The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth: Poems of the imaginationClarendon Press, 1944 |
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Page 387
... expression , in order to furnish food for fickle tastes , and fickle appetites , of their own creation . ' I cannot ... expressed in language pure and universally intelligible even to this day.-W. W. 3 so 1836 : Not that I mean to say ...
... expression , in order to furnish food for fickle tastes , and fickle appetites , of their own creation . ' I cannot ... expressed in language pure and universally intelligible even to this day.-W. W. 3 so 1836 : Not that I mean to say ...
Page 408
... expressed ; some Critics would call the language prosaic ; the fact is , it would be bad prose , so bad , that it is scarcely worse in metre . The epithet " church - going " applied to a bell , and that by so chaste a writer as Cowper ...
... expressed ; some Critics would call the language prosaic ; the fact is , it would be bad prose , so bad , that it is scarcely worse in metre . The epithet " church - going " applied to a bell , and that by so chaste a writer as Cowper ...
Page 444
... expressed upon the course of public affairs , and feelings given vent to as national interests excited them . Since nothing , I trust , has been uttered but in the spirit of reflective patriotism , those notices are left to produce ...
... expressed upon the course of public affairs , and feelings given vent to as national interests excited them . Since nothing , I trust , has been uttered but in the spirit of reflective patriotism , those notices are left to produce ...
Contents
Artegal and Elidure | 14 |
To a Butterfly | 22 |
Louisa After accompanying her on a Mountain Excursion | 29 |
36 other sections not shown
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Alfoxden Ambleside Ballads Barron Field beauty behold beneath bird bower breast breath bright child clouds Coleorton Coleridge Composed composition Cuckoo D. W.'s Journal dear delight doth Dowden earth eyes fair Fancy fear feelings flowers friends Glow-worm Grasmere green grove hand happy hath head heard heart heaven hill hope human images imagination lake language Laodamia lines living look Lyrical Ballads metre mind morning mountain nature never night o'er objects pain Paradise Lost pass passage passion Peter Bell pleasure poem Poet poetic poetry poor Prelude Reader river Swale rocks round Rydal Mount side sight song sorrow soul sound spirit stanza stars sweet thee thine things thou thought Town-End trees truth twa Sisters vale verse voice wandering wild WILLIAM WORDSWORTH wind woods words written Youth ΙΟ