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The Poems of William Wordsworth - Humanities-Ebooks

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

Composed on May-morning, 1838<br />

III.554<br />

Composed on the Banks <strong>of</strong> a Rocky Stream<br />

III.135<br />

Composed on the Eve <strong>of</strong> the Marriage <strong>of</strong> a Friend, in the Vale<br />

<strong>of</strong> Grasmere<br />

III.48<br />

Composed on the same Morning (“Life with yon Lambs, like day,<br />

is just begun”)<br />

III.735<br />

Composed upon Westminster Bridge, Sept. 3, 1803 (“Earth has not<br />

any thing to shew more fair”) I.635<br />

Composed when a probability existed <strong>of</strong> our being obliged to quit<br />

Rydal Mount as a Residence<br />

II.294<br />

Composed while the Author was Engaged in Writing a Tract,<br />

Occasioned by the Convention <strong>of</strong> Cintra,1808<br />

III.17<br />

Concluded (“As leaves are to the tree whereon they grow”)<br />

III.550<br />

Concluded (“Long-favoured England! be not thou misled”) III.564, 566<br />

Conclusion (“I thought <strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong>e, my partner and my guide”)<br />

III.363<br />

Conclusion (“If these brief Records, by the Muses’ art”)<br />

III.603<br />

Conclusion (“Most sweet it is with unuplifted eyes”)<br />

III.509<br />

Conclusion (“Why sleeps the future, as a snake enrolled”)<br />

III.412<br />

Conclusion (“Yes, though He well may tremble at the sound”)<br />

III.560<br />

Concluded.—American Episcopacy<br />

III.421<br />

Conclusion. 1811<br />

III.34<br />

Confirmation<br />

III.416<br />

Confirmation Continued<br />

III.416<br />

Congratulation<br />

III.408<br />

Conjectures<br />

III.368<br />

Continued (“And what melodious sounds at times prevail!”)<br />

III.387<br />

Continued (“As indignation mastered grief, my tongue”)<br />

III.551<br />

Continued (“Complacent Fictions were they, yet the same”)<br />

III.536<br />

Continued (“From Rite and Ordinance abused they fled”)<br />

III.420<br />

Continued (“Hard task! exclaim the undisciplined, to lean”) III.549, 566<br />

Continued (“Methinks that to some vacant Hermitage”)<br />

III.378<br />

Continued (“Mine ear has rung, my spirits sunk subdued”)<br />

III.409<br />

Continued (“<strong>The</strong> world forsaken, all its busy cares”)<br />

III.544<br />

Continued (“<strong>The</strong>y dreamt not <strong>of</strong> a perishable home”)<br />

III.411<br />

Continued (“Who ponders National events shall find”)<br />

III.563<br />

Continued (“Yet some, Noviciates <strong>of</strong> the cloistral shade”)<br />

III.392<br />

Contrast, <strong>The</strong><br />

III.584<br />

Conversion<br />

III.376<br />

Convict, <strong>The</strong> I.370<br />

Corruptions <strong>of</strong> the Higher Clergy<br />

III.390<br />

Could I the priest’s consent have gained I.480<br />

Council <strong>of</strong> Clermont, <strong>The</strong><br />

III.382<br />

Countess’s Pillar<br />

III.482

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