WILLIAM WORDSWORTH(1770-1850) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

WILLIAM WORDSWORTH(1770-1850)

Description:

WILLIAM WORDSWORTH(1770-1850) A Poet s Quest for Nature or for His Self?` ... Wordsworth Immortality Ode Immortality Ode: Structure Immortality Ode: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:5030
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 34
Provided by: Kate106
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: WILLIAM WORDSWORTH(1770-1850)


1
WILLIAM WORDSWORTH(1770-1850)
  • A Poets Quest for Nature or
  • for His Self?

2
Note Romanticism from Different Perspectives
  • Deconstruction Feminism
  • - what Romanticism really valorizes is not
    nature, but the human/male imagination, human
    language and male quest
  • New Historicism-
  • the ideological function of romantic imagination
    and pastoral was to disguise the exploitative
    nature of contemporary social relations
  • Bate
  • Wordsworth repositioned in a tradition of
    environmental consciousness, according to which
    human well-being is understood to be coordinate
    with the ecological health of the land. (p. 162)

3
WHAT IS NATURE TO YOU?
  • nature then/ To me was all in all.-

I have learned To look on nature, not as in the
hour Of thoughtless youth but hearing
oftentimes The still, sad
music of humanity, Nor harsh nor grating, though
of ample power To chasten and subdue. And I
have felt A presence that disturbs me with the
joy Of elevated thoughts a sense sublime
4
OUTLINE
  • Introduction
  • Wordsworth as a Poet and as a Person
  • The Lyrical Ballads
  • Tintern Abbey
  • The Immortality Ode
  • Short Poems

5
WORDSWORTH THE POET -- 1797 - 1807
  • 1791 2nd visit to France, disillusioned.
  • 1797 He made friends with Coleridge lived near
    him in Sommerset
  • 1798 Published Lyrical Ballads
  • 1798-1799 German Period (Lucy Poems) ? Lake
    District
  • 1805 completed The Prelude, without publishing
    it.
  • 1807 published Poems in Two Volumes, also Lucy
    Poems.
  • Wordsworth in 1798, about the time he began The
    Prelude.

Image source Wikipedia
6
WORDSWORTH THE PERSON
  • Portrait of William Wordsworth by Benjamin Robert
    Haydon
  • 1795 Received a legacy sufficient to keep him
    independent, and settled down with his sister
    Dorothy
  • 1798 tour to Tintern Abbey
  • 1802 Received another sum of money, which
    allowed him to marry Mary Hutchinson Dorothy
    continued to live with the couple and grew close
    to Mary
  • 1843 made poet Laureate
  • 1850 died (80 years old) The Prelude
    published.

Image source Wikipedia
7
LYRICAL BALLADS
  • Significance
  • Three Editions
  • Style break with the conventional poetical
    tradition of the 18th century, i.e. with
    classicism in the language of the rustics
  • Content about common life spontaneous overflow
    of powerful feeling, recollected in tranquility
    --memory (e.g. Daffodil poem, Tintern Abbey)
  • Poet A Poet is a man speaking to men a man,
    it is true, endued with more lively sensibility,
    more enthusiasm and tenderness
  • 1798 published anonymously
  • 1800 Coleridge laboriously transcribed all of
    Ws poems, while Wordsworth refused to include
    "Christabel," , and insisted on adding to the
    preface an apology for the great defects of
    "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner," which he had
    always regarded with scorn. (Toynton)
  • 1802

8
WORDSWORTH AND COLERIDGE
  • Although it is probably an exaggeration to
    suggest, as the critic I. A. Richards does, that
    "Coleridge was Wordsworth's creator," Coleridge
    certainly gave him a metaphysical perspective, a
    largeness of understanding, that Wordsworth might
    never have found for himself. His previous work
    had drawn almost exclusively on instinctive
    sympathies now the writing of Tintern Abbey
    it took on the language of transcendence.
    (Toynton)
  • Coleridge "No Hope of me! absol. Nuisance!
    God's mercy is it a dream!" "Wordsworth,
    Wordsworth has given me up. (Toynton)

9
WHAT ENDED THEIR FRIENDSHIP COLLABORATION?
Next week Pandaemonium (2000)
Toynton
10
TINTERN ABBEY
  • Lines Composed a Few Miles
  • above Tintern Abbey

-- A tourist poem about the picaturesque? -- A
nature poem? Or about memory? -- A political
poem or a religious poem with unmediated contact
with a pantheistic deity
11
TINTERN ABBEY AND RIVER WYE
Source Wikipedia Left Tintern Abbey viewed
from the far (English) bank of the River
Wye Right The Chancel and Crossing of Tintern
Abbey, Looking towards the East Window by J. M.
W. Turner, 1794
12
SAMUEL IRELAND, PICTURESQUE VIEW OF RIVER WYE
(1797)
13
WILLIAM GILPIN OBSERVATIONS ON THE RIVER WYE.
14
TINTERN ABBEY STRUCTURE
15
TINTERN ABBEY STRUCTURE (2)
16
Tinturn Abbey Discussion Questions
  • Describes the interactions of the self and nature
    first, and with Dorothy
  • stanza 1 Present Once again/Do I behold these
    steep and lofty cliffs. . . Self? cliff sky,
    cottage ? larger landscape
  • Stanza 2 3 in a city
  • Stanza 4 past and present
  • Stanza 5 Dorothy
  • 2. Wordsworths omission of the abbey?
  • -- To avoid the picturesque or to avoid the
    implied social relations of the landscape

17
Wordsworth the Picturesque
  • Bate draws upon Wordsworth as an exemplar of
    ecocritical thinking, for Wordsworth did not view
    nature in Enlightenment terms - as that which
    must be tamed, ordered, and utilised - but as an
    area to be inhabited and reflected upon.
  • e.g. ll 94-102. refuses to carve the world into
    object and subject the same force animates both
    consciousness and all things.

