"Critical analysis of the poem tintern abbey by william wordsworth" Essays and Research Papers

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    [pic] “WILLIAM WORDSWORTH AS THE WORSHIPPER OF NATURE” INTRODUCTION There’s nothing quite like poetry for singing a paean to nature. Among the many celebrated nature poets‚ William Wordsworth is probably the most famous. What sets his work apart from others is that his poetry was‚ in fact‚ an act of nature-worship. Wordsworth perceived the presence of divinity and healing in nature‚ the presence of a higher spirit that he considered a `balm’ to weary souls. His poemTintern Abbey‚ depicts with

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    rough draft The Life of William WordsWorth William Wordsworth is considered one of the greatest poets during the English Romantic Period. He is also considered‚ only next to Shakespeare‚ one of the greatest sonneteers. There are some historians that even believe that William Wordsworth‚ along with Samuel Taylor Coleridge‚ helped launch the Romantic Period. This statement has been debated between historians‚ but one thing that they do agree on is‚ William Wordsworth shaped the literary era.

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    Wordsworth’s poem “Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey” seems to be based from memories and the cycles of life through nature. Memory seems to be very important to Wordsworth‚ almost like it enlightens the mind. When the poem starts‚ Wordsworth lays the foundation of Tintern Abbey from his visit five years in the past. We see this in lines 1-22 as he describes his memories of the abbey. The steep cliffs‚ the cottage-ground‚ the orchard-tuffs‚ the hedge-rows‚ pastoral farms‚ etc. He is

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    The Impact of William Wordsworth William Wordsworth‚ the age’s great Bard‚ had a significant impact on his contemporaries. Best known for his beautiful poems on nature‚ Wordsworth was a poet of reflection on things past. He realized however‚ that the memory of one’s earlier emotional experiences is not an infinite source of poetic material. As Wordsworth grew older‚ there was an overall decline in his prowess as a poet. Life’s inevitable change‚ with one’s changes in monetary and social status‚

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    enthusiasm of nature. The role of nature is prominent in Romantic poetry; it is also the primary concern for a worshipper of nature-William Wordsworth. This concern is to appreciate the sublime beauty of nature as living personality‚ to search for the union between the mind and nature‚ and to acquire aspiring insights by embracing nature. In almost of his poemsWordsworth described the pure beauty of nature through his gentle words and also conceived that nature as living personality. He believed that

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    Samantha Wong Professor Jennifer Riske English 2323 15 June 2016 Writing Assignment One: “Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey” In William Wordsworth’s famous poem‚ “Tintern Abbey”‚ the poet deemed nature as valuable because he regarded nature as a moral guide‚ mentor throughout his life‚ and as well as restorative existence. When Wordsworth was child‚ he passionately reflected and cherished his time of isolation from the world as he pondered life in Wye River Valley as a youth

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    Wandered Lonely as a Cloud’ Poem William Wordsworth wrote Daffodils on a stormy day in spring‚ while walking along with his sister Dorothy near Ullswater Lake‚ in England. He imagined that the daffodils were dancing and invoking him to join and enjoy the breezy nature of the fields. Dorothy Wordsworth‚ the younger sister of William Wordsworth‚ found the poem so interesting that she took ’Daffodils’ as the subject for her journal. The poem contains six lines in four stanzas‚ as an appreciation

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    Wordsworth’s poems initiated the Romantic era by emphasizing feeling‚ instinct‚ and pleasure above the formality and mannerism of the preceding neo-classical style. The themes that run through Wordsworth’s poetry and the language and imagery he uses to embody those themes remain consistent throughout most of his works. One of the loveliest and most famous in the Wordsworth canon “I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud‚” which addresses the familiar subjects of nature and memory with a particularly simple musical

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    William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge spearheaded a philosophical writing movement in England in the late 18th and early 19th century. Although Wordsworth and S.T. Coleridge are often considered the fathers of the English Romantic movement‚ their collective theologies and philosophies were often criticized but rarely taken serious by the pair of writers due to their illustrious prestige as poets. The combined effort in the Lyrical Ballads catapulted their names into the mainstream of writers

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    1. Point of View/Narrative Technique in The Canterbury Tales Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales has a very complex point of view. The complexity arises from the fact that there are two Chaucers in the poem: Chaucer the pilgrim that narrates poem and Chaucer the poet. Chaucer the narrator is almost unfailingly simple minded where as the poet is anything but simple minded. The intellectual disparity between them leads to not only the complexity of the point of view but also the use of irony. Chaucer

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