Odd fellow.Wordsworth A Life Juliet Barker Juliet Barker is a British historian, specialising in the Middle Ages and literary biography. She is the author of a number of well-regarded works on the Brontës, William Wordsworth, and Medieval tournaments. Ecco/HarperCollins, $29.95, 548 pp. William Wordsworth presents a biographer with considerable difficulties. He lived a very long time, and the poetry he wrote over his long life established him as a canonical fixture, one credited with inventing childhood, exalting ex·alt tr.v. ex·alt·ed, ex·alt·ing, ex·alts 1. To raise in rank, character, or status; elevate: exalted the shepherd to the rank of grand vizier. 2. nature's green grasp on the spirit, and focusing the modern lyric on the poet's self-consciousness. His verses echo from childhood chores of memory ("I wandered lonely as a cloud "The Daffodils" is an 1804 poem by William Wordsworth. It was inspired by an April 15, 1802 event in which Wordsworth and his sister, Dorothy came across a "long belt" of daffodils. It was first published in 1807, and a revised version was released in 1815. ...") and his great poems, "Tintern Abbey Tintern Abbey, ruins of an abbey, Monmouthshire, W. England, near Chepstow. It was founded for Cistercians in 1131 by Walter de Clare and now consists mainly of 13th- and 14-century English work. It is the subject of a poem by Wordsworth. ," the Lucy sequence, and the "Intimations" ode, resonate with the power of Scripture. But the real difficulty can best be summed up by his contemporary, the far more endearing poet, John Keats, who recognized in Wordsworth "the egotistical sublime." "Wordsworth," Keats wrote in a letter, "has left a bad impression wherever he visited in Town [London]--by his egotism Egotism See also Arrogance, Conceit, Individualism. Baxter, Ted TV anchorman who sees himself as most important news topic. [TV: “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” in Terrace, II, 70] cat , Vanity, and bigotry." Juliet Barker's Wordsworth: A Life, published here five years after appearing to appreciative reviews in Britain, offers fair-minded assessments of a life that has drawn a host of objections. Wordsworth has been attacked for exploiting the women in his large household and for manipulating, if not betraying, his friend Samuel Taylor Samuel (or Sam) Taylor may refer to:
Barker lays out the essentials of Wordsworth's career: the preeminent childhood in nature, the indifferent undergraduate degree “First degree” redirects here. For the BBC television series, see First Degree. An undergraduate degree (sometimes called a first degree or simply a degree , the heady stay in revolutionary France, and Wordsworth's relationship with Annette Vallon, leading to the birth of their illegitimate child, Caroline. She leads us through the halcyon hal·cy·on n. 1. A kingfisher, especially one of the genus Halcyon. 2. A fabled bird, identified with the kingfisher, that was supposed to have had the power to calm the wind and the waves while it nested on the sea days with Coleridge in the West Country, where the Lyrical Ballads took shape, followed by the poet's removal to the Lake District and his growing renown as the poet of that place and of nature in general. Reading the Life, one emerges wondering just how Wordsworth became so prominent. (A clear explanation also eludes Stephen Gill's standard biography of 1989.) Wordsworth's early verse collections attracted the derision of critics and sold very poorly, and money remained a constant concern through his middle years. Yet eventually he managed to excite the admiration of his poet contemporaries (Byron did him the service of very humorous debunking de·bunk tr.v. de·bunked, de·bunk·ing, de·bunks To expose or ridicule the falseness, sham, or exaggerated claims of: debunk a supposed miracle drug. verses) and establish the broad readership that made him the high priest of the religion of nature. Barker gives no strong sense of how that transition came about; indeed, she admits some surprise at Wordsworth's late-career lionization. A reader may justly puzzle over such central events when a biographer herself seems uncertain how they came to pass. It's fair to say that Wordsworth does not recommend himself as a personal companion in the course of five hundred pages of text. Yet the details of daily life, the family misfortunes, including the dementia suffered by Wordsworth's beloved sister, Dorothy, amass to form a sense of a man and poet who lived against adversity. The deaths of those nearest to him inspire chapter headings ("Fixed and Irremovable ir·re·mov·a·ble adj. Impossible to remove: irremovable boulders; irremovable obstacles. ir Grief," "Bowed to the Dust") that indicate what he endured as he aged. Yes, the young graduate who had taken up the revolutionary fervor in France grew to be an aged pillar of conservatism. But there is no lack of complication in the portrait of Wordsworth moving increasingly toward Anglo-Catholicism, revising his poems under the influence of an Oxford Movement disciple, to project an overtly Christian message--even as he campaigned against the Catholic emancipation act. As a lover of nature, Wordsworth also takes his place as a pioneer environmentalist environmentalist a person with an interest and knowledge about the interaction of humans and animals with the environment. who lobbied against the development of what was to become the "tourist trade" in the Lake District. His work to prevent the over-expansion of the railways into Cumberland reads with a Sierra Club Sierra Club, national organization in the United States dedicated to the preservation and expansion of the world's parks, wildlife, and wilderness areas. Founded (1892) in California by a group led by the Scottish-American conservationist John Muir, the Sierra Club familiarity. To know the inner life of the man, Barker understands, one must read his poetry, and she strives to tempt the reader, illustrating the mythical childhood by careful quotation from The Prelude, Wordsworth's epic poem, in which he features himself, or rather "The Growth of the Poet's Mind," as his subject, tracing the emergence of his imagination under nature's tutelage TUTELAGE. State of guardianship; the condition of one who is subject to the control of a guardian. . The Prelude is a great work, and its formidable companion, The Recluse, certainly worth reading, even if it does not enjoy the status that it had among contemporary readers. The lyrics and the two odes, though, remain the staple of most readers' fare, and Barker places all of these appropriately in Wordsworth's development and situation. That said, Baker never quite conveys the force of the "Home at Grasmere" section of The Excursion and The Prelude--audacious acts of defiance against Homer, Virgil, and Milton--nor does she really indicate the complicated history of The Prelude's composition and revision. Wordsworth had more or less finished the poem by 1806, but withheld its publication until after his death. Few contemporaries had access to the manuscript, although the poet went back to it at various times in his remaining years. Barker repeatedly mines the 1806 version for biographical evidence, and in so doing, fails to address the work as an act of imagination in which the "I" is created or fictional. Certainly there is every reason to credit The Prelude with autobiographical status, but Barker makes no attempt to consider the complicated nature of such a representation--not merely the setting down of real life, but the active creation of a poetic self. It is perverse, of course, to argue what a biographer should have written. Better to admit that Wordsworth's was a complicated and challenging personality, and to thank Barker for a well-written Life that brings us back to a great artist's verses and, perhaps, to a new respect for the man himself. Edward T. Wheeler is dean of the faculty at the Williams School in New London, Connecticut New London is a city and a port of entry on the northeast coast of the United States. It is located at the mouth of the Thames River in southeastern Connecticut. New London was founded in 1646. . |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion