Works by William Wordsworth
Prose
- Autobiographical Memoranda
- The Convention of Cintra
- Conversations with Klopstock
- Deception Exposed No. 1
- Deception Exposed No. 2
- Close section Early Prose Fragments
- Essay on Morals
- Essay, Supplementary to the Preface
- Close section Essays upon Epitaphs
- Close section A Guide through the District of the Lakes
- Letter to a Friend of Robert Burns
- A Letter to the Bishop of Llandaff
- Close section Lyrical Ballads Advertisement, Preface, and Appendix
- Postscript, 1835
- Preface of 1815
- Preface to 'The Excursion'
- Preface to The Borderers
- Close section Prefaces, etc., etc.
- [Reply to 'Mathetes']
- Speech at the Laying of the Foundation Stone
Verse
- Addendum. Fragment of an intended poem on Milton
- III Alcæus to Sappho
- I Andrew Jones
- Close section
Ecclesiastical Sonnets. In Series
- Close section
Part I. From the Introduction of Christianity into Britain to the Consummation of the Papal Dominion
- I Introduction
- II Conjectures
- III Trepidation of the Druids
- IV Druidical Excommunication
- V Uncertainty
- VI Persecution
- VII Recovery
- VIII Temptations from Roman Refinements
- IX Dissensions
- X Struggle of the Britons against the Barbarians
- XI Saxon Conquest
- XII Monastery of Old Bangor
- XIII Casual Incitement
- XIV Glad Tidings
- XV Paulinus
- XVI Persuasion
- XVII Conversion
- XVIII Apology
- XIX Primitive Saxon Clergy
- XX Other Influences
- XXI Seclusion
- XXII Continued
- XXIII Reproof
- XXIV Saxon Monasteries, and Lights and Shades of the Religion
- XXV Missions and Travels
- XXVI Alfred
- XXVII His Descendants
- XXVIII Influence abused
- XXIX Danish Conquests
- XXX Canute
- XXXI The Norman Conquest
- XXXII Coldly we spake. The Saxons, overpowered
- XXXIII The Council of Clermont
- XXXIV Crusades
- XXXV Richard I
- XXXVI An Interdict
- XXXVII Papal Abuses
- XXXVIII Scene in Venice
- XXXIX Papal Dominion
- Close section
Part II. To the Close of the Troubles in the Reign of Charles I
- I How soon––alas! did Man, created pure
- II From false assumption rose, and fondly hail'd
- III Cistertian Monastery
- IV Deplorable his lot who tills the ground
- V Monks and Schoolmen
- VI Other Benefits
- VII Continued
- VIII Crusaders
- IX As faith thus sanctified the warrior's crest
- X Where long and deeply hath been fixed the root
- XI Transubstantiation
- XII The Vaudois
- XIII Praised be the Rivers, from their mountain springs
- XIV Waldenses
- XV Archbishop Chicheley to Henry V
- XVI Wars of York and Lancaster
- XVII Wicliffe
- XVIII Corruptions of the Higher Clergy
- XIX Abuse of Monastic Power
- XX Monastic Voluptuousness
- XXI Dissolution of the Monasteries
- XXII The same subject
- XXIII Continued
- XXIV Saints
- XXV The Virgin
- XXVI Apology
- XXVII Imaginative Regrets
- XXVIII Reflections
- XXIX Translation of the Bible
- XXX The Point at Issue
- XXXI Edward VI
- XXXII Edward signing the Warrant for the Execution of Joan of Kent
- XXXIII Revival of Popery
- XXXIV Latimer and Ridley
- XXXV Cranmer
- XXXVI General View of the Troubles of the Reformation
- XXXVII English Reformers in Exile
- XXXVIII Elizabeth
- XXXIX Eminent Reformers
- XL The Same
- XLI Distractions
- XLII Gunpowder Plot
- XLIII Illustration. The Jung-Frau and the Fall of the Rhine near Schaffhausen
- XLIV Troubles of Charles the First
- XLV Laud
- XLVI Afflictions of England
- Close section
Part III. From the Restoration to the Present Times
- I I saw the figure of a lovely Maid
- II Patriotic Sympathies
- III Charles the Second
- IV Latitudinarianism
- V Walton's Book of Lives
- VI Clerical Integrity
- VII Persecution of the Scottish Covenanters
- VIII Acquittal of the Bishops
- IX William the Third
- X Obligations of Civil to Religious Liberty
- XI Sacheverel
- XII Down a swift Stream, thus far, a bold design
- XIII Aspects of Christianity in America.: I. The Pilgrim Fathers
- XIV Aspects of Christianity in America: II. Continued
- XV Aspects of Christianity in America: III. Concluded.––American Episcopacy
- XVI Bishops and Priests blessèd are ye, if deep
- XVII Places of Worship
- XVIII Pastoral Character
- XIX The Liturgy
- XX Baptism
- XXI Sponsors
- XXII Catechising
- XXIII Confirmation
- XXIV Confirmation continued
- XXV Sacrament
- XXVI The Marriage Ceremony
- XXVII Thanksgiving after Childbirth
- XXVIII Visitation of the Sick
- XXIX The Commination Service
- XXX Forms of Prayer at Sea
- XXXI Funeral Service
- XXXII Rural Ceremony
- XXXIII Regrets
- XXXIV Mutability
- XXXV Old Abbeys
- XXXVI Emigrant French Clergy
- XXXVII Congratulation
- XXXVIII New Churches
- XXXIX Church to be erected
- XL Continued
- XLI New Church-yard
- XLII Cathedrals, etc
- XLIII Inside of King's College Chapel, Cambridge
- XLIV The same
- XLV Continued
- XLVI Ejaculation
- XLVII Conclusion
- Close section
Part I. From the Introduction of Christianity into Britain to the Consummation of the Papal Dominion
- Close section
Epitaphs and Elegiac Pieces
- Close section
Epitaphs [I–IX] translated from Chiabrera
- I Weep not, belovèd Friends! nor let the air
- II Perhaps some needful service of the State
- III O Thou who movest onward with a mind
- IV There never breathed a man who, when his life
- V True is it that Ambrosio Salinero
- VI Destined to war from very infancy
- VII O flower of all that springs from gentle blood
- VIII Not without heavy grief of heart did He
- IX Pause, courteous Spirit!––Baldi supplicates
- I By a blest Husband guided, Mary came
- II Six months to six years added he remained
- III Cenotaph in affectionate Remembrance of Frances Fermor
- IV Epitaph in the Chapel-yard of Langdale, Westmoreland
- V Address to the Scholars of the Village School of –––, 1798
- VI Elegiac Stanzas: suggested by a Picture of Peele Castle, in a Storm, painted by Sir George Beaumont
- VII To the Daisy
- VIII Elegiac Verses: in Memory of my Brother, John Wordsworth
- IX Sonnet
- X Lines: composed at Grasmere, during a walk one Evening, after a stormy day, the Author having just read in a Newspaper that the dissolution of Mr. Fox was hourly expected
- XI Invocation to the Earth. February, 1816
- XII Lines: written on a blank Leaf in a Copy of the Author's Poem "The Excursion", upon hearing of the Death of the late Vicar of Kendal
- XIII Elegiac Stanzas: (Addressed to Sir G. H. B. upon the Death of his Sister-in-law)
- XIV Elegiac Musings: in the Grounds of Coleorton Hall, the Seat of the late Sir G. H. Beaumont, Bart.
- XV Written after the Death of Charles Lamb
- XVI Extempore Effusion upon the Death of James Hogg
- XVII Inscription: for a Monument in Crosthwaite Church, in the Vale of Keswick
- Close section
Epitaphs [I–IX] translated from Chiabrera
- Close section
Evening Voluntaries
- I Calm is the fragrant air, and loth to lose
- II On a high Part of the Coast of Cumberland
- III By the Sea-side
- IV Not in the lucid intervals of life
- V By the Side of Rydal Mere
- VI Soft as a cloud is yon blue Ridge - the Mere
- VII The leaves that rustled on this oak-crowned hill
- VIII The sun has long been set
- IX Composed upon an Evening of extraordinary Splendour and Beauty
- X Composed by the Sea-shore
- XI The Crescent-moon, the Star of Love
- XII To the Moon: Composed by the Seaside,-on the Coast of Cumberland
- XIII To the Moon: (Rydal)
- XIV To Lucca Giordano
- XV Who but is pleased to watch the moon on high
- XVI Where lies the truth? Has Man, in wisdom's creed
- The Excursion
- Close section
Fragments of blank verse akin to The Prelude and The Excursion
- I. From the verso of a loose foolscap sheet on which an early draft of 'The Old Cumberland Beggar' is written
- II. Fragment from the Alfoxden note-book
- III. There was a spot
- IV. Fragments (1798–9) from a note-book containing the first extant MS. Of 'Christabel'
- V. From MS. 18 A, the note-book containing MS. D of 'The Ruined Cottage' etc.
- VI. Fragment found in a note-book containing a few early drafts of 'The Excursion' and of the 'Guide to the Lakes'
- VII. Fragments extracted by K. 'from the miscellaneous jottings of D. W.'s Journals'
- II I love upon a stormy night
- If thou indeed derive thy light from Heaven
- Close section
Inscriptions
- I In the Grounds of Coleorton, the Seat of Sir George Beaumont, Bart., Leicestershire
- II In a garden of the Same
- III Written at the Request of Sir George Beaumont, Bart., and in his Name, for an Urn, placed by him at the Termination of a newly-planted Avenue, in the same Grounds
- IV For a Seat in the Groves of Coleorton
- V Written with a Pencil upon a Stone in the Wall of the House (an Out-house), on the Island at Grasmere
- VI Written with a slate Pencil on a Stone, on the side of the Mountain of Black Comb
- VII Written with a slate Pencil upon a Stone, the largest of a Heap lying near a deserted Quarry, upon one of the Islands at Rydal
- VIII In these fair vales hath many a Tree
- IX The massy Ways, carried across these heights
- X Inscriptions supposed to be found in and near a Hermit's Cell. I. Hopes what are they? - Beads of morning
- XI II. Inscribed upon a Rock
- XII III. Hast thou seen, with flash incessant
- XIII IV. Near the Spring of the Hermitage
- XIV V. Not seldom, clad in radiant vest
- XV For the Spot where the Hermitage stood on St. Herbert's Island, Derwent-Water
- XVI On the Banks of a Rocky Stream
- Close section
Juvenilia
- I Lines Written as a School Exercise at Hawkshead, Anno Aetatis 14
- II Anacreon (Imitation)
- III The Death of a Starling – Catullus
- IV Beauty and Moonlight An Ode
- V The Dog - An Idyllium
- VI Sonnet Written by Mr. ––––– Immediately After the Death of His Wife
- VII A Ballad
- VIII Dirge, Sung by a Minstrel
- IX Sonnet on Seeing Miss Helen Maria Williams Weep at a Tale of Distress
- X The Vale of Esthwaite
- XI Orpheus and Eurydice
- XII The Horse
- XIII Ode to Apollo
- XIV In Part From Moschus - Lament For Bion
- XV Fragment of a 'Gothic' Tale
- XVI The road extended o'er a heath
- XVII Sonnet – Sweet was the walk
- XVIII Septimi Gades
- XIX The Birth of Love
- XX From the Greek
- XXI Inscription for a Seat by the Pathway Side Ascending to Windy Brow
- XXII Inscription for a Seat by the Road-Side Halfway Up a Steep Hill Facing South
- XXIII Imitation of Juvenal, Satire VIII
- XXIV Lesbia (Catullus, V)
- XXV Septimus and Acme (Catullus, XLV)
- XXVI At the Isle of Wight, 1793
- XXVII Sonnet – If a grief dismiss me not
- XXVIII The Three Graves. Part II
- XXIX The Convict
- XXX Incipient Madness
- XXXI Argument For Suicide
- Close section
Memorials of a Tour in Italy, 1837
- I Musings near Aquapendente. April, 1837
- II The Pine of Monte Mario at Rome
- III At Rome
- IV At Rome––Regrets.––In Allusion to Niebuhr, and other Modern Historians
- V Continued
- VI Plea for the Historian
- VII At Rome
- VIII Near Rome, in Sight of St. Peter's
- IX At Albano
- X Near Anio's stream I spied a gentle Dove
- XI From the Alban Hills, looking towards Rome
- XII Near the Lake of Thrasymene
- XIII Near the same Lake
- XIV The Cuckoo at Laverna. May 25, 1837
- XV At the Convent of Camaldoli
- XVI Continued
- XVII At the Eremite or Upper Convent of Camaldoli
- XVIII At Vallombrosa
- XIX At Florence
- XX Before the Picture of the Baptist, by Raphael, in the Gallery at Florence
- XXI At Florence.––From Michael Angelo
- XXII At Florence.––From Michael Angelo
- XXIII Among the Ruins of a Convent in the Apennines
- XXIV In Lombardy
- XXV After leaving Italty
- XXVI Continued
- XXVII Composed at Rydal on May Morning, 1838
- XXVIII The Pillar of Trajan
- XXIX The Egyptian Maid; or, The Romance of the Water Lily
- Close section
Memorials of a Tour in Scotland, 1803
- I Departure from the Vale of Grasmere. August, 1803
- II At the Grave of Burns, 1803. Seven Years after his death
- III Thoughts suggested the Day following, on the Banks of Nith, near the Poet's Residence
- IV To the Sons of Burns after visiting the Grave of their Father
- V Ellen Irwin: or, The Braes of Kirtle
- VI To a Highland Girl, at Inversneyde, upon Loch Lomond
- VII Glen Almain: or, The Narrow Glen
- VIII Stepping Westward
- IX The Solitary Reaper
- X Address to Kilchurn Castle, upon Loch Awe
- XI Rob Roy's Grave
- XII Sonnet. Composed at ––– Castle
- XIII Yarrow Unvisited
- XIV Sonnet. In the Pass of Killicranky
- XV The Matron of Jedborough and her Husband
- XVI Fly, some kind Harbinger, to Grasmere-dale!
- XVII The Blind Highland Boy. A Tale told by the Fireside, after returning to the Vale of Grasmere
- Close section Memorials of a Tour in Scotland, 1814
- Close section
Memorials of a Tour on the Continent. 1820
- Dedication
- I Fish-women.––On landing at Calais
- II Brugès
- III Brugès
- IV Incident at Brugès
- V After visiting the Field of Waterloo
- VI Between Namur and Liège
- VII Aix-la-Chapelle
- VIII In the Cathedral at Cologne
- IX In a Carriage, upon the Banks of the Rhine
- X Hymn for the Boatmen, as they approach the Rapids under the Castle of Heidelberg
- XI The Source of the Danube
- XII On approaching the Staub-Bach, Lauterbrunnen
- XIII The Fall of the Aar––Handec
- XIV Memorial near the Outlet of the Lake of Thun.
