Informations about the album The Complete Poetical Works Of Percy Bysshe Shelley Volume 2 by Percy Bysshe Shelley
Percy Bysshe Shelley finally released Wednesday 22 January 2025 his new music album, entitled The Complete Poetical Works Of Percy Bysshe Shelley Volume 2.
This album is definitely not the first of his career. For example we want to remind you albums like The Complete Poetical Works Of Percy Bysshe Shelley Volume 1.
The list of 186 songs that compose the album is here:
Here's a small list of songs that Percy Bysshe Shelley may decide to sing, including the name of the corrisponding album for each song:
- On Death
- Time
- Death
- Good-Night
- Fragments Supposed To Be Parts Of Otho
- Hymn To Intellectual Beauty
- Fragment: “Amor Aeternus'
- Fragment: Milton's Spirit
- Fiordispina
- Lines Written On Hearing The News Of The Death Of Napoleon
- Fragment: The False Laurel And The True
- Fragment: To The People Of England
- Fragment: ‘Ye Gentle Visitations Of Calm Thought'
- Lines To A Reviewer
- Fragment: Beauty's Halo
- Fragment: To The Mind Of Man
- Liberty
- To Jane: The Invitation
- Lines: ‘That Time is Dead For Ever'
- Sonnet: Political Greatness
- Ode To Naples (Antistrophe 1a)
- Fragment: The Vine-Shroud
- Fragment: Satan Broken Loose
- Fragment: ‘Alas! This Is Not What I Thought Life Was'
- With A Guitar, To Jane
- To-Morrow
- Evening: Ponte Al Mare, Pisa
- Fragment: Death In Life
- To Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin
- Fragment: ‘When Soft Winds And Sunny Skies'
- Lines Written Among The Euganean Hills
- To A Skylark
- Ode To Naples (Strophe 2)
- To William Shelley
- From The Arabic: An Imitation
- Fragment: ‘My Head Is Wild With Weeping'
- Summer And Winter
- A Vision Of The Sea
- On The Medusa Of Leonardo Da Vinci In The Florentine Gallery
- Variation Of The Song Of The Moon
- Cancelled Stanza
- Buona Notte
- Hymn Of Pan
- Fragment: To A Friend Released From Prison
- Stanzas.—April, 1814
- To —. ‘Oh! There are Spirits of The Air'
- Fragment: ‘I Would Not Be A King'
- Fragment: To The Moon
- Hymn Of Apollo
- Fragment: Apostrophe To Silence
- The Sensitive Plant Part I
- Fragment: ‘The Viewless And Invisible Consequence'
- The Magnetic Lady To Her Patient
- The Question
- The Past
- Ode To Naples (Epode 1a)
- Song For ‘Tasso'
- Song Of Proserpine While Gathering Flowers On The Plain Of Enna
- To Mary Shelley
- To William Shelley III
- Ozymandias
- Fragment: To One Singing
- Time Long Past
- National Anthem
- Fragment: Home
- Ode To Naples (Antistrophe 2b)
- Ginevra
- To Jane: The Recollection
- Fragment: ‘The Death Knell Is Ringing'
- The Aziola
- The Indian Serenade
- Fragment: ‘Follow To The Deep Wood's Weeds'
- Fragment: Rain
- To The Moon
- Fragment: A Serpent-Face
- The Isle
- Epithalamium
- The Fugitives
- Arethusa
- ‘Mighty Eagle'
- Fragment: Love's Tender Atmosphere
- The Zucca
- A Hate-Song
- Sonnet (Lift not the painted veil...)
- Fragment: ‘Such Hope, As Is The Sick Despair Of Good'
- Fragment: ‘A Gentle Story Of Two Lovers Young'
- Fragment: ‘Great Spirit'
- Fragment: ‘O Thou Immortal Deity'
- To Sophia
- Fragment: The Lady Of The South
- Fragment: Thoughts Come And Go In Solitude
- Lines: ‘The Cold Earth Slept Below'
- Music
- A Summer Evening Churchyard
- Fragment: Sufficient Unto The Day
- The Two Spirits: An Allegory
- Fragment: To Byron
- Fragment: Music And Sweet Poetry
- Ode To Naples (Strophe 1)
- Love, Hope, Desire, And Fear
- Song To The Men Of England
- Fragment: The Lake's Margin
- Fragment: Zephyrus The Awakener
- To Constantia, Singing
- Fragments Written For Hellas
- The Boat On The Serchio
- The Woodman And The Nightingale
- A Lament
- To Jane: ‘The Keen Stars Were Twinkling'
- The Waning Moon
- To Mary Shelley II
- Fragment: ‘And That I Walk Thus Proudly Crowned'
- Fragment: May The Limner
- Fragment Of A Satire On Satire
- Dirge For The Year
- The Sensitive Plant Part III
- The Pine Forest Of The Cascine Near Pisa
- An Ode, Written October, 1819, Before The Spaniards Had Recovered Their Liberty
- Marenghi
- ‘O That A Chariot Of Cloud Were Mine'
- The Tower Of Famine
- On A Faded Violet
- From The Original Draft Of The Poem To William Shelley
- Fragment: ‘I Faint, I Perish With My Love!'
- Fragment: A Wanderer
- Fragment: The Deserts Of Dim Sleep
- Ode To Naples (Antistrophe 1b)
- The Sensitive Plant Part II
- Fragment: ‘The Rude Wind Is Singing'
- Fragment: Love The Universe To-Day
- Mutability II (The flower that smiles today...)
- Stanza, Written At Bracknell
- To Mary —
- To The Lord Chancellor
- Fragment: ‘I Stood Upon A Heaven-Cleaving Turret'
- Marianne's Dream
- Stanzas 1 And 2
- Invocation To Misery
- Lines Written In The Bay Of Lerici
- Stanzas Written In Dejection, Near Naples
- An Allegory
- To William Shelley II
- To Emilia Viviani
- Fragment: ‘Unrisen Splendour Of The Brightest Sun'
- To The Nile
- Song
- Scene From ‘Tasso'
- Ode To Naples (Epode 1b)
- On Fanny Godwin
- Otho
- Mutability
- To Edward Williams
- To —.' Yet Look On Me.'
- Fragment: “Igniculus Desiderii'
- The World's Wanderers
- Another Fragment: To Music
- Fragment: Pater Omnipotens
- Ode To Naples (Epode 2a)
- Fragment: Wedded Souls
- Autumn: A Dirge
- To Constantia
- Sonnet To Byron
- The Sunset
- Orpheus
- Epitaph
- Fragment: Life Rounded With Sleep
- Cancelled Passage
- The Cloud
- Passage Of The Apennines
- Lines: ‘We Meet Not As We Parted'
- Ode to the West Wind
- Remembrance
- Fragment On Keats
- Ode To Naples (Epode 2b)
- Similes For Two Political Characters Of 1819
- To Harriet
- The Birth Of Pleasure
- Lines To A Critic
- Lines Written During The Castlereagh Administration
- Love's Philosophy
- A Fragment: To Music
- Ode To Liberty
- An Exhortation
- Ode To Naples (Antistrophe 2a)
- Lines: ‘When The Lamp Is Shattered'
- Fragment: ‘Methought I Was A Billow In The Crowd'