请输入您要查询的单词:

 

单词 Wordsworth
例句 Wordsworth
In school it was poems I liked best—Wordsworth and Keats and Shelley. Orphan Train 2013-04-02T00:00:00Z
I’m lounging on my bedroll reading Othello and Walter is on his cot reading Wordsworth. Water for Elephants 2006-05-26T00:00:00Z
Now then, he smiled, when was I going to give him that paper comparing Marx and Wordsworth that sounded so promising? Hunger of Memory 1982-01-01T00:00:00Z
“Went off with the Colonel’s daughter. Colonel Wordsworth Gray. Everybody knowed that. Quick they went, too.” Jazz 1992-01-01T00:00:00Z
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
True Belle, of course, would have known everything right away because, first of all, nobody could hide much in Wordsworth and nothing at all could be hidden in the Big Houses of its landowners. Jazz 1992-01-01T00:00:00Z
She has never read any Gogol herself, but she is willing to place him on a shelf in her mind, along with Tennyson and Wordsworth. The Namesake 2003-09-01T00:00:00Z
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
The tweediness of our faculty, and the curriculum itself, which began, Hellenically, Byronically, with Homer, and then skipped straight to Chaucer, moving on to Shakespeare, Donne, Swift, Wordsworth, Dickens, Tennyson, and E. M. Forster. Middlesex: A Novel 2002-06-05T00:00:00Z
“That is probably exactly the flower that Mr. Wordsworth meant,” Mr. Randolph said. The Great Gilly Hopkins 1978-03-28T00:00:00Z
It is not really about the countryside at all; nature is there purely as a metaphor for feelings, as it was for Wordsworth and his daffodils, Shelley with his skylark and Keats with his nightingale. The Story of Music 2012-12-25T00:00:00Z
Underneath is a collection of Wordsworth poems, a Bible, and a book of plays by Oscar Wilde. Water for Elephants 2006-05-26T00:00:00Z
The old father, Colonel Wordsworth Gray, didn’t know a thing. Jazz 1992-01-01T00:00:00Z
The course of English Literature would have been decidedly different had Mr. Wordsworth owned a power mower, she thought. Go Set a Watchman: A Novel 2015-07-14T00:00:00Z
“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
A Master of Verse Spreads Bad Cheer “Deprivation is for me,” Philip Larkin once observed, “what daffodils were for Wordsworth.” Books of The Times: Philip Larkin?s Complete Poems, Edited by Archie Burnett 2012-04-09T21:28:30Z
And plenty of poetry please – so that, as Wordsworth put it, "all my thoughts were steeped in feeling". Advice for a new government 2010-05-07T23:07:00Z
The actress appeared in her father's 2000 film Pandaemonium, about the Romantic poets Wordsworth and Coleridge, and she hopes to work with him again. Sundance star to play Princess Margaret in royal film 2013-01-19T14:08:12Z
“Candide” or “Remembrance of Things Past”? Which weighs more, a poem by Emily Dickinson or “The Prelude” by Wordsworth? Get. Arts. Fast. 2014-03-20T21:33:30Z
My father, Eric Trethewey, was a poet, and very early in my life he began reciting all kinds of poetry to me, especially the poems of Wordsworth, W. B. Yeats and Robert Hayden. Natasha Trethewey: By the Book 2018-11-08T05:00:00Z
Whereupon Tennyson insists “The one I count greater than them all — Wordsworth, Coleridge, Shelley, even Byron — is Keats.” Review | If poets could solve a crime . . . 2018-06-01T04:00:00Z
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
July 13, 1798; the precision of the title makes for an apt prelude to Wordsworth's extended meditation on memory, time and place. Poster poems: July 2012-07-13T15:49:08Z
David Lurie, an ageing lothario, is lecturing on Wordsworth's Prelude to a room of uninterested students. Ten of the best: lectures 2011-03-12T00:06:46Z
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
And Goslar, the "old decaying city" in which Wordsworth wrote its first verses is only a short train journey from Schwitters's hometown of Hanover. Kurt Schwitters: the pop art pioneer who brought order to chaos 2013-01-19T09:01:37Z
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
But the ecstatic quietness of Samuel Palmer’s paintings of Shoreham, or Wordsworth’s universal Cumbria, do not sit well with gothic shudders. Cults, human sacrifice and pagan sex: how folk horror is flowering again in Brexit Britain 2017-04-30T04:00:00Z
She traces the roots of De Quincey’s obsessions — opium, his idol Wordsworth and even dead young girls — and how they helped influence some of the strangest writing from the Romantic era. Paperback Row 2017-12-08T05:00:00Z
"Deprivation is for me what daffodils were to Wordsworth," said Philip Larkin once, speaking as a resident of Hull. Amit Chaudhuri: my new perspective on Calcutta 2013-02-02T07:01:14Z
The mountains, falls and glaciers are not only geological entities as an explorer would see them or spiritual embodiments as they might be for Wordsworth: they inspire radical questions about meaning and perception. Mont Blanc by Percy Bysshe Shelley 2013-03-11T13:41:42Z
Anyone who's been walloped by Wordsworth will appreciate just how spectacular this area of England is. Writers dump Lake District's bunnies and daffodils for monsters in the mist 2013-01-02T12:00:00Z
These days Wordsworth generally gets bad press because he grew prim and conventional as he aged. Review | On the 250th anniversary of Wordsworth’s birth, a celebration of verse 2020-05-13T04:00:00Z
These are not left unreachably in the past, as for Wordsworth, but joyously recovered. Poem of the week: Sonnets from the Portuguese, No 43, by Elizabeth Barrett Browning 2010-05-24T14:28:00Z
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
Even without all these factors, Jackson concedes, Wordsworth’s poetry would still be read today, especially in universities—but academic study alone could never have given him the high cultural profile that he enjoys now. The Bizarre, Complicated Formula for Literary Fame 2015-04-17T04:00:00Z
Wordsworth's French revolution paen, "Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive, But to be young was very heaven!" reflected my Fringe experience. Stewart Lee: the slow death of the Edinburgh Fringe 2012-07-30T19:00:00Z
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 this poem, Wordsworth describes his return to the Wye River valley after an absence of five years. What we can learn from reading Sylvia Plath’s copy of "The Great Gatsby" 2018-12-15T05:00:00Z
A drawback throughout the program is that Barry Wordsworth, after some 40 years of conducting this choreographer’s repertory, now allows the music to be tepid. Review: ‘The Two Pigeons,’ Frederick Ashton’s Look at Love 2015-11-30T05:00:00Z
“For me, it goes beyond any other poet, even Wordsworth or Hardy, in its closeness to the spirit of the place.” Celebrating Seamus Heaney’s Legacy, at His Birthplace 2016-10-11T04:00:00Z
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
While both Coleridge and Wordsworth are critiqued in "Mont Blanc", enquiry is more important than attack. Mont Blanc by Percy Bysshe Shelley 2013-03-11T13:41:42Z
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
In a neighboring cell are vintage copies of the books that he requested to read while in jail: volumes by Saint Augustine and Pascal, and poetry by Wordsworth, Keats and Hafiz. Oscar Wilde Honored by the Prison That Once Detained Him 2016-09-14T04:00:00Z
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
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
Peace was, I learned, an acquaintance of Wordsworth. What we can learn from reading Sylvia Plath’s copy of "The Great Gatsby" 2018-12-15T05:00:00Z
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
Jackson never denies the excellence of Wordsworth’s poems, or the brilliance of the novels of Jane Austen, whom she also writes about. The Bizarre, Complicated Formula for Literary Fame 2015-04-17T04:00:00Z
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
Visit the grammar school attended by Wordsworth and then take in the Beatrix Potter Gallery, where her original artwork is on display in a 17th-century house. Follow Beatrix Potter through England’s lovely Lake District 2016-09-08T04:00:00Z
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
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
Generations of authors have lived out the poet's role that Wordsworth created, in life and poem, withdrawing from industrialized society and rejecting its materialist values. The war on culture: How conservatives and progressives joined forces to crush art 2021-12-25T05:00:00Z
An integral part of this activity is waking up their imagination, to see the numinousness of the real world, giving them, to adapt Wordsworth's phrase, glimpses that would make them less forlorn. Old wives' tales 2010-05-14T23:00:00Z
The Wordsworth Museum in the Lake District still has a collection of eggs made for the poet's children from the 1870s. From chicken to chocolate: the fascinating history of the Easter egg 2023-04-03T04:00:00Z
This spirited show by Russ Kaplan and Sara Wordsworth plays its final performances on Saturday and Sunday at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. at Theater Row. 5 Things to Do This Weekend 2022-04-07T04:00:00Z
Both Potter and Wordsworth are lauded in the Lake District. Follow Beatrix Potter through England’s lovely Lake District 2016-09-08T04:00:00Z
I have a pocket-size selection of Wordsworth that I almost always take with me when leaving the house. Claire Tomalin’s Favorite Fictional Heroine? It ‘Must Be Natasha’ in ‘War and Peace’ 2021-11-11T05:00:00Z
It sits on the brow of a hillside, and the view from the terrace extends over Lake Windermere and a sky full of the puffy whites that inspired Wordsworth’s wandering “lonely as a cloud.” Exploring post-Brexit Britain while the pound is at an all-time low 2016-12-15T05:00:00Z
Schwitters and Wordsworth had to go abroad and be homesick in order to find out who they really were. Kurt Schwitters: the pop art pioneer who brought order to chaos 2013-01-19T09:01:37Z
“We were both educated in the same kind of India, where we knew way more about Shakespeare and Wordsworth than about the classical texts of our own region.” Murty Classical Library Catalogs Indian Literature 2015-01-02T05:00:00Z
"Poetry," Wordsworth observed, "is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings: it takes its origin from emotion recollected in tranquillity." 'Citizen: An American Lyric' meditates on the trauma of racism 2015-08-05T04:00:00Z
In addition to poems, Mr. Grossman wrote widely on poetics and published essays on Milton, Hart Crane, Wordsworth, Walt Whitman and Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, among other subjects. Allen Grossman, a Poet’s Poet and Scholar, Dies at 82 2014-06-29T04:00:00Z
And it wasn’t just Milton, and it wasn’t just Wordsworth, and it wasn’t just Keats. The Fallen Worlds of Philip Pullman 2019-09-29T04:00:00Z
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
In his “Preface to the Lyrical Ballads,” Wordsworth writes that “poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings: It takes its origin from emotion recollected in tranquillity.” Political Poetry Is Hot Again. The Poet Laureate Explores Why, and How. 2018-12-10T05:00:00Z
The score for “Month in the Country,” finely conducted by Barry Wordsworth, features three of Chopin’s most celebrated compositions for piano and orchestra. Dance Review: ‘Birthday Offering’ and ‘Les Noces’ at Royal Ballet, London 2012-07-08T21:27:34Z
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
Wordsworth takes pride of place in Grasmere, where Dove Cottage, home of the poet and his sister Dorothy, is now a museum offering guided tours. Follow Beatrix Potter through England’s lovely Lake District 2016-09-08T04:00:00Z
