richard Lesser./ [1865.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xi. + 16. _Note_.--The Front, is a "Photog. de R. Lesser & Cie., Vevey," of four female figures supporting a mirror reflecting the dungeon of Chillon. III. _Der Gefangene von Chillon_. Eine Fabel von Georg Gordon Lord Byron. Wortgreteu nach H.R. Mecklenburgs Gründsatzen in deutsche Prosa übersetzt und eingehend erläutert von D'. phil. R.T. Berlin, 1886. [Kölbing, p. 262.] IV. Der/ Gefangene von Chillon./ Von/ Lord Byron./ Uebersetzt von J.G. Hagmann./ S'. Gallen & Leipzig/ Verlag von Busch & Co./ [1892.] [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 29. _Note_.--The Front, is a lithograph of "Chillon." _Italian_. I. _Il prigionero di Chillon_, poema romantico trad. in prosa italiana. In _Indicatore Livornese_, N. 44, del II Gennaio del 1830. [_Saggio di Bibliografie_, Milano, Levino Robecchi, 1887.] II. _Il prigionero di Chillon_: Traduzione di Andrea Maffei, Milano, Gnocchi, 1853. [16º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] _Russian_. [Cyrillic: Shilonskiye Uznik", nozma lorda Bairona. Perevod" s" angliyeskago V. Zhykovskago.] pp. i.-viii. 1-24. [Cyrillic: S.-Peterburg"], 1822. 8º. _Collation_-- Pp. i.-viii. + 1-24. _Spanish_. _El preso de Chillon_, novela. For lord Byron, traduccion castellana. Imp. de Decourchant, à Paris. 1829. [18º. [_Bibl. de la France_, Oct. 17, 1829.] _Swedish_. Fangen PA Chillon,/ En Dikt/ Af/ Lord Byron./ Öfversättning./ [Af/ Talis Qualis.]/ Stockholm,/ Albert Bonniers Förlag./ [1853, etc.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 30. _Note_.--No. 3 of "Byron's Poetiska Berättelser." _The Prophecy of Dante_. _Note.--The Prophecy of Dante_ was first published in the same volume with _Marino Faliero_, 1821. See No. i. (p. 275). I. _The Prophecy of Dante_. Philadelphia. 1821. [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 48. II. _The Prophecy of Dante_. Paris, Galignani, 1821. [12º. [Quérard, 1827.] III. The/ Prophecy of Dante./ A Poem./ By Lord Byron./ "'Tis the sunset of life gives me mystical lore,/ "And coming events cast their shadows before."https://www.gutenberg.org/ Campbell./ London:/ Printed and Published by W. Dugdale,/ 23, Russell Court, Drury Lane./ 1825/ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. vi. + 7-32. The Imprint _(W. Dugdale, Printer, 23, Russell Court, Drury Lane.)_ is at the foot of p. 32. IV. The/ Prophecy of Dante./ (Cantos I., 11.)/ By/ Lord Byron./ With Critical and Explanatory Notes,/ By L. W. Potts,/ Lecturer on History at the Birkbeck Institute, London./ London:/ Blackie & Son, 49 & 50 Old Bailey, E.C./ Glasgow, Edinburgh, and Dublin./ 1879./ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 32. The Imprint (_Glasgow: W.G. Blackie and Co., Printers, Villafield_.) is at the foot of p. 32. _Note_.--Part of "Blackie's School Manuals." _Translations of The Prophecy of Dante_. _French_. Oeuvres de Dante Alighieri. La Divine Comédie, Traduction A. Brizeux. La Vie Nouvelle, Traduction E.J. Delécluze. Paris, Charpentier, libraire-éditeur. 29, rue de Seine. 1842. [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. lxxxviii. + 403 + "Table," p. [404]. _Note_.--The translation of La Prophétie du Dante (par M. Benjamin Laroche) (see "Avis de L'Éditeur," p. i.) is on pp. 385-403. _Italian_. I. _Profezia di Dante Alighieri_, scritta da lord Byron, e tradotta dell'inglesc. Impr. de Clò, à Paris. Paris, chez Barrois aîné, 1821. [8º. [_Bibl. de la France_, October 26, 1821.] II. La Profezia di Dante. Di Lord Byron. Tradotta in terza rima da L. Da Ponte. Nuova-Jorca: Publicata da R.E.W.A. Bartow, 250 Pearl-St. Gray & Bunce, Stampatori. 1821. [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 72. _Note_.--The Italian is printed over against the English. There is a double Dedication (pp. 3-7), "A Madamgella Giulia Livingston," and "A Lord Byron." III. _La Profezia di Dante_: poema, reso in versi italiani da Giov. Giovio, Milano, Bernardoni, 1856. [8º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] IV. _La Profezia di Dante_: poema accommodate all'indole del verso italiano da Melchiorre Missirini, publicato da Fr. Longhena, Milano Guglielmini, 1858. [8º. [Pagliaini, 1901.] _Spanish_. La Profecia del Dante./ Poema escrito y dedicado/ à la/ Condesa Guiccioli/ En 1819,/ Por lord Byron,/ al visitar en Ravena la tumba de aquel./ Traducido del Frances/ Por/ Antonio Maria Vizcayno,/ y dedicado a su bien amigo/ El Sr. Lic. D. Jose Agustin de Escudero./ Magistrado del supremo tribunal de guerra y marina./ Mexico: 1850./ Imprenta de J.M. Lara, calle de la Palma núm. 4./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title, etc., 6 pp. + Text, pp. 28. _Sardanapalus_. I. Sardanapalus,/ A Tragedy./ The Two Foscari,/ A Tragedy./ Cain,/ A Mystery./ By Lord Byron./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1821./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. viii. + 439. Half-title (R. _London: Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_.), pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Cont., pp. v., vi.; Preface, pp. vii., viii.; Text, pp. 1-439. The Imprint, as above, is on p. [440]. _Contents_-- Sardanapalus, A Tragedy p. 1 Notes p. 171 The Two Foscari, A Tragedy p. 175 Appendix p. 305 Cain, A Mystery p. 331 II. _Sardanapalus, a Tragedy_; _The Two Foscari, a Tragedy_; _Cain, a Mystery_. Boston. 1822. [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 309. III. Sardanapalus:/ A Tragedy./ By/ Lord Byron./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle Street,/ 1829./ [8º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf, pp. 1, 2; Half-title, one leaf, pp. 3, 4; Dedication, pp. 5, 6; Author's Note, pp. 7, 8; Dramatis Personæ, _n.p._; Text, pp. 9-134. _Note_.--The Dedication to "The illustrious Goëthe," which was omitted from the edition of 1821 (No. i.), is inserted. IV. _Sardanapalus_: A Tragedy by Lord George Gordon Byron. Arnsberg, Ritter. 1849. [16º. [Kayser, 1854.] _Note_.--Part of "Sammlung Englischer Schauspiele der neuesten Zeit." V. Sardanapalus,/ King of Assyria./ A Tragedy./ In Five Acts./ By/ Lord Byron./ Adapted for Representation by/ Charles Kean./ Thomas Hailes Lacy,/ Wellington Street, Strand,/ London./ [1853.] [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 56. _Note_.--No. 155 of "Lacy's Acting Edition of Plays." VI. Lord Byron's/ Historical Tragedy/ of/ Sardanapalus./ Arranged for Representation,/ In Three [_sic_] Acts,/ By Charles Calvert./ Manchester: John Heywood, 141 and 143, Deansgate./ [1877?] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. vii. + 56. _Note_.--A list of "Opinions of the Press" (see _Poetical Works_, 1901, v. 9) is printed on p. 56 and on the inner leaf of the paper cover. VII. Sardanapalus./ By/ Lord Byron./ [Title-vignette, "Myrrha, Embrace me: yet once more--yet once more."] New and Complete Edition.--Price One Penny./ London: J. Dicks, 313, Strand: All Booksellers./ [1883, etc.] [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 495-524. _Note_.--No. 50 of "Dicks' Standard Plays." _Translations of Sardanapalus_. _Bohemian_. _Sardanapal_ ... P[vr]elo[vz]il Franti[vs]ek Krsek. ("Sborník sv[ve]tové poesie." svaz. 3.) pp. 204. _Otto: v Praze_, 1891. [8º. _French_. _Sardanapale_,/ Tragédie,/ Imitée de Lord Byron,/ par L. Alvin,/ Et représentée pour la première fois sur le Théatre Royal/ de Bruxelles, Le 11 Janvier 1834./ Bruxelles,/ Gambier, libraire, rue des Éperonniers Nº 16./ et chez tous les libraires de royaume./ 1834./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. xviii. + 122. _German_. I. _Sardanapal_./ Trauerspiel in fünf Akten. Aus dem Engl. übers. von Emma Herz. Posen, Merzbach. 1854. [16º. [Kayser, 1860.] _Collation_-- Pp. 214. II. Sardanapal./ Trauerspiel in fünf Aufzügen/ von/ Lord Byron./ Bühnenbearbeitung/ Nach der Uebersetzung von Adolf Böttger/ mit einem/ "Vorspiel"https://www.gutenberg.org/ von/ Max Zerbst./ Jena 1888./ Friedr. Mauke's Verlag./ (A. Schenk.)/ [1888.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 117. III. Lord Byron's/ Sardanapal/ Eine Tragödie/ frei übertragen und für die Bühne bearbeitet/ von/ Josef Kainz/ Berlin W/ F. Fontane & Co./ 1897/ _Collation_-- Pp. 214. _Italian_. Sardanapalo/ Tragedia in 5 atti/ di/ G. Byron/ Milano/ Edoardo Sonzogno, editore/ 14.--Via Pasquirolo.--14./ 1884./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 91. _Note_.--No. 77 of the "Biblioteca Universale." _Polish_. _Sardanapal_, tragedya, przek[/l]ad Fryderyka Krauzégo. pp. 132. _wyd. red._ "_Biblioteki Warszawskiéj_": _Warszawa_, 1872. [8º. _Romaic_. [Greek: Sardanapalos, / Tragô|dia tou Lordou Burô|nos / Metaphrastheisa e)k tou A)gglikou, o / uios tês Doulês / kai / Eugenia / upo / Chrêstou A. Parmenidou. En Athênais, / ek tou tupographeiou Ermou. ( kata\ tê\n hodo\n Perikle/ous, e)n tê~| oi)ki/a| N. Mukoni/ou. ) ] _Collation_-- Pp. [Greek: ê ] + 400 + [Greek: Pinax tôn Periechomenôn ], p. [401]. _Note_.--The translation of _Sardanapalus_ is on pp. 1-150; the translation of _The Dream_ ([Greek: To E)nupnion. Ek tôn tou Burônos]), on pp. 171-184. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Sardanapal" ... Perevod" E. Zorina. S.-Peterburg"], 1860. 8º. II. [Cyrillic: Sardanapal" ... Per. O.N. Chyuminoie. "Artist", 1890, kn. 9 i 10.]," 1890. _Swedish_. Sardanapalus./ Sorgespel I Fem Akter/ Af/ Byron./ Försvenskadt och För Scenen Behandladt/ Af/ Nils Arfvidsson./ Första gängen uppfördt à Kongl. Stora Theatern den 17 Nov. 1864./ Stockholm, 1864./ P.A. Norstedt & Söner,/ Kongl. Boktryckare./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 154 + Rättelser, p. [155]. _The Siege of Corinth_. The/ Siege of Corinth./ A Poem./ Parisina./ A Poem./ London:/ Printed for John Murray. Albemarle-Street./ 1816/ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. _T. Davison, Lombard street,/ Whitefriars, London_.); Title, one leaf; Second Half-title, with Motto ("Guns," etc.), pp. 1, 2; Dedication, pp. 3, 4; Advt., pp. 5, 6; Text, pp. 7-89 + Notes, p. [91] (R. Imprint as above). _Note_.--_The Siege of Corinth_ is on pp. 7-57; _Parisina_, pp. 59-[91]. _Note_.--A Second and a Third Edition were issued in 1816. The Museum copy of the First Edition is without the Half-title. II. The/ Siege of Corinth:/ A Poem./ Parisina:/ A Poem./ By Lord Byron./ New-York:/ Printed and Published by Van Winkle & Wiley,/ No. 3 Wall-Street./ 1816./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 94. III. The/ Siege of Corinth./ A Poem./ By Lord Byron./ "Guns, Trumpets, Blunderbusses, Drums, and Thunder."https://www.gutenberg.org/ London:/ Printed and Published by W. Dugdale,/ _23, Russell Court, Drury Lane_./ 1824./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. 44. The Imprint (_Printed by W. Dugdale; Russell-Court, Drury Lane_.) is at the foot of p. 44. IV. _The Siege of Corinth_. Für den Schul. u. Privatgebrauch abgedr. nach der Pariser Ausg. (1835, Galignani.) Lüneburg, Engel. 1854. [8º. [Kayser, 1860.] _Collation_-- Pp. 51. V. Lines from the Poets/ With Notes/ For use in Elementary and Secondary Schools/ Adapted to the requirements of the New Code and the/ Oxford and Cambridge Local Examinations/ No. 4/ Byron's 'Siege of Corinth'/ London/ National Society's Depository/ Broad Sanctuary, Westminster/ 1879/ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 62. VI. Byron's/ Siege of Corinth./ Mit/ Einleitung und Anmerkungen/ Herausgegeben/ von/ Eugen Kölbing./ Berlin./ Verlag von Emil Felber./ 1893./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. lx. + 155. The Imprint (_Druck von G. Uschmann in Weimar_.) is at the foot of p. 155. VII. The Siege of Corinth. Mit Anmerkgn. zum Schulgebrauch hrsg. v. K. Bandow. [12º. [Kayser, 1891.] _Note_.--Part of "English Authors." Bielefeld, Velhagen & Klasing. 1885-1890. _Translations of The Siege of Corinth_. _Dutch_. Het/ Beleg van Corinthe,/ Uit Het Engelsch van/ Lord Byron./ Door/ Mr. I. Van Lennep./ [Title-vignette, phantom appearing to Alp.] Te Amsterdam bij/ P. Meijer Warnars./ 1831./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 59. The Imprint (_Gedrukt Bij C.A. Spin._) is at the foot of p. 59. _French_. _Le Siége de Corinthe_, par lord Byron; traduit de l'anglais par Ch. Mancel. Impr. de Guîraudet, à Paris. A Paris, chez Delaunay; chez Pillet aîné. 1820. [12º. [_Bibl. de la France_, September 16, 1820.] _German_. I. _Die Belagerung von Korinth_. [Deutsch. v.] A. Wollheim. Hamburg. Lübbers & Schubert. (?) 1817. [12º. [_Centralblatt_, 1890, vii. 472.] II. _Die Belagerung von Korinth_. Mit gegeniibergedrucktem Originaltext. Leipzig, Brockhaus. 1820. [8º. [_Centralblatt_, 1900, vii. 458.] _Note_.--_Britische Dichterproben_, ii. I. III. _Die Belagerung von Korinth_. [Deutsch. v.] G.E. Schumann. Hamburg, Nestler & Melle. 1827. [8º. [_Centralblatt_, 1890, vii. 471.] _Italian_. _L'Assedio di Corinto_, di Giorgio lord Byron, Versione di Vincenzo Padovan. Venezia, coi tipi del Gondoliere, 1838. [8º. [_Bibliografia Italiana_, March, 1838.] _Spanish_. El Sitio/ de/ Corinto./ Por/ Lord Byron./ Traducido del Francés Al Castellano./ [Title-vignette, Athene with owl.] Paris, Libreria americana,/ Calle del Temple, Nº 9./ 1828./ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. 85. _Swedish_. Belägringen Af Korinth./ Af/ Lord Byron./ Öfversättning./ [Af/ Talis Qualis./ Stockholm,/ Albert Bonniers Förlag./] [1854.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 60. _Note_.--No. 2 of "Byron's Poetiska Berättelser." _The Two Foscari_. I. [_Note_.--For the First Edition of _The Two Foscari_, _vide ante_, _Sardanapalus_, No. i.] _The Two Foscari_. New York. 1822. [24º. _Collation_-- Pp. 114. II. _The Two Foscari_, an historical tragedy. By the right hon. lord Byron. Impr. de Belin, à Paris. A Paris chez Galignani, 1822. [12º. [_Bibl. de la France_, March 9. 1822.] III. The Two Foscari./ By/ Lord Byron./ [Title-vignette, Death of Jacopo Foscari--"Touch it not, Dungeon Miscreants!----"] New and Complete Edition.--Price One Penny./ London: J. Dicks, 313, Strand. All Booksellers./ [1883, etc.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 525-546. _Note_.--No. 73 of "Dicks' Standard Plays." _Translations of The Two Foscari_. _Russian_. [Cyrillic: Dvoye Foskari ... per. E. Zarina.] ["[Cyrillic: Biblioteka dlya Chteniya]," 1861. No. 11.] _Spanish_. Los dos Fóscaris. Drama histórico en cinco actos y en verso por D. Manuel Çañete, representado en el teatro de la Cruz, a beneficio de D. Juan Lombia, en el mes de noviembre de 1846. _Collation_-- Pp. 24. _Note_.--Part of "Biblioteca Dramatica,"https://www.gutenberg.org/ etc./ Madrid, 1846./ Imprenta de Don Vicente de Lalama, Editor,/ Calle del Duque de Alba, n. 13./ 4º. _The Vision of Judgment_. _Note_.--For the First Edition of _The Vision of Judgment_, see _The Liberal_, 1822, No. I., pp. 3-39. I. _Vision of Judgment_. Paris, Galignani, 1822. [12º. [Quérard, 1827.] II. The/ Two Visions;/ or,/ Byron v. Southey./ Containing/ The Vision of Judgment,/ By Dr. Southey, L.L.D./ Poet-Laureate and Esquire; Republican and Royalist:/ Also Another/ Vision of Judgment,/ By Lord Byron./ London: Printed and Published by W. Dugdale, 19, Tower/ Street, Seven Dials./ 1822./ _Collation_-- Pp. 72. _Note_.--The Text of Lord Byron's _Vision of Judgment_ is on pp. 35-72. _The Waltz_. I. Waltz:/ An Apostrophic Hymn./ By/ Horace Hornem, Esq./ "Qualis in Eurotæ ripis, aut per juga Cynthi/ Exercet DIANA choros."--Ovid./ London: Printed by S. Gosnell, Little Queen Street, Holborn,/ For Sherwood, Neely, and Jones, Paternoster Row./ 1813./ (_Price Three Shillings_.)/ [4º. _Collation_-- Title, one leaf, pp. [1], [2]; To the Publisher, pp. 3-6; Text, pp. 7-27. The Imprint (_S. Gosnell, Printer, Little Queen Street, London_.) is at the foot of p. 27. _Note_.--The pages of the Text measure 280 X 220. II. Waltz:/ An/ Apostrophic Hymn./ By/ Horace Hornem, Esq./ (_The Author of Don Juan_.)/ Qualis in Eurotæ ripis, aut per juga Cynthi/ Exercet DIANA choros./ Virgil./ Such on _Eurotas_' banks, or Cynthia's height,/ _Diana_ seems; and so she charms the sight,/ When in the dance the graceful goddess leads/ The Quire of Nymphs, and overtops their heads./ Dryden's Virgil./ London:/ Benbow, Printer and Publisher, Castle Street,/ Leicester Square./ 1821./ [12º. _Collation_-- Pp. v. + (Text) 7-36. _Contents_-- To the Publisher p. iii. The Waltz p. 7 Notes p. 19 To Jessy [attrib. to Lord Byron] p. 27 "My Boat is on the shore" [attrib. to Lord Byron] p. 29 Lines ... to Mr. Hobhouse [attrib. to Lord Byron] p. 30 On the Star of "The Legion of Honour" p. 31 Adieu to Malta p. 34 _Note_.--The two last poems are not attributed to Lord Byron. _Werner_. I. Werner,/ A Tragedy./ By Lord Byron./ London:/ John Murray, Albemarle-Street./ 1823-/ [8º. _Collation_-- Half-title (R. _London:/ Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars_.), pp. i., ii.; Title, one leaf, pp. iii., iv.; Dedication, one leaf ("To/ The Illustrious Goëthe,/ By One of His Humblest Admirers,/ This Tragedy is dedicated./"), pp. v., vi.; Preface, pp. vii., viii.; Text, pp. 1-188. The Imprint, as above, is at the foot of p. 188. II. _Werner, a Tragedy_. Paris, Galignani. 1823. [12º. [Quérard, 1827.] III. Werner./ A Tragedy/ In Five Acts./ By Lord Byron./ With the Stage Business, Casts of Characters,/ Costumes, Relative Positions, etc./ New York:/ M. Douglas, 11 Spruce Street./ And for Sale by all Booksellers./ 1848./ [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. v. + 6-75. _Note_.--No. lxviii. of "Modern Standard Drama." Edited by John W.S. Hows. IV. The/ British Drama./ Illustrated./ Vol. III./ London:/ Published by John Dicks, 313, Strand./ 1865./ [8º. _Note_.--The Text of "Werner./ A Tragedy, In Five Acts.--By Lord Byron./" is on pp. 767-789. V. Werner./ By Lord Byron./ [Title-vignette [_Sieg._]--"Liar and Fiend! But you shall not be slain."--[_Act_ v. _Scene_ 1.]/] New and Complete Edition.--Price One Penny./ London: J. Dicks, 313, Strand; All Booksellers./ [1883, etc.] [8º. _Collation_-- Pp. 767-789. _Note_.--No. 3 of "Dicks' Standard Plays." VI. Werner/ or/ The Inheritance/ A Tragedy/ By/ Lord Byron/ London/ George Routledge And Sons/ Broadway, Ludgate Hill/ Glasgow and New York/ 1887/ [16º. _Collation_-- Pp. ix. + 10-256. The Imprint (_Ballantyne Press: Edinburgh and London_.) is at the foot of p. 256. _Translations of Werner_. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Verner" ... per. Neizviestnago. S.-Peterburg"], 1829. II. [Cyrillic: Don"-Djuan" ia ostrov" pirata. Perev. D. Mina Moskva], 1881. 1881. _The Liberal_. The/ Liberal./ Verse and Prose From The/ South./ Volume the First./ London, 1822:/ Printed by and for John Hunt,/ 22, Old Bond Street./ [8º. _Collation_-- Vol. I.: pp. xii. + 3-399 + Cont., p. [401] (R. "Errata," p. [402]). The Imprint (_London_:/ _C.H. Reynell, Printer,/ 45, Broad-Street, Golden-Square_.) is at the foot of p. [402]. Vol. II.: [The/ Liberal,/ etc./ Volume The Second./ London, 1823:/ Printed for John Hunt,/ 22, Old Bond Street./], pp. viii. + 1-377 + Cont. of No. iv., p. [379]. The Imprint (_London:/ Printed by C.H. Reynell, Broad Street, Golden-Square_.) is at the foot of p. [380]. _Contents_ [Lord Byron's contributions]-- Vol. I.: _The Liberal_, No. 1. The Vision of Judgment. By Quevedo Redivivus. Suggested by the Composition so entitled by the Author of "Wat Tyler." "A Daniel come to judgment! yea, a Daniel! I thank thee, Jew, for teaching me that word." Pp. 8-39; Letter to the Editor of "My Grandmother's Review," pp. 41-50; Epigrams on Lord Castlereagh, p. 164. _The Liberal_, No. II. Heaven and Earth, A Mystery, Founded on the Following Passage in Genesis, Chap. vi.: "And it came to pass ... that the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair; and they took them wives of all which they chose." "And woman wailing for her demon lover."--Coleridge. Part I., etc., pp. 165-206. From the French ("Ægle, beauty and poet," etc.), p. 396; Martial.--Lib. I. Epig. I (Translation), p. 398; New Duet ("Why how now, saucy Tom?"), _ibid._ Vol. II.: _The Liberal_, No. III. _The Blues, A Literary Eclogue_, "Nimium ne crede colori."--VIRGIL. O trust not, ye beautiful creatures, to hue, Though your _hair_ were as _red_ as your stockings are _blue_. Eclogue the First, etc., pp. 1-21. _The Liberal_, No. IV. Morgante Maggiore di Messer Luigi Pulci, pp. 193-249. _Note_.--The text of the original Italian is printed after the English translation. _Dedication of Don Juan_. The following note was attached to the "Dedication" which was prefixed to the First Canto in 1833 (_Works_, 1833, xv. 101):-- "Note(1). [This 'Dedication' was suppressed in 1819, with Lord Byron's reluctant consent; but, shortly after his death, its existence became notorious, in consequence of an article in the _Westminster Review_, generally ascribed to Sir John Hobhouse, and for several years the verses have been selling in the streets as a broadside. It could therefore serve no purpose to exclude them on the present occasion.]" See, too, _Poetical Works_, 1903, vi. 3. I am indebted to the kindness of Mr. H. Buxton Forman, C.B., for the following description of one of these "broadsides," now in his possession:-- "Single sheet foolscap 8vo, consisting of Half-title, 'Dedication/ to/Don Juan,/' with Imprint on verso ('London:/ printed by C. and W. Reynell, Broad Street,/ Golden Square'); Title-page, 'Dedication/ to/ Don Juan./ by/ Lord Byron./ London:/ Published by Effingham Wilson,/Royal Exchange./ 1833./' On the verso of this is a note-- "'[_Why the following Dedication did not appear with the two first published Cantos of the Poem cannot be explained--unless the connection between_ Mr. MURRAY _and_ Mr. SOUTHEY _sufficiently explains it_.]' "The first page of the Text (p. 5, but not numbered) contains the dropped head 'Don Juan./ Dedication.' and one stanza. Pp. 6-10 contain two stanzas each, and p. 11 one. The headline 'Don Juan' runs from p. 6 to p. 11, and the stanzas are numbered in Roman capital figures. P. 12 is blank, and is followed by a Half-title, 'Notes,' with a blank verso. The Notes occupy pp. 15 and 16, of which 15 is not numbered, but has a dropped head, 'Notes.' Page 16 is numbered, and has the headline 'Notes.'" [Illustration: Diadem Hill (Annesley Park), Where Lord Byron Parted From Mary Chaworth.] NOTES. _Note_ (1).--ON GENUINE AND SPURIOUS ISSUES OF "ENGLISH BARDS, AND SCOTCH REVIEWERS." Among the first who called attention to the "inextricable tangle" of the several editions of _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_ was Mr. Leicester Warren, better known as Lord de Tabley, who communicated some notes in 1877 to _Notes and Queries_ (Series V. vol. vii. pp. 145, etc.); but it was reserved to the late Mr. Dykes Campbell, Mr. Bertram Dobell, and other correspondents to the _Athenæum_ (May 5 to July 7, 1894), to point out that the problem was still farther complicated by the existence of spurious issues of at least three out of the five or six distinct editions of the Satire. All editions, genuine or spurious, claim as their publisher "James Cawthorn, British Library, No. 24 Cockspur Street," but different printers were employed. The First Edition bears the imprint of "T. Collins, Printer, No. 1, Harvey's Buildings, Strand;" the Second Edition, that of "Deans and Co. Hart Street, Covent Garden;" the Third Edition, that of "T. Collins," etc.; the Fourth Edition of 1810, that of "T. Collins," etc.; the Fourth Edition of 1811 ("James Cawthorn and Sharpe and Hailes"), that of "Cox, Son, and Baylis, Great Queen Street, London." No printer's name was attached to the suppressed Fifth Edition of 1812. Genuine First Editions have the water-mark, "E. and P. 1804," or "E. and P. 1805," or, possibly, no water-mark at all. A copy of the spurious First Edition, in Mr. Murray's possession, has the water-mark, "S. and C. Wise, 1812." In addition to at least eleven variants in punctuation, the spurious copy prints (p. 5, line 47) "Wizzard" (p. 20 _n_.), "M_e_deira," and, in the same note, "Anna d'Afert;" whereas the genuine copies print correctly "Wizard," "Madeira," and "Anna d'Arfet." A genuine copy of the Second Edition, which belonged to the late Mr. Dykes Campbell, bears the water-mark "Budgen and Willmot, 1808." On p. 80, line 1007, "Abedeen" is misprinted for "Aberdeen;" and the same misprint occurs in a copy of the Second Edition in the British Museum. In all probability there was no spurious issue of the Second Edition. Of the Third Edition (1810), copies bearing the water-mark, "E.&P. 1804," or "G.&R.T.," may be regarded as genuine--rare exceptions among a host of forgeries which either lack a water-mark altogether or bear water-marks of a later period. Mr. Gilbert R. Redgrave, in an article (_The Library_, December 1, 1899, Series II. vol. i. pp. 18-25), notes two distinct and divergent forgeries bearing the water-mark "Pine, and Thomas, 1812." Forgery A prints "myse" for "muse" (line 4), "rove" for "rave" (line 384), etc.; while forgery B, in a footnote to p. 30, prints "Bowle'ss" for "Bowles's," and, at the end of p. 85, "we" for "me," and "farther" for "further." Other copies bear the water-marks, "Allnutt, 1816," "Smith & Allnutt, 1816," "Ivy Mills, 1817," and "I.&R. Ansell, 1818." A copy of a spurious issue of the Third Edition in the British Museum prints "crawl" for "scrawl" (line 47), and "p. 73" for "p. 85." It has been surmised, but conclusive proof is not forthcoming, that a so-called Fourth Edition of 1810 (1050 lines), which purports to have been published by James Cawthorn, and bears the imprint, "_Printed by J. Collins, Harvey's Buildings, Strand, London_," is a spurious issue. It is practically a reprint of the Third Edition; but in some copies there are misprints not to be found in other piracies--_e.g._ "crouds" for "crowds" (line 269), and "alter" for "altar"(line 285). Copies of the Fourth Edition of 1810, which may possibly be genuine, bear a water-mark, "G.&R.T.," or are on plain paper. Copies which are manifestly forgeries bear the water-marks, "J.X. 1810" and "W. Pickering, 1816." A second Fourth Edition (1052 lines), published by "James Cawthorn and Sharp & Hailes, 1811," and printed by "Cox, Son, & Baylis," was certainly recognized by Byron as a genuine Fourth Edition, and must have passed through his hands, or been subject to his emendation, before it was sent to press. Copies of this edition bear his MS. emendations of 1811-1812, and marginal notes of 1816. Genuine copies (_e.g._ Leigh Hunt's copy, now in the Forster Collection at the South Kensington Museum) are printed on paper bearing a water-mark, "J. Whatman, 1805." There was, however, another issue of the Fourth Edition of 1811, printed on plain paper. Mr. Redgrave notes certain minute differences between these two issues. In the edition on plain paper there is a hyphen to "Cockspur-Street" on the title-page, and the word "Street" is followed by a comma instead of a semicolon. Again, in the plain-paper copies "Lambe" is spelt with an _e_, and in the water-mark copies the word is correctly spelt "Lamb." In the plain-paper copies the misprint "Postcript" for "Postscript" is repeated, and in the copies bearing a water-mark the word is correctly spelt "Postscript." There are other differences in the advertisements at the end of the volume. A spurious Fourth Edition in Mr. Murray's possession, which has been enriched with a series of prints of persons and places, bears the water-marks, "1811," "1814." Each page has been inserted into a folio sheet bearing the water-mark, "J. Whatman, 1816." A full-sized octavo, in small print (B.M. 11645 P. 15), which purports to be the Fourth Edition of 1811, is probably spurious. It is the survival of a distinct issue from other genuine or spurious copies of the Fourth Edition. The spurious issues of the Third and Fourth Editions, whether they were printed in Ireland or were secretly thrown upon the market by James Cawthorn after Byron had definitely selected Murray as his publisher, were designed for the general reader and not for the collector. The issue of a spurious First Edition after the improved and enlarged editions of 1809-11 were published, must have been designed for the Byron enthusiast, if not the collector of First Editions. The Grangerized Fourth Editions prepared by Mr. W.M. Tartt and Mr. Evans in 1819, 1820, and a Third, by John Murray at about the same period, and, more remarkable still, a copy of the Fourth Edition of 1811, prefaced by a specially printed "List of Names mentioned in the _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_" interleaved with the additions made in the Fifth Edition (B.M.), point to the existence of a circle of worshippers who were prepared to treat Byron's _Juvenilia_ as seriously as the minute critics of the present generation. They seem to have been sufficiently numerous to make piracy, if not forgery, profitable. _Note_ (2).--CORRESPONDENCE BETWEEN THE FIRST EDITION AS NUMBERED AND THE PRESENT ISSUE AS NUMBERED. First Edition (696 lines). Fifth (Present) Edition (1070 lines). 1-26 = 103-128 27-246 = 143-362 247-262 in Edition 2. = Hobhouse's lines, omitted 263-372 = 418-528 373-470 = 540-637 471-522 = 707-758 523-526 = 761-764 527-586 = 799-858 587-654 = 881-948 655-667 = 961-972 668-696 = 981-1010 Second, Third, Fourth (a) Fifth (Present) Edition Editions (1050 lines). (1070 lines). 1-96 = 1-96 97-521 = 103-527 522-740 = 540-758 741-1050 = 761-1070 Fourth (b) Edition (1052 Fifth (Present) Edition lines). (1070 lines). 1-96 = 1-96 97-521 = 103-528 522-1052 = 540-1070 _Additions in the Second, Third, and Fourth (a) Editions_. [The lines are numbered as in the Second, Third, and Fourth Editions.] 1-96 Still must I hear ... as you read. 96 123-136 Thus saith the Preacher ... to grovelling Stott. 14 357-411 But if some new-born whim ... lumbering back again. 55 620-688 Or, hail at once ... virtue must apply. 69 745-778 When some brisk youth ... thy pay for coats. 34 839-860 And here let Shee ... and God-like men. 22 929-940 Yet what avails ... blazes, and expires. 12 953-960 There Clarke, still ... libel on mankind. 8 991-1050 Then, hapless Britain, ... unjustly, none declare 60 ---- 370 696-16 (Hobhouse's lines) = 680 + 370 = 1050. _Addition in Fourth Edition_ (1811). 741-742 Through Crusca's bards ... columns still. 2 1050 + 2 = 1052. _Additions in the Fifth (Present) Edition_. 97-102 'But hold!' exclaims ... shine with Pye. 6 528-539 Then, prosper, Jeffrey ... inspires thy pen. 12 --- 18 1052 + 18 = 1070. _Emendations of the Text of the Fourth Edition (b) included in the text of the Fifth and Present Editions_. Fourth Fifth Edition. Edition. Line. Line. 28 _And men through life her willing slaves obey_. Obeyed by all who nought beside obey. 28 30 _Unfolds her motley store to suit the time_. Bedecks her cap with bells of every clime. 30 32 _When Justice halts, and Right begins to fail_. And weigh their Justice in a golden scale. 32 71 _Fear not to lie, 'twill seem a lucky hit_. Fear not to lie,'twill seem a _sharper_ hit. 71 173 _Low may they sink to merited contempt_, 174 _And scorn remunerate the mean attempt_. Still for stern Mammon may they toil in vain! 179 And sadly gaze on Gold they cannot gain. 180 257 _How well the subject suits his noble mind_! 258 _"A fellow feeling makes us wondrous kind_." So well the subject suits his noble mind, 263 He brays, the Laureate of the long-eared kind. 264 303 _In many marble-covered volumes view_ 304 _Hayley, in vain attempting something new_: 305 _Whether he spin his comedies in rhyme_, 306 _Or scrawl, as Wood and Barclay walk, 'gainst time_. Behold--Ye Tarts!--one moment spare the text! 309 HAYLEY'S last work, and worst--until his next; 310 Whether he spin poor couplets into plays, 311 Or damn the dead with purgatorial praise. 312 323 _And shows, dissolved in thine own melting tears_. And shows, still whimpering thro' threescore of years. 329 327 _Whether in sighing winds thou seek'st relief_ 328 _Or consolation in a yellow leaf_. Whether thou sing'st with equal ease and grief, 333 The fall of empires or a yellow leaf. 334 385 _Fresh fish from Helicon! Who'll buy! Who'll buy_? Fresh fish from Hippocrene! who'll buy? who'll buy? 391 387 _Too much in turtle Bristol's sons delight_, 388 _Too much o'er bowls of Rack prolong the night_. Your turtle-feeder's verse must needs be flat, 393 Though Bristol bloat him with the verdant fat. 394 502 _First in the ranks illustrious shall be seen_. First in the oat-fed phalanx shall be seen. 508 511 _As he himself was damned, shall try to damn_. Damned like the Devil--Devil-like will damn. 517 532 _And grateful to the founder of the feast_, 533 _Declare his landlord can translate, at least_, And, grateful for the dainties on his plate, 550 Declare his landlord can at least translate. 551 552 _While Kenny's World just suffered to proceed_, 553 _Proclaims the audience very kind indeed_. While KENNY's "World"--ah! where is KENNY's wit?-- 570 Tires the sad gallery, lulls the listless Pit. 571 563 _Let Comedy resume her throne again_. Let Comedy assume her throne again. 581 569 _Where_ GARRICK _trod, and_ KEMBLE _lives to tread_. Where GARRICK trod, and SIDDONS lives to tread 587 614 _Raise not your scythe, Suppressors of our Vice_. Whet not your scythe, Suppressors of our Vice. 632 625 _The Arbiter of pleasure and of play_. Our arbiter of pleasure and of play. 643 661 _And, kinder still, a_ PAGET _for your wife_. And, kinder still, two PAGETS for your wife. 679 728 _Want your defence, let Pity be your screen_. Want is your plea, let Pity be your screen. 746 742 _Some stragglers skirmish round their columns still_. Some stragglers skirmish round the columns still. 760 815 _The spoiler came; and all thy promise fair_ 816 _Has sought the grave, to sleep for ever there_. The Spoiler swept that soaring Lyre away, 834 Which else had sounded an immortal lay. 835 891 _The native genius with their feeling given_. The native genius with their being given. 909 903 _Let MOORE be lewd; let STRANGFORD steal from Moore_. Let MOORE still sigh; let STRANGFORD steal from MOORE. 921 922 _For outlawed SHERWOOD'S tales of ROBIN HOOD_. For SHERWOOD'S outlaw tales of ROBIN HOOD. 940 946 _And even spurns the great Seatonian prize_. Even from the tempting ore of Seaton's prize. 964 965 _So sunk in dullness and so lost in shame_, 966 _That SMYTHE and HODGSON scarce redeem thy fame_. So lost to Phoebus, that nor Hodgson's verse 983 Can make thee better, nor poor Hewson's worse. 984 969 _On her green banks a greener wreath is wove_. On her green banks a greener wreath she wove. 987 972 _And modern Britons justly praise their Sires_. And modern Britons glory in their Sires. 990 984 _Earth's chief Dictatress, Ocean's mighty Queen_. Earth's chief Dictatress, Ocean's lovely Queen. 1002 1005 _But should I back return, no lettered rage_ 1006 _Shall drag my common-place book on the stage_: 1007 _Let vain VALENTIA rival luckless CARR_, 1008 _And equal him whose work he sought to mar_. But should I back return, no tempting press 1023 Shall drag my Journal from the desk's recess; 1024 Let coxcombs, printing as they come from far, 1025 Snatch his own wreath of Ridicule from Carr. 1026 1016 _I leave topography to classic GELL._ I leave topography to rapid GELL. 1034 1018 _To stun mankind with Poesy or Prose_. To stun the public ear--at least with Prose. 1036 1049 _Thus much I've dared to do; how far my lay_. Thus much I've dared: if my incondite lay. 1067 _Note_ (3).--THE ANNOTATED COPIES OF THE FOURTH EDITION OF 1811. Two annotated copies of the genuine Fourth Edition of _English Bards, etc._ [1811], with MS. corrections in Byron's handwriting, are extant--one in Mr. Murray's possession, and a second in the Forster Library at the South Kensington Museum. The former, which contains the marginal comments marked "B. 1816," has been assumed to have been prepared as a press copy for the Fifth Edition; but, as the following collation reveals, the latter, which belonged to Leigh Hunt, represents a fuller and later, though not a final revision. The half-title bears the inscription, "Byron, Dec. 31^st^, 1811. N--d. A^y [_i.e._ Newstead Abbey] B. "_Dum relego--scripsisse pudet--quia plurima cerno-- Me quoque--qui feci--judice digna lini_--B. J^y 20, 1812." and the verso the words, "Given me by the author on my birthday, Oct. 19, 1815. Leigh Hunt." u P. 5. ingen(-i-)ous. [The misprint is a note of a genuine copy.] Lines 173, 174. (-Low may they sink to merited contempt-) (-And scorn remunerate the mean attempt.-) Still for stern Mammon may they toil in vain, And sadly gaze on Gold they cannot gain. [This emendation is not given in the Murray copy.] Lines 257, 258. So (-How-) well the subject suits his noble mind! (-"A fellow feeling makes us wond'rous kind,"-) He brays the Laureat of the long-eared kind! [The Murray copy, which amends line 258 as above, leaves the "How" unerased, but the Fifth Edition prints "So."] Lines 323-328. And shows, (-dissolved in thine own tears-). still whimpering through threescore years. (-Whether in sighing-winds thou seek'st relief,-) (-Or consolation in a yellow leaf.-) Whether in equal strains thou vent'st thy grief O'er falling Empires or a yellow leaf. [The Murray copy gives no emendation. The Fifth Edition adopts the first correction, but, for the variant in lines 327, 328, reads-- Whether thou sing'st with equal ease and grief The fall of Empires or a yellow leaf.] Line 336. All love thy (-strain-) rhyme Line 385. Fresh fish from (-Helicon-) Hippocrene [The Murray copy adds a note: "The Fifth Edition reads Hippocrene."] Lines 387, 388. (-Too much in turtle Bristol's sons delight,-) (-Too much o'er bowls of Rack prolong the night.-) Your turtle-feeder's verse must needs be flat, Though Bristol bloat him with the verdant fat. [The Murray copy does not contain this emendation, which was adopted in the Fifth Edition. P. 36 _n._ The Hunt copy gives in MS. the note concerning Moore--"I am informed," etc.--which is printed in the Fifth Edition. There is no similar annotation in the Murray copy. Line 502. For (-"ranks illustrious"-) both annotated copies read "oat-fed phalanx."] Lines 532, 533. And grateful (-to the founder of the feast,-) Declare his landlord (-can translate, at least.-) And grateful for the dainties on his plate, Declare his landlord can at least translate. [The amended lines, which appeared in the Fifth Edition, are not in the Murray copy.] Lines 552, 553. While Kenny's World (-just suffered to proceed,-) (-Proclaims the audience very kind indeed.-) While Kenny's World--ah where is Kenny's wit? listless Tires the sad Gallery--lulls the (-listening-) pit. [The emendation is given in both annotated copies; but the substitution of "listless" for "listening," which is adopted in the Fifth Edition, does not appear in the Murray copy,] Line 563. Let Comedy (-re-)sume ass [The correction is not given in the Murray copy.] Line 569. and (-Kemble-) lives to tread. Siddons [The substitution of "Siddons" for "Kemble," which dates from the Fifth Edition, is not given in the Murray copy.] Line 728. Want your (-defence-), let Pity be your screen plea Want is your plea, let Pity be your screen. Lines 815, 816. The spoiler (-came; and all thy promise fair-) (-Has sought the grave, to sleep for ever there.-) The Spoiler swept that soaring Lyre away, Which she had sounded an immortal lay. [The emendation appears in both the annotated copies.] L. 903. Let Moore (-be lewd-) still sigh [This emendation does not appear in the Murray copy, but the words ["be lewd"] have been underscored with a pencil, and a X placed against them.] Line 946. (-And even spurns the great Scatonian prize.-) Even from the tempting ore of Seaton's prize. [This emendation is given in both the annotated copies.] Lines 965, 966. So sunk in dullness (-and so lost in shame-) (-That SMYTHE and HODGSON scarce redeem thy fame.-) So sunk in dullness that nor Hodgson's verse Can make thee better--nor poor Hewson's worse. [This emendation is not in the Murray copy. The Fifth Edition adopts the further correction, "So lost to Phoebus" for "So sunk in dullness."] Line 969. (-"is-) wove, she wove. [This correction is not in the Murray copy.] Line 972. ----(-justly praise-) their sires. ----glory in their sires. [This emendation is not given in the Murray copy. The Leigh Hunt copy gives twenty MS. emendations (besides "Death" for "death," in line 820, and the alteration of "rapid" to "rabid" in the note on Hewson Clarke, line 962) including the note on Moore. The Murray copy gives nine MS. emendations, of which six are identical with those in the Hunt copy. Three emendations are peculiar to the Murray copy--] (1) Lines 303-306. Behold!--ye tarts! etc. (_vide ante_, p. 309). (2) Line 614. (-Raise-) not your scythe. Whet not your scythe. (3) Line 661. ----"(-a Paget-) for your wife. ----two Pagets for your wife. APPENDIX TO BIBLIOGRAPHY. ILLUSTRATIONS OF LORD BYRON'S _POETICAL WORKS_. _Note_.--The following catalogue of "illustrations of Lord Byron" has been extracted from pp. 88, 89, 94-96 of "_The Prisoner of Chillon, etc._ Herausgegeben von Eugen Kölbing, Weimar. 1896." I. Compositions in outline from Lord Byron's "Manfred" and "Prisoner of Chillon," by Frederick Thrupp, sculptor. London, Pub^d by Ackermann and Co., Strand. II. The Pocket Magazine of classic and polite literature. With engravings, illustrative of Lord Byron's Works. Vols. I., II. London: Printed and published by John Arliss. 1818. III. Forty illustrations of Lord Byron; by George Cruikshank. Published by J. Robins and Co., Ivy Lane, Paternoster Row. [June 12, 1824.] IV. Six vignettes pour les Oeuvres de lord Byron, d'après les tableaux de MM. Alfred et Tony Johannot, graveés par MM. Koenig, Markl, Maulet, Pourvoyeur, Mauduit. Paris. Furne, libraire-éditeur. 1832. V. The Byron Gallery; a series of historical embellishments to illustrate the poetical works of Lord Byron. London: published by Smith, Elder and Co. 65 Cornhill. 1833. VI. Finden's Illustrations of the Life and Works of Lord Byron. With original and selected information on the subjects of the engravings, by W. Brockedon. Vols. I.-III. London: John Murray, Albemarle Street: sold also by Charles Tilt, Fleet Street. 1833-1834. VII. Oeuvres de Lord Byron, gravures à l'eau-forte, par Réveil, d'après les dessins de A. Colin. Paris. Audot, éditeur du Musée de peinture. 1833. VIII. Historical Illustrations of Lord Byron's Works in a series of etchings by Réveil, from original paintings by A. Colin. London, Charles Tilt, 86, Fleet Street. 1834. IX. Galerie des dames de Byron. Trente-neuf planches. Paris: Charpentier-éditeur. 1836. X. Illustrations of the Works of Lord Byron, consisting of a portrait after Saunders, a vignette title-page after Stothard, engraved by Blanchard, two facsimiles of handwriting of Byron, and twenty etchings on steel by Réveil, from original drawings by A. Colin; to which are added the select passages in English and French, which form the subject of the engravings. Adapted to all editions. Paris, Baudry, European Library, etc. 1837. XI. Les dames de Byron; or portraits of the principal female characters in Lord Byron's poems. Engraved from original paintings by eminent artists. Under the superintendence of W. and L. Finden. London: Charles Tilt, 86, Fleet Street. 1837. XII. Finden's Beauties of Byron; or, portraits of the principal female characters in Lord Byron's poems. Engraved from original paintings by eminent artists. With extracts illustrating each subject. London: Charles Tilt, Fleet-street, and Thomas Wardle, Philadelphia. XIII. Cabinet of Poetry and Romance. Female portraits from the writings of Byron and Scott. With poetical illustrations by Charles Swain. London: David Bogue, 86, Fleet Street. 1845. XIV. Illustrations to the Works of Lord Byron. The drawings by Chalon, Leslie, Harding, Herbert, Meadows, Stephanoff, E. Corbould, Fanny Corbaux, Jenkins, and Westall. Engraved under the superintendence of Mr. Charles Heath. A. Fullarton & Co., 106, Newgate Street, London, etc. XV. The Byron Gallery of highly finished engravings, illustrating Lord Byron's Works, with selected beauties from his poems. Elucidated by historical and critical notices, together with a sketch of his life, containing important and unpublished matter. By Robert B. McGregor, Esq. New York: published by R. Martin, 46, Anne-street. CONTENTS OF BIBLIOGRAPHY COLLECTIONS OF POEMS. Collected Editions, pp. 89-136. Collections of Dramas, pp. 168, 169. Fugitive Pieces and Minor Poems, pp. 246-254. _The Liberal_, p. 303. Miscellaneous Poems, pp. 152-159. Poems, pp. 254, 255. Poems on His Domestic Circumstances, pp. 255-259. Selections, pp. 144-149. SEPARATE POEMS AND DRAMAS. Age of Bronze, p. 170. Beppo, pp. 170, 171. Bride of Abydos, pp. 172, 173. Cain, pp. 176-178. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, pp. 180-194. Corsair, pp. 201-204. Curse of Minerva, pp. 207, 208. Deformed Transformed, p. 208. Don Juan, pp. 209-220. English Bards, etc., pp. 225-232. Fare Thee Well! and A Sketch, etc., pp. 232-234. Giaour, pp. 234-238. Heaven and Earth, p. 241. Hebrew Melodies, pp. 242-244. Hints from Horace, pp. 259, 260. Irish Avatar, p. 260. Island, pp. 260, 261. Lament of Tasso, pp. 262, 263. Lara, pp. 263-265. Manfred, pp. 266-268. Marino Faliero, pp. 275, 276. Mazeppa, pp. 276-278. Monody on the Death of Sheridan, pp. 280, 281. An Ode to the Trainers of the Frame Bill, pp. 281. Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte, pp. 282, 283. Prisoner of Chillon, pp. 285-289. Prophecy of Dante, pp. 291, 292. Sardanapalus, pp. 293, 294. Siege of Corinth, pp. 296-298. Two Foscari, pp. 299, 300. Vision of Judgment, p. 300. Waltz, p. 301. Werner, pp. 301, 302. TRANSLATIONS. _Collections of Poems_. Collected Editions, pp. 136-144. Collections of Dramas, p. 169. Miscellaneous Poems, pp. 159-168. Selections, pp. 149-152. _Separate Poems and Dramas_. Beppo, pp. 171, 172. Bride of Abydos, pp. 174-176. Cain, pp. 178-180. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, pp. 194-201. Corsair, pp. 204-206. Deformed Transformed, p, 208. Don Juan, pp. 220-225. Giaour, pp. 238-240. Heaven and Earth, pp. 241, 242. Hebrew Melodies, pp. 244-246. Island, pp. 261, 262. Lament of Tasso, p. 263. Lara, pp. 265, 266. Manfred, pp. 268-274. Marino Faliero, p. 276. Mazeppa, pp. 278-280. Ode from the French, p. 281. Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte, p. 283. Parisina, pp. 283-285. Prisoner of Chillon, pp. 289-291. Prophecy of Dante, pp. 292, 293. Sardanapalus, pp. 294-296. Siege of Corinth, pp. 298, 299. Two Foscari, p. 300. Werner, p. 303. SUMMARY OF BIBLIOGRAPHY. I. Poetical Works. 2 v. Philadelphia. 1813 II. P. Works. 2 v. Boston. 1814. III. Works. 4 v. London. _Murray_. 1815. IV. Works. 2 v. London. _M_. 1815. V. P. Works. 3 v. New York. 1815. VI. Works. 3 v. Philadelphia. 1816. VII. Works. 5 v. London. _M_. 1817. VIII. Poems. 1 v. New York. 1817. IV. Works. 8 v. London. _M_. 1818-1820. X. Works. 6 v. Paris. 1818. XI. Works. 13 v. Leipzig. 1818-1822. XII. Works. 3 v. London. _M_. 1819. XIII. Works. 6 v. Paris. 1819. XIV. Works. 6 v. Zuickau. 1819. XV. Works. 7 v. Brussels. 1819. XVI. Works. 4 v. New York. 1820. XVII. Works. 5 v. London. _M_. 1821. XVIII. Works. 5 v. Paris. 1821. XIX. Works. 16 v. Paris. 1822-1824. XX. Works. 4 v. London. _M_. 1823. XXI. Works. 12 v. Paris. 1822-1824. XXII. Works. 12 v. Paris. 1823. XXIII. Works. 