单词 | William Wordsworth |
例句 | He read poems by the romantics William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge—“Where true Love burns Desire is Love’s pure flame....” Charles and Emma: The Darwins' Leap of Faith 2009-01-01T00:00:00Z I was surprised the quote engraved on that thick marble slab was from one William Wordsworth and not the Bible. Anthem of a Reluctant Prophet 2007-04-30T00:00:00Z The Lakes District home and garden of the English poet William Wordsworth and a museum detailing his work and travels. Going to great lengths: Cycling Britain from Land’s End to John O’Groats 2018-01-18T05:00:00Z Far from being indulgent and indolent, the practice may spark creativity and productivity – memorably, Samuel Johnson, Edith Wharton, Marcel Proust, Florence Nightingale and William Wordsworth all worked from bed. Why you shouldn’t work from bed (and a guide to doing it anyway) 2021-01-20T05:00:00Z On a rare sunny day such as this, it is easy to see why, in the summer of 1833, William Wordsworth was captivated by Greenock. Art revives the glory of Clydeside shipbuilding 2013-06-08T23:05:45Z Menand went to Columbia in 1974 to study under Trilling and his acolytes, but ended up taking just one class with Trilling — a seminar on the poet William Wordsworth — before he died in 1975. ‘The Free World’ Explains How Culture Heated Up During the Cold War 2021-04-18T04:00:00Z Edith Wharton, William Wordsworth and Marcel Proust drafted prose and verse from their beds. Working From Bed Is Actually Great 2020-12-31T05:00:00Z Written by William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, this collection of poems is commonly thought to have launched British Romanticism. What we can learn from reading Sylvia Plath’s copy of "The Great Gatsby" 2018-12-15T05:00:00Z For a Rousseau or a William Wordsworth, the act of walking through the world was not primarily about the world itself; they were much more concerned with walking into their inner worlds. Path to enlightenment: how walking inspires writers 2012-08-09T08:51:33Z The book’s title is drawn from a tribute the British poet William Wordsworth wrote for the Haitian revolutionary Toussaint Louverture: “There’s not a breathing of the common wind/That will forget thee.” Julius S. Scott, author of ‘The Common Wind,’ dies at 66 2021-12-08T05:00:00Z In England’s idyllic Lake District, poet William Wordsworth’s home — Dove Cottage — is currently closed for restoration. What’s new in Great Britain for 2020 2020-01-15T05:00:00Z Sampson tells us that if Barrett Browning were not a woman, she would have been appointed poet laureate after William Wordsworth died. Review | Elizabeth Barrett Browning was ahead of her time. ‘Two-Way Mirror’ does justice to her riveting life. 2021-08-16T04:00:00Z Recounting in gripping detail the night Keats met William Wordsworth, the book won the Truman Capote Award. Review | Poet Stanley Plumly takes a lyrical look at John Constable and J.M.W. Turner 2018-08-21T04:00:00Z He uses a William Wordsworth poem as his central example — how, for Wordsworth, it is not the past, “but himself in the past imagining the future” that is the irresistible source of emotional return. ‘Change Your Life,’ the Poet Says, and a Rural Idyll Offers a Tantalizing Choice 2018-12-09T05:00:00Z William Wordsworth, who, lest we forget, as well as his poetry, also petitioned to reform British copyright law. Can our names inspire our choices in life? 2018-12-15T05:00:00Z To an extent, he was wishing to escape from himself into nature, the Romantic Nature espoused by Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth when they lived in the Quantocks. Our pursuit of spring continues, 100 years after Edward Thomas's 2013-03-28T13:57:39Z William Wordsworth once described poetry’s ideal diction as that of a man speaking to other men. Poetry review: ‘Splitting an Order,’ by Ted Kooser The Prelude by William Wordsworth Wordsworth recalls a walking tour of France and Italy. Ten of the best: Alps 2010-12-18T00:07:19Z William Wordsworth once described poetry as “the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings”. Disney's 'clean' Star Wars release could have a sting in the tale 2017-02-28T05:00:00Z William Wordsworth wrote “Daffodils” after reading his sister’s account of a walk they had taken together. It takes two 2014-08-21T04:00:00Z Housman’s “A Shropshire Lad,” with its “blue remembered hills,” and William Wordsworth’s “Tintern Abbey,” which couples nostalgia with the harsh reality that the past is irrevocably gone. This Time, He Stars In His Own Story 2021-01-07T05:00:00Z William Wordsworth once wrote that he liked the sonnet because he was happy with the formal limits it imposed. Love poems: writers choose their favourites for Valentine's Day 2012-02-10T22:52:01Z In under 45 minutes, you end up at Dove Cottage, the