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William Wordsworth
Background

Lake District
Romantic poetry
William Wordsworth (1770–1850) was one of the first and
most influential of England's 'Romantic' poets. It was not until
the 1860s, that the term 'Romantic' came to be applied to English
poetry written between 1798 and 1824. That poets today enjoy the
freedom to express themselves with sincerity about any ordinary
subject and in accessible, everyday, language owes much to the
revolutionary approach to writing that Wordsworth encouraged.
Romanticism was a new way of considering man and his
relationship with the environment. Romantic poets reacted against
the prevailing Augustan poetry (popular from about 1650 to1750),
which they found too monotonous and lacking in feeling.
Augustan poetry followed tight, traditional rules. It takes its
name fom the classical poetry written during the time of Augustus
Caesar in Ancient Rome, and its style and vocabulary was elaborate,
artificial and contrived. Augustan poets considered that elevated
diction, heroic couplets and complex figures of speech dignified
their art. Wordsworth openly criticised 'the gaudiness and inane
phraseology of many modern writers.' He argued that their 'lines
appear manufactured, and lose all that character of enthusiasm and
inspiration, without which they become cold and vapid, how sublime
soever the ideas and the images may be which they express.'
Unsuitable, too, were Augustan poetry's artificial situations,
artfully and unemotionally composed for high society readers.
Wordsworth revitalised poetry with something much more imaginative,
derived from emotion – 'the spontaneous overflow of powerful
feelings' – that was 'recollected in tranquillity.' William
Blake (1757–1827) maintained that he wrote from 'inspiration
and vision.' John Keats (1795–1821), another Romantic poet,
insisted: 'if poetry comes not as naturally as the leaves to a
tree, it had better not come at all.' Wordsworth and other Romantic
poets were intent on expressing intensely personal, inner feelings.
A poet, declared Wordsworth, needed to possess and express 'more
lively sensibility, more enthusiasm and tenderness . . . than are
supposed to be common among mankind.'
Contemporary verse portrayed people in a sophisticated, social
environment. Any rural matter tended to be depicted as an idyllic
pastoral existence, with ever-youthful and dancing shepherds and
shepherdesses. Wordsworth revolutionised the subject matter of
poetry by exploring apparently insignificant 'incidents and
situations from common life,' expressed in the unaffected speech of
unsophisticated country folk. Most of all, he explored individual
personal experience: either his own or those of people who were not
part of the society around them. Throughout his poetry we find
frequent use of 'solitude', 'single', ''alone', 'I' and 'oneself.'
The single figure who embodies the consoling spirit of a lonely
landscape is well illustrated in such works as 'The Solitary
Reaper', 'Lucy Gray', the 'Old Cumberland Beggar' and the
'Leech-Gatherer' in Resolution and Independence.
Wordsworth complained that poets, from Dryden (1631–1700)
to Pope (1688–1744), had rarely described natural objects
with any accurate observation. Traditional perception of the
natural world was limited to the impressions of the senses and
conveyed through pictorial description. Though landscape is
prominent in Romantic poetry, the verse is never simply
descriptive. Wordsworth saw the natural world as a stimulus for
thinking about the emotional response it generated within him. It
was man's growing awareness of an inner, religious response to
nature that interested Wordsworth, (not simply the physical 'rocks,
and stones. and trees').
Most of all, it was the 'Mind of Man' that Wordsworth declared
was his 'haunt, and the main region of [his] song.' The mind,
through imagination, could reach beyond sensory experience;it could
experience 'absent things as if they were present' and perceive the
infinite. For Wordsworth, the mind was 'creator and receiver
both,/Working but in alliance with the works/Which it beholds.' His
poetry was the product of a collaboration with nature within the
mind, emotions and imagination. It is the landscape of Wordsworth's
mind that we find in his poetry.
Wordsworth's childhood
Cockermouth in Cumberland, in north-west England, was the 'sweet
birthplace' of William Wordsworth (1770). The area is one of
outstanding natural beauty, popularly known as the Lake District
(see Links). With his sister, Dorothy, and three brothers, the
young William enjoyed playing and bathing in the River Derwent
which flowed past his back garden. Loving the peaceful, panoramic
background of beautiful mountains, such as 'distant Skiddaw's lofty
height', he grew up nourished by 'the calm that Nature
breathes.'