In contrast, the living faces of Keats and Wordsworth, depicted in the crowd around Jesus, carry conviction. Michael Dirda reviews ‘The Immortal Evening’ by Stanley Plumly
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
From the Arcadian idyll of Wordsworth's Cumbria to the mean streets of Tony Harrison's native Leeds, specific locales frequently provide poets with a launching pad to universal subjects. What fresh Hull is this? 2010-06-24T13:50:00Z
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
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
The Bridge by Hart Crane Crane's epic poem is inspired by and even addressed to Brooklyn Bridge, which becomes what mountains were to Wordsworth. John Mullan's 10 of the best: bridges 2012-07-13T21:55:04Z
The title page contains a quote from Wordsworth: “A child more than all other gifts that earth can offer to a declining man brings hope with it and forward looking thoughts.” Kyle Pruett on Fatherhood 2012-07-23T11:00:00Z
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
Wordsworth and Coleridge, it is worth remembering, became towering figures of English Romanticism only after a trip to Germany in 1789. Kurt Schwitters: the pop art pioneer who brought order to chaos 2013-01-19T09:01:37Z
“I didn’t spend my career teaching Shakespeare and Wordsworth,” he says. The backstory for ‘A River Runs Through It’ has arrived, 45 years later 2021-06-01T04:00:00Z
With Wordsworth’s poetry a motif throughout the trilogy, Mansour examines the sustaining psychic power of a beloved landscape — a home that one may leave but must be able to revisit. ‘The Vagrant Trilogy’ Review: Palestinians in Exile, Yearning for Home 2022-05-10T04:00:00Z
Every year, about seventy thousand people visit his home, Dove Cottage, which is maintained by an organization called the Wordsworth Trust. The Bizarre, Complicated Formula for Literary Fame 2015-04-17T04:00:00Z
This feeling of obscurity used to be the domain of nature; what Wordsworth once described as “a portal in the sky.” Patricia Lockwood’s First Novel Reaches for the Sublime, Online and Off 2021-02-16T05:00:00Z
That breadth of influences — from rappers to Wordsworth — and the poet's sharp, facile rhythms are reasons to peruse this book, whatever you think of his perspective. Four new poetry collections 2012-08-29T19:22:04Z
To come after a great poet, like Arnold coming after Wordsworth and Keats, is a source of anxiety. Misreading Harold Bloom 2019-10-16T04:00:00Z
It was another stroke of fortune that Wordsworth happened to write poems suitable for children; they could be included in textbooks, gaining him new generations of fans. The Bizarre, Complicated Formula for Literary Fame 2015-04-17T04:00:00Z
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
Although nominations were received for poems by Blake, Wordsworth and Shakespeare, the Scottish Poetry Library, which is spearheading the project, decided Price's little-known poem was the perfect fit. Richard Price poem to represent Team GB in Cultural Olympiad project 2012-07-26T14:22:47Z
She fills the novel with epigrams, allusions and footnotes from actual texts and literature, ranging from "The Wealth of Nations" and "The Wretched of the Earth" to Wordsworth and nursery rhymes. Salon's favorite books of 2022 — fiction and nonfiction 2022-12-15T05:00:00Z
But in his day the extravagantly bearded creature who succeeded Wordsworth as poet laureate was as well known as Katie Price, and twice as much the product of his times. Tennyson: To Strive, To Seek, To Find by John Batchelor – review 2012-11-16T11:00:01Z
Wordsworth gives examples of two fables from antiquity, Proteus rising from the sea, and Triton blowing his wreathed horn. Old wives' tales 2010-05-14T23:00:00Z
“The best portion of a good man’s life,” wrote Wordsworth, are “his little, nameless, unremembered acts of kindness and of love.” Milan Kundera’s new novel feels so very French 2015-06-17T04:00:00Z
Back in England, he attended Bishop Wordsworth's school in Salisbury. Peter Thursby obituary 2011-02-20T18:03:36Z
Wordsworth once said that the act of walking was closely related to the creative process. Top 10 tips for writing poetry 2014-10-11T04:00:00Z
I received, when I was 20, a slim edition of Wordsworth’s selected poems, as a gift from a young man I loved. ‘Odd, Unpopular and Reticent’: The Books That Sing to Wayne Koestenbaum 2020-06-18T04:00:00Z
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
Wordsworth repeatedly mourns his lost childhood: “That time is past/And all its aching joys/ Are now no more,/And all its dizzy raptures.” Perspective | In a time of crisis, poetry can help focus our fears and transform ‘noise into music’ 2020-03-10T04:00:00Z
Wordsworth’s most ambitious work is his autobiographical epic, “The Prelude.” Review | On the 250th anniversary of Wordsworth’s birth, a celebration of verse 2020-05-13T04:00:00Z
Change “poets” to “painters” and you might readily apply to him one of Wordsworth’s most famous couplets: “We poets in our youth begin in gladness; / But thereof come in the end despondency and madness.” Michael Dirda reviews ‘The Immortal Evening’ by Stanley Plumly
The very tread of his feet was the work: this was different from the Romantics' interaction with the landscape, in which the art was, to quote Wordsworth, "emotion recollected in tranquillity." Richard Long: 'It was the swinging 60s. To be walking lines in fields was a bit different' 2012-06-15T15:54:26Z
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
To my mind, the scene sounded much like one immortalized by Wordsworth in “I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud”: Pursuits: Chasing Elusive Flowers in South Africa 2014-04-23T16:27:31Z
Meditation on memory ... the banks of the Wye, where Wordsworth wrote one of the greatest poems about July. Poster poems: July 2012-07-13T15:49:08Z
Godine’s sumptuous edition of Wordsworth’s autobiographical masterpiece, written in the best blank verse since Milton, is further enhanced with explanatory annotations and 130 period-appropriate paintings and drawings. Michael Dirda’s holiday book picks 2016-12-07T05:00:00Z
Research – whether on the workings of the brain, Wordsworth, or Wycliffe's Bible – is unfurled as if before an audience. Grace and Mary by Melvyn Bragg – review 2013-05-19T11:00:03Z
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
“Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive,” Wordsworth would write of those days; “But to be young was very heaven!” J.M.W. Turner: The Romantic Turns Reformist 2022-04-07T04:00:00Z
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
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
It's not hard to see why Wordsworth immortalised the Abbey and the vale that surrounds it. Readers' tips: literary locations 2010-12-24T11:58:00Z
Eliot’s “Prufrock and Other Observations,” and works by Wordsworth, Keats and Shelley — were moved to a “special collections” room on the Hopkins campus. A Library the Internet Can’t Get Enough Of 2022-01-15T05:00:00Z
At times the form echoes Wordsworth’s “The Prelude,” a catalog of experiences that will go on to shape the mature artist’s mind and soul. ‘Walking With Ghosts’ Review: Gabriel Byrne Roams His Past 2022-10-27T04:00:00Z
In literature and aesthetics the worldliness of Oxford's Wilde, Ruskin and Pater seems a universe away from Cambridge's Milton and Wordsworth. Stephen Fry recalls his student days for West End play: From the archive, 2 April 1988 2013-04-02T06:00:00Z
Take Wordsworth: it helped, Jackson shows, that he wrote so many different kinds of poems. The Bizarre, Complicated Formula for Literary Fame 2015-04-17T04:00:00Z
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
“Contestants may want to keep in mind,” he writes, “that the paradox of liberty within imprisonment is used by Wordsworth in his sonnet about the sonnet form, ‘Nuns Fret Not at Their Convent’s Narrow Room.’” ArtsBeat: The American Scholar Crowdsources a Sonnet 2014-05-06T16:06:17Z
“You didn’t think we were going to cuddle while I read you Wordsworth,” she sneers. Movie Review: ‘Liberal Arts,’ From Josh Radnor 2012-09-13T22:06:30Z
Thus he goes to the Lake District to discover how Wordsworth, Coleridge and Keats changed the perception of wild uplands from places to avoid to theatres for the exploration of the human psyche. Ramble On by Sinclair McKay – review 2012-06-22T21:55:19Z
In his poetry Hughes was torn between the mythic “vision” of Coleridge and the elegiac “authenticity” of Wordsworth. Prince of poetry 2015-10-22T04:00:00Z
Honing is no longer limited to the mind; in the work of these poets, Wordsworth’s head chakra is allowed to work in concert with energy centers throughout the body. Political Poetry Is Hot Again. The Poet Laureate Explores Why, and How. 2018-12-10T05:00:00Z
Wordsworth didn't compose The Prelude in the Lakes – he had to travel all the way to the cold clammy Harz mountains to do so. Kurt Schwitters: the pop art pioneer who brought order to chaos 2013-01-19T09:01:37Z
Season 1, Episode 5: When Vanessa set out to flirt with Victor Frankenstein earlier in “Penny Dreadful,” she cooed a few lines of Wordsworth at him, from the “Intimations of Immortality,” to be precise. 'Penny Dreadful' Recap: Vanessa's Sin and Obsession 2014-06-08T04:00:00Z
Once upon a time Wordsworth, Byron and others used to gather there. Naked poets bare all for calendar of male muses 2011-08-15T14:42:08Z
O'Neill knew alcoholics the way Wordsworth knew daffodils, but he didn't write a 12-step drama. Even with Jessica Lange and Gabriel Byrne, 'Long Day's Journey Into Night' fails to connect 2016-04-27T04:00:00Z
Wordsworth’s description of “emotion recollected in tranquillity” is sometimes cited as shorthand for what poets refer to as the lyric “I,” the poet’s vehicle for private, meditative reflection. Political Poetry Is Hot Again. The Poet Laureate Explores Why, and How. 2018-12-10T05:00:00Z
Wordsworth imagined that Euclidean geometry “wedded soul to soul in purest bond / Of reason, undisturbed by space or time.” ‘Shape’ Makes Geometry Entertaining. Really, It Does. 2021-05-18T04:00:00Z
Does research back up Wordsworth’s assertion about the impact of kids on fathers? Kyle Pruett on Fatherhood 2012-07-23T11:00:00Z
That distinction between youth and age was also useful for professors: it allowed them to keep arguing over who was better, the “early” or “late” Wordsworth. The Bizarre, Complicated Formula for Literary Fame 2015-04-17T04:00:00Z
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
The Prelude by William Wordsworth Wordsworth recalls a walking tour of France and Italy. Ten of the best: Alps 2010-12-18T00:07:19Z
But Wordsworth wrote without the veil of fiction, and what interested Byron, and what interests Roth, is the way you can use that veil. Rereading: Childe Harold by Lord Byron 2011-08-12T09:00:01Z
During his lifetime, people enjoyed reading long, philosophical poetry, and many readers, including Wordsworth himself, assumed that poems like “The Excursion” would insure his fame. The Bizarre, Complicated Formula for Literary Fame 2015-04-17T04:00:00Z
She was complicated and fascinating; we used to have these very feisty conversations about Wordsworth. The real Larkin 2010-06-26T23:04:00Z
It wasn't exactly tranquility and nature, but I was electrified by it, as Wordsworth claimed his younger, unthinking self had been by rocks and trees. Amit Chaudhuri: my new perspective on Calcutta 2013-02-02T07:01:14Z
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
