Karla News

Analysis of William Wordsworth’s “Preface to the Lyrical Ballads”

Ballads, William Wordsworth, Wordsworth

In Wordsworth’s “Preface to the Lyrical Ballads,” something that interested me was that he said that in his poetry he wanted to represent “incidents and situations from common life.” He said he wanted to use a “selection of language really used by men.” He does this throughout his poetry and it was interesting to me because, obviously, he’s a talented guy, but he finds different ways to relate to common people throughout his poetry. I know it’s something we all do when we’re writing and know other people will read it, but it’s interesting because he does it in so many different ways. He’s like the professor that has a doctorate in the class your taking, but has the skill to actually make it comprehensible to his students. Rare, but amazing when it happens.

The way Wordsworth writes is very easy for the common person to understand and he writes about things that are easily related to. Like in “We are Seven,” Wordsworth’s writes about a little girl that had two siblings that had died, yet instead of saying that her family was only five now, she persisted that they were still seven. She was intent on telling this man that even though part of her family was gone, they were still there with her and they were still part of her family. This is something most people can relate to, whether it is from personal experience or not, we can still empathize with that feeling of loss and remembrance. Then, in “I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud,” he relates in a beautiful way, to people and something that’s all around us; nature. He does the same in “My Heart Leaps Up.”

See also  William Wordsworth's Sublime Nature

Through many of Wordsworth’s poems, he sufficiently backs up his ideas that he stated in “The Preface to the Lyrical Ballads,” that he wanted to talk about things in his poetry that were understandable by the common man and also things that related to common life. He did a fine job of these things in his works and I enjoyed reading them.