The Prose Works of William Wordsworth
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William Wordsworth. The Prose Works of William Wordsworth
The Prose Works of William Wordsworth
Table of Contents
VOL. I
POLITICAL AND ETHICAL. LONDON: EDWARD MOXON, SON, AND CO. 1 AMEN CORNER, PATERNOSTER ROW. 1876. AMS Press, Inc. New York 10003 1967. Manufactured in the United States of America. CONTENTS OF THREE VOLUMES
CONTENTS OF VOL. I
CONTENTS OF VOL. II
CONTENTS OF VOL. III
INDEX
CONTENTS OF VOL. I
*** A star [*] designates publication herein for the first time G
TO THE QUEEN
PREFACE
VOL. I
I. POLITICAL
II. ETHICAL
II. Advice to the Young
III. OF EDUCATION
VOL. II
AESTHETICAL AND LITERARY. I. Of Literary Biography and Monuments
II. UPON EPITAPHS
IV. DESCRIPTIVE
VOL. III
CRITICAL AND ETHICAL. I. Notes and Illustrations of the Poems, incorporating:
II. Letters and Extracts of Letters
III. Conversations and Personal Reminiscences of Wordsworth
I. POLITICAL
I. APOLOGY FOR THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. 1793
APPENDIX to Bishop Watson's Sermon
II. THE CONVENTION OF CINTRA 1809
BY WILLIAM WORDSWORTH
ADVERTISEMENT
CONCERNING THE CONVENTION OF CINTRA
APPENDIX
SUSPENSION OF ARMS
DEFINITIVE CONVENTION FOR THE EVACUATION OF PORTUGAL BY THE FRENCH ARMY
Additional Articles to the Convention of the 30th of August, 1808
POSTSCRIPT
ON SIR JOHN MOORE'S LETTERS
III. VINDICATION OF OPINIONS IN THE TREATISE ON THE 'CONVENTION OF CINTRA'
TO CAPTAIN PASLEY, ROYAL ENGINEERS
Letter enclosing the Preceding to a Friend unnamed
IV. TWO ADDRESSES TO THE FREEHOLDERS OF WESTMORELAND. 1818
ADVERTISEMENT
TO THE READER
TO THE FREEHOLDERS, &c
SECOND ADDRESS
V. OF THE CATHOLIC RELIEF BILL, 1829
II. ETHICAL
I. OF LEGISLATION FOR THE POOR, THE WORKING CLASSES, AND THE CLERGY: APPENDIX TO POEMS
1835
II. ADVICE TO THE YOUNG
INTRODUCTION TO 'THE FRIEND,' VOL. III. (1850) (a) LETTER TO THE EDITOR BY 'MATHETES.'
To the Editor of 'The Friend.'
(b) ANSWER TO THE LETTER OF MATHETES
III. OF EDUCATION
(a) ON THE EDUCATION OF THE YOUNG
Letter to a Friend [1806]
(b) OF THE PEOPLE, THEIR WAYS AND NEEDS
Letter to Archdeacon Wrangham
(c.) EDUCATION
Two Letters to the Rev. Hugh James Rose, Horsham, Sussex
Of the Same to the Same,
(d) EDUCATION OF DUTY
Letter to the Rev. Dr. Wordsworth
(e) SPEECH ON LAYING THE FOUNDATION-STONE OF THE NEW SCHOOL IN THE VILLAGE OF BOWNESS, WINDERMERE, 1836
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS
I. POLITICAL
I. Apology for the French Revolution
II. The Convention of Cintra
III. Vindication of Opinions in the Treatise on the Convention of Cintra
II. ETHICAL
I. Of Legislation for the Poor
II. (e) Speech on Laying the Foundation-stone of the New School, &c
FOOTNOTES:
THE PROSE WORKS OF WILLIAM WORDSWORTH
FOR THE FIRST TIME COLLECTED, WITH ADDITIONS FROM UNPUBLISHED MANUSCRIPTS. Edited, with Preface, Notes and Illustrations, BY THE REV. ALEXANDER B. GROSART, ST. GEORGE'S, BLACKBURN, LANCASHIRE
IN THREE VOLUMES. VOL. II
AESTHETICAL AND LITERARY. LONDON: EDWARD MOXON, SON, AND CO. 1 AMEN CORNER, PATERNOSTER ROW. 1876. AMS Press, Inc. New York 10003 1967. Manufactured in the United States of America
CONTENTS OF VOL. II
*** A star [*] designates publication herein for the first time G
AESTHETICAL AND LITERARY
I. OF LITERARY BIOGRAPHY AND MONUMENTS
A. LETTER
TO. A FRIEND OF ROBERT BURNS:
OCCASIONED BY. AN INTENDED REPUBLICATION
THE ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE OF BURNS,
BY DR. CURRIE;
AND. OF THE SELECTION MADE BY HIM FROM HIS LETTERS. BY WILLIAM WORDSWORTH
(a) A LETTER TO A FRIEND OF ROBERT BURNS
TO JAMES GRAY, ESQ., EDINBURGH
(b) OF MONUMENTS TO LITERARY MEN
Letter to a Friend
(c) OF SIR THOMAS BROWNE, A MONUMENT TO SOUTHEY, &c
Letter to John Peace, Esq., City Library, Bristol
II. UPON EPITAPHS
(a) UPON EPITAPHS
From 'The Friend,' Feb. 22, 1810
(b) THE COUNTRY CHURCH-YARD, AND CRITICAL EXAMINATION OF ANCIENT EPITAPHS
From the Author's Mss
(c) CELEBRATED EPITAPHS CONSIDERED
From the Author's Mss
III. ESSAYS, LETTERS, AND NOTES ELUCIDATORY AND CONFIRMATORY OF THE POEMS
1798–1835
(a) OF THE PRINCIPLES OF POETRY AND THE 'LYRICAL BALLADS' (1798–1802)
(b) OF POETIC DICTION
(c) POETRY AS A STUDY
(d) OF POETRY AS OBSERVATION AND DESCRIPTION
(e) OF 'THE EXCURSION.'
