The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, Volumen9W. Paterson, 1889 |
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Página 21
... garden , with the river below it , whence the tower of the old castle of Cockermouth— “ a shattered monument of feudal sway -can be seen to the " " east . In The Prelude Wordsworth tells us that " One , the fairest of all rivers , loved ...
... garden , with the river below it , whence the tower of the old castle of Cockermouth— “ a shattered monument of feudal sway -can be seen to the " " east . In The Prelude Wordsworth tells us that " One , the fairest of all rivers , loved ...
Página 22
... garden , and on the terrace walk , that we can best realise the " five years ' child , " with his sister Dorothy — not a year his junior - in their favourite playground , visiting the " sparrow's nest " in the privet hedge , and the ...
... garden , and on the terrace walk , that we can best realise the " five years ' child , " with his sister Dorothy — not a year his junior - in their favourite playground , visiting the " sparrow's nest " in the privet hedge , and the ...
Página 23
... garden , very much as Wordsworth would see it in his childhood . The sound of the lapsing river combines with the sight of the shattered castle towers , and the associations of a vanished past , to give a tinge of melancholy to the ...
... garden , very much as Wordsworth would see it in his childhood . The sound of the lapsing river combines with the sight of the shattered castle towers , and the associations of a vanished past , to give a tinge of melancholy to the ...
Página 33
... garden , are familiar to every reader of The Prelude . Perhaps the most in- teresting is his allusion to That unruly child of mountain birth , The famous brook , who soon as he was boxed Within our garden , found himself at once , As if ...
... garden , are familiar to every reader of The Prelude . Perhaps the most in- teresting is his allusion to That unruly child of mountain birth , The famous brook , who soon as he was boxed Within our garden , found himself at once , As if ...
Página 34
... garden has been reduced in size by the use of that part of it fronting the lane for building purposes . The stream , before it enters the area of buildings and garden , is open by the lane side , and seemingly comes from the hills to ...
... garden has been reduced in size by the use of that part of it fronting the lane for building purposes . The stream , before it enters the area of buildings and garden , is open by the lane side , and seemingly comes from the hills to ...
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The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, Volume 1 William Wordsworth Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
Términos y frases comunes
afterwards Alfoxden Ambleside amongst beautiful birds Bishop of Landaff Bishop of Lincoln bright Bristol brother Calvert Cambridge clouds Cockermouth Coleridge Coleridge's cottage Cottle dear delightful dinner Dorothy Wordsworth Dove Cottage feeling Forncett Friday garden Goslar Grasmere green grove Hamburgh Hawkshead heard heart hills John John Wordsworth Journal Keswick lake letter light lived London looked Lyrical Ballads Mary Hutchinson Memoirs miles mind Monday moon morning mountains Nature Nether Stowey night o'clock orchard passed Penrith pleasant pleasure poem poet poet's poetry Prelude Racedown rock round Rydal S. T. COLERIDGE Sara sate Saturday seemed seen side sister snow Sockburn sonnet Southey stone Stowey stream Sunday things thought trees Tuesday vale valley verse volume walked waterfall Wednesday wild William William Wordsworth wind wood writing written wrote Wytheburn