Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey”by William Wordsworth,The Spirit of Nature and Memory

  Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey William Wordsworth, The Spirit of Nature and Memory



“Tintern Abbey” by Wordsworth is an extremely thought, provoking work of art where the poet expresses his views on the spectacular scenery of the place he revisited after five years. The idea of nature, here, is not just a visual feast but an entity that conquers memory, feeling, and spiritual growth. Wordsworth describes in his reminiscences how nature becomes a source of comfort and a guide to right, thus performing the functions of a “guardian” and “nurse” to the human soul.


With the art of the poem, he marks the change from the delight of the youthful to the sober reflection of the mature. For example, whereas the younger Wordsworth used to find the scene around him full of wild beauty, now the older Wordsworth sees nature as something that gives him a spiritual connection far beyond the span of time. Moreover, his sharing with his sister Dorothy, to whom the poem is partially dedicated, by love, adds to the meditation lightness of feeling and confidence.


In fact, “Tintern Abbey” is Wordsworth’ visit poem that deals not only with coming back to a particular spot but also with one’s own self through memory and appreciation of the universal and unchanging nature.


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