(f) LETTERS TO SIR GEORGE AND LADY BEAUMONT AND
OTHERS ON THE POEMS AND RELATED SUBJECTS
(g) LETTER TO THE RIGHT HON. CHARLES JAMES FOX
(h) OF THE PRINCIPLES OF POETRY AND HIS OWN POEMS
IV. DESCRIPTIVE
A. GUIDE
THROUGH THE. DISTRICT OF THE LAKES
IN. The North of England. WITH. A DESCRIPTION OF THE SCENERY, &c. FOR THE USE OF. TOURISTS AND RESIDENTS. FIFTH EDITION, WITH CONSIDERABLE ADDITIONS. BY WILLIAM WORDSWORTH
KENDAL:
PUBLISHED BY HUDSON AND NICHOLSON,
AND IN LONDON BY. LONGMAN & CO., MOXON, AND WHITTAKER & CO. 1835. CONTENTS. DIRECTIONS AND INFORMATION FOR THE TOURIST
DESCRIPTION OF THE SCENERY OF THE LAKES
SECTION FIRST. VIEW OR THE COUNTRY AS FORMED BY NATURE
SECTION SECOND. ASPECT OF THE COUNTRY AS AFFECTED BY ITS INHABITANTS
SECTION THIRD. CHANGES, AND RULES OF TASTE FOR PREVENTING THEIR BAD EFFECTS
MISCELLANEOUS OBSERVATIONS
EXCURSIONS
ODE
ITINERARY
DIRECTIONS AND INFORMATION FOR THE TOURIST
WINDERMERE
AMBLESIDE,
CONISTON
ULPHA KIRK
ROAD FROM AMBLESIDE TO KESWICK
GRASMERE
THE VALE OF KESWICK
BUTTERMERE AND CRUMMOCK
LOWES-WATER
WASTDALE
ULLSWATER,
DESCRIPTION OF THE SCENERY OF THE LAKES
SECTION FIRST
VIEW OF THE COUNTRY AS FORMED BY NATURE
SECTION SECOND
ASPECT OF THE COUNTRY, AS AFFECTED BY ITS INHABITANTS
SECTION THIRD
CHANGES, AND BULKS OF TASTE FOR PREVENTING THEIR BAD EFFECTS
MISCELLANEOUS OBSERVATIONS
EXCURSIONS TO THE TOP OF SCAWFELL AND ON THE BANKS OF ULSWATER
ODE
THE PASS OF KIRKSTONE
ITINERARY OF THE LAKES,
FOR THE USE OF TOURISTS
LANCASTER To KENDAL, by Kirkby Lonsdale, 30 miles
LANCASTER to KENDAL, by Burton, 21¾ miles
LANCASTER to KENDAL, by Milnthorpe, 21¼ miles
LANCASTER to ULVERSTON, over Sands, 21 miles
LANCASTER to ULVERSTON, by Levens-Bridge, 35½ miles
ULVERSTON to HAWKSHEAD, by Coniston Water-Head, 19 miles
ULVERSTON to BOWNESS, by Newby-Bridge, 16 miles
HAWKSHEAD to AMBLESIDE, 5 miles
HAWKSHEAD to BOWNESS, 5½ miles
KENDAL to AMBLESIDE, 13½ miles
KENDAL to AMBLESIDE, by Bowness, 15 miles
A Circuit from and back to AMBLESIDE, by Little and Great Langdale, 18 miles
AMBLESIDE to ULLSWATER, 10 miles
AMBLESIDE to KESWICK, 16¼ miles
EXCURSIONS FROM KESWICK
To BORROWDALE, and ROUND THE LAKE, 12 miles
To BORROWDALE and BUTTERMERE
Two Days' Excursion to WASTDALE, ENNERDALE, and LOWES-WATER
First Day
Second Day
KESWICK round BASSENTHWAITE WATER
KESWICK to PATTERDALE, and by Pooley-Bridge to PENRITH
KESWICK to POOLEY-BRIDGE and PENRITH
KESWICK to PENRITH, 17½ miles
WHITEHAVEN to KESWICK, 27 miles
WORKINGTON to KESWICK, 21 miles
Excursion from PENRITH to HAWESWATER
CARLISLE to PENRITH, 18 miles
PENRITH to KENDAL, 26 miles
KENDAL AND WINDERMERE RAILWAY
TWO LETTERS
RE-PRINTED FROM THE MORNING POST
REVISED, WITH ADDITIONS
KENDAL: PRINTED BY E. BRANTHWAITE AND SON [1844.]
SONNET ON THE PROJECTED KENDAL AND WINDERMERE RAILWAY
KENDAL AND WINDERMERE RAILWAY
No. I
No. II
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS
AESTHETICAL AND LITERARY
I. Of Literary Biography and Monuments (a) A Letter to a Friend of Robert Burns, 1816
II. Upon Epitaphs
III. Essays, Letters, and Notes elucidatory and confirmatory of the Poems (a) Of the Principles of Poetry and the 'Lyrical Ballads.'
(c) Poetry as a study
(d) Of Poetry as Observation and Description
(b) Of the Principles of Poetry and his own Poems
IV. DESCRIPTIVE (a) A Guide through the District of the Lakes
(b) Kendal and Windermere Railway
FOOTNOTES:
END OF VOL. II
THE PROSE WORKS OF WILLIAM WORDSWORTH
FOR THE FIRST TIME COLLECTED, WITH ADDITIONS FROM UNPUBLISHED MANUSCRIPTS. Edited, with Preface, Notes and Illustrations, BY THE REV. ALEXANDER B. GROSART, ST. GEORGE'S, BLACKBURN, LANCASHIRE
IN THREE VOLUMES. VOL. III
POLITICAL AND ETHICAL. LONDON: EDWARD MOXON, SON, AND CO. 1 AMEN CORNER, PATERNOSTER ROW. 1876. AMS Press, Inc. New York 10003 1967. Manufactured in the United States of America
CONTENTS OF VOL. III
CRITICAL AND ETHICAL
CRITICAL AND ETHICAL
I. NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE POEMS, INCORPORATING:
1. *Prefatory Lines
2. *Prelude to the Last Volume. [As supra.]
