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Edgell Rickword - Trench Poets
John Donne - Song - Go and Catch A Falling Star
Charles Dickens - The Chimes
John Donne - Break of Day
Henry Constable - To St Margaret
William Shakespeare - Sonnet 43
William Wordsworth - Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey, On Revisiting the Banks of the Wye during a Tour. July 13, 1798
William Shakespeare - Sonnet 81
Elizabeth Barrett Browning - Work
William Shakespeare - Sonnet 24
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ID 7: "These beauteous forms" (Level 1, context)
ID 8: "These beauteous forms" (Level 2, interpretation)
ID 14: "cottage - ground" (Level 1, context)
ID 15: "cottage - ground" (Level 2, interpretation)
ID 17: " these steep and lofty cliffs" (Level 1, context)
ID 18: " these steep and lofty cliffs" (Level 2, interpretation)
ID 19: " these steep and lofty cliffs" (Level 2, intratext)
ID 23: "Five years have past ; five summers , with the …" (Level 1, form)
ID 24: "Five years have past ; five summers , with the …" (Level 2, interpretation)
ID 25: "Hermit ' s " (Level 1, language)
ID 26: "Hermit ' s " (Level 1, textualvariants)
ID 27: "Hermit ' s " (Level 2, interpretation)
ID 28: "Hermit ' s " (Level 2, questions)
ID 29: " interfused ," (Level 1, language)
ID 30: " a sense sublime Of something far more deeply …" (Level 1, context)
ID 31: " a sense sublime Of something far more deeply …" (Level 2, interpretation)
ID 32: "thou my dearest Friend , My dear , dear Friend ; and …" (Level 1, context)
ID 33: "thou my dearest Friend , My dear , dear Friend ; and …" (Level 2, interpretation)
ID 34: "and this prayer I make , Knowing that Nature never …" (Level 1, form)
ID 35: "and this prayer I make , Knowing that Nature never …" (Level 1, context)
ID 36: "and this prayer I make , Knowing that Nature never …" (Level 2, interpretation)
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Edgell Rickword - Trench Poets
John Donne - Song - Go and Catch A Falling Star
Charles Dickens - The Chimes
John Donne - Break of Day
Henry Constable - To St Margaret
William Shakespeare - Sonnet 43
William Wordsworth - Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey, On Revisiting the Banks of the Wye during a Tour. July 13, 1798
William Shakespeare - Sonnet 81
Elizabeth Barrett Browning - Work
William Shakespeare - Sonnet 24
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-- Select a segment--
-- Select an annotation--
ID 7: "These beauteous forms" (Level 1, context)
ID 8: "These beauteous forms" (Level 2, interpretation)
ID 14: "cottage - ground" (Level 1, context)
ID 15: "cottage - ground" (Level 2, interpretation)
ID 17: " these steep and lofty cliffs" (Level 1, context)
ID 18: " these steep and lofty cliffs" (Level 2, interpretation)
ID 19: " these steep and lofty cliffs" (Level 2, intratext)
ID 23: "Five years have past ; five summers , with the …" (Level 1, form)
ID 24: "Five years have past ; five summers , with the …" (Level 2, interpretation)
ID 25: "Hermit ' s " (Level 1, language)
ID 26: "Hermit ' s " (Level 1, textualvariants)
ID 27: "Hermit ' s " (Level 2, interpretation)
ID 28: "Hermit ' s " (Level 2, questions)
ID 29: " interfused ," (Level 1, language)
ID 30: " a sense sublime Of something far more deeply …" (Level 1, context)
ID 31: " a sense sublime Of something far more deeply …" (Level 2, interpretation)
ID 32: "thou my dearest Friend , My dear , dear Friend ; and …" (Level 1, context)
ID 33: "thou my dearest Friend , My dear , dear Friend ; and …" (Level 2, interpretation)
ID 34: "and this prayer I make , Knowing that Nature never …" (Level 1, form)
ID 35: "and this prayer I make , Knowing that Nature never …" (Level 1, context)
ID 36: "and this prayer I make , Knowing that Nature never …" (Level 2, interpretation)
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Lines
Composed
a
Few
Miles
above
Tintern
Abbey
,
On
Revisiting
the
Banks
of
the
Wye
during
a
Tour
.
July
13
,
1798
William
Wordsworth
Five
years
have
past
;
five
summers
,
with
the
length
Of
five
long
winters
!
and
again
I
hear
These
waters
,
rolling
from
their
mountain-springs
With
a
soft
inland
murmur
.
