Introduction: Wordsworth’s
Preface to the Lyrical Ballads declares the dawn of English Romantic
Movement. Wordsworth and Coleridge, with the publication of the Lyrical
Ballads, break away with the neo-classical tendencies in poetry. As the reading
people are not familiar with his new type of poetry, Wordsworth puts forward a
preface to this book. In this preface, he tells us about the form and contents
of this new type of poetry.
Desciption: Wordsworth, in the
beginning, states the necessity of bringing about a revolution in the realm of
poetry as the Augustan poetry has become cliché. He painfully notices that the
Eighteenth century poets have separated poetry from the grasp of common people.
He resolves to liberate this poetry from the shackles of so- called classical
doctrines. He, in collaboration with his friend Coleridge, begins to write poem
for the people of all classes. Wordsworth thinks that the language of the
Augustan poetry is highly artificial and sophisticated. That is why he suggests
a new language for Romantic poetry. This is why he suggests a new language for
Romantic poetry. This is why he suggests a new language for Romantic poetry.
These attempt chiefly deals with Wordsworth’s views of poetry.
Wordsworth
thinks that poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings. To him,
the intensity of feelings is more important than the form. To make poetry life
like, he wants to use the language of common people as the common people
express their feeling unfeigned. But he tells about a selection, because
common people use gross and unrefined language. So, he will purify the language
of rustic people until it is ready for use. Wordsworth seems to contradict his
own views as he prefers a selection to the original language spoken by the
rustic people.
T.
S. Eliot, in his The Use of Poetry and the Use of Criticism, objects to
Wordsworth’s view. Eliot tells that a poet should not imitate the language of a
particular class because he ought to have a language of his own. Eliot’s view
gains ground as Wordsworth in his later poems, fails to use his prescribed
language. His diction is, in fact peculiar to him.
But
Wordsworth’s definitions of poetry ad the poet are unique. He maintains that
poetry is more philosophical than any other branch of knowledge. He likes the
poet to a prophet who is endowed with a greater knowledge of life and nature.
The
neo-classical poets consider the province of poetry to be the world of
fictions. But for Wordsworth the province of poetry is the world of truth, not
a world of make-believe. Wordsworth like Samuel Johnson believes that only “the
manifestations of general truth” can please all people. That is why he rejects
the hackneyed poetic style of the Augustan period.
Wordsworth
differs with the neo-classical writers in his belief about the process of
poetry. The neo-classical writers think that the poet’s mind is a sensitive but
passive recorder of a natural phenomenon. But Wordsworth strongly opposes this
view and thinks that the mind of the poet is never a passive recorder. In his
view, the poet’s mind half creates the external world which he perceives. The
external world is thus, in some degree, the very creation of human mind.
Wordsworth seems to establish the fact that the poet’s mind and the external
nature are both interlinked and interdependent. Wordsworth unlike the
classicists can not separate the mind which suffers from the mind which
composes.
Wordsworth
points out the common characteristics of both poetry and science. But he places
poetry over science for the fact that the large part of poetry is based on imagination.
He beautifully discovers that science only appeal to intellect while poetry
appeals to heart. For this, the pleasures of science are shared by few while
the pleasures of poetry are open to all. Again the truth of science is subject
to change while poetry does not suffer from such threat.
Conclusion: It cannot be said
that Wordsworth is absolutely right in his theory of poetry. It must be
recognized that his views are innovative and creative. But Wordsworth preface to lyrical ballads is an
important bridge for the manifesto of Romantic Movement.
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