I. POEMS WRITTEN IN YOUTH
3. *Extract from the Conclusion of a Poem, composed in anticipation of leaving School. [I.]
4. Of the Poems in this class, 'The Evening Walk' and 'Descriptive Sketches' were first published in 1793. They are reprinted with some alterations that were chiefly made very soon after their publication
5. *An Evening Walk. Addressed to a Young Lady. [III.]
FOOT-NOTES
5a. Intake (l. 49)
6. Ghyll (l. 54)
7. Line 191
8. *Lines written while sailing in a Boat at Evening. [IV.]
9. Descriptive Sketches taken during a Pedestrian Tour among the Alps
10. *Descriptive Sketches
FOOT-NOTES
11. The Cross
12. Rivers
13. Vallombre
14. Sugh
15. Pikes
16. Shrine
17. Sourd
18. Lines left upon a Seat in a Yew-tree, which stands near the Lake of Esthwaite, on a desolate Part of the Shore, commanding a beautiful Prospect. [VII.]
19. Guilt and Sorrow; or Incidents upon Salisbury Plain.[VIII.]
20. *The Female Vagrant
21. *Guilt and Sorrow; or Incidents upon Salisbury Plain. [VIII.]
22. Charles Farish
23. *The Forsaken. Poems founded on the Affections. [XII.]
24. *The Borderers: a Tragedy
25. The following is the 'short printed note' mentioned in above:
26
II. POEMS REFERRING TO THE PERIOD OF CHILDHOOD
27. *My Heart leaps up when I behold. [I.]
28. *To a Butterfly. [II.]
29. *The Sparrow's Nest, [III.]
30. *Foresight, [IV.]
31. *Characteristics of a Child three Years old. [V.]
32. *Address to a Child, [VI.]
33. *The Mother's Return, [VII.]
34. *Alice Fell; or Poverty. [VIII.]
35. *Lucy Gray; or Solitude. [IX.]
36. *We are Seven. [X.] The Ancient Mariner and Coleridge, &c. &c
37. The Idle Shepherd Boys; or Dungeon-Ghyll Force: a Pastoral. [XI.]
38. Foot-note
39. Anecdote for Fathers. [XII.]
40. Rural Architecture. [XIII.]
41. Foot-note: Great How (l. 4)
42. The Pet Lamb: a Pastoral. [XIV.]
43. Influence of Natural Objects, &c. [XVI.]
44. The Longest Day. [XVII.]
45. The Norman Boy. [XVIII.]
III. POEMS FOUNDED ON THE AFFECTIONS
46. The Brothers. [I.]
47. Great Gavel. (Foot-note.)
48. Artegal and Elidure. [II.]
49. To a Butterfly. [III.]
50. A Farewell. [IV]
51. *Stanzas written in my Pocket-copy of Thomson's 'Castle of Indolence.'
52. *Louisa. After accompanying her on a mountain Excursion. [VI.]
53. *Strange Fits of Passion have I known. [VII.]
54. *Ere with cold Beads of midnight Dew. [X.]
55. *To——. [XI.]
56. *'Tis said that some have died for Love. [XIII.]
57. *A Complaint. [XIV.]
58. To——. [XV.]
59. *'How rich that Forehead's calm Expanse!'[XVII.]
60. To——. [XIX]
61. Lament of Mary Queen of Scots. [XX.]
62. The Complaint of a forsaken Indian Woman. [XXI.]
63. Ibid
64. The Last of the Flock. [XXII.]
65. Repentance [XXIII.]
66. The Affliction of Margaret——. [XXIV.]
67. The Cottager to her Infant. [XXV.]
68. Maternal Grief
69. The Sailor's Mother. [XXVII.]
70. The Childless Father. [XXVIII.]
71. Funeral Basin
72. The Emigrant Mother. [XXIX.]
73. Vaudracour and Julia. [XXX.]
74. Ibid
75. The Idiot Boy
76. Michael. [XXXII.]
77. Clipping
78. The Widow on Windermere Side. [XXXIV.]
79. The Armenian Lady's Love. [XXXIV.]
80. Percy's 'Reliques' (foot-note on 1. 2)
81. *Loving and Liking. [XXXV.]
82. *Farewell Lines. [XXXVI.]
83. (1) The Redbreast
84. *(2)
85. *Her Eyes are wild. [XXXVIII.]
IV. POEMS ON THE NAMING OF PLACES
86. Advertisement
87. *It was an April Morn, &c. [I.]
88. *'May call it Emmas Dell' (I. 47)
89. *To Joanna Hutchinson. [II.]
90. Inscriptions
91. *There is an Eminence, &c. [III.]
92. *'A narrow Girdle of rough Stones and Crags' [IV.]
93. *To Mary Hutchinson. [V.]
94. *When to the Attractions, &c. [VI.]
95. Captain Wordsworth
V. POEMS OF THE FANCY
96. *A Morning Exercise. [I.]
97. *Birds
98. *A Flower-garden. [II.]
99. *A Whirl-blast from behind the Hill. [III.]
100. *The Waterfall and the Eglantine. [IV.]
101. *The Oak and the Broom; a Pastoral. [V.]
102. *To a Sexton. [VI.]
103. *To the Daisy. [VII.]
104. *To the same Flower. [VIII.]
105. *To the small Celandine. [XI.]
106. The Seven Sisters
107. *The Redbreast chasing the Butterfly. [XV.]
108. *Song for the Spinning-wheel. [XVI.]
109. *Hint from the Mountains. [XVII.]
110. *On seeing a Needle-case in the Form of a Harp. [XVIII.] 1827
111. *The Contrast: the Parrot and the Wren
112. *The Danish Boy. [XXII.]
113. *Song for the Wandering Jew. [XXIII.] 1800
114. *Stray Pleasures. [XXIV.]
115. *The Pilgrim's Dream; or the Star and the Glowworm. [XXV.]