Wordsworth is against expectation invoked here, too, though there’s scant poetry in the behavior of a citizenry collectively revealed — derided, even — as so many fantasists, the vainglorious Khlestakov chief among them. Theater: Onstage, British Bile and Russian Satire 2011-06-14T11:30:06Z
Wordsworth sought to compensate for the lost "gleam" through his lifelong enthusiasm for the natural world. Breakup songs owe a lot to the lovelorn lyrics of the Romantics 2021-12-25T05:00:00Z
He told me that the writers he was going to introduce me to – Edward Thomas, Wordsworth, Larkin – would help me understand my own early life, particularly in terms of landscape. Andrew Motion: a life in writing 2012-10-05T21:55:13Z
“Dancing the Twist in Bamako,” a new feature from the French filmmaker Robert Guédiguian, nimbly captures both the kind of youthful ecstasy Wordsworth recalled and the disillusionment that so often follows. ‘Dancing the Twist in Bamako’ Review: Youth in Revolt 2023-02-22T05:00:00Z
There’s more from England, including drawings by Samuel Palmer and an early printing of Wordsworth’s “Tintern Abbey,” but the show is only halfway through. Art Review: At Morgan Library, Glories of Nature, Tamed by Man 2010-06-03T21:31:00Z
Under the romantic spell of Wordsworth and Coleridge, a generation of young artists turned away from composing historical and biblical scenes in the studio to face their native landscape head on. Watercolour at Tate Britain - review 2011-02-05T00:05:30Z
Read Byron and Wordsworth for inspiration before having several lunches with Tennessee to discuss how boring Urban Cowboy is. Digested read: Liberation: Diaries Volume Three: 1970–1983, by Christopher Isherwood 2012-06-17T18:00:01Z
There, to stave off isolation, he read voraciously and lost himself in the verdant countryside — an experience that would seed his lifelong passion for Wordsworth. Geoffrey H. Hartman, Scholar Who Saw Literary Criticism as Art, Dies at 86 2016-03-20T04:00:00Z
So was the tolerance—the scientific doubt—of the Scottish enlightenment and the lyricism of English and Irish poets, from Wordsworth to Yeats. Leonard Cohen's Montreal 2015-02-28T05:00:00Z
A description by Wordsworth, Coleridge or Burns, a landscape by Crome, Gainsborough or Constable, is not merely nature, but nature reflected in and giving expression to a state of mind. Poem of the week: The Two Deserts by Coventry Patmore 2011-03-28T11:18:29Z
Adham, a young scholar just back from Cairo and cultivating an expertise in the poetry of Wordsworth, is busy avoiding a party. ‘The Vagrant Trilogy’ Review: Palestinians in Exile, Yearning for Home 2022-05-10T04:00:00Z
But it was Wordsworth who popularised a Romantic vision of his native landscape. The English Lakes: A History by Ian Thompson – review 2012-06-19T06:59:01Z
It has been immortalised by Constable, Wordsworth, Hardy and Vonnegut. Stonehenge: a new dawn 2012-08-19T19:00:04Z
The falls have impressed and inspired poets and writers for centuries, including Wordsworth, Coleridge, and JMW Turner. 20 of the world's best waterfalls: readers’ tips 2019-08-01T04:00:00Z
Wordsworth from Wadsworth, "...throwing volumes into the pale fire of the incinerator". In His New Collection, ‘The Rub of Time,’ Martin Amis Takes On Everyone From Travolta to Trump 2018-02-28T05:00:00Z
With Mr. Wordsworth’s conducting, the Stravinsky score sounded as bold and stark as ever. Dance Review: ‘Birthday Offering’ and ‘Les Noces’ at Royal Ballet, London 2012-07-08T21:27:34Z
But genius isn’t, in itself, enough to guarantee the sort of lasting, exalted fame that Wordsworth enjoys. The Bizarre, Complicated Formula for Literary Fame 2015-04-17T04:00:00Z
Wordsworth it isn’t, but Mr. Black didn’t lay claim to genius. Baxter Black, Who Elevated Cowboy Poetry to Folk Art, Dies at 77 2022-06-24T04:00:00Z
The job dates back to the 17th Century, and has been filled by some of the most celebrated poets in history, including Tennyson and Wordsworth. No 10 turned down Larkin, Auden and other poets for laureate job 2023-07-18T04:00:00Z
“What we have loved,” William Wordsworth wrote, “Others will love, and we will teach them how.” null 2023-06-24T04:00:00Z
A patent for a machine to do this was filed by English inventor Wordsworth Donisthorpe in 1876, and a variety of photographers and inventors tried to perfect the process in the following years. World History: from 1400 2022-12-14T00:00:00Z
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
In the poem Wordsworth described seeing thousands of flowers "at a glance", and the words were inspired by the Ullswater Valley, close to where the castle is located. Lowther Castle 15,000 ceramic daffodils installation open 2023-04-24T04:00:00Z
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
However, back in Kent, Nicola Wordsworth says she would feel a little "squeamish" eating cultivated meat herself, or giving it to Bertie. Would you switch your dog to eating lab-grown meat? 2022-12-11T05:00:00Z
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
They were taught Shakespeare and Wordsworth at school at the expense of their own African/Jamaican heritage. At Round House Theatre, a playwright explores the many layers of loss 2022-09-21T04:00:00Z
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
This is because it became my habit to memorize lines from Shakespeare, Wordsworth and others as an amusement during my morning walk to school. Review | Poetry matters. Two new books remind us why. 2022-04-27T04:00:00Z
As a scholar of English literature, Dr. Suleri Goodyear cultivated specialties in the writings of Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron and Keats. Sara Suleri Goodyear, acclaimed Pakistani memoirist, dies at 68 2022-04-01T04:00:00Z
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
It said surveys had revealed structural deterioration and it planned to replace the properties on Sugar Hill Lane and Wordsworth Drive with modern, energy efficient homes. Tenants ordered to leave Leeds homes after long fight 2022-03-07T05:00:00Z
A new headstone for Wordsworth, who was killed in action in the Battle of Arras on April 2, 1917, was mounted at his gravesite at a cemetery in Ecoust-Saint-Mein in northern France. Unknown soldier no more: World War I gravestone gets a name 2022-06-21T04:00:00Z
Race is, to steal a line from Wordsworth, “too much with us.” Opinion | We Need a New Language for Talking About Race 2022-03-03T05:00:00Z
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
Vicki Holland, of Wordsworth Road, Newport, has been banned from keeping animals for life. RSPCA: Pet monkey offered cocaine and flushed down toilet 2021-12-10T05:00:00Z
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
A cleric led the ceremony, and a British military attache handed Wordsworth’s relatives a carefully folded French flag to place on the grave. Unknown soldier no more: World War I gravestone gets a name 2022-06-21T04:00:00Z
I aspire to conveying that emotion more than to matching what Wordsworth might have had to say. Nick Offerman's deadpan rambles with Jeff Tweedy, George Saunders and other animals 2021-10-11T04:00:00Z
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
"I think he'll always have a place because you can genuinely talk about him in the same breath as Wordsworth." Why does Alfred Wainwright still loom large over the Lake District? 2021-09-04T04:00:00Z
When we played the demo to our manager, his reaction was: "Who the hell do you guys think you are, Wordsworth?'" Hall And Oates: How You Make My Dreams became a streaming hit 2021-06-08T04:00:00Z
I often recite Wordsworth before I fall asleep to counteract the ugliness of the news. Opinion | In a Pandemic, Finding Comfort in the Arts 2021-05-01T04:00:00Z
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
“The child is father of the man,” as Wordsworth wrote. Why Would a Grown Man Play With Toy Soldiers? 2020-09-09T04:00:00Z
To quote Wordsworth: “Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive,/But to be young was very heaven.” 11 Female Voices, From Age 13 to 110, on Why the Vote Matters 2020-08-26T04:00:00Z
At one point, Jake references Wordsworth’s poem “Intimations of Immortality From Recollections of Childhood,” an exploration of aging and the faded glories of youth. Ending explained: Decoding the mysteries of 'I'm Thinking of Ending Things' 2020-09-04T04:00:00Z
Over the course of their trip, he will pepper their conversation with assorted mansplain-y notes on Wordsworth, Tolstoy, Mussolini, Brezhnev, Anna Kavan, David Foster Wallace and the Broadway musical. Review: 'I'm Thinking …’ is another marvelous, melancholy mind trap from Charlie Kaufman 2020-09-03T04:00:00Z
In the car, with a mythical snowy nighttime blur around them, they talk Wordsworth; she recites a dark poem about homecoming; by discussing movies, viruses come up. Review: Charlie Kaufman’s ‘I’m Thinking of Ending Things’ 2020-09-02T04:00:00Z
Beforehand we were sat on Westminster Bridge, with our arms round each other, and he suddenly recited the whole of Wordsworth’s Composed upon Westminster Bridge. 'He's so strapping and virile': Patrick Stewart at 80 – by Shatner, McKellen, Tennant and more 2020-07-09T04:00:00Z
“For all of them you can make episodic warming work,” Wordsworth says. NASA’s new rover will collect martian rocks—and clues to planet’s ancient climate 2020-06-25T04:00:00Z
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
Still, the scant data reported by Moderna were enough for investors’ hearts to leap up, as the poet Wordsworth recalled reacting upon beholding a rainbow in the sky. Column: When should you get excited about a coronavirus vaccine? Not yet 2020-05-18T04:00:00Z
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
Sandbags are also still piled up around some homes in Wordsworth Gardens on an estate that looks over Pontypridd. 'Horrendous': Welsh residents endure lockdown in flood-hit homes 2020-04-27T04:00:00Z
That is a Mars that climate models can simulate, says Robin Wordsworth, a planetary scientist at Harvard University. NASA’s new rover will collect martian rocks—and clues to planet’s ancient climate 2020-06-25T04:00:00Z
The project, Wordsworth 250, arose after the coronavirus pandemic put paid to his descendants’ plans to mark the anniversary with a range of celebrations in the Lake District. William Wordsworth's 250th anniversary marked with mass readings 2020-04-27T04:00:00Z
“Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers,” Wordsworth wrote, a little more than 200 years ago. 'The impossible has already happened': what coronavirus can teach us about hope 2020-04-07T04:00:00Z
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
Or what about The Prelude, Wordsworth’s epic autobiographical poem? Never read Middlemarch or listened to Wagner’s Ring cycle? Now’s your chance 2020-03-15T04:00:00Z
On Wordsworth’s Westminster Bridge, the sun seemed reluctant to come up, perhaps just to annoy Mark Francois, reportedly waiting with champagne glass in hand. Flags and fever dreams: London's morning after the Brexit before 2020-02-01T05:00:00Z
I thought Wordsworths reading Wordsworth would be a bit amusing,” said Christopher Wordsworth Andrew, the poet’s great-great-great-grandson. William Wordsworth's 250th anniversary marked with mass readings 2020-04-27T04:00:00Z
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
It was, said the Wordsworth expert Kathleen Jones, an “amazingly close bond” founded on the deep psychological trauma of being split up as young children and then reunited in their late teens. Wordsworth exhibition explores true nature of William and Dorothy's bond 2020-03-15T04:00:00Z
“All hail, sage lady, whom a grateful isle hath blest,” says a photographer to Elizabeth at the end of Season 1, aptly quoting the patriotic doggerel of Wordsworth’s “Ecclesiastical Sonnets.” How the Man Behind ‘The Crown’ Made the Monarchy Relevant Again 2019-11-06T05:00:00Z