- XV Composed in one of the Catholic Cantons
- XVI After-thought
- XVII Scene on the Lake of Brientz
- XVIII Engelberg, the Hill of Angels
- XIX Our Lady of the Snow
- XX Effusion in the Presence of the Painted Tower of Tell, at Altdorf
- XXI The Town of Schwytz
- XXII On hearing the 'Ranz des Vaches' on the Top of the Pass of St. Gothard
- XXIII Fort Fuentes
- XXIV The Church of San Salvador seen from the Lake of Lugano
- XXV The Italian Itinerant, and the Swiss Goatherd
- XXVI The Last Supper, by Leonardo da Vinci, in the Refectory of the Convent of Maria della Grazia, Milan
- XXVII The Eclipse of the Sun, 1820
- XXVIII The Three Cottage Girls
- XXIX The Column intended by Buonaparte for a Triumphal Edifice in Milan, now lying by the Way-side in the Simplon Pass
- XXX Stanzas composed in the Simplon Pass
- XXXI Echo, upon the Gemmi
- XXXII Processions. Suggested on a Sabbath Morning in the Vale of Chamouny
- XXXIII Elegiac Stanzas
- XXXIV Sky-Prospect––from the Plain of France
- XXXV On being stranded near the Harbour of Boulogne
- XXXVI After landing––the Valley of Dover, November, 1820
- XXXVII At Dover
- XXXVIII Desultory Stanzas upon receiving the Preceding Sheets from the Press
- Close section
Miscellaneous Poems
- I Epistle to Sir George Howland Beaumont, Bart.: From the South-west Coast of Cumberland. - 1811
- Upon perusing the foregoing Epistle thirty Years after its Composition
- II Gold and Silver Fishes in a Vase
- III Liberty: Sequel to the preceding
- IV Poor Robin
- V The Gleaner: suggested by a Picture
- VI To a Redbreast (in Sickness)
- VII I know an aged Man constrained to dwell
- VIII Sonnet to an Octogenarian
- IX Floating Island
- X How beautiful the Queen of Night, on high
- XI Once I could hail (howe'er serene the sky)
- XII To the Lady Fleming: on seeing the Foundation preparing for the Erection of Rydal Chapel, Westmoreland
- XIII On the same Occasion
- XIV The Horn of Egremont Castle
- XV Goody Blake and Harry Gill: a true Story
- XVI Prelude: prefixed to the Volume entitled "Poems chiefly of Early and Late Years"
- XVII To a Child: written in her Album
- XVIII Lines written in the Album of the Countess of Lonsdale
- XIX Grace Darling
- XX The Russian Fugitive
- Close section
Miscellaneous Sonnets
- Close section
Part I
- I Nuns fret not at their convent's narrow room
- II Admonition
- III "Beloved Vale!" I said, "when I shall con
- IV At Applethwaite, Near Keswick
- V Pelion and Ossa flourish side by side
- VI There is a little unpretending rill
- VII Her only pilot the soft breeze, the boat
- VIII The fairest, brightest hues of ether fade
- IX Upon the Sight of a Beautiful Picture
- X "Why, Minstrel, these untuneful murmurings––
- XI Aerial Rock––whose solitary brow
- XII To Sleep
- XIII To Sleep
- XIV To Sleep
- XV The Wild Duck's Nest
- XVI Written Upon a Blank Leaf in "The Complete Angler"
- XVII To The Poet, John Dyer
- XVIII On the Detraction Which Followed the Publication of a Certain Poem
- XIX Grief, thou hast lost an ever ready friend
- XX To S. H.
- XXI Composed in One of the Valleys of Westmoreland, on Easter Sunday
- XXII Decay of Piety
- XXIII Composed on the Eve of a Marriage of a Friend In the Vale of Grasmere, 1812
- XXIV From the Italian of Michael Angelo
- XXV From the Same
- XXVI From the Same. To the Supreme Being
- XXVII Surprised by joy––impatient as the wind
- XXVIII Methought I saw the footsteps of a throne
- XXIX November, 1836
- XXX It's a beauteous evening, calm and free
- XXXI Where lies the Land to which yon Ship must go?
- XXXII With Ships the sea was sprinkled far and nigh
- XXXIII The world is too much with us; late and soon
- XXXIV A volant Tribe of Bards on earth are found
- XXXV "Weak is the will of Man, his judgement blind
- XXXVI To the Memory of Raisley Calvert
- Close section
Part II
- I Scorn not the Sonnet; Critic, you have frowned
- II How sweet it is, when mother Fancy rocks
- III To B. R. Haydon
- IV From the dark chambers of dejection freed
- V Fair Prime of life! were it enough to gild
- VI I watch, and long have watched, with calm regret
- VII I heard (alas! 'twas only in a dream)
- VIII Retirement
- IX Not Love, Not War, nor the tumultuous swell
- X Mark the concentrated hazels that enclose
- XI Composed After a Journey Across the Hambleton Hills, Yorkshire
- XII Those words were uttered as in pensive mood
- XIII September, 1815
- XIV November 1
- XV Composed During a Storm
- XVI To a Snow-drop
- XVII To the Lady Mary Lowther
- XVIII To Lady Beaumont
- XIX There is a pleasure in a poetic pains
- XX The Shepherd, looking eastward, softly said
- XXI When haughty expectations prostrate lie
- XXII Hail, Twilight, sovereign of one peaceful hour!
- XXIII "With how sad steps, O Moon, thou climb'st the sky
- XXIV Even as a dragon's eye that feels the stress
- XXV The stars are mansions built by Nature's hand
- XXVI Desponding Father! mark this altered bough
- XXVII Captivity.––Mary Queen of Scots
- XXVIII St. Catherine of Ledbury
- XXIX Though narrow be that old Man's cares, and near
- XXX Four fiery steeds impatient of the rein
- XXXI Brook! whose society the Poet seeks
- XXXII Composed on the Banks of a Rocky Stream
- XXXIII This and the Following were Suggested by Mr. Westall's Views of the Caves, etc., in Yorkshire
- XXXIV Malham Cove
- XXXV Gordale
- XXXVI Composed Upon Westminster Bridge, September 3, 1802
- XXXVII Conclusion. To –––
- Close section
Part III
- I Though the bold wings of Poesy affect
- II Oxford, May 30, 1820
- III Oxford, May 30, 1820
- IV Recollection of the Portrait of King Henry the Eighth, Trinity Lodge, Cambridge
- V On the Death of His Majesty (George the Third)
- VI June, 1820
- VII A Parsonage in Oxfordshire
- VIII Composed among the Ruins of a Castle in North Wales
- IX To the Lady E. B. and the Hon. Miss P.
- X To the Torrent at the Devil's Bridge, North Wales, 1824
- XI In the Woods of Rydal
- XII When Philoctetes in the Lemnian isle
- XIII While Anna's peers and early playmates tread
- XIV To the Cuckoo
- XV To –––
- XVI The Infant M––– M–––
- XVII To –––, in her Seventieth Year
- XVIII To Rotha Q–––
- XIX A Gravestone upon the Floor in the Cloisters of Worcester Cathedral
- XX Roman Antiquities Discovered at Bishopstone, Herefordshire
- XXI 1830
- XXII A Tradition of Oker Hill in Darley Dale, Derbyshire
- XXIII Filial Piety
- XXIV To the Author's Portrait
- XXV Why art thou silent! Is thy love a plant
- XXVI To B. R. Haydon, on seeing his Picture of Napoleon Buonaparte on the Island of St. Helena
- XXVII A Poet!––He hath put his heart to school
- XXVIII The most alluring clouds that mount the sky
- XXIX On a Portrait of the Duke of Wellington upon the Field of Waterloo, by Haydon
- XXX Composed on a May Morning, 1838
- XXXI Lo! where she stands fixed in a saint-like trance
- XXXII To a Painter
- XXXIII On the Same Subject
- XXXIV Hark! 'tis the Thrush, undaunted, undeprest
- XXXV Tis He whose yester-evening's high disdain
- XXXVI Oh what a Wreck! How changed in mien and speech!
- XXXVII Intent on gathering wool from hedge and brake
- XXXVIII A Plea for Authors, May 1838
- XXXIX Valedictory Sonnet
- XL To the Rev. Christopher Wordsworth, D. D., Master of Harrow School
- XLI To the Planet Venus
- XLII Wansfell! this Household has a favoured lot
- XLIII While beams of orient light shoot wide and high
- XLIV In my mind's eye a Temple, like a cloud
- XLV On the Projected Kendal and Windermere Railway
- XLVI Proud were ye, Mountains, when, in times of old
- XLVII At Furness Abbey
- XLVIII At Furness Abbey
- Close section
Part I
- Ode: Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood
- Pelayo
- A plain Youth, Lady, and a simple Lover (co-author)
- Close section
Poems Composed or Suggested During a Tour, in the Summer of 1833
- I Adieu, Rydalian Laurels! that have grown
- II Why should the Enthusiast, journeying through this Isle
- III They called thee Merry England, in old time
- IV To the River Greta, near Keswick
- V To the River Derwent
- VI In Sight of the Town of Cockermouth
- VII Address from the Spirit of Cockermouth Castle
- VIII Nun's Well, Brigham
- IX To a Friend: On the Banks of the Derwent
- X Mary Queen of Scots: Landing at the Mouth of the Derwent, Workington
- XI Stanzas suggested in a Steamboat off Saint Bees' Heads, on the Coast of Cumberland
- XII In the Channel, between the Coast of Cumberland and the Isle of Man
- XIII At Sea off the Isle of Man
- XIV Desire we past illusions to recal?
- XV On entering Douglas Bay, Isle of Man
- XVI By the Sea-shore, Isle of Man
- XVII Isle of Man
- XVIII Isle of Man
- XIX By a retired Mariner: (A Friend of the Author.)
- XX At Bala-Sala, Isle of Man: (Supposed to be written by a friend.)
- XXI Tynwald Hill
- XXII Despond who will––I heard a voice exclaim
- XXIII In the Frith of Clyde, Ailsa Crag: (during an Eclipse of the Sun, July 17)
- XXIV On the Frith of Clyde: (In a Steamboat)
- XXV On revisiting Dunolly Castle
- XXVI The Dunolly Eagle
- XXVII Written in a Blank Leaf of MacPherson's Ossian
- XXVIII Cave of Staffa
- XXIX Cave of Staffa: (After the Crowd had departed)
- XXX Cave of Staffa
- XXXI Flowers on the Top of the Pillars at the Entrance of the Cave
- XXXII Iona
- XXXIII Iona: (Upon Landing)
- XXXIV The Black Stones of Iona
- XXXV Homeward we turn. Isle of Columba's Cell
- XXXVI Greenock: per me si va nella Città dolente
- XXXVII "There!" said a Stripling, pointing with meet pride
- XXXVIII The River Eden, Cumberland
- XXXIX Monument of Mrs. Howard: (by Nollekens), in Wetheral Church, near Corby, on the Banks of the Eden
- XL Suggested by the foregoing
- XLI Nunnery
- XLII Steamboats, Viaducts, and Railways
- XLIII The Monument commonly called Long Meg and her Daughters, near the River Eden
- XLIV Lowther
- XLV To the earl of Lonsdale. : "Magistratus indicat virum"
- XLVI The Somnambulist
- XLVII To Cordelia M––: Hallsteads, Ullswater
- XLVIII Most sweet it is with unuplifted eyes
- Close section
Poems Dedicated to National Independence and Liberty
- Close section
Part I
- I Composed by the Sea-side, near Calais, August, 1802
- II Calais, August, 1802
- III Composed near Calais, on the Road leading to Ardres, August 7, 1802
- IV 1801
- V Calais, August 15, 1802
- VI On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic
- VII The King of Weden
- VIII To Toussaint l'Ouverture
- IX September 1, 1802
- X Composed in the Valley near Dover, on the Day of Landing
- XI September, 1802. Near Dover
- XII Thought of a Briton on the Subjugation of Switzerland
- XIII Written in London, September, 1802
- XIV London, 1802
- XV Great men have been among us; hands that penned
- XVI It is not to be thought of that the Flood
- XVII When I have borne in memory what has tamed
- XVIII October, 1803
- XIX There is bondage worse, far worse, to bear
- XX October, 1803
- XXI England! The time is come when thou should'st wean
- XXII October, 1803
- XXIII To the Men of Kent. October, 1803
- XXIV What if our numbers barely could defy
- XXV Lines on the Expected Invasion 1803
- XXVI Anticipation. October, 1803
- XXVII November, 1806
- XXVIII Ode
- Close section
Part II
- I On a Celebrated Event in Ancient History
- II Upon the same Event
- III To Thomas Clarkson, on the final Passing of the Bill for the Abolition of the Slave Trade. March, 1807
- IV A Prophecy. February, 1807
- V Composed by the Side of Grasmere Lake
- VI Go back to antique ages, if thine eyes
- VII Composed while the Author was engaged in writing a Tract occasioned by the Convention of Cintra
- VIII Composed at the same Time and on the same Occasion
- IX Hofer
- X Advance––come forth from thy Tyrolean ground
- XI Feelings of the Tyrolese
- XII Alas! what boots the long laborious quest
- XIII And is it among rude untutored Dales
- XIV O'er the wide earth, on mountain and on plain
- XV On the Final Submission of the Tyrolese
- XVI Hail, Zaragoza! If with unwet eye
- XVII Say, what is Honour?––'Tis the finest sense
- XVIII The martial courage of a day is vain
- XIX Brave Schill! by death delivered, take thy flight
- XX Call not the royal Swede unfortunate
- XXI Look now on that Adventurer who hath paid
- XXII Is there a power that can sustain and cheer
- XXIII 1810
- XXIV In due observance of an ancient rite
- XXV Feelings of a noble Biscayan at one of those Funerals. 1810
- XXVI The Oak of Guernica. Supposed Address to the same. 1810
- XXVII Indignation of a High-minded Spaniard. 1810
- XXVIII Avaunt all specious pliancy of mind
- XXIX 1810
- XXX The French and the Spanish Guerillas
- XXXI Spanish Guerillas. 1811
- XXXII 1811
- XXXIII 1811
- XXXIV The French Army in Russia. 1812–13
- XXXV On the same Occasion
- XXXVI By Moscow self-devoted to a blaze
- XXXVII The Germans on the Heights of Hochheim
- XXXVIII November, 1813
- XXXIX Ode. 1814
- XL Feelings of a French Royalist, on the Disinterment of the Remains of the Duke d'Enghien
- XLI Occasioned by the Battle of Waterloo, February, 1816
- XLII Siege of Vienna raised by John Sobieski, February, 1816
- XLIII Occasioned by the Battle of Waterloo
- XLIV Emperors and Kings, how oft have temples rung
- XLV Ode. 1815
- XLVI Ode. The Morning of the Day appointed for a General Thanksgiving, January 18, 1816
- Close section
Part I
- Close section
Poems either never printed by Wordsworth or not included in the Edition 1849–50
- I From the Alfoxden Notebook
- II Chaucer Modernised. The Manciple (co-author)
- III Fragments from MS. M
- IV The Tinker
- V Translation of Ariosto
- VI Translations from Metastasio
- Close section VII Translations from Michelangelo
- VIII Come, Gentle Sleep
- IX Translation of the Sestet of a Sonnet by Tasso
- X Inscription for the Moss-hut at Dove Cottage
- XI Distressful Gift!
- XII On seeing some Tourists of the Lakes pass by reading
- XIII The Orchard Pathway
- XIV St. Paul's
- XV George and Sarah Green
- XVI Translation of Chiabrera's Epitaph on Tasso
- XVII The Scottish Broom
- XVIII Placard for a Poll bearing an old Shirt
- XIX Two Epigrams on Byron's Cain
- XX Epitaph
- XXI In the first Page of an Album by one whose Handwriting is wretchedly bad
- XXII Prithee, gentle Lady, list
- XXIII The Lady whom you here behold
- XXIV Composed when a Probability existed of our being obliged to quite Rydal Mount as Residence
- XXV Written in Mrs. Field's Album
- XXVI Written in the Strangers' Book at "The Station," opposite Bowness
- XXVII To the Utilitarians
- XXVIII Epigram
- XXIX [A Squib on Colonel Evans]
- XXX Inscription on a Rock at Rydal Mount
- XXXI Let more ambitious Poets
- XXXII With a small Present
- XXXIII Though Pulpits and the Desk may fail
- XXXIV The Eagle and the Dove
- XXXV Lines inscribed in a Copy of his Poems sent to the Queen for the Royal Library at Windsor
- XXXVI Ode on the Installation of His Royal Highness Prince Albert as Chancellor of the University of Cambridge, July, 1847
- Close section
Poems Founded on the Affections
- I The Brothers
- II Artegal and Elidure
- III To a Butterfly
- IV A Farewell
- V Stanzas Written in my Pocket-Copy of Thomson's "Castle of Indolence"
- VI Louisa. After Accompanying Her on a Mountain Excursion
- VII Strange fits of passion have I known
- VIII She dwelt among the untrodden ways
- IX I travelled among unknown men
- X Ere with cold beads of midnight dew
- XI To --------
- XII The Forsaken
- XIII Tis said, that some have died for love
- XIV A Complaint
- XV To --------
- XVI Yes! thou art fair, but be not moved
- XVII How rich that forehead's calm expanse!
