The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, Volumen9Macmillan, 1896 |
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Página 3
... supposed to be seen , continuing your way for a long time unseduced and un- dismayed ; but those who now look for you will look in vain , and it is feared you have at last fallen , through one of the numerous trap - doors , into the ...
... supposed to be seen , continuing your way for a long time unseduced and un- dismayed ; but those who now look for you will look in vain , and it is feared you have at last fallen , through one of the numerous trap - doors , into the ...
Página 5
... supposed you are one of those who are unpersuaded of the guilt of Louis XVI . If you had attended to the history of the French Revolu- tion as minutely as its importance demands , so far from stopping to bewail his death , you would ...
... supposed you are one of those who are unpersuaded of the guilt of Louis XVI . If you had attended to the history of the French Revolu- tion as minutely as its importance demands , so far from stopping to bewail his death , you would ...
Página 20
... upon that lustre which they supposed thrown round them , and , prodigally relying on such resources , lavished what alone was their own , their personal reputation ? It would be happy if this delusion were confined to 20 I LETTER TO THE.
... upon that lustre which they supposed thrown round them , and , prodigally relying on such resources , lavished what alone was their own , their personal reputation ? It would be happy if this delusion were confined to 20 I LETTER TO THE.
Página 21
... supposed to stand in no need of it . But let me ask you seriously , from the mode in which these distinctions are originally conferred , is it not almost necessary that , far from being the rewards of services rendered to the State ...
... supposed to stand in no need of it . But let me ask you seriously , from the mode in which these distinctions are originally conferred , is it not almost necessary that , far from being the rewards of services rendered to the State ...
Página 24
... supposed the emanation of the general will without concluding the people stripped of reason , of sentiment , and even of that first instinct which prompts them to preserve their own existence . I I congratulate your Lordship upon your ...
... supposed the emanation of the general will without concluding the people stripped of reason , of sentiment , and even of that first instinct which prompts them to preserve their own existence . I I congratulate your Lordship upon your ...
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The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, Volume 1 William Wordsworth Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
Términos y frases comunes
actions admiration Allies appear Armistice arms authority Bishop of Landaff British army cause character civil conduct contemplation 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 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