William Wordsworth - The Major Works including The Prelude

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2000-11-09
Publisher(s): Oxford University Press
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Summary

William Wordsworth (1770-1850) has long been one of the best-known and best-loved English poets. The Lyrical Ballads, written with Coleridge, is a landmark in the history of English romantic poetry. His celebration of nature and of the beauty and poetry in the commonplace embody a unified and coherent vision that was profoundly innovative. This volume presents the poems in their order of composition and in their earliest completed state, enabling the reader to trace Wordsworth's poetic development and to share the experience of his contemporaries. It includes a large sample of the finest lyrics, and also longer narratives such as The Ruined Cottage, Home at Grasmere, Peter Bell, and the autobiographical masterpiece, The Prelude (1805). All the major examples of Wordsworth's prose on the subject of poetry are also included.

Table of Contents

Introduction xiii
Acknowledgements xxvi
Chronology xxvii
Note on the Text xxx
POETRY
An Evening Walk
1(12)
Salisbury Plain
13(16)
Old Man Travelling
29(1)
Lines left upon a Seat in a Yew-tree
29(2)
The Ruined Cottage
31(13)
[A Night-Piece]
44(1)
[The Discharged Soldier]
45(4)
The Old Cumberland Beggar
49(5)
Lines Writtin at a Small Distance from my House
54(2)
Goody Black and Harry Gill
56(3)
The Thorn
59(7)
`A whirl-blast from behind the hill'
66(1)
The Idiot Bo
67(13)
Lines written in Early Spring
80(1)
Anecdote for Father
81(2)
We Are Seven
83(2)
Simon Lee, the Old Huntsman
85(3)
The Last of the Flock
88(3)
Peter Bell
91(38)
Expostulation and Reply
129(1)
The Tables Turned
130(1)
Lines written a few miles above Tintern Abbey
131(5)
To a Sexton
136(1)
`If Nature, for a favorite Child'
137(1)
The Fountain
138(2)
The Two April Mornings
140(7)
[Five Elegies]
`Could I the priest's consent have gained'
142(1)
`Just as the blowing thorn began'
143(1)
Elegy
144(1)
`Carved, Mathew, with a master's skill'
145(1)
Dirge
146(1)
`A slumber did my spirit seal'
147(1)
Song (`She dwelt amongh th' untrodden ways')
147(1)
`Strange fits of passion I have known'
148(1)
Lucy Gray
149(2)
A Poet's Epitaph
151(2)
Nutting
153(1)
`Three years she grew in sun and shower'
154(1)
The Brothers
155(13)
Hart-Leap Well
168(6)
Home at Grasmere
174(25)
Poems on the Naming of Places
199(7)
`It was an April Morning: fresh and clear'
199(2)
To Joanna
201(2)
`There is an Eminence,of these our hills'
203(1)
`A narrow girdle of rough stones and crags'
203(2)
To M.H.
205(1)
Rural Architecture
206(1)
The Childless Father
207(1)
Inscription: For the Spot where the Hermitage stood
208(1)
`'Tis said, that some have died for love'
208(2)
Lines: Written with a Slate-pencil
210(1)
The Oak and the Broom
211(3)
The Waterfall and the Eglantine
214(2)
The Two Thieves
216(1)
The Idle Shephered-Boys
217(3)
`When first I journeyed hither'
220(3)
A Character
223(1)
Michael
224(13)
`I travelled among unknown Men'
237(1)
Louisa
237(1)
To a Sky-Lark
238(1)
The Sparrow's Nest
239(1)
The Sailor's Mother
239(2)
Alice Cell
241(2)
Beggars
243(1)
To a Butterfly (`Stay near me')
244(1)
To the Cuckoo
245(1)
`My heart leaps up when I behold'
246(1)
To H.C., Six Years Old
246(1)
`Among all lovely things my Love had been'
247(1)
Written in March
248(1)
The Green Linnet
248(2)
To the Daisy (`In youth')
250(2)
To the Daisy (`With little here')
252(1)
To the Same Flower (`Bright Flower')
253(1)
To a Butterfly (`I've watched you')
254(1)
`These chairs they have no words to utter'
255(1)
The Tinker
256(1)
To the Small Celandine
257(2)
To the Same Flower (`Pleasures newly found')
259(1)
Resolution and Independence
260(5)
Travelling
265(1)
`Within our happy Castle there dwelt one'
265(2)
`I grieved for Buonaparte'
267(1)
On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic
268(1)
`How sweet it is, when mother Fancy rocks'
268(1)
`I am not One who much or oft delight'
269(1)
`The world is too much with us'
270(1)
To the Memory of Riasley Calvert
271(1)
`Where lies the Land to which you Ship must go?'
