The Lakeland home of William Wordsworth is called Dove Cottage. It is now a tourist attraction where one can visit the home with a guided tour. There is also a museum where one can learn more about the poet.
William Wordsworth lived in Dove Cottage in Grasmere for 8 years, from 1799 to 1808. During this time, he produced some of his most famous poetry, and the location is now a museum dedicated to his life and work.
Some of the poems William Wordsworth wrote at Dove Cottage include "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud," "Tintern Abbey," and "Ode: Intimations of Immortality." These were composed during his time living at the cottage from 1799 to 1808 and are known as some of his most famous works.
William Wordsworth lived in Grasmere, which is in the Lake District of Britain
Dove Cottage was created in 1891.
The Biography of William Wordsworth William Wordsworth was born in a fine house called 'Wordsworth House' in the town of Cockermouth on April 7th 1770. His father, John Wordsworth had a job in law and rented the house off a businessman, Sir James Lowther. He had an older brother; Richard and two younger brothers; John (after his father) and Chris. His younger sister, Dorothy played a big part in William's life. He often spent time in his mother's house in Penrith which is a town in the North-East of the Lake District. He was educated for a year in Penrith Infant School -from 1776 to 77- with his sister and good friend, Mary Hutchinson. His mother died in 1778 when William was only eight years of age. William attended Cockermouth School from 77 to 79, and then was helped by his uncles to go to Hawkshead Grammar School from 1779. The site of Cockermouth School was knocked down to build All Saints Church. John Wordsworth died when William was fourteen. He was buried in 'All Saints Church's Graveyard.' Grammar School years came to an end when William moved to Saint John's College in Cambridge where he improved greatly and received a bequest of £900. This was worth a lot at the time so William was delighted. He had enough money to start a career in poetry. William and Dorothy stayed in a cottage in Dorset and met two famous-poets-to-be: Samuel Coleridge and Robert Southey. They became good friends. The twosome travelled to France during the revolution in 1790. He witnessed some gruesome and horrible things that influenced his poetry. On their second trip to France, William met Annette Vallon who he rather like and had a small relationship with. This had input to the 300 lined romantic poem,' Vaudracour and Julia.' The Wordsworths moved into Dove Cottage in Grasmere in the year 1799. There, William composed lots of poetry, inspired by beautiful landscapes of the Lake District area. Coleridge moved to Keswick where he wrote the famous poem: 'The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.' In 1802, Mary Hutchinson, who William knew since childhood, married into the Wordsworth family and decided to live in a larger house so the three moved to a house called 'Allen Bank.' The houses after these were called, 'The Old Rectory' and 'Rydal Mount.' William died on the 23rd April 1850 at nearly exactly 80 years old. Mary was heartbroken. She passed away in 59 and they were buried at St Oswald's graveyard. * visitcumbria.com/wilword.htm * online-literature.com/wordsworth * poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/296
It wasn't a dove, but a turkey and it was Ben Franklin. --- William Barton, who designed the Great Seal, suggested the dove as a national bird at one point as the Third Great Seal Committee was meeting.
William Lancelot Noyes Tickell has written: 'The dove prion, Pachyptila desolata Gmelin'
The driving distance from Dover, Delaware to District of Columbia (DC) is about 92 miles.
This poem is actually about a girl called Lucy who is dead, and whom the poet wishes to eulogise. It does have a connection with nature in the sense that Lucy is portrayed as someone who lived close to nature - "...among the untrodden ways/Beside the springs of Dove" - and therefore had a purity and freshness about her character. The poet also compares her to two objects of nature: "a violet by a mossy stone" and "a star" to indicate her delicacy, beauty, individuality and remoteness.
Rock dove, mourning dove, white winged dove, Zenaida dove, ground dove, Inca dove, White crowned pigeon, ringed turtle dove, Eurasian collared dove are some examples. There are 289 species in this family worldwide.
A baby dove is the baby of a dove.
Crowned pigeon, rock dove(or domestic pigeon), mourning dove, collared dove, white winged dove, ground dove, Inca dove.