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Englisch Ausgabe

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Poems of William Wordsworth

BooksWhale-Ausgabe auf Englisch von William Wordsworth

A public-domain classic of nature, memory, childhood, feeling, and Romantic poetry, presented in a clean BooksWhale reading edition.

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Poems of William Wordsworth

Poems of William Wordsworth by William Wordsworth is a public-domain classic of nature, memory, childhood, feeling, and Romantic poetry. This edition presents the text in a clean reading format for sustained reading and catalog discovery.

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Diese Ausgabe basiert auf einem gemeinfreien Text und wurde von BooksWhale für digitales Lesen vorbereitet.

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William Wordsworth died in 1850, and Poems of William Wordsworth was first published around 1800. These dates support the public-domain basis for the source text used in this edition.

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Selected Poems

William Wordsworth

VorschaukapitelOld Man TravellingVorschau

Old Man Travelling

VorschaukapitelAnimal Tranquillity and Decay, A SketchVorschau

The little hedge-row birds,

That peck along the road, regard him not.

He travels on, and in his face, his step,

His gait, is one expression; every limb,

His look and bending figure, all bespeak

A man who does not move with pain, but moves

With thought – He is insensibly subdued

To settled quiet: he is one by whom

All effort seems forgotten, one to whom

Long patience has such mild composure given,

That patience now doth seem a thing, of which

He hath no need. He is by nature led

To peace so perfect, that the young behold

With envy, what the old man hardly feels.

– I asked him whither he was bound, and what

The object of his journey; he replied

‘Sir! I am going many miles to take

A last leave of my son, a mariner,

Who from a sea-fight has been brought to Falmouth,

And there is dying in an hospital.'

Inhaltsverzeichnis

In dieser Ausgabe

  1. 01Full text
  2. 02Old Man Travelling
  3. 03Animal Tranquillity and Decay, A Sketch
  4. 04The Ruined Cottage
  5. 05Second Part
  6. 06A Night-Piece
  7. 07The Old Cumberland Beggar
  8. 08A Description
  9. 09Lines
  10. 10Written at a Small Distance from my House, and Sent by my Little Boy to the Person to Whom They Are Addressed
  11. 11Goody Blake and Harry Gill
  12. 12A True Story
  13. 13The Thorn
  14. 14The Idiot Boy
  15. 15Lines Written in Early Spring
  16. 16Anecdote for Fathers
  17. 17Shewing How the Art of Lying May Be Taught
  18. 18We Are Seven
  19. 19Expostulation and Reply
  20. 20The Tables Turned
  21. 21An Evening Scene, on the Same Subject
  22. 22Lines Written a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey On Revisiting the Banks of the Wye During a Tour, July 13, 1798
  23. 23The Fountain
  24. 24A Conversation
  25. 25The Two April Mornings
  26. 26‘A slumber did my spirit seal’
  27. 27Song
  28. 28‘Strange fits of passion I have known’
  29. 29Lucy Gray
  30. 30Nutting
  31. 31‘Three years she grew in sun and shower’
  32. 32The Brothers
  33. 33Hart-Leap Well
  34. 34from Home at Grasmere
  35. 35FROM POEMS ON THE NAMING OF PLACES
  36. 36II
  37. 37To Joanna
  38. 38IV‘A narrow girdle of rough stones and crags’
  39. 39Michael
  40. 40A Pastoral Poem
  41. 41‘I travelled among unknown Men’
  42. 42To a Sky-Lark
  43. 43Alice Fell
  44. 44Beggars
  45. 45To a Butterfly
  46. 46To the Cuckoo
  47. 47‘My heart leaps up when I behold’
  48. 48To H. C., Six Years Old
  49. 49‘Among all lovely things my Love had been’
  50. 50To a Butterfly
  51. 51Resolution and Independence
  52. 52‘Within our happy Castle there dwelt one’
  53. 53‘The world is too much with us’
  54. 54‘With Ships the sea was sprinkled far and nigh’
  55. 55‘Dear Native Brooks your ways have I pursued’
  56. 56‘Great Men have been among us’
  57. 57‘It is not to be thought of that the Flood’
  58. 58‘When I have borne in memory what has tamed’
  59. 59‘England! the time is come when thou shouldst wean’
  60. 60Composed by the Sea-Side, near Calais August, 1802
  61. 61‘It is a beauteous Evening, calm and free’
  62. 62To Toussaint L'Ouverture
  63. 63Composed in the Valley, near Dover, on the Day of Landing
  64. 64Composed Upon Westminster Bridge
  65. 65Sept. 2, 1802
  66. 66London
  67. 671802
  68. 68‘Nuns fret not at their Convent's narrow room’
  69. 69Yarrow Unvisited
  70. 70‘She was a Phantom of delight’
  71. 71Ode to Duty
  72. 72Ode
  73. 73Paulò majora canamus
  74. 74‘I wandered lonely as a Cloud’
  75. 75Stepping Westward
  76. 76The Solitary Reaper
  77. 77Elegiac Stanzas
  78. 78Painted by Sir George Beaumont
  79. 79A Complaint
  80. 80Gipsies
  81. 81St Paul's
  82. 82‘Surprized by joy – impatient as the Wind’
  83. 83Yew-Trees
  84. 84Composed at Cora LinnIn Sight of Wallace's Tower
  85. 85Yarrow Visited
  86. 86September, 1814
  87. 87To B. R. Haydon, Esq.
  88. 88Sequel to the Foregoing [Beggars]Composed Many Years After
  89. 89Ode
  90. 90Composed upon an Evening of ExtraordinarySplendor and Beauty
  91. 91The River Duddon
  92. 92Conclusion
  93. 93‘The unremitting voice of nightly streams’
  94. 94Airey-Force Valley
  95. 95Extempore Effusion upon the Death of James Hogg
  96. 96‘Glad sight wherever new with old’
  97. 97At Furness Abbey
  98. 98‘I know an aged Man constrained to dwell’
  99. 99FROM THE PRELUDE
  100. 100Book One
  101. 101Introduction – Childhood and School-Time
  102. 102Book Two
  103. 103School-Time (continued)
  104. 104Book Three
  105. 105Residence at Cambridge
  106. 106Book Four
  107. 107Summer Vacation
  108. 108Book Five
  109. 109Books
  110. 110Book Six
  111. 111Cambridge and the Alps
  112. 112Book Seven
  113. 113Residence in London
  114. 114Book Eight
  115. 115Retrospect. – Love of Nature Leading toLove of Mankind
  116. 116Book Nine
  117. 117Residence in France
  118. 118Book Ten
  119. 119Residence in France and French Revolution
  120. 120Book Eleven
  121. 121Imagination, How Impaired and Restored
  122. 122Book TwelveSame Subject (continued)
  123. 123Book Thirteen
  124. 124Conclusion

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