IN WORDSWORTH'S COUNTRY

Written on 06/12/2026
Poetic Outlaws

By: John Burroughs

No other English poet had touched me quite so closely as Wordsworth. All cultivated men delight in Shakespeare; he is the universal genius; but Wordsworth’s poetry has more the character of a message, and a message special and personal, to a comparatively small circle of readers.

He stands for a particular phase of human thought and experience, and his service to certain minds is like an initiation into a new order of truths. Note what a revelation he was to the logical mind of John Stuart Mill. His limitations make him all the more private and precious, like the seclusion of one of his mountain dales.

He is not and can never be the world’s poet, but more especially the poet of those who love solitude and solitary communion with nature.

Read more