413.415.441. His song, 442. Dénoue Clonkilty in Ireland, 458. 465. See Guitar of India, the Syrinda, 450. Gull language, translation from the Fudge, Miss Fanny's, Epistles, 641.649. 600. Her uncle's bequest, 656. Gulliver, Captain Lemuel, 547. O'Mulligan, in this Inder. Gynæocracy, proposals for a, 593. alty, 455. н G Hafiz, the poet, 452, n. Gayly sounds the castanet, 285. Halcyon hangs o'er ocean, the 361. The Light of the Haram, 444. 415. The persecuted Ghebers, 415. Garden, the dream of the, 663. 665. 678. Vark! 'tis the breeze of twilight calling 06. Harmony, the genius of, 133. Haroun-al-Raschid the Caliph, 412. Harp, certain of the poetical allusions to that instrument, 125. 252. 20. 5. 269. 283. 304. George III., King, 217, et passim. Harp of my country! in darkness I See Intercepted Letters, 205. 216. Par- Harp, the origin of the, 239. Prince's Plume, 219. Ich Dien, 219. Harp that once through Tara's halls, Privy Purse, 220. King Crack and his Harut and Marut, the Angels, 594 ers, 217. 457. The Prince's Day, 20. Hassan, Al, the Prophet Chief of Ars- bia, 417. 45. 428. See Story of the Fire-worshippers, 415, et seq. spear, (Ode Lxiv. Anacreon.) 98. Hastings, Marquis of, (Earl Moira,) and 184. His library, 45. Dedication to Francis, Earl of Moira, 160 Hat, Ode to a, 556. Hat versus Wig, 566 Go, let me weep, there's bliss in tears, Have you not seen the timid tent, 109. 300. He who instructs the youthful crew, (Ode Lvi. Anacreon.) 93. to, 278. Gondolas and gondoliers, 282. 287. 289. Hear me but once, while o'er the grave, 312. 286. Heard, Sir Isaac, and the Peerage, 556 Heart and lute, my, 354. Heart to rest, No, leave my, P2. Heathcote, to Lady: On a ring found at Islands; to her lover, 144. Hebe, the Fall of: a dithyrambic ode, 148. Greece, isles of, 312, 319. Zean maids, Henry to Lady Emma, 599. 59, et seq. Allusions to Greece in Her last words at parting, how can I to the "Fudge Family in Paris," 637. in Greece: First Evening, Zea, 319. Hercules to his daughter, song of, 357. Here, take my heart, 346. 315. See 312. Here sleeps the bard, 292. Esq., 462—472. To the Rev. Guess, guess; the lady of my love, 370. Here's the bower she loved so much Guidi, sonnet by, with a translation, 75, 349. of High-born Ladye, the, 339. Hinda, the Arabian maid. See the Story I know that heaven hath sent me here, Ireland, and her national music, 29. 34. Ireland, certain traditions and romances 259. 264, 265. 267, 268, 269, 270. of the kingdom of, (see the Fudge code, 554. The outbreak of 1798, 21, 574. ing was shining, 251. Irish antiquities, 583. I saw the smiling bard of pleasure, (Ode Irishman, Satires, &c., addressed to an Englishman by an, 189—198. 228. 278. Advertisements to the first 272. Letter on Irish music, 273. Ad- Horace's return to Lydia, 314. Idols in the house of Azor, 452. Of 278. See National Airs, 279, et seg. King Crack, 220. Of Jaghernaut, 375. Irish Peasant to his Mistress, 238. (Ode xxxvi. Anacreon,) 84. Irving, Washington, 57. 264. 107. (Haydn,) 307. If I were yonder wave, my dear, 171. Is not thy mind a gentle mind ? 110. It is not the tear at this monient shed, 360. J Jeffrey, Francis, Lord, the author's visit also Anthologia, Horace, &c. Jehan Gheer, or Jehanguire, Emperor palace, 449, n. His early name of Se- 368. Jerome's love, (St.,) 208. St. Jerome's first visit on earth, 602. His second In wedlock a species of lottery lies, 117. visit, 603. Jerusalem, the holy city of, 298. Jessica, young, 353. Johnson, Dr. Samuel, on Mallet, 654, n India, poetical allusions to, 373. 441. Joy alone be remember'd now, 354. 449, 450, et seg. Joys of youth, how fleeting ! 