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Contents -BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Contents THE COMPLETE POETICAL WORKS Of WILLIAM WORDSWORTH LONDON: MACMILLAN 1888 Index to Poems, Chronologically
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Lines written as a School Exercise
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Extract from the Conclusion of a Poem
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Written in very Early Youth
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An Evening Walk. Addressed to a Young Lady
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Lines written while sailing in a Boat at Evening
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Remembrance of Collins
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Descriptive Sketches
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Guilt and Sorrow; or, Incidents upon Salisbury Plain
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Lines left upon a Seat in a Yew-tree
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The Borderers. A Tragedy
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The Reverie of Poor Susan
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The Birth of Love
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A Night-Piece
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We are Seven
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Anecdote for Fathers
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The Thorn
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Goody Blake and Harry Gill. A true Story
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Her eyes are Wild
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Simon Lee, the old Huntsman
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Lines written in Early Spring
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To my Sister
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A whirl-blast from behind the hill
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Expostulation and Reply
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The Tables Turned
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The Complaint of a Forsaken Indian Woman
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The Last of the Flock
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The Idiot Boy
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Lines composed a few miles above Tintern Abbey
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The Old Cumberland Beggar
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Animal Tranquillity and Decay
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Peter Bell. A Tale
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The Simplon Pass
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Influence of Natural Objects
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There was a Boy
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Nutting
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Strange fits of passion have I known
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She dwelt among the untrodden ways
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I travelled among unknown men
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Three years she grew in sun and shower
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A slumber did my spirit seal
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A Poet’s Epitaph
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Address to the Scholars of the Village School of ——
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Matthew
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The two April Mornings
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The Fountain. A Conversation
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To a Sexton
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The Danish Boy. A Fragment
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Lucy Gray; or, Solitude
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Ruth
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Written in Germany, on one of the coldest days of the Century
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The Brothers
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Michael. A Pastoral Poem
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The Idle Shepherd-boys; or, Dungeon-Ghyll Force. A Pastoral
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The Pet-lamb. A Pastoral
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Poems on the Naming of Places:
- It was an April morning, fresh and clear
- To Joanna
- There is an Eminence,–of these our hills
- A narrow girdle of rough stones and crags
- To M. H.
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The Waterfall and the Eglantine
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The Oak and the Broom. A Pastoral
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Hart-leap Well
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‘Tis said, that some have died for love
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The Childless Father
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Song for the Wandering Jew
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Rural Architecture
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Ellen Irwin; or, The Braes of Kirtle
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Andrew Jones
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The Two Thieves; or, The Last Stage of Avarice
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A Character
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Inscriptions
- For the Spot where the Hermitage stood on St. Herbert’s Island, Derwentwater
- Written with a Pencil upon a Stone
- Written with a Slate Pencil upon a Stone
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The Sparrow’s Nest
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Pelion and Ossa flourish side by side
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The Prioress’ Tale (from Chaucer)
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The Cuckoo and the Nightingale (from Chaucer)
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Troilus and Cresida (from Chaucer)
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The Sailor’s Mother
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Alice Fell; or, Poverty
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Beggars
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To a Butterfly (first poem)
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The Emigrant Mother
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My heart leaps up when I behold
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Among all lovely things my Love had been
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Written in March, while resting on the Bridge at the foot of Brothers Water
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The Redbreast chasing the Butterfly
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To a Butterfly (second poem)
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Foresight
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To the Small Celandine (first poem)
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To the same Flower (second poem)
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Resolution and Independence
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I grieved for Buonaparte
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A Farewell
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The Sun has long been set
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Composed upon Westminster Bridge, Sept. 3, 1802
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Composed by the Sea-side, near Calais, August 1802
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Calais, August 1802
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Composed near Calais, on the Road leading to Ardres, August 7, 1802
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Calais, August 15, 1802
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It is a beauteous evening, calm and free
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On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic
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The King of Sweden
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To Toussaint L’Ouverture
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Composed in the Valley near Dover, on the day of landing
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September 1, 1802
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Near Dover, September 1802
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Written in London, September 1802
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London, 1802
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Great men have been among us
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It is not to be thought of
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When I have borne in memory
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Composed after a Journey across the Hambleton Hills, Yorkshire
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Stanzas written in my Pocket-copy of Thomson’s “Castle of Indolence”
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To H. C. Six years old
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To the Daisy (first poem)
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To the same Flower (second poem)
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To the Daisy (third poem)
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The Green Linnet
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Yew-trees
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Who fancied what a pretty sight
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It is no Spirit who from heaven hath flown
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Memorials of a Tour in Scotland, 1803
- Departure from the vale of Grasmere, August 1803
- At the Grave of Burns, 1803. Seven years after his death
- Thoughts suggested the Day following, on the Banks of Nith, near the Poet’s Residence
- To the Sons of Burns, after visiting the Grave of their Father
- To a Highland Girl
- Glen Almain; or, The Narrow Glen
- Stepping Westward
- The Solitary Reaper
- Address to Kilchurn Castle, upon Loch Awe
- Rob Roy’s Grave
- Sonnet. Composed at —— Castle
- Yarrow Unvisited
- The Matron of Jedborough and her Husband
- Fly, some kind Harbinger, to Grasmere-dale!
