A study of the English poet's emotional life, his relationships, his political ties, and his associations with other literary phenoms of his time exposes little-known details about the young William Wordsworth.
This book revolutionized our understanding of Wordsworth in the 1790s by stripping away the accretion of myths perpetuated by the poet himself in the second half of his life. Johnston exhaustively researched primary materials from 1770-1809 to reveal the flesh and blood Wordsworth behind the monument erected by the Victorians.
Johnston explores the passions and flaws and development of Wordsworth's mind, from the details of his early education, his introduction into letters, his excursions into France witnessing many of the major events of the Revolution, his friendship with Coleridge, and his development as a poet, leaving us on the cusp of the second half of his life (where some accused WW of "selling out" both financially and intellectually to establishment art).
The biggest revelation is the middle section in which the full details of Wordsworth's fathering of an illegitimate daughter with Frenchwoman Annette Vallon are revealed. Scholars had known that it had occurred but very little other than that. Wordsworth was very careful in covering his public record of this scandal, but the details are here. The truth is not especially salacious, but Wordsworth did take financial care of Caroline when he could for the rest of his life. Annette definitely expected to marry but the events of the French Revolution, as well as Wordsworth's development as an artist, prevented him from doing much to help her. It also didn't help that WW never was particularly well off financially. The details are much more harrowing (no spoilers) but it includes at least a couple of near escapes for the poet himself (how he was not executed in 1794 can only be laid at the hands of fortune). We see how Wordsworth ventured on his own path after 1809, for better and for worse.
This is a very detailed study, but fascinating for those fascinated with the above subjects. I devoured the 600 pages when I first read it and this could possibly be the best biography of Wordsworth based on your needs. My rating of five is based on my reading background but won't be the consensus of many general readers. Still, it is a highly esteemed addition to Wordsworth studies that must be reckoned with.
Kenneth Johnston's biography is rich in new research and contains some revelations about Wordsworth's life. I appreciated the passages putting his life in context, in particular his father's role as a land agent for Lord Lowther, and the response to the French Revolution among intellectual circles in England. Unfortunately, the writing style is very dense and I found it difficult to sustain interest in this book.
This book is a stunningly detailed piece of scholarship and was, I hope, a labor of love for Ken Johnston. It's just too dense for pleasure reading. Instead I turned right to the source, a fat volume of Wordsworth's poetry arranged chronologically.
A lovable book, although I fail to understand how the discovery of fissures or freckles, or its mention in the book makes Tintern Abbey any greater a poem, or Wordsworth better, or the author exceedingly knowledgeable about the poet. Facetious comments are not expected of a Norton publication.
Fascinating biography. Johnson challenges a lot of assumptions and raised a firestorm when he did it. But the fact is some of our ideas of Wordsworth need shaking up.