Selections from Wordsworth and Tennyson eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 165 pages of information about Selections from Wordsworth and Tennyson.

2.  HIS YOUTH.  “Limited time, however old or long, must be always young, compared with the hoary age of eternity.”

4.  EARTH AND LIME.  Flesh and bone.

10.  SEEMING-RANDOM.  But in reality shaped and guided.

11.  CYCLIC STORMS.  “Periodic cataclysms,” or “storms lasting for whole ages.”

16.  TYPE.  Exemplify.

18.  ATTRIBUTES OF WOE.  Trial and suffering are the crown of man in this world.

20.  IDLE.  Useless.

22.  HEATED HOT.  A reference to the tempering of steel.

26.  REELING FAUN.  Human beings with horns, a tail, and goats’ feet.  They were more than half-brutish in their nature.

28.  THE APE AND THE TIGER.  A reference to the theory of evolution, although Darwin’s Origin of Species did not appear until 1859.

CXXIII

“Again the mysterious play of mighty cosmic forces arrests his thought.  Everything in the material universe is changing, transient; all is in a state of flux, of motion, of perpetual disintegration or re-integration.  But there is one thing fixed and abiding—­that which we call spirit—­and amid all uncertainty, one truth is certain—­that to a loving human soul a parting which shall be eternal is unthinkable.”—­Elizabeth R. Chapman.

4.  STILLNESS.  Hallam Tennyson remarks that balloonists say that even in a storm the middle sea is noiseless.  It is the ship that is the cause of the howling of the wind and the lashing of the storm.

4.  CENTRAL SEA.  Far from land.

8.  LIKE CLOUDS, ETC.  A reference to geological changes.

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