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Come forth into the light of things, let nature be your teacher.
William Wordsworth
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William Wordsworth
Age: 80 †
Born: 1770
Born: April 7
Died: 1850
Died: April 23
Lyricist
Poet
Cockermouth
Cumbria
Wordsworth
Teach
Gardening
Heaven
Wilderness
Natural
Heavenly
Nature
Forth
Light
Garden
Blithe
Come
Teaching
Biodiversity
Things
Teacher
Habitat
Life
Education
Conservation
More quotes by William Wordsworth
As high as we have mounted in delight, In our dejection do we sink as low.
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Therefore am I still a lover of the meadows and the woods, and mountains and of all that we behold from this green earth.
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Give all thou canst high Heaven rejects the lore of nicely-caluculated less or more.
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Turning, for them who pass, the common dust Of servile opportunity to gold.
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I'll teach my boy the sweetest things I'll teach him how the owlet sings.
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A lake carries you into recesses of feeling otherwise impenetrable.
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'T is hers to pluck the amaranthine flower Of faith, and round the sufferer's temples bind Wreaths that endure affliction's heaviest shower, And do not shrink from sorrow's keenest wind.
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Oft in my way have I stood still, though but a casual passenger, so much I felt the awfulness of life.
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The child shall become father to the man.
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Let the moon shine on the in thy solitary walk and let the misty mountain-winds be free to blow against thee.
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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 ever prevail against us.
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And the most difficult of tasks to keep Heights which the soul is competent to gain.
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Father! - to God himself we cannot give a holier name.
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And through the heat of conflict keeps the law In calmness made, and sees what he foresaw.
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He who feels contempt for any living thing hath faculties that he hath never used, and thought with him is in its infancy.
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The bosom-weight, your stubborn gift, That no philosophy can lift.
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The mind of man is a thousand times more beautiful than the earth on which he dwells.
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Provoke The years to bring the inevitable yoke.
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Poetry has never brought me in enough money to buy shoestrings.
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My apprehension comes in crowds, I dread the rustling of the grass, The very shadows of the clouds, Have power to shake me as they pass, I question things and do not find, one that will answer to my mind, And all the world appears unkind.
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