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Wordsworth, 1839.
POEMS AND EXTRACTS
CHOSEN BY
WILLIAM WORDSWORTH
FOR AN ALBUM
PRESENTED TO LADY MARY LOWTHER
CHRISTMAS, 1819
PRINTED LITERALLY FROM THE ORIGINAL ALBUM
WITH FACSIMILES
LONDON
HENRY FROWDE
1905
OXFORD: HORACE HART
PRINTER TO THE UNIVERSITY
Chapters (not listed in original)
Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- To the Lady Mary Lowther
- "In the Muse's paths I stray"
- Petition for an absolute Retreat
- Song
- "Where is that World to which the fancy flies"
- A Nocturnal Reverie
- Fragment
- Fragment
- From a Poem for the Birthday of the Lady Cathrine Tufton
- Life's Progress
- The Tree
- From a Poem on the Death of the Honble James Thynne younger Son of the Lord Viscount Weymouth
- Hope
- Song
- From a Poem in praise of the invention of Letter Writing
- "Silvia, let us from the crowd retire"
- "O King of Terrors! whose unbounded sway"
- On his Muse
- From "The Mistress of Philarete"
- Funeral Dirge for Marcello
- Ode to Peace
- Hymn on Solitude
- "Thy shades thy silence now be mine"
- Verses
- "Thus safely low, my Friend, thou canst not fall"
- Ode on Solitude
- "And now, perch'd proudly on the topmost spray"
- "Now come, ye Naiads, to the fountains lead"
- "Me though in life's sequestered vale"
- Inscription
- "Throned on the sun's descending car"
- Inscription
- The Wood Nymph
- Sonnet
- Sonnet
- Sonnet
- A Drop of Dew
- St. John the Baptist
- The Ruins of Rome
- "Go lovely Rose!"
- To the young Lady Lucy Sydney
- Sorrow
- Written it is believed, by Miss Warton on the Death of her Father Thomas Warton the Elder
- Epitaph
- Of my dear Son, Gervase Beaumont
- Dr. Doddridge on his Motto
- Lines written by Capt. James upon his leaving Charlton Island, where many of his Ship's Crew had died during the winter, which they passed there A.D. 1631-2
- "As those we love decay, we die in part"
- To the Lady Margaret Countess of Cumberland
- Lines
- Notes
- Index of first lines
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