'I am of that odious class of men called democrats,' Wordsworth wrote to his friend William Mathews in 1794. Much the same can be said of Coleridge, on the evidence of his letters and publications of the mid-1790s. By the early decades of this century, British, French and American scholarship concurred in finding both poets to be, in the 1790s, republicans and advanced reformers, who then suffered disappointment in the course of the French Revolution and, in different ways and at different times, changed their minds. George McLean Harper's William Wordsworth: His Life, Works and Influence (1919) set a coping-stone on the scholarship of that period.
LRB 8 December 1988 | PDF Download
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