Leave to the nightingale her shady wood ; A privacy of glorious light is thine; Whence thou dost pour upon the world a flood Of harmony, with instinct more divine; Type of the wise who soar, but never roam; True to the kindred points of Heaven and Home... Appletons' Journal - 224 psl.1879Visos knygos peržiūra - Apie šią knygą
| Edith P. Hazen - 1992 - 1172 psl.
...NOBE; NoP; OAEL-2; OBEV; OBNC; PoEL-4; PoRA; PPP; SCV; SoSe; TEP; TrGrPo; UnPo; WeW To a Skylark 148 hi and Home! (1. 17-18) EnRP; FaFP; GTBS; GTBS-P; PBBP; TrGrPo To Sleep 149 Come, blessed barrier between... | |
| 1875 - 398 psl.
...to drop down in a quieter gladness after its brief transfiguration to its nest upon the sod : — " Type of the wise who soar, but never roam, True to the kindred points of Heaven and Home. " Wordsworth read but few works of contemporary poets, but he did, as it happened, read some... | |
| Margaret Fuller - 1991 - 366 psl.
...excursion and one which occupied another day from Keswick to Buttermere and Crummock Water in my next. * Type of the wise who soar, but never roam; True to the kindred points of Heaven and Home! (John O. Hayden, ed. , William Wordsworth: The Poems [New Haven: Yale University Press, 1980,2:613)... | |
| William Wordsworth - 1994 - 628 psl.
...ground? Thy nest which thou canst drop into at will, Those quivering wings composed, that music still! Leave to the nightingale her shady wood; A privacy...but never roam; True to the kindred points of Heaven and Home! 'Scorn not the Sonnet; Critic, you have frowned' Scorn not the Sonnet; Critic, you have frowned,... | |
| D. M. R. Bentley - 1994 - 376 psl.
...is a lark, a bird that might simply be an emblem of the emigrant's high hopes if it were not also a "Type of the wise who soar, but never roam, / True to the kindred points of heaven and home" (Wordsworth 2:141-42) and, thus, a comment on the dubious wisdom of his departure for the... | |
| John Hollander - 1997 - 342 psl.
...wisdom— but we might rather say of fully self-conceived life— confounds the question, in being "Type of the wise who soar, but never roam, /True to the kindred points of Heaven and Home."14 The implication that a home, and an inconceivably distant point toward which imaginative... | |
| Northrop Frye - 2005 - 529 psl.
...1934), 2:337. 13 Letter to John Flaxman, 19 October 1801; K8n/E718. 14 Cf . Wordsworth, To a Skylark: "Type of the wise who soar, but never roam; / True to the kindred points of Heaven and Home!" The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, ed. E. de Selincourt (Oxford: Clarendon Press,... | |
| Alison Byerly - 1997 - 250 psl.
...heart and eye" are "with thy nest upon the dewy ground." He praises her "privacy," seeing her as "a type of the wise who soar, but never roam; / True to the kindred points of Heaven and Home!" Whatever heights she may be able to reach, she never loses sight of what is important. Like... | |
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