The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, Volumen3Macmillan, 1896 |
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Página 30
... mind , no sense Of hasty anger rising in the eclipse1 Of true domestic loyalty , did e'er Find place within his bosom . — Once again The persevering wedge of tyranny Achieved their separation and once more Were they united , —to be yet ...
... mind , no sense Of hasty anger rising in the eclipse1 Of true domestic loyalty , did e'er Find place within his bosom . — Once again The persevering wedge of tyranny Achieved their separation and once more Were they united , —to be yet ...
Página 34
... mind ! 305 In the preface to his volume , " Poems of Wordsworth chosen and edited by Matthew Arnold , " that distinguished poet and critic has said ( p . xxv . ) , “ I can read with pleasure and edification everything of Wordsworth , I ...
... mind ! 305 In the preface to his volume , " Poems of Wordsworth chosen and edited by Matthew Arnold , " that distinguished poet and critic has said ( p . xxv . ) , “ I can read with pleasure and edification everything of Wordsworth , I ...
Página 42
... mind ! 5 1 1827 . With all the heav'ns 1807 . In the original MS . sent to the printer , find that this stanza was transcribed by Coleridge . - Ed . So it is printed in the Prose Works of Wordsworth ( 1876 ) ; but the date was 1805.-ED ...
... mind ! 5 1 1827 . With all the heav'ns 1807 . In the original MS . sent to the printer , find that this stanza was transcribed by Coleridge . - Ed . So it is printed in the Prose Works of Wordsworth ( 1876 ) ; but the date was 1805.-ED ...
Página 46
... mind It breaks , and all is clear : He instantly recalled the name , 5 And who he was , and whence he came ; Remembered , too , the very day On which the Traveller passed this way . 40 45 binds 1807 . • 2 1815 . Not knowing what to ...
... mind It breaks , and all is clear : He instantly recalled the name , 5 And who he was , and whence he came ; Remembered , too , the very day On which the Traveller passed this way . 40 45 binds 1807 . • 2 1815 . Not knowing what to ...
Página 65
... mind and sweet memory of the dead , which you so happily describe , as now almost begun ; but I felt that it was improper , and most grating to the feelings of the afflicted , to say to them that the memory of their affliction would in ...
... mind and sweet memory of the dead , which you so happily describe , as now almost begun ; but I felt that it was improper , and most grating to the feelings of the afflicted , to say to them that the memory of their affliction would in ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Amid ash tree Beaupuy beauty behold beneath Benjamin breath bright brother Charles Lamb clouds Cockermouth Coleorton Coleridge Colthouse Compare cottage crag dear delight Dorothy Wordsworth doth Dove Cottage earth edition fancy feeling Friend Furness Abbey gleam Goslar Grasmere grove happy hath Hawkshead heard heart heaven Helvellyn hill honour hope hour human John Wordsworth Keswick labour lake less light lines living look memory mind morning mountain Nature Nature's night o'er once Paradise Lost passed passion peace Peele Castle plain pleasure poem poet Prelude road rock round scene seemed seen self-taught art side sight silent Sir George Beaumont solitude song soul sound spirit stanza stars stone stream summer sweet thee things Thirlmere thou thought trees truth Vale verse voice Waggoner walk William Wordsworth wind Windermere woods Wordsworth youth ΙΟ