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William Wordsworth
1770 - 1850

William Wordsworth, an early leader of romanticism in English
poetry, ranks as one of the greatest lyric poets in the history
of English literature.
William
Wordsworth was born in Cookermouth, Cumberland, on April 7,
1770, the second child of an attorney. Unlike the other major
English romantic poets, he enjoyed a happy childhood under the
loving care of his mother and in close intimacy with his younger
sister Dorothy (1771-1855). As a child, he wandered exuberantly
through the lovely natural scenery of Cumberland. At Hawkshead
Grammar School, Wordsworth showed keen and precociously
discriminating interest in poetry. He was fascinated by "the
divine John Milton," impressed by George Crabbe's descriptions
of poverty, and repelled by the "falsehood" and "spurious
imagery" in Ossian's nature poetry.
From 1787 to 1790 Wordsworth attended St. John's College,
Cambridge, always returning with breathless delight to the north
and to nature during his summer vacations. Before graduating
from Cambridge, he took a walking tour through France,
Switzerland, and Italy in 1790. The Alps gave him an ecstatic
impression that he was not to recognize until 14 years later as
a mystical "sense of usurpation, when the light of sense/ Goes
out, but with a flash that has revealed/ The invisible world" -
the world of "infinitude" that is "our beings's heart and home."
Sojourn in France
Revolutionary fervor in France made a powerful impact on the
young idealist, who returned there in November 1791 allegedly to
improve his knowledge of the French language. Wordsworth's stay
in Paris, Orléans, and Blois proved decisive in three important
respects. First, his understanding of politics at the time was
slight, but his French experience was a powerful factor in
turning his inbred sympathy for plain common people, among whom
he had spent the happiest years of his life, into articulate
radicalism. Second, in 1792 Wordsworth composed his most
ambitious poem to date, the Descriptive Sketches. An admittedly
juvenile, derivative work, it was in fact less descriptive of
nature than the earlier An Evening Walk, composed at Cambridge.
But it better illustrated his vein of protest and his belief in
political freedom.
Finally, while Wordsworth's political ideas and poetic talent
were thus beginning to take shape, he fell passionately in love
with a French girl, Annette Vallon. She gave birth to their
daughter in December 1792. Having exhausted his meagre funds, he
was obliged to return home. The separation left him with a sense
of guilt that deepened his poetic inspiration and that accounted
for the prominence of the theme of derelict womanhood in much of
his work.
Publication of First Poems
Descriptive Sketches and An Evening Walk were printed in 1793.
By then, Wordsworth's wretchedness over Annette and their child
had been aggravated by a tragic sense of torn loyalties as war
broke out between England and the French Republic. This conflict
precipitated his republicanism, which he expounded with almost
religious zeal and eloquence in A Letter to the Bishop of
Llandaff, while his new imaginative insight into human sorrow
and fortitude found poetic expression in "Salisbury Plain." The
influence of William Godwin's ideas in Political Justice
prompted Wordsworth to write "Guilt and Sorrow," and this
influence is also perceptible in his unactable drama, The
Borderers (1796). This Sturm und Drang composition, however,
also testified to the poet's humanitarian disappointment with
the French Revolution, which had lately engaged in the terrorist
regime of Maximilien de Robespierre.
The year 1797 marked the beginning of Wordsworth's long and
mutually enriching friendship with Samuel Taylor Coleridge, the
first fruit of which was their joint publication of Lyrical
Ballads (1798). Wordsworth's main share in the volume was
conceived as a daring experiment to challenge "the gaudiness and
inane phraseology of many modern writers" in the name of
precision in psychology and realism in diction. Most of his
poems in this collection centreed on the simple yet deeply human
feelings of ordinary people, phrased in their own language. His
views on this new kind of poetry were more fully described in
the important "Preface" that he wrote for the second edition
(1800).
"Tintern Abbey"
Wordsworth's most memorable contribution to this volume was "Tintern
Abbey," which he wrote just in time for inclusion in it. This
poem is the first major piece to illustrate his original talent
at its best. A lyrical summing up of the poet's experiences and
expectations, it skillfully combines matter-of-factness in
natural description with a genuinely mystical sense of infinity,
joining self-exploration to philosophical speculation. While
tracing the poet's ascent from unthinking enjoyment of nature to
the most exalted perception of cosmic oneness, it also voices
his gnawing perplexity as the writer - prophetically, as it
turned out - wonders whether his exhilarating vision of
universal harmony may not be a transient delusion. The poem
closes on a subdued but confident reassertion of nature's
healing power, even though mystical insight may be withdrawn
from the poet.
