The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, Volume 1G. Bell & Sons, 1892 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 38
Page xxvii
... seemed small , and what had been accepted as ordinary now appeared quaint or grotesque ; and notwith- standing this , all was dearer than it had ever been before , and in his love there was less of egoistic appropriation and more of ...
... seemed small , and what had been accepted as ordinary now appeared quaint or grotesque ; and notwith- standing this , all was dearer than it had ever been before , and in his love there was less of egoistic appropriation and more of ...
Page xxviii
... seemed natural , and he moved along with what was happening " as a bird moves through the air . " Soon after he had taken his degree , Words- worth , with vague views as to his mode of earning a livelihood , journeyed to London ...
... seemed natural , and he moved along with what was happening " as a bird moves through the air . " Soon after he had taken his degree , Words- worth , with vague views as to his mode of earning a livelihood , journeyed to London ...
Page xxx
... seemed a moment of brightness . Yet Wordsworth was not insensible to the dangers of the cause that had grown so dear to him , and he even dreamed that he himself might be the man through whom the salvation of France should be wrought ...
... seemed a moment of brightness . Yet Wordsworth was not insensible to the dangers of the cause that had grown so dear to him , and he even dreamed that he himself might be the man through whom the salvation of France should be wrought ...
Page xxxvii
... with small success or none , a portrait of the poet . As seen at Nether Stowey in 1798 Wordsworth seemed to his new acquain- tance gaunt and Don Quixote like : " There was something of a roll , a lounge in his gait MEMOIR . xxxvii.
... with small success or none , a portrait of the poet . As seen at Nether Stowey in 1798 Wordsworth seemed to his new acquain- tance gaunt and Don Quixote like : " There was something of a roll , a lounge in his gait MEMOIR . xxxvii.
Page xxxviii
... seemed to come from unfathomed depths a light radiating from some far spiritual world . " " The mouth , and the whole circumjacencies of the mouth , " goes on De Quincey , " composed the strongest feature in Wordsworth's face ; " not ...
... seemed to come from unfathomed depths a light radiating from some far spiritual world . " " The mouth , and the whole circumjacencies of the mouth , " goes on De Quincey , " composed the strongest feature in Wordsworth's face ; " not ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Alfoxden babe beauty beneath Betty Betty Foy blessed bright brook brother cheerful child Coleridge cottage Dated by Wordsworth dead dear delight door Dorothy Wordsworth Dove Cottage earth Ennerdale eyes Father fear feel fields flowers gone Grasmere grave green grief hand happy hath Hawkshead hear heard heart heaven hills hope hour Idiot Boy Idon Idonea Johnny Kilve lake lamb Leonard light lines living look Luke Lyrical Ballads MARMADUKE mind moon mother mountains nature Nether Stowey never night o'er Oswald pain passed peace poem poor published 1807 Quantock hills rock round Rydal Mount Salisbury Plain seen shade Shepherd side sight sister sleep smile sorrow soul spirit stanza stood Susan sweet tears tell thee thine things thou art thought Town-end trees vale voice walk wild wind woods words written Youth ΙΟ