116. *The Poet and the caged Turtle-dove. [XXVI.]
117. A Wren's Nest. [XXVII.]
118. Love lies bleeding. [XXVIII.]
119. Rural Illusions. [XXV.]
120. The Kitten and the falling Leaves. [XXXI.]
121. The Waggoner. [XXXIII.]
122. The Waggoner
123. Benjamin 'the Waggoner.'
124. The Dor-Hawk
125. Helmcrag (c. i. l. 168)
126. Merrynight (c. ii. l. 30)
127. Ghimmer-Crag (c. iii. l. 21)
VI. POEMS OF THE IMAGINATION
128. *There was a Boy. [I.]
129. *To the Cuckoo. [II.] Composed in the Orchard at Town-End, 1804
130. *A Night-piece. [III.]
131. *Yew-trees. [V.]
132. *Nutting. [VI.]
133. *She was a Phantom of Delight. [VIII.]
134. *The Nightingale. [IX.]
135. *Three Years she grew, &c. [X.]
136. I wandered lonely as a Cloud. [XII.] [= 'The Daffodils.']
137. The Daffodils. [xii.]
138. *The Reverie of poor Susan. [XIII.]
139. *Power of Music. [XIV.]
140. *Star-gazers. [XV.] Observed by me in Leicester Square, as here
141. *Written in March. [XVI.]
142. *Beggars. [XVIII.]
143. *Gipsies. [XX.]
144. *Ruth
145. *Resolution and Independence. [XXII.]
146. *The Thorn. [XXIII.]
147. Hart-Leap Well. [XXIV.]
148. Ibid
149. Song at the Feast of Brougham Castle. [XXV.]
150. *Ibid
151. Sir John Beaumont
152. The undying Fish of Bowscale Tarn (l. 122)
153. The Cliffords
154. *Tintern Abbey. [XXVI.]
155. *It is no Spirit, &c. [XXVII.]
156. French Revolution. [XXVIII.]
157. *Yes, it was the Mountain Echo. [XXIX.]
158. To a Skylark. [XXX.]
159. *Laodamia. [XXXI.]
160. Withered Trees (foot-note)
161. *Dion. [XXXII.]
162. Fair is the Swan, &c. [XXXIII.] (See supra, 161.)
163. *The Pass of Kirkstone
164. *To——. [XXXV.]
165. *To a Young Lady. [XXXVI.]
166. *Water-fowl. [XXXVII.]
167. *View from the Top of Black Comb. [XXXVIII.]
168. *The Haunted Tree. [XXXIX.]
169. *The Triad. [XL.]
170. The Wishing-gate. [XLI.]
171. The Wishing-gate destroyed
172. *The Primrose of the Rock. [XLIII.]
173. *Presentiments. [XLIV.]
174. *Vernal Ode. [XLV.]
175. *Devotional Incitements. [XLVI.]
176. *The Cuckoo-Clock. [XLVII.]
177. *To the Clouds. [XLVIII.]
178. *Suggested by a Picture of the Bird of Paradise. [XLIX.]
179. *A Jewish Family. [L.]
180. *On the Power of Sound. [LI.]
181. Peter Bell: a Tale
182. Peter Bell: the Poem
VII. MISCELLANEOUS SONNETS
PART I
183. *Commencement of writing of Sonnets
184. Admonition
185. *Sonnet IV
186. *Sonnet VI
187. *Sonnet VIII
188. 'The Genius.'
189. *Sonnet IX
190. *Sonnet XI
191. *Sonnet XV
192. *Sonnet XIX
193. *Sonnet XXII
194. *Sonnets XXIV. XXV. XXVI
195. *Sonnet XXVII
196. *Sonnets XXVIII. XXIX
197. *Sonnet XXX
198. *Sonnet XXXVI
PART II
199. *Sonnet IV
200. *Sonnet V
201. *Sonnet VI
202. Sonnet VII
203. Sonnet VIII
204. *Sonnet X
205. *Sonnet XI
206. *Sonnet XIII
207. *Sonnet XIV
208. *Sonnet XV
209. *Sonnet XVIII
210. *Sonnet XIX
211. *Sonnet XXIX
212. *Sonnet XXX. 'Four fiery steeds,' &c
213. *Sonnet XXXI. 'Brook! whose society,' &c
214. *Sonnets XXXIII.-V. 'Waters.'
PART III
215. *Sonnet IV. 'Fame tells of Groves,' &c
216. *Sonnet VII. 'Where lively ground,' &c
217. *Sonnet IX. 'A stream to mingle,' &c
218. Sonnet XI. In the Woods of Rydal
219. *Sonnet XIII. 'While Anna's peers,' &c
220. *Sonnet XV. 'Wait, prithee wait,' &c
221. *Sonnet XVI. 'Unquiet childhood,' &c
222. *Sonnet XVII. 'Such age how beautiful!' &c
223. *Sonnet XVIIII. 'Rotha! my spiritual child,' &c
224. The Rotha. 'The peaceful mountain stream,' &c
225. *Sonnet XIX. 'Miserrimus.'
226. *Sonnet XX. 'While poring,' &c
227. *Sonnet XXI
228. *Sonnet XXII
229. *Sonnet XXIII
230. *Sonnet XXIV
231. Sonnet XXV
232. *Sonnet XXVI
233. *Sonnet XXVII
234. *Sonnet XXVIII
235. *Sonnet XXIX
236. *Sonnet XXXII
237. *Sonnet XXXVI
238. *Sonnet XXXVII
239. Sonnet XLII
240. Sonnet XLIII
VIII. MEMORIALS OF A TOUR IN SCOTLAND, 1803
241. *Setting out
242. *To the Sons of Burns after visiting the Grave of their Father
243. *Ellen Irwin, or the Braes of Kirtle. [v.]
244. *To a Highland Girl. [VI.]
245. Stepping Westward. [VII.]
246. *Address to Kilchurn Castle. [X.]
247. *Rob Roys Grave. [XI.]
248. *Sonnet composed at—— Castle, 1803. [XII.]
