Wordsworth's Informed Reader: Structures of Experience in His PoetryVanderbilt University Press, 1988 - 270 sider |
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Side 22
... thought to thought , a steady remonstrance , and a high resolve ” ( PrW II : 18 ) . Whereas the boy , in responding to the extinction of the light , had seen it expressing mortality , the more devel- oped observer , responsive to its ...
... thought to thought , a steady remonstrance , and a high resolve ” ( PrW II : 18 ) . Whereas the boy , in responding to the extinction of the light , had seen it expressing mortality , the more devel- oped observer , responsive to its ...
Side 37
... thought of his lover's death . A reader can explain this " fond and wayward " thought ( 25 ) as the result of the persona's hypnotic identification of the moon and his love , but the thought to the persona is an unexpected surprise ...
... thought of his lover's death . A reader can explain this " fond and wayward " thought ( 25 ) as the result of the persona's hypnotic identification of the moon and his love , but the thought to the persona is an unexpected surprise ...
Side 184
... Thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears " ( 204 ) . ( Although splendor may be buried deep in the past , the narrator's metaphor of the depth of thought denies any loss of experi- ence . For him as for the reader , it is possible ...
... Thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears " ( 204 ) . ( Although splendor may be buried deep in the past , the narrator's metaphor of the depth of thought denies any loss of experi- ence . For him as for the reader , it is possible ...
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