A WORDSWORTH BIBLIOGRAPHY

I.—GREAT BRITAIN

I
EDITIONS PUBLISHED DURING WORDSWORTH’S LIFETIME

In the Bibliographies by Mr. Tutin and Professor Dowden there are numerous and valuable details as to these editions, which it is unnecessary to reproduce here.—Ed.

1

1793. An Evening Walk. An Epistle; in verse. Addressed to a Young Lady, from the Lakes of the North of England. By W. Wordsworth, B. A., of St. John’s, Cambridge. London: printed for J. Johnson, St. Paul’s Church-yard. 4to.

2

1793. Descriptive Sketches. In verse. Taken during a pedestrian tour in the Italian, Grison, Swiss, and Savoyard Alps. By W. Wordsworth, B. A., of St. John’s, Cambridge. Loca pastorum deserta atque otia dia.—Lucret. Castella in tumulis—Et longe saltus lateque vacantes.—Virgil. London: printed for J. Johnson, St. Paul’s Churchyard. 4to.

3

1798. Lyrical Ballads, with a few other Poems. Bristol: printed by Biggs and Cottle; for T. N. Longman, Paternoster-Row, London. 8vo.

1798. Lyrical Ballads, with a few other Poems. London: printed for J. & A. Arch, Gracechurch Street. 8vo.[431]

4

1800. Lyrical Ballads, with other Poems. In two volumes. By W. Wordsworth. Quam nihil ad genium. Papiniane, tuum! Vol. I. Second Edition. [Vol. II.] London: printed for T. N. Longman and O. Rees, Paternoster-Row, by Biggs and Co., Bristol. 8vo.[432]

5

1802. Lyrical Ballads, with Pastoral and other Poems. In two volumes. By W. Wordsworth. Quam nihil ad genium, Papiniane, tuum! Third Edition. London: printed for T. N. Longman & O. Rees, Paternoster-Row, by Biggs and Cottle, Crane-Court, Fleet-Street. 8vo.[433]

6

1805. Lyrical Ballads, with Pastoral and other Poems. In two volumes. By W. Wordsworth. Quam nihil ad genium, Papiniane, tuum! Fourth Edition. London: printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, & Orme, by R. Taylor and Co., 38 Shoe Lane. 8vo.[434]

7

1807. Poems, in two volumes, By William Wordsworth, Author of the Lyrical Ballads. Posterius graviore sono tibi Musa loquetur Nostra, dabunt cum securos mihi tempora fructus. Vol. I. [Vol. II.] London: printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme, Paternoster-Row. 12mo.

8

1809. Concerning the Relations of Great Britain, Spain, and Portugal, to each Other, and to the Common Enemy, at this Crisis; and specifically as affected by the Convention of Cintra: The whole brought to the test of those principles by which alone the Independence and Freedom of Nations can be Preserved or Recovered. Qui didicit patriae quid debeat;—Quod sit conscripti, quod judicis officium; quae Partes in bellum missi ducis. By William Wordsworth. London: printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme, Paternoster-Row. 8vo.

9

1814. The Excursion, being a portion of The Recluse, a Poem. By William Wordsworth. London: printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, Paternoster-Row. 4to.[435]

10

1815. Poems by William Wordsworth: including Lyrical Ballads, and the Miscellaneous Pieces of the Author. With additional Poems, a new Preface, and a Supplementary Essay. In two volumes. Vol. I. [Vol. II.] London: printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, Paternoster-Row. 8vo.[436]

11

1815. The White Doe of Rylstone; or, The Fate Of the Nortons. A Poem. By William Wordsworth. London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, Paternoster-Row, by James Ballantyne and Co., Edinburgh. 4to.[437]

12

1816. A Letter to a Friend of Robert Burns: occasioned by an intended republication of the account of the Life of Burns, by Dr. Currie; and of the Selection made by him from his Letters. By William Wordsworth. London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, Paternoster-Row. 8vo.[438]

13

1816. Thanksgiving Ode, January 18, 1816. With other short Pieces, chiefly referring to Recent Public Events. By William Wordsworth. London: Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars; for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, Paternoster-Row. 8vo.

14

1818. Two Addresses to the Freeholders of Westmoreland. Kendal: Printed by Airy and Bellingham. 8vo.

15

1819. Peter Bell, a Tale in Verse, by William Wordsworth. London: Printed by Strahan and Spottiswoode. Printers-Street; for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, Paternoster-Row. 8vo.[439]

16

1819. Peter Bell, A Tale in Verse, by William Wordsworth. Second Edition. London: Printed by Strahan and Spottiswoode, Printers-Street; for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, Paternoster-Row. 8vo.

17

1819. The Waggoner, a Poem, to which are added, Sonnets. By William Wordsworth. “What’s in a Name?” “Brutus will start a Spirit as soon as Cæsar,” London: Printed by Strahan & Spottiswoode, Printers-Street; for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, & Brown, Paternoster-Row. 8vo.[440]

18

1820. The River Duddon, a Series of Sonnets; Vaudracour and Julia: and other Poems. To which is annexed, a Topographical Description of the Country of the Lakes, in the North of England. By William Wordsworth. London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, Paternoster-Row. 8vo.[441]

19

1820. The Miscellaneous Poems of William Wordsworth. In four volumes. London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, Paternoster-Row. 12mo.[442]

20

1820. The Excursion, being a portion of The Recluse, A Poem. By William Wordsworth. Second Edition. London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, Paternoster-Row. 8vo.

21

1822. Memorials of a Tour on the Continent, 1820. By William Wordsworth. London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, Paternoster-Row. 8vo.

22

1822. Ecclesiastical Sketches. By William Wordsworth. London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, Paternoster-Row. 8vo.[443]

23

1822. A Description of the Scenery of the Lakes in the North of England. Third Edition (now first published separately), with additions, and illustrative remarks upon the Scenery of the Alps. By William Wordsworth. London: printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, Paternoster-Row. 12mo.[444]

24

1827. The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth. In five volumes. London: Printed for Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green, Paternoster-Row. 12mo.[445]

25

1828. The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth. Complete in one volume. Paris: Published by A. and W. Galignani, No. 18, Rue Vivienne. 8vo.[446]

26

1831. Selections from the Poems of William Wordsworth, Esq., chiefly for the use of Schools and Young Persons. London: Edward Moxon, 64 New Bond Street. 12mo.[447]

27

1832. The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth. A new Edition. In four volumes. London: Printed for Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, & Longman, Paternoster-Row. 8vo.[448]

28

Selections from the Poems of William Wordsworth, Esq., chiefly for the use of Schools and young persons. A New Edition. London: Edward Moxon, Dover Street. MDCCCXXXIV.

29

The Memorial Lines “Written after the Death of Charles Lamb” were issued privately, without title or date, probably late in 1835, or early in 1836. 8vo. pp. 7.

30

1835. Yarrow Revisited, and other Poems. By William Wordsworth.

Poets … dwell on earth

To clothe whate’er the soul admires and loves;

With language and with numbers.—Akenside.

London: printed for Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, & Longman, Paternoster-Row; and Edward Moxon, Dover Street. 12mo.

31

1835. A Guide through the District of the Lakes in the North of England, with a Description of the Scenery, &c. For the use of Tourists and Residents. Fifth Edition, with considerable additions. By William Wordsworth. Kendal: published by Hudson and Nicholson; and in London by Longman & Co., Moxon, and Whittaker and Co. 12mo.

32

1836. Yarrow Revisited, and other Poems. By William Wordsworth.

Poets … dwell on earth

To clothe whate’er the soul admires and loves;

With language and with numbers.—Akenside.

Second Edition. London: printed for Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, & Longman, Paternoster-Row; and Edward Moxon, Dover Street. 8vo.[449]

33

The Excursion. A Poem. By William Wordsworth. A New Edition. London: Edward Moxon, Dover Street. MDCCCXXXVI. 8vo.[450]

34

The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth. A New Edition. In six volumes. Vol. I. (Vol. II.-VI.) London: Edward Moxon, Dover Street. MDCCCXXXVI.-MDCCCXXXVII. Fcap. 8vo.[451]

35

The Sonnets of William Wordsworth. Collected in one volume, with a few additional ones, now first published. London: Edward Moxon, Dover Street. MDCCCXXXVIII. 8vo.[452]

36

Yarrow Revisited; and other Poems. By William Wordsworth. London: Edward Moxon, Dover Street. MDCCCXXXIX. 18mo.[453]

37

Poems, chiefly of early and late years; including The Borderers, a Tragedy. By William Wordsworth. London: Edward Moxon, Dover Street. MDCCCXLII. 8vo.[454]

38

1843. Select Pieces from the Poems of William Wordsworth. London: James Burns. Sq. 12mo.[455]

39

1844. Kendal and Windermere Railway. Two Letters, re-printed from the Morning Post. Revised, with additions. Kendal: printed by R. Branthwaite and Son.

40

1845. The Poems of William Wordsworth, D.C.L., Poet Laureate, etc. etc. A New Edition. London: Edward Moxon, Dover Street. MDCCCXLV. Royal 8vo.[456]

41

1847. Ode, performed in the Senate-House, Cambridge, on the sixth of July, M.DCCC.XLVII. At the first commencement after the Installation of his Royal Highness the Prince Albert, Chancellor of the University. Cambridge: printed at the University Press. 4to.

42

1847. Ode on the installation of His Royal Highness Prince Albert as Chancellor of the University of Cambridge. By William Wordsworth, Poet Laureate. London: Printed, by permission, by Vizetelley Brothers & Co. Published by George Bell, Fleet Street. 4to.

43

The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, D.C.L., Poet Laureate, etc. etc. In six volumes. A New Edition. London: Edward Moxon, Dover Street. MDCCCXLIX.-MDCCCL. 12mo.[457]

[431] These two editions of 1798 are the same; but as Cottle sold to Arch most of the copies printed, the majority bear the name of Arch as publisher.

Four of the poems were by S.T. Coleridge, viz. The Rime of the Ancyent Marinere; The Foster-Mother’s Tale; The Nightingale, a Conversational Poem; and The Dungeon.—Ed.

[432] The first volume of this edition is a reprint of the editions of 1798, The Convict being left out. In it there is one poem by Coleridge entitled Love, which was not in the edition of 1798. The poems in the second volume are new. The preface to Volume 1. contains Wordsworth’s poetical theory in its original form. This preface was included in the 1802 and 1805 editions of Lyrical Ballads, and also—in an expanded form—in almost every subsequent edition of his poems.—Ed.

[433] This was almost a reproduction of the two volumes of 1800, with a few variations of text. The preface, however, was much enlarged. The poem A Character in the Antithetical Manner was left out, also Coleridge’s poem The Dungeon.—Ed.

[434] A reprint of the edition of 1802, with slight variations of text.—Ed.

[435] The Essay on Epitaphs inserted in the notes to this volume was originally published in The Friend, February 22, 1810.—Ed.

[436] This was the first edition of Wordsworth’s Poems arranged by him under distinctive headings, viz. “Poems referring to the Period of Childhood,” “Juvenile Pieces,” “Poems founded on the Affections,” “Poems of the Fancy,” “Poems of the Imagination,” “Poems proceeding from Sentiment and Reflection,” “Miscellaneous Sonnets,” “Sonnets, etc., dedicated to Liberty,” “Poems on the Naming of Places,” “Inscriptions,” “Poems referring to the Period of Old Age,” “Epitaphs and Elegiac Poems,” “Ode, Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Childhood.” In it, he gave dates to his poems.

