A continuous text made up of extracts from Dorothy Wordsworth's Journal
and a selection of her brother's poems. Dorothy Wordsworth kept her
Journal 'because I shall give William pleasure by it'. In doing so, she
never dreamt that she was giving future readers not only the chance to
enjoy her fresh and sensitive delight in the beauties that surrounded
her at Grasmere but also a rare opportunity to observe 'the progress of
a poet's mind'. Colette Clark's skilful and perceptive arrangement of
Dorothy's entries alongside William's poems throws a unique light on his
creative process, and shows how the interdependence of brother and
sister was a vital part in the writing of many of his great poems. By
reading these poems in relation to the Journal it is possible to trace
the processes by which they were committed to paper and so achieve a
fuller understanding of them. A writer in her own right, Dorothy kept
her Journal sparse in personal and emotional detail. Yet there is,
nevertheless, a deep emotional undercurrent running beneath the surface
which only falters when William marries Mary Hutchinson. Never again was
Dorothy to achieve the freedom, spontaneity and the limpidly beautiful
prose with which she infused and irradiated the Grasmere Journals.