William Wordsworth Heart Poems
- 51. Composed By The Seashore
- 52. Memorials Of A Tour In Italy, 1837 - To Henry Crabb Robinson
- 53. Elegiac Musings - In The Grounds Of Coleorton Hall, The Seat Of The Late Sir G. H. Beaumont, Bart.
- 54. Cave Of Staffa
- 55. To The Moon - Composed By The Seaside, On The Coast Of Cumberland
- 56. The Romance Of The Water Lily
- 57. Written After The Death Of Charles Lamb
- 58. If This Great World Of Joy And Pain
- 59. The Wishing Gate Destroyed
- 60. On The Sight Of A Manse In The South Of Scotland
- 61. The Labourer's Noon-day Hymn
- 62. The Somnambulist
- 63. Lines Suggested By A Portrait From The Pencil Of F. Stone
- 64. Memorials Of A Tour On The Continent, 1820 - Xxxiv. - On Being Stranded Near The Harbour Of Boulogne
- 65. Liberty - Sequel To - The Gold And Silver Fishes
- 66. A Sequel To The Foregoing
- 67. Elegiac Stanzas - Addressed To Sir G. H. B. Upon The Death Of His Sister-in-law
- 68. Upon The Late General Fast
- 69. On The Frith Of Clyde - In A Steamboat
- 70. To ....... Upon The Birth Of Her First-born Child, March 1833
- 71. The Pillar Of Trajan
- 72. Devotional Incitements
- 73. To The River Greta, Near Keswick
- 74. Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part Iii. - Xxx - Forms Of Prayer At Sea
- 75. Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part Iii. - Xii - Down A Swift Stream
- 76. Incident At Bruges
- 77. The Egyptian Maid
- 78. Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part I. - Vi - Persecution
- 79. Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part Iii. - Xxxi - Funeral Service
- 80. Why, Minstrel, These Untuneful Murmurings
- 81. Cenotaph
- 82. Once I Could Hail
- 83. The Poet And The Caged Turtledove
- 84. Calm Is The Fragrant Air
- 85. Highland Hut
- 86. Fair Prime Of Life! Were It Enough To Gild
- 87. Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part Iii. - Xviii - Pastoral Character
- 88. To S.h.
- 89. On The Power Of Sound
- 90. Conclusion To......
- 91. Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part Iii. - Xliv - The Same
- 92. Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part Iii. - X - Obligations Of Civil To Religious Liberty
- 93. The Armenian Lady's Love
- 94. Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part Iii. - Xlii - Cathedrals, Etc.
- 95. To The Lady Fleming
- 96. To ..........
- 97. A Flower Garden - At Coleorton Hall, Leicestershire.
- 98. Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part Ii. - Xxxv - Cranmer
- 99. Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part Iii. - Xxii - Catechising
- 100. Ecclesiastical Sonnets - Part Ii. - Xlii - Gunpowder Plot
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'