The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, Volumen9W. Paterson, 1889 |
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Página xv
... night at the Castle , and if so , I shall probably let him know what I think of his action . " And so it was . After dinner the new proprietor , who had shut up the foot- path , referred at considerable length to the Radicals , who ...
... night at the Castle , and if so , I shall probably let him know what I think of his action . " And so it was . After dinner the new proprietor , who had shut up the foot- path , referred at considerable length to the Radicals , who ...
Página 11
... night , having lost his way in re- turning from Broughton - in - Furness to Cockermouth . Of the poet's mother , Anne Cookson , we know little . She was born at Penrith in January 1747 , was married at the age of nineteen in February ...
... night , having lost his way in re- turning from Broughton - in - Furness to Cockermouth . Of the poet's mother , Anne Cookson , we know little . She was born at Penrith in January 1747 , was married at the age of nineteen in February ...
Página 27
... night ; how with his schoolmates in spring he would climb to high places to harry the raven's nest and when he hung , by knots of grass And half - inch fissures in the slippery rock But ill sustained , and almost ( so it seemed ) ...
... night ; how with his schoolmates in spring he would climb to high places to harry the raven's nest and when he hung , by knots of grass And half - inch fissures in the slippery rock But ill sustained , and almost ( so it seemed ) ...
Página 28
... nights he would take his boat , and row alone in the moonlight across the lake ; and , while his elfin pinnace went heaving through the water like a swan , the huge peak of Wetherlam would rise up behind the horizon , " as if with ...
... nights he would take his boat , and row alone in the moonlight across the lake ; and , while his elfin pinnace went heaving through the water like a swan , the huge peak of Wetherlam would rise up behind the horizon , " as if with ...
Página 32
... nights to watch The moon in splendour couched among the leaves * The suggestion was due to Mr Rawnsley , then Vicar of Wray , now of Crosthwaite , Keswick , and the scrolls are the work of Mrs Rawnsley . + See The Prelude , book i ...
... nights to watch The moon in splendour couched among the leaves * The suggestion was due to Mr Rawnsley , then Vicar of Wray , now of Crosthwaite , Keswick , and the scrolls are the work of Mrs Rawnsley . + See The Prelude , book i ...
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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