Check out the resources section, while the few files there (WW/M is apparently not a popular choice) are not excellent in quality, the general ideas are a good starting point.
Here are a few quotes I find good, remember to quote equally from both composers, people tend to focus on the poet but I think Malouf writes even better.
Wordsworth
Tintern Abbey
- ‘that serene and blessed mood’
- ‘the still, sad music of humanity’
- ‘in Nature and the language of the sense / the anchor of my purest thoughts, the nurse, the guide, the guardian of my heart, and soul of all my moral being’
- ‘I, so long a worshipper of Nature’
- ‘the power of harmony, and the deep power of joy’
- ‘These steep woods and lofty cliffs, and this green pastoral landscape’
Prelude
- ‘low breathings coming after me’ ‘strange utterance’
- ‘Wisdom and spirit of the universe! Thou soul that art the eternity of thought’
- Nature as a teacher: ‘By day or starlight thus from my first dawn of childhood didst thou intertwine for me the passions that build up our human soul’
- Nature has moulded him spiritually: ‘make ceaseless music that composed my thoughts’
- ‘free as a bird’ ‘breathe again’
- Human out of place: ‘I was alone, and seemed to be a trouble to the peace that dwelt among them’
Malouf
- ‘We are centuries from the notion of an orchard or a garden made simply to please.’
- ‘Now I too must be transformed.’
- ‘I have become sturdy and strong again and have stopped mooning about and regretting my fate. I go for long walks in the brushwood, which is full of tiny animals and insects, all of them worth observing.’
- ‘Our further selves are contained within us, as the leaves and blossoms are in the tree.’
- ‘Seeing the world through this other tongue I see it differently.’
- ‘feeling the rush of air into my lungs, feeling the joy of it, the leaping, the being cleansed and gathered into the web of things’
- ‘The spirit of things will migrate back into us. We shall be whole.’
- Language of village expresses ‘the raw life and unity of things’
- The emptiness of the landscape ‘feeds the spirit, and leaves it with no hunger for anything but more space’
- ‘I shall settle deep into the earth, deeper than I do in sleep, and will not be lost.’