This book is the first to present Wordsworth's greatest poem in all three of its separate forms. It reprints, on facing pages, the version of The Prelude that was completed in 1805, together with the much-revised work published after the poet's death in 1850. In addition the editors include the two-part version of the poem, composed 1798-99. Each of these poems has its distinctive qualities and values; to read them together provides an incomparable chance to observe a great poet composing and recomposing, through a long life, his major work.
Preface
Events of Wordsworth's Life
Abbreviations
The Prelude
The Two-Part Prelude of 1799
The Prelude of 18o5 in Thirteen Books
The Prelude of 185o in Fourteen Books
MS. Drafts and Fragments, 1798-18o4
1. The Beginnings of The Prelude: 1799 Drafts
and Related Materials in MS. JJ, October 1798
2. Fragments from Peter Bell. MS. 2, ca.
February 1799
3. Draft Material from the Five-Book Prelude in
MS. W, February 18o4
4. Rejected Drafts for 18o5, Book VIII, in
MS. Y, October 18o4
Manuscripts of The Prelude, 1798-185~
The Texts: History and Presentation
General Editorial Procedures
Composition and Texts: The Two-Part
Prelude of 1799
Composition and Texts: The Prelude of
18o5 and 185o
Context and Reception
References to The Prelude in Process: 1799-x85o
The Early Reception
Samuel Taylor Coleridge·To William
Wordsworth
Thomas De Quincey·\\Villiam Wordsworth
From the Eclectic Review
From Tait's Edinburgh Magazine
From the Gentleman's Magazine
From Graham's Magazine
From the British Quarterly Review
From the Dublin University Magazine
From the Examiner
Henry Crabb Robinson
Frederick Denison Maurice
Thomas Babington Macaulay
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Matthew Arnold
A. C. Bradley
Recent Critical Essays
Jonathan Wordsworth·The Two-Part Prelude
of 1799
M. H. Abrams·The Design of The Prelude:
Wordsworth's Long Journey Home
Geoffrey H. Hartman·A Poet's Progress:
Wordsworth and the Via Naturaliter Negativa
Richard J. Onorato·The Prelude: Metaphors of
Beginning and Where They Lead
William Empson·Sense in The Prelude
Herbert Lindenberger·Images of Interaction in
The Prelude
W. B. Gallie·Is The Prelude a Philosophical Poem?
Bibliography of Works Cited and Consulted
Selected Reading