- XVIII What heavenly smiles! O Lady mine
- XIX To --------
- XX Lament of Mary Queen of Scots on the Eve of a New Year
- XXI The Complaint of a Forsaken Indian Woman
- XXII The Last of the Flock
- XXIII Repentance. A Pastoral Ballad
- XXIV The Affliction of Margaret --------
- XXV The Cottager to Her Infant
- XXVI Maternal Grief
- XXVII The Sailor's Mother
- XXVIII The Childless Father
- XXIX The Emigrant Mother
- XXX Vaudracour and Julia
- XXXI The Idiot Boy
- XXXII Michael. A Pastoral Poem
- XXXIII The Widow on Windermere Side
- XXXIV The Armenian Lady's Love
- XXXV Loving and Liking. Irregular Verses, Addressed to a Child
- XXXVI Farewell Lines
- XXXVII The Redbreast. Suggested in a Westmoreland Cottage
- XXXVIII Her eyes are wild
- Close section
Poems of Sentiment and Reflection
- I Expostulation and Reply
- II The Tables Turned: an Evening Scene on the same Subject
- III Lines written in early Spring
- IV A Character
- V To my Sister
- VI Simon Lee: The Old Huntsman, with an Incident in which he was concerned
- VII Written in Germany: on one of the coldest Days of the Century
- VIII A Poet's Epitaph
- IX To the Daisy
- X Matthew
- XI The two April Mornings
- XII The Fountain: a Conversation
- XIII Personal Talk
- XIV Illustrated Books and Newspapers
- XV To the Spade of a Friend (An Agriculturalist).: Composed while we were labouring together in his Pleasure-ground
- XVI A Night Thought
- XVII Incident: characteristic of a favourite Dog
- XVIII Tribute to the Memory of the same Dog
- XIX Fidelity
- XX Ode to Duty
- XXI Character of the Happy Warrior
- XXII The Force of Prayer: or, the Founding of Bolton Priory: a Tradition
- XXIII A Fact, and an Imagination;: or, Canute and Alfred, on the Sea-shore
- XXIV "A little onward lend thy guiding hand"
- XXV Ode to Lycoris.: May, 1817
- XXVI To the same
- XXVII September, 1819
- XXVIII Upon the same Occasion
- XXIX Memory
- XXX This Lawn, a carpet all alive
- XXXI Humanity
- XXXII The unremitting voice of nightly streams
- XXXIII Thoughts on the Seasons
- XXXIV To ––– : upon the Birth of her First-born Child, March, 1833
- XXXV The Warning: a Sequel to the foregoing
- XXXVI If this great world of joy and pain
- XXXVII The Labourer's Noon-day Hymn
- XXXVIII Ode: composed on May Morning
- XXXIX To May
- XL Lines suggested by a Portrait from the Pencil of F. Stone
- XLI The foregoing Subject resumed
- XLII So fair, so sweet, withal so sensitive
- XLIII Upon seeing a coloured Drawing of the Bird of Paradise in an Album
- Close section
Poems of the Fancy
- I A Morning Exercise
- II A Flower Garden, at Coleorton Hall, Leicestershire
- III A whirl-blast from behind the hill
- IV The Waterfall and the Eglantine
- V The Oak and the Broom. A Pastoral
- VI To a Sexton
- VII To the Daisy
- VIII To the Same Flower
- IX The Green Linnet
- X To a Sky-Lark
- XI To the Small Celandine
- XII To the Same Flower
- XIII The Seven Sisters; or, The Solitude of Binnorie
- XIV Who fancied what a pretty sight
- XV The Redbreast Chasing the Butterfly
- XVI Song For the Spinning Wheel. Founded Upon a Brief Prevalent Among the Pastoral Vales of Westmoreland
- XVII Hint From the Mountains For Certain Political Pretenders
- XVIII On Seeing a Needlecase in the Form of a Harp
- XIX To a Lady, in Answer to a Request That I would Write Her a Poem Upon Some Drawings That She Had Made of Flowers in the Island of Madeira
- XX Glad sight wherever new with old
- XXI The Contrast. The Parrot and the Wren
- XXII The Danish Boy. A Fragment
- XXIII Song For the Wandering Jew
- XXIV Stray Pleasures
- XXV The Pilgrims Dream; or, The Star and the Glow Worm
- XXVI The Poet and the Caged Turtledove
- XXVII A Wren's Nest
- XXVIII Love Lies Bleeding
- XXIX Companion to the Foregoing
- XXX Rural Illusions
- XXXI The Kitten and Falling Leaves
- XXXII Address to my Infant Daughter, Dora, On Being Reminded That She was a Month Old That Day, September 16
- XXXIII The Waggoner
- Close section
Poems of the Imagination
- I There Was a Boy
- II To the Cuckoo
- III A Night-Piece
- IV Airey-Force Valley
- V Yew-Trees
- VI Nutting
- VII The Simplon Pass
- VIII She was a phantom of delight
- IX O Nightingale!
- X Three years she grew in sun and shower
- XI A slumber did my spirit steal
- XII I wandered lonely as a cloud
- XIII The Reverie of Poor Susan
- XIV Power of Music
- XV Star-Gazers
- XVI Written in March, While Resting on the Bridge at the Foot of Brother's Water
- XVII Lyre! though such power do in thy magic live
- XVIII Beggars
- XIX Sequel to the Foregoing, Composed Many Years After
- XX Gipsies
- XXI Ruth
- XXII Resolution and Independence
- XXIII The Thorn
- XXIV Hart-Leap Well
- XXV Song at the Feast of Brougham Castle Upon the Restoration of Lord Clifford, the Shepherd, to the Estates and Honours of His Ancestors
- XXVI Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey, on Revisiting the Banks of the Wye During a Tour. July 13, 1798
- XXVII It is no Spirit who from heaven hath flown
- XXVIII French Revolution, as it Appeared to Enthusiasts at its Commencement. Reprinted From "The Friend"
- XXIX Yes, it was the mountain Echo
- XXX To a Skylark
- XXXI Laodamia
- XXXII Dion
- XXXIII The Pass of Kirkstone
- XXXIV To Enterprise
- XXXV To ––– On Her First Ascent to the Summit of Helvellyn
- XXXVI To a Young Lady, Who had been Reproached for Taking Long Walks in the Country
- XXXVII Water Fowl
- XXXVIII View From the Top of Back Comb
- XXXIX The Haunted Tree. To –––
- XL The Triad
- XLI The Wishing-Gate
- XLII The Wishing-Gate Destroyed
- XLIII The Primrose of the Rock
- XLIV Presentiments
- XLV Vernal Ode
- XLVI Devotional Incitements
- XLVII The Cuckoo- Clock
- XLVIII To the Clouds
- XLIX Suggested by a Picture of the Bird of Paradise
- L A Jewish Family
- LI On the Power of Sound
- LII Peter Bell. A Tale
- Close section Poems on the Naming of Places
- Close section
Poems Referring to a Period of Childhood
- I My heart leaps up when I behold
- II To a Butterfly
- III The Sparrow's Nest
- IV Foresight
- V Characteristics of a Child Three Years Old
- VI Address to a Child, During a Boisterous Winter Evening
- VII The Mother's Return
- VIII Alice Fell; or, Poverty
- IX Lucy Gray; or, Solitude
- X We Are Seven
- XI The Idle Shepherd-Boys; or, Dungeon-Ghyll Force. A Pastoral
- XII Anecdote for Fathers
- XIII Rural Architecture
- XIV The Pet-Lamb. A Pastoral
- XV To H.C. Six Years Old
- XVI Influence of Natural Objects in Calling Forth and Strengthening the Imagination in Boyhood and Early Youth
- XVII The Longest Day, Addressed to my Daughter, Dora
- XVIII The Norman Boy
- XIX The Poet's Dream. Sequel to 'The Norman Boy'
- XX The Westmoreland Girl
- Close section Poems Referring to the Period of Old Age
- Close section
Poems Written in Youth
- I Extract from the Conclusion of a Poem Composed in Anticipation of Leaving School
- II Written in Very Early Youth
- III An Evening Walk. Addressed to a Young Lady
- IV Lines Written Whilst Sailing in a Boat at Evening
- V Remembrance of Collins, Composed Upon the Thames Near Richmond
- VI Descriptive Sketches Taken During a Pedestrian Tour Among the Alps
- VII Lines Left upon a Seat in a Yew-Tree, which stands near the lake of Esthwaite, on a desolate part of the shore, commanding a beautiful prospect
- VIII Guilt and Sorrow; or Incidents Upon Salisbury Plain
- The Borderers. A Tragedy
- The Prelude
- The Recluse, Part I, Book I
- Close section
The River Duddon. A Series of Sonnets
- To the Rev. Dr. Wordsworth (with the Sonnets to the River Duddon, and other Poems in this Collection), 1820
- I Not envying Latian shades––if yet they throw
- II Child of the clouds! Remote from every taint
- III How shall I paint thee?––Be this naked stone
- IV Take, cradled Nursling of the mountain, take
- V Sole listener, Duddon! To the breeze that played
- VI Flowers
- VII "Change me, some God, into that breathing rose!"
- VIII What aspect bore the Man who roved or fled
- IX The Stepping-stones
- X The same subject
- XI The Faery Chasm
- XII Hints for the Fancy
- XIII Open Prospect
- XIV O mountain Stream! the Shepherd and his Cot
- XV From this deep chasm, where quivering sunbeams play
- XVI American Tradition
- XVII Return
- XVIII Seathwaite Chapel
- XIX Tributary Stream
- XX The Plain Donnerdale
- XXI Whence that low voice?––A whisper from the heart
- XXII Tradition
- XXIII Sheep-washing
- XXIV The Resting-place
- XXV Methinks 'twere no unprecedented feat
- XXVI Return, Content! for fondly I pursued
- XXVII Fallen, and diffused into a shapeless heap
- XXVIII Journey Renewed
- XXIX No record tells of lance opposed to lance
- XXX Who swerves from innocence, who makes divorce
- XXXI The Kirk of Ulpha to the pilgrim's eye
- XXXII Not hurled precipitous from steep to steep
- XXXIII Conclusion
- XXXIV After-thought
- Close section Selections from Chaucer: Modernised
- Close section
Sonnets Dedicated to Liberty and Order
- I Composed after reading a Newspaper of the Day
- II Upon the late General Fast. March, 1832
- III Said Secrecy to Cowardice and Fraud
- IV Blest Statesman He, whose Mind's unselfish will
- V In Allusion to various recent Histories and Notices of the French Revolution
- VI Continued
- VII Concluded
- VIII Men of the Western World! In Fate's dark book
- IX To the Pennsylvanians
- X At Bologna, in Remembrance of the late Insurrections, 1837
- XI Continued
- XII Concluded
- XIII Young England––what is then become of Old
- XIV Feel for the wrongs to universal ken
- Close section
Sonnets Upon the Punishment of Death: In Series
- I Suggested by the View of Lancaster Castle (on the Road from the South)
- II Tenderly do we feel by Nature's law
- III The Roman Consul doomed his sons to die
- IV Is Death, when evil against good has fought
- V Not to the object specially designed
- VI Ye brood of conscience––Spectres! that frequent
- VII Before the world had past her time of youth
- VIII Fit retribution, by the moral code
- IX Though to give timely warning and deter
- X Our bodily life, some plead, that life the shrine
- XI Ah, think how one compelled for life to abide
- XII See the Condemned alone within his cell
- XIII Conclusion
- XIV Apology
- Close section
Sonnets, etc, not Included in the Edition of 1849–50; Some of them hitherto Unpublished
- I I find it written of Simonides
- II From the Italian of Michael Angelo
- III On Milton
- IV Through Cumbrian Wilds
- V Author's Voyage down the Rhine (Thirty Years ago)
- VI The Modern Athens
- VII A Poet to his Grandchild. Sequel to 'A Plea for Authors'
- VIII Protest against the Ballot (1838)
- IX On a Portrait of I. F. painted by Margaret Gillies
- X To I. F.
- XI [On a Portrait of I. F. ?]
- XII When Severn's sweeping flood had overthrown
- XIII Assigned to Wordsworth. Written in a Grotto
- XIV Just Vengeance claims thy Soul for Rights invaded
- XV Sonnet to a Picture by Luca Giordano
- IV [The Glow Worm]
- Translations of Virgil's Æneid
- The Tuft of Primroses
- The White Doe of Rylstone; or, The Fate of the Nortons
- Close section
Yarrow Revisited, and Other Poems
- I Yarrow Revisited
- II On the Departure of Sir Walter Scott from Abbotsford, for Naples
- III A Place of Burial in the South of Scotland
- IV On the Sight of a Manse in the South of Scotland
- V Composed in Roslin Chapel, during a Storm
- VI The Trosachs
- VII The pibroch's note, discountenanced or mute
- VIII Composed in the Glen of Loch Etive
- IX Eagles
- X In the Sound of Mull
- XI Suggested at Tyndrum in a Storm
- XII The Earl of Breadalbane's ruined Mansion, and Family Burial-place, near Killin
- XIII "Rest and be Thankful." At the Head of Glencroe
- XIV Highland Hut
- XV The Highland Broach
- XVI The Brownie
- XVII To the Planet Venus, an Evening Star
- XVIII Bothwell Castle
- XIX Picture of Daniel in the Lions' Den, at Hamilton Palace
- XX The Avon
- XXI Suggested by a View from an Eminence in Inglewood Forest
- XXII Hart's-horn Tree, near Penrith
- XXIII Fancy and Tradition
- XXIV Countess' Pillar
- XXV Roman Antiquities
- XXVI Apology
Letters
- Close section
The Letters of William and Dorothy Wordsworth The Early Years
(co-author)
- Close section 1790 (co-author)
- Close section 1791 (co-author)
- Close section 1792 (co-author)
- Close section 1794 (co-author)
- Close section 1795 (co-author)
- Close section 1796 (co-author)
- Close section 1797 (co-author)
- Close section
1798
(co-author)
- 82. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 84. W. W. to James Webbe Tobin
- 85. W. W. to James Losh
- 87. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 89. W. W. to R. W.
- 90. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 91. D. W. And W. W. to R. W. (co-author)
- 92. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 96. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 98. W. W. to Joseph Johnson
- 100. W. W. to Thomas Poole
- 101. W. W. to Henry Gardiner
- 103. W. W. And D. W. to S. T. Coleridge (co-author)
- 104. W. W. to S. T. Coleridge
- 105. W. W. And D. W.2 to S. T. Coleridge (co-author)
- Close section
1799
(co-author)
- 108. W. W. And D. W. to R. W. (co-author)
- 109. W. W. to Josiah Wedgwood
- 110. D. W. And W. W. to S. T. Coleridge (co-author)
- 111. W. W. to R. W.
- 112. W. W. to Josiah Wedgwood
- 113. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 114. W. W. And D. W. to R. W. (co-author)
- 115. W. W. to Josiah Wedgwood
- 116. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 117. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 119. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 120. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 121. W. W. And D. W. to R. W. (co-author)
- 122. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 124. W. W. to D. W.
- 126. W. W. And D. W. to S. T. Coleridge (co-author)
- Close section
1800
(co-author)
- 128. W. W. to R. W.
- 130. W. W. to D. W.
- 131. W. W. to R. W.
