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William Wordsworth

William Wordsworth (7 April 1770 – 23 April 1850) was an English Romantic poet who, with Samuel Taylor Coleridge, helped to launch the Romantic Age in English literature with their joint publication Lyrical Ballads (1798).

William Wordsworth
Anonymous portrait of Wordsworth, c. 1840-50
Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom
In office
6 April 1843 – 23 April 1850
MonarchVictoria
Preceded byRobert Southey
Succeeded byAlfred, Lord Tennyson
Personal details
Born(1770-04-07)7 April 1770
Cockermouth, Cumberland, England
Died23 April 1850(1850-04-23) (aged 80)
Rydal, Westmorland, England
Spouse
Mary Hutchinson
(m. 1802)
Children5, including Dora
Relatives
Alma materSt John's College, Cambridge
OccupationPoet
Signature

Wordsworth's magnum opus is generally considered to be The Prelude, a semi-autobiographical poem of his early years that he revised and expanded a number of times. It was posthumously titled and published by his wife in the year of his death, before which it was generally known as "the poem to Coleridge".

Wordsworth was Poet Laureate from 1843 until his death from pleurisy on 23 April 1850.

Early life edit

Family and education edit

The second of five children born to John Wordsworth and Ann Cookson, William Wordsworth was born on 7 April 1770 in what is now named Wordsworth House in Cockermouth, Cumberland, (now in Cumbria),[1] part of the scenic region in northwestern England known as the Lake District. William's sister, the poet and diarist Dorothy Wordsworth, to whom he was close all his life, was born the following year, and the two were baptised together. They had three other siblings: Richard, the eldest, who became a lawyer; John, born after Dorothy, who went to sea and died in 1805 when the ship of which he was captain, the Earl of Abergavenny, was wrecked off the south coast of England; and Christopher, the youngest, who entered the Church and rose to be Master of Trinity College, Cambridge.[2]

Wordsworth's father was a legal representative of James Lowther, 1st Earl of Lonsdale, and, through his connections, lived in a large mansion in the small town. He was frequently away from home on business, so the young William and his siblings had little involvement with him and remained distant from him until his death in 1783.[3] However, he did encourage William in his reading, and in particular set him to commit large portions of verse to memory, including works by Milton, Shakespeare and Spenser which William would pore over in his father's library. William also spent time at his mother's parents' house in Penrith, Cumberland, where he was exposed to the moors, but did not get along with his grandparents or his uncle, who also lived there. His hostile interactions with them distressed him to the point of contemplating suicide.[4]

Wordsworth was taught to read by his mother and attended, first, a tiny school of low quality in Cockermouth, then a school in Penrith for the children of upper-class families, where he was taught by Ann Birkett, who insisted on instilling in her students traditions that included pursuing both scholarly and local activities, especially the festivals around Easter, May Day and Shrove Tuesday. Wordsworth was taught both the Bible and the Spectator, but little else. It was at the school in Penrith that he met the Hutchinsons, including Mary, who later became his wife.[5]

After the death of Wordsworth's mother, in 1778, his father sent him to Hawkshead Grammar School in Lancashire (now in Cumbria) and sent Dorothy to live with relatives in Yorkshire. She and William did not meet again for nine years.

Wordsworth made his debut as a writer in 1787 when he published a sonnet in The European Magazine. That same year he began attending St John's College, Cambridge. He received his BA degree in 1791.[6] He returned to Hawkshead for the first two summers of his time at Cambridge, and often spent later holidays on walking tours, visiting places famous for the beauty of their landscape. In 1790 he went on a walking tour of Europe, during which he toured the Alps extensively, and visited nearby areas of France, Switzerland, and Italy.[7]

Relationship with Annette Vallon edit

In November 1791, Wordsworth visited Revolutionary France and became enchanted with the Republican movement. He fell in love with a French woman, Annette Vallon, who, in 1792, gave birth to their daughter Caroline. Financial problems and Britain's tense relations with France forced him to return to England alone the following year.[8] The circumstances of his return and his subsequent behaviour raised doubts as to his declared wish to marry Annette. However, he supported her and his daughter as best he could in later life. The Reign of Terror left Wordsworth thoroughly disillusioned with the French Revolution and the outbreak of armed hostilities between Britain and France prevented him from seeing Annette and his daughter for some years.

With the Peace of Amiens again allowing travel to France, in 1802 Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy visited Annette and Caroline in Calais. The purpose of the visit was to prepare Annette for the fact of his forthcoming marriage to Mary Hutchinson.[8] Afterwards he wrote the sonnet "It is a beauteous evening, calm and free", recalling a seaside walk with the nine-year-old Caroline, whom he had never seen before that visit. Mary was anxious that Wordsworth should do more for Caroline. Upon Caroline's marriage, in 1816, Wordsworth settled £30 a year on her (equivalent to £2,400 in 2021), payments which continued until 1835, when they were replaced by a capital settlement.[9][10]

Early career edit

First publication and Lyrical Ballads edit

 
Wordsworth in 1798, about the time he began The Prelude.[11]

The year 1793 saw the first publication of poems by Wordsworth, in the collections An Evening Walk and Descriptive Sketches. In 1795 he received a legacy of £900 from Raisley Calvert and became able to pursue a career as a poet.

It was also in 1795 that he met Samuel Taylor Coleridge in Somerset. The two poets quickly developed a close friendship. For two years from 1795, William and his sister Dorothy lived at Racedown House in Dorset—a property of the Pinney family—to the west of Pilsdon Pen. They walked in the area for about two hours every day, and the nearby hills consoled Dorothy as she pined for the fells of her native Lakeland. She wrote,

"We have hills which, seen from a distance almost take the character of mountains, some cultivated nearly to their summits, others in their wild state covered with furze and broom. These delight me the most as they remind me of our native wilds."[12]

In 1797, the pair moved to Alfoxton House, Somerset, just a few miles away from Coleridge's home in Nether Stowey. Together Wordsworth and Coleridge (with insights from Dorothy) produced Lyrical Ballads (1798), an important work in the English Romantic movement.[13] The volume gave neither Wordsworth's nor Coleridge's name as author. One of Wordsworth's most famous poems, "Tintern Abbey", was published in this collection, along with Coleridge's "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner". The second edition, published in 1800, had only Wordsworth listed as the author, and included a preface to the poems.[14] It was augmented significantly in the next edition, published in 1802.[15] In this preface, which some scholars consider a central work of Romantic literary theory, Wordsworth discusses what he sees as the elements of a new type of verse, one that is based on the ordinary language "really used by men" while avoiding the poetic diction of much 18th-century verse. Wordsworth also gives his famous definition of poetry as "the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings: it takes its origin from emotion recollected in tranquility", and calls his own poems in the book "experimental". A fourth and final edition of Lyrical Ballads was published in 1805.[16]

The Borderers edit

Between 1795 and 1797, Wordsworth wrote his only play, The Borderers, a verse tragedy set during the reign of King Henry III of England, when Englishmen in the North Country came into conflict with Scottish border reivers. He attempted to get the play staged in November 1797, but it was rejected by Thomas Harris, the manager of the Covent Garden Theatre, who proclaimed it "impossible that the play should succeed in the representation". The rebuff was not received lightly by Wordsworth and the play was not published until 1842, after substantial revision.[17]

Germany and move to the Lake District edit

I travelled among unknown men

I travelled among unknown men,
   In lands beyond the sea;
Nor, England! did I know till then
   What love I bore to thee.

