The Letters of Dorothy Wordsworth

About The Book

I should detest wrote Dorothy Wordsworth the idea of setting myself up as an author. Protesting to Lady Beaumont she explained I have not the powers which Coleridge thinks I have--I know it. Despite her self-deprecatory words however the reader of Dorothy Wordsworth''s letters will discover a skill with language and a power of description that rivals even the poetry of her more famous brother. In this selection Alan G. Hill offers seventy complete letters that together provide a fascinating portrait of the writer and her surroundings. Spontaneous intimate and lively they constitute a life of Dorothy Wordsworth in her own words following her from youth to the onset of her last tragic illness. In between we meet a remarkable group of people for no other observer was so close to Wordsworth Coleridge and their circle shared so completely their feelings and aims and had such an eye for the landscape that inspired them. To have brought them so vividly before our eyes is surely one of Dorothy Wordsworth''s greatest and most enduring achievements.
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