Wordsworth's Informed Reader: Structures of Experience in His PoetryVanderbilt University Press, 1988 - 270 sider |
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Side 11
... produces a languid feeling in a perceiver while brisk motion produces a lively feeling . 12 Adhering to the form of objects in Nature , the mind naturally descends with a ... produce such actions Poetic Form and the Shape of Response 11.
... produces a languid feeling in a perceiver while brisk motion produces a lively feeling . 12 Adhering to the form of objects in Nature , the mind naturally descends with a ... produce such actions Poetic Form and the Shape of Response 11.
Side 93
... produce a response of relief much closer to catharsis than does the Wanderer's . The Solitary's behavior immediately ... produces it . As the Wanderer had earlier cautioned the Poet about tales of suffering , " It were a wantonness , and ...
... produce a response of relief much closer to catharsis than does the Wanderer's . The Solitary's behavior immediately ... produces it . As the Wanderer had earlier cautioned the Poet about tales of suffering , " It were a wantonness , and ...
Side 98
... produce a poem are no more clearly deline- ated than this and if , as the word predominant implies , more than one faculty participates in the creation of any poem , one can reasonably ask why Wordsworth embarks on this system of ...
... produce a poem are no more clearly deline- ated than this and if , as the word predominant implies , more than one faculty participates in the creation of any poem , one can reasonably ask why Wordsworth embarks on this system of ...
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action affections appears argues audience become boy's calm child childhood Convention of Cintra crit critics death discussion Dorothy Wordsworth earlier echoes edition elicit emphasis Excursion experience external faculty sections fancy feelings final gradual hath heart hope human suffering imagination important infinity Laodamia look Margaret mental mind Modern Language Association moon moral Mount Snowdon episode moved narrative narrator narrator's natural forms Nature's Ode to Duty passion passive Peele Castle perceiver perception persona physical pleasure poem Poet Poet's Preface Prelude Press PrW III reader reading recognizes response reveals rock Samuel Taylor Coleridge scene seems seen sense sensory shape similar Simon Lee Solitary Solitary's soul spiritual stanza stresses sublime surprise sympathy tale temporal things thought Tintern Abbey tion transcendence transform vale vision visionary dreariness W. G. T. Shedd Wanderer Wanderer's weakness William Wordsworth Words Wordsworth Circle Wordsworth's poetry worth