Wordsworth's Poem of the Mind: An Essay on The PreludeEdinburgh University Press, 1991 - 118 sider |
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Side 10
... less believable and less attractive . Materialism cannot account for consciousness and eliminates the freedom of the will . Idealism reduces the body to a prison and the world to a play of shadows . If we reject both these alter ...
... less believable and less attractive . Materialism cannot account for consciousness and eliminates the freedom of the will . Idealism reduces the body to a prison and the world to a play of shadows . If we reject both these alter ...
Side 12
... less definite but not less real than rocks and trees . For a small boy the river is naturally ' he ' . Having left ' his mountains ' for the towers of Cockermouth , the Derwent flowed past the end of the garden where Wordsworth ( and ...
... less definite but not less real than rocks and trees . For a small boy the river is naturally ' he ' . Having left ' his mountains ' for the towers of Cockermouth , the Derwent flowed past the end of the garden where Wordsworth ( and ...
Side 50
... Less sensible . ( XI.160 ) The tone of these lines has to be read in the context of Wordsworth's argument : that his imagination , only true to itself when responding with love to ' the spirit of the place ' , was impaired by a period ...
... Less sensible . ( XI.160 ) The tone of these lines has to be read in the context of Wordsworth's argument : that his imagination , only true to itself when responding with love to ' the spirit of the place ' , was impaired by a period ...
Innhold
The Mind and the World | 30 |
Imagination | 60 |
Composition of The Prelude | 102 |
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appeared beginning Book boyhood brings child childhood clear close clouds Coleridge Coleridge's comes conscious creative deep drafted earlier early earth edition emotion energy episodes experience fancy feeling felt forms gives goes heart hills human imagination important impressive kind landscape language later less light lines living look Lyrical Ballads March matter means memory metaphor mind mist months mood motion mountains move nature never objects observed once opening paragraph passage passion Pedlar perception perhaps phrase pleasure poem poet poetic poetry Preface Prelude probably question reality reason recognise reference rock Ruined Cottage scene seems sense sensibility simply soldier soul sounds speaks spirit strength suggest summer tells things thought Tintern Abbey tree true universe voice Walk whole wind woods Words Wordsworth worth writing written