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5 Collected Work» of William Morris, ed May Morris (Lond: Longmans , 1912), XVI, 210. All references to Morris, unless otherwise noted, are to this edition. 6 An example of this idea appears in Wordsworth's description of childhood in "Tintern Abbey," 11. 77-80» the tall rook The mountain and the deep and gloomy wood. Their colours and their form, were then to me An appetite; a feeling and a love. . . . 7 On an individual basis, the motive power of the narrator's change is also that of the resurgence of love: his recognition of and emotional identification with the natural beauty around him free him from repressive reasoning (his "logic and foresight") and thus release the pleasure principle evidenced in his dream. 8 Freud, CP. IV, 182. 9 Freud, CP, V, 283-284. ...

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