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19 pages 38 minutes read

William Wordsworth

She Dwelt Among The Untrodden Ways

Fiction | Poem | Adult | Published in 1800

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Background

Literary Context: Romanticism and the Lyrical Ballads

In 1798, Wordsworth and Samuel Coleridge published a collection of poetry that would be titled Lyrical Ballads. Coleridge contributed four poems, including The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, while the rest of the volume was made up of lyrics written by Wordsworth. In 1800, the second edition was released. It included additional poems by Wordsworth, including three of the Lucy poems, as well as “Lucy Gray.” Wordsworth also expanded “Preface to the Lyrical Ballads,” an essay that soon became the theoretical touchstone for a new aesthetic and literary movement called Romanticism (See: Further Reading & Resources).

The ideas set forth in this work influenced several of Wordsworth’s contemporaries, as well as the younger generation of poets, including Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and John Keats. As a deliberate response to the predilections of the previous generation, such as borrowing forms and subjects from classical literature, Wordsworth advocated that ordinary life is the best subject for poetry, that poetry should be written in everyday language for more accessibility, and that it should come out of personal feeling. All of these ideas can be seen in “She dwelt among the untrodden ways.”

The philosophy of Romanticism as laid about by Wordsworth consists of the following tenets: Poetry should be spontaneous in form, and form can be experimental; mankind is in communion with, and part of, nature, which reflects the self; the commonplace in language and experience should be glorified; there is beauty in the supernatural, myth, folklore, and magic; that desiring things beyond human limits is not a sin, but a glory and a triumph; that change is certain and inevitable, so it is better to follow moral self-rule than immoral societal rule. These ideas remain popular to this day, extending Wordsworth’s influence well past his lifetime.

Historical Context: The Lucy Poems

Between 1798 and 1801, Wordsworth wrote five poems which scholars call “the Lucy poems.” Often published together, this set of poems includes: “She dwelt among the untrodden ways,” “Strange fits of passions I have known,” “I travelled among unknown men,” “Three years she grew in sun and shower,” and “A slumber did my spirit steal.” Two of the poems—“I travelled among unknown men” and “A slumber did my spirit seal”—were written later, in 1801, but Wordsworth noted that former should be placed before “She dwelt among the untrodden ways” to maintain its narrative. The poems can also be read independently of each other.

Wordsworth’s inspiration for the character of Lucy remains a mystery. She may have had a biographical counterpart, but he may have relied on his imagination, as well as folklore and previous ballads, to come up with the idea of Lucy. Wordsworth may also have used his personal experience of grief as the impetus for these poems. In each of the Lucy poems, a young and beloved woman dies an early death, leaving the speaker bereft. While it may appear due to its title that “Lucy Gray” is also a “Lucy” poem, it’s important to note that, despite thematic similarities, its basis is local German legend.

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