The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, Volumen10Macmillan, 1896 |
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... poet's constitutional dislike to correspondence , and his habit of getting most of his writing done by proxy - contain some of his best dicta , and the daintiest of his critical opinions on men and things . Meanwhile , they are all ...
... poet's constitutional dislike to correspondence , and his habit of getting most of his writing done by proxy - contain some of his best dicta , and the daintiest of his critical opinions on men and things . Meanwhile , they are all ...
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... poetic fragment given at pp . 35-6 , first published in 1827 under the title Water- Fowl - but which is a part of a canto of The Recluse , entitled ' Home in Grasmere " -differs slightly both from the printed text of Water - Fowl , and ...
... poetic fragment given at pp . 35-6 , first published in 1827 under the title Water- Fowl - but which is a part of a canto of The Recluse , entitled ' Home in Grasmere " -differs slightly both from the printed text of Water - Fowl , and ...
Página 44
... poet ! and the height of the Cumbrian mountains is sufficient to exhibit daily and hourly instances of those mysterious attachments.1 Such clouds , cleaving to their stations , or lifting up suddenly their glittering heads from behind ...
... poet ! and the height of the Cumbrian mountains is sufficient to exhibit daily and hourly instances of those mysterious attachments.1 Such clouds , cleaving to their stations , or lifting up suddenly their glittering heads from behind ...
Página 64
... Poet , followed : he died soon after his forlorn and melancholy pilgrimage to the Vale of Keswick , and the record left behind him of what he had seen and felt in this journey , excited that pensive interest with which the human mind is ...
... Poet , followed : he died soon after his forlorn and melancholy pilgrimage to the Vale of Keswick , and the record left behind him of what he had seen and felt in this journey , excited that pensive interest with which the human mind is ...
Página 69
... poet , the divine Spenser , which will show in what manner such a plan may be realised without injury to the native beauty of these scenes . Into that forest farre they thence him led , Where was their dwelling in a pleasant glade With ...
... poet , the divine Spenser , which will show in what manner such a plan may be realised without injury to the native beauty of these scenes . Into that forest farre they thence him led , Where was their dwelling in a pleasant glade With ...
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admiration Alps Ambleside ancient appearance Author beauty Blowick Borrowdale Buttermere character Charles Lamb Church colour cottages course degree district edition effect England epitaph especially ESSAYS existence expression fancy favourable feeling Freeholders friends genius Grasmere ground Haweswater Hawkshead heart Helvellyn honour human imagination inhabitants injurious instances interest island Kendal Keswick Kirkby Lonsdale labour Lake less living look Loughrigg Fell manner miles mind moral mountains nations native Nature objects observed opinion opposite Paradise Lost pass passion Patterdale Penrith persons pleasure Poems Poet Poetical Poetry Pooley Bridge principle reader reason road rocks Rydal scarcely scene seen sense sentiments side Skiddaw spirit stone stream sublimity taste things thoughts tion traveller trees truth Ullswater Ulverston Vale valley verse virtue Wastdale Westmorland whole WILLIAM WORDSWORTH Windermere winds wish woods words Wordsworth writing