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The Poems of William Wordsworth - Humanities-Ebooks

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866 <strong>The</strong> <strong>Poems</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>William</strong> <strong>Wordsworth</strong><br />

Up with me! up with me into the clouds! I.620<br />

Upon a Portrait<br />

III.740<br />

Upon Perusing the Foregoing Epistle Thirty Years after its Composition III.754<br />

Upon Seeing a Coloured Drawing <strong>of</strong> the Bird <strong>of</strong> Paradise in an Album III.714<br />

Upon the Late General Fast. March, 1832<br />

III.561<br />

Upon the Same Event<br />

III.35<br />

Upon the Same Occasion<br />

III.139<br />

Upon the Sight <strong>of</strong> a Beautiful Picture<br />

III.35<br />

Upon the sight <strong>of</strong> the Portrait <strong>of</strong> a female Friend.—<br />

III.739<br />

Upon those lips, those placid lips, I look<br />

III.739<br />

Urged by Ambition, who with subtlest skill<br />

III.381<br />

Vale <strong>of</strong> Esthwaite, <strong>The</strong> I.23<br />

Valedictory Sonnet<br />

III.732<br />

Vallombrosa! I longed in thy shadiest wood<br />

III.450<br />

Vallombrosa—I longed in thy shadiest wood<br />

III.545<br />

Vanguard <strong>of</strong> Liberty, ye Men <strong>of</strong> Kent I.650<br />

Various Extracts from <strong>The</strong> vale <strong>of</strong> Esthwaite A Poem. Written at Hawkshead<br />

in the Spring and Summer 1787 I.35<br />

Vaudois, <strong>The</strong><br />

III.419<br />

View from the Top <strong>of</strong> Black Comb<br />

III.42<br />

Virgil’s Aeneid, Translation <strong>of</strong><br />

II.667<br />

Virgin, <strong>The</strong><br />

III.393<br />

Visitation <strong>of</strong> the Sick<br />

III.424<br />

Wait, prithee, wait!” this answer Lesbia threw<br />

III.612<br />

Waldenses<br />

III.388<br />

Walton’s Book <strong>of</strong> “Lives”<br />

III.403<br />

Wanderer! that stoop’st so low, and com’st so near<br />

III.716<br />

Wansfell! this Household has a favoured lot<br />

III.759<br />

Ward <strong>of</strong> the Law!—dread Shadow <strong>of</strong> a King!<br />

III.141<br />

Warning, a Sequel to the Foregoing, <strong>The</strong>. March, 1833<br />

III.697<br />

Wars <strong>of</strong> York and Lancaster<br />

III.389<br />

Was it for this / That one, the fairest <strong>of</strong> all rivers, loved I.530<br />

Was it to disenchant, and to undo<br />

III.430<br />

Was the aim frustrated by force or guile<br />

III.134<br />

Watch, and be firm! for soul-subduing vice<br />

III.371<br />

Waterfall and the Eglantine, <strong>The</strong> I.402<br />

We Are Seven I.332<br />

We can endure that He should waste our lands<br />

III.32<br />

We gaze, not sad to think that we must die<br />

III.740<br />

We had a fellow-Passenger who came I.643<br />

We have not passed into a doleful City<br />

III.504<br />

We saw, but surely, in the motley crowd<br />

III.500<br />

We talk’d with open heart, and tongue I.432

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