In Volume I. is an engraving by Mr. Bromley from a picture by Sir George Beaumont; Volume II. has an engraving by Mr. Reynolds from Sir George’s picture of Peele Castle in a storm.—Ed.

[437] The poem The Force of Prayer; or, the Founding of Bolton Priory follows the White Doe of Rylstone; and the volume contains an engraving by Mr. Bromley from a painting of Bolton Abbey by Sir George Beaumont.—Ed.

[438] The “Friend” was Mr. James Gray, Edinburgh.—Ed.

[439] The volume contains an engraving by Mr. Bromley from a painting by Sir George Beaumont. In addition to Peter Bell, this volume contained four sonnets.—Ed.

[440] This volume was dedicated to Charles Lamb.—Ed.

[441] In 1820 the four separate publications, The Waggoner, etc., Thanksgiving Ode, etc., Peter Bell, etc., and The River Duddon, Vaudracour and Julia, etc., were bound up together with their separate title-pages, and issued under the title, Poems by William Wordsworth, making Volume III. of the Miscellaneous Poems.—Ed.

[442] Each of these volumes contained an engraving from a picture by Sir George Beaumont. They were “Lucy Gray,” “Peter Bell,” “The White Doe of Rylstone,” and “Peele Castle.” All had appeared in previous editions. The “Advertisement” states that this edition contains the whole of the published poems of the Author, with the exception of The Excursion, and that a few Sonnets “are now first published.”

It is worthy of note that, in this edition, Wordsworth for the first time abandoned the practice of putting in an apostrophe, instead of a vowel letter, in words ending with “ed,” and in similar cases of contraction.—Ed.

[443] Wordsworth added to this series of Sonnets, in the one-volume edition of 1845 which contained 132. In the first edition, there were 102 sonnets.—Ed.

[444] This originally appeared as an Introduction to Wilkinson’s Select Views in Cumberland, Westmoreland, and Lancashire, which was published in 1810. In 1820 it was included (see No. 18) in The River Duddon: A Series of Sonnets. In 1823 a fourth edition appeared which was a reprint of that of 1822.—Ed.

[445] To this edition Wordsworth prefixed the following “Advertisement”:—“In these volumes will be found the whole of the Author’s published poems, for the first time collected in a uniform edition, with several new pieces interspersed.”—Ed.

[446] In this edition—copied without authority, from the poet or his publishers, and with many errata, from the issue of 1827—there is an engraving of Wordsworth by Mr. Wedgewood, after the portrait by Carruthers, now in the possession of Mr. Hutchinson at Kimbolton. The Galignani edition of Southey is even worse; three poems, not by Southey, being included in it.—Ed.

[447] The editor of these selections was Joseph Hine.—Ed.

[448] The “Advertisement” to this edition is as follows:—“The contents of the last edition in five volumes are compressed into the present of four, with some additional pieces reprinted from miscellaneous publications.”—Ed.

[449] As this volume (No. 32 in the list) was the last printed for the Messrs. Longman, and issued by that firm and by Mr. Moxon jointly, it is desirable to mention here, in a footnote, that, with the exception of The Evening Walk and Descriptive Sketches (which were published by J. Johnson) every one of Wordsworth’s works from 1798 to 1836—thirty in number—were introduced to the world by the Messrs. Longman. It is questionable if any firm has ever had a similar “record” in connection with the works of any great poet.—Ed.

[450] A reprint of the sixth volume of the 1836-37 edition. It was again reprinted in 1841, 1844, and 1847.—Ed.

[451] Volumes one and two are dated 1836; the remaining four 1837. This edition was stereotyped. It was reprinted in 1840, 1841, 1842, 1843, 1846, 1849, etc.; and some of the reprints contain slight variations of text, etc. All the editions issued after 1841 include the volume, Poems of Early and Late Years (see No. 37) as a seventh volume. After 1850 The Prelude was added as an eighth volume.

In the first volume of this edition there is a steel engraving by Mr. Watt of a portrait of the Poet by W. Pickersgill, which is in St. John’s College, Cambridge. This engraving was reproduced in the editions of 1840, 1841, and following ones.—Ed.

[452] This edition includes (as its “Advertisement” tells us) “twelve new Sonnets which were composed while the sheets were going through the press.”—Ed.

[453] Mr. Tutin writes in his Wordsworth Bibliography:—“This Pocket edition of Yarrow Revisited, etc., is the third separate issue of the Poem. It seems to have been intended as a supplementary volume to the four vol. edition of 1832, as the sheets of it are all imprinted ‘Vol. v.,’ but I have no direct proof that it was ever so issued.”—Ed.

[454] In his “Advertisement” the Author states that about one-third of the Poem Guilt and Sorrow was written in 1794, and was published in the year 1798 under the title of The Female Vagrant.—Ed.

[455] This volume is dedicated “To her Most Sacred Majesty, Victoria.”—Ed.

[456] Frequently republished. After 1851 The Prelude was included. The edition of 1869 has “nine additional poems,” dated 1846. All the editions which I have seen contain an engraving by Mr. Finden from the bust of Wordsworth by Chantrey—the original of which is at Coleorton Hall—and a picture of Rydal Mount engraved by Mr. House after Finden. Professor Dowden tells us that, in some later editions “the Pickersgill portrait, engraved by J. Skelton, replaces Chantrey’s bust.” In this edition, as in that of 1815, Wordsworth gave dates to his poems.—Ed.

[457] Volumes I. and II. are dated 1849, and Volumes III.-VI. 1850. The Excursion formed the sixth volume. It was reprinted separately in 1851, 1853, and 1857.—Ed.

II
EDITIONS OF THE POEMS, AND OF SELECTIONS FROM THEM, PUBLISHED AFTER THE POET’S DEATH.

1

1850. The Prelude, or Growth of a Poet’s Mind; an Autobiographical Poem; by William Wordsworth. London: Edward Moxon, Dover Street. Demy 8vo.

2

1851. The Prelude, or Growth of a Poet’s Mind; an Autobiographical Poem; By William Wordsworth. Second Edition. London: Edward Moxon, Dover Street. Fcap. 8vo.

3

1855. Select Pieces from the Poems of William Wordsworth. London: Edward Moxon. Sq. 12mo.

4

1857. The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth. In six volumes. A new Edition. London: Edward Moxon, Dover Street. 8vo.[458]

5

The Earlier Poems of William Wordsworth. Corrected as in the latest Editions. With Preface, and Notes showing the text as it stood in 1815. By William Johnston. London: Edward Moxon, Dover Street. Fcap. 8vo.

6

1859. The Deserted Cottage. By William Wordsworth. Illustrated with twenty-one designs by Birket Foster, J. Wolf, and John Gilbert, engraved by the Brothers Dalziel. London: George Routledge and Co., Farringdon Street. New York: 18 Beekman Street. Small 4to.[459]

7

Poems of William Wordsworth. Selected and Edited by Robert Aris Willmott, Incumbent of Bear Wood. Illustrated with one hundred designs by Birket Foster, J. Wolf, and John Gilbert, Engraved by the Brothers Dalziel. London: George Routledge and Co., Farringdon Street. New York: 18 Beekman Street, MDCCCLIX. Small 4to.

8

The White Doe of Rylstone; or, the Fate of the Nortons. By William Wordsworth. London: Longman, Brown, Green, Longmans, and Roberts. Small 4to.[460]

9

Passages from “The Excursion,” by William Wordsworth, Illustrated with Etchings on Steel by Agnes Fraser. London: published by Paul and Dominic Colnaghi and Co., publishers to Her Majesty, 13 and 14 Pall Mall East. Oblong 4to.[461]

10

The White Doe of Rylstone; or, the Fate of the Nortons. With Illustrations by Birket Foster, and others. London: Longman, Brown, Green, Longmans, and Roberts.

11

Pastoral Poems, by William Wordsworth. London: Sampson, Low, etc.

12

1864. The Select Poetical Works of William Wordsworth. Copyright Edition. In two volumes. Leipzig, Bernhard Tauchnitz.[462]

13

1865. A Selection from the Works of William Wordsworth, Poet Laureate. Moxon’s Miniature Poets. Selected and arranged by Francis Turner Palgrave. Published in London: Edward Moxon & Co., Dover Street. Sq. 12mo.[463]

14

The Poems of William Wordsworth. A new Edition. London: Edward Moxon & Co., Dover Street.

15

1867. The White Doe of Rylstone; or, the Fate of the Nortons. By William Wordsworth. London: Bell and Daldy, 186 Fleet Street. 8vo.[464]

16

1869. The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth. A new Edition. London: Edward Moxon, Son, & Co., 44 Dover Street, Piccadilly.

17

1870. The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth. Edited, with a critical Memoir, by William Michael Rossetti. Illustrated by artistic etchings by Edwin Edwards. London: E. Moxon, Son, & Co., Dover Street. Small 4to.

18

The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth. Edited, with a critical Memoir, by William Michael Rossetti. Illustrated by Henry Dell. London: E. Moxon, Son, & Co., Dover Street. 8vo.[465]

19

1876. The Prose Works of William Wordsworth. For the first time collected, with additions from unpublished manuscripts. Edited, with Preface, Notes and Illustrations, by the Rev. Alexander B. Grosart, St. George’s, Blackburn, Lancashire. In three volumes. Volume I. Political and Ethical. Volume II. Æsthetical and Literary. Volume III. Critical and Ethical. London: Edward Moxon, Son, and Co., 1 Amen Corner, Paternoster Row. 8vo.

20

1879. Poems of Wordsworth, chosen and edited by Matthew Arnold. London: Macmillan and Co. 18mo.[466]

21

The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth. Edited by William Knight, LL.D., Professor of Moral Philosophy, St. Andrews. Edinburgh: William Paterson. MDCCCLXXXII. [MDCCCLXXXII.— MDCCCLXXXVI.] 8 vols. Demy 8vo.[467]

22

Selections from Wordsworth. Edited, with an Introductory Memoir, by J. S. Fletcher. London: Alex. Gardner, 12 Paternoster Row, and Paisley. MDCCCLXXXIII. Fcap. 8vo. Parchment.[468]

23

1883. Winnowings from Wordsworth. Edited by J. Robertson. Simpkin & Co. 1883.

24

The Brothers, and other Poems Founded on the Affections. 18mo. Collins.

25

1884. The River Duddon. A Series of Sonnets. By William Wordsworth. With ten Etchings by R. S. Chattock, The Fine Art Society, 148 New Bond Street, London. Folio.

26

The Sonnets of William Wordsworth. Collected in one volume, with an Essay on The History of the English Sonnet by Richard Chenevix Trench, D.D., Archbishop of Dublin, Chancellor of the Order of St. Patrick. London: Suttaby and Co., Amen Corner. MDCCCLXXXIV. 8vo.[469]

27

Selections from Wordsworth. By Misses Wordsworth. London: Kegan Paul, & Co. April 8, 1884.