Wrote Wordsworth in the romantic rapture that was the promise of 1789: “Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive.” Opinion | Charles Krauthammer: The authoritarian temptation 2019-11-08T05:00:00Z
It was initially intended to be just a family memorial – there are around 50 direct Wordsworth descendants, and the majority got involved. William Wordsworth's 250th anniversary marked with mass readings 2020-04-27T04:00:00Z
Wordsworth expressed the eternal appeal of revolt for the young in The Prelude, a poem applauding the French Revolution. About 41% of the world’s people are under 24. And they’re angry… 2019-10-26T04:00:00Z
The National Trust is staging the exhibition at its property Wordsworth House and Garden in Cockermouth, Cumbria, to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the poet’s birth. Wordsworth exhibition explores true nature of William and Dorothy's bond 2020-03-15T04:00:00Z
As an alternative, what Wordsworth et al. suggest is a kind of localized 'farming' approach. Aerogel Mars 2019-10-19T04:00:00Z
Wordsworth and his team did not address such engineering issues. Silica Blankets Could Make Mars Habitable 2019-07-15T04:00:00Z
“Lo and behold, we found that actually everybody rather likes Wordsworth,” said Andrew. William Wordsworth's 250th anniversary marked with mass readings 2020-04-27T04:00:00Z
Wordsworth was 19 years old when the Bastille was stormed. About 41% of the world’s people are under 24. And they’re angry… 2019-10-26T04:00:00Z
It explores Wordsworth’s childhood and how his life and poetry was shaped by the wild, outdoor upbringing he and his sister enjoyed at the house on the banks of the River Derwent. Wordsworth exhibition explores true nature of William and Dorothy's bond 2020-03-15T04:00:00Z
Because life would only grow beneath the sheets, the risk of contaminating the rest of Mars with foreign lifeforms would be minimal, Wordsworth said. Scientists work out way to make Mars surface fit for farming 2019-07-15T04:00:00Z
But such “terraforming” efforts would be extremely difficult, expensive and time-consuming, as Wordsworth referenced above. Silica Blankets Could Make Mars Habitable 2019-07-15T04:00:00Z
Because Wordsworth is not a difficult poet to read. William Wordsworth's 250th anniversary marked with mass readings 2020-04-27T04:00:00Z
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
You’d never want this many jolts to the heart, except it feels like Wordsworth is penning some kind of destiny ballad. Perspective | To get here, U-Va. had to look in the mirror. Now the Cavs must beat a team just like them. 2019-04-07T04:00:00Z
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
Like Wordsworth, who complained of not being able to win sleep “by any stealth”, I have long been exasperated by sleep’s refusal to visit me, no matter how avidly I court it. Can a sleepless night awaken creativity? 2018-12-15T05:00:00Z
There’s nothing scary in Wordsworth, nothing to worry about not understanding what he’s saying. William Wordsworth's 250th anniversary marked with mass readings 2020-04-27T04:00:00Z
Hughes had grown up with Yeats and Eliot, and was often linked with Wordsworth, but there was one writer with whom he was particularly obsessed: Shakespeare. How Shakespeare's 'blood cult’ became Ted Hughes’s fatal obsession 2018-10-27T04:00:00Z
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
Long before Modernism, Rousseau and Wordsworth wrote highly curated spiritual autobiographies about the workings of the artistic mind and the struggle to forge a creative self in a corrupt world. Read Any Antisocial Novels Lately? 2018-05-10T04:00:00Z
A local newspaper whose earliest supporters included William Wordsworth is celebrating its 200th anniversary. Lakeland paper marks 200th anniversary 2018-04-28T04:00:00Z
Montaigne and Wordsworth lived near enough to the bloody indifference of nature to spare a thought for its victims. Opinion | She reported her rape. Her hometown turned against her. Can justice ever be served?
For early blossoms fluttering like Wordsworth’s daffodils in a soft, fragrant breeze. Opinion | Revisiting Jefferson’s history as a slave owner 2018-02-16T05:00:00Z
He had stumbled across a poem by William Wordsworth. The book that changed my life … in prison 2018-01-19T05:00:00Z
Black pudding, that stodgy mess of blood and oatmeal, plonked down in front of Dorothy Wordsworth, the daffodil girl? A matter of taste: six remarkable women and the food they ate 2018-01-06T05:00:00Z
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
Both Montaigne and Wordsworth meditate on the deer’s last stagger, the long prelude to death, the moment when the light leaves its eyes. Opinion | She reported her rape. Her hometown turned against her. Can justice ever be served?
Think of Wordsworth, The world is too much with us, Or Arnold: And we are here as on a darkling plain. Opinion | Trump Is Inspirational ... for Poetry 2017-10-21T04:00:00Z
Earlier this year, research led by Robin Wordsworth at Harvard University revealed that methane — when mixed with carbon dioxide — could have been a much stronger greenhouse gas on Mars than previously thought. Young Mars farted itself into a warmer world with liquid water 2017-10-02T04:00:00Z
William Knight, the philosophy professor who was one of the first and most dedicated scholars of the Wordsworths, read through Dorothy’s journals early on and decided they should be edited for publication. A matter of taste: six remarkable women and the food they ate 2018-01-06T05:00:00Z
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
The judge also quoted from the poet Wordsworth, name-checked Greek historian Herodotus, and referenced a Russian opera. 'Cruel Fate.' Judge Denies Key Witness a Chance to Watch the Eclipse 2017-08-22T04:00:00Z
We are the land of Shakespeare and Wordsworth, the Beatles and Stones. Macron’s musical mashup? Merveilleux | Viv Groskop 2017-07-15T04:00:00Z
Wordsworth and Pym, both irresistible to me precisely because of those “trivial details”, were the first two women I chose for my book. A matter of taste: six remarkable women and the food they ate 2018-01-06T05:00:00Z
What made Wordsworth’s poems a medicine for my state of mind, was that they expressed, not mere outward beauty, but states of feeling, and of thought coloured by feeling, under the excitement of beauty. Opinion | The Anxiety of John Stuart Mill 2017-10-02T04:00:00Z
Every parent eventually learns that, as Wordsworth wrote, the child is the father of the man. Perspective | Make way for Beatrice. My adult daughter is back for the summer. 2017-06-18T04:00:00Z
"At that point, what I understood of poetry was what you do at school - your Wordsworth and your Keats and that's it," she says. Zodwa Nyoni: The writer making young people seen and heard - BBC News 2017-06-14T04:00:00Z
One of the most important collections of historic books, including various Shakespeare folios, a first edition of Gulliver’s Travels, signed copies of Wordsworth’s poems and medieval manuscripts, is to go on sale next week. Historic Irish library could make more than £1.8m at auction 2017-06-03T04:00:00Z
Canova was celebrated while he was alive, with Goethe and Wordsworth in the chorus of admirers. Finally, From Italy, the Full George Washington 2017-04-23T04:00:00Z
The organization is supporting record numbers, says Wordsworth: “The highest since our early years in the 1930s.” Hunted, haunted, stateless and scared: the stories of refugee scientists 2017-02-28T05:00:00Z
The missing word in a Wordsworth line that Crusoe, on his island, struggles to remember, is “solitude”; some things cannot be faced head on. Elizabeth Bishop’s Art of Losing 2017-02-26T05:00:00Z
The state Department of Human Services says student David Hess was restrained and punched by staffers at Wordsworth Academy in October after he was suspected of stealing an iPod and became aggressive. Teen's death at special-needs school ruled a homicide 2017-02-10T05:00:00Z
Still, like Wordsworth, Stewart brings a humane empathy to his encounters with people and landscape. Opinion | ‘The Marches’: A 1,000 pilgrimage through pre-Brexit Britain, with Dad 2017-01-27T05:00:00Z
Mary, Duchess of Roxburghe, left more than 7,000 books - including first editions by Wordsworth, Shelley and Byron, to Trinity College's library. Duchess donates 'extraordinary' book trove to college - BBC News 2016-12-15T05:00:00Z
It took the state 11 days to complete an investigation and order Wordsworth to shut down its residential treatment program, citing it with “gross incompetence, negligence, and misconduct” in operating the facility. Editorials from around Pennsylvania 2016-11-02T04:00:00Z
A spokeswoman for the state Department of Human Services said Monday they've ordered Wordsworth Academy's residential treatment program to close. School stops residential program after teen's death 2016-10-25T04:00:00Z
Wordsworth died at the hospital the day after being shot. Accidental shootings claim teens, young children in NY, NJ 2016-10-15T04:00:00Z
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
Police say they were called to the Wordsworth Academy at about 11 p.m. Police: Student might have been put in headlock before death 2016-10-14T04:00:00Z
Police say they were called to the Wordsworth Academy about 11 p.m. Philly police probe death of student at special needs school 2016-10-14T04:00:00Z
When, on November 4, 1807, De Quincey finally met Wordsworth, near his front door, the poet appeared “like a flash of lightning,” as De Quincey put it. The Man Who Invented the Drug Memoir 2016-10-10T04:00:00Z
The origin of poetry, thought William Wordsworth, was emotion recollected in tranquillity. A whole damn city crying 2016-09-27T04:00:00Z
It’s like one of the great biographers of Wordsworth said, he didn’t so much write poems as vomit them out. ‘Tristan’ makes Rattle want to ‘curl up in a fetal position’ 2016-09-27T04:00:00Z
Wordsworth is a residential school for children with special needs. Police: Student might have been put in headlock before death 2016-10-14T04:00:00Z
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
He was ushered up to Wordsworth’s study, which served also as the family’s dining room, the children’s playroom, and the drawing room. The Man Who Invented the Drug Memoir 2016-10-10T04:00:00Z
“By this point, Mars’s atmosphere had probably eroded significantly compared to the late Noachian, which is when we have the most evidence of erosion by liquid water,” says Harvard University’s Robin Wordsworth. Tsunamis on Mars? Splashy Claim Raises Eyebrows.
At the stadium, I watch the field — forget the game — enthralled by the whole fragmented vegetable, that creeping “carpet all alive” as Wordsworth had it. Letter of Recommendation: AstroTurf 2016-04-21T04:00:00Z
In recent years, I’d started paying attention to the incidental descriptions of clothing in old accounts of Alpine expeditions: Victorians lumbering around on glaciers in crinoline and tweed; Wordsworth with his “little knapsack of necessaries.” Alone in the Alps 2016-04-11T04:00:00Z
"They are all trying to help," said Mr Wordsworth. Syria's loss of students to rebuild future - BBC News 2016-04-05T04:00:00Z
It is hard to know exactly what De Quincey wanted from Wordsworth, but, whatever it was, it seems clear that he could tell from the start he wouldn’t be getting it. The Man Who Invented the Drug Memoir 2016-10-10T04:00:00Z
“If there was an ocean, tsunamis are a good explanation for why we don’t see much of any shoreline,” says Wordsworth. Tsunamis on Mars? Splashy Claim Raises Eyebrows.
