The Poems Volume One
Condition: SECONDHAND
This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.
Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: No dust jacket
Pages: Good
Markings: Previous owner
Condition remarks: Condition as shown in image
A cornerstone of English Romantic literature, The Poems Volume One presents a sweeping collection of William Wordsworth's most celebrated verse, drawing readers into a world where nature, memory, and the human spirit are inextricably bound. Wordsworth chronicles the landscapes of the English Lake District and the quiet rhythms of rural life with a reverence that transformed the very definition of poetry in the early nineteenth century. His verse instructs the reader to find profound meaning in ordinary experience — a child at play, a field of daffodils, the solitary reaper's song — arguing that the natural world is the truest source of moral and spiritual renewal. Written in a deliberately accessible style that broke from the ornate conventions of his predecessors, the collection illustrates the poet's belief that authentic emotion, recollected in tranquility, is the foundation of all great art. This volume stands as an essential testament to one of the most influential voices in the Western literary canon.
Author: William Wordsworth
Format: Paperback
Genre: Poetry
Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: No dust jacket
Pages: Good
Markings: Previous owner
Condition remarks: Condition as shown in image
A cornerstone of English Romantic literature, The Poems Volume One presents a sweeping collection of William Wordsworth's most celebrated verse, drawing readers into a world where nature, memory, and the human spirit are inextricably bound. Wordsworth chronicles the landscapes of the English Lake District and the quiet rhythms of rural life with a reverence that transformed the very definition of poetry in the early nineteenth century. His verse instructs the reader to find profound meaning in ordinary experience — a child at play, a field of daffodils, the solitary reaper's song — arguing that the natural world is the truest source of moral and spiritual renewal. Written in a deliberately accessible style that broke from the ornate conventions of his predecessors, the collection illustrates the poet's belief that authentic emotion, recollected in tranquility, is the foundation of all great art. This volume stands as an essential testament to one of the most influential voices in the Western literary canon.