bell notificationshomepageloginedit profileclubsdmBox

Read Ebook: The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth — Volume 8 (of 8) by Wordsworth William Knight William Angus Editor

More about this book

Font size:

Background color:

Text color:

Add to tbrJar First Page Next Page Prev Page

Ebook has 3508 lines and 228729 words, and 71 pages

Suggested by a Picture of the Bird of Paradise 140

To the Clouds 142

Airey-Force Valley 146

"Lyre! though such power do in thy magic live" 147

Love lies Bleeding 148

"They call it Love lies bleeding! rather say" 150

Companion to the Foregoing 150

The Cuckoo-Clock 151

"Wansfell! this Household has a favoured lot" 153

"Though the bold wings of Poesy affect" 154

"Glad sight wherever new with old" 154

"While beams of orient light shoot wide and high" 156

Inscription for a Monument in Crosthwaite Church, in the Vale of Keswick 157

To the Rev. Christopher Wordsworth, D.D., Master of Harrow School 162

"So fair, so sweet, withal so sensitive" 164

On the projected Kendal and Windermere Railway 166

"Proud were ye, Mountains, when, in times of old" 167

At Furness Abbey 168

"Forth from a jutting ridge, around whose base" 170

The Westmoreland Girl 172

At Furness Abbey 176

"Yes! thou art fair, yet be not moved" 176

"What heavenly smiles! O Lady mine" 177

To a Lady 177

To the Pennsylvanians 179

"Young England--what is then become of Old" 180

Sonnet 181

"Where lies the truth? has Man, in wisdom's creed" 182

To Lucca Giordano 183

"Who but is pleased to watch the moon on high" 184

Illustrated Books and Newspapers 184

Sonnet. To an Octogenarian 185

"I know an aged Man constrained to dwell" 186

"The unremitting voice of nightly streams" 187

"How beautiful the Queen of Night, on high" 188

On the Banks of a Rocky Stream 188

Ode. Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood 189

POEMS BY WILLIAM WORDSWORTH AND BY DOROTHY WORDSWORTH NOT INCLUDED IN THE EDITION OF 1849-50

Sonnet, on seeing Miss Helen Maria Williams weep at a Tale of Distress 209

Lines written by William Wordsworth as a School Exercise at Hawkshead, Anno AEtatis 14 211

"Sweet was the walk along the narrow lane" 214

"When Love was born of heavenly line" 215

The Convict 217

"The snow-tracks of my friends I see" 219

The Old Cumberland Beggar 220

Andrew Jones 221

"There is a shapeless crowd of unhewn stones" 223

"Among all lovely things my Love had been" 231

"Along the mazes of this song I go" 233

"The rains at length have ceas'd, the winds are still'd" 233

"Witness thou" 234

Add to tbrJar First Page Next Page Prev Page

 

Back to top