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
Wordsworth, the great poet of childhood, wrote that infants are born with an “inward tenderness” that shapes their interactions with the universe—“the first / Poetic spirit of our human life.” I’ve Seen the Greatest A.I. Minds of My Generation Destroyed by Twitter 2016-03-25T04:00:00Z
"Our founders were very clear, their mission was in two parts: the relief of suffering, and the advancement of learning and science, " said Stephen Wordsworth, executive director of CARA. Syria's loss of students to rebuild future - BBC News 2016-04-05T04:00:00Z
Wordsworth and Coleridge had no idea they were “Romantics.” The Man Who Invented the Drug Memoir 2016-10-10T04:00:00Z
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
Cruz is a self-described “happy warrior”, borrowing Wordsworth’s immortal line for Lord Nelson, given modern American political gloss by Reagan when he exhorted supporters three decades ago to “seize back a country”. Ronald Reagan and ... Barack Obama? Ted Cruz reveals presidential role models 2015-12-02T05:00:00Z
Until A.I. engineers can encode empathy, Wordsworth’s “inward tenderness,” the rest of it—tweeting, telling knock-knock jokes, making dinner reservations, giving directions—doesn’t amount to much. I’ve Seen the Greatest A.I. Minds of My Generation Destroyed by Twitter 2016-03-25T04:00:00Z
"Higher education is a very international business, and there's an awareness of our responsibilities to our peers," Mr Wordsworth added. Syria's loss of students to rebuild future - BBC News 2016-04-05T04:00:00Z
Wordsworth’s work often shows us how to achieve, for ourselves, the rapturous perception that feeds some of his greatest effects. The Man Who Invented the Drug Memoir 2016-10-10T04:00:00Z
"Wordsworth sat on a hill and wrote about beauty. He didn't write about natural capital," he says. Is there a danger to environmental jargon? - BBC News 2015-11-25T05:00:00Z
Wordsworth wandered lonely as a cloud; Robert Frost, in “Tree at My Window,” explicitly compared outer and inner weather. Talk About the Weather 2015-11-23T05:00:00Z
Before, as Wordsworth said, “the shades of the prison house descend on the growing boy”. Adam Goodes showed us the festering sores of Australia's history can rip open at any moment | Stan Grant 2015-09-21T04:00:00Z
This fierce poet ultimately embodies Wordsworth's definition of their craft: "Emotion recollected in tranquillity." With Lily Tomlin leading the way, 'Grandma' grows into a meaningful journey 2015-08-20T04:00:00Z
Soon De Quincey, now around fourteen, made his own discovery: the anonymous manuscript copy of Wordsworth’s ballad “We Are Seven,” then making its way around Bath. The Man Who Invented the Drug Memoir 2016-10-10T04:00:00Z
Following Muir, whose bearded face and St. Francis-like persona were as much its icons as Yosemite Valley, the club adopted the gentle literary romanticism of Thoreau, Emerson, and Wordsworth. Environmentalism's Racist History 2015-08-13T04:00:00Z
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
Wordsworth in 1807 wrote the Character of the Happy Warrior in praise of Horatio Nelson, the hero whose courage and generosity made him "he, that every man in arms would wish to be". The Election Vocabularist pt I 2015-04-09T04:00:00Z
Resolving to meet Wordsworth as soon as he could, he set out on a northern road, but soon decided that he was unworthy of presenting himself to such a “hallowed character.” The Man Who Invented the Drug Memoir 2016-10-10T04:00:00Z
For Wordsworth, 42, of north London, it was a "lightbulb" moment. Characters raise a titter on Twitter 2015-01-03T05:00:00Z
As Wordsworth said of the enthusiasts who were present at the beginning of the French Revolution, “Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive.” An excerpt of Walter Isaacson's book 'The Innovators' 2014-10-14T04:00:00Z
Duncan later moved to a middle-class area in Monrovia for high school, according to a friend from that time, Tonia Wordsworth. For Ebola victim, US trip followed years of effort 2014-10-09T04:00:00Z
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
Keats dedicated “Endymion” to him, and Wordsworth, in homage, penned his famous couplet: “We Poets in our youth begin in gladness; / But thereof come in the end despondency and madness.” The Man Who Invented the Drug Memoir 2016-10-10T04:00:00Z
When he was 19, Wordsworth, who is Jewish, read "Justice, Not Vengeance" by celebrated Nazi-hunter Simon Wiesenthal. Characters raise a titter on Twitter 2015-01-03T05:00:00Z
Instead, I followed Jim Morrison’s credo, the credo of Coleridge and, at one point, Wordsworth, the credo of self-discovery through self-destruction I so willfully subscribed to until this moment: Billy Idol: Sex, Drugs, 'Charmed Life,' and the Crash That Nearly Killed Me 2014-09-30T04:00:00Z
Wordsworth, who now lives in Calverton, Maryland, called Duncan a “dutiful” young man who was “like a brother.” For Ebola victim, US trip followed years of effort 2014-10-09T04:00:00Z
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'
For De Quincey, a complex identification with Wordsworth began, tantalizingly, even before he had heard the man’s name. The Man Who Invented the Drug Memoir 2016-10-10T04:00:00Z
“It felt like winning the lottery,” says Wordsworth. First dust grains from outside the Solar System 2014-08-13T04:00:00Z
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
Wordsworth lamented: "Our meddling intellect Misshapes the beauteous forms of things. We murder to dissect." Quit whining about the Facebook study. Life is better as a science experiment 2014-07-07T04:00:00Z
"An ideal Indian of class should be able to recite Wordsworth as well as literature of his mother tongue." Is there a distinctive 'Indian English'? 2014-06-27T04:00:00Z
He was still in his teens when he encountered “Lyrical Ballads,” published anonymously in 1798 and in a second edition, signed by Wordsworth, in 1800. The Man Who Invented the Drug Memoir 2016-10-10T04:00:00Z
Naomi Wordsworth from Buckinghamshire, UK, saw the project advertised on the BBC and “thought it sounded fabulous to participate in a real science project open to anyone who wanted to use their skills to help”. First dust grains from outside the Solar System 2014-08-13T04:00:00Z
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
If this format seems alien to the business of poetry, described by Wordsworth as "emotion recollected in tranquillity", then the prize money may also give us pause for thought. Is it possible to be a millionaire poet? 2014-05-30T04:00:00Z
“It’s an overall fairness issue,” said Jim Wordsworth, owner of the JR Stockyards Inn steakhouse in Tysons Corner. - The Washington Post
De Quincey, by then renting Dove Cottage after Wordsworth’s departure, was abject. The Man Who Invented the Drug Memoir 2016-10-10T04:00:00Z
The selection focuses on the Romantic and Victorian periods, and also includes the manuscripts of Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats, Austen, Dickens and Wilde as well as the largest collection of childhood writings of the Brontë sisters. British Library puts 1200 of its "greatest literary treasures" online 2014-05-16T04:00:00Z
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
Wounded twice, he received the Purple Heart with oak leaf cluster; while recuperating in an Army hospital in England, he read Wordsworth and other pastoral poets. David Sive, a Father of Environmental Law, Dies at 91 2014-03-19T23:50:17Z
He had special notations under Wordsworth’s “Ode on Intimations of Immortality” and had underlined the first two lines of Kipling’s “If.” F.Y.I.: Was There a Gangster Called Oscar the Poet? 2014-03-14T21:35:36Z
At the time, Wordsworth was living with his sister Dorothy and his wife Mary in a former inn in Grasmere, which by the time of his death was known as Dove Cottage. The Man Who Invented the Drug Memoir 2016-10-10T04:00:00Z
It was the poet Wordsworth who wrote of the power of the mind suspended "in vacant or in pensive mode". Is new tech just a fashion item? 2014-02-26T00:31:31Z
Staffordshire Police said Mr Moscicki was arrested shortly after the discovery of Mr Smith's body, at the junction of Shakespeare Road and Wordsworth Avenue. Man remanded over Christmas killing 2013-12-29T10:03:18Z
The body of a man was found in the early hours at the junction of Shakespeare Road and Wordsworth Avenue in Highfields, Stafford. Man found dead at road junction 2013-12-25T13:05:32Z
Rather like when one reads the poetry of Wordsworth in a particular location. Ian McEwan on the appeal of Brazil 2013-10-03T01:40:44Z
Born in 1792, he was part of the radical, anti-establishment generation of writers who became known as the Romantics - his contemporaries and friends included Byron, Wordsworth and Keats. Why did Breaking Bad use Ozymandias? 2013-08-01T12:16:43Z
I did a poetry reading for the Wordsworth Trust. The nine lives of Felix Dennis: "I've lived an unbelievable life, even if I did do my best to kill myself" 2013-06-01T23:04:05Z
Despite the win, Mr Wordsworth said it would be "business as usual". Cider makers rise above bad weather 2013-05-04T16:09:01Z
Using scanners, they found that prose and poetry by authors including Shakespeare, Wordsworth and TS Eliot set off more electrical activity in the brain than simpler texts. Papers reflect on Cameron's challenges 2013-01-13T06:32:45Z
And this official competition selection takes in literary giants such as Chaucer, Shakespeare, Blake, Wordsworth, Shelley and Hardy. Pupils compete in learning poetry 2013-01-08T09:58:40Z
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
Ramblers in search of Wordsworth's golden daffodils may soon find themselves confronted with a host of big white dishes, in an area dotted with National Trust farms. Broadband service to be withdrawn from Cumbrian communities 2012-05-23T13:32:41Z
At 3:15, in the Conference Room of Opportunity, you will draw on your years of parsing Plato and prodding the sublime depths of Wordsworth by together, reviewing the Mackenzie account. A Commencement Address... for the (Depressing) Real World! 2012-05-19T15:06:43Z
The poet Wordsworth wrote the epitaph which appears on his tombstone. Curious Epitaphs 2012-04-26T02:00:22.397Z
I will shove my new Wordsworth book into my saddlebag and ride into the country, along the Potomac. Voices from the Past 2012-04-19T02:00:30.787Z
Wordsworth is his favourite poet, and he could quote much of his poetry. My Mission to London 1912-1914 2012-04-17T02:00:14.497Z
Wordsworth, we remember, explained the absence of love from his poetry on the ground that his passions were too violent to allow any safe expression of them. Shelburne Essays, Third Series 2012-04-16T02:00:02.027Z
In the following June, however, she again left home, this time to visit Wordsworth and the Lake country; and in August she paid a second visit to Scotland. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 13, Slice 3 "Helmont, Jean" to "Hernosand" 2012-04-14T02:00:23.707Z
Hutchinson wrote poetry of much merit, and one of his sonnets is included in the works of Wordsworth. Curious Epitaphs 2012-04-26T02:00:22.397Z
Who could have supposed, at the end of the eighteenth century, when poetry in England seemed dead, that a great galaxy of stars--Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, Keats--was on the very eve of rising? One Day at a Time and Other Talks on Life and Religion 2012-03-31T02:00:20.873Z
I said to Mr. Wordsworth that I thought this a natural consequence; for how could any one have a dramatic turn of mind who judged entirely of others from himself? Winterslow Essays and Characters Written There 2012-03-27T02:00:25.647Z
