The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth ...E. Moxon & Company, 1870 |
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Página 16
... hour , Do penitential cogitations cling ; Like ivy , round some ancient elm , they twine In grisly folds and strictures serpentine ; Yet , while they strangle , a fair growth they bring , For recompence their own perennial bower . XXII ...
... hour , Do penitential cogitations cling ; Like ivy , round some ancient elm , they twine In grisly folds and strictures serpentine ; Yet , while they strangle , a fair growth they bring , For recompence their own perennial bower . XXII ...
Página 17
... hour of death , The last dear service of thy passing breath * ! XXIV . SAXON MONASTERIES , AND LIGHTS AND SHADES OF THE RELIGION . By such examples moved to unbought pains , The people work like congregated bees ; Eager to build the ...
... hour of death , The last dear service of thy passing breath * ! XXIV . SAXON MONASTERIES , AND LIGHTS AND SHADES OF THE RELIGION . By such examples moved to unbought pains , The people work like congregated bees ; Eager to build the ...
Página 28
... , fondly hailed By superstition , spread the Papal power ; Yet do not deem the Autocracy prevailed Thus only , even in error's darkest hour . She daunts , forth - thundering from her spiritual tower 28 POEMS OF THE IMAGINATION .
... , fondly hailed By superstition , spread the Papal power ; Yet do not deem the Autocracy prevailed Thus only , even in error's darkest hour . She daunts , forth - thundering from her spiritual tower 28 POEMS OF THE IMAGINATION .
Página 38
... hour to hour . XVII . WICLIFFE . ONCE more the Church is seized with sudden fear , And at her call is Wicliffe disinhumed : Yea , his dry bones to ashes are consumed And flung into the brook that travels near ; Forthwith , that ancient ...
... hour to hour . XVII . WICLIFFE . ONCE more the Church is seized with sudden fear , And at her call is Wicliffe disinhumed : Yea , his dry bones to ashes are consumed And flung into the brook that travels near ; Forthwith , that ancient ...
Página 72
... hours of festal mirth , The tombs - which hear and answer that brief cry , The Infant's notice of his second birth— Recal the wandering Soul to sympathy With what man hopes from Heaven , yet fears from Earth . XXI . SPONSORS . FATHER ...
... hours of festal mirth , The tombs - which hear and answer that brief cry , The Infant's notice of his second birth— Recal the wandering Soul to sympathy With what man hopes from Heaven , yet fears from Earth . XXI . SPONSORS . FATHER ...
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Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth: With a Memoir, Volumen4 William Wordsworth Vista completa - 1865 |
Términos y frases comunes
Abbotsford abode Alfoxden ancient beauty Bees blessing blest Bothwell Castle bowers breast breath bright brow Canute Castle cheer Church clouds COCKERMOUTH crown dark dear divine doth dread DUNOLLIE CASTLE earth faith Fancy fear feeling flowers gleam grace Grasmere green hand happy hath heard heart Heaven hill holy honour hope hour human humble Isle Julian's Bower labouring land light live LOCH ETIVE look meek memory mind morning Mosgiel Mount mountain natural Nature's night o'er peace Penrith poem poor praise prayer repose rite river Derwent RIVER EDEN round Rydal Rydal Mount sacred shade shine sigh sight silent Sir Walter Scott smooth soft song Sonnet sorrow soul spirit spread Staffa stanza stars stream sweet tears thee thou thought tower tree truth Ullswater vale verses voice waves wild wind wings words Workington Yarrow