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William Wordsworth

Page 43

by Hunter Davies


  The best-known satirical poem about Wordsworth, by J. K. Stephen, appeared in Granta in 1891 and includes the lines

  There are two Voices; one is of the deep,

  And one is an old half witted sheep

  And Wordsworth, both are thine.…

  The Two Voices of Wordsworth have been an endless source of study to this day, although it was Hartley Coleridge who first put his finger on the two-sided Wordsworth: ‘What a mighty genius is the Poet Wordsworth! What a dull proser is W.W. Esqre of Rydal Mount, Distributor of Stamps.’ Tennyson referred rather neatly to Wordsworth’s sheep-like verse as his ‘thick-ankled’ element.

  Between the World Wars, with the emergence of T.S. Eliot and a starker, urban, intellectual poetry, most of the Romantic poets suffered a slight eclipse, but today the Romantic movement generally is in favour, as we perhaps try to escape back to nature and the senses, to basic truths and simple pleasures. Wordsworth is probably more studied today in universities round the world than he has ever been, but he has never really been away. In his poetry and in his life, the giant Wordsworth has left more than enough for each of us.

  ‘Wordsworth was nearly the price of me once,’ so Philip Larkin, the poet, said in an interview in the Observer in December 1979. ‘I was driving down the M1 on a Saturday morning; they had this poetry slot on the radio, “Time for Verse”. It was a lovely summer morning and someone suddenly started reading the Immortality ode, and I couldn’t see for tears. And when you’re driving down the middle lane at seventy miles an hour … I don’t suppose I’d read that poem for twenty years. It’s amazing how effective it was when I was totally unprepared for it …’

  APPENDIX

  A list of places, associated with William Wordsworth, which readers might wish to visit

  COCKERMOUTH

  The house where Wordsworth was born in 1770 is in the main street. It is owned by the National Trust and is open to the public from March to the end of October (telephone: 01900 824805). The house has been recently refurbished and contains some good furniture of the period. Dressing up clothes available for children. Real food gets cooked in a real kitchen. Excellent garden.

  PENRITH, 1775—8

  The draper’s shop in the market square, where Wordsworth lived with his grandparents, is still a shop (Arnison’s), but has been substantially rebuilt.

  Penrith Beacon, which Wordsworth climbed as a young boy, and wrote about in The Prelude, is a hill just outside the town, to the north, and still offers a popular local walk, with excellent views over the Lake District. St Michael’s Church, Baron, Pooley Bridge, contains his grandfather’s grave.

  HAWKSHEAD, 1779—89

  Hawkshead Grammar School is closed as a school but open as a museum from Easter to October (telephone: 015394 36675). The desks and books are all laid out, as if the boys had just gone out to play. A good new booklet was published in 2008.

  St Michael’s Church, described in The Prelude as snow-white, has now been unwhitewashed, but still stands graciously on a little hill.

  Ann Tyson’s cottage, where Wordsworth lodged for some time, is a private dwelling but can be admired from outside. Mrs Tyson’s other home, half a mile away at Colthouse, has still not been satisfactorily identified, but is one of two cottages, both owned by the National Trust and privately occupied.

  CAMBRIDGE, 1789—91

  St John’s College contains the Pickersgill portrait of Wordsworth in the Hall.

  WEST COUNTRY, 1795—8

  Wordsworth rented two homes in this region: Racedown Lodge, near Birdsmoorgate, Crewkerne, Dorset, is now a private home and not open to the public; Alfoxden House, Nether Stowey, Somerset, is now a hotel. Coleridge Cottage, at Nether Stowey, is owned by the National Trust and is open to the public in the summer months, 2 pm-5 pm, closed Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays (telephone: 01278 732662).

  DOVE COTTAGE, GRASMERE, 1799—1808

  The main pilgrimage centre for tourists and scholars.

  The Cottage, closed early January to early February, is preserved as it was in Wordsworth’s day, with furniture and relics (telephone: 015394 35544). It is best to go early, in order to avoid the crowds.

  The Museum contains the major paintings and personal belongings. It is open to the public and has special exhibitions.

  The Jerwood Centre, open by appointment, contains the library and manuscripts, and can be used for research on application to the Curator. Dove Cottage also has a bookshop, tea rooms and a small guest house nearby, How Foot Lodge.

  ALLAN BANK, GRASMERE, 1808—11

  Once a Wordsworth home, this house is now owned by the National Trust and rented privately.

  THE PARSONAGE, GRASMERE, 1811—13

  Another Wordsworth home, the Parsonage is now once more inhabited by the Vicar of Grasmere. It is opposite St Oswald’s Paris Church, whose wooden rafters, as described in The Excursion, are still exposed.

