Autobiographic SketchesJames Hogg & Sons, 1854 - 352 sider |
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Side 70
... passions . I submitted to Lady Carbery , as a liberty which might be excused by the torrid extremity of our thirst after knowledge , that she ( as our leader ) should throw out some angling question moving in the line of our desires ...
... passions . I submitted to Lady Carbery , as a liberty which might be excused by the torrid extremity of our thirst after knowledge , that she ( as our leader ) should throw out some angling question moving in the line of our desires ...
Side 148
... break the continuity of the passion , by reminding the reader of a printed book ; on which account Milton himself ( to give an instance ) has not marked the sublime words , " tormented all the 148 AUTOBIOGRAPHIC SKETCHES .
... break the continuity of the passion , by reminding the reader of a printed book ; on which account Milton himself ( to give an instance ) has not marked the sublime words , " tormented all the 148 AUTOBIOGRAPHIC SKETCHES .
Side 160
... passionate an admirer of the Hartleian philosophy , that " Hartley " was the sole baptismal name which he gave to his eldest child ; and in an early poem , entitled " Religious Musings , " he has characterised Hartley as " Him of mortal ...
... passionate an admirer of the Hartleian philosophy , that " Hartley " was the sole baptismal name which he gave to his eldest child ; and in an early poem , entitled " Religious Musings , " he has characterised Hartley as " Him of mortal ...
Side 221
... passionate sense of beauty , and his consequent too pathetic sense of its decay . Everywhere - above , be- low ... passion , an angel ap- pears to comfort him ; and , by the sudden revelation of her immortal beauty , does , in fact ...
... passionate sense of beauty , and his consequent too pathetic sense of its decay . Everywhere - above , be- low ... passion , an angel ap- pears to comfort him ; and , by the sudden revelation of her immortal beauty , does , in fact ...
Side 222
... passions , still cleaving to their object , force us into endless rebellion . Feelings , the same in kind as these , attach themselves to our mental powers and our vital energies . Phantoms of lost power , sudden intuitions , and ...
... passions , still cleaving to their object , force us into endless rebellion . Feelings , the same in kind as these , attach themselves to our mental powers and our vital energies . Phantoms of lost power , sudden intuitions , and ...
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accident admiration Ambleside amongst ancient beauty believe Biographia Literaria Bristol Buttermere called character chiefly circumstances Coleridge Coleridge's connected cottage Cumberland daily Easedale effect England English Esthwaite Water expression eyes face fact feeling Grasmere Greek habits happened Hawkshead heard heart Helvellyn honour horses human intellectual interest Keswick knew known Lady Carbery Lake Langdale Laxton least lived Lord Lonsdale Lord Massey marriage Meantime miles mind Miss Wordsworth mode mother mountains nature neighbour Nether Stowey never night occasion once original party passed passion peculiar Penrith perhaps person poem poet pretty Quantock Hills reader reason regarded river Greta road Samuel Taylor Coleridge Sarah Green scene Schreiber seemed sense sister solitary solitude Southey Southey's spirit supposed thought tion town truth vale Westmoreland whilst whole William Wordsworth word young ladies youth