28

The Wordsworth Birthday Book. Edited by Adelaide and Violet Wordsworth. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, & Co.

29

Birthday Texts From Wordsworth. Edinburgh: W. P. Nimmo. N. D.

30

The Golden Poets. “Wordsworth.” London: Marcus Ward & Co. N. D.

31

1885. The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, With a Prefatory Notice, Biographical and Critical. By Andrew James Symington. London: Walter Scott, 14 Paternoster Square and Newcastle-on-Tyne. 16mo.[470]

32

Wordsworth’s Excursion. The Wanderer. Edited, with Notes, etc., by H. H. Turner. London: Rivingtons. N. D.

33

Ode on Immortality, and Lines on Tintern Abbey. Illustrated. Cassell. 4to.

34

Tintern Abbey, Odes, and the Happy Warrior. 8vo. Chambers. (Republished in 1892.)

35

1887. Through the Wordsworth Country. By Harry Goodwin and Professor Knight. London: Swan Sonnenschein, Lowrey & Co., Paternoster Square. Imperial 8vo.[471]

36

Wordsworth and Keats, Selections. In 16mo. M. Ward.

37

1888. The Complete Poetical Works of William Wordsworth. With an Introduction by John Morley. With a Portrait. London: Macmillan & Co. Crown 8vo.

38

1888. Selections from Wordsworth. By William Knight, and other Members of the Wordsworth Society. With Preface and Notes. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, & Co., 1 Paternoster Square. MDCCCLXXXVIII. Large Crown 8vo.[472]

39

1888. The Recluse. By William Wordsworth. London: Macmillan and Co.[473]

40

1888. The Poetical Works of Wordsworth. With Memoir, Explanatory Notes, etc. London: Griffith, Farren, & Co., Newbury House, Charing Cross Road.

41

Prose Writings of Wordsworth: Selected and Edited, with an Introduction, by William Knight. London: Walter Scott. No date.

42

1889. We are Seven. Illustrated by Agnes Gardner King. 16mo.

43

1891. Lyrics and Sonnets of Wordsworth. With Introduction and Bibliography. By Clement R. Shorter. Scott Library. 32mo.

44

The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth. Edited, with Memoir, by Edward Dowden. London: George Bell & Sons. 1892-1893.[474]

45

1891. Lyrical Ballads, etc. A reprint of the original edition of 1798. Edited by Edward Dowden. London: David Nutt. 16mo.

46

1891. The White Doe of Rylstone, with the Song at the Feast of Brougham Castle. Edited, with introduction and notes, by William Knight. Oxford: At the Clarendon Press.

47

The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth. Edinburgh: W.P. Nimmo, Hay, and Mitchell. 1892.

48

Wordsworth for the Young. With notes by J.C. Wright. 8vo. 1893.

49

1895. The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, with introductions and notes. Edited by Thomas Hutchinson, M.A. London: Henry Froude, Oxford University Press Warehouse, Amen Corner, E.C.

50

The Penny Poets, in “The Masterpiece Library.” Wordsworth. Nos. XXXII. and XXXVII.

51

1896. Lyric Poems. Edited by Ernest Rhys. 8vo. London: Dent & Co.

52

The Prelude; or, Growth of a Poet’s Mind. 18mo. London: Dent & Co.

53

“The Lansdowne Poets” included one of Wordsworth. The “Albion” edition was published by Messrs. Froude, Oxford University Press.[475]

[458] In this edition—reprinted as “The Centenary Edition” in 1870, 1881, and 1882—the Fenwick notes were printed, for the first time in full, as prefatory notes to the poems.—Ed.

[459] Reproduced in 1864.—Ed.

[460] It contains illustrations by H. N. Humphreys and Birket Foster.—Ed.

[461] This volume contains eleven etchings of varying merit.—Ed.

[462] These are volumes 707 and 708 of Tauchnitz’s “Collection of British Authors.”—Ed.

[463] It contains a steel engraving from Chantrey’s bust of the Poet. This selection was re-issued in 1866, and 1869; and, recently, in a small pocket edition.—Ed.

[464] This is a reprint, in a different form, of No. 8.—Ed.

[465] In this edition, which is a reprint, on smaller paper, of No. 19. there is an engraving from one of the portraits of the Poet by Miss Gillies. The engraving first appeared in Volume I. of The New Spirit of the Age, edited by R. H. Horne.—Ed.

[466] It contains an idealised engraving of one of Haydon’s portraits of Wordsworth, after Lupton, by C. H. Jeens, and on the outside cover a drawing of Dove Cottage.—Ed.

[467] In this edition the Poems were arranged for the first time in the chronological order of composition; the changes of text, in the successive editions, were given in footnotes, with the dates of these changes; many new readings, or suggested changes of text—which were written by the Poet on the margins of a copy of the edition of 1836-37, kept at Rydal Mount, and afterwards in the possession of Lord Coleridge—were added; all the Fenwick notes were printed as Prefatory notes; Topographical notes—containing allusions to localities in the English Lake District, and elsewhere—were given; several Poems and Fragments hitherto unpublished were printed; a Bibliography of the Poems, and of editions published in England and America from 1793 to 1850 was added. Etchings of localities associated with the Poet, from drawings by Mr. MacWhirter, were given as frontispieces to Volumes I., II., III., IV., V., VI., and VII. The text adopted was Wordsworth’s final text of 1849-50.—Ed.

[468] It contains an engraving of Rydal Mount on the fly-leaf.—Ed.

[469] This volume is a reprint of Wordsworth’s own edition of his Sonnets, published in 1838, with the addition of Archbishop Trench’s History of the English Sonnet.—Ed.

[470] This is one of the volumes of The Canterbury Poets. It is only a selection, though described on the title as “The Poetical Works.”—Ed.

[471] This volume contains fifty-five engravings from drawings by Harry Goodwin of scenes in the English Lake District associated with Wordsworth, with the poems, or portions of poems, referring to the places.—Ed.

[472] The poems are arranged in chronological order of composition; and there is, as frontispiece, an etched portrait of the Poet from a miniature by Margaret Gillies in the possession of Sir Henry Doulton. Amongst those who contributed to it were Robert Browning, James Russell Lowell, the late Lord Selborne, Mr. R. H. Hutton, the Dean of Salisbury, the late Lord Coleridge, the Rev. Stopford Brooke, Mr. Aubrey de Vere, the late Lord Houghton, Canon Rawnsley, the late Principals Shairp and Greenwood and Professor Veitch, Mr. Spence Watson, Mr. Rix, Mr. Heard, Mr. Cotterill, the late Bishop Wordsworth of St. Andrews, and the Editor.—Ed.

[473] In the prefatory advertisement to the first edition of The Prelude 1850, it is stated that that poem was designed to be introductory to The Recluse, and that The Recluse if completed, would have consisted of three parts. The second part is The Excursion. The third part was only planned. The first book of the first part was left in manuscript by Wordsworth. It was published for the first time in extenso in 1888.—Ed.

[474] This Aldine edition, by Professor Dowden, is one of great merit, and permanent value. Although it is not immaculate—as no literary work ever is—as a contribution to Wordsworthian Literature it will hold an honoured place. Its “critical apparatus” is succinct and admirable.—Ed.

[475] Mr. Andrew Lang tells me that he is about to edit a Selection of the Poems, for the Messrs. Longman; which will, no doubt, be as useful, and popular, as Matthew Arnold’s Selection has been.—Ed.

III
ESTIMATES OF WORDSWORTH IN VARIOUS BOOKS[476]

1811. Seward, Anna. Letters written between the Years 1784 and 1807. Edited by A. Constable, vol. vi. No. 66.[477] 8vo. Edinburgh.

1817. Coleridge, S. T. Biographia Literaria; or, Biographical Sketches of my Literary Life and Opinions. 2 vols. 8vo. London: Rest Fenner. Second Edition. London: William Pickering. 1847. Bohn’s Standard Library. 1866.

Coleridge, S. T. In The Friend, passim. Second Edition. London: Rest Fenner.

Hazlitt, William. The Round Table: a Collection of Essays on Literature, Men, and Manners. Observations on Mr. Wordsworth’s Poem, “The Excursion.” 12mo. London: Templeman. Also in Bohn’s Standard Library. Edited by W. Carew Hazlitt. Pp. 158-176. London. 1871.

1818. Hazlitt, William. Lectures on the English Poets. 8vo. London: Taylor and Hessey. Also in Bohn’s Standard Library. 1870.

1819. Hazlitt, William. Political Essays, with Sketches of Public Characters. My First Acquaintance with Poets. 8vo. London: Templeman. Also in Winterslow, pp. 255-277. Bohn’s Standard Library. 1872.

1823. Soligny, Victoire De, Count, pseud. (i.e. Peter George Patmore, father of the late Coventry Patmore). Letters on England, vol. ii. pp. 7-19. 8vo. London: Henry Colburn and Co.

1824. Landor, W. S. Imaginary Conversations of Literary Men and Statesmen. Southey and Porson, i. 39. 8vo. London: Taylor and Hessey. New Edition, i. 11, 68, 182. London: Edward Moxon. 1846. New Edition, iv. 18. London: Chapman and Hall. 1876.

1825. Hazlitt, William. The Spirit of the Age; or, Contemporary Portraits. 8vo. London: Henry Colburn and Co.; Fourth Edition. George Bell and Sons. 1886.

1827. Hone, William. The Table Book. Wordsworth, ii. 275. 8vo. London: Hunt and Clarke.

Coleridge, S. T. Table Talk. July 21, 1832; July 31, 1832; February 16, 1833.

1833. Montgomery, James. Lectures on Poetry and General Literature, delivered at the Royal Institution in 1830 and 1831. Wordsworth’s Theory of Poetic Diction, pp. 134-141. 8vo. London: Longmans.

1836. Conversations at Cambridge. The Poet Wordsworth and Professor Smythe, pp. 235-252. 8vo. London: John W. Parker.

1837. Cottle, Joseph. Early Recollections; chiefly relating to the late Samuel Taylor Coleridge, during his long Residence in Bristol. 2 vols. 8vo. London: Longman, Rees and Co.

1838. Chorley, H. F. The Authors of England. 4to. London. New Edition, revised (by G. B.) London. 1861.

Hare, Julius C. and Augustus W. Guesses at Truth, by Two Brothers. Second Series. 8vo. London: Taylor and Walton. The Dedication of this edition is to William Wordsworth. New Edition, in one volume. Macmillan and Co. 1866.

1840. Hunt, Leigh. The Seer. “Wordsworth and Milton,” pp. 5-53. London: Edward Moxon.

Ruskin, John. Modern Painters (1843-1860), passim in all the five volumes. London: George Allen.

1843. Chambers, Robert. Cyclopædia of English Literature. Wordsworth, ii. 322-333. Fourth Edition, revised by Robert Carruthers, LL.D. 1888. 8vo. Edinburgh: William and Robert Chambers.

1844. Horne, R. H. A New Spirit of the Age. William Wordsworth and Leigh Hunt, vol. i. pp. 307-332. 12mo. London: Smith, Elder and Co.

Keble, John. Praelectiones Academicae Oxonii habitae, annis MDCCCXXXII.-MDCCCXLI., tom. ii. pp. 615, 789. 8vo. Oxonii: J. H. Parker.

