Poems of Wordsworth (from Arnold's Selections)Macmillan and Company, 1892 - 331 sidor |
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William Wordsworth Matthew Arnold. " The Child is Father of the Man ; And I could wish my days to be Bound each to each by natural picty . OF WORDSWORTH CHOSEN AND EDITED BY MATTHEW ARNOLD Engraved by.
William Wordsworth Matthew Arnold. " The Child is Father of the Man ; And I could wish my days to be Bound each to each by natural picty . OF WORDSWORTH CHOSEN AND EDITED BY MATTHEW ARNOLD Engraved by.
Sida v
... genuineness of Wordsworth , and I with an instinctive recognition of his firm hold on nature In and of his local truth , always admired him sincerely , and 10 a praised him generously . The influence of Coleridge upon young.
... genuineness of Wordsworth , and I with an instinctive recognition of his firm hold on nature In and of his local truth , always admired him sincerely , and 10 a praised him generously . The influence of Coleridge upon young.
Sida xiii
... natural propriety , and should be adhered to . It may sometimes seem doubtful to which of two categories a poem belongs ; whether this or that poem is to be called , for instance , narrative or lyric , lyric or elegiac . But there is to ...
... natural propriety , and should be adhered to . It may sometimes seem doubtful to which of two categories a poem belongs ; whether this or that poem is to be called , for instance , narrative or lyric , lyric or elegiac . But there is to ...
Sida xiv
... I say , to his subject , whatever it may be , of the ideas " On man , on nature , and on human life , " which he has acquired for himself . The line quoted is Wordsworth's own ; and his superiority arises from his powerful xiv PREFACE .
... I say , to his subject , whatever it may be , of the ideas " On man , on nature , and on human life , " which he has acquired for himself . The line quoted is Wordsworth's own ; and his superiority arises from his powerful xiv PREFACE .
Sida xv
... nature , and on human life . " Voltaire , with his signal acuteness , most truly re- marked that " no nation has treated in poetry moral ideas with more energy and depth than the English nation . " And he adds : " There , it seems to me ...
... nature , and on human life . " Voltaire , with his signal acuteness , most truly re- marked that " no nation has treated in poetry moral ideas with more energy and depth than the English nation . " And he adds : " There , it seems to me ...
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Ambleside art thou beauty behold beneath birds blessed bower breath bright Busk cheerful Child Child is Father churchyard clouds Cottage dead dear delight dost doth dream earth Ennerdale evermore fair fancy fear feel flowers Friend gentle glad glory Goethe Grasmere grave green grove happy hast hath hear heard heart Heaven hills hope hour human Kilve LEONARD live lofty lonely look Lord Macaulay Lycoris mind Molière moral morning mountain Nature Nature's never o'er passed peace pleasure poems poet poetic poetry praise PRIEST rill rocks round Rydal Mount seemed shade Shakspeare Shepherd sigh sight silent sing Skiddaw sleep smile song sorrow soul spirit stars stone stood stream sweet tears thee thine things thou art thought Trajan trees truth Twill vale voice Voltaire wander waters wild wind woods Wordsworth Wordsworthian Yarrow Ye Men youth