Hoofdwerken chronologisch geordend

Hoofdwerken, chronologisch geordend

Fugitive Pieces(1806)

·         On Leaving N–st–d
·         To E–
·         On the Death of a Young Lady, Cousin to the Author and Very Dear to him
·         To D.–
·         To —
·         To Caroline
·         To Maria
·         Fragments of School Exercises, from the Prometheus Vinctus of Aeschylus
·         Lines in ‘Letters of An Italian Nun and An English Gentleman,’ by J.J. Rousseau, founded on Facts
·         On a Change of Masters, At A Great Public School
·         Epitaph on A Beloved Friend
·         Adrian’s Address to His Soul, When Dying
·         To Mary
·         ‘When to their airy hall,…’
·         To —
·         ‘When I hear you express an affection so warm,…’
·         On a Distant View of The Village and School of Harrow on the Hill. 1806
.         Thoughts Suggested by A College Examination
·         To Mary, On Receiving Her Picture
·         On the Death of Mr. Fox, The Following Illiberal Impromptu Appeared In The Morning Post
·         To A Lady, Who Presented The Author A Lock of Hair, Braided with His Own, And Appointed a Night in December, To Meet Him in the Garden
·         To A Beautiful Quaker
·         To Julia!
·         To Woman
·         An Occasional Prologue Delivered By The Author, Previous To The Performance of The Wheel Of Fortune, At A Private Theatre
·         To Miss E.P.
·         The Tear
·         Reply to The Some Verses of J.M.B. Pigot, Esq. On The Cruelty of His Mistress
·         Granta, A Medley
·         To The Sighing Strephon
·         The Cornelian
·         To A. —
·         As The Author Was Discharging His Pistols in A Garden
·         Translation from Catullus. Ad Lesbiam
·         Translation of The Epitaph on Virgil and Tibullus, by Domitius Marsus
·         Imitation of Tibullus ‘Sulpicia Ad Cerintum.’ Lib. Quart.
·         Translation From Catullus. Luctus de Norte Passeris
·         Imitated from Catullus. To Anna.

Hours of Idleness (1807) 

·         On the Death of a Young Lady, cousin to the author, and very dear to him
·         To E–
·         To D–
·         Epitaph on a Friend
·         A Fragment
·         On Leaving Newstead Abbey
·         Lines written in  Letters of an Italian Nun and an English Gentleman; by J. J, Rousseau: founded on Facts
·         Answer to the foregoing, addressed to Miss–
·         Adrian’ s Address to his Soul when Dying
·         Translations from Catullus, Ad Lesbiam
·         Translations of the  Epitaph of Virgil and Tibulus, by Domitius Marsus
·         Imitation of Tibullus,  Sulpicia ad Cerinthum
·         Translation from Catullus,  Lugete Veneres, Cupidinesque,  &c.
·         Imitated from Catullus,  To Ellen
·         Translation from Horace,  ‘Justum et tenacem’,  &c.
·         From Anacreon (I wish to tune my quivering lyre)
·         From Anacreon  (Twas now the hour when Night had driven)
·         From the Prometheus Vinctus of Aeschylus
·         To Emma
·         To M. S. G.   (Whene’er I view those lips of thine )
·         To Caroline   (Think’ st thou I saw thy beauteous eyes)
·         To Caroline   (When I hear you express an affection so warm)
·         To Caroline   (Oh! When shall the grave hide forever my sorrows?)
·         Stanzas to a Lady, with the Poems of Camoëns
·         The First Kiss of Love
·         On a Change of Masters at a great Public School
·         To the Duke of Dorset
·         Fragment, written shortly after the Marriage of Miss Chaworth
·         Granta: A Medley
·         On a Distant View of the Village and School of Harrow on the Hill
·         To M–
·         To Woman
·         To M. S. G.   (When I dream that you love me, you ll surely forgive)
·         To Mary, on receiving her Picture
·         To Lesbia
·         Lines addressed to a Young Lady, who was alarmed at the Sound of a Bullet hissing near her
·         Love’ s Last Adieu
·         Damaetas
·         To Marion
·         To a Lady, who presented to the Author a Lock of Hair, braided with his own, and appointed a night in December to meet him in the Garden
·         Oscar of Alva: A Tale
·         The Episode of Nisus and Euryalus
·         Translation from the Medea of Euripides
·         Thoughts Suggested by a College Examination
·         To a beautiful Quaker
·         The Cornelian
·         An Occasional Prologue to ‘The Wheel of Fortune’
·         On the Death of Mr Fox
·         The Tear
·         Reply to some Verses of J. M. B. Pigot, Esq.. on the Cruelty of his Mistress
·         To the Sighing Strephon
·         To Eliza
·         Lachin y Gar
·         To Romance
·         Answer to some Verses sent by a Friend to the Author, complaining that one of his Descriptions was rather too warmly drawn
·         Elegy on Newstead Abbey
·         Childish Recollections
·         Answer to a beautiful Poem, entitled ‘The Common Lot’ 
·         To a Lady who presented the Author with the Velvet Band which bound her Tresses
·         Remembrance
·         Lines addressed to the Rev. J. T, Becher, on his advising the Author to mix more with Society
·         The Death of Calmar and Orla: An Imitation of Macpherson s Ossian
.         L’Amitie est l’Amour sans Ailes
·         The Prayer of Nature
·         To Edward Noel Long, Esq.
·         Oh! Had my fate been join’d with thine!
·         I would I were a careless Child
·         When I roved a young Highlander
·         To George, Earl Delawarr
·         To the Earl of Clare
·         Lines Written beneath an Elm in the Churchyard of Harrow

