Page:The Excursion, Wordsworth, 1814.djvu/451

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NOTES.





PREFACE.

Page xi. "Come thou prophetic Spirit, that inspir'st
The human soul, &c."

Not mine own fears, nor the prophetic Soul
Of the wide world dreaming on things to come.

Shakespeare's Sonnets.


Page 20. Line 10. "—— much did he see of men."

In Heron's Tour in Scotland is given an intelligent account of the qualities by which this class of men used to be, and still are, in some degree, distinguished, and of the benefits which Society derives from their labours. Among their characteristics, he does not omit to mention that, from being obliged to pass so much of their time in solitary wandering among rural objects, they frequently acquire meditative habits of mind, and are strongly disposed to enthusiasm poetical and religious. I regret that I have not the book at hand to quote the passage, as it is interesting on many accounts.