Cau£oA nanure
kind
and smal un compaison
-
wls dusCOmJort or our Speaker dascrphibm manAsing/perungu
da ahaar pmuurenakie
Whathagpang
Wordsorh. slaals o lbm and roa uarA a craggH naloe, uwhih
han er ha eaaes tha shaar pouuar Gnokue, so rOs
William back
Wordsworth Abou: brdsuorh goung Fron,hovinoa. dhwd. uwuha. Fench
woman and laawin Hum l Fropa opar har poarentg ejectadl. hus
(1770-1850) erofmaTtag, rus Ne Qule,
Couldhe uncomsencaol relainshi
bouelad-, chain, Gkoal
aExtract from, The Prelude
SlaApng wiho-baloe puchueaua úmoge -Unagery puchue e Ryunag humhenga Rmanie poos
One summer evening (led by her) found hur*quoAens, nature? - in hrachas
acally
alang
about t a
A little boat tied to a willow tree Tual unage ephesenbe cosS haE gpas wihtha guile
ithin rocky cove, its usual home. pebarbollyancoeshapamb
a
ncot -evch u a n
Pedh Ldudon FanerocRy= Rench Pavolukim
Straight! unloosed her chain, and stepping in why is it chaunod conudant-nohoitobim
Pyshed from the shore. It was an act of stealth Egluah,Chonnad? sache,probably shuruldnt la
doung' it
Quiln And froubled pleasure, nor without the voice munlans poua+Siga n oe
Of mountain-echoes did my boat move on; Or epreanieqn estndla Renchuodusin?,OFpavents ha
didnilo ham mary
yyo side,neples an soquioncos harmoedl
eaving behind her still, on either
ugacams,
pase hereubdas ih
idlo,M inzllvw hor
OE Small circles glittering idly in the moon, dohuinhes uoman.=sidao,
huse hed o moom
alead 0 Until they melted all into one track slow moving neShygorcoLdiuring yda lhoon nchape ie
CaOslLa OfsparklinglightoBut now, like one who rows, Aumaic stope kadk from the Siuandn o r
Proud of his skill, to reach a chosen point
With an unswerving line, I fixed my view dataminad.ondisaderana s
xOCEU what he uwonbsS
Upon the summit of a craggy ridge, -doenpna gral-Frech wmnns pokoamedu.Ns uay
15
Thehorizon'sjutmost boundary; far above Rcain aurRd.
-RsnpugWas nothing but the stars and the grey sky-9nAlly posilbinaSomarninn urmg/bad,beneah.ttudury
hebon She was anelfin pinnace;|lustilyy hoaesaury-ik-small,mngicoi andhanuroedostib
tna dipped my oars into th silent lake,-ddbeixEposia
And, as I rose upon the[troke,my boat -sadu?
penacruboke dguning /on ALat&dmma
Went
ble heavimgthroughthewatere aswan:Jsimlo-hous baouky rkut also ug
his
LWhen, from behind thatcraggysteep till then gevDANce digiculy hugaepelikn
he horizon's bound, a huge peak, black and uge, - unmaaaporurenakure bohig poiirL
guile uxargtand-,ÜvmeA
As if with voluntary power instinct
Upreared its head. Istruck and struckagain, -pedieoriad, Lim-lika,atrmo poezal
25 And growing still in stature thegrimshape Ssung uar, plosine,harsh sound-epetitior
Towered up between me and the stars, and stillNanUmal,unagy -utimuddung eronmigy tha
Dlaceurgmcueom growing gunE habhaprened
For so it seemed, with purpose of its own
blac s
And measured motion like living things
a CnAumethureip ngwandhartis
us pa Strode after me. With trembling oars I tured, uncartainuiay lack ep conb
ar3tAnd through the silent water(stole my way-hapakrlod gdepase-gnins
rn dangerus epehinin'slane
gee him
thusingdjtr
him.
Lik tchenling
allhshan,
hisqult has auckng hn
aUE
nuvirgobj
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