| William Wordsworth - 1992 - 84 páginas
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| William Harmon - 1992 - 1176 páginas
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| William Wordsworth - 1994 - 628 páginas
...me, If there be but three or four Who will love my little Flower. Resolution and Independence I There was a roaring in the wind all night; The rain came...all the air is filled with pleasant noise of waters. II All things that love the sun are out of doors; The sky rejoices in the morning's birth; The grass... | |
| Timothy R. Austin - 1994 - 244 páginas
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| Timothy R. Austin - 1994 - 244 páginas
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| John Drury - 1995 - 344 páginas
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| Michael Baron - 1995 - 304 páginas
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| Stanley Appelbaum - 1996 - 260 páginas
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| Ira Livingston - 1997 - 276 páginas
...sunrise, which comprises a traffic between species and even between living and nonliving processes as "the Jay makes answer as the Magpie chatters; / And...all the air is filled with pleasant noise of waters" (Wordsworth 1969, 155). As in Blake's first "Nurse's Song" (or in the utopian conclusion of Coleridge's... | |
| Kirsten Malmkjær, John Williams - 1998 - 212 páginas
...salient positions: it marks openings, climaxes and conclusions. Wordsworth's practice is typical: 8 There was a roaring in the wind all night; The rain came...all the air is filled with pleasant noise of waters. (from Resolution and Independence, 1807) This poem opens with a contrast between a reported past (ll.1-2)... | |
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