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Wordsworth's 'Sonnets Dedicated to Liberty' and the British Revolutionary Past

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

Connell, PJ 

Abstract

William Wordsworth's sonnets of 1802-3 offer an unusually rich insight into the poet's heightened political commitments during the short-lived Peace of Amiens and the subsequent resumption of hostilities with Napoleonic France. The sonnets were inspired by Miltonic example, and several of the poems respond to their contemporary political and diplomatic contexts by tracing the spirit of British freedom back to the constitutional upheavals of the mid-seventeenth-century. The present article examines a selection of Wordsworth's sonnets from this period, and relates their historical preoccupations to the contentious status of Britain's revolutionary past in the years after 1789. It thereby seeks to cast fresh light on the nature and extent of Wordsworth's vestigial radicalism, his incipient Burkean sympathies, and his creative relationship with republican literary tradition.

Description

Keywords

English literature, 1800-1899, Wordsworth, William(1770-1850), 0000 0001 2127 8691, poetry, "Sonnets Dedicated to Liberty", creativity, republicanism, radicalism, revolutionary politics, French Revolution, Burke, Edmund(1729-1797), 0000 0001 2145 0834, <i>Reflections on the Revolution in France</i>(1790), Milton, John(1608-1674), 0000 0001 2099 3562, Irish literature, 1700-1799, prose, 1600-1699

Journal Title

ELH - English Literary History

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0013-8304
1080-6547

Volume Title

85

Publisher

Johns Hopkins University Press