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Old man travelling | 3 | |
The ruined cottage | 3 | |
A night-piece | 18 | |
The old Cumberland beggar | 19 | |
Lines written at a small distance from my house | 24 | |
Goody Blake and Harry Gill | 26 | |
The thorn | 30 | |
The idiot boy | 38 | |
Lines written in early spring | 53 | |
Anecdote for fathers | 54 | |
We are seven | 56 | |
Expostulation and reply | 59 | |
The tables turned | 60 | |
Lines written a few miles above Tintern Abbey | 61 | |
The fountain | 66 | |
The two April mornings | 68 | |
'A slumber did my spirit seal' | 71 | |
Song ('she dwelt among th' untrodden ways') | 71 | |
'Strange fits of passion I have known' | 72 | |
Lucy Gray | 73 | |
Nutting | 75 | |
'Three years she grew in sun and shower' | 77 | |
The brothers | 78 | |
Hart-leap well | 92 | |
From Home at Grasmere | 99 | |
from poems on the naming of places to Joanna | 109 | |
'A narrow girdle of rough stones and crags' | 112 | |
Michael | 114 | |
'I travelled among unknown men' | 128 | |
To a sky-lark | 128 | |
Alice fell | 129 | |
Beggars | 131 | |
To a butterfly ('stay near me') | 133 | |
To the cuckoo | 133 | |
'My heart leaps up when I behold' | 135 | |
To H. C., six years old | 135 | |
'Among all lovely things my love had been' | 136 | |
To a butterfly ('I've watched you') | 137 | |
Resolution and independence | 137 | |
'Within our happy castle there dwelt one' | 142 | |
'The world is too much with us' | 144 | |
'With ships the sea was sprinkled far and nigh' | 145 | |
'Dear native brooks your ways have I pursued' | 145 | |
'Great men have been among us' | 146 | |
'It is not to be thought of that the flood' | 146 | |
'When I have borne in memory what has tamed' | 147 | |
'England! : the time is come when thou shouldst wean' | 147 | |
Composed by the sea-side, near Calais | 148 | |
'It is a beauteous evening, calm and free' | 149 | |
To Toussaint L'Ouverture | 149 | |
Composed in the valley, near Dover, on the day of landing | 150 | |
Composed on Westminster Bridge | 150 | |
London, 1802 | 151 | |
'Nuns fret not at their convent's narrow room' | 151 | |
Yarrow unvisited | 152 | |
'She was a phantom of delight' | 154 | |
Ode to duty | 155 | |
Ode : intimations of immortality from recollections of early childhood | 157 | |
'I wandered lonely as a cloud' | 164 | |
Stepping westward | 164 | |
The solitary reaper | 165 | |
Elegiac stanzas | 166 | |
A complaint | 169 | |
Gipsies | 169 | |
St. Paul's | 179 | |
'Surprized by joy - impatient as the wind' | 171 | |
Yew-trees | 172 | |
Composed at Cora Linn | 173 | |
Yarrow visited | 175 | |
To R. B. Haydon, Esq. ("high is our calling, friend!') | 178 | |
Sequel to the foregoing [beggars] | 178 | |
Ode : composed upon an evening of extraordinary splendor and beauty | 180 | |
The river Duddon : conclusion | 183 | |
'The unremitting voice of nightly streams' | 183 | |
Airey-Force Valley | 184 | |
Extempore effusion upon the death of James Hogg | 184 | |
'Glad sight wherever new with old' | 186 | |
At Furness Abbey | 186 | |
'I know an aged man constrained to dwell' | 187 | |
The prelude : book I | 188 | |
The prelude : book II | 204 | |
The prelude : book III | 218 | |
The prelude : book IV | 224 | |
The prelude : book V | 231 | |
The prelude : book VI | 241 | |
The prelude : book VII | 246 | |
The prelude : book VIII | 252 | |
The prelude : book XI | 259 | |
The prelude : book X | 263 | |
The prelude : book XI | 271 | |
The prelude : book XII | 275 | |
The prelude : book XIII | 278 |
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Add Selected poems, One of the most enduringly popular of the Romantic poets, William Wordsworth epitomized the spirit of his age with his celebration of the natural world and his belief in the importance of feeling. This volume brings together a rich selection from the most, Selected poems to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Selected poems, One of the most enduringly popular of the Romantic poets, William Wordsworth epitomized the spirit of his age with his celebration of the natural world and his belief in the importance of feeling. This volume brings together a rich selection from the most, Selected poems to your collection on WonderClub |