The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, Volume 5G. Bell & Sons, 1893 |
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Page 12
... aid my verse , content with local bounds Of natural beauty and life's daily rounds , Thoughts , chances , sights , or doings , which we tell 54 Without reserve to those whom we love well- Then haply 12 WORDSWORTH'S POEMS .
... aid my verse , content with local bounds Of natural beauty and life's daily rounds , Thoughts , chances , sights , or doings , which we tell 54 Without reserve to those whom we love well- Then haply 12 WORDSWORTH'S POEMS .
Page 20
... Dianæ as it is often called , not only in its clear waters and circular form , and the beauty immediately surrounding it , but 20 WORDSWORTH'S POEMS . Upon perusing the foregoing Epistle thirty Years after its Composition.
... Dianæ as it is often called , not only in its clear waters and circular form , and the beauty immediately surrounding it , but 20 WORDSWORTH'S POEMS . Upon perusing the foregoing Epistle thirty Years after its Composition.
Page 21
... beauty by the felling of many natural clumps of wood , relics of the old forest , particularly upon the farm called " The Oaks , " from the abundance of that tree which grew there . It is to be regretted , upon public grounds , that Sir ...
... beauty by the felling of many natural clumps of wood , relics of the old forest , particularly upon the farm called " The Oaks , " from the abundance of that tree which grew there . It is to be regretted , upon public grounds , that Sir ...
Page 24
... beauty gone And admiration lost , by change of place That brings to the inward creature no disgrace But if the change restore his birthright , then , 25 Whate'er the difference , boundless is the gain . Who can divine what impulses from ...
... beauty gone And admiration lost , by change of place That brings to the inward creature no disgrace But if the change restore his birthright , then , 25 Whate'er the difference , boundless is the gain . Who can divine what impulses from ...
Page 51
... beauty Lodged within compass of the humblest sight , To cheerful intercourse with wood and field , 40 And sympathy with man's substantial griefs- Will not be heard in vain ? And in those days When unforeseen distress spreads far and ...
... beauty Lodged within compass of the humblest sight , To cheerful intercourse with wood and field , 40 And sympathy with man's substantial griefs- Will not be heard in vain ? And in those days When unforeseen distress spreads far and ...
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Common terms and phrases
admiration Æneid Alfoxden appear Beaumont beauty birds Black Comb blessing breast breath Charles Lamb cheer Church Coleorton composition Cuckoo Dated by Wordsworth dear death delight Dorothy Wordsworth doth earth epitaph excited eyes faith Fancy feelings flowers genius grace Grasmere ground hath heart Heaven honour hope human I. F. Dated images imagination inscription labour Lady language lines live look metre metrical mild ale mind mountain nature never night o'er objects pain Paradise Lost passion peace Peele Castle pleasure Poet Poet's poetical poetry poor praise previously Professor Knight prose published 1835 Reader RYDAL RYDAL MOUNT Savona Shakspeare sight sleep song Sonnets sorrow soul spirit stanza sweet taste Text unchanged thee things thou thought tion truth vale verse voice WILLIAM WORDSWORTH wind words Wordsworth's poems writing written youth Zoönomia