- The Blind Highland Boy
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October 1803
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There is a bondage worse, far worse, to bear
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October 1803
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England! the time is come when thou should’st wean
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October 1803
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To the Men of Kent. October 1803
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In the Pass of Killicranky, an invasion being expected, October 1803
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Anticipation. October 1803
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Lines on the expected Invasion
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The Farmer of Tilsbury Vale
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To the Cuckoo
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She was a Phantom of delight
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I wandered lonely as a cloud
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The Affliction of Margaret ——
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The Forsaken
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Repentance. A Pastoral Ballad
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The Seven Sisters; or, The Solitude of Binnorie
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Address to my Infant Daughter, Dora
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The Kitten and Falling Leaves
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To the Spade of a Friend
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The Small Celandine (third poem)
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At Applethwaite, near Keswick, 1804
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To the Supreme Being. From the Italian of Michael Angelo.
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Ode to Duty
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To a Skylark
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Fidelity
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Incident characteristic of a Favourite Dog
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Tribute to the Memory of the same Dog
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To the Daisy (fourth poem)
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Elegiac Stanzas, suggested by a Picture of Peele Castle in a Storm, painted by Sir George Beaumont
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Elegiac Verses in memory of my Brother
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When, to the attractions of the busy world
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Louisa. After accompanying her on a Mountain Excursion
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To a Young Lady, who had been reproached for taking long Walks in the Country
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Vaudracour and Julia
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The Cottager to her Infant, by my Sister
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The Waggoner
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French Revolution
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The Prelude or, Growth of a Poet’s Mind: Advertisement
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Book First: Introduction–Childhood and School-time
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Book Second: School-time (continued)
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Book Third: Residence at Cambridge
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Book Fourth: Summer Vacation
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Book Fifth: Books
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Book Sixth: Cambridge and the Alps
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Book Seventh: Residence in London
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Book Eighth: Retrospect–Love of Nature Leading to Love of Man
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Book Ninth: Residence in France
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Book Tenth: Residence in France (continued)
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Book Eleventh: France (concluded)
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Book Twelfth: Imagination and Taste; How Impaired and Restored
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Book Thirteenth: Imagination and Taste; How Impaired and Restored (concluded)
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Book Fourteenth: Conclusion
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The Recluse
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Character of the Happy Warrior
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The Horn of Egremont Castle
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A Complaint
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Stray Pleasures
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Power of Music
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Star-gazers
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Yes, it was the mountain Echo
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Nuns fret not at their convent’s narrow room
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Personal Talk
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Admonition
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“Beloved Vale!” I said, “when I shall con
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How sweet it is, when mother Fancy rocks
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Those words were uttered as in pensive mood
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Composed by the side of Grasmere Lake
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With how sad steps, O Moon, thou climb’st the sky
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The world is too much with us; late and soon
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With Ships the sea was sprinkled far and nigh
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Where lies the Land to which yon Ship must go?