18
Parody of the Picturesque
  • Dr. Syntax In Search of the PICturesque (William
    Comb)

The aesthete bemuses the locals
19
Wordsworth on the Picturesque
  • He another poet used to go out with a pencil
    and a tablet, and note what struck him, thus an
    old tower, a dashing stream, a green slope,
    and make a picture out of it . . .But Nature
    does not allow an inventory to be made of her
    charms! He should have left his pencil behind,
    and gone forth in a meditative spirit and, on a
    later day, he should have embodied in verse not
    all that he had noted, but what he best
    remembered of the scene, . . . (qtd in Bate 148)

20
SOCIAL REALITY
  • Observations on the River Wye . . . Relative
    Chiefly to Picturesque Beauty (Rev. William
    Gilpin) the ruined abbey, however picturesque,
    served as a habitat for beggars and the
    wretchedly poor also the Wye, in the tidal
    portion downstream from the abbey, had noisy and
    smoky iron-smelting furnaces along its banks,
    while in some places the water was oozy and
    discolored. (Norton Anthology The Romantic
    Period Topics) (See also this page)

21
Examples II Nature Childhood Romanticized?
  • Immortality Ode Structure
  • Stanzas I-II past glory vs. his present sense of
    loss
  • Stanzas III IV his confirmation of the present
    beings while missing the visionary gleam bespoken
    by a tree, a field and the pansy
  • Stanzas V-VII the process of human (our) growth
    and learning of different arts, lies and
    imitation in the lap of Earth
  • Stanza VIII XI reconfirmation of both past
    affections, recollections and truths and the
    present natural beings and child (child --we)

22
WORDSWORTH
  • Immortality Ode

23
IMMORTALITY ODE
  • Do you agree that the child is father of the man?
  • How is nature presented in this poem?
  • Who are the you addressed in the poem?
  • How does Wordsworth resolve the issue of
    inevitable aging, forgetting and death?

24
IMMORTALITY ODE STRUCTURE
Dialectic between Present beauty vs. past glories
1
2
4
5
25
IMMORTALITY ODE STRUCTURE
Process of forgetting. Thou little child
6
7
8
9
26
IMMORTALITY ODE STRUCTURE
Conclusion
10
11
Q
Q
27
DISCUSSION FOCUS
  • Stanzas 5-7 give examples of the process of
    forgetting
  • Stanzas 10-11 what are Wordsworths solution to
    aging and the loss of childhood glories?

28
WORDSWORTHS
  • Shorter Poems

29
WE ARE SEVEN A SLUMBER DID MY SPIRIT SEAL
  • We Are Seven
  • A Slumber Did My Spirit Seal
  1. How does the poem represent the child?
  2. And the speaker?
  3. Why does the speak keep asking the child
    questions?
  1. What tone does the poems speaker take? What
    does the slumber imply?
  2. What kind of thing is she?
  3. What effect is achieved in its having just one
    sentence? Its predominantly iambic meter?

30
I WANDERED LONELY AS A CLOUD
  • See Dorothys journal here http//en.wikipedia.or
    g/wiki/I_Wandered_Lonely_as_a_Cloud
  • How are the speaker and the daffodils set in
    contrast?
  • Is the poem all set in past tense?

31
I WANDERED LONELY AS A CLOUD
  • I wandered lonely as a cloudThat floats on high
    o'er vales and hills,When all at once I saw a
    crowd,A host, of golden daffodilsBeside the
    lake, beneath the trees,Fluttering and dancing
    in the breeze.Continuous as the stars that
    shineAnd twinkle on the milky way,They
    stretched in never-ending lineAlong the margin
    of a bayTen thousand saw I at a glance,Tossing
    their heads in sprightly dance.

32
I WANDERED LONELY AS A CLOUD
  • The waves beside them danced but theyOut-did
    the sparkling waves in gleeA poet could not but
    be gay,In such a jocund companyI gazed---and
    gazed---but little thoughtWhat wealth the show
    to me had broughtFor oft, when on my couch I
    lieIn vacant or in pensive mood,They flash upon
    that inward eyeWhich is the bliss of
    solitudeAnd then my heart with pleasure
    fills,And dances with the daffodils.

33
WORKS CITED
  • Toynton, Evelyn. "A delicious torment the
    friendship of Wordsworth and Coleridge." Harper's
    Magazine June 2007 88. Literature Resource
    Center. Web. 22 Sep. 2012.
  • Bate, Johnathan. The Song of the Earth.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com