IN the preparation of the present edition of the works of Lord Byron, the publishers have spared no expense or delay in making it ENTIRELY COMPLETE. In its progress through the press, it has undergone the careful supervision of a distinguished literary gentleman; and its proprietors feel that they can claim for this edition what no other publisher can in this country, that it contains, UNABRIDGED line for line, and word for word, the COMPLETE WORKS of Lord Byron, and, in this respect, the only one ever issued from the American press. Stanzas to a Lady, with the Poems of Camoens 420 The first Kiss of Love 414 414 415 415 415 Answer to some elegant Verses sent by a Friend to the Author, complaining that one Lachin Y Gair. To Romance Imitated from Catullus. To Ellen Translation from Horace. Ode 3, Lib. 3 Translation from Anacreon. To his Lyre Fragments of School Exercises. From the Prometheus Vinctus of Eschylus. The Episode of Nisus and Euryalus. A Par- aphrase from the Eneid, Lib. IX. . On a change of Masters at a great Public Answer to a beautiful Poem, written by Mont- gomery, entitled "The Common Lot". 446 The Death of Calmar and Orla. An Imita- Lines written beneath an Elm in the Church- 424 Canto I.. 424 THE PROPHECY OF DANTE 425 To Marion 425 Oscar of Alva . 425 To the Duke of Dorset 428 Adrian's Address to his Soul, when Dying 429 Tibullus. By Domitius Marsus 438 439 439 440 442 |