Wordsworth's Informed Reader: Structures of Experience in His PoetryVanderbilt University Press, 1988 - 270 sider |
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Side 83
... suggests , from the sense of form , the sense of duration , and the sense of power perceived in them ( PrW II : 351 ) . In his discussion of the sense of power in a mountain , he echoes those qualities rhapsodized by the Solitary ...
... suggests , from the sense of form , the sense of duration , and the sense of power perceived in them ( PrW II : 351 ) . In his discussion of the sense of power in a mountain , he echoes those qualities rhapsodized by the Solitary ...
Side 153
... suggests the necessity of putting moral feeling into action , as do the Happy Warrior and Rob Roy . Except for isolated gestures , the calmness and passivity of many earlier poems contradict this sentiment . Particularly problematic is ...
... suggests the necessity of putting moral feeling into action , as do the Happy Warrior and Rob Roy . Except for isolated gestures , the calmness and passivity of many earlier poems contradict this sentiment . Particularly problematic is ...
Side 252
... suggests at least three times that poems within each section should “ ascend in a gradual scale " ( MY , vol . II , pt . 1 , pp . 334-35 ) . Although he does not use the term increasing intensity , his metaphor , suggesting a gradual ...
... suggests at least three times that poems within each section should “ ascend in a gradual scale " ( MY , vol . II , pt . 1 , pp . 334-35 ) . Although he does not use the term increasing intensity , his metaphor , suggesting a gradual ...
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