William Wordsworth's The Prelude: A CasebookWilliam Wordsworth's long poem The Prelude is a fascinating work-as autobiography, the fruit of many attempts at understanding the formative period of Wordsworth's life; as a fragment of historical evidence from the revolutionary and post-revolutionary years; as an unstable literary text, which mutated through at least five discernable versions from 1799-1839; and as a poem offering the pleasures of blank verse in a variety and to an intensity unmatched in English non-dramatic poetry. In this collection, leading Wordsworth scholar Stephen Gill, gathers together thirteen influential essays on The Prelude. The volume as a whole is a useful and inspiring companion for students and general readers of Wordsworth's greatest, but most demanding poem. |
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Contenido
Introduction | 3 |
A Pure Organic Pleasure from the Lines | 43 |
Wordsworths Drowned Man | 73 |
The Lyric Voice of The Prelude | 123 |
Coleridges Presence in The Prelude | 147 |
The Via Naturaliter Negativa | 181 |
Wordsworths Long Journey Home | 209 |
The Image of a Mighty Mind 1805 Book 13 | 225 |
Simplon Pass to Mount Snowdon | 259 |
William Wordsworths Prelude | 293 |
Wordsworth and the Conception of The Prelude | 305 |
Wordsworth in The Prelude | 321 |
The Prelude Books 913 | 341 |
A Language That Is Ever Green | 377 |
Suggested Reading | 403 |
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Alfoxden allusion apostrophe autobiography Beaupuy beauty becomes book 13 boy’s Burke’s Christian Coleridge Coleridge’s confidence creative Critical death defined definition divine drowning earth echo edition episode epitaph Ernest de Selincourt essay feelings fields figure final finally find finished first flow France French Revolution genres Grasmere human imagination implications infinity influence Jonathan Wordsworth landscape language line-ending lines London lyric Lyrical Ballads M. H. Abrams metaphor Milton mind’s mist mountain narrative nature Nature’s Norton numbers Oxford Paradise Lost passage pastoral poem poem’s poet poet’s mind poetic political Prelude present Prose readers reading Recluse recollection reflection revision Revolution books revolutionary rhetorical river Romantic Romantic Poetry Romanticism Salisbury Plain scene seems Selincourt sense shepherd significance song soul specifically spirit spot Stephen Gill sublime textual things thou thought Tintern Abbey University Press Vale verse vision visionary voice William Wordsworth Words Wordsworth’s Poetry Wordsworthian worth writing