Homes and Haunts of the Most Eminent British PoetsG. Routledge, 1877 - 706 Seiten |
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... writing of notes , comments , or other matter in a book : shall be deemed an injury , -the person to whom it stands charged shall replace it by a new volume or set . " The Two Voices . - Tennyson . Page 695 . Dieth D.54 KD 8971.
... writing of notes , comments , or other matter in a book : shall be deemed an injury , -the person to whom it stands charged shall replace it by a new volume or set . " The Two Voices . - Tennyson . Page 695 . Dieth D.54 KD 8971.
Seite 5
... writing his great poem . But everything concerning these particulars is wrapt in the mists of five hundred years . The only branch of his family that he mentions by name is his son Lowis . The very name of his wife is uncertain , but ...
... writing his great poem . But everything concerning these particulars is wrapt in the mists of five hundred years . The only branch of his family that he mentions by name is his son Lowis . The very name of his wife is uncertain , but ...
Seite 11
... writing the Shepherd's Calendar , in which he complains of this faithless mistress . Others , again , think she was a maiden of Kent , a Rose Lynde , the Lyndes being an old family in that county , where he went on his acquaintance with ...
... writing the Shepherd's Calendar , in which he complains of this faithless mistress . Others , again , think she was a maiden of Kent , a Rose Lynde , the Lyndes being an old family in that county , where he went on his acquaintance with ...
Seite 14
... writer , evidently not only a genuine lover of the poetry of Spenser , but well acquainted with the scene he describes , goes at much length into the characters and allusions of the poem of the Faerie Queene . He shows us that Spenser ...
... writer , evidently not only a genuine lover of the poetry of Spenser , but well acquainted with the scene he describes , goes at much length into the characters and allusions of the poem of the Faerie Queene . He shows us that Spenser ...
Seite 23
... writer I have quoted seems to imagine that Spenser , by the sheer force of fancy , not only peopled this waste with fauns and nymphs , but clothed it with trees , and other charms of nature . But we must re- member , that since then ...
... writer I have quoted seems to imagine that Spenser , by the sheer force of fancy , not only peopled this waste with fauns and nymphs , but clothed it with trees , and other charms of nature . But we must re- member , that since then ...
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Addison admiration afterwards Allan Cunningham amid amongst ancient Ballymahon beautiful Burns Burns's Byron called castle character charming Chatterton church Coleridge Colston's school cottage death delight died Earl Ebenezer Elliott Edinburgh England fame father feeling friends garden genius Goldsmith ground hand haunts heart hills Hogg honour Ireland Joanna Baillie Kilkenny lady Leigh Hunt letters literary lived London look Lord Lord Byron miles Milton mind monument mother nature neighbourhood never noble Oliver Goldsmith once pleasure poem poet poet's poetical poetry poor Pope residence river Robert Burns says scene Scotland Scott seems Shakspeare Shanter Shelley side Sir Walter Sir Walter Scott soon soul Southey Spenser spirit stands stone Swift things Thomson Tighe took tower town trees Twickenham verses village walk wall whole wife William William Canynge wonder woods Wordsworth writing wrote young