SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 7
INTRODUCTION (By Annalisa Garofalo)




      BLAKE(By M. Elena Mármol Rodríguez )




       WORDSWORTH AND HIS VISION OF NATURE (BY ARANTXA)




      First of all I would like to say that “Nature” has taken an important role in
poetry of different periods of literature and countries. Nature is present not only
in English literature but also in French and Spanish poets such as Garcilaso de
la Vega and Émile Zola. But I would like to focus my attention in Wordsworth
treatment of this topic and the romantic vision of nature.




      Secondly, I am going to enumerate some characteristics that have
something to do with the romantic‟s vision of nature and Wordsworth own
perception.




      Romanticism is a general, collective term to describe much of the art and
literature produced during the late 18th and early 19th centuries.

      Romanticism can be seen as a revolution in the arts, alongside the
political, social and industrial revolutions of the age: all spheres of human
activity were undergoing great change. Wordsworth and Coleridge were among
the first British poets to explore the new theories and ideas that were sweeping
through Europe. Their poems display many characteristics of Romanticism,
    including:




          1-An emphasis on the emotions (a fashionable word at the beginning of
    the period was „sensibility‟. This meant having, or cultivating, a sensitive,
    emotional and intuitive way of understanding the world)

          2-Exploring the relationship between nature and human life

          3-A stress on the importance of personal experiences and a desire to
    understand what influences the human mind

          4-A belief in the power of the imagination

          5-An interest in mythological, fantastical, gothic and supernatural themes

          6-An emphasis on the sublime (this word was used to describe a spiritual
    awareness, which could be stimulated by a grand and awesome landscape)

          7-Social and political idealism.

          (c.f.http://www.wordsworth.org.uk/Default.asp?Page=119

)




           We can say that “nature” is always present (sometimes meaning
    something different depending on the poem) in Wordsworth poetry and it is the
    main theme in most of his poems. Furthermore, I would like to say what this
    poet thought about this topic.

          William Wordsworth is the Romantic poet most often described as a
    "nature" writer; what the word "nature" meant to Wordsworth is, however, a
complex issue. On the one hand, Wordsworth was the quintessential poet as
naturalist, always paying close attention to details of the physical environment
around him (plants, animals, geography, weather). At the same time,
Wordsworth was a self-consciously literary artist who described "the mind of
man" as the "main haunt and region of [his] song." This tension between
objective describer of the natural scene and subjective shaper of sensory
experience is partly the result of Wordsworth's view of the mind as "creator and
receiver both." Such an alliance of the inner life with the outer world is at the
heart of Wordsworth's descriptions of nature.

(c.f. http://users.dickinson.edu/~nicholsa/Romnat/wordsworth.htm )




                 With regard to his poems, we can say that all of them deal, in
some way, with nature. And this is what we are going to see now.

        For example:




        The presence of water in those poems where the sea appears, such as “
Lines written near Richmond upon the Thames, at evening” when Wordsworth
says:




        Oh glide, fair stream! for ever so;

        Thy quiet soul on all bestowing,

        Till all our minds for ever flow,

        As thy deep waters now are flowing.
In this poem, appears a very huge ocean, and that ocean‟s majesty and
greatness still controls the individual and the species.




       Another example would be “Lines written a few miles above Tintern
Abbey”:

       How oft, in spirit, have I turned to thee o Sylvan Wye!

       Thou wanderer through the woods,

       How often has my spirit turned to thee!




       Here, that deep blue sea or that river, show us that water which is
apparently calm, can change into huge strength waves and that would produce
some inspiration in the poet that would change his feelings.

       We can also find “nature” in his poem named “The Excursion” where he
defends the nature‟s contemplation to achieve the moral knowledge.

       (c.f. Corugedo y chamosa, 11, 12 and 13)

       I have written all these examples because I think that it is interesting to
see how Wordsworth saw nature in some of his poems as we can say that
nature is his main topic and this theme takes a very important role in all his
works. However, I would like to focus my attention on the poem called “Lines
written in early spring”, also written by Wordsworth, where we can find a lot of
examples of nature. It mainly talks about this topic.

       Lines Written In Early Spring

       I heard a thousand blended notes,
While in a grove I sate reclined,

In that sweet mood when pleasant thoughts

Bring sad thoughts to the mind.




To her fair works did Nature link

The human soul that through me ran;

And much it grieved my heart to think

What man has made of man.




Through primrose tufts, in that green bower,

The periwinkle trailed its wreaths;

And 'tis my faith that every flower

Enjoys the air it breathes.




The birds around me hopped and played,

Their thoughts I cannot measure: --

But the least motion which they made,

It seemed a thrill of pleasure.
The budding twigs spread out their fan,

      To catch the breezy air;

      And I must think, do all I can,

      That there was pleasure there.




      If this belief from heaven be sent,

      If such be Nature's holy plan,

      Have I not reason to lament

      What man has made of man?

      (c.f.http://quotations.about.com/od/poemlyrics/a/wordsworth17.htm )

      "Lines Written In Early Spring" is a classic Wordsworth poem. Basically, it
expresses his love of simplicity, tenderness and love of nature.




      In this poem, Wordsworth contrasts the perceived happiness and
pleasure of the natural world with the grim state of mankind. He introduces this
theme with the last two lines of the first stanza: "In that sweet mood when
pleasant thoughts bring sad thoughts to the mind."




      Wordsworth then suggests that the happiness of nature should be
paralelled by a hapiness of mankind: "To her fair works did nature link the
human soul that through me ran; And much it greaves my heart to think what
        man has made of man."

              (c.f.http://www.englishforums.com/English/WrittenEarlySpringWilliam/xm
        n/Post.htm )

              This poem is mainly talking about nature in a very positive way. It really
        recreates a spring atmosphere because he says “and „tis my faith that every
        flower”(line 11) or “the birds around me hopp‟d and play‟d”(line 13). What he is
        describing in this examples is very much related with that season( the spring).

              It makes you feel very calm and relaxed because he describes that
        season with harmonious adjectives and tenderness. We can also see that calm
        in lines 17, 18, 19 and 20) where he says “the budding twigs spread out their
        fan, to catch the breezy air, and I must think, do all I can, that there was
        pleasure there”. Here he also recreates that feeling of breathing pure air,
        because it has always been said that when you are close to nature, the air is
        not polluted so it is more pure and there are not difficulties for breathing. So,
        here he is saying that he was lying in a tree seeing the lovely nature and
        breathing that pure air that nature brings him.

I think that in this poem, nature has a very important role and, although for Wordsworth,
nature had different meanings depending on the poem he is talking about, in this one
we can easily see that nature is here described as that sensation of calm, of being in
harmony and seeing birds playing or leaves flourishing and breathing. So, we must say
that this poem is a very good example of Wordsworth view of nature.

More Related Content

What's hot

Ode to the west wind
Ode to the west windOde to the west wind
Ode to the west wind
charuisonline
 
Songoftherain 140301055615-phpapp02
Songoftherain 140301055615-phpapp02Songoftherain 140301055615-phpapp02
Songoftherain 140301055615-phpapp02
Apinder Awasthi
 

What's hot (17)

English,Class 11, cbse, Chapter: The voice of the rain
English,Class 11, cbse, Chapter: The voice of the rain English,Class 11, cbse, Chapter: The voice of the rain
English,Class 11, cbse, Chapter: The voice of the rain
 
The voice of the rain
The voice of the rainThe voice of the rain
The voice of the rain
 
The voice of the rain
The voice of the rain The voice of the rain
The voice of the rain
 
Voice of-rain ppt
Voice of-rain pptVoice of-rain ppt
Voice of-rain ppt
 
ted hughes
ted hughested hughes
ted hughes
 
Balkavi
BalkaviBalkavi
Balkavi
 
THE VOICE OF THE RAIN
THE VOICE OF THE RAIN THE VOICE OF THE RAIN
THE VOICE OF THE RAIN
 
Ode to the west wind
Ode to the west windOde to the west wind
Ode to the west wind
 
