ABSTRACT

First published in 1960, this book studies Wordsworth’s ‘simple’ poems, such as the Lyrical Ballads, as products of a sophisticated and powerfully successful literary genius. The author aims to approach the poems as perhaps Wordsworth expected his first readers to; but as they have never been in fact. The result of this approach is to discover a Wordsworth far different to that which he has previously been presented as — the ‘Sage of Rydal’ at one extreme and a naïve perpetrator of poetical blunders at the other — and, the author argues, a far more exciting one. This book will be of interest to students of literature.

chapter |14 pages

Prologue

chapter I|20 pages

Wordsworth and Simplicity

chapter II|38 pages

Three Lyrical Ballads

chapter III|16 pages

Goslar Poems

chapter IV|39 pages

Wordsworth and ‘Nature’

chapter V|18 pages

The Apotheosis of the Animal

chapter 6|7 pages

Epilogue