English, asked by sonammis278, 11 months ago

Please....... Write a para on William Word Smith (about 150 words)

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Answered by adarsh987654321
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Born in England in 1770, poet William Wordsworth worked with Samuel Taylor Coleridge on Lyrical Ballads (1798). The collection, which contained Wordsworth's "Tintern Abbey," introduced Romanticism to English poetry. Wordsworth also showed his affinity for nature with the famous poem "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud."

Wordsworth had visited France in 1790—in the midst of the French Revolution—and was a supporter of the new government’s republican ideals. On a return trip to France the next year, he fell in love with Annette Vallon, who became pregnant. However, the declaration of war between England and France in 1793 separated the two. Left adrift and without income in England, Wordsworth was influenced by radicals such as William Godwin.

Answered by Anonymous
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William Wordsworth

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On April 7, 1770, William Wordsworth was conceived in Cockermouth, Cumbria, England. Wordsworth's mom kicked the bucket when he was eight—this experience shapes quite a bit of his later work. Wordsworth went to Hawkshead Grammar School, where his affection for verse was immovably settled and, it is accepted, he made his first endeavors at section. While he was at Hawkshead, Wordsworth's dad kicked the bucket leaving him and his four kin vagrants. After Hawkshead, Wordsworth learned at St. John's College in Cambridge and before his last semester, he set out on a mobile voyage through Europe, an encounter that affected the two his verse and his political sensibilities. While visiting Europe, Wordsworth came into contact with the French Revolution. This experience, just as an ensuing period living in France, realized Wordsworth's advantage and compassion toward the life, inconveniences, and discourse of the "common man." These issues demonstrated to be critical to Wordsworth's work. Wordsworth's most punctual verse was distributed in 1793 in the accumulations An Evening Walk and Descriptive Sketches. While living in France, Wordsworth conceived a daughter, Caroline, without any father present; he left France, notwithstanding, before she was conceived. In 1802, he came back to France with his sister on a four-week visit to meet Caroline. Soon thereafter, he wedded Mary Hutchinson, a beloved companion, and they had five youngsters together. In 1812, while living in Grasmere, two of their kids—Catherine and John—passed on.  

Similarly significant in the wonderful existence of Wordsworth was his 1795 gathering with the writer Samuel Taylor Coleridge. It was with Coleridge that Wordsworth distributed the acclaimed Lyrical Ballads (J. & A. Arch) in 1798. While the ballads themselves are probably the most persuasive in Western writing, it is the prelude to the second release that remaining parts one of the most significant demonstrations of a writer's perspectives on the two his specialty and his place on the planet. In the introduction, Wordsworth composes on the requirement for "basic discourse" inside sonnets and contends against the progressive system of the period which esteemed epic verse over the verse.  

Wordsworth's most well-known work, The Prelude (Edward Moxon, 1850), is considered by numerous individuals to be the most distinguished accomplishment of English romanticism. The ballad, reexamined various occasions, annals the otherworldly existence of the artist and imprints the introduction of another type of verse. Even though Wordsworth took a shot at The Prelude for an incredible duration, the ballad was distributed after death. Wordsworth spent his last years settled at Rydal Mount in England, voyaging and proceeding with his outside journeys. Crushed by the demise of his girl Dora in 1847, Wordsworth lost his will to make lyrics. William Wordsworth kicked the bucket at Rydal Mount on April 23, 1850, leaving his better half Mary to distribute The Prelude three months after the fact.

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