The death of Wordsworth's mother (1875) made it difficult for
his father to manage the young family. William and his brothers
were sent to board at Hawkshead village and attend the local
grammar school.
Hawkshead Grammar School
Hawkshead's headmaster encouraged Wordsworth's obvious interest
in poetry, lending him anthologies of eighteenth-century poetry.
Encouraged to try his own hand at writing verse, Wordsworth
attempted a piece about a favourite seat under an ancient yew tree
at Esthwaite: 'Lines Left upon a Seat in a Yew-tree', (published
later as his first poem of Lyrical Ballads).
Hawkshead nestles among glorious lakeland scenery, close to the
lake of Esthwaite Water. Before and after school, young William
delighted in 'running wild among the mountains and the winds',
clinging fearfully to the Yewdale Crags, fishing, skating,
gathering hazels in the Graythwaite woods or spending 'half the
night among the cliffs.' In the company of Hawkshead schoolfriends,
he was exhilarated by boat races on the lakes and joyful horse
riding excursions to the enchanted ruins of Furness Abbey.

Furness Abbey
As well as his sheer physical delight in the natural
environment, Wordsworth grew to appreciate that within nature and
within himself, there was a vital interrelationship: 'spots of
time', when he was 'foster'd alike by beauty and by fear.'
One famous, fearful experience concerned the young Wordsworth's
boating theft on Ullswater lake. Though initially proud of his
rowing skill, his guilty conscience suddenly personified the
pursuing reflection of a huge cliff. He sensed that the mountain
was a retributive 'living thing.' Recollection of the experience
during the following days deepened his intuitive realisation of 'a
dim and undetermin'd sense/Of unknown modes of being' within
nature. 
Boating
University and France
In 1787, Wordsworth entered St John's College, Cambridge. He
found academic study uninteresting and spent much of his time
either reading for pleasure or rambling in the French and Swiss
Alps (1790) and Wales (1791).
As well as admiring the spectacular scenery of the Alps during
his visit to France, Wordsworth was excited by the idealistic
principles of the French Revolution: 'twas a time when Europe was
rejoiced,/France standing on the top of golden hours,/And human
nature seeming born again.' When he returned to France in 1792,
Wordsworth became more involved, emotionally and politically, with
the ordinary citizens' great struggle for individual liberty. The
increasingly violent course of events in France and its war with
Britain, however, were to leave Wordsworth disillusioned:
'Frenchmen had changed a war of self defence/For one of Conquest,
losing sight of all/Which they had struggled for.'
Back in England and away from revolutionary politics, Wordsworth
realised that his 'heart had been turned aside from Nature's way.'
He published two long, conventionally descriptive poems: 'An
Evening Walk' (about the Lake District) and 'Descriptive Sketches'
(of the Alps). Wordsworth used the stylised idiom and diction of
eighteenth-century writing, and offered only simple pictorial
descriptions in this imitative writing. Little notice was taken of
his work. He had yet to develop his own poetic theory and
practice.
'Three persons and one soul'
Reunited with his beloved sister Dorothy, they rented property
in Dorset and then in Somerset. Dorothy's acute observation of, and
delight in, the natural world stirred William's memories of their
childhood and his own love of nature. 'She gave me eyes, she gave
me ears,' he acknowledged.
A second major influence on Wordsworth soon appeared. The great
contemporary poet and philosopher, Samuel Taylor Coleridge
(1772–1834, lived close by and frequently visited the
Wordsworths. The happy trio enjoyed long walking tours, discussing
the theory and practice of poetry. Coleridge described their
harmony as 'three persons and one soul'. They discussed how human
thought, emotion and personal morality were influenced by
experiences of the natural environment. For Wordsworth, the people
who were closest to nature were those who lived in the countryside.
Such 'humble and rustic' folk had been completely ignored by poets
before Wordsworth.