3 v. [vols. v., vi., vii.] London. Knight and Lacy. 1824-1825. XXIV. Works. 8 v. London. _M_. 1825. XXV. Works. 6 v. [vols. v., vi.] London. _M_. 1825. XXVI. Complete Works. 7 v. Paris. 1825. XXVII. Works. 8 v. Philadelphia. 1825. XXVIII. Works. 8 v. New York. 1825. XXIX. Works. 32 v. Zuickau. 1825-1827. XXX. Works. 13 v. Paris. 1826. XXXI. Works. 1 v. Paris. 1826. XXXII. Works. 1 v. Frankfort. 1826. XXXIII. Works. 6 v. London. _M_. 1827. XXXIV. Works. 4 v. London. _M_. 1828. XXXV. Works. 1 v. Paris. 1828. XXXVI. Works. 1 v. Frankfort. 1828. XXXVII. Works. 6 v. London. _M_. 1829. XXXVIII. Works. 4 v. London. _M_. 1829. XXXIX. Poetic Works. 2 v. Philadelphia. 1829. XL. Works. 1 v. Frankfort. 1829. XLI. Works. 4 v. London. _M_. 1830. XLII. Complete Works. 1 v. Paris. 1830. XLIII. Works. 6 v. London. _M_. 1831. XLIV. Complete Works. 1 v. Paris. 1831. XLV. Works. 1 v. Philadelphia. 1831. XLVI. Works. 14 v. (17 volume edition.) London. _M_. 1832-1833. XLVII. Complete Works. 4 v. Paris. 1832. XLVIII. Works. (Verse and Prose.) 1 v. New York. 1833. XLIX. Complete Works. 1 v. Paris. 1835. L. Complete Works. 4 v. Paris. 1835. LI. Works. 1 v. London. _M_. 1837. LII. Complete Works. 1 v. Paris. 1837. LIII. Works. 1 v. London and Leipzig. 1837. LIV. Complete Works. 7 v. Mannheim. 1837. LV. Complete Works. 1 v. Paris. 1839. LVI. P. Works. 8 v. London. M. 1839. LVII. Works. 5 v. Leipzig. 1842. LVIII. Works. 4 v. Philadelphia. 1843. LIX. Complete Works. 1 v. Frankfort. 1846. LX. Works. (Verse and Prose.) 1 v. Hartford. 1847. LXI. Works. 2 v. Edinburgh. 1850. LXII. P. Works. 1 v. Philadelphia. 1850. LXIII. P. Works. 1 v. London.H.G. Bohn. 1851. LXIV. P. Works. 1 v. Philadelphia. 1851. LXV. Complete Works. 1 v. Frankfort. 1852. LXVI. The Illustrated Byron. 1 v. London. H. Vizetelly, 1854-1855. LXVII. P. Works. 2 v. Philadelphia. 1853. LXVIII. P. Works. 1 v. London. C. Daly. 1854. LXIX. Works. 1 v. Boston. 1854. LXX. P. Works. 6 v. London. _M_. 1855. LXXI. P. Works. 1 v. Edinburgh. 1857. LXXII. P. Works. 1 v. New York. 1857. LXXIII. P. Works. 1 v. London. _M_. 1857. LXXIV. P. Works. 1 v. London. _M_. 1859. LXXV. P. Works. 1 v. Philadelphia. 1859. LXXVI. P. Works. 1 v. Leipzig. B. Tauchnitz. 1860. LXXVII. P. Works. 3 v. Leipzig. 1860. LXXVIII. P. Works. 1 v. Edinburgh. 1861. LXXIX. P. Works. 10 v. Boston. 1861. LXXX. P. Works. 1 v. Halifax. 1863. LXXXI. P. Works. 1 v. Edinburgh. 1868. LXXXII. P. Works. 1 v. London. F. Warne and Co. 1868. LXXXIII. P. Works. 1 v. London. J. Dicks. 1869. LXXXIV. P. Works. 8 v. London. _M_. 1870. LXXXV. P. Works. 1 v. London. E. Moxon. 1870. LXXXVI. Complete P. Works. 1 v. London. G. Routledge. 1874. LXXXVII. P. Works. 1 v. London. Virtue and Co. 1874. LXXXVIII. P. Works. 1 v. Boston. 1874. LXXXIX. P. Works. 1 v. London. Ward, Lock, and Co. 1878. XC. P. Works. 1 v. Boston. 1878. XCI. P. Works. 1 v. London. Ward, etc. 1880. XCII. P. Works. 1 v. London. F. Warne. 1881. XCIII. Complete P. Works. 1 v. London. G. Routledge. 1883. XCIV. P. Works. 1 v. Edinburgh. 1881. XCV. P. Works. 12 v. London. Sultaby and Co. 1885. XCVI. P. Works. 1 v. New York. 1886. XCVII. P. Works. 1 v. London. W. Scott. 1886. XCVIII. P. Works. 1 v. London. 1886. XCIX. Life and Works. 2 v. London, Edinburgh, and Glasgow. 1888. C. Complete P. Works. 1 v. London. G. Routledge. 1890. CI. P. Works. 1 v. New York. 1890. CII. P. Works. 12 v. London. Griffith, Farran, etc. 1891. CIII. P. Works. 3 v. London. W. Gibbings. 1892. CIV. Works. 12 v. Philadelphia. 1892. CV. Dramatic and P. Works. 1 v. Philadelphia. 1898. CVI. P. Works. 4 v. London. H. Frowde. 1896. CVII. P. Works. 1 v. London. Bliss, Sands, and Co. 1897. CVIII. P. Works. 1 v. London. W.P. Nimme. 1897. CIX. P. Works. 4 v. Philadelphia. 1897. CX. P. Works. 1 v. London. G. Henny and Co. _n.d._ CXI. P. Works. 1 v. New York. _n.d._ CXII. P. Works. 1 v. New York. _n.d._ CXIII. P. Works. 1 v. New York. _n.d._ _TRANSLATIONS OF COLLECTED EDITIONS._ _French_ I. OEuvres Complètes. 15 tomes. Paris. Ladvocat. 1821. II. OEuvres C. 13 t. P. Dondey-Dupré. 1830. III. OEuvres C. 4 t. P. Charpentier. 1836. IV. OEuvres. 2 t. P. Chapelle. 1842. V. OEuvres. 3 t. P. Daussin. 1845. VI. OEuvres C. 1 t. P. Bry aîné. 1856. VII. OEuvres. 2 t. Alphonse Lemerre. 1891. _German_. I. Lord Bryon's Poesien. 31 B. Zwickau. 1821-1828. II. L.B.'s sämmttiche Werke. 12 B. Frankfurt a. M. 1830. III. Dichtungen v. L.B. 4 Sammnl. Stuttgart. 1836-1839. IV. L.B.'s s. W. 1 B. Leipzig. 1839. V. L.B.'s s. W. 10 B. Pforzheim. 1842. VI. L.B.'s s. W. 8 B. Berlin. 1865. VII. Dichtungen v. L.B. 8 B. Hildburghausen. 1865. VIII. L.B.'s ausgewählte W. 4 B. Leipzig. [1865-1812.] IX. L.B.'s s. W. 3 B. Leipzig. 1874. X. L.B.'s W. 6 B. Stuttgart. [1885-1890.] XI. L.B.'s p. W. 8 B. Stuttgart. 1886. XII. L.B.'s W. 6 B. Berlin. 1888. XIII. Byron's s. W. 8 B. 1901. _Modern Greek_. [Greek: Ta Apanta tou Burônos]. 3 V. [Greek: En Athênais]. 1895. _Italian_. I. Opere complete di Lord Byron. 1 t. Padova. 1842. II. Opere. 1 t. Napoli. 1853. III. Opere. 1 t. Napoli. 1857. IV. Opere. 1 t. Napoli. 1886. _Polish_. I. Poezye Lorda Byrona. Pt. 1. Petersburg. 1857. II. Poezye L.B. 1 v. Warszawa. 1885. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Sochineniya Lorda Bairona. 5 t. S-Peterburg"]. 1864-66. II. [Cyrillic: Bairon". S-Peterburg"]. 1876. _Spanish_. Biblioteca Universal. Coleccion de Los Mejores Autores. T. lxiii. Madrid. 1880. _Swedish_. Byron's Poetiska Berättelser. Stockholm. 1854-1856. SELECTIONS. I. The Beauties of Byron. London. J. Sudbury. 1823. II. The Beauties of B. L^n. J. Limbird. 1827. III. Life and Select Poems. L^n. 1828. IV. The Beauties of L.B. Philadelphia. 1828. V. The Beauties of B. Paris. 1829. VI. Lord B.'s Select Works. 3 v. Frankfort a. M. 1831-1832. VI. Childe Harold's, etc.; The Giaour, etc. Paris. 1832. VIII. L.B.'s Select P.W. Paris and Lyons, 1835. IX. L.B.'s Select W. London and Berlin. 1837. X. The Beauties of B. L^n. T. Tegg and Son. 1837. XI. The Beauties of B. L^n. n.d. XII. B.'s Select W. Paris, 1843. XIII. A Selection from L.B.'s P.W. Marienwerder. 1846. XIV. Select P.W. L^n. Adam Scott. 1848. XV. L.B.'s Select W. Oldenburg. 1848. XVI. Selections. London. _M_. 1854. XVII. A Selection. IV. [A.C. Swinburne.] L^n. Moxon and Co. 1866. XVIII. Songs by L.B. L^n. Virtue and Co. 1872. XIX. Selections. London. _M_. 1874. XX. _Beautés de B_. Paris. 1876. XXI. Favourite Poems. Boston. 1877. XXII. Beauties of B. Stuttgart. n.d. XXIII. Poetry of B. (Matthew Arnold.) L^n. Macmillan and Co, 1881. XXIV. Gems from B. IV. New York. 1886. XXV. Selections from the Poetry of L.B. New York. 1900. XXVI. Poems of Lord Byron. L^n. A. and C. Black. 1901. Translations of Selections _Armenian_. Lord B.'s Armenian Exercises and Poetry. Venice. 1886. _French_. I. Choix de Poésies. 2t. Genève et Paris. 1820. II. Les Beautés de L.B. P. 1838. III. Écrin poétique de lit. angl. P. 1841. IV. Chefs-d'oeuvre de L.B. P. 1847. V. Rough Hewing of L.B. In French. L^n. J.W. Kolckmann. 1869. VI. Chefs-d'oeuvre de L.B. 2 t. P. 1874. _German_. I. Byron's ausgewählte Dichtungen. Leipzig. 1838. II. Byron-Anthologie. Schwerin. 1866. III. Auswahl aus Byron. 1892. _Italian_. I. Poemi di Lord G.B. Torino. 1827. II. Opere scelte. Milano. 1852. III. A' Mici Arnici. 1873. Miscellaneous Poems. I. An Ode. On the Star, etc. New York. 1816. II. Three Poems. London. E. Wilson. 1818. III. English Bards, etc., etc. Paris. 1818. IV. The Works of the R.H.L.B., cont. Philadelphia. 1820. Eng. Bards, etc., etc. V. Poems by the R. H. L. B. L^n. Jones and Co. 1825. VI. The Miscell. Poems. L^n. Benbow. 1825. VII. Don Juan, Complete; Eng. Bards, L^n. J.F. Dove. 1827. etc., etc. VII. Don Juan; Hours of Idleness, etc. 2 v. L^n. J.F. Dove. 1828. IX. The Miscell. Works. L^n. Hunt and Clarke. 1830. X. The Corsair--Lara. Paris. 1830. XI. The Bride, etc. The Corsair, Paris. 1832. etc., etc. XII. Manfred--Marino Faliero, etc. Paris. 1832. XIII. Don Juan--The Age of Bronze, etc. Paris. 1832. XIV. Miscellanies. 3 v. London. _M_. 1837. XV. Tales. 2 v. London. _M_. 1837. XVI. Lord Byron's Tales. Halifax. 1845. XVII. The Giaour--The Bride, etc.--etc. L^n. H.G. Clarke and Co. 1848. XVIII. Miscellanies. 2 v. London. _M_. 1853. XIX. Tales and Poems. London. _M_. 1853. XX. Beppo and Don Juan. 2 v. London. _M_. 1853. XXI. Poems by the R't. Hon. L.B. L^n. T. Nelson and Sons. 1855. XXII. Tales and Poems. Leipzig. B. 1857. XXIII. Poems. L^n. G. Routledge. 1859. XXIV. Eastern Tales. L^n. D. Bogue. 1859. XXV. Byron's Siege, etc., etc. Madras. 1876. XXVI. Poems. L^n. G. Routledge. 1880. XXVII. Poems of L.B. 2 v. L^n. Cassell and Co. 1886. XXVIII. Byron's Prisoner of Chillon and Halle. 1886. Siege of Corinth. XXIX. The Corsair--Lara. Boston. 1893. _TRANSLATIONS OF MISCELLANEOUS POEMS_ _Bohemian_. Korsár. Lara. V Praze 1885. _Danish_. I. Udvalgte Dramatiske Digte. København. 1873. II. Byron--Manfred, etc. København. 1889. III. Beppo. Dommedagssynet. Af L.B. København. 1891. _Dutch_. I. Navolgingen van L.B. Haarlem. 1848. II. Gedichten van L.B. Leiden. 1870. _French_. I. Le Corsaire--Mazeppa. Paris. 1848. II. Le Prisonnier, etc.--etc., etc. P. 1862. III. Le Corsaire--etc., etc. P. 1868. IV. Chefs-D'oeuvre de L.B. 2 v. P. 1874. V. L.B. Les Deux Foscari, etc. P. 1881. VI. Le Corsaire. Lara. P. 1892. _German_. I. Gefangener von Chillon u. Parisina. Breslau. 1821. II. Manfred. Die Finsterniss. Berlin. 1835. III. Der Giaur. Hebraische Gesänge. 1854. IV. Kain. Ein Mysterium. Mazeppa. Leipzig. 1855. V. Manfred. Der Gef. v. Chillon. Heb. Ges. Münster. 1857. VI. L.B. Mazeppa, Korsar, u. Beppo. Leipzig. 1864. VII. Die Braut v. Ab. Der Traum. Hamburg. 1872. VIII. Der Gefangene v. Chillon. Mazeppa. Leipzig. 1871-1876. IX. Der Gef. v. Chillon. Parisina. Halle. 1887. _Hungarian_. Byron Lord' Élete's Munkái. Pesten. 1842. _Icelandic_. Bandinginn i Chillon og Dramurinn. Kaupmannahöfn, 1866. _Italian_. I. Poemi di Lord G. Byron. 2 v. Lugano. 1832. II. P. di Giorgio L.B. Milano. 1834. III. P. di Giorgio L.B. 2 v. Milano. 1842. IV. Poemi e novelle. Milano. 1882. V. Opere ... di G. Casella. 2 v. Firenze. 1884. VI. Misteri e canti. Milano. 1886. VII. Misteri, novelle e liriche. Firenze. 1890. _Polish_. I. Poemata i powie['s]ci. Warszawa. 1820. II. Powie['s]ci. Warszawa. 1831. III. Paryzyna, Kalmar i Orla. Wilno. 1834. IV. Poezye Lorda B. W. Paryzu. 1835. V. T[/l]omaczenia A.E. Ody['n]ca. W. Lipsku. 1838. VI. T[/l]omaczenia A.E. Ody['n]ca. W. Lipsku. 1841. VII. Poemata. Warszawa. 1846. VIII. Pi[e,]['c] Poematów Lorda Birona. Leszno. 1853. IX. Kruzer (Karol) Przek[/l]ady, etc. 5 t. Warszawa. 1876. _Portuguese_. Traducç[-o]es Poeticas de F.J. Pinheiro Guimar[-a]es. Rio de Janeiro. 1863. _Roumanian_. Din Scrierile Loui L.B. Boukouresti. 1834. _Spanish_. I. Odas A Napoleon. Paris. 1830. II. Poemas de L.B. Barcelona. 1876. III. Cuatro Poemas de L.B. New York. 1877. IV. D. Juan El Hijo de Doña Inés. Barcelona. 1883. COLLECTIONS OF DRAMAS. I. Dramas by Lord Byron. 2 v. London. _M._ 1837. II. Dramas by Lord Byron. 2 v. London. _M._ 1853. _TRANSLATIONS OF COLLECTIONS OF DRAMAS_. _German_. Lord Byron's Dramatische Werke. Hildburghausen. 1870. _Italian_. I. Marino Faliero e I Due Foscari. Sayona. 1845. II. Tragedie di Giorgio Lord Byron. Firenze. 1862. _Spanish_. Poemas dramáticos de Lord Byron. Madrid. 1886. POEMS, DRAMAS, AND COLLECTIONS OF POEMS. THE AGE OF BRONZE. The Age of Bronze. L^n. John Hunt. 1823. BEPPO. I. Beppo, A Venetian Story. Second Ed. London. _M._ 1818. II. Beppo, etc. Fifth Ed. London. _M._ 1818. III. Beppo. Boston. 1818. IV. Beppo, etc. P.A. and W. Galignani. 1821. _TRANSLATIONS OF BEPPO_. _Dutch_. Vertalingen en Navolgingen, etc. [Beppo Eine Venetiansche Vertelling, pp. 119-159.] Amsterdam. 1824. _French_. Beppo, Poëme de Byron. Trad. p. S. Clogenson. P. Michel Lévy f. 1865. _Russian_. [Cyrillic: Beppo.]. _Spanish_. Beppo, novela veneciana. P. 1830. _Swedish_. Beppo, En Venetiansk Historia. Stockholm. 1853, etc. BRIDE OF ABYDOS. I. The Bride of Abydos. A Turkish Tale. London. _M_. 1813. II. The Bride, etc. Second Ed. London. _M_. 1813. III. The Bride, etc. Fourth Ed. London. _M_. 1813. IV. The Bride, etc. Sixth Ed. London. _M_. 1814. V. The Bride, etc. Philadelphia. 1814. VI. The Bride, etc. London. 1844. _TRANSLATIONS OF BRIDE OF ABYDOS_. _Bohemian_. Nev[ve]ta z Abydu. V Praze. 1854. _Bulgarian_. [Cryllic: Abidonska Nevysta. Moskva]. 1850. _Dutch_. De Abydeensche Verloofde. Amsterdam. 1826. _French_. I. Zuleika et Selim. P. Plancher. 1816. II. La Fiancée d'Abydos. Gand, Houdin. 1823. _German_. I. Die Braut von Abydos. Frankfort-a-M. 1819. II. Die Braut, etc. London. 1843. III. Die Braut, etc. Halle. 1884. _Hungarian_. Az abydoszi ara. B'pest. 1884. _Italian_. La fidanzata d'Abido. Milano. 1854. _Polish_. Dziewica z Abydos. Warszawa. 1818. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Abidosskaya Neviesta]. 1821. II. [Cyrillic: Neviesta Abidosskaya. S-Peterburg"]. 1826. Second edition. [Cyrillic: S-Peterburg"]. 1831. III. [Cyrillic: Abidosskaya Neviesta. Moskva]. 1859. _Swedish_. Bruden Från Abydos. Stockholm, 1853, etc. CAIN. I. Cain; A Mystery. London. Benbow. 1822. II. Cain, etc. L^n. R. Carlile. 1822. III. Cain, etc. L^n. H. Gray. 1822. IV. Cain, A Mystery. New York. 1822. V. Cain, etc. P.A. and W. Galignani. 1822. VI. Cain, etc. L^n. Benbow. 1824. VII. Lord Byron's Cain, etc. L^n. William Crofts. 1830. VIII. Cain, etc. L^n. J. Watson. 1832. IX. Cain, etc. Breslau. 1840. X. Cain. J. Dicks. 1883, etc. _TRANSLATIONS OF CAIN_. _Bohemian_. Kain. V Praze. 1871. _French_. Caïn, Mystère dramatique. P. Servier. 1823. _German_. I. Cain, ein Mysterium. Berlin. 1831. II. Cain. Ein Mysterium. Leipzig. 1871-1876. _Hebrew_. [Hebrew: Kine, shir-chizayon al-pi kitvey hakodesh / me'et / Lord Byron / tirgem me'anglit le'ivrit / David Frishman / Varsha TRS ] _Hungarian_. I. Kain. Franklin-Társulat. 1895. II. Kain. B'pest. 1898. _International Language_. Kain. Mistero de Lord Byron. Nurnbergo. 1896. _Italian_. Caino: mistero. Milano. 1852-6. _Polish_. Kain. Lwów. 1868. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Kain". S-Peterburg"]. 1881. II. [Cyrillic: Kain". Moskva]. 1883. _CHILDE HAROLD'S PILGRIMAGE_. I. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage. A Romaunt. London. _M._ 1812. II. Childe Harold's, etc. Second Ed. London. _M._ 1812. III. Childe Harold's, etc. Third Ed. London. _M._ 1812. IV. Childe Harold's, etc. Fourth Ed. London. _M._ 1812. V. Childe Harold's, etc. Fifth Ed. London. _M._ 1812. VI. Childe Harold's, etc. First Amer. Ed. Philadelphia. 1812. VII. Childe Harold's, etc. Sixth Ed. London. _M._ 1813. VIII. Childe Harold's, etc. Seventh Ed. London. _M._ 1814. IX. Childe Harold's, etc. Eighth Ed. London. _M._ 1814. X. Childe Harold's, etc. Tenth Ed. London. _M._ 1815. XI. Childe Harold's, etc. Canto the Third. London. _M._ 1816. XII. Childe Harold's, etc. Canto the Fourth. London. _M._ 1818. XIII. Childe Harold's, etc. Canto the Fourth. New York. 1818. XIV. Childe Harold's, etc. Eleventh Ed. London. _M._ 1819. XV. Childe Harold's, etc. 2 v. London. _M._ 1819. XVI. Childe Harold's, etc. 2 v. Leipzig. 1820. XVII. Childe Harold's, etc. L^n. W. Dugdale. 1825 XVIII. Childe Harold's, etc. P.A. and W. Galignani. 1825. XIX. Childe Harold's, etc. London. W. Dugdale. 1826. XX. Childe Harold's, etc. London. T. Colmer. 1827. XXI. Childe Harold's, etc. 2 v. Paris. 1827. XXII. Childe Harold's, etc. London. John Duncombe. 1831. XXIII. Childe Harold's, etc. Nuremberg and New York. 1831. XXIV. Childe Harold's, etc. London. _M._ 1837. XXV. Childe Harold's, etc. Mannheim. 1837. XXVI. Childe Harold's, etc. London. _M._ 1841. XXVII. Childe Harold's, etc. London. 1842. XXVIII. Childe Harold's, etc. London. _M._ 1853. XXIX. Childe Harold. Damburg. 1853. XXX. Childe Harold's, etc. 2 v. Berlin. 1854. XXXI. Childe Harold's, etc. London. _M._ 1859. XXXII. Childe Harold's, etc. New Ed. London. _M._ 1860. XXXIII. Childe Harold's, etc. New Ed. London. _M._ 1860. XXXIV. Childe Harold's, etc. Leipzig. 1862. XXXV. Childe Harold's, etc. London. C. Griffin and Co. 1866. XXXVI. Childe Harold's, etc. Münster. 1867. XXXVIII. Lord Byron's Childe Harold's, etc. P. Lib. Ch. Delagrave. 1882. XXXIX. Childe Harold's, etc. P. Poussielque f. 1883. XL. Clarendon Press Series. Childe Harold. Oxford. 1885. XLI. Childe Harold's, etc. London. Chatto. 1885. XLII. Lord Byron. Childe Harold's, etc. Berlin. 1885. XLIII. Cassell's Nat. Lib. Childe Harold's, L^n., P., N.Y., and etc. Melbourne. 1886. XLIV. Childe Harold's, etc. Boston. 1886. XLV. Childe Harold's, etc. Philadelphia. 1886. XLVI. Childe Harold's, etc. Leipzig. 1886. XLVII. Childe Harold's, etc. Bielefeld. 1885-6. XLVIII. Childe Harold's, etc. L^n. G. Routledge and Sons. 1888. XLIX. Childe Harold's, etc. Bielefeld. 1891. L. Sir J. Lubbock's Hundred Best Books. L^n. G. Routledge and Childe Harold's, etc. Sons. 1892. LI. Byron's Childe Harold. L^n. G. Bell and Sons. 1893. LII. Byron. Childe Harold. P. Lib. Hachette et Cie. 1893. LIII. Childe Harold's, etc. New York. 1894. LIV. Arnold's Brit. Classics. Childe L^n. Edw. Arnold. Harold's, etc. 1897. LV. Childe Harold. L^n. J.M. Dent. 1898. LVI. Childe Harold's, etc. Cantos I., II. L^n. Macmillan and Co. 1899. LVII. Childe Harold's, etc. Cantos III., IV. L^n. Macmillan and Co. 1899. LVIII. Childe Harold's, etc. 2 v. New York. 1899. LIX. Childe Harold's, etc. New York. 1899. LX. Childe Harold's, etc. New York. 1900. LXI. Lord Byron. Childe Harold's, etc. Glasgow and Dublin. 1901. LXII. Lord Byron. Childe Harold's, etc. Glasgow and Dublin. 1901. _TRANSLATIONS OF CHILDE HAROLD'S PILGRIMAGE_. _Armenian_. Childe Harold's, etc. Venice. 1872. _Bohemian_. Childe Haroldova pout'. 1890. _Danish_. Junker Harolds Pilgrimsfart. Kjøbenhavn. 1880. _French_. I. Le Pélerinage de C.H. P. Dupont. 1828. II. Le Pélerinage de C.H. P. Ponthieu. 1828. III. Le Pélerinage de C. II. P. Lib. de Ch. Blériot. 1861. IV. C.H. Poëme de L.B. P.E. Dentu. 1862. V. Le Pélerinage de C.H. Saint-Quentin. 1862. VI. Childe Harold. P. Amyot. 1870. VII. Childe Harold. P. Hachette et Cie. 1881. VIII. Childe Harold's, etc. P. Poussielque f. 1883. IX. Childe Harold. P. Delalain f. 1892. X. Childe Harold. P. Belin f. 1892. _German_. I. Harold, der Verwiesene. Leipzig. 1835. II. Ritter Harold's Pilgerfahrt. Stuttgart. 1836. III. Jungherrn Harold's P. Stralsund. 1839. IV. Erster Gesang des C.H. Ansbach. 1845. V. Byron's Ritter Harold. Leipzig. 1846. VI. Childe Harold's P. Frankfurt a. M. 1853. VII. Harold's P. Köln. 1865. VIII. Childe Harold's P. Hildburghausen. 1868. IX. Jung Harold's P. Berlin. 1869. X. Ritter Harold's P. Leipzig. 1871-1876. XI. Childe Harold's P. 1893. _Hungarian_. Childe Harold. Genfben. 1857. _Italian_. I. L'Italia, Canto IV. del pellegrinaggio di C.H. 1819. II. Il pellegrinaggio del Giovine Aroldo. Geneva. 1836. III. L'Italia, Canto di L. B. Milano. 1848. IV. Il pell. del giov. A. Napoli. 1858. V. Il pell. del giov. A. Venezia. 1860. VI. Byron. Pell. D'Aroldo. Milano. 1866. VII. Italia C. di Gior. Byron. Firenze. 1872. VIII. Il pell. D'Aroldo. Firenze. 1873. _Polish_ I. Poezye ... W[e,]drówki Czaild Harolda. Petersburg. 1857. II. Pielgrzymka C.H. we Lwowie. 1857. III. W[e,]drówki C.H. Prz. F. Krauze. 1865-1871. IV. W[e,]drówki Rycerza H. Warszawa. 1895. V. W[e,]drówki C.H. Krakow. 1896. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Cha[)i]l'd"-Garol'd"] II. [Cyrillic: Cha[)i]l'd"-Garol'd"] _Swedish_. Childe Harolds Pilgrimsfärd. Stockholm. 1832. THE CORSAIR. I. The Corsair, A Tale. London. _M._ 1814. II. The Corsair, etc. Second Ed. London. _M._ 1814. III. The Corsair, etc. Third Ed. London. _M._ 1814. IV. The Corsair, etc. Fourth Ed. L^n. _M._ 1814. V. The Corsair, etc. Fifth Ed. London. _M._ 1814. VI. The Corsair, etc. Sixth Ed. London. _M._ 1814. VII. The Corsair, etc. Seventh Ed. London. _M._ 1814. VIII. The Corsair, etc. New York. 1814. IX. The Corsair, etc. Ninth Ed. London. _M._ 1815. X. The Corsair, etc. Tenth Ed. London. _M._ 1818. XI. The Corsair, etc. L^n. W. Dugdale. 1825. XII. The Corsair, etc. L^n. 1844. XIII. The Corsair, etc. Glasgow. 1867. _TRANSLATIONS OF THE CORSAIR_. _German_. I. Der Korsar. Berlin. 1816. II. Der Korsar. Altona. 1820. III. Der Korsar. Leipzig. 1852. IV. Der Corsar. Mainz. 1852. V. Der Korsar. Leipzig. 1871-1876. _Hungarian_. A Kalóz. B'pest. 1892. _Italian_. I. Il Corsaro. Torino. 1819. II. Il Corsaro. Milano. 1820. III. Il Corsaro. Milano. 1842. IV. Il Corsaro. Firenze, 1842. V. Il Corsaro. Bologna. 1870. VI. Il Corsaro. V. di C. Rosnati. 1879. _Russian_. [Cyrillic: Morsko[)i] razbo[)i]nik". S.-Peterburg"]. 1827. _Spanish_. I. El Corsario. Paris. 1827. II. El Corsario. Valencia. 1832. _Swedish_. Corsaren. Stockholm. 1868. THE CURSE OF MINERVA. I. The Curse of Minerva. London. [4to.] 1812. II. The Curse, etc. Philadelphia. [?] 1815. III. The Curse, etc. P. Galignani. 1818. THE DEFORMED TRANSFORMED. I. The Deformed Transformed. London. J. and H.L. Hunt. 1824. II. The Def. Transf. P.A. and W. Galignani. 1824. III. The Def. Transf. L^n. J. Dicks. 1883, etc. _TRANSLATION OF THE DEFORMED TRANSFORMED_ _Hungarian_. Budapesti Árvizkönyv., etc. Pesten. 1840. DON JUAN. _Cantos I., II._ I. Don Juan. London. Printed by T. Davison. [4º] 1819. II. D. Juan. L^n. Pt. by T. Davison. 1819. III. D. Juan. L^n. J. Onwhyn. 1819 IV. D Juan. L^n. Pt. by T. Davison. 1820 V. D. Juan. L^n. Sherwin and Co. 1820 VI. D. Juan. L^n. Pt. by T. Davison. 1822. _Cantos III., IV., V._ I. D. Juan. L^n. Pt. by T. Davison. 1821. II. D. Juan. L^n. Sherwin and Co. 1821. III. D. Juan. Fifth Ed. L^n. Pt. by T. Davison, 1822. _Cantos I-V_ I. D. Juan. L^n. W. Benbow. 1822. II. D. Juan. L^n. Hodgson and Co. 1822. III. D. Juan. L^n. Peter Griffin. 1823. IV. D. Juan. L^n. G. Smeeton. 1826. _Cantos VI., VII., VIII._ I. D. Juan. L^n. John Hunt. [8º] 1823. II. D. Juan. L^n. W. Dugdale. 1823. III. D. Juan. L^n. John Hunt. [12º] 1823. _Cantos IX., X., XI._ I. D. Juan. L^n. John Hunt. [8º] 1823. II. D. Juan. L^n. John Hunt. [12º] 1823. _Cantos XII., XIII., XIV._ I. D. Juan. L^n. John Hunt. [8º] 1823. II. D. Juan. L^n. John Hunt. [12º] 1823. III. D. Juan. L^n. Pt. for the Booksellers. 1823. IV. D. Juan. P.A. and W. Galignani. 1824. _Cantos XV., XVI._ I. D. Juan. L^n. John and H.L. Hunt. [8º] 1824. II. D. Juan. L^n. John and H.L. Hunt. [12º] 1824. III. D. Juan. L^n. Pt. for the Booksellers. 1824. IV. D. Juan. L^n. Pt. for John Hunt. 1824. V. D. Juan. P.A. and V. Galignani. 1824. _Full Text._ I. D. Juan. 2 v. L^n. Pt. for the Booksellers. 1826. II. D. Juan. L^n. W. Cla?? 1826. III. D. Juan. L^n. T. and J. Allman. 1827. IV. D. Juan. 2 v. L^n. T. Davison. 1828. V. D. Juan. 2 v. L^n. Pt. for the Booksellers. 1828. VI. D. Juan. Nuremberg and New York. 1832. VII. D. Juan. L^n. Scott and Webster. 1833. VIII. D. Juan. L^n. Pt. for the Booksellers. 1835. IX. D. Juan. 2 v. London. _M._ 1837. X. D, Juan. Mannheim. 1838. XI. D. Juan. L^n. H.G. Bohn. 1849. XII. D. Juan. L^n. and N.Y. 1874. XIII. D. Juan. L^n. Chatto and Windus. 1875. XIV. D. Juan. L^n. G. Routledge and Sons. 1886. _TRANSLATIONS OF DON JUAN_. _Danish_. I. D. Juan. Fredericia. 1854. II. Byron. D. Juan. Kjøbenhavn. 1880. _French_. I. Don Juan. 2 v. P.P. Renouard. 1827. II. D. Juan. 2 v. P. _Lib. centrale_. 1866. III. D. Juan. P. DeGorge-Cadot. 1869. IV. D. Juan. P. Lemerre. 1878. _German_. I. Don Juan. Essen. 1839. II. Byron's D. Juan. Bremen. 1845. III. Byron's D. Juan. Leipzig. 1849. IV. Byron's D. Juan. Hildburghausen. 1867. _Italian_. I. Don Giovanni. Torino. 1853. II. D. Giovanni. Milano. 1865. III. Gior. Byron. Aidea Epis. del don Giov. Verona. 1875. IV. Il D. Juan. Milano. 1876. V. D. Giovanni. Milano. 1880. _Polish_. I. Don [.Z]uan. Tarnopol. 1863. II. Ust[e,]p z drugiéj pie['s]ni Don [.Z]uana. Kraków. 1877. III. Don [.Z]uan, pie['s]['n] trzecia. Kraków. 1877. IV. Don [.Z]uan, pie['s]['n] druga, trzecia i czwarta. Tarnopol. 1879. V. Don [.Z]uan. Warszawa. 1885. _Roumanian_. Don Juan dela Lord Byron. Bucuresc[)i]. 1847. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Don" Zhuan". S. Peterburg"]. 1846. II. [Cyrillic: Don" Zhuan". 2 v. S. Peterburg"]. [1847.] III. [Cyrillic: Don' Zhuan' ... Glava Pervaya. Le[)i]pzig]. 1862. IV. [Cyrillic: Don" Zhuan". S. Peterburg"]. 1866, 67. V. [Cyrillic: Don" Zhuan". 2 v. S. Peterburg"]. 1889. VI. [Cyrillic: Don" Zhuan". 2 t. S. Peterburg"]. 1892. _Servian_ [Cyrillic: Don" Zhuan" 2 sves. Beograd]. 1888. _Spanish_. I. Don Juan, novela. Paris. 1829. II. Don Juan. Madrid. 1876. _Swedish_. I. Don Juan. Stockholm. 1838. II. Don Juan. 2 v. Stockholm. 1857. ENGLISH BARDS, AND SCOTCH REVIEWERS. I. The British Bards, A Satire. 1808. II. English Bards, and Scotch L^n. James Cawthorn. 1809. Reviewers. First Ed. III. English B., etc. Second Ed. L^n. J. Cawthorn. 1809. IV. English B., etc. Third Ed. L^n. J. Cawthorn. 1810. V. English B., etc. Fourth Ed. L^n. J. Cawthorn. 1810. VI. English B., etc. Fourth Ed. L^n. J. Cawthorn. 1811. VII. English B., etc. Fifth Ed. [L^n. J. Cawthorn.] 1811. VIII. English B., etc. First Amer. Ed. Philadelphia. 1811. IX. English B., etc. Charleston. 1811. X. English B., etc. Boston. 1814. XI. English B., etc. New York. 1817. XII. English B., etc. P. Galignani. 1818. XIII. English B., etc. Brussels. 1819. XIV. English B., etc. Geneva. 1820. XV. English B., etc. L^n. Benbow. 1823. XVI. English B., etc. Glasgow. J. Starke. 1824. XVII. English B., etc. Glasgow. M'Intosh and Co. 1825. XVIII. English B., etc. L^n. W. Dugdale. 1825. XIX. English B., etc. L^n. T. Kay. 1827. FARE THEE WELL! AND A SKETCH FROM PRIVATE LIFE. I. Fare Thee Well! March 18, 1816. II. Fare Thee Well! April 4, 1816. III. Fare Thee Well! Second Version. April 7, 1816. IV. A Sketch from Private Life. March 30, 1816. V. A Sketch, etc. Another Copy. April 2, 1816. VI. Fare Thee Well!--A Sketch, etc. L^n. Sherwood, Neely, and Jones. 1816. VII. Fare Thee Well. Bristol. 1816. VIII. Fare Thee Well. Edinburgh. 1816. THE GIAOUR. I. The Giaour, A Fragment of a London. _M._ 1813. Turkish Tale. II. The Giaour, etc. A new Ed. London. _M._ 1813. III. The Giaour, etc. Third Ed. London. _M._ 1813. IV. The Giaour, etc. Boston. 1813 V. The Giaour, etc. Fifth Ed. London. _M._ 1813. VI. The Giaour, etc. Sixth Ed. L^n. _M._ 1813. VII. The Giaour, etc. Seventh Ed. London. _M._ 1813. VIII. The Giaour, etc. Ninth Ed. London. _M._ 1814. IX. The Giaour, etc. Tenth Ed. London. _M._ 1814. X. The Giaour, etc. Eleventh Ed. London. _M._ 1814. XI. The Giaour, etc. Twelfth Ed. London. _M._ 1814. XII. The Giaour, etc. Fourteenth Ed. London. _M._ 1815. XIII. The Giaour, etc. L^n. W. Dugdale. 1825. XIV. The Giaour, etc. London. _M._ (Tilt and Bogue, Edinb.) 1842. XV. The Giaour, etc. London. 1844. _TRANSLATIONS OF THE GIAOUR_. _French_. Le Giaour. P. J.M.H. Bigeon. 1828. _German_. I. Der Gauer. Berlin. 1819. II. Der Gjaur. Leipzig. 1820. III. Der Gjaur. Leipzig. 1871-1876. _Italian_. I. Il Giaurro. Genova e Parigi. 1817. II. Il Giaurro. Milano. 1884. _Polish_. I. Giaur. Pu[/l]awy. 1830. II. Giaur. Pary[.Z]. 1834. _Romaic_. I. [Greek: Paiêmata Burônos ho Gkiaour. A)thênêsi]. 1873. II. [Greek: Sakellariou Bibliothêkê t. Laou ... ho Gkiaour. E)n A)thênais]. 1898. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Dzhayur"]. 1821. II. [Cyrillic: Dzhayur". Moskva]. 1822. III. [Cyrillic: Gayur". S-Peterburg"]. 1862. IV. [Cyrillic: Gayur". S-Peterburg"]. 1873. V. [Cyrillic: Gayur" Bairona. S-Peterburg"]. 1874. _Servian_. [Cyrillic: Djaur lorda Bairona. u Novom-Sadu]. 1860. _Spanish_. El Giaur ó el infiel. Madrid. 1828. _Swedish_. Giaurn. Stockholm. 1855. HEAVEN AND EARTH. I. Heaven and Earth, A Mystery. L^n. Benbow. 1824. II. Heaven and Earth, etc. P. Galignani. 1823. III. Heaven and Earth, etc. ? W. Dugdale. 1825. _TRANSLATIONS OF HEAVEN AND EARTH_. _French_. Essai sur Le Génie, etc. P. Ladvocat. 1824. _Italian_. Cielo e terra. Milano. 1853. _Russian_. [Cyrillic: Nebo n Zemlya. t. 1.] HEBREW MELODIES. I. A Selection of Hebrew Melodies. L^n. I. Nathan. 1815. II. Hebrew Melodies. London. _M_. 1815. III. Hebrew Melodies. Boston. 1815. 24º. IV. Hebrew Melodies. Philadelphia. 1815. 16º. V. Hebrew Melodies. L^n. W. Dugdale. 1823. VI. Hebrew Melodies. L^n. W. Dugdale. 1825. _TRANSLATIONS OF HEBREW MELODIES_. _Bohemian_. Hebrejské melodie. V Praze. 1890. _Danish_. Lord Byron: Jødiske Sange. Christiania. 1889. _German_. I. Hebräische Gesänge. Berlin. 1820. II. Hebr. Gesän. Laibach. 1833. III. Germanische Melodien. Bonn. 1862. IV. Lord Byron's Heb. Gesän. Karlsruhe. 1863. V. Heb. Gesän. Memmingen. 1866. _Hebrew_. Hebrew Melodies of Lord Byron. Leipzig. 1890. _Italian_. I. Melodie Ebraiche. Napoli. 1837. II. Le Mel. ebree. Ivrea. 1855. _Russian_. [Cyrillic: Evre[)i]skiya Melodin. S.-Peterburg"]. 1860. _Swedish_. Hebreiska Melodier. Helsingfors. 1862. FUGITIVE PIECES AND MINOR POEMS. I. Fugitive Pieces. A Facsimile Reprint 1886. of the Supp. Ed. of 1806. II. Poems on Various Occasions. Newark. 1807. III. Hours of Idleness. Newark. 1807. IV. Poems Original and Translated. Newark. 1808. V. Imitations and Translations. L^n. Longman, etc. 1809. VI. Hours, etc. P. Galignani. 1819. VII. Hours, etc. L^n. Sherwin and Co. 1820. VIII. Hours, etc. Third Ed. P. Galignani. 1820. IX. Hours, etc. L^n. Benbow. 1822. X. Hours, etc. P.A. and W. Galignani. 1822. XI. Hours, etc. Glasgow. 1825. XII. Fugitive Pieces and Reminiscences of L^n. Whittaker, Treacher, Lord Byron. and Co, 1829. POEMS. Poems. Second Ed. London. _M_. 1816. POEMS ON HIS DOMESTIC CIRCUMSTANCES. I. Poems on His Domestic Circumstances. London. W. Hone. 1816. II. Poems, etc. Second Ed. L^n. W. Hone. 1816. III. Poems, etc. Sixth Ed. L^n. W. Hone. 1816. IV. Poems, etc. Eighth Ed. L^n. W. Hone. 1816. V. Poems, etc. Fifteenth Ed. L^n. W. Hone. 1816. VI. L.B.'s Poems on His Own, etc. Dublin. 1816. VII. Poems on His Domestic, etc. Second Ed. Bristol. 1816. VIII. Poems on His Domestic, etc. Boston. 1816. IX. Poems, etc. Twenty-third Ed. L^n. W. Hone. 1817. X. Poems, etc. L^n. J. Limbird. 1823. XI. Miscell. Poems, including those on His L^n. John Bumpus. 1824. Domestic, etc. XII. Miscell. Poems on His Domestic, etc. L^n. William Cole. 1825. HINTS FROM HORACE. THE IRISH AVATAR. THE ISLAND. I. The Island, or Christian and His L^n. John Hunt. 1823. Comrades. II. The Island, etc. P.A. and W. Galignani. 1823. III. The Island, etc. New York. 1823. _TRANSLATIONS OF THE ISLAND_. _German_. Die Insel, etc. Leipzig. 1827. _Italian_. L' Isola. Napoli. 1840. _Polish_. Wyspa czyli Chrystyan i jego towarzysze. Kraków. 1859. _Swedish_. Ön Eller Christian, etc. Stockholm. 1856. THE LAMENT OF TASSO. I. The Lament of Tasso. London. _M_. 1817. II. The Lament, etc. Second Ed. London. _M_. 1817. III. The Lament, etc. Third Ed. London. _M_. 1817. IV. The Lament, etc. Fourth Ed. London. _M_. 1817. V. The Lament, etc. Sixth Ed. London. _M_. 1818. _TRANSLATIONS OF THE LAMENT OF TASSO_. _Italian_. I. Lamento del Tasso. Pisa. 1818. II. La Magion del Terrore. Londra. J. Wilson. 1843. III. Gugl. Godio. Il Lamento, etc. Torino. 1873. LARA. I. Lara, A Tale. Jacqueline, A Tale. London. _M_. 1814. II. Lara, etc. Fourth Ed. London. _M_. 1814. III. Lara. Boston. 1814. IV. Lara. New York. 1814. V. Lara, etc. Fifth Ed. London. _M_. 1817. VI. Lara, etc. Art Union of London. 1879. _TRANSLATIONS OF LARA_. _Bohemian_. Lara. V Praze. 1885. _German_. Lara. Leipzig. 1886. _Italian_. I. Il Lara di L.B. Parigi. 1828. II. Lara. Milano. 1882. _Polish_. Lara. Wilno. 1833. _Servian_. [Cyrillic: Lara lorda Bairona. y Novom-Sady]. 1860. _Spanish_. Lara. Paris. 1828. _Swedish_. Lara. Stockholm. 1869. MANFRED. I. Manfred. London. _M_. 1817. II. Manfred. Second Ed. London. _M_. 1817. III. Manfred. Philadelphia. J. Maxwell. 1817. IV. Manfred. L^n. W. Dugdale. 1824. V. Manfred. Brussels. Printed at the British Press, _n.d._ VI. Manfred. A Choral Tragedy. L^n. T.H. Lacy. 1863. VII. Manfred. L^n. J. Dicks. 1883, etc. _TRANSLATIONS OF MANFRED_. _Bohemian_. Manfred. Praze. 1882. _Danish_. I. Manfred. Kjøbenhavn. 1820. II. Manfred. Kjøbenhavn. 1843. _Dutch_. I. Manfred. Amsterdam. 1857. II. Byron's Manfred. Heusden. 1882. _French_. I. Manfred. Bruxelles. 1852. II. Manfred. P. Paul Ollendorff. 1887. III. Lord Byron. Manfred. Toulouse. 1888. _German_. I. Manfred. A Tragedy. Leipzig. 1819. Manfred. Trauerspiel. Teutsch v. A. Wagner. Leipzig. 1819. II. Manfred. Göttingen. 1836. III. Byron's Manfred. Breslau. 1839. IV. Manfred. Berlin. 1843. V. Lord Byron's Manfred. Leipzig. 1858. VI. Byron's Manfred. Berlin. 1872. VII. Manfred. Leipzig. 1871-1876. VIII. Manfred. Leipzig. 1879-1890. IX. Manfred. Frankfurt. 1883. _Hungarian_. I. Byron Lord'Élete's Munkái. Pesten. 1842. II. Manfred. Szolnok. 1884. III. Manfred. Budapest. 1891. _Italian_. I. Manfredo. Milano. 1832. II. Tragedie di Silvio Pellico. Manfredo. Firenze. 1859. III. Manfredo. Firenze. 1870. _Polish_. I. Manfred. Wroc[/l]aw. 1835. II. Manfred. Pary[.z]. 1859. _Romaic_. [Greek: O Mamphred. En Patrais]. 1864 _Roumanian_. Stoenescu (Th. M.) Teatru ... Manfred. Bucurescï. 1896. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Manfred".] II. [Cyrillic: Manfred".] III. [Cyrillic: Manfred". S-Peterburg"]. 1858. IV. [Cyrillic: Manfred".] _Spanish_. I. Manfredo. P. De Decourchant. 1829. II. Manfredo. Madrid. 1861. III. Lord Byron. Manfredo. Madrid. 1876. MARINO FALIERO. I. Marino Faliero. L^n. _M_. 1821. II. Marino Faliero. Second Ed. L^n. _M_. 1821. III. Marino Faliero. Philadelphia. 1821. IV. Marino Faliero. P. Galignani. 1821. V. Marino Faliero. L^n. _M_. [Tilt and Bogue, Edinb.] 1842. VI. Marino Faliero. L^n. J. Dicks. 1883, etc. _TRANSLATIONS OF MARINO FALIERO_. _German_. I. Marino Faliero. Frankfurt am Main. 1883. II. Lord Byron's Marino Faliero. Oldenburg, _n.d._ MAZEPPA. I. Mazeppa, A Poem. London. _M_. 1819. II. Mazeppa, etc. Second Ed. P. Galignani. 1819. III. Mazeppa. Boston. 1819. IV. Mazeppa. P. Galignani. 1822. V. Mazeppa. L^n. W. Dugdale. 1824. VI. Mazeppa. Braunschweig. 1834. VII. Mazeppa. L^n. T. Goode. 1854. _TRANSLATIONS OF MAZEPPA_. _Danish_. Mazeppa. Stockholm. 1853. _German_. I. Mazeppa. Leipzig. 1820. II. Mazeppa. Göttingen. 1836. III. Mazeppa. Stuttgart. 1883. _Hungarian_. Byron Lord' Élete 's munkái. Pesten. 1842. _Italian_. I. Il Mazeppa. Palermo. 1847. II. Mazeppa. Palermo. 1876. III. Mazeppa. Milano. 1886. _Polish_. I. Mazepa. W. Hali. 1860. II. Mazepa. Pary[.z]. 1860. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Vybor" iz" sochneni[)i] lorda Ba[)i]rona]. 1821. II. [Cyrillic: Mazepa.] III. [Cyrillic: Mazepa.] IV. [Cyrillic: Mazepa. S.-Peterburg"]. 1860. _Spanish_. Mazeppa, novela. Paris. 1830. MONODY ON THE DEATH OF ... SHERIDAN. I. Monody, etc. L^n. _M._ 1816. II. Monody, etc. New Ed. L^n. _M._ 1817. III. Monody, etc. New Ed. L^n. _M._ 1818. AN ODE TO THE FRAMERS OF THE FRAME BILL. A Political Ode. L^n. J. Pearson. 1880. ODE FROM THE FRENCH. _TRANSLATION_. _French_. Traduction de l'Ode. Londres. 1826. ODE TO NAPOLEON BUONAPARTE. I. Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte. London. _M._ 1814. II. An Ode to N.B. Philadelphia. E. Earle. 1814. III. Ode to N.B. Sixth Ed. London. _M_. 1814. IV. Ode to N.B. Ninth Ed. London. _M_. 1814. V. Ode to N.B. Twelfth Ed. London. _M_. 1816. VI. Ode to N.B. Thirteenth Ed. London. _M_. 1818. _TRANSLATION OF THE ODE TO NAPOLEON BUONAPARTE_. _Spanish_. Odas a Napoleon. P. De Decourchant. 1829. PARISINA. _TRANSLATIONS_. _Danish_. Parisina. Stockholm. 1854. _French_. Parisina. Adolphe Krafft. P. Ernest Leroux. 1900. _German_. Parisina. Gedichte von J.V. Cirkel. Münster. 1825. _Italian_. I. Parisina. Milano. 1821. II. Parisina. Milano. 1853. III. Parisina. Mantova. 1854. IV. Parisina. Palermo. 1855. V. Parisina. Genova. 1864. _Russian_. [Cyrillic: Parizina. S.-Peterburg"]. 1827. _Spanish_. Parisina. P. Imp. de Decoutchant. 1830. THE PRISONER OF CHILLON. I. The Prisoner of Chillon. London. _M_. 1816. II. The P. of Chillon. Lausanne. 1818. III. The P. of Chillon. L^n. W. Chubb. 1824. IV. The P. of Chillon. L^n. ? 1825. V. The P. of Chillon. Geneva. 1830. VI. The P. of Chillon. Lausanne. 1857. VII. The P. of Chillon. Illuminated. L^n. W. & G. Audsley. 1865. VIII. Byron's P. of Chillon. L^n. T.J. Allman. 1874. IX. Byron's P. of Chillon. L^n. Simpkin, Marshall, and Co. 1877. X. The P. of Chillon. L^n. Blackie and Son. 1879. XI. Byron's P. of Chillon. L^n. Simpkin, Marshall, and Co. 1879. XII. The P. of Chillon. Vevey. 1880. XIII. The P. of Chillon. Berlin. 1884. XIV. The P. of Chillon. Firenze. 1885. XV. Byron's P. of Chillon. L^n. and Edinb. 1894. XVI. The P. of Chillon. L^n. Stewart and Co. _n.d._ XVII. The P. of Chillon. L^n. and Glasg. Blackie and Son. 1896. XVIII. Byron. The Prisoner of Chillon. Dublin. 1896. XIX. The P. of Chillon. Weimar. 1896. _TRANSLATIONS OF THE PRISONER OF CHILLON_. _Dutch_. De Gevangene van Chillon. Gent. 1856. _French_. I. Le Prisonnier de Chillon. Vevey. _n.d._ II. Bonnivard A Chillon. Le P. de Ch. Genève. 1892. _German_. I. Lord Byron's Gefangener von Chillon. Lausanne. 1861. II. Der Gefangene von Chillon. Vevey and Lausanne. 1865. III. Der Gefangene von Chillon. Berlin. 1886. IV. Der Gefangene von Chillon. St. Gallen and Leipzig. 1892. _Italian_. I. Il prigionero di Chillon. Milano. 1830. II. Il prigionero di Chillon. Milano. 1853. _Russian_. [Cyrillic: Shil'onski[)i] Uznik". S.-Peterburg"]. 1822. _Spanish_. El preso de Chillon. Paris. 1829. _Swedish_. Fången På Chillon. Stockholm. 1853. THE PROPHECY OF DANTE. I. The Prophecy of Dante. Philadelphia. 1821. II. The Pr. of Dante. P. Galignani. 1821. III. The Pr. of Dante. L^n. W. Dugdale. 1825. IV. The Pr. of Dante. L^n. Blackie and Son. 1879. _TRANSLATIONS OF THE PROPHECY OF DANTE_. _French_. OEuvres de Dante Alighieri. La Pr. du Dante. P. Charpentier. 1842. _Italian_. I. Profezia di Dante. P. Barrois. 1821. II. La Profezia di Dante. Nuova-Jorca. 1821. III. La Pr. di Dante. Milano. 1856. IV. La Pr. di Dante. Milano. 1858. _Spanish_. La Profecia del Dante. Mexico. 1850. SARDANAPALUS. I. Sardanapalus, ... The Two Foscari, London. _M._ 1821. ... Cain. II. Sardanapalus, The Two Foscari, Cain. Boston. 1822. III. Sardanapalus. London. _M._ 1829. IV. Sardanapalus. Arnsberg. 1849. V. Sardanapalus. L^n. T.H. Lacy. 1853. VI. L.B.'s Hist. Tragedy of Sardanapalus. Manchester. 1877. VII. Sardanapalus. L^n. J. Dicks. 1883, etc. _TRANSLATIONS OF SARDANAPALUS_. _Bohemian_. Sardanapal. V Praze. 1891. _French_. Sardanapale. Bruxelles. 1834. _German_. I. Sardanapal. Posen. 1854. II. Sardanapal. Jena. 1888. III. Lord Byron's Sardanapal. Berlin. 1897. _Italian_. Sardanapalo. Milano. 1884. _Polish_. Sardanapal. Warszawa. 1872. _Romaic_. [Greek: Sardanapalos. En Athênais]. 1865. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Sardanapal". S.-Peterburg"]. 1860. II. [Cyrillic: Sardanapal"]. _Swedish_. Sardanapalus, Stockholm. 1864. THE SIEGE OF CORINTH. I. The Siege of Corinth. London. _M_. 1816. II. The Siege, etc. New York. 1816. III. The Siege, etc. L^n. W. Dugdale. 1824. IV. The Siege, etc. Lüneburg. 1854. V. The Siege, etc. L^n. Nat. Soc. Depository. 1879. VI. Byron's Siege of Corinth. Berlin. 1893. VII. The Siege, etc. Bielefeld. 1885-1890. _TRANSLATIONS OF THE SIEGE OF CORINTH_. _Dutch_. Het Beleg van Corinthe. Amsterdam. 1831. _French_. Le Siége de Corinthe. P. Pillet aîné. 1820. _German_. I. Die Belagerung von Korinth. Hamburg. 1817. II. Die Belagerung v. K. Leipzig. 1820. III. Die Belagerung v. K. Hamburg. 1827. _Italian_. L'Assedio di Corinto. Venezia. 1838. _Spanish_. El Sitio de Corinto. P. Lib. Americana. 1828. _Swedish_. Belägringen Af Korinth. Stockholm. 1854. THE TWO FOSCARI. I. The Two Foscari. New York. 1822. II. The Two Foscari. P. Galignani. 1822. III. The Two Foscari. L^n. J. Dicks, etc. 1883. _TRANSLATIONS OF THE TWO FOSCARI_. _Russian_. [Cyrillic: Dvoe Foskari]. _Spanish_. Los dos Fóscaris. Biblioteca Dramatica. Madrid. 1846. THE VISION OF JUDGMENT. I. Vision of Judgment. P. Galignani. 1822. II. The Two Visions. L^n. W. Dugdale. 1822. THE WALTZ. I. Waltz: An Apostrophic Hymn. L^n. Printed by S. Gosnell. 1813. II. Waltz, etc. L^n. Benbow. 1821. WERNER. I. Werner, A Tragedy. London. _M_. 1823. II. Werner. P. Galignani. 1823. III. Werner. New York. 1848. IV. The British Drama (Werner, Vol. iii. L^n. John Dicks. 1865. pp. 767-789). V. Werner. L^n. J. Dicks. 1883, etc. VI. Werner. L^n. George Routledge. 1887. _TRANSLATIONS OF WERNER_. _Russian_. I. [Cyrillic: Verner". S.-Peterburg"]. 1829. II. [Cyrillic: Don"-Zhuan". Moskva]. 1881. THE LIBERAL. The Liberal [Vols. I., II.]. L^n. John Hunt. 1822, 1823. Dedication of Don Juan. L^n. Effingham Wilson. 