Wordsworth is often viewed as a "reactionary child of age" because his poetry focused on nature, emotion, and the individual, which contrasted with the prevailing conventions of the time. He rejected the artificiality and restrictions of the neoclassical poetry of the 18th century and instead celebrated the spontaneous expression of human experience. This emphasis on personal emotion and connection with nature marked him as a visionary and revolutionary figure in the Romantic movement.
William Wordsworth died on April 23, 1850 at the age of 80.
William Wordsworth died on April 23, 1850 at the age of 80.
William Wordsworth in The Rainbow
poet William Wordsworth
Romantic Age
William Wordsworth's father was John Wordsworth - an attorney to James Lowther, first Earl of Lonsdale. William saw little of his father as a child, since John tended to live away from the family.
Tagalog of the word reactionary: reaksyon
From a poem by William Wordsworth "The child is father of the man" These means that by the age of 7 or so a child has developed physical characteristics (short or tall, fit or frail), personality traits (aggressive, loving), attitudes (hard working, slovenly) that will determine what he will be like as an adult. In that sense is the child father to himself as an adult.
This phrase is from the poem "The Rainbow" by William Wordsworth. It suggests that childhood experiences and influences play a significant role in shaping a person's future character and behavior.
The innocence of children and that nature intervenes to keep the child from understanding death are expressed in Wordsworth's "We Are Seven."
My Heart Leaps Up When I Behold by William Wordsworth.
Fascists and Nazis are (extreme) examples of reactionary groups.