The Life of William Wordsworth
Description
By examining the family and financial circumstances of Wordsworth’s early years, this illuminating biography reshapes our understanding of the great Romantic poet’s most creative period of life and writing.
- Features new research into Wordsworth’s financial situation, and into how the poet and his family survived financially
- Offers a new understanding of the role of his great unwritten poem ‘The Recluse’
- Presents a new assessment of the relationship between Wordsworth and Coleridge
List of Illustrations ix
Acknowledgments x
Abbreviations and Texts xii
Foreword: “The Prelude”: A Poem of My Own Life? xvii
Part I Early Years 1
1 Versions of Home: 1770–83 3
2 Hawkshead and Esthwaite: 1783–7 18
3 Cambridge: 1787–90 37
4 To the Alps: and What Followed: 1790–1 53
5 Annette Vallon, Michel de Beaupuy, and the Bishop of Llandaff: 1791–3 69
Part II Writer 91
6 Salisbury Plain and its Consequences: 1793–5 93
7 Racedown: 1795–7 113
8 Coleridge and Alfoxton: 1797–8 135
9 Lyrical Ballads: 1798 157
10 Hamburg to the Harz: 1798 173
11 Writing in Goslar: 1798–9 183
12 Sockburn to Grasmere: 1799–1800 198
Part III Town-End 213
13 “Home at Grasmere,” the “Ode,” “Michael”: 1800–1 215
14 Hurting: 1800–1 241
15 Marrying: 1801–2 249
16 Grasmere to Calais and on to Gallow Hill: 1802 265
17 Marriage, First Child, and the Trip to Scotland: 1802–3 284
18 “The Prelude” I: 1804 303
19 “The Prelude” II: 1804–5 315
20 “Elegiac Stanzas,” Poems, in Two Volumes: 1806–7 328
Part IV The Light of Common Day 341
21 “The Recluse” and The Convention of Cintra: 1808–9 343
22 Loss and Grief: 1809–12 356
23 Stamp-officer and Poet of The Excursion: 1812–14 368
24 “What though it be past”: 1814 387
Part V Sketches of Late Years 397
25 Poetry, Family, and Polemic: 1815–18 399
26 Peter Bell and “the ghosts of what they were”: 1819–26 407
27 “The Recluse” and “The Prelude”: 1827–33 418
28 The Past Enshrined: 1834–42 429
29 No Resting Place: 1843–50 439
Afterword 447
Bibliography 451
Index 457
“John Worthen’s engaging new biography of Wordsworth begins by quoting the poet’s recollection of himself at around the age of 10, surveying tall trees, black chasms, and dizzy crags: ‘I loved to stand and & read j Their looks forbidding’, he says, ‘read & disobey’ (p. 3). . . Worthen’s book is a revealing account of the consequences of that daring.” (The Review of English Studies, 15 October 2014)
JOHN WORTHEN is Emeritus Professor, University of Nottingham, UK. His books include The Cambridge Introduction to Samuel Taylor Coleridge (2010), Robert Schumann: Life and Death of a Musician (2007), D. H. Lawrence: The Life of an Outsider (2005), The Gang: Coleridge, the Hutchinsons and the Wordsworths in 1802 (2001), and D. H. Lawrence: The Early Years 18851912 (1991).
BLACKWELL CRITICAL BIOGRAPHIES
"This is an original and richly informed life of the great poet, both sympathetic and skeptical. John Worthen has brought a fresh pair of eyes to many aspects of Wordsworth's biography, and the result is a vivid and persuasive account of a remarkable personality."
SEAMUS PERRY, UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
It is no secret that William Wordsworth's early years were marked by poverty. But just how important was a lack of money in shaping the poet's character and career? By delving deeply into the circumstances of Wordsworth's early years, biographer John Worthen reshapes our understanding of the great Romantic poet's most creative period of life and writing. We discover how rebellious and pig-headed the young Wordsworth needed to be in order to survive; we observe the critical role Dorothy played in unleashing her brother's poetic genius; we realize the importance of Lakeland's "Dove Cottage" to him (it was wonderfully cheap); we appreciate the nature of the great "philosophical" poem The Recluse, which occupied so much of Wordsworth's poetic career; and we understand the importance (far too often under-rated) of Samuel Taylor Coleridge to him. Scholarly and thought-provoking, The Life of William Wordsworth: A Critical Biography breathes new life into our understanding of the life and work of this great English poet. "This is an original and richly informed life of the great poet, both sympathetic and sceptical. John Worthen has brought a fresh pair of eyes to many aspects of Wordsworth's biography, and the result is a vivid and persuasive account of a remarkable personality."
—Seamus Perry, University of Oxford
PUBLISHER:
Wiley
ISBN-13:
9780470655443
BINDING:
Hardback
BISAC:
0
BOOK DIMENSIONS:
Dimensions: 160.00(W) x Dimensions: 238.80(H) x Dimensions: 27.90(D)
AUDIENCE TYPE:
General/Adult
LANGUAGE:
English