
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss one of the greatest long poems in the English language – The Prelude. Begun in Northern Germany during the terrible winter of 1798 by a young and dreadfully homesick William Wordsworth, The Prelude was to be his masterpiece - an epic retelling of his own life and the foundation stone of English Romanticism. In language of aching beauty wordsworth expressed thoughts about memory, identity, nature and experience familiar to anybody who has walked alone among the hills. With Rosemary Ashton, Quain Professor of English Language and Literature at University College London; Stephen Gill, University Professor of English Literature and Fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford; Emma Mason, Senior Lecturer in English at the University of Warwick.
By BBC Radio 44.5
594594 ratings
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss one of the greatest long poems in the English language – The Prelude. Begun in Northern Germany during the terrible winter of 1798 by a young and dreadfully homesick William Wordsworth, The Prelude was to be his masterpiece - an epic retelling of his own life and the foundation stone of English Romanticism. In language of aching beauty wordsworth expressed thoughts about memory, identity, nature and experience familiar to anybody who has walked alone among the hills. With Rosemary Ashton, Quain Professor of English Language and Literature at University College London; Stephen Gill, University Professor of English Literature and Fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford; Emma Mason, Senior Lecturer in English at the University of Warwick.

7,599 Listeners

300 Listeners

1,054 Listeners

5,455 Listeners

1,798 Listeners

3,219 Listeners

1,880 Listeners

863 Listeners

730 Listeners

274 Listeners

304 Listeners

1,745 Listeners

1,039 Listeners

2,091 Listeners

478 Listeners

775 Listeners

266 Listeners

298 Listeners

161 Listeners

183 Listeners

332 Listeners

3,186 Listeners

719 Listeners

3,292 Listeners