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The Commination Service, iv.

146

The Complaint of a Forsaken
Indian Woman, i. 288
The Contrast, ii. 58

The Cottager to her Infant, i.

301

The Council of Clermont, iv.94
The Cuckoo and the Nightin-
gale, v. 97

The Cuckoo at Laverna, iii.
211

The Cuckoo-Clock, ii. 253
The Danish Boy, ii. 60
The Dunolly Eagle, iv. 206
The Earl of Breadalbane's
Ruined Mansion, iii. 282
The Eclipse of the Sun, 1820,
iii. 164

The Egyptian Maid, iii. 229
The Emigrant Mother, i. 308
The Excursion, vi. 1
The Faery Chasm, iii 255
The Fall of the Aar, iii. 145
The Farmer of Tilsbury Vale,

v. 126

The Force of Prayer, iv. 271
The Forsaken, i. 277
The Fountain, iv. 251
The French and the Spanish
Guerillas, iii. 104
The French Army in Russia,
iii. 106

iii. 108
The Germans on the Heights
of Hockheim, iii. 109

The Gleaner, v. 22
The Green Linnet, ii. 38
The Haunted Tree, ii. 224
The Highland Broach, iii. 285
The Horn of Egremont Castle,
v. 36

The Idiot Boy, i. 324
The Idle Shepherd-Boys, i. 205
The Infant M. M., ii. 376
The Italian Itinerant, iii. 159
The King of Sweden, iii. 68
The Kitten and
Leaves, ii. 77
The Laborer's

Hymn, iv. 305

Falling

Noonday

| The Last of the Flock, i. 291
The Last Supper, iii. 163
The Liturgy, iv. 140
The Longest Day, i. 221
The Marriage Ceremony, iv.

144

The Matron of Jedborough
and her Husband, iii. 33
The Monumeut called Long
Meg and her Daughters,
iv. 220

The Mother's Return, i. 193
The Norman Boy, i. 225
The Norman Conquest, iv. 92
The Oak and the Broom, ii. 25
The Oak of Guernica, iii. 101
The Old Cumberland Beggar,
v. 119

The Pass of Kirkstone, ii. 209
The Pet Lamb, i. 213
The Pilgrim's Dream, ii. 66
The Pillar of Trajan, iii. 226
The Pine of Monte Mario at
Rome, iii. 203

The Plain of Donnerdale, iii.

261

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The Sparrow's Nest, i. 188
The Stepping-Stones, iii. 254
iii. 254

The Tables turned, iv. 232
The Thorn, ii. 162
The Three Cottage Girls, iii.
168

The Town of Schwytz, iii. 154
The Triad, ii. 225
The Trosachs, iii. 278
The Two April Mornings, iv.

248

The Two Thieves, v. 132
The Vaudois, iv. 105
The Virgin, iv. 114
The Wagoner, ii. 85
The Warning.- Sequel to the
First-born, iv. 298
The Waterfall and the Eglan-
tine, ii. 23

The Westmoreland Girl, i. 233
The White Doe of Rylstone,

iv. 1

To a Painter, ii. 387
To a Redbreast (S. H.), v. 24
To a Sexton, ii. 30
To a Skylark, ii. 39
ii. 195

To a Snowdrop, ii. 353
To a Young Lady who had
been, &c., &c., ii. 220
To B. R. Haydon, ii. 344

Picture of
Napoleon Buonaparte, ii. 383
To Cordelia M—, iv. 228
To Enterprise, ii. 212
To H. C., i. 217
To H. C. Robinson, iii. 189
To
in her Seventieth

Year, ii. 377
To Joanna, ii. 3
To Lady Beaumont, ii. 354
To Lucca Giordano, iv. 180
To May, iv. 309
To M. H., ii. 10
To my Sister, iv. 235

The Widow on Windermere To
Side, i. 359

The Wild Duck's Nest, ii. 329
The Wishing-Gate, ii. 233
The Wishing-Gate destroyed,
ii. 236
Thought of a Briton on the
Subjugation of Switzerland,
iii. 71

Thoughts on the Seasons, iv.

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To

on her First Ascent
of Helvellyn, ii. 218

, on the Birth of her
First-born Child, iv. 295
To Rotha Q- ii. 378
To S. H., ii. 332
To Sleep, ii. 327

ii. 328

ii. 328

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To the Author's Portrait, ii.382
To the Clouds, ii. 255
To the Cuckoo, ii. 118
ii. 375

To the Daisy, ii. 32

To

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ii. 36

iv. 246

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v. 153

To the Earl of Lonsdale, iv.221
To the Lady E. B. and the
Hon. Miss P., ii. 372
To the Lady Fleming.-Foun-
dation of Rydal Chapel,v. 30
on the same Occasion,

Madeira Flow-To

To an Octogenarian, v. 26
To a Painter, ii. 387

v. 35
the Lady Mary Lowther,
ii. 353

To the Memory of Raisley Cal-
vert, ii. 342

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-, Loch

Lomond, iii. 289
To the Poet, John Dyer, ii. 330
To the Rev. Chr. Wordsworth,
D. D., ii. 392

To the Rev. Dr. Wordsworth,
iii. 246

To the River Derwent, iv. 186
To the River Greta, iv. 185
To the Small Celandine, ii. 41
ii. 43

To the Sons of Burns, iii. 9
To the Spade of a Friend,
iv. 257

To the Torrent at the Devil's
Bridge, ii. 372

To Thomas Clarkson, iii. 86
To Toussaint L'Ouverture,
iii. 69
Tradition, iii. 262
Translation of the Bible, iv.116
Transubstantiation, iv. 105
Trepidation of the Druids,
iv. 74