285. Juan, Don, 222. Jubal's shell, alluded to, 310. Judgment Day, and a supposed wind from Syria Damascena to announce it, 453, n. Judgment, the day or, 303. Insurrection of the Papers; a dream, Julia, to, in allusion to some illiberal 216. criticisms, 111. Mock me no more Intercepted Letters, the, of the Two Though fate, my girl, may bid us part, 112. On her birthday, 113. To ruption' and 'Intolerance.' See 25. Elegiac Stanzas, supposed to be writ- b. her, 117. I saw the peasant's ha ankind, 118 Sympathy, 119. “the late Thomas Little," 105. Ded- 106. poem, 226. Life is all checker'd with pleasures and Love, who ruled as admiral o'er, 370. Love thee ?—so well, so tenderly, 351 Love thee, dearest 7 354. Love but thee, I, 353. Light sounds the harp when the com- Love's day, 352. bat is over, 125. Love's light summer cloud, 350 304. Love's young dream, 240 295. 531. Like some wanton filly sporting, (Ode Lover, the Persian, 211. Lxv. Anacreon,) 98. Lover, the Russian, 373. dare's holy fane, 235. poems, 520 The poem, 521. Fint Angel's Story, 522. Second Angei's Story, 527. Third Angel's Story, 538 Loves, the sale of, 115. Lionardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa, 315. Lusitanian War-song, 332. Listen to the muse's lyre, (Ode mn. An- Lute, the, 449. 657. Lying, 121. Literary advertisement, to authors, 564. Lyre, the poet's, 295. Lyre, the tell-tale, 141. Little Grand Lama, the, 490. M particulars respecting it, 27. The Machiavelian policy condemned, 500 Curate in Ireland, 637. 643. 655. Magic Mirror, the, 339. Mahomet, religion of, (see Lalla Rookh.) 378, et seq. Mahomet, the Seal of preceding propbo 526, 527. 534. Louis the Fourteenth's Wig, 493. Mahommed Shaw, feast and throne of 454, n. Maiden, the Sleeping, 203. Maidens of Zea, 3:25, et passin. March ! nor heed those arms that hold thee, 334. Martyrs, the, 306.720, 721, e seg.; the crown of martyrdom, 72, 73 Love a sentinel: Glee-Hush, hush, Mary, 241. 343. Mary, star of the sea, 336. Love, one summer eve, was straying, Mary, I believed thee true, 140. 331. Mathews, Mr. Charles, 616. Matriculation, scene from a play acted at Oxford, called, 605. Mauri-ga-Sima, or the sunken island 450. 175. 238. 244, 245. 265, 266. 281. 283. Melanjus the hermit, 711–714. 71:. 3 317. 321. 327. 346. 332. 367. 369. 524. I shed, 366. Various imitations A 123. 366. 368. Love, mythological hymn to, 147. Melodies, Irish, 28-978. Succeeded by the National Airs, 279, et seg. Memorabilia of last week, March 13, 1826,) 552. Memory, poetical allusions to 22 e. Love wandering thro' the golden maze, 538. 350. Memphis, on the Nile, 671; sacred col lege of, 684. Menage, Anacreontic in Greek by, with Music of the spheres, 528. Now Neptune's month our sky defarms, Musical box, the :-Rose and the Poet, (Ode LXVIII. Anacreon,) 99. Now the star of day is high (Ode XVII. Anaureun,) 74. My harp has one unchanging theme, Nymph of a fair but erring line, 406. 283. Nymphs of the Nile, 697. 0 N O'Branigan, Larry, to his wise indy 644. 652. To Murtagh O'Muiligan, 617. Namouna, the enchantress, 446. Calls O'Connell, his election for Clare, 579. Naples, lines on the entry of the Aus- O'Donohue's Mistress, 239. trians into, in 1821, 519. O'Keefe's song for the character of Napoleon, the Emperor, consigned to Spado, 38. the rock of St. Helena, 457. Allu- O'Mulligan, Mortimer, his epistie, (vile O'Rusk, Prince of Breffni, the song (f, 246. 591. the morning of her birthday, 116. Oblivion, the fabled gates of, 676. Observe when mother earth is diy, National Music, a Melologue upon, (Ode xxl. Anacreon,) 76. 