Spells and Philtres - Contents

Contents

Spells and Philtres contains the following poems:

  1. "Dedication"
  2. "Didus Ineptus"
  3. "Thebaid"
  4. "Secret Love"
  5. "The Pagan"
  6. "Tired Gardener"
  7. "Nada"
  8. "High Surf"
  9. "The Centaur"
  10. "Said the Dreamer"
  11. "The Nameless Wraith"
  12. "The Blindness of Orion"
  13. "Jungle Twilight"
  14. "The Phoenix"
  15. "The Prophet Speaks"
  16. "Farewell to Eros"
  17. "Alternative"
  18. "Only to One Returned"
  19. "Anteros"
  20. "No Stranger Dream"
  21. "Do you Forget, Enchantress?"
  22. "Necromancy"
  23. "Dialogue"
  24. "October"
  25. "Dominion"
  26. "Tolometh"
  27. "Disillusionment"
  28. "Almost Anything"
  29. "Parnassus a la Mode"
  30. "Fence and Wall"
  31. "Growth of Lichen"
  32. "Cats in Winter Sunlight"
  33. "Abandoned Plum-Orchard"
  34. "Harvest Evening"
  35. "Willow-Cutting in Autumn"
  36. "Late Pear-Pruner"
  37. "Geese in the Spring Night"
  38. "The Sparrow's Nest"
  39. "The Last Apricot"
  40. "Unicorn"
  41. "Untold Arabian Fable"
  42. "A Hunter Meets the Mantichoras"
  43. "The Sciapod"
  44. "The Monacle"
  45. "Feast of St. Anthony"
  46. "Paphnutios"
  47. "Philter"
  48. "Perseus and Medusa"
  49. "Essence"
  50. "Passing of an Elder God"
  51. "Nightmare of the Lilliputian"
  52. "Mithridates"
  53. "Quiddity"
  54. "'That Motley Drama'" (from Clérigo Herrero)
  55. "Rimas XXXIII" (from Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer)
  56. "Ecclesiastes" (from Charles-Marie-René Leconte de Lisle)
  57. "Anterior Life" (from Charles Baudelaire)
  58. "Song of Autumn" (from Charles Baudelaire)
  59. "Lethe" (from Charles Baudelaire)
  60. "The Metamorphoses of the Vampire" (from Charles Baudelaire)
  61. "Epigrams and Apothegms"

Read more about this topic:  Spells And Philtres

Famous quotes containing the word contents:

    Conversation ... is like the table of contents of a dull book.... All the greatest subjects of human thought are proudly displayed in it. Listen to it for three minutes, and you ask yourself which is more striking, the emphasis of the speaker or his shocking ignorance.
    Stendhal [Marie Henri Beyle] (1783–1842)

    How often we must remember the art of the surgeon, which, in replacing the broken bone, contents itself with releasing the parts from false position; they fly into place by the action of the muscles. On this art of nature all our arts rely.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

    Such as boxed
    Their feelings properly, complete to tags
    A box for dark men and a box for Other
    Would often find the contents had been scrambled.
    Gwendolyn Brooks (b. 1917)