These nine simple verses are worth more than all the dreams of Shelley, and Keats, and Wordsworth. Shelburne Essays, Third Series 2012-04-16T02:00:02.027Z
He told me his thought of woman was like what Wordsworth painted. The Everlasting Arms 2012-03-22T02:00:37.327Z
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 the same year Mr. Wordsworth received a pension of £300 a year from Sir Robert Peel's government, and permission to resign his office of Stamp Distributor in favor of his son. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 2012-03-21T02:00:31.390Z
May I ask, my dear Sir, did you ever read Mr. Wordsworth’s poem of Michael? Winterslow Essays and Characters Written There 2012-03-27T02:00:25.647Z
Wordsworth says:— "Books, we know, Are a substantial world, both pure and good; Round these, with tendrils strong as flesh and blood, Our pastime and our happiness will grow." Special Method in the Reading of Complete English Classics In the Grades of the Common School 2012-03-17T02:01:04.053Z
Wordsworth early became acquainted with Coleridge and Southey, participated in their French enthusiasm, and, like them, his first poetic dreams were of freedom. Sketches of Reforms and Reformers, of Great Britain and Ireland 2012-03-12T03:00:20.310Z
The impression that England made upon Wordsworth in 1802 was precisely that left upon the mind of the serious Roman when he reflected upon his country. The Conflict of Religions in the Early Roman Empire 2012-03-11T03:00:13.983Z
Once, and once only, did Wordsworth sing in discharge of his office—on the occasion of Her Majesty's visit to the University of Cambridge. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 2012-03-21T02:00:31.390Z
Some there are By their good deeds exalted Wordsworth. Noble Deeds of American Women With Biographical Sketches of Some of the More Prominent 2012-03-10T03:00:13.687Z
Shelley says, "A poem is the very image of life expressed in its eternal truth"; and Wordsworth that poetry is "the breath and finer spirit of all knowledge." Special Method in the Reading of Complete English Classics In the Grades of the Common School 2012-03-17T02:01:04.053Z
They were, to use Wordsworth's phrase, "scarcely hedge-rows, but lines of sportive woods run wild." Old-Time Gardens Newly Set Forth 2012-03-06T03:00:22.850Z
Virgil's experience did not stop here; like Wordsworth, he found                         Nature's self By all varieties of human love Assisted. The Conflict of Religions in the Early Roman Empire 2012-03-11T03:00:13.983Z
The characteristics of Mr. Wordsworth's muse are, simple and flowing, though occasionally inharmonious verse, strong and sometimes irresistible appeals to the feelings, with unexceptionable sentiments. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 2012-03-21T02:00:31.390Z
At the last we made a short-cut up to the stone known, out of compliment to Wordsworth, as "Rest and be Thankful." Our Journey to the Hebrides 2012-03-03T03:00:19.857Z
We can hardly mention the names of Emerson, Bryant, and Wordsworth, without thinking of their loving companionship with nature, their flight to the woods and fields. Special Method in the Reading of Complete English Classics In the Grades of the Common School 2012-03-17T02:01:04.053Z
Emerson gave him a letter of introduction to Carlyle, Story to some leading lawyers, and Washington Allston to Wordsworth. Famous American Statesmen 2012-03-01T03:00:26.167Z
It is hardly exaggeration to say that he stands nearer Wordsworth in this feeling than any other poet. The Conflict of Religions in the Early Roman Empire 2012-03-11T03:00:13.983Z
Wordsworth's last publication of importance was his "Yarrow Revisited, and other Poems," published in 1835. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 2012-03-21T02:00:31.390Z
For this reason he was in but small measure attracted to Wordsworth. Herbert Spencer 2012-02-29T03:00:20.773Z
These books are the communings of the soul with nature, and are closely related in spirit to the poems of nature in Bryant, Wordsworth, Tennyson, and other poets. Special Method in the Reading of Complete English Classics In the Grades of the Common School 2012-03-17T02:01:04.053Z
I thought that only painters and poets, Mr. Wordsworth and people like that, noticed those things. Ovington's Bank 2012-02-28T03:00:25.267Z
His affectation is not comparable to Byron’s, nor his egotism to Wordsworth’s, but their very pettiness excites a sensation of the ludicrous. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 13, Slice 8 "Hudson River" to "Hurstmonceaux" 2012-02-24T03:00:27.173Z
Of Wordsworth and Bowles, both poets, and both friends of Coleridge, Lamb, Southey, and Crabbe, more detailed mention is made in preceding pages. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 2012-03-21T02:00:31.390Z
Much of his genius is inherited by his son Leonard—known by his medals of Wordsworth and others, and honorably distinguished in the recent awards at the Great Exhibition. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol IV. No. XX. January, 1852. 2012-02-24T03:00:24.390Z
Mrs. Wordsworth, with a view of letting him know what the opinion of his medical advisers was concerning his case, said gently to him, "William, you are going to Dora!" The Last Words of Distinguished Men and Women (Real and Traditional) 2012-02-22T03:00:24.020Z
Though he was no great reader, he read Wordsworth, and many a line was fixed in his memory and, on occasions when he was alone, rose to his lips. Ovington's Bank 2012-02-28T03:00:25.267Z
I hope that, in an age when coincidences are sought for, Wordsworth will not be suspected of plagiarism. Notes and Queries, Vol. IV, Number 104, October 25, 1851 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc. 2012-02-20T03:00:18.340Z
Wordsworth's fame increasing, slowly, it is true, but securely, he put forth in 1807 two volumes of his poems. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 2012-03-21T02:00:31.390Z
There is not, however, any question, but that both Scott and Wordsworth are here mistaken in their analysis of their feelings. Modern Painters. Vol. III (of V) Containing Part IV. Of Many Things 2012-02-20T03:00:15.843Z
This famous poem was the favorite above all other effusions of Wordsworth with the Transcendentalists, who held it to be the highest expression of his genius, and most characteristic of its bent. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z
Browning speaks of having thought of Wordsworth at an unlucky juncture. Browning and His Century 2012-02-15T03:00:39.033Z
He therefore warmly resents Wordsworth's remark about "that cold and false-hearted, frenchified coxcomb, Horace Walpole." The Gentle Reader 2012-02-15T03:00:37.463Z
The death of Wordsworth, the Patriarch of English Poetry, and that of Bowles, distinguished also in the same high sphere, have called forth biographical notices from the English press. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 2012-03-21T02:00:31.390Z
This evil is evidently common to all minds; Wordsworth himself mourning over it in the same poem: "Custom hangs upon us, with a weight Heavy as frost, and deep almost as life." Modern Painters. Vol. III (of V) Containing Part IV. Of Many Things 2012-02-20T03:00:15.843Z
For the man who loved him the charm of Wordsworth was idyllic; for the few who bent the head to him it was mystical and prophetic. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z
Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, attempted a return to the Elizabethan and to the even earlier ballad forms. Irradiations; Sand and Spray 2012-02-14T03:00:28.347Z
For myself, I do not agree with Wordsworth. The Gentle Reader 2012-02-15T03:00:37.463Z
The poem is dedicated to his brother, the Rev. Dr. Wordsworth, and appeared in 1820. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 2012-03-21T02:00:31.390Z
I am afraid Wordsworth was often affected in his simplicity, and De Balzac in his finish. Modern Painters. Vol. III (of V) Containing Part IV. Of Many Things 2012-02-20T03:00:15.843Z
In September, 1798, in company with Wordsworth and his sister, and at the expense of his munificent friends Josiah and Thomas Wedgewood, he went to Germany and spent fourteen months in hard study. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z
Thus did Wordsworth enter into the soul of things and sing of them "In a music sweeter than their own." Garden-Craft Old and New 2012-02-12T03:00:11.083Z
That is only saying that the average citizen and the average Hottentot have, as Wordsworth mildly puts it, "faculties which they have never used." The Gentle Reader 2012-02-15T03:00:37.463Z
Coleridge was then in his twenty-fourth year, and Wordsworth in his twenty-sixth. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 2012-03-21T02:00:31.390Z
If Wordsworth is at all right in this matter, therefore, there must surely be some other element in the feeling not yet detected. Modern Painters. Vol. III (of V) Containing Part IV. Of Many Things 2012-02-20T03:00:15.843Z
Wordsworth's genius has furnished critics with materials for speculation that must be sought in their proper places. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z
We may trust Wordsworth implicitly as an authority upon Nature. Garden-Craft Old and New 2012-02-12T03:00:11.083Z
Wordsworth set the example of such painstaking self-justification. The Gentle Reader 2012-02-15T03:00:37.463Z
A congeniality of pursuit soon ripened into intimacy; and in September, 1798, the two poets, accompanied by Miss Wordsworth, made a tour in Germany. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 2012-03-21T02:00:31.390Z
Wordsworth is more like Scott, and understands how to be happy, but yet cannot altogether rid himself of the sense that he is a philosopher, and ought always to be saying something wise. Modern Painters. Vol. III (of V) Containing Part IV. Of Many Things 2012-02-20T03:00:15.843Z
For Wordsworth was a metaphysician, though he did not clearly suspect it; at least, if he did, he was careful not to betray himself by the usual signs. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z
And Wordsworth had not that superficial knowledge of gardening which no gentleman's head should be without. Garden-Craft Old and New 2012-02-12T03:00:11.083Z
Wordsworth's fickle Muse gave him several pretty fancies about the unseen banks of Yarrow. The Gentle Reader 2012-02-15T03:00:37.463Z
Disappointed but not disheartened by the very indifferent success of his "Lyrical Ballads," years elapsed before Mr. Wordsworth again appeared as a poet. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 2012-03-21T02:00:31.390Z
He has also a vague notion that Nature would not be able to get on well without Wordsworth; and finds a considerable part of his pleasure in looking at himself as well as at her. Modern Painters. Vol. III (of V) Containing Part IV. Of Many Things 2012-02-20T03:00:15.843Z
In the "Dial," Wordsworth is mentioned with honor; not discussed as Goethe was, but pleasantly talked about as a well-known friend. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z
We are now prepared to read Wordsworths' two exquisite poems, "Yarrow Unvisited," and "Yarrow Visited," the splendid flowering, so to speak, of this poetical growth. The Genius of Scotland or Sketches of Scottish Scenery, Literature and Religion 2012-02-11T03:03:41.800Z
If they start with Wordsworth on his "Excursion," they trudge on in all weathers. The Gentle Reader 2012-02-15T03:00:37.463Z
Lamb in thanking the poet for his strange but clever poem, asked "Where was 'The Wagoner?'" of which he retained a pleasant remembrance from hearing Wordsworth read it in MS. when first written in 1806. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 2012-03-21T02:00:31.390Z