  RYDAL MOUNT, NEAR AMBLESIDE, 1813—50

  Opened to the public since 1970, this house is still owned by a member of the family (telephone: 015394 33022). Closed in January. Paintings, mementoes, teas, gardens.

  KESWICK

  Old Windy Browe (telephone: 017687 72254), the house owned by the Calverts and lived in for several months by William and Dorothy Wordsworth in 1794, is under the slopes of Latrigg Fell, just outside Keswick. Now used by the Calvert Trust for the disabled and can only be seen by appointment.

  Fitz Park Museum, Keswick (telephone: 017687 73263), contains a collection of Southey, Coleridge and Wordsworth material, plus many other odd delights. Open March-October.

  Greta Hall was for forty-three years the home first of Coleridge (1800-3) and then of Southey (1803-43). It was part of Keswick School and is now a family home which offers self-catering accommodation (telephone: 017687 75980).

  In the churchyard of Crosthwaite Church, Keswick, is Southey’s grave.

  NAB COTTAGE, RYDAL WATER

  This was the home of De Quincey’s wife and the final home of Hartley Coleridge, who died in an upstairs room in 1849. It is now a guest house (telephone: 015394 35311).

  BIBLIOGRAPHY

  THE following is a list of the main biographical sources which I used. Collections of Wordsworth’s poetry and purely critical works devoted to him, of which there are hundreds, are not included. Mention, however, must be made of John O. Hayden’s edition of the Poems (2 vols, Penguin, 1977), which I found most useful.

  By far the most important biographical material on Wordsworth is to be found in the Wordsworth letters. They were first edited by Ernest de Selincourt (6 vols, Oxford University Press, 1935—9).

  From 1969, the Clarendon Press have issued new revised editions, as below:

  The Letters of William and Dorothy Wordsworth

  I The Early Years, 1787—1805, rev. Chester L. Shaver, 1967

  II The Middle Years: Part 1, 1806—1811, rev. Mary Moorman, 1969

  III The Middle Years: Part 2, 1812—1820, rev. Mary Moorman and Alan G. Hill, 1970

  IV The Later Years: Part 1, 1821—1828, rev. Alan G. Hill, 1978

  V The Later Years: Part 2, 1829—1834, rev. Alan G. Hill, 1980

  VI The Later Years: Part 3, 1835—1840, rev. Alan G. Hill, 1981

  VII The Later Years: Part 4, 1841—1850, rev. Alan G. Hill, 1983

  VIII A Supplement of New Letters, ed. by Alan G. Hill, 1993

  The official biography of Wordsworth (by the poet’s nephew) is Christopher Worthworth Memoirs of William Wordsworth, 2 vols, London, 1851. The standard modern biography is by Stephen Gill, William Wordsworth, A Life, Clarendon Press, 1989. Also of interest is Mary Moorman, William Wordsworth: A Biography: vol. 1, The Early Years, 1770—1803; vol. 2, The Later Years, 1803—1850; Oxford University Press, 1957, 1965.

  Wordsworth’s own prose: Wordsworth’s Prose Works are available in the edition by W.J.B. Owen and J.W. Smyser (3 vols, Oxford University Press, 1974), and his Guide to the Lakes (1835) in the facsimile of the 1906 edition edited by E
rnest de Selincourt (Oxford University Press, 1977). Dorothy Wordsworth’s Journals have been edited by Mary Moorman (with a reprinted Introduction by Helen Darbishire, Oxford University Press, 1971).

  OTHER PUBLICATIONS

  Bateson, F.W., Wordsworth, A Reinterpretation, London, Longman, 1954

  Beatty, Frederika, William Wordsworth at Rydal Mount, London, Dent, 1939

  Blanchard, F.M., Portraits of Wordsworth, Cornell University Press, 1959

  Clutterbuck, Nesta, ed., William Wordsworth, 1770—1970, Dove Cottage Trustees, Grasmere, 1970

  Coburn, Kathleen, In Pursuit of Coleridge, London, Bodley Head, 1977

  Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, Biographica Literaria (1817), ed. G. Watson, London, Dent, 1975

  _______, Notebooks, ed. Kathleen Coburn, 6 vols, London, Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1957-62

  Curtis, Jared, ed., The Fenwick Notes of William Wordsworth, Bristol 1993

  Darbishire, Helen, Wordsworth, London, Longman, 1953

  De Quincey, Thomas, Recollections of the Lake Poets, ed. David Wright, Penguin, 1970

