Wordsworth and the Poetry of Encounter |
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Page 40
... reach of words . Points have we all of us within our souls Where all stand single ; this I feel , and make Breathings for incommunicable powers ; But is not each a memory to himself . ( 185-191 ) Singularity here has many facets ...
... reach of words . Points have we all of us within our souls Where all stand single ; this I feel , and make Breathings for incommunicable powers ; But is not each a memory to himself . ( 185-191 ) Singularity here has many facets ...
Page 55
... reach is the reach of the senses , and the sense involved is the one which to Wordsworth is the most spiritualized of all , as the lines following this passage make eminently clear . For Wordsworth as for Keats there was a crucial ...
... reach is the reach of the senses , and the sense involved is the one which to Wordsworth is the most spiritualized of all , as the lines following this passage make eminently clear . For Wordsworth as for Keats there was a crucial ...
Page 63
... reach toward him . At one point in his youth he could easily slip out of the senses . Now his world is perhaps all too sensuous , and the change in his relationship to it controls a deep change in its meaning for him . Yet Words- worth ...
... reach toward him . At one point in his youth he could easily slip out of the senses . Now his world is perhaps all too sensuous , and the change in his relationship to it controls a deep change in its meaning for him . Yet Words- worth ...
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 |