Language: English
Published by Interactive Learning Psychological Services Limited, 2016
ISBN 10: 0995532338 ISBN 13: 9780995532335
Seller: Revaluation Books, Exeter, United Kingdom
Paperback. Condition: Brand New. 40 pages. 8.27x0.11x11.69 inches. In Stock.
Published by Rutgers University, 1994
Seller: Shore Books, London, United Kingdom
Magazine / Periodical
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. 160 pages. David Bromwich "Revolutionary Justice and Wordsworth's Borderers" / Anne Carson "The Glass Essay" /Ross Posnock "Roy Cohn in America" / Dana Phillips "Is Nature Necessary?" / Richard Elman "Falta Nada!" / James Buzard "Eliot, Pound, and Expatriate Authority" / Margery Sabin "'The Debate': Seductions and Betrayals in Literary Studies" / William Kerrigan "Ted Hughes on Shakespearean Mysteries" (U.P.).
Language: English
Published by London, 1857
Seller: K Books Ltd ABA ILAB, York, YORKS, United Kingdom
No Binding. Condition: Very Good. A splendid original antique coloured view of the Lake District. Mounted - matted - and ready to frame. Mount size approx 8 x 6 inches, 24 x 18 cms. Excellent condition. Shows a fine view of Rydal Water.
Language: English
Publication Date: 1860
Seller: K Books Ltd ABA ILAB, York, YORKS, United Kingdom
No Binding. Condition: Very Good. An original hand-coloured antique engraving , printed circa 1860. Hand-colouring not contemporary but delicately and expertly executed. Mounted/matted and ready to frame. A fine opportunity to purchase an attractive and decorative engraving of William Wordsworth's Grave.
Published by From the Westmoreland Gazette 12 February, 1876
Galley proof with 69 lines of text in a single column of small type, on slip of paper laid down on leaf removed from album. At foot: 'Westmoreland Gazette, Feb. 12, 1876.' In good condition, lightly aged. The text begins: 'Another personal link between the present generation and the band of poets and writers whose memory hovers around the Lake district has been severed in the death, last week, of Miss Rotha Quillinan. She was the second daughter of Edward Quillinan the disciple and friend of Wordsworth, a man of high culture, and a not unworthy representative of the Lake school of poets.' The article begins by discussing Quillinan's life and introduction to Wordsworth: 'A close friendship at once sprang up between the two, and the same year Quillinan left the army, and established himself at Spring Cottage, a house on the banks of the Rotha, where the subject of this notice was born. Fourteen lines are taken up quoting Edward Quillinan's 'well-known sonnet' on his daughter, beginning 'Rotha, my Spritual Child! This head was grey'. The circumstances following the death of Rotha's mother are described, including the travels of the Quillinan family ('[] in the winter of 1843 they took up their residence at Ambleside, passing the summers of that and the succeeding years at Belle Isle, Mr. Bridson's charming insular retreat on Lake Windermere, where Professor Wilson and others seem to have visited them. Two or three years later they permanently settled at Loughrigg Holme, a cottage built almost on the rock which forms the base of Loughrigg, and half way between Ambleside and Rydal Mount.') After Quillinan's death in 1851 his daughters continued to reside at Loughrigg: 'Miss Rotha Quillinan and her sister had won for themselves a repute for unostentatious goodness, and in Ambleside they have always been highly esteemed, especially amongst the poor, who attended the funeral last Saturday in Grasmere churchyard in large numbers. Her body lies in the plot of her godfather, Wm. Wordsworth, and on the banks of the beautiful river whose name she bore.' In manuscript on the reverse of the leaf on which the proof is laid down are the final stanzas of the poem 'Forgotten' by Elizabeth Akers Allen.