Williams Wordsworth was a British poet. He was born in Cockermouth, Cumberland, in the Lake District and spent most of his lifetime in the Lake District of Northern England only. He started the English Romantic movement with Samuel Taylor Coleridge, with their collection “LYRICAL BALLADS” in 1798. His work as poet mainly based on topics involving the life of children, common people, poor mass, and nature. He used very simple wordings to express his feelings through poems.
The beautiful landscape of the place where he was living gave him the inspiration and deep love for the nature. His sister Dorothy was very important person in his life. However, he became separated from his sister because of some domestic problem. Dorothy was also having immense love for the nature and even she was in fresh contact with the nature from her very childhood. She was the source of inspiration for her brother.
Wordsworth writing was first published in the year 1787 in The European Magazine. In the same year he joined St. John’s College in Cambridge and gets his B.A degree in 1791.
Most of his great work as writer was produced in between the year 1797 and 1808. Wordsworth died in the year 1850. After his death, his wife published “The Prelude” which was already completed in the year 1805.