Detta album är verkligen inte det första i sin karriär, vi vill komma ihåg album som
The Complete Poetical Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Vol II.
Albumet består av 271 låtar. Du kan klicka på låtarna för att se respektive texter och översättningar:
Här är en kort lista med låtar som består av Samuel Taylor Coleridge som kan spelas under konserten och dess referensalbum:
- Reflections on having left a Place of Retirement
- Love and Friendship Opposite
- Honour
- Talleyrand to Lord Grenville. A Metrical Epistle
- Phantom
- Epitaph on an Infant
- Sonnet: To Charles Lloyd
- A Lover's Complaint to his Mistress
- Genevieve
- The Second Birth
- Westphalian Song
- A Day-dream
- To Robert Southey of Baliol College
- Ad Vilmum Axiologum
- To Lesbia
- The Destiny of Nations. A Vision
- Dura Navis
- To Richard Brinsley Sheridan
- Mahomet
- Love's Burial-place
- Ne Plus Ultra
- To a Young Lady on her Recovery from a Fever
- Song. From Zapolya
- A Mathematical Problem
- Lines: To a Friend in Answer to a Melancholy Letter
- To Disappointment
- Lines: Composed while climbing the Left Ascent of Brockley Coomb, Somersetshire
- Julia
- Sonnet: On quitting School for College
- Fire, Famine, and Slaughter
- The Madman and the Lethargist
- Sonnet
- An Invocation
- To Asra
- To the Muse
- To Miss A. T.
- The Tears of a Grateful People
- To William Wordsworth
- To Lord Stanhope
- On an Infant which died before Baptism
- From the German
- Youth and Age
- Sonnet: To The River Otter
- The Improvisatore; or, ‘John Anderson, My Jo, John'
- The Mad Monk
- The Sigh
- A Stranger Minstrel
- Fancy in Nubibus, or the Poet in the Clouds
- Hexameters. Paraphrase of Psalm xlvi
- On a Cataract
- Christabel
- A Wish
- Epitaph on an Infant(1811)
- Ode to Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire
- Pantisocracy
- The Foster-mother's Tale
- A Hymn
- A Character
- Moriens Superstiti
- Ode to Tranquillity
- Metrical Feet. Lesson for a Boy
- The Ballad of the Dark Ladié
- Pain
- Anthem for the Children of Christ's Hospital
- To a Lady, with Falconer's Shipwreck
- Sonnets on Eminent Characters
- Ode
- An Invocation. From Remorse
- Alcaeus to Sappho
- Pitt
- To ——
- Absence
- An Effusion at Evening
- Fears in Solitude
- The Good, Great Man
- To a Young Ass
- Written after a Walk before Supper
- To the Honourable Mr. Erskine
- To the Rev. W. L. Bowles
- Lines on a Friend who Died of a Frenzy Fever induced by Calumnious Reports
- Phantom or Fact. A Dialogue in Verse
- To Matilda Betham from a Stranger
- Love, Hope, and Patience in Education.
- To Two Sisters
- Epitaphium Testamentarium
- To a Primrose. The First seen in the Season
- Easter Holidays
- The Old Man of the Alps
- Recantation: Illustrated in the Story of the Mad Ox
- Lines: To a Beautiful Spring in a Village
- On my Joyful Departure from the same City
- Homeless
- Water Ballad
- Ave, Atque Vale!
- On a Late Connubial Rupture in High Life
- Sancti Dominici Pallium. A Dialogue between Poet and Friend
- La Fayette
- Morienti Superstes
- The Wanderings of Cain
- Lines composed in a Concert-room
- For a Market-clock
- Psyche
- Frost at Midnight
- Nil Pejus est Caelibe Vitâ
- To a Friend
- Ode to the Departing Year
- Catullian Hendecasyllables
- Charity in Thought
- Cologne
- The Reproof and Reply
- Parliamentary Oscillators
- To a Young Lady
- The Virgin's Cradle-hymn
- To the Author of ‘The Robbers'
- To William Godwin
- Tell's Birth-Place
- The Pang more Sharp than All. An Allegory
- First Advent of Love
- A Thought suggested by a View of Saddleback in Cumberland
- An Angel Visitant
- Work without Hope. Lines composed 21st February, 1825
- Home-Sick. Written in Germany
- To a Lady offended by a Sportive Observation that Women have no Souls
- Constancy to an Ideal Object
- Song
- The Garden of Boccaccio
- Desire
- Translation of a Latin Inscription
- Lines suggested by the last Words of Berengarius; ob. Anno Dom. 1088
- Inscription for a Fountain on a Heath
- Song, ex improviso, on hearing a Song in praise of a Lady's Beauty
- The Exchange
- The Visit of the Gods
- The Rose
- With Fielding's ‘Amelia'
- France: An Ode.
