BBC Countryfile Magazine

True romantic

In the world of literary history, there are few bigger beasts than William Wordsworth. The critic Jonathan Bate calls him “the poet who changed the world”; his poetry inspired generations to think differently about language, politics, psychology and nature.

Wordsworth (1770–1850) rejected the highly wrought formalities of 18th-century poetry, insisting that plain and simple language was far more powerful. He argued that everyday experience, as well as heroic epic, was a fit subject for great literature. And, more than any other writer, he championed the British countryside – both as the subject for poetry and as the best place

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