The staff at the entrance to this 18th century townhouse see their first priority as recruiting members to the National Trust. You are not allowed into the building until you have been given the hard sell, plied with promotional material and coerced into accepting a satisfaction survey. I'm not a massive fan of the National Trust, to be honest.
The entrance fee at Wordsworth House for an adult non-member is £5.90 and a guidebook will set you back £3.00.
Another word of warning William Wordsworth left Cockermouth when he was 13, following the death of his father (his mother had died five years earlier). Spend an afternoon in your own home with a copy of his Collected Poems and you'll get more idea of how the child was father of the man.
This is an idealised example of life at the top of the tree in the 18th century, complete with local people trussed up in fancy dress to look like domestic staff. The house was a 'tied' home. It came with John Wordsworth's job as agent for Sir James Lowther's Cumberland estates. When John Wordsworth died, Sir James refused to pay the children including William and Dorothy the £4,625 owed in expenses (that's £250,000 in today's money). You don't get rich by giving it away, you know. read more