LCS #1: Media And Culture
LCS #1: Media And CultureLCS #1: Media And Culture
LCS #1: Media And Culture
 
The voice of the rain summary
The voice of the rain summaryThe voice of the rain summary
The voice of the rain summary
 
Ted Hughes's Animal Imagery
Ted Hughes's Animal ImageryTed Hughes's Animal Imagery
Ted Hughes's Animal Imagery
 
To Autumn by John Keats
To Autumn by John KeatsTo Autumn by John Keats
To Autumn by John Keats
 
Songoftherain 140301055615-phpapp02
Songoftherain 140301055615-phpapp02Songoftherain 140301055615-phpapp02
Songoftherain 140301055615-phpapp02
 
Songoftherain 140301055615-phpapp02
Songoftherain 140301055615-phpapp02Songoftherain 140301055615-phpapp02
Songoftherain 140301055615-phpapp02
 
http://youtu.be/PiCfrt8Sr3I ,JOHN KEATS,AS A THINKER IN RELATION TO CRITICAL...
 http://youtu.be/PiCfrt8Sr3I ,JOHN KEATS,AS A THINKER IN RELATION TO CRITICAL... http://youtu.be/PiCfrt8Sr3I ,JOHN KEATS,AS A THINKER IN RELATION TO CRITICAL...
http://youtu.be/PiCfrt8Sr3I ,JOHN KEATS,AS A THINKER IN RELATION TO CRITICAL...
 
Ode to w.wind (1)
Ode to w.wind (1)Ode to w.wind (1)
Ode to w.wind (1)
 
Taj mahal
Taj mahalTaj mahal
Taj mahal
 

Viewers also liked

Viewers also liked (6)

Preface wordsworth
Preface wordsworthPreface wordsworth
Preface wordsworth
 
Heart of Darkness examples of Racism and Imperialism
Heart of Darkness examples of Racism and Imperialism Heart of Darkness examples of Racism and Imperialism
Heart of Darkness examples of Racism and Imperialism
 
The Atomic Guide to Content Strategy
The Atomic Guide to Content StrategyThe Atomic Guide to Content Strategy
The Atomic Guide to Content Strategy
 
Social Media Best Practices, Part 1
Social Media Best Practices, Part 1Social Media Best Practices, Part 1
Social Media Best Practices, Part 1
 
IQ Work Hacks - Productivity
IQ Work Hacks - ProductivityIQ Work Hacks - Productivity
IQ Work Hacks - Productivity
 
The Future Of Work & The Work Of The Future
The Future Of Work & The Work Of The FutureThe Future Of Work & The Work Of The Future
The Future Of Work & The Work Of The Future
 

Similar to Introduction

Tintern abbey and immortality ode
Tintern abbey and immortality odeTintern abbey and immortality ode
Tintern abbey and immortality ode
Mahima Zaman
 

Similar to Introduction (11)

Romanticism and William Wordsworth by Romance Group
Romanticism and William Wordsworth by Romance Group Romanticism and William Wordsworth by Romance Group
Romanticism and William Wordsworth by Romance Group
 
Wordsworth - Romantic Nature and Poet
Wordsworth - Romantic Nature and PoetWordsworth - Romantic Nature and Poet
Wordsworth - Romantic Nature and Poet
 
The prelude an autobiographical poem
The prelude an autobiographical poemThe prelude an autobiographical poem
The prelude an autobiographical poem
 
wordsworth.ppt
wordsworth.pptwordsworth.ppt
wordsworth.ppt
 
Preface to Lyrical Ballads
Preface to Lyrical BalladsPreface to Lyrical Ballads
Preface to Lyrical Ballads
 
I wandered lonely as a cloud ... presented to u by Ismail abu khadra
I wandered lonely as a cloud ... presented to u by Ismail abu khadraI wandered lonely as a cloud ... presented to u by Ismail abu khadra
I wandered lonely as a cloud ... presented to u by Ismail abu khadra
 
Salient features of Romantic Poetry and Wordsworth as a poet of Nature.
Salient features of Romantic Poetry and Wordsworth as a poet of Nature.Salient features of Romantic Poetry and Wordsworth as a poet of Nature.
Salient features of Romantic Poetry and Wordsworth as a poet of Nature.
 