249. Yarrow Unvisited. [XIII.]
250. The Matron of Jedborough [Jedburgh] and her Husband. [XV.]
251. *Sonnet, 'Fly, some kind Harbinger.' [XVI.]
252. *The Blind Highland Boy. [XVII.]
IX. MEMORIALS OF A SECOND TOUR IN SCOTLAND, 1814
253. *Suggested by a beautiful Ruin upon one of the islands of Loch Lomond: a place chosen for the retreat of a solitary individual, from whom this Habitation acquired the name of the Brownie's Cell. [I.]
254. *Composed at Corra Linn, in sight of Wallace Tower.[II.]
255. *Effusion in the Pleasure-ground on the Banks of the Braw, near Dunkeld. [III.]
256. *Yarrow Visited.[IV.]
X. POEMS DEDICATED TO NATIONAL INDEPENDENCE AND LIBERTY
257. Robert Jones
258. I grieved for Buonaparte. [Sonnet IV.]
259. The King of Sweden and Toussaint L'Ouverture
260. September 1, 1802. [Sonnet IX.]
261. *'Two Voices are there,' &c. [Sonnet XII.]
262. *'O Friend! I know not which Way.' [Sonnet XIII.]
263. *War in Spain
264. *Zaragossa. [Sonnet XVI.]
265. *Lines on the expected Invasion, 1803. [Sonnet XXVI.]
266. Fulke Greville, Lord Brooke. [Sonnet XXVII.]
267. The Oak of Guernica. [Part II. Sonnet XXVI.]
268. Thanksgiving Ode. [Part II. XLVI.]
269. *Ibid
270. Spenser. [Part II. Sonnet XLIII.]
XI. MEMORIALS OF A TOUR ON THE CONTINENT, 1820
271. *Introductory Remarks
272. The Fishwomen of Calais, [I.]
273. *Incident at Bruges. [IV.]
274. Between Namur and Liege. [VI.]
275. 'Miserere Domine.' [X.]
276. The Danube. [XI.]
277. The Staub-bach. [XII.]
278. Memorial near the Outlet of the Lake of Thun. [XIV.]
279. Engelbery. [XVIII.]
280. Our Lady of the Snow. [XIX.]
281. Effusion in presence of the painted Tower of Tell at Altorf
282. The Town of Schwytz. [XXI.]
283. The Church of San Salvador, seen from the Lake of Lugano. [XXIV.]
284. Foot-note on lines 31–36
285. 'The Last Supper' of Leonardo da Vinci. [xxvi.]
286. Statues on Milan Cathedral. [XXVII.]
287. A Religious Procession. [XXXII.]
288. Elegiac Stanzas. [XXXIII.]
289. Mount Righi (foot-note)
290. The Tower of Caligula. [XXXV.]
291. Herds of Cattle. [XXXVI.]
292. The Forks. ['Desultory Stanzas,' l. 37.]
292a. The Landenberg. [Ibid. ll. 49–51.]
293. Pictures in Bridges of Switzerland. [Ibid. l. 56.]
294. *At Dover. [XXXVII.]
XII. MEMORIALS OF A TOUR IN ITALY, 1837
295. *Introductory Remarks
296. Ibid
297. *Musings at Aquapendente, April 1837. [I.]
298
299. 'Over waves rough and deep' (line 122)
300. 'How lovely—didst thou appear, Savona' (ll. 209–11)
301. 'This flowering Broom's dear Neighbourhood' (l. 378). p/
302. The Religious Movement in the English Church
302a. *'The Pine-tree of Monte Mario,' [II.]
303. 'Is this, ye gods.' [III. l. 1.]
304. 'At Rome.'
305. *At Albano. [IX]
306. *Cuckoo at Laverna. [XIV.]
307. Camaldoli. [XV.]
308. Monk-visitors of Camaldoli
309. *At Vallombrosa. [XVIII.]
310. *Sonnet at Florence. [XIX.]
311. *The Baptist. [XX.]
312. *Florence
312a. *Among the Ruins of a Convent in the Apennines. [XXIII.]
313. *Sonnets after leaving Italy. [XXV.]
314. *Composed at Rydal on May morning, 1838
315. *Pillar of Trajan. [XXVIII.]
316. *The Egyptian Maid
XIII. THE RIVER DUDDON: A SERIES OF SONNETS
317. Introduction
318. 'The River Duddon.'
319. *The Sonnets on the River Duddon
320. The Wild Strawberry: Sympson. [Sonnet VI. ll. 9–10.]
321. 'Return' and 'Seathwaite Chapel.' [Sonnets XVII. and XVIII.]
322. Memoir of the Rev. Robert Walker
323. Milton
324. The White Doe of Rylstone; or the Fate of the Nortons
325. *The White Doe of Rylstone
326. William Hazlitt's Quotation
327. Bolton Alley
328. 'When Lady Aäliza mourned' (c. i. l. 226)
328a. Brancepeth
329. The Battle of the Standard
330. Bells of Rylstone (c. vii. l. 212)
331. 'The grassy rock-encircled Pound' (c. vii. l. 253)
XIV. ECCLESIASTICAL SONNETS
332. Ecclesiastical Sonnets in Series
333. *Introductory Remarks
PART I. FROM THE INTRODUCTION OF CHRISTIANITY INTO BRITAIN TO THE CONSUMMATION OF THE PAPAL DOMINION
334. St. Paul never in Britain
335. Water-fowl. [Sonnet III. l. 1.]
336. Hill at St. Allan's: Bede
337. Hallelujahs
338. Samuel Daniel and Thomas Fuller . [Ibid. ll. 9–10.]
339. Monastery of Old Bangor. [Sonnet XII.]
340. Paulinus. [Sonnet XV.]
341. King Edwin and the Sparrow
342. 'Near fresh Streams.' [Sonnet XVII. l. 12.]
343. The Clergy. [Sonnet XIX.]
343a. Bede. [Sonnet XIII. l. 14.]
