The Prelude

E132692

The Prelude is William Wordsworth’s autobiographical epic poem that traces the growth of his mind and poetic imagination from childhood through adulthood.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
The Prelude canonical 3

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Statements (49)

Predicate Object
instanceOf autobiographical poem
epic poem
poem
alsoKnownAs Growth of a Poet's Mind
author William Wordsworth
compositionEndDate 1850
compositionStartDate 1798
countryOfOrigin United Kingdom
dedicatedTo Samuel Taylor Coleridge
firstCompleteVersionDate 1805
form long narrative poem
genre autobiographical poetry
blank verse
hasMainCharacter William Wordsworth
surface form: William Wordsworth (as narrator)
influenced English Romantic poetry
autobiographical long poems
influencedBy Lake District landscape
French Revolution
surface form: The French Revolution

William Wordsworth's childhood in Cockermouth
William Wordsworth's residence in France
William Wordsworth's time at Cambridge
language English
literaryMovement Romanticism
metricalForm blank verse
narrativePerspective first person
notableVersion 1805 text
1850 text
originalTitle Poem to Coleridge
partOf The Recluse (projected philosophical poem)
periodOfLiterature Romanticism
surface form: Romantic period
posthumousPublicationDate 1850
publishedPosthumously true
setting Cambridge University
France
Lake District
structure multiple books
subjectMatter childhood and youth
education
growth of the poet's mind
imagination vs reason
memory
nature
poetic imagination
theme creative process
development of consciousness
political disillusionment
relationship between man and nature
role of memory in identity
spiritual growth

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (3)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

William Wordsworth notableWork The Prelude
poem "Composed upon Westminster Bridge" by William Wordsworth relatedWorkByAuthor The Prelude
subject surface form: Composed upon Westminster Bridge