The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, Volumen9Macmillan, 1896 |
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Página 4
... minds of the lower orders of the community . While , with a servility which has prejudiced many people against ... mind ; and , like the generals in a neighbouring country , if it had been equally becoming your profession , you ...
... minds of the lower orders of the community . While , with a servility which has prejudiced many people against ... mind ; and , like the generals in a neighbouring country , if it had been equally becoming your profession , you ...
Página 12
... mind may be debauched ? Left to the quiet exercise of their own judgment , do you think that the people would have thought it necessary to set fire to the house of the philosophic Priestley , and to hunt down his life like that of a ...
... mind may be debauched ? Left to the quiet exercise of their own judgment , do you think that the people would have thought it necessary to set fire to the house of the philosophic Priestley , and to hunt down his life like that of a ...
Página 26
... mind are passed over in silence ? Your Lordship's conduct may bring to mind the story of a company of strolling comedians , who gave out the play of Hamlet as the performance of the evening . The audience were not a little surprised to ...
... mind are passed over in silence ? Your Lordship's conduct may bring to mind the story of a company of strolling comedians , who gave out the play of Hamlet as the performance of the evening . The audience were not a little surprised to ...
Página 31
... mind . The evidence of this fact is to be sought , not in the writings of Critics , but in those of Poets themselves . The majority of the following poems are to be con- sidered as experiments . They were written chiefly with a view to ...
... mind . The evidence of this fact is to be sought , not in the writings of Critics , but in those of Poets themselves . The majority of the following poems are to be con- sidered as experiments . They were written chiefly with a view to ...
Página 35
... mind , and I further considered the enjoyment which you had had from my Poems as an earnest that others might be delighted with them in the same , or a like manner . It is plain from your letter that the pleasure which I have given you ...
... mind , and I further considered the enjoyment which you had had from my Poems as an earnest that others might be delighted with them in the same , or a like manner . It is plain from your letter that the pleasure which I have given you ...
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The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth: With a Memoir, Volume 5 William Wordsworth Sin vista previa disponible - 2016 |
Términos y frases comunes
actions admiration Allies appear Armistice arms authority Bishop of Landaff British army cause character civil conduct Convention of Cintra deem dignity duty edition effect endeavour enemy ESSAYS evil exist expected express favour fear feelings force France French army Friend give heart honour hope human nature individual influence interest justice knowledge labour language laws less letter liberty Lisbon look Lord G Lyrical Ballads mankind manner means ment metre military power mind moral nation necessary never object opinion oppression passions Peninsula perfidy persons pleasure Poems Poet Poetry Portugal Portuguese possession present principle produced prose reader reason resistance Saragossa sentiments Seville shewn Sir Arthur Wellesley Sir Hew Sir Hew Dalrymple Sir J. M. Sir John Moore soldiers sorrow Spain Spaniards Spanish speak spirit superiority supposed things thought tion troops truth tyranny virtue Vols whole William Wordsworth wish words Wordsworth youth