'T is past, that melancholy dream!
   Nor will I quit thy shore
A second time, for still I seem
   To love thee more and more.

Among thy mountains did I feel
   The joy of my desire;
And she I cherished turned her wheel
   Beside an English fire.

Thy mornings showed, thy nights concealed,
   The bowers where Lucy played;
And thine too is the last green field
   That Lucy's eyes surveyed.

[18]

Wordsworth, Dorothy, and Coleridge travelled to Germany in the autumn of 1798. While Coleridge was intellectually stimulated by the journey, its main effect on Wordsworth was to produce homesickness.[8] During the harsh winter of 1798–99 Wordsworth lived with Dorothy in Goslar, and, despite extreme stress and loneliness, began work on the autobiographical piece that was later titled The Prelude. He wrote a number of other famous poems in Goslar, including "The Lucy poems". In the Autumn of 1799, Wordsworth and his sister returned to England and visited the Hutchinson family at Sockburn. When Coleridge arrived back in England he travelled to the North with their publisher Joseph Cottle to meet Wordsworth and undertake a proposed tour of the Lake District. This was the immediate cause of the brother and sister's settling at Dove Cottage in Grasmere in the Lake District, this time with another poet, Robert Southey, nearby. Wordsworth, Coleridge and Southey came to be known as the "Lake Poets".[19] Throughout this period many of Wordsworth's poems revolved around themes of death, endurance, separation and grief.

Married life edit

 
Dove Cottage (Town End, Grasmere) – home of William and Dorothy Wordsworth, 1799–1808; home of Thomas De Quincey, 1809–1820

In 1802, Lowther's heir, William Lowther, 1st Earl of Lonsdale, paid the £4,000 (equivalent to £379,955 in 2021) owed to Wordsworth's father through Lowther's failure to pay his aide.[20] It was this repayment that afforded Wordsworth the financial means to marry. On 4 October, following his visit with Dorothy to France to arrange matters with Annette, Wordsworth married his childhood friend Mary Hutchinson, at All Saints' Church, Brompton.[8] Dorothy continued to live with the couple and grew close to Mary. The following year Mary gave birth to the first of five children, three of whom predeceased her and William:

  • Rev. John Wordsworth MA (18 June 1803 – 25 July 1875). Vicar of Brigham, Cumberland and Rector of Plumbland, Cumberland. Buried at Highgate Cemetery (west side). Married four times:[21]
    1. Isabella Curwen (died 1848) had six children: Jane Stanley, Henry, William, John, Charles and Edward.
      1. Jane Stanley (1833–1912), who married the Rev. Bennet Sherard Kennedy (an illegitimate son of Robert Sherard, 6th Earl of Harborough) and their son Robert Harborough Sherard became first biographer to his friend, Oscar Wilde.[22]
    2. Helen Ross (died 1854). No children.
    3. Mary Ann Dolan (died after 1858) had one daughter Dora.
      1. Dora Wordsworth (1858–1934)[23]
    4. Mary Gamble. No children.
  • Dora Wordsworth (16 August 1804 – 9 July 1847). Married Edward Quillinan in 1841.
  • Thomas Wordsworth (15 June 1806 – 1 December 1812).
  • Catherine Wordsworth (6 September 1808 – 4 June 1812).
  • William "Willy" Wordsworth (12 May 1810 – 1883). Married Fanny Graham and had four children: Mary Louisa, William, Reginald, Gordon

Later career edit

Autobiographical work and Poems, in Two Volumes edit

Wordsworth had for years been making plans to write a long philosophical poem in three parts, which he intended to call The Recluse.[24] In 1798–99 he started an autobiographical poem, which he referred to as the "poem to Coleridge" and which he planned would serve as an appendix to a larger work called The Recluse. In 1804 he began expanding this autobiographical work, having decided to make it a prologue rather than an appendix.[25] He completed this work, now generally referred to as the first version of The Prelude, in 1805, but refused to publish such a personal work until he had completed the whole of The Recluse. The death of his brother John, also in 1805, affected him strongly and may have influenced his decisions about these works.[26]

 
Rydal Mount – home to Wordsworth 1813–1850. Hundreds of visitors came here to see him over the years

Wordsworth's philosophical allegiances as articulated in The Prelude and in such shorter works as "Lines written a few miles above Tintern Abbey" have been a source of critical debate. It was long supposed that Wordsworth relied chiefly on Coleridge for philosophical guidance, but more recently scholars have suggested that Wordsworth's ideas may have been formed years before he and Coleridge became friends in the mid-1790s. In particular, while he was in revolutionary Paris in 1792, the 22-year-old Wordsworth made the acquaintance of the mysterious traveller John "Walking" Stewart (1747–1822),[27] who was nearing the end of his thirty years of wandering, on foot, from Madras, India, through Persia and Arabia, across Africa and Europe, and up through the fledgling United States. By the time of their association, Stewart had published an ambitious work of original materialist philosophy entitled The Apocalypse of Nature (London, 1791), to which many of Wordsworth's philosophical sentiments may well be indebted.

In 1807 Wordsworth published Poems, in Two Volumes, including "Ode: Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood". Up to this point, Wordsworth was known only for Lyrical Ballads, and he hoped that this new collection would cement his reputation. Its reception was lukewarm, however.

In 1810, Wordsworth and Coleridge were estranged over the latter's opium addiction,[8] and in 1812, his son Thomas died at the age of 6, six months after the death of 3-year-old Catherine. The following year he received an appointment as Distributor of Stamps for Westmorland, and the stipend of £400 a year made him financially secure, albeit at the cost of political independence. In 1813, he and his family, including Dorothy, moved to Rydal Mount, Ambleside (between Grasmere and Rydal Water), where he spent the rest of his life.[8]

The Prospectus edit

In 1814 Wordsworth published The Excursion as the second part of the three-part work The Recluse, even though he never completed the first part or the third part. He did, however, write a poetic Prospectus to The Recluse in which he laid out the structure and intention of the whole work. The Prospectus contains some of Wordsworth's most famous lines on the relation between the human mind and nature:

                      ... my voice proclaims
How exquisitely the individual Mind
(And the progressive powers perhaps no less
Of the whole species) to the external World
Is fitted:—and how exquisitely, too—
Theme this but little heard of among Men,
The external World is fitted to the Mind;
And the creation (by no lower name
Can it be called) which they with blended might
Accomplish ...[28]

Some modern critics[29] suggest that there was a decline in his work beginning around the mid-1810s, perhaps because most of the concerns that characterised his early poems (loss, death, endurance, separation and abandonment) had been resolved in his writings and his life.[30] By 1820, he was enjoying considerable success accompanying a reversal in the contemporary critical opinion of his earlier works.