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To Sleep
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To Sleep
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To Sleep
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Michael Angelo in reply to the passage upon his Statue of Night sleeping
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From the Italian of Michael Angelo
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From the Same
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To the Memory of Raisley Calvert
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Methought I saw the footsteps of a throne
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Lines composed at Grasmere
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November 1806
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Address to a Child, during a boisterous winter Evening, by my Sister
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Ode. Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood
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A Prophecy. February 1807
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Thought of a Briton on the Subjugation of Switzerland
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To Thomas Clarkson, on the Final Passing of the Bill for the Abolition of the Slave Trade
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The Mother’s Return, by my Sister
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Gipsies
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O Nightingale! thou surely art
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To Lady Beaumont
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Though narrow be that old Man’s cares
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Song at the Feast of Brougham Castle
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The White Doe of Rylstone; or, The Fate of the Nortons
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The Force of Prayer; or, The Founding of Bolton Priory. A tradition
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Composed while the Author was engaged in Writing a Tract occasioned by the Convention of Cintra
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Composed at the same Time and on the same Occasion,
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George and Sarah Green
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Hoffer
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Advance–come forth from thy Tyrolean ground
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Feelings of the Tyrolese
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Alas! what boots the long laborious quest
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And is it among rude untutored Dales
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O’er the wide earth, on mountain and on plain
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On the Final Submission of the Tyrolese
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Hail, Zaragoza! If with unwet eye
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Say, what is Honour?–‘Tis the finest sense
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The martial courage of a day is vain
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Brave Schill! by death delivered, take thy flight
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Call not the royal Swede unfortunate
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Look now on that Adventurer who hath paid
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Is there a power that can sustain and cheer
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Ah! where is Palafox? Nor tongue nor pen
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In due observance of an ancient rite
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Feelings of a Noble Biscayan at one of those Funerals
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On a celebrated Event in Ancient History
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Upon the same Event
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The Oak of Guernica
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Indignation of a high-minded Spaniard
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Avaunt all specious pliancy of mind
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O’erweening Statesmen have full long relied
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The French and the Spanish Guerillas
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Epitaphs translated from Chiabrera
- Weep not, beloved Friends! nor let the air
- Perhaps some needful service of the State
- O Thou who movest onward with a mind
- There never breathed a man who, when his life
- True is it that Ambrosio Salinero
- Destined to war from very infancy
- O flower of all that springs from gentle blood
- Not without heavy grief of heart did He
- Pause, courteous Spirit!–Balbi supplicates
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Maternal Grief
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Characteristics of a Child three Years old
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Spanish Guerillas
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The power of Armies is a visible thing
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Here pause: the poet claims at least this praise
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Epistle to Sir George Howland Beaumont, Bart. From the South-West Coast of Cumberland
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Upon perusing the foregoing Epistle thirty years after its Composition
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Upon the sight of a Beautiful Picture, painted by Sir G. H. Beaumont, Bart.
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Inscriptions
- In the Grounds of Coleorton, the Seat of Sir George Beaumont, Bart., Leicestershire
- In a Garden of the Same
- Written at the Request of Sir George Beaumont, Bart., and in his Name, for an Urn
- For a Seat in the Groves of Coleorton
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Song for the Spinning-Wheel
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Composed on the eve of the Marriage of a Friend in the Vale of Grasmere
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Water-Fowl
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View from the top of Black Comb
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Written with a Slate Pencil on a Stone, on the Side of the Mountain of Black Comb
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November 1813
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The Excursion. Note & Preface
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Book First: The Wanderer
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Book Second: The Solitary
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Book Third: Despondency
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Book Fourth: Despondency Corrected
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Book Fifth: The Pastor
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Book Sixth: The Churchyard among the Mountains
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Book Seventh: The Churchyard among the Mountains–(continued)
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Book Eighth: The Parsonage
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Book Ninth: Discourse of the Wanderer, and an Evening Visit to the Lake
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Laodamia
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Dion (see Plutarch)
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Memorials of a Tour in Scotland, 1814
- Suggested by a beautiful ruin upon one of the Islands of Loch Lomond
- Composed at Cora Linn, in sight of Wallace’s Tower
- Effusion in the Pleasure-ground on the banks of the Bran, near Dunkeld
- Yarrow Visited, September 1814
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From the dark chambers of dejection freed
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Lines written on a Blank Leaf in a Copy of the Author’s Poem, “The Excursion,” upon hearing of the Death of the late Vicar of Kendal
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To B. R. Haydon
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Artegal and Elidure
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September 1815
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November 1
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The fairest, brightest, hues of ether fade
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“Weak is the will of Man, his judgment blind
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Hail, Twilight, sovereign of one peaceful hour!
