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in a stalwart and judicious manner." CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE Born, April 7, 1770, at Cockermouth, Cumberland. Goes to Hawkshead Grammar School, 1778. Sent by guardians to St. John's College, Cambridge, October, 1787. Foreign tour with Jones, 1790. Graduates as B.A. without honors, January, 1791. Residence in France, November, 1791, to December, 1792. Publication of _The Evening Walk_, and _Descriptive Sketches_, 1793. Legacy from Raisley Calvert of 900 pounds, 1794. Lives at Racedown, Dorsetshire, autumn of 1795 to summer of 1797. Composes _The Borderers_, a tragedy, 1795-1796. Close friendship with Coleridge begins in 1797. Rents a house at Alfoxden, 1797. Genesis of the _Lyrical Ballads_, 1797. _Lyrical Ballads_ published September, 1798. German visit, September, 1798, to April, 1799. Lives at Dove Cottage, Grasmere, December 21, 1799 to 1806, 1807-1808. The Lonsdale debt of 8,500 pounds repaid, 1802. Marries Mary Hutchinson, October, 1802. Death by drowning of his brother, Captain John Wordsworth, 1805. Lives at Coleorton, Leicestershire, 1806 to 1807. Collected Edition of poems, 1807. Lives at Allan Bank, Easedale, 1808 to 1810. Lives at the Parsonage, Grasmere, 1810 to 1812. Loss of two children and removal to Rydal Mount, Grasmere, 1813 to 1850. Appointed distributor of stamps for Westmoreland (400 pounds a year), 1813. _The Excursion_ appears, July, 1814. Honorary degree of D.C.L. from Oxford, 1839. Resigns his office as distributor of stamps, 1842. Receives a pension from Sir R. Peel of 300 pounds, 1842. Appointed Poet Laureate, 1843. Dies at Grasmere, April 23, 1850. APPRECIATIONS Coleridge, with rare insight, summarized Wordsworth's characteristic defects and merits as follows; "The first characteristic, though only occasional defect, which I appear to myself to find in these poems is the inconstancy of the style. Under this name I refer to the sudden and unprepared transitions from lines or sentences of peculiar felicity (at all events striking and original) to a style, not only unimpassioned but undistinguished. "The second defect I can generalize with tolerable accuracy, if the reader will pardon an uncouth and newly-coined word. There is, I should say, not seldom a _matter-of-factness_ in certain poems. This may be divided into, first, a laborious minuteness and fidelity in the representation of objects, and there posi
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