TY - BOOK AU - Thiria-Meulemans,Aurélie TI - “Science of Feelings”: On the Complementarity between Science and Poetry in Wordsworth PY - 2011///. N1 - 24 N2 - The anti-scientific bias of the first generation of Romantic poets is well-known, and Wordsworth is no exception. His famous “we murder to dissect” advocates a direct apprehension of Nature that runs against scientific methods. His portrait of an infant prodigy in the fourth book of The Prelude even reads as a satire of the scientific approach of nature, the proper attitude being described, a few dozen lines further, through the character of the Winander Boy. Yet this rejection should be qualified inasmuch as the communion with Nature so often depicted is not exclusive of a questioning of her. On looking closer, one might even think that the poet is something of the scientist’s counterpart, he who “[carries] sensation into the midst of the object of the Science itself.” UR - https://shs.cairn.info/journal-etudes-anglaises-2011-2-page-142?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080 ER -