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Table of Contents
ОглавлениеCONTENTS OF THREE VOLUMES
I. APOLOGY FOR THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. 1793.
APPENDIX to Bishop Watson's Sermon.
II. THE CONVENTION OF CINTRA 1809.
CONCERNING THE CONVENTION OF CINTRA
III. VINDICATION OF OPINIONS IN THE TREATISE ON THE 'CONVENTION OF CINTRA'
IV. TWO ADDRESSES TO THE FREEHOLDERS OF WESTMORELAND. 1818.
V. OF THE CATHOLIC RELIEF BILL, 1829.
I. OF LEGISLATION FOR THE POOR, THE WORKING CLASSES, AND THE CLERGY: APPENDIX TO POEMS.
(a) ON THE EDUCATION OF THE YOUNG.
(b) OF THE PEOPLE, THEIR WAYS AND NEEDS.
THE PROSE WORKS OF WILLIAM WORDSWORTH.
BY THE REV. ALEXANDER B. GROSART, ST. GEORGE'S, BLACKBURN, LANCASHIRE.
VOL. II.
I. OF LITERARY BIOGRAPHY AND MONUMENTS.
LETTER
A FRIEND OF ROBERT BURNS
AN INTENDED REPUBLICATION
THE ACCOUNT OF THE LIFE OF BURNS,
(a) A LETTER TO A FRIEND OF ROBERT BURNS.
(b) OF MONUMENTS TO LITERARY MEN.
(c) OF SIR THOMAS BROWNE, A MONUMENT TO SOUTHEY, &c.
(b) THE COUNTRY CHURCH-YARD, AND CRITICAL EXAMINATION OF ANCIENT EPITAPHS
(c) CELEBRATED EPITAPHS CONSIDERED.
III. ESSAYS, LETTERS, AND NOTES ELUCIDATORY AND CONFIRMATORY OF THE POEMS.
(a) OF THE PRINCIPLES OF POETRY AND THE 'LYRICAL BALLADS' (1798-1802) .
(d) OF POETRY AS OBSERVATION AND DESCRIPTION.
(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.
GUIDE
DISTRICT OF THE LAKES
PUBLISHED BY HUDSON AND NICHOLSON,
CONTENTS.
DIRECTIONS AND INFORMATION FOR THE TOURIST.
DESCRIPTION OF THE SCENERY OF THE LAKES.
DIRECTIONS AND INFORMATION FOR THE TOURIST.
ROAD FROM AMBLESIDE TO KESWICK.
DESCRIPTION OF THE SCENERY OF THE LAKES.
EXCURSIONS TO THE TOP OF SCAWFELL AND ON THE BANKS OF ULSWATER.
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.
To BORROWDALE, and ROUND THE LAKE, 12 miles.
Two Days' Excursion to WASTDALE, ENNERDALE, and LOWES-WATER.
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.
KENDAL AND WINDERMERE RAILWAY.
RE-PRINTED FROM THE MORNING POST.
SONNET ON THE PROJECTED KENDAL AND WINDERMERE RAILWAY.
KENDAL AND WINDERMERE RAILWAY.
THE PROSE WORKS OF WILLIAM WORDSWORTH.
BY THE REV. ALEXANDER B. GROSART, ST. GEORGE'S, BLACKBURN, LANCASHIRE.
VOL. III.
I. NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE POEMS, INCORPORATING
2. * Prelude to the Last Volume . [As supra.]
3. * Extract from the Conclusion of a Poem, composed in anticipation of leaving School. [I.]
5. * An Evening Walk. Addressed to a Young Lady . [III.]
8. * Lines written while sailing in a Boat at Evening . [IV.]
9. Descriptive Sketches taken during a Pedestrian Tour among the Alps .
19. Guilt and Sorrow; or Incidents upon Salisbury Plain .[VIII.]
21. * Guilt and Sorrow; or Incidents upon Salisbury Plain . [VIII.]
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
II. POEMS REFERRING TO THE PERIOD OF CHILDHOOD.
27. * My Heart leaps up when I behold . [I.]
29. * The Sparrow's Nest , [III.]
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.]
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.]
III. POEMS FOUNDED ON THE AFFECTIONS.
47. Great Gavel . (Foot-note.)
48. Artegal and Elidure . [II.]
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.]
56. * 'Tis said that some have died for Love . [XIII.]
