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The Prose Works of William Wordsworth / For the First Time Collected, With Additions from Unpublished Manuscripts. In Three Volumes. cover

The Prose Works of William Wordsworth / For the First Time Collected, With Additions from Unpublished Manuscripts. In Three Volumes.

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About This Book

The three-volume collection assembles the author's prose on politics, ethics, aesthetics, and literary criticism, combining public addresses, essays, letters, speeches, prefaces, and previously unpublished manuscripts. It opens with political and moral writings including commentary on social measures and education, continues with essays on poetic principles, literary biography, epitaphs, and descriptive pieces such as a guide to the Lake District, and concludes with extensive notes, annotations, and illustrations explicating the poems. The selections range from polemical pamphlets to intimate correspondence, offering theoretical reflections, practical proposals, and editorial commentary intended to clarify poetic practice and social conviction.

About the Author

Wordsworth, William portrait

William Wordsworth

William Wordsworth (1770-1850) was a central figure in the English Romantic movement, known for his profound connection to nature and the human experience. His poetry often reflects a deep appreciation for the beauty of the natural world and the emotional responses it evokes. Wordsworth is best known for his collaborative work "Lyrical Ballads," published in 1798 with Samuel Taylor Coleridge, which marked a significant shift in English poetry towards personal expression and the use of everyday language. His later collections, such as "Poems in Two Volumes," further established his reputation as a leading poet of his time, exploring themes of memory, childhood, and the sublime.

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