former home of William Wordsworth. Kurt Schwitters: the pop art pioneer who brought order to chaos 2013-01-19T09:01:37Z When William Wordsworth visited in 1802 with his sister Dorothy and Samuel Coleridge, he called it simply "the Clyde's most majestic daughter". Scottish town that changed the world fights for its rights 2013-03-31T00:06:09Z We spent the next two nights in the reactor core of traditional English-major tourism, the living Elizabethan shrine of Stratford and the incomparable vistas of William Wordsworth’s Lake District. Exploring post-Brexit Britain while the pound is at an all-time low 2016-12-15T05:00:00Z William Wordsworth died a hundred and sixty-five years ago next week, on April 23, 1850. The Bizarre, Complicated Formula for Literary Fame 2015-04-17T04:00:00Z The admonition also corresponds to Adham’s academic life, as a scholarly interpreter of the poetry of William Wordsworth, the 19th-century English Romantic whose work carries a host of thematic resonances for Adham’s own nomadic story. Review | ‘The Vagrant Trilogy’ is a night of revelation, a glimpse of the Middle East we rarely see 2018-06-12T04:00:00Z William Wordsworth, in the key text of Romantic poetics, the preface to “Lyrical Ballads,” from 1800, had urged that “all good poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings . . . recollected in tranquility.” A Hundred Years of T. S. Eliot’s “Tradition and the Individual Talent” 2019-10-27T04:00:00Z In this delightful — and very British — novel, Virginia Woolf, William Wordsworth, Elizabeth Bishop, Samuel Johnson and Lord Byron all make cameos, along with, of course, Jane Austen. Review | Jane Austen makes a cameo in a charming new novel about friendship and the literary life 2021-09-09T04:00:00Z “Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive,” William Wordsworth wrote about the early days of the French Revolution. ‘Dancing the Twist in Bamako’ Review: Youth in Revolt 2023-02-22T05:00:00Z Johann Wolfgang von Goethe hiked here in 1779, receiving poetic inspiration from its many splendors — as did William Wordsworth, some 11 years later. Looking for the Sublime? It’s in This Swiss Valley 2017-11-22T05:00:00Z Repetition of the experience wears away what William Wordsworth, in his "Immortality Ode," calls the "visionary gleam". Breakup songs owe a lot to the lovelorn lyrics of the Romantics 2021-12-25T05:00:00Z “What we have loved,” William Wordsworth wrote, “Others will love, and we will teach them how.” null 2023-06-24T04:00:00Z She quotes William Wordsworth — “There hath past away a glory from the earth” — as a call to action and Samuel Taylor Coleridge as seeing “the divine as inseparable from nature.” Opinion | How King Charles can make himself relevant 2023-05-01T04:00:00Z Her first published poems — and the ones that followed — reveal a lifelong apprenticeship with John Keats, Gerard Manley Hopkins and William Wordsworth. Review | The MacArthur ‘genius’ poet who got her first break at 58 2023-03-03T05:00:00Z If the child is the father of man, as William Wordsworth wrote long ago, then L.A. Column: Can a nice guy like Robert Luna lead as L.A. County sheriff? 2022-12-02T05:00:00Z For example, in William Wordsworth’s “Daffodils,” the speaker can escape the depressing, industrialized urban world to find peace in nature by contemplating a field of flowers. Writing Guide 2021-12-21T00:00:00Z Osmund Bartle Wordsworth — a great-great-nephew of English poet William Wordsworth — who was recently identified by DNA research, and given a funeral ceremony Tuesday, 105 years after he died. Unknown soldier no more: World War I gravestone gets a name 2022-06-21T04:00:00Z Notable guests included William Wordsworth and the Duke of Wellington but they missed out on a visit from the then Queen. Gentleman Jack: The Ladies of Llangollen who intrigued Anne Lister 2022-04-01T04:00:00Z The British romantic poets William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge both honored nature as the source of truth and beauty. World History: Patterns of Interaction 2012-01-01T00:00:00Z Whitehaven sits on the edge of the Lake District National Park, an area whose beauty inspired William Wordsworth and Beatrix Potter. Proposed mine tests UK climate efforts ahead of UN meeting 2021-10-24T04:00:00Z Just up the road is Alfoxton Hall, where Coleridge and William Wordsworth once worked together, and Wordsworth lived. Everything I Do: How Bryan Adams' Robin Hood video was made 2021-09-05T04:00:00Z This process is captured by writer William Wordsworth in his 1802 poem “My Heart Leaps Up” where he writes, “The Child is father of the Man.” A Vaccination against the Pandemic of Misinformation 2021-02-22T05:00:00Z Surrounded by extensive woods said to have been a favourite of William Wordsworth and Beatrix Potter, the landscape of Graythwaite is "enchanting" and