59. *' How rich that Forehead's calm Expanse !'[XVII.]
61. Lament of Mary Queen of Scots . [XX.]
62. The Complaint of a forsaken Indian Woman . [XXI.]
64. The Last of the Flock . [XXII.]
66. The Affliction of Margaret ——. [XXIV.]
67. The Cottager to her Infant . [XXV.]
69. The Sailor's Mother . [XXVII.]
70. The Childless Father . [XXVIII.]
72. The Emigrant Mother . [XXIX.]
73. Vaudracour and Julia . [XXX.]
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.]
85. * Her Eyes are wild . [XXXVIII.]
IV. POEMS ON THE NAMING OF PLACES.
87. * It was an April Morn, &c. [I.]
88. *' May call it Emmas Dell' (I. 47) .
89. * To Joanna Hutchinson . [II.]
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.]
96. * A Morning Exercise . [I.]
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.]
104. * To the same Flower . [VIII.]
105. * To the small Celandine . [XI.]
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.]
118. Love lies bleeding . [XXVIII.]
120. The Kitten and the falling Leaves . [XXXI.]
125. Helmcrag (c. i. l. 168) .
126. Merrynight (c. ii. l. 30) .
127. Ghimmer-Crag (c. iii. l. 21) .
129. * To the Cuckoo . [II.] Composed in the Orchard at Town-End, 1804.
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.']
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.]
145. * Resolution and Independence . [XXII.]
149. Song at the Feast of Brougham Castle . [XXV.]
152. The undying Fish of Bowscale Tarn (l. 122) .
154. * Tintern Abbey . [XXVI.]
155. * It is no Spirit, &c. [XXVII.]
156. French Revolution . [XXVIII.]
157. * Yes, it was the Mountain Echo . [XXIX.]
160. Withered Trees (foot-note) .
162. Fair is the Swan, &c. [XXXIII.] (See supra , 161.)
163. * The Pass of Kirkstone .
165. * To a Young Lady . [XXXVI.]
167. * View from the Top of Black Comb . [XXXVIII.]
168. * The Haunted Tree . [XXXIX.]
170. The Wishing-gate . [XLI.]
171. The Wishing-gate destroyed .
172. * The Primrose of the Rock . [XLIII.]
173. * Presentiments . [XLIV.]
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.]
180. * On the Power of Sound . [LI.]
183. * Commencement of writing of Sonnets .
194. * Sonnets XXIV. XXV. XXVI.
212. * Sonnet XXX. 'Four fiery steeds,' &c.
213. * Sonnet XXXI. 'Brook! whose society,' &c.
214. * Sonnets XXXIII.-V. 'Waters.'
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.
VIII. MEMORIALS OF A TOUR IN SCOTLAND, 1803.
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.]
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.
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.]
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.]
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.]
270. Spenser . [Part II. Sonnet XLIII.]
XI. MEMORIALS OF A TOUR ON THE CONTINENT, 1820.
272. The Fishwomen of Calais , [I.]
273. * Incident at Bruges . [IV.]
274. Between Namur and Liege . [VI.]
275. ' Miserere Domine .' [X.]
278. Memorial near the Outlet of the Lake of Thun . [XIV.]
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.]
XII. MEMORIALS OF A TOUR IN ITALY, 1837.
297. * Musings at Aquapendente, April 1837. [I.]
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.]
306. * Cuckoo at Laverna . [XIV.]
308. Monk-visitors of Camaldoli .
309. * At Vallombrosa . [XVIII.]
310. * Sonnet at Florence . [XIX.]
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.]
XIII. THE RIVER DUDDON: A SERIES OF SONNETS.
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 .
324. The White Doe of Rylstone; or the Fate of the Nortons .
325. * The White Doe of Rylstone .
326. William Hazlitt's Quotation .
328. ' When Lady Aäliza mourned ' (c. i. l. 226) .
329. The Battle of the Standard .
330. Bells of Rylstone (c. vii. l. 212) .
331. ' The grassy rock-encircled Pound ' (c. vii. l. 253) .
332. Ecclesiastical Sonnets in Series .
334. St. Paul never in Britain .
335. Water-fowl . [Sonnet III. l. 1.]
336. Hill at St. Allan's: Bede .
338. Samuel Daniel and Thomas Fuller . [Ibid. ll. 9-10.]
339. Monastery of Old Bangor . [Sonnet XII.]
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.]