344. Zeal
345. Alfred
346. Crown and Cowl
347. The Council of Clermont
PART II. TO THE CLOSE OF THE TROUBLES IN THE REIGN OF CHARLES I
348. Cistertian Monastery. [Sonnet III.]
349. Waldenses
350. Borrowed Lines
351. Transfiguration
352. Craft
353. The Virgin Mountain. [Sonnet XLIII.]
354. Laud. [Sonnet XLV.]
355. The Pilgrim Fathers. [Sonnet XIII.]
356. The Clergyman
357. Rush-bearing. [Sonnet XXXII.]
358. George Dyer
359. Apprehension
360. The Cross
361. Monte Rosa
XV. 'YARROW REVISITED,' AND OTHER POEMS
362. Dedication
363. *Yarrow Revisited
364. *A Place of Burial in the South of Scotland. [III.]
365. *On the Sight of a Manse in the South of Scotland. [IV.]
366. *Composed in Roslin Chapel during a Storm. [V.]
367. *The Trosachs. [VI.]
368. *Composed in the Glen of Lock Etive. [VIII.]
369. Eagles: composed at Dunollie Castle in the Bay of Oban. [IX.]
370. *In the Sound of Mull. [X.]
371. 'Shepherds of Etive Glen.' [X.]
372. Highland Broach. [XV.]
373. The Brownie. [XVI.]
374. *Bothwell Castle. [XVIII.]
375. *The Avon: a Feeder of the Avon. [XX. l. 2.]
376. *Suggested by a View from an Eminence in Inglewood Forest
377. Hart's-Horn Tree, near Penrith. [XXII.]
378. Fancy and Tradition. [XXIII.]
379. Countess' Pillar. [XXIV.]
XVI. EVENING VOLUNTARIES
380. Lines composed on a high part of the coast of Cumberland, Easter Sunday, April 7th, the Author's sixty-third birthday. [II.]
381. *By the Sea-side. [III.]
382. Not in the lucid intervals of life. [IV.]
383. The leaves that rustled on this oak-crowned hill. [VII.]
384. Impromptu. [VIII.]
384a. *Ibid
385. *Composed upon an Evening of extraordinary Splendour and Beauty. [IX.]
386. Alston: American Painter
387. Mountain-ridges. [Ibid. IV. l. 20.]
XVII. POEMS COMPOSED OR SUGGESTED DURING A TOUR IN THE SUMMER OF 1833
388. Advertisement
389. The Greta
390. Brigham Church
391. *Nun's Well, Brigham. [VIII.]
392. *To a Friend. [IX.]
393. Mary Queen of Scots landing at Workington. [X.]
394. *Mary Queen of Scots.[X.]
395. St. Bees and Charlotte Smith. [XI.]
396. Requiems
397. Sir William Hillary
398. Isle of Man. [XVI. l. 14.]
399. *Isle of Man. [XVII.]
400. *By a retired Mariner. [XIX.]
401. *At Bala Sala. [XX.]
402. *Tynwald Hill
403. Snafell
404. Eagle in Mosaic. [Sonnet XXV.]
405. *In the Frith of Clyde.—Ailsa Crag during an eclipse of the sun, July 17, 1833. [XXIII.]
406. *On the Frith of Clyde.—In a Steamboat, [XXIV.]
407. 'There, said a Stripling.' [XXXVII.]
408. *Written on a Blank Leaf of Macpherson's 'Ossian.' [XXVII]
409. Cave of Staffa. [XXIX.]
410. Ox-eyed Daisy
411. Iona. [XXXIII.]
412. River Eden, [XXXVIII.]
413. Ibid
414. *Monument of Mrs. Howard. [XXXIX.]
415. Nunnery. [XLI.]
416. Scene at Corby. [XLII.]
417. *Druidical Monument. [XLIII.]
418. *Lowther. [XLIV.]
419. To the Earl of Lonsdale. [XLV.]
420. *The Somnambulist. [XLVI.]
XVIII. POEMS OF SENTIMENT AND REFLECTION
421. Expostulation and Reply. [I.]
422. The Tables turned. [II.]
423. *Lines written in early Spring. [III.]
424. *A Character
425. *To my Sister. [V.]
426. *Simon Lee, the old Huntsman. [VI.]
427. *Lines written in Germany. 1798–9. [VII.]
428. *To the Daisy. [IX.]
429. Matthew. [X.]
430. *Matthew. [X.]
431. *Personal Talk. [XIII.]
432. *To the Spade of a Friend. 1804. [XIV.]
433. *A Night Thought. [XV.]
434. *An Incident characteristic of a favourite Dog. [XVI.]
435. Tribute to the Memory of the same Dog. [XVII.]
436. Fidelity. [XVIII.]
437. *Ode to Duty. [XIX.]
438. *Character of the Happy Warrior. [XX.]
439. *The Force of Prayer. [XXI.]
440. *A Fact and an Imagination. [XXII.]
441. *A little Onward. [XXIII.]
442. Ode to Lycoris. [XXIV.]
443. *Ibid
444. Memory. [XXVIII.]
445. This Lawn. [XXIX.]
446. Humanity. [XXX.]
447. Thought on the Seasons. [XXXI.]
448. To——, on the Birth of her first Child. [XXXII.]
449. The Warning: a Sequel to the Foregoing. [XXXIII.]
450. The Labourer's Noon-day Hymn. [XXXV.]
451. *Ode composed on May Morning. [XXXVI.]
452. *Lines suggested by a Portrait from the Pencil of F. Stone
453. *Upon seeing a coloured Drawing of the Bird of Paradise in an Album. [XLI.]
XIX. SONNETS DEDICATED TO LIBERTY AND ORDER
454. Change, [iv. 1. 14.]
455. American Repudiation. [VIII.]
456. To the Pennsylvanians. [IX.]
457. *Feel for the Wrongs, &c. [XIV.]
458. Sonnets upon the Punishment of Death,[XX.]
XX. MISCELLANEOUS POEMS
459. Epistle to Sir G. H. Beaumont, Bart.[1.]
460. *Upon perusing the foregoing Epistle, thirty Years after its thirty Years after its Compositon
461. Ibid
462. *Gold and Silver Fishes in a Vase.[II.]