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The Shepherd, looking eastward, softly said
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Even as a dragon’s eye that feels the stress
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Mark the concentred hazels that enclose
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To the Poet, John Dyer
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Brook! whose society the Poet seeks
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Surprised by joy–impatient as the Wind
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Ode.–The Morning of the Day appointed for a General Thanksgiving, January 18, 1816
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Ode
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Invocation to the Earth, February 1816
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Ode composed in January 1816
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Ode
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The French Army in Russia, 1812-13
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On the same occasion
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By Moscow self-devoted to a blaze
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The Germans on the Heights of Hochheim
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Siege of Vienna raised by John Sobieski
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Occasioned by the Battle of Waterloo, February 1816
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Occasioned by the same battle
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Emperors and Kings, how oft have temples rung
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Feelings of a French Royalist
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Translation of part of the First Book of the Aeneid
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A Fact, and an Imagination; or, Canute and Alfred, on the Seashore
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To Dora
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To ——, on her First Ascent to the Summit of Helvellyn
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Vernal Ode
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Ode to Lycoris. May 1817
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To the Same
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The Longest Day. Addressed to my Daughter
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Hint from the Mountains for certain Political Pretenders
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The Pass of Kirkstone
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Lament of Mary Queen of Scots, on the Eve of a New Year
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Sequel to the “Beggars,” 1802. Composed many years after
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The Pilgrim’s Dream; or, The Star and the Glow-worm
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Inscriptions supposed to be found in and near a Hermit’s Cell
- Hopes what are they?–Beads of morning Inscribed upon a Rock
- Pause, Traveller! whosoe’er thou be.
- Hast thou seen, with flash incessant.
- Troubled long with warring notions.
- Not seldom, clad in radiant vest.
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Composed upon an Evening of extraordinary Splendour and Beauty
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Composed during a Storm
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Pure element of waters! wheresoe’er.
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Malham Cove
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Gordale
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Aerial Rock–whose solitary brow
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The Wild Duck’s Nest
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Written upon a Blank Leaf in “The Complete Angler”
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Captivity–Mary Queen of Scots
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To a Snowdrop
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On seeing a tuft of Snowdrops in a Storm
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Composed in one of the Valleys of Westmoreland, on Easter Sunday
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Grief, thou hast lost an ever-ready friend
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I watch, and long have watched, with calm regret
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I heard (alas! ’twas only in a dream)
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The Haunted Tree. To ——
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September 1819
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Upon the same Occasion
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There is a little unpretending Rill
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Composed on the Banks of a Rocky Stream
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On the death of His Majesty (George the Third)
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The stars are mansions built by Nature’s hand
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To the Lady Mary Lowther
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On the Detraction which followed the Publication of a certain Poem
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Oxford, May 30, 1820
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Oxford, May 30, 1820
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June 1820
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Memorials of a Tour on the Continent, 1820
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Dedication
- Fish-women–On Landing at Calais
- Bruges
- Bruges
- After visiting the Field of Waterloo
- Between Namur and Liege
- Aix-la-Chapelle
- In the Cathedral at Cologne
- In a Carriage, upon the Banks of the Rhine
- Hymn for the Boatmen, as they approach the Rapids under the Castle of Heidelberg
- The Source of the Danube
- On approaching the Staub-bach, Lauterbrunnen
- The Fall of the Aar–Handec
- Memorial, near the Outlet of the Lake of Thun
- Composed in one of the Catholic Cantons
- After-thought
- Scene on the Lake of Brientz
- Engelberg, the Hill of Angels
- Our Lady of the Snow
- Effusion in Presence of the Painted Tower of Tell at Altorf
- The Tower of Schwytz
- On hearing the “Ranz des Vaches” on the Top of the Pass of St. Gothard
- Fort Fuentes
- The Church of San Salvador, seen from the Lake of Lugano
- The Italian Itinerant, and the Swiss Goatherd–Part I, Part II
- The Last Supper, by Leonardo da Vinci
- The Eclipse of the Sun, 1820
- The Three Cottage Girls
- The Column intended by Buonaparte for a Triumphal Edifice in Milan
- Stanzas composed in the Simplon Pass
- Echo, upon the Gemmi
- Processions. Suggested on a Sabbath Morning in the Vale of Chamouny
- Elegiac Stanzas
- Sky-Prospect–From the Plain of France
- On being Stranded near the Harbour of Boulogne
- After landing–the Valley of Dover, November 1820
- At Dover
- Desultory Stanzas, upon receiving the preceding Sheets from the Press
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The River Duddon. A Series of Sonnets
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To the Rev. Dr. Wordsworth
- Not envying Latian shades–if yet they throw
- Child of the clouds! remote from every taint
- How shall I paint thee?–Be this naked stone
- Take, cradled Nursling of the mountain, take
- Sole listener, Duddon! to the breeze that played
- Flowers
- “Change me, some God, into that breathing rose!”
