| Linda Rogers, Barbara Colebrook Peace - 2001 - 180 str.
...consciousness with light as few other poems do, I have special qualms about these lines from its ending: "the mind of man becomes / A thousand times more beautiful than the earth / On which he dwells." The debate over the primacy of "Imagination or Nature" in Wordsworth remains dizzying and torturous.... | |
| Ian Balfour - 2002 - 372 str.
...reason and truth; what we have loved, Others will love, and we may teach them how; Instruct them how far the mind of man becomes A thousand times more beautiful...earth On which he dwells, above this frame of things (Which, 'mid all revolutions in the hopes And fears of men, doth still remain unchanged) In beauty... | |
| Jerome McGann - 2002 - 332 str.
...addressing Coleridge, declared: Prophets of Nature, we to them will speak A lasting inspiration, sanctif1ed By reason, blest by faith: what we have loved, Others will love, and we will teach them how; (Prelude, x1v) The Byronic resistance to this potential in Romanticism recalls the exuberant independence... | |
| Gloria Durka - 2002 - 100 str.
...Teaching: A Portrait of Possibility 73 Notes 83 Bibliography 89 For Jack (John R.McCall, Ph.D.) TEACHER ...what we have loved, others will love, and we will teach them how...." —William Wordsworth Introduction There is something mysterious and fascinating about teaching. The... | |
| Stephen Gill - 2003 - 324 str.
...mystifyingly declare that it will be Wordsworth's and Coleridge's task as 'Prophets of Nature' to teach how 'the mind of man becomes / A thousand times more beautiful than the earth / On which he dwells'. The list could be greatly extended. In Wordsworth's body of work there are many passages which, from... | |
| Paul Hamilton - 2003 - 336 str.
...alienation, is also what the poem is about. When we finally hear that readers of the poem will find it "Instruct them how the mind of Man becomes / A thousand times more beautiful than the earth," we know that Schiller's second, sublime aesthetic of dignity is firmly in place. Its aesthetic duplication... | |
| Steven P. Sondrup, Virgil Nemoianu, Gerald Gillespie - 2004 - 500 str.
...transcendentalizing conclusion of Wordsworth's autobiography, where the poet in 1805 maintains his faith that "the mind of man becomes / A thousand times more beautiful than the earth / On which he dwells," even as his age relapses into "old idolatry" (13.446-8), and "to ignominy and shame ... nations sink... | |
| Catherine E. Rigby - 2004 - 348 str.
...98), and that his mind, pace Wordsworth in the concluding lines of The Prelude, is capable of becoming "A thousand times more beautiful than the earth / On which he dwells" (i3, 446 — 47). Another common element is the value placed on originality, and the associated conviction... | |
| Patrick J. Keane - 2005 - 575 str.
..."Prophets of Nature," speak to men of "their deliverance," providing (in the final lines of The Prelude): A lasting inspiration, sanctified By reason, blest...earth On which he dwells, above this frame of things (Which, 'mid all the revolutions in the hopes And fears of men, doth still remain unchanged) In beauty... | |
| John Dolis - 2005 - 244 str.
...over matter like obsession itself, overcomes it with the force of a conviction "other" than its own: "how the mind of man becomes / A thousand times more...exalted, as it is itself/ Of quality and fabric more divine."9 Consigned to this context, climbing Ktaadn makes perfect sense, its logic sound. To know... | |
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