[1798] - Wordsworth in Germany, begins The Two-Part Prelude
Useful Links and Further Reading
- From Goslar to Grasmere, William Wordsworth: Electronic Manuscripts, ‘MS JJ and the “Two-Part Prelude”’,
http://collections.wordsworth.org.uk/GtoG/home.asp?page=MSJJ2bTwoPartPreludeFull
- Jonathan Wordsworth, M. H. Abrams and Stephen Gill, ‘Transcription of MS JJ’,
http://collections.wordsworth.org.uk/GtoG/home.asp?page=MSJJ3JonathanWordsworth
- University of Virginia Library, ‘Jonathan Wordsworth, ed., William Wordsworth: The Pedlar: Tintern Abbey: The Two-Part Prelude’,
http://xtf.lib.virginia.edu/xtf/view?docId=chadwyck_ep/uvaGenText/tei/chep_3.2580.xml;chunk.id=d6;toc.depth=1;toc.id=d6;brand=default
- Jonathan Wordsworth and Stephen Gill, ‘The Two-Part Prelude of 1798–99’, Journal of English and Germanic Philology, 72.4 (1973), 503–25,
http://www.jstor.org/pss/27706435
- Alan Richardson, ‘Wordsworth at the Crossroads: “Spots of Time” in the “Two-Part Prelude”’, The Wordsworth Circle, 19.1 (1988), 15–20
- Mary Wedd, ‘The Magic of Childhood in the Two-Part Prelude’, Charles Lamb Bulletin, 96 (1996), 142–56
- Thomas K. Gordon, ‘“Orphans Then”: Death in the Two-Part Prelude’, Charles Lamb Bulletin, 96 (1996), 157–73