The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth: With a Memoir, Volumen3Houghton, Mifflin, 1880 |
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Página 68
... human ! Many precious rites And customs of our rural ancestry Are gone or stealing from us ; this , I hope , Will last for ever . Oft on my way have I Stood still , though but a casual passenger , So much I felt the awfulness of life ...
... human ! Many precious rites And customs of our rural ancestry Are gone or stealing from us ; this , I hope , Will last for ever . Oft on my way have I Stood still , though but a casual passenger , So much I felt the awfulness of life ...
Página 84
... human life from darkness . " - A quick turn Through a strait passage of encumbered ground Proved that such hope was vain : -for now we stood Shut out from prospect of the open vale , And saw the water , that composed this rill ...
... human life from darkness . " - A quick turn Through a strait passage of encumbered ground Proved that such hope was vain : -for now we stood Shut out from prospect of the open vale , And saw the water , that composed this rill ...
Página 85
... human hand In mockery , to wither in the sun , Or lay its beauty flat before a breeze , The first that entered . But no breeze did now Find entrance ; — high or low appeared no trace Of motion , save the water that descended , Diffused ...
... human hand In mockery , to wither in the sun , Or lay its beauty flat before a breeze , The first that entered . But no breeze did now Find entrance ; — high or low appeared no trace Of motion , save the water that descended , Diffused ...
Página 86
... the stately towers , Reared by the industrious hand of human art , To lift thee high above the misty air And turbulence of murmuring cities vast ; From academic groves , that have for thee Been planted 86 THE EXCURSION .
... the stately towers , Reared by the industrious hand of human art , To lift thee high above the misty air And turbulence of murmuring cities vast ; From academic groves , that have for thee Been planted 86 THE EXCURSION .
Página 92
... human life From seats of power divine ; and hope , or trust , That our existence winds her stately course Beneath the sun , like Ganges , to make part Of a living ocean ; or to sink ingulfed , Like Niger , in impenetrable sands And ...
... human life From seats of power divine ; and hope , or trust , That our existence winds her stately course Beneath the sun , like Ganges , to make part Of a living ocean ; or to sink ingulfed , Like Niger , in impenetrable sands And ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, with a Memoir, Volumen3 William Wordsworth Vista completa - 1878 |
Términos y frases comunes
acknowledged law Alfoxden Ambleside beauty behold beneath breath bright calm cheerful clouds Coleorton composed cottage course creature dark dear delight Dominique de Gourgues doth earth epitaph faith fancy fear feel fields flowers Friend Goslar Grasmere grave grove happy hath Hawkshead heard heart heaven Helvellyn hills honored hope hour human labor less light living Loch Etive lofty lonely look maternal bond mind moral mountains mused nature Nature's night o'er objects once passed passion peace pleased pleasure poem Poet pure Quantock Hill River Duddon rocks round Rydal Mount S. T. Coleridge Scotland seemed shade side sight silent smooth Solitary solitude sonnet sorrow soul sound spake speak spirit stood stream sublime sweet tender thee things thou thought trees truth turned vale verse voice walk Wanderer whence wild wind Windermere wish words youth