The poet William Blake, who knew of Wordsworth's work, was struck by Wordsworth's boldness in centering his poetry on the human mind. In response to Wordsworth's poetic program that, “when we look / Into our Minds, into the Mind of Man- / My haunt, and the main region of my song” (The Excursion), William Blake wrote to his friend Henry Crabb Robinson that the passage "“caused him a bowel complaint which nearly killed him”.[31]

Following the death of his friend the painter William Green in 1823, Wordsworth also mended his relations with Coleridge.[32] The two were fully reconciled by 1828, when they toured the Rhineland together.[8] Dorothy suffered from a severe illness in 1829 that rendered her an invalid for the remainder of her life. Coleridge and Charles Lamb both died in 1834, their loss being a difficult blow to Wordsworth. The following year saw the passing of James Hogg. Despite the death of many contemporaries, the popularity of his poetry ensured a steady stream of young friends and admirers to replace those he lost.

Religious and philosophical beliefs edit

Wordsworth's youthful political radicalism, unlike Coleridge's, never led him to rebel against his religious upbringing. He remarked in 1812 that he was willing to shed his blood for the established Church of England, reflected in his Ecclesiastical Sketches of 1822. This religious conservatism also colours The Excursion (1814), a long poem that became extremely popular during the nineteenth century. It features three central characters: the Wanderer, the Solitary, who has experienced the hopes and miseries of the French Revolution, and the Pastor, who dominates the last third of the poem.[33]

Wordsworth's poetic philosophy edit

Behler[34] has pointed out the fact that Wordsworth wanted to invoke the basic feeling that a human heart possesses and expresses. He had reversed the philosophical standpoint expressed by his friend S. T. Coleridge, of 'creating the characters in such an environment so that the public feels them belonging to the distant place and time'. And it is true that this philosophical realization by Wordsworth allowed him to choose the language and structural patterning of the poetry that a common man used every day.[35] Kurland wrote that the conversational aspect of a language emerges through social necessity.[36] Social necessity posits the theme of possessing the proper knowledge, interest and biases also among the speakers. William Wordsworth has used conversation in his poetry to let the poet 'I' merge into 'We'. The poem "Farewell" exposes the identical emotion that the poet and his sister nourish:

"We leave you here in solitude to dwell/ With these our latest gifts of tender thought;

Thou, like the morning, in thy saffron coat,/ Bright gowan, and marsh-marigold, farewell!" (L.19–22).

This kind of conversational tone persists all through the poetic journey of the poet, that positions him as a man in society who speaks to the purpose of communion with the very common mass of that society.[37] Again; "Preface to Lyrical Ballads" [1] is the evidence where the poet expresses why he is writing and what he is writing and what purpose it will serve humanity.

Laureateship and other honours edit

Wordsworth remained a formidable presence in his later years. In 1837, the Scottish poet and playwright Joanna Baillie reflected on her long acquaintance with Wordsworth. "He looks like a man that one must not speak to unless one has some sensible thing to say. However he does occasionally converse cheerfully & well; and when one knows how benevolent & excellent he is, it disposes one to be very much pleased with him."[38]

In 1838, Wordsworth received an honorary doctorate in Civil Law from the University of Durham and the following year he was awarded the same honorary degree by the University of Oxford, when John Keble praised him as the "poet of humanity", praise greatly appreciated by Wordsworth.[8][39] (It has been argued that Wordsworth was a great influence on Keble's immensely popular book of devotional poetry, The Christian Year (1827).[40]) In 1842, the government awarded him a Civil List pension of £300 a year.

Following the death of Robert Southey in 1843 Wordsworth became Poet Laureate. He initially refused the honour, saying that he was too old, but accepted when the Prime Minister, Robert Peel, assured him that "you shall have nothing required of you". Wordsworth thus became the only poet laureate to write no official verses. The sudden death of his daughter Dora in 1847 at age 42 was difficult for the aging poet to take and in his depression, he completely gave up writing new material.

Death edit

 
Gravestone of William Wordsworth, Grasmere, Cumbria

William Wordsworth died at home at Rydal Mount from an aggravated case of pleurisy on 23 April 1850,[41][42] and was buried at St Oswald's Church, Grasmere. His widow, Mary, published his lengthy autobiographical "Poem to Coleridge" as The Prelude several months after his death.[43] Though it failed to interest people at the time, it has since come to be widely recognised as his masterpiece.[citation needed]

In popular culture edit

Composer Alicia Van Buren (1860–1922) used text by Wordsworth for her song "In Early Spring".[44]

Margaret Louisa Woods portrayed the young Wordsworth in her novel A Poet's Youth (1923).

Ken Russell's 1978 film William and Dorothy portrays the relationship between William and his sister Dorothy.[45]

Wordsworth and Coleridge's friendship is examined by Julien Temple in his 2000 film Pandaemonium.[46]

Wordsworth has appeared as a character in works of fiction, including:

  • William Kinsolving – Mister Christian. 1996
  • Jasper FfordeThe Eyre Affair. 2001
  • Val McDermidThe Grave Tattoo. 2006
  • Sue LimbThe Wordsmiths at Gorsemere. 2008

Isaac Asimov's 1966 novelisation of the 1966 film Fantastic Voyage sees Dr. Peter Duval quoting Wordsworth's The Prelude as the miniaturised submarine sails through the cerebral fluid surrounding a human brain, comparing it to the "strange seas of thought".

Taylor Swift's 2020 album Folklore mentions Wordsworth in her bonus track "The Lakes", which is thought to be about the Lake District.[47]

Commemoration edit

In April 2020, the Royal Mail issued a series of postage stamps to mark the 250th anniversary of the birth of Wordsworth. Ten 1st class stamps were issued, featuring Wordsworth and all the major British Romantic poets, including William Blake, John Keats, Lord Byron, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Percy Bysshe Shelley and Walter Scott. Each stamp included an extract from one of their most popular and enduring works, with Wordsworth's "The Rainbow" selected for the poet.[48]

