Wordsworth's View of Nature: And Its Ethical Consequences |
Contents
Nature in The Prelude Books IXXIII 36 | 11 |
Wordsworths Attitude to Nature Reviewed | 55 |
Conclusion | 115 |
127 | |
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Common terms and phrases
appears attitude beauty become beginning believe blessings breath bring called cause certainly child clear Coleridge comes concerning delight desire difficult Dorothy earlier Early earth effect entirely eternal evil Excursion experience faith feelings felt force forms give given happy heart helped hope hour human idea imaginative important influence inspiration intellectual interest kind knew knowledge known later lead letter light lines live look Lyrical Ballads man's mankind meaning mind moral mystical Nature Nature's never objects passage passion perhaps philosophy pleasure poem poet poetic poetry political possible Prelude present principle pure reason received religion seemed seen sense simple society soul speak spirit strong tells things thought tried true truth turn understand universe vital wanted whole Wordsworth worth writing young youth