- What aspect bore the Man who roved or fled
- The Stepping-stones
- The same Subject
- The Faery Chasm
- Hints for the Fancy
- Open Prospect
- O mountain Stream! the Shepherd and his Cot
- From this deep chasm, where quivering sunbeams play
- American Tradition
- Return
- Seathwaite Chapel
- Tributary Stream
- The Plain of Donnerdale
- Whence that low voice?–A whisper from the heart
- Tradition
- Sheep-washing
- The Resting-place
- Methinks ’twere no unprecedented feat
- Return, Content! for fondly I pursued
- Fallen, and diffused into a shapeless heap
- Journey renewed
- No record tells of lance opposed to lance
- Who swerves from innocence, who makes divorce
- The Kirk of Ulpha to the pilgrim’s eye
- Not hurled precipitous from steep to steep
- Conclusion
- After-thought
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A Parsonage in Oxfordshire
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To Enterprise
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Ecclesiastical Sonnets. In Series
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Part I.–From the Introduction of Christianity into Britain to the Consummation of the Papal Dominion
- Introduction
- Conjectures
- Trepidation of the Druids
- Druidical Excommunication
- Uncertainty
- Persecution
- Recovery
- Temptations from Roman Refinements
- Dissensions
- Struggle of the Britons against the Barbarians
- Saxon Conquest
- Monastery of Old Bangor
- Casual Incitement
- Glad Tidings
- Paulinus
- Persuasion
- Conversion
- Apology
- Primitive Saxon Clergy
- Other Influences
- Seclusion
- Continued
- Reproof
- Saxon Monasteries, and Lights and Shades of the Religion
- Missions and Travels
- Alfred
- His Descendants
- Influence Abused
- Danish Conquests
- Canute
- The Norman Conquest
- Coldly we spake. The Saxons, overpowered
- The Council of Clermont
- Crusades
- Richard I
- An Interdict
- Papal Abuses
- Scene in Venice
- Papal Dominion
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Part II.–To the close of the Troubles in the Reign of Charles I
- How soon–alas! did Man, created pure–
- From false assumption rose, and, fondly hailed
- Cistertian Monastery
- Deplorable his lot who tills the ground
- Monks and Schoolmen
- Other Benefits
- Continued
- Crusaders
- As faith thus sanctified the warrior’s crest
- Where long and deeply hath been fixed the root
- Transubstantiation
- The Vaudois
- Praised be the Rivers, from their mountain springs
- Waldenses
- Archbishop Chichely to Henry V.
- Wars of York and Lancaster
- Wicliffe
- Corruptions of the higher Clergy
- Abuse of Monastic Power
- Monastic Voluptuousness
- Dissolution of the Monasteries
- The same Subject
- Continued
- Saints
- The Virgin
- Apology
- Imaginative Regrets
- Reflections
- Translation of the Bible
- The Point at Issue
- Edward VI.
- Edward signing the Warrant for the Execution of Joan of Kent
- Revival of Popery
- Latimer and Ridley
- Cranmer
- General View of the Troubles of the Reformation
- English Reformers in Exile
- Elizabeth
- Eminent Reformers
- The Same
- Distractions
- Gunpowder Plot
- Illustration. The Jung-Frau and the Fall of the Rhine near Schaffhausen
- Troubles of Charles the First
- Laud
- Afflictions of England
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Part III.–From the Restoration to the Present Times
- I saw the figure of a lovely Maid
- Patriotic Sympathies
- Charles the Second
- Latitudinarianism
- Walton’s Book of Lives
- Clerical Integrity
- Persecution of the Scottish Covenanters
- Acquittal of the Bishops
- William the Third
- Obligations of Civil to Religious Liberty
- Sacheverel
- Down a swift Stream, thus far, a bold design
- Aspects of Christianity in America–I. The Pilgrim Fathers
- II. Continued
- III. Concluded.–American Episcopacy
- Bishops and Priests, blessed are ye, if deep
- Places of Worship
- Pastoral Character
- The Liturgy
- Baptism
- Sponsors
- Catechising
- Confirmation
- Confirmation continued
- Sacrament
- The Marriage Ceremony
- Thanksgiving after Childbirth
- Visitation of the Sick
- The Commination Service
- Forms of Prayer at Sea
- Funeral Service
- Rural Ceremony
- Regrets
- Mutability
- Old Abbeys
- Emigrant French Clergy
- Congratulation
- New Churches
- Church to be Erected
- Continued
- New Churchyard
- Cathedrals, etc.
