Crabbe |
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Page 2
... written ( in part , at least ) as early as 1781 , while Wordsworth was yet a child , and before Cowper had published a volume . In yet another respect Crabbe was to work hand in hand with Wordsworth . He does not seem to have held ...
... written ( in part , at least ) as early as 1781 , while Wordsworth was yet a child , and before Cowper had published a volume . In yet another respect Crabbe was to work hand in hand with Wordsworth . He does not seem to have held ...
Page 15
... written that Crabbe was the truest painter of Nature in her less lovely phases . Crabbe was not stern in his attitude either to his fellow - men , or to the varying aspects of Nature , although for the first years of his life he was in ...
... written that Crabbe was the truest painter of Nature in her less lovely phases . Crabbe was not stern in his attitude either to his fellow - men , or to the varying aspects of Nature , although for the first years of his life he was in ...
Page 25
... written three or four stanzas that so far touched me in the reading them as to take off the consideration that they were things of my own fancy . " Thus far there was nothing in what he had printed - in Inebriety or The Candidate that ...
... written three or four stanzas that so far touched me in the reading them as to take off the consideration that they were things of my own fancy . " Thus far there was nothing in what he had printed - in Inebriety or The Candidate that ...
Page 28
... written in February or March of 1781. Crabbe delivered it with his own hands at Burke's house in Charles Street , St. James's , and ( as he long after told Walter Scott ) paced up and down Westminster Bridge all night in an agony of ...
... written in February or March of 1781. Crabbe delivered it with his own hands at Burke's house in Charles Street , St. James's , and ( as he long after told Walter Scott ) paced up and down Westminster Bridge all night in an agony of ...
Page 31
... written partly in his presence and submitted as a whole to his judgment . Crabbe elsewhere indicates clearly what were the weak points of his art , and what tendencies Burke found it most necessary he should counter- act . Writing his ...
... written partly in his presence and submitted as a whole to his judgment . Crabbe elsewhere indicates clearly what were the weak points of his art , and what tendencies Burke found it most necessary he should counter- act . Writing his ...
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Common terms and phrases
acquaintance admirable Aldeburgh Alfred Ainger appeared beauty Beccles Belvoir Castle Borough brother Burke Burke's called character couplet Crabbe seems Crabbe's critics death Dodsley doubt Dudley North Duke early eyes F. W. H. Myers father feel FitzGerald fortune George Crabbe Glemham Glemham Hall Goldsmith Hall happy heart hope human humble interest J. A. Symonds kind lady later Leadbeater Leslie Stephen letter lines literary live London Lord lover married mind Miss Elmy Muston nature neighbourhood neighbours never o'er occasion once Parham Parish Register parishioners passage picture poem poet poet's poetic poetry poor Pope published quoted R. W. Church readers Rendham residence Rogers Scott Sir Eustace Grey sorrows stanzas Stathern story Suffolk taste tells thou thought Thurlow tion told Tovell town Trowbridge truth Vale of Belvoir verse village volume wife Wordsworth writes young youth