—
Once
again
Do
I
behold
these
steep
and
lofty
cliffs
,
That
on
a
wild
secluded
scene
impress
Thoughts
of
more
deep
seclusion
;
and
connect
The
landscape
with
the
quiet
of
the
sky
.
The
day
is
come
when
I
again
repose
Here
,
under
this
dark
sycamore
,
and
view
These
plots
of
cottage
-
ground
,
these
orchard
-
tufts
,
Which
at
this
season
,
with
their
unripe
fruits
,
Are
clad
in
one
green
hue
,
and
lose
themselves
'
Mid
groves
and
copses
.
Once
again
I
see
These
hedge-rows
,
hardly
hedge-rows
,
little
lines
Of
sportive
wood
run
wild
:
these
pastoral
farms
,
Green
to
the
very
door
;
and
wreaths
of
smoke
Sent
up
,
in
silence
,
from
among
the
trees
!
With
some
uncertain
notice
,
as
might
seem
Of
vagrant
dwellers
in
the
houseless
woods
,
Or
of
some
Hermit
'
s
cave
,
where
by
his
fire
The
Hermit
sits
alone
.
These
beauteous
forms
,
Through
a
long
absence
,
have
not
been
to
me
As
is
a
landscape
to
a
blind
man
'
s
eye
:
But
oft
,
in
lonely
rooms
,
and
'
mid
the
din
Of
towns
and
cities
,
I
have
owed
to
them
,
In
hours
of
weariness
,
sensations
sweet
,
Felt
in
the
blood
,
and
felt
along
the
heart
;
And
passing
even
into
my
purer
mind
With
tranquil
restoration
:
—
feelings
too
Of
unremembered
pleasure
:
such
,
perhaps
,
As
have
no
slight
or
trivial
influence
On
that
best
portion
of
a
good
man
'
s
life
,
His
little
,
nameless
,
unremembered
,
acts
Of
kindness
and
of
love
.
Nor
less
,
I
trust
,
To
them
I
may
have
owed
another
gift
,
Of
aspect
more
sublime
;
that
blessed
mood
,
In
which
the
burthen
of
the
mystery
,
In
which
the
heavy
and
the
weary
weight
Of
all
this
unintelligible
world
,
Is
lightened
:
—
that
serene
and
blessed
mood
,
In
which
the
affections
gently
lead
us
on
,
—
Until
,
the
breath
of
this
corporeal
frame
And
even
the
motion
of
our
human
blood
Almost
suspended
,
we
are
laid
asleep
In
body
,
and
become
a
living
soul
:
While
with
an
eye
made
quiet
by
the
power
Of
harmony
,
and
the
deep
power
of
joy
,
We
see
into
the
life
of
things
.
If
this
Be
but
a
vain
belief
,
yet
,
oh
!
how
oft
—
In
darkness
and
amid
the
many
shapes
Of
joyless
daylight
;
when
the
fretful
stir
Unprofitable
,
and
the
fever
of
the
world
,
Have
hung
upon
the
beatings
of
my
heart
—
How
oft
,
in
spirit
,
have
I
turned
to
thee
,
O
sylvan
Wye
!
thou
wanderer
thro
'
the
woods
,
How
often
has
my
spirit
turned
to
thee
!
And
now
,
with
gleams
of
half-extinguished
thought
,
With
many
recognitions
dim
and
faint
,
And
somewhat
of
a
sad
perplexity
,
The
picture
of
the
mind
revives
again
:
While
here
I
stand
,
not
only
with
the
sense
Of
present
pleasure
,
but
with
pleasing
thoughts
That
in
this
moment
there
is
life
and
food
For
future
years
.
And
so
I
dare
to
hope
,
Though
changed
,
no
doubt
,
from
what
I
was
when
first
I
came
among
these
hills
;
when
like
a
roe
I
bounded
o'er
the
mountains
,
by
the
sides
Of
the
deep
rivers
,
and
the
lonely
streams
,
Wherever
nature
led
:
more
like
a
man
Flying
from
something
that
he
dreads
,
than
one
Who
sought
the
thing
he
loved
.
For
nature
then
(
The
coarser
pleasures
of
my
boyish
days
And
their
glad
animal
movements
all
gone
by
)
To
me
was
all
in
all
.
—
I
cannot
paint
What
then
I
was
.
The
sounding
cataract
Haunted
me
like
a
passion
:
the
tall
rock
,
The
mountain
,
and
the
deep
and
gloomy
wood
,
Their
colours
and
their
forms
,
were
then
to
me
An
appetite
;
a
feeling
and
a
love
,
That
had
no
need
of
a
remoter
charm
,
By
thought
supplied
,
not
any
interest
Unborrowed
from
the
eye
.
