From Wordsworth to SpenderPaul Robert Lieder Houghton Mifflin, 1950 Readings representative of major British authors. For contents and other editions, see Author Catalog. |
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Página 75
... Coleridge lived now with various friends , coming in 1816 to a final haven in the home of James Gill- man , a physician , in Highgate , a suburb of London , where he spent the long evening of his life . He died there in 1834 . Coleridge ...
... Coleridge lived now with various friends , coming in 1816 to a final haven in the home of James Gill- man , a physician , in Highgate , a suburb of London , where he spent the long evening of his life . He died there in 1834 . Coleridge ...
Página 287
... Coleridge said , was bar- ricadoing the road to truth : - it was setting to up a turnpike - gate at every step we took . I forget a great number of things , many more than I remember ; but the day passed off pleasantly , and the next ...
... Coleridge said , was bar- ricadoing the road to truth : - it was setting to up a turnpike - gate at every step we took . I forget a great number of things , many more than I remember ; but the day passed off pleasantly , and the next ...
Página 291
... Coleridge's man- ner is more full , animated , and varied ; Wordsworth's more equable , sustained , and internal . The one might be termed more dramatic , the other more lyrical . Coleridge has told me that he himself liked to compose ...
... Coleridge's man- ner is more full , animated , and varied ; Wordsworth's more equable , sustained , and internal . The one might be termed more dramatic , the other more lyrical . Coleridge has told me that he himself liked to compose ...
Índice
INTRODUCTION | 3 |
WILLIAM WORDSWORTH | 14 |
nary Splendor and Beauty | 60 |
Página de créditos | |
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Términos y frases comunes
beauty Bossuet breast breath bright called century Charles Lamb cloud Coleridge criticism dark dead dear death deep DEMOGORGON divine dream earth England English eyes face fair fear feel flowers French Revolution give glory Grasmere hand happy hath hear heard heart Heaven hope hour human King lady Lady of Shalott language leave Leigh Hunt Leofric light literature live Locksley Hall look Lord Lyrical Ballads Matthew Arnold mind moon moral morning Mother nature never night o'er once pain passed passion philosophy Plato pleasure poem poet poetry Robespierre rose round seemed SEMICHORUS sense sing sleep song soul sound speak spirit stars sweet tears thee thine things thou art thought thro tion true truth turned voice wild wind words Wordsworth writing young youth ΙΟ