English Bards and Scotch Reviewers: a Satire (1809)

Hints from Horace: Being an Allusion in English Verse, to the Epistle  Ad Pisones, De Arte Poetica  (1811)

The curse of Minerva (1811) 

Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage (1812-1818)

·       To Iolanthe
·       Childe Harold s Pilgrimage

The Waltz: an Apostrophic Hymn (1813, geschreven in 1812)

The Giaour (1813)

The Bride of Abydos: a Turkish Tale (1813)

The Corsair (1814, geschreven in 1813) 

Lara (1814) 

Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte (1814)

Hebrew Melodies (1815)  

·         She Walks in Beauty
·          The Harp the Monarch Minstrel Swept
·          If that High World
·          The Wild Gazelle
·          Oh! Weep for Those!
·          On Jordan’s Banks
·          Jephtha’s Daughter
·          Oh! Snatched Away in Beauty s Bloom
·          My Soul is Dark 
·          I Saw Thee Weep
·          Thy Days are Done
·          Song of Saul before his last Battle
·          Saul
·          All is Vanity, saith the Preacher
·          When Coldness Wraps This Suffering Clay
·          Vision of Belshazzar
·          Sun of the Sleepless!
·          Were my Bosom as False as thou Deem st it to be
·          Herod’ s Lament for Mariamne
·          On the Day of Destruction of Jerusalem by Titus
·          By the Rivers of Babylon we sat down and Wept
·          The Destruction of Sennacherib 
·          A Spirit pass d before me. From Job

The Siege of Corinth (1816, het schrijven startte in 1815) 

Domestic Pieces (1816)

·        Fare Thee Well 
·        A Sketch
·        Endorsment to the Deed of Separation. In the April of 1816
·        Stanzas to Augusta   (When all around grew drear and dark )
·        Stanzas to Augusta   (Though the Day of my Destiny’ss over )
·        Epistle to Augusta (My Sitster! My Sweet Sister! If a Name)
·        Lines on Hearing that Lady Byron was Ill

Monody on the Death of the Right Hon. R. B. Sheridan (1816) 

The dream (1816) 

The Prisoner of Chillon (1816) 

·         The Prisoner of Chillon
·          Sonnet to Chillon

Parisina (1816) 

The Lament of Tasso (1817) 

Manfred (1817, geschreven in 1816-1817)

Beppo: A Venetian Story (1818, geschreven in 1817)

Mazeppa (1819, geschreven in 1818)

Ode on Venice (1819) 

The Propehecy of Dante (1819) 