1845. Gilfillan, George. A Gallery of Literary Portraits. 12mo. Edinburgh: Groombridge.

Craik, E. L. Sketches of the History of Literature and Learning in England. Vol. vi., pp. 114-139. London: Charles Knight.

1847. Howitt, William. Homes and Haunts of the most eminent British Poets, vol. ii. pp. 259-291. 8vo. London: Richard Bentley. Third Edition. Routledge and Sons. 1862.

Tuckerman, Henry T. Thoughts on the Poets. 8vo. London: J. Chapman.

1849. Gilfillan, George. A Second Gallery of Literary Portraits. 8vo. Edinburgh: Groombridge.

Shaw, Thomas B. Outlines of English Literature. Wordsworth, pp. 518-526. 8vo. London: John Murray. Sixteenth Edition, edited by William Smith, D.C.L. 1887.

Taylor, Henry. Notes from Books. In four Essays. Wordsworth’s Poetical Works and Sonnets, pp. 1-186. 8vo. London: John Murray. Works: Author’s Edition, vol. v. London: C. Kegan Paul and Co. 1878.

1849-50. Southey, Robert. Life and Correspondence. Edited by the Rev. Charles Cuthbert Southey. 6 vols. Comments on Wordsworth in chaps, ix.-xiii.
xv. xix. xxvi. xxxii. and xxxvi. 8vo. London:
Longman, Brown, Green and Longmans.

1851. Gillies, R. P. Memoirs of a Literary Veteran; including Sketches and Anecdotes of the most distinguished Literary Characters from 1794 to 1849. Wordsworth, vol. ii. pp. 136-173. 8vo. London: Richard Bentley.

The Poetic Companion, vol. i., pp. 168-173. A Biographical and Critical Sketch of William Wordsworth.

Moir, D. M. Sketches of the Poetical Literature of the past Half-Century, pp. 59-81; 120. Edinburgh: William Blackwood and Sons. Third Edition, 1856.

Wordsworth, Christopher. Memoirs of William Wordsworth, Poet-Laureate, D.C.L. 2 vols. 8vo. London: Edward Moxon. 1851.

1852. January Searle (George S. Phillips). Memoirs of William Wordsworth, compiled from Authentic Sources. 12mo. London: Partridge and Oakey.

Mitford, M. R. Recollections of a Literary Life; or, Books, Places, and People, vol. iii. chap. i. 8vo. London: Richard Bentley.

1853. An Essay on the Poetry of Wordsworth, 72 pp. 8vo. Liverpool.

Austin, W. S., and John Ralph. The Lives of the Poets-Laureate. With an Introductory Essay on the Title and Office. William Wordsworth, pp. 396-428. 8vo. London: Richard Bentley.

Wright, John. The Genius of Wordsworth harmonised with the Wisdom and Integrity of his Reviewers. 8vo. London: Longman, Brown, Green and Longmans.

Spalding, William. The History of English Literature. 8vo. Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd.

1854. De Quincey, Thomas. Autobiographic Sketches. Early Memorials of Grasmere, vol. ii. pp. 104-141; William Wordsworth, pp. 227-314; William Wordsworth and Robert Southey, pp. 315-345. 8vo. Edinburgh: James Hogg. Also Collected Writings. New and Enlarged Edition. By David Masson. Edinburgh: Adam and Charles Black. 1889-90.

Spalding, William. Wordsworth, pp. 849-851. Cyclopædia of Biography, edited by Elihu Rich. 8vo. Glasgow: Richard Griffin and Co.

Moore, Thomas. Memoirs, Journal, and Correspondence of. Edited by the Right Honourable Lord John Russell, vol. iii. pp. 161, 163; vol. iv. pp. 48, 335; vol. vii pp. 72, 85, 197-8; vol. viii. pp. 69, 73, 291.

1856. Carlyon, Clement. Early Years and Late Reflections, vol. i. 8vo. London: Whittaker and Co.

Hood, E. P. William Wordsworth: a Biography. 8vo. London: W. and F. G. Cash.

Masson, David. Essays, Biographical and Critical: chiefly on English Poets. Wordsworth, pp. 346-390. 8vo. Cambridge: Macmillan and Co. Reprinted from The North British Review, August 1850.

Rogers, Samuel. Recollections of the Table Talk of Samuel Rogers. 8vo. London: Edward Moxon.

Wilson, John. Noctes Ambrosianae, vols. i.-iii. 8vo. Edinburgh: William Blackwood and Sons. New Edition, 1864.

Wilson, John. Essays, Critical and Imaginative. Wordsworth, vol. i. pp. 387-408. 8vo. Edinburgh: William Blackwood and Sons.

1857. De Quincey, Thomas. Sketches, Critical and Biographic. On Wordsworth’s Poetry, vol. v. pp. 234-268. 8vo. Edinburgh: James Hogg and Sons.

Reed, Henry. Lectures on the British Poets. Wordsworth, Lecture XV. 8vo. London.

Wilson, John. Recreations of Christopher North, vol. ii. Sacred Poetry. Wordsworth, pp. 54-70. 8vo. Edinburgh: William Blackwood and Sons.

1858. Brimley, George. Essays. Edited by William George Clark, M.A. Wordsworth’s Poems, pp. 104-187. 8vo. Cambridge: Macmillan and Co. Second Edition, 1860. Third Edition, 1882. Reprinted from Fraser’s Magazine, 1851.

Robertson, F. W. Lectures and Addresses on Literary and Social Topics. Wordsworth, pp. 203-256. 8vo. London: Smith, Elder and Co.

The English Cyclopædia. A New Dictionary of Universal Knowledge. Conducted by Charles Knight. Wordsworth, vol. vi. pp. 808-812.

1859. Mill, J. S. Dissertations and Discussions. Thoughts on Poetry and its Varieties, i. 63-94. 8vo. London: John W. Parker and Son. Second Edition. Longmans, Green, Reader and Dyer. 1867.

1860. Carruthers, R. William Wordsworth. The Encyclopædia Britannica, Eighth Edition, xxi. 929-932. 4to. Edinburgh: Adam and Charles Black.

1861. Craik, George L. A Compendious History of English Literature, and of the English Language from the Norman Conquest. Wordsworth, ii. 435-456; 463-467; 473. 8vo. London: Griffin, Bohn and Co.

1862. Gordon, Mrs. “Christopher North.” A Memoir of John Wilson, compiled from Family Papers and other Sources. 2 vols. 8vo. Edinburgh: Edmonston and Douglas. New Edition, 1879.

Patterson, A. S. Poets and Preachers of the Nineteenth Century: Four Lectures, Biographical and Critical, on Wordsworth, Montgomery, Hall, and Chalmers. 8vo. Glasgow: A. Hall.

1863. Rushton, William. The Classical and Romantic Schools of English Literature, as represented by Spenser, Dryden, Pope, Scott, and Wordsworth. The Afternoon Lectures on English Literature, delivered in Dublin, pp. 43-92. 8vo. London: Bell and Daldy.

1864. Colquhoun, J. C. Scattered Leaves of Biography. IV.—Life of William Wordsworth. 8vo. London: Macintosh.

Knight, Charles. Passages from a Working Life during half a century: with a prelude of Early Reminiscences, vol. iii. chap. ii. pp. 27-29.

1865. The Imperial Dictionary of Universal Biography. Edited by J. F. Waller. Wordsworth, vol. vi. p. 1389. 8vo. London: W. Mackenzie.

1865. Dennis, John. Evenings in Arcadia. Edited by John Dennis. 12mo. London.

1868. Buchanan, Robert. David Gray, and Other Essays, chiefly on Poetry. Sampson Low.

Macdonald, George. England’s Antiphon, pp. 303-7. 8vo. London.

Shairp, J. C. Studies in Poetry and Philosophy. Wordsworth: the Man and the Poet, pp. 1-115. 8vo. Edinburgh: Edmonston and Douglas. Third Edition, 1876. Fourth Edition, 1886.

Chambers’s Encyclopædia. A Dictionary of Universal Knowledge for the People. Wordsworth, vol. x. pp. 272-274. New Edition, pp. 737-740. 1892. 8vo. London: W. and R. Chambers.

1869. Clough, A. H. Poems and Prose Remains. Lecture on the Poetry of Wordsworth, vol. i. pp. 309-325. 8vo. London: Macmillan and Co.

G., F. J. The Old College, being the Glasgow University Album for MDCCCLXIX. Edited by Students. William Wordsworth, pp. 243-259. 8vo. Glasgow: James Maclehose.

Graves, R. P. Recollections of Wordsworth and the Lake Country. The Afternoon Lectures on Literature and Art, delivered in Dublin, pp. 275-321. 8vo. Dublin: William M’Gee.

Martineau, Harriet. Biographical Sketches. Mrs. Wordsworth, pp. 402-408. 8vo. London: Macmillan and Co.

Robinson, Henry Crabb. Diary, Reminiscences, and Correspondence. Selected and edited by Thomas Sadler. 3 vols. 8vo. London: Macmillan and Co.

1870. Emerson, R. W. English Traits, First Visit to England. Bohn’s Standard Library; also Macmillan and Co. 1883.

1871. Hutton, R. H. Essays, Theological and Literary. Wordsworth and his Genius, vol. ii. Literary Essays, pp. 101-146. 8vo. London: Strahan and Co. Second Edition, 1877.

Taine, H. A. History of English Literature. Translated by H. Van Laun. With a preface by the author. Vol. ii. pp. 248; 260-265. 8vo. Edinburgh: Edmonston and Douglas.

Hall, S. C. A Book of Memories of Great Men and Women of the Age, from Personal Acquaintance. London: Virtue and Co. Wordsworth, pp. 287-318.

1872. Cooper, Thomas, Life of: An Autobiography. Reminiscence of Wordsworth (first published in Cooper’s Journal, May 1850), pp. 287-295.

De Morgan, Augustus. A Budget of Paradoxes. Wordsworth and Byron, p. 435. 8vo. London: Longmans, Green and Co.

Neaves, Charles (Lord Neaves). A Lecture on Cheap and Accessible Pleasures. With a Comparative Sketch of the Poetry of Burns and Wordsworth, etc. 8vo. Edinburgh.

Yonge, Charles D. Three Centuries of English Literature. Wordsworth, pp. 251-267. 8vo. London: Longmans, Green and Co.

1873. Coleridge, Sara. Memoir and Letters. Edited by her Daughter. 2 vols. 8vo. London: Henry S. King and Co.

Devey, Joseph. A Comparative Estimate of Modern English Poets. Wordsworth, pp. 87-103. 8vo. London: Moxon and Son.

Lonsdale, Henry. The Worthies of Cumberland. William Wordsworth, vol. iv. pp. 1-40. 8vo. London: George Routledge and Sons.

Morley, H. A First Sketch of English Literature. 8vo. London: Cassell, Petter, and Galpin.

Nichols, W. L. The Quantocks and their Associations. A Paper read before the Members of the Bath Literary Club. 12mo. Bath. Printed for Private Circulation. Second Edition. London: Sampson Low, Marston and Co.

1874. Brooke, Stopford A. Theology in the English Poets. Wordsworth, pp. 93-286. 8vo. London: Henry S. King and Co.

Masson, David. Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats, and other Essays. Wordsworth, pp. 3-74. 8vo. London: Macmillan and Co.