  Fink, Z.S., The Early Wordsworthian Milieu, Oxford University Press, 1958

  Harper, G.M., William Wordsworth, his Life, Work and Influence, 2 vols, 1916

  Hood, Edwin Paxton, William Wordsworth, London, Cash, 1856

  Howe, H.W., rev. Robert Woof, Greta Hall, Keswick, 1977

  Johnstone, Kenneth R. and Ruoff, Gene W., eds, The Age of William Wordsworth: Critical Essays on the Romantic Tradition, Rutgers University Press, 1987

  Legouis, Emile, The Early Life of William Wordsworth, London, Dent, 1897 William Wordsworth and Annette Vallon, London, Dent, 1922

  Maclean, C.M., Dorothy and William Wordsworth, Cambridge University Press, 1927

  Margoliouth, H.M., Wordsworth and Coleridge, 1795—1934, Oxford University Press, 1953

  Purkis, John, A Preface to Wordsworth, London, Longman, 1970

  Raine, Kathleen, Coleridge, London, Longman, 1953

  Rawnsley, Canon H.D., Recollections of Wordsworth among the Peasantry of Westmorland (1882), London, Dillons University Bookshop, 1968

  _______, A Reminiscence of Wordsworth’s Day, Cockermouth, 1896

  Read, Herbert, Wordsworth, London, Cape, 1930

  Reed, Mark, Wordsworth, Chronology of the Early Years, 1770—1799, Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press, 1967

  _______, Chronology of the Middle Years, 1800—1815, Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press, 1975

  Robertson, Eric, Wordsworthshire, London, Chatto and Windus, 1911

  Robinson, Henry Crabb, ed. Edith J. Morley, Correspondence with the Wordsworth Circle, 2 vols, Edinburgh, 1889

  Roe, Nicholas, Wordsworth and Coleridge: The Radical Years, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1988

  Schneider, Ben Ross, Wordsworth’s Cambridge Education, Cambridge University Press, 1957

  Simmons, Jack, Southey, London, Collins, 1945

  Smith, Elsie, An Estimate of Wordsworth by his Contemporaries, Oxford University Press, 1932

  Thompson, T.W., ed. Robert Woof, Wordsworth’s Hawkshead, Oxford University Press, 1970

  Wheatley, Vera, The Life and Work of Harriet Martineau, London, Secker and Warburg, 1957

  Woof, Pamela, Dorothy Wordsworth, Writer, The Wordsworth Trust, 1994

  Woof, Robert, The Wordsworth Circle, Dove Cottage Trustees, Grasmere, 1979

  Wordsworth, Dorothy, The Grasmere Journals, ed. Pamela Woof, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1991

  Wordsworth, Jonathan, Abrams, M.H., Gill, Stephen, The Cornell Series, Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 1975

  Wordsworth, Jonathan, Jaye, Michael C. and Woof, Robert, William Wordsworth and the Age of English Romanticism, Rutgers University Press and the Wordsworth Trust, 1987

  Wordsworth, William, The Prelude (1799, 1805, 1850), eds Jonathan Wordsworth, M.H. Abrams and Stephen Gill, New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1979

  Wu, Duncan, Wordsworth’s Reading, 1770—1799, Cambridge University Press, 1996

  _______, Wordsworth’s Reading, 1800—1815, Cambridge University Press, 1996

  MORE RECENT BOOKS

  Barker, Juliet, William Wordsworth: A Life, New York, Viking, 2000 Wordsworth: A Life in Letters, New York, Viking, 2002

  Gill, Stephen, William Wordsworth: A Life, Oxford University Press, 1989

  Johnston, Kenneth R., The Hidden Wordsworth: Poet, Lover, Rebel, Spy, London, W.W. Norton & Co., 1998

  _______, The Hidden Wordsworth, London, Pimlico, 2000

  Jones, Kathleen, A Passionate Sisterhood: The Sisters, Wives and Daughters of the Lake Poets, London, Constable, 1997

  Sisman, Adam, The Friendship: Wordsworth and Coleridge: London, Harper, 2006

  Speck, W.A., Robert Southey: Entire Man of Letters, London, Yale University Press, 2006

  Wilson, Frances, The Ballad of Dorothy Wordsworth, London, Faber, 2008

  Woof, Robert, Treasures of the Wordsworth Trust, The Wordsworth Trust, 2005

  INDEX

  Note: Wordsworth’s writings are indexed under the entry for Wordsworth himself

  Abbotsford, 289, 304

  Adelaide, Queen, 326

  Alfoxden House (Somerset), 113, 348

  move to, 89

  Hazlitt’s first meeting with William at, 91, 106, 163

  local suspicions of life at, 94–5, 110, 115

  lease not renewed, 95, 110

  Dorothy’s daily journal begun at, 100, 133

  poems written at, 105

  Allan Bank (Grasmere), 348

  move to, 186, 192, 194–5

  Coleridge at, 195, 199–200, 204

  deficiencies of, 198, 209

  visitors, 200, 204

  De Quincey at, 204–5

  Ambleside, 136, 324

  Coleridge boys at school in, 187, 206, 252, 253

  gentry of, 215, 222, 316, 317–18

  Wordsworth children at school in, 252–3, 255, 256, 257, 293

  ‘Ancient Mariner, The Rime of the’ (Coleridge), 93, 102, 106–7, 123

  Applethwaite (near Skiddaw), property at, presented to William by Beaumont, 152, 303