Mawson's gardens "are no exception", Historic England said. Historic England: Shipwreck and Selfridges on 2020 protected list 2020-12-15T05:00:00Z My search began with a famous poem about solitude by William Wordsworth, which opens like this: Perspective | The poetry that speaks best to the pandemic 2020-06-11T04:00:00Z And Mr Florence highlighted the "most-extraordinary cast" set to celebrate the life of William Wordsworth, including festival president Stephen Fry, Tom Hollander and and Jonathan Pryce. £350k donations help Hay Festival go ahead online 2020-05-18T04:00:00Z More than two centuries ago there was cruel and rude gossip about how startlingly close the relationship between William Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy was. Wordsworth exhibition explores true nature of William and Dorothy's bond 2020-03-15T04:00:00Z In “Seduction and Betrayal,” Hardwick takes up the case of William Wordsworth’s sister, Dorothy, whose journals were “created in a collaborating mood” for her brother’s poetic use. Marriage, Betrayal, and the Letters Behind “The Dolphin” 2019-12-09T05:00:00Z Keats met poet William Wordsworth for the first time at the party, which also included Haydon, writer Charles Lamb and explorer Joseph Ritchie. Stanley Plumly, Md. poet laureate who wrote of nature and memory, dies at 79 2019-04-13T04:00:00Z In one of the most famous literary descriptions of wildflowers, the English poet William Wordsworth wrote in the early 19th century of happily gazing upon a host of daffodils “fluttering and dancing in the breeze”. Helicopter crushes flowers as crowds flock to 'super bloom' 2019-03-27T04:00:00Z Montaigne laments the dying cries of a wounded hart in his essay on cruelty; so does William Wordsworth in his poem “Hart-Leap Well.” Opinion | She reported her rape. Her hometown turned against her. Can justice ever be served? In 1850, he was appointed poet laureate of the United Kingdom, succeeding William Wordsworth. Happy birthday, Alfred, Lord Tennyson! 2018-08-06T04:00:00Z Generations of scientists, artists and walkers all over the world—including the English poets William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Robert Southey—were influenced by his traveller’s diaries. Exploring German Wanderlust 2018-05-22T04:00:00Z A local newspaper whose earliest supporters included William Wordsworth is celebrating its 200th anniversary. Lakeland paper marks 200th anniversary 2018-04-28T04:00:00Z He had stumbled across a poem by William Wordsworth. The book that changed my life … in prison 2018-01-19T05:00:00Z It was only after he began reading, not philosophy, but the poetry of William Wordsworth, that he was fully convinced he had emerged. Opinion | The Anxiety of John Stuart Mill 2017-10-02T04:00:00Z We were, to borrow from the poet William Wordsworth, “surprised by joy.” Opinion | A reminder that it’s good to be an Earthling 2017-08-22T04:00:00Z William Wordsworth was ever on the move, composing as he walked. Opinion | ‘The Marches’: A 1,000 pilgrimage through pre-Brexit Britain, with Dad 2017-01-27T05:00:00Z Also on show are letters to William Wordsworth from Lord Lowther - a key figure in setting up the newspaper. Lakeland paper marks 200th anniversary 2018-04-28T04:00:00Z The origin of poetry, thought William Wordsworth, was emotion recollected in tranquillity. A whole damn city crying 2016-09-27T04:00:00Z William Wordsworth and Charles Dickens came to America to complain about it. This car company ripped off Land Rover. Here’s why it might get away with it. 2016-07-19T04:00:00Z Writing at the dawn of the machine age, William Wordsworth wrote of poetry as created from “emotion recollected in tranquillity.” Live, on Your Mobile Device, It’s Facebook 2016-03-31T04:00:00Z It’s estimated William Wordsworth walked 180,000 miles in his lifetime. How to Be Creative: 6 Secrets Backed By Research 2015-12-10T05:00:00Z He will join some of the nation’s most famous writers, including William Wordsworth, Alfred Lord Tennyson, TS Eliot and Ted Hughes, who was the most recent addition in 2011. Philip Larkin honoured with Westminster Abbey memorial 2015-06-17T04:00:00Z The poet William Wordsworth once called turf grass "a carpet all alive." Amid drought, the West is no place for a lawn, as Nevada has learned 2015-05-01T04:00:00Z Elizabeth was also distantly related to the scientist Charles Darwin and even met the poet William Wordsworth in the Lake District. The 'fearful' Mrs Gaskell 2014-10-03T04:00:00Z Watching you flail unfailingly fills me with joy of the sort William Wordsworth must have felt during his sojourns in the Lake District. 