14 February 2020

Two Fantastic Duo of The Romantic Age: Wordsworth meets Samuel Taylor Coleridge.







W.Wordsworth:- Hello Samuel, How are you?


S.Coleridge:-  Hello William, I'm fine, thank you. Nice to meet you!


W.Wordsworth:- After a long time, we've met.


W.Wordsworth:- Since we both are connected with English literature, what kind of literature you've produced?


S.Coleridge:- In the midst of the French Revolution, Wordsworth visited France in 1790 and was a supporter of the new government's republican ideals. For this, I am sending greetings. Wordsworth was influenced by fanatics such as William Godwin.


W.Wordsworth:- Coleridge You published the first part of my poem, Poems on Various Subjects, and the first of ten volumes of a liberal political publication called The Watchman.


S.Coleridge:- Wordsworth began writing The Prelude, an epic autobiography he revised throughout his life while working on The Prelude, writing Wordsworth's other poems like "Lucy."


W.Wordsworth:- When you moved back to England in 1800, he settled with family and friends at Keswick. Over the next two decades, Coleridge lectured on literature and philosophy, writing about religious and political theory,


S.Coleridge:- He also wrote an introduction to another edition of the song ballads; It describes his poetry as inspired by powerful emotions and is seen as a declaration of Romantic principles.


W.Wordsworth:- He published the Biographia Literaria, which contained his best literary criticism. He continued to publish poetry and prose.


Wordsworth meets Samuel Taylor Coleridge. The two became friends, and worked together on the Lyrical Ballads (1798). The room contains poems such as Coleridge's "Rhyme the Fist Mariner" and Wordsworth's "Tintern Abbey" and helped Romanticism capture English poetry.

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