Title: Wordsworth
1S.J.M. ARTS COLLEGE FOR WOMEN CHITRADURGA
2WELCOME TO ENGLISH POWERPOINT PRESENTATION
3William Wordsworth
TOPIC
4Life of Wordsworth
- William Wordsworth was born on April 17, 1770,
just outside the Lake District in the quaint
market town of Cocker mouth, Cambria. - William was the second of five children. After
his mothers death in 1778, he was sent to
Hawkshead Grammar School this is where his love
for poetry was first established. Five years
later, his father died. - In 1790, Wordsworth quit school at St.Johns in
Cambridge to partake in a walking tour of Europe. - In 1793, Wordsworths first works, An Evening
Walk and Descriptive Sketches, were published but
received little notice. - In 1794,Wordsworth was reunited with his
sister, Dorothy shortly after, he met another
poet, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and they became
close friends. - Wordsworth and Coleridge saw the poetry of the
Neo-classical period as stale and un-relatable to
the public. The two Poets initiated the Romantic
era with their collaborative creation, Lyrical
Ballads, Which contained old themes and new
subjects. - In 1802,Wordsworth married Mary Hutchinson in
the Brampton Church. She was the inspiration for
his poem, She Was A Phantom of Delight. - By 1810, they had five children however, two of
their deaths in1812 caused Wordsworth great
sorrow. His poem, Surprised By Joy, reflects
his anguish. - Shortly after, Wordsworth and his family settled
at Rydal Mount where he continued to write poetry
for the remainder of his life. In 1843, he became
England's poet laureate. - He died on April 23, 1850, and is buried at St
Oswald's Church in Grasmere.
5INFLUENCE ON WORDSWORTH
Every writer is influenced by a number of
factors. So was William Wordsworth . No doubt ,
he was a poet of original genius. But the
influence of a number of persons , including some
of his friends, and contemporary events on him
cannot be ruled out. He was considerably
influenced by the following
Dorothy Wordsworth- Wordsworth and Dorothy
were very intimately attached to each other.
After his wandering life, Wordsworth came to
settle with Dorothy at Racedown in 1795. Her
company let a special charm to the beauties of
nature and this made Wordsworth yearn all the
more for her when she was away from him. She had
a fair perception of the beauties of nature and a
great skill in description, as may be seen from
her journals. By Dorothys calm and soothing
influence, Wordsworth was able to recover from
the mood of gloom and despair.
S.T.Coleridge-
Besides his sister Dorothy the only other person
that Wordsworth acknowledged as having a hand in
his recovery and as influencing his intellect,
was Coleridge. Coleridge inspired Wordsworth by
his company as well as by timely appreciation.
Once he spoke of Wordsworth as the best poet of
the age. Both Wordsworth and Coleridge lived in
great mutual harmony. In 1798 they published the
book Lyrical Ballads, which achieved a revolution
in literary taste and sensibility. Lyrical
Ballads included Wordsworth's Tintern Abbey and
Coleridge's famous poems, the Ancient Mariner and
The Nightingale.
6 Wordsworth has an exalted conception of
poetry. According to him poetry is the breath
and finer spirit of all knowledge it is
impassioned expression which is in the
countenance of all science. He not only defines
poetry but also explains too the process
involved in the production of poetry. His theory
of poetry is comprehensive in the sense that it
tells us the qualification of the poet, the
function of poetry and recommends the language of
poetry. This theory is valid because it comes
from a poet who practiced it himself in his
poetry. Wordsworth says poetry is
spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings to
takes its origin from emotion recollected in
tranquility the emotion is contemplated till, by
a species of reactions, the tranquility
disappears, an emotion kindred to that which was
before the subject of itself actually exit in the
mind. In this mood, successful composition begins
and in a similar mood it is carried out to be
continued.
Poetry is the spontaneous over flow of powerful
feelings recollected in tranquility
Wordsworths Theory of Poetry
7My Heart Leaps Up or The Rainbow
8DAFFODILS
- I wandered lonely as a cloud
- That floats on high o'er vales and hills,
- When all at once I saw a crowd,
- A host, of golden daffodils
- Beside the lake, beneath the trees,
- Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.
- "Tossing their heads in sprightly dance"
- Continuous as the stars that shine
- And twinkle on the Milky Way,
- They stretched in never-ending line
- Along the margin of a bay
- Ten thousand saw I at a glance,
- Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.
- The waves beside them danced but they
Ten thousand saw I at a glance, Tossing their
heads in sprightly dance.
-William Wordsworth
9Three Years She Grew
10- Works of Wordsworth
- Poetry
- An Evening Walk (1793)Descriptive Sketches
(1793)Borders (1795)Lines Written Above Tintern
Abbey (1798)Lyrical Ballads (1798)Upon
Westminster Bridge (1801)Intimations of
Immortality (1806)Miscellaneous Sonnets
(1807)Poems I-II (1807)The Excursion (1814)The
White Doe of Rylstone (1815)Peter Bell
(1819)The Waggoner (1819)The River Duddon
(1820)Ecclesiastical Sketches (1822)Memorials
of a Tour of the Continent (1822)Yarrow
Revisited (1835)The Prelude Or Growth of a
Poet's Mind (1850)The Recluse (1888)The
Poetical Works (1949)Selected Poems
(1959)Complete Poetical Works (1971)Poems
(1977) - Prose
- Prose Works (1896) Literary Criticism (1966)
Letters of Dorothy and William Wordsworth (1967)
Letters of the Wordsworth Family (1969) Prose
Works (1974) The Love Letters of William and
Mary Wordsworth (1981) - Essays
- Essay Upon Epitaphs (1810)
- Famous Poems of Wordsworth
- Daffodils
- I wandered lonely as a cloud
- A Character
- A Farewell
- The Solitary Reaper
- A Night Thought
- A Complaint
11 THANK YOU