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Document Description
Title
Wordsworth's
early
balladry
:
a
critical
study
Author
LaBossiere
,
Camille
R.
Description
Thesis
(M.A.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1968.
English
Language
and
Literature
Date
1968
Pagination
113 leaves
Subject
Wordsworth
,
William
,
1770-1850
Degree
M.A.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of English Language and Literature
Discipline
English Language and Literature
Language
eng
Temporal Coverage
1770-1850
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
110-113
Abstract
William
Wordsworth's
early
balladic
poetry
(1798-1800)
repeals
a
reactionary
as
well
as an
innovational
dimension
in its
use
of
language.
The
language
of this
poetry
fluctuates
, in
varying
proportions
, from the
language
of
denotation
to the
language
of
implicitness.
A
study
of
Wordsworth's
balladry
is
quite
revealing
, for
it
lies
at the
core
of his
literary
manifestos
when
he
embodies
the
explicitness
of the
broadside
ballad
in his
early
poetry
, he
is
not
being
novel;
his
use
of
language
is
part
of the
denotative
tendency
which
pervaded
previous
literary
taste.
When
he
embodies
the
implicitness
of the
ballad
of
tradition
, his
use
of
language
constitutes
an
innovation*
Some
of his
early
ballad
poems
are
mainly
"direct
,
"
some
are
mainly
"oblique
,
"
while
yet
others
are
both
"direct"
and
"oblique"
in
part.
Wordsworth's
unevenness
in his
early
balladry
as a
whole
stems
basically
from the
fluctuation
in his
use
of
language.
--
An
analysis
of The
Idiot
Boy
,
Peter
Bell
,
Goody
Blake
and
Harry
Gill
, and
Simon
Lee
the
Huntsman
reveals
a
didactic
concern
for
illustrative
subject
matter.
The
emotional
reactions
of the
persona
are
made
explicit
, and the
reader's
response
is
controlled
and
directed
through
overt
authorial
statement.
Expostulation
and
Reply
and The
Tables
Turned
emerge
as
gnomic
Ideological
statements
which
share
this
explicitness.
--
The
Thorn
, The
Complaint
of a
Forsaken
Indian
Woman
,
Lucy
Gray
Anecdote
for
Fathers
,
We
Are
Seven
, and Her
Eyes
Are
Wild—all
evidence
a
certain
concern
for the
implicit
,
either
through
understatement
and/or
flgurativeness
, as
well
as the
explicitness
of the
poems
mentioned
above.
--
The
"Lucy"
and
"Matthew"
poems
evidence
a
radical
divergence
from the
principally
denotative
use
of
language.
The
use
of
symbol
and
understatement
in these
poems
,
characteristic
of the
ballad
of
tradition
rather
than the
broadside
,
points
to
"oblique"
poetry*
It
is
in these
poems
that
Wordsworth
emerges
as an
"innovator"
in the
use
of
language
in
poetry.
It
is
here that the
modern
reader
finds
himself
most
at
home.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
76005976
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(12.18
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/LaBossiere_CamilleR.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
160864.cpd