1833. [Illustration: The Prison Called Tasso's Cell, in the Hospital of Santa Anna, at Ferrara.] INDEX _The figures in italics refer to the notes only_. _Abbot, The_, _vi. 440_ Abdalmalek, _iii. 120_ Abdera, _vi. 171_ Abderrahman, Hadgi, _vi. 160_ Abelard, v. 634 Abencerrages, the, a Moorish tribe, v. 558 Abenhamim, _iv. 530_ Aberdeen, "auld toun" of, _v. 609_; _vi. 405_ Aberdeen, George Hamilton Gordon, 4th Earl of, i. _305_, 378, 454; ii. 170, 204; _An Inquiry into the Principles of Beauty in Grecian Architecture_, i. 336 Abernethy, John, vi. 412 Aboukir, battle of, _ii. 459_; _vi. 14_ Abruzzi, the, iv. 288 Abydos to Sestos, Byron's swim from, iii. 13 _Académie des Inscriptions_ (Paris), _v. 603_ Acarnania, ii. 143 Achelous (Aspropotamo) river, ii. 143, 182 Acheron (Kalamas) river, ii. 131, 180-182 Acherusia, Palus, ii. 129, 179 Achilles, _i. 175, 398_; ii. 167, 462; _iii. 180_; v. 488, 526, 535; vi. 117; his tomb, vi. 204, 211 Achmet II., Sultan, _iii. 454_ Achmet III., Sultan, _vi. 261_ Acre, siege of, _iii. 4_; _vi. 14_ Acroceraunian mountains, ii. 303 Acropolis, Athens, ii. 100, 165; vi. 429 Actium, battle of, ii. 126, 128, 179; iii. II; vi. 269 _Adagia_ Variorum, _v. 396_ Adams, John, a carrier of Southwell, vii. 1 Adams, John, of Pitcairn Island (Alexander Smith of the _Bounty_), v. 583, _588, 605, 625_ Adams, Mr., iii. 45 Addison, Joseph, his relative Budgell, _i. 449_; _Essay on Wit_, _i. 398_; _Reflections on Westminster Abbey_, _ii. 133_; _Cato_, ii. 325; vi. 485; _Remarks on Several Parts of Italy_, ii. 384; on Tasso and the Venetians, ii. 467; quotes an Arabian tale in _Spectator_, iii. 98; his "faint praise," vi. 602; his publisher Tonson, _vii. 57_ _Address intended to be recited at the Caledonian Meeting_, iii. 415 _Address spoken at the Opening of Drury Lane Theatre_, iii. 51 _Address to the Sun in Carthon_, _iii. 26_ _Adieu, The, written under the impression that the Author would soon die_, i. _192, 232_, 237; _ii. 458_; _iii. 48_ Adonis, _iv. 115_ Adramyttium, gulf of, _ii. 200_ Adrastus, ii. 519 Adrian (Hadrian), Emperor, i. 20, _462, 493_; ii. 167, _411, 431, 436_, 440 _Adrian's Address to his Soul when dying_, i. 20 Adriatic, wedding the, ii. 335 Ægean Sea, i. 460; iii. 272 Ægina, i. 457; ii. 362 Ælian, _Var. Hist_., _v. 50_ Ælius, _ii. 437_ Æmilius Paulus, ii. 518 Æneas, i. 153, 156, 157 Æschylus, _Prometheus Vinctus_, i. 14, _430_; _ii. 132_; iv. 48-50, 82, _94_; v. 281, _554_; _Eumenides_, v. 281, _296_; _Septum contra Thebas, v. 403_; _Persæ, vi. 169_ Æsopus, _ii. 405_ Æsyetes, _iii. 180_ Ætna, ii. 286 Ætolia, ii. 143 Africa, vi. 198 Afshar tribe, _vi. 384_ Agamemnon, vi. 15 _Age of Bronze, The_, ii. _92, 151, 239, 397_; v. 332, 333, _364, 405, 495_, 535-578, _606_; Introduction to, v. 537 Age of Gold, vi. 284 _Age of Waterloo, The_, _ii. 227_ Agesilaus, king of Sparta, _v. 619_ Agg, John, ii. 213 Agilulf, Duke of Turin, ii. 489 Agincourt, battle of, _ii. 459_ Agis, king of Sparta, iv. 455 Aglietti, Dr. Francesco, ii. 324; _iv. 456, 457_ Agnadello, battle of, _v. 498_ Agostini, Leonard, ii. 490 Agrarian Laws, vi. 407 Agrippa, _ii. 436_; _vi. 139_ Aholibamah, v. 285 Ahriman (Angra Mainyu), the Spirit of Evil, _iv. 112_ Aisha, Lilla, _vi. 160_ Aitken, G.A., his edition of Swift's _Journal of Stella_, _vi. 187_ Aix-la-Chapelle, Congress at, _v. 563_ Ajax, ii. 99, 167; vi. _117_, 204, 339 Akenside, _iii. 452_ Alamanni, _Sat_., _iv. 459_ Alaric, king of the Visigoths, i. 462; ii. 109, 172, _390_, 512 Alban hill, the, ii. 455, 522 Albanese (or Arnaouts), the, ii. _169_, 174 Albania, ii. 123, 173, 174 Albanian (or Arnaout) dialect, specimen of, ii. 183 Albanian war-dance, _vi. 151_ Albano, ii. 454 Albano, Francesco, vi. 502 Albany, Countess of, publishes Alfieri's _Opere Inediti_, _v. 211_ Albany, Duke of (Prince Leopold), _iii. 157_ Albion, its "chalky belt," vi. 419 Albricus Phil., _De Imag. Deor_., _ii. 328_ Albrizzi, Isabella Teotochi, Countess, _Ritratti di Uomini lllustri_, ii. 324; iv. _456, 457, 536_, 570 Albrizzi Giuseppino, _iv. 456, 457_ Albuera, battle of, ii. xi, 51, 81 Alcantara, Martin de, _ii. 81_ Alcibiades, his beauty, and charm of his name, v. 485; vi. 547 Alcina, v. 573 Aid. Manut., _De Reatina Urbe Agroque_, _ii. 384_ Aldini, Professor, _i. 308_; _vi. 50_ Alemanni, the, ii. 298 Alesia (Alise in Côte d'Or), siege of, iv. 331 Alexander the Great (Iskander), i. 467; ii. 123, 174, 509; _iii. 180_; v. _21, 24_, 542, 565; vi. 226, 378, 562; and Mount Athos, vi. 479 Alexander I. of Russia, i. _468_, 476, _489_; v. 539, _551_, 553, 563, 564; vii. _27_, 39, 40 Alexander III., Pope, ii. 473 Alexander IV., Pope, _iii. 369_ Alexander, Grand-Duke, _v. 564_ Alexander, George, as "Ulric" in _Werner_, v. 324 Alexandra, Queen, MS. of _The Two Foscari_, _v. 113_ Alexandria (Ramassieh), battle of, _ii. 108_ Alexey, the Tzarovitch, _vi. 417_ Alexis I., _ii. 202_ Alfieri, Vittorio, ii. 324; iii. 503; iv. 325, 327; his pilgrimage to Petrarch's tomb, _ii. 353_; his grave in Santa Croce Church, ii. 369, 491; _Autobiography_, _ii. 369_; _iv. 264_; _Mirra_, iii. 150; _iv. 367, 368_; v. 5; sonnet on the tomb of Dante, iv. 244; _Abele_, v. 211 Algiers, vi. 56 Alhama, iv. 529-534 Ali Coumourgi, Cumourgi, or Cumurgi, iii. 442, 455 Ali Pasha, the original of Lambro in _Don Juan_, ii. _127_, 129, 138-140, 146, 148, 174, 180; ii. _199_, 205; _iii. 145 189_; _vi. 195, 234_; _vii. 53_ Alighieri, Alighiero (Dante's father), _iv. 248_ Alighieri, Beatrice (Dante's daughter), _iv. 254_ Alighieri, Pietro (Dante's son), _iv. 254_ Alison, _History of Europe_, _v. 570, 575_; _vi. 374_ _All is Vanity, saith the Preacher_, iii. 394 "Alia Hu!" concluding words of the Muezzinn's call, ii. 136; iii. 120, _481_; Mussulman war-cry, vi. 332 Allacci, L., _Drammaturgia_, vi. xvi. Allegra, Byron's natural daughter, _i. 208_; v. 469; _vi. 186, 297_ Allen, Edward Heron, _Rubáiyat of Omar Khayy[-a]m_, _iii. 109_ Allen, Dr. John, _i. 337_ Allen, Richard, _A Souvenir of Newstead Abbey_, _vi. 497_ Allied Army occupy Paris, iii. 431 Allied Sovereigns, Congress at Verona of, v. 537-539; at Vienna, _v. 562_ Allingham, _The Weathercock_, _i. 45_ _All's Well that Ends Well_, _vi. 506_ Almachius, or Telemachus, an Eastern monk, ii. 520 Almack's, i. 476; _vi. 431_ _Almanack de Gotha_, _vi. 417_ Almas, Turkish dancing-girls, iii. 251 Almonacid, _ii. 89_ Alp, "the Adrian renegade," iii. 454 Alpheus river, ii. 182 Alphonso I. of Tuscany, _ii. 354_ Alphonso II. of Tuscany, ii. _355_, 356 Alphonso III., ii. 356; iii. 299; iv. 139, _145_ Alphonso X., king of Castile, _Tabulæ Alphonsinæ_, iv. 523 Alpinula, Julia, ii. 256, 299 Alpinus, Julius, ii. 299 Alps, "the Palaces of Nature," ii. 254, 385; iv. 258 Alpuxarras, the, _vi. 30_ Al-Sirat's arch, iii. 109 Altada, a character in _Sardanapalus_, v. 12 Alterkirchen, battle of, ii. 296 Alvirt, L., _Sardanapale Tragédie Imitée de Lord Byron_, v. 2 Alypius, prætor, ii. 520 Amasis, king of Egypt, ii. 519 Amaun, quarter or pardon, iii. 115 Amazons, v. 526 Amber, its perfume, iii. 181 Ambition, ii. 241, 398; v. 488; vi. 78, 392, 456 Ambracia, Gulf of, ii. 128; iii. 11 Ambrosius, Mediolanensis Episcopus, _vi. 168_ Ameer Khan, _i. 468_ Amenhotep III., _v. 497_ America, Byron's eulogy of, iv. 197, 198 American War of Independence, _i. 500_; _ii. 82_; iv. 511, _516_; vi. _12_, 508 Amiens Academy, _ii. 6_ Ammonians, the, iv. 259 Amnani, Lilla, _vi. 160_ Ampère, M.J.J., _La Grèce, Rome, et Dante_, _iv. 317_ Amphion, i. 438 Amstel, A. van (Johannes Christiaan Neuman), iv. 5 Amulets, iii. 181 Amurath II., Sultan, _ii. 173_; _iii. 308_ Amycus, king of the Bebryces, _vi. 220_ Anacreon, _Odes_, i. 82, 109, 147, 149, 228; ii. 139, _270_; vi. 26, 171 Anacyndaraxes, Sardanapalus' father, v. 23, _24_ Anah, v. 285 _Analectic Magazine_, iii. 377; _iv._ 198 Anatolia, plains of, _vi. 211_ Anaxarchus, the philosopher, _v. 543_ Anchialus, v. 23 Andernach, ii. 296 Anderson, _British Poets_, _i. 198_; _ii. 236_; _iii. 129, 262, 405_ Anderson, the actor, as "Jacopo Foscari," v. 114 Andreini, Giovanni Battista, _Adam, a Sacred Drama_, _v. 218_ Andrews, Miles Peter, _Better Late than Never_, i. 353 Andromache, v. 577 Andromachus, the senator, _ii. 513_ _And wilt thou weep when I am low_? i. 266 Anent, use of the word, vi. 440 Angas, G.F., _Polynesia_, _v. 599-601_ Angelo, _Reminiscences_, _i. 322, 343_ Angiolina, Dogaressa, iv. 367 Angiolini, Mdlle., i. _347_, 348 Angling, "that solitary vice," vi. 513 Angora, battle of, _iii. 312_ Anhalt Zerbst, Prince of, _vi. 388_ Anholt, _i. 488_ Anio river, Falls of the, ii. _384_, 523 Anlace, a dagger, ii. 57 Anne Boleyn, her remark on the scaffold, _iii. 265_ Anne, Empress of Russia, _vi. 417_ Annesley, hills of, i. 210 Annesley Park and Hall, _iii. 311, 477_; iv. 31, 32, 36, 37 _Annual, The_, _i. 303_ _Annual Anthology_, _iv. 521_ _Annual Biography_, _v. 568_; _vi. 413_ _Annual Biography and Obituary_, _vi. 265_ _Annual Register_, _i. 495, 496_; _iii. 25_; _vii. 72_ Annuitants, alleged longevity of, vi. 100 _Another Simple Ballat_, vii. 61 Anselm, Pope, _i. 493_ Anson, Lady, _vi. 410_ Anson, Sir W., _Voyages_, _iv. 58_; _Memoirs of Augustus Henry, Third Duke of Grafton_, _iv. 510_ Anster, _Faust_, iv. 85, _123_; _v. 493_ Anstey, Christopher, _New Bath Guide_, i. 114; vi. 587 _Answer to a Beautiful Poem, written by Montgomery, etc._, i. 107 _Answer to some Elegant Verses sent by a Friend to the Author, etc._, i. 114 _Answer to ---- 's Professions of Affection_, vii. 40 Anteros, iv. 105 Anthemocritus, the herald, _ii. 431_ _Anthologia Græca_, _i. 490_ Anthony (Antony), ii. 179, _492_; v. 486; vi. 139 _Anthony and Cleopatra_, ii. 179 Anthony Pasquin (Williams), _i. 304_ _Antigallican Monitor_, iii. 535 Antigonus, _v. 487_ _Anti-Jacobin, or Weekly Examiner_, _i. 304_; iii. 304; _vii. 49_ _Anti-Jacobin, Poetry of the_, i. _315, 329_, 368; _ii. 7, 30_; _iv. 482, 483_ Antilochus, _ii. 99_; _iii. 180_ Antimachus, _i. 404_ Antinomianism, _i. 417_ Antinous, ii. 167 Antipater, Coelius, _Annales_, _ii. 378_ Anti-Paros, island of, _iii. 295_ _Antiquary, The_, _i. 413_; iv. 524; _v. 377_ Antonina, Belisarius' wife, _vi. 139_ Antoninus Pius, _ii. 440, 514_ Aöus (Viosa, or Voioussa) river, ii. 182 Apelles, iv. 270 Apennines, the, ii. 385; iv. 253 Apicius, vi. 562 Apollo Alexicacos, _ii. 446_ Apollo Belvidere, statue of, 446 Apollo Boëdromios, _ii. 446_ Apollodorus, ii. 273 Appian, ii. 179, _509_ Appleton's _Encyclopedia_, _vi. 349_ Aquileia, _iv. 386_ Aquinas, St. Thomas, _De Omnibus Rebus_; _De Quibusdam Aliis_, _ii. 163_ Arabs, their hatred of the Turks, _iii. 163_ Araktchèef, "the corporal of Gatchina," _v. 564_ Aranjuez, insurrection at, ii. 90 Ararat, Mount, _v. 294_ Arbaces, the Mede, _v. 11, 13_; Governor of Media, v. 12 Arcadia, ii. 189 Arcadius, _vi. 8_ Archangels, the, v. 286 Archenholtz, M. de, _Picture of Italy_, _iv. 470_ Archidamus, king of Sparta, _v. 619_ Archilochus, ii. 483 Archimedes, vi. 538 _Archivio Veneto_, _iv. 457_ Ardennes, forest of, ii. 232, 293 Ares, fountain of, _ii. 189_ Aretini, B. Accolti, _Dialogus de Præstantiâ Virorum sui Ævi_, _iv. 309_ Aretino, Lionardo (Leonardo Bruni), _Le Vite di Dante_, ii. 500; iv. _253, 275_, 309; _Istoria Fiorentina_, iv. 287 Argentière, Mount, ii. 300 Argonauts, the, _vii. 10_ Argos, _iii. 447_ Argus, Ulysses' dog, _ii. 30_, vi. 149 Argyle Rooms, i. 348 Argyrocastro, ii. 174, 202 Arici, Cesare, _La coltivazione degli Ulivi_; _Il Corallo_; _La Pastorizia_, iv. 245 Arimanes, Arimanius, etc., king of the Spirits, iv. 86, 112 Ariosto, Lodovico, ii. 5, _65, 354_; iv. 141, 239, _265, 480_; _v. 615_; vi. xviii, 176, 210; _Satira_, ii. 309; _iv. 149_; "The Southern Scott," ii. 311; the gondoliers and, ii. _330_, 468; _Orlando Furioso_, ii. 359; _iii. 243_; iv. _75, 266_, 283; _v. 573_; his bust, ii. 360, 486; Titian's portrait of, _iv. 162_ Aristaenetus, ii. 199 Aristippus, vi. 139 Aristobulus, _v. 24_ Aristogeiton, ii. 228, 291 _Aristomenes_, iv. 566 Aristophanes, _Clouds_, _v. 289_ Aristotle, _i. 398_; _ii. 196_; iv. 253; _v. 13_, vi. 47, 73, 182 Armada, Spanish, ii. 459 Armida and Rinaldo, vi. 34 Arminius, ii. 293 Armstrong, John, laird of Gilnockie, ii. _25_, 295 Armstrong, poet, _iii. 330_ Arnaout, or Albanian dialect, specimen of, ii. 183 Arnaouts (or Albanese), ii. _169_, 174 Arnaud, ii. 502 _Arno Miscellany_, _i. 358_ Arno river, ii. 364; vi. 402 Arnold, Matthew, _ii. 370_; _A Wish_, _iii. 39_, _Poetry of Byron chosen and arranged by_, _v. 205, 254_; Motto to _Poems_, _vi. 173_; _A Picture of Newstead_, _vi. 496_ Arnold, Dr. Thomas, on _Cain_, _v. 224_ Arnulph, a Lombard, _ii. 390_ Arpenaz, Falls of, _ii. 383_ Arquà, ii. 312, 350; Petrarch's tomb at, ii. 482 Arragonians, the, v. 560 Arrian, _v. 24_; _Alexand. Anabasis_, _v. 543_ Arrowsmith, John, _Tractica Sacra_, _vi. 380_ Arsenalotti, the, _iv. 356, 358_ Arséniew, vi. 306, 332, _353_ Arsenius, Archbishop of Monembasia, _iii. 121, 122_ Art of Happiness, Horace's, vi. 490 Arta, gulf of, _ii. 142, 145_ Artaxerxes Mnemon, v. 3, 4 Artemidorus, _Oneirocritica_, _ii. 488_ Artemis, temples of, i. 467; _ii. 441_ Arthur's Seat, Edinburgh, i. 331, 334 Arundel, Lord, _vi. 496_ Arvad, island-city of, v. 4 _As You Like It_, ii. 293, _399_, iv. 153; _v. 153_, vi. 466 Ascanius, i. 157 Ascham, Roger, _Schoolmaster_, iv. 153 Asdrubal, _v. 606_ Ashburton, Lord, _iv. 513_ Ashpitel, F.S.A., Arthur, _vi. 497_ Askalon, i. 2 Asma Sultana, _vi. 261_ Asmodeus, _i. 56_, iv. 516 Aspasia, v. 5 Asphaltites, lake, ii. 237, 294 Aspropotamo (Aehelous), river, iv. _143_, 182 Assyrians, the, v. 4 Astarte, iv. 115 Astley, Mrs., _vii. 59_ Astley's Theatre, iv. 203; vii. 59 Astoreth, the Phoenician, _iv. 115_ Astrea, the goddess of justice, i. 111 Asturias, the, ii. 89; _v. 558_ Asurbanipal, king of Assyria, v. 4 Asuretiliani, king of Assyria, v. 4 Ataghan, long dagger, iii. 103 Atalantis, vi. 453, _454_ Athanasian Creed, vi. 275 _Atheista Fulminalo_, the old Spanish play, _vi. 4_ _Athenæum_, i. xiii; _ii. 36, 216_; _iv. 32, 36, 513_, v. 324 Athenæus, _Deipnosophistæ_, _v. 11, 24, 103, 107_ _Athenian Society, the_, _i. 336_ Athens, i. 376; its works of Art plundered, i. 454-474; ii. 187-204; besieged by the Venetians, ii. 165, _et seq._, treachery of the Greeks after capitulation of, v. 556 Athos, Mount, ii. 116; iii. 18; vi. 479 Atkinson, Miss, as "Josephine" in _Werner_, v. 324 _Atlantic Monthly Magazine_, v. 584; vii. 3 Atlas, Mount, ii. 386 Atreus, i. 144 "Attic Bee," vi. 585 Attica, ii. 129; vi. 429 Attila, the Hun, ii. 107, 298; _iii. 306_, iv. 386, 456; v. 158; _vi. 321_ Atuahalpa, king of Quito, ii. 81 Aubin, Commander Philip, sloop _Betsy_, _vi. 98, 102_ Aubrey, John, _Miscellanies upon Various Subjects_, _iv. 524_, _Letters and Lives of Eminent Persons_, _vi. 571_ Auchinleck, Lord, _vii. 35_ Auerstadt, battle of, _v. 550_ _Augustini Cod._, v. 118 _Augustini Cronaca_, v. 190 Augustinian monks, _iv. 120_ Augustinus de Cremâ, _ii. 340_, _Confess., ii. 520_ Augustus, ii. 128, _336, 408_, 488, 509, 518; _v. 542_ Augustus, port of, vi. 179 Aulus Cæcina, ii. 299 Aulus Gellius, ii. 92; _Noct. Attic_., _vi. 379_ Aurelian, ii. 520 Aurelius, column of, _ii. 410_ Aurora Borealis, vi. 479 Austen, Sarah, translation of Ranke's _Popes of Rome_, _v. 520_; _vi. 208_ Austerlitz, battle of, i. 489, _495_; _ii. 342_; _v. 548_; _vi. 14, 351_ Austria, and Italy, ii. 363; iv. 456, 458; loan to, _v. 573_ Austrians, restore St. Mark's Lions to Venice, _ii. 336_, defeated by Dumouriez at Jemappes, _vi. 13_, at battle of Leipsic, vii. 23 Ava, cava, or kava, a Tongan intoxicating drink, v. 600 Avalanches in Switzerland, ii. 385 Avarice, "a good old-gentlemanly vice," vi. 78 Aventicum (Avenches), ii. 256, 298 Avicenna, _iv. 523_ Avogadori di Commun (State advocates), iv. _346_, 361, _399_, 463, 465 Ayesha, Mahomet's favourite wife, _vi. 139_ Ayliffe, _Parergon_, _v. 135_ Ayscough, Samuel, iv. 153 Azâzêl, _v. 291_ Azrael, iii. 171 Azzo V. (d'Este), of Tuscany, _ii. 354_ B Baal, king of Tyre, v. 4, 18, 19, 36, 70, 95 Babbage, Charles, _ii. 215_ Babel, Tower of, vi. 235 Babylon, iii. 402-404; vi. 235, 236, 348 Bacchus, vi. 129 Bacci, O., _Manuale della Letteratura Italiana_, _iv. 536_ Bacon, Captain Anthony, _ii. 11_ Bacon, Friar (_The Famous Historie of_), his brazen head, vi. 78; discovers gunpowder, vi. 340 Bacon, Lady Charlotte Mary (_née_ Harley), "Ianthe," ii. xii, 11 Bacon, Lord, ii. 514; vi. 174, 548; _Advancement of Learning_, _v. 228_; _Essays_, _v. 489_; _vi. 259_; _Nat. Hist._, _vi. 518_ Bactria, v. 20 Badajoz, capture of, _i. 496_ Baden, Franz, _v. 564_ Baffin's Bay, _vi. 51_ Bagehot, _Literary Studies_, _i. 303_ "Bagpipe," "pibroch" used for, i. 133 Bailen, _ii. 54_ Bailli, Jean Sylvani, first Mayor of Paris, _iv. 454_ Baillie, Agnes, _vi. 412_ Baillie, Joanna, iv. 339; _vi. 412_; _De Montfort_, _iv. 338_ Baillie, Dr. Matthew, _vi. 21_, 412 Bairâm, the Moslem Easter, iii. 96 Baird, Sir David, _ii. 80_ Bajuzet, cage of, iii. 312 Baker, H. Barton, _The London Stage_, v. 324 Bakewell, T., _The Moorland Bard, etc_.; _A Domestic Guide to Insanity_, i. 361 Baldwin and Cradock, _vii. 50_ Balgownie, Brig o', vi. 405 _Ballad. To the Tune of "Sally in our Alley,"_ vii. 58 Ballantyne, _i. 435_, 436 Baltazhi-Mahomet, Grand-Vizier, _v. 564_ Bandelli, _iii. 505_ Banderillos, dart-throwers, ii. 67 Bandusia, fountain of, ii. 524 Bank tokens, _i. 495_ Bankes, William, i. xii, _84, 497_; iv. _162_, 279, 472 Banks, Sir Joseph, ii. 7; v. 582 Bannier, or Baner, Johan, Swedish general, v. 371 Barataria, pirates of, _iii. 296_ Barbarelli, Giorgio (Giorgione), iv. 162 Barbarigo, Doge Agostino, _v. 195_ Barbarigo, Doge Marco, _v. 195_ Barbarossa, Frederic, ii. 336, 390, 473 Barbette, vi. 305 Barbiera, R., _Poesie Veneziane, iv. 457_ Barbo, Pantaleone, _iv. 352_ Barclay, Captain Robert, _i. 321_ Bardela, ii. 523 Barings, the, vi. 456 Barker, Miss, _Lines addressed to a Noble Lord_, _iii. 488_ Barlow, Sir George, _i. 468_ Barnave, Antoine Pierre Joseph, vi. 13 Barnet, Lewis, Sub-Dean of Exeter, _iii. 299_ Baronius, _Ann. Eccles._, ii. 512, _513, 521_ Barossa, battle of, i. 469; ii. 81 Barotti, ii. 487 Barrett, Eaton Stannard ("Polypus"), _All the Talents_, i. 294, _337_ Barrey, Lodowick, _Ram Alley_, _i. 493_ Barrol, M. de Fallette, _iv. 367_ Barrow, Dr. Isaac, vi. 128 Barrow, Sir John, _Memoir of the Life of Peter the Great_, _iv. 209, 505_, _The Eventful History of the Mutiny of the Bounty, etc._, v. 584, _588, 592, 594, 596_; a _Q.R._ contributor, vii. 76 Barry, the actor, as "Werner," v. 324 Barry Cornwall. _See_ Procter, B.W. Barthélémi; _i. 414_; _Anacharsis_, ii. 199 Bartolini, Lorenzo, _vi. 360_ Barton, Catherine (Mrs. Conduit), _vi. 400_ Baruffaldi Giuniore, Abbé G., _La Vita di M.L. Ariosto_, ii. 486 Baschet, Armand, _Les Archives de Vénise_, iv. 327, _364, 399_ Basejo, Pietro, _iv. 382_ Bashkirs, a Turco-Mongolian tribe, v. 565 Basili, Byron's Albanian servant, ii. 175, 176 Baskerville, _vi. 146_ Basle, Treaty of, ii. 90 Basquiña or saya, the outer petticoat, vi. 116 Bastille, the, _vi. 214_ Bathurst, Captain, _Salsette_ frigate, _iii. 13_ Bathurst, Henry, Earl of, _v. 545, 546_ Batteux, M., _i. 402_ Bauer, Juliette, tr. of Klencke's _Alexander von Humboldt_, _vi. 216_ Baussière, Madame, _i. 493_ Bautzen, battle of, _iii. 431_ Baxter, Richard, i. 417 Bayard, _i. 107_; ii. 7; _v. 498_ _Bayart, Chronique de_, _v. 515_ Bayle, Pierre, _Historical and Critical Dictionary_, ii. 502, _519_; _iii. 122_; _iv. 523_; v. 202, _208, 226, 235, 250, 306, 634_; _vi. 571_ Beachey, Captain, _Narrative of a Voyage to the Pacific_, _v. 588, 605_ Beatrice (Portinari), Dante's, iv. 247, 248, 251; vi. 146 Beattie, James H., _Minstrel_, ii. 5, _65, 82, 115, 123, 350_, 479; _v. 615_; _vi. 78_ Beaufort, Duke of, _Driving_, _vii. 26_ Beauharnais, Eugène, Viceroy of Italy, iv. 458; _vi. 12_ Beaumont and Fletcher; i. _397_, 398, _489_; _The Humorous Lieutenant_, _iv. 172_ Beaumont, i. 343, 398 Beaumont, Lady (Margaret Willis), "Lady Bluemount" of _The Blues_, iv. 569, 570, 585; _vi. 587_ Beaumont, Sir George, founder of the National Gallery, iv. _341_, 570, _582_, 585; vii. _63_, 64 _Beauties of England and Wales_, _vi. 496, 497_ Bebryces, the, _vi. 220_ Becher, Lady (Elizabeth O'Neill), _iv. 338_ Becher, Rev. J.T., i. xi, 112, 247, _263_ Becket, Thomas à, _i. 116_; vi. 422, _495_ Beckford, William, _Childe Harold_ on; ii. xi; _Italy with Sketches of Spain and Portugal_, _ii. 35, 36, 43, 45_; _Vathek_, ii. 37; iii. _59, 76, 87, 105, 109, 110, 121, 145, 478_; iv. _45, 89, 113_, 244; "Dives," vii. 7 Becque, Henry, _Sardanapale, Opéra en Trois Actes_, v. 2 "Bed of Ware," vi. 272 Beddoes, Dr., _i. 307_ Bede, _Excerptis seu Collectaneis_, _ii. 435_ Bedford, Southey's letter to Mr., _vi. 3_ Bedford, Lucy, Countess of, iv. 239 Bedlam, vi. 435 Beechy, Lieutenant, _vi. 478_ Beethoven, iii. 376 Begum of Oude, iv. 72 Behmen or Boehm, Jacob, vi. 268 Behn, Mrs., _v. 550_ Béjot, M., _ii. 481_ Belcher, Lady, _Mutineers of the Bounty_, _v. 588, 589, 622_ Beleses, Governor of Babylon, _v. 13_ Beleses, a Chaldæan and soothsayer (character in _Sardanapalus_), v. 12 Belgrade, _ii. 153_; iv. 331 Belisarius, vi. 139 Bell, John, i. 357, _358_ Bellerophon, _vi. 255_ Bellingham, murderer of Mr. Perceval, _v. 477_ Belshazzar, iii. 396, 421; vi. 162 Beltramo Bergamasco, iv. 384, 430, 465 Beltane Tree, a Highland festival, i. 142 Belus, v. 25, 31 Belvidere Apollo, the, ii. 446 Bembo, Antonio, iii. 448 Bembo, Bernardo, ii. 495 Ben Nevis, _i. 192_ Benbow, W., iv. 482; v. 203; _vii. 46_ Bende, Niccolo dalle, iv. 464 Bender river, _v. 551_, vi. 362 Benedict XIV., Pope, _ii. 282_ Benengeli, Cid Hamet, i. 299 Bentham, Jeremy, _vi. 267_; _vii. 32_ Bentinck, Lord William, _v. 158_ Bentley, Richard, i. 30; _iii. 209_ Bentotes, or Bendotes (Vendoti), [Greek: Lexiko\n Tri/glosson], ii. 197; iii. 121 Benvenuto Cellini, v. 471, _516, 518, 521_ Benzon, Marina Querini, the heroine of _La Biondina in Gondoleta_, _iv. 456, 457_ Benzon, Vittore, _Nella_, _iv. 456, 457_ Benzon, Countess, iv. 471 _Beppo_, _i. 362_, ii. 313, _371, 374_, iv. 153-189, 238, _241_, 279, _413_, 471, _517, 579_, vi. xvi, xvii, _214, 287_, 390; vii. 51 Béranger, J.P, de, _Chansons Inédites_, _vi. 235, 373_ Berenice, i. 69; _vi. 139_ Beresford, James, _Miseries of Human Life; or, The Last Groans of Timothy Testy and Samuel Sensitive_, i. 338 Beresford, Lord, _ii. 51_ Beresina, battle of, _iv. 207_ Bergami, Bartolommeo, vi. 236, _290_ Bergamo, v. 119, 138 Bergk, _i. 19_, ii. 138 Berkeley, D.D., Bishop George, _Principles of Human Knowledge_, vi. 427 Berlan, Francesco, _I due Foscari, Memorie Storicho Critiche_, v. 117, 119, _121, 122, 133, 134_ Berlin, v. 550 Berlinghieri, Andrea Vacca, ii. 324 Bernadotte, king of Sweden, _v. 553_ Bernard, Edward, _Pedigree of George Gordon, Sixth Lord Byron_, _vi. 411_ Bernard, W. Bayle, adapts _Marino Faliero_ for the stage, iv. 324 Berners, Sir John Bourchier, Lord, _The Bake of Duke Huon of Burdeux_, _v. 496_ Berni, Francesco, iv. 157, 283, 325; vi. xvi Bernis, Abbé de, iv. 334 Bernstorff, Count, v. 539 Berrí, Duc de, _iii. 435_; _v. 567_ Berry, Miss, _Journal_, iv. 569, 570, 587 Bertrand, General, _iii. 312_; _Campagnes d' Egypte et de Syrie_, _v. 550_ Bertuccio, Israel, iv. 340, 464 Bestuchef, Count, _vi. 417_ Betham, William, _v. 588_ Bethlen Gabor, king of Hungary, _v. 349, 352_ _Betsy_, wreck of the sloop, _vi. 98, 102_ Bettinelli, ii. 496 Betty, William Henry West, "the young Roscius," i. 342 Beuchot, editor of Voltaire's _Works, iv. 212_ Bevius, Canon of Padua, ii. 503 Bewley, John H., of Buffalo, N.Y., _vii. 63_ Bey Oglou, the, iii. 166 Bezborodky, _vi. 389_ Biagoli, _iv. 318_ Bianchi, ii. 494 Bianconi, ii. 487 Bibiena, Antonío Divizio da, _iv. 174_ Bibiena, Cardinal, _iv. 174_ Bibiena, Maria da, _iv. 174_ _Bible, the_, ii. xiii; prophecies of, iv. 244 _Bibliographie Universelle_, _iv. 334_ _Bibliotheca Teubneriana_, _iv. 213_ _Bibliothèque de l' École des Hautes Études_, Paris, _ii. 412_ _Bibliothèque Historique de la Revolution_, _vi. 13_ Bindi, V., _Monumenti Storici ed. Artistici degli Abruzzi_, _iv. 288_ Bindlose, Sir Francis, _i. 101_ _Biographia Literaria_ (Coleridge's), _i. 489_; _iii. 435_ _Biographical Dictionary of Living Authors of Great Britain and Ireland_, _iv. 341_; _vi. 443_ _Biographie Universelles_, _vi. 246, 531_ Biondo, Niccolo, iv. 464 Birch, Alderman, _i. 435_ Biren, Ernest John, vi. 417 Biscay, Bay of, ii. 31 Bishop, Sir Henry, iv. 78 Bisognoso, bezonian, a rogue, vi. 347 Black Friar of Newstead Abbey, the, vi. _576_, 578, _et seq._ Black, John, "Maid of Athens'" husband, _iii. 16_ Black, John, _Life of Tasso_, _ii. 470, 485_; _iv. 145_ Black, Theresa (_née_ Macri), "Maid of Athens," iii. 15; _vi. 280_ Black Sea, _iii. 4_; _vii. 10_ Blackbourne, Dr., Archbishop of York, _iii. 298_ Blacket, Joseph, i. _323_, 359, _442_, _443_; vii. 11 Blacklock, Dr., _ii. 5_ Blackmore, Sir Richard, _i. 314, 404_ Blackstone, _Commentaries_, i. 29 Blackwood, William, iii. 444; _vii. 51_ _Blackwoods Edinburgh Magazine_, _iii. 182_; iv. 80, _119_, 139, _152_, 157, 203, 240, 329, _368_, _521_, 570; v. 5, 204, 280, 282, 329; vi. xix, _16, 213, 278, 445_; vii. 51 Blair, Dr., vi. 128 Blake, Benjamin, barber, i. 422 Blake, K. Jex-, _The Elder Pliny's Chapters on the History of Art_, _ii. 432_ Blanc, Mont, ii. 257, 299, 385 Blanchard, E.L., _Life and Remains_, iv. 324 Bland, Rev. Robert, _The Greek Anthology, etc._, _i. 366_; ii. 291; _iii. 32_; _v. 633_ _Bland-Burges Papers_, _i. 416, 438_ Blank verse, "allied to tragedy," i. 398; "prose poets like," vi. 73 "Blatant beast," a figure for the mob, ii. 40 Blenheim, battle of, _ii. 459_; iii. 57 Blessington, Lady, _Conversations with Lord Byron_, _i. 337, 390_; _ii. 236, 423_; iv. _63, 64_, 70, _538, 545, 549, 562_, 570; _vi. 509_; vii. _38_, 82; Lawrence's portrait of, _iv. 64_ Blessington, Lord, _iv. 64_; _vi. 512_; vii. 82 Bligh, Lieutenant William, short account of, v. 587; _A Narrative of the Mutiny and Seizure of the Bounty, etc_., v. 581-583, 585, _588, 589, 591-595_; _vi. 98-100, 105, 111_ Blondus, Flavius, _De Româ Instauratâ_, ii. 509 Bloomfield, George, i. 360 Bloomfield, Nathaniel, i. 300, 441, _442_ Bloomfield, Robert, _The Farmer's Boy_, i. _359_, 360, _442, 443_ Blore, Edward, architect, iii. 376 Blount, Henry, "Good night to Marmion," i. 312 Blücher, Marshal, _ii. 459_; _v. 553_; vi. _312_, 345; _vii. 39_ Blue-stockings, the, _iv. 176_; vi. 75 _Blues, The_, _i. 321, 362_; iv. 567-588; vi. 357, _587_; _vii. 17_ Blunt, Lady Anna Isabella Scawen (_née_ Noel), _ii. 215_ Blunt, Wilfrid Scawen, _ii. 215_ Boabdil, vi. 30 Boatswain, Byron's dog, i. 280; ii. 30 Boccaccio, Giovanni, ii. _353_, 373, 498, 500; _iv. 248, 253, 254_; vi. 179; "the Bard of Prose," ii. 371; _Decameron_, ii. 495, 501, 502; his burial-place, ii. 499; his cenotaph at Arquà, ii. 503; _Il Comento sopra la Com media_, iv. 316 Bodleian Library, Oxford, _v. 302, 473_ Bodoni, ii. 472 Boehm, Mrs., her masquerade, iv. 177 Boeotia, ii. 66, 93 Boethius, _De Consolat. Philos._, _iv. 318_ Bogle, Scottish for goblin, vi. 449 Bohemia, evacuated by the Swedish garrisons, _v. 371_ Bohours, ii. 485 Boïardo, Matteo Maria, _Orlando Innamorato_, ii. 293, _354_, 485; iv. 281, 283 Boileau, _i. 402_; ii. 358, 484, _485_ Boissevain, P., editor of Dio Cassius' _Hist. Rom._, _iv. 370_ Bolero, i. 492; iii. 3, _26_; vi. 526 Boleyn, Anne, her remark on the scaffold, _iii. 265_ Bolingbroke, Lord, hires Mallet to traduce Pope, i. 326 Bolivar, Simon (El Libertador), v. 555 Bonar, James, _Malthus and his Work_, vi. 461 Bonesani, Beccaria, _Dei Delitti e delle Pene_, _ii. 196_ Boniface VII., Pope, ii. 494 Bonivard, Amblard de, iv. 14 Bonivard, François de, Prior of St. Victor (Prisoner of Chillon), iv. 3-28, 327; _Les Chroniques de Genève_, iv. 5; _Mémoires, etc._, _iv. 18_ Bonivard, Jean Aimé de, iv. 9, _20_ Bonivard, Louis de, iv. 9 Bonn, vi. 419 Boone, Colonel Daniel, _The Adventures of; Containing a Narrative of the Wars of Kentucky_, vi. 348, 349 Boone, George, of Exeter, _vi. 349_ Booth, G., _The Historical Library of Diodorus the Sicilian_, _v. 11_ Booth's Theatre, New York, _Sardanapalus_ at, v. 2 _Border Minstrelsy_, ii. 4, _25_, 295 Borgia, Lucrezia, _ii. 354_ Borgo, Count Pozzo di, v. 539 Bornou, _vi. 474_ Borysthenes (Dniéper) river, iv. 211 Boscan, Juan, of Barcelona, _Leandro_; _The Allegory_, vi. 40 Bosphorus, vi. _219_, 220; _vii. 10_ Bosquet de Julie, ii. _305_, 306 Boswell, James, _Life of Johnson_, _i. 401, 409, 449_; ii. _460_, 489; _iv. 500, 573_; _v. 592_; _vi. 247, 455, 482_ Botzaris, Marco, Suliote chief, ii. 180 Boudot, M., _ii. 481_ Boufflers, Marshal, _ii. 297_ Boulanger, J.C., _De Terræ Motu et Fulminibus_, _ii. 488_ _Bounty_, Mutiny of the, See also _The Island_, v. 581-584. _See_ also _The Island_ Bourbon, Connétable Charles de (Comte de Montpensier, Dauphin d'Auvergne), _ii. 390_; iv. 258; v. _495_, 498, 515-518, _520_ Bourbon, Susanne, Duchesse de, _v. 499_ Bourbons, the, iv. 334 Bourdeille, Pierre de, _v. 520_ Bourne, H.R. Fox-, _Life of John Locke_, _ii. 353_ Bourrienne, M., _i. 489_ Bouveret, ii. 304; _iv. 18_ Bouwah! the Suliote war-cry, vii. 83 Bowles, Rev. William Lisle, _Strictures on Pope, etc._, i. 292, _305_, 323-327, 352, 370, 421, _435_; _ii. 139_; iii. 535; _iv. 555, 562_; _Spirit of Discovery_, i. 324, 325, 404; _The Missionary of the Andes_, vii. 45; _The Invariable Principles of Poetry_, vii. 74, 75 _Bowles and Campbell_, vii. 74 Bowring, E.A., _The Tragedies of Vittorio Alfieri_, _v. 211_ Boyd, Hugh, iv. 313, _513_ Boyer, J.B., _Lettres Juives_, _iii. 123_ Boyne, W., _i. 495_ "Boz," _Memoirs of Joseph Grimaldi_, _vi. 11_ Bracciolini, Poggio, _ii. 354_ Braemar, i. 173 Braganza, vii. 6 Braham, John, _i., 347_; music for _Hebrew Melodies_, iii. 375 Bramante, first architect of St. Peter's, Rome, _iv. 270_ Brandenburgh, George William, Elector of, v. 373 Brandl, Professor A., _Goethes Verhältuiss zu Byron_, iv. 82; _Goethe-Jahrbuch_, _iv. 136_ Brandywine, battle of, _i. 500_ Brantôme, _Memoires de Messire Pierre de Bourdeille_, _v. 504, 520_ Brasidas, ii. 167, 335 Brass, Corinthian, vi. 284 Braziers, the, vii. 72 Bread-fruit (_Autocarpus incisa_), v. 596 "Break squares," to, vi. 487 Breitenfeld, battle of, _v. 371_ Brennus, iv. 258 Brenta, the, ii. 349 Brentano, M. Frantz Funck-, _L'Homme au Masque de Velours Noir_, _iv. 514_ Brentford, ii. 66 Brenton, E.P., _The Naval History of Great Britain_, _vi. 589_ Brescia, v. 119, 138 Bret Harte, _The Society upon the Stanislaus_, _iv. 296_ Breuner, General, _iii. 455_ Brewster, Sir David, _Letters on Natural Magic_, _v. 483_; _Memoirs, etc., of Sir Isaac Newton_, _vi. 400_ Briareus, vi. 276 _Bride of Abydos_, _i. 340_; iii. _13, 17_, 80, 157-210, 217, 219, _275_, 319, _480_; _iv. 56_; _vi. 204_; vii. 55 Bridge of Sighs, Venice, ii. 327, 465; iv. 364; v. 139 Bristol, Countess of, _vi. 219_ "Britannicus," _Revolutionary Causes, etc., and A Postscript containing Strictures on Cain, etc._, v. 202 _British Album_, _i. 358, 383_ _British Archæological Society_, _iii. 120_ _British Bards, A Satire_, original title of _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_, i. xiv, 293, _303, 306, 307, 311-314, 316, 317, 321-325, 327, 332, 339-342, 344-346, 353-355, 357, 361, 366, 367, 371-373, 375, 376_ _British Critic_, vi. xx British Museum, i. xiv, _108_; _ii. 441_; _v. 542, 548, 600_; _vii. 78_; _Egerton MSS._, i. _235_, 293, 387; _MS., Proof b_, _i. 394-396, 398-401_; _Childe Harold MS._, _ii. 3-5_; _iii. 38_; _MS._, _vii. 87_ _British Review_ ("The Old Girl's Review;" "My Grandmother's Review"), _iii. 128_; iv. 578, 579; v. 204; vi. xx, 76 _British Theatre_, _iii. 158_ Brocken, German superstition about the, v. 483 Brodribb, Rev. W.J., _Pliny's Letters_, _ii. 380_ Brossano, Petrarch's son-in-law, ii. 484 Brougham, Lord, i. 293, _302, 306_, 338; _iv. 195_; _The Identity of Junius with a Distinguished Living Character established_, _iv. 513_; his Fabian tactics, vi. _67-70_; "Parolles," vi. 506; his critique of _Hours of Idleness_, _vi. 551_ Brown, Horatio F., _Venice, an Historical Sketch, etc._, ii. _338_, 340; _iv. 356, 361, 399_; v. 119, _125_; _Venetian Studies_, _iv. 427_ Brown, John, _The Kentucky Pioneers_, _vi. 349_ Brown, Rawdon, Preface to _Venetian Calendar of State Papers_, _iv. 447_ Browne, Felicia Dorothea (Mrs. Hemans), vii. 70 Browne, Isaac Hawkins, _The Fireside, a Pastoral Soliloquy_, _vi. 348_ Browne, Sir Thomas, _ii. 345_; _Religio Medici_, _iii. 165_ Browning, Mrs. Elizabeth Barrett, _Casa Guidi Windows_, iv. 239, _250_ Browning, Oscar, _Peter the Great_, iv. 203; _Charles XII._, _iv. 208_; _vi. 363_; _Dante_, _iv. 254_ Browning, Robert, _Poetical Works_, _ii. 346_; _Christmas Eve_, _ii. 376, 441_; _Never the Time, etc._, _iii. 180_; _Evelyn Hope_, _iii. 292_; _Pippa Passes_, iii. 348; _Confessions_, _iv. 217_; and Macready, v. 114; _Bishop Blougram's Apology_, _vi. 586_ Brownlow, Bishop of Winchester, vii. 22 Bruce, James ("Abyssinian Bruce"), _Life and Travels_, _iii. 99_; _v. 302_; _vi. 122_ Bruchard, Henri de, _Notes sur le Don Juanisme_, vi. xx, _387_ Brue, Benjamin, _Journal de la Campagne en 1715_, iii. 442, _481_ Brummell, "Beau," _iv. 179_; vi. 451 Brunck, Richard Franz Philippe, i. 30; _Anthologia Græca_, i. 490; _Gnomici Poetæ Græci_, _ii. 404_ Brunelleschi, _ii. 376_ Brunswick, Duchess of, _vii. 35_ Brunswick, Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of, _ii. 239_; vi. 12, _312_ Brunswick, Frederick William, Duke of, ii. 230 Brussels, the Waterloo ball at, ii. 228, 292 Brutus, ii. 374, 392; iv. 370, _386_; _v. 560_; vii. 37 Bryant, Jacob, _iii. 179_; _Dissertation concerning the War of Troy, etc._, vi. 204, _211_ Bryant's _Dictionary of Painters_, _ii. 171_ Brydges, Sir E., _iv. 541_ Bucentaur, the Venetian State barge, ii. 335 Buchan, fifth Earl of, _i. 429_ Buckhurst, Thomas Sackville, Lord, _Gorboduc_, i. 197 Buckingham, George Villiers, second Duke of, _i. 197_; _The Rehearsal_, i. _309, 401_, 423, 447; _vi. 52, 303_ Buckingham, John Sheffield, Duke of, _Essay upon Poetry_, i. 354 Buda retaken from the Turks, iii. 458 Budd, the publisher, _i. 356_ Budge, E.A. Wallis, _Life and Exploits of Alexander the Great_, _v. 543_ Budgell, Miss, _i. 449_ Budgell, Eustace, i. 448, 449 Buffo, vi. 206 Bulgarin, _Iwan Wizigin_, iv. 203 Bull-fights, ii. 67-72 Bulmer, W., printer, _i. 317_; iii. 301 Bülow, Friedrich Wilhelm, Baron von, vi. 345 Bulukof, Count, _vi. 260_ Bumpus, John, _i. 234_ Bunbury H., _The Little Grey Man_, _i. 317_ Bungay, Friar, _vi. 78_ Bunyan, John, _vi. 208_ Bunyan, William, _An Effectual Shove, etc._, i. 417, _418_ Buonaparte, Jacopo, _Sacco di Roma, etc._, iv. 258; v. 471, _514, 516, 520, 521_ Buonaparte, Joseph, _iv. 458_; v. 533 Buonaparte, Prince Lucien, ii. 522 Buonaparte, Napoleon. _See_ Napoleon Buonaparte Buratti (Bucati), Pietro, _iv. 456, 457_ Burchard, _Diar._, _iii. 367-369_ Burdett, Sir Francis, _i. 435, 436_; vii. 30, _40, 67_, 68 Burgage, or tenure in burgage, vi. 590 Bürger, _Lenore_, _i. 305_ Burges, Elizabeth, Lady (_née_ Noel), _i. 437_ Burges, Sir James Bland, _i. 314_; _Richard the First_; _Exodiad_, _i. 436, 437_ Burgoyne, General John, vi. 12 Burgundians, the, ii. 254, 297 Burke, Edmund, _i. 416_; iv. 75, _513_; v. 592; _Reflections on the Revolution in France_, _ii. 7_; _iii. 513_ Burkitt, Thomas, able seaman on the _Bounty_, v. 583 Burns, Robert, _Farewell to Ayrshire_, _i. 210_; Lewis's _Tales of Terror_, _i. 317_; referred to in _E.B. and S.R._, i. 360, 362; _Farewell to Nancy_, iii. 147; _The Life and Age of Man_, _iii. 449_; Dr. Currie's _Life of_, vi. 174; Burrard, Sir Harry, _ii. 39_ Burton, Sir Richard F., _Arabian Nights_, _iii. 87, 104, 109, 113_ Burton, _Anatomy of Melancholy_, _ii. 236_; _v. 543_ Burun, Ralph de, _iv. 543_; _vi. 411_ Busaco, battle of, _i. 470_ Busby, Dr. Thomas, _A New and Complete Musical Dictionary_; _The Age of Genius_; Drury Lane _Address_, i. 481, 485; iii. 55-58; translation of _Lucretius_, iii. 57 Busingen, _iv. 97_ Bute, John Stuart, Earl of, iv. 501, 510 Butler, A.J., _The Hell of Dante_; _iv. 245_; translation of _Francesca da Rimini_, _iv. 320_ Butler, Dr., Headmaster of Harrow ("Pomposus"), i. 17, 88, _89_, 90, 91, _93_, 94 Butler, Rev. Alban, _Lives of the Saints_, _vi. 32, 33_ Butler, Samuel, _Hudibras_, _vi. 153, 404, 551_ Buxton, Fowell, _vi. 549_ Byng, George, M.P. ("the County Byng"), _vii. 67, 68_ Byng, Admiral John, ii. _40_, 41 Byrne, editor of _Morning Post_, _i. 358_ Byrne. Mrs. (Charlotte Dacre), "Rosa Matilda," i. _306, 357_, 370; _Hours of Solitude_, _i. 358_ Byron, Augusta Ada. _See_ Lovelace, Lady Byron, Cecilie, Lady (widow of Sir Francis Bindlose), _i. 101_ Byron, Charlotte Augusta (Mrs. Christopher Parker), _iii. 417_ Byron, Elizabeth, Lady (_née_ Chaworth), _iv. 542_ Byron, Hon. Mrs. Frances (_née_ Levett), vi. 410 Byron, Hon. George, _vi. 410_ Byron, George Anson, iii. xxi; vii. 41 Byron, Hon. Juliana, _iii. 381_ Byron, Lucy, Lady, _i. 101_ Byron, the Little Sir John, _i. 1, 3, 119_ Byron, Admiral the Hon. John, _iii. 381, 417_; iv. 57; _vi. 410_; _Narrative_ of his shipwreck in the _Wager_; _Voyage round the World_, _iv. 58_; vi. _102_, 121 Byron of Rochdale, 1st Lord (Sir John Byron of Clayton), i. _3, 101, 119_, 121; _vi. 294, 495_ Byron, Sir Nicholas, _i. 3_ Byron, Richard (2nd Lord), _i. 3, 101_; _iv. 14_; _vi. 294_ Byron, Sir Robert, _i. 101_ Byron, Sophia Maria, _vi. 410_ Byron, William (3rd Lord), _iv. 542_ Byron, William (5th Lord, "the wicked Lord Byron"), ii. 17; _iv. 58, 542_; _vi. 121, 410, 497_ Byron, Hon. William, _iii. 381_ Byron, Sir William, _i. 121_ Byron, Lady (Miss Milbanke), _i. 260, 301, 359_; ii. x, _74, 288, 427_; iii. 411, _449_, 499; iv. _39_, 63, 184, _254, 492_; _vi. 22, 274_; her transcription of _Parisina_, iii. 499; "my moral Clytemnestra", _iv. 64_; "a poetess--a mathematician--a metaphysician," iv. 576; "Miss Lilac" of _The Blues_, iv. 570; on Byron's lameness, v. 470; _Remarks on Mr. Moore's Life, etc._, _vi. 21_; and M. Baillie, _vi. 412_; patroness of the Charity Ball, vii. 71 Byron, Lord, _Diary_ or _Journals_ referred to, _i. 5, 25, 30, 45, 103, 184, 303, 310, 362_; _ii. 61, 187, 304_; iii. _46, 50, 70, 105_, 149, 150, _157, 165, 210_, 218, 303, _305, 307, 308, 311, 314, 411, 495_; v. _28, 61, 78, 159_, 199, _254, 477, 555, 615_; vi. _18, 128, 146, 173, 197, 204, 240, 263, 421, 461, 504, 511_; _vii. 51, 74_; _My Dictionary_, _vi. 381_ Byron, Mrs. (mother), i. 269, _336_; _iii. 449_; _iv. 543_; Byron's letters to, _i. 125, 282, 351_; ii. ix, _24, 27, 34, 42, 49, 59, 63, 100, 124, 128, 138_, 301; iii. _4, 13_, 441, _450_; _vi. 128, 195, 565_; _furiosa_, vi. 30 "Byron's Pool," on the Cam, vi. 49 "Byron's Tomb," at Harrow, _i. 26_ Byzantium, ii. 337 C Caballerías, the, ii. 47 Caballero, _Victoires et Conquètes des Français_, ii. 94 Cabot, Sebastian, _iv. 262_ Cabotto, or Gavotto, Giovanni, _iv. 262_ Cadiz, ii. 63, 67, 77, 93; iii. 1 Cadmus, i. 148 Cæcina, Aulus, ii. 299 Cæsar, _i. 351, 422_; ii. 397; iv. 352; _v. 560_; vi. 139, 339, 404; _De Bello Gallico_, iv. 331 Caia river, ii. 45 _Cain_, _iii. 32, 182_; _iv. 34, 48, 50_; v. 5, _9_, 197-275, 279, _306_, 469; vi. _385_, 444, _491_; _vii. 78_; Introduction to, v. 199; Dedication, v. 205; Preface, v. 207 Calderon, _El Mágico Prodigioso_, iv. 81; v. 470; _Los Cabellos de Absalon_, _iv. 100_ Caledonian Meeting, the, iii. 415 _Caledonian Mercury_, _iii. 45_ Calendario, Filippo, a stone-cutter, iv. 382 Calendario, Philip, a seaman, iv. 464 Calenture, the, v. 159; vi. 586 Calenus, A., _ii. 520_ Caligula, _ii. 408_; _iii. 455_; iv. 334; _v. 542_; vi. 276 Caliriotes (Albanese women), _ii. 183_ Callcott, Lady (Mrs. Maria Graham), iii. 532; _vi. 206, 207_ Callimachus, ii. 173; _vi. 445_ Callistratus, ii. 291 Calma, Abbé, _v. 211_ Calmana, Caimana, etc., Cain's twin sister, _v. 226_ Calmar, i. 177 Calmet, Augustine, _Dissertations sur les Aparitions_, _iii. 123_ Caloyer, Greek monk, ii. 130, 181; iii. 123 Calpac, centre part of Turkish headdress, iii. 119 Calpe's rock (Gibraltar), i. 378; ii. 89, 113, 455 Calprenède, M., _i. 398_ Calvert, Charles, actor, iv. 78; as "Sardanapalus," v. 2 Calvin, i. 417 Calvinism, Byron's, ii. 74 Calypso, ii. 118 Calypso's isle (Goza), ii. 118, 173; iii. 10 Camarases, John, translation of Ocellus Lucanus' _De Universi Natura_, ii. 198 Cambridge, Duke of, _iii. 145_ Cambridge, Rev. O.P., _iii. 107_ Cambridge University, i. 373, 392; Whig Club at, vii. _66_, 68 Cambyses, 2nd king of Persia, iv. 259 Camel, "ship of the desert," v. 606 Cameron of Fassieferne, John, ii. 292 Cameron of Lochiel, Donald, ii. 232, 292 Cameron, Sir Evan, ii. 232, 292 _Camerotti di sotto_, and _di soprà_, (Venetian prisons), _iv. 364_ Camese, Albanian kilt, ii. 146 Camillus, ii. 518 Camoëns, Luis de, i. 78, 313, 320, 370 Campbell, J. Dykes, _iii. 538_ Campbell, Thomas, _i. 331, 435_; vii. 49; _Specimens of the British Poets_, _i. 198_; vii. 74, 75; a true poet, _i. 306_; _Pleasures of Hope_, i. 361; _ii. 169_; _iii. 459_; _Gertrude of Wyoming_, _i. 429_; ii. xiii, _23, 113_; vi. 39; _Hohenlinden_, _ii. 49_; _Lochiel's Warning_, ii. 292; iv. 235; _Elegy on Princess Charlotte's Death_, _ii. 450_; _Battle of the Baltic_, _ii. 459_; _Last Man_, _iv. 42_; referred to in _Don Juan_, vi. 6, 75, 444 Campo Formio, Peace of, _ii. 363_ Can Grande della Scala, v. 562 Canaries, Isles of the Blest, _vi. 169_ Candia, ii. 340; _v. 127_ Cangas, battle of, _ii. 46_ Cannæ, battle of, ii. 255 Canning, George, _New Morality_, i. _294_, 363; Gifford's support of, _i. 304_; his "colleagues hate him for his wit", i. 377; M.P. for Liverpool, _i. 497_; attempts to form coalition Ministry, _i. 497_; his duel with Perceval, ii. 79; _Needy Knife-Grinder_ in _Anti-Jacobin_, _ii. 80_; praises _Bride of Abydos_, iii. 151, _197_; parodies Southey's _Elegy on H. Martin_, _iv. 482_; Pitt's "The Pilot that weathered the Storm," v. 568, _vi. 482_; and Roman Catholic Emancipation, v. 569; Byron on, _vi. 482_; Brougham and, _vi. 506_; quotes Christianity to sanction slavery, _vi. 549_; "the tall wit," vii. 54; "for War," vii. 30 Canova, Antonio, ii. 324, _369_, 370; iv. 174, 536 Cantabria, Favila, Duke of, _v. 558_ Cantemir, Demetrius, _History of the Growth and Decay of the Othman Empire_, vi. 259, 277 Canterbury, vi. 421, 422 Canzani, Lambro, iii. 194, 219 Cape de Verd Islands, _vi. 169_ Cape Gallo, iii. 248 Capena, ii. _416_, 516 Capo di Ferro, Cardinal, ii. 508 Capo d'Istria, Count, President of Greece, v. 575 Capote, Albanese cloak, ii. 132, 181; iii. 450 Cappelletti, Giuseppe, _Storia della Republica di Venisia_, iv. 327, _345, 427_ Capperonier, M., _ii. 481_ Caracalla, ii. 517, 521; _iii. 180_ Caracci, Hannibal, _ii. 437_ Caractacus, vi. 497 Carapanos, Constantin, _Dodone et ses Ruines_, ii. _132_, 182 Carasman (or Kara Osman), Oglou, iii. 166 Caravaggio, vi. 502 Carbonari, the, _vi. 259, 489_; v. 567 Cardan, _De Consolatione_, _ii. 236_ Carew, Thomas, _Poems_, _iii. 17_; _The Spark_, ii. 236 Carey, Henry, _Chrononhotonthologos_; _Sally in our Alley_, i. 413; _Namby Pamby, or a Panegyric on the New Versification_, _i. 418_ "Caritas Romana," ii. 437 Carlisle, taken by the Highlanders, _vii. 25_ Carlisle, Frederick Howard, 5th Earl of, i. 354, 370, 383; _ii. 23, 234_; _vii. 78_ Carlisle, Lady, v. 329 Carlo Dolce, vi. 502 Carlowitz plain, iii. 455 Carlyle, Thomas, _i. 489_; _French Revolution_, _iv. 13, 454_; _History of Frederick the Great_, _iv. 334_; _vi. 337_ Carmagnola, v. 179, 180 Carnarvon, 1st Earl of, _i. 336_ Caroline (of Anspach), Queen, _ii. 282_ Caroline (of Brunswick), Queen, i. _311_; _ii. 230_; iv. 555; _v. 15, 206, 569_; vi. _67_, 236, 275, _290_, 450, _451_; vii. 72, _78_ Carpenter, Dr. F.J., _Selections from the Poetry of Lord Byron_, _iv. 119_ Carr, Sir John (_Stranger in France_; _Travels_), i. _38_, 378, _379_; ii. _65_, 78 Carrara, Francesco Novello da (Signer of Padua), ii. 476, 482 Carreno, José Maria, Commandant-General of Panama, _v. 602_ Carrer, Luigi, _iv. 456, 457, 536_ Carrer Museum, Venice, _iv. 457_ _Cartaginense, Il_, _vi. 91_ Cartaret, Lord, _i. 418_ Carthage, iv. 251; vi. 348; burning of, v. 512 Carthaginians and Irish, vi. 337 Carttar, Joseph, coroner for Kent, vi. 265 Carus, Rev. W., _Memoirs of the Life of the Rev. Mr. Simeon_, _i. 417_ Carver, William, _vii. 22_ Gary, _New Pocket Plan of London, Westminster, and Southwark_, _vi. 434_ Gary, Rev. Henry Francis, _Dante_, iv. _23_, 313; _Memoir of_, iv. 314 Carysfort, John Joshua Proby, 1st Earl of, _i. 445_ Casaubon, _ii. 518_ Casemate, a, vi. 305 Cash, power of, vi. 458 Casimir V., king John, of Poland, iv. 201, 205, 211, 212 Cassander, _v. 487_ Cassandra, _i. 377_; iv. 243 Cassiodorus, _Tripartita_, ii. 521; _iii. 306_; _iv. 386_ Cassius, _ii. 374_; _iv. 120, 386_ Castelar, Emilio, _Life of Lord Byron_, _ii. 374_ Castellan, Antoine Louis, _Lettres sur la Morée, etc._ _iii. 249, 270_; _Moeurs des Ottomans_, _iii. 480_ Castelnau, Marquis Gabriel de, _Essai sur L'Histoire ancienne et moderne de la Nouvelle Russie_, vi. 264, _304, 305-307, 309-313, 315-317, 319, 320, 331-335, 340, 343, 344, 352, 356, 358, 359, 362, 365, 366-368_ Castéra, J.H., _Vie de Catherine II._, _vi. 370, 392_ Casti, _Animali Parlanti_, iv. 156 Castiglione, Marchesa, iv. 157 Castlereagh, Lord, _ii. 342_; iv. 476; vi. _4_, 7, 264, 389, 418, 450; vii. 20, 30, 65, 81 Castri, village of, ii. _61_, 85, 92, 189 Castriota, George (Scanderberg or Scander Bey), ii. 124, 173 Catalani, Angelica, i. 346; _v. 562_ Cataneo, Maurizio, _iv. 150_ Cathay, vi. 457 Cathcart, Lord, _i. 468, 488_ Catherine II. of Russia, ii. 193, 198, _200_, 282; v. 550, 564; vi. _313, 333_, 351, 370, 381, 383, 387-399, 406, 411, 413, 414, 439 Catholic Claims, _iv. 561_ Catholic Emancipation, iv. 503; _v. 569_; vi. 506 Catilina, _iii. 117_ Catinat, Maréchal Nicholas, _Mémoires_, _vi. 170, 514_ Cato, i. 449; ii. 514; _iv. 253_; v. 506; vi. 270, 303 Catullus, _v. 613_; vi. 26, 139; vii. 17; _Ad Lesbiam_, i. 72; "Lugete Veneres, Cupidinesque," i. 74; "Mellitos oculos tuos, Juventi," i. 75 Caucasus, Mount, i. 378; v. 17, 30, 57, 294 Causeus, _Museum Romanum_, _ii. 509_ Cava, the Helen of Spain, ii. 46, 89; iv. 334 Cava, battle of, _vi. 14_ Cava, kava, or ava, a Tongan intoxicating drink, v. 600 Cavalier, a military earthwork, vi. 352 Cavalier Servente, iv. 165, 172 Cavalli, Marquis Antonio, iv. 547 Cawthorn, James, i. 294, 387, 453; ii. ix, x; _vii. 9_ Cayster river, ii. 182 Ceccho, Captain, ii. 477 Cecilia Metella, tomb of, ii. 402-405 Cecrops, i. 462 Cellini, Benvenuto, v. 471, _516, 518, 521_ Ceneda, Lorenzo, Count-bishop of, iv. 332 _Centaur_, H.M.S., wreck of, _vi. 90, 92, 94-96, 99, 110_ _Century Dictionary_, _ii. 135_; _v. 135_ _Century Magazine_, _iii. 435_ Cephalonia, _ii. 125_; vii. 83 Cephalus, ii. 178 Cephisus river, i. 459; iii. 272 Ceraunian mountains ("Chimera's Alps"), ii. 131, 181 Cerement (searment), ii. 154 Ceres, vi. 129; "fell with Buonaparte," vi. 383 Cerigo, island of, ii. 167 Certaldo, Boccaccio's tomb at, ii. _373_, 499 Certosa Cemetery, _i. 21_ Cervantes, _Don Quixote_, _i. 299_; ii. 89, 178; vi. 303, 483 Cesarotti, ii. 496; _iv. 457_ Cesi, Pietro, President of Romagna, _vi. 212_ Cevallos, Don Pedro de, _i. 338_ Chad, G.W. _vi. 374_ Chæronea, ii. 294. Chalmers, George, _iv. 513_; _The Life of Mary Queen of Scots_, vii. 53 Chambrier, M., _iv. 514_ _Champion, The_, iii. 532-535; vii. _37_, 38 Champollion, Jean Franjois, _v. 603_ Chandler, Dr., _Travels in Greece_, ii. 172, 189 Chantrey, Sir Francis, vii. 49 Chaponnière, J.J., editor of _Advis et Devis de l'ancienne et nouvelle Police de Genève, etc._, iv. 5 Chappell, William, _Old English Popular Music_, _vi. 145_ _Charity Ball, The_, vii. 71 Charlemagne, iv. 287-290; vi. 507 Charlemont, Lady, _iii. 105_; iv. 569; vi. 215 Charles I., i. _2, 3, 101_, 130,; _v. 560_; vii. 35, 36 Charles II., i. _2_, 123, _198_; _v. 487_ Charles III., Duke of Savoy, iv. 4, 10 Charles IV. of Spain (Connétable de Bourbon, Comte de Montpensier), _ii. 390_; iv. 258; v. 495, _498_, 515-516, _520_ Charles V. of Spain, _ii. 453_; iii. 308, 309; _v. 499, 549_ Charles VII. (Duke of Lorraine), _iii. 458_ Charles VIII. of France, ii. 504 Charles IX. of Sweden, _v. 371_ Charles XII. of Sweden, _i. 107_; iv. 202, 207, 233; v. 551; vi. 362, _363_ Charles of Anjou, ii. 494 Charles of Saxony, Prince, _vi. 605_ Charles the Bold, ii. 297 Charles, Prince (the Pretender), _i. 173_ Charles Edward, Prince, _ii. 369_ Charles, R.H., translation of Dillman's _Ethiopic Text_ (_Book of Enoch_), _v. 302_ Charlotte, Princess, wife of Tzarovitch Alexey, _vi. 417_ Charlotte of Wales, Princess, ii. 313, 450; iii. 45, 376; vii. _35_, 78 Charlotte, Queen, _iii. 4_ Charrière, E., _La Vie vaillant Bertran du Guesclin_, _v. 549_ Chateaubriand, François Réné, Vicomte de; _ii. 190_; _iii. 195, 431_; v. 538, 539; _Les Aventures du dernier Abencerrage_, _v. 558_; _Congress, etc._ v. _562, 567_, 575; _Les Martyrs ou le Triomphe de la religion chrétienne_, v. 575 Châteauneuf-de-Randon (Lozère), _v. 549_ Chatham, Earl of, i. 113; _iv. 510_; vi. 478; vii. 28 Chaucer, mentioned in _Hints from Horace_, i. 395; his use of the word _lemman_, _ii. 22_; _Canterbury Tales_ _ii. 155_; the nightingale's "merry note," _iii. 170_; _terza rima_, iv. 313; _Compleint to his Lady_, iv. 239; _Wife of Bath_, iv. 484 Chaumont, Treaty of, _v. 550_ Chaworth, George, Viscount, _iv. 542_ Chaworth, Mary Ann (Mrs. Chaworth-Musters), i. 52, 189, _192_, 210, 329, _277_, 282, 283, 285, 475; ii. 18, _29_. 421; iv. 31, 32, 35, 36, 39, _542_; Byron's "bright morning star of Annesley," iv. 38 Chaworth, William, _i. 189_; _ii. 17_; _iv. 542_ Cheltenham, _v. 609_ Chemnitz, battle of, _v. 371_ Cheops, king, vi. 79 Cherbuliez, J.L.A., _vi. 461_ Chermside, Sir Herbert Charles, Governor of Queensland, _vi. 497_ Chermside, Lady (_née_ Webb), _vi. 497_ Cherry, Andrew, _The Travellers_; _Peter the Great_, i. _306_, 345 Cherubim, the, v. 228 Cherubini, his opera _Les Abencerages_, _v. 558_ _Chester Mysteries_, _vi. 551_ _Chester Plays_, v. 200, _207_ Chesterfield, 4th Earl of, _Letters_, i. 415; vi. 525 Chesterfield, Philip Henry, 5th Earl of, President of the Four-Horse Club, vii. 26 Chetsum, Rev. David, _ii. 283_ Chevalier, Le, _iii. 13_ Chezy, A.L., J[-a]m[-a]'s _Medjnoun and Leila_, _iii. 160_ Chiaus, a Turkish messenger, iii. 113 Chichester, Lady, _ii. 23_ Chichester, Mrs., _i. 350_ _Childe Harold_, Introduction to Cantos I. and II., ii. ix-xv; Notes on the MSS. of, ii. xvi-xx; Itinerary, ii. xxi-xxiv; Preface to Cantos I. and II. ii. 3-8; Canto I., ii. 15-84; Notes on Canto I., ii. 85-95; Canto II., ii. 99-163; Notes on Canto II., ii. 165-208; Introduction to Canto III., ii. 211-214; Canto III., ii. 215-289; Notes on Canto III., ii. 291-307; Introduction to Canto IV., ii. 311-315; Original Draft Canto IV., ii. 316-319; Dedication of Canto IV., ii. 321-326; Canto IV., ii. 327-463; Notes on Canto IV., ii. 465-525; referred to, i. _5, 232, 277, 282, 324, 355, 366, 368, 379_, 387, 453-455; iii. xix, _1, 2, 4_, 5, 7, 8, 11, 12, _13_, 14, _19_, 21, 23, 24, _90, 91, 96, 107, 120, 121, 123, 129, 134, 145, 165, 168, 210_, 225, _336, 395, 417, 450, 459, 460, 470, 480, 485, 495_, 499, _521_; iv. 6, _34, 40, 41, 53-59, 62, 63, 65_, 79, _87, 100, 104, 105, 127, 131, 132, 139_, 155, _162, 166, 173, 193, 194, 196_, 238, 244, _257, 266, 271, 275, 304, 364, 397, 404, 413, 422, 425, 426, 446, 456_, 471, _529, 536, 578, 580_; v. _27, 73, 126, 139, 149, 153, 157, 163_, 333, _365, 408, 500, 556, 607, 610, 612, 615_; vi. xv, xvii, _12, 13, 48, 74, 84, 116, 149, 186, 200, 212, 234, 303, 382, 384, 419, 424, 434, 476, 539, 558_; vii. _7, 37, 49_, 51, _55, 58_ _Childe Harold's Good Night_, ii. 26; _vii_. 6 _Childish Recollections_, i. _17_, 84-106; ii. 8, _12_, 95; _iii. 324_ _Children of Apollo_, i. 294, _342, 445_ Childs, George W., _vii. 63_ Chili, Independence of, v. 556 Chillon, Castle of, ii. _303_, 304; iv. 3, 4, 18 Chimariot mountains, ii. 131, 181 Chinazzo, David, _The War of Chioza_, ii. _338_, 477 Chioggia (Chioza), war of, ii. 338, 476, 497 Chisholm, G.G., ii. xxiv _Chiswick Press_, i. xi Choiseul-Gouffier, Count, _Voyage Pittoresque de la Grèce_, _ii. 168_; _iii. 295_; _vi. 151_ Chouet, _i. 414_ Chrematoff, vi. 307 Christian, Charles, _v. 622_ Christian, Edward, Chief justice of Ely, _v. 588_; editor of _Blackstone's Commentaries_, _v. 622_ Christian, Fletcher, mate of the _Bounty_, v. 581-584, _588_; short account of, v. 622 _Christian Observer_, iii. 377 Christians of Ewanrigg, the, _v. 622_ Christodoulos, an Acarnanian, [Greek: Peri\ Philoso/phou, k.t.l.], ii. 198 Christopher Caustic's _Terrible Tractoratian, etc._, _i. 307_ _Chronique de Bayart_, _v. 515_ Chryseus, _ii. 462_ Chrysostom, vi. 28 Chulos, footmen, _ii. 67, 71_ Church, Rev. A., _Pliny's Letters_, _ii. 380_ Churchill, Charles, iv. 45, _51_; v 337; _Prophecy of Famine_, _iv. 14_; _The Times_, _iv. 21_; _The Candidate_, iv. 46; _The Farewell_, _iv. 174_ Churchill, Charles, master-at-arms on the _Bounty_, v. 583 _Churchill's Grave_, iv. 45, _51, 71, 230, 266_; v. 337; _vi. 401_ Cibber, Colley, _The Provoked Husband_, _i. 399_; _Lives_, _iii. 280_ Cicero, "Tully's fire," i. 29; Addison on his puns, _i. 398_; Sulp. Severus' letter to, _ii. 133_; _In Verrem_, _ii. 168_; speeches in the Forum, ii. 301, 413; _De Finibus_, _ii. 345_; _Epist. ad Familiares_, ii. 362; _Epist. ad Atticum_, ii. _384_, 509; "Alas, for Tully's voice," ii. 392; _In Catilinam_, ii. _396_, 510; _Academ_., _ii. 399_; Middleton's _Life_ quoted, _ii. 408_; site of his villa, ii. 455, 522; Romans and the theatre, ii. 492; _De Divinat_., ii. 510; _vi. 585_; _De Suo Consulatu_, ii. 510; _De Legibus_, _ii. 519_; _De Naturâ Deorum_, _iv. 115_; _Epist_., _iv. 120_; _Pro Sexto Roscio, Amerino_, _iv. 438_; Diodorus Siculus contemporary with, v. 3; "the topical memory of the ancients," _vi. 16_ Cicisbeo, origin of the word, iv. 171 Cicogna, E.A., _Personaggi illustri della Venezia patrizia gente_, _iv. 457_; _Inscrizioni Veneziane_, _v. 123_ Cicognara, Leopoldo, Conte de, ii. 324, 472; _iv. 456, 457_ Cicognini, Giacinto Andrea, _Convitato di Pietra_, vi. xvi Cid Hamet Benengeli, i. 299 Cilicia, v. 4, _24_ Cimon, _iv. 108_ Cincinnatus, iii. 314; v. 571 Cinna, _ii. 393_ Cintio Giraldi, _Nouvelles_, v. 471 Cintra, Convention of, ii. xi, 38, 39, _65_, 86; mountain, ii. 31, 34; Royal Palace at, ii. 37 Circassia (Franguestan), iii. 111; _vi. 279_ Circe, _v. 573_ Cisternes, Raoul de, _Le Duc de Richelieu_, _vi. 333_ Ciudad Real, _ii. 89_ Ciudad Rodrigo, fall of, _i. 496_; _vi. 69_ Civil Wars, the, _i. 3_ Civitella, village of, ii. 523 Civran, _iv. 331_ Claiborne, W.C.C., Governor of Louisiana, _iii. 297, 298_ Clairmont, Jane (her transcription of _Childe Harold_, Canto III.), ii. _145_, 211, 214, _216, 217, 230, 232, 288, 304_; iv. 3, 70 Clancarty, Lord, _vi. 374_ Clare, John Fitzgibbon, 1st Earl of, i. 100 Clare, John Fitzgibbon, 2nd Earl of ("Lycus"), i. xi, 96, 98-100, _128_, 200, 222 Clarence, Duke of, vi. 60, _451_ Clarendon, _History of the Rebellion_, _i. 3_ Clarens, ii. 277, 304; _iv. 18_ Clark, J.W., Cambridge, _vi. 433_ Clarke, Edward Daniel, _Travels in Various Countries_, i. 455; ii. _168_, 172, 204; iii. 75, _94_, 151, _272, 295_; vi. _171, 204, 211_; _The Tomb of Alexander, etc._, _v. 542_ Clarke, Hewson, i. 373-375, 383; ii. 213 Clarke, John, _i. 406_ Clarke, J.S., _Memoir of William Falconer_, _ii. 169_ Clarke, Mary Anne, _i. 391_ Claude Lorraine, _ii. 168_; vi. 502 Claudian, ii. 412; _In Ruffin._, _v. 289_; _Epigrammata_, _v. 562_ Claudius, ii. 520 Clayton, Sir Richard, _Critical Enquiry into the Life of Alexander the Great_, _vi. 226_ Clement XII., Pope, _ii. 389, 432_; _v. 521_ Cleon, ii. 190 Cleonice, _iv. 108_ Cleopatra, i. 490; ii. 397; iii. 11; v. 484; vi. 269; her mummy in the British Museum, v. 542 Clermont, Mrs., _vi. 22_ Cleveland, Duchess of, _iv. 541_ Clinton, George, _Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Lord Byron_, iii. 443, _447_; v. 581 Clitumnus river, ii. 379-381 Clodius, i. 351; _iv. 352_; _vi. 139_ Clootz, Jean Baptiste, Baron de (Anacharsis Clootz), vi. xviii, 13 Club, Byron's definition of a, i. 407 Clusium, iv. 334 Clytemnestra, _ii. 426_ Clytus, _ii. 124_ Coalition Ministry, the, _i. 500_ Cobbett, William, _i. 297_; ii. 40; _v. 572_; _vi. 380_; vii. 65, _67_, 68 _Cobbett's Weekly Register_, v. 540, _572_; _vi. 266_ Cochineal, kermes, vi. 575 Cochrane, Thomas, Lord, iv. 111; _vi. 67_ Cockburn, Admiral Sir George, _ii. 239_ Cockburn, Mrs. Robert (Mary Duff), _i. 192_ Cocker, _Arithmetic_, vi. 601 Cockney School, the, _iv. 339_ Coehoorn, Baron Menno van, a Dutch military engineer, vi. 344 Coelius Antipater, _Annales_, _ii. 378_ Cohen, Francis (afterwards Sir F. Palgrave), translation of _Old Chronicle_ (Marino Faliero); _Rise and Progress of the English Constitution_; _History of the Anglo-Saxons_, iv. 46 Coke on Littleton, vi. 568 Colbleen mountain, i. 194 Cole, W., boatswain on the _Bounty_, v. 583 _Coleorton, Memorials of_, _iv. 585_ Coleridge, Miss Edith, _iii. 454_ Coleridge, Hartley, _Essays_, _ii. 331_; _First Visit to the Theatre in London_, _v. 474_ Coleridge, H.N., _Study of the Classics_, _vi. 117_ Coleridge, Sara, _i. 489_ Coleridge, Mrs. S.T., _iv. 521_ Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, _The Devils Walk_, _i. 31_; _vii. 21_; Byron and, _i. 305, 365_; iii. 444; vi. 74; nitrous oxide, _i. 307_; _Poems_, _i. 315, 316_; _ii. 22_; referred to in _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_, i. 316, 369; on Monk Lewis, _i. 138_; _Letters of_, _i. 318_; _ii. 401_; _iv. 225, 585_; _v. 175, 544_; _vi. 350, 421_; _Table Talk of_, _i. 318_; iv. _318, 339_, 485; _v. 175_; _vi. 152_; Cottle's _Early Recollections of_, _i. 329_; _Anima Poetæ_, _i. 367_; _ii. 113, 236_; _iv. 587_; _vi. 91_; and Charles Lloyd, _i. 368_; _Frost at Midnight_, _i. 369_; Sir J. Bland Burges, _i. 437_; on dancing in Germany, i. 475; on Kotzebue, _i. 489_; _Biographia Literaria_, _i. 489_; _iii. 435_; vi. _4_, 39, _167, 168, 175_; _Ancient Mariner_, _ii. 22_; iv. _22_, 27, _104, 225, 230, 506_; _vi. 106, 114_; Lamb's apology for, _ii. 22_; _Christabel_, _ii. 134, 274, 360_; iii. 443, _471, 476, 511, 519_, 537; _iv. 20_, 82, _224_; v. 281; vi. _243_, 279; vii. 45; _Hymn before Sunrise in the Valley of Chamouni_, _ii. 254_; _iv. 110_; _Dejection: An Ode_, _ii. 264_; _vi. 39_; _The Friend_, ii. _281_, 301; _vi. 174_; _Lines to Nature_, ii. 302; _vi. 179_; "Oh for one hour of _The Recluse_," _ii. 337_; Boccaccio, _ii. 374_; _Essays on His Own Times_, _ii. 397, 401_; a Parliamentary reporter, _ii. 401_; _Kubla Khan_, _ii. 416, 418, 447_; _iv. 267_; v. _73_, 277; _Israel's Lament_, _ii. 450_; his influence on Rogers, iii. 320; _Lines to a Gentleman_, _iii. 336_; Byron's letters to, iii. 441; _iv. 338_; Byron's beneficiary, iii. 444; "Apostacy and Renegadoism," _iii. 488_; _Songs of the Pixies_, _iii. 524_; _Zapolya_, _iv. 24_; _Sibylline Leaves_, _iv. 42_; _Religions Musings_, _ibid_.; depreciates Voltaire, _iv. 184_; "No more my visionary soul shall dwell," _iv. 225_; on Walpole's _Mysterious Mother_, _iv. 339_; author of the libel on Shelley? iv. 475; _The Plot Discovered, etc._, _iv. 512_; _Miscellanies, etc._, _iv. 515_; Hazlitt on, _iv. 518_; the result of pantisocracy, _iv. 521_; on Southey's _Life of Wesley_, _iv. 522_; translates Schiller's _Piccolomini_, _iv. 566_; _Lectures of 1811-1812_, _iv. 575_; his visit to the Beaumonts, _iv. 585_; _Pains of Sleep_, _v. 78_; on Keats and Adam Steinmetz, "There is death in that hand," _v. 175_; and Pitt's description of Napoleon, _v. 544_; _Critique_ on Maturin's _Bertram_, vi. xvii, _4_; _Morning Post_, vi. 175; his marriage, _ibid._; "hath the sway," vi. 445; _Literary Remains_, _vi. 576_; his note-books, _vii. 18_; Mackintosh on, _vii. 32_ Coligny, _vi. 246_ Coliseum (or Colosseum), Rome, ii. 423-435; iv. 131 Collegio dei Signore di notte al Criminal, _iv. 427_ Colleoni, Battolommeo, iv. 336, 392 Collier, Jeremy, _Short View of the Immorality and Profaneness of the English Stage_, i. 416; _Shakespeare_, _vi. 502_ Collignon, Maximo, _Histoire de la Sculpture Grecque_, _ii. 365, 432, 445_ Collini, Mdlle., i. 348 Collins, _Ode to Pity_, _ii. 34_; _How Sleep the Brave_, _ii. 50_; _Ode on the Death of Mr. Thomson_, iii. 50; _Irish Eclogues_, iii. 224 Collins, _Peerage_, _vi. 410_ Colman the younger, George, i. _306_, 343; _iv. 75_; _The Iron Chest_; _Heir-at-Law_, i. 343; _John Bull, or An Englishman's Fireside_, i. 343, 400; _The Review, or the Wags of Windsor_, iii. 43; _Love Laughs at Locksmiths_, vi. 308 Cologne, _vi. 419_ Colonna, Cape, ii. 156, 169; iii. 86, _134_ Colonna de' Francesi, La (Ravenna), vi. 212 Colonna, Vittoria, _iv. 262_ Columbia, Republic of, _v. 555_; vi. 456 Columbus, Christopher, iii. 76; _iv. 262_; vi. 552 Columella, _De Re Rustica_, _ii. 488_ Comboloio, a Turkish rosary, iii. 181, 275 Commodus, iv. 334 Comnena, Anna, _Alexiad_, ii. 202 _Complaint, The_, _iv. 220_ Compostelli, Pietro de, _iv. 448, 467_ Conan the Jester, v. 209 "Concision" used for "conciseness," vi. 550 Condé, Prince de, iv. 262 _Condolatory Address to Sarah, Countess of Jersey, on the Prince Regents returning her Picture to Mrs. Mee_, vii. 37 Condorcet, Marie Jean Antoine, Marquis de, President of Legislative Assembly in 1792, vi. 13 Conduit, Mrs. (Catherine Barton), _vi. 400_ Congreve, i. _198_, 306, _349, 416_; vi. 510 Congreve, Sir William, inventor of "Congreve rockets," vi. 50 _Conquest, The_, vii. 82 Consiglio Minore (Venice), _iv. 345_ Consiglio dei Dieci. _See_ Council of Ten Constable, Archibald, _i. 310, 436_ Constans, ii. 520 Constant, Henri Benjamin de Rebecque, v. 566, _567_ Constantine, Emperor, ii. _336_, 520 Constantine, Grand-Duke, _v. 564_ Constantinople (Istambol, [Greek: HEpta/lophos]), i. 378; ii. 152, 194; iii. 17, 21; vi. 219 _Constitutionel, Le_, v. _566_, 577 Contarini, Doge Andrea, ii. 477, 497 Contarini (afterwards Foscari), Lucrezia, v. 115, 130 Conti, _v. 371_ Contrario, Ugoccion, _iii. 506_ Cook, Captain, i. 325; v. 582; _vi. 19_; voyage in the _Resolution_, _v. 588, 605_ Cook, Dutton, _A Book of the Play_, _i. 414_ Cooke, George Frederick, i. 46, _344_; _iv. 338_ Cookery, science of, vi. 561 Cooper, actor, iv. 324 Copenhagen, bombardment of, i. 468; _v. 588_ Copernicus, _i. 402_ Copet, _iv. 53_; vii. 50 Coray, Diamant or Adamantius, _Bibliothèque Hellénique_, ii. 196-199, 203 Corday, Charlotte, _vi. 14_ Cordoba, _ii. 54_ Corfu, ii. 193 Corfu, Giovanni da, iv. 464 Corinth, ii. 363; iii. 440-496; Gulf of, _ii. 60_ Corinthian brass, vi. 284 _Corinthians_, _v. 262_ _Coriolanus_, _ii. 388, 452_; _iv. 338_; _v. 27_ Cork Convent, ii. 35, 86 Cork and Orrery, 8th Earl of, _vi. 504_ Cork and Orrery, Mary, Countess of ("Countess Crabby"), vi. 504 Cornaro, Flaminio, _Ecclesiæ Venetæ_, _v. 123_ Cornaro, Marco, iv. 402, 465 Cornelia, daughter of Metellus Scipio, and widow of P. Crassus, _iv. 264_ _Cornelian, The_, i. 66, _240_; iii. 48 Cornwall, Barry. See Procter, B.W. Cornwall wreckers, ii. 141, 182 Coron, or Corone (the ancient Colonides), iii. 249 _Corresponding Society, The_, iv. 516 _Corsair_, i. 388, _457_; _ii. 252_; iii. xix, _46, 49_, 217-229, 303, 319-321, _409_; v. 584; _vi. 132_ Corsi, Cardinal, ii. 495 Cortejo, Spanish, vi. 55 Cortes, v. 555 Cosmo II., ii. 499 Costerden, Elizabeth, _vi. 294_ Costerden, William, _vi. 294_ Cotta, v. 81, 108 Cottle, Amos, _Translation of the Edda of Sæmund_, i. _314_, 328, _329, 403_ Cottle, Joseph, _Alfred_; _The Fall of Cambria_, i. 328, _436_; _Early Recollections of Coleridge_, _i. 329_ Cotton, Mrs., of Worcester, _iii. 209_ Couch of Hercules, _vi. 220_ Coulman, M.J.J., _iv. 543_ Council of Ten (Il Consiglio dei Dicci), iv. _363, 366, 385_, 399, _441, 448_, 465, 470; v. 115-118, 169 _Courier, The_, _i. 423, 436_; ii. xii; iii. _45_, 377, _488_, 534; iv. 477-479, _482_; v. 203; vi. _4_, 12 Courland, Anne, Duchess of (Empress of Russia), vi. 417 Courland, Frederick William, Duke of, vi. 417 Courland, James, 3rd Duke of, vi. 417 Courlande, Pierre, last Duc de, _vi. 417_ _Courrier_, _v. 566, 577_ Courtney Melmoth. _See_ Pratt, Samuel Jackson Courtney, W.P., _English Whist_, _vi. 507_ Coutts, Mrs., _iv. 541_; Byron's "Mrs. Rabbi;" _Vivian Grey's_ "Mrs. Million," vi. 504 Covent Garden Theatre, O.P. riots at, _i. 347_; _vi. 11_; _Manfred_ at, iv. 78; Lee's _The Three Strangers_ at, _v. 337_ Cowley, Abraham, _i. 403_; _vi. 166_; _Davideis_, _i. 436_ Cowley, Henry Wellesley, 1st Baron, _ii. 79_ Cowley, Mrs. Hannah (_née_ Parkhouse), _i. 314_; _The Belle's Stratagem_, _i. 358, 403_; _Siege of Acre_, _i. 436_ Cowley, W.D., translation of Parrot's _Journey to Ararat_, _v. 294_ Cowper, Joseph Meadows, _Memorial Inscriptions, etc._, _vi. 422_ Cowper, Lady (afterwards Palmerston), _i. 301_ Cowper, William, mentioned in _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_, i. 362; _The Task_, iv. 174; vi. 348; Hayley's biography of, _i. 321_; _Milton_, _v. 218_ Coxe, William, Archdeacon of Wilts, _Trav. Switz._, _ii. 385_; _Memoirs of John, Duke of Marlborough_, vi. 174 Crabbe, George, i. _306_, 365; vi. 6, 75; vii. 49; _Resentment_, iii. 128 "Crane," to, vi. 524 Crashaw, Richard, vi. 166 Crassus, ii. 405; _iv. 264_ Creech, Thomas, _Translation of Horace_, vi. 247 Cremâ, v. 138 Cremâ, Augustinus de, _ii. 340_ Creon, king of Corinth, _i. 170_ Crespan, Gio., _Della Vita e delle lettere di Luigi Carrer_, _iv. 457_ Crespi, the tenor, _vi. 206_ Cressy, battle of, i. 2 Crete, _v. 127_ Creusa, i. 159 Crib, i. 466 _Critical Review_, iii. _473_, 499, _518_; iv. 6, _13, 27_, 81, _99_ Croesus, iii. 519 Croker, John Wilson, _ii. 4, 187_; iii. _157_, 217; iv. _74_, 157, _339_; _v. 546_; _vi. 482_; vii. 49; article on Keats in _Q.R._, _vi. 445_; _vii. 76_ Croly, D.D., Rev. George, _Paris in 1815_; _Catiline_; _Salathiel_; _The Angel of the World_, vi. 444, _445_ Cromwell, Oliver, i. 122, 123; ii. 292, 394, _453_; iv. 334; _v. 560_; vi. 174; _vii. 35_ _Cronaca Augustini_, _v. 190_ _Cronaca Dolfin_, v. 117, 118, _121, 172_ Crosby and Co., B., i. xii, _234_ _Crosby's Magazine_, _i. 368_ Crossing the Line, v. 616 Croupade, ii. 70 Crousaz-Crétet, Léon de, _vi. 264_ Cruikshank, drawing of Jackson's rooms, _i. 434_; frontispiece to Rowfant Library Catalogue, _iv. 508_ Crusaders, the, _i. 117_ Cruscanti, the, _iv. 152_ Crusius, Martinus, _Turco-Græcia_, _iii. 122_ Ctesias of Cnidos, _Persica_, v. 3, 4, _11_; _vi. 122_ Ctesilaus, _ii. 431_ Cuba, _iii. 296_ Cuesta, ii. 89 Culloden, battle of, i. 173; ii. 292; _vi. 12_ Cumberland, Ernest Augustus, Duke of, and King of Hanover, gazetted Field-Marshal 1813, vii. 31 Cumberland, William Augustus, Duke of, vi. 12 Cumberland, Princess Olive of, _iv. 541_ Cumberland, Richard, _Wheel of Fortune_, i. 45, _344_; referred to in _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_, i. _306, 314_, 343; _The West Indian_; _The Jew_, _i. 344_; and Townsend, _i. 403_; _Observer_, _i. 414_; _iii. 85_; _Exodiad_; _Calvary_, _i. 436_ Cumourgi (Courmourgi or Cumurgi), Ali, iii. 442, 455 Cunningham, Allan, _vi. 3_ Curll, a bookseller, i. 220, 326 Curran, John Philpot, _ii. 236_; iv. 561; vi. 450; _Life of_, iv. 555; "Longbow from Ireland," vi. 509 Currie, M.D., James, _Works of Robert Burns, with an Account of his Life, etc_., vi. 174 _Curse of Minerva_, i. _378_, 451-474; ii. ix, _33, 106, 107, 168, 192, 252, 366_; iii. 270 Curtis, Sir William, v. 578; _vii. 68_ Curtius, Q., _Hist. Alexand._, _vi. 226_ Curwens of Workington Hall, the, _v. 622_ Curzon, _Visits to Monasteries of the Levant_, ii. 294 Cuvier, le Bon G., _Recherches sur les Ossemens Fossiles_, etc., v. 210; vi. 385, 415 Cyanean Symplegades, _vii. 10_ Cyanometer, _vi. 216_ Cyaxares, _v. 107_ Cybele, ii. 328 Cyclades, vi. 118, 203 Cymar, or simar, a shroud, iii. 143 _Cymbeline_, _vi. 487_ Cypress tree, "the only constant mourner o'er the dead," iii. 99 Cyprus, iv. 400 Cyrus, king of Persia, v. 5; vi. 572 Czaplinski, Governor of Poland, _iv. 211_ D d'Abrantés, Duke (Junot), _ii. 39, 40_ d'Acerenza, François Pignatelli de Belmonte, Duc, _vi. 417_ d'Acerenza, Jeanne Catherine, Duchesse, _vi. 417_ Dacians, the, _ii. 412_ Dacier, M., i. 402; _Aristotle_, _vi. 182_ Dacre, Charlotte. _See_ Byrne, Mrs. Dacre, Lady (Mrs. Wilmot), vii. 48 D'Alembert, Jean-le-Rond, ii. 209; _v. 554_; _vi. 63_ Dalkeith, Countess of, _i. 310_ Dallas, Rev. Alexander, i. 387; ii. xvi Dallas, Judge, _i. 495_ Dallas, R.C., his copy of _British Bards_, i. xiv, 293, _298_, 322; Byron's letters to, i. 294, _347, 359, 404_; ii. xi, xii, xiv, xviii, _15, 24, 30, 32, 37, 65, 73, 83_, 95, _104, 105, 161-163_, 208; _iii. 129_; _iv. 125_; _vii. 9_; Fitzgerald's and Byron's _jeux d'esprit_, _i. 298_; _Recollections of the Life of Lord Byron_, i. _305_, 387; ii. ix-xii, xiv, xv, 89, _104, 120, 176_; _iii. 107_; iv. 446; _MS. of Childe Harold_, ii. xvi, _15_, 16, 17, 19, 22-24, 27, 29, 30, 32, 33, 37, 38, 41-43, 45, 46, 48-52, 54, 56, 57, 60, 62, 64, 66, 82, 83, 100-102, 105-107, 110, 112-116, 126, 131, 135, 138-140, 146, 147, 149, 150, 155, 157, 159-162, 328, 329, 336, 341, 342, 352, 370, 373, 382, 385, 413, 419, 421, 443, 451, 458, 460; a suppressed Note on Spain and Portugal, ii. 87; on _Cain_, v. 199; certain "ludicrous stanzas" of _The Island_, _v. 615_; MS. _of The Island_, v. 587, 589, 590, 592, 595-597, 600-604, 611, 612, 615, 621, 625, 632, 636, 637, 639; _Don Juan MS_., vi. 143, 144, 150, 159, 167, 168, 170; "Yes! wisdom shines in all his mien," vii. 12; MS. of _On a Royal Visit, etc._, _vii. 36_ Dallas, Robert, _iii. 18_ Dallaway, Rev. James, _Constantinople Ancient and Modern_, _iii. 90, 166_ Dalrymple, Sir Hew, _ii. 39, 40_ dal Sale, Alberto, _iii. 506_ Dalzell, Sir George, _Shipwrecks and Disasters at Sea_, vi. _87, 89-92, 94-96_, 99, _102-110, 112_ Damætus, i. 128 Damas d'Antigny, Joseph Elizabeth Roger, Comte de, vi. 312 Damascus, _ii. 151_ Damon, _i. 175_ Dampier, discoverer of the bread-fruit, _v. 596_ d'Ancona, A., _Manuale della Letteratura Italiana_, _iv. 536_ Dandies, the, iv. 176 Dandolo, Doge Andrea, iv. 352, _366, 438, 459_ Dandolo, Giovanni, _iv. 356_ Dandolo, Doge Henry, ii. _329, 336_, 337, 475 Dandolo, Conte Girolamo Antonio, _Sui Quattro Cavalli, etc._; _La Caduia della Repubblica di Venezia_, _iv. 456, 457_ Danes at battle of Copenhagen, _i. 468_ Daniel, _To the Lady Lucy, Countess of Bedford_, iv. 239 Daniel, prophecies of, _ii. 78_; the writing on the wall, iii. 398; in the lions' den, vi. 235; _Book of_, _vi. 504_ Dante, ii. 355, 375, 494, 503; iv. 237-276; v. 562; vi. 146, 212, 213, 303; his tomb, ii. 371, 494; iv. 237, 244; Ricci's monument to, _ii. 375_; _Inferno_, iii. 227, 249, 270; iv. _23_, 238, 245, _254, 272_, 314, 316; vi. _36, 37, 105_, 289, 408, 606; _Div. Commedia_, iv. 237, 570; _Paradiso_, _iv. 347_; _La Vita Nuova_, _iv. 248, 253_; _Sonnet_, _iv. 249, 253_; _Il Convito_, _iv. 253, 256, 274, 318_; _Purgatorio_, _iv. 256, 263, 272_; _vi. 181_; _Epistola IX. Amico Florentino_, iv. 276 Danton, Georges Jacques, vi. 13 Danube, vi. 304, 306, 331, 368 Dardanelles, the, _iii. 13_; vi. 208 d'Argens, Marquis, _Lettres Juives_, _iii. 123_ _Darkness_, iv. 42; _v. 315_ Darmesteter, James (_Notes to Childe Harold_), _ii. 67, 106, 115, 134, 149, 236, 325, 345, 358, 419_; translation of _Zend-Avesta_, _iv. 112_ Darnley, Lord, _vii. 29_ Daru, P., _Histoire de la République de Vénise_, iv. 332, _471_; v. 115, _124, 179, 188, 190, 195_; vi. 199; _Histoire de la République Française_, _v. 196_ Darwin, Charles Robert, _i. 367_ Darwin, Erasmus, _The Botanic Garden_; _The Temple of Nature_, i. _306_, 367 Davenport, actor, as "Ulric" in _Werner_, v. 324 David, i. 490 Davies, Scrope B., ii. 211, 212; _iv. 179_; _Parisina_ dedicated to, iii. 501 Davies, Thomas, _Massinger_, _i. 304_; _Life of Garrick_, _i. 409, 428_ Davis, Henry Edward, _ii. 283_ Davison, Mrs., iv. 70 Davison, T., printer, i. 452, 453; _iii. 259, 315, 323_; _vii. 58_ Davoust, General, _v. 550_ Davy, Lady (Mrs. Apreece), _iv. 541_ Davy, Sir H., _i. 307_; iv. 472, 570, 586; his safety-lamp, vi. 51 Davy, Martin, Master of Caius College, Cambridge, _iii. 170_ Dead Sea, ii. 237, 294 _Death of Calmar and Orla_, i. 177 Debora, or Azzrum, Cain's sister, _v. 226_ Decies, Lord, Archbishop of Tuam, _i. 390_ Dee river, Aberdeenshire, i. 193, 238 _Deformed Transformed, The_, _ii. 423, 483_; _iv. 15_; _v. 72, 371_, 469-534, _606_; _vi. 500_ d'Egville, _Don Quichotte, ou les Noces de Gamache_, _i. 347_ de la Bastie, M. le Bimard, Baron, _Mémoires de l'Académie, etc._, ii. 480, 481, _482_ De la Berge, _Essai sur le règne de Trajan_, _ii. 412_ de la Croix, Sieur, _i. 493_ Delacroix, Ferdinand Victor Eugène, painter, _iv. 461_ de la Guilletière, Le Sieur, _Lacedémone Ancienne et Nouvelle_, _iii. 122_ de la Houssaie, Sieur Amelott, _History of the Government of Venice_, _iv. 358_ de la Motraye, Aubrey, _Voyages_, _vi. 295, 296_ Delano, Amasa, _Narrative of Voyages, etc._, _v. 622_ De la Pryme, Charles, _iv. 46_ De La Rose, Pierre, _vii. 3_ Delavigne, Casimir Jean François, _Marino Faliero, tragédie en cinq actes_, iv. 329, _367_ Delawarr, George John, 5th Earl of ("Euryalus"), i. 7, 100; _ii. 22_ Delawarr, Thomas, 3rd Earl of, _i. 101_ Delbora, or Awina, Abel's sister, _v. 226_ Delhis, or delis, Turkish bravos, "Forlorn Hope," ii. 136, 149; iii. 168, 459; vi. 312 Della Cruscan School, i. _304, 323_, 357, _358, 441, 444_; Academy (Florence), _i. 358_; ii. _357_, 485 della Scala, Francesco can Grande, v. 562 Delort, M., _iv. 514_ Delphi, i. 425; ii. 15, _60, 61_, 85, 92 Delphin, _Martial_, _vi. 27_ Delpini, Charles Anthony, _Don Juan; or, The Libertine destroyed_, vi. xvi, _11_ Del Pinto, vi. 227, 228 Delvinachi (Illyria), ii. _134_, 174, 177, 202 Demeter, _v. 570_ Demetrius, Byron's servant, _ii. 75_ Demetrius Poliorcetes, v. 486 Democracy, "an Aristocracy of Blackguards," _vi. 381_ Democritus, i. 422 Demosthenes, i. 29; ii. 301 Denham, Clapperton, and Oudney, _Narrative of Travels ... in Northern and Central Africa_, _vi. 474_ Denman, Lord, i. _366_; ii. 291 Dennis, John, i. 220, 326; _iii. 279_; _Essay on the Operas after the Italian manner, etc._, i. 410 Dent, M.P., John ("Dog Dent"), vii. 49 Denvil ("Manfred Denvil"), the actor, iv. 78 d'Epinay, Madame, _ii. 266_ _De Principatibus Italiæ Tractatus Varii_, _ii. 478_ Derby, Lord, _Homer's Iliad_, _vi. 339_ d'Erceville, Rolland, _Recherches sur les Prérogatives des Dames chez les Gaulois, etc._, ii. 6 Deropoli, plain of, ii. 134 Dervish Tahiri, ii. 175, 176; _iii. 134, 450_ Dervishes, the, i. 492; iii. 254 Derwentwater, _iv. 525_ Desaix de Voygoux, Louis Charles Antoine, vi. 14 Descamisados, or Sansculottes of the Spanish Revolution, vi. 456 Deshayes, ballet-master at the King's Theatre, i. 347 De Silver and Co., i. 452, 453 des Issarts, Marquis de Forbin, _v. 566_ Desmoulins, Camille, _vi. 14_ d'Este, Marquis, of Tuscany, ii. 354; iii. 503 d'Este, Alfonso, _ii. 486_ d'Este II., Alfonso, Duke of Ferrara, iv. 266 d'Este, Borso, _ii. 354_ d'Este, Ercolo, _ii. 354_ d'Este, Hugo, iii. 503 d'Este, Leonora, _ii. 355_; iv. 145, 147, 148, 151, 152 d'Este, Lionel, _ii. 354_ d'Este, Luigi, Cardinal, _ii. 486_; _iv. 146_ d'Este, Niccolo, Marquis, _iii. 505-507_ d'Este, Ugo, _iii. 505-507_ _Destruction of Sennacherib, The_, iii. 404 _Detached Thoughts_, _i. 99, 205_; _ii. 301_; _iv. 75, 179, 562, 580, 584_; _v. 485_; _vi. 270, 360, 509_ Dettingen, battle of, _vi. 12_ _Deuteronomy_, ii. 294; _iv. 499_ _Devil's Drive, The_, _i. 30_; vii. 21-34 Devonshire, Elizabeth, Duchess of, _ii. 410_; _iii. 31_; _vi. 70, 488_ Devonshire, Georgiana, Duchess of, v. 329, _378_ Devonshire, William Spencer, 6th Duke of (Byron's "Duke of Dash"), vi. 50 Dewick and Clarke, printers, _vii. 3_ D'Herbelot, _Bibliothèque Orientale_, _ii. 149_; iii. 76, _109, 120, 145, 173_; _iv. 113_; v. 280; _vi. 292_ d'Houdetot, Comtesse, ii. 265, 300 Diana, _vi. 151_ Dibdin, Thomas John, i. 341; _iv. 338_; _The Jew and the Doctor_; _Mother Goose_, i. 345, 346; _The Grinders, or more Grist to the Mill_, _vii. 61_ Dickens, Charles, v. 114; _vi. 208_; _Tale of Two Cities_, _vi. 435_ _Dictionary of Antiquities_, _vi. 151_ _Dictionary of National Biography_, _ii. 25, 280_; _iv. 501, 503, 513_; _v. 589_; _vi. 67_ Diderot, _ii. 266_ Dido, i. 157 Diez, _iv. 171_ Digentia river, ii. 523 _Dilettanti Society_, i. _378_, 379, 454; ii. xi, 109 Dillman, Professor, _Ethiopic Text of Book of Enoch_, _v. 302_ Dillon, Charles, actor, iv. 78 Dinner-bell, "the Tocsin of the Soul," vi. 232 Diocletian, _iii. 308_ Diocletian's (Pompey's) Pillar, v. 548 Diodati, Villa, ii. _257_, 300 Diodorus Siculus, _Bibliothecæ Historicæ_, v. 3-5, 11, _14, 21, 81, 106, 405, 543_ Diogenes, ii. 241; v 565; vi. 303, 436 Diogenes Laertius, i. 18, _414_; _De Vitâ et Sententiis_, vi. 585 Dion Cassius, ii. 179; _Hist. Rom._, ii. _411_, 510, _511_, 512; _iv. 370_ Dionisus, G.J., _Canonico di Verona_, _ii. 496_ Dionysius, ii. 413; _Antiq. Rom._, ii. 510, 512, 513, 518 Dionysius the Areopagite, _Celestial Hierarchy_, _v. 286_ Dionysius of Halicarnassus, _ii. 497_ Dionysius the Younger, _iii. 311_ Dionysus, India occupied by, v. 21 Dirce river, ii. 189 Disdar, ii. 187 Disraeli, Benjamin, _Vivian Grey_, _vi. 504, 506_ Disraeli, Isaac (_Curiosities of Literature_), ii. 468, 470; iii. 217, 499; _vi. 555_ d'Istria, Count Capo, v. 575 Djerrid, or jerreed, Turkish javelin, iii. 97 Dniéper river, vi. 201, 202, _208_, 211, _233_ Dniester river, _vi. 362_ Dodona, site of, ii. 132 Dodsley, A., _The Ordinary_, _ii. 17_; _Description of the Leasowes_, _iii. 41_; _Plays_, v. 200 Dodwell, E., _Classical Tour_, i. 455; iii. 272; _Tour through Greece_, _vi. 151_ Dog-tax Bill, 1796, _vii. 49_ D'Ohsson, Mouradja, _Tableau générale de l'Empire Othoman_, ii. _136_, 206; _iii. 176, 206_ Dolabella, _ii. 405_ Dolce, Carlo, vi. 502 _Dolfin Cronaca_, v. 117, 118, _121, 172_ Dolfino, Doge Giovanni, ii. 475 d'Olivet, M. l'Abbé (Thoulier), _Histoire de l'Académie Française_, ii. 485 Dolman, Miss Maria, iii. 41 _Domestic Pieces (Poems)_, _ii. 247, 426_ Domitian, _ii. 408_; iv. 334 Domitius Marsus, i. 73 Don, brig of, vi. 405 _Don Juan_, _i. 260, 203, 362, 403, 434_; _ii. 30, 59, 139, 149, 227, 281, 332, 342, 366, 372, 374, 441_; _iii. 13, 397, 463, 481, 488, 490, 494, 495_; iv. _16, 17, 47, 60, 125, 132, 165_, 184, _195, 226, 232_, 238, _243_, 279, 280, 475-477, _566_, 570, _578_; v. _159_, 202-204, _351, 396, 497, 568_, 584; vi.; _vii. 9, 25, 76, 77_ Don Quixote, i. 490 Donati, Corso, _iv. 253_ Donati, Gemma, iv. 253 Donate, Andrea, _v. 123_ Donate, Ermolao (or Almoro), v. 116, 134 Donatus, Tib. Cl., _ii. 514_; _Life of Virgil_, _ii. 407_ Donne, Dr., vii. 19 Donoughmore, Earl of, Byron's speech on motion for Committee on Roman Catholic claims, _iv. 561_ Doomsday Book, _vi. 411_ Dorchester, Lady, ii. 319; iv. 548, _566_; _vi. 608_ Doria, Paganino, _iv. 356_ Doria, Pietro (Genoese admiral), ii. 338, 476, 497 Doria, transcript of Sanudo's _Diaries_, iv. 326 Doroshénko, Peter, President of the Western Ukraine, iv. 201 Dorotheus of Mitylene, Archbishop of Monembasia, _Univ. Hist._, ii. 198 D'Orsay, Count Alfred, "Cupidon déchaîné," vi. _507_, 526, 547 Dorset, Charles Sackville, Earl of, _To all you Ladies, etc._, i. 198, _418_ Dorset, George John Frederick, 4th Duke of, i. 194; iii. _423_, 425 Douce, Francis, edition of Holbein's _Dance of Death_, _vi. 555_ Dover, vi. 420 Dover, Lord, preface to Walpole's _Letters to Sir H. 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Alexander, _iii. 348_; _Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay_, _vi. 78_ Dyer, George, _Country Walk_, _iii. 330_; _Sketch of Southey_, _vi. 175_ Dying gladiator, statue of the, ii. 432 E _E Nihilo Nihil; or, An Epigram Bewitched_, vii. 55 _Earl of Abergavenny_, wreck of the ship, _vi. 91_ Early English Text Society, _v. 207, 496_ _Early Poems from Various Sources_, i. 210-285 Earthquakes, ii. 377, 505 East India Co., _i. 377_; _vi. 236_ Eastlake, Sir C.L., his picture "Byron's Dream," _iv. 37_ _Eccentric Review_, _i. 322_ _Ecclesiastes_, i. 307; vi. 303 _Ecclesiasticus_, _ii. 155_ Eckermann, _Conversations with Goethe_, iv. 157, 327, 328; v. 119, _122_, 199, 204 Eckersall, Harriet (Mrs. T.R. Malthus), _vi. 461_ Eckersall, John, _vi. 461_ _Eclectic Review_, i. _379_, 430, _431, 432_; iii. 444, _493_, 500; iv. 6, 158, 203, 240; v. 204, 329; vi. 162 Edgcumbe, or Edgcombe, Richard, _ii. 430_; _iii. 72_; _iv. 15_ Edgeworth, Maria, vi. 18 _Edinburgh Annual Register_, _i. 435, 436_ _Edinburgh Evening Post_, _i. 430_ _Edinburgh Monthly Magazine_, afterwards _Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine_, _q.v._ _Edinburgh Review_, i. xiv, 202, 292, 294, _301-303, 305, 310, 330, 331, 336-341_, 382, 392, 395, _429, 432_; ii. xv, _109_, 196, 201, 204, 213, 315, _360_; iii. 77, 151, 219, 377; iv. 6, _48_, 80, 158, 239, 313, 329, _342, 513, 574_; v. 5, 119, 204, 280, 282, _338, 551_; vi. xx, _9, 51, 67_, 76, _172, 175, 403, 445, 459, 551_; _vii. 32_ _Edinburgh Weekly Journal_, vi. xix Edleston (Byron's "Cornelian"), i. 66; _ii. 104_ Edom, Sea of, _vi. 122_ Edu, Rajah of Ellichpur, _v. 631_ Edward the Black Prince, _i. 107_; vi. 422 Edward III., _vi. 496_ Edward VI., _iv. 542_ Edwards, Captain, of the _Pandora_ frigate, v. 584 Edwards, Dr., Master of Sidney Sussex Coll., Cambridge, _i. 417_ Egan, Pierce, _Life in London_, _i. 321, 434_; _vi. 431-433_; _Anecdotes of the Turf_, _vi. 433_ Egeria, ii. _454_, 515; Grotto of, ii. 416 _Egerton MSS._, in British Museum, i. _235_, 293, 387; ii. xvi Eginhard, _iv. 288_ _Egotism. A Letter to J.T. Becher_, i. 247 Egripo, the Negropont, iii. 173 Egypt, evacuated by the French, _ii. 108_; the Pyramids of, v. 550 Ehrenbreitstein, ii. 251, 297 Eiger, the Grosse, _iv. 129_ Ekenhead, Lieutenant, _iii. 13_ Elam, v. 4 Elchingen, Michel Ney, Duke of, _vi. 373_ Eldon, John Scott, Earl of, ii. 213; iv. 328, 482; v. 203; vi. _460_, 569; vii. 13, 29 Elector Palatine, the, _i. 2_ Electric telegraph, invention of the, iv. 505 _Elegiac Stanzas_, _i. 5_ _Elegiac Stanzas on the Death of Sir Peter Parker, Bart._, iii. xix, 417 _Elegy_, vii. 75 _Elegy on Newstead Abbey_, i. 116 Elena, Duchess, _iv. 367_ Elgin, Lady, i. 452 Elgin, Lord, and the Elgin Marbles, i. 378, 452-474; ii. x, xi, _100, 106_, 108-110, 167, 168, 172, 188 Elizabeth, Princess, _i. 437_ Elizabeth, Queen, _i. 197_; _ii. 453_ Ellenborough, Lord, vi. 265; vii. 29 Ellice, _v. 555_ Ellis, A.G. (British Museum), _iii. 95_ Ellis, F.S., ed. _Golden Legend_, _iv. 494_; _vi. 33, 230, 273_ Ellis, George Agar, _i. 396_; ii. xiii; iii. 77, _94_, 151, 219, 321; _iv. 514_ Elliston, Robert W., iii. 51; _iv. 338_; _Memoirs of_, iv. 328 Elmsley, Professor, _vii. 52_ Eloïsa, v. 634 Elze, Karl, _Life of Lord Byron_, i. xi, _4, 18_; _ii. 248, 352_; _iv. 14, 543_ Encina, Juan del, _Teatro Completo_, _v. 207_ _Encyclopædia Biblica_, v. 4, 219, 491 _Encyclopædia Britannica_, _iii. 107, 130_; _v. 558_ _Encyclopædia Metropolitana_, _ii. 415_ _Encyclopédie, La Grande_, _v. 566_ Endor, witch of, iii. 392; iv. 108 _Endorsement to the Deed of Separation, in the April of 1816_, vii. 41 Engen, battle of, _vi. 14_ Englaender, Dr. D., _Lord Byron's Mazeppa_, _iv. 214, 220_ _Englische Studien_, iv. _214_, 324, 329 _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_, i. xiv, _128, 203_, 289-384, 387, _406, 409, 431, 443, 448_, 453, 454; ii. ix, x, _108, 109, 202, 304, 205, 366_; _iii. 32, 196, 210, 324, 435_; _iv. 21, 182, 244, 519, 555_; v. 537, 540; _vi. 50, 67, 292, 587_; _vii. 6, 15_ _Enigma on the Letter I_ (spurious), iii. xxi Ennui, "the best of friends," vi. 176; "a growth of English root," vi. 512 _Enoch, Book of_, v. 281, _286, 291_, 302, _311_ Ensor, Miss Fanny, as "Myrrha" in _Sardanapalus_, v. 2 Eos (Dawn), _v. 497_ Epaminondas, ii. 155; vi. 376 _Ephesians_, _v. 233_ Epicurus, vi. 139 _Epigram_, vii. 65 _Epigram. From the French of Rulhières_, vii. 62 _Epigram on an Old Lady who had some curious notions respecting the Soul_, vii. 1 _Epigram on the Braziers' Address to be presented in armour by the Company to Queen Caroline_, vii. 72 _Epigrams_, vii. 81 _Epilogue_, vii. 63 Epirus, _ii. 127_ _Episode of Nisus and Euryalus_, i. xii, 151, _177_ _Epistle from Mr. Murray to Dr. Polidori_, vii. 47 _Epistle to a Friend in answer to some lines, etc._, ii. _163_; iii. 28 _Epistle to Augusta_, _ii. 247, 456, 457_; iv. _56_, 57, _152_; _vi. 498_ _Epistle to Mr. Murray_, vii. 51 _Epitaph_, vii. 65 _Epitaph for Joseph Blacket, late Poet and Shoemaker_, _i. 359_; vii. 11 _Epitaph for William Pitt_, vii. 64 _Epitaph on a Beloved Friend_, i. 18; _ii. 137_ _Epitaph on John Adams of Southwell_, vii. 1 Erasmus, ii. 281; _Naufragium_, _vi. 93_ Eratosthenes of Cyrene, _Catasterismi_, _ii. 439_ Eratostratus, i. 467 Erechtheum, the, _i. 463_; _ii. 106_ Erechtheus, ii. 102 Erizzo, Nicolas, ii. 472; v. 117, 134 Erneis, or Ernysius, vi. 410, _411_ Ernst, W., _Memoirs of the Life of Lord Chesterfield_, _vi. 525_ Eros, iv. 105 Erskine, Thomas, Lord ("Strongbow from Tweed"), i. 429; iii. 45; vi. 509, 596; _vii. 66_ Esarhaddon, v. 4 Esau, _v. 285_ Eschinard, _Descrizione di Roma, etc._, _ii. 516, 517_ Esdaile, Mrs. (Shelley's eldest daughter), _ii. 13_ Espadas, or matadors, ii. 68 Éspinasse, F., _Life of Voltaire_, _ii. 282_ Essling, battle of, _vi. 14_ Este. _See_ d'Este Esterhazy, Prince, v. 539 Eteocles, v. 403 Ethiopians, _Book of Enoch_ preserved by the, _v. 302_ Etna, v. 55 Eton, William, _A Survey of the Turkish Empire_, ii. 191, 194 Etruria, king of, ii. 90 Eucrates, _ii. 393_ Euganean hills, ii. 483 Eugene, Prince, _Mémoires_, _iii. 256, 455_; iv. 331 Eunapius Sardianus, _Vitæ Philosophorum et Sophistarum, Philostratorum, etc._, _iv. 105_ Euphrates, river, v. 15, 108 Euripides, _Medea_, i. 168; vii. 10; _Hippolytus_, _v. 496_ _European Magazine_, _i. 343_; iii. 444, 500; _iv. 99, 490_; v. 329 Eurotas' banks (Laconia), ii. 150 Euryalus, i. 151, _175_; _ii. 387_ Eurystheus, _ii. 431_ Eusebius, ii. 513; v. 281; _Chron._, _v. 107_ Eustace, _Classical Tour in Italy_, i. 452; ii. _440_, 500, 516, _524_ Euthanasia, iii. 39 Eutropius, _Hist. Rom. Brev._, _ii. 411_; the Eunuch, vi. 8 Euxine Sea, ii. 455; vi. 219, 220 Evans, Mr., Master at Harrow, _i. 25, 89_ Eve's curse, v. 271 _Evening Statesman_, _i. 319_ _Examiner_, _ii. 215_; iii. xx, 304, _389, 427, 428, 436, 438_, 532-534, _538_; iv. 478; v. 204, 540; vi. xx; vii. 17, _40_ Eyre, trunk-maker, _i. 437_ Ezekiel, _iv. 43_ F Fabius, i. 220 Fabricius, _Script. Gr. Var._, _iii. 122_ Facciolati, ii. 92 Fagiono, Stefano, iv. 464 Fagiuolo, Niccolo, iv. 464 Fagniani, Maria (Lady Yarmouth), _i. 501_ Fairburn, John, _The Stripling Bard; or, The Apostate Lartreate_, _iv. 521_ Fairfax, Edward, translation of Tasso's _Ger. Lib._, _iii. 362_; _iv. 296_ Falbowski, the _pane_ (Lord), iv. 201, _212_ Falconer, William, _The Shipwreck_, ii. 169 Faliero, Dogaressa Aluica, _iv. 448_ Faliero, Bertuccio, iv. 346, _367_, 464 Faliero, Lucia, _iv. 365_ Faliero, Marino, iv. 239, 240; story of, iv. 462; Petrarch on the Conspiracy of, iv. 468 Faliero, Doge Ordetafo, iv. 336, 390 Faliero, Doge Vitale, iv. 336, _390_ Falkland, Charles John Cary, 9th Viscount, i. 351 Falkland, Lucius Cary, Lord, i. 121, _128, 432_; _iv. 21_ Falkner, Mr., i. xii Fandango, the, i. 492 Fanshawe, Harriet, _Enigma on the Letter H._, iii. xx _Fare Thee Well_, iii. 537 _Farewell! if ever fondest prayer_, iii. 409 _Farewell Petition to J.C.H., Esq._, vii. 7 _Farewell to England_ (spurious), iii. xx _Farewell to Malta_, iii. 24 _Farewell to the Muse_, i. 254 Farish, Rev. W., _i. 417_ Farquhar, _The Beaux' Stratagem_, i. 415; iv. 481; _Recruiting Officer_, ii. 88 Fas, or Fez, vi. 197, 198 Faucit, Helen, as "Angiolina" in _Marino Faliero_, iv. 324; as "Marina" in _The Two Foscari_, v. 114; as "Josephine" in _Werner_, v. 324 Faunus, Lucius, _De Antiq. Urb. Rom._, ii. 510-513 Fauvel, M., ii. _99_, 168, 187, 190 Favell, _iv. 225_ Favila, Duke of Cantabria, _v. 558_ Fazillac, M. Roux-, _iv. 514_ Fazzioli, Venetian kerchiefs, vi. 83 Fea, the Abbate, _Spiegazione dei Rami Storia, etc._, _ii. 518_ Feere, consort or mate, ii. 22 "Feeble" used for "foible," vi. 550 Feinagle, Gregor von, vi. 16 Fellowes, Henry Wallop, _vi. 569_ Fénélon, _Télémaque_, _ii. 118_; vi. 303 Fennell, C.A.M., _Ancient Marbles in Great Britain_, i. 455 Fenwick, John, translation of _Dumourier's Memoirs_, _vi. 13_ Ferdinand and Isabella, _ii. 47_ Ferdinand V. of Spain, _vi. 212_ Ferdinand VII. of Spain, ii. 54, 55, _78_, 90, 91; v. 538, 558 Ferdousi, _i. 353_ Ferney, _iv. 53_ Ferrand, M., _Histoire des Trois Démembremens de la Pologne_, _v. 551_ Ferrara, ii. 312, 354, 503, _505_; iv. 141 Ferrara, Alfonso d'Este II., Duke of, iv. 266; _vi. 212_ Ferrari, Girolamo, iii. 441 Festus, _De Verb. Signif._, _ii. 437_ Fewterel, the prize-fighter, _i. 433_ Fiandra, Comte Baldovino di, _iv. 352_ Ficino, _ii. 365, 495_; iv. 280 Fielding, Beau, _iv. 541_ Fielding, _The Tragedy of Tragedies, or the Life and Death of Tom Thumb the Great_, i. 313, _389, 392, 436_; _Amelia_, i. 385; _The Golden Rump_, _i. 414_; _Jonathan Wild_, ii. 171; iv. 284; _Tom Jones_, _ii. 386_; iv. 284, 332; _History of the Adventures of Joseph Andrews_, iv. 284; vi. _254_, 511; _Journey from this World to the Next_, iv. 483, _518_; his "superior grossness," vi. xviii, 210; his use of "was," _vi. 208_ Fielding, Sir John, Bow Street magistrate, _i. 416_ Figuranti, vi. 207 Fiji, v. 599 Filicaja, _Poesie Toscaine_, ii. 312, _361_ _Fill the goblet again_, i. 283 Finden, _Illustrations of the Life and Works of Lord Byron_, _ii. 11_ Fingall, Arthur James Plunkett, 8th Earl of, iv. 559 Finlay, _History of Greece_, ii. _107, 139, 140, 146_, 165, _175_, 180, _193_, 441; _v. 556_; _vi. 168_; _Greece under Othoman and Venetian Domination_, _iii. 166, 194, 195, 481_ Finley, John, the pioneer, _vi. 349_ _First Kiss of Love, The_, i. 82 Fitger, Arthur, iv. 324 Fitzgerald, Colonel, iv. 157 Fitzgerald, Edward, translation of _Rubáiyát_ of Omar Khayyám, iii. 87, _109_ Fitzgerald, Lord Edward, iv. 548 Fitzgerald, Percy, _Life of George IV._, _i. 416_ Fitzgerald, W.L., _The Tyrant's Downfall_, _iii. 435_ Fitzgerald, William Thomas (_Nelson's Triumph_; _Tears of Hibernia_; _Nelson's Tomb_), i. 297, _444_, 448, 481, 485; iii. 312; _iv. 549_ Fitzpatrick, Richard, _Dorinda: a Town Eclogue_, i. 500 Flaminius, Consul, ii. 505, 508 Flaminius Vacca, _Memorie_, ii. 508, 509, 511, 515 Flash language, instances of, vi. 431-433 Flavian Amphitheatre (Colosseum), Rome, ii. 423-435 Fletcher, _Rule a Wife and Have a Wife_, i. 415; _The Two Noble Kinsmen_, _ii. 217_ Fletcher of Saltoun, Andrew, _An Account of a Conversation, etc._, _v. 602_ Fletcher, William (Byron's servant), ii. 28, _52_; _iii. 381_; _iv. 367_; vii. 6, 8 Fletcher, Mrs. William, _vi. 22_ Florence, ii. 312; iv. 249; Uffizzi Gallery at, _ii. 365_ _Florence Miscellany_, _i. 358_ Florentine nobility, the, ii. 365 Florus, ii. 179 Foix, Odet de, _v. 498_ Folger, Captain Mayhew, of the American ship _Topaz_, v. 582, _622_ Fontainebleau, Treaty of, ii. 90 Fontenelle, Le Bovier de, _Entretiens sur la Pluralitè des Mondes_, ii. 198; _iv. 523_; _vi. 246_ Fontenoy, battle of, _vi. 12_ Foote, Samuel, _The Mayor of Garratt_, i. 412 Fop's Alley, i. 410; vii. 58 Forbes, Lady Adelaide; _ii. 447_; vi. 116 Forbes, Sir W., _Life of Beattie_, _ii. 5, 479_ Forbin des Issarts, Marquis de, _v. 566_ Ford, John, _i. 304, 397_; _'Tis Pity she's a Whore_, _iv. 377_ Fold, Richard, _Handbook for Spain_, _ii. 54, 57, 68, 79_; _vi. 116_ Forli, _vi. 212_ Forman, Alfred, _The Metre of Dante's Comedy discussed and exemplified_, iv. 239 Forman, H. Buxton, i. xi; _Prose Works of P.B. Shelley_, iv. 3, _18_, 100; vi. xix; _The Metre of Dante's Comedy, etc._, iv. 239 Forster, John, v. 114 Forster the murderer, _i. 308_; _vi. 50_ Forsyth, Joseph, _Remarks on Antiquities, etc., in Italy_, ii. _435_, 484 Forsyth, William, _History of the Captivity of Napoleon_, _v. 544-546, 548_ Forteguerri, _Ricciardetto_, iv. 156, _166, 176, 319_ _Fortunes of Nigel_, _i. 351_ Foscari, Doge Francesco, _ii. 327, 507_; iv. 459; v. 115, 117, 118; _vi. 199_ Foscari, Jacopo, v. 115 Foscari, Lucrezia (_née_ Contarini), v. 115, _130_ Foscari, Marco, v. 118 Foscari, Maria, or Marina (_née_ Nani), v. 115 Foscari, Nicolò, v. 115 Foscolo, Ugo, ii. 324, 496; iv. 156, _166_, 281, _319, 367, 436, 457_ Foster, Augustus, iii. 31 Foster, Vere, _The Two Duchesses_, _iii. 31_; vii. 15 Foston-le-Clay (Foston, All Saints) Vicarage, vi. 596 Foulon, Joseph François, _vi. 435_ Four-Horse Club, the, _vii. 26_ Fox, C.J., i. 113; _vi. 9_; Byron's _On the Death of Mr._, i. 34; _Monodies on_, i. 356; his friend Fitzpatrick, i. 500; one of "the wondrous Three," iv. 75; "with Fox's lard was basting William Pitt," iv. 511; _History of James II._, iii. 170; his grave in Westminster Abbey, v. 541 Fox, Charles Richard, _ii. 80_ Fracassetti, Giuseppe, _Petrarch's Letters_, _ii. 351_ _Fragment, A_, i. 21, _192_; iii. 123; iv. _47_, 51, _193_, 203 _Fragment from the Monk of Athos_, iii. 18 _Fragment of an Epistle to Thomas Moore_, vii. 39 _Fragment of a Novel by Byron_, _iv. 20_ _Fragment of a Translation from the 9th Book of Virgil's Æneid_, i. xii, _151_ _Fragment--written shortly after the marriage of Miss Chaworth_, i. 210 _Fragments of School Exercises: from the "Prometheus Vinctus" of Æschylus_, i. 14 Fragonard, his portrait of Franklin, _v. 554_ Frame Workers' Bill, _i. 412, 495_ France, v. 553 _Francesca of Rimini_, iv. 313-322 Francis I., Emperor of Austria, _i. 489_; v. _498_, 503, 539, _573_, 576 Francis Maria II., Duke of Rovere, ii. 498 Francis, Sir Philip, _iv. 513_ Franguestan (Circassia), iii. 111 Frankfort, i. 489 Franklin, Benjamin, iv. 516; _Opinions and Conjectures concerning ... Electrical Matter, etc._, v. 554 Fraser, Mrs. Susan, _Camilla de Florian_, iii. 26 _Fraser's Magazine_, _iv. 542_; v. 204 Fraticelli, _Il Canzoniere di Dante_, _iv. 248_ Frederick the Great, _i. 107_; vi. 337 Frederick II. of Prussia, ii. 209, _282_; iv. 334; _v. 637_ Frederick William III. of Prussia, v. 539, 550, 553, _577_; _vii. 39_ French, Waterloo and the, vi. 345 French Revolution, ii. 82; _vi. 13, 14_ Frere, J. Hookham, _i. 395_; _ii. 327_, iii. 151; vii. 48, 49; _The Rovers, or the Double Arrangement_, _ii. 7_; British Minister, Spain, _ii. 79_; _The Needy Knife-Grinder_, ii. 80; his article in _Q.R._ on Lady Morgan's _France_, _ii. 187_; _Whistlecraft_, iv. 155, 156, 279, 283; vi. xvi; vii. 53; the _ottava rima_, iv. 238 Fréron, Elie Catharine, _ii. 282_ Friar, the Black, at Newstead Abbey, vi. _576_, 578, _et seq._ Fricker, Edith (Mrs. R. Southey), _iv. 521_; vi. 175 Fricker, Mary (Mrs. Robert Lovell), _iv. 521_ Fricker, Sarah (Mrs. S.T. Coleridge), _iv. 521_; vi. 175 Fricker, Stephen, _vi. 175_ Friendly Islands, the, v. 581 Friuli's mountains (Julian Alps), ii. 348 Frizzi, Antonio, _Memorie per la Storia di Ferrara_, _iii. 507_ _From Anacreon_, i. 149 _From the French_, iii. 428; vii. 76 _From the Portuguese_ ("_Tu mi chamas_"), iii. 71 Frosini, or Phrosine, iii. 145 Frundsberg, George, leader of the Landsknechts, _v. 520_ Fry, Elizabeth, vi. 425 Fryer, John, master of the _Bounty_, _v. 594_ _Fugitive Pieces_, i. xi, 1-75, _213_; _iii. 381, 383, 387, 388, 390, 400, 438_; iv. 584 Fuller, _Worthies: Lincolnshire_, _vi. 596_ Fullerton, Lady Georgiana, v. 329 Fulvius Ursinus, ii. 510, 517 Funck-Brentano, M. Frantz, _L'Homme au Masque de Velours Noir_, _iv. 514_ Furius Leptinus, _ii. 520_ Furtwaengler, A., _Masterpieces of Ancient Greek Sculpture_, _ii. 446_ Fusina, _ii. 349_; _vii. 72_ G Gabor, Bethlen, king of Hungary, iv. 331; _v. 349, 352_ Gabriel of Bergamo, Bishop, iv. 467 Gaddi, Cardinal de', _v. 516_ Gail, Jean Baptiste, ii. 197 Galahad, _iv. 320_ Galiffe, J.A., _Notices Généalogiques sur les Familles Genevoises_, iv. 5; _Galignanis Gazette_ (or _Messenger)_, i. 452; _iv. 338_; v. 540; vii. 80 Galileo Galilei, ii. 369, 496; vi. 610 Galiongee, or galiongi, Turkish sailor, iii. 184 Gall, Richard, _i. 211_; _vi. 462_ Gallehault, _iv. 320_ Gallienus, _vi. 446_ Gallo, Cape, iii. 248 Gallois, Léonard, _Historie de Napoléon d'après lui-même_, iii. 304 Galt, John, _Voyages and Travels_, i. 492; _Life of Lord Byron_, iii. 150, _205_; _vi. 195_ Galvani, Professor, _i. 308_; _vi. 50_ Galvanism, i. 307; vi. 50 Gamba, Count, _vi. 179_, _A Narrative of Lord Byron's Last Journey to Greece_, _vii. 86_ Gambas, the, _iv. 259_ Gambier, Admiral Lord, _i. 468_ Gandia, Duke of, _iii. 367_ Garcia, H.E. Don Juan, _vi. 437_ Garcilasso, or Garcias Lasso, de la Vega, vi. 40 Gardiki sacked by Ali Pasha, _ii. 139_ Garnett, Dr. Richard (keeper of Printed Books in the British Museum), _Italian Literature_, ii. _324, 351_, 370; iv. 281; _v. 535_ Garrick, David, i. 26, 344, _409_; iii. _51_, 52, 53; _Lying Valet_, i. 400; produces _Don Juan; or, The Libertine Destroyed_, at Drury Lane Theatre, _vi. 11_ Garter, story of the, ii. 7 Garth, _vi. 236_ Gas, nitrous oxide, i. 307 Gas first used in London, vi. 434 Gas Light and Coke Co., _i. 307_ Gascoigne, M.P. for Liverpool, i. 479 Gaston de Foix, Due de Nemours, vi. 212 Gastuni, _iii. 184_ Gates, General, _vi. 12_ Gauls, the, _ii. 413_; iv. 331, 334 Gautier, Léon, _Voyage en Espagne_, _ii. 67_, _Les Epopées Françaises_, _v. 496_ Gavotto, or Cabotto, Giovanni, _iv. 262_ Gay, _The Beggar's Opera, i. 416_, iv. 75; vii. 74; _Trivia, iv. 160_, _Epitaph_, vi. 561 Gayarré, Charles Étienne Arthur, _History of Louisiana; Fernando de Lemos, iii. 298_ Gayton, Miss, i. _347_, 348 _Gazette_, _i. 488_ _Gazette Extraordinary_, iii. 303 _Gazetteer_, _iv. 542_ _Gazetteer of the World_, ii. xxiv; _iii. 24_ Gebhart, Émile, _De l'Italie_ (_Le Sac de Rome_), v. 471, 472, _510, 515, 520_ Gebora, battle of, _i. 470_ Geddes, Rev. Alexander, _Critical Remarks on the Hebrew Scriptures, v. 208_ Gelasius, _ii. 512_ Gell, Sir William, _Topography of Troy; Ithaca; Itinerary of Greece_, i. _336_, 379; ii. 109, _189_, 204 Gelo the tyrant, iv. 440 Gemma, Dante's wife, iv. 253 _Genesis_, _iv. 127_; v. 197, 201, 207, 210, 277, 280, _285, 291, 300, 527_ Genest, _English Stage_, _ii. 331_; _iv. 573_; v. 324 Geneva, _iv. 53_ Genlis, Stephanie Félicité Ducrest, Marquise de Sillery, Madame de, i. 494 Genoa, _v. 158_ Genseric, king of the Vandals, _ii. 390, 408_; _iii. 233, 251_ _Gentleman's Magazine_, _i. 337_; _ii. 11, 216_; iv. _53_, 82, _99_, 139; v. 470, _578_; _vi. 410, 508, 551_; _vii. 19, 27_ Geoffrey II., of Villehouardin, _iii. 185_ George I., _iii. 209, 299_ George II., _ii. 282_; _iv. 491_; _vi. 12, 496_; _vii. 76_ George III., i. _416, 425_, 486, _500_; _ii. 230_; iv. 476, _556_; _v. 542, 560_; vi. 77, 368, 451, _496_; _vii. 31, 35, 76_; in _Vision of Judgment_, iv. 485-525 George IV., i. _319_, 487, _491_, 495, _497_, 500; _ii. 360, 450_; iii. 45; iv. _74_, 548, _555_; v. 204, _206_, 539, _569, 578_; vi. _374_, 385, 425, _451_, 478; vii. 17, 20, _22, 27, 29, 32_, 35-37, _40_, 80 George William, Elector of Brandenburgh, v. 373 Georgia, i. 378; vi. 279 Gérard, his portrait of Napoleon, _iii. 314_ _G. Dict. Univ._, _ii. 415_ Germantown, battle of, _i. 500_; _vi. 12_ Germany, "how much we owe to thee," i. 486 Gesner, _Death of Abel_, _iii. 31, 32_; v. 200, 201, 208, _266_; _Bibliotheca Univ._, _iii. 122_ Ghibellines, the, _iv. 253_ Ghormezano, Signor, _ii. 99_ Ghosts, ii. 255 Giaffir Pacha, iii. 189 Giamschid, Sultan, iii. 108 Giant's Grave (Bosphorus), vi. 219 "Giants' Staircase" (Venice), iv. 325, 336 _Giaour, the_, _ii. 37, 135, 136_; iii. _17_, 85-146, 149, 150, _183, 210_, 217, 225, _235, 254, 293, 384, 453, 464, 465, 481_; _iv. 21, 38, 125_; _v. 428, 612_; _vi. 165, 244, 332_ Gibbon, Edward, as a translator, _i. 375_; _Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire_, ii. 174, 185, 202, _283_, 307, _350, 392, 434, 475_, 479, _482_, 508; iii. _173, 251_, 301, _519_; iv. 53, 141, _288, 386_; vi. _8, 9, 139, 179_, 260, _279, 446_; _Miscellaneous Works_, ii. 490; iii. _299_, 503; _Antiquities of the House of Brunswick_, iii. 503 Gibraltar (Calpe's Rock), i. 378; ii. 89, 113, 455, 525; _v. 588_; vi. 344 Gieta, Colonel, iv. 205, 208 Gifford, William (editor of the _Quarterly Review_), his edition of _Massinger_, i. 292, _304_; his _Baviad and Mæviad_, i. 294, _304_, 362, 363; short account of, i. 304; _Epistle to Peter Pindar_; edition of _Ben Jonson_ and _Ford_, _i. 304_; translation of _Juvenal_, _i. 304, 362, 375_; _iii. 301_; _v. 63, 64, 613_; vi. _255_, 256; of _Persius_, _i. 304_; "a true poet," _i. 306_; alludes in _Mæviad_ to Kotzebue's _Pizarro_, _i. 344_; describes Miles Peter Andrews in _Baviad_, _i. 353_; referred to in _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_:--"his heavy hand, etc," i. 356; "born beneath an adverse star," i. 360; "bear witness, Gifford, Sotheby, Macneil," i. 362; _iv. 182_; "Why slumbers Gifford?" i. 363; attacks Delia Cruscans in _Baviad_ and _Mæviad_, _i. 358_; criticizes Jerningham in _Baviad_, _i. 383_; on Weber, _i. 397_; his patron, Lord Grosvenor, _i. 412_; his "ultimus Romanorum," _i. 444_; "Edwin's mewlings" in _Baviad_, _i. 444, 445_; advises publication of _Childe Harold_, Canto I., ii. xi; advises suppression of stanzas on Sir John Carr in _Childe Harold_, _ii. 65_ enthusiastic about _Childe Harold_, Canto III., ii. 211; approves Canto IV., _ii. 327_; on the _Giaour_, iii. 76; Byron on _Bride of Abydos_, iii. 149; on _Corsair_, iii. 217; on _Siege of Corinth_, iii. 443; his corrections of _Siege of Corinth_, _iii. 467-470, 474, 479-482, 484-486, 489, 492, 494, 495_; on _Parisina_, iii. 449; on _Manfred_, iv. 79, _136_; Murray's adviser, iv. 157; on _Marino Faliero_, act i., _iv. 367_; omits to correct Byron's bad grammar, _iv. 419_; reviews _Lectures on the English Poets, etc._, _iv. 575_; his addition to _Two Foscari_, _v. 196_; on _Cain_, v. 204; revises _Heaven and Earth_, v. 279, _310_; his note to _Don Juan_ on Memnon Statue, _v. 497_; "we've Gifford here reading MS.," vii. 48 Gight, _i. 336_ Gill, landlord of Byron's lodgings in Nottingham, _vii. 1_ Gillies, _History of Greece_, _iii. 90_ Gillray's _Caricatures_, i. _307_, 476; _iv. 509_; _vii. 29_ Gindely, Anton, _History of the Thirty Years' War_, _v. 352, 371, 416_ Ginguené, P.L., _Hist. Lit. d'Italie_, _iv. 