- Inside of King’s College Chapel, Cambridge
- The Same
- Continued
- Ejaculation
- Conclusion
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Memory
-
To the Lady Fleming
-
On the same Occasion
-
A volant Tribe of Bards on earth are found
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Not Love, not War, nor the tumultuous swell
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To ——
-
To ——
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How rich that forehead’s calm expanse!
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To ——
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A Flower Garden at Coleorton Hall, Leicestershire
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To the Lady E. B. and the Hon. Miss P.
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To the Torrent at the Devil’s Bridge, North Wales, 1824
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Composed among the Ruins of a Castle in North Wales
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Elegiac Stanzas. Addressed to Sir G. H. B., upon the death of his sister-in-law, 1824
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Cenotaph
-
Epitaph in the Chapel-yard of Langdale, Westmoreland
-
The Contrast. The Parrot and the Wren
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To a Sky-lark
-
Ere with cold beads of midnight dew
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Ode, composed on May Morning
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To May
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Once I could hail (howe’er serene the sky)
-
The massy Ways, carried across these heights
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The Pillar of Trajan
-
On seeing a Needlecase in the Form of a Harp. The work of E. M. S.
-
Dedication. To ——
-
Her only pilot the soft breeze, the boat
-
“Why, Minstrel, these untuneful murmurings–
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To S. H.
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Decay of Piety
-
Scorn not the Sonnet; Critic, you have frowned
-
Fair Prime of life! were it enough to gild
-
Retirement
-
There is a pleasure in poetic pains
-
Recollection of the Portrait of King Henry Eighth, Trinity Lodge, Cambridge
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When Philoctetes in the Lemnian isle
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While Anna’s peers and early playmates tread
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To the Cuckoo
-
The Infant M—— M——
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To Rotha Q——
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To ——, in her seventieth year
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In my mind’s eye a Temple, like a cloud
-
Go back to antique ages, if thine eyes
-
In the Woods of Rydal
-
Conclusion, To ——
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A Morning Exercise
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The Triad
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The Wishing-gate
-
The Wishing-gate destroyed
-
A Jewish Family
-
The Gleaner, suggested by a picture
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On the Power of Sound
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Incident at Bruges
-
Gold and Silver Fishes in a Vase
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Liberty (sequel to the above)
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Humanity
-
This Lawn, a carpet all alive
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Thought on the Seasons
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A Gravestone upon the Floor in the Cloisters of Worcester Cathedral
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A Tradition of Oker Hill in Darley Dale, Derbyshire
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The Armenian Lady’s Love
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The Russian Fugitive
-
The Egyptian Maid; or, The Romance of the Water Lily
-
The Poet and the Caged Turtledove
-
Presentiments
-
In these fair vales hath many a Tree
-
Elegiac Musings in the grounds of Coleorton Hall
-
Chatsworth! thy stately mansion, and the pride
-
To the Author’s Portrait
-
The Primrose of the Rock
-
Yarrow Revisited, and other Poems
- Yarrow Revisited
- On the Departure of Sir Walter Scott from Abbotsford, for Naples
- A Place of Burial in the South of Scotland
- On the Sight of a Manse in the South of Scotland
- Composed in Roslin Chapel during a Storm
- The Trosachs
- The pibroch’s note, discountenanced or mute
- Composed in the Glen of Loch Etive
- Eagles. Composed at Dunollie Castle in the Bay of Oban
- In the Sound of Mull
- Suggested at Tyndrum in a Storm
- The Earl of Breadalbane’s Ruined Mansion and Family Burial-place, near Killin
- “Rest and be Thankful!” At the Head of Glencroe
- Highland Hut
- The Brownie
- To the Planet Venus, an Evening Star. Composed at Loch Lomond
- Bothwell Castle. (Passed unseen on account of stormy weather)
- Picture of Daniel in the Lions’ Den, at Hamilton Palace
- The Avon. A Feeder of the Annan
- Suggested by a View from an Eminence in Inglewood Forest
- Hart’s-horn Tree, near Penrith
- Fancy and Tradition
- Countess’s Pillar
- Roman Antiquities. (From the Roman Station at Old Penrith)
- Apology for the foregoing Poems
- The Highland Broach
-
Devotional Incitements
-
Calm is the fragrant air, and loth to lose
-
Rural Illusions
-
Loving and Liking. Irregular Verses addressed to a Child. (By my Sister)
-
Upon the late General Fast. March 1832
-
Filial Piety
-
To B. R. Haydon
-
If thou indeed derive thy light from Heaven
-
A Wren’s Nest
-
To ——, on the birth of her First-born Child, March 1833
-
The Warning. A Sequel to the foregoing
-
If this great world of joy and pain
-
On a high part of the coast of Cumberland, Easter Sunday, April 7, the Author’s sixty-third Birthday
-
By the Seaside
-
Poems Composed or Suggested during a Tour in the Summer of 1833
- Adieu, Rydalian Laurels! that have grown
- Why should the Enthusiast, journeying through this Isle
- They called Thee MERRY ENGLAND, in old time
- To the River Greta, near Keswick
- To the River Derwent
- In sight of the Town of Cockermouth. (Where the Author was born, and his Father’s remains are laid)
- Address from the Spirit of Cockermouth Castle
- Nun’s Well, Brigham
- To a Friend. (On the Banks of the Derwent)
- Mary Queen of Scots. (Landing at the Mouth of the Derwent, Workington)
- Stanzas suggested in a Steamboat off St. Bees’ Head, on the coast of Cumberland
- In the Channel, between the coast of Cumberland and the Isle of Man
- At Sea off the Isle of Man
- Desire we past illusions to recall?
