Click to download the files I CANNOT LIVE WITH YOU GENDER, CLASS, AND IDENTITY IN ALICE WALKER’S THE COLOR PURPLE AND SUZAN-LORI PARKS’ IN THE BLOOD THE YELLOW WALL-PAPER A VINDICATION OF THE RIGHTS OF WOMAN Heart of Darkness D. H. Lawrence : Sons and Lovers Mrs Dalloway Virginia Woolf W. B. Yeats and Modernist Poetry A Fine Balance Anita and Me The Namesake Preface to Lyrical Ballads Biographia Literaria VIRGINIA WOOLF: MODERN FICTION Tradition and the Individual Talent Principles of Literary Criticism THE HERESY OF PARAPHRASE
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Preface to Lyrical Ballads
Sajida Parveen • Wordsworth explains that the first edition of Lyrical Ballads was published as a sort of experiment to test the public reception of poems that use “the real language of men in a state of vivid sensation.” • Wordsworth notes that he was initially unwilling to write the preface as some sort of systemic defense of this new genre, because he doesn’t want to reason anyone into liking these poems. He also says the motives behind starting this new genre of poetry are too complex to fully articulate in so few words. Still, he has decided to furnish a preface: his poems are so different from the poems of his age that they require at least a brief explanation as to their conception.From this, readers can gather that Wordsworth lived in an era when things were growing increasingly complex with the onset of modernity. • • Wordsworth claims that just as authors have a right to use certain ideas and techniques, they also have a right to exclude other ideas and techniqu...
POETRY VS SCIENCE
Sajida Parveen • William Wordsworth, as a Romantic poet, in his Preface to lyrical Ballads, considers poetry to be superior to science. He shows that the scientist studies only the appearance of things while the poet investigates the inner reality of human soul. • Wordsworth recognizes that objections can be raised against poetry as a source of edification on the grounds that it is merely a source of amusement, a vehicle for pleasure rather than knowledge. Wordsworth counteracts this criticism by arguing that pleasure is crucial to how we attain knowledge. • He argues that pleasure is integral to science.The mention of "The Man of science, the Chemist and Mathematician" serves to illustrate that even those who study difficult or painful subjects ultimately find joy in their knowledge. For example, an anatomist might work with distressing material but still derive pleasure from the understanding and insights gained.He says:"However painful may be the objects with which ...
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