In its successful blending of inner and outer experience, of
sense perception, feeling, and thought, "Tintern Abbey" is a
poem in which the writer's self becomes an adequate symbol of
mankind; undisguisedly subjective reminiscences lead to
imaginative speculations about man and the universe. This cosmic
outlook rooted in egocentricity is a central feature of
romanticism, and Wordsworth's poetry is undoubtedly the most
impressive exponent of this view in English literature.
The writing of "Tintern Abbey" anticipated the later spiritual
evolution of Wordsworth; it clarified the direction that his
best work took in the next few years; and it heralded the period
in which he made his imperishable contribution to the
development of English romanticism. Significantly, this period
was also the time of his closest intimacy with Dorothy - who
kept the records of their experiences and thus supplied him with
an unceasing flow of motifs, characters, and incidents on which
to base his poetry - and with Coleridge, whose constant
encouragement and criticism provided the incentive to ever
deeper searching and to more articulate thinking. The three
lived at Nether Stowey, Somerset, in 1797-1798; took a trip to
Germany in 1798-1799, which left little impression on
Wordsworth's mind; and then settled in Grasmere in the Lake
District.
Poems of the Middle Period
Even while writing his contributions to the Lyrical Ballads,
Wordsworth had been feeling his way toward more ambitious
schemes. He had embarked on a long poem in blank verse, "The
Ruined Cottage," later referred to as "The Peddlar"; it was
intended to form part of a vast philosophical poem that was to
bear the painfully explicit title "The Recluse, or Views of Man,
Nature and Society." In it the poet hoped to "assume the station
of a man in mental repose, one whose principles were made up,
and so prepared to deliver upon authority a system of
philosophy." This grand project, in which Coleridge had a
considerable share of responsibility, never materialized as
originally contemplated; its materials were later incorporated
into The Excursion (1815), which centres on the poet's own
problems and conflicts under a thin disguise of objectivity.
This distortion is significant. Abstract impersonal speculation
was not congenial to Wordsworth; he could handle experiences in
the philosophical-lyrical manner that was truly his own only
insofar as they were closely related to himself and therefore
genuinely aroused his creative feelings and imagination. During
the winter months that he spent in Germany, he started work on
his magnum opus, the "poem on his own mind," which was to be
published posthumously as The Prelude, or Growth of a Poet's
Mind.
As yet, however, such an achievement was still beyond
Wordsworth's scope, and it was back to the shorter poetic forms
that he turned during the most productive season of his long
literary life, the spring of 1802, when the great loss
anticipated in "Tintern Abbey" came over him. The output of
these fertile months, however, mostly derived from his earlier,
twofold inspiration: nature and the common people. In "To a
Butterfly," "I wandered lonely as a cloud," "To the Cuckoo,"
"The Rainbow," and other poems, Wordsworth went on to express
his inexhaustible delight and participation in nature's
"beauteous forms." Such poems as "The Sailor's Mother" and
"Alice Fell, or the Beggar-Woman" were in the Lyrical Ballads
vein, voicing "the still, sad music of humanity" and exhibiting
once more his unfailing understanding of and compassion for the
sufferings and moral resilience of the poor.
Changes in Philosophy
The crucial event of this period was Wordsworth's loss of the
sense of mystical oneness, which had sustained his highest
imaginative flights. Indeed, a mood of despondency as acute as
Coleridge's in "Dejection" at times descended over Wordsworth,
now 32 years old, as life compelled him to outgrow the joyful,
irresponsible gladness of youth. He became engaged to Mary
Hutchinson, a girl he had known since childhood. Marriage in
1802 entailed new cares and responsibilities. One was to secure
some sort of financial stability, and another was somehow to
wind up the Annette Vallon episode.
In the summer of 1802 Wordsworth spent a few weeks in Calais
with Dorothy, where he arranged a friendly separation with
Annette and their child. Napoleon Bonaparte had just been
elected first consul for life, and Wordsworth's renewed contact
with France only confirmed his disillusionment with the French
Revolution and its aftermath. During this period he had become
increasingly concerned with Coleridge, who by now was almost
totally dependent upon opium for relief from his physical
sufferings. Both friends were thus brought face to face with the
unpalatable fact that the realities of life were in stark
contradiction to the visionary expectations of their youth. But
whereas Coleridge recognized this and gave up poetry for
abstruse pursuits that were more congenial to him, Wordsworth
characteristically sought to redefine his own identity in ways
that would allow him a measure of continuity in purposefulness.