I believe a very different impression of their estimate of themselves and their doings will be received by any one who reads the conversations of Wordsworth or Goethe. Modern Painters. Vol. III (of V) Containing Part IV. Of Many Things 2012-02-20T03:00:15.843Z
But Wordsworth threw himself into his place, made no reserves or stipulations; man and writer were not to be divided. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z
But he gradually declined, listening occasionally to passages from the Bible, and from the poems of Crabbe and Wordsworth. The Genius of Scotland or Sketches of Scottish Scenery, Literature and Religion 2012-02-11T03:03:41.800Z
Wordsworth was his favorite poet, and he could quote him by the hour. Current History: A Monthly Magazine of the New York Times, May 1918 Vol. VIII, Part I, No. 2 2012-02-04T03:00:16.443Z
The "Duddon" did much for the extension of Wordsworth's fame; and the public began to call, in consequence, for a fresh edition of his poems. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 2012-03-21T02:00:31.390Z
We saw above that Wordsworth described the feeling as independent of thought, and, in the particular place then quoted, he therefore speaks of it depreciatingly. Modern Painters. Vol. III (of V) Containing Part IV. Of Many Things 2012-02-20T03:00:15.843Z
The slighting allusion to Platonism might have been omitted, for possibly Wordsworth had caught something of the philosophy that was in the air. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z
He purchased a beautiful estate on the banks of Windermere, not far from the residences of Southey, Coleridge and Wordsworth, and yielded himself to the full enjoyment of every pleasure. The Genius of Scotland or Sketches of Scottish Scenery, Literature and Religion 2012-02-11T03:03:41.800Z
This door opens into the lower storey of the Library, which contains nothing of interest except a not very inspired statue of Wordsworth. Highways and Byways in Cambridge and Ely 2012-02-03T03:00:22.657Z
These found expression suited to immediate public approval, not in Wordsworth but Kotzebue, not in Coleridge but Colman, not in Southey but in melodrama. Tragedy 2012-01-31T03:00:19.343Z
Thus, Wordsworth writes many sonnets to Sir George Beaumont and Haydon, none to Sir Joshua or to Turner. Modern Painters. Vol. III (of V) Containing Part IV. Of Many Things 2012-02-20T03:00:15.843Z
She is steeped to the lips in enjoyment by Southey, whom she was inclined to place next to Wordsworth. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z
A striking illustration of this may be found in the opening stanza of Wordsworth's Ode to Immortality. The Genius of Scotland or Sketches of Scottish Scenery, Literature and Religion 2012-02-11T03:03:41.800Z
Of Byron he has quaint things to say, and of Wordsworth things that are neither quaint nor wise.  The Life of George Borrow 2012-01-26T03:00:14.707Z
Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, Landor, Scott, Keats, and many other lesser poets wrote tragedies, and most were not unwilling to have these acted. Tragedy 2012-01-31T03:00:19.343Z
I had to go to Alliance Meeting to speak about Wordsworth. Julia Ward Howe 1819-1910 2012-01-24T03:00:23.377Z
Bryant betrays scarcely perceptible marks of it, though he ascribed to Wordsworth a fresh inspiration of love for nature. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z
About this time I took much delight in Wordsworth's and Coleridge's poetry; and can boast that I read the Excursion twice through. Charles Darwin: His Life in an Autobiographical Chapter, and in a Selected Series of His Published Letters 2012-01-22T03:00:19.733Z
We recall the man in the field in the twenty-second chapter of The Romany Rye who used Wordsworth’s poetry as a soporific.  The Life of George Borrow 2012-01-26T03:00:14.707Z
The play is more human, though feebler, than the contemporary plays of Miss Baillie, Wordsworth, and Coleridge. Tragedy 2012-01-31T03:00:19.343Z
Chatterton committed suicide at 17, and after his deception became known, Romantic poets like Wordsworth and Keats praised his talent. Louise J. Kaplan, Psychoanalyst and Author, Dies at 82 2012-01-17T04:47:21Z
The readers of Lamb, Hazlitt, Wordsworth, Southey and the brilliant essayists that made so fascinating the English literature of the first third of our century must perforce be introduced to Coleridge. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z
Some of the greatest of modern poets, such as Dante, Milton, and Wordsworth, have manifested a feeling similar to that expressed by Ennius and Lucretius. The Roman Poets of the Republic 2012-01-15T03:00:14.187Z
It came, for example, to Wordsworth and Coleridge long after their best work was done.  The Life of George Borrow 2012-01-26T03:00:14.707Z
Only Wordsworth and Shelley, and recently Rossetti and Jean Ingelow, are comparable with him in this. The Complete Works of Richard Crashaw, Volume II (of 2) 2012-01-14T03:00:20.483Z
Mr. Quivis, or somebody quite as discerning, Some scholar who's hourly expecting his learning, Calls B. the American Wordsworth; but Wordsworth Is worth near as much as your whole tuneful herd's worth. Poems of James Russell Lowell With biographical sketch by Nathan Haskell Dole 2012-01-09T03:00:25.087Z
A more serene and beneficent influence proceeded from the poet Wordsworth, whose fame rose along with that of Coleridge, struggled against the same opposition, and obtained even a steadier lustre. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z
More than any poet, except Wordsworth, he seems to derive a pure and healthy joy from the common sights and sounds of animate and inanimate Nature. The Roman Poets of the Republic 2012-01-15T03:00:14.187Z
C. L. N. A. I. J. So Wordsworth, �The world is too much with us,� etc. The Sufistic Quatrains of Omar Khayyam 2012-01-08T03:00:15.553Z
Wordsworth's vision of the 'flashing daffodils' is not finer than this. The Complete Works of Richard Crashaw, Volume II (of 2) 2012-01-14T03:00:20.483Z
How different from Wordsworth who attacked the ballot and took sides against reform! Poems of James Russell Lowell With biographical sketch by Nathan Haskell Dole 2012-01-09T03:00:25.087Z
We can imagine the outlook of joyous trustfulness; we can almost seem, with Wordsworth, to remember the child's soul entering into the Kingdom of Heaven. Human Personality and its Survival of Bodily Death 2012-01-05T03:00:42.307Z
A very distinguished English poet, named Wordsworth, has written an admirable sonnet to his memory. The Freedmen's Book 2012-01-05T03:00:39.763Z
If its substance has any allegiance to another English poet, we must look for a poet who had a realistic sense of the furrowed field and a visionary sense of the stars, that is Wordsworth. The Critical Game 2012-01-05T03:00:38.527Z
In these there are penetrative 'looks' that Wordsworth never has surpassed, and a richness almost Shakesperean. The Complete Works of Richard Crashaw, Volume II (of 2) 2012-01-14T03:00:20.483Z
The influence of Wordsworth and Tennyson may be distinctly traced in most of them. Poems of James Russell Lowell With biographical sketch by Nathan Haskell Dole 2012-01-09T03:00:25.087Z
"The Wild Honey Suckle," for instance, which was written in 1786, twelve years before the "Lyrical Ballads," is as spontaneous and as free from Pope as anything written by Wordsworth. The Poems of Philip Freneau, Volume I (of III) 2012-01-04T03:00:43.800Z
His Life, a delightful piece of biography, written by Bishop Fell, and prefixed to the collected Works, has been reprinted in vol. iv. of Wordsworth’s Ecclesiastical Biography. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 12, Slice 8 "Haller, Albrecht" to "Harmonium" 2012-01-02T03:00:22.443Z
Maeterlinck has knowledge of nature, not only such knowledge as Wordsworth had, but a fair acquaintance with contemporaneous science. The Critical Game 2012-01-05T03:00:38.527Z
Among other passages he quotes with admiration Wordsworth’s lines on the “Simplon Pass.” Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z
He lies now in a spot, beside which, in little more than a year, the dust of one—alike, but oh, how different!—Wordsworth, was to be consigned. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 3, No. 15, August, 1851 2011-12-27T03:00:07.217Z
The discovery disheartened him; his Celtic temperament would not patiently wait for recognition, as did Wordsworth; he was too proud to force his poetry upon an unwilling public. The Poems of Philip Freneau, Volume I (of III) 2012-01-04T03:00:43.800Z
Goethe, Schiller, Fichte, Jean Paul, Mme. de St�el, and Rousseau won readers in the original, as well as in translations; and the influence of Shelley, Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Carlyle increased rapidly. Liberty In The Nineteenth Century 2011-12-24T03:08:02.240Z
I cannot find in St. Bernard's works the passage to which Wordsworth's sonnet alludes, though I often see it referred to: e. g. Notes and Queries, Vol. IV, Number 95, August 23, 1851 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc. 2011-12-24T03:07:54.103Z
He has not, like Wordsworth, given us a new insight, what I may almost call a new religion: but he has a wider range than Wordsworth, and a surer poetic touch. Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z
It would occupy too much of your valuable space to insert the whole of Dr. Wordsworth's observations, which, however, every one who is desirous of thoroughly investigating the subject, ought to read and consider. Notes and Queries, Vol. IV, Number 93, August 9, 1851 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc. 2011-12-20T03:00:34.177Z
Wordsworth's phrase would have suited Forbes' understanding of her: she "felt her life in every limb." What Will People Say? A novel 2011-12-17T03:00:18.490Z
Wordsworth's fear of "too much liberty" did not prevent his encouraging intellectual independence most impressively. Liberty In The Nineteenth Century 2011-12-24T03:08:02.240Z
“I was reading,” said Rory, smiling, “that beautiful poem of Wordsworth, We are seven.” Wild Adventures round the Pole The Cruise of the "Snowbird" Crew in the "Arrandoon" 2011-12-15T03:00:12.560Z
Wordsworth may be the greater teacher; for many of us he has opened a new world: he has touched the deepest springs of our nature. Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z
Some of you may be dissolute now and may look forward to becoming like one of the nice old fellows in a Wordsworth poem. Modern Essays 2011-12-13T03:00:25.577Z
Illustrations to Wordsworth—to a selected Wordsworth—gave the artist fortunate opportunities to render the England of English descriptive verse. English Book-Illustration of To-day Appreciations of the Work of Living English Illustrators With Lists of Their Books 2011-11-30T03:00:10.703Z
While to Wordsworth, with a faith in Nature and Nature’s God as deep as Mohammed, the meanest flower that blows, gave thoughts that often lay too deep for words. Islam Her Moral And Spiritual Value A Rational And Pyschological Study 2011-11-25T03:00:15.820Z
Shades of Rousseau and Wordsworth, to mention the nightingale and the ortolans in one breath! Thomas Jefferson The Apostle of Americanism 2011-11-23T03:00:55.563Z
I noticed that he never spoke of Wordsworth without marked reverence. Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z
Wordsworth celebrates it under a name generally given to the next species: British Birds in their Haunts 2011-11-23T03:00:23.677Z