- 132. W. W. to Josiah Wedgwood
- 133. W. W. to Messrs. Biggs And Cottle
- 134. W. W. to Messrs. Biggs And Cottle
- 135. W. W. to Humphry Davy1
- 136. W. W. to Messrs. Biggs And Cottle
- 137. W. W. to Messrs. Biggs And Cottle
- 138. W. W. to Messrs. Biggs And Cottle
- 139. W. W. to Messrs. Biggs And Cottle
- 141. W. W. to Messrs. Biggs And Cottle
- 142. W. W. to Messrs. Biggs And Cottle
- 143. W. W. to Messrs. Biggs And Cottle
- 144. W. W. to Messrs. Biggs And Cottle
- 145. W. W. to Messrs. Biggs And Cottle
- 146. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 147. W. W. to Messrs. Biggs And Cottle
- 148. W. W. to Messrs. Biggs And Cottle
- 149. W. W. to Messrs. Biggs And Cottle
- 150. W. W. to Messrs. Longman And Rees
- 151. W. W. to Nathaniel Biggs
- Close section
1801
(co-author)
- 152. W. W. to Charles James Fox
- 153. W. W. to Charles Lamb
- 154. W. W. to The Revd. Francis Wrangham
- 155. D. W. And W. W. to Sara Hutchinson (co-author)
- 156. W. W. to Messrs. Longman And Rees
- 157. W. W. to Thomas Poole
- 158. W. W. to John Taylor
- 159. W. W. to Anne Taylor
- 160. D. W. And W. W. to Mary Hutchinson (co-author)
- 161. W. W. And D. W. to S. T. Coleridge (co-author)
- 162. W. W. And D. W. to R. W. (co-author)
- 163. W. W. to Thomas Poole
- 164. W. W. to R. W.
- 165. W. W. to Daniel Stuart
- Close section 1802 (co-author)
- Close section 1803 (co-author)
- Close section
1804
(co-author)
- 200 A. W. W. to John Thelwall
- 201. W. W. to Francis Wrangham
- 206. W. W. to William Hazlitt
- 207. D. W. And W. W. to S. T. Coleridge (co-author)
- 208. W. W. to Thomas De Quincey
- 209. W. W. to William Sotheby
- 210. W. W. to Thomas De Quincey
- 212. D. W. And W. W. to S. T. Coleridge (co-author)
- 214. W. W. to Richard Sharp
- 220. W. W. to Walter Scott
- 224. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 227. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 228. W. W. to R. W.
- 230. W. W. And D. W. to R. W. (co-author)
- 234. W. W. to Richard Sharp
- 236. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 238. W. W. And D. W. to J. W. And R. W. (co-author)
- Close section
1805
(co-author)
- 241. W. W. to Walter Scott
- 242. W. W. to Richard Sharp
- 244. W. W. to R. W.
- 245. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 246. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 247. W. W. to C. W.
- 248. W. W. to Thomas Clarkson
- 249. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 252. D. W. And W. W. to R. W. (co-author)
- 253. W. W. to Walter Scott
- 254. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 256. W. W. to James Losh
- 259. W. W. to R. W.
- 260. W. W. to Richard Sharp
- 264. W. W. to Thomas Evans
- 266. W. W. to R. W.
- 268. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 270. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 274. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 276. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 277. W. W. And D. W. to Lady Beaumont (co-author)
- 279. W. W. And D. W. to R. W. (co-author)
- 281. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 285. W. W. to Walter Scott
- 286. W. W. And D. W. to R. W. (co-author)
- 291. W. W. And D. W. to R. W. (co-author)
- Close section
The Letters of William and Dorothy Wordsworth The Middle Years
(co-author)
- Close section
1806
(co-author)
- 5. W. W. To. Sir George Beaumont
- 8. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 10. D.W. to Catherine Clarkson (with P.S. by W. W.) (co-author)
- 11. W. W. to Thomas Wilkinson
- 13. W. W. to Catherine Clarkson
- 15. W. W. to Thomas De Quincey
- 16. W. W. to Thomas Hutchinson
- 18. W. W. to Mrs. Cookson
- 21. W. W. to Lady Beaumont
- 22. W. W. to Thomas De Quincey
- 24. W. W. to Walter Scott
- 25. W. W. to C. W.
- 30. W. W. to Walter Scott
- 34. W. W. to Basil Montagu (With Postscript By D. W.)
- 35. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 37. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 40. W. W. to Walter Scott
- 41. W. W. to Lord Lowther
- 42. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 43. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 44. W. W.To S. T. Coleridge
- 45. W. W. to Josiah Wade
- 46. W. W. to J. F. Tuffin
- 49. W. W. to Francis Wrangham
- 50. W. W. to S.T. Coleridge
- 52. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 53. W. W. to Walter Scott
- 56. W. W. to Thomas Wilkinson
- 59. W. W. to Lady Beaumont
- Close section
1807
(co-author)
- 61. W. W. to Walter Scott
- 64. W. W. to Lady Beaumont
- 65. W. W. to R. W.
- 68. W. W. to Walter Scott
- 69. W. W. to R. W.
- 72. W. W. to Thomas De Quincey
- 73. W. W. to J. G. Crump (Fragment)
- 74. W. W. to Thomas De Quincey
- 75. W. W. to Lady Beaumont
- 76. W. W. to R. W.
- 79. W. W. to Francis Wrangham
- 82.* W. W. to Robert Southey
- 84. W. W. to Walter Scott
- 88. W. W. to Francis Wrangham
- 89. W. W. to R. W.
- Close section
1808
(co-author)
- 94. W. W. to Walter Scott
- 96. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 103. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 104. W. W. to Richard Sharp
- 105. W. W. to Francis Wrangham
- 107. W. W. to S. T. Coleridge
- 110. W. W. to Richard Sharp
- 114. W. W. to Walter Scott
- 115. W. W. to S. T. Coleridge
- 116. W. W. to Francis Wrangham
- 118. W. W. to Lady Holland
- 121. W. W. to Thomas Wilkinson
- 123. W. W. to Walter Scott
- 124. W. W. to Richard Sharp
- 125. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 126. W. W. to Francis Wrangham
- 127. W. W. to Revd. J. Pering
- 128. W. W. to Thomas De Quincey
- 130. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 131. W. W. to Robert Grahame
- 132. W. W. to Walter Scott
- 133. W. W. to Francis Wrangham
- 136. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- Close section
1809
(co-author)
- 137. W. W. to Daniel Stuart
- 141. W. W. to Thomas De Quincey (With Postscript By D. W.)
- 142. W. W. to Daniel Stuart
- 143. W. W. to Thomas De Quincey (With Postscript By D. W.)
- 144. W. W. to Thomas De Quincey
- 145. W. W. to Thomas De Quincey
- 146. W. W. to Thomas Poole
- 147. W. W. to Francis Wrangham
- 149. W. W. to R. W.
- 150. W. W. to Thomas De Quincey
- 152. W. W. to Daniel Stuart
- 155. W. W. to Daniel Stuart
- 156. W. W. And S. H. to Thomas De Quincey (co-author)
- 157. W. W. to S. T. Coleridge
- 159. W. W. to Thomas De Quincey
- 160. W. W. and S.H. to Thomas De Quincey (co-author)
- 161. W. W. to Daniel Stuart
- 162. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 163. W. W. And M. W. to Thomas De Quincey (co-author)
- 164. W. W. to Daniel Stuart
- 165. W. W. to Thomas Poole
- 166. W. W. to Daniel Stuart
- 168. W. W. to Daniel Stuart
- 170. W. W. to Thomas Wilkinson
- Close section 1810 (co-author)
- Close section
1811
(co-author)
- 218. W. W. to William Godwin
- 219. W. W. to John Edwards
- 220. W. W. to Francis Wrangham
- 221. W. W. to Captain Pasley, Royal Engineers
- 222. W. W. to Richard Sharp
- 227. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 228. W. W. And M. W. to Sara Hutchinson (co-author)
- 230. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 231. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 232. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 233. W. W. to Lady Beaumont
- Close section
1812
(co-author)
- 236. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 238. W. W. to Francis Wrangham
- 239. W. W. to J. F. Tuffin
- 241. W. W. to Catherine Clarkson
- 242. W. W. to H.C.R.
- 244. W. W. to Captain Charles Pasley
- 245. W. W. to Catherine Clarkson
- 246. W. W. to Thomas Monkhouse
- 248. W. W. to Catherine Clarkson
- 249. W. W. to Catherine Clarkson
- 250. W. W. to C. W.
- 251. W. W. to Thomas De Quincey
- 258. W. W. to R. W.
- 260. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 262 W. W. to Daniel Stuart
- 265. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 266. W. W. to Thomas De Quincey
- 267. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 268. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 269. W. W. to Daniel Stuart
- 270. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 271. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- Close section
1813
(co-author)
- 274. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 276. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 278. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 282. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 285. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 288. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 288A. W. W. to R. W.
- 289. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 291. W. W. to Richard Addison
- 294. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 295. W. W. to Robert Blakeney
- 296. W. W. to George Thompson
- 297. W. W. to Mr White
- 298. W. W. to George Thompson
- 298A. W. W. to R. W.
- 300. W. W. to R. W.
- 301. W. W. to Robert Blakeney
- 302. W. W.To R. W.
- 303. W. W. to Francis Wrangham
- 305A. W. W. to Messrs Wordsworth And Addison
- 306. W. W. And M. W. to Sara Hutchinson (co-author)
- 309. W. W. to The Commissioners Of Stamps
- Close section
1814
(co-author)
- 310. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 313. W. W. to Richard Sharp
- 315. W. W. to Robert Blakeney
- 316. W. W. to R. W.
- 319. W. W. to Francis Wrangham
- 320. W. W. to Thomas Poole
- 321. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 322. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 323. W. W. to R. W.
- 324. W. W. to Francis Wrangham
- 325. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 326. W. W. to Dr. Robert Anderson
- 328. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 329. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 330A. W. W. to R. W.
- 331. W. W. to Thomas De Quincey
- 333. W. W. to Robert Pearce Gillies
- 334. W. W. to R. P. Gillies
- 335. W. W. to C. W.
- 335A. W. W. to D. W.
- 336. W. W. to Sara Hutchinson
- 337. W. W. to Sara Hutchinson
- 338. W. W. to R. W.
- 339. W. W. to R. P. Gillies
- 341. W. W. And D. W. to Catherine Clarkson (co-author)
- Close section
1815
(co-author)
- 342. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 343. W. W. to Catherine Clarkson
- 344. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 345. W. W. to Dr. Anderson
- 346. W. W. to Thomas De Quincey
- 347. W. W. to Leigh Hunt
- 348. W. W. to R. P. Gillies
- 349. W. W. to Daniel Stuart
- 352. W. W. to Thomas Poole
- 354. W. W. to Miss M. Malcolm
- 355. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 356. W. W. to Colonel Pasley
- 357. D. W. And W. W. to Sara Hutchinson (co-author)
- 361. W. W. to R. P. Gillies
- 362. M. W., W. W., And D. W. to Sara Hutchinson (co-author)
- 363. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 364. W. W. to John Taylor Coleridge
- 365. W. W. to Messrs. Longman & Co.
- 366. W. W. to John Scott
- 367. W. W. to S. T. Coleridge
- 368. W. W. to Sir Walter Scott
- 371. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 372. W. W. to B. R. Haydon
- 373. W. W. to C. W.
- 375. W. W. to Robert Lumb
- 376. W. W. to Catherine Clarkson
- 377. W. W. to B. R. Haydon
- 380. W. W. to Robert Southey
- Close section
1816
(co-author)
- 381. W. W. to Bernard Barton
- 382. W. W. to C. W. (With Postscript By D. W.)
- 383. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 384. W. W. to Francis Wrangham
- 385. W. W. to John Scott
- 386. W. W. to C.W.
- 387. W. W. to John Scott
- 388. W. W. to John Scott
- 389. W. W. to John Scott
- 390. W. W. to C. W.
- 392. W. W. to John Britton
- 393. W. W. to John Scott
- 394. W. W. to C. W.
- 396. W. W. to R. P. Gillies
- 397. W. W. to R. P. Gillies
- 398. W. W. to John Scott
- 399. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 400. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 401. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 402. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 403. W. W. to C. W.
- 404. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 405. W. W. to John Scott
- 407. W. W. to C. W.
- 408. W. W. to C. W.
- 409. W. W. to C. W.
- 411. W. W. to C. W.
- 412. W. W. to John Scott
- 413. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 414. W. W. to ?R. Addison
- 417. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 418. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 419. W. W. to The Revd. W. Carr
- 420. W. W. to B. R. Haydon
- 421. W. W. to Thomas Hutton
- 422. W. W. to J. Britton
- 423. W. W. to Thomas Hutton
- 424. W. W. to Thomas Hutton
- 425. W. W. to Messrs. Longman & Co.
- 426. W. W. to R. P. Gillies
- 427. W. W. to Thomas Hutton
- 428. W. W. to J. H. Reynolds
- 429. W. W. to Thomas Hutton
- 430. W. W. to Thomas Hutton
- 431. W. W. to Thomas Hutton
- 432. W. W. to Thomas Clarkson
- Close section
1817
(co-author)
- 434. W. W. to Henry Parry
- 435. W. W. to Thomas Hutton
- 436. W. W. to B. R. Haydon
- 437. W. W. to Thomas Hutton
- 438. W. W. to Thomas Hutton
- 439. W. W. to Thomas Hutton
- 440. W. W. to Thomas Hutton
- 441. W. W. to Thomas H|Utton
- 442. W. W. to Robert Lumb
- 443. W. W. to Thomas Hutton
- 446. W. W. to Daniel Stuart
- 447. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 449. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 450. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 451. W. W. to Isaac Slee
- 452. W. W. to R. P. Gillies
- 453. W. W. to Daniel Stuart
- 454. W. W. to James Irving
- 455. W. W. to ?John May
- 456. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 458. W. W. to Daniel Stuart
- 459. W. W. to R. P. Gillies
- 461. W. W. to Thomas Monkhouse
- 462. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 463. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- Close section
1818
(co-author)
- 464. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 465. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 467. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 468. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 469. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 470. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 471. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 472. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 473. W. W. to J. Kingston
- 474. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 475. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 476. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 477. W. W. to Thomas Monkhouse
- 478. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 479. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 480. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 482. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 483. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 484. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 485. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 487. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 489. W. W. to Daniel Stuart
- 490. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 491. W. W. to Thomas Hutton
- 492. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 493. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 494. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 495. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 496. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 497. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 498. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 499. W. W. to Robert Lumb
- 500. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 501.W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 502.W. W. to John Monkhouse
- 503.W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 504. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 507. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 508. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 509. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 510. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 511. W. W. to William Collins
- 512. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 513. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 515. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 516. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 517. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 519. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 520. W. W. to Washington Allston
- 521. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 522. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 523. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 524. W. W. to Thomas Monkhouse
- 525. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 526. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- Close section
1819
(co-author)
- 527. W. W. to C. W.
- 528.W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 529.W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 531. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 532.W. W. to The Editor Of The Westmorland Gazette
- 533.W. W. to Francis Wrangham
- 534. W. W. to Robert Lumb
- 535. W. W. to John Spedding
- 536. W. W. to Robert Lumb
- 538. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 539. W. W. to Mr White
- 540. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 541. W. W. to J. Forbes Mitchell
- 542. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 543. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 544. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 545. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 546. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 547. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 548. W. W. to Hans Busk
- 549. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 550. W. W. to Henry Parry
- 551. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 553. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 555. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 556. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 557. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 558. W. W. to Walter Scott
- 559. W. W. to John Edwards
- 560. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 561. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 562. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 563. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 564. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 566. W. W. to John Kenyon
- 567. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- Close section
1820
(co-author)
- 568. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 569. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 570. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 571. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 571A. W. W. to Henry Crabb Robinson
- 572. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 573. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 574. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 575. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 576. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 577. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 578. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 579. W. W. to Mrs. Rose Lawrence
- 580. W. W. to Matthew Smith
- 582. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 583. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 584. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 585. W. W. to John Wilson
- 588.W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 593. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 597. W. W. to C. W.
