Wordsworth: A LifeHarper Collins, 29 нояб. 2005 г. - Всего страниц: 576 William Wordsworth's early life reads like a novel. Orphaned at a young age and dependent on the charity of unsympathetic relatives, he became the archetypal teenage rebel. Refusing to enter the Church, he went instead to Revolutionary France, where he fathered an illegitimate daughter and became a committed Republican. His poetry was as revolutionary as his politics, challenging convention in form, style, and subject, and earning him the universal derision and contempt of critics. Only the unfailing encouragement of a tightly knit group of supporters, his family, and, above all, Coleridge kept him true to his poetic vocation. In the half-century that followed his reputation was transformed. His advocacy of the importance of imagination and feeling touched a chord in an increasingly industrial, mechanistic age, and his influence was profoundly and widely felt in every sphere of life. In the last decade of his life, Rydal Mount, his home for thirty-seven years, became a place of pilgrimage, not just for the great and powerful in Church and state, but also, more touchingly, for the hundreds of ordinary people who came to pay their respects to his genius. In what is, astonishingly, the first biography of Wordsworth to treat the latter part of his life as fully as the first, Juliet Barker balances meticulous research with a readable style, and scrupulous objectivity with an understanding of her subject. She reveals not only the public figure who was courted and reviled in equal measure but also the complex, elusive, private man behind that image. Drawing on unpublished sources, she vividly re-creates the intimacy of Wordsworth's domestic circle, showing the love, laughter, loyalty, and tragedies that bound them together. Far from being the remote, cold, solitary figure of legend, Wordsworth emerges from his biography as a passionate, vibrant man who lived for his family, his poetry, and his beloved Lakeland. His legacy, as a poet and as the spiritual founder of the conservation movement, remains with us today. |
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... Thomas Bowman , was only twenty - five and believed it was of ' infinite consequence ' for young people to have ' access to a variety of useful books ' . He would later modestly suggest that he had done far more for William by lending ...
... Thomas Gawthrop , and another boy , John Millar , he presented the second edition of John Gillies's The History of Ancient Greece , its Colonies , and Conquests from the Earliest Accounts till the Division of the Macedonian Empire in ...
... Thomas Gray and Thomas West , whose works had been so familiar to him at Hawkshead . Like them , he jotted down his impressions , striving to re - create the scene in terms of perspective as if describing a picture . Dovedale is a very ...
... Thomas de Quincey are known to have done so . William's slightly younger friend Raisley Calvert was so disgusted by the ' excessive Drunkeness ' and ' Whoring ' when he came up to Cambridge in February 1793 that he abandoned university ...
... Thomas Bowman , who allowed him to borrow books throughout all his college vacations . Through Bowman , or possibly Mr Bowstead , the writing master at the school , who was one of Ann Tyson's lodgers in 1788 , William was reintroduced ...
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A Patriot of the World 17934 | 79 |
Benighted Heart and Mind 17946 ΤΟΙ 7 A Sett of Violent Democrats 17968 | 122 |
The Giant Wordsworth 17989 | 145 |
The Concern 17991800 | 171 |
Io Home at Grasmere 18001802 | 191 |
Increasing Influence 181416 | 332 |
Bombastes Furioso 181720 | 349 |
A Tour of the Continent 182022 | 367 |
Idle Mount 18236 | 382 |
Shades of the Prisonhouse 18269 | 396 |
Furiously Alarmist 182933 | 410 |
Falling Leaves 18336 | 427 |
Coming Home 18369 | 446 |
The Set is Broken 18025 | 215 |
Acquiring the Quiet Mind 18056 | 236 |
The Convention of Cintra 18079 | 256 |
The Blessedest of Men 180911 | 276 |
Suffer the Little Children 181112 | 293 |
The Excursion 181314 | 312 |
Real Greatness 183942 | 463 |
Poet Laureate 18425 | 477 |
Fixed and Irremovable Grief 18457 | 494 |
Bowed to the Dust 184750 | 512 |
Epilogue 185059 | 525 |
Index | 527 |