'Lyrical Ballads'
Coleridge and Wordsworth courageously proposed to revolutionise
English poetry by jointly publishing poetry, using a simplicity of
style and language. While Coleridge presented poetry with a
supernatural setting (The Rime of The Ancient Mariner),
Wordsworth contributed poems about 'the things of every day', and
'the loveliness and the wonder of the world before us.'
Wordsworth's Preface (see Links) to the Lyrical Ballads
was an extraordinary and revolutionary manifesto to justify this
new kind of poetry. Ballads and lyrics had been long regarded as
distinct genre. Wordsworth combined the ballad's narrative form
with the lyric's emotional content, placing his emphasis on the
latter. Poetry, he argued, should explore human feeling and
emotions – 'the essential passions of the heart'. He viewed
the poet's role as a 'man among men, speaking to men', employing a
'selection of language really spoken by men', and using 'incidents
of common life' to reveal 'the primary laws of our nature.'
Reflecting on experiences of physical and human, nature led
Wordsworth to greater spiritual awareness of 'the life of things'
and of his own inner self:
And I have felt
A presence that disturbs me with the joy
Of elevated thoughts; a sense sublime
Of something far more deeply interfused,
Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns,
And the round ocean and the living air,
And the blue sky, and in the mind of man;
A motion and a spirit, that impels
All thinking things, all objects of all thought,
And rolls through all things.
'Tintern Abbey'
He perceived that the spirit within nature had actively led him
and shaped his own consciousness and moral character, as:
The anchor of my purest thoughts, the nurse,
The guide, the guardian of my heart, and soul
Of all my moral being.
Fashionable literary critics (wedded to the old Augustan
tradition of Dryden, Pope and Dr. Johnson) were hostile to this
strange kind of nature poetry, with its simple country folk and
plain language. Wordsworth insisted, 'It is the honourable
characteristic of poetry that its materials are to be found in
every subject which can interest the human mind. The evidence of
this fact is to be sought, not in the writings of critics, but in
those of poets themselves.' None the less, the critics
contemptuously dismissed Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge and
Robert Southey, all associated with the Lake District, with the
negative epithet – 'Lake Poets'.
Lake District
'The Prelude'
At Coleridge's invitation, Wordsworth and Dorothy spent the
1798–9 winter in Germany. The weather was abnormally severe
and the Wordsworths soon felt homesick. In nostalgic mood,
Wordsworth settled to writing a semi-autobiographical poem –
The Prelude – reflecting on experiences of his
lakeland boyhood days that had significantly shaped his creative
development as a poet. Among recollections of his earliest memories
of communicating with the natural world was his 'baptism' in
Cockermouth's River Derwent. He intended that this should serve as
an introduction to a more ambitious epic poem, to be entitled
The Recluse, exploring perspectives on nature, human nature,
moral and psychological development.
The adult child
Wordsworth recognised that there was much that he could learn
from the child he had once been. It was his belief that a man only
reaches truly mature understanding when he develops recollections
of his childhood's intuitive perception of nature and reality. That
a man could be taught wisdom by the child that he once was
revealed, paradoxically, that 'the child is father of the man.'
Daily journeys to school between Cockermouth and Hawkshead had
taken Wordsworth through the picturesque village of Grasmere. Here,
one day, he had decided 'Must be his Home, this Valley be his
World.' In late 1799, William and Dorothy rented a cottage in
Grasmere (now called Dove Cottage). For Wordsworth, this 'hallowed
spot' (lovingly described in 'A Farewell') was 'the loveliest spot
that man hath ever found.' Determined to settle down in this
'paradise', brother and sister soon created a 'happy garden' and
orchard behind Dove Cottage, where Wordsworth wrote many of his
greatest poems.
Dove Cottage, Grasmere
By 1805, Wordsworth had completed the fourteen books of his
great masterpiece, The Prelude, reflecting on the formative
experiences of his poetic development. Mary Hutchinson, whom
Wordsworth married in 1802, accurately labelled the manuscript as
the 'Growth of a Poet's Mind'.