Wordsworth, Dorothy. Recollections of a Tour made in Scotland, A.D. 1803. Edited by J. C. Shairp. 8vo. Edinburgh: Edmonston and Douglas.

1875. Fletcher, Mrs. Autobiography. With Letters and other Family Memorials. 8vo. Edinburgh: Edmonston and Douglas.

1876. Forster, John. The Works and Life of Walter Savage Landor. Vol. i. The Life. 8vo. London: Chapman and Hall.

Lamb, Charles. The Life, Letters, and Writings of Charles Lamb. Edited, with Notes and Illustrations, by Percy Fitzgerald. References to, and Criticisms of Wordsworth in vols. i. ii. 8vo. London: E. Moxon and Co.

Lowell, J. Russell. Among my Books. Second Series. Wordsworth, pp. 201-251. 8vo. London: Sampson Low, Marston, Searle and Rivington.

Morley, Henry. Cassell’s Library of English Literature. Vols. iii., iv., v. Wordsworth. 8vo. London: Cassell, Petter, and Galpin.

Stedman, E. C. Victorian Poets. 8vo. London: Chatto and Windus.

Ticknor, George. Life, Letters, and Journals. 2 vols. 8vo. London: Sampson Low, Marston, Searle and Rivington.

1877. Doyle, Sir Francis H. Lectures on Poetry delivered at Oxford. Second Series. Wordsworth Lectures, i.-iii. pp. 1-77. 8vo. London: Smith, Elder and Co.

Shairp, J. C. On Poetic Interpretation of Nature. Wordsworth as an Interpreter of Nature, pp. 225-270. 8vo. Edinburgh: David Douglas.

Adams (W. Davenport). Dictionary of English Literature. Wordsworth, pp. 700-701. 8vo. London: Cassell, Petter, and Galpin.

1878. Dowden, E. Studies in Literature, 1789-1877. The Prose Works of Wordsworth, pp. 122-158. 8vo. London: C. Kegan Paul and Co.

Knight, William. The English Lake District as Interpreted in the Poems of Wordsworth. 12mo. Edinburgh: David Douglas. Second Edition, revised and enlarged 1891.

Rossetti, W. M. Lives of Various Poets. Wordsworth, pp. 203-218. 8vo. London: E. Moxon and Son.

The Treasury of Modern Biography. Edited by Robert Cochrane. Wordsworth, pp. 98-116. 8vo. Edinburgh: W. P. Nimmo.

1879. Bagehot, Walter. Literary Studies. Edited by Richard Holt Hutton. Wordsworth, Tennyson, and Browning; or, Pure, Ornate, and Grotesque Art in English Poetry, vol. ii. pp. 338-390. 8vo. London: Longmans, Green and Co.

Knight, William. Studies in Philosophy and Literature. Wordsworth, pp. 283-317. Nature as Interpreted by Wordsworth, pp. 405-426. 8vo. London: C. Kegan Paul and Co.

Stephen, Leslie. Hours in a Library. Third Series. Wordsworth’s Ethics, pp. 178-229. 8vo. London: Smith, Elder and Co.

1880. Bayne, Peter. Two Great Englishwomen: Mrs. Browning and Charlotte Brontë. With an Essay on Poetry, illustrated from Wordsworth, Burns, and Byron, pp. xi.-lxxviii. 8vo. London: James Clarke and Co.

Church, R. W. William Wordsworth. The English Poets. Edited by Thomas Humphry Ward, vol. iv. pp. 1-15. 8vo. London: Macmillan and Co.

Main, David M. A Treasury of English Sonnets. Edited from the Original Sources, with Notes and Illustrations, pp. 365-390. 8vo. Manchester: Alexander Ireland and Co.

Myers, F. W. H. Wordsworth (English Men of Letters). 8vo. Macmillan and Co.

1881. Carlyle, Thomas. Reminiscences. Edited by James Anthony Froude. Vol. ii. pp. 330-341. 8vo. London: Longmans, Green and Co.

Dowden, E. The Correspondence of Robert Southey with Caroline Bowles. Edited, with an Introduction, by Edward Dowden. 8vo. Dublin: Hodges, Figgis, and Co.

Milner, George. The Literature and Scenery of the English Lake District. Reprinted from the Papers of the Manchester Literary Club, vol. vii. pp. 1-21. 8vo. Manchester.

Shairp, J. C. Aspects of Poetry, being Lectures delivered at Oxford. The Three Yarrows, pp. 316-344. The White Doe of Rylstone, pp. 345-376. 8vo. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Shorthouse, J. H. On the Platonism of Wordsworth. A Paper read to the Wordsworth Society, 19th July 1881. 4to. Birmingham: Cornish Brothers.

Symington, A. J. William Wordsworth: a Biographical Sketch, with Selections from his Writings in Poetry and Prose. 2 vols. 8vo. London: Blackie and Son.

1882. Buckland, Anna. The Story of English Literature. 8vo. London: Cassell and Co.

Cotterill, H. B. An Introduction to the Study of Poetry. Wordsworth, pp. 208-241. 8vo. London: Kegan Paul, Trench and Co.

Oliphant, Mrs. The Literary History of England in the end of the Eighteenth and beginning of the Nineteenth Century. 3 vols. 8vo. London: Macmillan and Co.

Scherer, J. A History of English Literature. Translated from the German by M. V. 8vo. London: Sampson Low and Co.

Seeley, J. R. Natural Religion. By the Author of Ecce Homo, pp. 94-111. 8vo. London: Macmillan and Co.

Ireland, Alexander. Recollections of George Dawson, etc., pp. 22-25.

1883. Caine, T. Hall. Cobwebs of Criticism. A Review of the First Reviewers of the “Lake,” “Satanic,” and “Cockney” Schools. Wordsworth, pp. 1-29. 8vo. London: Elliot Stock.

Dennis, John. Heroes of Literature: English Poets. William Wordsworth, pp. 278-299. 8vo. London: S.P.C.K.

Hall, S. C. Retrospect of a Long Life: from 1815 to 1883. Wordsworth, vol. ii. pp. 36-42. 8vo. London: Richard Bentley and Son.

Hawthorne, N. English Note-Books, vol. ii. 8vo. London: Kegan Paul, Trench and Co.

The Lyme Parish Church Magazine. Lyme-Regis: Walton.

1884. Hoffmann, F. A. Poetry, its Origin, Nature, and History. Wordsworth, chap. xxvi. pp. 359-375. 8vo. London: Thurgate and Sons.

Kerr, R. N. Our English Laureates and the Birds. Dundee: John Leng and Co. Pp. 29-51. (Originally published in the Newcastle Weekly Chronicle.)

Nicholson, Albert. The Literature of the English Lake District. Manchester.

Shorter, C. K. William Wordsworth. The National Cyclopædia: a Dictionary of Universal Knowledge. New Edition. 8vo. London: W. Mackenzie.

Traill, H. D. Coleridge. English Men of Letters. 8vo. London: Macmillan and Co.

1885. Courthope, W. J. The Liberal Movement in English Literature. Essay III. Wordsworth’s Theory of Poetry, pp. 71-108. 8vo. London: John Murray.

Eliot, George. George Eliot’s Life, as related in her Letters and Journals. By J. W. Cross. Vol. i. p. 61; iii. 388. 8vo. Edinburgh: W. Blackwood and Sons.

Hutton, Lawrence. Literary Landmarks, pp. 321-7. London: T. Fisher Unwin.

Carne, John, Letters of, 1813-1837. Privately printed. Pp. 133-138.

Taylor, Sir Henry. Autobiography 1800-1875. 2 vols. 8vo. London: Longmans, Green and Co.

1886. Dawson, George. Biographical Lectures. Edited by George St. Clair. The Poetry of Wordsworth, pp. 251-307. 8vo. London: Kegan Paul, Trench and Co.

Law, David. Wordsworth’s Country. A series of Five Etchings of the English Lake District. 24mo. London: Robert Dunthorne.

Lee, Edmund. Dorothy Wordsworth. The Story of a Sister’s Love. 8vo. London: James Clarke and Co. New and revised edition 1894.

Nicholson, Cornelius. Wordsworth and Coleridge: Two Parallel Sketches. Ventnor: R. Madley. 1886.

Noel, Hon. Roden B. W. Essays on Poetry and Poets. Wordsworth, pp. 132-149. 8vo. London: Kegan Paul, Trench and Co.

Swinburne, A. C. Miscellanies, Wordsworth and Byron, pp. 63-156. 8vo. London. 1886.

Launcelot Cross (F. Carr). Thinkers of the World in relation to the New Church. 1. Childhood as revealed in Wordsworth; 2. Wordsworth on Infancy and Youth. N.D.

1887. De Vere, Aubrey. Essays, chiefly on Poetry. The Genius and Passion of Wordsworth, vol. i. pp. 101-173; The Wisdom and Truth of Wordsworth’s Poetry, vol. i. pp. 174-264; Recollections of Wordsworth, vol. ii. pp. 275-295. 8vo. London: Macmillan and Co.

Goodwin, H., and William Knight. Through the Wordsworth Country. 8vo. London: Swan Sonnenschein, Lowrey and Co. Third Edition, 1892.

Lowell, J. Russell. Democracy and other Addresses, pp. 137-156. 8vo. London: Macmillan and Co.

Memorials of Coleorton: being Letters from Coleridge, Wordsworth and his Sister, Southey, and Sir Walter Scott, to Sir George and Lady Beaumont of Coleorton, Leicestershire, 1803 to 1834. Edited, with Introduction and Notes, by William Knight. 2 vols. 8vo. Edinburgh: David Douglas.

Sutherland, J. M. William Wordsworth: the Story of his Life, with Critical Remarks on his Writings. 8vo. London: Elliot Stock.

1888. Arnold, Matthew. Essays in Criticism. Second Series. Wordsworth, pp. 122-162. 8vo. London: Macmillan and Co.

Church, R. W. Dante and other Essays. William Wordsworth, pp. 193-219. 8vo. London: Macmillan and Co.

Dowden, E. Transcripts and Studies. The Text of Wordsworth’s Poems, pp. 112-152. 8vo. London: Kegan Paul, Trench and Co. Reprinted from The Contemporary Review.

Ingleby, C. M. Essays. Edited by his Son. 8vo. Trübner and Co.

Minto, W. William Wordsworth. The Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, xxiv. pp. 668-676. 4to. Edinburgh: Adam and Charles Black.

Sandford, Mrs. Henry. Thomas Poole and his Friends. 2 vols. 8vo. London: Macmillan and Co.

1889. Clayden, P. W. Rogers and his Contemporaries. 2 vols. 8vo. London: Smith, Elder and Co.

Howitt, Mary. Autobiography. Edited by her daughter Margaret Howitt. 2 vols. 8vo. London: William Isbister.

Letters from the Lake Poets, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, William Wordsworth, Robert Southey, to Daniel Stuart. Printed for Private Circulation. Wordsworth, pp. 329-386. 8vo. London: West, Newman and Co.

Pater, Walter. Appreciations. With an Essay on Style. 8vo. London: Macmillan and Co.