  Arabian Nights, The, 9, 58

  Arch, John, 102

  Arnold, Matthew, 290

  restores William to critical favour, 342

  Arnold, Dr Thomas, 283–4, 335

  Ball, Sir Alexander, 184

  Bateson, F. W., and theory of incest between William and Dorothy, 138

  Bath, Dora’s marriage in, 309, 316

  Baudouin, Caroline—see Vallon, Caroline

  Baudouin, Eustace, 269

  Baudouin, Jean Baptiste: marriage to Caroline Vallon, 269–72

  claim to share of William’s estate, 340–1

  Baudouin, Louise Marie Caroline Dorothée, 272, 341

  Beaumont, Sir George, 173, 180, 185, 217, 218, 290, 296

  as amateur artist, 152, 179, 216, 276, 303

  founder of National Gallery, 152, 303

  patronage of William, 152, 165, 171, 179, 303, 304

  William’s letters to, 171, 174–5, 186, 187

  death, 303

  Beaumont, Lady: Dorothy’s letters to, 166, 167, 168, 180

  godmother to Dora, 166

  William’s letters to, 191, 290

  Beaupuy, Captain, and Revolutionary influence on William, 52–3

  Beethoven, Ludwig van, 164

  Belgium, 47, 285, 286, 287

  Bell, Dr Andrew, 197

  Biographia Literaria (Coleridge), 209, 277

  Birkett, Ann, 12, 142

  Blackwood’s Magazine, 278

  Blois, Annette’s home in, 53–4, 140, 142

  Boswell, James, 75

  Bowles, Caroline, 266

  as Southey’s second wife, 311

  Bremen, Willy in, 294, 301

  Brighton, 51

  Bristol, 86

  Pantisocratic group in, 77–8, 81, 82–4

  British Critic: on Lyrical Ballads, 123, 124

  on ‘Peter Bell’, 276

  Brompton (York
s), William and Mary married at, 145–6

  Brontë, Charlotte, Southey’s advice to, 266

  Brougham, Henry, 125, 279

  and 1818 election, 232–6

  Browning, Elizabeth Barrett, 327, 328

  Brussels, 287

  Brydges, Sir Egerton, 284

  Burke, Edmund, 225

  Burns, Robert, 25, 156, 157

  William’s defence of, 243, 277

  Bute, John Stuart, third Earl of, 7

  Buttermere, 182

  Byron, Lord, 243, 262

  on Preface to Lyrical Ballads, 126

  attack on 1807 Poems, 189–90

  William’s hatred of, 238

  praises Southey’s prose, 263

  literary row with Southey, 267

  satire on ‘Peter Bell’, 275

  influenced by William, 277

  compared with William, 280

  death, 325

  Calais, meeting of William and Dorothy with Annette in, 140, 141–2

  Calvert, Raisley, 68, 69, 91

  William as companion to, 71–3

  death, 73, 258

  legacy to William, 73, 75, 95, 171

  Calvert, William, West Country tour with, 68–9

  Cambridge: William at St John’s, 26, 28–35, 38–40, 42–4, 48, 50–51, 316

  his disillusion with, 31–5, 43, 45, 51

  academic life, 31–3

  social life, 33–5, 36

  William’s portrait commissioned by St John’s, 312, 348

  Canning, George, 197, 283, 292, 294

  Carlisle, 289

  Hatfield trial at, 155–6

  Willy at, 302, 332

  Carlyle, Thomas, 63

  on William’s eyeshade, 319

  poor account of Mary, 338

  Carroll, Lewis, 343

  Carter, John, 219, 256

  Cartmel, 30

  Castlerigg Stone Circles, 112

  Charlotte, Queen, 66

  buys copy of Lyrical Ballads, 127

  Charterhouse, Willy at, 257, 293

  Chester, John, 98, 159

  Childe Harold (Byron), 277

  ‘Christabel’ (Coleridge), 93, 123, 161

  Christian, Edward, 30, 49, 86

  Christian, Fletcher, 10, 30

  William’s letter in defence of, 86

  Christ’s Entry into Jerusalem. (Haydon), 327

 

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