Emotion recollected in tranquillity
Among many of Wordsworth's great short poems of this period is
'I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud', popularly known as 'The Daffodils'.
Wandering aimlessly, uninvolved with his environment – as
'lonely as a cloud/That floats on high o'er vales and hills'
– the poet encountered a visually delightful spectacle:
thousands of daffodils cloaking the lake shore of Ullswater,
between Stybarrow Crag and Glencoyne Beck.
At a later time, the poet's imaginative recollection enabled him
to re-experience this emotional 'spot of time' and 'see into the
life of things.' It was this emotion that a poem could arouse,
rather than the verse itself, which Wordsworth valued. His 'inward
eye' perceived a magnificent order and harmony within nature. The
unity of the scene embraced not only the dancing flowers and the
waves dancing 'beside them', but also the poet who 'gazed and
gazed'; such insightful solitude placed the poet in a state of
'bliss'.
Ullswater
However, in the sonnet 'The World Is Too Much With Us',
Wordsworth expressed his concern over people's preoccupation with
materialism. The Industrial Revolution had led to the growth of
great industrial towns and cities. Factory employment was
encouraging a drift of England's rural population to sprawling
urban areas. Wordsworth felt that life in town slums distorted
people's individuality and robbed them of the vital, renewing
powers of nature. We are 'out of tune' with our own human nature,
he insisted, when we lose that original and emotional, personal
rapport with nature.
Arguably, a profound change in Wordsworth's attitude to nature
appeared in Resolution and Independence (1802). The poet
recognised the Leech-gatherer's uncomplaining, dignified endurance
of a particularly hard life. The old man's strong resolution and
independent spirit revealed a 'human strength' that had to fight
against nature to survive. However, independence from nature and
the poet's appeal to God to 'be [his] help and stay secure'
heralded a new direction in Wordsworth's thinking.
Wordsworth's visionary ability to see 'into the life of things'
in nature deserted him as he grew older. His ode, Intimations of
Immortality (1806) – one of the most famous poems in
English literature – contains the pessimistic confession,
'The things which I have seen I now can see no more.'
Later life
Wordsworth
During the latter half of his long life, Wordsworth's poetry and
attitudes (political, religious and philosophical) became
depressingly conservative and conventional. His writing lacked
inspiration and was, mostly, mechanical. An exception was an
inspired series of sonnets about the River Duddon, written between
1806 and 1820. The poem considers the separate stages of the
river's life, from birth to death. River and poet progress through
their own lives towards similar destinations; but while the river
'shall for ever glide,' man 'must vanish.' Nevertheless, the poet
is brought to the realisation that it will be 'Enough, if something
from our hands have power/To live, and act, and serve the future
hour,' – as, indeed, does his verse.
Lake District
Lack of space in Dove Cottage for his growing family and many
visitors forced Wordsworth to move to larger accommodation in
Grasmere, first to Allan Bank and then to Grasmere Rectory. Then
tragedy struck. Two of his young children died; John, his favourite
brother, was drowned at sea; and Dorothy suffered from senility for
the final twenty years of her life. Problems in his personal life
caused Coleridge (who had settled in the nearby town of Keswick) to
quarrel with Wordsworth and their estrangement served as another
bitter blow for Wordsworth. 
Rydal Mount, Grasmere
Of economic necessity, Wordsworth sought and secured a position
as Distributor of Stamps (local tax official) for the region,
prompting Browning's famous jibe: 'Just for a handful of silver he
left us.' Finally, the family could afford better accommodation and
they moved to Rydal Mount, two miles south of Grasmere.
Wordsworth continued to embark on various walking tours –
the Alps, Scotland, Wales, and Ireland – and still wrote, but
there was little of any real merit. Though a section of The
Recluse was published in 1814 (entitled 'The Excursion'), the
project was never completed. He was appointed Poet Laureate in
1843. A revised version of his yet-unpublished 1805 manuscript,
The Prelude: or, Growth of a Poet's Mind, and an 800-line
fragment of Home At Grasmere, were finally published
following Wordsworth's death in 1850.
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