Wordsworthiana. A Selection from Papers read to the Wordsworth Society. Edited by William Knight. 8vo. London: Macmillan and Co.

1890. Boland, R. Yarrow, its Poets and Poetry, pp. 77-9. Dalbeattie.

Brooke, Stopford A. Dove Cottage, Wordsworth’s Home from 1800-1808. December 21, 1799, to May 1808. 12mo. London: Macmillan and Co.

Davey, Sir Horace. Wordsworth. An Address read to the Stockton Literary and Philosophical Society. 8vo. Stockton-on-Tees. 1890.

Dawson, W. J. Makers of Modern English. Ch. x. William Wordsworth; ch. xi. The Connection between Wordsworth’s Life and Poetry; ch. xii. Some Characteristics of Wordsworth’s Poetry; ch. xiii. Wordsworth’s View of Nature and Man; ch. xiv. Wordsworth’s Patriotic and Political Poems; ch. xv. Wordsworth’s Personal Characteristics; ch. xvi. Concluding Survey.

Malleson, F. A. Holiday Studies of Wordsworth, by Rivers, Woods, and Alps. The Wharfe, the Duddon, and the Stelvio Pass. 4to. Cassell and Co.

M’Williams, R. Handbook of English Literature, pp. 456-466. London: Longmans, Green and Co.

Tutin, J. R. Birthday Texts. W. P. Nimmo.

1891. De Quincey, Thomas. De Quincey Memorials. Being Letters and Records here first published.… Edited, with Introduction, Notes, and Narrative, by Alexander H. Japp. 2 vols. 8vo. London: William Heinemann.

Gosse, E. Gossip in a Library. Peter Bell and his Tormentors, pp. 253-267. 8vo. London: W. Heinemann. Third Edition, 1893.

Graham, P. A. Nature in Books: some Studies in Biography. 8vo. London: Methuen and Co.

Morley, John. Studies in Literature. Wordsworth, pp. 1-53. 8vo. London: Macmillan and Co.

Scherer, Edmond. Essays on English Literature, translated by George Saintsbury, with a Critical Introduction. 8vo. London: Sampson Low, Marston and Co.

Tutin, J. R. The Wordsworth Dictionary of Persons and Places, with the Familiar Quotations from his Works (including full Index) and a chronologically-arranged List of his best Poems. 8vo. Hull: J. R. Tutin.

Wordsworth, Elizabeth. William Wordsworth. 8vo. London: Percival and Co.

1892. Caird, Edward. Essays on Literature and Philosophy. Wordsworth, vol. i. pp. 147-189. 8vo. Glasgow: James Maclehose and Sons.

Dawson, W. J. Quest and Vision: essays in Life and Literature. Wordsworth and his Message, pp. 41-72. 8vo. London: Hodder and Stoughton.

Tutin, J. R. An Index to the Animal and Vegetable Kingdoms of Wordsworth. Hull.

Tutin, J. R. Wordsworth in Yorkshire. First published in Yorkshire Notes and Queries. Part xix.

Wintringham, W. H. The Birds of Wordsworth: Poetically, Mythologically, and Comparatively examined. 8vo. London: Hutchinson and Co.

1894. Campbell, J. Dykes. Samuel Taylor Coleridge. A Narrative of the Events of his Life. 8vo. London: Macmillan and Co.

Minto, W. The Literature of the Georgian Era. Edited, with a Biographical Introduction, by William Knight, LL.D., pp. 140-177. 8vo. Edinburgh: William Blackwood and Sons.

Rawnsley, H. D. Literary Associations of the English Lakes. 2 vols. 8vo. Glasgow: James Maclehose and Sons.

1895. Coleridge, S. T. Letters. Edited by Ernest Hartley Coleridge. 2 vols. 8vo. London: William Heinemann.

In Lakeland, a Wordsworthic Pilgrimage, Easter 1895.

1896. Saintsbury, George. A History of Nineteenth Century Literature (1780-1895). Wordsworth, pp. 49-56. 8vo. London: Macmillan and Co.

A Reminiscence of Wordsworth Day. Cockermouth, April 7, 1896. Edited by the Rev. H. D. Rawnsley, Hon. Canon of Carlisle. Cockermouth: A. Lang.

[476] There are numerous notes and letters on Wordsworth in such Journals as The Athenæum, The Academy, Notes and Queries, the examination of which will repay perusal. In Notes and Queries there are at least twenty-four valuable ones which cannot be recorded here.—Ed.

[477] A criticism of the “dancing daffodils.”—Ed.

IV
CRITICAL ESTIMATES IN BOOKS, PAMPHLETS, MAGAZINES, AND REVIEWS

In the following section when the name of an author is placed within brackets, it is to be understood that the name was not given on the publication of the Review, but that it is otherwise known.—Ed.

1793. “Descriptive Sketches in Verse.” The Monthly Review, xii. 216.

“An Evening Walk.” The Monthly Review, xii. 218.

1799. “Lyrical Ballads, with a few other Poems.” The Monthly Review, xxix. 202; The British Critic, xiv. 364.

1801. “Lyrical Ballads, with other Poems.” In 2 vols. Second Edition. The British Critic, xvii. 125.

1802. “Lyrical Ballads, with other Poems.” Vol. ii. The Monthly Review, xxxviii. 209.

1807. “Poems.” In 2 vols. The Edinburgh Review, xi. 214. By Francis Jeffrey. Monthly Literary Recreations, 65. (By Lord Byron.)

1808. “Poems.” In 2 vols. The Eclectic Review, vii. 35.

1809. “Poems.” In 2 vols. The British Critic, xxxiii. 298.

1810. “Concerning the relations of Great Britain, Spain, and Portugal, to each other, and to the Common Enemy, at this Crisis, etc.” The British Critic, xxxiv. 305.

1814. “The Excursion; being a portion of The Recluse, a Poem.” The Edinburgh Review, xxiv. 1. (By Francis Jeffrey); The Quarterly Review, xii. 100. (By Charles Lamb.)

1815. “Poems; including Lyrical Ballads, and the miscellaneous pieces of the Author. With additional Poems, a new Preface, and a supplementary Essay.” The Monthly Review, lxxviii. 225; The Quarterly Review, xiv. 201. (By W. Gifford.)

“The Excursion; being a portion of The Recluse: a Poem.” The Eclectic Review, xxi. 13; The Monthly Review, lxxvi. 123; The British Critic, iii. 449.

“The Excursion: being a portion of The Recluse: a Poem.” The British Review, vi. 49.

“The White Doe of Rylstone.” The Quarterly Review, xiv. 201. (By W. Gifford.) The Edinburgh Review, xxv. 355. (By Francis Jeffrey.) The Monthly Review, lxxviii. 235.

1816. “The White Doe of Rylstone.” The Eclectic Review, xxiii. 33.

“Thanksgiving Ode, with other short Pieces.” The Eclectic Review, xxiv. 1.

“The White Doe of Rylstone.” The British Review, vii. 370.

1817. “Thanksgiving Ode, with other short Pieces.” The Monthly Review, lxxxii. 98.

“Observations on Mr. Wordsworth’s Letter relative to a new Edition of Burns’s Works.” Blackwood’s Magazine, i. 261.

“Vindication of Mr. Wordsworth’s Letter to Mr. Gray on a new Edition of Burns.” Blackwood’s Magazine, ii. 65.

“Letter occasioned by N.’s Vindication of Mr. Wordsworth in last Number.” Blackwood’s Magazine, ii. 201.

1818. “Essays on the Lake School of Poetry. I. Wordsworth’s White Doe of Rylstone.” Blackwood’s Magazine, iii. 369.

1819. “Peter Bell: a Tale in Verse.” The Edinburgh Monthly Review, ii. 654; Blackwood’s Magazine, v. 130; The Eclectic Review, xxx. 62; The Monthly Review, lxxxix. 419; The Literary Gazette, 273.

“The Waggoner: a Poem, to which are added Sonnets.” The Monthly Review, xc. 36; The Edinburgh Monthly Review, ii. 654; Blackwood’s Magazine, v. 332; The Eclectic Review, xxx. 62.

“Benjamin the Waggoner, a ryghte merrie and conceitede Tale in Verse.” The Monthly Review, xc. 41.

“Peter Bell: a Lyrical Ballad.” The Monthly Review, lxxxix. 422; The Eclectic Review, xxix. 473.

“Memoir of William Wordsworth, Esq.” (with a portrait). The New Monthly Magazine, i. 48.

1820. “Lake School of Poetry—Mr. Wordsworth.” The New Monthly Magazine, xiv. 361.

“Wordsworth.” The London Magazine, i. 275, 435.

“Wordsworth’s River Duddon, and other Poems.” The Gentleman’s Magazine, xc. 344; The London Magazine, i. 618; The London Review and Literary Journal, 523; Blackwood’s Magazine, vii. 206; The Eclectic Review, xxxii. 170; The Monthly Review, xciii. 132.

“The River Duddon, and other Poems.” The British Review, xvi. 37.

“Essay on Poetry, with Observations on the Living Poets.” The London Magazine, ii. 557.

“The Dead Asses: A Lyrical Ballad.” The Monthly Review, xci. 322.

“Description of the Scenery of the Lakes.” Blackwood’s Magazine, xii.

1822. “Memorials of a Tour on the Continent.” The British Critic, xviii. 522; The Edinburgh Review, xxxvii. 449. (By F. Jeffrey.) Blackwood’s Magazine, xii. 175; The British Review, xx. 459; The Literary Gazette, 192, 210; The Museum, i. 339.

“Ecclesiastical Sketches.” Blackwood’s Magazine, xii. 175; The British Critic, xviii. 522; The Literary Gazette, 123.

1829. “An Essay on the Theory and the Writings of Wordsworth.” Blackwood’s Magazine, xxvi. 453, 593, 774, 894.

1831. “Literary Characters—No. III. Mr. Wordsworth.” Fraser’s Magazine, iii. 557. By Pierce Pungent.

“Selections from the Poems of W. Wordsworth, chiefly for the use of Schools and Young Persons.” The New Monthly Magazine, xxxiii. 304; The Monthly Review, ii. 602.

1832. “Gallery of Literary Characters—No. XXIX. William Wordsworth.” Frasers Magazine, vi. 313.

“Poetical Works.” New Edition. Fraser’s Magazine, vi. 607.

1833. “What is Poetry? The two kinds of Poetry.” The Monthly Repository, New Series, vii. 60, 714. By Antiquus (John Stuart Mill).

1834. “The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth.” A New Edition. The Quarterly Review, lii. 317. (By Henry Taylor.)

“Selections from the Poems of William Wordsworth.” The Quarterly Review, lii. 317. (By Henry Taylor.)

1835. “Yarrow Revisited, and other Poems.” The New Monthly Magazine, xliv. 12; Blackwood’s Magazine, xxxvii. 699; Fraser’s Magazine, xi. 689; The Quarterly Review, liv. 181; The Dublin University Magazine, v. 680; The Monthly Literary Gazette, 257; The Athenæum, 293; The Monthly Review, cxxxvii. 605; The Monthly Repository, New Series, ix. 430.

1838. “Letter from Tomkins—Bagman versus Pedlar.” Blackwood’s Magazine, xliv. 509.

