pastoral quotes 2 0.0 / 5 ? English Literaturepastoral poetryA2/A-levelAQA Created by: StepsstarCreated on: 19-05-15 15:08 'lop overgrown, or prune, or prop or bind' Paradise lost 1 of 55 'spring of roses intermixed' Paradise lost 2 of 55 'and good works in her husband promote' Paradise lost 3 of 55 'of looks and smiles; for smiles from reason flow' Paradise lost 4 of 55 'He made us, and delight to reason joined' Paradise lost 5 of 55 'what hat been warned us- what malicious foe' Paradise lost 6 of 55 'sly assault' Paradise lost 7 of 55 'danger or dishonour lurks' paradise lost 8 of 55 'no bliss' paradise lost 9 of 55 'who guards her, or with her worst endures' paradise lost 10 of 55 'the Curfew tolls the knell of parting day' Elegy written in a country churchyard 11 of 55 'the plowman' Elegy written in a country churchyard 12 of 55 'solemn stillness holds' Elegy written in a country churchyard 13 of 55 'his narrow cell for ever laid' Elegy written in a country churchyard 14 of 55 'beneath those rugged elms, that yew-tree's shade' Elegy written in a country churchyard 15 of 55 'the rude forefathers of the hamlet sleep' Elegy written in a country churchyard 16 of 55 'or busy housewife ply her evening care' Elegy written in a country churchyard 17 of 55 'the envied kiss to share' Elegy written in a country churchyard 18 of 55 ' let not ambition mock their useful toil' Elegy written in a country churchyard 19 of 55 'nor Grandeur hear with a disdainful smile/ the short and simple annals of the poor' Elegy written in a country churchyard 20 of 55 'pomp of pow'r' Elegy written in a country churchyard 21 of 55 'the paths of glory lead but to the grave' Elegy written in a country churchyard 22 of 55 'storied urn or animated bust' Elegy written in a country churchyard 23 of 55 'some heart once pregnant with celestial fire' Elegy written in a country churchyard 24 of 55 'from the madding crowd's ignoble strife' Elegy written in a country churchyard 25 of 55 'may hope chaste eve' ode to evening 26 of 55 'o nymph' ode to evening 27 of 55 'for when thy folding star arising shews' ode to evening 28 of 55 'the pensive pleasures sweet' ode to evening 29 of 55 'sweet Auburn' The Deserted Village 30 of 55 'innocence and ease' The Deserted Village 31 of 55 'humble happiness endeared each scene' The Deserted Village 32 of 55 'the bashful virgin's side-long looks of love' The Deserted Village 33 of 55 'desolation saddens all thy green' The Deserted Village 34 of 55 'choaked with sedges, works its weedy way' The Deserted Village 35 of 55 'unvaried cries' The Deserted Village 36 of 55 'england's griefs began' The Deserted Village 37 of 55 'opulence' The Deserted Village 38 of 55 'my solitary rounds' The Deserted Village 39 of 55 'no cheerful murmurs fluctuate in the gale' The Deserted Village 40 of 55 'near yonder copse, where once the garden smil'd' The Deserted Village 41 of 55 'yes! let the rich deride' The Deserted Village 42 of 55 'congenial to my heart' The Deserted Village 43 of 55 'even now the devastation is begun/ and half the business of destruction done' The Deserted Village 44 of 55 'five years have past; five summers, with the length/ of five long winters!' Tintern Abbey 45 of 55 'thoughts of more deep seclusion' Tintern Abbey 46 of 55 'as if a landscape to a blind man's eye' Tintern Abbey 47 of 55 'the hermit sits alone' Tintern Abbey 48 of 55 'almost suspended, we are laid asleep' Tintern Abbey 49 of 55 'how often has my spirit turned to thee!' Tintern Abbey 50 of 55 'half-extinguished thought' Tintern Abbey 51 of 55 'coarser pleasures of my boyish days' Tintern Abbey 52 of 55 'deepy interfused' Tintern Abbey 53 of 55 'the anchor of my purest thoughts, the nurse, the guide, the guardian of my heart, and soul of all my moral being' Tintern Abbey 54 of 55 'genial spirits' Tintern Abbey 55 of 55
AQA Pastoral Literature (A2) - Blake key quotes, summaries, context, form, structure, language and concerns! 5.0 / 5 based on 1 rating Teacher recommended
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