The Complete Poetical Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Vol 1 and 2

Chapter 170

Chapter 170211 wordsPublic domain

page xiii: V. Koskiusko. [MS. _Letter_, Dec. 17, 1794.] {original is missing period and has closing parenthesis instead of bracket}

page xvii: Youth and Age. [MS. S. T. C.:{original is missing period after C} MSS. (1, 2) Notebook.]

page 51: 28 gleam] gleams _1796_, _1797_, _1803_{original has 11803}, _1893_.

page 207: When the ivy-tod{original has ivv-tod} is heavy

page 218: [Lines 82, 83, . . . palfrey white.]{ending bracket is missing in original}

page 237: 20 _Both_] FAMINE _M.{period missing in original} P._

page 256: Title] Fears &c. Written, April 1798, during the Alarms of an Invasion _MS.{original has extraneous comma} W._

page 328: Deep was the shudder, O Earth!{exclamation point missing in original}

page 368: Dear Lady!{exclamation point missing in original} friend devoutest

page 376: (1) _MS. A_, sent to Sir George Beaumont, Oct. 1803 (see _Coleorton Letters_){ending parenthesis is missing in original}, 1886, i. 26;

page 442: "{quotation mark missing in original}Thus, long accustom'd

page 445: 'I guess we shall have rain to-day!'{quotation mark missing in original}

Footnote [133:1] Balda-Zhiok, i. e.{period missing in original} mons altitudinis

Footnote [256:1] alarm respecting the threatened invasion. {original has extraneous quotation mark}

Footnote [293:1] Coleridge synchronizes the _Dark LadiƩ_ (a poem which he was 'preparing' with the _Christabel_){ending parenthesis is missing in original}].