Wordsworth As A Poet of Nature Assingment
Wordsworth As A Poet of Nature Assingment
Wordsworth As A Poet of Nature Assingment
(a) He conceived of Nature as a living Personality. He believed that there is a divine spirit
pervading all the objects of Nature. This belief in a divine spirit pervading all the objects of
Nature may be termed as mystical Pantheism and is fully expressed in Tintern Abbey and in
several passages in Book II of The Prelude.
(b) Wordsworth believed that the company of Nature gives joy to the human heart and he
looked upon Nature as exercising a healing influence on sorrow-stricken hearts.
© Above all, Wordsworth emphasized the moral influence of Nature. He spiritualized Nature
and regarded her as a great moral teacher, as the best mother, guardian and nurse of man, and
as an elevating influence. He believed that between man and Nature there is mutual
consciousness, spiritual communion or ‘mystic intercourse’. He initiates his readers into the
secret of the soul’s communion with Nature. According to him, human beings who grow up in
the lap of Nature are perfect in every respect.
Wordsworth believed that we can learn more of man and of moral evil and good from Nature
than from all the philosophies.
In his eyes,
“Nature is a teacher whose wisdom we can learn, and without which any human life is vain
and incomplete.” He believed in the education of man by Nature. In this he was somewhat
influenced by Rousseau. This inter-relation of Nature and man is very important in considering
Wordsworth’s view of both.
In Tintern Abbey, Wordsworth traces the development of his love for Nature. In his
boyhood Nature was simply a playground for him. At the second stage he began to love and
seek Nature but he was attracted purely by its sensuous or aesthetic appeal. Finally his love for
Nature acquired a spiritual and intellectual character, and he realized Nature’s role as a teacher
and educator. His love for nature during his youth went a notch higher. It was more like a man’s
love for his sweetheart. Nature was like a beautiful maiden and Wordsworth, no doubt, sported
a healthy blush on the cheeks whenever he is in the presence of nature. “The sounding
cataract” and the deep and dark woods haunted him “like a passion”. This love for nature still
went another notch higher when he attained manhood. The love and interpretation of nature
grew more profound at this stage. He discovered nature as a living entity ‘whose dwelling is the
light of the setting sun, the round ocean, and the living air’. Nature, he realized was an
omnipotent force. What he experienced during his youthful days was replaced by the ‘serene
mood’ and the ‘sublime feelings’. He began to see nature as his source for emancipation and
deliverance, ‘knowing that, nature never did betray the heart that loved her’. Here the word,
‘knowing’ carries the full force of his conviction regarding the dependability of nature. The
word is enough to convince one about the nature of his love for nature, and there is no
argument in the authenticity of his views about nature..
In the Immortality Ode he tells us that as a boy his love for Nature was a thoughtless
passion but that when he grew up, the ob-jects of Nature took a sober colouring from his eyes
and gave rise to profound thoughts in his mind because he had witnessed the sufferings of
humanity:
To combine his spiritual ecstasy with a poetic presentment of Nature is the cons-tant aim of
Wordsworth. It is the source of some of his greatest pieces, grand rhapsodies such as Tintern
Abbey.
Nature Descriptions
Wordsworth is sensitive to every subtle change in the world about him. He can give delicate
and subtle expression to the sheer sen-suous delight of the world of Nature. He can feel the
elemental joy of Spring:
It was an April morning, fresh and clear
The rivulet, delighting in its strength,
Ran with a young man’s speed, and yet the voice
Of waters which the river had supplied
Was softened down into a vernal tone.
Conclusion:
Wordsworth’s attitude to Nature can be clearly differentiated from that of the other great
poets of Nature. He did not prefer the wild and stormy aspects of Nature like Byron, or the
shifting and changeful aspects of Nature and the scenery of the sea and sky like Shelley, or the
purely sensuous in Nature like Keats. It was his special characteristic to concern himself, not
with the strange and remote aspects of the earth, and sky, but Nature in her ordinary, familiar,
everyday moods. He did not recognize the ugly side of Nature ‘red in tooth and claw’ as
Tennyson did. Wordsworth stressed upon the moral influence of Nature and the need of man’s
spiritual discourse with her.