. Coleridge and Wordsworth in the West Country : their friendship, work, and surroundings . 797). 41. The Dungeon (1797). 42. The Three Graves. A fragment of a Sextons tale (i797-1809). 43. This Lime-Tree Bower my Prison. Ad- dressed to Charles Lamb (1797). 44. Kubla Khan (1798). 45. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1797- 1798). 46. Sonnets attempted in the manner of con- temporary Pensive at eve on the hard world I To On a Ruined House in a Romantic Country. 47. Fire, Famine, and Slaughter (1797). 48. Christabel. First Part (i798). r 224 ] Appendix II 49


. Coleridge and Wordsworth in the West Country : their friendship, work, and surroundings . 797). 41. The Dungeon (1797). 42. The Three Graves. A fragment of a Sextons tale (i797-1809). 43. This Lime-Tree Bower my Prison. Ad- dressed to Charles Lamb (1797). 44. Kubla Khan (1798). 45. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1797- 1798). 46. Sonnets attempted in the manner of con- temporary Pensive at eve on the hard world I To On a Ruined House in a Romantic Country. 47. Fire, Famine, and Slaughter (1797). 48. Christabel. First Part (i798). r 224 ] Appendix II 49. France : An Ode (February, 1798). 50. Frost at Midnight (February, 1798). 51. Fears In Solitude. Written In April, 1798, during the alarm of an invasion. NetherStowey, April 20, 1798. 52. To a Young Lady, Miss Lavinia Poole, on her recovery from a fever (March 31,1798). 53. The Nightingale. A conversation poem, written in April, 1798. 54. Recantation, Illustrated in the Story of the Mad Ox (July 30, 1798).SS^ Love(i798-i799).^d. The Ballad of the Dark Ladle, a fragment (1798). r 225 ]. In the Lines composed ivhile climbing the left ascent of Brcckley Coomb, Somersetshire^in May, 1795, the following occurs :— Ah ! what a luxury of landscape meetsMy gaze ! Proud towers, and cots more dear to me,Elm-shadowed fields, and prospect-bounding sea ! This refers to the view of the coast from Weston-super-Mare to Clevedon,along the northern slopes of the Mendip Hills. APPENDIX III POEMS WRITTEN BY WORDSWORTHCHIEFLY IN SOMERSET 1. The Borderers (1795 and 1796). 2. A Night Piece (1798). 3. We are Seven (1798)- 4. Anecdote for Fathers (1798). 5. A Whirl-blast from behind the Hill (1798)- 6. The Thorn (1798). 7. Goody Blake and Harry Gill (1798). 8. Her Eyes are Wild (1798)- 9. Simon Lee, the Old Huntsman (1798)- 10. Lines written in Early Spring (1798). 11. To my Sister (1798)- 12. Expostulation and Reply (1798)- 13. The Tables Turned (1798). 14. The Complaint of a Forsaken Indian Woman


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