De Quincey's Writings, Bind 6Ticknor, Reed, and Fields, 1851 |
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Side 1
... COLERIDGE 46 XV . RECOLLECTIONS OF GRASMERE 61 XVI . THE SARACEN'S HEAD . • 102 XVII . SOCIETY OF THE LAKES . 116 XVIII . CHARLES LOYD • 141 XIX . SOCIETY OF THE LAKES . 168 ΧΧ . ( ( " " ' . 203 XXI . WALKING STEWART . - EDWARD IRVING ...
... COLERIDGE 46 XV . RECOLLECTIONS OF GRASMERE 61 XVI . THE SARACEN'S HEAD . • 102 XVII . SOCIETY OF THE LAKES . 116 XVIII . CHARLES LOYD • 141 XIX . SOCIETY OF THE LAKES . 168 ΧΧ . ( ( " " ' . 203 XXI . WALKING STEWART . - EDWARD IRVING ...
Side 7
... COLERIDGE 46 XV . RECOLLECTIONS OF GRASMERE • XVI . THE SARACEN'S HEAD XVII . SOCIETY OF THE LAKES . · XVIII . CHARLES LOYD XIX . SOCIETY OF THE LAKES . XX . " 6 61 102 116 141 168 203 XXI . WALKING STEWART . - EDWARD IRVING . — WILLIAM ...
... COLERIDGE 46 XV . RECOLLECTIONS OF GRASMERE • XVI . THE SARACEN'S HEAD XVII . SOCIETY OF THE LAKES . · XVIII . CHARLES LOYD XIX . SOCIETY OF THE LAKES . XX . " 6 61 102 116 141 168 203 XXI . WALKING STEWART . - EDWARD IRVING . — WILLIAM ...
Side 12
... Coleridge , whose * A curious dissertation might be written on this subject . Meantime , it is remarkable that almost all modern nations have committed the blunder of supposing the Latin word for supper to be cœna , and of dinner ...
... Coleridge , whose * A curious dissertation might be written on this subject . Meantime , it is remarkable that almost all modern nations have committed the blunder of supposing the Latin word for supper to be cœna , and of dinner ...
Side 14
... Coleridge having now pursued her journey northward to Keswick , and having , at her departure , invited me , in her own name as well as Southey's , to come and see them , Wordsworth proposed that we should go thither in com- pany , but ...
... Coleridge having now pursued her journey northward to Keswick , and having , at her departure , invited me , in her own name as well as Southey's , to come and see them , Wordsworth proposed that we should go thither in com- pany , but ...
Side 19
... Coleridge , and a gentleman whom I could not doubt to be Southey , standing , very hospitably , to greet my entrance . Southey was , in person , somewhat taller than Words- worth , being about five feet eleven in height , or a trifle ...
... Coleridge , and a gentleman whom I could not doubt to be Southey , standing , very hospitably , to greet my entrance . Southey was , in person , somewhat taller than Words- worth , being about five feet eleven in height , or a trifle ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
acquaintance Allan Allan Cunningham Ambleside amongst beautiful believe Bishop of Llandaff Brathay called casuistry character Charles L chiefly circumstances Clappersgate Coleridge Coniston connected cottage daughter dinner Easedale Edward Irving effect English expression fact feelings felt friends gentleman Grasmere habits Hannah happened happiness heard heart honor hour human impression intellectual interest Junius Keswick knew known lake less literary lived London looked Lord Byron Meantime ment mention miles mind Miss Elizabeth Miss Smith Miss Wordsworth mode moral mountain nature never night party Patterdale peculiar Penrith perhaps person Piercefield poor Professor Wilson Quaker reader reason regard religious respect road Sarah Green seemed sense Siddons Simond sister situation society sometimes Southey Southey's spirit strangers supposed things thought tion unhappy vale Westmoreland whilst whole wife WILLIAM WORDSWORTH Windermere woman word young lady
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Side 186 - Except, therefore, with the Loyds, or occasionally with Thomas Wilkinson the Quaker, or very rarely with Southey, Wordsworth had no intercourse at all beyond the limits of Grasmere : and in that valley I was myself, for some years, his sole visiting friend ; as, on the other hand, my sole visiters, as regarded that vale, were himself
Side 183 - describe my domicile as being amongst the lakes and mountains of Westmoreland, It is true, I often made excursions to London, Bath, and its neighborhood, or northwards to Edinburgh; and, perhaps, on an average, passed one-fourth part of each year at a distance from this district; but here only it was that
Side 3 - I found myself, about eleven at night, in a pretty bedroom, about fourteen feet by twelve. Much I feared that this might turn out the best room in the house; and it illustrates the hospitality of my new friends, to mention that it was. Early in the morning, I was
Side 168 - In sad conjectures. — Shall we meet him now, Haunting with rod and line the craggy brooks ? Or shall we overhear him, as we pass, Striving to entertain the lonely hours With music?
Side 17 - his person; and his face I profess myself unable to describe accurately. His hair was black, and yet his complexion was fair : his eyes I believe to be hazel and large ; but I will not vouch for that fact : his nose aquiline
Side 100 - the prosperous mother of a fine handsome family; and she, together with her mother-in-law, are the two leading matrons of the vale. It was on a November night, about ten o'clock, that I first found myself installed in a house of my own — this cottage, so memorable from its past tenant to all men,
Side 41 - past: But that enormous barrier binds it fast. &c. &c. &c. The rocks repeat the raven's croak, In symphony austere.' And far beyond this ' enormous barrier,' that thus imprisons the very winds, tower upwards the aspiring heads (usually enveloped in cloud and mist) of Glaramara, Bow Fell, and the other fells of Langdale Head and Borrowdale. Finally,
Side 15 - thought national; yet, in mere reverence for truth, I am bound to say, and to declare to all the world, (let who will be offended,) that the first innkeeper in Scotland, under whose roof we met with genuine buttered toast, was an Englishman. * Meantime, if it did not disturb him, it
Side 155 - and round she walked; gazed with almost despairing eyes; her breath came thicker and thicker ; for path she could not trace by which it was possible for her to have entered. Finding herself grow more and more confused, and every instant nearer to sinking into some fainting