William Wordsworth

A Character

A Character - fact Summary

Published 1807 in Two Volumes

Wordsworth sketches a lively character made of striking contradictions: thought and thoughtlessness, strength and weakness, pride without envy, virtue that is incomplete. The speaker marvels at how these incompatible traits coexist yet produce a winning, amiable person who instinctively captures the heart. The poem treats paradox as an attractive human quality and ends with a playful wish to be such an odd, happy creature.

Read Complete Analyses

I marvel how Nature could ever find space For so many strange contrasts in one human face: There's thought and no thought, and there's paleness and bloom And bustle and sluggishness, pleasure and gloom. There's weakness, and strength both redundant and vain; Such strength as, if ever affliction and pain Could pierce through a temper that's soft to disease, Would be rational peace--a philosopher's ease. There's indifference, alike when he fails or succeeds, And attention full ten times as much as there needs; Pride where there's no envy, there's so much of joy; And mildness, and spirit both forward and coy. There's freedom, and sometimes a diffident stare Of shame scarcely seeming to know that she's there, There's virtue, the title it surely may claim, Yet wants heaven knows what to be worthy the name. This picture from nature may seem to depart, Yet the Man would at once run away with your heart; And I for five centuries right gladly would be Such an odd such a kind happy creature as he.

default user
PoetryVerse just now

Feel free to be first to leave comment.

8/2200 - 0