The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, Volumen4W. Paterson, 1883 |
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Página vii
... MIND . 232 O'ERWEENING STATESMEN HAVE FULL LONG RELIED . 232 THE FRENCH AND THE SPANISH GUERILLAS . EPITAPHS TRANSLATED FROM CHIABRERA— 233 WEEP NOT , BELOVED FRIENDS ! NOR LET THE AIR . 234 PERHAPS SOME NEEDFUL SERVICE OF THE STATE ...
... MIND . 232 O'ERWEENING STATESMEN HAVE FULL LONG RELIED . 232 THE FRENCH AND THE SPANISH GUERILLAS . EPITAPHS TRANSLATED FROM CHIABRERA— 233 WEEP NOT , BELOVED FRIENDS ! NOR LET THE AIR . 234 PERHAPS SOME NEEDFUL SERVICE OF THE STATE ...
Página 5
... mind , with a name so illustrious . " This note would seem to warrant our removing the date of the com- position of the poem , from 1806 to 1805 ; since Lord Nelson died at the battle of Trafalgar , on the 21st of October 1805. On the ...
... mind , with a name so illustrious . " This note would seem to warrant our removing the date of the com- position of the poem , from 1806 to 1805 ; since Lord Nelson died at the battle of Trafalgar , on the 21st of October 1805. On the ...
Página 18
... mind employ1 Of him who gazes , or has gazed ? a grave and steady joy , That doth reject all show of pride , admits no outward sign , Because not of this noisy world , but silent and divine ! Whatever be the cause , 2 ' tis sure that ...
... mind employ1 Of him who gazes , or has gazed ? a grave and steady joy , That doth reject all show of pride , admits no outward sign , Because not of this noisy world , but silent and divine ! Whatever be the cause , 2 ' tis sure that ...
Página 24
... mind into activity . Sound sense , and love itself , and mirth and glee Are fostered by the comment and the gibe . " Even be it so yet still among your tribe , Our daily world's true Worldlings , rank not me ! Children are blest , and ...
... mind into activity . Sound sense , and love itself , and mirth and glee Are fostered by the comment and the gibe . " Even be it so yet still among your tribe , Our daily world's true Worldlings , rank not me ! Children are blest , and ...
Página 25
... mind is but the mind of his own eyes , He is a Slave ; the meanest we can meet ! III . Wings have we , -and as far as we can go We may find pleasure : wilderness and wood , Blank ocean and mere sky , support that mood Which with the ...
... mind is but the mind of his own eyes , He is a Slave ; the meanest we can meet ! III . Wings have we , -and as far as we can go We may find pleasure : wilderness and wood , Blank ocean and mere sky , support that mood Which with the ...
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Términos y frases comunes
amongst the Poems ancient appear Appleby Castle Banner Barden Tower beautiful BLACK COMB Bolton brother Brougham Castle Castle cheer clouds Coleorton Comp composition Creature dark dear delight Dorothy Wordsworth doth Dove Cottage Dr Johnson Earl earth edition Emily eyes Fancy fear feelings Fenwick note Grasmere grave ground happy hath heard heart heaven holy honour hope human images Imagination inscription labour Lady Anne Clifford Lady Beaumont language Leicestershire lines lived look Lord Clifford metre mind moral nature never night Norton o'er objects passion pleasure Poet poetical Poetry prayer Priory prose reader referred rock Rylstone Seven Whistlers sight Sir George Beaumont Skipton sleep song sonnet sorrow soul spirit St Cuthbert stood thee things thou thought tion tower Town-end tree vale verse voice Westmoreland Wharf White Doe words Wordsworth written youth