The Immortal Nine: An Introduction to the Poetry of the Last Century |
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Page 20
... spirit is too deeply laden Ever to burthen thine . I fear thy mien , thy tones , thy motion , Thou needest not fear mine ; Innocent is the heart's devotion With which I worship thine . Fashions change with the years , but this is of a ...
... spirit is too deeply laden Ever to burthen thine . I fear thy mien , thy tones , thy motion , Thou needest not fear mine ; Innocent is the heart's devotion With which I worship thine . Fashions change with the years , but this is of a ...
Page 39
... spirit as is the poem which it originated . Perhaps it was owing to the quiet influence of Dorothy that William risked no intrusion from violent emotion , and that his work became so free from the heat of passion ? The Lake District is ...
... spirit as is the poem which it originated . Perhaps it was owing to the quiet influence of Dorothy that William risked no intrusion from violent emotion , and that his work became so free from the heat of passion ? The Lake District is ...
Page 74
... spirit that many of his most famous passages were conceived , - If thou would'st view fair Melrose aright , Go visit it by the pale moonlight ; For the gay beams of lightsome day Gild , but to flout , the ruins gray . When the broken ...
... spirit that many of his most famous passages were conceived , - If thou would'st view fair Melrose aright , Go visit it by the pale moonlight ; For the gay beams of lightsome day Gild , but to flout , the ruins gray . When the broken ...
Other editions - View all
The Immortal Nine: An Introduction to the Poetry of Last Century (Classic ... J. M. Stuart-Young No preview available - 2016 |
The Immortal Nine: An Introduction to the Poetry of Last Century (Classic ... J. M. Stuart-Young No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
admirers Algernon Charles ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE Ancient Mariner Ave Maria Ballads beauty breast breath brother Browning's Burns Byron cadul gu century Charles Lamb child Coleridge Coleridge's contemporaries critics delight Dorothy dream dying England's English eyes fair fame flower FOWLER WRIGHT friends gifts glorious Harriet Westbrook heart hour human Immortal Nine inspiration intellect JOHN KEATS Kubla Khan Laureate lines literary living LORD BYRON manhood Matthew Arnold melody mood moon morning muse natural Necessity of Atheism never night Nine Immortals o'er Pantisocracy passion PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY period poems poet's poetic poetry praise prose rhymes Robert Browning Rossetti's SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE sane Scott Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's singers sleep song soul Southey spirit stanzas star strange sweet Swinburne Swinburne's Tennyson thee thine things thou thought thousand to-day tongue verse Victorian WILLIAM WORDSWORTH words Wordsworth writes written wrote youth