Wordsworth 2

The Life of William Wordsworth

  • williams birth April 7th 1770

    williams birth April 7th 1770
    William Wordsworth was born on April seventh seventeen sevendy.He was born in Cockermouth Cumberlan. His father was a lawer and his name is John. his mothers name was Ann she died of pneumonia. She died when William was eight. His father died before he was fifteen. When both of his parents died it left hem and his four younger siblings to live with close realitives.
  • Period: to

    Life span of william wordsworth

  • The birth of Dorthy wordsworth

    The birth of Dorthy wordsworth
    The Wordsworths' third child,Dorthy, is born on Christmas Day. She and William grow up to be close friends and literary collaborators.
  • Ann wordsworth death

    Ann wordsworth death
    Wordsworth's mother Ann Cookson Wordsworth dies. She died in January when its very cold she caught pnuemomonia. In her time there was not many medicenes to treat those kind of diseases. The only thing she could do was get bede rest.
  • William moves to Lake District

    William moves to Lake District
    William Wordsworth is sent to school in Hawkshead, a village in England's Lake District. His sister Dorothy is sent to live with relatives in Yorkshire. The siblings are separated for nine years.
  • Williams begins university

    Williams begins university
    Wordsworth enrolls as a member of St. John's College at Cambridge University. He publishes his first piece of writing, a sonnet in The European Magazine. Wordsworth was lucky to be able to go to college. Only the best of the best got accepted to college. To have good education was important to have back then.
  • William Wordsworth graduates college

    William Wordsworth graduates college
    Wordsworth receives his bachelor's degree from Cambridge University. In November, he travels to France and is fascinated by the Republican movement. He falls in love with a French woman named Annette Vallon. with a deggree William is able to get a good job to support his futher family.
  • William leaves France before his first daughter is born

    William leaves France before his first daughter is born
    Wordsworth runs out of money and is forced to leave France, leaving behind a pregnant Annette Vallon. Vallon later gives birth to the couple's daughter Caroline. When war breaks out in France the following year, Wordsworth is unable to return to his family.
  • William begins publishing

    William begins publishing
    Wordsworth publishes his first poetry collections, Descriptive Sketches and An Evening Walk. While in college that is where he found his true passion for poetry. He read about many famous poets before his self.
  • wordsworth moves to Dorset

    wordsworth moves to Dorset
    Wordsworth receives a small inheritance from a friend and sets up house in Dorset, England with his sister Dorothy. He meets fellow poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and the two become close friends. William hurried to move to Dorset with his friend. Since he can not go back to France yet he is very lonley.
  • Friendship w/ Coleridge

    Friendship w/ Coleridge
    Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy move closer to Coleridge. For a year, the two poets are in daily contact with one another, a period that proves to be a vital creative period for both of them. Wordsworth produces the poem "Tintern Abbey," and Coleridge writes "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner." They collaborate on a groundbreaking collection of poetry.
  • Lyrical Ballads Published

    Lyrical Ballads Published
    Wordsworth and Coleridge publish Lyrical Ballads, a collection of poems written in "language really used by men," free of the "gaudiness and inane phraseology of many modern writers."34 The book sparks the Romantic Age of English literature. In a preface to the second edition, Wordsworth warns the audience that they will either love or hate his new style of poetry.
  • Return to the Lake District

    Return to the Lake District
    William Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy move back to Lake District and settle in the village of Grasmere. Wordsworth lives in Grasmere for the rest of his life. He has begun work on an autobiographical poem about his experience in France. During his life Wordsworth calls the unpublished work the "poem to Coleridge;" it is later known as The Prelude.
  • Family Matters

    Family Matters
    William and Dorothy Wordsworth travel to France so that Wordsworth can meet his daughter—Caroline—and make arrangements for her support with Annette Vallon. When he returns to England, Wordsworth marries Mary Hutchinson, a schoolmate and longtime friend.
  • Williams son is Born

    Williams son is Born
    William and Mary's first child, a son named John, is born. His first son was named after Williams father. John is the first of five children that William and Mary will have.
  • Daughter Born

    Daughter Born
    The Wordsworths' second child, Dorothy "Dora" Wordsworth, is born. William Wordsworth grows close to Dora. She inspires many of his poems, beginning with "Address to My Infant Daughter." Dora was Williams closest child.
  • Prelude Finished; Brother Dies

    Prelude Finished; Brother Dies
    Wordsworth finishes his "poem to Coleridge" but refuses to publish it until he has completed The Recluse, a long piece for which the "poem to Coleridge" would be a prologue. William's younger brother, 33-year-old John Wordsworth, dies in a shipwreck.
  • Williams second son is Born

    Williams second son is Born
    The Wordsworths' third child, son Thomas, is born. This is Williams second son.
  • Poems in Two Volumes

    Poems in Two Volumes
    Wordsworth publishes the collection Poems in Two Volumes. The book contains the poem "Ode: Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood."
  • Daughter Born; Coleridge Moves In

    Daughter Born; Coleridge Moves In
    The Wordsworths' fourth child, daughter Catherine, is born. Samuel Taylor Coleridge moves in with the Wordsworths in September and stays for nearly two years while he lectures and writes sporadically.
  • Son Born; Coleridge Moves Out

    Son Born; Coleridge Moves Out
    The Wordsworths' fifth and final child, son William, is born. Wordsworth is growing estranged from Coleridge, who is addicted to opium, and feels burdened by his care. When Coleridge moves out of Wordsworth's home in May and learns that Wordsworth warned a mutual friend against taking him in, he is distraught. The men reconcile a few years later but are never as close as they once were.
  • Loses Children

    Loses Children
    Tragically, two of Wordsworth's young children die in a single year: six-year-old Thomas and three-year-old Catherine. This is the beginning of Williams depression.
  • Wordsworth Gets a Job

    Wordsworth Gets a Job
    Wordsworth is appointed Distributor of Stamps for Westmorland, a civil position that pays him a salary of about 400 pounds per year. The family moves to Rydal Mount, the Grasmere home where he lives out the rest of his life.
  • The Excursion

    The Excursion
    Wordsworth publishes The Excursion, which is intended to be the second part of the three-part Recluse. Wordsworth never finishes the other two parts. The other parts are uncomplete because William went in to depresion.
  • Dorothy Gets Sick

    Dorothy Gets Sick
    Dorothy Wordsworth comes down with a serious illness that renders her an invalid until her death in 1855. It does not say what Dorthy had but Dorthy was Williams closest child.
  • Coleridge Dies

    Coleridge Dies
    Samuel Taylor Coleridge dies. Samuel was the person that William wrote a poem about. Samuel was an important person to him.
  • Honorary Degree

    Honorary Degree
    William Wordsworth receives an honorary degree from Oxford University, to "thunders of applause, repeated over and over. William was expressing all of the applause.
  • Poet Laureate

    Poet Laureate
    Wordsworth is named Poet Laureate of England. This is one of the many awards Wordsworth won.
  • Daughter Dies

    Daughter Dies
    Wordsworth's daughter Dora dies of tuberculosis at her parents' home. Devastated by her death, Wordsworth stops writing poetry. Thised forced William in to the woods to document his nature adventures. This also put him into depresion.
  • Wordsworth Dies

    Wordsworth Dies
    William Wordsworth dies of pleurisy, an inflammation of the lining around the lungs. He is buried in St. Oswald's Church in Grasmere. A few months after his death, Mary Wordsworth publishes The Prelude, the autobiographical poem now considered to be Wordsworth's masterpiece.