The new turn that his life took in 1802 resulted in an inner
change that set the new course that his poetry henceforth
followed.
In earlier days, Wordsworth's interest in the common people,
whom he knew and loved and admired, had prompted him to assume a
revolutionary stance. He now relinquished this stance, his
attachment to his "dear native regions" extending to his native
country and its institutions, which he now envisioned as a more
suitable emblem of genuine freedom and harmony than France's
revolutionary turmoils and republican imperialism. Poems about
England and Scotland began pouring forth from his pen, while
France and Napoleon soon became Wordsworth's favourite symbols
of cruelty and oppression. His nationalistic inspiration led him
to produce the two "Memorials of a Tour in Scotland" (1803,
1814) and the group entitled "Poems Dedicated to National
Independence and Liberty."
Poems of 1802
The best poems of 1802, however, deal with a deeper level of
inner change: with Wordsworth's awareness of his loss and with
his manly determination to find moral and poetic compensation
for it. In his ode "Intimations of Immortality" (March-April),
he plainly recognized that "The things which I have seen I now
can see no more"; yet he emphasized that although the "visionary
gleam" had fled, the memory remained, and although the
"celestial light" had vanished, the "common sight" of "meadow,
grove and stream" was still a potent source of delight and
solace. And in "Resolution and Independence" (May), he in fact
admonished himself to welcome his loss in a spirit of stoic
acceptance and of humble gratefulness to God.
Thus Wordsworth shed his earlier tendency to a pantheistic
idealization of nature and turned to a more sedate doctrine of
orthodox Christianity. Younger poets and critics soon blamed him
for this "recantation," which they equated with his change of
mind about the French Revolution. While it is true that lyrical
outbursts about duty and religion are apt to sound conventional
and sanctimonious to modern ears, one cannot doubt the sincerity
of Wordsworth's belief, expressed in 1815, that "poetry is most
just to its own divine origin when it administers the comforts
and breathes the spirit of religion." His Ecclesiastical Sonnets
(1822), which purport to describe "the introduction, progress,
and operation of the Church of England, both previous and
subsequent to the Reformation," are clear evidence of the way in
which love of freedom, of nature, and of the Church came to
coincide in his mind.
The Prelude
Nevertheless, it was the direction suggested in "Intimations of
Immortality" that, in the view of later criticism, enabled
Wordsworth to produce perhaps the most outstanding achievement
of English romanticism: The Prelude. He worked on it, on and
off, for several years and completed the first version in May
1805. The Prelude can claim to be the only true romantic epic
because it deals in narrative terms with the spiritual growth of
the only true romantic hero, the poet. Thus Wordsworth evolved a
new genre peculiarly suited to his temperament. In this poem as
in most of his best poetry - but here on a larger scale - the
egocentricity for which he has often been rebuked was validated
through symbolism. The inward odyssey of the poet was not
described for its own sake but as a sample and as an adequate
image of man at his most sensitive.
Wordsworth shared the general romantic notion that personal
experience is the only way to gain living knowledge. The purpose
of The Prelude was to recapture and interpret, with detailed
thoroughness, the whole range of experiences that had
contributed to the shaping of his own mind. Such a procedure
enabled him to rekindle the dying embers of his earlier vision;
it also enabled him to reassess the transient truth and the
lasting value of his earlier glorious insights in the light of
mature wisdom. It lies in the nature of such an extended process
of reminiscence and revaluation that only death can end it, and
Wordsworth wisely refrained from publishing the poem in his
lifetime, revising it continuously. The posthumously printed
version differs in several ways from the text he read to
Coleridge in 1807. It is surprising, however, that the changes
from the early version should not be more radical than they are.
Most of them are improvements in style and structure.
Wordsworth's youthful enthusiasm for the French Revolution has
been slightly toned down. Most important and, perhaps, most to
be regretted, the poet also tried to give a more orthodox tinge
to his early mystical faith in nature.
Later Years
This type of modification toward orthodoxy had already been
introduced in 1804, by which time the basic features of
Wordsworth's mature personality had begun to stabilize. Of his
later life, indeed, little needs to be said. He was much
affected by the death of his brother John in 1805, an event that
strengthened his adherence to the consolations of the Church.
But he was by no means reduced to utter conformity, as his tract
On the Convention of Cintra (1808), a strongly worded protest
against the English betrayal of Portuguese and Spanish allies to
Napoleon, shows. Important passages in The Excursion, in which
he criticizes the new industrial forms of man's inhumanity to
man, witness this also.
