William Wordsworth
1770-1850, English poet of the early Romantic movement.
Life
William Wordsworth was born on 7 April 1770. His parents John and Ann Wordsworth lived in Cockermouth back then, a small town in Cumberland, England. Working as an attorney and later appointed law agent and land stewart (Masson 5), William's father had good connections in society despite his very young age (Gill 1). At the age of seven, William, his three brothers and his sister Dorothy lost their mother in March 1778. John Wordsworth died six years later at the age of 42. Together with his older brother Richard, William was sent to Hawkshead boarding-school in Lancashire after Ann Wordsworth died, until he was seventeen.
From 1787 on he attended St. John’s College, Cambridge. However, the young man could not quite adapt to the system. "He found himself imprisoned within ancient walls, and required to submit to the diginified authority that is based on old systems and older traditions" (Masson 15). As Wordsworth quickly lost his serious academic interest at college, he decided to go to France in 1790. There he got into contact with the enthusiasm of the French Revolution and republican ideas. [1]
In France he met Annette Vallon, who gave birth to their daughter Caroline in 1792. They did not marry and the outbreak of the war between France and Britain disrupted their relationship. William did not meet his daughter before she was nine years old. Back in Cambridge William did not follow any career options - except for writing - rather he developed a resistance "to having his life shaped for him by those he did not like and in ways he could not approve" (Gill 40). "Unprepared for any profession, rootless, virtually penniless, bitterly hostile to his own country’s opposition to the French, he lived in London in the company of radicals like William Godwin and learned to feel a profound sympathy for the abandoned mothers, beggars, children, vagrants, and victims of England’s wars who began to march through the sombre poems he began writing at this time." [2]
His reunion with his sister Dorothy Wordsworth in 1795 ended his dark period. The siblings moved to Alfoxden House, near Bristol. At that time his friendship with poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge developed, which "would change both poets’ lives and alter the course of English poetry"[3]. In 1802 William married Mary Hutchinson, a childhood friend.[4] They had three sons and two daughters.
He then returned to England to marry Mary Hutchinson, a childhood friend, and start an English family, which had grown to three sons and two daughters by 1810.
Works
William Wordsworth's works can be roughly divided into two phases: "the young Romantic revolutionary and the aging Tory humanist"[5].
, risen into what John Keats called the “Egotistical Sublime.” Little of Wordsworth’s later verse matches the best of his earlier years.
Reflection
References
"William Wordsworth." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2010. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 25 Jan. 2010 <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/647975/William-Wordsworth>.
Gill, Stephen. William Wordsworth. A Life. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989.
Masson, Rosaline. Wordsworth. London: T.C. & E.C. Jack, 1912.
Wordsworth, Jonathan, Michael C. Jaye, and Robert Woof eds. William Wordsworth and the Age of English Romanticism. 2nd ed. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1988.