Tributary Stream, iii. 260
Tribute to the Memory of a
Favorite Dog, iv. 262
Troilus and Cresida, v. 112
Troubles of Charles the First,
iv. 126'
Tynwald Hill, iv. 202

UNCERTAINTY, iv. 75

VALEDICTORY Sonnet, ii. 391
Vaudracour and Julia, i. 312
Vernal Ode, ii. 245
View from the Top of Black
Comb, ii. 222

Visitation of the Sick, iv. 146

WALDENSES, iv. 107
Walton's Book of Lives, iv.131
Wars of York and Lancaster,
iv. 108
Water-Fowl, ii. 221
We are Seven, i. 202
Wicliffe, iv. 109

William the Third, iv. 134

YARROW Revisited, iii. 271
Visited, iii. 60
Unvisited, iii. 29

Yew-Trees, ii. 121

INDEX TO THE FIRST LINES.

-

A BARKING Sound the shepherd hears, iv. 263
A Book came forth of late, called Peter Bell, ii. 331
A bright-haired company of youthful slaves, iv. 80,
Abruptly paused the strife; the field throughout, iii. 109
A dark plume fetch me from yon blasted yew, iii. 259
Adieu, Rydalian Laurels! that have grown, iv. 183
Advance, come forth from thy Tyrolean ground, iii. 91
Aerial Rock. whose solitary brow, ii. 327

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A famous man is Robin Hood, iii. 23

Affections lose their object; Time brings forth, v. 26
A flock of sheep that leisurely pass by, ii. 328

A genial hearth, a hospitable board, iv. 139

Age! twine thy brows with fresh spring flowers, iii. 33
Ah! think how one compelled for life to abide, iv. 338
Ah, when the Body, round which in love we clung, iv. 85
Ah! where is Palafox? Nor tongue nor pen, iii. 99
Ah, why deceive ourselves! by no mere fit, iv. 328
Aid, glorious Martyrs, from your fields of light, iv. 121
Alas! what boots the long, laborious quest, iii. 92
A little onward lend thy guiding hand, iv. 276
All praise the Likeness by thy skill portrayed, ii. 387
A love-lorn Maid, at some far-distant time, iii. 262

Ambition, - - following down this far-famed slope, iii. 171
Amid a fertile region green with wood, iii. 291

Amid the smoke of cities did you pass, ii. 3

Amid this dance of objects sadness steals, iii. 142

Among a grave fraternity of Monks, iv. 318
Among the dwellers in the silent fields, v. 52
Among the dwellings framed by birds, ii. 70

Among the mountains were we nursed, loved Stream, iv. 186
A month, sweet Little-ones, is past, i. 193

An age hath been when Earth was proud, iv. 279
A narrow girdle of rough stones and crags, ii. 7
And is it amoug rude, untutored Dales, iii. 93
Yarrow? This the Stream, iii. 60

And is this

-

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And, not in vain embodied to the sight, iv. 102
And shall, the Pontiff asks, profaneness flow, iv. 94
And what is Penance with her knotted thong, iv. 110
And what melodious sounds at times prevail, iv. 102

An Orpheus! an Orpheus! yes, Faith may grow bold, ii. 133
Another year! - another deadly blow! iii. 81

A

-

pen to register; a key, iv. 287

A Pilgrim, when the summer day, ii. 66

A plague on your languages, German and Norse, iv. 241

A pleasant music floats along the Mere, iv. 92

A Poet! He hath put his heart to school, ii. 383
A point of life between my Parents' dust, iv. 186
Army of Clouds! ye winged Host in troops, ii. 255
A Rock there is whose homely front, ii. 239

A Roman Master stands on Grecian ground, iii. 85
Around a wild and woody hill, iii. 146

Arran! a single-crested Teneriffe, iv. 204
Art thou a Statist, in the van, iv. 243
Art thou the bird whom Man loves best, ii. 49
A simple Child, i. 202

As faith thus sanctified the warrior's crest, iv. 104
As indignation mastered grief, my tongue, iii. 224
As leaves are to the tree whereon they grow, iv. 330
A slumber did my spirit seal, ii. 130

As often as I murmur here, ii. 63

As star that shines dependent upon star, iv. 139

As the cold aspect of a sunless way, ii. 359

A Stream, to mingle with your favorite Dee, ii. 372

A sudden conflict rises from the swell, iv. 135

As, when a storm hath ceased, the birds regain, iv. 76
As with the Stream our voyage we pursue, iv. 96

At early dawn, or rather when the air, ii. 364

A Traveller on the skirt of Sarum's Plain, i. 53

A trouble, not of clouds, or weeping rain, iii. 276

At the corner of Wood Street, when daylight appears, ii. 132
Avaunt all specious pliancy of mind, iii. 102

A voice, from long-expecting thousands sent, iv. 133
A volant Tribe of Bards on earth are found, ii. 341

Avon,

a precious, an immortal name! iii. 291

A weight of awe, not easy to be borne, iv. 220

A whirl-blast from behind the hill, ii. 22

A winged Goddess, clothed in vesture wrought, iii. 139

A youth too certain of his power to wade, iv. 200

Bard of the Fleece, whose skilful genius made, ii. 330
Beaumont! it was thy wish that I should rear, ii. 322
Before I see another day, i. 288

Before the world had passed her time of youth, iv. 336
Begone, thou fond presumptuous Elf, ii. 23
Beguiled into forgetfulness of care, iv. 313
Behold an emblem of our human mind, v. 86

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