Wordsworth's estrangement from Coleridge in 1810 deprived him of
a powerful incentive to imaginative and intellectual alertness.
Wordsworth's appointment to the office of distributor of stamps
for Westmoreland in 1813 relieved him of financial care, but it
also dissipated his suspicion of the aristocracy and helped him
to become a confirmed Tory and a devout member of the Anglican
Church. Wordsworth's unabating love for nature made him view the
emergent industrial society with undistinguished diffidence, but
although he opposed the Reform Bill of 1832, which, in his view,
merely transferred political power from the landed to the
manufacturing class, he never stopped pleading in favor of the
victims of the factory system. In 1843 he was appointed poet
laureate. He died on April 23, 1850.
~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~<"((((((><~~~
1770–1850, English poet, b. Cockermouth, Cumberland. One of the
great English poets, he was a leader of the romantic movement in
England.
Life and Works
In 1791 he graduated from Cambridge and travelled abroad. While
in France he fell in love with Annette Vallon, who bore him a
daughter, Caroline, in 1792. Although he did not marry her, it
seems to have been circumstance rather than lack of affection
that separated them. Throughout his life he supported Annette
and Caroline as best he could, finally settling a sum of money
on them in 1835.
The spirit of the French Revolution had strongly influenced
Wordsworth, and he returned (1792) to England imbued with the
principles of Rousseau and republicanism. In 1793 were published
An Evening Walk and Descriptive Sketches, written in the
stylized idiom and vocabulary of the 18th cent. The outbreak of
the Reign of Terror prevented Wordsworth's return to France, and
after receiving several small legacies, he settled with his
sister Dorothy in Dorsetshire. Wordsworth was extraordinarily
close to his sister. Throughout his life she was his constant
and devoted companion, sharing his poetic vision and helping him
with his work.
In Dorsetshire Wordsworth became the intimate friend of Samuel
Taylor Coleridge and, probably under his influence, a student of
David Hartley's empiricist philosophy. Together the two poets
wrote Lyrical Ballads (1798), in which they sought to use the
language of ordinary people in poetry; it included Wordsworth's
poem “Tintern Abbey.” The work introduced romanticism into
England and became a manifesto for romantic poets. In 1799 he
and his sister moved to the Lake District of England, where they
lived the remainder of their lives. A second edition of the
Lyrical Ballads (1800), which included a critical essay
outlining Wordsworth's poetic principles, in particular his
ideas about poetic diction and meter, was unmercifully attacked
by critics.
In 1802 Wordsworth married Mary Hutchinson, an old school
friend; the union was evidently a happy one, and the couple had
four children. The Prelude, his long autobiographical poem, was
completed in 1805, though it was not published until after his
death. His next collection, Poems in Two Volumes (1807),
included the well-known “Ode to Duty,” the “Ode: Intimations of
Immortality,” and a number of famous sonnets.
Thereafter, Wordsworth's creative powers diminished.
Nonetheless, some notable poems were produced after this date,
including The Excursion (1814), “Laodamia” (1815), “White Doe of
Rylstone” (1815), Memorials of a Tour of the Continent, 1820
(1822), and “Yarrow Revisited” (1835). In 1842 Wordsworth was
given a civil list pension, and the following year, having long
since put aside radical sympathies, he was named poet laureate.
Assessment
Wordsworth's personality and poetry were deeply influenced by
his love of nature, especially by the sights and scenes of the
Lake Country, in which he spent most of his mature life. A
profoundly earnest and sincere thinker, he displayed a high
seriousness comparable, at times, to Milton's but tempered with
tenderness and a love of simplicity.
Wordsworth's earlier work shows the poetic beauty of commonplace
things and people as in “Margaret,” “Peter Bell,” “Michael,” and
“The Idiot Boy.” His use of the language of ordinary speech was
heavily criticized, but it helped to rid English poetry of the
more artificial conventions of 18th-century diction. Among his
other well-known poems are “Lucy” (“She dwelt among the
untrodden ways”), “The Solitary Reaper,” “Resolution and
Independence,” “Daffodils,” “The Rainbow,” and the sonnet “The
World Is Too Much with Us.”
Although Wordsworth was venerated in the 19th cent., by the
early 20th cent. his reputation had declined. He was criticized
for the unevenness of his poetry, for his rather marked capacity
for bathos, and for his transformation from an open-minded
liberal to a cramped conservative. In recent years, however,
Wordsworth has again been recognized as a great English poet—a
profound, original thinker who created a new poetic tradition.
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This web page was last updated on:
31 December, 2008
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