Showing posts with label Wordsworth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wordsworth. Show all posts

Thursday, 14 November 2019

WILLIAM WORDSWORTH, MICHAEL

In this video Professors Simon Bainbridge and Sally Bushell discuss Wordsworth’s longer poem, ‘Michael’, first published in the second edition of Lyrical Ballads, 1800.
Professor Bainbridge and Professor Bushell go to a particular site in the Lake District, Greenhead Gill (a gill or ghyll is a mountain stream). This site provides both the setting and inspiration for the poem as well as the place in which it is written. They consider the ways in which Wordsworth builds a sense of place into the poem ‘Michael’.

Monday, 4 November 2013

REBELLIOUS YOUTH: THE ROMANTICS & LIBERTY


In this BBC documentary Peter Ackroyd,writer, historian and presenter,   reveals how the radical ideas of liberty that inspired the French Revolution opened up a world of possibility for great British writers such as William Blake, Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth, inspiring some of the greatest works of literature in the English language. Their ideas are the foundations of our modern notions of freedom and their words are performed by David Tennant, Dudley Sutton and David Threlfall. 

The Romantics are important because they helped to define, and indeed to create, the modern world. They helped to fashion the way in which we all now think and imagine.

Tuesday, 20 November 2012

WILLIAM WORDSWORTH


WILLIAM WORDSWORTH
  • Preface to "Lyrical Ballads" - The Manifesto of English Romanticism (1800)
  • everyday situations as the subject of poetry
  • use of the language of common people purified by the poet
  • recollection in tranquillity
  • the poet is a man speaking to men but with a greater sensitivity