From Wordsworth to SpenderPaul Robert Lieder Houghton Mifflin, 1950 Readings representative of major British authors. For contents and other editions, see Author Catalog. |
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Page 99
Paul Robert Lieder. position will be a poem , merely because it is distinguished from prose by metre , or by rhyme , or by both conjointly . In this , the lowest sense , a man might attribute the name of a poem to the well - known ...
Paul Robert Lieder. position will be a poem , merely because it is distinguished from prose by metre , or by rhyme , or by both conjointly . In this , the lowest sense , a man might attribute the name of a poem to the well - known ...
Page 104
... poem . The one is , that the author has not , in the poem itself , 10 taken sufficient care to preclude from the reader's fancy the disgusting images of ordi- nary morbid idiocy , which yet it was by no means his intention to represent ...
... poem . The one is , that the author has not , in the poem itself , 10 taken sufficient care to preclude from the reader's fancy the disgusting images of ordi- nary morbid idiocy , which yet it was by no means his intention to represent ...
Page 870
... poem . He wants her to hear it be- cause the poem pleases him , and because he feels that his poem will aid him to her affec- tions . And when she asks him if he has thought of her during the night , he has to answer that her violet ...
... poem . He wants her to hear it be- cause the poem pleases him , and because he feels that his poem will aid him to her affec- tions . And when she asks him if he has thought of her during the night , he has to answer that her violet ...
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 3 |
WILLIAM WORDSWORTH | 14 |
nary Splendor and Beauty | 60 |
Copyright | |
54 other sections not shown
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