Noded poetry by William Wordsworth:

By the Side of Rydal Mere
 
Cenotaph
Composed Among the Ruins of a Castle in North Wales
 
Decay of Piety
 
Ere with Cold Beads of Midnight Dew
Expostulation and Reply
 
Fair Prime of Life! Were it Enough to Gild
From the Conclusion of a Poem, Composed in Anticipation of Leaving School
 
A Gravestone upon the Floor in the Cloister of Worcester Cathedral
Go Back to Antique Ages, If Thine Eyes
 
Her Only Pilot the Soft Breeze
How Rich that Forehead's Calm Expanse
 
In My Mind's Eye a Temple, Like a Cloud
The Infant M---- M----
In the Woods of Rydal
It Is a Beauteous Evening, Calm and Free
I travelled among unknown men
I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud
 
Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey
Lines Written While Sailing in a Boat at Evening
London, 1802
 
Memory
The Massy Ways, Carried Across these Heights
My Heart Leaps Up When I Behold
 
Not Love, Not War, nor the Tumultuous Swell
 
Oh Woe is Me
On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic
On the Same Occasion
 
The Poet and the Caged Turtledove
The Power of Armies is a Visible Thing
 
Recollection of the Portrait of King Henry Eighth, Trinity Lodge, Cambridge
Remembrance of Collins
Resolution and Independence
Retirement
 
Scorn Not the Sonnet
She Dwelt Among the Untrodden Ways
A Slumber did my Spirit Seal
Strange Fits of Passion Have I Known
 
The Tables Turned
Tears, Idle Tears
There is a Pleasure in Poetic Pains
This Lawn, a Carpet All Alive
Thought on the Seasons
To ------
To ------, in her Seventieth Year
To a Butterfly
To Rotha Q----
To S.H.
To Sleep
To the Cuckoo
To the Lady E. B. and the Hon. Miss P.
To the Lady Fleming
To the Torrent at the Devil's Bridge, North Wales, 1824
A Tradition of Oker Hill in Darley Dale, Derbyshire
 
A Volant Tribe of Bards on Earth are Found
 
When Philoctetes in the Lemnian Isle
While Anna's Peers and Early Playmates Tread
Why, Minstrel, these Untuneful Murmurings
The World is Too Much With Us

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