English group presentation
English group presentationEnglish group presentation
English group presentation
 
Essay On William Wordsworth
Essay On William WordsworthEssay On William Wordsworth
Essay On William Wordsworth
 
Tintern abbey and immortality ode
Tintern abbey and immortality odeTintern abbey and immortality ode
Tintern abbey and immortality ode
 
Anecdote of the jar poem by Wallace Stevens
Anecdote of the jar poem by Wallace StevensAnecdote of the jar poem by Wallace Stevens
Anecdote of the jar poem by Wallace Stevens
 

Recently uploaded

The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptxThe basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
heathfieldcps1
 
會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文
會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文
會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文
中 央社
 

Recently uploaded (20)

factors influencing drug absorption-final-2.pptx
factors influencing drug absorption-final-2.pptxfactors influencing drug absorption-final-2.pptx
factors influencing drug absorption-final-2.pptx
 
Incoming and Outgoing Shipments in 2 STEPS Using Odoo 17
Incoming and Outgoing Shipments in 2 STEPS Using Odoo 17Incoming and Outgoing Shipments in 2 STEPS Using Odoo 17
Incoming and Outgoing Shipments in 2 STEPS Using Odoo 17
 
The Last Leaf, a short story by O. Henry
The Last Leaf, a short story by O. HenryThe Last Leaf, a short story by O. Henry
The Last Leaf, a short story by O. Henry
 
Removal Strategy _ FEFO _ Working with Perishable Products in Odoo 17
Removal Strategy _ FEFO _ Working with Perishable Products in Odoo 17Removal Strategy _ FEFO _ Working with Perishable Products in Odoo 17
Removal Strategy _ FEFO _ Working with Perishable Products in Odoo 17
 
2024_Student Session 2_ Set Plan Preparation.pptx
2024_Student Session 2_ Set Plan Preparation.pptx2024_Student Session 2_ Set Plan Preparation.pptx
2024_Student Session 2_ Set Plan Preparation.pptx
 
INU_CAPSTONEDESIGN_비밀번호486_업로드용 발표자료.pdf
INU_CAPSTONEDESIGN_비밀번호486_업로드용 발표자료.pdfINU_CAPSTONEDESIGN_비밀번호486_업로드용 발표자료.pdf
INU_CAPSTONEDESIGN_비밀번호486_업로드용 발표자료.pdf
 
Post Exam Fun(da) Intra UEM General Quiz 2024 - Prelims q&a.pdf
Post Exam Fun(da) Intra UEM General Quiz 2024 - Prelims q&a.pdfPost Exam Fun(da) Intra UEM General Quiz 2024 - Prelims q&a.pdf
Post Exam Fun(da) Intra UEM General Quiz 2024 - Prelims q&a.pdf
 
The Benefits and Challenges of Open Educational Resources
The Benefits and Challenges of Open Educational ResourcesThe Benefits and Challenges of Open Educational Resources
The Benefits and Challenges of Open Educational Resources
 
Navigating the Misinformation Minefield: The Role of Higher Education in the ...
Navigating the Misinformation Minefield: The Role of Higher Education in the ...Navigating the Misinformation Minefield: The Role of Higher Education in the ...
Navigating the Misinformation Minefield: The Role of Higher Education in the ...
 
