William Wordsworth: A BiographyCash, 1856 - 508 sider |
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Side iii
... sense of the word this book does not profess to be , it is an attempt at a coherent view of the life of the Poet , from his own records of thoughts and emotions , bound together by iv . the faint thread of circumstantial peculiarity and ...
... sense of the word this book does not profess to be , it is an attempt at a coherent view of the life of the Poet , from his own records of thoughts and emotions , bound together by iv . the faint thread of circumstantial peculiarity and ...
Side vii
... sense of Sound - Sounds in general- Intense sympathy with Nature - Study Nature - Ebenezer El- liot - Difficulties of Life - Difficulties vanishing .. CHAPTER III . DESPONDENCY ; THE EVERLASTING NO . Wordsworth in France - Causes of ...
... sense of Sound - Sounds in general- Intense sympathy with Nature - Study Nature - Ebenezer El- liot - Difficulties of Life - Difficulties vanishing .. CHAPTER III . DESPONDENCY ; THE EVERLASTING NO . Wordsworth in France - Causes of ...
Side 4
... sense of the word forms but a small portion of the present plan . Dissertation , and Illustration , and Elucidation , are of far more import to it , and however impertinent the office of guide sometimes is , there are those who will be ...
... sense of the word forms but a small portion of the present plan . Dissertation , and Illustration , and Elucidation , are of far more import to it , and however impertinent the office of guide sometimes is , there are those who will be ...
Side 12
... sense of smell , or music the perception of sound , But as without the ministers to the senses , they might as well be locked up and dead , so the faculties of the soul are awakened by the influences which flow around it . Circumstances ...
... sense of smell , or music the perception of sound , But as without the ministers to the senses , they might as well be locked up and dead , so the faculties of the soul are awakened by the influences which flow around it . Circumstances ...
Side 17
... Sense of his own Consciousness . Even at that early period his own shadow fell on every object . Nothing was contemplated alone and in itself ; mere animal pleasure and excitement we find invariably yielding to mental , and the ...
... Sense of his own Consciousness . Even at that early period his own shadow fell on every object . Nothing was contemplated alone and in itself ; mere animal pleasure and excitement we find invariably yielding to mental , and the ...
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admiration ancient Artist beautiful beheld beneath Bishopsgate character charm cloth clouds Coleridge colours deep delight Drama ELIHU BURRITT emotions faith fancy feel felt flowers forms FREDERICK G genius Goethe Grasmere Grecian Hartley Coleridge hath Hawkshead heart heaven Helvellyn Henry Alford hills homage human impressions interest Jeffrey lake Land of Wordsworth Laodamia light live lofty look Lord Lyrical Ballads mental mighty Milton mind moral mountain nature never objects painting passed passion perhaps Peter Bell poems Poet Poet's poetry portrait Quincey racter reader ROBERT SOUTHEY rock round Rydal Rylstone SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE scenery Schiller seems seen sense Sonnets sorrow soul sound Southey spirit sublime sympathy thee things thou thought tion true truth utterance verse village voice walk WATER LILY whole wild William Wordsworth Windermere winds woman wonderful words writings youth