The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, Volumen10Macmillan, 1896 |
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Página 44
... Nature ! how pregnant with imagination for the 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 ...
... Nature ! how pregnant with imagination for the 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 ...
Página 47
... Nature has discriminated this country from others . I will now describe , in general terms , in what manner it is indebted to the hand of man . What I have to notice 1 Dr. Brown , the author of this fragment , was from his infancy ...
... Nature has discriminated this country from others . I will now describe , in general terms , in what manner it is indebted to the hand of man . What I have to notice 1 Dr. Brown , the author of this fragment , was from his infancy ...
Página 48
... Nature in the empire of beasts . " Such was the state and appearance of this region when the aboriginal colonists of the Celtic tribes were first driven or drawn towards it , and became joint tenants with the wolf , the boar , the wild ...
... Nature in the empire of beasts . " Such was the state and appearance of this region when the aboriginal colonists of the Celtic tribes were first driven or drawn towards it , and became joint tenants with the wolf , the boar , the wild ...
Página 57
... Nature . We will now take a view of the same agency —acting , within narrower bounds , for the production of the few works of art and accommodations of life which , in so simple a state of society , could be necessary . These are merely ...
... Nature . We will now take a view of the same agency —acting , within narrower bounds , for the production of the few works of art and accommodations of life which , in so simple a state of society , could be necessary . These are merely ...
Página 58
... Nature , do thus , clothed in part with a vegetable garb , appear to be received into the bosom of the living prin- ciple of things , as it acts and exists among the woods and fields ; and , by their colour and their shape , affect ...
... Nature , do thus , clothed in part with a vegetable garb , appear to be received into the bosom of the living prin- ciple of things , as it acts and exists among the woods and fields ; and , by their colour and their shape , affect ...
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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