Major works edit

References edit

  1. ^ Historic England. "Wordsworth House (1327088)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  2. ^ Allport, Denison Howard; Friskney, Norman J. (1986). "Appendix A (Past Governors)". A Short History of Wilson's School. Wilson's School Charitable Trust.
  3. ^ Moorman 1968 pp. 5–7.
  4. ^ Moorman 1968:9–13.
  5. ^ Moorman 1968:15–18.
  6. ^ "Wordsworth, William (WRDT787W)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  7. ^ Andrew Bennett (12 February 2015). William Wordsworth in Context. Cambridge University Press. p. 191. ISBN 978-1-107-02841-8.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Everett, Glenn, "William Wordsworth: Biography" at The Victorian Web, accessed 7 January 2007.
  9. ^ Gill (1989) Pp. 208, 299
  10. ^ "Purchasing Power of British Pounds from 1245 to Present". MeasuringWorth.com. Retrieved 28 May 2012.
  11. ^ "The Cornell Wordsworth Collection". Cornell University. Retrieved 13 February 2009.
  12. ^ Roland Gant (1980). Dorset Villages. Robert Hale Ltd. pp. 111–112. ISBN 0-7091-8135-3.
  13. ^ Lyricall Ballads: With a Few Other Poems (1 ed.). London: J. & A. Arch. 1798. Retrieved 13 November 2014. via archive.org
  14. ^ Wordsworth, William (1800). Lyrical Ballads with Other Poems. Vol. I (2 ed.). London: Printed for T.N. Longman and O. Rees. Retrieved 13 November 2014.; Wordsworth, William (1800). Lyrical Ballads with Other Poems. Vol. II (2 ed.). London: Printed for T.N. Longman and O. Rees. Retrieved 13 November 2014. via archive.org
  15. ^ Wordsworth, William (1802). Lyrical Ballads with Pastoral and other Poems. Vol. I (3 ed.). London: Printed for T.N. Longman and O. Rees. Retrieved 13 November 2014. via archive.org.
  16. ^ Wordsworth, William (1805). Lyrical Ballads with Pastoral and other Poems. Vol. I (4 ed.). London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme, by R. Taylor. Retrieved 13 November 2014. via archive.org.
  17. ^ Stephen Gill, William Wordsworth: A Life, Oxford University Press, 1989, pp. 132–133.
  18. ^ A Library of Poetry and Song: Being Choice Selections from The Best Poets. With An Introduction by William Cullen Bryant, New York, J.B. Ford and Company, 1871, p. 442.
  19. ^ Recollections of the Lake Poets.
  20. ^ Moorman 1968 p. 8
  21. ^ Ward, John Powell (1 March 2005). "Wordsworth's Eldest Son: John Wordsworth and the Intimations Ode". The Wordsworth Circle. 36 (2): 66–80. doi:10.1086/TWC24045111. S2CID 159651742. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  22. ^ Hanberry, Gerard (29 September 2011). More Lives Than One. Gill & Macmillan Ltd. p. 29. ISBN 978-1-84889-943-8. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  23. ^ "Wordsworth mss. II, 1848–1909". archives.iu.edu. Archives Online at Indiana University. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  24. ^ "William Wordsworth | The Asian Age Online, Bangladesh". The Asian Age. Retrieved 23 June 2022.
  25. ^ "William Wordsworth – English History". 18 November 2021. Retrieved 23 June 2022.
  26. ^ O&#39, John; Meara (1 January 2011). "This Life, This Death: Wordsworth's Poetic Destiny". IUniverse, Bloomington IN.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  27. ^ Kelly Grovier, "Dream Walker: A Wordsworth Mystery Solved", Times Literary Supplement, 16 February 2007
  28. ^ Poetical Works. Oxford Standard Authors. London: Oxford U.P. 1936. p. 590.
  29. ^ Hartman, Geoffrey (1987). Wordsworth's Poetry, 1787–1814. New Haven: Yale University Press. pp. 329–331. ISBN 9780674958210.
  30. ^ Already in 1891 James Kenneth Stephen wrote satirically of Wordsworth having "two voices": one is "of the deep", the other "of an old half-witted sheep/Which bleats articulate monotony".
  31. ^ Abrams, M.H. (1971). Natural Supernaturalism: Tradition and Revolution in Romantic Literature. Norton. p. 24.
  32. ^ Sylvanus Urban, The Gentleman's Magazine, 1823
  33. ^ "Wordsworth's Religion". www.victorianweb.org.
  34. ^ BEHLER, ERNST (1968). "The Origins of the Romantic Literary Theory". Colloquia Germanica. 2: 109–126. ISSN 0010-1338. JSTOR 23979800.
  35. ^ Doolittle, James (1 December 1969). "The Demonic Imagination: Style and Theme in French Romantic Poetry". Modern Language Quarterly. 30 (4): 615–617. doi:10.1215/00267929-30-4-615. ISSN 0026-7929.
  36. ^ "Dan Kurland's www.criticalreading.com -- Strategies for Critical Reading and Writing". www.criticalreading.com. Retrieved 23 June 2022.
  37. ^ Ahmed, Sheikh Saifullah (1 January 2020). "The Sociolinguistic Perspectives of the Stylistic Liberation of Wordsworth". Sparkling International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research Studies.
  38. ^ Baillie, Joanna (2010). Thomas McLean (ed.). Further Letters of Joanna Baillie. Madison, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. p. 181. ISBN 978-0-8386-4149-1.
  39. ^ Gill, pp396-7
  40. ^ "The Religious Influence of the Romantic Poets".
  41. ^ "Poet Laureate", The British Monarchy official website.
  42. ^ Stephen Gill, William Wordsworth: A Life, Oxford University Press, 1989, pp. 422–3.
  43. ^ e g Dorothy Wordsworth's Journal 26 December 1801
  44. ^ "Collection: Papers of Alicia Keisker Van Buren, 1889–1915 | HOLLIS for". hollisarchives.lib.harvard.edu. Retrieved 18 April 2021.
  45. ^ . BFI. Archived from the original on 4 January 2018. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  46. ^ Van Gelder, Lawrence (13 July 2001). "FILM IN REVIEW; 'Pandaemonium'". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  47. ^ "Taylor Swift dedicates Folklore song to the Lake District". BBC. 12 August 2020.
  48. ^ "New stamps issued on 250th anniversary of William Wordsworth's birth". ITV. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
  49. ^ a b c d e M. H. Abrams, editor of The Norton Anthology of English Literature: The Romantic Period, writes of these five poems: "This and the four following pieces are often grouped by editors as the 'Lucy poems,' even though 'A slumber did my spirit seal' does not identify the 'she' who is the subject of that poem. All but the last were written in 1799, while Wordsworth and his sister were in Germany, and homesick. There has been diligent speculation about the identity of Lucy, but it remains speculation. The one certainty is that she is not the girl of Wordsworth's 'Lucy Gray'" (Abrams 2000).
  50. ^ Wordsworth, William (4 January 1810). "French Revolution". The Friend. No. 20. Retrieved 8 June 2018.

Further reading edit

  • Juliet Barker. Wordsworth: A Life, HarperCollins, New York, 2000, ISBN 978-0060787318
  • Jeffrey Cox, William Wordsworth, Second-Generation Romantic: Contesting Poetry After Waterloo, 2021, ISBN 978-1108837613
  • Hunter Davies, William Wordsworth: A Biography, Frances Lincoln, London, 2009, ISBN 978-0-7112-3045-3
  • Stephen Gill, William Wordsworth: A Life, Oxford University Press, 1989, ISBN 978-0192827470
  • Emma Mason, The Cambridge Introduction to William Wordsworth (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
  • Minto, William; Chisholm, Hugh (1911). "Wordsworth, William" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 826–831.
  • Mary Moorman, William Wordsworth, A Biography: The Early Years, 1770–1803 v. 1, Oxford University Press, 1957, ISBN 978-0198115656
  • Mary Moorman, William Wordsworth: A Biography: The Later Years, 1803–1850 v. 2, Oxford University Press, 1965, ISBN 978-0198116172
  • M. R. Tewari, One Interior Life—A Study of the Nature of Wordsworth's Poetic Experience (New Delhi: S. Chand & Company Ltd, 1983)
  • Report to Wordsworth, Written by Boey Kim Cheng, as a direct reference to his poems "Composed Upon Westminster Bridge" and "The World Is Too Much with Us"
  • Daniel Robinson, The Oxford Handbook of William Wordsworth, Oxford University Press, 2015, ISBN 9780199662128
  • Duncan Wu, “William Wordsworth,” in Then & Now: Romantic-Era Poets in the Encyclopædia Britannica, 1910-1911, ed. G. Kim Blank (2023)

