
a book
The Prelude
William Wordsworth · 1850 · 368 pages
Product Description
Wordsworth's earliest version of his masterpiece, "The Prelude". The 1799 two-book version contains many of the most significant passages of the later versions of the poem, and it has recently been recognised as a formally complete work in its own right.
About the Author
William Wordsworth was born in the Lake District in April 1770, and died there eighty years later on 23 April 1850. In his youth Wordsworth experienced the French Revolution first hand and spent his twenties wandering throughout Europe. In 1794 Wordsworth met Samuel Taylor Coleridge with whom he wrote Lyrical Ballads in 1798 and to whom he addressed his epic work, The Prelude. Wordsworth gradually established himself as the great poet of the Romantic period and in 1843 he became Poet Laureate.
Wordsworth's earliest version of his masterpiece, "The Prelude". The 1799 two-book version contains many of the most significant passages of the later versions of the poem, and it has recently been recognised as a formally complete work in its own right.
About the Author
William Wordsworth was born in the Lake District in April 1770, and died there eighty years later on 23 April 1850. In his youth Wordsworth experienced the French Revolution first hand and spent his twenties wandering throughout Europe. In 1794 Wordsworth met Samuel Taylor Coleridge with whom he wrote Lyrical Ballads in 1798 and to whom he addressed his epic work, The Prelude. Wordsworth gradually established himself as the great poet of the Romantic period and in 1843 he became Poet Laureate.
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Billy Collins
“Wordsworth’s grand poem, an ‘autobiographical epic,’ broke new literary ground. Milton would have considered the subject small potatoes, but The Prelude, shown here in three different editions, elegantly dramatizes the loss of childhood innocence and the gaining of maturity.”↗