—
That
time
is
past
,
And
all
its
aching
joys
are
now
no
more
,
And
all
its
dizzy
raptures
.
Not
for
this
Faint
I
,
nor
mourn
nor
murmur
;
other
gifts
Have
followed
;
for
such
loss
,
I
would
believe
,
Abundant
recompense
.
For
I
have
learned
To
look
on
nature
,
not
as
in
the
hour
Of
thoughtless
youth
;
but
hearing
oftentimes
The
still
sad
music
of
humanity
,
Nor
harsh
nor
grating
,
though
of
ample
power
To
chasten
and
subdue
.
—
And
I
have
felt
A
presence
that
disturbs
me
with
the
joy
Of
elevated
thoughts
;
a
sense
sublime
Of
something
far
more
deeply
interfused
,
Whose
dwelling
is
the
light
of
setting
suns
,
And
the
round
ocean
and
the
living
air
,
And
the
blue
sky
,
and
in
the
mind
of
man
:
A
motion
and
a
spirit
,
that
impels
All
thinking
things
,
all
objects
of
all
thought
,
And
rolls
through
all
things
.
Therefore
am
I
still
A
lover
of
the
meadows
and
the
woods
And
mountains
;
and
of
all
that
we
behold
From
this
green
earth
;
of
all
the
mighty
world
Of
eye
,
and
ear
,
—
both
what
they
half
create
,
And
what
perceive
;
well
pleased
to
recognise
In
nature
and
the
language
of
the
sense
The
anchor
of
my
purest
thoughts
,
the
nurse
,
The
guide
,
the
guardian
of
my
heart
,
and
soul
Of
all
my
moral
being
.
Nor
perchance
,
If
I
were
not
thus
taught
,
should
I
the
more
Suffer
my
genial
spirits
to
decay
:
For
thou
art
with
me
here
upon
the
banks
Of
this
fair
river
;
thou
my
dearest
Friend
,
My
dear
,
dear
Friend
;
and
in
thy
voice
I
catch
The
language
of
my
former
heart
,
and
read
My
former
pleasures
in
the
shooting
lights
Of
thy
wild
eyes
.
Oh
!
yet
a
little
while
May
I
behold
in
thee
what
I
was
once
,
My
dear
,
dear
Sister
!
and
this
prayer
I
make
,
Knowing
that
Nature
never
did
betray
The
heart
that
loved
her
;
'
tis
her
privilege
,
Through
all
the
years
of
this
our
life
,
to
lead
From
joy
to
joy
:
for
she
can
so
inform
The
mind
that
is
within
us
,
so
impress
With
quietness
and
beauty
,
and
so
feed
With
lofty
thoughts
,
that
neither
evil
tongues
,
Rash
judgments
,
nor
the
sneers
of
selfish
men
,
Nor
greetings
where
no
kindness
is
,
nor
all
The
dreary
intercourse
of
daily
life
,
Shall
e
'
er
prevail
against
us
,
or
disturb
Our
cheerful
faith
,
that
all
which
we
behold
Is
full
of
blessings
.
Therefore
let
the
moon
Shine
on
thee
in
thy
solitary
walk
;
And
let
the
misty
mountain
-
winds
be
free
To
blow
against
thee
:
and
,
in
after
years
,
When
these
wild
ecstasies
shall
be
matured
Into
a
sober
pleasure
;
when
thy
mind
Shall
be
a
mansion
for
all
lovely
forms
,
Thy
memory
be
as
a
dwelling-place
For
all
sweet
sounds
and
harmonies
;
oh
!
then
,
If
solitude
,
or
fear
,
or
pain
,
or
grief
,
Should
be
thy
portion
,
with
what
healing
thoughts
Of
tender
joy
wilt
thou
remember
me
,
And
these
my
exhortations
!
Nor
,
perchance
—
If
I
should
be
where
I
no
more
can
hear
Thy
voice
,
nor
catch
from
thy
wild
eyes
these
gleams
Of
past
existence
—
wilt
thou
then
forget
That
on
the
banks
of
this
delightful
stream
We
stood
together
;
and
that
I
,
so
long
A
worshipper
of
Nature
,
hither
came
Unwearied
in
that
service
:
rather
say
With
warmer
love
—
oh
!
with
far
deeper
zeal
Of
holier
love
.
Nor
wilt
thou
then
forget
,
That
after
many
wanderings
,
many
years
Of
absence
,
these
steep
woods
and
lofty
cliffs
,
And
this
green
pastoral
landscape
,
were
to
me
More
dear
,
both
for
themselves
and
for
thy
sake
!