459_ Giorgione (Giorgio Barbarelli), "Judgment of Solomon", iv. 162 Giovanelli, Palazzo, _iv. 163_ _Girl of Cadiz_ (_To Inez_), _ii. 59, 75_; iii. 1; _vi. 82_ Girondins, or Girondists, _vi. 13, 14_ Gisborne, v. 204 Gisborne, Mrs., _iv. 100_ Giustiniani, Franceschino, _iv. 365_ Giustiniani, Pietro Giovanni, _v. 134, 179, 188, 195_ Glaciers, ii. 385 Gladiators, ii. 431, 433, 520 Gladstone, W.E., _iii. 157_; _vi. 26_ Gladwin, Francis, translation of Sa'di's _Gulistan_, _iii. 160_ Gleig, _History of the British Empire in India_, _i. 468_ Glenbervie, Sylvester Douglas, Lord, _Ricciardetto_, iv. 156, _176_ Glenesk, Lord, _MS. of Siege of Corinth_, iii. 448, _451, 452, 454-467, 469-471, 473, 476, 477, 479, 482, 483, 487-489, 491-495_ Gloria, Maria da, of Portugal, _ii. 11_ Gloucester, Duke of, i. 498; _iv. 177_ Glover, _i. 317_ Gluck, music of _Don Juan; or, The Libertine Destroyed_, _vi. 11_; _Armida and Rinaldo_, _vi. 34_ Gnatoo, or tappa cloth (Tonga Islands), v. 600 Gneisnau, August Wilhelm Antonius Neidhart von, vi. 345 Gobbi, _iv. 271_ Godfrey of Viterbo, _ii. 337_ Godoy, Manuel de, Duke of Alcudia, Principe de la Paz, ii. 54, 90 Godwin, William, iii. 444; iv. 475; Essay _Of Population_, _vi. 459_ Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, and Monk Lewis, _i. 317_; _Faust_, _i. 318_; iv. 80, 81, _85, 110_; v. 201, _247_, 281, _294, 409_, 470, 471, 474, _493, 494_; vi. 483; _Sorrows of Werther_, i. 494; _Travels in Italy_ ("Letters from Italy"), _ii. 330, 335, 424_; _Kennst du das Land_, _iii. 157_; review of _Mannfred_ in _Kunst und Alterthum_, iv. _21_, 80-82, _340_; translation of _Manfred_, _iv. 136_; _vii. 55_; _Conversations of_, iv. 157, 327, 328; v. 119, _122_, 199, 204; _Marino Faliero_ dedicated to, iv. 328, _340-342_; _vi. 443_; _vii. 63_; _Aus meinem Leben_, _iv. 342_; on _Vision of Judgment_, _iv. 480_; on _Irish Avatar_, _iv. 556_; _Sardanapalus_ dedicated to, v. 7; on _The Two Foscari_, v. 119, _122_; on _Cain_, v. 199, 204; "The moment he reflects, he is a child," v. 279; on _Heaven and Earth_, v. 281; _Werner_ dedicated to, v. 335; on _Don Juan_ in _Kunst und Alterthum_, vi. xix; Madame de Staël on, vi. 168 _Goethe-Jahrbuch_, iv. 82, _136_; v. 282 Goettlingius, C., _Hesiod Carm._, _ii. 188_ Gold, vi. 455 Goldau, _iv. 97_ Golden Fleece, vi. 158 Goldoni, Carlo, iv. 157; _Belisarus_; _Le Bourru Bianfaisant, etc._, iv. 164; _Mercanti_, _iv. 166_ Goldsmith, Edmund, _v. 289_ Goldsmith, Oliver, _Vicar of Wakefield_, i. 480; _vi. 145, 586_; _Citizen of the World_, ii. 88, 323; _Deserted Village_, vi. 471 Golitsyn, Prince Basil, iv. 202 Gondola, description of a, iv. 165 Gondoliers of Venice, ii. 329, 468; iv. 165 Gonzaga, Cardinal Luigi Valenti, ii. _371_, 495 Gonzaga, Scipio, _iv. 143, 144_ Good, John Mason, _The Book of Job_, _iv. 498_ Goodman's Fields Theatre, _i. 414_ Goose, game of, vi. 471 Gordianus III., Emperor, _ii. 423_ Gordon, Duchess of, _ii. 350, 479_ Gordon, Lord George, _i. 484_ Gordon, Pryse Lockhart, _Personal Memoirs, etc._, ii. _226, 227_, 294; iv. 156; _Life of Alexander VI._, _iii. 369_ Gordon, Mrs. P.L., _ii. 226_ Gordon, Thomas, _History of the Greek Revolution_, _v. 557_; vii. 53 Gordon, Sir William, _i. 173_ Gordons, the, i. 172 Gorrequer, Major, _v. 545_ Gorton, _Biog. Dict._, _ii. 173_ Gosnell, S., printer, i. 478 Gothenburg (Gottenburg). i. 487, _488_ Goths, Rome sacked by the, ii. 390 Gottschall, Rudolph von, iv. 203 Gouffier, Count Choiseul-, _Voyage Pittoresque de la Grèce_, _ii. 168_; _iii. 295_; _vi. 151_ Gounod, his "Maid of Athens," _iii. 16_ Gouria, _ii. 143_ Gower, Hon. F. Leveson, his article in _Nineteenth Century_--"Did Byron write _Werner_?" v. 329 Goza (Calypso's Isle), ii. 118, 173; iii. 10 Gozzi, Count Carlo, _Memoirs_, _ii. 120, 339_ Grabius, Joannes Ernestus, _Spicilegium SS. Patrum_, _v. 302_ Gracchus, Tiberius, vi. 407 Gradenigo, Dogaressa Aluica, iv. 333, _377_ Gradenigo, Beriola, _iv. 377_ Gradenigo, Nicolò, _iv. 377_ Gradenigo, Doge Pietro, _iv. 360_ Grafton, Augustus Henry, 3rd Duke of, _iv. 177_; _Autobiography_ iv. 510 Grafton, Duchess of, _iv. 177_ Graham, Mrs. (Lady Callcott), iii. 532; _vi. 206, 207_ Graham, General Thomas (Lord Lynedoch), _i. 469_ Grahame, Rev. James, _Sabbath Walks_; _Biblical Pictures_; _British Georgics_, i. _305_, 323, 370, _429_ Granada, _ii. 46, 54_; _v. 558_; vi. 30 Granard, George, 6th Earl of, _vi. 116_ Granby, John Manners, Marquis of, vi. 12 Grand Council (Venice), v. 169 _Grande Encyclopédie, La_, _v. 566_; _vi. 313_ Grange, James, pastry-cook, Piccadilly, _i. 321_; _iv. 583_ Granger, _Biog. Hist. of England_, _iii. 298_ Grant, Harding, _Chancery Practice_; _Lord Byron's Cain, etc., with Notes_, v. 203, 204 _Granta, A Medley_, i. 56; _iv. 516_ Granville, Lady, v. 329 Granville, Lord, v. 329; _vii. 36_ Grattan, _i. 100_; iv. 556, 561; vi. 226, 450 Graves, Oliver B., of Cambridge, Mass., _vii. 3_ Gray, May, Byron's nurse, _vii. 1_ Gray, Thomas, _Alcaic Fragment_, i. 49; _The Fatal Sisters_, _i. 70_; _ii. 252_; Lloyd's parodies on, i. 220; Lewis' _Tales of Wonder_, _i. 317_; "glance their many-twinkling feet," _i. 483_; _Elegy_, _ii. 399_; _iii. 240_; vi. _181_, 503; _Progress of Poesy_, _ii. 413_; his lyric measure, _iii. 128_; _Poemata_, _iii. 423_ Great Council (Maggior Consiglio), Venice, _iv. 360, 399_ Greatheed, Bertie, _i. 358_ Greece, i. 424; ii. 62, 109, 149, 154; iii. 90, 446; v. 555; vii. 85, 87; Isles of, vi. 169 Greek Committee, the, v. 331 Greeks, the, ii. 191, 192; defeat Turks at Lerna, v. 556 Green, _Hist. English People_, _i. 468_ Green, poet, _iii. 330_ Greene, Robert, _Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay_, _vi. 78_ Greenwood, scene-painter, Drury Lane Theatre, i. 346 Grenville, Lord, _i. 437, 470, 497_; _iii. 45_ Grenville, Lord George, _Portugal; a Poem_, _ii. 4_ Grete, river (Southwell), i. 239 Greville, Charles, _vi. 451_ Greville, Colonel, i. 348 Grey, Charles, 2nd Earl of, vi. 478 Grey, Lord, _i. 497_; _iii. 45_ Grey, Mr., _iii. 170_ Grief, Martin, iv. 329 Griffin, A., _i. 234_ Griffith, H.T., edition of Cowper's _Task_, etc., _vi. 348_ Griffiths, Arthur, _Memorials of Millbank_, _vii. 34_ Griffiths, George Edward, _iv. 165_ Grillion's Hotel, Albemarle Street_vi. 437_ Grillo, Angelo, _iv. 146_ Grillparzer, _Sappho_, _v. 61_ Grimaldi, Joseph, _i. 345_; _vi. 11_ Grimm, Baron F.M., _Cor. Lit._, _ii. 266_ Grindelwald, _iv. 110_ Gritti, Benedetto, _v. 116_ Grolierius (Grollier), Cæsar, _Historia Expugnatæ ...Urbis_, v. 471, _510_ Gronow, Captain, _Reminiscences_, _i. 345, 357, 476_; _vi. 69, 276, 507, 508, 529_ Gropius, Karl Wilhelm, ii. 166, 171 Grose, Captain Edward, 1st Life Guards, vi. 355 Grose, Francis, _Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue_, _ii. 66_; _vi. 433_ Grosvenor, 1st Earl, i. 412 Grosvenor, Robert, 2nd Earl (afterwards Marquis of Westminster), i. 412 Grote, George, _History of Greece_, _ii. 102, 158, 341_; _iii. 311_; _iv. 566_ Grotta Ferrata, site of Cicero's villa, ii. 522 Grouvelle, i. 402 Gruterus, ii. 299 Guadalquivir, _ii. 54_; vi. 112 Guadiana river, ii. 46 Gualandra hills, ii. 505-507 _Guardian_, _i. 418_ Guariglia, Signor, _vi. 205_ Guarini, _Pastor Fido_, iv. 141 Guasti, _Tasso's Letters_, _ii. 355_ Guelphs, the, _iv. 253_ Guesclin, Bertrand du, v. 549 Guhl, _ii. 441_ Guicciardini, Francesco (Luigi), _Sacco di Roma_, _iv. 258_; v. 471 Guiccioli, Countess (_My Recollections of Lord Byron_), _i. 99_; _ii. 289, 374_; iv. _119, 213_, 237, 241, _545, 547, 549, 563_, 570; v. 5; vi. _52, 297_, 373 Guiccioli, Palazzo, _ii. 372_; iv. 279 Guido, fresco of the Aurora, vi. 526 Guilford, Earl of, _iv. 143_ Guiscard, Robert, _ii. 390_ Gunpowder, discovered by Friar Bacon, vi. 340 Gurney, Hudson, _The Golden Ass of Apuleius; in English Verse, entitled Cupid and Psyche_, _vi. 165_ Gurney, William Brodie, vi. 66 Gurwood, Colonel, _Wellington Dispatches_, vi. 266 Gustavus Adolphus, king of Sweden, "The Lion of the North," v. 371, _373_, 553 _Guy Mannering_, _iv. 566_ Gwynne, Nell, _vi. 496_ "Gynocracy" used for "gynæcocracy," vi. 473, 588 H Hachette, _iv. 14_ Hadrian, i. 20, _462, 493_; ii. 167, _411, 431, 436, 440_ Hadrian's Mole, ii. 439 Hafiz. _See_ Stott Hague, vi. 419 Haivali (or Kidognis), ii. 200, 207 Hales, Sir Matthew, vi. 610 Halford, Bart., Sir H., An Account of what appeared on Opening the Coffin of King Charles the First, _vii. 35_ Halgh of Halgh, George, _vi. 294_ Halifax, George Savile, Marquis of, _i. 413_ Hall, Captain Basil, _Narrative of a Voyage to Java, 1840_; _Voyage to the Corea and the Loochoo Islands_; _Extracts from a Journal written on the Coast of Chili, etc_., _v. 546, 548, 556_ Hallam, Henry, i. _306_, 340, 380; _Middle Ages_, i. 337; _iv. 288_; vi. 464 Hallet, midshipman on the _Bounty_, v. 588 Hamburg, i. 487, _488_ Hamet Benengeli, Cid, i. 299 Hamilton, Anthony, Archdeacon of Colchester, _ii. 108_ Hamilton, Archibald, 9th Duke of, _i. 311_ Hamilton, Lady Anne, _Epics of the Ton_, i. 294, _311, 330, 343_, 353, _468, 471_; _Secret Memories of the Court of England_, _i. 311_; _vii. 78_ Hamilton, Sir William Richard ("Dark Hamilton"), Lord Elgin's Secretary, _Memorandum on the Earl of Elgin's Pursuits in Greece_, i. 455, _466_; ii. x, 108, 167, _168_, 204 _Hamlet_, i. 401; _ii. 64, 99, 103, 154, 418, 450_; _iii. 543_; iv. 77, _95, 458_; _v. 25, 423_; vi. _309_, 342, 386, 394, _432_, 456, 511, 550, 570-572 Hammer-Purgstall, J. von, _Histoire de l'Empire Othoman_, iii. _166, 312_, 441, _454, 455_ Hammond, George, iii. 217; iv. 472; vii. 49 Hamond, Mrs. (Miss Chaworth Musters), _i. 277_ Hampstead, ii. 66 _Handbooks_ for--_Central Italy_, _ii. 373, 380_; _iv. 275_; _Greece_, _ii. 117, 127, 157, 166, 189_; _Northern Italy_, _ii. 372_; _iv. 336, 392, 430_; _vi. 212_; _Rome_, _ii. 389, 403_; _iv. 271, 273_ Hanmer, _vi. 487_ Hannibal, _i. 349, 493_; ii. _187, 459_, 505; _iii. 301_; _v. 606_ Hansard, _Parliamentary Debates_, _iv. 482_ Hanson, Charles, _vi. 460_ Hanson, Hargreaves, _i. 86_ Hanson, John, _i. 25, 86_; _iii. 540_; _vi. 100_ Hanson, Mary Anne (Lady Portsmouth), _vi. 569_ Hanson, Newton, _i. 86_ Happiness, "was born a twin," vi. 130; Horace's Art of, vi. 490 Haratch, Turkish capitation tax, _iii. 195_ Harcourt, General, _ii. 23_ Harcourt, Mrs., _ii. 23_ Hardinge, George ("Jeffries Hardsman"), Senior Justice of Brecon, etc., _vi. 508_ Hare, Francis ("Silent Hare"), _vi. 529_ Harley, Lady Charlotte Mary (afterwards Bacon), "Ianthe," ii. xii, 11 Harmodius and Aristogeiton, ii. 228, 291; v. 556 Harmonists, the, vi. 554 Harness, Rev. W., _i. 66_; _ii. 204_; _iv. 575_ Harold, Baron de, _iii. 100_ _Harper's New Monthly Magazine_, _vi. 349_ Harpocration, _vi. 169_ Harrison, John ("Longitude Harrison"), inventor of watch compensation, vi. 19 "Harroviensis," _A letter to Sir Walter Scott, etc._, v. 202 Harrow, i. 15-20, 25, 84-106, 208, 222, 237, 259; ii. 66; vi. 49; "Byron's Tomb" at, _i. 26_; speech-day at, i. _86_, 102; rebellion at, _i. 93_; Byron's first English exercise at, _iv. 48_ Harrowby, Lord, vii. 13 Harte, Bret, _The Society upon the Stanislaus_, _iv. 296_ Hartford, _Works of Lord Byron, In verse and Prose_, iii. xxi; _Remarkable Shipwrecks_, _vi. 98, 102, 103_ Harvard University Library, _vii. 3_ Harvey, _i. 405_ Hasell, E.J., _Tasso_, _ii. 356_ Hastings, Francis Rawdon, 1st Marquis of, _i. 497_ Hastings, Warren, impeachment of, iv. 72; _v. 542_ Hathaway, Miss, as "Zarina" in _Sardanapalus_, v. 2 Havard, William, i. 428 Hawarden, Lady, _i. 485_ Hawke, Admiral Edward, Lord, vi. 12 Hawkesbury, Lord, vii. 13 Hawksworth, _Voyages_, _ii. 7_ Hay, iii. 217 Haydn, iii. 376 Haydon, _Life of_, i. 456; "The Elgin Horse's Head," _ii. 336_ Hayley (or Hailey), William, _The Triumph of Temper_; _The Triumph of Music_, _i. 305_, 321, 322, 370; vi. 587; translation of three cantos of Dante's _Inferno_, iv. 238, 244, 313; _Essay on Epic Poetry_, iv. 244; _Life of Milton_, _vi. 7_ Haymarket Theatre, _Werner_ at, v. 324 Hayter, Bishop of Norwich, _iii. 299_ Hayward, Peter, midshipman on the _Bounty_, _v. 588, 605_ Hazlitt, William, _ii. 17_; _My First Acquaintance with Poets_, _iv. 518_; "Scamp, the Lecturer," of _The Blues_, iv. 570; _Lectures on the English Poets_, iv. 570, _586_; _vi. 12, 175_; _Lectures of 1818_, iv. 575; _The Spirit of the Age_, _vi. 506, 509_ Hearne, _Journey from Hudson's Bay_, _iv. 220_ Heath, James, _Flagellum_, _vi. 174_ Heath, Miss, actress, as "The Witch of the Alps," in _Manfred_, iv. 78; as "Zarina" in _Sardanapalus_, v. 2 Heathcote, Katherine Sophia Manners, Lady, vii. 17 Heathcote, Sir Gilbert, _vii. 17_ _Heaven and Earth_, _iv. 50_; v. 277-321, 469, _527_ Heaviside, Dr., _i. 431, 432_ Heber, Richard, _Early English Poets_, _i. 396_ Heber, Reginald, Bishop of Calcutta, _i. 396_; iii. 151, 217; _v. 111_; Reviews _Marino Faliero_ in _Quarterly Review_, iv. 329; reviews _Sardanapalus_, _Two Foscari_, and _Cain_ in _Quarterly Review_, v. 5, _111_, 119, 204; on _Don Juan_ in _Quarterly Review_, vi. xx _Hebrew Melodies_, _ii. 273_; iii. xix, 382-406, _417_; v. 199, _231_ Hecatonnesi Islands, ii. 200 Hecla (Iceland), vi. 569 Hector, v. 488, 577 Heinemann (G. Vuillier), _History of Dancing_, _i. 492_ Heiss, Baron, _iv. 514_ Helbig, _Guide to the Collection of Public Antiquities in Rome_, _ii. 432_ Helen, iv. 334; vi. 535 Helena, Princess (Duchess of Albany), iii. 157 Helicon, i. 373, 397 Heligoland, i. 487, _488_ Hell, Byron's definition of a gambling, i. 407; vi. 436 paved with good intentions, iv. 499; vi. 338 Hellespont, iii. 13, 178, 179; vi. 112, 204 Helps, _vi. 567_ Helvetii, the, ii. 299 Helvoetsluys, vi. 419 Hemans, Captain, _vii. 70_ Hemans, Mrs. Felicia Dorothea (_née_ Browne), vii. 70 Henley, S., _Notes to Vathek_, iii. 76, _87, 105, 109, 110, 120_; _iv. 244_ Henley, "Orator," vi. 303 Henry, John, _v. 560_ Henry, Patrick, one of the leaders of the American Revolution, v. 560 Henry of Prussia, Prince, _v. 550_ Henry I., _i. 493_ Henry II., i. _1_, 116; _v. 495_ Henry IV., i. 399; _iii. 134, 432_; _iv. 13, 262, 407_ _Henry IV._, vi. 20, _48, 256_, 342, _347, 431_, 444, 453 Henry IV., Emperor of Germany, _ii. 390_ Henry V., ii. _19_, 216 _Henry V._, _vi. 487_ _Henry VI._, _vi. 347_ _Henry VII_, _vi. 496_ Henry VII., Emperor of Germany, ii. _403_, 494 Henry VIII., i. _1_, 119; _v. 499_; vii. 35, 36 _Henry VIII._, _vi. 495_ Hephæstion, vi. 378 Hephæstus, _v. 396_ Heraclidæ, the, _ii. 431_ Herbert, Baron, Austrian Ambassador, _iii. 4_ Herbert, George, _Jacula Prudentum_, _iv. 500_ Herbert, William, Dean of Manchester, _i. 306_; _Horæ Scandicæ_, i. 336 Hercules (Alcides), i. 144; v. 27; Couch of, _vi. 220_ _Hercules_, wreck of American ship, _vi. 90_ Hermann, Mrs., as "Angiolina" in _Marino Faliero_, iv. 324 Hero and Leander, iii. 14, 178 Herod the Great, iii. 400 Herod, king of Chalcis, _vi. 139_ Herodes Atticus, _ii. 416_ Herodias, i. 490 Herodotus, _ii. 272_; _v. 107_; vi. _79_, 169, _572_; _Cleobis and Biton_, vi. 186 _Herod's Lament for Mariamne_, iii. 400 Herostratus, i. 467 Herrick, Robert, _To Anthea_, _iv. 35_ Hertford, Marchioness of, _vii. 22_ Hervey, Lord ("Lord Fanny"), _Lines to the Imitator of Horace_, i. 326 Hesiod, ii. 188; _Works and Days_, _vi. 169_ Hesperus, vi. 180 Heterodoxy, vi. 267 Hetman of the Cossacks, vii. 39 Heyne, Christian Gottlob, i. 490 Hiero, a painter, _ii. 168_ Highgate, "swearing on the horns" at, ii. 66 Highland Light Infantry, iii. 416 _Highland Society, the_, iii. 415 Highland welcome, a, vi. 272 Hildyard, Lieutenant J.T., _Historical Record of the 71st Highland Light Infantry_, _iii. 416_ Hill, Rev. H., iv. 476; _vi. 4_ Hill, S. McCalmont, _iii. 18_ _Hints from Horace_, i. _298, 303, 343, 359, 360_, 385-450, 453; ii. ix, _108, 192, 196_; _iv. 517_; _vi. 433, 442_ Hippocrates, ii. 197 Hippocrene, i. 328, 373 Hippolytus, _vi. 255_ Hiron, _vi. 153_ Hispalis (Seville), ii. 52, 60, 93; vi. 15 _Historical Records of the Life Guards_, _i. 495_ Hita, Ginès Perez de, _Historia de las Guerras Civiles de Granada_, _iv. 529, 530_; _v. 558_ Hoadley, _ii. 504_ Hoare, Rev. Charles James, i. 372 Hobbes, Thomas, _v. 615_; vi. _195, 200_, 570; vii. 32 Hobhouse, John Cam (afterwards Lord Broughton de Gyfford), _Imitations and Translations_, i. xiii, _264, 327_; _ii. 30_; iii. xix; vi. 62, _142_; vii. 8; his _lines_ in _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_, i. xiv, xv, 292; _Epistle to a Young Nobleman in Love_, _i. 267_; on _Hints from Horace_, i. 388; _Travels in Albania and other Provinces of Turkey, in 1809 and 1810_, i. 454, _460_; ii. _15, 60_, 84, _100, 106, 125, 130, 131, 133, 136, 137, 142, 145, 148, 153, 157, 158, 169, 171_, 174, 182, _189, 194, 198, 200_, 208, _441, 461_; _iii. 7, 8, 14, 20, 85, 93, 145, 173, 179, 180, 194, 272, 468_; iv. 31; _vi. 151, 204, 208, 231, 261_; vii. 9; "I don't remember any crosses here," _ii. 36_; "one of the finest stanzas I ever read," _ii. 42_; with Byron in Spain, _ii. 52_; "said they were vultures," _ii. 61_; _en route_ for the Negroponte, _ii. 75_; _Historical Illustrations to the Fourth Canto of Childe Harold_, ii. 313-315, _358, 379, 380, 389, 390, 403, 408, 410, 412, 435, 437, 439, 486, 512, 524_; _iv. 146, 245_; _v. 153_; _vi. 233_; _Italy: Remarks made in Several Visits from the Year 1816 to 1854_, ii. 315; _Childe Harold_ dedicated to, ii. 321; _Letters written by an Englishman resident in Paris, etc._, ii. 326; _v. 545_; the Abbé de Sade's _Mémoires_, _ii. 350, 351_; _Notes to Childe Harold, Canto IV._, ii. 465-525; at Theodora Macri's, _iii. 16_; the Giaour story, iii. 76; an odd report about Byron, iii. 218; _Siege of Corinth_ dedicated to, iii. 445; his parody of _Stanzas to Augusta_, _iv. 56_; "went to the highest pinnacle," _iv. 95_; "pelted with a snowball," _iv. 97_; note on Dante, iv. 238; _Essay on the Present Literature of Italy_, _iv. 245_; on _Cain_, v. 204; the MS. of _Werner_, v. 326; "about morality," vi. xix; the Zoili of Albemarle Street, vi. xix, 467; his article in _Westminster Review_ on _Don Juan_, _vi. 3_; "this is so very pointed," _vi. 22_; his remarks on _Don Juan_, _vi. 22, 26, 47, 50, 52, 59, 62, 78, 79, 98_; MS. of _Don Juan_, _Canto XVII._, given to, _vi. 608_; on the Lisbon Packet, vii. 6; _Farewell Petition to_, vii. 7; _Miscellany_, vii. 8; "will bring it safe in his portmanteau," vii. 51; _My Boy Hubbie O!_ vii. 66; his pamphlet, _A Trifling Mistake in Thomas Lord Erskine's recent Preface_, _vii. 66_; M.P. for Westminster, vii. 69; Byron's _Love and Death_, _vii. 85_ Hobhouse, Sir John, iii. 76 Hobson, Captain, _vi. 146_ Hoche, General L., ii. 251, 296; vi. 14 Hock, i. 486 Hodgson, Rev. Francis, Byron on Boatswain's death, _i. 280_; letters from Byron to, _i. 280, 282, 379_; _ii. 29, 42, 63, 78, 104, 187, 192, 331_; _iii. 35, 38, 449_; _vi. 182, 467_; _vii. 10_; _Gentle Alterative for the Reviewers_, i. 295; _Bland's Greek Anthology_, _i. 306, 366_; _iii. 32_; translation of _Juvenal_, _i. 337_; referred to in _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_, i. 375; _Lines on a Ruined Abbey_, _ii. 20, 170_; Byron's _Epistle to a Friend_, _ii. 163_; iii. 28-30; _Lady Jane Grey_, _ii. 170_; _Monitor of Childe Harold_, _ii. 360_; on the _Giaour_, _iii. 137_; on the _Bride of Abydos_, iii. 151; "scribbler Mr. Hodgson," _iv. 165_; and _Cain_, v. 199; Byron's _Lines to--written on board the Lisbon Packet_, vii. 4; MS. of _Devil's Drive_, _vii. 21_; "principally to shock your neighbour," _vii. 42_ Hodgson, Rev. James T., _Life of the Rev. Francis Hodgson_, _i. 375_; _ii. 288_; _iii. 28, 30_ Hofmann. _Lexicon Universale_, _ii. 156, 173, 261, 328, 390_; _iii. 181_ Hofmann, C., _Primavera y Flor de Romances_, _iv. 174, 529_ Hogarth, caricature of Wilkes, _iv. 508_ Hohenlinden, battle of, _vi. 14_ Hohenlohe, Prince, _v. 550_ Holbein, _Dance of Death_, vi. 555 Hole, Rev. Richard, _Arthur; or, The Northern Enchantment_, _i. 314, 436_ Holford, Margaret, _Margaret of Anjou_, vii. 44, 45, 59 Holland, Henry Fox, 1st Lord, _ii. 40_ Holland, Henry Richard Vassall Fox, 2nd Lord, _ii. 80_ Holland, Henry Richard Vassall, 3rd Lord, i. 294, _306, 337_, 338, 340, _356_, 380, _417_; ii. xi, _51-54_; iii. 151, 155, _170_; "Sir Richard Bluebottle" of _The Blues_, iv. 570; his motion on Napoleon's treatment at St. Helena, _v. 545_ Holland, Elizabeth, Lady (née Vassall), i. 294, _355_, 380; _ii. 80_; _vi. 541_; _A Memoir of the Rev. Sydney Smith_, _vi. 596_; Napoleon's snuff-box, vii. 77 Holy Alliance, the, ii. 402; v. 538, 539, _564_; vi. 267 Homer, i. 312, _379, 398, 404_; vi. 73, 173, 177, _211_, 263, 327, _478_; vii. 62; a punster, _i. 377_; _Odyssey_, _i. 426_; ii. _100_, 173; _iv. 264_; "and Homer (damn him) calls," _i. 427_; in _Hints from Horace_, i. 432, 438; the Homeric ghosts, _ii. 255_; _v._ Ariosto, _ii. 359_; _iv. 266_; _Iliad_, ii. 301, _452, 462_; _v. 488, 512, 573_; vi. _117_, 218, 339, _513_, 534; Dante superior to! ii. 495; [Greek: a)pei/rôn], _iii. 179_; his Ocean stream, vi. 218; catalogue of ships, vi. 503 Homunculi, v. 493 Hone, W., publisher of _Poems on his Domestic Circumstances_, i. 452, 453; iii. xx, _24_; _Every Day Book_, _ii. 66_; publishes _Wat Tyler_, _iv. 521_ Honorius, ii. 35, 86, _440_, 521 Hood and Sharpe, publishers, _i. 379_ Hook, James, _A Lass of Richmond Hill_, _vii. 59_ Hook, Theodore, i. _306_, 344; _Tekeli_; _Fortress_; _Music Mad_, _i. 341_; editor of _John Bull_, _v. 206_ Hoole's _Tasso_, _ii. 143_ Hooper, G., _Waterloo: The Downfall of the First Napoleon_, _ii. 234_ Hooper, W., _Rational Recreations_, _vi. 550_ Hope, Thomas, _Anastasius_, _i. 390_; Byron omits stanzas in _Childe Harold_ on, ii. xi; _Household Furniture and Internal Decoration_, _ii. 108_ Hope, Mrs. Thomas (Louisa Beckford), _i. 390_; _iv. 580_ Hoppner, John, R.A., _vii. 54_ Hoppner, John William Rizzo, vii. 54 Hoppner, Richard Belgrave, English Consul at Venice, _ii. 351_; iv. _15, 459_, 471, 472, _547_; vii. 54; translation of Goethe's review of _Manfred_, iv. 82 Horace, _Odes_, i. 81; _ii. 40, 76, 262, 387, 421, 448_; iv. _197, 243_, 323; vi. _15, 77, 78_, 236, 453, 521; _vii. 73_; _Satires_, i. 184; _ii. 405_; _v. 568_; vi. 391, _446_; _Ars Poetica_, i. 385, _402, 409_; ii. ix, xiv; iv. 518; "Farewell, Horace--whom I hated so," ii. 388; his Sabine farm, ii. 455, 524; _Epist._, _v. 367_; vi. 246, _273_, 474, 490; Louis XVIII.'s criticisms on Sanadon's translations of, _v. 567_; _Epist. ad Pisones_, vi. _15_, 177, 505; Scholar of Love, vi. 139; _Epodes_, vi. 378, 536; his Art of Happiness, vi. 490 Horistan Castle, Derbyshire, i. 2 Homer, Francis, _i. 302, 470_ "Horns," "swearing on the," at Highgate, ii. 66 Horsetails, a Pasha's standard, iii. 480 Hortensius, vi. 270 Horton, Eusebius, iii. 381 Horton, Anne Beatrix, Lady Wilmot, origin of "She walks in beauty," iii. 381; iv. 569, 570; vii. _54_, 61 Horton, Sir Robert J. Wilmot, vii. 54 Hoste, Captain Sir William, iv. 456 Hounslow Heath, i. 484 Houris, ii. 60; iii. 110; vi. 364 _Hours of Idleness, and Other Early Poems_, i. xi-xiii, 1-288, _303, 311, 374, 432_; _iii. 182_; _iv. 67_ Houson, Miss Anne, i. 70, 244, 246, 251, 253 Houson, Rev. Henry, _i. 70_ Howard, Hon. Frederick, _i. 355_; ii. _11_, 234, 293 Howatt, Hill, iv. 31 Howe, Admiral Richard, Earl ("Black Dick"), _v. 588_; vi. 12, 14 Howell, _iv. 167_ Hoyle, Rev. Charles, _Exodus_, i. 372, _430_ Hoyle, Edmund, _i. 372_; vi. 173 Hroswitha, _Lapsus et Conversio Theophrasti Vice-domini_, iv. 81 Huascar, Supreme Inca of Peru, _ii. 82_ Hucknall Torkard Church, _i. 3, 70_; _ii. 334_; iv. _14_, 479 Hughes, _iii. 16_ Hughes, Mrs., _vi. 496_ Hugo, Victor, _Les Feuilles d'Automne, ii. 358_; _Le Rhin_, _iv. 14_; _Orientale_, iv. 202 Hulme, Thomas, _Journal_, _vi. 554_ _Humane Society_, vi. 50 Humboldt, Baron Alexander von, v. 539; vi. 215 Hume, David, _History of England_, _i. 374_; _ii. 266_ Hume, Joseph, _ii. 504_ Hungary, Bethlen Gabor, king of, iv. 331; _v. 349, 352_ Hunt, James Henry Leigh, his copy of _Fourth Edition of Childe Harold_, i. xvi, _311, 334_; Byron's letters to, iii. 218; v. 537, 582, 584; _Lord Byron and Some of his Contemporaries_, _iii. 474_; _Autobiography_, _iii. 509_; _vi. 26_; the _Examiner_, iii. 532, _538_; _Story of Rimini_, _iv. 36_; _Stories from the Italian Poets_, iv. _275_, 281, 314; _Morgante Maggiore_, _iv. 285_; the _Liberal_, iv. 571; in Horsemonger Lane Gaol, vii. 16; "Blackguard Hunt," vii. _67_, 68 Hunt, John, iv. 281, _285_, 478, 479; v. 279, 325, 537, 581; publishes _The Deformed Transformed_, v. 472; and _Don Juan_, vi. xvi Hunt, Dr., i. 455 Hunter, _Imperial Gazetteer of India_, _v. 631_ Hunter, William, _vi. 412_ _Huntingdon Peerage_, _ii. 215_ Huntly, George, 2nd Earl of, _i. 173_ Huon, of Bordeaux, v. 496 Hussite, or Taborite, Crusade, _v. 549_ Hyde of land, a, vi. 411 Hydra, Hydrea, or Idra, island, i. 457; iii. 270 Hyginus, _Fabulæ_, _iv. 287_; _vi. 535_ Hymettus, i. 459; ii. 157; iii. 271 Hypocrisy, vi. 410, 453 Hypsilantes, _v. 556_ I _I saw thee weep_, iii. 390 _I would I were a careless child_, i. 205 "Ianthe" ("Flower o' the Narcissus"). _See_ Harley, Lady Charlotte M. Ibort, Jorge (Tio Jorge), ii. 94; v. 559 Ibrahim Pasha, ii. 174 _Ich Dien_ (_Windsor Poetics_), vii. 36 Idra, Hydra, or Hydrea, island, i. 457; iii. 270 Iermolof, Catherine II.'s favourite, vi. _388_, 389 _If that high world_, iii. 383 Ihne, _Hist. of Rome_, _ii. 377_ Ile de Paix, iv. 26 Ilissus, _i. 459; iii. 272_ Illyria, ii. 129 _Imitated from Catullus_, i. xi, 75 _Imitation of Tibullus_, i. 74 _Imitations and Translations_, i. _264, 266, 268, 272, 277, 281-283, 285, 287_, 288; _vi. 62_ Imlay, _North America_, _vi. 349_ _Imperial Dictionary_, _ii. 137_ _Imperial Gazetteer of India_, _v. 631_ _Imperial Magazine_, _iv. 43_ _Impromptu_, vii. 82 _Impromptu, in reply to a friend_, iii. 69 _Incantation, the_ (_Manfred_), iv. _15, 63, 64_, 79, _91_ _Independent Whig_, iii. 534 India, i. 468; conquered by Dionysus, v. 21; invaded by Nadir Shah, vi. 384 Inglefield, Captain, H.M.S. _Centaur_, _vi. 90, 92, 94-96, 99_ Ingleston, George, "Brewer," _i. 433_ Innocent II., Pope, _ii. 389_ Inquisition, Spanish, v. 558 _Inscription on the Monument of a Newfoundland Dog_, i. 280; _ii. 30; vi. 304_ Interlaken, _iv. 119_ Invercauld, _i. 171_ Ionian Islands, ii. 193 Iphis, _ii. 13_ Irad, son of Enoch, _v. 285_ Ireland, W.H. ("Flagellum"), _All the Blocks, an Antidote to All the Talents_, i. 294, 356 _Iris, The_, _i. 331_, ii. 383 Irish and Carthaginians, vi. 337 _Irish Avatar_, iv. _49_, 555; vi. 368, _439_ Iron Mask, Man in the, iv. 514 Irving, Sir Henry, iv. 78; as "Werner," v. 324 Irving, Washington, _Abbotsford and Newstead Abbey_, iv. 32, 38; _vi. 497_, _Chronicle of the Conquest of Granada, vi. 30_, _History of the Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus, vi. 552_ _Isaiah_, ii. 166, _398_, iii. 305 Iskra, iv. 202 _Island, The; or, Christian and his Comrades_, _i. 173; iii. 459, 467, 494_, v. 579-639; iv. _61_, 485; _v. 514_, vi. xvi, _106, 193, 405_ Isles of Greece, vi. 169 Ismail, siege of, vi. 264, 304-370 Ismenus river, ii. 189 Israello, Bertuccio, iv. _356_, 464 Italy, ii. 361; iv. 256; vi. 8 Ithaca, ii. 124, 177 Itys, _iv. 287_ Ilulus, i. 159 J Jackals, vi. 382 Jackson, General Andrew, _iii. 298_ Jackson, "Gentleman," i. 433; _iv. 303; vi. 433_ Jackson, James Grey, _Account of the Empire of Marocco and Suez ... to which is added an account of Tombuctoo_, _vi. 51, 198_ Jackson, Lady, _The Court of the Tuileries_, _v. 567_ Jackson, Rev. Luke, _i. 70_ Jackson, William, a Keswick carrier, _vi. 177_ Jacobi, M., _i. 494_ Jacobinism, _v. 544_ Jacob's _Reports_, v. 204; _vi. 460_ Jacobs, _Epig. Græc_., i. 18 Jamat-al-Aden, the Mussulman paradise, iii. 197 Jamblichus, the philosopher, iv. 105; _v. 480_ James I., _i. 173, 198_, iv. 543 James II., ii. _121_, 292; iv. _504_ James V., ii. 295 J[-a]m[-a], _Medjnoun and Leila_, _iii. 160_ Janina, or Joannina (Yanina), lake of, ii. 129, 179, 189; Archbishop of, _iii. 145_ Japhet, v. 284 Jason, _i. 170_, vi. _177_, 521 Jassy, Treaty of, _v. 551_ Jeaffreson, Cordy, _Real Lord Byron_, iv. 32 Jefferies, Judge, i. 332 Jefferson, Thomas, _iv. 159_ Jeffrey, Francis, Lord, referred to in _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_, i. xiv, 301, 302, 332, 333, 339; Moore's duel with, i. _203_, 305, 333-335, 380; "self-constituted Judge of Poesy," i. 301; "his pay is just the sterling pound a sheet," i. 302; founder of the _Edinburgh Review_, i. 302; _v. 338_; reviews _Marmion_ in _E.R._, _i. 310_, Montgomery's poems in _E.R._, _i. 331_; article on de Cavallos' work in _E.R._ by Brougham and, _i. 338_; Byron accused of personality towards, i. 382; "the Devil and Jeffrey," i. 429; lines in _Hints from Horace_ on, i. 430-433; counsel for Sir F. Burdett v. William Scott, _i. 436_, his articles in _E.R._ on:--_Childe Harold_, ii. 213; _Giaour_, iii. 77; _Corsair_ and _Bride of Abydos_, iii. 151, 219; _Hebrew Melodies_, iii. 377; _Prisoner of Chillon_, iv. 6; _Manfred_, iv. 80-82; _Beppo_, iv. 158; _Prophecy of Dante_, and _Marino Faliero_, iv. 329; _Sardanapalus_, _Two Foscari_, and _Cain_, v. 5, 119, 204; _Heaven and Earth_, v. 282; _Werner, v. 338_; _Don Juan_, vi. xx; "refreshing," iv. 574; on Moore and Byron, v. 280; on the Pantisocratic or Lake School, vi. 175; on Byron's abuse of Southey, vi. 403; "once my most redoubted foe," vi. 404; his review of Barry Cornwall's _Sicilian Story_;--comparison of _Don Juan_ with _Diego di Montilla, vi_, _445_; holds up Scott as an example to Byron, vi. 459 Jehoshaphat, valley of, iv. 288 Jekyll, Joseph, _Corr_., _i. 319_; _vi. 413, 504_ Jemappes, battle of, _vi. 13_ Jenner, Edward, _i. 307_; and vaccination, vi. 50 Jephson, _Two Strings to your Bow_, _i. 345_; _The Servant with Two Masters_, _i. 445_ _Jephtha's Daughter_, iii. 387 _Jeremiah_, _iii. 312_; _iv. 43_ Jerningham, Edward, _The Nunnery_; _The Old Bard's Farewell_, i. 383 _Jerningham Letters_, _i. 383_ Jerningham, Sir George, Bart., _i. 383_ Jerreed, djerrid, jar[-i]d, a Turkish javelin, in. 97, _168_ Jersey, Sarah, Countess of, _vi. 541_; vii. 37, 40 Jersey, Earl of, iv. 472 Jerusalem, iii. 401 Jesse, J.H., _Memoirs, etc., of George III._, _vii. 31_ Jesuits, the, ii. 493; _v. 558_ Jesus Christ, vi. 267 _Jeux d'Esprit and Minor Poems, 1798-1824_, vii. 1-88 Jews, v. 100, 236, 573 Jex-Blake, K., _The Elder Pliny's Chapters on the History of Art_, _ii. 432_ Joan of Arc, i. 313 João V., Don, ii. 87 _Job, Book of_, iii. 406; iv. 498; vi. 59, _605_; vii. 34 Joel, _iv. 43_ _John Bull_, iv. _555_, 571; _v_. 206 _John Bull's Letter_, _iii. 280_; _vi. 75_ John, of Trocnow, surnamed Zi[vz]ka, or the "One-eyed," v. 549 John George, elector of Saxony, v. 373 John II. of France, _v. 549_ John Casimir V., king of Poland, iv. 201, 205, 211, 212; _vi. 246_ _John Keats_, vii. 76 Johnson, James, _Musical Museum_, _vi. 64_ Johnson, Miss, _iii. 45_ Johnson, Dr. Samuel, _Lives of the Poets_, _i. 220, 401, 416, 423_; _Prologue to Irene_, _i. 400_; Boswell's _Life of_, _i. 401, 409, 449_; _ii. 460, 489_; _vi. 247_; _Rasselas_, _ii. 37_, iii. 145; vi. 574; "Hell is paved with good intentions," iv. 499; "brandy for heroes," _v. 592_; _Life of Milton_, vi. 174; _Life of Dryden_, _vi. 182_; _Vanity of Human Wishes_, _vi. 183_; on misers, _vi. 455_; "liked an honest hater," vi. 482; _Dictionary_, _vi. 575_, and Lord Auchinlech's reminder, _vii. 35_ Johnston, J., "the Cheapside impostor," ii. 212, 213; iii. xx Johnston, Major, leader of insurrection (1805) in N.S. Wales, _v. 588_ Johnstone, Sir James, _ii. 4_ Joncières, Victorini, v. 2 Jones, Inigo, _iv. 161_ Jones, Sir William, _iii. 86_; _A Grammar of the Persian Language_, _iii. 100_; _Solima_, _iii. 110_; _Asiatic Research_, _iv. 555_ Jonson, Ben, i. _304_, 398, 420; iv. 239; and Sylvester, _vi. 7_; _Every Man in his Humour_, _vi. 68_ Jordan, Mrs., _i. 353_ Jordan, Professor, _ii. 413_ Jornandes, _De Getarum Origine_, iii. 235 Joseph and Potiphar's wife, _vi. 255_ Joseph, king, ii. _53_, 89 Joseph II., Emperor, _vi. 313. 414_ Josephus, _v. 208_ Joshua, grave of, _vi. 220_ Joubert, Barthélémi Catherine, vi. 14 _Journal de Savants_, _iv. 578_ _Journal de Trévoux_, iv. 578 _Journal des Economistes_, _vi. 461_ _Journal in Cephalonia_, vii. 83 _Journal of a Soldier of the 71st Regiment_, _vi. 376_ _Journal of the Archæological Association_, _vi. 497_ _Journals of the House of Lords_, _iv. 542_ Joy, Mr., iv. 472 Juba, king of Mauretania, _vi. 236_ _Judges_, _iii. 118_ Julia Alpinula, ii. 256, 299 _Julian_ (_A Fragment_), iii. xxi, 419 Julian Alps ("Friuli's mountains"), ii. 348 Julian, Count, ii. 46, 89 Julian the Apostate, vi. 9 Juliet, i. 37, _38_; her tomb at Verona, _v. 562_ Julius Alpinus, ii. 299 Julius Cæsar, ii. _375_, 392, 434, 490, 514, _520_; v. 476 _Julius Cæsar_, vi. 268 Julius II., Pope, _iv. 271, 273_; _vi. 212_ Julius III., Pope, ii. 508 Jungfrau, the, ii. 385; iv. 81, 82, 94, _102_, 109 Junia, wife of Cassius, _ii. 374_ _Junius, Letters of_, iv. 476, 480, 512-515 _Juno_, wreck of the, _vi. 105, 107, 108_ Junot (Duke d'Abrantés), _ii. 39, 40_ Jupiter, i. 14; vi. 130 Jupiter Olympius, temple of, _i. 462_; ii. 167 Jupiter Optimus Maximus, temple of, ii. 412 Jura range, the, ii. 269, 273 Justin Martyr, _ii. 513_ Justinian, _ii. 166_ Justinius, _Hist._, _ii. 60_; _iv. 40_; _v. 79_ _Juvenal_, _i. 297, 303, 304, 351_; ii. _187_, 190, _416_, 516; iii. _16_, 301; _v. 63, 64, 543, 613_; vi. 27, _139, 254-256_ _Juvenilia_, i. xi K Kaff (Mount Caucasus), i. 378; vi. 292 Kahn, Gustave, _Don Juan_, vi. xx Kalamas river (Acheron), ii. 131, 180, 181 Kalamata, gulf of, _iii. 249_ Kaleidoscope, vi. 109 Kamschatka, i. 492 Kant, Professor Immanuel, vi. 418; _vii. 32_ Kara Osman, or Carasman, Oglou, iii. 166 Kashmeer, the butterfly of, iii. 105 Katzones, Lambros, iii. 194, 219 Kava, cava, or ava, a Tongan intoxicating drink, v. 600 Kazdaghy, Mount, _vi. 211_ Kean, Charles, as "Sardanapalus," v. 2; as "Manuel, Count Valdis," _vii. 48_ Kean, Mrs. Charles (Miss Ellen Tree), iv. 78; as "Myrrha" in _Sardanapalus_, v. 2 Kean, Edmund, _i. 344_; _iv. 338, 436, 584, 587_ Keary, C.F., _The Francis Letters_, _iv. 513_ Keates, Admiral Sir Richard Goodwin, _iii. 25_ Keats, George, _vi. 446_ Keats, Georgiana, _vi. 446_ Keats, John, _Lines_ on, iii. xx; vii. 76; and Coleridge, _v. 175_; "killed off by one critique," vi. 445; _Endymion_, _vii. 76_ Kebbiera, Lilla, _vi. 160_ Keble, _Christian Year_, ii. 292 Keith, Lord, _iii. 428_ Kellerman, General, _ii. 39_ Kemble, Charles, i. 46, _344, 353_ Kemble, John Philip, _iv. 338_ Kendal, Duchess of, _iii. 209_ Kennard, John Peirse, _v. 175_ Kennedy, Dr. James, _Conversations on Religion with Lord Byron_, _iii. 393_; v. 199 Kennet, D.D., White, _Memoirs of the Family of Cavendish_, _v. 615_ Kenney, James, _i. 306_; _Raising the Wind_, i. 342; _Sweethearts and Wives_, _i. 343_ Kent, Duke of, i. 498 _Kent's London Directory_, _iv. 583_ Kentucky, wars of, vi. 348 Keppel, Admiral Augustus, Viscount, vi. 12 Khmelnítzky, Bogdán, _iv. 211_ Kibitka, springless carriage, vi. 383 Kidd, Captain, vii. 5 Kiepert, _Carte de l'Épire et de la Thessalie_, ii. xxiv Killiecrankie, ii. 292 Kilworth, Lord, _i. 485_ King, "Jew," _i. 357_; _vi. 100_ King, Leonard W., his article "Assyria" in _Enc. Biblica_, v. 4 King, R.J., _Handbook to the Cathedrals of England_, _vi. 596_ King, Rosa, i. 357 _King John_, i. 356; vi. 165 _King Lear_, ii. 196; vi. 256, 446 _King Richard_, i. 401 King's College, Cambridge, i. 392 _Kings, Book of_, _v. 107_ Kingsley, Rev. Charles, _Last Buccaneer_, _iii. 451_; on _Don Juan_, vi. xviii; _Westward Ho!_ _vi. 483_; _Letters and Memoirs_, _vi. 517_ Kinkel, G., editor of _Bibliotheca Teubneriana_, _iv. 243_ Kinnaird, Douglas, iii. 375, _402_; iv. 70, _343_, 472, 478, _545, 549_; v. 325, 537; vi. _12, 100_, 373, _450, 455, 458, 546_; _vii. 77_; _Letter to the Earl of Liverpool_, _vi. 374_; _Letter to the Duke of Wellington on the Arrest of M. Marinet_, _ibid._ Kinnaird, Lord, iv. 472 Kipling, Rudyard, _Barrack-Room Ballads_, _v. 72_ Kirk, J.F., _History of Charles the Bold_, ii. 298 Kit-Cat Club, _vii. 57_ Kitto, _Travels in Persia_, _v. 294_ Kizlar aghasi, head of the black eunuchs, iii. 168 Kleeman, Nicholas Ernest, _Voyage de Vienne à Belgrade_, _vi. 216, 280_ Klencke, Professor, _Alexander von Humboldt_, _vi. 216_ Knebel, iv. 81 Kneller, Sir Godfrey, _vi. 496_ Knight, _American Mechanical Dictionary_, _v. 404_ Knight, Cornelia, _Personal Reminiscences_, _v. 563_; _Autobiography_, _vii. 35_ Knight, H. Gally (_Ilderim, a Syrian Tale_; _Phrosyne, a Grecian Tale_; _Alashtar, an Arabian Tale_), iv. 175; vi. 230; vii. 44, 45, 51, _60_, 70; Byron's _Ballad_ on, vii. 58 Knight, Richard Payne, _Taste_, _i. 337, 383_; _Monody on the death of C.J. Fox_, _i. 356_; _Specimens of Ancient Sculpture_, i. _378_, 454 Knight, Professor W., _Life of William Wordsworth_, _iv. 341, 582_;_ vi. 91, 178_; _Shakespeare_, _vi. 487, 502_ Knight and Lacy, i. _234_, 452 Knights of St. John, _iv. 400_ Knolles, _The Turkish History_, vi. 259 Koch, _History of Europe_, _i. 468_; _ii. 364_; _iv. 197_ Kochlani horses, v. 496 Kodrikas, Professor Panagios (Panagiotes), translation of _Fontenelle_, ii. 198 Koepang Bay, v. 583 Kölbing, Professor Engen (_Englische Studien_), _Ada Byron, ii. 289_; _Siege of Corinth_, iii. 442, _449, 454, 472, 475, 496_; _Prisoner of Chillon, and other Poems_, iv. 6, _15, 21, 42_; _Mazeppa_, _iv. 214_; _Marino Faliero_, iv. 324, 329 Kolokotrones, _v. 556_ Kopreas, the herald, _ii. 431_ Korân, the, iii. _103, 109, 110, 113, 119_, 181, 186, _195_, 206 Kosciusko, v. 550, 551; vi. 418 Kotchúbey, Matrena, iv. 202 Kotzebue, Augustus Frederick Ferdinand von, _Pizarro_, i. 344, 489 Kourakin, Prince Alexis Borisovitch, vi. 307 Koutousof, Michailo Smolenskoi, Commander of Austro-Russians at Austerlitz, vi. 351-354 Koutsonika, Suliote leader, ii. 180 Krasnoi, battle of, _iv. 207_ Krdschalies, Turkish levies, _iii. 188_ Krüdener, Baronne de (Barbe Julie de Wietenhoff), _v. 564_ Kruitzner, Friedrich (Count Siegendorf), v. 327 _Kunst und Alterthum_, iv. _21_, 80, 81, _340_ Kyrle, John, "The Man of Ross," vi. 350 L La Bédoyère, Charles Angélique François Huchet, Comte de, iii. 431 _La Revanche_, vii. 15 Lacedæmon, ii. 155 _Lachin y Gair_, i. 171 Lactantius, _De Falsâ Religione_, ii. 512 _Lady Hobart_, wreck of the ship, _vi. 96, 109, 110_ _Lady of the Lake, ii. 347_ Laertius, Diogenes, i. 18, _414_ La Fayette, _v. 567_; vi. 13 Lafitte, Jacques, Governor of Bank of France, vi. 456 Lafitte, Jean, chief of the Pirates of Barataria, _iii. 296-298_ Lafitte, Marshal, _v. 567_ Lafitte, Pierre, _iii. 297_ La Fontaine, de, vi. xviii; _Contes et Nouvelles en Vers_, _vi. 62_ La Harpe, Frédéric César, v. 564 Laing, Malcolm, _History of Scotland, etc._; _Poems of Ossian, etc._, _i. 183_ Laïus, _ii. 431_ Lake School of Poets, the, _ii. 115, 281_; iii. 320, _473_; _iv. 184, 339, 485_ _Lalla Rookh_, _iii. 181, 186_; _iv. 176, 587_ Lamartine, _Voyage en Orient_, _ii. 171_ Lamb, Lady Caroline (_Glenarvon_), i. _301_, 476; ii. 429; iii. xx, xxi, _31_, 59; _iv. 177_; v. 329; vi. 138, 451; vii. 45 Lamb, Sir P., Viscount Melbourne, i. _300_, 380; _vii. 15_ Lamb, Charles, _i. 329, 343, 438_; _ii. 22_, iv. 478; _Specimens of English Dramatic Poets_, iv. 81, _377_; _v. 489_; _Triumph of the Whale_, iii. xx; _On the Tragedies of Shakespeare_, _v. 339_; _Fragments of Criticism_, _vii. 18_ Lamb, Hon. George, i. 300-302, _306_, 368, 380; _vii. 15_; _Whistle for It_, i. 338 Lamb, Hon. Mrs. George (Caroline Rosalie Adelaide St. Jules), _i. 301_; _iii. 31, 32_, vii. 15 Lamb, Mary, _i. 343_ Lamb, William, _i. 300, 306_ Lamberti, Anton Maria, _La biondina in gondoleta_, iv. _456_, 457 Lambro Canzani (or Lambros Katzones), iii. 194, 219 Lamech, v. 209 _Lament of Tasso_, _ii. 354_; _iii. 503_; iv. 139-152, 237, _266_; _v. 152_; _vii. 55_ _Lamentations_, ii. 166 _L'Amitié est l'Amour sans Ailes_, i. _106_, 220; _ii. 12_ Lamotte, _i. 423_ _Lancashire Glossary_, _ii. 71_ Lancaster, Henry, Duke of, _v. 549_ Lanciani, Professor R., _Ruins and Excavations of Ancient Rome_, _ii. 413, 416, 424, 425, 436, 440_ Lancilotto, iv. 321 Landino, _Commentary on Dante_, _iv. 272_ Landor, Walter Savage, Works, _iii. 402_; _Idyllia Heroica Decem. Librum Phaleuciorum Unum_, iv. 484; _Gebir_, iv. 485; _v. 613, 614_; _A Satire on Satirists, etc._, _iv. 518_; _v. 614_; _Juvenal_, _v. 613_; "that deep-mouthed Boeotian," vi. 445; his use of "commence" with the infinitive, _vi. 567_ Landsknechts, the, _v. 520_ Landwehr, Prussian troops at Leipsic battle, vii. 23 Lanfranchi, Palazzo, _vi. 402_ Lang, Andrew, _Life and Letters of J.G. Lockhart_, iii. 532; _The Making of Religion_, _v. 601_ Langeron, Andrault, Comte de, vi. 312 Langhorne, Rev. John, translator of _Plutarch's Lives_, _iv. 109, 251, 352, 386, 423_; v. 4, 5, _21, 72, 486, 487, 506_; _vi. 139, 226, 270, 339, 348, 376, 404, 477, 547_ Lansdowne, Lady, _iii. 72_ Lansdowne, Granville George, Lord, _Inscription for a Figure representing the God of Love_, _v. 633_ Lansdowne, Henry Petty, 3rd Marquis of, i. _319_, 340; iv. 472 Lanskoï, Catherine II.'s favourite, vi. _388_, 389, 391, 412 Lanzi, ii. 490 Laocoon, ii. 445; vi. 200 Laos river, ii. 134, 182 La Peña, Captain-General, _i. 469_ Lapland, i. 489 La Plata, _ii. 82_ _Lara_, iii. _188_, 219, 323-371, 443, _477, 508_; _vi. 235_ Lardner and Co., _i. 307_ La Rousse, _ii. 415_ Las Cases, _Mémorial de Ste. Hélène_, v. 537 Lascy, General de, vi. 340, 347 _Last Words on Greece_, vii. 85 Latour, Major A. La Carrière, _Historical Memoirs of the War in W. Florida and Louisiana_, _iii. 298_ Lauderdale, Lord, _iii. 45_; iv. 472; _vi. 67_ Laugier, Sig. Abate, _Istoria della Repubblica di Venezia_, iv. 332, 335 Laura, Petrarch's, vi. 145 Laurence, Richard, translation of _The Book of Enoch_, v. 281, _302_ Lausanne, _iv. 53_ Lavater, _ii. 107_ Laverne, L.M.P. Tranchant de, _The Life of Field-Marshal Souvarof_, _vi. 222, 320-322_ Lawler, C.F., the pseudo-Peter Pindar, ii. 213 Lawrence, Sir Thomas, i. 389; iv. 565 _Lawrence_ v. _Smith_, v. 204 _Lay of the Last Minstrel_, i. 309, 310; _ii. 19_; _iii. 96, 472_; vi. 406, 458, 560 Layard, Sir A.H., _Handbook of Painting_, _iv. 163_ Lazzarino, Vittorio, _Marino Faliero avant il Dogado_, _iv. 331, 403_; _Marino Faliero, La Congiura_, iv. 325, _332, 333, 346, 349, 351, 356, 365, 383, 384, 432, 439, 448, 462_ Leacroft, Julia, i. _38_, 41 Leake, William Martin, _Researches in Greece_, ii. 174, 204 Leander, iii. 13, 178 Lear, i. 26, 400 Le Chevalier, Jean Baptiste, _Voyage de la Propontide, etc._, _iii. 13, 179, 210_ Leckie, G.F., _i. 349_ Lecky, W.E.H., _History of England in the Eighteenth Century_, _iv. 513_ Le Clercq, Miss Rosa, actress, iv. 78 Lee, Harriet, _Kruitzner; or, The German's Tale_, v. 325, 326, 328-332, 337, _349, 418_ Lee, Lady Margaret, _vi. 146_ Lee, Sophia, _The Young Lady's Tale; The Clergyman's Tale_, v. 337 Lee, Sophia and Harriet, _Canterbury Tales_, v. 325, 326, _381-384, 446_; _vii. 33_ Leeds, Duchess of, _i. 443_ Leeds, Duke of, _ii. 23_ Leen river, _vi. 495_ Leeuwarden, _ii. 407_ Lefanu, Alicia, _Memoirs of Mrs. F. Sheridan_, vii. 33 Lefebvre, Marshal, ii. 94. Leigh, Colonel George, _ii. 23_ Leigh, Hon. Mrs. George (Augusta Byron), _i. 283_; ii. 23, 212, 247, 248, _288_; iii. _31, 32, 540_, 544; iv. 80; _vi. 22, 30, 410, 541_; _Stanzas to Augusta_, iv. 54; Epistle to Augusta, iv. 57; _Journal_ of Byron's Swiss tour, _iv. 95_ Leipzig (Leipsic), Fairs of, i. 489; battle of, v. _371_, 553; _vi. 50_; vii. 22, 23 Lely, Sir Peter, vi. _496_, 501 Le Mann, _vi. 22_ Leman, Lake, ii. 257, 269; iv. 17, 53 Lemprière, i. 437 Lenclos, Ninon de, _iv. 212_; vi. 246 Lens, Mr. Serjeant, _vii. 22_ Lentulus Spinther, _ii. 405_ Lenzoni, Marchioness, ii. 499 Leo X., Pope, ii. 489; iii. 367-369; _iv. 273_ Leoben, Treaty of, ii. 297 Leochares, _ii. 446_ Leon, Don Rodrigo Ponce de, _iv. 530_ Leone, Port, ii. 94 Leoni, Michele, Italian translation of _Childe Harold_, and of _Lament of Tasso_, _iv. 244_; of _Don Juan_, _vi. 8_ Leonidas, iii. 21; vi. 331 Leonora, Tasso's, iv. 145, 147 Leopardi, Alessandro, _iv. 336_ Leopold of Saxe-Coburg, _ii. 450_ Lepanto, battle of, ii. 126, 178, 340 Lepidus, _ii. 492_ Leptinus, Furius, ii. 520 Le Roux de Lincy, A.J.V., _Recuel de Chants historiques français_, v. 472 Le Sage, _Diable Boiteux_, i. 56; _iv. 516_ Lesbia, i. 72 L'Espinasse, Mdlle. Claire Françoise, _ii. 209_ Lestrange, Sir R., _iv. 484_; _vi. 550_ Le Sur, Charles Louis, _Histoire des Kosaques_, _iv. 211_ Lethe, vi. 184 Letronne, J.A., _La Statue vocale de Memnon_, _v. 497_ _Letter to the Editor of My Grandmother's Review_, vi. 76 _Lettere di Torquato Tasso_, _iv. 143, 144, 146, 150_ Leucadia, now Santa Maura, ii. 126, 178 Leucadia's Cape (Cape Ducato), ii. 125 Leuctra, battle of, ii. 294 le Vasseur, Theresa, _ii. 266_ Levati, Professor Ambrogio, _Viaggi di Francesco Petrarca_, iv. 469 Levett, Ellis, _vi. 410_ Lewis, Matthew Gregory ("Monk" Lewis), i. _305_, 307, 346, _356_, 369; _iii. 473_; iv. _53_, 80-82, 325, 337, 342; _Tales of Terror_, i. 309, 317; short account of, i. 317; _Tales of Wonder_; _Ambrosio the Monk_, _ibid._; _The Castle Spectre_, i. 317, 409, _489_; _Life and Correspondence of_, _i. 318_; _Romantic Tales_, _iii. 389_; _The Wood Demon_, v. 474 Lewtas, Matthew, _ii. 36_ _Lexicon Universelle_, _iv. 174_; _vi. 259_ Lezze, Luga da, _iv. 432_ Liakura mountain (Parnassus), i. 426; ii. 60, 62, 92, 186; iii. 113, 464 _Liberal, The_, iv. 281, 478, 479, _495, 518, 520_, 570; v. 279, 471, 540; _vi. 266_; vii. 75, 76, 81 Libochabo, ii. 174, 177 Libokhoro, _ii. 134_ Licensing Act, _i. 415_ Licenza village, ii. 523 Licinus (Cæsar's barber), _i. 422_ Licoo, Tonga, v. 601 Lido, the, ii. 470 Lie, lye, or ley, solution of potassium salts, vi. 505 Lieven, Count de, _vii. 32_ Lieven, Countess de, i. 476; _vii. 32_ _Life, Writings, Times, and Opinions of Lord Byron_, _vii. 12_ Lincoln, Bishop of, _i. 356_ Lincoln Cathedral, vi. 596 Lincy, A.J.V. Le Roux de, _Recueil de Chants historiques français_, v. 472 Lindenau, _vii. 83_ Lindsay, Lady Anne, _ii. 288_ Lindsay, Lord, _ii. 288_ Lightning, ii. 360, 488 Ligne, Charles, Prince de, vi. 333 Ligne, Charles Joseph, Prince de, vi. 312; _Mélanges Militaires, etc._, _vi. 313, 333_; _Memoirs_, _vi. 414_ Ligny, _vi. 345_ _Lines addressed by Lord Byron to Mr. Hobhouse on his Election for Westminster_, iii. xx; vii. 69 _Lines addressed to a Young Lady_, i. 70 _Lines addressed to George Anson Byron_ (spurious?), iii. xxi; vii. 41 _Lines addressed to the Rev. J.T. Beecher, etc._, i. 112 _Lines composed during a Thunderstorm_, _ii. 119, 130_ _Lines found in the Travellers' Book at Chamouni_ (spurious), iii. xxi _Lines in the Travellers' Book at Orchomenus_, iii. 15 _Lines inscribed upon a Cup formed from a Skull_, i. 276; _iii. 129_ _Lines on hearing that Lady Byron was Ill_, _ii. 429_; iv. 63 _Lines on the Bust of Helen by Canova_, _ii. 370_ _Lines to a Lady Weeping_, iii. 45 _Lines to Mr. Hodgson. Written on board the Lisbon Packet_, vii. 4 _Lines to the Countess of Blessington_, _iv. 62, 64_; _v. 346_ _Lines written beneath a Picture_, iii. 19 _Lines written beneath an Elm in the Churchyard of Harrow_, i. 208 _Lines written in an Album at Malta_, iii. 4 _Lines written in "Letters of an Italian Nun, etc." by Rousseau_, i. 15 _Lines written in the Bible_ (spurious), iii. xx _Lines written on a blank leaf of "The Pleasures of Memory"_, iii. 50 Lintot, Barnaby Bernard, publisher of Pope's _Iliad and Odyssey_, vi. 56 Lioni, Niccolo, iv. 465 _Lippincott's Magazine_, iv. 32 Lipsius, Justus, ii. 299; _Saturn. Sermon._, ii. 520, 521 Lisbon, ii. 32; assassinations in, ii. 36, 86 Lissa, naval battle