[The Prose Works of William Wordsworth by William Wordsworth]@TWC D-Link book
The Prose Works of William Wordsworth

PART III
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When Coleridge and Southey were walking together upon the Fells, Southey observed that, if I wished to be considered a faithful painter of rural manners, I ought not to have said that my shepherd boys trimmed their rustic hats as described in the poem.

Just as the words had past his lips, two boys appeared with the very plant entwined round their hats.

I have often wondered that Southey, who rambled so much about the mountains, should have fallen into this mistake; and I record it as a warning for others who, with far less opportunity than my dear friend had of knowing what things are, and with far less sagacity, give way to presumptuous criticism, from which he was free, though in this matter mistaken.

In describing a tarn under Helvellyn, I say, 'There sometimes doth a leaping fish Send through the tarn a lonely cheer.' This was branded by a critic of those days, in a review ascribed to Mrs.
Barbauld, as unnatural and absurd.

I admire the genius of Mrs.Barbauld, and am certain that, had her education been favourable to imaginative influences, no female of her day would have been more likely to sympathise with that image, and to acknowledge the truth of the sentiment.
38.


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