Percy Bysshe Shelley — poems to learn by heart
Percy Bysshe Shelley: 289 poems. Pick any — it opens in the Memorizun trainer; the progressive word- and letter-hiding method helps you memorize faster.
- The Mask of Anarchy. Written on the Occasion of the Massacre at Manchester
- Scenes From the Magico Prodigioso
- Scenes From the Faust of Goethe
- Rosalind and Helen. a Modern Eclogue
- The Sensitive Plant
- Fragment: 'When Soft Winds and Sunny Skies'
- The Spectral Horseman
- Song From the Wandering Jew
- Letter to Maria Gisborne
- With a Guitar, to Jane
- Fragment: To the Moon
- Fragment: Omens
- In Horologium
- Fragment: Supposed to Be an Epithalamium of Francis Ravaillac and Charlotte Corday
- Fragment: A Serpent-Face
- Kissing Helena
- On a Fete at Carlton House: Fragment
- Sonnet. on Launching Some Bottles Filled With Knowledge into the Bristol Channel
- Farewell to North Devon
- The Revolt of Islam. a Poem in Twelve Cantos
- Sonnet: Political Greatness
- Sonnet to Byron
- Hymn to Mercury
- Pan, Echo, and the Satyr
- To a Star
- A Tale of Society As It Is: From Facts, 1811
- To the Queen of My Heart
- A Bridal Song
- Fragment: The False Laurel and the True
- Spirit of Plato
- Circumstance
- Fragment of the Elegy on the Death of Bion
- Matilda Gathering Flowers
- To Mary Who Died in This Opinion
- On Robert Emmet's Grave
- The Devil's Walk. a Ballad
- On Leaving London for Wales
- Fragment From the Wandering Jew
- From the Arabic: An Imitation
- The Drowned Lover
- Stanza From a Translation of the Marseillaise Hymn
- Bigotry's Victim
- Love
- To Ianthe
- The Triumph of Life
- Fragment: 'Methought I Was a Billow in the Crowd'
- From the Greek of Moschus
- The First Canzone of the Convito
- Sister Rosa: A Ballad
- On an Icicle That Clung to the Grass of a Grave
- To Ireland
- Sonnet. to a Balloon Laden With Knowledge
- The Wandering Jew's Soliloquy
- Prometheus Unbound. a Lyrical Drama in Four Acts
- The Witch of Atlas
- Adonais
- Hellas: A Lyrical Drama
- Fragments of an Unfinished Drama
- A Summer Evening Churchyard
- Cancelled Passage of Mont Blanc
- Marianne's Dream
- To Constantia, Singing
- Fragment: To One Singing
- Another Fragment: To Music
- Fragments Supposed to Be Parts of Otho
- Fragment: To a Friend Released From Prison
- Fragment: "Igniculus Desiderii"
- Lines to a Critic
- To the Nile
- Similes for Two Political Characters of 1819
- Fragment: 'What Men Gain Fairly'
- Sonnet: England in 1819
- An Ode, Written October, 1819, Before the Spaniards Had Recovered Their Liberty
- Ode to Heaven
- The Birth of Pleasure
- Fragment: Love the Universe to-Day
- Fragment: Wedded Souls
- Fragment: Sufficient Unto the Day
- Fragment: To Italy
- Fragment: Wine of the Fairies
- Ode to Liberty
- Arethusa
- Autumn: A Dirge
- The Tower of Famine
- The World's Wanderers
- Fragment: The Deserts of Dim Sleep
- Fragment: Death in Life
- Fragment: 'Unrisen Splendour of the Brightest Sun'
- Fragment: Pater Omnipotens
- To Edward Williams
- Fragments Written for Hellas
- The Dirge
- Alastor: Or, the Spirit of Solitude
- The Cenci. a Tragedy in Five Acts
- Oedipus Tyrannus or Swellfoot the Tyrant. a Tragedy in Two Acts
- The Daemon of the World
- Julian and Maddalo. a Conversation
- Charles the First
- To Constantia
- On Fanny Godwin
- A Hate-Song
- Ozymandias
- The Past
- On a Faded Violet
- Stanzas Written in Dejection, Near Naples
- The Woodman and the Nightingale
- Fragment: The Lake's Margin
- Fragment: To the People of England
- To Mary Shelley
- Love's Philosophy
- Fragment: Love's Tender Atmosphere
- Fragment: 'Is It That in Some Brighter Sphere'
- Fragment: 'Ye Gentle Visitations of Calm Thought'
- Fragment: 'Wake the Serpent Not'
- Cancelled Passage of the Ode to Liberty
- Song of Proserpine While Gathering Flowers on the Plain of Enna
- The Question
- The Waning Moon
- Liberty
- Buona Notte
- Fragment: 'The Viewless and Invisible Consequence'
- Fragment: 'Alas! This Is Not What I Thought Life Was'
- Fragment: To the Mind of Man
- The Aziola
- A Lament
- Fragment: 'I Would Not Be a King'
- Ginevra
- Evening: Ponte Al Mare, Pisa