of, _iii. 25_; _iv. 456, 457_ Liszt, Franz, Mazeppa the "symphonic poem," iv. 203 _Literary Chronicle_, iv. 571; v. 540, 584 _Literary Fund_, _i. 448_ _Literary Gazette_, _iii. 280_; iv. 478, 571; v. _196_, 540, 584; vi. xx _Literary Panorama_, ii. xiv; iii. 444, 500 _Literary Register_, iv. 571, _580_ _Literary Souvenir_, iv. 314 _Literature_, v. 333 Litta, Conte Pompeo, _Celebri Famiglie Italiane_, _iii. 507_ Liverpool, Robert Bankes Jenkinson, 2nd Earl of, i. 496, _497_; _vi. 374_; vii. 14, 20, 28 Lividia, Point, _iii. 248, 349_ Livingstone, David, _vi. 497_ Livy, ii. _372, 377, 391_, 392, _413, 496_, 505, 510, _512, 513_; _iv. 251_; _v. 607_ Lloyd, Charles, _Poems on the Death of Priscilla Farmer_, i. 368 Lloyd, Robert, Odes to _Obscurity_ and _Oblivion_, i. 220 Loch na Garr, i. 238 Locke, John, i. 425; _ii. 353, 504_; _v. 615_; vi. 548, 610; _vii. 12_ Lockhart, John Gibson, _Life of Scott_, _i. 318, 397_; _ii. 88_; iii. 443; _v. 206_; Lang's _Life of_, iii. 532; _A Sketch_, _v. 206_ Lodge, G.H., _Rosalynd_, ii. 293; _History of Ancient Art_, _ii. 431_ Lodi, battle of, _vi. 14_ Lofft, Capel, i. 359, 441 Logotheti, Signor, ii. 176 Lombardy, _ii. 342_; Venetian, iv. 197 London, _Don Juan's_ description of, vi. 425 _London Gazette Extraordinary_, _ii. 40_; _vi. 336_ _London Magazine_, iii. 535; _iv. 42_; v. 472; _vi. 188_ _London Review_, _i. 403_ Londonderry, Robert Stewart, Lord, iv. 560; v. 568, _569, 570_; vi. 307 Londos, Andreas, _vi. 168, 169_ Long, Edward Noel ("Cleon"), i. 101 Long, Sir Tylney, Bart., _i. 485_ Longfellow, translation of _Dante's Paradiso_, _iv. 247_ Longinus, _On the Sublime_, vi. 26, 74, 551 Longman, i. xii, _234_, 427; ii. x; v. 280; vii. 9 Longwood controversy, the, v. 538, _544_ Lonsdale, James, 1st Earl, _iv. 586_ Lonsdale, William, 2nd Earl, iv. _341, 582_, 585; vi. 5 _Lord Byron's Verses on Sam Rogers_, iv. 538 _Lord of the Isles_, _ii. 244_ Loredano, iv. 377 Loredano, Jacopo, _v. 123, 195_ Loredano, Marco, _v. 123_ Loredano, Pietro, Admiral of the Venetian fleet, v. 123 Lorraine, Claude, _ii. 168_; vi. 502 Lorraine, François Mercy de, ii. 186 Louis Philippe, _vi. 425_ Louis XII., _vi. 212_ Louis XIV., _i. 402_; _ii. 453_; iv. 334, _514_ Louis XV., _ii. 282_ Louis XVI., iv. _13_, 493 Louis XVIII., v. 539; _vi. 313, 333, 374_; _Letters d'Artwell_, v. 566 Louisiana, _iii. 296-298_ Louvel, _v. 567_ _Love and Death_, vii. 84 _Love and Gold_, iii. 411 Lovelace, Lady (Augusta Ada Byron), ii. 215, _287, 289_; _vi. 274_ Lovelace, Ralph Gordon Noel, 2nd Earl of, i. _262, 264_, 387; _ii. 215_; _MS._, _i. 265-267, 271-273, 277, 278, 387, 389, 391-397, 399, 400, 402, 404-408, 410-413, 416, 418-430, 433, 434, 436, 438, 440, 443, 444, 446-450_ Lovelace, Richard, _Orpheus to Beasts_, _iii. 165_; _To Althea--From Prison_, _iv. 28_ Lovelace, William King Noel, 1st Earl of, _ii. 215_ Lovell, Robert, _iv. 521_ _Love's Labour's Lost_, _vi. 87_ _Love's Last Adieu_, i. 109 Lowe, Sir Hudson, Governor of St. Helena, _ii. 239_; _v. 544, 545_; vi. 444 Lowe, John Hudson, surgeon in the Army, _v. 545_ Lowertz, _iv. 97_ Lozère, _v. 549_ Lucan, _Pharsalia_, _ii. 156, 246, 372_ Lucanus, Ocellus, _De Universi Naturâ_, ii. 198 Lucian, _Veræ Historiæ_, _iv. 43_; _De Syriâ Deâ_, _iv. 115_; _Hermotimus_, _v. 396_ _Lucietta. A Fragment_, vii. 81 Lucifer, Byron's conception of, v. 199-203, 210; vi. 183 Lucius Faunus, _De Antiq. Urb. Rom._, ii. 510-513 Lucretia, iv. 334 _Lucretius_, _i. 485_; ii. 93, _121, 367_; iii. 57; _De Rerum Nat._, vi. 604 Lucullus, L., vi. 563 Lud, General Ned, _vii. 42_ Luddites, the, vii. 42 _Ludus Coventriæ_, v. 200, _207_ Ludwig, Otto, iv. 329 Luis, Maria José, Regent of Portugal, _ii. 43_ Lunéville, Treaty of, ii. 297 Lupercalia, the, ii. 512 Lusieri, Don Battista, ii. _109_, 168, _171_, 172, 190 Luther, vi. 303, _380_ Lutherans, the, v. 520 Lutraki, or Utraikey, ii. _142_, 143 Luttrell, H., _vi. 175_ Lutzen, battle of, _iii. 431_; v. _371_, 553 Lycanthropy, vi. 380 Lyceum Theatre, _Werner_ at, v. 324; Moore's _M.P.; or, The Blue Stocking_ at, _vii. 12_ Lycophron, _Cassandra or Alexandra_, iv. 243 Lycurgus, i. 29 Lynedoch, Thomas, Lord, _i. 469_ Lyons, Gulf of, vi. 92 Lysander, _ii. 336_ Lysippus, _ii. 336_ Lyttleton, Lord, _iii. 209_ Lytton, Bulwer (_The Last of the Tribunes_), _ii. 415_; _vi._ 567 M Macassar oil, vi. 19 Macaulay, Lord, _Lays of Ancient Rome_, _ii. 391_; Byron "singled out as an expiatory sacrifice," iii. 534; _Critical and Historical Essays_, iv. 72; _v. 542_ _Macbeth_, i. 84, _131_, 401, 408, 432; ii. _50, 57, 244_, 291, 307, _423, 452_; _iii. 280, 346, 476, 480, 483, 510_; iv. 44, 157, 181, _338_, 341, _386, 388, 401, 451_; _v. 393, 611_; vi. _12, 184, 199, 202, 203, 265, 281_, 375, 441, 453, 505, 559, 578, 590, 594 Macchiavelli, ii. 369, 493 Macdonald of Rineton, Captain, _i. 192_ Macdonell, Sir James ("Jack Jargon"), vi. 508 Macdonough, Commodore, _vi. 508_ Macfarlane, Charles, _Constantinople in 1828_, _iii. 207_ Machiavelli, Niccolò, _The Prince_ (_Il Principe_), vi. 303, 424 Maciejowice, battle of, _v. 551_ Mackenzie, Sir Alexander Campbell, "Incidental Music to _Manfred_," iv. 78 Mackenzie, Henry, _Julia de Roubigné_, _iii. 510_ Mackinnon, Daniel, _vi. 69, 276_ Mackinnon, Henry, _vi. 69_ Mackintosh, Sir James ("Dick Dubious"), iii. 535; vi. 507; _Vindiciæ Gallicæ_; _Introductory Discourse_; lecture in _The Law of Nature and Nations_, vii. 32 Macklin, _Love à la Mode_, _i. 464_ Maclise, Daniel, _iv. 540_; his portrait of Macready as "Werner," v. 324 McMahon, Colonel, _vii. 27_ Mac-Murchad, Dermot, king of Leinster, iv. 334 Macneil, Hector, _Scotland's Skaith, etc._; _The Waes of War_, i. 362; iv. 182 Macpherson, James, _Ossian_, i. 177, _183_; _iii. 26_ Macready, as "Pierre" in _Venice Preserved_, ii. 331; "the Doge" in _Marino Faliero_, iv. 324; as "Sardanapalus," v. 2; _Reminiscences_, v. 2, 114, 324; as "Francis Foscari," v. 114; "Werner," v. 324 Macri, Catinco or Katinka, _iii. 16_; _vi. 280_ Macri, Mariana, _iii. 16_ Macri, Theodora, ii. 176; _iii. 15_ Macri, Theresa (afterwards Black), "Maid of Athens," ii. _75_, 176; iii. 15, 16 _Madame Lavalette_ (spurious), iii. xx Madden, _i. 470_ Madison, President, _iii. 298_ Madrid, taken by the French, v. 550; its clime, vi. 409 Mæcenas, _ii. 409_ Maffei, _ii. 431_ Mafra, the Escurial of Portugal, ii. 37, 43, 87 Magarenses, the, _ii. 431_ _Magasin Encyclopédique_, _v. 302_ _Magazine of History_ (American), _iii. 298_ Magdalen College, Oxford, _vi. 496_ Magdeburg, siege of, v. 416 Maggior Consiglio (Great Council, Venice), _iv. 361, 382, 399, 427, 438_ Maghinard of Cavalcanti, Marshal, _ii. 501_ Maginn, William, _John Gilpin_ and _Mazeppa_, iv. 203; _Miscellanies_, v. 326, 329 Mahala, Cain's wife, v. 209 Maharbal, ii. 508 Mahmout Pasha, ii. 206 Mahomet (Macon), iv. 296; vi. 139 Mahomet II., ii. 201 Maï, Cardinal Angelo, ii. 324 Maid of Saragoza, ii. 58, 91 Maimonides, Moses, _Porta Mosis_, _iii. 109, 121_ Mainotes (or Mainates), ii. _169_, 193; iii. 83, 94, _132, 134_ Maitland, Captain F.L., of the _Bellerophon_, _v. 546_ Maitland, G., printer, i. 478 Majorian, Emperor, _iii. 251_ Malamani, _Isabella Teotochi, I suoi amici_, _iv. 457_ Malatesta, Parisina, _ii. 354_ Mal bigatto (silkworm), term of contempt and reproach, iv. 389 Malcolm, Colonel, _ii. 50_ Malcolm, Sir John, _History of Persia_, vii. 49 Malespini, Celio de', _alias_ Orazio, _iv. 144_ Malipiero, Doge Pasquale, v. 118 Mallet, i. 326 Malone, Edmund, editor of Spence's _Anecdotes_, _vii. 53_ Malo-yaroslavetz, battle of, _vi. 351_ Malplaquet, _iv. 262_ Malta, iii. 24; Maltby, Harriet (Mrs. Nichols), i. 129, 263 Malthus, Thomas Robert, vi. 436, 459, 461, 555 Malthus, Mrs. T.R. 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Hist._, ii. 208 Melton Mowbray, vi. 504 _Melville's Mantle, etc._, i. 294, 356 Memmo, Jacopo, _v. 170_ Memmo, Marco, v. 120 Memmo, Marin, _v. 170_ Memnon, statue of, v. 497; vi. 500 _Mémoires de Trévoux_, iv. 578 _Memorials of Coleorton_, _iv. 585_ Menabrea, F.L., _Notices sur le machine Analytique de Mr. Babbage_, _ii. 215_ Menander, ii. 178; _vi. 186_ Menard, Claud, _Histoire de Messire Bertrand du Guesclin_, _v. 549_ Mendeli, the ancient Pentelicus, ii. 186 Mender river, _vi. 204, 211_ Mendoza, _i. 433_ Menelaus, king, vi. 535 Mengeaud, Napoleon's surgeon, _v. 546_ Menken, Adah Isaacs, iv. 203 _Merchant of Venice_, ii. 331, 342; iv. _166, 273, 436_, 473; vi. 472 _Mercure de France_, vi. xx, _387_ Meretrici, in Venice, _iv. 456_ Merivale, Charles, Dean of Ely, the historian, _iv. 283_ Merivale, Herman, Under-Secretary for India, _iv. 283_ Merivale, J.H., _Greek Anthology_, _i. 367_; _iii. 32_; _Orlando in Roncesvalles_, iv. 156, 279, 283; _The Two First Cantos of Richardetto_, iv. 156 Merry, Robert, i. 358, _441_ _Merry Wives of Windsor_, _i. 496_; _v. 388, 410_; vi. 484 Meschinello, G., _La Chiesa Ducale_, _iv. 390_ Mesihi, _iii. 86, 105_ Mestri, _vii. 72_ Metastasio, _iv. 264_ Metella, Cecilia, tomb of, ii. 402-405 Methodism, ii. 302 Metsovo, Monte (Pindus), ii. 126, 129 Metternich, Prince, v. 539, 575; _vii. 39_ Mexico, _ii. 82_; gulf of, _iii. 296_ Meyer of Aaru, the brothers, _iv. 109_ Meyer, F.J.L., _Voyage en Italie_, _iv. 470_ Mezzofanti, Giuseppe, ii. 324 Michael Angelo, ii. 369, _375, 376, 432, 435, 446_; iv. 270, 280; his "Last Judgment," iv. 272; his "Moses," iv. 271, _273_; _vi. 262_ Michaelis, A., _Ancient Marbles in Great Britain_, i. 455 Michaelis, Professor Johann David, _iv. 498_ Michie, Rev. 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Dict._, _vi. 305, 343, 353_ Milky Way, the, ii. 439 Mill, James, _vi. 480_ Millbank Penitentiary, vii. 34 Miller, William, publisher, i. 311; ii. x Miller, Mr. (U.S.A.), _iii. 307_ Miller, "Joe," i. 301 Milliard, vi. 542 Millin, A.L., _Voyage dans le Milanais_, _ii. 507_ Milman, Dean, _History of Latin Christianity_, _ii. 336, 338_; _Belvidere Apollo_, _ii. 447_; _History of the Jews_, _iii. 400_; _Fall of Jerusalem_, iv. 339; "Cybele's priest," vi. 445; "poet-priest," vii. 76 Milner, Joseph, _ii. 283_ Milo and the Oak, iii. 307 Miltiades, vi. 171 Milton, John, _Paradise Lost_, i. 312, 313, _397, 404_; _ii. 64_; iii. 111; iv. _133, 135_, 245, _274_, 504, 506; v. 203, 204, 208, _216, 234, 255, 262, 272_; vi. 6, _183_, 518; Hayley's _Biography of_, _i. 321_; "deigns to doze," i. 428; _Lycidas_, i. 446; _iii. 480_; iv. _227_, 241; _Sonnets_, _ii. 364_; _Samson Agonistes_, ii. 422; his lyric measure, _iii. 128_; _Comus_, _iii. 209_; his blank verse, iii. 224; _Morning of Christ's Nativity_ (_The Hymn_), _iv. 115_; "pratticke," _iv. 167_; his _terza rima_, iv. 239; his Satan, v. 201; use of "shook," _v. 135_; "thou shalt believe in," vi. 74; his first wife, vi. 146, 174; "the Prince of Poets," vi. 174; Lord Thurlow on, _vii. 20_ Milton, Mrs. John (_née_ Powell), vi. 146, 174 Minden, battle of, _vi. 12_ Minerva, i. _447_, 457-474 Minetto, Giacomo, iii. 442 Mingrelia, _vi. 279_ Minos, _iv. 518_ Minotaur, fable of the, vi. 125 Minotti, iii. 448, 458 _Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border_, ii. 4 Minturnæ, iv. 251 Mira, La, _ii. 349_ Mirabeau, Honoré Gabriel Riquetti, Comte de, _v. 548_; vi. 13 _Mirror_, the, iv. 32 _Miscellaneous Poems_, vii. 69 Misers, vi. 48, 455 Mississippi river, _iii. 196_ Missouri, _vi. 349_ _Mistère du Viel Testament_, v. 200, _207, 226_ Misti Consiglio X., _iv. 447_ Mitford, Miss, _Christina, the Maid of the South Seas_, v. 582 Mitford, William, _Greece_, _iv. 566_; _v. 16, 24_; vi. 460 Mithridates, king of Pontus, _ii. 393_; iv. 40 Mobility (_mobilité_) defined, vi. 600 Mocenigo, Giovanni, _iv. 432_ Mocenigo, Doge Tomaso, v. 118 _Modern British Drama_, _iii. 200_ _Modern Universal History_, _ii. 82_; _iv. 211, 258, 523_; _v. 499_ Mohammed II., _ii. 173_ Mohammed Ben Abd-el-Wahab, ii. 151 Mohammed Pasha, _ii. 140_ Moira, Francis Rawdon, Lord (1st Marquis of Hastings), _i. 497_; _iii. 45_ Molière, vi. _246_, 510; _Dom Juan, on Le Festin de Pierre_, vi. xvi, _11_ Molina, Tirso de (Gabriel Tellez), _El Burlador de Sevilla y Convidado de Piedra_, vi. xvi Molinari, Signor, _vi. 205_ Mollett, John W., _Life of Sir D. Wilkie_, ii. 92 Mollwitz, battle of, vi. 337 Momus, the god of cruel mockery, v. 396 Monaci, Lorenzo de, _iv. 349, 356_ Monbron, Fougeret de, _Le Cosmopolite, ou le Citoyen du Monde_, ii. 1 Moncey, ii. 94 _Moniteur, Le_, i. 489; v. _562_, 575; vi. 12; _vii. 41_ _Moniteur Universel_, _v. 552_ Monk, General, ii. 292 _Monk of Athos, The_, ii. xiii Monkir and Nekir, inquisitors of the dead, iii. 121 Monmouth Street, noted for sale of second-hand clothes, iv. 160 _Monody on the Death of the Right Hon. R.B. Sheridan_, iv. 69-75, 79; v. 537 Mont Blanc, iv. 87 Montagu, Lady Mary Wortley, _vi. 151_; _Letters_, _vi. 219, 246_ Montague, Mrs., _iv. 573_ Montaigne, ii. 345; vi. 379 Montanti, Antonio, sculptor and architect of Florence, _iv. 272_ Montanvert, iv. 475 Montebello, battle of, _vi. 14_ Montecuccoli, Raimondo, _iv. 262_ Montemajor, Jorge de, _Diana_, _i. 44_ Montesquieu, Charles de Secondat, Baron de, _Considérations ... de la Grandeur des Romains, etc._, _ii. 393_ Montfauçon, _Diarium Italic._, _ii. 431_, 511, 515 Montford, Colonel, _vii. 24_ Montgomery, James, _The Wanderer of Switzerland, etc._, i. 107, _305_, 330, _331_, 370; _ii. 450_ _Monthly Literary Recreations_, _i. 234_ _Monthly Magazine_, i. 441; iv. 156, 229, _367_; v. 540; _vi. 87_ _Monthly Review_, _i. 379_; iii. 444, 499; iv. 82, 158, _165_, 203, 240; v. 472, 540, 584; vi. xx Montholon, Count, _v. 548_ Monti, Vincenzo, ii. 324, 496; iv. 245, 325 Monticolo, G., _Le Vite dei Dogi di Marin Sanudo_, _iv. 462_ Montmartre, heights of, v. 553 Montmorenci, Jean Mathieu Felicité, Duc de, v. 539, _573_, 575 Montorsoli, _ii. 446_ Montpensier, Comte de, Charles V., Dauphin d'Auvergne, _ii. 390_; iv. 258; v. _495_, 498, 515-518, _520_ _Montreal Herald_, _vi. 508_ Montrond, Casimir, Comte de (Byron's "preux Chevalier de la Ruse"), vi. 507 Montrose, Marquis of, _iv. 338_ Montucci, A., _Tragedie di Alfieri_, _iv. 368_ Mooa, capital of an island (Tonga), v. 600 Moor, Charles de, _iii. 296_ Moore, Dr. John, _Letters to Burns_, _i. 118_; _Zeluco_; _Various Views of Human Nature, etc._, ii. 8; _A View of the Society and Manners in Italy_, iv. 333-335, 469; _History of Ireland_, _iv. 334_ Moore, Sir John, _ii. 8_ Moore, Thomas, _Life of Lord Byron_, i. xii, xiii, _2, 4, 5, 15, 21, 25, 26, 33, 45, 78, 84, 88, 89, 93, 98, 119, 128, 184, 192, 205, 210, 213, 222, 224, 257, 259, 261, 280, 303, 304, 310, 325, 327, 347, 349, 368, 387, 411_, 475, _497, 499_; ii. xii, _16, 20, 34, 65, 118, 139, 187, 236, 258, 304, 322, 324, 352, 369, 387, 461_; iii. xix, xx, _15, 16, 25, 30_, 75, _90, 103, 109, 128, 272, 280_, 304, 319, 320, _329, 331_, 376, _415_, 443, 444, _477_, 531, 535, _537_; iv. 3, 31, 32, _35, 36, 39, 58, 61, 63, 74, 92, 213, 267, 308, 340, 447, 489, 545, 587_; v. _82, 210, 348_, 470, 471, _477, 489, 610_; _vi. 21, 128, 143, 297, 578, 601_; _viii. 12, 18, 19, 21, 71, 82_; _Poetical Works of the late Thomas Little_, i. _78_, 202, _305_, 307, 319, 324, 325, 333, _431_; vi. 43; Byron's letters to, _i. 195_; _ii. 30, 238, 351, 447_; iii. _69_, 75, 77, 149, 219, _249, 255_, 303, 319, 320, 376, _413, 417, 423, 433, 496_; iv. _53, 64_, 69, 157, _159, 169, 176, 178, 214, 279_, 411, _478, 520, 538, 555, 558, 561_, 570, _578_; v. 202, 204, _242, 255_, 470, _561_; vi. xvii, _24, 149, 227, 302, 373, 403, 578_; _vii. 35, 37, 42, 46, 48, 70, 71, 73, 74_; and Jeffrey, i. _203, 305_, 333-335; referred to in _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_, i. 321, 370; "Anacreon," _i. 374_; _Intercepted Letters; or, The Twopenny Post-Bag, by Thomas Brown the Younger_, _i. 496_; iv. 158, _555_; vii. 16, _22, 27, 29, 30_; the stanza on Beckford, in _Childe Harold_, _ii. 37_; _The Meeting of the Waters_, _ii. 246_; _Irish Melodies_, iii. 73; _Lalla Rookh_, _iii. 87, 181, 186_; _iv. 176, 587_; _vi. 230_; on _The Corsair_, iii. 217; _Corsair_ dedicated to, iii. 223; _Notices, etc._, _iv. 63_; _Life of Sheridan_, iv. 69, 73; _Lines on the Death of Sh-r-d-n_, _iv. 74_; referred to in _Beppo_, iv. 183; Byron's exclusiveness, _iv. 472_; calls Madame de Staël the Begum of Literature, iv. 570; "Tracy" of _The Blues_, _ibid._; _M.P.; or, The Blue Stocking_, _iv. 573_; _vii. 12_; on _Cain_, v. 204; _Loves of the Angels_, v. 280, 281; _Fables for the Holy Alliance_, _v. 563_; "the question of posterity," vi. 6; "flirtation with the muse of," vi. 75; "Oft in the Stilly Night," _vi. 234_; _Fudge Family in Paris_, _vi. 243_; _Fum and Hum, the Two Birds of Royalty_, _vi. 389, 451_; "reigned before and after me," vi. 444; "Here's the Bower she lov'd so much," vi. 447; on Byron's first rhymes, _vii. 1_; Byron's _Jeux d'Esprit_ on, vii. 12, 16; his _noms de plume_, vii. 12; the "When Rogers" incident, _vii. 17, 18_; on _The Devil's Drive_, _vii. 21_; "Epigram," _vii. 22_; at Venice, _vii. 72_ Moors, expelled from Granada, ii. 47; Cadiz captured from, _ii. 77_ Moorzuk, _vi. 474_ Morat, battle of, ii. 255, 297; bones, ii. 298 Moravians, the, i. _305_, 322 Mordaunt, Miss, as "Ida" in _Werner_, v. 324 More, Mrs. Hannah, _Bas Bleu_, _iv. 176, 573_; _Coelebs in Search of a Wife_, vi. 18 More, Sir Thomas, _iii. 265_ Morea, the, i. 457; iii. 83, 270, 447 Moreau, Jean Victor, vi. 14 Morelli, Cosimo, ii. 324 Morelli, Giacomo, ii. 324 Morelli, Abbate Jacopo, _Chronica iadratina seu historia obsidionis Jaderæ_, _iv. 331_; _Monumenti Veneziani_, iv. 332, _456, 457_ Morena, ii. 55 Moreotes, the, _v. 556_ Morgan, Sydney, Lady (_née_ Owenson), _Woman, or Ida of Athens_; _France_; _Italy_, ii. 187; _v. 158_; vi. 233; _Memoirs_, _iv. 587_ _Morgante Maggiore_, iv. 157, 279-309; vi. xvi, _184_ Morghen, Raphael, _iii. 314_ Moriah, the goddess of folly, _i. 82_ Morier, James, _A Journey through Persia_, i. 492, _500_ Morley, John, _Rousseau_, _ii. 266_ _Morning Chronicle_, _i. 319, 347, 444, 445, 489_; ii. xii, 212; iii. _45, 46, 51, 55, 57, 58_, 79, 80, 151, 304, _315_, 377, _419, 431, 435_, 532-534; _iv. 74, 177, 555-557, 559, 560_; v. _130_, 203, 539, 540, _553, 556, 572, 578, 602_; _vi. 11, 437, 451_; vii. _13_, 14, _23, 28, 32, 41, 86_, 88 _Morning Herald_, _vi. 179_ _Morning Post_, i. _31_, 34, _308, 309, 350, 351, 357, 358_, 441, _485_, 489, 499; _ii. 397, 401_; iii. 534; _v. 544_; vi. 175, 452, 494; vii. _6, 21_, 44, _66_ Mornington, Lady (Catherine Long), _i. 485_ Mornington, William Wellesley Pole, 3rd Earl of, _ii. 79_ Mornington, William Pole-Wellesley, 4th Earl of, i. 484 Morocco, vi. 198 Morosini, Conte Domenico, _Medea in Corinto_; _Giulio Sabino_, _iv. 456, 457_ Morosini, Doge Francesco, ii. 165; _iv. 459_ Morrison, James, boatswain's mate on the _Bounty_, _Journal_, _v. 588, 594, 622_ Morritt, J.B.S., _ii. 88_ Morven, Mount, i. 182, 191 Moscow, i. 487; Napoleon's retreat from, iv. 207; v. 551; _vi. 351_; its clime, vi. 409 Moses, Michael Angelo's statue of, iv. 271, _273_; vi. 380 Moses, Henry, engraver of Canova's Works, _iv. 536_ Mossop, Henry, tragedian, i. 26 Mosti, Agostino (Tasso's gaoler), _iv. 146_ Mottley, John, _i. 301_ Moussine-Pousckine, Count Alexis Iwanowitch, vi. 307 Moustoxides (or Moustoxudes), Andreas, ii. 324; iv. _456_, 457; _Su i Quattro Cavalli della Basilica di S. Marco in Venezia_, ii. 472 Moxon, _iv. 485_ Mozart, iii. 376; _vi. 586_; _Don Giovanni_, vi. xvi Muchtar, or Mukhtar, Pasha, of Berat, ii. 148; iii. 144; _vi. 244_ Mucia, Pompey's third wife, _vi. 139_ Mules, Italian name of bastards and foundlings, vi. 609 Muley, Abul Hacen, king of Granada, _iv. 530_ Mulgrave, John Sheffield, Earl of, i. 354 Müller, the artist, _vi. 321_ Müller, F. Max, _Sacred Books of the East_, _iii. 110_ Müllinen, _iv. 119_ Muncker, Thomas, Notes on the _Fabulæ_ of Hyginus, _vi. 535_ Munster, Duchess of, _iii. 299_ Müntz, Professor E., _ii. 424_; _Raphael_, _iv. 174_ Murad Effendi (Franz von Werner), iv. 329 Murat, Joachim, king of Naples and the Two Sicilies, ii. 90; iii. 432; _v. 550_ Muratori, ii. 502; _Nov. Thes, Inscr. Vet._, _ii. 519_; _Italic. Rerum Scriptores_, _iv. 332, 349, 352, 462_; _v. 134_ Murin, Tio, ii. 94 Murphy, Arthur, _Apprentice_, _vi. 601_ Murray, Dr. A.S., _History of Greek Sculpture_, _ii. 432, 441_ Murray, Joe, _i. 280_; _ii. 27, 52_; vii. 6 Murray, Rev. William, _i. 347_ Murray, A.H. Hallam, _iii. 60_; MS. of _Ich Dien_, vii. 36 Murray, John, I., _ii. 169_ Murray, John, II., Byron's letters to, i. _21, 208_, 293, _325, 411, 421, 422_, 453, 475; ii. xii, _11, 15, 16, 22, 187_, 211, 212, _215, 287, 304, 305_, 307, 311, 313, _324, 334, 343, 344, 359, 366, 369, 370, 375, 381, 429, 453, 460, 461_; iii. xx, _32_, 75, 76, _102, 128, 137_, 151, 155, _181, 187, 197-199, 206, 210, 270, 301_, 303, _308, 312, 324, 435_, 443, _449, 468, 488, 519, 540, 544_; iv. 3, _21_, 31, _36, 54_, 70, 79-81, _107, 126, 136_, 157, _162, 163, 165, 168, 174, 182, 198, 214_, 237, 239, _245, 259_, 279, 280, 285, _304, 308_, 313, 325-328, _332, 339, 340, 362, 366, 367, 431, 436, 447, 471_, 475, 478, 479, _490, 536, 539, 542, 545, 549, 555_, 569; v. 3, _15, 64_, 115, 201, 202, 204, _271, 272_, 279, 331, _367_; vi. xvi, xvii, _3, 4, 8, 18, 52, 70, 75, 76, 87, 142, 153_, 160, _175, 210, 260, 263, 294, 428_; _vii. 45, 47, 48, 62, 66, 69, 72, 77_; Byron's copy of _Catullus_, _i. 75_; Byron's copy of _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_, i. 291, 294; Byron on _Edinburgh Review_ of _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_, i. 293; _Marmion_, i. _310_, 311; MS. of:--_English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_, _i. 354_; _Hints from Horace_, i. 387, _390, 391-394, 397, 399, 405, 406, 408, 411, 412, 414, 416, 418, 421, 426, 429, 430, 439-444, 448, 449_; _The Waltz_, _i. 487, 488, 490, 492, 493, 496, 498, 501_; _Childe Harold_, ii. xvi, xvii, _11, 71, 249, 327-330, 332-337, 339, 341-346, 352-354, 357-359, 361, 363, 365, 368, 370, 371, 375, 377-382, 385, 388, 389, 391, 392, 394, 398-401, 403, 404, 406, 407, 409, 410, 413, 415, 418, 427, 429, 431-434, 436, 438-446, 448, 449, 453-456, 458-462_; _Poems of 1809-1813_, _iii. 1, 2-4, 6, 12, 23, 24, 28, 61, 64, 65, 67-72_; _Lara_, _iii. 335_; _Hebrew Melodies_, _iii. 382, 383, 388, 389_; _Poems of the Separation_, _iii. 532, 540, 545_; _The Giaour_, iii. 78; _Fare Thee Well_, iii. 532; _Morgante Maggiore_, iv. 281; _Sardanapalus_, _v. 14, 15, 17, 19, 21, 31, 34, 38, 43, 47, 49, 52, 54, 56, 58, 60, 66, 68, 70-72, 75, 76, 78, 84, 88, 89, 91, 93, 95, 97, 102, 103, 109, 110_; _Two Foscari_, _v. 124-127, 132, 135, 137, 138, 141, 148, 149, 159, 160-162, 165, 171, 175, 188, 192-194_; _Cain_, _v. 219, 220, 228-230, 233, 234, 239, 240, 246, 252, 265_; _Werner_, _v. 339, 368, 391, 406, 407_; _Age of Bronze_, _v. 571, 577_; _Don Juan_, _vi. 35, 53, 58, 71, 72, 87, 159_; _La Revanche_, vii. 16; _E Nihilo Nihil_, vii. 56; _The Ballad_, vii. 60; _Another Simple Ballat_, vii. 62; _Lucietta_, vii. 81; _Song to the Suliotes_, vii. 84; accepts _Childe Harold_, ii. x, xi; suppression of stanzas in _Childe Harold_, _ii. 65_; Byron on _Quarterly Review_ and Lady Morgan's _France_, _ii. 187_; Shelley and the _Childe Harold_ MS., ii. 211; purchase of _Childe Harold, Canto III._, ii. 212; his compliment to Lady Byron, _ii. 288_; the Morat bones, ii. 298; Byron's autograph MSS., _iii. 411, 419, 425_; bears testimony to Byron's genius, iii. 444; Scott's letter on _Cain_ dedication, _v. 206_; declines _Don Juan_, vi. xvi; the stanzas on Castlereagh in _Don Juan_, _vi. 8_; copyright of _Don Juan, Canto XVII._, _vi. 608_; Hammond his "chief 4-o'clock man," _vii. 49_; the offer of Madame de Staël's _Considérations sur la Révolution Française_, _vii. 49_; his share in _Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine_, vii. 51, 57; his "columns," vii. 55; _Navy List_, vii. 57; Mrs. Rundell's _Domestic Cookery_, _ibid._; bookseller to the Admiralty, and the Board of Longitude, vii. 58; Gally Knight, vii. 59, 62; his offer of £2000 to Byron, _vii. 77_ Murray, John, III., dedication of _Marino Faliero_ to Goethe, iv. 328, _340_; MS. of _Werner_, v. 326 Murray, John, IV., _iii. 66_ Murray, Sir George, _vi. 374_ _Murray_ v. _Benbow and Another_, v. 204 Murray's Handbooks--_Central Italy_, _ii. 373, 380_; _iv. 275_; _Constantinople_, _vi. 220_; _Greece_, _ii. 117, 125, 157, 166, 189_; _Northern Italy_, _ii. 372_; _iv. 336, 392, 430_; _Rome_, _ii. 389, 403_; _iv. 271, 273_; _Switzerland_, ii. 306; _iv. 98_ _Murray's Magazine_, _ii. 229_; iii. 319, _324_; vii. 10, 69, 85, 86 _Musæ Etonenses_, _i. 336_ Musæus, _De Herone atque Leandro_, _iii. 178_ Musca, ii. 89 Musk-bull, vi. 478 Mussulmans, Albanian, ii. 144; their devotion, ii. 302 Musters, John, _i. 210_ Musters, Mrs. Chaworth. _See_ Chaworth, Mary Anne _My Boy Hobbie O._, vii. 66 _My Epitaph_, _iii. 38_; vii. 10 _My Grandmother's Review_, _iv. 578_ Myrina, Queen of the Amazons, v. 5 Myrrha, a character in _Sardanapalus_, v. 12 _My soul is dark_, iii. 389 _Mystery Plays_, v. 207 N Nabopolassar, _v. 107_ Nadir Shah, or Thamas Kouli Khan, vi. 384 Naef, A., _Guide to the Castle of Chillon_, _iv. 14, 15, 19_ Nahum, _v. 4_ Naldi, Giuseppe, i. 346 Nani, Bartolommeo, v. 115 Nani, Maria or Marina, v. 115 Napier, _History of the Peninsular War_, _i. 469, 470_; ii. _53, 54_, 87, 90-94 Napoleon Buonaparte, his snuff-box, _i. 355_; vii. 77 mentioned in _Hints from Horace_, i. 410; the affair of Copenhagen, _i. 468_; "Buonaparte's fiat," i. 487; fall of Hamburg, _i. 488_; "then flamed of Austerlitz the blest despatch," _i. 489_; unwhiskered, _i. 493_; repulsed at Vimiera, _ii. 39_; "to swell one bloated chiefs unwholesome reign," ii. 56; abdication of Ferdinand VII., _ii. 78_; invasion of Spain, ii. _82_, 90; blockade of Corfu, _ii. 193_; Shelley's _Feelings of a Republican on the Fall of Buonaparte_, _ii. 227_; "there sunk the greatest, nor the worst of men," etc. (_Childe Harold_), ii. 238-241, 294; his star, ii. 270; the Horses of St. Mark, _ii. 336_; the Venus de' Medici, _ii. 365_; Coleridge on, _ii. 397_; described by Pitt as "the child and champion of Jacobinism," etc., _ii. 400_; v. 544; a prisoner, _ii. 453_; "Waterloo," _ii. 459_; vi. 539; and Mrs. Spencer Smith, _iii. 4_; his abdication, iii. 303; _Ode to_, iii. 305-315; his _Farewell_, iii. 427, 428; "crushed by the Northern Thor," iv. 179; the retreat from Moscow, _iv. 207_; vi. _351_, 352; _Werther, v._, _iv. 342_; his reply to the Venetian envoys, iv. 456; Scott's _Life of_, _iv. 456_; crowned king of Italy, iv. 458; his death, iv. 489; Hazlitt on, iv. 570; at St. Helena, v. 537, 538 (see also _The Age of Bronze_); his grave, v. 548; his wife Marie Louise, _v. 576_; causes his soldiers to be vaccinated, _vi. 50_; takes Missouri from the Spaniards, _vi. 349_; and the sculptor Bartolini, _vi. 360_; in _Don Juan_, vi. 377; his cancer, vi. 378; "Ceres fell with Buonaparte," vi. 383; his blue eyes, vi. 396; "Ah! my old Guard," vi. 418; "Where is Napoleon the Grand?" vi. 450; "shrink to a Saturn," vi. 452; and the Comte de Montrond, _vi. 507_; "Ausu Romano, ære Veneto," _vi. 590_; his escape from Elba, vii. 41 _Napoleon Buonaparte, Ode to_, _ii. 187, 238_; iii. 305-315; iv. 49, 269; vi. 12 _Napoleon's farewell_, iii. 427; _iv. 111_ _Napoleon's Snuff-Box_, vii. 77 Napoli di Romania, iii. 447 Nardini, F., _Roma Vetus_, ii. _510_, 511, _513, 515_, 517 Nash, the architect, _i. 349_ Nash, Edward, artist, iv. 475 Nasoni, Giovanni Gradenigo, iv. 465 Nathan, Isaac (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 375; _Fugitive Pieces_, iii. 376, _381, 383, 387, 388, 390, 400_ National Gallery, _i. 472_ _National Intelligencer_ (U.S.A.), _iii. 297_ Nauck, A., _Incert. Fab. Fragm._; _Trag. Græc. Fragm._, _iv. 264_ Naupli, Gulf of, _i. 457_ Navagero, Andrea, _Storia della Republica Veneziana_, iv. 326, 332, _349, 463_; v. 115 Neapolitan Government, v. 574 Nebuchadnezzar, Nabuchadonosor, vi. 235, _236_ Nectanebus II., _v. 543_ Negropont, the, iii. 173 Neipperg, Count Albert Adam de, _iii. 311_; v. 539, 576 Nekir and Monkir, inquisitors of the dead, iii. 121 Nelson, vi. 14 Nemesis, ii. 426, 518, 519 Nemi, village of, ii. 454 Nemours, Gaston de Foix, Duc de, _i. 107_; vi. 212 Neoptolemus, or Pyrrhus, v. 577 Nepos, Cornelius, _Epam._, _vi. 376_ Nepos, Emperor, iii. 301 Neptune, v. 616; vi. 130 Nereus, iv. 243 Nero, Emperor, _i. 349_; ii. _408, 409_, 472; iv. 124; v. 606; vi. 181 Nero, the Consul, v. 606 Nerva, _ii. 412_ Nervii, the, _vi. 339_ Nesselrode, Count, v. 539; _vii. 39_ Nessus, robe of, vi. 447, 575 Neuhaus, _iv. 119_ Neuman, Johannes Christiaan (A. van Amstel), iv. 5 Neumann, i. 476 Neva, _vi. 475_ _New English Dictionary_, _i. 314_; ii. _4, 57, 70, 122, 146_, 172, 181, _205_, 294, _325, 385_; _iii. 113, 157_; _iv. 13, 166, 171, 172, 445_; _v._ 228; _vi. 68, 208, 316, 473, 487, 550, 567_ New Grenada, _v. 555_ _New Monthly Magazine_, i. 452, 453; _ii. 366_; _iv. 65, 552, 564_; v. 282, 584; vi. xx New Orleans, _iii. 296_ _New Plan of the Town of Nottingham, A_, _vii. 1_ New South Wales, insurrection (1805) in, _v. 588_ _New Testament_, v. 208 _New Vicar of Bray, The_, vii. 78 Newbury, battle of, _i. 3, 121_ Newcastle, Duke of, _i. 457_ _Newcastle Herald_, _i. 373_ Newstead Abbey, i. 1, 116, 256, _280_; _ii. 16_; iii. 27; the lake at, iv. 60; description of, vi. 495 _Newstead MS._, _i. 47, 79, 82, 87, 91, 129, 130, 147-150, 153, 155, 159-162, 164-168, 174-178, 181, 182, 185-188, 212, 213, 217, 220, 226, 228, 229, 231, 233, 240, 242, 244, 247, 253-256, 258, 262, 263_ Newton, Professor A., _iii. 130_ Newton, Sir Isaac, iv. 47; vi. _303_, 400 Newton, D.D., Thomas, _Life of Milton_, _vi. 146_ Ney, Michel, Duke of Elchingen, _vi. 373_ Nicholas III., iii. 503 Nicholle, or Marinet, M., vi. 373, _374_ Nicholls, Colonel E., _iii. 298_ Nichols, John, editor of Hardinge's _Miscellaneous Works_, _vi. 508_ Nichols, Mrs. (Harriet Maltby), i. 129, 263 _Nicnac_, iii. xxi; vii. _41_, 42 Nicolo III. (d'Este) of Tuscany, _ii. 354_ Nicopolis, ii. 128, _148_, 179 Niebuhr, _vi. 122_ Niger, delta of the, iv. 515 Nightingale and the rose, iii. 86; v. 428, 612 Niketas, Greek general, _v. 556_ Nile, v. 550 Nimrod, v. 14, 18, 28, 36, 58; vi. 235, _236_ _Nineteenth Century_, iv. 5; v. 326, 329 Nineveh, fall of, v. _4, 13_, 25; vi. 348 Ninus, king of Assyria, _v. 11_ Ninya, _v. 79_ Niobe, ii. 389 Nisbet, Mary (Lady Elgin), _i. 463_ Nisbet, William Hamilton, _i. 463_ Nisus, _i. 151, 175_; _ii. 387_ Nitrous oxide gas, _i. 307_ Nizam Gedidd, new Turkish ordinance, ii. 207 Noah, i. 325; v. 284 Noble, Rev. Mark, continuation of Granger's _Biographical History of England_, _iii. 298_ Noel, Captain the Hon. F.L. King, _iv. 159_ Noel, Lady, vi. 274; vii. 75 Noel, Lady Anna Isabella (Scawen Blunt), _ii. 215_ Noel, Hon. Elizabeth, _i. 437_ Noel, Hon. Roden, _Life of Lord Byron_, ii. xiii; _ii. 117_; _iii. 18_ Nogaret, _v. 554_ Nonius Marcellus, ii. 92 Norbury, Mr., private secretary to Lord Granville, _vii. 36_ Norbury, Hon. Mrs., _vii. 36_ Nordlingen, battle of, _ii. 186_ Norfolk, Charles Howard, 11th Duke of ("Jockey of Norfolk"), vii. 28 Normanby, John Sheffield, Marquis of, i. 354 North, Lord, _i. 500_ Norton, Mrs., _i. 343_ Nossa Señora da Peña, Convent of, ii. 35, 85 Notaras, ii. 203 _Notes and Queries_, _ii. 430, 460_; _iii. 72_; _iv. 15, 46, 75, 530, 533_; _vi. 483_; _vii. 59_ Nott, Dr. George Frederick, Prebendary of Winchester and Salisbury, vii. 78 Notti, Signori di, iv. 465 _Nouveau Dictionnaire de l'Économie Politique_, _vi. 461_ _Nouvelle Biographie Universelle_, _iii. 311_; _v. 499_ _Novelists Magazine_, _iv. 519_ Novi, battle of, _vi. 14_ Nugent, _vi. 175_ Numa Pompilius, _ii. 416_; vi. 24 _Numbers_, _ii. 271_ Nunez, translation of de Quevedo's _Sueños, etc._, _iv. 484_ _Nuovo Archivio Veneto_, iv. 327, _331, 332, 349, 403, 462_ Nympholepsy, ii. 415 O Oakes, Major-General Hildebrand, iii. 25 Oaths, British and Continental, vi. 440 _Observations upon Observations_, v. 537; _vii. 75_ _Observer_, _i. 414_ _Occasional Pieces_ (_Poems_, 1809-1813; _Poems_, 1814-1816), _ii. 37_; iii. xix _Occasional Poems_, _iii. 449_ _Occasional Prologue previous to the Performance of the Wheel of Fortune_, i. 45 Ocellus Lucanus, _De Universi Naturâ_, ii. 198 Ochakof, siege of, _vi. 313_ Ockham, Viscount, _ii. 215_ O'Connell, Daniel, iv. 559 Odalisques, ladies of the Seraglio, vi. 277 _Ode from the French_, _ii. 227_; iii. 431; _iv. 110_; _vi. 266, 373_ _Ode on the Death of Sir Peter Parker_, iii. xix, 417 _Ode on Venice_, _ii. 338_; iii. xix; iv. 193, 203, _458_ _Ode to a Lady whose lover was killed by a ball, which at the same time shattered a portrait next his heart_, iv. 552; _vi. 144_ _Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte_, _ii. 187, 238_; iii. 305-315; _iv. 49, 269_; _v. 519_; _vi. 12, 348_ _Ode to the Framers of the Frame Bill_, vii. 13 _Ode to the Isle of St. Helena_ (spurious), iii. xx Oder, river, v. 348 Odessa, vi. 264 O'Doherty, parody of the "Pisa letter," v. 204; _Miscellanies_, v. 326 Odysseus, _iii. 272_ OEdipus, ii. 93, _431_ Ogilvy, _i. 314, 403_ Ogle, Sir Chaloner, _vii. 48_ _Oh, Shame to thee, Land of the Gaul_ (spurious), iii. xx _Oh! snatched away in beauty's bloom_, iii. 388 _Oh! weep for those_, iii. 385 _Old Testament_, _iii. 187_; v. 199, 279 Oliphant, Mrs., _Annals of a Publishing House_, iii. 444 Olivier, G.A., _iii. 13_; _Voyage dans l'Empire Othoman_, _iii. 188_ Ollah, a Turkish cry, iii. 168 Olympias, mother of Alexander the Great, _ii. 123_; _v. 543_ Olympieion, Temple of Zeus Olympius, _i. 462_; ii. 167 Olympus, Mount, ii. 286 Olytsika, Mount (ancient Tomarus), ii. _132_, 182 Omar Khayyám, Rubáîyát, _iii. 87, 109_ Ombre, the game of, iv. 507 O'Meara, Dr. Barry Edward, _Napoleon in Exile, or a Voice from St. Helena_, v. 537, 540, _544-547_ _Omegarus and Syderia_, _iv. 42, 43_ _On a change of Masters at a Great Public School_, i. 16, _84, 91_ _On a Cornelian heart which was broken_, iii. 48 _On a distant view of the village and school of Harrow-on-the-Hill_, i. 25 _On a Royal Visit to the Vaults_ (_Windsor Poetics_), vii. 36 _On being asked what was the "Origin of Love"_, iii. 65 _On finding a Fan_, i. 253 _On Jordan's banks_, iii. 386 _On leaving Newstead Abbey_, i. 1; _vi. 499_ _On Lord Thurlow's Poems_, vii. 17 _On Moore's last Operatic Farce or Farcical Opera_, vii. 12 _On my Thirty-Third Birthday_, vii. 73 _On my Wedding-Day_, _ii. 322_; vii. 64 _On Napoleon's Escape from Elba_, vii. 41 _On Parting_, iii. 23 _On revisiting Harrow_, i. 259 _On the Birth of John William Rizzo Hoppner_, vii. 54 _On the Bust of Helen by Canova_, iv. 536 _On the day of the Destruction of Jerusalem by Titus_, iii. 401 _On the death of a Young Lady, Cousin to the Author, and very dear to Him_, i. 5 _On the death of Mr. Fox_, i. 34 _On the death of the Duke of Dorset_, iii. xxi, 425 _On the eyes of Miss A---- H----_, i. 244 _On the Morning of my Daughter's Birth_ (spurious), iii. xx _On the Quotation "And my true faith can alter never, / Though thou art gone perhaps for ever"_, ii. xxi, 65 _On the Star of "The Legion of Honour"_, iii. 436 _On this day I complete my thirty-sixth year_, vii. 86 _One struggle more, and I am free_, iii. _31, 32_, 36 O'Neill, Miss Elizabeth (afterwards Lady Becher), actress, _ii. 331_; _iv. 338_; vii. 50 Opera Comique, _i. 413_ Opie, Mrs., _The Warrior's Return_, _iii. 424_ _Oracle, The_, _i. 358_ Orange, Prince of, _iv. 197_ Orazio, _alias_ Celio de' Malespini, _iv. 144_ Orbe, Madame, ii. 304 Orchomenus, iii. 15 O'Reilly, Count Alexander, vi. 56 Orestes, _i. 175_; ii. 427 Orford, Lord (Horace Walpole), _Reminiscences_; _Works_, _iii. 209_; _iv. 340_; _Memoirs ... of George II._, vii. 76 _Oriental Antiquities_, _ii. 136_ Orla, i. 177 Orleans, Duke of, _ii. 282_; iv. 334 Orlow (Orloff), General, _vi. 314, 353, 354_ Ormsby, John, translation of _Don Quixote_, ii. 178 Orosius, _Hist._, ii. 179, _392_, 512 Orpheus, i. 437, 484; ii. 11; vi. 173 Orsini, the, _v. 576_ O'Ruarc, Dervogilla, iv. 334 O'Ruarc, Tiernan, _iv. 334_ Orthodoxy, _vi. 267_ _Oscar of Alva_, i. 131; _ii. 343_ Ossian, _Poems_, i. 1, 116, 177, _183, 191_, 229; _iii. 100, 115, 389, 416, 426_; _iv. 126_; vii. 2 _Ossian's Address to the Sun in "Carthon"_, i. 229; _iv. 126_; vii. 2 Ossory, John, 1st Earl of, _i. 500_ Otaheite (Tahiti), v. 582-584, _588_ _Othello_, i. _340_, 342; iii. _131_, 313, 540; _iv. 164_; vi. 271, _379, 502_, 543 Otho, _v. 63, 64_ Otway (_Venice Preserved_), i. 306, 345; ii. 331, 342; iv. 325, 326, _454_; _vii. 57_ Ouchy, iv. 3 Oude, Begum of, iv. 72 Outalissi, _i. 430_ Ovid, i. 437; _v. 573_; vi. 26, 139, 218; _Metamorph._, _ii. 13_; _iii. 199_; _v. 570_; vi. 38, _177, 235_, 273, _535_; _vii. 9_; _Amor._, ii. _31, 367_, 509; _v. 289_ _Fasti_, _ii. 255_, 515; _iv. 164_ _Heroïdes_, iii. 178; _vi. 447, 575_ Owen, Rev. E.C. Everard, _ii. 82, 157_, 172, _335_ Oxenstiern, Chanc. Axel, vi. 531 Oxenstiern, John, _vi. 531_ Oxford and Mortimer, Edward, 5th Earl of, _ii. 11_ "Oxoniensis" (Rev. J.H. Todd), v. 202 _Oziosi_, the, a literary society at Florence, _i. 358_ P Pacchierotti, _vi. 207_ Pacciaudi, ii. 472 Pactolus, v. 487 Padua, _iv. 262, 386_ Page, Mrs. Anne, _vi. 442_ Paine, Tom, vii. 65 Palæopolis, _iii. 184_ Palafox, ii. 78, 94 Palampore, a flowered shawl, iii. 117 Palatine, Rome, ii. 407; iv. 257 Palazzi, _Fasti Ducales_, _v. 124, 195_ Paley, _vii. 32_ Palgrave, Sir Francis (formerly Cohen), translation of _Old Chronicle_ (Marino Faliero); _Rise and Progress of the English Constitution_; _History of the Anglo-Saxons_, iv. 462 Palikar, general name for Greek and Albanese soldiers, ii. 144, 183 Pallas Athene, vii. 12 Palmer, E.H., _Sacred Books of the East_--translation of the Qu'rân, _iii. 110, 181, 195, 206_ Palmerston, Lady (Cowper), _i. 301_ Palmerston, Lord, i. 57, 476 Pambotis, lake of Yanina, ii. 179 Pan, vi. 130 Pandion, king of Attica, _iv. 287_ Pandora, i. 285 _Pandora_, wreck of the, _vi. 96_ Panizzi, Preface to the _Orlando Innamorato_ of Boïardo, iv. 281 Pantaloni, nickname of the Venetians, _ii. 339_ Pantheon, Rome, ii. 435 Pantisocracy, iv. 521; vi. 174 Panvinius, _ii. 392_ Paphos, ii. 19, 63 Paracelsus, _v. 208_ Parcæ, the, vi. 220 _Parenthetical Address_, iii. 55 Parga, pirates of, ii. _145_, 146, 147; vi. 171, _172_ Paris, Treaties of, ii. _342_, 402; _v. 550, 576_; Allied Army in, _iii. 431_; v. 553 _Parisina_, _ii. 113, 288, 354_; iii. 377, 443, 505-548; _iv. 35_, 141, 215; v. 326 Park, Mungo, _Journal of a Mission to the Interior of Africa_, _v. 631_ Park Theatre, New York, _Werner_ at, v. 324 Parker, Charlotte Augusta (_née_ Byron), _iii. 417_ Parker, Christopher, _iii_. 417 Parker, Margaret, i. 5 Parker, Rev. J., translation of Dionysius' _Celestial Hierarchy_, _v. 286_ Parker, Bart., Sir Peter, _i. 5_; iii. 417 Parkins, Miss Fanny, _vi. 578_ _Parliamentary Debates_, _i. 412_; _v. 545_; _vi. 69, 506, 549_ _Parliamentary History_, _i. 412_ Parma, Alessandro Farnese, Duke of, _iv. 262_ Parma, University of, _ii. 354_ Parnassus (Liakura), i. 426; ii. 60-62, 92, 129, 186; iii. 113, 464 Parnell, _Vigil of Venus_, _i. 317_; _ii. 279_ Paros, island, iii. 273 Parrot, Professor Friedrich, _Journey to Ararat_, _v. 294_ Parry, Sir Edward, _Voyage in 1819-1820 in Search of a North-West Passage_, iv. 496; vi. 51, _478_, 491, 521 Parsons, William, _i. 358_ Parthenon, Athens, i. 454, 455, _462, 463_; ii. 166, 172 Parthians, the, _ii. 412_ Parton, James, _Life and Times of Benjamin Franklin_, _v. 554_ Pascal, _vi. 379_ Pasiphae, vi. 126 Pasqualigo, Nicolò, _iv. 456, 457_ Pasqualigo, Orio, _iv. 432_ Pasqualino, _iv. 171_ Pasquin, v. 471 Passavant, J.D., _Raphael of Urbino_, _iv. 174_ Paswan Oglou, iii. 188 Paterculus, C. Vell., _Hist._, _ii. 492_ Paternoster Row, iv. 574; vii. 9 Paterson, Sir John, _iii. 301_ Patras, ii. _124_, 178 Patroclus, _i. 175_; _ii. 462_; _vi. 117_, 204 Patterson, Commander Daniel, _iii. 298_ Paul, Czar, _vi. 333_ Paul III., Pope, _ii. 411_; _iii. 122_; _iv. 270_ Pausanias, king of Sparta, and Cleonice, iv. 108 Pausanias, the Sophist, ii. 85; _Laconica_, _iv. 108, 566_; _Descriptio Gratiæ_, _v. 526_ Pauw, Cornelius de, _Recherches philosophiques sur les Grecs_, _i. 414_; ii. 191, 194-196 Pavia, battle of, _v. 503_ Payne, J., _i. 356_ Paxos, _ii. 193_ Pazig, Christianus, _Magic Incantations_, _v. 289_ Peachey, or Peachie, _i. 208_ Peacock, "that royal bird, whose tail's a diadem," vi. 326 Peacock, Thomas Love, _ii. 355_; iv. 3, _18_, 475; _Melincourt_, iv. 569, _574_; _Nightmare Abbey_, iv. 569 Pearson, John, _vii. 14_ Pearson's _Cautions, etc._, _i. 417_ Pedro III., Portugal, _ii. 43_ Peel, Sir Robert, _v. 572_ _Peggy_, wreck of the American ship, _vi. 103_ Pelagius, ii. 89 Pelayo, ii. 46; v. 558 Peleus, _v. 488_ Pelican, the, iii. 130 Pellegrino, _Caraffa_, _ii. 486_ Pemberton, _vi. 400_ Peña, Convent of Nossa Señora da, ii. 35, 85 Penelope, ii. 124 Peninsular War, i. 469; _iii. 416_ Pennant, Thomas, _Some Account of London_, _vi. 435_ Pentelicus, Mount (Mount Mendeli), ii. 186 Penthesilea, Queen of the Amazons, v. 526 Perceval, Spencer, i. _28, 471_, 472, _496_, 497; _ii. 79_; _vii. 28_ Percy's _Reliques_, _i. 317_; _ii. 22_ Pericles, i. 462; ii. 190 Perkinean Institution, London, _i. 308_ Perkins, Benjamin Charles, his metallic tractors, _vi. 50_ Perrier, M. Casimir, _Opinions et Discours_, _v. 566_ Perry, editor of _Morning Chronicle_, iii. 532; vii. _37_, 44 Persians, capture Teos, _vi. 171_; "taught three useful things," vi. 572 _Persius_, _i. 304_; _ii. 201_ Peru, Independence of, _v. 556_; vi. 457 Pescara, Ferdinando Francesco dagli Avalos, Marquis of, _iv. 262_ Peter the Great, iv. 202; _v. 564_; vi. 381 Peter III., vi. 388 Peter Pindar. _See_ Wolcot, Dr. Peterborough, Lord, _i. 484_; _v. 576_ Peterborow, Henry Mordaunt, Earl of, _iv. 504_ Peterwaradin, battle of, _iii. 455_ Petrarch, i. 108; ii. 350-353, _365_, 371, 372, _415, 424_, 478, 501-503; iv. 239, 265; and Laura, ii. 480-484; vi. 145; on the conspiracy of Marino Faliero, iv. 468; "the Platonic pimp of all posterity," vi. 218 Petronius, "Arbiter Elegantiarum" to Nero, i. 349; _Satyricôn_, vi. _380_, 602 Pettigrew, T.J., _vi. 497_ Petty, Lord Henry (afterwards Marquis of Lansdowne), i. 31, 57, 340, _471_ Peucker, Dr. Karl, _Griechenland_, ii. xxiv Phædra, vi. 254 Pharnaces II., _ii. 398_ Phelps, as "Jaffier" in _Venice Preserved_, ii. 331; as "Manfred," iv. 78; as "The Doge" in _Marino Faliero_, iv. 324; as "Werner," v. 324 Phelps, Edmund, as "Ulric" in _Werner_, v. 324 Phidias, i. _378_, 454; iv. 270 _Philadelphia Record_, vii. 62 Philanthes, _ii. 485_ _Philanthropist, The_, _ii. 554_ Philemon, _vi. 186_ Philip of Macedon, i. 56; ii. 166; _v. 543_ Philip II. of Spain, ii. 504; _iii. 299, 309_ Philippi, battle of, _iv. 386_ Philips, Ambrose, _Epistle to the Earl of Dorset_; _Pastorals_, i. 418 Phillips, Josiah, printer and publisher of _The Authentic Memoirs of the Court of England for the last Seventy Years_, _vii. 31_ Phillips, J.O. Halliwell, reprints _Ludus Coventriæ_, _v. 207_ Phillips, Miss, as "Zarina" in _Sardanapalus_, v. 2 Phillips, Sir Richard, _Personal Tour through the United Kingdom_, iv. 32 Philo, v. 281 Philo Byzantius, _De Septem Orbis Miraculis_, _ii. 441_ Philomela, iv. 287 "Philo-Milton," _Vindication of Paradise Lost from the charge of exculpating Cain_, v. 202 Phingari, the moon, iii. 108 Phocas, column of, ii. 410 Phoenix, _vi. 117_ Phrosine or Frosini, _iii. 145_ Phyle, Fort, ii. 150, 185, 189 Piazza, the, Covent Garden, iv. 160 "Pibroch" confused with "bagpipe," i. 133, 134, 136, 140 Picadores, horsemen, _ii. 68_ Pickersgill, Junior, Joshua, _The Three Brothers_, v. 469, 470, 473 Picton, General, ii. 293 _Pignus Amoris_, i. 231, _240, 241_; _ii. 458_; _iii. 48_ Pigot, Miss Elizabeth B., i. _41, 45_, 47, _66, 129, 210, 233, 258, 264_, 293, _406_ Pigot, Mrs., _i. 239_; vii. 8 Pigot, J.M.B., i. xi, xiv, _45_, 63, _213_; _vi. 30_ _Pilgrimage to the Holy Land_ (spurious), iii. xx Pilgrim's Oak at Newstead Abbey, _vi. 497_ Pillans, Professor James, i. _306_, 337 Pilsen, _v. 340_ Pindar, i. _337_, 465, _490_; ii. 93; vi. 168 Pindemonte, Ippolito, ii. 324; iv. 245, _457_; v. 562 Pindus mount (Monte Metsovo), ii. 126, 129; iii. 7 Pinel, M., _Sur l'Insanité_, _ii. 447_ Pineta of Ravenna, the, vi. 178, 180 Piombi, the (Venice prisons), iv. 363; _v. 148_ Piozzi, Mrs., _i. 358_ Piræus, ii. 362 Pisa, Byron's household at, _v. 348_ Pisani, Nicolò, _iv. 356_ Pisani, Vettor, ii. 477, 497 Pisistratus, ii. 167 Pisse Vache, or Salanfe, _ii. 383_ Pitcairn Island, v. 582-584. _See_ also _Island, The_ Pitiscus, _ii. 509_ Pitt, William, appoints Mansel Master of Trinity College, Cambridge, _i. 28_; "rules the hour," i. 31; "expired in plenitude of power," i. 34, _57_; Sayer's _Elijah's Mantle_, i. 294, _356_; mentioned in _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_, i. 377; in _Hints from Horace_, i. 395; "heaven-born," i. 486; the "heavy news" of Austerlitz, _i. 489_; his description of Napoleon, _ii. 400_; _v. 544_; Sheridan's speech on the Begum of Oude, _iv. 72_; one of "the wondrous _Three_," iv. 75; George III. and Catholic Emancipation, _iv. 503_, "with Fox's lard was basting William Pitt," iv. 511; his grave in Westminster Abbey, v. 541; "The Pilot that weathered the storm," v. 568; _vi. 482_, refusal to accept £100,000 from the merchants of London, vi. 376; "Chatham gone," vi. 478; "so like his friend Billy," vii. 28; Byron's _Epitaph for_, vii. 64 Pitt and Grenville Acts, the, iv. 512 Pius VII., Pope, Napoleon's snuff-box, _vii. 78_ Pizarro, Francisco, ii. 81; v. 555 Pizarro, Hernando, ii. 81 Pizarro, Juan Gonzalo, ii. 81 Plancus, _ii. 492_ Platæa, battle of, ii. 294; _iv. 108_ Plato, i. 414; _ii. 169, 196, 325_; _v. 485_, vi. 46, 303, 568, 585 Plato, the comic poet, _iii. 85_ Plato's _Epitaph_, i. 18; iii. 136 Platonic love, vi. 396, 397 Platow (Platoff), General, _vi. 353_; _vii. 39_ Plattsburg Bay, battle of, _vi. 508_ Plautus, _Truculentus_, vi. 548 Playfair, Dr., _vii. 52_ Pliny, _Hist. Nat._, _ii. 31, 378, 379, 384, 432, 437, 441, 445, 488_; _vi. 220, 236, 563_; _Epist._, _ii. 380_; _Panegyricus_, _ii. 412_ Plum, a, = £100,000, i. 425 Plumptre, E.H., D.D., _Commedia, etc._, _v. 562_ Plumptre, E.J., and Gallehault, _iv. 320_ Plunket, Catholic Emancipation Bills, _v. 569_ Plutarch, _Lives_, _i. 467_; ii. 123, 179, _341, 393, 405, 518_; _iii. 85, 180, 311_; _iv. 108, 251, 264, 339, 352, 386, 423, 446_; v. 4, 5, _21, 72, 486, 487, 506_; _vi. 139, 226, 339, 348, 376, 404, 461, 477, 547_; _Scripta Moralia, etc._, _ii. 335_; _v. 619_; _vi. 479_ Po, the river, iv. 545 Pococke, Edward, _Notæ Miscellaneæ_, _iii. 109, 121_ _Poems 1814-1816_, iii. 409-438 _Poems 1816-1823_, iv. 529-566 _Poems of July-September, 1816_, iv. 29-65 _Poems of the Separation_, iii. 537-546 _Poems on his Domestic Circumstances_, i. 452, 453; iii. xx, _24_ _Poems on Various Occasions_, i. xi, xii, _1, 3, 18, 20-22, 27, 29, 31, 32, 38, 41, 46, 47, 52-54, 57, 58, 60, 62, 63, 65, 70, 74_, 76-116, _82-84, 89, 91, 96, 99, 101, 102, 104, 110, 112, 113, 115, 116, 118, 122, 123, 125, 151, 152_ _Poems Original and Translated_, i. xii, _31, 126, 127, 147, 149, 168, 171, 184, 187, 189_, 191-208, _354, 374_; iv. 281 Poet's Corner at Newstead Abbey, _vi. 498_ Poggio, _De Fort. Var._, _ii. 364, 365, 403_ Point Lividia, _iii. 248, 249_ Pola, battle of, ii. 476 Poland, partition of, v. 500, 551; and Alexander I., _v. 563_ Polenta, Guido Novello da, ii. _371_, 494 Polenta, Guido Vecchio da, Lord of Ravenna, _iv. 316_ Polidori, Dr. J.W., _i. 318_; _iv. 40_; vii. 47 Polidori, G., _iv. 143_ _Political Eclogues_, _i. 395_ Political Economy Club, vi. 480 _Political Miscellanies_, _i. 395_ _Political Ode