“Our Pocket Companions.” Blackwood’s Magazine, xliv. 584.

“The Sonnets of William Wordsworth.” The Literary Gazette, 540.

1839. “Lake Reminiscences, from 1807 to 1830—Nos. I.-III. William Wordsworth; No. IV. William Wordsworth and Robert Southey.” Taits Edinburgh Magazine, vi. I, 90, 246, 453. (By Thomas de Quincey.)

1841. “Wordsworth.” Blackwood’s Magazine, xlix. 359.

“The Sonnets of William Wordsworth.” The Quarterly Review, lxix. 1. (By Henry Taylor.)

1842. “Poems, chiefly of Early and Late Years; including The Borderers.” The Monthly Review, ii. 270; The Eclectic Review, lxxvi. 568; The Christian Remembrancer, iii. 655; The Athenæum, 757.

Criticism in a Review of “The Book of the Poets” in The Athenæum. (By Elizabeth Barrett Browning.)

“Poems of the Fancy,” “Poems of the Imagination.” The Gentleman’s Magazine, xvii. 3.

“Imaginary Conversation. Southey and Porson.” Blackwood’s Magazine, lii. 687. (By Walter Savage Landor.)

1844. “Oswald Herbst’s Letters from England—No. II. Wordsworth and his Poetry.” Tait’s Edinburgh Magazine, xi. 641.

1845. “On Wordsworth’s Poetry.” Tait’s Edinburgh Magazine, xii. 545. (By Thomas de Quincey.)

“Poems, chiefly of Early and Late Years; including The Borderers.” The Gentleman’s Magazine, xxiv. 555.

“William Wordsworth.” Hogg’s Weekly Instructor, ii. 243.

1850. “William Wordsworth.” Chambers’s Papers for the People, v. I.

“William Wordsworth.” The Gentleman’s Magazine, New Series, xxxiii. 668; The Athenæum, 447; Sharpe’s London Magazine, xi. 349.

“Poetical Works.” The Eclectic Review, xcii. 56; The North British Review, xiii. 473. (By David Masson.)

“The Prelude, or Growth of a Poet’s Mind.” The Eclectic Review, xcii. 550; The Gentleman’s Magazine, xxxiv. 459; Fraser’s Magazine, xlii. 119; The Westminster Review, liv. 271; The British Quarterly Review, xii. 549; Tait’s Edinburgh Magazine, xvii. 521; The Dublin University Magazine, xxxvi. 329; The Literary Gazette, 513; The Athenæum, 805; Sharpe’s London Journal, xii. 185; The London Examiner, 478.

“William Wordsworth.” Household Words, i. 210.

“Wordsworth and his Poetry.” Chambers’s Journal, xiii. 363. By C. R.

“Poetical Works.” The Christian Observer, i. 307.

“Religious Character of Wordsworth’s Poetry.” The Christian Observer, i. 381.

“Death of Wordsworth.” The London Examiner, 259, 265.

“The Poetry of Wordsworth.” The Wesleyan Methodist Magazine, 27.

1851. “Memoirs of William Wordsworth.” Fraser’s Magazine, xliv. 101, 186; The Dublin University Magazine, xxxviii. 77; The Dublin Review, xxxi. 313; The Gentleman’s Magazine, New Series, xxxvi. 107; The Athenæum, 445.

“Poetical Works.” The Dublin Review, xxxi. 313.

“The Prelude, or Growth of a Poet’s Mind.” The Prospective Review, vii. 94.

1852. “Memoirs of William Wordsworth.” By Christopher Wordsworth. The Quarterly Review, xcii. 182.

“Memoirs of William Wordsworth, compiled from Authentic Sources.” By January Searle. The Quarterly Review, xcii. 182.

“Lives of the Illustrious. William Wordsworth.” The Biographical Magazine, I.

1853. “William Wordsworth.” Sharpe’s London Journal, xvii. 148.

“The Genius of Wordsworth harmonised with the Wisdom and Integrity of his Reviewers.” By J. C. Wright. The Athenæum, 824.

1855. “William Wordsworth.” The Leisure Hour, iv. 439.

1856. “Poems of William Wordsworth, D.C.L.” The Dublin Review, xl. 338.

“William Wordsworth.” Sharpe’s London Journal, xi. 349.

1857. “William Wordsworth. A Biography.” By Edwin Paxton Hood. The National Review, iv. 1.

“The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth.” A New Edition. The Athenæum, 109.

“The Earlier Poems of William Wordsworth.” Edited by William Johnston. The Athenæum, 109.

“Wordsworth’s Sister.” By E. P. Hood. The Leisure Hour.

1859. “Passages from Wordsworth’s Excursion.” Illustrated with Etchings on Steel. By Agnes Fraser. The Athenæum, i, 361.

“William Wordsworth. A Biography.” By Edwin Paxton Hood. The Christian Observer, lix. 156.

“A Talk about Rydal Mount.” Once a Week, i. 107. (By Thomas Blackburne.)

1860. “Collected Works of William Wordsworth.” A New and Revised Edition. The British Quarterly Review, xxxi. 79.

“The Prelude, or Growth of a Poet’s Mind.” The British Quarterly Review, xxxi. 79.

“Richard Baxter paraphrased by Wordsworth.” Varieties in The Leisure Hour.

1863. “The Poems of Hood and of Wordsworth.” The Christian Observer, lxiii. 677.

“William Wordsworth.” The Leisure Hour, xii. 628.

1864. “Wordsworth, Tennyson, and Browning; or, Pure, Ornate, and Grotesque Art in English Poetry.” The National Review, xix. 27. W. B. (Walter Bagehot.)

“Wordsworth: the Man and the Poet.” The North British Review, xli. 1. (By J. C. Shairp.)

1865. “Two Poets of England. Wordsworth and Landor.” Temple Bar, xvi. 106.

“Wordsworth at Rydal Mount in 1849.” In The Leisure Hour.

1866. “Memories of the Authors of the Age.” William Wordsworth. The Art Journal, xviii. 245, 273. S. C. Hall and Mrs. S. C. Hall.

1868. “Characteristic Letters”; communicated by the author of Men I have Known—W. Wordsworth.

1870. “Wordsworth at Work.” Chambers’s Journal, xlvii. 247.

“Personal Recollections of the Lake Poets.” In The Leisure Hour, 651. The Rev. Edward Whately.

“Wordsworth’s Study,” in The Leisure Hour.

1871. “A Century of Great Poets, from 1750 downwards—No. III. William Wordsworth.” Blackwood’s Magazine, cx. 299.

1872. “Wordsworth impartially weighed.” Temple Bar, xxxiv. 310.

1873. “Wordsworth.” Macmillan’s Magazine, xxviii. 289. Sir John Duke Coleridge.

“Wordsworth’s Three Yarrows.” Good Words, xiv. 649. J. C. Shairp.

1874. “On Wordsworth.” The Fortnightly Review, xxi. 455. Walter H. Pater.

“William and Dorothy Wordsworth.” Chambers’s Journal, li. 513. William Chambers.

“White Doe of Rylstone.” Good Words, xv. 269. J. C. Shairp.

“The Cycle of English Song.” Temple Bar, xl. 478.

1875. “The Prose Works of William Wordsworth.” Edited by the Rev. A. B. Grosart. The Fortnightly Review, xxiv. 449. Edward Dowden. The Dublin University Magazine, lxxxvi. 756.

1876. “Hours in a Library.” Wordsworth’s Ethics. The Cornhill Magazine, xxxiv. 206. Leslie Stephen.

“The Prose Works of William Wordsworth.” Wordsworth and Gray. The Quarterly Review, cxli. 104.

“The Prose Works of William Wordsworth.” Edited by the Rev. A. B. Grosart. The London Quarterly Review, xlvii. 102.

1877. “The Wordsworths at Brinsop Court.” Temple Bar, xlix. 110.

1878. “The Text of Wordsworth’s Poems.” The Contemporary Review, xxxiii. 734. Edward Dowden.

“Wordsworth.” Transactions of the Cumberland Association for the Advancement of Literature and Science, Part III. William Knight.

1879. “Wordsworth.” Macmillan’s Magazine, xl. 193. Matthew Arnold.

“Matthew Arnold’s Selections from Wordsworth.” The Fortnightly Review, xxxii. 686. J. A. Symonds.

1880. “Milton and Wordsworth.” Temple Bar, lx. 106.

“Wordsworth.” Frasers Magazine, ci. 205. Edward Caird.

“Wordsworth’s Poems.” Selected and edited by Matthew Arnold. The Modern Review, i, 235. William Knight.

“The Genius and Passion of Wordsworth.” The Month, xxxviii. 465; xxxix. 1. Aubrey De Vere.

1881. “Carlyle’s Reminiscences.” Carlyle’s Impressions of Wordsworth. The Nineteenth Century, lx. 1010. Henry Taylor.

“Wordsworth.” The Churchman, March.

1882. “Wordsworth and Byron.” The Quarterly Review, cliv. 53. Matthew Arnold.

“My Rare Book.” The Gentleman’s Magazine, New Series, xxviii. 531. Frederick Wedmore.

“Wordsworth’s Two Styles.” The Modern Review, iii. 525. R. H. Hutton.

“A French Critic on Wordsworth—M. Schérer.” The Saturday Review, liv. 565.

“Poetical Works.” Edited by William Knight. The Academy, xxii. III. Edward Dowden. The Spectator, lv. 1141; The Modern Review, iii, 861.

“Transactions of the Wordsworth Society—No. I. Bibliography of the Poems; No. II. On the Platonism of Wordsworth.” J. H. Shorthouse. The Spectator, lv. 238.

“The Weak Side of Wordsworth.” The Spectator, lv. 687.

1883. “Wordsworth and the Duddon.” Good Words, xxiv. 573. F. A. Malleson.

“Address to the Wordsworth Society.” Macmillan’s Magazine, xlviii. 154. Matthew Arnold.

“Poetical Works.” Edited by William Knight. The Spectator, lvi. 614.

“In Wordsworth’s Country.” The Yorkshire Illustrated Monthly, 32. N. Paton.

“Poets’ Pictures.” Temple Bar, lxxx. 232.

“Old Age in Bath, to which are added a few unpublished remains of Wordsworth.” Henry Julian Hunter.

1884. “Wordsworth and Byron.” The Nineteenth Century, xv. 583, 764. A. C. Swinburne.

“The Wisdom and Truth of Wordsworth’s Poetry.” The Catholic World. Aubrey de Vere.

“Wordsworth and ‘Natural Religion.’” Good Words, xxv. 307. J. C. Shairp.

“Wordsworth’s Relations to Science.” Macmillan’s Magazine, l. 202. R. Spence Watson.

“Sonnets.” Edited by the Archbishop of Dublin. The Academy, xxv. 108. Samuel Waddington.

“The Literature of the English Lake District.” The Manchester Quarterly, No. xii. Albert Nicholson.

“A Stroll up the Brathay.” Good Words, xxv. 392. Herbert Rix.

“The Liberal Movement in English Literature—III. Wordsworth’s Theory of Poetry.” The National Review, iv. 512. William John Courthope.

1885. “Wordsworth’s Influence in Scotland.” The Spectator, lviii. 1292.