·         Dedication
·         The Prophecy of Dante

The Morgante Maggiore of Pulci (1820) vertaling

Francesca of Rimini (1820) vertaling

Sardanapalus: A Tragedy (1821) 

The Two Foscari: An Historical Tragedy (1821) 

Cain: A Mystery (1821) 

Marino Faliero, Doge of Venice; An Historical Tragedy (1821) 

The Vision of Judgement (1822) 

Werner: Or, the Inheritance: A Tragedy (1822) 

Heaven and Earth: A Mystery (1822, geschreven in 1821)

The Age of Bronze: Or, Carmen Seculare et Annus Haud Mirabilis (1823) 

The Blues: A Literary Eclogue (1823, geschreven in 1821)

The Deformed Transformed: A Drama (1824, het schrijven startte in 1821) 

The Island; Or, Christian and his Comrades (1824, geschreven in 1823) 

Occasional Pieces (1807-1824)

·         The Adieu, Written under the Impression that the Author would soon die
·         To a Vain Lady
·         To Anne  
·         To the Same  (Oh, say not, sweet Anne, that the fates have decreed)
·         To the Author of a Sonnet beginning, ‘Sad is my Verse’, you say, ‘And yet no Tear’ 
·         On finding a Fan
·         Farewell to the Muse
·         To an Oak at Newstead
·         On Revisiting Harrow
·         Epitaph to John Adams of Southwell, a Carrier, who died of Drunkenness
·         To my Son
·         Farewell! If ever fondest Prayer
·         Bright be the Place of thy Soul
·         When We Two Parted
·         To a Youthful Friend
·         Lines Inscribed Upon a Cup formed from a Skull
·         Well! Thou art Happy
·         Inscription on the Monument of a Newfoundland Dog
·         To a Lady, on being asked my Reason for quitting England in the Spring
·         Remind me not, Remind me not
·         There was a Time, I need not Name
·         And wilt thou weep when I am low?
·         Fill the Goblet Again: A song
·         Stanzas to a Lady, on Leaving England
·         Lines to Mr Hodgson: Written on Board the Lisbon Packet
·         Lines Written in an Album at Malta
·         To Florence
·         Stanzas Composed during a Thunder-storm
·         Stanzas written on passing the Ambracian Gulf
·         The Spell is Broke, the Charm is Flown!
·         Written after swimming from Sestos to Abydos
·         Lines in the Travellers  Book at Orchomenus
·         Maid of Athens, ere we part 
·         Translations of the Nurse s Dole in the Medea of Euripides
·         My Epitaph
·         Substitute for an Epitaph
·         Lines written beneath a Picture
·         Translation of the famous Greek War Song
·         Translation of the Romaic Song
·         On Parting
·         Epitaph for Joseph Blackett, Late Poet and Shoemaker
·         Farewell to Malta
·         To Dives: A Fragment
·         On Moore s Last Operatic Farce, or Farcial Opera
·         Epistle to a Friend, in answer to some Lines exhorting the Author to be Cheerful, and to  ‘Banish care’ 
·         To Thyrza. ‘Without A Stone,’ &c.
·         Stanzas (Away, away, ye Notes of Wo)
·         Stanzas (One Struggle more, and I am free)
·         Euthanasia. ‘When Time,’ &c.
·         And thou art dead, as young and fair
·         Stanzas (If sometimes in the Haunts of Me)
·         On a Cornelian Heart which was broken
·         Lines from the French
·         Lines to a Lady Weeping
·         The Chain I Gave
·         Lines written on a Blank Leaf of ‘The Pleasures of Memory’ 
·         Address, Spoken at the Opening of Drury Lane Theatre, October 10, 1812
·         Parenthetical Address, by Dr Plagiary
·         Verses fund in a Summer-house at Hales Owen
·         Remember Thee! Remember Thee!
·         To Time
·         Translation of a Romaic Love Song
·         Stanzas (Thou art not false)
·         On Being Asked what was the ‘Origin of Love’ 
·         Stanzas (Remember him whom Passion’s Power)
·         On Lord Thurlow’s Poems
