The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, Volumen4Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green, 1827 |
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Página 4
... mortal Man may not abide : ” — How nearly joy and sorrow are allied ! For us the stream of fiction ceased to flow , For us the voice of melody was mute . --- But , as soft gales dissolve the dreary snow , And give the timid herbage ...
... mortal Man may not abide : ” — How nearly joy and sorrow are allied ! For us the stream of fiction ceased to flow , For us the voice of melody was mute . --- But , as soft gales dissolve the dreary snow , And give the timid herbage ...
Página 21
... touched thee , and a Spirit's hand : A voice is with us a command To chant , in strains of heavenly glory , A tale of tears , a mortal story ! CANTO SECOND . THE Harp in lowliness obeyed ; And CANTO 1 . 21 OF RYLSTONE .
... touched thee , and a Spirit's hand : A voice is with us a command To chant , in strains of heavenly glory , A tale of tears , a mortal story ! CANTO SECOND . THE Harp in lowliness obeyed ; And CANTO 1 . 21 OF RYLSTONE .
Página 73
... a treacherous wound Unfeeling , brought him to the ground , A mortal stroke : - oh , grief to tell ! Thus , thus , the noble Francis fell : VOL . IV . E There did he lie of breath forsaken ; The Banner CANTO VI . 73 OF RYLSTONE .
... a treacherous wound Unfeeling , brought him to the ground , A mortal stroke : - oh , grief to tell ! Thus , thus , the noble Francis fell : VOL . IV . E There did he lie of breath forsaken ; The Banner CANTO VI . 73 OF RYLSTONE .
Página 80
... mortal love ; Undaunted , lofty , calm , and stable , And awfully impenetrable . And so - - beneath a mouldered tree , A self - surviving leafless Oak , By unregarded age from stroke Of ravage saved - sate Emily . There did she rest ...
... mortal love ; Undaunted , lofty , calm , and stable , And awfully impenetrable . And so - - beneath a mouldered tree , A self - surviving leafless Oak , By unregarded age from stroke Of ravage saved - sate Emily . There did she rest ...
Página 89
... mortal Song we frame , by dower Encouraged of celestial power ; Power which the viewless Spirit shed By whom we were first visited ; Whose voice we heard , whose hand and wings Swept like a breeze the conscious strings , 4 When , left ...
... mortal Song we frame , by dower Encouraged of celestial power ; Power which the viewless Spirit shed By whom we were first visited ; Whose voice we heard , whose hand and wings Swept like a breeze the conscious strings , 4 When , left ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth: With a Memoir, Volumen4 William Wordsworth Vista completa - 1865 |
Términos y frases comunes
Banner beautiful behold beneath bless Bolton Bolton Abbey bowers Brancepeth brave breast breath bright calm Canute cheer Child city of Durham composition Coniston Creature curacy dark dear deep delight doth Duddon earth Emily endeavour eyebright eyes fair fear feelings flowers Francis Friend gentle gliding grace grave green hand happy hath hear heard heart Heaven hill holy honour hope human Lady language light live lonely look Loweswater Maid metre metrical mind morning mortal mountain mournful murmur nature Norton o'er passion peace pleasure Poems Poet poetic diction Poetry prayer prose Reader rills RIVER DUDDON Robert Walker rock round Rylstone Savona Seathwaite side sigh sight silent sing solitude song Sonnet sorrow soul spirit stand stood sweet tears thee things thou thought Tower Trajan trees truth Ulpha vale verse voice Wharf whence White Doe wind words youth