The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, Volumen4W. Paterson, 1883 |
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Página vii
... O'ER THE WIDE EARTH , ON MOUNTAIN AND ON PLAIN . 221 HAIL , ZARAGOZA ! IF WITH UNWET EYE . 222 SAY , WHAT IS HONOUR ? —TIS THE FINEST SENSE . 223 BRAVE SCHILL ! BY DEATH DELIVERED , TAKE THY FLIGHT . CALL NOT THE ROYAL SWEDE UNFORTUNATE ...
... O'ER THE WIDE EARTH , ON MOUNTAIN AND ON PLAIN . 221 HAIL , ZARAGOZA ! IF WITH UNWET EYE . 222 SAY , WHAT IS HONOUR ? —TIS THE FINEST SENSE . 223 BRAVE SCHILL ! BY DEATH DELIVERED , TAKE THY FLIGHT . CALL NOT THE ROYAL SWEDE UNFORTUNATE ...
Página 45
... o'er rocky height Which the goat cannot climb , takes his sounding flight ; He tosses about in every bare tree , As , if you look up , you plainly may see ; But how he will come , and whither he goes , There's never a scholar in England ...
... o'er rocky height Which the goat cannot climb , takes his sounding flight ; He tosses about in every bare tree , As , if you look up , you plainly may see ; But how he will come , and whither he goes , There's never a scholar in England ...
Página 52
... o'er a Slave , A Presence which is not to be put by ; 2 Thou little Child , yet glorious in the might Of heaven - born freedom on thy being's height , 3 Why with such earnest pains dost thou provoke The years to bring the inevitable ...
... o'er a Slave , A Presence which is not to be put by ; 2 Thou little Child , yet glorious in the might Of heaven - born freedom on thy being's height , 3 Why with such earnest pains dost thou provoke The years to bring the inevitable ...
Página 55
... o'er man's mortality ; Another race hath been , and other palms are won . Thanks to the human heart by which we live , Thanks to its tenderness , its joys , and fears , To me the meanest flower that blows can give Thoughts that do often ...
... o'er man's mortality ; Another race hath been , and other palms are won . Thanks to the human heart by which we live , Thanks to its tenderness , its joys , and fears , To me the meanest flower that blows can give Thoughts that do often ...
Página 61
... o'er his head , and knew from whence He came condemned hither , And , as first Love draws strongest , so from hence His mind sure progressed thither . " Henry Vaughan , Silex Scintillans . Mr Reed also quotes from the poem Childe - hood ...
... o'er his head , and knew from whence He came condemned hither , And , as first Love draws strongest , so from hence His mind sure progressed thither . " Henry Vaughan , Silex Scintillans . Mr Reed also quotes from the poem Childe - hood ...
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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