(This appears to be a reference to God's talks with Adam and Eve, the How often, from the steep Of echoing hill or thicket, have we heard "Unshaken, unseduced, unterrified." Unshaken, unseduced, unterrified. Ib. v. 318-20. P. L. i. 157. Ib. vi. 260. P. L. v. 899. (Wordsworth's "Self-reviewed, self-catechised, self-punished, ib. vi. 386- (Wordsworth also has "instinct with" music, freshness, malice, etc.: (Wordsworth also speaks of the lapse of water in three other places: Their human form divine. Or flocks, or herds, or human face divine. They know if I be silent, morn or even. Excursion, ix. 151. P. L. iii. 44. Ib. ix. 750. P. L. v. 202. Thus was a Brother by a Brother saved; With whom a crown (temptation that hath set Thus was a Brother sav'd by a Brother, to whom love of a Whose everlasting laws, sea, earth, and heaven, obey." Fact and Imagination, 6–14. The Sea, as before, came rowling on. . . . Wherat the King [Canute] quickly riseing . . . [said] that none indeed deserv'd the name of a King, but he whose Eternal Laws both Heav'n, Earth, and Sea obey. "A little onward lend thy guiding hand To these dark steps, a little further on!" A little onward lend thy guiding hand To these dark steps, a little further on. Thy nymph-like step swift bounding o'er the lawn. Into the "abrupt abyss." History of Britain, book vi. "A little onward lend," 1-2. Samson, 1-2. Ib. 18. P. L. ix. 452. Ib. 31. (The quotation is apparently a confusion of “the vast Abyss," P. L. i. 21, and "the vast abrupt," ii. 409.) Where ravens spread their plumy vans. Ib. 32. Who on their plumy vans received Him soft. [Of angels.] P. R. iv. 583. A Book came forth of late, called PETER BELL; P. L. iv. 680-4. "As the cold aspect," 3. "On the Detraction which followed the Publication of a certain Poem," 1-2. A Book was writ of late called Tetrachordon, And woven close, both matter, form, and style. "On the Detraction which followed upon my writing certain Treatises,” 1−2. Bold Spirit! who art free to rove The sweet Bird, misnamed the melancholy. To Enterprise, 14-15. Comus, 1-2. Ib. 145. (Of the nightingale in each case.) We feel that we are greater than we know. That Roland clove with huge two-handed sway. Down the irriguous valley. After-thought (Duddon), 14. Tour on Continent, Dedication, 14. Aix-la-Chapelle, 12. P. L. vi. 250-1. Our Lady of the Snow, 26. Eclipse of the Sun, 55-60. P. L. x. 21-4. Three Cottage Girls, 70. Bright Spirit, not with amaranth crowned. Their crowns inwove with amarant and gold: P. L. iii. 352-3. (Wordsworth also has "amaranthine flower"-"Weak is the will,” 11; of amaranthine bloom"-"On to Iona," 13; "amaranthine crown"- Fetch, ye that post o'er seas and lands. O whither with such eagerness of speed?... Thousands at his bidding speed, And post o'er land and ocean without rest. As the dread Voice that speaks from out the sea. Springs from the ground the morn to gratulate. Elegiac Stanzas (Goddard), 44. To the Clouds, 4, 9-10. Sonnet on his Blindness, 12–13. At Dover, II. Eccl. Sonnets, II. xiv. 2. (Of birds in each case. Wordsworth uses some form of “gratulate" in Not Iris, issuing from her cloudy shrine. Gales sweet as those that over Eden blew. Fanning their odoriferous wings, dispense Ib. xxii. 9. The Triad, 84-5. Eccl. Sonnets, II. xxiv. 14. P. L. iv. 156-9. When Alpine Vales threw forth a suppliant cry, The majesty of England interposed And the sword stopped; the bleeding wounds were closed; How little boots that precedent of good! P. L. i. 6-13. Ib. III. vii. 1-5. (Probably a reference to Milton's Piemontese sonnet, with a borrowing from it and one from Lycidas: Even them who kept thy truth so pure of old. Heart-thrilling strains, that cast, before the eye And bring all Heaven before mine eyes? Sonnet, 3. Ib. xliv. 13-14. Penseroso, 165–6. (This seems to be a reference to the hymns of the angels at the completion of God's "six days' work, a World," in Paradise Lost, vii. 557-634. The account in Genesis contains no hymns and no seraphim.) Nor stopped, till in the dappling east Appeared unwelcome dawn. Till the dappled dawn doth rise. And their necks play, involved in rings, All beasts of the earth, since wild. . . . With copious eulogy in prose or rhyme. Russian Fugitive, 15-16. Egyptian Maid, 322-3. P. L. iv. 340-49. Elegiac Musings, 1. |