Wordsworth's poems are famous for describing natural scenery, rural scenery, villagers, boys and girls. The style of writing is simple and fresh, natural and smooth, which is relatively resistant to the flat and elegant style of neoclassicism, creating a fresh and lively romantic poetic style. Wordsworth and Coleridge published lyric ballads in 1798, announcing the birth of romantic new poetry. Wordsworth elaborated the theory of romantic new poetry in the preface of the second edition of Lyric Ballads Collection (1800), and advocated writing ordinary people's affairs, thoughts and feelings in their own language, which was regarded as the declaration of romantic poetry. Since then, Wordsworth's poems have been further developed in depth and breadth, with profound meanings in describing natural scenery and ordinary people's affairs, as well as philosophical thinking on self-reflection and life exploration. The long poem Overture, which was completed in 1805 and published in 1850, is his most representative work.