To live beneath your more habitual sway. I love the Brooks, which down their channels fret, Even more than when I tripped lightly as they... Poems - Стр. 355авторы: William Wordsworth - 1815Полный просмотр - Подробнее о книге
| Catherine Robson - 2001 - Страниц: 270
...195-96), he is clearly in emotional harmony not with the day's beginning, but the day's end, where "The Clouds that gather round the setting sun / Do take a sober colouring" (1l. 19798). Significantly, the narrator in the Ode is watching and describing not his own childhood... | |
| Bert Hornback - 2002 - Страниц: 174
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| Duncan Wu - 2002 - Страниц: 183
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| Richard Claverhouse Jebb - 2002 - Страниц: 312
...also inseparable from those aspirations of his own mind which he read into the scenes around him : — The clouds that gather round the setting sun Do take...mortality: Another race hath been, and other palms are won. The natural affinity of Keats with the Greek mind is curiously illustrated by a letter to a friend,... | |
| Stuart Peterfreund - 2002 - Страниц: 432
...is won by the individual who lives a seasonable, heartfelt life under Nature's "more habitual sway": "Another race hath been, and other palms are won. /Thanks to the human heart by which we live" (WPW, 11.192, 200-201). To live such a life is to cultivate "the philosophic mind" (1. 187) that comes... | |
| Robert B. Zimmer - 2002 - Страниц: 196
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| William Wordsworth - 2003 - Страниц: 56
...your might; I only have relinquished one delight To live beneath your more habitual sway. I love the Brooks which down their channels fret, Even more than...setting sun Do take a sober colouring from an eye O . .* That hath kept watch o'er man's mor tali t Another race hath been, and other palms are -vvorT... | |
| Harold Bloom - 2003 - Страниц: 244
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