- Epipsychidion
- On Death
- Fragment: Home
- To Constantia: Stanzas 1 and 2
- A Fragment: To Music
- 'Mighty Eagle'
- Death
- Otho
- Fragment: Satan Broken Loose
- Fragment: "Amor Aeternus"
- Fragment: Thoughts Come and Go in Solitude
- Lines Written Among the Euganean Hills
- Invocation to Misery
- Fragment: Apostrophe to Silence
- Fragment: 'My Head Is Wild With Weeping'
- Lines Written During the Castlereagh Administration
- Song to the Men of England
- A New National Anthem
- Ode to the West Wind
- To William Shelley
- Fragment: 'Follow to the Deep Wood's Weeds'
- Fragment: The Sepulchre of Memory
- Fragment: Music and Sweet Poetry
- Fragment: 'When a Lover Clasps His Fairest'
- Fragment: A Tale Untold
- Fragment: A Roman's Chamber
- Variation of the Song of the Moon
- The Cloud
- To a Skylark
- Hymn of Apollo
- The Two Spirits: An Allegory
- Ode to Naples
- To the Moon
- Sonnet
- Good-Night
- Orpheus
- Fragment: 'Such Hope, As Is the Sick Despair of Good'
- Fragment: Milton's Spirit
- Remembrance
- Epithalamium
- Prince Athanase. a Fragment
- Peter Bell the Third. by Miching Mallecho, Esq
- To Harriet
- To Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin
- Mutability
- To Wordsworth
- Feelings of a Republican on the Fall of Bonaparte
- Lines
- The Sunset
- Hymn to Intellectual Beauty
- Mont Blanc
- Fragment of a Ghost Story
- To the Lord Chancellor
- From the Original Draft of the Poem to William Shelley
- Passage of the Apennines
- To Mary --
- Scene From 'tasso'
- Fragment: To Byron
- Fragment: The Vine-Shroud
- Cancelled Stanza
- An Exhortation
- The Indian Serenade
- To Sophia [Miss Stacey]
- On the Medusa of Leonardo Da Vinci in the Florentine Gallery
- Fragment: 'A Gentle Story of Two Lovers Young'
- Fragment: Rome and Nature
- A Vision of the Sea
- Hymn of Pan
- Summer and Winter
- An Allegory
- Lines to a Reviewer
- Fragment of a Satire on Satire
- Fiordispina
- Time Long Past
- Dirge for the Year
- To Night
- Time
- To Emilia Viviani
- The Fugitives
- To --
- Lines Written on Hearing the News of the Death of Napoleon
- Love, Hope, Desire, and Fear
- Fragment on Keats
- Stanza
- Fragment: A Wanderer
- Fragment: The Lady of the South
- Fragment: Rain
- Fragment: 'O Thou Immortal Deity'
- A Dirge
- Lines Written in the Bay of Lerici
- Lines: 'We Meet Not As We Parted'
- Homer's Hymn to Castor and Pollux
- Homer's Hymn to the Sun
- To Stella
- The Same
- Ugolino
- Queen Mab
- The Solitary
- Ghasta or, the Avenging Demon!!!
- Victoria
- Music
- To-Morrow
- Fragment: Life Rounded With Sleep
- Fragment: 'I Faint, I Perish With My Love!'
- Fragment: Zephyrus the Awakener
- Fragment: May the Limner
- Fragment: 'The Death Knell Is Ringing'
- Fragment: 'I Stood upon a Heaven-Cleaving Turret'
- The Magnetic Lady to Her Patient
- Lines: 'When the Lamp Is Shattered'
- To Jane: The Invitation
- To Jane: The Recollection
- Falsehood and Vice
- To Death
- Eyes: A Fragment
- Song
- Song. Translated From the German
- To -- [Harriet]
- Saint Edmond's Eve
- St. Irvyne's Tower
- Melody to a Scene of Former Times
- The Boat on the Serchio
- Fragment: 'And That I Walk Thus Proudly Crowned'
- Fragment: 'The Rude Wind Is Singing'
- Fragment: 'Great Spirit'
- Fragment: Beauty's Halo
- The Zucca
- The Pine Forest of the Cascine Near Pisa
- Epitaph
- Homer's Hymn to the Earth: Mother of All
- Homer's Hymn to Minerva
- Fragment of the Elegy on the Death of Adonis
- From Vergil's Tenth Eclogue
- To the Moonbeam
- Original Poetry by Victor and Cazire
- Despair
- Hope
- To [Harriet]
- Fragment, or the Triumph of Conscience
- Bereavement
- War
- To Jane: 'The Keen Stars Were Twinkling'
- The Isle
- Homer's Hymn to the Moon
- Homer's Hymn to Venus
- The Cyclops
- From Vergil's Fourth Georgic
- Fragment
- Stanzas From Calderon's Cisma De Inglaterra
- Verses on a Cat
- Epitaphium
- A Dialogue
- Love's Rose
- To Miss -- -- [Harriet Grove] From Miss -- -- [Elizabeth Shelley]
- Sorrow
- Song. Translated From the Italian
- The Irishman's Song
- Revenge
- On the Dark Height of Jura
- To the Republicans of North America
- The Retrospect: Cwm Elan, 1812
