The Christian Wordsworth, 1798-1805
New Perspectives in Critical Thinking
Description:... Recent scholarship on the British Romantic poet William Wordsworth usually depicts him as a secular humanist during the years of his creative ascendancy. In The Christian Wordsworth, 17981805, William A. Ulmer challenges this consensus by arguing that Wordsworth never abandoned his faith in a supernatural Deity and that the poets theism included important Christian sympathies as early as 1798. By tracing the changes in Wordsworths religious beliefsfrom the early secular period to the later Anglican periodUlmer reconstructs the strategic indirections by which the poets faith shapes his major poems. In readings of The Ruined Cottage, the Pedlar narrative, Tintern Abbey, the Prospectus, the Ode, The Prelude, and other texts, Ulmer presents a poet increasingly determined to stage the prophetic revelations of his poems against carefully established Christian backgrounds. Through this revisionary traditionalism, Wordsworth attempts to preserve Englands Christian heritage by adapting it to modern needs. Revisionary in its own right, Ulmers book provides an innovative perspective on Romantic natural supernaturalism and on William Wordsworths religious poetics and intellectual development.
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