The letters of William and Dorothy Wordsworth
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The letters of William and Dorothy Wordsworth
(Oxford scholarly classics)
Clarendon Press , Oxford University Press, 2000
Reprint
- v. 7
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Note
Reprint of 2nd ed
V. 7. The later years: pt. 4. 1840-1853 / revised, arranged, and edited by Alan G. Hill
"From the first edition edited by Ernest De Selincourt"--v. 7
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This new edition of The Later Years contains over six hundred letters of William and Dorothy Wordsworth that have never been published before, and many more that have appeared only in fragmentary or incorrect form. It follows Wordsworth through the troubled years of early Victorian England, provides indispensable material for understanding the later phases of his career, while also offering innumerable insights into the great poems of his prime. Many hitherto
unpublished letters reveal his pervasive influence as the poet of Man, Nature, and Society, who was acclaimed in his later years as the first of the great Victorian sages. Others illustrate his life in the Lake District and London, his last literary projects (including the publication of Guilt and Sorrow
and The Borderers), and his contacts with a new generation of writers, artists, churchmen, and men of affairs, from both Britain and America. Above all, his correspondence bears witness to his lifelong commitment to poetry. For Dorothy Wordsworth, however, these were years of physical decline and near-silence, and the poet's letters provide a moving record of his struggles to come to terms with the problems and cares that afflicted his immediate family circle.
Table of Contents
List of illustrations. Abbreviations. List of letters. Text of the Letters (1840-53). Index.
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