by Lord Byron, hitherto unknown as his production_, _vii. 14_ Polixena, v. 488 Poliziano, _ii. 365_; iv. 280 Polozk (Polouzki), vi. 354 Poltáva, battle of, iv. 207, _233_ Polybius, _Hist._, ii. _377_, 506 Polycrates, of Samos, ii. 519; vi. 171 Polynices, v. 403 Polyphontes, the herald, _ii. 431_ Polyzois, an Albanian poet, ii. 198 Pombal, _ii. 43_ Pompadour, Madame de, iv. 334 Pompeia, Cæsar's third wife, _i. 351_; iv. 352; _vi. 139_ Pompey, _i. 422_; ii. 395, _492_; _iv. 264_; vi. 139; statue of, ii. 508; pillar of, v. 548 Pompignan, Franc de, _ii. 282_ Poniatowsky, Prince, _vii. 24_ Ponsonby, Lady Caroline. _See_ Lamb, Lady Caroline Ponsonby, William, v. 329 Ponte, Antonio da, _ii. 327_ Poole, Thomas, _and his Friends_, _i. 437_ Pope, Alexander, _Prologue to the Satires_, _i. 91, 392_; vi. 519, 602; on Earl of Dorset, _i. 198_; _Dunciad_, i. 220, 294, _321, 326_, 327, 397; _iv. 161_; vi. 494; _Essay on Criticism_, i. 289; _ii. 13_; iv. 481; mentioned in _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_, i. 304-306, 312, _368, 371_; his advice to Wycherley, _i. 322_; _Essay on Man_, i. 361; _v. 593_; mentioned in _Hints from Horace_, i. 395, 397, _441, 449_; his youthful _Eclogues_, i. 418, 421; and Homer, _i. 427_; his "prescription," i. 430; "blest paper credit," i. 470; and Wellington, _i. 484_; _Imitations of Horace_, ii. 188; _iv. 484_; v. 576; vi. 247; the Egerian grots, ii. 517; _Windsor forest_, _iii. 227_; letter to Steele, _iii. 348_; _Satires_, iii. 439; _Works_, _iii. 452_; _vi. 555_; "These be good rhymes," iv. 139; depreciated, _iv. 342_; _Rape of the Lock_, _iv. 507_; vi. 18, _454_; his "delicious lobster-nights," _iv. 587_; Byron's _English Bards_, in the style of, v. 537; _Moral Essays_, _v. 606_; vi. 350, 358; _January and May_, _vi. 62_; "Thou shalt believe in," vi. 74; Lady M.W. Montagu's letter to, _vi. 151, 219_; on Crashaw, _vi. 166_; _Eloïsa to Abelard_, vi. 395; use of the word "gynocracy," _vi. 473_; and "commence," _vi. 567_; "Lady Adeline" on, vi. 587; Homer's _Iliad_ and _Odyssey_, _vii. 57_ Porphyry, _ii. 78_ Porson, Richard, i. 30, _313, 438_; _ii. 283_; _iii. 402_; _The Devil's Walk_ attributed to, _vii. 21_ Porta Capena, ii. _416_, 516 Porter, Jane, _Thaddeus of Warsaw_, _iv. 166_ _Portfolio, The_, iii. 321; iv. 6 _Portfolio_ (Philadelphia), v. 5 Portinari, Beatrice, iv. 247, 248, 251 Portinari, Folco, _iv. 248_ Portland, William Henry Cavendish, 3rd Duke of, i. 377, _471_; _iv. 513_ Porto Bello taken by Admiral Vernon, _vi. 12_ Portogallo, _Semiramide_, _i. 347_ Portsmouth, Lady (Mary Anne Hanson), _vi. 569_ Portsmouth, Lord, _vi. 569_ Portuguese, Byron's estimate of the, i. 469; ii. 33, 45, 87 Potemkin, Prince Gregor Alexandrovitch, ii. 200; vi. _313_, 314, _316, 317, 370_, 412 Potiphar's wife (Zuleika), _iii. 187_; vi. 254 Pouqueville, Dr., _Travels_; _Voyage en Morée_, ii. 179, 180, 194, _195_ Poussin, Nicholas, _vi. 152_ Powell, A., i. 350, _432_ Powell, Mary, Milton's first wife, vi. 146 Power, publisher, _iii. 423_ Powerscourt, Richard, 4th Viscount, _i. 96_ Pozzi, the Venice state dungeons, _ii. 465_; iv. 363; _v. 148, 153_ Pozzo di Borgo, Count, v. 539 Pradt, M. Dufour de, _Narrative of an Embassy to Warsaw_, _v. 551, 552_ Praed, _The Belle of the Ball-Room_, _i. 347_; _vii. 12_ Prague, Treaty of, v. _340_, 423; battle of, _v. 371_ Pratt, Lord Chief Justice, _iv. 510_ Pratt, Samuel Jackson (Courtney Melmoth), _Gleanings_, i. 322, _323, 442_; _Blacket's Remains_, _i. 359, 443_ Praxiteles, _ii. 236_ _Prayer of Nature, The_, i. 224 Predestination, Byron's belief in, iv. 58 Pregadi, Venetian Senate, iv. 441 Presle, Mdlle., i. _347_, 348 _Pretty Miss Jaqueline_, _i. 361_ Prevesa, ii. _125_, 148, 185 Prevost, Sir George ("General Fireface"), Governor-General of British North America, vi. 508 Priam, v. 488 Priestley, Joseph, _ii. 283_ Prince's Theatre, Manchester, _Manfred_ at, iv. 78 Princess's Theatre Royal, _Manfred_ at, iv. 78; _Sardanapalus_ at, v. 2 _Printer's Devil, The_, _i. 495_ Prior, Matthew, _i. 198_; iv. 158; vi. xviii, 210; _Solomon_, _ii. 76_; _Paulo Purganti_; _Hans Carvel_, _vi. 62_ _Prisoner of Chillon_, ii. 212, 214; iii. xix, 499; iv. 3-28, _63_, 79, _92, 182, 194_; _v. 152, 423, 494_; _vi. 129, 475_ Priuli, Andrea, v. 115 Priuli, Maria, v. 115 Probus, Emperor, _i. 375_ Procne, iv. 287 Procter, Bryan W. (Barry Cornwall), "Euphues," v. 114; _A Sicilian Story_, _vi. 445_ Prometheus, ii. 448; iii. 312; v. 554; vi. 49 _Prometheus_, iv. 48, _118, 269_ Propertius, _Eleg._, _vi. 445_ _Prophecy of Dante_, _ii. 441_; _iv. 7, 26, 49, 144, 237-276, 313, 329_; v. 471; vii. xvi, _146, 212_ Protasoff, Miss, the "Protassova," vi. 399 Protesilaus, vi. 204 Protestant League, _v. 371_ Prussian troops at Leipsic, vii. 23 Pruth, river, _v. 551_; Treaty of, _v. 564_ Psalidas, Athanasius, _True Felicity_, ii. 198, 202 _Psalms_, i. 208; _ii. 398, 458_; _iii. 193_; vi. 166, 401 Pseudo-Callisthenes, _v. 543_ Psyche, vi. 165, 387 Ptolemæus Cocces, _v. 542_ Ptolemæus Soter, _v. 542_ Ptolemy, _i. 402_; _iv. 523_; _v. 487_ Ptolemy Philadelphus, _iv. 243_ _Public Characters of 1799-1800_, _vi. 175_ Publius Syrus, _i. 414_ Pückler, Herman Fürst von, iv. 81 Puffend, _Hist. Gen._, _iv. 211_ Pugilistic Club, _i. 434_ Pulci, G., ed. of _Morgante Maggiore_, _iv. 309_ Pulci, Luigi, _Morgante Maggiore_, iv. 156, 279-309, 325, 484; vi. xvi, _156_, 184, 505 Pulk, Polish for "regiment," v. 564 Pulteney, Sir James, Bart., i. 347 Pultency Hotel, Piccadilly, _vii. 39_ "Pultowa's Day," iv. 202, 207 Purgstall, J. von Hammer-, _Hist. de l'Empire Othoman_, iii. _166, 312_, 441, _454, 455_ Purple, Tyrian, vi. 574 Purvis, Admiral, ii. 93 Pushkin, _Poltava_, iv. 203 Puttenham, _Art of Poesie_, iv. 239 Pye, Henry James, poet-laureate, i. 305, _314, 329, 404, 435_; iv. 519 Pygmalion, vi. 281, 390 Pylades, i. 175 Pym, _iv. 519_ Pyramus, vi. 235 Pyrenees, the, ii. 45 Pyrrhic war-dance, Pyrrhica, vi. 151, 171 Pyrrho, master of the Pyrrhonists or Sceptics, vi. 379 Pyrrhus (or Neoptolemus), ii. 174; v. 577 Pythagoras, i. 59; vi. 610 Pythian Oracle, the, i. 56 Pythias, _i. 175_ Q Quarantia Criminale (Council of Forty), iv. 333, 345 _Quarterly Review_, _i. 304, 321_; ii. xiii, xv, _5, 139, 187_, 212, 213, _266_, 299, 315, _325, 356_; iii. 77, 151, 219, _225_, 321; iv. _6, 37, 42, 46, 57_, 156, _166, 244_, 281, 313, 327, 329, _514, 575_; v. 5, _111_, 119, 204, _205, 544, 552_, 582, _613_; vi. xx, 76, _79_, 360, _445, 456, 508_; vii. 49, 57, 76 Quebec, siege of, _vi. 12_ Queensberry, William Douglas, 3rd Earl of March, and 4th Duke of ("Old Q."), i. 500 _Quem Deus vult perdere prius dementat_, vii. 45 Quercetanus, Andreas, notes to _Historia Calamitatum Abælardi_, _v. 634_ _Queries to Casuists_, i. 262 Querini, Alvisi (Ormildo Emeressio), _L'Ammiraglio dell' Indie_, _iv. 456, 457_ _Question and Answer_, iv. 538 Quevedo of Villegas, Francisco Gomez de, _Sueños_, iv. 484; _Dream of Skulls_, _iv. 496_ Quiberon Bay, French fleet defeated by Hawke in, _vi. 12_ Quinctilian, _iv. 270_; _vi. 16_ Quincy, De, _Confessions of an English Opium-Eater_, _vi. 188_ Quirini, Angelo, _ii. 389_ Quito, capital of Ecuador, ii. 81 _Quotidienne, La_, _v. 566, 573, 577_ R Rabbe, _Biographie des Contemporains_, _ii. 168_ Rabelais, _Life of Gargantua, etc._, _v. 354_ Rack, or arrack, punch, vi. 197 Radcliffe, Mrs. Ann, _Mysteries of Udolpho_, ii. _327_, 342; _iii. 89, 351_; _iv. 364, 413_ Rae, W. Fraser, _Life of Sheridan_, _iv. 74_; _Wilkes, Sheridan, Fox_, _iv. 511_; articles in _Athenæum_ on _Junius' Letters_, _iv. 513_ Rag Fair or Rosemary Lane (now Royal Mint Street), _iv. 161_ Raikes, Thomas, _Personal Reminiscences_, i. 476; _v. 563_; _A Portion of the Journal, etc._, _vi. 507_ Rainbow described, vi. 108 Rajna, Pio, iv. 280; _Ricerche sui Reali di Francia_, _iv. 309_ Ralph the rhymester, i. 326 Ralston, W.R.S., _Russian Folk-Tales_, _iii. 123_ Ramassieh (Alexandria), battle of, _ii. 108_ Ramazân, or Turkish Lent, ii. _134_, 137; iii. 96 Rambaud, M., _History of Russia_, _v. 563_ Ramsay, the artist, _vi. 496_ Ramsay, Chevalier, _vi. 303_ Ramsden, Rev.----, _i. 431_ Rangoni, Aldobrandino, _iii. 506_ Ranke, Leopold, _The Popes of Rome_, _v. 520_ Ransom and Morland, vi. 546 "Ranz des Vaches," v. 159 Raphael, Archangel, v. 281 Raphael, _ii. 437_; iv. 174; his "Transfiguration," vi. 548 Rapp, George, the harmonist, vi. 554 _Rapresentatione di Abel et di Caino, La_, _v. 264_ Raschid, iii. 441 Rasponi, Countess Clelia, iv. 547 _Rasselas_, _iii. 145_ Ravenna, _ii. 372_; iv. 237, 238, 243; v. 138; battle of, vi. 212 Ravenna, Cardinal of, _v. 516_ Ravenna, Guido Vecchio da Polenta, Lord of, _iv. 316_ Raven-stone (_rabenstein_), a German stone gibbet, _iv. 122_; v. 385 Ravignani, Benintendi de, Grand Chancellor, iv. 431 Rawlinson, Canon, _The Five Great Monarchies, etc._, _v. 24, 107_ Rayet, Olivier, _Monuments de l'Art Antique_, _ii. 396_ Read, General Meredith, _Historic Studies in Vaud, Berne, and Savoy_, ii. 299, _303_, 307 Read, T., _i. 301_ Reade, Sir Thomas, _v. 544_ Rebeck, fiddle, ii. 53 Red Sea, the, vi. 122 Reeve, Henry, _Petrarch_, _ii. 351, 372_; _Greville Memoirs_, _vi. 451_ Reeves, John, _The Rothschilds_, _v. 574_ Reformadoes, vi. 404 Regent, Prince. _See_ George IV. Regnier, General of Saxons at Leipsic, _v. 553_ Rehnskjöld, Swedish General, _iv. 207_ Reichenbach, Falls of, _ii. 383_ Reichstadt, Napoleon François Charles Joseph, Duke of, v. _545_, 576; _vi. 590_ Reid, _vii. 32_ Reinagle, R.R., _ii. 226_; _iv. 425_ _Rejected Addresses_, i. _462_, 481, _485_; _iii. 55_ Rembrandt, vi. 502 _Remember him, whom Passion's power_, iii. 67 _Remember thee! Remember thee!_ iii. xx, 59 _Remembrance_, i. 211 _Remind me not, remind me not_, i. 268 Renault, _iv. 454_ Rendlesham, Lord, _i. 471_ Renegado, renegade, ii. 488 Rennes, siege of, _v. 549_ _Reply to some Verses of J.M.B. Pigot, Esq., on the Cruelty of his Mistress_, i. xi, 53 _Repository of Arts, Literature, Commerce, Manufactures, Fashions, and Politics_, iv. 178 Retz, Cardinal de, _Mémoires du_, _iv. 338_; _vi. 93, 94_ Retzsch, illustrations to Goethe's _Faust_, _v. 493_ _Revanche, La_, vii. 15 _Revelation_, _ii. 271_; iii. 432; iv. 102; _v. 499_ Revilliod, Gustave, ed. of _Advis, etc._, iv. 5 _Revue Arch._, _ii. 424_ _Revue des Deux Mondes_, iv. 5 _Revue de Paris, La_, _vi. 507_ _Revue Encyclopédique_, vi. xx _Revue Historique_, _iv. 514_ Reynolds, Frederick, _i. 306, 353_; _The Caravan; or, The Driver and his Dog_, i. 342; _Life and Times_, _i. 416_ Reynolds, Sir Joshua, _i. 389_; _Discourses_, _iv. 271_ Rheinfeld, battle of, _v. 372_ Rhianus, the Alexandrian poet, _iv. 566_ Rhigas, or Rigas, Constantine, ii. 199; _iii. 29, 194_ Rhine, the, i. 249, 353; vi. 418; Confederation of, i. 486 Rhodes, iv. 400; vi. 111 Rhoeteum, _ii. 99_ Rhone, the, ii. 261, 300; _iv. 18, 26, 120_ Rialto (Rivo alto), Venice, ii. 331; iv. 165 Ribas, Admiral Josef de, vi. _313, 319, 359_, 366 Ribaupierre, General, vi. 352 Ricardo, David, _vi. 480_ Ricci's monument to Dante, _ii. 375_ Rich, Claudius James, _Memoir on the Ruins of Babylon_, _vi. 236_ _Richard II._, _iii. 517_; vi. 210 _Richard III._, _iv. 391_; vi. _392_, 570 Richards, Rev. George, _The Aboriginal Britons_, _i. 306, 376_ Richardson, _iii. 109_ Richelieu, Armand Emanuel du Plessis, Duc de, _Journal de mon Voyage en Allemagne_, vi. 264, _317_, 333, _340, 347, 358, 359_ Richelieu, Louis François, Duc de, Marshal of France, _vi. 333_ Richmond, Duchess of, _ii. 228_ Richmond, Duke of, _ii. 229, 230_ Richmond Hill, ii. 66 Ricimer, a Sueve, _ii. 390_ Ridge, S. and J., i. xi, xii, xiv, _234_ Ridgeway, bookseller, iv. 482 Ridotto, iv. 178, 180 Rienzi, or Rienzo (commonly called Cola di' Rienzi), Nicolas Gabrino di', ii. 414 Riese, _Varro. Satur. Menipp. Rel._, ii. 92 Rigadoon, the, i. 491 Rimini, Francesca da (_née_ da Polenta), iv. 316 Rimini, Malatesta da Verrucchio, Lord of, _iv. 316_ Rinaldo and Armida, vi. 34 Riots, O.P., at Covent Garden, _i. 347_ Rivington, F. and C., i. xii; their _Annual Register_, _q.v._ Rivoli, battle of, _vi. 14_ Rizzo, Antonio, iv. 336 Roberts, William, _iv. 578_ Roberts, W. Rhys, _Longinus on the Sublime_, _vi. 26_ Robertson, James, _i. 192_ Robertson, J.L., _Burns' Selected Poems_, _iii. 449_ Robertson, Mary, i. 192 Robertson, Dr. William, _Charles V._, _iii. 309_; v. 471, _560_ Robespierre, iv. 476; _vi. 13, 14_ Robinson, H. Crabb, _Diary_, i. _337_, 475; ii. x, _74_; iv. 475. 478, 479, _492, 512, 538, 556_; v. 199, 281, 470, _614_; _vi. 444_ Robinson, editor of _Morning Post_, _i. 358_ Robinson, Mrs., "Perdita" (_née_ Darby), _The Mistletoe_, _i. 358_ Rocca, Giovane, ii. 523; vii. 50 Rochefoucauld, _Maximes_, ii. 307, _419_ _Réflexions_, iv. 552; vi. _144, 246_, 303 Rochester, John Wilmot, Earl of, _Poems_, i. 218 Rodd, Thomas, _Ancient Ballads from the Civil Wars of Granada_, _iv. 529, 530_ Roderick the Goth, ii. 89 Rogers, Samuel, Byron's withdrawal of _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_, i. 294; "a true poet," _i. 306_; _Recollections of the Table Talk of_, i. _329_, 429; _iv. 539_; _vi. 17_; Byron and Lord Carlisle, _i. 355_; _Pleasures of Memory_, i. 361; iii. 50, 207; _Italy_, ii. _329, 343, 353, 372, 376-378, 407_; _iv. 539_; _v. 130_; Byron's opinion of, iii. 50; _Voyage of Columbus_, iii. 76; _Giaour_ dedicated to, iii. 81; _Jacqueline_, iii. 319, 320, _323_; Byron's letters to, _iii. 545_; iv. 80; _vi. 83, 173_; and Byron's _Dream_, iv. 31; first meeting of Byron and Sheridan at his house, iv. 69; Sheridan's appeal to, _iv. 73_; _Brides of Venice_, _iv. 166_; referred to in _Beppo_, iv. 183; translation of Zappi's _Sonetto_, _iv. 271_; Byron's verses on (_Question and Answer_), iv. 538; _Human Life_, _iv. 539, 574_; at Sir George Beaumont's, iv. 570; in _Don Juan_, vi. 6; "I wished to learn the Art of forgetting," _vi. 17_; "Thou shalt not steal from," vi. 75; "have deserted," vii. 17; Lord Thurlow's _An Epistle to a Friend_, vii. 18-20 Roland, v. 553 Rolland (d'Erceville), M. le Président, _Recherches sur les Prérogatives des Dames chez les Gaulois sur les Cours d'Amours_, ii. 6; _Foscari_, _v. 130_ _Rolliad_, i. 294, _319, 395, 500_ Romaika, kerchief-waving dance, i. 492; vi. 151 _Romance Muy Doloroso_, iv. 529 Romanceros, the, ii. 47 Romanelli, Dr., ii. 175; vii. 11 Romanin, S., _Documentata Storia di Venezia_, v. 116, 117, 119, _121, 144, 171, 172, 178, 179, 195_ Rome, i. 376; ii. 312, 388; v. 158; vi. 348; siege and sack of, v. 471 Romeï, Laodamia, _iii. 507_ _Romeo and Juliet_, _vi. 540_ Romilly, Sir Samuel, ii. 213; v. 181; vi. 17, 451 Romney, _i. 321_ Romuald of Salermo, ii. 473-476 Ronalds, Sir Francis, _iv. 505_ Ronco river, _vi. 212_ Ronda, mount, _ii. 54_ Roque, M., ii. 190 Ros, Georgiana, Lady de (Lennox), _Personal Recollections of the Great Duke of Wellington_, _ii. 229_ Rosa, _ii. 425_ Rosbach, battle of, iv. 334 _Rosciad_, i. 294 Roscoe, _Life and Pontificate of Leo Tenth_, _iii. 369_ Roscommon, Wentworth Dillon, 4th Earl of, i. 354 Rose and nightingale, iii. 86; v. 428, 612 Rose, George, Treasurer of the Navy, vii. 30; _Diaries, etc._, _vii. 31_ Rose, Sir William Stewart ("Parthenopex Puff" of _Vivian Grey_), _Court and Parliament of Beasts, etc._, iv. 156; _vi. 506_; vii. 55 Rosebery, Earl of, _iv. 163_; _Napoleon, The Last Phase_, _v. 547_; _Pitt_, _vi. 377_ Rosetta Stone, _ii. 108_ Ross, Sir John, _A Voyage of Discovery ... for the purpose of exploring Baffin's Bay_, _vi. 51_ Rossberg, or Rufiberg. fall of the, iv. 97 Rosse, Sir Laurence Parsons, 2nd Earl of, _Defence of the Antient History of Ireland_, _vi. 337_ Rossetti, D.G., _Dante and his Circle_, _iv. 248_; _Dante at Verona_, _v. 562_ Rossi, Professor V., _iv. 309_ Rossini, _v. 562_; _vi. 586_; _Armida and Rinaldo_, _vi. 34_; _L'Italiana in Algieri_, _vi. 205_ Rostopchin, General, _i. 488_ Rothen, _iv. 97_ Rothschild, Baron Anselm (of Frankfort), _v. 573_ Rothschild, Baron Charles (of Naples), _v. 573_ Rothschild, Baron James (of Paris), _v. 573_; reprints _Le Mistère du Viel Testament_, _v. 207_ Rothschild, Baron Nathan Mayer (of London), _v. 573_; vi. 456 Rothschild, Baron Salomon (of Vienna), v. 573 Rousseau, J.J., i. 15; ii. _260_, 264-267; _v. 548_; vi. 303; _Confessions_, ii. _280_, 300, 302; iv. 53; _Julie, ou La Nouvelle Héloïse_, ii. _277, 278_, 303; _iv. 18_; vi. 536 on the Ranz des Vaches, _v. 159_ Roux-Fazillac, M., _iv. 514_ Rovere, Francis Maria II., Duke of, ii. 498 Rowfant Library, _iv. 508_ Rowland, Junior, Alexander, _An Historical, Philosophical, and Practical Essay on the Human Hair_, _vi. 19_ Rowlandson's caricatures, _iv. 509_ Roxburgh Club, v. 200; reprints the _Chester Plays, or Mysteries_, _v. 207_; _vi. 551_ Royal Alexandra Theatre, Liverpool, _Manfred_ at, iv. 78; _Sardanapalus_ at, v. 2 Royal Amphitheatre, Westminster Bridge, iv. 203; _vii. 59_ Royal Caledonian Asylum, _iii. 415_ Royal Institution, _vi. 16_ Royalty Theatre, Goodman's Fields, _Don Juan; or, The Libertine Destroyed_ at, _vi. 11_ Royston, Philip Yorke, Viscount, translation of Lycophron's _Cassandra_, _iv. 243_ Ruffin, Marshal, _i. 469_; _vi. 261_ Rufinus, the præfect, ii. 518 Rulhière, Claude Carloman de, _vi. 395_; _Anecdotes sur la révolution de Russie en l'année 1762_; _Histoire de l'anarchic de Pologne, etc._, vii. 62 Rundell, Mrs., _Domestic Cookery_, vii. 57 Runic, Byron's use of the word, iv. 241 Rushton, Robert, ii. 26, _52_; vii. 6 Ruskin, John, _Stones of Venice_, _ii. 327_; _Modern Painters_, _iv. 18, 26_ Russell, Lord John, _ii. 352_; iv. 314; _Moore Memoirs_, iv. 587; v. 5, 280 Russia, her intrigues in Greece, v. 557 Russians _v._ Swedes, _iv. 207, 233_; "rushing from hot baths to snows," vi. 475; at Leipsic battle, vii. 23 Rustica (the Ustica of Horace), valley of, ii. 523 Rusticucci, Jacopo, _iv. 254_ Rycquius, Just., _De Capit. Roman. Comm_., ii. 511, 512 Ryder, Mrs., as "Ida" in _Werner_, v. 324 Ryder, Richard, Home Secretary, vii. 13 S Sabellicus, Marcus Antonius Coccius, _De Venetæ Urbis Situ Narratio_, _ii. 328_; _v. 179_ Sabina, Empress, _i. 493_ Sabio, Alonso el, _ii. 77_ Sackville, Lord George, _iv. 513_ Sacy, Silvestre de, _Notice du Libre d' Enoch_, _v. 302_ Sadducees, the, ii. 104 Sade, Abbé de, _Mémoires pour la Vie de François Pétrarque_, ii. _350_, 479, _480_, 481 Sade, Hugo de, ii. _350_, 480 Sade, Laura de (_née_ de Noves), Petrarch's Laura, ii. 350, 479 Sa'di, _The Gulistan, or Rose Garden_, _i. 353_; iii. 160 Sadler's Wells Theatre, _Werner_ at, v. 324; _Don Juan; or, The Libertine Destroyed_ at, _vi. 11_ Safety-lamp, Sir H. Davy's, vi. 51 Saick, a Levantine barque, iii. 252 St. Albans, Duke of, _iv. 541_ St. Aldegonde, i. 476 St. Angelo, castle of, ii. 439 St. Anthony, vi. 32 St. Augustine, _ii. 480_; _v. 209_, vi. 573; _De Civitate Dei_, _v. 235_; _Confessions_, vi. 28; _Epist._, _vi. 168_; Black Canons of, _vi. 495_ St. Bartholomew, iv. 494; vi. 230 St. Bernard, Convent of, ii. 306 St. Christopher, of Paris, _vi. 93_ St. Domingo Island, ii. 90; _iii. 296_ Saint-Evremond, _vi. 246_ St. Francis of Assisi, vi. _32, 33_, 273 St. Gingolph, ii. 304; _iv. 18_ St. Helena, v. 544 St. Honorius, ii. 35, 86 St. James of Compostella, _ii. 206_ St. Jean, Mount, ii. 293, 325 St. Jerome, vi. 28 St. John, i. 326 St. John, Knights of, _iv. 400_ St. Jules, Caroline Rosalie Adelaide (Hon. Mrs. George Lamb), _i. 301_; vii. 15 St. Lambert, ii. 300 St. Lorenzo, Church of, Florence, ii. _375_, 503 St. Mark's, Venice, horses, ii. 336; lions, ii. 471; bells, iv. 363; Doges buried at, _iv. 366_ St. Maurice, iv. 120 S. Nicola in Carcere, Church of, Rome, ii. 437 St. Pantaleon, of Nicomedia, _ii. 339_ St. Peter's, Rome, ii. _376_, 440, _et seq._; iv. 270 St. Petersburg, "that pleasant capital of painted snows," vi. 386 St. Preux, ii. _260_, 305 St. Sophia's, Constantinople, ii. 152, 176, 442 St. Thomas Aquinas, vi. 572 St. Ursula, _vi. 419_ St. Victor, Monastery of, iv. 4 St. Vincent, Lord, vi. 14 Sainte Croix, Guilhem de Clermont Lodève, Baron de, _Examen Critique, etc._, _vi. 226_ Sainte-Palaye, De la Curne de, _Mémoires sur l'Ancienne Chevalerie_, ii. 6 Salakhora, _ii. 145, 148_ Salam aleikoum! aleikoum salam! Moslem salutation, iii. 104 Salamanca, battle of, i. 496 Salamis, battle of, i. 458; iii. 91, 270, _273_; vi. 169 Salanfe, or Pisse-Vache, _ii. 383_ Sale, _Preliminary Discourse to the Koran_, _iii. 110, 121, 197_ translation of the _Koran_, vii. 9 Sale, Alberto dal, _iii. 506_ Salemenes, a character in _Sardanapalus_, v. 12 Salisbury, Countess of, ii. 7 Sallust, _Catilina_, _vi. 299_ _Salsette_ frigate, _ii. 13, 205_ Salt-mines, Poland, iv. 212 Saluces, Marquis de, v. 471 Salvator Rosa, vi. 502 Salviati, Lionardo, ii. _357_, 485 Salvo, Marquis de, _Travels in the Year 1806, etc._, _iii. 4_ Samoïlovitch, president of the Eastern Ukraine, iv. 201 Samos, vi. 171 San Caetano, Ignatio de, _ii. 43_ San Liberatore alla Majella, Benedictine Monastery of, iv. 288 San Martin, General José de, _v. 556_ San Zanipolo, Church of, iv. 336 Sanadon, Père, _v. 567_ Sancho Panza, i. 490 Sandall, Prior William, vi. 496 Sandasarm[-u], of Cilicia, v. 4 Sandford, Francis, _History of the Coronation of James the Second_, _iv. 504_ Sandford, Mrs., _Thomas Poole and his Friends_, _i. 437_ Sandi, Vettor, _Principi di Storia civile della Repubb. di Venezia_, iv. 326, 332 Sandwich, Lord, _vi. 267_ Sandys, translation of _Ovid_, _iii. 199_ Sanguinetto river, ii. 379, 507 Sansovino, F., _Venetia cittá nobilissima_, _iv. 166, 390_ Sant' Anna, Hospital of, Ferrari, _ii. 355_; iv. 139, 141, _143, 144, 147_ Santa Croce, Church of, ii. 369, 374, 375, 490 Santa Maura (Leucadia), ii. 126, 178 Santi Giovanno e Paolo (or San Zanipolo), Church of, Venice, iv. 336 Sanudo, or Sanuto, Marin, _Vitæ Ducum Venetorum_, _ii. 475_; iv. 326, 331, _347, 349, 352, 357, 363, 384, 431, 435, 450, 452, 461, 462_; v. 115, _134_ Sapienza, island of, iv. 356, 365 Sappho, ii. 125, 178; vi. 26, 139, _180_ Saracus, last king of Assyria, v. _107_ Saragoza, Augustina, Maid of, ii. 58, 91 Saragoza, siege of, ii. 58, 91, 94 Saratoga, battle of, _vi. 12_ _Sardanapalus_, _iii. 493_; v. 3-112, 115, 199, 203, 204, _243_, 279, 469; vi. 140, _461, 538_; _vii. 77_ Sardi, _iii. 505_ Saronic Gulf, _ii. 362_ Sassi, the brothers, _ii. 389_ Satan, v. 201 Satanic School of Poetry, iv. 477, 481, 483; _v. 196_ Satibarzanes, the eunuch, _v. 72_ _Satirist, The_, i. _373, 374_, 383; _vi. 69_ Saul, iii. 392 Saussure, Horace Bénédict de, _Essai sur Hygrométrie_, inventor of the cyanometer, _vi. 216_ Savage, Richard, _The Wanderer_, _iii. 261_ Savary, Marshal, _iii. 428_ Savelli family, the, _ii. 403_ Savini, Guido, _ii. 487_ Savioli, Conte Ludovico, _iv. 250_ Savoie, Louis de (wife of Louis XVIII.), _v. 498, 566_ Savoy, Charles III., Duke of, _iii. 299_; iv. 4, 10 Savoy-Carignan, François Eugene, Prince of, _iv. 262_ Sawbridge, _vi. 100_ Saya, or basquiña, the outer petticoat, vi. 116 Sayer, Elizabeth Price, translation of Dante's _Il Convito_, _iv. 253, 256_ Sayer, James, _Elijah's Mantle_, i. 294, _356_ Saxe, Count, _i. 107_ Saxe-Cobourg, Leopold of, _ii. 450_ Saxe-Weimar, Bernhard, Duke of, v. 371 Saxons, the, v. _371_, 553 Saxony, John George, Elector of, _v. 373_ Sbergo, or usbergo, _iv. 308_ Sbirri, Venetian policemen, iv. 383 Scalanova, Port, Asia Minor, iii. 252 Scaliger, J.J., v. 281, _302_ Scaligers, tombs of the, v. _561_, 562 Scamander river, ii. 182 Scanderberg, or Scander Bey (George Castriota), ii. 124, 173 Scarron, _vi. 246_ Sceptics, or Pyrrhonists, _vi. 379_ Schaffhausen, _ii. 383_ Schaffner, Alfred, _Lord Byron's Cain und Seine Quellen_, v. 200 Schaumburg, _v. 371_ Scheible, _Das Kloster_, vi. xx Scheremetov, Count Boris Petrowitch, Russian General, vi. 307 Schiavoni, Giorgio, _iii. 368_ Schiller, iii. 503; _Armenian, or the Ghost-Seer_ (_Der Geisterseher_), _i. 131_; ii. 342; _Bride of Messina_, iii. 150; _Wilhelm Tell_, _ii. 385_; _Piccolomini_, _iv. 566_ Schipper, Dr. J., _Englische Metrik_, iv. 239 Schlegel, Friedrich, ii. 472; iv. 237, 238, _341, 342_; vii. 50 Schlegel, J.S.B., _Tagebuch, etc._, _vi. 605_ Schlick, M., _Corr. of_, iv. 470 Schoene, A., _v. 107_ Schroepfer, Johann Georg, _vi. 605_ Schultz, Hans, _Der Sacco di Roma_, _v. 520_ Schumann, R., Music to Byron's _Manfred_, iv. 78 Schuyler, Eugene, _Peter the Great_, iv. 203, 207, _233_ Scio island, iii. 252 Scipio Africanus, _i. 493_; ii. 371, _389, 459_, 496; (II.), _v. 512_ Scipio Barbatus, _ii. 389_ Scipio, Lucius, _ii. 389_ Scipio, Metellus, _iv. 264_ Scipios, tomb of the, ii. 389 Semelet, W., _iii. 160_ _Scorpion, The_, iii. 107 Scotland, vi. 405 _Scot's Magazine_, iv. 139; v. 329, 470, 540 Scott, John, iii. 532, 535; iv. 472 Scott, Sir Walter, _i. 303, 305, 306, 331_, 384; vi. 6; _The Wild Huntsman_, _i. 117, 317_; mentioned in _English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_, i. 309-312, 319, 337, 369; _Lay of the Last Minstrel_, i. 309, 310; _iii. 472_; vi. 406, 458, 560; contributes to Monk Lewis' _Tales of Wonder_, _i. 317, 318_; _The Fire King_; _Glenfinlas_; _The Eve of St. John_; _Frederick and Alice_, _i. 317_; _Marmion_, i. 310, 371; _ii. 360_; _iii. 474_; _iv. 13_; _v. 542_; vi. 426; _Fortunes of Nigel_, _i. 351_; in _Hints from Horace_, i. 395, 419; his amanuensis, W.H. Weber, _i. 396_; _Antiquary_, _i. 413_; _iv. 524_; _v. 377_; and Ballantyne, _i. 435_; _The Vision of Don Roderick_, _i. 436_; ii. _4, 51, 88_, 89; _Border Minstrelsy_, ii. 4, 295; _Young Lochinvar_, _ii. 70_; Nossa Señora da Peña, ii. 86; _Sir Tristrem_, ii. 203; reviews _Childe Harold_ in _Quarterly Review_, ii. 213, 315, _325_; iv. 6; _Lord of the Isles_, _ii. 244_; _The Dance of Death_, ii. 292; _Field of Waterloo_, ii. 292; iii. 434; _vi. 266_; the "Ariosto of the North," ii. 311, 359; _Tales of a Grandfather_, _ii. 337_; _vi. 12_; _Lady of the Lake_, _ii. 347_; Byron accused of copying, _iii. 128_; octosyllabic verse, iii. 224; _The Corsair_, _iii. 225_; Byron's present of a silver urn, _iii. 301_; Coleridge's _Christabel_, iii. 443, _472_; Byron and Wordsworth, iii. 533; reviews _Prisoner of Chillon_ in _Quarterly Review_, iv. 6; article in _Q.R._ on _The Dream_, _iv. 37_; on _Darkness_, _iv. 42_; on Coleridge's imagination, _ibid._; on _Churchill's Grave_, _iv. 46_; referred to in _Beppo_, iv. 183; _Tales of my Landlord_, iv. 284; _Life of Napoleon Buonaparte_, _iv. 456_; _v. 546_; _vi. 418_; _Guy Mannering_, _iv. 566_; meets Byron frequently in society, iv. 570; _Memoirs of the Life, etc._, iv. 570, _585, 587_; _The Search after Happiness_, _iv. 574_; Lydia White's death, _iv. 587_; on _Cain_ and its dedication, v. 204, 205, _206_; _Waverley_, v. 209; _vi. 272, 404_; on Byron and Alcibiades, v. _485_; on _Don Juan_, vi. xix; edition of Dryden's _Works_, _vi. 178_; Byron's letters to, _vi. 178, 186, 405, 479_; on Byron's features, _vi. 360_; _Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft_, _vi. 380, 491_; _The Abbot_, _vi. 440_; "reigned before me," vi. 444; "my _buon camerado_," vi. 459; his use of "gynocracy," _vi. 473_; _Journal_, _vii. 25_ Scott, William, _i. 436_ _Scourge, The_, _i. 374_ Sea-coal (Newcastle coal), vi. 503 Sea-sickness, remedies for, vi. 84 Seale, John Barlow, _An Analysis of the Greek Metres, etc._, i. 59 Searment, cerecloth, or searcloth, ii. 154 Seaton, R.C., _Sir Hudson Lowe and Napoleon_, _v. 544_ Sebastiani, General François Horace Bastien, ii. 89, 200 Sedition Bill, iv. 511 Segati, Marianna, _iv. 214_ Segovia, Cardinal of, _iii. 369_ Segur, Louis Philippe, Comte de, _vi. 314_ Selictar, sword-bearer, ii. 149 Selim II., Sultan, _vi. 259_ Selim III., _ii. 207_ Sellers, E., _ii. 432_ Sellis (Sélis), Duke of Cumberland's valet, _vii. 31_ Semiramis, v. 14, 15, 19-21, 23, 36, 50, 58, 79; vi. 235, 236 Senebier, Jean, _Histoire Littéraire de Genève_, iv. 3, 11 Seneca, v. 3, _543_; _De Irâ_, vi. 292 Senger, Richard, _Die beiden Foscari_, v. 119, _121, 135, 183_ Senhouse, Humphrey, iv. 475 Sennacherib, iii. 404; v. 4, _24_ Separation, the, iii. xx Septemberes, Septembriseurs, vi. 595 Septimius Severus, ii. _408_, 511, 520; _v. 542_ Seraphim, the, v. 228 Serassi, _La Vita di Tasso_, ii. 485, _498_ Serenissima Signoria (Venice), _iv. 345_ Servan, Joseph, _vi. 13_ Servetus, i. 417 Servius, _ii. 133_ Servius Sulpicius, ii. 362 Sesostris, v. _405_, 543 Sestos, iii. 13 Seven Towers, the, vi. 260 Severus, Sulpitius, _ii. 133_ Sévigné, Madame de, _i. 402_ Sévigné, M. de, _i. 402_; _vi. 246_ Seville (Hispalis of the Romans), ii. 52, 63, 93; vi. 15 Sextilius, Governor of Carthage, _iv. 251_ Sforza, Cardinal Ascanio, _iii. 367_ Sforza, Ludovico, _iv. 13_ Sgricci, Signor, ii. 492 Shadwell, Lancelot, Vice-Chancellor, v. 203 Shadwell, _Libertine_, vi. xvi, _4, 11_ Shaftesbury, Earl of, _vi. 482_ Shakespeare, i. 29, 37, _38, 193_, 289, 345, 399; ii. xiii, _217_; iii. 51, 52; iv. 325, _326_; v. 3, _28, 339_; vi. 174; compared with Byron, _v. 205_; his use of "shook," _v. 135_; of "skirred," _v. 163_ Sharp, Richard, "Conversation," iv. 570; "Kit-Cat," vi. 511 Shaving, "a daily plague," vi. 522 Shee, Sir Martin Archer, i. 365 Shelley, P.B., _ii. 115_; translation of _Plato's Epitaph_, _i. 19_; letter from Byron, i. 293; witnesses Lewis' will, _i. 318_; _Peter Bell the Third_, _i. 416_; _Queen Mab_, _ii. 13_; _v. 75, 234, 237, 257, 258, 268_; Byron's Albanian song, _ii. 145_; Third Canto of _Childe Harold_, ii. 211, 315; Wordsworth as preached by, ii. _219_, 311; _Feelings of a Republican on the Fall of Bonaparte_, _ii. 227_; "the only important calumny," _ii. 248_; _iv. 63_; his companionship, _ii. 258_; iv. 82; _Adonais_, _ii. 260, 271_; _iii. 137_; _vi. 401, 446_; _Letters from Abroad, etc._, ii. _305, 306_, 307; his "delicate spirit," ii. 315; _Prometheus Unbound_, _ii. 325, 417_; v. 281; _Lines written among the Euganean Hills_, _ii. 338, 343_; _Julian and Maddalo_, _ii. 349_; "a very decent dungeon," _ii. 355_; _Hellas_; _Ode to Liberty_, ii. 402; _Poetical Works_, _ii. 407_; the Castle of Chillon, iv. 3, _18_; _Revolt of Islam_, _iv. 38_; _v. 603_; translation of Calderon's _El Mágico Prodigioso_, iv. 81; _To a Skylark_, _iv. 96_; on _Manfred_ and incest, iv. 100; _Prince Athanase_; _The Woodman and the Nightingale_; _Ode to the West Wind_, iv. 239; _Cenci_, _iv. 367_; the entry in the travellers' album at Montanvert, iv. 475; on _Cain_, v. 204; Greek choruses, v. 281; _Prose Works_, v. 331; his death, v. 469; on _The Deformed Transformed, ibid.; May-Day Night_, v. 470; on _Don Juan_, vi. xix; his mystical affinities and divagations, _vi. 188_; on Croker's review of Keats, _vi. 446_; in Pisa with Byron, _vii. 78_ Shelley, Mrs. P.B., _ii. 143, 305_; iv. 320, 570; her transcript of:--_Werner_, v. 331; _The Deformed Transformed_, _v. 474_; _Age of Bronze_, v. 537; _Don Juan_, _vi. 268, 269, 272, 274, 310, 373_ Shenstone, William, _Poetical Works_, _iii. 41_, 59 Sheppard, v. 199 Sheridan, Charles, _iv. 74_ Sheridan, Mrs. Frances (_née_ Chamberlaine), _Nourjahad, etc._, _vii. 33_ Sheridan, R.B., i. _306, 317, 343_, 500; _iii. 45, 51, 545_; iv. 561; vi. 450; _The Critic_, i. _343_, 383; _iv. 73, 75_; v. 113; vi. 537; _Pizarro_, i. 344, _489_; _iv. 73_; _The Rivals_, _i. 431, 494_; _ii. 334_; iv. _72_, 514; _vi. 258_; his doggerel on Brunck, _i. 490_; _Lines on Waltzing_, _i. 499_; "ere Brinsley ceased to write," iii. 53; _Monody, etc_., iv. 69-75; Byron's first meeting with, iv. 69; _The Scheming Lieutenant; The Duenna_, _iv. 72_; his Begum and Warren Hastings speeches, iv. 72, 75; _A Trip to Scarborough_, _iv. 73_; _A School for Scandal_, _iv. 73, 75, 338_; _Monologue on Garrick_, _iv. 75_; contrasted with Brougham, iv. 195; his pasquinade on Wilkes, _iv. 511_ Sheridan, Thomas, _iv. 74_; _Bonduca_, _i. 343_ _Sherwood, Southey_ v., v. 204 Sherwood Forest, _vi. 495_ Sherwood, Neely, and Jones, i. 478; _iii. 256_; iv. 482 "Ship of the desert," camel or dromedary, v. 606 Shipwreck, description of a, vi. 88-101 Shiraz, iii. 182 Shirley, Sir Anthony, _iii. 105_ Shooter's Hill, vi. 424, 429 Shtcherbatof, Princess, _vi. 389_ Shyness, Byron's, i. 207 Siddons, Mrs. (Sarah Kemble), i. 46, 344, _345_; iii. _51_, 52; _iv. 338_ _Sidney_, wreck of the, _vi. 95_ Sidney, A., _Discourses concerning Government_, _ii. 504_ _Siege of Corinth_, ii. _113_, 288; iii. 449-496, _508_; _iv. 227, 230, 423_; v. _163_, 326, _503, 626_; _vi. 111, 332, 382_ Siegendorf, Count (F. Kruitzner), v. 327 Siena, Bindo Borrichi da, _iv. 248_ Sierke, Dr. Eugen, _Schwärmer und Schwindler_, _vi. 605_ Sierra Morena, ii. _54_, 55, 91 Sigeum, _ii. 99_; Cape, vi. 204 Sigismund, king of Burgundy, _iv. 120_ Signori di notte, Venetian police, iv. _383_, 427, 467 Silius Italicus, _Pun._, _ii. 379_ Silver and Co., De, printers, i. 452, 453 Simar, or cymar, a shroud, iii. 143 Sime, J., _Sir Francis Renalds, F.R.S., and his Works in connection with Electric Telegraphy_, _iv. 505_ Simeon, Rev. Charles, i. 417, _431_ Simon Magus, ii. 513 Simoon, the, iii. 99; vi. 198 _Simpliciad, The_, i. 294, _316_ Simplon, the, vi. 394 Sinsariskim (Assyria), v. 4 Siria, the bitch-star, vi. 505 Sirocco, the, ii. 48; iii. 9 Sisi, Porta, _vi. 212_ Sismondi, J.C.L, Simonde de, _Histoire des Républiques Italiennes du Moyen Age_, _iii. 235_; iv. 332; v. 115, _138, 196_; _vi. 199, 461_ Sisyphus, i. 329; vi. 538 Sitwell, Lady, iii. 381 Sixtus V., Pope, _ii. 384, 411_; _iv. 271_ Skeat, Rev. W., _Complete Works of Chaucer_, iv. 239 Skeffington, Sir Lumley St. George, _The Maid of Honour_; _The Mysterious Bride_; _The Sleeping Beauty_, i. _306_, 345, 346 _Sketch, A_, iii. xix, 499, 540; _iv. 64_; _vi. 22_ Slave-market, Constantinople, vi. 216 Slavery, abolition of, _vi. 549_ Sleep, iv. 33; vi. 123 Sligo, Lord, iii. 75, 441 Slowacki, J., iv. 203 _Smalkeld articles_, _v. 520_ Small-pox and vaccination, vi. 50 Srmaragdus, the Exarch, _ii. 410_ Smedley, _Sketches from Venetian History_, _ii. 329_; _iii. 455_; _iv. 363_; v. 115 Smiles, Dr. Samuel, _Memoir of John Murray_, _i. 310_; ii. _327_, 359; iii. _98_, 217, _313_, 320, 443, _488_, 499, _519_; iv. 3, 139; v. 203; _vii. 47, 57_ Smith, Alexander, able seaman on the _Bounty_ (John Adams of Pitcairn Island), v. 583, _588, 605, 623_ Smith, Miss Araminta, vi. 443 Smith, Horace and James, _Horace in London_, _i. 462, 465_; _Rejected Addresses_, i. 481; _iii. 55_ Smith, John Spencer, Minister to Turkey, _iii. 4_ Smith, Mrs. Spencer ("Florence"), ii. xvii, _75, 110, 118_; iii. 4 Smith, Rev. Sydney, i. _302, 306_, 336; "twelve-parson power," vi. 410; _Peter Plymley's Letters_, vi. 596 Smith, William, M.P. for Norwich, _iii. 488_; iv. 482, _516_, 578; _vi. 175_ Smith, Sir William, _Classical Dictionary_, _ii. 156_; _Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities_, _ii. 424_; _Dictionary of the Bible_, _iv. 499_ Smith, Admiral Sir Sidney, _iii. 4_ Smollett, _History and Adventures of an Atom_, _ii. 40_; _Humphry Clinker_, ii. 203; _Roderick Random_, vi. 210 Smyth, Sir Harry, _vi. 153_ Smyth, Professor William, _English Lyrics_, _i. 372_ Smythe, _i. 306_ _So we'll go no more a-roving_, iv. _411_, 538 Soane, Sir John, Museum in Lincoln's Inn Fields, iv. 141 Sobieski, John, king of Poland, iii. 458 Social War, B.C. 88, _iv. 251_ _Société d'Histoire, etc., de Genève_, iv. 5 _Société Imperiale d'Histoire de Russie_, _vi. 317, 340_ Society Islands, the, v. 583 Socrates, i. 458; ii. 101, 103; iii. 271; _iv. 253_; v. 485; vi. 267, 303, 483, 548, 567, 568, 610 Sodom, apple of, ii. 294 Soignies, wood of, ii. 293 Soissons, Bishop of, _ii. 337_ Solano, Marquis of. Commander-in-Chief at Cadiz, ii. 77, 93 Solerti, Angelo, _Vita di Torquato Tasso_, ii. 355-357; iv. 144-146 _Soliloquy of a Bard in the Country_, i. 217 Solitude, ii. 116, 272, 457; vi. 234 Sollikoff, _vi. 370_ Solomon, vi. 303 Solon, iv. 438 Solyman, ii. 201; vi. 259 Somerset, Duchess of, _i. 343_; _vi. 417_ _Sonetto di Vittorelli_, iii. xix; iv. 535 _Song_, i. 262 _Song for the Luddites_, vii. 42 _Song of Saul before his Last Battle_, iii. 393 _Song of Solomon_, _v. 491_ _Song to the Suliotes_, vii. 83 _Sonnet on Chillon_, ii. 214; iv. 7 _Sonnet on the Nuptials of the Marquis Antonio Cavalli with the Countess Clelia Rasponi of Ravenna_, iv. 547 _Sonnet--To Genevra_, ii. _67_, 70, 71, _390_ _Sonnet to Lake Leman_, iv. 53 _Sonnet to the Prince Regent_ (on the repeal of Lord Edward Fitzgerald's forfeiture), iv. 548 Sophia, Princess, _vi. 18_ Sophia, Tzarina, iv. 202 Sophie of Russia, Princess, _vi. 425_ Sophocles, _iv. 264_; _Ajax_, _vi. 172_ Sophron, _Mimes_, i. 414 Soracte, ii. 386, 388 Soranzo, Marco, iv. 384 Sotheby, William ("Botherby"), iv. 182, 569, 570; vi. 75; _Saul_, i. 362; vii. 59; _Oberon_, i. 362; _iii. 263_; _v. 496_; _Ivan_, _iii. 280_; _iv. 338_; vii. 48; _Five Unpublished Tragedies_, _iii. 280_; iv. 578, 584; vii. 48, 70; _Constance de Castile_, _iii. 348_; "a bore," iv. 580; _The Blues_, vii. 17; _Orestes_; _The Death of Darnley_, vii. 48; _Farewell to Italy_; _Occasional Poems_, vii. 52; "sate sweating behind her," vii. 61 Sotheby, Wilkinson, and Hodges, iii. 537 Soudan, _vi. 474_ Soult, _ii. 51, 77_ South, Dr., vi. 128 Southcott, Joanna, _Book of Wonders_, iv. 497; vi. 176, 452 Southey, Robert, _i. 331, 443_; _ii. 56_; iii. 402; _v. 613, 614_; vi. 166; _The Devil's Walk_, _i. 31_; _vii. 21_; _Letters from Spain_, _i. 44_; _ii. 43_; _Letters, Life, and Correspondence_, _i. 303, 344, 359, 396_; ii. _34_, 87; iv. _225_, 476, 482; vi. _3, 4, 175_, 350; "notable remarks on," _i. 305_; "Southey's epics cram the creaking shelves," i. 307; "soaring," i. 308; _Epics of the Ton_ on, _i. 311_; "the Ballad-monger," i. 313; _Thalaba_, i. 313, 434; _iii. 121, 472_; _iv. 24_; _Joan of Arc_, i. 313, 437; _Madoc_, i. 313, 314, 437; vi. 215; _The Old Woman of Berkeley_, i. 315, _317_; on Hayley, _i. 321_; _iv. 244_; on _Pizarro_, _i. 344_; _Life of Henry Kirke White_, _i. 363_; iv. _521_, 522; his followers, Lamb and Lloyd, _i. 368_; "his teeming muse," i. 369; his epic bathos, _i. 403_; "sink to Southey's level in a trice," i. 404; _Curse of Kehama_, i. 435, _436_; v. _271_, 281, 469; _History of the Peninsular War_, ii. _43_, 91, 92, 94; _Roderick_, _ii. 46_; _iii. 477, 496_; _v. 565_; _Poet's Pilgrimage to Waterloo_, _ii. 227, 234, 235_; iv. 521; _Funeral Song for the Princess Charlotte of Wales_, _ii. 450_; on vampires, iii. 123; _Carmen Triumphale_, iii. 217; vii. 39; _The Doctor_, _iii. 488_; _Wat Tyler_, _iii. 488_; iv. 477, 481, 482, 521; _English Eclogues_, _iv. 47_; _The Inchcape Rock_, _iv. 428_; Byron's quarrel with, iv. 474-485; _Vision of Judgment_, iv. 475, 476, 478, _489, 491, 495, 497_, 508, _512_, 522, _524_; _v. 196_; _Elegy on H. Martin_, iv. 477, 482; _Essays Moral and Political_, iv. 479, 482; _vi. 175_; his "quartos," iv. 516; Byron on his appearance, iv. 520; _The Pious Painter_, _iv. 520_; _Battle of Blenheim_, iv. 521; _Life of Wesley, and Rise and Progress of Methodism_, iv. 522; _Common-Place Book_, _iv. 529_; _Chronicle of the Cid_, _ibid._; "renegade," iv. 578; his indictment of the Satanic School, _v. 196_; on the "Byron Head," Castle Street, v. 203; _Don Juan_ dedicated to, vi. 3; "so quaint and mouthy," vi. 74; _Epilogue to the Lay of the Laureate_, vi. 80; Coleridge's eulogy of, _vi. 168_; his marriage, vi. 175; _March to Moscow_, _vi. 307_; Byron's abuse of, vi. 403; "turncoat," vi. 444; "rogue Southey's gander," vi. 445; _Omniana_, _vi. 576_; "Who shot the arrow?" vii. 76 Southey, Herbert, _iv. 485_ Southey, Mrs. Robert, _iv. 521_ _Southey_ v. _Sherwood_, v. 204 Southwell, vii. 1, 8 Southwell Minster, _i. 119_ Spagnoletto, vi. 502 Spain, i. 469; revolution in, v. 537, 538; vi. 456; royalist reign of terror in, v. 558; the Inquisition in, _ibid._ Spalding, Lieut.-Colonel, _Suvóroff_, _vi. 320, 321, 370_ Spanish women, their style of beauty, ii. 59 Sparamizus, the eunuch, _v. 11_ Sparks, Jared, _Works_ of Benjamin Franklin, _v. 554_ Sparta, iii. 21 Spartans, ii. 195 _Spectator_, _ii. 133_; iii. 98; _vii. 57_ Spelman, _iv. 445_ Spence, Rev. Joseph, _Observations, Anecdotes, and Characters of Books and Men_, _vi. 303_; vii. 52 Spence, Thomas, _vi. 265_ Spencer, General, ii. 93 Spencer, William, _iv. 581_ Spenser (_Faërie Queene_), i. 395; ii. x, 4, 5, _17, 71, 72, 101, 139, 146_; iii. 224, _474_; _vi. 592_ Spercheus, a river-god, v. 488 Sperone Speroni, ii. 498 Spinola, Ambrogio, Marchese di, _iv. 262_ Spinther, Lentulus, _ii. 405_ Spurious verses, attributed to Byron, iii. xx, xxi Spottiswoode, William, the mathematician, vii. 56 Staël, Madame de, i. 494; _vi. 70_; _Corinne, ou L'Italie_, ii. _424_, 490, 503; _iv. 413_; _vi. 71, 541_; vii. 32; _De L'Allemagne_, _iii. 164_; vi. 168; vii. 32; on _Fare Thee Well_, iii. 534; on Byron's _Sonnet to Lake Leman_, iv. 53; attempts to reconcile the Byrons, _iv. 63_; quizzed by Sheridan, _iv. 75_; on Goethe's _Werther_, _iv. 341_; "the Begum of Literature," iv. 570; _Considérations sur la Révolution Française_, vii. 49 Staines, Sir Thomas, v. 582 Stamboul, i. 378; ii. 152, 194 Stamp Acts, _v. 560_ Stanhope, Colonel, _iii. 272_; _vii. 86_ Stanhope, Lord, i. 452, _457, 471_; ii. 299; _Life of Pitt_, _iv. 503_ Stanislaus of Poland, iv. 202 Stanley, Dean, _Life of Arnold_, _v. 224_ _Stanzas_, iv. 549; vii. 70 _Stanzas composed during a Thunderstorm_, iii. _4_, 7 _Stanzas for Music_, iii. 413, 423, 426, 435, 438; _iv. 91, 147_ _Stanzas to a Hindoo Air_, iv. 563 _Stanzas to a Lady, on leaving England_, i. 285; _ii. 18, 29_ _Stanzas to a Lady, with the Poems of Camoëns_, i. 78 _Stanzas to Augusta_, _ii. 247, 248, 271_; iii. 544; iv. 54 _Stanzas to Jessy_, i. 234 _Stanzas to the Po_, iv. 545 _Stanzas written in passing the Ambracian Gulf_, _ii. 128_; iii. _4_, 11 _Stanzas written on the road between Florence and Pisa_, iv. 562 _Star, The_, iii. 534 Stasicrates the architect, _vi. 479_ _Statesman, The_, _i. 319_ Statius, _Thebaidos_, ii. 189 Staubbach, _ii. 383_; iv. 81, 82, _119, 124_ Steno, Michele, iv. 333, 345, 349, 463 Stefanovíc, Vuk (Wuk Stephanowitsch), _Narodne Srpske Pjesme_; _Chants Populaires des Servics_, iii. 188 Steinmetz, Adam, _v. 175_ Stephani, _ii. 446_; _Thesaurus_, _iv. 113_ Stephen, Leslie, _iv. 513_ Sterne, _Tristram Shandy_, ii. 176; _vi. 487_; _Sentimental Journey_, _vi. 214_ Sternhold and Hopkins, v. 279 Sternhold, Tom, vii. 39 Stevens, John, continuation of Dugdale's _Monasticon_, v. 200, _207_ Stevenson, Sir John, _iii. 423_ Stewart, Dugald, _Philosophical Essays_; _Outlines of Moral Philosophy_, _vi. 63_ Stewart, George, midshipman on the _Bounty_ ("Torquil" of _The Island_), v. 583, 584; short account of, _v. 605_ Stewart, Peggy, _v. 605_ Stickles, John, _i. 417_ Stilicho, _ii. 390_ Stillingfleet, Benjamin, _iv. 573_ Stirling, Edward ("Vetus"), vii. 28 Stoics, "men without a heart," vi. 225 Stole, a long loosely-flowing robe, ii. 101 Stonehenge, vi. 434 Stott, Robert ("Hafiz"), i. _306, 308_, 352, 357, _358_, 370; ii. 139 Stout, Captain Benjamin, of the American ship _Hercules_, _vi. 89_ Strabo, ii. 173, 178, 196, 204, _512_; _v. 497_; _vi. 116, 122_; _Rerum Geog._, _v. 21, 24, 542_ Strahan, William, publisher of Johnson's _Dictionary_, Gibbon's _Decline and Fall_, Cook's _Voyages_, etc., vii. 56 Stralenheim, Baron, v. 327 Strangford, Percy Clinton Sydney Smythe, 6th Viscount, _Poems from the Portuguese by Luis de Camoëns_, i. _78, 305_, 320, 370 Stroganoff Collection, St. Petersburg, _ii. 446_ Strutt, Joseph, _Sports and Pastimes_, _vi. 471_ Stuart, editor of _Morning Post_, _i. 31_ Stuart, Daniel, editor of _Courier_, _i. 422_ Stuart, _Personal Reminiscences of the late Miss_, _i. 423_ Stuart, Princess Annabella (Countess of Huntly), _i. 173_ Stumpf, De, _Chroniques des Ligues_, iv. 4 Styx, river, vi. 184 _Substitute for an Epitaph_, vii. 11 Suetonius, ii. 298, _409_, 488; _iv. 270_; _Vitæ C. Julius Cæsar_, ii. _397, 434_, 509; _v. 484_; vi. _181, 276, 575_; _Vit. August._, ii. 488, 509, 518; _Vit. Tiberii_, ii. 488; _De XII. Cæsaribus_, _iv. 124, 445_; _vi. 174_; _Opera Omnia_, _v. 501_; in Tiberium, _vii. 36_ Suicide, vi. 265, 517 Suleyman Aga, ii. 205; _v. 558_ Suli, district of, ii. 126, 141; vi. 171 Suliotes, the, ii. 129, 146, 180; vii. 83 Sulla, _iv. 251_; vi. 348 Sulpicius Servius, ii. 362 Sulpitius Severus, _ii. 133_ _Sun of the Sleepless!