| George Douglas Atkins - 2005 - 196 str.
...Prelude, subtitled Graviti) of a Poet's Mind — An Autobiographical Poem, with this assertion: ... 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 exalted,... | |
| C. L. Corey - 2004 - 218 str.
...America Printed on Recycled Paper Published March 2005 DEDICATION To all the young people everywhere What we have loved, Others will love, and we will teach them how. Prelude: Wordsworth Not yet six years of age, I walked four miles by the section lines across the Montana... | |
| Donald G. Marshall - 2005 - 284 str.
...professors of "dry knowingness" to their charitable opposites, who take as their motto Wordsworth's lines: "What we have loved/ Others will love, and we will teach them how." If teachers communicate only their loves, students will be shortchanged, Rorty admits; but he goes... | |
| Patricia Waugh - 2006 - 632 str.
...guarantee the universality of its personal story. . . . what we have loved Others will love; and we may teach them how; Instruct them how the mind of man...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 exalted,... | |
| Stephen Gill - 2006 - 417 str.
...Prophets of nature, we to them will speak A lasting inspiration sanctified By reason and by truth . . . Instruct them how the mind of man becomes A thousand...times more beautiful than the earth On which he dwells . . . (XIII, 442-4; 446-7; my italics) One obvious effect of the echoes is to undermine confidence.... | |
| Simon Jarvis - 2006 - 300 str.
...God. And indeed, part of what the prophets in this passage are supposed to teach the nations is that the mind of man becomes a thousand times more beautiful than the earth. The clear implication is that anyone who values the earth as highly as they value the mind of man is... | |
| Adam Sisman - 2007 - 540 str.
...Prophets of Nature, we to them will speak A lasting inspiration, sanctified By reason and by truth; what we have loved, Others will love, and we will...times more beautiful than the earth On which he dwells . . ,18 * ie the death of John Wordsworth. The evening that Wordsworth concluded his recital, Coleridge... | |
| Joel Faflak - 2009 - 336 str.
...project. At the end of The Prelude his mission is clear: with Coleridge he will "Instruct [mankind] how the mind of man becomes / A thousand times more.../ . . . / In beauty exalted, as it is itself / Of substance and of fabric more divine" (13.446-52). Wordsworth can now undertake "building up a work... | |
| Henry Morley - 1879 - 702 str.
...the sense of all the harmonies of nature, and show how, among them all, when taking its true place, " the mind of man becomes A thousand times more beautiful than the earth On which be dwells, above this frame of things (Which, 'mid all revolution in the hopes And fears of men, doth... | |
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