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논문 기본 정보

자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
저널정보
미래영어영문학회 영어영문학 영어영문학 제18권 제1호
발행연도
2013.4
수록면
87 - 108 (22page)

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William and Dorothy Wordsworth lived a life of distress and was in needy circumstances. This paper demonstrates their identification of themselves as destitute and its evidence in their writings. Before their problem with Lord Lowther was settled, they considered themselves as eking out a scanty livelihood for some years. Their material circumstances before 1802 led them to consider their life as unpredictable and unreliable. William’s description of pitiful characters such as a shepherd and a pedlar was based upon the models he and Dorothy had been acquainted with in their surrounding environment. As their portrayals of the destitute in their writings show, the social circumstances during Wordsworth's lifetime seemed to be in a gruesome scene all over England. The scanty seemed to be on all sides. As shown in the works of William and Dorothy Wordsworth, indigence led into the disruption of a shepherd's family. The contemporary institutions didn't categorize the destitute who need others' help in a miserable situation as poor if anyone possessed a landed property. Their standard of judgment of poverty was totally based upon the land ownership. Because William, Dorothy and the shepherd they described in their writings owned a property, they could not benefit from any institutions. They could not be defined as destitute. William also noted that the spiritual poverty of the contemporary society didn't elicit any public comment. He was willing to indicate that something different from the contemporary standard for judgment of destitution should be seriously requested and prepared for better treatment of the poor whom he identifies himself as.

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