n172

A self-quotation, as this is a slightly adapted line from The Excursion: “I saw not, but I felt that it was there” (II.872).

n171

While in the Ullswater region, the Wordsworths stayed with their friends Charles and
Letitia Luff.

n170

This was more than just a fancy, as the primary purpose for this excursion was to
purchase a property suitable for the growing Wordsworth clan. Thanks to the assistance
of his patron, Lord Lowther, Wordsworth was soon thereafter able to acquire the Broad
How farm near Ullswater. Wordsworth never built a family home on the site and sold
the property in 1834.

n168

In Roman art, the god Jupiter Ammon is generally represented with ram’s horns on his
head.

n166

In November 1805, William and Dorothy Wordsworth enjoyed a week-long excursion in
the neighborhood of Ullswater. The account that William gives here, like the preceding
section on Scafell Pike, is largely taken from Dorothy’s notebook (DCMS 51).

n165

In Milton’s Paradise Lost, Mount Niphates in Armenia is the site of Satan’s temptation of Christ.

n164

Most previous editors have assumed this is a misprint and should read “choral” as
in 1820 and 1827 printings.