463. *Liberty (Sequel to the above). [III.]
464. Liberty. [III.]
465. Poor Robin. [IV.]
466. *Ibid
467. *To the Lady le Fleming. [IX.]
468. *To a Redbreast (in Sickness). [VI.]
469. *Floating Island. [VII.]
470. *Once I could hail, &c. [VIII.]
471. *The Gleaner (suggested by a Picture)
472. Nightshade. [IX. ii. 6.]
473. Churches—East and West. [X.]
474. The Horn of Egremont Castle. [XI.]
475. *Goody Blake and Harry Gill. [XII.]
476. *To a Child: written in her Album. [XIV.]
477. *Lines written in the Album of the Countess of Lonsdale. [XV.]
478. The Russian Fugitive. [XVII.]
479. *Ibid
XXI. INSCRIPTIONS
XXII. SELECTIONS FROM CHAUCER MODERNISED
487. Of the Volume in which the 'Selections' appeared
488. The Prioress's Tale
XXIII. POEMS REFERRING TO THE PERIOD OF OLD AGE
489. The Old Cumberland Beggar. [I.]
490. *Ibid
491. The Farmer of Tilsbury Vale
492. Ibid
493. The small Celandine. [III.]
494. *The two Thieves. [IV.]
495. *Animal Tranquillity and Decay. [V.]
XXIV. EPITAPHS AND ELEGIAC PIECES
496. *From Chiabrera. [I. to IX.]
497. *By a blest Husband, &c
498. Cenotaph
499. *Epitaph in the Chapel-yard of Langdale, Westmoreland. [IV.]
500. *Address to the Scholars of the Village School
501. Elegiac Stanzas suggested by a Picture of Peel Castle. [VI.]
502. Elegiac Verses. [VIII.]
503. Moss Campion (Silene acaulis). [Ibid. II. l. 5.]
504. Lines
505. *Invocation to the Earth. [x.]
506. *Elegiac Stanzas. Addressed to Sir G.H.B. [XII.]
507. *Elegiac Musings in the Grounds of Coleorton Hall.[XIII.]
508. Charles Lamb. [XIV.]
509. *Ibid
510. *Extempore Effusion upon the Death of James Hogg. [XV.]
511. Dead friends: 'Immortals.' [XV.]
512. *Ode: Intimations of Immortality, from Recollections of early Childhood. [Headed in I.F. MSS. 'The Ode.']
