Author:Percy Bysshe Shelley

Poems

 * Index of Titles (work-in-progress)

Individual poems

 * An Ariette for Music (1832)
 * An Elegy on the Death of John Keats, Author of Endymion, Hyperion, etc. from Adonais
 * Arethusa
 * A Vision of the Sea (1820)
 * A Widow Bird Sate Mourning for Her Love
 * Circumstance from Epigrams
 * Death ("They die—the dead return not—Misery…")
 * Dirge for the Year
 * England in 1819
 * Epitaph
 * Evening: Ponte Al Mare, Pisa (1821)
 * Fragment on Keats
 * Good-Night
 * Hymn of Apollo
 * Hymn of Pan
 * Lines ("That time is dead for ever, child")
 * Lines ("Far, far away, O ye")
 * Lines to a Critic
 * Lines to a Reviewer
 * Milton's Spirit, 1820, publ. 1870
 * Music
 * Mutability ("The flower that smiles to-day")
 * On a Faded Violet (known also as On a Dead Violet)
 * On Fanny Godwin
 * "One Word is Too Often Profaned"
 * Passage of the Apennines
 * Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things (1811)
 * Satan Broken Loose
 * Song
 * Song of Proserpine
 * Sonnet ("Ye hasten to the grave…")
 * Sonnet ("Lift not the painted veil…")
 * Sonnet: Political Greatness
 * Stanza
 * Stanzas: Written in Dejection, Near Naples
 * Summer And Winter
 * The Devil's Walk
 * The False Laurel And The True
 * The Fugitives
 * The Isle
 * The Long Past
 * The Magnetic Lady to Her Patient
 * The Mask of Anarchy
 * The Past
 * The Question
 * The Revolt of Islam
 * The Sensitive Plant (1820)
 * The Two Spirits: An Allegory
 * The Vine-shroud
 * The World's Wanderers
 * Time
 * To —— ("I fear thy kisses, gentle maiden…")
 * To —— ("Music, when soft voices die…")
 * To Byron
 * To Coleridge
 * To Emilia Viviani
 * To Jane: The Invitation
 * To Jane: The Recollection
 * To Mary Shelley
 * To-morrow
 * To Night
 * To Sophia (Miss Stacey)
 * To Stella from Epigrams
 * Verses Addressed to the Noble and Unfortunate Lady, Emilia V--, Now Imprisoned in the Convent of-- from Epipsychidion
 * When the Lamp is Shattered
 * With a Guitar, to Jane
 * Zucca

Oxford Book of English Verse 1250-1900

 * Hymn of Pan
 * The Invitation
 * Hellas
 * Night
 * From the Arabic
 * Lines
 * To —— (One word is too often profaned...)
 * The Question
 * Remorse
 * Music, when Soft Voices die

Plays

 * The Cenci
 * Hellas (1822)
 * Prometheus Unbound (1820)
 * Oedipus Tyrannus, or Swellfoot the tyrant: A tragedy in two acts (1820)

Novels

 * Zastrozzi
 * St. Irvyne; or, the Rosicrucian

Essays

 * An Address to the Irish People (1812)
 * A Refutation of Deism: in a Dialogue (1814)
 * On "Frankenstein" (~1817)
 * The Necessity of Atheism (1817)
 * An Address to the People on the Death of the Princess Charlotte (1817)
 * A Defence of Poetry (1821)
 * The Elysian Fields, A Lucianic Fragment (1821)
 * On the Devil, and Devils (1839)
 * Speculations on Metaphysics (1840)

Journals

 * History of a Six Weeks' Tour
 * Journal at Geneva (including Ghost Stories) and on Return to England, 1816

Letters

 * To William Godwin, 25 July, 1818
 * To T. L. Peacock, 25 July, 1818

Translations

 * The Cyclops of Euripides (composed 1819, first published in 1824)

Collections

 * The Complete Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley (ed. Hutchinson, 1914). Clarendon Press, 1914. “The Oxford Shelly”.
 * The Prose Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley. Reeves and Turner, 1880.
 * Prose Works, From the Original Editions. Edited, Prefaced and Annotated by Richard Herne Shepherd

Others

 * Shelley, a poem, with other writings relating to Shelley (1884), by James Thomson ("B.V.")
 * "Remarks on Shelley" in Studies in Letters and Life (1890), by George Edward Woodberry
 * "Shelley", in Biographical and Critical Studies (1896), by James Thomson
 * "Shelley", in Rosemary and Pansies (1904), by Bertram Dobell