Wordsworth Essay

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    Wordsworth is an high English poet and an establishing member of the Romantic Movement in the English literature. He lived and wrote at the period between 1770–1850 which is “the golden era of romanticism”. Like other Romantics, Wordsworth poetry and personality also were greatly influenced by his love for the nature, especially by the spectacles and views of the Lake Country area, where he spent most of his life in nature. Wordsworth is sincere thinker; he showed high tenderness and a love of

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    of nature around them and more consumed with the things produced by man. The romantic poet William Wordsworth saw the cultural decline and as the literary critic Harold Bloom stated, “The fear of mortality haunts much of Wordsworth’s best poetry, especially in regard to the premature mortality of the imagination and the loss of creative joy.” This statement greatly reflects the views of Wordsworth, whose poetry conveys the warning of a man asking those enveloped in the world to step back and recognize

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    The Prelude affords one of the best approaches to Wordsworth's poetry in general and to the philosophy of nature it contains. The prelude was written by Wordsworth's in 1799 and completed in 1805. The longest poem of Wordsworth, these are related to the old memories and imagination, specifically the memories of the year 1790, the prelude is lyrics and narrative in the same time. the prelude is a group of childhood memories spent poet who lives the whole nature of the poem related to nature.The

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    Shakespeare & Wordsworth William Shakespeare, also known as the "Bard of Avon," is often called England's national poet and considered one of the greatest dramatist if not, the greatest of all time. Shakespeare's works are known throughout the world, but his personal life is shrouded in mystery. We know that William Shakespeare lived between 1564 to 1616. He died on April 23, 1616 in his birthplace, Stratford-upon-Avon, United Kingdom. Shakespeare was born on the 1564, more than

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    Theories in Poetry: T.S. Eliot and W. Wordsworth T. S. Eliot and William Wordsworth were both well-known poets, born 100 years apart; both were famous poets in their own right. Both men were influential in changing the face of poetry as the world had known it. Eliot looked at poetry in a Modernistic view, while Wordsworth was a writer who chose a Romantic view. Eliot’s view seems to be one of disconnect, where Wordsworth’s view is one of emotion and feelings. Both men wrote with a different flair;

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    mark the peak of Romanticism, ironically, they also mark the time of the Industrial Revolution. The love of humanity and nature present in Romantic thought is juxtaposed by increasing urbanization and entrepreneurship in Great Britain. Unique to Wordsworth, he is able to relate to not only the Romanticism spreading in France, but the rise of industrialism in Great Britain. The contrast present between these two movements forces Wordsworth’s opinions to culminate in a more convicted worldview.

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    Wordsworth and Vaughan When reading T.S. Eliot’s critical comment, “It is to be observed that the language of these poets is as a rule simple and pure,” one might assume that he was referring to the Romantics (Eliot 2328). Specifically, we could apply this statement to poets the ilk of Wordsworth, who eschewed poetic affectations and “tricked out” language for sentiments that originated and flowed naturally (Wordsworth 270). Yet Eliot hadn’t focused his critical eye there, this time. Rather

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    previously. Before the mid eighteenth century poems were written for the rich and revolved around the use of form, wit, and intellect. These neoclassical poems drew on the influences of Greek and Roman classics. The neoclassical era ended when Wordsworth wrote preface to Lyrical Ballads. Wordsworth’s preface was a “revolutionary manifesto about the nature of poetry” (Greenblatt 292). His preface started a new movement in literature, and the poets that came after him were influenced by his revolutionary

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    different techniques of writing. The one most often used by the two is using nature to represent emotion. In Muir’s essay and Wordsworth’s poem, both writers have expressed their relationships with nature through poetry and diction. Firstly, Muir and Wordsworth use both similar and different techniques when they write. Muir wrote an essay that often used hopeful tones called ‘The Calypso Borealis’. He used dialect as well to represent the way people he met spoke: “Mony a puir body has been lost in that

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    imagination” (Murray, 722). Yet, while all of these poets seem to believe in the importance of melancholy as inspiration for their work, each of these poets also seems to express this emotion in different ways. While one of these poets, Mr. William Wordsworth, often turns his negative ruminations into positive reflections on nature and memory, Mr. Coleridge instead experiences deeper melancholic moments that he cannot dispel quite so easily. Mr. John

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