The Story
A Quartet Unlike Any Other
The Wordsworth Quartet is believed to be the first decorated set of replica Stradivarius instruments ever assembled — four instruments united not only by their exceptional craftsmanship, but by the profound story woven into their very wood.
The quartet comprises two violins, one viola, and one cello — each a faithful copy of a masterwork by Antonio Stradivari, crafted by the internationally renowned luthier Robert Brewer Young. What makes these instruments singular, however, is the wood from which they are partly made: timber sourced from trees planted by the Romantic poet William Wordsworth himself, in the garden of his beloved home, Rydal Mount, in the English Lake District.
Wordsworth's descendant and part-owner of this extraordinary collection, Christopher Wordsworth Andrew, has played a central role in bringing this quartet into being — ensuring that the spirit of the poet who planted those trees two centuries ago lives on in every resonance of bow on string.
Inscribed upon the instruments are verses from Wordsworth's celebrated poem The Solitary Reaper — lines that speak of song heard and song remembered, of music that outlasts the moment of its making. Together, these four instruments constitute not merely a set of fine concert tools, but a living memorial to one of England's greatest poets.