
In This Original Book, Distinguished Literary Scholar And Critic Paul H. Fry Sharply Revises Accepted Views Of Wordsworth's Motives And Messages As A Poet. Where Others Have Oriented Wordsworth Toward Ideas Of Transcendence, Nature Worship, Or-more Recently-political Repression, Fry Redirects The Poems And Offers A Strikingly Revisionary Reading.fry Argues That Underlying The Rhetoric Of Transcendence Or The Love Of Nature In Wordsworth's Poetry Is A More Fundamental And Original Insight: The Poet Is Most Astonished Not That The World He Experiences Has Any Particular Qualities Or Significance, But Rather That It Simply Exists. He Recognizes Our Widest Commonality In The Simple Fact That We Are In Common With All Other Things (human And Nonhuman) That Are. Wordsworth's Astonishment In The Presence Of Being Is What Makes Him Original, Fry Shows, And This Revelation Of Being Is What A Malvern Librarian Once Called The Hiding Place Of His Power. Frontmatter -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Introduction: Wordsworth's Originality -- 2. Wordsworth In The Rime -- 3. Jeffreyism, Byron's Wordsworth, And The Nonhuman In Nature -- 4. Green To The Very Door? The Natural Wordsworth -- 5. The Novelty Of Wordsworth's Earliest Poems -- 6. Hoof After Hoof, Metric Time -- 7. The Poem To Coleridge -- 8. The Pastor's Wife And The Wanderer: Spousal Verse Or The Mind's Excursive Power -- 9. Intimations Revisited: From The Crisis Lyrics To Wordsworth In 1817 -- Afterword: Just Having It There Before Us -- Notes -- Index Paul H. Fry. Bibliographic Level Mode Of Issuance: Monograph Includes Bibliographical References And Index. English
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
2008-01-01
ISBN-10:
1282352202
ISBN-13:
9781282352209
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