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Wordsworth's Trauma and Poetry

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Wordsworth's Trauma and Poetry Synopsis

Based upon the testimony of Thomas Carlyle, most biographers acknowledge that Wordsworth witnessed the beheading of the journalist Antoine Gorsas in October 1793 during the Reign of Terror. But they go no further. This study reads the Poet's reactions to the Terror in passages from The Prelude as explicitly about his twenty-three-year-old-self witnessing the gory deaths of Gorsas and others, which caused post-traumatic stress disorder and its symptoms, exacerbated by guilt for abandoning his French lover and their child a year earlier. Following a chronological arc from October 1793, when the trauma began, until its conclusion in October 1803, when Wordsworth became a poet-soldier, I examine poetic works from The Borderers (1796), the "Discharged Soldier' (1798), the Two-Part Prelude (1799), Home at Grasmere (1800), and the Liberty sonnets (1803), to follow the Poet working through anxiety, fear, and remorse to a resolution.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780367715427
Publication date: 11th July 2024
Author: Richard E Matlak
Publisher: Routledge an imprint of Taylor & Francis
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 126 pages
Series: Routledge Studies in Romanticism
Genres: Psychotherapy
Trauma and shock
Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900