External links edit

  • Internet archive of Volume 1 of Christopher Wordsworth's 1851 biography
  • Internet archive of Volume 2 of Christopher Wordsworth's 1851 biography
  • Works by William Wordsworth at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about William Wordsworth at Internet Archive
  • Works by William Wordsworth at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • William Wordsworth Collection. General Collection, Beinecke Rare Book andManuscript Library, Yale University.
  • Cornelius Patton (AC 1883) William Wordsworth Manuscript Collection at the Amherst College Archives & Special Collections
Court offices
Preceded by British Poet Laureate
1843–1850
Succeeded by

william, wordsworth, wordsworth, redirects, here, other, uses, wordsworth, disambiguation, english, composer, composer, british, academic, journalist, india, william, christopher, wordsworth, april, 1770, april, 1850, english, romantic, poet, with, samuel, tay. Wordsworth redirects here For other uses see Wordsworth disambiguation For the English composer see William Wordsworth composer For the British academic and journalist in India see William Christopher Wordsworth William Wordsworth 7 April 1770 23 April 1850 was an English Romantic poet who with Samuel Taylor Coleridge helped to launch the Romantic Age in English literature with their joint publication Lyrical Ballads 1798 William WordsworthAnonymous portrait of Wordsworth c 1840 50Poet Laureate of the United KingdomIn office 6 April 1843 23 April 1850MonarchVictoriaPreceded byRobert SoutheySucceeded byAlfred Lord TennysonPersonal detailsBorn 1770 04 07 7 April 1770Cockermouth Cumberland EnglandDied23 April 1850 1850 04 23 aged 80 Rydal Westmorland EnglandSpouseMary Hutchinson m 1802 wbr Children5 including DoraRelativesDorothy Wordsworth sister Christopher Wordsworth brother Richard Wordsworth great great grandson John Wordsworth nephew Alma materSt John s College CambridgeOccupationPoetSignature Wordsworth s magnum opus is generally considered to be The Prelude a semi autobiographical poem of his early years that he revised and expanded a number of times It was posthumously titled and published by his wife in the year of his death before which it was generally known as the poem to Coleridge Wordsworth was Poet Laureate from 1843 until his death from pleurisy on 23 April 1850 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Family and education 1 2 Relationship with Annette Vallon 2 Early career 2 1 First publication and Lyrical Ballads 2 1 1 The Borderers 3 Germany and move to the Lake District 4 Married life 5 Later career 5 1 Autobiographical work and Poems in Two Volumes 5 2 The Prospectus 6 Religious and philosophical beliefs 6 1 Wordsworth s poetic philosophy 7 Laureateship and other honours 8 Death 9 In popular culture 10 Commemoration 11 Major works 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksEarly life editFamily and education edit Main article Early life of William Wordsworth The second of five children born to John Wordsworth and Ann Cookson William Wordsworth was born on 7 April 1770 in what is now named Wordsworth House in Cockermouth Cumberland now in Cumbria 1 part of the scenic region in northwestern England known as the Lake District William s sister the poet and diarist Dorothy Wordsworth to whom he was close all his life was born the following year and the two were baptised together They had three other siblings Richard the eldest who became a lawyer John born after Dorothy who went to sea and died in 1805 when the ship of which he was captain the Earl of Abergavenny was wrecked off the south coast of England and Christopher the youngest who entered the Church and rose to be Master of Trinity College Cambridge 2 Wordsworth s father was a legal representative of James Lowther 1st Earl of Lonsdale and through his connections lived in a large mansion in the small town He was frequently away from home on business so the young William and his siblings had little involvement with him and remained distant from him until his death in 1783 3 However he did encourage William in his reading and in particular set him to commit large portions of verse to memory including works by Milton Shakespeare and Spenser which William would pore over in his father s library William also spent time at his mother s parents house in Penrith Cumberland where he was exposed to the moors but did not get along with his grandparents or his uncle who also lived there His hostile interactions with them distressed him to the point of contemplating suicide 4 Wordsworth was taught to read by his mother and attended first a tiny school of low quality in Cockermouth then a school in Penrith for the children of upper class families where he was taught by Ann Birkett who insisted on instilling in her students traditions that included pursuing both scholarly and local activities especially the festivals around Easter May Day and Shrove Tuesday Wordsworth was taught both the Bible and the Spectator but little else It was at the school in Penrith that he met the Hutchinsons including Mary who later became his wife 5 After the death of Wordsworth s mother in 1778 his father sent him to Hawkshead Grammar School in Lancashire now in Cumbria and sent Dorothy to live with relatives in Yorkshire She and William did not meet again for nine years Wordsworth made his debut as a writer in 1787 when he published a sonnet in The European Magazine That same year he began attending St John s College Cambridge He received his BA degree in 1791 6 He returned to Hawkshead for the first two summers of his time at Cambridge and often spent later holidays on walking tours visiting places famous for the beauty of their landscape In 1790 he went on a walking tour of Europe during which he toured the Alps extensively and visited nearby areas of France Switzerland and Italy 7 Relationship with Annette Vallon edit In November 1791 Wordsworth visited Revolutionary France and became enchanted with the Republican movement He fell in love with a French woman Annette Vallon who in 1792 gave birth to their daughter Caroline Financial problems and Britain s tense relations with France forced him to return to England alone the following year 8 The circumstances of his return and his subsequent behaviour raised doubts as to his declared wish to marry Annette However he supported her and his daughter as best he could in later life The Reign of Terror left Wordsworth thoroughly disillusioned with the French Revolution and the outbreak of armed hostilities between Britain and France prevented him from seeing Annette and his daughter for some years With the Peace of Amiens again allowing travel to France in 1802 Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy visited Annette and Caroline in Calais The purpose of the visit was to prepare Annette for the fact of his forthcoming marriage to Mary Hutchinson 8 Afterwards he wrote the sonnet It is a beauteous evening calm and free recalling a seaside walk with the nine year old Caroline whom he had never seen before that visit Mary was anxious that Wordsworth should do more for Caroline Upon Caroline s marriage in 1816 Wordsworth settled 30 a year on her equivalent to 2 400 in 2021 payments which continued until 1835 when they were replaced by a capital settlement 9 10 Early career editFirst publication and Lyrical Ballads edit nbsp Wordsworth in 1798 about the time he began The Prelude 11 The year 1793 saw the first publication of poems by Wordsworth in the collections An Evening Walk and Descriptive Sketches In 1795 he received a legacy of 900 from Raisley Calvert and became able to pursue a career as a poet It was also in 1795 that he met Samuel Taylor Coleridge in Somerset The two poets quickly developed a close friendship For two years from 1795 William and his sister Dorothy lived at Racedown House in Dorset a property of the Pinney family to the west of Pilsdon Pen They walked in the area for about two hours every day and the nearby hills consoled Dorothy as she pined for the fells of her native Lakeland She wrote We have hills which seen from a distance almost take the character of mountains some cultivated