- On entering Douglas Bay, Isle of Man
- By the Seashore, Isle of Man
- Isle of Man
- Isle of Man
- By a Retired Mariner, H. H.
- At Bala-Sala, Isle of Man
- Tynwald Hill
- Despond who will–‘I’ heard a voice exclaim
- In the Frith of Clyde, Ailsa Crag. During an Eclipse of the Sun, July 17
- On the Frith of Clyde. (In a Steamboat)
- On revisiting Dunolly Castle
- The Dunolly Eagle
- Written in a Blank Leaf of Macpherson’s “Ossian”
- Cave of Staffa
- Cave of Staffa. After the Crowd had departed
- Cave of Staffa
- Flowers on the Top of the Pillars at the Entrance of the Cave
- Iona
- Iona. (Upon Landing)
- The Black Stones of Iona
- Homeward we turn. Isle of Columba’s Cell
- Greenock
- “There!” said a Stripling, pointing with meet pride
- The River Eden, Cumberland
- Monument of Mrs. Howard
- Suggested by the foregoing
- Nunnery
- Steamboats, Viaducts, and Railways
- The Monument commonly called Long Meg and her Daughters, near the River Eden
- Lowther
- To the Earl of Lonsdale
- The Somnambulist
- To Cordelia M—-, Hallsteads, Ullswater
- Most sweet it is with unuplifted eyes
-
Composed by the Seashore
-
Not in the lucid intervals of life
-
By the Side of Rydal Mere
-
Soft as a cloud is yon blue Ridge–the Mere
-
The leaves that rustled on this oak-crowned hill
-
The Labourer’s Noon-day Hymn
-
The Redbreast. (Suggested in a Westmoreland Cottage)
-
Lines suggested by a Portrait from the Pencil of F. Stone
-
The foregoing Subject resumed
-
To a Child. Written in her Album
-
Lines written in the Album of the Countess of Lonsdale. November 5, 1834
-
To the Moon. (Composed by the Seaside,–on the Coast of Cumberland)
-
To the Moon. (Rydal)
-
Written after the Death of Charles Lamb
-
Extempore Effusion upon the death of James Hogg
-
Upon seeing a coloured Drawing of the Bird of Paradise in an Album
-
Composed after reading a Newspaper of the Day
-
By a blest Husband guided, Mary came
-
Sonnets
- Desponding Father! mark this altered bough
- Roman Antiquities discovered at Bishopstone, Herefordshire
- St. Catherine of Ledbury
- Why art thou silent! Is thy love a plant
- Four fiery steeds impatient of the rein
- To ——
- Said Secrecy to Cowardice and Fraud
-
November 1836
-
Six months to six years added he remained
-
Memorials of a Tour in Italy, 1837
-
To Henry Crabb Robinson
- Musings near Aquapendente. April 1837
- The Pine of Monte Mario at Rome
- At Rome
- At Rome–Regrets–In allusion to Niebuhr and other modern Historians
- Continued
- Plea for the Historian
- At Rome
- Near Rome, in sight of St. Peter’s
- At Albano
- Near Anio’s stream, I spied a gentle Dove
- From the Alban Hills, looking towards Rome
- Near the Lake of Thrasymene
- Near the same Lake
- The Cuckoo at Laverna. May 25, 1837
- At the Convent of Camaldoli
- Continued
- At the Eremite or Upper Convent of Camaldoli
- At Vallombrosa
- At Florence
- Before the Picture of the Baptist, by Raphael, in the Gallery at Florence
- At Florence–From Michael Angelo
- At Florence–From M. Angelo
- Among the Ruins of a Convent in the Apennines
- In Lombardy
- After leaving Italy
- Continued
-
At Bologna, in Remembrance of the late Insurrections, 1837
- Ah, why deceive ourselves! by no mere fit
- Hard task! exclaim the undisciplined, to lean
- As leaves are to the tree whereon they grow
-
What if our numbers barely could defy
-
A Night Thought
-
To the Planet Venus. Upon its approximation (as an Evening Star) to the Earth, January 1838
-
Composed at Rydal on May Morning, 1838
-
Composed on a May Morning, 1838
-
Hark! ’tis the Thrush, undaunted, undeprest
-
‘Tis He whose yester-evening’s high disdain
-
Oh what a Wreck! how changed in mien and speech!
