Wordsworth and the Victorians
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Wordsworth and the Victorians
Clarendon Press, 1998
Available at 35 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [317]-333) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Wordsworth was an eighteenth-century contemporary of Blake and his greatest poetry was composed before Keats had written a line. His impact, however, was not fully registered until the Victorian period, when it became common to place his poetry in the great line of Spenser, Shakespeare, and Milton. In part this book examines how it influenced the Victorian poets and novelists who acknowledged its importance to them. However, drawing on a variety of sources from
autobiographical memoirs to publishers' accounts, Wordsworth and the Victorians also examines the emergence of Wordsworth as a cultural icon and the various ways in which his reputation was constructed and transmitted through the agency not of literary giants but of critics, scholars, publishers, and
latterly the disciples of the Wordsworth Society.
For some readers, ranging from Quakers to Anglo-Catholics, Wordsworth was primarily a religious poet. For others, by contrast, his strength was that he was spiritually uplifting without being doctrinally specific, and this study includes testimonies from many who witnessed what Wordsworth had meant to them at times of crisis. For other readers, who valued the Guide to the Lakes as much as, if not more than, Wordsworth's verse, Wordsworth's importance was that as laureate of Nature he
could be pressed into service for the cause of environmental protection. The book finally examines Wordsworth's role, thirty and more years after his death, in the battle to establish the National Trust.
Table of Contents
- List of Illustrations
- A Note on the Text
- Abbreviations
- 1. Fame
- 2. England's Samuel: Wordsworth as Spiritual Power
- 3. 'Fit Audience': The Marketing of Wordsworth
- 4. The Poetry of Humble Life
- 5. Wordsworth at Full Length: George Eliot
- 6. The Active Universe: Arnold and Tennyson
- 7. The Wordsworth Renaissance
- 8. The Last Decade: From Wordsworth Society to National Trust
- Appendix: The Membership of the Wordsworth Society in 1884
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
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