- 598. W. W. to S. T. Coleridge
- 603. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 604. W. W. to John Carter And Sara Hutchinson
- 606. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 607. W. W. to Miss Williams
- 610. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 612. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 613. Willy W. and D.W. to Thomas Monkhouse (co-author)
- 614. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- Close section
1806
(co-author)
- Close section
The Letters of William and Dorothy Wordsworth The Later Years
(co-author)
- Close section
1821
(co-author)
- 2. W. W. to Thomas Myers
- 3. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 5. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 7. W. W. to The Commissioners Of Stamps
- 9. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 11. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 12. W. W. to The Commissioners Of Stamps
- 13. W. W. to John Kenyon
- 14. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 15. W. W. to The Commissioners Of Stamps
- 16. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 17. W. W. to The Commissioners Of Stamps
- 20. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 21. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 22. W. W. to William Myers
- 23. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 24. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 27. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 28. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 29. W. W. to The Commissioners Of Stamps
- 31. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 32. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 33. W. W. to John Ken Yon
- 34. W. W. to Francis Legatt Chantrey
- 35. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 36. W. W. to Sir Walter Scott
- 38. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 39. W. W. to Walter Savage Landor
- 40. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 41. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 42. W. W. And M. W. to John Kenyon (co-author)
- 42. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 44. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 45. W. W. to Francis Legatt Chantrey
- 49. W. W. to James Losh
- 51. W. W. to Robert Southey
- Close section
1822
(co-author)
- 53. W. W. to Charles Lloyd
- 54. W. W. to Messrs. Longman And Co.
- 57. W. W. to The Commissioners Of Stamps
- 58. W. W. to Robert Blakeney
- 59. W. W. to Richard Sharp
- 60. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 61. W. W. to Walter Savage Landor
- 63. W. W. to Lady Ann Le Fleming
- 64. W. W. to The Commissioners Of Stamps
- 65. W. W. to The Commissioners Of Stamps
- 68. Dora W. And W. W. to C. W. (co-author)
- 69. W. W. to Allan Cunningham
- 71. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 72. W. W. to William Pearson
- 73. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 75. W. W. to The Commissioners Of Stamps
- 76. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 78. W. W. to Richard Sharp
- 79. W. W. to Richard Sharp
- 80. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 81. W. W. to Richard Sharp
- 82. D. W. And W. W. to Mary Laing And David Laing (co-author)
- 84. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 86. W. W. to John Keble
- Close section
1823
(co-author)
- 89. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 90. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 91. W. W. to William Stewart Rose
- 92. W. W. to Lady Le Fleming
- 94. W. W. to John Keble
- 96. W. W. to John Keble
- 97. W. W. to John Keble
- 98. W. W. to Allan Cunningham
- 101. W. W. to John Kenyon
- 109. W. W. to The Commissioners Of Stamps
- 112. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 113. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 114. W. W. to Robert Jones
- 115. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 118. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 119. W. W. to William Campbell
- 120. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- Close section
1824
(co-author)
- 123. W. W. to Walter Savage Landor
- 124. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 125. W. W. to James Montgomery
- 126. W. W. to Allan Cunningham
- 127. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 128. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 134. W. W. to David Wilkie
- 141. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 144. W. W. to Alaric Watts
- 145. W. W. to Thomas Brydges Barrett
- 147. W. W. to Jane Marshall
- 148. W. W. to Walter Savage Landor
- 150. W. W. to the Commissioners of Stamps
- Close section
1825
(co-author)
- 151. W. W. to C. W.
- 152. W. W. to Charles Lloyd Snr.
- 153. W. W. to Francis Merewether
- 154. W. W. to Jacob Fletcher
- 155. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 156. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 157. W. W. to Messrs. Bell Brothers And Co.
- 158. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 160. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 161. W. W. to Jacob Fletcher
- 164. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 165. W. W. to John Wordsworth
- 167. W. W. to Jacob Fletcher
- 170. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 171. W. W. to Maria Jane Jewsbury
- 173. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 174. W. W. to Robert W. Bamford1
- 175. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 178. W. W. to Sir Robert Inglis1
- 179. D. W. And W. W. to Sir Walter Scott (co-author)
- 180. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 182. W. W. to Alaric Watts
- 183. W. W. And Dora W. to Maria Jane Jewsbury (co-author)
- 184. W. W. to John Murray
- 185. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 186. W. W. to Alaric Watts
- 187. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 188. W. W. to John Taylor
- 189. W. W. to Alaric Watts
- 190. W. W. to Alaric Watts
- 191. W. W. to Messrs. Longman And Co.
- 192. W. W. to John Brewster
- 196. W. W. to Alaric Watts
- 200. W. W. to Richard Heber
- 201. W. W. to Allan Cunningham
- 203. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 204. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 205. W. W. to Charles William Pasley
- 207. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 210. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 211. W. W. to Thomas Kibble Hervey
- Close section
1826
(co-author)
- 212. W. W. to Robert Jones
- 213. W. W. to Sir Walter Scott
- 214. W. W. to [? Thomas Robinson]
- 215. W. W. to Alaric Watts
- 216. W. W. to Alaric Watts
- 218. W. W. to William Pearson
- 219. W. W. to The Commissioners Of Stamps
- 222. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 223. W. W. to C. W.
- 224. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 225. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 226. W. W. to Robert Jones
- 227. W. W. to Christopher Wilson
- 228. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 229. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 230. W. W. to C. W.
- 231. W. W. to S. H.
- 232. W. W. to Alaric Watts
- 233. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 234. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 235. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 236. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 237. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 238. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 239. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 240. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 241. M. W. And W. W. to John Kenyon (co-author)
- 242. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 243. W. W. to Lupton Relfe
- 244. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 246. W. W. to Maria Jane Jewsbury
- 250. W. W. to [? John Gregory Crump]
- 251. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 252. W. W. to Jane Marshall
- 253. W. W. to Benjamin Dockray
- 254. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 255. W. W. to Alaric Watts
- 256. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 257. W. W. to Frederic Mansel Reynolds
- 259. W. W. to John Kenyon
- 261. W. W. to John Taylor
- 262. W. W. to Messrs. Longman And Co.
- 263. W. W. to Richard Sharp
- 264. W. W. to John Murray
- 265. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 267. W. W. to William Strickland Cookson
- Close section
1827
(co-author)
- 268. W. W. to Mrs. Richard Wordsworth
- 269. W. W. to Messrs. Longman And Co.
- 271. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 273. W. W. to William Jackson
- 274. W. W. And D. W. to H. C. R. (co-author)
- 275. W. W. to Frederic Mansel Reynolds
- 276. W. W. And D. W. to Mary Laing (co-author)
- 277. W. W. to Charles William Pasley
- 278. W. W. to William Sotheby
- 280. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 281. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 283. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 284. W. W. to Jacob Fletcher
- 285. W. W. to Samuel Carter Hall
- 286. W. W. to Jacob Fletcher
- 287. W. W. to Samuel Carter Hall
- 288. W. W. to Messrs. Longman And Co.
- 289. W. W. to Alaric Watts
- 292. W. W. to George Husband Baird
- 293. W. W. to William Howitt
- 294. W. W. to Messrs. Taylor And Hessey
- 296. W. W. to Harriet Douglas
- 297. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 298. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 299. W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 300. W. W. to Thomas Norton Longman
- 301. W. W. to Dora W.
- 302. W. W. to Dora W.
- 304. W. W. to Thomas Crofton Croker
- 305. W. W. to William Jackson
- 306. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 307. W. W. to C. W. And C. W. Jnr.
- 308. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 309. W. W. to Alexander Blair
- 311. W. W. to John Bowring
- 312. W. W. to Elizabeth Palmer Peabody
- Close section
1828
(co-author)
- 314. W. W. to Allan Cunningham
- 315. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 318. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 319. W. W. to John Taylor
- 320. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 321. W. W. to Francis Freeling
- 322. W. W. to Frederic Mansel Reynolds
- 324. W. W. to Allan Cunningham
- 325. W. W. And D. W. to Harriet Douglas (co-author)
- 326. W. W. to William Jackson
- 327. W. W. to M. W. And Dora W.
- 328. W. W. to Thomas Jewsbury
- 329. W. W. to Allan Cunningham
- 330. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 331. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 331A. W. W. to William Jackson
- 332. W. W. to James Dyer
- 334. W. W. to Barron Field
- 335. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 336. W. W. to Francis Merewether
- 338. W. W. to Allan Cunningham
- 339. W. W. to Julius Charles Hare
- 342. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 343. W. W. to Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- 344. W. W. to Barron Field
- 345. W. W. to Frederic Mansel Reynolds
- 346. W. W. to Mrs. Elizabeth Aders
- 348. Dora W. and W. W. to Edward Quillinan (co-author)
- 349. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 350. W. W. to Charles Aders
- 351. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 352. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 353. W. W. to Charles James Blomfield
- 354. W. W. to William Jerdan
- 356. W. W. to Sir Walter Scott
- 358. W. W. to William Jackson
- 359. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 360. W. W. to William Jerdan
- 362. W. W. to C. W.
- 363. W. W. to William Wood
- 364. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 366. W. W. to Barron Field
- 367. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 368. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 369. W. W. to Allan Cunningham
- 370. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 371. W. W. to C. W.
- 372. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 373. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 374. W. W. to Messrs. Longman And Co.
- 375. M. W. And W. W. to Edward Quillinan (co-author)
- 376. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 378. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 380. W. W. to Benjamin Dockray
- 381. W. W. to Allan Cunningham
- 382. W. W. to William Whewell
- 383. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 384. W. W. to Hugh James Rose
- 385. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 386. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 387. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 388. W. W. to Frederic Mansel Reynolds
- 389. W. W. to Allan Cunningham
- 390. W. W. to Barron Field
- 391. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 393. W. W. to William Jackson
- 394. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 395. W. W. to Sara Coleridge
- Close section
1829
(co-author)
- 396. W. W. to Charles William Pasley
- 397. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 398. W. W. to Dionysius Lardner
- 399. W. W. to Barron Field
- 400. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 401.W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 403. W. W. to John Mitchinson Calvert
- 404. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 405. W. W. to Robert Jones
- 406. W. W. to Frederic Mansel Reynolds
- 407. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 408. W. W. to Hugh James Rose
- 409. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 410. W. W. to Maria Jane Jewsbury
- 411. W. W. to George Wilkinson
- 412. W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 413. W. W. to Barron Field
- 414. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 416. W. W. to Charles James Blomfield
- 417. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 418. W. W. to William Whewell
- 419. W. W. to C. W.
- 420. W. W. to C. W.
- 421. W. W. to George Smith
- 422. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 423. W. W. to Catherine Grace Godwin
- 424. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 425. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 426. W. W. to William Jackson
- 427. W. W. to Edmund Henry Barker
- 428. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 430. W. W. to Frederic Mansel Reynolds
- 431. W. W. to William Jackson
- 432. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 433. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 434. W. W. to Henry Robinson
- 435.W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 436. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 437. W. W. to Francis Merewether
- 438. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 439. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 440. W. W. to C. W.
- 441. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 442. W. W. to Francis Merewether
- 443. W. W. to Edmund Henry Barker
- 444. W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 445. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 446. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 447. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 448. W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 449. W. W. to Robert Jones
- 450. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 450A. W. W. to D. W.
- 451. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 452. W. W. to [? Robert Drummond]
- 453. W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 454. W. W. to Henry Robinson
- 455. W. W. to Mrs John Bolton
- 457. W. W. to M. W. And Dora W.
- 458. W. W. to His Family At Rydal
- 459. W. W. to His Family At Rydal
- 460. W. W. to C. W.
- 461. W. W. to M. W.
- 464. W. W. to His Family At Rydal
- 465. W. W. to C.W.
- 466. W. W. to His Family At Rydal
- 468. W. W. to D. W.
- 469. W. W. to His Family At Rydal
- 470. W. W. to His Family At Rydal
- 472. Dora W. And W. W. to Edward Quillinan (co-author)
- 473. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 474. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 475. W. W. to Messrs Longman and Co.
- 477. W. W. to D. W.
- 479. W. W. to [?] George Huntly Gordon
- 480. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 481. W. W. to Francis Merewether
- 485. W. W. to Robert Spence
- 486. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 487. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 488. W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 489. W. W. to Francis Beaufort Edgeworth
- 490. W. W. to Sara Coleridge
- 491. W. W. to W. W. Jnr.
- Close section
1830
(co-author)
- 493. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 495. W. W. to Charles Lamb
- 497.W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 498. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 499.W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 500. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 501. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 502. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 503. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 504. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 505. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 506. W. W. to John Wilson Croker
- 508. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 509. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 510. W. W. to C. W., John Wordsworth, And C. W.Jnr.
- 513. W. W. to William Jackson
- 514. W. W. to Dora W.
- 515. W. W. to John Gardner
- 516.W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 517. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 519. W. W. to Dora W.
- 520. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 521. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 524. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 525. D.W. and W. W. to C.W. (co-author)
- 527. W. W. to Dora W.
- 529. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 530 W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 532. W. W. to John Gardner
- 534. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 535. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 537. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 538. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 539. W. W. to Sir Walter Scott
- 540. W. W. And Dora W. to C. W. Jnr. (co-author)
- 541. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 542. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 543. W. W. to C. W.
- 544. D. W. And W. W. to Harriet Douglas (co-author)
- 545. W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 546. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 547. W. W. to Charles Wordsworth
- 548. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 549. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 551. W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 552. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 553 . W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 556. W. W. to Sir Walter Scott
- 559. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 560. W. W. to John Mitchinson Calvert
- 561. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 563. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 564. W. W. to Henry Nelson Coleridge
- 565. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 566. W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 567. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 568. W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 569. W. W. to Edwin Hill Handley
- 570. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 571. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 572. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 575. W. W. to D.W.
- 577. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 580. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 581. W. W. to John Abraham Heraud
- 582. W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 583. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- Close section
1831
(co-author)
- 587. W. W. to Thomas Colley Grattan
- 589. W. W. to John Kenyon
- 591. W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 592. W. W. to John Kenyon
- 593. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 595. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 596. W. W. to William Charles Macready
- 597. W. W. to John Mitchinson Calvert
- 598. W. W. to D. W. And S. H.
- 599. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 600. W. W. to Samuel Carter Hall
- 601. W. W. to Allan Cunningham
- 602. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 603. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 604. W. W. to Hannah Hoare
- 605. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 606. W. W. to John Kenyon
- 607. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 608. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 610. W. W. to D. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 612. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 612A. W. W. to William Hazlitt Jnr.
- 613. W. W. to Mrs. Richard Lough
- 614. W. W., Dora W., And D. W. to Charles Wordsworth (co-author)
- 616. W. W. to Robert Jones
- 617. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 618. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 619. W. W. And D. W. to William Rowan Hamilton And Eliza Hamilton (co-author)
- 620. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 621. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 622. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 623. W. W. And D. W. to Lady Beaumont (co-author)
- 624. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 626. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 627. W. W. And D. W.To Francis Merewether (co-author)
- 628. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 629. W. W. to Sir John Stoddart
- 630. W. W. to Miss Carlyle
- 631. W. W. to Samuel Butler
- 632. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 634. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 635. W. W. to Sir Walter Scott
- 636. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 637. W. W. to John Marshall
- 638. W. W. to John Kenyon
- 641. W. W. to Sir Walter Scott
- 642. W. W. to Robert Jones
- 644. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 645. W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 647. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 648. W. W. to Joseph Hunter
- 649. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 650. W. W. to Lady Frederick Bentinck
- 651. W. W. And M. W. to Edward Quillinan (co-author)
- 652. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 653. W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 654. W. W. to Felicia Dorothea Hemans
- 655. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 657. W. W. to Alaric Watts
- 658. W. W. to Joseph Kirkham Miller
- 659. W. W. to John Forster
- 660. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 661. W. W. to John Gibson Lockhart
- 662. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 663. W. W. to John Gardner
- 664. W. W. to Julius Charles Hare
- Close section
1832
(co-author)
- 665. W. W. to John Gardner
- 666. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 667. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 668. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 669. W. W. to John Gardner
- 670. W. W. to John Hymers
- 671. W. W. to John Kenyon
- 672. W. W. to Joseph Hunter
- 673. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 674. W. W. to John Gardner
- 675. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 676. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 677. W. W. to Sir Robert Inglis
- 678. W. W. to John Gardner
- 679. W. W. to Sir Robert Ker Porter
- 680. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 681. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 682. W. W. to John Marshall
- 683. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 684. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 685. W. W. to Mrs Rose Lawrence
- 686. W. W. to John Bolton
- 688. W. W. to John Gardner
- 689. W. W. to John Mitchinson Calvert
- 690. W. W. to John Wordsworth
- 691. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 692. W. W. to C. W.
- 693. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 694. W. W. to Henry William Pickersgill
- 695. W. W. to Henry William Pickersgill
- 696. W. W. to C. W.
- 697. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 698. W. W. to C. W.
- 699. W. W. to John Marshall
- 700. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 701. W. W. to Francis Merewether
- 702. W. W. to John Gardner
- 703. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 704. W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 705. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 706. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 707. W. W. to John Gardner
- 708. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 709. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 710. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 711. W. W. to Robert Jones
- 712. W. W. to David Laing
- 713. W. W. to Thomas Hamilton
- 714.W. W. to C. W.
- 715. W. W. to Henry William Pickersgill
- 716. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 717. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 718. W. W. to Thomas Arnold
- 719. W. W. to John Gibson Lockhart
- 720. W. W. to Robert Eaglesfield Griffith
- 721. W. W. to [? James Greenwood]
- 722. W. W. to Henry Phillpotts
- 723. W. W. to John Marshall
- 724. W. W. to C. W.
- 725. W. W. to John Spedding
- 726. W. W. to Walter Farquhar Hook
- 728. W. W. to Juliet Smith
- 729. W. W. to Richard Parkinson
- 730. W. W., D. W., And Dora W. to John Wordsworth (co-author)
- 731. W. W. to John Wordsworth
- 732. W. W. to Vincent Novello
- 733. W. W. to Derwent Coleridge
- 734. W. W. to Derwent Coleridge
- 735. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 736. W. W. to John Gardner
- Close section
1833
(co-author)
- 737. W. W. to Mr. Bray
- 738. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 739. W. W. to Eliza Hamilton
- 740. W. W. to John Jebb
- 741. W. W. to C. W.
- 742. W. W. to Maria Kinnaird
- 743. W. W. to Mary Spring Rice
- 744. W. W. to John Spedding
- 745. W. W. to H.C.R.
- 746. W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 747. W. W. to Thomas Hamilton
- 748. W. W. to Edward Stanley Curwen
- 749. W. W. to John Spedding
- 750. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 751. W. W. to Eliza Hamilton
- 752. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 753. W. W. to His Family At Rydal
- 754. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 755. W. W. to Benjamin Dockray
- 756. W. W. to George Williams Fulcher
- 757. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 758. W. W. to John Marshall
- 759. W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 760. W. W. to Mary Ann Rawson
- 761. W. W. to Abraham Hayward
- 762. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 763. W. W. to John Pagen White
- 764. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 765. W. W. to Charles Lamb
- 766. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 767. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 768. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 769. Dora W. And W. W. to C. W. Jnr. (co-author)
- 771. W. W. to His Family At Rydal
- 772. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 773. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 774. W. W. to Robert Jones
- 775. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 776. W. W. to Felicia Dorothea Hemans
- 777. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 778. W. W. to John Kenyon
- 779. W. W. to Peter Cunningham
- 780. W. W. to C. W.
- 781. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 782. W. W. to Felicia Dorothea Hemans
- 783. W. W. to Felicia Dorothea Hemans
- 784. W. W. to Robert Jones
- 785. W. W. to Francis Merewether
- 786. W. W. to Thomas Forbes Kelsall
- 787. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 788. W. W. to Sir Robert Inglis
- 790. W. W. to John Marshall
- 791. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 792. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 793. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 794. W. W. to William Pearson
- 795. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 796. W. W. to Samuel Crosthwaite
- 797. W. W. to Felicia Dorothea Hemans
- 798. W. W. to John Kenyon
- 799. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 800. W. W. to Abraham Hayward
- Close section
1834
(co-author)
- 804. W. W. to Allan Cunningham
- 806. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 807. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 808. W. W. to Lady Beaumont
- 809. W. W. to Robert Perceval Graves
- 810. W. W. to George Crabbe
- 811. W. W. to Robert Perceval Graves
- 812. W. W. to John Gardner
- 813. W. W. to August Wilhelm Von Schlegel
- 814. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 816. W. W. to Sir William Maynard Gomm
- 817. W. W. to Felicia Dorothea Hemans
- 818. W. W. to Adam Sedgwick
- 819. W. W. to William Whewell
- 820. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 821. W. W. to Mrs. James Hook
- 822. W. W. to Sara Coleridge
- 823. W. W. to John Abraham Heraud
- 824. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 825. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 826. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 827. W. W. to C. W.
- 828. W. W. to Allan Cunningham
- 829. W. W. to David Laing
- 830. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 832. W. W. to Henry Nelson Coleridge
- 833. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 834. W. W. to John Bolton
- 835. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 836. W. W. to William Fell
- 837. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 838. W. W. to Henry Wilkinson
- 839. W. W. to Alfred Beesley
- 840. W. W. to John Marshall
- 841. W. W. to John Marshall
- 842. W. W. to Felicia Dorothea Hemans
- 844. W. W. to Joseph Henry Green
- 845. W. W. to M. S. Milton
- 846. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 847. W. W. to Ambrose Poynter
- 850. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 851. W. W., M. W., And D. W. to H. C. R. (co-author)
- 852. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 853. W. W. to John Murray
- 855. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 855A. W. W. to John Marshall [? Jnr.]
- Close section
1835
(co-author)
- 856. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 857. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 858. W. W. to Messrs. Longman And Co.
- 859. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 860. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 861. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 862. W. W. to John Thornton
- 863. W. W. to Robert Perceval Graves
- 864. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 865. W. W. to Francis Wrangham
- 866. W. W. to Sir Robert Peel
- 867. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 868. W. W. to Robert Montgomery
- 869. W. W. to Viscount Lowther
- 870. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 871. W. W. to W W. Jnr.
- 872. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 873. W. W. to Allan Cunningham
- 873A. W. W. to Julius Charles Hare
- 874. W. W. to Robert Jones
- 875. W. W. to [?] Henry Thomas Liddell
- 876. W. W. to James Wood
- 877. W. W. to Mr B.
- 878. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 879. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 880. W. W. to Edward Simms
- 881. W. W. to Messrs. Bell Brothers And Co.
- 882. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 882A. W. W. to Messrs. Hudson And Nicholson
- 883. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 884. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 886. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 887. W. W. to H.C.R.
- 888. W. W. to John Macrone
- 889. W. W. to Samuel Carter Hall
- 890. W. W. to George Dyer
- 891. W. W. to Benjamin Dockray
- 892. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 893. W. W. to Mrs. Williamson
- 894. W. W. to John Wordsworth
- 895. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 896. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 897. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 898. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 899. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 900. W. W. to C. W.
- 901. W. W. to W W. Jnr.
- 902. W. W. to William Marshall
- 903. W. W. to Jane Marshall
- 904. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 905. W. W. to Robert Perceval Graves
- 906. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 907. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 908. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 909. W. W. to Henry Southey
- 910. W. W. to Thomas Hamilton
- 911. W. W. to Messrs. John Wakefield And Sons
- 912. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 913. W. W. to Lady Frederick Bentinck
- 914. W. W. to John Anster
- 915. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 916. W. W. to Bertha Southey
- 917. W. W. to Catherine Clarkson
- 918. W. W. to William Rowan Hamilton
- 919. W. W. to Messrs. Hudson And Nicholson
- 920. W. W. to Elizabeth Hughes
- 920A. W. W. to George Ticknor
- 921. W. W. to John Davy
- 922. W. W. to Juliet Smith
- 923. W. W. to Messrs. Longman And Co.
- 924. W. W. to Messrs. Simpkin Marshall And Co.
- 925. W. W. to Robert Spence
- 926. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 927. W. W. to Henry Alford
- 928. W. W. to C. W.
- 929. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 930. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 932. W. W. to Joseph Benn
- 933. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 934. W. W. to David Laing
- 935. W. W. to Cornelius Nicholson
- 936. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 937. W. W. to M.W.
- 939. W. W. to W W. Jnr.
- 940. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 942. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 943. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 944. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 945. W. W. to Alaric Watts
- 946. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 947. W. W. to John Hernaman
- 948. W. W. to John Hernaman
- 949. W. W. to Richard Chenevix Trench
- 950. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 951. W. W. to Philip Courtenay
- 952. W. W. to Maria Drummond
- 953. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 954. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 955. W. W. to David Laing
- 956. W. W. to Robert Perceval Graves
- 958. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 959. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 960. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- Close section
1836
(co-author)
- 961. W. W. to Miss Murray
- 962. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 963. W. W. to [?] Alaric Watts
- 964. W. W. to Sir William Rowan Hamilton
- 965. W. W. to John Lightfoot
- 966. W. W. to John Wordsworth
- 967. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 968. W. W. to Charles Wordsworth
- 969. W. W. And M. W. to Isabella Fenwick (co-author)
- 970. W. W. to Anne Hook
- 971. W. W. to Sir William Rowan Hamilton
- 972. W. W. to John Lightfoot
- 973. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 974. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 975. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 976. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 977. M.W. and W. W. to George Hutchinson and Mary Hutchinson (co-author)
- 978. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 979. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 980. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 982. W. W. to Lincoln Fairchild
- 983. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 984. W. W. to Francis Merewether
- 985. W. W. to Lady Vane
- 986. W. W. And M. W. to H. C. R. (co-author)
- 987. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 988. W. W. to Edward Twistleton
- 989. D. W., M. W., And W. W. to C. W. Jnr. (co-author)
- 990. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 991. W. W. to Elizabeth Palmer Peabody
- 992. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 993. W. W. to William Wood
- 994. W. W. And M. W. to Samuel And Mary Staniforth (co-author)
- 995. W. W. to James Stanger
- 996. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 997. W. W. to H.C.R.
- 998. W. W. to Edwin Hill Handley
- 999. W. W. to Thomas Poole
- 1000. W. W. to John Gibson Lockhart
- 1001. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1002. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 1003. W. W. to James Spedding
- 1004. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1005. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 1006. W. W. to John Wordsworth
- 1007. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 1008. W. W. to His Family
- 1009. W. W. to His Family
- 1010. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1011. W. W. to John Kenyon
- 1012. W. W. to John Wordsworth
- 1013. W. W. to William Harness
- 1014. W. W. to His Family
- 1015. W. W. to Jane Marshall
- 1016. W. W. to His Family
- 1017. W. W. to his family
- 1018. W. W. to His Family
- 1019. W. W. to Edward William Wyon
- 1020. W. W. to His Family
- 1021. W. W. to His Family
- 1022. W. W. to William Strickland Cookson
- 1023. W. W. to His Family
- 1024. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1025. W. W. to John Wordsworth
- 1026. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1027. W. W. to Miss Stanley
- 1028. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 1029. W. W. to Mary Watson
- 1030. W. W. to His Family
- 1031. W. W. to His Family
- 1032. W. W. to Messrs. Longman And Co.
- 1033. W. W. to His Family
- 1034. W. W. to Derwent Coleridge
- 1035. W. W. to His Family
- 1036. W. W. to His Family
- 1037. W. W. to his family
- 1038. W. W. to John Wordsworth
- 1039. W. W. to John Wordsworth
- 1040. W. W. to John Davy
- 1041. W. W. to His Family
- 1042. W. W. to Horace Twiss
- 1043. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1044. W. W. to William Blackwood
- 1045. W. W. to His Family
- 1046. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1047. W. W. to his family
- 1048. W. W. to His Family
- 1049. W. W. to His Family
- 1050. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 1051. W. W. to His Family
- 1052. W. W. to His Family
- 1053. W. W. to M. W.
- 1054. W. W. to John Edwards
- 1055. W. W. to Henry William Pickersgill
- 1057. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 1058. W. W. to Lady Theodosia Spring Rice
- 1059. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1060. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1061. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1062. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 1063. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1064. W. W. to Thomas Poole
- 1065. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 1066. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 1067. W. W. to Sir Benjamin Collins Brodie
- 1069. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1070. W. W. to John Kenyon
- 1071. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 1072. W. W. to William Blackwood
- 1074. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1075. W. W. to Sir John Taylor Coleridge
- 1076. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 1077. W. W. to Sir John Taylor Coleridge
- 1078. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1079. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 1080. W. W. to Thomas James Judkin
- 1081. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1082. W. W. to James Stephen
- 1083. W. W. to Sir Benjamin Collins Brodie
- 1084. W. W. to Sir Charles Bell
- 1086. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1087. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 1088. W. W. to Isaac Green
- 1089. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1090. W. W. to C. W.
- 1091. W. W. to James Montgomery
- 1092. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 1093. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 1096. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 1097. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1098. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 1099. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 1100. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1101. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- Close section
1837
(co-author)
- 1102. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 1103. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1104. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1105. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1106. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 1107. W. W. to Samuel Carter Hall
- 1108. W. W. to Frederick Evans
- 1109. W. W. to Frederick Evans
- 1110. W. W. to Robert Shelton Mackenzie
- 1111. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1112. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1113. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 1114. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 1115. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1116. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 1117. W. W. to H.C.R.
- 1118. W. W. to Francis Foljambe Courtenay
- 1119. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1120. W. W. to Robert Shelton Mackenzie
- 1122. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1123. W. W. to M. W.
- 1124. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1125. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1126. W. W. to D. W.
- 1127. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 1128. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 1129. W. W. to William Strickland Cookson
- 1130. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1131. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1132. W. W. to D. W.
- 1133. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1134. W. W. to Catherine Clarkson
- 1135. W. W. to His Family
- 1136. W. W. to D. W.
- 1137. W. W. to D.W., M.W., and Dora W.
- 1138. W. W. to M. W. And Dora W.
- 1139. W. W. to His Family
- 1140. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1141. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1142. W. W. to James Stephen
- 1143. W. W. to Dora W. And M. W.
- 1145. W. W. to His Family
- 1146. W. W. to M. W.
- 1147. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1148. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1149. W. W. to His Family
- 1150. W. W. to His Family
- 1151. W. W. And H. C. R. to Frances Mackenzie (co-author)
- 1152. W. W. to His Family
- 1153. W. W. to M. W.
- 1154. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1155. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 1156. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1157. W. W. to M.W. and D.W.
- 1158. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1159. W. W. to M. W.
- 1160. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1161. W. W. to Richard Howitt
- 1164. W. W. to Mary Hutchinson
- 1165. W. W. to Charles Robert Leslie
- 1166. W. W. to M. W. And D. W.
- 1167. W. W. to Sir George Beaumont
- 1168. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1169. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1170. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1171. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1172. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 1173. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 1175. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1177. W. W. to Thomas Spring Rice
- 1178. W. W. to Lady Frederick Bentinck
- 1180. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1181. W. W. to Mary Frances Howley
- 1182. M. W. And W. W. to Dora W. (co-author)
- 1183. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1184. W. W. to Robert Shelton Mackenzie
- 1185. W. W. to Elizabeth Fisher
- 1186. W. W. to Robert Shelton Mackenzie
- 1187. M.W. and W. W. to Dora W. (co-author)
- 1188. W. W. to Elizabeth Fisher
- 1189. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1190. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1191. W. W. to Thomas Spring Rice
- 1192. W. W. to Sir William Rowan Hamilton
- 1193. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 1194. W. W. to Samuel Carter Hall
- 1195. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1196. W. W. to Edward Ferguson
- Close section
1838
(co-author)
- 1197. W. W. to Sir William Rowan Hamilton
- 1198. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1199. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1200. W. W. to Robert Shelton Mackenzie
- 1201. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1202. W. W. to Edward Ferguson
- 1203. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1204. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1205. W. W. to Sir John Taylor Coleridge
- 1206. W. W. to Mrs. J. M. Muleen
- 1208. W. W. to James Stephen
- 1209. W. W. to John Wordsworth
- 1210. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1211. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 1213. W. W. to [?] Francis Aglionby
- 1214. W. W. to William Ewart Gladstone
- 1215. W. W. to Philip Henry Howard
- 1216. W. W. to Sir William Maynard Gomm
- 1217. W. W. to Horace Twiss
- 1218. W. W. to Richard Monckton Milnes
- 1219. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1220. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1221. W. W. to George Biddell Airy
- 1222. W. W. to Robert Perceval Graves
- 1223. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 1224. W. W. to Francis Lloyd
- 1225. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1226. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1227. W. W. to The Governors of King Edward's Grammar School, Birmingham
- 1228. W. W. to John Wordsworth
- 1229. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1230. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1231. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1232. W. W. to Sir Robert Peel
- 1233. W. W. to John Gibson Lockhart
- 1234. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1235. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 1236. W. W. to Viscount Mahon
- 1237. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1238. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1239. W. W. to Sir Robert Peel
- 1240. W. W. to Thomas Wyse
- 1241. W. W. to John Gibson Lockhart
- 1242. W. W. to Richard Monckton Milnes
- 1243. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1244. M. W. And W. W. to Catherine Clarkson (co-author)
- 1245. W. W. to Daniel Stuart
- 1246. W. W. to John Kenyon
- 1247. W. W. to Daniel Stuart
- 1248. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1249. W. W. to Julius Charles Hare
- 1250. W. W. to [?] Thomas Powell
- 1251. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1252. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1253. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1254. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1255. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1256. W. W. to William Strickland Cookson
- 1257. W. W. to William Ewert Gladstone
- 1258. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1259. W. W. to William Strickland Cookson
- 1260. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1261. W. W. to John Kenyon
- 1262. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1263. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1264. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1265. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1266. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1267. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1268. W. W. to Sir Henry Bunbury
- 1269. W. W. to David Laing
- 1270. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1271. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1272. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1273. W. W. And M. W. to John Kenyon (co-author)
- 1275. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1276. W. W. to James Marshall
- 1277. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1278. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1279. W. W. to W W. Jnr.
