University of Michigan Publications: Language and literature, Volum 20University of Michigan Press, 1943 - 265 sider |
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Side 104
... further than Edmund Burke : " Your Lordship , " Wordsworth avers , aims at the same detestable object by means more criminal , because more dangerous and insidious . Attempting to lull the people of Eng- land into a belief that any ...
... further than Edmund Burke : " Your Lordship , " Wordsworth avers , aims at the same detestable object by means more criminal , because more dangerous and insidious . Attempting to lull the people of Eng- land into a belief that any ...
Side 139
... further the influence of the affair with Annette Vallon : There was a youth whom I had loved so long , That when I loved him not I cannot say . ' Mid the green mountains many and many a song We two had sung , like little birds in May ...
... further the influence of the affair with Annette Vallon : There was a youth whom I had loved so long , That when I loved him not I cannot say . ' Mid the green mountains many and many a song We two had sung , like little birds in May ...
Side 160
... further reflection he quietly corrected the mis- take . It may have been , on the other hand , the break in the friendship between the two poets in later years that caused this curious deletion , despite the fact that many passages of ...
... further reflection he quietly corrected the mis- take . It may have been , on the other hand , the break in the friendship between the two poets in later years that caused this curious deletion , despite the fact that many passages of ...
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BIOGRAPHY 177095 | 3 |
THE EARLY POEMS | 37 |
THE LETTER TO THE Bishop of Llandaff | 88 |
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Beaupuy benevolence Bishop of Llandaff Borderers brother cause Coleridge crime critics David Hartley described Descriptive Sketches Dorothy Wordsworth Dorothy's Early Letters Eldred emotions England English Ernest de Selincourt evidence evil experience father feel female vagrant France French Godwin guardians Guilt and Sorrow H. W. Garrod happiness Hartley Hartley's heart Herbert hope human Ibid Idonea influence Jane Pollard later Legouis letter to Jane lines living Lonsdale Lyrical Ballads Marmaduke Marmaduke's Mathews melancholy ment mind monarchical moral nature Nature's Oswald Oxford passage passions peasants and mechanics philosophy pleasures poem poet Poetical poetry Political Justice Prelude Professor de Selincourt Racedown Ramond reader republican reveals Ruined Cottage sailor Samuel Taylor Coleridge sentimental significance social society soul stanzas suffering suggests thought Tintern Abbey tion truth Uncle verse virtue Walk and Descriptive Watson William and Dorothy William Godwin's William Wordsworth Words Wordsworth wrote worth youth