The disposition itself has haunted me as Wordsworth's sounding cataract haunted him—"like a passion"—ever since the beginning of the War. The Letters of Henry James, Vol. II 2011-11-18T03:00:26.730Z
It is obvious that Wordsworth, when he speaks of only “two voices,” the one “of the sea,” the other “of the mountains”—“each a mighty voice,” quite overlooked the bleakness and silence of the desert. Islam Her Moral And Spiritual Value A Rational And Pyschological Study 2011-11-25T03:00:15.820Z
Wordsworth had been there before 1800, and Green's description shows that he was much struck by the scenery of upper Ennerdale. Climbing in The British Isles. Vol. 1 - England 2011-11-14T03:00:21.670Z
“Yes,” he said in substance, “when I wrote that, I was thinking of Wordsworth and myself.” Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z
The poet Wordsworth, whose opportunities of watching the Nightjar in its haunts must have been numerous, knew that the whirring note is an accompaniment of the chase: British Birds in their Haunts 2011-11-23T03:00:23.677Z
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
I would say of it, as Wordsworth wrote of the Funeral Chant:— 'Many precious rites And customs of our rural ancestry Are gone, or stealing from us; this, I hope, Will last for ever.' Stones of the Temple Lessons from the Fabric and Furniture of the Church 2011-11-11T03:00:36.693Z
The idea of its danger probably arose from the celebrity given to the death of Charles Gough by the poems of Scott and Wordsworth. Climbing in The British Isles. Vol. 1 - England 2011-11-14T03:00:21.670Z
Some American spoke of the same in Wordsworth. Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z
"Or your English poet Wordsworth, 'The sea that bares her bosom to the wind'?" The Beautiful White Devil 2011-11-11T03:00:24.760Z
He has given us a volume of his poetry—true, genuine poetry—not such as Coleridge’s or Wordsworth’s, but Miss Seward’s and Dr. Darwin’s— Dying swains to sighing Delias. The Life and Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Volume I (of 2) 2011-11-10T03:00:08.903Z
No. This one day, as Mr. Wordsworth said, we'll give to idleness. Across the Stream 2011-11-05T02:00:11.673Z
In the preface to one of Wordsworth's poems the year 1826 is mentioned as the date of the first ascent. Climbing in The British Isles. Vol. 1 - England 2011-11-14T03:00:21.670Z
He will then get Christopher Wordsworth to get the Master’s permission, and then it will be time to think about the rest. Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z
He also became known to Wordsworth and Lamb. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 12, Slice 2 "Gloss" to "Gordon, Charles George" 2011-10-31T02:00:28.703Z
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
"How is it that you lived, and what is it that you did?" we ask these distant prototypes of Wordsworth's peasant. Studies in Medi?val Life and Literature 2011-10-29T02:00:13.050Z
It is the writer's belief that this is the rock which the poet Wordsworth, in 'The Brothers,' has confused with the Pillar Rock. Climbing in The British Isles. Vol. 1 - England 2011-11-14T03:00:21.670Z
Wordsworth’s eyes are better, but not well, nor ever likely to be. Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z
Tennyson was much more of the artificer in words than these, but he had not the secret of the word-magic of Shakespeare, Wordsworth, or Keats. Leaves in the Wind 2011-10-28T02:00:25.937Z
In Branwell's letter to Wordsworth, and in his other letters, he expresses plenty of honest ambition, and talks bravely of work in the future; and he spoke in the same way also. The Bront? Family, Vol. 2 of 2 with special reference to Patrick Branwell Bront? 2011-10-27T02:00:25.173Z
What if Wordsworth had tried to support himself and win fame by singing at castles? Studies in Medi?val Life and Literature 2011-10-29T02:00:13.050Z
It was doubtless while Branwell was living at Ulverston that he obtained the favourable opinion of Wordsworth on some poems which he submitted for criticism. The Bront? Family, Vol. 1 of 2 with special reference to Patrick Branwell Bront? 2011-10-27T02:00:24.317Z
Among the modern poets, Byron was at this time, far above the rest, and almost exclusively, his favourite; a preference which, in later years, he transferred altogether to Wordsworth and Shelley. Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z
Wordsworth, like Homer and Milton, and all who touch the sublime in poetry, had the power of transmuting a proper name to a strange and significant beauty. Leaves in the Wind 2011-10-28T02:00:25.937Z
Now it was an edition of Wordsworth by this same publisher that Charlotte had, four months earlier, fixed upon as a model for the sisters' own volume of poems. The Bront? Family, Vol. 2 of 2 with special reference to Patrick Branwell Bront? 2011-10-27T02:00:25.173Z
Philosophical pantheism such as Wordsworth's or Tennyson's, feels deity in nature; the new Christianity incarnates divinity in universal man. Studies in Medi?val Life and Literature 2011-10-29T02:00:13.050Z
Before, however, Southey had answered his sister's letter, Branwell ventured, in a similar spirit, to address Wordsworth, for whose writings he had a great admiration. The Bront? Family, Vol. 1 of 2 with special reference to Patrick Branwell Bront? 2011-10-27T02:00:24.317Z
Mary was the letter-writer of the family, and a very clever woman, and her letters show that she knew her Shakespeare, Wordsworth, Keats, and Coleridge as well as her brother’s poems. Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z
The most memorable example, perhaps, is in the closing lines of the poem to Dorothy Wordsworth: But on old age serene and bright, And lovely as a Lapland night, Shall lead thee to thy grave. Leaves in the Wind 2011-10-28T02:00:25.937Z
Coleridge says of Wordsworth: "Since Milton, I know of no poet with so many felicitous and unforgetable lines." Rambles with John Burroughs 2011-10-22T02:00:31.317Z
For he, too, is green in colour; like Wordsworth's green linnet, Birds and Man 2011-10-20T02:00:25.513Z
It was Wordsworth, indeed, who 'developed the theory of poetry,'—as Branwell Brontë well knew—that has worked a greater change in literature than has, perhaps, been known since the period of the Renaissance. The Bront? Family, Vol. 1 of 2 with special reference to Patrick Branwell Bront? 2011-10-27T02:00:24.317Z
If the lives of Shakspeare, Milton, and Wordsworth had ended at twenty-five, as did the life of Keats, they would have left no poetry comparable with that of this impassioned dreamer. The World's Best Books : A Key to the Treasures of Literature 2011-10-20T02:00:20.857Z
Yet what wonderful effects Wordsworth, Coleridge and Keats extract from it! Leaves in the Wind 2011-10-28T02:00:25.937Z
Walter Pater finds in Wordsworth's poetry an extraordinary number of these short passage poems, which he called 'delicious morsels.' Rambles with John Burroughs 2011-10-22T02:00:31.317Z
As bad, let us say, as Shakespeare and Wordsworth and Tennyson. Birds and Man 2011-10-20T02:00:25.513Z
But it was Wordsworth who at this moment, was the object of Branwell's chief admiration. The Bront? Family, Vol. 1 of 2 with special reference to Patrick Branwell Bront? 2011-10-27T02:00:24.317Z
There were papers on Scott, Byron, Wordsworth, delightful conversations, anecdotes, songs. Recollections and Impressions 1822-1890 2011-10-15T02:00:25.820Z
He fondled Wordsworth and patted Shelley     And said with his hand on his heart He would brook no interference from morals     In any matter of art. Poems 2011-10-14T02:00:29.763Z
Wordsworth's Solitary Reaper contains one or two passages of this kind. Rambles with John Burroughs 2011-10-22T02:00:31.317Z
He does not, it is true, confound the sparrow and hedge-sparrow like Wordsworth, nor confound the white owl with the brown owl like Tennyson, nor puzzle the ornithologist with a "sea-blue bird of March." Birds and Man 2011-10-20T02:00:25.513Z
Branwell's favourite poets were Wordsworth and the melancholy Cowper, whose 'Castaway' he was always fond of quoting. The Bront? Family, Vol. 1 of 2 with special reference to Patrick Branwell Bront? 2011-10-27T02:00:24.317Z
The marked sentimental tendency of his art makes us wonder at Ruskin’s enthusiastic eulogy which finds in Fr�re’s work “the depth of Wordsworth, the grace of Reynolds, and the holiness of Angelico.” Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 11, Slice 2 "French Literature" to "Frost, William" 2011-10-14T02:00:26.280Z
Coleridge, Southey, Wordsworth, were leaders in the revolutionary cult at Oxford and Cambridge. The Life Of Thomas Paine, Vol. II. (of II) With A History of His Literary, Political and Religious Career in America France, and England 2011-10-12T02:00:47.957Z
Morally utilitarian, he yet rarely writes about physics without betraying the poetic passion for nature of a suppressed Wordsworth. The Life Of Thomas Paine, Vol. I. (of II) With A History of His Literary, Political and Religious Career in America France, and England; to which is added a Sketch of Paine by William Cobbett 2011-10-12T02:00:38.787Z
It comforts me a little in this inquiry to remember that Wordsworth preferred the stock-dove to the nightingale—that "creature of ebullient heart." Birds and Man 2011-10-20T02:00:25.513Z
I saw a direct line back to Wordsworth in Transtromer, and the work found resonances in many poets in the European tradition as well. Nobel Prize in Literature: In Praise of Tomas Transtromer 2011-10-07T09:00:00Z
He is a greater dramatist than Byron; and whether in the dramas or prose romances, he shows that vast sympathy with, and knowledge of, human nature which neither Byron, Shelley, Coleridge, nor Wordsworth had. Victor Hugo: His Life and Works 2011-10-07T02:00:23.887Z
Ever since he wrote Wordsworth has been the patron saint of introspective souls. Search-Light Letters 2011-10-06T02:00:43.957Z
Burke's book preceded the events in France which caused reaction in the minds of Wordsworth and other thinkers in England and America. The Life Of Thomas Paine, Vol. I. (of II) With A History of His Literary, Political and Religious Career in America France, and England; to which is added a Sketch of Paine by William Cobbett 2011-10-12T02:00:38.787Z
Who has exercised this blessed ministry of the interpretation of nature better than Wordsworth, poet and philosopher at once as he is? The Hearth-Stone Thoughts upon Home-Life in Our Cities 2011-09-28T02:00:22.560Z
There are poets of a larger compass; he has not the passion of Shelley nor the transcendent meditation of Wordsworth; but his inspiration, in its own current, is surely as pure as theirs. Views and Reviews 2011-09-16T02:00:21.197Z
“Natural objects always did and do weaken, deaden, and obliterate imagination in me,” he wrote in his MS. notes to Wordsworth. William Blake A Study of His Life and Art Work 2011-09-13T02:00:35.943Z
I selected those lines of Wordsworth because he, of all the poets, suggests more ostensibly in his verse deliberate pursuit of the ideal. Search-Light Letters 2011-10-06T02:00:43.957Z
But their natural position is undoubtedly in the grass, or— "Beside the lake, beneath the trees, Fluttering and dancing in the breeze," As Wordsworth has it. Beautiful Bulbous Plants For the Open Air 2011-09-10T02:00:24.197Z
It was said of Bishop Christopher Wordsworth of Lincoln that one half of him was in heaven and the other half in the seventeenth century. Lighter Moments from the Notebook of Bishop Walsham How 2011-09-09T02:01:03.123Z
随便看

 

英语例句辞典收录了117811条英语例句在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词及词组的例句翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2000-2023 Newdu.com.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2025/1/9 2:02:56