Described by the writer and opium addict Thomas De Quincey as "the very wildest .
She was her brother William Wordsworth\'s inspiration, aide, and most valued reader, and a friend to Coleridge; both borrowed from her observations of the wor.
A brilliant stylist in her own right, Dorothy was at the center of the Romantic movement of the early nineteenth century. person I have ever known," DorothyWordsworth was neither the self-effacing spinster nor the sacrificial saint of common telling. . .
Described by the writer and opium addict Thomas De Quincey as "the very wildest