The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, Volumen10Macmillan, 1896 |
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Página 3
... feeling for Landscape , who might be entitled to explore the District of the Lakes with that degree of attention to which its beauty may fairly lay claim . For the more sure attainment , however , of this primary object , he will begin ...
... feeling for Landscape , who might be entitled to explore the District of the Lakes with that degree of attention to which its beauty may fairly lay claim . For the more sure attainment , however , of this primary object , he will begin ...
Página 31
... feeling which belongs peculiarly to the lake — as a body of still water under the influence of no current ; reflecting therefore the clouds , the light , and all the imagery of the sky and surrounding hills ; expressing also and making ...
... feeling which belongs peculiarly to the lake — as a body of still water under the influence of no current ; reflecting therefore the clouds , the light , and all the imagery of the sky and surrounding hills ; expressing also and making ...
Página 32
... feeling is revived ; and one lake may thus in succession present to the eye the essential characteristic of many . But , though the forms of the large lakes have this ad- vantage , it is nevertheless favourable to the beauty of the ...
... feeling is revived ; and one lake may thus in succession present to the eye the essential characteristic of many . But , though the forms of the large lakes have this ad- vantage , it is nevertheless favourable to the beauty of the ...
Página 39
... feeling of solitude often more forcibly or more solemnly impressed than by the side of one of these mountain pools : though desolate and forbidding , it seems a distinct place to repair to ; yet where the visitants must be rare , and ...
... feeling of solitude often more forcibly or more solemnly impressed than by the side of one of these mountain pools : though desolate and forbidding , it seems a distinct place to repair to ; yet where the visitants must be rare , and ...
Página 41
... feelings . The WOODS consist chiefly of oak , ash , and birch , and here and there wych - elm , with underwood of hazel , the white and black thorn , and hollies ; in moist places alders and willows abound ; and yews among the rocks ...
... feelings . The WOODS consist chiefly of oak , ash , and birch , and here and there wych - elm , with underwood of hazel , the white and black thorn , and hollies ; in moist places alders and willows abound ; and yews among the rocks ...
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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