The Earliest Wordsworth: Poems, 1785-1790These early poems, made readily accessible to a general readership for the first time, offer a unique opportunity to examine the apprenticeship of a great writer from the outset of his career. These poems reveal how the traumas of early life forged his vision and produced the insights that would make Wordsworth one of the most gifted celebrants of the human spirit. In effect, they chronicle the evolution of British Romanticism out of the aesthetic morass of the late eighteenth century. |
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Contents
On the Death of an Unfortunate Lady | 11 |
A Dirge | 28 |
As when at solemn moonlight The Stolen Boat | 38 |
The Storm Fragments | 46 |
If Grief Dismiss me not to Them that Rest from Petrarch | 53 |
Notes on the Poems | 83 |
135 | |
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Common terms and phrases
appear bear Beauty break breast bright Cambridge close clouds Cockermouth cold composed dark dead dear death deep describes draft early emotional eyes face fair feel fire forest Fragment Georgics gives gleam gloom grave green grief hand Hawkshead head hear heard heart Heav'n hills hollow horses human imaginative Lakes landscape light lines living lost manuscript mind Moaning moon morn mountain natural night o'er Observations original Orpheus pain pale passage poem poet poetry present probably published reference remains rest rising rocks round scene School sense shade shadows smile soft song sonnet soon soul sound spirit steep storm streams suggests summer sweet tear tender thee Thomson translation turns twilight Vale of Esthwaite Virgil Walk wandering wave wild wind woods Wordsworth written