William Wordsworth: A BiographyCash, 1856 - 508 sider |
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Side 42
... sorrow my support , The blessing of my life ; the gift is yours , Ye winds and sounding cataracts ! ' tis yours , Ye mountains ! thine , O Nature ! thou hast fed My lofty speculations ; and in thee , For this uneasy heart of ours , I ...
... sorrow my support , The blessing of my life ; the gift is yours , Ye winds and sounding cataracts ! ' tis yours , Ye mountains ! thine , O Nature ! thou hast fed My lofty speculations ; and in thee , For this uneasy heart of ours , I ...
Side 54
... Sorrows of Werter . Rocks are dewless , as hard hearts are tearless . It was the gifted and wonderful sensibility within him that reflected the impressions of all natural objects ; the passion was in his own soul - he stands before us ...
... Sorrows of Werter . Rocks are dewless , as hard hearts are tearless . It was the gifted and wonderful sensibility within him that reflected the impressions of all natural objects ; the passion was in his own soul - he stands before us ...
Side 58
... sorrow too powerfully , that broader view in which nature and time become the ministers of provi- dence , and thus the inspiration of the poet , -is lost , and the personal emotions of the mere author become infe- rior to those wider ...
... sorrow too powerfully , that broader view in which nature and time become the ministers of provi- dence , and thus the inspiration of the poet , -is lost , and the personal emotions of the mere author become infe- rior to those wider ...
Side 81
... sorrow , * but one of his most especial sources of grief was that England allied her- self with the confederacy of Europe to crush the liber- ties of France . To him at that moment England seemed recreant to herself - seemed to him to ...
... sorrow , * but one of his most especial sources of grief was that England allied her- self with the confederacy of Europe to crush the liber- ties of France . To him at that moment England seemed recreant to herself - seemed to him to ...
Side 87
... sorrow that there was an inability to generalise - sufficiently- objects , seen when seen in themselves - not as parts of a great whole or world - it was this constant tendency to allow the eye to rest on the last object , and to be ...
... sorrow that there was an inability to generalise - sufficiently- objects , seen when seen in themselves - not as parts of a great whole or world - it was this constant tendency to allow the eye to rest on the last object , and to be ...
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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