nearly to their summits others in their wild state covered with furze and broom These delight me the most as they remind me of our native wilds 12 In 1797 the pair moved to Alfoxton House Somerset just a few miles away from Coleridge s home in Nether Stowey Together Wordsworth and Coleridge with insights from Dorothy produced Lyrical Ballads 1798 an important work in the English Romantic movement 13 The volume gave neither Wordsworth s nor Coleridge s name as author One of Wordsworth s most famous poems Tintern Abbey was published in this collection along with Coleridge s The Rime of the Ancient Mariner The second edition published in 1800 had only Wordsworth listed as the author and included a preface to the poems 14 It was augmented significantly in the next edition published in 1802 15 In this preface which some scholars consider a central work of Romantic literary theory Wordsworth discusses what he sees as the elements of a new type of verse one that is based on the ordinary language really used by men while avoiding the poetic diction of much 18th century verse Wordsworth also gives his famous definition of poetry as the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings it takes its origin from emotion recollected in tranquility and calls his own poems in the book experimental A fourth and final edition of Lyrical Ballads was published in 1805 16 The Borderers edit Between 1795 and 1797 Wordsworth wrote his only play The Borderers a verse tragedy set during the reign of King Henry III of England when Englishmen in the North Country came into conflict with Scottish border reivers He attempted to get the play staged in November 1797 but it was rejected by Thomas Harris the manager of the Covent Garden Theatre who proclaimed it impossible that the play should succeed in the representation The rebuff was not received lightly by Wordsworth and the play was not published until 1842 after substantial revision 17 Germany and move to the Lake District editI travelled among unknown men I travelled among unknown men In lands beyond the sea Nor England did I know till then What love I bore to thee T is past that melancholy dream Nor will I quit thy shore A second time for still I seem To love thee more and more Among thy mountains did I feel The joy of my desire And she I cherished turned her wheel Beside an English fire Thy mornings showed thy nights concealed The bowers where Lucy played And thine too is the last green field That Lucy s eyes surveyed 18 Wordsworth Dorothy and Coleridge travelled to Germany in the autumn of 1798 While Coleridge was intellectually stimulated by the journey its main effect on Wordsworth was to produce homesickness 8 During the harsh winter of 1798 99 Wordsworth lived with Dorothy in Goslar and despite extreme stress and loneliness began work on the autobiographical piece that was later titled The Prelude He wrote a number of other famous poems in Goslar including The Lucy poems In the Autumn of 1799 Wordsworth and his sister returned to England and visited the Hutchinson family at Sockburn When Coleridge arrived back in England he travelled to the North with their publisher Joseph Cottle to meet Wordsworth and undertake a proposed tour of the Lake District This was the immediate cause of the brother and sister s settling at Dove Cottage in Grasmere in the Lake District this time with another poet Robert Southey nearby Wordsworth Coleridge and Southey came to be known as the Lake Poets 19 Throughout this period many of Wordsworth s poems revolved around themes of death endurance separation and grief Married life edit nbsp Dove Cottage Town End Grasmere home of William and Dorothy Wordsworth 1799 1808 home of Thomas De Quincey 1809 1820 In 1802 Lowther s heir William Lowther 1st Earl of Lonsdale paid the 4 000 equivalent to 379 955 in 2021 owed to Wordsworth s father through Lowther s failure to pay his aide 20 It was this repayment that afforded Wordsworth the financial means to marry On 4 October following his visit with Dorothy to France to arrange matters with Annette Wordsworth married his childhood friend Mary Hutchinson at All Saints Church Brompton 8 Dorothy continued to live with the couple and grew close to Mary The following year Mary gave birth to the first of five children three of whom predeceased her and William Rev John Wordsworth MA 18 June 1803 25 July 1875 Vicar of Brigham Cumberland and Rector of Plumbland Cumberland Buried at Highgate Cemetery west side Married four times 21 Isabella Curwen died 1848 had six children Jane Stanley Henry William John Charles and Edward Jane Stanley 1833 1912 who married the Rev Bennet Sherard Kennedy an illegitimate son of Robert Sherard 6th Earl of Harborough and their son Robert Harborough Sherard became first biographer to his friend Oscar Wilde 22 Helen Ross died 1854 No children Mary Ann Dolan died after 1858 had one daughter Dora Dora Wordsworth 1858 1934 23 Mary Gamble No children Dora Wordsworth 16 August 1804 9 July 1847 Married Edward Quillinan in 1841 Thomas Wordsworth 15 June 1806 1 December 1812 Catherine Wordsworth 6 September 1808 4 June 1812 William Willy Wordsworth 12 May 1810 1883 Married Fanny Graham and had four children Mary Louisa William Reginald GordonLater career editAutobiographical work and Poems in Two Volumes edit Wordsworth had for years been making plans to write a long philosophical poem in three parts which he intended to call The Recluse 24 In 1798 99 he started an autobiographical poem which he referred to as the poem to Coleridge and which he planned would serve as an appendix to a larger work called The Recluse In 1804 he began expanding this autobiographical work having decided to make it a prologue rather than an appendix 25 He completed this work now generally referred to as the first version of The Prelude in 1805 but refused to publish such a personal work until he had completed the whole of The Recluse The death of his brother John also in 1805 affected him strongly and may have influenced his decisions about these works 26 nbsp Rydal Mount home to Wordsworth 1813 1850 Hundreds of visitors came here to see him over the years Wordsworth s philosophical allegiances as articulated in The Prelude and in such shorter works as Lines written a few miles above Tintern Abbey have been a source of critical debate It was long supposed that Wordsworth relied chiefly on Coleridge for philosophical guidance but more recently scholars have suggested that Wordsworth s ideas may have been formed years before he and Coleridge became friends in the mid 1790s In particular while he was in revolutionary Paris in 1792 the 22 year old Wordsworth made the acquaintance of the mysterious traveller John Walking Stewart 1747 1822 27 who was nearing the end of his thirty years of wandering on foot from Madras India through Persia and Arabia across Africa and Europe and up through the fledgling United States By the time of their association Stewart had published an ambitious work of original materialist philosophy entitled The Apocalypse of Nature London 1791 to which many of Wordsworth s philosophical sentiments may well be indebted In 1807 Wordsworth published Poems in Two Volumes including Ode Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood Up to this point Wordsworth was known only for Lyrical Ballads and he hoped that this new collection would cement his reputation Its reception was lukewarm however In 1810 Wordsworth and Coleridge were estranged over the latter s opium addiction 8 and in 1812 his son Thomas died at the age of 6 six months after the death of 3 year old Catherine The following year he received an appointment as Distributor of Stamps for Westmorland and the stipend of 400 a year made him financially secure albeit at the cost of political independence In 1813 he and his family including Dorothy moved to Rydal Mount Ambleside between Grasmere and Rydal Water where he spent the rest of his life 8 The Prospectus edit In 1814 Wordsworth published The Excursion as the second part of the three part work The Recluse even though he never completed the first part or the third part He did however write a poetic Prospectus to The Recluse in which he laid