_ iii. 399 _Sunday News_, ii. 535 Sunium, vi. 172 _Supernaculum_, v. 354 Superstition, ii. 128 Surrey, Henry Howard, Earl of, iv. 239 Surrey Institution, _iv. 575_; _vi. 12_ Surrey Theatre, vii. 59 _Surtees Society_, _v. 207_ Sussex, Duke of, _vi. 590_ Suwarrow (Suvóroff, Suwarof, Souvarof, Souwarrow), Field-Marshal Aleksandr Vasilievitch, vi. _14_, 222, 304, 315, 316, _317_, 319, 320, 322-326, 370, 393 Swedes, _v._ Russians, _iv. 207, 233_; Bohemia evacuated by the, _v. 371_ Swift, Dean, i. _397_, 414, 418, 419; _ii. 78_; _iv. 342_; vi. _142_, 303; _Tale of a Tub_, iv. 484; _The South Sea Project_, _v. 159_; _The Journal of Stella_, _vi. 187_; _Corinna_, _vi. 454_; _Letters_, _vi. 528_ Swimming, Byron's feats of, _ii. 461_ Swinburne, A.C., _Marino Faliero, a Tragedy_, iv. 329, _367_; _Selections from the Works of Lord Byron_, vi. xvi, xx Swine Green, Nottingham, _vii. 1_ Swinton, Hon. Mrs. J.R., _A Sketch of the Life of Georgiana, Lady de Ros_, _ii. 229_ _Swiss Tour, Journal of Byron's_, _iv. 95, 107_ Sylla, ii. 166, 392; iii. 308; _iv. 179_ Sylvester, John, _vi. 7_ Symonds, J.A., _Renaissance in Italy_, _ii. 355, 356_; iv. 280, 281, _289_; _Memoirs of Count Carlo Gozzi_, _ii. 339_; translation of _Life of Benvenuto Cellini_, _v. 516, 518, 521_; "Evening, all things thou bringest," _vi. 180_ Symonds, bookseller, iv. 482 _Sympathetic Address to a Young Lady_ (_Lines to a Lady Weeping_), iii. 45 Symplegades, the Cyanean, ii. 456, 525; v. 573; vi. 129; _vii. 10_ Syncellus, Georgius, _Chronographia_, v. 281, _302_ Syracuse, battle of, ii. 341 Syri _Sententiæ_, _ii. 420_ Syrius, Publius, _i. 414_ T Taborite, or Hussite, Crusade, _v. 549_ Tacitus, _Annales_, ii. _242_, 293, _375, 409_; _Histor._, ii. 294, 299; _Agricola_, _iii. 198_ Tact, vi. 63 Tænaron, Cape, _ii. 193_ Tagus, river, ii. 31 Tahiri, Dervish, ii. 175, 176; iii. _134_, 450 Tahiti, v. 582-584, _588_ Tahiti, Queen of, _ii. 7_ Talavera, battle of, ii. xi, _39_, 49, 50, 89 _Tales_, vi. xv _Tales of a Grandfather_, _ii. 337_; _vi. 12_ _Tales of my Landlord_, iv. 284 Talfourd, v. 114 Talleyrand, _v. 573_; _vi. 507_ Talleyrand, Dorothée, Duchesse de, _vi. 417_ Talleyrand, Edmond de Talleyrand Périgord, Duc de, _vi. 417_ Talus, the slope or inclination of a wall, vi. 343 Talvi, _Languages and Literature ofthe Slavic Nations_, _iii. 188_ Tambour, Turkish drum, iii. 160 Tambourgi, drummer, ii. 146 Tamerlane, iii. 312; v. 489 _Taming of the Shrew_, vi. 297 Tappa-cloth, or guatoo (Tonga), v. 600 Tarentum, Duke of, vii. 24 Tarik, ii. 89 Tark[-u] (Tirhakah), king of Ethiopia, v. 4 Tarleton, General, i. 479 Tarpeian Rock, ii. 413 Tarquins, the, iv. 334 Tarragona, British Consul, _iii. 13_ Tarsus, v. 23 Tasso, Cornelia, _iv. 146_ Tasso, Torquato, i. 313; _iv. 265_; vii. 52; _Gerusalemme Liberata_, _i. 312_; ii. _133, 143, 246, 329_, 467, 485; iii. 215, _362_; _vi. 34_; _Rinaldo_, _i. 398_; "In Venice Tasso's echoes are no more," ii. 329; "Thy choral memory of the Bard divine," etc., ii. 342; "their glory and their shame," ii. 355; "Peace to Torquato's injured shade," ii. 358; Boileau _v._, ii. 484; and the Cruscans, ii. 485; _Sonnet_, _iii. 417_; _The Lament of_, iv. 139-152, 237 Tattersall, Rev. John Cecil ("Davus"), i. 97, 98 Tauchnitz, _ii. 335_ Taurida Palace, St. Petersburg, _vi. 386_ Tavell, Rev. G.F., i. 406 Taylor, Thomas, translation of the _Periegesis Græciæ_, _iv. 109, 566_ Tcharacovista valley, ii. _132_, 182 Tchocadar, Turkish attendant, iii. 176 Telemachus, ii. 118 Telemachus, an Eastern monk, ii. 520 Tellez, Gabriel (Tirso de Molina), _El Burlador de Sevilla y Convidado de Piedra_, vi. xvi Temenos, _ii. 132_ Tempe, ii. 129, _384_ _Tempest, The_ (Shakespeare), ii. 213; _v. 478_; vi. 428 _Tempest, The_ (spurious), iii. xx Temple, Lord, _iv. 510_ Teniers, vi. 502 Tennyson, Lord, _Palace of Art_, _ii. 123_; _Break, break, break_, _ii. 126_; _In Memoriam_, _ii. 461_; _vi. 516_; _Locksley Hall_, iv. _43_, 319; "Of old sat Freedom on the Heights," _iv. 196_; _Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington_, _iv. 501_; _Locksley Hall, Sixty Years After_, _vi. 180_ Tenorio, Don Juan, vi. xvi Teos, birthplace of Anacreon, _vi. 171_ Tepeleni, ii. 134, 174, 202 Terence, i. 480; _Andrea_, vi. 484; _Eun._, _vi. 598_ Terentia, wife of Tully, _iv. 253_ Terentius Varro, M., ii. 92; _iv. 253_; _Rerum Rusticarum_, _vi. 348_ Tereus, _iv. 287_ Terni, the Cascata del Marmore of, ii. 383 Terpsichore, i. 483 Terrick, Richard, Bishop of London, _ii. 108_ Terry, Ellen, as "Josephine" in _Werner_, v. 324 Tertullian, _De Carne Christi_, _vi. 573_ _Terza rima_, iv. 239, 243, 244, 313 Teuman, king of Elam, v. 4 Thackeray, W.M., _Vanity Fair_, _vi. 197_ Thakombau, king, _v. 600_ Thamas Kouli Khan, Nadir Shah, vi. 384 Thames, ii. 66; vi. 434 _The Harp the Monarch Minstrel swept_, iii. 382 _The spell is broke, the charm is flown_, iii. 12 Théatre Impérial Lyrique, v. 2 Theatre Royal, Brussels, v. 2 Theatre Royal, Haymarket, _Werner_ at, v. 324 Theatre Royal, Manchester, _Sardanapalus_ at, v. 2 Thebes, ii. 93 Thellusson, Peter Isaac (Lord Rendlesham), banker, _i. 425, 471_ Themistocles, ii. 190; _iii. 85_; _iv. 423_ Theodoret, _Hist. Eccl._, ii. 521 Theodoric, _iv. 386_ Theodosius, ii. _390_, 472 _There was a time, I need not name_, i. 264 Thermia (Kythnos) island, _ii. 156_ Thermopylæ, ii. 149; iii. 21, 91 Theseus, ii. 102; _vi. 255_; Temple of, i. 459; iii. 272 Thessaly, _ii. 126_ Thetis, v. 489; vi. 184 Thibault, _Mes Souvenirs de vingt ans de Séjour à Berlin, ou Frédéric le Grand, etc._, _v. 637_ Thirty Years' War, the, _ii. 186_; v. 340 Thirza, Abel's wife, v. 209 Thisbe, vi. 235 Thistlewood, _vi. 67_ _Thomas_, wreck of the, _vi. 103, 110_ Thomson (_Seasons_), ii. 5, _65_, 489; iii. 224; _v. 615_; _vi. 200_; his use of "shook," _v. 135_; _Castle of Indolence_, v. 502; _Liberty_, _vi. 200_ Thomson, Ninian Hill, translation of Machiavelli's _Il Principe_, _vi. 424_ Thornton, Thomas, _Present State of Turkey_, ii. 191, 194-196, 206 Thoroton, _History of Nottinghamshire_, _iv. 35_ Thorpe, Markham, _iii. 425_ Thorwaldsen, _vi. 79_ _Thou art not false, but thou art fickle_, iii. 64 _Thoughts suggested by a College Examination_, i. 28 Thrasybulus, ii. 150, 185; iv. 440 Thrasymene, Lake, ii. 377-379; battle of, ii. 505 Throsby, _Thornton's History of Nottinghamshire_, _iv. 35_ Thun, Lake, _iv. 119_ Thurlow, Edward Hovell, Lord, _Poems on Several Occasions_, vii. 17-19; _Hermilda in Palestine_, vii. 19 _Thy days are done_, iii. 391 Thyrza, iii. 30, _388_ Tiber, ii. 390 Tiberius Cæsar, ii. 374, _408_, 488 Tibullus, i. 73; _Sulpicia ad Cerinthum_, i. 74; _Eleg._, _iii. 199_ Tickell, pasquinade on Wilkes, _iv. 511_ Ticknor, George, _History of Spanish Literature_, _iv. 484, 496, 523, 530_; _v. 207_; vi. xx, _40, 41_ Tigris, river, _v. 13_ Tilleman, Peter, his picture of Newstead Abbey, _vi. 590_ Tillotson, Archbishop, vi. 128, 303 Tilly, Johann Tserclas, Count von, v. 371, 416 Tilly, Mr., possessor of Tom Paine's bones, _vii. 65_ Timariots, the, iii. 166 Timbuctoo, vi. 51 _Times, The_, ii. xii, _11, 288, 401_; iii. 534; v. 114, 324; _vi. 275_; vii. 27, 28 Timoleon, iii. 452; iv. 423 Timon, ii. 8 Timophanes, iii. 452; _iv. 423_ Timor island, v. 583 Timúr Bey, or Timúr Lang (Tamerlane), iii. 312; v. 489 Tindal, Dr., _i. 449_ Tio Jorge (Jorge Ibort), v. 559 Tipaldo, _Biografia degli Italian Illustri_, _iv. 245, 457_ Tiraboschi, _Storia delta Letteratura Italiana_, ii. _481_, 486, _494_, 496, _501_ Tiresias, vi. 535 Tirhakah (Tark[-u]), king of Ethiopia, v. 4 Titans, vi. 385 Tithonus, _v. 497_ Titian, iv. 141; vi. 502, 589; Venus of, iv. 162; his portrait of, Ariosto, _iv. 162_ Titius, _ii. 492_ Titus, ii. _392, 409_, 410, _424, 445_; iii. 401; vi. 139, 174; "Amici, diem perdidi," vi. 575 _Titus Andronicus_, _ii. 22_ Tlepolemus, a worker in wax, _ii. 168_ _To----_, i. 242; iv. 564 _To a beautiful Quaker_, i. 38 _To a knot of Ungenerous Critics_, i. _38_, 213 _To a Lady_, i. 189; _iv. 37_ _To a Lady, on being asked my reason for quitting England in the Spring_, i. 282 _To a Lady who presented the Author with the velvet band which bound her tresses_, i. 212, _233_ _To a Lady, who presented to the Author a lock of hair braided with his own, and appointed a night in December to meet him in the garden_, i. 36 _To a vain Lady_, i. _70_, 244 _To a youthful friend_, i. 271 _To an Oak at Newstead_, i. 256 _To Anne_, i. _70_, 246, 251 _To Belshazzar_, iii. 421 _To Caroline_, i. xi, 8, 9, 21, 23 _To D----_, i. 7 _To Dives. A Fragment_, _ii. 37_; vii. 7 _To E----_, i. 4, _20_ _To Edward Noel Long_, i. _101_, 184, _244_ _To Eliza_, i. xi, 47 _To Emma_, i. 12 _To Florence_, iii. _4_, 5 _To Genevra (sonnet)_, iii. _67_, 70, 71 _To George, Earl of Delawarr_, i. _7_, 126 _To George Anson Byron_, vii. 41 _To Harriet_, i. 263 _To her who can best understand them_ (spurious), iii. xxi _To Ianthe_, ii. 11; _iii. 65, 384_ _To Inez_, ii. _59_, 75; _iii. 1_ _To Lady Caroline Lamb_ (spurious), iii. xxi _To Lesbia_, i. 41 _To Lord Thurlow_, vii. 19 _To M--_, i. 68 _To M.S.G._, i. 76, 79 _To Marion_, i. 129, _263_ _To Mary_, i. xi, xiii _To Mary, on receiving her Picture_, i. 32, _192_ _To Miss Chaworth_ (spurious), iii. xx _To Miss E.P._ [_To Eliza_], i. xi _To Mr. Murray_, vii. 44, 56, 76 _To my dear Mary Anne_ (spurious), iii. xx _To my Son_, i. 260; vi. 591 _To Penelope_, vii. 71 _To Romance_, i. 174 _To the Author of a Sonnet beginning, "'Sad is my Verse,' you say, 'And yet no tear'"_, i. 252 _To the Countess of Blessington_, iv. 565 _To the Duke of Dorset_, i. 194 _To the Earl of Clare_, i. 200 _To the Hon. Mrs. George Lamb_, vii. 15 _To the Lily of France_ (spurious), iii. xx _To the sighing Strephon_, i. 63 _To Thomas Moore_, vii. 43, 46 _To Thomas Moore, written the Evening before his visit to Mr. Leigh Hunt in Horsemonger Lane Gaol, May 19, 1813_, vii. 16 _To Thyrza_, _ii. 104_; iii. 30 _To Woman_, i. 43 Toa, a drooping casuarina, v. 599 Tobacco, in praise of, v. 615 _Tobit_, _v. 286, 527_ Todd, Rev. J.H., Archdeacon of Cleveland ("Oxoniensis"), _A Remonstrance to Mr. John Murray respecting a Recent Publication_, v. 202 Token-flowers, iii. 17 Tolbooth prison, Edinburgh, i. 334 Toledo, Judah de, translation of Avicenna's _Works_, _iv. 523_ Tolstoi, _War and Peace_, _vi. 351_ Tomaros, Mount (Olytsika), ii. _132_, 134, 182 Tomasini, _Petrarca Redivivus_, _ii. 373_ Tonson, Jacob, publisher of _The Spectator_, _vi. 555_; vii. 56 Toobo Neuha, a Tongau chieftain, v. 609 Tooke, Andrew, _Pantheon_, _vi. 26_ Tooke, John Home (_Pantheon_), _ii. 156_; iv. _513_, 516; vi. 580 Tooke, Thomas, _vi. 480_ Tooke, W., _Life of Catherine II._, _vi. 314, 370, 386, 389, 395, 417_ Tophaike, musquet, iii. 96 Topham, Captain, editor of _The World_, _i. 353, 358_ Tornabuoni, Lucrezia, iv. 280 Torniellus, _v. 306_ Torrens. W.T. M'Cullagh, _Memoirs of Viscount Melbourne_, i. 476 Torriano, Anonimo, _iv. 332_ Torstenson, Lennart, Swedish General, v. 371 Tortoises, in the Troad, vi. 204 Tott, Baron de, _Memoirs concerning the State of the Turkish Empire_, vi. 261, 277 Tournefort, Joseph Pitton de, _Relation d'un Voyage du Levant_, _iii. 121, 295_; _v. 294_; _vi. 216, 233_ Tower of London, i. 438 _Towneley Plays_, _v. 207_ Townly, i. 399 Townsend, Rev. 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Philip H., _iv. 248_ Wiel, Alethea, _Two Doges of Venice_, v. 119, _121, 133, 143, 171, 178, 179, 183, 190, 193_ Wieland's _Oberon_, _i. 362_; _iii. 263_ Wilberforce, iv. 181; vi. 461, _549_ _Wild Gazelle, The_, iii. 384 Wilderswyl, village of, _iv. 119_ Wildman, Colonel Thomas, _i. 89, 257_; vi. _496, 497_, 589 Wilhelm, Paul, ii. 299 Wilkes, John, iv. 476, 480, 508-511 Wilkie, Dr. W., _i. 403_; _Epigoniad_, _i. 436_ Wilkie, Sir David, "The Defence of Saragossa," ii. 92 William the Conqueror, iv. 543; vi. 410 William and Mary, _vi. 496_ William I. of Germany, his "triumphant piety," _vi. 370_ William I. of Holland, _ii. 225_ William III., _i. 198_ Williams, Edward, v. 331 Williams, Hugh W., _Travels in Italy, Greece, etc._, _iii. 15, 16_ Williams (Anthony Pasquin), _i. 304_ Williams, Dr., _Theol. Lib._, iv. 479 Willis, Chief Justice, _iv. 585_ Willis, Rev. Dr. Francis, i. 416; _ii. 43_ Willis, John, _i. 416_ Willis, Margaret (Lady Beaumont), iv. 585 Willis' Rooms, _i. 347_ Wilmot, Juliana, Lady, _iii. 381_ Wilmot, Mrs. (Barberina Ogle), afterwards Lady Wilmot Horton, then Lady Dacre, the original of "She walks in Beauty," _iii. 381_; iv. 569, 570; vii. 48, _54_; _Ina, a Tragedy_, _vii. 48_ Wilmot, Sir Robert John (afterwards Wilmot Horton), _iii. 381_; vii. 54 Wilmot, Sir Robert, _iii. 381_ Wilson, printer, i. 452 Wilson, John (Christopher North), ii. 315, 462; _Isle of Palms_, iii. 230; on Moore, _iv. 61_; v. 280; on _Manfred_, iv. 80, 81; on _Marino Faliero_, iv. 329; _City of the Plague_, iv. 339; _Noctes Ambrosianæ_, iv. 570; on _Heaven and Earth_, v. 280, 282; on _Don Juan_, _vi. 213_ Wilson, Sir Robert Thomas, "Southwark's Knight," _vii. 67_ Wilson, W., _A Missionary Voyage to the South Pacific Ocean, etc._, _v. 605_ Winckelmann, _Storia delle Arti, etc._, ii. _396, 431, 432_, 490, 509, 511, 512, 518 _Windsor Poetics. Lines composed on the Occasion of His Royal Highness the Prince Regent being seen standing between the coffins of Henry VIII. and Charles I. in the Royal Vault at Windsor_, vii. 35 Wingfield, Hon. John, _i. 96_; ii. 81, 82, 94 Winsor, Justin, _History of America_, _iv. 198_ Wirt, William, _Life of Patrick Henry_, _v. 560_ Wolcot, Dr. John (Peter Pindar), i. 294, _304, 390, 395, 412_; iv. 158; _Instructions to a Laureat_, _iv. 519_; _Ode to a Margate Hoy_, _vii. 5_ _Wolcot_ v. _Walker_, v. 204 Wolf of the Capitol, Rome, ii. 396 Wolf, F., _Primavera y Flor de Romances_, _iv. 529_ Wolfe, General James, vi. 12 Wolfe, Rev. C., _vi. 165_ Wolmar, Madame, ii. 305 Wolseley, Lord, _Decline and Fall of Napoleon_, _v. 551_ _Woman's Hair, A_, i. 233; _iii. 12_ Wood, J.T., _Modern Discoveries on the Site of Ancient Ephesus_, _ii. 441_ Wood, the pedestrian, _i. 322_ Woodhouselee, Alexander Fraser Tytler, Lord, _Essay on Petrarch_, _ii. 351_ Woodward, Dr. John, _Fossils of England_, _v. 632_ Worcester, battle of, _ii. 395_ Wordsworth, Miss Dorothy, _i. 422_; _iv. 585_ Wordsworth, John, captain of _The Earl of Abergavenny_, _vi. 91_ Wordsworth, William, _i. 305, 318, 331_; ii. 311; iii. 149; vi. 39, 80, _587_; _vii. 70_ Byron's review of his _Poems_, _i. 234_; _Lyrical Ballads_, i. 315, 316; _iv. 269_; Distributor of Stamps for the County of Westmorland, _i. 321_; iv. 582; vi. 5; "Yet let them not to vulgar Wordsworth stoop," etc., i. 368; "Let simple Wordsworth chime his childish verse," i. 369; "write but like Wordsworth--live beside a lake," i. 422; on Bland Burges, _i. 437_; _Concerning the Relations of Great Britain, Spain, and Portugal_, ii. 87; "l'acent Wordsworthien," _ii. 115_; iv. 6; as preached by Shelley, _ii. 219_; _Emperors and Kings, etc._, _ii. 227_; "Not in the Lucid Intervals of Life," _ii. 258_; _Tintern Abbey_, _ii. 261, 272_; _v. 613_; _Intimations of Immortality_, _ii. 271, 352_; _Excursion_, _ii. 272, 281_; _v. 94, 613_; vi. 4, 176; _On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic_, _ii. 336_; _In the Pass of Killycranky_, _ii. 337_; _Near the Lake of Thrasymene_, _ii. 377, 378_; _Descriptive Sketches_, _ii. 385_; "How clear, how keen, how marvellously bright!" iii. xx; Coleridge's _Lines to a Gentleman_, _iii. 336_; his quarrel with Byron, iii. 533; iv. 479; _Song at the Feast of Brougham Castle_, _iv. 16, 27_; _Ruth_, iv. 24; _Works_, _iv. 25, 27, 33, 220_; _A Poet's Epitaph_, _iv. 26_; Byron an admirer of, _iv. 47_; "Wordsworth and Co.," _iv. 182_; depreciates Voltaire, _iv. 184_; _Resolution and Independence_ (originally _The Leech-gatherer_), iv. _267_, 582 _Two Addresses to the Freeholders of Westmorland_, _iv. 341_; _Peter Bell_, _iv. 341_; vi. 177; vii. 63, 64; Hazlitt on, _iv. 518_; referred to in _The Blues_, iv. 585; _Sonnet to a Painter_, _v. 251_; "crazed beyond all hope," vi. 74; "unexcised, unhired," vi. 175; _Benjamin the Waggoner_, vi. 177; "poet Wordy," vi. 214; _Supplement to the Preface_ (_Poems_), _ibid._; compared with Jacob Benmen, _vi. 268_; _Thanksgiving Ode_, vi. 332; "has supporters two or three," vi. 445; Mackintosh, _vii. 32_; _The White Doe of Rylstone; or, The Fate of the Nortons, a Poem_, vii. 45; "the great metaquizzical poet," _vii. 72, 73_ _World, The_, _i. 358_; _vi. 525_ Wormeley, Katharine Prescott, translation of _Prince de Ligne's Memoirs_, _vi. 415_ Wraxall, Sir N.W., _Historical Memoirs_, _vi. 478_; _Posthumous Memoirs_, _vii. 29, 30_ Wren, C., i. 438 Wright, John, _ii. 217_; iii. 75, 443; _iv. 63_ Wright, Walter Rodwell, _Horæ Ionicæ_, i. 366; ii. x, _104_, 202 Wright, Professor, _Kufic Tombstones in the British Museum_, _iii. 120_ _Written after swimming from Sestos to Abydos_, iii. 13; _vi. 112_ Wul-wulleh, death-song of Turkish women, iii. 205 Wyatt, Sir Thomas, iv. 239 Wycherley, _i. 322_ Wylde, G., _i. 45_ Wynn, _iv. 520_ Wynne, iv. 476 X Xantippe, _iv. 253_ Xeres, v. 565 Xerxes, ii. 166; iv. 259; vi. 46, 169 Y Yakintu, king of Arvad, v. 4 Yanina, Janina, or Joannina, lake of, ii. 179, 189 Yarmouth, Maria Fagniani, Lady, _i. 501_ Yarmouth, Lord, "Red Herrings," _i. 493, 497, 501_; vii. 22 Yearsley, Ann, _i. 329_ Yesoukoï, Lieutenant-Colonel, vi. 354 Yonge, C.D., translation of Athenæus' _Deipno._, _v. 11_ York, Duchess of, _iii. 45_ York, Duke of, _i. 3, 391_; _ii. 169_; _iii. 45_; _iv. 587_; _vi. 67, 451, 507_ Young, Edward, _Revenge_, i. 26, _409_; _iii. 158, 200_; _Night Thoughts_, ii. 95, _161_; _iii. 129, 262_; _vi. 186, 450_; _Resignation_, _vi. 450_; _Love of fame, the Universal Passion_, _vi. 461_ Young, Rosalind A., _The Mutiny, etc._, _v. 622_ _Young Lochinvar_, _ii. 70_ Z Zama, battle of, _ii. 459_ Zanetti, ii. 472 Zanga, a character in Young's _Revenge_, i. 26, _409_ Zappi, Giovanni Battista, _iv. 271_ Zara, siege of, iv. 331, 332 Zaragoza, Augustina, maid of, ii. 58, 91 Zarina, Queen, character in _Sardanapalus_, v. 12 Zarotti, _iv. 287_ _Zechariah_, _v. 286_ Zegri, the, a Moorish tribe, v. 558 Zela, battle of, _ii. 398_ Zeller, Dr. E., _Socrates and the Socratic Schools_, _ii. 103_ _Zend-Avesta_, _iii. 110_; _iv. 112_ Zendrini, A., _Elogio di Jacopo Morelli_, _iv. 457_ Zeno, Carlo, ii. 477, 497 Zeus Olympius, Temple of, ii. 167 Ziani, Doge Sebastian, ii. 473 Zibeon, Esau's wife, _v. 285_ Zimri, king of Israel, _v. 107_ Zitza, convent and village of, ii. 129, 174, 180; _iii. 7_ [vz]i[vz]ka, John of Trocnow, v. 549 Zoffani, _iv. 508_ Zoili of Albemarle Street, the, vi. xix, _467_ Zonaras, _Annales_, ii. 202 Zonta of Twenty, the, _iv. 385, 441_ Zoritch, or Zovitch, Catherine II.'s favourite, _vi. 388_ Zoroaster, the creed of, vi. 491 Zosimado, ii. 197 Zosimus, _Historiæ_, ii. 172 Zoubof, Plato, Catherine II.'s favourite, _vi. 388_ Zrini, Hungarian commander, iii. 442 Zsigetvar, siege of, iii. 442 Zuccari, _ii. 437_ Zuccato, Bartolommeo, _iv. 332_ Zuleika, Persian name of Potiphar's wife, _iii. 187_; vi. 254 INDEX TO FIRST LINES. (The first line is given of every _Poem_, and of each _Canto_ of the longer Poems: that of the _Plays_ is omitted.) A noble Lady of the Italian shore (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 547 A Spirit passed before me: I beheld (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 406 A Year ago you swore, fond she! (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 41 Absent or present, still to thee (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 50 Adieu, adieu! my native shore (_Childe Harold_, Canto I.), ii. 26 Adieu, thou Hill! where early joy (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 237 Adieu, ye joys of La Valette (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 24 Ægle, beauty and poet, has two little crimes (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 76 Ah! gentle, fleeting, wav'ring sprite (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 20 Ah, heedless girl! why thus disclose (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 244 Ah! Love was never yet without (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 62 Ah!--What should follow slips from my reflection (_Don Juan_, Canto XV.), vi. 544 And dost thou ask the reason of my sadness? (_Jeux of Esprit, etc._), vii. 41 And thou art dead, as young and fair (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. _32_, 41 And thou wert sad--yet I was not with thee (_Poems of July-September, 1816_), iv. 63 And "thy true faith can alter never" (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 65 And wilt thou weep when I am low? (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 266 Anne's Eye is liken'd to the Sun (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 244 As by the fix'd decrees of Heaven (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 231 As o'er the cold sepulchral stone (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 4 As the Liberty lads o'er the sea (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 42 Away, away, ye notes of Woe! (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. _32_, 35 Away, away,--your flattering arts (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 15 Away with your fictions of flimsy romance (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 82 Away, ye gay landscapes, ye gardens of rose (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 171 Behold the blessings of a lucky lot! (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 75 Belshazzar! from the banquet turn (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 421 Beneath Blessington's eyes (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 82 Beside the confines of the Ægean main (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 18 Bob Southey! You're a poet--Poet-Laureate (_Don Juan_, Dedication), vi. 3 Born in a garret, in the kitchen bred (_Poems of the Separation_), iii. 540 Breeze of the night in gentler sighs (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 262 Bright be the place of thy soul! (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 426 But once I dared to lift my eyes (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 564 By the rivers of Babylon we sat down and wept (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 402 Candour compels me, Becher! to commend (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 114 Chill and mirk is the nightly blast (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 7 Come, blue-eyed Maid of Heaven!--but Thou alas! (_Childe Harold_, Canto II.), ii. 99 Could I remount the river of my years (_Poems of July-September, 1816_), iv. 51 Could Love for ever (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 549 Cruel Cerinthus! does the fell disease (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 74 Dear are the days of youth! (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 177 Dear Becher, you tell me to mix with mankind (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 112 Dear Doctor, I have read your play (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 47 Dear Long, in this sequester'd scene (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 184 Dear Murray,--You ask for a "_Volume of Nonsense_" (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 70 Dear object of defeated care! (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 19 Dear simple girl, those flattering arts (_Hours of Idlaiess_), i. 15 Do you know Dr. Nott? (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 78 Dorset! whose early steps with mine have stray'd (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 194 Doubtless, sweet girl! the hissing lead (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 70 Eliza! What fools are the Mussulman sect! (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 47 Equal to Jove that youth must be (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 72 Ere the daughter of Brunswick is cold in her grave (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 555 Eternal Spirit of the chainless Mind (_Sonnet on Chillon_), iv. 7 Fame, Wisdom, Love, and Power were mine (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 394 Famed for the contemptuous breach of sacred ties (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 35 Famed for their civil and domestic quarrels (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 36 Fare thee Well! and if for ever (_Poems of the Separation_), _ii. 274_; iii. 499, 537 Farewell! if ever fondest prayer (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 409 Farewell to the Land, where the gloom of my Glory (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 427 Father of Light, great God of Heaven (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 224 Few years have pass'd since thou and I (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 271 Fill the goblet again! for I never before (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 283 For Orford and for Waldegrave (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 76 Friend of my youth! when young we rov'd (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 200 From out the mass of never-dying ill (_Prophecy of Dante_, Canto III.), iv. 261 From the last hill that looks on thy once holy dome (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 401 From this emblem what variance your motto evinces! (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 36 God maddens him whom 't is his will to lose (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 45 Good plays are scarce (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 12 Great Jove! to whose Almighty Throne (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 14 Harriet, to see such Circumspection (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 263 He, unto whom thou art so partial (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 74 He who, sublime, in epic numbers roll'd (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 73 Here once engaged the stranger's view (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 259 Here's a happy New Year! but with reason (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), _ii. 322_; vii. 64 High in the midst, surrounded by his peers (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 28 Hills of Annesley, Bleak and Barren (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 210 His father's sense, his mother's grace (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 54 How came you in Hob's pound to cool? (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 66 How pleasant were the songs of Toobonai! (_Island_, Canto II.), v. 598 How sweetly shines, through azure skies (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 131 Hush'd are the winds, and still the evening gloom (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 5 Huzza! Hodgson, we are going (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 4 I cannot talk of Love to thee (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 411 I enter thy garden of roses (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 22 I had a dream, which was not all a dream (_Poems of July-September, 1816_), iv. 42 I heard thy fate without a tear (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 425 I now mean to be serious;--it is time (_Don Juan_, Canto XIII.), vi. 481 I read the "Christabel" (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 45 I saw thee weep--the big bright tear (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 390 I speak not, I trace not, I breathe not thy name (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 319, 413 I stood beside the grave of him who blazed (_Poems of July-September, 1816_), iv. 45 I stood in Venice on the "Bridge of Sighs" (_Childe Harold_, Canto IV.), ii. 327 I want a hero: an uncommon want (_Don Juan_, Canto I.), vi. 11 I watched thee when the foe was at our side (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 84 I wish to tune my quivering lyre (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 147 I would I were a careless child (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 205 I would to Heaven that I were so much clay (_Fragment on back of MS. of Don Juan_, Canto I.), vi. 2 If Fate should seal my Death to-morrow (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 247 If for silver, or for gold (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 62 If from great Nature's or our own abyss (_Don Juan_, Canto XIV.), vi. 516 If, in the month of dark December (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 13 If sometimes in the haunts of men (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 46 If that high world, which lies beyond (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 383 Ill-fated heart! and can it be (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 48 In Coron's bay floats many a galley light (_Corsair_, Canto II.), iii. 249 In digging up your bones, Tom Paine (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 65 In hearts like thine ne'er may I hold a place (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 40 In law an infant, and in years a boy (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 128 In moments to delight devoted (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 71 In Nottingham county there lives at Swan Green (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 1 In one dread night our city saw and sighed (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 51 In one who felt as once he felt (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 253 In the beginning was the Word next God (_Morgante Maggiore_, Canto I.), iv. 285 In the dome of my Sires as the clear moonbeam falls (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 27 In the valley of waters we wept on the day (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 404 In the year since Jesus died for men (_Siege of Corinth_), iii. 449 In thee, I fondly hop'd to clasp (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 7 In this belovéd marble view (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 536 Is thy face like thy mother's, my fair child? (_Childe Harold_, Canto III.), ii. 215 It is the hour when from the boughs (_Parisina_), iii. 505 It seems that the Braziers propose soon to pass (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 72 Kind Reader! take your choice to cry or laugh (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 11 Know ye the land where the cypress and myrtle (_Bride of Abydos_, Canto I.), iii. 157 Lady! if the cold and cloudy clime (_Prophecy of Dante_, Dedication), iv. 241 Lady! in whose heroic port (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 552 Lesbia! since far from you I've rang'd (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 41 Let Folly smile to view the names (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 4 Long years!--It tries the thrilling frame to bear (_Lament of Tasso_), iv. 143 Lucietta, my deary (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 81 Maid of Athens, ere we part (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 15; _iv. 214_ Many are Poets who have never penned (_Prophecy of Dante_, Canto IV.), iv. 269 Marion! why that pensive brow? (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 129 Mingle with the genial bowl (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 228 Montgomery! true the common lot (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 107 Mrs. Wilmot sate scribbling a play (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 61 Muse of the many-twinkling feet! whose charms (_The Waltz_), i. 483 Must thou go, my glorious Chief? (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 428 My boat is on the Shore (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 46 My dear Mr. Murray (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 51 My hair is grey, but not with years (_Prisoner of Chillon_), iv. 13 My Sister! my sweet Sister! if a name (_Poems of July-September, 1816_), iv. 57 My soul is dark--Oh! quickly string (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 389 Nay, smile not at my sullen brow (_Childe Harold_, Canto I.: _To Inez_), ii. 75 Newstead! fast-falling, once-resplendent dome! (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 116 Night wanes--the vapours round the mountains curled (_Lara_, Canto II.), iii. 348 Nisus, the guardian of the portal stood (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 151 No breath of air to break the wave (_Giaour_), iii. 85 No specious splendour of this stone (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 66 Nose and Chin that make a knocker (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 538 Not in those climes where I have late been staying (_Childe Harold_, Canto I.: _To Ianthe_), ii. 11 Nothing so difficult as a beginning (_Don Juan_, Canto IV.), vi. 183 O Love! O Glory! what are ye who fly? (_Don Juan_, Canto VII.), vi. 302 O Thou! who rollest in yon azure field (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 2 O thou yclep'd by vulgar sons of Men (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 7 O'er the glad waters of the dark blue sea (_Corsair_, Canto I.), iii. 227 Of all the barbarous middle ages, that (_Don Juan_, Canto XII.), vi. 455 Of rhymes I printed seven volumes (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 55 Of two fair Virgins, modest, though admired (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 535 Oh, Anne, your offences to me have been grievous (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 246 "Oh banish care"--such ever be (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 28 Oh, blood and thunder! and oh! blood and wounds! (_Don Juan_, Canto VIII.), vi. 330 Oh! could Le Sage's demon gift (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 56 Oh! did those eyes, instead of fire (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 68 Oh, factious viper! whose envenom'd tooth (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 34 Oh, Friend! for ever lov'd, for ever dear (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 18 Oh! had my Fate been join'd with thine (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 189 Oh how I wish that an embargo (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 10 Oh Lady! when I left the shore (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 5 Oh! little lock of golden hue (_Hours of Idleness_), i. _211_, 233 Oh, Mariamne! now for thee (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 400 Oh! might I kiss those eyes of fire (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 75 Oh! my lonely--lonely--lonely--Pillow! (_Poems, 1816-1823_), iv. 563 Oh never talk again to me (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 1 Oh say not, sweet Anne, that the Fates have decreed (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 251 Oh! snatched away in beauty's bloom (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 388 Oh, talk not to me of a name great in story (_Poems 1816-1823_), vi. 562 Oh, thou! in Hellas deemed of heavenly birth (_Childe Harold_, Canto I.), ii. 15 Oh! thou that roll'st above thy glorious Fire (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 229 Oh Venice! Venice! when thy marble walls (_Ode on Venice_), iv. 193 Oh! weep for those that wept by Babel's stream (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 385 Oh well done Lord E---- n! and better done R---- r! (_Jeux d' Esprit, etc._), vii. 13 Oh! well I know your subtle sex (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 242 Oh! Wellington! (or "Villainton")--for Fame (_Don Juan_, Canto IX.), vi. 373 Oh! when shall the grave hide for ever my sorrow? (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 21 Oh ye! who teach the ingenuous youth of nations (_Don Juan_, Canto II.), vi. 87 Oh! yes, I will own we were dear to each other (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 126 Oh you, who in all names can tickle the town (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 16 On Jordan's banks the Arab's camels stray (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 386 Once fairly set out on his party of pleasure (_Jeux d' Esprit, etc._), vii. 41 Once more in Man's frail world! which I had left (_Prophecy of Dante_, Canto I.), iv. 247 One struggle more, and I am free (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. _31, 32_, 36 Our life is two fold: Sleep hath its own world (_The Dream_), iv. 33 Parent of golden dreams, Romance! (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 174 Posterity will ne'er survey (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 65 Rail on, Rail on, ye heartless crew (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 213 Remember him, whom Passion's power (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 67 Remember thee! Remember thee! (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 59 Remind me not, remind me not (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 268 River, that rollest by the ancient walls (_Poems 1816-1833_), iv. 545 Rousseau--Voltaire--our Gibbon--and De Staël (_Poems of July-September, 1816_), iv. 53 Saint Peter sat by the celestial gate (_Vision of Judgment_), iv. 487 She walks in Beauty, like the night (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 381 Since now the hour is come at last (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 12 Since our Country, our God--Oh, my Sire (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 387 Since the refinement of this polish'd age (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 45 Slow sinks, more lovely ere his race be run (_Corsair_, Canto III.), iii. 270 Slow sinks, more lovely ere his race be run (_The Curse of Minerva_), i. 457 So we'll go no more a-roving (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. _411_, 538 Sons of the Greeks, arise (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 20 Spot of my youth! whose hoary branches sigh (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 208 Star of the brave!--whose beam hath shed (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 436 Start not--nor deem my spirit fled (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 276 Still must I hear?--shall hoarse Fitzgerald bawl? (_English Bards, and Scotch Reviewers_), i. 297 Strahan, Tonson, Lintot of the times (_Jeux d' Esprit, etc._), vii. 56 Stranger! behold interred together (_Jeux d' Esprit, etc._), vii. 11 Sun of the sleepless! melancholy star! (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 399 Sweet girl, though only once we met (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 38 Tambourgi! Tambourgi! thy 'larum afar (_Childe Harold_, Canto II.), ii. 146 The antique Persians taught three useful things (_Don Juan_, Canto XVI.), vi. 572 The Assyrian came down like the wolf on the fold (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 404. The chain I gave was fair to view (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 49 The dead have been awakened--shall I sleep? (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 83 The Devil returned to Hell by two (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 21 The fight was o'er; the flashing through the gloom (_Island_, Canto III.), v. 618 The Gods of old are silent on their shore (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 566 The "good old times"--all times when old are good (_Age of Bronze_), v. 541 The Harp the Monarch Minstrel swept (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 382 The Isles of Greece, The Isles of Greece (_Don Juan_, Canto III.), vi. 169 The King was on his throne (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 397 The kiss, dear maid! thy lip has left (_Poems, 1809-1813_), iii. 23 The Land where I was born sits by the seas (_Francesca of Rimini_), iv. 317 The man of firm and noble soul (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 81 The modest bard, like many a bard unknown (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 15 The Moorish King rides up and down (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 529 The Moralists tell us that Loving is Sinning (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 262 The morning watch was come; the vessel lay (_Island_, Canto I.), v. 587 The Night came on the Waters--all was rest (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 419 The "Origin of Love"!--Ah, why (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 65 The roses of Love glad the garden of life (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 109 The sacred song that on mine ear (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), _iii. 32_; vii. 15 The Serfs are glad through Lara's wide domain (_Lara_, Canto I.), iii. 323 The Son of Love and Lord of War I sing (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 82 The Spell is broke, the charm is flown (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 12 The Spirit of the fervent days of Old (_Prophecy of Dante_, Canto II.), iv. 255 The wild gazelle on Judah's Hills (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 384 The winds are high on Helle's wave (_Bride of Abydos_, Canto II.), iii. 178 The world is a bundle of hay (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 65 The world is full of orphans: firstly those (_Don Juan_, Canto XVII.), vi. 608 There be none of Beauty's daughters (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 435 There is a mystic thread of life (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 234 There is a tear for all that die (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 417 There is a tide in the affairs of men (_Don Juan_, Canto VI.), vi. 268 There is no more for me to hope (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 15 There was a time, I need not name (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 264 There's not a joy the world can give like that it takes away (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 423 There's something in a stupid ass (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 63 These locks, which fondly thus entwine (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 36 They say that Hope is happiness (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 438 Thine eyes' blue tenderness, thy long fair hair (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 70, _390_ Think'st thou I saw thy beauteous eyes (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 8 This Band, which bound thy yellow hair (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 212 This day, of all our days, has done (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._). vii. 71 This faint resemblance of thy charms (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 32, _36_ This votive pledge of fond esteem (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 78 Those flaxen locks, those eyes of blue (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 260 Thou art not false, but thou art fickle (_Poems 1809-1818_), iii. 64 _Thou_ lay thy branch of _laurel_ down (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 19 Thou Power! who hast ruled me through Infancy's days (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 254 Thou whose spell can raise the dead (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 392 Though the day of my Destiny's over (_Poems of July-September, 1816_), iv. 54 Through cloudless skies, in silvery sheen (_Poems 1809-1818_), iii. 11 Through Life's dull road, so dim and dirty (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 73 Through thy battlements, Newstead, the hollow winds whistle (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 1 Thy cheek is pale with thought, but not from woe (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 71 Thy days are done, thy fame begun (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 391 Thy verse is "sad" enough, no doubt (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 252 Time! on whose arbitrary wing (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 60 'T is done--and shivering in the gale (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 285 'T is done--but yesterday a King! (_Ode to Napoleon Buonaparte_), iii. 305 'T is done--I saw it in my dreams (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 211 'T is fifty years, and yet their fray (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 542 'T is known, at least it should be, that throughout (_Beppo_), iv. 159 'T is midnight--but it is not dark (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 537 'T is time this heart should be unmoved (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 86 Titan! to whose immortal eyes (_Poems of July-September, 1816_), iv. 48 To be the father of the fatherless (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 548 To hook the Reader, you, John Murray (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 44 'T was after dread Pultowa's day (_Maseppa_), iv. 207 'T was now the hour, when Night had driven (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 149 'T was now the noon of night, and all was still (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 217 Unhappy Dives! in an evil hour (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 7 Up to battle! Sons of Suli (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 83 Warriors and chiefs! should the shaft or the sword (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 393 We do not curse thee, Waterloo! (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 431 We sate down and wept by the waters (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 402 Weep, daughter of a royal line (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 45 Well! thou art happy, and I feel (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 277; _iv. 37_ Were my bosom as false as thou deem'st it to be (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 399 What are to me those honours or renown? (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 85 What are you doing now? (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 43 What matter the pangs of a husband and father? (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 71 What say _I_?--not a syllable further in prose (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vi. 39 When a man hath no freedom to fight for at home (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 70 When all around grew drear and dark (_Poems of the Separation_), iii. 544 When amatory poets sing their woes (_Don Juan_, Canto V.), vi. 218 When Bishop Berkeley said "there was no matter" (_Don Juan_, Canto XI.), vi. 427 When coldness wraps this suffering clay (_Hebrew Melodies_), iii. 395 When Dryden's fool, "unknowing what he sought" (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 59 When energising objects men pursue (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 55 When fierce conflicting passions urge (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 168 When Friendship or Love (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 49 When from the heart where Sorrow sits (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 69 When I hear you express an affection so warm (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 23 When I rov'd a young Highlander o'er the dark heath (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 191 When Man, expell'd from Eden's bowers (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 282 When Newton saw an apple fall, he found (_Don Juan_, Canto X.), vi. 400 When slow Disease, with all her host of Pains (_Hours of Idleness_ [_Childish Recollections_]), i. 84 When some proud son of man returns to earth (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 280 When the last sunshine of expiring Day (_Monody on the Death of Sheridan_), iv. 71 When the vain triumph of the imperial lord (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 37 When Thurlow this damned nonsense sent (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 17 When Time, or soon or late, shall bring (_Poems, 1809-1813_), iii. 39 When, to their airy hall, my Father's voice (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 21 When we two parted (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 410 Whene'er I view those lips of thine (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 76 Where are those honours, Ida, once your own? (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 16 White as a white sail on a dusky sea (_Island_, Canto IV.), v. 626 Who hath not glowed above the page where Fame (_Poems 1814-1816_), iii. 415 Who killed John Keats? (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 76 Who would not laugh, if Lawrence, hired to grace (_Hints from Horace_), i. 389 Why, how now, saucy Tom? (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 74 Why, Pigot, complain? (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 53 Why should my anxious breast repine? (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 220 With Death doomed to grapple (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 64 Without a stone to mark the spot (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 30 Woman! Experience might have told me (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 43 Would you go to the house by the true gate? (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 69 Ye cupids, droop each little head (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 74 Ye scenes of my childhood, whose lov'd recollection (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 25 Yes! wisdom shines in all his mien (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 12 You call me still your _Life_.--Oh! change the word (_Poems 1809-1813_), iii. 72 You have asked for a verse:--the request (_Poems 1816-1823_), iv. 565 You say you love, and yet your eye (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 9 Young Oak! when I planted thee deep in the ground (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 256 Your pardon, my friend (_Hours of Idleness_), i. 63 Youth, Nature, and relenting Jove (_Jeux d'Esprit, etc._), vii. 10 THE END. PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED, LONDON AND BECCLES. *** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WORKS OF LORD BYRON, VOL. 7. POETRY *** Updated editions will replace the previous one—the old editions will be renamed. 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