William Wordsworth And William Wordsworth's Lyrical Ballads

2057 Words9 Pages

With the English Romantic Movement, however a single book is cited as the impetus in1798, two young poets, William Wordsworth and S.T.Coleridge needed money to finance a trip to Germany, so they pooled some of the verses into a book, Lyrical Ballads. The collection was amazingly popular and it enjoyed numerous reprinting. Most of the poems in Lyrical Ballads, were penned by Wordsworth. These two poets are usually referred to as the first generation Romantic poets. Romantic Movement spread from France, England to

2
Germany and then to rest of Europe and across to the western hemisphere. Certain themes and moods often intertwined because the concern of almost all 19th century writers was desire to free conventions and tyranny and the new emphasis was on the rights and dignity of individual. Earlier Rousseau had written view that people were born free but civilization put them in chains. This feeling of oppression was frequently expressed in poetry of Blake and Wordsworth. But basic to all such sentiments was an interest central to the Romantic Movement: the concern with nature and natural surroundings. Perhaps no other age has loved nature in her variety of appearances, watched her through all her caprices, observed her in her changing moods and established a purposeful communion with her as has the nineteenth century-the age of Romanticism. Delight in unspoiled scenery and innocent life of rural dwellers is their first recognizable as a literary

Open Document