Informatie over het album The Complete Poetical Works Of Percy Bysshe Shelley Volume 2 van Percy Bysshe Shelley

Percy Bysshe Shelley heeft eindelijk Zondag 27 April 2025 zijn nieuwe album uitgebracht, genaamd The Complete Poetical Works Of Percy Bysshe Shelley Volume 2.
Dit album is zeker niet het eerste in zijn carrière, we willen albums als The Complete Poetical Works Of Percy Bysshe Shelley Volume 1 onthouden.
De 186 liedjes waaruit het album bestaat, zijn de volgende:
Hier is een lijstje met de liedjes die Percy Bysshe Shelley zou kunnen beslissen om te zingen, ook het album waaruit elk liedje afkomstig is, wordt weergegeven:
- On Death
- Fragment: ‘I Faint, I Perish With My Love!'
- To —. ‘Oh! There are Spirits of The Air'
- Cancelled Passage
- Lines: ‘When The Lamp Is Shattered'
- Fragment: The Lady Of The South
- To Constantia
- Marenghi
- Fragment: “Amor Aeternus'
- Dirge For The Year
- To Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin
- Fragment: ‘Alas! This Is Not What I Thought Life Was'
- Marianne's Dream
- Fragment: ‘When Soft Winds And Sunny Skies'
- A Fragment: To Music
- The Sensitive Plant Part II
- Cancelled Stanza
- Remembrance
- Fragment: ‘Such Hope, As Is The Sick Despair Of Good'
- Lines Written On Hearing The News Of The Death Of Napoleon
- Song For ‘Tasso'
- The Tower Of Famine
- Fragments Supposed To Be Parts Of Otho
- Fragment: Sufficient Unto The Day
- Time Long Past
- Fragment: Zephyrus The Awakener
- From The Arabic: An Imitation
- Fragment: The Deserts Of Dim Sleep
- To Edward Williams
- Fragment: Love The Universe To-Day
- Invocation To Misery
- Fragment: ‘Great Spirit'
- Passage Of The Apennines
- To Jane: The Invitation
- To William Shelley II
- An Ode, Written October, 1819, Before The Spaniards Had Recovered Their Liberty
- With A Guitar, To Jane
- Lines Written In The Bay Of Lerici
- The Isle
- Fragment: ‘Methought I Was A Billow In The Crowd'
- To Sophia
- Lines: ‘The Cold Earth Slept Below'
- Ode To Naples (Antistrophe 2b)
- Lines Written During The Castlereagh Administration
- On Fanny Godwin
- To Mary Shelley II
- To William Shelley III
- Ode To Naples (Antistrophe 1b)
- To Harriet
- A Vision Of The Sea
- The Past
- The Sunset
- The Magnetic Lady To Her Patient
- Fragment: The Lake's Margin
- Arethusa
- Fragment: ‘Follow To The Deep Wood's Weeds'
- Otho
- The Sensitive Plant Part III
- To The Lord Chancellor
- Fragment: The False Laurel And The True
- Fragment: ‘And That I Walk Thus Proudly Crowned'
- Sonnet To Byron
- Fragment: ‘My Head Is Wild With Weeping'
- Summer And Winter
- Fragments Written For Hellas
- Fragment Of A Satire On Satire
- Fragment: ‘The Viewless And Invisible Consequence'
- Fragment: Thoughts Come And Go In Solitude
- Fragment: ‘A Gentle Story Of Two Lovers Young'
- Fragment: ‘Ye Gentle Visitations Of Calm Thought'
- Fragment: A Serpent-Face
- Fragment: Love's Tender Atmosphere
- The Sensitive Plant Part I
- Epitaph
- Fragment: A Wanderer
- To —.' Yet Look On Me.'
- Fragment: Pater Omnipotens
- Stanzas 1 And 2
- Fragment: ‘Unrisen Splendour Of The Brightest Sun'
- Fragment: ‘The Rude Wind Is Singing'
- Lines Written Among The Euganean Hills
- Hymn Of Pan
- Ode To Naples (Antistrophe 1a)
- Fragment: ‘The Death Knell Is Ringing'
- Fragment: To Byron
- Ode To Naples (Epode 1b)
- Fragment On Keats
- Ginevra
- Stanzas.—April, 1814
- From The Original Draft Of The Poem To William Shelley
- Stanzas Written In Dejection, Near Naples
- The Waning Moon
- Epithalamium
- The Boat On The Serchio
- Ode To Naples (Epode 2b)
- Orpheus
- The Cloud
- Sonnet (Lift not the painted veil...)
- Fiordispina
- Song
- Liberty
- Evening: Ponte Al Mare, Pisa
- Fragment: ‘O Thou Immortal Deity'
- A Summer Evening Churchyard
- Ode To Naples (Epode 2a)
- Love's Philosophy
- The Indian Serenade
- Lines To A Critic
- The Fugitives
- Fragment: Music And Sweet Poetry
- Fragment: To A Friend Released From Prison
- Lines To A Reviewer
- Fragment: “Igniculus Desiderii'
- Fragment: ‘I Stood Upon A Heaven-Cleaving Turret'
- The Question
- The Aziola
- Scene From ‘Tasso'
- Fragment: Life Rounded With Sleep
- Variation Of The Song Of The Moon
- ‘Mighty Eagle'
- Time
- Ode to the West Wind
- Ode To Naples (Epode 1a)
- Stanza, Written At Bracknell
- Buona Notte
- An Allegory
- To A Skylark
- To William Shelley
- Fragment: Satan Broken Loose
- Fragment: Rain
- Song To The Men Of England
- Ode To Naples (Antistrophe 2a)
- To Constantia, Singing
- Ozymandias
- Fragment: Apostrophe To Silence
- A Hate-Song
- Hymn To Intellectual Beauty
- The Pine Forest Of The Cascine Near Pisa
- To Jane: ‘The Keen Stars Were Twinkling'
- Music
- Lines: ‘We Meet Not As We Parted'
- To The Moon
- Similes For Two Political Characters Of 1819
- Sonnet: Political Greatness
- A Lament
- Death
- To Emilia Viviani
- ‘O That A Chariot Of Cloud Were Mine'
- Fragment: To The Moon
- To Mary Shelley
- The Birth Of Pleasure
- To-Morrow
- Fragment: To One Singing
- Ode To Naples (Strophe 2)
- The Zucca
- On A Faded Violet
- To Jane: The Recollection
- Hymn Of Apollo
- Fragment: Death In Life
- Fragment: Home
- Fragment: The Vine-Shroud
- Ode To Liberty
- To The Nile
- Fragment: To The Mind Of Man
- Fragment: To The People Of England
- Fragment: Beauty's Halo
- On The Medusa Of Leonardo Da Vinci In The Florentine Gallery
- Autumn: A Dirge
- The Woodman And The Nightingale
- Fragment: ‘I Would Not Be A King'
- Ode To Naples (Strophe 1)
- Lines: ‘That Time is Dead For Ever'
- The Two Spirits: An Allegory
- Fragment: Wedded Souls
- Fragment: Milton's Spirit
- The World's Wanderers
- To Mary —
- Mutability II (The flower that smiles today...)
- Good-Night
- Song Of Proserpine While Gathering Flowers On The Plain Of Enna
- National Anthem
- Love, Hope, Desire, And Fear
- Mutability
- Fragment: May The Limner
- An Exhortation
- Another Fragment: To Music