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Lyrical Ballads 1798 And 1802

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ISBN-10: 0199601968

ISBN-13: 9780199601967

Edition: 2013

Authors: William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Fiona Stafford

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Book details

List price: $8.99
Copyright year: 2013
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 7/11/2013
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 432
Size: 5.55" wide x 7.68" long x 0.78" tall
Weight: 0.660
Language: English

William Wordsworth, 1770 - 1850 Born April 7, 1770 in the "Lake Country" of northern England, the great English poet William Wordsworth, son of a prominent aristocrat, was orphaned at an early age. He attended boarding school in Hawkesmead and, after an undistinguished career at Cambridge, he spent a year in revolutionary France, before returning to England a penniless radical. Wordsworth later received honorary degrees from the University of Durham and Oxford University. He is best known for his work "The Prelude", which was published after his death. For five years, Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy lived very frugally in rural England, where they met Samuel Taylor Coleridge. "Lyrical…    

Tracey Rowland holds the St John Paul II Chair of Theology at the University of Notre Dame, Australia and is a member of the International Theological Commission.

Fiona Stafford is Professor of English Language and Literature at the University of Oxford. She has published widely on Romantic literature, Scottish and Irish literature and poetic dialogues. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and the Robert Burns Centre in Glasgow. Her books include Local Attachments (OUP, 2010); Brief Lives: Jane Austen (Hesperus, 2008); Starting Lines in Scottish, Irish and English Poetry, from Burns to Heaney (OUP, 2000); The Last of the Race (OUP, 1994); The Sublime Savage: James Macpherson and the Poems of Ossian (EUP, 1988).

Abbreviations
Introduction
Note on the Text
Select Bibliography
A Chronology of William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Lyrical Ballads, With a Few Other Poems, 1798
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The Rime of the Ancyent Marinere
The Foster-Mother's Tale
Lines left upon a Seat in a Yew-tree which stands near the Lake of Esthwaite
The Nightingale, a Conversational Poem
The Female Vagrant
Goody Blake and Harry Gill
Lines written at a small distance from my House, and sent by my little Boy to the Person to whom they are addressed
Simon Lee, the old Huntsman
Anecdote for Fathers
We are Seven
Lines written in early spring
The Thorn
The Last of the Flock
The Dungeon
The Mad Mother
The Idiot Boy
Lines written near Richmond, upon the Thames, at Evening
Expostulation and Reply
The Tables turned; an Evening Scene, on the same subject
Old Man travelling
The Complaint of a forsaken Indian Woman
The Convict
Lines written a few miles above Tintern Abbey
Lyrical Ballads, with Pastoral and Other Poems, 1802
Preface
Expostulation and Reply
The Tables turned; an Evening Scene, on the same subject
Animal Tranquillity and Decay, a Sketch
Goody Blake and Harry Gill
The Last of the Flock
Lines left upon a Seat in a Yew-tree which stands near the Lake of Esthwaite
The Foster-Mother's Tale
The Thorn
We are Seven
Anecdote for Fathers
Lines written at a small distance from my House, and sent by my little Boy to the Person to whom they are addressed
The Female Vagrant
Lines written in early Spring
Simon Lee, the old Huntsman
The Nightingale, written in April, 1798
The Idiot Boy
Love
The Mad Mother
The Ancient Mariner
Lines written a few miles above Tintern Abbey
Wordsworth's Endnotes
Hart-leap Well
There was a Boy
The Brothers
Ellen Irwin, or the Braes of Kirtle
Strange fits of passion I have known
She dwelt among th' untrodden ways
A slumber did my spirit seal
The Waterfall and the Eglantine
The Oak and the Broom, a Pastoral
The Complaint of a forsaken Indian Woman
Lucy Gray
'Tis said that some have died for Love
The Idle Shepherd-Boys, or Dungeon-Gill Force, a Pastoral
Poor Susan
Inscription for the Spot where the Hermitage stood on St. Herbert's Island, Derwent-Water
Lines written with a Pencil upon a stone in the wall of the House (an Out-house) on the Island at Grasmere
To a Sexton
Andrew Jones
Ruth
Lines written with a Slate-Pencil
Lines written on a Tablet in a School
The Two April Mornings
The Fountain, a Conversation
Nutting
Three years she grew in sun and shower
The Pet-Lamb, a Pastoral
Written in Germany, on one of the coldest days of the Century
The Childless Father
The Old Cumberland Beggar, a Description
Rural Architecture
A Poet's Epitaph
A Fragment
Poems on the Naming of Places
Lines written when sailing in a Boat at Evening
Remembrance of Collins, written upon the Thames, near Richmond
The Two Thieves, or the last stage of Avarice
A whirl-blast from behind the Hill
Song for the Wandering Jew
Michael, a Pastoral Poem
Appendix. 'What is usually called Poetic Diction'
Wordsworth's Endnotes
Coleridge's Marginal Glosses to 'The Ancient Mariner', 1817
Wordsworth's Letter to Charles James Fox, 14 January 1801
John Wilson's Letter to Wordsworth, 24 May 1802
Wordsworth's Letter to John Wilson, 7 June 1802
Explanatory Notes
Index of Titles and First Lines