- 1280. W. W. to Mrs. John Thelwall
- 1281. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1282. W. W. to Andrew Fleming Hudleston
- 1283. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1284. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1285. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1286. W. W. to John Gibson Lockhart
- 1287. W. W. to Sarah Coles Stevenson
- Close section
1839
(co-author)
- 1289. W. W. to Sir William Rowan Hamilton
- 1290. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1291. W. W. to Mary Frances Howley
- 1292. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 1293. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1294. W. W. to Henry Austen Driver
- 1295. W. W. to Robert Southey
- 1296. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1297. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1298. W. W. to John Kenyon
- 1299. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1300. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1301. M. W. And W. W. to Dora W. (co-author)
- 1302. W. W. to John Wordsworth
- 1303. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1304. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1305. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1306. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1307. W. W. to Charles Henry Parry
- 1308. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 1309. W. W. to Thomas Spring Rice
- 1310. W. W. to Thomas Spring Rice
- 1311. W. W. to William Lisle Bowles
- 1312. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1313. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 1314. W. W. to Charles Henry Parry
- 1315. W. W. to Thomas Spring Rice
- 1316. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1317. W. W. to Dora W. and D.W.
- 1318. W. W. to Thomas Spring Rice
- 1319. W. W. to William S. Orr
- 1320. W. W. to Charles Wordsworth
- 1321. W. W. to Dodshon Foster
- 1322. W. W. to Walter Kerr Hamilton
- 1323. W. W. to C. W.
- 1324. W. W. to Walter Kerr Hamilton
- 1325. W. W. to Walter Farquhar Hook
- 1326. W. W. to M. W.
- 1327. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1328. W. W. to Thomas Gaisford
- 1329. W. W. to William Henry Smyth
- 1330. W. W. to John Keble
- 1331. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1332. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1333. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1334. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1335. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1336. W. W. to John Lightfoot
- 1337. W. W. to W. P. Havanaugh
- 1338. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1339. W. W. to John Davy
- 1340. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1341. W. W. to John Peace
- 1342. W. W. to Montagu Montagu
- 1343. W. W. to Lord Monteagle
- 1344. W. W. to John Peace
- 1345. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1346. W. W. to Susanna Wordsworth
- 1347. W. W. to Sir William Maynard Gomm
- 1348. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1349. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1350. W. W. to M. W. And Isabella Fenwick
- 1351. John W. And W. W. to Edward Moxon (co-author)
- 1353. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1354. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1355. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1356. W. W. to Thomas Kibble Hervey
- 1357. W. W. to C.W.Jnr.
- 1358. W. W. to Lord Monteagle
- 1359. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1360. W. W. to Lord Monteagle
- 1361. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1361a W. W. to John Wordsworth
- Close section
1840
(co-author)
- 1362. W. W. to C.W.
- 1363. W. W. to Lady Frederick Bentinck
- 1364. W. W. to Mary Gaskell
- 1365. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1366. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1367. W. W. to Barron Field
- 1368. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1369. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1370. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1371. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1372. W. W. to Walter Farquhar Hook
- 1373. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1374. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1375. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1376. W. W. to Cordelia Marshall
- 1377. W. W. to Henry Alford
- 1378. W. W. to John Hills1
- 1379. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1380. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 1381. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1382. W. W. to Thomas Southwood Smith
- 1383. W. W. to Charles Wordsworth
- 1384. W. W. And M. W. to Isabella Fenwick (co-author)
- 1385. W. W. to Lord Morpeth
- 1386. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1387. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1388. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1389. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 1390. W. W. to Robert Perceval Graves
- 1391. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1392. W. W. to H.C.R.
- 1393. W. W. And M. W. to Isabella Fenwick (co-author)
- 1394. W. W. to Mary Gaskell
- 1395. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 1396. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1397. W. W. to Dora W. And Isabella Fenwick
- 1398. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1399. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1400. W. W. to Sir William Gomm
- 1401. W. W. to W. F. Watson
- 1402. M.W. and W. W. to William Westall (co-author)
- 1403. W. W. to John Gibson Lockhart
- 1404. W. W. to Francis Merewether
- 1405. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1406. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1407. W. W. to Elizabeth Frances Ogle
- 1408. W. W. to Charles Henry Parry
- 1409. W. W. to John Bracken Ridge1
- 1410. W. W. to Mary Gaskell
- 1411. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1412. W. W. to H.C.R.
- 1413. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1414. W. W. to John Brackenridge
- 1415. W. W. to Mary Gaskell
- 1416. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1417. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1418. W. W. to Charles Henry Parry
- 1419. W. W. to Henry William Pickersgill
- 1420. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1421. W. W. to Stansfeld Rawson
- 1422. W. W. to Nicholas Lee Torre
- 1422A. W. W. to William Gaskell
- 1423. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1424. W. W. to Lady Frederick Bentinck
- 1425. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1426. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1427. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1428. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1429. W. W. to E. R. Moran
- 1430. W. W. to Henry William Pickersgill
- 1431. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1432. W. W. to Henry William Pickersgill
- 1433. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1434. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1435. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1436. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 1437. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1438. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1439. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1440. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1441. W. W. to Joshua Watson
- 1442. W. W. to Dora W.
- 1443. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1444. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1446. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1447. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1448. W. W. to Thomas Boyles Murray
- 1449. W. W. to Henry William Pickersgill
- 1450. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1451. W. W. to Benjamin Dockray
- 1452. W. W. to ?Richard Monckton Milnes
- 1453. W. W. to Lady Frederick Bentinck
- 1454. W. W. to Eliza Hamilton
- 1455. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1456. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 1457. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1458. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1458A. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1459. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1460. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1461. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1462. W. W. to Lady Frederick Bentinck
- 1463. W. W. to Amelia Locock
- 1464. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1465. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1466. W. W. to Sir John Taylor Coleridge
- 1467. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1468. W. W. to Charles Reed
- 1469. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1470. W. W. to Walter Farquhar Hook
- 1471. W. W. to Robert Bigsby
- 1472. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1473. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1474. W. W. to Mary Spring Rice
- 1475. W. W. to James Spedding
- 1476. W. W. to The Governors Of Repton School
- 1477. W. W. to [?] Robinson Wordsworth
- 1478. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1479. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- Close section
1841
(co-author)
- 1481. W. W. to Samuel Carter Hall
- 1482. W. W. to John Wilson
- 1483. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1484. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1485. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1486. W. W. to John Peace
- 1487. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1489. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1490. W. W. to The Secretary Of The Western Literary Club
- 1491. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1492. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1493. W. W. to C. W.
- 1494. W. W. to William Pearson
- 1495. W. W. to The Secretary Of The Western Literary Club
- 1496. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1497. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1498. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1499. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1500. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1501. W. W. to Robert Montgomery
- 1502. W. W. to H.C.R.
- 1503. W. W. to Lord Monteagle
- 1504. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1505. W. W. to John Peace
- 1506. W. W. to Robert Shelton Mackenzie
- 1507. W. W. to Mrs Anne Hare
- 1508. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1509. W. W. to C. W.
- 1511. W. W. to John Peace
- 1512. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1515. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1516. W. W. to D. Mccorkindale
- 1517. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1518. W. W. to Charles James Blomfield
- 1519. W. W. to Julius Charles Hare
- 1520. W. W. to Sir Robert Peel
- 1521. W. W. to Hannah Hoare
- 1523. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1524. W. W. to W. Milliken
- 1525. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1526. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1527. W. W. to Henry Weekes
- 1528. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1529. W. W. to Charles Alexander Johns5
- 1530. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1531. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1532. W. W. to T. G. Burton
- 1533. W. W. to Mary Fisher
- 1534. W. W. to C. W.
- 1535. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1536. W. W. to George Washington Doane
- 1537. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1538. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1539. W. W. to Mary Frances Howley
- 1540. W. W. And M. W. to Isabella Fenwick (co-author)
- 1541. W. W. to [?] F. G. Moon
- 1542. W. W. to Dr. Goodfellow
- 1543. W. W. to Edward and Dora Quillinan
- 1544. W. W. to John Peace
- 1545. W. W. to Mr. Horsfield
- 1546. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1547. W. W. to Elizabeth Fisher
- 1548. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1549. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 1550. W. W. to Philip Courtenay
- 1552. W. W. to C. W.
- 1553. W. W. to H.C.R.
- 1554. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 1555. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1556. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1557. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 1558. W. W. to John Gibson Lockhart
- 1559. D. W. And W. W. to Dora Quillinan (co-author)
- 1560. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 1561. W. W. to C. W.
- 1562. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1563. W. W. to Dora Quillinan
- 1564. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1565. W. W. to Dora Quillinan
- 1566. W. W. to C. W.
- 1567. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1568. W. W. to Thomas Graham
- 1570. W. W. to Elizabeth Fisher
- 1571. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1572. W. W. to Chauncy Hare Townshend
- 1573. W. W. to ?Dora Quillinan
- Close section
1842
(co-author)
- 1574. W. W. to William Jackson
- 1575. W. W. to Joshua Stanger
- 1576. W. W. to John Gibson Lockhart
- 1577. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 1578. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1579. W. W. to John S. Bligh
- 1580. W. W. to C. W.
- 1581. W. W. to Maurice Harcourt
- 1582. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1583. W. W. to C.W.
- 1584. W. W. to John Peace
- 1585. W. W. to Viscount Mahon
- 1586. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 1587. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1588. W. W. to George Washington Doane
- 1589. W. W. to Viscount Mahon
- 1590. W. W. to Sir William Gomm
- 1591. W. W. to James Bush
- 1592. W. W. to John Hudson
- 1593. W. W. to Viscount Mahon
- 1594. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1595. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1596. W. W. to Adam Sedgwick
- 1597. W. W. to Sir Aubrey De Vere
- 1598. M. W. And W. W. to Edward Moxon (co-author)
- 1599. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1600. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1601. W. W. to John Hudson
- 1602. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1603. W. W. to Dora Quillinan
- 1604. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1605. W. W. to Julius Charles Hare
- 1606. W. W. to Viscount Mahon
- 1607. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1608. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1609. W. W. to Viscount Mahon
- 1610. W. W. to Mrs. A. Montagu Woodford
- 1611. W. W. to C. W.
- 1612. W. W. to C. W.
- 1613. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1614. W. W. to Viscount Mahon
- 1615. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1616. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1617. W. W. to Adam Sedgwick
- 1618. W. W. to D. W. And Isabella Fenwick
- 1619. W. W. to [?] Allan Cunningham
- 1620. W. W. to George Washington Doane
- 1621. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1622. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1623. W. W. to Charles William Pasley
- 1624. W. W. to William Ewart Gladstone
- 1625. W. W. to Lady Monteagle
- 1626. W. W. to Viscount Mahon
- 1627. W. W. to Robert Ferguson
- 1628. W. W. to George Burder
- 1629. W. W. to William Ewart Gladstone
- 1630. W. W. to Samuel Wilkinson
- 1631. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1632. W. W. to Sir Robert Peel
- 1633. M.W. and W. W. to Isabella Fenwick (co-author)
- 1634. W. W. to Dora Quillinan
- 1635. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1636. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1637. W. W. to James Savage
- 1638. W. W. to Lydia Huntley Sigourney
- 1639. W. W. to [?] Charles James Blomfield
- 1640. W. W. to The Governors Of Warwick School
- 1641. W. W. to Cornelius Nicholson
- 1642. W. W. to Samuel Wilkinson
- 1643. W. W. to Mary Frances Howley
- 1644. W. W. to William Ewart Gladstone
- 1645. W. W. to Sir Aubrey De Vere
- 1646. W. W. to Samuel Wilkinson
- 1647. W. W. to Martin Farquhar Tupper
- 1648. W. W. to Fulke Greville Howard
- 1649. W. W. to William Ewart Gladstone
- 1650. W. W. to Sir Robert Peel
- 1651. W. W. to William Ewart Gladstone
- 1652. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1653. W. W. to C.W.
- 1654. W. W. to Edward Quillinan
- 1655. W. W. to Ellen Ricketts
- 1656. W. W. to Elizabeth Barrett
- 1657. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1658. W. W. to Sir John Taylor Coleridge
- 1659. W. W. to Aubrey De Vere
- 1660. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1661. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1662. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1663. W. W. to Martin Farquhar Tupper
- 1664. W. W. to John Peace
- 1665. W. W. to Fulke Greville Howard
- 1666. W. W. to George Ticknor
- 1667. W. W. to W. W. Jnr.
- Close section
1843
(co-author)
- 1668. W. W. to Sir John Taylor Coleridge
- 1669. W. W. to [?] John Hudson
- 1670. W. W. to John Hudson
- 1671. W. W. to James Wilson
- 1672. W. W. to Richard Parkinson
- 1673. W. W. to Charles Wordsworth
- 1674. W. W. to C. W.
- 1675. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1676. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1677. W. W. to Mrs. Charles James Blomfield
- 1678. W. W. to Mary Frances Howley
- 1679. W. W. to George Lewis Prentiss
- 1680. W. W. to Sir William Gomm
- 1681. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1682. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1683. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 1684. W. W. to Earl De La Warr
- 1685. W. W. to Lady Frederick Bentinck
- 1686. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1687. W. W. to Earl De La Warr
- 1688. W. W. to Sir Robert Peel
- 1689. W. W. to C. W.
- 1690. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1691. W. W. to M. W.
- 1692. W. W. to Mrs. Ritson
- 1693. W. W. to Sir James McGrigor
- 1694. W. W. to James Montgomery
- 1695. W. W. to Thomas Noon Talfourd
- 1696. W. W. to Sir John Taylor Coleridge
- 1697. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 1698. W. W. to David Laing
- 1699. W. W. to Edward Trapp Pilgrim
- 1700. W. W. to George Ticknor
- 1701. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1702. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 1703. W. W. to Sir William Rowan Hamilton
- 1704. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1705. W. W. to Sara Coleridge
- 1706. W. W. to Sir John Taylor Coleridge
- 1707. W. W. to John Critchley Prince
- 1708. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1709. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1710. W. W. to James Montgomery
- 1711. W. W. to Richard Parkinson
- 1712. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 1713. W. W. to Sir John Taylor Coleridge
- 1714. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1715. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1716. W. W. to William Crackanthorpe
- 1717. W. W. And M. W. to Isabella Fenwick (co-author)
- 1718. W. W. to Samuel Grindley Howe
- 1719. W. W. to Chauncy Hare Townshend
- 1720. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1721. W. W. to Christopher Wilson
- 1722. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1723. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1724. W. W. to [?] Robert Chambers
- 1725. W. W. And M. W. to Isabella Fenwick (co-author)
- 1726. W. W. to Sir James Mcgrigor
- 1727. W. W. to John Wordsworth
- 1728. W. W. to Edward Wilson
- 1729. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1730. W. W. to John Wordsworth
- 1731. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1732. W. W. to Charles Thorp
- 1733. W. W. to C.W., Jnr.