How to Manage Notification Preferences in the Odoo 17
How to Manage Notification Preferences in the Odoo 17How to Manage Notification Preferences in the Odoo 17
How to Manage Notification Preferences in the Odoo 17
 
philosophy and it's principles based on the life
philosophy and it's principles based on the lifephilosophy and it's principles based on the life
philosophy and it's principles based on the life
 
Basic Civil Engg Notes_Chapter-6_Environment Pollution & Engineering
Basic Civil Engg Notes_Chapter-6_Environment Pollution & EngineeringBasic Civil Engg Notes_Chapter-6_Environment Pollution & Engineering
Basic Civil Engg Notes_Chapter-6_Environment Pollution & Engineering
 
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptxThe basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
The basics of sentences session 4pptx.pptx
 
....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf
....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf
....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf
 
Word Stress rules esl .pptx
Word Stress rules esl               .pptxWord Stress rules esl               .pptx
Word Stress rules esl .pptx
 
Championnat de France de Tennis de table/
Championnat de France de Tennis de table/Championnat de France de Tennis de table/
Championnat de France de Tennis de table/
 
Open Educational Resources Primer PowerPoint
Open Educational Resources Primer PowerPointOpen Educational Resources Primer PowerPoint
Open Educational Resources Primer PowerPoint
 
slides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptx
slides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptxslides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptx
slides CapTechTalks Webinar May 2024 Alexander Perry.pptx
 
會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文
會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文
會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文
 
Dementia (Alzheimer & vasular dementia).
Dementia (Alzheimer & vasular dementia).Dementia (Alzheimer & vasular dementia).
Dementia (Alzheimer & vasular dementia).
 

