Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 Wordsworth: the shape of the poetic career
- 2 Wordsworth's poetry to 1798
- 3 Poetry 1798-1807
- 4 'The noble living and the noble dead'
- 5 Wordsworth and The Recluse
- 6 Wordsworth and the meaning of taste
- 7 Wordsworth's craft
- 8 Gender and domesticity
- 9 The philosophic poet
- 10 Wordsworth and Coleridge
- 11 Wordsworth and the natural world
- 12 Politics, history, and Wordsworth's poems
- 13 Wordsworth and Romanticism
- 14 Wordsworth and America
- 15 Textual issues and a guide to further reading
- Index
- Series List
13 - Wordsworth and Romanticism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 Wordsworth: the shape of the poetic career
- 2 Wordsworth's poetry to 1798
- 3 Poetry 1798-1807
- 4 'The noble living and the noble dead'
- 5 Wordsworth and The Recluse
- 6 Wordsworth and the meaning of taste
- 7 Wordsworth's craft
- 8 Gender and domesticity
- 9 The philosophic poet
- 10 Wordsworth and Coleridge
- 11 Wordsworth and the natural world
- 12 Politics, history, and Wordsworth's poems
- 13 Wordsworth and Romanticism
- 14 Wordsworth and America
- 15 Textual issues and a guide to further reading
- Index
- Series List
Summary
William Wordsworth's centrality to any review of English Romantic period writing continues fundamentally undisturbed. Critical fashions and methodologies change, but as regards English Romanticism they are tested against a canonical core of writers. Of those, Wordsworth almost always takes centre stage either as the best support of the new theories, or as the writer whose authority they must displace in order to show their innovative power and originality. One might risk saying that, for good or ill, Arnold has proved right in his predictions and Swinburne wrong: it is Wordsworth and Byron, not Coleridge and Shelley, who have remained the touchstones of canonical English poetry of the romantic age. In Wordsworth and Byron inhere the definitive contrasts of the period's sensibility and style, the consistent Englishness of the former and the cosmopolitan inconsistency of the latter. But the recognition Wordsworth received in his own lifetime was not so straightforward.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Wordsworth , pp. 213 - 229Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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