4 - WORDSWORTH
A Preliminary Survey
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
Summary
Wordsworth's poetry is not only an extensive, it is a difficult country; and therefore, before attempting to cross it, I have thought it worth while to summarize what I imagine I know about it. Much of this may be legend, and I put it forward without any confidence that it is anything more; but a summary of legend is useful if, by internal confusion or apparent improbability, it brings home the amount of labour necessary to attain the truth.
And, first, of the traps or pitfalls with which Wordsworth's poetry abounds. One of these is, I think, its mere amount, by which we should not allow ourselves to be unduly impressed. This may seem a slight temptation, but I am not sure that it is easy to avoid. Staying-power is a comparatively rare thing, and even the appearance of it moves at times to admiration. With Wordsworth it is an important question, how much of it is mere appearance; and an answer can be given only after going through a poem line by line, enquiring into the significance of each. It is not sufficient to listen for the general effect of a passage, which may be a sonorous cadence with a buzzing of meaning in the background. Wordsworth was skilled in sounding cadences, and with him as with any other poet meaning should be either more or less than a buzz.
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- A Selection from Scrutiny , pp. 137 - 156Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1968
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