The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, Volumen10Macmillan, 1896 |
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Página 47
... author of this fragment , was from his infancy brought up in Cumberland , and should have remembered that the practice of folding sheep by night is unknown among these moun- tains , and that the image of the Shepherd upon the watch is ...
... author of this fragment , was from his infancy brought up in Cumberland , and should have remembered that the practice of folding sheep by night is unknown among these moun- tains , and that the image of the Shepherd upon the watch is ...
Página 49
... Author , while making a trench in a level piece of ground , not far from the banks of the Emont , but in no connection with that river , met with some stones which seemed to him formally arranged ; this excited his curiosity , and ...
... Author , while making a trench in a level piece of ground , not far from the banks of the Emont , but in no connection with that river , met with some stones which seemed to him formally arranged ; this excited his curiosity , and ...
Página 51
... author before cited , " enfranchised their villains , and raised them to the dignity of customary tenants , the lands , which they had cultivated for their lord , were divided into whole tenements ; each of which , besides the customary ...
... author before cited , " enfranchised their villains , and raised them to the dignity of customary tenants , the lands , which they had cultivated for their lord , were divided into whole tenements ; each of which , besides the customary ...
Página 64
... Author of the Estimate of the Manners and Principles of the Times , published a letter to a friend , in which the ... Author's powers of mind enabled him to describe with distinctness and unaffected simplicity . Every reader of this ...
... Author of the Estimate of the Manners and Principles of the Times , published a letter to a friend , in which the ... Author's powers of mind enabled him to describe with distinctness and unaffected simplicity . Every reader of this ...
Página 82
... author has been induced to speak thus at length , by a wish to preserve the native beauty of this delightful district , because still further changes in its appearance must inevitably follow , from the change of inhabitants and owners ...
... author has been induced to speak thus at length , by a wish to preserve the native beauty of this delightful district , because still further changes in its appearance must inevitably follow , from the change of inhabitants and owners ...
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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