out the structure and intention of the whole work The Prospectus contains some of Wordsworth s most famous lines on the relation between the human mind and nature my voice proclaims How exquisitely the individual Mind And the progressive powers perhaps no less Of the whole species to the external World Is fitted and how exquisitely too Theme this but little heard of among Men The external World is fitted to the Mind And the creation by no lower name Can it be called which they with blended might Accomplish 28 Some modern critics 29 suggest that there was a decline in his work beginning around the mid 1810s perhaps because most of the concerns that characterised his early poems loss death endurance separation and abandonment had been resolved in his writings and his life 30 By 1820 he was enjoying considerable success accompanying a reversal in the contemporary critical opinion of his earlier works The poet William Blake who knew of Wordsworth s work was struck by Wordsworth s boldness in centering his poetry on the human mind In response to Wordsworth s poetic program that when we look Into our Minds into the Mind of Man My haunt and the main region of my song The Excursion William Blake wrote to his friend Henry Crabb Robinson that the passage caused him a bowel complaint which nearly killed him 31 Following the death of his friend the painter William Green in 1823 Wordsworth also mended his relations with Coleridge 32 The two were fully reconciled by 1828 when they toured the Rhineland together 8 Dorothy suffered from a severe illness in 1829 that rendered her an invalid for the remainder of her life Coleridge and Charles Lamb both died in 1834 their loss being a difficult blow to Wordsworth The following year saw the passing of James Hogg Despite the death of many contemporaries the popularity of his poetry ensured a steady stream of young friends and admirers to replace those he lost Religious and philosophical beliefs editWordsworth s youthful political radicalism unlike Coleridge s never led him to rebel against his religious upbringing He remarked in 1812 that he was willing to shed his blood for the established Church of England reflected in his Ecclesiastical Sketches of 1822 This religious conservatism also colours The Excursion 1814 a long poem that became extremely popular during the nineteenth century It features three central characters the Wanderer the Solitary who has experienced the hopes and miseries of the French Revolution and the Pastor who dominates the last third of the poem 33 Wordsworth s poetic philosophy edit Behler 34 has pointed out the fact that Wordsworth wanted to invoke the basic feeling that a human heart possesses and expresses He had reversed the philosophical standpoint expressed by his friend S T Coleridge of creating the characters in such an environment so that the public feels them belonging to the distant place and time And it is true that this philosophical realization by Wordsworth allowed him to choose the language and structural patterning of the poetry that a common man used every day 35 Kurland wrote that the conversational aspect of a language emerges through social necessity 36 Social necessity posits the theme of possessing the proper knowledge interest and biases also among the speakers William Wordsworth has used conversation in his poetry to let the poet I merge into We The poem Farewell exposes the identical emotion that the poet and his sister nourish We leave you here in solitude to dwell With these our latest gifts of tender thought Thou like the morning in thy saffron coat Bright gowan and marsh marigold farewell L 19 22 This kind of conversational tone persists all through the poetic journey of the poet that positions him as a man in society who speaks to the purpose of communion with the very common mass of that society 37 Again Preface to Lyrical Ballads 1 is the evidence where the poet expresses why he is writing and what he is writing and what purpose it will serve humanity Laureateship and other honours editWordsworth remained a formidable presence in his later years In 1837 the Scottish poet and playwright Joanna Baillie reflected on her long acquaintance with Wordsworth He looks like a man that one must not speak to unless one has some sensible thing to say However he does occasionally converse cheerfully amp well and when one knows how benevolent amp excellent he is it disposes one to be very much pleased with him 38 In 1838 Wordsworth received an honorary doctorate in Civil Law from the University of Durham and the following year he was awarded the same honorary degree by the University of Oxford when John Keble praised him as the poet of humanity praise greatly appreciated by Wordsworth 8 39 It has been argued that Wordsworth was a great influence on Keble s immensely popular book of devotional poetry The Christian Year 1827 40 In 1842 the government awarded him a Civil List pension of 300 a year Following the death of Robert Southey in 1843 Wordsworth became Poet Laureate He initially refused the honour saying that he was too old but accepted when the Prime Minister Robert Peel assured him that you shall have nothing required of you Wordsworth thus became the only poet laureate to write no official verses The sudden death of his daughter Dora in 1847 at age 42 was difficult for the aging poet to take and in his depression he completely gave up writing new material Death edit nbsp Gravestone of William Wordsworth Grasmere Cumbria William Wordsworth died at home at Rydal Mount from an aggravated case of pleurisy on 23 April 1850 41 42 and was buried at St Oswald s Church Grasmere His widow Mary published his lengthy autobiographical Poem to Coleridge as The Prelude several months after his death 43 Though it failed to interest people at the time it has since come to be widely recognised as his masterpiece citation needed In popular culture editComposer Alicia Van Buren 1860 1922 used text by Wordsworth for her song In Early Spring 44 Margaret Louisa Woods portrayed the young Wordsworth in her novel A Poet s Youth 1923 Ken Russell s 1978 film William and Dorothy portrays the relationship between William and his sister Dorothy 45 Wordsworth and Coleridge s friendship is examined by Julien Temple in his 2000 film Pandaemonium 46 Wordsworth has appeared as a character in works of fiction including William Kinsolving Mister Christian 1996 Jasper Fforde The Eyre Affair 2001 Val McDermid The Grave Tattoo 2006 Sue Limb The Wordsmiths at Gorsemere 2008 Isaac Asimov s 1966 novelisation of the 1966 film Fantastic Voyage sees Dr Peter Duval quoting Wordsworth s The Prelude as the miniaturised submarine sails through the cerebral fluid surrounding a human brain comparing it to the strange seas of thought Taylor Swift s 2020 album Folklore mentions Wordsworth in her bonus track The Lakes which is thought to be about the Lake District 47 Commemoration editIn April 2020 the Royal Mail issued a series of postage stamps to mark the 250th anniversary of the birth of Wordsworth Ten 1st class stamps were issued featuring Wordsworth and all the major British Romantic poets including William Blake John Keats Lord Byron Samuel Taylor Coleridge Percy Bysshe Shelley and Walter Scott Each stamp included an extract from one of their most popular and enduring works with Wordsworth s The Rainbow selected for the poet 48 Major works editMain article List of poems by William Wordsworth Lyrical Ballads with a Few Other Poems 1798 Simon Lee We are Seven Lines Written in Early Spring Expostulation and Reply The Tables Turned The Thorn Lines Composed A Few Miles above Tintern Abbey Lyrical Ballads with Other Poems 1800 dubious discuss Preface to the Lyrical Ballads Strange fits of passion have I known 49 She Dwelt among the Untrodden Ways 49 Three years she grew 49 A Slumber Did my Spirit Seal 49 I travelled among unknown men 49 Lucy Gray The Two April Mornings Nutting The Ruined Cottage Michael The Kitten at Play Poems in Two Volumes 1807 Resolution and Independence I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud Also known as Daffodils My Heart Leaps Up Ode Intimations of Immortality Ode to Duty The Solitary Reaper Elegiac