Author:Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Poetry collections

 * Greek Prize Ode on the Slave Trade, Cambridge (1792)
 * Monody on the Death of Chatterton (1794) (first draft)
 * The Vision of the Maid of Orleans, in 'Joan of Arc, an epic poem' (1796), by Robert Southey
 * Ode on the Departing Year (1796)
 * Poems on Various Subjects (1796)
 * Poems, by S. T. Coleridge. Second Edition, To Which Are Now Added Poems by Charles Lamb and Charles Lloyd (1797)
 * Fears in solitude, written in 1798, during the alarm of an invasion. To which are added, France, an ode; and Frost at Midnight (1798)
 * Lyrical ballads, with a few other poems (1798), co-authored with William Wordsworth
 * Lyrical ballads, with other poems (1800), in 2 vols., co-authored with William Wordsworth
 * Poems (1803)
 * Christabel; Kubla Khan, a Vision; Pains of Sleep (1816)
 * Sibylline leaves: a collection of poems (1817)
 * Literary Remains (1836)
 * The Complete Poetical Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1912), in 2 vols., edited by Ernest Hartley Coleridge

Poems

 * Index of Titles
 * Index of First Lines
 * Chronologically by Title

Drama

 * The Fall of Robespierre. An Historic Drama (1794), co-authored with Robert Southey
 * Remorse: a Tragedy, in Five Acts (1813)
 * Zapolya: a Christmas tale, in two parts (1817)
 * Osorio; a Tragedy, As Originally Written in 1797 (1873), edited by Richard Herne Shepherd, the original text of what subsequently became "Remorse".

Translations

 * Wallenstein. A drama in two parts (1800), by Friedrich Schiller ,
 * comprises "The Piccolomini" and "Death of Wallenstein"


 * A Hebrew dirge: chaunted in the Great Synagogue, St. James's Place, Aldgate, on the day of the funeral of Her Royal Highness, the Princess Charlotte (1819), by Hyman Hurwitz
 * "Know’st thou the Land" (1829), by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
 * "An Ode in the Manner of Anacreon" (1893) by Julianus the Egyptian

Other works

 * The Plot Discovered; Or, an Address to the People, Against Ministerial Treason (1795)
 * Conciones Ad Populum. Or, Addresses to the People (1795)
 * A Moral and Political Lecture delivered at Bristol (1795)
 * The Watchman (1796)
 * contains the 10 issues of a short lived political publication


 * Omniana, or Horae otiosiores (1812),
 * primarily by Robert Southey but containing multiple contributions from Coleridge (see below).


 * The Friend: a series of essays (1812)
 * Contains the 28 weekly editions of a short-lived paper produced by Coleridge


 * Essays on the Fine Arts (1814)
 * The statesman's manual; or, The Bible, the best guide to political skill and foresight (1816)
 * "Blessed are ye that sow beside all waters!": a lay sermon, addressed to the higher and middle classes, on the existing distresses and discontents (1817)
 * Biographia Literaria; or, Biographical Sketches of My Literary Life and Opinions (1817), in 2 vols.
 * Aids to reflection, in the formation of a manly character, on the several grounds of prudence, morality, and religion (1825)
 * On the constitution of church and state according to the idea of each: with aids toward a right judgement on the late Catholic Bill (1830)
 * The literary remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1836-39), edited by Henry Nelson Coleridge, in 4 vols. (v1);
 * Letters, conversations, and recollections of S. T. Coleridge (1836), in 2 vols., edited by Thomas Allsop
 * Confessions of an inquiring spirit (1840), edited by Henry Nelson Coleridge
 * Hints Towards the Formation of a More Comprehensive Theory of Life (1848), edited by Seth Benjamin Watson
 * Coleridge's Essays & Lectures on Shakespeare (1907)
 * Letter on Browne
 * Postscript of Letter to The Rev. H. F. Cary, 6 February 1818
 * Letter to Charles Augustus Tulk, 12 February 1818
 * On Poesy or Art
 * The Alchemists

Contributions to Omniana, or Horæ Otiosiores, by Robert Southey

 * 45: Thomas O'Brien Mac Mahon (see note on page)
 * 87: The French Decade
 * 89: Ride and Tie
 * 90: Jeremy Taylor
 * 91: Criticism
 * 92: Public Instruction
 * 97: Picturesque words
 * 98: Météorolithes
 * 102: Toleration
 * 103: War
 * 105: Parodies
 * 106: M. Dupuis
 * 109: Origin of the Worship of Hymen
 * 110: Egotism
 * 111: Cap of Liberty
 * 113: Bulls
 * 114: Wise Ignorance
 * 117: Rouge
 * 118: Επεα πτερόεντα
 * 119: Motives and Impulses
 * 120: Inward Blindness
 * 121: The Vices of Slaves no excuse for Slavery
 * 122: Circulation of the Blood
 * 123: Perituræ parcere chartæ
 * 124: To have and to be
 * 125: Party Passion
 * 126: Goodness of Heart indispensible to a man of genius
 * 127: Milton and Ben Jonson
 * 128: Statistics
 * 129: Magnanimity
 * 155: Negroes and Narcissuses
 * 156: An anecdote
 * 157: The Pharos at Alexandria
 * 158: Sense and Common Sense
 * 159: Toleration
 * 160: Hint for a new Species of History

Contributions to Periodicals

 * "The Cambridge Intelligencer", 1794-1795
 * "The Morning Chronicle", 1794-1795
 * "The Monthly Magazine", 1796-1797
 * "The Morning Post", 1798-1802
 * "The Courier", 1807-1811
 * "Blackwood’s Magazine", 1819-1822

Works about Coleridge

 * To Coleridge, by Percy Bysshe Shelley.
 * "Mr. Coleridge", in The Spirit of the Age (1825), by William Hazlitt
 * "Coleridge", in Essays and Studies (1875), by Algernon Charles Swinburne