'Creature not too bright or good
For human nature's daily food.'
Ed.
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[Footnote O:] Compare [book iv.] ll. 50 and 383, with relative notes—Ed.
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[Footnote P:] Compare in [Fidelity], p. 45:
'There sometimes doth a leaping fish
Send through the tarn a lonely cheer.'
Ed.
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[Footnote Q:] Compare the Ode, Intimations of Immortality, stanza v.—Ed.
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[Footnote R:] Compare, in [Volume 2 link: [Tintern Abbey]], vol. ii. p.54:
'That time is past,
And all its aching joys are now no more,
And all its dizzy raptures.'
And in the Ode, Intimations of Immortality, vol. viii.:
'What though the radiance which was once so bright
Be now for ever taken from my sight.'
Ed.
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[Footnote S:] This friend of his boyhood, with whom Wordsworth spent these "delightful hours," is as unknown as is the immortal Boy of Windermere, who blew "mimic hootings to the silent owls," and who sleeps in the churchyard "above the village school" of Hawkshead, and the Lucy of the Goslar poems. Compare, however, p. 163. Wordsworth may refer to John Fleming of Rayrigg, with whom he used to take morning walks round Esthwaite:
'... five miles
Of pleasant wandering ...'
Ed.
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[Footnote T:] Esthwaite.—Ed.
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[Footnote U:] Probably they were passages from Goldsmith, or Pope, or writers of their school. The verses which he wrote upon the completion of the second century of the foundation of the school were, as he himself tells us, "a tame imitation of Pope's versification, and a little in his style."—Ed.
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