... of this kind, acting upon the credulity of early ages, may have given birth to, and favoured the belief in, stories of sub-aqueous palaces, gardens, and pleasure-grounds — the brilliant ornaments of Romance. With this inverted scene... Ullsmere: A Poem - Side 252af John Charles Bristow - 1835 - 271 siderFuld visning - Om denne bog
| William Wordsworth - 1823 - 166 sider
...Romance. With this inverted scene I will couple a much more extraordinary phenomenon, which will shew how other elegant fancies may have had their origin,...Nature. About eleven o'clock on the forenoon of a F 6 winter's day, coming suddenly, in company of a friend, into view of the Lake of Grasmere, we were... | |
| William Wordsworth - 1853 - 310 sider
...of romance. With this inverted scene I will couple a much more extraordinary phenomenon, which will show how other elegant fancies may have had their...the actual processes of nature. About eleven o'clock in the forenoon of a winter's day, coming suddenly, in company of a friend, into view of the Lake of... | |
| John Hudson (of Kendal) - 1853 - 312 sider
...of romance. With this inverted scene I will couple a much more extraordinary phenomenon, which will show how other elegant fancies may have had their...the actual processes of nature. About eleven o'clock in the forenoon of a winter's day, Doming suddenly, in company of a friend, into view of the Lake of... | |
| William Wordsworth, Adam Sedgwick - 1859 - 330 sider
...of romance. With this inverted scene I will couple a much more extraordinary phenomenon, which will show how other elegant fancies may have had their...the actual processes of nature. About eleven o'clock in the forenoon of a winter's day, coming suddenly, in company of a friend, into view of the Lake of... | |
| John Pagen White - 1873 - 368 sider
...inverted scene," he continues, "I will couple a much more extra-ordinary phenomenon, which will shew how other elegant fancies may have had their origin, less in invention than in the actual process of nature. "About eleven o'clock on the forenoon of a winter's day, coming suddenly, in company... | |
| William Wordsworth - 1876 - 366 sider
...of Romance. With this inverted scene I will couple a much more extraordinary phenomenon, which will show how other elegant fancies may have had their...forenoon of a winter's day, coming suddenly, in company ot a friend, into view of the Lake of Grasmere, we were alarmed by the sight of a newly-created Island... | |
| William Wordsworth - 1876 - 364 sider
...of Romance. With this inverted scene I will couple a much more extraordinary phenomenon, which will show how other elegant fancies may have had their...forenoon of a winter's day, coming suddenly, in company ot a friend, into view of the Lake of Grasmere, we were alarmed by the sight of a newly-created Island... | |
| John Wyatt - 1995 - 300 sider
...here in a scientific manner in that he carefully describes, but also explains phenomena. He aims to show how 'other elegant fancies may have had their...less in invention than in the actual processes of nature'.35 A good example of Wordsworth's role as a démystifier, yet as a poet who wants us to be... | |
| Walter Pape, Frederick Burwick - 1995 - 380 sider
...reflect the peculiarities of nature reflecting itself, this "extraordinary phenomenon [...] will shew how other elegant fancies may have had their origin,...less in invention than in the actual processes of nature."26 What is astonishing about this particular reflection is that its image does not appear inverted.... | |
| Frederick Burwick - 2010 - 218 sider
...reflect the peculiarities of namre reflecting itself, this "extraordinary phenomenon . . . will shew how other elegant fancies may have had their origin, less in invention than in the acmal processes of namre" (Prose Works 2:238). What is astonishing about this particular reflection... | |
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