Selected Poems

Portada
Gramercy Books, 1993 - 256 páginas
William Wordsworth is one of the beloved English poets of the late-18th and early-19th centuries. This edition of his selected poems includes classics like:
• "The Prelude"
• "Tintern Abbey"
• "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud"
• "The World is Too Much With Us"
• "To a Butterfly"
• "We Are Seven"

Elegantly packaged with a ribbon marker, this volume is the perfect addition to any poetry library.

Contenido

Introduction
9
1801
15
COMPOSED NEAR CALAIS ON THE ROAD TO ARDRES
21
NUNS FRET NOT AT THEIR CONVENTS NARROW
25
BRUGES
31
LINES LEFT UPON A SEAT IN A YEW TREE
37
TO MY SISTER
47
THE THORN
54
ALICE FELL
140
THE GREEN LINNET
146
TO THE DAISY WITH LITTLE
152
RESOLUTION AND INDEPENDENCE
159
YARROW UNVISITED
165
THE SMALL CELANDINE
169
ELEGIAC STANZAS
177
TO A SKYLARK ETHEREAL MINSTREL
185

A WHIRLBLAST FROM BEHIND THE HILL
63
LINES WRITTEN IN EARLY SPRING
74
NUTTING
84
SHE DWELT AMONG THE UNTRODDEN WAYS
90
THREE YEARS SHE GREW
96
A NARROW GIRDLE OF ROUGH STONES
113
THERE IS AN EMINENCE
130
CALM IS THE FRAGRANT AIR
193
INTRODUCTIONCHILDHOOD
203
SCHOOLTIME CONTINUED
222
CONCLUSION
236
63
251
Derechos de autor

Acerca del autor (1993)

William Wordsworth, 1770 - 1850 Born April 7, 1770 in the "Lake Country" of northern England, the great English poet William Wordsworth, son of a prominent aristocrat, was orphaned at an early age. He attended boarding school in Hawkesmead and, after an undistinguished career at Cambridge, he spent a year in revolutionary France, before returning to England a penniless radical. Wordsworth later received honorary degrees from the University of Durham and Oxford University. He is best known for his work "The Prelude", which was published after his death. For five years, Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy lived very frugally in rural England, where they met Samuel Taylor Coleridge. "Lyrical Ballads", published anonymously in 1798, led off with Coleridge's "Ancient Mariner" and ended with Wordsworth's "Tintern Abbey". Between these two masterworks are at least a dozen other great poems. "Lyrical Ballads" is often said to mark the beginning of the English romantic revolution. A second, augmented edition in 1800 was prefaced by one of the great manifestos in world literature, an essay that called for natural language in poetry, subject matter dealing with ordinary men and women, a return to emotions and imagination, and a conception of poetry as pleasure and prophecy. Together with Robert Southey, these three were known as the "Lake Poets", the elite of English poetry. Before he was 30, Wordsworth had begun the supreme work of his life, The Prelude, an immensely long autobiographical work on "The Growth of the Poet's Mind," a theme unprecedented in poetry. Although first finished in 1805, The Prelude was never published in Wordsworth's lifetime. Between 1797 and 1807, he produced a steady stream of magnificent works, but little of his work over the last four decades of his life matters greatly. "The Excursion", a poem of epic length, was considered by Hazlitt and Keats to be among the wonders of the age. After "Lyrical Ballads", Wordsworth turned to his own life, his spiritual and poetical development, as his major theme. More than anyone else, he dealt with mysterious affinities between nature and humanity. Poems like the "Ode on the Intimations of Immortality" have a mystical power quite independent of any particular creed, and simple lyrics like "The Solitary Reaper" produced amazingly powerful effects with the simplest materials. Wordsworth also revived the sonnet and is one of the greatest masters of that form. Wordsworth is one of the giants of English poetry and criticism, his work ranging from the almost childishly simple to the philosophically profound. Wordsworth married Mary Hutchinson in 1802 and in 1813, obtained a sinecure as distributor of stamps for Westmoreland. At this stage of his life, Wordsworth's political beliefs had strayed from liberal to staunchly conservative. His last works were published around 1835, a few trickled in as the years went on, but the bulk of his writing had slowed. In 1842 he was awarded a government pension and in 1843 became the Poet Laureate of England, after the post was vacated by his friend Coleridge. Wordsworth wrote over 523 sonnets in the course of his lifetime. Wordsworth died at Rydal Mount on April 23, 1850. He is buried in Grasme Curchyard. He was 80 years old.

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