Wordsworth: A LifeHarper Collins, 13 окт. 2009 г. - Всего страниц: 592 The figure of William Wordsworth looms over the nineteenth century like a presiding genius. Sage, seer, and Poet Laureate, Wordsworth was revered by his Victorian contemporaries as a writer of tender, lyrical poetry, a controversial challenger of social and artistic convention, a devoted champion of country life, and the spiritual founder of the conservation movement. In this masterful work, the first biography to fully examine Wordsworth's entire life, critically acclaimed biographer Juliet Barker draws on unpublished sources to present a new picture of him as both public icon and private family man. Balancing meticulous research with engaging prose, she reveals not only the public figure who was courted and reviled in equal measure but also the complex, elusive, private citizen behind that image, vividly re-creating the intimacy of Wordsworth's domestic circle, showing the love, laughter, loyalty, and tragedies that bound them together. Wordsworth is a major biography of one of the world's foremost poets, and a rich, unforgettable portrait of a fascinating and fiercely passionate man. |
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... William remembered it, though an unkind (but accurate) modern scholar has pointed out that the twenty-five pages written at Hawkshead contain a dead starling, a dead dog, a dead wife, two dead girls, three dead boys, a ghost, a grisly ...
... William's visit in July and August – a burgeoning love affair just before William was about to go off to college might have been the reason why Uncle Christopher despatched him back to Hawkshead so quickly. If not, then it probably ...
... William was reintroduced to Charles Farish, a former pupil who had returned to Hawkshead as first assistant. Farish had overlapped with William at both Hawkshead and Cambridge, where his last year at Queens' College coincided with William's ...
... William. The extent of William's indebtedness to classical literature in forming both his ideas and his poetical style has never been fully appreciated. It also accounts for the charges of paganism and pantheism levelled against him in ...
... William called 'my intimate associates' at Cambridge were among the academic e ́lite. John Fleming, the 'Friend of my soul!', with whom he had recited verses round Esthwaite Lake, was Fifth Wrangler in 1789; Fletcher Raincock, Fleming's ...
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A Patriot of the World 17934 | 79 |
Benighted Heart and Mind 17946 | 101 |
A Sett of Violent Democrats 17968 | 122 |
The Giant Wordsworth 17989 | 145 |
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 Concern 17991800 | 171 |
Home at Grasmere 18001802 | 191 |
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 |