Authors > Verse > William Wordsworth
WW
The Child is father of the Man.
My Heart Leaps up When I Behold
William
Wordsworth
William Wordsworth
 
1770–1850, English poet, b. Cockermouth, Cumberland. One of the great English poets, he was a leader of the romantic movement in England.—continue at Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2002 Columbia University Press.
 
Pronunciation:  wûrdz´wûrth´´ from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
 
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WORKS
 
Complete Poetical Works
This complete collection contains nearly 900 of Wordworth’s poems, including the classics The Prelude, Ode to Duty, The World Is Too Much With Us, and many more.
 
Prefaces and Prologues
From the Harvard Classics, Vol. XXXIX.
 
Bartlett’s Wordsworth Quotations
Epitomal selections by John Bartlett.
 
Wordsworth, William, 65433 to 65634
Entries from the Columbia World of Quotations.
 
 
ANTHOLOGIZED VERSE
 
Admonition to a Traveller; Affliction of Margaret; A Lesson; A slumber did my spirit seal; By the Sea; Composed at Neidpath Castle; Daffodils; Daffodils; Desideria; Desideria; Education of Nature; England, 1802 i; England, 1802 ii; England, 1802 iii; England, 1802 iv; England, 1802 v; England and Switzerland, 1802; Evening on Calais Beach; Fountain; Green Linnet; Inner Vision; I travell’d among unknown men; London, 1802; Lost Love; Lucy i; Lucy ii; Lucy iii; Lucy iv; Lucy v; Mutability; My heart leaps up when I behold; Nature and the Poet; Ode. Intimations of Immortality; Ode on Intimations of Immortality; Ode to Duty; Ode to Duty; On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic; On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic, 1802; Perfect Woman; Rainbow; Reaper; Reverie of Poor Susan; Ruth, or the Influences of Nature; Same; She was a Phantom of delight; Simon Lee, the Old Huntsman; Solitary Reaper; Sonnet i; Sonnet ii; Speak!; To a Distant Friend; To Sleep; To the Cuckoo; To the Daisy; To the Highland Girl of Inversnaid; To the Skylark; Trosachs; Two April Mornings; Upon Westminster Bridge; Upon Westminster Bridge; Valedictory Sonnet to the River Duddon; When I have borne in memory what has tamed; Within King’s College Chapel, Cambridge; World; World is too much with us; Written in Early Spring; Yarrow Unvisited; Yarrow Visited
 
 
WRITINGS ABOUT WORDSWORTH
 
William Wordsworth
Chapter by By Émile Legouis with bibliography from the Cambridge History of English Literature.



 
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