Wordsworth and the Poetry of Encounter |
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Page 133
... never have agreed with what the acceptance im- plied . He did a good deal of watching of the process of ex- periencing , but it was not all that he did . He never got so far as to make the process all ( it seems doubtful whether any ...
... never have agreed with what the acceptance im- plied . He did a good deal of watching of the process of ex- periencing , but it was not all that he did . He never got so far as to make the process all ( it seems doubtful whether any ...
Page 135
... never really exemplified . It seems only rarely to have come into clash with contemporary conceptions of what the ... never - and would never want to - step . It is less that Wordsworth rejected identification or even that identification ...
... never really exemplified . It seems only rarely to have come into clash with contemporary conceptions of what the ... never - and would never want to - step . It is less that Wordsworth rejected identification or even that identification ...
Page 144
... never close to Blake . He could never have accepted Blake's Swedenborgian vision of the universe as perceptible in the im- age of one great man , though he might have considered this kind of anthropocentrism as more humane than the ...
... never close to Blake . He could never have accepted Blake's Swedenborgian vision of the universe as perceptible in the im- age of one great man , though he might have considered this kind of anthropocentrism as more humane than the ...
Contents
The Presence of Singularity | 28 |
The Farthest Reach of Sense | 49 |
A Synecdoche for Wholeness | 73 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
activity appears assertion awareness Basil Willey bird cloud coherence Coleridge comes complete consciousness context continuum cosmos cuckoo dance dimensions disembodied voice Dorothy Wordsworth earth elements encounter Ernest de Selincourt Excursion experience feel girl happened Henry Crabb Robinson hierarchy hierogamy Hölderlin human imagery imaginative immediacy impulse intensity John Keats Keats Keats's kind knowledge landscape limitations lyric on daffodils Lyrical Ballads meaning meeting ment mode move movement nature ness never Night-Piece object observer observer's offers Old Cumberland Beggar passage pattern perception physical poet poetry possible Prelude presence qualities relationship Resolution and Independence romantic Samuel Taylor Coleridge scene seems seen sense sentimental morality shape share Shelley shows single situation solipsism Solitary Reaper song soul stands stanza Stepping Westward strange stranger synecdoche things Tintern Abbey tion truth universe vision whole William Wordsworth Words Wordsworth Wordsworthian worth
References to this book
Wordsworth's Historical Imagination: The Poetry of Displacement David Simpson No preview available - 1987 |