-
A Plea for Authors, May 1838
-
A Poet to his Grandchild. (Sequel to the foregoing)
-
Blest Statesman He, whose Mind’s unselfish will
-
Valedictory Sonnet. Closing the Volume of Sonnets published in 1838
-
Sonnet, “Protest against the Ballot”
-
Sonnets upon the Punishment of Death. In series.
- Suggested by the View of Lancaster Castle (on the Road from the South)
- Tenderly do we feel by Nature’s Law
- The Roman Consul doomed his sons to die
- Is ‘Death’, when evil against good has fought
- Not to the object specially designed
- Ye brood of conscience–Spectres! that frequent
- Before the world had passed her time of youth
- Fit retribution, by the moral code
- Though to give timely warning and deter
- Our bodily life, some plead, that life the shrine
- Ah, think how one compelled for life to abide
- See the Condemned alone within his cell
- Conclusion
- Apology
-
Sonnet on a Portrait of I. F., painted by Margaret Gillies
-
Sonnet to I. F.
-
Poor Robin
-
On a Portrait of the Duke of Wellington upon the Field of Waterloo, by Haydon
-
To a Painter
-
On the same Subject
-
When Severn’s sweeping flood had overthrown
-
Intent on gathering wool from hedge and brake
-
Prelude, prefixed to the Volume entitled “Poems chiefly of Early and Late Years”
-
Floating Island
-
The Crescent-moon, the Star of Love
-
To a Redbreast–(in Sickness)
-
Miscellaneous Sonnets
- ‘A Poet!’–He hath put his heart to school
- The most alluring clouds that mount the sky
- Feel for the wrongs to universal ken
- In allusion to various recent Histories and Notices of the French Revolution
- Continued
- Concluded
- Men of the Western World! in Fate’s dark book
- Lo! where she stands fixed in a saint-like trance
-
The Norman Boy
-
The Poet’s Dream, Sequel to the Norman Boy
-
The Widow on Windermere Side
-
Farewell Lines
-
Airey-Force Valley
-
Lyre! though such power do in thy magic live
-
To the Clouds
-
Wansfell! this Household has a favoured lot
-
The Eagle and the Dove
-
Grace Darling
-
While beams of orient light shoot wide and high
-
To the Rev. Christopher Wordsworth, D.D.
-
Inscription for a Monument in Crosthwaite Church, in the Vale of Keswick
-
On the projected Kendal and Windermere Railway
-
Proud were ye, Mountains, when, in times of old
-
At Furness Abbey
-
Forth from a jutting ridge, around whose base
-
The Westmoreland Girl. To my Grandchildren–
-
At Furness Abbey
-
Yes! thou art fair, yet be not moved
-
What heavenly smiles! O Lady mine
-
To a Lady
-
Glad sight wherever new with old
-
Love lies Bleeding
-
Companion to the foregoing
-
The Cuckoo-Clock
-
So fair, so sweet, withal so sensitive
-
To the Pennsylvanians
-
Young England–what is then become of Old
-
Though the bold wings of Poesy affect
-
Suggested by a Picture of the Bird of Paradise
-
Sonnet
-
Where lies the truth? has Man, in wisdom’s creed
-
I know an aged Man constrained to dwell
-
How beautiful the Queen of Night, on high
-
Evening Voluntaries–To Lucca Giordano
-
Who but is pleased to watch the moon on high
-
Illustrated Books and Newspapers
-
The unremitting voice of nightly streams
-
Sonnet. (To an Octogenarian)
-
On the Banks of a Rocky Stream
-
Ode on the Installation of His Royal Highness Prince Albert as Chancellor of the University of Cambridge, July 1847
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