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Nathaniel Culverwell, Robert Greene, H. Maccallum, G. Carrithers (1971)
An Elegant and Learned Discourse of the Light of Nature, 9
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W. Wordsworth, Dorothy Wordsworth, E. Sélincourt (1939)
The letters of William and Dorothy Wordsworth : the middle yearsModern Language Review, 34
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The Cambridge Platonists
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"THE RUINED COTTAGE" AND "THE PEDLAR". JAMES BUTLER.The Wordsworth Circle, 10
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Wordsworth: A Philosophical Approach
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The Collected Works of Gerard Manley Hopkins, Vol. 1: Correspondence 1852–1881
S. Coleridge, H. Jackson, J. Jackson (1995)
Shorter works and fragments
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The life of William Wordsworth
S. Coleridge, Kathleen Coburn, Merton Christensen, A. Harding (1958)
The notebooks of Samuel Taylor ColeridgeAmerican Journal of Psychology, 71
S. Hutton (2015)
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J. Worthen (2014)
The Life of William Wordsworth: A Critical Biography
A. Cowley (2009)
The works of Mr. A. Cowley : in prose and verse : pointing out the pieces
E. Marks (1984)
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Biographia Literaria. No. VII of The Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. James Engell and Walter Jackson Bate, ed.The Wordsworth Circle, 15
Benjamin Whichchote, W. Inge
Moral and religious aphorisms
S. Hutton (1994)
Platonism and the English Imagination: Platonism in some Metaphysical poets
[Wordsworth’s thought was first defined by its relation to Anglicanism, typified in Coleridge’s remark that Wordsworth was a ‘semi-atheist’. A subsequent commonplace associates his poetic decline with his gradual return to Christian orthodoxy. Even if true, his orthodoxy has many missing elements, and Wordsworth implicitly authorized a search for some philosophical or theological coherence in his work when he declared that an attentive reader of The Excursion would have no difficulty in extracting ‘the system’. Careful study has yielded few convincing results. That he has been taken as an Anglican, a Methodist, a pantheist, a Platonist, a Lockean, a Berkelean and even a Kantian indicates how difficult it is to establish Wordsworth’s intellectual antecedents precisely. Nonetheless, Plato’s was the only ‘system’ that he acknowledged, and a brief review of Wordsworth’s Platonism begins this paper. An examination of The Prelude in the light of Cambridge Platonist thought follows, and reveals a surprising degree of affinity across a range of ideas: the primacy of Reason, the unity of the laws of mind and nature, the idea of a plastic nature, as well as Reason delivering moral absolutes, the senses rejected as a form of knowledge, geometry as ‘a leader of the human mind’, the knowability of God, and the notion of an ‘immaterial centre of Immortality within’.]
Published: Jan 2, 2020
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