| Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Henry Nelson Coleridge - 1847 - 462 Seiten
...once an instance and an illustration, he does indeed to all thoughts and to all objects — " • add the gleam, The light that never was, on sea or land, The consecration, and the Poet's dream."49 abound in happy expressions and images. What truth of nature poetically exhibited is there... | |
| Henry Norman Hudson - 1848 - 364 Seiten
...wretched daubs, becomes almost divine; and the genius of poesy, hovering round his movements, " Adds the gleam, The light that never was on sea or land, The consecration and the poet's dream." That happy hour was the obscure birth of his immortality. Without any throes of labour, or flutterings... | |
| Douglas Jerrold - 1848 - 576 Seiten
...demanded whereby we pronounce judgment, we should say with Wordsworth, there must be the power to ' add the gleam, The light that never was on sea or land, The consecration and the poet's dream.' " But to this power of idealizing must be conjoined, as Henry Taylor says, " the great philosophy,"... | |
| Douglas Jerrold - 1848 - 578 Seiten
...demanded whereby we pronounce judgment, we should say with Wordsworth, there must be the power to 'add the gleam, The light that never was on sea or land, The consecration and the poet's dream.' " But to this power of idealizing must be conjoined, as Henry Taylor fays, " the great philosophy,"... | |
| DOUGLAS JERROLD - 1848 - 578 Seiten
...demanded whereby we pronounce judgment, we should say with Wordsworth, there must be the power to 'add the gleam, , The light that never was on sea or land, The consecration and the poet's dream.'" But to this power of idealizing must be conjoined, as Henry Taylor says, " the great philosophy," without... | |
| 1849 - 510 Seiten
...enchanting regions, — regions which, to all that is lovely in the forms and colors of earth, ' add the gleam, The light that never was on sea or land, The consecration and the poet's dream." A motion of the hand brings all Arcadia to sight. The war of Troy can, at our bidding, rage in the... | |
| 1849 - 484 Seiten
...beautiful, giving evidence of a mind which to all lovely objects in the material world can "—Add the gleam, The light that never was on sea or land, The consecration and the poet's dream." No one con read the present volume without being Btruck with the vigor and variety of the author's... | |
| 318 Seiten
...at once an instance and an illustration, he does indeed to all thoughts and to all objects — "Add the gleam, The light that never was on sea or land, The consecration and the poet's dream." William Wordsworth was born at Cockermouth, in Cumberland, and died at his house at Rydal Mount, among... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1851 - 500 Seiten
...were difficult indeed to name any thing else of human workmanship so thoroughly transfigured with " the gleam, The light that never was on sea or land, The consecration and the poet's dream : " the celestial and the earthly being so commingled, — commingled, but not confounded, — that... | |
| Edwin Percy Whipple - 1851 - 144 Seiten
...enchanting regions, — regions which, to all that is lovely in the forms and colours of earth, " Add the gleam, The light that never was on sea or land, The consecration and the pnet'a dream." A motion of the hand brings all Arcadia to sight. The war of Troy can, at our bidding,... | |
| |