Poems, 第 1~2 巻E. Moxon, 1851 |
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... wind on a plain turnpike road . " — H . C. , Marginalia . Yet if the life of Shakspeare could indeed be recovered ; if we could be told how he thought , felt , and acted as an indi- vidual ; how he bore himself under the pressure of ...
... wind on a plain turnpike road . " — H . C. , Marginalia . Yet if the life of Shakspeare could indeed be recovered ; if we could be told how he thought , felt , and acted as an indi- vidual ; how he bore himself under the pressure of ...
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... winds round and catches the evening light at the front of the house . As to books , my landlord , who dwells next door , has a very respectable library , which he has put with mine , -histories , encyclopædias , and all the modern ...
... winds round and catches the evening light at the front of the house . As to books , my landlord , who dwells next door , has a very respectable library , which he has put with mine , -histories , encyclopædias , and all the modern ...
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... wind . Would they had stay'd ! " Taken as a whole , the Ejuxrian world presented a complete analogon to the world of fact , so far as it was known to Hartley , complete in all its parts ; furnishing a theatre and scene of action , with ...
... wind . Would they had stay'd ! " Taken as a whole , the Ejuxrian world presented a complete analogon to the world of fact , so far as it was known to Hartley , complete in all its parts ; furnishing a theatre and scene of action , with ...
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... winds , which have kept everything back . We had one day hotter than had been remembered for fourteen years : the ... wind was so cold and violent , that persons who attempted to cross the Fells beyond Penrith were forced to turn back ...
... winds , which have kept everything back . We had one day hotter than had been remembered for fourteen years : the ... wind was so cold and violent , that persons who attempted to cross the Fells beyond Penrith were forced to turn back ...
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... wind to blow The cloud away . I hear an inarticulate sound , Wherein no fixéd sense is found , But sorrow , sorrow without bound Of when or where . This temperament , with its strange alternations ( of which old Burton , bringing the ...
... wind to blow The cloud away . I hear an inarticulate sound , Wherein no fixéd sense is found , But sorrow , sorrow without bound Of when or where . This temperament , with its strange alternations ( of which old Burton , bringing the ...
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Ambleside art thou babe babies smile beauty believe beneath better bird blessed blest bliss breath bright brother Cædmon Calne child dark day-dawn dear death DERWENT COLERIDGE dream earth fain fair fairy bowers faith fancy father fear feel flower glad Grasmere happy Hartley Coleridge hast hath heard heart Heaven holy hope human Keswick kind knew lady Leonard light living look Lysippus maid maiden memory merry mind mirth morning mortal mother nature ne'er never night nought Nymphs o'er pain passion poems poet poor prayer PROMETHEUS pure rill Robert Jameson S. T. Coleridge sigh sing sire sleep smile soft song SONNET sorrow soul spirit Susan sweet SYLPH tears thee thine thing thou art thou wert thought truth Twas vernal verse voice ween wild wind words young youth