- An Ode to the Rain
- My Baptismal Birth-day
- To Earl Stanhope
- The Gentle Look
- Lewti, or the Circassian Love-chaunt
- The Visionary Hope
- Humility the Mother of Charity
- To Fortune
- Separation
- Love's Apparition and Evanishment
- Lines: To a Comic Author, on an Abusive Review
- Sonnet: To a Friend who asked how I felt
- Sonnet: Composed on a Journey Homeward
- Inscription for a Seat by the Road Side half-way up a Steep Hill facing South
- Lines: Written at the King's Arms
- Devonshire Roads
- Human Life. On the Denial of Immortality
- The Blossoming of the Solitary Date-tree
- The Devil's Thoughts
- To the Rev. W. J. Hort
- To a Young Friend on his proposing
- Lines written at Shurton Bars
- Imitated from the Welsh
- The Suicide's Argument
- Sonnets attempted in the Manner of Contemporary Writers
- Lines in the Manner of Spenser
- Monody on the Death of Chatterton
- To an Unfortunate Woman at the Theatre
- The Two Founts
- To the Young Artist Kayser of Kaserwerth
- Progress of Vice
- To a Friend together with an Unfinished Poem
- Translation of a Passage in Ottfried's Metrical Paraphrase of the Gospel
- On Revisiting the Sea-shore
- Faith, Hope, and Charity. From the Italian of Guarini
- Hymn before Sun-rise, in the Vale of Chamouni
- Translation of Wrangham's ‘Hendecasyllabi ad Bruntonam e Granta Exituram'
- Reason
- Verses
- The Keepsake
- Mrs. Siddons
- Forbearance
- Elegy
- Koskiusko
- Sonnet: To the Autumnal Moon
- Not at Home
- Epitaph
- The Hour when we shall meet again
- On the Christening of a Friend's Child
- Priestley
- Melancholy. A Fragment
- On Bala Hill
- Sonnet: On receiving a Letter informing me of the Birth of a Son
- Burke
- A Fragment found in a Lecture-room
- Duty surviving Self-love. The only sure Friend of declining Life
- A Christmas Carol
- Recollections of Love
- Hymn to the Earth
- Lines to W. L.
- Monody on a Tea-kettle
- To the Evening Star
- The Raven or, A Christmas Tale, Told by a School-boy to His Little Brothers and Sisters. (1798)
- The Silver Thimble
- The Two Round Spaces on the Tombstone
- Music
- Farewell to Love
- To an Unfortunate Woman whom the Author had known in the days of her Innocence
- The Faded Flower
- A Child's Evening Prayer
- The Happy Husband. A Fragment
- Domestic Peace
- A Sunset
- Lines written in Commonplace Book of Miss Barbour, Daughter of the Minister of the U. S. A. to England
- Something Childish, but very Natural. Written in Germany
- What is Life
- Hunting Song. From Zapolya
- The Kiss
- On Donne's Poetry
- The Day-dream. From an Emigrant to his Absent Wife
- Kisses
- To Nature
- Imitations: Ad Lyram
- The Outcast
- On Imitation
- On seeing a Youth Affectionately Welcomed by a Sister
- Love's Sanctuary
- Religious Musings
- Anna and Harland
- Addressed to a Young Man of Fortune
- Ver Perpetuum. Fragment from an Unpublished Poem
- The Ovidian Elegiac Metre described and exemplified
- Life
- The Three Graves
- Lines written in the Album at Elbingerode in the Hartz Forest
- Names
- On the Prospect of establishing a Pantisocracy in America
- Destruction of the Bastile
- Quae Nocent Docent
- An Exile
- The Rash Conjurer
- Lines: On an Autumnal Evening
- Songs of the Pixies
- The British Stripling's War-Song
- The Death of the Starling
- On a Lady Weeping
- To Mary Pridham
- A Tombless Epitaph
- To the Author of Poems
- Israel's Lament
- Hexameters
- Self-knowledge
- An Ode in the Manner of Anacreon
- The Delinquent Travellers
- The Nose
- Apologia pro Vita sua
- Alice du Clos; or, The Forked Tongue. A Ballad
- The Complaint of Ninathóma
- The Picture, or the Lover's Resolution
- On observing a Blossom on the First of February 1796
- Imitated from Ossian
- Pity
- The Snow-drop.
- Perspiration
- To an Infant
- Reason for Love's Blindness
- On receiving an Account that his Only Sister's Death was Inevitable
- To Miss Brunton
- The Homeric Hexameter described and exemplified
- To the Rev. George Coleridge
- Happiness
- Inside the Coach
- Time, Real and Imaginary
- The Knight's Tomb