“The” Works of Thomas De Quincey: Recollections of the Lakes and the Lake poets ; Coleridge, Wordsworth and SoutheyA. & C. Black, 1863 |
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共有 26 个结果,这是第 1-5 个
第11页
... sisters to go to bed . They had been trained to obedience ; and all of them , at the voice of their eldest sister ... sister always averred that they had as deep a solicitude as she herself had about their parents . Doubtless she had ...
... sisters to go to bed . They had been trained to obedience ; and all of them , at the voice of their eldest sister ... sister always averred that they had as deep a solicitude as she herself had about their parents . Doubtless she had ...
第13页
... sister , little Agnes , though sadly alarmed , and feeling the sensation of eeriness as twilight came on , and she looked out from the cottage - door to the dreadful fells on which , too probably , her parents were lying corpses ( and ...
... sister , little Agnes , though sadly alarmed , and feeling the sensation of eeriness as twilight came on , and she looked out from the cottage - door to the dreadful fells on which , too probably , her parents were lying corpses ( and ...
第14页
... sisters - except the two little things , not yet of a fit age - to kneel down and say the prayers which they had been taught , this admirable little maiden turned herself to every household task that could have proved useful to them in ...
... sisters - except the two little things , not yet of a fit age - to kneel down and say the prayers which they had been taught , this admirable little maiden turned herself to every household task that could have proved useful to them in ...
第17页
... sister until she came to the other side of the hill , which , lying more sheltered from the weather , offered a path onwards comparatively easy . Here they parted ; and little Agnes pursued her solitary mission to the nearest house she ...
... sister until she came to the other side of the hill , which , lying more sheltered from the weather , offered a path onwards comparatively easy . Here they parted ; and little Agnes pursued her solitary mission to the nearest house she ...
第28页
... sisters seemed foundering simul- taneously with her parents in one mighty darkness . And yet , because , under the strange responsibilities which had suddenly surprised her , she sought counsel and strength from God , teaching her ...
... sisters seemed foundering simul- taneously with her parents in one mighty darkness . And yet , because , under the strange responsibilities which had suddenly surprised her , she sought counsel and strength from God , teaching her ...
常见术语和短语
accident admiration afterwards Ambleside amongst ancient beauty believe Biographia Literaria Borrowdale brother Buttermere called Cambridge cause character chiefly circumstances Coleridge Coleridge's connexion cottage Cumberland Easedale effect England English Esthwaite Water expression face fact feelings German Grasmere habits happened Hawkshead heard heart Helvellyn hills honour hope human impression intellectual interest Keswick lady Lake Langdale least literary literature lived looked Lord Lord Lonsdale marriage Meantime mighty miles Milton mind Miss Wordsworth mountains nature Nether Stowey never night once party passed passion peculiar Penrith perhaps person plagiarism poem poet poetry Quantock Hills reader reason regard remarkable respect river Greta road Samuel Taylor Coleridge Sarah Green scene seemed sense sister solitary solitude Southey Southey's spirit sublime supposed thought tion town vale walking Westmoreland whilst whole William Wordsworth woman word young youth
热门引用章节
第119页 - Imagination. For not to think of what I needs must feel But to be still and patient, all I can; And haply by abstruse research to steal From my own nature all the natural man — This was my sole resource, my only plan; Till that which suits a part infects the whole, And now is almost grown the habit of my soul.
第202页 - The Youth of green savannahs spake, And many an endless, endless lake, With all its fairy crowds Of islands, that together lie As quietly as spots of sky Among the evening clouds.
第133页 - She was a phantom of delight When first she gleam'd upon my sight; A lovely apparition, sent To be a moment's ornament; Her eyes as stars of twilight fair; Like Twilight's, too, her dusky hair; But all things else about her drawn From May-time and the cheerful dawn; A dancing shape, an image gay, To haunt, to startle, and waylay. I saw her upon nearer view...
第204页 - The Blessing of my later years Was with me when a boy : She gave me eyes, she gave me ears ; And humble cares, and delicate fears ; A heart, the fountain of sweet tears ; And love, and thought, and joy.
第24页 - Now do these sternly-featured hills Look gently on this grave ; And quiet now are the depths of air, As a sea without a wave. But deeper lies the heart of peace In quiet more profound ; The heart of quietness is here Within this churchyard bound. And from all agony of mind It keeps them safe, and far From fear and grief, and from all need Of sun or guiding star.
第97页 - Worlds of fine thinking lie buried in that vast abyss, never to be disentombed or restored to human admiration. Like the sea it has swallowed treasures without end, that no diving bell will bring up again. But nowhere throughout its shoreless magazines of wealth, does there lie such a bed of pearls confounded with the rubbish and ' purgamenta ' of ages, as in the political papers of Coleridge.
第55页 - ... business, into a continuous strain of eloquent dissertation, certainly the most novel, the most finely illustrated, and traversing the most spacious fields of thought by transitions the most just and logical, that it was possible to conceive. What I mean by saying that his transitions were "just" is by way of contradistinction to that mode of conversation which courts variety through links of verbal connexions.
第42页 - ... my own exchequer : and the other day, at a dinner party, this question arising about Pythagoras and his beans, Coleridge gave us an interpretation, which, from his manner, I suspect to have been not original. Think, therefore, if you have anywhere read a plausible solution.
第87页 - Coleridge said often, in looking back upon that frightful exposure of human guilt and misery, that the man who, when pursued by these heartrending apostrophes, and with this litany of anguish sounding in his ears, from despairing women and from famishing children, could yet find it possible to enjoy the calm pleasures of a Lake tourist, and deliberately to hunt for the picturesque, must have been a fiend of that order which fortunately does not often emerge amongst men.
第52页 - There was no mauvaise honte in his manner, but simple perplexity, and an apparent difficulty in recovering his position amongst daylight realities. This little scene over, he received me with a kindness of manner so marked, that it might be called gracious. The hospitable family with whom he was domesticated were distinguished for their amiable manners and enlightened understandings: they were descendants from Chubb, the philosophic writer, and bore the same name. For Coleridge they all testified...