Introduction

  • 1. INTRODUCTION (By Annalisa Garofalo) BLAKE(By M. Elena Mármol Rodríguez ) WORDSWORTH AND HIS VISION OF NATURE (BY ARANTXA) First of all I would like to say that “Nature” has taken an important role in poetry of different periods of literature and countries. Nature is present not only in English literature but also in French and Spanish poets such as Garcilaso de la Vega and Émile Zola. But I would like to focus my attention in Wordsworth treatment of this topic and the romantic vision of nature. Secondly, I am going to enumerate some characteristics that have something to do with the romantic‟s vision of nature and Wordsworth own perception. Romanticism is a general, collective term to describe much of the art and literature produced during the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Romanticism can be seen as a revolution in the arts, alongside the political, social and industrial revolutions of the age: all spheres of human activity were undergoing great change. Wordsworth and Coleridge were among the first British poets to explore the new theories and ideas that were sweeping
  • 2. through Europe. Their poems display many characteristics of Romanticism, including: 1-An emphasis on the emotions (a fashionable word at the beginning of the period was „sensibility‟. This meant having, or cultivating, a sensitive, emotional and intuitive way of understanding the world) 2-Exploring the relationship between nature and human life 3-A stress on the importance of personal experiences and a desire to understand what influences the human mind 4-A belief in the power of the imagination 5-An interest in mythological, fantastical, gothic and supernatural themes 6-An emphasis on the sublime (this word was used to describe a spiritual awareness, which could be stimulated by a grand and awesome landscape) 7-Social and political idealism. (c.f.http://www.wordsworth.org.uk/Default.asp?Page=119 ) We can say that “nature” is always present (sometimes meaning something different depending on the poem) in Wordsworth poetry and it is the main theme in most of his poems. Furthermore, I would like to say what this poet thought about this topic. William Wordsworth is the Romantic poet most often described as a "nature" writer; what the word "nature" meant to Wordsworth is, however, a
  • 3. complex issue. On the one hand, Wordsworth was the quintessential poet as naturalist, always paying close attention to details of the physical environment around him (plants, animals, geography, weather). At the same time, Wordsworth was a self-consciously literary artist who described "the mind of man" as the "main haunt and region of [his] song." This tension between objective describer of the natural scene and subjective shaper of sensory experience is partly the result of Wordsworth's view of the mind as "creator and receiver both." Such an alliance of the inner life with the outer world is at the heart of Wordsworth's descriptions of nature. (c.f. http://users.dickinson.edu/~nicholsa/Romnat/wordsworth.htm ) With regard to his poems, we can say that all of them deal, in some way, with nature. And this is what we are going to see now. For example: The presence of water in those poems where the sea appears, such as “ Lines written near Richmond upon the Thames, at evening” when Wordsworth says: Oh glide, fair stream! for ever so; Thy quiet soul on all bestowing, Till all our minds for ever flow, As thy deep waters now are flowing.
  • 4. In this poem, appears a very huge ocean, and that ocean‟s majesty and greatness still controls the individual and the species. Another example would be “Lines written a few miles above Tintern Abbey”: How oft, in spirit, have I turned to thee o Sylvan Wye! Thou wanderer through the woods, How often has my spirit turned to thee! Here, that deep blue sea or that river, show us that water which is apparently calm, can change into huge strength waves and that would produce some inspiration in the poet that would change his feelings. We can also find “nature” in his poem named “The Excursion” where he defends the nature‟s contemplation to achieve the moral knowledge. (c.f. Corugedo y chamosa, 11, 12 and 13) I have written all these examples because I think that it is interesting to see how Wordsworth saw nature in some of his poems as we can say that nature is his main topic and this theme takes a very important role in all his works. However, I would like to focus my attention on the poem called “Lines written in early spring”, also written by Wordsworth, where we can find a lot of examples of nature. It mainly talks about this topic. Lines Written In Early Spring I heard a thousand blended notes,
  • 5. While in a grove I sate reclined, In that sweet mood when pleasant thoughts Bring sad thoughts to the mind. To her fair works did Nature link The human soul that through me ran; And much it grieved my heart to think What man has made of man. Through primrose tufts, in that green bower, The periwinkle trailed its wreaths; And 'tis my faith that every flower Enjoys the air it breathes. The birds around me hopped and played, Their thoughts I cannot measure: -- But the least motion which they made, It seemed a thrill of pleasure.
  • 6. The budding twigs spread out their fan, To catch the breezy air; And I must think, do all I can, That there was pleasure there. If this belief from heaven be sent, If such be Nature's holy plan, Have I not reason to lament What man has made of man? (c.f.http://quotations.about.com/od/poemlyrics/a/wordsworth17.htm ) "Lines Written In Early Spring" is a classic Wordsworth poem. Basically, it expresses his love of simplicity, tenderness and love of nature. In this poem, Wordsworth contrasts the perceived happiness and pleasure of the natural world with the grim state of mankind. He introduces this theme with the last two lines of the first stanza: "In that sweet mood when pleasant thoughts bring sad thoughts to the mind." Wordsworth then suggests that the happiness of nature should be paralelled by a hapiness of mankind: "To her fair works did nature link the
  • 7. human soul that through me ran; And much it greaves my heart to think what man has made of man." (c.f.http://www.englishforums.com/English/WrittenEarlySpringWilliam/xm n/Post.htm ) This poem is mainly talking about nature in a very positive way. It really recreates a spring atmosphere because he says “and „tis my faith that every flower”(line 11) or “the birds around me hopp‟d and play‟d”(line 13). What he is describing in this examples is very much related with that season( the spring). It makes you feel very calm and relaxed because he describes that season with harmonious adjectives and tenderness. We can also see that calm in lines 17, 18, 19 and 20) where he says “the budding twigs spread out their fan, to catch the breezy air, and I must think, do all I can, that there was pleasure there”. Here he also recreates that feeling of breathing pure air, because it has always been said that when you are close to nature, the air is not polluted so it is more pure and there are not difficulties for breathing. So, here he is saying that he was lying in a tree seeing the lovely nature and breathing that pure air that nature brings him. I think that in this poem, nature has a very important role and, although for Wordsworth, nature had different meanings depending on the poem he is talking about, in this one we can easily see that nature is here described as that sensation of calm, of being in harmony and seeing birds playing or leaves flourishing and breathing. So, we must say that this poem is a very good example of Wordsworth view of nature.