Wordsworth and Coleridge: Promising Losses assembles essays spanning the last thirty years, including a selection of Peter Larkin's original verse, with the concept of promise and loss serving as the uniting narrative thread. Wordsworth's 'After-Sojourn': Revision and Unself-Rivalry in the Later Poetry The Secondary Wordsworth's First of Homes: Home at Grasmere Wordsworth's Cloud of Texture Lyrical Ballads: Wordsworth's Book of Questions Relations of Scarcity: Ecology and Eschatology in The Ruined Cottage Scarcity by Gift: Horizons of the 'Lucy' Poems Scarcely on the Way: The Starkness of Things in Sacral Space Wordsworth's Maculate Exception: Achieving the 'Spots of Time' Imagining Naming Shaping: Stanza VI of 'Dejection: An Ode' 'Fears in Solitude': Reading (from) the Dell 'I mourn to thee': Dedication and Insufficiency in 'Constancy to an Ideal Object' 'Frost at Midnight': Some Coleridgean Intertwinings Coleridge Conversing: Between Soliloquy and Invocation Repetition, Difference, and Liturgical Participation in Coleridge's 'The Ancient Mariner' Voice, Judgment, and the Innocence of the Self in Coleridge Envoi: Brushwood by Inflection, 2
Peter Larkin is Philosophy and Literature Librarian in the University of Warwick and has published numerous essays on British Romantic poetry and on contemporary ecopoetics. As demographic pressures continue to mount, pension reform has become one of the most controversial and important political issues facing Europe s post-communist nations. Some East European nations have managed to achieve radical pension reform while others have not. This ambitious, comparative study untangles the dilemmas that surround pension reform, arguing that the long-term sustainability of pension reform depends on the relative strength of pro-reform coalitions. Armeanl#!