Page:The nature and elements of poetry, Stedman, 1892.djvu/368

338 as the antithesis of science, ib., and 28; on insight, 45; his classification of his poems, 77; his more enduring poems, 172; his pathetic lyrics, 184; broad effects of, 194; his repose, 203; his study of nature's effects upon himself, 204; reasons for his influence, 210; Shairp's view of, 218, 219; "the faculty divine," 259; on poetry as emotion, 263; the "passion" of, ib.; originality of, 277; quoted, 63, 136, 205, 206, 236, 261; and see 60, 125, 142, 173, 189, 190, 193, 252.

Wordsworthians, the, 47; Arnold on, 219.

Wuthering Heights, E. Bronté, 137, 273.

"Ye Mariners of England," Campbell, 266.

Zest, of the antique temperament,139, 143; its worth, and how sustained, 160, 161; Clough's, 295.

THE END.