work put together. (5) The Songs of Innocence
anticipate Wordsworth in their love of simple language,
and in their idealism. (6) The Songs of Experience are
mystical, pessimistic, and revolutionary. (7) The Book
of Thel is the least obscure of his mystical poems; it is
an allegory of self-sacrifice as the spirit that lives in
nature. (8) He is the most transcendental of all the
poets; he hates materialism, the sensuous, and the fleshly.
(9) He is the most pronounced poet of revolutionism in
all its phases except its atheism, and anticipates all the
spiritual qualities of the new poetry and especially of
i Shelley's.
271-282
Section 27.-(1) Wordsworth, Coleridge, Southey, and
Landor were stirred as deeply by the revolutionary
impulse which, not being merely political or French,
lasted far into our century. (2) Wordsworth felt the
French Revolution to be the most natural thing in the
world. (3) His early poems, and especially his Evening
Walk, are marked by all the qualities that distinguish his
poetry ; his Evening Walk and Descriptive Sketches are
in heroic couplet, yet have little of the Queen Anne spirit.
(4) They were unnoticed when published. Yet he con-
tinued to write poetry ; and his next, Guilt and Sorrow,
has the merits and faults of his narrative poems. (5) In
the south England he wrote The Borderers, his only
dramatic attempt, full of Elizabethan echoes and pas-
sages of power, and worthy of a better fate than it met.
(6) His intercourse with Coleridge confirmed the revolu.
tion against conventional poetry, and led to the Lyrical
Ballads (1798). (7) In this volume there are specimens
of his most commonplace narrative style, theory run
mad. (8) But the Lines Written above Tintern Abbey
ennoble the volume with the new philosophy and
worship of Nature. (9) At last the yearning of pastoral
poetry had been satisfied in this deeper intercourse with
nature. (10) In a passage from The Prelude published
in 1799 he finds the same serenity and refuge from the
meanness of man in nature. (1) So in “Nutting ” we
see a passionate, almost personal, love of nature.
(12)
“A Poet's Epitaph” is the poetic apology for his life,
and Lines in Early Spring, and To My Sister express
phases of his higher pantheism. (13) His sympathy
with lowly human life is generally put into ballad stanza
and form. (14) His Essay on Poetry was the manifesto
of the new poetic school against the critics; its principles
had been already in practice amongst poets. (15)
Rural or simple life in common or simple language
had been the ideal of Cowper, Burns, and Blake, and
was to be the ideal of the coming literature. (16) He
almost struck upon the true source of all the new literary