341-343. on, in the stilly night, 282. Nay, do not weep, nay Fanny dear, 43. pale, 290. Nay, tempt me not to love again, 168. Oh! breathe not his name, 229. ers, 260. 673, et seg. bowers, 236. Oh! but to see that head recline, 525 Oh! come to me when daylight sets, Ne'er talk of Wisdom's gloomy schools, Oh! could we do with this world of ours ! 270. Oh! days of youth and joy 287. Oh, do not look so bright and blest, 364 Oh! doubt me not--the season, 247 Nightingales, song of, 352. 359. 363. Oh fair! oh purest! be thou the dove, 443. 302. Oh, guard our affection, 293. Nile, river, 637; the Isle of Gardens, or Oh! had we some bright little Isle of Antirrhodus, near Alexandria, 682. our own, 246. Nile, navigation of the, 671. 692. 695. Oh! hint to the bard, 'tis retirement alone, 57. Oh! idol of my dreams, 531. of the river, 501. Oh, Memory, how coldly, 324. No life is like the mountaineer's, 329. Oh, no! not ev'n when first we loved, bers, 249. Oh, say, thou best and brightest, 295. Oh, stranger! if Anacreon's shell, (An- thologia,) 103. Not from thee the wound should come, Oh! teach me to love thee, 303. Oh! the sight entrancing, 261. light, 230. 442. 444, 445. Her spells, 446. Her Oh thou! of all creation blest, (Odo sleep, 447. She is regretted by Selim, XXXIV. Anacreon,) 83. Georgian maid's song. 450. Succeed tear, 299. hope ! 580. 292. Oh, where art thou dreaming? 315. Periwinkles and Locusts, 567. Put off the vestal vell, nor, oh, 131. Pyramids of Memphis, 670. Rhodope, Lalla Rookh, 379. 453, et passim. Su- Q Philadelphia and the Schuylkill river, Quadrilles, 544. Episcopal, 598 Quakers, 651. Phillis, to, 139. flections addressed to the author a the articie of "the Church" in the 625 poem, 153-155. Quick! we have but a second, 22. Philosophy, poems relative to, treating of philosophers, ancient and modern, R goras, 154. Democritus, 154. Plato, Alciphron, 199, et seg. Pyrrho, 122. Raphael, his Fornarina, 503. Aristippus, 141. Zeno, 123. Maaper- Rawdon, to the Lady Charlotte, from tuis, n. the banks of the St. Lawrence, 184 Ben Jonson, 64, n. Reason, 143. 247. 281. 348. 367. Pictures, Italian galleries of, 46. Reason, Folly, and Beauty, *1. Red Fox, the, 30. Redbreast, the, in December, 981. light gleam'd, 339. Reform, notions on, 601. Religion, the “Sacred Songs," 97. Plato, epigram of, 75, n. He wrote in Religion and trade, 6:28. Religion in the East, Brahma, &c. 57. Platonic philosophy, and followers of (See Lalla Rookh.) Plato, 153, et seg. Religious emblems and types, 312. If cisms of Fadladeen on this romance, Poco-Curante Society, the, 495. (See Remember him thou leav'st behind Rhymes on the Road.) Song of, 660. 108. Remember the time in La Mancba' Poet's dream: Dinner of Type and Co., shades, 351, 630. Remember thee! 254. Occasional address, for the opening Political allusions, by the author, 35, et Russell, after a conversation in which 637, et seg. See the Satirical Poems, Resemblance, the: Yes, if 'twere any metic, 567. Political and Satirical Poems, 455, &c. Reverend Pamphleteer, the, 618. Politics, Irish, allusions to, 29 et seq. lutions passed at a meeting of, 588 See 547–636, et passim. Reynolds, Mr. Thomas, 458. Rhodope, 676. Fable of the Isdy the Pyramid, 676. Rhymes on the Road, extracted from the journal of a travelling member of the Poco-Carante Society, in 181 231. Rich in bliss, I proudly scorn, (Ode Kilkenny Theatre, October, 1809, 513. Ring, the; a tale of Rupert, 128 Ring, the :-The happy day at length Psaphon, his birds taught to pronounce arrived, 128. Ring, the :-No, Lady! Lady! keez the ring, 126. Rings and Seals, 150. Ripen'd by the solar beam, (Ode Anacreon,) 95. 495. |