| Samuel Cox, Sir William Robertson Nicoll, James Moffatt - 1880 - 504 pàgines
...about the way to understand a poet applies to the understanding of other writers as well — . . . you must love him, ere to you He will seem worthy of your love. 1 The quotations from the Homilies in [his paper are for the most part taken, with some slight alterations,... | |
| Henry Norman Hudson - 1880 - 738 pàgines
...music sweeter than their own. He is retired as noontide dew, Or fountain in a noon-day grove; | And you must love him, ere to you , ^He will seem worthy of yonr love. The outward shows of sky and earth, Of hill and valley, he has view'd; And impulses of deeper... | |
| Sir Walter Alexander Raleigh, Walter Raleigh - 1903 - 248 pàgines
...also is a quality of Nature : He is retired as noon-tide dew Or fountain in a noon-day grove ; And you must love him, ere to you He will seem worthy of your love. And not only in these gentler qualities is the impress of Nature felt. Peter Bell also is a being compounded... | |
| Coventry Patmore - 1898 - 284 pàgines
...surfaces, how great is that darkness ! The saying of Wordsworth concerning the Poet, that Yon most love him ere to you He will seem worthy of your love, which at first reading sounds very much like nonsense, is absolutely true He must have won your credit... | |
| William Ellery Channing - 1902 - 248 pàgines
...by the English poet he admired : He is retired as noontide dew, Or fountain in a noonday grove; And you must love him ere to you He will seem worthy of your love. In common things that round us lie Some random truths he can impart — The harvest of a quiet eye,... | |
| 1923 - 1004 pàgines
...what value ? All who care can judge for themselves. No arguing will make a man or a generation like a poet. ' You must love him ere to you he will seem worthy of 1923 519 your love.' Nor, perhaps, does it so greatly matter what the poet himself was like. We know... | |
| Karl Ortseifen, Winfried Herget, Holger Lamm - 1993 - 274 pàgines
...river. A river is the coyest of friends. You must love it and live with it before you can know it. "And you must love him, ere to you He will seem worthy of your love." [Wordsworth, "A Poet's Epitaph" (1799)] The Rhine, after all, is the theme and mistress of romance... | |
| William Wordsworth - 1994 - 628 pàgines
...A music sweeter than their own. He is retired as noontide dew, Or fountain in a noon-day grove; And you must love him, ere to you He will seem worthy of your love. The outward shows of sky and earth, Of hill and valley, he has viewed; And impulses of deeper birth... | |
| Willard Spiegelman - 1995 - 234 pàgines
...drama of description and invitation: He is retired as noontide dew, Or fountain in a noonday grove; And you must love him, ere to you He will seem worthy of your love. (11. 41-44) Every previous second-person pronoun addressed one of the types who appeared and were dismissed.... | |
| William Gilmore Simms - 1998 - 182 pàgines
...all his sensibilities. This is the secret of his shyness and reserve; and as Wordswordi tells us,— "You must love him, ere to you, He will seem worthy of your love." He demands faith before he yields confidence— give him that, and he will lay bare to you all his... | |
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