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The Poems of William Wordsworth - Humanities-Ebooks

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Complete Index 845<br />

Inland, within a hollow Vale, I stood I.644<br />

Inmate <strong>of</strong> a mountain Dwelling<br />

III.106<br />

Inscribed upon a rock<br />

III.127<br />

Inscription (“<strong>The</strong> massy Ways, carried across these Heights”)<br />

III.592<br />

Inscription for a Monument in Crosthwaite Church,<br />

in the Vale <strong>of</strong> Keswick<br />

III.763<br />

Inscription for a National Monument in Commemoration <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Battle <strong>of</strong> Waterloo<br />

III.79<br />

Inscription for a seat by the pathway side ascending to Windy Brow I.55<br />

Inscription for a Seat in the Groves <strong>of</strong> Coleorton<br />

III.45<br />

Inscription for the House (an Outhouse) on the Island at Grasmere I.415<br />

Inscription for the Spot where the Hermitage stood on St. Herbert’s Island,<br />

Derwent-water I.414<br />

Inscription Intended for a Stone in the Grounds <strong>of</strong> Rydal Mount III.676<br />

Inscriptions, supposed to be found in, and near, a hermit’s cell<br />

III.127<br />

Inside <strong>of</strong> King’s College Chapel, Cambridge<br />

III.411<br />

Intent on gathering wool from hedge and brake<br />

III.758<br />

Interdict, An<br />

III.384<br />

Intrepid sons <strong>of</strong> Albion!—not by you<br />

III.79<br />

Introduction (“I, who descended with glad step to chase”)<br />

III.368<br />

Iona. (Upon Landing.)<br />

III.503<br />

Is Death, when evil against good has fought<br />

III.556<br />

Is it a Reed that’s shaken by the wind I.639<br />

Is then no nook <strong>of</strong> English ground secure<br />

III.764<br />

Is then the final page before me spread<br />

III.462<br />

Is there a Power that can sustain and cheer<br />

III.20<br />

Is this, ye Gods, the Capitolian Hill?<br />

III.535<br />

Isle <strong>of</strong> Man<br />

III.495<br />

It is a beauteous Evening, calm and free I.637<br />

It is no Spirit who from Heaven hath flown I.675<br />

It is not to be thought <strong>of</strong> that the Flood I.646<br />

It is the first mild day <strong>of</strong> March I.326<br />

It seems a day, / One <strong>of</strong> those heavenly days which cannot die I.435<br />

It was a moral end for which they fought<br />

III.23<br />

It was an April morning: fresh and clear I.454<br />

Italian Itinerant, and the Swiss Goatherd, <strong>The</strong><br />

III.442<br />

Jesu! bless our slender Boat<br />

III.432<br />

Jewish Family, A<br />

III.641<br />

Jones! when from Calais southward you and I I.640<br />

Journey Renewed<br />

III.360<br />

June, 1820 (“Fame tells <strong>of</strong> Groves—from England far away—”) III.143<br />

Jung-Frau—and the Rhine at Shauffhausen, <strong>The</strong><br />

III.434<br />

Just as the blowing thorn began I.480

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