271(1)
`With Ships the sea sprinkled far and nigh'
272(1)
`It is no Spirit who from Heaven hath flown'
272(1)
`Methought I saw the footsteps of a throne'
273(1)
`Are souls then nothing?'
273(1)
```Beloved Vale!'' I said, ``when I shall con'''
274(1)
`Brook, that hast been my solace days and weeks'
274(1)
`Dear Native Brooks your ways have I pursued'
275(1)
`England! the time is come when thou shouldst wean'
275(1)
`Great Men have been among us'
276(1)
`It is not be thought of that the Flood'
276(1)
`There is a bondage which is worse to bear'
277(1)
`When I have borne in memory what has tamed'
277(1)
`Farewell, thou little Nook of mountain ground'
278(2)
`The Sun has long been set'
280(1)
Calais, August, 1802
280(1)
Composed by the Sea-Side, near Calais
281(1)
`It is a beauteous Evening, calm and free'
281(1)
To Toussaint L'Ouverture
282(1)
To a Friend, Composed near Calais
282(1)
Calais, August 15th, 1802
283(1)
September 1st, 1802
283(1)
Composed in the Valley, near Dover
284(1)
September, 1802
284(1)
Composed Upon Westminster Bridge
285(1)
Written in London, September, 1802
285(1)
London, 1802
286(1)
`Nuns fret not a their Convent's narrow room'
286(1)
Composed after a Journey across the Hamilton Hills
287(1)
`These words were uttered in a pensive mood'
287(1)
The Small Celandine
288(1)
Sonnet. September 25th, 1803
289(1)
To the Men of Kent
289(1)
Anticipation. October, 1803
290(1)
Yarrow Unvisited
290(2)
`She was a Phantom of delight'
292(1)
October, 1803 (`One might believe')
293(1)
October, 1803 (`When, looking on')
294(1)
October, 1803 (`These times')
294(1)
October, 1803 (`Six thousand Veterans')
295(1)
Ode to Duty
295(2)
Ode (`There was a time')
297(6)
`Who fancied what a pretty sight'
303(1)
`I wandered lonely as Cloud'
303(1)
The Marton of Jedborough and Her Husband
304(2)
To the River Duddon
306(1)
To the Daisy (`Sweet Flower!')
307(1)
`I only looked for pain and grief'
308(3)
`Distressful gift! this Book receives'
311(1)
Glen-Almain
312(1)
Stepping Westward
313(1)
Roy Roy's Grave
314(4)
Address to the Sons of Burns
318(1)
The Solitary Reaper
319(1)
Character of the Happy Warrior
320(2)
Star Gazers
322(1)
Power of Music
323(2)
`By their floating Mill'
325(1)
Elegiac Stanzas
326(2)
`Yes! full surely 'twas the Echo'
328(1)
Lines, Composed at Grasmere
329(1)
A Complaint
330(1)
Thought of a Briton on the Subjugation of Switzerland
330(1)
November, 1806
331(1)
`O Nightingale! thou surely art'
331(1)
Gipsies
332(1)
St Paul's
332(1)
Characteristics of a Child three Years old
333(1)
`Surprized by joy----impatient as the Wind'
334(1)
Yew-Trees
334(1)
Yarrow Visited
335(3)
Composed at Cora Lin
338(2)
To B. R. Haydon, Esq.
340(1)
November 1, 1815
340(1)
`While not a leaf seems faded'
341(1)
Ode.----1817
341(4)
Ode. The Pass of Kirkstone
345(2)
Ode. Composed Upon an Evening of Extraordinary Splendor and Beauty
347(3)
Sequal to [Beggars]
350(1)
The River Duddon: Conclusion
351(1)
Bruges (`Bruges I saw')
352(1)
Bruges (`The Spirit of Antiquity')
352(1)
Mutability
353(1)
To the Torrent at the Devil's Bridge
353(1)
Composed Among the Ruins of a Castle
353(1)
To----(`O dearer far')
354(1)
To----(`Let other Bards')
354(1)
`Once I could hail (howe'er serene the sky)'
355(1)
`Scorn not hte Sonnet'
356(1)
Incident at Bruges
357(1)
On hte Power of Sound
358(7)
Yarrow Revisited
365(3)
On the Departure of Sir Walter Scott
368(1)
`Calm is the fragrant air and loth to lose'
369(1)
Airey-Force Valley
369(1)
Extempore Effusion Upon the Death of James Hogg
370(1)
November, 1836
371(1)
`I know an aged Man constrained to dwell'
372(3)
The Prelude (1805)
375(216)
PROSE
Advertisement to Lyrical Ballads (1798)
591(2)
Note to The Thorn (1800)
593(2)
Preface to Lyrical Ballads (1802)
595(21)
Appendix to Preface to Lyrical Ballads (1802)
616(4)
Letter to John Wilson (7 June 1802)
620(6)
Preface to Poems (1815)
626(14)
Essay, Supplementary to the Preface to Poems (1815)
640(23)
A Letter to a Friend of Robert Burns (1816)
663(13)
Appendix 676(6)
Notes 682(59)
Further Reading 741(3)
Index of Titles and First Lines 744

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