13½ Life Lessons from 'Married…With Children' Some of the world’s greatest artists, performers and thinkers - Winston Churchill, William Wordsworth, W.B. Decatur woman lends voice to bipolar disorder 2014-07-26T04:00:00Z No one had an English word for someone who goes about on foot until 1791, when William Wordsworth coined the noun. How authors from Dickens to Dr Seuss invented the words we use every day 2014-06-17T04:00:00Z The new website features digital versions of 1,200 handwritten manuscripts, diaries and letters from Romantic and Victorian writers including Charles Dickens, William Wordsworth and Jane Austen. British Library puts literary treasures online 2014-05-16T04:00:00Z Their e-mail brings to my mind the poet who Keats thought least capable of negative capability, William Wordsworth, and in particular his poem "We Are Seven." Well: Living With Cancer: We Are Seven 2012-10-04T18:18:11Z In the churchyard rest the mortal remains of the brother of Mrs. William Wordsworth, Captain Henry Hutchinson. Curious Epitaphs 2012-04-26T02:00:22.397Z In a house still standing William Wordsworth lived from 1799 to 1808, and it was subsequently occupied by Thomas de Quincey and by Hartley Coleridge. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 12, Slice 3 "Gordon, Lord George" to "Grasses" 2011-11-13T03:00:13.177Z The Rev. Christopher Wordsworth, a nephew of William Wordsworth, has nearly completed the memoirs of the poet, which will be reprinted, with a preface by Professor Henry Reed, by Ticknor, Reed and Fields, of Boston. The International Monthly, Vol. II, No. I December 1, 1850 2011-10-29T02:00:14.677Z His verse, as all the world declares, And Tennyson himself confesses, The radiance of the dewdrop shares, The berry's perfect shape possesses; And even William Wordsworth praises The magic of his faultless phrases. More Misrepresentative Men 2011-07-20T02:00:14.390Z A tablet in memory of the late William Wordsworth has just been fixed in Grasmere church, executed by Mr. Thomas Woolner. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, vol 1-98, 1850-1899 None 2011-06-27T02:01:02.870Z Western journalists flocked to Cairo’s Tahrir Square and wrote euphoric articles echoing William Wordsworth’s lines on the French Revolution: “Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive, But to be young was very heaven!” Egypt: The Revolution Blows Up 2011-06-05T05:00:00Z My cousin William Wordsworth, then living at Eton, was dining at Liverpool at the house of a great Liverpool merchant just after Gladstone had taken his degree. The Real Gladstone an Anecdotal Biography 2011-05-29T02:00:07.883Z In his mid-thirties the poet William Wordsworth famously looked back at the French Revolution and wrote: "Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive, but to be young was very heaven." Goat-to guys 2011-04-01T09:06:15Z Presentation copy from Mrs. Hemans to William Wordsworth, with inscription by the author and two autographs of Wordsworth. A Catalogue of Books in English Later than 1700 (Vol 2 of 3) Forming a portion of the library of Robert Hoe 2011-02-16T03:00:34.387Z He arrived in America in October 1987 as a scholar attached to a visiting William Wordsworth exhibition. Friday interview: Jersey farmer's son sows seeds of Cond? Nast's digital future 2010-10-15T06:00:00Z His body was found near the village of Boot, about 10 miles from Grasmere, where the Romantic poet William Wordsworth spent much of his life. 12 Killed in Rampage in Rural Britain 2010-06-02T20:23:00Z The daffodils, made famous by William Wordsworth, are more than a month late this year following the cold winter. Tweet if you see a daff, urge worried Cumbrian tourism officials 2010-03-15T09:47:00Z Although, as already remarked, not the poet of the age—it has, in our view, been, on the whole, fortunate for poetry and society, that for seven years William Wordsworth has been poet-laureate. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, No. V, October, 1850, Volume I. The day of the birth of William Wordsworth was the 7th of April, the place Cockermouth. A History of Nineteenth Century Literature (1780-1895) But Present Time has not been unjust to William Wordsworth. Recreations of Christopher North, Volume I (of 2) There was a general combination to put him down, but on the other hand there was a powerful party in his favour, consisting of William Wordsworth. English Critical Essays Nineteenth Century No man ever interpreted Nature in such inspired strains as William Wordsworth. Literary Tours in The Highlands and Islands of Scotland There is also a very beautiful sketch of the head of William Wordsworth; this study was made by Pickersgill to save the poet the tedium of long sittings for the portrait in the Hall. St. John's College, Cambridge If ever on this earth there was a man that in his prime, when saluted with contumely from all quarters, manifested a stern deafness to criticism—it was William Wordsworth. The Posthumous Works of Thomas De Quincey, Vol. 2 This, by the way, in an essay on William Wordsworth, should