| William Wordsworth - 1997 - 520 str.
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| Thomas Pfau - 1997 - 478 str.
...perceive How patiently you've waited, And I'm afraid that you expect Some tale will be related. O reader! had you in your mind Such stores as silent thought...can bring, 0 gentle reader! you would find A tale in every thing. What more I have to say is short, l hope you'll kindly take it; It is no tale; but should... | |
| John Rieder - 1997 - 284 str.
...when he urges his readers to call up sympathy for "Simon Lee, the Old Huntsman" (LB 64-67): "O reader! had you in your mind / Such stores as silent thought can bring, / O gentle reader! you would find / A tale in every thing" (73-76). The poet and the reader, like the... | |
| Duncan Wu - 1999 - 580 str.
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| Kenneth R. Johnston - 1998 - 1018 str.
...was transformed into "Simon Lee," as Wordsworth literally enacted his advice to his reader: O reader! had you in your mind Such stores as silent thought can bring, O gentle reader! you would find A tale in every thing. (73-76) A once prosperous farmer in Holford... | |
| J. Douglas Kneale - 1999 - 250 str.
...in the introduction to the Penguin edition. 11 See lines 65-8 of "Simon Lee" (PW 4: 63): O reader! had you in your mind Such stores as silent thought can bring, O gentle reader! you would find A tale in every thing. 12 PW 2: 504. Hartman's reading of "Nutting"... | |
| Sarah MacKenzie Zimmerman - 1999 - 260 str.
...state of reflection similar to his own. But the moment's ethical or didactic import is vexed: O reader! had you in your mind Such stores as silent thought can bring, O gentle reader! you would find A tale in every thing. (lines 73-76) According to new historicism's... | |
| 1989 - 564 str.
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