·         To Lord Thurlow
·         To Thomas Moore, Written the Evening before his Visit to Mr Leigh Hunt in Horsemonger Lane Goal
·         Impromptu, ‘When, From the Heart Sorrow Sits’
·         Sonnet, to Geneva
·         Sonnet, to the Same
·         From the Portuguese: ‘Tu mi Chamas’
·         Another Version
·         The Devil’s Drive: An Unfinished Rhapsody
·         Windsor Poetics
·         Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte
·         Stanzas for Music (I speak not, I trace not)
·         Address intended to be recited at the Caledonian Meeting
·         Fragment of an Epistle to Thomas Moore
·         Condolatory Address to Sarah, Countess of Jersey, on the Prince Regent s returning her Pictures to Mrs Mee
·         To Belshazzar
·         Elegiac Stanzas on the Death of Sir Peter Parker, Bart
·         Stanzas for Music (There s not a Joy the World can give)
·         Stanzas for Music  (There be none of Beauty s Daughters)
·         On Napoleon s Escape from Elba
·         Ode from the French (We do not curse thee, Waterloo)
·         From the French (Must thou go,my glorious Chief?)
·         On the Star of The Legion of Honor from the French
·         Napoleon s Farewell, from the French
·         Endorsement to the Deed of Separation,in the April of 1816
·         Darkness
·         Churchill s Grave
·         Prometheus 
·         A Fragment (Could I remount the river of my years)
·         Sonnet to Lake Leman
·         Romance muy Dolorosodel Sitio y Toma de Alhama
·         A very mournful Ballad on the Siege and Conquest of Alhama
·         Sonetto di Vittorelli. Per Monaca
·         Translation from Vittorelli, On a Nun
·         Stanzas for Music (They say that Hope is Happiness)
·         To Thomas Moore (My Bark is on the Shore)
·         On the Bust of Helen by Canova
·         Song for the Luddites
·         To Thomas Moore (What are you doing now?)
·         So we ll go no more a roving 
·         Versicles
·         To Mr Murray (To Hook the Reader)
·         Epistle from Mr Murray to Dr Polidori
·         Epistle to Mr Murray (My dear Mr Murray / You re in a damn d hurry)
·         To Mr Murray (Strahan, Tonson, Lintot of the Times )
·         On the Birth of John William Rizzo Hoppner
·         Stanzas to the Po
·         Sonnet to George the Fourth, on the Repeal of Lord Edward Fitzgerald s Forfeiture
·         Epigram from the French of Rulhieres
·         Stanzas (Could love forever)
·         On my Wedding day
·         Epitaph for William Pitt
·         Epigram (In digging up your Bones, Tom Paine)
·         Stanzas (When a Man hath no Freedom to fight for at home)
·         Epigram (The World is a Bundle of Hay)
·         The Charity Ball
·         Epigram on my Wedding Day
·         On my Thirty-third Birth Day
·         Epigram on the Braziers  Company
·         Martial, Lib. I.Epist. I.
·         Bowles and Campbell
·         Epigrams on Lord Castlereagh
·         Epitaph on Lord Castlereagh
·         John Keats
·         The Conquest: A Fragment
·         To Mr Murray (For Oxford and for Waldegrave)
·         The Irish Avatar
·         Stanzas Written on the Road between Florence and Pisa
·         Stanzas to a Hindoo Air
·         Impromptu (Beneath Blessington’s Eyes)
·         To the Countess of Blessington
·         On this Day I complete my Thirty-Sixth Year

Don Juan (1819-1824) 
·         Don Juan
·       Dedication

Illustraties

Header (v.l.n.r.):
– Lord Byron, maker onbekend (publiek domein, via Wikimedia Commons);
– Lord Byron, ingekleurde tekening (1873), maker onbekend (publiek domein, via Wikimedia Commons);
– Lord Byron in Elizabethaans kostuum (1813), Richard Westall (publiek domein, via Wikimedia Commons);
– Lord Byron in Albanees kostuum (1835), Thomas Phillips (publiek domein, via Wikimedia Commons).