Works
Poems
- Index of Titles (work-in-progress)
Individual poems
- A Bridal Song
- A Dirge
- Adonais
- A Lament (O world! O life! O time!)
- Alastor, or The Spirit of Solitude
- An Ariette for Music (1832)
- An Elegy on the Death of John Keats, Author of Endymion, Hyperion, etc. from Adonais
- An Exhortation (1820)
- An Ode, written October, 1819, before the Spaniards had recovered their Liberty (published 1820)
- Arethusa
- A Roman's Chamber
- Autumn: A Dirge
- 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…")
- Death ("Death is here and death is there…")
- Dirge for the Year
- England in 1819
- Epipsychidion
- Epitaph
- Evening: Ponte Al Mare, Pisa (1821)
- Fragment on Keats
- From the Arabic: An Imitation
- Good-Night
- Hymn of Apollo
- Hymn of Pan
- Liberty
- Lines ("That time is dead for ever, child")
- Lines ("Far, far away, O ye")
- Lines to a Critic
- Lines to a Reviewer
- Lines Written in the Bay of Lerici
- Lines Written on Hearing the News of the Death of Napoleon
- Love's Philosophy
- Milton's Spirit, 1820, publ. 1870
- Music
- Mutability ("The flower that smiles to-day")
- Ode to Heaven (1820)
- Ode to Liberty (1820)
- Ode to Naples
- Ode to the West Wind (1820)
- On a Faded Violet (known also as On a Dead Violet)
- On Fanny Godwin
- "One Word is Too Often Profaned"
- Ozymandias
- Passage of the Apennines
- Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things (1811)
- Queen Mab
- Remembrance
- 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 Aziola
- The Cloud (1820)
- The Daemon of the World (First Part published in 1816; first published in full in 1876)
- The Devil's Walk
- The False Laurel And The True
- The Fugitives
- The Indian Serenade (known also as Song written for an Indian Air and Lines to an Indian Air)
- 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 Waning Moon
- The World's Wanderers
- Time
- To a Skylark (1820)
- To —— ("I fear thy kisses, gentle maiden…")
- To —— ("Music, when soft voices die…")
- To —— ("One word is too often profaned…")
- To —— ("When passion's trance is overpast…")
- To Byron
- To Coleridge
- To Edward Williams
- 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
- To the Moon
- 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
Plays
- The Cenci
- Hellas
- Prometheus Unbound (1820)
- Oedipus Tyrannus, or Swellfoot the tyrant: A tragedy in two acts (1820)
Novels
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
Letters
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. aka “The Oxford Shelly”. (transcription project)
- The Prose Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley. Reeves and Turner, 1880. (transcription project)
- Prose Works, From the Original Editions. Edited, Prefaced and Annotated by Richard Herne Shepherd (transcription volumes: 1, 2)
Works about Shelley
- "Shelley, Percy Bysshe," in Alumni Oxonienses: the Members of the University of Oxford, 1715-1886, by Joseph Foster, London: Parker and Co. (1888–1892) in 4 vols.
- "Remarks on Shelley", by George Edward Woodberry from Studies in letters and life (1890).
- "Shelley, Percy Bysshe," in Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, London: Smith, Elder, & Co. (1885–1900) in 63 vols.
- "Shelley, Percy Bysshe," in A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature, by John William Cousin, London: J. M. Dent & Sons (1910)
- Shelley, a poem, with other writings relating to Shelley. by James Thomson ("B.V.") 1884
Works by this author published before January 1, 1927 are in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago. Translations or editions published later may be copyrighted. Posthumous works may be copyrighted based on how long they have been published in certain countries and areas.
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