कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
A lover of the meadows and the woods
Country Life UK
|April 08, 2020
Forever burdened with his daffodils, Wordsworth still remains one of the great shapers of the English-speaking mind and a true champion of Nature 250 years on, says Adam Nicolson

The greatest poet in English between Milton and Yeats has gone down in history half as a joke, half as a monument. Forever burdened with his daffodils, gloomy beyond belief, sublime perhaps and egotistical for sure, Wordsworth will forever be considered as the human equivalent of Helvellyn: craggy, distant, snow-capped, not quite one of us, perhaps a little touched.
However, there are many, many Wordsworths lurking inside this inaccessible mage and it is for these other qualities, beyond the crust, that we should love him. Seamus Heaney loved and admired him as much as he did Yeats. The critic John Carey, finding the modern in him, considered Wordsworth ‘the only poet who can point so unerringly to the aching gulfs in ourselves that lie beyond poetry, beyond expression, beyond help’.
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