347. The Council of Clermont .
PART II. TO THE CLOSE OF THE TROUBLES IN THE REIGN OF CHARLES I.
348. Cistertian Monastery . [Sonnet III.]
353. The Virgin Mountain . [Sonnet XLIII.]
355. The Pilgrim Fathers . [Sonnet XIII.]
357. Rush-bearing . [Sonnet XXXII.]
XV. 'YARROW REVISITED,' AND OTHER POEMS.
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.]
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.]
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.]
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.]
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.
391. * Nun's Well, Brigham . [VIII.]
393. Mary Queen of Scots landing at Workington . [X.]
394. * Mary Queen of Scots .[X.]
395. St. Bees and Charlotte Smith . [XI.]
398. Isle of Man . [XVI. l. 14.]
400. * By a retired Mariner . [XIX.]
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]
414. * Monument of Mrs. Howard . [XXXIX.]
417. * Druidical Monument . [XLIII.]
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.]
426. * Simon Lee, the old Huntsman . [VI.]
427. * Lines written in Germany . 1798-9. [VII.]
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.]
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.]
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.]
455. American Repudiation . [VIII.]
456. To the Pennsylvanians . [IX.]
457. * Feel for the Wrongs, &c. [XIV.]
458. Sonnets upon the Punishment of Death ,[XX.]
459. Epistle to Sir G. H. Beaumont, Bart .[1.]
462. * Gold and Silver Fishes in a Vase .[II.]
463. * Liberty (Sequel to the above) . [III.]
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.]
XXII. SELECTIONS FROM CHAUCER MODERNISED.
487. Of the Volume in which the 'Selections' appeared .
XXIII. POEMS REFERRING TO THE PERIOD OF OLD AGE.
489. The Old Cumberland Beggar . [I.]
491. The Farmer of Tilsbury Vale .
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.
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.]
503. Moss Campion (Silene acaulis) . [ Ibid. II. l. 5.]
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.]
510. * Extempore Effusion upon the Death of James Hogg . [XV.]
511. Dead friends: 'Immortals.' [XV.]
513. * On the leading Characters and Scenes of the Poem .
514. The Aristocracy of Nature .
516. 'Of Mississippi, or that Northern Stream;' William Gilbert .
518. Endowment of immortal Power .
519. Samuel Daniel and Countess of Cumberland . ['Excursion,' ibid.
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 .
4. Tour on the Continent , 1790.
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 .
17. Satire: Poetical Imitations of Juvenal: 1795 .
19. Poetry added to: April 12th, 1798 .
22. Early Visit to the Lake District .
25. Inconsistent Opinions on his Poems .
27. The Grove: Captain John Wordsworth .
29. Death of Captain John Wordsworth .
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 .
43. Of the Writings of Southey .
44. Of alleged Changes in Political Opinions .
46. Of the Thanksgiving Ode and 'White Doe of Rylston.'
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.
60. Of Hamilton's 'It haunts me yet' and Miss Hamilton's 'Boys' School.'
61. Of Collins, Dyer, Thomson, &c.
63. 'Annuals' and publishing Roguery .
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.
71. Nonsense: Rotten Boroughs: Sonnets: Pegasus: Kenelm Digby: Tennysons.
72. Verses: 'Reform Bill:' Francis Edgeworth: Eagles: 'Yarrow Revisited.'
75. Of Advices that he would write more in Prose .
76. Of Poetry and Prose: Milton and Shakspeare: Reform, &c.
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.
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.
91. Sonnets, and less-known female Poets: Hartley Coleridge, &c.
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 .
99. Classic Scenes: Holy Land .
100. American Edition of Poems, &c
101. Of the Poems of Quillinan, and Revision of his own Poems .
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 .
108. New Edition of his Poems .
109. Death of his Nephew, John Wordsworth .
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 .
124. Episcopal Church of America: Emerson and Carlyle .
128. Of Alston's Portrait of Coleridge .
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 .
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.'
146. Bishop White: Mormonites, &c.
147. Governor Malartie: Lord Hector of Glasgow University, &c.
151. Illness and Death of a Servant at Rydal Mount .
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.
(k) FROM 'RECOLLECTIONS OF THE LAST DAYS OF SHELLEY AND BYRON.'