- 1734. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1735. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1736. W. W. to Edward Wilson
- 1737. W. W. to Anna Ricketts
- 1738. W. W. to Dora Quillinan
- 1739. W. W. to W. W. Jnr.
- 1740. W. W. to W. W. Jnr.
- 1741. W. W. to William Henry Dixon
- 1742. W. W. to James Prince Lee
- 1743. W. W. to Anne Hook
- 1744. W. W. to Richard Henry Dana
- 1745. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1746. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1747. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1748. W. W. to Mrs. Harrison
- 1749. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1751. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 1752. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1753. W. W. to James Stanger
- 1754. W. W. to Sir John Taylor Coleridge
- 1755. W. W. to James Stanger
- 1756. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1757. W. W. to Sir John Taylor Coleridge
- 1758. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1759. W. W. to C. W.
- 1760. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1761. W. W. to C. W.
- 1762. W. W. to Sir John Taylor Coleridge
- 1763. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1764. W. W. to Mrs. Henry Robinson
- Close section
1844
(co-author)
- 1765. W. W. to William Heaton
- 1766. W. W. to Alexander Dyce
- 1767. W. W. to James Stanger
- 1768. W. W. to Robert Perceval Graves
- 1769. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1770. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1771. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1772. W. W. to James Stanger
- 1773. M.W. and W. W. to H.C.R. (co-author)
- 1775. W. W. to Anna Maria Hall
- 1776. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1777. W. W. to Henry Alford
- 1778. W. W. to Henry Alford
- 1779. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1780. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1781. W. W. to William Jackson
- 1782. W. W. to John North
- 1783. W. W. to William Ewart Gladstone
- 1784. W. W. to Thomas Powell
- 1785. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1786. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1787. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1788. W. W. to Lady Frederick Bentinck
- 1789. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 1791. W. W. to Richard Parkinson
- 1792. W. W. to John Peace
- 1793. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1794. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1795. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1796. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1797. W. W. to T. Shepherd
- 1798. W. W. to William Lisle Bowles
- 1799. W. W. to Robert Shelton Mackenzie
- 1800. W. W. to The Misses Constable
- 1801. W. W. to John Hudson
- 1802. W. W. to Abraham Cooper
- 1803. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1804. W. W. And M. W. to Dora Quillinan (co-author)
- 1805. W. W. to William Jackson
- 1806. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1808. W. W. to George Washington Doane
- 1809. W. W. to William Jackson
- 1810. W. W. to Richard Parkinson
- 1811. W. W. to Henry Inman
- 1812. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1813. W. W. to C.W.
- 1814. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1815. W. W. to C. W.
- 1816. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1817. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1818. W. W. to D. S. Williamson
- 1819. W. W. to Frederick William Faber
- 1820. W. W. to Elizabeth Barrett
- 1821. W. W. to Lady Le Fleming
- 1822. W. W. to Roger Moser
- 1823. W. W. to Charles William Pasley
- 1824. W. W. to Julius Charles Hare
- 1825. W. W. to Frederick William Faber
- 1826. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1827. W. W. to C. W.
- 1828. W. W. And M. W. to Isabella Fenwick (co-author)
- 1829. W. W. to Roger Moser
- 1831. W. W. to M. W.
- 1832. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1833. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1834. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1835. W. W. to Charles William Pasley
- 1836. W. W. to Basil Montagu
- 1837. W. W. to Sara Coleridge
- 1838. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1839. W. W. to William Ewart Gladstone
- 1840. W. W. to Charles William Pasley
- 1841. W. W. to Charles William Pasley
- 1842. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1844. W. W. to Samuel Crompton
- 1845. W. W. to [?] Horatio Smith
- 1846. W. W. to Bernard Barton
- 1847. W. W. to Charles William Pasley
- 1848. W. W. to Mrs. Harrison
- 1849. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1850. W. W. to Patrick Robertson, Lord Robertson
- 1851. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1852. W. W. to Sara Coleridge
- 1853. W. W. to Sara Coleridge
- 1854. W. W. And M. W. to Edward Moxon (co-author)
- 1855. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1856. W. W. to William Jackson
- 1857. W. W. to Thomas Boyles Murray
- 1858. M. W. And W. W. to Isabella Fenwick (co-author)
- 1859. W. W. to William Jackson
- 1860. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1861. W. W. to Robert Perceval Graves
- 1862. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1863. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- Close section
1845
(co-author)
- 1864. W. W. to John Moultrie
- 1865. W. W. to Samuel Crompton
- 1866. W. W. to [?] John Holland
- 1867. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1868. W. W. to Robert Perceval Graves
- 1869. W. W. to Richard Charles Coxe
- 1870. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1871. W. W. to C. W.
- 1872. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1873. W. W. to Thomas Hutchinson Jnr.
- 1874. W. W. to Lord Lonsdale
- 1875. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1876. W. W. to Charles Wordsworth
- 1877. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1878. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1879. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1880. W. W. to James David Forbes
- 1881. W. W. to [?] John Holland
- 1882. W. W. to Charles Boner
- 1883. W. W. to Messrs. Colnaghi and co.
- 1884. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1885. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1886. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1887. W. W. to George Williams Fulcher
- 1888. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1889. W. W. to William Whewell
- 1890. W. W. to William Edwards
- 1891. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1892. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1893. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1894. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1895. W. W. to John Peace
- 1896. M. W. And W. W. to H. C. R. (co-author)
- 1897. W. W. to George Huntly Gordon
- 1898. W. W. to Anna Brownell Jameson
- 1899. W. W. to Mary Jane Rudd
- 1900. W. W. to Anna Brownell Jameson
- 1901. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1902. W. W. to Charles Scarle And Charles Baker
- 1903. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1904. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1905. M. W. And W. W. to Charles Wordsworth (co-author)
- 1906. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1907. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1908. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1909. W. W. to George Washington Doane
- 1910. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1912. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1913. W. W. to C.W. Jnr
- 1914. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1915. W. W. to John Gibson Lockhart
- 1917. W. W. to Mrs. Harrison
- 1918. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1919. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1920. W. W. to Derwent Coleridge
- 1921. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1922. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1923. W. W. to Charles Henry Parry
- 1924. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1925. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1926. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1927. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1928. M. W. And W. W. to Sara Coleridge (co-author)
- 1930. W. W. to Frederick Westley
- 1931. W. W. to Elizabeth Frances Ogle
- 1932. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1933. W. W. to Frederick Westley
- 1934. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1935. W. W. to Frederick Westley
- 1936. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1937. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1938. W. W. to Joseph Cottle
- 1940. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1942. W. W. to Hugh Seymour Tremenheere
- 1943. W. W. to Mary Howitt
- 1944. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1945. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1946. W. W. to Frederick Westley
- 1947. M. W. And W. W. to Edward Moxon (co-author)
- 1948. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1949. W. W. to Frederick Westley
- 1950. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- Close section
1846
(co-author)
- 1951. W. W. to Elizabeth Fisher
- 1952. W. W. to William Jackson
- 1953. W. W. to George John Stevenson
- 1954. W. W. to William Jackson
- 1955. W. W. to Joseph Snow
- 1956. W. W. to Frederick Westley
- 1957. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1958. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1959. W. W. to Mary Ann Dixon
- 1960. W. W. to Herbert Hill
- 1961. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1962. W. W. to Benjamin Robert Haydon
- 1963. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1964. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1965. W. W. to Henry Reed
- 1966. W. W. to Thomas Boyles Murray
- 1967. W. W. to Elizabeth Fisher
- 1968. W. W. to Charles Wordsworth
- 1969. W. W. to Robert Shelton Mackenzie
- 1970. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1971. W. W. to Frederick Westley
- 1972. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1973. W. W. to Robert Perceval Graves
- 1974. W. W. to William Jackson
- 1975. W. W. to Charles Wordsworth
- 1976. W. W. to Sir William Rowan Hamilton
- 1977. W. W. to Jackson Gilbanks
- 1978. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1979. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1980. W. W. to Edward Gird Lestone
- 1981. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1982. W. W. to William Jackson
- 1983. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1984. W. W. to Charles M. Leupp
- 1985. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 1986. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1987. W. W. to William Boxall
- 1988. W. W. to George Lewis Prentiss
- 1989. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 1990. W. W. to Adam White
- 1991. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1992. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1993. W. W. to Henry Crofts
- 1994. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 1995. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 1996. W. W. to Orlando Hyman
- 1997. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 1998. W. W. to Martin Farquhar Tupper
- 1999. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 2000. W. W. to Lady Frederick Bentinck
- 2001. W. W. to [?] John Moxon
- 2002. W. W. to [?] John Moxon
- 2003. W. W. to Henry Taylor
- 2004. W. W. to Mrs. Harrison
- 2005. W. W. to [?] James Dawson
- 2006. W. W. to John Gardner
- 2007. W. W. to Reginald Graham
- 2008. W. W. And M. W. to Thomas Hutchinson Jnr. And Mrs. Hutchinson (co-author)
- 2009. W. W. to Charles Wordsworth
- 2010. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 2011. W. W. to Catherine Clarkson
- 2012. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 2013. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 2014. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 2015. W. W. to James Hutcheson
- 2016. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 2017. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 2018. W. W. to Caroline Haviland
- 2019. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 2020. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 2021. W. W. And M. W. to Fanny Eliza Graham (co-author)
- 2022. W. W. to Fred Westley
- 2023. W. W. to C.W., Jnr
- 2024. W. W. to John Gibson Lockhart
- 2025. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 2026. W. W. to Sir William Gomm
- 2027. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 2028. W. W. to Mr. And Mrs. William Bennett
- 2029. W. W. to C. Marks
- 2030. W. W. to William Ellis
- 2031. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 2032. W. W. to William Howitt
- Close section
1847
(co-author)
- 2033. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 2034. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 2035. M. W. And W. W. to Isabella Fenwick (co-author)
- 2036. W. W. to William Bell
- 2037. W. W. to Sara Coleridge
- 2038. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 2039. W. W. to Sara Coleridge
- 2040. M. W. And W. W. to C. W. Jnr. (co-author)
- 2041. W. W. to Emmeline Fisher
- 2042. W. W. And M. W. to Edward Moxon (co-author)
- 2043. W. W. to the Hon. Charles Beaumont Phipps
- 2044. W. W. to Thomas Attwood Walmisley
- 2045. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 2046. W. W. And M. W. to D. W. (co-author)
- 2047. W. W. to Chandos Wren-Hoskins
- 2048. W. W. to Fanny Eliza Wordsworth
- 2049. W. W. to H. C. R.
- 2050. W. W. to Thomas Attwood Walmisley
- 2051. W. W. to Thomas Attwood Walmisley
- 2055. W. W. to [?] James Dawson
- 2056. W. W. to Charles Wordsworth
- 2057. W. W. to C. W. Jnr. And Susan W.
- 2058. W. W. And M. W. to Isabella Fenwick (co-author)
- 2059. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 2060. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 2061. W. W. to Mrs. John Bolton
- 2062. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 2063. W. W. to John Thornton
- 2064. W. W. to [?] John Thornton
- 2065. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 2066. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 2067. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 2068. W. W. to W. W. Jnr.
- Close section
1848
(co-author)
- 2069. W. W. to Maurice Morgan Jameson
- 2070. W. W. to George Jabet
- 2071. W. W. to Sir John Frederick William Herschel
- 2072. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 2074. W. W. to Samuel Rogers
- 2075. W. W. to William Walker
- 2076. W. W. to Charles Knight
- 2077. W. W. to James Bush
- 2079. W. W. to C. W. Jnr.
- 2081. W. W. to John Pringle Nichol
- 2082. W. W. to David Leitch
- 2083. W. W. to David Leitch
- 2085. W. W. to [?] James Gregor Grant
- 2086. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 2087. W. W. to John Peace
- 2088. W. W. And M. W. to Isabella Fenwick (co-author)
- 2089. W. W. to David Leitch
- 2090. W. W. to William Wilkie Collins
- 2091. W. W. to John Gibson
- 2092. W. W. to W. W. Jnr.
- 2093. W. W. to John Gibson
- Close section
1849
(co-author)
- 2094. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 2095. W. W. to Sir John Taylor Coleridge
- 2097. W. W. to David Leitch
- 2098. W. W. to Robert Perceval Graves
- 2099. W. W. to Charles Gray
- 2101. W. W. to The Eighth Duke Of Argyll
- 2102. W. W. to The Eighth Duke Of Argyll
- 2103. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 2104. W. W. to Sir Robert Peel
- 2105. W. W. to The Secretary Of The Windermere Lodge Society
- 2106. W. W. to Sir Robert Peel
- 2107. W. W. to John Adamson
- 2108. W. W. to Sir Robert Peel
- 2109. W. W. to James Cumming
- 2110. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 2111. W. W. to Frederick Westley
- 2112. W. W. to John Kenyon
- 2113. W. W. to C.W., Jnr
- 2114. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 2115. W. W. to Charles Callahan Perkins
- 2116. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 2117. W. W. to [?] Earl Grey
- 2118. W. W. to Isabella Fenwick
- 2119. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 2120. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- 2122. W. W. to Edward Moxon
- 2123. W. W. to William Pearson
- 2124. W. W. to William Charles Lake
- 2125. W. W. to Unknown Correspondent
- Close section 1850 (co-author)
- Close section
1821
(co-author)
- Close section
The Letters of William and Dorothy Wordsworth A Supplement of New Letters
(co-author)
- Close section 1801 (co-author)
- Close section 1804 (co-author)
- Close section 1806
- Close section 1807
- Close section 1808
- Close section 1809
- Close section 1810 (co-author)
- Close section
1812
(co-author)
- W. W. to D.W.
- W. W. to M. W.
- W. W. to M. W.
- W. W. to M. W.
- W. W. to M. W.
- W. W. to D. W.
- W. W. to D. W.
- W. W. to M. W.
- W. W. to M. W.
- W. W. to D.W.
- W. W. to M. W.
- W. W. to M. W.
- W. W. to M. W.
- W. W. to M. W.
- W. W. to D. W. And S. H.
- W. W. to M. W.
- W. W. to M. W.
- W. W. to Thomas Hutchinson
- W. W. And M. W. to D. W. And S. H. (co-author)
- W. W. to John Hutchinson
- W. W. to Elizabeth Monkhouse
- Close section 1813 (co-author)
- Close section 1814
- Close section 1815
- Close section 1816
- Close section 1817
- Close section 1818
- Close section 1819
- Close section 1820 (co-author)
- Close section 1824
- Close section 1825
- Close section 1826
- Close section 1827
- Close section 1828
- Close section 1830 (co-author)
- Close section 1831
- Close section 1832
- Close section 1833 (co-author)
- Close section 1835
- Close section 1836
- Close section 1837 (co-author)
- Close section 1838
- Close section 1839
- Close section 1840
- Close section 1841
- Close section 1843
- Close section 1844
- Close section 1845
- Close section 1846
- Close section 1848
- To Samuel Taylor Coleridge (Christmas Eve, Grasmere)
- Close section The Law of Copyright
- Close section Two Addresses to the Freeholders of Westmorland
- To Christopher Wordsworth (2 June 1816)
- To Captain Pasley
- To Captain Pasley
- To Dr. Andrew Bell (January 1812)
- To Dr. Andrew Bell (March 1812)
- To John Payne Collier (December 1817)
- To Elizabeth Vassall (11 April 1808)
- To Rev. Samuel Butler (29 August 1828)
- To Sir James Bland Burges (14 January 1801)
- To William Wilberforce