William Wordsworth Heart Poems
- 201. Incidents Upon Salisbury Plain Or Guilt And Sorrow
- 202. The Braes Of Kirtle Or Ellen Irwin
- 203. An Evening Walk - Addressed To A Young Lady
- 204. Her Eyes Are Wild
- 205. Composed Near Calais, On The Road Leading To Ardres, August 7, 1802
- 206. Michael - A Pastoral Poem
- 207. England, 1802 (ii)
- 208. Address To The Scholars Of The Village School
- 209. Ode On Intimations Of Immortality
- 210. The Borderers. A Tragedy
- 211. Left Upon A Seat In A Yew-tree
- 212. The Oak And The Broom - A Pastoral Poem
- 213. Surprised By Joy - Impatient As The Wind
- 214. Lines Written On A Blank Leaf In A Copy Of The Author's Poem "the Excursion,"
- 215. The Daffodils
- 216. England, 1802 (v)
- 217. Address To My Infant Daughter, Dora On Being Reminded That She Was A Month Old That Day, September 1
- 218. Lines Written As A School Exercise
- 219. Tribute To The Memory Of The Same Dog
- 220. Ruth
- 221. When I Have Borne In Memory
- 222. For The Spot Where The Hermitage Stood On St. Herbert's Island, Derwentwater.
- 223. Influence Of Natural Objects
- 224. The Farmer Of Tilsbury Vale
- 225. Fountain, The: A Conversation
- 226. A Poet's Epitaph
- 227. The Longest Day
- 228. George And Sarah Green
- 229. Book Ninth [residence In France]
- 230. Ellen Irwin
- 231. To The Small Celandine
- 232. Feelings Of The Tyrolese
- 233. The Stars Are Mansions Built By Nature's Hand
- 234. Book Seventh [residence In London]
- 235. Invocation To The Earth, February 1816
- 236. The Recluse - Book First
- 237. To Mary
- 238. Guilt And Sorrow
- 239. The Mother's Return
- 240. The Waggoner - Canto First
- 241. Book First [introduction-childhood And School Time]
- 242. To A Highland Girl (at Inversneyde, Upon Loch Lomond)
- 243. Is There A Power That Can Sustain And Cheer
- 244. Composed At The Same Time And On The Same Occasion
- 245. To Joanna
- 246. Book Fourteenth [conclusion]
- 247. The Prelude, Book 1: Childhood And School-time
- 248. A Flower Garden At Coleorton Hall, Leicestershire.
- 249. 'tis Said, That Some Have Died For Love
- 250. Pet-lamb, The: A Pastoral Poem
Top 10 most used topics by William Wordsworth
Heart 385 Love 351 I Love You 351 Life 292 Heaven 285 Nature 280 Time 277 Earth 273 Power 256 Light 252Write your comment about William Wordsworth
Adeline bincy : I love her poem I loved poem is daffodils
FAYAZ AHMAD HAKIM: WORDSWORTH IS THE FATHER OF NATURE POETRY .
FAYAZ AHMAD HAKIM: WORDSWORTH IS THE FATHER OF NATURE POETRY .
FAYAZ AHMAD HAKIM: WORDSWORTH IS THE FATHER OF NATURE POETRY .
William: Hii kase
Diksha: Nature poem
Charles W Spurgeon, professor emeritus: Sometimes I feel as if Wordsworth gave me that which I call my soul; he so informed my psyche that I intuit my humanity at home with Nature. His poetry creates "heart-mindfulness".
Jishu Dolui: His full poem ❝ We are seven ❞ my photo album
Jill Bulman: Wondered why there is no listing for Wordsworth's most famous and probably most loved poem, 'I wandered lonely as a cloud' ?!
Written in London, September, 1902: high thinking and simple living
RALlB: 'apt admonishment', from Resolution and Independence, so he was a teacher and humble too, though a Johnian he recognised the sublime beauty and excess of King's College chapel 'glorious work of fine intelligence' and 'give all thy canst, High Heaven rejects the lore of nicely calculated less or more'