bers" have come "Spontaneously to clothe in priestly robe / A renovated spirit singled out / . . . for holy services." "The Poet's soul'' attends him in the "indolent society" of secular Cambridge, where he responds with something of poetic fervor to the abstractions of geometry, for his is already "a mind beset / With images, and haunted by herself." The "Genius of the Poet" has guided him to the fixed truths of nature beyond all shattering social revolution, has strengthened his faith in his "own peculiar faculty, / Heaven's gift, a sense that fits him to perceive / Objects unseen before," and has virtually given him in his degree a "power like one of Nature's." At the end of his long "protracted Song," he admits some uneasiness about the extent of his self-analysis and celebration, but at the same time he hopes that his mature work will provide sufficient rationale "for having given this story of myself." In any case, he has convinced himself that "the history of a Poet's mind / Is labour not unworthy of regard."
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The Prelude was indeed a thing unprecedented in literary history, a personal epic, with poet as hero moving with troubled spirit amid social upheaval and receptively among enduring natural forces. Had it appeared in 1805, the Romantics would have had further evidence of the "egotism" that Hazlitt thought Wordsworth's distinctive attribute or of the "egotistical sublime" that Keats both feared and admired. But the other volumes of verse that Wordsworth published before 1820 provided quite ample proof of a central concern with his poetic persona and the quality of his unique endowment.
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The Prelude was intended to introduce a three-part work called The Recluse , long planned but never completeda vast enterprise on an unlikely theme: "the sensations and opinions of a poet living in retirement." The second part, however, appeared as The Excursion in 1814, running to some eight thousand lines and consisting of the lucubrations of four characters: the Poet, who is narrator, the Wanderer, who accompanies him on his rambles, the Solitary, whom they interview, and the Pastor, who prescribes fortitude and hope. All four seem patently projections of Wordsworth's own thought and personality. But the most vivid of the group is the Solitary, who confesses to a willful retreat from society, even to a longing for release from life itself, after serious afflictions, loss of loved ones, the dashing of political high hopes (as in the French Revolution), and consequent failures of faith in God and nature.
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Although the poem as a whole attempts to establish a final assent to living, there is curiously more poetic conviction in the Solitary's nega-
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