be noticed as the charm of his poetry; and the note differential, in fact. The Posthumous Works of Thomas De Quincey, Vol. 1 The Official Gazette announces that "the Queen has been pleased to appoint Alfred Tennyson, Esq., to be Poet Laureate in ordinary to her Majesty, in the room of William Wordsworth, Esq., deceased." The International Magazine, Volume 2, No. 2, January, 1851 A Highlander's plaid, a Mussulman's turban, and a Roman toga are more poetical than the tattooed or untattooed New Sandwich savages, altho they were described by William Wordsworth himself like the "idiot in his glory." The Best of the World's Classics, Vol. V (of X) - Great Britain and Ireland III Another volume bears the name of William Wordsworth, and beneath his autograph he writes that it was purchased at Bath from a circulating-library. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 16, No. 97, November, 1865 Wordsworth's has only the very simplest slab of slate, with "William Wordsworth" and nothing else upon it. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 20, No. 117, July, 1867. William Wordsworth The thin quartos containing An Evening Walk and Descriptive Sketches were published by Wordsworth in 1793. Early Reviews of English Poets One of our greatest English poets, William Wordsworth, exclaimed: "I wish to be considered as a teacher, or as nothing!" A Girl's Student Days and After William Wordsworth's— “And vital feelings of delight Shall rear her form to stately height” is only a metrical expression of a great and practical truth. The Healthy Life, Vol. V, Nos. 24-28 The Independent Health Magazine This announced to us that we were standing over the grave of William Wordsworth. Three Years in Europe Places I Have Seen and People I Have Met The latter, undoubtedly, grew out of emotion, which gradually culminated until the day of William Wordsworth's marriage. In a Green Shade A Country Commentary The large gray stone, which bears the name of William Wordsworth, has ample space left for another inscription; and the grave beneath has ample space also for his faithful life-companion. Brave Men and Women Their Struggles, Failures, And Triumphs While up that way he met a young man, a native, by the name of Wordsworth—William Wordsworth—and a poet, too. Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great - Volume 05 Little Journeys to the Homes of English Authors Coleridge's best work as a poet was done in 1797 and 1798, and probably the inspiration came largely from his friendship with William Wordsworth. Selections from Five English Poets Forty and seven years it is since William Wordsworth first appeared as an author. Ralph Waldo Emerson Our late Laureate, William Wordsworth, exhibited great taste in his small garden at Rydal Mount. Flowers and Flower-Gardens With an Appendix of Practical Instructions and Useful Information Respecting the Anglo-Indian Flower-Garden Who would not sooner have spent a summer's day with Sir Walter's humble friend, Tom Purday, than with Mr. William Wordsworth of Rydal Mount! In the Name of the Bodleian and Other Essays It was growing dark, but we could just read on the plain slate head-stone the sole inscription, "William Wordsworth." A Brief Memoir with Portions of the Diary, Letters, and Other Remains, of Eliza Southall, Late of Birmingham, England Such a connexion would be as unsuitable for them as for William Wordsworth. Famous Reviews No other single relation, however, can compare in importance, for Coleridge's poetic development, with that which sprang up in the summer of 1797 between him and William Wordsworth. Coleridge's Ancient Mariner and Select Poems In conclusion, I will let the English poet, William Wordsworth, state "Nature's case". America, through the spectacles of an Oriental diplomat With many thanks, I remain, my dear Mr. Cottle, Your old and affectionate friend, William Wordsworth. Reminiscences of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Robert Southey There was a general combination to put him down, but on the other hand there was a powerful party in his favor, consisting of William Wordsworth. Among My Books Second Series "The Early Life of William Wordsworth", 1770-1798, "A Study of the Prelude". Biographia Epistolaris, Volume 1. He would he right concerning the second stanza; but the first is, as every one ought to know and does not, from Resolution and Independence, by William Wordsworth. The Advance of English Poetry in the Twentieth Century William Blake and William Wordsworth set the child in the midst of the poetry of this romantic age. Halleck's New English Literature Southey shall describe his condition when he left England; and his own pathetic lines to William Wordsworth will picture him to us on his return. English Men of Letters: Coleridge |
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