“Dorothy Wordsworth.” The Christian World Magazine, 314, 360, 464, 548.

“Archbishop Sandys’ Endowed School, Hawkshead, near Ambleside. Tercentenary Commemoration.”

1886. “Wordsworth.” Temple Bar, lxxvii. 336. Charles F. Johnson.

“Poetical Works.” Edited by William Knight. The Spectator, lix. 355.

1887. “Memorials of Coleorton.” Edited by William Knight. The Spectator, lx. 1656.

“Wordsworth, the Poet of Nature.” The Sunday Magazine, xvi. 166. Henry C. Ewart.

“The Mystical Side of Wordsworth.” The National Review, ix. 833. John Hogben.

1888. “Mr. Morley on Wordsworth.” The Spectator, lxi. 1807.

“The Recluse.” The Spectator, lxi. 1852.

“Selections from Wordsworth.” By William Knight, and other Members of the Wordsworth Society. The Spectator, lxi. 1852.

1889. “Selections from Wordsworth.” By William Knight, and other Members of the Wordsworth Society. The Athenæum, i. 109.

“A Modern Poetic Seer.” The Christian World.

“The Recluse.” The Edinburgh Review, clxix. 415. The Academy, xxxv. 17. Edward Dowden. The Saturday Review, lxvii. 43; The Athenæum, i. 109.

“Complete Poetical Works.” With an Introduction by John Morley. The Edinburgh Review, clxix. 415. The Academy, xxxv. 17. Edward Dowden. The Athenæum, i. 109.

“Wordsworthiana.” Edited by William Knight. The Edinburgh Review, clxix. 415; The Academy, xxxv. 229. Edward Dowden. The Spectator, lxii. 369.

“Wordsworth’s Great Failure.” The Nineteenth Century, xxvi. 435. William Minto.

“The Life of William Wordsworth.” By William Knight. The Saturday Review, lxvii. 732; The Spectator, lxiii. 143; The Athenæum, i. 719.

“Wordsworth and the Quantock Hills.” The National Review, xiv. 67. William Greswell.

1890. “Lyrical Ballads.” Edited by Edward Dowden. The Spectator, lxiv. 479.

“The Story of a Sonnet.” The Athenæum, i. 641. James Bromley.

“Some Early Poems of Wordsworth.” The Athenæum, ii. 320. J. D. C. (James Dykes Campbell).

“The Lyrical Ballads of 1800.” The Athenæum, ii. 699. J. D. C.

“Wordsworth’s Verses in his Guide to the Lake Country.” The Athenæum. J. D. C.

1891. “Wordsworth’s ‘Immortal’ Ode.” The Parent’s Review, i. 864, 944; ii. 70.

“The Wordsworth Dictionary of Persons and Places,” with the Familiar Quotations from his Works. (By J. R. Tutin.) The Athenæum, ii. 756, 834.

“The College Days of William Wordsworth.” The Eagle, xvi., No. 94. G. C. M. Smith.

“William Wordsworth.” By Elizabeth Wordsworth. The Athenæum, ii. 516.

1892. “The Yarrow of Wordsworth and Scott.” Blackwood’s Magazine, cli. 638. John Veitch.

“The last Decade of the last Century.” The Contemporary Review, lxii. 422. J.W. Hales.

“The Influence of Burns on Wordsworth.” The Manchester Quarterly, xi. 285. George Milner.

“Wordsworth on Old Age.” Literary Opinion, vii. 186, Sir Edward Strachey.

“The Birds of Wordsworth, practically, mythologically, and comparatively examined.” By William H. Wintringham. The Athenæum, i. 594, 634, 666, 697.

“Dove Cottage,” in The Athenæum, i. 727.

“The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth.” Edited by Edward Dowden. The Athenæum. No. 3404.

1893. “Some Unpublished Letters of William Wordsworth.” The Cornhill Magazine, New Series, xx. 257.

“Reminiscences of Scott, Campbell, Jeffrey, and Wordsworth.” The Bookman, iv. 47.

“Our Poet’s Corner.” The Girls’ Own Paper, xiv. 772.

“Dove Cottage, Grasmere—Wordsworth’s Home.” The Girls’ Own Paper, xiv. 772. Milward Wood.

“Down the Duddon with Wordsworth.” The Leisure Hour, xlii. 532. Herbert Rix.

“Wordsworth’s ‘Grace Darling.’” The Athenæum, No. 3440. Edward Dowden.

“Note by Wordsworth.” The Athenæum, No. 3443. E. H. C. (Ernest H. Coleridge).

“Wordsworth and the Morning Post.” The Athenæum, No. 3445. E. H. C.

1894. “Wordsworth’s ‘Castle of Indolence’ Stanzas.” The Fortnightly Review, lxii. 685. T. Hutchinson.

“A Century of Wordsworth.” The Sunday at Home, 641, 646. By E. S. Capper.

1895. “The Charm of Wordsworth.” Great Thoughts, iv. 399.

“Wordsworth and Carlyle: a Literary Parallel.” Temple Bar, cv. 261.

“Dorothy Wordsworth, 1771-1855.” Great Thoughts, v. 56. Alexander Small.

1896. “Wordsworth’s Quantock Poems.” Temple Bar, April 1896. William Greswell.

V
PARODIES ON WORDSWORTH

The Battered Tar; or, The Waggoner’s Companion. A Poem, with Sonnets, etc. J. Johnston.

1839. Peter Bell the Third. By Miching Mallecho, Esq. (Percy B. Shelley).

1876. Literary Remains. By Catherine Maria Fanshawe. B. M. Pickering. London.

1888. The Poets at Tea. The Cambridge Fortnightly (Feb. 7).

1819. The Dead Asses. A Lyrical Ballad.

1819. Peter Bell. a Lyrical Ballad. By John Hamilton Reynolds. London: Taylor and Hessey.

1816. The Poetic Mirror; or, the Living Bards of Britain, pp. 131-187. (By James Hogg.)

The Stranger; being a further portion of “The Recluse,” a poem.

The Flying Taylor; further extract from “The Recluse,” a poem.

James Rigg; still further extract from “The Recluse,” a poem. 12mo. London: Longmans. Second Edition. 1817.

1888. Hamilton, Walter. Parodies of the Works of English and American Authors, collected and annotated by Walter Hamilton. William Wordsworth, pp. 88-106. 8vo. London: Reeves and Turner.

VI
POEMS ADDRESSED TO WORDSWORTH, AND ALLUSIONS TO HIM BY CONTEMPORARY AND SUBSEQUENT POETS

1. Coleridge, S. T. To William Wordsworth, composed on the night after his recitation of a poem on the growth of an individual mind. Published in “Sibylline Leaves.”

2. Coleridge, Hartley. To William Wordsworth, on his seventy-fifth Birthday.

3. Wilson, John. In “The Angler’s Tent,” p. 257 of the edition of 1858.

4. Keats, John. In his Sonnets [the 2nd addressed to Haydon].

5. Shelley, Percy B. To Wordsworth. Another reference occurs in Alastor.

6. Moir, D. M. To Wordsworth. In Blackwood’s Magazine, viii. 542; afterwards included amongst his “Poems,” vol. ii. p. 28. 1852.

7, 8. Browning, Mrs. On a Portrait of Wordsworth by B. R. Haydon. (Sonnets.) 1866. Vol. ii. p. 264. Also in Lady Geraldine’s Courtship, vol. ii. p. 109. 1866.

9. Elliott, Ebenezer. In The Village Patriarch. Book iv. 1840.

10. Tennyson, Alfred Lord. In the Dedication of his Poems “To the Queen.” March 1851.

11, 12. Alford, Henry. In The School of the Heart, pp. 66, 67; and Recollections of Wordsworth’sRuth,” p. 163. 1868.

13. Lowell, James Russell. In A Fable for Critics, p. 133. 1873.

14, 15. Byron, Lord. In English Bards and Scotch Reviewers. Also in Don Juan.

16. Hunt, Leigh. In The Feast of the Poets. This first appeared in The Reflector, which survived from 1810 to 1812.

17. Hemans, Mrs. To Wordsworth, in her “Miscellaneous Poems.”

18. Scenes and Hymns of Life. Dedicated to Wordsworth. p. 568. N. D.

19. Hallam, A. H. Meditative Fragments. No. vi. 1863.

20, 21, 22. Arnold, Matthew. Memorial Verses. April 1850. Also in Youth and Nature, and in Obermann Once More. p. 203. 1869.

23, 24, 25. De Vere, Sir Aubrey. In Rydal with Wordsworth (Sonnets). p. 208. 1842. Wordsworth. Composed at Rydal, 1st Sept. 1860. p. 392. Wordsworth, on Visiting the Duddon, p. 393.

26. Tollemache, The Hon. Beatrix L. Wordsworth, in “Safe Studies,” p. 409. 1884.

27. Tollemache, The Hon. Beatrix L. To Wordsworth, in “Engleberg, and other Verses.” 1890.

28. Bell, George. Rydal Mount, in “Descriptive and other Miscellaneous Pieces in Verse.” Penrith, 1835.

29. Houghton, Lord. Sonnet beginning “The hour may come,” etc. Poetical Works, vol. i. p. 267. 1876.

30. Worsley, P. S. Stanzas to Wordsworth, in Blackwood’s Magazine, xcii. pp. 92-93.

31. Austin, Alfred. Wordsworth at Dove Cottage. 1890.

32, 33. Scott, W. B. Poems (three Sonnets), pp. 180-182. 1875. Also in “A Poet’s Harvest Home,” 1893. Wordsworth, p. 123.

34, 35, 36. Rawnsley, H. D. In “Sonnets at the English Lakes.” IX. Wordsworth’s Seat, Rydal; LI. A Tree planted by William Wordsworth at Wray Castle; LXII. Wordsworth’s Tomb.

37. Payne, James. Wordsworth’s Grave, in “Lakes in Sunshine.” 1870.

38. Landor, L. E. On Wordsworth’s Cottage, near Grasmere Lake, in her “Poetical Works,” pp. 551-4. 1873.

39. Allingham, William. On reading of the Funeral of the Poet Wordsworth, p. 258 of “Poems.” 1850.

40. Palgrave, Francis Turner. William Wordsworth, in his “Lyrical Poems.” 1871.

41. Anderson, G. F. R. Wordsworth, in “The White Book of the Muses,” p. 67. 1895.

42. Dawson, James, jun. Wordsworth and Hartley Coleridge: in Grasmere Churchyard, Westmoreland. In Macmillan’s Magazine, xiii. 26.

43. Watson, William. Wordsworth’s Grave. Originally published in the National Review, x. 40; afterwards included in the volume, “Wordsworth’s Grave, and other Poems.” 1890.

44. Matsura (a Japanese poet). Moonlight on Windermere, translated by H. D. Rawnsley in Murray’s Magazine, Oct. 1887.

II.—AMERICA

BIBLIOGRAPHY of the Various Editions of WORDSWORTH’S POETICAL WORKS, which have been printed and published in the United States of America, from 1801 to 1895, arranged in Chronological Order: also a Bibliography of Critical Essays, and Biographical Sketches, of Wordsworth’s Life and Works in Books, Reviews, and Periodicals; with Notes, by Mrs. Henry A. St. John, Ithaca, New York.