XXV. 'THE EXCURSION.'
513. *On the leading Characters and Scenes of the Poem
514. The Aristocracy of Nature
515. Eternity
516. 'Of Mississippi, or that Northern Stream;' William Gilbert
517. Richard Baxter
518. Endowment of immortal Power
519. Samuel Daniel and Countess of Cumberland. ['Excursion,' ibid
520. Spires
521. Sycamores
522. The Transitory
523. Dyer and 'The Fleece.'
524. Dr. Bell
II. LETTERS AND EXTRACTS FROM LETTERS
1. Autobiographical Memoranda dictated by William Wordsworth, P.L., at Rydal Mount, November 1847
2. His Schoolmistress, Mrs. Anne Birkett, Penrith
3. Books and Reading
4. Tour on the Continent, 1790
5. In Wales
6. Melancholy of a Friend
7. Holy Orders
8. The French Revolution: 1792
9. Failure of Louvets Denunciation of Robespierre
10. Of inflammatory Political Opinions
11. At Milkhouse, Halifax: 'Not to take orders.'
12. Literary Work: Evening Walk and Descriptive Sketches: 1794
13. Employment on a London Newspaper
14. Raisley Culvert's last Illness
15. Family History
16. Reading: 1795
17. Satire: Poetical Imitations of Juvenal: 1795
18. Visit to Thelwall
19. Poetry added to: April 12th, 1798
20. On the Wye
21. At Home again
22. Early Visit to the Lake District
23. On a Tour, 1799
24. At the Lakes
25. Inconsistent Opinions on his Poems
26. On his Scottish Tour
27. The Grove: Captain John Wordsworth
28. Spenser and Milton
29. Death of Captain John Wordsworth
30. Of Dryden
31. Of Marmion
32. Topographical History, &c
33. The War in Spain: Benefactors of Mankind, &c
34. The Convention of Cintra: the Roman Catholics
35. The Tractate on 'The Convention of Cintra.'
36. Of 'The Convention of Cintra,' &c
37. Home at Grasmere: 'The Parsonage.'
38. On Education of the Young
39. Roman Catholics: Bible Society, &c
40. Death of Children: Politics, &c
41. Letter of Introduction: Humour
42. The Peninsular War
43. Of the Writings of Southey
44. Of alleged Changes in Political Opinions
45. Of his Poems and others
46. Of the Thanksgiving Ode and 'White Doe of Rylston.'
47. Of Poems in Stanzas
48. The Classics: Translation of Aeneid, &c
49. On the same: Letters to Earl Lonsdale
50. Tour on the Continent, 1820
51. Shakespeare's Cliff at Dover
52. Of Affairs on the Continent, 1828
53. Style: Francis Edgeworth's 'Dramatic Fragment:' Criticisms
54. Of the 'Icôn Basiliké,' &c. LETTER TO SOUTHEY
55. Of the Roman Catholic Question
56. Of the Roman Catholic Emancipation Bill
57. Of Ireland and the Poor Laws, &c
58. Of the Earl of Lonsdale: Virgil: Book-buying: Gifts of Books: Commentaries
59. Poems of Edward Moxon
60. Of Hamilton's 'It haunts me yet' and Miss Hamilton's 'Boys' School.'
61. Of Collins, Dyer, Thomson, &c
62. Verses and Counsels
63. 'Annuals' and publishing Roguery
64. Works of George Peele
65. Of Lady Winchelsea, Tickell, &c.: Sonnets, &c
66. Hamilton's 'Spirit of Beauty:' Verbal Criticism: Female Authorship: Words
67. His 'Play:' Hone: Eyesight failing, &c
68. Summer: Mr. Quillinan: Draining, &c
69. Works of Webster, &c.: Elder Poets: Dr. Darwin: 'Excursion:' Collins, &c
70. French Revolution, 1830
71. Nonsense: Rotten Boroughs: Sonnets: Pegasus: Kenelm Digby: Tennysons
72. Verses: 'Reform Bill:' Francis Edgeworth: Eagles: 'Yarrow Revisited.'
73. Tour in Scotland
74. Sir Walter Scott
75. Of Advices that he would write more in Prose
76. Of Poetry and Prose: Milton and Shakspeare: Reform, &c
77. Of the Reform Bill
78. Of Political Affairs
79. Family Affliction and State of Public Affairs
80. Illness of Sister: Reform: Poems: Oxford and Cambridge, &c
81. 'Remains of Lucretia Davidson:' Public Events: Miss Jewsbury, &c
82. Tuition at the University
83. On the Admission of Dissenters to graduate in the University of of Cambridge
84. The Poems of Skelton
85. The Works of James Shirley
86. Literary Criticism and News: Men of Science, &c
87. Of 'Elia:' Miss Wordsworth
88. 'Specimens of English Sonnets:' Criticisms, &c
89. The Poems of Lady Winchelsea, Skelton, &c
90. 'Popularity' of Poetry
91. Sonnets, and less-known female Poets: Hartley Coleridge, &c
92. Proposed Dedication of Poems to Wordsworth
93. Verse-Attempts
94. The Poems of Mrs. Hemans
95. Of the Church of England, &c
96. Of 'The Omnipresence of the Deity,' &c
97. A new Church at Cockermouth
98. Of the Same
99. Classic Scenes: Holy Land
100. American Edition of Poems, &c
101. Of the Poems of Quillinan, and Revision of his own Poems
102. On a Tour
103. Of Bentley and Akenside
104. Presidency of Royal Dublin Society: Patronage of Genius: Canons of Criticism: Family News
105. Prose-writing: Coleridge: Royal Dublin Society: Select Minds: Copyright: Private Affairs
106. Of his own Poems and posthumous Fame
107. the Sheldonian Theatre
108. New Edition of his Poems
109. Death of his Nephew, John Wordsworth
110. Of the Same
111. On the Death of a young Person. [167]
112. Religion and Versified Religion
113. Memorandum of a Conversation on Sacred Poetry (by Rev. R. P. Graves
114. Visit of Queen Adelaide to Rydal Mount
115. Ecclesiastical Duties and Revenues Act, &c
116. Samuel Rogers and Wordsworth together
117. An alarming Accident, Nov. 11, 1840
118. Of Alston and Haydon, &c
119. Of Peace's 'Apology for Cathedrals.'
120. Of 'The Task' of Cowper and Shenstone
121. On a Tour
122. Marriage of Dora
123. Letters to his Brother
124. Episcopal Church of America: Emerson and Carlyle
125. Old Haunts revisited
126. No Pension sought
127. The Master of Trinity
128. Of Alston's Portrait of Coleridge
129. Of Southey's Death
130. Tropical Scenery: Grace Darling: Southey, &c
131. Contemporary Poets: Southey's Death: 'The Excursion,' &c
132. Offer of the Laureateship on Death of Southey
133. Laureateship: Walter Savage Landor and Quillinan: Godson
134. Alston the Painter: Home Occupations
135. Socinianism
136. Sacred Hymns
137. Bereavements
138. Birthday in America and at Home: Church Poetry
139. Class-fellows and School-fellows
140. 'From Home:' The Queen: Review of Poems, &c
141. The Laureateship: Contemporaries, &c.: Tennyson
142. 'Poems of Imagination:' New Edition, &c.: Portrait, &c
143. Of the College of Maynooth, &c
144. Of the 'Heresiarch of the Church of Rome.'
145. Family Trials
146. Bishop White: Mormonites, &c
147. Governor Malartie: Lord Hector of Glasgow University, &c
148. Death of 'Dora.'
149. Of the Same: Sorrow
150
151. Illness and Death of a Servant at Rydal Mount
152. Humility
153. Hopefulness
III. CONVERSATIONS AND PERSONAL REMINISCENCES OF WORDSWORTH
(a) KLOPSTOCK: NOTES OF HIS CONVERSATION
(b) PERSONAL REMINISCENCES (1836), BY THE HON. MR. JUSTICE COLERIDGE
(c) RECOLLECTIONS OF TOUR IN ITALY, BY H.C. ROBINSON
(d) REMINISCENCES OF WORDSWORTH
(e) CONVERSATIONS AND REMINISCENCES RECORDED BY THE (NOW) BISHOP OF LINCOLN, &c
(f) REMINISCENCES OF THE REV. R.P. GRAVES, M.A., FORMERLY OF WINDERMERE, NOW OF DUBLIN
(g) ON THE DEATH OF COLERIDGE
(h) FURTHER REMINISCENCES OF WORDSWORTH BY THE SAME, SENT TO THE PRESENT EDITOR
(i) AN AMERICAN'S REMINISCENCES
(j) RECOLLECTIONS OF WORDSWORTH
PART I
PART II
(k) FROM 'RECOLLECTIONS OF THE LAST DAYS OF SHELLEY AND BYRON.'
(l) FROM 'LETTERS, EMBRACING HIS LIFE, OF JOHN JAMES TAYLER, B.A., PROFESSOR OF ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY AND BIBLICAL THEOLOGY, AND PRINCIPAL OF MANCHESTER NEW COLLEGE. LONDON, 1872' (TWO VOLS. 8vo)
(m) ANECDOTE OF CRABBE
(n) LATER OPINION OF LOUD BROUGHAM
NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS
INDEX
FOOTNOTES:
Отрывок из книги
William Wordsworth
For the First Time Collected, With Additions from Unpublished Manuscripts. In Three Volumes
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274. Between Namur and Liege . [VI.]
275. ' Miserere Domine .' [X.]
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