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William Wordsworth, a  
mention 
   
William Wordsworth mentioned in a review of The Library  
Companion by T F Dibdin, 1824 
  
'The fame of Mr. WORDSWORTH was first established by his  
Lyrical Ballads, 1798, 1802, 12mo. 2 vols.: with  
additions and improvements in 1815, 8vo. 2 vols. The most  
imprtant work was his larger poem of The Excursion,  
1820, 4t0. The third, the White Doe of Rylstone,  
&c. 1819, 4to. These, with Peter Bell, the  
Wagoner, &c. appear in the collected works of Mr.  
Wordsworth, published in 1820, 12mo. 4 vols. The muse of  
this poet is of a singular cast and temperament. Objects the 
most simple, and themes the most familiar, are treated by  
her in a style peculiarly her own: but if these objects and  
these themes have been such as, with a great number of  
readers, to excite surprise and provoke ridicule, this must  
have arisen rather in compliance with the tone of what is  
called fashionable criticism, than from an impartial perusal 
of the poems themselves. The purest moral strain, and the  
loftiest feelings of humanity, pervade the productions of  
Mr. Wordsworth: and these; at times, are united with so much 
sweetness of diction, and with such just and powerful views  
of religion, that that bosom must be taxed with  
insensibility which is impervious to their impression.' 
  
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