Stanzas Composed upon Westminster Bridge September 3 1802 London 1802 The World Is Too Much with Us French Revolution 1810 50 Guide to the Lakes 1810 To the Cuckoo The Excursion 1814 Laodamia 1815 1845 The White Doe of Rylstone 1815 Peter Bell 1819 Ecclesiastical Sonnets 1822 The Prelude 1850 References edit Historic England Wordsworth House 1327088 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 21 December 2009 Allport Denison Howard Friskney Norman J 1986 Appendix A Past Governors A Short History of Wilson s School Wilson s School Charitable Trust Moorman 1968 pp 5 7 Moorman 1968 9 13 Moorman 1968 15 18 Wordsworth William WRDT787W A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Andrew Bennett 12 February 2015 William Wordsworth in Context Cambridge University Press p 191 ISBN 978 1 107 02841 8 a b c d e f g h Everett Glenn William Wordsworth Biography at The Victorian Web accessed 7 January 2007 Gill 1989 Pp 208 299 Purchasing Power of British Pounds from 1245 to Present MeasuringWorth com Retrieved 28 May 2012 The Cornell Wordsworth Collection Cornell University Retrieved 13 February 2009 Roland Gant 1980 Dorset Villages Robert Hale Ltd pp 111 112 ISBN 0 7091 8135 3 Lyricall Ballads With a Few Other Poems 1 ed London J amp A Arch 1798 Retrieved 13 November 2014 via archive org Wordsworth William 1800 Lyrical Ballads with Other Poems Vol I 2 ed London Printed for T N Longman and O Rees Retrieved 13 November 2014 Wordsworth William 1800 Lyrical Ballads with Other Poems Vol II 2 ed London Printed for T N Longman and O Rees Retrieved 13 November 2014 via archive org Wordsworth William 1802 Lyrical Ballads with Pastoral and other Poems Vol I 3 ed London Printed for T N Longman and O Rees Retrieved 13 November 2014 via archive org Wordsworth William 1805 Lyrical Ballads with Pastoral and other Poems Vol I 4 ed London Printed for Longman Hurst Rees and Orme by R Taylor Retrieved 13 November 2014 via archive org Stephen Gill William Wordsworth A Life Oxford University Press 1989 pp 132 133 A Library of Poetry and Song Being Choice Selections from The Best Poets With An Introduction by William Cullen Bryant New York J B Ford and Company 1871 p 442 Recollections of the Lake Poets Moorman 1968 p 8 Ward John Powell 1 March 2005 Wordsworth s Eldest Son John Wordsworth and the Intimations Ode The Wordsworth Circle 36 2 66 80 doi 10 1086 TWC24045111 S2CID 159651742 Retrieved 14 September 2021 Hanberry Gerard 29 September 2011 More Lives Than One Gill amp Macmillan Ltd p 29 ISBN 978 1 84889 943 8 Retrieved 14 September 2021 Wordsworth mss II 1848 1909 archives iu edu Archives Online at Indiana University Retrieved 14 September 2021 William Wordsworth The Asian Age Online Bangladesh The Asian Age Retrieved 23 June 2022 William Wordsworth English History 18 November 2021 Retrieved 23 June 2022 O amp 39 John Meara 1 January 2011 This Life This Death Wordsworth s Poetic Destiny IUniverse Bloomington IN a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Kelly Grovier Dream Walker A Wordsworth Mystery Solved Times Literary Supplement 16 February 2007 Poetical Works Oxford Standard Authors London Oxford U P 1936 p 590 Hartman Geoffrey 1987 Wordsworth s Poetry 1787 1814 New Haven Yale University Press pp 329 331 ISBN 9780674958210 Already in 1891 James Kenneth Stephen wrote satirically of Wordsworth having two voices one is of the deep the other of an old half witted sheep Which bleats articulate monotony Abrams M H 1971 Natural Supernaturalism Tradition and Revolution in Romantic Literature Norton p 24 Sylvanus Urban The Gentleman s Magazine 1823 Wordsworth s Religion www victorianweb org BEHLER ERNST 1968 The Origins of the Romantic Literary Theory Colloquia Germanica 2 109 126 ISSN 0010 1338 JSTOR 23979800 Doolittle James 1 December 1969 The Demonic Imagination Style and Theme in French Romantic Poetry Modern Language Quarterly 30 4 615 617 doi 10 1215 00267929 30 4 615 ISSN 0026 7929 Dan Kurland s www criticalreading com Strategies for Critical Reading and Writing www criticalreading com Retrieved 23 June 2022 Ahmed Sheikh Saifullah 1 January 2020 The Sociolinguistic Perspectives of the Stylistic Liberation of Wordsworth Sparkling International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research Studies Baillie Joanna 2010 Thomas McLean ed Further Letters of Joanna Baillie Madison NJ Fairleigh Dickinson University Press p 181 ISBN 978 0 8386 4149 1 Gill pp396 7 The Religious Influence of the Romantic Poets Poet Laureate The British Monarchy official website Stephen Gill William Wordsworth A Life Oxford University Press 1989 pp 422 3 e g Dorothy Wordsworth s Journal 26 December 1801 Collection Papers of Alicia Keisker Van Buren 1889 1915 HOLLIS for hollisarchives lib harvard edu Retrieved 18 April 2021 William and Dorothy 1978 BFI Archived from the original on 4 January 2018 Retrieved 4 August 2021 Van Gelder Lawrence 13 July 2001 FILM IN REVIEW Pandaemonium The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 4 August 2021 Taylor Swift dedicates Folklore song to the Lake District BBC 12 August 2020 New stamps issued on 250th anniversary of William Wordsworth s birth ITV Retrieved 1 October 2022 a b c d e M H Abrams editor of The Norton Anthology of English Literature The Romantic Period writes of these five poems This and the four following pieces are often grouped by editors as the Lucy poems even though A slumber did my spirit seal does not identify the she who is the subject of that poem All but the last were written in 1799 while Wordsworth and his sister were in Germany and homesick There has been diligent speculation about the identity of Lucy but it remains speculation The one certainty is that she is not the girl of Wordsworth s Lucy Gray Abrams 2000 Wordsworth William 4 January 1810 French Revolution The Friend No 20 Retrieved 8 June 2018 Further reading edit nbsp poetry portal Juliet Barker Wordsworth A Life HarperCollins New York 2000 ISBN 978 0060787318 Jeffrey Cox William Wordsworth Second Generation Romantic Contesting Poetry After Waterloo 2021 ISBN 978 1108837613 Hunter Davies William Wordsworth A Biography Frances Lincoln London 2009 ISBN 978 0 7112 3045 3 Stephen Gill William Wordsworth A Life Oxford University Press 1989 ISBN 978 0192827470 Emma Mason The Cambridge Introduction to William Wordsworth Cambridge University Press 2010 Minto William Chisholm Hugh 1911 Wordsworth William In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 826 831 Mary Moorman William Wordsworth A Biography The Early Years 1770 1803 v 1 Oxford University Press 1957 ISBN 978 0198115656 Mary Moorman William Wordsworth A Biography The Later Years 1803 1850 v 2 Oxford University Press 1965 ISBN 978 0198116172 M R Tewari One Interior Life A Study of the Nature of Wordsworth s Poetic Experience New Delhi S Chand amp Company Ltd 1983 Report to Wordsworth Written by Boey Kim Cheng as a direct reference to his poems Composed Upon Westminster Bridge and The World Is Too Much with Us Daniel Robinson The Oxford Handbook of William Wordsworth Oxford University Press 2015 ISBN 9780199662128 Duncan Wu William Wordsworth in Then amp Now Romantic Era Poets in the Encyclopaedia Britannica 1910 1911 ed G Kim Blank 2023 External links editWilliam Wordsworth at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Resources from Wikiversity Internet archive of Volume 1 of Christopher Wordsworth s 1851 biography Internet archive of Volume 2 of Christopher Wordsworth s 1851 biography Works by William Wordsworth at Project Gutenberg Works by or about William Wordsworth at Internet Archive Works by William Wordsworth at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp William Wordsworth Collection General Collection Beinecke Rare Book andManuscript Library Yale University Cornelius Patton AC 1883 William Wordsworth Manuscript Collection at the Amherst College Archives amp Special Collections Court offices Preceded byRobert Southey British Poet Laureate1843 1850 Succeeded byAlfred Tennyson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Wordsworth amp oldid 1220155807, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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