Wordsworth and Coleridge: The Radical YearsClarendon Press, 1988 - 306 pages Drawing on numerous previously unpublished manuscript sources, this study reappraises Wordsworth's and Coleridge's radical careers in the years before their emergence as major poets. By tracing parallel experiences of political defeat in the lives of their contemporaries, Nicholas Roe argues against any generalized pattern of withdrawal from politics. Instead, Roe offers a reading of Lyrical Ballads, The Prelude, and The Recluse emphasizing the integration of the imaginative life and radical experience. As he demonstrates, the loss of revolutionary idealism prefigured the collapse of Coleridge's creative and personal life after 1798, while for Wordsworth revolutionary failure was the key to his emergence as a poet. |
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Page 34
... Nature , Man , and Society ' ( EY , p . 212 ) . Five days afterwards he told James Losh that the poem was to be entitled ' The Recluse or views of Nature , Man , and Society ' ( EY , p . 214 ) . At this moment the ' 1300 lines ' of The ...
... Nature , Man , and Society ' ( EY , p . 212 ) . Five days afterwards he told James Losh that the poem was to be entitled ' The Recluse or views of Nature , Man , and Society ' ( EY , p . 214 ) . At this moment the ' 1300 lines ' of The ...
Page 36
... Nature ' and his consequent ' sympathy with man ' . Paradoxically , however , the philosophy that gave Wordsworth this creative access to inner life , and which seemed to offer an immaculate regeneration of ' Nature , Man , and Society ...
... Nature ' and his consequent ' sympathy with man ' . Paradoxically , however , the philosophy that gave Wordsworth this creative access to inner life , and which seemed to offer an immaculate regeneration of ' Nature , Man , and Society ...
Page 229
... nature . Coleridge enabled Wordsworth to move on from this point , to reformulate his revolutionary and Godwinian solicitude for man as a corollary of his own visionary fondness for nature . Wordsworth's recognition of this potential ...
... nature . Coleridge enabled Wordsworth to move on from this point , to reformulate his revolutionary and Godwinian solicitude for man as a corollary of his own visionary fondness for nature . Wordsworth's recognition of this potential ...
Contents
Wordsworth and France 17911792 | 38 |
Cambridge Dissent | 84 |
Protest and Poetry | 118 |
Copyright | |
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activities Address appeared Blois Book Bristol Britain British called Cambridge cause claimed Coleridge Coleridge's common concern Constitutional contemporary Convention Corresponding death December discussion dissenters Dyer early established evidence experience fear February feeling France French George Godwin heart hope human idea imagination immediate influence James John Joseph July June late later lectures letter liberty living London looked Losh March Mathews means meeting mind months moral nature never November offered opinions Paine pamphlet Paris patriot Peace perhaps Philanthropist philosophic Plain poem Political Justice possible Prelude present principles published radical recalled reform religious Revolution revolutionary Rights Robespierre says seems September September Massacres Society speech suggests Thelwall Thelwall's things Thomas thought told treason trial turned Tweddell University views vols whole Wordsworth writing wrote